a EZ-l : i. .,. .r n. ___ -_...__, .__. PéQE_.'1lYlfQ. SMALL CAKES* made wit/z Zllagic, win First Pris ' for Bits. Jeanne McKenzie “.\l:l_~i;ilnsnl1v:l_vs been my stand- by," wluntecrs Mrs. Jeanne Mc- Kenziaofforonro, Winncrv-frllrcefirst prizes ar. lll€ I931 cnnndiuuXntional Exhibition. "Ill fzlcr, I wouldn't tllink of using any other baking powder. "I make nll my cakes with hlagic. If I didn’r, I um quite sure I never would llzlve vmn so nlrlny priics. blagic gives nll baked foods all extra fine qurllirvof flnvornndrexturctllrlt lift thcln out of the ordillzlry class." Magic Bfiklllg IR“ cl" is used luv- clll.r:':'.".'yl1\' the llilljkilil" of cookery experts, zliuliri. s. rlrlll l llscwivcs throughout C dn. r, hlzlcic outsells nil lmllcr 1.‘. powders combined! lkMrn. mCKflflllalfi Prize Recipe DELICATE CAKE .14 cup butter 2 teaspoons Magic 2 cups fruit sugar Baking Powder 14 Cup milk Wllllt": nf a eggs 3 cups pastry flour l icuspnon almond CXlfuC! Cream butter rind mid Bllglli‘. Sifz flour and baking rrnzdcr wgclhcr sevcrnl times. Add llmlr n d milk nlfernafely to the blllfcr nnd e 'r Then add egg whiten bcnlcn vcr, Add almond extract. Bnize llzlif ni lmttcr in small fancy cake moulds in nlndcrutc oven a! 375°F. for fllJCUY. 2|) minutes. Pour other half in layer cake tins and bake in mod- enne oven at .175" F. 3S Lo 40 minutes; when cool, cut in fancy shares with cookie cutters. Decorate ea illuminated with icing. chopped nuts. can ed orange DIN. iclly, CiicliOlfi, mar inc cher- ries, elc. -l C<;l\"|'.\lNS NO AIUM." Thin b [IIIIIQIIK OII cz-i-ry rln is your piuzlrmllcc rhnt Maui: linking Pnlvlll-r in free from nlum m’ nny lmrmlul ingre- dlcnr. Made in Crlnn I FREE COOK BOOK-Wlu-n you bake at home, rlllzc advantage of rllc a:- lracfivc rcciprs in rllc Ell-uric (‘nnk Hook. Write m Frrlnrlanl Brands l.rll.. Fraser Ave. 6: Liberty Sc, 'l'ornnro. (Jnrrlrio. .| B’ Sale By Tenderl SHARES IN (‘II.\III.UTTI'ITO\VN CAN COMPANY LIMITED, TIIE l SAID SHARES BEING THE ‘ PROPERTY OF EASTERN CAN- NERIES LIMITED. \ Scaled Tclldcl-s adzlrnfncll to ihc ' undersigned Wlll he rccclvcd up to Ind including: Tuesday‘, March 15,’ A.—D. 1932, nL tlvclvc o'clock noon, ' for the purchase of the follming: 50 Shares of Common Stock in Charlottetown Can Conlpnny Lim- Jied each share having n par value g One Hundred Dollars (31001. Dated this 26th day of February, I A. D. 1932. r l ll. F. MACPllEl-Z l I Solicitor f0": Liquidator Eastern Cannerlcs Limited. l 1193-2-21-29-5-11-12-14 jlffllpllf. into n. p:l'l- o.’ cycs of thzli lwcrc heavily fflllflPfl wllh ions: blrlclr l by the uril ~. sfrunstfv-lnnrkcrl black i Dorothy Dix Letter Modest Young Man Who Wants a Genius for a Wife — Wife Who Enjoys Her Hard Lot Because She Loves Her Husband. Will Marriage Spoil Studcllfs Career? Iknu- Allss Dix-Some mcn look for beauty in tllc woman tllry lllarry. Olilvls want llcr l0 have money. I desire brain's. I run eager to nlurry, bill I lmlli the ulost intelligent wonlall I can find. I would like for hcr to have an I. Q. of 250, but if she hasn't, then one of zoo will do. Utterly mediocre myself. 1 admire 1n others the intelligence which I do not possess. I wish to identify myself with a. brilliant woman and have intelligent children. I believe that some- where there ls a. maiden such as I have described, intelligent and yet emotional enough to shut her eyes to the inevitable disilluslonments of married life, so I am asking God w send me 11 genius for a wife. DAVID- Answer: Well, if you get, a. genius for a. wife, David, I lllll l uid that you will 11nd out. that matches are made in hell iniwad uf 1'1 l‘l“l\'L’ll For geniuses, male and female, are kittle-cattle to 11W with (lily ill and day out. ‘ ‘ 'I'lu-_v are full of temperament and unreason and inutabllity and lack of comlllon sense and lhcy are selfish and egoimlc and cruenl’ mm“; sidcrntc to all about; them. Better read what Mrs. Carlyle 5W5 “b” uulrrvlng n gcllius before you spent any more time on your knees DYBY" m8 f0": ollc, for the Lord nligllt take S0“ Eli Your ‘Ymd and 59nd o“ m "cu. l And after all is said and done, what a. mun wants in e wife ls not some spectacular talent, it 1s Just the plain, ordinaryubillty to be u. good wife and nlolhcr and make a comfortable b01119. Plus "W181i intellig- lll(‘(.‘ u» Illilllf‘. hcr 1m interesting and agreeable companion. And also llu dosrlli wzlllt to Sllfllld his life groveling at Ills wife's fee‘. looking up Lu hcr. Ilc wullls hcr to thrill a. little over him. Bu: you are right 1n putting brains at the top of the i-sl; of quali- liclltiulr; llllli n woman should have as a wife. Most men never-consider ‘K315. ‘fhcy lllfllTy for beauty or money or because a. girl has "IT" or a .1 av willl hcr. Not for brains. Yet of all of these brains is the only one that cnll be cicpclldcd "upon to last. Bl-lluly’ lllclcs lll a fcw years. Money often takes to itself wings. Passion dlcs of satiety and‘ the old cat outgrows her klttenish tricks, but zilc illtolllgcllt woman becomes more and more interesting as the years 3:0 by. The only thing in the xvorld that can keep marriage from growing llal on your lllulds ls for your wifefo have brains. The average couple uf modcl-utc lllCflllS nlld with children are tied pretty closely to their own Llcarthsfozlcs. They cannot afford many outside diversions, and whether lhcy spend their evenings bored to death or whether they spend them in ultercstlllg converse depends upon what. the woman has to give of gnyefy and intelligence frlu: <::l_\1:1.::.'l"l':<. l\:"-=-.".~1 Gqlikmzuxj Dear Miss Dix-I am a farmer's wife and I have noticed that. very [few Iamiers‘ wives‘ letters appear in your column. Possibly this in l6- lcounfcd for by the reason that farmers’ wives have so much to do that ‘llley don't have time for self-pity or introspection. Until my marriage [l had been used m a home where fhere wcreplvutv o! servant's, and I , mu a. father who was lavishly generous w nw- Anv one would have thought a girl brough; up under such circumstances would be utterly unflttcd for a farmer's wife and the life I have to live, for I live in a llousewhat has no modem conveniences. I have to carry in W001‘! find water, pick up ashes, start. fires and scrub floors. but I love my husband and I do it. willingly nlld I am perfectly happy. Whcn I read the letters that. you receive from women who really have so little to do I can't help but thllllalthzlt they dolft love their husbands 0r they wouldn't com- plain. HAPPY. Answer: Right you arc, Mrs. Happy, and 1 ‘hope that a lob of the neurotic wnlllcn who are sllcddlllg gobs of fears over their sad fates because they have to do a little housework with the assistance of forty-five electrical servants. as the advertisements say,-w1l1 read your brave letter and brace up and dry their eyes and tackle their jobs in a better spirit. The proof of love is deeds, not words, and certainly the wile who isn't willing to help her husband has a mighty thin affection for him. The kllld of love that counts 1s that which rolls up its sleeves and gets busy with the broom and the cooking stove and makes him a happy and com- fortable home. Real love expresses itself in a woman being willing to wear a. last year's halt and walk a dozen blocks to a cut-rate grocery and butcher shop, and it makes hcr pin on her face the Gilllle that worn come on when hard times comes and 1t make s her bllck her husband up instead of howling and complaining because she can't have all the money she wants to sucnd- DOROTHY DIX. I O I I I Dcar Dorothy tlx—My husband and I have denied ourselves a great deal to help our son through medical school. Hc has worked also and has not been extravagant, has always been a dutiful, loyal 5011, but now he has met; a. nurse whom he has fallen in love with, and she insists on him marrying her now before he 1s through his training. We are trying to get him to wait ulltll he 1s settled, b ut sha tells him she can care for herself. We still owe on his tuition, and it humlliates us very much that he is willing to marry before he 1s ready for 1t. If he dues marry her, it will separate him from his family. MOTHER. Answer: Of course, your son 1s very foolish to get married while he is still a student. It will handicap him in every way, especially in his studies, for certainly a bridegl-oonfs mind will be diverted from his books. I have heard that among certain savage people when a. man marries he fakes a__holldny of two years to get over it, so to speak, before he comes back and resumes the regular business of life. An admirable custom, 1i: seems to me. Also, u young doctor shuts many doors 1n his face when be gets mar- ried that would bc opcn to him if he were single. For one thing women, who are the bnsls of every doctor's fortune and popularity, have not the interest in a young married doctor that they have 1n a. single one. They don't invite him to dinner if he has to drag along a. wife, and this cuts him off from'muklllg many valuable acquaintances. He lacks the glam- our that a bachelor has, and 1f they are going to have a married doctor they stick to their old family physician. Doctors and preachers should llcvcr marry until they get settled in their professions. There are a thousand reasons why your son should put of‘! marriage until he has gotten on his feet, but if the girl is in love with him and If Sllf.‘ ls stupid and heavy and dull, with a conversational range 1311M Jcs fronl the kitchen to the nursery and back again, she and her hus- .1 "ml will yawn ill each others faces and quarrel to put a little pep Into I . iiilgS. - I But if sue is alert and alive, if she reads and thinks andihas a. sense hf humor, she will keep conversation on its iipwes and there will never j ‘:11 n nlonlont 01' boredom. - 1 As to how to find n. vvonlan of in telligcncc, that's easy. 1.53 about you. zlud they are mostly overlooked by other mcn. DOROTHY DIX. They are The House of Dreams-Come- True Margalai Pcdler IContlnucd) i Jean's first, instinctive feeling was ‘one of distaste. In spite of hc. 11's colllpullioll were n. sommvhatkpqwledge mat; vapjgny was on llubcrnlc liillc FICIICIIIIIQIII of fifiyyqf the aides: 11511195 in fiance, th. r fllcl-nnbzluls, with an unmistak-fcounfess struck hcr as partakng ; vblc zli: of breeding about lllm, undlllible of the adventuress-of tll sL.1‘.."l_\'-ln0kll1g wclnall someilyrpc vi woman of no parflculu flrcll years younger, whose u"l1rm,bll'f-h who has climbed by her wi‘. I-rullciic calollrng and swifi, mob-l-and she wondered what position in rrcsilll-c pl-ucullncd hcr of Lzltflnslle had occupied prior to her mar- ‘: ml. All illrcc were conversing inliringc. ‘cclull. ‘ She was sharply recalled from hcr "All! Ln. vole‘. qui vlcllt!“ Prt-lilloughis to find that Madame dc azmn tan-nod as Jcnn approcwllcdfvzlrigny was introducing the little us quick cxclmnzliloll liildillffidillllfldlC-EIQOCI Frenchman to her as with rcllcf. Still in French. whlchllcr husband, and immediately shci lrlll he and Joan spoke as flucntqspckc Jenn fclt her suspicions mell- ly mm with as lllilc accent using away’ beneath the warm, cal"- Pnclish. he confirms-d rnylldlyqrcssinc cadences of an unusually ‘ulcall. 1st lnc pl-cscnt you to Mu- beautiful voice. Such a voice was clnnle la Countess, rln Vfll'lf‘.ll_\'." n. straight passport to the hcart.‘ T1111 girl found llcrsclf looking I’. seemed to cfothe even the l prosaic little Count in an almost: romantic atmosphere of tendcrl charm, an effect. which hc speed-i lly dispelled by giving Jean a full,‘ true, and particular account of the, various pulmonary svmpionls which: annually induced him to seek the: hiull. dry air of Mlanfavan. "It ls ml insurance of good healihi illal. 1 come," he informed Jean) gravely. "011. yes. wc are not llcrc merely ~ for pleasure-commit ccs autres"—; Madame dc Varigny gestured smil- lngly towards a. merry party of men and grls who had ill-Qt 091110 l" from lllging and were stamping the snolv from of: their feet am'd gay lllllc outbursts of chaff and laughi- V glccullarly opaque, (lensi- common to Southern races. l7i'O W71 They lashes. giving them :1 flctitouslv sirfl. mld disurnlillg cxprcssloll, yet Jlcnn ‘was vaguely conscious that their real 1‘ ._ lcsslnn held mmetlfng secret Illlfl inlplzlcablc. nllnost rc- pcllcnf. rm ll‘|\[)l‘(‘<.\l’lll sirr-lluilmled brolvs illal. lav so rlrxsr- nbovc lhcm. For the rcsf. Mrlrllllllr- Dr: Varirnly wrls undmlnbly‘ ll beautiful \\'()ll‘i'll'l, l-lcr blll(‘-l)lfl’l\' rnnrlw mar framing rm oval fncc cxirnnrrlillnljv attrac- ilvc in cnllluul". wllh somcvxllnt lllch chcek hour-s and a clever flexible mollill. w _ ,m'l'heChildrc=n's @381; m wood 5 Worry The Mother , fact. The only thing left for you 1s l lof animation had deceived i l l l i i . determined to nlarry him, nothing that you could say will have any ef- _ to be thankful that she has a. pro- lcsslon and cull support herself and that you won't be saddled with her board and keep. Most boys who marry while they are still at school wish their wives on their parents to support. But one tlllng let me urge upon you. Don't make a. break with your son because of his marriage, because that will be a. living sorrow i0 lib-Ll. If youhave to give in, do it gracefully, and remember that soon- alienate lliln from you. Pzlmilles that quarrel ovcr n. marriage always make up.’ bu; the mailing 11D is lllze :1. broken vase that. has been mended. There is al- lWomanb Realm -:- Social and Personal -:-l Fashions - For 77w Copk CHOCOLATE BROWNIIS One-quarter cup butter, I cup sugar, ‘.4 cup sweet milk, 2 c538. beaten light; 2 squares bitter choc- olate, melted; pinch salt. 1.5 tea- spoon baklng powder, two-thirds cup flour, 1 cup choped walnuts. 1 tea- spoon vanilla. Cream buter, add sugar and eggs, and beat well. Then - add melted chocolate, and the flour sifted with salt and baking powder. Add milk and vanilla. Bake 1n , slightly greased pan 1n thin sheet. Gut irlco strips, and dip in any klfld of frosting desired. A MorningSmile ______,___l Old Scotohwomun-How to McDonaldb farm? Surly Railway Portcr—A mile and a half. . “But I've got a tin chest." "I dlnne. care if ye've got Lin legs-it's a mile and a half." far 1s 1t. CLINTON SCHOOL Honor February: Grade X-I Grace Whitehead, 2 Ruth Heaney and Jennie MacKa (equal). ' Grade VII-1 Elmer Somers, 2 Elva Pickering, 3 Chrlsiena Payn- ter. Grade VI-l Mabel Sullivan, 2 Beth O'Connor. 3 Ivan Pickering. Grade V-I Virginia O'Connor, 2 Irene Pickering. Grade IV--1 Edith Whitehead, 2 George Pickering, 3 Hillard Wood- side. Grade III—-1 Jackie Pickering. Grade II-1 Lois Whitehead, 2 Ivrln Somers, 3 Jean O'Connor. Grade 1 Sr.—1 Kathleen O'Con- Roll for the month of Lorna Warren, 2 O'Connor, 3 Katherine _ straight." nor. Grade I Jr.—1 Reggie Warren. l Perfect Attendance —- Ruth I-Iea- i ney, Grace Whitehead, Elmer Bo-i mars, Elva. Pickering, Chrlstenc, Puynter, Mabel Sullivan, Ivan . Pickering, Irene Pickering. Virgin- ia O'Connor, George Pickering. Roy Paynter, Lorna Warren, Kath- erine Pickering, Ivan Somers, Lois Whitehead, Joan O'Connor, Reg- gie Warren. ways the ugly crack. DQRQTHY DIX hcr. From her window she saw him con: Eng along the frozen track chat ll- from the hillside cemetery, and r a moment she hardly recognized h. father in that suddenly shrunl huddled figure of a ma-n, stumblll dnwrl the paih, bk head thrust for- ward and sunken on his breast. Her first impel-dive instinct was l0 go and meet him. Her whole be- ing ached with the longing to let him feel the warm rush of her sympathy. to assure him that hc was not utterly alone. Bu: she checked the impulse recbgnisng that he had no use for any 5ym_ Infill or love which she could give. She had never really been any- illilil OUIPr than cxtcrcr to his life mrslde 7115 IIB-llbines, and now she __, _ _ “ _ lfrlb mtulivcly that he would wish c1‘. "We are here jus: .15 last your, '1,“ (,0 remain equally outs,“ the when wc first nlaclc the llccquaiuf- [fmpic o; m5 grim anc-c of Iilollsicur Pclrrssm-the‘ suddenly llllltcd qualify of hcr voice inlplcd just the fght a.- *' MogtHficr_ news growing‘ girl eedol sco-rr.'s~- llflS d (Qdl > l EM uLslQJNI _, ' of Norwegian g1‘ Liver Oil Rid. in, ‘Vifaminw/‘ivandjlli ..1?3' would bitterly resent the knowledge He was the type of man whol —-Isla. M. Weeks. Teacher. s: . yS éfOTdS g s: 5 Vifiiifi moms OF Au. THE FAMluYl. "She is rather a. fascinating wo- man," commented Jean. g "Yes—but preferable as a friend rather than rm enemy. I don't know anything about. hcr, but I ‘wouldn't mind wagering that she has a dash of Corsican blood in llcr. I Anyway, she will look after you all right till Anne Brennan writes." "And if no letter comes?" sug- gested Jean. "Or supposing Lady Anne can't have nlc? We're rather faking things for granted, you know." H's face clouded. but cleared a- gain almost instantly. mount, of sylllpzlihcilc l'CC0llCC'.10’l‘l—~ "so that mcll pnuvrc nlzlri may M- surc himself o." m“ any eyes Md 5cm mm at a. "she will have you. Anne would, moment of such utter, pftlable self- ‘lever mime a nlqucsl’ or mine‘ U revenue“, and it was the measmeinot, you must come to me, and I'll vet nnvihcr ycm" of or ml- understanding that. Jean hCfllilI." lwaitcd qllleilv {ll he should 13110055,- The falllfy lrnlllclll glcnm ill her go come to hm; eyes convinced Jenn that, 51s 5110 had shrelvdly begun i0 sllspcci, the little Colml. was a IllEilflilO imngfn-Ilcss regained his cugicmary p015‘; sire, and once agallls she found ‘though he still looked straingd 5nd herself wondering what could be shaken. He addressed hq- abruptly. the circumstances responsible for "I've decided to go strlfght on to the ulfon of two such (lssimilal-‘Iifarscilles and sail by the next personalities ns the high-bred. about, Jean. There's one I can catch hypochundrical limo Count and ‘if I start at once." the rather splendid-looking but lll- "Ag once?" she exclaungd, taken most plebclan-bom woman who was aback. "You don't mean-to-day?" his wife. HQ nodded- She lnlcndcd, later on. to ask her "Yes, this very evening. I find I father if he could supply the key can get down to Montreux m “mg to the riddle. but he had contrived for the night mall." men. answer. to drift off during the course of|111z he!‘ unspoken thought: "You'll hel- conversation with the Varlgnys, be quite all right. You will be cer- and, when at last she found her-Main to hear from Lady Anne in a self free to Jon him. he had (llsnp- dB? o!‘ W0. find. meanwhile, ' I'll pearcd altogether. 85k Mldlme d9 V5118"? f0 Dlay She though: 1t very probable thaiqchllpcrm- She'll be delighted"- he had gone out to watch the prog-‘Wlih a. flash of the ironlcal hum- rcss of a ski-lng match u. which he our that was never long absent had rcfcrrcd with 531m! cnlhusinsm from him. earlier in the day. and sllc smiled "Who was she before she married a little at the characterstlc way in the Count?" queried Jean. which he had extrlcied lrmseli, at "I can't tell you. She is very re- her expense. from the lnconvenlenrelilcerlt abmlt her antncedmts-prob- cf his unexpected rerozlirn with the ably with a 100d reason"—emiling Whcu he came, llc had more or M.C.W.ll ~. oeo-owwoooam+woorooot "l wrialn’ very mul-lllrlzllalrnseiilvlclarveytglnglililrlllm z grgoegglldrcn had, and I bed tried several rem iee to s Ono day my husband was ‘n the dm w. ‘m; AND 4 overheard n lady gm] [he ' diam”: raged- GLASSES FITTED W: l-'.'§..‘.~'£§.3i,°',g$1,;;¢w_uql-uruliw vr- wool"- NW3? E. W. TAYLOR z "n. Wm‘ u home andlffvlng er children,» he frame home .1. s. TAYLOI: z s we”. "1 two day: both the cluldlea were Optometrists p ' 35m , . _ I42 Richmond 5""! yrup drugnceend genaerlallillllerircldlg lwigyogl‘; 91'“ §o+woe+wo0rve++e+0++w’ L‘d"T°mnl9Lp!§ ' " ‘- - - - I" vm-lgnyg, grimly. "But she ls n big and beauti nub. two hours latcr, she realised ful person, and our little Count is m» qncq qua his superficial "cl:- qbviouliy quite hum in his elaoice." make other arrangcmclltsfl-vagucq ly. "I'l1 lei the next boat gu, and stay in Pal-ls till I hear from you. But I can't wait here any longer." He paused, then broke out hur- rlclfy: "I ought never to have come he, this place. It's haunted. I know, you'll understand-you always do understand, I think. you quiet chuck-why I must. go." And Jean, looking with the clear eyes of unhurt youth into the hand- some, grlef-ravagcd facc, was slld- denly conscious of a shrinking fear of that mysterious force called love, which can make, and so swiftly, terribly unmakc, the lives of men and women. (To Be continued) TENDERS Sealed Tenders will be received by the undersigned till March 1mg], n; 1 P. M. for hauling milk u; m; factory and delivering whey 1n p“. rnne. On Middleton and Dunk River lloulen u they were leuon of 1930 and all other routes an in I931. The lowest or any tender not neceesarii, nccepled. Klnkon. Dairy Association. J. W. FARMER, Secrehry. 1211-3-4-5-8-31. Stole Chickens, But Left His Card IN certain suburban district, 500 chickens had disa peured, but no one couldfind the tlluef. Then one morning, In the hen-house of E. O. Wagner, u pocket mirror was found. On that mlrror was a thumb print. In the finger print records of a nearby city was found n print that. matched it. It stud, as laluly as a letter, “The man who sto qthosa chickens is Albert I-Ispens. Ho llvea in Bakersfield. He is father of 11 children, but not They found the clliclrendilli-a hide- A thumb print cent him hero out, beneath the culpriUs barn. put hlm behlnd tile burs. H mistake _of jeavlng a rec Packet mirror with fell-tale thumb print finger prlnt Impressed. Germ-Laden Prints _ This is told to remind you that you buoy in every count h b ‘ leave finger dpriuls on everything you safety ea well as ref w’, cleanlineq They e made thg 0rd wltll g touch. An tléose finger printa are wthousande of users. all l . . usuYouypgidfilpatll: germs from thing A Delightful way others have touched, from handshakes, from pets, etc. Your touch ma. cou- _ vey them to foods-to a piece o toast we: made, no greater beautlfier. In you butter, to u. cookle, m a chocolate. lgflmt |s glmtle and abundant. Thanh A few of those germs may b in no perfume-butarvefreshing acentd millions in the lnouih. From there they ggfety,which bu; g mqmmg, y“ go to attack vltal organs. tell; you it p ' es-qmd proigcig, Life Extension Institute lists 2_7 Another ggfegum-d i‘; aggingf, bu}; diseases which may be conveyed ln thls gdourg, Lifebuoyb friend] laihcrpq way. Colds are the most common, (impinge glmpom 0f ' akin, l perhaps. An hand which has been your “m” in them of odour-causing wrurte. Use used to chec a_ sneeze or u couch Lgebuo forevery b8.i.ll—ll1eIlAIlWm- becomes contaminated. And every in; or uring the dny,you mayhem" touch of um hand, ln the print If. Dino Qflelmive odour from Qhabod loaves, may spread colds. If ou will prove these facts foglycauv Lifebuo is _a luxurious soap, bud on two pa m 011s. No better soap m; s'e1f ' l ml will How to be Safe wisll dl1§i.“i§l§ll"lmlry'y1§lp um m: b So ' a b miIli ne . the svolllld‘ 051a,“? combat tlllleee’ Try Lmebuny Free dangers. Ii: contains an antiaepiic. Its lather washes myny the germs, or makes them inactlvc. If you don't uea_Li.i_‘ebuoy audyani to try it, send a. cllpplng from thla ad- Vefflzfimfllfif. wlltih yoilglllllntlg; aigd addmu So ' l Lif b ften i er rot era l opt. 49 enll 5.13:“ pbegoli lisgllls. grille’; ‘leach ‘Illoronvfio, Ont. One full m ‘cake will u‘ their c ' dren the habit. Thus Life- sent you without cost. LBII Lifebuo Stops Body Odom Health Soap Nursemalds Frlend Still In Custody NEWARK, N. .1. Mar. v-Deputv Chief of Police Brex, after quest- ioning the two men all n81“: announced today Police Wmlld mn“ tinucd to hold Henry (Red) John- son, friend Of the nursemlfd to ihc Klndllapperl Lindbergh bflby. bill- would not hold Johansen Junfle- friend 0f JOhXISOD- Jurlge was detained last nlfllll when Iocaled ill Englewood. His wife is n. seamstress at the home 0'! ihe late Dwight W. Morrow, MYS- Llndbcrghs fnihcr- Arthur A. Springer. Secretary 1-0 the late Senator Morrow. said Jlngc, a. with Josnsonlasl: Tucs- day nig t, the evening of the kid- napping, and that "the 0111005 9f the questioning" wns to "chcfik Johnson's whereabouts." ‘ilrlivfessional Bards Stewart & Lowthef. 1. n. STEWART. K- C- u. w. LOWTHER. “c BARRISTERS. soucrrons. a4 Great ceorxe Sm" MONEY "r0 LOAN BELL a. MATHIESON R“ 1;, m“ D. L. Maihiesou. W“ Barristers a Solicitor! Money to L03" Charlottetown uni! Moniaxflfi ll. F. MacPllEE, BJ BARRISTER. SOLICITQR NOTARY. Mu “my Bunggng, Charlniieiown 576-2-8-1 month. MARK R. McGUlGAN . A. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR. ETC- MONEY T0 LOAN‘ P“ Cameron BlnchChnrloticinun. - ' llIlcLEOD & BENTLE .1. A. BENTLEY N5 TICE ! 1s hgrpby gIVCTlT: I will not be responsible for bills contracted ln my name, without my personal consent. w~ E- HENTLEY’ C urns. F. .1, IIORNSBY, Barrlaler lllld AItorneI-Iéiézlg" Charlottetown. Office: 180 RinhmongN- 1340-3-8-31. MONEY T0 L0 p. EDGAR SHAW. K-c Law Offices - Prim" Bmdl’ 121’ Grafton Street, marlnliléllfl" Wills and Estates Se“ e - H Collector of Bills (sum-u mfn}, SAFE protection fur all doeum elm‘ ' town. P- E- Y- JJi. Macdonald, li.0. BARRISTER, SOLICITOB. 6w. Riley Building Char‘ ietown, P. E. Island. Money w Loan and Collection: given the very best attention. 575-2-6-1month. i cake , wi bread and. as | 111;; ageneral table syruv- BENS 0N3 , GOIDEN SYRUP A nourishing and delicious food thl! builds healthy bodies. Particularly re- commended for growing children by expert dietitians. An economy f°° that the whole family will c1110!’- em m m "Canada's m» mm” he pee: lone-tented rid!!!- Thl CANADA ITAICII 60., I-llnilel. MONTREAL V.