PAGE TWO 7.5 . one‘ scurry to the lower front over Forlorn state Now he tood th - ii__ - reoeivdfi the ‘five tfrgd-i o fame‘: A young woman who murdered her husbe-ud becs glégnp ed £2: ofiedam mud-covem to take her ale ping and he refusedtwel endvoalélnbfil t3} £10m . . ve T steps with Shlgiff Blllesvivzélghggs, s. felt like slasyihgugllelti"! giii usrhhnds under slifiilui- llrovwflwii- bi" b" he new rsyons are bis. red-faced man. Behind them 1mm me nerve was it. y grand__but you ma“ rise ‘geyggxrlognedeputy, Bud Taylor. t us ho e and pra that this cnsc will not set e precedent for us- handle them gently. y these two. was Thurbe 3. Don't rub or twisl ‘Now’ them. Avoid cake . . .. . . . th . teie l soap rubbing. This sheriff moved on into the house. flst to help him keep‘ going. Wise anilmspelltii weakens threads,en- lfgiylilyhdivergltgpdly, l" l Lm d mother-knows Kellogg's Corn Flakes, courag” ma" Miss Hassle . ‘Pluhnflo Blieific vfouftae withmmund suguvgiveshimll°°d°d come at 1&5? We've been waiting i°°d ""8!- ofdei’ "Will Pic-kl!" 4.plp them In lllltewurm lux and wail-ins" oiKeliozlrsiodnvi the minute you take them oil. 5- When drylng-genllysqueeze ,1 out moisture, then roll stock- _ Peasley and Advent. lugs in a turkish towel. deputy shoved Thurber 6.04m‘! use clelhetplne, Dill Thurber was a sorry do hang them over s smooth rod, away from heat and sun.- hlm- Furthermilm- he to Pau at least, before you wear them again. Rayons are strongest when perfectly dry- hauriqds upon his stom i. ow, folks. I'd like t0 say OUR glamorous new rayons and _ hembergs will wear beautifully if you give them gentle care. Be sure you clip them in LUX every night, L“! is gentle — saves elasticity-whisk: away harmful perspiration-cuts clown ' embarrassing, costly runs. Paul scowle meafin? d. “Wh W85, YOU m1 w ght say, a ll you about that st I heard of fir e lghurber hadn't told "You never icld me thing." Thurber said. dgért know what yo a _.. dale after Sheriff House of llate I! ISABII. GARLAND CHAPTER XXII p0 through fllfiiélOll-BG. It brought every H De . thin, saturnine indiviedlllgl- Beggcen that's quite an interesting little yarn. He's under arrest right now. I'll tell you about it " The “So I understand from Dr. Harry if we can all Just go into room. " but the others gathered in Lux saves elasticity, helps stock- meglgffi =‘ in stoke: theirfili Th d to k " B P e 0c r too the : stairs, ' the drawing room- Se Alan. Helen, Estelle, Chadwick. and sat down beside hi shaven, red-eyed, end with the un- nlistakable odor of alcohol about to Sheriff Stephens. His lwife glared back at him omin- n1 115 Y ma‘ sheriff settled himself in chair. leaned back ling folded his B10 took me so long to get here was that nobody come alter me." Didn't ‘Thurberi’ o, sir-never come near me. Way I hanplpened to run into him what had hap- ned up here was from Dr. Harry. me a thing." Paul turned on Thurber. “What's the ides, anywa ? Why didn't ym g) dto? the sheri as I ordered you o .. at!" Paul roared. "You know deirn well I went out to vour cottage last night and pounded on the door and to d you to g0 down to True- Stephens and Dr. Social a THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ndl Personal '1. Fashions kn‘ AAA‘ i l tifiable homic do and ma d rest his Ice an r that “Howdy Mr. Comstook," the sh r- 1. aw w|"|y_b. m meted PEuL “Gum you“ “ha” enough for e poor ltlllgeblld "m °f Y°“"i"- Rwrgdliiluswlili? looking at Thurber I and flnc cm 2 whose face wore an expression of . Pullhem on eave- "- issiN-"Al - "Where the devil have you been Pm °i l"! "Ii-i N :‘,'I"Y'" Y°P ‘lid Y°“'_ ell mu time?" he demanded. ruins Jimmie. in I iiyinz in» our n "R" ""1 mifl- Thurber didn't answer, but the hydrant, fence post, or other gultgblg lherifi’ did object. Like all youngsters, he burns up an awesome amount of energy in s day. Must have a sustaining break- about how f- i coroner up- "Did you kill her, Thurber? Did vol-l? If you did. so help me, I'll—" Thurber threw up his hands to protect himself. "I didn't! I swear I didn't! Keep him away from mel Don't let him hurt me!" o, The sherifl’ rose and laid a hand on Paul's arm. "Steady, boy. Don't fly oil the handle- that way. We'll work this thing out. don't you frat. Now, then, tell me what you know ul. rena. Miss The sheriff's into a chair m. sight — un- view. more existing to listen to all day appeared to ill dl Lflblé in I- 1'9“- gpltn 515111055 m glililflfimhelxlfiltiln ab-Qél-évomiihafégilizi" d n d“ 331g. ihre eveenirrllglega r, and p 7. Dry lhoroughlyforafitllda; vent ' o "5 ap- himself‘ peared from my mother's desk last the Wm- news, ght. 1 found it missing shortly "° den“ °“ after I found her dead. It's clear now what happened to it. Th must have known it was there. He sneaked into her s d mething of an evening that txiuiio to go window sho r to - oom. strangled h burger ma; she d he said. "first off. 1, t d m r s. um that the reason it ell‘! odlgfiitltlanglyngfifigertofiogtgswd Old meanie 101‘ not 8019K Zliddllil With wildly. "I didn't touch her! I took the moniy. but I didn't kill herl" "Shut up!" suld Sheriff Ste- phens. "Now, Mr. Comstock. you set down while I do a. little talking. I want to tell vou how I found out about him having the money and all. Seems he blew into town some time around noon. He stopped by Dr. Harry's house — according to the Doc-arid left word for him to come upnhele, but he didn't come near me. should I have gone at d? you sive new evening gown, wants to be seen. take her out and give her a good coincidence. later. The much as gust spending the eveni can't for “wh he life of him see why our pace?" Thurber muttered. "I ust went by Dr. Harry's because I-—" He broke of! suddenly. “You ust went to Doc Harry's be- cause w y?" asked the sheriff. with deceptive mildness. Thurber swallowed several times. "Because I thought there might be war should to do my‘ There you are. sullenly. "I u're talking there is ure is in pcradin Y. Dorothy ‘gays- -AT-HOMI§ HUSBANDS STAY ' SHOULD N01‘ BE MURDERED Most Women Content Themselves By Crying t he his . lkimbmgs. ‘(b51180 i’ " w ° ‘m’ d bad entitle her to shoot him 121mg; wfleblgvsnfiylbylfg-iwllftgmbgcaun didn't feel frolicsoms after toiling for eight or ten hours to provide her with beau .v upon him for that reason is really canyins the mutter e Iittio u» m. Most women sin hemscl with she ding a. few buckets of ie aver tlgiera forlorn lots and tcllin! and how little they apprwinie =11 they do that have been marked down from $60 t0 This emotional outlet conduccs to the safety d glflshgggtriggtfioilnthgn it would otherwise , mom, but, it does not remove wives amen: wgrievanoo about having husbands who are no wining to play around th them of evcninel- causu Ion. mm! FIGHTS husbands and wives have so many fi! ‘i; B5 tax“! “rely personal point question, for each looks at it from n. d eren p dr d h thing The woman who is tied duwubtygilgififigtitfi. <§Erd§s£dbXtiEEtfiZiHaé for m-ot-h-e-r wants her hus an en n gllltlliuting conversation when he is at home, and tell funny stories thflt mm il nce as soon as he has screed she (eels likleeranuninfihe: pine down his iivwi and choking him The housewife who cooks and scrubs and nothing to occupy her mind, except w think diiitgéoiiu herself. dud she thinks her husband an WANTS T0 APPEAR. 1N PUBLIC - d-l kc nd has an expen- Md ‘he “Mm” who thinks xielhslglhl; ingiiiilillgowlieii and will see she practically married to get a. time an almost has w chlomtm-m him to get him into his evening clothes and that on all festive occasions he sits around lookiflC 1 martyr, she bemoans herself as another victim of marr a The husband, on his part. whg i» ‘magi-iii’ hlhltfazsletllgtalkiliilli dd?‘ iiilv°iilfiuillii°voi§e, who desires nothins 0Y1 “iii-h 5° to 115m J tell ho the c m i ""i.'“,‘3.',lf'.%'d'i‘ill.‘l§.;l€“€£.fi abolilz i. any. And ,f half f w man's pleas- promme by taking h: hi‘: ngtter hgwaglogmy he looks. 5o there is notn ng to be done about it. But really shouldn't be killed for bulking. The. t is I have heard men say they would rather be shot than go to the Smiths‘ l! she ked him “'2, marsh been robab y had. h t zht dfuiuiifilf. limit.‘ ell-limes ff/Vflf/é’ zm/ 7.64 At your grocei-‘s in 7- and 12-02. packages _ also improved FILTER tea bails. treatments thes. but for her to commit mayhem Blended end perked In Cnnede short of that and content ars their friends é husbands r Livingc Leisure The Woman's Realm Ire with age is grandmother's ace, Brought from its meat for s bride to wear; Hash and fragrant are orange ooms. Binding the veil to her golden hair. Borrowed from one who is nesl- m mean and selfish their ail; d ry day fifiilfi ‘l...‘.‘l.°i..“,'°i‘i.%'i¥u?§ fifiitiggig; likes marriage a. less danfler- be for It is always advisable when u; u "D011 a carpet thickness o; IIBWBPBPBI‘. otherwise a ring m form on your carpet or rug and such rings are very hard to get n“; DIAMOND ODDITY 5o rare are evenly coloured d1‘. "Willis °i 8w quality that til often command a. greater price than colourless diamonds or m, samue 12:29‘, yet fine colour is dug w i! 5 8 mil!!!‘ Y in th wnlcii the stone is come C35?“ °l Handkerchiefs will be easier is f.°i€“wi‘..¥“l%.'§°;§l?‘ui2;°3" are washed. w -_-._ MOSQUITO LOTION To make a mosquito lotion g a home use the following; l Mgpoqn of ecu de cologne, and 2 drums of oil o! Peiillyfoyll. Piece the esll do cologne in a bottle, und slowly add the pennyroysl. Shake well, and apply. And when he retires, with his pipe and m; ls tlhe cobwebby kerchief of Irish o0 . . m_ And blue as the midnight Sunl- ui er Is the sapphire that comes from her happy groom. Forbbrides today, s; in times gone Y. ‘Vear the something old and the something new’ Norowouid they mail-y pt use with. u . The something borrowed, the some- thing blue. BOOK COVERS A cont of varnish may oe applied over the finest tooled leather or other book binding without fear of injuring the color or appearance In B113’ Way. The idea. is a good one for the protection of rare old books since the varnish forms a moist- proof vrear-resistng coat which will preserve the cover indcfinitel . It a good ides, too, for chil en's books which soon show finger- prints and other siZlis of wear; or for the cook book which ts apt w (‘ch d mends and has ow lgisargh she is. wants to , if it is no more play bridge wi e Joneses, or eat her. and who would that she silent date when she finds like an early Christian B. h" f 1 f0 wilful’. iiiidwiliilui i2 th lving-room couch ivifiiviguisnw and the streets, or 3d no use in telling the wife to tum- CUTE PAIR. Smart little adjuncts m m, brides happiness in her kitchen are the dimdl aprons, lll very vivid the poor man too severe a punishment, though —-mvi&ht be trouble up here." “ at kind of trouble?" v £152"? m efiecgnygfi? t??? migiggll-I-Jckgthousht some one ‘ lawman,"- didgitlysgéid yguu? “m” ma.“ "M mgigyd what Vmade you think A M » , S o’ "tutu. fiiurazlt“ .":.'.2. “i: 1H; d“ '*§}',,,{,*""',,f5“"' on,“ ""1"! m‘ ‘z "‘ hills bound by u rubber ban “mg a s n“ Ker a up " ' i l, "There's eighteen 1 HOPE CHESTS IN ECLIPSE of possession in s. host of exquisite l ——-—- trousseau underthings, but she That cedar chest which used to will not neglect to gather together hundred and some odd dollars in this stac us wondered ii’ any of you folks would §OOO e-ii didn't. Mr. Chad, 1 didn't: He t said it wouldn't hurt neri ' k- He said it would just make her sick I E .. DOMESTIC AFFAIR happen to know anything about it." m f" ,, , " d i; H16 DIM]! 9Y9- ge 22hr glide grid Joy of brldes-to- e. collection of lingerie sufficient ..w‘§§§§§"§§ §,,§§°,',§‘,f,_‘}??icmd hearlgvnlio said What wouldnt hurt wrgirffg. w“ 5° are as gen anishb etd to the lmllao to see her through six months or uked hoarse“), “Maude” He Sam the“ was“ no um the warp. ghopegfgyllrke. Emu, zVljnlgvlzgmfifi-é gigllfgmveuiswgrxllitetgfbgtiyféniggga Tllefihfilg: ierked‘ s. thumb to- danger - but moi when w. Paul "iigiiiiibtlflfffiv ‘ = . - ward ur r. "On him.’ , m b g, ' d r 1w, “T o o ' collects the minimum linen. silver. with the smart clothes necessary to pa“; strode flora“ the mom and ffighi- Iaaogghtogaygeyshewas sick china. and crystal with which to look her loveliest bridal self through make her temporary quarters plea- the coming Summer and Fall. Let sontly livable and homelilte. next Winter fend for itself, when page, She may have to forego the pride the leaves begin to fall. of your to good enough."--- Sold by leading lewellers everywhere! FCC IRIDFS IOOK AND INSURANCE stood over the cowering servant, his hands clenched. his face white with Y Id h o more appropriate tribute to the sincerity o“ m" c wktlisn e genuine Bridal Wreath diamond ring. The exclusive 4-point guarantee of Fri“! §°|°"|"B- "milli- brllllance end flawless quality tells her that only the beet ls BMW. WREAITH or something, so I ducked out the 5M6! 110i’ @911“! mu’ h“ .. back consulted a. doctor. Holliwollg the sherifl cut in. Doctor: "D0 yiiiiudriiil- 58157?" "What's dli this about Manders?" Sandy: "Yes, sir. "He was the one that give me the Doctor: “Well. you must Ii" capsules to put in Mrs. Comstocks that up. D'you smoke?" medicine chest. He had. ‘em for a. Sandy; "Yes, sir." sick horse." Docmr; "You must give that up. “Mm ‘you speyakdlnfi leg the bottle my h ca. s eswe o yourpoc - M s“ “m, ujckjy thmug "i" ° “he!” asked the office oor, theqdoctor exclaim- Thurber nodded. “Yer - t took _ 1m back out of her cabinet when “Ag” Bu, p,“ m, gm. my ce. n y- I-I took the money. I was afraid mhlfige ggleiyhfiboke up, saying "I'm not taking it," replied Sandy. faintly. “But — but 1 don't under- sltgnd." I don't understand — any- ng. "I don't blame you e bit mlvam," said the sherifl. “It sure a. mix- up. But let me go on with my story about what this fellow did after he WHEN TO SEND G111‘! TO BRIDE Presents may be sent st any time . . . ." aft r th invlt tion is received. They “m to “lid be Continued) at: alwgys seliit to the bride. dd- dressed vrith hel- maiden name. in care of her parents or srdiun The bride acknowledges them at once in a brief. graceful note of tliatlks, written upon small notepaper, either with or without her monogram, as preferred. Stationers should be consults es to the correct paper for this vv‘ THE COOK ’S Q c. w. PAITERSOII J EWELLER Gt. George St. P11111050 . CORNER 04+» FILLED POPOVEBS 1 up sifted flour, 1-2 teaspoon “it, 3 eggs, 1 cup milk, i table- spoon shortening, melted. - Method: Blft flour and sait- Bell eggs light and combine with milk and shortening and add to d in- grsdients. Beat with rotary at» er for 3 minutes vlzoroupiY- Pill hot ‘ cum. . . flu-il- sq with shortening until two-thirds full. Bake 25 minutes in hot oven, 475 degrees li‘., then decrease oven mm‘ tem t loaaod mud J. R. WILLIAMS m “*5Q?i.m"asl“‘..§§§..ill“'§l r i0 l°||9W ""'“ °" rm Friend! Je ell a? '8'“; °' 3"“ “m “m” Z . be“ mh- - bun-l- “ ' s F L “ '/ ca. Geo Sllreetw n‘ " iiJii-lhofi‘ .‘1‘"§<;'Zn°‘§l‘” $3.1 / rimhme-i-d-i-u-u-l fiFFe’, ' rom the cups and fill with scramb- .4’ U" oihfiilflC-felm to led eggs, replacing tops. . guard against under- - - / “time” - -' - , non- unn lreasy harmless t I‘ _ s’ l2“ I fabrics.’ Pull-ounce In: /.'.../...~.'-... roe 0mm AID um olloou fill‘! llll u ,,,',,,-,",,,°“,° MY°§‘.’,°T,‘,’“'W1 “$2.93? m’ ”¢'M'°"""" Bil l Dill. -- 1 14 “E50,,” nllgtfbge-asduuspogi 576?‘! PIgSyAIYATION 5173111135 r,1-2 cu so crum . I I ‘llilffi. Guam" 5M5- P- = 9”‘ filial. it‘: i ' Bridal wmui Diamonds c Wedding mm 35ml “ch11; wagon - ~ - 1 4 lllfethod: Saute 0l1l0l1 in shorten- until 110w but not brown. MDASE JEWELER Summersidc i See the latest stylesjiere. No ‘obligation. in: ye Combine with beef. salt, first pep- per, crlnlbs, and half ihe beetcn eggs. 00mins remaining ingre- dients. Press meat mixture out on sheet of waxed pane ton!!! l4 X lo inches. spread with will» mixture. Roll meat around stuf- fing and place in loaf pan. Bake ._ ..k.__.._ _ i i. 1 hour and l5 minutes in moderate oven, 360 deqgyl I Genes H become spotted and sticky me @010“. Bud matching gloves lo Ill: wdghgb], yagnjlh ma“, binding her pies and cakes out of the oven. n um u, boo _ The gloves are good too for puttw e and L ___k mo 8mm” wood 0n the open fireplace. l ' {You GIRLS Will) SIIFFER llilMlllllllllllll PROPER VALVE USI PB. ESERVDS ' nun-m. oslui or floss -____ ___. Every indirect ate he m 111m Wlhcn not in use garden hose figfffifggmgfihilflgifghigfejif; is installed propgly zhas Evolve‘: for should be carefully‘ drulned of uuvoumefl_due to mncuonn, blowin out the scale and sediment Water, coiled so that there lire no from t e copper coil qt the hogan; kinks or bends, and stored oft the says the Plumbing end Heating ground, preferably indoors, so that Industries Bureau. it will dry out free of dirt und gril- liiallure on the part of the homo- Linoleum floors should be kept owner or service man to use these waxed to preserve iiifii Slim" valves is the chief reason why Don't varnish inlaid linoleum. ll many indirect water heaters and may discolor and cause cracking. water heater co per coil; huvd t0 _ be replaced e year. with cop- per hesding the list of critical we: materials, homeowners and service men should flush the sediment from the coils at frequent inter- vals and thus minimize the possi- mcnthiy MIBUIAI ss-try Lydia E. Pinkbemh Vegetable Compound Tlbletl (with added iron). Mnds emecially [or toomenflrbsy also help build up rsd blood. Made in Canada. Knowing Bright Phrases You're Never at e Lose Sum-Odell Relel from llsilllna gillvletgedt-h“ the w“ m” “m” all Ila Fem vliih _____ Y _ 1mm mu. wxunr “ELLQGGIQ A front hall is s nice thing to have, but you can't live in it, and it mil’ greatly increase the cost of the house. LINOLBUM IOIWALL! Linoleum wall coverings no m. Needlecraft/i For The Home b0 feminine Tongue-tied the minute duo's alone with an attractive lnenl It's times like this when you MUST know bright conversation- Wlw says you don't in e lsysuit? Int them look st this dim g suit, simplicity itself and about as big ls a minute, yet ruffle- mgmeddarld fluigttnirlg a. en s. ma em» Ji etertcn like “Wonderful party!‘ . . . "Isn't the room glamorous with these colored lights?" to learn, but such simple, friendly phrases certainly help you to get acquainted . . . and they may peve the wey in romance! Pretty econ the man you're wida may ask, "Why didn't we meet long ego?" And you, of course, know e charming reply: "Fate's been hold- ing out on us!" You charm your hostess. too, when you remember to say, "I can't tell you how much I've enjoyed tonigb“ And if you collect vivid ways of saying tilinps-“egog with expecte- , with cont! in 00in or stung to me Needlecraft Duran. Obn- tu Guardian. The Oharlottctown Guardian Needlecraft Department. "on" “om u Meumuhh’. "on" h, Style No. I541 . .--.. ..--.. eeeo -. e blue moon"—you become a really h , , cmpmhm You impress influential business people. too, when you know the ---—- poised, efficient thin: to eey. On II"?- AM"! he ‘ lepbgne: "Maythmalkeeeni ep- __ pontment” After e n rvew: ‘Thank u for your time." m" “ma” Anne with effective ‘ you're any situation! mistress of Our fl-pege booklet gives dozens of gr ’ phrases for many social and business occasions. Lim lively phrases to give color, treehneu to yol_.|r spegch. Bendldeenisincoiasf your o ofIiITIOTIVE or c ALL OCCASIONS to The Charlottetown Guardian, Home 8cm, Be £170 to your sum, D1115 am: of booklet. ' Ill‘ I