i v , ..__. I 502 more " PAGE 121cm 11H‘? crjggpowtamww GUARDIAN ~1- ‘AUGUST sly; -:-“ Literature For The Cook‘ onus APEICOT r12 ' " ' . .eer. a - 20 w“! h‘ Coo-t a dour or more ‘B’ ‘ P feeln; o.’ weari- 53"“ ‘~7- 3 EMA"- w-‘eflu "5’ x- so that evflLVflY-b one cup of water link! cup c! sugar, untz: soft. are: the oattcm wruie hot enough to "eguJV: ;: one egg, the: pour r me aprons. an: arra gr. ‘.5? 5221'. 1n 111'.- putry shel, ‘ - Hake a me..ngue c! the pa. ulavrd sugar vwer for "broom Serve while 535.“. he 1g mow": to all ‘out :2 s-ss felt .e he would and FQIILI! ‘I'm: ‘nope was um. .~'\_I.‘H rum-i; ma‘: 1'61 be was m love hzrr. ‘There are 1c!" ‘o mourn befides a zrn-f s nuke r. 111.1»: an svmpa‘ ;-‘-- v-r. J-“Pd ‘FM f’ a‘ Cap» Tr - r-'.-'.""."e* a‘ the c‘- ir; rondutfed d.’ Two". a . P-ci b? .‘-f year‘ o.‘ (72.32. v Al’: ‘The pal! bear-rm- vrxzng sohoolmvu 1f the deceased at" Raiph Harvey Yin/Ad church . e war iarglr‘ annendcd. ch and grave be- the Re": J. L Lund Adludant ‘H. eral to ‘.".= WILLIAM KENNEL“! CROOKS m: Inc/Tran: of ll. was» . Orr/alt". -.f "r and Mrs. ‘Will- ‘The modern vile zoo! motoring t ' ate had cudd- 1'1. _ c‘ husband plays golf.‘ at?! a ' age of magi. avr. Adam delves and Eve '79 T1‘. Cars Tra r- 4on5» v1.3:- w. "sec E/imu-nd Crommml. t’ mm the same fiuiz" AKE perfect raspberry jam the Certo way and get 43/4 lbs. as against 3 lbs made by the old long-boil process. With Certo, jams and jellies take only l. few minutes" boiling (follow, directions carefully) -—sl'iort boiling retains all- the fresh fruit colour and flavour —- you'll always get a perfect set—fifty per cent. more “from a given amount of fruitr-no failures, no waste. Iadpca for Nearly IN Delicious Jams, J; James and $1 Marmalade! 4" The raclpi h a o k I a I carnal under the label of Ilsa Cute bottle. Near- ly I00 homi- laarld ra- elpu. In- eludu prac- tically ovary Irult avail- lllll. Indul- |n| Iuadaua hulntlrnl Inn a aald lull‘. ollaw n- Use Certo, ‘any day in the year with any “fruit you likw-‘fresh, canned or dried--or fruit juice. Results are perfect every time! I as cara- ‘tfimlu may, Qiznro amine-m jallylna a15- --Maliaa 90$ asin Jail? naaasauanadfaoalma. lcllyulanacanpaajaa_ ._flalqajulaatluarvoull —\lam}itludlsa. Sandi ballad away by also all hull hvwr. Swoosh lads fgfigfl) plied. calm. Ills“ i Ardent Advocate of Spanking-How to Make a and cne- ' Have aready a pastry shell o! good 12c. and v vie)‘. butzlt up around the edge! Brush ' 1:3: the beater. yolk of‘ thr- svmp from, l can count. i ‘Poplin’. have to gave 112cm. and mother Biff ='.~r Bus»: to u om the: m’ ‘he cnmmuunztv ‘.<. sincer- . f and ‘nowhng brat s X y. v< "' j_b4_e:_glmn Mun” j str.mc..t of grace and .. John Crocaman. _ ma.» Deccan Stanley l-{o-sutt and .W5m¢}.s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions ls Wonderful I Etiquette fifilidhk i Dorothy Dix Letter Box i _ Q. What is the most popular cuter-ill for a weddmg dress? “flute sstr. has long been the , favorite material v _ Q How should corn on the cob be eaten when corn holders are not pro- ‘ vided? Wife Take an Interest in Housekeeping- Should This Girl Sacrifice Her Love for i the Sake of Her Family? Dear Ms: DLx-I "stander wh=re you get the idea that husbands do not l ant}, spank thelr w 1 s .n '1' < c . ant‘ are? lhave had more spankings than I Q w“. ,5 n.0,? And I dc-se e Zc-m every one‘; Ivan: extravagant, lcsslping. , ha,‘ 1.05%“: o, n,“ bid mpcred and w._ru.. My husband supports use qm, . in .uxurj:, 15 loving and kind, and all mat he us: ll l A An c," "w? 5mm, I l f: 1s taken up with the fingers" eld tightly at each end. 1 valuable to a! than a rcadg." chat 1 ca not spend money recklessly and that I do m: gossip. and when I do he punishes m8. I Ins‘ '....I-ted yesterday for spending half o! the house-l v ‘ .53 money: for an evening dress whens! have twoi SOURIS "l" w»; that 1 have never worn and the worst: , . a - . . .a'_ I ever got was for telling the inside of ‘s: ‘f’?! o.‘ ‘he recmbmecmon b‘ case for wlzzch my husband had been thci m?’ u” me Fmwpflng o! bow} floca. and Dominion wide results by megaphone and Radio from Mr. IVL s Acorns store. The local roturzs 4mm different pooLs of the Country. mzznounczng the re-electlcn of Hon. flohn A, MacDonald were given oui ‘by Mr. H. H. Acorr, and the Domin- Z321 Wld! rctmwu ‘were heard for hun- dreds ofyards as issued from the loudspeaker of the super radio set ;in Mr. Acorns store. Souns peapie are loud in the‘: praise of this splendid service. pose that you will say thatmy husband .d correct faults by long talks, tenderness and He ‘rec’ that and it did not work, so one came 1:, he turned me across his knee and gave ‘ ' ‘er spent as recklessly since. I have proved so that I am unrecognizable and '71»: and my husband. And 1 love a husband our ,. r1 tram.» behave myself. If he h!!! PQFIHiY-lfid m9 to ride .-».~-.-g1~.=r.».d one: ‘rpm. w.- would have been divortcd 10118 88°- parcnt-s and have been spoiled and 1n- ned until my husband dud it. 1f I had > hood when I needed them, my husband 1-, me now You may not know it. Miss Dix. fczhzar. again and plenty of young w-Lvcs are get- zt. BPOILED GIRL I arr. the uni)‘ ch 1:1 ' ’ dufigr-ti f }.f=- ant; r.‘ .ad some spankings in n“, m. Milton Amt-Donald. Bellevue. bl" 59"‘ was s miter to souns on Tuesday. H218 Lhezrs and‘ they nccti Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sterns of AMW": _ _ ‘Bridgetown were among the recent Pcxonaliy‘ I e zuwaj-"s been an earnest and an ardent advocate of visitors w our town spankznr. I ha. ' cn tco many peevrsh, fretful, whining, disgruntled Qzild- ' ren who were nu n sancc-s turned into beaming little angels by belngl We undenund m“ Rev Mon“? turned acros= some r.’ “rs knee and given a good spank or two to doubt . ' ' v neure J. C, Madman V. G. is the the rtfgenerafilfic power of corporal punuhmcnt Judiclslly administered when wwchu“ of a new Nash sedan‘ ' and as needed. _ Mr.A.E,Btl ofChlottet/Jwn To talk abcu". moral suaszon and appealing to s child's higher nature is E w“ ‘mm: ‘Se umowmuuw sour“ a1‘. tommvrot. Th2 ' way to roach the finer feelings of any self-willed ion wgdnesdlv the business end of a halrbrush or a similar in- l " you don't beltevc it Just try it on your Susie or‘ Johnnr‘: the next time zhe or he gets into s tantrum or refuses to obey. and HOV.‘ T8’; “'3. The than; that l5 tha mar-tar with the present generation is that it is the ofisprmg of ‘arcak-armed mothers who had not the int. to anforce their authority ‘by farce when 1t was nccc-swry. but who tried to persuade their mow,“ Mud‘ on w°dns' children into walking the strait and narrow way instead of batting them into I ' 1t. For children are no: amenable to ethical arguments, but they respectl force. You mav talk ~ ' tongue oil’ to a youngster trying to convince it of l the beatitg: of righteuunv and 1'. will do no good. but if it knows that 1t Illl get a good spanlcng if 1t decent behave itself, it, will be a model of all the infantile virtues. Mr. Jama At-klzd. Mount. Stassrt. We a visitor to our town on the 30th. Mid L. I. McMilliaa, of Char-ludic- Mk. Merton Jardine. Hillsboro, was a flsitor to Bouris last week. . Mr. George Lutz. Fortune paid a visit here on the 30th. To say that chzldrcn should never be spanked is as silly as to say that the teeth should oe taken out of our laws and that criminals should never be punished. It's the hangmans ivhip that keeps the trembling wretch in order. D0 away with capital punishment and llfc sentences and murder would be a favorite sport and no 0110's life would be safe. Mrs, Mamie town. passed And n. l5 the same way with children. It Ls because so many children know, when they dcfy their parents and go their own ways. that ma worst that will happen to them mil be a few tears from mother and a feeble and ineffectual protest from lather, that there are thousands of parents who are wringing their hands in despair and moaning out that they cannot do a thing Wllh 13-year-old boys and girls. Ylllllli WIFE , flflfillllfll Altar Taking Lydia E. Phkhamfis Vegetable Compound Understand, 1 am not. adv-seating the beating of children. No one is more opposed to harshness toward children than I am, but I think the greatest cruelty that parents can show w their children ls tn lat them now up undisciplined and uncontrolled. ‘Train up a child in the way he should grow and when he is old he will not depart from it," sold the wisest man Saunders, Charlotte- ,‘ through our town On l Wednesday. 1 l iwas a momist no Sourls 0n Thursday. m’. A. E. Qulgley. St. Paton was a, l l ‘ paid a visit to the Bastarn Motto- Grains of Wheat and Rice i Shot from Huge Guns To make them twice as delicious . . .' tuzice‘ as digestible How exploding 125 million food cells makes Puffad Wheat and Puffcd Rice as nourishing as hot cooked cereals. Aviyouusoedthisutrerlydifiereatldndof ceresl...PuflcdW'heazsndPufiedRice...the crispcst, crundiicst cereal on the market today? Pufiecl Wheat and Pulled Rice are different beause they're made diflcrcntly. Choice full-flavored grains of wheat and rice are scaled in hug: bronze guns. Then revolved in fiery ovens. This expands the natural mois- ture in the millions of tiny food cells. Theo the guns lrcfircd- Causing 125 million explosions in every grain. Everytinyfoodcellisblasted open. Thegrsinssrc made as completely digestible as though they had been ‘ cooked for hours. Hence Puficd Wheat and Pufiecl Ric: are virtually as notirishing as hot cooked cereals. These grains "shot from gims" become 8 time; normal size. They have all the buttery crispness of fresh toast. They taste like sweet new nut-meats. Never before was rich grain nourishment made so dclcctably good to eat. Order Puflcd Wheat and Pufied Rice from your grocer today. The Quaker Oars ' Company. < recent motorist to the Eastern end of the Island. clothes for yIears. and it ls only thchousc hiscff: ‘Wm-mace of the dress reforrnerscloscd for cr-ztersive renovation; that givas hope of bursting the bondsJake about; a it. ‘A man‘! olobhlnl. b b0 aonsfblo, The rstcnszruction. 112:1". ls ‘ should be nelthar tight nor stlftmt $250,000. and has already -‘.. The modern collar ls both. If the approved by the Court of . ' reformers do no more than sbollshwss the subject of a specie‘ the high stiff collar they will haveof the oour; of Common C‘ effected a great improvement. day. Tizcrc was son". The neck ls a part of our anatomythc expend JTC‘ on :..c grzund tbs which should be untrammellcdJ-he country was in a bad 525's .... Matty a headache and the dlscomfortthe mime-r was not tirzcr: " c.’ many a cold are mainly caused by One member was aw... z» say the vessels of the neck beingcertain matters at the Kfaruigngo wmpmssed. The larynx has not frcetverc a disgrace. when the Lard Maj movement and the gullet ls congesurdiiztcrrxipteci 1o observe that such "We often-i wear tightly-fittingstntcmcnt should not be nzsde writb hard hates. the worst nhing pcslbleout knowledge, He said his resld. for the preservation of the hair mu ccmfcrtablc to live in. but men "As for stiff shirts. we have gradu-loned mrtnin improvements he con ally had the sense to abolish themsidered- ought to be carried out. from daily use. but we still make a. Another member declared that: fetish of chem for the evening. meyhad no‘, soon the 10rd bravo:- sit are as unhygianlc as they are lnoon-wlth a rug over him w prozec‘. hlm vqnim ," self from draught.‘ The court t: the expenditure. and gave LONDON 101D MAYOR. _ tions to a committee to find aocombd SEEKS NEW HOMEatlons for the Imd Mayor. {$130K Aug. 1-51!‘ Mr. Robert McKenzie. (ha nil liked garage man is at present busily engaged in inszalllrg a couple o! gas tanks, Mr. W. B. ‘Ferzuscn. Suffolk. was among the recent motorists to our town, Mr. H. A. Peters. Rollo Bay. was a visitor to our covm on Thursday. Ml‘. N. D. MacLean. Chailcttctawn. Nlr. Earle Grant of MGWIIUO. polls on Thirsday evanlng. , Mr. Elmer Oampball. Rollo Bay. was a recent irisltor to Sourls, Mr. A. V. Spillett. East Royllty. iwas a moiorzst hare on the 1st of August. Mrs. W. J_ Chevarle. Chmottot/Jnl. William It doesn't take the young IT-All V a1 I‘%IGETZCE, will. .' that ever lived. . And he also gave as the recipe for this the use of the md. As my correspondent states, if the parents had-done their duty ln the spanking line, it would not be necessary for husbands to resort. to such drastic measures, as hcrs has done to correct her faults. i? Whether it is desirable that a husband should spank his wife when she acts like a spoiled child, I shall not presume to say, but I will say that I wondered at the forbearance of husbands who kept their hands ofl. I have seen women wasting the hard-earned money of their husbands on senseless extravagance; women whose husbands lavished avory luxury upon them, but who were never satisfied; women who were peavlsh. frctful and complaining and who anpreczated nothing that. was dons for tham, and I have thought that they were just like bad children who naedad l aood spanking to bring them to their senses and make them bchlvs. So perhaps if spanking is coming again into flshlon, ll my correspond- ent avers, it is n good thing and will save many a divorce. DOROTHY DIX. I I O I I I Dear Miss Dix-How can I get my wife to take an interest in lasrnlna housekeeping? Her mother brought her up to be a helpless kitten. 81a can do nothing except spend money and 1s terribly extravagant. I hava no peaceful home and no money saved. What. can 1 do. A MAN WHO FELL FOR A PRETTY FAGI. Answer: The only no)" that you.can get your wife to talc In lntnrast In lnarnlnl to keep house is to serve notice on her that. you an lctnl to divorce har if she doesnt. Perhaps if she knows that she ls aclng U0 loaa her Job as a wife, as rhe would lose any other Job unless sna msda good on it. It will make her get busy with the cookbook and the pots and the Plhl. Marriage is a partnership and is Just u much thawlfei bualncal to make a comfortable home for her husband as it ls to provida tho raw mat- erial out of which the home is made and I think any man la foolish and weak who doesn't force his wife to keep up her and of the bllllll. Not many women want to lose their homes, and l! they know that their husbands would bundle them up and send them back to mother unless they kept their houses clean and orderly and provided good, mil-cooked nulls, they would make themselves first-class housekeepe u- It la because men put up with lazy and slouchy wives who savor keep anything in order and who never set food on their table that wouldn't poison an ostrich. that there an so many wivas who spend that: days Mill on the bu! racing trashy novels, or coins to tha moms or brldgl puma. and whoao ldoa of housokee, _ la opanlna a can and stopping around to the have seen many cases where I have thought it was needed and when I have - BAMNIQ, Ontaritr-"When I first L ' E Pinkbam’: Vogelablc ~- Compound_ 1 _ lud been man-ml about a year and . my strength was Y luring moon ac- . muni- of my con- difion. l was only t , l9 aml it was my My needed something to steady m _v . _ Ill I. girl " dpm tald me to JAketheV oteblcCom Jamm thankful I d because t. mongthens-d my whole lystnn and now I feel per lcctly wall and have a sweat little bah; —Mu. J. B. drums, Banach. ‘is at present visiting in Sourls the guest of Miss Vera Fitzpatrick. DRESS REFORM SENSIDLI STAT! LONDON DOCTOR. The dress reform movement for men seems a sensible one to a lmsdon doctor. "Modern man's olothin: has little to recommend it. Woman us fa: batter off-or they were until this year, when they have beiun to M. fashion cramp them onoa again." he says in an English p190!- ~ “Father frowned — delicatessen foiga dab of pomo salad and a transparent sllca of ham. Noa- support is a ground for divorce for woman. lad bouasbacplnl should ao- tltla any man 0o his freedom from a woman. AM sba should lot no alimony. fi-Illh-v-Wtmvtaarltolhcdwitlwatsfhblfllltfillltlllltlh- boy. ’ Ontario. "Men have been cramped by their cause she has a pretty face and without considering whether sho had any other qualifications for making a good wife. Ho deserves all ha gets. As a matter of fact. when you plck out a doll all you have got la the right w ex- pect. to spend the balance of your llfe dressing it up, and that is what ls happening to Y0“. 50n- When men choose wives for what ls in their heads and their hurt-a ln- stnad of the kind of complexion they have got, they don't have to complain about. thclr being senseless and extravagant. DQ110111’? D12. Dear. was Dlx--I am the main support of my family and my parents think that 1 have no right. to get married because they want. the money that 1 make. My father says that if I have any idea of marrying Lshould lb- andon it, sndrtrled to force mo to return the rln! l" my IWMMIR- X lm w-llllng to work after marriage and give the money to my people. but must I giva up tho man I love and who loves mo and who la abla to tcka care of m.’ ' C. M. B. Anawar: cgi-talnly not. Your family has no right to demand such a sacrifice from you. Argus no more with them. Just step out some flnc day and marry your man. 130F017" mi- Shampoo the - CUTICUIIA way lwatarlow. 10rd Mayor. of Ltrrdon, lsstnrts at the top long to reach t MI house-hunting. The Manslcribottom-unlrus he ls digging a well. Fl used to cry so much Mothn worried-and l was cross all the time. ‘The chafing hurt me such a lot that being a. baby wasn't very much fun. Then something wonder- ful happened. 0n: day after my bath, Mother powdered me from a dif- fermt tm. I knew right away it was the rxomi powder for mc-it felt so cool and cuddly against my skin. l don't cry how because of chafing. I'm ever so comfy and ever so good!" The Powder or your Baby There are baby powders and baby powders, just as there are babies and babies. But one thing is certain, the powder that is to make all babies completely comfortable must contain the finest talc-the soft, flaky Italian talc used by us in making Johnson! BabyPowder. Inferior baby powders are made of inferior tales, which contain shat , needledikc particles harmful to t e delicate baby skin. Under a. microscope you can see the difference I between Johnsonb Baby Powder and another-rub them between your fingers and you‘ll rm. it! cram and. son m.