GUARDIAN PAGE "rwo THE sEFrEMBER 18, 1933 L . ‘Q v skskss ‘ ‘ v v v . . . Y“ v v v v H o h . o , ' ’ ‘l JP l-Fh --Lt t 1 , lVoman s ea m -:- ocza an ersona -.- as zons . z era are s ' _ _ “‘4‘4AA 400004000 M *“-“ ‘ was c ac‘ H: w“ ~ e- ucw it ,~.. 5 l1 l ‘* ‘ “ #4‘ ‘é ¢“¢¢v v ¢~‘¢¢v¢ “‘ Q‘ ‘ ‘='¢‘¢¢¢ ‘ “ 9 "' "' x3. ~ =- '_ - W i 1 Wm» i J ms COOK'S I / M. Y. W i ' - MW!“ m- ' z 1 c 4 1 J . . f - P‘ZIZ- 114$ a . i N Woo-Ma ° ohm MAKE i fli . it g GARDEN] G - Wmkf Dorothy Dix .... s... ‘ CORNER coco N UT nu. usssu-Jciiifillflji}; 3- ' ' “m” I mo“: With Veletables ‘°‘""°'-"hl'ofl kinds _ fir’ TIME son BUIBS 4' P“ 1 ‘M16011!!! f|'¢9h—in ti“ t. _, ““' " ‘* cartons and base, h P?» t} . . . motions (he per-t und rubbing in mm bl- ‘Wmd’ 9°‘ m“ °I b”! mode In Canad h l will §:ffafl‘f,a§§°"§“f_§‘,,f°m‘,f Wife Who Dean-es to be Klssed Must Keep a “m,” o, M, u...“ m, m: flamespoom m,“ m H:_____ ,-, itllre of spring flowering bulbs. No Herself Ktssable, But H_0w C_an a Woman When cgmciarrloaake my ‘though iulssppeh 8:133:12“ rials: m: I m) m, and,“ iswru; .’ F, matter w?! difllcllltles fllsVé ‘been Whisper SWGGt Nothmgs in a Man S To we“; m“, “ma, up m, dwm m Mm m‘ mama,“ “m. w,“ 1 cup cllllopéocd celgy coconup! - 9* experience in grovlzng 0 er ow- - _ ' ' 1 cup a cc carro i g b" there Should be no trouble m Ear WhIlG He Reads “I9 N€WS gachmtm Eggnog behfnotlremtlée glue be no trace of In iodine stain. ‘man potatoes ‘_.~ T, _.. securing striking results with tlll- paper ? -— Tak€§ TWO t0 er g a ' Con) m, THE HEAD EASILY gale, pepper r E i 1pc, hyaclllths. daffodils or any of Make a Happy Marriage Bu, o]. the shy and enger thoughts nmlvsmrrsn Pm!” ; ~ f ‘the smaller types. There is no cul- n? I - That hide and w‘l! not get them Cover or dredge the meat with ‘ . ‘tivatlon, no spraying and no trans- - , A dreggd, Anhcuah the ordinuy w“! m flour and sear in a. heavy Dim m L i planting. A man asserts that 99 per cent of the women who lose thelr husbands the hot fat. When the meat is s deep brown on all sides add the washed apricots, celery. carrots and peeled potatoes. Season well with salt, pepper and minced parsley. doso because they do not take the trouble to keep them. and that if wives will’ i‘ i‘ "i" WY “Wm m“ i!" m" i" Pimd m"! °"° W‘ would m u“ same allure and m“ M much mm m keep the“. hus- 'Sa much more lovely than the son to another the discharges bands laminated as they did to get them in rest? from the throat and nose, it can the first place‘ mammony “Duld become a -—SBI'& Tkbidflle- also be transmitted in other ways. grand sweet song instead of the scrapping Remember this “ext “m” Y9" med i ‘This l5 the idcal time to plant these bulbs in most pans of Can- llda. In the vzanner districts. tho job maybe put of‘! until late Octo- ber and there are records of actual _i____ - r water cover and . to use a dozen handkerclllefs or Add W‘) cups o ’ blsntlng ln December. when the WW“ 1i "WSW i5 "W? “id i‘ WW1“ ‘mmny LOW-HEELED SHOES Fort FALL w ~ cook for about two how's or "Hm , _ ground has not been frozen. and do sway with divorce. F-OOTWEAR meat is tender. Tlus will serve eight ‘ persons. All handkerchiefs should be boiled for at least three minutes after be'ng used. otherwise the| genus wlll not be killed. Paper handkerchief: are best because they can be blumed immediately after use. one must”, forget we, that the one scant teaspoonful of salt, two good blooming tulips resulted. But from the middle to the end of Sep- tcmbcr ls generally conceded the ‘proper pcrlod. As a general rule most gardeners wati until the reg- ular growth has been cut down by lhc first frost as they do not wish All of which is, of course. only too true. Heaven knows that in this column I have stressed often enough the folly of wives throw- irlg away the bolt with wl-lich they hookoo their poor fish, and warned them that there was no place between the altar and the grave in Low heeled shoes have made their debut lrl Paris as the IatPst note in full footwear fashions. Heels only an inch high marked the kid and patent leather shoes which a leading designer displayed Beef Souffle With Tomato Salloo Melt two tablespoonfuls of but- ter with two tablespooniuls of flour. BAKERS cu r » 1 _ v . , _ send you all them pretty flowers . to disturb the Drcsent bloom. l. which a woman coma s“ down and take ch n“ Wm‘ “m”? clufhes m 1934 style handkerchief ges back into one's dashes °t whm.’ pegpe‘ 52%;“; u e gits, Missy?" m mo. BULBS IMPORTANT easy and be certain that she had landed her catch. and that it wouldn't shows llle hoe-s W-‘ro mod? with mm o, bag we, n L, flmshed spoonful of "W" JFZW- d k m, AMprngngsmglg "certainly, my hubmu. Wu,“ It is important to get full sized, flop back into the stream and onto the line of some other fisher-woman. a fhhl blilld 1195B dflfikllod for with’ and thus "meets mom 0H9 Dim °t 11°‘ m1 - a“ °°° ‘ mspmm heavy bulbs] free "om my mudw walk ng ease. Many shoe deslgners til it thickens. It is a wise precaution to disin- fect them when the cold is batter. Use a swab soaked in an antisepw favor street shoes with only med- lum high heels. tapirfng but uummuuwu;onwMo~Wwa shown last ‘sgzsan ‘High slender There is than no fear that the spike hee‘s appear on modcls to be :22“ Wm be mum‘ to pastures worn with aflernoon and evening, ' v g°gtfzbped pumps and a “mo, m! OLDEST TOWN CRIER m 1-mo- ‘ LAN fastening well up on the instep are I D shown for afternoon wear, while “Glory be!" exclaimed the “he suttently am holdln‘ out m’ oln't he?" or other disease. There ls u. vast difference in price and quality. ‘Misses’ are almost unknown with 4 _ the full sized bulbs but frequent ruough with llnderslzcd, cheap ones for the slluplo reason that there is: not enough food stored up in such to produce follugc: and flowers too. As A gcucral rule these sprng flowering bulbs are planted to a.‘ dPlJlh of three tunes the diameter. Then add one pint o! cold pot mast chopped fine, half a cupful of dried bread crumbs, rolled fine. and the yolks of three e285- ! Take from fire and add the whites beaten stlfl’. Bake for 25 minutes in lndlvldlml cups or, if preferred, in one larso baker, ill a pan of boiling water. serve with tomato sauce. Cold mutton, chicken or lamb may For a. woman's selling herself to her husband isn't a stunt that she can put over once and be done with. It ls a Job that she has to do over llgaln every day as long as she lives lf she keeps hlm content with his bar- gain, and prevents his turning covetous eyes (m the newest thing in flap- pers with streamline effects and fresh Palm B-hd all the new SW86“- A Washington woman who has enjoyed, thirty-five years of more than unusual connuclal bliss, has in I , her employ an amusing 01d Ne?” 1th‘. Brown: I think the author-g cooki ' ‘this novel writes absolute dnvel One doy. who“ o W‘ ‘l! “Maw” What on earth ls an "aching void!‘ beautiful floworo W“ 1°" 1°‘ m“ ma. Borwln: You ought to no, mistress, the 600k “Ppmed t” be dear-you're always Cfllllplllilllflgd ' llroaoot- Bho ""11 "Y°' husband headaches. And, alas, only too many women never realize this. They tlllnk be- cause thc men to whom they are married once loved thclu they will go on automatically loving them to the end or the chapter. no nlotlor how k11- attractive and disagreeable they become. They bellcve that the weddulr: This w“!!! mean about three or four inches for daffodils and hyacinths and‘ only n. little over an inch for ceremony marks the end of s woman's courtship 0i l1 mim- ihsi-ead °f realizing it is just the beginning of her wooing of him if she is to REP!) what she has won. And all too many women are conlmlltcd to the theory that marriage gives them the right to go shabby and 5101117).’ unluud home. oxfords are displayed as the cor’ rcct shoe accessory w strict suits. The new oxfords we cut on fem- lnlne lllles, however, the mannlsh Sam Smy. or Oxford, the oldest! town crler. has just celebrated his n uctieth bl. tllday. Mr. Srr-y was a powder boy in the Crimea and has bc used. ulclg '11P (‘mollfooél and other tiny ones. The exception. and it ls a. big one. is the tulp. This one must go in much deeper. There eat onions and tell their husbands home truths. 20° ‘and and great gmndwhud‘ ran. He became town crier '10 years Daintinoas With Chic Styles "II-Ali shoe being shown only for sports wear. - Sandals and strapped pumps are Luck doesn't float around the all‘ I850! Illllllllln and light, on Tom Dick or Undoubtedly if all women kept up after marriage the art and wiles WITH IVIBY PATlIfi are seven“ with which they ltlred their husbands into the holy estate, it would make ' the favorite evening models. They gfooliggdnssgli,sgeéfiivéghnbimnts Ho: 1y. just anyhow or any- i I" “u amn H1195 of MINDS» ‘hi! 5111B"!- fol‘ first a tremendous difference in domestic life. For. after all, husbands are are genlraliy fashioned of velvet‘ Mn smys dunes are vnly varied Where- . nowcrs mildoms °l' mrifinfl inside. still mere men with men's natural reactions toward femininity, and it ls _ or heavy crepe dyed to match the He must ca“ the mhabimnts u, '3 The wit to KNOW tho thin! Y0" the tall, large Dal-wins. usually in much, essier on the eyes to gaze upon a pretty, daintlly dressed woman l color of the gown and often f!n- f,“ when one mum He a,” “t”! want. the Wlll to work. the. sum-flue‘? y“, were m gum- solid colors. and the equally largo than 1t is upon one in a soiled kimono with cold cream ou her face and i ished with piping of gold or silver $1M" w (he came and m,‘ them lfllfih to 118M, lines a-plerlty in the newest fall Breeders. 111 blended colors. m ed- curl papers on her hsir. kid. Following the conservative vo- i an about it The strength to use but tempered humans; zillion of course there are Cottage _ _ gue less cutout work appears than In» privaté me he is the village tools and only weapons. youql be wanung some new c“- ‘tulips, smaller than the It ls much more agreeable to spend an evening at llolllo “Hi1 o Wife Darwin last year. and novelties. For the single, ggyly who ls cheerful and chatty and. a. good listener, who lends all attentive ear llllfp 1t is best to plant about six while hel‘ husband talks about himself and his plans and W118i ho sold i° iiTE-‘hes deep in Qlay and up to eight the boss and the boss said to him, than it is to have as a. fireside compan- inchcs in light soil but the large i ion a. wife who is a bore or a whiner or a complainer and whose only topic Breeders and Darwlns should gofof conversation consists in demanding to know why he doesn't make as down from ten w “new mchfi much money as some other man does. This extra depth for tulips is neces- lary in order to dEVClOp deep enough hoot growth to support the long vtems and heavy blooms. o tume slips. Today's model is espe- , cially designed for the new slim- ! lino frocks. And easy to make! cut it out and run it up on the sewing machine in an hour or so. Two parts to the pattern. Finish the upper edge with binds. Roll the lower edge by hand to give it Iikench accent, You'll be surprised at how lflitle it will cost to make it. _rag and bone man, newspaper lman, chimney sweep 1nd fisher- man. He has a small holding on when iodine is appued w chm which he keeps pigs and poultry dren's cuts or bruises some of it and now: vegetables and fruit’ generally manages b0 stain their clothes or handkenchlefs. ‘like F ‘ stains should be tneatcd before the Th‘ “"8"” "PM °* ""1" i" articles are washed in order that u" United Kmgdmn ‘"5 571704 they may be entirely removu-Li bushels of the value of $29,158 Flirst dampen the spot with a 11g. ilcompared with 1,152,448 at $303,828| honor-bright; I The spirit and the spunk to dare. the hope, the grit to bear, And when disaster falls, the pluck to grin and start again- Thaifs Luck! IODINE STAINS . s Certainly the wife who desires to be kissed must keep herself kios- able, and the one who wants to keep her husband glad he married her must wreaths matrimony with roses instead of sticking it full of tacks. Keep the But if women so often seem to fold away the glamour of courtship BRANDED near 12v cannon For the first seven months of with their wedding veils, the fault ls not always wholly theirs- often it is the man's, because he would not play up f0 them, and. no Just as tie ccld water. Then sprinkle the" stain with s. pinch of bicarbonate of soda. Rub the bicarbonate well Iln August, 1932. The export to all ‘countries was 58,954 bushels at A8009’! against 1,547,340 at $678,310 Children Healthy There rnult be iron and vitamins in n child's diet, for, without them, Choose crepe silk or crepe satin“ i Style No. 613 is designed for sizes l4, 16, 18, 2O years, 36, 38 and. 40 inches bust. .' this vem ‘he “its of hm d d b t woman can give a. very convincing impersonation ofs Lady Llovc wlthgllii into the stain and keep damping| a. year ago. m, emu an ghyivel s,“ m requires 2% yards 394,161,, . . ) n c e9 a lover, Juliet must have her Romeo, or else hel lmpasslonnl vows c- M I h “BEMA” Barbuda Mob-u. fink‘ material. . in Canada amounted to 18.308316 some the maundermgs o; one W50 has beeome (nwgsu and ,5 mpqng w puss e or t em to keep any of the glamour of courtship around mar- !bs.. an increase oi 5,444,891 lbs. on the corresponding period last year. ‘The soles for the month of Iuly were 2.203.290 lbs. an increase ‘f 122.818 lbs. on July of last year. __—_-~_______ EXPORTS OF LIVE CATTLE high among the iron-containing loodl; it is also rich in vitamins. You wlll find it good for all the family. Use it on the table, and In cooking. It is the most economical molasses you can buy! Price of psrmrm 1s cents in‘ stamps or-coln (coin is preferred.) Wrap csin carefully. herseu‘ rlage or to hold the pose of sweethearts. Ne woman can whisper sweet nothings to a man who doesn't even For a. woman is to her husband Just what he sees her to be, and if he look up from his paper and who only grunts uh-huh when she tells him sees her only as a. cook or a nursemald or a whipping girl on whom he new much she loves 111m. No woman can put any temperature into a, kiss can take out his ill-temper when things go wrong in business, why, that's when a. man turns the rim of his ear to receive it. No woman can sum; 1111 Sh? 15 and 9-11 She 01m b6. le to meet her husband when he returns home o ‘ _ LTIQVZZQ: $512,253: m, greeting is going to be: "Say, haven't I told No woman alone can keep_her marriage from becoming sordid. ‘mat you a thousand “mes not w M, the children leave then- skage, and bicy- is a two-handed Job that requires the united effort of both s husband cles in the front yard‘? By George, 1f I ran my business in the incompet- ‘and wife. No woman ls enough of a hypnotist to keep a. man in a sen- em way you run a house, em, em" etc]. itslxlqrlnerelrzlktrance against his will. He has to lend himself to her band- To the end of July, the expert; of live cattle to Great Britain. says the Llve Stock and Meat ‘Trade Rovicyv. were approximately 28,000 head, and by the second week in Street Address u ’ ‘Y’ Genuine Nor can any woman put much pep lnto dolling herself up for hubby u Bo it is folly to talk about wives holding husbands who want to get BA City ' at..." A 30, , l: she knows that lnsteod of o. compliment she ls solos to sot o lmoo fist??? conlllwofrcfi qfhe hm,“ about the money she spends in beauty shops and that instead of telling away. and who will not play the game. If they knew the secret of every E F ‘with M 318 for he ‘Sine gflfiizb a’ her haw becommg he‘, new ‘rock 1,, he ,5 80mg to demand to knew what vamp from Lilith down to Peggy Joyce, they still couldn't do it, because X [f8 611C)’ - S H0 O She-Haven't I always been fair to you?" He-"Yes. but I want you to be l fair and warmer." you can't put any pep into making love to a jellyfish or a. refrigerator. And if husbands want their wives to keep the love fires burning brightly at home, they've got to furnish a lot of the fuel thelnselves. DOROTHY DIX. 1933 and 137307 1m. the same pen lit cost and raise the roof over her extravagance. . ‘od of 1031. MOlASSES over the water. as though threaten- ing every moment to fall in, were And nobody can deny that there are millions of husbands who thus trample all of their wlves’ romantic dreams under foot. and make it im- .______-____-_ lflnnral‘! Llnimrnf for ‘rim lmmlg, oob~l$fi I frightened run-away, fervently spoke to her, mumbling something wishing she'd stood ground at home. 1n her ear. Prudence, terrified. “Flying Boat” Estate Dr. J. R.- ~with good house, barn. ' and lee house. Ideal place for Fox _ lows of lbove Estate. PropertyForSaIe The property of the latc Ruby Mnrosidc, situated at Upper North River, lo miic from Milton Station. The property consists of 8 acres land in good state of cultivation hen house Ranch or retired farmer. u’! not sold by private sale before .'cptember 27th lt will he sold by Public Allo- flon. together with stock, crop, im- ' ‘ and ‘ ” ‘ "' ‘ For further parllclllhrs apply to McLean do Mackinnozl, Royal Bank Bulld- Ing, Charlottetown. or tn F. C. . Dollar, New Wllishirc, or to Mn. Isabelle llcartz. 8 Elm Ave" Execu- 1147. City of Charlottetown Tax Appeals Notice is hercby given that the ifoard of Appeal wlll meet on Thursday. September 28th, 1933, it l0 o'clock in the forcnoon in the Court Room ln the City Hall to hear all appeals from civic assess- ments, valuations or rates for the f HEAR TS AFIRE . By : MARY CHRISTIE CHAPTER 42 a PRAYER. Whatever shall I do?" Over and over in the girl's dlnaught brain the '- ' ‘ ‘ thought reiter- ated. . A dollar and fifty cents with which to face the world. No, there was another fifty cent piece that she hadn't counted! That made two dollars. But-could one get a bed in the city for that price? Her lamentable ignorance of life rushed at her like a. devastating torrent, almost submerging her with terror of the future. What was there for a. girl like her to do? - The monotonous mllmlur of the wheels got on her nerves until she could have screamed aloud. They seemed to taunt her with a. sound llkcz-“Nothlng . . . nothing . . . "mar 1933. Datcrl at Charlottetown this 15th lay ol‘ Scplcnlhcr 1933. GEO. P. NICHOLSON, City Clerk. (‘Zty of Charlolktown. nothing! . . over and over again, in a jiblng refrain. How long did the train take, un- til lt reached the city? hours Journey, wasn't it? ‘nut would moon an arrival at nearly half past two! Oh, what had she. done, to run away like this? Where could she go, destitute of money. and ccrtairlly destitute of friends? Then she remembered a. woman- frlend of Janet Mercer's, who was care-taker of a huge block of offic- es somewhere in the city. Mldhurst Buildings was the name. They were old and gloomy, and the woman and her husband had a. tlny apartment, right at the top of them, on the seventh floor. Janet Mercer’ sometimes stayed ovcmlght there. on her infrequent visits to New York. SE2 had describ- ed the quaint abode to Prudence. who had been much intrigued at the description. "Like living in a bird's nest at the top of a very tall tree," Janet had and got her nerve to tell Mrs. Van- slttart, quietly and coherently, how truly innocent she was of the un- fortunate affair at Winston Towers. "It wlll look exactly as though I were guilty!" she thought miserably. as the train whirled her at express speed through the night. But the longest, dl-earlest journey does comes to an end, and at half past two A. M., the weary girl found herself 1n the big deserted terminus, with a few sleepy porters staring curiously at her, and not a. place to go! She went out into the streets and trled to get a quiet-appearing hotel. But the night porter wouldn't let her in. It was strictly against his orders, he told the girl, with an un- pleasant wfnk, to admit stray young women without luggage. Prudence felt great waves of shame sweep over her, and blindly turned away. Even though it meant courting sure rebuff she tried another hotel turned and ran, for nearly e. mile. There, panting for breath, she leant against some buildings, until a burly policeman told her bnls- quely to ‘move on, please.‘ Iiieellng like a. criminal, she drag- ged on to a big open square. It was an extraordinarily hot night for May, and not a breath of air was stirring. In the square ten down-and-out- era slumber-ed. flotsam and jetsam flung hither and thither by ilfe. "Shall I become like one of these slumberlng people! If only she could lie down there, and die! But somewhere deep ln the heart of the little country girl, timid of llfe as she was, from inexperience, there lurked a fighting instinct. She would make good. She would live down this hateful story. Cir- cumstanccs-hateful, cruel as they were-she wasn't golng to let them keep her dovml Behind all this paln and injustice there must be some good reason. one day?" thought the heartsick girl, vistas of s. frlendless future rising up before her, without home, money, friends, or love. What would Peter Armstrong think. if he could see her now? To- morrow the countryside would ring with the story of the theft. would he believe her guilty? This sudden filght would bee: out the story, wouldn't it? She hadn't paused to think of that. ' Yet-oh no-she wasn't sorry she Things would work out for the best in the end, if only she had courage, and kept a stout heart. BuiPln the meantime-where to lay her head? Hotels wouldn't sc- cept her. It was futile to continue that depressing search. Across the street slle saw a red lamp bunting, before a big church, with a flight of taps going up to the light, "the lamp of the doctor of EAST PITTSBURGH. Sept. 16- The "flying boat" has come through its first practical wet with "flying colors", according to Dr. Oscar Tit- jens. noted for his research in stream-lining of airplanes, racing automobiles, Zeppelins and railway cars. A 14-foot boat with a normal max- imum speed of about 12 miles an hour was used in the test. When converted to a. "flying boat," by st- _ tachment of ltydrofolls, Ol’ wlng- ‘ like planes, the craft attained a speed of about 24 miles an hour on the Delaware River at Fsslngton, Pa. l “The hydrofoiles act in water as an airfoil acts in air," Dr. Titjens said. "When a. certain speed is ‘ reached the airfoil, or wing edge lifts an airplane of! the ground into y the air. similarly/my hydrofoil lifts the boat clear of the water." coo wnouasstan .4 souls," it was called. All night long. those hospitable The definition of a. “wholesaler” groan oars, span, ‘and FEED BUCK- or two, only to meet with similar ex- had come, ghastly as the present perlence. No. they had no room for was. she couldn't have stayed on at laughed. Mrs. Smith, the caretaker. had met Prudence once, down in the country, and had llcxspitably told the girl that if ever she wanted a bed in town, she would put her up. Twenty mlnutcs past elcvcn now! New York was a long way oil‘. Three "But I don't know whore Mid- hurst Buildings are!" thought the her. The wording was sometimes curt, very often brutal, but even when the hotel-clerk put it kindly, saying the place was ‘full’, she was made to feel her position openly. Twice she asked the way to Mid- hurst Buildings. No one knew its whereabouts. Green Gables, facing the ignominy that would await her. Dragging her weary feet onwards, she almost stumbled over a. bicycle, with a man sleeping on the ground beside it. And all around the square, some even lying on the parapet of the doors stool open. Anyone might en- ter, and find sanctuary. Home of the homeless! burning lamp, and prayed that help might come to hcr. molly is lacking in the home of a 01' in the egg regulations includes any person who sells eggs to anyone for resale, or to any restaurant, hos- Prudence stood before the ever-imm- Mm- Wfldl"! him-W. hflkefy. logging. mining. or construction camp. transportation company or other organization for its or their |use in baking or cooking or for (To be Continued.) l It sometimes happens that har- omployces -- Once a furtlve-looking creature pool, boots, off and head hanging music composer, [ervlng to inmates, guests, patrons’ tock Branch Dominion Live,‘ . ‘ Motheson All dcbis due deceased are l1! quired to be paid before 5th 0o- tober next to Miss Lillian Math- econ. Springfield. otherwise 9"‘ ceedlngs will be taken. HUGH B. MCKAY. , Executor We are ready to bu)’ l some good PRESSED HAY, SPEED and and FEED WHEAT. _ SEED BARLEY, SEED WHEAT, either for- CASH or in exchange for FEEDS of all kinds. - CARTER & 00- Limited