’ :1. a. McDONALD rrcrrrwo- _ lfllfifllmlAllljOTTETOwN. GUARDYAN FGfifWl/iny ., I —-,_4»--_~au-p¢; l . - Italzan 2 cups butter. 2 cups fine granulated sugar. 6 eggs. 5 cups flour 2 cups raisins. Specially nice for birthdays. seven years. A. Mode-Beat butter to a cream, add sugar by degrees, then beaten wolks of eggs, beaten whit es next; sift baking powder and flour together, keeping some to flour the fruit; then add milk and flour, alternately fruit and essence of lemon. a paper-lined pan in a moderate oven. Cake 2 cups currants. 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder. 1 cup of milk. 3 teaspoonfuls lemon. of Bake two hours in Have used this recipe for forty- PEEBLEIS, New Westminster. A Morning Smile MURPHY ADVERTISES The editor of the local paper was unable to secure advertising from one of the business men of tho town. who asserted stoutly that he him- self never read ads and didn't be- lieve anyone else did, says Pbrbes Magazine, "Will you advertise if I convince you that folks read the ads?" the editor asked? “If you can show mei" was the sarcastic answer. "But you can't." In the next issue of the paper the editor ran a line of small type in an obscure corner. It read: ‘Wvhat is Murphy going to do about it?" v _ The business man, Murphy, ..has- icned to sock out the editor next lay. He admitted that he was being )cstcred out of his wits by the cur-l 15 "u! “Vem-slntl- ‘ Etiquette Bylobflhlaa Q. How does one get theater tick- ets to his auests? A. Mail them and -then meet in the theater. Q. In what color should a baby be dressed? , A. Customary colors are blue for a boy, pink for a girl. Q. 1f a guest at dinner is not satisfied with the food, may he men- tion it to the hostess? A. Never. ious. He agreed to standby the edi- tor‘s explanation in the forthcoming issue, and this was: “Murphy is going to advertise, of course." Having once ‘advertised, Murphy, in sealers, add a little water (about Tannns spread with delicious fond . . . most of it soft, highly rciixicd—lacl~:ing in the “bulk ' and iron your body must have to kccp well and strong. This is the dining-room trag- edy that occurs daily in mil- of poisonous wastes-Jo exer- cise the intestines and keep them healthy. - ALL-BEAN is delicious as a cereal with milk or cream. Sprinkle ovcr other cereals or use in cooking. Two tablespoonfuls daily are guaranteed to relicve both tem- porary and recurring constipa- tion. In severe cases with each meal. At your grocefls-in the red-and-green package. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. rally?” ALL-BRAN lions of homes. No wonder most people suffer from consti- pation. No wonder headaches, acknches, and dull days are frequent! Just add one delicious food to your table-and you will help correct all this suffering. Add Kellogg's ALL-BEAN in some form every day. ALL-BEAN adds the neces- sary “bulk" or "roughage"—- and iron—that is so often lack- ing in our diet today. This bulk is needed to prevent constipa- tion-to sweep the system clean 2 inches). put onhiibbefiTndicrcw on lid loosely. Put in boiler and boil two and o, half hours. Take out and screw lids on tight, turn uptide down and keep that way. Here is an addition of my own: If the chickens are young I scald and clean the feet, boil them separately, and use that water to put in Jars; For The Cook CANNED CHICKEN Cut chicken up as for stewing, put / WARNING No malt or cocoa drink is in any sense a aub- sdcuoe for Ovaidne. Tho process by which Ovaltino is made is the result of years of scientific research. Refuse so called "just as good" prcparatiom. Ni C. M. Lampson fifCo. LIMITED. 64 Queen Street London, E. C. 4, England Public Auction Sales or RAW FURS Shlppin bags will be furnish- ed without charge by applying to R. '1‘. Holman, Ltd" Sum- merside, P. E. l. Represented by Alfred Fraser, Inc. 212 Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. Professional Cards W. H. AITKEN é? CO. importers of high grade GASOLINE -— KEROSENE - 011A! Wo Believe in Prince Edward Island Office, 29 Queen St. Phillie 404 Tanks, Spr. Pk. n. B. Crossing ', Phone 56. McLEOD t; BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY. K. C. Barrister and Attorney-at-Law ' Office: 180 Richmond Street MONEY T0 LOAN Charlottetown, l’. B. l. McLURE 6a MacKlNNON SILVER FOXES AND FURB Representing HUDSONB BAY CO, of LONDON. ENGLAND. Ofllce 112 Kent St. Phone 38! McDONALD f? McPHEE A. II. F. McPHEE BARRISTERS. ATTORNEYS. ETC. MONEY TO LOAN Stewart 6'! Lowther f J. D. STEWART, K. C. N. W. LOWTHER BAIIRISTERS. SOLICITORS, ETC. B4 Great George Rlreel ' MONEY T0 LOAN. MARK R. iuaniicau B. . l‘ ILIIJSTIR SOLICITOR. ETC, ' MONEY TO LOAN. Zllunomn Block. Charlottetown, PJJ. now," not altogether Master Juggins have an idea of another course which may commend itself to you. Come, don those garments, which will none the ‘less cloak you with safety, and join me morning room." - 772cFnhab0/[auses 0/ szrr/Jzrss/vrii are nervous strain and digestive unrest UTH of these an be overcome by the simple act of inking a mp of hot Ovaltine each night before retiring. The great value of Ovalcine is due to the fact that it offers super- nontiahment in very easily digested form. Ovaltinc not only quiet: the nerve: and alloys digestive unrest-Jaringing sleep naturally- but also, while you sleep, it replenishes your lost energy and vitality. Qvaltine is a rich concentration of ripe barley malt, rich creamy milk, and fresh eggs. Every nutritive element your body needs to maintain mental and physical fitness is combined in this delicious and perfect combination of Nature's best restorative foods. Drink B it daily instead of tea or coffee. "goodnight" beverage to ensure sound restful sleep. OVFI LT] N E’ TONIC 500p acvenaos 5nsuites Sounchllaiurtal. 3Zeep Sold by all pod More: in 50c, 75c, $l.25 and special $4.50 family aize tins; also served at soda A. WANDBI LIMITED, LONDON, BNGI AND PETERBOROUGH, CAN. ‘Yrt-IQOQM TRAII. ARTHUR. D. HOWDBN SMITH AUTHOR. of WI.“ SERVICE (Continued) "There is no hope of a pardon proceeded Juggins But few of the English gentry interest your cousins "There is naught to do, then, save go back to F‘ra'nce and the friends who now distrust me," ‘I said bitterly. remonstrated energy. "I "Never say so," with in grannys The coffee which the old lady poured us in blue-bordered china bowls put new I settled back in my chair and puffed at the long clay pipe which Juggins had filled for me. life and hope in me. Granny Juggins gave me an op- proving pat on the shoulder. “That is well, Master rtarry. Worry never solved any difficulty. And now I must be going about my duties; Robert tells you hath my indom- but remember that what COUGHS Talc half o lonpoonful of Minsni‘: in molasses. Hui Mind's, inhale it. Also rub ll wall lnlo your chm. ' You'll got roliol I "I am some curiosity as the door closed without influence behind h"- nnd 1 had hoped-But tis hopeless. If you were Scot or Irish, it might be done. besides you and Master Charles rose in the ‘l9. You are a marked man, and with against you ‘twill be impossible even to gain a hearing for you." |into my confidence, Master Harry," politics, great spoils of trade, in- hop the future of a continent. And and to checkmate the very foreign Jacobite cause? I need a strong iilautn" Juggins, I am for Englcnd l :.o'r.'," l answered. "If such a plot liiuvort it. Count mo with you, I then I put in rather more than 2 inches. One pair of feet will make l cup of jelly. The length of time for boiling will depend ‘on the age of the fowl. I have had them keep for nearly two years. -__-_______ CLUB ASKS NAVY T0 GIVE BACK SILVER SERVICE’. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 28. (U. P.) —'I‘he Princeton Club of Philadelphia has requested the United States Navy Department to return a silver bowl and ladle, presented by the club to the U. S. S- Princeton when the cruiser was commissioned. .Woman% Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- ashionsic-Lifcrature Where v / , Emma: 0st . em o’ ell/inn. p D0 rgthy i l “Parents Are Alwayfl Praying f0!‘ Th?" Chm!‘ ren — What They Need to Pray f?!‘ 15 M0“ Common Sense fo_r Themselves/in Deal- ing With Their Children, : Says Dorothy Dix Why do parents use so little common sense in dealing with their child- ren? Why do they flnd it so hard to realize that their boys and Blrl! l"! flesh and blood human beings, with natural human impulses and reactions. and deal with them onthat platform? None of us who are not senile have forgotten how we felt about things in our early youth. We remember when we were girl and boy mad, and hOW W0 if!" when we couldn't go to a party, as if there was 110 11-58 in struggling on with a life that was full of black dis- appointments and we had better Just lie down and die. We recall how we rese ’ lllll asonable res- trictions that our parents put upon us and how we outwitted them. We remember how avid we were for pieasu o, how _ _ tireless our feet were in the dance, how restless we were because we were bubbling over with animal spirits and energy. We remember how vital it was to us to have the latest cut in trousers or the loudest necktie or the last thing in party dresses and, above all, we remem- ber how easily, like little lambs, we could have been led along any road our parents wished us to travel, but what stubborn little mules we were when they tried to drive us the way they ‘desired us to go. ‘There are no middle-aged men and women in the world whose minds do not teem with memories, of their own experiences, of their own adoles- cence, but it seems to teach them nothing and to give them no tip about managing their own children. They seem to think tbatltheir sons and daughters are an entirely new species of Genus Homo, with none of the emotions, deslres'and inclinations that they themselves had, and that they will not act under the same conditions as they acted. They even go farther than this. They stulify themselves into believing that their own young- NLESTLFPS MILK STL§'S Evaporated Milk inwioe as rich as ordinary bottled milk . . . a purecowbinilkwithslluselcsl water-removed... then steri- lized and sealed in airtight tins. Rich and creamy . . . Nssrsfs Evspomcd Mill: Be sure and make it your A m“ embodying the requst was recently presented to the Senate by member of the club and ‘a graduate of Princeton. The silver service has been in the custody of the Navy De- partment since the ship was de-com- missioned. HARTFORD, Conn., Feb. 26. (U. P.)—-It must have been a strong arm- ed thief who robbed Teddy's Lunch here for he carried away the $400 loot in the safe in which it was con- tained. The safe weighed 400 pounds. fountains. s0 s At the instance hark to these facts. of myself and my associates in the the Western Plantations, the pro- PORTO estto ooto arc ‘ COPYRIGHT m, BKENTANO,‘ several years ago secured the royal asset to a law prohibiting the snlc of Indian trading goods to the French in Canada. "Our object was twofold. Thc best and cheapest trading goods are merit." “And what ‘is that?" I inquired in He smoked in silence for several ITIBQUYMY-"Ted in Eflglflilfl- If W0 moments. can kecp them to ourselves and "1 am resolved to take you fully compel the French to use more costly and loss durable goods made on the Continent we shall bc able to underbld them with the Indians. So the fur trade will come more and more into our hands." Juggins leaned forward and tapp- ed me on the knee. he began at last, "and I should not do so if I doubted your discretion." He fell silent again. “Did it not seem strange to you that such an assult as you saw last night should have been made upon an ordinary merchant?" he asked suddenly. “I thought they meant robbery." “Robbery? ’I‘hcy never made a demand upon mc. Tney meant murder. The truth is, lad, I am at grips with a deadly enemy. ‘Tis a curious story, concerned with high the richest land in all the world- how rich it is or how vast no man knows. ‘Twill rcquirc centuries to exploit it. Since first we colonized there we have contended with France, not only for further power, but for the actual right to breathe. Our two countries cannot agree to divide this domain, limitless though it be. Sooner or later one must oust the other. "The fur trade is the key to it all. It is so, because neither the French nor we are sufficiently powerful to ignore the strength of the Indian tribes. The fur trade is the source of the savages for securing trade goods. They will be bound closest to the country which gives them the best terms. If ‘ve can deprive the trlgues of church and state-may- as it happens Robert Juggins is at the hub 0f it. "Do you think you would like to play a hand-on 'England's behalf influence which sickened you of the arm combined with a agile mind used to French ways and the French tongue." I WOllld have answered, but he nmch M the “blmy '-° buy the" checked ma goods as cheaply as We do, then we shall be able to trade to better ad- vantage with the Indians and so in- crease their friendship for us. At the same time the volume of the provincial trade will be increased." "I see," I answered. "But you "I! you accept you must be pre- pared to light your old friends, for the cncmy I have spoken of is Jacobite at heart and works under cuvcr for the return of the Pretender through the weakening of England nnd the paramount influence of Fruncc. Remember that before you commit yourself." . “Even as I told you last night, (‘liildrenis Cold o jiéfi Checked with". it ‘i; 11s you speak of is under way, then "diiiillft" Rub 93 Lryvhy. "1 will l. sold ouistly. "Now, Senator Reed of _Pennsylvania, a adds so appezizing richnocsooalloooklog and baking and to ca. wbIzdssTuf-sii or slnvgaauho- demand llnsof mudltlilkfldawfi» AI . TWICE AS RICH AS r ORDINARY BOTTLED Mim -_- y-m-‘vvr-v-m-oq-wu-n- --=u=-==w=-n--x-. :- w-Q-an- -=-_.-_-. Company of Merchant Traders to vincial government of New York “North America." he went on. "is trade openly, and the French trad- spoke before of a twofold object n» "to develop bones. body and mind- cicprivlng the French of the right to] ‘btoin trade goods troug afford to change. New York?" “So I did, and that brings me to the enemy whom I mentioned. Heard you ever in Paris of one Murray-Andrew Murray?" I shook my head. “He hath connections with the French, and, too, with the Jacobites; but they would be well covered, no doubt. Murray owns the Provincial Fur com] ny of New York, which is the largest of all the trading agencies. He hath sct himself deliberately to drive out of existence all the independent traders and secure the entire trade for himself. The trndc with the French in Can- ada likewise is in his hands. “Before the provincial govem- mcnt passed the prohibitive law of which I spoke, he carried on his crs, helped by a government subsidy, more often than not underbld our traders-using English goods, mind you, for the purpose. And the French traders would sell their skins in the London market at a lower price than our own traders could (To be Continued) Thlsbook "finodfl ha: Radon" ls truly a priu book for not; hotnswlle. Nearly I" nclpoo plcliod from all porn o! Qnadn. Send llconto lo wnr for- warding clarion. Illloul l coupon. They Ilare Not Gall Him Skinny Any More No, never again-he found a way to add l5 pounds of sold, stay there iflesh to his bones and his sturdy, manly figure causes ntlng young men to know their place-he can handle any of them now. Skinny men and frail youngsters need and should have the weight building, vltalizing substance -m McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets they put energy and bition into weak people-they make you vigor- ous. ' - Get an swzm- coated twblets (Mc- Coy's. at any drug store anywhere- take them as dareczed for 23 days- then i.’ yvi don't gain at lens‘ F» pnutltis pet your money back -,Jti:.t lk. is covn mailing cool. ._.._.._.____ -_-_ l Beef Sausage Roll iii lbs. of beefsteak. ' $5 lb. of ham or bacon. . 0 os. of bread crumbs A 2 eggs. Pepper, salt and taste. Mince all up together and bind with the eggs. Put in a Nd ding bowl and steam for two hours. When done, roll in browned crumbs and serve cold. This makes a nice meat m1l_ parsley p; “W sters are entirely diflerent from other people's children a d will not do n the Jones or the Brown children do. . i And that is why fathers and mothers lio awake at night Qggnlzlnaly wondering where theirwandering boys and girls are. It is Why they w,” over sons and daughters they cannot control. It is why their hearts by“ with disappointment over foolish children who mess up their lives helm they have fairly begun by making ill-advised marriages. No one can deny that a wayward child is a sorrows crown of sorrow m,‘ that it is the hand that you have borne and that is bone of your bone m, flesh of your flesh that can drive the dagger deepest into your soul. A“ so it is both pitiful and exasperating to think that parents bring mo“ o‘ the trouble about their children upon themselves and that they could m. themselves sli the buckets of tears they shed if they would only use l “m. intelligence in handling their boys and girls. ‘ I have in mind as I write three tragedies in the making which u‘ going to break the hearts of the parents and probably wreck m, u,‘ d tho children, but which nobody can avert because the parents bellm m“ they are stronger than Nature, stronger than youth, and, that, “my. their children have not the same desires of other youngsters. In the first case there is a fine and talented boy of 20. His pom,“ m very ambitious for him to become a great lawyer and they feel that it l“ waste of time for him to daily with girls and that an early mania" ‘m be a handicap to him. In order to do this, they try to segrega him gm the female sex. No girl's foot ever crosses his mother's doorstep, and ‘m, he is invited to places every possible obstacle is thrown in his way t4 m. vent his going. All girls are spoken of dlsparagingly to him as weak, "h, silly, frivolous creatures who use their good looks to snare young m“ u their doom. ' _ The result of all mu is bound to be exactly opposite 1mm w“, m, ‘ parents desire. Denied all natural companionship with girls of hi; m age and class, he is absolutely certain to fail for tho first bold vamp or m. digger who makes love to him. Simply because he doesn't know girl| M has no standards of comparisons. If this father and mother were tryiq to wish an Imhnimr mnrrlm upon their son. they could find no mom q. way to go about it, yet when the inevitable occurs, and he bring home a tawdry wife to them before he is able to support one of any um, it will be a blow to them from which they will never recover. Thssscondcaseistbatofaladwhohasthnotlmesnm onpsnsive private school in which he bod been placed by his parmfl g4 whowasonlyfoundineachcassadtsralmexpsnsnve and agony‘ search. ‘Ihers is nothing fundamentally wrong with the boy, Hg my has a mechanical mind instead of a literary mind and school bored him t; death. Every time when be was discov ho was industriously and by. pily working in a garage, making an honest living. ' And each time his idiotic ‘parents tore him away from the mo; g wanted to do and sent him back to another high-priced school in s, yo; attempt to try to make him do the thing he doesn't want to do, and it doesn't take any prophet, nor the so n of a prophet, to toll that some Q; he will make a good getaway that they will not be able to trace and that la will probably degenerate into a tramp. All because they did not have nan enough to-let him use his hands and be what God made him to be-o doom of the insides oi’ automobiles instead of the insides of people, as his fsthw and mother have determined he shall be. . And the third case is that of a pretty, gay young girl of ll whose pant do not think it proper for o slrl to have dates before shs is 21 or H, sol -“ ‘Vi! Kath who refuse to let her see her boy friends at home. As a result. she mosh them on the ‘street corners and picks them up in drugstores and goes God knows where, with Heaven knows whom. Some day she will marry one of these sheiks, or there will be an awful scandal about her that will humble her parents to the dust, but the fault will be theirs because they refused b recognize, the fact that a young girl is going to have boy friends ros- pectably at home if her father and mother will let her. but on the stml if they won't let her. l Parents are always praying for their children. What they need I pray for is more common sense for themselves in dealing with their child! rm CANADA STAICII 00., Limited. Montrhl Ilsou send fill your Recipe look. I enclose 799' DORIUITIY DIX. efl/lflfiflflpfljjgyl You ca n Yfl "ml n01“ b ‘ighinql HESE are Canada's most whole-M some and delicious Syrups —,| They are the cheapest energy food y0ll . can buy because they contain more‘ nourishment than many more expen- sive foods. Doctors will endorse this statement! Eat more of our famous Corn Syrups ~ Serve them daily . . . they are so easily digested and they save money 0n your food bills. ' See the Coupon below. The CANADA STARCH CO» Limited MONTREAL anwmosauno BRAND ask for McCoy). 1-i- m v