\ PAGE OVER-ll MILUON JARS USED VEARlY For The Cook HEAYENLY PIE 2 bananas. 1 CUP Sllglm ‘é teaspoon salt. 2 egg whites. ls teaspoon itllnonzl extract. h’ pint crcnnl. ‘>4 teaspon vanilla. Current jelly. 1A cup chopped nuts. Lille n pic plulevvitll pastry." llzlv- ing S fluted edge. llillit: for 10 millu- tes irl a hot over, 500i". Mash the bmlanas through a potato masher and udtl the sugar, mlt and egg whites anti ilcat all to- gether with ll large egg beater untll like bcllten egg lvilllcs; add al- mond extinct rind fill shell. Bake for 30 minutes in a moderate oven t i851“. Remove and ehlll and top with whipped cream to which the vllnilla has been added. Dot the surface with current Jelly and sprinkle with the chopped nuts. N0 —S_leep, N0 Rest, Stomach GAS Is Cause Mrs. A. Cloud says: “For years I had a bad stomach and gas. Was nervous and could not sleep. Ad- ierikn rid me of all stomach trouble nnd lirnv I sleep fine.’ Hughes Drug 00., Ltd. A Canadian N aflovtal Welcome awaits you liovA aifOllAii in Historic Halifax Maritime Headquarters --a metropolitan hotel of 170 splendidly appointed guest rooms and a lux- ury of service unexcelled —set in the key position of the province's com- mcrce, and the centre of Nova Scotias many dc- lightful vacation resorts. A hotel where you may stay for business or for pleasure—or both—and find just the accommo- dation you desire. The Nova Scotian has welcomed many distin- guished and discriminat- ing guests -- why not you? Full dolnilr [ram lb: Resident flirmugcr. any Canadian Nalianul Agent or from 1b: Hotel Defnrvlmmf, Montreal. CANADIAN NAIIOHAI. I2AII.\\/AY§ HOTEL DEPARTMENT ' i WASHINGTON, D. 6., Sept. l9- When the leaves begin w tum yel- low and cool breezes 8'1" B hi!" of coming snow 5nd 1111i!!! "m" peratures, househ "‘ s’ thouiml turn to preparation of their homes to meet the change in seasons. There are all sorta of jobs to be . ldone around the house before the winter sets in and most of these can be done by the home owner or occupant. Of course, the heating unit must be in good condition, But, most important of all, the home should be insulated against the weather so the furnace can heat it efficiently. The first step, therefore, should be that of inspecting and protect- ing the house itself against winter l winds and snows, according to gov- erllment housing experts here. Check Doors and Windows Perhaps last year you noticed a oold draft coming in liround doors and windows. This wuis probably due to loose window frames, glass tor sashes, and to open spaces un- ider the doors. The best way to {remedy this cold air leak is to in- stnll storm doors and windows. lThcse act as buffers and form a 'dead air space between themselves | and the regular doors and windows l that is an efficient insulator. [ If installation of these protective measures is too expensive, win- dolvs can be stuffed around the 1 loose frame with old rugs or felt batting. This is clone with a putty ' knife, the material being firmly wedged in the space between tile wvindow and the sash. Loose glass can be made airtight by replacing the old putty which holds it in place. Weather stripping tacked around doors and windows is also ' efficient in keeping out the cold. If e. house is of wooden con- struciion and the. clupboards are old, it is probable that some of them are loose and are allowing cold air to enter. Inspection of these old boards will detect those that are warped and loose and them. , Sometimes the mortar which was used to cement the frame of a house to the foundation becomes 1008B B-nd falls out. v These holes allow cold air to enter the base- ment and find its way up into the house. Be sure to check this, and if faulty mortar is found, replace it with new. two places where cold air enters enable the home owner to replace ‘ n» Winter Coming, Pointers To Help Keep The House Warm easily. To prevent this both divi- sions should be insulated from the rest of the house. Check Cold In Attic There are many materials avail- able for attic insulation. They are made in blanket forms of felt. wood, hair or fibre, and are tacked on the inside surface to form 8 barrier against the cold. This in-y ‘sulation not only retains heat in- winter and prevents entrance of cold air, but also keeps out the ho‘ radiations of the sun in summer. The basement roof should be in» sulated with some type of wall board or fibre to prevent 601d Bil‘ from finding its way up thrOUEh the floor of the first slorcy of the house. Waterproofing the cellar walls to kcep out dlunpncss and rc- sultillg cold is illso n good precau- tion to take. Once the house itself is prepared for the winter, attention should be diverted to prepuratioll of the fur- nace so it will (itlirer its maximum efficiency. 1f the heating unit was not given a thorough cleaning last spring, it should be done before winter sets l in. After removing the ashes close the doors and dnrnpers. Then open the door mrlrkcd “clean out" and with a long brush scrape every bit of the surface within reach/The dust will lvoflr downward to the ashpit, where it can be removed ' easily. Then clcnn out the smoke pipe 3 that leads into the chimney. This should be taken down and all the soot should be removed from it. Its s. rather dirty job, but it is essential to the efficient operation of the furnace. Look to the grates. Neglect last .year may have resulted in their burning out, and they may need replacing. Then, too,. the firepot may be cracked. If this is so, the , pot can be repaired in some cases by the application of a special fire- pot cement. Often, however, the fircpot is cracked beyond repair and must be replaced. Don't Neglect Chimney The chimney needs just as much attention as the furnace. It should ‘ be cleaned of its year's accumula- ‘tion of soot and grime. This can ‘be done by starting a fire and ‘ lhrflwilig in three or four handfuls of common salt, zinc scrapings or 4. The attic and the basement are old dry batteries. The fire should Earl wmm be under full draft during this, 11nd steadily her hands had pressed flitainst him, and with that pressure came such a change m he; [age that the fiercerlesg of Paul's an“; ‘relaxed, and he saw an idol crush- ed and broken in her eyes. To the level or that run he had sunk his own ideal of Carla. He let. her move 3W5!’ from him, and stood with B. grim, set face before her, "I'm sorry." he said. “r know you are thinking that I am vile and unclwn." l "Not that," she spake quickly. "I would rather think I cm the one who is unclean." ‘Ihat was all she said, and he rnade no effort to answer her. Words became futile, even impossible, as‘ she looked at him. What he might have said. his pleading, the argu- ments he had built for himself, 5nd for her, crumbled under- the tragedy A ’ which had come like a sickness in- to her whit/e, beautiful face-g trag- edy that was filled with appeal, with Pain and for a moment or two with an utter loneliness, a5 1: ghg had lost something which mum never come back to her. He had Seen the same look in her eyes the filsht her mother died. 111m it. had filled hlln wit-h a great pity, Now its‘ tenderness, its yearning (or a thing“ Kflne. shook him to the foundation of his soul. He saw Carla as he: had always known she would bc' when it came to her love for a man. Only a love that had no scar of ugliness upon it would she take to her breast and ‘hold there. The‘ memory of love, its burned out ash.| The Crippled Lady of Peribonka 31 JAMES OLIVER CUEWDOD iwwrlsht. m9. by ncublmnnmn, um Co. Inc.) - r i -__-¢-.__- yielding to him, would have descend-l ed out of heaven to the level of his own debasemerlt. Clearly as she had seen his passion and felt the crush of his arms, Carla now saw ‘this change in him. and slowly, believing joyouslyg u miracle itself in her face and all that; Paul had seen broken down bult itself up again. softness came into her mouth, and she smiled at him. “Shall we go, Paul?" He bowed his head then picked up the coat which had hccn her pillow vhgocial and Personal i__.__ -__.__.____ PERIOD wlllullll-"ss; .. ... l _ ...,.. i N =i’"g‘5§ ‘ ..f°'€2?.¥i. Dorothy Dix '....°°'..°..'“‘, ‘ became in a terribly Criminals! l! Mill!!!“ . nditio , ‘f , maxi} 3J1 J52‘. Let's Face the Fact That Most o1 Uur Crimin- %%§=;bey;§;§g; i als Today Are Mere Children, And_That 3w." said Mu- _ it is up to us to Give Them the Kind John Goode of Z18 Ottaway Ave. “But after time I was relieved of this misery. “A few months ago I had pains in the center of my back, _I also had nerv- ous headaches and 11°" alipfliifi took two bottles of the ‘Prescription’ r and have had no trouble since.’ Sold by druggists everywhere. AMotningSmilc The couple was married and traveled to the lakes for their honeymoon. As soon as they arriv- ed they took a boot out upon the lake. The following morning the bride's mother got a postcard which read: "Arrived safely. Grand row be- fore supper." "My!" she muttered. "I didn't think they'd begin quarrel-lull w soon." l ~ the heated fumes, tearing up the chimney at terrific speed, curry off [much of tile soot and dirt with them. If the jacket is not insulated on the outside, much of the heat is going to escape and be lost in the btisem-n... A covering of asbestos on the outside of both the jacket 5 and the furnace pipes will keep the hullb in those units until it reaches the floors above. Better see that all pipes, down- spouts and gutters. are prepared for whiter. Pipes which are expos- ed to weather should be wrapped with an insulating material, and down-spouts and gutters should be cleaned to prevent collection of taking Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription a short of Training That Will Enable Them to Make a Fair Living and Avoid Temptation The most alarming thing in this country today is the fact that most. of our criminals are mere children. The killers who murder men they ' have never seen before for a paltry hire are boys in their teens. The gun molis, the shopllfters, the street walkers are . mostly little floppers on whose lips their mother's nilk is hardly dry. _ _ And the main reason these youngsters have lrned to nefarious ways of getting what they yant is because we have taught them no honest way of making a decent living. They have been turned out m the world from school with the nec- essity of supporting themselves and with no know- ledge of how to do it. So they drift into the first job they can find, and belngutterly unskilled rm untrained and of little value to any employe., the, receive a pittance of a wage that. barely keepssoul and body together i and leaves no margin over for the pleasure that youth craves and must have at any price. inevitably they become discouraged and disgruntled. They and neither pleasure nor profit in the work they do bunglingly and lncompcg. ently, and for which they receive small -pay.* Therefore, the great ma}- ority of them either soon lose their Jobs or throw them up and become part of the great army of driiters who from occupation to occupation. always with longer periods between employment ,tmtil finally they de- generate into bums and loafers. ' What's the use in working, they argue, when you don't get enough _ to live on out. of it? And so it. is largely from this class of untrained, l‘ mesgerly paid workers that the hoboes and the gangsters and the petty . thieves and the slrls who take what is euphemously called “the correct , way" are recruited. > The boy who cannot, on his poor wage, take out his sweetie and give her joyrides and make her presents, or buy himself the sheik clothes his soul yearns for, only too often robs the cash drawer of his employer, or becomes s. bootlegger or a highjack er, or Joins some gang of thieves. And only too sadly often the girl whose untrained fingers and brain can earn only a. few tlolfars a. week looks at her thin pay envelope and the finery she covets, and sells her soul to buy the chiffons rind the skaneskin shoes that seem to her the most important thing in the world. And let no one judge her too harshly. As Thackeray said of Becky Sharp, “any woman can be virtuous on $5000 u year." Fashions _-:- ocroliclz Literature l ‘flint the Fashionable: are Wearing i i lip-Annabella Worthington lied Unmasking Lesson Furnished with ' livery Pattern A ltunnfnl dlytimo drug m“ cut: along smart tailored Lines. It's suitable for many nguI-u, The plneiled front lending neigh W "19 118"". thus cutting breadth in u splendid way. . You an carry it out in rough finished crepe silk, satin grgpg, canton crepe or any of the new 50ft; woolcns. Style No. ‘I44 is designed In Illcs 16, l8, 20 years, 38, 88, 40 Ind 42 inches bust. B11038 requires 8% yards of 89-inch material with a yard of 35-inc contrasting. The original was in the newest Paris has to offer - rhum-brows monotone woolen. Price of Pattern 15 cents 1| stamps or coin (coin preferred. Wrap coin carefully. N0. 744. Size ..--."----"--.--}.. nu». Name electric-uh, ' ‘ State \‘_ ]] China has led the wond in the value of American sirplane import: this year. _._4—\-_ l . A; keeper who_‘_ I the ‘ “ ” Ind who are bored by their professions. Uruguay mly establish uucmploy . merit, insurance. It. is the bookkeeper whose books are hlwuys out of balance, the swoo- graphera. who cannot spell, who hate office work. It is the sloPPY n01!“- the m- - ‘ lawyers or doctors ' But those who do nnything superlctively well have a pride and in) and never-failing interest in their occflPfli-iiili- But. the life story of thousands of these derelict boys and girls wllp work is a religion to them who get the greatest loy out of life- It is the craftsmen whosl So i water and resulting breaks from freezes. KINGSTON SCHOOL Following ,5 the report of m“? gun or a blackjack. ston School for September. Grade X. 1. Maurice Cshill; 2. Clifford Rodd; 3. Freeman Newson; 4. Stanley Willis. Grade IX. _ 1. Evelyn Yeo; 2. Ei- cnnor Willis; s. Lena Paul; 4'. Rho- da Newson; 5. Earl Docherty. if they must. but I believe that the thing that woul i J Grade vm‘ l‘ Daisy PM“; 2' they can ell-m not oruy bread and butter, but a slice of cake. Gamma Docherty‘ To begin with, nothing does more to strengthen tile moral characte. | Grade V. 1. Georgie Willis; 2. of a ho or a. girl and to form habits Florence Younker; 8. Mary Glow; y work badly. Millard’: relieves Stomach Cramp. crowd our courts and fill our jails would have been changed if they had every youngster were taught. some trade or effliefiil been taught some trade or profession by which they could have nlade n fair living. Thousands of them would never have taken the wrong turn of the road if we had put into their hands some trade or profession as a weapon with which?» fight the world instead of forcing them to use a for bunglers. Employers have not the time themselves to train workers. For human nature being what. it is, the young, who The boy and girl who start out hunting a. Job must have somethin, to it would not on]; give him o. livelihood. but something to fill his thoughts ma hands m4 to bolster him up lagsinst temptation. We shoud give hirn self-respect. Thea: are the-days of experts. There is no place in this billy W01‘!!! to stop it, at least among the youngis work, the sort of work that pays. - To teach them, from their very kindergarten days some way by which trade, knowing how to do some definite work well. ‘ ‘ I m, m" they not ‘o out, people who hate their Jobs you may be sure that they are doing their "n dwmtlY- m‘ 1"" " “m” M‘ “m °r ‘m’ a are filled with the avid desire of the ir time of life for run and frolic and sell‘. They must know how to do some one thin! W11 mush wmske feasting, ‘for automobiles anad swanky clothes and silk stockings and their services profitable to whoever hires them. And we owe this train- night clubs, are going to have them—horlestly if they can, dishonestly mg to the childlm of our country. We are not. giving them a fair deal unless we equip them to make I. living in the world in which they must I am not contentanding that ‘there is any universal panacea for crime, 1|", d do more than any other one thins m “m”, "ma" Wm “w”. be “m, congenital cflmdm. Thffg i‘ Wm glwgyg be other men and women so irldilent they would rather MmQ/ than work. . But. 3.110 great maloritv 01 boys and sirls m 1M IW- W" are brimming over with energy thal- they do not know how to use and ma; w; pqrmit tp get into the wrong ChBPDGlB. of industry in them than having a Tum m, ymmmtn how £0 make enough money legithnnew m n” whenever you find ‘and rob and murder tn get it. DOROTHY DIX. helping and guiding her, until they came to the beginnng of the ledge from where he had looked down om her sleeping form beside the fire. H, w“ he, about n u paused daylight had concealed things _i'rom m, a mommps rest him. Now they were revealed, be-‘ Carla looked at we me m the p" traying a change which could no of gloom below them. It was curing 1°53“ 3°99 "m! behind the "mkl out m, yellow pool o; “m; w“ of her courage. Something in her: narrowing and growing dimmer. h“ died 5m“ the? 1°" the Pitch‘ A sob came in he, “mag wood fire. The ssh of it_was in her, “we won»; ueed___ever__to xmgd" face, the ghost of it in her eyes,' she s51 and she knew that he saw it and rim,’ nevm» tried to smile at him bravely He “E15pgc]g1]y._f,he “me me;- q wanted to take her in his arms, and "And y°u_3]eep|_ng beside 3,," ad. his lips almost cried out the desire. deg pguL Carla so‘ that too, and when the They continued upward. ‘rm mg thing of iron in him triumphed over ‘wag shut out. The ledge widened rind bvth wit» and m. swiitude m- turned, so they were gcsng through H! the shrill-sh in her face. =- ground depths. The had gone only g‘ . . a short distance wnyen Paul Stopped MY only Medicine” and smothered his torch in the sand. until its flame was extinguished. The mellowing illumination of the pltqhlpine, the velvety softening of shadows, the pale unreality of first Mrs. McEachnie Says Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills Haired Her at. Every Hold Your Head shoulders from the floor. ‘The ten- _ clan will develop in the muscles. F01‘ Beauty, '.I.‘he monne in which you place ~ cold cream on your neck and should- Famous beauues M yesterday era, with sri upward, outward smooth were accused of being proud. Alvnrm ‘wit? help‘ W“: m“ "um proof of it people explained thltlm Wmmm ‘Fwwur- P“ °" m9 Periodic- Eye Examinations sloped steeply, with day at the top of it. It was a two or three hundred yard climb, littered with broken rock which half choked the ascent in places. A mass close to them had After that they saw a pale reflec- Crlglg in Lllq tion of lght ahead of them. When ‘D Wm“ _ they reached it they could look up G" u Pun’;- u m‘ Ls through a long. narrow fissure that Bzntflmd been aaeal Irlrggg Her Qt v . s. Archie Mc- ..acnme, nupevlue, Ont. "1 com. melivtld taking the Pills when 1 was Just. budding into woman. the very fact that they held their mu‘ Vlwwwy u we" l" "bemb heads high giye them an added reason for being beautiful. A head that slumps looses its grace, its dignity and its self confidence. A head can't go any higher than o neck will let it. And necks show age almost before any other part of the body. In order to keep the muscles of your neck from sagging you must exercise them. You must promote clrculation for the swift flow c’ healthy blood» will do more to keep you young than any other agent. Examine Wlll Help Roll your head -in a circle from back and around to the front again. Forget that it, is fastened firmly tn your neck. and let it spin u thdugh it might drop off. Don't go too fast. At least. not until you are accustomed to the exercise. It may make you dizzy at first. If it _' toned, lntcltufe, the front to the side, than u» the’, Don't wear you lllllfl i" llvooru-nycmuwmqllfl- without ro-cumlnotion. for In cncy for n. roll of fat to’ appear in any 0nd plocc. 'I‘he,moln thing to remember is thou; you must. not let your circula- tion go to sleep..kocp your skin alive. Necks Are Just like minds. If they aren't-active they grow dull and riroop. You can't. be beautiful if your held "isn't held high. You must be‘ lrmudi u“; time serious about‘! M.‘ ‘ma, “pm-gun, who- the: one’! eye! IN I005 4* otherwise. nqggggplwqvvhlohllnot mammal. mlv W"! W" nonmtinlllfl 9° ‘mum prcoiouunwvollwllfl‘ i DOMlfvlON. OP‘ CANADA PROVINICR PRINCfl EDWARD r IS Ah IN THE- SURBOGATII COURT IN 11m olorduile, or will: usuwrlli ll‘ Josiah Pnrmndy, iota of Chur- lurietowru-in Queen! County, ile- Ound your eye- ILF. HIITGIIESOII freshly fallen. "I spoiled my shirt on that," said Paul. "I loosened the stuff and came down with it. I hope there isn't another place like it farther up." Paul was breathing deeply from his exertions, and Carla. was fight-| ing for breath. He could see where the sharp edges of the stones had bruised the hands which ahc was holding at her breast. Her skirt was tom, and through s. rent in her *1!!! be oold by public“ suction on the promises on Thursday the third do! of November A, D, 1 ' nt 2 o'clock, [.11. The slid. all: iI made pursunn toga license to loll rcsl cltltc issued Jrenin by tho Hon- orable Hgrnlrl L. Palmer Surrogate and Judge of Probate for the unit! Pro- vince and whicb- nit! License was fmifnfmgiufye ‘fellctfih 521- MI doe-i. stop. rest. and try it again. mum, time or life. I Egan] ‘ w; m? You don't wa-nt an ungainly lump_ of flesh at the back of your neck.‘ It denotes the fact that the years are adding up, and that you don't hold your head in the right man- ner. Lie on your back, tends clasp- ed and stretch downward as vigor- ously as you can. Raise and lower your head and‘ Williams’ Pink Pills, anu ...._ cor. talnly helped me through tun. per- iod safely. Now at 60, every time I feel a little out of sorts. I take them-they have really been my only medicine." Growing girls, and women at the dreaded time of life, have special need of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. The rich new blood cells created by these Pills carry to every part of run-down systems the vigor-build- ing properties required to restore i granted the 28th day of September. A. D 1082. Thofollovving lands. will be let no and sold; that ‘ll to Ily ALL that trnct_ piece and‘ parcel of land situate lying and. being in the Common of Charlottetown in Queen's hounded nnd described u follows: Commencing on the southwest side of rn-k Street at a point one hundred nil twelve (112) feet outhustwlrdly from it: junction with Remington Bond; thence southwest parallel with nid. Kcnllnlton Road one hundred and twelve (112) feet M310) inches: thuncs at right nv-qleh loiitbcnt par- nllol with Pnk Strut a distance of forty-five (45) fut: thence at rilht lnglol northult finrcllcl with nid a love that was crippled and blind 11¢ Lighicdn Torch, and They walk- but clean, she would cher sh with sleeve the whiteness of her arm re- “Nth ‘M ‘Prenlth- T17 them- M vealed itself. Her face was streaked your mum‘ h‘ plmecm” 31”‘ DANDRUFF Remington Rood a distance of onn hundred and twelve (112) foot, ll: (H) lnehu to the loothvnlt side of nlrl the sacred fatihfulnes; of an glim- joffered-a theft, though it could be I to him. Carla, as she stood before 11 m. he 001116 WONND thmilflh B11 walked scrors the sand together. At eternity. ‘The cu-lu. hc had asked for the pile of rocks he m: her hand, nun. But not such n. love as he had and shook the sand from it. lmadc a legal theft, from another wo- west, and I man. Even as he felt this cnlshng setting when I found it. If we can sense of his loss of her, another get out iceiore dark and make emotion, a freeing of his spirit. 8 racket, some one may be near en- rejoicing with his grief, grtiered ln- ough to hcnr us." ed Across the Sand Together, with rock dust and hollows which he had not noticed clearly before were in her cheeks and under her eyes. Over them was a broader light of day. He could have flung a stone up to the level of the earth and beyond that Wis o. sky of vivid blue, still touched by the glow of a declining sun. It was this’ light, descending in n pool upon t-hetn, which mode him see another Carlo. "Yes. The cleft in the rock faces think the sun was B H: lighted n torch, and they containers, 50c. WWW-GO OiO-QXW EYES rssrsn Park Street; thence northvvutwnrrlly - TB. PUBLICNOTICI! ll hocrby given Orton‘ m! murlulmrto Statute tblt the herein- after particularly deleribed lands will , Professional Gard: Stewart 8c Lowther. J. n. STEWART, a. 0. N. w. LOWTIIER. , SAIBISTEBS. SOLICITORS. I'm “Atoll. George Street MONEY 1'0 LOAN MoLEOD & BENTLEY , .|. A. annuity W. l. BENTLEY. K. C. Banister and Attorney-shun MONEY ‘l0 [JOAN Olin: I00 Richmond Sheik Prohibition Commission Obll. H. Block, Cllllfllllli» chmikgwfll Peters I B. M Do B! - u lohncSlmpnon, Hamilton. llfllll the southwest lids nf Park Street‘ I fllltlnco of fatty-five (45) eet to tho place of commence- ment, , The uid fund will he cold fro» from encumbrances» and whoever will |r|v' thr- molt lblll ,hnrn prcfrri-'~~~ AND GLASSES FITTED l. S. TAYLOR I. W. TAYLOR Optometrist 1B Richmond Street ~ or.“ t AAA‘ such quid " ' -..'.~ru mAIuwIIY ADMINISTRATOR oLtbo Eltlfl lnfl Effect of Jouinhi Cq-mody. Palmer A Inner, Ciilrlottotovln somcvronb. Ifl-M-Iclob-ll l r ~ pnmmnei. l ll ,' i’ ntlon rellrdlnl ,,,.‘,°,';‘i.,,',‘,, ofhlghnmlnon AC1 to the shove or h. ' w-wrfm- .|. Fflllhb. M. l’.. Pink“ l0 Victory A . lUi-l-ll-Im-l-IIQL MissGwynneth b .Coombl . scrum "ulomt. ston-r- "rfNG Phone Iii-l-