r f » r 1930 _ _:rua cusnsorrirrowu GUARDIAN __ _ _ _ PAGE SEVEN JULY zs. _ _ __ WHEN A CHILD IS FEVERISH. CROSS.UPSET __ _ _ Cells. gas. sour belei- ,srf 1- " _"<5 ing. frequent vomiting, V `<=` feverlshness, in babi" 'C - and children, generally 4" I " show food is sourlng in i - 1; jf# -"* `_ ._ the little digestive tract. f »- _._.»v When these s p- °-..--_ toms appear, give gh _F _ ,_ :=,- a. teaspoonful of Phil >‘*""' ` lips Milk of Magnesls. Md it to the dret_ bottle of food n the morning. Older _children should be given n tsblesponnful in Q ,vlan of water. This will comfort the chili;-make his stomach ,mi bowels easy. ln. five minutes he is eomfortabls, haplpy. It will sweep the bowels free of a sour, indifestible food. H 0 ons the bowels in const potion, colds, ehlilreifs ailments. Children take it readily because it is palatable, pleasant- sting. “Learn its many uses for mother and 551.1, Write for the interesting book, *Useful Information." Address The Chas. 5, Phillips Chemical Co., Windsor, Out. lt will he sent FREE. In buying, ba sure tvetsmwim Phil- lips Milk of Msgnes . octors have prescribed it for over 50 years. ,ff-f-1-’*" l___ THE l-_AND WE LOVE U! IIANK LIIGI ANGUS MacASKILL -_- Q- Wh° Wes' Angus Msesskiiir A- Angus MacAsklll was widely kmwn “-5 U19 C9-P6 Breton giant, Born in the Hebrldies het came to Cans Breton in his childhood. no Brew to be '1 feet 9 inches in height Bild weighed 425 lbs- ilib travelled for_ Yelrs as a human curiosity under th; same management as the midget Tom Thumb. He returned to Cape Breton where he opened a store and died in 1863 atthe premature age of 38 _where he was widely mourned for his sterling qualities and kindly dis- position. His home was at English- town near Sydney. l Etiquette I N loberh IQ i _ Q- when one is on me train, _ should he ring for the porter to pro. ‘Pa-re his berth before asking his ‘seatmate's consent? `- A. No; it is courteous to consult the seatmate first. Q- 1-Iow long may a. friendly letter A MorningSmr°le _ George: If I'd known that the tun- nel was going to be so long, I’d have kissed you." She: "Good helvonsl Wssrrt that nu," _,___._._-_-- Kinard's Linlmoiis cheeks Colds as onse- be? A. As long as the time and inclin- ation permit. _ _ Q- At sn informal dinner are the guests announced? A. No. - w------------_T-- --~--' -- 1 _ ix ,~n,,,__,_ _ ‘ che" tsl' ‘ Piston. 1 mesh a°°°°\\i -Hlllbig reason why 'you Rnd Grape-Nuts on millions of breakfast tables is this 1" .'. Grape-Nuts .,*' i fs wonderfully good! - Crisp, crunchy, golden- " ~»..,- - .~..» brown moreels of real deilciousnees. Try lt! ` _ f -Z1, ._ ‘ \r10°*" ' / -:-r»-Fi'- ‘ul -6v¢4kll4pT 'f____ Gm... I 6 __ " ` _ »"‘. -ff" _ " ' 5;' --5% _-_ .r _ ‘ ' ' _ ' _ffl 1 '- °V""' I non;-AOD | Can you think of anything sadder than these children who are trying 21013; thsvjufi t€e_:$_§d 1;: ss;¥;f_`:;_Pcur over beaten egg yolks and re- _gg out for it Wm 1-.. Gf.,.__._... ag mm.. _I ' -1, csii afeasou’ , ;to reform their parents, who ere reaching out their poor little helpless beby , the b_'_ ku; _five _“___ ___ _my wmcwturn to heat to wok e few minutes- =,future date, -f"P'5.","I,I,_f ffi- ""' ) cp 9”” hands, trying to bring their fathers and mothers together, trying to bring _S bs Tltel Elgar d not S ueeze __he|P1B°€ in baked Pa-°-WY SHUI *md °°V'\ I Cotton. ` A' “dey” Cm",]|: \ .f peace to a stormy home, their poor little hearts heavy with the grief of their ____';e gmm ihe *bag ° wgmd make- er with meringue made from- g_ Pape,-_ _ elders, the joy of life crushed out of them in their infancy by their having to J ' rms 2 088 Whiife-4. 3 Leather. 60 mam d a second-rate jelly. _ °“ - me in B' perpetual storm center' I ri After you have extracted the juice, I A _ "_ _ 17 -l _ _ _ 4| Y AN Findslfamilyl ""”i°`l ‘___ nl-|:__' n '- -___ -`-_--r "r _'>`._ ' I ‘ _ _ .. .. _-1 °' "“°“"’ Uv” ~ With Every Pattern “Unless a Man and Woman Have the Strength _ of Character to Sink Their Own Personal” - Better for Them to Part, Declares Dorothy Dix When we talk about divorce we say truly enough that the real victims are the children. They are the hapless and innocent sacrifices that the men and women who make a failure of marriage offer up on the altar of their selfishness, or their weakness, or lack of self-control, or their passion. _-_l- Every chlld has a right to be born of parents who love each other, to be rear ed in an atmosphere of harmony and quiet, and to have the influence and the guidance of both a father and a mother, and when it misses these it is more than a sentimental misfortune. It is a disaster that warps its entire life. Every poor little boy or girl who is pulled out of the wreckage of a broken home has received wounds in its soul from which it never recovers. - Bo well is this recognized that many husbands and wives who have actu- ally come to hate each other continue to live together “for the sake of the children," as the phrase goes. But having made this concession to what they feel to be their duty they consider that it leaves them free to vent their spite and animosity upon each other as much as they please, and to make their homes places of purgatory ln which the little unfortunates that they have brought into the world are forced to llve. Still other disgruntled married couples hold to the theory that husbands and wives have a right to their daily spat, and that if they get a kick out of saying mean things to each other, it is nobody's business. not even their childrerfs. .__.____ Bo the criminations and recriminations are recklessly hurled backward and forward and father calls mother a fool and mother accuses father of being a woman chaser, or a drunkard, or a. tightwad, or e. lazy loaler, and _tl-ie air grows fetld with the emanations of dislike and disappointment, and the children sit there drinking it all in with their little ears, their nerves reaped by the discord, their minds filling with a contempt for the man and woman whom they see fighting like cats and dogs. Strange that parents so seldom consider the effect that their disagree- ments have upon their children. They would if they saw the thousands of pathetic lett/ers that come to my desk from girls and boys who tell of their unhaPPy homes, and ask me if there is any way in which they can reconcile their quarrellng parents to each other, and induce them to live together in peace and harmony. “We have e. beautiful home, and fine cars and plenty of money and everything to make us happy, but we are miserable because my father and mother are always fighting," one will write. “Neither one can say anything without starting something, and then they scream at each other and accuse each other of terrible things, and it is so awful that 1 am thinking about running away." ““My father is a good, kind man and he works hard and comes home tired to death, but the minute he opens the door mother jumps on him about something he has done. or has forgotteri to do, and she just nags him and nags him, and frets and complains about his not making more money, and about her not having everything she wants, until she finally just goads him l something back to her Then she begins to cry and says to us into say ng . children: ‘Just look how your father treats mc,’ and acts like a martyr, but we are so sorry for father we feel like crying over him. How can we get mother to treat father better?" another will ask. Others tell of phllanderlng fathers and jealous mothers who wash their hel fu hurl insults . dirty linen before their children's eyes, and who, in t r ry, _ at each other until they strip every s hred of character away from each ' other and leave their children with no respect for either parent. And still other children tell of fathers and mothers who try to make them take sides in the civil war that wages perpetually in their homes and who lo both our tear the poor, pitiful youngsters in twain between them. “We ve father and our mother,” ‘they say. “They are both good to us. Why won't they get along together and let us have a happy home?" Grudges for Their Children’s Sake, it is ' Q ” \ ' 5 es. ,,.., r Q -11% ‘..'~;`\.- 'i ' '*§Vl`l:l‘,`-`-a f ‘iv ... _`~‘;}i.; , .» I ‘ .'."_g ; W __ ` ' ny Annebeiie Worthington A charming mid-summer frock chooses flat washable crepe in sweet olive green shade. It's very simple and ever so smart, _ It's the slim silhouette that suits ‘ deb or matron. The shirring at center-front of the moulded bodice carries out vertical line. It gives height to the figure, and creates a. lovely softened effect. lt is lengthened by a circular skirt _ with snug shaping through the hips. It is utterly chic. It depends en- tirely upon its lines for smartness. Youll adore it fashioned of peach shantung, marine blue linen with white polka-dots. red and white I printed batiste and cool green tones in cotton voile. Style No. 3033 comes in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. lt takes but 3% yards of 39-inch material. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or ess work...yz`elds 50 0 more jelly! Simply - - Easily DELIGHT your family with luscious home-marie currant jelly. For jellies and jams the variety is astonishing if you use Certo, a pure food product made from fruit.. And you get 50'/'Ip more jam or jelly. Remember, Cerro never fails and you may use it any time of the year! 87 Valuable Recipes The Cerro recipe booic under the label of every Cerro bottle opens up is whole new Field of jam and jelly making, Learn how to use luscious fruirs cha: nezer be/are -u,-oulrl jell. Recipes are home-rested. Follow recipes carefully-you'I.l be sure of results. r:*"ei;'__‘___ “ -The natural Jeliying IVI % substance extracted iam or _ielly at less from fruiz. cor: per ju. -_Tells the juice tl-lar _S°"°’ 95 *ll* 511"- - S h f ui: would have boiled ave’ t ° f away by ,he old fIav_our. Saves the (1°,,s_i,°,j) medmcp fruit colour. _ _Womans Realm -.°- Social and Personal -.°- Fashions -:_-_ Literature ";~ ___‘l' ‘ _ in _ Y -Y-_ -_:_-_ _ v ~ _--» -- \ ' llfliat the Fashionable Are Wearing cbiiaren ' ° um ‘ vi.-'s D0f0thy Dlx il Meg. w:rer',"<`*_ ' e world embittered in disposition, disill usloned, its nerves shattered _ts such as entrants Wmch are rich '* ‘ vrCw> Fo r H 0 t G 1. e r ‘ _ 9 their own personal grudges for their chlldrc-n's sake and get along together Uf V is reached. Test the juice for pectin to try to uve together n is _ __ _ snarling and shall give you. The first is to use _. ._r_. V- aned and have just one parent than to have two who are _ 'if ` "_, ____ m H th ti _ DOROTHY Dlx tablespoon of not fruit. juice and one .ws ._ ~- ,.(`: / snapping at each 0 er B 0 me tablespoon of grain alcohol and mix "AS Candidate for the Baby Ward, it gives me pleasure ig.. f -.v,_2,~;'/'.‘» 1 '__ L . __ __ _..___. .____._ .» "/"'”" /M” J/ '§°1,§;nTf i§‘0'|_D” ” ”-f5e_(;_,-g,,T p?10,,d_dg§,§1{ed Qfd together. If there is sufficient pectinl to address tI1i's_meeti'ng, I tell you FeIIoiv»BaIn:cs, iimr 1; __ __ it the C0mbihBi2i0l1 Of 8lC0h°l “ml you. elect 'me I Il sec that all our lyloliievs use tins Iovciy, i ,‘ _ __ --“__ /_ L » -;, _ 5 W ,_ /1 _ ,.7//// l --' Mo.DE l ____ ov r everything to a depth of il feet in I _ _ _ buri d “iii -i“l‘-"° Wm °°“i3°“I f°““l“g quite rom y Baby Powder I II make em, laoirs an ,-, __ ,, ~,,,’1_=-».?.~ , , _____._.-_-°;' , 1 fa `f"'-’-";f§..1;1-‘.-" *- - £7 -W ` - Girl is about 5.000 Years old. accord ly. n. different manner from those g¢ to use one teaspoon of hot fruit juice, _ SOIL _“Ky powder to stop d_a_____g_ All you nad ' - _-_ _ , s ` ing to J. L. Hodson in The News- aftcr it. __ _ 1 1-ie continues: Llp-stick Pre-flood Frat-es in some instances one teaspoon susar. i;¥_;ldor;e_ete;_a:_poe;_i; W do ____ _mc for me _ 11* Chronicle. 1 %§_?,v ~ _ with Epsom salts. This sh g __, _ _ c L ’ I` 0 ` 0 I i bo me _ _ _ This Eieciri c Hoi P ole nt... W.. .__..___._.:_...._ ________ __ ____ ____ ____ ____ _ ____ __________ ________ _ ~ an ctln. Bittsh Museum the treasures Mr. C. Leonard Wolley In one respect they are the most d test 9331” fm' Pe his been diggirg up et Ur or the rornnriotbie thi-gs yet discovered st Add the sussr and boil gently im- ohsidees. Ur; thfy are the first objects found til the lellvlns stase is reached- This There you could see the omnmentsitliere to which religious significance Will i»Hl¢@ 9501"- 10 mini-\¢95~ The 595” _ d_ Before the to determine whether the jelly has. md paints that the Modern Girl of may _safely be attache _ 3500 B. C. employed to make herself flood people lived in brick buildings, been C00l¢¢d 10113 61100811 l~\`¢. f\1'Si-- ` . ds buudinos were place a drop of jelly on a cold plate Z ,_ beautiful. The flappers, who mo- and roon nfiei-uar ,, and if it holds lu shape the jelly is Queen snub Ah had je¢_b1,,,¢k mi,-_ ready for bottling, or using a cold* metal spoon allow some of the jelly, delicately shaped noses and small _ K . ____~___ _ mouths. Their mouths were pain- UNVEIL MEMOBIALS to drop from lt and if the drops jolnf U' " _ 4 .~__ __ ' ' _‘-- _ -_ bil., ’ together to form s sheet you may be ‘ _ __ _ ____-_'____l_¢ ____ ._ __ _ _ ...-31 ig . I l Summer meals are iight. So_li_ghten the I°_b of preparing them. With this mdy _electric hotpluecyou can cook without heating up our kit en. lt is light snd portable. May be ected in my electric outlet. _See it H810 today. These liberal terms are for s limited time only. QNLY $122 DOWN Boiaiice $1 u month for 4 month! U total of $5.60. Cash price 55-50- Moritime Electric Co., Lid. °f ill’ ,f -paints they used were red. b c '- in of Mon- ing the glass to make .sure that you _ "l Prince Edward Island -it throws on the delve# in M'-S°P°*-° _ The “Wm 44,000 men who have no _ Charlottetown “_ 3 ' amia. and life just before and after,more than _ `, - _ Pick over currents wash and drain. a th g - at the he-ids-apparcnt‘y goddesses or dfm- delled themselves after a lady called constructed of cement bricks. grave. ik ive ou a W... " _-nv g. _ ---_ L 5 h fru - '_ -_ _ __ _ - 'Z _;s=§ff~" ‘ \_ ' if m ' _ Husbands and wives think that their happiness or unhappiness affects §:__;’_e‘;_l;_l:;__1;4;;°5__;:§;rt_:'1;l° gtoo :Wea - *M ~ §..:'_-»‘- _ '_g’f'\ themselves alone. It does not. It reacts on their children. They pay P_ _ha _________ ____ on the _ave the debt of their fathers' and mothers' luck of self-control. and 5;; gently for a°_f°____ _O mlguoes _ ' I . h C k. n And so unless a man and woman have the strength of character to sink until what we call the pectln stage -__ _ f--'_--‘--"~\ l.5_Aw\O1 3;... 1:i.is.tr>d -'___ :avg ._ __ _ ..~ - ‘ “"`m`ff'8 »g~¢\-¢a¢.i£f=`».a.`»`- 1 ' ` sw. _ .1 __ ~ -'f-f #tr-;_ $2555; § -“ft -.’_; r, -' if "" I ’ ‘ T ' ' i ‘ ~ ~ 1 - _s __;\_._.»-»_._s_>_;_:-5; LONDQN, July 26--The Modern People before thc flood were e f __ _ __ ` ` ` - "' thick 5“b5°““°“' The 5°°°“d best is ntlemeni ‘TI-iey`Il see Iiow badly we need this "‘_"%“..._- ii o in outward amlty and peace, lt is better for them to part than lt is for them , There are two common tests which I _ \ __ ,_»-. _ ff. no __ _ _ __ ' l d cord Far better for ° ch‘ld to be half-orph- 0118, » -_'___ \ I rj.-__.....~-,__,.__, ,,~§.,.2' , 5 __ i- -_,_,.___§Y_:§ _. ns* . AQ, i .¢-JZ ‘!"‘:** ~ 7- _-J ted ruby. eyebrows were emboldened -- ere LONDON. July 26.~The Imperial sure that your jelly is ready to-bottle. with black, and round eYeS W dr"-n rims of green-much as our War Graves Commission announces The glasses ln which you are put- _ actresses of to-any iire theirs with that memorials to the missing new ting your iellv Should. of course. be; b1ue_ ' of the Great War, which have been- thoroughly sterilized snd we suggestt "ws know, said Mr. woiiey, "the ereeteri at Looe, Pozieres vis-ern snowing the iellyw cool before Disc- _ is ir, Afton and Louvervsi icnmbrsu win ins the hot paraffin wax Over it tilt of . ‘ =' » _-T- " .' < “' ` ‘ - 1 f -` . 2'; ‘ ri _:li ‘zrif .~ - . .~ ~'\ 5 _-1- w.. __ _ _ __ ,_ __ , _ _ _ ___ ._ .. _ _ _ _ _ \ _- ‘_ _ ~$""‘___', _ _ ' . _ ` white. reen. and yellow." The chief be untelled on the morn g I _ ' ,f ‘ - - - _.jj _ 5- Q5. ) _ __ E , ,_ \ A ` and most obvious interest oi' th ex da" Aigust 4, the annivrsary of have a perfect seal. {_'_”_'\|5__,g _ _ .» _ _ . _,_-. _ _. ' , _' = rtr into the war ' -,-5,-‘i'_;. ` _ -‘ " y ' ' < .__I"'f--_-‘ -V .`__-‘;_`J-_,t_- W ` ' “"- ' "f, _ f J, ' . ‘R ° ' e~ - _ _ ~. . ~_ _ O C I G d m hlbitlori. he thinks. le the new light Great Britaln‘s e . y ` . _ orlals commemmorate Red Currarit Jelly i.; . _ § is a thing not so much of thc past ns contain tiny female figures e if 4 '_ in before the Flood This con- slender, graceful bodies but inhuman Same result BS the f01'¥“€1' Will If the __ - thick substance does not form, boil '“"“ Y'-_<. _ _` _/1 ' , ('- G If babies what changes they`d effect I One thing is certain, they`cl insist that ali Mothers. use Johnsons Baby Powder-the deli- cate, fluffy Italian tale that soothes and comforts tender baby skins. had votes- H.i\'\~ you i'~~fI _I-whnsrin E9 _Iolinsoi‘I's Iisiw Smp _’ I'--- if inroniiinction with _lohufon Q' _I0i"‘.=0n= Baby 'I`aIc to icrcp the I\aI`-v- skin in pcrfcct con- dition. .‘\