MJWoman 11... HOUSEWIFE ail HER ACTIVITIES CANADIAN PINE - (as fvevmgvufidqoqiflfl-eoivuose-Vl. . ‘ _ . rm: cnaawrrarowlv GUARDIAN a nnnxxmss‘ A‘ x ‘ ‘a l W50“ JERSEY an‘ 1v fsvARealmi -:- Sociai A 8 ‘sans a a‘ as ‘AAKAAAAA ‘KKKAAAAAAALAAL‘AAAAAIAAA¢;A¢ vvv 1v vvvvV v v vvvv vv v v ssskaxsxkxv Mill Get No 1:: ' xssakmkkks¢a rsonal -:- Fashions -:- Llté raiure A AAAAAAAA‘AAAAAA‘A AA‘A SMART FROCKS FOR FASHIONABLE PEOPLE "'"'""" °Jfiiim€$l£‘.=l.2.‘?.i" Single Women Are Better Ofl’ Than Married Sisters Who Slave Unrewarded f0!‘ Grouchy Husbands — They Should Cease Pltylng Themselves Uiiii make w derfulchocolole Sauce For your Ice Cream fflifirawr all my and served st Isl moment's notice. For instance,‘ lellied soup for dinner, g whok- some salad in gelatin for luncheon and some kind of a frozen dessert may be made while y0ur’re doing the morning's work. Set them in It's s most likable frock because of its smart simplicity. The inset vest produces a. very slimming effect. Asnug l-iipyokeinpcinted at the front, keeps the hire slender. The popular cape sleeves are entic- in!!! one!" c0110!‘ _l keen. sweet fragrance lies along the air, The" odour of the tall Canadian ' pine; How soft‘ the sunbeams on his -.~. ».r_1:- a i: -¢'l;,‘ “an _ra;c M l4 in“, m ‘l? nt‘ cl m . ace dei w‘, , Ni. m. "F m. P» needles diiirl the Icebox and forget about them tie - e. has where the snow he: left the until meal time. forest bare, He spreads his russet carpet every- where. I-Iigh is his syvaying top the croon- ing wind Eases hisrsbormy souL-time out of mind Be ought his ancient, steadfast solace there. FLOWER JEWELLERY forgetme-not heads are lope of the ear Floiver-bmoches. Victorian posies, have WilliamT. Allison. ——-—-——— like SPINACH RINGS finch in ally form is. o! 00GB. spinach, lizlt try it on the family ferent." but not too expensively. Chop it after cooking. Floral wristbands were muc ' ' u: seen at Ascot, worn over in lndiilaual ring moulds. Keep hot in hot water, lurn out and fill cen- tres with liliy balls or dice of cooked carrots or beets well- Sea-soiled. florist. whose aim is to be violets pinned to muffs promised for the autumn. SPUN GLASS COLLARS TABLOID I Apropos 0f unusual fashions. Try putting a little sage intoihas just launched collars of spu frlrt pics instead of flour to take up; glass. With a black romaine froc the i c. Sacra also makes delicious cut on long classical lines he pink e Cook rhubarb in water shosving ‘a Medici collar of spu arid Siilill Add‘ sago and cook in glass while glitters romantically. tlic juin .i! thick Sweefen and eat These glass collars will with cream, _ ——--——-——i——— ‘noon gowns to be shown in As lanllxs :each the age 0f about , forthcoming autumn a _V('ill‘. zlie mcat assumes {the - “There will be spun glass chill-actor" of mature mu ton. Young mutton is a very fine quality of meat which ie not ap~ the frock, check and designs, and- even Oh¢$-—Ifl'fld0!l Ehuliange It is dis ngllished from lamb by ill» mimic of the meat and bv the -— -___ p31" mlnlll‘ and hardness oi the boiler. Cuts of mutton are heavier than ill -~» of llllllb. DAINTY DISH SET CHECKING PAINT SPLASIIES -—___ an Edinburgh paper When painting a window or pic- tllrn fralne. rub soap around the glilss near the edge. Then if the George and Queen Mary. be easi.‘ to the door knobs and hardware b" '11:‘ painting is skirted so ., can very easily" be the Palace of Holyrood-house. had to reach the pala before 7 o‘ clock the following morning. "At midnight, a wholesale hous had to be opened up and th packet was dispatched tIO th palace by taxi.” "I-Iolyroodhouse" t _» zruoar‘ c‘ l\I.-\KEE 165mm no wonrr Let your Icebox do most of your w.» . n work in the summer-time, is the c morning. left in the re- while in Scotland A captivatting idea is that of "Gail"! tiny flowers as though they were precious stones. Little whire bells of lily-of-the valley or blue covered over clip frames and fixed to the tiny! also been’ devised, and can be "fitted" by the “dif- summer gloves. and floral posies of parmalule must supply some Other ingred- are iient to help the good work along. ,well-kriown English dress designer BEFORE A KING The following is an excerpt from , 1mm "An urgent message was receiv- paint salaries rm the glass, it can ed by an Edinburgh firm the other removed. Apply vaseline evening. It requested that a packet of Kello Co Flak be t to gg m as Sm It full. Leave to stand nine days, stirr- official Pl-li lll"‘\llS that may be prepared. residence of the King and Queen THE COOK'S CORNER Berry-Currant Jam Mixture Raspberries, as all experienced cooks know, have not any real jelly- ing qualities of their OWII. Tney make grand jam-but if W8 “any, to h “jell" them, or to make the kind of jam that has a light jelly-ish body, Because they have plenty of pee- tin of their own and also the amount of acid which is the second secret of jellying power in a fruit, a red currants promptly suggest them- selves as the auxiliary in this c359, n ,And they have another very real Jus- kitiflcation: The combined flavors of islraspberries and currants are ultra- nldelicious. . So here is a. siinplc j - re 1pc that be seen we feel sure Table Tuixci-s will like. on some cf the evening and lifter- ‘when Y0“ mink 1i 1188 been Suf- me flciently cocked, dribble a few drops conecuons_ of juice on a cold saucer, and let collars with colour variations to tone. with spotted multi-coloured [stand a few moments to see if it will congeal. Raspberry-Currant Jam 1 pound red raspberries ‘i cup currant juice i‘. pound sugar Mash fruit, add currant juice and bring to boiling point. stir well from the bottom. Add sugar and cock thick, stirring occasionally. at tbs’ ilmfij Pack in hot sterile jars and seal. of a visit to Scotland by King‘ Raspberry Vinegar Fill a Jar with raspberries. Pour over white vinegar until the jar is lng every day. Strain well, and to every pint allow l lb. of sugar. Boil as long as any scum rises, then bot- tle up and cork tightly. 0 e e Loganbelry Jelly Have four pounds of loganberries, one pint of water, sugar. Choose fruit slightly under-ripe; PRINCE OF WALES RITUSES ‘feet tall perfumed xvith sweet peas wash (or pick over carefully), then place in preserving pan. SOLUTION FOR. WOOD WORMS Put one camphor block into one‘ I ounce of iodine. Allow the camphor to dissolve, then with a brush paint over the entire surface af- Why do peqple pity old maids? Why do old maids pity themselves? cool. Style No. 869 is desigied for sins Why are mothers so anxious mi- their daughters w merry met ti}? wyvigd rather they were unhsppily married than not to be married at a l’ does a woman feel that selling e hiwbflnd 15 drawing the capital prim in the lottery of life. and that if she doesn't get one she is bound to spend her clays in drsbness and loneliness? Nobody feels that way about an old bach- elor. Nobody bedews him with tears of sym- fected, making certain that all holes are thoroughly filled with the solution. This can be left on for three days or so, then the process should be repeated and allowed to dry well, after which it can be polished with a good fumlture polish YOUNG WODIAN BALKS AT PARTIAL SCALPIZNG SYDNEY. Aug. lk-Details of an offer of $250 and payment of medical expenses made by a the- atrical artist to purchase l2 inchs of scalp, a. strip Binchs by two M01198. from another young woolen to re- place portions of the firsts W031i!“ scalp damaged iri a motor smash. have just been revealed. Negotiations T0ll0W€d the appear- ame o; the following advertisement in a newspaper: “Wanted brunette give portion of and -" The successful appllmnt. selected from many by a medical specialist. balked at the proposal after hearing ‘the surgical details Some of these were that after be- ing scalped. she would have to have a forearm strapped aver her head f-or l0 days. It, would be necessary for the donor to remain in bed for about six weeds to ensure a success- ful gralt to the scalp of the recl- plent. would be stnamiied tOEBi-hef while the tissues were uniting. GOOD SALES “How did you come out this year on the farm, Uucle John?" "Gosh. I made a pile. I happened to have the good luck to get three i cows four pigs. and an old mule run -‘ over by railroad trains. and about a dozen chickens killed by them auto- \ mobilicus wagons. I cleaned nigh about a thousand on ’em." THAT “LIKE THE DICKENS" FEELING pathy, and least of all is he sorry for him- self. Nobody considers that life must be I cinders, ashes and dust to him because he | isn't married. On the contrary, he is cherished I by h- ‘ , ,. ’ by . 8nd ., by other men with awe and envy because he | has been foxy enough to dodge the burdens 0! matrimony. Yet in these days of feminine emancipation, when every avenue of occupation is open to a woman and a woman's earning capacity and her achievements are only limited by her ability, wherein is the lot oi’ the girl bachelor different from the lot of the man bachelor? Why should we es- teem single blessedness a. curse to women and B 8TB" 1°! me"? No one will deny that an ideal marriage is the nearst approach to a heaven on earth that any mortal can ever know. For e. woman to get s husband who is tender and true and loving and who gives her a perfect companionship; to have a. beautiful and peaceful home and fins children is for her to be the darling of the gods. If marriage inevitably brought this to a. woman-even if she had a sporting chance of getting it-one could not wonder at her desire for matrimony and at her feeling that to be an old maid was the crowning blow that fate could deal her. ‘ But this is not the case. It is only in fairy tales that Prince Charm- ing comes riding every maidens way. - If there are any husbands who are a happy combination of a sheik and Jacob and Job and Mr. Rocke- feller, most wives would pay out good money to see them in a freak show. Most homes are sweatshops instead of palaces of dreams and oftener children are causes of tears and anxiety than sources of pride and cohgratulation. , When the average old maid compares her lot with that of her mar- ried sister she does not want to swap jobs with her. She looks in the mirror and sees that she would pass for five years younger than sister. She is better dressed. she works only union hours, instead of toiling eighteen hours a. day, with no holidays or Sundays off. On Saturday night she has her pay envelope instead of getting nothing for her week's labor. She is free on come and go as she pleases, instead of having to ask permission to go even to the movies. She does not have to go in fear and trembling of any man's temper or grouches. she is treated with respect and consideration, and even Jollied along by her boss, because if he knocked her work continually and swore at her and was gruff and rude to her she would give notice and quit. And highly competent women assistants, such as she is, are hard to get and are valuable when got, whereas wives are bound to stay on, no matter what sort of treatment they receive. ' A girl will tell you that she is going to get married because she is tired of working, and then she will deliberately espouse s. poor man and walk out of a mahogany-furnished office into a kitchen, where she will have to slave ten times as hard as she ever worked before. Thousands of women marry because they are so afraid of loneliness, yet they could count on the fingers of one hand and have a thumb and little finger to spare all the wives they know who get any companionship from their husbands... A stuffed dummy with a newspaper in its hand 10, 1B years, as, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with "6 yard of 35- inch contrasting and 4 yards of binding. v Sheer cottons, striped or cheded seersucker, linen, and plain tub silks in white and delicate pastel ice- cream shades are other smart me- diums. You can also fashion it of black crepe satin fer mcktein parties and daylight dining for "fld-IIIIIIIIIBI’ wear. - Price of PATTERN I5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 8U. Bile ........-....-.-.-..-. “mu-nun............nn"-,nu Name ............s.t;é.t.ka.............. . ' ISItate A MorningSmilc A Dumb Cluck Mrs Jones wes spending e day in bed with s severe cough, and her husband was working in the back yard, and hammering nails into some boards. Presently his neighbor came over. "How's the wife?" he asked - "Not very well." said Jones. "Is that her wilghirr?" "No, you fsthead." replied Jones, "it's a herihouse." CANADA PROVINCE OI PRINCE IIDHZAIID ISLAND The flying instructor. having de- wlllagsckezivtili?‘glfderoxhifid? “mm” llvered s lecture on pars/chute work, ' concluded: "And if it doesnt open-well, gen- tlemen, thatfls what is known as ‘jumping to a OOIICIIISIQIY." L Old Lady (who doesn't like modern manners): You girls are so useless nowadays. Why I believe you don't know what needles are for! The Flapper: Of course I know. They make the phonograph play, In the matter of the Bankruptcy u: Benjamin I. Rayner. Notice is hereby given that Bctjfllnll Ilsyuer cf Sulunieraiile. lll Prime Edward Island, was adjudged Bank. rupt on the 6th day of July 193i, sod that the first meeting c! creditors will be held on the (8th day of August 1934, at the linur ct eleven o'clock in the forennnn ,1? the Law (‘curls Building ln the (‘ity M Charlottetown. To vote ihereat proofs of --lnims and proxies must be filed wills me prior thereto. llEIlTll IIEIIIS Cllllll iigainri illl and lilies of the valley for iihe WW5 3'1“! i0 the boil and simmer slow- is about as chatty as the average husband is st his own fireside, unless ‘Phone havlflif claims pump with the GOLD MEDAL FOR SAVING FRENGH YOUTH and 180 Gloria Romanesque candles perfumed with orange blossoms for the wedding breakfast hall. Ajellds daughter. Virginia. ls to marry James Joseph Reardon of New Yonk Thursday. The bride and brideklibom. who have tween granted an aud'ence with the Pope. will present the Pontlff vsith four candles as they are on their wedding journey. Aiello. who is 74. is the third gen- eration oi’ candlemaikers in his family. WLKRRITZ. France. Aug. l6—The PYlllCL‘ of WzliPs has refused a life saving modal offered hkn by f/he French Government in recognition of heroism, it was learned today- 'Ih<- Prince aided in saving a boy from lirolrnilv; in a swimming pool how a wruk o. Although .0 has recieved hun- dreds of laudatory letters and tele- grgurm of congratulation, the heir to the British throne modestly declined to accept France's offer of a cold medal. A long document in parchment from Paris asked him to accept the decoration and ploised him for his heroism in rescuing th-e youth, who waslcaulrht ‘by a. huge wave and lifted from the beach into the pool, The Prince at the time of the in- cldent refused to be made a "hero." although scores of persons crowded around to ccnEPM/“MW bim- He‘ "pointed out that ‘he was only one of manu- persons surrounding the p001 at the, time. Thr- Kinlrg eldest son is spending a vacation at a Villa hens. HATS FROM TYROL ARE RAGE IN PARIS PARIS. Aug. l6—Tho Austrian disturbances have laid their mark on Parisian fashions. A prominent modiste displayed to-day a, group of Tiyolean hats strongly reminis- cent of those worn by Prince Ernst vcn Starhemberg and other Aus- trians for the last word in femin- ine headgear for the fall. An early display of 1935 styles show many felts turned up in back and down in front with very high pinched crowns trimmed with paint- brush feathers, like those worn by 'I‘yrolee-ns. ~ They are in browns and greens. trimmed with feathers of _vcllow or burnt orange. some nf which are placed in back and others swooping down in front, adding a brilliant - ~ _ ‘Ml-Antonio ilo the cnndlcmaker who made \ u- iho wedding of Colonel ly for about one hour. Now strain through a jelly bag. leaving it to drip all night. Measure up the juice and allow one pound of sugar to each pint. Place juice and sugar in the pan, bring gently to the boil, stirr- ing frequently. When boiling point is reached. cease stirring and allow jelly to boil for 15 minutes. then test it on a cold plate. If done. skim well, pot up, and cover at once. Danish MaesroOu-is two and a half ounces caster sugar, one teaspoonful baking powder, one to one and a half white of eggs. Mince the almonds, then pound well in a mortar. Add sugar and baking powder; mix to s soft consistency with slightly beaten white of egg. Place small round of rice paper on a greased baking sheet, then pipe the mixture on to them, using a large plain pipe. Bake in a very slow oven till crisp and delicately browned. Two and a half ounces almonds, m I8 [IVER Wake Up Your Liver Bile. Feel Fit. You Ncedn't use Calomel To Do It. It's your liver, failing to pour out the vital lwo pounds of bile, daily, into your bowels. that makes yorbileel so cfl-coloué; F c o ieineslis poor ' union. cod ate Ono lcn in your bowels Ind decs e. Yea system e poisoned. You go through t e ' 0i ill» blbli-lfll- . heartburn. You have e in cur mouth eelthy slid _ echee. Your whole system eeeéne out c! kllter. ow can cu reasonably expect to clear u a condition li e this by moral; taking sells, issu- ersl new. oil. lsntive can y or chewin gum or roughage? ese onur move the bowe , and tbsts not aicugh. You must weks up your I liver bile. mncury). Tekl Quin’! I . ‘revlpurely vegetable, lztle, sun and sale. '1‘, ey make you feel s undred per cent better in e very ort time. Don't waste your money on nubstitutns. Be definite. Ask for Carter's by name-and gee them! Lock for the name. Guru's. on the rd hbel. 36c. st ell druuism Q The Million By C. N. 6's? A. Dollar Doll M. Williamson A SIREWS CHARM and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbu-rgh. is planning to outdo anything he has touch of color. ever donc for the w=dding of his Most hats are pinched over the (lfl\IiZl'll"l‘ We is at work on ‘Z98 lwes- face thclloh Pthcrs are rolled sharp- iwc" c~"."'"" ‘or ihnl occasion. ,lv 1m in bl" and front and exten- ‘i-Ic and his artisans are making ‘dod eight inches on the sides. Nllm- 46 Isabella Romaneeqsee candles emue those-cornered marqlulse a rfigsmdwfflilfliesotlpevelieysl-iapes are can, also five-sided in the ebcsdi alter. ‘I! candles six large berets, . _ ll. [deep going wi/b I FOOD FOR ENERGY KlzLLoods PEP is a delicious com- ltination of flavor and nourishment. Crisp flakes of wheat. Healthful pro- fein. Vitamin B. Imn. Plus extra bran in be mildly laxative. Reedy to cat with milk or cream. PEP is sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. that's almost the same question, in "Well, you force me to ask one Terry drew a deep breath. "That- different shape, isn't it?" "Perhaps, But I wish it answered. now. I don't want some fantastic idea sprung upon me later on. “Everything1; got to be settled, without delay. I thought it had been already. Please let me have the truth." "The truth is, I don't want any- thing from you at all," Terry said. shamed anger trembling ln her voice. "You-you seem to talk as if I were some greedy—animali“ "You are, just that," were the words on Milils Sheridan's tongue, but he kept them there. After the late experience with his wife, which had deeply wounded his pride and honour if not his heart, he'd come to believe that ha. had lost trust in WOIIIBII. He had told himself lately, that if he never met a so-cslled "attractive woman" again he would be glad. Yet here he was shut up with one in a floating house and unable to get rid of her for weeks. Shc was the last creature of her sex he would be inclined to trust; but unfortunately he couldn't shake her ofl’ permanently by being I. brute. All he could do was to say. coldly, that he had not intended to be rude. Perhaps Miss Divine would change her mind later on, before the cruise ended, and suggest some arrange- ment agreeable to herself. T-"l-iy BETTE! BRAN Il-AKIS . . . Roady-ic-eaf "Meanwhile." he added, "please go and ccmc as you like. without any ably know something about llie on shipboard, if not on yachts. On board this yacht, we'll manage m0"! QUESUOYI- whal- do YOU Wflm things much as if ‘Silverwood’ were from me if not money?" a liner ten times her size. We'll take our exercise round the deck, when we feel like it, without noticing each other. We don't need to speak, or even bow and smile as we pass. 'I'hat's the programme. "But if there's anything you want that you haven't got, let me know- by Mrs. Harkness or a steward. You see the programme?" "I see." Terry echoed. She got up and walked sway quickly, lest the moon should glint on the tears in her eyes. Miles Sheridan loved the sea. lie had a bent for mechanics, and liked to spend an hour or two a ‘lay in the engine room. There were men on board, including Yale, the yachts captain, with whom he enjoyed e v chat: and there were plenty of ‘cooks i to read. i Though he had organized the cruise for a grim purpose, he was not bored as days drifted into nights snd nights into days. I-Ie was in s. mood that sickened hlm of the work, and was glad to be away from it, for, though he had never loved Betty as a man loves the One Woman. her betrayal of hlm had been a blow. I-Ie could sit for hours on deck in s long chair, smoking a pipe and gazing in s half dream at the architecture of the waves; distant towers, marble-white on grey-green hills, built against the horizon only to crumble, and be rebuilt again. It was like life, he thought; the dous slccesses and failures, and new successes reared out of ruined hopes as ages came and went. Sometimes the Doll would go by, Hell‘ of disi-ur‘ > i You've be 'd if he saw her thm h the co \ u... _ company comes in. Taking it by and large, there are more wives than old maids who spend lonely evenings, because the old maid can put on her hat and g0 out and hunt up congenial society or go to places of amusement, while the wife has to stay put and wait for husband's return or listen to his SIIOTGS. Now I am .not trying to discourage any girl from getting married who has the cosmic urge to take a mate and who finds one ready to her hand. Without doubt she is carrying on the good work for which Nature put her into the world, and i.i' she generally gets more kicks than hwpence out of matrimony she has st least the consolation of name and pltylng those who are perpetual \ But there are many thousands of women who will never marry, for whom there are no husbands, and I would like to give these a, word of cheer and to assure them that they have no reason to be sorry for them- Possibly they may have missed the worst misery. and they have" no more cause to pine over not having mil-fried a paragon of s hue‘ -fl than they have to beat upon their breast and wail because they are not the Queen of England 0l' a movie star or a millionairem. selves. They don't worry over that. Why should they moan over not draw- DOROTHY DIX ing the matrimonial prize? self in s book. seldom, however, did she pass his way twice. She seemed to know by instinct when he was on deck, and to choose another time for her walks. If the girl had accepted her wages, and the French novels, Sheridan would have thought of her scarcely at all, except to turn dlstastefully from the prospect of flaunting him- self with her by and by on land. Bur. she had thrown eight French novels and ten thousand dollars on the floor of her cabin; and he could not help speculating upon her mental- ity. It intrigued him, too, that a type of these self-indulgent dolls should contrive to keep the figure. face and throat of a sevtentccn-year-old girl, while e. well-bred woman of twenty- aeven or twenty-eight-like Betty. couldn't escapethe burden cf fat, and a double chin, without stern dieting and pouring down of acid medicines prescribedby secret spec- ialists. This doll, however, touched no wine. 5o said Mrs. I-Iarkness, having got the information from Roberts, who waited on Miss Divine at the table. Sheridan, being told, had remark- ed, "I'm not interested in Miss Div- ine's habits, my den-r I-Iarky." All the same he was interested; a mere matter of curiosity. And from one or two things the old woman had let drop before this gently adnfnistered snub, Miles had gleaned that his ex-nurse was weakening in her disapproval cf the girl. Not being a brute, Sheridan was mildly glad. Rather deadly for the wretched girl to be haunted by the graven image Harky could he, when her conscience was on the war-path! It was true; before "Sllverwood" writing Mrs. before her ANYWHERE WITHIN A MILE Joe-But, Nan, on what ground dices youu father object to me?" Nsn-"On any ground within s mile of the house." Mortgage Sale To be sold by public auction in front of the Lew Courts Building in Charlottetown on Saturday the 1st dsy of September, A. D., 1934, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, ALL THAT tract, piece, or parcel of land situate lying and being on Township Number Fifty-five in King's County, in Prince Edward Island, bounded and described as follows, that is to seyl-On the North by DeGroe Marsh on the south by the Csrdtgan River on the east by land by Ber- nard McLean and on the west by land in the possession of Mrs. A. Mc- Askill containing twenty-five acres of land s little more or less. ALSO ALL THAT other tract of land sit- uate lying end being on Township Number Fifty-five, in King's County, aforesaid, bounded and described u follows, that is i0 ssy:-0n the north by lend in the possession cf estate must fill the Filniodilln on the Trustee whvn In“ pointed hefnre the dlsfrihiliinn ie made, otherwise the prncl-udw cf the estate will be distributed ‘iulnnc ill! parties entitled thereto, Wllbll" 1'0‘ prd to snob claims. Mill HAPPINESS at Summereidc. llv! if! Deted day of August 1034. Address of Custodian, I‘. 0. Box . lummerside, P. II. I FREDERICK J. I, Whigs’! CISTDD lfinai DOMINION 0F CANADA PROVINCE OI‘ PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND IN the Surrogate Court In! George V. A. D. 193i. erheps you nouns ill yes when the defewoiikiedcoeyousretooflscd to enzer imo the ood dines the! ocheswomenenim renesener , u-y Lydia Ii. Pi em’: Vegere Ifconceupyourgeuenl 15kt you more pep-more Rel-number that 98 out of I00 women report benefit.‘ Le: h help youeoo: In Be Estate of Minnie‘ Tocmbs, lste of North Rusur" gllQtllhldfilOéllllyllll the said lroHflN ecesse n esul e. By the Honourable HAROLD LE2; NARI). PALMER. Surrogate Jililgc Probate. etc.. etc. l '1'» the shQIlII ii: the Count!’ d Queen's County or sny (‘orleI-nlill‘ °1 literate person within said Lounii» his! ill ' FARM 0R SALE Over I00 acres of lend with farm uildinge on Covehead Rood former- prcperty of the lsfe Thomas Carroll. Apply to Mil-l. ELIZABETH JENNINGS, Coveheed Road GREETING: Whereas u on resdilll i!!! riviiii"; on file of illism Lee Tflomiil g. North Bustico aforesaid. Farmer, id Administrator of the above Mo!“ estate praying that citation l-lfll‘ issued for the Purim" l"""'"“fl“ set forth: You are therefore lien-ivy required to cite all persons llllvvrg-Rfize in the laid Estate to he and h before me at e Surrogate Court if) 9 _ held lathe Court House in than L-BSM. luttetowli, in Queen's County. esld Province, on Thumlar All parties indebted to the Estate of Dr. E. G. Gillie, Kensington, are requested in meke payment before September 15th. After that date ell accounts will be given to s lawyer thirtieth day of August urn. v-ulliiil- ,at the hour of eleven o'clock for" "M" of tho same day to lhmv <'l\l|~" ii lilg they can why the Avvnllillu of llic ~11 Estate should not be passed and "19 Estate closed ll prayed for in Hi4 of Don etition and on motion “lg cKlnnon. Esm. Proctor for ll Petitioner. And I do hereby flffl"\'ih" l true copy hereof ha forthwith liilll“ llsherl In some newspaper published F: (‘hsrloiiciown aforesaid nnre Ill "-1 pQngoHlTlTB fcr collection. IVIIIS. ANNABELLE GILLIS, Kensingion, P. E. Island. L-NSO. NOTICE During Exhibition Week Blue Bus Line will opereie ml usual schedule escqat that it will be held until 8.30 respectively, namely, in the Court House in (‘hlirlnm-iolrl aforesaid, in from of the School North Ruailca aforesaid all‘! ' n-mii of the Hall u. .\ll\.\'T""'l " Queen's County aforesaid. In vim] I persona interested In the said Iaslfli‘ as aforesaid may have rluc lmtiro W. A. McKinnori on the east by land in the possession of Bernard Mc- Lean on the south of DeGros Mel-sh on the west by land in the possess- Ion of Roderick Steele and John D. Steele containing twenty-five acres of land s little more or leee. ' The above sale is nude under and byvirtrseofepowerofeelecorl- telned in an Indenture of Mortgage deted 18th day of July. i923, made between John D. McLean of DeGroe Marsh in King's County in Prince Edward Island, Farmer, of the first pert, and Anne M, Hesserd of Char- hcd been s week at, sea, Mrs. Hark- ness had succumbed to the charm of the siren. (To Be Continued.) A BIG DIFFERENCE ‘there are two sides to every ques- tion, proclaimed the sage. Yes, said the fool, and there are two sides to a sheet of fly paper, lottetcwn, in Queen's County, in said Island, Wife of Louis A. Ilen- . ard, of the second part, default hav- ing been made in payment of the ‘moneys secured by the said mor- ‘Ill!- v For particulars apply to McLeod l Bentley, Sollclto s, Charlottetown. Dated this Ist day of August, I934. ANITA M. HASZABD, Harman- “g J‘ 0i thereof, h Gin-n under my hlinrl nail f"; Bell of the said (‘nllrt llll! l h rlsy of July A D 10.14 irml m r e zlmi syesl’ of m. Mnicavyl "W" 1b. ) 1, PAIAII-II (I'M n sill-rush" n-ma—1-21_s4-~ gig} P. M. Tuesday. Wednesday, and Thursday. If this would not suit the pes- sengers of each day. a time will be 1 agreed upon by driver and daily pes- sengel-s suitable to sll. L-MOB-B-le-Oi. 8 I '7- _,¢ - » ‘iv-i All overdue accounts and arranged for within fificrn notes must be settled for days will be handed to all‘ immediately at my office in solicitor for collection. WELLINGTON McNElllL Charlottetown. Those not