. L 14, 1931 011cc you use it you’ll never be without it! BORDEPPS Eagle Brand is so handy when pro. paring hurried noon day luncbeong-go "ii-fills when late impromptu flippers exhaust the day's milk supply: Borden's Eagle Brand Milk ls made from whole silk-pasteurized and smoothly blended with fino sugar. It is sealed in at once, am] re. tains its full goodness-A .aluable cook book of 180 recipes, entitled, "New Magic in Your Kitchen" haeheen prepared by prominent , dietitians for your use. You'll agree that seldom, if ever, have so many successful recipes been bound in one volume-It is {gee for the asking-Writs for it. - ~11 ..l"'.“::;:':.f:;.:;w.:t"*- llGl-Ti B RAND 32252112; .. i. YuurKitchen." Neml......... Address . OLD COW BELL FOUND ' LE FALLS, TeX» April by his flllll’.‘l‘ during an Indian raid 11 in 1869. Th: bell lvirr his mum-s ‘ members of Derry, L. O. L. jointly amoun- AT canoe: "cove on u» evenin! of mo.” moi when the 800d ladiu of Lady Pat- ricla 1ndge,l...0 s. A, and the Found In By MARY KNIGHT United Press sun Correspondent PARIS, April 11. ‘ ple proof of the vanity of man and his figure are found in. the skin-tight styles alter- nating through different periods. They must have been the bane of the bow-legged man's existence as were the short flirts to the knock- kneed flapper. When men's neck and shoulders were swathed in lace and ruffs that recalled those of Queen Ellnbeths days, the nether garments were the scantlest. ‘Iheir high cutaway coats. revealed their manly figures in se- vere silhouette and dared them to indulge in over-eating! As the politlcai_ turmoil increased, fashionable attire grew more and more eccentric and multiform, until republican institutions triumphed, and the women. of France began to clothe themselves like those oi Greece and Home both in style and “ ‘ may discarded costly materials, and shivcred through the winter months clad in a few yards of uslin, and bundled themselves up in summer with fluffy furs. What could be more modern to- day than that ancient custom? Men wore a combination of an- tique and romantic costume invent- ed by the painted David, which was finished off with Hungarian boots. The gorgeous and stately dress oi the courts of Louis XIV and Louis celebrated "their third and sixty- eeveoth Anniversaryk with a spied-- did banquet. _' " _ ' After full illetioe had been dons the sumptuous feast prepared by the ladies the following toasts and pro- gram was successfully carried out and thoroughly enJOYBd b? all pre- sent wiui w. Mack Mcllladyen as Toastmaster. ' » - The Kink—National Anthem. The BmDiro-Mr. finest Holm. Violin Bohr-Mr.‘ David Molhlihern. Read- in8—Mi-ss Catherine McNevin. Our Island ans-Mr; L. E. McKinnon. Trio-(Missee) Jessie Bell MeNevin, oauieriii Monet-in, setri iuexinnou. ReadIIIB-Miss Imiise McNevin. Our Order-Mr. (‘Xilin Campbell", Solo- Mrs. C. R. McPhail. Derry lodge- Mr. itemi- Méuevin.‘ us» Patricia Iiodge-qvilrs. Harry MoNevin. Solo- Mr. Alex McDonald. The Indies- Mr. Donald MoDougall. A vole of Thanks. ‘The program was brought to a close byslnging . National An- them and good Night Ladies. MERMAID SCHOOL ’ ‘Standing ‘for’ the ‘month oi March. Grade VIII-l. - Beta MacDonald, I. Margorle MacDou-iald, 3. Catherine MacDonald and John Doyle (equal). - Iii-ado Jll-I-L-Adele MacDonald, 2. Elinor lvlunn, 3. Gordon MacDonald. (mas V.—l. u» MacDonald, 2. Nina-Jenkins, 3. Ronnie Robertson. ..Gt1‘1.1<.l¢. l\'—.1.~.3-".1Ql'9l.l°9. Dlmn- 3- IIOTDB MacDonald and Blair Mac- YHE CHARLU'I'I'E'I'UWN U UAKUIAN Proof Of 'Man’s Vanity Period Styles gime. Piles of false hair, artificial flowers, feathers, and Jewelry reach- ed lts height on ladies’ heads about 1790. Mai the kaleidoscope oi fashion m showing us glimpses today of the same cycle on a modified scale when Worth returns the aigrette to the evening colffure oi 1931, fastened to the hair with a gorgeous jgwgllgd pin or clip. cycles of alternate luxury and slmvllfllv have distinguishes all 8868. but this one in which we are now living works harder for slmplio. ity than any of the former ones did to achieve luxury. Funk?“ llhllllfle more quldrly 95°11 dflllde. a fact due in many Wills to the increased facilities of communication. The triumph of do- F1061“!!! l8 Shown by their universal adoption by all classes. Will the time ever come when the most ad- vantageous and artistic costumes for men and women will be found and kept’! The probabilities are all against it. The ‘Saxon philosopher Rudolf Hermann Lotz, who knew and ex. prmsed the first psychology of ‘#1073188. said that we prolong the iousness of our personal exist. 911698 into any foreign body brought irto relationship with the surfaces °Y m" (""1 50d)’. so that we feel our- for the month oi’ lviiarch. bell, 2. James Mill. Arthur Rayner. Kinnon. Ross Rayner. Olive Gillespie. frcllng of resistance arising from ii tight band or belt. We all are more alive to a new sensation than to one which has been long in the ilcld oi conscious- ness. In order for clothes to yield the maximum of pleasure they must not resemble their brothers and sisters in shape, color 0i‘ cut, too fa. PAQE ,ELE_\_'EN Li". FALSE TEETH ARE KEEP Yllllll UWN 42¢- miliarly—\\'hicli means- thac we shall always have to have, not only new clothes, but new kinds- Qf clolhggg which brings us i0 the door marked “No Admittance" of one of the greatest Parisian couturicrs, and a few words mumbled in French is the "Olwneesarnc" that admits us be- ' hind the scenes and shows us how the sacred shears of fashion cut history from bolts of silk and satin. .__________. CLERMONT SCHOOL The following is the class standing Grade VIII-l. Jabez Mill, 2. Wes- ton Campbell, 3.Dainiel Murphy. Grade VI (Sm-l. Gerald Murphy. Grade VI (Jr.)--1. Blanche Camp- Grade V—1. Jrstin Murphy. Grade IV-—i. Ethel Campbell, 2. ' Grade III-l. Ella MacKlnnon, 2. Grade III (al-l. Ella MacKinnon. Grade III (bi-l. Michael Mac- Grade III (cl-l. Gerald Mill, 2. Grad-e II-ijivtsi-y Gomm. Grade I—1. Wanda Mill. Teacher ielvw Brow taller with our headgear, move with our fluttering laces and Donald. .. - I ‘ Grade III-l. Ian MacDonald. Grade 11-1. Gordon MacDonald, and Dolores" Vlacboriald‘, 2. Gerad MacDonald. Grade I-l. Alex Robertson, 2. Pearl MacDonald, 3. Vera Jenkins. XV had disappeared with the old re- ribbons, and derive vigor from the REBUILD HISTORIC CHURCH TORGAU, (Province Saxon), April lost are lost because nl pyoirlicli. Woman who values ilir: youthful curl- tour of licr face, for a famous British scientist tells us that many pcnpli; have pyorrlica for tcn years bcforc tender. spongy gums appear. dentist regularly. but, more than this, you should give your lcctli and gums thorough daily care. sage ilicm with Forlimfs. This dcnii- frice was originated by R. J. Forhan, D. D. S., a specialist in pyorrhea. cleans tlicm gently, thoroughly, safely. Clean teeth add lo beauty, but that is AS LUNG ASYBU CAN FALSE TEETH are worn in lliouraniln of IIIOIIlII-l lorlay because these simple rules of llealfh were almml unknown o few years ago 0o many women neglect this greatest Threat to Beauty! OSS of tcclh ilirrnlcilb‘ lms of bcnuly-nml lialftlic rulultvgcili uiily linlf llIC story. V/licn llll‘lf nrr hnish in: llif rlrposiis n! flu. gum llllf‘, ilic irriiniinii lii/llfjfllihl‘ nfpyr -l | licn. The (rihcr unpuriniit res .~n .'-.i' using Forliano is. llic bCllPlll 1v giti n with mcscugc vfull lllfilftltlltil \\llll cvrry luhc). Follow lllfcvi cull you will fccl Llu: tiuglc of V5,, >11 circulation—licallh-gi-ving circuldimn —wl:ich liclps Lo keep tlic gums strong and firm. Forliuifs is the logical dentifrice for the wliolc family-so safe ilial. llu: tiniest child can uzac ii. Do nril lci. Lliv: prccioiisyczirsialip li_y—:ul->yii l~'~i Mm "i llUW us your (lfllllfllLi. lL lvlliim in iwu size-s, 33c and oUr—Ju;.l a lrgzv Cents pcr tube more tlizill Oltlllllll‘) loolhpasles, and exceedingly wrll Here nrc words to startle cvcry You should, of course, sec your Brush tlicm with Forliaifs. Mus- Uscd for brushing the tcelli, ii GREAT INVENTIUN l. l Dorothy Dix L\etter Box 13.—-'1lie Protestant church authori- ties of Prussia have appropriated funds for renovating the Schloss- ‘kirche-Ialacc Church-of Tornau. built in i544 at ltiartin Luther's dir- Grade I (Jul-Arthur MacDonald. cction. as thc first Protestant church FORHAN’S FOR THE GUIVIS _.-P'*’ tvorih it. Fbrliams l.irl., Montreal. ill-Walter Glesecke, pioneer , . r, has found a. cow bell lost in.tals and was lust loilcxviug an Indian attack. Mlnaril‘: LlnIrnr-rit for barns. KELVINATOR has set a record for dependable, trouble-free operation which no other maker of electric refiipemrois can era ho to _For Kclvinator was first in the housebo d electric - arion field. 17 years of improvement based on Kelvinaior research and on the suggestions of actual users. And in these 17 years not a single Kelviaaror has worn our. Today you can buy a Kelvinator with the assurance iharir will give years of double-free service. Ask our Kelvinaror dealer to demonstrate _these rcmar able features, many of which are exclusive to Kelvinsior: -—Fl:xo mblrr ire may for quid: and easy removal of ice cubes. ——Ke1vinalor’i' patented Lio-Tbennic Tuber give world's fastest freezing of ice cubes and desserts. -—Tb: Kelvin Cnliper keeps lettuce, celery and vegetables fresh and crisp for days, and even restores them when wilted. -—Tbe Fruit Chm keeps meat and fish at below- fieezing temperatures. —4-way cold, automatimlly controlled, is an exclusive Kelvinaror feature. " ‘ --0ne piece, round-cornered porcelain food LOW FIRST PAYMENT Easy compartments. I . _ . -'l‘riple-coated porcelain exterior with French Monthly Terms Gray trim. _Qug,dmplc dirornium plated hardware. Monel and diromium ice-tray fronts. Electrically lighted interiors. Balanced doors. No scooping. ' - - 4,41, ism u. xibiuuk fgwxillilw-n u‘! ‘fag? ‘f Ligiud, bodes, 0mm», and n: film‘ ["5 n” ‘P’ ' ' fanny, London. 70m‘ nearest Kelvinsior dealer will gladly demonstrate the New Models Palmer Electric Co., Ltl., Grafton Si. Charlottetown Central Creameries, Ltd, Fitzroy St, Charlottetown. SUMMERSIDE, Prace McKay i Co., Limited. J‘ g . k ‘ for. istence. Then a husband and wife who live alone arc thrown on each other for c society and amusement and grow much closer together than those who live among other people and are always in n group. All the little intimacy, the talking of everything over, is done away with’ when there arc other people around. Then, the home develops the wife as nothing else does. Unless a girl Continued from page 8 in u“, wm.m_ Lion. years. KING SEES MAGTCFANXQ TRICKS keeps on with her job after she is married she has nothing to do unless she nmno‘ postal clerk of Palwm“ 9"‘ The church will he- llu- Roi-anna- Ii hurl not hPPll ilsurl im‘ ‘.30 omc a memorial l0 ROME. April 1l (U. P.I-——G, B_ R0- gages in conjuring tricks in his eplill‘ time. HIS iamr: ,‘)i"l‘l(ll'llllllll‘0 llrfow‘ ihv rovnl lillll’ has spread so fm‘ that hi" WAS called lly. Tho King prp_.pp_gql hm, with y. i0 the Villa Savoy, Lhr residence of: gold watch. elny maul/x may have pyorrlicd imrl a! '10 flu: 041d! arr. 4 out 0f 5 lllllnllllllfil ;Klli: View!‘ Finnimrqiuhu-Q 1'17: mui has n. home. and Satan finds work for ldlc fcniininc hands tn do even quick- ci" than hr docs for men. It is the young wives who are living with their parents, or their hus- bands‘ parents, who get pecvlsh and iretiul and discontented because they have nothing with which to occupy their minds, and nothing to think about except how many things they would like to _buy, and how many thrill: they could gct out oi a flirtation with some other man. It is the homcles, idle young wives who spend their days pricing things in department stores and going tdthe movies and who pick up strange men sud go joyriding with them. A man who doesrft provide his wife with n home of. hci‘ own that will kecp her busy keeping it, adorning ll, planning for it has taken the surest way of wrecking his marriage. And a home is a good financial investment because it makes a _\’0tln[; couple save money to pay for their furniture, and that leads them to sav- ing the money to pay for the home itself. It is a common saying and a true one, that ii you never go to housekcping you never have anything, be- cause the temptation to spend on foolishness is greater than most people can resist. They have to have a definite object foi- whlch to save. And furthermore, there is no greater fun than there is in establishing a homo. The man who misses that has missedithe thrill that you get but once in a lifetime. ' ’ DOROTHY DIX. I O I I O O Dear Miss Dix-I have a boy friend who says that a man is a. fool to marry until he is over 40. He says that a man has to give up so much when he marries, and that a man is still young at 40, while s. woman is old, and that the man has to sacrifice more than the woman does in order to have s. family. What do you think? 1". H. H. Answer: Your boy friend's views are all wet. If a man waits until he is 40 to marry, he has missed the ten best years of his life, supposing, of course. that he marries happily. ilie has missed the rapture of young love, and the companionship of a woman that deepens every joy and lightens every sor- row, and he has missed those ten crucial years of youth in which a man and woman can adapt themselves to each other until they literally become one. By the time a man is 40 he has hardened into bachclorhood. He has gotten set in his ways and he cannot change them. The bloom is rubbed off romance for him, and ‘he cannot love with the impassioned fervor of 30. And at 40 a man's children are apt to be brats instead of playthlngs. ‘Their noise disturbs him and he cannot enter into their amusements as he could if they had come to him when he was younger. As for your friend's contention that a man at 40 is young and a woman old, I know that is a common illusion among men, but if you will look around among your acquaintances you will perceive that most wives at middle age are just as young and attractive looking as their husbands are. The old theory that women age quicker than men is being discounted in these days when men live under such a. strain in business and ‘when women make a cult of preserving their youth. It is ridiculous to assert that the man makes a greater sacrifice than the woman in rearing a family. Who goes down into the valley of the shadow of death to bring children into the world? Who pushes the perambulator and watches over the babies day in and day out, night in and night out? Who washes them and sews for them and feeds them? Every mother is ten times as much of a mother as a father is of a father. DOROTHY DIX. O I O O O O Dear Miss Dix—I am a young man in love with a beautiful girl who says she will marry me, but she never wants any children. I love children and think no home complete without them. She says we will be happier with- out them because she cari keep her good looks and her figure better if she never has any children. What must I do? WORRIED BOY. Answer: Better break of! the engagement, because the girl shows that she is vain and selfish and self-centered. such a woman doesn't make a good wife. It is perfectly natural and right for you to desire children. They add to the happiness of a home and give a man something to live for and work The wife, the child, the home, they complete the cycle of a man's ex- days dorfi‘ matter at all. adays other women are learning their complexion secret!” » “To keep youthful charm,‘ guard com- plexion beauty,” the lovely actresses will tell you. “Use soothing Lux Toilet Soap, regularly, as we do!” Important actresses throughout the Lever Brothers Lirmied. Tmfllln u “ck you oor o, e on Birthdays l SAYS 0R, fIIHIOIIS screen star Any woman who is unwilling to have children because it will mar heri beauty is cold and unnatural, and a man does wise in avoiding her as a | wife. But you are lucky in one thing, that this girl was honest enough to of tell you before you were married that shs would not have children instead .. and ‘ ‘“ _ you find it out afterward, as women frequently do. DOROTHY DIX. “The woman who wants to win and hold adora- tionshouldkeepyouth,” Hugh Trevor says. “Stage and screen And now- 'world remain young. lovely, alluring. year after year! In Hollywood . . . on Broadway. . . in Europe. they guard com- plcxionbcauty -KEEPyOL1tllllllCll?ii'iTl - with Lux Toilet Soap. They have znzulc starshold theadm,-,.a_ this fragrant, very while sonn official in HUGKEVOR Hon they have won all film studios. It is found in thczitrc year afteryean Bil-H.“ dressing rooms throughout tlic country! Guard complexion beauty as 9 out 0f 10 lovely screen stars do The countless stars all over the world who use this white soap find it soothing whatever their type of skin mnv be. You, ton, will find Lux Toilet Soap the perfect care for your complexion LUX Toilet Soap. .10", The caress of dollar-awake French toilet soap W7! '3; .;. oi.-_ . ,5‘; . nmumRimfw-sa ewxasz-sii- -' i. “""liiill.llvlltiil= ~i I Hlilliliillllltlttlflllllllilllllriillflliliiiieisiilesiwisiiitaa-iaas.» wsesaes-nsi-bé-W iisrsiiiiiitli :4. iiifltiEtiiliiysie-aérulllllvtil\ttilrrt?1fl¥'==Yrr1.-=" l3