WEurope who are accustomed to ride bullets and tasteless 7-’ PAGE EIGHT u ‘Wom, E an ’s ‘Realm “ ¢¢vwv v~vv IP33 114$ f ~ MANREADEIL ' ' soomuislnisrnzu. 0h, sen‘ me s sprg c’ the sweet- 5mm” mm‘ scented heather That blooms on the mountans sae bonnie and free, The mountains that rise l’ their; gran’ rugged beauty, Afar i’ the land that is d<arest taeldwmd be credit” m m" mtiieifm m»... 0h, dear tae my heart are. the nee purple blossom. Sac srwet wl’ the brvnth o’ the mountain an’ glen. They ca’ ba-i: ldP ru u’ a’ the scents o‘ my chi dhood, '.l'l1e heather-clad iulfs I wad Iain use Ruin. Afton in dtesms dze I stray ‘mid the lientlzer, ' Or i-fcinl the lull-paths through the bracken an’ gorse, Or roam i’ the woods where the bluebeils grow bonnie, An‘ follow some clear. wzmplin’ bum in its course. But ch, whed I wake, rm heart- sick wi‘ the long-in’ Tao see since again the dear land o‘ my birth, The hlls an‘ thr moors when the bloomb on the heather. .'1'11e scenes that tuo me are its ‘fairest on earth. " Oh. kreus that I 10's i‘ this land 0‘ the maple, An’ freens i’ the land I 10's dear- ost an‘ best, M. the last long fu-eweel, when ye lea’ me tue slunlber, Let u wee sprig 0' heather be laid on my breast. -—-A. M. Adam (Canada). s xuvc. wno Brcvcnus King Christian of Denmark, who was 62 last week, besides being the, tallest monarch in Ifurope. is the only king to go out riding on s. bi- cycle. Though it is usually at Sfkagen, the fishing vliage where he has his summer vllLs, he has more than once been seen leaving his palace in Copenhagen on his bicycle (says [the Star) He is one of the few mugs of or walk alone, Nearly every mom- fng he leaves Amalienborg Castle, when he is in residence in Copen- hagen, to ride alone on horseback along the sea-Izont promeade, the, Iogellie. He often stops to drink coffe at the Yacht Oiub before re- turning to the Castle. FROZEN FRUIT One of the latest triumphs of co‘d storage in Iondcn. I hear, is the successful refrigeration of fifty tons of buck curl-ants for a. Jam- malcmg filrm (says s. London wri- m.) The company was overwhelmed by the glut of soft fruit in the summer. and instead of pulping the fruit, decided to freeze it until it. could be used. The black currents were like when thb? were taken out of cold storage. But they retained the fragrance of fresh fruit, and on being "melied” Proofs N01 Mer Glaims have made better Jun than could have been produced during the A MOTHER'S Gil-TS Some day we may know Just how Jmuch of the progoa we enjoy We may, some day, be able to fl- gure that out. But never will we be able to measure the love, the patience, the forgiving spirit, the sacrifice shegavc us. Neither will we ever bc able to know how much of nobility, virtue. and character she gave us, because tbs" greater thngs are intangibles and Mother herself knows not hbe measure of her giving. In these-cs in all thlngs—ehe gives without stint, and kec-pe no record-K E. Hicks. LAUGHTER 01-" CHILDREN Whst seems to grow fairer to me as life goes by is the love and grace and tenderness of it; not its wit and cleveness and grandeur of lmowiedge (grand as lmowledge is) but Just the laughter of little ohidrcn and the frirndrhip of friends: the cosy talk by the firs- side; the sght of flowers and the sound of mmic. -Jol'm Green. PATZENCE To live in the presence of great truths and eternal laws~thai is what ke"ps s man patient. when the world ignores him, and calm and unspoiled when the world praises him. ' —Balzac- ‘PRUTH Iif truth were banished frqm the Earth it should find refuge in the bosom cf kings THE COOK'S . CORNE Carsmcl Icing 1 "cup granulated sugar 1-3 cup corn syrup 2 tablespoons water Few grains salt 1.3 teaspoon vanilla 1 egg white Mix corn syrup, sugar, water and suit. and boil until it threads. Add ‘ vanilla and pour gradually 111w ess white which has been beaten dtifl. Beat till thick. then set. over hot. water and cook about 10 minutes, until firm around the edge. Beat until the mixture will hold its shape and spread on cake. Csrlmel Myer Gkc l-fl cup cooking oil 1 cup sugar Few grains of salt I eggs 1,5 teaspoon vanilla. 5i cup milk 2 tablespo 1% cups flour 2 teaspoons baking powder Pour oil in miidnl bflwi. ldd Ilia gar, suit, egg yolks, vanilla and best till creamy. Sift together cornstarch flour and bsklng powder and sift into egg mixture, alternately with milk Best well, fold in egg whites. whipped lightly. and bake in two layer coke pans. Putfogether snd frost with caramel icing. corn starch Caramel Pie 2 CUPS 001'!) lYfllD lood Tests" before and After fl g a remedy afford the surest proof of its value in the treatment. of weak, run-down, nervous condi- tions that. indicate snaemis. Phy- sicians are able so measure Occur- scaly the haemoglobin content. of their patients‘ blood streams snd to "count" their red corpusoles. As the haemoglobin and red cor- puscles increase toward normal, the patients definitely experience re- stored energy. That is because their body cells are then receiving the amount. of vitsllzbxg oxygen from ms lungs and of nutrimenr. from the digestive organs needed for re- building snd clearing the system of poisons. _ Though Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are credited with 40 years of good results, and their blood-building benefits are attested to in '12 differ- ent countries, this remedy need not mp at claims and testimonials-it can point to scientific PROOF of its efficiency. Recently l. reputable physicisn “blood tested" s group of under- pu patients, prescribed Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills and, s month later, sglin tested their blood. 'l‘he phy- sician's records showed increases in haemoglobin and red eorpusclos thii were nothing short of marvel- lous. These records are authentic 1nd copies of thPm will be given to an? person who desires them. sure-and safe. Try this IA f , vsniiis. rev Brains silt 2 eggs Pie crust I tablespoons corn starch Line pie plate with crust. Best egg yolks and add corn syrup, corn- starch and vanilla, mixed thorough- 1y. Fold in egg whites, stiffly beaten, and pour into paltry-lined plate. Place strips of pun-y over top and bake from 25 to 30 minutes in m oven, 875 degrees F. C ‘ Whipped Oman I cup whipped cream. 2 drops vanilla 3 tablespoons corn syrup Best cream until thick then grad- ually whip in tho corn syrup. The corn syrup will prevent cream from spreading. The destruction of timber hes re- sulted chiefly from five causes: the activities cf the settler and lum- bzrmsn, from fires. inzscis. fungi, and from Windstorm! and heavy snow. The spread or fir serious brain disease of horses, known ll On- cocpiulouysliiis. in Itryhnd. De- a‘ v ‘kmkn Charming Montreal Bride-Elect .. lvflss Mad l'ne Gagnon Blouindaughter of the lrte Mr. R- Gag. non and Mn. C. H. ELuln .f Mon- meal, whose engaged is an ocnced Duraurau, son ofHon. Alfred Duranleau, m'n' tor of Duranlcaur- Photograph to M)‘. Adrien marines, and Ms. Montreal. Soci Peer Claims That Priceless Mona 'l‘HE (JHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN a] fvwv by Garcia studio. and Personal -:- FQ'@F§Oi “.Q§.QO§.CO§@§Q..'OQOO'.§.Q'.QO'OOO'0.0'%OOOO9QQQQOO<O O-GO0QQ.§Q§Q4O ~IOvQOOOOO P§OOOOOQOOvQOOOQOOOOOOO o - o u. lO-OQO-OO-C n: 1...... . m, 2.3.7.’ Dorothy Dzx “.11” '7“ - b ' The Come-Hither Look in a Woman’s Eyes is There by Nature and Can’t be Cultivated. Beauty, Character and Intelligence Fall Before it, and the One Who , Has it N eedsiLittle Else Girls are always asking me why some other girl who is neither more beautiful, better dressed, more intelligent nor a better dancer than they. has men swarming around her ‘like bees about a honeypot, while they have never a beau nor s. date to bless them- selves with. To ihisheart-breaking query, I esn wly reply that the secret. of a. woman's fascination for man lies neither in her looks nor her with nor her accomplishments. It is the come- bither look in her eyes. And to sly that is merely to substitute one mystery for another. something that a man recognizes at sight and goes down before like ripe wheat before the sickle. Nor does any one know why one woman has if and urmtber has it not. Neither can it be acquired by any sri or artifice or by fasting or prayer. It is the gift of the gods. ' It has to do with u woman's looks. Yet the whole of it is not beauty, for we all know women of classic form and features whom all men ad- mire av. s distance, but never desire to approach closely. Some of the bsndsomest women in every community are old maids, the tradition of whose/youthful fairness lingers like u halo about‘ them as long as they live. If. is also notorious that great beauties seldom make big marriages. On the other hand, there are girls with no claim whatever ~to pulch- riiude who could have as many husbands as they have n lEEIS and we:- were not one husband as much as any woman could stand musing around the house. Indeed, it. is almost an axiom that any woman who can marry once can marry again should Providence or the divorce court free her from her spouse. ‘ Nor does s woman's fascination for men have any relation Lo her worth ot character. Theoretically, men worship goodness, purity, amia- hility, modesty and domesticity in s woman, but personally they do not run after the model of virtue who pwsesses all of these shining attributes. for no one knows Just what it is. It is Just - Xi M cow v Fashions OCTOBER 30 1933 _._. V: ‘as -:- Literature ,1 ./. i '29. . ,4 {z .// L_, \"" . -. .1. If WE‘!!- Gi READY SOON. ESTII-Llu-GWREE l5 IEPING nsnos m Rinso iu the lkenugic. Even pom I bright, almost without eflbnl u: for cup, R1080 if -up_ so: 'ves twice u much suds u u n Iaardm nan-r. Creamy surfs-n all cleaning Try ' 01L makes dishwushing I Grease and ans come shimug- _ . Rmsc on wash sy for snowy clothes mr tul JrrdFEng. Buy the BIG package. .‘._ _‘ . ,‘ ‘ easier t for I Millions use Rinso in fub, wushr a dishpon Dngintiness‘ ‘With Chic Styles Lisa Has Hang For More Than I00 Years In His Ancestral Mansion in Paris. real Mona Lisa. Leonardo da Vinci's priceless maslerpiece, re- posed for more than 100 years in s. baronial hall of England? Lord Bruwnlow considers that he has the genuine Mona Lisa in the collection at Belton Park, Grantham, which forms one of his treasured heirlooms. He bases his faith on a private catalogue of the Brownlow collec- tion, dated 1824. It states that “Sir Joshua Reynolds, at chose sale the portrait was purchased, Judged this to be the original and the one now at. Paris to be not genuine-an opinion which others, who have subsequently cxsmined it, also en- certain. What Ls believed to be che orig- inal Mona Lisa now hangs in the Louvre, from where, it is to be pre- cxcspt during the period between I911 and 1918, when it was stolen. Lord Brcwnlow relates the ro- mantic story of the portrait. Personal Opinion "First let me sey." he began, “that it is only my opinion. I am simply the owner. I am not an art sxpert, and it is purely my own view. “An important point is that Leonardo da Vinci stated thfli hi8 portrait was unfinished. "well, in my Mona Lisa it can distinctly be seen that Just above the hands of the siizer the work was left. unfinished. A pupil prob- sbly completed the portrait. later. “After Sir Joshua Royfloid!’ death it was sold and some into the hands of Sir Abraham Hume, l. personal friend of sir Joshua and one of my ancestors. "Bir Abraham had n. nmgniflcent collection gathered mostly in Ven- les and Bologna. It contained fam- ous works by Van Dyck, one of which was purchased by the Nu- tionsl Gallery, and other valuable pictures. Imm, mo, his collection was built up chiefly from Italy, whore szuoolsaunss eronsca rsms Alaldlnllfafllbsddgh gmassua." proven preparation. lswm sud virlinis is attributed to silt marsh uacsmiiocs Will it!) Wu Smiling, Healthy U Briglu ' . .. ._-__- Lord Brownlow Contends He Has Original of Leonardo da Vinci’s Masterpiece at Bel- ton Park-Accepted Picture is at Louvre LONDON, Eng, Oct. 2B—Ha.s the sumed, it has never been moved. .l..eonurdc executed his glorious ‘half-length portrait. ‘ “The inlmediaio history of the Mona Lisa at Bolton Park is this: “Until ten years ago it was one of a collection of 154 paintings at Ashridge House, at that time an-' other country seat of the Brown- lcw family. i "Part of the collection was sold lin i023. and Mona Lisa was one of about 50 paintings that were Ilcft and taken to Grantham. 1824 Catalogue "Now this is the quotation from the i824 private catalogue of the Brownlow collection, on which I build my faith: “ ‘The Mons Lisa-i feet 3 inch- es by l. ft. 8% inches. She was the wife of Francesco Olcoondo. s Florentine gentrmsn. "'81;- Joshua Reynolds, who Judg- cd this to be the original, observed ,that the hands were probably col- ‘cred by Raphael cr Giulio Ro- imano!" m. Wllenski. the m critic. in- formed by s press represerrstivc ‘of Lord Brownlowb Mona Lied. said: "I have not seen lord Brownlows picture, and I cannot.‘ therefore give an opinion on it It is quite feasible that Leonardo [himself painted s replica of his portrait." €LIVER DIET IN TREATMENT OF ANAEMIA It has been known for seven! years that treatment by liver diet has a curative effect cn certain types of anaemia. Loss of blood from iniury qr dis- ease leads to one type ofisuleml-l. which can be benefited by liver diet. The cause of the other type is unknown. v The prescribed dsfy does is b!!! s pound of liver. Calves‘ Liver ll the best, and it must be fresh. If cooked, the liver must on no account be over-cooked; or it will lose its value. It is. however, s good thing to give it in as varied forms as posslbe, for patients quickly tin of it. Liver may be pulped up with sauce or the Juice may be taken mixed with Orange Juice. It is quite palatcbc if scraped 0n I esrrot grater and served in ssndwlehss. in these cases it should be used raw. The Dominion Department cf ligricuizu-e again report the D0- That kind of girl is generally the girl that s man recommends other men to marry. but doesn't marry himself. The women who have held men in Lhrsli from the time oi Ami 11> first wife down to the youngest flapper have not been conspi nous for their goodness. Nor have they fooled men. Men have known them for ____..___ wnn ousssusxuvo LESSON wvrn nvnzv run-mu TUINISHRII w! ..-.~-'I;...i éi¥.‘3‘.5~....-...os m. ~ ~~-» Q-s -_—-1@ uu-qi‘. Just what they were. ‘they have reprchatod them and despised them, ' but they saw the come-hither lock in the women's eyes and followe-l l: to their doom. ‘ ’ Even less has intelligence in s. woman anything to do with he: sinus for men. On the contrary, feminine brains are caviar, as a general thing, to the masc "--= taste, and the less sense s womauhas the better men like her. - Any pretty moron can marry s dozen times to a college graduates once. end the surest. way for a girl to queer hersclf is to an ...pi lo talk to men as if she were a reuonablc human being instead of an sddie- parod butterfly. The limit of ‘intelligence that the average mun will stand for in s. woman ls for her to have shrewdness enough io hide from him how much sense she has, and to Jolly him along s0 that she makes him feel that he is as strong as s. prize-fighter and know-s more than the Century Dic- tionary. . . | If, then. neither beauty, wit nor virtue lights the beacon in a women's eyus, what does? Primarily it is sex. There are women who are human beings and there are other women who are Just women. There are women in whom femininity is raised to thenth power. There is .101. a line m U1 ‘.. bod cs nor s quality of their minds nor s fiber of their characters that isn't Just l all woman, and these women, by the very law of Nature, draw every man . they meet toward them as a magnet attracts a bit of metal. These women cannot stand alone in the world or fight their own bat- tles. 'I'hey are bound to have something to hang on to, and they never stretch out their tsndrils in vain. some man always rises up and quali- fies for the role of the sturdy oak. The more utterly feminine a. woman is the more irresistible her chum for man, and this is why the business girl, the good-fellow girl and the athlete girl find it hard to marry. ‘Probably no man in the world ever popped the question i0 s girl when she was wearing kniclcer-bockers. Undoubtedly, also, the come-hither look in s womans eyes is s look that expresses willingness. It is s gentle. soft and inviting lock. It is not the hard predatory look of the huntress of men who is decal-mined to chase down s husband and catch him and bear him as a sacrifice to the sltsr. Nor is it the cold, self-satisfied, self-contained look of the bach- elor msid that says that her heart is an impregnsble fortress that. she duos s mm to try to break into. That look sflronts s men's vanity s-nd drives him sway instead of tolling him on. The come-hither look is a flattering look-a yielding, caressing look that makes every man feel that he is a hero of romance and ready to swear that he is the ONLY ONE who has ever had that signal wig-wag- ged to him from the eyes of that particular woman flsunting invitation to come into the land of love, and the man would have to be more or less than a man if he didn't answer it. A curious thing about the come-hither look in,a wonuufs eyes is that it is s vision vcuchsafed only to men. No other woman can sec it in ber sister's orbs. Bhe only recognizes the deadly results of her having ll. DOROTHY DIX. "But the procedure of the courts in dealing with this kind of trouble is still that. of by-gumo cen- tuflvs." UNHAPPY PARENTS CAUSE CBIMINALS Unhappy marriages make for Ju- venile crime. ‘lihfs was shown by Mr. Claude Mullins, North Iondon (Eng) ma- gistrate, when he made s. plea for now methods of dealing with "dvmsetic" eases in polce courts. He wll speaking st the snnusl meotlng of the fnndon Police Oourt Mission. and he linked up two of the newest problems of the British police ecurle In the police courts of England sad Wales, he said, there were, llsi year, 167,000 applications for separation and maintenance orders. Dflfl'fl‘lblu Oondlilons This was four times the numbsr d 685M hfllldicd by the divorce courts. 1h additco, 8.500 husb nds were lent to Prison for d bt. 1w. year, following maintenance odors. The prirmry cause of this Juven- 01A no‘ “In”. He wolfld like to see the parties rreetotsl‘ iheomirttheresirel- eon for coming ho their unhappy state. If s msgirbrsl. tried to get. i» the real cause of the trouble. he was going beyond his duties. He was merely an arbitrator in s "dog fight." Mr. Mullins laid dorm cwo pro- posals for desllng with csses which led i0 so much Juvenile crims- They were: A new technique for majstrscel; Better training for naissionaries Dr Cyril Ncrwood, headmaster of Harrow. said that the world today was ihrcnged with those w ‘o um had no chmc . whose only home is s patch in I. mininti free from sheep scab. There has been no cuss of this dil- ese for the past five yesrs; uer of dourne. s dang rous contagious diseasc cf horses, for the P!“ crime from matrimonial discord," room sud whose only playground is the gutter?’- no asked. - Ml‘. Justice du Pdrrq who IN- fle crime. said Mr. Mullins, warn the failure of the pnrenis, and bad n. is s. flutforing, ' “ "What. chance is there for a child‘ Wild bl.v.".'.‘1'1‘; '\(' gpqpg 511k; 111d “W517; is Lu a D111 cl. wum ‘urn; inc p. , h“, .m_ urtsnl. shite loucu oi t-“JJSL ' Ifcsnslsobecarriedoutinbsiry woolen. tweed. tweed Jersey, cush- meff JJ-ifil’. nekti. ~.1k, we. and .4211: zzuclrius. “DC l!» I03“ 6.42 ~Q.;;¢l~. mg“ m Q uairy wooicu mixture for school or “U580 in true Irish-green, rust or reddish-brown. With this a toning suede belt or u-elbmabu-Lu. 4x11 be urn 21.‘. ‘i. £11m u. pw 0001M! Bi-Ylc N» 6“ ll delimed for sizes l4, l6, l8, 20 years, as, 3g m4 w lmhes bust. Siu l6 req..l..s 3% yurds-SD-lnch uatcrmi altar i, yap; Ju-l ,3, ggn- uusiing? _ Price of PATTERN ll‘: cents us JHlBBIP-s or coin (coin is preferred) Wrap coin carefully. No. m. 81a u... ............... u»... Btrflt Addres o"; ..... .. em; VII-NON INUIITUTI The Vernon ladies held shea- n. full Ineefing at the home of Mrs. David Fraser on Tuesday on, 17 with bwelve lama-whee and thug prudent. Meeting opened Wifh i210 Ode fcllcvwrd by the used reputed bi unison. the minutes of the previous meefng rend sndlp- proved The school committee give the fcllowinl report. blscbbcsrds, IMP. 0111'“. eludes etc. It n: msv d and seconded that we ask ibe Becrewry of the District lo buy tbs blackboard: and map The 50mm‘! reed s ism:- frcm Mr. Ho's tbs kin: the ladies for tbe| Fluent fa- u» seems and desk-s. A discussion on lidhtins the nu- sge. The President Mrs. A. Sulli- vln invited the ladies for the sn- nusl meetng. mpg" mwmm Nstions‘. Anthem. Iluneh wls serv- edbythebcehesnndscellmicn of 00 cents him. Bananas auniurss sud Jennies m she eblef cmmtries exporting bsusnss, and from both countries exports are expanding. World trade in bu- uanls has more than doubled since fivs yasrs lrfote the great. War, when it averaged over s mil- lion ions. or about 50 million bun. chel, snnu lly- Next to One-i Bri- is'n O nsds i~ an large-i ‘we! e importer of b nan s. but m pzr cent-cf tbs bsnsn s sawing wci-‘d ma. goes to the Uuitrd dimes. the mm u oi-Mr men. "H! the housing mndiiions. "You cannot separate juvgnllg sded st the it's‘ of the mrimocr p isaners, slid u. t when one visit- ed the men in tn lr Mlll st Deri- thlrteen your. 210M406 Isms irrerezt in their Irlves and humus. The convict. he Id, was m“ o-uug ' ‘id The hunting novice had bee» iosped an obstinate horse. At the end of the day be return- ed limping and dlshevelled, and mid bitterly io the ownsr: "Don't. tell me again about hbrlfl being intelligent. We some to Q nasty Jump! today and this cm.- founded beast lei me do every ml “on”. "It is u funny thing, but our; time I dsnce with you the dances seun very short." ‘ "They are. My nsnce is lender cl the orchestra." SILENCE G1 the whole Silence scems is mo ch" highest. Divinity q; my Qlflh If present. Blessed is films” the giver of s11 truth, of s11 goes that bu any substance or comin- usnce in i-tl If s nnn is to work, indeed, as s reviewer. or pamphlet.- book writer, or s Psrlsmenfoer, o: bwn-c ier, silence wll not. do {or hlmsl. lLButifsmanlsnolfo work in sny such ways us these but or half s oentur silent (nay, Zr that mutter, s-ll his days sfl ni.)- ih netrsutesnncibegct. 011' of him othe wise. l; mconuwywenfwnuwbemuouimnwnuwsahd. Hound's uni-sec Indus XII. in I cum or...“ nd duel-ens way, h‘ ihen lot him sit seven years silent. - - W81‘, id, ago. iolmaie.‘ 1:111: snciug. a. ' suto. sic, linsins. ‘Ihomls Pryon. All“) _.P.). A whose 1 to Ohd blisherl. s, the was the lfred A. aspira- one an! smc in- loademiu lug per- y on her After s of these Guggen- cslved A