l l l \ wana. r i 1 l i 4 . I , _ °“ "1 ° ' _-_ a ° -,'- it atur oman s Realm _-_-__.S'o:l ixiccllmiics nndi treatments and \\‘i`iit on rl strict dict _ but Sargon lrave me nil: only lasting: relief. The rheiimfttic condition hnsi cleared up and for tn- i"ii‘‘ .M *_ V _ (i____ My secret is, Lux in the "I HAVE been married more ` than ten years, and have done all my own work, 1930 -i-> An Irish farmer had a cow which *-1* was almost impossible to milk be- Q. On taking leave at a dinner °“ should one ever tell the hostess what 'D use of its restiveness. so he decided get rid of lt, and he sent Casey ith it to the market. T0 i\\ (‘\¥ \` l-` ` So wise isithe wife who studies her husband and finds out' what he is I` . _' , . . i’ . ‘ y . BOS ` ‘llke and plays up to it instead of wasting her time and energy trying t0 C qhqvm `.,,,.,. fm? and lmake him do what he ought to do instead of wasting her time and energy imll ont; o t\b‘ prions butter l 11‘10k€ him d0 Wh” 116 011811! 5° do in-‘lead °f what he Wants to do' sau e n re : ic.” _ . until it is tender and just ii light yel- l "_"*`_' then stay on indefniti ly? A. No; he should leave immed- iately after expressing his apprecia- tion to the hostess for her hospital- ity. Q. What kind of stationery is B.lwa_vs in fashion? A. Plain white paper, of gocd` quality. Q. What did Shakespeare write about "fami1iarity"? A. “Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar." a pleasant evening he has had and W l l Y t "The man asked me it she gave plen- ty of milk, and I said: ‘Man, you'll be tired to death with the milking of h ... HAZELBROOK Returning with much more money han he expected the cow would fetch, the farmer asked him if he had told the truth about the cow. "Begorrah, I did," replied Casey. QT. AND VICINITY Mrs. John McKinnon and two sons spoons flour, .stir coiistaixlll. 11110 " when smooth and biilibhng add one- Y low snr often Add time lable- I! y0ur husband admires gay, well-dressed women, by all means under- ` ' . rqudy the flapper. Doll yourself up and be as interesting and amusing as ou can. It`s pretty hard for a woman with three children to take care of not to look and feel dragged out, and to let her conversation dwell mostly half cup each of mill: and creamy one-half teaspoon sail. mid l10lJl79f~l“ Stir until well blciideci. ilicii add one' 9! pon the nursery. But if she has a husband who is not of a domestic turn mind, she has to feed him on something besides sterilized baby food if pound of either fresh or mulled cl-an l she does not want him to eat out of some other woman`s hand who oflers meat. Cut as many slices of bread as 111171 3 ull! With U10” NP in W are required, trlni off ci-lists, and . toast on one Sldev Make a paste Oli so perhaps, knowing your man, you will do well to go off and leave him onemall cup pa.-,mean Clwsn fnnrlfor a month and get you the pretty clothes and the new things to talk tablespoons of l>\1ti0r. Suit. l1t‘l1llf`1‘l“b°“"~ and paprika. I-leap the' toasted Sidi' yet my hands look as nice as they did on my wedding day, thanks to Lux,” writes Mrs. Harold W. Simmonds; l Modern young homemakers themselves discovered this secret of keeping hands 'delicately white and smooth-femininely hppealing. They first noticed how nice their hands looked after washing their fine things in Lux | i i then began using Lux for dishes, tool " ` Of nearly 2,000 young wives in li large cities, 96 out of every 100 are keep- ing hands as young and dainty as when 305 Famous Beauty Sliopf have air-eed that: "It is impossible to dis- tin&uis berweeirthe hands of the woman wi maids to do all her work and the hands of a woman who uses Lux: Lux ~ » married ten years, has hands lovely as al' ride fs ` For less than fail day-new 1.1¢ sf. . brides! Luxfor dishes marvellously economical beanty care /br the bands! they were married, by using Lux; For dishes and the many other soap and water tasks about the house! They know that ordinary, coarse soaps leave hands red and rough, while Lux suds protect the precious beauty oils oi' the skin: ; : keeping busy hands smooth, white, adorably young looking.- Lux for all your dishes costs less than ii' - Greenland Not For Sale WASHINGTON. D. (‘_ July 19.- Persistent rumors that Great Britain is Saekirg to buy Greenland ln whole or in part or to extend its treaty rights there, are attrnctirg much in-l Miss. Edyths Wood spent the week teresi in official and riiploniatic clr-lend at lm. home hue' l cies hare, while official confirmation of actual negotiations is lacking and it is recognized that Greenland has an important bearing on the propos-f Bd British-Avtie air route explorat- ions for which ar' to he iixderta-ken hy a British expedition. This exped- ition headed by H. r' Watkins. ex- pects 'ri spend foiirwen months in sZi:“.r=‘»‘in;' and riiiippinz out nn ricrn- pinlfe route from Enclanrl to Ca;‘.nd.°i lov l\'a'.' '~ _ 1 . _ and Cvrvc-nlrind. The Binding denied Danish Prime Minister, ac- Cvreat Britain. __ ...___; FRUM MUTHER _ UF EIBHTEEN Read How This Medicine Hel-pa Her l sm i . I 1 . ` was of lifland tie Faro lslnnds` to the Tre-ation here recently reports that Denmark was oons.rior‘.--c the =al" of Greenland to of Earnsciiffe were recent visitors here. . Mr. Cv. I-l. Myers, U. S. of Montague ,motorad to Haaelbrook last Sunday. Mrs. Jennie Leaman U. B. A, ls visiting friends in Bethel, l f Mrs. Levi Inngille. City is visit- ling heme the guest of Mrs, Mary Jones. of bread with the crab mixture, then put a thin layer of cheese paste on top. Place in gicased rlisli and bake iiniil slightly brown. Add siiiill glicr- kins. and r»f‘r\'c. AN B.~\_S1' PREY. I GENEVA, N Y.. .lilly 21-Bc<`.?\ll.'»l’. l 'the adult. flies ni' the chci'i'_v maglgotl move about over the fruit nnrlleaves scraping and lapping with their ' 'fleshy tongues. they fall tin easy prey to the rrozressiw fruit rzrower who , employs tlit- common poison slvrnys advoca.f.e¢l for the cniiirol of the pest, l Ms-s_ Mary oi-sig u. s. A. is visiting 'friends and relatives on el-ls gland, l, Mrs William McGregor who spent. ‘the past. few days here returned to not l home in the City. l Miss Raehel McDonald Melville is ,\‘15m11fl her sister Mrs. J. S. Myers. ; The recent Ice Cream social held lon the lawn of Mr, John Pippy in sid of the Hszelbrook Womei-1', Institute filmed a decided success. ‘me com- mittee in charge are tn he oqngngu. Wfefi Ou *he 'fumble manner in which they performed their duty and the Institute wishes to thank an who h9l'P¢d mllke th? Social the gvlgcus _it rrf>v#-fi to he. 'rm author on ideal and A large crowd uv" pl-,sem from both city ang eountm A “fy neat sum was realized which goes in My for the new school library, ' Mrs. Ray Pierce and little son "Bob" U. B. A. are visiting in--Mr, Herbert the guest of the formerlq sly,” Mm Elton Rayner. Service at Birch Hill on sunday morning was conducting by mg pu. tm Rav. Ewen Maobmigali assisted iw Rev. J. W. S. lmwry of Cambridge l Mass, There was a very lu-gn m-nwd present. The evening service was con- ducted by Rev. Mr. Lowry, says Dr. Hugh Glasuou-, nnlomolog- list at the Geneva agriciiltiiral exper- ]iment stl=.t.ion. The s~,>i~n_v combina- liion fcirnfl to iw lilo most effective And if you leave the three children for him to take care of, you can rest assured that when you return you will look like a rescuing angel to him. DOROTHY DIX. l l U U O I O ' Dear Dorothy Dix-How is lt' that we never see now the beautiful, heal- thy-looking girls we used to see forty years ago? ls lt because the young girls in their teens smoke cigarettes, drink cocktails. powder their faces and use e. lipstick every few minutes and Jazz all night and sleep all day, so that when they are in their ear-iv 20s they already 10011 like 01d hails? GRANNDFATHER. Answer: The reason that girls look frail and delicate now is because they are all half-starved. Forty years ago cur ves were fashionable in the female anatomy and consequently girls were plump and healthy and well-fed look- ing. Now it is the styletto be angular and the more a girl looks like a rack of bones, the smarter she is. Bo girls live on pickles and olives and non- iattening food, and as a result they look as if they are about to pass away from pernicious anemia. :in the st-ation orcliards contained ,lime-sulphiir. two and one half gal- i lions; :irsenate of lcrid. two and one- ‘ half pounds; nnri tvrilor in make one 'hundred tzailons, For .street t-hcrrie lthe limo sulphur was i‘cd;i<~1~fl to two l gallons. -l rn l Jacob L. Crane, Chicano city plan- 'ner. predicts that in the next. flvel iyears American businr~s.= men will be living in siibiii-hs 100 miles from their offices. The for:-cast is not too fan- ciful, for today many men have 'their homes 25 and more miles from 'UPU llluces nf business. Motor. ltrain and tram transportation is rap- id and the aeroplane is due to take ite placs as a conveyer of people to and from their daily' tasks. The many friends of Mrs. Eric Pen-I dergust will be pleased to learn she is l formerly progressing after her rercnti illness. Miss Gertrude Coach' city motored; to Haaelhrook this week. Mr. and Mrs, S, A. McDonald City attended the Ice Crt-am social held ilre on Thiirsday evening, _ --_._._.___,_ _ _______ - _Y-_ _ _ _ But there is nothing else in the the world so marvelous as the feminine constitution. No matter what women do to it or how they abuse it, it seems to come up smiling. And, as a matter of fact, these undernourished, frag- ile, little creatures that appear to be to ttering on the verge of the grave, are really Just as healthy and strong as their plump grandmothers were. A At any rate, they seem to be able to stand a lot more than the women of the past. In old-fashioned novels the heroine was always swooning away. She had to lean on a sturdy. masculine arm if she walked a block, and it was considered a poetic and romantic thing to be an invalid and lie on a couch most of the time. The modem girl can take a perfectly appalling amount of exercise with- out tumlng a hair. Bhe lolfs and plays tennis and swims and hikes in a way that makes a man keep on the Jump to keep up with her. And it is she who does the inarathori-dance stunt while men cut in. Nor do many girls who lazz at night sleep all day. Most of them earn their own livinga and have to punch the time clock at 9 A. M. As for woinen's beauty, that is merely a matter of taste, but I think that granddaughter is quite as good-looking as grandmother was at her age. And of this I sm sure: Granddaug hier looks much younger. In fact, all modern women have had at least one dlp into the fountain of perpetual youth. At 40 grandmother was fat and settled and middle-aged. At 60 she was an old woman who had retired to the chimney corner and began to pick out her pall-bearers. At 40 nowadays I woman baba her hair and rolls her stockings and looks like her debutsnta daughters' twin. At 60 sl-is is buying a red hat and learn- ing tl-is latest dance step. Donor!-ry mx, O I l O O l Dear Miss Dix-I was engaged to a man for more than a year, but we Mr and Mrs. .neu Moxie sity nm , recent visitors to I-Iazelbmok. l _.i l lil az T_-‘"".»";1~§.;1..`- i;:hi-'ard-.: t. . Mias.Doei.slil1iq1moapeattiieputl DR. J. P. MILLAR ,V DENTAL SURGEON norms-a is me , ‘ a is soo had a quarrel and he got ao angry that he slapped me good and hard. I broke the engagement, although I loved the man dearly. He is trying to get me to make up with him and thinks I am very unreasonable because I will not do lt. but l do not want to risk my right cheek. would you? ONE WHO WAS SLAPPED. "“'°* ‘”-°"* '°¢“f“°¢ 0° HU MIN V1 i °°"’¢\’ 9110*" U14 “if11m0"¢| I think that if you marry a man w he has shown you that he is n brute Northam. A ' ' "1-M* aus viii as s vin-bum you viii deserve lun emtiy what you viii ¢se,. I gives the hands actual beauty csre.". for such a tiny NATIONALISTS OF INDIA PLAN T0 LIFT VEIL OF THE YUBDAH CAICUTTA, July 19-'Ib lift the veil of the "Purdah" ridden women of India and pemilt them to see the world, as their" sisters in Tur- key have done, is one of the alms or the Nationalist leaders. For centuries millions of Indian women have never spoken to anyone out- side thcir own family circle owing to the "Purdah" custom. and the Nath?/netlilsts are counting on the aid of these very women, once this an- cient barrier is cast aside. to swell their ranks and give mbmentum to the movement of Mahatma Gian- dhl for the self-glovernment of In- dia. Mrs. Nellie Sen Gupta, the Eng- lish wife off J. M. Ben Gupta, the Bengali mayor of Calcutta, long e. leader for Indian reform, says many of the best workers for the Swaraj cause are those come out from behind the “Purdah curtain during the last year or two and are naw taking an active inter- est in politics. Mayor Gupta was arrested in Avril on l charge of sedition, in connection with the civil disobed- ience activities ied by Gandhi, and sentenced to nine month imprison- ment. Mrs. Sen Gupta, wihose maid en name was Nellie Grey, met her husband when he Cambridge University. She came out to India ‘twenty-two yearn ago has she become in suDp0rting'the political policy of her husband. that she has only found time to return to England once for a visit. She has two sons, the older aged 20, and the other 11. "Of course we cannot blame the British Government fOr the "Pur- dah" system," said Nm Ben Gupta to The Assoc!/ited Press. "aa this was a. student at and so interested women who have | » custom of the seclusion nf women was conceived long before the Brit- ish cams to Indie.. It onginntsd here with the Hindus' and in tune was adopted by other races of the. country. l "The Hindus centuries ago had never heard of “Purdah" but soon after the Moharnmedan conquest the Hindus adopted the veil and the Sli-Sl/BII1 Olf l¢90Dl1”18 their women within their own homes in order toi prevent the fares of their pretty] wives and daughters being observedl by the invaders and carried off wi Mohammedan houses for nn good purpose,” Mrs Sen Gupta explainedl “At the same time the Hndus nisoi introduced cariy or child marriages This wu pert of their sohome to Selva the IMI froth the clutches of the Mlohammedan, the idea being that a. wife through hor hiisbnncl,l wouldlikely be given more protect-' ion. generally speaking. than an un- married girl. "Every Nationalist leader is strong ly Opmaed to the ide; of the "Pur- eystemx Mrs sql oupts un- phasiaerl. "Cia.ri¢ihi long ago cams out against the custom which he not only considers absurd. bus which is detrimental to the laws of natllro And injurious to health-. "No nation in the world can go ahead. or keep within the progress of times. if it keeps its women shut up within the four walls of their homes, allowing them to view life throixh a couple of square ln- ohee of lattice work let over their WH-' Mrs' Ben Gupta Wears nothing but Indian made cloth as part of the Swarja boycott of all British mods. l l no respect for a nature. For bllalera and belle-m|liard'a llnlment “ You have had your warning. Profit by woman, na kindlineu, it and steer elear of a man who has no tendemess. no chivalry in his _ DOR0'Il€-IY DIX. ( lc a day; Lovely, smooth white hands price! . Dis/awaslving Lem/esYour Hands Lovelier- with LUX Lever Brothers I-laaulhed, Twmh-Cup-:ahve by :I their Excellmciea I V` 3iii`W There passed away at Govehead Road. on April Bth.. 1930, a respected resident, in the person of Wiliiail Jennings, at the age of 83 years, af- ter only a few days illness. Deceas- ed, though, of a quiet and unassum- ing disposition, had many ffltliill and was a. kind and Obllging rieldll' bor, He was born.at Portage, 'Raci- die Parish, and lived there all hi-I life, except for the past SiXf0°l years, he resided at Covehead Road. Ho is survived by his widow. I-|14 one brother, John Jennings. of Soul- is_ HL; funeral took place to St. Du- lrcnis Church on the morning *ll April wth., Requiem Mau beins °f‘ fered up by the pastor, Rev. J. 0- Pltre, after which the remains 11| conveyed tothe adjoining canister! io await the Resurrection morn. 'ral pull bearers were .Albert Proud. Dil' lei Roady, E. J. Vee-scy, Alfred D093 James Marshall and E. J. Relrdm Pile 'Sufferers You can onl et uiek Ind W" manent relief gy lwmgvlnl 50° “ui -congestion of blood in the l0V¢ bowel and a weakehllll Uf ¢h° Nm' Nothing but an internal medial: can do t is-that"s why 01151115 solves full. nr. J. s. uonnsrdt 111|' rovared a real internal Pile 1‘¢1'0°”' After prescribing it for 1000 Pmnu with success in D60 easel. |10 “md it naivr-nom. nruseists evsrv'v1\°" now sell it and Hughes DN! °§1 mu.. guarantees monev-W1* B HEM-ROID does 'not end PU” any form. DR. w. R. CARSON rum.: oneusu oh\f°vf‘°“" Chronic and Norvola DW; in runes aa. hw ‘H onwuu ac. run Chu" & l l