_ w...“ ' _ ., ‘oamHqnq-_~gra-e~r-ew-rw 414.4-“ "-~c_...-.. n4ne. She Has the Knack of Getting Things Dene i Active the live-long f/thoroughly elilcient in everything she does, the modern Canadian house-, wile seeks the modern, quicker way to do things. \ _ She must to keep pace with-the demands on hOf-llitlflw‘ When it comes to household cleaning, only Old Dutch will sullice. She knows the distinctive advantages oi this modern perfect cleanser-helps herself to more time be- cause Old Dutch cleans quicker, brings Heolthlul Cleanli- ness to her home because Old Dutch removes visible dirt and invisible impurities; conserves elfort because Old Dutch cleans so easily. g Every day more and more Canadian housewives are adopth ing Old Dutch exclusively because it... cleans more things .. . cleans quicker. .‘. a'oesn’t scratch. . . is kind to their hands 5.. and goes further‘; there/ore costs less to use. OH Dutch is the only cleanser you need in your home} _V MADE IN CANADA ............g|d and‘ |n c°|°|..............-...... MalluocdisbsdniiiocselivolOldbdclsiabeiiesei-schlseldn . cuosnv soar worms. Dept. .64MneeulayAve.,1cmrsta,Orsl. Please find enclosed . . . cents and... labels for which send me .. .ose Dutch Holden. Ceiens svosvcl ovum c1 ssusu HIGH TEST 5A! ITY PACKAGE OPENS Cl-OOGED BRAINS v KEEPS BRAINS OPEN A‘! ALL GROCIIS THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _ AMorniM-smll’ l‘. Dorothy-Brit _~... .\_.__ -' A bur], mus plllhdd hi! WHY w m, www- 01 a post oilice, de- mmdmg o penny stamp. The sir! “mad the counter was tryinl W and“ mmeflqmg to m old woman. u; "y, he shouted. “Pvt Rot to catch a trail!- The clerk tumed and said Gilm- , 1y, "Did w“ gay you had to catch a train?" "I did." maPPQd m! m"- “Thsn it's a railway station you want-this is a post officer’ nazzhnnoox AND vscmrr! ass-s. w. Wood who Inuit "is out week here has returned to her hem, 1n Mil. Herbert. w. .1. n. onashan has Mum- ed home mm a pleasant flu" weeh visit with friends in crap- and. Service at the Baptist Olulmll here an Sunday afternoon was con- ducted by the pastor, IRev. E. J. Chisholm and was well attended. 1 The Mt. Herbert community League held their last regular meet- ing at. the (it-manage vnui a goodly maybe;- peeeent. Games and music added much to the evening's enter- tainment and a delightful lunch was served by the ladies. Mr. Oliver Myers was s recent visitor t0 Hennltalo the Kilast of his sister. lVitrs. Garfield Show. Mrs. H. A. Jenkins was a recenti visitor to lvllllview. Nil-s. Ernest mgs spent the week end in Vernon the Quasi; of her father, Mr. Wallace Drake. What the Fashionables are Wearing $7" 1 Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington ‘"3" m.“ we Mrs. Earle mes. m. Herbert are receiving congratulat- ions on the arrival of e. baiby boy. Mrs. Warren Acorn is spending some time in Mt. Stewart with his mother, lVhe. Mimn who is quite ilk-H. “THESE HARD TIMES" No. 84'l—Adorabla ‘Pajamas. This Q1 394m}, mateflay style is designed in sizes 6. B. if! No. azi-scnool Frock. nus style and l2 years. Bize 8 requires 3-11; is designed in sizes B, l0, l2 and 14 yards of 35-inch material with ~31 , years. Size 8 requires 1% yards of yard of 35-inch light contrasting g 39-inch material iith $6 yard of 35- and ‘i6. yard of 35-inch dark con- inch contrasting. trastlng. v No. lad-Moulded Hlpline. This 2N0. 873-S1nart PaJema Ensemble. ‘style is designed in sizes 14, l6, l8, This style is designed in sizes 14, l6, izu yczlrs, 36, 3B, 40, 42, 44 and 46 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inchcc ‘inches bust measure. Size 36 re. buaii 11188-51118- 51Z° 35 requires. 3i? quires 4-‘. yards of 39~inch mater. yards of 39-inch material with 2'... m, 11,, ym-ds o; ,1bb°n_ yards of 39-inch contra-itine- _ Br: sure to r111 in the size or the No. duik-Easque-Like Bodicc. TlllS mum, smd smmps o, m,“ (com style is designed in sizes 14, 16, 18, prpfprrcd) 90 yea-rs. gillzealnidniiill ygus: mm oi pniicm 1s cents. measure. q u . . . . uressaaseeeeeseceaIIIIIOOIQIIIQ “The hard times and scarcit of money nmkes 1t more important him ever to economize. One way [have on clothes 1s by renewing the colon of faded or out-of-stylc dresses, coats, stockings, and underwear. For dye- lllg. 0!‘ lint-mg. I always use Dia- mond Pycs. 'I'hcy are the most. economical ones by far because they never fall to produce results that make ou proud. Why, things look better an new when redycd with Diamond Dyes. They never spot, streak. or run. 'I'hey go on smoothly and evenly, when in the hands of even a ten year old child. Another thing, Diamond Dyes never take the life out. of cloth or leave it limp as some dyes do. They deserve to be andwlio "iniimry a girl to death by virtually ordering her friends out of Beaux Never Know When to Go Home- Is the Anonymou Letter Always MaiiciouaL-To Tell or Not to Tell audegtrlwithcnedatemaynndliemlfwttha nsobhaiosethesvsningisover. Younlllllll“ notevenphonethsttheyauoomlimhutllfllmi themselvesunanhounoed. Instead o! the old methodsofparents dwiiiiilllflfilllhmiil‘ ‘MP3 anooosslonalyawnesalsinttoboyIi-llliiliil time to leave, it um the tear an or the 1W"!- mneqmouwdmgivethemtheeir. Thelilvb isfast beoosningeraoo. Parents ofscmottenwon- dsa’ where their boys erein the W! m!“ 31°”!- We fathers and mothers of “will”?! 9W1‘! "u _ ma, ranmws. ADBWQ!‘ i broken hy your daughter's heaux, and I certainly 88100 "ml 7°“ m“ there are no greater pests than guests who never lmo when to B0 11°11?"- No human being can be fascinating for more than thirty minim! l‘ l stretch. No one can be interesting for 1011891’ m“ In W": m‘! “m mu" is the limit of human endurance on any 011°‘! "WW- And, of course, a mighty little of the company of boys 0nd Illll IOU a long way with any person who does not belong to their lflllalliiilifl m‘! has not their tastes nor habits nor interests; who i100! llflii even I?!“ their language nor get the points o! their jokes. But why afflict yomsell with this? why, after you have said "howdy do" to the ymms man who come to your house, don't you go oi! and go to bod and 90 81661? I114 1°!‘ get them? After all, you know, daughters‘ dates didn't come to see you. and any older person is always a wet blanket over the bubbling apiriiil of the young. As for chaperoning them, you do that euificlently when you are on the place. Just the knowledge that mother and father are around some- where in the background is an invaluable Jotection to e girl and keel?! I party from getting too rough. Personally, I should think that any mother and father would be so thankful to have their daughter entertain her friends at home imtead of rushing oi! with them to nidht clubs and on wild BR1711111011118 r140! i0 God knows where, or parking with them in cars, that they wouldn't care ‘lr the boys did my long after they should have had sense enough to so home. There is no other one thing that parents makea greater mistake about than they do about the attitude they assume toward the young men who come to see their daughte rs. Very often this is so hostile that it drives boys away. for no youth with any spirit will go to a house in which it is made apparent to him that he is not wanted. Many a girl owes her old maidenhead to the fact that her gmuchy father virtually insulted every eligible youth who came to see her. Also, there are tihose fathers and mothers who don’t like to have their habits and comforts interfered with, and who insht on monopolis- lng the living room and their own favorite chairs and reading lights when the girlshave company, and after a boy has spent a few evenings in the bosons of the family, with father and mother and grandpa and grandma and little brother and little sister eavesdropping all he says, he also quits coming or takes the girl out to seine place where they can be alone. And there‘ are other parents who drive all the young people away because they don't like noise, or they want to go to sleep with the birds, the house. ‘ - ~ All of this is a fatal mistake. In every family when there are girls welcome should be printed on the doormat. Girls should be encouraged to have their friends in their own houses instead of entertaining them on the streets. That is not only safer, but it gives the parents a. chance to get acquainted with the boys and nnd out what sort of chap; they ETC. For e girl to have a home that her p ‘ snake pleasant does as much as any other one thing to promote her chances of making a good marriage, for it is the home atmosphere and the home background that turn a. man's thoughts toward matrimony. DOB/Orgy 131x, eeeeee Deaf DOIOi-ily Dill-What d0 you think of anonymous letter writers? called ‘the world's finest dyesi’ " S.B.G., Quebec “You say you wasn't drunk?" But this offim says that while you were in a drunken state you tried to climb s. “Yes, I did, your worship, but Some time ago an article was sent to me anonymously which criticized certain faults that it was insinuated I had. Don't you think that it would have been lots better to have come and talked it over with mo? WONDERING. Answer: Of course, the anonymous letter is generally a stab in the back by some one who did not have the courage to attack you face to “ca, M“; anonymous letters are venomous and vituperative and accuse the one fllffle Crocodiles had been following me around B11 night, and, they were sailing on my nerves. when He said Until he sees you again, lie will think of you as he last saw you. Were you beautiful of Pompeian Creams and Powders endures. Know the caress of the Day Cream which vanishes so (guickly. Choose one of the ve shades of Pompeian Beauty Powder, so suitable and agreeable to your complexion. 1 ust the right weight-not so ght as to look grainy nor so Pompcisn Bloom (rouge)- Health for the Aged i/\l<l Name Street Address ' i _ i Scott's Eunuislan Cit] m.“ BEAUTY PR Iedeliisie uallltltlgflfsolghhg Con“ ..' “'11:... D Crsami sol ‘kilo no. Bee so. MAKI IIAIITY lslssAgesuzllsroldLRledle been unfaithful to her or they reveal some secret in s. wife's past to her of these will exactly suit individual coloring. W“ P then? The effectiveness of lflv" a Yliilthful- Vi“! 5'17‘ Unusually smooth and water- proof. Lasts all day. Night Cream. First as a thor- ough cleanser, then leave on a second film all night to soften, sooth . . . and protect. You'll belovclicr . . . tomorrow ._._._ in after years. heavy that it cakes. And {on can pay more for you: Oriental, Light, Medium, buy Dark, Vivid or Orange-one Pompeian. POM P€ IAN Cream 60:. ins AlL-DAY- smefi‘ kOe. LssL, lo-llitlcCssslltnTereseiyfl, to whom they are written of some black crime or they utter. as the legal Phrase am- Wme alander or they tell a woman that her husband has For The Cook BIlAD-CB-UMB BREAD Dissolve one tablespoon of maple gyrup or molasses in a cup of milk, and blend in one cake of oomwflll“ ed yeast. Measure a pint of dry bread-crumbs. broken into little pieces, but not finely crumbled. and add warm water. enough barely to moisten them all throulh-OHI WP should be enmllh. Add this to he yeast mixture. also add one cup. each, oi white flour and Graham flour, mixed with one-half a tea- spoon of salt and with tablespoon ‘ at a substitute) rubbed indtneedonaiiouredboardmddinl i! necessary. either a little more white flour or a little more water or milk. Cover, and let rise in a warm place until double in bulk. Knead again, but only lightly, shape into one good-stead lost or two small ones, place in greased pans, let rise again until double in bulk. and bake at 880 degreu Fahrenheit, for onehnurforelarlsloaiorforty minutes for two small ones. This breed should be rather close-grain- ed end moist. and is an excellent and wholesome way to use stale pleoeaAeuporlsssofdetesoi-reia- ins, chopped and floured, is e great improvement. The new Pompcian Li siidé nmre. Three perfect shades. At night use Pompcian You are assured that while eautg products, you cannot igher quality than ' Mn ODUCTS (Classic, Cold ages: a. m. New and new servan/IP-Pluse Intern, I forgo; whether the mil- Letter Box Disgruntled Parents Whose Daughters’ DearDorothyDlz-Isttleekofreiinesnsntendgoodlmedingtiset causes young men o! today not to leave at e probe: hour when they salt on a girl? The tag habit at dances has now been taken into the home Evidently you are mun: mush mo: hlvlng your night's rest ' Lees-s “"95"!” - 15 959- Ivarounn mu cl I61 ab) Sweetened Condensed Iiik has the Birse Label" llaswseteled Evaporated Iflk he the White Label LafgeiitfProducel-s Condensed and Evaporated M11]; Qndsellersof , "Nlfliih ma l. saiakstirdysais. Sterilization of flag evaporated milk and vanishes b‘ - pure that. Ithviauy f used foriniant feeding. . Consult your physician a forfeedinghliruotioni husband or they hint at something" that will make enmity between friends. Always the piupose of the anonymous letter is mos-tify and hurt or terrorize, and so it is a dastardly thing and the writer o! anonymous let- ters is rightly held in supreme contempt. But I have often thought that it would be a good thing if there could be a. kindly anonymous latter. A letter calling the attention of some one we loved and admired to some little mannerism or fault that worked an ihlllry to them, but which they could easily correct it only they knew of it, and that such a letter need not be signed because it would save the face oi the one to whom it was written. You would not like, for instance, to tell Mary Jane, who is everything that is good and sweet in a woman, but who hsa miserable taste in dress. that she should let some one else buy her clothes for her. Nor would you like t otell Mrs. X. that you are so fond of, that people are beginning to avoid her because she bores them so talking about her children. Nor would you care to tell Mr. B. that he is getting paunchy and needs to diet or Mr. C. that he gets on everybodys nerves by getting into an argu- ment over every topic that comes up. Perhaps the clipping that was sent to _you was intende’ in this friendly anonymous fashion. mo! it over and see if it doesn't give you a hint that you might well take. - DOROTHY DH. ' e e e e e - Dear Miss Dix—My mother died a number of years ago from T. B. Iamengagedto bemarried and. notlcngagoin speaking of disease my fiance expressed great honor of T. B. I am strong and healthy and work- ing every day, but I am wondering if this young man would marry me if he knew that my mother died of that ailment. Do you think I should tell him? ' A. B. I think you should. He will be sure to find it out and it may make him think that you deceived him. If he is at all upset by finding out about your mother, get him to go to some physician and talk it ovsr. Any doctonwlll tell him that T. B. is not hereditary, and that ‘ your mother had it is no reason on earth why you should. In any event, it is quite possible that she acquired it years after you were born. DOROTHY DIX. NEW DIVORCE BILL i smmoN. Me-noh z-my n; Canadian Preset-A new Dim“ B111. based on the 11181011231 rapqf of the Divorce commission, “m. sat 20 years ago, will b, may,“ to the House of Commons as | Wrote member's Bill. It contain the liilflpusais of Loni Buckmastefl Bill oi eight years ego which p“ ed through the Home of Lords, but ithasbcenbtvlllhtuptodguq the Divorce lnnv Reform Union, The bill seeks to establish ins following minds for divorce. m either tsllband or wife: Adultery: dfieltlm for years: cruelty; incurable insanity (when the respondm has been s. certified lunatic for five years); incurable druhkeness, when an ti pendent has for three years been separated from the petitioner; m. prisonment ‘under a eormautd death sentence. " New grounds tor nullity an in~ troduced. They include: . y ‘I Wilful refusal to consummate v tnerrtage: mental which has become definite six month-s of marriage; . - fits ofdnsanlty or epilepsy; certain dlaéalts at the time at tnerrlage. ‘ .1 . .. ies dren Yofilva folks hood hot sus- Aaining breakfesti to most demands of school and play. In 0f NEW DESIGN ' in Quick Quaker Oats marked “oisinawaref. flavour of Quaker Oats. It is the lone cereal you never tire of. This 5",, ma," iis because of the delicious teite‘ ‘ hi“? "‘°°'.':': ’ ' °‘ *1" Pimp "In-finned sralhs taesstoldmeshewastooilllnbed teesepasoloslshopptng ' llods ' o...» o.» o... ~- " . . "'5'" {a mud" 9"“ "WWII 3PM. Aunt Jmilna Pdneeh Floor i 0 Health and Energy for Work ‘ Play; difleront ovensland rolled in"? succulent tender flakes. And tliil exclusive Quaker Oats PY°°°"~ , Quaker Oats the elements for makes Quick Quaker cook fssitt». wth and stamina combine thananyothercereahltismlil!’ . wi is those for energy to provide to serve in 2% minutes afiafm if 7- V supremein food value. sister ‘ i l, ENGLISH CHINA .~ Everyone enioys the fine Do not aspen the Pr" WM" tisvour or nourishment in W“? "oats. In large houdehold 91¢‘ up; or without chinswllir‘ g ‘liiosise. soolodvwif _. . e'I°Q’tQd through many duly. NEVER in BULK-A‘ flvzcxmQflvghfiatglOars For children, bl . and email, heal authorities say, ~ "Quaker Oats for‘, ' Bud/art." . . om». in ill Elli"- and other sum I.