l,‘ iTBINKrdlikotogo Nor s, nor whistle blow, Nor-gangs sound- And id have stillness ‘ All around. x Not rctl stillness ' ‘Both low will-sperm! 5, l-‘iiks n for hum of bees; , wavelets purring over stones giln strangely weird and tangled tones. Or-maybe-tho katydid; UFOr the song _0i' birds in treetops hid sq: just some low sweet sounds like l; these -i-'I‘o fill a tired heart with ease. O O O Always considerate of her servants " the Queen never showed to greater‘ ‘ advantage in this respect than dur- ing her recent unannounced visit to Buckingham palace. The domestic staff of the palace at the moment was depleted, most of the servants being at Windsor Castle, so that ,when the Queen decided to lunch -.. there during her visit to town, the question arose of arranging for the .meal»_in the absence of those whose regular duty it would be to attend to this matter. When ‘the Queen. heard oi the difficulty she at once issued instructions that no special meal should be prepared, adding that she would bring food with her, and take it in her own sitting room at the palace. In accordance with l-Ier Mlfjestyk special instructions the meal ~was quite a frugal one, con- ‘ sistlng of a few sandwiches and a sweet; carried in a. specially con- structed case ilxed on the running board of the royal car. u _ o o o Befcirofi.‘ R. H. Prince Henry, the Duke of Gloucester, left Vancouver, l ‘he rewarded those who had waited upon him during his illness, and to his nurses, Miss Ruth McKinnon and MisiMargaret Murphy, he pre- sented handsome gifts. The former, _ who is a Revelstoke girl, received a beautiful compact, and the latter, a daughter oi Mr. Justice Murphy and Mrs. Murphy, was given a gold wrist watch. .5‘ 75' The Duke oi York will be god- father to the newly born Serbian " Prince. The baby, the third son of Queen Marie oi Jugoslavia, will be ioi-mlallyiaamed about the middle oi July and probably will be called Ivan. He was provisionally called Paul. Mrs. A. G. Putnam and family of Sackville are summering at the old homo in Eldon. Ven. Archdeacon Haslam, Princi- pal of Immanuel College, Saskatoon is expected on the Island tonight to spend a brief vacation at his old home Stone Cottage, Springfield. O O O Captain the Hon. Inigo Freeman Thomas. son oi I-lis Excellency the Governor General, arrived in Can- ada at Quebec on Saturday after- Pains in the Back These Are Usually Due to a Weakened Condition oi the Blood, ‘Iha muscles of the back are con- stantiy under heavy strain. and have but little rest throughout the day. They are therefore in need oi all the nourishment and strength that plenty oi purs red blood can give them. Un- less they have this help, you will have backache and continue to have it. Backachc seldom or never means kidney trouble. It is nothing mom m" "l0 fillffld. womout muscles oi the bocklwshowing their exhaustion because 0i the lock o! good, pure 111006. The one lvnerally recognized noon. Captain Freeman Thomas is accompanied by his wife.‘ O O O Mr. and Mrs. Louis Buprecht and Miss Doris Ruprecht o1 Montclair, New Jersey, are leaving for Bani! Lake Louise. Vancouver,’ Victoria. and Seattle returning by way of the iellows‘ . They will not visit the Island this summer as usual. O O O Many friends in Charlottetown and Bummerslde will be delighted to hear that Mrs. Gladys Bell Owen. daughter oi Mr. and. Mrs. G. W. gBell of Summerslde, and a talented so- prano oi much renown, is still doinl; splendid work in the sphere oi music. Recently in Knox Church, Regina. she gave an intimate and histrlon- ically significant renderlngof “The. Ninety and Nine," using the Sheldon setting. Quoting from The Leader, Regina: “Madame Bell Owen's voice is vivid in color, is finely adequate in a climax and answers the mind's hel in its every demand. So con- vingk a performance is always a delight." Dr. Harvey Robb, organist of Bloor Street ‘Church, Torontb. was the organist on this occasion. It must be very gratifying to her ‘friends here to know that Mrs. Owen is spoken of so highly in the West, where she has only been such a short time. Mrs. Owen left 0n Wed- nesday for Alaska and the land of the Midnight Sun on a pleasure trip. O Rev. Malcolm J. McLeod and son oi New York are among the welcome. visitors holidaying in Eldon. O O O Mrs. J. J. McKinnon is bein! , welcomed home after an extended visit to the Southern States and Montreal. She wu accompanied home by Mrs. Alex. McKinnon and two children of Montreal who is vis- iting her mother Mrs. Hammond Kelly. - - ' OOO Tourists are taking advantage of the lovely month of July to visit the Garden Province. During the past week the city has been pleasantly crowded with vLsltors. Parliament.” building was the chief centre of at- traction and the pretty gardens around the buildings wQre dotted with visitors from. day to day. O O O Miss Georgina Pope who has been in Ottawa for the winter isleaving shortly one. visit to ‘I-Ialifam- _ _ o no ‘o | if?!“ Colonel and Mrs. I-I. O. Beer of Ottawa have left the Capital on an extended trip through P. E. Island. O O l Miss {Helena Rogers who is home from Maiden, Mass, on a holiday visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. lienjamin Rogers, Prince Street, spent the week in Montague the wel- come guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Mabon. O O 0' Mr. and Mrs. .1. "r... zhdnucn have as their welcome guest Mr. A. J. McLeod oi Brandon, Man. who is rc- newing old friendships in his native Province. O O O Mrs. (Col) Neiles and children and Miss Lena Barrett of Regina have arrived to spend the slnnmcr here. They are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Paton, prior to taking s. cottage at Holland Cove. Her many friends will be glad to .know that their mother Mrs. Barrett who has been quite ill, is slowly‘ improving. -‘ coo Mrs. Hollis and daughters of Mon- treal arrived this week on a visit to Col. and Mrs. A. G. Peake. O O O Mrs. A. A. Bartlett is summcinl at the Cox Hotel, Souris. O O. O . . Mr. David Stewart of the Shaw- inlgan Engineering Stafl. Q1195":- eflioicnt blood builder is Dr. wil- "ml 945* Pills When the binds has been improved thrown m. u“ of this medicine backache d1. ' M11. Jairbairn, Essex, 0st,, can; what; m5 Williams’ Pink run did for her in a case oi this kind, 5h, Myst-J‘! suflored for nearly three years with I. weak back. At times the pains were so bod that Iliad to .» arrnrrnbsilliliil”“ ' ~ several doctors with very limo bogg- fit. A friend urged ms m u; p; ‘Vlilliams Pink Pills. I did so, and 0h. the icy of once more being able to stand up straight without suiIor. in: intense min. Amr using m: boxes there was no doubt they yo” “limit mo. I used sight bozo; in all and have not since had a sign oi _thstroublo. ‘Clflllblllmjhgun. “illfilili-not mi tired and wofhout ll IWIIIIY- In‘ all this I thank Dr. Williams Pink Pills, Iiyourdoalsrdoesaotkssptbese Dllllyoncouletthaabymkllstsoc a box from The Dr. Williams Iodi- £5‘.F‘*"“I‘QQQ'QI§IQ"‘QQQ§:L;-. ‘_ . holiday. walk half doubled over. I had tried i is horns on a ten days visit to his parents, Hon. .1. D. and Mrs. Stew- art, and ls thoroughly ‘enjoying his O O O Dr. Fred Boyle and bride are u- riving in the city today to spend their honeymoon at Inkcrlnan the guests oi Hon. G. i‘. and Mrs. Hughes. I O O O An amusing story wll told roc- ently by iuur. um more: You. While he was at ilio- lloyol’ Naval College in the Isle of Wlghtahe was out riding alone when ho was 0V8!- tsken by a dense fog. and ‘complete- i; lost his bearings. lifter riding about for a time. lnoklrigln vkin m some familiar laoflnarlr‘ he at length sspied a rustio-hitilamppon o gatinflly good mail.” hQJ-lkild. “l! this tho n! to R1407" ‘Hhjfij. iln't young "reiler-ms-islji." r ’_ , qflw rustic, liter critically ‘ (Oflflllld moments: “than ml *'."'=\?v~7inwh-"-"‘*_. i i}; 3h,‘ no; ’ r g would not. make theeifort if they \.. -iiglS_ 'ofciarl and Personal -:- Fashions t-r-‘i- I-l'1‘ehl,’¢'1l“fl1"e Héflfiifi¢rvi¢é$0i Canadian Medicaid . Naasoeiailionf. 6 panics ‘roon - livery babyishduld be breastfed. There are few mothers who cannot nursi their balms if=they try to do so, and there arelew mother-s who understood‘ how important it" is that the baby shouldfhave his natural food, ‘Ibex-e ls no other mils, or no preparation which ls just as good as breast =milk. Breast. milk" is purer, cleaner and more easily digested than any other food. and it requires no preparation; ' 1 . ' . Mothers sometimes wean’ their‘ babies because they thinlc ‘dint they have notanough milk, or that the quality oi their milk is not good. This isa serlousrmistakc. Every effort should be made to keep up the quantity available, and it is much better for the baby that he receive some breast milk than none at alli If there is not sufficient breast milk, tho 'ry supplementary nt of nourishment is given after the nursing according to the feeding for- mula glvenby the physician. ’ The baby should be fed at kegullu" intervals. Not only is this desirable irom the standpoint of his digestion, but it is important as the start. of proper habits in the child. n he is asleep at nursing tim, he should be awakened, and ‘he should not be al- lowed to fall asleep while he is at the breast, The feeding takes. from ten to fifteen-minutes. After feedinl. the - baby should be held up over the shoulder in order to allow him to get rid of the air which he has swallow- ed, ' . During the hot weather particular- ly, the fact that babies become thirsty should not be forgotten, and the baby should be offered water. previously boiled l: then; is any qtldfiblOll of purity, between feedingsn‘ ' _Under ordinary conditions, the babyhis nursed for eight or nine months;-longer periods are not good for ths child. The baby should not be weaned excepting uponTthe advice d: the doctor who will advise as to __what_ diet he is to. receive. As a r1119. ‘babies are not weaned during the hot summer months, ‘ i Breast-feeding makes for stronger, healthier-babies. and it. protects them “from ‘thsdangers of disease. Artificial feeding, evenbf the highest quality. is, at ths best, an attemptto imitate the natural" fsedini. ' ' ' ' Questions, concerning Health, od-. dressed-to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College 8t... Toronto, will b_e answered personally by cor- respondence.“ ' Made Her Baby Plump and Well Nothing makes a mother more grateful than a_ benent conferred up- ._0n her child. "~TMothers everywhere who have used Baby's Own ‘Tablets for their children speak in enthusias- tic terms oi them. For lnstancq-Mrs. zepbsriay Lsvoic, Three Rivers, our... writesp-"Bsbys- Own Tablets are i wonderful medicine for littls- ones. They never‘ fail to regulate the baby's stomach and bowels and make him plump and well. 1 always keep a box ‘oi the ‘tablets in the house and would advise all mothers to do likewise." Most oi'_»the ordinary ail- ments of childhood “arise in the stom- ach and bowelsnand can be quickly banished by Baby's Own Tablets. These Tablets relieve constipation and indigestion, bi-‘eak up coldi and simple fevers, expel ‘worms, allay teething pains and promotd health- ful sloop. They are guaranteed tn bs free from injurious drugs and am safe even for the youngest and most delicate chii The Tablets are sold by medic _ dealers _or by mail at 25o a box" s Dr. Williams Med! cine 00.. Brockville. Ont. 4 ' 1 riilplsrls to develop a forestry de- partment to care for its 3,366,000 acres of trees. _ Labor troubles in Australia”, have caused fniirksdroduetim in indus- trial activity there. h Bfifi IQ n-h-imnnn-IQIII-I-Ddill- mental-y "clolcl to a formal note? ‘i r A. "sincerely yoursflflvcry Bin-A cercly yours," or, "Very sincerely-m ‘ d. wart ‘doei-i‘ ' linen on so many n-lqnu cards. mun? A. It moans "s. thickened soup." . s I way uusaanns . l - '1" “m ..‘.'..."':..:.! Dorothy Dix Qwbatuosomalihodlliilmlh: Instead of Blaming Her Extra Pounds for Her Husband’s Failing Interest, the Average Middle-Aged Wife Should Take a Course of Mental Gymnastics to Rejuvenate ’ Her Mind v The tired husband has become so common nowadays that when you see a middle-aged man who is still in love with his wife and who actually enjoys her society, you wonder how he has escaped being put in a museum of freaks along with the Bearded Lady and the Living Skeleton and the Wild Man from Borneo and the other rara avis. Just why men, when thw reach their uproarious 40s, are so prone to weary or‘ their wives and to want to swap them of! for a this year's model, is one of the problem that women ‘acquire gray hair and crew's feet trying to solve. So far as they can see, they have come up to specifications and delivered the goods. as per matrimonial contract. They have been virtuous wives. admirable mothers-thrifty and industrious, and good housekeepers. and they don't see why their hus- bands are not satisfied withrthem, as their fathers and grandfathers were satisfied with their wives. All oi which is true. The mlllrun of wives grades just as wcll as it ever did. Perhaps better. Certainly nTbther and grandmother didn't try as hard tokeep father and grandpa vamped as they do their husbands, because in their day marriage was not the precarious Job it is now. g Once a woman got a r usband, she had an until-death-do-us-part grip on him and she couldn't lose him even if she tried, whereas keeping one now is like holding a slippery eel. have lost their taste for them, and in trying to unrlddle the riddle their first. guess‘ is invariably the physical. “Ha," they cry, with one voice, "that's it. Our husbands have fallen out oi love with us because we are no longer young and beautiful and slim", ' And forthwith they begin counting their calories and hide them away to the beauty shops and the plastic surgeons, and are pounded and boiled and beaten and starved, and have their faces liited in a vain effort to acquire a boyish figure and to look sweet and 20, instead of fat and 40. . Now I think that this is where the women guess wrong. The trouble is not physical but mental. The thing that disillusions the average man who tires oi his wife is not he: personal appearance but her mind. What concerns the man who has to live with a. woman day after day, year after year. is not what is on the outside of her head but what is inside oi it, and i! she is intelligent and interesting and sympathetic and understanding. she looks good to him. no matter if she does lose her school girl complexion and get grizzlc-haired and take on o. little surplus weight. I get thousands of letters from thes emlddle-agcd men who are married to women of whom they are sick unto dellth, women whom they have everI come to loathe and hate, and not oneyoi these disgruntled husbands has ever raised the point of his wife's looks. Not one oi them has ever said that he had ceased to love his wife because she had got {at and old and homely and he wanted to be rid of her to marry a pretty young flapper. No. invariably the man's complaint about his wife has been that he asked for bread and she gave him a stone. Invariably he has said that he was tired of his wife because she was dull and stupid and bored him to ex- tinction, because she never read, never thought, never grew, never had an original idea or got a new viewpoint, never did anything to make her an in- teresting companion to an intelligent man. It was their wives‘ fat brains, not their fat hips, to which these men objected invariably these men, who have ceased to love their wives, say that their wives have killed‘ their aflection by coldness, by selfishness, by neglect, by their nagging and petty tyrannfes‘, ‘lIy their determination to get what they want for themselves and their children, no matter how ruthlessly they had to sacrifice the man‘ to do it. It is against the greedy. self-centered wives, the wives who have shown them no ilppreointionn nor gratitude. the wives who have never even tried to enter into their lives and help and encourage them that these men revolt. It is their wives‘ souls that have become hideous -to them, not their bodies. These are facts that the wives who wish to retain their husbands‘ affec- tions may wcll lay to heart, for while men are undoubtedly attracted to a woman in the first ‘place by a pretty face, it takes something rwre than a. peaches-and-cream complexion and naturally wavy hair to hold them. No man will long gaze enraptured at. a living picture if when it speaks it just tackles like “a hen, nor will he cherish it long if its fairness is a. mask that covers meanness and littleness and narrowncss, or if it merely gives him something that is easy on the eyes, but nothing on which to iced his soul. And, on the contrary, there are few men who ever apply any of the canons of art to Judging the beauty of the woman who keeps them entertain- ed and amused and filmed up and Jollied and who glves them‘ sympathy and understanding and appreciation and watln affection and makes them feel that to her, at least, they are wonders and world-heaters. mNo man grows tircdiof that kind oi a wife, no matter how old she grows. d: how much she loses her figure. The eyes in which we see ourselves glor- iousliiuiisdud will always be the most beautiful dyes in the world to us. The lips that pleasant lad flattering things m us will always "be the lips we want to 1‘- . The heart in which burns a fire at which we may warm ourselves will cl draw ti! tA it. The mind that continually presents some new foot ‘to us will‘ nuvir lose interest for us. , . j . -g'1 dorms, mskimmyiag-i. gun-lo in which women can aflord to overlook no bets and so they ilo wcll to keep themselves as young and pretty as pos- siblspbut i! they would spend as much time in massaging the wrinkles in their disposition afthsy do on their faces? i! they would devote as much ei- iort to suppling up their minds as they do to suppling up their muscles; if they would count their words before they spoke as carefully as they do their calories; ii they would cut out their‘ criticisms as carefully as they cut out their starches, and i! they would study the men to whom they are married as carefully as they do thiir lines. we should have fewer tired husbands. » ' ‘ ooaomv nix. POGO-Q union's ew goubl: Dollar or; ~49 vThis wonderful bargain was; selected specially i _ ‘EIOIDOUBLE DOLLAR DAYS, includes hats worth $3._7Band more .. .. . . . .. ' E What should a man war at a- incl breakfast! A. A frock coatwitlsn-sy \ r1‘ 4 (Moore. t? M¢LeodfiLtd~ ~50 the poor women who have done their best, according to their lights _ to be good wives, are bewildered, and do not know why their husbands should r Milady Beautiful l r BEAUTY QUESTIONS ANSWERED (hstuming the Mature Womll DEAR MISS LEEDS-I am v51 yea-rs old, but look and feel like 35- I have brown hair and light eyes. I am 5 feet 3 inches tall and weigh 140 pounds. My measurements are: bust, a4; hips, a4; thish. lore-ii. 18: ankle 8. All my frlendssay I am too int. Please advise me what to wear, ’ ' READER Anseww-Your measurements are m very good and your weight islthnt bi the average woman oi your age‘ and height. I should not. consider you" loo fat. Do not gain more weight, however. It isrconsldcred betier for the health to begin losing a little weight as one grows older. Dark clothes are smart and will make you i look slimmer, Black and navy blue, and drak brown are sale choices. Use! The V-Shaped neckline and the sur- pice effect are becoming. to youriig- ure. For dressy occasions I would suggest a chiffon printed in some soft, misty colors. Tan and brown is a popular combination; a pale. pink- ish tan with medium blue is also good. Old rose and peach shades are .ex-~ cellent. i - LOIS IEEDS House Slippers DEAR MISS LEEDS-I wear bed- room slippers around tho house all day. Would this ruin my feet’! A READER Answer-The answer to your ques-l lion depends largely upon the typo of islippers you wear. Ilthink a, ‘neat, well-fitted kid slipper with a rubber heel would be suitable to use around the house. Felt slippers would tend to make the feet prospira too much, The purpose oi wearing heels on our shoes is to break the jar of walking on hard floors and pavements. Ii‘ the. floors in your home are not thickly carpeted it would be better not m wear heelless slippers all day, 50mg- times women who wear bedroom slippers develop a shuffling gate. In Beneral it is a. good plan for every woman to wear heelless slippers for a. while each day so that the big ten- don at the back oi the heel may be stretched and the toes have exerciso. ’ LOIS Lrzcns Reducing the Hips Dear Miss Leeds-I ani'l6 years old and 5 feet I inch tallnwhat should I weigh? Will‘ running up and down stairs reduce my hips? CARROTS Answer-The average weight for iour ago and height is i08 pounds. 13° not INTI’ about your hips unless they are over 36 inches around. sfiflir-Cllmbiflil is a 800d reducing ex- ercise ior the hips; hiking and swim-, min: are also. Lerraisifll ‘sideways high kicking and the inverted bicycle exercise are helpful. ' “Lois mans" Blackheads Dear Miss Leeds-(l) 1 nn-l ‘past tall. How can I get rid of blackheads onmy nose? I csnnotsqlloeu om out. What should fweigh? 1) 1 h"! "Bht brown hear, blue eye and a light olive lklnywhntifle becmnln‘ colors? - Run; R‘ A"""-(1> Th! average weight for your use and height is between llB and lIl pounds. The time in squeeze out the blackhcadg l; Jun‘. nmr the face has been washed with“ warm water and soap. work “p q; rich lather on your tics clot); and rub this on your noseiilbt. tbs lather- dry on your skin, than rinse it ofl ihoroushly. You" may use "a dimqdp extractor for pressing out the largo: blackheads; this ‘little lnhtnlm may‘ mill b6 Pllfbhiaedat a drug store. Do not try lo get out the tiny black. hflql by pressure. but wash tom out. (I) You msywclr crslmyiidfili, peach, modluniraspbsrry u trim- mng, pink-violet in’ time unmnai dark tau». bottle-Brien, dark blpo; {aids below waistline is pressed into light-lrlmming at throat and cuffs. 1 _____ ._ _ _. _ __ _ _ _ _ a 400,000 Women iu years old and s mt w. inches “ What New York is Wedring Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson F "Yflishcd With Every Pattern By “Annebeglle Worthington Itlis easily possible w wear French undies, and still keep within W"! budget by mskins t-htm- Ivor instance take Style No. 2799. the essential onB-Plwo 008mm Bu? one can't have too many. esvwlllly for summer occasions to wear with the new sheer cotton frocks. 1t will take about one hour of ¥°W| time to inako this slender model. All you have to do is to cut it out and oloso side and shoulder soaml- Eli-h inverted plaits to provide necessary iulness to hem,»and still retain its slim straight lines. It has comfortable v-neckflne at front with deep round outline at back. It can also be made » with straight upper edge with shoul- ' der straps, as provided for some in pattern. , It is designed in size l6 years. 38. 38, 40, 42. 44 and 46 inches bust. ' It is sketched in ivory washable silk crepe with embroidery worked in ecru shade. the new smart vogue oi Paris. _ Flesh crepe de chine, flowered voile,‘ ninon. crepe satin, batiste, radium silk and novelty rayon fabrics suitable. 1 Pattern price is cents. rant. mnsj; No. ‘I38 (blue) cost i5 cents extra. Be: sure to iill in size of pattern. Address‘ Pattern Department. The New Fash-l ion Magazine is l5 cents, but only 10 cents when ordered with B. pattern.’ No. 2769. Size Trans. No. 738. NBmQ Street Address City . . . . . . . State Irene Fulton l Tells How Cuticura 1 Healed Eczema Banana ourtod on my ince in hard, red pimples which in a few days would biuk and thlm scale over. While it woo in this scaly form my ism would itch and burn. and the irritation prevented me from sleeping or gutting any res!- Tho notable lasted about four mouths. "l uned nevus] remedies but they did not seem o: help me- I N8“ using Outiourn Soap and Ointment and they relieved tho itching and burning. and in about tlve weeks l wu oomplcoely baled. one: uamg three abs: of Conan Soap box ofOutilan-n Ointmmb" (WIN!) Min Irena H. Fhlion, Puraboro. N. 5.. sq». l7, 192s. Cutfcura Soap‘ to disuse and purity. Cancun Oil-tuner: m doom: and hnl, and Quinn Tatum: in and refresh, are idml to! daily toiln purposel- n-gjd. c I ad In. lo Said sfimafln-clw ‘ all-g: Corker: Skovlll S 35¢‘- For The Cook PINEAPPLE CREAM Ono-quarter l A MorningSmile The minister had observed that the most regular attendant at his church was s. hard-working washer ._, who, Sunday after Sunday, was al- ways to be found in her pew. The minister felt he must commend her. "Mrs. Brown,” he said, "I notice you at church every Sunday, Do you enjoy the beautiful music." "Na, it no’ that." “Perhaps-perhaps you enjoy my sermons?" I "Na, it's no‘ that." “Well what is it that brings you here every week?" “Weel, it's like this. I work hard a‘ well, and it's no‘ often I get. sic a. comfortable sate wi’ sac little tac think about." Houcehold Hints Bylobctaho A SUBSTITUTE FOB. TACK! Phonogarph needles with worn points can be used to advantage many times in the place of tacks. _ DISCOLOBDED CHINA When chins dishes are discolored. they can be cleaned readily with a solution of salt and vinegar. pint heavy item apple. cut into pieces; six luarsh- mallows, cut in small nieces. whl; , the cream until stiff. then nrii. ihl cut marshmallows and thc P1” apple. Mix together lightly. iii" in a cold bowl. and let it b°~'°““ very cold. When ready to sefl‘! place in sherbet glasses. 109 ‘"31 ' spoonful of sweetened whipped trill" and place a. piece oi PWPIPP‘ Serve with spongecske. I CAKE FILLING A delicious cake filling can be made bymixing one cup oi grated pins- apple, one-hall cup oi pulverized aular. and one tablespooniul of lo- mon iuice_ Report Benefit‘ Hdctualreoorri I “Have you received benefit from taidng Lydia E. Pinkilam’: Vegetable Compound?” 3A questionnaire enclosed with every bottle of medicine has ‘ “Qiilht. w. 4m. over.4®,000 replies. The overwhelming ms.- i°fifY'*'ln fact, ninety-eight our °f fllhvndrlsi-nvs. "Yes." If this dependable medicine has 54???? B11117 women. ha’: it. reasonable to suppose that i: will hi: you an: Get a bottle "" ‘we. vow was. whipped until stiff; five slices pint" -