awflgmdnls Realm l 11m crmarxrrrcmwn GUARDIAN- i. -:- Social and PersQnIdlI , J . P‘. “ 3‘ (0 E‘ o0 Q V) I l PAIGE SEVEN * Literature ‘. Canadcfs , Favorite Window Cleaner Nothing is so widely used for-keeping windows and mirrors crystal clear as Bon Ami Cake! Thirty-eight years on the market and today more popular than ever._ Cleaning with Bon Ami is safe, easy-— Ieally fun! With a damp cloth apply a thin lather of Bon Ami over the glass. Wheri it dries, rub off with a clean, dry cloth. Gone is every streak,everysmear,everyfinger-mark. And remember Bon Ami Cake has a partner—Bon Ami Powder. You'll like it for cleaning bathtubs, tiling, fine kitchen utensils, etc. Both forms have the same magic ingredients —both blot up dirt without scratching. Never redden the hands. HON AMI LIMITED, MONTREAL Powder and Cake —every home needs both (G1 154.) i a " Low Spear Grass. Poa annus L. (G: Wild Plants .5... l Canada Blue Grass. roe compress“ 1-- Of P. E. 18101261 l (G:i55.) - Fowl Meadow Grass. Pol trim!“ i.‘ l Glllb (GI 15$.) , lJune Grass, Poa. pratensis L. (Gt LXVI GRAMINEAE ; 15s.) (Conflnucd) ' Red Fescue. Fesuca rubra L. (G: 181-) l Sheep's Fescue, Feslcua ovina L. (G1 Blue-Joint Grass, Calsmnsroillfi ‘ 161.) cmladensls (MichxJ Beauv (G1 l Gouch Grass, Agffilllv-‘Ofl repel“ lT-I-l 1353 l Beauv. (G: 161.) Wild Oat, Grass, Danthonla spicatl squirrel-tail, Wild Barley. Hordeum (h) Bea," (g; 143,) jubatum L. (G: 167.) Orchard Grass, Dsctylis glomerata L- fi LXVI cvrsnacaaa l m“ the grasses, this farnlly, that of the sedges, is a difficult one. b81108 little has been done by 10°51 mums‘! in the way of determinations. Hares-tall Cotton Grass. Eriophorum cslll-hrix sham. (l? 197-) Fall Cotton-Grass. K109110711" anguSlTlfOlllLlfl Roth. (l: 197.) And perhaps others of the genus- .;Lunches§_; v . . . mutt-Wm, murll l > , ln-ilm when you Lllu- .1 om: LXVII TYPIIACIAI Cat-tall. locally Bulnuh. '17P"! lltlfolia L. (M: 6B.) Broad-fruitted Bur-reed. Bnlrssfllwn gurymrplfln Engelm. (M: 68. slmplé-fltmmld Bur-reed. SWAPS!!!‘ mm simplex Huds. (M: 68-) LXVIII EQUISETACEAE Common Hllfbeblll, EQUBQl '1 m Stockings here at $150 This is the latest production of the famous KAYSER 1111119 shown here at the same time as in Montreal and Toronto. All the new colors. 0V" the counter or by mail Household Hints By Bobertabeo I I l ' Freshly Palnkd Booms l l Set c. tub of cold water over night in a room that has been freshly: painted, Next morning the water will; be dotted with oily particles contain-l ing lead poison. ' broken Glass Place broken glass in a hot fire before throwing away in order to melt the edges, leaving no sharp points to cause imury ' Cherry Stains To remove cherry stains from clothl scald in hot milk l l l Etiquette Bylabtfllldb I Q. Should the prcnx "Mr." be used on a man's business card? A. No. On a man's business card! only such prefixes as Dr., Rev, etc.,. should be used. Q. Is it all riglnt. when a cigar or, cigarette has been finished, to merely lay it on the ask tray? l A. No. The fumes are often very disagreeable. It should be extin- gulshed. Q. What does “cannelon" mean? A. Meat that is stuffed, rolled.‘ then roasted or braised. l FOOTBAIL LEAGUE FOR EUROPE} l With the development of football in Europe an international Rugby lea- gue is now considered pzssible, Eng- land will send a team to Spain in; May. The sport is becoming popular‘ in Francs, Belgium, Germany, Switz- erland, and even in Russia, so that observers believe that nmtches- be-‘ tween other countries will b: played d. the nea: future possibly" this year.‘ LTD R311) SIGNS FOR CZECHS State roads of Czechoslovakia are .o have signs for the direction of autolsts. 'l.‘ou'ns and larger villages will be named, distances to Chcch and ‘ other European cities given, and dan- l ger points lildlCfllCCl. The slovakia Automobile Club, will scll advertising space on the signs, and if there is any profit it must go into im- provement of the system. and other measures facilitatir g rngtor traffic on the roads. ' arvense L. (G: 52.) Wood Horsetail, Equisetum sylvaticum L. (G: 52.) Marsh Horsetail, Equlsetum pslustre L. (G: 52.) scouring-rush Equisetum hyemale L. (Baln: 53.) LXIX ARACEAE Indian Turnip, Arisrlema triphyllum (L) Schott. (M: 257.) Marsh Calls Water Arum, Call: palustrls L. (M: 258.) Sweet Flag, Acorus calamus L. (M: '258.) Lxir LEMNACEAE Lesser Duckweed, Lsmns minor L. (M: 2B0.) (To Be Continued) Felt Tirocl and Miserable “I took Lydia E. Pinkhamh V ble Compound for mis- era le and tired feelings and it gave me strength to do my work. M nerves are and I feel we and stroirg land havfi a appetite. seep we am in pretty good spirits and able to work day , months or 1 year or two years without being able to size her up and form a Czccho- ' thing, is the real reason so many husbands get tired of their wives. They crave a this year's model wife just as they do a this year's» nodal automobile. ' ..":; ll . '::".:..:' . l...“ Dorothy Drx Dwell» Out. of Love rl . " hfiéfih‘ Perhaps When Men Fall Out of Love With Their Wives for no Apparent Reason it i Because They Know They’re in Duty Bound“ to be - Fireside Companions, Muses Dorothy Dix- ‘ Why do men tire of their wives? Why do they {s11 out 91 10v; 5Q quickly? What is there about marriage that seems to dispel the charm. that a woman had for a man? . Every day we see the spectacle of some man who has risked his neck to get a girl in marry him break. ing his neck to get away from her. Before marriage he couldn't get enough of her society. After marriage a little of it is too much. Before marriage she had to sweep him out of her house l0 get rid of him of an evening. After marriage he grabs his hat m4 but; it as soon as dinner is over. Before marriage he found her fascinating and interesting. After marriage she bores hhn. - Yet she is the same woman. She hasn't changed. She has the same mentality and carries the same con- . _ versstlonal line and this is what makes the poor, neglectod wife, who “d- denly realizes that her husband has lost. interest in her and ceased to care for her, throw up her hands 1n utter bewilderment. ' She doesn't know what is the matter, nor what she- has done, nor why her husband should have lost his taste for her. Because he picked her out of the whole bunch of women for a wife and inasmuch as he was an intel- ligent adult male she gives him credit for having enough sense to know what he was doing. She feels that even an idiot couldn't associate with a woman for slx pretty correct estimate of her character anddlsposition and mental equip- ment and being able to judge how well they would yibe will" his qwn, Of course, there are cases where women trick men into matrimony by clfczting virtues and charms that they do not possess. There are plenty pf girls who pose as angels while they are trying to catch a man and as soon as they have him they shed their wings and reveal themselves as the devils they are. There are girls who before marriage are so mud and sweet and amiable that butter wouldnt melt in their mouths, who after marriage are viragoes and terrorize their husbands with their temper. There are girls who wear ruffled white aprons and talk about how they adore children, and how they Just dots on cooking and how they long for a. clear little home of their own, but who after the matrimonial knot is safely tied call children brats and refuses to be bothered with any of their own; l who couldn't be dragged into a kitchen by wild horses, ant‘, who demand to 1 live in hotels because they are too lazy to make a home Naturally the man who has been gold-bricked in a matrimonial trans- : action doesn't feel very kindly toward the lady artist who has gypped him. It is easier to love our enemies than it is those who befool us and take us in as easy marks. l . Then there are the women who deteriorate after marriage; There are the pretty, slim dairtll dressed young girls who were balm to a, man's eyes before marriage, who let themselves get fat and sloppy after marriage, and who never think that it ls worth while to comb their hair, or wash the cold cream ofl of their faces, or put on a pretty frock for a mus husband. And there are the cheerful, gay young girls who were such good fun and seemed such good sports before marriage, who, after marriage, get neurotic and spend their time nursinglthelr ailments and " ' themselves up on self-pity because they have to keep house and take care of their children and because they can't have all of the luxuries that the wives of millionaires have. And there are the women who seemed bright and up-to-dats and wide awake and intelligent when they were 20 whose mental growth stops when they marry. They never have another original idea. as long as they live. They never read a worth while book or magazine. Tpeir interests are bounded by their homes and their little circles. Their cinversational reper- toire extends from the kitchen to the nursery andbsck again. They make no effort to keep up with their husbands or to be companions to them, It is no wonder that the man who married a living picture gets sick and tired of looking at her when she turns into a chrome. It is no wonder that a man gets weary of lhtsning to the walls of a wife who is a whlner and com- plaincr, and it is inevitable that a man should flea to other companionship from the trite he has outgrown and who bores him to tears by her babble about the cost of butcher's meat and the baby's tooth and what the people next door are doing. ~- But there is a large number-pf women who do not fall under any of these categories whose husbands weary of them for no apparent reason.‘ They have kept themselves trim and neat. They are good housewives. They are pleasant and amiable. They ‘are qulle as interesting I114 lfilllllmt ll their husbands, yet their husbands do not dlsguze the fact that they are a-wcary and that marriage has become merely an endurance test to them. Perbrps she explanation of this is to be found in the nee that marriage to these men means bondage. It is not that they have any fault to find with their wives. It is just the senssthac they are no longer free that got: upon their nerves. It is the call of the wild that makes them want to luvs home. If they were not married to their wives, they would find them interest- ing and charming and delightful woman whole society they would greatly enjoy. It is because their wives have a right to expect than: to show at- tention to them that keeps them from doingit and it is tho knowledge that. they are in duty bound to be fireside conlpaniona to their wlvesthat makes them sit up as glurn u graven images of an waning. or. also fare forth in search of the society of some woman whom my do not look uponu a jailer. It is tho same spirit that makes a man think it la fun to open champagne for chorus girls, but howl over the baby's milk bill, And perhaps in this flcklenesa of man, this continual doom for lune new DORUIIY DIX. now. I recommend the ege- table Compound and you may use this letter as a testi- lunobocn dessert. ~ ff poilblc, turn sil meats with a heavy spoon, as a fork stuck into For The Cook l monialP-Mfss Delvena Wal- , lace, Union Smut, North Devon, PllllllalllXQ" lllllil F Moore t? McLeod Ltd- Vllqllllzllfl. lI-lllllllllllllll, .16»? mwed dried apricots. lug chic en will frakc it tender. clnnamonaudsular Ill-RU Ill" them will let thajuicu out. Lela shortening l! required when chocolate m used in a cake, aa choco- late contains a great amount. of fat Th0 NI!- Vly to k0? Finley fresh IN THE KITCHEN CABINIT Delicious fritters can be nude from i . _ 11101111181115’. Now rub in a hand lotion. cmmo run rnr. nazvns AND NAILS . ' Cleanliness is the first essential in the care of hand, for nothing is more unlo-my than grimy knuckles and fingernails. The skin must. be thoroughly scrubbed with soap at least once a day. The second essential is the liberal use of lotions or creams to counter- act the drying effect of the water. Most, people find it necessary to wash their hands several times a. day. By so doing they wash sway more and more of the natural oil from the skin and this is why hands so often age prematurely. V When the hands are much soiled ‘ it ls a good plan to rub them with lemon juice before using the nail brush and soap. Dilute the lemon with equal parts of water or else dip the hands in water and apply the juice while the skin,ls wet; Rub the inside of il-e lemcn on the grimy spots, rinse well and then use soap and water. Do not use very hot water for washing the hands. Rinse of! every Darticle of coup and dry the hands For use in the daytime a nongressy one i smore convenient to use, but every night in addition the hands 577L411 be massaged with an oily pre- paration. ' you wonder what to give the kiddies for sup- 3;; per, just serve them a i , bowl of crispy Kellogg's’ Corn Flakes with plenty l of milk or cream. Deli- l cious—ancl extra easy l to digest. l l i l l 1 l s con j Ergr; CORN FLAKES; -s'- 1W»:- . l‘ alwflw- * The flake: wzth the flavor that can’! be copies‘! .7 1t a t _ , ml dune: of glycerlne; ' A Mornlng Sfnlle, ‘,6 dram wnite rose extract, l ' ‘f: dram tincture benzoin. thick. cf the following: 3E5 ounces lanolin 1 ounce C0003 butter 2 drops essence of rose 3 drops tincture o! benzoin This cream should be massaged into the skin after it has been cleansed. Hold your forearm up vertically and massage downward the elbow. Leave on overnight. When the fingernails are brittle and tend to bend away from the nail-bed, dnly oily should not be neglected. In the case applications. Hers is a recipe for a greaseless lotion: I drums white gum trsgacanth melted in 4 ounces rose water; Add ‘.6 drzm oi’ powdered borsx oz" housevdva these conditions are often caused by the use of strong washing preparsticns and water. When there does mt seem to be any external cause for the brittleness and bending, one‘! die‘. or general health may be at Hill’. and s doctor should be rxlnsulted. The nails should be filed short and protected with a good liquid nail polish Tomorrow - Beauty Questions ' Answered. CORNS ‘ 1f} ‘lad/It 019 llllfizin P llT NAMS‘ ._ Corn Extractor. Bus, street-car and subway as to be able to answer the more sim- ple questions of foreign xlsitors. l con- eighteenth was ductors of Berlin are to be taught the The pallbearers were: Messrs. Clar- rudiments of English and French so once. Edmlmd and Frmk Gaunv" l rats. l. .'..: now long had you This lotion may be thinned by ad-l known your ‘husband before you we?! ding cologne water if it becomes LOOl married? " Second ditto: 1 dldnlt know hirn a! A good hand cream may be made all, l only thought I did. 11v MEMORZAN l MR. JOSEPH GALLANT Bay View and vicinity was veil deeply saddened on the sevenfie-‘illil day of September, when it was a1’:- nounced that Mr. Joseph Gill-Inf’. young and loved citizen of that Pl!“ had been called to his Eternal Hons! at the early age of eighteen yell‘! Joe as he was familiarly known had only been sick for a very short time and, hi; death was a very sever! shock to his relatives and friend: All that medical skill and kinfl parenks could do for a loving son wu hastily administered but all to n! avail and his Creator called hi1‘! Home on the above mentioned fill» During his last illness he was of» tended by Rev, W. V. MacDonald who administered to him the 1w rites of the Catholic Church. Hll funeral which was held on ‘eh largely attended. Dermat Fleming. DB-mlan cm"? and Arthur Walsh. Children ' . thrive on -FRY’S This pure and high quality cocoa is made from specially selected cocoa w'“' l" boangbyskiilaoquirodinlflflyoan MM" o! experience. For giving health and h“ vigor, FITS in l A pinch of soda zn with the gtaw- tgtopugmggqgmgvgqqfiw, juutuyouvwlllllsllqultandbfaco tnalorintharmlguati. »1.--e0.-'ry- Rice 119d in Inlll Ind served with l 1a PRYUDNU_W)‘Ifi“a.WQf'_ a" s