._-~ _ ewwmosmo»... k PAGE EIGHT "rm: qljagporrsrowsl; “GUARDIAN POTIBD DAFFODES ‘rilree bulbs planted In u Dot of earth. Darkness and Wallil. Sprouts- Then light and sun, Buds pOklllg up. Srctehin; their necks Lnngel‘ each (lay. Now, daffodils! Who can fathom The mystery 0f the earth And the miracle. Of the blcoln‘! —Jcssie Findlay Erowr TH E W! 5E MOTHER. ' l-lverv child should be taught‘ from the very first to be tidy. In- stead of poor, tired mother clear-i inconspicuous and as a. result so- ing away the toys, the child should be set to do it himself. He. quite enjoy the lesson, especially when mother zhows an obvious de- light in the neat and orderly cup-E board, and trill quickly l-ram that it ‘ la just as easy to be tidy as un- tidy. And at the snmc tinle teach. toys; times with experience and undzr- you." kzddies tn handle their gently. so that they: do not get broken teforc they have been en- joyed. It will help them. to become less c‘.ums_v in, many (ithcr were‘. too. Nothing is more satisfactory for cleaning and iucserving antique oak than linseed 011. ‘Pwo or three times a. year it slloilld be thor- oughly rubbed into the wood with a soft woollen duster. Only usc a. small quantity cf oil; it is the rub- bing that will bring out the beauty of the wood. In between-times or- dmary ftlnllturc polish can bc used for keeping its surface bright- ness. . . THOSE TIGHT SCREWS Whcn screws are difficult to nlove and there is no oil awlilable, let, a few drops of vinegar fall on to the s “cw head and on the woodivork stlrroundlng it. Leave It to sank in .ior a short time, and you will find the screw call be ulovcd quite easily. BIASRKJE AFTER SPRATN The lfllpgftllllCC of early massage after sirains and sprfllils cannot be too strongly enlptlusizech, Unless the brtiLsillg and outflow of fluid ilxtc the surrounding tissues is completely.- mniered there is great clnntrel- bf a Sonn of rheumatism re- sultme euszly understood. If an scctumllation of this sort. remains, it is nip’. to become fibrous, thus lflnitmg the movements of the \lnt in nddztion. the pain causcd by contraction persists for a con- szcleratble time. After sprains and strains mu should get busy with a. good lini- /ldfl/, TOW/l Skin i ‘Vaseline’ Pctrolcumjelly is most effective for healing chapped hands and faces; rough, red skin; for cracked, chapped lips or for giving relief from wirldbum and head colds. Keep a jar handy on the bathroom shelf. You'll find it, useful in dozens of ways; heals bumps, scratches, cuts and burns; soothes baby's tender skin. ll SUII YOU GIT "II GINUINI LOOK FOR ‘fl-ll TRADEMARK VASILINE WHEN YOU IUY. If you don't see it you are not getting the genuine product of Chescbrough Mfg. Co., Cons‘d., 55 20. Cbabot Avenue, Montreal. vtnll . ‘dictionary describes tact as an in- ment which should be rubbed 111 =1’- the earliest possible moment. It Ls better for a second Wm“ W Five the massage. Unless your skill is tend". b51119 the affected part. in hot water be- fore massaging, This increases the power of the liniment. VALUE OF TACT Good, manners may truly be said to have their basis in consideration for other people. But while tact certainly cenles under the heading of good manners, it needs also that touch of subtlety which is the dividing line between courtesy and diplomacy. Diplomacy is often obvious and may be recognized. but true tact is cial asset, alas! rather rare. The A MomingSmile t Dorothy Dixf Letter Teacher: "Now, Tummy, how many times have I told you to get to school on time?" Tommy: "I don't know, teacher: I thought you were keeping the score: Molly is a. practical-minded little maid with an affection for animals. The other day she heard her par- ents telling about a. relative who ha dto have his arm cut of! in cun- sequence of a. tigers bite. She only said: "What a. pity! The poor old tiger might Just as wcll have had it!" What bird can carzy the greatest weight? A crane. Why are the cook and the kit- chen-flre such great chums? They generally go out together. When Your Daughter Comes toWomanhood Give Her Lydia E. Plnkham’: Vegetable Compound tuitivcflpercoption of what is flt- ting especially of the right thing to do or say adroitness in dealing with persons or circumstances. Few people have that gift of in- tuitive perception. It colnes some- l i ‘ standing, but mercifully it may also be cultivated. Tactlessness. like bad‘ imanners, is quite often sheer lack‘, .of thought or consideration, event Isomctimcs lack of coneentratlonf The worst. faux as may well be made because someone has lost the thread of a conversation, or simp- ly is not attending to the matDerI on hand. i The tactless person is, then, often the careless or inattentive person. If you have not. naturally that intuitive perception, your road to tactfulness must be paved with more thought and consideration for other people. There are also a few broad rules for the girl who has an unhappy knack of “putting her foot. in it." l ideal-times, particularly formal meals. often prove traps for the 1111111113‘; possibly because, in .,l.helr ciesire to keep the conversational ha" Y0llinE._ people sometimes choose their subjects haphazard or carelessly. without due regard to other people's possible prejudices. Meal-time Topics 'I‘hey are right. enough to insist Oil talking at meal times. The most banal small talk is better than uncomfortable 4 silence. No, it is not the small talk which we must veiunluul of an: which sometimes get us into trouble. It is the large talk, the ‘highbrow’ or deeply ser- ious talk! Meal-time topics Should be light as far as possible. The deep problems of life are not to be discussed while we fill the tnnef lnanl l ‘ Religion when e are wLth com- :parative strangers should be taboo. m pm“ chm and sucei bake at 499‘ _ {It is so easy to tread on other ‘ Dwples toes. Very frank or very scientific or very _5pec1a1,15ed m}; should be avoided unless we lmow our company well. It ismore than bad manners to talk above another ‘person's head. Illness should be avoided also, particularly when its uiscussion hdnliis of gruesome details. In this t connection retiecncc should be 111°"? Yfifiifettcd than it often is. We may inquire kindly enough or’ ‘our neighbor's illness. We learn. 'I perhaps. that matters are serious i and we express our sympathy. There matter should be allowed to ‘rest unless our neighbor's wife el- ects to tell us more. So often people i insist on asking what is wrong, ‘sometimes before other people, _ a safe rule not to ask people "what 55 '~\'°1‘1l1;"' in a question of illness. They will tell you if they want to, {and if they intend telling you they are possibly waiting for a favorable nppclfitlnity. i‘ Th9 Right Moment i I Lifillt intervention turneth away! urrath. Your Joke may not. be an‘ hnspired one. But it. will do its good ‘lvsnrk if you offer ls lightly enough Ififisllllllllg that. the situation so far only needs light treatment. Tile next moment the situation may be lost. Worm have run too ‘high. old gentleman are nigh to apoplexy, argument lltls become n brawl, and the lovers have quar- rcllcd. Your chance of being a truly tactful person has gone. Ycu sat silent and ivatched and heard the world taking itself too serious- ly and you did not laugh 5nd 51.0w ll. the c1101‘ 0t its ways. ‘sometimes even at meal-times! It is i Moat girls In their teens need n tonic and regulator. Give your daughter Lydia E. Vegetable Compound for the next few months. Teach her how to guard her health at this critical time. When she is a happy, healthy wife and mother she will thank 70D. THE COOK ’S CORNER Oat. Cookies This same filling is useful to put between those nutty deliciously full- flavored cookies that are made will‘ rolled oats. 2 cups quick oats 2 cups pastry flour lté cups brown sugar ' 1.5 cup hot water i 1 cup butter or other shortening l5. teaspon salt ‘.5 teaspon soda Mix the toasted oats, the pastry, flour and salt; cream shortening and sugar well and rub into the dry mixture. Dissolve soda. in the hot water and stir in gradually. Pack in loaf pan, chill thoroughly, slice thin and bake in a. quick oven. , Brim Cookies Another nutty-flavored brown cookery everyone should enjoy. They need ‘K.- cup shortening 1 cup white sugar 1 tablespoon cream 2 eggs 1'1; cups pastry flour 2 teaspoons baking powd 1 l’: teaspoon salt 2 cups bran 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream shortening, work in sugar, add well beaten eggs and cream.‘ Mix and sift the baking powder and ‘ salt. with the flour, mix these dry ilngredients well with the bran and combine thoroughly with the first; mixture. Add Vanilla. Pack closely degrees F. i I n 54 C amztriel 7 NW "l t's smoother," they say, "it goes on so evenly . . . doesn't cake . . . tioeslft grain . . . stays on beauti- fully . . . agrees with my skin." Thus do beautiful women of 54 landsjustify Pompcinms 30 years of beauty research. You, mo, will love Polnpcinn Beauty Powder. Your denier has]: in 5 harmonious shades. If any Pompcinn product docs not give complete satisfaction we will gladly refund your money. BEAUTY POWDER PARIS TORONTO NEW YORK LONDOF Saks agents: Harold F. Ritchie l Co. Lid. 10-18 McCau| Sl., Toronto u Plnkham’: , [Foolish Man Who Doen’t See That Others Gauge His Success by the Appearance of His House- Only" Cure for Inter. fering Mother Dear Alias Dix-We ‘live in 5 little town in which we belong to n number of orders in which both hold offices. and both of us no popular. ‘Now here is the trouble: My husband finds money for everything he wants, but none for giving us n decent home. We still live in the little shack in which we moved when we first cams to this place. There is not a window or door in ll. that fits nor a modem 00n- vcnicnce nor comfort, nor have I a whole piece of furniture. I cannot entertain as the other women do and I am ashamed to ask anybody to my house but when I talk about giving up my oflices and breaking away from the crowd my husband says I am crazy and am trying to ruin him. If we could not afford a. better home, 1 would content myself with his, but we can. What can I do? ' ' nawN-l-rmnmv. Answer : I Stu I t Nothing. Unless you haw. the courage to go out and rent the kind of house that you know you can afford and buy the kind of furniture you need and also can aflord and then tell your husband that he can come along and live comfortably with you and pay for it, or else you will take in boarders and pay for it yourself, but that you are tired of living in a ) dog kennel and don't propose to do so any longer. , I knew a “roman who had a husband like yours and she followed this plan, and, after throwing a few fits, the husband went along as meekly as Mary's little lamb, and was as proud as punch of his new home and the standing it gave him in the community. . If you are afraid to try this scheme, why don't you get some of his fellow lodge L a, especially those he looks up to, to kid him about the kind of house he lives in? Often a. man will listen to what other men say when he turns a. deaf ear to his wife's entrectles. Anyway, if ‘you can sell him to the idea that it reflects upon him, and shows that he is less successful than other men to live in a tumbledown old house, you , will move him out of Poverty Fiat to Prosperity Row" I can never understand a. man not wanting to own his own home and not taking an interest in making it as comfortable and beautFul and ‘attractive as he can. For there is no thrill greater than possessing a little bit of the good earth; there is nothing more interesting than plant- ing trees and shrubs and flowers, and watching them grow: there ls nothing that gives such a sense of comfort and‘ security as to know that. your house belongs to you, that it ls your castle with which you may do as you please, that it la a safe shelter against the storm and stress of the world. It gives a feeling of permanence to know that you are anch- ored, that you are not going to move on the first of next October or next. May and that. no rent collector is coming every month beating on your door. To own your own home is the outward and visible sign of success. It is the badge of good citizenship and it brings some of the purest happi- ness that the human heart ever knows. And to a. woman her home means even more than it does to n mm. Its four walls make her world. There her ilfe works itself out. It ls the scene of her activities. It encompasses her desires and. aspirations. Show me the woman who is interested in her home, the woman who keeps it as neat as a pin, the woman who is always trying to beautify it and make it a little prettier and more comfortable, the woman who takes a. pride in her cooking and her kitchen, and l‘. will show you a. good wife and mother. The sort o! oman who is u real helpmeet to her husband and who raises up children who are an honor and credit to her and the community. But show me a. woman who takes no interest in her home, who has no pride in it and who gads away from it every minute that she can, and _ I will show you a. woman who poisons her family on bad cooking and I whose children grow up into hoodlums because they are reared on the street. It is strange but true that men do not realize how much a woman's home means to her, nor do they realize the value that c. woman sets on her belongings, nor how her happiness is bound up in chairs and rugs and draperies. If they did, they would not be, as they so often are, so nig- gardly about buying new furniture. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-J have three grown children and one of the best ihusbands in the world. but my home is made miserable and we are all turning into grouches by my mother, who lives with us. She makes our every minute miserable by her fault-finding and cutting remarks about everything we do and leave undone. She thinks she shoulddominnte our entire lives and we should obey her Just as if we were little children, and she is furious if we leave her at home at all or fail to take her every- where we go. My nerves are simply worn out with the strain. What shall we do? PERPLEXED. Answer: y A family should be run for the greatest good for the greatest number, and if there is one member of it who breaks up the pence and r _ pines: of all the rest then ‘u: or she should be as gently and painlessly removed "'5 P°551b1°- (Continued m pa“ g) Vhal the Fashionables are Wearing liy Annabelle Worthington skirt for this cunning frock. At the some time they are lim- plicity itself to press into place. after the frock! frequent visits t0 the wash tub. While the original model was in French blue linen with blue and white polka-dotted dlnllty contract, the style is one that lends itself to many colors and materials. Yellow pique with white swlss dotted in yellow, is cute idea. Wsol jersey, gingham checks. t pique and batlste prints Ire sturdy f materials. | Style No. 447 is designed in sizes f c rcqui reason: the family blazed. Sim b: the muse of m rt wt Slungu, sliced onions, canned ‘tomato so of lounges, pIIViOI-lm. t following: 1 cup salt, K teaspoon lmcn’: food AIDS rzsrsn RECIPES or rruerlue SIMPLE QR sausages... browned with onions and a cup or Ins) of tomato coup. Season and put on to cool: while flour, i bupoon gunmen Mumd 1 at this mixture well and pour over the partial y Baku until nicely btown0d—nnd than you an. A really delicious nourishing luncheon for four people-wt pic $|vory~ma|<u possible a ml economy in nd its flavour, so subtly appeclingnnill‘ favourable commcnhprovi overlooked that K teaspoon of Cohen's Mustard In the olmalrs . 11.8.1’. DIGESTION A Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions‘; -:-. Litedratlire lulenes . Placclnbalchgdish‘ baking powder, egg‘, 1Jcup milk. sausages. ve not v9" wdw GARDEN NC Seeds sown early often disap- point, but careful preparation and intelligent mu. gemcnt help to prevent this. The object here dif- fm from gardening in the open, and the method varies accordingly. These plants are to be transplant- ed once or twice. and the first aim should be to get a. good root sys- tem that will carry the plant through these disturbances. Thur:- forc. force root growth by provid- ing light, fibrous, fairly rich soil in beds where plants are to grow. If you are so fortunate as to have a. thoroughly arable loam soil that does not form hard clods or crusts it should serve well as a basis for your mixture. Add nearly as much sand, and about the some volume of leailmold, neutral peat. one of the prepared humus products. or of all comb-tel of the world out- side of the tropics, being found in Europe. Northern Africa. Siberia. North Amcrlcl. Aunt-mils. and the , meat southern pol-ta of South Am- erica. an the Dfllnlnlon DepB-rt- ment of Agriculture. It has all sorts 01 M11108 I11 the various languages of the world. and in the English M18115“ ls kmwn as Tu: grass, 111119 Run. spear grass. lizngllnh 8111s. men 818-96. bird grass. smooth-stained grass, meadow Brass. and common meadow grass. AIFALFA T!!! WANDIBEB About 500 EC. Alfalfa was brought from Persia to Greece. from whence it spread first to Italy, then to Northern Africa. The Arabs curried the punt. to Spain in the seventh century An, and later it was introduced to France. The Bpamards brought it to Mexico, South America, and weat- em United Btntes; British and The most important breath d turkeys are Bronze, White Holland. and Narragansett. Other breeds an Bourbon. Red. Black. 1nd Slate There is little difference in flu hardiness of any of the breeds. u the Dominion Department of A . lulturc. and the flesh of all turkey ' la very similar in texture and flcvour. Indigestion, Gas IF you're troubled with ltomach distress, gas, and your blood needs enriching, there's nothing so good as Dr. Piercc'u_ Golden Medical Discovery. .. MruEilzabeth Stew- ' ' art of 129 S. Caro- line Sh. Hamilton, Ont, uyl: "I ma! In have much awful stomach distal. I had lu- digestion most all the while and wu oun- llmully bloated with pl. ‘t timu I had heartburn that mad: me feel mlunhle and I would become dl -he other colonists took the plant to u the eastern parts of North America. the finest parts-of I'll 01d and ALL TURKEY FLESH SIMILAIM thoroughly rooted -‘ 11 your trouble in yarn." Sold by wm- m. Illa’: cum, nail». I. is garden soil is clay the proportion inthemtxtulu ‘ “‘be.‘ from u third to n sixth or even lees. Break Up Clodl In preparing soil for seeding in pots or shallow boxes it ll only tn get rid o! most o! the lumps 1nd clods, either by sifting it through n, screen, or by shuvelllng it fflptltfll- 1y from one heap to another and brushing away the coarser lumps that r011 down the alder of the pile. For topping oi! the lecdbed. Rift a few handfuls through window screening. n Fill the bottom of the box or pot ~ w1th I 11m a pebbles. cod uh- es. bite of charcoal or the like that will provide drslnnge 5nd. will all» permit water to spread through the box when it is set in Inter. Cover this drainlle material with n layer o! the oonmr ntcurlcl lifted from the lenfmold or old compost. Oovar this with m inch and I hnlf 0f the mixed 0°11: ma it dmm with n 118$ b01116. and scatter over the surface a thin layer of the fine sifted soil. Bow the seed wool-ding to dir- 2, 4. and 6 years. Sim 4 requires 1% |°°fl°“5' “WYIW Wm! i319 fine 5m- yards and 35-inch material for dress ‘ °d 5°"~ wit" $110 Wt 01' "It l1!‘ with 1% yards of 85-inch material , immln: it 1n water until mou- for blouse. . ' Price of Pattern is 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. N0. (47. Sim .....“........n...- s-u- oI-olllcnlllln Name ‘.57; ._ . street address And how charmingly the plalts provide sufficient fullness to the _ ...........-..-u-.......1.... City ture shows at the lurflce. PROHIBITED PIN! Th!!! Nve-leaved pines from all count- __ rfcn, and certain two-lowed pines from Europe have been loheduled by the Dominion Department of Agriculture on the prohibited 1m of entry into Canada. This manure is calculated to prevent the entry of the White Pine Blister Rust ‘and certain insect puts. GMS! OI‘ MANY NAME! Kmtucky Blue ‘an is n mun A: all Drug stir?‘ De parcmental Store: a YARDLEY my: What other Gift can be more fitted than the Yardley Lavender, what other has the same Winsome charm-as fresh and lovely as springtime Itself f Give a Yardley Gift-in perfume. powder or cream or In one of the many Yardley Glft sets. Llvlndn Pulumc. 36d to $12.00. Complexion Powder, Cl .00. mphalan ‘Cram 61.00. m: c n "_'r»nu a ' Glftlltinl); YARDLEY-LONDON n»... NawYork_ m Leah. , Bu: d 8. 01.00 l h I t0