l For 771a Cook t i TART DELICIOUS mane wrru UNUSUAL FILLING A . Avoicl fGrippy Colds ' Take Vitamin-rich $§QT_T'$ fi-EM U LiSlQN of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil" For dinner, there is nothinl bu‘ r ter than a delicious new Pumpkin 'pie made with cocoanut to give I fine, new flavor with fresh pump- kin. For the evening party. W145 with the pumpkin filling are delic- ious, too. But whether pies or tarts, use a light pastry that is especially adapted for shells, such as the one given here. PIE CRUST cups sifted cake flour. i teaspoon salt. _» cup cold shortening. . lg cup cold water (about) Sift flour once, measure, add salt and sift again. Cut in shortening until mixture looks like meal. Add water, a little at a time, mixing with a knife or spatula until the u i l w ' o o . . . lA MornmgSmrla I l . l and A Scottish landowner ivus com- possum, RD“ dough I,‘ gnch (h1g1; on slightly floured board. Fit loose- ; 1y on pic plate. Turn edge and prick lltllh fork. Bake in hot oven (450) lfor 15 minutes. Makes one 9 inch twto crust pie or twelve 2%.‘. inch tarts shells. Use 1-3 recipe for one New Llaid~"liow do I announce _ pie shcnon1y_ ' — . _ ' (l: "w"? Do I my 'll!liill‘l' is ready‘ . 5-1-“(1 ' DELICIOUS PUMPKIN PIE l Use ‘.2 recipe given above to make pie shell and line plate with pastry. Then fill with this fine flavored custard. 1'1,- cups premium shred cocoanut 2 cups cooked, mashed pumpkin. I cup sugar. ‘.5 teaspoon niace. ".- teaspoon cinnamon. ‘l teaspoon allspice. 3 tablespoons butter, meited. 3 eggs, ., ightly beaten. ” cups milk, scolded. . 11:0 tfiiziiit, "yore llllttr" lllll‘ lliit; an‘ two o‘ iixcui suappit up 1' is‘ riiluilli; b; the Sanvbuili." ivzis is Hens Fed Strychnine As Theft Preventive --___ n-iivsorr. (m, my. mreuitvy-I hlllll Ira Ecliols at last has found “ what he describes B5 a “H.641” Combine ingredients in order treatment or aiititoxin for that old given and mm thoroughly‘ Pour mm “m, mend Chicken dismsr_l pie she'l. Bake lll hot oven i400i , Hhxvfsf, l5 minutes, then (lecrcase heat to ~ “c m“ a "Ohm: “the bu“, new? moderate 13501 and bake 30 minu- pzipz: saying the f rs; person iii his ms longer" Jieicyhborhood found suffering from p son uxould be arre ‘cal as a _ T ' ' (n thief. ' I FTc-liols” item advzu d lllf‘ _tlliCf I who lifted 1.7 barrel! and white legliciriis frciu his roost not to ca; them nitgl ' warned per- FIYF llllr") us to know F" “‘ 'l‘.‘_\' might caflitc them. l7lS said, have a Mas. HorrMAN was eighteen when her baby was born. Within a year she had a serious operation. Then the flu. Her nerves '.\l , l; “tunim" full of Sfiilehnine." g went to pieces. She lie explained his "treatment" of Cfkd "Y" "Owing H i Whmvuv .. chichmg n: all. lt was an unhappy bouseliol ‘ ‘ .1 n_ bum,‘ 0M SUV}? ller grandmother told her about the famous Vegetable Compound. That's how old and trusted n remedy i: isl"l have taken six bottles," she says, “with marvelous results and I am thankful for my increasing health." 7" mama... VUIETAGLE JICIMPDUNU ' to b? palm “as in humans, Li? no‘. m affect tlvmselves. He pa o Illiflll rinses over a pCrlfid of "it" . . bi-Ztt: itirvcasrvl as " tcc do IipqL Tuck llirmrils m your travelling i...» Woman ’s Realm -:- dotigli cleans the bowl of all-flour ‘ pastry. Use as little water as ‘ s}? Q V “tour: u" l Doro Ts me. Sundays or holidays. him pretty well myself. the earth. {tenderness and companionship. ,'All he is interested in is putts. His match sets. His scores." I would be the happiest woman in the world he will imjirove his game. thy Db: Letter Box Dear Miss Dix—I am a golf Widow- kind and generous man and I love him dearly and hi? Pfllbflbly IQWS m9 as much as he can anything but a golf ball. He plays so?! every day after office hours until dark and 6011195 110K119 18W W - a warmed-over dinner, too tired even to chat with I never see him at all on Saturdays and I am young and naturally I Want company and to step out now and then. My husband encourages me to do this so thut I will be off his hands and conscience. the group that I go out with is beginning to care for me too much and I am commencing to like I told my husband about this and he said: "Oh. go along with the man. You love me too niuch eve." to think of unothci man," and that he would trust me to the ends of But I am getting afraid of myself. My husband gives me none of these. Man Who Sacrifices His Wife to His Golf ls 1n a Fair Way to Lose Her_- Shall Business Woman Risk Marrymg Mal} W161 Small Income, or Remain Single and Lonely One man in I want affection and And how if he cherished me as much as he docs his bag of golf sticks. Won't you advise me? Answer : You are not the one who needs advice. NANCY. It is your husband who needs a good talking to and to be told that what he needs to improve is not ihis golf game but his matrimonial technique. For if he doesn't ‘he is slated to lose something a lot moie valuable than a silver golf trophy. He is going to lose a perfectly good Wllfl. it is a fine-thing for a man to have some sport or hobby in which he is iiilcreszcd, and particularly good for him to have one that takes hi niout of doors and gives him ex ercise, but when he lets that become [his consuming passion and permits it to crowd out more important things, it becomes a vice that can ruin his life and that of his wife just as much ‘as the drink or the dope habit can with golf. ation. No‘. one of the things that you can take or leave. . And that seems to be the trouble it appears to be a pleasure that cant be taken in moder- ‘ 1t absorbs its victims bcdy and soul and conversation, and that is why the wall of the golf winrlar: is heard througliou If husbands would only play golf part-time and give their wives a. portion of their Sundays and holidays, few wives would object. When it y Saturday and Sunday esoiiio and having to listen to her hus- band's post-mortems on his game after darkness drives hiin home from [the links, why, it isn't strange that wives rebel and feel that the greatest comes, however, to a ivonian having and summer afcriicons by her lon enemy to domestic happiness is a golf stick. Nor would husbands like being neglected for their wives‘ br being sidetracked for golf, if the shoe was As for the complacent husband wife with impunity and that has eyes for no other man, one could smile at his e sequences not sure to be ,so disastrous. .1ian the belief that so many men cherish that once o. woman loves. a man t the length and breadth of the land. to spend ever idge any more than the wives enjoy i on the other foot. My husband ts a good, clean, ‘inn/N (f“'1l{ll ial and Personal -:- Why MissLillianLoug/ztonls “I use Magic Baking Pow- der," says Min Lillian Lough- ton, Dietitian and Cookery Expert of the - ' . Canadian Mag- azine. "My successful baking results are due in large part to its freshness, uniformity, and consistent high quality. "My own recipes are planned for Magic, and I lcu mmend it for all recipes calling for baking powder." Miss Loughton's high praise con- firms the judgment of other Cana- dian dietitians and cookery experts. The majority of them use Magic rxclzuicely, because it gives con- sistently better baking results. Magic is first clioicc of Canadian housewives, foo. I: outsell: all other baking powders combined. <' ‘ls “CONTAINS N0 AI-UM." Thll nannies! on ovary tln in your guarantee that Mall: Baking Powder lo free from nium or any harmful ingra- dicot- I raise coox BOOK - wt... l Chocolate Cup Cakes famous war’ moss-venom; 476 s ouooourlour cakes M cupahortening l cup sugar 2 eggs %' cup milk 2 cups pastry flour (or 1% cupl read flour) p ' 2 teaspoons Magic Baking Puller $4 teaspoon salt )4 teaspoon soda l teaspoon vanilla extract" 2% squares unsweetened chocolate Cream shortening; odd sugar slowly; add well-beaten egg yolks. Sift dry ingredients together and add, alternately with milk, to first mixture. Add vanilla and melted chocolate; fold in egg whites beaten stiff. Put into greased muflin tins and bake in moderate oven at 375° F. about minutes. Cover with chocolate icing. you bake at liome, the new Magic I Cook Book will give you dozens of recipes for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd.’ Fraser Ave. 8f and honorable game. O C Dear Miss Dix-J am a woman Ipresent career which insuies me a I ,makes less than I do and who will g hood. There ls who believes that he can neglect his ;‘ she is so much in love with him that she Answer: gotlsm were the con- I For there is no fallacy greater you care for the mun m... new congenial he is to you. Sometimes a. lux- he is bound to go on loving him, no matter how he treats her. ‘Ihcre is nothing easier than to ls there anything easier than for a man to win th wife. I Let a husband fail to show his wife the little attentions and tender- too absorbed in his own pursuits to r a good time or even to pay her a compliment, messes she craves. Let him become ‘ltake licr out and give he husband. It is when husbands cease to make love to their wives tha‘. wives bc- , land then let some other man come aiong‘ w her society; who plies her with fiatteries an wonderful she is; who sends her flowers a that she is the most important thing in ‘filling candy away from a baby for him to win her starve a woniairs love to death. Noi e love of a heart-hungry the world to gin to lend their ears to the voice of the tempter. | Of course, nothing is ever really going to reform a golf hound, I think the a. man for whom she has a. great and absorbln . {beforehand that she will always have to wor be no good as a money-maker, but lie may be all to the good as a. tender, ther? fascinating, understanding companion. . As you are a business woman, of course, you appreciate the value i ho shows her he delights in of money and know just how far it will go and how much is required to ' d tells her how beautiful and run a. family. Also you know how hard is the lot of ‘the wife and mother nd candy and makes her feel l who has to work and struggle and strain to make both ends meet on an him, and it. is like ‘insufficient income, but love can make all of that WOYLh while, and bet- away from her , Ler is a lia'f loaf shared with the husband you adore than a feast eaten ‘alone. Liberty Se, Toronto, Ont. DOROTHY DIX. nun more than 30. Sha!l 1 follow my modest, steady income and remain single, which would mean a. lonely future, or shall I marry a tnan who probably never earn a comfortable living, but with lvll")?! I mighthave companionship and perhaps mother- “inL-e an: l not. likely to be any. DAILY READER. driest-uh depends altogether on how much 32 k to support him. He may But in making your decision chiefly consider whether the man really will give you companionship or not; whether you think alike; whether you are interested in the same subjects; whether you like to do the some ' i . l not even losing a wife or two, but the spectacle of the forlorn golf widows should tip girls off to the danger of marrying one addicted to the ancient F2555... ,-:- Literature p Bu Annabelle A soft woolen in rhum-brown colouring made this practical smart dress. _ The binds that finish the bodice closing terminating in s bow at the shoulder are toning velvet. It's the most simple model to fashion. And economical too! Style No. 903 is designed in sins 38, 38, 40, 42, 44, 48 and 4B inches bust. Size 80 requires 2% yards 54-inch, with $6 yard 35-inch contrasting. It would be equally smart carried out in black rough crepe. The trim could be either of white crepe, of black velvet or of self-fabric. Wine-red crinkled crepe satin is another delightful medium. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin 1s preferred). Wrap coin carefully. ' . No. 903. Size ............ ........ Street Address I ‘State oadaoh often relieve 1i MILLION JARS USED YEARL NOVEMBER s. 1932 r‘ a What the Fashionable: are Wearing Illustrated Drellmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern Worthington w‘, things; whether you never talk out; whether you never bore each other. Not all husbands and wives are chummy. and no revels 1n the iworld are lonelier than those married people who do not even speak the same language, who cannot even make a. remark without starting nome- thing and who spend their evenings in a silence you could cut with a knife. The thing people marry for oitenest is companionship and it is the thing they aeldomest get. So before you slve up u awd 10b 101' I hw- band make sure that he will be a pal and not a dummy in your home. DOROTHY DIX. O O Ibear Dorothy Dix-What can an older sister do to keep her brother of from making a marriage that will wreck his life? ‘talented young chap, full of promise, and he has fallen in love with l ury is more vital to us than a. necessity and we really need white hyac- ‘Silly little doll who is selfish, 8119113’ End 59011911 and thinks °t 50mm! . inths to nourish our souls more than we do bread to sustain our bodies, ‘but indulging herself in herevery whim. Her sister, of the same typo and I think there are cases in which a woman is justified in marrying a l has already wrecked the life of a fine young man whom she married and g passion, even ff she knows rleft 1n a few months when she found out that he could not give her all My brother is a [the finery she wanted. Can you help me avert this fate for my bro- ! Answer: PEGGY. When a boy becomes infatuated with that sort of sexy little creature he is deaf to all reason and there is no use in arguing with him. about it. Every objection that you bring up merely fans the flame of his passion because it makes him become her champion. The only remedy is to try in some way to throw them together for 1 few weeks in such a manner that he would have a chance to get bored to death with her chatter and see how brainless and self-centered she is. If he had to put up with a few of her tantrums when she was crossed and see how unreasonable she is, and especially if he had to make a. few sacrifices for her, it would cure him. DOROTHY DIX. ___ Iv Tllli \l\T'l'I-Il{ U." l \<ll.l.\'l 3H1‘ \\i.\'l:l\(; Tl‘ i ‘h ‘r - _. 7,’- (ir-nrg» ' , 9 _ NUTIf r: or‘ s , K155335351, c. Tllli 5r‘ C I O ~~ 1.1 trill: JFIITN u. mvvis r-itmonitltn 7718 111018! e l'(l\l'.\' LTD. By .\ll'lltI'I I< IIIIIILTIY |.'\]j,\‘ (h! n \]!I'|l'|l (.I'|.1‘|'ll ‘lflflllllg’ of 1i... ,- R" WILMOT mun-w. nf rm- John u. irnulu .1 IHLTHHI IIuu-wr Llniilrrl will In‘ held ’"“' " “’ ‘- "- C- A» I" CHAPTER XIX i1 mru-umuu n W. n. out-.|.». u... lirlunrrl Islnull m. T... u- ..........| .1..- Fminty, szluy the THE JOURNEY NORTHWARDS filuulnlinll rr- ivmup I_\ In |.-- n»!!! ilrlfllnlnlrrl of "11... 5"": In u-v" Jlfipvvililill]: 1| l. -'| n. u.» "nu-r u.» I r \.-u..-<..._.-.\i-:u.i. Qbcub m, emy nm or llll" pur-mw of . . ,....i..... .,,' ,,,,,‘,=,,,,,,,,_ hint of virginal freshness; s. pro- n.- mi r... u.» m u .1 rwliouw. \llf‘ll ulll- iiirnlellltll as the sun kissed the greens and} bioxvns 0n Wandsworth Common] m Nnrv-m- and sent the grey and mauve shad-‘ m‘ ,I>||l.v.~(--|-(,“§‘ ' ows chasing one another back to the i w Inn-humus, -r i..---t-i n, llnlr-rl rm. . “eunlh d». IIPR‘ .\. D. 1H‘). I / num m‘ 1 é :’,'_:,‘h',l" ';f_'('_~r"_']j;"{t yun<ll.siovered kingdom where shady _ _ " ' lows lvc, a skylark scared joyously < ‘-—'"--————~——— W -- info the dcepening blue, canticiesl spilling from his soft, brown throat] In the distance, London-the; ,tztantess-was stirring from her 15 George y” (“pl 5,’ lslumber. The incessant-and some‘ , , __ _ _ h V’ way, musical-wear of the traffic “DIME (‘i"‘““ll‘u‘ itiiat dies away at midnight to the‘ ' iinerest murmur, and then for a. ' per ed to complete silence, nv TIIE MATTER or IRE VOLUNTARY WINDING UP ACT fil/S/A of Ii. J. MacNlilLl. BLACK asp bfLVI-Ilt mx ('().\I|'.»\.\'i, Lin. sorrel: is neicssi" units‘ short lhirl lrecuii agon 0n the first lifiie liizit a Special (Lem-rail filer-ling o1‘ of its flail) crescendo’ and soon h, __,,,.,|,,,;d,.,s m- um 1L _,_ ma“ uitvr the lark had winged from the tin-Ll Black and Silver i~‘u.\- Ctifllpuny {eye's vis ca, the first human forms Jmiterl will be held in the uiiice oi‘ ‘came along the Commons paths ullz. Stewart at Nurtham in Prlnre ‘H M b 1 511mm,, In Prince Edward “and U" . l l‘ ‘r glit faves fumed cltyyvards.‘ Lfhursday the twenty-fourth rlay of brcaihllli! cieeply‘ of the first sweet-l psovemlier A. 1)., 1e62, at the lmur ,eued breaths cf the morning and p. two o'clock I’. M. for lhc purpose ‘finding life-if only for a m0ment_ Ill passing a resolution: requiring the “Try 800d 5.11.1 (fompany tu he wound up! ' hinder the provisions of "The Vol- Non” of “m” people suspected pintary winding up A“, “and yo, that behind a blarkthorn bush, sixi Lift‘ tllizllligsguilzll ‘llllllsiptingtla llquli‘; yards from the path. where the - i5 ll 0T5 OI‘ N! Si! - ‘ i pv ding up, and for the giving or “lute snow or its boom gustened w-th the dew, lay the inert figure 0f a marl. h: heavy overcoat tuck-j nun-mquentuil. rtlrcctlons. and for llie tanviciinn nf -'ll!.‘l‘l other busi- he s, as r iy he incidental thereto. l): 1| this; twenty-seventh day b!" (wlrilir-r, A. 1)., I932. hat crammed tightly upon his head' ed snugly around him; his soft mti. u predlecton for been the case. When consciousness did return to him, like a lazy cloud struggling There is a certain attractiveness ‘ across the face of the sun, a sense May morniig-a [of numbness assailed him. His limbs felt almost immovable: a dull be- Lse of spiung almost fulfilled, and wilderng pa n throbbcd in his tem- r pies, and when h to greet the sky, he closed them again hurriedly, the glare causing a burning sensation under the lids. Slowly his brain reeled from its stupor and began to function more normally. Diiigeiitly he sought to think back a little whle and then, real'slng that he was out in the open and not 1n his comfortable bed at Half Moon street, he filled his lungs deeply with the sweet, blossom scented air about him. The effect was almost magical. He struggled into a sitting position and found the sensat on of nausea. ‘iwith which he had awakened fromiTnat gentleman had been his drugged sleep, evaporating. life began to tingle in his limbs. His head felt clearer. and looking across the Common he saw an omnibus rumbling along the road ln the dis-' Lance. With an elfort he struggled to his UTICURA THE SYMBOL . the bush to admire the bursting feet, su glory of the buds and to catch tii Yifull magic of their subtle perfumeP-Ie fei And because none of those who that his knees were lacking their crossed the Common in those earlyiaccustomed rigidity. He looked at morning hours had time to indulge his watch. It was half past nature study, Peter Blayne remained hidden from the public gaze for probably an hour road. One or longer than otherwise might have him with curl To Those Who Appreciate the Best e_ hand t: incredibly weak, and foun the Common making desperate efforts to get h bearings. Then the cloud rolled a infernal censerl Everything! five. ‘More people were hurrying across the instrument, "and if I don't sec m me direction of we you before, ‘I'm catching the first your friend, Mas Freda vane- two of them fflggrded available train north." osty as he stood there trounced Blayne gi-miy. “Want any assistance?" asked vvebster tersely. "No thanks," smiled Blayne into d Blayne left the box and hailed a y; taxi. lnstructng the driver to put Jliim dawn at the far end of Moore fthat breathed opulence from every He remembered that he ought, by, Wildvw and every porch. {of those ocrursed drug fumes filter lng from his brain. do what he did. He began to run across the Common towards the road. At first lie was aware that hi! SW16 Was stiff and cramped, [but as hLs objective drew nearer, his limbs loosened and vigor m. turned to him, - Fortunately at the junctlqn o; the road he found a call box and asked for Inspector Webster's number, dragged from his bed to answer the tele- phones insistent summons. He was istartled when he heard Blaynehs Vvlfie- Even more astounded when Blayne gave him a rapid prcc}; of events. l "Pm lust off now to see if I can 0F PURITY EH17? My Qyrpp-R 0|,» THE DmEC-l; and a silk scarf tucked germs his Th ill T0118! PTCPIITGHDOYIS ti}? ‘i b f.“ '4 i ‘ mt“- _ _ film“- | ° s”?- ffllgrlnt and pure, cleanses and protects; the 4-bit ‘v . ‘. . ., 1- l - - ~. rom vewi , an Ise tic on e ' - i: l} 211.1 ‘Maw. nu ii/ni n Irrpplrlint His body v/aa concealed r 1 Q lllanment 1 p _ d h sling, removes rashes and im- i , ,9) .j,.g_i/,l.fi~{, I rm“ STEWART - by the low lateral branches o.’ the, lotions; the Tulcumimpmuapleaaing fragrance to the skin t " ‘ Seémtn}, thorn and could only have been; so-nzsc. 0intment25eand50c. TnIcurn25c. Canadian cum-a I c? /~ fl '1 lmo-in-ai-izi. been by onwrw who walked across] . “"”‘“-'-"""4-WQ=-PIIIBI-.W.Mw _ l / I until nearly two o'clock. I thought lEhtS. to have been breakfastlngi Fillldmately the number 0f the c opened his eyesIin a Bradford hotel, with the lasthmlse had returned l° hlm- and 35 . f lie walked afong a few minutes later he found himself confronted by the If Peter Blayne had not ppssggg- same elderly woman he had met ed a constftut on Tke a Itfelstiuithe night D9501‘?- lhe would no; have hm, able to “I'm afraid you're too late, sir," said the woman, apologetically, in ‘answer to his inquiry for the mys- iterious Miss Freda. Vane. i "How do you mean, too late?" “Miss Vane left last night, sir, and I don't know when she will be back." "Do you mean that she's gone for good?" "Oh, no sir! She often goes away for a week-sometimes a month. She keeps her rooms on. I always Bet the rent, sir-in advance." There was no mistaking this wo- iman‘; honesty. she suspected noth- iiia; knew nothing about last night's affair. Blayne told himself that he might have expected this. It was Junllkely that the so-cnlled Miss Vane would stay on at the house l to be 1n when he called upon her. 5 Twenty mnutes later he let him- self into his flat. Hooker was there to greet him. Blayne was conscious of the man's amazed scrutiny, and then glancing in the mirror, noticed that. lie presented a somewhat dis- hevelled appearance. "I hope there's been notlrng the matter, sir? I waited up last night you might have been rather late, pportng hhnseli with one manage to find that house in Cad- without the bag. sir. I had it heic on a bough o; me bhcmhom, agar. Gui-dens. 1 think I can," an- rcady packed. You look pale, sir, too. lAnything I can get you, sir?" "A little amp or brandy in hot ‘water, would be most acceptable, Hooker. I've spent the night on Waudsworth Commonp thanks to ‘charming young lady, isn't she?" "My friend, sir! Excuse me, sir. I don't recollect having heard of the lady before." There was a wealth 'Way completely and he remgnibeiulSliffiiili, and at half past six Blayne of indignation in Hookers voice. ed. The house! The woman! Thatmllnd 1131159“ 919611118 we Girdms and Blayne smiled as he noted his man's obvious discomfort. "I hope it wasn't 8llylh’ng serious, sir. 1-" "qlianks," Hooker! Bring me the brandy to the batthroom, then start an the breakfast. A good break- fast if you don't mind. While you're waiting for the eggs to set consult Mr. Bradshaw and ask him about the trains to Bradford." Blayne was in his dressing room preparing for a hot tub. “Very good. sir. I mentioned that your bag was still ready, sir." Hooker withdrew, silently. "I don't know what I'd do wit-h- out Hookerl Blayne told himself Is he went to his bath. "He looks after ms like a father. If ever I should loose Hooker, I'd have to learn to organise l'fe all over again and" at my time of life, learning is rather painful.’ POTATOES AND TIIRNIPS We are buying a limited supply 0f Tur- nips and Tablestock Potatoes all this week. Highest market pric- es. J. Lester Douglas, Ch’town, P. E. I. sir, and had gone on to the rtalron In the adjacent kitchemglvli". Christopher Hooker busted himself with a kettle of hot water and l bottle. There was a frown on his ugunllly complacent brow and oo- casionally he r almost sub- consciously, in his tasks as thouflh he were exigaaed in tlrnklnz Wt 5 very complex problem. . (To sq Continued) NATURAL GAB CONSUMPTION Production of natural gas in Canada in August was reported at 911,982 thousand cubic feet, a 7.1 per cent. decline from the previous month's total of 981,700 thousand cubic feet and 29.8 per cent. from the August, 193i. ' norm: Miss Laura Hughes, agent for The LePage Individual Communion Cup 00., Toronto, will give 10% on all orders received before Nov. 15th to the Protestant Orphanage. Send for information to Miss town, P. Also 10% of all sales of novedty hand bags will be given to the Protestant Orphanage. The price of the handbags is $1.25 sent C.O.D. to any address. This offer expires Nov. 15th. 6029-1i Spinning and Weaving 8cm! mo your wool to be lmui Ink yarn and wove into Blankets. The charge: are: Single yarn l8 owls. doubled 28 oooto per pound. Bllllketl 82.00 and ll llllllllli’ ’ 51.86. It token llvo lbs. of wool per Blanket. Wool must be well walr- edundalldlrtl-Ild burrs vivid out. The also of single yarn h nod- lam aha doubled yarn one. medium and coarse. In shipper: name on all parcels and owners name. ml- druo and instruction lnlllll- $8M by mail or llellllt. lrolght will be paid on m n». ma. taxonomy. ‘w.- ll Queen Street Laura Hughes, Box 3, Ohariotte- " a I. v*~¢so-o4Q\-ovoo>oo¢-O-0+O4 EYES TESTED AND - GLASSES FITTED ' .|. s. canon u. w. canon g Optomctrls I42 Richmond Street Professional Cards A Stewart 8. Lowther .|. n. srawaar, K. c. N. W. LOWTIIER BABBISTEBS. souciroas. no 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN McLEOD 8t BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Barrister and Altorney-at-LII MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street J.A. MacDonald. K- 9- BABIISTER. SOLIOITOB. do. " llllcy Bulldinl Charlottetown. P. E- Ill!"- lioncy no Loan and Colleellolu ;-_ ‘hm u" very but attention. b15-2-8-lmonth. {may Eihilu a0. Mal-billion, LL9- . Barristers a Solicitor! Money to Mill charlottetoivn and Monti!" ll, F MacPllEE, BJ- BARBISTER. SOLICITOR NOTARY. 6Q ‘m, gqflfllng, Charlottetown svs-a-a-i month. MARK R. McGUIGAN B. . saunas-m. soucrron. IT° more! 1-0 LOAN n ihllulun Block. Charlottetown. P 2*! 3?-