y,» |4| Z gFor Hie Cook l , i f Pciicu UPSIDE DOWN caxss 2 cups pastry flour. 4 teaspoons baking powder. 31f teaspoon salt. 2 tablespoons butter. 1 cup sugar. 1 egg. T‘ 1 cup peach syrup. U‘; 1 tablespoon lemon juice. . Sift dry ingredients together. 5Cream butter, add sugar and con- tinue creaming. Beat in eggs and beat until mLxture is very light and creamy. Mix lemon juice and syrup p , and add flour and syrup alternately until all are used, beating well. Grease muffin tins with 1 tea- spoon butter each, then put 1 table- spoon of brown sugur in the bottom r‘ of each. Cover with slices of peaches ‘ Ind chopped nuts. Pour batter over ' this, filling this two-thirds full. this, filling tins two-thirds full. ‘minutes. Remove from tins, serving with peaches on top, and serve gar- nished with whipped cream and - nuts. ...ir £4‘ —~u -—-»-¢»a- —-~ __- S .- ‘f ;—fH->_ {atxlztttzsrrensr MILLVALE SCHOOL On Friday June 26, twenty-five visitors gathered in Millvale school for the Annual examination. The pupils were examined in the dif- ferent; subjects by Messrs Leeming Murphy and John J. Hogan and their teacher, Mildred MacDonald. The pupils were then given some exercises in Phylsicirll Drill, for the teaching of which a ceritificate had been awarded. The school , certificates were (Wfllfdfid to tllc two pupils Oswald and Cletus Murphy; who tried and were suc- cessful in the Public School ex- aminations. The teacher and pupils were then complimented on their year's work by Messrs Clem- ent Trainor, Wendel Murphy ftrustees) Leeming Murphy and John J. Hogan. After which an ad- , dress was read to the teacher by Mrs. Looming Murphy and Mrs. ‘John Parsons on behalf of the In- » stiiute presented her with an ap- - proprlate gift. ‘ The address read as follows:- ,_ Dear ‘Te:ichel~:—As the scholas- 5 tic year is now drawing to a, close, and soon your well deserved va- cation begins, necessitating your ‘ removal from us for a. time, we - the members of the Millvaie Women's IIlStlilltg take this op- portunity of extending to you‘ an - expression of our gratitude for the great interest manifested by you ‘not only llor the progress and de- welopment of our school but also for the social improvement of our community. _ We thank you for your efforts in ‘organizing our Institute and carry- ing out its various projects, We are pleased to learn that you have decided to return to our school for another term, and trust that our relations in the future may be as pleasant and fruitful of good as [he yiast. In conclusion, we ask you to a6" cept this small gift as a. token of the eslcenl of the members of our Institute. Signed on behalf of the Millvale Women's Institute Mrs. Leeming Murphy, President. y uni-n ‘ qmali-ai~atausxan;via»vcmsvu Iulvoflaa" . .- g. ». YOUR clllln Not Stupid- Handicapped The seeming stupidity of many school children, is directly chargeable to faulty vision. Correctly fitted glasses often work wonders. NOW c. r. lllncllsson F. Gordon Hutchcson Optometrists-At your service. Have your child's eyes examined loss than a real value? A ‘you drink flvo cup 0f “KING CDLE TEA” a (lay, your tea costs you Think of that—'less than a cent a day for the lux- ury oi drinking “KING CIILE TEA.” Where else can a cent buy so much Kept positively fresh In It! clean aluminum package. cent a day. - lettuce-green crush flowers. done in the mandarin manner. Paris Styles — By MARY KNIGHT United Press Stafl Correspondent PARIS, July 16.—(U. PJ-The lowly spider has inspired o hat. The milllners of Paris are spinning webs of chenille and silk cord in the exact design that. the spider weaves its web, and to run true to realism, a pin in the shape of a spider is the only trimming. The poor dead cock whose feathers form a gorgeous pcplum for a. gown of white crepe would ‘crow with pride and revel in mar- tyrdom-lf he could see the way Schlaparelll has glorified him. The white crepe gown is almost puritanical in its line, crossing in front simply like an old-fashioned flschu. and tight, and the skirt is wide and to the ankles. Loose back crepe gloves, at least two sizes too large, wrinkle over the hands and wrist, and a black bone bracelet appears half way up one arm. Pink orsandie and silver spa ngled embroidery is a deliberate attempt to combine demureness with sophistication, and because it is attempted by Chanel it is a delightful success. neeked—a silhouette in glittering softness. An ofI-the-shoulder black lace gown by Redfern is of another world with its little pink faille cape held together in front with Jewelled wrists and throat and a superb figure form its background. Opallne lame for a wrap is one preference of Lanvin, and it is a. hat by Talbot; for which she uses nubbed starched yellow tweed. The sleeves are long Sleeveless, V- Still in the mandarin manner is PRESIDENT WILSON UNINJUR. ED DECATUR, Ala, July 15. (U.P.) —President Wilson, two year old negro boy, fell 30 feet into two feet of water in the bottom of a well here and escaped with no discom- fort except a slight chilling on a Yiot summer day. He was rescued by the fire and police departments, Jointly; ,. Magistrate, to prisoner who has frequently been in the dock: "Eben- ezer Nonkes. aren't you ashamed to be seen here so often?" _Prisoner: "Bless yel‘ 'eart, sfr, this place is quite respectable ter‘ some places where I'm sent." . "i l‘ Mother of Elgb! Give: Advice "I we! .14.. I n zM/heevl afiufrf "WHEN my first baby boy w" born 1 was weak and run. dowh. l read about Lydia B. Pink- ham s Vegetable Compound in 011g y‘ Your lmle bunk! and nvv who! f! had done for others. "f look three bottles and i: mode mo feel strong 1nd bum,» d "l um the mother of‘ eight chll. lzflbwlyyoungcstufifrlcn mamlu; _ l ""1""?! Pulse your medl- cme Ind 1 zell other women lbw; If." The grateful womnnvvhowl-igg; this letter is Mrs. Dan MacCraig BishopSi.,So.Alcxandrin,Onml°: @447. 401's’ ' liiiii/ill EUMPUIJNH nqp-i-n...» ' lottetown, B. R. hen Ne. 4 in pen SAN SOIWS PEN WINS Notes on P. E. Island Egg Lay- ing Contest for the week endinl; July 1o, 1931. Mr. William Sansonrs B. R. Den led the contest for production for the week with 52 eggs, 61.8 points; Mrs. Roland Eastern W. L. pen was second with 54 eggs, 613 points and J. P. Peel's W. L. pen was third with 55 eggs 60.5 points. The first and second hens lead- ing in individual production to date are Mr. William Sansolrro B. R. hens number 5 and 8 with 212 e885. 244.4 points, 201 e338, 229.6 P0111128 respectively. The third place is held by Experimental Farm Char- 7 with 198 elgs, 226.2 points. Production for highest pens in contest to date are: ‘~ m, Mr. William samom. Durham Bridge, N. B. B. R. 1806 eggs 2080.5 points, ‘ . zndflxp. Farm, Fredericton, N. B. 3. R..'1’l38 eggs, 1908.7 points. 3rd, Mr. dunes Tuplin, New An- nm. P. E. I. B. R. 1553 Gill. 1685.2 4th, ‘ll/ms. Roland Easter, New Wiltshire, W. b. 1502 eggs 1633.9 points. A The production for tlt- Wee" wa — ewwu» a luv» why A" I I 9 val:- DorothylDtx ......, l Many Girls Who Are Otherwise Charming Are Passed Over by Men Because They Are Too Standofflsh or Too Eager, Too Tongue-Tied or Too Ioquac- ious, Too Unskilled in Games i or Too Expensive We were diccussiul why alrls who m pretty and lniellllellt- '11“ srcgooddoncenandgooddresscrcu-ndwlwwouldmakloiwdwlvel" often have no attraction whatever for men and never have l. date or n - chance at a husband. of course, tho real mower to the qllflllw 1B um they lab: that mymrloul wmefllllll m“ ‘" coll u: BtLrM-ZUOD- m- um may cannot be 111w‘: ed nor can it be helped. Thom isnothlllliheym do about it. If nature did not bestow it upon a girl she is simply out of luck and that's all there is to it? But another reason why many Sill-ll Wh° "'3 for above the average in pulclu-ltude and assorted feminine charms are passed over by men is b6- oauu they lack technique. They never lei-m 110W w handle mcn. rney an either rm sow or iw Bfmdillmhl ‘°° Pkm" or too indifferent. Such a. one either runs after men or shriek! $01‘ 311° police when one comes near her and one sales method in Jllill 550"‘? 5' bad as the other. Very often when a girl perceives that the boys do not swarm around her as they do around her sisters she cn-mollfllllefi he!‘ “Wm b7 mum‘ mg the pose of a. man-hater. She pretends to scorn the anti" mist-lull!" sex and calls attention to its weaknesses and defects. She thanks God lgudly and in public that me can bu y her own food at the restaurants and pay for her own theatre tickets and that she doesn't hi" W b‘! bored by the company 0! some little pin-headed moron in ‘breaches. And 511g proclaims from the housetops that she would never ‘give up B 800d job 5mg a good palm-y to go and be a. servant in any mm! “When- -_-n-___ And she seldom does, for the girl's defense mechanism works only too well. She drives all the boys BWB-Y- T00 many girls are handing out angel's food for them to go out of their way to hunt up one who 106d! them on dill pickles. The one thing that men demand above Ill @189 111 women is sweetness. They will have none o fthe one ln whom the milk of human kindness has turned to clabber, and they will flee faster from a woman with a sharp tongue than they will fro many enemy with a. two-edged sword. Another mistake made by many girls who never have a bee“ l! in trying to be too vivacious. They have got the idea that men like girls who are gay and full of pep and bubbling over with hlsh Spirits. m they jump around like a. monkey on a stick and are always screaming at the top of their voices about somethinfl- lmd they hi" hystefl“ and 513315- and everything is just too wonderful or too awful or too something. This line goes big with a. college boy, and a flapper in her teens can get away with it, but a grown-up woman who can t sit still for five minu- tes at a. time and who marvels over a. bog of peanuts and thinks they are just the most wonderful things she ever saw and who bursts into peels of mirth without occasionls a fit subject for an allenist, and no man of in- telligence yearns to install her in his home. lie feels that her FY0991‘ habitat is a. lunatic asylum. Men fight shy of many other girls because they are hard to entertain- Among these are the beautiful but dumb, who are 300d to 100k 81? but who have never a word t0 5B8 f0! lihemsell/W- After one experience most men pass these up because no man's idea of a pleasant evening is working like a coalheaver trying to make eon- versatlon with a. girl who never bats the ball back to him or who, when she does, comes across with o. family Twltfll 850i“? Will-ii 91°31" mm“ and father says and. little brother does. Nor do young man rush the critical girl who is never pleased with anything; who never likes the play or the movie to which chc has been ‘aken and who always tells her escort about what a. grand car Johnml So-and-So has and how she enjoyed the grand opera that Tommy Blank took her to and what a. wonderful dinner Bobby Smith ordered at the St- Robem on another occasion. A young man naturally considers that he isn't getting any more than a. run for his money when a girl makes him feel that he is giving her the time of her life when he takes her out. And there are other girls who are left at home with mother and father because they never learn how to do what other young people are doing, and so they are excess baggage with which no youth burdens him- self. A girl may be as beautiful as s. houri but no man will take her to a party if she dances so badly that n0 other chap will cut in and he will have to drag her around all evening. A man will overlook all the seven deadly sins in a. girl before he will have her give him the wrong load at bridge, and he will never. never ask her to play with him 1f the crabs his game in tennis or golf. —--*"\-P A lot of other girls get sidetracked because they are too expensive. They make too many calls on a. idea's pocketbook. They are the sort who have two or three birthdays a year and who drag a man window- shopping where they point out perfectly darling bags and cute bits of jewelry that they are just dying to have. They apparently never eat at home, for they are always hungry and they always pick out the costliest food on the menu at a restaurant and they insist on loin: to the night ‘club whose cover charges are hlzhest. Few men can afford the gold-digger. Fewer ‘still m poor enough 87'! eggs and to date 2684a eggs. MR. AND MRS. spirited to stand beinl held up by a pair of blue eyes and o. baby mouth that tries to look artlesc, and so the hinting girl generally flndl herself '-:-¢,S0cial and Personal h-:- Fcojilgioi§s Q. Isltprepntoflnonclolfin a. theater? A. 1t is porlufuible, but one should not fen so vigorously as to cause other: to feel the air our- rent. Q. In the modern table servloc, who does all the carving? ‘ A. Thecook. _ Q. What are tho two molt im- portant requisites of visiting eti- quettc? A. Amiobillty and punctuality. He was the champion poet and tho club's worst golfer. He had bored the professional with his ideas regard- ing methods of improving his game until that official had lost all pat- fence. "Now, I want your advice’ oon- tinued ths hopeless one. "What par- ticular stroke do you think I should develop?" The other’: reply was prompt. "Paralytio," he said, and hurried eff. _“Art and business have nothing in common." said an idealist. “Oh, I don't know about that!" replied his practical friend. "The value of a. painting. like the value of a cheque, depends o. great deal on whose name is at the bottom of it." fl‘ ' I 4 i What the Fashionablemare Waning Illustrated Drceamahlng Lcsaonlurnislled with . . EVQ” rgxflgm . l!!! Annabella Worthington ‘ ' l-‘Ilwthlly nimble m \m little French chiffon print. It will lovoLv afternoon or Noam-van‘: ‘ “Tube berufflod collu- m4 ‘ma. l" o‘ Phil! YluOW Chlflon M m 9489 finished ppqfqu] wu velvet girdle u" ‘ n m» front. yommm’ Th! Inducted fulneu of 6r“ GU11 gfvu 5 vq-y offset. _ And it's co easily pa]; e And You'll layoffs from 61gb"! Style No. 81.1’! may be bu! in u“ 13, 14, l3. l8, 20 yogi, 3g and as inchol bust. Size 16 require, u‘ yards 89-inch with if yard 39-inch contrasting. It will make un lovely u» p, m and white botuto print with m,” white organdic frili. Eyelet handkerchief linen 1a.,“ aqua-blue in adoroble. P1511! PIIW 01' Printed crop; Printed voile and ombmldcrcd oh Kindle H! Will-lb’ lttrl-etlva “b. rice. < Bocunfofillintboaizeoftlu pattern. Send stomps er coin (com preferred.) Price of pattern 15‘ cents. char-up," 1, lmdcl of yen” the um. loft prggty No. 8177. Sim ..................... N51!!! Illllliollcosoeuoucnunoolollllliiiqg Street Mdrtll laden with fur. or overcleeve. haired furs like earacul. front. Style can. They are returning plenty strong for fall and are virtue-ll! Olive caracul, black mole, snow lynx, l ecoon and wolverlne are especially smart on these casual, infomul types, in great bolster collars, notched fur collars, revers and lapela and in either barrel cuffs or wide banded treatments on the flared ale-eve Brown and either bright or soft 818m is a smart mixture com- bination, and many of the mixture fabrics will be used with short Bright monotone woolen: as well is dork ones will be worn and the silhouette styles will‘ range 110m Eh! swagger, informal ones to semi-drew? Incubator 5P0?" WWF- Th9 princess, unoclted kinds are emphasised and. alcoves take on dol- nuln versions, especially the dolman out at back end raglan It IIIIOIICIOIIOOIIIOIOOIIQI!oonaulolil 01W State New Face Powder i - ‘\ p Wm, “M, m,“ Is All The Rage That lovely, natural bloom of You might as well know- now that before the sen-sou is 0W1‘. youth! find it in LIELLO-Gw. you'll be tagged with a sports coat. mm“ mam“ m” "W" known. New French process makes it stay on longer. Coloring, approved by United Stomp government, blonds perfectly with In? complexion. No flakoy o: pasty look. No ugly shine. MEMO-DID prcventl large pores, never irritates skin. sold through all Drugglsts and at Toilet Goods Counter-l. -~ firs. punter-My husband hover goes to sleep in church. ma. Groom-A good listener, chi‘ ma. Bunkcr- No -o. Sunday golfer. A Welt mndon hlwkfl’ Wis lel~ linI rod cabbage: when N1 Old lad] hoist by her own petard. crunendous moo. hot weather foods usually contain. called ubuifllu. ‘ of course, there are many other reasons why pretty Bllllilfl 7b 59' tract men, but these are some of the principal mistakes that girls mike. g Growing Children need as much nourishment in Summer as in Winter ' -doo all , 0mm‘ “so, ...:a ... tr...“:.:r..r:::z.l'.: Give diam plenty of Onldno Cold ac and between mull- will love this moods, delicious, refreshing drink. And in eggs, creamy milk and malt extract will build up their strength lndvlzalimunoodwtfoodcondo. Onlcine Cold (or hoe if you prefer) l: an inexpensive w: to make complete the nutritive value of every meal. 'OVA LTI N B’ 5°"°°' CQLD irked him, wan you tell me ti" my to Tumham Green?" "Wot (Pym- woni; to tum ‘Im green for?" cold. the mon- ‘ ‘l yer coo they're for bleklilrl" _ DORUIIHY DH. ti‘: HUWTOiAII OVALTINI CQI-D ‘Aiidloonpoonfulnoffinlslnow hcupordmofcoldnllkwbilk biwunwdwmwneflillee? with your on bill"- lll F" ' ‘chain. . . . Ovaldmlnoldofll fluids-up finalmNvlm antibody ma: a 50c. m. 11-1? w! v1 A. WANDIR 1.1mm) d-l 14-” in"? '1'" "h" i“ lmadllqlmmrmbuwgkomd- . mud-airman. -°"'.....l..‘“"ll' E'ifi"..%fi ‘ilfifTdTf-ifiwm n“. ma" m», lab-dud. "' You Can't Be Too Careful In A Nice Neighborhood Bv B3166? “MAT Ill Tlli iilfiltl-b All >60 Donn? umxrAtsku .." ‘lb Au"? lacuna mum my‘: ‘m: um o! surname fllhctew-Fmlouw FLWIN? llili-R-ii-irH-li-H! i i, ‘ l . sunzrmmmuouumw ‘f! \\\ $ w" n“ “fr? -' ‘.33 XI". 1 ...---4 ' A” a» ‘F5. m ma,“ 1w", “pa: m»: . I I 1.il..ra:u re“