. -q-m~.w-....-~ .,.-..-i -v~<-*~v '- _ __ __ ___}_.__ ,_n._¢.,m ....: ._-__b....,..-.--,.- -~< .. - . 1 1 ..-- ,.~.¢.-...;. 1 r J ct: ‘<‘-'=_ .1 1 v-I‘ ' Asian’..- :_..-:‘_..._ _‘ 0i‘!- '."'v v ‘ I775 73* Llifariiarife- B94 f-Tf- §9€l4lififi4 _P¢1t§<2'=9l-:.=-_Fae/liens- rs: lalcrtqtvre -r|vs-iIIIIO\ THE LHTLE THINGS 1 come in the little things. Baith the 10rd; Not borne on morning wings Of majesty, but I have set My feet Vimidst the delicate and bladed wheat, Uiat springs triumphant in the fut-rowed sod. -Evelyn Under-hill. A FOUNTAIN We cannot look, however imper- fectly upon a great man without gaining something by him. He is the living light fountain which it Is good and pleasant to be ll'“flr.-~ Carlyil‘. TIIE FLORAL ICLO€K Ffverv visitor to Ediugurzh is struck with the beauty of the flo- ral airancetnents in Princes Street. gardens, and the summer display this your is one of ihemost taste- f-ul that can be rentcmlwred. Butlhm- wand the visitor is particularly impiwssediwithou with the floral clock. Edinburgh claims to ‘have in- siuilcd the Iithl iitirul clock: .\ir. NTHutlie, who “WIS tlu-n the City gardener orimtiatnz the idea in vtuiotts puts of tile globe. 11nd it is a tribute to the contrivances originated .in Edin- burgh have been V same fTrm for floral clocks at Brid-z ling ton, South Sea, two park= in Liverpiol, and the Zoo gardens at Sydney in Australia. The Princes Street clock mechanism is in the‘ base of the Allan Ramsay monu- merit, and the motion is conveyed b0 the dial wok: below the sur- face of the soil by wires encased in tubes. The "hands" of the clock hold many plants embcddrd in moss, Ind the clock face and its sur- in! 1903. Since then it has been copied} E“mb‘_“'§1‘ispicuzus, so that if one workmanship that the mechanicaltqlme tucked m no one is likely to s"pplicd by the I ILLUSTRATED a roundlngs are a master piece of carpet. bedding. When it. is known. that from 12,000 to 14.000 plants are separately arranged in the de- sign, some idea can be formed of the painstaking work undertaken by Mr. John T. Jeffrey, the pres- ent City Gardener, and his staff. A fcabure of the clock is that the hours are announced by a "cuc- koo" call. BIRDS MAKE BLANKETS The idea of birds making blan- kcts is not laughable. It is a sol- emn fact. The partridge covers her eggs with a soft blanket of leaves. This is done to protect them from the prying eyes of a hedge- row thief. Seeing only leaves a hedgehog or rascally crow passes on unaware of ten or twenty pre- cons eggs underneath. But careful though the partridge is in covering hcr nest, the little grebc is even more painstaking. This lady of the large ponds and shady mcrcs never departs from nest for an instant t putting a blanket over the eggs. And the blanket she makes is a wet one, composed of damp pieces of rushes and reeds. This is not madness but calculat- ed mcthod, for the most covering always discolours the white eggs and makes them still more incon- is not be any the wiser. The cautious little grebe leaves nothini! to chance. Aren't you delighted to and such an attractive ensemble for home Why is a motor car like a sleepy We"? puppy‘? 360M159 b0"! l"? Wild (fllfdl- What has three feet and no legs? A yard. What is the difference between a little girl who is good at needle- work and a stick of barley sugar? One sews nice seams and the other seems so nice. THE cooks" cos/van Gooseber-y And Strawberry Jam Three pounds gooseberries, two You may become reconciled after the-loss . of 4 or 5 teeth but it wasn’t pounds strawberries. Pick over the gooseberries and re- move stems and tails. Wash, then hull the strawberries. Put. berries in a saucepan and crush them with a wooden spoon or potato masher. Heat slowly to the boiling point, then boil 5 minutes. Measure, add an equal measure of sugar and boil rapidly for 20 minutes, or until the mixture jells from the edge of spoon. Pour at once into small ster- ilized jars and seal with melted paraffin. Strawberry And Rhubarb Preserves Eight cups strawberries, 8 cups cut-up rhubarb, 8 cups sugar, Juice 3 lemons, Juice and grated rind 1 was hard at first, it? OTBJIQB. sDaintineas With Chic Styles B! jffrldlll-Il UOITIIIIIGIJI ,nnnunsnsn" grs It's quite pretty enough for the bride. It's practical too. ‘And it's so entlclngly cool. And flattering-well I guess. It reflects the gaiety of the season in yellow gingham with yellow and white tissue checked gingham trim. Bend for your pattern today and with a few yards of gingham-you're ready to start! Even if you are an amateur at sewing you can make this c: emble I in an amazingly shohr. time. The pattern includes complete instruc- tions for cutting it out and putting it together. The V-neckline, bias bodice seam- ing and cleverly placed pockets are interesting slenderizlng details. Another scheme and a very dainty one, is blue and white dotted dlmity used for the dress and repeated 1n the pron trim. For the one-piece apron and the dress trim use white organdie. Style No. 935 is designed in slzezs l4, l6, l8, 20 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust.’ Size 36 requires 8 yards 35-inch with % yard 35-inch contrasting, separate apron ll‘,- yards 35-inch. Dorothy Dix.‘ ’s Letter Box Heart-Hungry Husband Explains Why Mid- dle-Aged Men Philander - Shall Boy of 18 Marry or Take Chance of Losing Sweetheart? " Dear Miss Dix-People often ask why middlc-ugcd men, who have apparently been devoted husbands, suddenly take to philanderlns- It is because they are so heart huengry. Now I am marriedto a fine woman. She is attractive, a good housekeeper, a good cook and a good mother, but in the twenty years we have lived together not three times has she ex- pressed any affection for me or showed in any way that she was particularly interested in me. We never quarrel, yet sometimes when we are sitting together I feel that I am the lonesomest man in the world, and that I would give everything I have if she would only give me o. kiss and tell me that she feels glad that she married me. I have never gone phllanderlng, but I am beginning to see how it could be done, the craving for love gets unbear- able I may decide to go where some one will tell me the things I want to hear. J. S. J. Answer: I commend this letter to the prayerful consideration of those women whose husbands have roamed away from their own flresides and who can't understand why a man isn't satisfied with a. wife who keeps his house clean and neat and his socks damed and feeds him upon pies such as his mother never knew how to bake. v They are so self-righteous, these neglected wives, when they recite the litany of their virtues. They have literally slaved for their husbands. They have pinched every penny to save his money; They have scrubbed and washed and ironed to keep their husbands comfortable. No man better taken care of, no children better reared than theirs. What more Price of PATIZERN l5 cents in I stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully, In the morning, tum the berries into a colander and drain of!’ the Juice. -Place this juice on the fire and bring quickly to the boiling pointi Boil hard 5 minutes. Add the rhu- barb, previously washed, dried and cut into even-sized pieces, and the could any man ask of a woman than they have given? And why their husbands should tire of them and go oil’ after strange goddesses, they cannot imagine. And they do not know that they have given their husbands every- thing except the thing that they want most of all; and that ls some out- ward expression of the love that their wives really feel for them, and that takes itself out in work and worry instead of words. Walking ten blocks to find a. cut-rate butcher shop or spending hours stewing over a gas range preparing a dainty dish ls, in reality, a declaration of affection that is worth more than any amount of palaver, only a man is too dumb to understand it. . It always seems to me that one of the greatest mistakes that women make is in assuming that heart-hunger is an exclusively feminine com- plaint. Men suffer from it Just as much as women do. The only differ- ence is that women howl to Heaven over their gnawing pains, while men only too often assuage theirs by nibbling at forbidden fruit. It is a strange thing that women, who know the value that they put upon little attentions and caresses and tenderness from their husbands, so seldom seem to realize that their husbands have the same desire to be Jol- lied and made much of by them. Every wife knows that as long as her husband tells her that she is the one woman in the world to him and that he thanks God every day on his knees for getting her for a wife, she is berries, fruit juices and grated . orange rind. Bring slowly to boilingt point, boil gently until the consist- ency of jam. ‘This will require about 50 to 60 minutes. IHE HAPPINESS tlF MUTHERHUUD It Depends Upon Health- Tnke Lydia E. Pinkhnmfi Vegetable Compound it at home they go abroad in search of 1t. so often see a man give a woman who is what they consider a poor wife. Very often she is the most thriftless woman they know. sweep under the beds. _ She is a poor cook. yet her husband adores her, and they don't know that while she may not perfectly happy and satisfied, no matter if she has to do her own work and wear hand-me-dowzis and ride in the street cars instead of having a Rolls Royce and Paris flnery and servants to wait upon her. But it doesn't dawn on her that; she can keep her husband from look- ing at other women and feeling that he is a martyr who has been sold by marriage into slavery to a wife and children by her constantly as- suring him that he is the handsomest and most fascinating man in the world to her, and that she thinks that no hero has anything on him in the brave way he meets life. ' If we knew the inside history of the men who, denly jump the domestic bars, we should find that mwt of them do it because they are starved for love. ‘They hunger for flattery. They yearn to be cajolcd and petted and made much of, and because they don't get at middle age, sud- One of the things that women always marvel over is the devotion they She doesn't She wastes money. And i Check ible to women as a sex. taste is constantly changing, and you are in love with love instead of hav- m‘ . * " ll I Il-Hv 1'2 n’.- !! Wi" We keep on saying that Red RoscTea will please you more than any other. If this is true, you should be using Red Rose, Isn't that so? ' Check us up on that statement! ‘ If we are rlght] you galn by getting a tea you like better. Red Rose Tea--at the re- duced price of 35c lb. -- is really great value. If It happens, you don't like It better you are not the loser anyway. All grocers have our authority to glve moneyback to anyone who asks for It. aao ROSE TEA “is good tea” Shall 2| or shall me as if D00. have to wait for three years something will come between us. marry her and let my father support us until I get through school I talke a chance on losing her by waiting three years? Talk to I were your son. ~ Answer: If you were my son, I would say this to you: A young man married i1 a young man marred, particularly when the young man is of your tem- perament. ,_ No boy in the world at 18 is fit to marry. Hs hasrfl; come to himsJit He hasn't the faintest idea of what sort of man he is going to develop ink nor what sort of woman he is going to want for a wife when he is grown up, and not once ln a. hundred times does a. very youthful marriage turn out successfully. In your particular case the odds against it would be even greater, for the reason that you "run around," as you say, is because you are suscept- Every petticoat. has lts allure for you. Your ing concentrated your aflections on some one particular woman. This is perfectly natural. It ls, indeed, a phase of adolescence, but The first tooth is the hlll‘(it‘$t—-]11ll‘- iicul:n"l_v it‘ your (lenti s it. was lost c t; of pyor- rhea. The word “pyorrhczfl strikes terror into the hearts oi' those Wllfl know that once this gum disease starts to take truth there is no knoivinp: when i! will stop. Pyorrhca beg‘ " zit the {rum line and works its \\' ' timrnuvtrd t0- ward the tooth sori-zcts. It acts so quietly. that you may have it item's before it is either seen or felt. Four out of five people 1 the ztgc of forty have ]'!_‘-'Ul'l'll0i1——l\llll many of them had it u luuzz, lent: time before it was rrcoyznizccri. In the end, pyorvhea is the actual cause 0f halftime adult teeth ior-t. It is dangerous to take any chances with pyorrhea. Here are two precautions to follow: First, he sure not to forget the address of your dentist. Visit him twice a year, anyway. I-Ic is a real friend in need. Second, pick out a tooth- paste that docs more than polish your teeth. Forhan's Toothpaste is a thoroughly good cleanser- nonc better. But it takes care of the cunts too, and you cannot have ltmlllty teeth in unhealthy gums. Dr. It. J. Forhan worked 26 years as a pyorrhca specialist, and his exclusive formula cannot be ob- taincd by the public except in l"orh:ln’s Toothpaste. Get ahead of‘ p_vorrhca. Prevention is the only way. Take it seriously. Start today with Ibrhrufls. All druggists. TENDERS Written Tenders, addressed to the undersigned and marked "Tcndcr for Coal," will be received up to August. 10th, 193:! for supplying 100 has soft coal for the P. E. l. Prot- Qbtant Orphanage. Quote prices for Run of Mine and Screened con! for good quality, de- livered at. Mt. Herbert Station. Also 15 tons good Coke on some delivery. Lowest or any tender not neces- sarily accepted. IRA M. BROWN, Scdy-Treas. 158 Prince Street, Charlottetown. 1998-7-25-tts—7l. Spinning and lliciaving Send rne in your wool to be spun Into Yarn and wove into Blankets. The charges arc: single yarn 23 rents doubled 2G cents per pound. Blankets $2.00, and If unlaumlcrcd I185; it takes five lbs. of wool per Blanket. Won! must he wcll washed 11nd nll dirt mu! burrs picked ouLl The size nf slnglc yarn is medium, and doubled yarn fine, medium, coarse and honking yarn. Put ship- per! name on all parcels and own- rris name, address and instructions. lrvaide. Scml Ivy mail or freight. Freight will be paid on 100 lh. lots. WM. LANDRIGAN, C5 Queen Slrccf, fllnrlottcfown. “v-=---_.-_--—_—~1- v ._{-_/_._ Jun: 20-Tuc-Sat-32i, CHAPTER II. A Charming flirtation It's the third turning along this Toad." Prudence answered the stranger shyly. "Then keep straight on till you come to the lodge gates." "Thanks most awfully." The 1m. perious note had vanished at sight of the girl's Y0ung beauty, yet the eyes still held their arrogance des- pite the amused interest they con- tfllned- Th0". his teeth s. strong flash of white, he added, gailyz- “Quite a rustic picture, isn't it? i IF IUIIENWIE S S ‘Red Cross fine Freight and Passengers Leave Leave Montreal Ch‘Town S.S. Ft. Sf. George Aug. l2 Aug. 14 S.S. Ncrissa Aug. 26 Aug. 28 CARVELL BROS LTD. (fharfotieinwn Agent: a a l! HEAR TS AFIRE B Y MARY CHRISTIE Then, as his horse curvetted ner- vously there, old lady! Calm yourself! This h way! Nearer the hedge!" Wash, drain and hull berries, add sugar and let them stand overnight. __ AMornFnQSrniIQ "My lucks died out lately. First, I lost a pot of money in a deal; then I had my car stolen; now my boy's ‘broken his leg. How's that for a. run of bad luck?" ed a. hole in the coat!" Phoebe in the apple-orchard with her chickens!" The girl blushed deeper, half in shyness, half resentment. frock! Even haughty Virginia Dale was no better- "He takes me for a dairymaid," thought she. (Oh for Janet Mercer's adrolt power of handling situations, conversations, men!) "Come, don't bs timid. Anyone as pretty as you, must have a tongue in hcr head. Is your name Phoebe?" she wasn't quite the tongue-tied fool ally, he thought she was. thing but Prudence," she replied de- murely. the faded gingham gown and shabby shoes. beauty, if she only had a decent up at the Towers featured. ‘ dress this rustic maiden up and parade her to the other as a rival! Gay Lothario air:- adequately nourish her husband's b soul, and that while she may throw in her love and appreciation. telling your husbands the things th them from going to other women to "Before my first baby was born I was very ill and dizzy. M husband went to the store an bought u bottle o! your egetable Compound and made me take it according to di- rections. It. certainly built me up. The baby weighed eight unds and we were bot-h healthy. I ve three chil- tO it. o Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a boy of 19. “Not as bad as mine. Listen. I dmn m d I l kin ‘ bought a suit with two pairs of mthedilyllnwas Illznbfis l‘ ‘gr Tsarzylildgtfietat U3? “m3 Inm f trousers and three days later bunk Fly 171m, 01d mm.’ ‘OOJ._MR& L .s e a ra a I w con nue to do so a fer marriage. m, 405 Eleanor St, Mon- EWP "118- So, wives, I commend this man's letter to you. ody on a balanced diet, she feeds his away his money she makes him rich Take hlé tip about if you want to keep your home-brew soft ey want to hear hear it. Make talk so strong that other ladies’ will seem insipid and tasteless compared DOROTHY DIX. no: of 18. very much in love with a. girl My father is sending me to college and is planning on putting me through a. dental school when I finish. My girl says it will ruin my life for her to marry me now and that my family would always blame her around a. great deal and being young I think I could I am positive that she is the one for me and I fear that if I do not wreck your life by taking it seriously and entering into a. mar- rlage that you would regret before the ink was dry on your marriage cer- tlflcate. It isn't fair to yourself and it isn't fair to the girl, and she has more intelligence than you have by not being willing to enter into it. As for the danger of losing her by waiting until you are ready to marry, that is as nothing to the danger of wishing that you hadn't mar- ried her if you do marry her. If you really love each other, your love will stand the strain of a. three years‘ wait. If it does not, you may be sure that it was Just a passing fancy that would have gone the way of all puppy love, anyway, and you will be saved the mess of a divorce and from having committed the crime of bringing a child into the world to suffer for your mistakes. Certainly you have no right to marry and dump a. wife down on your father to support. That is as unmanly an act as any lad can commit. You have no moral right to marry until you are ready to assume the ob- ligations that matrimony entails and provide for your own family. w '0 DOROTHY DIX. To the jaded listener, the! _ sound of it was as a. freshet of de-i light. i “I'm no gold-digger. The turnips and potatoes keep me far too busy." He grlnned:—-"Oh, please be more poetic. Eve and the apple . . .!"_ “Quito halJDY in an AdEIfilJ. Eden!" she flung back athim, with mischief in her bright dank eyes. The man on the other side of the hedge was agreeably surprised to find this seemingly demure young maiden capable of rcpartee. By love! he believed he'd sfay a. little longer in the country, darned mon- otonous thought it had hitherto proved to be. “I have no opportunity to be any- Was that a challenge? He eyed Why, she might be quite a It would be a darn good joke to But aloud he merely said, with s "I should think that opportunity And the arrogant blue eyes danced with quizzical amusement. "No-it's Prudence." (This foolish feeling!) “Prudence?" The young man flung back his head and laughed de- llghtedly. “Gee! That's a good one!" 0 in the roadwayz-"Whoa Animal and rider moved closer to r! the apple-orchard and the pretty. in flushed young girl, “Tell me, Miss Prudence, do you always live up to your name?" Prudence made a mighty effort ftcr nonchnlancc and ease. nswcr the stranger in lurked for you at every corner." ners, her an odd look. Was she deeper than she seemed? (me never knew astily :- and run?" T0 appreciated. ‘Ihink of all the pretty the Same country losses who have married ght, bantcrlng spirit would show‘ millionaires!" .._._-._____._.____ 111m W1 11¢ 11nd med‘: an error. and‘ Prudence laughed softly, music- He could creep away from Vir- ginia Dale whenever she grew tire- some and exacting, and find solace in flirtation with this pretty Prud- ence in the apple-orchard. Young girls usually bored him to extinction. They were either hope- lessly insipid, or-as often in his , . "seV-impertincntly “knowing? He Then, seeing her stiffen, he added had no time for either class. But pretty Prudence, thought "be- neath" him, promised a certain piq- uancy combined with lack of know- ledge of the world which really was refreshing in these days. God! even her name was a sort of challenge! Prudence indeed! Hadn't he flung it to the winds these many years? ! "Tell me, little lady, have you gotl a sweetheart?" beguiling sweetness of the courting o male. (Just as well to know how the Prudence smiled enchantingly. “Them aren't really many cor- hereabouts. It's all quite pen-J’ "And above-board, eh?" He flung "You flt into the picture here all ght, but you'd certainly be a riot the city. Say, why don't you cut She lifted puzzled brows. "Run where?" “To places where you'd be better pretty busy. Lots to do about the farm." She drooped her head. dalrymaid. considerably abova her Job, too. Jove! it was a waste! Antoinette or one of her court, beauties, playing at her farming!“ he flung buck gallantly, leaning a little closer, and flashing those gay blue eyes so full of deviltry upon her. His voice held all the heart, either. couldn't you take pity land lay in this quarter . . not, of course, that he couldn't. easily cut out all the local Reubens, if he, tried!) Prudence dangled her sun-bon- net by its long strings. Oh, for fine- ness to dangle this amazingly nt- tractive man in like manner, with the skill and nimbleness of wit of- say-tlre beautiful Virginia Dale up at the Towers, who always had a string of swalns about her. That was the one sure way to hold a suitor, wasn't it? Brains, and clev- er repel-tee, and subtlety, and lots of self-assurance. How lamentably she said, half below her breath. her, but the‘ gay deviltry in his eyes had vanished, and his smile was wistful. sleeping princess of the apple-orch- ard,” he said gently. "As a matter of fact, I'm the most infernnlly lonely fellow in the world. Crowds don't make company. you know. And DOMINION OF CANADA PIKLHHNCI-i‘ U11‘ PRINUE LlIHVAllI) ISLAND . lu the surrogate Court, 24th GCOII\ v., A. 11., was In re estate of Juuies Woods ls of New Wiltnlilro in Queen's Count iu the suit! Province deceased ieststc By the liuuuurublu lluroltl LeonsN Pululer Surrogate Jullgu of Probate etc, etc. To the Sin-riff of_tlro County 0| Queen's County or uuy Constable 0| literate persons within said Count)’. Greeting; WHEREAS upon reading tho 96W tlon on filo of fluasn Woods of N6‘ Wllfshire aforesaid, mam-led woman. the adminintrutrlx o! the above num- cd astute praying that s citation ma! be issued fur the purpose herein- nfu-r set forth: You nre therBfOIf hereby required to cite all perm!" interested in tho said Estate to l1! and appear before me s: s Surwrl" mouth set as though every femin- ine instinct warned her she must flght against the enclouding fascin- ation of this strange young man. “PeODIe like you are never lonely," He was still looking directly at "That's all you know, you little she-Prudence-lacked these ld- -and one gets awfully disappoint- ,°,,""5°,,,',‘;,,‘*,';,,',=§i§ ‘It, 'g‘,’,,,fi,‘;i',"cfi,°,'ltf mirable assets! ed..__" in m» Sllill Prov ncc on Bnturdav w! But hard facts faced her. She "How?" vlsgltiiiiiytrlxililtu “llllnyllfllll OAIuKIIéIIt dfletzxcl was inexperienced, Th“; wgfg no foreuoou of the some dny to she! lovers m the om“; why pre_ "Qh, Just, in everything {rho cause it‘ nny they can why U" varicate? "No. There's no one. I-—I’m kept so-as he'd thought - she was a “And to me you seemed like Marie next utterance, and its import (To be Continued.) Then, with bcguiiling charm n every cadence of his voice:- "And I-I haven't got. a sweet- n my loneliness?" she famed h" head’ h" sweet lllnnrd’: Llnlment {or burns. general rottenness of life." ciur lgttetown aforesaid once ln each M‘) though the world, world of lovers and young life and spring and beauty, waiting for this handsome youth's said, nt the store of 1r. .1. Trnlllfl!’ In In Tomorrow's Accounts of tbs snld Estate should not Ive passed and the Estnfo chi"! us prayed for in snid petition M15 Silence in the green world all o m ti f II. ll‘. ltiscPhce. 35' about them. Sunlight filtering] ulsué’. ofbrosald "Plsllllohgf snarl‘)? “mum u“ m“ t° l“ 3"“ Wm‘! ggferfllgreg: Kgterlrwitennt gllblmlledfl In some newspaper published in t nthlcnst friun cgn cclnttlgnt i t I l ma enchmwdgifilx; Ilflafég: obsmrggluwlm nostril i" ,:|hal following plnbllttlh plshceils réwllg; vey, nsmey, n e s 0 were tensed and Court Home in Charlottetown nfnre- Tyrone in Queen's County nforfllfliiiv and in front of tho school-hone» fir; Iilvuvvnlo in salt! County so that I persons Interested if! tho lflill B!‘ fnle may lmvc vluc notice thereof. I (‘ill-en under my hnnd and Sea! c instalment Prud- ence Learns the Stranger‘; nu- mm emu-q,- this 2m- day of Jul; N d U t A. D. 103.‘! mu! in the 21th 7°!" - ‘me m ‘n npleu“ H's liinicsty’! reign. PM ‘In Truth, (n. a.) 4am.) u. r.. snrrgfl" ..___.;__.___ lllllninfs Llnllnenl rsllevol coml. ‘ n gums-pap. ..-....~...