l hi‘! n ‘it: 5"“ idoing '1 " i‘.\cc ‘way, i .21‘; w, Ill“! ztion ii: inli’ fer toi-J < matlfrom I I I . I i i I i i I “LOCK YOUR nonoou BIRTHDAYSPI SAYS ' HUGH iTREVOR Famous Screen Star Q‘ youth," Trevor says. HUGH TREVOR year. all. learning their complexion secret!” “To keep youthful charm, guard com plexion beauty. A skin zrgiow with the fascin- ireshncss oi youth is always allur- ating ing," the lovely act resses tell you. "Us Lux Toilet Soap reg ularly, as we do." IRENE DUNN R.K.O. Star Broadway-in Europe, they remain 701ml. charming and magnetic, with Lux Toilet Soup. 686 of the I94 actresses in Hollywood alone are levoted to it._ That is why Lux Toilet Soap is the ' ‘ "_\ ofiioisl soap in the dressing rooms of all the great: film studios! Your akin will respond to it, tool The caress of dollar-a-cake French soap for Esrstts TAYLOR , Just 10c. a cakel, Alluring Stir I For The Cook ICEBOX ROLLS sponge, 1 cake yeast. 1 eupful scalded milk. ‘,3 cupful lukewarm water. 1 cupful flour. V. cupiul sugar. Dissolve the yeast in lukewarm water. Cool the milk to lukewarm and add dissolved yeast and sugar. Stir in flour and allow to stand in refrigerator over night. In the morning add the following ingred- lents: 2 cupiuls milk, scalded and cooled i0 lukewarm. 1 cupful melted fat. 6 cupfuls flour. 2 teaspoonfuls salt. This make-s a soft dough and can be kept inthe refrigerator several days and used as needed. Drop a heaping tablespoonful in each well- greased muffin tin. and allow to rise about three hours, or until tripled in bulk. Bake in a hot oven (400 to 425 degrees) twelve to fifteen a‘o?HEADACHE. INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION AUCTION SALE AT MURRAY HARBOR On Thursday, June 23, 1932, at Z P. M., u beautiful dwelling in extra. good condition, 1%, acres of land. This i.a a very valuable property for n Summer Hotel, situated on the bunk oi the South River at Murray Harbor. It is one of the most suit- lble tourist resorts on Prince Ed- ward Island. Good bathing and fishing. A real proposition for an enterprising party. Right in the village oi Murray Harbor. The terms at slle. Will be sold privately llp to day oi sale. Apply to A. R. Mclnnis, Trustee in Bankruptcy. J. A. MMDONALD, Auctioneer. B6l2-8-1l-l8-22-3l. lENilERS Tenders will be received by the undersigned until noon 27th, for the completion of a wing to the Sum- mcrslde High School, Bummcrslde, P. E. I. A certified cheque for 5% bi the amount must be enclosed with bid. Plans and specifications. can be seen at the office of the Secretary of the School BMW. Bummerside, and the office of J.‘ ill. Hunter, architect, Charlotte- town. lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Recretery School Board, Summer- ‘uos. Nlii-l-iill-I wk. "The woman who wants to win and hold adoration a h o u l d k e e p Hugh "Stage and screen s ta r s hold the .- r1- mirafion they have won year alter Birthdays don't matter at And nowadays other women are In Iiollyyivool - on a '4. ' The Thieving Martyr- Complex Mother Dorothy Dix Hated Children Better off Than Offspring of Life. Stealing Women Who Use Decep- tive Cunning to Thwart Natural Lives of Sons and Daughters. Such Women to Blame for Present-Day Weaklings Among my correspondents is a poor little bewildered 16-year-old Bill. who is having s. lot of trouble with her mother and doesn't know what to do about it. ‘I have set my heart on graduating this term," she writes, "but I am afraid I won't be able to do so because my mother interferes so much with my studies. She wants me to give all of my time when I am out of school to her and when she sees me with a book in my hand she begins to cry and say that I think more of my old Latin and mathematics than I do of her and. that if I loved her I would want to talk to her instead of study- v ing. . _ ' - “If I shut my door she accuses me of trying to ' separate myself from her and she goes around for ‘ days and days looking as lf her heart would break and if l don't let. her tuck me in bed as if I were a baby she sobs and _ says that she had better die now that her own child doesn't care any- g thing more for her. ’ - "Now I do love my mother dearly and try in every WM] I can to please her but I can't just sit in her lap the balance of my life can I? And that is Just about what she wants me to do. "And mother is always telling me how much I owe her and how grateful I should be for all she has done for me and how she took care of me when I was a baby and nursed me when I was sick and how many sacrifices she has made for me and how 1 never can repay her for all she has sacrificed, but, lands saks, Miss Dix, l didn't ask to be born, and after she brought me into the world it looks to me as if she owed me something. “Now I have told my mother a million times how grateful I am in her and how much I appreciate her and love her but that doesn't Jatisfy her. She still weeps and claims that I don't care whether she is alive or dead and I don't know how I can convince her of my aflection and make her happy. What must I do?" Keep on telling her what she wants to hear. That is the only way you can have any peace with her. Ml of her tears and reproaches and martyr poses are just so many cowardly weapons with which she is try- , ing to force protestations of devotion from you. But as soon as you are ‘ grown and able to stand on your feet flee from her as you would from a I deadly enemy, for she is determined to rob you of verything in life that i is worth having. A 800d mviher 15 the greatest blessing that any child can have. A possessive mother ls the greatest misfortune that can befall it, For the possessive mother does not scrupie to enslave their ambitions and distort their lives and to break their hearts and to wreck their happi- ncss. This sounds like a hard indictment of motherhood and, thank God a it is not true of most mothers. But every one of us can point you to a I‘ dozen gentle, sweet-faced, saintly looking mothers who have committed‘ these crimes against their children an who, ironically enough, consider: themselves good mothers. f We know mothers who, because they want to keep their children de- pendent on them and always looking up to mother, try to force a per- petual babyhood upon their offspring. They do all in their power to keep their children dependent on them and always looking up to mother, try to force a perpetual babyhood upon their offspring. They do all in their power to keep their children from growing up and becoming self-| master's slowness by running ahead. .- -i-—-—-- igigr rfint meLand women. fiey never let them use their own judgmen . rrfa CHARLOTTETOWN ousnnma and Personal utldiOS I i Attend 111e- COOKING SCHOOL Iune 27, 2.8, 29, 30 Holman’! 8rd floor You'll be sorry if you . Inlsu it! All information in Friday's Guardian. ' AMorningSmile "Mrs. 87mm bad to take bar daughtcr abroad for her nerves. she inherited nervousness from her father." "Yes, I remember Symsa was nervous even‘ as a kid but his mother didn't take him abroad, she took him across her knee." They never permit them to stand alone. They never let them have any freedom of thought or action. They want them to go through the world hanging on to mother's hand. All about us we see the results. Middle-aged men and women who have no decision of character, who are weaklinga who have to cling t0 some stronger person for support. Husbands and wives who are always running back home to mother to tell her their troubles and ask her ad- vice. Why, not long ago a. woman of '10 told mo upon the death of her aged mother that she had never even bought a pocket handkerchief for herself or made a single move on her own initiative. Mother had always done everything for her. We know plenty of other mothers who have tied their children so firmly to their apron strings that they could not break sway to go where fortune awated them. John had a. fine offer to go into business in a wept and clung to him until he gave it up and settled down in a life of drudgery on the farm or in a little town where there was no opportunity for advancement. ' distant city, but mother couldn't bear to be parted from him and She . * F¢'s "i<>11s;', Sally had s. God-given talent that would have brought her fame and wealth, but to have developed it, she would have had to l vs home and mother worked upon ‘ner sympathies and sense of duty by moaning out that she was old and wouldn't live ions and how lonely and forlorn she would be without her, until Sally sacrificed her ambitions and the career she might have had and became a. slave to mother, who lived 0n for the next thirty or forty years, until it is too late for her to do anything. And look at the hosts of mothers who wring promises from their children never to marry as long as they live! look at the desiccated old maids and old bachelors we all know dancing attendance on selfish old women who tyrsnnize over them and rule them with a. rod of iron! Mother has had her own life. She has had love and romance and marriage and children who at least brought her enough PICBUUXU for her to want to keep them to herself, but she ruthlessly denies all of these to her sons and daughters and t- demns them to lonely and loveless lives for her own selfish gratification. ‘ And the possessive mother does all of this in the name of love. It would be a better and a kinder thing is she hated her children. , DOROTHY DIX. ‘D H [ESE No. 3'l9—Youthfully Smart. This style is designed in sizes 14, 16. 1B, zo yous, 36 and 3B inches bust measure. size l6 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material for redingots and 2% yards of 39-inch material for dress. No. 38'1—Outc Frock. This style is designed in sizes 3, 4 and 8 years Size 4 requires 1% yards of 36-inch material wlmi-lt yard of 85-inch contrasting. No. Biz-For Heuvler Build. This style is designed in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust meas- ure. Size 36 requires 8% Y“!!! 0i 39-inch material with av. yards o! binding. _ No. 593-For School irlear. This style is designed in sizes 6, 3, 10, 12 mun m ornwn~solo n" won“, ovu‘ The Plains ofiihraham (Continued) During the morning, Odd's uneasi- ness began to reflect itself in lJecms. Soon after noon, he left his ‘work and told his mother he was going in the direction of Luz-sun's place. Catherine walked with him through the young orchard and up the slope. Never had she seemed more beautiful to Jeems. His father W95 PlkhiFthis mother of his would always be a girl. From above the orchard. standing on a little plateau that overlooked the Bulain farm, Jcems stood for a few moments with h‘s arm about his mother. Then he kissed her, and Catherine watched him until he was lost to her sight in the Big forest. Jeerns did not have the desire to hunt, nor did Odd. Unexplainabie impulses were pulling at them bmh. Odds restlessness was unlike his masters. Whenever Jeems paused, the dog turned and sniffed the air of their trail, facing Pbfbldden val- ley in an attitude of suspicion and doubt. Jeems observed his compan- ions enigmatic actions. Odd was not giving the Indian signal. It was as Jeems did not hurry. I-Ie unslung his bow, which was the only weapon he had brought, and carried it ready in his hand. Yet if Odd had hinted of danger he would have paid no attention to the . warning. Danger was miles away on the other side of Dleskau and his men. It would come no nearer and ha would never have o. chance to meet it. In ‘roinettefis eyes he would always re- main a. renegade and a Coward. Night thickened. The stars came out. Deepening shadows lay about them as they climbed the tallest of the hills, from which they could look over the ridges and woods be- they called to Henrlwho was m his tween them and Forbidden valley. turnip field, and waved at hlnLflBecause from this hill it, was p05- sible to see over the Big forest which sheltered their farm from the north winds, Jecms and his father called it Home mountain. Odd whined as he climbed it to— night. Jle went ahead of Jeems, and when he gained the crest his whin- ning changed to a. howl, so low that one would scarcely have heard it at the foot of the hill. Jeema came to him and stopped. For a. space, there was no beat- ing of o. heart in his breast-noth- ing but a stillness that was like death, a horror that could come only at the sight and the feeling of death. Rising from the far side of the forest into which B89611)“ hid gona that morning was a distant gfow oi fire. Nearer, over the rim 01 Forbidden valley, the sky was a red ~lllum'nation of flame. And this il- lumination was not of a burninfl forest. It was not a. scorch 0f burning stumps. It was not a con- flagatlon of dry swamp BT85?» W‘ fleeting itself agalnst a. moonless heaven. It was a tower of blazing light, mushrooming as it rose, flat- tening itself in a s‘nl.ster scarlet radiance ur/ier the clouds, dripping at its edges into cofors of silver and gold and blood. His home was bumlngl with the cry thatcame from hi! lips, there leapt madly into his m‘nd the words that Hepsibah had spoken to him a last time that morning: "If ever I'm off there and you see a. fire lighting up the sky by night, or smoke darkening it by day, hurry to the sclgneurle with your father and mbther as fast as you can go, for it will mean my hnhd has set the heavens talking to you and that the peril o‘ death near." . CHAPTER. V For a space Jcems could not sky. His home was in flames. This‘ alone would not have deadeued hlmi with honor. His farther was there to! ours for his mother, a. new home could be built, the world did not end because a house burned. Bu‘ there were two fires-and the othe. farther on, reflecting itself dim]; and yet more scmberly, was the on: tha/t terrified him. It was Hepai- bah‘s fire talking to him through the night! _ Then the choking thing in him‘ gave way and as the power to act retumed, he saw Odd facing the lighted heavens-and in every muscle and line of the dog‘; rigid frame the Indian s‘gn was clearly‘ written. He set off at a run down hill, and as he ran bushes whipped at his face and shadows gathered under his feet and long arm; of gloom reached out from among the trees to hold him back. Ha could not come up with Odd. Like two shadows in a playful night, one closely pursuing the other they ran until Jeems’ breath began to break frcnn his lips in gasps, and at the and of a mile he fallbackto lwalk. Odd lessened his pace to his mas- ter's. They climbed s. lower hill, and once more Jesms could see the glow oi fire. In the upper vault of if something without form or aub- move as he gamed at the crimsonilths sky is was fading to a ghostly stance, s thing bewildering and un- intelligible, lay behind them. They came t0 Lussanb nine miles from their home. Since Lussazfs departure, the place had been ab- andoned. and in those five years the wilderness had largely reclaim- ed what man had taken from it. Joems stood where hahad fought Paul Tache, and ghostly whispers crept aboiit him in the stillness. Then came a feeling. of dread, ul- rmnt fear. He turned back to the ‘house and to the open, where long ago he had stood with Tolnette and all her loveliness so near lo him. The sun had set and dusk was gather-inc over the land before he drew h'mself away from the ghosts which haunted Lussan‘; place. Night wuld Bdd nothing more to his l gloom. Odd whlned F _ ently u: his eagerness to reach home. Borne- l-lmes be showed impatience at his .-- .-~..u¢.~.yq-9y,-,-“ . , ,5; smoke -- Buckingham In: received anon voluntary, prlise from people, in every wall: of life than any other cigarette. r and 14. years. Size 8 requires 2% Teething] “Baby's Own Tablets take away that teething fever," writes Mrs. Alfred Buugay, North Sydney, N5. Effective also in relieving colds, fever, colic; upset stomach, constipation. Chil- dren like them. Absolutely SAFE y —See analyst's ' certificate in each 231 .- '= DI. Wllllflll‘ BABY'S OWN TABLETS palior against the sweeping arc of the Milky Way. They ran on, and the spirit of hope began to fight for a. place in Jeems’ brain. This ray of 1‘ght and force to the arguments with which he now made an effort to hold back the grimmer thing. His home was burning. But it. must be an accident. nothing that should fill him with fright. The other fire-off in Forbidden vailey-wll no more than a. coincidence, prob- ably o. oonflograticn started by- a careless Indian or a white man's pipe. He paused again to sci; his urgaui, and Odd stopped with him. His shaggy body was trembling with the pent-up emotions of sun-- pensa and passion which misused him when he caught in the air the deadly poison to his nostrils-the Indian smell. deems struggled not in believe the evidence which ha saw, and told himself that ii by any chance than were Indians at his homa they were friends help- ing in save what they could from the tragedy of the fire. Out of the silence Jeums heal-d a sound which rose above the pound- ing of his heart. 1g you so far away so in latlnct, that the stirring of the leaves had kept it from his. ears. (To Be Continued) Ethel (watching mother put down Illustrated Dresamakiug Furlililld Willi, Evaryfltioru - ‘ no swam. Worthlnclouy yards of 38-inch material. No, asp-Eur Motions. This SW16 is designed in sizes 38. 3B. 4°. '33-'44» 46 and 48 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 1% Yfldl 9! 35'1"“ ma“; gm] 3% ' yards of 39-inch printed material. - Be lure to flll in the also of the pattern. Price of Pattern 16 cents In stamps or coin (coin is preferred-i- Wrap coin carefully. Nuns ....-.....,~.- Street Address ....u..."nuns-nun"..... . c“, Stats iIAIIBTIOI SALE Household Furniture At 36 Brighton Road ou ' Tuesday, June 28th, at 10.30 A. Me all the household af- fects of 3.1!. Jenkins, in- cluding living-room. dining- room, kitchen and bedroom furniture. THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND SHEEP BBEEDERS’ ASSOCIA- TION il receiving WOOL at the Agricultural Ihll. Charlottetown. Do not pay freight on nil nhlp meats. Address, v WOOL GEADING STATION. OIIAIILOTTETOWN. 3 - I-mw. NOTICE j ANNUAL MEETING Th AnuualMeeting Ithslfll. I. Pzotcetaut .0 Ill! be wilihaveavub. Gomlloieprlntedrcportsforibli wilibodiltriblhdllldthoworkoi “'11: museum‘, can blio o" o to uudallarooordiolzniuviiod ut- ieudmho oloegy, are pupa aahodioaunbuuaatothoieoongn- htlmoatlisluuday IIAII. SN-G-IO-Imw-Oi. ms rsstcn ' Jlrsunror. uni-poison): "Ants always learn to be busy; Whey never atop to enjoy themselves." Mm: "on. r don't know. may ilmllowaoimutboyarptbno.‘ AND cmssas FITTED I. W. TAYLOR I. l. IAILOI ' II Iiclmlnd lines (Months cool and healthful Kellogfa PEP Bran Flakes are crisp. Cooling, Easy to digest. Chock. full of energy. All 1h, "nourishment of whole wheat. And all the flavor] Enough bran to he mildly laxative. ' You'll enjo the” l, fer bran flakgs. Sold I; all grocers. Made by Kellogg in London, Om, BETTER I BliilN FliiliES MATCH STICK COLLARB Here's a. new costume gadget rowed from the kitchen It's mstqi stick collar. to be wom tailored clothes. Beads like match sticks are used multistrand necklaces in all - ent colors. Bracelets that twist ‘around your virlst a u l of times match the necklace. I Felt Terribly Nervo Flggitd out . . . always meianchol blue. She should take Lydia E. ' ham‘: Vegetable Compound. in ~- l action builds up the system. Try . _< omiuxf t L- FEED the BALI with I B L A T C FORD’S CALF ME and watch them 81'" I 5 tuning! ma“: - Bring up the Y0 CHICKENS 0n Blatchfcrzls Egg Ma both sold by Garter & 00., l Seed and Feed Sto Professional Gar Stewart & Lowthfl .1. o. srswsnr. K- C- u. w. tow-ruse aamnsraas, souciroas. ll Glut George Stmi money ro com McLEOD. d‘ SENTL s. a. BENTLEY w. u. uuuruav. k. c. ammu- sud Attornerlm‘ nous! so 1.0m 0mm rao Richmond s Prohibition Commissi can. n. Black. 011mm"- Charlottetown- Ju. l. McDonald. West 5t P’ John Simpson. Ihmllw“ ,, _ , Bend- all information N!‘ Infraction of PBOIIIBITION t1 the above or to . Ins J. Frill?!» 3- Q M‘ Charlottetown. i saith-common u not-idea with luff control. i