. -ea. Financing Children in Marriage is One of the Best Investments That Can Be Made Gil cf the acute problems of the day is that of the young people who want to marry, but cannot do so because they have not enough money Iithwhicbtoeetupahome. can see no end. t0 lull-Q that is denied them. Iaisons; that it is substituting lovenesfs for clean homes; little children into the world, no one can deny. soured old maids. But what to do about it, since love isn't really enough to live upon and, married or single, we must oat and have a roof above our heads and Doubtless in time the Government will set up an alphabetical society that will provide trousseau, bridal trips and honey- moon flats well stocked with angel's food for newlyweds, but until that halcyon day arrives it seems to me that it is up to parents to help their dilldreu to get married instead of tolling them to "wait." which seems so clothes to cover us’! easy to those not in love and so tragic to those in love, No other one thing ls so illogical and incomprehensible, anyway, as the attitude of American fathers and mothers toward their marriages. They believe in marriage. They want their children to marry. Yet not one American father and mother in a. hundred make any provisions for their children's marriages, or do anything to make it possible for them to marry under They look forward to their children's marriages. conditions that will help to make their marriages successes. Americairparents are overindulgent to their children so long as they They lavish upon them fine clothes and sport cars, but fliey do not put amde for a girl any dowry that will help her finance her marriage to the worthy young man she loves who is just beginning to climb the ladder and who cannot take upon his back a wife who will be a may at home. burdentohim. Many 8-11 Amerififl-n lirl Ioes to her husband without a penny in her pocket. __I-ler whole assets consist of nothing but a costly rrousseau oi All of us know fine young boys and girls who are desperately in love with each other, who are literally lovesick for each other, and whose happiness, whose health and whose morale are being undermined by a long en- gagement to which even youthful optimism They hope against hope that time; will improve, that the young man will get a better Job, that some miracle will happen that will enable them to marry, and in the meantime they eat their hearts out in bitterness and longing for the naturarright ‘Iliat this condition of affairs is causing many young people, who W0llid prefer to be openly and honorably married, to indthge in that it is mating many a. girl on the downward path and bringing hordes, of imme- Nor can any one deny that it is producing an undesirable crop of cynical bachelors and useless finery that she would gladly trade off for a tio-a-montb allow- ance from Papa. Nor do many parents consider it any part of their obligation to help their sons through those first trying years of marriage when the. young husband is finding out to his dismay what an expensive luxury a wife is, and how short a way the salary that was big enough for one goes when you have to stretch it over two or three or more. Thousands upon thou- sands of divorces would be prevented if only parents felt that when they cultivated crepe de chene tastes in a. girl they should supply it and not expect the poor young man she married to do it, and if they would sweet- en the matrimonial cup that their sous are beginning to get a distaste tor by dropping a little sugar in lt- The argument then is that parents, knowing that their children will some day want to marry, should save up something to finance that, lust as they put aside money to send them to college, and that after they are married they should continue to help them 11 they need it until, they are on their feet. Perhaps the reason that fathers and mothers are so unwilling to make sacrifices, why they balk at going to live in a smaller and less preten- tious house, or do without a new car in order that Mary may marry that young Jones she is so crazy about is because they have passed the senti- mental age, and loves young dream doesn't seem as important to them '0 as their own comfort. They don't regard it as vital. But in this they are wrong. It is their children's whole life, their whole well-being that is at stake, and the most important thing in the world to them is that ‘they should marry while they are still young and still capable of a romantic and passionate love. Furthermore, in financing their dilldrenk marriages to the right men and women, parents are making the best investment in the world; the poor young man who couldn't alone support a wife when often not only provides for her in after years but takes care DOROTHY Int-s. AN ANCIENT OFFICE (Canadian Press) SHEFFIELD, England, Nov. 3- 1024, and Sir Samuel For he married of her par- Roberts, ear-MP. for the Ecclesall Division of Sheffield has been in- stalled, dates back to the year isadirect The office of Master Cutler of descendant of the first Master Sheffield, in which Sir Samuel Cutler, Robert Sermy. ' IF YOU WANT A CLE AR COMPLEXION giveyoarloi _-_.- __ MORE iaoul , I‘. IRON is Nature's rouge. It makes your blood red; and An H. _ rich red blood imparts a beautiful, clear, glowing color to your complexion. On the other hand, the person who hasn't ‘ enough iron, will become pale and sickly-looking. They may also suffer from skin outbreaks because blood, poor in iron, ls not able to fully remove the waste matter from the skill‘ 1 ‘ mu. l" Iron means health and vitality, tool So get plenty of iron in ' blood if you want both clur complexion and .... hr Is <43 v- {cf this oua mineral. like Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. fig ‘r ' lsndyourwbolesystemisre-euerglsed.‘ iDawllllamyPinkPlilshavebelpedfliousandsof INRH tb. Unfortunately, modern foods do not contain enough Hence the need for an iron tonic is remedy supplies iron _in‘ a form‘ which your system A readily and speedily assimilates. As your blood becomes enriched with this iron your skin takes on a healthier tone owls regain a clear, glowing complexion and at the same time has restored these persons to joyous health. As an iron treat- _ _, '_ meat for beauty and health Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills is likely ,, ,, pspfespyou immensely. . . ,1 ~_- i - . ' ~ . . Pale, Pepless Girl Becomes ‘Prentdty d . . . mm“. “m; veqvjq , an ..-'-.. .m,|,,ug, w. ab; 99:20am. ‘hi: a‘; nT-tili w use ~. p ' of iron. Ibo was gives Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for a bw- Ix; whet a happy slugs this brought mild“ 5am‘ 11-» It: t" mm-t'.'@upsauvu"y' rslly. A $4 blood w».- 1 MIME m: DI. Williams’ Pink Plih burgruti increased the em 7- Isuhbllieod. TklsIdednsiunfaIe-bullwllnsheath llldvilllm m.» . sppsflts and digestion; sharing the complexion t». 1 " "* .‘ I ' f a my smumnsauim...mrmw nerve: ......... W p,‘ ,. . lflf» -' .11 - a. -~ cliildreirs CHAPTE.“ Balms. Runbrsoksr had vanished. A telephone call from Carl early next morning gave Rita the news and before noon Senator Runbreck- er visited Mollie at The Globe and expressed the fear she had been The Senator was a sick man. mentally and physically. He told Mollie. that if anything happened to Selma he would blow his brins out. And Mollie knew this was not a wild threat; it was a simple statement of fact. “She was unhappy about Carl Balmer" Mollie said, "and in all probability has gone off somewhere t. get it out of her system. Nothing will hapen to her. Senator." Nevertheless, when the senator had gone, Mollie went to see her friend at police headquarters. "All I want," she informed him, "is per- haps a word whispered to one or two of your men. But officially you know nothing about it.” When Mollie was leaving, the office gave her a copy of what the police had said was a diary, iound in Wells’ room. There were twenty- four single spaced typewritten pag- es. It was not in any sense a diary but a clumsily written autobio- graphy. When she had read it through she went back and checked and re-read passages she found par- ticularly interesting. fllhe portions she checked follow: "I was born in Madrid, Spain, September 22, 1903. Before I was a year old I was taken to Cairo, Egypt, where nq father, a surgeon of some standing, was in charge of a large private hospital. I was al- ways curious about what went on in my father's operating room, and when I was six I climlkd up to the transom of a small room of! the operating room and watched, with considerable horror, I must admit, s. complete autopsy. lt was a full year before I again ventured to return to my secret place. But the interval had given me new courage and by the time I was twelve years nld I had witnessed at least fifty major operations, and several autopsies. "m time I was not only hardened by these experiences but developed a mat eagerness to try my own hand at this fascinating business. During my iatherbabsence from the hospi- tal, I inveigled a young neighbor boy into the operating room where I chlorofonned him, pulled of! his clothes and had made a three-inch incision in ‘his left side when my father, returning unexpectedly, found me there. Under his able care the boy recovered. Twas thoroughly whipped, but I think my father was interested by the discovery that I was disposed to follow his fotsteps for after that he frequently talked to me about both medicine and sur- gery. "But about this time two events occurred that definitely turned me against any orderly career. My mother, whose own mother had died in an insane asylum, went stark mad and after several months of in- finite patience on my father's part was removed to an institution. The second event took place shortly alter my mother's commitment. While fighting with a boy oi about my own age and size. an orderly man interferred and in a rage I drew a pocket knife and stabbed him several times in the hack. For this I was tried foi- assault and only my father's plea saved me from a term in a house of correction." There followed an unt of the boy Fuhrmanh next three years _which were spent in a military school. Then, after a year oi travel, he was sent to Oxford with the ex- pectation that on his graduation he would begin the study of medicine. “It was generally believed now that I had undergone a refonnation, and perhaps I had for while I had definitely decided long ago not to be a physician, I had also come to realize that the intelligent person does not openly defy society's laws. pets’. What I sought to prove was that the modern method of detec- tion was a formula which was so narrow in scope that a half-wit wno had enough brains to understand the simple formula could safely commit any number of major crimes‘ id punishment. I wrote the book under the "non de plume ‘Dr. Chenlee’ and mailed it to a firm of publishers with a note saying I would not, for obvious rea- sons, reveal my identity,‘ but mat they were welcome to the manu- séiript, gratis, if they cared to print "To my surprise. they did publish it and there was an immediate howl of protest which found expression chiefly in letters to the daily news- papers. And now, stirred by this re- action, I began writing s second book which I called ‘The Strange (Jase of Dr. Chemise‘. This was Pure fiction and my only object 5n writing-it was to further irritate those who had been aroused by my first book. It was offered as an auto- biographical record of the fictitious Dr. Chemise, who was then sup.- posed to be living in London, to wove the arguments oi his earlier _ work. Dr. (Jheulee was pictured as a man then nearing his eighty-fifth birthday and at least half the book was taken up with an experiment 5n urder he claimed to have made in Feather in Her Hat BIJULEANNIMOOIE d l "In my third year at Oxford I st- tended a series of lectures on crim- inology and was so impressed that I promptly set about writing a book which I called ‘The Police Are Pup- to return to Oxford, and of his keen disappointment when he discovered his father had not left him his siz- able fortune outright, but had pro- vided a trust fund from which he was to be paid twenty-five hundred pounds a year. , “During the months that I re- mained in Cairo to await final set- tlement of my father's estate, I completed ‘The Strange Case oi Dr. Chezzlee‘. Returning to England, I mailed rny completed m" crint to the publishers of my first book, again concealing my identity. The success of‘ the book was almost ra- stantaneous. More than a quarter of a million copies were sold in the first forty days. Though it was the thinnest fiction, it was received as a true record and rumor had i: that Scotland Yard was combing trio whole of England for the elusive eighty-five-year-old Dr. Chezzlee." (To Be Continued.) ounce banana DATES The combination of orange and date flavors make these candies very popular. You will find your own ways of varying the mixture, :00, of course. 2 tablespoons butter 1 egg yolk ‘A teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons orange juice Sifted icing sugar ‘A teaspoon grated orange rind Silvers of candied orange peel Pitt-ed soft dates Cream butter and blend in 2 tablespoons sifted icing sugar. Add egg yolk and salt; then" alternate sifted icing sugar and orange juice to make mixture stiff enough to hold its shape. Add rind; Form into small rolls and use to stuff dates. Garnish with slivers of candied orange peel, down centre of stuffing. Note: l/i cup crushed pineapple and juice may replace egg yolk and orange juice. Add few drops lemon juice instead of orange rind. Dec- orate with chocolate dragees. CLERGYMAN DIED ' WORTH $400,000 LONDON, Oct. 3-The estate oi an Anglican clergyman, . who divided his life between church work and hotel management, has been prohated" at more than $400,000. The bulk of this goes to his adopted daughter. The deceased was the Rev. Francis Thomas Bartlett Westlake. Originally in the Baptist ministry he eventually took Anglican orders, worked for some time in Lanca- shire, and finally had a rectory in Northamptonshlre. Meanwhile with his wife, who was a keen business woman, he managed a large private hotel in Douglas, Isle of Man, the clientele oi which was drawn largely from church and. chapel ‘circles. Later Mr. and Mrs. Westlake took a boarding house at Blackpool, which proved equally popular. Mrs. Westlalre died some years ago on holiday in the south of France. l-ler husband in his will directed that his body "whatever might be the cost" should be buried at Nice in his wife's grave, and taken there by land and sea, not by air. PRESS THE BUTTON TO CHOOSE YOUR PERFUME NEW YORK, Nov. 3—Milady can now step inside what looks like s. pressing buttons make a scientific choice of perfume. She touches one button and clean fresh air sweeps through the booth. She presses another and in- troduces the scent or n. particular perfume. Other buttons bring other scents from a. series of nozzles. By alternately filling the booth with clean air and different scents she can concentrate on her sense of smell. The new device has been install- ed in a large New York department store. EVA MAY ATTEMPT NEW CHANNEL SWIM (Canadian Press) IIICTOU, N. 5., Nov. 1—-l~lusky Eva Morison, who almost swam the English Channel this summer, is going back this fall to try it all over again. Undetsned by her first failure, the Pictou county girl is confid- ent she can finish the tough swim given something better than the gale and fog that forced her out in August. It was so rough that time that one of the hosts trailing her bumped into Miss Morrison several times es she stroked her way through great rollers. And it was so foggy her handlers didn't know until later that they were close to shone when she was taken out. Johnny Morrison. Eva's 17-year- old brother, would like to go over with her for the second attempt. A powerful swimmer, he may try the grind with his big sister. modernistic telephone booth and by 1‘ 11.. Hoqsliwlrrv and HER ACTTVITTES TH! Gil‘! It came to me unheralded st dawn Enwrapped tissues. soft of pearly mist, And tied with sunbeanis. One by one , The folds, touchedby an unseen Hand, Drifting apart revealed the hidden treasure; ' Then I heard the song of birds. Murmurs of myriad prayers. thanksgiving, praise. It was a good and perfect gilt. One more new day. _ - lllam Boyd Allen Honesty is really the art of ap- pearing honest. Folks who lose faith haven't much else to lose. . The school of experience never suspends for a. vacation. Any man Ls happy when the blue sky is the only over-head. We must bend to the storms- the way trees acquire their strength. Only God can make a tree. Any fellow with a. cigarette hiltt can burn it up. Some people think they are “doing good" by trying to run other people's business. The world is full of men looking for jobs because they can tell you so many schemes to get rich. A MIMI-I'd ‘Foot Bath When preparing s. mustard foot bath, he sure to dissolve the mus- tard in cold water first. Then add it to the hot water. If just dumped in, the mustard is very apt to stick to the skin and cause a. burn or blister. An Unpleasant Smell If your hands persplre you are very apt to have gloves that get a nasty, leathery odor to them after several weerings. This can be prevented ‘by dusting rice or talcum powder into the gloves as soon as th~y are removed. A Place for Them A large box should be kept for the purpose of storing cancelled cheques and i ipts. Be sure to put them there after the bill is paid, then should a. dispute come up over the payment,’ you know just where to find the bill and re- ceipt or cancelled check. Removes the Stains When crystal vases or flower holders are used frequently s. brown stain is apt to form at the base. These dark stains can be remo :l by moistenin tea leaves with vinegar, placing them in the vase and scrubbing the inside with them by means of a bottle brush. A Gift Drawer I‘ is nice to have e. gift drawer in your home if you have plenty of space. In this you may put any bargains you pick up from time to time and when you need something in a hurry, there is your prize or gift just waiting for the opportunity. Old Pictures After years oi service. the backs of pictures hung on your wall are apt to get torn and open to dust and soil. Take a heavy weight of wrapping paper and glue it tightly to the hack of the frame. This will keen out dust that is so hard on the picture itself. What, No Toothpick? The use of toothpicks after a meal is, of course, very poor taste, but besides that many pepole in- jure the delicate gum tissues be tween the teeth by constant use of toothplcks. To have healthy teeth is most important that this tissue be preserved. THE CHARTER OAK The Charter Oak in Hartford. Conn, was blown down in August. 1856, when its age was computed to be nearly 1,000 years. The tradi- tion relating to it is as follows: When Sir Edmund Andros was appointed governor general of New England, he came to Hartford in i687 to receive the Colonial char- ter. This the olonists were loath to surrender, but, appearing to submit, carried it to the council chamber. During the debate,‘ the lights were extinguished and in the ensuing confusion the docu- ment was carried from the room to its hiding place in the hollow of the tree. Here it remained until 1689, when the deposition of Andros made further concealment unnecessary. When Men Wore Short Breeches Gentlemen of Queen Elisabeth's time wcie doublets, breeches and long st " . Sometimes. but not always, the breaches reached down to the knees. There was a custom of stuffing the breaches with cotton-wool rugs. flag and other substance in order to make them wide. The coats of men of fashion were of silk, velvet and taffeta. 'l"hey were of red, blue, green and almost every other color. some costs hung to the knees, or eves to the ground. Qllnlne Well Known Of the many drugs that have come to be recognised as almost positive "ics in certain sugar and it cup cocoa.‘ Bombay, India, forty years before. l-le told how he had ‘ three ,.N7Iflil'lfllt in tbs city of Bombay, had written each when of the conventional out which the police are invariably baffled. the police had made ntrhesdway whatever in their investigation." Bil-Arman then told how, before » l l-IIHH! '00s: Your Stomach Rebel liter Every llsal You hi? “The bloelalhibeevy feeling bait: insole; e em n wi m p , sag-as uh oversees; ngsnd B, yenumssls; the rising sud soaring of food, all m» and more fall to the lot of those sufleriag diseases quinine seems to be one a v.2: an our: given a es on which grew this remarkable bark was "qulnaqqulna." In the ' L tongue-A!‘- ‘ s of thoIllcll—Wh¢n the namoois- plant was duplicated it indicated that it had some curative proper- ties.—Wsshington Post. Payne's Burial Place John Howard Paynepauthcr of "Home, Sweet Home," lies in Oak Hill cemetery. Washington. D- @- l-ie died in 1852 while consul at Tunis and was buried there. ‘ll-tiny years later his body was brought beck, inrrred, and a monument was erected to his memory. HUNT FOR OIL THAT ENDURES FOR AGES WASI-IlNGTOlL-Search fbr an oil which forms a basic ingredient of paints which are known to have withstood exposure for at least 150 years on the unprotected faces of mountain cliffs in southern Cali- fornia will be one .oi the" objectives of Dr. John P. Harrington, Smith- sonian institution ethnologist. when he resumes his field work among the Mission Indians. By extensive inquiries among 1M Indians last m‘. Doctor Ham"!- ton confirmed the fact that this oil is pressed from the seeds of the chilicothe, a specig of wild cucumber. It is ow quite rare. but grows in the uthern California mountains in places known to the Indians. Formerly, closely related plants were found over most of the ‘United states, but they have become very scarce- Doctor Hea-rington will try to obtain enough of the chilicothe cucumbers to yield a sufficient supply of the oil for experimental purposes, to detennine whether it is this ingredient which gives the paint its remarkable lasting quality. The Indians obtain it in the crudest sort of way, merely it out of the seeds with a stone pestle. Five Colors Obtained Using thb oil as a base. five colors of paint are obtained. Red pigment is manufactured by mix- ing the chillicothe oil with red scum from the surface of springs whose wafer contains a high per- centage of iron. White and yellow paints are obtained by mixing the oil with native clays of those colors. A black, which retains its gloss for years is made by mixing the oil and oxide of ma. ganeee. Blue can be obtained from a mix- ture of the oil and powdered azulite-a mineral comm in the neighborhood. Apparently, no other substance enters into any of these paints, which withstand all the vicissi- tudes of weather literally for cen- uries. These rock pictures are referred to by the Indians as "spirit paint- ings." Presh ones still appear from time to time in the depths of the mountains. Near the missions are some which am known to be at least 150 years cfd, having ante- dated the coming of the Spanish missionaries. “Splrlts" Work at Night The “spirits" always work during the night. their handiwork sp- pearing in the morning. The paint- ings. of course. are the work of medicine men. The attitude toward them of the peop‘e as a whole is a curious mixture of belief and sophistication. Few actually believe that "spirlts"'produce the picture. but some still believe that they are the work of supernatural agencies working through the edlcine man. It was from some of these shamans themselves that Doctor Harrington obtained the formulas for the paints. The oil is also used extensively by the Indian women, as asunburn their red skins burn badly when e, " to the summer sun for long periods. The oil presumably not on!y absorbs those wave lengths of the solar spectrum causing sunburn, as do many pre- parations regularly sold for the purpose, but also tend to make the skin redder. Redness is considered an attribute of beauty. FRENCH CREAM BALLS You will find these chocolate-flav cred nut bon bone unexpectedly de- licious, perhaps, if it has not oc- curred to you that an uncooked cream esn be quite sonhll ‘ ‘ in character. _ _ l cup nutmeets, finely chewed 5t cup cocoa 1% cups sifted icing sugar Few salt ‘A cup sweetened condensed milk 8 teaspoons vanilla Mix nutsneats. 1% icing lfclswn will with sweetened condensed milk and vanilla. Add salt. Blane into balls. Combine remaining sugar and cocoa and roll bells in mixture. WELL IIBILLIIB A Tbessudrusflen a Wells n» ll wllllfifl! lblllalseefclear, wbelsesmewatsrhewr Weast gusrslteetoget atqwe gnrelteele the A n. 1a, l5 and l7 years. Sins l5 l6- loticn. These women in spite of ' smm" CLOTHES, FOR rue 140m: ozzsssmaxeza Today's pattern points the way to an altogether charming, inexpensive simple to sew, dress for the teens. Nevertheless, in spits of ifs usi- ness to acquire. it has extremely modish features with its soft cellar. sleeves that flare at the wrists and graceful and important centre-ful- ness at front of the skirt. Bottle green crepe silk with wool effect. made this lovely dress, style No. 458 is designed for sizes quires 3% yards of 39-inch material. Price of PATTERN l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin ls preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 4.58. Sire -...-....-.¢e---u-tees Name use-sensuous»..-tuJenaeooueee-enue AMorningSmile TERPSICHORE Xouna Man—Y0unr lady. what do you usually get for teaching a younsman like me new dance steps? Attractive Dancing Teacher —-One of my assistants. Sta ..- D0 IT RIGHT “Where's old Bill been lately? I haven't seen him for months." "What? Haven't you ‘card? He's lot three years for stealin’ a car." y What did he want to steal a car for? Why didn't he buy one m- net Ply for it. like a gentleman!" THE COOK'S ' CORNER UNOOOKED CANDIIQ Confections that require no cook- ing—don't they sound like the ans- wer to a number of minor problems? Pbr those simple home parties that no person should find irksome to Prepare. the candies for a finish- inl touch can be achieved with very little in the way of effort. When the children beg to be showed "to make candy". you can- turn them loose with the easy requirements for files ‘of tfhese ugicooklelddsweeta, and e o ear o s t scorched “ . p e "ups or And Just for the ' “ ' o: u" family sweet tooth, 1t is ' ts have candies at your flngertlpg m“, l" $5 95-5“? made as the few we give here. I I O“ 6W0!“ Illqllrsk CINU/NE BARBADOS [XT/PA FANIY MillASS ES Auction: stu: AT NORTH RIVER BRIDGE 0N WEDNESDAY, NOV. C, I985 Sliding At 1 O'clock sharp I am untreated by Parker A. Home to offer by public suction his beautiful farm of l0 acres and lovely home. All ’ conven- iences sitnalcd thereon. This is an 091114111"! N - ‘ a real home. Also an ideal location for tourist finds. nothing in the way of heat and with G ‘ \\I cam-nu. mum! scnooi. Standing for October: Grade X.-l, Jean Mannie: i. Kenneth Menace; 8, Donald Mac- Ausl 014.12g. DEF-l, Bernice Ward; i. YOIIDI. Grade viii-i. Bebe: MacAus- land; a. Jack AIIWW; l. Pram“ I Robe Grade NL-l, Allison MacRae; l. Molly Lewis; I, Arlene Jenkins. Grade V.-—l, Georgie Ward: I. I-lsrdd MacRse. Grade IV.—l. Betty A811"; 3- Norma Jenkins; 8, Lillian Lewis- Grade IIL-l, Gladys Ward; 2, eorge ‘ sensult. Oxide II.-—i, Jackie Spencer; I. my R0901‘- Gnde I.-No exams. g Betty MacKay, teacher. iii-i- Use Ilia-d’: for Dandruff _-¢__.. Boy Scouts Association AIIIIlIAL MEETING The Annual Business Meeting of the Provincial Council of the Boy Scouts Association will be held in the City Hall, Charlottetown on Monday, November 4. 8i- 730 p.m. All interested in Scouting cordially invited, J. 0. HYNDMAN. President. ‘ shank‘; Glasses In Speech Education For Children and Adults will M ’ ‘ ’ by Min Margery Hicks. B. L. 1., graduate of Emerson Cul- Speaklng - Monday l‘ ‘LOO P. M. Conversational Voice Culture - Monday at 8-00 P. M. V Private and class instruction m mm mum; (oi-mm. oormih" of speech defects and posture enr- notion. For further information ca" I'll-J. L-24l0-l1-1-3l. House To Rent Also at the lune place l will offer l choice mileh cow due to Also Crop consisting of 20 tans u": ....""'.:."'":..' s w, s; wheat. I00 bushels cell. 0 Also quantity el homeholl furni- “IIIUIC I dhllel. ollclefh, ‘"91’ "Ill!!! Iinllls. bell. etc.‘ lvsrytbhs in and about the Illea Abe 1 track wagon. ‘ht-ms cub. runs a. noaus, North am. .1. a. smnonam, - ' Desirable bungalow in heel N: ldentlal section being No. l0 North liver load. covnnrllllll m‘ 40cm with fireplace, dinlnl“ room, three bedrooms each Wm‘ linen closet. bathroom. illflm“ pantry, china closet. Ilot "i" beating. recession immediately- tpliyulhlll. r. s. Morris. Chi let dance, er H. I. llaefllll. Solicitor. Riley Bids. Charlottetown- ___a IrISOI-IO-SI-dl Auctioneer. Il-Ilsl-li-i-l-s-Ii. Bus». Buying No.1 and No. 2 5V3! m (m!) wun book was finished, he was called home because of the death cf his mother; how. within twenty-four hcurs after his arrival, his father suffered a stroke and was dead rs- lle z not Blmulnfl Hi1 ll w» from swam-h trouble. Burdock Blood Bitters tones up' tbs membrane lining of the stomach, and re- "if. "i.'£"$""" e ...sadgetvidof stage‘ ma. ~ '°" g prowl of digestion. as other dealers, l Potatoes Certified Seed Potatoes. also table stock daily taking delivery at the Railway Wharf- Our cffleesad warehouse has been removed to W. D- Gillls Co. Wharf, same waroheus wk . .1. Lester Dolls"! operated at. Call and get your bags. 0 prices are as his" PAUL A. BQJRRAY-