s“. NJ’- p.,.uk.»-_--evsr_ ; GARDENING PAGE TWO 0000-04 fO-v§O-OQO-O l 0-0-0-040040 9 44+ winter Blooming il-‘lowezi '.l'hess bulbs om B150 b9 819W" just uneasily indoors. By planting a few every two weeks from now until Christmas a succession of bloom will b9 obtained throughout most of" tho winter. They are usually D1811!’- cd in fancy bowls or painted tins - and the real secret of succem lies in getting them properly started. The most satisfactory planting material is special fibre, obtainable at all seed stores. This is clean. moisture absorbing and very cheap, as it can be used over and over again. With it no drainage will be required. One hyacinth will make a fair show in a bowl but it is best to plant at least three tulips, and up to a dozen or fifteen narcfsussel are oftcn put in the ordinary bowl. The fibre is pressed firmly about the bulbs and the latter are only planted deep enough to cover all but the tim. The pot is then well watered and stored in some cold, dark place. ‘This start is essential with all but the narcissus which can be grown inthe open window. A temperature of around 50 degrees in about right though it will not matter if it goes iowcr. The pots should not be allowed to dry out, ‘lumps, daffodils and hyucinths are left in this cold dark place until tho pots are filled with roots and tho stems have started to grow. Some varieties will take longer than others, and thus by selecting the most advanced bulbs and bringing out a few pots at s time, s long blooming period can be obtained. From the cellar the pots are brought into full light and a normal room temperature. They are watered lib- erally and soon reach the blooming stage. once tho flowers are olpen keep as coal as possible, especially at night in order to prevent wilting. This rule annueb to cu indoor blooms and cut flowers. MOVING ‘I'm’!!! Early spring is the best time to move most perennial flowers, shrubs and young trees, though if necessary l. good deal of this work may also be carried out in the fall. It is well to get it over in September so that some growth ch11 be mode this fnl! and it is essential that the plant be well watered both before lift- ing‘ and after arrival in its new quarters. A full pail of wntcr is not too much for the ordinary plant. Oi‘! the perennials, iris, pesony. deiphin- iurns, phlox and other; are divided udih a sharpspado and moved‘ at this time. shallow planting is advis- i able with the firs‘. two, i i of head or throat is usually benefited by tho vapors of- c..." M3 52.33512 c mi: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN I Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box Slovenly Wife Has Herself to Blame When Husband Turns to Neat Woman - Can Father Beat Goodness Into Seven- teen-Year-Old Daughter? Dear Miss Dix—Whst should l. man expect from a. wife who does not try to keep up with him!‘ _I cm a business man and I Hm ashamed 0! my wife. Bhe is not neat nor up-to-date. She has all the money she needs and could dress nicely, but she won't spend any of it on clothes. All she cares about is the money which she soaks away in the . bank. I have become interested in a woman i who has common sense, education, culture, l looks and character and of whom I could be‘ y proud as a wife. Should I divorce my wife and marry this other woman? DISGUSTED HUSBAND. i Answer: Can't you wake your wife up and make her see that imless she keeps step with you that she is boun to lose out? Can't you make her realize that when she is slovenly and slouchy she is repulsive to you. and that she is simply driving you away from her to some Pretty 8nd dimly ‘Yomfln “'h° 1-9 9°55’ ‘m the eyes? Can't you make her perceive that no man can go on loving a woman of whom he is ashamed? Tcll her that you do not intend to be drugged down by u. wife who is a dead weight, nor humiliated by one who is a slovcn, but that before you divorce her you are going to give her anotherrhance. 'I‘hat cer- toinly should givo her something to think about, and, if she cares for you at all, she will brace up and turn ovcr a ucw lcnf. Certuinly any woman must be n monilnlcnt of sloth nnd ignorance who docs not realize that in these duys uuy woman who keeps her hus- band has to be up and doing and keep herself peppcd up in mind and body. Otherwise, she loses out to some woman who is on the job. In olden times, when marriage was s... until-donth-d0-us-pu1"t contract, possibly a woman could slump clown after marriage and let Nature take its course and get as dull and. fat and be as sloppy-looking as she pleased. She might bom her husband to tears because she never had a new or original idea or read anything. She might be so lazy she let the house look like a pigsty. She might degenerate into a perpetual state of wrappers until she looked like something the cat brought in, but her wedding ring made her safe. Her husband had to stick to her, no matter how tired of her he became, nor hard she was to look at. But gone axe the days when marriage was s cinch for women. In these times of easy divorce marriage is a temporary job that a wife holds only on good behavior, and as long as she puts up n good show. She is in adult teeth lost are taken by this one gum disease. The trouble with pyorrhea is that it may be under- mining your teeth for many years before you realize it. age of forty have pyorrhea, so you can't "fool around" about it. You simply must have when teeth Actual pain is nothing compared with hurt pride I It is hideously embarrassing to lose even one tooth-one tooth in front. You stop in the middle of a sentence, in the midst cf a smile, to cover up the ugl ga with a wavering, nervous an . Much, 1rmch, MUCH worse than any pain you could have suffered when that tooth was pulled You should be more afraid to stay away from our dentist than to see him. Ony a dentist can diagnose pyorrhua—and half the Four out of five people past the -.Woman’sg Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- 4...,q§»¢4+»»a $9004 000-004 oooowwooa-cooaoua *‘ "More than (‘fill/HIE is, needed i the home treatment of your teeth, 1t will pay to use a toothpaste in- vented by s dentist. Dr. R. J. Forhan devoted a lifetime to pyor- rhea treatment. His professional formula is used by thousands of dentists and his home formula is embodied in Forhmfs Toothpaste. It's the finest toothpaste with an extra-protection feature. Don't let pyorrhea get started. Use preven- tion. Use Forhanb. It's ncver too Fashiwls. 1,-1- ‘ A4AAAA L‘_ AWNIWIEBTIW“ ‘lwnbonmclyicddnddiaflllcdto mob an omqtflsth degree that “Than is a wind that sinlI 0! than a lglflhg- mmggmqg, '1”;- vmmtrv minus-I life 1m m them they may mused 0f hcethered hills And brown-om b. “m, bug y“ .11 hum“ pun”; sac they are nluolen. ‘ hcookl. 0f golden scents that wonder all amend m: a nose-bleed tblh one has Anmng the flowers, that open wide djflflguny in mppmg, mgmq; ‘b. their 5111111118 em- jorbent couch with lemon juice and plug the nostril. It will stop abrwst inunedfatoly. "And thrmwh the. city lhwtl I softly dram these country friends _ ‘ And trail them ha/ppily along my Way. Thenkina the ‘Ymd- that swtlv n, Thole ma» ma Servo 1mm- oinss or wimtrv thus‘? nmuy Economically and Well —G. R. Bennett, in the London Miercm-y. iuss or suns BREAD m us- rz runnmcs At this time of the year bread 50011 becomes stale; however, care- ful tho housewife is, and on Mon- _ day morning she often finds more Refinement of sentiment and piece‘ of ma“ “m, ‘h, m,“ con. feeling is well, but some one sug- vemmfly m, M- mmbt SENTEMENT < SEPTEMBER 19, 1933 “wg “vn_‘%“"____:_"_i¢_,__,_¢_fg¢g___¢_,A¢-__, H. ...‘c:::¢¢¢¢¢¢#¢v~v-¢‘"'°"§¢ —-¢ ¢‘-¢‘- -‘= ==-—-¢¢-= L :48 . § Literature‘ ultimo..." and Built Me lip" rd!- How 1. in z. p; ' him’! Vogctl lc Comm“ Ovcrcdlnc Anemia Condig "My lut child lived only ten and I was temblysick before and its birth. I begun to take Lydia g Pinkham’: Vegetable Compound helped my nerves and built ms up, think om sh uid ' zrialnwehzciirysh: lstrnearizqg migdldfe 1:‘: oo. MRS. W. MANBELL 462 Gordon Avo., Verdun, Montrec , Quebec. Get s bottle from your druggist tcdq, _ professional early to start the children on i dental advice about twice a year Forhan's, the double-duty tocth- i and when you take up seriously | paste, at all drug stores. happen, so as I came in I took off my coat and pulled down the ‘- -' gests that the refining process rnay| Hem are a few delightful ways of half an hour, squeeze out the mop. be carried to the point of Steriliza- using up p196” o; 5w], brag tion. When feeling and sentiment ' , s! 4- nus mum; He beat me until my back was covered with welts and the skin was cut so I bled. but I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of crying or uttering -.1 sound. Al! this happened because I had come home at 10 o'clock instead of 9 as I was expected. I had stopped over at a girl friend's. My father beats me because he says he wants to bring me up right and that is his method. Bo fur he has succeeded, but any chance I get to do something behind his back I do it. I have to stand for this trcntuicnt because I am a 17-year-old girl and because he believes in a good cziucuiiuu and is like- ly to give it to me. Have you any advice for me? N. E. H. Answer: If you would appeal to the protection of any domestic court, it would stop your father's brutality. He would not dare to beat you if he knew that he would be arrested for assault and buttery if he struck you again. But, if you took such methods, your home life would be made unendur- able to you, for he would find some other way in which to vent his cruelty‘ and his rage at not being impllcity obeyed upon you. So the only advice that I can give you is to study very hard so that competition with a world full of young. pretty and attractive women, and if she holds her own. she has to be on her tiptccs. She has to keep her- self good-looking and well groomed. She has to be an interesting com- panion. She has to be an efficient housckcepr. She has to be able to stand comparison with other women and be a. wife who reflects credit on hcr husband rather than one who makes every one wonder how he hap- pened to marry her, A lot of women are so avaricious that they are not willing to spend enough money on themselves to keep in the running. They begrudge the price of the beauty shop and go around with stringy hair and un- manicured hands and shiny noses. ‘Fhcy nre ‘too stingy to buy any dec- cnt clothes and they look like 30 cents in basement bargain frocks and shabby hats, and then they wonder that their husbands never want to be Ieen out with them. Believe me, this is false economy, for it causes many a wife to lose a husband who is a good provider, to some other woman who looks like a daily hint from Paris. No money is bettcr spent than that which a wife pays out for keeping herself looking yoiuig and attractive and pulchrlt- udinous. - Also, it hurts a man's credit for his wife tc go shabby. I once heard a doctor, who was married to one of these penny-pinching wives. urging her to get some good clothes. ("The way you dress," he said to her, "in- jures my standing in my profession and the community. When people see you, they are bound to think one of two things, c-‘ither that I am such a poor doctor that I have no practice, or else that I am so stingy I will not give you decent clothes. Either one is a. poor advertisement of me." Every wife is her husband's show window. People judge of his ability and prosperity and success largely by the way she looks, and so the wife (Ices him an ill service who makes a poor display. monorail mx. . Dear Miss Dix-The other night when I returned home I was met at the door by my father with a whip in his hand. I knew what was to Estate ‘Dr. J. R. Matheson Ah debts dus deceased are re- quired to be paid bcfore 5th Oc- tober ncxt to Miss Lillian Math- eson, Springfield, otherwise pro- ceedings will be taken. HUGH B. MOKAY, Executor. Property ForSale The property of the late Ruby Dloreside, situated at Upper North River, $5 mile from Milton Station. The property consists of 8 acres land in good state of cultivation with good house, barn, hen house and ice house. Ideal place for Fox ‘slim, shabby figure of a very young Ranch or retired farmer. ."‘ not sold by private sale before fcptcmber 27th It will be sold by Public Auc- tion, together with stock, crop, im- plomcnts and household effects. For further particulars apply to McLean s MmcKinnon, Royal Bank Build- IIIK. Charlottetown. or to F. C. Dollar, New Wiltshirc, or to Mrs. Isabelle Heartz. S Elm A\'c.. Execu- Oors o! above Estate. 1M7. <fi<fl flfiitfirfi§fifirfii~firlfitfifififi City of Charlottetown Tax Appeals Notice is hereby givcn that the Board of Appeal will mcct on} Thursday, September 28th, 1933, at l0 o'clock in the forcnuon in the Court Room in the City Hall tn hear all appeals from civic assess- mcnts, valuations or rutcs for the year 1933. HEAR TS AFIRE B Y MARY CHRISTIE CHAPTER 43 hat at an angle on his scented head. "Cleaned out . . . and can't get to the banks till morning," Prud- As Prudence waited. a taxi-cab once heard him airily explain to the drew up at the bottom of the steps. kind door-keeper, who quietly let and the driver jumped down swift- him m, ly, opening the door of his vehicle, "11 only 1 had eh, mums, go m, and holding out a friendly hand to m, mo," thought the weaned young 8011100116 1115166. - spectator in the shadows. "Corns, now, miss! You're all right A wgfl-drggggd‘ mmmeqsed mm new! 1111s is the place I told you arrived, greatly perturbed. 0L" He half dressed. half lifted. the "Can't get a bed in the whole city. And no one will cash a. check for mc. I heard that you were always open . . ." ' Soon after that, a boy appeared, and Prudence overheard him say, 1n an anxious tone: "I ivas too late to get into the LONEQY AND HOMEVSICK woman from his cab. Prudence could see her pale face in the moonlight. There was a daz- ed look in the eyes. The driver took her by the arm, and led her to the door, knocking briskly- _ Y. M. c. A., and they told me you'd A tall and friendly woman-officer Wye me 1,, _ _ _~ opened to him. SCFBWBH! up her courage, she "Cmlle 1"- mY deal" she “id- knockcd gently at the door of the Drawing nearer, in the shnciows,‘ chm-ch m“; was admitted by the justgws soon as you are of legal age you can leave home. Decide on what you want to do and commence qtting yourself now for some way to sup- port yourself so that you may have w good trade to depend on when you start out for yourself. At present it would not be possible for you to get work of any kind and so, as it is better to endure even a tyrannical father than to starve to death, you had best stay where you are. But what a short-sighted man your father is to think that he can bring you up rightly by force. You cannot coerce people into being good, you have to teach them the wisdom and the beauty of goodness. There is such a little time a. child is physically afraid of a father, but there is a. long, long time, s. never-ending time, in which a father's influence will be a guide to a child if the father has taught it to respect and love him, and to do right Just because it is right. DOROTHY DIX. O O O I ‘ Dear Dorothy Dix-I am s girl of 1a, engaged to be married to a. boy of 21. We were to havebeen married very soon, but he started to flirt with my mother. who is 40, and it has developed into an infatuation with both of them. I did not think anything of it at first, as I had such con- fidence in my mother, but now I am worried. to death over it. I love this young man so much that I hate to give him up, and, if I did, I feel it would ruin my life forever. What should I do? BELMA. Answer: I should think you would be so disgusted with the young man that you would never want to lay eyes on him again. It is s. horrible situ- ation, for it is a dreadful thing for a. girl to have her faith in her mother shaken, as well as to have her sweetheart faithless to her. Evidently this young man is a born philandcrer if he could not resist a woman old enough to be his mother. so you will be lucky to be rid of him. And don't think your life is ruined. At 18 a. girl's heart is only scratched by s love affair. It is never broken. It has as much resil- ience as s rubber ball, and in six months you will wonder why you ever thought you cared for this poor, weak cad. ' DOROTHY DIX. - "cigarette coupons." - Ingredients: a oz. bread, S oz. flour, 4 os. shredded suet, 4 on. our- rants and sultanns. 1 cs. candied peailcosuwdessmnie r baking powder, a. little grated nut- A Morning/Smile "I've been saving up for my wee wifie’s birthday present for nearly meg. a year," said the artful McTosh. Soak the bread in oold water for ."Ay, but that's right good of ye,” ‘ put in Sandy, his friend. "How ture and mash the bread with | fork. Add the flour, suet, sugar M fruit and mix well together, the greeted nutmeg and the ti? en eggs, and lastly the baking der. Pour into a mined pudding h. s|n and steam m three hm Tum out and serve with mutsm or jam sauce. much have you saved?" "Nearly two hundred." replied Mc- Tosh proudly. V Sandy gasped. "Two hundred pounds?" he ejacu- lated. "No lsddis.” said the other; II All! Dqintiinan With Chic VSlVfyles mwsuwm , rvumsrmu Paris has put all kinds of interest in sleeves this season. Today's model favours two of e new ideas to give shoulder bsf l. Make it with cleaves with 1's striking an upward line at the shoulders or with perky epaulets as in tbs small diagram. You'll like its buttoned wrapped closing. It gives It tailored chic and is decldedl, slimming. Carry it out in wool jersey, tweed, faille crepe. suk. silk and synthetic THE, cook s comvcn Baked Hamburg And Hard Cooked Esra 1% lbs. chopbed beef l small onion, minced 4 hard cooked eggs Salt, pepper, ginger 2 cups soaked bread in milk I tablespoon butter mnur“ ‘m _ 3e89,, You can make 10in about two hours. r 1 cup tomatoes ‘A cup sliced onion Have the meat put through the meat grinder twice. Add the bread, the onion, seasoning to taste and the two uncooked eggs well beaten. Arrange the hard cooked eggs ena to end across the middle of the meat and roll the meat mixture around them. Place the roll in a baking dish, . pour over it a sauce, composed of No. 401. Biro ...................... the ‘tomatoes, sliced onions, butter_ - or other fat, and water, and bake " " Style No. 401 is designed for sizes 14, l6, 18, 20 years, 86, 38 and 40 inches. Size l0 requires 2% yards 54-inch material. Price of PATTERN ll! cents in stamps or coin (coin ls preferred.) Wrap cain carefully. -.-_._-._-_—-_-__- “H1110 in a moderate oven. Temp. 350E‘. Time abvutflhvw- bsitlfls 111-‘ ..... .. . quently with sauce. an“, Adda“ In serving slice the roll crosswise. motioned to a pew. There-with a hassock underneath her tired young head-she lay at full length on a. pew. How still and strange and quiet it was! How éool and peaceful! life's fltful fever swept the streets out- side, but in the crypt was mighty cairn. . "Like the shelter of a great rock!" § thought Prudence. i Quietly the varied pilgrims enter- ' ed, lying staring up at the white,’ vaulted TOOL I all such pains, and if you take And all about were memorial tab-i m‘ ‘l? ' g7, w; ',‘,';';",,',“,’f lets to the famous dead. and we! fectly harmless! n it not folly THE womru wuo surrzn P\lN 5 Month after month, she must stay away from her work, break up, treasured dates, be disap- pointed. ASCO Tablets bring immediate relief to the women who accept them. They banish white pillars. s uffer ‘i’ Prudence watched a shabby boy A 5 O O 53k” taking a bench, making a pillow of :25 9:1‘; n d3: a. Bible and a hassock. and then ‘r “y m,‘ “m” stretching his tired length on the scat. Almost immediately ho fell asleep. She could hear his regular _ breathing. l tiflc and cer- ‘ tain relief next time. Ah! that weary round u. inc ein- city Emu ployment agencies! The sickening ache of hope deferred! Th; mqygmgng o; “m. m]. y“, “Is there nothing I can do?" she 1,0 m“; Bflwm up to Aw,“ n broke out once, when an official totalled 33,255 head u mmmted had been particularly curt Wfih her. w“, 16.003 {or the “me per.“ h“ "Best thing you can do is go right. I yum back home to your people," came the brusqus reply, as the hard-fea- tured woman turned to a lino of female applicants, all struggling to outvie each other, and secure any sort of a Job that would keep body and sou! together. "You don't look fit for hard domestic labor, and you wouldn't get it, anyway, without ref- erences. As for anything else, of I course, you're quite untrained." ' In the depths of her lonely, haml- Pr d sick heart, Prudence rcnlimd flat the frank works were true-intoler- ably true. ' (To be Continued.) The muffled noise of passing‘ taxi-cabs seemed very far away, nc- centuating the succeeding " . Great tears crept to Prudencels eyes, and trickled down her cheeks. But-strange to sayl-some of the intolerable pain had gone from her sud heart. Hope had sprung up again, and c. measure of peace des- cended. 811s dreamt that she was homo again, and happy. At six o'clock she woke. The night-pilgrim were departiflfl’. and the city. was aroused again. Carts were rumbling in the streets, and everything stirring. stiffly she walked out into the early morning, leaving peace of Prudwce 53W u"? 8m W55 m- "mi! tail and friendly woman-officer, and just caught the taxi-driver whispcr- =~ - .. .;_'i 7.1-.- mg to the door-keeper: _—_ "Trying to kill herself. she was . .. . I was having a cup of coffee ncnr the park, mid I heard a sob, iflll(l—]O0k!llg round-I saw her on lthc grass, bchiud mc. I run along, f AUCTIO | and got hcr just in the nit-k of time. II-‘ought like u. little wild cat . . . ibut she's nil right now . . . you l kccp an cyc rm her . . ." m 'l"nt‘n the gentle voicc of the AT 2 I‘. M. frontage on Grafton Street. In 1mm at Charlottetown this 15th uvomm-ofliccr. and the 4°91‘ ‘Va-l, 12) AT .1 r. M. day of Scptcmhcr 1933. GEO. I’. NICHOLS-ON, ( y.’ (Icrk. City 0|‘ Charlottetown. ' closed again. Eur not. for lam. The next COTL"? \".".". n (ldiirlflctl r1" iinn ‘ircr if. Solicitors. Two Splendid City Properties for Sale by , Public Auction on the Premises on I Thursday, September 21st. Large Ilcsialcncc, 10 Grafton Street with lot having '18 ft. 9 In. .\'r_\v Ilourc with Store and large lot, ESTATE PATRICK CALLAGIIAN. No nightmare marred her sleep. N SALE mind behind her. Intense realiz- ation oi her present position made her young face deeply gm»... She must find work to 4 Apart from the financial situation, wasn't work the panacea for all mental ills? Once she had ‘mnde good.’ she last night's wretched story would be utterly disproved. She found a coffee-stall, and had a steaming cup, which put new life and strength into her. best Residential Section. on corner of Spring and would return to Green Gables, and‘ Central Bus Sorvlco Daily Except Sunday Between CHARLOTTETOWN ELMIRA -- SUMMERSIDI -— KENSINGIYJN ALSO SERVICE T0 Rustlco, Cavendish, Stanley Bridge, Hunter River, Fredericton, Morel], St. Peters. _ PHONE I030 rum [cu suu: Fsnn for Sale at Hollow River, King's County, 264 acres of lnnd on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, together with dwelling and out-buildings, at a bargain, fonncrly the property of J. Victor McCormnck. other useful articles. Terms Cash. Then a wnsh and brush-up in the railroad station, and n setting forth young man in evening clothes, a silk 1105,‘ upon the great adventure. . .. \~..r»~ will-Ian... Big Auction Sale AT THE OLD Island Hospital lfonsington Road _ Ihursday, 21st. September at 10.30 O'clock Over 300 articles including Piano and Plano Stool, Tables, Rocking, Arm and Co - mon Chairs, Iron Bed, Cliildren’s Iron Cria Ul-llzolstered Sofas, Commodes, Tables, Dress ers,_ T-"sts of Drawers, Pitchers and Basinl! Pictures, Books, Book Case, Portable Phono- gTaph, Vases, Preserve Bottles, and man! No reserve, everything must be sold- J . A .. McDONALD, For further particulars opply to ' f George J. Tweedy, Charlottetown. Auction“ A 4i 110$ 1109.