1-", "" (qozniiontacute f~ appeings 0' .The Week Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret and a party of eight persons, last wreak attended the New York ballet company's Per- formances of "RDIIIOO and Juliet" and "Or. Stage" and later went to the hotel Savoy where they made their first appearance to gether in a public restaurant and glanced to the music of a rhumba and. O O O The Royal family cracked two longstanding stcial precedents this week by going to the theatre 0n Bank Holiday and sitting ii‘. the balcony insload of occupying the traditional family box. The King and ueen and the l-‘rincess- es Ellzarbot and Margaret and other members of the Royal house- lholcl attended the eveninq perfor- mance at the Strand Tfffllfé of “Fifty-Fifty”, a popular farce on a labcrmapital theme, starring Harry Green, an American comed- ian. Heretofore ‘.t had seen the Royal family's custom :0 spenu holiday quietly. foregoing all public functions and, appearances. o . . Mrs. Bruce lvlarr who his been spending several weeks wrth her brother Mr. Harold Messervy and Mrs Messervy (‘tiring the critical illness or her aunt Miss Mary Wade left Thursday on return to her home ln ElmirauOnt. Mrs. tDr.) Smallwood “U15 host- ess at a luncheon party at the Charlottetown Tuesday for visiting friends. ' . t Mrs. 1".A. Stewart Jones enter- tained at a most enjoyable summer tea at her home North River Road, ‘Thursday afternoon.‘ Miss Mary Gayle, Montreal and Miss Cherry McGregor, New Glas- gow are the guests of Miss Audrey DeBlols at her summer home. Kep- pooh. O 8 O Misses Jean and Doris Gill. and Miss Muriel Weeks entertained at’ the form-refs h-cme Monday in honor qf Major Genera: Ernest G. Weeks and Mrs. Weeks of Ot- taw-a. It was a reunion o.‘ lntimnte friends and a dclightfu: social evening was spent in happy remin- isclng. O O O Misr Margaret Lawson of On‘.- gary, Alberta vhc has been vislfi- fng her brother Mr Jock Lawson and lVI.rs. Lawson. left m. return Tuesday after being widelv enter- tained. s o o Mrs, G. l. Henderson has left on return to Windsor, Ont. and plans stopping er. route to visit. with her son Homer Hcndersnn and Mrs. Heriderson - Mt. and l/Irs OM. Williams. acovzmpanied bv their tlaughtcl‘ Iltdiss Mary have returned from a visit to Mr. Williams sister, Miss Claire Williams, Fredericton, N.3. -. - Mr. and Mrs. Russell o! Halifax are the welgome guests nf their - son . . Russell and Mrs. Russell, Prlnceft. Mrs A. T Vinnicombe, St. John, arrived to spend c. holiday at Dalvey. . ' MI‘. and Mrs. E F. Green, South Port Connecticut, are vacationing at the Charlottetown I-Iotcl. Mrs Green is a sister of Mrs. I-I i-I. 511w, Upper Frmce. Street. The tea hostesses at the Tennis Courts this afternoon will be Misses Meir: I-Illlion and Helen Dower. O O O Dr. and Mrs Lawrence Burpee Ottawa, have left on return after spending several weeks visiting spots of interest. o.n the Island Miss Helen Oookson of Plainfieltl New Jersey, arriviad by plane Wed- nesday night on a visit- to her mother Mrs Cookson and her aunts the Misses Hodgson. If r b Household Scrapbook F By lfoberla Lee é Baking Bread When making home-tirade bread. care should be taken when placing in the oven that aha pan does not must. the sides of the oven. or uu l" bread will not bake evenly and will t in unshapely loaves. l T‘ ’ rclol-hing Silk tmderclothing will iron per- fectly if it is folded when dry and wrapped in the center of the bun- lle of sprinkled clothes. It will ab- wrb lust enoush link Strainer: Wash the sing strainer after each ‘ meal. When neglected it is attrao ive to mice and roaches and also Siva the kltohen an unpleasant . macaw norms OPEN T0 PUBLIC Ehglan Major and lidrs. 11.8. Chandler and their two da- hters. Connie and Carol, returned on Wen- neadgy after sperding two weeks in New Brunswick and Nova Booth. Mrs. Chandler's niece, Miss Yvonne Kinley of ltiiddle Musquodoboit. accompanied ‘hem home and will be their guest for two weeks. . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Auoion and interesting children Nancy and Peter, left on return to Halifax after spending a holiday in the city, guests :\t the Charfottetown Hotel They ‘Nero accompanied by Miss Marion Doyle of Halifax who visited with her brother lvir. Jr. Doyle and Mrs. Poyle, 55 Fitzroy. Mr. and Mrs Harry Jenkins. NY. are visiting in the city, the guests of Mr Jénkins’ mother, Mrs SR Jenkins. - O O I Mrs. J D Stewart. Ottawa is the guest of her son Col. J David Stewart and Mrs Stcwart. I - o o Mr nr-l Mrs J M B. McFad-t yen, Edmundston, N B are spend-t ing a two weeks vacation at Stan- hope Beach. u . Mr. and Mrs Cyril Arsenault have as their tvrlrome guest Mrs.‘ Florence Meredith of London“ England. Mrs. Meredith also VlSll-l ed her son Commander Ralph Merc- dith at Dartmouth. N S. . . s Mrs. Esther Lrwis. international representative of Beta Sigma Phi, Kansas City, Mn left Wedni-sdiy for Sydney following a :lolightful weekend in Charlottetown» This was Mrs Lewis" first visit to the Garden Province and willie here she was the guest of different sorority members for delightful drives to the outstandin; beach-a and the Anne of Green Gables country. On Sllltfiiiy Mrs Morton Dew entertained at the tea hnu: in her honor and Mrs Lewis left the province with many pleasant memories. O O O The illnes of firs. Charles Mc- Kenzie of N-zrvtown in the P E.I Hospital is deeply regretted by her many Charlottetown friends - o a (formerly Mrs. T M Barton Helen McEachen) and children Nancy and Colin nI North Bill2ri.-.\| Mass. are visiting in the city. the. guests of Mr and Mrs J.J. Cor.- nolly, North River Road. I s - - Miss Beryl ltIarDonald draught-f er of Mayor B Earle MacDonald, and Mrs. MacDonald has as ha‘. house guest her class mate Mir-s’ Gornhe Dumone of Lunenburg. N . s - - , Many frierds n! Mr. Harry Brown will be pleased to know that he has returned home after being a patient for thine weeks in. the Charlottetown ‘ Hospital. . - lvlrs James litgs, California en- tertained with a dinner party Sat- urday evenir-g m honor of her brother-in-lar: and bride, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Inks Mrs. lugs was‘ Mis Anna Mccannell of Lorne Valley, Prlrce EXDVBIG Island. Oov-l ers were laid ror eight including] the honorees, Miss Florence Inga. Mr. and Mrs Forrest [ngs and. daughter, Susan and host hostas. 'I‘he newlyweds nlan to make their home in Downcy, Cali- fcrnia. one Mix Helen Agnew is spending .1 week's holiday in Cardigan, tlze guest of her uncle Mr. William Agnew and Mrs. Agnew. - - Miss Nora A Harper, R. N has arrived home from Mon-real .t. spend a holiday on the Island with her family and friends Miss l-tzrpsr raduated from tne Royal Victoria cspitai Training School for Nurses last Spring and has slme that time been on the staff of the Royal Victims Montreal Maternity Hos- p ta . Better English D. C. Williams \--,»vv-v\ 1. What is wrong with this sen- tlence? "Our work is nowhere near one." 2. Mist is the correct pronunc- iation of ucletrs"? 3. which one of these words l| misspelled? Irascible, an. 4. What does the word ‘lnvetm- ate" mean? 5, What is I word beginnlru with ve that means "pertaining to . ..-, 5pm‘ ANSWERS 1. Say, "Our work is not Early - . L ... 2 .._. n“ H“ newt a u in me un- flgst syllable-la u bl a s , accen first sy a e. - . Isinglass. 4. Confirmed in a habit. b "He is an inveterate smoker." "He is an inveterate idler." 5. Vernal. quired by the National Trust and is open to the public. Built of local stone, the house is noted for its panelli and emboss- Aug.1.‘—- o ,builthy _ Ihaipebetweenlfiiiland ahdinthehlndsofhisdes- until IflLhlsbeenao- ed plum‘ work. and ts east front, where Nine Worthies stand in nlcher. Rooms are be furnished with valuable relics luding a James I royll bedstead. ear Brus- sels tapestries and Romney. s. NI and l iation; poflfltg by Anne supposed Always Anothe. Spring Adelaide qllmpllllel XXII Arizona, to Anne, was limply unbelievable. It was such e con- tradiction towering mow- capped peaks. massive canyons. quiet blue artificial lakes and canals, lovely fertile valleys, and then the long white roads twist- rng through the whining sands over the flat hot lalns of desert that stretched as at and wide as the "ye could see. It was, as Gil’! aunt had raid, a land a: far removed from civill- zaticci as one could find, and yet holding civilization within its gasp. Ii. was, as Anne had hoped. the one place in the world that made her come alive. She could feel that slowly healing process taking place within her, that re- awakening. The painful and frightening awareness that David was lost to her forever was dim- inishing; not only David. but all that on which she had built and planned her life. that something within herself that she had held on to. her faith and pride. Per- sonal equations, love and hate, triumph and sorrow. pride and fear, shriveled into nothingness in a country so magnificent. What would it matter in another thirty million years that a girl tamed Anne Ashton had been hurt. that she had thought that hurt matter- ed? She was made humble instead of resentful, peaceful instead ofte- belllous. If she could not yo: be grateful, at least now she sic-sept- ed what had been and knew it be- yond her power to resist or quest- lon what was to be “You've lost that peaked lock," v Miss Tracy informed her. "It's this desert air, clear as a .rout stream. and the sunshine and the long rides-there's nothing like the outside of a horse for the inside of a man, you know—and the quiet like a prayer at night." “And Penlta’: cooking!" Anne laughed. "Don't forget that." An ol Mexican couple. Peplta and Sabas. and their daughter Neonlla. were the only house scr- vants at this time of the year. There were ccw hands and-lterdz- men. a few Indians. The ranch covered forty square miles. ‘There were any number of out buildings, big bars. cattle sheds. barracks and mess halls, and what seemed like a scattered village of smell guest cabins for ln season therc- were sometimes from fifty to a hundred guests. Both Miss 'I‘racy and Anne were still ln riding breaches-they had ridden twenty miles that (lay!- and had decided not to change for dinner. Replete with Peprttfs fam- ous cooking, drugged with mount aln air. weary with the dellgtt- ful fatigue of sheer physical ex- ertion. they were a5 content as two purring kittens. Thev. sit curled up before the six-foot fire- place in which logs had been laid and lighted, as the nights were cool after sundown. “You can stand a few extra pounds," Miss Tracy said. "I can't see why girls want to keep so scrawny these days. Now when I was a girl, if I do say so myself, I had a figure that would take any man's eye." She gave her knitting a little poke with her needle as if to stab home the certainty of her remark. "Tell me." Anne asked on an im- pulse, “were you ever in lnve, Aunt Bobby?" They had become almost as good "pals" as Giles was with his aunt, and Miss ‘Pracy had insisted that Anne must all her “Aunt Bobbv." "I-Imm. . ." Barbara ‘Tracy count- ed off a row of stitches before st answered. "Was I ever in love? What, a question! Certainly I was in love, A half dozen timer. I ex- pect to be in love a time or two m again before I pan on into a bct- ter world, my dear. I'm centenarlan yetl" "But I meant really in love- with one man." "It was so real I thought I'd never get over it," said. "Would you believe it? I took to my bed for four months. I ‘vent about in a coma for almost m- other four. Then suddenly I snapped out of it and found I couldn't kill myself off like that. no matter how I trl-ed. People don't die of love-that's so much bunkum, my dear." "What happened to map you out of it?" Anne asked. "What happened? Why. I fell in love again, of course!" "But I don't want to do that. I don't want to love anyone ner- agaln, leave myself open to be lhurt, humiliated. . . ." "Bunkuml" Min Tracy miffed. |"You were made to love and be loved, my deer. The but thing you can do l‘: fall in love again as ulckiy as you can.‘ th one of the handsome cow- boys around here?" Anne asked, her grey eyes twinkling; "Some of them are andsomc.’ tMln Tracy's eyes twlnkled, too. "In their chaps and boots, plaid shirts and kerchiefl. bit: rom- tbreros. You might practice on lOfll. But I'd nu gent .for perman- ency, someone e so if I may, my dear." "I luppou you rnnn 02m?" Anne laid. "You could do worse." his aunt raid complacently. Her needles flew back and forth with amazing ' ‘i r-r the it awn . "I had rapidly. cute fiickln from ‘fer a short silence. “Posted from hing flreligh letter i New York. Asking If m might come f’ out and pay us a little visit-with your liermiulorl. my dear." ' "My permission. . . Jhw Yorkl" it was surprise that brought the warm glow within her brunt. "I . . .1 didn't know he could get beck lo soon." "lfo beengone six weeks." Min ‘n I" ‘m’ M» mam-ma w» m» m fi'.s..".a""":.r'tir.‘r. at: ou take the name attitude I do. w. M“ (3501. ‘F, “m” 4o mm hat it wnm't necena , fer Giles “m u". puufoffigh m“. i", to nk perrni-ulon cf anyone. I|- m“ Mm“ 7 ' rpeclally since this hop s to be ‘ h n ranch. He's always n eruy about the wide open spacer. so his father deeded it to him when ‘is was twenty-one. I not him a wire. Giles. I mean. He'll probably be here tomorrow. "tomorrow!" Anne's voice sounded rather faint. even to her ovm earl. or» t» at...» ‘lot l‘ Lasting from youth straight on. Aunt Bobby‘ llel t a ," she added nf- m’ ii me S'Side . After Busy Operatic Season Ellen ’s Diary ly an Island Farmer’: Wife James must have continued to in touch with the vague com- t5 or aha wind about k la _ the ause, even after we reured last night. For it seemed as though I had scarcely left off admiring the play of moonlight through the stirring loaves of the sllvt-r birch, when all at once dawn nsd er- rived and James remarked bright- ly: "It's all overcast, Ellen- and loads to be taken off the wagons st Rob's". It was early then, so early that the cream-mick had not come to the n-ill to ick up our can, which is among t first of the load. "Rut never you mind rising Ellen" James said, slipping a suspender into place ‘I can get a bite for myself this morning." This lovely suggestion led mg then to describe in detail, the exact laces where he would rind food or the meal- about dlIilF-Z-TOOIII, cellar and pantry. t Dear James. I blessed him in my mind, and then turned away from the light of the WlPdOW thc better to seek repose. "El-leni" he‘ called presently, ir. a muffled voice from the distant dlninE-YOOT" “is this all t. bread there is?" "No!" l called lustily "there's another loaf '1 the cell-zr" Funny how sounds are determined to rise. while words are supposed to fail. "Where?" James came to the foot of the stairs ‘.0 a=k "In the cellar’ . 1 repeated, Timers would, as a mat-l fer cf course, be a trail of crumbs. here alui there zhat even I cou.d; read And than remembering other, probable mlslLps, I ca-led: "'13. Gladys Bell Owen, operatic soprano, whose home is in Sum- mcrside. She is the (laitgllter 0f Mr. and Mrs. G. \V. Bell and she is about to visit them for a rest and vacation after an active New York season during which she was stage (l-ircctor 0f the Geliing Opera Group production at the Brabazoti-Plaza Theatre. Gladys Bell Owen will return to New York early in Septem- ber to supervise a new series of operatic production at the Bra- bazon-Plaza. Moulding of several opera excerpts into a. single performance is musically, artistically and in p0int of siagecraft a very difficult task» The Prince Edward Island artist's success has been highly praised by New York critics. LiVingaKLeiSure. e-TIIVIE '5 REALM- i RESIN KEPT IN SECTS Copal. a form of resin. is used for varnish making, but ‘.0 the entomologist it hns a different use, in that insects of past ages frequently have bem found 1m- bedded in the product in a perfect stale in preservation. CI-IECKERBOARD STYLE INSPIRATION NEW YORK-Eta. noted design- er of "proportionate sizes," plBllS her vivid collection aroun a ser- ies of delightful chec rboard figures-both daytime and formal clothes lnspl-red by world-famous chess. collections. From the quaint little ivory, jade, and jewellsd gaming pieces, which have civen significance to the game of chess v A donrassrou I love old and changeless things That through the ages olden, Have mellowed in the heart of man More lovely and more golden. Meaning such things as rare old bells And chimes of other days, That still call men to worship And spell out hymns of praise. Meaning such things as evergreens That point up to the sky, Oh hush! stand close and listen To their soothing lullaby. ~ Meaning such things as oceans - o . Now grey and flecked with white. Now blue beneath a summer sky Or dark neath spangled night. sure to shut the e-cllar door Jamar" And turned mice more .o resume} my rest. It was .r ideal slate this: Perhaps ncvw that I had tag time. I might considn-in this semi-i wakeful state which invariably: courts thesub-cot-"clcus- the plot, of a book or short story. I would. name my heroine . But James‘ was not to be dismissed so easily: “Ellenl" he called "where did you‘ say I'd find the milk and cream?” left off inv Mrsonai interests. for the sake of Aiderlea and shout- ed directions. O I Then a perfect silent: reigned and sleep was again flirting with me when I heard‘ "Ellen, when you have finishing the milking, don't bother leitim the cows cut- we won't likely ha away lonu" And then the car rolled down hive drive- way. I overheard James tell a. visitor this evening in a proud tone "Yes, I was up early this morning. I got inv ow-n. areakfast. You know" ng went on "I never remember having to get znv own meals before Ellen came. I had to this morning so as to get off early to Rob's!" Which mggnt serve to point out to any bride, that contrary to her expectations that time will eventually erase certain begone delights from the mind of friend husband, never will the memory of those halcyon days of mother's c-zre pass away. l have .1 feeling that when this James of mine, finally reaches the state he sometimes descrzlres as "near ti: the end of my tether" and L: old and toothless and white-headed. he will still be able to pip‘: up in n quavery voice to tell me. "Ellen" he will say as he did remmiscerr. ly this evening ‘I can't mind om time when my mother was living that I had to get up and get my own breakfast" and to cvnphaslzrc the utterame "No! I do not! Olt wise disturbed the cows crd aftt-r for hundreds of years, Eta. with the skill and finesse of a great player. borrows a silhouette here. a line of drapery there. and spins them through a series of deft mov- es into a collection of enchanting clothes. Continuing to mirror the romance of chess, she grouus her lrne in "moves". ' Meaning such things as heady winds ' That pull and clutch and shr ll, Tugging at doors and windows And calling where they will Meaning ruch things as friend- ships rare Elms on Etiquette If you invite a girl to go to a dance, you must furnish the trans- portation, whether you have your HWH ialoppy or share the ride witn friends. When you get to the dance. arrange where to meet your partner after she has check- ed her wraps, so you will not get separated in the crowd. i ‘i? MEDIEVAL MOTIF IN ‘ ELABORATI SLEEVES NEW YORIL- In many colleen, ions there is a medieval motif‘ evidenced by elaborate sleeves with attached capeleta or huge. umbrella puffs above the elbow all heavily embroidered in gold Ind jewelr. The high jeweled‘ chccke neckline and the doublet iacket also are motifs |ugge|ti¢lg' hlawy! when knighthood was m: Eyes that are blue and smile at YOU. Or hazel eyes or brown. Meaning such thing: as love and horn e Parents add children dear, And all our cherished family That love us now and here. —Ed'rth Hallett. Silk gut used for fishing tackle is obtained from the silk glands of an insect closely related to the silkworm. Cook 's Corner Corn Syrup Spice Oaks 1% lifted cakg flour 2 tefigoons double acting baking WW3" need a 350 deg 1" own . . . 501K flklll, I‘ “aw” m‘ Pfflmre bread crumbs or cites and , %""P°°”u”m°n mo". our.“ melted butter over than, to“. y. “um” Hum" em to bring them into cont“; ,5 c“ m,“ a the m. mt in min; can» 9t cup dark com n n» “l '33‘ °' "'11P"! "m! WIN‘ 1% teefloou v a "1' M“? “d " - I44 h“ will 1 a cup vegetable altortenl '°,L"Y' Imam‘ " “m” 1k telliwon ted tmmndne °‘“'m°'°" ""4 "W"! In bak- 2 tablespoons rown sugar w.“ '41:!“ “Mn” P"! 0! 1 a“. unhnwh Mr an e in a moderate oven i sut flour onoe measure and sift ‘m 1 “m- "W" 1 hour- Rllsim. "imm- nut mute or all three may be added t th y... ...... ° smur- 1* r salt and spices. syrup, milk and vanilla. e; lemon stir just to soften. Sift in dry in- odimts. Add brown sugar. forci hrmrgh sieve to remove l necessary. Add V: clip of liqud to 08l- lllx until all flour is dampened thn but 1 minute. Add runaining liquid. blond and beet about 2 min- utellon .Bakelnlxex2incl\ all. it was only a snack that James had prepared for himself. when two loads were tucked .1 y in the hay-loft at ‘flu-D's end a damp- ness ar-i grev clouds hung about, the men returned to Altlerlea m time for James to Join me at breakfast. After. su er was, when a drying win tossed the Pond waters into wavelets and the afterr-Jon sun shone brilliantly we make an ideal combination for the haying, they were off again to Rob's This work was completed here this week. with the usual mows and lofts filled to the top and a slrug stack "in the bmk" up by the line fame. The yield exceeded James‘ expects-ions in. this season of a "fair to *.i‘.ddlin“' crop. If it was m; lot. for the most part to stay at the buildings I could visualze the delights of rid.- ing down along the road througiii the stumpfield, skating the maple grove, seated high on a. fragrant load of hay. We drove the horse‘ in the hay-fork on occasions anal gathered cherries one day with] eanie and Ksrmyn, in the gar- den in the precious period known as "between loads". James himself finds it difficult. to reconcile any minor intorest with the seasonal work at hand. One evening the yvillllllr ladies end Junie, much excited, spread the suppe table cf new hoards in the shade of the old birch and we enjoyed the meal amid pleasant and num- eurroundings A fat grey, me ‘clue r who had ptum to her guns; too long furnished the piece dc, resistance, she being truly a bird o’ pains. Pard and Mutt rot "the, crumbs". And July went far and taxman“ ' rtw..."'""* "Matti n a ugust s in to her place-sad a flock of back- birds congregated in the orc std, and held a session that can only have one sad gnegnlrig. And new borne to me softly in the urns o! the peaceful nicht. comes pluentl the Du, so wel- come to thou; yfilio labovr and are “"9" N“ n” heavy-lads ' with "the strain of \ toil-the fret of cue”-I-lis day- and ours-The sabbath. N“. Until Monday . . . Diary. ' Oood-nilht. ‘rams sour ' Addrel ‘I0 NUTS" NIH IA’! H0110 n ‘lfillblflfiurhlverythitng mfrorn 611v "WM fiinflrlll ......l.1..i"."i‘...¥.'.f fir‘: i" °' m "W" "'°°"'" ""4" fall and not only will ontrlch aérrmlfgnu‘; n'“':{°n"7£% plumes sway along city rtreetuat the cocktail hour, but the blllihlill lri will even wear them down- own to the office. . Iuthenmf all kinds will deck the more expensive hat: snd all colon will prevail from rophisrl- cated black to lush ink. and an official of Toron llhlon fn- dustry. "Tim-o w be a wide var-j ions. rLiteraftu re out. late at night, Mr. and Style Number sure to lute also you wish. r AUGUST 10, 1946 nmo<>vv<>osw~o~ e DOROTHY 01x, 3A YS— I Husband Material . ritltill 8pm Mm lackflres. Sorry Woman Finds 0n Gm) O1" GIRLS ask me by what signs and tokens they can teIIAwhetheFPa map i; good husband material or not. Well. daughters, picking out a husband is always o. chancy undertaking that may back- fire on you. for most fnen suffer a sea chwss if!" mflrrlkge and no wife knows until she has tried living with a husband whether she has gotten a household anlfl 0!‘ I d°m°m° 4W“- ‘ 5,111 md ,1; ma" m certain precautions that a llrl does well to bear in mind when she goes hmbend-hunting. For instance. she should concentrate on trying to find out what sort of disposition he has, for that is what she has to live with. day In and day out. It isn't enough for a man's manners and morals to be above reproach. Many a pillar 0g the church is a lousy husband. so don't marry my man until you find out whether he is going to h. “q to pt along with and mike marriage a pii i! of n Pllrllmy- om: WIIO muons Th“, pay more attention to a man's runny- hls having a Grecian nose. Domestic life is full Wm; you/want is a husband who can laugh off c1 marriage instead of raising rows over them. iage r .a man's appetite. If he is a dySW-ptlc. 315i? ‘lgeamfbiigefzdfilrslttrxh he ois strons 1°! die“ "id PM" “"1"! 8° slowe about the wedding bells. Stomach ulcers have wrecked more marQZQFf éfitfiy",{ff§,,‘if°fh¥f§§ unless you are hunting for trouble. y e e will have a whole husband. The most you will get is a 0:11“ Zr: or his interest and affection. Mother will have all the rest srxrid mile mas‘ you ever Can hgpg to be will be a humble slave trying to B1 hm“ for Mum and never succeeding 'in giving satisfaction. pnaon.‘ many a c3110“, boy, Th, boy who marries in his teens is t as llkel to lose his taste for his wife as he did for gooey ice cjrtfam sodasy Pick out an adult man for a husband who knows what he wants in- a wife ind 854736 l0 hi5 blfflam- h doesnw need Don't marry a man lo reform hlm- M5113’ m" w ° V“ refonning. No woman ever has been surgeon enough to put a s- baclcbonc inm a spineless manor to Illvlfiilfl I l"? °fi° m“ bu"! 9' go-getter. ‘ I , Don't marry for money. but dont curry "i? m" w“ “w” pfQVed that he can support a family. All the love talk about living on bread and cheese and kisses u hooey and the young tour!» who try it d l t th kissln part of the Infill!- wonDchFt emargy a mgn whose testes and habits dim’! Jib? will}! Vim"- Whether married couples coo like turtledoves or flsht like “whim dogs depends altogether on whether RWY like "7 4° ‘h’ “me l “'35 or not. For whether we think a thin! l5 “Sh! °T “m! depend‘ "W" ‘h th it is dish. v' ea ebostesslggr man wtho thinks everything he h“ is 1'19"“ 1W because it is his. and who brags about hLs car and his eitognand hi: gun- is a good bet as a husband because his wife will fall in o e earn category and he will boast of her perfections. d‘ Generally speaking. you wont go far wroni "h"! Y0" W: l jolly, good-natured. able-bodied mm for s husband and. H50" l - I hungry man who likes to est and who makes it worth-while for a wile m get up 5 good dinner. For. as a rule, such men are amiable. good providers and easy to hcusebreak. ‘ so mere you are, girls. In marriage there is no sure thing. Y0“ go into it at your own risk. bone than YOU d0 i0 of “p3 and downs and the little misadventures é Modern g Morning Smile ' Etiquette DIAGNOSED . Dr. Knowall: "You must not stay a, “an; l.“ Smith." Mr. Smith: "ls the night air bad for me. doctor?" when sending n. birthday or Doctor: "N0. it isn't that. It's Q‘ x kind m a per. the excitement after getting homo gfle"il“gocgdegxtpslggé m me 5w" that hurts you." SOME SPEED office, should the card be mailed or merely placed on this other PH" rat's desk? ‘ -—- to n m. When they met at lunch time Jim A- l" "i wmw“ m‘ m" °” - harms: at‘. '.<=>:..'..~-... .... “d 55$?’ “r "a Asith . a, n , . ‘I'm ‘t. .: r e nlti whenaboya neither digptplfgleiziilkinflovfiiizegthtgf 'N°' "m" h" ‘d '° “m? “n Quintana ti? street? a i Al.’ The girl should make the first move in speak. Q. May one ever be inquisitive? A. No; no nutter how many charms a person may possess. an in- uisitlvfL nunner will overshadow 3mm n "l-le got engag at the dance on Saturday. and they're getting mar- ried almost at once." u "Oh. are the banns up yet? "I'll sav they are. No more smok- ing, drinking or betting." little earn, and a few Iima beam with strips of pimmfo, to boiled potato cubes. Then cream in the double boiler. . How can I revive cut flowers’! A. They can ofton be revived by plunging the stems into boilina water. I CARD ODDITIEI There are 52 ctrds ln a full deck cf laying‘ cards. the number oi wee in a year. and the sum of all the card: in the four runs. plus one for the joker, is 365. the number of days in s year. Q. With what. should the lips of the invalid be moistaned? A. A bit of absorbent cation dip- ped in a solution of half glycerine and half lemon Juice is on of the ocst things for molstenlng the fev- er-narched lips of a patient. Q. HdW can I make creole pots.- toes? A. Add minced green pepper. a fNeedlecraft/l —F OR THE HOME?- IIIAOK IIIAIQI This insfore cm be made with a deep ‘ “ back, or a built upone. Either way is very and cornforlab e, and will give you ser- vice the your mun . No. 2652 is cut in sises l2, 14,, 18, 1s, 20, 40. 42 and 44. Sire Z5 requires 4 d: 35-inch or 396 yards and 2t: cents for PA which inc udes com iota sewing guide. Print en your um. Addr pin . 1B0 nelude Postal unit or lone number in your a n ‘dgtrigim P mm Departure t. flu Cthsrlottetown Guardian. those which usually appear in the fall." GINIIOU! IIVETQ Benjamin maxim made money from his invention. no lie heliwd the mould DO MD- uted to the’ while, andmréiilifl.‘ pmnu _