mivnsiaazé itrnwisr GUARDIAN i Tim motto-w \ A flowered dimity the choice of ’W°'L'¢f},$ Realm -.:-i Social and Personal -:- FGShIOIIS -:-“ rLzterature DdilyAfguménts ‘I Al. Fashion Hint ‘ - _ ‘ g l l” t ‘ ful W _ ‘A n o" ”°'°"'y D“ ‘*’""B°* Again I. S TYLE '....J l QUALITY? at OLKUDB CALLAN . “My yo! m... didn't make n0 mgngy practicin’ medicine, but he's done right well since he got 5 white coat uni aet" In w a specialist." " -’—"_’_ Feeling Worn ‘ Out when the Blood Becomes Watery a Breakdown Follows. l-lnw many girls and wouien suffer from headaches, pain in the back or “do, poor appetite, nervousness and. a constant feeling oi wearlnes-i and‘ palpiiation of the heart at the lenszt‘ exertion. Of course, all these symp- tOlllS may not be present. in any one case. but any of them show that the blood has become thin and watery. and good health can only be rrgflliiflil. by enriching the blood. This should. he done without delay. For this bur-Q pose nothing else acts so promptly‘ and so surely as Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Every dose helps to enrlchf the blood and tone weak nerves and thus bring new healtli and vitality‘ to weak, and often despondent pco-l ‘ p16. The truth of these statements; is ot-oved by the case of Mrs. How- ard King, R. R. 5, Truro, N. 5., who‘ says: "A couple oi years ago I grew so weak I could scarcely walk across‘. a room without help. My blood was‘ thin and I was almost breathless. I. hnii taken Dr. Williams Pink Pills oni‘ a former occasfon with good results. and so decided to try lhcni again. the time I had taken a few boxes I fcit much better. but I continued! taking tiie pills for several months, by‘ vrhlch time I could walk for miles with little effort. I do rill my own‘ housework and care for four children. so you will see what Dr. Williams Pink Pills have done for me."~ You can get these pills throughj any medicine dealer or by mail, post} paid. at 50c a box from TllE Dr. Wil- iiams Medicine Co, Brockviile, Ont. 'f‘he large aqueduct project at Santa, Domingo, Dominican Republb, is nearing completion. Notice posted on electric lintion in Donegal. Ireland “Bcwaro- to touch these wires is instant d ‘nth. Any one found doing no will be pru- tcutcd." ~ Wh cnil'Zii?e”i'i'co ~ for it , Mothers, who take om: simple re- "llllflli. are seldom worried. l ith I bottle of Fletcher's Castoria in the Wee the can do what their doctor “fluid tell them to do, when baby i: lfetiui, feverish, colick , constipated 0r ltuifed-up with cold-give a. few drop: of this pure ve table, pleasant- sting preparation. t cnmiortollaby Ind soothe: him to sleep in n jitly- t’! perfectly ufe for the youn st hat. Une it freely—and u o tfli l; needed, lpecialintu advise. A more liberal done in all it takes to comfort Mid relieve older children when fever- “hnlllibld brcathmo appetite, wldfl. "m. lhow they need a good purging- lle mark oi genuine Caetoria is the Fletcher signature on the wrapper. Look for l ' We suggest that when you send for i smart woman for warm days. The all-around box-platted skirt is liked because of its youthfulness. A girdle tiger. swathes the hips make; p; t ab; . doubly attractive and becoming td the iroman~ with a mature figure. Style no. 175 can be made sleeveless or will} lotig dart-fitted sleeves, and l5 designed in sizes 46, 18, 2O years, 36, 38. 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Turks at shoulders, furnish sufficient fulncss to bodice. It's charming in printed pique. pastel silk crepe, geor- gciic, sliiintung, printed rajali, silk pique or linen. Sizes 36 requires 3‘; _v:il'ils of 40-inch inatcrinl with "é yard of ~i0-itit-li contrasting. Price 15 cents in sirinips or coin (coin preferred.) Wrap coin carefully, this pattern, you enclose 10 cents od- dltiorial for a copy of our Spring Fashion Magaiinc. It's just filled with delightful styles. including smart en- sembles and cute designs for the kiddies. Is There A Baby In Your Home ? I8 there R baby or young children in your home’? If there ls you gfibuld not be without a box of Baby's Own Tablets. Childhood ailments come quickly and ineans should always be at hand to promptly flgth them, Baby's Own Tablets are ‘the ideal homo remedy. They regulate the bowels; sweeten the stomach; banish constipation and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers-in fact they rclievc all the tninor ills of little ones. Concerning them Mrs. Moise. Cabottc, Maknmlk, Que, writes: “Baby's Own Tablets tire the best remedy in the world for little ones. My baby suffered terribly from indi- gestion and vomiting, but the Tablets soon set her right and now she is in perfect health." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. .Wiliiams Medicine Co., Brockville, 015453;?“ GABDIGAN SCHOOL Grade X.—l. Herbert McDonald; 2, Margaret Rcvllle; 3, Charles Craw- ford and Annie Keenan, equal; 4. Lucy Reville. Grade fX.—1, Mary MacAulay; :2, Evelyn McEachern; 3. James Mc- swnin; 4, Irene Macdonald. Grade VIII.-—1. Marguerite Dixon; 2, Marie Brothers; 3, Ruth McEach- em; 4. Robert Craswell and Mari!!!" ct Sullivan. Grade VL-i, Stella Sullivan; 2. Hilda McDonald; 3, George Sulivan; 4, Lloyd Warrie. Grade .—-i. Allan Brothers; 2. Theresa McIntyre; 3. Mild"?! ma‘ mond: 4. Daniel Walsh. cmioe 1II.—l, MBTBIYBY- Mecmn" 31d; 2, Claude Brothers; 3. Dbl/id Mncdonald; 4- Jim" Redmcmd‘ Grade IL-i. Rita Sullivan; :2. Comeiia Ryan: 3. Glflrly! Redmfxld? 4. Lawrence Shelli"!!- Grade I.—i. Rcztls Bylin: 2. Ethel Shepard: 3. Leonard McIntyre; 4» Clarence Ryan. cause of the way she spends. We have one child, but she complains of the trouble of taking care oi it. She doesn't want to keep house. and she lives in a board- lhl house so she won't have a. thing to do but look sweet. all of baby's bad habits and what a. terrible time she has had looking after him. Then srie has seen dresses shoes, hats that she wants. yet I have not spent a dime for clothes for the last year and am beginning to look like a. tramp. How Can a, Meek Husband Curb His Wife's Extravagancel-Present-Day Status of the Old Maid-When is it Wise to Change Jobs? ' Dear Miss Dix--I am a traveling salesman. Have a ‘fine position and am next in line for promotion, but my wife wants me to quit and do something else. She wants a home and a car, but I am not able to give her these things lust now. I am unable to save anything be- When I return home over week-ends I am told of She doesn't seem to understand that I can} af- ford certain things and I haven't the nerve to tell her, w‘ _ What can I do? T. E. D. Answer: _ Brace up and try to act like a‘ man instead of a mouse. You are a cow- ard, without the spunk to make your wife behave hersclffand she knows it and takes advantage of it. .’ In her heart of hearts she has a contempt, for you for it, and some of these fine days‘ she is going to decide that you don't make enough money to suit her and that you are not much of a man, anyway, and she will divorce‘, you on some pretext or other and marry some other man who offers her a better make of car .than you can give her. ‘ .- Don‘t deceive yourself for a, moment by thinking that you are making‘ your wife love you by being so good to her in indulging tier in the thingsi you can't afford and that she thinks how sweet and self-sacrificing you are‘ to wear patched shoes so that she an have a forty-seventh pair of embroid-‘ cred sandals. She isn't reacting that way to your unselfishness. She is think- ing what a poor sap you are to let her work you. And the first time she will ever have any real respect for you will be when you read the riot. act to her and make her begin shculdering her end of the matrimonial bargain. You can spoil a wife in‘ the same way that you can a child, and it works out in just the same way. Did you ever see a childthat was pampered and indulged that was contented and happy? You never did. It is always peev- ish and fretful and restless, wanting something it can-tget. That is the way with a spoiled woman. Take away all work from a. woman. Put her in a hotel or a boarding houscjr give her half a dozenl servants so shc has nothing to do but amuse herself. Give her an unlimited‘ shopping ticket and you wiill make licr neurotic and disgruntled and miser- i able. Who are the WOIDO‘. who are always deciding that their hard-ivorkcd husbands are not their affinities and that some other men are their soul‘ mates? Who are the womcn who fill the doctor's offices and sanltariums? Who are the women who run off after every fake religion and new cult?‘ ‘Ihey are the morbid, discontented, disgruntled, idle women whose foolish husbands thought they were being kind to them in giving them nothing tr do. ‘ And who are the happy, healthy. contented women? Every time they are the busy. hard-working women. The vromen who earn their oiim liv- irzgs. The women who cook and sew and scrub and wash and rear half a1 dozen children. "The reason for it is obvious. We can't be happy unless we have our self-respect and no woman can rcspect hcrsclf when she knows that she is not doing her part in life, that shc is cheating on her husband and her.‘ children. And no utterly selfish is ever happy because his desires are: insatiable. He wouldn't have as much as he wanted if he had the whole world. i You have made a frlghtfully, bad start with your wife, brother, but if you are ever to have any happines you must retrace the steps you have taken. In the first place you must refuse to let your wife boss you. Don't give up the good job you have because of her ivhim. Stick to the work you have fitted yourself to do and stay with the firm in which you have a good chance of promotion. ‘ Then yank your wife out of that boarding house and put her to wiork in a home. If she had something to do to keep het- busy, she wouldn't: have so much time to look around the stores and sce how much nnery she} wanted. And thcn make her a. definite allowance and make her live within it. Refuse to let her run you in debt. 0f course, she will weep her eyes out and have hysterics, but she will‘ 0.0 ta t/iai [out a Flowers gathered in V10 53"“ °l France were recently sent by All“, plane to the 5.93m 95 Emland‘ 011,4 it [if yourcjewefler .14 - some girls CHOOSE to remain unmarried? \\\\\\\\\_\\\\\\\\\ ‘ '%%K\ HOLMES d EDWARDS, ~»- lamb ~- llldammlhtfaudcby STANDARD SILVER COMPANY OF TORONTO, LIMITED Euclid by Factory S.C. lnoztiufionnl Silver Company of Canada, Limiud Be lure to u: the beautiful (linplny a! that follptving high-clan denim“; (‘liinlolieluivnu w. .\. 114x708, Snmmerllda ll. R. CROCKETT ESTATE '1. W. IMTTERSOX, l ..._. _, t know that you are right and that you are asking nothing more of her than! she should give. ' l . -—-~_ a a l Any man who lets a wife ruin him with her extravagance is a weakiingl A MOITIUIg Sfldlze l i m l it and a fool. And it gets him nowhere, even with her. of a woman who stuck to the man she had ruined? u u Did you ever know‘ DOROTHY DIX. ‘i Dear Miss Dix-Isn't this world modern enough to accept the fact that: Why must people think it is! because we lack beau-By. brains, personality or what-have-you? Are our. families and friends being quite fair in so judging us? 1 don't like house- work. I hate cooking, but I do like business. it takes character and sense, to hold down a good position and yet if I don‘. marry my family and friends will think there is something wrong with my get-up. ‘What do you think of usythe bachelor maidsifrom choice? A GIRL WHO IS NOT INTERESTED IN BOYS. Answer: I think that whether a girlmarries or stays single is absolutely and en- tirely her own affair and that it’ is nobody elsc's business. Also, I think that she has quite as good, if not a better, chance oi leading a full, happy and in- terested life as if she had married. Nobody will deny that an ideal marriageds indeed the holy estate in which , men and women are happiest. But ideal marriages are about as rare L‘ hen's teeth and the average marriage offers no prospect so alluring that it justifies a girl in grabbing the first man who comes her way on the them’ that a bad husband is better than none at all. In the olden days, when every door of opportunity Wes shut in I “Wmmls face and she had no chance oi’ making a living except by doing the most menial work and when a woman had ico be chaperoned until she was 80 years old if she was single and her only road to Mil’ llbefll! W85 thrill-lib the matrimonial gates, it was obvious that every woman would marry if she pol- sibly could and that if she didn't marry it was because she was so lvltlflfltt- ive that neither by hJ-ik nor crook could she catch a. husband. i. But all of that is changed. Women can support themselves now qulifi ar. well as the average husband can do it. They have lust as much» freedom as n. man and can go and come u they please. So the stigma nu been removed from the old maid. ' Nobody if foolish enough nowadays in think that the reason I women doesn't marry__is_ because she couldn't. ‘they know it is because she doesn't want to. Because she prefers certain single blessedneu m n. chance of DN- sible wedded wretchedness. Because she likes oflic work hettr than kitchen work. Because the man of her ideal never came by and she would not lower her standards. Nobody looks down on an old maid. On the contrary, among the most sought-after women in society are unmarried women who are well dressed. well educated, who keep up with the times and who are 8011151 Ind klhflll’ and eumpanionable. DOROTHY DIX- ooncot Dear Dorothy Dlx—Do you think it advisable l0 chi-BIG l>°5lll°ni Wm“ you have no fault to find with your present position except w» w“ M" been there a number of years and t-hinll h"! KW "m" mmwwnm" "d the we ‘k has become more or 1m mechemcll? ‘ 5mm“ itnawer: It ‘is only advisable to change positions when you find that you have lone m“ the wrong sort of work, something or which you are not adapted and which is uncongenial to you. w Only d0 8°01‘! Wflrli when we do work that‘ we like and in which we nnd pleasure. it is a bad thing to change your p0sl-_ tion often because it makes employers feel that yo" ll‘! unsteady and not~ to be relied upon. ' not why lat your work get, monotonous? Why not put pep in it by studying it and trying to become an expert in your line? Personally, I cant lmrine any wo~lr ever becoming dull to m2. I would llWlYl be 011'. _, - . . X my tip toes trying to ‘so: it in a new light Ind Ill lmvther Angle on it and, atienipLlng to do it bc.t.cr. DQ317111‘! D13- lllld GUIIKIN “R05, Silver Ware. pieces. Starr her a Holmes sive sets which FREE! Inerluble plan Have Captured .T]ie Ca-natli Heart ROM Halifax to Vancouver out: , country/shame: are attaining the ideal of table beauty . . . inexpen- sively through Holmes 6f Edwards Distinctive, graceful, exquisitely pae- oerned for every taste, Holmes d! Edwards Super-Plate Inlay brings you something more than plale_ solid silver- where the wear comes on most used Use thin coupon for a re~ Silver-m practical and con- venient way :0 accomplish in four Iltpl the charm of per- ‘ feet lppoinunenfl fable. an Hostess’ it... the June Bride on her w: to com lete silver table ware. Give y 8C Edwards Silver Ware‘ Starting Servic%one of four succes- finally build into a com- plate service of table silver. Holmes 8C Edwards Hollow Ware and Flat l Ware can be matched in design. of buying to your ' Limited, Dept. Plan lend me Al...- 11A,.“ --.'.-----.-----..--....., G. H. TAYLOR m.------------------------------- The lntemacional Silver Company of Canada, Toronto, Ontario. Swnee to a Perfect Table Service’ . Cily....................... .. ....... Mancunian-InnIuuuu-Innn-I-I-u-n-I-I- — 3-19 3 yMld-l-IOII Avenue North, your free boolrlet—“Steppiag . --------Q-J J l “Get in the countryi." said the do:- tor. "Long walks in the open air. No alcohol in any form, and one cigar a day." "But-cloctor—" ' "One cigar a day!" reiterated the doctor firmly. _ _ Six weeks later the patient returned ' ierit ruefully. my time of life to take up smoking!’ to town. -- “How do you feel?" asked the d0:- r. "Splendid! Fit as a fiddle!" "And you lilzcd it all?" "Yes; everything except the one _ cigar." The doctor smiled. “The tobacco habit. my dear slr-—" "Isn't any Joke." put lil the pat- "m; hard for a man a; ADandq Ca and uritlz FAT Cteamu \ Divinitu Fudge Everybody Likes-a Tastt] it walzugis, coated delicious bitter-i.‘ "f 5a _-A1PI»_yQJ\JQB-