'¢~¢ f:!il» \l ' 4... "A 7'. ;;.;>e.;;;r-. ._* Y,- l ` l i `| 1., ‘il . % .‘2,, 1. i Z l i l . 4 l l » 1 .>~....,.-f --»-<- '- fi ll ,. 1 _ . t f fl il i I. 1 ,f A 2; AM sending you ll ' A " ' ogg EIGHT _ ) _ gnc cnARLofl"rl-:frovvN ouannraw F . __ _ _ MAY gi, 1933 i ?f]Wornan’s Realm -:- Social and Personal :Fashions :_ Literature Out worms are almost certain to plague the garden maker this year. Various remedies for exterminatlnz them are sold in stores, but it is wise for the garden maker to put paper collars around such pla.nts ls tomatoes, melons and cucum- ncrs, regardless of what other mea- \l_res may be adopted. They can be clade from any stiff paper, and she-.lid he inserted two inches in the ground, extending the same distance above. A little lime dug in- to the ground around the plants will help to keep the pests away. and oftentimes many cut worms may be found by digging around the plants just under the ground. Some enterprising garden amateurs go into the garden at night with a lanle-rn, when they are likely to find the destructive creatures in the very act of cutting down thrif- U plants. The newest thermometers for re- rording winter temperatures at Wyonling ranger stations can re- . gutter cold as intense at 78 degrees below zero. “'I.\'T)0W BOXES The window and porch box sea-,f son is approaching and th annual S problem of pl:\n‘s for these decora- l “ , . . _ ` ' f' Y t.ve allzllticlls to the home arises. rllfrlfctl urs' Gall'-e p<\:'fertl_v smooth. several other nmrrled child,-en_ In my 51mp]1¢1ty 1 figured that mother 50 For the sumty box, nothing is fi- U l ` CORNER BAKED HERRINGS 6 herrings ' if tablespoons vinegar' % tcuspon salt 4 peppercorns 3 cloves 1 bay leaf il. pmt cold water rhlgs, split them ill two and take out the centre bone. Sprinkle u l;tr,h seasoning inside them. Roll up CCH!- ly and place in pie dish with vine- gar, pszppcrcorns, cloves, bay leaf and ivutcr. Cover the dish lvith some greased paper and bake in moderate oven for one-half hour. Serve hot or cold. CHEESE SAUCE 1’ cups hot hulk ‘s teaspoon mustard 1/a teaspoon papliko. Melt buter, acid flour and stir' until snlooth; then add milk, stirr- ` E briskly until free from lllmlx- "Now when Mary and I were married and she said that mother must Tum mm d°“ble bm" and °°°k come and live with us because mother was old and would be so lonely Bhd .. ..... .. wemy mlmllfs °r mom' Mix se” depended on her so much, I made no 0b.le0l>l0I\, lh0l1Eh I ¢0Uld-“T 560 Why “IMS U"°‘”"“2h]7"’ "dd tu sauce mother was such a forlorn figure, being as how she was a remarkably » ‘ `~°i`. _ 3 tablespoons butter ,ogy `~'f"-""‘ 3 tablespoons flour V ` ' l ‘ lv a ` f in Mc'.hoci: Clean and wipe the hcr- l Finds Wife _. r ' ' ' I 6 s y THE cooxs f f . ,,,,,,,. pointing” vvoh, chic solos g A1*1°”““‘*`“ A,-borot-hy' Dlx 1 n.l.os'rns'rzn nnssssuxnm l3_sQON rnlrnsnm Baby! wrm Ivan! rsrnnlq ‘T Who Puts Her Mother’s Welfare l Above Yours, Says Victim _,. _'-`;=..;f.*'1*\-_=..t ' rg; . , - ' <-ii' Never to you. ,. ~\$~ erb, which is about u mere husband will be only an incident in her cosmos. "When my son gets old enough to think about marriage Tm 30318 to give him only one piece of advice," said a. man to me the other day. best as well as for more ordinary I'm going to say to him: "BOY, UIBYYJV B Wllstel' “Fd 9- spmder' °’ 3 wear' ' clothes-horse or a poor cook or a. bridge Shafk if your fancy falls on one of them, but don’t, 85 YOU W value your happiness, marry a. girl with the mother p complex. The others may make you a poor wife, dainty and practical. hut if you marry s. mamma’s baby YW W°n'5 MVB any wife at all. she will always belong to mother. 8, “I know from experience. I fell in IOVB With H girl who was pretty and sweet and lnteliisenli Bhd st who carried pretty nearly the whole line of fem- W lnine virtues and attractions, and everybvdy £016 me how lucky I was to get her. ‘A B00d dllllghlel' ”' makes a good wlfe,' they said, quoting the old pro- N the most lying bit of propaganda that has ever M teaspoon sm been put over on simple, credulous, ignorant men. For let 11 8l1”1 Once 86% . A ‘pw gmms White pepp" ddlcted to ancestor-worship arid you never can break her away from her 'l “lm g’“"°l °l‘“"`e oith. she will go on bowing the knee to mother as long as she lives and V 7 _*D* -x 3-1,1-ii-‘_ | Y W ‘ BY _ANNABUJI Wowltmfvml Marry a Waster’ a Spender’ a (3101 hes-Horse _S-he`ll love this darling dress with 01' 3. Brldge Sharp, But D011 t, as You its smart pulled sleeves. Value Your Happiness, Marry a Girl S dot print in blue and white. p coin carefully Name Street Address clgy Btato - l And mother will love it too. It'sl o unbelievably easy to fashion it. The original model was carried out in a washing crepe silk in pln It’s so lovely for more "simpler" If you are planning ahead for arm weather, dimity prints, batlste rlnts linen, organdie, gtc., are Style No. 507 is designed in sizes 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 re- quires 2 ynrcls of 30-inch material with ‘.1 yard of 35-inch contrasting. Price of PA'I'I'ER.N 15 cents in amps or coin (coin is preferred). ra . 0.507. Size ....--...-...--...su . . . . ......»»~..... 1 .» - ......».--no-.-sr.-......- jbotterd./Wooreis M lr ,Tru E QBIQIMAL Easels-ang D1'/‘ect from 6/zyla/za' IN SOAPS AND TALCUMS HE refined qualify of Potter & Moore's Tfamous Toilet and Beauty Specialties lt notably expressed In Complexion Soaps - w of unusual ‘llneness of texture-Soaps that are rich in laiher and beneficial to the skin-and ln Talcum and Dusting Powders of exceptional llghiness and smoothness. Fra?- ranfly perfumed with the original Potter 8: Moors I Mitcham Lavender. ` If you wish a beautiful sheet of 'ml (`h°l`"` “nd heat “nm cheese is obust and health woman in her early 50.1, with plenty of money and transfer embroidery containing over ; F- .QW 1 ner .than petuuias. The Balcony lumpy. lchcrlsh her it was an "gm with me_ . ' L: i strain has made rapid progress and -~-< ‘l ____ ' designs, send 15 cents additional se boat(-;~ lf srluet ls curdlcd or would just be B guest in our house, and if Mary felt it was her duty to for mmem Na 2350_ .HQ sm ' now has a finer color range, the in- l §\f.\ITltE D'll0TPIl. S.\l'('E “mme did I know that when 5 woman hog n duty fixation toward her , - ' - " l"“‘e bl C “T P“'7"‘* VW b"lm’ ll “I bsolves er from havi an dut whatsoever to her husband A _ ` ` 'l ' ‘ _ 5’ - Y ` mother Ita h HB y y ' - J’ ?:~Af`;§.' _ filvorite because of its velvety tex- ` 1 lffll~“»>'!?’>0f1 »ffm0H .lllife Mother comes mst, and mother-‘g comfort, mother's pleasure, mo’ther's lift' _’7- ' s l la - . » ~ v - ' ' _ ~ "`"" These ""° admlmble Pla"’s'l 3 '“l’l"'“l"""“" l’““"” taste. mothers whims and, above all. mothers feellnss. Whidl “fe always A . Mm because of their long stems, which g 1 i-l"lf?f»l”*0U Cllilllllfd lla?-5l"»" spread all over the place, are daughters chief consideration, and, if they _ dF0~'ll'l S1'H<`@fiiUl' fffm the bf-`¥f`»“~ I "‘ l“""`tl""""‘ Sm' . - come in connict with husbands, so much the worse for him. _ " ' . _ 1, -A 'r‘oIl nnsturtiums. to make long' 3-li” lil” "`l"""`~ _?I‘”l° “W1 tho fa.; ~f,~n_q nf ,Com-V ME. eXc,».m.m m4_,? u:eZ‘l~i iuurtcr uni! p;l:~:l<-1'. liioll add ll terra! for the sunny box. The dwarfl th" mit' compact types of salvia will fumishl _______,_,._________ brilliant scarlet all summer, audi _ l S'i'0"5 H-I~'FS’1m “'31 make 5' mist "fl vine to trail from the window bor ivlrlle to droop over thc edge. Dwarf and half dwarf snapdro.-l 15 tm, m.mb,:mm_ If Wm stand gona have been used with excellent Shad, w,.u_ effect as window plants. furnish- -J’ V. ing brilliant spikes all season, For fragrance nothing eau displace the pulpit- clusters of the llcliotrope, easily raised from seed and always available in plants. scented stock in s oorner of a porch box will prove a. delight on summer evenings. It has no claims to beauty and looks like a bedrag- Kled weed dllrins' the day, but at nicht it picks up and has tiny flowers of n powerful, spicy gent, There are few annuals that will flourish in shadow window boxes, For brilliant colors the fancy-leav- ed saladlums and tuberous begonlo_q have proved the most satisfactory and brilliant subjects. Both these must be purchased as bulbs, but they solve the problem of color in the shady window box, which is a problem as most of the annuals de- mand sun to give a good crop of bloom. For vines the trailing vinca, wan-' dering Jaw and English ivy hold favorite place. A handsome annual ` Queen la‘.:_ch. It was told to her by A Plan* °f W0 °f the nlsht- ‘ the Duke or _/lfzioll wi-.»-n hor Mn- l and f:l.'n'.\l1 hviclsolllc buff flowers SCOTFIQH STORY AMUSES QUEEN MARY Here is a story which made the l je:-ty vistcd an exlrbition of Scot- tish nl'li!:ll'_v stfltllettes at the gal- leries of the Rayal Society of Brit- ish artists. “In Victorian days the men of the '7lst Rcgriment wore long can- vass co'.'el'lnf:s over their legs. Un- derneath were trousers of_ brilliant hue. Wimllicclon was then a favor- ite place for military reviews, and d there the regmert paraclcd one ay in full dress uniform. The spectfltors were largely young Vig- torian ladies, complete with bustles and parasols. “Tho soldiers came to a halt. Then a fierce command rang out: 'Remove trousers.” Instantly every paras/ol was raised on high, and el/fry Victorian back was turned, as the soldiers removed their harm- less canvas coverings." 4 “Now . . . the Picture ol Health !”. fl n picture of my _ laaby, Warren Rich- __ writes Mrs. s-'Matheson of Box `~`-H37, Lac Megantic, é 1 Quebec. is now eight months old and weighs 27 pounds and -qs, the picture of health. Since putting him on Eagle ‘_ -- we have never had any trouble with him. He is lffiwell and contented and I certainly recommend Eagle 13,35... ~. Y 8 fee of her baby ox Jw- LZL _ 1: wr 'is som.. co. umm-I. Truro, N.S. rl"-o mul no new dll" of ..::'.o~" -.....--':':: f 0 1 ard; ol lads' Iran! balloo- Ulm A llnu....._.._.--_---<--- 1-D_qs¢|;_ll\»4 rand to an other mother who is havin trouble with din _sn If you are unable to nuns your own baby, T ffffallozv the advice of hundreds of thousands of mothers, and try Eagle Brand. The coupon .-:'~6elo»' will bring you 4 copy of "Baby'.¢ Welfare.” Y 3;. 'if' _ 1'# "so I've always run a. bad second to mother. I've had to eat the food WATCH YOURSELF G0 BY that agreed with mother's digestion. I have had to refrain from smok- _--_ ing because mother didn't like the smell of tobacco. I've had to have the Jug; grand gsidg md watch your- people uround me that mother liked instead of the ones I enjoyed. I've “lf go by; had to stay at home, or else go by myself because mother didn't like to Think of yoursclf as "he" lnggem travel and my wife woudn't leave her alone. My wife has ruthlessly sac- of "L" . riilced my tastes and pleasures and habits to her mother. Apparently it `N-me cyosdyy as in other men you has never even occurred to her that it is more a wife'5 duty to try to make nm her husband happy than lt is to her mother. The bag_kneed mme” md me “Of course, every bridegroom enters marriage in the fond belief that Pick flaws ‘md fault' forget the his bride has put him on a pedestal and looks up to him and regi1rdS him man'1s you' _ as more or less of an oracle. I was soon to be undeceived on that score. And strive to make your estimate We hadn‘t been_ma.rrled a month before I found out that the fountain of ring true wisdom of which my wife drunk was not me but her mother. She had confront yourgcu and wok you in V seedy coat. got the_"mother-knows-best" idea so .firmly planted ln her mind that tons the P 0_ of the dynamite of experience with moss-grown opinions and moronic y views could not dislodge it. . Just stand aside, and watch your- self go by. ' “so we have lived our whois married are to tho time of 'mother thinks -3- W~ Gillm- we should 'dothis or that! Or, 'mother says we mustn`t do the other -'fini FEVER thing/ and what I think on the subject has as little weight as the gin- berlng of an idiot. And if that isn’t a deilater of vanity in a husband, I *-°*- ' don., know what “_ Sonic people are peculiarly sensi- ~My wife promptly installed her mother as head of the house and 1 tive to pollen. so that when the have never been anything in it but the bi1lpayer_ All of her life my wife pollen season begins they suffer a. had glve1!'fmplici't obedience to her moth and, as far as possible she has complaint called Hay Fever. forced this same little-child role on me. We have had to do as mother said, This strange condition is similar or else there were scenes and tears and mother taking to her bed and to asthma, where the patient is having to be wheeled into forgiving us for the crime of thinking that W0 sensitive to other forms of protein. have some right. to live our own lives. Of course, I have always been the An attack of Hay Fwe, begin, chief culprit, for Mary is so enslaved to her mother that she would never with vbleng, sneezing, which cg” be even think of rebelling. _ very exhausting. At the some 'time the patient usually feels out of "And when the children cams mother took entire charge of them. s0rtS_ She named them hideous old family names 'against which my wife would Prevenuvs treatment with pouch not protest. because it would wound mothers feelings. Mother sooms the extract should begin hem" the scientific modem method of baby-raising because she didn t bring up her pollen sewn omerwdse M effect children that way, and so our babies have been bounced and rocked and will not be felt. sung to and made sick by improper feeding. But I have been helpless to It is im "tant to tr at t in ls suse m wife is sure that mother is infallible and knows P ° my Pl`°l°‘;h 631 1;; busy gocwrs put together ~ source of irritation in the nasal more an ~ "And worst of all, there has been no privacy in our married life. My passagesffor this is often the ox- clting cause of the condition. wife and’I have never had a chance to get really acquainted and speak Tm” Wh° are Mable l'° °l't°‘°“ out our hearts to each other because mother has always been listening in _ shouldavoid the country in the We have had no opportunity to grow together because mother has always “fly Summer- There is m“°h 1°” been between us separating us. We have never had s meal alone together. dlmgef 111 U10 lf°W¥15- We can never go off to the theatre together alone. We can't even take a ride without having mother along back-scat chauffeurlng. We have missed UUTT7-NG 0UT UOOKIES all the sweetness and intimacy of marriage, for, after all, marriage is a -- twosome and any third party is an lnterloper. To hasten the cutting Olllf 0f cookies and to improve their flavor, "I have never been first with my wife. I have never been the head roll out the dough on s, board, of my house. I have never been sn oracle to her. It has always been place the board in s cold plsoe for other that shs considered first And that is why I’m 80111! i0 Wllm one hour The cookies can then be DORUFHY DIX ,,, _ _ my son against marrying a girl with a mother complex-" quickly out out and ea.-lily handl- - od time stands while you gaze into her yg,|:yrfy gnmg M5333 p-Q09 eyes that would be diplomacy But T551-E Bgrrgn A MOfningS”lilQ I if you were to tell her that her faccl _._ would stop is clock, you’re in for it.”l 991011,] ,md cheery china in the During A concert in A Scottish ART han tm °m°l“1 wh° W" °°u°°““3 Au 3'9"' MT' 5' th’ W* °f 911° mous influence over the children. tickets st ih° d°°f l°“Kh° 011* the whole living creature. body and n a oluld takes an interest ln his 0H1'B¢Bl<¢1’- soul, and chiefly of the soul. But it mem ,md ,au mpplly, ,md ,$353. household is an asset; in the nur- sery it is essential and has sn enor- -iqs' nanny, mon, or ye'11 be lg not only the work of the whole tion and a contented mind tn laaein' trouble " he whispered mys- . ' 5" ° ' fkrettllfé, It llkewi-S8 l.dd.r98AeB the remuh The :addy chnd is so Onan t'°"l°“31Y- whole creature. That in which the me ,mms cl-,pd umm be h ticket-eollector‘s owed reply. “I've let in two wimmln who said that ,A ,L-,I ~ '“` "whats me row?" demanded the t Y °““" ° rerfea bolus sneaks muah 814° have does not feed regularly and sum- mk _ _ °“_f;eeg°:my_n° lessin Wu me the perfect being to listen.-Ruskin. ¢,..,,,;,._ they wisthecaretakox-'e wife, sun ( if `¢\ ' V noo there’s a third yin wantln' to _gg come mon _ ‘LH > Q: ` J V The small boy was reading. ‘ll ' ' Q’ 62 Presently hs paused and took the § volume to his father. _ I , "nad," he sold, '-what does it ll (mean here by diplomatic phraseol- csv?" Father thought hard for I little while before he said: "My boy. U you ton A sul that-_ "" I I --A _,,,_,,... _. ,_ -f --ww mf- ~ rr... Cutleura Soap Best for Ba_by’s Daily Bath Made of th t ' '. cuts and cogtfigrihg sslrgmhthing and healingpropertios, it pro- tects bab s tender akin and keeps it cllear and l1ealthy,free from rushes and irritstions. Price 260. Cmsdim Depot: Lyman IM.. 286 St. Paul Strut. J.. Mammal. ~ Hill In Bright colors fasclnate children ofsllogesfrom thoveryyoung baby in its prom. Gaily colored chi- ns introduced into the nursery will do more to induce l. child to "clear up" its plate than any amount of persuasion from mother or nurse. Numerous attractive and inex- pensive nursery china. sets may now be obtained. Decorated in bright colors with quaint nursery rhyme figures and amusing animal plo- tures, these sets will provide n source of endless delight to the lit- tle ones, who, in their joyful eager- ness to see what is happening to the Dutch doll or funny animal at the bottom of the plate, will read- Lly finish their meal to the last scrap. BRIDE IN FOUR HUNDRED IS SWEET BIXTEEN One bride in every 400 married in England and Wales is a girl of six- teen. In the British Registrar Cleneral's statistics for 1931, just published, it is revealed that there were 311, 847 marriages, which is fewer by soon than in mo. ' There were only three marriages in which both bride and bride- groom were 16, but altogether' 'H9 girls of that age were married in the year, to men of from 16 to 00 years old. Twenty-two boys of 16 married wivu whose ages varied from 16 to 24. Marriage figures as a. whole show that the third quarter in the year is the popular time for weddings. Up to about 30 years ago the fourth Klwlrter was the favorite. The birth rate for 1931 was 15.8 per 1,000 of population, the lowest on record and the lowest for any country except Sweden. Baby boys were in the proportion of 1,049 to every 1,000 baby glrll, the highest ration for eight years. The total number of births was 832,001, a decrease of 18,730. :By the excess of births I over deaths there was s. natural in- crease in the po`pulatlon.of 140,541. The death rate was 1.2.8 per 1.000. Decrees that made absolute in, respect of dissolution or annulment of msrriage number 3.754, an in- crease of 304 over the preceding year. Only in one year, 1028, has this l figure of 3,764 been exceeded. DISCIPLINE IS BEST ADMIN- ISTERED QUIETLY But Sometimes Children Require Foreeful Lessons in Instant Retrlbutlols Real and lasting discipline is us- ually administered quietly. When 9. child has fractured ps law or been deliberately naughty, punishment is often given when the parent is excl/ted and the child upset. It’s bound to lose its potency if this is the cue. Perhaps the identical infraction will not occur again, but resl rs- owbmrsooaheasvlol-mmlnl. _ - al' l. ‘_ ,'.}f{f :“,f; Soaps-I0c to 50c s calc. Tslcum ln Glass, Mal Dusting Powder. 3| Al Dm; from .md Bemy couruen MlTCHAM LAVENDER PQODUCTS by POTTER 6- MOORE, LTD- P f B th C I Ll 'd B h S i F Onan ...Tl `i>"$f.'a..., ' s.'.l§§l.f' s».‘l`.'l.., 52.1.2 "' sl..5i‘.7. sua.. .';,;y,,lfvv‘e’.‘ . POTTER lr MOORE, LIMITED - Lavender House, LONDON LH.,..e___.._._Qsa_ua_Lua_L_ ‘ 1 ....-.... 1"’ M_llc,l-laM_._aa.yE__N_,_l>,E,R -= ln1p1a.ute¢1 in those saner moments when the parent is himself and the child is in a. receptive mood. Now all these things being true I sm deliberately going to contra- dfct myself. I am about to say that there are times when a child needs n forceful lesson inginstant retribu- tion. A Story In Point Not so long ago s little girl six years old discovered that the quickest way to get what she want- ed was to use her hands. she stmck her nurse, her mother, other chil- dren who came to play and finally her baby sister. ' Each time she was punished, but always in some way that had no direct association with the or-imc. At first her mother talked to her about her friends, that no one would love her or play with her. Next she put her to bed each time it happened. After that she took her bicycle away for three days, and in turn most of her prized possessions. ' But it never did much good. Bun- ny kept on with her hitting. One day she tripped over the dog, the dog growled at her, and she went back and deliberately pounded him. The 'Right Medicine Her mother was about to order HH' UP-1ta.irs and was racking her bnains about what to do next when suddenly she , changed her mind "Bunny, come here." She laid Bunny over her knee and spanked 1161' DYOPOTIY- , “Until you tell me thai 1011 !!°V¢\ intend to hit any one or I-uylhinl sgain,Iama'0ingtokeepol1.”lh° said grimly. And Bunny sdbbed, "I’ll monk Mummy. I do promise. I'l1 remem- ber." I'1l never hit anybody ago-in." Then and then only her moths! stopped. "Every time you ltrlh l person or an animal," she vm-rnod hor weeping da.ughter,, “I shlll have to hurt you the some way. I won’t have it. It has got to stop.” And so far, I hear, the treatment has succeeded. Bunny has reform- cd at last. mi KIND 'ro 'roumsrs Half the fun of a vacation I telling ono's friends about it buck home after it is over. It is during ‘such chinfests that the' cities towns and villages which were vis- lted are praised or criticized. Friends are either urged to visit such-omb such s place or are warned to my way from it. In many cases the adverse criticism is based on noth- ing more than an unpleasant ex- perience with someone who when asked for as direction, left the im- pression that it hurt to give thi information.-Hamilton Spectator. Rainwater is ideal for washing clothes, but if hard water has to be used,-a little borax will act ss 0 softener. Mother (at bedtime): ”Don't mumble your prayers, Nancy. I can't hcnr a word you say." Nancy: “I wnsn't Speaking to you, mummy." AS fr, 'I | v f \ \ l *_ lm "hw I F f . is . T l'l"S TIME to bring crispness back to ._....i_..._'l'--'3'-'7‘*M“" ~ breakfast. Serve Kellogg s Com Flakes 1-rrrmsuu axe and watch how eager y the appetites ' ' ' _ Kollo ’s are far more than refresh- |113 100. use delicious Hakes are rlch =;‘en;;gyfu;dkso essyato digistdthlsy , ,pi ll ee eener tier. " *ii ‘@8083 in London. 0nm~lo. ° ° -~ Ti/ #if _ respond! h. .W ,_ J lil fo get heavy floods 1 -1 gia- :-7 A \"X`