(i? ‘l crown GUARDIAN‘ . vvw vv ‘ 19a v vpvvvv’ ital... n ’s s Realm i" SW54 Pers n. 1.1 ka*aA- >‘ vvvvv vvv all sliion so -:- Litelra i... a a thuylookaslt they would lightup durkroomlikossolar hump.- < IOADI The shortest road to success is the good of earnest endeavor. H». t. MISFORTUNES I believe, indeed, that. it is more audible to suffer great misfortunes ' to do great things-Stanislaus. Jliiflifi} t’ ENERGY eigy weaned in uselws talk be put into useful talk else- ii. uiiliqt: Ea BOOKS 111'?! 5 " is e best solitary cunpany would, and in this particu- elly excelling any other, that study l1 am sure lo converse ne but wise men; but abroad possible for mo to avoid the y of fools. What an advantage » '. 1, by this good fellowship. that (he help which I receive "giiéfiif ggsggfi § F i 5 s 3 bounces of bhree or four thousand ‘years ago, as 11 they were the week- wcumnc i Here, without travel- Ican makeboldwlth the best 1on3 they have in their heesury. gwitfn the same freedom that the Is- pelites borrowed of the Egyptians, 1nd, without suspiion of felony, ynekeuseofthemasmlneowml can here, without trespassing, g0 in- in my vessel. and store it up ~ my profit and advantage. ' Sir W. Waller. FURNITURE our ,= _ nlvnALs rrs AG! ‘ ‘one may get worthwhile hints of the older cabinet- Iuskers. such as often have a entail antique shop attached to their woskmop ‘end of the elbow rest both your chair leg which has slid On I. floor or carpet for a century or more becomes quite smooth and shiny and loses all traces of the broken grains in the wood caused by the sew. In fact I have seen ' where the end of the i088 looks ai- most like polished lignumdvifse. With chairs made by the lees ex- perienced men, such as the York- shire ladder-back, the ends of the back legs will often show uneIQ wear. owing to their not being cut quite true to the front legs. TODAY WE COME T0 VITAMIN C ARE YOU SURE YOU GET ENOUGH? Are you getting enough vitamin C in your daily diet? 1f you are using plenty of fruits and vegetables. some of them raw, you prcba-bly are furnishing your body with an ade- quate amount. According to Dr. Mordecai Ezekiel, economic adviser to the Secretary of Agriculture. in the talk given to the American Dietetics Association u week or two ago, the consumption of fruits and vegetables and milk during the last few years has fallen off consider- ably. This. according ti. Dr- Ezekiel is largely due to the fact that the prices have remained at about the some level due to the cost transportation. M the some times the prices of mats, cereal products and sugar have dropped. Uptoliifltherehasbeennlerge increase yearly in the consumption of fruits and vegetphlu which are so valuable 0n account 0d their mineral and vitamin content. We find vital-nix: 0 liberally supplied by citrus fruits and tomatoes. whether raw or conned. Apples. bananas, pineapples, fresh or canned. straw- berries and raqabsries are also good conitflbuters. Among the vege- tables we find, in addition to to- matoes, the mtabogu turnip, spin- ach, lettuce. cabbage, carrots, string |beans, peas and potstoes- bothl sweet and while. all liberally sup~ plied with this vitamin. with the exception oif tomatoes, the waking of these vegetables re- moves some oi’ the natural content. Vegetables canned by modern “ ‘, however. retain a goodly nvpptly. How about your vitamin C? le- pconwnced. The some man also explained how flhe attractive dress patterned for wdny is so cleverly designed and in- tereuting, it needs little in the way of trim. The Jabot frill forms a very bodice line. The buttoned young . its outstanding smut- simple as falling off a Iwiored wardrobe, as ruby, emerald or sap- Iliha blue, and it is just perfect for this model. lfiitweight woolens, velvet, rayon novelties that suzzeat wool, etc, are Ill! suitable. fiyie No, U6 i: designed for sizes A6,. 1d years 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches vstnsue to requires an Ylrds of mo» of pswnnn i5 cents in orpoin (coin is preferred). fully. é Dish-usual;- “n. I III "unuuppoe .. . A" dmibwoman MIXED FRUIT DELIGHT Four oranges. three bananas. one cup stoned dittes, one apple, hilt A cup shredded almonds, some whip- ped cream. SMART FROCKS FOR FASHIONABLE PEOPLE Illustrated Dressmakin With Each Cult the oranges in iwlves. omen- wise, scoop out the pulp. then break Lessons Furnished attern energy, slee IQssneesI-sny one of these may common constipation. Yet this condition can bu so , usually, by eating s delicious cereal. Tests show Kdlo g’: ALL-HIM! rovidel "bulk" an vitamin B to elp romote regularity. Ann-Burt also urnishes iron for the blood. The "bulk" in ALL-BEAN in much like that in leafy vegetables. How much safer than patent medicines! Two tableapoonfuls of ALL-BEAN daily are usually auflicisnt. Chron‘ cases, with each meal. If seriously ill, see your doctor. ALL-Ban: makes no claim to be a “cure-all.” Serve as a cereal or use in cook- ing. At all grocers in the red-Ind- green package. Get ALL-BEAN and not a part-bran product. Made by Kellogg in London. Ontario. me pulp into small pieces, and mix it with the peeled and diced ewle the sliced banarmi. chopped dew! and shredded almonds. Pile into the orange cups, and top with whiwfii cream ON THE SPOT pa,“ i5 the time for fruit, cooked and fresh. and below is s very use- ful hint to remove unsightly fruit- stains from table linen and clothing’. Tie up some cream of tszter in the stained part. and let it boil in soap- suds for s. few minutes; NW1 W853! and rinse in clear water, and thc| stains will be 8011c- evenings to preps-re him dainty he lost his Job she shouldered the whole nup- port of the family. When he flew into rages wrath. _ _ She saked nothing arhim and be gave her nothing, and eventually he forscok her for a woman who belongs to the well-known, she apologized for things she hadn't done] and gave the soft answer that turns qwayothfl ingredient,‘ choppy-v 5mm, 1-2 i: vinspr. Bofippiee topulp in vines". add and boilfor 20 minutes. If put in Jars. it will keep indefinitely. SUPPER. DISH he is happy and satisfied them with any degree of certainty trouble with matrimony. one it is too late to change. they are married and who return them and regard them as the dust WEARING FLANNELS . ‘line following advice has copied from a medical Jounal of 1833. It shill may be used with good results NEXT 5911118- "As the genial sunshine of sprinfl advances, those accustomed to flin- nel under-garments are wodlégouh dtlspossed to lay them su Y aside This is antherrof‘ 01mm? magnitude. Keep em 0n 8 east wind is no lmiger elaborated; till the flowers are blooming in the field and. a uniform a‘ w temperature is established. A muliM/ude annually are hurried to an early gmve in the very meridian of life in consequence of not under- standing or by neolwtins this simple Lhqugh mpovtant advice."- Medilcal Journal. NEAT KNITTING To make neat and well-mod bimonholes, work one row of double crochet round each one. On the wrone side. Baht-Iv “wk "P the two crocheted edses. so that when the workispreasedandihe tsoklngs removed the buiwonhols is a good aha/pa and will not sane. “‘ “ ““‘........‘“"°“‘° “w?” i.» owing to 88. l gqifnkig purposes can be obtained by very neatly wdrklng one row tight double crochet along the 3 cha. whom they are married. pays her the attention. kisses. any work but work him Nobody loves l. slave. Those we They write their own price-tag and marriage get nothing. As l‘ matter-bx mt. husbands I wish that I could answer this of other man and women who are wondering whether it is best to make put lambs or goats of their mates, and no one else is wiseenough to tell valuation they put upon themselves. Gimme family and who keeps his nose to the, ' grlndstone supplying her demands. Bhe has sum o; mum c“; m imp lengths. the temper of a vii-ago and he Jumps when she speaks, but flllillrmfly Md 1 em of tomatoes, 1 can of pork Now this woman is going to be married aguin- She doesn't desire to make another failure and she wants to know how to treat her second o; m“; husband. Shall shefoilow her natural im ‘ considerate and unselfish to him, or shall she be the one in the family who must be kotowed to and to whom offerings must be made? to be affectionate and " n, for there are thousands which to do. Sometimes the treat- ‘em-rough policy seems to win out oftenest. Again it fails. That isthe For every rule there are a hundred excep- tions. Each system of dealing with a husband or wife has a personal local spendthritt some sound advice. application and by the time ycu find out you have hit on the wron‘: devotion for devotion, sacrifice for sacrifice, wiselfishness tor unselfishness. but for the most part those who annex earthly angEls at the altar neglect them and tyrannize over] beneath their feet. All of us know dozens of cases of meek and humble wives who stay, “"5115 m!‘ hinfifikee-Pilli" at home cooking and scrubbing and pinching pennies and who never. have a new dress or go aywhere, while their husbands step out every evening to places of amusement where they blow platinum blonds’ to on the money their wives have saved out cf the baby's milk MNPJWW d° Y°11 W"? W" m9 bill. And we know wives who never do s. lick of work and who go about' “m”! °! Pwple l" "hi?!" W" hi" dressed like Solomon in all nu glory, while their husbands mu them- m interest when W“ 8° w the selves toiling to pay for the extravagance of the female parasites to But. strange to say, it is not tbemsn who sacrifices himself body and soul to his wife who is the best- loved husband. Nine times out of ten it is some wastrel who is selfish and overbearing, and who never Doesn't even throw her a kind word as he might throw s bone to a hungry dog. And it is not the woman $59M"! 3°51‘ Wm‘ “M95108 c1959- who has worked her fingers to the bone for her husband whose hand he n9“- lt. is the soft. manicured hand of the wife who has never done Why this is thus we do not know. perhaps it ls because in love it is _ more blessed to give than to receive and we love more those for whom “W31 M“ markh I mem- H6 W" we do things than we do those who do things for us. Or perhaps it is be- cause incur secret hearts we have a contempt for those who let us im- pose upon them end exploit them, And who have not the backbone to get up and fight us and make us treat them with respect and Justice. adore are those we look up to, not down upon. Hence the man who lets his wifelmpose upon him and monopolize ail the perquisites of matrimony and the woman who makes of herself nothing but s. servant in her home commit Ystsl blunders. are regarded by their mates st the ‘rbose who demand nothing in and wives are as easily spoiled u babies and, like babies, you can't really pamper them sind be as good to themlsyouwould liketowithoutruining them. DIX That Royle Girl ifinnd sewn. mnwmaslsevenatlyitil stitches are often 10ml, owingtothe shsplngs,‘ nt ittco . d geetiwrequiredneok mess e berm sewing on s collar or Strange Work‘ Mode lock lad IollelOvorul I l1 llslsg l‘! 3f ES 5. away. "I had mistaken her char- acter completely-completely." "Looks ls if she told the truth "Arm bod?” asked Ellison, sym- pathetically. "Let ms help You. om mm" ' gazette," said Calvin, concentrat- ing upon the affair of the mat.- "Baretts never knew who IMF mm. Don't let anybody bother her-not evui newbPlW mm- 1 xeusinwiu be freed; tomorrow, in war-loom Ola-ks. , will ask uni-clean. our " the 5?: i: i? =93? 2E2 5E? 25:5 £5 When sewlflfl swim w W s ' @,flnqi¢fl;bfllillalibebfldrfbfilnk' ByEdwmBslmer ‘v n - ““ lie mm “whim mam Th” Wm r "Quite." ma Calvin, looking mm the country. George started home and was about a block from his quiet residence when two bold. bed persons ‘ —‘“ ‘ ‘ ‘ unknown shot him."- posing it upon treating torment of it, in preference to his thoughts in idleness through the day. By night he was prepared, and he went to bod certain of Ket- »1ar's release in the morning. ‘lhe prospect, indeed, was appor- lnttoeveryomwhoreedtbeesrly editions of the mania! papers which were sold at downtown street corners on Dads 0D! mdimmed- Having regained I Ono thing seems certain, however, and that is that the best bus-l I bands and wives are rarely the best loved or the most considered. 00-‘ spend moron two-thirds!‘ caslonally you see a man and woman who appreciate the saint to whom‘ 1 to second base? | i I ' iety, ma: upside mm was delayed only by his impcratlveifor the finish of the Oluire family- ‘needflfsshavflfidafssial llrylonlcnsslicedunditod d 1 pint of water, salt er about 20 minu- ' and beans, I d newer. with 2 tablapoons an - fes. Then thicken i l AMorningSmile QUEER. BUDGETING The young curate was giving the “You ought to make it a rule. Georgefihe said, "never to spend all your wages." "l do,” replied George. "I never "Well, I'm very glad to hear it," remarked the curate. "And do you deposit the t ‘ der in the post office?" "Well no, sir," admitted the spendthrlft, "1 give the rest to the WHY, INDEED‘! theatre? Woman-I don't know. Why do youoheerwildlywhenamanwith. whom you are not acquainted slides Lola Nesson," Dads particuiarized, “Yes. . . He told me he was wrong, all wrong. Dads." "Ketlar?" “No; it was about Ket he was under the car.” related Joan Daisy, suddenly seized with need to talk. although with every one else she had begged of! mention o! the mat- ter. so she id how Mr. Clarke had culled her k, after she had start- ed frorn the car, to tell her that he had been wrong. "Phat was funny, wasn't it? Especially in him; for l! any one can keep things inside him- self. that man can. You'd have tholllbt he'd have fltllred this would keep till I,got back with help; and if l didn't ever get back. what would be the diflerence?" “You'd have known it for a min- uts, at any rate, if you were killed the next." explained Dads. "Known what?" ’ "Phat be was wrong about you." “But I did know it anyway. Heav- ens. I'd been telling him that for three months." “He wanted you to know that be knew it. st last." "Yes." said Joan Daisy, nodding, for of course she had realized this and was only talking it over. "He Ttica that we know of, so we're perfectly safe in saying that babies constitute the largest single group of snapshot subjects. It's perfectly reasonable that this should be so; for we apshoot those things in which we are most inter- ested. For another thing, babies make ideal subjects, because they don't pose. They're always natural. There are baby pictures and baby pictures, of course. Some arouse spontaneous enthusiasm; others are merely records, without much sp- pesl. What's the essential diflerence be- tween the good and the merely so-so baby pictures. Usually you'll find, the good pictures show infants do- my Iomethinip-crawiing, chewing _a doll, wrestling with toes, or even indulging in a real good cry. The merely so-so pictures give us only recognisable glimpses of babies do- ing nothing much at all. 0f course, it’: possible to take a picture of s sleeping baby and get a charming result. But to do this, the camera work must be nusual. Very well, what about the fechnio of baby pictures? . First. you'll need to have light . enough for action pictures. Few babies stay still long enough for time exposures. Oub-of-doors, you'll have no trouble at all working in open shade or out in the full light, - IN MAT!‘ R. “THE VOLUNTARY WINDING-UP ACT" AND THE BRIGHTON BLACK FOX COMPANY, LIIVIITED. ’ . NUHCE I8 HEREBY GIVEN that a Special “ ' Meeting of the shareholders of The Brighton Black Fox Couipsny, limited will be held at the Oflloo of Norman W. lsowflner. Id Great George Blkeef. in Charlottetown in Queen's County in Prince Edward Island on Monday, the tenth dgv o! December A.D., 1934 st the hour of three o'clock in the afternoon foi- the purpose of con- slderi and passing upon s resolu- tion requiring that the Company be wound up under the provisions of “The volun y Winding-Up Act" and fu- the appointment of p liqui- flnlor for such winding-II]!- llld for 4s the ‘ of tel thereto. ' Dated thk 32nd dsy of November A. 1)., 1984. FRANK R. IIIAUPZ, President. L-2d28-l1-26-l2. after Quen Anne's war and General Knox! staff and Antietam." Till-l FBEDOH! , "No. He telephoned about the man I shot-Blretta." .. ted Daisy, carefully wiping s cup. asked him to; I wanted to know." "that," said Duds, firmly grasping her arm, "that's nothing to think‘ of." Duds kissed her goodnight Ind retired to the bedroom where his wanted the world to lmow, too, when hewaswrongssmuchaswhenhe thought he was right. I stood by him when he ‘ ' ” ’ the police, and he certainly came out and said he'd been wronl." she related; and Dads, watching. ww deep color spread fromlyher forhead to her throat. "He sum cams through against him- lBlfi-llldforlictsndme. . .1t would have been s queer wind-up for ab: cum family, wouldn't it,' "What would?" he inquired, swore thstshehadbeenthinkingsoln. fsntl! thst she hadnot noticed thst she had ceased speaking to mm. “Ob. if that car had turnedovsr a all; binder or thoobuilets had got - ll $11153“! a rotogrnvure Iwilm Printing a picture of a ilivvar in a noun corn field er en tiled lower still in be Bin was given a ny treatment. D pounds n» mums-uni: b! I crossed the e0 qum sbo alt u so wor time wonders wu This Imus ‘old run way. We every not s of an it cannot can‘! on its Pllisp usoeo cues. .fi$’@a um a.‘ 5a E DNYI m loo . m‘ at. .,%."’a~ PALE, PEPLESS GIRL Bream: PRETTY -4zvo WASNT sm: PLEASED! 1.1m uuaouyiinsimmmmonnwuwlo. a"*'.fi::..'"im'“ "'3".."i...‘&i"$i.'i"“°fl".ii ‘V lobin. tbs red substance in the red co heel v bmgl°fifrfmmmusu u$£ a "noctu- "”*""' n’; will-m’ W“ "-- eswfi I t unison sbioovlbals bcelts. red annuals! all u» gun's! Mlllllllihbhtflloflblwallna. wife offered discussion of the com-I pantive marital and financial merits of Mr. Hobexg. who certainly was s substantial man, and Fred, who was to be freed to-morrow under condi- tions which any one would cell cred- itable to him, so that no one could say his reputation bad been hurt. Duds attended to this so perfunc- torily that. for the first time. momma complained to him of lack of interest in Dilly’! welfare. Joan took to bed the newspaper which Dads had brought home; and after switching o8 her reading lamp she reached up for the light again. seven! times. Upm the front page was heralded s forecast of Kat's re- lease; but it was not this which drew her again and lfllin to the page. It was the account of her own and Mk. Clarke's expeditions to Tut's ‘temple, of their pmniit after leav- GW a-glllfil“ I I And what a happy change took M=i$.§""°". nu in- ‘tion till 5 a halt! mm h” tannin . ‘m in Ilflfl substance, lretbet baelnoglobiu. " tilt b " is chwu unlined. HERE aren't any oiflcial statis- O NAPSHDT (of nmlves "directed" time mspghqh. es they pleased and the camera was clicked s1 hi‘; '. 1P . ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘¢‘4 am‘: a LAAAQAA ‘r _ ' "' I v v i» - r . , ‘ .11.. HOUSEWIFE and , MK Pills Fill "my m, "'3 _ S ‘K m, . I » ' l _ BABY P|CTURE$ i amount RElIEF ,, a m- m“- a. * 5- m son. " the w... a.» a s-roallv old - Is “Doormat” or “Saint-on-Pellefltal CQPTWI mum-l w» w “w! why- ‘ gnu u. and; “m”. dflnithww Niki-sou‘: mulw-a-qmigffi b11022’! ALI-BIN Cvrrwied Attitude‘ for WffeL-So‘ mewhere in B6- “dmmmw “m? m’ m l‘ “mmwm add» _ ma . _ _ *2; my m. and u: smooth .. board m any B" Gimlfivm” tween Would be Perfect, S83’! D0!‘ Mww-Mfljffjém; $3 ilstielwiftnsavszvlll - tunemI-ndthesanalifilsutfenn h - B t wh tever is, "lmamkww - Bu‘ =-~ lain I! lowdveulhd pub be felt quid Ml"! ‘W! all "P! ° If on are troubled by common 0t y Dix“ u a . "lbMwm 7°)“ c’! * c . 4115f tr-chhanow temple, noble: than the fingermtzotualiy co potion. tbisiettislrezl d _ Remember Every $11 Bu. “P, , are dud-lair M1000 I on ' . . ' i ab: thee mm beuvun with a dome inside m l mm wbhh m b?» ‘gififimmil? mam- m- WfitCS H61‘ 0W0 Price ‘gm: ,mue vast. mined by hlM-‘llllmv! WWI. 01' my health. For you I Tag . . m“, mm m, bum, fiflliouatlsnflrae whilatneoutddamhceispim- 40p myultwithp ssudotber mug.“ ‘uuewoouwbd ‘Ifliq thindoutgrown shell by ished and the hflmiw marks 6;; dupes or constipation. ‘ wwdued mg“. an“ m a "n, 1v l!" Wwflflv M‘ ""19 mm“!- W “mum "I decided to hv Krml Aw wmt should be s wife's attitude toward he! husband? Should m» ‘M, Wm w,’ m, we Wm, o, 3 -0 w. Hoknu not filing”: remove flu mark: y“ Nowthum ind “be-algal? mo“, m, (gnfly pekatul and require him tohigrxtiolncense before}? ‘mum mm __ Wm a - "If men"? - abuldsbemakeofhsrselfadoormatfor trunpleuom ___ v a "ms winter-rs“ M- nb..‘°'<.i'.i.‘z‘.°"'i:.'.-..r..i'°i.iia °' ° rzw.::':..::.a s: vrs::.:.r:*.~: we» can" p~°g,_~'*---*,_**~-*i- ha» i» "i There are pixitures by ‘Pitian so which come with use w u- ohflr mueltl- and soa-nxious to be a good wifethat aha T“ puma, m.“ 2 mud, " " W°"d'-\ °Y d"! Jtmoed in solden eplendors. that The Outer Bdrm 0f "I 6W?" "i Headaches. loss of appetite and simply enslayed herself to him. She worked mo,“ “mgr, 1 pound raisins. 1 large - - tho right instant. providing it's not so bright that i] cssts unplesaantly sharp shadows or causes the baby to squint. Us; the regular snapshot time and in] opening. This time of year, of course, n may be more convenient to work 1|)- doors. Ona of the easiest ways u, take baby pictures indoors, during the daytime, is to get the subject fairly close to a big window (my necessarily a. sunny one) and than use a photoflood-typs lamp to Ugh‘ up the side of your subject that's sway from the window. A photofiood bulb in one of those inexpensive ro- flectors will be found very handy In; this and other indoor shots. l! there's a lot of light coming from the window, you'll be able to use a regu- lar snapshot exposure. For surety’; sake. better work with the lens at it: widest opening. Wait until your sub- ject strikes an interesting pone; then click the shutter and the pic- ture's yours. Don't forget that you can supersensitive flim to get baautiz action shots with much less light than other films require. And let your baby subject “direct” his own picture. Let him do as he pleases, with only slight suggestions from you. So doing, you'll get real looking. satisfying pictures. And you'll always treasure them. JOHN VAN GUILDER. i118 the Temple and of the fight in the ditch of the com field and of the discovery, in the city, of Beretta dead. ‘ Joan's eyes sought the paragraph which related that Mr. Clarke had worked s11 day. and expected to ap- pear in court to-morrow, not only to oppose the writs for Zenn, but also in connection with the developments OUT-he Ketlsr case. _ . , Upon awakening Kat tilled her mind; for there were sounds 1n Ket’! apartment. His mother had come to dist and sweep in preparation for him; and Joan and Dads and Mrs. Folweli went together to the courh _ The Jury filed silently to their places; the Judge suddenly appear- ed; Ket was within the doors and Joan Daisy arose hot with triumph at the sight of him. For they had won he and ‘shei _They had proved (Continued on Page 6) Q6‘ GENUINE Banaanos FA/VEY EXTRA I. 0. C. Campbell. L-tsll-ll-ill-M-H l1 Charlottetown Woolen Hills lie-opens Send your Wooltobeslfll" Into yarn, or woven into blankets. - The charges are, sin!" yarn”!!! cents; doubled 26 cents per pound. Also Hook- lna Yarn. lauksts 82.00, laundered; If mapped and bleached $2.15, It takes 5 pounds 0f wool per blanket. Freight will be raid °" 00 lb. ofs.