_ __ ___ ii 1_3* 9 ' l * » _,_ ’ . ~ ¢ . 4 ¢ 1 .',-,V 1. 'f.» '_ . -_ 5.. ‘_ ‘ l f l _ I the _ lor 1 or! . mt wi ‘YY t Bi '$552 I E i i r t ____._... 1 _ lili.” ld = . t *€‘“""’.f-"-”" , »L""f“ -v " ». .» .-“'t' i ' _ _' L 1 i`: li li ill- I 4 1 , \ fl __ _ ,.._,_._.= ` ._ .-.,-=§1»-'~1-.` `T-',<..~.-. , _ , __._.-...._.,.. . l I -.s-s.. __.¢.1.a..au_¢ _ _ _ _ 2 i i i i . ii =t 1 _ .. “__ a. ... ».».»¢»- w;,,_,¥§ ,', _,__ ai. ____ ____._.e--- ~- PAGE T-_,_-0 _'rifle cll.5l2_i,oTTi:TowN §_UARQl_Alg_ n ..s., 'earl I1 0 I OCOLATE CUP CAKES cup sliortcning 1 cup sugar 2h»t~t ; ;'ff:'.“'”i.’:° ' ~ ni,/.,/_‘ia ‘_ ." n i ‘ fi 3§f5"g,§_Fil,§}’ statement on 3-{:;_'l1_'f.__,§§pf ivory tin is your ilk.-s7f_~',"‘-`l‘;:.j’ r=i.min|.»n that 1_1 _"~,', _, > .’_'~'; c linking in free ..` “" ` I , 1/` i.,=i:iiimi<»r any ' i. :_n.ft~l thorn- Ma’ i‘ ' - ~"=f _' *mt ._ _ . ' _ ‘ Qt cr man, said Jim, was _ _,[andl1c saw in them the unmistak- that the wrath of thc giant was II F. _ _ . .______ Loc found himself admiring his very tau vc,-y big altogether In his demands? And were you veil F _ ' Y ' angry with hlln last night and aiu “bm Sig" that his hm" °f ’°°k°"mg jmlfled' or sale Tender iinilcienxiiiel iiiiiiiiliiiiiiir i . .. f ' l. l F , = ' ~ . 0 " , _ tziiinliv, in nt °°_°",f`s mes View fm' 3"” th” '°““d t°.‘“‘S"“‘-" mm' yon lhrehihn hint? and ala hslnngh “'”‘ at h‘“‘d- ' ' ° A” '"5 1’°“°“” g°"“’“° wie' 1" ~-~- srl-2-a-ti-15.15-zz-as-zi-1 A '\‘-'~ i l ‘ ‘ hi -'\ -*tim x‘° 5 ‘CW mu" 0° _H ed him- for any other very bg man. My- ___ the puny me of you and remind The scene that followed was one the guilt of Leo was shattered by film rt ; _ _ _ wtiili. _lButDhc tlil nott tkuru 1111211 _ lself for instance. A clerk. attnckcd you to bc C___r___.ul? Dm 3_6 Mackm, _that Ames never afterwards forgot. ' " nes l s ri c vou tha Mr 'b th- ‘ ‘ ~ -; y is man, might very easily _ ,, _ "Jim‘s mighty, towering figure; his real' Macklin ,S not an0g,._hC_, naw M_______k that I had ________c,_cd mm D.d nil this happen? Jim was closct _ _ . . . blazing eyes: that arent f`St Of htS.inju,stlc¢ had been done and that h ' . . ' lic 1 , s.c.n_g me here?> v.cllt on Lee. l Doesn't thait describe the friend gcéorinilge l;§§__siE0dtl§;actc;1_;; ng; that held Macklin, small weak,| '~`°"““S tical" HS ll'-‘ ~”»l”'0k¢‘~ you meg at Brady`s Cottage last wud _“___ terrified ,hcipiess; dangling sllllly, Ames -‘hot H ‘Wick l”0k M Mfwk' night. Macklin?" The question ` an liich r two from the floor, all lin; ivas .client a moment, then! "Dld “ll this halmen' Macklin? 0 _ --» --- - ---~»_lD_d iw, TIME was that _wwe made Ames feel that he had sna- | nl , _ _ de y been Jarrod sheer out of life i _ h hest Colds ;j;;‘j;;§g;1;_’§,‘;;}_ ;g;;g__,g;~t 8° ........................ ......... Rub well ' ' ' ' ' ' __ _ over | _ _ incredible. utterly unreal. Certainly HHS Svluvtlllns tu Mr- Mlick- throat and chest ms IMC “orkcd suddenly' He mis°d‘Mackl'n had is look or havin sud- l '_ fa' ` p-___ -1__._._ 'I _ ". Pro. Cards 5 S'i’l‘1WA!!'i‘ K; i.i)W’I`Hlil{ { J. l). ,~“|l.`l\Al(`l_ K. C. CD (U (53 msn L9 LL1 ET: I N Vt/_ |.UiVllIl'IR BAlH¢|5.l`l‘.`Ri~l, S(ll.|(.`I'l`t)RS, ITG 84 (ireai (iron-.e Street MUNEY [0 LOAN. lli'}l.i. £2 MA'i`Hlii`SUN ll. ll. Bell, I) l.. hlutiiicnnn, Ll. B . Bnrrlr.ii'| Je \'olli~|tors ,‘ Money to i.o1n 1' Charlottetown and Montague F-_--_---l-_ ~` MARK lt. l\lcGUIGAN f- ii. A. 'BARRlS'l’ER, S()l,I(7l1‘0R., ETC. MONEY T0 LOAN [Inninron Block. Charlottetown. P.E.l. `.. MCLEOD & liEN'l`LEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. Barrister and Attorney-ll-LII lJn'lce: 180 Richmond Street MONEY T0 LOAN EDGAR SHAW. K. C. Law Omen - Prowse Bloch. ,|27 Grafton Street. Charlottetown n Wills and Estates Settled. llollecgloti oi llllia iSDeeia| lleritl 'gpm ‘polqcilon for all documents. Charlottetown, P. E. L ‘-13 ~=="_~_-.'31 ,____..,_...... _ - v luxury and every kindness except fidelity. and now l I would gladly give her that if I dldn't have the other woman on my conscience. The other woman will always be provided for by me. Have I any other obligations to her now? BUSINESS MAN. _.___ Answer: As between your duty to your wife and the "other woman," I should say that your greatest obligation is to the woman you took a solemn oatli before God and man to love and cherish. And the fact that you have ldefaulted on your part of the contract for fifteen years does not make tit any the less a debt of honor. It only gives you a lot of back pay- E ment to make up to the woman you have neglected and llefmlllled of her | rights so long. There are cases when a woman forfeits her claim upon ller husband 1 by her coldness, by her selfishness, by her fault-nndlng and nagging, by lher making life with her a hell on earth. In such instances one can ,young girls who set themselves deliberately to flatter and cajole married men, and appeal to them by every wile oi sex, to get them away fron lielr wives and llito their tolls. There are plenty of men who woul :ever find out that their wives had grown old and fat or that their wivl _ .lldn‘t understand them if some girl didnt sec in them a sugar a a an P P entice them away from their homes and duty. Judging by the fact that your mlstrem’ mother has lived on he daughters ill-gotten gains all of these years and has countenanced he daughters mode or life, I should say that you can doubtless heal an_ hurt in the girls heart with a poultice of greenbacks. But don't go back to your wife until you have washed your slat. clean, and until you are certain that you are going to run straight il the future. DOROTHY DIX. O O O U l Dear Miss Dix-You say that for a man and wife to have the sam tastes, habits, etc., is the best guarantee against their going on the rock in matrlmony. But havent you noticed couples who are so much alll they can't get along together? I know a couple, for instance, who bo resent criticism but both like io criticize, and they are in a perpetx i-ow. How about iw conrous. Answer: ° Congeniality implies people being lntel'cstcti_ in and liking the sam. things, not having the same temperament. People who have the sam temperament can rarely get along together. That is why families fl; apart as soon as they can and why the Browns go to the ends of the earth to keep from being Browned to death by tlielr sisters and brothers and why the Jones seeksomebody as dlflerent as possible from the Joneses to marry. _ If Jones, who ls irritable and high-tempered, marries a red-licaded, nervous woman, they are as good for a stormy life as a nickel ls for a ginger cake. But if Jones marries a placid, amiable, good-natured wife he will be as happy as the day is long, and his counterpart will also get along beautifully if she gets a jolly, amiable husband, For years I have known a couple ot line people who have been very unhappy together simply because they are both shy and reserved and do not know how to show their feelings, yet both are plnlng for love and petting and to be made a. fuss over. I fthis man had gotten a wife who was his exact opposite, one who would have caressed him and made much of him and jollled him along, he wo uid have been perfectly blissful, and the woman would have been equally happy if she had married a man who would have made love to her and told her that She got more beautiful hardly blame a. man tt he turns from such a wife to a woman who _ gives him the love and tcndemess and sympathy and companionship that _llts wife refuses him, and one can feel that under such conditions the "other woman" has really a deeper claim on him than his wife has. But you have no auch justification. Aocordlng to your own story your wife is a woman of exceptionally tina and courageous ,pu-1;, she has held your admiration and respect, even in your falthlessness to her. she has repaid your dlsloyalty with a loyalty that has stood a grueling _ test. She has waited patiently for years and years, with despair in her _ heart and her pillow soaked with tears, for you to return to her, though _ God only knows why wives think that prodigal husbands are worth wait- ing for or grieving over. But, at any rate, they are certainly entitled to what they get. One may be sorry too for the "other woman" if she loves the man, but_she is a love pirate, and is operating without the law. She knows ' that she is robbing a. woman of her husband and taking the love and I money that belongs by rights to the wire. she is accessory to the hus- bands crime of disloyalty even. when she does not instigate lt. For it is only too sadly true that there are innumerable gold-digging. l --I I _~" I ; ---_.____. _ J°h"__ 3 Gif' ,i‘i‘..“:;l.‘i.;“.;.:i;;‘;§;,l.‘:.kiii..he ____ Baolzetibq . ’ °°' °"°'.... -. l.??.?.."“”1.'i.’§* f »°l`....... l‘llrmwst])wtttians t I . i _he returned to me cottage ,md 0“~ Pefhafps Mfwklln °“1Y “Sed him _ U the moat healthful food byforeinoat dietltlana. i Lee h t for some purpose, and has found if _ ps ma is no ._ . .~ - » - For nourishment delicious flavor and low cocr t icnnilinitui _ to be sins that it was twelve .ninth '““’__"‘°“d °’ M“°“““ 5' L” Wm chown amino bonu svaurln mast l _ S it the door and planted went into it, letting hlmseli in with _Umwelt ,mm his back to ___ and the me key_ wmch he found h__nu___g since that this man is not as ea_s_; ~ ___ ___ EDWARDSBURG _ _ _ _mo men at me desk looked up ___ the _vy over me doom He wa___ as he_secmed. Has that bcen_ 1., _fa - f, _ __ , ’-shi1n>1y. Macklin half rose. utter- ed five minutes, and men he wss,M”k1'“? And hamg done wi" f 1 . ," ‘ ing an exclamation, but sank bmkl- med ,_ y- dirty “Wk for you’ docs he not' "m-""'/i ‘_ ` "Wh-"tr do you want. Warriiis- gnonit listen to himl Dont ns- has he bee" in the hhhlt of lea.-_ ,il-.,,--'t §i,iill*`-‘ i i ton?" iiskocl Antics quietly. mn to him! I-le`s lying! You c8Ii'5 n ` appoi mon ., r you ,i i pwff ' _ B9 _ "F11 tel you." answered Jim. iustlhhlieve the word of a thier. . . _ in the h°H°“' °f that "°°' Am' ' _ P -nu camna srancli co.._i.imii¢d. M<_iN'raIiAi. ns q“5mv_ but with mah t__mm,1,Dcn____5__cn_0 h_m_,_ have you been in the llablt of lil saaainaewynf csaaanrnu aww. _ ~ - . ‘ ' _ , _ ' 7 l ‘ H .inf ui _Lucy had sensed beneath the quiet- ` "sit down. Macklin," sais Ames, '.°"'ew‘"g mm in me “mag” Ami aum_._____;11;..‘.°.¢..__._m 1...___...._._ _,_,_s_ ___ ___ sudden _One of c0mmm_;__ HH gilding yol1r_ liusli-inoney undel _ _*_ “_ _. __ "Y95ff‘f nothing. It WR5‘ murderer! You're killing me. . .” um “b°'° m'°p°"~v “r fm' “mm turned if- in the lock. Macklin ,` --very WML Lea Wm you con, 9°" “mi” B' mv _“““°°°“" cd or- and held mm dangling And L,,e.s the wmm or R giant agulnst al M _listed or for any item of siicliiol. staricd up again at thot, but Amesltmue?-. ' ' i And has “"5 "mn bw" “eb (To Be con nued) m I yo by ano her man. Macklin mm his Cm" “gain 35 Ames mm' suddenly started to his feet, cry- ioned h`m to keep still. in out. ,every day. A man and woman may have the some tastes and yet have different temperaments. They may have a. mutual fondness for books or the theatre or golf or good cooking and yet one be optimistic and the other pessimistic or one thin-skinned and the other able to laugh bd any crlclclsm. » DOROTHY Dlx. I O I O l Dear Dorothy Dlx-I ama. lonely widow, 55 years old, my children all grown up and married. I have an ofler of marriage from a man of ,another nationality. Would you advise me to marry him or go and live 'with one of my children? _ WIDOW. Answer: _ If the man is fine and honorable and all that he should be, his nation- ality does not matter unless he belongs to one of the races with which it is not advisable for Nordics to marry. And also unless he wishes to take' you to his own country to live. Very few American women are ever hallily in foreign countries where the ways, and particularly the ways of husbands with wives, are different from ours. But if the man is at all eligible you will be happier with him than you will be living with your children. A woman who is used to her own homo does not fit easily into her childrerrs. DOROTHY DIX. came on a. sharp, merciless note that made Mackln suddenly clench hold his knowledge over you, an_l i make you pay for his silence? Anil _ *Q - .,l *tl i. ing otes 0' 'nt t fo i"`M li _F _Gia le’ l _ `" "`""*"` AMomingSmile I N0. CHANGE A mall approached a. minister and shaking his hand heartily, exclaim- ed, “How are ye, sir? Ye remem- ber nie, I'm sure?" "Well, I can't say I do," said the minister doubtfully. ` "Oh, but ye must. Ye married me ten years ago. Don't ye mind tlic man who forgot the time of the ceremony?" "Ah," said the minister, "I re- member you now. You got an awful fright that night." “I did that, an' 1've got her yet." -___ ‘_ For The Cook _` SULTANA CAKE One-halt pound each_of fruit or granulated sugar, butter and sul- tana raisins, also li pound of peel (1 use half lemon and cltron, M pound of each), 54 cup of sweet milk, 2 eggs, is cup ol mai-aschlno cherries cut, 'A pound of flour and 1 small teaspoon of baking powder. Method: Cream butter and sugar thoroughly, add eggs (well beaten) the milk and flour, with baking powder sifted in it, lastly the fruit. _Put a layer of batter in pan and sprinkle the peel over it. also some of the cherries, being careful that land how splcndldly the skirt con- entrates its fulness in A front ln- JBIBF. c waistllne. lt's marvelous in sheer woolen terials, but has many possibili- i to be carried _ out in orugh Style No. 975 is designed for sizes i6, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with % yard of 35-inch contrasting. _ | Be sure to fill in the size or the preferred.) Price of pattem 15 cents. N0. 975. Siz 0 »...»..~»»»».¢».~-.aa ........ .....--.l-l.-sn.. ui Name . . . . . . . StreetAddress _................................. City State _-im cherriu and peel are covered well with batter. Bake in slow oven one and one-quarter hours. I sometimes iouble the quantities and but in a. good-sized pan, baking two and one-halt hours. This is really as dllcious cake. The bodice fairly wraps the figure id note how the shawl collar meets | l Bl! Annabelle Worlliingtnn l i _ :rted pialt to give height to 1ts_ ' r- _ _ , -,-.j;'5_»,<;<,<_--_-. _ ‘ .l _ _ if $12? fl' .gli-7 11,' ._ ._ 1- .__ l X :2 ~:w:-~ _'Z _,___ i 1____ ________wT_ _ T8 i _ '/hat the Fashionables are Wea Illustrated Dressmaliing Lesson Furnished Wm Every Pattern ri =? »“l H” _ rf., i to be carried out in rough ;f,_"-" ___,. .cpe silk. _ 3 ' _ Its simple smart styling makes it l 55,., . __ teouauy suited in the miss or the ` lf# ii?" matron. /\ Hs “ § ` » 0 it .97 ab _ r--~ ._ _ l I _'41 .9 Cutlcura Soap ‘\& Cuticura 0intmcnt wit I » » _` ,\ Shampoo I__{egularly This treatment will keep the lcslp in I health! condition and the hair soft an lustrous. \\`_ - I _ ¥°‘.i._""i!.L"“".-...a““i..”§..?i’f‘¥.‘v‘$.’.l`¢.'2",E l hd., Ialnd. cu1t.... Macklin g1i.ilty....‘ Lee innocent. . .. . Then Lucy had been right, after all, in her dls~ trust of the manager' . . . And he had been so Sure that no evidence had been overlooked. . . . He had done everything to ensure I. fair trial for Lea. . . But hero was the truth. . . This was evidence be- yond dlspute. _ . . His mind clear- ed after a moment and he realized that this thai, was going on before him was not only the truth, but m'ght easily be dangerous, and lead to things worse than anything that had yet happened. Lee was a man in whom the spirit, of revenge had been storing up energy through three terrible year. His wrath now was like the breaking forth ol' a. volcano. . . He was in no mood_ to care what he might do; in no mood to put any re’n upon his over- whelmtns temper. . . _ He was shaking Macklin ss' if the wretched little man weighed no more than a kitten, and Macklin was crying out: “I-"or God’s sake let me go! You'rs choking mel You dirty hereinafter referred factory buildings at lo. LOT N0. 3. lzil Engine. and 3 Engines and Engine. referred t 14 Fishing Boats and ll 6 Flat-Bottomed Dorles. 1 Large Dory. i il to. traps, rope, etc.. all as Schedule “B” hereinafter The following Georgetown, 10 H. P. Fraser Smack "Louis M." 10 ll. P. Ill as itemized in Schedule LOT N0. 2. Freehold land (b) At Launching, 4 Fishing fc) At Annandale, 1 Fishing All as listed numbered and cribed ln Schedule “D” herein 0. Schedules wherein the abovel parties are listed and described l particulars may be inspected by ll sons interested at the Office oft Company in Georgetown or at office or the undersigned. Tenders will be rw-ivfd 10|' _ Dated th 5th d f Feb U r ____ C _____re__5o__ab]e ___ .eyes hot and blaz ng, looked into his plgmy, and Ames knew suddenly l e ay 0 remained still and perfectly cool ~-rms h ~ ~ ng mo e a mor ' saitl: “Wcll, \\-lla; have you to tell m |War1'ington?" 5° n s \_ \\ // ‘- .`\ \ ~e»`hae.\ ‘nb _\ M D-l 8 ll TN( \¢o\i€ » ~‘."l". r'- ' " _I ._,_._. _tam sy»a¢au.ia-_ a..... ..... .turd -A By George McManus A FISH COULDNT