5- . r ..krtlfairfl=‘ather must often have done without the shoes or the hat he needed ' " high school. ‘ THE ETOWN V GUARDIAN .. lomain’s Realm i-r-Social and Personalx.-:-. iI""_ctshions -:- rothyt Letter ab; l‘ - ents Giving Child Square Deal When _ »_,ey Force Her to Repay Them in Cash ;j, Ior Rearing Her?~Why Force Educa- . , tion of Unappreciative Girl? . , -_-.___ vMiss Dix-Should children- pay back their parents for their rais- 4 d their education? f em a girl i9 years old and ever since I got my first job my father and mother have taken possession of my payenvelope . . on the ground that I owed it to them for the money they spent on bringing me up. When I have protested at getting only s2 or 83 a week out of the money I cam the reply has been that I had better pay my debts before I begin to spend. It makes me feel as if I had- been sold into peorlage, and the worst oi it is I don't know how much they have charged up against me, nor how long I'll have to slave to buy my freedom. Do you think they are giving me a square deal? NINA. IIISWEFZ IillldNfl into the world entirely for their own _ leesure and without l-ny regard whatever for l e child's wish to be born, it is most unjust l ‘for them to force children to reimburse them for their upbringing. It is being made l0 pay for a present that you don't want and that 1s a burden that some one thrusts upon you. It is a curious thing that parents think that their children owe them an lnestimable debt of gratitude for bringing them into the world, no Considering that men and women bring . A11... "HOUSE WIFE . and HER ACTIVITIES A STAR Like as a Star That taketh not haste. That neecleth not rest Be eaoh ono fulfilling His God-given heat. CURTAINS To prevent short cilrtains from blowing vases off window ledges, l try the following hint. Screw a small hook under the wooden window sill, and sew-a small loop on to the bottom of your curtain. The curtain can them be hooked into position without spoiling the appearance of the windows. RAFFIA BAGS Raffle bags can be made like now again by means of straw hat dye- Romove the lining from the beg and paint on the color with a srnall blush. SALT CELLARS fmatter what sort of world they are thrust into, though what the children who are born with hereditary diseases and mental deficiencies and who are i doomed to poverty in their cradles have to thank their progenitors for, it is hard to say. Indeed, most parents, looking upon the little red squirming mite of humanity upon which they have thrust the gift of life, might well - say with old Omar: “My forgiveness giveand take." There are still other parents who regard their children as nothing , but slaves sent by a beneflcent Providence to save them from the necessity ' of laboring. They put their offspring to work lust as soon as the little , hands are capable ofperforming any task, they collect their meager wages, and by the time the youngstem reach adolescence they knock of’! work for l, good and spend the remainder of their lives living on their children. There l‘ are thousands upon it usands oi big, husky, middle-aged men who are .. being supported by anemic, underfed, overwonked boys and girls. The parents‘ excuse for this always is that they took care of their children when they were little and now it ls the children's tum p; take care of them, though even at this Father and Mother get the best of the bargain, since generally the child has to pay ofl for the ten or fifteen years £0! infancy in which they cared for him by supporting them for thirty or forty years. At this rate. bringing up children pays a bigger percentage in profit than rearing any other kind of livestock. mremw v But it is a sordid thing for parents to put a price-tag on the baby's ‘,3 milk bottle and charge up against it every bowl of cereal and mess of sp “ch, with overtime for the hours when it was sick and Mother walked it t - the colic. We like to think that something better than greed warms ‘Yarms, that must die without they nourish and protect it. We like to think -- that love and a sense oi responsibility make them glad to toil for it and sacrifice for it without thought that they are making a good investment for the long pull. ' 5 ,1 And we like to think that the relationship of children to their parents '4 is hot that of a debtor to a hard creditor who is trying to screw §the last penny out of them, but that love, not duty or necessity, makes i‘ them succor the old people in their need and take upon their books the . burden under which aged shoulders are sagging. We like to think that o! daughters buy Mother pretty clothes and jimcracks because they remem- Tbofihow often she went shabby to buy them party frocks. We like to Qthlxlk that sons get more of a lkick out of making Father a good allowance fthnn they do out of any other money they spend, because they know now '"_ to give them money for the circus or a new pair of skates. So the question of what children owe their parents depends Very much ‘ on what the parents have done for the children. If the parents have given , their children love and tenderness and understanding; if they have done - everything they could do to make them happy, then the children owe them s, the same debt of affection and they are in honor bound to pay it back in gthe same coin. l’? But if the parents have given their children nothing but their board ‘lend keep, and kept a running account of that and charged them usurious interest, then I don't blame the children for reneging at paying a. debt they ldld not voluntarily contract. ‘ ' ‘ . . ‘ DOROTHY DIX. f: ‘Dear Miss Dix-My daughter, a girl of l8, says to me: "Mother, I {don't intend to be a coed. I want to flit into society, find my Prince LCharming and marry." This from n. girl who has just graduated from . She has no experience in life, no idea of what she will ex- ‘ rpect out of it. Should she continue her education she would not lose out gsocially. In fact, it is her father's plan to have her spend her holiday gtime abroad with well-to-do relatives. What can a parent do with a yymodem girl? A WORRIED MUTHIZR. n wer: Not much, I fear, because the modern girl is convinced that she has bitten by Solomon's dog and knows all there is to know. Especially fps ‘she sure that she knows more than that poor dumbbell, her mother. gwhom she generally regards as the extreme low in human intelligence. i course, you might toll tier, though she probably wouldn't listen to ‘ you, that education does hm necessarily unfit a girl for society. 1n fact. there are those who consider that it adds to a girl's charm and uttfflotiVe- There are even those who consider it a necessity, and that no mat- €e'i‘ how pretty a girl is she cannot interest intelligent men unless she can ‘dohyerse fluently 811d eYIWWFWl-Fill HWE‘.QQ1PH'P.1.§HRKQF§= . . .... 1"" ‘You might also toll her that on this search for Prime Charmin! that iilie is so eager to start upon a. good education will be s. lamp to guide her feet and keep her from picking out an imposter. For now she is so ignor- that she has no standards by which to judge men. but an education will give her a yardstick by which to measure them and find out whether they come up to her ideal. ,But, as the old proverb‘ says: "You can lead a horse to water, but you os ot make it drink." You can send a girl to collefle. but you 68ml“ e her study. And if your daughter does not want to study, it is a te of time and money to try to force an educaticgoupm herblx- i I I I I I I ‘Dear Miss Dix-Can you unriddle the riddle to which I B-ln muffled? .. married to a man who is perfectly mlcndid in every other way ex- this: He delights in airing all my faults in front oi company. When nrselcne together he practically never critlciros me, but just let oom- come and he holds up all of my faults and shortwmlnes for their t. Why is this? - 0- M- ' n» wltt. Berna; "flmfyozzgfnlgfdothyat. ‘iheymaythinktrleirwivesarelult- veabutinordertoshowodhcwhumnrolatheyaretheydraa ewlfebermcompanv wdtryior laoshswmlsinetimofhoi- . .. mm tubules knorwhcae after-dinner stories all ' "the all: their wivraulllhod a check "Your: only." or put inateadoflaganueoldtbeiroestkouaeretotileraa the stalking horse for all _ carts of fathers and mothers for the helpless little creature in their ' To prevent salt from coking in salt cellars, mix in a little ground rice. HERE AND THERE Peck your winter wollens away in newspaper paokets and add to each a few pieces of camphor. No moth will ell-tor here. I I I Ilf you vacuum flack has not been used du-nirlg the winter pit will need an ertra special cleansi!!! Put in it a small quantity of salt and vinegar. Shake well and rinse thoroughly. BOILED RICE To prevent boiled rice or other milk pudding from sticking to the bottom of the saucepan during cooking, first grease the bottom oi the pan with a. little butter. CLEANING WALLPAPER 'I‘o_clean wallpaper, make a large piece of dough and rub over the walls with it, turning the dough as soon as it becomes dirty. » FEELING ONIONS Aim peelingonions wash your hands in cold water to rid than of the smell. If washed in hot water. the pores ame opened. and the juice penetrates the skin- Clear Tiles Once each year wash down the bathroom and kitchen tiles with a light paste made of plaster of Paris, allowing it to dry and then wiping off what adheres to the smooth surface. This treatment will eliminate all dark spots and lines. squeak! Squcakl Why ls it‘ a woman can let a sweeper squeak until it is weak‘ before she realizes that all it ‘needs is a litt‘e machine oil in its various parts? she will find the sweeper will work 100 per cont. better and easier after it is oiled besides going about. its duties in a quiet manner. Decorated Candles iii you are given a pair cf elabor- ately decorated candles and are quite certain they will soil easily, give them a. coat of clear shellac before ever using them. Dust will not adhere to them readily and they will stand quite readily and they will stand quite a deal of wiping with a. clean damp cloth when they do get soiled. Australian entering homtal: " ‘Ullow. Bill." “Come in to die?" "Ncpyectorday." SURGEON WARNS AGAINST USE 0F APEBJENTS A glnwe wsming against the danger of giving a child with abdominal pain an aperient on the assummion that something it has eaten has disagreed with it is ut- tored by Prof. A. Rendle Short. Professor of Surgery in Bristol University, in a . ‘ recently. He said: "The great majority d abdominal pains in children are not due to some single in- , and the found that they diner‘? 0d into a fine noquef 1 ‘- Jtisexpectedtllat smil- lion dollar industry may mow out of the discovery- ‘Goumiets who like their cheeses to be "ripe" have depend- ed, upon France to provide the particular blue-mold Roquefort variety. Exwr‘ nts in cheese at the University of Min- nesota Farm in the environs of st. Pull, led however, to the dis- covery that these sandstone caves. wtttlin a few minutes’ walk of the St. Pa/ul City Hall, were ideal places to "cure" the product which is said to compare easily in quality with the French-made cheese. During the last year 10.000 lbl of the cheese was mired in a re- latively small experimental cave. ' There are enough caves near St. Paul to supply the entire world demand for Roquefort cheese, so says Prof. W. B. Combs. chief of the dairy division at the Univer- sity farm. ' USEFUL COOKERI HINTS “Cookery hints" were stock in trade long before there We!‘ cookery books, women's magazines. newspaper food pages. or radio ldtohen broadcasts. Women and men’ too, ‘. .10 00011118 W86 l» man's job, passed on their little kitchen secrets or guarded them carefully, according to 31-59051“ and circumstances. Today our cookery knowledge for the most part is circulated in the fonn of precisely IWWL WW4 recipes. However, all cooks still seek “hlnts" and find in them practical susuestions for how wayB and short-outs which make cooking easier and more interesting. we all like to exchange cookery secrets. so here are some which may be new. Do you know that- Vqetalble cocktail is made W combining chewed caboose oolery. green and seasoniw i“ l thin gelatin mixture. Serve with a spicy cocktail sauce- Iticklm have a variety of uses qty-m- than m gemish sandwiches and salads. Add - finely chopped pickle with a few drops o4 onion juice to mayonnaise to serve with run or m moisten chopped moot my ssmiwiok ruling. Add chipped pickle to willie sauce just before serving it on cauliflower. Chop mixed mustard pickle and cream with butter; use bet/ween very Wu slices of buttered bread: toast and serve hot with toa. Add thin slices of pickle to Potato. rioe of macaroni salad- y Cereals are not only "extender? for fish salads. but lmpmve the flavor by cutting excessive oili- 31333. '1\-y steamed rice with tuna and corn flakes with salmon in the proportion of one-third cereal to two-thirds fish. Combine as usual with other ingredients in your fish salad recipes. 001d watorr but into a hot skillet will in time-cause it to buckle, due to uneven expansion of the metal. Ascoopoficecrcanlonaserv- ing of corn flakes makes a whole- some nurishihg dessert. @001- ally good for the children's ail-P- Pflfi ' pom rum BEAN ro-r awn m SUMMER _ When warm weather comes, most of us put the good old bean pct on a top shelf and fol-get it until winter; yet there's nothiul "m! °n those raw days in Jilly and Aulul than a batch of baked beans. With spicy Boston brown bread. your family will enjoy them. When there's no time for the long soaking and baking procem, it's simple to turn a. can of beans into a caserole, add s. tablespoon cf molasses, one of lemon juice and another ofmeltcd butter and reheat them in a hot oven. The lemon juice is a better summer season- ing than catsup. Pieces of bacon put on top of beans and cooloed in the oven makes this dish very tasty. Here's a recipe for Boston brown ad : BOSTON BROWN BREAD steam 21-2 ilotlraBekotenmlnuiss LONDON srnas msnrla in a model-ems not. oven. Pound. rum moss or rams baking paw own ma“ good molds n you invent the “London is tho gayest city in M19" "W! Dir-ope," mid Mrs. Florence bread to rise so er , San . ' writer. W“ t" visiting Victoria after a 12-month!’ trip through Europe. I93 "m! The young wiflw said Paris no 1°‘ an compared to London. means m4 w! uueewereevolvuedemitweens- Ill-o" oenerr to mete reservations an ‘"11 mt jueu well n advance. She tastiest b moth ~doiain_ in loeldon wees flea bovine yatplsh end & cost!) Him . in “film! one. . I m ls with 8 so Mrs. W. D. I-lerridge and her young son, Billy, who llove- been visiting the formers brother. Rt. Hon. It. B. Bennett, at the Chat- eau Laurier, have left for St. Andrews-by-the-Sea, N3" to spend the Summer months. I I I The Hon. Mr. Justice J. D. Hyndman of Ottawa is arriving in the city tonight to spend a week or two with his mother, Mrs. Che-l’- les lLvndman and brother Mr. A. W. Hyndman. Mr. Hyndman motor- ed down from Ottawa to Frederic- ton. N. B.. with Mr. Justice O. S. Crocket of the Supreme Court of Canada, and Mr. Justice A. K. Dysart who stopped on’ to visit his brother Hon. A. A. Dysart, K.C., in Buctouche. I I I ms. A. H. C. Beairsto, 'I‘oronto, and her son Billy, have gone to Gregorb, Brackley Beach. for the Summer. I I I Mrs. F. P. Taylor and Mrs. Mur- doch McKinnon left Thursday to spend the Summer at the Cox Hotel in Souris. Mr. Frank McKin- ncn is visiting his chum, Mr. Ralph Calder at their Summer home in Stanhope. - I I I Miss Inez Mutch is being wel- comed hcme from New York on s holidoy visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Ii’. Mutoh. I I I Dr. I. E. and Mrs. Croken have as their guests Mrs. Crokens sister, ma. (Dru) Regan and little dough. ter Pat. who are greatly enjoying their holiday. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Rogers have as their guest Mr. Roger's sister, Mrs. Wilson E. Hunt of Maiden, Mow. who is being welcomed by many friends. I I I Mr. and Mrs. lhnest Mcllish of Toronto are among the visitors here this week, the guests o: M1‘. and Mrs. John A. Erase, 89 Upper Prince Street. They are on a motor trip through the Maritimes and are renewing many friendships during their brief holiday. I I I Mrs. Ernest Bell" of Charlottetown, and her sister, Mrs. Roland Holyoke of Fredericton, N.B.. who have been attending the Anglican summer school in Rothesay, spent the ween. end visiting friends in Saint John and left Monday by motor for Fredericton where Mrs. Bell will Vie"? MY- Bud Mrs. Holyoke before returning home. I I I Mrs. A. B. Warburton and Miss Olga Warburton are again spend- ius the holidays at Holland Cove. Miss Warburton is a member ct the staff of Fialkoner Hospital, Boston, I I I Mnny home friendsam much in. teresisd in the marriage which 1g “K1118 place in Toronto today of Miss Helen large to Mr. Ian Mc- Arthur. Mr. and Mrs. McArthur will leave immediately after the cere- mony on a honey-moon motor trip to this city to visit the bride's par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. H. I-‘t. Is , Hillsboro Street. we w one Miss Dora Duchemin of Sydney BPeht a few days in New Glasgow, NS. last week on her way to her Summer home in Bay Fbftung, I I I At the Charlottetown Tennis Courts this afternoon the t“ hostesses will be Miss Sue Brenton, Miss Marjory Maser. Miss Betty Newson, Miss Lyma Wright. I I I The Duchess of Kent has set - other fashion. She were three all?» mond stars in her hair at a ball the other night. And consume, Duchess of Westminster, gt the’ oPera wore a five-tailed comet in diamonds on the left side o! im- heed ‘ I I I Mr. J’. W. Boulter is in Quebec to meet ht son, Mr. Cedric Boujtor. who is returning from Athens. Greece. After a short holiday here Mr. ‘will take up work with one o e or 05¢ 1 the mmd s. unverslties in I I I Mrs. G. W. Wakeford is summer. in: at the or»: Hotel, Soul-lg. I I Mrs. Walter Gregor cg m-gcklgy advent... Social work et- Manhattan State Hospital. use. wheretbegmomwaselnembercf is receiving a cordial welcome to her new home. . I I I Roccblingrheed mistress of , Windmt, '88-. and her assistant, mu Murray. are again spending the summer at one of the cottages at Holland Cove. The? have as their guests Mrs. Wallace from Halifax and Miss Hancock from Montreal. I I Mrs. A. G. Putnam cf Beokvills has arrived to spend the Slimmer at slldon. lMr. Putnam will join the family later on. I I I Tea hostesses at the Golf Links this afternoon will be Mrs. H. H. Home, Misses A. and I. Home, Mrs. H. C. ‘Thompson. -. I I I Mrs. A. H. Macleod and son Keith of Saint John are summer- ing at Breokley Beach. I I I we. Den Anderson and young daughter Elizabeth of Montreal, are being welcomed on a visit to Mrs. Anderson's father, Mr. Henry Mc- Farlane, Prince Street. I I I Rev. George Morris, Mrs. Morris and family of Seokville are spend- ing a few weeks in Bresdalbane. I I I Mr. Roy Duchemin returned to Sydney last week from a visit to Bay Fortune where, with ma. Duchemin, they were wlsitirlg at the summer home of his parents. En route home by motor, Mrs. Duchemin entrained at sackvills for Detroit, where she will visit her sister, Mrs. J. H. MacDonald, for the summer‘ months. I I I Mr. N. J. Sparks of the Historic Sites Branch of the Department of the Intorior. Ottawa, who is suppr- intending the erection of the calm at Holland Cove in commemoration of Captain Holland who conducted the first survey in British North America, is accompanied by Mrs. BDB-fksand their little daughter Joan. While here they are occupy- ing one of the summer cottages at Holland Cove. I I I Rev. Dr. George E. Ross and Mrs. Ross of Fredericton are summer- lng at Youghall Beech, NB. I I I Miss Joan Price. Montreal, is vis- iting her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. b: D. Nicholson, Fitzroy St. I I I Mk‘. and Mm. W. Scott Munro and little daughter Heather of Montreal are visiting Mrs. Munro's sister Mrs. Hebe: It. Large. I I I Mrs. E. P. Harrington and dough. ters the Misses Mildred "and Vir- ginia motored to Halifax the lest of June and have taken up residence for the Summer months at the Rosebank Apartments, Quinpool Road. Later they will be joined by Capt. Colin H. and Mrs. Campbell and small son Colin H., of Calgary. Miss Carmen Harrington of Quebec City and w. William Ramsay of Ottawa. ‘ . . The tea hostesses at the Sum- menside Golf Links this afternoon will be Mrs. Melville Bradshaw, ma. E. T. ‘Iunton, Miss Harriet Bradshaw, Miss Sybil Tanton. I I I Mrs. Gale and four children. Phyllis, Nancy. Ralph and Jack, the family of Colonel J. R. Bale of St. John. N3, are among those in resi- dence at Holland cove this Summer. I I ‘The nurses of the PJILI. Hospital gave a. very enjoyable miscellaneous shower Monday evening in honor of Miss Illa Edwards, R.N., whose marriage took place lest Wednesday to Mr. Wendell Wood. The happy event was held at the bride's home in Hampshire, the guests motoring out in the cool of the evening. Amid much galety the gifts. which were very pretty and valuable, were opened by Miss Marion Wil- son and the verses read by Miss Bu-rlice Mutch. A few hours were ploasantly spent with refreshments of ico cream and cake before good- byes were said. " I I I On Tuesday evening Miss Illa Beach, Miss Olive Ritchie, Miss me Oumminrs. New York. Charlie Cummings oi Charlottotown were kuests of Mrs. Gregor! sister. Mrs. J. W. Howe. Jacksonville, N. 2.. for a few days this week m their way homo from a motor trip to New York. I I I Mrs. J. D. Hyndman, cf Ottawa. has returned from Edmonton. Alta, where she has been the guest o: her son. Mr. fouls nyndman and Mrs. Hyndmsn for the past six Min Muriel Maclsen is returning ""4 mowing to ‘Iloronto to resume h" 11mins duties after a much "tidied holiday with her mother, m. Mir-y Msobesn. I I I msic-zealnl. Waterman“ of smetml r vs vmms 14m. Joan. mums. ‘Tommy, Patricia ens John Edwards, RN, was again the wed mqof honor at a miscellaneous shower GeorRo-L” He oolloludl! given by Mrs. Cecil Wood at her lovely home, Central Royalty. Love- ly gifts were showered on the popular young ntnrse, together with mI-ly I006 wishes. I I I On Thursday Miss “we. borne friends and neighbors of Hampshire tortured her a ‘shower of appre- ciation" which consisted of e de- Weltremmt. fireman spending the samsnorcn tberulendmgiereirlresidsaeecu Amfiso time. rue uoMs Shlrtwaist frocks a-plollty mm. Altlhzou weillmhavc to decl ' ‘is sim ml r81.’ spectator sports or town. it looks stunning in linen. navy blue matlfs on white ground. renewal the navy in composition buttonalnd buckle. It's charm too in dlmity or dotted swine. as w WWW!‘ not red on white around- Agaln you'll find a dress for act- "eti backwmixaiiualfiziwo comm so on- D 1y ‘M so practice-l in striped crinkly cw ton or plaided seer-sucker, that nose. no iron n8. Style No. w: is dasisued for d!!! 1e. i8 years, a6. 8o. 4° W! 414mb” bilat. Sire as requires as vents o! SO-irlch material. Price of PATTERN is cents in stamps or coin (coin is wretched-l Wrap coin carefully. _.___..___a--—-—-— 210.837. Size .... use; u...“-t-r-s-e-tot-en-s-re-u."- (my Btlffi BOOKS/ART: 5 MUSIC (By I‘. B. m: n‘; vvv Plagiarism (because or rapid growth of weeds. eW-l The Governor-General dentin!" of Canadl». JOQR Bllmm- Wm h?“ a new novel The House of he Four Winds." on the fall list of the Houghton Mifflln co. . . ._ Kather- m, Anthony is rapidly completinl her biography of Louisa May Mo?“ to be published this fall. . . J Rice Burroulhi M" Q°V°1 “n” and the Leopard Men‘ is oXvoot-oo w be ready early in selvtomber- - Willa Gathers "Lucy Gayhefl" 15 slated for the first of August. . . - "The Garden Murder Case" by 3- 5- VanDirw-the initial murder is committed in a garden atop a New York apartment but the motion o! the story is concerned with horses, the turf, and racing lore-is also for the fall. . . . Captain Landau. author of "Ali's Fair" a 810W o! the British Secret Service behind the German Ines. is workinl ou 1"‘ other book "The White Lady" to be published in August. Victor Canning, author of Finchley Discovers His Blizlend. has completed his second novel "Polycarps Progress" and has earn- ed for himself the title of Mr. Priestley's apprentice. An lilnglish reviewer. W. E. Williams adds-feud s promising one too. In this second novel of his he creates one Polycarp Jarvis, and sends him on a genial truantry in the manner of the 014181‘ of the Good Oflmlillliiml- - - has the same sort of spaoiousnw, the same facility for nlaking daily trivialities lively and momentous. the same nest of narrative as Mr. Priestley. . . . It is a siofy whim has exuberance, swift movement and plenty of fun." Charles Morgan, reporting from London for the New York Times. sends back word that all Lmdon is snickering at a parody review of English historical mattere-"IOOG And All That," Reginald Arkelrs dramatic version of the book of the same name by W. C. Sella!- and R. October 1930. The drsnlatimtion must have been a difficult undertaking as most of the humour of the book lies in the author's witty commentary, but the difficulty has evidently been overcome by the use of a "compete" who appears on the stage to remark on the scerlo just ended and to in- troduce the one to ‘follow. themselves vary greatly in quality but the entertainment steadily in- creases. with the climax of the non- sense in the scene "I'm Four with the relnark-"The whole entertainment with Alfred Roynoidb tlnkllng music. is such a. rollicking piece of nursery buffooaery that. in what might elsewhere be satirical, there is no sting." Two soronto artists have con- of Art Bihibitlons. price on a card which input into a sealed box. At the close of the There r water-colours, oils pastels, and colourful batik: in the itioa SMART . A um season-end here is a delightful t- - .Hem" J. Yeetman first published in- Mr. Morgan says that the scenes ‘ coated something new in the way P“ "l4 "I" "mo" Attbeurtueurrmxalmlrme ""1" . , “rt l and bidders have a good chance of picking up bargains for g song. A recently published book which should be of. interest to music lov- ers is entitled “Rom Fragments to Parslfal, ‘rho Arttof Richard Wac- nerl" It is written by Bede -Vsn Berchem withe foreword by Law- rence '1‘ibbett, and has sixteen full page illustrations. ' withGern-laneshismother _, to voice tho protest that must have beenin the minds or music lovorl for some time. the protest‘ that Wagner-most opera in fact-is never sung in English. Although he himself understands German as well as English. Walter Demroch realirss that the are many people who have had ‘slim- merlngs of the real vitality and grandeur of- the wagnsrian opera." but who cannot appreciate it fully because o1 the barrier of language. In his letter to the New York Times, he writes: ‘What a pity that an opera like Wagner's "Meister- sinser." which to my mind is tbs greatest comedy since Shakespeare. should only be enjoyed because of its music, but cannot be readily understood because it is sung in I ‘ e. In Italy Wagner is perfomlsd in Italian. In Holland it is performed in Dutch. in Stockholm in Swedish. lnPolsndinPclish. . . .Andthen there is a little mpubllc of only two millions, a small nation. but now politically independent. Riga is the capital and there they give their operas in the Intvian tongue! Why should our country lag behind? Why should opera be sung only m the select few in foreign tongues? Opera should. and must be pre- served. It has got to be democratisld. One way to do it is,to extend our opera season to last forty five weeks during the year and lower tbs prices. The New Deal at the Met- ropolitan wlll include those great American singers who have there demonstrated so nobly the beauty o! English in song." comm 3 or 4 sticks I of rhubarb, f on corniiour, l. tablespoonful lemon juice, l pintwater, e ca. sugar, l teespoomul grated lemon l cream. dsssicated cocoenut. _ the rhubarb and out it up. Stew with water until quits soft. than rubthroughasisvaneturntotha juice and "half-pint stews “rib-ow 1 It has taken s man, brought up i