e man’s R AA vVVvVvV vv v v v vrvvvvv VV vvv vv v Im -:-7 Soc: ’-ll. " 'l'\/|_L_AA_- 1.... A AAA - l ouiuiotaiv I A A AAA A A A A A v wvvv vvvvvvvvvwrvvvvvvvvvvwvvvvvv A AAAAAA AAA.AAAAAA4 AA A -fa‘ AA AAAAAAA vv‘v v v vrv Vvvvv AAAAAAAA AAA A s i ns‘C-:- Litera AAAA ‘ vvv AA A ta re 0000.6 ‘_ _ _ V A AA AA A AAA*AAAAAi A A AAAAAAA A A AAAAA .'_x. vv vv #HoUsEWIFE and |o......z.,.. 0.3.] I "W3 0‘ OLD FAMILY Rimbey, Alta.——Flye orphaned baby skunks nestled beside I cat herself a mother of five, on R. Vetsch’s farm near here. The cat ;f xc"'§-not desolate whose ship is Proper Rearing of .Clu'ld1-en is One of the Greatest Tasks of Woman —— Proper Training Will do Far More Than Mere Intuition or Too Much . (Dy UIISULA D1400“), An Old Ship the ship of such tremulous mein ies to him: Just as he was return- ing to England, too, after a. com- mission in China. ' 5 li $9 the mystery ofInun- adoptedthe and now the vm, 1.1531 wgsngstedalldtlred. f itnmrn at. family eats. ramps and wrestles Mother-Love No flag» fluttg.-red from her. she : great love with feith- together. moved wm-uy flwugh pxoudl,, ' -mm°‘‘ ‘ A famous woman psychologist has just established a school in which with her funnels still polnt1n€ W .__...______.___ TENDER. CAKE CRUST un l . light the stars to bear him she proposes to _ , company. Grease your cake pan and line She says: with paraffin paper before you ; _ Outin the silence of the moun- pour the cake mixture in if you Q ' ‘-"Iain. passes, want the cake not to stick. Never ~ , The heart makes peace and flour the bottom of the pan as it - - liberty its own— makes for a tough crust. Tin wind that blows across the scented grasses Bringing the balm of sleep—- comes not alone, ._.____:_______ GRANNY KNEW BE 51‘ Granndmaas old standby. cod liver oil. was approved by modern medi- cine today as the best source of vitamin D for baby's milk, only one thing—milk irradiated by ultra-violet rays—was "just as good." Dr, Philip C. Jeans, of E» Beneath the vast ilimitable spaces. Whereaodhassetflislewelsin gar-ray. . 1 may pitch his tent in desert l “#2:: “"5 h°9"7°n 15 ‘Wt 3° Iowa City. reported after a study H _‘ / -, _- 3" made at the suggestion of the ccm- I - *"?——*?-— mlbcee On foods 0! the American For what the world needs ' __ Medical Association. l 3 TABLOID Either of the two were about 50 per cent more efficient than A mitio oil of cloves added to the irradiated ergosterol, a vegetable will substance. or yeast in fortifying needed and always will need. is 390d n‘°°‘1“5- can teach women to bring up their children to D? fine more alud instead of rotters and hoodlums, she should be 8 Ven the 0 gr . Medal for disthigulshed services to her country 01” ¢-lemed 01‘ 5°m°“‘m3- “Motherhood is the only gain women in the way they should train their babies. to the sin’. She Was flnlfihed WW1 work, finished with the busy hum of h1ue—,1ackei.s about her. Once llmfession I01’ her decks ‘had shone whltely, her which no preparation isexpected orrequlred. guns had markied in the sun. a The problem child usually problem-home where there mother. able factor in social wastage. is E Wines from a problem The problem mother is a !0l'mld- Mistakes clean awning had been sllmfld We! the quarter deck. Once, he had re- membered her as something of which he was tremendously proud. made in a child's upbringing in the first _ years 0‘ ms me (men lead to warped and something that moved on the sur twisted personalities, deforming ent preparation for motllerhooti." every human relationship he may ever make. The only cure for all of this is a trained intellig- face of the water, never quavei'- ing never moving. Even in the wild- est seas she had renlaincd steady, and that when you are swinging for’rard is something to be thank- A school for mothers! It's a grand idea ml for. and there isn't one of us who wcn’t be plug- ging ior its success. If there was ever any- thing that filled a lonslelt want. it is U‘-is ously more than anything else, what it always has If there is any one WHO taste used for paperhanging eep it sweet. ' Sweet Marjoram. grq90llf 5iraw5°"l°m milk with the vital bone Vllwlnln. Dr. Jeans estimated. make iams and jellies using CERTO Recluse ex- Acrw lsifue EASY AND a suite WA)’ l=on.,JAM_ AND JELLY , MAKING. ‘* I. vb‘, , A ~::{ suolzr eon R|C-H, lN building on. ‘ FLAVOU srmr to rear it. matter in the world. soluble mysteries of life. does not change a woman's character one iota. _ ‘ in an empty head, nor make a stupid woman intelligent, nor a frlV0-‘OHS Bearing a child does not even make a. woriisil a mother 5-We It does not give her a mother heart. thousands of women who have not It single mother inipu-L59. Who 115V9“"~ even an animal instinct for their children and in whom their otrspnna are always rats and nuisances, just as there are other women who never one wise. I in a. physical sense. have a child who are all mother. Women who are deliberately bad mothers are few, however. women adore their children and are willing to make any sacrifice 101" them, and it is the tragedy of motherhood that so often the women W110 are trying to be the but mothers are the worst. _ ance and not intent, but the results are none the less dlsastmlls for t-‘l8«L- This gives us the mothers who love so blindly that they cannot see a. single blemish in their children and so let them grow up with faults that are a handicap to them as long 115 they live- them unpopular. Slovenly speech that mark them as uncultured. Selfilsli disregard of other peoples’ rights that ostracize them. The trouble has always been that we have held to the tlleofl’ there is something occult and niysterious about motherhood and tllcit when a. woman has a. baby. no matter 310W l’1“““l°5-5 “W1 mgml’ 5“? “- some miracle occurs that gives her the wisdom and strength and kiln-::l;.ll» “Mother knows best is the slogan we use to enslave C U tell to tyrants and tools. Worse still, this idiotic idea. that every mother has an intuitive knowledge and understanding of her children and knows by instinct how to guide them makes men turn over the rearms 03 youngsters to women whose judgment they would not trust in any 0 0 Anyway it 15 3, step forward in recognizing that motherhoodxj a .' . - - - ~ 1 careerdthsllt xeciuéaei sslmlfig lI§§L<m9gf’-‘i”:,§’“c§f1°§§,f]“f§fi5‘“$,e’;; more than scrap iron and steel in lsliliellxif 823180 to ccoektaflapurtics. or playing budge. or taking part in E the °1" ml" ‘“°”'5 “*9” "°“"‘“9 golf tournament, or stepping out to lllllht clubs, or What do you? ('00d is bound to come of facing the fact that at least as much thought, eilori and intelligence should be, given to DWPBFJHE Oneself ‘'0 “MP9 the “°5‘“’3’ of a human being as to how to SW6 3 Permlmem 01‘ P°‘md 9- Wl’ew""°"' bill in 1 J is of th in- “ W W" ...:.“:......l.... as mm mm.» 1. ms... it does not PM 9”‘-‘“5 There are Most They sin through ignor- Boorish manners that make Often Physlcfll He watched her now, and as he did so. sentimental curiously whimsi- cal about her. Dreams began to Wreath themselves in his mind, di‘el1.ms of what might have been; dreams of what lied been. "It‘a a shame to break up old ships," he was saying to__himself, "a ———-shame, if: is.’ There’: something in her." He remembered the first time he saw her. He had married exactly a week. He had married Nell. at the little flshonnanzs church at Porchcstcr. and then suddenly when he was in the glorious delirium 01' his honey- moon iiistunbing news had come He was transferred from the‘ "Royal Sovereign," he was to join at once the great ship destined for a two and a. half years’ commiss- ion in Malta. The letter had come at breakfast, with Neil all dimples and sweetness the other side of the jumper. “What is it. clear?" she asked Hesaid as casually as he could. "Oh. nothing. nothing " He could not tell her yet, not yet. Let them hang on to that remnant of happiness Just a mo- ment or two longer. Nell, so beauti- ful, far and away the most beauti- ful, girl he had ever seen. Watch- inlg her he wondered how she could have cared for a. fellow like he was. Nell. with her soft fair ringlets and her wide blue eyes. He was a lucky chap. To leave her? That he felt was impossible. To leave her alone here in Ports- mouth for two and a half years with the memories. the poignant derechs that could have been cured in youth, but that nothing can be equisite. one week! His kisses! His done about in maturity. It gives us the adiniring mothers who are so weak that they have not , the strength to stand up and fight a self-willed youngster. They never l teach their children to control their appetites and they become d-I‘uI1Klil”dS and libertines. thy become murderers. they become thieves. They never They never teach them to conquer their tempers and teach them to dony thir desires and They never bred in thin any grit and courfifle and sense of responsibility and they fill the courts with their divorces. it gives us the possessive mothers whose love is so selfish that it , C. among them aobrbing her heart out. W °*“*“““:..“:.;°r.';.**.::§ n was an mu in their own ways. love their children wisely but not too well, and put strength in their good right arms when it comes in managing them, it will be God's own blessing the °'°l'““' 3°”? ‘W33’; that W“ to the world. DORLYYHY DIX. ‘ with mi. wonderful bottled .—- 0 pectinpmd sllfruitsjeii perfectly, PLAY SAFE. Only } Certu 1. aortas.’ 2 Short boiling saves fruit ‘ flavour as well as juice. You never get that “boiled-down” 1 taste. HALF AGAIN — , As MUCH JAM :.; FROM MY FRUIT " (lo amsses INSTEAD OF6) we SAVED rlMe-MoNsv- FRUIT. « ev.:-,/ we Em Isl-IEO m LESS rum |5’M|NU'|’-‘E3 AFTER MY r-v.un- WAS . F Certo's famous Ihort boll ' not only saves time and work-—but money, too. For the juice can't ball away in steam. 3 You us. with Cei-to you _ °boilsuchsshort time... ' , only V; minute for jeilies—I ' fl little longer for June. r.¢c~. ‘ (‘trio in pun perh'n-nolhhig in added-ii in fluentl- Irnl icflying Jubilant: extracted [ram fruit. Mair: Jams and ielliu will: my Inn‘! or fruit juice. Tlure are plenty of good reason: /or suing Cami. star: now. Buy Cerfo u all groan. Made In Canada. A line: necuve soon... ma recipu come with :.n,., bag}. of cu-@:fi a recipe for each fruit. .]Dnt Cato recipes jut won’: work with anything but Comb Wpp,‘ I," 2 .5',aea&[ J,- _ Assorted‘ labels "" ‘ . romuy Gluue Wouldn't you like the attractive W enema T/HE COOK'S CORNER FOR A MEATLESS MEAL This next idea may be a new one to you, but it makes an easy meat- less dinner, and you can add to it by serving crisp bacon strips. An- other accompaniment that goes well with this are little pork sausages, fried crisp and brown. COTTAGE CHEESE DUIWPLXNGS WITH SPINACH 3 tablespoons butter 4 egg yolks 1 cup cottage cheese ‘A: cup flour to cup dry bread crumbs 4 egg whites 1 teaspoon salt Method: Cream the butter and add the egg yolks one at a time, beating well after each addition. Press the cottage cheese through a coarse sieve and add with the salt, flour and bread crumbs. Fold in the stiiily beaten egg whites and drop from a spoon into rapidly boiling. salted water. Cover tlghtly and cook for 10 minutes without liftin the cover. Remove with uslot spoon or a wire Ladies l Here you are—0ur July sale of very latest styles in Sheers, M a n c h u Prints and Dimity. Coats smart and snappy in Polo and Irish Linen. The Modern Shop V (Over Canadian Stores) 4 mwwmmoooooa W l SURPRISE UPSIDE-DOWN TARTS A slice of sweetened fresh pine- apple, a spoonful of vanilla ice cream, then ii covering of flaky pic paste, conspire together to make R most intriguing surprise dessert. Do notice our suggestion that you Sprinkle chopped wasted almonds over the pineapple slice before cav- cring with the filled tort shell; the nutmeata add even greater interest to an already delicious dish. 2 cups sifted flour 2-3 teaspoon salt 2-3 cup shortening or shortening with butter Cold water strainer and serve on a bed of hot, chopped. cooked spinach. If you are not serving the bacon or samage accompaniment, this is nice garnished with hard oodzed eggs and served with a cream sauce to which has been added 56 cup grated cheue. ._..—_.. Dllila Plfllal SALAD 3 lane dill pickles 1 once soft pilniento cheese Lettuce ~ AMomingSmHe ' HARD TO CONVINCE d.:,V’i'nxuo': "How old are you. grand- Grsnddad: "one hundred and one, my dear." Winnie: "Don’t be funny, gnnddad. That's not an age; it’: a temperature." BID-IIIADIDI "Fblks." said the colored minis- ter. “the subject of my sermon dis svenin' em ‘Due.’ How many in do congregation has done read the nth otiaptsr of Matthew!" Nenrly every hand long‘? raised huh: ‘I rilht." reverence. "You is an the loin I van: to 0940'‘ I'll lloflth eh|g_to_r__ u." '.‘v’."' ,. caresses! His loving. all his long- trips. The Navy drives hard. When he told her she wept, and begged him to stay. Desert. Do any- thing, only of course she didn't understand. The great ship sailed one morn- ing. with the women in a little hud- dle by the old saliyport, and Neil good—bye was so much worse than the clean break, but the good-bye was drawn out and harrowing. something that hurt in a Jagged wound. He sent her a message from Gib, and directly he got to Malta he went down Realé and into an Indian shop. and he bought her I. shawl, a lovely white silk shawl with roses embroidered on it, and hum- mlng birds, in darting glorious colours. He picked it up, and he sent it. It was good to be a wo- man. for some pretty things eased the pang of parting, and perhaps inc shawl would comfort her, poor ldl And then, a month later, he saw her He met her as he crossed the Barmcca. the garden above the sm. gardens where palms and olcandcrs bend together. and the bougelnvlllea flaws like a crimson river over ruined arches, and the goldfish dart in a still sun-warmed D001. He saw her standing there. just. the same, just as sweet, her arms out to him. He thought it was a ghost. "You 7" he said. "Jimmy, I had to come. I could not let you go so easily, I let the flat." . "But your passage money?" “I came out as nurse to an of- flcer's wife. she gave me the pass- age money and I minded the children." She lifted up her face to he kissed. Bo. regardless of every- body else in the Bsrrscca they clune together.-and a Maltese pass- ing said approvlngly, "Bella, bells," and he knew that a little Heaven had come over his world. A little I-legven that nothing could die. ur . They took a fist in Florlans. It was a tiny flat, with no carpet; on the stone floors, but a balcony It seemed odd to Jim. that they should be towing out the old ship. he felt himself growing curi- ' from whichyouooulcluothegi-and harbour. peeps of blue between square stone houses, with the lights of Blengles. beyond at night. Life was a honeymoon, a blissful, rean- tinual honeymoon. He asked for nothing more. He was good at his Job and marked down for promot- ion. Nell had brought him luck. Nell had brought him Joy. Ned was the turning point in his life, he told himself. Then he introduced Dick Harris. Dick was a petty officer. and he had seen Nell on board one day when the sip was open to guests. and he had marked her down. "Wish I'd got a wife out here" he said, "wish I'd got a home, and something to go ashore for." It was well known that Dick led a gay rather dlssolutc life ashore. constantly in strada Forne, in ‘ those gay cafes where more res- pectable men did not go. Jim would not have immduoed him, save that one day w.'\?n he -was with Neil in Strada Reale, he met Dick face to face. "Introduce me?" said Dick. And then it could not be helped! It was outside one of the Indian Shops. and he remembered now the cllrlllsly wizened face of the little old Indian watching with uzib1inii- ing eyes .a.nd shaking his old knob- bled head. Afterwards Jim told Nell, "Dick isn't our sort. I don't want you to have much to do with him." "He see?i'n's very nice, gay too." “EYES. too guy would be more like Mercifully Dick was transferred to one of the destroyers in the Slienia harbour, and Jim imagined that the friendship would end anyway 5 for the time being. Once coming home he found Dick in the little sitting-room with the balcony look- ing out to the grand harbour and slenglea. Jim was unable to con- ‘ coal his surprise. and Dick left , hurriedly; afterwards Jim turned to 1 Neil, "I couldn't help it. He Just came 4 here." ,v “Of course you couldzrt help it. only it mustn‘: happen again," and now he wished that he had never introduced her to Didi Only the thing was done, them was no going l back on it; it was finished and could not be undone. "It shan’t happen again," she as- sured him. suddenly on that eventful sun- day, things happened. There was a rising in Alexandria, one of those sudden rlsings, with sand-bagging, and the natives revolting, and white People in danger. Three of the big ships were hurriedly sent there, and 2' Jim's happened to be one of them. i “Ir. won't be for more than a tort- night." he assured Nell, “the very slsht of our big guns seems to put the fear of God into them." , “A fortniglit is a very long time.” ‘ “It shan‘t seem like it." she waved the ship away from the Barraca. Nell with a background of oleanders in a full pink side of blossom; Nell with the palms like giant feathers sweeping around her. He did not guess that it would be far, far longer than a fortnight. The sea. has mysterious ways in her service. The natives were not amenable, and the sight of the big guns did not score them in the manner they had anticipated. There was far more trouble than had been expect- ed. and finally. when it was done with, instead of returning to Malta and the grand harbour, and Jim to the little flat with the balcony, they joined the rest of the Mediterran- ean fleet on their summer cruise at Argostoii. It was early in Auxust when they returned to Malta. Malta was burnt brown the sun, she was blistered, and ma; houses were glittering whitely, so that one's eyes hurt at the very sight of her. But the hurt was good to the heart of Jim, for it meant home. He saw no women waiting on the Barracca. but then the after- noon sun was too fierce, you could not expect it: he went ashore the moment he could, and he told the carrozzi to "drive like hell." The hat was empty. He sat down and waited for her return. Surely she had not gone to meet hi mand they had missed each other? Surely she had never been so ' silly as to do that? He noted the furniture, and the light green our-( toms. and the bowl of roses on the table. Hm it was not so hot. the first gentle cool of the evening seemed to be blowlna in upon him..- Then as he looked round he notic- « ed on the table I dance ticket tom in two. There was a large box of ex. .. chocolates on the side, hoe. olata from Turin, bought in scram Lucia where are all the expensive chocolate shops. _'I'here.wos the faint essence of cigarette smoke about the flat, and he knew that Neil did not smoke. Going into the bsdmom, his cur- iosity now amused. and with it A certain Brim disma, that he could not choke down entirely, he saw an evening dress lying on the bed, 5. gay affair, a froth of tulle, and 3 $1117 Mall of cold. It was a useless frock for I suloi-'s wife, knew it. nestlly he cupboard. and he saw hsn there new clothes, hrosts “of agent: such clothes, enn fmckglngogc, silk: true, nil: was cheap out here.| but these were exquisitely made. Danes frocks. But Nell did not dance - ‘Dhs came in and saw him. What—~what are you doing" me And instantly in the joy of guy“ liar there. he forgot an up, and turned ma caught her to his Mart. Nell dt-rllnl. my own little Nelly." It seemed that her lips were cold. and that she did not want him. it seemed tliatscI'nt'wIlfofrua'n lIIlIII.llHl!lI!hV0!I|flI1II.|Fs- ‘ IS TEA TIME ‘s . fz '°- noon 6" Drink .1?!’ than TEA for Vifalibv.’ thing secret that he could not tear down. “Why. what is it " he asked. ('I‘¢fBe Continued.) LONG RIVER WOMEN'S INSTI- '.I'D'.I‘E The June meeting of the Long River Women's mstituto met it the home of Mrs. Herbie Paynter with 16 member and five visitors present. The meeting opened in the usual way, The minutes of the last meeting were read and corrected. It was decided to hand the D1- slituie money over to Harry Payn- ter to get some shinglu for the hall. It was reported that the District W. 1. Convention is to be held at Malpeque, July 3rd, and that a number on the program is expect- ed from us. Mrs. Andrew Johnstone (Jr.) and Mrs. Donald Campbell were ap- pointed delegates to the Annual Convention. The School Committee reported that there should be more sand for the sand table and that the school should be scrubbed. Five volunteers said they would do the SL1 bbing June 23rd. Mrs. A. Brown said that James would get the sand for the table. The Sick Committee reported "that two received fruit. It was moved. seconded and carried that the fruit bill be paid. A letter of thanks from Mrs. B. J. Pmfltt for fruit was read by the secretary. The new committees for next I month are: Sick, Mrs. Nelson Mac- Leod and Mrs. Heath Campbell; Program. Mrs. Andrew Johnston: and Mac Found; Lunch, Mrs. Hed- ley Paynter, Mrs. B. J. Profitt and Eva Paynter; July sec.. Mrs. An- drew Johnstone; house of next meetlrls’. Mrs. Donald Campbell's. Mrs. Donald Campbell reported that she returned the library books. It was then decided that the sec- retary-'I‘rea.sul'er pay her the post- age'I‘he Institute than planned that they would treat the school child- ran with ice cream. Evelyn Found. Alma Payntcr and Mrs. Ernest Dunning were appointed on this committee. The next roll call is to be an- swered by “A Weed that Bothers Me Most." “ The progmm consisted of a ques- tionnaire on sel1ool.1"air and Beau- tification of school Grounds by Mrs. Allan Campbell; a reading, {Little Things," by Mrs. Oliver pay-nter; and a. reading on cut- worms by Mrs. Murdock Macneod. The collection amounted to $1.31!. The meeting closed by sinking the National Anthem. Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making The young girl, the miss and motlicu can indulge in numbers of darling frocks of this type. She need scarcely worry whether cot- ion, linen or tub sill: may be chosen. Why not have one of each? such a. dress calls for the min- imum’ of material. and as for the maklng—well see for yourself — it's child's play. Cotton prints as pique. chintz. seersucker, dotted swiss, chsiits or bright mcnotcnes in shantung, lir- en-llke wave, crash, etc., are perfect mediums. style No. 1797 is designed for siz- es 14, i6, 18 years. 36, 38 and 40- lnches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards of 39-inch material. Price of PKITERN 15 cents in stamps at coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. -«nu.--e--ye---. No. 1797. Size Name __..._.__..__..._..___ street Address ._._._._————.-:———-—-——-— Clty Etato WANDERERS’ PROFIT WOLVlilRJ~mlviPl‘0N, England — A record proiit of $88,950 was made by Wolverhampton Wanderers. English Football League club, last year. Transfer fees lietted the club more than 390.000. leaving the club free from debt. Dorothy (aged nlne)—Every one tells me I look like you, mother." Motlier—Well, dear, and aren't you pleased? Dorothy: "I suppose so. but ‘id like to be creditcii with I little or- iginality-selected. KEEP FASHIONAHLE Pail. imp.-“Colours Gloves This summer the fashion is wuhablo¢lcneuInsriotofcol- orl HI!WGl!M¢IIO|IlC]Ql"I“ white gloves and give them jut the Pub colors you wuitawlth Tlniaul Use Tintex, too, for you colorful dress-soeeaorlen — and for all faded apparel and home '7! WI1H Tintex IINIS \\in |)\|$