can; o er .3'69..AflEr..lf i‘ UEtOQM ..-...-nv<nev- ._._._..... ....9-.-_‘ . .s=r-\n|-..¢ ».¢, \ WIND PAGE/EIGHT r .. -,- . y 1 __£‘__..4';,. ‘ m»- "veg r», filfiijat thleilifcisliionables a Illultraicd Dressmalilng Lesson Furnished wru- Every Pattern 1 Annabelle Worthington "U" ‘ivfllrsa-w-vn "LHUH"'"1 w‘. _.; SCHOOL . DAYS Here's a new dress to start the mid-season school term that will have enormous appeal to ihc younger girl as Wcll as the college miss. -1t ofiers such excellent themes for contrasting colours and fabrics. . And isn't the wrapped closing with button trim attractive? The skirt, cut slightly circular, moulds the figure snugly through the hips. The bodice is slashed from the cen- ter-neck, and finished for closing under the bow tie. It's as simple as A. B. C. to make ft. And it takes but 2!; yards of 39-inch material with 1% yards of 89-inch contrasting for the miss of 16 years. Style No. 2558 may be had in sizes l2, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. .Brown angora wool jersey with vivid green Jersey ls "zry practical and. effective as sketched. The collar may be of the green shade or of white pique. The tie is brown crepe de chine. Deep vivid blue woolen mixture with plain grey woolen is another idea you'll like immensely, c—_;~:::—_ —_-;—_-r ———- xpcnsive For whitening the teeth and firming the gums, nothing is better than Salt-ask your dentist! Windsor Brando of Salt are pure, mild and pleasant to use. And Salt costs so little! Ke r Salt on your-Ta as well as in your kitchen. — .Windso ,..-.~ m v h," £33.19 S0 $011k: Induction Limited, (Windsor Maker: of Windsor Sail, Windnn Why huy- - - ._ _,.. ._..-_..'.,_ zsss ‘= i . A-é-‘Hir- M73121?- lt is also delightfully pretty car- rleci out in one fabric as Spanish ‘tile or light navy blue wool crepe Iwith a contrasting tie oi’ crepe silk. jAs for example, brown with the Eformer and vivid red with the lat- tcr. Rough Crepe finished silk, plain flat crepe and many rayon novelties are splendid for this model. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin meter-red.) Price of pattern 15 cents. ‘_.._._._.___._..__-__...__ No. 2558. Size . . . . . . . . . ...... --¢----|nu-.n|¢“ Name Street Address . . . . .....-------u---uuu.-.-» i... Clly State Success: It is grip and grit that conquer success, not alone the vi- got with which one takes hold of his task but also the doggedness mth which he holds on after he has taken hold. toothpaste a package of throom shelf, Qom/arpulluu... ‘THE ROMANQ OP SALT". “an ofnpodal ua for hi re Wearing The Canadian Press) "In-*_v;~vwvv-.\-v- -_ . @..... Furry Dishes when “such clcli- cious desserts can he prepar- - cd with f» . JELL powm-zn Nin Flavors 11m: carowN GUARDIAN . -.__. __ -. p Heist: ‘l, “a: Dau r ‘ o‘ ' Off” Mgr-g" Dorothy D11 ....,.. a Success \ Impwhl” ter Happily Married Will Resolve. First» to Let Her Alone, She Will Be (larc- ful Not to Disparage Her Son-in- Law Nor to Pity Her Daugh- ter, But Will Encourage And StrengthenHer to Face Life With a Smile , I have received a stranflfl 19”"- n l‘ “m” ‘ widow who” only child. a girl, is about m be rnlrriedrand the mother Saints grant“: she can do to FY0519“ h" dwsmers happiness and e p m rlage a success. ~ Well, the am, the blswt and "W mm m" poytflnt thing you can do is not to so to 11" Wm‘ her. Give the bridal couple a chance to make their adjustments to each other with no third party standing by to referee their fight-B. loft W themselves they will scrap and kiss and make up and no piirticular harm will be done, but with mother taking sides and urging daughter to Stand up for he: rights, what would have been a slight scrimmage, soon over and forgotten, often develops Magnetic Survey MONTREAL, Qua, April ‘L-(By The Canadian Pl'655)—TlZ6 results of a part of the extensive investiga- tion into geophysical methods of exploration were described in a. pa- per ou "Magnetic Surveys over Min- eral, Diabase and Artificial Dykea" by Dr. A. B. Eve and Prof. D. A. Keys, of the Department of Physics, McGi1l University, Montreal, at to- day's session of the annual meet- ing of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy hero. Field work in the Sudbury region, in conjunction with laboratory ex- periments, had shown that as a re- sult of recent improvements it was now possible to find a magnetic dyke of rock or mineral to map its dir- ection and dip with fair accuracy, and to estimate the approximate depth of the overlying soil, the electrical methods, as distinguished from magnetic surveys, could be used to distinguish mineral from rock dykes. This method of magnetic survey- ing was likely to be of great use in discovering and opening up mineral deposits that were concealed be- neath the soil. The method was simple and comparatively inexpen- elve so that large areas where min- erals were suspected to exist could be covered in a short time. Even with the comparatively crude mag- netic instruments available hereto- fore, a. number of important mines had been found, such as the Alder- mac in Rouyn and the Falcon- bridge and Lcvack at Sudbury, the paper said. HAMIPSHmE SCHOOL Standing of the Hampshire School for the month of March. Grade x.-1. Peggy Easter. Grade IX.-l. Mildred 'l‘rernere. Grade VIII 6r. 1. Lois MaoLeod. Grade VIII Jr- l. Phyllis Eastcn, 2, Verna Kitson, 3- Clifton Stewart, 4. Elmer Larier, 5. Annie Stewart. 6. Morris Kitson. Grade V.—l. Frances Lortcr, 2. Oeliu ‘Iroznere, 3. Heath Lartcr. Grade IV. Srd-l. John Edwards, it Margaret Larter, 3- Ralph Younker, 4. Alec Larter. Grade IV Jr.—1. Lawson ‘Pre- merv, I. Preston ‘Iremere, 3. Lois Younker, 4. Priscilla Stewart. Grade IIf.-1. Raymond Tremcre, 2. Alice Stewart, 3. Fulton Kitson, 4. Roy Stewart Grade IL-l. Borden ‘Iremerc, 2. Claude ‘lremerc, 8. Leighton Larter. 4. Alice Edwards. ll. Irving Tremere Grade I. Bra-l. Ora Tremere. _ Grade I. Jr.-l. Errol Stewart, 2. Willie Stewart. Perfect attendonoer- Mildred Tnmere, Verna Kitson, Clifton Stewart, cello. Tremere, John Ed'_ wards, Lawson Tremere, Pmsinn Tremors, Hilton Kitson. Borden Tremolo. n-vin: Tremero. Errol Stewart, Home M. Younker, Teacher'- DQGS OATUHING IT IN CALGARY GAIGARY, Alli, A1111 Y-(By — Twelve put your finger in her housekeeping pic. Let her work out her own sal- iodired Sail and Rcgnl Tabla Salt (hon manning) dogs and a number or cats have died from poisoning in Calgary while police continue a deicnnincd hurt for the rlayera. A number of valuable an'mals have been destroy- ed. ' Meantime, bands of maraudlng dogs are worrying residents of Og- den, Cull"! suburb, and police are taking atepc to eradicate the mam- nou. ~-r'.g‘. V.“ ~. . sAfi Salt Dlvhlorn) Windsor, Ontario o grftcasca from 85c to $10, at all good drug and depart-j meat stores. into a forty years civil war. Also, the presence of any outsider is o bar to the confidence that should exist between a husband and wife. Nothing is so calculated to make a young husband drop his love-making as to have to do it under an alien and a critical eye. Nor does any man feel inspired to open up his soul to his wife and tell of all his hopes and plans an daspiratlons with mother-in-law listening in. There is a time and a mood for tell- ing things and this passes if he has to put oi! all private conversation with his wife until mother goes to bed or they can shunt her off to the movies. Besides, a man marries a girl to get her of! to himself where he can monopolize her, and half the happiness of his home is spoiled if he and his wife can never have u meal alone or spend an evening alone or even take a ride without having mother parked in the back of the car. So, if you want your daughter to be happy and for her and her hus- band to grow close together, don't go to live with her. And you'll be happier, too, in your own room in a hotel or boarding house, because you will be independent as you could not be if you were an enforced guest on your ln-laws and had to be always suppressing your opinion and walking on eggs to keep the peace. Next, don't dissatisiy your daughter with her bargain. Don't be for- ever calling her attention to the faults and weaknesses of her husband. Perhaps he isn't anything to boast about, but such as he is, he is hers and her happiness depends upon her belief that she has drawn the head prim in the matrimonial lottery. The favorite indoor sport of thousands of mothers is picking on their in-laws. Never a fault or afel bio of the man and woman their daughter and son have married but they drag out and hold up for their children's inspection. They criticize John’: table manners and his pro- nunciation and his taste in dress a nd the way he talks and walks and sits until-they make Mary wonder what one ever saw in him that made her want to marry him. . Often it is mother who puts suspicions in he: daughter's mind by wondering what keeps John out so late at night and if he really is in conference as much as ho says ho ia and why he had to pick out that pretty blonde girl for a. atenographer and uo on and so forth. If you want to secure tho permanence of your daughter's home give her husband a boost instead of a knock. Don't depreciate him to-her. Sell him to her. Every woman looks at he: husband through her mother's eyes, and mother can make her sec him u a Prince Charming or as a. flop or a. villain. And don't over let your daughter tell you about her husband's faults. Any woman can turn an ant hill into a mountain with her tongue. ‘ Don't adopt the martyr pose toward your daughter. Don't pity her because marriage doesn't come up to all of her expectations and because it isn't th: combined love ldyl and picnic aha thought it was going to be. When she comes weeping to you don't mingle your tears with hora. Laugh at her. Shame her. Buck her up. Don't "poor Mary" her. Tell her sure, marriage is a. hard Job, ifuli of work and worry and anxiety, but so is everything else in life that is worth doing and having. Of course, - uab ’ are unreasonable and selfish and full of cusoedneu and hard to stand, but lust remember that she isn't any angel herself and that John has to put up with Just as much in her as she does in him. Naturally, children tie a. woman down and they are a. lot of trouble and call for incessant care and sacrifice, but which one of them would she like to give up and wouldn't the world be u. pretty sad old place without them? And tell her that you didn't raise your daughter up to be a quittor and a coward and that you expect her to have the strength and the courage to stand up to whatever blows life hands her and take them on the chin with a smile. And, lastly, if you want your daughter’: marriage to be a success, ' keep your hands ofi.’ it. Don't interfere between her and and her hur- band. Don't meddle with the way she brings up her children. Don't vation. It is the only way. DOROTHY DIX. lv Appointmonlio “Lh ,. MAKE THE LOVABLE O other erfume in all the world can greet you with the tenderness and rcfreshin touch of the Yardley vender. In 162 years none has pre- oumedtotalreito lace u F aahion’: t- loved companion; and none ever will. Make the Yardley Lavender: your perfume-for the solace that it brings when you are fired and for the fascination that in Yardle 'a'-alone. In atop- pcrod ttlca at 35c-—and YARDLEY LONDON Toronto, Now York, Plrll YARDLEY The Mother Who Wishes to See Her Dough; A MorningSmile . Correct -—ri-— Deacon Perkins (interrupllnl; ser- mom-Pahson. Ah wishes yo’ would give us de definition of "persever- ence." . Par-son Jones-Brudders and sis- ters, Deacon Perkins done axed mo to define perseverance; it moons fustly, “to take hold"; SCCOHdlg, "t5 hold on"; thudly and lastly, "to neber levae go." The Power Of The Microscope MONTREAL, Que. April ‘L-(By the Canadian Pressl-A simple method for determining the nature of some opaque minerals with the microscope was described by Prof. F. F. Osborne of the geology otai! of McGill University, Montreal, in an address on “Plane Polarized Light in the‘ Microscopic Examin- ation of Ores and Minerals" at to- day's session of the‘ annual meeting of the Canadian Institute of Min- ing and Metallurgy here. The trick played on a beam o: light by particles of the various mineral substances placed m m Path had long been used by scien- tists to identify these substances, he stated. The microscope, in the hands of skilled mineralogiats, would identify almost any of the minerals that were transparent, but minerals that were opaque, and among these were many of the moot valuable minerals of commerce, had heretofore presented a. difficulty, Prof. Osborne said. In his paper which could be only understood by specialists in this line, Prof. Osborne described a. simple method he devised for ascertaining, by means of a microscope, the nut- ure of some of thou opaque min- erals. Peters Road and Vlomlty The fine weather with so many noticeable signs of spring - goon, many of our migratory land long- aters, the ubiquitous ozow- wheel- ed vehicles placing turmeri- wero all rudely interrupted by the advent of another snow storm April 4th Ind 5th, Mr. MacDonald Johnston, Peters Road, has in captivity o. fine lpe- cimon of butterfly, which ho cap- tured on one of the aforesaid fine days. another harbinger of spring! Your correspondent offcra l. bo- lated apology to the many ladies of the community of the mot- hooking fraternity for not report- ing in the Guardian the many or- tistlc triumphs as a result of this season's activity in this popular work. suffice it to say that the workmanship and dcllgnl ll’! fully up to the marl: of cxcollcncy o.‘ u» put. i We regret m mm that owing to the prevalence of mumpl in the surrounding district; the otfond- once in mmyoftiu lcbooilil mo- tcrially affected. Our popular mail courier, Mr. James McGuigan, now experiences SITES r min. .- Dnncullho » LAVENDER Vgristiigoutintootripcaboutthrec tncmuizllllflroiinodbuinwith these rolll, adding any trimmings of kidney or moot, shake over the sea.- sonod flour loft on the plate and nolfnlltbobuinwitbatockrut onthclidofputmnolthoedgeu well together, cover with grossed paper and steam from three to four howl. perhaps flic moat , diugrooablo salon both . no to weather roads, ovorniliongroutdbutho always makes the daily trip in good time. (or evenings rather) Statutory Holidays, when the mail docs not oomo, and there is noth- ing new to read. can tcstlfy; but nine times out of ten the but thing that can hap- pen g i‘, For The. Cook “ emu: um KIBNIYI Anotbot ltrlotly Mob-KIWI“ pirddlngllmodoofitcokondlld- 1' ‘ma. nuutiuwmurum Britilhhlcl. \ nm-quaruruofopoundoitood steak numeric-Gulf!!!’ 0189001141 ozuudm. m Marrow“! o1 noumlraliotaupocnfulofccltond ono-quarhrtcllpoonful ormrvr mthsingrodientrraquirodfortho puddinl- I mtnepaatry you mo!» d! ounocaofflmantbrocounocoofluotu balfotOI-lwonfizlofblklfllwli- dcrgnpinohoflalhundooldwotcr tcmix. Tomckotho wiry. sieve the nounnlt andbaklncnowdenlhred thcluotflnoly and mix with the uounaddcufliciont water-taxation. stifl plotmcut offnmallpieco for tbelldrollthorectoutondlinco Zronaodboainwlthit. Wipetnomoatromovoallfatoud lnonoclwllmdonciochwido-Mit thenmawnitrudmvoronnnhto anddipinthoetripeofmoallPuta. small picoc of kidney and a tiny pieoooffctccchltriplndroll Ind Pcrlrupl the moot lonesome days are thou Poverty is uncomfortable, as I to a young min i! to -bo tos- | "Savloyourstr APRIL s, 19a: * m . ~Woman’s Realm .-:- .S"ocial anciPersonal -:- Fashions -:- Literature —and get a whiter wash, tool -'N°..".:?..Y"'~""-" w“ i a ma. mozfilxmfifi eaouglrdrwcarmmnnu rho week. And You cm get whiter. brl ima- ciodml jun by waking zbem lnllimo soda." No more wuhboudl Million oi women have mid goodbye m wuhboudl. klnro um ccrubbln; —uvu the clothes. l: gm clothes no whine, cvca boiling bu’: needed. C for lllnro l much? cod: c2’ liglllwcipgllt? roapu. Creamy Ian's llldhslleforfinegg lincoa-wuiulrlo co outed thlnp, m, The makers oi 4o {mom wulm recommend Rinlo. it‘! MILLIONS us RINSO l in tub, washer and clishpon led overboard. and oompolod m sink or swim for himself amen A. Garfield. - Mn. A. Finley, Montague. 1| vu- iting at the home of bar daughter Mira. J. L. Maximum and family, Peter-aloud; The many fox rancher in this. vicinity are now engaging m; earnest attention of thou inter- ested ondcxpoctation in on tiptoo as to tho probable results-P. toolmninlmpoto turn, knivooand Bon Ami. For It’: lonAllllrnlhll unth non Now for a BIG CLEAN-UP A big cloan-up-yoc! And a quick 0M6. practically everything in the kitchen! With clamor that quioklflqalou up" all tho dirt-makes things oltlnv-but doesn't match u coarse, gritty cleanser-u do. Boa Ami huno unpleasant odor, doesn't clog dninl or pip“: M"! "'5'" °' youhmdn. Don Ami bu coon: ofhonrolrolducunndoomeo intwooon- vmiont form: . . . a snowy-white Powder In o clftct-topom and: handy Coho. Sold ac grocery otorco ovorywhore- - “Ham? Scratched Yet” and pans, nickel fix- forlu, refrigerator-n- o lino, snowy-white Monttoll AMI (ma. 1.. 0am)