l - v VLALYGHING, animate in r‘ ~ A n . d. PC i! “A! FUR an BEAUTY For T720 Cook ..,,, and al'o'.l.' .1 iiulul‘ 1111111 Add ifs» water and cl ice. \’.'ill strrve 12 the time lo I.{‘l"\I‘. pour over when‘ people. MT. STElllirklYl NOTES The lYJ-‘(ir 7 ww ‘ (3.1 i» >ti:.‘»:1t; I. '=. llllfl quite .1: tlwi: ncl- \ll violate‘ of lll‘ 1.131.. Mi‘, Ogl- .\l.. ‘Ji, “as a \l.l'.i.l‘ it» ; . i'.ctii'._ , . This Ifiztlri ~10. :i;.- Llcni’, cnvri"_'.'. l l < Etiquette BYIODCQIQ 1 Q. What should be served with jam that is to be eaten on bread or toast at the ten table? A. Small butter-knives with which to spread it. Q. If a man does not escort a woman to a dance party, with whom should he dance first? A. The daughters of the hostess, if there are any; otherwise, he may choose any partner. Q. Should a doctor's title be used on the wedding invitation? A. Yes. A Morning Smile Daughter: “nut, uadcly, why do You object to my becoming engaged? is it because of my youth?" Fiitiicr: “Yes; he's hopeless." - order oi the day at the present time, and many of the ladies 0f this vLcinLty‘ are thus employed, The many friends or Miss Irene Warren, Cherry Hill, are pleased to know tiizit she was able to return to her SCllLlul in Covehead, recently after being confined to hei- home [01- a time, owing to illness.-—X.Y.Z. KENSINGTON l‘ -.-- 5...........ii>.......1 . , i Dorothy Dix Letter Boa: Is it Risky to Marry a Man Whose Parents and Sister Made Unhappy Marriages ? - Fighting Parents Who Wreck Child- ren's Nerves — Kind Friend ‘I husband to seek enjoyment outside of his home-that is, playing cards. not gambling-and drinking with his friends. My fiance also has a sister who was mar- ried and divorced because her husband was unable to support her. I cannot see any inkling of either the mother's or the father's traits in this boy, although I have known him a long time. Personally, he is a splendid young man, just graduated from the law school and is making $30 a week as a law clerk. 1 am also making a nice salary and we intended to be_ married this winter and plow the rest oi the way to- gether, but my family have told me, and mean to ad- here to it, that if I marry this man_I may consider myself an outcast, and that they will not have anything to do with me. Shall I give up the man I love because of my people? I can't see any oi the faults oi his parents in him, nor can any one else, but my mother claims that these will show after marriage, and that 1 will suffer. What shall I do? DIBILLUBIONED. , Answer: I should say go on and marry your young man and be havlly- You? parents are only bluffing. All of this old heavy father business of turning a girl out into the cold world because she marries the man she wants in- ‘stead oi her father's and mother's choice, calls for a laugh now instead oi WEEDS. Any intelligent girl, who has sense enough to hold down a good job and earn her own bread and butter, is perfectly capable of picking out her own i husband, and all the father and mother have a right to do is to sign on the Rev. Mr. Loring of West Point oc- cupied the pulpit, of the Unjtgd (‘hiirch here on Sunday‘ April 12ml lut both services, ilnd preached ac-. upiably to large congregation. Rev. D. L. Griffiths of Kensing- inn who is supplying Zion Church, Chariotleloirn, is exchanging pul- pits with Rev. S. .l. ltilacArthur oi Mom-inn ior two Sundays April 12th and 19th. \\/'l‘.'~l»llllll.sl(‘l‘ United Church, Win- nipeg 1-1 u liicli Rev. S. J. Borinell, is pastor is the church home of a large number oi Maritime people includ- ing some families which formerly resided in Kensington. In a letter re- cvntlv received from friends an a4:- cuunt was given of their communion service oi Mar. 29th, 122d persons received communion at that ser- vice. ’I‘hcre are now 1450 members which aitcordinsz to Mr. Bonnell is llln largest. membership in the his- _i.igy- oi‘ the church. In the course of :.ci~iiii.~n .\lr. Donnell announced iii~ spiritual movement that \' igtcr Churrh is cxpcrlencng ‘" nit a part oi the wonderful lung oi religious int-crest that rlti . ;\ l)','lll‘-{ evidenced in many oi the Winnipeg Churches. in an nn-oiint of the annuahmeet- n= oi st. Afatthews Anglican i» — Crunch, Winnipeg’ lhe lmme oi iviir. J. G. Whitehead appears as an office- beni-eh, Mr. Whitehead is a former Krnsintzicn boy the son of the lat: Tilr il-LKl. Nlrs. Robert Whitehead, /.'i 'i\ been nn active worker ln 1:1. Matthews Church for many years. Ora n? iho Clark Family tidy/e’ EIPE a in ecrlhen dish or bake pan. Mix Deans in iecispoonful of dr l1 . '1' KT.- "q Lot lhe iov qui VLCLARychML-ggn, I of Clark's Pork and hands praise tiris Clark Kitchens help ckar and belie! me fihllmfb roar: and BEANS, (wan. Tomolo, Chili or Plain Sauce) Place contents of can y mustard. Place slices of ocon nr slcli pork on lop, oven —-when heated lhfOUgll——5erye_ then pop dish info you uls. F” Prepared in Canada for more lhan 50 years. l‘ dotted line and give her their blessing. And don't worry about their not forgiving you. The old days when parents never spoke again to a son or daughter v/ho married against their will are also gone. People have too many pleasant and interesting things to do in these times to cherish grudg- es, and besides hate has to have something more to live on than a pre- judicc. So father and mother will come around and think they made the match by the time the first baby arrives. If your young man cnme from a family in which there was insanity, or which was afflicted with some inheritable disease, your parents would be right to try to keep you from marrying him, but the idea that he is bound to be a nagger bccausc his mother is, and a drunkard because his father has been driven to drink, and that your marriage will end in the divorce court because his sister's did, is so ridiculous that one can hardly take it seriously. I should urgently suggest that you procure a good book on eugenics and get your father and mother to read it and see how science deals with this subject, and how many things that we used to think "are in the blood" aren't there at all, and how few characteristics are really here- ditafy. As for children "taking after" their fathers and mothers and following in their footsteps, it works around th e other way quite as often. Many a boy has a perfect horror oi drink because in his childhood he saw his father in his cups. Many a girl makes the ncatest oi housekeepers because her mother was a sloven. and many a girl is gentleness and patience and amiability lt- sclf to her husband because she has always in her mind tha picture oi her poor intimidated father bending his head ‘ before her virago mother's nagging. . The most peaceful home I ever go into is presided over by a woman whose childhood was spent in a. house of strlie where there was continua! quarrcling between her father and mother, and so determined was she not to make that kind of home that she never permits any argument on any subject whatever. Ii your mother-is determined that you shall never marry into any fam- ily in which there is a woman who nags, or a man who drinks, or in which there has been a divorce, you are doomed for spinsterhood. I believe that children should be largely guided by their parents in marriage, and that when the parents have some" valid objection against a young man or a. young woman, the children should respect it. But to break oil a match because the parents don't happen to like the disposition oiayoung man's motherpr the father's habits, or because his sister was unlucky enough to marry a man who couldn't support her, is absurd, and a girl isn't called on to wreck her life's happiness and break hei- heart because her father and mother are narrow-minded and prejudiced. Ii the young man himself had a bad temper, or ii he drank, or even if he was divorced, there might he excuse for parental interference. But when it is only papa and momma. and sister they object to, it is beyond consider- atlon. DORUHIY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-My parents are always quarreling with one another. _ Mother accuses father oi going with other women, though I don't think this , is true. She doesn't know the value oi money and is always wanting more money that he is givingto that woman he is supposed to be going with. She says these things before the children and my two young brothers are get- ting so they don't respect father, and stay away from home as much as they} can, because no one likes to come home to a mother and father who are! always fighting. I have tried everything to bring them to their senses, but have failed, and it has got on my nerves so that I feel that I cannot stay at home any longer. Both of them love me dearly. Do you think if I went away it would hel pl any? I have a business education and a good job. BABE. Answer: I think that ii you told them that you could not any longer endure such a place oi discord as they make your home it might possibly bring’ them to their senses. It is worth trying and at any rate there is no use in your having your young life wrecked and your nerves shattered by con-l‘ tinuing to live in a house that is not hing but a battleground. You have a I right to peace even ii you have to leave your father and mother to ilnd it. There is nothing else in the world so curious as the fact that marriedl couples seem to think they have a. perfect right to fight as much as they, like and that what they say to each other is nobody! business. Not even their children's. They also feel that they have a perfect right to make for their children a home that is a hell on earth. Apparently they never consider what the effect of the way that they treat each other is upon theirchildren. They never stop to think that‘ for a child in be brought up in a house oi strife, to be compelled to assist in its \.S7cin Health Derived from‘ Daily Use of " Tan nap, nro andfr mumoiemsethes ~ the Olllthgll, lntiseggl: and healing, H“. to remove imples, rashes and irritations and the T QI—., smooth and pure, to impart a pleasing fragrance to the skin. j loldsvrywb . i‘ '-. Olnhanrfle. ab— Eslabliihmenls u! Montreal, r.o.. "" “"":"7" """"" "W: 1' "- n" Si. Reml, P.Q., and Harrow, Onl. c"""-'rl-','."|.".T'.. u slab; 00;. ., .. ‘l .‘ . ' vw ..- 0n a.» V" n --~ ‘ ' r" ' y * ,3!“ ,.‘,_,‘.~ t , ' - . an ..~-.,.- swvW-‘v . Dear Miss Dlx—I am deeply in love with a young man to whom my ' family strongly object because of his family. His mother, though aha is a remarkable housekeeper, is a mean and nagging woman and has driven her than Dad can afford to give her and says that he should give her the; One oi the effects of our retwn to femininity is the draped collar with plaited ruiiling that lends much charm and daintincss. " Today's model in suit crepe silk in gay print in red and white on black ground, is strikingly smart with plain white crepe contrast. You'll especially like the slim- ming tricky hip bands that marge into circular ifulness at the front of the skirt. And it's simplicity itself to make Style No. aoiis is designed roi- sizes 5 wont spread [flllastrilgizie (learned. llbwioAvoii-I (org/infill: Most coldtroubles have their be- ginning in the delicate lining of the nose. i Stop your cold at its beginning - with the first snifiie or sneeze use C-ta-rhozone inhaler. It releases a healing vapor that destroys the bacteria which causes colds and other winter ailments. Catarrho- zone cleans and dlslnfects the nos- trils, clears away nasty discharges. relieves that stuffed-up feeling in the forehead. . How To Stop Colds Catarrhozona — has successfully restored cases that resisted other Iremedies. “No one can know, better than I the benefit one gets from the very first day's use of Catarrhoaone," writes T. T. Hopkins of Westvale. “1 Bronchial Oatarrh, ear noisesyhead- ghad for years a stubborn case of ‘ ache, sore eyes, stopped-up nose and throat. It affected my appetite and mad. my breath rank. Catarrhoamte restored me quickly and now keeps‘ me irse from colds." Large one dollar size Catarrhomne with hard rubber inhaler lasts two months and is ‘Hospital-Certified!’ Smaller sizes 25c and 50c. Catarrhozone __ firings Relief Quickly ~u1.i....=*zi.*.. ruiesgaili. ideas.) g Illustrated f fDr , ' _" I " ‘" W Patt By Annabelle *1 m... Furnished m . we... ‘........;‘ v 1s. 18 years, 30, as, bust. Navy blue flat crepe silk with white flat crepe is entercmly youthful and wearable for ~ Sine 36 requires 3% yards 39-inch with $6 yard 85-inch contrasting and 2% yards plaftinlii‘ Price of pattern 1s cents. 40 Ind 42 inches No. aoss. size sQIIIOIOOOOIeeuoaleeloosollll Name,- neoeeuu 1 masseuse"...- 8 Q IlolloeeoeslseoouonbleleIeasennola-ls Olt! Blah .-. vasnmonellllolls ALBERTON The death of Ausustus McLellan occurred at his home on Friday, Npfll 8th.. Mr. McLellan was born in‘ "Grand River in 1839, from which place he Li to rutureil’ I .42 m... it ‘Jzfiliiqfl "DAVID McCOY, age IO yqqr, . More proof iha! children lake cod-liver oil willingly-y ihis emulsified way Lmn so many other youngsbais. , David McCoy. pictured above, hates plain cod-liver oil. His moved to Elmsdals, finally taking up. his scalding place in Alma. rarmiagl was his chief occupation and he prov-l ed a steady faithful worker. He 1s' survived by 3 sisters, all nuns, two‘, are in Worcester and one in the, Mother House, Mantras-balsa 2 sonni Frank, Brooklina N. J. and W. B. McLellan at home; one daughter; Ma's. Matthias Graves, Alberton. ‘Ihe funeral was held on ‘Ihumday morn- ing at the Sacred/Hem Church. na- quiem High Mass was sung by Rev. T. Campbell. The pail bearers were; Frank McKenna, Peter Burke, John Wallace, Harold Warren. Con. 0'- Brlen and John O Gordon. Funeral was ‘ucted by G. Roy Phillips, undertaker. "Craig's Wife" was shown ln the Institute Hall on Saturday, Alpril 11 th. stars in the cast were Irene Rich and Warner Baxter. The picture presented the story of a. woman who cared more for money and control oi the home than she did ior the man she married. She lived to herself and was finally left to herself for~her.. husband was forced to desert her. A i, "Ruby Lips" was also pre- scnud and the evening was pleasant- ly spent for all who attended. Mn. Herbert Champion left on Monday morning tn jolnher daught- er in Wales. She was met in Konsing- ton by Mrs. Henry who will accomp- any her on her long journey. ‘flielflmeftl of Mr. James McLeod of Alberton was hold on ,Sunday. (April 12th and despite the very lass condition of the roads. was largély attended. many coming from a dis- tanootopllyalnettrlbute to the man whole distinguished career has been completed. Mr. McLeod who passed a/way on Wednesday at the age of 3'1 years, formerly worked in Roger's Store, Mberton, ind than took up farming. A man" of sterling character whose word was as 800d as his bond he was "hold in hlsh es- teem and generally revered. Funeral services were held at the house‘ by the ‘aw. m. Wwler assisted in u» prayers by Dr. Thompson. Mr. Mc- Leod was the recipient of- many flowers. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. William Hoiit, Wor- cester: who atientad the funeral oi her father and Mrs. Doule at homo; also four sons. Fred, mm Rupert; William and Bandy, Worcester, and Mont at horns. . ‘lhe poll beam-swore J. W. Illorsy- the, William Deavlbt, James Millman, Alfred Gillie, John O. Gordon and James Hunter. mother admitted it frankly when the Scott's Emulsion reporter re- cently called at her home at 187 Sackville St" Toronto.‘ But Mrs. McCoy was anxious to see if David would feel any difierantly about Scott's Emulsion of Cod- Liver Oil, so she gladly consented to let him try it. David took a spoonful. Then he grinned. . . . “Say. I do like flail." he said. "It tastes good!" Pleuaonfer lo take- but that isn't alll Pale. underweight. run-down chil- dren -—they need cod-liver oil. Give ii to them ‘the pleasantest way—-givethemScott’sEmulsion. scorris emulsion men Plousunlor to IQIKI—IIIIOI Iojljoli,’ OI VITAMIN wuhQ. all a I '0 "01",: Mmwllh Scott's Emulsion doesn't upset even delicate stomachs. It brings you purest. Norvvsian cod-liver oil in its pleasantelt form-vs pas- fect emulsion.’ Easier to take- oasiertodigest. You getmoregood out of Scott's Emulsion and you leel the benefitslquicker.‘ Scott's Emulsion contains no alcohol. It is rich in vitamin A," the growth-promoting vitamin that hel s guard against disease. It is rich in vitamin D. the sun. shine vitamin that prevents rick. ets. It also contains vital minerals that aid in forming sound bones and "teeth. This gives Scott's Emulsion a special advantage Iq- growing children. infants. nun- ing and expectant mothers. GetScotffsEmulsion ' At your nearest drLifigut. in home size and am traveling sine bottles. Sales ts: Harold ll‘. Ritchie 8i Co" td.. Toronto. MRS MALOLM MARTIN _ more ‘pissed away in the P. 1c. r. Hospital on ‘the morning of March within-s. Malcolm Martin, Gram; View. "She had been in failing health for some time, but only recently did her condition become such that an operation was found necessary. On Tuesday word had been received oi the "success of the operation, so that the news of her sudden death on Thursday came as a great shock to friends and relatives. Born in Grand View in the year i857, the daughter of Duncan and Mary Finlayson, she spent her life funeral. in Grand View. Hes nephew, Alli Finlayson, is on tho old hfllllhldx" Mrs. Martin will b0 mlllfll l?! Olin... circle of friends. Bhe ll survival by,’ her husband, Malcolm Martin. Despite the bad conditions o! the‘? roads her funeral was largely lb: ‘tended. The service was conduclet. from the Orwell Head Church by‘; Rev- D. M. Binclnir. The Choir. sang "There will be no dark valley‘ ' and "softly and ‘Ilsnderlyfi two favorite hynms oi the deceased which... she had marked some’ time bofmji.‘ her death" in her hymn book, with the request that they be sung at ~~ "llowwlll you hcvo your Shredded Wheat Jhls morning?" "I'll have i: with hot milk. my dean It's a bit chilly out parents’ quarrels, and to be buffeted by their passions, wrecks its nerves and makes it subject to all sorts of neuroses that may blight its entire life. They never think that when they hurl insults at each other and accuse each other of all sorts oi vile conduct, they are destroying the children's respect ior them and that they are killing every particle of influence they might have over their boys and girls. v i 'l‘hey never think that a child would be better of! with no parents than with quarreling ones, and that any asylum would be shatter home than one in which hate dwells. Surely, ii parents could realize how miserable they make their children by their quarrels, they would deny themselves the pleasure oi their daily spat. DOROTHY DIX. ._ Dear Miss Dlx—I have a dear friend, who is a splendid, loyal husband, the father of seven children, to whom he is devoted. I know that his wife is unfaithful to him, but he does not suspect it. Shall i tall him? A Answer: 3 ‘l Certainly not. Let him dwell in blissiulignorande as long as he can. His knowing that his wife is untrue to him would not help matters, because he could not make over her nature and make be: loyal and faithful. Perhaps he does know about his wife and fmheroically pretending-not to for the children's sake andtoksep a home for them. liar it is not easy for a man to know what to do with seven children lf- they have no mother. A! 1011s as ha can keep up ‘his pretense oi ignorance he saves hlsifuo, but ii you tell him oi his wife's uniaithfulness and that everybody knows it. you will force him in divorce her to preserve his standing in the community. " - ' -» DOROPBY DIX. doors, and I want somethinl to wann me up. It certainly, , is great the way you can serve Shredded Wheat ll either a hot or cold cereal- and just an euily either way. Fickle spring can't fool us. can she? And be sure to have some Shredded Wheat yourself because it is who! you need to keep stron and healthy in this kind weather." . Help Canadian Prosperity by utingTWO "Shredded When" . Biscuits s day. suarnosoi H1 "WITH sill. ms BRAN’ g or m: vvnoisvvnuf- qll an stmsooso vim eoammuu ‘ma’