--ff *gl* ` IEE GUARDIAN ' A i 7 y ._ ____ A_ - _ _._....._ , ~ - , _ ,` _ _ _ _ __ __ i . , I) . _ \y_ _ T V _ ..-- ».~..._. . ..,... , .l It is a secret-a dreadful secret-u . and friend husband mngt not knew. iii/nf 'V 7710 Big ‘Value ir\` i F LU U R . '_-l - " ' L ié"*i-~f.€i:=‘-..- '--'~‘ ` F f ' ,;_-=;\\ / \ ///'0i{»;\\C L’ /~V(\\ \\\ in ¥ @ lllf/ ._ A Q3 - _ ___ - ‘ M' ' " lieve to he the badges or radicalism. PLACE on your table, bread made of “REGAL FLOUR" and s_ee how your family will like it. The test of the table is the supreme test. The St. Lawrence Flour _Mills Co. Limited MONTREAL i . .,\., it Looking Glass L 1 ay svs1.YN Nason `| i Bo many miladies ¢ Radlcllllm hlrlll \ l ly parade for the (Umm 1/" Padfes ` They just wear radical dresses with to the coast gf./Wm Scotia Canadao Uawrfre Ly-_ Through the _ If milady would be a radical, let bd be a radical. It's part of the trend ef ‘ the times to have ‘ liberal ideas and plans for reform- ing the world. But- _ ' Here is. who!! the rub comes in. of radical " twist feel they must en- force their radi- calism by freak- iah .behavior many women'l heads and, in- stead of lighting actively for the cause, they mere- cause. So it happens that a crop of cigarette-smoking, bohbed-hair females has sprung up of late, with talks about new ideas, the vote, free verse and divers other sub- lects. Bat as for doing things, these women have no time for that. They, are too busy haunting what they be- mannish collars and ends, and,learn how to blow smoke rings at afternoon {teas. These occupations leave them i no time for action. So they forget the real parpen 'of ' ,the ideas they claim to believe ia. i en who do not smoke and do not dret l #_ `-‘Z \'~|i'(~i `. 1 Timé leans , ,-f~ - , , "5 ‘ no waistcoat calls for a cellar, so. :l_\)l»é,i’/1,, -5 ' ,\1!`\"<§f,=` `,f/, , l ,.ulJ.r `_. . i -_-.5 nil ` ` ' /\ _ fr;-.gee Ya . V el ‘fi ; ~.j.T;¢--f.. »»3..».hniihiiaa1=21|f"""" ilifaliillfuiillliii _ 4 r ‘iv 9 i. 1' ui; .\_ 1,~f~,»....;.".;'."..“.-'f-.;¥'..'.’L‘.-»»'“i'~ . 1. 1_ ; if _.4 i' Jw f *'”' I _fr ’€%."I"’"f°”°‘;’L° Give aTime Saver Electric Washer for a Christmas present. it extends the good cheer of Christmas to every wash-day of the fycar. No other 'present Icon make wife or mother ‘so happy. See tl:e_Tim° (Save:-_~in our_»lore\ MAn|1'|Ms E|.zc-rmc co. |.To. so GRAFTON' sr. cHAn|.o'r1‘s'roN'w __..fP¢’“' The women who are really working for world progress are the quiet well- “l`ldlClllY." They are the good wom- l len who are bringing up their children \ properly, the teachers, the woman iyvritera and business women. The women 'who are too busy with their work to have time for parading aro- ths women who are making the world better and cleaner. i - So discard your cigarettes and trou- serettes, and get to work, if you would lachlevo something worth while. lSENSiBLE COLLARS ON MAT lfear of Return of High and Stiff- "\ Mllreiciailodliora ll Groilndlt, _ ng to Report. f 'Now that the war has taught women not only how to dress their feet, but how to use them, the new 'boxcoats are about to give a lesson in what to do about collars. For the very low col- | liars and open throats have been so I comfortable and almost universally f becoming that most women havb reso- lutely forgotten the days of high, tight- lttlng things of bones, wires and ' scratches which tried tempers and cor- l , tainly marred looks, notes s. _writer in the New York Sun. title boxeoat demands s waistcoat. ' here we are facing the solution ofthe collar question. And there is s new neck line ealied the- double line. It is achieved _ by placing one material above the other, as, for instance, a I per line of blue georgette over the» There is no fear of the ati!! little boned and wired collar returning. -there is no doubt about that*-but ii: I All of the Red Cross workers, the 1 Y. M. C. A., motor corps girls and oth- , er hard-working women so persistent-_ ! ly demanded this sort of collar that it l seems to be the mark 'of eiiiclency, | and well-dressed women have avoided | the other, at least in working honrsrl Te the rest of us, though, triila an . . very dear, also _very_ becoming. if---l1_1l-4 STUNNING SPRING M0 f C Ei -I in .lr voun wir: aouonr voun moans Hana < . ke them with the i'¢i,\‘;wxl1e`iiygeBnigat you are smok- mg the vary highest quality of tobacco. All our cigars are of tested worth. long lilies, Hu: vanna, Porto. Rico and oniea tm We assure YW ot satip- factlon and a saving ill YOU? more hill LAMBROS Bii0S i 1. Very ohio is this hd, latest spring ,medeiq IH ______..___.___. with Music or _ Musical Instrument Because the very thought of you, Makes music in my mind, Pray let me ,hare the music true, .<»f,.. \ v a J ..h».¥T.. ` ~.' e. ° ¢ .¢//}» ..||\i§‘§ _' in] \\\\= 5/ " 'rf/I ‘l ~ a 1 . i Howe the Apple Got into the Dumpling -is a small mystery compared to how the maraschino cherry is made to float inside its chocolate coating. To one who has neyer seen it done, it may Well seem difficult-if not impossihle. Let us tell` you how we _doit. L- First of all we malte a delicious hoiléd cream. This is. then placed in heated containers to lceep it soft. The maraschino cherries are next examined to see that each one is perfect. Then one at a time, the perfect cherries are picked up with a forl<, dipped into the cream and laid aside to set. The second stage tal»' .lm ‘ "’:. S ‘ This win do very '”"°ly :or the creat. , ' 1 1 ~'»' .. 1,] i - . W ;/ and la the hainr a aught eeuai- or :aa | ` < _,,,..;~‘;..; gen P , hi-ecaao aalshes on the couu-lass hom- _ ‘ 'Mi l - &:§: ,,»9_ mf °¢ fi" “ch ; 'Ulf ""i/"“"' 4 . str. 1.3- Again, the straight, round military, ' "-.,`W‘_ ' ' 5.30:* ,T collar which so often appears on these .W 'F °" lime coats calls for no further finish, as often it is braided in the moat mlli- ' tary effect or made of ilne velvet or | brocade; or. again, s. band 'of far high , ' and straight arouiid, something like i the long ago "chin chin" things. _‘ ' __ melts, and-prestol-the cherry floéts. ‘ As forthe result--well, you must taste Neilsonis lvlaraschino Cherries--they are more luscious-- §_.~;-" we were ahout to say--than mother’s apple i .vsstee of dark blue lfrocade has an up- rv ./ . EN dutnplings. ' ` f",~ ".>_~ci'~. " 5*) .5 ' J vilnonh ’ However, the high collar is very smart l ll Il ,ms wonderful m°m“t,°M_ ,,. ._ The Chocolates that are Different ' r ~ U _ -----e 'hcl-...__ "1 l dl SONGS OF THE SEA Old Jock paused for a monent from his arduous labor of back slicing _a hemp strop. iE»agerly he relit his ob- stinate clay pipe. A smile ot’ satisfac- tion shone over his weather beaten old face as the smoke came anew in icloudsfwrites A. VB. W. Curran Reedy, in Bllghty. London. Without n moment's hesitation he resumed his work with amarlinspike and neatly whipped strands. At the some time' he commenced yet another oi those queer rhythmic jargons of his old sall~_ ing days? As a boy Jock roamed around the Pacino in an old’ American wind- Jammer. He retains much that is characteristic of clipper days. No word speaks in praise of is an encyclopedia of do not interest him -he can spin a yarn for both dog' watches an every yard of canvas from the main skysail to the flying jlb. He fswears by the old sailing ships. Jock's :particular weakness ts for He must know thousands of for he rolls them off un- verses lfrom the ‘Book of voice ta cracked, and is probably betrays lit- .But as he haull-i‘ or does some some eifort is essen- a wheesy chorus instinctively from his wisenod throat: never down Limo wry, mayb, - ' ~ " ~ rivers. so they say, tauti. ~ Lima port Wil! The sweeteatilayeat) (brightest) I could dnd llnwn 'Lima way! _ lic has songs [or every occnsion. Movement inspires him to it fresh outburst. Most of his repertoire is crudely comic, n little oi’ sentimen- tal and some quite dismully maudlin. When spoken to considering his chonties old Jock relupses into n uu- communlcatlvc mood. l-le thinks we are poking inn at1him. The roam-ve of some old seamen is sphinxlike. Occasionally n few bare fletuiis will half unconsciously escape him. but only ns a -concession to it stolid per- severance. ' 'Every lline oi’ his queer jnrgons' smacks 'of the salt seas. The bride buffets ln the ambling gait of them. He has anatches of song more or if-as appropriate to every Joh aboard ship, from working-a capstan to “bowsin|;" a halliard taut. We sternly set onrl faces against ribald laughter slmplyd to hear the wheezv old relic of by-* gone days "get under way" with n new inspiration. ' _ In hi, unctuous way he is funnier than Coquelin or Dan Leno. . In a particularly confidential ‘burst he recently related that -in the old sailing days of his youth-"when seamen were seamen”-each crew of working hands was led by n clianteyman, who sang a line or two or recitative,: haphazard nonsense, to which the tolling seamen added a ,so-called chorus. Jock nssured ua that a chauteyman he once knew who hailed from Florida could keep a crew singing for an hour without once ro- peating himself. Old Jock rates him side with Capt. Kidd and Paul Jones theer'a nothing about it on his papers a step higher than Nelson, side by We sometimes think that he once shipped under the Jolly Roger-but Old Jock is 'qstill singing. His voice floats down from 't s boat deck ‘Er Skippefs name was Auron Rugg, ‘His lmao wus ripe ma-hog-any! Aye! Aye he loved a well-illled jun, iHe'd keel a nigger an' string a thug; But he wasnt t c chap to log nny. Jock is going ahead with his quaint nonsense nt n rute o' knots. The sca road is thronged with ol-l sorts of queer folk, but Jock is thc qucerest lo bc encountered in ln.\\l-_v a mile. A SAVING IN FUEL For summer may bl- nccompllslicd in winter l‘y trying the following lcnvo tim vinflcrs outdoors a apo where they will not be objectionable to plan: Alter sifting thc ashes in winter' in t the eye. and allow them to be thoroughly cleaned by exposure to rain ani snow. ln the spring add them to me une coai»bin sittings, m-ixingtlieln thoroughy. The cindera prepared in this way will probably last a medium-sized family a good part ot the summer whenever hot ilroa are required. The idea la given especial- ly tor those who do not hive las- stovos.-C. Von H. . To "Her Wih a Pain oi Gloves; lou 0 little thumbs. l can but wish Since vyou, unchld. 'l`cii her-but 'eI¢5iteI¢5K9¢5K1¢3|€!e5|€9¢5|€1¢9|5io9KUel(F6 *ggpgap-mm;aaqgneszakiaaawkseskarikseiisriks above' oft to E. R. BROW-' A 146 Richmond St Chartottetown . Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness asia Glass insurance at .Lowest rates. » V Good Stroag,fStock Cospalilt , , . ine.. I , ,£130 it 1,-‘1 = . -,tg ,irq-x' .:y',_¢_» 1 ef :'i_.;,yl, .U _-`»~"' ;'. .. L iiriil;-` if 3 ,- .. 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