aucusr 2. 1929 i? 41. Wanton ’s Rea M my: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDlANi ‘ PAGE SEVEN noon lunches are easily prepared with ready - baked Household Suggestions Keeps the Polish If 981W is always rinsed with boil- ing crater after washing it will need my little cleaning with polish. Dry quickly with a clean towel. l Carpet Moths. If you suspect moths or moth eggs )1 the rugs or carpet, spread a wet. wuiel smoothly over the carpet and iron over it with a hot iron. The itcam vclll. kill the moths. Another Thought. Dip the shanks of the squeaky asters into vaseline and then slip ihcm into the legs of the furniture. You will be able to move even the heavy pieces easily and quietly. Pongee. Let pongee dry before ironing. Then roll the article for ironing and put it in the bundle with the dampened clothes until ready for pressing. It will iron beautifully if this is done. Too Soiled to Wear If the Panama hat looks pretty loiled upon getting it out this spring, try a few home remedies. Use an ordinary spot remover to clean "the hat. Then cover with Fuller's earth, wrap it in a towel and pack away for a few days. Brush of‘! the pow- rler and you will m pleased with the result. Before_ Vacationing. If you are to be away for the whole summer, have the eaves and roof of your house examined before you leave. Then there will be no nasty leaks causing ruined walls and fur- nishings while you are away. SALADS TO TEMPT THE CAPRICIOUS APPETITE with the approach oi the warm divs. appetites become capricious and the housewife sometimes feels that there is nothing new in the 100d m “vml new ways of combining old familiar foods that. may appeal to her. The other day I heard 9g 3 delicious new way 91 magma chicken salad. Chicken Salad 1 tin chicken or equivalent amount fresh chicken. l firm white cabbage. Radish“, 3 leaves fresh mint. Green onions. 1 cucumber. Tomatoes. Pimento. Salt and ocnocr. Salad dressing. Shard cabbage very finely. Flake chicken and salt and pepper well. Chop fresh mint leaves and add to chicken. Add chopped green onions and whole radishcs to cabbage and chicken. Slice cucumber and soak in salted water a few minutes. Com- bine cabbage and chicken mixture with salad dressing. Place a layer of this mixture in bowl, add a layer of cucumbers and a. layer of tomatoes. Repeat, having cabbages and chicken mixture on lop. Garnish with thin strips of pimento. Crab Salad 1 tin crab meat or equivalent am- ount fresh crab meat. l tin green peas. l. head lettuce. B cooked beets. Cucumber. Stuffed olives. Juice l lemon. Salad dressing. Take crab meat and sprinkle with juice of lemon. Let. stand in cool place fifteen minutes. Shred lettuce finely. Add crab meat and drained peas. Dice beets and add. Throw mixture together lishily Wm‘ m" and add salad dressing. Garnish with stuffed olives and slices of cucum- ber. Crab Salad No. 2. l tin crab meat or equivalent em- ount fresh crab meat- 1 tin wax beans. 3 hard-boiled eggs. Tomatoes. e medium-size cooked collim- Celcry. Lettuce. Salad dressinB- Prepare crab meat as above. D160 ‘atoes and celery. odd W “"5 meat, and also add drained wax beans add salad dressins- Garnish Wm‘ hard-boiled cw and m" ‘°"““’°' BS. Etiquette By IIobertoLeo Q. Should wedding invitations be sent to all relatives and intimate friends? A. Yes, even to those who live for away, whether they are able to come to the wedding or not. - Q. What is an appropriate form of entertainment for young PQOPIQ b9- tween the ages of sixteen and twenty? A. Dancing is probably the most popular and enivyflble- Q. Is it lll-bred for a woman to smoke in a public restaurant? A. N0. ._______-_—- Motor vehicles produced in Austria last year numbered 9,410. line to tempt her family. While DELIGOUS NIAPPLI BISCUITS ICI WITH THIS ifilifilivflifl’ your main. Nulll’; lllky Way Roolpo Book, - in‘ more than looncipee for eoupe, 0:, g enndieo, milk drinks. ie: cream, eelnde, ere. will be god] oent free on requeet. Write oetlPlFood Compiny, Limited, Metropolitan Building, Toronto, Ontario. HUI b0 For every cooking purpoe: rmuem Milk- rich, creamy, pure. wholesome-makes more deli htful dilhee than ordinary milk. It will ed new variety and uttncdvon». to there is literally nothing new’ the,“ Mi lady Beautiful Bylnhlnedl CORRECTIVE EXERCISES Scanty bathing costumes are being indorsed by physical culturists be- cause they permit a larger area of the skin to benefit by the direct rnys of the sun. Another really important advantage of the new vogue is that it puts a premium ongraceful, well- knlt figures, Girls who are too thin or too stout. are hasténing to develop ideal proportions. Figures that have been made unsightly by postural de- fects, such as result in swaybacks and laterally curved spines, are being improved because crooked bodies are unfashionable. Thus fashion has be- come an ally of physical fitness in- stead of being its worst enemy, as has often been the case in other years. Today 1 am going to describe for you a few exercises for correcting common postural defects that mar the bathing-suit silhouette. ~ For Swaybacks ‘ (l) Sit down on the floor .with legs stretched straight in front, feet to- gether, hands on shoulders and elbows well back. Fling the arms up straight above the head. Bend elbows, bring hands down to shoul- ders again. Keep elbows "well back Repeat arm-raising ten times. , <2) Stand erect with feet slightly apart. Slowly relax the upper part of the body, beginning with the neck and proceeding downward until the trunk and arms are hanging‘ relaxed in front of the legs. Keep knees straight. Slowly raise trunk to erect position. Repeat. (3) Stand erect with arms hanging at sides. Ralseheélsflancfslowly 1.5m knees, Keep thighs and knees to- gether. Rise and repeat. For Unsymmetrical Figures ~ <1) When the lateral curve of the I spine makes the right shoulder lower than the left, practice this exercise. Stand erect with elbows bent and hands on shoulders. Shoot the right arm above your head and at the same time filng the left arm out to the side at shoulder level. Return arms to starting position and repeat. (2) Sit erect. If the right is your high shoulder, place that band on your hip. Hold a. dumb-bell or book weighing two to four pounds in the 16ft hand Ht Your shoulder with the elbow bent. Slowly extend your left. arm upward until it is fully stretched. Slowly return it to starting position. Repeat. Of course, ii the right shoul- ‘der is lower than the left, hold the dumb-bell in your right hand and do the exercises on that. side. Tomorrow - Beauty Questions Answered. Good Things To Eat“ Baked Stufled Pork Chops. Have the chops cut thick, if neces- sary using two chow together. Have the butcher cut e tiny pocket in each one and fill with chicken filling. Lay in a greased pan, add a little waiter and bake until the chops are brown- ed on both aides and very ieriderl basting frequently. If the pork is not. so tender. it would be well to cover the chops after they have browned well. Alpungu: Vanalgretle. Aieplendld way to use up that left- over cold asparagus. Mix together 1-2 teaspoon nit, 1-2 ‘ uspoon paprika. l-I teaspoon onion juice, 5 table- spoons olive oil, 3 tablespoons vine- gl-rlnd e pinch of celery suit. Ar- range the uperngus on a bed of crisp lettuce, pour over the dressing and sprinkle with finely chopped parsley and green 909D"!- Ilot Apple Roulette: Prepne n very rich baking powder dough and roll out into e thin sheet. i... over it thin 311w oi occlcd- or- plee and sprinkle with rhaved maple gugnr, ground cinnamon, currents. end minced candied lemon peel. Dot with bit: of butter and roll up line e ielly roll. Cut in slice: down through the rolljgdvw in buttered pen. élrislcover; ‘ . ' 13M mm! '.‘.f.°“°° Dorothy Dlx lie-Man M" In Her Heart of Hearts Every Woman Longs For a Husband Who Will Dominate ‘Her, and If She Gets Him, She Sticks by HimThrough Thick and Thin, Even if He Beats" Her Do women like cavemen? Yes. Undoubtedly. The one quality that women yglug ‘boy; .11 others in a man is force, mental or physical. They may admire a man who is good and gentle and kind and tender, but he never . thrills them "as does the strong man. Ii every woman got her ‘heart's secret desire, she would be ‘wooed with a club and dragged of! by the v_ hair of her head t er mate's cave. Or else she would adore being abducted by a lover who would use . strong-nun methods and force her to marry mm m . _ spite of herself. That is why the bold suitor always gets the girl while the humble adorer invariably gets left. of COUTSE. women do fall in love with timid, weak l A .91 men, but the affection they give them is maternal. They love them as they would a child, with a protecting, pltying love that is no more like the lave that they give to a stalwart, upstanting he-man than near-beer 1; like champagne. . _ lt is the fact that women revert to the cavewoman in their emotion; that explains that mystery of feminine psychology-why a woman who is married to a man who is everything that is fine and noble, and who lavish“ upon her a perfect devotion, and who works his fingers to the bone to sup- llly he!‘ With evtry luxury. so often utterly fails to appreciate him or seem- ingly to have any affection for him whatever, while, on the [other hand, the woman who is married to a brute who beatsand starves her, adores him and sticks to him through thick and thin. Many a. time in the divorce courts l have seen a handsomely dressed woman getting a divorce on some trumped-up charge oi uncongeniality or incompatibility from a splendid man who had done everything he could to make he!‘ hflPlJY- And many a time in a police court I have seen a poor, shabby woman draw her thin shawl across her breast to hide the bruises that her husband had inflicted upon her and lie about falling and hurting herself 1° 5W6 him "0111 801118 to i511. Bud then follow him as mcekly as a dog, knowing that she would get another beating when they got back home. lt is one of life's little ironies that women should have struggled for centuries to get equality with men, which they_really do not want, Theoretic- ally, as a sex, we may desire to stand on the same platfonn with men as their peers, but individually, as women, we want to look up to some man. No woman really wants to be her husband's equal. She wants him to be her superior. She wants him to be stronger than she is. Wiser than she ls. To have better judgment than she has. she wants somebody she can lean on. Somebody she can depend on. Somebody to whom 511g can tum for advice and counsel. "' Men do not mind looking down upon their wives. You will often see a man who is married to a woman greatly his inferior. a woman who is not in his class mentally or socially. yet he will still love and cherish her because of other good qiialities she possesses. But it is a. fatal thing ml- g woman ta marry a man that she looks down upon, no matter what his virtues. Her sense of superiority kills her affection for him. In order to love she must respect, and she does not respect a man who has less brain or brawn than she has. There are many families in which the gray mare is the better horse. Families in which the wife has far more force of character than the hus- band, far more executive ability, far more industry and enterprise. Famil- ies in which the wife is far more intelligent and better educated than the husband. Families in which the wife earns a better salary than the hus- band. Families in which the wife has won distinction by acting, or writing, or painting, or the practice of some profession, while the husband has re- mained obscure. But does this state of affairs make for peace and happi- ness in the family circle? Never. Are these superior wives contented and satisfied? No, never. ' The contented wives are those who are married to men whom they re- gard with awe and reverence and to whom they look up as oracles. When a woman begins every sentence with "John says" as if that settled every prob- lem in the universe beyond the shadow of a doubt, it is a certificate of mari- tal happlness strong enough to draw money on at the bank. ' Of course, women, being human, will take every advaffdge that they can get, and when they find that men are weak and yielding and that they can run over them roughshod they will do it, but no woman ever really loves the man she henpecks. She has a contempt for him and that is why she orders him about and never considers his comfort or his pleasure. You never saw a widow grieve for the meek little husband she has harried into the grave. You never saw a wife consider the comfort of the husband who never asserted himself in his own house, and who took the leaving; of things after she and the children had had the best. You never saw a woman stick to the man she had ruined by per extravagance. As a matter of fact, women like to be dominated by the men they love. A woman likes for her husband to be the head of the house. She likes to feel that he has standards to which she must come up and that there u; certain things he wouldnt stand for her doing. She likes to be the lee-st little bit afraid of him and to feel that. despite his love and tenderness for her there is authority over her; and that the iron hand in the velvet glove is guiding their lives. Wbmen don"t lova weak men. They dent love men they een befool. They don't love men they can wrap :.round their fingers or men who are afraid of them. They love men who are stronger th:n they are-men who will treat ‘em rough if they don't behave themselves. They still fall for cave- man stufl. D0307!" Dlx- ‘ Sprinkle with sugar and ground bud-boiled eggs and one ounce of cinnamon and bake until crisp and butter. Add one tablespoon * ‘ brawn, parsley and season with salt and white pepper. Spread between thin slices of white or brown bread. ___._- Sardine and l" Sandwiches. Bone and pus through a :leve twelve sardines, the yolks of two in imflmlfll its highways. ' when Baby is Cutting 1...». Th: levels leeeme Loose at um =" a - Honduras plans to epend $1,000,000 lm .-:-, SocialgandgiPersonalyi-:- Fashions -:- Bobbeil lHair Long hair? No, women must not grow it," says M. Antoine o! Paris. the ‘inventor of the shingle, in a re- cent interiew with the Evening News, London. This is the wisdom of An- toine, whose life is spent gazing at beauty and making it stillfmore beautiful. l ' _ Antoine's slender- white hands waved rythmlcally, and into his lus- trous greyeyes came the liearn of the artist. "Ah!" he_said earnestly. "there is noihing a woman likes so much as to be beautiful, for when she is beautiful she is happy!" A dflen mirrors round the wall; of his workroom in Dover street, Mayfair, reflected theenthusiasm oi the great hairdresser, now on a vis- it from Paris-reflected his dark. handsome face, his sleek ‘wavy black hair. his suit of delicaie grey. "Beauty!" he repeated, radiantly. "f; as an artist, make women love- ly, and that is everything for them. Antoine's hands curved and circled in the air‘ as he spoke. "The shingle has made’ them hap- py-—the shingle I invented, ah, many years ago. And now I continue my work for them, to make life yet the more pleasant. "One must know-yes, what makes each one woman beautiful, superb. For no two women are alike. "This woman! her face is broad in the cheekbones. She must look ma]- estic. She must brush her hair down beside her face, and give to it the dignity immense. “But this other woman, she is of the Louis Quinza type. She must wear pretty and omamentezl frocks. One must give her curls. Ah, one must put sparkle in her hair. Sh: must be like champagne. She must bubble and glisten! "And now sea this other. "She is rare. She can wear her hair straight, wiih no curls, and shining like a mans She him the classic face. The lines cf her face are like the lines or her body, straight and slim. Ah, she Ls superb!" Antoine was talking rapidly now. his words tumbling over one another, his hands flashing with tremendous vlvacity. "Women must not grow their hair long now," he said. “Only long enough. each woman, for herself; so she can adorn hcr head with the curls or waves that adorn her type. so she can be really herself. "I see your English Aims‘ 3°“ 5"?- erb are they! They have ‘this Bd- vantage over the girls of Southern Europe, over some girls from Ameri- ca--they have color to ISSi-il the 111195 of their faces. The Em “Vim the pinlrand white skin—her hair adds to the color of the picture, gives her almost another dimension." Antoine. as something of a sculp- tor as well es a hairdresser, looks at women with an artist's eye. “I treat each woman as a work of art." he said dramatically. "People say i0 me. ‘If Y0“ 5T9 5° good an artist, why do 9011 BOW?!‘ with women's hair?’ i say to tbs"!- -1 have had my horoscope "M! bi‘ a great Pole, which has 8W9" m9 knowledge and made my mind fr" from philosophical worries. "Now I concentrate upon statuary which u livint-Whlbh is quite M interesting as working in bronze or marble; "I consider myself an artist. More. any these mornings with a bowl of crisp Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and milk or cream! Add fruit or honey. And there's a treat that has no rival in the cereal world. roasts coalv FLAKES * Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario Extra crisp. Oven-free]: lVhat the Fashionable Are Wearing $ . linfifiw. hUALl-J! Illustrated Dressmgrihgh Lesson Filrnished» With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington . The shorts are scalloped at botl upper and lower edges. with thi scalloped treatment repeated in the collar and cuffs. They button to the simple straight blouse with com- fortable open V-neckline. In the four year size this smart suit is mazle with 1 yard of l-JZ-inth material for shorts, collar and cuffs, with h yard of 32-inch cont-as: for blouse. 1t is quite a sir-in; It is cute too in yeilciv ‘Jiqllc with white cross-barred dimity blouse Brown chsmbray with tan zhiny cot- ton broadcloth is extremely S'?i'\'lZB' able. light green linen with white V r "flue with whize. and p111}, :1 ideal combinations. .. p1". 2 l5 cents. Trans N3. 7153 wqw 1'3 cc Ls extra. Ad- rlrer- i” veg". Di: . 1Z2 sure to fill in s.:e of pxicrn. Th: New Fasiiiczi l/lagazine is l5 cents, but. only 1O cunts when ordered with a pattern. _ - _ _ . . _ _ _ _ _. _ l- _ _ __- .- "w; No. 2860. Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . f“ \ _ v Ema l-Imb. Tums, ha. 7oz, Trans 5- ....................... Style No. 2860 is a fetching sailor blue linen suit with white pearl bun‘ tons and white linen blouse with.Yoaihlnlllfillfnle"!FY0871"!!- blue anchor molii. Any wcc lad of‘ -- 1 2 and 4 ‘tars would m“, m be‘ Many building associations are ‘oe- Ccstn Ric: has started lu £5,250.00 I make women happy. l believe they say ‘Antoine’ Wlih kindness in their voices." Household Hints, By Roberto Lee Sweaters The best way to dry a owes!!!‘ l5 m make a hammock out of a P!!!" of netting or thin material. Hang this 1n the sun and lay the sweater in it. Draw the hammock out flat so that the sweater is not double‘ over. when treated in this way the sweater will not. get out of shape. Rook of Plants the proud ovmer of this sailor suit. ling formed in Gree:e. MR$ WILLlAM RD MR OHN FILER l - 10 Queen Sued, Undsuy. Ontario l)! Bickiovrd venue. Buhlo, N. Y. “I was in very poor health "l took Lydia E. Pinkham’: ‘ Care should be taken that freedom is given roots of plants as well es'the outside growth. 1f the roots ere crowded the plant's growth will be stunted. Jelly it. will be cloudy. Nearly 2l,000 mile: of highwa, get mm. _____,_',\__<;.;..~.... V. . l m.“- wo- ..,,.,,~ . ,V_ g Jelly should be poured into the glasses ee soon l: it hes cooked suf- ficiently. If allowed to conical first. m Chine :re now open to motor traffic. In buikruptcycourt at Leeda, Enl- lend. Dr. H. P. Jone: admitted that emong hi: creditor; were 40 person: who ins pun zorfmm end cu m! before my baby was born and Vegetable Compound for had to lie down two hours ncrvousricss,tired feelings and every day. My mother pcr- underweight and it helped me waded me to try Lydia E. to general good health. M _ Plnkham’: Vegetable Com- nerves are much better and l pound. It has helped me won- have gained pep, have a good derfxiliy. My baby is not very appetite now and feel well and l big but he is strong and strongl am e housewife and healthy. l recommend the am able to do my work every Compound to every woman l day. I am willing to answer any hear complaining. i will be letters l receive from women lad to answer lencraP-Mrs. askin about V bio Co iliiam Hard . - un ."—-Mn. I Filei‘. ‘ Lvdizi E. Pinitimirfs. \ (fqcizliilv (‘uiriglrw-i-riii i Literature g a