Cnpita IJs l‘? main it tooii of the I mi ed by barn. only t er agl 56911191 perien The" three said ' Jii=t l brown ills m Indcei as I irgiet, smack Pigs ‘fifty i two l‘ The wth (‘$85. flic ll of th‘ feed i To ing w gfnge: pectir stcpp loose lip m rcccr stepp the f up to were, hay could subst e the Ew W116i‘. In 1110517 folio‘ GTPC Whii Four Engl 511st hote‘ tliOii a lit Si: perk used cnoi i l . n- il! FEE? F.eu-:§.._>W,_ I 1 I rIIIflYer be delighted with its small cost. Pace 'rw _--_ (y, A Woman's .___ iihat the Fashionable: are Wearing Bu Ilnnaboifs Worfhllllou illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With Every Patten Here's s lovely day dress in s novelty silk and wool crepe novelty for early fall wear. Its lines are decidedly slimming. It's also neat and trim for the college girl in tweed or soft mono- lone diagonal W001i?“- It's extremely easy to make. You'll Style No. 782 ls designed in sizes jis, is, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. ' Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material. It can also be carried out in '5 rough crepc silk. You'll like it irri- mensely in the Gurgundy shade. Price of Pattern 15 cents in itamps or coin (coin preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. h...“ -NO, 7B2. Size .............. Name ...-.................. Street Address ltluslsnv-n-sev State .. .-noosslllollollu City AMomingSmilo if‘ .__;. b. i‘ 0% o‘. 151" 6-‘ 9’ - 4Q‘?! 3%? ‘a , a. c‘ '.V V ~35. 6'0’ O .0 sir. At a singing competition, the local baritone sung "The Village Blacksmith" and was confident of being placed first. On the result being declared he was disappoint- sd to find he vras second and he asked for an explanation. The adjudicator informed him that he had made a mistake in his lines "Instead of singing ‘each morning sees some task begun: each evening sees it close,’ you sang, ‘each evening sees some task ocgun, each morning sees it close.’ " "That was right enough," pro- tested the singer. "Don't you know he was on the night shift?" For 771a Cook JELLY PLUM-AND-CRABAPPLE Cook the plurns- with a little water until tender, then drain in a bag. Add water to the crabapples and cook until tender throughout,l Shell drain; do not stir either fruit while cooking. Take one-third plum to two-thirds crabapple juice. Take three-fourths a cup of sugar i0 each cup of juice; boil the juice twenty minutes, add the sugar, heated in the oven, and let boll all aver. Sometimes a little longer toiling is needed, but not ofkn. Wild plums give good results. WANTED Prince County llospital, Summe - ride, will receive up to Oct. 1st, i932, applications for the position of Night Supervisor, Apply by mail vfating qualifications, experience, and salary required. JAS. ll. PRICHARD, Secretary. Sept. 2l-wfm-3i. AND GLASSES FITTED .I. S. TAYLOR E. W. TAYLOR Optometrists 142 Itlchmond Street swo-e-o-c-c-o Professional Bards Stewart 8. Lowther .I. D. STEWART, K. C. N. W. LOWTIIER BABBISTERS, SOLICITORS, ITO. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN VicLEOD & BENTLEY .I. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Barrister and Attorney-at-Lsw MONEY T0 LOAN Ofliee: 180 Richmond Street MissGwynneth F. Coombs TEACHER THEORY, READING 40 Victory Ave. Phone 683-L. 5697-9-l4-wsm-1-mth. PIANO, SIGHT. Prohibition Commission Chas. B.‘ Black, Chairman, Charlottetown. Jss. B. McDonald, West St. Peters John Simpson, H ‘“ . Send all information regarding infractions of PROIIIBITION ACT to the sbove or to Inspector .I. l-‘rfnin. B. C. M. P, ‘bulk above the waistline. sleeves are ruffled and stuffed and MODE TO ELBOW. SIIUULDER ITS WAYi NE WYORK, Sept. 23.—'I‘he 1932 mode will elbow and shoulder its way through the season with a swagger and grace comparable only , to the fashions of the gay nineties. f By leaps and bounds the silhouette 1 above the waist widens. Sleeves’ billow and puff at all points from] shoulders to wrists. Unquestion- ably arms nrc the focal points around which all fashions revolve, for chic in ones costume demands The romantic urge that began to make its presence felt last year is now taking a. firmer grip on our shoulders. determined to make them important and thoroughly dressed- up. To achieve this top-heavy look puffed until the natural lines arc no longer visible in the masses of billowing materials. A season ago such exaggerations were confined for the most part to evening cloth- es. Now the big sleeve appears in the morning and stays with us the round of the clock. Furs, flounces, and feathers play I -:- Social an’ When coffee is being infused for fllVOIin‘ purposes. il- l-I Will! 9° make i; very strong; we like to us! double the amount of coffee tn the quantity of water. which W‘ would hiss if brewing s beverage. cor/e... gin, ‘o... HE» C ‘Coffee Clio No. I , 1 cup brown sugar 1 cup butter I eggs i-I cup molasses 1 cup strong coffee Gran parents Werei-N ow We Step Out How Much Better Off We Are Than our And Live Our Own Lives After Our Drip coffee, or boiled or , coffee? n does not matter-Just have it. mo. and mono. with I11 of its fine flavor youmsn get out into your dish. Coffee Souffle _ 1 1-2 cups coffee (stmns) 1-2 cup milk (or cream) 1 tablespoon gelstlne 9-4 cup sill" 3 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla Put together into a. double boil- er. coffee, milk, half the suslr and gelatine, which has been will"! in n little cold water. When hot add the yolks of eggs which have been beaten with balance of the sugar- Stir for s few minutes and remove from the fire. mt c001 slightly- Beat the whites of eggs until velY stiff, add vanilla, then fold into first mixture. Pour into s wet mould. when set serve with whip- ped creom. Java. Cream 2 tablespoons tapioca 1-8 teaspoon salt 2 cups milk, scolded 1 egg yolk slightly beaten 1-4 cup sugar 3-4 cup shredded cocoanut 1 egg white, stiffly beaten 1-2 teaspoon vanilla " l ;nc,;m‘ M‘ ' ‘ “‘ Children Are Married and We 2 teaspoons powdered cinna- Make a Cult of Optimism In- "w" ' stead of Holding Tearfests 1 teaspoon cloves 1-4 teaspoon salt i cup chopped raisins 5 cups flour 2 teaspoons baking powder Sift together the flour, ssit, bak- ing powder and spices. Dredge raisins with some of the flour. Cream butter and sugar. Add ben- ten yolks and molasses, then ulter- riste the coffee and flour; lastly best in whipped whites. Divide in- to 2 loaves and bake in moderate oven. The most notable achievement of this present age, and "19 W9 I" have most cause to be grateful for, is the increase in hBPPIIIW- W9 have made life so much plessuiter and more agreeable than it usedJlo be. Especially have we improved the latter decades of human oxiliklwh. which men and women used to put in patiently and foriomiy waiting for their latter end, and in which their liveliest amuse- ment was making their wills and selecting their pallbearers, but in which they now have literally the time of their lives. ' Possibly young people are no happier now than they were in what we erroneously call the "good old times.” Doubtless it was Just as much fun to ride behind old Dobbin with your best girl st four miles an hour as it is to speed with her in Coffee Cream 1-2 box gelatine 1-2 cup sugar 1 1-2 cups thin cream 1-2 cup strong coffee (cold) Sock the gelatine in a little cold water. Put ‘the sugar, coffee and soaked gelatine into double boiler and cook until dissolved, then add cream and pour into a mold. Serve with whipped cream. an automobile at sixty, and as romantic to hold hands at the church supper as it is at the cinema. Doubtless one got just as much kick out of singing to the socompanime ‘ of the parlor organ as one does out of listening to the radio, and kisses were just as sweet when girls‘ lips were clean as they are now when flavored with lipstick. Youth is the time of enjoyment and barring some tragic situation is always happy, but youth is short and after it had fled and men and women settled down, as the phrase goes, life used to be a dull and de- pressing affair. Perhaps that is why people used to think and talk so much more about going to heaven than they do now. GLASS TAINTING Hand painted glass is enloying a wave of popularity at the present time. _ In some instances it is rather ex- pensive to buy, but if you are one of those pcorge who like to have some hobby in hand then here is In our complacency we take whatever good befalls us as no more than our due and less than we deserve, so we fail to note how much more enjoyable things are for us than they were for our forebears. Yet those of us who are middle-aged and over can well recall when there were vir- tualiyno amusements or diversions except for boys and girls. Cook tapioca and sali; in milk in double boiler 15 minutes or until. tapioca is clear, strring frequently. , Combine egg yolk and suga". Poul‘ small amount of tapioca mixture. Remove from fire and add c0001» nut. Cool. Fold in eel; white and vanilla. Serve cold. Serves 6. Coffee Cake 1 cup very strong coffee 1 cup butter 2 cups 511851‘ 3 eggs 1 1-2 pints flour 1 1-2 teaspoons baking powder 1 cup stoned raisins, out in two 1-2 cup’ chopped citron l0 drops each extract slisplce and nut-meg 1-2 cup milk Rub the butter and sugar to I. while cream; add the e385. 1 ll I time, beating three or four minutes after each. Sift together flour and powder, which add to the butter, etc, with the coffee, raisins, citron milk and extracts. Mix into a smooth batter. Bake in paper lined significant roles in enlarging the new silhouette. cake tin in a hot oven, 50 minutes. 011B that Slwllld BPPBM- A respectable middle-aged man was supposed to find all the relaxa- Qllifi $118811 81855 i-FEYS. boil-ks. tion and get all the thrills he craved out of his business and his family, 151's and WW1!» 0M1 be ifailsmfmed and his credit would have actually been impaired if he had taken any fit hflme 111W T951117 iniefflsllns "id time off to play.’ No golf, no tennis, no polo for him. Even a fishing or I over egg and sugar. return to d0\l'|artistic articles such as dresslng- a hunting trip was looked upon askance, and what would have been l ble boiler and cook until thickened. l table sets, flower containe's and , thought of him if he went off on both a summer and a. winter vacation. numerous other things. one trembles to think of. As for a. woman, she virtually ablured the world, the flesh and the WEED‘ devil when her first baby was born. She became All Mother and ceased The manufacture of excelsior and to be a human being with any desires for pleasures and frivolities. She wood wool was responsible in 1931 Joined the Black Silk Brigade and got her excitement out of the baby's for a factory output valued at_ first tooth and Juniors going to college, and took her romance vicarious- finesse, which was a little below '_ly through her daughter's besux. the 1930 figure, although some ‘ When the Browning clubs were first started women hesitated to join wood-working industries manufac- them because it was such a bold and adventurous thing to do. A wife ture it as a side line and, therefore, and mother would never have outlived the scandal if she had left her the total in a report issued by the family for any reason save to nurse a dying relative, and after the child- Dominion Bureau of Statistics does ren were married she was supposed to be done with all real interest in not include the whole. life and to find her only pleasure in nursing her grandchildren and med- Excelsior is used in packing fra- itating upon death. gile commodities of all kinds and in upholsterlng. It is also used in MAKING USE 0F THE TREE Consider the altered status of the middle-aged and old now. They the manufacture of cheap mat- are the play girls and boys of the modern world because they have more tresses. Poplar is the chief wood ‘time and more money than the young. All the pleasure resorts are used, and so the industry provides crowded with elderly people who are dressed to kill and as jolly as sand- a market for what is, in many boys. The only post-mcrtems you hear from them is over their golf places in Canada, a tree weed. As games and their bridge losses, and when their children get married par- the supply of poplar is more than ents don't climb up on the shelf. They buy themselves a ticket around sufficient to provide for its present the world and start out to do the things they couldn't do when they were uses, the development of the excel- young. sior industry depends entirely on l d Personal -:- ,Fashions Aland/sleep 4- . e in " irorrloflfvom, gi l / as oozed/t was/i. - -- ' “The beotmomh wash is s solution Ofcummqn , 'Amfl'i'dfl Modienl Association. . undlniid-plensntoouse. aside qarq/e - - - Use Windsor Sale-puns: and best for sensitive mgmbn _ fieall/u/ qunzs - Windsor Suit harden: the condition.‘ c/edh feel/z - - Nothing will clean and whiten die Suit-nod i: com so little! SAVE MONgEY... g m‘? WIN DSC ' SKL &nlinlobnzles (WhdoorSalaDivlioaJWiudsuOnm-t, [Little IluhanlWlndowSukWfodsofloJludSahmdRnalTobkSoflllrumnutq) ‘ a: u... Winder);- 5:11’ ' gums and keeps them in; teeth better than Win , We are meeting life with more p We are making a cult of . our greatest modern improvement. osophy than our fathers and mothers did. timism instead of s s ligion of pessimism. In the past the ability to mourn was developed into a positive tale Maidens pincdawsy with s. green-and-yellow melancholy over tlie c who tilted them. Neglected wives spent their lives grieving over ii bands who betrayed them. The women who never "got over" son were, somehow, looked up to. with a sort of awe. The streets were b1 with women who put on crepe in their youth and never took it on. Women have just as much to weep over now as they did, but ii t shed tears they do it in private and turn a brave and smiling face ii the world. Nobody can imagine a modern girl dying of a broken he because some drug-store sheik threw her over. If her cheeks are l she covsrsvup their psleness with rouge and laughs it ofl’. The wives philsnderers don't fret themselvesinto the grave over their liindali They either get divorces and try their luck again or else deride tlis msn may be s. poor husband and s. good provider and let it go at i Even the women who have great sorrows to bear take them with w Stevenson celled "that brave attitude toward 1lfe." n‘... do women tell their troubles as they used to do. No bi gnrbed women come to spend the day with us and have a teariest they did with our grandmother. It is considered bad form to talk a your operations and poor opintsmanship to tell the faults of the hush who supports you, and so when women gather together they do not . on funeral-baked meats, but feast on spicy stories. So altogether this is s happier if not s. better world. Especially (Copyright, i929, The Crippled Lady of Peribonko B! JAMES OLIVER CUBWOOD by DoobledsyJIIoe-sn, and Co. Ins.) market conditions. l A11 real happiness, however, must come from within, and herein lies ing as it turns over and over that other mile to go after 1 hit; the'something in her voice strangely I can scarcely believe what you have cloud. But this down here doesn't thrilled Paul. "I think there is s said. Doctor Derwent. 1 would Jump appeal to me like a nice, white cloud love s0 great that it is cowardly for in it without fear, whlie back there all filled with feathers. It makes me it to deliberately die, 5, love so ——where it is breaking itself into think of a—a big holei I wouldn't complete that when its other hail spray and foam-J would never have try to walk on it, or jump into it, goes there is still heaven left in the wurase ‘w start!" unless Colin fell in first and 1 had memories of it. It is wicked to take the breath of human life from such sweep of water which had the sp- tunnel. Halfway to the orfice a rock Its effect on Claire was not what mile or more the huge churns of Paul had anticipated. To his amazc- the river bed were at work, sluh. mm it was she who suzzeried theyfing and twisting the down-rushing spread their luncheon on the edge floods until, Paul thought, they 0f a great slab of rock which pro-i were an inspiring and beautiful jected into the stream, and fromlthing to look upon. where they could look upon the won- Yet it was the darker and more 4911111 Plfly of water below them. sinister side that Claire chose, with This rock, several 8.0185 in éxtéhthg, scene under their gyeg thgt wag was covered with soil which was'colosally awesomé but equally un- continualiy absorbing moisture from beautiful, the river, so that it hiufoiothed ii-' As she ate her luncheon. she let self with a carpet of flower-g and him know for the first t'me, some- grass until it was an oasis of beauty thing o: the strange fear which pos- in the heart of a rock-vlsaged land- 595-5"! h" Whenever Bhe W35 11981’ R898 which otherwise would hoveithe fury 0f whirls WRWP- 3% Wll possessed little m offset 1g; mowlsurprised she should speak of it now forbidding aspects. 1i, was Claire who and not at some time when they also selected the spot for their had been alone. Derwent roused the table-cloth and who arranged theirlcflnfusion 1n her by Bovine. in am- places afterward so that, all might Wer to a question Bled by C5118. sit. looking toward the mouth of the that no living creature whose hab- overhung chasm. several hundred itant was land could exist for more yards downstream from the rock, than a few seconds in the oily which held its tenure like an indom- ChBIYbCPS below them. ltable guardian before it. Between Claire shruzsed her slim should- their positnn and the abyss of the ers and looked with unafraid eyes gorge was a. black and irresistible upon what Derwent had accredited with the omnipotence of superde- pcarance of a flood of boiling oil on structlon. its way to the mouth of a huge "Were you ever haunted by a dream?" she asked. "I have been SIOWIY wearing away with the cen- tunes reared its grim and battered head out of the stream, cutting it like a knife in two equal parts. Even about this 11188511 tooth of stone was no glint of suhilt white- ness of froth or foam, and no sound came from this part of the chfllmel except a sullen murmur and hiss. lending still greater reality to the caprice oi thought that water must metamorphosc itself to oil be~ fore the throat oi’ t'n'e gorge would ‘Tim/c it. It was from the other tumult came. where since childhood. Most children dream of falling from ladders and housetops, of seeing ghosts, of run- ning away from dangers-but mine was always of water. It has remain- ed with me. I am terribly afraid of water, but only when it is angry. The ocean terrfies rne when it lash- es itself white. I found a lovely place W Paint in Cornwall, but the surf Was always beating against the cliffs and drove me away. Water like this below us does not disturb me at "There you might llvhhere there to help him." To His Amusement it Wu She Who Suggested They Spfed/i Their Luncheon on the Edge of a Grout Slab of Rock. could be no possibility of it." said Derwent. "I can almost fancy walking on it without wetting my shoes, it looks so firm and substsnti l looking." per- sisted claire. "Did you ever stand on a moun- taln top and look down into the clouds and think how nice it would be to lump on into one of the cosrliiim, and to him alone. Then Ihe little nests they nialrev- asked Lucy‘ all. It is so smooth and unbroken, Belle. "I have. Once I think I mighi, . . ‘ i s do of the table rock iliat the cineillikg the ripples in Carla's hair when have done it if Colin hadn't held for half s it is down-so soft and velvety look- rns. He says I would have had an- "Would yum-then?" asked Paul. "0.’ course I would,’ she said. "Do you suppose I would let him go into that tunnel alone?" "I-wonder. fife is a precious thing. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred it is more precious than the person we live with. We don't idealize the women who burn them- selves on their husbands‘ funeral pyres in India. Do we?" "I don't think so. Their sacrifice was inspired by duty and a reiglous faith. Neither takes the place of love. But if Colin were down there, going to a. death like that, I would wani, to go with him. I would go. I cannot explain. Isn't there s. difference?" "Yes-A difference that is infin- womsn would b, joining the man she loved in s. final hour of life, that they might be together in the supreme moment. It would be choos- ing between a few more minutes with him or a few more years with- ‘out him, and minutes measured by love are priceless to a woman than years without it." . "Also to a man," said Derwent, holding_his wife's hand closely for a moment. "I don't. think we would hesitate to take the leap. Do you. Paul?" He was looking at Carla, who was gazing meditltiveiy upon the vis- cious sweep of water below them. She lwlfld up almost in the mom- ent his glance went to her. Her lips moved, a3 if for on instant she were on the pont of speaking to caught herself. and gumed her gaze to the river again. - "A woman's love for a man isn't ite.'f said Claire. "ln th’s instance sl s love because of’ a selfish desire not to live alone. I think, Lucy- Belle, if it came to the feai test God would give you strength to lhold yourself back. You would not die. You would live, and cherish the memories of your love like s garden of beautiful flowers. It was as if a cathedral bell had tolled softly among them, so won- derfully gentle and strange was Carla's voice. Carla knew. ‘that was the thought wh'ch Bflpped Paul, and it held the others. She had passed through the fire at which his wife and Lucy-Belle were only guess- ing, and it was from her soul, not {her lips, that evidence had come. Claire gave a little start at his side. and her face and eyes grew sud- denly and vividly filled with light ls she looked at Carla, as if all in s second and a. half a great and half- expected truth had come to possess her. Stranger even than the change in her face was the way in which she found Paul's hand and held it tenderly and warmly between her own Never had the thrill of her entered into him as during these moments. He closed his hands tight- ly about hers. But he was looking at Carla! the middle-aged and old. DOROTHY DIX. 16 rem of practise, in which he l their feet and let their ilfllliiy has administered wmore than 1w.- hang. Consequently, the femili 000 toes. 30,000 feet-or 15,000 pa- (w; 15 expanding;- tients. . r "The vanity of women has hurt their feet for so long it is painful to contemplate," Dr. Wadsworth ssys. "They have wanted to make their feet dainty and small, since dsintiness and smallness conform- ed to their ideas of beauty. "Bo they bought shoes to fit their vsnitysnd not their feet. Hence the srchescof their feet humped up like camel's been, bunions and corns flourished, and the bones of their toes more often than not re- sembled s jumbled pile of sticks. Periodic- Eye Examinations Don't wear your glosses lo iivo or ten years. ls some d1‘ i without re-exsmlnstlo .for i that time serious changes Al's vitally important. Wh I But after s11 these centuries. m" om,- q” In ‘M, o the women have decided Ail the st- trsctiveness they might acquire is “mm” not worth one iota of the pain it m” u“ PM.“ whim || not costs. So they buy shoes to fit uwnnd‘ m" work W, injury to the moli precious sense WI 1105""- Buliiling Lot For Sale .__.-_- Guard your eyes. A largo lot“ M“: ‘ldulziflono of City’ bestru ensld eta. Avzfly h Gs Fa II. I. McPIIEE, OPTOMETBIST Solicitor. Riley Building. TENDERS FQR COAL (To Be Continued) rmns women's" rssr oirow- mo LARGER. WICHFFA, Kan, Sept. 23- Na- ture often ignores the esthetic for the practical; hence women's feet are getting larger. _ That's {he theory of Dr. C. '1". Wadsworth, chiropodlst. He backs always like that.” shs sold. and up his assertion by pointing to ths| 536 9-21-22. ' Tender; will be received at the oflice of the City Cl up to and including Wednesday September 28th from C Dealers for supplying the City with 125 tons of H‘ screened coal for the. City Building, and 150 tons for Market ‘Building. t l , All cosi to be weighed on City Weigh Sc/aies and l’ mod in basement of each building, weighing to be 11'" by Contractor. The lowest or any tender not necessfl accepted. CHOLSON ' . P. NI . G City Cler silklléii‘. 7-, ikh$$$$ " i “iliiirslrl. T i 5