I ,1 PAGE TWO ____-__ l run CHARILOTTETOWNV z-uu- Gila-tibia}: AlMorningSmile A youthful billiards marker was informed by his employer that he would have to be more careful in the matter oi chalk. “Can't help it, sir," replied the marker. "I know the fellows who pocket the chalk; but they're reg- ular customers, and you 1vou!dn‘t like me to oilend them, would you, lit".'" "No," was the reply; "but you rould give them a gentle hint, you know." The marlugi- m-ouusctl to do so. and a lcw clays 1:111 r. observing a player pocket a PlCCT.‘ of chalk, he approached the culprit and remark- rd, "You ll excuse 1111-. sir, bu: are you connected in any 11111 11-1121 the milk trade?" "Well, yes," was the i-splg. "What U! it?" "l zlioucht so.’ rejoined the mar- 1- "i.~_1- the amount 0t chalk you my“ -_1-,1,1,\_1-, My be.» llKC-s t-ntci-- prise, and lit- told nic 1o give you a hint that ll you iviintctl a bucket of watt-r now and again you could have one with pleasure!" When Your-Cough Hangs On, Mix This at Home Baveaifl. SoEuyl NoCooklngl The best cough remedy that money could buy can easily be mixed at home. It costs ver little, yet it's the most rc- liable, iic -acting medicine you ever used. ' he way it takes hold of stub- ‘born cuiigllis, giving immediate relief, is ‘astonjls ing. ! 1h uy ruggist c suppy you wi 2% ounces of Pluck. Pour this into a 1U oz. bottle, and iidd granulated sugar syrup to make 16 ounces. 'l‘u miikc syrup. use 2 cups of sugar and one cup of wiitcr. and stir 11 fcw moments until dissolved. No cooking l'll‘l‘il"ll. It's no trouble at all. and saves two-thirds of the mom-y a family usually spends on cough medicine. Keeps perfectly and tastes fine. It _is surprising linw quickly this loosens the germ-laden phlt-gnl. “Will's and heals the inlliiint-(l membranes, clears the air yiassagi-s. and thus ends a severe cough in a hurry. Tlincx is i1 compnunil of Norway Pine. in concentrated form. the most reliable healing agent for severe coughs. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded. ' high school at Grcat Bend, was noticed starting down ihc street to school the other day carrying an alarm clock. He noticed his mistake when he was half way llIOYC, re- turned ltome and exchanged the For The Cook Almond-Stuffed Eggs S-lrircl-cookcd eggs I, cup chopped toasted almonds I, cup cooked and chopped as- [Jllfflflllfl tlpsf Whipped cream mayonnaise Cut thc hard-cooked eggs in hall lengthwise; remove yolks carefully. without breaking whites. Mash the 1_vu'l:s and combine lightly with the flstuirilglls and with 2 tablespoons oi the 1111M; (WhlCh ha1'e been i-ouglfy ,L'lllT;l[\"(l, spread on a pan and llll'0‘.'.llt‘il 1n the oven.) Stir in jcntizgh 111;1_vonnaise to niuistcti the ‘l!l1.‘11‘11l\‘ 12nd season to taste with ‘lsait 111111 pcppei- or paprika, 01- per- lllillb 1011 will like a very iew grains ioi t-trveiiiic. _Reiill the egg whites with this n1 -- tli-op ii spoonful c1‘ ntay- 01111. 11vilh ivhippcd crcin folded i111» it» on each, and SllflllklC with tlic i-cst oi the toasted almonds. Serve on lettuce. A Womczn’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:-Fusltiotat Tells How To ‘Gain 12 Pounds I11 Three Weeks '- ltfi-s. B. liiorri-ll was nervous, thin and rundown. She took V1801 (lPOD tonic) and gained 12 pounds in 3 weeks. She s'9cps and feels line iraiv. Tastes delicious, Hughw Drug Co., Ltd. . . AS YOU that your skin may emphasize Pinch of salt l tablespoon sweetened berries Few 11-11010 hcrrics 1 teaspoon butter Prepare tlic bt-PYWS- mashed canned of youth q-he whoge ' Use Palmolive berries iii-c sprinkled with fruit n-[bggng 3041; sugar and a little lemon Juice. Beat the ca: yolk 1111111 thick and lemon- T” n’ colored. Add the Hill and milk and beat well, Ee-it the egg white until \'Cl'_\' 111111111 and will cling T0 the bcivcl. Fold this into the yolk mix- ture. Turn at once into a small frying pan which has been scoured with Still to make smooth, heated thoroughly and well greased. Let cook sloivly, 111 a moderate oven or Touch your skin . . . doe! i! f¢€| smooth-soft-firin? Remember. charm expresses itself most truly in a youthful, radiantly lovely skin. Youth E lufyours You keep your skin lovely, garnishing with. ixulisli roses or with slices oi rad- lmashed berries on one-half. Fold young,a luring. More than 20,000 beauty experts will tell you so. The secret lies in simple, but sensible over a very low heat until nicely brow-nod mid fairly dry. Spread the Garnish with whole berries. A Maple Leal Cigol lover. You vc heard about the abscut- _.~_ minded professor. He lives at Great c1". Bend. Professor Gale Beainan, mathematics teacher in the junior clock for a package of ivriting pup- lle knew he wanted to lake “F511, cold and crisp. ]Efl&])ll3i'l‘_\' Omclcttc 1 tablespoon milk l egg white lent dish for luncheon. I ESCYVE at once. This is delightful for l ‘n breakfast tray, oi- sprinkled light- something t0 5011001- 1 egg yolk liy with powdered stigar is an excel- beauty care every single day. Olive oil for youth The great youth-giv- ing cosmetic-olive oil —~is the answer. How r- l-"ler outstanding Measured by their true im- portance, no other talent known to women compares with that of being a Real Good Cook-compare them all in any way you desire. To all good cooks we send greetings and ask them to mention this mes- sage to anyone who may benefit by it. A riiu: MUSICIAN A GOOD GOLFER A CkEVEH BUSINESS GIRL A SMAHT- I . 1 . anion: PLAYER r‘ ' v New Twelve-Lesson Home Study Course by ENROLMENT ‘ HO has devoted her best efforts to its preparation that THE TWELVE LESSONS ARE every girl may become a good cook in the true sense F R E E ~ of the word. Miss Scott believes that the true ambi- tion of every woman prompts her to reach out for knowledge 1° Us"; of MAPLE LEAF which extends far beyond mere baking, boiling and frying. She "cream .0‘ the west” FLOUR believes that every girl, and every woman of today is eager t3 . . ' learn all they possibly can about food, provided they can depen mgcxnfifinidnizlgpfiziinxg? :5; upon the available information. She believes you all are vitally . . ' t t d ' th th ds the thods ihich save time collponsfand 32°“ wtm ti“??? your 2115:1811; rrlixclme; giiadv 311x12; sfifeguardntlie healtli of the family. Sou“ so egg?‘ ti‘? hi: thlrlggxi; And so we have the new course that the busy girl or woman who lOll 8S W ' c" "eh Yo“ Th“ i= a" c" iiiiiliiaiilil?Ziiiififijiilii3i‘.3°iiThiilliiififif°li°iif§ifieuki have to do to get the lessons’ fundamentals in a remarkably short time Allhlraiay write the They will be your own to study, ' when and how you choose and to keep for future reference. Start now and you will profit by it llirougltoutyour liletimc. examination if they choose. The handsome Diploma of the Maple Leaf Cooking School should be possible to all who master what is clearly and simply b . " - 1' ' ‘ taught in the course, and in - " the Easy Way Series of books which follow. THE NEW EASY VlAY SERIES THREE MARVELOUS NEW BOOKS BY ANNA LEE SCOTT For Students at the Conclusion cl the Caurz: Coupons and Complete lnlcnnation in the Bags cl MAPLE LEAF . FLOUR "CREAM OF THE WEST." l 1 yam. Ptxwrlivlé . - , iulillnnnulifoiwlvl 5- - Aéclress all Corrcrpaniznze to ANNA LEESCOTT MAPLE LEAF bllLLlNG CO, LlTvlll-ED, TORONTO By Annabelle Don't you think these panties are ' adorable? ' They hug the hips so perfectly. And note the flat panel effect at the front and at the back. The sides are cut slightly circular. To make them is as simple as A. B. C. The liip yoke and panel cut in one piece. Thcirsmall cost ls am- azlng. Tea-rose, washable crepe satin is exquisite. Trim the legs with ecru Alencon lace. Flesh coloured crepe de chine with self bindings instead of the lace trim, is a very practical choice. Style No. 396 is designed for sizes 26, 28, 30, 32, 34 and 36 inches waist. Size 3p requires 1% yards 39-inch, with 2 yards lace edging. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin ls preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . ... - Street Address City State. The Double Act A Romance of the Theatre BY MARION TOMLINSON “Ah, oul, Madame!" The modistc brought out several dresses of black - silk, and some aprons of fine white linen. Rosemary made her friend try , one on, and Nell in that sever cos- tume, with her grey hair knotted ‘smoothly back, locked the perfect elderly companion for a fairy prin- oess. It was all Rosemary could do 0o keep her feet from dancing as she walked down the line of bowing shop assistants to the door when all the things prepared for her had been seen. ' "Come quickly, Nell darling. As soon as we're out cf sight I'm going to dance a iandarigo on the pave- ment. I've ncvcr been so happy in my life." Nell glanced at her, then turned to the costumler, who stood respect- fully holding open the door. “Madame will take a taxi," she murmured. and as the man gestured for a boy to find the desired vehicle she added wamtngly: “Madame must not tire herself." ‘ But the people employed in the shop of " ‘ Jacques, who sup; plied Grenoblen costumes, looked after the girl with adoration and looked regretfury at he sketches from which they had made her clothes. cqirelle est gentllle," they said, “Qiielle est belle, la Prlncesse loin- talnel Elle est gate comma 1111 en- fant, la petite!" By which they meant that they mid been very well paid for their work, and that, being artists as well a; miles people, they were happy to use it? In lmolive Soap, more than 20,000 beauty experts agree. Because it is the Quworld-recog- nized soap that uses olive oil as its chief beauty ingredient. Use Palmolive on the whole body. Rinse with warm water, followed by cold. Youthful charm your reward Watch the natural loveliness of youth return to you: skin. You will then have found that someth' v "’"%“.‘i‘.§€1’“"“"’* E C. MADE 1N CANADA W“ 1614» mnfzmwg“ What the Fashionables are Wearing Worthington that the lovely things they had made were destined to be worn by someone worthy oi them. Not far from Hyde Pork Corner there is an odd little house set in a big garden. It was built sometime last century by an artist influenced by the pre-Raphaelltc movement, as a home for his bride. The lady for whom it was built died, and her husband left it -as holding too many memories for him to remain there. Shice then it has been seldom teniinted, for it. had been too fan- tastically designed for modern households to feel comfortable in it. Grenoble, therefore, was able to ob- ' tain a lease on it without delay. In the windows of the lower moms he had mist-blue certain hung, chann- lng against the grey stone outer walls, and in tho windows of the quaint grey tower he set glldedliars. Thousands of blooming marlgold plants were transplanted into the garden, until the house was sur- rounded by a golden carpet. About the garden there was a tall fence of spiked iron pallngs. The gate was fastened by a large golden padlock. Every clay about four o'clock dur- ing the month of August; thera could be seen through the pallngs of the spiked fence, a figure so beauti- ful us to seem unreal. It was a young glrl whose slender neck seem- ed weighed down by masses of gold-- en hair, 11-110 winked pensively along the gravel paths about. the house, or fed the gold fish in the fountain. She was always accompanied by an elderly w-omnn in black silk, who seemed more a friend than a diienna. The 1ic\vs got about, as such news wtll, until every day there was a crowd about the iron paltngs, jost- llng for places, and Waiting for. the vision to come out of the house. when it came it seemed uncon- scious of the crowded on-lookers. ii cheer oi admiration. s 1 One Good Result of the Depression, at Least, Has Been a Market Decline in the Divorce Rate, Proving That Trouble Draws People Together and That. Only the Idle Have Time m Worry About Their Emotions According to recently published statistics, the general depression ha, hit the divorce market as hard as it did the stock market, and there has and Affinity Preferred and other standard domes- tic issues as there has been 1n steel or motors o1 oll or any of the other securities in which we 1n- vested our all. All over the country there has been a marked decline in the divorce ratio, and in many communi- ties less than a. third of the usual number of homes are being broken up. At first glance this is rather surprising, as one might. think that when husbands and wives are torn with anxiety about money and forced to a lower scale of living and deprived oi their accustomed amusements and diversions they would find their chief indoor sport in fighting with a each other. It seems, however, that this is not the case, and this unexpected n. mlstice between married couples proves again what we have always known that trouble draws people closer together than happiness does. Our play-I comrades, our buddies, those with whom we have suffered and endured, become part ot our very souls. ‘ And this is particularly true of husbands and wives, and it is why there are more divorces among the rich than among the poor. No man and woman are really married who are not dependent on each other 311g who do not have to sacrifice for each other. It is the man's sweat and wesrlness incoming the wife's support; it is the labor o! the wife's hand; in ministering to husband and making him comfortable that binds them together wit oops of steel. All the circumstances of life of the rich: the man's business affairs which keep hln-i away from home; the wife's absorption in society; tlic many homes; the ceaseless round of gayetles; the living in a. crowd: the very fact that neither ever does anything personally for the other; that servants look alter them when they arc well and hired hands nurse them when they are ill, keep them from being necessary to each other and drive them apart. It is the poor husbands and wives, who work and 1109B fllld P1811 together. W110 depend on each other for ccmradeship, who , literally grow into one as the years go by. Then. indisputably. a lean Pocketbook is U10 first aid w Virtue. 111m is no safeguard against temptation like lacking the price, and the way to the divorce court is paved with easy money. A rich man must indeed, be a Joseph if he resists all the beautiful young gold-diggers who use all their arts and wiles to take him away from his lawfully wedded wife. A rich woman must be like Caesar's wife if she does not lend an ear to the " flatterles and cajoleries‘ and blandishme It!‘ o! the gigolos who find it easier to work a vain and heart-hungry woman than it ts to toll at a lob. All of these potent sources of divorce have been cut off by the de- presslon. when Mr. MlLllonbucks C6ased_to,be a, Bugs;- Papg 115 auto- matically cessed to be of interest; to predatory females. when Mrs. Croe- sus was no longed good for fat presents, the boy friend faded out of the picture. Arid thus many a Husband and wife have been given a chance to rediscover each other and realize that there is less headache and in- digestion in home-made bread and butter than there is in champagne and caviar, and that there is more comfort in a good old husband and wife who will stick to you through thick and thin than there is in a light-of- love who will fit at the first hint of adversity. Another reason why there have been fewer divorces during this time of depression than there were in the days of prosperity 15 because women, who are the petitioners 1n almost three-fourths of the divorce cases, have had something to think about beside the temperature of their emotions. They have been too busy trying to make ends meet and find cut-rate butcher shops and bargain-price groceries to sit up with their fingers on. their pulses counting their heartbeats or vlviseeting their husbands to discover ifthey really came up to their ideals or not. ' I get thousands of letters from women asking my advice about get- ting divorces from their husbands, and in the great majority o! cases I am appalled and amazed at the stfly and paltry reasons they give for wanting to break up their homes. They will begin by saying that. they are married to good, faithful, up- right, kind, generous men who provide them with every comfort and lux- ury, but they want to divorce theirhusbands because they don't like their table manners or because their husbands don't want to step out every night to places of amusement or‘ because their husbands are not ardent lovemakers or because their ‘ ‘ nds don't understand them or ‘ use their husbands are not roynantlc or because they are not ems-in whether they love their husbands or not. . These are the matrimonial woes of idle women and the depression has cured them because many of them have had to go into the kitchen - for the first time in years, and by the time they have got through . scrubbing the pots and pans and wrestling with the vacuum cleaner and the washing machine they haven't any time to devote to the stow of their affections, and it has seemed a lot more important for their hus- bands to keep their Jobs than to be Fairy Princes. Many a woman who before the hard times was contemplating a trip to Reno is now hanging on to her meal ticket with both hands. For a divorce without alimony isn't so hot. So. If one of the by-products of the depression is to lessen divorce and bring husbands and wives to their senses, it will be worth all it cost. whatever the price. DQROTHY mx,_ Rosemary's days within the fairy house that summer were empty and dreaming-or at least they seemed been as big a slump 1n Incompatibility of"llamper and Mental Cruelty -..' boy and girl friends with whom we feast and dance and make merry come and go in our lives, scarcely leaving a memory behind them, but, our l’ so to her, who had always known a life of hard work and of moving on from town to town. The garden and the house had cast a spell upon her, and for the time at least, she was supremely content to obey Gren- oble‘s dictum that the care of her beauty should be her only interest, that she should speak to no one, and that even orders to the ser- vants should be given through Mrs. Forrest. She was allowed a singing master, for she had a small pure voice. She had books in plenty. Several times a. day specialists in beauty culture came to care for her hair and skin and to teach what art could do to enhance natural beauty. Her eye- lashes, naturally long, were made to look longer and darker and to cast a shade of mystery 0W1‘ l!" #70! even though they sometimes raiseill that were ordinarily frank and clear. Two pomadad young men ‘argued long and hotly over the tak- ing out of a single hI-ll’ of her eye- tcoiiunuea on Pip a) 11111111911 SALE or runmruna, ram crock AND.PIIODUCE sun FARM- lNG IMPLEMENTS or Til}? LATE ononoa FORBES. Al VERNON nnmon. A8 DIRECTED by Order of U11 Court of Chanocfli l" "1' “mm of McLean vs. Forbcl. Na- B 1"- ‘ will m. up and nu by Public M" . tlim on tho premises of the late George Forbes at Vernon Brit!!! l" Queen's County. on Thursdl! ‘P; second day of Ibbrulfl. A. D. 19-4‘- Mllllllllll at one o'clock in the l‘: ternoon, all th lifillllwl‘ n"? _ tun, farm m» , Inna-Int ""9 °_ manta and farm 9'94"“ “l °' h?‘ Inning 0o the est-ah ol "l9 1* Ger-op Forbes, deceased. l Terms u to unlit. and oolldlllfl" of sale will be aulllllflced at sale.“ m further pulflfllllll our‘! ,. the IIIIIGIIIIIIMI. - mm lllhl sun suiium A- l“ . ma. n. ‘new 5mm M"“I ‘In Chaucer!» ~ ‘_ iiei-i-u-ai