WELCCME, RUBY! lil YA, AL! Are wehglad o‘ see you two-to-gether! Theking and queen of song-and-dance in" their first spectacu- . lai- musical together! n: lino cove m om: HAND i i. i _ ma CWHARLOTFU. " ml: CENTRAL GUARDIAN ‘lble column ie nlervod ros- new of local iltonet but advertising of e page: nature may he inserted at l cents a word strictly payable ll CONFIDEBATION LIFE INSUR- ANCIL L-679B-7-12-3l3. SPECIAL ELIZABETH ARDEN Face Powder, regular $1.76 for 51.20 Jamieson's Drug Store. L-Mfl-lbtl-B-Zi. FUNERAL 5EBVlCE§~The fun- lei-al of the late John Ehncis Mac- Quaid took piece from his mother's residence Saturday morning at 8.30. The pallbearers were Messrs. Frank MacDonald, James Cobb. Austin Cameron, Eugene MacMahon, Em- mett German and Emmett Monagh- an. Service at the church and grave was conducted by Father Peters. POLICE COURT-At the Policei 1mg lines. Court Saturday morning a man charged with being drunk and iii- capable had five dollars bail estrea- ted. Two others were fined two dol- lars and costs each. A man charg- ed with being drunk and disorderly was sentenced to twenty days in jail. The case of a man charged with being drunk in charge of a motor vehicle was adjourned till Monday. A motorist charged under the Highway Traffic Act paid ac- cident costs. SOCIAL GATHERING -- Mp5, Wilfred Curiey oi’ Clermont was the hostess to a farewell party giv- en in honor of her cousin Rev. Fr. McQuirk, of Boston. The, enter- tainment opened with piano selec- tions by Mrs. ‘(Dr.) McBride of THE HIGBLANDs-Denco to-‘ morrow instead of Wednesday this week, L-flll-B-S-ll. AIIMSTRONZ- CARSON — Un- der an arch of sweetpeas banked with potted plants and ferns, Miss Alice Carson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. s. F. Carson. became the bride of J. Melvin Armstron8. 513011111111. at a quiet wedding ceremony per- ] formed on the lawn at the home of ‘the bride_'.s sister. Mrs. Ernest A. I Power, River Glade. recently. Rev. i J. Earle DcLong. Baptist clergyman I River Glade. officiated. The ibridal party marched to the lawn i to the strains of the Bridal Chorus irrom Lohengrln. played by Miss {Alice Henry. When the party re- } entered the residence for the laign- ing of the register. Mia! Henry play- Ieci Mendelssohns Wedding March. §'I'he bride looked attractive in a . French blue chiffon gown, made on She carried a bouquet of pink roses and gypsophila. Her only attendant was her little niece. Ruth Vera Power, who carried a basket of sweetpeas. After the cer- emony. a buffet luncheon was serv- cli. The bride's table was centred with a wedding cake, and the color scheme throughout the rooms was Jblne and white. The bridal couple left by train pn a wedding trip through Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Both the bride and eroom are graduates of Provincial _N0rmfil School. and the bride is a ‘ ' cradnate of Cambridge Hospital, Massachusetts. class of '32. Mr. i “mi-strong is a graduate of Mac- rlonald College. having received his . degree of bachelor of science in ag- riculture in ‘St-St. John Telegraph NE PRESIDENT 0F BNO'8 ‘FRUIT SALT‘ ' o. a. weapon. Whose appointment is announced ll President or J. c. Eno (Canada) Limited. Mr. Weedon joined Enos in 1919i appointed Assistant Manager cf the England, factory in I921. Assistant Exeport Manager in 1921i. in I92 came to Canada to wig the first overseas FIB-M- 1-111" . Weedon opened l plant in the United States. n 193i he wss ap- pointed Vice-President of the com- ml)’. Mr. Weednn served in the yal Air Force throughout the Great War, 1814-1919. ‘ Authors’ Blundeis‘ (“-7. 8.") in the Montreal Gazette) Emerson somewhere gave ex- pression that "consistency was the A large donation was presented to the Rev. Father who responded with an eloquent ad-i dress of thanks and added to the enjoyment of the evening with p, _____ Spanish Many people have lamps with Page 0! my silk frill shades, for not only do Wrote Thackeray. "I find a fault these give an attractive light, but they are also economical, as they on to enumerate a variety of "slips can be washed and rewashed and o! the pen" which the critics had Silk, however, overlooked. "Jones is called Brown. the effects of ' i QIHve-t National Pinon with -.s OTHER srAas s. arsurv CHORUS ALSO . o - . NEW-g AND TRAVELTALK ‘ EVENING r s. ass P. M. TODAY —T ESDAY-WEDNESDAY PRINCE EDWARD fl Coming T hursday-Frlduy-Sliutrduy vAunavlLLa 0N Tim smoa RUSTY, REUBEN BOYS - HILLBILLY _ concur all to Improve . River Fisheries of New Brunswick (By The Canadian Press) LEDERICTON, N. 13., Sipl. 8~— Buhv In“! GIRIJS own ACHIEVEMENT DAY AT COLEMA lng Club held their 011 Thursday. will rot, in time from Mfl-cMlllan and sun and light. which means that ... . . . . .. 16c, 26c. EVENING ..... 26c, 32f“, 37c. 111181151 22nd. Miss Miss Haszard of th stitute were present the workwhich was oi The foul- girls leading the classes were as follows; ti) Erma Wallace, (2) Avis Whitten. (3) Blanche leard, (4) 'l‘0duy-—'1‘ues—Wed Mat. 3.15 P.M. Eve. 7 dz 8.45 P-M. CAPITOL i 10w oes B. WQI. Attract Canadians Barbados. 1h the British West with an Achievement .. has enjoyed a. steadily in- creasing tourist trade during re- CClll. YCRTS, and H1078 5O 5111C inauguration of the direct steam- ship service between Canada and l the islands of the Caribbean by the gery Beer. (2> Gertrude Wallace. r3) Doris Ileard. (4) Marion Learii. Following the judging, completing her. work for had resulted in many against all types, of fishing. with a consequent improvement particu- larly noticeable this season, he said. each girl undo a single stitch. You the year, then ‘be able to either remember. An interesting part of t enjoyed by all present. At concln. sion of the meeting lunch was Coleman ' Institute members to all present. een MacKinnon, the local ‘leader of this group. has accomplished a As Recreation. Ill City Helps KZSIiEXFON. 0:11.. Sfivi- 11—~Eele_ .phcne executive by occupation and ‘nil- pilct for 1'(‘Cl"£\[iI)l1, Gordon (1.1 Tli/_':Gl*:';;1i'. who recently .tl*.e Web. tel" Memorial trophy and; 11¥11151P11i and . the tile of Canada's foremost rlrn- l 191119 DITCPMREC 0f W-‘wm M0 ‘atoll; airman, ihrnks it will not be l 114111115» A Smiviiif liflmber of Am- 15 mo“, ericans are also discovering the va- rcation attractions of Barbados as on fihcrlcs of the Sl. . said to be steadily deterior- '. an advisory council ; Due to its caterly position in the bars is to be furm“d, F. Cedric l ‘Atlantic, Barbados is favored with BTW deal in teaching the girls to a‘ constant breeze and a moderate “W- and it alas also under Miss temperature the yerlr round and - M“°K“m°"'5 Captured. attracts a considerable number of P111 °11 1111 911111 swick Fish and Game so A=SCC1M1"H announced here. bit and also dram- . * a atized their sewing song at Milo vxydiscd frame. l" niakiilg of recommendations District Cznventlon. ‘l0 department of fisherirs at -——’——~ ‘long before mlirzy cllililh . Cooper said he hlid bezn ai- i and fly their mm . _. by Dr. W. A. Found, (iCpilty - 111111 111“ 11'3"=exponsi\'c jlfl‘. lit had no <b_i:c.ion to the lnflfkfvd M1; M“ ation of such a cuunril. rc-igqpnt O Victoria, were recent visitors the C_ N_ s_ Mrs- Earle Acorn, Lake Verde _ i5 an DZISSPHECT -- ye- "Lady" liners in this se:vice show, zhcse liners calling at Boston on i Filing Club, bath north and south bound trips. “m, p5 s,“ ljarbnclos‘ trade is done mcstly with . h on inun- 3 Great Britain, Canada. and [My e1.CQu,-age_ United states, there countries ac- ml 13mm“; field; ‘ Cflillltlllf! for approximately 70 per .1 as a rule W111 0f 11K‘ imports. Great Britain m flying clubs. ‘ supplies 413 lwr cent. Canada 14 up flying for 1X“: cult the United States 12.9 per 1.1.: exports Canada ~-l~h1 zitiitud" , 131m ($11 rnr cent of the total, . Great Britain 11.8 per cent and the iii the Wclutcr competitions 1 111111?“ 513195 4.7 lfr which brought Ml". McGrcgcr to , s-ir 81111 moiflws are the main lire- on M the me o; 3; jncludgd ducts which Canada takes from ': oil‘. ffiJPQd landings. iurnsMBRYbMEE 311d 1116 ‘Rifle-st . and otlvr aerial m1n0eilvl'e.".§l19m 111111011011 111 Biifbados from ilnmlinufactured wood “mum i and illnbfl‘. Othfi‘ commodities gm _ than . flour. sulphate 0f ammonia, shocks ».- we. PPYFfiliIllij! lie feels juspflhd sieves. meter , as lonmlrilible lfnft in his machine .' 51111113185. salt pork. ' in in llll nlirrllnobilc on t'_rl'a firmshi \ Aiyfl-rvgrfil’ lifts a keen HD1211!- Ci" . ll of Lil" ‘macho part. in the ' of all fill‘ pilot. f-Ic began ' 1933. made a solo lliivl- SIX hour: of insiruc-j n and obtained his plloti; licence» in liu-xiit of flint _v:r\l‘, Hi’; in- ‘ ' ivrls Capt. H. B. Free of l iii“ Kinvsnoli Flying Club. to ivhom , Fredericton, Cflnjflji’ j;_/’l\'_~_l.,1_ stark, Grand Falls llml Alido- ‘ lunches of the p otective and qlqpiiyn l,‘ rim _~_i,-_ CQDL s fNFQCiIIIiOTl“ will be asked 10's the council.‘ “mi nrlmcs ‘will bi submitted e department, of fisheries for Gfvggy _, A. C Ladner, Granville, Ohio, is at present. czive ASSOLlEiIiZll. l). H. Sn‘ d. Halifax, chief supetvisi Y 0 r k s h i r e_ Wins Cricket Championship 11115 811511 113$ 511111131113’ 1°1Ylic (trough mull to be CilOSPIi A he olulicil in an effort to of.‘- unbazed oiliiliun l l-tnt. As rozzilds yard (which will enable toward aviation fnzlllties. lFPS. All inicrtfls will be i"v-‘ the 60 inches bsjng made by cut‘ (C.P- Cable by Guardian's Special Wire) a who 111-‘ billet/o e c°m-1C’"1a“‘ 1-‘ LONDON. Sept. a-(cr. Cable) the frill, your -Essex defeated Kent by 137 runs in the closing match of, the Eng- lish county cricket season today. 'I"i'ie result leaves the rmeli, two lIlPlllhFFFI ncmbex, and thr- New lli-lm - Fish and Game Plolcctive As- lon. one member. having clinched championship two weeks ago. Der- byshira finished in second position with Middlesex third while North- after another disas- trous season, are at the bottom of the table for the second year in British Jurist Enjoys Holiday VANCOUVER. Sept. 8—Car.ada's national parks appeal to Rt. Hon. Sir B0111 Mcrriman. President of flu:- Probnte. Divorce and Admir- lnlty Division of the High Court of Justice of Great Britain, who has r a brief holiday on wt. H:- saw his first national at Jase: en route here, play-l lid told reporiersfl the most superb spotc ‘r setn. Playing a round ov"r the Jasper links. it occurred to m? that here was st course which i might have been designed in surrey land transplanted to Switzerland." ,The eminent jurist is a low handi- frap player and went around the per course at a pace which would do credit to the golfers in the, the forthcoming Totem Pole Tour- mly one iii the world ivliero dnl commercial no‘. fishing is rifwlll be asked Essex scored 97 and 394 in the match concluded today, their op- ponents replying with 195 159. Alfred Freeman, famous Kent slow bowler, took his 200th wicket during the game. He has attained this mark for the eighth consec- utive season, the feat constituting a record for first class During the eight years Freeman has captured 2,4718 wickets. In other ‘matches Yorkshire de- featsd Marlyebone cricket club by one wicket. the South Africans were victorious over counties by eight wickets and the players and gentlemen played to a luinking amateur . iitcr .l.vri'oos nil illc §ll!‘(.’"-“S he hm trio of Qilrenls Uillvirityfpgnk Ni in th‘ war. "He i: at“! q T‘ Mli- i "It is one of "All hi1- liu lls have}; 11.1w- N any slight fullness prettily as you sew it on. now is to replace the wire frame- fill .l.l'.'e of Mm-i, . r ucnLeti iii the Mori- lcrclal fishermen .- fishcrmlm nnd not nrc"ssar-' members of any pratccLive as- " . ‘Fnronio, trraduating in eriginofling from McGill Unl- the cmploymcrltéJas of the Bell Tr-lrphnn: Company in Cooper referred to formation ie Miramlchi AdVlSOYy Coun- ter a meeting called in i933 to si the Miramichl river salmonl Kingston distlict in l 110.0. 1'10 and 226 (Holmes 80, Bowed five for 64); Yorkshire 339 and lea for nine wickets (Sutciifie b3. Wyatt seven for. 8'1): It 5M1‘- borough. South African 3M end 2i for two; Minor Counties 190 and 224; at Skcgness. Players 2'10 for six, declared. and 101 for four, declared, (0. Smith four for 26); Gentlemen iii (Paris M) and It for five wickets; alumina lagoon Melts uiaol and m o. Mmiififwh can: from Ilene that’ NEW LAMBS FOR OLD l Re-Covering Silk Shades still look like new. a new frill is required. one or two snags to beware these you can easily guard against once they are pointed out One point to remember. when you are going to re-cover anything, is to thoroughly examine it before you will he program you start in enthusiastically pul- ling the article to pieces without taking this precaution, you may‘ find yourself in a bit of a fix when it co es to putting it together again. As a rule there are two types of these silk frill shades. In one the wire framework is held in place by four screws placed at intervals; direction thLq club and in the other the wire frame- work is sprung into the outer Having undone the wire frame, you will see that both outer and inner sik frills are stitched to the lower edge of the framework, which is bound‘ with tape to make it caster to sew on to. Carefully undo the stitching. When this is done the fringe must be taken off. A silk frill usually measures somewhere about seven inches in depth The circumference will 1196958111113’ vary. but an average- sized shade will measure some- where about 60 inches round: therefore. you will require one you, in- flldenwlly. to make two shades- the necessazy width is so little), ting two lengths of 30 inches. allowing half an inch extra for the joins. Having joined the two pieces of next move is to sew on the bead fringe, and this should always be carefully done, so that the fringe is sewn on high enough to prevent the white taped clging XTOl‘ showing, when this happens it gives a very ugly of. fect When this is all dong the inner white silk reflector should be tacked on to the outer silk frill, which will then be ready to sew on to the wire framework. T0 1111M Perfectly certain that your fr.‘ l going to be evenly distributed around the ll-rlnféworlt. fold it in two. Now take your needle and secure first one end. then the other, and ' lastly hdth sides. After this is done you wi“ see a glance how you can ease All that remains for you to do work into the outer fame. Screw the framework up. and you’ will have finished a very good jg q which 3'0“ may iustly feel pround. GOLF JASPER PARK LODGE. Altm. Sept. ‘L-There is a serious e deinio at Jasper Perk Lodge but though a large number of noted doctors are here both from the United States and Canada they can do nothing to stop its progress. It is en epidemic of holes-in-one. Just throttle: day Paul n. Moore ofltaneee (it scor- ed s hole-iii-ono at the . 12th, Yesterday morning Bod Ched- wiok of Winnipeg broke Paige inh- lnan’: heart when he registered en ece at the 15th at e crucial stage of their match. The-seine after- noon Rey Stuitt. Vancouver, pinyin; with T. B. Randell and Lee Raynor. Vancouver; Lew Houghton, Begins. and R. F. Bull, ‘lrinidld sunk hh tee shot It the 7th. Doctors that all concerned are doing stun conrlmous m DONDON mnovmo rlownou. i-ni payinl illillillimfldfidaegittiflil-fid ‘visits To re-cover a shade of this des- cription is not actually difficult, in but as, in most things there are of, in llfiiiee" makes N110"- well.- “ti!!! on well-fed babies‘ it'll“... » - assume u 53in. . hobgoblin of little minds." If we reverse this saying it would read that. "inconsistency was the hob- gcblin of great minds." and I think that it would contain a great deal of truth. "As sure as I read a own composition," or two. half a dozen." Then he goes Brown, who is dead. is brought to life. Aghast, and months after the number was printed, I saw that I had called Philip Firmin. Clive Newcome. Now, Clive Newcome is the hero of another story by the readers’s most obedient servant." Thackery gave as a reason for those slips that he was suffering domestic tragedy at the time. No doubt this was so, but many authors have committed greater blunders without. any excuse except the lack of verifying facts or as a. matter of expediency .N0velists are great culprlm in this respect, but it may be said that they are neither his- torians nor recorders of facts; they deal primarily with human nature. ' Shakespeare was not free from errors. but owing to the manner in which he deals with his various subjects, they pass unnoticed- Cannon were not known in the reign of John. nor printing in the time of Henry II. Clocks in Julius Caesar. and striking clocks at that-Cassius said: "The clock hath stricken three." In "Midsum- mer Night's Dream" he transports English customs. such as May Day and its festivities to the court of the Duke Theseus. He makes Hector quote Aristotle, Carlolanus refer to Cato and Alexander, and introduces a billiard table into the Palace of Cleopatra. Does the infant Perdita landing on the sea coast of Bohemia detract from "A Winters Tale"? You do not look to Shakespeare as a geographer. Sir Walter Scott was an of- fender in this respect. Despite his great knowledge of horses he makes the horse of Wi1fred of Ivanhoe do a journey which no horse could ever mnke . In the same novel he writes of Knights of the Temple as priests, and a Franciscan friar dispenses lavish hospitaliy in an English forest M: a time when 5t. Francis was play- ing as a child at Asslssi- HOW couid,he have thought. of the "Fair Maid of Perth“ going to mass in the afternoon? o: of one of the Knights of Richard I. hold- ing converse with a contemporary of the Conqueror? The Conqueror was Richard's great-great-grand- father. Charles Kingsley, in his famous novel. "Westward Ho!" represents one of his characters reading the prayer from the Prayer Bock for "all conditions of men" before a sea-fight. In the days of Queen Elizabeth there was no such prayer. in the Prayer Book. Wilkie Colfins was careful when he introduced a sick person into his story; he always consulted a doctor about the cause and pro- gress of the disease. Phillip Mas- singer could not have been so careful as in his novel. "The Duke of Milan." he betrays ignor- ance of poisons. One of his char- acters scatters a poisonous powder over s flower. Some of it falls on g lady's hand; her lover kisses the tips of hei- fingers and dies. No poison could ever produce such an effect. This reminds me of the death of the loathsome wretch in "Slack House" who expired in the egoniee of tsneous corn- bustiomwhetever t at may mean. The moon has had a greet in- fluence in leading imaginative writers into confusion. ckens writes of the new moon appear- trig in the east. in the early even- ing, while Walter Besent, in his Otiiidhn of Gibson" maker a new moon appear in the east at two o'clock in the morning. Rider "King Solomon's an eclipse of the moon take place at the new moon teams of the full moon. A strik- cue of poetic license occurs in ' lurisl of Sir John Moon," in the verse- We buried him darkly at dead of flllh . The sod with our bayonet: turn ' 3y the struggling mocribeaine’ misty light, And our lanterns dimly burning, Sir Robert Bail the astronomer. proved that at the‘ time of Sir John Moor‘! - burial below tiiei the men his been long a "s ruggiin in m whee conduct-hrs hi: iflt." I0 lino even a .there nine years after his death. it that Friday was so familiar with the habits of the bear. when bears are unknown in the West Indian Is‘ands7 Those questions bring to wrote of the sloes and palms of W_voming-new flora state. Anthony Trollope writes of Andy Scott that "he came Whistl- ing up the street with a cigar in his mouth." Truly a feat. Only equalled by the feat of the clocks of London. as narrated by Jules Verne when his hero won in “Round the World Days." “from every steeple, pell- ing forth ten minutes to ten." on his geographical imagination in his two novels. “The Vicomte de Bragelonne" and "Twenty Years After" In “Vicomte dc Bragelonne he describes two each other on the banks of the river Tweed, within sight of New- castle, and also when he describes Newcastle Abbey as being on the Scottish side of the ‘Tweed. fishermen safiing up the Tweed to deliver fish n: Newcasale. Appar- ently the County of Northumber- land had "Twenty Years After" it is stated that the Tyne separates England as an art critig recently was re- Epress Rates uburltnlia, Sept. s - Striking redudtions in rates on long-haul heavy express shipments effective over the lines of all railway ex- mug companies in Canada on, Sept. 2nd are announced by the Ex- press Traffic Association of Can- ads. The new rates represent a rc- duction of more than 20 per cent. Some time ago express rates on packages 1B lbs. and under were consideralhy reduced. but in order to take advantage of these rates shippers frequently found it nec- essary to split large shipments into small packages. This entitled llilfl- crease in packaging costs which is now removed. The -, reduced der will remain in effect. striking instance in the "Ancient Mariner." after the terrifying apparition of the phantom ship, the game of dioe, and the in- stantaneous tropical night. when Clomb above the caste/m bar The horned moon, with one bright star Within the nether tip. _ As the moon rises in the east and "climbs" the sky, she must have been at or near the full: equally so. if it was a crescent moon with her horns, it must have been in the western sky and dcswnding. These are only a few examples. a A case of scientific int-possibility is that of George Elliot in her great story. "The Mill on the Floss." at the end. Maggie Tulliver and her brother Tom, the heroes of the story, met their death through their frail boat being overwhelmed by a huge floating mass of debris, which must have drifted at s quicker rate than the boat. Now, as they were drifting in the same current, the heavier derbis could never have overtaken them. Miss Katherine Tynan gives s. spirited account of a foxhunt dur- ing the reign of James L, this a full century before there was any fox-hunting. She also states that ' icebergs are pleiltful in the Atlantic during Chrismas time. a very bad choice. Miss Sheila Kaye-Smith, in "The End of the House of Alard," gives a description of a room containing d book case in which there was a book with the title. “With Wallace at Ban- noclcburn." He must have been Robinson Crusoe is pretty well supplied with inventions. When he swam to the wreck we are told he stuffed his pockets with bus- cults. apparently in blissful ignor- ance that our hero had taken off all his clothes and left them on the shore-those clothes which were washed away by the tide. Surely Crusoe could have eqip- ped himself from the ship's Then there is the instance of sec- lng goats‘ eyes when it was pitch dark. Two questions we may ask. How did the Spaniards give Fri- day's father an agreement in writ- ing when they had no writing material of any kind? How was mind that Campbell the poet. for that remarkable in Eighty Alexander Dumas drew vividly armies facing and no existence u in Reduced’ ' rates on packages i5 lbs. and ilfl-l it like t proved for ocnsuring a picture of the Garden of Eton because artist had introduced a pippin. l- modern discovery. as his for the Apple. After all. fiction is QTRFAML/NE CIGARS ‘Ill MEMORIAM MB. DENNIS SINNOTT The death occurred at the city Hoqaital on Tuesday, July 3o, o1 Mr. Dennis Sinnott, Morel], afte] s. short illness of about one month. The deceased. who was in hi4 74th year, had always enjoyed d‘. cellent health until a few weekg previous to his death, when he w“ removed to the hospital where a1] that was possible was done to re- store his health, but God willed otherwise and on the above date he departed this life. The late Mr. Sinnott was a gen. tleman of upright, honest chars/s.- fer and in his passing Morell hag lost one of its most. noble citizens, an enthusiastic supporter of every good work. a kind neighbor and a devoted and con- sistent member of the Roman ca. tholic Church. ' and obliging He leaves to mourn their loss three brothers. namely, John, Fair- fleld. Maine; Philip, Charlottetown, and Ambrose at home: and one sister Mrs. RE. Kelly, Rnseneath, to all of whom is extended sincere sympathy. Sister Mary Immaculate of the City Hospital is a niece of the de- " ceased. His funeral was held on Thurs. day mom-mg, August l. from his late ruidenoe to St. Lawrence's Church where requiem high mast was sung by his pastor Rev. Jos- eph Rooney, thence to the adjoin; ing cemetery, there to await s. glr rious resurrection. May his soul rest in peace. (Patriot please copy) .___._.___._..____ PEACH MOUSSE 1 teaspoon gelatine 2 tablespoons cold water 1 oup milk‘ . ‘é cup fruit sugar Pinch of salt 1 tablespoon lemon juice l cup whipping cream 1 cup peach pulp Soak gealtine in cold water. Heat milk and dissolve gelatlne in it. Add sugar and salt. juice. and when mixture is partially - set, fold in cream, stiffiy whipped, and peach pulp. Place in freezing trays and freeze, or put in a mould, cover with buttered paper and tight-tit- ting cover and pack in ice and salt (six parts ice to one part», salt.) Let stand 4 to 6 hours. Cool. Add lemon of mechanical refrigerator AN ODIOUS COMPARISON A father and his little boy wen having a discussion on legal mat- ters. "What is a retaining fee?" asked the little boy. His father replied: "A retaining fee is a fee paid to a lawyer before he will undertake to do any work for a client." I “Ohi" replied the little boy, "like putting a shilling in the meter be- fore you get. any gas." INQUISITIVE YOUTH AGAIN Tommy-Mr. Higgins, is it true what daddy ssysthat ynwreaseif- made man? Mr. Higgins tindulgentlw-Yes. son, yer dad's right. Tommy-Well, why did you do hat the model 1mm sp°fl5n¢ w; have to be entitled to lieenoe as well as charitable and not over-critical. tploetry. gen though it is stranger an ru . Ho’s Grand Champion Baby Jsini ,IIii- ill‘ i... ‘f ‘..s-¢-=...-9_-3,»_~