pw¢»c>..<v-,q,,,_.. V _. . aenrrorraaeoq 3Q us. u it A l rerun-w fivakvru» / PAGE EIGHT =._.__...I—' --~ Oyronsn 25, 1,3,, Wo‘man ’s Realm What the Fashionable are Wearing. Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Aimebelle Worthington l l =t~r Princess sugges- - ivfk." and refill find 5m‘. MA‘ or‘ FISHING THRILL nramrltimns 1'1. Wiiimps-c; of - so flung on L110 g clorc-ups“ of fish- l1'1"e. nfitpctl ‘nrr: streams cf 1 thrill for .. niiosc 1.1“ Pr.>1'iliccs-bj.'-ll1c- ."11111uul Maritime z in Foresters‘ Hail, . *1 n.c background .'..:'1. l1 .1151 through u- C Nit. (iPliglltEd ire Iimninir with many such < buck home. l“ 1' - »~ >1" l7. D llwf-Pliec. retiring P. ~ . 1'11" ~11 ' i i-“xieiveii the c reports were zil program enter- wlth the foi- "iim: Jack lllUS Ger- irono. with mrompzinlst. were clectcd : 151111. President, lion. Vice-Presi- _ it so useful for general day wear. Note the graceful swing the skirt is given through circular godets at either side. The panel front and back give it lengthened line and eni- ‘ phosize the snugness of the hips. The neckline is new and charming. It is carried out in modlsh silk and wool mixture in becoming cin- namon brown tones. The collar and cuffs are of white crepe silk. The tie of plain blending brown crepe. Style No. 2679 may be had in sizes. 14. 16. 1a. 2o years, so, as, 4o and 42' inches bust. Navy blue wool crepe with white’ fnille crepe ls jounty. Size 14d requires 4H3 yards 39-inch’ material with "é yard 39-inch con-- trusting and ‘J- yard 32-inch for t‘e-' string. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or co n (coin preferred). Be sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. spend 10c to save $10. flow? By ordering a copy of our new Fall and Winter Fashions. It gives the answer to the often asked question, "How does she do it?" For it shows how to dress up to the min- Ute at little expense. You can save on every dress and save on the children's clothes too. That means more and better frocks for "“l and yyours. Order your copy now. Just enclose 10 cents in stamps or coin and mail with your name 1nd ad- dress to Fashion Department.’ N0. Z679. Size................. Name Street Address ..-u.no“.“runs-u..-"nu"... City State dents, Sir Robert Falconer; Dr. l-LP. Whldden. Chancellor of MoMnater University; Archbishop Neil McNeil, $.11. Logan and J.A. ltfacLeod; President, A.E. LePage, Vice-Presi- dcnt; Colonel Kelller MaoKay Nova Scotin; T.H.R. McNally, New Bruns- wick: Professor W.L. Holman, Prince Edward Island, Executive. CLF. Eat- on, A.\V. Rogers. \V.R. Belyea. A.C, DflllCl, Mrs. Ernest Forbes, Auditor, Wit. Stevens. While the films were being shown excellent music was supplied by the latest recruit in Mr. W. McNutt Importance y, Warn: I‘ “him [i Dorothy “It Is Just as Important to Know How to Spend Wisely as It Is to Know How to Save Wisely . and Between the Spendthrift and the Tightwarli the Spendthrift Chooses the Better Part” A Door boy and girl got married on the proverbial shoestring. They were intelligent, energetic and ambitious and determined to rise in the World. Bo they worked hard and pinched pennies and eventually they mcnts she craved. ‘M... _Now thattlme has come. They have accumulated doing it the love of money hasbeoome an obses; sion with the husband and he cannot bear to part with a cent more than is absolutely necessary to live on. They mght have a beautiful home 1n a desirableneighborhood, but he will not leave the dilapidated old house 1n a bad neighborhood because it would cost more. They still walk and ride in the street cars because that is cheaper than keep ng an automobile and when she asks for a cent more than the meager allowance her husband gives her to keep house upon he shrieks with horror over her extravagance and the high cost of living. _______. This couple is childless. Thcy are growing old and the wife. deprived of the comforts and luxuries she has helped earn, is becoming bitter as she reflects upon the irony of their denying themselves everything they ivnnt in order to leave the money that would have made them comfortable This case is not an uncommon one. Every one of us could match it up among our acquaintances. We all know rich men and women who are in reality paupers because they cannot bring themselves to spend the mon- ey they love better than they do their ease or pleasure or even life itself. For often they will literally starve themselves to death for lack of proper food or deny themselves the trip, the vacation, the change of climate that would have prolonged their days. These people turn an admirable virtue into the worst of vices. Com- pelled to bc thrifty in their youth, they have let the saving mania fasten itself upon them until they have become misers and to their love of money they ruthlessly sacrifice themselves and their families. And to what end? A few more scraps of paper in their bank boxes that will he as worthless ‘to them when they lie in their ooffins as the paper money they scatter at Chinese funerals. A few more figures in a bank book that their dead eyes will not be able to gloat over. And then greedy heirs fighting over the estate. Children rejoicing that they are getting their hand; on the money out of which a stingy father and mother kept Charlottetown. If Your Ears Ring With Head Noises if you llflVP catarrhnl deafness or head noises i111 in your alruggllt and get l llll"l‘l' oi‘ l'.li‘llilllf. ulrruhlve strength». and :.-l1l in il I, pint uf hut wuicr unil a lilllv Mlglii‘. Tukc a iulilcsjioonful [our 1.111.» ,1 tiny. _ This will Mien bring quick relief from the ilisrrnssini: heml noises. (‘logged nostrils shnuiil open. breathing hrcniue ¢:|~=_\' and inn inimms atop dropping into lllv‘ llli'l~lil. it is r _v to prepare, (‘lwli 111i 1111i is pic nut to trike. Anyone 1.11 l'llllll‘l'lliil ilrvifnws or head ~1 should give this prescription I ‘four future health may depend on knowing these facts. ANY women don't realize how important it is to rake or: . 1 1i cnrc of themselves at certain [HULK .‘~I1lr;gu.1rr.ling your health today v. ill rmltl; to llikltll difference Liter. Ami the right kind of sanitary pro- miion is one of zhc most important silt-guards you can take. Today you pay so little for ZQ/‘tc-x tint it simply doesn't pay to r.;l._1_ (lLHKCS with substitutes. For Lidia"; is the sanitary pad that's lilinlC to fir; it absorbs so perfectly flan chafing and such discomfons klisappcar; i: is so easy to dispose m’. Try Kotcx. The Kotex Company of Canada, _I.ll'lillCd. Toronto, 0nd oaooomzrs . . . l-Completely, by aspecial process. 2-D: bospilals- Kotex i; the identical material used in Canadas leading hospitals. 3-Raunded and tapered cor- ners-for inconspicuous pro- tectlon. ‘f-Disposalle completely, in- stanzly. Roux-co: for lz-n any drug, dry good: or department ltcrl. Xoux 8uper-Siu—1lc for l3. Made in Canada KOT€XI - fhaNlwhllinryPadwhitlldcodcliacl them so long and that they cnn have at least the things they have craved so long, - - Certainly thrift is very much to be commended in the young. As Hill said a. long time ago," the ability to save is a test of character and you can judge whether a youth will be a success or a failure by whether he spends more than his income or less. Also, a man is lacking in even ordinary prudence and intelligence who does not lay up something for the rainy day and old age that are bound to come to us nil. But it is just as important to know how to spend wisely as it is to know how to save wisely, and between the spendthrift and the tightwad the spendthrift chooses the better part. For the waster, at least, has some fun as he goes along while the miser has none, nor does throwing money away harden the heart and deaden thesympathies as does clutching it too tightly. It is every man's bounded duty to save a reasonable proportion of his earnings, enough, if possible. to guarantee his independence and keep him from being a burden on others, but beyond that it is equally his duty to indulge himself in every luxury that he can afford. Fbr we cannot save up our enjoyment to some future day and say that after a while I will feast or 1 will indulge myself in fine clothes or I will travel and see the far places that I so long to see. We can atrophy our desires and if we defer gratifying them year after year we cease to want anything and lose our power of enjoyment. By the time we get ready to order our feast we have dyspepsia and can only eat stale crackers and milk. By the time we get ready to order Paris frocks our youth and beauty are gone and sackcloth and ashes look just as well on us as chiffon. And when we are ready to start on our great adventure our rheumatism ties us to a steam radiator at home. The moral of all of which is both to save'and to spend with moder- ation for that is the only way in which we can get the pleasure outcf today and still keep an umbrella in n» closet in me tomorrow should N rainy. FLOWER GIRL RETIRES whereas a city gentleman used to spend slxpcnce on a button-hole there are now many women workers who willingly expend two shillings at a time in the purchase of biovmfl. LONDON, Oct 21,—One 0f the last of the London "flower girls" is desert- lng her "pitch" WhlClI she has occupied outside the Royal Exchange for 40 years. No doubt Mflfl’ Ann" has 8- Jul" name. but only as Mil-FY Al"! h“ ‘he been known to a couple of generations of city business men and women W110 have stopped of a morning at 11B!‘ basket on the Exchange pavement "l"! purchased 5 button-hole. M,” Arm is going into honorable retirement. but there will be nobody "It la an advantage to any country its industrlesfi-Icrd Beaverbrook. Make dresses bright as new] to follow her in the business. The 01W corporation refuses to issue new llcen- ' DIAMOND DYES l" “l? "4 DOROTHY DZ. _ the old custom. Flower sellers say that if other peoples invest their money in ds Checked‘ , . . Etiquette gfmentfilvugt rubcwi . latch In 1 Q- Wm wrwelwll a wed =i .' breakfast, should it be placed on the w ' — table when it is set, or should it be For TTmCook brought in later? CPIBON PRESERVE A. Either way is correct. Q. What characterise-c is consider- ed fatal to real charm? , A. Inquisitlveneas. No matter how many charms a perso may poetical. an inquisitive manner will overshad- ow them all. Q. When writing n woman, ‘marital condition is unknown, should she be addressed? A. "Dear Madam." Peel the cltrons and cut into slices about an inch and a half thick, then into strips the same length, leaving them the full length of the fruit. Take out all the seeds with a small knife. Then make a. syrup of a pint of water to every ten pounds of su- gar, weighing the sugar pound for pound with the prepared cltron. Let the syrup simmer gently, for 20 min- utes. then put in the otron and boll slowly for an hour. or till it is tend- er. Before taking from the fire, add two lemons sliced thin. and tWO ounces of root ginger, crushed with a hammer. Do not stir while it is boiling and do not let it. boil for very long after the lemony and ginger have been added. “Cut the citron in thin slices," says the second recipe, ."and boll it in water ivlth a small piece of alum. till clear and tender. then rinse it‘ off in cold water, Make a syrup of three-quarters of n pound of sugar to a. pound of the cltron. boiling a and firm “rust m Jesus m5 savkmr‘ piece of root ginger in it. Then put fiievcizgms; R's! gglYAbgd lcitbnilafswc ' ' fllhllfltllllibiSflg-Eg hulls-moth to every f'veI Rev. Mr. George Ayers led in prayer. cmronsy. ' I He leaves to mourn besides a sorrow- i in; widow, two daughters, Miss Laura land Miss Ethehl both at home. The funeral was very largely attended. Interment was made in Searletown Cemetery. The pail bearers were Messrs. Percy Allen, Leigh Lowther, Major Lowther, Alden Wright. Albert Wecks and Hermes Myers. May the bereaved wife and family in their deep sorrow find comfort in the an- ltlcipation of a. happy reunion in the land where parting la unknown. wthcse how __________i. ALBANY AND VICINITY The citizens of North Carleton and vicinity were shocked on Saturday morning October the eleventh in learn of the death of Mr. Henry Lowther after only two days illness seventy-two years of age was long and favorably known by a large cir- cle of friends. a. good citizen and neighbor who was interested in the general welfare of the community. Of a generous disposition, yet firm and courageous, he passed into his eternal rest with a calm resignation SEASIDE SANDWICHES The first day of his holidays Blnks entered the palatial seaside restaur- ant and had a ham sandwich. The bill came to 9s 8d, so he sent for the manager. “Well. sir,’ explained the manager. "X grant that the sandwich itself might be reasonably priced at four- pence. This, however, is a. high-class establishment. Think of our over- head expenses. Look attire beautiful pictures on the walls!" Binks paid up and left. Next day he had another ham sandwich at the same place. But when the hill came Mn Lloyd Walsh was a visitor m he placed four coppers on the table. _ summersme, “Not this time. not this time!" he.‘ chuckled. “I saw your pretty pictures yesterdayfl-Yorkshlre Post. l Mr. Ernest Paynter, Bedeque ‘made Messrs. Ernest Amett and Charlie Walsh were recent motorists to Cra- paud Corner. _.,-_ Miss Ruby Burns motored to Sum- merslde last week. IN _ Ovaltine you have three of Nature's best zcnic fooda—milk, eggs and barley malt, concen- trated by an occlusive scientific process and af- fording, unimpaired, every one of the manual vitamins, as well as the organic phosphorus to Iced nerves and brain, the tired or a. lit: Indoor confin for mental co res and to Ovdlzfne is family size us - rm . sea for Btfefil 110W“ "ufisi and '5 NEW?“ §gvelilnfficehl1f QVALTlNB the old "girls" leave the business, or dyed look when Diamond Dyes are RUSKS used. Just true, even, new color-a maybe leave life altogether, there are no successors. Flower selllnz ‘m m‘? city sidewalks is undflstwd l0 have been quite a, profitable livelihood, Al- though the wearing’ of A buttcnhole by men is a. custom which has con-g slderably declined in recent yam. yllr the increasing number cf women city workers who buy HOV/Ora Y0 140m thcir office work tables has con- lidlrlhlv nmnnenaatad that hcld their own throu h the hardest wear and washing, 8 Diamond Dyes owe their aupefi. crlty to the abundance of pure anll nea they contain. Cost morn to make. Surely. But you pay no insorc for them. All drug stores- c. Only final Canadian Wheaten flour and n: . $'o""”‘o£'r‘r "iii." Tllqngndallciciuand I’: "ma" nourishing r n fury biscuit:- (NH ' wauoaa LlMpfD .- of pqumonla. The deceased who was] . n busineéss m]? t0 Albany 155i WEEK. liams of Augustine Cove are spending d. if 1a u" n 53..- doffifi if” ‘builds-up Wain. -:- Social and Personal» -:-. Fashions s-:-'- Literature“ I ‘ Hats Are Soft ' l 3 L; your hat a limp rug of a. thing ‘the-n seen offyour head? Has it a lining of mcuasellnc or geometric, or perhaps no lining at all? Does it fit.‘ your head as closely and trifuly as your glove fits your hand? Is it draped and atiched to attain distinc- tion? Ku it no trimming except per- hapa a crystal pin or a tiny feather fantasy? This may sound like the old parlor game oi’ twenty questions. But it is just a. quick and simplified method of classifying oneself as in the mode or out of it. If you can answer these questions in the affirmative you may ivear your new hat with that self- confidence and pride which is the finishing touch to the millinerb creation. It is a hat of" the season. It is perfect. ‘ There u nmunnecessary stiffening in the new hats. They are marvell- i ously limp except where , the un- draped brim needs alight support. The human head ls intended as their ‘only form. The hat block ‘s vanish- 1 g. I Practically cvrry new hat, except the broad-brinrmed models for after- noon wear. is closely fitted against the nape of the neck to give a be- coming and flattering line and to in- sure comfort when worn with the, high full fur collars which will be‘ everywhere when the first frost is here. Chenille, felt, velvet, velour, satin- and the new sheer thin broadcloth- of such materials are the season's smartest hats fashioned. Tucks and, stitching and drapery are the only trimmings used on most modelsfix- cept perhaps a, tiny feather fantasy or a crystal cmament. Incidentally, shining is one of the most popular methods of fitting the new millinery to the, head. It is used to draw the hat in to the back oi’ the head. and at the same time preserve the winglike sides which are so smart. ..________.__a___ Misses Helen and Winnie MacWil- some time here with relatives. Miss Minnie Campbell, Freetown, is spending a. week in Albany, the guest of her cousin Miss Ruby Bums. A very large crowd attended the service in Albany Baptist Church Sunday evening. "The Prodigal Son" was presented in story and mlnstrel. not noticeably le fagg to rest their amen: during school houisfwirli ncenrracion, comes a: a time in a lA Mdmingsngih ' A3“ a. WW1! of the n muss-production housed ew w" o‘ finished the builder and hi, y,“ went round on n tom- o; The builder had 45¢, was the time for ded um m‘ “e” °F l-he walls. 8o, ledflng m, u. sistiant in one house, h; “your”; to the one adjoining lg, "Can you hear me speak, Georg", queried the builder. "Yes," came the reply, "Hm-funny!" thought u” mum er. Then an idea struck him u,‘ h. called= "Can you see me, Georggfm "No, air." . The builder then rejoined m, m.’ panion and, with a iclf-ldtlsfled m5 remarked: "Now, them! what ! call my walls." .__.____.__ When a, man runs short in his w. counts, he sometimes runs long m his travels. - ---_. Plant BULBS N 0 W ii Excellent weather and the right time to PLANT BULBS OUT DOORS. We still have n gccd selec- tlon of TULIPS, HYACINTBS, DAFFODIL, CROCUS l-‘BEESIA, NARCISSUS, SNOWDROPS, &c., and are giving a discount off all orders, and paying postage on all _ MAIL ORDERS. All large first size Bulbs on. sale at our BOOK STORE. Barter .& 0o. Limited The fiienrl of growing children. WHEN your children come home from school Ill’! d “tircccli physicallly, for a cup of dcliciou: Orsaellcihey an nervous y. I!‘ L nearlywgv? Th‘? can’? Y. its p w’ ursuam ' ll childbdif? Plml"! f“ 5°" "d Nature is makin insistent demands upon his or her sren h maxim Ind d“ flrbv- and vitality . . uring the days of growth ‘ REeo " ‘ " ’ ' hldfll" "l4 f1" f" truth, some schools serve milk cdzhe cliildreh at‘ " "' warmth and energy. ' _ w. “my M“,_,,,,__ ' Easily digested. Quickly‘ ' ‘Milk ‘LS Good—-But Ovaltine is Better asimilatcd. Delicious. i Ovflltme is the fines: thing in the world for replaci, ,_ ' ,, ch34,“ 10,,‘ m the ‘energy children use up so fast. A sure wa _'no bui dberoag maintain rosy-checked, flklwing‘. lib‘. aw Q1. soda fountain: LTI N . in filzjiand spcddllpjc -» 45s King srfwlir, . Iu-vnk _v airs"