. 01193. excellent result without meat. that the family will eat its com- on-cob in the most approved manner l' 1W.) LiiAAAéA T?!‘ ‘tvvv vvvvv MOVEMENT .We sleep and wake and sleep. but all things move. The Sun flies forwardto his brother Sun: .The dark earth follows, wheeled in her ellipse; And human things returning on themselves Move onward leading up the golden --'I'he Golden Year year. A LA5'I'ING FOUNTAIN book inwards! For you have a lasting fountain 0f happiness at home that will always bubble up. if you will but dig for it. -Marcus Aurelius ADVICE Let no man presume to give ad- vice to others that has not first given good counsel to hlmsefL- Sencl. DIFFERENCE S The love of the human race is increased by their individual differ- each having something men . . . to bestow and to receive: . . . hu- mility in each, rejoicing to admire in his fellow that which he finds not in himselL-Ruskin. FRESHENING LEFT-OVER ROLLS Left-over rolls may b0 made quite fresh again if you reheat them this WHY: Wrap the not-quite-fresh rolls 111 Wand paper and put the package into a plain brown paper bag. Place it in s iuke warm oven for about 15 minutes. The rolls will come out looking and tasiMg Just like fresh NEW ZEST TO BEANS l! your family is tired of home- made baked beans with salt pork, $17 baking them with pieces of fresh pork. You'll be surprised haw much more appealing they are cooked m“ Way. Besides. s pan of baked beans with generous squares of fresh Dork scattered throughout, consti- tutes a. whole meal. MEATLES! EAVOUBY Put s. tabsp. butter into s. pan, add about 8 potatoes cut in very thick slices, an onion finely chopped, salt, pepper, and 1 teacup milk or water. Cook the potatoes till tender, then sprinkle in 2 or 3 tablespoons grated cheese and a little parsley, heat and turn out. The dslh may be sprink- led with grated cheese and brown- ed, but this does not add to its di- gestibility. For variety new carrots thinly slice and peas may be cook- ed with the potatoes, and lend color and interest. The foods in this dish are very well balanced, giving an _-.___ EATING CORN ON THE COB The best way to make certain is tosee that long ears of corn are broken in two before being sent to the table. Usually an ear no longer than four inches can be managed with one hand in an unobtrusive way; and even if two hands are re- quired to steady the ship, the effect is less barbarous when the ears are short. Little silver forks may be pro- vided, but they are not necessary. Often we see people start upon an ear of corn and go up and down and all around it before stopping, chomping all the while. This smacks strangely of the barnyard and should be avoided. To butter and season a strip of cop not more than an inch wide at a time will protect the lips from irritation . . and protect the napkin. FAMIOUS WARDROBE MISTRESS DEAD Mrs. Field-Wait, wardrobe mist- ress at the famous old Drurylane Theatre, London, and aunt of Nelson Keys, the comedian. has died at the age of seventy-eight. after fifty years‘ connection with the London stage, beginning with thc first night of "Iolanthe" at the Savoy in 1882. Until a fcw days ago she had for COLIO MID CHIPS EPMIS‘ II TllE STOMAGII nss been on the market for the past 88 years; its action is pleasant, rapid, reliable and effective and relief from cholera, colic, cramps and pains in the stomach comes promptly. Price, 60c. a bottle at sli druggists 1 or desle s‘ p t u on] by The T. fifteen years climbed the 200 step! to her omoe at the top of Duty- lane Theatre. She had previously worked at the Adelphi, the Gaiety, Daly's, and the Palace, and among the many stir! whose dresses she looked after were Mrs. Iengtry, Marie Btudholme, Kate Cutler, Marion Terry. and Lily Elsie. Nelson Keys, as a boy, gave his first imitations in her drawing- room. - Mrs. Field-Wait, who was lmown in the theatre as Mrs. Florence Field used to look back fondly on the days or the “show girl." George Edwardes, the famous Galety chief. gave her a diamond brooch. but she had to sell it in 1914. when she went io Canada, started a business and lost all her money. DANGER! 0F CHILL Children are easily chilled. and parents should be careful at the sea- side not to let them bathe or paddle in the water so long that their skin bcccvies "goose-flesh," or they be- gin to shiver. should those symp- toms appear it is high time they were taken out of the water, well dried, made to run about and given some hot milk to drink. SCANTY EYEBROWS NEVER ADD TO EYE BEAUTY Hold yourself in line when it comes to the line of your eyebrows. Most women lose their sense of proportion when they get eyebrow tweezers in their hands. Don't lose yours! Fashion in the ways to wear your straight line if you would be smart. Their ovm natural line is much more becoming. However, don't discard eyebrow tweezers altogether. You'll needthem to remove straggling hairs which grow down too far on your eye lids and the ones that have grown too closely together in the middle. You should have a. smooth, un- lined brow. Eyebrows which grow close together in the middle mar its appearance. Tweezeithose hairs often. If your eyebrows are unusually thick and haves. shaggy appear- ance, thin out s. few hairs occas- ionally. Don't try to change the natural line. Leave them in the line in which they grow-just be sure to keep that natural line smooth with no rough edges. ‘Freezing your eyebrows until only a. few hairs remain defeats your purpose. Instead of enhancing the beauty of your forehead and eyes, the excessive tweezing will serve to disfigure them. If your eyebrows aren't thick en- ouzh. you might use s. little plain white vaseline on them at night. Don't forget to brush them with a small, soft brush after you powder your face. They won't be shining Eyebrow pencils may be used to pecially in the daytime. TOO MANY MILK PUDDINGS Milk puddings for children are sometimes overdone, especially in of forcing them to have milk pud- dings or nothing they no longer look forward to meals, lose their ap- petitie and get indigestion. MANIPULATION 0F RAID! REVEAL CHARACTER If you are curious to find out what sort of person s woman is, watch the way she uses her hands, Miss Helen Lieidloff, New York sculptor, suggested recently to a New York World-Telegram reporter. The ar- tist whose modelled collection of celebrities’ hands has been sent to the century of Program fair in Chicago believes that card index files could be filled with character- istics of people simply from study- ing their unstudled manipulations of hands at work or in conversation. reveal far more than their shape or their size,” Miss medloi! said. “Their contour. the length and shape of fingers, the general plan of palm and knuckles, and even the type of wrist from which the hand hangs, are part of the physical ensemble we have inherited from our gnceg- tors. But the way we usc them is all our own and is fsr more of realizes." y Two pairs of hands that to the casual observer look about the some at ma? by their movements proclaim that one woman is gentle and gen- erous. while the other is revealed as ‘ ¢évvévvvvv wvvvv vvvvv v ’s Realm -:- S cia] “é v‘$ v vYYYYvvvvv v vvv .THE CHARLOTTETOWN GIJARDIAN {H} and P rsonal -:- ‘fiv évfifi“ H0O‘? .23.. Dorothy Dix I , III Mlrrllse Prom Study l oriously repeaters. body, and that never (lies. failure in their mouths. on the subject. Too Long Have We Married on the Grab-Bag Principle — College Courses in Matri- mony Will Be Worth Their Price if Only They Tell Boys and Girls How to Distinguish Between Real Love and Physical Attraction Several of our leading universities are establishing courses in matri- mony in which they will make an attempt to teach ths art, science or system, as they say in Monte Carlo, of winning out in the greatest gamb- ling game on earth. have we married on the grab-bag principle and trusted to luck instead of skill and knowledge in selecting our mates and getting along with them afterward. And if the learned professors can teach the boys and girls any certain formula for solving their matrimonial problems as they do for working .0ill.' their sums in arithmetic, they will be benefac- tors to the human race. This is well. Assuredly they have a wide field of knowledge to explore, for virtually nothing definite is known Those who succeed in marriage and those who fail do not know why nor how they did it. Even experience seems to teach nothing, for the divorced are not- Nor does age and knowledge of the world help, for graybeards and adolescents make the same matrimonial blunders and fall into the same matrimonial trap. Admitting, however, that in its very nature marriage is always bound to be a foolhardy adventure, and the way to make a success of it one of the things for ivhlch there is one rule and a thousand exceptlonivflllll there are many things about it that the young can be tailglit which will make it a less hazardous enterprise than it is at present. And the most important oi‘ these, it seems to me, is to try to teach boys and girls how to distinguish between physical attraction and real love, how to tell the difference between a transient sex appeal and the grand passion that comprises love of the soul and mind as well as the If we could do that, we could save innumerable wrecks of the lives of the youngsters who are blown together on some vagrant gust 0! psa- eyebrowers have changed. You no . sion and who marry only to find that they have nothing in common, that longer tween them mm l thin’ their attraction for each other has died out as suddenly as it began, and who quarrel and part with the bitter taste of a marriage that has been a ‘To say. nothing of the children who must pay the price of their mistake. And this tragic error, into which they are befooled by nature itself, of thinking that a mild Case of infatuation is enduring love is one that any ignorant boy and girl are likely to make. of life when they are in love with love and when they can see a Fairy Prince or the maiden of their dreams in any commonplace lad or lassie. Particularly is this ‘the ease with girls, who are soaked in romance from their cradle up and who begin to think of love and lovers and plan their trousseau while they are arc still in the kindergarten. They can't wait for the right man to come along. They can't stop even to take ft second look at the boy on whom they are They are like the heroine in the old Florodora opera, who sang "I must love somebody and it might as well be you." wait to grow up. lavishing their affections. So the poor little creatures, drunk 011 their own emotions, which are the headiest of holnebrew coilcociinns, rush into marriage and spend the balance of their lives regretting it, or trying to get out of it. From this fatal blunder parents cannot save their children, because all boys and girls believe that their fathers and mothers are so old and desiccated that they have oven forgotten what love is like. the college can do what ihc parents hove failed to do, as many a lllrl majors in domestic science who couldn't be dragged by Wild "horse-S 1M0 her mother's kitchen. Maybe when love and mxirriazc beflvmfi hish-bfowed $193513‘? Studies in college. youngsters will learn to make laboratory tests of their feelings. And noting the reactions that have taken place as regards their affections for Maud and Arabella or Percy and Archibald, without whom they thought they could not live last year and whom they cannot endure this If w become encrusted with pwder dust‘ Furthermore, great will be the gain if girls and boys can be taught in ~ All too long half-orphaned little For they are at the time They can't But probably aggressively spiteful lacking in loyalty and strength character, Miss Liedloff said. She compared the fragile looking hands o: Lily Pons, Metropolitan Opera, star, with hands the shape and size belonging to differ- ent types oi women. thei heads as well as their hearts not only 111 P16141118 W‘ darken eyebrows that are mo 118m tcligiighutzblllrslfis and wives but in dealing with them afterward. colored But use n sparingly’ e5- boys may even he taught to give as much serious thought and intelligence to choosing a wife as thr-y do to picking out an automobile and girls may be brought to see that it is as important to choose husbands who become them and suit their llllCS and whom they are crazy about as it is a hat. And certainly both boys and girls could be taught how to treat hus- bands and wives as they are instructed how to treat dumb animals the case of so many children WhO in the school or animal indusairy. Half the husbands and Wives in the frankly dislike them‘ A5 the resultl world don't know that there is any code of domestic etiquette which they should observe in dealing with each other, and half of the divorces will be stopped when they find out that it ls as bad form to use the hammer on each other as it is to eat peas with a knife. Undoubtedly the colleges will te with the partners of their bosoms, with special reference to all the nice- ties of diplomacy, and WllCll that happens the higher education will be justified and the domestic millennium begin. or stingy or of 511.1110 "Impromptu movements of hands a recoil from its limpncss, five-WE! $11511 ‘b9 ""886 96111011 the owner's lack of character, she "We know that this singer's gen- erosity with her voice and her time and her indifference toward money have sometimes embnrrnxcd her managers. All these characteristics show up in the unconscious spread and relaxation of hér fingers when she snakes impromptu gestures in conversation," she said. Similar hands on a furtive or tricky or stingy person would have' fingers that would automatically curl in on the palm, or the hand might be so flabby that a stranger would sensing observed. Miss uedloff looks far more often hands than at fncfs or. about New York and amuscs her. self by attaching characters and oc- cupations onto the people she sees. Mrs. Geo. Wilson of New Domin- ion and then in a few well chosen ‘remarks explained the object of their visit. She then called on Mrs. Stanley Taylor to read the dress which is as follows: bers of Fairview Women's 111mm“ have come hero tonight to ‘n1. 51"? WW5 Como Wu to our community. You ‘have left behind your old neigh- bors snd friends, ‘but we hope the JWW i In NV" Owlflflll, 1| Perhaps (C N schoolgirl c0 where there are children. mild, and p in oils. firs: with warm water, th this beauty care and see DCW "It's olive oil that beauty. all over” Yaulb I, radian! rkil i: tbs null! of Pa mulivo’: gnu/a oliw oil ran PALMOLIVE, and no. daily rule in thousands o skins . . . and yours . . . no ordinary soap can hope to give Palmolive results. For nothing has ever been found to equal the enrlc care of this blend of olive Use this treatment for bath and face. Massage a thick lather of_ Palmolive Soap and warm water gently into the skin. Rinse, Buy 3 cakes ofPalmollve today! Follow your skin responds with new makes Palmolive green ”' I’m mplexion other so: , is the homes For their delicate en with cold. for yourself how youth, KA4AAAAAAQ Fashions. '-:- Literature“ -.nks"sa.' ‘as A‘ ‘n’; masks‘ MADE IN CANADA we know you and your family have been held in the highest esteem in the community from which you come, and we know you will fill the same pla..e here. Mrs. Cavanagh is really coming back to her old home and friends but t/o Mr. Cavanagh and family we are all strangers and as such we most cordially welcome you and‘ although we understand at the present time you are not contem- plating having s. permanent home here, we hope that you will find the place and people so interesting and pleasant you will find it im- possible to tear yourselves away from us. It is such people as you we need in our community to build it up and make it a better place to live in. So on behalf of the Institute we ask you to ac- cept this mmll gift and we hope We W111 Prove as good neighbors and friends as we know you to be. Signedon behalf of the Pair- view Women's Institute. ' MRS. STANLEY TAYLOR RUBY CURRIE - ‘Mrs. Cavanogh made a very O-O§O§-O-O+0 GARDENING l Some garden makers have been inquiring about standard roses, which are to be seen in more pre- tentious rose gardens, where they make a very attractive appearance. They are sometimes called tree roses because they have one long stem or trunk, with all their‘ flowers borne at the top. These standard roses are useful in large gardens to break up the somewhat flat and monotonous appearance likely to be found within them. Moreover they are said to be less susceptible to black spot and mildew than the bush roses, probably because they are more open to the air. In pro- tected gardens it may be possible to carry these standard roses through the winter by wrapping a, little straw or burlap around them, but the best way to handle them, and the only way in cold sections, is to lay them down when winter comes. This can be done by loosening the roots at one side and then pressing the plant suitable reply and after Elfprgg- sing her pleasure on meeting her old friends again thanked them sincerely for their great kindness. _i__._____ "We are moving in the direction of a new world orderfl-Raymond B. Fbsdick. LISTEN MOTHER . . . to this y! JUST hear Rice Krispies snap and crackle in milk or cream! That's how crisp these toasted rice bubbles are. That’s why children love them. And Kellogg’s Rice Krispies are so good for everybody. Nourishing ricel Easy to digest. Al- ways oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. ach youngsters how-to deal suavely DORUH-IY DIX. Institute News rbsmvmw w. 1. On the evening of June 10th. the Fairview Women's Institute called on Mr. and Mrs. James Cavanagh to welcome them to the communi- ty. Mrs. Allison McMillan on be- half of the mstitute, at first voiced the sentiments of the peo- ple by extending a welcome to Mrs. John Currie on her return to her old home in Fsirvlew after spend- ing the winter with her daughter ‘d. Mr. and Mrs. James Osvsnsgh. Deer Iiriendm-We the mem- l . sugar into them. Fold in other in- gredients. Drop from teaspoon on greased tin. Bake in modereate- oven. Time in oven, 30 minutes. ‘Temperature, 300 degrees. Servings 36. shortening, sugar, dates, cocoanut, and flavoring. Mix weu. Add milk and flour which has oeGT: sifted with baking powder and salt) Drop ' fr in a moderately hot oven. ‘Time in oven 12 minutes. Temperature. 3'15 degrees. Servings, 3G. over to the ground, where it can-be covered with a. little soil and left until spring. CORNER Cocoanut Crlspettes 3 egg whites t6 cup shredded coccahut 1 cup sugar 3 cups com flakes 1 teaspoon vanilla Beat egg whites stiff and add other ingredients. Drop by tea- spoonfuls on a greased baking sheet. Bake in a moderately hot oven. Time in oven, 15 minutes. Temper- ature, 375 degrees. Servings, 24. Coconut Meringucs ' 2 egg whites if cup sugar ‘A teaspoon salt 9t cup dates, out in small pieces l4 cup walnut. chopped l4 cup cocoanut 1 teaspoon orange extract Beat egg whites stiff and bcat cream well together. Add 888$ slightly beaten and milk. Add flour sifted with salt and baking powder. Mix well, add coeonnut and vanilla. - Drop from a teaspoon on P611564 tins. Bake in moderately hot oven. l Time in oven, 15 minutes. Tempera- ‘ ture, 375 degrees. servings, 30. . Rhubarb Wine It 1s important that the‘ wine is made in a wooden tub or barrel or 1t was s. chilly day and the fruit vendor was not feeling in the best o1 tempers. An old lady who stop- ped at his csrt was critical of his bananas. - “com-s, they're ripe," returned tbs vendor. listed. "They are hard to skin." The vendor gasllvd- "Crikey!" he emulated- do yer expect for three for two _ 0H?" Two ladies who had not B6011 9W3 other for years, recently met in t!!! street. They recolnlled "ch, “h” after s. time, and their recognition was cordial. , "So delighted to see you basin why, you are scarcely altered!" "And how little charmed you mi why, how long is it since we met?’ "1 should say five years" "And why have you never been t~ see me?" ‘ ooh’ my gear, just look at m weather we have had." large crock. Slice 30 Pounds lull?! rhubarb into small pieces. PIWB l! crock and pour six gallons of boil- ing water over it. Stir freqllm ‘ for l0 days, then strain Juice pour into crock or tub and heat thl _'juice in o. pot; dissolve 2% pound: ‘ of sugar to each gallon of Juice Ind pour into crock or tub. When liqflll is blood heat add q broken-up fresh yeast cake. Allow juice to fenneni until it stops working then stroll and bottle. The wine should be un- ldlsturbed for 12 months. n! nmvsssuz Today's model is just perfect for hot weather wear. Besides being unbelievably easy to make, it's surprisingly inexpensive. The pattern includes clear instruc- tions as how to cut it out and put it together. The scalloped treat- ment is optional. The pattern also provides for the neckline, sleeves and hipline to be cut with a straight edge. Carry it out as the original in a sheer dlmity print in dusty pink tones - you'll love it. The white or- gandie vest gives 1t a. dainty touch] It's a dress you, can wear andl wear and it will tub beautifully. striped batiste can be worked out very ffectively in this model, an dis smart in blue and white or black and white. ' _ Tub silks in white and pastels an charming too. Style No. 867 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46. 48 8nd 50 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3'56 yards 85-inch and 9i yard contrasting. Price of PATTERN l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully, .__.___.._-._-_._..-_ N0. 887. Sim "nun"... ....... .........¢-...... . . . . . .. Street Address . . . . . .........--.............,,, ... Daintiness With Chic Styles -._.___.-__ I ILLUSTRATED DIISSIIAKING LESSON WITH IVIBY PATTERN WOITIIINGEIQ City ' Coooenut Date Cookies 1 es: 1-3 cup cooking oil 9t cup sugar 1-3 cup dates, cut in pieces 1-3 cup oocoanut. 2 teaspoons lemon extract ~36 cup milk 2 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder ‘A teaspoon salt 1-3 cup nuts, if desired. Beat egg very light Ind add om teaspoon on greased tin. Bake 54 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder I cup shredded ocoanut 1 teaspoon vanilla BABY'S OWN TABLETS, the famous prescription that has brought quick relief in millions of cases of “summer complaint" and restored babies and children to health and happiness. ’I'hese tablets contain medldasl ingredients that cause bis bowels, liver and ‘ " to act together 1° "Pd i119 Imus or poisons that Qlmbllllel‘. I414 suns, ‘and sobad with summer complaint we despalred of saving her. A friend advised Dr. Williams’ BABY'S OWN TABLETS. After the thini dose baby fell asleep.~By noon the next day she took the _ usual bottle feeding." Why not get a box of BABY'S OWN -TABLETS and have than mdy in case your child suffer: m. BABY'S own TABLETS Make and Keep Children Well-As Poor little child! How mother's ly impo in cases of “summc: . heart does echo to see blm complaint". A - time w wall and drkl Cm m Iust howellcctlvs “asavs own tell her wbst she should do for he: TABLETS" are may be gathered. » Pmdim! 5811198? from Mrs. Hazel Allard! exper- Hm a one “f. mm", m" um lenoc. She writes: "My baby was , ' l "e mum u. dunk attack of summer complaint? lg’ ‘WNW 5'1"" PM» chills and l“... will‘: n“ met’ wrmak‘ “u” 9‘ Z4 cupbutter or margarine the correct proportions for uie ab: Tfillhllgl? ffhllill‘; a?! WP l"!!! administration to him and to troubles, fretfulnees, sleeplessng- i; .4‘; 2 eggs “k other children, which is extreme- sod simple fsvut . g y; 1 cup m ' , 5; , m, ,,,,,,, on. WILLIAMS’ u! Mothers Knew Alnsmzngsmzzs "These don't 190k r199." l!!! J “I w“ you they're not," she per- - . "W118! pence-bananas with zip 155ml‘. . ' ..5‘_ V, .\