(ihw woman woo‘ 30. CREAM CGNCIENTRATE b... gin. Oath! A superbly rich, fine emollient containing genoccl—-a glandular young-skin ingredient which the skin absorbs with benefit. Watch in wonder as this amazing Dorothy Gray Cream Concentrate enlivens your colouring. Two ounces $5.00. Loo]: for these improvements in your complexion l O A much softer, smoother-looking texture. O Liveiier colouring for muddy, sallow complexiown-a. U The fresh, radiant clarity I The sparkle and "bloom" ego-o d». MCDRE s. M¥LEOD Ls Livingfi. Leisure —T7-1E WOMAN ’S REALM- TIINGI THAT MAR. s little things that mar the til!» g tiny, fretful little things. he ‘mqky chim creaking b11186. !.i.‘ha hasty word that like a limPfl Clings to memory- ney; Buch tiny things, but with what strength they held me captive. Ihey deafen me, I cannot hear tne long of bird, w whisper of the breeze, only catch the rumble of com- plaint. O cruel chains of peevlshness fretful cars That ca tlve hold my spirit, when al around a thousand Joys Extend their beck'ning hands. Ilut in my cell of loneliness I can and lee Noughtl but the dust upon the I l‘ s The sootiupon my pans, Ah. me! Lord, break these chains and set me free. The Duke and Duchess of Rut- iand are back at Beivol-r Castle. 5f- ter their honeymoon in Eastorll. Their stay has been commemo ated on the menu at their hotel. It happened like this. at dinner the first evening the Duke suggested they should have as a sweet a novel mixture of pineapple and bananas. The second evening the couple ordered the same sweet. On the third evening it was placed he- fore them without asking. “But no.” laid the Duke, "we should like iomethlng else this evening." "But. .__ii__._m .7___ 8f soma- '-= i A g-wmildfflfimfili“ila°lfal qohnostrii. it reduces con. Illtion and makes breathing easier in I M"! . . . lives grand nits!‘ rm oolhkoliowdiractionlintbopaokags. oqzmnmmw ' lama: mime-mull of l younger skin. often lost with the year; fir." protested the waiter. ‘we have it on the menu now." And there it was -"Compote Duc do Rutland." LUEEWARM WATER Plastic imitation ivory is best cleaned with a cloth dampened in lukewarm water, then dried. LINE WITH FLANNEL _ One of the ways to kee silver bright and shiny is to lne the drawer in which it ls kept with dark outing flannel. The sublime and the ridiculous are often so nearly related that it rs difficult to class them separate- ly. One step makes the ridiculous, and one step above the ridiculous makes the sublime again. -Thomas Paine. PERFECT BEHAVIOR HARD TO ACHIEVE Children love noise. excitement, activity and even confusion is joy- ful to them at times. They have no manners. They are quite happy eating with their frngers, making loud sucking noises as they spoon their soup. equally joyful as they slam doors push people one side. help themselves first and often. and in other ways prove themselves primitive. They have no morals. They fake what they want, boldly, without conscience, for they have no cun~ science about it. Wanting, taking, enjoying, are natural to their stage of rowth. C ildren have to learn how to 1 awe-re of! down the lane i:n s. clat- ' James above the sunllme > Ellen 's Diitry Iy an Island Farmer's Will necessary was in their rather dermrmrre. Eve-n at tihe gateway the outward pmceson ‘was halted while James called 5% Kind when reaching the furthest field that the much needed lub- rication for the machine was for "And Jantinegs basket?" I had attended to I myself This was a smaller basket Jock bought rwent-W B114 will’, uwxu be the my one for Jamie James had sold And tihen they w: z horses and farm cart-s 1m uhqiro way to the ilXSb 0f ilhe d18- gtng. l I O "You'd better slip in somatic-la’, linden. to give 1n a IPWK "u" l‘ added. at the same time casting a speculating Gin about me "if you're not too busy today." This was when he was ‘mm to leave H4; smiled amd waved at me n.- he BN1 1mm ggim down the lane and MW!‘ was a mule more demanding nor a salute more eloquent. I can“ away from one window mush-ins up myself. f was xcmiesnibeixnm the line in one t! Julie's favorite sown . “Hallow, follow. fol-low the glam!" I miyself was Gilli-Y Wind 4m hid-rig it- to "follow the gleam" totbw.‘ _ _ skies were lowering and a brifik wind frown the north iilnvw B 8H“- amd - my ears when L-iter I went to Join than. It ill-look odd leaves alotnll my path as I skirted the woodlands. when the Au-tmnn colors were more subdued than in the absence of the Iinflhins. Across fields and under the 111w» the several iiarms baween. Iosmctombsmtimefordlfl- ner. Joanie was in fine Hillbilli- Nm glttgebher iron: the 10:12am- ering theme and the dgglnc. But "did you hear that man 0H ‘i316 may], say tihst there's" snow in some es s-si-‘ll’ Y“ he Md‘ tat-lily " I Santa Giants looked up from his plate in rn as a. new thought struck “Wmild he have plenty 91 up there for his rdndfibf? not too Dlamiiui hhs WW}: it nationality? cmwe him. . - . tiyrm shower almost the workers from re- usmlng to the field. W$IMY bit of blue above a hill was pit-cause 0d the fzno cool alternool} which followed. "ma; now. wen James would hurl? "13- ‘mm l“ ‘ moment I would siraiflhten co catch a view of the stmmfle mtllns mm- speeds (m the distant slopes. tins coolness of woodland Bflvfl and the different herds at ' min st any an‘?! live in the adult world and the adults have to teach them. There must be times of quiet, and places ,for it. so that grownup people can live comfortably, And good manners, healthy morals, congld- erstion for other people's rights and opinions. must be acquired by the lidren. They will acquire these under thq influence of careful 3nd patient teaching. MOTHERS BEST fill! Mothers are tho first and best teachers. Patiently, hous- by they should teach the children 23v to behave. in the house and One day. after many months of teaching, of hope deferred and pa- tience strsined, Bonny or Billie, dgleds what he should without being Somebody re ortl that he or she behaved autifully at the tab e. or under severe stress. and _mother ll delighted. i s? fields. 321% an g i a E .5..§§.§=§-sis§;§§§ When -you have used a bar of mp. return it to l dry soap dish lolthlt it will m melt unoccu- r y. Use a spon e rubber pad to wash tilel in your sthroom. It will hold leoul dsr dih do wmiiifiil-‘ilr. m . "u", lm/Social and Qerso KING (Oil. TEA AND COFFEE lThe Girl Fromii {The Double R i a nsrrv aadcxmosa , "Purple slippers," she told the kitten, "are too expensive for a gal in my position even to con- sider. Wc have a ranch to run. and running pinches in these days is no cinch." Rusty sat in her office. locking over a worn map of the Double R. She was trying to decide Wllilfé‘ l0 pasture the yearlings that the‘ feeders had refused to take off her hands. With her was Hank, vct- eran rider of the Double R. who had been on the nanch since the time of her randfather. As she stud ed the map, she real- ized that the Nopocos. though an asset, were also a liability. They blocked access to parts of the ranch that would be useful to her now. "Don't know why I didn't think of it. sooner." said Hank. “Ralph run a makeshift trail in there a few years ago, while you were away at college. Made 9, map of it and figured he might try out a new strain of cattle in Low Valley. where no strays could get in. But he never did anything about it and I don't know what became of the map let's see that map there-J‘ With a grubby finger. the old man traced a route from the loca- tion of the ranch house. "Now see here where the Nopp- cos sorta switch their tail —I thznk Ralph's trali began right about there." Rusty considered. "But the val- ley’s so far west. If we pastured the yearlings there while they're putting on weight, they'd run a lot of it off when we drove them back here to send them to market." "It ain't necessary to drive them back." Hank said eagerly, turning again to the map_ "Ralph thought of that problem and found a solu- tion, Now see, here's Low Valley-v and here’s its south wail. Some- wheres along here, Ralph found an easy trail up over that south wall. dc-wn to the Big Sandy, and straight. across her to the highway. You write hhn, Miss Rusty. That map he made must be somewheres- Or ask your mom. She might know." When Rusty. asked her mother. Mrs. Rowland recalled that Ralph and Hank had packed into Low Valley. but she didn't know any- thing about a map. However. lhe produced an album of pictures which Ralph had taken on the tri . Rusty settled into an armchar ln her room to look them over. Ralph had arranged them in order, with notations under each one. First came a long series taken dull": the difficult trip over the ridge. Then, Rusty cams to a snapshot of Hank and his horse on an eleva- tion looking down into the volley —-"First view of Low Valley." A (Contiuicd nn Page 3) FIG BARB it cup shortening ‘it/s cup sugar e88 l/l cup milk (approx ‘ Zificiapa pastry . aspoon sa 3 teaspowa bak wder ‘A teaspoon vani p0 a Mix in the usual way. Chill the dough before rolling. ~l a Way aiion Brings Relief Because Dr. Cbasl’ Kidney-UNI‘ PllllltllpMlIMIQalO-ldllfiiydllfl liver stimulate kidney and T.“i.‘l'f.2°l'.ii'a“£.2'“a."““" a impugn-MT: oommonilll cousti JTIiILQHARI-QII W91!!! ‘EPJARDIAN ‘bear her. own child and. unless flue lcsmps her job. she has to rear it r i‘? ooaomv 01x SAYS— . ~ “Synthetic Mother Woasl list Alum dud Material Fsr illllil-lislslll Stilt oasoruummapauomuuusoumiuvcvmoi-hflhll" Garner by hand and give it her time and her own personal care and inch!!!- ‘rhsre are no mail order babies. You can't write to l- 11111111114301’!- aaying: “Please send me by parcel post l seven pound in!!!" 1B 80°‘! condition. A girl" with golden curls preferred. but if the ruwlv {in run out will take dark. romantic-looking m. and upon its arrival turn it over to hired help. or leave it to grow up, on the streets. and then have some- thing that you will be proud of and which will be a prop amt stay for 7°“: old age. For inventive genius has given us many use- ful gadgets. but no one has yet created a asi- thetic mother who is Just as good ll the rill thing. And this truth being self-evident, i! £11m!» the spotlight on what is really the most vital ques- _ tion of our day. and that is what to do about the a woman who are bringing children into the world evading the responsibilities of motherhood. . BLAME!) POI. INCOI-ILIGIBILITY ). and then How can they be made to lee what a crime they are committing? For the sin of every little bobby-sucker who goes astray and every boy who is a hoodlum is not upon their heads. but upon the heads of the mothers wiho did not do their duty by them. These mothers. who are mothers in name only. come from every rank in life. They an the rich woolen whose children scarcely know them by sight and who are on far more familiar terms with their nurses than they are with the mothers whom they only hurriedly glimpse as they are rushing from one place of amusement to another, and who often leav them to the dare of servants fotr months at a time. '111.ey are the career women who sacrifice their children to their llllbmflll- Th6? l" 1101 Gods who are onuiipresent. They are merely human women who cannot be off on a lecture tour. or making a pic- ture. and be at home watching over their chum-en at the same time. If they are doctors. they cannot refuse to a call because the cook has left and there is nobody to get supper for the kids. And in the choice between the youngsters and their careers. the youngsters B0 to the W611. They are the women who have no taste for domesticity and don't want t0 be tied down by children. They want to work outside of the home. may want to make-money and buy fine clotha lnd to go to night clubs. instead of stayinil. at home and rocking the baby to sleep, "M "ICUIIKMIYY Ind ‘Ihmmy in bed and hearing their prayers, and seeing}! that they‘ do their homework. esearetswomenwhoarer nsiblof uve for being a mother is not a pmfesm that £1», filfcilffdmfl°nfi interval 0i! @1118 wmflhllig else. It. ia a M-hour-a-day chore that calls for every minute of a womams time. and that takes all tn; strength and wisdom that is in her, But how we are t-o get the ’ wqmn to g children is the most important work shs can doleeandntthbexflaflg will have to answer to God for. is the great problem of today. Iibr, aim’ all. Monfs influence rules the world. and she cannot throw away her power without upsetting the apple cart. M o d e r n l Etiquette ByIODGflIIAI 2 Morning Smile Woman on telephone: ‘I sent my little boy to your store for two plums, and I got only a pound and a half. Your scales must be wrong." Fruit dealer: "My scales are all night, madam. Have you weighed your little boy?" Q- 18 1B Du-missible when eat- ing to cut the bread wit-h the knife, page», lift it to the mouth witch the A. No: neither is correct. The bread Bholfld be broken, one bite at 0F - COURSE nal/Fashionsn IJTIlll-ll-Iltlllll its-rat v w~nE_1.=.@..o»;_ 5:’ r"'.‘.’.'.’v . ‘a ; ¢ o ' m t a I H!!- SOME", Ilddlasfnsuloadshhalflfllllllflcctasahhcbnkolonstnwhvowlalbds Coilucotton Products 00.. Ltd. KLEENEX’ Now available in 3 SlIOS CHUBBY SIZE- "f i9 HANKY SIZE - » -_'- 9" x ill HANS SIZE » - » - ll ill‘ SlRONC-ER WHITYU lHAN FVIR { a y 1 ...... ‘p. r.-,- w-r»! , a time. and lifted th with the tln-gera. e mouth . When a toastmaster calls for an im rompiu speech from some $1118}. ow long should the guest A little girl whose fondness for, movies and the personalities fea-j tured in them far surpassed her liking for school air-d textbooks was selected b_v the teacher to answer the uestion: A- N01 more than three min- " t is a comet?" Psi-aimed. "tw- gh; u] hedmm Q. Wlhen introduced to a r. son and that person la the firs to ‘ hat is a star’ with l tail?" per- u SKY» Hvw do you do." what should listed the instructor I B. U. Wllibslm 1. What law-rung with this sen- tence? "i hop, that I may be fav- ored wit-h a prompt reply id tlhis letter." ll tbsJsforrect pronunc- 2. What lotion oi “a (i. Whiohmne of these words is misspelled? Nlroisul, chrysairime- mum. daffodil. 4. Wha 1 proved affective parts of plaster - dered sugar. quirgl timysrd 85-inch or 89-inch. ' sand How Can 1!! fly Anne Allllfl “why. Miokey Mfmseg» exciap-n. the reply be? Q. How can l d-elect a leak in ed the pupil’ brlghtenm‘ so? "ling; ‘Zlifioupfifiii a? dial“ f.“ fipl-he point where th? leak . c" c "M r We . m“"w‘ifé‘fi“it"élil.‘a"f°fa‘l m oitocnnrnb Acclissorulis )_ g _ iiilslsrnagpelzr- {£21m usetolxslsltflgfialr ea . . l-lowcani mak a oodroaonl Better Wllldei? roach powdeer ‘that hasI l is made of equal of Paris and pow-l Q. How can I tell i! eggs are flt to eat? A. By placing l-hem in a pan of salt water, one heaping tablespoon to a pint. ", “ed eggs will floa Good eggs will sink. Poverty is uncomfortable as can testify; but nine times out e ten the best thing that can ha] pen to a young man is to be ruse» overboard and com elled to slnl or swim for hlmsel. -Jamel l Garfield. In LUMBAGO, ACRES omi PAINS TWO !0I TIA Two charming aprons to make rom a ilbulousl mall amount of lbric. Became eir cut is lo fem- inlnely pretty have them In an ex- travagant taffeta or surrlh. as wall as cotton. No. Tm is cut in one also and re- q Ni 85-inch or 39-inch "i." l I y a included. cut in one lile and rl- tl f PA which ihcluliie: 00g!’ to TIER“ guide. Print your aim. Address and Style Number plainly. Be lllvtoltatnlilsyoilwiltalsiciudo postal unit or Ions number in your address. Address P tt Department. The Chlrlottetowi: giiardiara Pattern Nos. arr-sass Nlllid A6425 Gty --- m - ‘ not. - 0. Ron's! little mt. andnmllehm gaunt? u» mm oomsa out‘ and bagorlaiad thiwv w"ndorlsl.biitllnotdtforimii ands -pfl‘~nnz9fimo:nn_'thahaigzo“lfllln andhala on» maili- - m“ ‘on stressful-sawmills“ Arklsld nus-murmur‘ "w..." “""“' °“"°"‘ m“, redraw ' ‘-" ‘ iismJl bou Dllsn No.10! moanzimmstiot "m m ~33... at cum - . aunts Ulllfllfifl aftar . will in till warm pand no ... 4am- moilisrs sellout to form rust. ' ' ' ' ‘ Ringworm a scalp affects __._..............____...-__.." ‘ one lo M» N- ’ .. . . . ,1» mistolissxiw.‘ h” l . rNeedlecraftl —FOR_ THE HOME —