PAGE Elfin? . rm: CHARLOTTETOWN. spanning BEA U T Y ARTS ‘h3g3; By LOISLEEDS tip... Q-A .»~ k n r. w .1.’ i £300.‘: HEALTH ESSENTIAL Tolcluding radiant health. For many CHARM The importance of correct posture, lnormal people who would be Chflffn_ ling seem to just miss being so be- cause they lack vibrant health. _<. mental poise, cleanliness, of being J interested 111 111119151 115 Well as hav-i Lei-ck of Pep "'1 1112 B hobby of ones own are easily re-l There are many who are not ill "111111911 as elements of Charm, Oneiwlio still have not the radiant health 111E111 K180 mention the importance of that is rightfully theirs. They haven't; lifotier selection of colors and 1 the joy of winking up in the morning rlothcs, of perfumes and cosmcqit-s 315;, feeling fully refreshed and eager for “S “WSP- 10° 111"“? 111ml‘ 1191111111 irlacc , flllolhci" day of work and pleasure. 111 the life of a woman who would be ' '1'1101uzh they do only an ever-age day's cllaunina- Perhaps thcse- the abj. ivork. they n. far too fatigued w. 111.1’ 10 isolcct becoming clothes and-fore the day is over. They somehow accessories — could well be grouped i lack pep and vitality, and though rem under ‘he ‘m1’ 19111115116‘ 0f good taste , son may 1811 them that exercise in the In dress. And now comes éillOllIOI“0|)€ll air and a few minutes‘ indoor quality" in 1.1115 quest for charm. good ‘exercises daily is exactly what, they 1111111111 110111 l111ysical and mental, lneed they have not energy or inclin- v ‘ELIOH to carry out such a. beauty and Health Is Basic health program. They do not relish And isn't l: true that all the other their food properly and have forgot- atti-ibtltcs of _ chrtlm are really de- I ten what it means to be really hungry Wlldflllt upon uood health? The wo- and able to enjoy a troll-cooked meal 111F111 “"110 15 11111 llhyfilcolls’ fit ftndsjof nourishing food thoroughly. Un~ l: difficult to maintain correct pos-lfortunately, there are countless wo- 11116- 511° 15 11111 10 8110M a 510110111112 men whose health is in justsuch u carriage. and seldom walk with chin negative state—thcy are not ill, but on up and chest elevated. a5 though shewhe other hand. though they them- 11101111181115’ ffllflyed the exercise of1st1ves do not realize it, they cannot 11'fl'111111§~ Molllal P0159. too, is almost ‘lclairfi to have really good health, imrowblo to one who ls denied good ‘ When ones physical rosistance n at health. It may be easy enough for n such a low ebb it is almost impossible 517111“ mmd 111 a 51110118 body to eom-, to look at life optimistically. Petty bat successfully worry, self-consclous- worries creep in and the wholesome mess and all ‘the other negative moods 1 confidence with which every one which detract from charm, but p00r'5h0uld look at, lite 15 gradually re. general health is very apt to invitefplaced by a gloomy, pessimistic at- tnese defects and make one dLssatis- 1 titude. fled frctful and worried over unim-. so in this quest for charm by all P91111111 1111111115- lmeans check up on the general health. Naturally. it would be very unfairisirst of all and then it will be much t 10 53y 111111‘ 111059 111 11°91’ 110511111 ca11"0B.Sl8l' toacquire all the other esscrr. 1101' 11° ‘1111111111181 as 1t must not b0 Itials. 0f course. if there seems to be fo-"stwaln that some ot‘ the mostlsomet-hlng radically wrong. the best cnarmlng and sweet individuals in? thing to do is to consult a physician the world are those who have beeniimmediatcly, As it-is s0 much better ‘loniod strong Who-s. but who 59911110) retain good health than it is to re- 111 111119 1161111111111- 11ei1111y‘ 111111115 811d 1 capture it after it. has, once been lost. laave developed sweet. dispositions. git is a good plan to have a. thorough But yet no list of attributes cssen- ,‘ physical examination at; least once a 31111 1° 611111111 “'°111<1 be 60111111918 1111' 1 year to find out just where one stands lhe malflflly 01 W°111°11 11111117111» 111' on the health scale. Then lf milady The SpiC-Spanw I I Cleans Where Others Can ’t s. eamvgflaflwith and Blower $17.50 l’ THERE are hundreds of places in your home that: can’: be reached by ordinar vacuum cleaners with their clumsy, lfltflly- cient attachments. These are the places that the Premier Spie- Span cleans. i Spic-Spm dom allthis-wind more. It pro- ‘ tectamaterlals against moths and eliminates cooking odors. Even the finest houcecleaning equl man! is a Ion way from being complete wi out the S ic- pan. Make yours complete. Phone I emlcr dealer for a home demonltration. 'll1llt1i. , pan i i ...~.___ t 1 . . l t MA"'T ,.Y.fi.i.acra1c COMPANY .. '~---,-1_;ic.11s.19.".... ~ - It is not always wise to be satisfied MANY of us miss the good things in life simply because we are satisfied with what we have. There are lots of folks who have never a learned the merits of King Cole Tea because they are satisfied with the tea they are drinking. It is not the part of wis- ; dom to bc satisfied with 1 something good if you can 1 get something better. moGota and c T %%'i‘n<n You'll like King Cole Coffee, too. feels below par she will learn. the rea- son why and be able to build herself up before it is too late. But remember that. the physicians cannot do it all. Every woman w ho wishes to retain the health and beauty which l5 so necessary to charm and uiell being must conscientiously obey certain health rules. Her daily diet must be wisely chosen. Insisit on cal.- lllg fruit and at least two nonstarchy vegetables daily; it is a good plan to have one of them raw. Laboratory re- search proves that. milk. fruits, meat and fresh vetctablcs, especially green vegetables help to give a. clear skin, glossy hair and healthy nails. Neuro- i, tho ncrve strain coming from too little ‘sleep. inadequate food and other bad I hygienic habits helps to make a mud- (Iy skin, dull eyes and histories; hair. It is '50 easy for thc busy ivoman 1o neglect her daily exercise and her daily walk out of doors. but she can; not hope to retain supple muscles and a radiant complexion 11111655 she will devote ten to twenty minutes every night and morning to regular daily gxeygsc and spend some part of the d“. out of doors in the fresh ail- and sunshine. . Plenty of sleep is essential w hoflllh and beauty. Eight to nine hours of l restful slumber every i1it;11t arc neces- tsary 5m- pilflltfally every woman and ‘it this can be 5119111911119111911 by 11 1°11 to twenty minute rest l>¢1‘1°<1 111111115 the‘ d“. i; will be evcn better. Another simple but lmlwrlram health rule is to drink plenty of wa- ter Six to eight glasafuls taken every day between meals la not too much, and more may be taken to advantafl in many 1111595- As human said before. charm 1-1 , elusive and it is ofteilmost dlffiizlxi‘: to say just why one i>o1$°11 1115 1 who . another has not. But. the \\ 0111311 0d g Qt 59X?!“ “M9911 you dean 01 7111.7 v _ l will have gone a lone My 1°11": $0 quirlng all the other tittiibtites 0 coveted gift, personal mflgemm- i 1 ‘falls! and '1 -;_ bend. ’ it U0 C’ Q 3 Q $ / f. Do_‘not__neglect Ill“! “m5” ._ Etiquette “yv Bylnberhlno 1 l Q. After taking friends lo the theater, is it necessary to take them to dinner? A. No. Q. What is a. big help to a, hostess who is serving without a maid? A. A tea wagon, as this can be placed near her and can hold the extra. cups, silver, and anything else which would be in the way on the table. Q. Ls it permissible for a. woman to travel alone in Europe? A. Yes. as much so u in the United Staten.‘ -___..i. 1 logists tcli us without reservation that’ Marriage i, 5a’: Only or ore 1‘ 1 1 1 1 .' s ‘ .1 § Dorothy Dix Tmfii‘ Convenience f 1 Worth While Can the Human Heart be Satisfied With the Marriage of Convenience, Where Respect and Congeniality are Substituted for the Self-Abnegating Love That Makes Duty a Pleasure? Shall a girl use her head or her heart ln choosing her husband? Shall she marry for love, or an establishment? Does the love match or the mar- riage of convenience bring a, woman most happiness? These are questions that I am continually asked by glrls and, being lncurably sentimental myself, I in- variably answeri Marry for love. Perhaps your heart may betray you. Perhaps your Prince Charming will lose his ul— lure for you when once the cloak of romance hu drop- ped from his shoulders. Perhaps your great lover will make a grouchy, dumb husband. Perhaps he will even be unfaithful to you. Perhaps your own love will not be able to stand poverty and shabbiness and hard work. Perhaps you will regret thc flesh pots. 3v " Nevertheless, marry for love, for you will have had sonlctliing of which life cannot rob you. You will have had your great. hour. You will have known the rapture and the glory ahdthc circling wings. Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay. Better to have feasted royally once, cven if thc cakes and ale proved indigcstlble, than to go through lifc on a sklnlmed-milk diet, without flavor or taste, because it is good for the stom~ nch and affords enough nourishment to keep one alive. My views. however, are flatly contradicted by that of a famous woman writer who, in a recent magazine article, urges women to marry for conven- ience and not for love. "Love is unimportant," she says. “Food is important. Shelter is 1m- portant. Children are important. Order and a sense of security are im- portant, but not love. I married for love and wasted the best years of my life in trying to make my marriage a success. I married again for conven- ience and I have been rewarded with all thc joys of life. “In my first marriage I loved and my husband betrayed my love. In this second marriage of convenience 1 do not. expect adoration. I do riot expect romantic love and for the first time I am able to look at the world svith eycs that are not harried with suffering. I am valued for what I am, a. wife, a mother, the partner of a man respected in the community. Now I know that where there is a genuine respect. a mutuality of interest and pur~ pose, asthcrc is between us and children, marriage is bound to last." ' Undoubtedly, where a man and woman enter into marriage as they would lntoa business transaction, it is much more likely to endure than it is when it. is contracted on a. purely emotional basis. That ls amply proved by the fact that America, in which practically every match is a love match, leads the world in the number of its divorces, while in Continental Europe. where parents mostly select their children's wives and husbands, and marriages are arranged on thc grounds of suitability and to promote financial or social 1n- tcrests, divorces arc comparatively rat-c. 1,. ‘ There are many reasons why the marriage o! convenience should have a better chance of fasting than the marriage of love, The first is, of ocursc. that when you look at a man or woman with hard-boiled eyes instead of love-blinded ones you are probably a better picker of what you really need in a mate. Secondly, the conventional marriage has not the emotional stress that the love match has, nor do those who enter into it demand so much of those to whom they are marl-led. And, thirdly, it ls a guard and ashield to onc's heart, because those we do not love cannot tear our hearts to tattcrs. They can only annoy us. The woman who has married a man for what he can give her is satisfied with her house, hcr car, her fine clothes, her position in society, and she has no idea of throwing up her soft lob. If she has married l mlvn whom she merely respects, she neither expects nor desires him to be an ardent lover. and she doesn't badger hlm about ath ousand things that the devoted wife nags her husband about, stlch as keeplnu his fect dry and watching out. for automobiles and coming home on time. _Nor does the man who has married a girl because she had money. or her father had a pull that would advance his interests. or because she was it good domestic girl and he wanted to settle down. torture himself with jealousy over every man who comes about her. All. he asks is not to be bothered and to be made comfortable. ' Undoubtedly, a marriage of reason, in which a man and woman who have congenial tastes and mutual interests pool their assets because they be- licvc they can make a bigger success of life together than apart, may bc made a very placid and stable arrangement, but it can only be made a auc- cess if both husband and wife shut their eyes tothc shadowy romance that hovers in thc background. For the human heart, especially when it is youngand hungry, must have something to feed upon besides the dry husks of respect and friendship. It must have something warm, vital; something that has life and death tn it, and if it docs not find this at home it will sick it elsewhere. No marriage is easy. Every marriage calls for self-abnegation, for sac- rifice, for putlencc, for endurance, for the putting of anothcfs pleasure and happiness before ones own, and it is so easy to do this for one we love and so hard to do it as a matter of duty. ‘ It takes love to make toll a pleasure; to make heavy burdens light; to make sacrifice sweet; to make cven a beloved onc‘s faults and peculiarities dear and precious beacusc they are h ls or hers. ft taltcs lovc to endure all things, hope all things and forgive all things . And so I sny marry for love. It is the only thin: that makes it worth vihile. with love-marriage becomes a heaven on earth. Without it. it is cindcrs, ashes and dust. _ - DOROTHY DIX. w . Character Close-Upa-l BROW Ll K!" THIS lfitFULL OI- MENTAL MUSCLES THPtT GET H LOT OF- EXE-RCl 5E’ A Morning Smile Military Commander — "Forwnrdl march! Company, halt! Forward‘ tnareh! Squads loft! Squads right! On the left. into the line! By the right flank! l-Ialtl Rest! Attention!" Irish Recrult-"Bedad, if I'll work for a man who changes his mind so often. ' n" alumni". r 1 manna Pflrfect fond i, 3'7. WARNING I 11141110 u . Rduu mnnbm9nh;g% Omioy ' d. f bin , Tdelicious ‘gut-akin: if“: leap. will build fol pra- BUILDS ur again Ikbln. “‘"“v 11117 411835» unzat, Iytouwi“ moth: W“ a While you sleep, the concentrated nourishmqie in Qv l . , _ “P 7°“? ‘Yflfln with new stores o e vitality. You ll wakcn rested in every nerve and tiaa standing why Ovaltine in called “the world’: be; night » 121p. ’ °V‘1!.=.'1;111..1.§. ant sleep P Nonsense ‘i try OYALTINE ,/ naturralaleepglgingachbof l round craqufl f energy and "c; Under. "zlliiidl-fiw‘ at: izé- l: _____ __’ - ______?Z1J. t "' 'i. WHOAREYQUPE Household Hints For 1718C k The Ronumce of Your Name B, ma.“ u. . o0 By iwnv iiasnms anus , i LEMON Pfli Curtains _ Matilda: This name is of Welsh origin and was spelled Watkin, or Givntkin. It is an lntcrcstzng fact that. most Welsh names were Cunlpotiridorl to dmote relationship to their forbcars. "Ap" meant “son of" and "kins" dc- notcd collateral relationship. Conse- qucntly. Apowell meant "son of P011011." and Watkins “the kin of Watt." This is sccn iii many like names, such its Judklns, Atkins, Pur- klns and others. ‘ Two families of Watkins froln the l beginning of the reign of Henry VII 1 tmthc end of thc scvciltccnth ccn- 1 tury were settled in Llanigoil. Wales. They later moved to Hay. T119 11151 mention of any individual l of this name is in 1550. whcil 1 Thomas Watkins was master of ‘, Stephouse. tho ancestral home, which had‘ been in the possession of , the family for 200 years or more. l After him came William W'atkiiis,i Thomas Watkins mid Lewis Watkins. i Lewis was n bailiff of Brccoil in 1655. - William is mentioned its n tiarliri- t Cllrlfllils will hang more evenly if the sclvagc is cut from the goods be. fore heinming, as the selvage ls tnorc tightly woven and hangs more flrm- ' ly than the rest. of the fabric. Boiling Liquids Boiling liquids, fruits or Jellies may bc turned into glass Jars without, breaking the Jars if the bowl of a spoon is pressed on the bottom while filling. White Teeth To whiten the teeth, saturate brush with the Juice of a lemon and rub the tccth hard. Do this once a wcck. inentary ofiicer in 1651 in thc forces that opposed Charles I. Among the early immigrants to Virginia was James Watkins, who came in 1607 or 1608. llc was a com- panion to Captain John Smith in litany of his perilous voyages of dis- covery in Virginia. Another early settler was Henry Watkins, Quukcr, who was born in Wales in 1038 and who settled in Virginia in 1687, dying in 1715-16. This family inadc their home in Cumberland County, mow Powhatan Countyt- Henry was the grcnt-grcat-grantlfathcr of the lin- mortal Henry Clay and a direct au- cestor of John W. Daniel. late Scim- tor from Virginia. While most of fieury Watkins’ descendants re- mained in the South, one branch now lives ncar Ardinorc, Pa. and nil- othcr in St. Louis. 1 B11116 Pastry over an invertad m, I plate. Before baking. prick the pqmy I all over with a fork and set the plat; on a tin sheet to keep the edge from lcontact with the oven. Set the cook- ed paste inside a clean plazr- or m, P111111? 51m. Pour in a cooked fllliilg, i spread with meringue and let bake in 1 a very moderate oven about 20 mlnti. 1 tea. For the filling stir 2'; lcvcl tabla. y spoons of cornstarch, and ‘.4 teaspoon ‘ of salt with 2 or 3 tablespoons of cold l water to a. smooth paste. pnui- on 1 {cup of boiling water and stir con. {stantly until boiling; let boil about, 1 five minutes; add 1 cup of sugar, ti“ 1 juice and grated rind c! a hm llemon, 1 tablespoon of butter. and 1 the beaten yolks of 3 eggs; stir 1mm 111° 68E is set, then use. For the mer- lnsue, beat the whites of a cast very light, and gradually beat in 6 level ¢i1119$l100ns of sugar. Quick Pile ltclief No Salve: or Cutting Pile sufferers can only.’ wt quick, safe and last-lug relief hv romgvmg the cause-bad blood circulation lr the lower bowel. Cutting and salves can't. do this-nan utterlln remedy must be tisctl. HEAf-ROID thc prescription of Dr. J. S. Leon- hflfdt, BUCCCBdS, because it, remove! this blond congestion and strengthen: the affected parts. HEM-ROID tablets as soltl by Idruggists everywhere, have H1611 a wonderful record for quick and latt- llli! relief. that - A -- ftl'\'.'t_i‘s sell them with guarantee of money- ' back if they do not cnd all Pllt’ sufi ferlng. ' 1Amazing! M111! METHQD miles baking’ mo) tcdiouu minutes a master baker. makes tiresome appetizingtlnn qualities. \ I _ ‘III UAKII 0A1‘! COIIPAIT. : “trough, &&10- lwouldllkntutrydn Ikwldylllblal ' . Hun IIII c! t as. a... .. .......-:.......r.:."..':..m , . I t o . ' I seller's t t____________________ _ Now we want you to know, and to try. 1111 amazin‘ g new way of bakml’ .',._.P¢f1¢¢°d ,Jstttt How to bake delicious bread and rolls easily, quickly, described in ‘attractive free booklet YOU know Quick Quaker Oats-how 6118 wonderful development in cereals cuts many off the cooking of breakfast- The Quaket New any Method of’ bread bakifli kneading unnecessary. DO“ away with “setting the sponge" . ".1. ifld I111” rolls and bread lighter, more delicious and 11W" you've we: tasted. m fully described and illustrated inc buufifill little booklet-n copy of which we'll be c1114 1° send you free. Just fill in thc coupon. 01' N1‘ the Quaker Flour dealer for one, next H1119 9°“ visit: his store. Be lure to get a bl! 019111111“ Flour, too. It’: the fineat you can 1111!- F“ antilfactory result: use» it always W116" W‘ bake the New Easy Way. for every boiuehold Pflrpole. ‘. . . tested at: every stage in ntllling 1nd 1111f“ daily in our own laitchcna toprove its bclnfll U k r Flour "ftgtloigwfldlb" (I Always the 561119