d», AlXiIbIA-‘4_T~I:: i? ‘(ilfllevaliai- iiiliilsria IPIF» GUARDIAN; eastern l Happenings of the w Week l; Colonel and Mrs. McPhail hai"e ar- rived from Kingston. Ont. to spend Dame to the country over the hill- Bome. come, hear the birds and get. the thrill: lee the grace of the elm trees. the summer at their lovely home in Uigg. BABY'S own l- Dorothy Dix Letter Boat Milady Beautiful ' By Mb Leeds Com- Foolproof Method of Keeping a Husband. ' fort for the Girl Whose Fiance Has Ceased I l I l ii yiaasama anon" LOTION ' wmi its numerous creams and Hear the hum of the busy bees; l beauty lotions, milatlfs dressini $111519 - on", resembles a well-stocked cosme- ' tic counter. No wonder she hails with to Love Her -- At What Age is Youth Come to the country bright and Mrs. Stewart and her daughter. sunny. .Mrs. Guy Cameron of Strathgartney For health, ‘and peace. and golden were visitors to Summerside this HOHCY- week. sfSl u.’ lat; 2nd Baby to: 1 11o ..: Miss Louise McKinnon, who is to be one of the June brides. was given Mrs. Artemas Lord. Charlottetoivns grand old lady celebrated her 85th birthday on Monday last when she‘ a lolly and delightful miscellaneous welcomed many callers and received'shoiver by the Nurses of the P. E. numerous good wishes and massages‘ Island Hospital, among whom she is Lrom friends home and abroad. a great‘ favorite. u a Iva Mr. and Airs. Priest who were mar- fied Ma): 22nd in Toronto are spend- ng a delightful honeymoon on the island. They were guests of Mr. and Mrs. .1 F. Arneti of Summcrside this week. .\fr.<. Priest was formerly Ellis: Ella McLean of Montague. a o The engagement of another. popu- kiar young Charlottetoivn couple Miss Kathleen Bourke to Mr. George Geddes Wood was announced this week by their pai"eiits. Mr and Mrs. H. A. C. Scarth and family." have gone to their summer" Many friends here were interested|1101116 B! KEDPOCYL in the wedding which took place on. ‘ _\[ay 111a; gt. Mary Aibhots Church. Mrs. Reginald Shives of Campbell- Lonijgp, vrhpn 10.11; daughm- c; the ton. N B. is visiting her sisters Mrs. late Mr John A Longwortli. of Char- H T HOIHHH and Mrs J. H. Prit- lotrno-vn, became the bride of Mr ‘vlinrd of Eiiimmevside. v n snovm in London and South Africa. 1\l1=-'= 590131118 POPE. W110 dllflfls Beresford Ash. mining engineer. ivellz ' I The bride was given in marriage by 111i‘ “'31 “'85 313111311 111 6113119 0f N0- hs, unclp. M; R, g, pulmqq M, y; 1 l2 Hospital at Bolougne and later of C, ‘i Sliefficlci ‘Terrace, London. .\Ir. l 111v 1\l1111fl1'.‘-' HO-“Diifll M Halifax. ar- and 31,5‘ 5n tailed {up Nlonlffdl on l‘.\'f‘Cl home from Barbacloes on Tues- May :0. l dar- I I I f l U u Mm. gmd and 1115;, 313;“ 35C-’ Mrs John Stcrns and little son l Farlane entertained \'E‘l"-' pleasantly Bilfldf" 1131f 139911 115111118 M15 51-81119 sister. Mrs A R. Enman in New. lCrlasgow. N. S. 1 l J Garth Toombs 2t seven tables of bridge av, ihPll‘ home 1n Summerside 0i‘. Friday Fien- Lng. Refreslxnents were served at the Mrs. lDlil close ofthe evenings play b"; thel hostesses ' . o n Dr. J. Y. Ilfacl-‘adyen, M. B. E. and Mrs. MacFadven of Anquila, Britishl West Indies, have arrived in the city to spend the summer months with Mrs MacFadyens parents, Mr. and .1\frs.G H I-folbrook. law. Sask. on a visit to her parents Dr. A. W. and Mrs. Leard cf Sum- merside. I , receiving congratulations on Tuesday, l At the Tennis Courts this after-‘ ‘noon the tea hostesses will be the l\-I:sses Bourkc, Miss Helen Janiieson. l ville l‘. 15. where they attended con- livinieris games with a charming ‘din- l Miss Dorothy Bentleyz ' V u a Mr and Mrs. l-Ienry Smith left} ‘the Sumnierside East End Bridge Wednesday on a short visit to Sack- l Club celebrated the closing of ‘the i w a a ference .ner at the Clifton Hotel They." after- ~ ' ‘wards spent a iervpleasant evening Itown. who has B . being welcomed home from Moose-l i i I et made of crepe paper of the chosen color and fashioned into the shape of a huge rose. Hidden. within the ‘ petals of the paper rose have gifts for , the bride-elect-a bit of the heart o‘ the rose from each guest. U O The sympathy of many friends will go out to Mr. C. N. Bissett and Mrs. ‘ G. P. Strong on the death of their sister Mrs. Dimock of Windsor. N. . who is so kindly remembered by friends here. O The Summerside having their formal opening this afternoon. The hostesses at the tea hour will be Mrs. Mussen. Mrs. H T. Holman, Mrs. H. H. Lefurgey and Mrs. Wilfred Iieeky. . a a Let the ices be in the chosen color l with white or if expense need not be considered, let them be frozen in the form of roses. I-Ia\"e a rosc at each cover at a luncheon or a rose served on each plate at a party or reception. Have a corsage of roses as a gift to the honoree. a o Pope of Charlotte- been visiting the Miss Florence e l ' l Golf Club areI Mature ? Dear Miss Dix-I am going to be married very soon and I want to make a happy home for my husband. I writ to mate a home ‘that will be a pmc that he ivill be glad to come to and where his friends will be sure of a wel- come. I do not want to be a ball-aiid-chaixi wife. so I shall insist on his having his bachelor friends in when- j ever he wants them and 1' will not stay snooping - around listening to what they say and being a killjoy I am sorry to say there have been many women in his life, but when I marry him. knowing this, I will not run to the nearest police station or tear the glrfs hair out. no matter how much I feel like it. Nor will I tell my troubles to my friends nor my mother. nor let him suspect I know. but will try tn make myself more at- tractlve and his home more pleasant. Am I too easy- going in my plans? J. W. Li. 1 Answer: _ Your plan for making a happy home and making your. All of the matrimonlail ‘1i~.d:ed. no. marriage a success is the very essence of wisdom. . bureaus in the world could not have doped you out a better scheme. The real secret of managing a husband Ls to drive him with a light rein. ‘ Never let him feel the curb and realize that you are guiding and controlling 1 him. Never flick him with the whip of reproof. Never let him feel that he is in harness and has become just a family dray horse and can never kick l up his heels again. The thing that makes men bolt oftenest is just the little ipetty tyrannies their wives put upon them. The eternal “do this“ or do i that." The incessant nagging about little faults and habits. If wives could only manage to make their husbands feel that they are an adjunct to their 1 pleasures instead of a brake upon them, it would make matrimony a grand l | sweet song instead of the scrapping match it too often is. It is the easygoing wives who keep their husbands. I doubt if any ami- f I able woman. one with a sense of humor and a laugh hung on a hair trigger. _. ever lost her husband no matter how fat and middle-aged she got or what a 1 poor cook she was. The one thing a man is grateful to his wife for beyond everything else is not picking a fuss with him or making a row over little l things or reminding him of his faults. Mr. R. ‘Harold Jenkins. M. P» was; ' Misses Green of Summersldeireturn- ed to her home on Wednesday. hi» I-Ie gets enough bumps in the outside world. He gets enough bawling I out from his boss or his customers or his patients. I-Ie has to watch his step l every minute of the day and when he comes home he-wants peace and quiet Mm Gleveland and her “me baby l and to be iollied and somebody to laugh at him if he is cross instead of hav- boy have amveq m summerslde {mm i ing her feelings hurt and making an issue of it. " And he wants to flop down it being his 57th birthday. one Youngstown, Ohio. on a visit to her parents; Judge‘ and Mrs. A. C. Saund- ers. I . . . . Fine details .fl'l3.l‘l( the summer blouses,_ as for 6K3lllplE one of pink ‘crepe cut with a collar continuing ' Airs. R. l-l. Jenkins l5 being wel-lof bridge at the home of Mrs. Jflmho a “bot doubla and underlald comed home after a pleasant vfinter " LieRoy Holman. The prizes were wonl I 1 1 Ln the Capital. .bv Mrs. James Wood and Mrs. lDrJ S.mpson. . O I I a a Miss Edith Ings has returned from i .' hmlday with h” motile" l“ PO": Colored bridal veils are the newest Hill . ' 1 _ ‘ ‘ [idea for relieving the all-ivhite wetl- lriiiig "own. In ne f '~~ The hostesses at the Golf Links ~wcfi End Lnqdin, wows Whexjlgig: this afternoon for the tea hour are ‘jwecuhz, m Couritlgnd bridal heat!‘ Mrs. W S. StewarLjfrs. Bartlett. idmsses “,5 Show“ a bmial ‘Fl or Mrs. A. G. Peake. Mrs. A. B. Cosh. lpalest p-nk m“, w “hath was‘ at M” c‘ N" smelt" ltachecl a little Dutch bonnet of lace {and tulle with orange blossoms of the pals shade oi pink. Both bon- of "*0 Mrs. F. U. Bake: entertained the east end bridge club at her home in Summersicle on Wednesday evening A daligbtifiil evenir; was spent and a dairiir buffet lunch was served by the hostess" l i! I 0 A morning Smile The young man was sitting on it ‘iotel verandah. Close by him sat a young. pretty widow, with her s11."- vear-old son. Presently the little fel- low ran up to the man. who patted him on the head. "Whats your name?’ asked. ~ "William Brown." i‘ ‘Ts you married?" “No, ‘f am not.“ The child paused a moi-sent. then. fuming to his mother. said. "What rise must I ask him. mummie?" i116 Hill? boy ,2 ‘net and veilwere edged with silver and had silver lace inset. These veils ‘have been found much more becom- 1 mg than the all white, it is declared. - l No SlIOIVCX‘ for the June bride is , more appropriate than a “rose party.“ Decide on the kind of roses you want ' lto use and use only one color com- ‘bined with white. In decorating the house. be generous in arranging a ‘rose Part3?‘ let there be roses every- lwhere, bowls of roses on niantels. i pleted with contrasting fabric jackets. i m the pas; but. that he love; you now. l. ldress as the collar. cuffs bookcases-have roses in every room I in which guests will go Fill all wall li-ases and fiOWEI‘ receptacles with with white, while the buttoned cufis likewise show this touch of white. and smart new ‘tuck-in blouses are being made with cape sleeves. e e a Mrs. J. H. Prichard gave a br" of nine tables on Thursday evenmg‘. at hcr home in Suitmierside in honor of her daughter. Mrs. Conrad. ivho is . on a‘ visit from Allston. Mass..A d.- lightful evening was spent renewing old friendships. at! .-._. _.__i. _... .....- l--- .\;|J sports silk is the sturdy shantung in its roughened weave. and the smart- est frocks and suits of the moment in silks for sports or country wear are in while or pastel stantung, made in every possible style-jacket dresses. two-piece suits to be worn with sep- arate blouses and frocks to be com- -_a_-- m... ~.-_.. i__._.v u... _.i. ....'. . . ,1... __ one One needihave no trepidation in matching such small accessories of and the handbag. and a very recent vogue is the set of pink linen, the purse all in ' linen save for a gold ring as straps and a gold and pink leather placque roses or perhaps a bit of some white for the fastening. ivhile there are also flowers. The dining-rpm“ {able may‘ pink linen shoes ivhich-"imght be in- be made a thing of beauty. Scatter . 13111593 111 this accessory idea in fab- over centre ivhite lace or the linen.’ 1 ' ' l rose petals. letting this be the last .minute to make sure they will be soft and fresh. In the centre have a bask- ‘Vlien Babies on Babies will cry, often for no You may not know what's wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon lpparent reason. has your little one comforted; i not, you shoulilcail a doctor. Don't experiment with medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults! Most of those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tastin , reme y gentle-acting children's that children like.‘ It may be the stomach. or may be the little bowels. Or in the case cf older children. a sluggish, con- aiiiinied condition Castoria is mil f the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up any minor ailment. and could by no possi- bility clo the youngest child the slightest harm. So it's the first thing to think of when a child has a coated tongue; won't pla , cant sleep. is fretful or out o sorts. Get the genuine; it always has Chas. H. Fletchcfl signature on the package. i XlC. a o Four ensemble type for summering include the printed silk frock with its sheer, creepg." wool coat of three- quarter length, coped as to collar. the more mature model of print frock with full length or seven-eighths coat other dresses, the shortened coat and dress of tiny patterned chiffon, and the afternoon ensemble of solid color chiffon 1n black or dark blue. its dress pin tucked in an intricate de- sign and its hip-length Jacket very soft as to outline. ‘Household Hints ayusuum A Carpet Beater A section cut from ‘an old garden hose makes an effective. fi-er-zi-iie beat- er for rugs and carpets. A Cleanser lea-water is an ideal cleanser for varnished woodwork. made by pouring boiling water on spent tea leaves and then straining the liquid through a cloth or muslin. Mush when frying C3'.'f‘.l".“3l mush. add a l tablespoonful of sug: - " 11-} t." table.- spzcnfuis cf milk.- and it will fry a nlnq hnnnln. f of dark silk interchangeable with This can be , on the couch and put his headonthe best sofa cushion and scatter the news- ‘ paper all over the floor without a row being made over it. So dont be afraid you will be too easygoing with your husband. You ‘ cant be. Sugar catches more flies than vinegar and if you want your hus- l band to eat out of your hand just feed him on angels food. l l And you are not only wise but just in starting out to give your husband a square deal in the home. One of the reasons that so many men step outl ' is because the.i~ wives have pre-empted the house and monopolize it. and the l husband hasn't even the right of a boarder in the home he supports. ,. ____.__... l-foiv mves get this way nobody knows, but the average woman thinks that the home is her sole property and that she has the right to every inch _ of the space studio as; "flu:- 21515-"137318 in_it. Why, I know plenty of homes in ivhich the man of the house hasn't even l a shelf in a closet or a hook that he can call. his own nor a chair that belongs i to him nor a place where he can smoke and read in peace. and he wouldn't f any more dare to invite a guest to it than he would to the White House. ' Noteven a member "of his own family. Hence you make a good move when you make your husband at home in his own home and you bind him to you when you make his friends welcome. for men are loyal to their old pals and theyresent it deeply when their wives cold-shoulder thém out of the house. . Ks for your husband's former lady friends, forget them, as he has. No woman is so little to be feared as the one of whom a man has tired and, any- way, the thing that matters is not that your husband has loved other women If you live up to the program you have 1 mapped out for yourself. there is small danger of his ever wandering away 1 from his own fireside. DOROTHY 131x, t Dear Miss Dix-For six years I have been going with a young man whom | I live devotedly. We ivere engaged and were soon to have been married. but l I have noticed lately that he has been‘ very unhappy arid a few weeks ago he I told me that he did not want to get married. He kept seeing me less and l less. then stayed away a week, and‘! suffered a hysterical nervous collapse‘, i andthinking I was dying, my father sent for him. I feel that I cannot live - without him. Have resigned from my position. What am I to do? I be- . lleve I am going to lose my mind. I just can't give him up. HEARTBROKEN. Answer: Of course you can give him up just the way we give up those we love when they d.e. There is no option in the matter. It is fate. And we bear v such griefs because we have to bear them. And for your comfort. realize how much better off you are than you | would have been if you had married the young man and‘ then found out that he had ceased to care for you and that he loathed being bound to you. I think that the "most terrible thing that can happen to any woman is to know l that the man to whom she ts married does not love her; that the marriage bands that are to her so precious are gall and fetters to him: that while she lit-rigs for his soc.ety. hers bores him to tears; that he‘ shudders away from i‘ her kisses and the very touch of her flesh is repulsive to him; that she is a j drag upon him. a blight upon his happiness, and that he looks forward with despair to years upon years of enforced companionship with her. It seems to me that for a woman to know that aihan had married her rom a sense of duty. or because he was sorry for her, or because she threw herself upon his chivalry and was such a poor, weak creature that she was zvllllng to wrcck his life to gratify her selfish passion, and he lacked the - i-iardihood to stand out against her tears and entreaties and threats of death. would humble her into the very dust. and that every time she looked at him ishe would be filled with self-loathing and reproaches for the misery she l had brought upon him. - - 1 - » So my advice to you is tn brace up and take a grip on yourself Bun-imam your pride to your aid and put this man out of your life and out of your - thoughts forever. No need to reproach him. He has only done a brave and ' honest thing in telling you the truth in time to avoid-making [a terrible ; mistake that would have wrecked bot h of your lives. f........_-_ No doubt he regrets the situation as much as you do, but he is no more are in nature and cannot be helped. -prcblems. I am happy to help others‘ dengh; a cream or a lotion which pIOmlEES to serve several purposes at once. and that is just the kind 01 beauty aid that I am c0111: to tell you, about today. Furthermore. it ls a pro-; duct. which you can ‘easily and inex-l pensively make yourself through l: is i ecessary to purchase the ingredients- Now we will first take up its U595- ln the first place i‘: makes an excel- lent hand lotion. and "if fnilady will keep a jar of it on the wash basin and another on the kitchen sink where 511E can use i; after every time she has to put hei- hands in water, she will be Hausa e the powder- bdse into the Sin amply repaid. for it will keep her hands soft and smooth if she uses it regularly. Another use is for the lips. Used on the lips it will keep them soft and will prevent 511312131113. Arid a third use is, one which I am quite surewill ap- peal to many of my readers. It .is a' wonderful powder base for com-l plexions which are inclined to look‘ r ough and scaly when a face powder, is applied. Such an appearance usually; goes with a dry skin and if those wi.h ‘ that, YYBe of skin will use this base I, am sure they will find tha; the con-l dition_of their skin is very much proved so that. the face powder and make-up can be applied much more: arti; icaily and will stay on muchl longer. A fourth use of this versatile beauty] l lotion will appeal to my readers of the s erner sex. Although my beauty column is largely devoted to miladys as well. Many of my feminine readers would‘ be surprised to know how many beautyl questions come to this column froml men and boys. There Ls nogocd roa- son ivhy these should not be just as interested m the various details that go to make up a well-groomed ‘sip-l Pearance as women are and I want‘ my masculine readers to feel that their m‘ Canmg 11°11“? lonshlre England dur rig the rei l . . . . . 5n o For The Cook SANDWICHES l One-quarter pound fresh butter. l one quart spinach, cooked and passed 1 through a very flnc sieve, six anchov- f les, put through a sieve. one table- l spoon each of parsley and capers, chopped fine, seasonings. After the, spinach is cooked. drained and pass- cd through a sieve, work it into the i fresh butter gradually. Then add the other ingredients, and season all. ' Pack in a mold and set in the ice chest. Spread thin slices of bread with this mixture. cut in triangles, and serve. I SPRIb. Li JAVOR!’ Etiquette wlobertalm Q. What are the fashionable even- A. From o'clock. Q. What should a woman wear to l an afternoon wedding? ‘ A. Afternoon frock, with hose and shoes to match. kid gloves and a hat. . Q. What is the principal rule for proper eating. A. To eat quietly and slowly. eight to nine-thirty‘ i‘ a recipe for a lotion or cream that may be used on the face after shav-l in; when the skin is ra her sensitive‘, and needs some kind of sroihing lo-l tion that I am about to iilicribe i5! just the thing to use for the piii‘p05€.; judging from the enthusiastic letters ‘ that I have received from lhoie who have tried it. A lotion which will accomplish all this may seen-i too good to be true. ' Bu; nevertheless it. is of proved value ‘ and this is the way to make it if you do not care to buy it ready made or- are unable to obtain it in your neigh- borhood. Use two drams of white gum tragacantli. one ounce of glycerine. one-half dram powdered borax. twol York “gram Ne... i‘ 59y Magazine and otir drams Cologne water, one-half dram simple tlnciure of benzozn, one-half. dram white rose extract and eight ouncg of rosevrater . Melt the gum in a liltle hot water overnight; use Justl sufficient to cover it. In the morning. i: will be perfectly soft and dissolved. Stir the mixture and add the lmrax~ ‘ and the glycerine. then add two drams 1 of Cologne water and ihen the berizion . |drop by drop and the rosewatei-l gradually. Add the perfume last and mix the ingredients thoroughly. Those who prefer a thin lotion my add morerosewater and those who would rather have a jellylike cream or solu- tion may lessen the amount of rose- water added. Very litla of this or cream is necessary when used as a powder base. Apply 1115i, a thin film Stephen's time ,of war in 159T. and ii beauty 137011181115 B" 01 lust, as much . over the face and neck. smoothing it importance as are those of feminine on well and massaging it nn‘il it dis- night that you will go to sleep. mature? Answer: ant questions of their lives. Dear Miss Dix-What is the age of maturity for a boy and a girl? minister of our church was given a permit to preach when he was i’! and he is satisfied‘ with his choice of a career. girl when he was 19 and they are both happy. And don't mourn as one without hope. Time blurs the sharp edge of every disappointment and makes our grlefs only flant. sad memories. l DOROTHY DIX. l . . I The I have a neighbor who married a L So when are a boy and girl l A BOY. l i l l l The law presupposes that a boy ls mature at 21 and a girl at 18, but when 1 they are really mature depends uponthe lnndividual. strongly marked talents know what they are going to do ‘in the world from ' the cradle up, and a few boy'-and-giri marriages tum out all right. 1 these are the exceptions that prove the rule, and the average youngsters do well to wait until they cut their wisdom teeth before they decide tho import- Some boys with ' But l DOROTHY DIX. ' YARDLEY s New Bond Street LONDON iresponsible for not loving you than you are for loving him. Such things 1 If you have the money, I advise you to take l. long trip. There is no ‘thfr y -~~ i‘: i .-'z' l-zix: 11:: tat-cl, beczuse it fills every day with new Iota-mu and new fans and M!‘ 090ml that up vow mind o! your trouble. 558-362 Adelpicle St. W, TORO ‘YA T/ae Lovable Fragrance There is nothing Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions» a-Mlizlteraturefil WHO ARE You? A Ridgway? The Romance of Your Nam. B)’ RUBY HASKINB ELLIS t’- Mrlgwiu; T11‘! Ridsway family l5 of Saxon origin and the name it taken from an estate 0mm Lord Ryde ancieu self wg bl? cm 11'3"‘. “ho lived in Km Bl‘ vciriois Chino“ in spelling. it finally‘ becime Rig; E 1V3)’. which is in use today. The Ridgways ivere Iiviiig m m“ ‘Queen Elizabeth. The; ‘Ffifp mom nent in the affairs of the day s" Thomas Ridgway, who v J5 cream Earl of Londonderry, fitei out a 511m ictavu in the naval e:-:plo.ts a.‘ ~ Waiter Raleigh and the Earl of Essex, H, also commissioned a shp ctivar UM by England to repel the famoiu Spanish Armada. One of the eai a: Ridgways, was Richard .1 itlscn o1 Robert, the second Eail of Lo. on. derry. Richard was born in England in i654, married Elizabeth Chamber. layn and came to America wzih lu‘; family on the ship "Jaccla and .\ rv,‘ in 1679. They seztied on the um. lern shore of the River Delaware, Richard Rldgwaf." acquired a largi tract of land in Bueks County. Pei-n. sylvania. which was the first Englisl settlement in the Svait‘. The name of Ridrivag." is outstand- ing today. Among many important people of this name is Ennan Jessi l‘ Ridgway. prominent Joiirnzist. con- nected with such will-known news- papef5 and periodiials as the New THE LAND we LOVE By FRANK LEIGH .\u.\ 11.14 110.. 5L Q. Where is Norway HD1156? A. Norway House is a post of the Iiudsoifs Bay Company" on the ei- treme northern end of Lake Winni- peg where tlicre is a ftrl o.’ the Com- pany and which is still as for long years past an importinl. fur tradiu center. Its name orfliiflitfl 111 i1" fact that a party of Scandinavian: had been employed n bu‘ 5111i original fort. In Sir 901;». will day Norway House \'Ll.'. riie and headquarters of the i. 5 Co. Whtfl readers. apieam the Governor and ClllilCli met iii- Riecen ly I ‘have received quite a' Tomorrow-Beauty Questions An- nuany m discuss its was. In 1m number of le.ters asking me to giie swered a company of $01k“; g T; M ' — ' - - - -ol Go where everything is so grlppingly interesting that you will be insenslblyi tzelgaigfvg; tggrgazi F ea diverted from your one obsession. e or _',_ “‘*—_ l ______--_----\ If you cannot afford to travel. go back to work and work so hard that i ' ‘ l you will not have time to think of your lost love, and you will be so tired at I Character CbSe-bps ' Hf‘ (‘f/HP V/l/f‘ 779E JM/fll Eff-i" W/f/l M91 F-fl/WP/V PUP/Lb‘ if! 07/4 657.5‘ fXf/féfi i. in all the Wtlflfil of beauty that can take the place of r116 Lovable Fragrance of the Yardley Lav- ender. Wistfui, winsome, caressing- its charm is all its own. it has lent its sweet vivacity to bWYYT and consoled with the very broth- of peace the weary, the sad, 111d d: wk‘ RDLEY LAVENDER i. It Pm‘: 6c New m; The Lovable Fragrance Sinoi 1770 35 i1.’ l i. ~ In t‘: 1 ’ r1’ ' 153 From 65: lb: battle, of all good drug and department store‘ l ,