u Fashion's? Literdttrre ins-Y 75.. _ i" had the wise man's winter at‘ ' stone. Kilt was I who built Chaldea. and the - ‘ cities on the plain; it was Greece and Rome and Carth- l‘ age and the opulence of Spain, ‘their countries walked in ._._._ scarlet and their queen wore n‘ chains of gold: ind forgot ‘tws 1 that made them, f} growing godless folk and bold, f! went over them in judgement and f‘; again my cowrnfiolds stood iwhore their empty courts bowed ' homage in obsequious multi- _ tudo. Wot the ration that forgets me, in w that hour her doom is sealed, Q a judgement ash-om heaven that Z can never be Mailed-Harry flKemp. r». l. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Q A pinch of cinnamon or ground fploves added to milk puddings tuisnparts a delicious ‘nutty mayor. L? 3i When preparing tc dye a garment fblacir. mix an equal quantity of ‘jiavy blue dye with the black. The laomuinsnoh pwvents the Hlflteflfl Immtakingonthsgreenishtinge penin someblack garments. O O O Remove transfer which still show through ernbroid y with ‘a pioce of cotton wool dipped in methylated spirit, “b: alter in {warm soapy mm.‘ Applsaauceputintoadishand lightly browned lnthe ovonmakg 8.75M aid-d a. little yam- to give extra brilliance. O U floors which have been freshly stained and vamisbeifwill be easier mop or duster wilFglids freely human. ‘ O O O Hub-ice stone used with. warm ' and water will clean cork either inblc or bathroom ones. Rinsewelrlinooldwateazanddry them quickly. The result is quite s now appearance. browns wasnnm an ~ \\ orr-mn-rscr: run- Odf-the -face E3 M125 present l. ‘#11016 hose lines away with the tips M {our finger-s, gently but firmly. qflonit expect them to vanish MIR!‘ SOME EARLY called on account of his reputation for piety. He was the son or Ethel- red the Unroady, and was born at off days but it seems that Edward was formally recognised as heir to the throne on the death of Hardicanute in 104.2 although his coronation was delayed, for some reason or other. until Easter 1043 possibly because the king wished to be crowned at the festival. Although he has been called saintly he was not. really a. good king. He was much too-keen on foreigners to please the English and it was not until long after his death in i008 that historlansbegan to glorify the days before the Nor- man conquest. and bo cast a halo about the head of Edward- Earl Godwin was still causing trouble when Edward the Oonfessor was on the throne, and after him casne his son Harold. Therefore the king found hb hands full most of his time. During the closing years of his life, he worked on the founda- tion of his new Abbey of Watmiri- ster, but was unable to be prmeni at its nseoration. That must have been a bitter blow indeed, but Ed- ward the Confessor was a dying man, and he passed away- on Janu- ory the fifth. i066. JAZZ A BIT T0 MAlNTAm GOOD FIGURE “Women who copy native dances will always maintain a good figure, as these develop and. powerfully affect the muscles of the trunk." struck girls who read the report of his speech. "Efforts to force the body into the fashionable shape has made many women and girls neurotic." he declared “Mlmy young girls ocnstrlct their hips with tightly- fitlting garments. It is highly dan- gerous. “For the ' ,‘ percussion in- struments od the primitive peoples, the women or girls wihc wants tc dc Millie “ " can resort to a Qrfl-‘mflphorm and records. There must always be rhythm in action if the body is to develop gracefully.” A doctor, who was consulted, em dorsed Mr. Jefferyb view. "If the whole nation took to dancing, there would be far fewer cases of dwnic indigestion and other internal corn- lilaints." he ma. LACE 0N PRINTS The printed fu-ock with lace sc- cent is something new, bu, m“; frock being shown is qr printed @1999. I- BIW around‘ with yellow and white motifs. Delicate detail is introduced in rows and rows of yellow. Valenclennes lace edging shallow rilffles on the sleeves, and trimming the bow that has a smut 3330a bit - happl fore. moroofa enoc and val and Estella . fight against dormestlc slavery. of tomorrow. repulsive to her. treated him the remainder of his life. ‘The present drew down a good pay envelope kitchen for nothing. The girl who service tohold dcwnheriobinan efficient at homo as she was her husband as she did her boss. the down-and-out. i -: FASHIONS Here's a fasclna." home frock that's easy in every way. lbs! to make the waistline ‘ ‘ ‘ ." Easily into because it's wrap- around. Easily tubbed-it opens out E ht -they won't: but cared :N8ll1llly,iilHY'11M0n remand ' ing to ntatrons as well as youth. fist for pressing. It's a figure flatterer, and becom- Wrap coin OllIOaeI¢l"0a|av-auaaaaoaailllaalll pnascaeaal'°llaos w. nee-aeaalacaioaa mar. Delightful to use. Creates com- plealcns of g lovalinsm. Makes the skin velvety soft in t0!- Booiins and dispels irrita- it has ever been heretofore. _ and women are suing touse their heads as Well as their hearts in picking out their mates, and that they are going to put as much intellig- It is because I think we are growing mom problems of life that I believe marriage is make-a one-piece adairi Pin tucks ' Price“ of Pnfllllmisceatsin. stampanrcoinuaoinisprafenodJ- carefully e--_-—.--_-¢@¢¢- , Ho. res. sin ' Consensual"llaleaaeslla-ssbsaaosaaa ' sure thing and less energy into trying to make i? There are those who believe, because of the frequency of-divorce. that marriage is a doomedinstitution. mistic point of view. IsMarriago DoomedZQ-On ~_the GontITBIQStho Outlook Has Never. Been so R08)’, Says. ' Dorothy Dix, for We Are Headed for a New Day When the Sexes Will Understand Each Other and Every Wife Will be Satis- fied Because She Got the Man She ' Wanted , I do not agree with this pessi- On the wntrlfy. I think that tbs outlook for mat- rimony was. never so rosy as at present, and that in the future we shall havmbetter and marriages than we have aver had ba- Ieventhinkthatwearegoingtotakea lot of the risk out of msrriag and make it gamble than I think that man 881100885 of their marriages as they do of the green grocery trsds oa- ths millinery business, and that they will be just as much ashamed of get- ting a. divorce as they would be of having 1n go into bankruptcy through their own negligence. Of course just now you can hardly bear your elrs for-the noise of’ homes being demolished, and swapping partners has become favorite But this matrimonial hubbub is merely the result of our being in a transition state between the old order and the new. force archaic conventions on a modern world. Men are still suffering from. the head-of-the-houss complex and the hs-who-must-beiobeyed ides and the delusion that s. woman's place in the home is before the gas range. And women are still a little drunk on their first draught of free- dom and are putting the pent-up rebellion of a. thousand years in their So no wonder that the two clash and the wreckage of homes straws the country from here to Reno. thlswillsddlzstitselfandthsnweshalihsvessne andsafemarriagesand spidorswlllweavetheirvrebsacromthsdowsofthedivoroeoourts. 1116M 8Y9 many reasons why I am so Olitimistic about the marriage One is that, as everybody knows, the happiness of a mar- riage depends more upon a. woman's getting whats-ho wants in marriage than upon anything else. A contented wife makes a_ because she is always on her tiptoes trying to please him. Now in tbs pastawoman hsdtctakeanythingshecouid gotintheshapeofs ’, because marriage was the only gainful occupation open m her. We are trying to But soonall husband She might hive cared nothing for the man. Hemay oven have been She may have been celibato by nature and have had no compulsion toward matrimony, but she had to have a meal ticket, so she, married the first poor, unfortunate crest oration of women is under no such necessity to sell itself in marriage. The modern girl can support herself quite as well as a. husband is likely to, so when she marries it is fcrlove alone. And when a wife loves her husband she brings to marriage the magic that makes all 0! it! hardship! I- Bfly adventure. that takes the sting out of every sacri- fice, and turns it into the halieluiah ofgngels mums: ms mm 91m“; Another mason that the marriage of the future stands a better dbanca of happiness than that of the past did is that men and women have so much better opportunity to know each other now than they formerly did. In the past marriage was sort of a grab-bag game. You thrust in your hand and pulled out a mate and what you got was just a. matter of luck. Y0" W" 5119i B8 likflly ‘to draw a dumbbell as a college graduate, a shrew as Patient Grleselda, a nagger as a salve-spreader, But now. when boys and girls go to school together, when they work . find P18? 110893161‘. it is their 0W1! Btllllidity if they don't pick out tho kind ll lntelllsmt in solving the‘ the “brand-up instead 0i norwrmr mx. l FOR SPRING s!‘ indoor sport of the married sot. A decree absolute instead oftlriiver pill has become the household remedy for that tired feeling that husbands and wives got about each other, and it has got to be so that you don't dare to ask your friends how John and Mary are, if you haven't seen them far six months. because John and Mary may have been superseded by Perci- u who came her wayiand mal-' r .Woman’s Realm -:- .IS'ocial and i »i‘..'.‘.i“t'.'.li.‘.il Palnm IfuLTwlcea d: -l-rub iucream lather inrogha. a ofmy face throat. l use infer m wane my whnlp- to . 9g ‘ mmmw keeps my nldn w dear and youth- banal a of olive oiL And llike its soothing velvety lsrber. ‘ AMorvliIidsma¢ III-AV! DUCKS Two-laborers engaged in road mending were having their lunch plalncdof the pie his missus had given him. Ha gave a sample to his mate. whomgreedvthst it was tough. "mrtlfhs, went on, “it's not so bad as spudden my missus gave me once. I couidnbrget-lifonk into it nobow,;let alone my teeth, so I throwsmhe whole lot to some ducks wottha woman nest docs-beeps. Next dayxhaeomes to 'mo and . ‘What was-that you gave my ducks. yesterdayifl‘ ‘flieyfve, sunk." A negromammy down south nam- od onsfof ~l1er'oi!spring.'“‘1li’crphine." “Why do youcallher Morphine?" abs-was askcdcne day. A “Cause-db ‘done’ ‘heard white I by therosdslde, and one man com-. NR8. HJZABITI PITIIB PlOTOU,,May flb-The death of Mrs. Elizabeth Peters OOOlI-ffedufll Friday, May 24, at her homo on- Prince Albert Bt-Bhe was a woman of fins Christian ulnar-later- and a devoted member of the Roman Catholic Church. She had reach- ed the advanced age of 9i years and was formerly a resident of Montague, 9.12.1. She is survived by one son, James or Pictou. and one daughter, ma. Peter Dolmey, also of Pictou. She also leaves one sis-_ tor. Mrs. Mary Mlcfnnls of Halifax. and three brothers. James in the United. States. and Fclix- and Jef- ferson. in Cape Breton. The fun- eral took place on Baturda, morn- ing, the service being held fltella. Maris ‘church, and interment was made in the Roman Catholic cemetery. . folks say morphine am a produck ob de wilcWDW. and lf obber a child had a wile poppy, dis am him." . l ‘ 1 turn-stunt} _ flavoured - Gear . tbslibrsry to visitwith - Mordaunt. rector of the parish, who small mumle l’ EATURES GI’ Quaker ikmnlmfln make-them * better value tlsnlmbocalisbaselnryoadaruufeae- uresaot avallablalaislyalhreonlakal. l‘: Money-back 7Lz¢¢lj¢LorJ »Faurii‘leroyr é § this particular boy‘ rapture. Next day Cedric, s "a k father, brought down a. board game. The Earl confessed he was ignor- ant-of the A national game. so Cedric described matches he had seen in company with Mr. Hobbs and showed sll the attitudes of pitchenbattor andcatcher. When the illustrations were ended. the game began in earnest, the Ear using black pegs for his “men" and Cedric tho white. m. the Earl of Dorinmurt that on that particular mominl hewould be for- getfln_ his gout 8nd hi! bid tem- per in a child's game with s curly- hcaded boy for s. companion, lie would have made liimsslfrvery un- pleasant. And yet he certainly had forgot- ten himself when a. footmsn an- nounced a visitor. ‘The visitor was the Remand m. was so startled the n! scene that he almost fell back a flflI. There was no port d his duty that m. Mordaunt found so un- pleasant as his calls on the Barl- His. noble (anon usually made these visits as disagreeable as prnsible fr: he hated charities and flew into rages when any of bis tenantry took the liberty cf being poor and ill. Burma Ill his rector-ship. w. Mordaunt did not remember having seen his lordship of his own free will do anyone a. kindness, and. knowing that the Earl's gout had become worse, the rector today had had to oonque his dislike to pre- sent a very case of needed charity. _ _ Judge of his amusement, then when on the docr's being open, be heard a ring of childish laughter. v ‘That's two out!" shouted a clear. little voice. __,,_, VI. "Ah." said the Lrli: it harsh voice. “Good-morning Manhunt- You ses I've found new employ- mcnt. ‘This is the new Imd Bunt- my» "I am delighted-to make your ac- quaintance," said the rector. "You made a long Journey to come to us." "It was a long way," said Cedric. "but Dearest, my mother, was with me, and of course you are never lonely if your mother is with you.” uaiofibsasr Ifaweekboforeanyionehadtoid ‘fa ‘ I d in :5: prosecuted mm: ‘Gm No Iiesi H E N ~ fimfid ‘k’ ‘W vsifiulrait =1 wshr; if ll l” gore Dr. Hand's lee a trial pub d ll! QIGAII-gio-luldm 1 "The rector glanced from zhe boy to the m1. __ _ "Your lordship is greatly to be congratulated," he said tothe latter. Earl had no intention of showing his feelings on the subject. "He is like his father," he 5am rather gruflly. “I lull he'll conduct himself more creditably. What is 1| today Mordaunt? Who is in troubis now?” This was not as bad as tho rector had expected, and he told the E1111 that I-Liggins, one of his tenant; was ill, that his children had scar- let fever, and that he was in trouble about his rent. Newick, the Earl‘; agent, had told Higgins he must pay or move, but Mr. Mordaunt said the tenant believed if he had s. little more time he could catch‘ up. “They all think that," said the Earl. looking rather black. Cedric ‘lstened with all his might. ‘first was the way with Bridget‘: The Earl started. “I forgot we had a. philanthropist in the room," he said. "I told-Hsvisham the boy was to have anything he wanted-— and what he wanted was money u give to beggars." He bent his gars on the boy. "What would you do in this case?" Fauntleroy laid one hand on t Earl's lmes with a. coniiding air o good comradeship. v "If l.’ wens rich. and not only ins: l. little "boy. I should let him sta and give him things for his child< rm." he said. “But than I am onl‘ a. boy. You can do anything, can yeyrlliirrmhl” said his lordshi ‘That's your opinion, is it?” An‘ he was not displeased. “Are You some w Wfltv MI Newiok now?" Cedric went on. “Can you write?" queried flu Earl. "You'll fiérdzinpon and ink and “glow you can write it.” the boy "You ue in write it." sud nu krl. "What will I write?" asked Oed- "Bay: ‘Higgins is not to be inter- fared with, for the rrwnt-‘lhd list it ‘Fauntleroy.’ " ( The writing was a. slow process but finally was u mpleted. and thl boy handed the letter to his Sfand- father. "Will it do?" lis asked. The Earl locked at it and the corners of hi: mouth irwitched a little. "Yes." he answered, and hand the note to Mr. Mordaunt. Wh the rector found written was this: "Dear mr. Newik if you pleas mil higins is not to be inturfesred witl [or the present and oblige . "Yours rispeeferly "Fauntleroy." (To Be Continued) Soot h jnq "(Will n_q ,///'um ltv/le-v/nl/ .TENDERS Tenders hm be received by nu _ undersigned until May 30th. 1935. for Painting New lnadon Presby" tartan Church. Tender to It!" prl for labor only. ‘Italian will also be received fol tinting inslda walls and oeillllll M Church. G. W. OAIIPBII-h B. l. I m-nrs-s-as-n-an. .|'0l.|. MEETING , n-"rm-sLas-ar lNO77CE an persons ireapassinf 0' Newton. Lot li-rlet 2G m. lead, a suns.‘- II f" sale. cheap. Add Y L“; TRAINOR. u laatnglfinoskfi Mill" fiW$mm$r“