.i ~ '-"fl ii t. :j‘,~'~,_` ‘f<. E . ll.. .1 i_- ' _r .' ‘.»'- .L5 W; f ‘.‘i..i‘_f€» ' "»i'»‘..> .f.......~. .»e, .~ '£1 with ' ',g§i, inf( 1~ <,.i -;,_ .lif- . -.,l:. _;,.)..g, 1 -_“4r,}:"'."< "~ f" ""."`,"'. L." _ f Y.. -.'.. it-s~` .. _..._ .,.._»,.§,¢_.,... ,_',._;. __ ae.. - » tr* 'T“'f e iii, , _ -,= lf I (- i ;l;:‘~l‘.,,E ..i ." <.,\l' 5:. -‘._;_ if. 1 1; li .i.... N! ' =§§¢fil-.\l;.» r ,ji ., ._ lv is . ~.-"cj -~ f _ ;._.l "_ 1" _- .f.L ‘,. '.. i ,fly ; _gf , . ' _.i, . -i-'1 <. ? ."'; A ' ,.; 5. .!:. _ ‘fi _ ésfl ""1 I ' " I 3. » f, ;`,._§ ._ ’ .,~:.1,t`-f_" _ L, "~ ~ - ‘rv U 2( ri. .vi-‘_tl~ .l fi 1' ,»&' ' - 7'-.bi-7 in-A ' ._ __ _ 1.1;- _...... I - _, ,....._..‘ff""f_’F,‘"" _T'_g;q=.°)§f.~ `;;.‘.,,~;`:§_ -_ --,-_-_#1,-f _,_ .f__._ 7.".-_ ` "‘ . IQ., :;5':- -,‘i,§.~_.,, if ‘Zi -i_/_qv va; A’ -...l-.-_ .», .t 1 if/ _1 rm, 4 -l;§{'l.; i:-"',»',..,, ‘ v - . .`i"i~’ ’ .~1‘;~.lf “L .'{’.I|"e. ‘- l, _ i_Q=,"/.".".g. ‘i If ' Nl.i5>~ 1" l. ts- ". ' , if ' . - '”2Z““ --1 .FL '_ 9*;-2; ‘“."5f*f I.-_.;_ . , .si 11-” " ~ -'~*t Tl. ,Z f._»fE~,£ L . t, T ... ,if " ,~‘ " "lv rr ,\ ii\;"{t“"§l`§ »" i, _‘_ o§'v§l,. ‘('.lf.u ‘gi _ r .i`;{ 2', - . K .` I 'l' ‘ ";‘)! lt' I' ". il§‘,~. , ‘ll I \ i‘:` "l l~ _-_ '~ -‘F 547" HE CHARLOTTETOW'N.GUARDI A -- _____m,_,___,_,,._. _._ MAY P _ “p _ “ ' ~' ` ~`."""*f”1,~' .._ _' - T"'“." "' "` ' _ ' - " ' » ~ - f % ' was 1 t-...,....i in A _ _ .~ ». .»‘, - 7_7 l _ ii _*_ _ ~- - ' 'e " -' ’ ’ " V _, - K W/hatfhe Fashionable Are Wearing. Dorothy Latter e t Qlllustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished it » » ' " . ~ - L with Ever-y Pattern straight Talk te Quitter wife_lr0eii ' A p _...___ ‘_ Who Teaches Her Children That They Owe J -ri... me ..f.t_i.'. aiasgrer mirth. ‘ By Annebelle Worthington Nothing to Their Parents- How to~ °“° " 222'." “"1" °"".”` ° '"` I _ (O-/Q? ., _ 5 / 5 ~'$.“_~' i .~- W' ' \\ .. rf- #ff '_ \.;,*{""' I ,_ ., _:I . is . ‘ 'I " '.?- .,r 'z ‘_ _~- _ .l rf' t -. _._ - -< _ ,_-___,,.,_,,»..-.=,~t.__,-9,: *~ " -. .4 A .~r- _`¢ f, '*‘.' .5; -'_ ..,.` ‘-»_ -7. _ " -1.* -J-' - _ff ._ w ,_,, 23'.: ?'_L . _ .. _ -m ~.. \ tl ' `\ B if ,aa L-` _i..._._._._.._... -..___- 1 1 . A Mornr°ngSmile A ...ine young fellows once asked an old man who kept a pork butcher’s shop how much his pork was a. yard. "Five shillings," was the reply. "Very well, l'il take a yard." said one of the jokers. ` “Where’s your money?" said the old man. ` “The young fellow laid down ilve shillings, which the butcher promptly A printed crepe de chine in Pattern 13. M D- _ ~ mee is lndniauallzed by its :lured ar iss lx A “me ‘“’°" B YE" HB0 I married. after about three Choose a Career ` V | Should” weeks of happy married life my husband had the opportunity of bu ing plnched-in effect. The pointed treat- : ment of the circular skirt with low- ilared fulness, is quite unique. 5 Style No. 3477 comes in sizes 12, I 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Hyacinth blue crepe silk, Lanvin 'green shantung, printed _dlmity in v sailor blue and white., and red and ,white cotton net print lend them- . selves charmlngly to this model. l Pattern price 15 cents. Be sure to flll ln size of pattern. Address Pat- tern Department. Our Spring Fash- ion Magazine is 15 cents, but you may order a pattern and s. Fashion ‘ ;‘.!a.gazlne togetherrfor 25 cents. 2 l | |_ l. 1 ti |, 0. 3477. S126 -A-.....»...-......... Name -~~..».. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-..».-ann. Street Address _ City ' State . For The Cook CLIFFORD TEA CAKES One cup butter or shortening, 2 cups brown sugar, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 12 teaspoon salt, 1 cup chopped nuts, 2 teaspoons vanilla. about Sli. to 3‘,_- cups i'lour. Cream sugar and butter, add eggs, and con- tinue to bent. Sift flour, salt and soda llthree times, and add with nuts bo first mixture. li' not stir! add a little‘ more flour. Add vanilla. Pack in long. greased bread tin, and leave in ro- frigerator over night. In the morning turn on board, slice thin and bake. One-half the recipe may be used if desired. r cape with scalloped edge. | 1 t I tuck Y il Horizintal tucks mark the natural urge “mmm O 5 in ‘ ver old' st bl walstline and create a smart, Y a a 'shed ilrm in the city, but in or-dar to do so he had to borrow heavily. After he borrowed the money we had no more happiness. Everything I did WU WFODB and at the least provocation he would abuse me and use the vilest languagcnnd I spent, the nTost miserable year of my life. There was no' other wolnsn in the case, but he said that every time we were together we quarreled, so he stayed sinh; gmc, ln order to be away from me and worked ten and eleven hours a day. Three weeks ago 1 got g divm-°¢_ Now he has been to see me and wants me to comeback. He says the reason he acted the way he dldwas because he was so worried with financial ailairs. Do you think he has changed? I still 'love him, but'I have schooled my-sell to forget him and I dont wan t to risk my happiness asainmltheilsh my impulse is to return to him. Please give me your honest opinion. M. F. M. Answer: _ When you look back at the wreck of your marriage, don‘t you feel that you were just as much to blame as your husband was and thatif in the stress _of an ordeal in your lives he showed himself somewhat of a brute, you proved yourself a. poor sport? Certainly nothing excuses his making you wretched and his abuse of you. It is not hard to picture how surprised and hurt a bride of three weeks felt in having her honeymoon so abruptly terminated and in having nagging and ‘fault-tindlng replace iiatteries and caloleries and knockd take the place of kisses. ‘ But you could have saved the situation if you had had a little patience, n. little forbearance, `a little discernment and a little sylnpsthy for your hus- band. You kn-ew that the chance of hlsliie had come to him and that he had to stake all that he had and more upon lt. You knew the frightful anxiety under which he was laboring. You knew that he was overworked, overstrsincd; that every nerve was quivering and raw. Bo you might have sensed that the re was really nothingpersonsl in what he did and said to you. You were just simply the escape valve for the lr- rltability that he had to keep bottled up in him all day and that he could not show to the outside world. If you had been big enough to realize- this und had met petulance with gentleness, if you had laughed at his fault-ilnd- mg and turned the edge of his temper on your good nature, if you had pet- ted him and amused him and jollled him instead of arguing with him when l he came home overwrought of an evening. you could have saved this uglyi break in your lives which you will never be able tn quita bridge over. For always there will be between you the memory of divorce, the knowledge of a love that was not strong enough to e ndure stress and that may fail 'you again in time of need. a ,_ ram not justifying men in taking out on their wives all of their. busi- ness worrles, though manya manfdoes it and many a woman hasonly to give one look at hei husbands face as he comes in the door of an evening Doviieted and then Df°<1\1CCd “U50 ln order to know whether stocks are up or down and how things have gone pigs' feet. at the office. And if they have gone ill, heaven help her, for she ls due to Household Hints By Roberts Lee ...nuow screens .ll the window screens are not nude of copper or bronze wire, wipe then-i carefully with machine oil to prevent rusting. The odor of the oil will keep away mosquitoes and files. Attaching Labeh When attaching labels to tin, nrst brush over lightly with o cut. onion or melted paraffin and they will stick tightly: or, a little brolvn sugar add- ed to paste has the same effect. Ad- hesive plaster makes a good label for tins. _ , Eggs To pack eggs for keeping, dlp them into a solution of two ounces gum arabic to a pint of ccld water. Let them dry andt hen puck in powdered, well burned charcoal. t hear that sne is the poorest cook who ever put. a pot on th: stove and to get of the bawllng out that her husband would have given his boss or his best ' client or customer if he had dared. ,_.e' t _ °"' aliould know about Phil fu?°i°;“sfei;ii;“°°b?,';}§; But even in the face of such ilfjiistlce a wife may well remember that it and ¢l.i1.h-an healthy and is her husbands nerves that are speaking, not his heart, and that if he MPPY. every 11100181' is cross and unrewonable and grouchy and glum, lt is nearly always because ups Milk of Magnus: he is weary unto death with the struggle of modern life, and that the reason _ he is overworked is because he is trying to give her and their children com- Tlm hsrmles almost _ , - _- _,__ _ s , -e' _ tasteless preparation is “ms and luxuries- ` "` most effective in reliev- mgntggiirg lv l;f!‘:1’::d°}§yb:;"§§?n§“t,¢; ofihiill; As to your question about going back to your husband, I should strongly the lime diI_;e!m,e tram such U muh advise lt. He has had his lesson. Perhaps you have had yours. You still l.@1.~i.ing_ fr..q.,en¢ vomiting, fevcfigimegg, love each other and when you take up your life together again I hope you <‘°lil'» A58 mild laxltive. it Het! gently. will be wiser and more patient and more forbearlng and understanding with but ct-rtrunly__ to open the little bowels ln each other - DoR6THY Dlx . collstipation, colds, children`s diseases. A tonspnonflll of Phillips Milk of Mag- ° ° ' ' ° ' ' ° ~ if nom does the wn_rl< of half a pint of llrnc Dca: Dorothy Dlx-I am in my 60s and live with a. married daughter who “"‘“"' ’" “"“t"‘l’z’"3 "‘“""‘ '“‘"‘ f°" ‘"' has children oi her own. She often remarks that no child owes anything tc fruit feeding, and preventing hard curds. 1,, ,,,,,,,,, ,,,.,,,, fm. mother ,md child me its parents, that tlieparents brought the child into the world without its i`\lll_\' oxplllinnrl in the interesting book Cllinserlt, thel.'efai‘€, all the talk Of child!`€n's duty t/0 pB.\‘€hLB is all bosh. “I seful Infnrmatn»n.’ lt will be sent you. imagine how a mother feels who has this constantly impressed upon herl l~`l'll'l’. Write The Chas H Phillips Ch,,§ni'm, Coq 'Windscm OAL ' What license will my daughters children take with her with these views im- ln buying, be sure to get genuine Phil- lip= Milk of Magnesia. Doctors have pre- scribed it for over 50 years. \ W T‘T7Je Ff¢gf¢"ft V - ‘» . ._ _sudigeyyoungchsrm-|&egnnce.ofn`ch In what more ,perfect way an the vlvseily of youthful beauty ind expression than in die wiiisome breath ofthe Yardley Lavender? In all the hundred and sixty years since the acozlihgsolaceecchcweuyaadthsscay- acdebniek. r YARDLEY V _ LAVENDER; Tb¢~Lo1/461: Fm amz ~»f'e=_~»-iif<».--'~'fi'-='i=='°..~‘-i=:f'-=»,=».1°“-°~»f ......,.,§' _ t _ »,.f».._,.t- -...cl pressed upon their minds? A F'0R.LOR.N MOTHER.. Answer: ' _ As we sow we reap, and I think your daughter will harvest with tears and bitterness the wrong ideals that she is sowing in her children's minds. For she will not want her children to _treat her as she is treating her own mother. She will not want to feel that they 'have no sense of oblig- ation to her, that they have no gratl tude for all the sacrifices she has made for them, no appreciation of her love, “no memory of thc long nlghtsshs has watched by sick beds," of the times she has sat up to all hours so that they might have a new frilly dress for s party, of the hours she hu spent over the cooking stove making the kind of ple they like, no memory _of how soft. mothers breast was and what s. refuge her arms were to which they could flee in any time of trouble, no memory of how mother was neveryfo tired or sick or busy to amuse them or comfort them or to entcrinto all of their plans and hopes. __ _ ` ‘ » No. Your daughter will not want her children to' feel that she has only done her duty by them when she has given them twenty years cf hor life and that when they are able to stand sions and go on their own that they arrfree to go sway and forget her. Bhs will want them to fcelthat they owe her a debt that can only in repaid by tandsmcu and consideration and by their feeling that it is s privilege to cherish her in her old age. But how can she expect this if by preccpt and example she is teaching' them that s mother is merely an upper servant whose duty it il' them and that when they nc longer ncedber work thoyuc free to dilclbd' nerr How can :lie expect theia~to.noncr,ber_wh»n me aces not ownmother? How can sho expect them to bo tcudlr toward hctwhln she' nuna_compaseioaorwnccrn§sgafui9vnocmawncbonh»r9J." -'_ -' i . .~ , [_`Ncwcm¢nuctoba|cm||cti`rltIodll¢tbomothsnwhncbchildrcn'ars' raftmwansntsst|gcli,w¢pua.scac¢munscw'm\tebnsit»ler they woulsbs in some cis ladies' hbme,`»_wi»n ugliest, han mslrcwnuu-re¢psct,tbsntbeysnlatlnncmascitnels\ohlicrca§_v¢bcrc tnsysacwinemaelvutaarunweiccmsrinste. ` Dcarbcrcthynic-fsms,yc,an|_|_irlsnsun-y 1ns`ennor¢siennas`iieoit|ntt,hstlsmy wmtdc,_yuiunlazt_ -_ , . li sh M0th€f 'rhslkliu Olqthl sun for pardon. M _ l‘”'..',._l.',;'<",,~,'~,-,F 1 y_-.,,.F- '-'R'-'* ' - '~ l :V ._ -i ge' \‘\ ‘ ‘ ' _- .";.'.!_E;l.,--'-;-,E ~ -jt.f<‘ _ .9 .- §-l';~’, 35,' !,;l5~!.‘t;5g§.'!»vl,Q = 3',” . km-.':'.!,'M 5% lt“,u~f‘i--,ii'!~,';, :.‘”' .‘»;r.7'.».‘.», Y, ' ,‘i1`*~ . `elWo.man’s Realm r-.°- Social a'n.d`fJPe“ifs'on-u~l‘*. <.-‘.°.- Fatshiiotisi -1- °Ll°fé1‘¢1f¢U‘@ ° _ By Lois LEEDS v Than anywhere else on earth! I O Q ¢ ,Princess Elizabeth has been seen almost every moming ‘this week llesrnii-ig how to sit on her new mount, a handsome black Shetland pony, gii"t'of'_thc King. hergrsnd- father, on~her birthday the first of last 'v/eek. "Lil1ibet," as' the 4-year- old daughter of.the Duke 'and Du- ohessis a£ectloi'i».t_e_ly_ known, will have none 'of 'the slds~ss.ddlc manner of going, Today." ssfon previous days, the black_pony of her dreams came to 'her .door and “Lllllbet." perched on his back." sat-tight s.s»the groom led the Bhetlandi through Windsor Castle grounds. Althcuglrher par- ents have returned. to London._the little Princess has remained at Windsor Cutie to continue her les- sons. Bhe wants to ride in L0ndon‘s famous Rotten Row. the King's fav- orite bridle path. \ . 0 l O The annual exhibition of needle- work, cornpletedby the Queen Mary's Needlework Guild this winter was held on Thursday afternoon at the home of the' President. Mrs. J. P. Gordon, 22 Longworth Avenue, and was indeed a pleasure to see. There were upwards of one hundred articles for the P. E. Island Protestant Or- phanage, comprised of the lovellest _ .W 7 _ smacks and denim suits for the bbyl for summer wear, while for the cold- ' er dnys there were numerous knitted sweaters, etc.. pretty serviceable cloth .es that any well dressed little 5°! or girl would appreciate whatever their station in life- Thea f°f "Wi Queeifs Own box, lil Wh1Ch§h€ takes a personal interest. and w ch goes to Queen Meryl! Maternity Home at Hamllltesdt EM1ll\¢» *U31* were fifty or more of the daintieet l and most wlnsome iluthes thief' °°\11d[ be imagined. all :ins from theliiem-,g ban or the local branch. ‘“ I The Queen’s »personsl christmas ears to tm President was also llwvim and very much admired. _ Mrs. Gordon, who had receiving with her, Mrs. Hearts, wife of_ the Lieutenant Governor, and Mrs. A- if Bartlett. served afternoon tea. Mrs. Blanchard poured sad wee °_¢°l“°°' by Mrs. G. E. Full, Mrs. James Pat- on, Mrs. Cosh. Mrs. A. G. Peake, Mrs. H. R.. l-lillson. Mrs. A. W. Hynd- msa, wus. c. i-i. Beer. Miss Ruth Hearts. C O O Lggy Byng, known throughout Canada. since_ she resided _at Ridelil Hall, Ottawa, with Lordhyns 101121- er Govemor General of Canada, had thc misfortune to break her wrist last Tuesday while visiting li fiimd in Cape Town, South Africa. O O I BEAUHFYING _BLOND HAIR One of the beauty problem that comes tn me very frequently is the natural darkening of blond hair. Young children and girls who have been admlred`for their shining golden locks during childhood ,and the early teena notice their mir slowly but surely turning ashen blond, mouse Tile motor show was a pleasant in- dication that summer is fest aD-~ preaching and motor psi-ties are in latte ana eatttm nlghties, pyiames, gingham and cotton dresses. flannel-, me (ming, " [ Continued on Page ll WHOAREYOU? The Romance of Your Nomi- ay RUBY uAslnNs aLl.ls | l ._...._ I C W -_l , ry ` p;-2~"\ r l-. ,,W‘ll;.y. 1 V / \` .li . ,_ \\ ,!!mi,,:. , ,.6 _ " _ ..t\_\,`,,"`_fl ~ .~ ‘ . H UI iI';r;‘:_$ " ' lg. r 1! grill .,, i f, - /. ji l /F5 ,QSM ._ ' -"§1"€"°'_ 7;-.est-;;+- il \.;_ ;*<1,, sound in 'tae rolls ei Battle abbey. that historic document of Efisland. in the eleventh century- I 'i"he suffolk Bscons oi' England. a very distinguished family. 1-!‘H°° Fm' gqtry to Grlms1clus_ Bacon. This family has enieved I Newry ef °i1'=- ggmding importance in the annals 0! time. The Keeper of the Great Seals] in Queen Ellza.beth‘s rekll- WH k“l°| gntcd and called "Lord Keeper Ba- cong- H3; gon, me great' literary gen- ius Lord Bacon, is credited by many pearesn plays. - 'ras first settler in New s:~.iclimd.` bearing this name was Andrew Bacon. at nutnlsadsbire. England- The fir" from gmfolk, England was Michael. who was one of the founders oi Ded- ham. Mau.. in mo. 'ram were n number of other first settlers. Cvecrll. of Suffolk; Nathaniel, samuel, 'rho- mas, William lil of whom settled in Massachusetts with the exception of Nathaniel, who locltdd in MNWU' lllchicl. who was a founder of t. '_'--.. J' ‘.115-J y _ ~ ay nausea p t BEAUTY _QUESTIONS ANSWERED Wants to Reduce: Excessive Perspira- tion ing process may be checked without tell me 110W I CID bfml' ml’ "°13h"` rlnses will help to bright/en this type down t/o 120? V _ (2) I sm greatly troubled with per- causes excessive odor and bathing my each hm _ B“b";a1_ W” LM .mn -, the central canal or core in black hair takes its character 'from the sulphate 4° of the red oxide or iron and sulphur , | in the competition ci this important , , i america within theiatir .nuts that \-~'~ - not only colors but feeds the hair it sell. soap supposed to destroy odor does _ at we to ml cm you mu mai In pure white or gray hair the col 'Baron , ' ` " is in reality a greenish brown hue md This mm’ is °' A“91°fF"x°“ ml' _ lo! iron and the manganese in lt. The Fm frm” bam?" nw balm It is mm _, lcolorlllg matter in blond hair con- B' name or great mummy in Nohl ../ f thins less iron and more sulvhur than mandy Wmiam B“°°“' “ 1082' °“' \,: 'darker shades do. The red of .the au- dowed the Abbey °i'H°l¥ Trinity in ~' burn, brown or Titian types comes Caen Grhéaldus i:c0;:e'; ` . from' the relatively lame P1`°P°rtlon 1i8il‘Lthe Onquer 1 av-H .-f' / :mat wmdo? _ P. _ 1 orlng elements are not presentpin sul-E (3) Fm tha Int ye” my hm hu flclsnt qiulltities to produce s blond. _ md h umm. auburn or brunette color of ha.ir.| §;;’;"°mX”'A;':‘;’; mn u°"my M sometimes, toe. air b.'s_»ii_la_s»ia the and rough. Can ipu advise me what centru cm" mu” 9° °'p°"°“° 1°” to do m mud to mm of color which may be~ remedied’ in BEVBNTEKN' some cases by proper tieatrizsnt and oommud on P." 14 n charge in the diet. When the dark- ,” be me rm mmm. of Q., ghgku- ailing process sch in-the color change First Mary Wood and after her death, is duc to the chemical changes taking M whim' piece in the system. 'njue-iblond, ty-’ "V " ho have inherited this-wi la l tb t ith "°‘ W ‘ _ . °’ K t_‘;‘x”‘;f,;;‘£”:“;°‘“°; °mdf mm ima emma usually 1-begin their lf _, ,, blondness through life: others-fn-I (°m‘ N' H" in "M °°u°°"d wht t qusntly develop into ssheii mcdiumi there were six by the name oi Bacon.; ’ Bmw H mo ‘ p!m_dMm_ mm on .mid darker shades of hair. Hence the of oeaml wasnmcwa. - tm '»“° °°l;“"°_"°h°' ,mm "W an lmltator of oilnrs it is much the color of the hair °°lffi=\11'i¥is and its liealtlirulmi. makes it attracthe So my gd.; any girl or woman \\lme@f,,1,,, are turning brown is to let nm; have 1161' WHY. since bleached or halr never harmonize; \\ color or light brown. Sometimes this lhvclllng Hidden Beauty type develops intoa true brunette with l There uc, however correct me dark brown or black hair. The girl and special fin-we that may is who is destined to be an ashen blonde W WM out the hidden beau *_ , light brown or even brunettg type will each type and color ol’ hair Ali; Mllad Beautlflll ldevelop into one whether she wears f¢1’°n¢ 511811112005 and treelmenb her hair short or long, will keep the hair and scalp in Ummm” ot. Hur col" condition provided that they are correctly. I would suggest to the I am often asked how this darken- my "adm WMM hah. L. not mm _ ,ing its full possibilities lor lovtl -“~|“"y 'D th’ hah' “Wm 1° 1' 1mP°s' ; to set. about giving the hair and sible to do so. and those who resortlregulm. massage treatments and Miss Lee'd'Sf_"u) I ,lm 17' am tznblsgsrzlsg 5111 };:;e‘;§'| the hair for at least ten mlnulei 5 feet 3 inchts tall. IM I "|831 While the use ci the right shempocm' umm ‘;;,,l:;:,I;§gon Page 9 pounds- I em smell-b°H°i Uw i'°“»een~cet treatments and special blenell ___-_ *_ of hair, the natural color of the hair depends upon _the chemical composl- Biquette SPi`1‘°l=1°l\ in f-bl °fmP“*- TNI W0" tion of the central canal or core of 1|, ggberg 1,, Skin 1°'-“' W me. 5111*! I dll’ with N For, ekomplt. t-h`s'che`n'llca1 com-l so ....e.. ....-. .u ng li. ae . P0Jl|>i°li 0! the oily. secretion that fills stairs, should the man or the wo A- The woman always ple the man Q How soon should a yo man's parents call on the paren his fiancee, after lcullnlng ol A. Within twenty four hours Q. What is the usual num courses at an informal dinner? GQGE. f;`Yl':5 HND ‘i\’l(\LL UTH SHOW TH‘S MAN SAYS TTLE' BUT ` DENGNSTQGTES Virginia. Edmund Bacon was s friend "um 1°' mg t"“°`t°>°n-'T' 6”" ("\UC\"‘ iN \-OV(-‘ Nsthlsndicl Bacon was an lllultri- ' l ~ ' -"~~-- -f ous~i'lgul'c in Revolutionary days. He ‘° ' ‘ was called the "first American rebel." WWW °°““' ' - l-in was of "Suffolk lineage." represen- ’ ` tin( ihcbtst bloodol Brltl4n.H.\ D°‘”W'°» ““'~~`3‘°d °"‘°“ m°m°1' camo to Jamestown. vs-. at tlwlle 'hi' \'°°'~“‘° * P*`°'°“*°?‘.“' *°'°°"‘“'“- ,ef ao, aaa stnm wa s msn aiuu WH- H°f*"°`“"°° “ ‘ “W” “‘ naysmu but ima mlm.: nuanii Kiel Ph““P" W"-` “"'°“"‘°° "“'°' an me use el mittee me iiiiaaesia. *lm*-“"°° ’.“"7°' ‘lm `M‘"" 'nic coat of arms sbovsgivsn are le°°l1°U~ “"1 1*-‘°-*‘"“"°*‘ ““‘ ““'°' useless ta uatiumn mesa. as ma- l1.\¢\ryNme- ' Jonathan. s met modem 9! Michal. tbfsetticr. vu s represen- uqyglgg .thl'lOll¢ll OW!! d thc colony. a '~ ` ' t cf llcbui was ssdiip.‘i¢\ms¢r of the cl -W of Bh‘attm\.ng1and. ,~ _ _I ` 'rasaotwti-»anma.u-u»aiaeig f -» ..........'"' “mamma 01’ 1* armruthecmt '_ - - . sleicwa. oeaa.. me ima as new na.-_' ven.Ho»,wuthescn9twi1iismBacca , my . f O iii ri ii* lst ~ : .sunk g i "' ‘ _~~ 'L s ."4:_-_-:--,- ,1- eeieieserua v A