,/ MARCH 18: 192,. SGFEIGITP‘. “Tm i‘, , .W¢l>.man’s Realm -:-. Social» and Personal -:- Fashions -:-» Literature ' w‘ l I ' l q ' Twelve Ounces of _l‘_j‘_rqnfisrgy g____ ' GUAYDTAN - - _ y _ . Look: for tho Extravagant a Wife Why Some Mm Are Dependent ln An Elliquette By Roberta Lee Lesson in English . M nymnomm- WORDS OFTEN MISUSEI): Avoid : ylng, “I appreciate your services . ghly." "Appreciate" means to es- , w adequately, and "highly" is‘ u uous. $EN LIISPRONOUNCEDZ 1n- llé ve; a as in “so," not as z. _ (lFTEN MISSPELLED: serge l woolen material»; surge ta large 'a"e.) J _ SYNONYMS: adherent. ally, fol- -Mi lady Beautiful Bylnlslaede A Fashion Hint I J Q. If a. mcn offcrs his hand when lutrcdilcccl, what should a woman do? ‘ A. Take it cordially and without ', ; ‘ _ "i. hesitation. ~ 0. How should coffee spoons be disnributczl? A. They should be placed on the saucers when the coffee is served. QQ Where should the hands be | placed when they are not being used at dinner? - m.’ disdpla supporm.‘ partisan‘ l A. In the lap, never rested on the wonn STUDY: "Use u word three , WW- lmes and it is yours." Let us ln- ease our vocabulary by mastering} Dorothy Dix- \ “A Man’s Prosperity, the Realization or the Failure of His Ambitions Are All in the Little Bag on His Wife’s Wrist—It’s What She Spends That Counts” "The most pathetic figures on earth," said a man to me the other day. "are the poor old men who have worked hard allot their lives and who, at the end of them, have nothing to show for their _work. Haven't even saved up enough money to enable them to slow down and take the last lap of the journey easily. Apcrcct _ clement . casll you Jo nice food. contains every ncedql digested,“ origin, wintry weat er.- "You see them everywhere. Poor, old, haggard- b}, no -\\'O1'd each clay. Today's word: .§;JLESIASTICAL: of or pertaining "’§l"\t\_‘ch\lrch. "Ecclesiastical tyranny c. "all kinds the worsl."--Bancroft. f‘ w u goose/laid Hints By Roberta Lee v ‘BVIYJ’? -.I .- , 7 Ironing Boards A Jul;- 1p 1 Ironing boards can be protected 3t om dust by taking two paper flour .3- "'l the required length. Egg Milk l; ‘allot a fresh egg until lery ligll‘. l l‘ it into a glass o! no"! milk. ; salsatgn to taste and flavor wilh itlléifinutmeg or lemon. Tins is very enirlg. Stubborn Doors _ f Tightening all of the hinge screws ‘lghfrequently take the sag out of he doors that develop the annoying: POOR PA or clnvua CALLAN “VHIQII I visited my sister luck home, my niece was rcal nee about showln’ me the stores that sold pretty things for girls." For The Cook ICADILLAC CHEESE SANDWICHES Cream one-half cup butter, add lOTiF-QllZlYtCl‘ pound Roqllefort cheese, undsiii" and bca: until the mixture is smooth and light. Add one-half tea- ispoon paprika, one teaspoon finely chopped chives, and salt to taste. lvfoiston xviih two tablespoons lclnon Juice. Sprcad bctwern thin sliccs of bllLacrcd gl-nlmln or rye bread. Cut in different shapes, arrange on a. plate ' and garnish with cress. ‘as, cutting the bottom from one’ ml pasting to the top of the other to _. ' Slip this ‘ the boardwhcn putting it away. ‘ THE LAND WE LO_VE By mam: LEIGH MAR IE CHAPDELAINE Q. Who was Marie Chapdelalne? A. Marie Chapdelaiue is the chief character ln the novel of that title, by Louis Hemell that has had n, wide ;circulation. ’l‘lle scene ls laid chiefly ’ iirthe Quebec village of Perlbonka, in l Lake St. John country. The orig- lnal'of this character 'i.=; laid to be Madam Bedard of that village, who is wcll-lznoltti in, llcr native province. 'I‘l_'ie_novcl in question gives a striking ' plctuleof the northern part of Que- bec and of the life of its people. , . APPIN ROAD AND VICINITY _ The many frlerTds of Mrs. Annie lFarrarare sorry to learn of her re- ‘cent ‘illness. Alnblfg " those who attended the iVictoria Rink on Saturday night ‘were, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Farrar, ‘M-CSSIS Wm. ltfacPhail, Bert Smith. Lcvns Gordon.‘ Wilbert Gillespie, IJudson McEachern, John Matheson, lJolul MacEachern and Misses Belle ESmiih, Czusic Gordon, Annie Ma:- Fnrlune. Mr. Wm. MacFm-lane reports the toads in bad condition. Mrs. Annie Gordon is confined to yd!‘ homc on account of illness. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. W. Smith were Hsltors to Bonshaiv on Tuesday. the cllzsts of their daughter Mrs. Ever- .ct; Crosby. ' Mr. Sheldon Mat-Lean. Cornwall, spcnt the wcck visiting friends in >Appin Road and Dcsablc. HE mother who wrote the llnc above knew what was bcst for baby. In the modern up-ro-datc maternity ‘ I and baby hospitals‘ they use I "Vaseline" Pctrolcum Jelly 1 l constantly. » y Ask any nurse or doctor. They ~ will tcll you that it is urc and healing and shoul be j kept always at hand in the "g nursery or bathroom. I Gcc a special tube or jar for baby. And rcmcmbcr, when .1 V011 buy, that the trademark _; Vaseline on the package is {I your assurance that you are '; getting the genuine roducr of the Chescbrough anufac- " curing Company, Cons'd, 5520 Chaboc Avenue, Montreal, Canada. DECIDEDLY INTERESTING A printed silk crepe with circular, flaring fulncss concentrated at. side. in diagonal treatment at top, taper- ing to waistline that varies the mode of fitted hipline. Sclf-fabric trim- ming pieces at ilcckline, lllpllne and sleeves, are utterly cllic. Style No. 436 is designed in ‘sizes 16, 1B. 20 years, so, as, V40 {mo 42 inches bust, and is made with 3 1-2 yards of 40- inch matcrlal in the 36-inch size. It is also a. delightful xvay to nmke your nclv slimmer dress in flowered gcor- gctte or chiffon, the season's smart- cst fabrics. It will also be attractive in featherweight woolen which has now taken on new formality for day- time wcar. Pattern price fifteen cents in stamps or coin (coin is pre- ferred). Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for this pattern you enclose 10 cents ad- ditional for a copy of our Spring Fashion Magazine. It‘s just filled with delightful styles. including smart en- sembles, and cute designs for the kiddies. SA Morning Smile l It is related that a New York busi- ness man who had become suspicious of the value of n mine in WlllCh he and some of lllS friends had invested, scllt all cxpcri. to. examine the pro- Derlfy- In a few days the expert tcle- graphed: "There is no more copper in this mine than in your head." The Nclv York man promptly wired back: “Look for ivory." SANDWICHES THAT PLEASE Hearty sandwiches cut in half-slice sizes with the crust of the broad left on appeal to men. No finger-thin drlfles if you really mean sandwiches. The ham-and-cgg tyne may be mad: into a substantial club type of ‘sandwich for men especially.’ For each sandwich make three slic- cs of buttered toast. Use the toast full size and cut oiI crusts after the sandwich ls madé." Covel; the first slice with lettuce and spread with mayonnaise dressing mixed with pre- pared mustard; acld a layer of sliced, hard-cooked egg. Cover with the szc- cnd sliczof toast, more lettuce and mayonnaise and with slices of cold I cooked ham. Covcr with the third slice of toast. Another type of man's sandwich is made with roast beef and a. hot rel- ish. Cut your bread half an inch thick and do not rcmovc 1110 crusts. Put I l thin slices of hot roast meat on the Chafing-After the bab has had a buth, rub .1 little " Qlsclinc" jelly ovcr the chafcd parts. This treatment rclicvcs the soreness, helps hcal thc irrlca- ‘, non. Colin-Take a bit of "Vaseline" , Jelly on the fin cr ti and gently massn c t e bri g: of aby's nose. his rclicvcs the stuff y feeling. * Scalp-If baby has a scaly scalp l, or a tendency to “cradle cap ' mass-ape the head gent] with “Vusc ioc"jclly every my af- ,1 cc: the bath. clinc A ‘nab: MARK PETROLEUM JILLV ‘l . Vas igmuioumlc mold, bread. season with hot barbecu: sauce and cover with other slices of butter- ed bread. Hot Barbecue Sauce. Ono half pound butter, 2 1-2 cups water, 1-4 ‘cup vinegar, 1 teaspoon mustard, 1 tablespoon sugar, I 1-2 teaspoons salt, 2 teaspoons chili pow- der, 1-4 teaspoon rod pcppcr, 1-2 tab- lespoon Worcestershire sauce, 1-2 tea- ' spoon tabasco sauce. 2 1-2 teaspoons block peppeiwI-G-onion chopped fine, 1-4 garlic choppzd ilno. - Put ingredients in saucepan, mix thoroughly and simmer one-halfhour. Use to haste mast and season barbe- cue sandwich. Spread two slices of breed with creamed butter, put a leaf of lettuce , on one slice. spread it with lllld rcsslng. cover it with sliced tomato ‘and lprlnkig it with a. combination of chopped celery and rcummbbr. finely ;:ut-. Cover the bendwith with the ......_.- SUPER-FLUOU! HAIR. Friends often ask me how I find enough to say in this column day after day. The answer is that you readers supply the subjects for these talks in your letters. Every indiv- ldunl who writes tome has his or her own set of beauty problems which differ just a little from every one‘s else. Today I have chosen e problem that comes up many times in letters from readers of different ages and types of complexion. llt is the prob- lcm of superfluous facial hair. The correspondent I have in mind now is a young woman in her 30s. a. blonde with dry skin who complains of dark, long hall's around her mouth. She has tried cutting them off with scis- sors. but this, of course, leaves stiff bristles. Cutting or shaving the hairs make them grow rapidly and become coarse. Plucktng the hair has o. simlldr effect. I have seen eye- brow hairs that had been tweezed out often grow in as tough as quills. Coarse hair naturally stands out straight from the skin like bristles. while soft, fine hair will lie down. .ChEl‘nlC8l depllatorles are some- times used to remove facial hair, but this I do not recommend as a. gen- eral rule. The chemical that is strong enough to eat off the “hairs tends to irritate the skin, especially if it is dry and sensitive. The "heirs. of course, grow in again, so that the process must be repeated at resu- lar intervals. The wax depilatories amount to nothing more than a wholesale pull- ing out of the hairs. ‘This is a. pain- ful process and may lead to irrita- tion; all irritations of the skin are to be avoided as much as possible on account of infection. When the hardened wax is pulledoff some of the hairs are found broken off at the surface of the skin while others seem to be taken out entirely. Thel tiny bulb seen at the end of the hair is called its root, but its removal does not mean thedeath of the hair foll- icle. Anothcr lluir will be produced from the same spot. One disadvantage common to both dcpilatolzies and shaving is that the process must be repealed at intervals. For the permanent removal of hairs the electric needle is used. The needle is inserted carefully into eech tiny hair follicle. where it. destroys the growth permanently. Unfortun- ately, the electricity tends to stimu- late the growths from adjacent hair follicles that have not. been burned out with the needle. As a result, the growth of hairs may increase after the electric treatment, but when all the follicles have been treated there will be no more hairs. The follicle is the little hollow in the skin into which the hair root. fits and from which it grows. A new monoplano of the Royal Air Force of Great Britain has a capacity of more than 1.000 gallons of fuel in the wings. During the winter fishing festival on the Muggelsee. a lake near Berlin. a heavy catch was hauled in and sold on the spot. to the large crowd of sightseers. cheese into a large ball, piece it on top of the sandwich and sprinkle it with paprika. Permanent Face. Swelling Finally Traced to Neuralgia The experience of Mrs. I. J. Barker, of 120 Alice Street, Guelph. was an interesting one. "I suffered wIthTiI-Edful pains all over my flee. Although I tried many medicines, my face remained badly swelled. A lady friend recommended Nerviilne. Her experience had been very satisfac- tory. 1 used Nervillne with ma. benefit myself. l rubbed Nlrvllfll over the neuralgia pert of my feet. and covered it with e-pieee of rod haul. Non-villa ended all m! trouble, and I recommend it hflhly for rheumetilm, painful mu. null- ings. lumbogo. coughs 1nd colds. I think it is e ncoelity in every home." Ali denim all Ionian in the inevitable hour is bound to strike forced to become depcndenhon their. ber of this company of the old down ness. I have spent very little on my should be sitting pretty on Easy stre lsr of our income and often beyond less, and pitiful than a poor old man. his ambitions, are all in the little bag difference how much money he make extravagant. For, as the old proverb with s. shovel." few thousand dollars saved up he ca blood to water and his bones to chalk We talk about evil women. BbOl-lt automobiles. will make him some sort of living. bu ture so helpless and plteous as the m Every woman knows o. dozen othe would clutch every dollar w flihilv i that comes to us ell and in which we ed ourselves with e competent umbrel Morell Notes lumen in norm Vilille m mu- lls ‘ennui hlulins WWW! f" (ml, and great piles of it near the berm teltlfy to their unfnfllnl in- dultfl- '- Muln Layton coffin end James Leslie. who operates e threshing out- fit and e "an gear" unwary bulilv ensued than days‘ finishing the threshing at the different buns and silo luring wood. " ' he Mani! Dru-rustic Club crown! mousing their play. namely “Arrive! of may" which n am will be mlbd If! son. leraueyfrlonlsrllreitbelaidil- ""“~-~~.neiii0.¢f!il\ Pilcbllilséldzianrgm men will be put in their places and they will be eyed clerks showing their goods with fumbling hands, living m mortal dread of losing their loos. headed old bookkeepers working overtime because they cannot keep the- pace youngsters set. Weary, spent, bent-shouldered old men flogging themselves on to their daily grind like a warnout old dray horse. And all with death in their hearts, because they know Grav- soon when young _ QR. children or some grudging relative. “All of my life the fate that I have most dreaded was to become a. mem- mnd-‘outers, but now as I near the 70s I see it looming before me. I have worked hard. I have been efficient ln busi- self and with the money I have made I ct with no fear for the future. Instead of that I have practically nothing saved-but‘ of all of the many thousands of y dollars that I have earned and I am racked withanxiety over not only what a will befall me, but my wife, when my earning capacity is gone. She has it. “I have never been nlggardly with her, because I wanted hcr to have everything we could possibly afford. Even my desire to safeguard our old age wu more for her than for myself, for a poor old woman is even more help- But she absolutely refused to co-oper- ate with me in saving, and I was helpless to do it without her. "Queer, isn't it, that man's prosperity, the realization or the failure or on his wife's wrist. It doesn't make any s, it is what she spends that counts. 1t is useless for him to try to be economical if she is a waster." ‘This men is right in saying that a husband and wife must do team work if they get along in the world and save up any money. No man, no mat- ter how thrifty he is nor how much he personally denies him-Sell’, can make e any headway in nourishing a. savings bank account if he hasa wife who is truly says, "s. woman can throw more out of the back door with a teaspoont han a man can put in at the from No men in the world are more entitled to our sympathy than those who are cursed with wives who are spenders. heartbreaking, none more discouraging, none more exasperating than for a man to spend his life toiling just to keep ahead of the bill collector. Mid W see other men of no more ability than he has forging ahead of him because he is tied down with the ball and chain of his wife's debts. For no experience can be m0"? n often pass through the portals thfl-T- when he thinks of what would become women who are vamps, who are gold- dlggers, who are herlots, but the worst of them cannot ruin a man's life mo" completely than do these good, kindly, affectionate wives through whose jngers money slips away like water. These wives who literally sell their hus- band's lifeblood for silk stockings and Ports hats and bridge prizes and If these extravagant wives only had sense enough to look at the matter straight they would see that it was even more imlwflant I01‘ themselves "l" the future should be safeguarded than it is for their husbands. For a man can practically always [at something to do up to the very end of his life that. t under heaven there is no other crea- lddle-aged woman who is pennlless. She knows no way of making a. dollar and she Ls too old to learn how- she cannot compeip with girls Nobody wants her around a business office. Nobody will even give her a. show at any work but the most menial, and there is nothing left for her but to find out how steep are another man's stairs and how bitter the bread of dependence. ‘ r women who used to live on cakes and ale, but who have not even bread to eat in “their old age. How much misery it would save if they could only realize that that lit! l! bimnd t0 be will‘ own unless they save up n. competence against their old 889- 1f they did. if the extravagant wives would look into the future, they hat they would make the eagle scream upqfl it, and they would beck their husbands up in saving for that rainy dlY get so very wet if we have not provid- lg, DORUITIY DIX ell, and hope for e speedy recovery to her lllllll good health. Mount Mary School. Morell. is do- ‘ing excellent work under‘ the skill- ful mlnllement of Mines Marion Coffin lfld lnttie RQllhr. .._...._. Mill Genevieve Joy is visiting in West 8t. Peters. the guest of her grlndparontl. Mr. And Mrs. J. J. Mc- Adlm. We are planed to note that Mn. W.'Wltlon ll Ibmlt lllln If“! her recent illness. - [M10000 m: trout with us u all miwlsoodnlcht skatinr. A very mt and exciting nines: flleyoimgnfiof 7 K 60c '. 19%.. Made w The Canadian Shredded Wheat Compurry, “,1 IVIETEORS 0R. “SHOOTING STARS" How would you like to have a hot cinder fall out of the sky and whiz past your nose? Maybe you think that couldn't llap- pen, but don't be too sure! Have ou ever heard of meteors? They re also called “shooting stars." "Me- teor" is a better name, because I am not speaking of a real star. ‘ 1f a “It is all my wife's fault. She is a good woman, but one of those who ""1 m" "m9 °l°5° w the ‘mnh- l‘ believe in enjoying today and letting tomorrow take care of itself. am has Wmfld mm‘ W end I" W“ and me- never been able to deny herself anything she wanted or to see the wisdom ' t ‘ of providing against some possible catastrophe. In vain I have preached thrift to her and pictured to her the horrors of a. dependent old age. laughed at me and mocked me and gone her way, living up to the last dol- ‘.‘.$ 4\ ‘*9 t The meteor cinder known as “the Willamette." Meteors are believed to be parts of “broken planets." They g0 mum-g the sun. in much the some way the earth does. Almost any night-if you look long nough-you will see a meteor streak- crs Pioneers and the Dreadnought! of Morell, ending by a. tie of 2-2. Mr. Ernest McQulrc, Accountant b: Weyburn Security Bank, Western Canada. is spending a well-earned vacation after an absence of seven years, with his. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McQuire, Morell. Miss Marie Murphy, R, N, was visiting at French Village, the guest The door of opportunity opens only to a. golden key, and if a. man has a °r M" and M“ Tmlple Mummy- Mrs. William Beldert is making a lead to fortune; he cannot do this if his wife has spent everything he made speedy recovery from her recent at- as they went along. The man without a. dollar in the bank is a. bond slave "ck 01 F1"- who is owned body and soul by his employer, because, no mutter how badly be is treated. he dares not throw up his Job if he has no money to live on bee" "NRTKNRK ‘Peltmenl It P141166 for even s. week. The man who has no money laid by that would see him EdWflrli Blflhd Hospital. has return- through sickness or loss of position llvcs in a sort of panic that turns his ed home much improved. Miss Marjorie Robbins, who has The old-time concert put on by Mr. of his wife and his children and himself if any catastrophe should befall him. C. E. Pratt and Son. St. Peter's. was greatly enjoyed by Morell radio fans. IONA SCHOOL The following is class standing of {tmmzE1o4Ys<n»wwd§ lng through the sky. This means that it hos come within rungs or m, earth and is being pulled down by gravity. _ When you rub your hands together, they become wann. When a meteor Pubs fl8airlst the air around the earth, it grows not and bums. "rim l, why it looks like a. "shooting star" when sccn_ in the sky at night, Most meteors are burned to ashes 119501“ they reach the earth's surface; but some cinders strike the ground, Several school pupils havg 101d m: o! finding meteors. In one villus e meteor fell in r road. almost striking e wsgm, A “Dmflll "1 Eflkland. working in s gar- den, was startled to hove g, ma”, bury itself Just a few feet away. In Brazil an ox was killed by g meteor cinder. So far as I know m, only man ever killed by g, ma”, was s. native of India. That hap- pened in 1827, in MIOW, 1mm, Yes. you MIGHT be struck by s‘ meteor cinder, but there is not one glance in a million that you will be, 50 dOIfl. W011’?- . Tomorrow-What Meteor (Anders _ are like. Iona School for months of Janus/y and February: Grads X.—Dorothy Flynn. . Grade VIIL-l, ‘Katie McPherson: 2, Florrle McPherson; 3. Cyrus Dock- erty. Grade V.V-1, Agnes Flynn; 2, Nor- man McLeod; 3, Margaret McLeod and Rita Flynn. Grade IV.—1, Margaret Mclleclw em; 2, Richard Quinn. Grade III-l, warren lllclnnis. Grade II.—1, Agnes Quinn; 2, Tens McLeod. Grade !.—l. Dannie Mcllnchern; l. Rosanne Quinn: 3, Role Quinn. Perfect Attendancer Katie Mac- Pherson, Florrle McPherson, Cyrul Dockerty, Margaret MacEechern. Te- na McLeod, Rose Quinn, Mlrllrtt McLeod. Percentage of, attendance, 90 P91’- cent. Murnret MICllIlY-U, Touche? Doctors Mada in Canada . -. . On lclentclldrugdrygegd; and depuunmsl mm. Phil: ihoelnulnnnndubnb N0- M79501)- ~ to T ex ~ ' lktaluvyNapllea, Approve the sanitary protection offered in 771a N EW and |uraov:o kor:x Marks the greatest step-in intimate feminine hygiene Deodorizes! ..¢nd44 _ ‘other important flanmr: ‘ - " , I ‘ i1£'.'..‘..‘.$.....“""..‘l;f‘" """' Z-Comm an muddled and: no cvldcool of mien Proteotioll s-Dndérauu nefoiy, omnib- by e an sad patented preulll 4-441": n n jeur neurob- lily lluQvllgll 3 ~4~ ‘ l-fmmlldlrpuodoflnow . 75c .\...,.l