I > “_"‘TFYfi'ifi“ffl‘iil’vil—vQfilQ-vQvwnsryurvyqvyqvqqvyq ‘lllllltllllfl"flfii llllflil p. i=.u:n l1i-il‘!l:lf’ t, iZlfl-KJHFII . t . -. ,5. l PAGE TWQ 7 What the Fashionables are Wearing By Annabelle Worthington A happy wee model that will please the most fastidious little miss. It ls one-piece at the front with drop seat back. Don't you think the Peter Pan collar and little pocket cute? It is the most simple garment to put together. You can make it o! a good quality fabric for a very smell sum. Striped flannel is darling in pale to dark blue tones. Flanneletes in pretty floral or gay dots is another iiice scheme. Kindergarten prints ln flannels or cotton are amusing. Style No. 785 is designed for slzcs 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material with 2 iyards of ruffiinz. Price of Pattern l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. I No. 786. Size ...................-. Styles T. Show “Decided Change SPRING SUITS AND COATS EX-iout fur. Hem li-ngth, they are cut TREMELY ItIANNISH l.\' LIKE: BUT FEMININE IN (‘ouiii ‘. l _ CHICAGO, Dec. 23-Siylcs next‘ spring will do aright-aboiitfacial from the extremely feminine to tiii‘ iiianirsli. 'i'liat is as lllt"l'[.)1't‘l"\l by Ariiivzinl sllllpFOll, American designer. .\ii:= Simpson, former associate of he I long in Paris, is showing h“? own i i933 collection in connection wi the opening of a nczv ndviuic f.iSll' . ton centre liei-c. Her spring suits and coats are mannish in line but feminine in‘ liash and color. The suit coats are ‘ lacket lcifiztli; ilic colka in back‘- DRl‘i'O\\', bu‘: lie lam‘, lispccfalll'l ln the coats. extremely uiiic Beltless Goats Her coals are belilcss and. willi- hegColdsi Rub well over l throat and chest i V5253 Ovru Zl Mu LION ARS Uszo YE "z i-iniixiuii i\i.\'.\i. l\' THE l‘lftH!.\'l‘I-‘. (m ll'l‘ uni GEORGE v, A. n. 1932 iii Re Estate cf Catherine simmeri- lid lnte rif 5f. Georges in King's rftlliiz? in the uni-l Province flhflflflllflll - ii iii thr- ii... "rilliiflr, Surf-v; Ho, clr. To the Sheriff ‘ of the (mung, of Kl"?! County or any Fonstnhle or literate person within iinid County IHHIIYIOV OF F\\‘\Il\ l f‘ I'll‘ y i iiv-il-lc l|.-.i-i-l»l l.i~.-i;:ir1l c Jii-lzr: of Pfiilifllc, CHEF/TING WIIIIHIIAS Illlwli r.,|.ii,i-_- im- pm}. i of .l.-.- i'i|.-ii~ii~.~i .\|.-. iiliimiii or si. u... t. ,,r......,,i Flerlflnen, and H. liriincle stunting-c in Qiinoii’! vnunty flin lIvci-iitors n!‘ "I" iiriiiill’: ihiii n! Charlottetown Vere-uni, Itnrrisn-r tii‘ FIlHWr‘. ll.'ill|"I| ’ i t-Hiiil lI-‘HIIP l" l"! ""4 -'li'llt‘:ir hflriif" iiir- "g n pm. lute Four: in i.» ii-iri in flit: in..." lin en 5n i‘ii:ir|i.tii~i.-un_ i.‘ Qnflpngq "" ‘ii iliu .-'.'i il Prinliriig m, ii'_\' ‘liiril ‘ hi Ill‘ of‘ ilic .~.'i|iir~ iii» 1'.lil \\‘ll_\' -‘ .<.'iiil ' uhculd not be n.1, “mi n", y.‘ Me flaw‘! n! ftfiiFvrd f.» 1.. 1.1m pvLtinn and on motion n! xmymm w pa,“ flier, Esq, l'ri r...~ t, l i-,,,.;,,,,,r_ Anal . . ., hm” cop)’ '|"r'1ir huh; 1W] in some ii~ 1mm, ,,,.,| '7" fhai-lottetowii Bill-q pap" week fnr at limit r..,',, .-.,,,,,,.,.,,,|,.,, week: from the Ilflfe |l-f‘i"lf um time l true copy lu-rnnf l..- f,-,,-|j,,.,-i,h posted in the fniiiiu-iiii: piiltii. |.;,...-.._ respectively. ii;iiii-~1_\ ill of, lllh tho ilnurt llni king's iloiiuti; the ITiill ln St. It the Post King's Pnunty aforesaid, hereby further nriler that .-i true (‘filly on hereof he fiirtlnviih urn-q Attorney-General of tlii< that iill persons infarct: .1 i Flnifiio. ill! nfnrcsiiiil iii.i,v li.‘l\‘i‘ iiiu; the lice ihcricr-f. GIVEN llll||l‘l' i|i_\' liriiiil and Sen] i-f the sniil l'rvlll'l thin 141th llill‘ u! l|f‘!"‘|l\l|l‘l" (L. l.) ~ A. h. lftfi; fliill t». iiv- Qfiril yrzir ..( ll = Stalwa- tvfla ri-igii. (Spill H. L. I‘\l.ii|lif. JllilLfv: of l'i».l~.i|i-. T327 11’ 3" Tue 5. RADIO BATTERIES Rl-ICIKARUKZK) RIGHT V. C. Smallwood Radio Service, "- 21 North R'ver Ran-l i l _ aforesaid, within twelve months "i" "' 6T45-ll-25-fmvv-l month. if‘ llllii] Fiiiiuli‘. ly-lui: illlll Iii-lug lu ill" lluyn-iliy of Fiiiirliiiteiiiivii in "Jiiwiis Fi-uiity iifriri-safil iiud being i-.irt i-i‘ lull iiiiiiilirir 'l‘lircr~ tlierlii. l ilii-l llllil iirsvrlheil us fiillnivs:— 1o fit zit ilic waistline. 'l'lic_\' are cioublc breasted ivilli iivo l't\\'i of button trim. Slcrvcn arc tucked nearly to the elbow, and are full betivccn vlbow and shoulder. The coat is slit, up [he back at thi- hem- ‘iilic a:- ill‘(.‘ men's. bcb:-'ii\'v:ii‘ slioivii ‘s i-lcvfl‘ “sill nciv ideas. Skirts cnllrclyi re hlare beach pajamas in this collec '5'“ The Him“? part of the beach 'l'lii‘ _‘ costume is simply a kr-vciilri mart, lciiviitc ilic shoulders lmre. Sport Frocks C.li'l‘\'lllg out the niariiiisii ten- dcrci‘. casual sport frocks are of siripcci sliirtiig, "ilitrlcziicly cut and tucked. Some feature a new slit back. Capes in all length and for all occnvions are very gOOd. ffiilrics and [his The New Year evening fabrics are of the stiffyfvziriety—organdies_ and moircs. Formal clothes have i'illlnl(l(‘l'li-l)lf‘ fulhilrss»approscliiiig _ti'iiiiiiiiii,i.;" iiizitcriai. 'l‘lie lint liilc lb all the pastel shades exemplify the a llTili‘. effect-n back. The bclt_ Zine also dips in back in many. l Hats are generally of the some Administrators Notice The undersigned administrators of the personal estate and effects of Eustace llczith lfaviliind late of Charlottetown in Queens County in Prince Edward Island, Barrister-at- LBW. deceased. intestate, hereby notify all persons indebted to the said estate to make immediate paya merit to them at the office vi Palmer J.- Furmer, solicitors, Char- lottetown, and all persons having any claims against the said estate are hereby required to present the same, duly attested, at the office from this date. Dated this 15th day oi‘ November, A. D., 1932. GEORGE D. DeBLOlS, H. JAMES PALMER, Administrators. Mortgage Sale To be suiil by Public Auction in front of the Four! liriuse at. illirir- lnllfillflVfl lu Queens County on the z-‘iii iiiiy of iiiwniiihrr A. D. 1932 at I‘\ i l ~|r of ihr-H! Ifvluitk hi (hi) "flair- lliinlt, all tlnit inn-t, ]lll‘l'i" nr |ifll‘l'i‘l liiii- iiillllllfillrllfl: iin the vii-at i-i‘ iiiiirr (luuen slim iii the 'r_v line of liiiiil form- ‘YW iii puss 11m (if O\\'"|i (‘uiiiiully Hui! Hiiiiilm. lf'l|I‘\! nit-up ti..- siiiil H-uiliurii buiiilury lllll‘ Wl'<l\l'fll‘lll_t' fi-iir llll'llll"l‘ll niiil lliirtv-iivo font. iliviu-c Iii. right. uncles ilirrcin iiuiith- nzirilly’ in.» hiiiiiiriiil niiil Pin fort. ilii-iirv i-iislivnrillv four hundred ziii-l f.fi_v riff‘ fi-i-i tin. inches nr in tlii- sirH-t :if.ir"~"iiiil uliil iliuiii-o iili-ng llll‘ saline l\I\|'lll\\fli‘i||y iii-ii llillll|"l‘il ‘iv-l |'l"\I'lI "ct four inch-a l» the plzii-v of Pllllllllilliiii-Illfllll i-nviiiruilug ‘iiln Si.\llll"."H ltiillll iivi. n-r a niiil |\'i'li|\'-l\\'\1 polo; of lrii-ii ll lliilo u... i-l‘ InFF. ‘llie nhnvv siil- ‘ ll (in pursuant (n d l'"\\'~"l' "f Fill" "iii in n i-crtnlii |l]I||'ll|lll'l‘ nf Mimi- il.ili~|| mini. iluy‘ of .i iv \ i ihn l "’|;_' couple which ll"rlllllf Iinrivig y... lit ..r ii... ‘irtliwili- Hi.- Ffllll fiii-iii-r 1l.'l"|'i"ll'lf‘~l jiiiphi n. .-- \i \i.»~iii.-i -..i..~.|..r, (Vlmnry i lillu-ui-il Islunil. [rum] A MorningSmile IMPORTANT THINGS FIRST An Englishman visiting a Scotch laird was taken by his host on a fishing trip. In the momlng the visitor iivlio was a novice at the sport. hooked a fine salmon, and in his excitement slipped arid fell into the river. The keeper, noticing that he was no swimmer, hooked onto him with a gal! and was about to drag him ashore when the lalrd called out: "What, are ye about, Donald? Get haud o‘ the rod and look to the fush! Ma. friend can bide a wee but the fiish winna." For The Cook ‘Pecan l-‘ruit Macaroon: i egg white. ‘.1 teaspoon salt. ‘f. cup brown SHEA!- 2 tablespoons caramel syrup. 1Q cup candied green and cherries, chopped. 1 cup dates chopped. ii;- ‘cups shredded cocoiiniih 1,- ciip whole pecan nuts. Bout egg whites and salt, udd red Loose R A; a result of style iidvlcc from London and PiiYlS Canadian col ton mills are now showing (ii-m; fabrics with a louse .\\'(‘.’l\‘L‘ lOl‘ spring and summer ivcar. Tlic loose weave material, slylixts. claim, is just one more ivay for lllf‘ smartly dressed ivoiiinii i) give licr (‘ftoiillllfi til" i-cqiiircil ziypczireinci- of rough- iicss. Foi-_sprir.g and summer street ivczr and for qnris a colt-en 5o loosely \\'OO\'(‘ll as l) have a spongy appearance is cxivctetl to answer the fashionable (lciiiziiid for rough materials. It has a diagonal line running through it in accordance iviih the (‘ilipliiisis on (liugoiiills in ,:pi'iiig fabrics. For sircc. \'.(‘fll' it l is particularly aiiraclivc in its deeper shades of rust, orangey red. sports yellow and pink and the brown and blue, u-liilc for summer ’pastcl shades of biiic and green l l advantage. material as tlic (ll'(‘S\‘; or of tlli‘ up more iii the back. The cmwii is more shallow but it still ponts toward the right eye. ASHES of ROSES A Romance of Today By Joanna Canaan For the rest of the way home Geoffrey dreamed of my at Hem- shott, and dreamed it over and over again until ihc dream was quic- perfect even to his father patting Fey's liand on parting on Sunday evening and saying, “We lliink of you already as a daughter. Be surf.‘ to come back ic us for iicx‘. iveck end, my dear." Friday morning at the officc WIIS a busy one, but, nevertheleas, Geof- frey managed to propound his idea to I-‘ayz Had she known or qiicssefl that. John Gilmoufs disappzoval liad already been most cmphatcal- ly stated, she would certainly have refused to fail in with such a plan. Spring. Cottons In ‘MW o” ‘his "°“31‘i‘l‘ ‘nalwml t" clothes while the more open mesh- giapiiaiznorrarowu GUARDIAN onocciu DorotIiy"Dbc’-Letter Box WECIAL T and COFFEE. sugar gradually, then other ingred- ients. Drop on to a buttered baking sheet. Bake at 325 deg. F. for l5 minutes. Last but not least we have a ‘ fruity bar with a refreshing orange flavor. STUFFED EGGS 6 hard cooked eggs. 3 tablespoons cooked meat or 3 tablespoons sardines turd diessing or 3 tablespoons sour pickles chop- ped or 2 tablespoons tomato catsup. Cut cold eggs in halves length- wise. Mash yolks with a. fork and l mix with any of the suggested com- binations. Add a little salt and pep- per if needed. Fill teh halves and garnish with lettuce. Serves six. SR US$80 in mus- ough Weaves MUTATION 0F CROCHET A finer, but more open material lliat Canadian mills are slioiving for afternoon and street wear is in imitation cf crochet. In the darker shades the openwork stands out in great delairand gives fl- iiiarkcd impression or rougluicrxs. Another loose weave cotton fab- rics ls a lawn imitating eyelet work. ‘rhe ribbed influence of last fall is again seen iri ll1€,!‘lbb€d appear- ance lent this material by imita- iiOll eyelet work. The delicalc weave of tliis fabric makes it equally suitable for afternoon or evening wear. - FOR SPORTS WEAR For rparts aiicisiiectator wear meshes are being shown in all the pastel shades and in varying size of mesh. The close meshes give the , impression of a ribbed material and I lend themselves to tailored sports es are particularly suited to specta- tor and afternoon wear. A pink mesh with e large coin dot of the sziinc shade and a ribbed mash in new developments iii meshes in ac- cord with tliir increasing popular- ity. for the occasion, she liad pinned a. new pink feather flower. Fay had been adorable in her blue summer frock but Geoffrey thought now that she was still more adorable in furs. There was no oar from Hcmsholt at the station, so Geoffrey caused their two suit cases to be placed in a taxi arid driven to the house. ‘There was a path ihrosgh the ivoltdsa ivliicli lic wanted to show to Ray. Round about Hemsliott the bcccliwoods of the Chiltern Bills clctrciided vciy steeply to the brink of ihc river. and already this year ilic curly frosts liad turned the leaves to gold. Fay could scarcely liave been described as a loi'er of nature, but even she gave a gasp of surprise when she stood with Geoffrey iii that gilded aisle of irces. Inadequateiy she expressed herself through the medum of the words, "What lovely woods. How As it ivas. though at. first she ox- prcsscrl reluctance, even in a ivhis~ per behind the filing cabinets Geof- frey did not find her difficult to persuade. The fact was that she saw very little reason why Mr. Gilmour should object to Geoffrey marrying licr. It was triic that they liad been brought up very differ- ently—he. among the lawns of Hemshott and the clolsiers of Bar- clicster: she, in a boarding house on Denmark l-lill-but her love story sccmcd to her all the more beautiful because of that: she thought of it as a parallel to many charming stories which poets like Lord Tennyson wrote and ladies like bliss. Gilmour road. She knew. too, that sh". possessed a lovely face and she had far too much common sense to underestimate the value of that. It was. tlicreforc, quite n hopeful travrlled lii a first class compartment of the TWlWfly up i110 ‘rhaiucs Vnlcy time pain,“ day ilfl0l'l‘O'l‘l. The weather was fllW‘, and U1" mcilrrv lights of au- lllmll 1M‘ ('l\'f‘l' the st"b"lii ffelris and the qxii"; brown hill.- beyond. .-. p“. i-nq i.-~ y... 5.1-“ y-q. ‘his ‘Jill <l.'i_\' of Xnvv-iiilnr \, ll. “'12. |:|l“'\"|| I. T"')\I\0\' Ho“ \"|\ ' .\| l \\' "XTTII lIviu-ni '4 i-f lli‘ l , "Pl-IL if lli_\'ii.v .\l... 4- 11' "til. I 1 i ‘Kl llfli Mun-Til nice." She took Geoffrey's arm. Very happily they strolled through the woods. And presently they crossed a lane and then Geoffrey led the way through a copse and a small pas» ture to a garden gate and they passed through the kitchen garden into the drive. The front door of the house stood open and Geoffrey rang the door bell as he walked into ihc hall. Across the liali came theelderly butler, Matthews. "Oh. Mr. Geoffrey," 11¢ said. “wait while I fetch your father. A terrible thing has happrned here today." CHAPTER X "SHE'S DYING, GEOFFREY!" the boudqpq Noghgng ranged in that delightful and ex- pressive room. It seemed to Geof- John Gilmour cams out of the Shall War Bride Return to Soldier Who Has foi" France. ials informed inc that he must have been killed, ls there were no records husband, nor have I written the other about being married again. What shall I do? Answer: Fay and said. "You must wait." He which was part of the atmosphere of Hemshotg had given place to tht vigorous and warning smell of an- tlseptics. In those softly carpeted and Oxbensively decorated coirdoi-s, it seemed as incongruous as the threat of death in Geoffrey's shel- tered life. dolr opened and Patricia Lysarde came out. Mi‘. Gilmoiir," Geoffrey. You'd better wait a m'n-‘ ute. He won’; be long." Just Recovered Shattered Memory, or Cleave to Second Husband? — Rest- less Young Wife Must Keep to Her Bargain _ . Delll‘ Miss Dix-In 191'! I married e young man jult before he left After the Armistice I lied no word from him and the oflic- of him. About flvc years ago I met I man with whom I fell in love and I realized then that when Imurriedtheflrsttlmelwalachlld and too young in know what love really wee. The men knew ell about my first marriage, but both of us it's TEN 1'0 O w: “alibi; ONE l vouiic rum 0F iuuc or mniicsr to women P-w ' "' Ofllblll odor of a British-made, f Malawian‘: "fifth" ‘or I "MM d“ ofoaly 30 OxoCnbeRedW ,, spoon for dis m‘, xo Limited, st. Peter Street, “m”; believing ine to be a widow, we married and now have an adorable child. Last week I received e. letter from iny first husband. I-Ie said he had been in a hospital in France with a shattered mind due to shell-shock. Having recovered his memory, he immediately wrote me and said he would return in several weeks. I have said nothing of this to my present MLU. What a tragedy these Enoch Arden affairs always are! And how pitiful is the plight of the woman involved in one of them, for, alas, in real lifc the husband returning from the dead seldom has the generosity and chivalry to fade unseen back into the shadow“ as did the hero of the poem, and leave his wife in undisturbed enjoyment of the new happi- ness she had found. On the contrary, lie sticks around and makes ruc- tioiis and trouble for all concerned, as a general thing. It is easy to understand how a woman, confronted suddenly with the ghost of the husband she has believed sleeping under the daisies these many years, should lose her head in a blind panic, as you have done. But this is no time for hysteria. You must gather your wits together and do the sensible thing, and that is to go at once to your husband and tell liiin your appalling news. You should have done that the minute you got tlie letter from your first husband that was not only the straight- forward and fair thing to do, but because every minute you delay gives your present husband cause for suspicion and jealousy. and for wonder- lug if the reason that you kept silent is because you irreier this love v1 your youth to lilm. In setting this problem you must use not only your heart but your head, and try to do the thing that will bring the greatest happiness to the greatest number of people. And that, it seems to me, is for you to have your first marriage quietly annulled and remarry your present hus- band. I can so: no sense in your sacrificing yourself, your husband and your child to anyunistaken sense of duty to this wraith of your past. You have a. right to look upon your first marriage as the irrespon- slble act of a child, carried away by the maudlin sentimentality of war and swept of‘! of your feet by s. passion of patriotism that made you want to give a little happinessto a. soldier going of! to fight for your country. If he llild, returned, doubtless you would have tried to make the best of such a marriage. Possibly you might have been happy together. Prob- ably you would have been as unoongenial and the marriage would have turned out as badly as so many other war marriages did. But your present marriage is a very different affair. It is the choice of a mature woman of her mate. It is i191‘ findill! the ma" Wh° Sim-m“ hm. and to whom she has given her whole heart and with whom she is happy and contented. Such a marriage is far more binding upon her in reality than any marriage entered into as a childish escapade. _ You have your own happiness and well-being to consider. You have the happiness of the good man you are married to and whose liome should not‘ be ivreckcd by any morbid pity or fantastic sense of obligation to o. shadow that has suddenly appeared out of the void. Above all, there is the child to whom you owe more than Y0“ 5° l° any Other human being on earth. You have no right to tear your child's life up by the TOMS. to deprive it. of the love and protection of a father for any reason what- soever, nor for any person wliomsocvcr. Of c urse, your heart cannot liclp but bc torrnwith pity 1'01‘ this D001‘ victim of war whom fate lias so cruelly misused. You could shed tears of blood picturing the forlorn years he spent in a madhouse, lost to tlie of adding one more sorrow to all he Romantic love does not often surviv O O O Dear Dorothy Dlx—I have been situation before I married. live with her and, of course, I said discontented Just because I want to me. Answer: female angels they may be. to interfere in each others affairs, home. most miserable. can do as she pleases. with her taste and cooking, she feel bombed. fore marriage that you would live wi early Christmas martyr. Happiness and contentment are thinking about how much you would world, forgetful of even his own name, and you agonize over the thought So there we are on the housekeeping proposition. a virtue for every young women to want to set up her own hares and Pen ates, but, Lou, a bargain is a. bargain and e._oontract is binding and the is honor even among young wives. So if you promised your husband be them if, you are determined to do so. just make yourself satisfied where you are. find a. good, reliable niotlier-in-law mighty handy to have around ih house when you want t0 go to the movies and step out of an evening. has borne. W But of what avail will it be for you to wreck your own, you, h band's and your child's life by going back to one who comes hem, 51011911 111M. With no ability Wen to care for himself, and who would still further crushed under the burden of a family to support? ‘ Far better to comfort him in some other way and have this for y solace, that the years have changed him as they have changed y, B Physical sufferlns and the cli are that you will have become as shadowy a figure to him as he is t4; y, DOROTHY DIX, eel married three years. My hugban is the ideal husband lover and we are as devoted as we were on the q, _we married and we have e. splendid baby. blue skly of happiness is that we have to live with my husband's mom" Not that she isn't all right, but I want a home of my own, The only spot in my Ci, I knew tii My mothcr-iii-law is alone in the ivori except for her son, and before we were married he asked me if l woiii "yes." But now I am unhappy ., set up my own home. Please ti. DOU. , I have said a tliousaiid times in this column and sliall probably 5a a thousand times more that I think it is always a. mistage for lllfllller; iii-law and daugliters-in-law to live together, no matter what sort s Because if you eliminate the almost inevitable jealousy there is t» tween two women who love the some man and whom both of them ie that they have authority to run, and the irresistible temptation they h“ you still have the fact that you a; depriving one or the other of the women of the fun of bossing her -. If the mother-in-law goes to live with the daughter-in-law, she l. her occupatiorrgonc and slic has nothing to do with the hands that ar idlc for the first iinic since slie was married. eral who is suddenly reduced to the ranks, her authority gone, her er perience set at naught, her advice sniffed at, and she is of all women tii She is like an old g6“ And if the young woman goes to live with her mother-ln-law, ehe deprived of the thing she really married for. Her oivn home in which sii Ever since she could walk she playfid keepin house and dreamed of the time when she would have her own home an could use her best china every day and have the color wallpaper that d1 liked, and when she has to live in some other woman's house and put u s as if her Castle in Spain had bee It ls no crime bii tii his mother it is up to you to doi and do it graciously without whining or complaining, or acting ilk; » s state of mind and you can acq A Quit pitylng yourself. Qul like to have a home of your own an And, believe nie, you vii DOROTHY DIX. "fate was smooth and shining. Slic seem- Gccffrcy‘ u.‘.c 1- ' V _ sound. ed to know ivhat to say and do. ‘ "Pat was out, too, this morning," All his lir l 1.. 1.1 very said John Gilmour. “she was pleasant for irizi. DJCllh and dlsas- there.‘ ter were fiction, history, or at the most news to read through the softening medium of the printed page. If anything unpleasant hap- pened in the village or the neigh- borhood. it was not discussed at nlie cliariirrg tables of- Hemshott. ‘out his pzirciils retlrcd and talked behind the closed doors of boudolr or the morningroom. He knew that sorrows must come but he relegat- cd- ihem to the far-off, inconceiv- able years that should have no pleasure in them. His father's words came crashing down into a world "I; was down on the other side of the hill behind H'glicr::s-ovcr~ Blayds," said Pat clearly. "We'd drawn several blanks and then at last we'd found in a plantation near Dipley. It. was at a scrubby cor; of hedge with a bar ‘across it under a trce_au awkward place. but nothing in particular for a horse like Pilgrim. But, anyhow, he‘ fell and rolled on lvirs. Gilmoiir. We were quite near a road and we} stopptd a car-it was Lard Ferret's. Everything possible was done." Geoffrey said, "Yes." that was all summer. and the shock of first-sorrow stunned him A i301" opened and shut in the m” “ hm" with‘); u 0t Mr o1 our" "You liad better came upstairs," , m S u d cor’ ' 1m ’ said Pat. ' i ‘. sad 11s fatlici Then he looked at John Gumour m", the mom, Geoffrey eat down in one of the cliintz armchairs with his elbows on hLs kiiecs and his licad bL-twccn hsl hands. "What is it, Pat?” he asked. "A concussed spine and fracture of the pelvis." she gold him. “And internal injuries. Too bud to oper- ate." "It's awful, Pat, isn't it?" "Yes. It's rotten luck, Geoffrey, old thing." There were steps and voices out- side in the corridor. Geoffrey look- ed up. opened the drawing room door iir-l Fay walked in without a. word. "Come along," lie said to Geoffrey and they went upstairs. The faint smell of lavender The door of Mrs. Gilmour’: bou- (To Be continued) "The doctor is in there again, she sald- "Hallo, INDIAN PRINCE TO wen STENOGRAPIIER ROME, Dec. 26.—A shipboard m- Tlie two men followed her into mance between an Indian prince was disar- mnrniiig room. His face w,“ gm, li's son. Fear r'.'d susp¢iis~ gripped Gcof-‘iphotcgraphs and the flowers. frcv, l "What's |li‘ppClli'd, Father?“ jcrlctl ovt. "It's Hui" molrcr," sild John V"rv bhiiljwllflll; bIVTvT,‘blfiiKviifiygllmblll‘. "she's liad an accident. good and comfgygjn; m Se, he, u“. . 1 a. . . Fl .n , h“ v-Mvru: (mbqm. (-1-; nmypinw qvrngm 1n a world so strawg: and _ ‘ i\.l'.€(‘ fell. Wa v: lrcii Hi‘- rorraivful. She wns wearing riding 1"" mrvi if! irwi up i-ozziii i-cr‘ ill“ V"? i“ R t in ioiich with vziii. She's cloth-s a short rsat and Redford f“tl li 1' ll"l‘ bccrim rig fiir collar into which, dying, Qpgffmyy C frey curious that his mother was and sorrowful. He looked fixedly at not sitting there m one o; h" pa. ""1 In ma. Deb s. ulnar-Juneau! . Lqh tunic-coloured dresses, among the “gxlar- - g.- bc-kad Patricia. She's been asking for you." """"Mr i, .... . » _ g ,_ _ RCORIIS a Wllllf . "I'm glad you've come, Geoffrey," Gecffrcy locked at her. It was and the ship's stenograplier is to re- sult in their marriage, it was an- nounced today. Len Vlaske, born at Pole, ac- cording to her sister, met the Ma- haraja of Kikaner, Sir Gobig Mo- Vlctoria a few months ago oii a voyage to India, and soon they will be married in the Muuulman rites at Bikaner. The bride-to-be, having obtained her father's consent, is returning to Bombay for her wedding, but mean- time she arranged that her sister should replace her as the ship's stenographer. N0 HOLIDAYS ANNAPOLIS, ~Md., Dec. 26.-—-M0re than 100 Naval Academy midship- men have "hit the Christmas tree" -and not for a nice present. That .bit of academy slang means that theynare behind in their stud- ies, in danger of flunking out, and hence were denied the annual Christmas leave. The 1,600 who are iii good stand- ing left here Friday and return January 2. ' liammed Khan, aboard the strainer- jiuciioii SALE 0F STOCK-IN-TRADE 0F 1| LATE GEORGE FORBES. VERNON BRIDGE ‘Al; directed by Order of tii Ccuii. ui‘ Chancery in the matter ~ McLean ve. Forbcl, No. D 1M, v/ili sci. up and sell by Public Ania lion n‘. the Stcre premises of tii late ueurgc Forbes, at Verna Bridge iii queens County, on Fri day , the 30th day of December instant, beginning at 10-80 o'clo¢ in the forenoon, All the stock-in trade, including dry goods, herd ware, boots, shoes and rub, paints, crockery, enamel and ware, groceries and other acc - ice and fixture: in and‘ upon said premises, of or belonginl the estate of the Into Geo Forbes. In case all of the above proptrl be not sold on the day aforesaid lll sale will be continued on the i i lowing day and from day to day ' concluded. For further particulars apply ihc undersigned or at premises. Dated this 22nd day of December A. D., 1932. . D. EDGAR SHAW. Mater in Chum 7296-12-23-61. FOR 0rd brecclics, and hei- brew-n hair SALE 1 STEEL SPLIT PULLEY 24” Diameter 9” face. 1 STEEL SPLIT PULLEY 26" Diameter 7” face. 1 CAST IRON PULLEY l8” Diameter A8” face. 1, 9Ft. STEEL SHAFTING _ 1 1% Diameter with Hangers and Bearinif 1i- ‘l Write or Phone The Charlottetown Guardian LL iii-j . n, 1......