if _ PAGE sich* 'rms cHAnLo'r'rs'rowN GUARDIAN »_ » t AUGUST, zo. 19 . l Ll i ‘ . A i l l i il. f . l /` slr. bef- tha G V61' A G Lita A hoi P. 'Z ., fi 7 -\i~ /_ 1?' .T 1' "i _'£- _., i W1 r cal coi ho' thi un Uh! set Th thi - lin dit 1. -N ~ t '.’/' _ » .vlflv _ _,_ » t i _,_...»:¢~_`,, . » 5 ' _-...____.T._,._~,¢<-_ lyk. _._ ...._.»-aw,-, ¢-=-_ . i J ~ I Womank Realm -.°- Social and Person¢1_l»__-:-4 Fashions " V JW! tth F hi n ble Are Wearin ` ' ouawuus Dyspepsia For The Cook' l a. >» » s i l 1 ff ' ° ‘ f--I-"-' il - - --1 i ...L_ 1---*cur-°-'-'T°==r .‘:‘_-7-*"-5.#-°--~;'.'» ` '| _ ~ - _ » _ if ss-ink... l Al a easoa g W, .......... i With Every Pattern Husbands _ , - '~ ' \..‘..-- .";. .` ‘ ‘1~ l , O I .". yi 9.' IQ/ ., (___, ati ' ' _ \\ _ \\- , .~._-_-‘.` \\\ ` ' '_ _ _ _ '” L", ~‘ ’ _ ' l £;L'F“,~i '\ _~> _ .0 ‘ 4.* _ \\\ V I ° s , _ _ ___ -7,- .- \-_ £1 ° ‘ ° ' ' \ V / / ` i ~\\\ _ s.. _ " '_ 9 , ; J T hgh/ _ " _ . _ .\ Y-s.~.:<;-.1.='¥;¢;E"-‘..=e‘é~.e~.;er:}j° 1,-~'~,,,,)._..‘_-x`-5-'§{ - rf* -.a * - i “-_ / 1 . . - _ -./, -'L ~ ._ _ - t _ _ f - / I» " _ \.\ iT:.~E.\ . 'HIM ` 2575 ® 5 i QU fan" . | ._ ’ l w ' ,¢-././/%- /.;-, Q,////~ , “%Z% I/ 4 fz // / 9,.,/f' _ '- >,,° . f-,_ 'sl ` =’ l - l -f b'.~a'i~~ . _V No. 3483-The Style No. 3483 is just as cute as can be. made of yellow ehambray with brown bias binding. In the dared sides are set little white appliqued rabbits worked around edges with a blanket stitch in pale green thread. This important sun suit is recommended by the Home Economics Department, of the United States Government for th welfare and happiness of youngsters of 1, 2, 3. 4 and 5 years. The 4-year size requires -1% yards of 40-inch material with 5 yards of binding. Transfer No. 705 rbluel costs 15 cents extra. No. 2575-Spoits are spreading! Everyone these days seem to be going in (or sports. Tire excrcise suit illiiatrated has sprung up from the fad of matching shorts to the smart frock for active sports. It consists of shorts and it tuck-in blouse. Dcszgned for sizes 12. 14, 18, 18 and 20 years. The 16- year size requires 1*. yards of 39-inch printed and 1*; yards of 32-inch plain material. .\`o. 2539-A _voiithfiil jacket suit of printed sportsweight linen, concen- trates attention on the capelet collar. It falls so prettily over the shoulders. The jacket may also be made without the sleeves, if desired. Designed for sizes 14. 16. 18 years, 35. 38 and 40 inches bust. The i6-year size requires Us yards of 39-inch Figured and iii. _vards of 35-inch plain material. All patterns 15 cents each in stamps or coin ‘coin preferred.) The Summer Fashion Magazine contains most interesting styles for adults for tovm or vacation wear. Also darling styles for the kiddies. It is 15 cents a copy. but may be obtained for 10 cents if ordered same time as pattern. _ .-.- _ _ -__ _ r DAY AT their di-xy ‘On Field Day osew ov e armsawuiex- PALNIER ROAD iccllent second crop of alfalfa in the new meadow. Fertilizer plots compar- ‘-"> thc fHCf Ulfii hai‘\‘e.=t \\'n.= int; concentrated fertilizers with the in full Swine. the Field Day on thf:` regular chemical mixtures were ex- Lagzf; tgrilcli/Ir. iylvent Peters, Palmer amincd with interest. Mr. Louis R09- . Ry. ugus 15th, was cnly er gave a talk on cow testing asioc- flirly veil attended. This station sit- lations and calf clubs and also point- ;~l3lf¢d l\11”l0lL’ miles from Charlotte-` cd out the qualities t/0 be looked for own is one of the most useful in the' in the selection of a. dairy sire. The Province. On it are demonstrated the 1 pure bred ayrshire bull owned by the best practices of the Experimental! opcrztor was used for demonstration Farm system. The Alaska oats, ani purposes. Dr. J. A. Clark gave an ad- Il! Vlfhty, first grow on the lllus- § clrcrs on Pasture Improvement and M1011 Station has provcri very vol-1 other work earned on at the Experi- uable to the district as it is not usu- mental Station. Charlottetown. The ally affected with stem rust like thc` treatment which each field received. later varieties. The excellent neids of! varieties of crops grown, and explan- corn seen on the station from year to ation of home improvement work was year have encouraged many to grow given by the Supervisor of the Eta- a small area. and thus supplement tions. l5-- ,__ -_ _ r .______M_._. _ 4. ._ _--_ Flftliaoldonlj "flies ore highly . dangerous" J ` »¢yri¢a1¢i.a..¢i.....~¢r.. Y ff” lean smelh' E ag . .'ffif}'re "' 5 .\, _ _ Spray il. »E;;5N@ _ l 1 .Q gg A '_-'°- ' ( _ I .. ... -- fi ._ X.-\;. . .\-t . "She does not. She pai-npers and spoils her son it and lets him ride rough-shod over her' and his sisters and talk to them any old way, and she should worry lit.; " ir if he marries a girl and breaks her heart and drives W icr to the divorce court with hil Belfishneu md rude- ncss and overboaringness. §':»i'* .' - 1 _ Al. vi _y -`&;` e_~. f ’*-.~-.». “ ‘..'.-'- Sift* _ " l"-sf $'.*'lf'-'\'h~.3¥"` ` ‘ \ .-~~ fr- "Now every married woman knows exactly what \ things a husband does, or fails to do, that makes his I wife blessed or accurst. Every woman knows that a . wifes happiness depends uponthe way her husband treats ner. Thi: is a deep, dark secret that men do not know themselves. for some of the most tragic domestic blunders that men make are made womans inhumanity to vsoiuan is that mothers do not begin to teach their that will keep a wife burning incense to Lady Luck as long as she lives. much incumbent upon him to make family life pleasant and agreeable as itl “Very few mothers do this. The girls do the housework. The boys do whe the sleei and eat and from which they go to amuse themselves nats or bungalows and leave them by their lonesomes while they si/ep out of an evening. No wonder they look upon their wives as they did upon their mothers and sisters as merely servants. whose business in life it is to pro-‘ vide for their wants and make them comfortable. But far otherwise would it be if they had been taught to he nreslde companions and to find pleasure in their own homes. and that it was jjust as much up to them to make their homes happy as it was their wives. “Then I would instill in the plastic mind of my young son the import- ance of domestic politeness, and I would impress upon him the fact that be- cause a woman happened to be related to him either by blood or marriage gave him no right to say ruclc and insulting things to her. If the first time little Johnnie talked back to mother and told her that she didn‘t have any sense and wasn`t anytliing but a fool woman anyway, she turned him across her knee and gave him a spanking that he would remember to his dying diy. she would save some unborn girl a lot of trouble and trfbulatlon. "For it is these boys whose mothers have never taught them to respect | them or to treat them with any deference or consideration who make the husbands who forget that their wives are ladies, even though married to them, and who say things to their wives they wouldn‘t think of saying to any 1 woman who had an able-bodied brother, or to any female employe whol could give notice and quit. "All of us know men who are courtly and gallant in their attitude toi other women but boors to their wives; who listen with bat/ed breath to the opinions of strange womcn but who tell their own wives to shut up, that they don‘t know what tfiey are talking about; who laugh their heads of! at | the feeble witticisms of their dinner partners, but who interrupt every story their wives try to tcii by remarking that that joke is so old thlt it his whiskers on it. ‘ "Then if I were bringing up a boy t.o be |. good husband I would have him cut his teeth on a bunch of bills. Rent bills. Grocery bills. Clothing bills. Drug bills. Doctor bills. All of the bills that are a by-product of mar- riage. Then it wouldn‘t come as such a shock of surprise to the young hus- band to find out that it costs money to support a family and that you cannot run a house on air. air. "Then I would teach my son that women are human beings first, and , wives afterward. and that if he wanted his wife to be a good wife and a satisfied wife he would have to make her jobattractive to her. I would teach him to be fair and generous to her with money, and that it was her right to have a definite allowance 'given to her every month for ner own use with no questions asked about it or comments made about the way she spent it. "I would teach him to show her some appreciation of the work she did for him. And I would teach him to do something actively to make her little treats. to take her to places of amusement, and to show her the little attentions on which women set such value. “I would teach him to play square with her and that he had no moi' right to philancler than she had, nor to expect her to be any more faithful to him than he was to her; that it was just as much his duty to make mar- riage a success as it was hers and that when there were children he would be just as much a father as she was a mother. “And take it from me. no woman would be hunting for an affinity, or inquiring the price of a ticket fo Reno, if sho got a husband whose mother had trained him up to be a good husband instead of a plln in the heart." DOROTHY DIZ. , dinner, as this increases the c ' of the meal. Effiquette _ 1,, nina. L.. C0|.I¢ Ill CHU# PIII! ll TIE STOIIGI §i Q. May s young girl accept ex- pensive gifts from a young man who has been calling on her for. some time? A. No: expensive gifts should not he accepted. Q. In what style should a reply to a formal invitation be written? A. In the same style as that of the invitation. Q. Is it necessary to “dress” for dillliéf? ._.`§t\`/.J D' VOWLEQS i YIT lil , wluu l °Ta/lwamfil -C ' ,.5 ' ri. <1- - -L"e1=»is¢ii;¥`i§i.¢'¢t\‘f.“"'“"’.- ¢ 2P4¢*¢&¢fwfH».65° ' .3 ' Worlrh largest makers of Suvgical Dressings, 34”d4S‘~" Absorbent Cottoris, etc. Us i M i ers, who will long cherish a kind and ~ loving father, the following are thc _