' "llfiltlifiilifili i i. _ ¥ if . isomer ro toss I PAGE TWO Yr‘ ____ _-__- -\Woinan’s Realm‘ -:- Social) an. -._ l ‘ . Attribute: 9 Gill had‘ to Dlllfrrnce w". ‘ n Psychology 1 mlAmerican Wife a Cheater of the Worst Kind, Says French Actress-Takes All _and Gives Nothing. But Dorothy Dix Finds Higher Percentage of Happy Marriages in America Than Elsewhere And now a French actres has been telling the world what she thinks She say-l that the American woman is a cheater of the worat kind because she about the American woman, and what she thinks is a-plenty. makes her husband pay with his last drop of blood thinking he is buying her love, and she gives him nothing. She says the Ainreican woman doesn't qven know the meaning of the word “love." and that is why the American man is noted in Eur- ope m being the worst woman-chuer in the World and for being unfaithful to his wife. She says that American women are ilavc- ‘drivers. That they are sold-diggers. That they are icebergs. That all they want from their hus- bands is money, money, money. That they know nothing of the art of love and that is why they have no mystery, no allure. no fire, no charm, no spirit of adventure, ind that is why they have no appeal for their own men and can't hold them. "American vsmcn," says this discerning writer, “drive their lnen to work for them to get the things they want. 1f the woman next door has a new fur coat, a man doesn't get a minutes peace until his own wife has one, too. The American husband wears himself out body and soul struggling to get together the dollars that his wile throws away on triflcs. He comes to her weary and worn with the day’s work; he would like to rest his head on her breast like a tired child. How he would love to shut the whole world away and get a bit of heaven for a few hours!" But no. The female Simon Legrce ‘he is married to cracks ilie whirl ind iiogs him on and, again I quot/e from this inspired wrfc‘, "the firc of love strikes stone and that stone is the woman." My, my, my! Had you’ any idea that the American woman was s0 cold and heartless and sexlcs and greedy as all that Or that the American man was such a poor, downtrodden sap that he permitted him- sell to be worked to death by one of the Gimme Sisters? Or that Ameri- can mcn were so discontented with their wives? Or that they were the world's greatest philanderers? From our reading of French novels- but lei that pass. All we can say is, lady, you‘ve got us wrong. Faults we have to spare, and we arc open to criticism on a thousand points, but the love life of Americans is the tenderest, warmest, most enduring that ls found among any people, and in no other country in the world are there hap- pier homes or more devoted husbands and wives. And the fact that divorce is so common docs not disprove this. lt only conflrmiit. It ls becaile our ideal o! domestic love is so high that we are always seeking it, and if one husband or wife falls us we break the matrimonial bond and pursue our quest instead of putting up with a lukewarm affection or indifference and making an establishment or social position or a good provider or a good cook take the place of romance, as la so often done in other countries. Certainly it will surprise the millions of wives whose suns rise and let in their husbands to be told that they do not love them. They haverrt a thought that doesn't center around their Johns. John's plcasurc- John's comfort, John's happiness and wellbeing motivate the world for 0h the notice board of a way- llde chapel it was announced: "On Saturday at 8 p. m. the annual mince-pie supper will be held: The subject of the sermon on Sunday morning will be ‘A Night of Hor- rorf" ,Q¢*§ IVES TE$TEll .1 AND 1 GLASSES FITTED i 5- r sires." ' it: nieiimobd Street dou“ Optometrist: r77‘! (Cont nucd) CHAPTER X" At noon of the second day of his “m” whoTb b journey Jcems came to the village In!" Ind enterlnl"‘he”';ro;2l';l; ‘of Kanestlo, whose chief Was Ma- the Charlottetown Driving Park bi ‘mm- °i “m” 5"’- He h" "m" lhe Provincial Exhibition Afloglg- 10d the seventy miles in thirty hours m‘: fiuflzilzzrfallglzzbio and was determined to return as t: of the Association will be fully 2:11: ' gzugfnwzzafillxfgtg°fz i l investigated and the party or parties prosecuted to the full extent alone at a time when the senltment ol the Indians was turning against! TVA Rzvnvc of the law. SI d b l manna“ or DmEcTons. them. Why he and not a. tribal run-i d368-7-1a-tf, ner had been sent to Yellow Bear; Puzzled him, and the fact that he bore a message of small importance. increased its uneasiness. l I-le had scarcely reached Kanes- tio, when his weapons, a mile pndl hatchet were taken" from mm and, he was brought in Matoree. individualwho was killed at Lakei 080m: the following year and who W» I buy in lPDclrarice though the French held him among the bravest ' a Professional Cards ' Stewart & Lowther I. o. srawsnr, x. o N. W. LOWTIIEB IABBISTEIIS. SOLICITORS. ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 IDAN .__.__.___.._.._____.___ MOLEQD cl BENTLEY LABINTLI’! fanned Jeems that he was a prls-li oner. lie said Tiaoga had defaulted in a payment of corn that - " ‘ terscly saplin- ed the agreement between the chiefs. ll Jeems riemptcd to es- "Pfi and was caught by his warriors he would be killed; if by any chancel he succeeded in letting bask to’ Prohibition Commission Chas. ii. Black. Chairman, Charlottetown. In. 3. McDonald. Went It. retort. s. flllllzllll imperial, alainilten. h Offll GI Itflfllfl‘ Infractions of II-OIIIIITION ACT to the above or to J. Tripp, I. O. ll. P. its ‘neon with his life. A dead line was drawn eiieireluig the tepee inl ID "eooo-NIGH 3 . OM € IAN BEAUTY PRODUCB,%///rw “use... . - \\\\\\\ Howveuuirmes... - p knowing how aw - i ;_*;,'§J,~,’;‘,,-,,, ,,, p- -- s; sunk-ii- war-taupe»- hailed by line dlnslnsi uni-Iii - i vdvewe-wsiihe- noetmiuakuiovwtohlw . ‘Tffiillififfiifl-‘lif; _ , ,_ ’ ' , i, aldrem with. a. certain anaount at. M," m? ////// ubiuuypum Aakhslieiiewtableil- r.':".:'.t""'""'*.':///// AMomingsmilc N0 BRIBERY \.__.. . LQDON-IAIIS s them. it was a sacrifice. dinitation of the real article. i cd up in Paris clothcs and riding has wrung out of her husband that she is spending. [helped earn with her own labor. {of his wife as he docs. csti: and good housekeepers and besides. He cxpccis her to keep young and maintain the family place in him. And, lastly, the reason the American man works so hard is not bc- cause he is goadcd to his office by his wife, but because “ mes-s is our It is the big game where the stakes are mil- lions and the sky is the limit that a man plays. the biggest kick out of, and he does it for fun more than for profit. great national pastime. And that is something no foreigner under-stands. The Plains Oi’ himself under a surveillance There isn't a service so menial they wouldn't glory in perform- ing it for their husbands. ‘There isn't a sagrilice that they haven't made a thousand times for their husbands so gladly that they didn't even know And if this isn't love, it is a milhty good synthetic As for the American man working himself to death to pay for his wife's finery,that is utter nonsense. There may be a few daughters of the Horse Leech crying more, more, more scattered around here and there, but tiie great majority of women are the family savings bank and penny-pinchers and are bending all of their energies toward “ ‘ ' ,, their husbands succeed and get a start in the world, And, nine times out of ten, when you aiee a middle-aged woman doll- Of course, the American man is the world's prize husband. man ls so generous, so broadminded and liberal in dealing with his womankind as he is, but for all of that no other man expects so much are fairly intelligent and not too hard on the eyes, and lf they are dom- cxpccu» his wife to be all oi these things and a, vamp and s. spellbinder how many babies she has or how much housework she has to do. pccts her to keep him entertained and amused. his evening clothes and go out and do the agreeable to people who bore And so if the American man gives a lot to his wife there is no denying he gets his moneys worth. Furthermore. that the American woman suits the American man as a wife is amply proved by the fact that American men seldom marry outside of their own country. Many American girl-s marry foreigners. ‘But the American man knows v/nat he wants in a wife and he sticks to [the domestic brand that ls made in the U. S. A. little to vote Conservative, an vote Liberal? Witness-Yes, my Lord. vote at the finish? Witness (indignontlw-I science i _._-@ For 77w Cook J Judge ldurins inquiry into a case at alleged bribery in an electfonn. - You say you received twenty-five also received twenty-five pounds w Judge-And for whom did you voted. my Lord, according to my son. d in a limousine it isn't blood money she n Ls the money ‘he CINNAMON NUT TOAST No other namon, and slim and goodlooking, no matter He ex- He expects her to make society without his having to put on plate. MARMALADE FRENCH ‘TOAST TWO @888. ‘d: teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1‘ cup milk, 6 slices bread, l-3 inch thick, orange marmalade. Beat the eggs, add salt, sugar and milk. Spread bread with orange marmalade. Put slices to- ttiher in pairs. Soak in egg and milk mixture until softened, and cook on a hot, buttered griddle until delicately browned. 'I‘iirn and brown on the other side. Serve at once while very hot. ..____________ Club Member (annoyed) — Who is it persists in cutting articles o of the Transcript? ‘ Second Ditto-One of those clip- wmaniacs, evidently. It is the thing lie gets DOROTHY DIX. Chenufsio, a figure which sped until’ it was wlnded.and then continued at a slower pace with a peristence, no beat of rain or blast or could halt. The traveler was Jeems. Wood Pigeon had repeated the message Toineite entrusted to her a few minutes’ preceding her flight with Kepsibah Adams, and no blackness was so thick that it hid from him the tortured faces of his wife and his blind uncle as they beckoned him to vengeance. Even ngeance seemed futile and inadéquate. Hope did not rise in his: breast. He had hoped when he knew ' his mother was dead, he had hoped‘ ashe sought for life among the ruina of 'I‘onteur manor, he had, that had not gone with her body BM Yet it was a part of her which _ he would find as he had left it when Wind he came to the end of the trail, un- filw ‘more had destroyed that. too. He reached Chenulsio. Th; place .81"m°d With pools of water. Sue- Three tablespoo butter, 3 table- spoons brown aunt‘. 1 teaspoon cin- 3 slices bread, 2 table- spoons walnut meats. Cream butter and add sugar and cinnamon. Out melts, and serve at once on hot What the ore Wearing p ' illmtrated DrQaBIIfLQOI FiirnlabcdWlt-h '_ lotfilllfloolllfllf - aplagnyrgliloweitrheooftorepe ailkgirdlstonedwifliflicwtnt. ltficdnaethatwouldlrloelfl! aummerafternouuudodelichtful dutyforinfoimalcveningwear. Itbluetthedreaaiouneedfor week-cudvacetlonl. - Bheerchilfon voila are also charmiugandaatisfactory. They tubbecutifiilly.» crepasilkandtripleabceracan no beuscd for thiaolcol! llflldfll‘ JIIOQGL. Style No. e41 ia declined for since i4, 1e, 18.10 years. M. 8! Ind 4° inches bust. Bile is requires 4 yards of 39-inch material with iit yard-a of its-inch, contrasting. " Beeuretolillinthcliacoltho pattern‘ ' Prlepofll-‘ittern lb cents in stamps 02.00111 (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin-carefully. .................-u-.u-------~---~ Nlfl n‘... -. _. aaaaccoacllwluloo-oaaacle Street Address nice. But there's g way was empty and his‘ eapons we" gone, evidence that he was away on a journey. Ilior a few moments after this discovery, Jeems stood in the shadow ofyen oak looking at Tie- 0gl'l dwelling plaice. The urge to destroy was not strong in him. The gentle whispering anion; the trees and the drip of water from their foliage coin ’ in amelody of pens which stfllllled to turn him from the thought of death. It night have won if a tallfigure had not come out of the tepee he was watching. Jeems knew it was Tia- oga. The chieftain advanced toward him as if an invisible fate were leading him in his execution. Prim-i he paused. ‘me moon was bright. It lit up his features thirty yards away leg strict than that accorded to a , prisoner whose fate was to be bob‘ "uncle was alive. But now it was im-' ture or death. lpafblg 1°;- mm to “m; u“; “y. i The fourth afternoon he per- lng grace within his mental reach. -celved an excited gathering of woe,” he want on, h, w" nqwly m. men and children some d‘ ‘ possessed ol the power of hate, from him but paid no attention to thpugh every sinew in his body was it. Depressed by fears whcih hldbent with implacable resolution 1n become unbearable, he was deter-his mission of death. He would kill mined to gain his freedom belfifelTlng“, 1-19 would u" ahlnm. another dawn. Increasng cloudi- There would be only justice and no new during the afternoon and I-‘gratifioation of the flesh or the promise or storm with the begin-ulna spirit in his set. s greater and more of evening added to his hopes fommwmppulng my,‘ m“ the 1m. success. Thunder and rain come pupa wfflch h“ "n; mm 1mm with darkness, and he feigned sleep Mammals‘ village began’ to choke _never quite given up hope that hlsf‘ vicious dogs lppeared -——-—-—-—_ to identify 'I'his'ri.se to his feet, _ , as it was drawn back an lghtcrs cl the Bee. Nations, in-l entered, I at an early hour. It was almost mid- hisht when he sat up and llltflllfldzing. 1t was his aloneiieae. The vast. to the downpour. He was about f/Oiness of the world. The sudden going certain that n0 ol the one who had rema'ned to Beams would be lying in the de-‘mak, it habitable for him. Without luge, when he heard the rustle of the skin flap to the tepcé "gums; m ‘nqqn why l; 511mm d some one continue to givl him the warmth In a moment a small voice whis- pered his name. Cold hands found VII dueiihim as he held out his arms. He If]! Jfl-‘uu WM w cover part of tho felt a child's drenched form. Then came choking words half ‘smothered in the heat of the storm: him with a force that was sicken- hi", but the people were asleep. He found his cabin with the dom- slopes as it would“ have been if anthem We" "IND inside. He could feel her presence when he entered. But she was not there. He made a light cautiously and screened it co that m: outside Oollld not m. The oi life. ‘roinstui was dead. It was a lbw. the walls. the room were il- fatc predeetined from the beginnlngHWIVflN lllflily- He began to put something he had always feared l"! "Winn thinsa. to Ill-her them vagueiy. Nothing counted now; to N" Ind fiMN. making {bundle k'il ‘riaoga and Shindaa would notlof his treasures on the table-hei- cans, a rift in the lloplesans|g' things. whet-rue had pi-sfpai-ed the which laynheld oflhlm. bundle he armed irmseii with a ‘Iiclnette there was no reason for its held. as he gaaedinto a myatcr of die-i tel-ice which his eyes could not pene-' trate. What had brought him, what‘ was he thinking, what the night- heid for him, Jecms did not ask himself. l-l, strung his bowans fit- ted an snow. Then he called Tia- ogrs name in a low voice tn let slender shaft sped through the moonlight with tbs winged sound of a. humming bird. He heard the ar- row strike. Tiaogsdid not cry out. His hands clutched at his breaches a motionless blot. Jeems went downthe rivei-[Ibr many daye he laid along its‘ shores seeking Toinctte’; body. He saw . senecca pass and repeal, but as he traveled almost aitirely in the water he was successful in evadinrtliian. (To Be Continued) csvauniaii sciioon oboanid _0n Thursday, Juno llltlhtbe es» amination of Cavendish School we! . igardfor their teacher. It was char- him know that retribution had m“, “'61,”, .\ come. The bow twang-ed and a n T" l’? feel tbatwe cannot letthie oppor- tunity pean- without-explain: in he n“ h m’ "rm ma l” mmlvsome wlrourrappreeiatloo. “I am Wood Pigeon. from chenufeio three days ago. I have come to tell you Silver Heels rie dead." ‘ ilhfliuflla than he would answer w’ Lightning flashes which accom. pcnied the storm that night reveal- ed a. solitary I rm away would have eirhausted him at other time. As the hours passed, an in his consciousness. lie was going f‘ gure hunvlnrwu the cabin in which Toinette and eunuch lied lined. bah hm. A i lie-advanced with a speed whl¢h'@uQ ind 'k hatchet and hi; bow, any-mm extinguished the light and _ wmt out. clofling the door behind explanation ldrhiehaste gathered, him. ., ' home. That in all of its signifcanca was to kill him first. Be sought shlndas, for his plan The interest which the rate-pay- ere took was mealtime by tbs large attendance. practically ovary helm in‘ the diltrict being represented. ‘rho classes were examined lathe W"!!! llllllwll b! "Nit. umber. ‘fhcuhewouldklllmolga. fi1fihfij-fii _ llilAcklandalaishdbyllh-A.‘ eaaiieuitwa.r._s.iikaa, city ’ , State . stale bread in one-fourth-lnch slic- ‘ In other countries men seem to be satisfied with their wives if they a: ‘°"_‘°"° crusts’ and cut m ‘ ' ....."..SL"°Z'..°..TZ"".°Z;....ZZ“‘ If." MANICURIST- Y it’. lm-el to ' 800d mothers, but the American man with cmhamon mixture ma spine ' u! ' kle with fairly chopped nut d” lumsework and your lids meats. Put in oven until sugar ar o e . , e pup ile- vealed by "their accurate answers answere how‘ thoroughly they had been taught and how diligently they had studied. ' Previous to the program Public School Gertincatea fire presented tcthe following pupils: Pauline Webb, ‘Jean ciuk, Herbert Wyaud. mm miron. v A The woerua which waacliiefly of Junior Rad ems, nature wal appreciated by all Qfter the pro- gram ice-cream and cake were serv- ed to, and liea-rtilyenioyed by all preeentflrhs voice of the people was than heard in congratulatory re- marks delivered by numerous rate- payers and re-echoed by the pupils luau cddrelfwhich was read by Mabel Simpson. and little Helen Green prelcnted Mill Ackllhd with rgift symbolic of tho pupils re- aoteristioof-bliaaAckland that her rapiywn briehyseiteonveyee ain- crewordl-ctthanka. 1n cloeine “God love-the ling" awiflilneuaboutltchoiuformolb ssaiubuprmtiaahiaoumasa today: model iuwbiu with ' customer. nsufi give l - ' one expensive advice You love ‘to ‘ wdjph him‘ EAT! ~11 mum yon a reel tlir to ace your youngster dip lustily into the cereal bowl. You know he's doing hi, part toward building growth and-health. So give him a bowl of Kellogg's Rice Krispics and milk. Breakfast, lunch 01' aupper—-wateh him eat! Rice K ' ,' fascinate children. Delicious, toasted rice bub- blee that actually crackle in milk or cream. ' Nourishing Rice Krispies are ao easy to digest, they i don't overtax. So much beb- tcr than many heavy dishes -—particularly at supper, Always oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, On. tario. Quality guaranteed, wl flCamhai-l8enbonllh- en a grea e n ° work, helping us il}llery will’ W strive to meet the words of that old quotation now so often brought be- fore our attention: "Konwledze il ‘ma’? We are pleased to hear you l" planning on staying with us fli- other year, and hope that duilnl that time, we will have many haw! times together. We ‘ask you in accept this tow! in remembrance of your first Y“: in Cavendish. (Bgd) repiia of Cavendish seiml Suspects. Sought . For; Eire ' simmoirm, N. 5.. July 15 — (By The Canadian Pram-POW‘ today sought two men euspwied °l having set fire to four larlc 19"“ of lumber deatWYod. at Bait spi-inb lllt llllht. I110 Ohio! A. M. POW" said two inen had been Mn Y" uuderlour careful guidsnoqwe I?" W" 1"" nlng away from the weed ill-Bi hm" the blue was discovered. First Bf- rinia; had found oil on the WM Two plies were owned by J. A- m“ of Amherst, who carried insuranct- George Strong of Silt 891'!!!" Wu’ 0d the other two. which were n“ inland. ~ ninth, ‘at-of Plilille Works and liighwayi. ‘l ‘Province. of“ m... Edward island ' Tenders {lerhlilfefirlng lilulne at - _\ nutmeg i ;lloe|iital lldlillafilllblllilwllllellildtllllcitlilaeflleounill noon w‘ y‘ ' I ,IQlcy.Ifly'llthfi\illypIhli~|dIoHwiIllngtocontraotfvrW~ aiaririaaeeik-ruaainlenaweunnaatai. flQ|ah~plllqlIepaetiQlelhbl|eflelh> aeeaeetillllllrlflilll“ unis-imam. auaaiaruraemworkraaa lilrbvl!‘ ~lpeelloetioliaiaaybr"°'