' ,__i:..n»~..- ' "' w” l ‘fiwvviizl Tlvhnnrm ..-..-cy,-;Emn,_ , T!‘ '__-".*£E9__L_----— — Womanis Realm -:-[ Social and Personal .- Fashions -_-'- Literfltllre _ Ask Your l I Neighbors “A lady I know advised m: to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound because _ I felt so weak and had to lie down so much. It has helpcal me to gain strength. My appc‘ tire is better. My nerves are steadier, and I am ablfl f0 5-1‘ all my hausmvorlz. You may use. my name because l think the Vegetable Compound is a good mgdi ine."—Mrs. ].'Mc' Kibben, 3 Jul-it Sc, Cl-czzriam. rio. i’. Billrbertn In! l Q. Are men's and womens vzsitzng cards the same size‘? A. N0; men‘; are smaller. Q. What color should a brunette with a sallow complexion avoid in he: selection of clothes? A. Yellow. l Q. What is one of the chief 95-‘ lentials of charmzng. pleasant table manners? A. Quietness. L W’ CAPTAIN P. PORRIOII MONTAGTIE. P. El ~T':‘.e dPtfl". accuz-revi Saturday cf Captain P Parrlor o: l/Iontasue, Prince Edirsfd Island. after Edens‘ zllziess. at the age of eufghtv vc For fifty years he was n Mast/s,- Mn ncr and as such he was well hlghlv estcvnicti b7." er Lin! older y‘. ' by two Ems quarters Strut‘? men: of Nat- ional Defense aTri J. W accountant of the Cflfiflfliflll Bank of Commerce. at Llnrlsri". Ontario. Fimerai Sfiflfi/‘PF 1 _ b0 lteld from his sun's residence, i?» Quinpool road at '23" 17. m. Kiontlijv. Lnterment n Caznp Hill cometary. L .7 Donaldson offlciatirq. >+++4+¢+¢ Here ’s Your Favorite Food Put up in a new Package. Most‘ delicious soups. all varieties in their original flavor cnmlcnsctl to powder‘ form. Easy to make—(.‘heap and nour- ishing. .- lac Per Package which makes two quarts. Use what portion of packgge you- rcquire-thc rcmeindcr kr-e-p, fresh. When you huy soup Say Jamison's ( ‘ompressed ’ Soup At All Grocers. A Canadian Product. ‘ l 4053 -5-29-tst8v-'Pcks. I -__-._-__-_/ ._-_-., -/ ,__-______ ,__ ~_l f l SPINNING Alill WEiilIlliG yarn or wove into blankets the charge for spinning single yarn is 25 cents per pound Spinning and weaving o blanket $2.25. Blankets are [white only) and Ill wool 12 x 90 inches unwashed wool must be washed clean and all burs and dirt picked out. Send by mail or freight. Freight will be paid Ill shipments of 100 lbs. Put ship- pers name on all parcels Ind owners name. address 1nd instructions inside. otherwise l will not be responsible for losses. The size of single yarn is medium and doubled ynrn. fine, med- ilun and coarse." WM. LANDRIGAN SOUBIS. P. E. I. Etyiauettei l if l ‘l? Dorothy Dix Letter Box l l l I l l and contented when I get old? Answer: 8,38 ful as Dolores Costello. or as famous ‘What Has the Old Maid to Live For’ - Shall ‘ Boy of Nineteen Sacrifice His Career to His ‘ Parents? - How to Decide Whom to l Marry Dear Nliss Dix-What is there for a woman to live for if she has no ‘husband and children and grandchildren? hIARIA. But do you ever think, Maria, how seldom that Undoubtedly, Maria, the greatest happiness that comes to a woman is to be married to the man she loves and who loves her, and to have fine and worthy “hildren and grandchildren about her to bless her old happens? To wish for that is almost like wishing that, a fairy tale would come true, or wishing that you might be a glamorous motion-picture actress with a million-dollar salary, or that. you might be as beauti a tennis player as Helen Wills, or that l you might have any other of. the preferred roles in life. woman. who sees Will". horror a solit nnflrlt contest. soluleiy. I suppose it is a proof of the old truth that hope springs eternal in the l human heart. but it never seems to occur to any middle-aged unmarriedl ary old age closing in on her. that by ance she could possibly have made an unfortunate marriage. or even - one of the indzfiercnt marriages that are nothin No, these unwed women are periec tly sure that they never would have l ‘lllfllde the kind oi marriage that their mothers and their sisters and their‘ C0llSln5 and their aunts did. They are sure that they would have got the l ideal husband and would have lived forever after u: a trance of bliss. ard» l l When they look around they do not: see much to make whooppee over in the lots of their married friends. There is Mary, whose husband l5 a drunk- There is Sally, whose husband is too tired to work, so that poor Sally has to go out and support him and the children. a baby every other year, and who is dragged down and washed out and looks twenty years older than her age, and who has never done a thing but walk, . the colzc and listen to howling brats since her first baby came. There is Maud, whose husband is a chrome grouch, And Isabel, whosell husband llllllkS a woman ‘should never go outside herdoor. and all that she is lgood for is to cook and have children And Hannah. whose husband is a tighttvad, and who works ten times as hard as she did in the office and whoJ l never has a nickel of her own to spend as she pleases. l l In i-‘Dmpflrlsflzi Mm the lot of a v pocketbook and no husband to boss h her lS far preferable. who considers that it l5 the privlle to his wife as he likes. Nor are children the unmixed bles 711T‘. cnts and who and give nothing in the way of filial d friends‘ children treat them and listen nun-n xn-‘b 4-‘: ,,.__ ._-.... daughters. “w... "n". ‘J\I\-\ nu are loving and dutiful to them and cherish their old ast number sin age. But gray hair in grateful children who take everything uty. If you will observe the way your to how they talk to mamma and papa. fmf-‘EG Finch joy in not having any sons and H. what can I do to keep happy g but a sort of endurance There is Angela, who has of married women, that of" l the tmmarried woman with a good Job and her own latchkey and her own er and snarl at her and find fault. with‘ She has less work to do, more money to spend on her- ‘self and far greater peace of mind. because she does not h ave to watch for‘ y the drag of a drunken footstep, nor endure the insults and abuse of a. man. ge of a husband to be as rude and brutall V15 4 \\ . J‘; Sunny Ceylon is to flected in the golden color of your cup of Cole Tea. Rich and mellow in flavor- iuscious Tea. want the "Extra" in choice Tea, ask your grocer for King Cole Orange PeROC- I If you the same problem that you have. plant he was installing. had got a fine start with a big firm for which he worked. mechanic with genius in his fingertips, and his employer had Just given him , a hig promotion and sent him to be in charge of the machinery in a huge liking farming and having no talent for it, you are a predestined failure, grubbing to your dying day for a. mere pittance. Among my friends was a young boy who was confronted with exactly Only he had gone out into the world and He was a born But on the way to his new place of business this young chap stopped to it his parents on the little farm on which they lived. The father told a l pitiful tale of how he had got behind and had mortgaged the place and they l begged the boy to stay and take charge of it. and told him it was his duty to g mag 01d maids Seem m think they‘ cherish them and look after them in their old age, and so on. There are, of course. children wiw are e crown e! hone: to mei: w- Finally the i‘ mother wept, the bny info submission and he gave up his good lob and stayed with them. l i He knew nothing about farming. hie by his foolish sacrifice of himself to his selfish parents. i For The Cook‘ COOOANUT JELLY BALLS % cup glflpfl Olkfl flour 1 waspoon bakini WWW‘ 1,3 teaspoon salt 1 ggblegpoon butter or other short,- enlng 55 cup IUBII‘ 1 BIB. unbeaten 1,5 cup shredded cocoenut g4 cup milk i4 gospoon vanilla $5 cup tart jelly 1 cup shredded cocoanut I am fiour once. measure. Idd Mk- mg powder and salt. and sift i089?!" three times. Cream butter thoroushly- ‘dd w"; gradually, and cream to- gether untll light and fiufly. Add egg. m4 b"; until light; then add $4 cup oocoanut. Add flour. nlwrnllklv "ll-h mule, q, small amountot o time. Boat W. “For your family's protection the bathroom should always be health- fully clean.” This is accomplished by cleaning the tub and washbowl after each using, because Old Dutch not only removes the visible dirt, but the often-clan gerous impurities, as well.” For greater economy Old Dutch is unequalled. No cieaningpreporation does so much as Old Dutch and none can do it so well. um each addition until smooth Add vanilla. am in armed mum" W“ in moderate over (350 degrees P.) 20] to 35 minutes. l ma: jelly with fork until of riBht consistency to spread. When cakes are l cool, spread top and sides with jelly, and m1] in cowanut. Makes 8 small Jl cakes. i ———-————-ii l _ TA Morning Smilerl POLITENESS “Is that the fire station? May I speak to the Captain? Oh, really? Good evening, or rather morning. Reginald Rentrew of Balmoral Man- sions, Nasturtium Road, speaking. Sorry to trouble you at this unholy hour, but the fact is we've a rotten lflra here and we’d like you to put it out if you aren't too terribly busy." Czechoslovakia shipped more than 56.000000 “mt-h of gloves to other parts of the world in the last l2 months. ' other dates. February. l He loathed it, and, although he work- ed like a slave, he never made expenses and they got deeper and deeper into i ' debt. until finally the Sheriff sold them out. But by that time the boy was . a middle-aged man broken in spirit, disgruntled. hi5 OPPOTU-lniil’ 80M. h15l I But if either your parents or , want tn do. it is they who should make have had their lives- l yours and you have a. long career before Send me your wool to be spun into demmme whether you are to be lnd-"dnnbied 2B canto. lchu l you have also missed a lot of potential misery. no more certainty of your having drawn a capi , there would be that you would draw th _ a ticket. And to ivhat a woman has to live - husband and children and grandchildr can have her own home. She can tra 0i‘ friends. And if the mother hunger little homeless babe and expend on it h a. chlld‘s devotion. ' I I I I ' Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a of six children, all of them married and ivith my parents on a small farm. They the farm. But I don't want to be a far illes shall never live together under her I will never make a success of it. What sh with my Parents .01" would you advise me to go to college? greatest happiness in the world, And that, really, there was tal prize in matrimony than for who doesn't marry and hasn't any en, why, there are a million things she can do to make life interesting and worth while. and the unending delight there is in following a c She can have a good job ongenlal occupation. She vel. She can have a congenial circle is too great, she can adopt some poor er love and care and receive in return DOROTHY DIX. boy 19 years old, the youngest son ln a. funily ~ living in homes of their own. 1118i‘. ____ii_ Answer t 119M131 always they are far happier if they own way than they are if their c them into their mm homes, hildren upset their plan of living by taking are left to themselves to do their I _.__i-_.- ' Their race yourself have to sacrifice the thing they the sacrifice instead of you. They is nearly run. but. you are just. starting on you. And what you decide now will hBPPY 0r Hliserlble. a success or n failure. —--_->-_ . If you go away to college, or if nces are that you will be sue you get into some occupation you like. the l cessful, but if you stick to a little farm, dia- l cuticura T body. Anti h‘ d ' on ideal P03: c m mgr-ml‘ n of tho family. his loup I31. lold LfiFMe-e-M L...._- . Complete your toilet with alcum Arum a both with Cuflcnro Soup, there is nothing more refreshing than Cntlcnra ‘talcum dusted over all the er for every Inembqr is are too old to work and I manage ‘ | half a dozen farms and keep them in luxury, instead of their all being forced . l to live on the mere pittance that, he is able to earn. Don't give up your life for your parents. e cgpltgl pfize m a 10mm, i; you wok You will best help them by fitting yourself to make more money. I , Nearly all sacrifices are futile. I want to go to college, but my y They will not consent to my leaving ‘ I can never merry because two fam- l roof. I hate the farm and know that all 1 do? Must I stay at home , A stunning outfit for deb 1nd tho little sub-deb who follow closely in the styles of her debutante listar. And all the sacrifice was to no avail, for if he had kept on with the l , work for which he was destined, he would be able now to l/Vhat the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished _ With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington buy his parents DOROTHY DIX. I Style No. 3282 is Printed tub silk . that would appeal to any smart miss ‘in its attractive dusty-pink tones. This shoulder and hipline bows are ‘of plain faille ribbon in the deepest shade of the print. l The long-waisted bodice is caught with plains at left hip beneath the y bow, which makes the right side quits ‘deep emphasizing its diagonal line. The gathered tiers of skirt on de- cidedly youthful. ‘this versutile model domes in sins: 12, l4, 16, 18 and 20 years. It is dainty for afternoon in chif- fon in coral-red shade. Wool chalila prints. printed dimity, printed batistc, putci flat wulublo crepe silk, printed lawn and printed voile are smart Pattern pricslb cents. Be sun w fill in size of pattern. Address Pot,- icrn Department. The Bummer mn- ion Mnguine is ready! It contain: most interesting styles for adults for town or motion wear. Also darling styles for the kiddies. it is 15 cents o can. but may becbtained for 10 cents if ordered ume time u pat- tern. -._-_ g __-_—_-__-_- N0. 3282. 81M "nun-nuances"; tun-u"-u.--l--....-.uuannuauo Nome Is there anything to it? Dear Miss Dix-It seems that according to astrology a person born be- tween certain dates should have as his friends persons born between certain l That one born, say, the latter part. of May or the first part of { h of ‘ l i _»_._ -—~———~— ~~——-———i'.-;—i June, should marry one born between the 1st of January and the 19t What do you think about it? Should one go by birth dates? X. Answer: Astrology ls almost the oldest of all sciences and many people in all ages have believed in it, but it has never appealed to me. t ham h“ Monday night marry, I would look at. a man's morals and his disposition and whether he. was a go-getter or not, and l wouldn't bother shout his birthday. Unsworth Gurney wishes to th the city firemen, neighbors an friends for their untirlng efforts if n I were going to fighting the fire which destroyed hli By thcl strenuous efforts the ndjoini buildings, young cattle and horsq DQROTHY DIX, were saved. 5103-1! tun-n“.---....-..i-n-unnuaau street Address . .-nun-nuance"...-uw-uuuo c"! 86th ..4 TWO BOOKS nvmur MOTHER wm. misnus “Bolqfi Welfare" h o tron booklet i, r magnum; for qpplanmtary foods. It hao owealth of othu-irsfcrmotlm ‘M’! mgfulmmgebqg. “fleotBobg/"h on mquiai little hookinwhlch you m8)’ nouvlbolsyhpqwthondpu-opuo. lciofreqaloo. Uutlucmnpmbelaw. DBIQEQJ-IMIIID. IQCILPAULSTIIETWBSIZLAQIIIBAL Plano and mo, (no, the two booklohyou oflot mother! AMessage to Mothers ofBottlwFed Babies IF YOUR baby is not thriving on his present food we suggest chat you and your doctor consider Eagle Brand Milk. Eagle Brand is so easy to digest that it is comparable to mother's milk in this respect. Practical tests over a per- iod of more than 70 years have proved it the food most likely to “agree"—-not only with healthy babies, but in dificult feeding cases where other foods fail. And Eagle Brand is al- ways pure, always uniform, always safe, even in the hottest weather-l We have on fyle thou- sands of‘ letters from grateful mothers all over Canada who have successfully reared their babies on Eagle Brand. L ‘ca! fcocflng directions and >... .-,_-. .-.. ._ uc....»:,,,,,,.,.,..r,___. WTVlvDHJig.