race atom» l‘ 'Woman '3 Realm 5.” ‘ _ . ’ Advocates Mfr? 3;, Do r0 thy Dzx , .‘,’,',';'.‘:.'.‘1,, m. of Patience Patience Would do More Than Anything Else in the World to Make Marriage a Success, if Only the Husband and Wife Who p, Begin to be Disillusioned had the l Patience to Use it If I were a fairy godmother and had it in my power to bestow some is talisman upon a bridal couple that would insure their future hlPPl- s and prosperity, I should give them PATTENCE And l should say: "My children, this is a conjure will Wm 4° mil" than love, it will do more than practicing all of the standard domestic virtues, it will do more than any- thing else in the world to make your marrllsc l 81w- ccss, if you will only use it. It ts a rabbit's foot that will protect you against all 0t the boxers that are walling to grab you as soon as the honeymoon is over, - if you will only carry it in your hand. “Use it when you first begin to discover that you » are united to just a plain. ordinary, faulty, human ‘nan or woman instead oi.’ being married to a little tin god. Use it when ch cther's little ways commence to get on your nerves, and the cute little kicks and mannerisms in each other that once enchanted you, make you Dent to scream or SW00 r. Use it most cf all when the disillusioning know- idge begins to soak in on yc-u that marriage is not a petting party, but a life Jentence at hard labor- “Ihus shall you be rrcd from the divorce court that yawns for the newlyweds. For it is in the early years of marriage that so many young couples either stumble into it, or else there begins that estrangemcnt that can separate two persons who live imcler the same roof farther from each other than if continents intervened between them. "So begin by applying some patience to lnarrizlge itself. Don't get dis- couraged and throw up your hands and quit because it isn‘t all that your fondest fancy painted it, and because it Ls not the glorious success that you tholfght it waslgolng to be. I! you took up llnv, ornicdicine, or architec- ture as a profession, you woulrint bc loolildi enough to expect to win fanic and fortune in ii. day. You would know tlm‘. you had to spend years and years qf study mastering L‘.i': trchinquc of your profession, nnd that it WOUlf] take more years of practice before you acquired skill enough to turn out n really good job. "If you went into business. you would (‘zinc-ct to struggle along for years building up your glocery trade, or your brokerage. You would know that you had t; have the courage to carry on ihrough luld times, and the grit to meet disappointments, nnd the wit to triumph ovrr your rivals, or else you would be sunk. But that the man who Just liolcl: on nnd fights on nearly always wrests victory out of defeat and Quakes a success of what he has set his hand to. " \ “Believe me, children, if men and women wou‘d use half as much pat- ience in trying to make marriage a success as thcy do in trying to make s success of a business or a profession, there would be mighty little matrimon- ial bankruptcy. As soon as a man finds out he has a wife who is a poor housekeeper, or extravagant, or who isn't interested in the things he is in- terested in, lie cries out that marriage is a failure and he makes an as- signment on the spot of all of his hopes and dreams. "And let a woman discover that her husband is just an un.sentimental_ soul who says it with beefsteaks instead of violets, or let him have a little flirtation with some other woman, and she packs her clothesand goes bark to mother, and another home is broken up. “Yet it is no exaggeration to say that nine out of ten of these marriages that go on the rocks could be saved if either the husband or wife exercised a little patience. If they would only wait and give marriage a chance to work itself out. If they would only wait until they found out that what they often think is a cyclone is nothing but a tempest in a teapot. If they would only wait until the woman learned how to cook and keep a budget, or the man got tired and lqst his taste for roaming. . "Some of the happiest middle-aged couples that I know were on the verge of divorce a dozen times in the first year of their marriage, but some- how they kept on going until they found the Promised Land. "Furthermore, children, have patience with each other's faults. f-Iow could two persons of different heredity. brought up in a diner-em snvimn. ment, of different sexes expect to have the same tastes and hab'ts and ways of doing things? Impossible. Just reflect that your little peculiarities are Just es irritating to your husband or wife as his or hers are to you, and ignore them instead of trying to correct them. Have patience with them and you will find that’ you soon cease to notice these faults and adapt yourself to them. “Dent expect miracles to happen, and don't expect that the marriage Ceremony will turn a gay, fun-loving girl into a staid, middle-aged wife who prefers a kitchen to a ballroom. Don't deliide yourself into believing that just getting married will change a wild, roaming youth into a fireside com. panlon who never wants to go out with the boys again. "It takes‘ time to turn a bachelor into a husband, or a flapper into s. W118. 8nd you can't hurry up the process by nagging and complaining. "It is patience that does it.” DORUHIY DIX. compel nls brother, Harry, to do it. 101156 Bfildaky was Jobless and un- Harry, according to 14ml“ cam. Ibla w support his used parents so] plaint, is well-off. . he brought suit in superior court to\ NEW HAVEN. Conn- Reb. 21. - l f l . uick, Motor! First aid us applied at once to avoid danger THE most important thin about first aid is to be quic about it. That's why you should have “Vaseline" Petroleum Jelly always on hand for instant use. Think of the child who is burned or cut. You don'twant him tosuf- feraminute;youdon'twant toin- ' vite infections which often come from neglected skin abrasions. “Vaseline” Jelly will help ou. Apply at once. nd applya ight bandage. Be pre ared. Lay in a supply at once. or sale every- where, in tubes and jars. And remember when you buy that the trade-mark Vaseline on the label is your assurance that you are getting the genuine prod- uctpf the Chesebrough Manufac- t ring Company, Cons’d, 5520 C b0i:Ave.,ltiontreaLCanada. l Etiquette ‘ By Roberta hm Q. vliint i; the orosar position for a man to take when walking with two women? ' A. On the curb side. nrvcr be- tween them. i Q. If a woman is ill. may she re- quest that a man give his scat to her in a car? ' A. Yes, but ncvez" under any other conditions. I Q. Are ices eaten with a spoon or :1 fork? A. With a fork. For The Cook in». * " -'"' BAKED FISH-AND-POTATO Quickly mash four boiled pota- toes with two pounds of fresh-boiled codfish or haddock, seasoning with three teaspoons of salt and one of pepper; add one-half cup of butter and cream enough to make the con- Whlle hat stir in the yokes of three a. This mixture should ‘i slightly to coagulate , otherwise it should be heated a little. Lsztly, beat in the slid-beaten white. cf the eggs, and beke in a buttered (117.11 until puffed and brown on top. Sprinkle with chopped green pepper before serving. Every Human Being Hates Castor Oil suéb a rotten taste _ and how it sticks. The modern laxative is far better, and of course is easy to take. What could be simpler than to swal- low one or two tiny sugar-coated pills just before you retire. Dr. Ham- ilton's Pills aid nature naturally, but efficiently; they cleanse the stomach, make the bowels active, tone up the digestive tract, and keep the system well regulated. To be free from head- ache, constipation, blllousness use Dr. Hamilton's Pills frequently. Good for men, women and children. Sold by all Drugglsts. WAFFLES BAKED liltEcTlillilltl-Y A Treat for the’ family To give your family or friends a treat mix the waffle batter. Then sit down to enjoy the meal with them. Not a step will _ m have to take-unless you run short of but- ter or syrup. Here is a beautiful nickel-plated Manning- Bowman Waffle Iron, with heat ONLY indicator, at a cash price of only use. $9.50 CASH Maritime Electric Company Ltd. of the On terms $2.00 down; balance 82-00 monthly for 4 months‘; a total of $10.00. Associated Gas and ElectriclSystem Charlottetown. P. E. l. MANNING-BOWMAN a Electric Waffle Iron sistcncy of a rather thick batter. —-—— _ Pdsty Faces fashion during 1931. 'the Rue La iiaix. ordained the cheeks that bloomed last year. Romantic period is predicted by th purveyors of bea lead of the ultra-smart younger se steps into line. So this year is to be a pale year l‘ tlessness will be carefully studied by young women of fashion, who will crave to look cadaverous as anxiously as they tried last year to appear as passable imitations of "he-men." The world ls promised a revival of the street-scene of the height of the Romantic period of the Eighteenth Century, when every Caring For treatment." washed in farm, soapy water. uclishod with vlzlinmis. Dry them on flannel and polish them with s. little Eau dc Cologne. “Opals can be washed very quickly in scsp and water. They must not, cn any account, be allowed to rc- nisln in water," an expert said to- day. "They should be very lightly polished Wlili a chamois lccither and a mere suspicion oi‘ flllQly\})O\\'(lCl‘0Cl chalk. "Diamonds. rubles can be rinsed in Eiu clc Cologne. best be done by obtaining a small amount of boxwoool dust. Immerse the trinkem in this, and carefully dust them afterwards." Pearls should -be dusted gently with a soft silk handkerchief. * Artificial trinkets must never bc "nshed at all. They should simply be rubbed up with dry tissue paper to rcrtorc their beauty. IIAIRDRESSER Sljlil) PARIS, Feb. 2l.—(U. PJ-A young Frenchwoman, M12. Renier, has brought an action against her hair- dresser, claiming damages because a "permanent" wave had lasted only a 5006 Feminine daintiness expresses this new model of printed crepe silk. And what o fascinating affair it is to make and wear. A pepluln frill encircle; the hips- Rosy Cheeks 0f Last Year I rams, reb. 21. - Party-faced young women are to como back into This is the decree of the powder factories of which have doom of the rosy Women have tired of looking too robust, with real or artificial sun- tanner skins. 'I‘hat,marked the age of realism; now a swing back to the’ ‘ ‘_. who themselves protest they do not originally make the fashion but only follow the in Paris. The rest of the world then Your Jewelry In damp weather Jewelled trinkets are apt to lose some of‘ their bril- llcnce. It ls, therefore, o. good plan to look them over. now and again, nnd to give them a little "beauty Plain gold jeivcllcry should be and Diamonds should be washed in the same way. and emeralds "The greatest care sllnllld be used. when cleaning gems, in seeing that they are thonnzggiily dry. This can bib}. Fat/solitaire ...~ illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington interfere ‘with it slcnderness. A frill also finishes the fitted cape ' PIMING). nit cnslitoirrl-troll contents; -_._ "To Replace 3mm,‘ young person Dined to appear as if dying of consuml>%1°n— and was unhww 11 “nmwfiml m achieving this ambition. H513“ yum. things, W110 tIQIVO months I80 were burltlhl W1"! ' energy, will henceforth loll about looking as though a breath 0! W184 would extinguish them. To look healthy will once Again be "d-lllllli- lng" and "common." Return of the pale-face after its gcllplg during a period of years will make as radical a 011N116 411 m! habits of youns 101k! 1n 311N176. 1n the way of diet, sport, danclnr and such-like, as did the post-war craze ' to be up and dolnk. ; It is predicted that Miss 1931 011 this side of the water will faint at the thought of wholesome food. Calorific values, which never meant much to the French, will so and the fashionable girl will search 0n the menu for the least nimrishing thing, all for the sake of looking romantic. t l A Morning Smiley, Paris Letter b! ma! KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent . PARIS, Feb. flL-No more. wond-I icing what to do while waiting first on one foot and then on the other for tbst fashionable young Ell‘! W110 is never on time for In “WM-Tm”! take out a Parisian wood cleflrflt <15! and work the little nimle W“ .15 made right into the cover. jlhcse new cigaret puzzles are ter- ribly popular things. Tim-o is a small round.or square gins surface en the top cfthe case under which are scv- eni tiny round indentlcns wsn ital-d numbers beneath them. Thcrc are al- so about five or six tiny steel "hi5 lets" destined, one for ecah hole. The object of the game is to dcvclop patience and poise in a crisis-much as is needed after waiting half an hour on a lady friend who is making you miss the first act-of a good show. These little "tricks" are rapidiy tak- in; place of a few "hasty puffs and the ladies are now deciding that a similar pleything for in-betwecn-the acts when their escorts go out for a smoke and they decide to stay and continent on the costuming of the audience. - _ ~ And with regard to the general color scheme of a smart evening audience-it is beginning to have a bluish cast to it that is spreading The wealthy man had brought a large cheque, a donation to the church fund, to the minister’! 110M0- “I suppose you brought this to save your soul?" said the minister. rather thickly over the previous black and white cast. 'I'here_ are still many spots of buck and white but navy blue lace, satin, chiffon and crepe dc Chine are regarded with great favor. "My soul? Oh, dear, n0!" 111911911 the wealthy one, "I brouKhl- ll? W save postage!” Sea Sounding (British United Press) Lennon. item-nary zr-s new type of fathometer, an apparatus for measuring the exact depth of water under a ship, hm been successfully tested during a fortnights fishing voy- age by a Fleetwood trawler belonging to the Boston Deep Sea. Fishing and Ice Co. Depths up to 400 fathoms (nearly half a mile) were accurately gauged. - The installation consists of an en- onnous "hsrsmer," over 100 lbs. in weight, fixed on the bottom of the ship,‘ inside the “skin," which creates a terrific din when s switch is turn- ed on by the navigator. The sound produced is re-echoed by the bed cf the sea, and the instrument in the skippers wheelhouse measures the ‘time it takes the vibration to travel through the water. As sound is known to travel as fast as 4,800 feet a sec- ond, the amount of water in fathoms is registered immediately. l In 400 fathoms the lead method iwould occupy at least a quarter of an hour, and the ship would have to be stopped for a correct measure- ment to be taken, but the instrument l l “(caring collar that chooses the becoming V- shape at the front and bow trim. Plain flat crepe, sheer crepy woolens, lace and many rayon novel- tics are all lovely materials for this model. Style No. 3006 may be had in sins 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. The pattern provides for long culled sleeve-l as seen in small illus- tratlon. The bindings are in plain colored crepe in the deepest tone of the print, while the collar uses the palest shade. You will see one attractive style after another as you turn over the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss, the matron. the stout-and a series of dressmaking articles. It is a book that will save you money. Besuretofillintheslzeof the pattern. Send stsmlil or coin (coin Price of book i0 cents. Price cf pattern i5 cents. __._-_.---.____- No. I006. Sile ..................... looelollsasIsa:oaleaeacneolosaueaoolsa Name lu|eloollillllllbloll vlllleulllsoseosnsleusooooooocsuvlnsel Street Addrui u-n-‘vsscoallcsoltoll , __;_._. TOW CAT ENDS —The pigeon colony of Twickenham today mourned the dearth of "Du- pert," one of the most famous of Britain's war-birds. Rupert flew through shell-fire on the Ypres front many times, but it was a slacker tomcat which brought him to his end. LIFE OF FAMED WAR PIGEON TWTCKENIIAIM’, England, Feb. 21 A strotg winged carrier pigeon, ._-. Social; and Personal -:- = Fashions ~:- Literati: Care of l’ oven 4F MILLION New Discovery In Paralysis Was Praised LONDON, Feb. lit-s discovery hailed by prominent physicians here as one of the most important con- tributions in years toward the battla with infantile paralysis, is one of the romances of the medical world. Nice years ago Edward "Weston Hurst. was an obscure student in one of the large hospitals here. spent long hours preparing himself to compete for o. scholarship in the Lister Institute of Preventative Medicine and won it. H0 There he devoted himself to re- search work in hopes of discovering the serum to prevent infantile pa- ralysis, a task that had baffled med- ical men for years. He was aided Authorities Urge I Avoid Pneumqnia Treat prompfly but avoid “dosing.” Too much internal medi- cine often disturbs the digestion and - lowers the vitality. by Dr. James Collier, one of the fore most authorities in the world on this disease. ’ ‘ In less than a year, Dr. Hurst, now in his earlythlnties. submitted results which Oollier claims have "conclusively proved by experi- ments wwh a horse and monkeys that the horse's blood invariably provides protection against the dis- ease." ' Collier mid the youtg doctor first inoculated monkeys giving them the‘ disease endthen took from a horse Rupert was born in 1917 and bc- fore he was many months old had proved himself '2. reliable muss/go carrier from the front line to his base. fie was owned by Sergeant S. G. Pnsscy of Twickcnham. The death of Rupert leaves only half a dozen genuine war-birds in Britain. The best known are "Old Bill," now living in retirement at Brighton, and "Lightning," who is pensioned at Clapton. tested on _..__. ___-___ the trawler will give 24 different measurements of water ‘into wthich he had inieoted the virus COIdS I10 \ .... rf¢'-.i>-4l .. ..-..... . .—= Institution Vifiiié JARS uslo "m1 the infected monikeyg‘, ' 7 the disease,” he 1t is estinwied that l 1101M wild give two 5 fortnight Wlfllqut la mum d "Mil m! Illfierh‘. l, mu. cotnacnon on; . Russo on‘ Shin. summon, com, "[841 bill cSW-q ‘l Fab. 214m": "llfid 01f U118 city's gtrgq‘ ‘j T118 collection “may. the machines would we"; quent creditors and then, u “f: Pflvment were not f j call at the house in the "M ‘E car.’- Semuel Mallish of representative of tho comedy y“ arrested onacharge ozbmé, d’ the peace and fined. 3 Nurse Tells How to - Stop Gas. Sleep Soqfl. "I was run-down an 88s and constipation. Bloated lobed . I was in misery and couldnotlsg' Ons dose Adlerlka. removed tbs feeling of gas. Now I feel fine and sleep izoodP-Num v. Fletcher. Adleriks washes out poisons whit cause gas. nervousness. bad sleep. it . contains no harmful drugs. 0st Ab" lerikn todlyi by tomorrow feel IN“ wonderful effect. Hughes Dru: 0M dnmouswith ll For free sample and 2e two quarts oi blood. “The serum, when injected into every minute with the vessel going at i full speed. 5 provides certain protection, \ absorbency. MQDESS remarkable substance , Fluffy material encased ln ‘ L . l ‘mo: m cmsnl l but is cleverlv. always i" W‘ 9° v!‘ \ CPI, Modess ~ tagvbvuovi/WMWLC iBodJ 7° 7 \ _ q We“? ?_'l¢rs9l;m¢”l<¢r=i1dl.'iur'§jc$l dreary. tbpslssgg, Lebserbgwlwg td. FREE l f l