.m-.-.mmnzmm- THE ICHARIJOTTETOWN GUARDIAN x n» l a PAGE- TWO ~ ‘ AUGUST 9~..1933 ' w ’ R 1 s ' 1 d P 1 - F h‘ - L't t ,~._,,,= a oman S ea m n" OClCl an ersona fi- GS 10713 '0' l 9ra are , '~ qcvvowvc - _ u“ ~~ feeu“: T» u‘ - _ c0§¢¢00+00+¢oo<+o0+v>¢ ‘¢“=““¢“=¢¢=¢¢~'¢ “w ‘—‘¢ ‘ “‘"‘ ‘TVTH if fiu§m?‘- _ ' M " _ i. p. t, Dorothy Db, i Daintmess mm cm..- sm» A g _ igngpgiivmg Zvbgvfig: w w»: i meat-on? _ 1m Dal‘ E near-nan» ‘pllgwg! Insulin I “nmwmbox +044 RV‘ cg x; w ilief». * tisa Tragic Thing to Think That a Mother “mm M0m6l1t$ Uaugfi-gcvcgfiya: Who Would Die for Her Child so Often Ruins its Life,” Says Dorothy Dix- “Yet it Happens Every Day” The other day a woman quoted to me the old folk saylfli; that l5 0m" 7 or; the lips of mothers about children stepping on your feet when they all! little and trampling over your heart whenjhey are big. T’ "It's true," she cried bitterly, "children have no gratitude, no appreciation of what their moth- ers do for them. Why, yesterday my daughter zicozisecl me of ruining her life. Me! Her own mother! And I have done nothing since the day she was born but worship her and sacrifice my- self for her. omtm-imnufl "Why, I have never denied her a thing in the world she wanted. I have indulged her every whim. She has never even known what it was to have a wish ungratified or to be thwarted about anything. And I have waited on her hand and foot as no servant would. ‘ l “I have simply devoted my life to that girl and you would think that _ - _ , uhe would be down on llCl‘ knees thanking God for the blesing of a '- ' ' ‘ 5 ' mother's love, but instead oi that she blames all of her troubles on me, I and says that if I had been her enemy I couldn't have done her more harm than I have. “She says. that the reason she ran through her money was because I brought hor up to be extravagant. and to think she had to have every- thing she wantrd Wllf/Lllcl‘ she could afford it or not. And the reason she ls lonely is because I have made her so selfish and self-centered that no- body loves her. Sheeven blames me for her unhappy marriages, and mys that the rcflsnn she llllS divorced two husbands is because I never taught ll\‘i‘ to consider anybody else but herself, or to do anything that she didn't Wilill’. to do simply because it was the right thing to do. "Did you ever hear of anything so unjust and terrible as a child say- lng such thintzs to her mother? Oh, I tell you it is little thanks we mothers get for our rimofion m our children." And, I thought, it is little gratitude their children owe these fond and foolish mothers who ruin the good clay the Potter has put into their hands Printed cheers in cotton and linen lead a fashionable life. ‘They may be ilorala, dots, checks or geomet- ries, but they must be tiny and de- tailed to create a slenderlzing ef- feet. A printed chiffon cotton voile made the model pictured. It is navy blue with white scattered motifs. It combines with plain blue contrast. Don't you think the sleeve pretty? The pin tucks give a lengthened ef- fect to the arm. The cross-over bodice and pointed hip seaming are exceptionally good features to slen- derlze the figure. Tub silks in white or pastels and zig-zag or diagonal stripes in linen are very attractive mediums for this model. It's as easy as A, B, O, to make it. Style No. B17 ia designed for sins 3-6, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust. v Size 36 requires 4% yards 35-inch with 9h yard 35-inch contrasting. Price of PA'I'I‘ER.N l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. No. 817. Size ......I............... i I I I Street Address and who fashion it into distorted forms that are of no practical use and that are bofuid to be smashed into smithereens in the liurly-burlg: of life. For it, is only too sadly true that unwise mother love can do o. child more injury‘ thlui malice itself could invent. “other is so tender of her darlings that she stands lJCiWCCIi them and every hardship. She will not correct their faults. She will not teach them to control their tempers. she does not teach them how to standup and take punishment. And then when they are chucked out into a world which no mother can soft- parl for them they are lmocked out in the first round because they hi!" not been trained to meet any of the conditions by which they are con- fronted. ‘ They are soft where they should be hard. CROSS. YESTERDAY . . . HAPPY TODAY l Afld 8 VET)’ gOOd reason Yesterday a whiney, peevish baby. Didn't want to play. Didn’t want to eat. To- day bubbling over with good nature and ready for his meals. Two little BABY'S OWN TABLETS worked the magic change. How did they do it? They simply re- mnvcll the intestinal poisons and the excess bile that were upsetting his diges- tion and irritating his nerves. BABTS OWN TABLETS are more than an ordinary laxative. They have a triple action-stimulate the liver, cleanse the kidneys. excrci=c the intestines. And chil- zlrcn who drink a lot of milk need an " ' l occasional liver stimulant, as the physi- dan who prepared the original formula for BABY'S OWN TABLETS well knew. Furthermore, the ingredients in these tablets are absolutely SAFE for children, and the dosage is correct. The nt-rt time your baby is cross, sleepless. doesn't want to eat, has (rrnivtl ioncue, hail llfUlilll. roiic. constipaiiomtecthing troublesnmvc liim BABY'S 0\\'.\' TABLETS in place of an ordinary laxative, and just sec how much more effective they are. As easy to take‘? candy. Complete directions with each ZS-unt box. B l; ‘They are weak where they _ __ ___,_,_ ,,,w__,__.¢___. ._ ___...n._ ..___ ... DR. WILLIAMS‘ Malta and Keep Clnilrn Well-A M other: Know prefer. Don't, by the way, overlook the fact that. you can whip evapor- ated miLk, if you first scald it (right in the tin or double boiler) for about 4 minutes, then cool it and chill it deeply before you try to whip it. it V341] whip very easily, and you can than flavor and ‘ .. it just as you would ordinary whipped cream. Just as a reminder-evapor- ated milk, the kind of canned milk which may be whipped, is unsweet- ZHE'CINNK$ CCHWVER Red Rhubarb Shortcake i‘ Amongst the good things YOU are making these days with rhubarb, don't overlook ' an old-fashioned shorteake. Make a rich shortcuke dough Just as ya“ wguld for straw- med. (The sweetened canned milk Den-y shormake, , is condensed, not evaporated.) Stew rhubarb, cooking it down l ___._i._.____ until it isnice and thick and sweet- i Meadow Fescue grass is a fairly ening it to your taste. WhiLst of 200d milk producer but its chief course, any rhubarb will (lo, the ,value is in fattening cattle. bright-lined strawberry rhubarb Will be most effective. Have the cooked. rhubarb cold. Perhaps you will like to serve cus- tard with your rhubarb shorlcakc- or you could have whipped cream to smother the top of the cake if you NOTICE All taxes in arrears for Cape] Trnvrrsr- School No. 82, nnt paid hy k Srptt-mhcr 13th will hr handed to 1h» cleric nf flu- (‘nuniy Court for collection. a:= recall? !¢§}**?s? DYSENTERY IS DANGEROUS Gl-IEQK IT AT ONCE "gs- l! ilic rcmr-Ily you should use. li. m not un experiment, hut a fried and prover] preparation that has been used m (ennmln for the past 88 yearn By nnlcr of Trustees. ' flict of tastes and desires, as they are bound to do in matrimony, then should be strong. They are self-indulgent where they should be stoic. ‘They are filled with a sense of their own importance where they should be them and none that make for success. You might just as well train a champion for a prizefight by having him loll on soft cushions and feed on chocolate creams and expect him to win out as to expect a child that has been pampered and spoiled to succeed in life. Yet that is the way s0 many mothers prepare their children for the grim battle of existence. Mother never makes Johnny stick to anything or finish a job he has startedand he grows up into being one of the quit- ters who drift from occupation to occupation without ever accomplishing anything. ‘Mother is so sorry for Percy, who is ‘ amsntal and who can never find just the thing he would like to do and who inevitably de- Velqps into a lazy loafer. Mother wears patched shoes so Busie can have n. dozen pairs of snake- skin pumps. Mother works her nngers to the bones so Maurie may have red enameled fingernails and hands that are too soft to use n broom. So Susie and Maurie develop into the kind of women who keep their hus- bands‘ noses to the grlndstone and whine and complain because they can't dress like mlllionairesses. And who can doubt for a moment that the reason there are so many divorces is because mothers unfit their daughters for being wives? Mother humble. They have had every quality that makes for failure fostered in . Sb: own bu‘ numb, faultless complexion to this some! soothing blend of olive and palm oils. Ir ll the secret blending of the oil: of olive and palm that makes Palmolive truly c beauty soap -- the soap millions of women depend on to lace; skin smooth, fresh, ndi- _ anzly youthful so alluring. Morning and night, with both hands make a rich, creamy lather of Palmolive Soap and warm water. Massage itfently into the res of the face, throat an shoulders. ‘use thoroughly. Dry carefully. ‘ Here's what happens. Palmolive‘: sooth- ing olive oil pmemnu every pore . . . flushes our every particle of dust and dirt. This is the true foundation cleansing which brings out the healthy, youthful, natural colourin of your skin, gives gou a complexion a - mired by men, envie by women. Buy 5 calces of Palmolive tocla . Use them as directed above. Then watch or results- a smoother, lovelier, younger complexion. MADE IN CANADA __¢.n A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Drink deep. or taste not the P.’- rian Spring. \ -l= pe. ‘ i<l l HONEST!’ ' l 1 hold the maxim no less appli- cable to public than to private af- fairs, that honesty is the best po- hay-Washington. A field becomes exhausted constant tlllB§€.—0Vld. by What fur ll useless for keeping you wean? The fur in a kettie. wnat ls the difference beirween an oak tree and a leopards mil? Oneisrcotedtoihespotandthe other in spotted to the root. WITH PENCIL AND PAPER A trick which puzzles people a brings up Elsie to believe that she is the most important person in the world, and that when she marries the only thing to be considered is her happiness, her pleasure, her well-being. Her husband must provide her with plenty of money and the things that money buys. He must take her out to places of amusement. He must be her humble slave and do her bidding at all times, and be grateful that she condesoends m let him support her. And he must never have any wishes or desired of his own. That is the way mother has always treated her, and that is the way she expects her husband to treat her. But, alas, husband has only too frequently been brought up by a mother who spoiled him just as much as the bride's mother spoiled her, and when these two undisciplined, self-willed creatures meet in the con- there are the explosions that are heard in the divorce courts. Probably it is not too much to say that three-fourths of the disillusion of matrimony is when the bride and bridegroom find out that their husband or wife don't treat ‘them as their mothers used to do. Then there are the mothers who ruin their children's lives by keeping them perpetual babies so that when they come to the place when they must depend upon themselves and use their own judgment they fail be- cause they are still undeveloped little children who have been held by the hand so long that they cannot stand alone. It is a tragic thing to think that a mother who would die for her child so often ruins its life. But it happens every day. DOROTHY DIX. HEAR TS AFIRE B y MARY CHRISTIE CHAPTER 9 In the Shadow of the Hedge for! her. “He's awfully strong . . ." ‘Thiawaoatnnticclerroananaot- "1 W115 1115i? wmlnd W 39ml Y0“. ual aspersion on ‘Prcymorei little lady." announced young Trav- brawn! He thrust out his chest at more airily, "and to apologize for on“, "rm not such n. weakling myself." He reddened. “And I'm certainly notch-aid to tackle him, if that's what you mean. Brute force doesn't alarm me in the least." "He's not a. tramp, after all." said Prudence, lorry for her error, but not knowing what to say to make amends. "He's the Peter Armstrong who lives in Pear-Tree Cottage and who does experiments-J’ "I know. I know," said Traymore tcstily. "If I'd thought be was a common tramp. would I have left that infernally awkward scene down by the pool. If you hadn't been there, I'd have given the chap the thrashing of his life. But because he was a boor was no reason why I should follow suit." "Of course not," defended Prud- ence quickly. "You wero wonderful, the way you acted." The youngman shot her a quick look. Did she mean to be sarcastic? But no. Her pretty face held only a flattering mixture of concern and admiration. _ "It W85 Only your presence that lot in‘ carried out in this way. Get half a doben slips» of paper and seat: yourself with these and a pen- cil at a table. lit is best to be at ADflMnfigShmk Iiittlc Betty, watching the farm- hands, spreading out a stock of hay to dry, could contain her curiosity no longer, so she politely asked: "Is it a needle you're looking for?" RANK EXTRAVAGANCE Insurance Agent-But you surely agree to taking out an insurance policy to cover your burial expense? Wily Scot-Na, na, mon; I micht be lost at seal ‘ ‘ ‘y bowled him over?" She flushed in hurt. silence, and drew away from him. Traymore spoke again. "Shouldn't be a bit surprised if the whole thing was a. frameup, Just to get me out of the way, 50's he could talk to you!" This was too much. "How can you speak like that, when it was you who picked a quar- rel with him?" "Huh?" ‘Ihsymore shot her a sidelong glance. "He'd be flattered if he knew the champion he's found in you, wouldn't he?" Quick, sensitive tears sprang to her eyes. The Inquisitor continued:- "You haven't by any chance fall- en in love with him, have you?" "How can you say such a thing?" stammered the girl. "wny, 1_1 mtg him. I—I‘m in love with nobody." Her lips trembled. The man's face softened. you with him as I did? I know all about the fellow, darn his insol- encel" "Ho says he has permission to fish in that neighborhood—" "Making up to you, was he?" Her companions voice was full of re- sentment. "He ought to have gone down on his knees, and apologized." "He did apologize," said Prudence made me hold myself in. Any fellow who makes a row in front of a girl, ought to be kicked." She nodded in agreement. "After this shows over, I'm going down and have it out with him," proceeded Traymore, gaining con- fidence. "I'll tench him his proper place." for nll hr-u-vl complaints. Price, 501-. a lioiilc n! all d" or Ilvnlcrs; put up only luv '1 lltlilburn 00., Limited, Toronto. (RUN-l illllllfflT SHERRI‘ ' Hm~r|-i.1"_s' nf T11 iagisia ‘lu- '1‘. Ont. "Oh don't." The girl's face was full of a quicl: (‘DZICZTU again. Vis- struck you, he hndnt seen me." iou of the others muscular dex- "The dicks“; he hadn't] And 1 terity down by the pool rose up be- supposg when he did see you, you with her native honesty. "when he "Not even a little teeny bit with me?" With all the begullement of the courting male, the query came, ever so gently, so that she Just caught it, and no more. A thrill shot through her heart. Unhappiness and doubt were all for- gotten. Spring-time reigned again. “And what do you thiiuk of Peter Armstrong?" Janet Mercer asked her as the two girls walked home that evening. Kwntinued ' on Ran a: ' some lttie distance from the com- . carefully l ers have a name written on them ‘and are folded. All are then put i into a hat, and one of the com- pany is asked w pick 011$ I PIP"- iHe must hold it in his hand with- ,o'ut unfolding it. 'I‘he.rest 0f file ,papers without examination are then tom up. While they are being torn, pretend to think hard, and pany. Now ask, someone to give 7°" the name of a film star, a famousthen you announce the name on cr,(,ke,e,-_ or any wen known per- the remaining slip. , son. This you proceed to write on‘ The secret of the trick is this, one of the papers. Fold the paper aftver the callingyof the first name, and call for another you write the same name on every moved scores of little plants my come up around the garden, most oi which will produce very. infer-to, flowers. ‘The remedy is to preveni the formation of seeds. Gkfdeg makers are sometimes tempted n grow plants from seeds because the} start very readily, but this i; I temptation which should be over- come. It is only once in a. blue moo; that a variety superior, or eve; equal, to those already on thi market is found. Phlox piano should be divided every three 0| four years, and must be fertilized occasionally because they or“ heavily on the plant food in hm soil. They also like to keep they mots cool, and can be made u, thrive especially well if the sot around them is lightly mulched wit]: peatmoss or some other material. WEDDING FLOWERS T ‘ GXPQ ‘vv wedding défllfg tions use garden flowers and flow ering shrubs, and wild flowers, wit}. plenty of green. Such leaves am sprays as laurel and huckleberq are cheap at the florist and 5n more effective than fern. Smile; 0f course ll the traditional fwvoritv for decorating the house for a. wed. ding and luncheon which follows, it, but this graceful green i; not always available. Owina w the nigh Protein content and excellent milling qualities oi Canadian hard wheat, the Japan. name. Again you write on the pap- ,-slip of paper no matter what may, er, folding it up when you havelbe called out, although no one but finished. Prweed until all the pap-iyourseli’ lmows this. t I e89 I166 lt- ln a standard mixing substance with the softer when: from the other countries from which Japan draws hefsupplies. YOUNGSTERS ean’t resist Kelloggfia Rice Krispies. When these cnmchy- crisp bubbles begin to snap, crackle and poprife a real invitation to eat. And you couldrfl; give children a better cereal. Wholesome rice in easy-lo-iligest fast, lunch or Yolfll enj WMWWW “Cannon: improvement ha: been the Kellogg policy flir ‘man 8100i 25 yearn. We ofllar you Kellogg's Rico Kriapien Lvilh full confidence lhnl they ‘M zzrrcafnl [he hlghell qualify and lineal . , 7 W us. p ' g A little Z whcfis at. great big eater! c" form. Fine for break- supper. oy Rice Krispies Willi mill: or cream and fruits or honey added. Always oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. say‘ xvh‘ {P ‘s: x;\\ Q k,‘ 3‘ \\ ‘Ne. . ._,__. ‘ \‘ ~\ ~\ \\<‘:\ w \‘ Q \ 1%