1V1 be r “"P“’*~_§;is;?'2*=‘ 9.1QZ-19@z'rw ._~.0 , _..--AA¢—OQHG'O.Q ..-a=--1><-- u-lI-l-fil-d— . .-_.. ---'-p- 19ers‘?! §'dfi!.SE.'§.E3’-$,5'..i. . ‘ marry." 5F‘ v1.1a»; 2-..». ..i6‘. £4.1- Woman's Realm ' "ilnTFwvl FIIDUR Best For All VYour Baking ““"""_——-"-1 AMorningSmilo I Several Scotchmcu were discuss- ing the domestic uphnppincss of a mutual friend. “Aye," said one, "Jock MacDon- ald has a sair time wt‘ that wife o‘ his. They do say they're aye quar- rlin'." “It serves him riclit," said au- other feelingly. "The purr fcckless creature marrit after coortin’ only eight years. Man, indeed, he had nae chance to ken the wuniman in sic a short time. When I was coort- in‘ I was coortiii‘ twenty years." "And how did it turn out?‘ in- quired a stranger in the party. i . .‘.'I tell ye, I was coortin' twenty year, an‘ in that time I kenned what wumip-an was, and so_I didna. Some women are great artists when it comes to drawing atten- lion. Well Children "Occasionally I givc cach of my five children BABY'S OWN TABLETS- I am sure that is why they never have any serious illness", writes Mrs. George Morley, Yorker, Ont. This sound Id- vice is passed on to all Mothers. BABY'S OWN TABLETS can bc given with cornplctc safety to the youngest and most delicate child-wee, analyst's statement in each 25c package. Recom- mended by mothcrs for teething troubles, simple fevers, colic, digestive disorders, constipation, frctfulness. Easy to take as candy. :45 ' ‘ Dr. Wllllnnu’ -BABY'S OWN TABLETS It is easier to get rid of money Iran it is trouble. AllBTlllN SALE At Falrvlcw, on Thursday, Nov- ember 17th at 2 o'clock sharp, of beautiful farm of 100 ncres former- ly owned by the late John Currie. One of the finest farms in or.c of the best. localities on I‘. E. l. Only foul" miles from Rocky Point Ferry fronting on Wcst River. Close lo Church, School and Market. Nearly all clear. Will be sold in whole or part to suit purchaser. Good bulld- ingu, Also all the farm movablcs be- longing to said estate. Terms at sale. ll‘ not sold will be offered for rent. ESTATE LATE JOHN CURRIE, Falrvlow. Auctioneer. I. A. MMDONALD, [493-11-15-31. All BTIDIL SALE l will sell at public auction on my premise; at Emerald Friday af- ternoon, November 18th. Bf 3 o'clock. A splendid matched team of grey horses, aged '1 and 10 years. Good rtylc and excellent workers. Sult- Iblr for heavy duty. Unc potato grader. Ono set scales. Two scis double harness. ‘Five nets double work harness. A number of agricultural imple- ments on vlcw for private sale. “All sums of $10.00 and under. rash. Ovcr that amount crcdlt at l2 months on approved join: note. vr-discount of 6 pcr cent allowed for rash. QITEYATSOPI FYFE. F. .l. E. WRIGHT. Auctioneer. men would like to marry. u. err-fin z. " ;~ ... -... u... ma‘... Fiudl . D08 “j :33?" 1 Dorothy Dix ..'.'.°.‘."'°';l"... olslble Frau Love? Few Young Couples Could Not Marry if They Were Willing to Pay the Price - But When They Oan’t Have Marriage de Luxe They Experiment With Free Love, and Then the Girl Pays the Bill A man takes exception w my excorlotlng the modern youths who offer girls free love unions instead of wedding rings. He says: "Most young They would also like to have sixteen-cylinder automobiles and sea-going yachts, but they can no more afford to set up a wile than they can a sports car or a. dc luxe boat so what are young couples to do at ‘the mating time 0f life except build temporary love nests when they haven't. the money to erect permanent homes?" No one can deny that the inability of the aver- age young man to earn enough to support. a fam- ily, and that puts matrimony into the unattain- able luxury class, is one of the worst phases of our economic situation. It bllghts love's young dream. It keeps youths and maidens from mar- rying until the blood runs cold, until their passion for each other has died out, until they have grown selfish and set in their ways and have no longer any inclination to marry. Undoubtedly, it promotes loose liv- ing because the heart is not regulated by income, and only too often these who cannot afford to marry take their love as they find it, as Mr. Kipling said of one of his heroes. It is a. terrible thing that thousands of young people who would like to enter into honorable wedlock and establish homes in which they would rear up fine children are virtually driven into these illicit relationships. What the remedy for this evil is I do not know, but I am sure that for the woman, at least, the solution of the problem is not free love, for in those undcr-tlio-rose romances she almost invariably loses out. When o. woman sets her heart on a man she can go on loving him to the enu of the chapter, but somehow a man's love seems to need to be lJOilIld by law and convention and public opinion. Just the fact that he has given his name to a woman; that he has a home that he has estab- lished: that lie hoschildren that he is proud to proclaim to the world binds him to a woman with hoops of steel. Otherwise, if he is free to roam; if a woman has no hold upon him but his fancy, almost always he will tire of her and forsake her for a younger and fairer face. Many marriages endure in happiness for a half ‘Tlhat the Fashionable: aro Wearing _ 1i ’ Illustrated Dressrualring Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern i i By Annabella Worthington Here's a. simple model of rhum brown rough crepe silk that meets daytime occasions smartly. "we!" those of formal character. It's a dross that’: so easy to wear. It is especially easy to fashion. Ind can be made at a small outlay. Style No. 920 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 38 and 8B inches bust. Carried out in gray wool crepe with the cape collar and turn-back culls of black crepe and worn with a black leather belt, it's ultra- smart. Black rough crepe with the deeP capelet and turn-back cuffs of white crepe is youthfully lovely. Size 16 requires 3% yards 39-inch with ‘H. yard 39-inch contrasting and 2 yards plotting. Price of Pattern l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. N0. 920. Size ..-...-..--.... s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . u... . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-- Name No man can be wrong all the time, except of course, a married man. l. tablespoon gelatine. ‘A cup cold water. 1 cup boiling water. l4 cup sugar. lo cup vinegar. ______ _ ‘ For The Coo/cf] There are, as I see it, only two century. but few liaisons last more than a very few years. solved as long as the economic situation remains as it ls. One is for the . CABBAGE BALLS STUFFED WITH RICE ways in which the problem can be 2 ta“ - lemon juice. 1 teaspoon salt. 1 cup celery, cut. in small strips. 1-3 cup cucumber cubes. girl to continue to be a. wage-earner after she is married until such time 1 cabbage (with rather open as her husband has got on his feet financially and is able, alone and un- leaves), aided, to support the family. Many young couples do this with the hap- 1 large onion. picst results. young and ardent, instead of having burned down to ashes and the weddi less. Working together and saving vlng than the one to which they hav trcir fathers and mothers are leaving nor high-priced shoes. amusement every evening. and every sort of labor-saving device. No. They lived plainly. hard. happy. You may say, and truly, that it that have become a part of your life used to riding. The double salary enables them to marry while they are when at last they move into the little bungalow whose every nail and’ lank has meant a. sacrifice they have made it a home that is founded pon n rock and that will stand unshaken as long as they live. The other remedy is a. more drastic one. e willing, for the sake of being together, to descend to a. lower scale of oplc to be willing, for the sake of their love, to begin life as their fath- rs and mothers did instead of demanding to set up housekeeping where When father and mother married, they did not have cars, nor even aihorse and buggy, unless they lived in the country. slk underwear, nor half o. dozen hats a treason, nor expensive clothes, They dressed economically. They worked They indulged themselves in few amusements. Yet they were Their marriages were successes. Hard to go shabby when you are used to being well 1 cupful of breadcrumbs. A little chopped parsley. . Pepper and salt. 1 cupful of rice (cooked) 'I‘rim the outside of the cabbage and wash well without breaking the leaves. Cook the cabbage whole in a saucepan of boiling water for about l5 minutes. drain in a colan- der. Slice and fry the onion, and mix to wait until the fires of love have ng cake has grown stale and taste- together weld them into one, and It is for young people to e been accustomed. It is for young l4 cup cooked green peas. ‘A cup cooked beets, cut in fancy shapes. Horseradish cream dressing. Watercress or lettuce. Dissolve soaked gelatin in boll- lng water. Add sugar, vinegar, lemon, juice and salt. Strain, cool 1nd when beginning to stiffen, add vegetables. Turn into ring mold and fill. Unmold. Fill centre with ssing, and garnish with salad green. with. it the breadcrumbs, cooked rice, parsley, salt and peper. Place some of this mixture between each leaf‘ of the cabbage, roll and tie the leaves and put it into a casse- oil. They did not have Neither did they have to step out to places of role with a very little water and Nor did they have luxurious surroundings fat. Cook slowly until quite ten- der. JELLIED VEGETABLE RING SALAD isn't easy to do without the things . It is hard to walk when you are 1/5 cup shredded cabbage. ‘that few children will refuse them. ' manifestation of zzThere is nothing repulsive in Millers Worm Powders, and they are as pleasant to take as sugar, so In some cases they cause vomiting through their action in an un- sound stomach, but this is only a their cleansing power, no indication that they are hurtful. They can be thoroughly de- pended upon to clear all worms from the system. _ ment have very little money oom- dressed. Hard to eat poor food when your appetite craves luxuries. Dull to sit at home of evenings instead of going out to night clubs. Bitter hard to drop out of the set with which you have always gone because you haven't the money to keep up with them. Men are no more willing to make these sacrifices than are women, young couple could not stand poverty. Their desire for each other was not as great as their desire for ease and pleasure. In all good truth there are very few young couples who could not marry ff they were willing to pay the price of love. But they are not. ‘They’ want love and marriage, but they want it de luxe, and when they can't and when they do it for the sake of love most of them regret it. us know dozens of marriages that have gone to pieces just because the All 0f to settle the bill. have that they experiment with free love for which the woman alone has Socil i. a Pesn‘ -:- Fashions ._._ _ -.-.-_-._..__. Decide this 0 may ru LL-FLAVilllliEil some READ THIS LETTER! "Dear Mfrs. Moore: I would be very grateful if you could publsh a page of suppers-what to DIED!" and how to prepare lh-something cheap and does not take too long to prepare. We are a family of four adults, and on account of unemploy- lrlg in. "1 am sure there are hundreds like myself at the present time that would appreciate th's help. There i! a lot of wonderful cooking publish- ed in your page, and I know one 80 skilled 1n the art of cookhk could help us poor people out, it‘ you have the time to spare. "I would like just two courses- meat and vegetables, or fish and vegetables, and a dessert. If I had soup I would not have fish or meat. I would also like a. few lumhu 1f it would not be asking too much. 0r could I buy a book on cheap dishes? I do hope you wll be able to hell? me Sincerely yours, A. M. H." out. Mrs. DOROTHY DIX. "GOOD TO THE LAST DROP” MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ROASTED AND PACKED IN CANADA. Canadian Cookery - m :- iiterature _ .. ,_“__ ‘v ‘lhoucndmoyou lfANYuirisimid tinueatodoso. All oonbeeorichso plotely protected. today. Make sure it marked on if. uftq- roan-inl- 4596 of its flavour in because the quality which has made Southern, blend world-famous rs now nom- d€il0lO1l5 meals ueslion lvuyicofimthlnkofthin o tho tin or package, that ‘cofieo has deteriorated, lost flavour. It cou- IINO airisimido tbotinorpackagqghot c0500 will keep full-flavoured rndofimtioly. Vita-Fresh Process Removes 0x19"! This new packing method exclusive to Maxwell Home absolutely removes and keeps out all oxygen from the sealed tin. No other coffee smooth, so full-fl voured, ' old Got a sealed and locked tin from your grocer has the words “Vita-Fresh” Air Inside tho Tin or Paclcagois Bound lo Damage Calico Flavour 1,0“; q- bug colon loom 65% of its flavour In 9 dlyl Cofloo in old-fashioned lino or cardbolrd #4110155!" 9 days alter roasting. MHll-fl clever cook is not tho 0M W110 m!“ from expensive For Canadidn Women food-the honors B0 to the 1H8"? ious cook who can. by fill/ill“! In‘ garnlshlng make the humbldt stow delicious to taste, attractive to look _ By Marl Moore. Spccllll! Glurdlon Benders. contributed fo the Guardian fol’ at. and nourishing. — Economical SIIPWPP-wm‘ l” n” Menu m- Family °" Fw- Snow Menu I pan and flow to PM?!" l" . Orcam of bean soup; “hi! loll?‘ es of Hubbard squash; broiled to- matoes; baked epplefl. In planning this meal I figured that ample portions of tho soul would prove very filling and Dmit- lshing too. All three other fwml can be cooked in the oven-thus utilizng all its heat while it is hot, Such a. charmlns 19W! lfllf m!“ me anxious to be-IIP ‘mi ‘Wins some of these suppers I have n8- gested so that is what. I did. Not one little luxury was iudull- ed at our table and we are all en- joylng 1t and have Mrs. A. M. I-I. to thank. My little correspondent slznins herseff “A Friend" will find f-hfl ‘these menus and suggestions will largely fill her need too. ma. a. M. n. has elven me °"° lead to start with-the rmriy evld" ently like soup. norm we plunlo too deeply int» menus I want to ll" 011° 33mm‘ mm; 11w expensive foods are the lazy foods-they are almost always easily prepared. While it does not follow that inexpensive foods l" Qrelm o! Bonn Soup Soak one and one-half our! N!" over night (you rnB-Y "86 Llmll- "hm navy or kidney beans l-l W" 11"‘ for.) in one quart water. In morn- ing put on to boil with one-half onion sliced finely, a little carrot. and one and one half M1590“! salt, and boll until beans are very tmder. Strain through fine S19v0 To th‘: strained mixture add om dlmclf. to prepare, t0 I certin u‘ tent one must. be willing 9° m!" them attractive in lpPQlffluw find to fuss up the flavor. I am not ask- lng that you use much more time and energy-but more thwlhf- Th! p'nt or three cum of milk (flu amount depending on how thief you like soup) and reheat the WhOK in top of double boiler. A little but (Continued on Page 6) i-i-k‘ IN TIIE MATTER 0F THE VOLUNTARY WINDING U!‘ "I 1.1 George V., (‘u NOTICE OF fiPliCL-TL MEETING of THE JOHN R. DINNI.‘ PEDIGBEED FOXES LTD. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhnl n Sprclirl (lrnrrnl Meeting 0f the hllllfflifllllffi of tho John R. Dlnnln Prilirrri-enl Foxes Limited will be hold in tho Parlor of the Y. llf. C. A. at (‘lmrkzlti-torvn in Queen's County. Pr-urn Edward Inland on Tueldny the Twenty lfvlfllll dny of November A. ll. 1011'! nt Ilse hour of Seven thirty o'clock l’. .\I. for the pnrpone of Iifll- KlilK n lrrwoluilon rvqulrlllg the mild lllllfllilli)’ to ho unuml up umlrr the lifllllhlllll! of "Tho Voluntary “Wod- ing (‘p Act" and for tho [lurpmw of nr-nvlntlnr a llquldutor or llquldntorl for the nulrl winding up, gm] f" 1|" glvlnl bf consequential direction: mu] (or tho tmnnnetlnn of such nth. or lIllNlflfII, nu may Ive Inflflgnlg] llicrrfn, llutcil flrin Seventh dny of Now-ur- In-r A. l). H1152. m’ nnm-zrc or rrru nrnncrorrs. ‘éliiladft ltfifl." """"°“" I 1 ~ i core non n-s-ic. a m’ Ill BANKRUPTCY In the matter of the Bl-nkruplcy of A. Frederick Hardy, Bankrupt, p, B. GENERAL AUCTION saus or near. nsrnr: I will sell by Public Auction on the premises in Alberton on Tues. day the 22nd day of November, 1932 at two o'clock in the afternoon, the following parcels which com. prise all the Real Estate of the Bankrupt, namely:- Pnrcel No. 1 Store and Log on Main Street. Parcel No. 2 lfousc and Lot on Reid Street. Parcel No. 3 Six acres of land on Buffering Street together with Fox Pens and Houses. Terms: Cash. Dated ut Sumrne sine, this 9th day of November 1932. F. J. E. WRIGHT. 6512-11-15-41 _ Trustee. lflfl-ll-lfl-sws-Cl. the doorway regard 13v. curious- ly. "Well?" ‘rhcre seemed to l....,..., to be a challenge in that. single word ul- tered with such menac ng calm. » ' "Madame," Blayne began. “I fear ‘that we have an intruder among us --a gpy, perhaps. It had Just come in from the grounds, and was pas- ing through th sf very room,'when, lo! Someone he come in through the window there-you see how it is open I, little-I tried to catch him. but he was too quick for me, and he went through there. We must search, Madame, for I am fearful lest someone has already guessed our secret. Search now, Madame, Search now!" Blaynek voice was agitated. His hand; clenched and unclenched. nervously, but nevertheless in spill! of th‘s clever simulation he was shrewdly watching the face of the woman who atlll afAJOd there, and ho noticed that she was apparently impressed by his eagerness and his‘ sincerity. Then she took o step forward into the noun. ‘Thole all right, Rama, but 1 don't thnk theze‘; need for you m distress yourself. I'll get Kasha to make a thorough search. You will coma with me and I will show you our meeting place." Ann Morrison took Btayne by the arm and led hm across the hall. Opening a small door concealed be- hind a long Indian tapeztry, she led the way into a narrow, dark par rage dimly liluminatcd by a small electric lamp covered with a deep red shade. At the farther end 201m The Invisible B! .l. n. wrnmor ‘there was a. light burning in the ha'l as he mounted the steps, his hands clasped in front of him witn the Slim volume he had bought be- tween thorn. No one emerged to greet hm and Blzlyne wondered whether he was too late. f-fe moved quietly across the hall in the direction of the room where he and Inspector Webster had interviewed the exas- peratlng Mrs. Morrison and her chaining daughter, Natalie. It was in darkness-an oppressive darkness like that which precedes a. thunder- 5l-°1'm- Blflyhe stood motlonlesst, like a statue. His quck eye had caught the movement of one of the cur- tains at the far end of the room. It could not have been wind: the night was cam and unhunlcd. Then like a flash, a white fgure darted across the floor with the nimble. near of a gazelle. Blayne, uncou- sctous of his danger, dashed forward to intercept it in its flight, but, 11's hands seemed to pafs through it as if it were a phantasmal being, A door was flung 0pm and closed with I bang. Then lrlence. TN Willis man sprang to the door he raw blsckly llmmed in the dark- ness 0f the room. It was locked. 5711459111? the room was flooded with "Eht and turning, with h‘; hgnJ 1271i cn the handle of the door, Blcyne found hlmtcif confronted by 51m Mlmflon. who stood fzarnrd tr. which they paused. "I have told them that you will be here," she whispered softly, "and when the time comes you will be able w hand up your message per- sonally to Zora, who has already been acquainted with the inform- ation that you wish to let him have “Thank you, Madame, but you will not forget to search the house. I have fears that all is not well to- night, for out in the darkness I cornmuned with the Great One and there were storm clouds on his brow.‘ - The woman opened the door soft- ly for him without answering, and Blayne moved forward into dark- near. “Superstitions fool," murmured Ann Morrison after she had closed the door and retreated along the narrow corridor. Peter Blayne stood for a moment in the silent darkness of tho room. ‘Ihen, la his eyes became more ac- customed to the gloom, he noticed that two tiny crimson lamps bum- ed high up on the ceiling, and though they were helpless in dio- pclllng the ‘*‘ ' completely they did enable him to see o. num- ber of shadowy figures seated on chairs arranged in the form of I half circle in front of what. ap- peared to Bloyne to be a black- covered dais. Bloyne moved slowly forward marvelllng at the size of the room. which was much bigger than h: had expected. Quietly he slipped into a chair that stood over by the wall, from which he could com- mnnd a perfect and uninterrupted sight of both the door and the can. ' Blllrne saw another door before The assembled Indiana begun to »v>~».;.--_o.<..._,.,..,,»-,. . .9, ._ croon slowly and softly, swaying backwards and forwards with an even rhythm, their curious incan- tatlona falling strangely on his un- ed ears. To Blnyne as he sat there it was terribly unreal; there was something grotesque about it too, but all the time his eyes never left the black-draped dais for a single mome it. Then he felt his body uncon- scioualy stiffen. Someone had cross- ed the platform and stood facing the assembly. "Brothers," he began in a low voice, "we are indeed honoured to- night, for our great Zora has came,‘ among us. There are certain 1m- portant matters about which he must speak to us-grave matter concerning the happenings of the put few weeks. I pray you harke unto his words carefully, for the may be vital with import for all o uo-tforevery Bon of Zora. in thr land and across the ocean. It is for this purpose you have been goth;- cred together..ml the great Zorn comes." Blayno watched the shadow fo of the man melt from the sombre platform. The Indians uttered a low, moaning sound like the eerie wind through the lean trees on a March night. l-ie saw that they had dropped forward upon their knees, their hands upralscd above their heads. Only Blaync sat rigid, walt- fng. ' Then, as the other form faded, the apparition appeared. At first it seemed like an insignificant glow rising from the background in o slow spiral, becoming more lumin- ous as it arose until, in some mir- aculous way, slowly it materialized sitting huddled on o. choir placed in the centre. . An arm was raised out of the white folds of the robe, and u voice said: Wife: "For months I couldn't figure out where my husband spent his evenings! And then one night I went homo, and there he wul—" Judge. "Peace be unto you, my brothers; the hour is nigh." There was a murmur of approba- tion from the assembled throng, who arose from their prostrations still muttering their inco ‘ “ (To be Continued.) Judge: "Do you know the mem- ing of on oath, madam?" Witness (proudly): "Your honor! An’ me ‘usband shlppin’ before the mast these 15 years!" AIIGTIOII SALE l will sell by public suction on the promises at St. Catharina, my farm consisting of 50 acres of laud, on Saturday, November 18th, at 2.30 P. M. Farm well watcrodinnd equipped with ouudinn. and lu good state of cultivation. Solo pool- tlvo. JOHN W. DOWIY. 8538-11-16-31. Professional (lard: Mothers, Mix This A At Home for o Bgd Cough Slvolfl. Boldly! No Cooling! 0m any drufiilt, put it into a 18 oz. bottle, and l up with your sugar syrup. The 16 ounces thus made costs no more than n small bottle of read minds medicine, yet it is the moat edeclivo remedy that money can buy. Kce a perfectly and taster flue. This aim o rem bu l reork- able thrce- o-d action. it soother and heals the inflamed membranes‘ loosens the germ-laden hle , and c urn the air pom .l. Tliuo’ t maker breathing us an let: you get restful sleep. Elinor is a compound of No 1y Pine, in concentrated form. flrnou. as I healing agent for throat membranes. Stewart 8t Lowther .l. D. STEWART, K. C. N. W. LOWTIIIB IABBIBTEBS. SOLICITORS. ITO H Gout George Street BONE! ‘l0 LOAN McLEOD & {BENTLEY Yo ‘ll be pleasant] surprised whet _ ‘you zndko up tfhis simple hlomo ml‘? w. a Q ore an try t or: stress u: con . unmet m‘ Anonqqhh. to no rcublo to mix, and coats ut a trifle, yet it: can be depended upon to MONIY ‘I0 LOAN give tluick and lutlng rel . oflloo; 1&0 Richmond ltrocl Mcletndryrvrp bydctirrlug 2 ltlllpltte)’ .___._... anu n e auger an one cop o vu r _ ezo.‘"".atrsr*"ei“lii"zl'd.*1: MissliauraM-flushesR-N Pine: Tr Al?“ Lorne Communion Cups. Collect-bl Plain. etc. Also Novelty Bond Dill I05 Eaton 5t. Phone 1106-5 Oct. ID-wsm-i month. Prohibition Commission Chas. II. Black, Chllflfllll- Charlottetown. Ian. B. McDonald. Went 8t. Paid! John Simpson. lhmlllflll- loud all information rtllfthl Infractions 0f PBOHIBITION AC1 into a ghostly white human form i "imam-o c 5i li..".l'.“.".'tl€.°.ii€3."'° "°'“"‘ "M t “vanish-omit: l0 "ll;.'.'.'2."..".....-..._...t». Maia" '* L) l A In ...m...a....,..mwmz.rivl*"“" i