\ . 0UrOBER' 14:11am.» iSTUMAGIiPAINS? ently with “Fruit-olives.” results-infirm rld you bins. flat- ulence, or pala_~after eating, and malls lite wort-ll iilrlns seah- Mra Annie Glover, Ottawa. wlllw " ' ' “A collar from ‘ mum-rill." w"‘...'...;~"¥==jt "Fmit-a-tivea" acts naturally on the sys- tem. Gently andcuickly it atrengtliens the whole digestive tract. It awakens liver, bowels and soottiiee tlie stomach. Get a 25c or a a yourdruggiat today. End diam-Ive t-rvllblu- - Get rid of jibenfPel-man- . Woman k Realm. ' AfhlorningSmile Howls s very painstaking golfer andittookhimthreehourstoreach the fifteenth hole where he drove his ball into the rough. After wsmh. the caddie located a ball, which the player examined. "Ne." he ‘ said. “this isn't mine. "'I‘his is a very old ball." _ . _"Yes," said the -boy. in exhausted tones, ‘fbut dontforget it's a long time since we started out, sir." ,.._} M/hatgfthe Fashionable Are Wearing -‘ Illustrzlled Dfessmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern ' By Annabelle Worthington ‘k1,. s, - l - _=.',...._-__ L. warfare’ 'A charming addition to your Pall wardrobe is a transparent velvet printed in dahliapurple tones, most admirably suited to ail-day occa- sions. » _ . The Style Ho. 2723 ‘sketched cm- llhasizes the curved hipline all Paris is talking about, The sleeky slender skirt, draped at right ilde, shows in- teresting wrapped movement. The becoming open V-neckllne is finished with rolled collar. Sleeves have darts below elbows to give arms slender appearance. Front shoulders are fitted and narrowed by inverted tucks. The bodice is long-waisted to af- fect hip yoke. '.l'hls makes it very simple for home seamstress, , for after the tucks are stitched in shoul- ders, the back is Joined to the two front sections. The two-piece skirt with cascade drapery on right side is ads-med and stitched to bodice. It is now ready to sew collar at neckline and set sleeves into armholes. About two hours cf your time and you have a perfectly adorable dress. that takes but 3% yards of 40-inch material wiih $4 yard of 32-inch wh- trastlng to copy it exactly. It comes in slaes 16, l8 years, 36 38. 40 and 42 inches bust. It is very attractive made of black crepe satin with rolled collar of egg- shell shade faille silk crepe, Silk crepe in bottle green self-trimmed and feather-Weight woolen in army blue in clever zigzag pattern are smart daytime selections. For more formal wear, choose Lucerne blue transparent velvet. Pattern price 15 cents. ‘Be ‘sure to n11 in size of ptttern. Address Pattern Department. ThelNew Fall and winter Fashion Magazine is 1s cents. but only 10_ cents when ordered with a pattern. ' ‘ ' No.‘2723. sire'..l.....i.......l.. aaoaalooeaaaaecnssaseaaaseloallllllpa Name - Illllltltlillluoeesenaeslaelaillllllf Street Address .-'i n.l'sasasanollllllololllaalaassealllam City - m . State , ' round shoulders? » nuances.‘ MilaclyBealztiful- .,nysaaaeep :'\,i l iiliil ‘viii. , y iliiitills woliiii , liiiiriill -B.l’hiliaai’s‘ (haploid ‘ - Swimming is a splendid exercissfor " the chest, back and shoulder muscles. Bwimthe Ameri- can crawl and the reel-ill bwlill-mlw- Practloe'standlng~ isftsll-‘ss pee-Bible with shoulders ~weli back, abdomen flat. and head up. Learn to stand. l" and walk correctly- - “The round- shouldered. uleueisris posture is WY erteh a bad~habit' ellkéilllflmbfll disk workers. Many 01,118 Ilfifld I large pm of the day ‘in a sittini position, whether in office or home- The usuarmlstake made is that of not sitting far enough back in the chili-w ‘rhe-svinefwlth “M1118 l" suplflft it, wilds l0 be bent, and the shoulders rounded. The result ls t-hlt the chest iacontractedjsnd the lb- doininal muscles automatically 601l- tract, and tbecheee is expwiw- u y6u,h‘ave_ to lean forwarmto roach desk or table. bend forward from the waist iqiihout relulns- the " W119" posture of‘ thesillne. You will 1W5 that thisewltbfl w“ l" '"'"‘"”“‘* 1°, hm”; wlthoflt IQUIIIO, OQOO UN habit has been acquires. A daily walk oilt-of-doors is essential also for those who won: at MQHWY °°°“P“ tiona or indoor work. howl» it Wm- toracta we'll! ‘elm P’ u P“- md gently ltlmll- lates the intlrhll orsenl- The "w" blithely Herbal WorksWonders on Peevisll Stomaclls and Lazy ‘Bowels The eldfrelieble Gallagher's Tonic and System Builder All the us and healing virtues of herbs, ature's own medicine, are in this tonic. No mincrailmdéugaB _Sets every o wor e. backthcrgidljoy oiflliivgmg. (flood for tlgie nerves. ' troubles-even Eczema. Builds you u . Sold, as other Gallagher's Herbal-i Household Remedim are, by 29 H. L. WORTH a’, Charlottetown, PIJ. Household Hints Bylobertllno said a secret service operative nam- ed Wheeler, in 10s Angeles, had giv- en Summers the namc of Wiseman. wartl and sideways. Rest right, hand on" chair and repeat the kicking with slightly apart ,and parallel. Holding the knees stiff. bend forward and touch the floor wlththe palms of your hand. and raise and lower both legs alter- natasly. gather and roll first to right ride and then todeft. Repeat twenty times. "whats ell“ anflbdilnlrrilatnwitb a swing from tboliimieeieu-eiehtnotwedinw out. flroathe deeply. w! tie"!!- " . hols time. ._ _ ____.,_ - THE Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN‘ Wm“ i Blames Wr . c W5? i Dorothy Dzx T.‘ Meme" Y _ Effort . “It-is OnIyOur iMarriage Contracts That We Feel We Should Have " a Right to Break if We Get Tired of Them or See Something New in the Husband or Wife Line We Would Rather Have” The trouble with marriage-is that we expect the lmpoulblg Q1 it, we expect it to be a glorious success without/our putting forth one effort to make it so and we complain that it is a failure when we have used lass intelligence less sportsmanship, less energy in trying in make a ‘ go of it than we do in any other worm of human en- dcaiior. We couldn't run a hot-dog stand the way we do marriage without going bankrupt. To begin with, look at the casual way in which people marry. If a man is going into s. business When Purchasing Bugs Itlis well to remember, when pur- to considerable sunlight, that browns, dark blues and greens will fade more readily than lighter shades. ‘Waehing Ribbons I When. laundering, ribbons. alter they are washed wind them around a. bottle filled with warm water and corked. The ribbons will dry quickly and smoothly. i Stain; To remove fruit stains from cloth- wash in the usual manner, -_._.___.___ TO INQUIRE INTO SECRET OF BRITISH. DOCUMElVT WASHINGTON. Oct. ll-Inq-uiry into the source of the all-aged secret British document now before it, will be undertaken next weekby the Sen- ate Commission investigating Wm. B. Shearerfls activities for U. S. Shipbuilders at, the i927 Geneva Na- val Conference. _ The Commission will confer to- morrow. Photostatlc copies of the so-called British paper wera- present- ed to it by Shearer at the hearings last week. _ Senator Allen, Republican, Kansas. who has a report from the Navy In- telligence attacking the u. ‘Lenticity of the paper, has demanded that complete investigation be mad-e to determine how such s. document was circulated. I Shearer testified thatthe name of Sir William Wiseman, was signed to the document after he received it from a Judge Summers. He described Wiseman as “the chief British spy in this country," during the war and Wlseman who is with a banking firm in New York has telegraphed the commission denying any connec- tion with-the document. He will be called to testify. The commission is looking for the Judge Summers and Wheeler, named by Shearer. Shares of many American com- panies are being introduced on stock markets of the Netherlands. thighs. Here is another exercise that you may practice regularly. Stand erect with right hand on hip, left hand resting on the back of a chair. Kick forward as high as possible with the right leg, keeping your trunk erect with‘ knees straight. Repeat high kicking ten times forward, back- the left leg. Stand erect with feet Lie down on your back Then raise both legs to- LOIS LEEDS. --_.___. Pivlli Lillliciitrs chasing rugs that are to be subjected ing and table linen moisten the spots thoroughly with pure glycerine and par‘ ‘ ‘ with another man, he looks up his record. ‘ He finds out if the other man is honest and reliable; if he is industrious; if he knows anything about the business they are going into, and how rnuch he is going to invest. in it in money and per-gong! service. _ ' But he goes into a life partnership with a woman for no better renson. than that she has the come-hither look in her eye and a pcaches-and-cream complexion. He doesn't even take the trouble to find out whether she has any brains or not, or whether she has any single quality that he will want in s wife. And women use just as little intelligence in selecting their husbands, A girl wouldn't think of buying a. dress without giving a lot of thought to whe- her it was becoming to her and had. her lines and was suitable for the pm- pose she wanted, and how it would stand the wear and tear of usage, but she will marry a man because he is good-looking, or a peachy dancer, or has a snappy line, without once considering whether he is congenial, whether his ideas match hers or not, or even whether he will be able to support her or not. A very large number of people, especially men, as disgruntled with mar- riage because they resent its bondage. They want to be free, untrammcled. able to come and go and do as they please, but the idea of personal liberty is a chimera. There is no such thing. We are all bound on the wheel. We all give hostages to fortune. That is life. ' The man who makes millions does it by slavery to his business. The great opera singer cannot even eat when he likes. The successful doctor and lawyer cannot drop their professl ons and go ofl to play. We are no more free, of our b ‘ ' and professional obligations than we are of our matri- monial ones, yet it is the bondage of matrlmonymgainst which we howl to high Heaven. ‘ Lots of us make bad bargains. We buy things that don't look so good to us when we get them home as they did in the shop windows. We are dis- appoint- i in the new car. we have acquired and find that it isn't just. exactly what we needed. We go into enterprise that we thought would return s million -a-mirlute profit and we find that they are all work and won-y and no dividends. Every young man who goes into a business or into a profession passes through a season of despair and ' ageme it and a feeling that he has made a mistake and wishing that he had chosen something else. Bu’. l: m only on our mninlmilllili bad bargains that we fecl we have a right towelch. It is only our marriage contracts that we feel we should have a right to break if we get tired of them, or see something in the hus- band or wife line we would rather have. It is only in marriage that we throw up our hands and quit without trying to make the best of our business and to carry on through the first years of disappointment to success, as we often do inbusiness. ' ~ - - Admittedly a large number of husbands and wives live a cat-and-dog ex- istence. Why? Because they make no effort tosell themselves "to each other, es they do to those with whom it is to their advantage to get along. It is appalling, but it is true, that the average husband and wife show to no other human being on earth such rudeness, such utter lack ofall consider- ation as they do to each other. ' ‘ s And the queer part of it is that these two people who make life so mis- erable for each other do not sin throu sh lgnoranccfloth have the technique of handling each other at their fingers ends, but 011W 811°"! W "l! 3- ' - They have a row every morning over the coiled. but the W119 119V" 50m- ers to learn how to make it right. " There are cubicle t-hlt lfelllet le 800d for a flght as a nickel is'for a gingercakc, but instead of burying them under tons of silence the wife drags them out on the caroet- Th6 hlllblnd 1mm" he esn Jolly his wife into doing anything, but he uses the hammer instead of tho salve-spreader. He knows that she hunt"! l-lld "m"! 1°? l WW4 °‘ praise, but wild horses couldn't drag it from him. - If men made the some cflort to set along Jvlth their wives-rho used t them the arts and wiles that they do on their women rs and clien and patients. and if women tried as hard toplaeate their husbands end t0 i-uh their fur the right way as they do that 01 s rrwchv We. it "W"! m“ matrimony from being a scrapping m atch lntoa peace anthem. ,__ - . . . Another charge that is brought against matrimony is that it is dull and mgnotonnus. Bo is business. So if life. - Ne thrill lasts rorisv We rm t he on our tiptoes all the time. Most of existence is Just iplvddifll H")!!! i118 same old road. 601M the "m! °14 "ti" d” ‘m’ 4”‘ " It is really no more moriotonoils for a man to come home eveff flllht m", H; u m. him. m go to the ofllce every morning, and a womancan I!‘ lust as tired of smearing her face with grease P!!!" "If!" "m" wr°r°zzn° ‘m, m m; stage tn act as she can of washing the babys face Oil‘ let lg brukgug, . All the pep we get in life we have tobrgut intlzri: arsomvtzergad i! we would put as much thofllhfi ""1 mm ‘M u ' do m our i. s... i. iii-M -" " art": " l; buglnegg, and if we were as eager to get the Bled an roin “m and wires as we are from the smell! Pllbufi- V! ""14 "i" b‘ '° mm‘ matrimony. ' ’ ‘ titu- lf marriage is a failure. it i! "Muse we make it so. No other ins tion would survive the rough treatment we l"! 1%- Dmwn" Du‘ 1M in aiae to the leviathan." and the ingest liners ever to bebiillt- [n m, “wit; The proposes shill- whloh are intended for the North At- lantic trade, will be crsllsht-ly 109 than com ceoi and will attain a‘ speed a in knots mm than an: American llllP mm the "vi-WH- the announcement said. Second In Size “ To Leviathan (Qpeelal to u» one») new YORK. out. ll.-—'i‘lie United sister lines was: announced that it 1M W!“ WWW‘ “W” '° may will be rile feet lens. lild will - Social and Personal ‘-‘."- Fashions - Etiquette Byllobrtblnla I Q. When are silver platters of fruit appropriate center pieces for n dinner table? A. On festive occasions such as Thanksgiving and Christmas. Q. If a man calls at onc‘s box lit the opera what should the mall near- est the door do? ' A. He should relinquish his scat. and may stand or stroll about. Q. 1s it proper to use sealing wax on the envelope of a social letter? A. Yes, It adds distinction. For The Cook I Us)!‘ u nn-illAlfi 1N u After-dinner coffee should be made V"! EtYOUK 511d served black. Coffee should be served boiling hot and the cream and sugar should be. passed immediately, ‘ BUY a. good grade of coffee from n‘ coffee roaster. Don't try to economize‘ in the quality of oofiec and expect good results. I! you buy your coffee already? ground buy it ln small quantities. Ii; is bound to lOse its flavor if kept, for a while before using. —~---_-____. BUBIED ALIVE TO ADVERTISE BOOK MEMOIRS PARJS, Oct. IL-lThe greatest French "murder mystery" in years has resolved itself into one of tile greatest of, publicity stunts which had been a complete fiasco. 1 Police questioning of Henry Bou-‘ logne. of Dunkerquc, brought a. con- fession that'he hld aided in burying: alive in a wood near Paris Clement‘ Passal, alias Marcluis de Champau-i bert, in order that that notorious‘ swindler might have publicity to help‘ the sale of his volume of memoirs‘ which was about to be published. The affair had been a first-class mystery since the police, following directions given in anonymous letters‘ signed by "Knights of Themis," went“ to the wood and dug up a. coffin in which Passal was found dead. T110‘ police first believed the man was in a catalcptlc state. but physicians who‘ examined the body believed he died. of starvation. eieediheeessuueiiehei _pes-m~”i mmmmnmu. sonierandcargoliiiliawhlellthe“m_mm' wonder-an- - . n’ l Allow a heaping tablespoon of cob‘ fee to one cup of water. i l "We find it a good . safeguard,” says mother, e Follow these Instructions N hiANY occasions mother ha! r0 be the fzilnily doctor, and "Vaseline" Petroleum Jelly is usually on hand to help her. It promotes heal- ing. Keep it handy in your medicine chest r00. Tickling cougll_A spoonful now and thcil rclicvcs a rough throat and soothes the paroxysms of coughing And remember, when you buy, that after-n cold. the trade mark Vaseline on the package gives you the assurance that you are getting the genuine product of the Chcscbrough Manufacturing C0., Conskl, S520 Chnboi: Avenue, Mon- trcal, Canada. Vaseline ‘r an!» K PETROLEUM JELLY Cold in the head-A bit snuffed up llle iloslrils makes breathing cssicr, helps llcal inflamed membranes. Constipation _ Take a (ca- spoonful or less twice s day —-one hour after breakfast and supper. It's tasteless and odorless. Reduce quantity for children. ‘ earth. 011‘ the evening of the 1011071 he made the acquaintance of Passal in! d1! 3mm?“ rflum“ m ‘m’ '7“ in prison and that his aid was enllst- but BOt n0 ill-W" when hQ-‘pfl. cd in carrying out the publicity through the tube. He tried all!!! l!!!‘ scheme. The two bought wood and] dB? with the “me result" The“ h‘ fashioned the coffin and then carried! lost his head, shut himself u? In‘ it to Bemeuil Wood, about 20 rrliles waited for the IITBM- will!!!‘ W“ west of Paris. mode 185$ 1118m- Thcy dug n shallow trench sufficl- Boulogflo will be PFNBWWI t“ ent to lower the coffin s. few feet he- ; homicide by imprudenw mil 1°! m" lozv the ground, and then after in?‘ the French C0110 69-118 111$" W559.‘ sorting a tube through which he was‘ sion of the corpse. If convicted 01 to breathe, Passal entered the casket.‘ these crimes he risks sentence of two ‘ I years in prison with a. fine of 60d | francs or less. The police say that other persons implicated in the attempted hoax will be brought to book. Boulogne last night told them that Faces Homicide Charge Boulogne according to the police} screwed the cover and covered it with v 11 ~ . 1 ‘M - Literature J _-,,-,,_,._,_--¢-—-v_-q-q__._.a-—-— , . ~ '. .. fbla-g: on» iméii"’"" g q... . 3r» w».