‘lwfiflgwfl?’ °"J 5313315529. £19.???’ '---_-,. ahtmkfiqnwci,“ it rsvf Q UOCOGCJOOO<D>F“A5'\ QGCM O<D§OG&-fl(1)l*-~-*-~-*~ Dorothy Dix '3 Letter Box j ‘ "Us"; lt’s a Maifs World Mostly Because Parents. y m’ tiff ” Have Made it so~lt’s About Time Imugh- ““ mm fcrs Were Given an Equal Break W ifh Sons '1'1ii< i< u man's world all rich’, but the prtrcnfs arc to v and I both uurk in a store. but ixhrn our 10m: . \t- ‘.0 liclp unh the chores It litimel’ N0. 2i t ‘tfilllbfllltl tune-s no. He gels the paper and . nnds a t-tt.‘ place in which to read. I have , The book itself, “For Readers It) itulp 4.1 suppct" and alter that l hate the Only", makes very entertaining t-...-nt-~ to wash vtlme he drcsse-s and steps; reading. Written by J. Penn, I. tut . 1.1». n; zhe lami-y car along. Do 1 evtr ‘g p eudonyti. it was originally; intend- ; tar to lake any of my friends for _ ed as a form of homage to the .t.t' .' 1'. ts simply unhcaid of. My earri- ,' gmal, mind; ‘who had worked um " furniture and lhe butther and t drggmed in the famous gelding while his are spent on Jttnes and t’ 11mm of m; Bu“ h Musgmn Bath tnorhttts he finds hlb ,‘ But Mr. Penn's subject ran away . ~\*F(‘l anti CPBfl wrfilis and #111115 .‘ with hun, he came to the British ' him, While 1 lintt- to spend hall ‘ yqugewn ‘or yen weeks and stayed zine the nzgtit beioie washing his . over u,“ years’ And msmad of I huootty prlhxsfli ttnythu-lg‘ for me. reading books he learned w mad w“ pktv_t.i‘_.ig.iiiusllluui.ci, but l .~tt.ll so) it is hugux] andbflagesl; Bugiflgme ‘ “ “ ‘ ' on e a ena e irnse , y a DEGUSwID w“ queer twist of chance or was lt a l\\'l.>l of his imagination? to pay n great. and more practical homage to the Readmz Room. The plfiiilfl British Museum Reading Ronni was opened in 1557. a httge circular room with mtlei of shvlvcs and a tremendous dome- the second largest m the world. "For nearly thrce-quartcrs of a ceiittiry”, writes Mr. Penn. "men and women have sat in this lltcr- ary workshop and have locked up into the dome for nistiirnf-ion". And the names around the dome- Chauoer, Shakespearc. Caxton. Milton. Titidalc, Locke. Spencer. Audi-on, swift. Pepe, Gibbon. Wordsworth. Scott. Bryon, Carlyle, ft “as. 1 think, the caricature by LOW that first attractcd me to "For Readers Oi-ily”. The carlcatun B entitled "a cue of over- GPIUHG his weight down on l strict uiet of theology". It was reprodu- t-cd.. I have forgotten when, but it and four others are m the Furor/s tin ;1.lll‘.l\('l‘ ll1<‘ll‘ wit.» and prclct . on m..» nubtuiy- knows, sitice girls iti- - .u Ltitir niuttit-is and fathers‘ uumlur. .tln~n a son 1s linrn there l.) feasting and Mtii pa‘. the l.l'tl1(’l‘0l1 the bark, and the t l ptutie ttiitl beams Vllll] couipnlcent-y for . . . .~t.t- uni-torts uontieriul. Whereas, when a 1.1m t-tt-n it wztl chop in her honor. The lather llllVrt hj. 120111 his follows utitl the IIlOLllUI‘ tells l.:l‘lt- girls are lllll(il3 to llf‘ p with the '-'\k'i1-‘l'\l from 00mg any chums. Wht-n l..\|‘.\ll|'|\\.\' brtrlllvi‘ gins L\\' CE us lllllCil as ullll.) uutl lnno to tut to work Alotht-t" trtun her as a manor of course, but . nu LM)-\. and she bi-utts about it if he con- .t Lmrlltly .1 t u"; Macaulay, Tennyon. Browning- . ttn-t \\<tir;.~ Et.t.~ 1n hclp when she comes home by some of thcm had been readers ., . ma; 1.|~ tt.~nt.. alltl doing tnc lltlllly bCWHIQ, or 1,110,?‘ and My; Pm“ mweeds w ». . t m‘. tinmttt \\t...t Aiutnci" steps out. t And she hub tin; and delve for all posnlbie refer- . ..n.:.<..ti.ti,. but lIlOlll('I'l1l‘\'t‘l thinks OI m1“. _ The fntulhq m? some very -11-"~|=l'“¢>1‘5~, 1111111811 he 1-5 W" 1111105 5b 117-719 W clntriiimr, skctchcs of many of our literary grout. 11nd some very humoiirous "ahccdotios" of present. day humanity" rt-qzttzt their fragile and ClFlIUflH.‘ duughwrs iznt l.\ .1110 take from the glrlb their hard- t U11}; to >pctiu tn 110011001115 utitl on drink. \Ir. Prim has fornd some ar- . - t.» t..t.t Z\l.\'l' ll‘. tllt‘ bu) blity trout ilitli‘ $0115 alict Uliilqrt‘. apt “ii-aw; A pfEW t . t ., l W. ll .> om: ul the iny-tri-irs u; nuttttc. but, evlnapib ' l ' " ..,_..., _,. ‘Hi >ill>I’\.\‘“il!l-l lilll-illtiltifnib "HUI a unduuex} aud U1 Aiacmflfly he wrnes’ l: his 1- ‘lltnl uni u ntouuntl let down his wile when she .. klmwledge i“ “*0 asuilnLfmng m?“ I htitt- own .\lf'l~'. ctcr .~l1l(.'C my lithe g rl was ' slmw-Y sfflfu‘ “Mlod mm a bmk m Ht nilyl l nutt- uttomu dlarfltlalled and unhappy. I bmcljhc“ of smmmm“ l.tti gin. tit-tome ‘nrctt ul tho bziliy ttntl nic llrctlllbt‘ he 513mm? m m‘ lmtrl- m m5 be‘ 11> znt ptlltlil» in tiitVt-ottiztry, while he is working ui 11'1"”? and m 111' al-‘Pmmnce- he but k tints. He says tints lo the only reason for sending 510011 0111 l" a TOW 0T (imb- (‘@71- . wt. t lllilLil‘ he .s tired of stay ng at home nights and not get- l'911l'1"nfil1)’-¢|°1l16d T986915. 11KB .8 ~ rta- it» nt- UMJG .0 GO. l (IUll t get to go places either, D0 Grimm" macaw Bmflflg Owls" - ~0f t; mt- uoun? I bcltcte l yvzll low my mind if l don‘t CQFLYIP- 1115 Original 11nd __ lflfigATlgrlEll (‘CCQIILTlC genius towers among the Victorians: he has taken from the Reading Room and ha; given much" Of Browning, V111‘? .t“..llg _vour litisbntitl down? Arirt you doing that. ..t .-|.. .\..lt vtnlil 1.5.» and complaint; and sttspltioiis ;, t, _ _ .. .t.titt=; rittrnge Jlltl trying to ntake llllllgs as easy for tyhatever he read. he remembered, . t . ' so that G. K. Chesturtt . who knows . .t.;.<.tr.l in llit- unrlti, ;L in for tt wuiiiztii to post: as Lin; MiLufunn “~@1,1_ M11194 his . u min a Dn-J) unn :0 lot-l .liat lit-r tiusuuiid 511011 d invniotjv. ‘prnrliqirius, like the Brit- . 1t» nt 1- tor 1151.113 cone su. Be honest. vtith 5'01"‘- ish Mtiscunt‘ ‘ of Dickens. m yntt ‘Wall-Gd it and bccaottsc baoics are q.“ W3‘ a cwayo,-r_ _ he w” a l: is Jllbl, your misfortune that you '- makcr of book» and not an ab- Nottimg your husband was fvfilmlblbl? snrbcr".. , Of Hugh Walpole who was saved from completg discour- : hr ha~ 1,101 a bad break as well as you have. He agemen, in ‘he Reading Room‘ mu‘. _\'<"lll‘ hculth, 1hr‘ terrible bils that. have had to Fmm men on Walpole tint: doctors and hospnuls, and the depression of mounted from Suncefs "0 Emmi; I t- L.L'l,\ inght to H sitk and nervous wife instead of ‘a novel foumwd “OWL Faster m‘; faster he wrote. and the more he turned out. the more useful he be» catne lost. perhaps his prose was deteriorating and perhaps lt might. have been bcllcr to remain closer .~ a result. -k people. you have got sclf-centcred and self- Attllt) lor nun as you could by gctt ng morbid .nk.ni:, he has lct jtuu down. lry Lu >11" the situation from his point of view, and . - * vttili uhat _\0'.t CUIISIIIUI‘ ms neglect, toll him i~ in bt*"lt' <0 ptttir-nt with voti. He has done m ‘he “Tammi” of Eighteenth 11111 10 X11111‘ 931N115‘ Whrre r011 118W “m” prifatcnét or t‘. srrhr: van have a chance to pay up Y0!!!‘ “Twelve is no record of the day nruricrl mi intro 9. Col 7) 21$“? Air-Longhilnlzifadmgunfiogieli- when he wcnl, it was the with- drawal of a great intellectual force. The thoughts hc had worked out tinder this dome might remain, but his futunc ideas would bc given nut elsewhere" Of Ghandhl, “'I‘hcre ls no record to tell when he came nor what. he read, or where he sat. but we can clearly see that Indian student; medium sizcd. thin, with kind dark eyes. a soft vnice.... he was serious. and thoughtful the quict hour: .~pmit in (he Reading Room must have had their sham in forming this philo nphic anarchist, the rc- r rd prnphct and formidable l.nil'llilal loader of a section of modern IndinK-tmd so on- Antl m‘ thaw and nll true scholars l 'll‘t(i their visits to the great British .\/lll.\f‘lll'll. Mr. Pcnn writes. “They know that the old must be absorb- ed before the new can be created." ‘Boy and Dog'Tea Towel b” The following item appears iii‘ “Novtw and View‘ of Literary Inntlcii" rccontiv "For the many , r WfllCYm of vari ..s ntifiotialitlcs, who dcpcnd largely on the Brltirh Miucum for their hlcraiy material, ft ls 300d news that the mconstrtlc- lion nf it< North Library. on which two ycars labour has bccn spent. is now practically complete, and that it will be open to readers by October. The interval will be occupied in decoration. the lfistflll- ment of fittings and the placing of WEDNEFIDAY W...»- rim I .--- -~.<..-.. t, \ :/ THURSDAY , ‘ y. v-i- b \/ FR‘DAY :r:-:1rvi;v§.soo,ooo books on the new \ ,1 cc-pup r-N" . I '1 - ‘ One of the must intervening m <1. rooms in the British museum is the one which holds the Elgin marbles. thmc Greek masterpieces of sculp- ture carried away from the Acropo- lls in Athens Lord Elgin in 1803. Amongst them ls the‘ group of the three goddesws from the Eastern SUNDAY “EH33, y,-.,.,y;,.,,;~- Dtx-itzn No Z20 15 "nm- anti hog‘ mttxf s fllllllflllg fn Pfllhffilflfil‘ and (‘rcnles n new Pfdlmfm 0! U19 PlYIYIPBOYP-UIB decoration for tcu 1:i--r1.~ 'l‘hrr-atl _tuur ncedle with the gay floss and fflm°"5_ m?" PM!“ _Wh°'~l 057W" _ wh m! simph, m., ms m; drnpencs are mde cribably beauti- M‘ The P'\ll".'li t‘11l‘.’fill1.$ tzaiulcr for sevrn tnwcls. Cfimplrle instructor» "11- FTOYH n"? Plftherm 10° l"? [m- pmbi-uitivrtttz. (IPTIIL- m rm sci-rm; uscd. minr stigkvsttons. some fragments 0f its frflw. the For contpirtc pnttarn fwd lii>1fi'tiCl-l0'l'ls for all of these designs. dfi-‘Plll’ 0T l" lfli-fil-fi- Mid "W"! m The Charlottetown lsalso one ofthc origlnalCarvatidvs fmm the portlco of the Erechthetim. After Lord Elgm had removed this figure from the temple. erecting In it: place a substitute. the natives claim they heard the five sisters weeping and lamenting all night. Besides the“: original pieces fhcre are, ln the Mueum. lnfeNst- in" casts of the whole series. and a minimum model of the Parthenon we it once was. tContlnued on page 0, Col i) lend 20 cents in stamp< m’ min tcoin preferred! Bunrdlcn Needlework Department. Una this coupon. Print ynur name and address plainly To The (‘hnrlotfelnwn Guardian Ycrdlenork DH"- DFSIGN NO. 2L0 qa_m.___.__-____________._.____ “rtflhdflrfls___.__ __ ___. _..__. _ .-__.-...._ c~____.__-————--— PM!!!“ ———-—--—— § Woman's Real m -:- Socia . abeth are guests of Mr. and Mrs. . the sclioolrtiom at Buckingham M155 JPR11°fl£ OTT- Q7 ijh" ‘my’; Palace Wllllf‘ UV‘ Km: and Qucen “"111 Nllrsml? Mwclauo“ 5d‘? - toured Wales. Fur a treat. lhcy Bfmfm- M°55~ h” “"1” m THE CHARLOT'FE'|'OWN GUARDIAN - mnr '- HAPPEN NGS 01-" THE ...- WEEK... Mulch. New York. u! the guests of their pncnts. Mf- “"1 MP8- R~ E. Mulch, nn-lvlnl to be present at the man-Inga of their sister, Miss Don Mutch to Mr. Juries McLean, which took plwa Wed- nesday. Dr. Ray Brow, and Mrs. Brow. and their IIIICNSUDQ childrcn have returned to Montreal. liter spend- lng a vacation at their summer cottage at Rocky Point. - - - a M: and Mrs. J. Harold M20011!!!- of Bwokline. Mass, with their sun and datightter, Gordon and Eliz- O I O O Mrs. Douglu Cameron. Ottawa‘. has arrived for a few week’: stly W. Chester s. McLure. Bonnu- at Buckley BfFICh; 1111191)’. They acre accompanied on ' ' their trip by the Rev. J. A. Donnell of Nelson B. C. - . - 4 - Miss Lyle Creelmun. Vancouver. who has been the guest of her bmther, Dr. P. A. Creclman, and Mrs. Creelmnn, left on return fil- O Mrs. W. A. Wlxwlck 1nd her two children of Saint John, N.B.. are visiting Mrs. Warwick's moth- er. Mrs. C. W. Bourke. Water St. O O U O Hostoswes nt the Charlottetown Golf Links this afternoon will be dash Mrs. K. S. Rogers. Mrs. H. B. Hen- » - o v derson. Mrs. W. E. Massey, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs A. D. CArlvPright. R. P. Simpson- Otlawa. arrived at Brackleyt Beach ' ' ' ' _ this wreck where they will remain Mrs. (Dr) John Howie. Mon- treal. who has been the guest of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. Hon- clcrsmi. Kent SL, left on return Monday. for the month of August. . t =. ~ Many fricnds hcre of Miss Florcnce Chuppell, will be sorry tn hear that. she is a pativnt in the Victoria Gcneral Hospital, Halifax, N.S. ' ,0 I I O On arrival from England in South Africa, Lady Duncan fold the Guild of Imynl Women there that "I have been seldom more out! Mrs. C. f‘. Donuts nnrl druightcr June. of Rirliclicu. Qthbcc. are impressed by the character of uny- expectcd to arrive tonight. They 1111f‘ lhfiflnl W85 0! 0111‘ Qlleefl will be 1hr ;'_ttt".'»l5 of Mr. and Mrs. Elllllbelh- . ‘ . ' . . ' l. .. c M “u n13“. t t Miss Selma Owen. RN. New York. is the guest, of her parents Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Owen, Kep- poch. Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Hooper. and son David, of LOIIttOII Ont. who have bcen litftrlztying at Stauhmtc Beach Inn and Beach (Provo Inn. scvcral weeks have left for their V y home. While in the city on Tues- CIIY- W710 m5 bu" V1511“! "ll" day [hpy my.‘ 311C515 at litnt-hcon tlves. left this morning on return. of Mr. and 1.11s. W. Cllftrifl‘ S. , , , , ‘ cum“ B°m,m,]‘1,n'l“‘ ‘ Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Davies. Avenel. New Jersey. arrived by motor Thursday t0 spend a holiday at Soiiris. . 0000 MISS Br-tty Unsworth. New York School is not nrcr iii England unlll Illld-Jlll)’. I‘(‘U])t‘l1‘lIl‘,', about. Sept. 19. so Prmrcss Elizabeth and Princess Margarct. Rose studied in 000a Kensingfon to visit her puenw durlng the month of Alllll-ii- . t A very enlsytible beach part! was held at Rosebazik. on Wednes- rlny afternoon. when Dr. L90 811d Mrs, Frank entertained the Art Society of Prince Edward Island. Boating and bathing wen enjoyed. After a delightful supper the rut-its were allowed to have picnic was down near tho little lake lti the gardens as thcy do at York Cot.- tage, Windsor. during family week- ends. P{‘lll(‘(‘.\S bfargtircl R0": ls making a collection of wild flow- ers and rafhcr turns up hcr tiny nose at the pnlat-t.‘ gardens. The youngci- royalties rxpect to spend §i§1'..i1i..-l2f.i" Qfindtiilinfllmcitiliii 11nd 11w about‘ °f “"1118 M.‘- whcrc Princess Elmaboth is hot- Ammm schemfeld Q7 New York: ing to reccirc as a present the ‘mmmnmil mk o“ mlmons’ w ‘c he ably illustrated. _ttmld much daughter. various. events of the tam-moon. Akeneral discusion of desk at which hm‘ mother did hc: lessons and which she greatly ad- mires. Countess of Strathmore . has pronflsm w gm, it w her modern art bflllfllng‘ to a close I “when you are old enough". Later mm‘ pleasant was on‘ I O O O t Mrs. Roland Loughlin, and little daughter Mary Elizabeth of Fredericton N. B. returned home _ _ Monday after visiting her parents, onto, is the wctromc guvsl. of her Mn and Mrs, lgmest; A_ Duchgnqjn, parents, Mr and ftlrs. J. C. Sims. ' ‘ ' ' _ t t - . Mr. and Mrs. Wm. R. Munn. Marshfield. have as their guests their daughters Dr. Charlotte Munn. and Dr. C. M. Holmes. of Rockland State Hospital, New York. noon both 171111605568 hatc bcgged for the English childs holitlny-“a trip to the scasidc." t. a a a Mrs. G. Parkcr Brown of Tor- Mrs. Willard J. McDonald. St. John, NB.. is thc guest of her sister. Mrs. A. T. Vmmmmbe and Mr. Vnintmmbc at their summer cottage Roclgv Point. o a a Miss Mae Cttmpbcll. Lriuisburg. N3“ -_ _ _,_ ‘ Y y Hnslesses at the Summer-side abbey]: sllfialfliignid orvfilzlllflllfiveMrb Golf‘ Links this afternoon will , , ‘,‘ _ ' be, Mrs. Kexandcr ‘Home. Miss Ethel Tanton, Miss F. H. Hunt. Misses Incz fifiavvnvnno~nnwp ~_ .- *1 Today’: Sihorl Wave Radio Program (AlThneIaIulal-lnllfltlul) SATURDAY, AUGUST ‘I TOKYO 4A5 p.m.--Popula.r longs. JZJ, 5.4 m., 11.80 11163.; or JZK.19 9 m., 15.1 m6!- PARIS 5:15 pmv-COIIOEH from Radio- Plflfi. TPA—4, 25 6 .. 11.12 mek. Loivbon 0:30 p.m. -students' Songs- GSP, 19.6 m.. 155 SI meg; G60. 19.1 m., 15.18 meg; OBI‘, 19.8 m., 15.14 meg; GSD. 25.5 m.. ‘ 11.75 meg. CAPACAS 7:45 p.m.-'I‘he Waltz Hour. YV&RC,5517 m.. 5.58 meg, LONDON 9:80 pour-Organ Recital by Ralph Downes. GSG. 16.8 m., 17.79 mBK-i G81’. 19.6 m.. 15.26 meg: GGD. 25.56 m.,11.75 meg; GSB, 81.5 m., 9.5111183. BUENOS AIRES. ARGENTINE 9:30 ~p .m— Vicnnesc Quartet. LRX. 31.06 m. 9.66 meg. S1 NTIAGO, CHILE 9:40 p.m.—Dance Music. CB- 960, 31.2 m..9.6l1 Inez.- LETI-IBRIDGE 11:30 p.m.-The Sport Week. Henry Viney. sports commentator.‘ CJRO. 48.7 m.. 6.15 meg; CJRX. E5 rn..11.7'z mpg. TOKYO 12:45 tt.m.—The National Pro- gram. JZK. 19.9 m.. 15.1 mcg. LYNDI-IURST. AUSTRALIA 8:45 a.m.- National Program. VK3LR. 313 m.. 9.58 meg. , m: COOK'S CORNER ALMOND MI-ZRINIGYE SQUARES 1 cup chopped dates 1-2 cup water 6 tablespoons butter 1-2 cup sugar 2 egg yolks 1 1-2 cups cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1-4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 egg whits I cup brown sitcttr (Jhopped almonds Method: Cock the dates and the water together until they form a thick paste. Cmam- the butler and sitgar and add the well beaten egg yolks. Sift. the flour once before measuring and then sift it again with the baking pOWGPI‘ and salt. Add this to the first mixture with pztess into a well greased pan. mntk- ing a layer about one-third inch the vanilla. Work well together and thick. Spread this with the date paste and then ovcr this spread a merin- gue made by beating the cgg whites stiff and then adding the brown sugar gradually. When the merin- gue ls very stiff. spread over the date paste and sprinkle with the chopped almonds. Bake. ln a. moderate 350-deg. l". oven for about 50 mmufes. Igt cool in the pan and cut in squares to serve. SPICE!) CHERRIES To 2 potmds of pitted cherries allow 1 pound of sugar and 1 cup of vinegar. Boil the stigar attd Margaret ___.___¢_ rr; Miss Gladys Holman. heir Majestie s Attend Royal Gar 1 ~- ‘n, - ~ " ' ‘i1’ . ‘ a notable exception. The young prin- the last royal gardcn puffy of the cask strained I knee ln a bicycle semon at Buckingham Palace on fall and wu obliged to witch from Host of the myal family attended my ilPrlnoeu nit-mm wuuluuiwuymrtmummmmn and vinegar fmzether yvifh 2 or 3 sticks ofjinnamon and I teaspoon is:- den Partv was more Iorlunltt. Wearing I plfty dress of frills and fluffs. the arrived. holding hei- mother's hand. While tho Queen spook; to I friend. Eli MIIBIQ with at tbl rkht. Pfi-P“"I"§-Uu and Pefflsonal -:- Fashions -:- Litera FRAGMENT tTennyaon) Flower in the crannied wall. 1 pluck you out of the cranium;- Hold you new. M! 111d l“- l“ "Y hand. Little flowu-Auut if I could under- stand what you are, root and 811, and all in all. 1 should know Whli. God and man STORED PACKAGE5 Now, mark thOM Will“ 95 u’ their contents when Y0“ l" P“? ting them away in the attic thzal year. You alvttays thtnll you Wi- NIIIBIIIDG!‘ 111511 What is m "ch puckuge. but how often do you N“ member? WINDOW SHADES If the window shade has 118G701! soiled just on the lower end. 1'8- move it from the roller. mlkfi l- new hem on the 11999:‘ 811d l-Dd tick the old hem onto the wooden roll- er. You will have an nbsclutzty fresh shade showing. THE FIBER RUGS If the colored stencllng on the fiber rugs looks particularly worn and faded tirs year. remember the colors may‘ be brought. back by painting with a quick-drying eu- amel. The patterns may be colored the some shades as before and glve the rugs an almost new appear- aiioe. INSECT ENEMES Garden insect enemies are divided into two groups -- those that eat holes in the foliage and those that suok out the juices. For the first-named. poison l5 usually applied. while the suckers are kt- tacked by a bunting spray which penetrates; Often when both ue present. a combrnatlon of poison and something that burns. gives the best results. Spraying or dust- ing when plants ape clamp we the usual methods of control. The tare THE HOUSE WIFE AND I 1E l R . gar and water. Polish should never be uied on furniture with A cellu- luu ilnlsb. or on ltmeti nr u-axed woods; a nightly damp rliamnl; t, b051- 10!‘ "W58. A litre {gm may be necessary in llme m, my, woods as walnut and mahogany; 1n this case a good brand n! liquyq cmam should be used vm- span lngly. Ebony should be vicar-m wit-h vinegar and water and my. lshed now and again with a mt drops of linseed oil. Lvtunw, CW erlngs should occaszouanyt hm Just a. little oil applied m them Chromium-plate (‘hairs and tabla should also be wiped with oll sometimes and ElZISF-fnppgd tables should be wiped with itiethv- lured spirits. Ecrrrches and marks of all kinds on stained ‘An a“. m, be removed by rttbbln: 1T1 Fllsepd oil vlgomtusly. Two m- three apply. cations may be necessary. GOOD NIIIGIIBOR$ Be neighborly. There Ls no in. fluence mono powerful :n>n mum"; life than the kindly glVP and take of his family with those who 1m near. . It fixes the feeling of gmdwm and permanency. and establishes mots that. go down deep. Never feel that uanythitig u (on small to be appreciated ln the way of attention. The bunch of flou-er: you send euros to Mr. Smith nuy be identical vrith tlm>t= grow- ing lit her own garden, hut 5m wonjt care. Its the friendly gestun thnts counts. All children like their parcnts f4 be generous and good mxors Buys and girls brought up ln an atmo- sphere of consideration and kind- ness w strangers as tvell as fflflldl, will develop ariclmcss of charac- ter of their own. and parents will reap. some day an abundant har- vest cf their own. Ablomingsmile damage fmm the biting ' ‘ is llSLlflllyv quite apparent. but the presence of the other kind ls only shown at first by a wilting or withering of the foliage. SALT WATFH. so long as you shampoo carefully once a week and brush your hair every night. you ‘do not-how!" to bother to rinse out the salt water after each dip in the surf. Scalps which are brushed and mu- saged daily and kept meticulously clean am not going to be harmed serlously~by a little sea water. GIVING FURNITURE TIIE BEST 0F CARE Most furniture can be kept In excerent condition for n long time without the use of cream or polish if lt l5 dusted daily with I. duster on which it few drops of paraffin hnvr- been sprinkled and thoroughly rubbed weekly _wlth cleaners wrung out in weak vine- of ground cloves and a teaspoon of ground nllsplce for about I0 IYIIIIULQS or until thickened slight- ly. Pour the boiling syrup we: the cherries, which have betn packed into clean jars. and sell at once. A SALESMANS LITK A salesman in a Monttval firm vves dlsmssed because of a lack of courtesy to customers. A month later the salts manaucr spotted hlm wllking about m n b01109 11111- form. “I see you have Klllléd the Force. Jones," said the 571105 man- r. “Yes? replied Jones.‘ "This 1.1 the Job I have been lot-akin? 5f" "t1 my life. On this job the cusirmcl‘ is always ‘yvrong?’ STRATEGY A minister once uolivci-vtl a scr- mon 1n a church whore mn-fll‘ 01 the congregation had tlu" habit of going out lxefore the cltw of thl meeting. I-Ic was iI(‘l\lS(‘(1 r1! U111 beforehand. l-Ie opened his meeting by say- ing encouraglnftfyi ‘M!’ tflfllils-l am going tn speak to two clmsel tonight: first. to the icmu 131W” ple. and then to the zit-but?!" people?’ After carnestlv arlrlrcs-tug W! supposedly ignorant pcflpll‘ fm‘ I while. he snld that they rotifcl MW take their hats and g0. The cntfre congregation heard him to the end. FOR HOME DRESSMAKER FASHION GUIDES IHE smartly styled rough linen dress in natural shade for the larger woman. It has youthful flattery ln ever-yr line. Note the saucy slecvw with pleats. The buttoned-down-tlie- front shirt type closing slink your yaLsfi and hlpllne. A t-ufoxted collar accents the cool vee neck. You'll want to make another of sheer cotton print with the hl-h fled neckline included ln the pattern. . It's easy to make this smart model with the it'd of the complain dfngrammed Sewing Chart that accompanies the pattern. Style No. 3150 ls desined for slats $0. 88. l0. 42. H. l! Ind 4R- lnchas bust. Blue 36 require; 3 3-4 yirds of 39-inch material. Bend -n!te0n~~teenk-~--1I&c) ln stamp! or coin teoln proforma» wrap own carefully ldtlnu In Charftmmwn Quorum: giving- Style No. 3150 sin“... ... w... Rum Bfltitldtlli GOPIIIS IAI‘ IOPIII-I VIOIIROY, Book" — (C?) runners ma: Vfceroy. o0 miles south o.’ Moose Jaw, ny gopbcn are thriving on u. grasshopper diet. They lle ln waft and flrrln: on their prey like n out. Farmers claim gophers m also getting a wtntar feed supply by mmovtn: unulruut- 0d when kemah from tho loll. a littll ‘