- . - - ..__-’._~.-@'>.f~_...;.._.._..x._- . . -_.__‘_.;|:r__y. 1 I I I I I I i l I .3 I ‘I i. it l I l c». ‘aria-unusual- :1. “Jamal-Qan- - "ha-m n-rm-e- m4 i‘ "1 "Isa" ~ gnaw cmos-isweet - Chocolate , is a pure. delicious and becltbfisi food. As an addition ‘to schoc I or business lunches or for between meal snacks it is vastly superior to most of the sweets commonly used. Trade-mark on every package Ii Iiilltl Made In Canada By Walter Baker C: Co. Limited ' Established I780 Mills at Dorchester, Mass. and Montreal, Canada aoonsros caorcs rtscmzs ssrrr rnss AGENTS WANTED .,.~.u: SLIIUO for your next I00 clays- Spot cash-—\Vondcrfui new u... .'. inc Extinguisher. Kills u. and saves lives. Excclls -~ Innvy Iiigh-priccd devices. l~k<- magic. Price of onli‘ 1 » an easy sale to every irtomobilo owner. (rut profit. Forty thousand -l-I Investigate today. "xungirisher Company. r. Ilttuwa. Ontario. - 6i. . g. 9. ._ ___:__,_________ AU TION SALE‘ Of eight stacks of hay on lilrs. John Lewis’ farm at North lliver. to_ be sold by the stack on Sutur- day, Dec. 8th. \I. J. A. McDONALD Auctioneer 12-7-2I. DESIRABLE PROPERTY For‘ Sale or To Let Property situated at-St. Avards, consisting of dwelling house. -ba.rn, and orchard, ‘Must be disposed OI at once. No reasonable offer re- fused. Apply 227 Grafton St. 116-12661. I am offering Ior sale .\Ionday, December 10th at the hour of on» o'clock, my household furniture and farming implements ; —Dave nport Couch, Mahogany Table and Side- board. Coat Tree, Wicker Chair,’ Lilrrary Table, Singer Sewing Mach- ine, Writing Desk. Kitchen Cab mm. Spinning Wheel. Screens. Single Bed, Folding Bed. Refriger- gtor, Kitchen stove, Quebec heater Llatinps, Fruit Jars. Churn. Butter Crooks, Milk Pails and Cans. Creamery Cams, 'I‘u.b Stand with Wrlnger, iloe Cream Freezer, Lawn Mower, Lawn Chairs, Garden Culti- vator and Seeder, Home Harness, Side Saddle, Western Saddle, Eng llsh Saddle. Wood Sleigh, Box Sleigh, Truck Xvagon, Cart, 'l'wo Seated Road Wagon. Plough. lilac Ilarrow. Scales, Boat. Stretching Board, Ilene and Cockorcls. otc. J. B. ROMSOUGH, Mt Edward lboud, Charlottetown J. A. MIcDONALD, Auctloucmr. 256-L2/I-3L Removal Notice l MaoDougnll fir. -l\laul\ulay and Waller d Doyle inavo removed their Shops and Offices from 236 Kent Street to 195 Grafton Si... where they will be plmuwd Io sec allvtflisir old customers and as many new ones as wish to patron- its them. flea them for your carpenter work and painting. 12-16mm. ‘ f Education Ia the atapplhgfdtona to pro- gress and prosperity. You. l! parents, know this slhl your ehIIdron to school that they may not be handicapped In future yearl- lut do you know that about seven out cf every ten school- ehlldren In thla country have defective ayoaf Do you know that defective syn are frequently the Mali work, even Q I fl l". fimlnu n Ily Have your child's ayes ea- amlnsd new and knew what their condition la-de not Illlfl. -. ‘.5 -r 9 ' V‘ ‘W s. noun-d ? o Gsmizuos Ari-lemon SYNOPSIS At s first night performance In New York a beautiful young wo- tnltn attracts attention by rising and leisurely surveying the audi- ence through her glasses. Clav- ering, a newspaper columnist, and his cousin, Dlnwiddle, are particu- larly Interested, Dlnwiddle declar- ing she is the Imago of Mary Og- den, n belle of thlry years ago. who had married a Count Zattlany. He is convinced that this is Mary's daughter, but all efforts to estab- lish her Identity prove futile. Claverlng finally manages to meet her, and she tells him she is the (‘ountcss Josef Zattlany, a cousin of Mary 0gden's and had married a relative of Mary's bus- band. Clavering does not believe her story and tells her so. As time goes on Clnverlng realiz- .-s that he is In love with the mys- terious Marianne Zattlnny, whose first name, he learns, ls lifary. He declares his passion and draws from her the admission of a recip- rocal warmth of feeling. Mm. Oglethorpe, having offered her box. (‘lavering invites Mary to attend the opera with him one ov- ening. lIer appearance there in the Oglethorpe box, rcgally gowned and the synosure of all eyes, is some- what in the. nature of a challenge to ‘hut forbidding Society which had she realizes the time has come to tuestioned her credentials, and clear up the mystery. She promises (‘havering she will reveal her secret to him the following Saturday night. ~ XXVIII (Continued) “Am I overdressed?" she mur- mured. "I did not know . . . I though‘ I would (iTfiSy as if'—-\\'i-ll, as if l had been invited by one of my own friend.s-~—~‘ “Quite right. To ‘dress down‘ would have. been fatal. And Gora uust spend a small fortune on her clothes. . . . But yon. . .you . . 1 have never seen you-———" "I am found of green." she said Ilgh-tly. "(fouleur d'esperance. Shall we go down?" He followed her down tho stairs and before they reached the crowded room below he had managed in sot his face; hut his heart was poumling. lie gave flora, who came forward to meet them. a ferocious scowl, but she was too much engaged with ‘Madame Zattlany to notice him; and so, for that matter, was the rest of the company. Miss Dwlghiflq gown was of black satin painted with flaming polnsettias, and Clavering saw Madame Zat- |tlauy give It n swift approving |glunce. Around her thin should- lers was a scarf of red tulle that warmed her brown cheeks. She looked remarkably well, almost handsome. and her strange pale ayes were very bright. It was evident that she “as enjoying her triumphs; this no doubt was the crowning one, and she led Madame Zattlany into tho room, leaving Clavering ‘to his own devices. It was certainly the “distin- guished party" he had promised. There were some eight or ten of the best-known novelists and story-svrlters In the country. two dramatists. several of the young- est publishers. most of the young editors, critics, columnists. and illustrators, famous in New York. at least: n few 11001.5, artists; the more serious contributors to the magazines and reviews: un architect. an essayist, a sculpririass, a fantous girl librarian nf a great private library, three. eurruspotul- unis of foreign nctlvspnpers, and two visiting Iirilisb ailtbnrs. ‘I'm- men wore evening dross. Th1- womerl, if not all patrons of the ranking "ltmlsus and drcssmnknrs, wore IEOPIYICI. Idvcn ihu urtiaflr: gowns stopped short of delirium. I r E _. .__._,-_--; To Slop A Gold flblafs BROMO QUININE Tablets be In Immediately to counteract o activity of Cold. Grip and Influ- enia Germs and brin] to a and» den ato the dangerous work of than disease germs in the human body. BROMO QUININE Tablets quick- ly render these [arms powerless a d com tely destroy their ornganleaxfizonce. The Tonic and Laxative Effect of Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets is very beneficial to the system at all times. The be: bears this signature l Plb 190- - . Published by m. with Corinne Griffith q Countess .-,-, I To. H - Ant! lf many of the women w: rn their hair short, so did all of; to reasonably young or had maunied to tirescrve the appearance ‘Id spirit r-f youth. Clnverlng nnilqrrl at once that Mr. Dinwlddie warrilot present. No doubt he had bben ordered to keep out of the way,’ Miss Dwlgh-t led Madame Zot- tiany to the head of the room and ,enthroned her, but made no intro- ductions at the moment; a young man stood by the piano, violin in hnnd, evidently waiting for the stir over the guest of honor to subside. The hostess gave the signal and the guesté were polite 1f restless. However, the pinyin: was admirable ;antl Madame Zai- tiany, at least, gave It her undivid- ed attention. She was, fts ever, apparently unconscious of glances veiled and open. but Claverlng laid n bet with himself that before‘ the end of the encore-politely rtlP- manded-she knew what every woman in the room had on. The violinist retired. Cocktails were passed. There was a surge toward the head of the room. (‘laverlng had dropped into a chair beside the wife .1! De Wilt Turner, eminent novelist, who Ion-ever, called herself In print rand out. Suzan Forbes. She was mu of the founders of the Lucy Fume League, stern advocates of m- inalienable individuality t.f wmrrnn. Whether you had one ilured hIlSiiflIlil or many. never dw-nld that individuality lpresutn hly derived from the male. parent! be hunk in any man's. When Bu- . 11's husband took his lilfle family r1 ivelling the astonished hotel reg- :.~r rend: De Witt ‘Porter. Sump Forbes, child and nurse. Sume- fmes explanations were wnmi- snme; and when travelling In Eu rope they found it cow-lien: to It nv to prejudice. Several of the they Stoners. however. hat! re- nounced Europe for the. Iirosent, u reactionary government refusing to issue separate passports You ‘r-tk your husband's nunt-z nt the altar. didn't you? You are legally runrrleil? You are? Then _vuu're no more miss than mister. You - to Europe as a respcctzable mar- stny at home nt lhcy would did A rled woman or yo So they stayed. Wln in the end. They always As for the husbands, they were amenable. Whetberhlbcey rbnlly approved of femlnlstlcs in evenso or were merely good-natured and indulgent after the Jashiun of American husbands, they were at some pains to conceal. All the bright young married women who were "doing things." however. were not Lucy_St0ners, advanced as they might be ln thought. They were mildly sympathetic, but ruth- er liked the matronly, had possess- slve. prefix. And, after allpwhat did it. matter’! There was enough tiresome barriers to scale. Heaven knew. This was the age of women, but man. heretofore predominant by right of brute strength and bal- lowed custom, was cultivating subtlety. and if he femlnlzed while they maacullnized there would be the devil to pay before. long. Miss Forbes was a tiny creature, wholly feminine in appearance, and in spito of hcr public activi- ties, her really brilliant and inliiuflve. mind, was itolorioirsly do- pendctit upon bur big burly bus- hnnd fnr guidance and ndvlec In all jinn-Heal thrillers. When they lnok n Iiolldny tho younger of his taliililren gnve him tho livnsl ironh- loiorshe. Iunl n nurse; he dared not give his wife Iu-r ticket in u crowd lost she. lose it, far less trust bur to relieve his burdeuo-d mind of any of ihc details of trav- r-l; nor even to order a uioul. Nevertheless. In: invariably, and with eomplcie. gravity, IIIIFUIIIICPII lu-r and allurlnd i.o her as Suzuu Forbes (she even iubued the Miss) and In- sent n choqlte. to lilo In-ngue when It was founded. Ills novels bad u quality of delicate. Irony, but. Im nvnwml fhnl. his nroiln was llvc and let live. lillss Forbes was not pruiiy, but slu- haul nu expresslvt: original Ili- ile fave. and her manners were. cbnrlning. Jnnei Oglethorpe. was n Imor beside her. II. was doubt- ful If she hml over boon nggresslvn in nmnuer or rude in bcr life; al- Ibouglt she never Invsilated In glvn uIII-rnnee to Ibo oxiremest of br-r npilllolls or in umintnin them to lbe |IlI.lI'I" end fwhonnbe some- IIIIIPg sped home to have hynlerlcs on her hirshltndhi broad chant). Sbr- was one, of (‘lnvorlntrs ‘ifs.- vorlles and Ibo heroine of the com- udy he so fur rejected. She. lit a cigarette as the music finisher! an pinched It onto n hold- er Iienrly _ long as her face. Hut‘ oven om Ing never luterf red‘ with the’ fiflsflfl), rnthcr rep‘ en- tory. smlld. n» _ "It must be wonderful to be an‘ nuihentle. beauty," she sold wist- fully. glancing at tho solid phalanx [of black backs and sleek heads at the other end of the room. "And she's revlshlng. of course. The men are sleepless about her. al- ready. Do assure me that she Is |stnpldl Nature would never treat the rest of us so unfairly as to spare brains for that enchant- Ingskull when she hasn't enough to go round as It la. I believe I'd give mine to look like that." "She's anything and everything but stupid. Ask Cora. They've mot already." ,1 "Well. there's something," aha I said wisely. "Lew of .- ~. '. wt‘ ~ 2 .l.‘.. men. Everybody in the room was _ -- - rm: N ~' was- lattlany. ' special dispensation of Providence Are you Interested in her, Clavey?" "immensely. But I want to talk to you about another friend of mine." And he told-her something of Anne Goodrich, her ambitions. her talents, and her admiration of the new aristocracy. Suzsn Forbes listened with smil lng interest and bobbed her brown little head emphatically. "Splen- did! I'm having a party on Thurs day night. Be sure to bring her. She'll need encouragement at first, poor thing, and I'll be only loo glad to advise her. I'll tell Tommy Treadwell to find n studio for her. I've an idea there's one vacant in The (lainaborougb, and she'd love the outlook on the Park. Witt can help her furnish; he's a wonder at picking up things. Mother can furnish the kitchenette. Do you think she'd join the Lucy Stone League?" “Nu doubt, us she was Iii-ought up in the most conservative utmos- phere In America, she'll leap most of the fences after she takes the first. Iiut I don't think site's the marrying kind." _ "I shall advise her to marry. Husbands are almost indispensable In a busy woman's life; and there are so many new ways of bringing up a baby. D'you like my gown?" It was n charming but not ex- travagant slip of bright green chif- fon and suited her elflshness atl- n-irably, ns he told her. "I paid it tnjrseli’. I pny for all my gowns, as l think I. con- sistent, but I can't afford the ex~ liuiltilvf- rlressmakers yet. At least l think I've paid for it. \Vitt says I haven't and that he cxtiecls :1 collector any day. But I must ‘mve. llf-CRIISQ I told her to send *he bill at once so that it wouldn't yet lost among all the other bills nn the first of the month. Your rolunm's been simply splffim: late ly, Full of fire and go, but rather ~what shall I call it—-exposive? WhnUs happened. Clavey"' ' "Good of you to encourage me. Suzanna. I'd thought it roitcn, What are-you working hi?" "I've just finished a paper on John Dewey for the Atlantic. I W115 so proud when Witt said he hadn't a criticism to make", XXVIII (Continued) "Em on a review for the Yale now; and the new Century has asked rne for a psychological analysis of the Younger -Genera- tion. I'm going to compare our post-war product with all that is known of young people and their manifestations straight back to the stone Age. I've made a specialty oi the subject. Witt has helped me n lot in research. D'you think he's gone off?" "Gone off‘! Certainly not. Ev- ery columnist in town had sortie- thing to say about that last install- ment of his novel. Best thin‘; he's ever (lone. and that's saying all He's strong as an ox, loo. Why in heaven's name should he g0 off?" "Well, baby's teething and won't let any one else hold her when EIHEUWIIL lHEjIiilE NIIW Moisicn Your Hair Iirush! Hair becomes Ilcuuiiltrl immediately! You coo plain. flat, colorless or oily hair become soft, fluffyfllirstrmrs and abundant. Try this!" ‘The effect. is st-artlirlg. When combing antirlresclng your hair, just moisten your ‘hat-r brush with a. lrlttlc "Danderlne" and brush Ittog youth 3m, w” mum,“ through your hair. You can do your hair up Immediately and it will ap- ‘pear twice as thick and heavy-m mass of glsamy hair. sparkling with life and possessing than. in- comparable softneae, freshness and luxurIance-yet not greasy, oily or sticky. While beautifying the hair "Dan- derine" is also toning and stimu- lating each single hair to grow tum, long and strong. Hair slope falling out and dandruff disappears Gut a ween: bottle of delightful. rehabbing fbandsrine" at any drug eompeill- or toilet winter sad is». see how - .I..¢..l. ' "£54,... .;.. I ‘ ma‘ (IHARLOTTETOWN anxious I . -. | ‘ A Q I ‘évvlth “ turea, Inc. Watch for the screQnweraIon produced by Frank Lloyd enbas‘ bee! Woman "wnlier gxnv l. . . ' -. . she gets a fretting speiim He's been up a lot lately." Kflavering burst Into a loud de- lighted laugh. He had forgotten his personal affairs completely, as he always did when talking to this renrarkable little paradox. “Gad! That's good! And his public vis- neIm-s him as a sort, of Iiud-lhn, brooding cross-legged in his li- brary, receiving direct advice from the god of fiction. But l wouldn't have you otherwise. The nineteenth century bluestockmg with twentieth century trimmings. . . . What now?" _ Rollo Lenders Todd, the "Pret of Manhattan," had stalked in with n Prussian helmet on his head, ‘his girth draped in a rich blue shawl embroidered and fring- rd with white, a bitter frown an his jovial round face; and m his band a lung rod with e. large blue Low on the metal point designud to shut refractory windows. Heb-n Vane Baku‘. u contribution from Society to the art of fiction, with flowing hair nud arrayed In a long nightgown over her Iiress, for-u- muely white, was nntustcrl to ilm top of the bookcase on the wrist wall. Ilcury Church, n famous “No one applauded more spon- taneously thnn Madame Zattlany. and she even drank a cocktail." saiiriat, muffled in a fur cloak. n sunall black silk handkerchief pinned about his lively hcu. stumped Ireavily Into the room, fell in a hcap on the floor against the opposite wall, and In a magnificent buss growled out the resentment of Ortrud, while a rising but no‘. yet prosillent pianist, with a long hlonde vivlg from Miss DWIRIIFS property chest, threw his bead hack. shook his hands. adjusted a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, and banged out the pre- little to Lohengrin with amazing variations. Elsa, with her profile against the \vall and her hands folded across her breast, sung wlnt of Elsnimprayer she could reuictn- ‘mr and with no apparent offort improvised the rest. Lohcngriu pranced up and down the room barking out German phonetics (he did not know a word or‘ the lan- ‘zitnge, but his accent was as Teu- tonic as his helmet). demanding vengeance and threatening auni» hilation. l-Ie brandlsheil his pole in the face of Ortrud, stamping nu! roaring, then benillirg Ins knees waddled across the room tnd prodded Elsa, who winced pcr- ceptlbly but continued to mingle ‘ier light soprano with the rolling bass oi‘ Mr. (Bhurt-h nnd the vocif- aratlong oi‘ tho poi-i. Finally, nt ihc staccato eonuuaud 0i‘ lIIr. l‘otld'a Iioarsenlng voice, she. top- iled over Info his arms and they both fell on Ortrud. Tho nonsense was over. - No one applauded more sponta- ‘Ittotnaly than Mndumu Zattialty‘ and she even drank u cocktail. liy this limo every one in the room hnd buon introduced to hcr and alto was chatting as If shn hadn't 1i can» In tho world. As fur as (Havering could soc, she luul every Intention of making a Sophisticate night of It. The. jilanisi, nftcr n brief vnl for recuperation, played wltli zlcafcnlng vehcntetico and then with excruciating sweetness. Onco moro cocktails wcru passed, and Ibuu there was a chnradc by Todd. Suzuu Forbes and the. young English sculptreas. which Madame Zatllany follnwod with jiuzzlcrl Interest; and was so de- lighted with horsnlf for guessing the vrurll llefnrn tho (zlimzzx llmt aha clapped her lmnda und laugh- ed like a child. More nuuilc, morn cocktails, a brief Impromptu play full of wllty nonsense. cnrlcuturlng several of tho distinguished company. whose appreciation was somewhat dubi- litter- nus, and Miss Dwight led the way down -to supper. (llaverlng watch- od Madame Zattlany g0 out wl-lh ‘the good-looking young editor , of Ionewif the ntnld old fiction maga- Iulnos which ho had recently lov- cranked up and driven with a mag- nificent gesture Into the front rank with the greatest animation. He hardly recognized her and it was apparent that she had entered into the spirit of the evening. quite reconciled to any dearth of Intellectual refresh- ment. The supper o fhot cyst-re. obi.- k- en salad, every known variety of sandwich. ices and cakes was tak- en standing for the most part. Madame Zattlany. however, once more enthroned at the head of the rpom. women as‘ well as men danc- ing attdndaboatupon her. Prohibi- tion. a dead Jet-lat to all who oenld afford to patrenlse on under; , I44!‘ 3° Iii Iuuulsiiltiof orotl out of Its rut by the-wayside, rue mums around A LONG TALK Chapter 1o Next day chore was no oppor- tunlty to talk with either Jane or one had a morning rehearsal. but: was ‘to bein oneot U118 choruses or "AAGQ." and was excited over wear- ing a Ion; ins-ck wig and draped robe of white chiffon with a-vjewel- all duo" and brought H7041. - 1 . Amy oamve home with her cos- tume, having begged it from the wardrobe mistress at one opera house. She put i1. on, wig and all. for the tamily. glorylng in the gsudlness of time great green jew- els that bound her head and her waist. She darkened her legs -WltIi yellow powder and appeared so in the living room, her face and neck and arms similarly darkened, with black lines outlining ther eyes and extending from the end of the eye toward her hair. “I've made up an Egyptian dance," she announced, “Jane, sit down and play.” She hunted up some music from the opera and put It before her sister, And then she danced, a dance that ‘was not classic, nor Egyptian, but that was simply Anny, intoxicated with the joy oi' "dressing up." . rliirs. 'l'albot felt Bdle ought to be shocked. But somehow she wasn't» -~she remembered the Greek (lance that had so shocked her. Yet Amy wit; as little dressed now as then ——-but somehow she was not a. girl. but a plctiircx u. Yet silo wautod to talk, and knew that ii‘ she did not ihavc some of all this nwstery cleared up, she would not sleep this night either. Nor did she, until physical (exhaustion triumphed over nervous excite- ment. The day after June was home In her home habit. Mrs. Talbot firushcn her workiflrst. Then when ‘the house was us spotless and treat as she could desire. she went into the liv- ing room, where Jane was at work at the desk. ‘In spite of all that was on her mind, she noticed that June did not use tlie frivolous gay colored quill that stood in such a dashing way upon the desk. Jane ivzts working with a fountain pen, which. when not in use, ‘was clipped ‘into the pocket oi‘ her tailored blouse. Even so, when he;- mind was pre- occupied and troubled. she could not sit quietly and talk. without putting her hands to some useful work. She got out the darnlng basket, and began stocking. T-here was lwhlle Jane-worked quietly. Then, with an effort- "I-I overheard wlutt you and _' were talking of the other night." The pen stopped, Jane ‘was won derlug what they were talking of. Then, with recollection. the pen dropped und the girl turn-en to face lher mother, "I heard what Amy said. I didn't hear you. You were acrms the room. Nowl want to, know all about it. Why have you and Am." been deceiving me?" There was pain and agitation in the old wo man's tones and in Iver ‘face, the stocking lay neglected In her lap. Jane's brown eyes never left her mother's face. She was in the weak position 0i‘ not remembering just what had been said, nor know- ing just how much her mother knew. "We haven't been deceiving you," she said finally. "AI least. we never tnuant to deceive you. But—wcll, it's so hard to (explain. mother. You wouldn't uuilersiand." Amy wouldn't understand! Illow many times luul she heard that phrasc~~utid in how mnny tones of volce—fr0n\ young Amy's nervous Impatlenm to Jane's present tone of tenderness! Everything Iicgnn to rebel in her at nnec. 'l'he.n tile Illfiiilill‘ rcmeru- herv-d that this was not tho wuy to solve her probleul. “Willy wouldn't I understand '2" ihni Miss‘ Dwight luul n eellnr. More cocktails. ltighbrtlls. sherry. worc passed continuously, and iwo onilutslastlc guests tunde u tiunch. Ifashlnnnblu young ruwlnrs and ae tresses began in arrive. llilnrlly waxed, impromptu stir-recites were tirade, stings rose on every key. Then suddenly some one. run up to the vleiorlrt and turned on the jazz; nlul in a twinkling tho din- ing-rnom was deserted. furnliure In the large room IIIJHIIIITR was pushed In tlm wall and the night entered on its past phase. Then only did Madame. ZnIiInny signify her intenllon of retiring, and (TluvorInK. l0 whom such rn- tertnlrtltients worn too familiar to banish for ntore than n lumnoni his ltonvy disquiet, hunts-nod to her nido with n xlghof relief uud n sinking sensation behind his ribs. lvlndatrte Znltlany made hnr furo- wells not only with. graclnustwsa hutflwith irnmlstakaiis plnorliy in her ‘prbtnntntlonan-nr bavln paused her friibst, ihterabtltig cvmdng in New York?” ' _, ._* \._.I. ‘Miss Dwight wont up m linr. dressing-room with her. and Clav- srlng, retrieving hat and top-coat. waited for her at the front floor She came down radiant and talk- ing anlmatedly to her hosts-ta; but when they had parted and she was alone with Clavcrlng her face seemed suddenly to turn tn stone and her lids dropped. Aa she was about to pass him abs shrank back. and than raised her eyes to his. In that fleeting moment they look- ed as when lie had mat than first: IQIGGOIIOQIVQBIY old, wise, disillusion- "Now for It." he thought n-Ilnly ss he closed the deer and followed 1m. oat .ta- the. payment. ."'I'|,\s' .h.,ip*_.~ill7i_ q Amy. lt was Amy's billlflt day, - ed girdle. And Jane had some lab- ‘ oratory work ‘which took her away ' the morning. But, still impelled -by ‘ mending a’. a silence. I Soft, flaky.» Containgno lye or aclds. Does betterwork she asked, keeping her voice pat» lent and holding balk ell the un- ger that was welllng up within her. "You never do, I don't know why." Jane said. still looking at her another with _a mixture of tcn- les of her cheeks. derncss and concern. "Sometlmca I "I must unilerstuntl," slut began think you don't wautt oundersiatnd her voice ilneven with snug, us. nrolher. Amy comes lo nn- witltl"You'vc got Io make mu under. overytltiug, and I Iell her evcry- stand. My trhllriren have grown ihl-ng too, and we both know all lllPl-IIWII)’ from me. ‘their u-uys arr-nu troubles that are worrying Ilutherdmy ways. I can'i»-" she broke Iiut— well, we haven't nteunl. to off, umtblc to continue, keep thorn from you. Only we Jane swung around in Ibo chair, thought It “'21s ltlutler" not. Io susxono elbow mstlngWm the desk, M111 nuyi-ltlnt.» because you don't under- ller e-hin in hmjlutnd. She stun-t] stand and the things we talk iliiilll! out of Ihu window awhile, then the simply hurt your I'm-Hugs." begun. ' 'I'lu~rc was silence. 'I'ln-n. "I'll tell you ibu whole Ihing, "And we love you ion nun-h lo "unhN-j- .51“, pwppmp w,,n,1-,.,~;,,g wan! to hurl. you." how lo pnl it so this old-inshiuirod Aucer ntelleil bofore this. llul the woman would not‘ be. hurt. hurt the girls hurl tried Io save (To Ilo Civiilinueil.) worse now. And when anger melts tears follow. Hot drops rolled fro“; her eyes down her mce. finding rt tiathetlc channel in the deep wrink. IIIS popular All-Canadian Route to this-West Indies enables the. traveller to i/jllil the beautiful Islands of Bermuda. Si. Kitts, Antigua.’ Montserrat, Dominica. Si. Lucia, Barbados‘ ' St. Vincent, Grenada and 'i‘rinidzicl'.'als , béf? ~ port of Dcmerara on the coastal South Am rica. TIIE unique advantages of this route arc the i opportunities it affords for set-mg a large number of fascinating tropical countries in a lcisurc- ly way, and [or making lhc acquaintance of new" and interesting people. Thcrc is never u danger 0i being bored by monotony. New scenes and’ new experiences crowd upon one from day to day. Tickets for the round trip (i9 doysi-ilivibilii- FARQUHAFJSTEAMSHII Steamer‘ “JAN” Charlottetown -t0 St. John's, Nfld. Next Sailing About December 11th This steamer will leave Charlottetown about December 11th Ind should arrive at St. John's, In time for the Xmas market. ShIPW" "°' qulrlng space for, Cattle, Poultry, Produce, etc. Apply to (IARVELL BROS., Agents fi80-lI-29-tst6I. V . l Superior FreshIPork i Sausages- DAVIS a trussn their mothetrwas a thousand times ' Charlottetown, P. E. I.“ At present retail prices cheapest in meat product obtainable. I N0 BONE NO ‘WASTE ‘Our-Sausage man-is them bettertltan ever. Fresh ‘dsilyti ' .