“Helen's “we A From Youth . .-to her first child; when - _?_, .,._ Vegetable LIDlAaPlNKl-IAM _andC I RE are three trying periods in a woman's life: when the girl matures to womanhood; when a woman gives birth woman l reaches middle § age. At these critical times llLydia E. Pinkhamls Vege- table Compound helps to l ' “restore normal health and v l. I vigor. Countless thousands Lydia anathema MEDICINE CO., Lynn, Mass-r U. $- As urg, Ontario. Canada Wonian ’s Realm, To 01d Age a Compound a i 1 g iggglillaelrierl marl . __ ._,._,-.._.._c_ $.11. Daily Arguments AUNT HET BY CLAUDE CALLAN ‘It ain't no wonder AIM’! kitchen looks shiny an‘ spot- less, She's wore out three can openers since Christmas." S IMPLY FL ATTERINT; l Here is one of the smartest slender- ‘ lzing models that Paris has ever sent} us. It s. charming afternoon or ' dinner dress interpreted in sheer black lace. The deep V-shaped vest of_ a. black chiffon that terminates ati waistline adds considerable length to’ figure. The snug hips have trimming! bands of grosgrain ribbon. The skirt ls circular with graceful fulness at hem. Style No. 543 is designed lri “ sizes la. is. 2o years, as, as, 4o, 42.44! 46 and 4B inches bust. Flowered chif-I ion, geérgette crepe in toasttan shade,;' printed silk crepe with bright smalll pattern on dark background. Shall-l turlg, pfihted rajah, printed voile, and‘ handkarchlet linen in gay print, are! very at ractlve suggestions. For youth- ful type. tomato red crepe de chine, or chaltreuse green chinon is chicu} Patterr price l5 ccntsin stamps or coin (qlqinrjia preferred.) Wrap coin careful ‘ ' ' I H atgthat when you send for i "you enclose l0 cents ad- ) copy of our Spring lgiknine. 1n Justfllled with tyles. including smart en- ‘ ' ute designs ici- the In Coughs I Coll"- flqqseholdV-lints‘ Dyloberh-Lce C ella r Steps If the cellar steps are rather dark. an accident can probably be avoided by painting thc lower step with white paint. Matches Matches should always be kept in a tin can, or box, with a tight fitting lid. Many fires have been started by mic-e carrying away matches. Meat Take the meat out of the paper be- fore putting it. in the ice-box. as paper has a tendency to absorb the juices. Etiquette 1 n; Roberta. use Q. For what purpose may an afternoon tea with dancing be given? A. It is ilsilallv given.t.o “bring out" a daughter, or to present a new daughtcr-in-law. Q. Should the briks family send the groom's people an invitation to the wedding? A. Yes; if the groom's people live ‘in another city, invitations to the house may be sent liberally. Q. is butter ever served at ionrlal dinners? A. No. ~ Book-We will lies ma... dellhlbw i Lipanw/l of‘ ill IRIQCHVO. recipes from Name's Milky Way gladly send it to you free. sFood CompsnyofCarlads Limitsd/TorontctOnt. zcfflclm ' dust with face powder or lilllltc of I Beautiful BEAUTY QUESTIONS ANSWERED Unsymrnetrical Legs Dear Miss Leeds-ill My 191F188. is larger than my right. Could you suggest some exercise to reduce it?" 1Z9 I am l6 years old, 5 feet 6'13 inches tall and weigh 140 pounds. Isl this right? 13> My face sometimes‘ appears rather yellow. I eat at least one green vegetable a day and am rarely constipated. My hair is blond beginning to darken and my EYES are |, very dark brown. What colors would suit me? ti) Would you recommend a bleach for my skin? IMPATIENT. Answer-U) It is not unusual for one leg to develop faster than its mate. When you have grown up 1 think both legs will measure the same or nearly so. I would not worry about 1t if »I were you. The types of exercise that will reduce excess fat on the’ calves include heel-raising. heel and toe movements as in clog dancing. bending and stretching the foot ‘at the ankle, rotating it, stair- climblng, skipping. heel-raising with knee bendinn. The same movements are used to develop muscle in the calves. but when done often enough they also tend to reduce excess fat. <2) You are a little above the ‘aver- age welght for your age and height. but this is no doubt due to your hav- ing heavier bones and muscles than the average. Your weight is. probably correct for your type. i3) Choose pinks with a. yellowish tinge, like peach and creamy flesh Bronze and medium tans suit your type. Among the reds choose dull brick, rust, burnt orange or Argentine red. You may also wear old blue. navy, dark green, reseda. cream and the popular sun-tan shades. i i4) I do not think you need a bleaching lotion, but you do need to stimulate your system. After your morning bath rub your body hard until the skin is in a glow. Exercise hard enough each day to cause sweat- ing. Walk four or five miles a day outdoors. Eat. some raw vegetables daily, as lettuce. celery, tomatoes. grated carrots. Besides this eat fruit and two kinds of cooked nonstarchy vegetables in addition to your reg- ular diet of bread. starchy vegetables and proteins. You should have 'a thorough physical examination by a doctor to see if there is any internal cause for the yellow tinge of your skin ;if there is you may need a special diet. Buttermilk is a good. mild skin bleach, LOIS LEEDS. Nose Massage Dear Miss Leeds-m My nose has become too fleshy lately at the curve. Do you think that massage and pull- ing will improve it? (2) My hair is] black and straight, and 1 wear. it parted on one side. Can you suggest another coifiure, besides a center part with bangs, for a round fa ‘I is) r amll rest 2 inches tall and weigh 98 pounds. Is this correct? (4) I have numerous freckles and am tanned now. Do you think that my freckles will brighten as the summer comes? vrLi/lh v. Answer-(l) Yes. Be very vareful, however, not to massage too hard or you will make your nose sore. (2) You vmight try brushing your haalr straight back for a change. but the lido-Dlrt coiflurs is usually most be- coming to a full face. You might have narrow bangs at the beginning of the part and have your hair looped up at the temple with a barrette. (3) You forgot to state yourags. If you ars l4 years old you should weigh about 100 pounds in comm-m W the averse: standard. (o Prob- ably. Before soins out 4n the hot sun Wu might protect your skin by rub- '- in the r‘ inc-stile partnership as she would have in a business partnership it Considers \ - - . 7.1.2:’ Do rotlly Dix a... y Ruhr! . - Come Buck‘! “The Good Old Times the Subservient Wife ‘and the LonLantLMaster Husband Are Gone, Never to Return-Jflie Modern Womans Ideal of Marriage is Not SerfdOIII; It 15 - - Equality” I have an interesting letter fmma man who says that men have changed their tactics in" dealing with women. He declares that the modern man is done with the‘ old. played-out goddess mn-a-pedeetal stuff and that hence- forth he n golrlgto dominate his wife and be the unquestioned he's»! iof the house, as his gmndfather was. I hate to throw cold water on this rare and beau- tiful uptimism, but I feel in duty bound to warn my correspondent that the good‘ old times of the sub- servient wife ahd the lord-and-master husband are gone, never to retum. '1‘hey have taken their place among the picturesque archaic relics of the past and are museum our osities along with tallow dips and the covered wagon and the parlor melodeon. All that men _ ' ' can do now is to gather their little sons about their _ - knees and tell them the legends of the far-on days when wives were meek and husbands the ones who must be obeyed. Patient Grieselda, alas, is dead, and none of her flapper grand-daughters seems to have inherited her humble spirit. Besides. this particular period of the world's history is not an auspicious one for re-establlshing an autocracy. Thrones are rocking everywhere. There is revolution in the air and the domestic czar has lust as little chance of climbing back upon his throne as the political one has When women achieved financial independence they emancipated them- selves from the control of their husbands. {The woman who could not, earn a dollar. and who was dependent upon her husband for the roof over her head and every mouthful of food she ate and every stitch of clothes on her back. was absolutely in his power. She had to kowww before him. She had to put up with whatever sort of treatment he accorded her. She had to ask his per- mission to buy a spool of thread, or to go to see her mother. She had to have his sanction before she could Join a club, or express an opinion.’ But that is all changed. Most women of today can support themselves. Every girl now is being trained to some trade or profession and will be just as capable of earning her own bread and butter and lam as a boy is, and the man befools himself who thinks that this free and independent creature is ever going to submit herself to the tyrannles of an overbearing husband, or suffer herself to be the slave-wife that her grandmother not infrequently was. The modern woman's ideal of marriage is not serfdom. it is equality. She wants to be his partner and she feels that she has qualified for this position by her past perfunnanoea, for very oft/en the wife has s better educa- tion than her husband has, has had better social advantages and in many cases has held down as A sponsible a. Job as he has. Naturally such a woman teels that she has a right lo ls much authority she had invested all of her money and brains and labor in it. Her services to the firm of Benedict a 00., are Just as valuable as her husband's. Her interest in its success as great. If it goes to smash, she will be ruined even more completely than he is, and so. she sees no reason why she should not have an equal voice in directing its policies. I believe that the clinging of men to the old ideal of a wife as an infer- ior, some one who must look up to her husband and obey him. some one whom he had a right to dominate completely, and men's refusal to regard marriage as a partnership. is at the bottom of much of the domestic un- happiness that we see all about us. It is the ever-potent source of arguments and quarrels because it is the clash between the new ideal and the old, the wife's struggle for her rights and the husbandsflgllt to withhold them from her. It prevents teamwork between husbands and wives because theycen never consult and talk things over as equalpartners. They cannot even discuss ‘ s of vital impor- tance, like the rearing of the children, because the husband feels that he should arbitrarily settle every matter and the wife resents having her opinion ignored and its starts such a family row that they learn to keep silent and play against each other in the dark. And it is the fact that men refuse to treat their wives as partners that fills women with bitterness over the money question and drives them into extravagance by way of revenge. The wife works as‘ hard in tho home as the husband does out. of it. Her hours are longer, her work duller and more monotonous than his. She pinches every nickel harder than he does, 5m, dc- nlcs herself as much. or more, tllsn he does. and she naturally feels that sha has earned the family income as much as he has and has as good right to it as he has. Now the woman doesn't mind her work nor her economies. She is per- fectly willing to work her flrpcrs to ths bone and trim her hat one move time if she feels that her husband is giving her a square deal and treating her like a partner. What she gets redheaded over is when he doesn't tell her one word about his affairs; when she doesn't know what he makes, whe- the: the firm ls prospsring or not, and when he refuses _to give her any part of the money she cams as a lust return for her labor. It is curious about this head-of-flis-hoilss complex that so many men have. And it is about the most pitiful oxhibltlon of human vanity that you ever see, because it is the desire of the small-minded man, who has no auth- crity over other men, to boss the poor. ‘ ' ‘ woman who is in his power. You‘ curt imagine a big man who is doing big things, a man who commands armies, or is at the head of a great enterprise. bothering about whether his wife obeys him or not, or assumes any authority in the_ household. , ‘women who are married to man who are wiser, broader, who have more knowledge of life than they have, will always defer -to their huspands‘ opinions. but they will do so because they want to. not because the man ar- rogiteritnbinlseif thsrlgbttsbethahsad o! thalamus. - ‘ ~ e “ oouwrn! nix. eunma %:a_ A 7' - --..r-_- —--i__ :- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literlgture_j5 Dasha Illustrated Is Dominion Linoleum Ru] No. 6557, qvdilnDlI’ alsoin one emu colour- ing No. 6355. INIMINICIIN “l %r “u?” P-"z . We Li‘. q tin-i ‘wiiiiiiiii i I’ I. 4 cs room. wandering“ colour f I wanrlul qualities. Canvenlwt widths. Mods in Canada 51 the makers o! rhs lasnous Dominion Ianluhlp Llmlflml Put new comfort and beauty on your porch this summer. Make an attractive setting for fumlture. Enjoy the same floor cleanliness there that you do indoors. Dominion Linoleum Rugs defy the weather. Rain cannot hurt Exposure‘ oannot7mur'its [beauty them. The sun wilfi not fade their ‘lovely colours. Th by smile at the heaviest traffic. Indoors or out, these ilurablc rugs lend s pleasing note of bril ht fresh beauty. Easily cleaned. No f toning needed‘. Attractive designs fl r . every room. In standard sizes at p pular prices. Ask to sec the display of Dominion Floor: or Home Furnishing and Dsprgmnsnral In Charlottetown " l _ ‘i Stores .-fl.-> 4th Biennial The Fourth Biennial Conference. Canadian Churches of Christ and com- bined with i1, the Annual Prince Ed- ward Island Convention, of the Churches of Christ. in this Province meet this year in this City, oom- mencing Wednesday morning, June 12th. and closing Sunday evening, June 16th. All the sessions will be held in the Central Christian Church, and it is ,. ted there will be delegates from all the Provinces in Canada. Among those who will attend will be pro- minent preachers from Canada and the United States. The Chairman of the All-Canada Conference is Mr. Geo. H. Stewart. Winnipeg, Man. a prominent mer- chant of that City, who is the owner of Mess-rs I-iolllngsworth. Limited, a large Ladies Garment store. He is lu- so connected with several other large financial organizations of that City. The Secretary of the All-Canada Conference is Rev. Hugh B. Kilgour, Toronto, Ont. Mr. Kilgour has made several visits to this Province. in con- nection with his work. He is sn out- standing Preacher. The ‘Treasurer of the All-Canada Conference is Mr. R. B. Butchart. Toronto, 0nt.. he is also Editor and Manager of "The Canadian Disciple." the official church publication. Mr. Butchart is a writer of considerable note, and has published several books. The President of the Prince Ed- ward Island Convention is Majol- C. L. MacKay. of this City. The Secretary-Treasurer of the Prince Edward Island Convention and Missionary Society a Miss Bertie‘ L. hing on a mixture of six olive all and one-fourth ounce “ ‘ e of benaoin. Rubthe lotion on exposed parts of the skin, than wipe on the For n» cues’ A MorningSmils euesssotbatyoursklrl wlilnotlook Dressy. For extra protectlon, you may sine. Wear s. wide-briulmed hat. 1401B LIIDS. Tomorrow-Stockings or leeks Dicriblig himself as a "bank ‘I . _. ._..___.._____.._.__....4. ~wasfouudbytllsofllaislltoiisfqdy bansssr.” s mas st Ashby. hllsnl. NW!‘ musmaunciuilns, Asabsatsnsss and seasoning. Mould into loaf. sass. 10 III» ‘two pdands Hamburg steak, 1 cub a” Th". N . bud-m‘ u, "imfimlfll-"nm-‘mw visa. ihavs fsr In summons my altar-studs new. I slwfll flmi thorn iii-unsatisfied. ulsp-ooaaiwamu tam "In the vacuum cleaner." IIIAT LOAF slltpmmburs, oosn this and also llhapgigilgliusalr. H" LBake in moderate oven one hour. a. .@--_--.-¢_—_ "M60 Plot or cold» *' =0- Conference ‘Churcheslflof Christ And animal P. E. I. Convention Churches of Clhrist Meets in-Charlottetowri, June 12 to 16. Stewart, of this City. Besides the above there will also be attending this Conference and Con- vention, Mr. Chas. L. Burton, Toron- m, 0nt., Vice Pruident and Genera-l Manager oi the well known firm of Robert Simpson Co. Limited who is Chairman of the Trustee Board 0f the College of Churches of Christ at Toronto. Ont. Rev. W. C. MaeDougall, M. A., B. D.. Ph. D. the Principal of the Col- lege Churches of Christ, 1bronto. Ont. Dr. MacDougall is no stranler to our people. He was acting Pastor of the Central Christian Church, m this City for three months during the fall of 1927. l-ie also held s College Extension Course in the same church during the month of Janurary oi this year. He is an outstanding Education- alist. and was a Missionary to India for twenty yfilrl. where he held im- portant apjuointmenh under the Brit- ish Covoryment, and was also Prin- cilill d! on Miss" ' _ Ont. izhis _ Work, of she is also "ofthe Young Peoples Churches in Canada, Superintendent of Re- iiglous mbaucn. of_the Religion! Education ,4‘ uncil ofJpCanada. Miss Royce is we l and reveal-ably kliovm here. lla Jlsiied this Province several tim in connection with her work. _ Rev. J. H. Elliohortler, Secretary De- partment o itBenevolehce, Indianap- olis. Ind. U. (i. A. Rev. ‘Mr. Mohorle! is a preacher f fmminence. and it ‘s interesting to note that he dedicat- ed the Centre Christian Church of this City near; 30 years luzc. be be- ing pastor the church ill Boston. Mast, that time. The above I a few of thl vlsltinr delegates who ill attend the Cor.- ference and ‘Convention in June. There will be lrkny others from cili- fersnt fields. pmminent ih i-hCil‘ i151" iléulsr line of vprk who will also be in attendance. It may be sin ed this will in the first time in l‘ e'hisl0r_\' of the Churches of clnget in this Provillw th_at such an important and hotnblt gathering from Allie other Provmtt! p! Continuddl on page l’: -l . Yea/ad of Ibe Zn». l i look for I/le l/b. Pod Pockaéflo . / “first ridlfll.'.~i/.’l'.i\\\iliifi' .'//.~..=.'//..'r\"”~* Hull's mum Ilsa has "m", .... W.‘ In ‘Allah _ ... QCHGRIP Shoes ksepyses fut t “ysuol-jsslinsl" with oolllsn and _ firm support. Vol ARCKGID 'sldmjoyfiisusfiot ‘WA/Ali will ' mire " 91A; * Arrsracoliw j Fashionable F , Charlottetown.‘ {I $1411 ABM‘ ‘l _ll/ y“ ‘ I Io. . Zéliflililffllll * s15 ' I‘ Gallegos there. h’. tfij e. Toronto, I