6'1 swan-fa" o H‘: llqra - i v “kw-Q. - :‘-(I-.. _ .. ._, l >1 d n. | d :| 1 vo-quu m-Wsuyl-f.’ "'_'*v— ‘Wbfisr-Q- - --__.. . A: 21337522122353) PAGE EIGHT Drink EFORE buying your next package of coEee know this-Is there air inside that tin or pack- age, or can any get in? If so-coffee deteriorates, lnees flavour. If not -—cofl'ee keeps its full flavour indefinitely. Every Bil: oi: Oxygen ls Banished by the Vite-Fresh Process This process, exclusive to Maxwell House Coffee, positively removesand excludes all traces of oxygen from the scaled tin. - In Maxwell House you get no? only e quality which has made this old Southern lllendworld-felnoqbut this quality is completely protected. No coilee can 1w smoother, richer, more satisfying. Get s tin from your grocer today. See that the words “Yiia-Frcsh“ are marked on the sealed and lurked tin. “GOOD TO THE LAST DROP‘ ~__.._._ __ .__._ __. 11% ' J-~s--_ Woman’s Realm ,-:- zSocial and Persona ; ‘ I002’ Fu LL-FLAVUIJRED COFFEE It's the Air Inside the Tin or Package That Ruins Cofiee Flavour loose orbegeoflec losee 65% of‘ its flavour in 9 dnye after roasting, (bloc In old-fashioned oreerdbonrdeertorre loses 45% of its flavour In 9 days after roosting. MAXWELL Ho use coFFss ROASTED AND PACKED IN CANADA HHILJ! What the Fashionables are Wearing ' Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With ' "v Every Pattern By Plnnabelle Worthington if _ , I GOOD STYLE, LOVELK AND SMART 1‘ I 31,; 0: As Paint ~ _ You'll have guessed the original 1 _ g was in a rather daring print in ' black and white crepe silk. The trims were plain white. Aren't the puffed sleeves attrac- tive? The skirt is cut with circular shaped side sections. This creates a panel effect at the front and the back. to give the figure youthful height. Besides black, a navy and white print or plain beige crepe silk would be very chic. Younger girls might like it in coral or a vivid red crepe silk. Style No. 3M is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and A 42 inches bust“ size 36 requires 3 3-4 yards 89 in. with 3-4 yard 35 in. contrast- ing. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern 15 cents. 1110.394. Size......~........-.—..... -........-n"--.n-}~.............. ",1. .... “m, . _ l‘: . .................................... Cit! State Your certainty oi perfect baking results is worth many time: the cost oi Quaker Flour NE baking failure, which you ere liable to have at any time with e second grade flour, may cost you many times the small extra Price you pay for Quaker Flotir. If Quaker Flour does not give you perfect satisfaction, we’ authorize your dealer to hand you beck the money you have paid for it. That is our sweeping guarantee against baking failure. Won't you try Quaker 111cm? Then you will see from yourperfect results and the better quality ‘of 9°" bikini. i118! Quaker is the beat flour of all and that it more 111111 "PW! in small ems cost over ordinary flour. Q .... fies; DID For The Cook EGG AND POTATO SALAD To e medium sized bowl of slic- ed cooked potatoes add three .sllc- ed hard cooked eggs, a tablespoon of finely minced raw onion and two tablespoons of diced bacon which has been fried out to l. gol- den brown. Add also (if you like the flavor», a. little finely chopped green pepper. Make a cooked may- onnaise and while it is still hot, pour over the salad and mix well, using sufficient dressing to mois- ten the ingredients well. Allow the salad to stand for half an hour before serving. Garnish with slic- ed egg and lettuce leaves.‘ lVlany persons like the flavor of cucumbers in potato salad. They blend very nicely with the recipe just given, if the diced bacon is omitted. In this case if. will be ne- cessary to add a generous. lump of butter to the cooked dressing in order to give the desired mellow- ness. Have the cucumbers peeled, diced and crisped in ice water, and do not add them until just before you are ready to serve the salad. As an alternative for the diced bacon or cucumbers, you may also like a few shredded herring, if you are fond o! their tangy taste. GOWAN BRAE WOMEN'S IN- ’ SHTIJTE A The regular monthly meeting for April was held st the home of Mrs. William Hewlett, with eleven mem- bers snd one visitor present. The meeting opened with a solo, “Carry Me Back to Old Virginnis," sung by the hostess and Miss Mary Mul- ally. The roll cell was cFilsd and ans- wered by writing your nams with your left hand blindfold. The min- utes of last meeting were read. A box was packed for charitable pur- poses. It was decided to get two new brooms for the school. The programme consisted of organ and Victrols. selections. The Sick Com- mittee. Mrl- Han-v Mallard. Mrs. nui- Mclnnls. mu m1 m: ‘next meeting, “Your favorite book and it's Author." A dainty lunch was‘ served by the b ‘ , assisted by Mm Iiem’? Mallard. The meeting closed with singing "Good Night Indies." Britain's 81111011 trade in whisky ..-_.._.._.._.. . , ness or affection They are married to me ‘Tl-HLQQARLOTTETOWN cusnoisiy p §p~ Tum Arc Wives .- Husbands Entitled D h D Should to Soil: y u SUPP]? Talk? - Romanov your Wife a Little of the Affection You Feel for Her ‘l-lt would be Peace in Your Home, Happiness in Your Heart, and Money in~ Your Pocket if You Did, for i_t is Love that Mflkefl the World Go Round for Women. _____.___. letters from women complaining that their mu- thsir husbands do not show them any tender- n who have all of tbe cardinal virtues of matrimony. but they P055080 0°09 0! n" graces. They are sober, honest, faithful, but they are not lovers. They m. 08 i110 P1111100 8000- I000 1110- vlders so far as food and clothes go, but they provide nothing for their wives‘ soull- l some women can get along comfortably 011011831 on their plain roast-beef-and-potsto diet. Others starve on it. »'l'hcre are women who hunger and thirst for mancs and sentiment and if their husbands fail to give it to them llfs is oinders, ashes and dust to them, no matter how many strings of pearls or Paris frocks or limousines it contains. Huband: Why Not Show I get innumerable i-isges are failures because The fact that men usually drop their love-making at the sltsr while women go on feeling like brides and wanting to be treated like bride: until they are 90 is at the bottom of half of the domestic discord. It is the wives, asking their usbands for bread and being given stones who fill the air with their lamentations. And it is the husbands who can't understand why their wives are not satisfied with the nice, shiny, three- karat rocks they bestow upon them who rend the atmosphere with their curses at women's unressonableness. The American man is the best husband ln the world, but he is a poor performer in sentimental roles. Even in his courting days he makes love by the hardest, and he hurries up the engagement and makes it brief and snappy so as to be dons with it. He always feels a fool when be is quoting poetry and uttering impassioned speeches, and after marriage he says it with beef staeks and charge accounts and slaving in an oilico so the wife can gad of! to Europe in the summer and to Palm Beach in the winter. out the necessity of his telling her how he feels about her and giving her compliments, why, he thinks there is something wrong in her upper story and she should see an alienlst about it. Perhaps he is right, and there is something wrong with women's mentality that requires them to be constantly assured of their husbands‘ affection for them, and that nukes them value a few soft words more than e lot of hard work, but there it is. That is the way Nature made them. And they can't help it, poor things. Of course, there is something both grotesque end pathetic in a fat, middle-aged woman with s. house full of children craving romance and eating out her heart in disappointment because her prosaic husband, with his mind concentrated on making a living for the family, doesn't kiss her as the movie hero does the beautous heroine in the fadedut in "Hearts Aflsme!’ or some other torch drama Yet there are thousands upon thousands of otherwise sensible women, with good husbands and good homes and all the materiel for happiness in their hands, who-throw them all away because of this morbid craving for romance. They are blind to all the good qualities of their husbands - because they are not Romeos and badger the unfortunate creatures to death demandin the impossible of them. Also, only too often these romantics! ladies wreck their lives by leaving perfectly good homes and husbands to go in search of the senti- mental adventures that they feel wait for them‘ down the road some- where. But, alas, there are few Fairy Princes who feel called upon to assuageths heart-hunger of grass widows with broods of young ones, and after marriage they likewise are more prone to knock their wives‘ cooking than praise their eyes. What to do about such a amuse 2 One might tell the women who pines for a show of affection from her husband that all marriage is a series of compromises and if she is married to a man who works his fingers to the bone to make her comfortable she might wel loverlook his not holding her hand in the moonlight, much as she would enjoy that experience. One might tell her, too, that after 40 every woman has to take her romance vicariously, and that is the reason why every cinema is crowd- ed with middle-aged women and why novels with rod-hot love them are best sellers. We may still have as much of a yen for romance es we did at l8, but if we do it is lust too bad, for it has passed us by and it will never come back our way any more. All the white lilies on which we feed our souls we must buy for ourselves. And the wise thing is just to accept the situation and to quit basting yourself up against a stone wall that you can never break down. And one might say to men, that women 0t live on bread alone, so why not givs them s. little of the angel's food they crave l‘ Why not show your wives s. little of the affection you feel for them l’ Why not pay them a few of the ‘ ntlons that mean so much to them l’ Why not give them an occasional kiss that is warm with passion instead of fluv- ored with ham and eggs i‘ .. It would be peace in_ your home, happiness in your hssrt and money in your pockctlf you did. For it is love that makes tbs world go round for women. . DOROTHY DIX. Good News snm“ For. Housewives on, l. scented fragrance, ‘ _+_, South wind abreathing, Only e faint, sweet whisper | FAMOUS RED BOB! TIAS Il- DUClD IN PRICE __—- That summer's nearing. 0111! e meadow brooklet Eagerly flowing, Only e woodland blossom Daintily growing. only sweet melodies Robins slinging. Ini times like the present, every 000110111? ls gladly welcomed. The reduction in Red Rose Ten prices means {considerable saving. The snnouncsmentin this paper will he "fll-Mslvsfl- unwmiv m view of the high quality maintained by the mm“ 0° "my 50.000000 a year. mg p“, T“ mp1’ Perched high in lofty treetops“ On branches ollnllnl’. ‘ _ drink Avoid winter iiis+' g g ‘ova LT] N ' romc soon swarms And if that isn't proof of love that ought to satisfy any woman witb- ‘ l -:- Fashions -. Famous stage Beauty declares no woman need look her age REALLY am 39 years ldl” says Billie Burke. “And I 6013i: sec why any woman should look her age. “We on the stage, of course, must keep our youthful freshness. Youth wins and holds the public as nothing else can. _“So one must be wise enough to keep this charm right through the years, Tq lulsnlilsbvleoolmunecbmhalmdssthflonmmfliflfiioflabecesgb. LU X Toilet Soap .i_liOi anti-en.- __‘ 13. 2 i” ' ‘Lifflrdture a’, _.____i_____i________ __ ___._l BILLIE BURKE dothisitisimportantaboveeverythlq elsetoguardcomplexionbeeuty——keep "mliflflllulmufiuslyfreshandsmoodx. “For years I have used Lux Toilet Soepregulsrly. Itleaves inslvdwsodsvfi-f’ myflw“? At3QBllli6BlIfkEllBSjll8t8lQtl¢dlp forasencsofmotionpicturesinflolly- wood! Shewillfindtheacu-cssestberc, like the stage stars, are devoted in Luz Toilet 50811- Actually 605 of the 613 im- portant ones use this fragrant white soap togusrdoomplenon beallty-regulgg-(y! Iavsrtethenllniddii I _ .. ._I_%H_____ _ AMorningSmile ___ __, Former President Galvin 0001. ldso said at a recent wedding breakfast in New York. R1011 Wung men. often nun-y D001‘ Blrls. -but rich girls seldom m"?! P001‘ $011118 men. When they do-wcll, it's often embarrassing, like the story: “A rich bride slid to her poor 701ml husband one night: “Does the fact that I'm ma, 00111118. meks any difference to you?" "o! 0001'". ll 400i. love" the Young fellow answered. , , "She lifted her heed from his shoulder with e jerk. She stared at him. "How so?" she eeid. "Well. vw m. It's such e eon- 1011" he explained. “to know that iflshoulddloyouwculdbgpgg. vidsd for." ' "500 but hsr heed down on hi; shoulder 53am, __e~_. Dcrsd tenderly. "Thou." he said, "1 mm p. provided for." Bfllhi. balmy dAYI of sunshine, Boft wind eeighing, _ Tell of sweet sprints awarding And winter's dying. Iran the word rumour-s place on the southern Railway, England-lo words can be made sac-so. nsnsy Gallant. ' without altering the position of the l letters: No, Nor, Or. Orb, Orbit, It, “I _ 0| m can» "- "And u 1 should am" m nau- l lbespltothelmdlslstcrJhereu-q '0ns m "every three per-sons in more volunteers than ever for the Britain have false teeth before they srbmlrllll service. are twenty-sight. » nmmucwuxwrueutsduuao ‘lhe-Weddlnglmchnunlpbp ‘Britisbmdiutrlesrhbbvwurd-grinplsyed bcokwsrdsresolvaslb 0°00 1110101101100 ' self into Oboplzrs lumen! Much, All Fashionable ' (Eoloun cl: Popular Prices For Sale lily snows: anus. umrrn, Charlottetown a i l. ..,, ~ ...;. - .1‘. . )».'-$- _ t "'1." v.0 "aligns = "a. .~¢_.-a»;__;-V ,