THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN APRIL 1. 1933 mica EIGHT _,TJ »»»» --~ _ _ _ _ ._ ...A __ _ __._.._.=,,..,, -#YW ' Y 7 . 1,_ | llc nun -_ l __ fl Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -.°-:Literature _ l 11 r-:~:Q!':-::-rs. Guardian -arf* fanadian Cookery A ` For Canadian Women y Mari Moore. Specially contributed to The Guardia'/c ro! Readers. M _ C P .iQUES'I’ION: I am one of yourlcayennc. 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Z1 “then try in hot In by mblespoom rtauers and I waht to ask r°\1 =1\|teasn0P8t. and mil out. Fold so as to.make 3 layers, turn orie-fourth \\a_;.- round, pat and roll out; repeat The Pa-ii-fy may be used at once: if not, fold in cheesecloth, put in eov- _Und tin. and keep in cold place hut; not in direct contact with ice. Use moderate oven. QUESTION : Wolud you kindly give me a few rccipcs in your W1- ' uma for cooking scallops other Fiisn deep fat frying as I find this Way. of cooking difficult in ,m apartmezlt? .. ,We are very fond of scallops .Lshould particularly like it recipes for entrees in ramekins in individual moulds. Thanking lflwanilcipatloll.-A. M_ .ANS\VER: DEV1’LI..E-D 5051,- and few or you oughly, out in halves and cook in two tablespoons butter 3 minutes. Add sail., cayenne, and lemon juice* and cook 1 minute. Melt. remain- ing butter. addflour, and stir until blended: ihen pour on gradually, while stirring constantly. C198!"-i Bring tn tha boiling point and add { egg yolks, slightly beaten scallops zi and wine. 1 give recipe for making beef a. la inode, English style if- possible. through your cooking page. Nader- ANSWER: BEEF A LA MODE (English style.) Insert 12 large lardoons (strips of pork fat) in a four pound piece of hc-ef cut. from the round. Make in- QUe's'r1oN: would you iruirllyi Season with salt and pepper, drsdlfe in 3 kettle, surround with orie- .s.c5, bit of bay . an lv e half cover meat. Cover closely, and below the boiling point. Remove to hot platter. Strain liquor. thicken and strain to serve as gravy. QUESTION: Do you know these economs-s? 1--Left over cereal _may he moulded in small cups and served as dessert with fruit. whipped cream, or a sweet sauce. 2-Save the water in which po- tatoes have been boiled and use in place of part of the milk in muffins, griddle cakes and bread. 3-Condensed milk (sweet/cned,l thickened with cocoa until of the right consistency to spread makes a delicious chocolate frosting. 4-Keep n small can for melting chocolate. It will save labour in dilshwashirig as well as the choco- late that adhere". to the can. 5-Save the best leaves of every bunch of celery. dry them thor- oughly and pulvcrizc them; Keep the powder in a, salt cellar and use in place of celery salt. 8-Crumbs of all sorts may be used for part of the flour in dark breads, steamed puddings, cake and cookies. 7-For thickening a tablespoon of flour or one-half’ tablespoon com starch will take the place of on ceq.-A.lVf.M. ANSWER: Such splendid suggeg. tions are certainly in tune with our ¢C0Y10rny program. Your suggestion to have a special can for melting chocolate appeals to me partieul- flrly--I always lament having to soft breadcrumbs. 2 eggs. ‘li CMD, Mix all ingredients together, mold For The :Cook A One large can salmon drained and hoppedflne, four eggs well beaten. inch of salt and PePP€1'~ Mix W' r cold. . SALMON L0 AF H Two cups canned salmon, 1 cup’ milk, 1 teaspoon salt, IJSPINY- 1] tablespoon lemon juice and 1 table~_ spoon melted butter- Remove bones and skin from ilshi and drain, saving liquor for sauce.: 1, loaf and pack into well greascd~ shallow mould. Bake 40 minutes ini moderate oven. Servo with 038| sauce, or plain ivhite sauce. or' creamed oyster sauce. . ' I l luonhpcp samios i ____ I Remove skill and bones from one lean sulinon und separate ilsh in lpieccs. Mix together ll- LeSSl>0°l\ i each of mustard and salt, J table- w gianlated [Wifi UP “ I dipped in cold water. M15 5°* .awny l in cold place. Turn niould on bed Of |lcttiice and serve with mf\!’°HDHiS° l ~ plain rolls made with one F6415?- cake. Also meat loaf made with iccslml llccr. 'rliahlrihs l'°\1 in ,I ndvallcc;-“Dcp.” ANSWER: Recipes for Lemon Meringue Pie and Devils Food Cake have been sent by private letter. You no doubt. have seen our S1100 ial article referring to m21'1DH\1¢'-‘S hy this time. Recipe for one tree of boiled fmsting is included with the Devils' Food Recipe. tl i W . Fudge Frosting (boiled) Two squares unsweetened choco- late, 2 cups sugar, '.1-fi cup milk, 2 utilespcoiis light com svrue. 2 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon van- illa, Cut chocolate in sniall pieces. Combine with sugar, milk .and com syrup, and cook slowly, stirring often, to 238 dog. Fahr. or soft ball stage. Then remove from fire, oook until lukewarm or 110 deg. Fahr. and add butter and vanilla and beat until creamy and thick enough to just hold its shape when drop- ped from spoon. Spread on cake quickly. Makes enough to fill and frost one cake. Creole 1-‘rusting One and two thirds cups brown sugar, 1-2 cup water, 1-2 cup egg whites, 1-2 cup finely chopped nut meats, 1-8 teaspoon cream of tar- tar. Combine water, sugar and W _“T ' '”.Y I lm SC Dorothy Dlx Leiter Box I -7 cally Instead of by Guess and by Gracious, Asks Reader - Loving Wife of Lean Years VVhose Head Was Turned by Riches Dear Miss Dix-We know the pedigrees of our horses, our cows, our ”“"' sheep and pigs and chickens for many generations and we know within arrow limits what the next generation of them will be. We have leum- cd to produce, with reasonable certainty, almost any chaiacterlstic we want. in plants and animals. Only humans are bred by guess and by Why should not people plan deliberately and fully for the kind of children they want? There is one and only one way to get them, and that is by selecting the right sort of males. There is no good reason why mature men and women should not plan their families on that basis. The prin- ciple ls correct. It works. D. E. L. Answer: ' Of course it works, but the trouble is that men 3 -“-" W '~t\‘ ;;u - 1 ‘ T110? who love best need friend- INP most; And hi* Wh0 Rather: from a host Of friendly hearts his daily food 3595011111811 B-nd Lid!! Moyra. Pon sonby. who have been spending some time in England and France, are ex- die of April, O O O O DGBIDIS. Mi-ss Rosa Lougworth, Miss cl 8 mornins for Halifax from which port they sail on their annual holi- day trip to Bermuda. h M". Rev D. Quigley was hostess and Women marry for themselves and not for their children, and then they expect Providence to step Ln and work a miracle “ d save them from the effects of their own folly. E Tits is the more strange because virtually all young people nowadays ` are taught biology at school and so they are not ignorant of the effects of heredity.. They know about germ cells and the mcndelian law an. thc passing on of hereditary traits, but appmeiitly this abstract knowledge 'has not a. feathers weight of influence with them when a boy falls in love \vith a girl with a. pretty face or a girl becomes enamored of a boy lui it taking way with him. l Mrs. Le Roy Holman or sinner- It ls an incredible thing that happens every day that a girl who would or not. , People don't seem to think of their children when they marry, yet all of their happiness and hopes and welfare are bound up in them. No other sorrow can tear a mnn‘s and woinan's heart to pieces as can that inflicted upon them by their cliildrcll. No tears are so bitter as those ey shed over a little coffin No anxiety is so acute as that which kccps i . them paralyzed with fear as they watch a frail and sickly child whose feeble thread of life may snap at any moment. No shame that bows tho ilicad so low as that of the disgrace brought on worthy parents by way- I ard sons arj daughters. And. on the contrary, there lsnothlng that brings to people such happiness as fine children do. They are literally a, crown of glory, and the realization of no personal ambition can illi a father and mother with such pride as they feel when they look upon a beautiful young daughter or a. son who is winning honor in the world. Yet probably not one person in ten, thousand even considers this potentiality of welll or woe that he or shc is laying up for himself or herself when _he or she marries. An intelligent man does not say to himself that he will marry Mary because she is strong and healthy and comes of a family that is not only sturdy in body but sturdy in soul, and who have those qualities of physical strength and honor and upright- ness that he would like his children to have. No. He deliberately picks out Julia, undeterred by the fact that she is sickly and neurotic as was her mother before her and that her grandmother died in an insane asylum and most of her relatives are "queer." Nor does Amanda turn down handsome Percy, who has a family his- tory of drunkenness and tuberculosis and whose ancestral trees is adorned with gamblers and spcndthrifts and philandcrers and l'le'er-do-wells, ln favor of plain Peter who is strong and healthy and whose people-for gen- eratlons have all been pillars in the community and noted for their thrift and ability to get along. And John and Amanda beat upon their breasts and can't understand how it happened when they bring into the world a lot, of sickly little degenerates who."takc after" grandpa or grandma and follow in the footsteps of their forbearsi But John and Amanda never would have been as headless ln selecting the grandparents of their horses or dogs as they are in picking out their childrens. Perhaps when we learn on be as careful about breeding human beings as we are animals, we will get a better race. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dlx-More than twenty years ago I married a girl who came of poor but nice people. We began life together humbly and while e were pool' and the children young we were happy, but since I have been fortunate in business and we have become rich all this has changed and I, atleast, am miserable. My wife has not been able to stand pros- perity. She will not stay at home night or day. She doesnt even want me to go out with her. Sho goes about with men who flatter her and I3QPS: This amount will serve three people. ‘-one Dim- scallops. 2 tablespoons 1 ' mus- ""§”_d' 1'? l€f\SD00n siilt. few grains ‘IC‘N€lm¢‘. 1~3 cup buttered cracker and heat io boiling point; drain again anti reserve liquor. Cream thc but- #litter 1 8 teaspoon made Cfilmlli- Clean scallops, di-gin WV- add mustard, salt, cayenne, 1. ‘Hill of the lesei-.md mmm. v an ‘““.“°i‘S» e110l>i>ed. Lei some onclialr h°‘”'~ PU” 1" baking dish or in in dividllal rarnekins Cmer with °,ru_.mw:‘ and b"k0 '20 niiniiics. ~ ' “P-‘liens lin Bret-lil-tie Cli`aii scallops. put in saucepan! :md “wk “nm 1110.11' begin to sllriv-I Al- n- 'Lttnnm and dry on it towel f"‘l"nt" 5"f‘U'lPS :lhrl pfr-"es of fhi TY Fliwrcl bacon on :;;<,.,._.,.,._qSv _ _ al- .'v.'..l": four .'scaiIo;i_g and fm. pi _l CC wash so much when washing the we or the double boiler enci- m9¢UY18 lt. The chocolate frosting is very snfedy too. Thank you kindly. QUESTION! Bclrlg 3, constant reader of your columns I am Sending we s recipe for tomato SOUP cake. Maybe you have had this recipe before. 3 d Tomato Soup Cake - One third cup butter. 1 cup While sllsar. 1 Small can tcmam soup, 1 'teaspoon baking soda, l 1_2 “HDR flour, 1 lcaspoon einllanion. 1-1: tcaspooil cloves, 1 cup raisins, peel and niiis. Cream butter and SHEET. then mix all thc intrredicnls ieseiheri lem/ine soup till last. Put Will in a dish and mb( with soda, :lien mix all togctlicr. I .il-,\~.~l.~n put a piece nf wax paper in bottom of cream of tartar arid stir until smooth. Cook without stirring to 260 deg. Fahr. or to the hard ball S0120. If crystals appears on inside of pan, wipe dorm with damp cloth. When cooked pour slowly over stiffly beaten egg whites. Beat until mixture leaves spoon almost clean or pulls sway from side of bowl. -this ls important. Add nuts and spread. This frosting is very casy to work with Plaln Rolls Olle tablespoon sugar, 1 cake yeast, 1 clip scolded milk, lukewarm, 3 clips' siftetl iirezid flour, white 1 ffilif. 2 talllespoolls melted butter, 1-2 teaspoon salt. Dissolve sugar and yezuzt in lukewarm milk. Add 1 1-2 cups flour and beat until smooill, tliell add while of ogg wel] beaten, butler and remainder of B 8. p b ¢,'§_'k7>11F01l to eaeli si-zelvcr. Balance! "fk""_""-"' ffl illllluii po.-.iiion bye qttltizllg lhroaiizli ¢»_,;_,._,, or bread | Plfecti on rack ill dripiiiilg pan and bake in iz hot ovflii until bum., 15 tin io preiellt from sticking. Bake lil deep calm tin in mipn of 325 deg. Fahr. Mrs. C., Ottawa, .‘\.NS-WIWR: We sllilil certainly rr:.»., Ai'-. ;» -. ~ . _ 1 llll 1: on sirilng dish and 'fry this cake as soon as possibl¢__. gamisii with l..,m,n and parsley Scallops Ala \~,.“.hu ' i rg . . 0.' 'l -. »‘ » <. . - _ _ W 1° I" ‘Ll-C-\|1\‘l7». .l t.ioic.»poons; QUESTION: I have bran, short., ‘?f‘”|°’°» 1'? “"'~‘i"lUl1 Y-IV. few grains.fUlf| l1ll<1;»;ai;i0;t:;iili;mmrlciir' or 'within I "I_-IEADACHES ..."l$' »:.--> _.ss -'bs-1.2:'-`»= <; I "":';":<"': 'V ' -»- Fluff-a-fines _ '~ andyearl \ ,_ ' _) J tj" of pain .__ -_ ~ '.3 fri, I *I ruHere¢| acced- r Q ingly with invllgrn- =£- _ 3 lien and sick head- , aches [nr 3-mrs. l 9, _ uiukl harrll‘y out _ anything me w.i,~ ' _ -_ , ’__,_,{ ”},~._.'*`) gxiallynconstiiiainli ._ -1 s' " ' < rea ze now. n ' M“f rnurvr. that l was IIIRUGT run-down condition. Fortunately for mr I neilhbur recommended 'Fruit-a-tlvrs' ' Ind I belan faking them. lnmoeruiniy glad 1 jg; They regulated my nym-rn andtoned me plttnerallym that now I mn in the bet. nl sith. I would not hesitate toremtimend 1 em tomyom.” graft-l-(loco . . . all adorn _ I it sounds most- ilnllsllal and thank 5'°il VFVY much for .vlnrlillig tlle` rceipe Joy your page "WY much. E. F, M. ANSWFR. : To three cups of white flour, arid 1-3 clip each of | , _ _ (iran, shorts and iniddl.ng_=. This ldoes not give you the ex,-.fl pm- i portions as they would be iii Gm. ` ham fl0lU'. but most of the essay.- Ilia! elements are present and it 'mem fi very good wh/.ic i-/lu-.it Qui-:sTroN: wciild you kindly 5*-‘nd me recipes for'-til- ailment b°U°d YFOSUHES. merlnsue. lemon pic made with comstarch, Dc.-lr; in ' , our for household baking pu _ ' " Doses. r _ flour ailfl the pall. Knead lightly, using as little extra. flour as pos- sible, then pllicc in well-greased bowl. cover and set to rise in tem- perature of about 'I6 deg. Fahr. until dolibie iii bulk. Mould into any' desired size of roll, place in ‘VCU lZ1`<‘1iSf‘d Dim, cover and let rise flgilil until double in bulk. Brush with beaten egg to glaze and bake fillifkly iii liot oven of 400 deg. Fahr. Elcctrifieation of the Central of Brazil Railway, in Brazil, will bc htfltflcd Within 3, few wegk5_ BURNS Iii NNI (pn of Miami: and Ivan sal, funn dl, og dun-. ixsanl sung:-owl _ own. no lull. lllcc,|oa||h * NIl|ldlnUtlng||gp w is In it in “unc or Pun" ,,, _r‘°od¢sxewltiimmqzmtm¢.»m` :LllN__l_m_E_N]' tell her how young and beautiful she is. She humlliates me by criticiz- ing me to strangers and calls me a. poor fool to my face. My daughter is developing the same attitude toward me. I am considering e. divorce as my home is nn empty house and my children grown.. I could provide for my wife and children, but they could not be so extravagant as they are t present. I am only 47. What is your advice? J. G. Answer: Your wife is afflicted with a disease that was much more prevalent a few years ago than it is now. It is "new richltis." Their money goes to many \vomen's heads and swells them out of all reason. It paralyzes whatever little brains they have and affects the nerves of the heart. It iso robs them of all sense of proportion and causes them to see them- selves as glamorous creatures, gold-plated and far superior to the hus- band who supplied the gilding. Many women have suffered with this complaint and, in fact, it may be said that it tilkcs one with an unusually strong mind to stand sudden rosperity. Take away from her the work which has kept her hands usy and hcr mind occupied and plunge hcl" into idlencss and she is sure to get into mischief. Make one who has been unimportant sud- denly worth the attentions of the parasitic horde who battcn on rich people and sho becomes the victim of every flattering gold-dlggcr. Every wealthy woman is besieged by an army of impecunfous young men who find it cnsicr to work a woman than to labor for b living and ho pay her for feeding them and riding them about in her cars and taking them to places of amusement and lending them money that they never repay by telling her how young and beautiful and fascinating sho . And the poor simplctons believe it. In your cuse your wife is the victim of her own suppressed desires. She was a poor girl who craved pretty clothes and culdn't have them, so now is dress-mad. Sho married before she had any play time and now sho cannot get enough of making wlloopee. She married her first beau and now she is avid for flirtiliions and love-making. Maybe after she gots her fill of all the things sho has wanted so long shc will settle down. Maybe she \voll't. The only cure for her would be for her to lose hor money and iliivc to go back to doing her own cook- g and making her own clothes again. Undoubtedly a separation, with n. drastic cutting down of her allow- ance, would bc a good remedy to apply to thc situation. It might defiate her ego to find out that her popularity was in direct ration to her income. Likewise, it might raise you in hcl- esteem to be made to realize that you are the Providence from whom all her blessing flow. f But I don‘t believe that breaking up your home and separating your- self from your children would make you any happier than you arc. Often is better to endure thc ills we liiirc than to fly to those we know not of. » DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-We have an adapted child und wc have determined ncvcr to tell him that llc is not our own. ' Are we right or wrong? MRS. H. E. Answer: Wrong. Tho child is bound fo find it out sooner- or later and he will tterly resent having bien deceived. 'Icil liini while he is so young that he will take it as a matter of course. When a child grows up believing its adopted parents are its own parents and then finds out this is not true, it gives it a. shook from which it never recovers. DOROTHY DIZ. for her Thursday afternoon Bridge Club this week at her home 32 _ v migmon Road' first sight the slits appear to be box pleats. V Mrs. W. A. Weeks, Miss Lorna -Veeks and Mr. Maurice Weeks, left 8 d waffle-iron surface is being used for yesterday mornin on an extende ` visit to Montreal. . F C t I C to .ide is the guest this week of her orn a Pekingese pup that wasn't a. thoroughbred will marry a mongre .ion Mr. Robert Holman land Mrs. » fe boy, and a man who would not pay $50 for an animal without investlgat- Holman, Brighton, f cl ing its ancestry and assluillg himself that it came of sound stock nevcri c ~ » » Ib” even tries to flnd out whether a girl lic marries comes of o. diseased fum- l Mrs. Alan Cosh entertained atthc be ily Canadian National Hotel on Monday afternoon in honor of Mrs LeRoy Holman of Summerside. ` Mm. Holman in a similar manner on Tuesday. Mrs L D Murray also entertain- - a Hearts only thrive on varied Eood: adian National on Friday. pected to return to Ottawa the mid- entirely of feathers or flowers. A -WHY PHYW °°mPI'Lslxlg Mrs. . ored‘ for evening wear, and include G°°"3° -7- RDBMS. Mrs. George lacquered satin and clre 1aoe.Lac- N°fBh L°1'\8worth are leavin this for sports suits. _ _ _ _» _ they are long. Short sleeves are 3 trimmed with small frills. s o o n B Mrs. Murdock McKinnon honored . . . ni ed for Mrs. Holman at her lovely 1 Mn. George DeBlois vru hostess t. n. luncheon-Bridge at the Can- # S U l Mrs. Alexander Campbell of Bum- Is the best friend that we can boast. merside was a. bridge hostess at thai ' ' ' ' ' Canadian National Hotel on Batux- um, mmf;-mgly, as he hlundered Her Excellency the Countess of day, inviting additional friends in _ _fo ° ’ 7 Happenings of the Week AM0rn1°nsSmile Why Not Plan Chimn’s Characters Eugen-it '_' Ho qu an enthusiastic but un» successful dancer. and at one P91194 during the carnival dance a reall! clever dancer had the misfortune to have him for a partner. , "I wish I were_1n your »h°¢l." 315 r the tesfhour. "Perhaps sol" she retorted 1011!- O O O O Some of the latest caps are made Shiny-surfaced materials are fav- uered linen makes smart trmlming tool Sleeves are very decorative. and ave fulness below the elbow when 0 Q s 0 Skirts of day suits slit at inter- als from knee to hem, so that at . O O l U A new quilted silk fabric with a wn frocks and two piece. ‘i O O l O i, Wide leather belts. slightly stif- lied and finished with large metal ips, are worn on some long coats, ! t many are fitted to the waist and ltless. o m b Explodes DETROIT, March 30-A piece of ght was the sole tanslbls obieet "But I wish you would refrain from attempting to get into them now." The old gentleman was Day!-118 B visit to a distant relation. For _tho whole of the afternoon he had submitted to the attentions 0! hi! hostess young son, but at last hl began to grow tired of havins Ml whiskers pulled and his toes trod- den on. "».mlame." he said. u he W” bout to depart, “there is one thins about your charminl 1’°\mB 3°” which especially pleases me.” "Ana what is that?" asked the smiling mother. "rust he isnt ir twin." replied th° old gentleman. held by detectives seeking the per- son who set off a black powder home of the Rev. Fr. Charles E. Coughlin. The bomb. lowered into the basement, caused only slight damage and rio injuries. Father- Coughlin, a principal fig- |`uro in the controversy over De- SlightDamageAs _ troit's banking situation, said he did not regard the bombln¥ HS B11 attempt on his life, but rather as an intimidation. He was shaken by the explosion. which came as he slept. but was unhurt. Father ’ ’ ° ° ` string-the slenderest of c1ues-t.o- Coughlin was born in Hamilton and lived most of his life in Ontario. home West Street on Wednesday aftemoon, ` C I l O C°ntinu1ns her social activities Mrs. Charles Beer entertained most delightfully at four tables of bridge last Monday aftcmoon. O C K l Mrs. (Dr.) John Howie. who is being cordially welcomed home on a. visit from India, was invited to an afternoon tea Wednesday to meet a. number of former intimate friends af. Mrs. W. E. Massey's pretty home on Hillsboro Street. O U O O Mrs. (Di-.) Dewar and family, will have the symoatlly or o wlfie circle of friends on the death of her sister Miss Catherine McLeod wriose kind- ly interest and active assistance in soclaland church work will be Kfeatly missed. ._ _ O O C C A charming little party was given by the nurses of the Prince County Hospital on Tuesday evening at the Nurses Home for Miss Mabel Wool- ner, who left on Thursday for her home in North Rustlco, ha'/ing tin- ished her course at the hospital. She was one of last yes.r's grad. uates. l O I I Mrs. R. Moorhead Legate left yesterday moming on a visit to her sons in Montreal. 0 O I O » Colonel Chester McLure, 1\-I. P., and Mrs. McLure of Ottawa, (nays the Ottawa Journal) spent the week-end in Toronto with their daughter, Miss Lena. Mcbure. O O O 0 Miss Alberta Stewart and sister Miss Marion Stewart left Thursday moming on n. snort visit to Toronto. On Saturday last the Misses Stewart were hostesses at seven tables of Bridge very pleasantly arranged at Old Spain. U O D C Mrs. Gregory, of Fredericton, is the guest of Mrs. H. A. Richardson of Toronto, and will go to Ottawq this week-end to visit Mrs. Murray Maclaren and the Hon. Murray MucLaren. I U U O U Miss Dorothy Pond has returned to Summerslde after a delightful visit to Charlottetown where sho was the guest respectively of Miss Burnett and Mrs. Hoop. Miss Pond sails on April Sth from Halifax for England where she will undergo a ‘ four years course in Hospital Nurs- inl- _ O O U C Miss Margaret Wood has gone over to Truro to spend- a few weeks with her aunt, Mrs. Arthur Stevens. Miss Wood is'convalescing after an oper- ation for appendicitts. - l U O U Mrs. S. H. Henderson entertained for her friends at a luncheon bridge i at the Canadian National on Thurs- day. 1 O I O Dr. J. A. Nicholson, former Reg- istrar of McGill University. Mon- treal, who has a host. of friends here, celebrated his 73rd birthday on Monday last. Dr. Nicholson and family are expected to llwnd the summer months in this city. a Q C O Big artificial flower poslel are .vommavmmzmatu ' to make. stamps or coin (coin _is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 577. Size .........¢»»»»»~»»¢»» -Ihr llurl las leak lame #Uh lillli Indian M:-s.A. Blank, Wallaooburg, GR., Urlid!-I MILE-_“ii~`s ale" '°“°‘°°:*“’“°"'f I "EN" ".s"°m“..'°:.“s°:”.::lf:'“:.. Nuvilliii :°....°.:.::.... .......°a ...‘"... .ag ill ill. ti.-nk!ulIdidutheyh\vaprovodofwmdu£ll| halptomo. round the ballroom with the zlrl- \ ; l » i its i ~ bomb before dawn today in U1' I udnll butmauu' ......."';':°:.:.".‘:°f.........~»"“°' i A lhrn\sua|1. .:-=»-rf.-..-~, . sf. slr. ,_ »_;,,__>` _. Q; . _,_\a.-§.;;..<.s. r >' 'S a. \‘»' " on 2. , _ _..., .~.. -- - -___-_..._ I lsr' fills _ 11;.. Q-?§~§_i3 ._ '