PAGE Two THE CH.§_R_I.U'I'ITITY\VI:J_Y (IIIARDIAN SEPTEMBER 8, 19'}; “it? t l l A Morning Smile . I scathing sermon 0n vanity and ex- travagance." ~ "Yes; and his own w.fe sitting there with a new $20 hat on.‘ “Oh! I wondered Just why he was so worked up!" _ “The IIIZIIIEL?!‘ certainly preached a‘ ,.\ l 'll/ifé—37|_ip >- _ Worn For The Cook OLD-FASHIONED ILLTE can; Hugh gévaaypfioguyifimvlm Pour 1 cup n! hmuuq wztoy , cup chorpcd flares, Lei. cool, Cream tablespoon butter Wltil 1 cup brown or white suuar. Add l well-beaten v egg. Sit. tcgcihcr 1'.- Cklljq flour, 1' 1 l-nrw; n,_-_-,.~,; fr“ in me 39M amp " teaspoon soda, h. teaspoon bakinzllgaspe growtod; l‘ POWdBY- Add 1 (‘UP CTIOPPPQ Hut-i 50F "The cycs of the world are vxatchU these dry inurezlzcixis. Add altcr- ‘mg m," » nately with date: nntl wrw-‘l- m first. mixture; I teaspoon vanilla. added last. bfokrzltc oven. Delicious with fudge frostlnu. Six FlICOS bacon. 2 rice. 2 tablcspnrliis" in 1k pinch pepper. 2cm broil bacon, from: pan and put into warmiiis: oven b9‘. keep hot, Add tlcc to fat 1n pan and whsngc our course for Perla-harm. . .4 wranvm Jcoumr RY HUGH FELNDF ‘"Z‘;~' i915 l I 1i f,‘ (cwtri? A A | ltlONTlNUitD l.‘!td muli~.l=iil' did lllL‘ thc honor tn Pic tct" dc Are you indeed my frixncl? _ hculdirt. I come here?" I his cnncc slid against mine um mm," ,aiirl wc grasticd hands. 1- ,.r,.,,_,,,fl,,,k,d‘ tThcyc i; m cm, m: "Became word lms barn brriuzht. to p1,“. t,“ $11119 11mm,“ you musllln f-Itiutclla Orleans" this very morn- l-sm-k thc m. t. bcttvccn Isle au Aigieiuc for‘ the ownl" to watch out for and m; [jut m9 and .831, for 11cm ,vcn. to tal-zc vnu prLsf-1icl~ and return '.<:;cnla." ‘jxoil to Bil i." "For Pcn.<"acaln!"' cxtlalmed Jules. “\V.- waste Why arc you “When thc sun goes clown we'll pzzriuliufr dzwzi thc bayroii t0 thc lake ‘a. thc edge of night?" l t l l t cup; cooked tviwrdfi. l stir imtfl hot. Add tnilk, then wcll- gTherc you will drop me and I willpick "Oh I go to the mouth of the beaten eggs and DPFYWY- 9N1‘. thc"- ‘iip 2-. canoe. I hm" the pistnlcs I pro- l‘?.\'flll (‘I ‘l Iiilfnt l’f‘i‘l‘l'1l75 I 11m remove from pan and qr‘ the lffipqyl 3-0“)- mnivu. tn know who critrs the Tl" i" “"11"?” “i Wlvf‘? “i ’ l "ll ".\lllll.-l"lll‘ l“; a. QOIIUEUIZII]. It. ls brawn." l B5 bOFdPT- ' ‘llqm \l‘(\ should help him." declared "You have bccn ivatchinq ffl‘ me t0 -——" Pasile. "m! ho! Soc hmv red thc-Whine!" Hm is“, l " "'1 l" mv vvknas‘ m" friend Th“ new French ._\l.".fl’vl' tlul cltlcr Pro-slut himsclffl“ ’ l ‘ ‘m " ' “ ‘ ' "=t~""ili<_'-cap hats" are n story in thcznsclvos. 5°" m“ t "M" ‘Thom lmc bar‘: ti thc lakc azirl up tlic llzer- ,.lnri I hcarrl him mutuririz: ‘.- = l" . 1 Llnod on t _ “i110. If you lack anvtlmnq _vnu shall I tvcndered u it were an ill omen ‘ "lay: hcrc ilnlil I can bring it." —__._._i_._.._______ in?‘ II liolrrlci; W135 the Mood or i "What I lack must l-cmc from la L l‘ mm Cm“ m‘ "or m" Noilvcllc Orleairl,“ I \ ispczxwl. ‘We will go there tczethcr. N0 onc will CHAPTER v1 scc us. I will stop outside the settle- ! am instructed by Mm John A. m'nt. ‘Intishall go inside and find a Mcxgngig n, 5,.“ on the pr,,m-,s,,s_ 1 Ker-p an Apmingmpng certa-n 1:? 1 and sav a word from HartsviIIc, rm Tuesday. September \Vitlic.ut inciclcnts of interest thc 117"» 77"‘ iP-»"-°1l “ill "Om" “Till X011 9th’ m’ ‘me "phpk p‘ m" h" 53"“ ipsckct auchoretl at sunclmvn in thc 9‘ 1W‘- 1 llllllkf’ mnsisting of m0 . . I' l =1 l - bundings. situated 13,2‘ an‘: 2 lmcilth of thc little Bayou St. Jcan, or I half miles from xm-(h \"|'l[ghift\_ lTrhoupic, as it still was known to, Alli-Y- MVRAE. manv settlers. Tire Rfattors had com- _ ,_ I _ _ Auctioneer. MW,“ "Mir b,,,.,,flm M, m ham‘, l mm uruld bc lilac. to cnm nth m1. ' ' " ' " _' ' _ '_' {to you. ll "s. ir-iiiw-z-"ilalc. mcnsietlr." c. 2 1 . a . 1 - ‘Jrcrc they ovcr carnini’, their psiors, “T, m] I mu t ‘O on w] no Coed ulthnalt being brought to book by _, ‘ Flflll‘ do Bicnvllc they were loath to, ‘ "leave inc in thc swamps and marshes H" lauierl without cnv amusement. “C-h. t-lzerc are quite a [cw ticrsons 6741-9-8-21, FOR SALE "Hold! I turn my canoe about h fir NOT Orzminf; m“ h Nmh ction about anything but baby. First l5 1, H; Holds Woman's Duty - . Children To l-lusbaml D h D V‘ (301110 Or Children '.' y Ix “Generally Speaking, the Better a Woman Does Her Duty to Her Husband the Better She Does it t0 Her Childremgfor in That Way She Holds Her Home To- gether,” Declares Dorothy Dix Is a womans duty greater to her husband or to her children? I think ‘that. a woman's duty is incomparably greater to her children than ii is to lier husband. Her husband is the man with whom she entered into the mat- ixmonial partnership and her duties to him are speci- fic and well defined and dependent, more or less, on his conduct and how he fulfills his part of the bargain with her. Unclci certain conditions, ll. seems to me, that her moral obligations are wiped out. It. Ls certainly no part of a wife's duty to love and honor an unfaithful husband, or to work arid make a comfortable home for a clrunkard who defiles he: roof with his debnlichss. If a woman still contlnucs to give affection to the llan who ras been disloyal to her and m cherish the one she has to fish out of t1 e gutter, it ls of lier grace and not he! ause he has any. right. to expect or demand i i I l VAL (‘. lvLl Ln a word, ‘vlrm a husband foils in his duty to his wife by that same i fuliPil llc cancels hi1 obdgation to him; but no math-t what B. womms crutc- . icii (i her duty to thcm nevcr ands because her responsibility mvc: ceases She brought them without their volition into the world. She no: only i’ thrust llfc upon them but shc shaped their lives. Lhc gave tllesn their l heredity because sh: picked cut. their father for them as well as sending her own blood through their veins. She madc their environment, It was her in-l fiucncc that was tircdominant. in their formative years. Therefore, a mother's f first duty is to care for these hostages she has given to fortune. I: outranks | iall other obligations and when the good of the children demands it shc ' ; should not only sacrifice hcr husband to them, but herself. I see no reason why a childless woman should endure the martyrdom of 3 marriage that. is a hell on earth, nor why it; is her duty to put. up with in- lsult and abuse from n brutal husband who misuses herfBut if a. woman has i children and has no way to provide f or them, I think that it is her duty to lentlurc any misery that may be her portion in marriage in order to secure lfor hcr children the food, the clothes, the education, the start. lri the world that their father can glve them. » I think, however, that most women overdo their duty to their chlldrsn and unclcrdo their duty to their husbands. They sacrifice their husbands ntcrilesdy" and causclcssly to thclr children, which is onc of thc main rea- rsns why in thc cm! so many husbands default 0n their marriage obligations. It generally begins with the first baby, when a young woman is so anx- ltus to bc a good mother that she forgets that she has any obligation to b0 fa good wife. Before the arrival of the little stranger who is to be her hus- band's fatal rival, she has spent her time catering to husband, She has doll- (cd rersclf up so that she may look good to him. She has spent her evenings amusing and entertaining him an “going about with him. She has been lovcr and comrade. " ' - l I l But wi:h thc advent of thc boby only too cften all of this is changed. all? lcts, herself get. slouchy and sloppy because baby pulls at hcr clothes and She has no interest in anything but the baby, noconver- Wild horses coulclnt drag her away from the cradle, and she rs frankly relieved when husband goes out by himself of an evening and leaves her to perform her rites cf infant. worship in peace. musscs licr hair. _. ‘F ll v . v2.1. m! T : ‘tcrr l Let 7 without cano"; and Jules Mattsr ~ ,0 m fur‘ n r q O 1 C I _ -ln.'< fYl'(‘.l(‘Ilt‘_\‘ hang us .-~..i and have Excellent 50 acres, Charlottetown flFflnkll‘ Fflldf {mm ., mliilly. Good dwelling and out. | "It not cnlv would offend m_v heart ‘I ' _ buildhuw ‘mung "rchflrd Wm‘ M 2m 1H”? w,“ wwlfld in this muck . rte “an ha, innit 11h llm layou. and L, ' ' I ‘ , ‘ ‘ ' I fclleucd \",'l"n he haltr-d without ranch. ;!ll0ll'_1<‘ll)~_ but it. tm-tlrl cnrlatlfzci‘ my t“, 411w.» H Qt\"x-7rvl' ., Apply l". A. Farquliarsnn, 99 Ilp- It‘ Vi" ‘inut a vanoc you will b0 l ‘m ll ‘ ' l‘ "w I “"5 m” P" Pflflfl! 51-. (‘hilrlotlclnwm ‘ . ; tllrzi his z-wcallcnty vrmild- . , . l 61M ,, n8 8 cm H lgmph 1 I ' n ‘nu ‘M hme You ‘.131.- Orlcaws. when so many immi- ‘~'~"~ ' - Y - ~ J1 =11 I ‘- .. .. , did n 1h”? H" “mud knqw p. m. harl l)f‘(‘:1 lcl to bclcle wast Red Cross Linei F urness "S. S. ROSOLIND" Freight and Passengers. Arrive ChTown and sail for ' st. John's. i Sept. 16f CARVELI. BROS. LTD. ' AGENTS mwf-tf. Leave Montreal Sept. I2 __.._ ............. l Professional (Jardsl Miss Bober ta Y‘. S enccr p ours was‘ thc only boat to wmc this l wag‘ .inc(~ ":11 e:~'-"iitic:l from BIIOXL?‘ Fllltillflll. liivilc, havc thc kind heart to illlfl a lmz ccumc for monsiciti‘, Basile was gonc but a short time.‘ when lic rcturncd with a small pi-l ivguc, whlcl: h" said he had “bor- rownd" from some of Le Page dul Pratzs people. Entcring this with my i gun and a hag of smoked meat, I pml- l died into the swamp growth. l while tlze Manors 10st no time in putting! about and working thc packet into al hght. brcez" and sailing snutli. doubt- i less t-ri hide up in Lake Bortzne for a iwinlc. Their alibi. if I were discov- crcd by: my cncmisc wou‘d be of a ateoerapliicnl nature. Ka-pinrz close t0 the bank and nn-l rlm- shelter of thc overhanging \vil-, ‘Inn's. I worked along slowly until thc l’ , ‘Al? R anothm- Fari= -'»ccmcd \"r,v llTZll‘. ‘ From Jut bcvunrl a warshousc ‘trthcthil1:\‘r'"ti‘atc‘;0fafluff‘. I p.“ and his ylcsplc stilll ‘Iii cc wcrc .~l.\' .11 his family’ One of them played l her’)? two years a g0. Jthc fluic.“ I said, “Same will bc hcrc now, but their crhin i: ‘fitrthtr down. Ami they are all clcvntcrl to his cxcfllcntryls inter- ests." was the significant reply. "The three Orillant broth Can I trust thmi?" "Two arc ltcrc now. They are lflvnl tn France," was thc discourag- ing answer. “Tlvn there is no one I can ap- prcach tinder the seal ‘of scrrccv?" "Fri one. mansirur. I must do your cirand. Who is thc man you wish i-rrvrrl taken to?" Non-x the "c crises, and they are plentiful, of the sacrifice of the father to the ciiilcl are unneccssaryn It does a child no good for a. mother to sit, and xisatch it slcrp, while her whole happiness and the ultimate welfare cf the child depends ilpon her watching her husband and seeing that he does not stray away from his own fireside in s eat-ch of the society his wife is too much absorbed to give him, Many a wife forgets that, while she can hire a reliable woman to take care of her children there is no woman she can trust to take care of her hus- band, and while shc is ln thc nursery holding little Johnny's hands some vamp is generally holding hands with her husband, Furthermore, this process of making father a goat for the children does not end with the cradle. It continues. Women justify themselves in shut- ting up their houses and going away for two or three months at. B. time in the summer and leaving their husbands alone in the city by saying that they do it for their children. The children must have country air and coolness and room to play ln, and so the mothers, calmly hugging this alibi to their breasts. go forth to summer hntz-ls wlth their offspring and then feel themselves grlevously ill- _,Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal a-Fashions -:- Literature . I i l Mas. CHARLES HOWARD Jsuonm ‘ ’ MR5. IVAN B. DAHL “HANDS” l lovely as on our l/Vedding Day thanks to Lux in the dishpan” ,i_, HANDS lovely as a bride's! Every- where . . . east, west, north, south . . . young wives exclaim ovcr a new- found secret . . . a way to cherish the beauty of their hands in spite of home- making cares. - "Using Lux for dishes and of/zersoap and water tasks has kept my hands as dainty as when I was married, 6 years ago,” writes lllrs. Ivan B. Dahl. Many other wives, like Mrs. Charles Howard Jacobie, Mrs. Carolyn Pier- son, also give Lux the credit for hands lovely as a girl's, after years of house- keeping! Among hundreds and hundreds of young wives interviewed in ll big cities, 96 out: of every 100 are using Luxl Wisely, they follow the advice of beauty experts, who say-“A wife who uses Lux in housework has hands lovely Mus. CAROLYN P1211508 So many soaps contain hai-mtul alkali which dries up the beautifying oils of the skin, leaving it roughened and wrinkled. Lux never drix these fine oils. The soothing, bland Lux suds ...' give your hands hours of marvellously I q gentle, comforting beauty care! --"" Yet Lux for all your dishes costs less than 1c a day! Hands lovely as pa bride’; for less than 1¢ a day '. . . LUX for Dishes . . DWI‘ Brother: Limited, Tormto-Sggu-p-mnken by lpflblflfifltllas: (hair Emdlmdfl "II Governor-Gen and Vilcountea W ‘ l/Vhat the Fashionable are Wearing Etiquette _ | Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished t "’ “m” With Every , Pattern ; . _._...__ I Q. Low inurlld ;.n ilrimarrled _ ivcmrin sign he'l- letters? Fellow Trnity ('nllc"t~ 0t‘ blush- , _ "You are to Incl Alnclcmctscllc IIFPKl bccausc their husbands finally rebel at being sacrificed to the children I ' . . . I London. England l’--“1““" "f a ‘mam? “Md ‘(PM mcillahlic. rrlc. lrut lust. arrivcd fromland console themselves after thc fashion of summer wldowers. By AnnebeJe Worthlngton ' A’ vmn her m“ nanlle’ andmh. OrganisBt arid (‘Lira Director |intw hzdirlg. It was quite dark under ;Blkm' ,1 one i? en know W“ mmo ‘writing t0 strangfis We P" ‘e5 all ‘l "PP" 51:0 archinv trees and I could not,‘ " _ ‘ g ' ‘ ' a _ _ _ V _ _ , , - “Mi55." Plano, Orzzrn, Theory hi‘? mm whmhr“ it ‘m; n whim 1W1 in finrl l‘lf‘1‘_ ‘mu v.11‘! say in hvr thc I _ Ancl tltcin. are other mcthcis who enslaie their husbands for their chdd- 1 ‘ t Q. IS n Ileccssan, for a ma“ m 51nd“ Bang“; (hum-h, my”. “T, F, 1),», Whltf‘ Inriln; Then l ion and “no litcrallyt work their husbands to death to give their children - A charmingly slender iii-lined Chil- I ask permission to sniolze when he ‘l. s with women who smoke? f)" "l"»"k mm‘ “"1"”? m“ m“ "°lj,._,,,,_ m,- hffp 5; mg H111 mmmd t; {fine clothes. fine cars and a thousand frills that they cannot. afford. ltlic follow rtartcrl a son: impulm- nnlgo with mop, ‘ I-‘itr Street Open for Rcci-ztration Sept. 17th. We all know must-holds in which the husband is the shabblest member of the fam- ' fon voile adds attractive fulness to its skirt through circular godets. A I ltlw St. Lauri-once As he rlrrzv ahrcastl _, _ _ _. A__ . , I” mv wd “mplnflp I mm" pnnm: A woman from the nlf. ship. Oncl ‘ '- " ‘ ' '|_‘_ ‘ nf those woman!‘ he tlroaxrd. ‘Mp Labmdm‘ lot the white; man! But _vnu will make who izcad salntsu, he ojsculatedwfamfi rhrvuglu a noose. What a price swt-zving his canon with a swirl of his ,0" ‘Your hpfld_,, Hmddlc and making totvard m’. "Hal- ,1 Sm 1 mum d" my Own errand,“ I I I ‘m W“? can‘ m m? rmm dark broke in. "When lny friend Irclicvl-s. m m” W” “f a “hm man‘ ltvl of m" hc (loos evil in (loin: my] AUDITORS Accounts Audited. Income Tar Returns Prepared. A. E. MacNeill 6'; Co. 127 Grafton Street ‘The White Indian." I cant ouslysbmlnctv, . , . l ‘fl-hlvl-lmo‘ "rphmm l "Be st'll, my friend. You annoy "Dialalel wnnsimlr Brampton! l me! I will find this woman with the outlandish naznc. I will speak the wards. If she is fml cncuzl-l to come ivitlt mo I will brim hcr hcre to this dead village " 1T0 be rontinuedi What lPlTlblP folly! With the whnlcl Gulf-Pensacola -the-upp'r-rlvcr, t0| {rrrrcl you comr- here?" he growled. Mark R. McGuigan, B. A. nlinnsrun, somcrrun, an. noun! T0 1.0m 9'1"" "Mi- °"""'""°"“~ H“ Prohibition Commission ---—-» - Chain-nan. Mr. saunas c. mmwn. t," McLeod s. Bentley Margate, p. E. . Send m lnformillnn rernrdlnlt ln- I 1. A. BENTLEY _ u, , w_ a BENTLEY’ L u fraltlnnr of Prohibition Act to ¢ Chic! Inspector B. J. Haywood 0r To il,v;- n ticreon tiushcd about from place -»(",m1 ncver conifdcrcd; nothing but. a hill payer. If it. comes to a showdown between rrn is greater than it. is to her husband, but. it ls not hcr duty to sacrifice her Generally speaking, the better she does husband needlessly to her children. l to place, his happiness and pleasure l the two, a woman's duty to her child- her duty to her husband the better she does it to her childrn. For ln that way she keeps hcr home together. as she does not do when she is so absorbed in hcr children that she forgets she has a husband at all and leaves hlm i either to grouch over being neglected, HYNDMAN-LAMY AMHERST. N. S., Sept. 4.—One of the most attractive weddings of the season took place this afternoon in Christ Church, Rev. Horace E. Dibblec officiating, when Marv Jean Lamy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. thc bride of Frederick Walter I-Iynd- Inmate: and nmmey-n-t." "w" l i 75 Dnrv-hestrr Street, Chlrlotletown - ATSQSI? ALE 8t STOUT MATERIALS (Iron 1m unsnlirilrd mlimanial) noun T0 com OPTIVAL SERVICE Charlottetown, l’. E. I. ‘l’ McDonald & McPhee . tvizs EXAMINED, mnssm surrusn sun FITTED. B. A. I. A. McDONALD. n. F. McPl-Il-Jn CAREFUL ATTENTION GIVEN T0 REPAIR WORK. ll Stem Ind it and: In i-nelleiu drink u wall u n lfltlll. It h u flue u the .mnn. son of Mr. and Mrs W. Eards- , lcy Hyndman, of Charlottctotvn. Rcv. Mr. Blbblee, was assisted by Canon , Malone, rector of StjPetefs Church. Charlottetown. ‘The bride, who was given away by hcr fahtcr. entered the church to Mendefssohnl: wedding march, play- ed by Walter MacNutt, of Charlotte- town. She presented a charming ap- good old English tout." Mn’! 7!: Im a ellld. which main O [I 10m, In M. Allen It Cm, Ltd. Flea 51., Toronto I BABIIQTERS, ATTORNEYS. ETD MON!!! ‘I0 LOAN Stewart & Lowther Illllbluxfs ~17: '1 nulls. 5Tb Region-m! Optometrist ‘l! Gran uenru. sum ____,_ r67 Item sum Phonq uz-i. on... mo Richmond s..." l EFFICI EN T E I I I l. D. STEWART. K. (L lfllll T0 LOAN; Charlnlmnu *'—-~ t rflkiav. 3- at-,._:..< 4 penance in n dress of white lace with pearls and train, and czm-‘ed u ncsegay of roses, ‘The bride was at- 'tended w mm mo. Milli and mu Aubrey H. Lamy, of Amherst. became _ or to be stolen by some other woman. DOROTHY DIX, Vivian Sargent, who were attired in gowns of blue moire, with small vel- vet: hats to correspond. The flower girl, little Miss Phyllis Webster, was ‘dressed tn old-fashioned peach. The groom was supported by his brother. ; Robert Hyndman. of Charlottetown. . At the reception, held at. the home at the brides parents after the cere- mony, the bride's mother wore a cmvn of plum crepe, with velvet hat, while Mrs. l-lyndman wasgowned ln , blue cnorgcttc. There were many out- inf-tnwn guests at. the wedding as ltvcll as the reception. The bride's smlng away costume ' was a black stilt, with fur. Mr. and Mrs. Hynrlznan will make a motor trip through the provinces and will then take up their residence ‘n Clxrlcitctavn, l-nl-rlu-LI-Lhl-nnllnllltl-n. l I ~sesa . 4B inches bust. fitted hip yoke merges into a pancl ‘l at the front and at. the back. which i contributes further lengthened line. 1 The bodice with slight all-around, blpusing rolls its fronts inlr: Jcrs Elitl adds a vest with Vlonnet neckline to detract from breadth. The inverted pin-tucked shoulders with sunburst effect. at. the back neckline is deco."- Btive. This unusual Style No. 2634 may be had in sizes 36, 3B, 40. 42, 44. 46 and l No. 2634, slzc 36, requires 4% yards ‘ of 39-inch material with M yard 35- inch contrasting. Silk crepe shantung. printed llncn and printed batlste are lovely in thc new pastel shades to freshen your nliclsummer wardrobe. t‘ Pattern price l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Be sure to fill l In size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. l............... ...... 1 Name ~ Street Addrraa f ---nununuouonu-n..... I on; , gm» l smoking at the A. If they are he should time, no; but otherwise. l ask their permission. Q. When bouillon is served ‘in l one-handled. or no-hzinrlled cup; 1191' should it be taken? u A. A spoon is used. BEEF EXPORT RESUMES The current Live Stack MEYK" 5°‘ port of the Dominion Deliflftmenl l“ Agriculture carries an 1mm 0' 111°“ than ordinary interest relatirl; l0 t“ resumption of the export cattle trill with Great Britain after B “P59 °.7 more than a year. The Manchest! Commerce wok the first averse!» shipment of 128 head. These cattll were pilrchastd in the Toronto yum ' and were of the type known 85 This} Manchester feeders," “flaw around i100 pounds in W838“ Another shipment of some 200 heM is now reported u beln; 011 "if? t» seaboard from Alberta for cflrcfl slaughter shipment. "This enteffl or the part. of the producer. trédf and steamship companies mould m. vlte a renewal of confidence "I'm: market. and indeed is already a good moral erlez-t." observes the "E jozt. '- . ‘.- m... lawn Imam u: Afl§~