PAGE TWO A v- Iuivfisr/r; w; we CAR QUIET? D THINK rr wasn't Movme - ITISNT.’ /7T5D£A0.'WE1/£ GOT 7O 6E7§O145ONE 7Z7 P051105,’ ALL THE WAV OUT TO HVPODERMIC ROAD? sues: WITH us/A/Fmvz 7HEVWOV75££MW£€E THEi/PE Awe! (kW/BE IT I§N’T THE CAR _ THAT’§ DEADIMAVB E IT'S c ONLY THE BATTERY! 1 ITCOULD/VTEEIWHYJ vUST HF A NEWOVE //V MVSELF.’ 111-“; u ouflmzevou 502e- IT WAS soon; oFcou/ess: WAIWAYS WORKED Ml . ou/ero/zruze - muo: Y Woman's Re L YO I wzng —BQGOLVD— ‘Ib keep my hem T0 do my Work! ‘Ilolivel Toseetoitthatlgrowazidgum me for an hour! . Towait in weakimssmd fcwalk in power. always frmiing oxwrard to- ward the light. and always facing to- right. Robbed, starved, defeated, fallen, wide astray- On with what strength I have Back to the way. Charlotte Perkins Glimnn. TODAY'S MENU But lfyouhavesomeeggwbitascn hands use them in a delightful fluffy prime whip. and serve it as dessert for dinner umight. For the ' dish, have alwayepopulur corned beef and cabbage and mashed potatoes. With the main course, have a tossed green salad with French dressing, whole Brain or enriched bread with butter, milk for the children and tea for their elders. Steaming bowls of chicken soup should get luncheon of to an ex- cellent start. Then serve lettuce and tomato sandwiches made with whole Bra-in on enriched bread. For a stimulating wintertime bev- erage, choose hot chocolate, and for a refreshing contrast, serve a fruit cup of sliced bananas and oranges for dessert . As an eye-opener for breakfast tomorrow, serve glasses of chilled fresh orange Juice. Next, serve cereal cooked with raisins and whole grain or enriched toast with ' lade. Then give the lk, and the grownups, their cof- 70 MAPLES Seventy species of maple occur thioughrut the world. I921. THE _WOMAN’S REALM alm/Socia and‘ kkkkkkk eisare n!) it over the The and grease should cope t. WOMEN VETERANS ARE ORGANIZING NEW YORK—E7ight women vet- erans led by an EX~WQA and ex- Wbve and an ear-Marine. have an- nounced the formation of the 1e gion of Women Veterans. the first socletv of its kind in the nation. Acting national commander and spot. vv v-v e AA¢¢¢ AAAAAAA AAAAAAA tgg... 05's.. POOOO-OO s-i. Dangerous Age Middle-Aged ‘Men and Women 1).. inexplicable Foolish Things O-O-O-O DEAR MISS DIX: What is the fool age with most people? Some say it is forty for women and fifty for men. What do ycu think about founder. Mm. Patricia Deuse of New York. a former marine ser- lleant. said the group had a 00- terltisl membership of 300.000-the number of honourably discharged service women. She predicted a membership approaching 1.000 by next spring. "We have applications from some 800 women veterans who have already been “contacted" Mrs. Dense said. “We hope in do for women veterans what the American legion has don-a for the men." The organization listed these basic purposes: to oppose discrim- ination of everv kind: to achieve economic. political and social equality for women veterans: w honor the memory of women who died in service: to inmate. partici- cate in and further either alone or in cooperation with similar groups any legislation intended fc/r the advancement of the 001111- cal. economic and social welfare of all honorably discharged veter- WSABYS CDLDS ___,,,,,,,,,, home remedy for relieving miseries of children's colds. No dosing to upset stomach. V9555 Just rub it on. ++e+e+40++0++o+0+c+40e+s 4 IELBOURNE. Que. Jan. 9 -— (CP) — Mrs, Althea Gallup, 105, whose motto for longevity always was “happiness and happiness alone," died here r-wently at her home in this Eastern Townships town. She was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs Durbin Lawrence, her father being one of the pion- eers of the district Her father largest of its kind, the white heron has l wing spread nearly seven feet. The sulphur of coal smoke will make ned or blue flowers much paler or even white. For years American fruit growers protected their orchards from frost without knowing how they did it. Pots of binning oil were used to heat their orchards, but they found out, several years later, that it was the smoke and not the heat, that saved tfnieir fruit. ‘Iihe smoke acted as a. blanket and prevented redi- ation of ground hen . One 36-foot length of garden hose contains enough rubber to masks one mteumatic lifesaving c9 "ml is r4: i" Prevent"? mad of Most 50a ‘aim; Gragnqsgpgi Better English i D. C. Williams g 044+O4+4-§-O+O-O'O+O-O-O4 1- What is wmng with this sen- Wme? A Pleasant stir-prise awaits “Z “ti; ,,,,,,,, . ti hi1 - iatiloxi ofaceiamigcsgyrm pr c 3. which one of these words is misspelled? Tenement, tete-a-teie, terestrial, 4 Wham does the word “pl-eval- hi"? is a d i with ta that meags xgrwattggfxexg canvas“? _ ANSWERS 1. Qmlt for. 2, Pronounce se ram-iks, e as in see unstressed. a E5 1X1 1'81“. 1 as in accent second ent." R parted a sripre anid hotel whet-a i251: ' syltlable. 3,‘ Terrestrial. 4, 0f wide gs coac runnng between - ——- ex em. or requent occurrence; en- moncl and Waterloo used to stop 1° “mm” “n” "M" 3b“ emlly BXISUHB- "It is a rev t ovgr “M'- wke mother silk stocking mistake." s, Tarpaulin. p H“ of stubborn din and grime! leave tiny diacoloring particles Tut: Prove Oxydcl Washes Clothes CLEANER and WHITERI ’ jYn, Whiml In wash m: me: feat-Oxytlol proved rim i: actual], wuhes clothes chum and wbiunhen many other mp: which, unlike Oxydoi, fail co get out rim lm pouible mce ,W||fle and lrldll Wall Mo! Weill! Soaps often iln the clothe: and the "hardness" of the water. "niece nick in the clothes and turn gray or yellow under ironing hen. But Oxydol combnn "diny pnynuW-nciunlly helps prevent ‘fdiny greys mused by din _ so clean they fair] um "Huslle-Ilbblflivd: uh DH Oull OXydoPl new "Hustle-Bubble" suds are l0 active they lift dirt out. All your white thing-except for unususl mine-come no elem they're White Without Bleach- ing. Sparkling white! $0 Ssh for Colon, Tee! And Oxydol in so ssfe-ufe for wuh colors, rayon: and your own precious heads. In rich, safe suds wash you: colored clothe: Next wuhdcy use Oxydol-and enjoy s wuh c, so clean it's actually White Without Bleaching! ° y sparkle! pm’? from forming in clothes! f nun u CANADA-Trude um Ind-ans oxyun WA‘N.~, 0 C‘ d‘ WHITE WITHOUT ULEACHINII, it? RALPH H. ANSWER: Depends upon the individual. With many men and women it lasts from the cndle to the grave, but, generally speaking, the age of indiscretion for both men and women seems to be around middle age. Why this should be so. no one can really ex- plain, but certainly it is a common thing to see women Around 40 and men around 50 who. up to that time, have been models of discretion and lived practical, wise. common sense lives, suddenly go hay- wire and commit all sorts of follies COMPLETE CHANGE ABOUT I have known women with grown children who have been devoted wives and mothers, who had dressed conservatively, and whose wildest diversion, had been running church affairs, all at once blos- som out in gay, girlish clothes and the latest_hair-do‘s and who took i to night clubs and making eyes at boys young enough to be their sons. . And it is trut that it is the men about 50 who oftenest swap off | their old wives for new, or lead the double life and are the easy prey ‘ for gold-diggers. , why? Probably because both men and wom suddenly realize that they are growing old and it is their last chance at a bit of romance. But certainly men and women at middle age do fool things that they spend the balance cf their lives repenting. DEAR MISS DIX: I have Just been discharged from the service and would like to marry the girl with whom I have been in love for years, but marriage does not seem to appeal to her. While I was over- seas she trained for a teacher and she appears to feel that she would rather have a career than a husband. What shouldI do? WONDERING. ANSWER: When a girl has the career germ in her systemythe only sane thing for a man to do is to let her work it out. Let her find out that a career is not something handed to her on a silver salver, but that it is something that n. woman buys with her hearts blood, with work and worry and anxiety and loneliness, and that it is rarely worth the price she paid for it. A great many men persuade girls to give up their careers to marry them. This is always a mistake, because no matter how good and kind the husband is, or how much money he gives his wife, she goes through life feeling that sba has made a terrible mistake and sacrifice. So let your girl have u go at her career. If she is really a genius and prefers the glad hand of the public to baby hands on her breast, you are lucky not to get her, for careerlng wives and matrimony don't| mix. . nma nonornv DIX: ‘ I am terribly in love with a boy of 23., He drinks, gamibles and is inclined to be lazy but he says he will, change his ways if I will marry him. Do you think he will really re- form if I marry him’! ANN H. for-nothing boy by manying him has simply taken leave of all of her good, common sense. Don't delude yourself into thinking that you can make a man of him. No woman is a put back-bone in a weakling, nor cure a drunkard’: thirst, nor exer- cise the fatal fascination that the gambling table has for the gambler. So if you have any intelligence whatever, or any regard for your happiness, I urge you not to marry this boy. You may pine for him, but you won't regret missing him as you will regret it if you marry TAKE N0 CHANCES WITH BABY'S COI.D .1 Cook ’s Corner OO-OO-O RICE CEREAL HONEY BALLS ‘I5 0UP 511831’ pONW‘ LET your baby‘: little cold develop i} (a3) hOIIGY. l nitscuaclxthln Lethlttirn. g-eoahklvlcgrige ‘ agpoonggt o. roul eyouwa 0o.‘ {my 1 r - of féunonlhs caught n nuiy cold, so tried 5% was waned’ m acres! 551K111.“ 91.13255 iiéiglif‘? Qrfiuym-‘tfii: Cook s er and honey, stirring Bnbyifgrftabletn from now on." only eno to revam burnin , to ruby-I Own Tablets help in m; trecunent e. tempera ure o 270 deg, F, ( d oi coldu by their laxative action. They are ban 1n com waten) Remove "om sweeL-tautinmealyio take-andmuybecrulhed , in u owder if desired. Efleciive in teething hem’- add m“ 9nd vmeggn Put iroubves, constipation. simple fevers, upset X108 091R!!! III/DO 11118 DUMGIM DOW! mzmuch Iummer complaint. diarrhoea and other minor ailments. No "sleepy" stud-no if‘? i?“ ‘§."'“°és“..i’."l'£“"si."“° 0 . 0D IP00 ° ed muffin or form into balls. Push anal wooden shewers into hhe balls before mixture cools. Yields: 20 balls (2 inches in dia- meter.) dulling effect. in the Ililhf. 25 cents. Your money buck lf you are not satisfied. CROCIIETED ACCESSORIES in...» Can 1 1: z By Anne Alhley O-OO-OQ-O-O-OOO-O-QO-OOGOQ-O-Q-O-O-QQ Q. wnm is n good remedy for o. skin’! ? A. Rub the ts thoro hi with almond oil. p" "8 y . How can I launder cliamois gloves success! ? A. When rinsing cimmois- gloves, use clean water but iult as soupy u me water in which the were- washed. It will them ce and soft. After w . off the hands, squeeze in a wwzlipblow out tihe flag-av, and hung in an airy Q. Hownen l prevent cabbage odor? A- will be very Iii-tie of the usual dislceeeble odor when cooking cabbage if an onion is boiled with the cabbage, Q . 4 i» Morning Smile cell it l. ch asked e hench- men whose wmilaiiuwes. .. m," dist sew e c ma into the Ed “l! DING! 0f 11b1,!“ "IQ H0811“! 0| thQ "3710" us pa." was e re- mgiillpiiésygihnfj l "the Tom- “d” "‘" ‘~—,.,,°"‘,., ..Is'"".*.':..':":ar= ‘".*;'*.'....."~".: Q Q °"‘—- ..~.~’::..::. "at..." u digs‘: 5°“ '° m“ can-away?» Gusrdien. - sister to she 9"!" m’- 1 Th»??? Y3" “m and ‘n? ' guts ovwt wlh her N“. HIM? . ' mtwm..." M -~=-- said‘ "Yes, i” mi it's tun- II; will I 1°! l G0! ‘Pllfllh “MW” . Personal f Fa 1f lights for the women folk at Al- deriu, tod rather trngc beginning. I suspect, ANSWER: Any girl who thinks she can reform a drunken, goodq mimcleworksr, and you cannot, Get u package today. Sickness so often strikes ‘ skkk-kkkk A A ‘AA vv v-wv > A:¢:AAAAAAAAA s‘ kkkk‘ 0-0 Ellen ’s Diary lyenlslnndhrlnefi Wile .I.@'. ' ‘Asks-ALA; yesterday was full of do- shions A AAAAAA AA > b b >44 Job only" You Can Dov i Q had an annoying and that only farmers‘ wives or other owners of laying flocks can ep- preclnts the work this. drecd hep- penlng entails, that Jennie chanc- ed to discover. you are mix- ing a bow! of fronting, that mult be stirred while it cooks; or are upstairs with a last coverlet to spread; or perhaps down in the semi-gloom of the cellar, you have almost ell of the dinner vegetables assembled, or more disturbing still be sitting down to n well earned meal, when all of a sudden you hear a sound you have been hup~ ing for and at the same time dreading: an enterprising cacklc from the poultry house. Faint to be sure‘ but to ears attuned, easily recognized. You drop every interest end go hurriedly‘; If there bc u much an u minu ‘s delay. you may as well “count that day lost", when the hens have learned to toy with this distressin pastime. When Jennie, accord ng to custom, car- ried n warm drink ti. her poultry this morning. she found the very start of this trouble that annoys owners of laying flocks. One mat- ron there, wlth the self-praise from her day's accomplishment barely off her beak, glared at an- other over a shining and warm fragment of egg shell in the nest. “Oh dear" Jeanie said coming to the door "I'm afraid they've com- menced to eat. their; eggs." James dropped the pail of water he was carrying from the pump to the Nell-mare. I came from my wood-toting to the box in the kit- chen and loitered near. Being earthy, I wanted to hear what James would offer by way oi ad- vice, The years rolled back while I waited. Advice does not fittingly describe the words that once ac- companied an incident of this kind. When it concluded, I always felt my unworthiness for this calling. Indeed it left my ego so chusten- ed and bewildered I never could be certain whether I myself, and not the henswere at fault. "And so, Ellen” James would any in a tragic tone "You've got them at that," and then with a hopeless sigh, that spoke volumes “but its too late now you'll Just have to watch them." The watching en- tailed the labor. Time works magic in us. "It's nothing’ James said lightly to Jeanie “ ive them plenty of shell and some say lime —a bit of that left from the white- washing will stop the habit and Jeanie (and this nearly bowled me over for in my day. I could only secure it by strategy) I'd give them ,some milk." While there was no u-epetition of the egg-breaking, Jeanie made frequent tri to col- lect them newly droppe to the ntruwy nests in the poultry house today. i The lovely weather, that cam to the Island, each day in the ne calender continued today. I decid- ed yesterday m. u pet day, a I curried my gloves and unfasienei my jacket, returning from th corner. This matched it in unex- perted loveliness. It was so pleas- ant that I sought for excuses t , linger out of doors. I held u pal ‘of drink to the youngest cal , while James fed the other: in th stall. And then I followed him t inspect the older cattle in th stables. But, when I directed a question to him, h‘; was not always there to answer. He was every- where: to a barn for a tin of grain; to another for a measure of bran or a handful of oilcake. Th! 5319917. with Spring secrets u- bout them, are confined in a pen in a shed. They paused in their nibbling to regard me from behind the bars of this fold. Only brlef~ ly, before they resumed their feed- ing at the clovery hay, James hnd s reed before them. Jock was let- t ng the horses to water—th:ee of them, down a winding path in a meadow to drink at the stream that had escaped through the waste-gates on the dam, Free now, it flows broadly to join the river below. The fer bank is lteep and wooded. When covered with e fresh fall of snow, there are funn tracks imprinted there, of smal furred travellers and of Winter birds. In Bummer, mossy knolls, in- Vite me to slip out of shoes to wade the depths and mount the slope, to dream there lazily m the coolness and shade. The water gurgles pest me ‘over a fallen log and eddies in small silver cur- rents and there is happiness and music in its ripple like that small meandering rooks. Mimic boats there. A curl of bark from the saw mill and a leaf or fern toned to the water, is It once borne swiftly from sight towards the river. _ _ The horses return at I brisk Ielk or easy canteen-with trucks to take cue of the produce-haul- ing, this is almost s holiday lu- son. They pause in the meadow, in apparent indecision. A teem on thg road draws their attention and then when they remember, the treat in their mnngerl, every sign 5 N‘ pillows: rations vgfidatgg two sugar coupe January. plies heat in the ren the first of January I will have to tliep this heat last year, he must do so als division of the Wantim and Trade Board to raise this rent. +O-O§Q~QOQ-O~O-Q'Q ltl (cw of" ‘ma: lute t questioa prise control no invited flun- wrl u- J 1H0 dllUW Ilfllllflbll 0O iii Last yen- my lgndlord sup- qnt I am and he now’ tells me after nve dollars more a month to defray the expense of heating ‘FPBIIBXOIR. Can u landlord,do A. If your landlord supptllileig ear at the acme price unless he had lssion from the Rent- e Prices Household Scrapbook By Roberts L90 .vv4+ A Velbluble Salad A good v etebls salad can be made by us n; cooked or canned peas, grated raw carrots, and shred- ded cabbage. Or, use cooked green iima beats, diced tomato. diced cucumber, chopped oilon, Serve on lettuce leaves, e Shcklllll Beige s will not develop‘, that pinkish cast if, after the first washings. a little tan e is added to the wa r. will also look new for u much long- er time, - w The Mulieins Cabinet the medicine cabinet hes three melves, and moat of them have. why not keep the medicines for in- for external a licntiaorl on the middle shelf, all poisons on the top shelf? of indifference venilhel end one _ return to their stalls. Pard prowl about the yards. He has nothing to do with the horses. The cattle are his care. I find it difficult to come away from the out of doors but "men must work and women must" cook and clean for even the days of this new year that promised extra time, pause not for man m" “LOYTLEH. Pat himself kept me company this evening although perhaps I should not make so free with the fact. Especially when he warned g me with a twinkle: "Now for th‘ luv av Heaven, Ellen" he said "don't be after writin‘ that down” James had the Wanderlust then. PM. and I listened to, and enjoyed muslcnl radio-programs and his toe tapped |nn accompaniment. When the can? we: erniliur, he sang snatches o it. He told me of his wood chop- ping, and of his recent holidays- Christmas and New Years. ‘Shure an‘ you wouldn't belave it, how busy it kapea me from morn ‘till night helping at theatable work an’ all an’ the day: l0 short." Pree- ently, his bed-Um; hour culled him 6m 10o Illllllili umus solm VERY rrrccnv: m PAIN such lympmms. ‘III "IIITIY" DIIGI Httern No. an itveraiu re temsl use on the lower melf, those “Q d Style Number t‘... 1"“? ' us: poets! unit or mno number in your sddren. D8 ,. Th. " Charlottetown Gusrdien. I kkkklkkkick‘ wvv v v WIN YOUR FAMILWS PRAISE. J00 OIII MT 4ft W0 Mfllf-IUUI. mm: 0R5 H0570!!! ~ AS’ T0487! r NGood for you Digesiible as iousi! ruulaxis Modern Eticiuetfe Byllobeneliei l mi permissible to place ones hand on n. ersolrs shoulder or arm, when talk with him? . This is not necessary, and is very annoying to some le. Of , in e matter of con olence, it is often done, even to the hold- inklpf the person's hand. while a . Q. Is it hen a. woman enters move their hats. should she nod in acknowledgement of the courtes ? A. No, it is not necessary. esvure is not It ell perennial. . an should one repeat the day and the hour? A. Yes. always, . to avoid mis- understanding. awny and the lantern in l star of‘ light went up the slope towards the houseion the hill and l. lost it in a wlll-oflthe-wisp out . the road. a u a Only the crackle of the fire. breaks the stillness-that and Ferd st the door begging a favor. He is gone now with e short hark of welcom amen is homing. Until tomorrow—Dlary - Good- night. uss YOIIR g TIRED FEELING; aoonsvr! Pflalus Many Sulfur Low Blood ‘-And Don't Know _ The beflllnl thing shout low blood count is unit you can weigh about u much u you ever did-even look health and strong, yet —you cln feel u if you ad lend in your le . dopey. tired Ind DI an. w blood count menu you haven't at cnoulh red co useful. It is their v l ob to curry life-fly n oxygen from your unn throughout your . And lust q it mm oxylen explode gasoline in your en and make the power to tum the wheels, so you must have plenty u! oxygen to u- ulcdn the energy in your body sud [lye you goinl bower. on Dr. Williams Pink Pills today. The! an world-noted for the help they [lye in increasing the number and strength n! red corpunclee. Then with your blood count up you'll feel like bounding up the shire ll you were floating on sir. Auk your druggllt for Dr. Williams Pink Pills today. u fNeedlecraftf FOR THE HQMI: l