PAGE EIGHT ¥wvwvvv¢—v‘ ¢v‘¢¢$#v*%¢¢‘v rW0 ‘#4? ‘vvvvvvvvv v~vv A 4 kkkk ‘a ‘an L¢v vvvvvvvwwvv 1v Vv ‘kmkm vw vw v1 wvvvwv ’ Realm -:- Social" THE (Jk1ARLU'l'1'l'J'1'UWN GUARDIAN _a%ifi vvvvvv-Vvvvv AQA‘AA AAAAL4L _..._,.__._.._. Who would come to others aid arust the price or sue! have Paid: l mixed with a. little minced onion ginning of a. meal may easily ‘be concocted from canned vegetables. Canned beats, cut. into dice and ow To Plck Your Son's Wlfe Dix LDiorothy If You're Thinking of Picking Out a Wife for Your Son, Don’t; Remember That He Has to Live With Her‘ — But if You Really AAAAA k‘ ‘kmk LAAAAAAA A A L‘ v V1 vv w vvvv v Vvvvvvvv v '- Fas rsonal -. i. w-vv Beauty is always admired I Win tbs cbam of a outb l skin witb Ibis semi len lotion-like alive and palm 0| s EVERY woman ion s forts skin that will bcadmired. “i150 t,youthfi.1l,lovel skin. Such a complexion can be yours, if you ollow 0 v v vvvvvvvv-vvvv vvvvvvvvvv i@8+L@w 44ALAAA a‘ V‘ ‘AUGUST 30. 1933‘ kkak AAAA g k A, Y Vrv -@m- AMomingSmila Wrong Pall An elderly German couple dadd- ed to buy the farm adjoining mau- property. The price agreed upon was $16,000, and they went ‘ ‘ town to conclude the deal. ‘may entered the bank, carrying an old battered milk pail with. a {in cover, which they act c nthe floor this simple beauty are. Morning and night, with both hands mas- sage a rich, creamy lather of Palmolive Soap and warm water ently into the pores of the face, throat and s oulders. Rinse thoroughly with warm. water followed by cold. Dry carefully. Palmolive’: soothing olive oil perutrata every ore, floats outthedustand dirtgathctcd daily by the skin, gives you the true foun- dation cleansing which brings out the healthy, youthful, natural colouring o£your skin. Buy 3 cakes oFPalmolivc today. Remember, Palmolive is the an! soap which brings you this rich, cosmetic lendrn of olive oil. Use Palmolive for only two wee s. Then, sec how truly beautiful your skin has become. “i110 would play tho pllfit’! Pm l-fust. the way have got by heart; who w uld be anothcns guide lcannpd smug beam, “ma beam’ WIT-W b? Film be ‘lllillllwil- ‘celery and tomato may be used in ‘ E- mmi-‘? 7\l"li!“"d-'tl1e same way, or the thick pert lof the tomato may be trsed alone. iAlmost. any combination prefer-mad --— -may be served as an appetizer, or Lt is a great thing to be trusted]; tomato asplc cut. into small cubes but" is u for hiZh" “Unit t“ bggjtny be served in cocktail glasses. 21v of trust. TROUBLE As we stand end-Kit"). ch rho huge tints come in. we run-run, tlrznking we shall be (tw-rwhrlntod: soon, however, they retard". S0 with the waves of srotrhft- in this worid; they threa- i111 w: but a firm resistance makes cw m brmk zit our foot. and marinated in French dressing are much favored by the lit-each. Must, Then Choose a Girl With High Principles between their chairs. when the time came to pay, the old farmar pulled the pail up on hia lap and started to count out an assortment of money, much of which had boon out of circulation for some time. Finally he reached the bottom and stopped, obviously very upset. "Why, theres only $14,000 here,“ be exclaimed. I-lia wife looked equally cortccrned for a moment, and then her fwa brightened. "Ach, paw. you brought wrong pail," aha explained. What a. Life l , “A moth spends an awful life." , “How ls that?“ ~ “Spends the summer in a fur coat and the winter in a bathing suit.“ ' My A correspondent asks: "If you won going to pick out a. wlfe for your son, what sort of girl would you choose?" Well, to begin with, I should not dream of assuming the responsibility " of picking out a wife for my son because l should realize that the girl who came up to my ideal might not fire his fancy at all. Also, I should reflect that as he waa the one who was going to have to live with the woman for the next thirty or forty years he had the right of selection, and that 1t was more important for him to be pleased with her than it was for me to put my O. K. on her. TRUST PAINTING LDXOLEIYM When the pattern on linoleum b? i116 lfl"5h°l'\“_bemmes badly mom-as in a. 1n:- chen—the housewife ls often wor- ried to know “that to do with it, especially if the fabric ls still good and likely to wear for many more months. In such a case it will gen- erally be found possible and econo- lmicul to paint over the cilcloth Iwith a sulabie color and make it: iservrrenble for twice its normal t --——- lwearing period. Of course. the ll- l- is in ~h~ minor actions of our ‘noleum should not be tracked to» 1 that our true character any serious extent. , Wash the linoleum verycarefnlly ‘and let it dry over night so that even the base is thoroughly dried iout. Use a plain color paint such as wood brown or a medium dark gffly as ls usctl for trorch floors: or you could use a. gray grcen de- in the kit- fill rm- huabands and wives are mostly a matter of taste, and why you like them or loathe them you can no more explain than you can why you think champagne the nectar of the gods, or a wlshy- washy something that tastes like weak vinegar. Nobody ever knows what any man sees in some particular woman that makes him single her out from the balance of her sex and desire her for his own. But it's there-some charm we do not behold, some kinship we do not feel, some quality we do not savor that appeals to him, and his happiness depends upon his getting what he wants. Sc the wife I would pick out for my son might bore him to death. The admirable creature that I might select might get upon his nerves. The model of all the virtues that. I would be sure was lust what he needed 1n a life mate might provoke him to divorce or murder. Of course, his own choice might not turn out any better than mine, but in marriage we have a. right, at least, to make our own mistakes. If, however, the onerous task of selecting my son's mato was laid upon me, I should conslder my son's needs in a wife even before I passed on the girl's qualifications for the Job. If he were a playboy, I should never pick out a sedate and serious maiden in the hope that she would be a. steadying influence, for I should lmow that sooner or later he would weary of the bonds by which she held him and break them. so I would pick out for him a little fllbbertlglbbet who would atop out with him and of whom he would never tire because she was a playmate instead of a. Now it costs less to keep that Schoolgirl Complexion CHAR AFTER 'I‘his should be bome in mind in the case of a blow ln the region of t the eye, since once a “black eye“ has deveioped. nothing will hasten its disappearance. THE COOK ’S ' CORNER Cheese Cream Puffs Daintiness lWith Chic Style: u! ‘armarsrtun won-imitators ‘O YYRTCES ~~—-— Burns Vtfvzcra rvhcn they stand alone, untrue us. Wlon we have mtlll’ to l» op our faults under, He new. w. rk is to keep our vices. prnrllng on the color n. If prawns try to keep their cimn tires evenly bitillllfTfl, they’ have, 1r me unodwmk 13 to be painted lingo uxlnck: but. lf they allow one I rm, you oculcl paint the woodwork ‘v . the rest, then they , n soft green, the wnlfs in a. medium ' n lrrou" minds ~5<’kv\'cli. ‘nuff and the-n have the floor a soft »~——-———-— ‘gray green slightly darker than the woodwork. This softer gray green Standing reproackm , . “mmd ‘M’ be 5° “Sill mum‘ n If my son was of the big, strong, masculine type, I would pick out for '1‘ (“Sim-t (m Warm 7m" 7mm‘ ‘he linoleum on“ p191“ him a clinging vlne who would always be lovely and helpless and appeal- 5“ "' ' TIT”, v foqm‘ n l‘: easily “l” m“ cum pm i‘ men“ m“ lug, and ask him what he thought she thought, and whom ‘he would have M f0 lymsf‘ d" Mound the edge in “m” d a. grand time protecting and benevolently basting. funk ll (m, gfllftllnfi in a little I sort, orange, P086 and l 51¢ °f If he showed signs of being a go-gettcr, I should choose as a wife for 5m“ m "k f” W‘ mkiuws’ m“ t him‘ ‘lepemlnb M “m” “Pa” hlm an ambitious, rather hard-boiled girl who was also on the up-attd-up Small burns sitould be dressed with petroleum jelly, medical, pa- raffin, olive oil, or boraclc oint- ment. and covered with gauae o1- clean white rag. Larger burns or scald; should not have any greasy preparation applied to them, since this gravely interferes with the tannlc acld_ treatment now universally used for such injuries. “ The best procedure in severe films is w wrap the mus in. blan- ket and keep him war-tn, and than in apply wet compresses to the in- jured areas. The compresses are made from clean soft cloth (old handker- cltlefs are good), soaked in luke- warm tea. The W0 l8 used because it eon- talns tannin acid. If there is none at. hand, heat the water and tea 1n a. saucepan, bring to the boil, and 0°01 by standing it in a basin of cold water. Get a friend to summon medical assistance at the earliest possible moment. . 1 cup boiling water ‘.6. cup shortening ‘A cup flour ‘.5 teaspoon salt Few grains cayenne ‘.5 cup grated cheese 2 esss Heat water and shortening to boiling point. Add flour, salt and cayenne, stirring constantly, and . cook until mixture leaves sides of pan. Add cheese and mix well. Cool. Add unbeaten eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Drop by teaspoonfuls on a greased pan, making small balls. Cook in a unodcratc oven 30 to 40 minutes. servings, 48, It is the last word inohlc for! vacation in brown and white plaid- ed gingham. ' It has such smart details, as the ' raglan shoulders, diminutive boylsl\_{ type collar and adds an inverted‘ plult to its slim skirt for animation. The front bodice closes with brown silk cord that matches the wide brown patent leather belt. You'll look like a. picture in it, it's so youthful and different. Just a. few yarda of gingham and about an hour of your time! Sendl for your pattern today! It's smart? economy. Style No. 9'13 la designed in sizes 14, 1B, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and l0 inches bust. Size 16 requires 4 yards 35-inch with 1A yard 35-inch. contrasting. Price of PATPPERN 15 contain stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully, ("HERB Y FTYADI ll 711'.“ Ht! tm-r a slow heat. _ your slvllfll 11951?‘- and who would rather her husband said it with a check than with lovey- milk “rim dovey sentimental twaddle; the kind of a girl who would be a. show Sugar’ ‘ few , window for he: husband. and. help him to prosperity by looking prosperous Add the ; APP“ 53"" Nun! and knOwlng how to spend his money when he made it. " °“P °h°lll°sl Mix one cup sable swce with an And, u my son was an egotlst, I'd pick out. a. wife for him who was d r° a W]? “d ‘ 5mm m‘? i Cqilfll quanlity 0f Whipped Cfefim. an adept incense-burner and who would be content to spend her llfe ad- ‘ °““’"“£ 255320635 °l l addins two tablespoons of chopped mlring and worshiping ‘him, which 1s a soothing thing to the vanity of Sh; ‘my ° a e Pm“! preserved ginger. any husbami PM“ ma’ a “netted mmfld “(L class t? wthlgamn? idlwénlggomgfimah: 'n:{n€§lerti1xi?' 5:213:02: xvii“ 13”‘ sum a gmfddzh domesticity harmony so much as for a husband and wife to have the a" f "(Pom e w‘ M“: e ' same standards of living, to have been brought up in the same traditions, nronus and strips of angelica. m have the same hflbm and the “m, “mes m Paloma and ppm __“_'_“~*" I should never pick out a. slob. girl for my son, for when the wife handles the pocketbook it not only nearly always has a. Yale lock on it, but she regards her husband as a. slave she has bought and who has to do her bidding. Nor should I think out for him a. girl who was following r. career, because 1 regard marriage and the making of a home and rearing children gas a whole-time Job, and not a aide issue that a woman can turn off with her left hand while she is not busy with lecturing or giving con- certs or running some business. . I should pick out for my son's wife a girl whose mother had instilled in her in her cradle the principles of honor and honmty and clean living, a girl who was as particular and dainty about her morals as she was about her lingerie. And I should like her to be a girl who bad been taught the domestic arts, how to cook and make a comfortable home, and how to spend money wisely and vrell, for I should hate to mist my son's stomach to a. wife who would poison him with bad food, or to see his hard-earned money being thrown into the garbage ow- I should pick out for my son's wife a. girl with good, hard horse sense, for then I would know that she would meet all of the difficulties of mar- ried life with poise and judgment. She would not rnake mountains out of molehills and have hysterics every time the cook left, or the babies had the collc. She would not consider herself neglected if a. busy man didn't notice every time she put on s. new dreu. And she wouldn't expect too . 2 pint of tahlvsprmns . 4on0 kernels. . azuvd golntlne, w»: ' Cheese and Bloc croquelu-s 1 em; 2 tablespoons butter Few grains salt Pepper 2 cups cold boiled rico 1 pound soft cheese. Add egg, butter and salt and pep- per to rice, and mix well. Form cheese into small balls. Cover these with the rice mixture on all sides so that the cheese will be inside the rice covering. Form into balls. Dlp in flne crumbs, beaten egg and again in crumbs. Fry in hot, deep fat. Serve with cheese sauce. Trifle With Pineapple 1% cups cake crumbs 2 cups diced, sweetened pineapple h cup blanched browned almonds l/k cup moist. cocoanut l 1% cup thick custard 1.5 cup cream, whipped Arrange the above mgredlents in a serving bowl in the order given. Gamish with mounds of whipped cream and pineapple slices. -_.-._-_._.._—-__-.-q Appgnzgns N0. 9'73. Bias .............--..--.. Appetizers for serving at Vite be- Fractures . . . . . . . . . ..-....-.~...u-..-.-.---. We cannot deal here with the first add treatment of graotumg since it is n. complex subject, but fractures in children will not suf- fer from being left alone until skilled aalstance la obtained. but be careful not. to overlook a. mo- ture. A baby who has been dropp- ed or has fallen from a. high chair, or a. child who complains of pain in a limb following a. fall, should always be examined by c. doctor. Otherwise partial fractures and cracks at the end of bones may be 0117? discovered when defective growth takes place. ¢——-~- Btreet Address They talk while you EAT! auKelloggfi Rice Krlaplea actually snap, crackle Ifnd pop in milk or cream. --That’s the cheery mes- maago of crispness you get us you enjoy the dclight- ‘ ful flavor. Butterscotch Cake Frosting 3 tablespoons butter 2 cups powdered sugar 1% tablespoons milk 1,6 teaspoon vanilla. Brown the butter, and while hot- stir in the sugar. Remove from fire and stir thoroughly. Add milk and vanilla, mix until smooth, add one- half cup ground pecans. Spread thickly over the cake. Cheese Sauce —-——- State 1% cups yellow cheese 1 tablespoon butter *4 cup milk Salt Pepper Mustard Few grains cayenne 1 egg Melt cheese with butter, add milk, season with salt, pepper, mustard and Cayenne. When smooth, add a beaten egg. When well cooked over For the first 33 weeks of i938, ending August 17th. the number of hogs graded in Canada was. 1.999.- 486. ‘GARBUS GREAT TRUE STORY BEGINS FRIDAY. to Cherry Jam Made With Pectin words-n B031“ 4 packed cups <2 lbs.) pitted, crushed charm”, We will conclude our chapter of Nourishing toasted rive. Easy to digest. Tlrmpting for any lmenl- dilzule by Kellogg ill Imndnn, Ontario. l ‘~§\\\:}_‘$\5 \\\ \\\\‘e.\ * l4 cup water 7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar 1 bottle liquid pectin Use only fully ripened fruit. Pit cherries. crush ‘thoroughly and measure into large kettle. Add wat- er, stir until mixture bolls, cover and simmer 15 minutes. Measure sugar into preserving pan. Add prepared fruit, packing each cup solidly and filling up the last cup or making up weight with water, if necessary. Mix well, and bring to full rolling boll over hot- test fire. Stir constantly before and whlla boiling. Boll hard 3 minutes. Remove from fire and stir in pec- tin. Then stir and skim by turns for just l5 minutes to cool slightly to prevent floating fruit. Pour quickly Cover hot Jam with film of hot par- affin; when Jam ls cold, cover with 1,6 inch hot paraffin. The conserve is a delicious one for the Jam cupboard either as a. breakfast sweet or a garnish for puddings and pastries as it ls exact- ly the color of fresh, ripe cherries and is clear and sparkling. STUFFED TOMATOES Ono cup soft breadcrumbs, quar- ter cup milk, one tablespoon melt- ed butter. quarter- teaspoon salt, pepper, onion Juice or grated onion six tomatoes. a little poultry sea- soniud-tbyme or savoury. Molsten breadcrumbs with milk, much of her husband, but take him as be was and make the best of him. I should pick out a. good-natured and cheerful girl for my son's wife, for it is the wife's disposition a. man has to live with and that determines whether the barometer of the home is set at fair and warm, or cold and stormy. I'd pick out for my son's wife a girl who was a good sport. Ono who could take matrimony on the chin and come up smiling. would play the game and do good team work. One who was no qultter, but who would stand by her man through thick and thin. And, lastly, I would pick out for my son's wile a girl who lovt-d him for himself alone, for a. wife has to have a- lot of love to stand any And if she loved him enough, perhaps the balance woman's son. wouldn't matter. accidents with a consideration of "foreign bodies." A foreign body in the eye is eas- ily removed with a fine camel hair brush or a. twist of cotton wool. Beads and other oddmenta that two-ycar-olds like to insert into their noses and ears are usually readily removed by a doctor. Please do not make any attempt to re- move them yourself; you will only bush them ln further. Finally. let us remind you that a One who DORDTHY DIX. First Aid To In Accident Time stitch ln time ssvea much more than nine that. prevention ls lesa trouble than _cure, and that cure is snore often an ideal than a. pos- slblllty. Children IDEAS ABOUT PRES SINQ While we must take eve?! res.- sonable precaution to prevent ac- cldents happening to children, we must also be prepared to deal promptly and properly with any accident that occurs. Cuts, grapes, and bruises are perhaps the commonest injuries to which they subject themselves, and we will deal with them first. Small Cilia Small outs on the hand or foot should be cleansed with plain warm water, and then kept cover- ed with bcraclc llnt until healed. 'l‘o bring up the corded affect on pique dresses, press them on the wrong aide. Linen, because it requires a. glos- sy finish, should be pressed on the right side. Both real and artificial show iron marks very should be ironed side. The visit. to the ironing board will be simplified if you bear ln m» - ma»'3.22.933.".i'fifl.iii'.il°tlt.li $6219“: “ma “t: nlerwrofibe practically dry before pressing; ’ ‘laliks should be damped slightly chrome or iodine. The more severe more and the “on should be a up Lifter cuts and cuts on your face may require stitching, and your doctor should be consulted as to this wlflhout delay. fl a cm; on the face be left to heal by itself u, may m». and the space between the eds“ Mala by beins filled with scar-thus. A broad. ugly scar resuta instead of the mm 11m of the carefully stitched wound. silks easily and on the wrong Graces hot water, beat it with an ggg- beater. I oo++o0+o+ i GARDENING l O§4+§944§§4 Many garden makers who are familiar with the common lrlses have not become acquainted with the miniature kinds which are now b91118 wld for use in rock gardens. There ls little place for these dwarf kinds in tho perennial borders, but they are thoroughly at home among the rocks, and. are among the chole- est flowers of springtime, coming weeks ahead of their taller relatives. Some ol thesé dwarf growing lrisca are bulbous species from the Cau- casus, but they thrive even in the northern states. The flowers are reddish purple with golden stamens and are violet scented. The ao-call- ed crcstcd lrlses are also lovely flow- ers for the rock garden. Among thorn is the delicate and fragrant Iris crlstata, blue in color and del- icately fragrant. Someone has said that these crested irlaes are as del- icate as hand-painted china. They get their names from the fact that they have crests instead of beards. Plant. them now. Despite the heavy export during the past crop year of Canada's graln, HAT is there about this strange and silent woman that will send sixty million people throughout the civilized world to the picture shows to sec her act? What is there that will start sixty million discussions whenever she acts? We begin to understand for the first time, when we read the true story of Greta Garbo and the true love story that has been woven through her life, the decisions she has been forced to make. And then we understand what all the argument is about. We begin to see how the ex- ‘rhe lint is usually kept in place pcricncc of this woman parallels the experience of millions of other “W” “m” hi“ “m” b“ ‘Wm tle hotter; cottons should be damp- the Dominion enters the new cm women throughout the world. -»—<>0<>-<- TWO MILLION COPIES OF TRUE STORY MAGAZINE Now BEING RUSl-IED TO otsrtuaurons flfiii-‘(i EIGHT‘! THOUSAND DEKLERS READY FOR SAL?‘ For this is no idle. expend from Hollywood. It is thoughtfill: powerful, stirringdrama that goes deep into our lives, especially into the livcs of the millims upon millions of everyday women who have had plenty of talent for tho making of a career and who havo had to surrender that talent to the making of a home. ' Garbo has no children. She will probably never have any children. Garbo has no homdli She will probably never have any: home. Here is a great human document, as deep as life itself. True Story Magazine, contain», ing the first chapters of this great True Story will be ready on Fri-i add onion; and a m; u, melted beet by sine oxide pastor, a roll of covered. a 1 we“ , _ butter and add to crumbs, remove which-half an inch wide— should Little can be done for the aver- fiultehdamp, wnllilie lanmmofi: iggrbmguuofagie-Zzelfiwtmm- centres from tomatoes, fill wlthll-lwaya be kept at hand. The plas- ago bruise, but 911111961559 l/Pbllw- iron should be used for each. third more than was on hand on this mixture. Bake in greased bak- ter should be applied firmly, so la tlnn of a cold wator cqmppgg‘ m; Stunned mo“ should be mo“ August 1 m“ yawn The camqwer 111g dLsh, 1n modern oven, till loma- to exert pressure on the wound and or lead lotion will very much m. ougmy damp and pwssed quickly o, other gnu“ Wm exceed w Mm we: are tender. ao stop bleedlnf ducc m resultant discoloration. with a. very hot iron. ooo amen ‘ ' ' ' ~ . . . . . .. . .. \‘\\‘ s8 day, September rst. Better tell your dealer today to hold a copy for you when it comes. We begin to sec that the decision she made is the decision that mil- lions of others have to make. $ .._. f 1,4143%’, (f; ..._, <1