THE GUARDIAN , CHARIOTTETOWN (AGE NINE We Also Carry CONFIRMATION DRESSES. isizesbro 14 yrs.) .. 53.95 so 56.95 FOR STYLE AND GOOD VALUE SHOP AT nus MlSSES 159 Queen St. a Nice Range of Children's White norms and annnuir DRESSES 3 Presenting Newest Fashion Features in Children's Pretty Taffeta, American Prints, Ginghems, Chambray Spuns, and etc. 32.98 to 510.95 A large assortment of wa.sh- i able dresses in sizes 2-14x. Choose dresses she'll wear -srtiystautimes. Phone 92 York and Vicinity Miss Lorna Vessey. last week cele- brnted her birthday with a few of her little friends. Messrs: Harry Lewis and Harold Watts, were visitors to Rustico on Wednesday Miss Margaret Wstts returned home Lfter visiting her sister Mrs olile Brown. City. Mrs. Leonard Andrews arrived home from the P. E. I. Hospital with her baby dsughtu. Mrs. Prod MacDonald. Olty is visiting in York the guest of Mr. and Mrs. ax-nest MacDonald. Mr. Angus Oluney. York. while he was out cutting kindlings had the misfortune of having the LXO slip snd cut his thumb which required four stiches. Many friends i of little Marlyn Lewis are sorry to hear of her ill- ness, her friends wish her a speedy recovery. Mrs.. Alex Benton, has returned to her home in York after visiting in Trscadie the guest of M.r. and Mrs. my Kelzer. Mrs. Alfred Morrison, has re- turned to her home in Pleasant or-ovi. after being a patient in the Charlottetown Hospital. Mh. Eerbut Lewis and grand- son Frankie Lewis were visitors to Union Road on Sunday the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Yeo. Friends of Mr. Ernest MacDonald. are sorry to hear of his illness and they all wish him a speedy re- overy. SEIZED RED LITERATURE MON'I'R.i!'.AL, April -(or)- City and Provincial po e today raided the Bleury Street offices of the Montreal Pea a Council. a local organization, nd gelzed thousands of allegedly oommun- irtic pamphlets and posters. Four police officers staged the raid shortly before noon when they entered the office armed with 3 search warrant for stolen goods. A Peace Council official said leaf- lzts, posters and the organization's complete filing system were tak- en away by the police. Police of- ficials said no arrests have been made yet. HOLST, Dorset. England-(GP) -The mystery of the wrongly- lpointcd signpost has been solved. Alter motorists had lost their way, it was 'discovered a cow had used lthe sign-post as a head scratcher. one,-room heaven: to little expense - as a Nothing transforms a room as quickly and at smart Congoleum Rugl Bright, pretty, easy-to-care-for . . . It stays beautiful and new looking an amazingly long timel For Congoleurn has a wear-layer of heat-toughened paint and baked enamel equal in thickness to 8 coats of the best floor paint applied by hand. And it's the only enamel surface tioor covering with the famous money-back 0W"'-"'l”- BiiNlillI.EilM Oell80d0ageIehIep...iI0dV9 .oc....I.umcensdei.InIted.MoMMl- Facts II F. ii. ufseArthas Who was known as the Poet? His name was 13.3 Clfey. the author of "Sally in our Mlev-" C-rev set his inspiration tor this number by observing s pair of sweethearts on their hell- days in London. The song caught, on from the first and became very POPUIBY. though its author recent- ed being called the Alley Poet. While we are all familiar with the song "Annie Laurie". I won. der .how many of us know that Annie was a real person. Annie Laurie was born at Maxweiton. Sctland. in l802;l and her ashes now rest in. Dunscore V Cemetery. Annie's boy friend. a Mr. Douglas, wrote the original words but they were retouched by Lady John Scott. It was soon taken up and sung everywhere. The writer does not know who composed the music to these famous lyrics. Every bird has its appointed task serving mankind by seeking their own ends. but the wise old owl is claimed to be the most valu- able to man of all birds. This pirate of the bird kingdom is as carniverous as a she-wolf, a sly rogue that works under cover of darkness, just as many criminals do. Yet, with all his faults, farm- ers can thank their lucky stars that the owl takes care of thous- ands oi.' rats and mice. Don't shoot them! Fest is decayed vegetable mat- ter that is neither coal not wood, not yet having arrived at a finish- ed staie. It is usually found in layers many feet thick. Ireland has extensixe peat bogs and we have a few in our own province. though they have never been ful- - ly investigated. When taken from its wet bed, it has too be i thoroughly dried in the sun be- fore it can be used for fuel. As to the quantity and quality of island peat bogs, oil too little is known about this local product but if it could be turned into fuel, it would be a godsend to many poor families who must buy coal or wood at very high prices. The Micmae Indians are our chief linguists. most of the tribe can speak French and English as well as their own tongue. - Do you know why the police- men of London are called "Bob- bies"? Sir Robert Peel created the London police force and that's how they calm by the name of "Peelers" and on still called "Bobbies" because Peel's first nsrne was Robere. Peel abolish- ed the old laws under which per- sonsusedtobehangedtorsuch crime as picking-pockets, ate. crimes that in our day would draw short prison terms. This great Brltislfoatsteaman was killed by a fall from his horse. There are some blrdgjhet chose ( their mates for life. odd and curious Get FERAMINE at your nearest Drug Store 912230 By Feeaing Only In Alive I NEWTonic Food Supplement F E RAMINE it improves A Appetite, Nutrition Nerves - Makes You Feel Stronger Peppier or YOUR MONEY BACK Try a. bottle of FERAMINE today. See If FE 'S unique combination of Iron and Vitamin B factors won't snap you out of that 34 alive slump--help restore lost pep and vitality- make you feel keeuer, more active! GUARANTEE: If after takin 8 bottles of FERAMINE, lyou're not satisfi with the bone- i , return t e empty bottles to your druggist and get the full price back. What could be fair- er? Large 14 oz. bottle only 31.50. i BEAU VIIIAT FEIIAMIIE IS DOING Fill! OTHERS! ' Mrs. C. Maker, 1540 Guy St., Montreal says, "Pleasant tasting Feramlne certainly helped steady my nerves and stimulate my appetite. It's a great builder-upper." , Howard S. Lantz, 26 Simeon St., Kitchener, 1 Out., says, "After only 2 bottles, I felt much : ppler and more active. I am going to cop right on taking Feramlne." 14 Os. Bottle Feramlne has been successfully tested in 6 leading countries). There are 2,330,000 seeds in a pound of iheep's grass. LWO in golden oat grass, and about 140,- 000 seeds to the pound, perennial .3: you . . . rye gram. Coclrsfood grass yields 28.000 pounds per acre on nlelr soil 2 which, when dried. shrinks to 12.- 000 pounds. Good quality timothy grass will return 40.000 pounds, decreasing to 17.000 pounds when dried. Were it not for the grass pas- tures. people would have to pay higher prices for their meat. milk. butter, cheese and wool. Mother Nature has wisely used grasee to cover up the scars of earth. Forest and flowers will in time decay but gran is immortal. Your Kiddies can have su- pervised care while 30!! work. 'l'0DDLEBS' INN NURSERY PHONE 2889-L M38. 0. 3. SOY (Nursery Supervisor) 18! bprlng Park Road (Above McGlll) osrstty on says - Continued from page I calls for adJustments' that the wife must make for the most part. No man is easy to live with. but when a woman loves her husband it takes the sting out of the sacrifices she must make and blinds her to his faults. But this does not happen if she does not love him. Then she resents everything she has to do for him and his every weakness be- comes an intolerable " against her. Your mother's optimistic belief that you will fall in love with your husband after marriage is not justified by experience. A woman who marries without love seldom falls in love afterward with her husband because if he did not. have the charms that could VH1: her before mar- riage. he still less has them after marriage. For men put their best foot. foremost when they are courting. Of course. every girl wants a home of her own. but she can buy it at too high a price. and she does psy more than it is worth when she sells herself for it. Moreover, she makes a doubly bad bargain because when she marries a man she doesn't love for a home she throws away her chances that are always on the card of getting both a '1 she loves and a home. And that is too good a bet to overlook. 'DEAR MISS DIX: I am married. have two small children, and live with my husband's mother. My mother-in-law spoils them. par- ticularly the little girl. until they are being ruined and I am powerless to help it. Neither their father or I have any control over the chil- dren, for their grandmother opposes our every effort to discipline them. The little girl of 3 still has to be rocked to sleep and screams as if she were mad every time she is crossed. I want to raise my children properly. but it is impossible to do so under the circumstances. What shall I do? WORRIED MOTHER ANSWER: Your first duty is to your children and it is some- thing that you must do right now. Immediately. It cannot be put off to some leter date. for the pattern of a child's life is set by the time it is 4 years old and nothing that you can do after that will lreatly change it. if you let your children defy you when they are in the cradle. you will have lost your authority over them and you will not be able to control them when they are older. If you let them find out that they can get what they want by screaming for it when they are babies. they will get their own way by making scenes as long as they like. If you let them disobey you when they are babies. they will flout your opinion and Judgment when they are adolescent and need to be guided by some one older and wiser than they are. A famous child specialist said once that grandmothers killed more babies than any known disease. Certainly they ruin more lives than all the powers of evil by spoiling children when they are babies and bring- ing them up to be selfish. undisciplined youngsters who know no law but their own wills and who deh all authority. No child should be brought up in the house with a grandmother or a maiden aunt unless the grandmother and the maiden aunt have self-re- straint enough to keep their hands of! them and leave them to their moth- er to rear. DEAR D0li.OTl-(Y Dix: I am the most. unhappy girl in the world be- cause the boy that I am in love with doesn't care beans about me. What can I do about it? . BOBBY G. ANSWER: Absolutely nothing. lava is not an emotion that can be compelled. It &mes and goes as it will and no one knows why. it is a matter of taste. of the Imagination. of some subtle a al. and if you do not have It for a boy. your sin: 17 lack it. and that is there is to it. t roar best plan is to quit ng about him snd turn your affections upon some more responsive youth. Dolblltnmaamtrwhlndejdhhrudnqbutwiuno per-eIIIIsQelgyaesalllteIIsIheesIIss-eolulrrg , THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW by Fagoly & .2-a-1... .. . .- . . , V. H i iI'IE5TUDlEDEYEl2YROADMAplNCApTlVrnI !""ANDGJE3l'OWl.UfO"TxN1t.O' BEFOQE HE TOOK THAT AUTO TRIP-g NAVIGATORD NAVIGATE OFF HIS COURSE . GOOD GRiEF.' ARE tDU AT THOSE MAPS AGAIN ?VGJ ' ', SHOULD HAVE EVERY ROAD IN THE OOUNTRY MEMORIIED N NON! LOST! VERE HARRY OUT OF THE Ci'I'V LIMITS! 1 CAN Jus'r MAKE rr's 6ETTiN' IF THAT WAS- rr wm-1 vow: BIKE" A . I'LL LEAVE rr AT 'n-1' aio'i:zBc':i: TxE'cVooi.'iJPliD.i-I.-'Ec;-:'IE Bus srol? AND sou CAN MAKE UP oz soME- CAN-STIZOLL ovsiz rr- IF HE -runner uses MY h 'i.5Ig'ifl . HEROES ARE MADE-NOT BORN