~ Woman as _»;*..':f'.:=:-r PAGE EIGHT . - OOQ§§§4§4§4444£§§§4OQOQQQOOOOOJOOQOOODOOO000900000OOOOOQOOQOOOQo§§§§§§§§§§+§§O&O§§0OOOO§O4)§§§QOO§O ' Ua?’*'.‘.i"'**- d _‘ ' THE CHARLOTTETOWN .“‘k“xk‘xAA‘Akxk kkkkknkxk AA AAA A AQLAAAA AA OOOQQQOQQOOO4 vvvvvvvvvv vvvvvvvvvvv v vvffvvvvvwvvvvvvi v 1 lWoman’ss Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- ‘HOO OOOOQQOO-O-O-O-QOO1QWKW 5““C MORSPS BLUENOSE " 'I'_H_E rail‘ roa Tastes Good-Spend_s Well _ Only 35c per pound package; I81: per half pound ECONOMY Ibcre lS a Hand that bends our, deeds flfcate skzn merely burns and peels, To mghtier issues than we plan- ed; Each sou the‘ tvixiaii, I bleeds My country, serves its dark com- mand. . (sch that I do no! know beneath who‘ slcyzi Ncr on what sea: ...l1l be thy fate: I only lmozv- it shall b: high. I only know it shall be great. —R:chard Hcvcy. FOR SFXBYRI. Let the woman who never has been siutbumed laugh at those who have. Nobody who has exper- ienced the {Hill of DIISfTFiIZZ will smile. ‘ ' Why people go out and get ac- tually blistered is difilcuit to un- derstand. Nona of them wuiid Ml- lingly put their hands nu .1 siove. Yet they some home Sfllfllilllil and it is often days before they feel rigiht. . _ If you are amually sun-bumed. CODY take if. litzhtiy. There 5mg olntments for burns ~that are tre- mendously soothing. Perhaps your pet pharmacy puts up its own lo- tion that looks like caicimine which you paint over your bumed arms and legs to relieve them im_ mensely. Certainly you should do something right away about it, The best way m treat sunburn is to avoid it. That can be done nicely, if you take a. little trouble. Use one of’ the oils, compounded to protect the skin frcm’ burning, be- fore you start. Dust powder over it before you leave. The powder is additional precautim. You can get; B. sun tan nzcrlv through the oil‘ and powder. But you won't burn so easily. Wear a. big hat or don't. LISTEN MOTHER . . . to this! J CST hear Rice Krispiea snap and crackle iu milk or cream! That’s how crisp these toasted rice bubbles are. That's why children love ihcln. And Kellogg's Rico Krispics are so good for everybody. Nmrrishing rice. Easy in digest. Al- ways oven-fresh. lllnrle by Kellogg in London, Ontario. szav rm lnuc in the qiaring sun. some nonlen simply can't get a Sllfliifin. Often the fairest, most de- ‘izeirher stare addng to its beauty. {Tl ll‘|\'i!‘.’.', such delicate skins or . s affected that way should lo. .1 by experience that it is much "bczter to be comfortable than aty- ,l;sh, and stav out of excmslve sun. S $ELEPT YOYR F-IlMHIER. COS- METICS IVITII CARE Summer heat has a way of dis- solving your cosmetics. The best way to keep your face locking as though it has been freshly made up is to got cosmetics which stay on in spite of the heat. A cream rouge will go on easily land evenly and stay on all clay. ,It will even resist clear water. Soap suds, or a cleansing cream, must be used to take it off. Don't forget. the rule for cream rouge. You simply have to use a foundation cream on ycur skin be- fore you put it 011. Dry roilae may be applied after you have powder- ed. Need A Wife , Ba a Good Cook ‘I ‘~. *1 The Reason That There is S0 Much Divorce is That the Cocktail - Shaker and-the Can- Olaener Have Superseded Pots and Pans, Says Dorothy Dix - The Heart of a Home is Not the Drawing Room, it is the Kitchen A girl said to me the other day: "Why do yiou put so much stress 0n women lacing good housekeepers and knowing how to cock? When I man-y I want to appeal to my husband's heart and soul, not his stomach, and for him to love and cherish me for some high- er reason than because I can make bread like his mother vised to make. Anyway, what difference dods it. make whether a girl can perform on a. gas range or not in these days when virtually every bridal couple go to live in a kitchenette apartment and forage around in restaurants for their 100d. and the only thing they ever cook up at home is a cocktail?" And the reason there is so much divorce, I rc- plied, is that the cocktail-shaker and can-opener have superseded pots and pans, and girls are hand- , ier at mixing Bronxes and Old-Fashioneds than they are at making pies. There is nothing in a liquid diet that nourishes the domestic feeling, nor can you ever feel settled in a place from which you are forever going out. to get something toeat. The heart of the home is not the drawing room nor the library. It 1s the kitchen, and what. we call the home atmosphere is no spiritual eman- ation. It ls the aroma of good cooking that salutes a man's nostrils as he opens the front door of an evening when he returns tired from his day's work, and that magically rests him and wipes all of his cares and worries away and fills him with peace and optimism. When you think of a happy home you automatically picture to your- self a. family sitting down to a savory and well-cooked meal, which they cat with the gaycty and laughter and good talk that goes with good cook- ing. But no one has. imagination enough to vision a happy home in which the family put on their hats every evening and go out to seek their sustenance in cafeterias or restaurants, or a home in which villalnously ‘prepared fond is eaien tn a lune of criticisms and wrangllngs. _ A wise woman, when asked how to hold a husband, replied: "Feed the brute." And that little advice still goes. Not all the sorceries ever practiced by sirens, from Lilith down, are so potent to draw a, man back When your face has been clean- ed, smooth on a. tiny little bit of foundation cream. Now take a small amount of the foamy cream rouge and make a. dot. lnvthe cen- tre of each check. Blend it up- ward and outward wit hyour fore- fingers, according t0 the shape 0f your face. When it is all smooth and even, pat on your powder with a piece of clean cotton. It is an excellent idea. to get your rouge and lipstick at the same time, from the same place. In that way, the beautician can tell just what shades of each you require; Also, you'll be sure that they harmonize. Dull finish powders are highly reczmmcnded for summer. They take away all shiny effects and they do stay on a 1mg time. IF YOU'VE SYMPTOMS JAUNDICE, SEE DOCTOR Yesterday a middle-aged woman completely yellow from jaundice came to ask what could be clone abvut it, wrlrcs a doctor, and when I inquired how long she had been like it she toicl mo nearly two months. Jaundioe can be due to many different causes, scone of them serious, some of them slight; but whatever the cause the Jaundice it- self, if not relieved, is very bad for you. ' Often you may feel quite well for a long time with the jaundice, hut. soc-n you begin to lose wefght and strength and to become se- verely pulled dmvn. It is therefore a great mistake, however well you may be feeling with it, not. in go so soon as. you beclme jauud rcrl tn see a doctor about it. Only the doctor will b0 able to discover the cause and to proscrib" the proper treatment; but. the longer you leave it before going to him the more difficult will his probicm be of treating it. suc- ccssfulfy. In many cases orwration is neces- mrl’; but here, cspwfinlly if you have alfnworl the laurdice to pull yru d'wn, the difficulty of tho. operation is greatly increased. OF WOMEN HOLD EYE AT PRJX l m; pram: i PARIS. July la-rt was a great day at Chantilly when the. Barrvn Erlouard do Rnthwvhlldfls Vendangc to his own fireside of an evening as is the knowledge that at homo he will find the dishes he likes host, cooked exactly the way he likes them. A woman may be as beautiful as a cinema. star, she may be as highly educated as a college professor, and as witty a wisecracker as a club host- ess. She may be as long-suffering and meek as Patient Griselda, but all of her virtues will avail her nothing if she doesn't make her husband a comfortable home. . That is what. he married fora. ‘That is what he expected to get. That is what he assumed to be his wife's end of the matrimonial partnership. And he feels himself defrauded when she falls down on her end of the Job and forces him to live in a house that looks like a pigsty, and to eat food that would poison an ostrich. When God made men's stomachs bigger than their hearts he handed wives a. tip they are wise to take. If they want to keep their husbands GUARDIAN Vvkkxvk AAAAAA From his in oils of olive and Pa molive, which is ma e throat, neck and should treatment described above slain-And Baby's i Fash '05; first Bath Protect your baby’: skin wilb {be on! ma) whose unique power to safiguard eaut lie} in tbe secret blend of its cosmetic oi I BABY'S tender skin demands special care. For this cue, nothing equals the sooth- alm. That is why of a secret blchd - ' cf these very oils, is the ideal soap for Baby. l: protects infant's skin from irritation and chaffing, keeps it clear, Soft and healthy. Mommy and night, give baby-mud your- aclfl-thc oliowing sim lc treatment: With both hands, work up at ick, rich lather with Palmolive and warm water. Massage face, ers gently, while Palmolive‘: creamy foam penetrates the ores. Rinse well, dry gently. The skin is llr. soft, smooth, delightful. ' Buy 3 cakes today! Follow regularly the . Then notice the smoothness, the softness, the charm of your Keep that Schoolgirl Complexion 4A4‘ s-: vv v Lite‘ vvvv vv THE COOK’S i‘ comvsze ' i DAFFODIL CAKE 1 cup sifted cake flour 11.; cupegg whites (about 10 to 12) 1,5 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cream of tartar Ill cups sifted sugar ll teaspoon vanilla 1.5 teaspoon orange extract 4 egg yolks, beaten until thick and lemon-colored. Sift flour once, measure and sift four times more. Beat egg whites and salt with a flat wire whisk. When foamy, add cream of tartar and continue beating until stiff enough to hold up in peaks but not dry. Fold ln sugar carefully, two table- spoons at a time. Sift small quantity of flour over mixture, fold in care- fully; continue until all is used. Divide mixture into two parts. To one add vanilla. To the other add orange extract and fold in the egg yolks. Put. by tablespoons into un- greased angel food pan, alternating yellow and white mixtures. Bake in rating out of their hands, they must keep angels’ food in them. It is when cold paper-bag food comes onto the table that love flies out at the window. Good cooking and good housc-keep ing not only furnish the environment in which alone domesticity can reach its perfect flower, but they con- serve a man's llcafth and augment. his chances of success in the world. When a. man marries he puts his ph ysical well-being into his wife's hands and it is mainly up to her whether he is going strong at ‘l0 or is a nervous wreck at 40. ‘ she can starve him on an ill-balanced dietuntil he hasn't enough strength and pop left even to nsk for a raise in pay. She can turn him into such a crmlchy (lfiéflvllilC that. nobody will have anything to do with him. Or she can feed him up until he is so hale and hearty and so over- flowing with vitality and enthusiasm that he could sell you an orange grove in Nova Scotlu. ‘ Many a man quarrels with his partner or his. best customer or insults his wealthiest patient with a chronic disease, or turns down the proposi- tion that Wfillld have made him a fortune simply because his wife gave him a breakfast of stodgy cakes and five-minute eggs. It is because the success of every marriage depends just as much upon a. woman being a good housekeeper as itdoes upon a man being a good provider; it is because the continuance cf love depends upon n. clean house and well-cooked food that I stress domesticity for women. More than that, I urge every girl i0 learn how to keep house and to cook BE- FORE she marries instead of waiting to acquire these accomplishments by practicing upon her poor, unsuspecting victim of a husbaml. For the first disillusionment the young husband gets in when he finds out that his Wonder Woman is utterly incapable of fulfilling the job she has undertaken. and the first quarrel, nine times out of fen, takes place and underdone bread. Then things are said that never would have been said and wounds dealt that never would have been dealt if only tht girl had known how to cook. i Failure to pmvirlr- are the ywunrls on which many a. woman gets a, divorce, And failure lo be a good housekeeper is vivhat makes most men want a divorce DOROTHY DXX. l wore black and wlfto silk, with aQUILT CUT IN 1875 IS FINALLY white lncktt. and silver fox fur and COMPLETED a big hat trimmed in black, while and green aigrcttcs. Lady Granard, who entered a horse in the race last year, hnd on a navy blue fouilnrd dress with white dots all over 1t. and her daughter, Larly Moira Forbes, w-as just. that. lov'ely' looking in pale blue flowered mousseline de solo, with a large white hat trimmed in blue. TITONVLLE, 0., July l7-—-A quilt for which the aqua-nee were out in 1875 has recently been piec- ed together and is on display hen, The squares were cut by lvn-g. Wzlliam Ellis when she was leaving for a new home in 1875, and were Pieced together by the present own er, Mrs. Charles Ellis, of Martins Ferry, O. Of 24 names embroidered on‘ tho quilt, only five still are living. NURSERY BREAD The following is n. wholesome when she sits llllTl down to n. dinner of burned meat and soggy potatoes . Drum “ e‘ q; "He and She." Grade III. Vocal B010, Irene Curley. oral Expression in several sub- jccts, Grade X. Red Cross Drill, Six girls. Dialogue, "Bertha as Teacher," Senior grades. _ ' Table Match, Grades u. III. Drill, "Red Gross Juniors," Fift- een primary pupils. Oral Expression in several suib- Jects, Grad! VI. Display of Seat Work. Dialogue, "A Troubled witness." Four senior boys. Vocal solo, Helen Hurry. Presentation of Certificates and prizes: MlacLean senior Certificates for Penmanship were presented to L11- llan Hurry. Isabel Curley, Ilene] Curley, Laura. Stetson, Raymond‘ MacKlnnorn, Jack Bell and Ivan Roberts. _ Mr. Cameron's prize for attend- ance was won by Lloyd Gates. The prizes for the highest aver- age in the Senior grades were won by: 1., Lillian Hurry; 2., Raymond MacKinnon; 3.,‘ Cedric Stetson; 4., and a slow over (300 degrees F.) 60 to 70 minutes. Invert on rack until cake is cold, then remove from tin. CHERRY CONSIIRVE The dark red sour cherries make an excellent conserve when com-, bined in following proportions: One quart cherries, one medium ornhge, two ounces raisins, one or two ounces nut meats, one and mm- quamr pounds sugar. Run the orange through the fine cutter of the food chopper. Boil slowly with one pint water 1n covered vessel for 30 to 40 minutes. Pit. the cherries and run them and the raisins through the medium fine cutter of food chopper. The nut meats may be run through food chopper, cut with a knife, cr broken with the fingers. When the orange has become tender add the cherries and raisins and boil moderately in open vessel until approximately one-half the juice has‘ evaporated. Stinoften to pro- vent burning. Add__the sugar and' boil rapidly until the hot pulps will mound upon the spoon or until the syrup is sufficiently concentrated to give the jelly test. Remove the conserve from the fire and allow to cool for three to five mmutes. Stir in the nut meats and fill into clean dry jars. Partially seal the Jars and process in boiling water for five to eight minutes. WEST ROYALTY SCHOOL West Royalty school held its closing exercises on Thursday, Juno 29. The school room was fil- led with wide-awake pupils and in- terested visitors. Mllfih credit is due to the teacher, was Ruby Bte- wart, for the amount of work she accomplished during the year. ‘Ilhe special visitors from Char- '“‘ nwerclztfnandMi-ailwen Tommy Jackson and Maurice Cur- ley. On behalf of the pupils, Lillian Hurry came forward and read an address, while Isabel qurley pre- sented the teacher with a valuable present. The singing of the Na- tional Anthem brought the exer- cises to a. close. The following day, June 80, the pupils, parents and. friends gather- ed at the shore for their annual school picnic. The afternoon was. spent in bathing and sports, after which a. bountiful supper was serv- ed by the ladies. Thus an enjoyable school year ended. Kansas Rich KANSAS HAS RIOHPOTAIOOR --Involuntary acreage reduction. effective crop control applied by mother nature, has caused pros- perity to potato-growers cf this region. Plowshares are turning up acres of potatoes in Kaw Valley, rwherc last year they weren't worth the cost of harvest. From Kansas City to Manhattan, on both sides of the Kaw River, farmers were diligently at work "picking spuds." Buyers, bidding eagerly for every carload ready for shipment, pay the farmers cash on the spot. Prices in the valley range from $2 to $2.15, 100 pounds, ‘with a few extra select shipments bringing $225. Even culls, worthlesl last season, bring '75 cents. I'E.'.EF.E!.'.O FRIEND Potato Crop _ GIRLS FACE CREAM TEST—RE- FUTE CRITICS A woman doctor in the current imue of the British Medical Jour- nal refutes some of the “sweepil-lg" condmnnatlorm of comet's: by many medical men. ‘ She is Dr. Alice Carleton, 151st- ant physlclaxt in the department of Dermatology, at Radcliffe ,1!!- fimmry, Oxford, where she experi- mcntxd with vanialung cream on girl undergraduates. Skin's Natural Oils “One sometimes hears the com- plaint that. it is ‘unrmturaP to put I creams and lotions on the akin," she writes, “but it is equally ‘un- natural’ to wash off the natural oils with soap and water." Dealing with cosmetics in detail aha says that lipstick: consist of a varying mixture of paraffin, lan- olin and spennaceti, with a dye- AAAQAALA AQAA A: stuff. _ They scarcely ever cause irrita- tion, and any trouble that arises generally disappears with a change of lipstick. vlessly white. Subtly fragrant. ' . 'JIJLY19.1933"-ii i 4*“:]*::‘~~,~e%' tare i Cl AMomiileSmili v - Two Welshman visiting lmdol for the nraftime canto mop cl ofIice in one o! the main ltnotifl. Thinking itwaa a mop, cm o! ‘i opened the door and. misc “What do you sell here?" "Ono of the clerks, thinking I have a Joke at the Welshman‘! on penle. answered, “Monkeys?! ' ~43? "Well," returned the Wallhmlu "you must have been doing l. rou- ing trade if there's only two cf you left." Village Policeman - You can't gr g‘ through here with your cut-out , Opfll. - Motorist-But- I have no cut-cuisi- on this car. _ , Policeman-Then get one put or Ind keep it closed. ‘I'm majority of rue and toilet powdeln ‘are entirely harmless. tho‘ use of lead ccmpounds which made Ii Q old-fashioned powders very dan- i. genus being now abandoned by xv- puvtable manufacturers. The quality o1 cold creams dc- pends on the fineness of division of the fats contained in them Dr. Carleton adds. Creamed One Cheek ‘ _ After dealing fully with the , gers of certain "wrinkle remove. hair dyes and lotions. she describe! an experiment with a. varushing cream on 40 girls-mostly under? ‘ graduates. These girls used the cream on one side of the face only for over . a month. In 13 cases "treated" side were beneficial, in 24 cases there was "iw change,‘ and in only one out of the 40 cu- es did the cream cause drynea of the skin. » the results ofthr ' nPersian Balm promotes daiuti- ness. charm and beauty. It is un- rivalled in its magical effect on thl ; _ skin. Swiftly absorbed by the til- sues, it leaves never a vestige of ‘stickiness. Delightfully cool to the skin. Stimulating and irlrxgoratirlg. Softens and makes the hands flaw- 1m. parts youth and loveliness to the v complexion. Persian Balm is the in- evitable choice of the woman who ' cares. WITH EVERY ‘Daintiness. With Chic Styles ILLUSTRATED DKESSMIKING LESSON FURNISHED PATTERN III ANNABILLI WOBTIIINGTON ' siil i; ~~~ .~. n~~~, ¢..;.E< won the Prlx de Diane, and all the kind o; bread whmh chum-en like smart ladcs of fashion won all thelsllmd and buttered. Into 6 cups of couture honors of the Social Sea- flour rub two Ounces m’ butter and Cameron. Mr. Cameron had at- tended the old school in West Roy- alty. ‘rhis spring, he presented to DURING BABY'S TEETHING TIME son here. 'l'.‘.f_‘l‘6 was Mme. lvlartinez de Hoz, whore husband had an entry,i Iibcriacl, and her brunette loveli- ness was enhanced by her outfit of pile hyacinth blue crepe. She wore a pinch of salt. Add one pound of sultanas and a cup of sugar and mix well. Crumble’ an ounce of yeast into the basin, and with about half a cup cf lukewarm milk mix it to a cream. Make a hole in The Bowel: Become Loon Diflrrhwl. dysentery, colic, cram manifest themselves; the gums come swollen, and cankora form in the mouth. This in the time when the mother should use the school, two nicely framed pic- tures. one of the old building and the other of the new school house. THE FAMILY i b . No. sao-larmuuva Model. style is designed in 118G! t6, 1B, 20 years, 86, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inchel 'I‘hls Ha also gave a largo book for a prize, which was awarded to Lloyd KRIS ‘W: cruilin n: CIIAM a wldc-brnuncd hat of the some shade. the crown of which was trimmrd with lacquer red velveti 1V1‘ Srloves also were of blue. with a cloth and keep warm for IThe Prince-rs d" ‘Faucigny-Lll- three quarters of an hour. Then cinge wore block and white in alknead it lightly with enough warm PTlIliPd CTFDe de. chine, with a [milk to make a stlffish dough, co- large black straw hat. Mrs. John R. ver agah. and sot asde for an DTP"! W85 WW Bay in a dress of ‘hour in a warm place. Knead azrn, |hrizht blue and white, with a large ‘imake it up into 51X rolls and bake the centre of the flour, pour in "the creamed yeast, sprinkle a time flour over it, cover the mixture Gates, ago B, for best attendance, Lloyd having missed only half a day during the school year. The folluwins program was car- ried out. Address of Welcome, Athol Rob- arts. Canadian History. Grade IV. Reading, "A Little Schoollnlfam." and who! we the baby's life. ceoigma ‘Trainer. On the market for 88 lbluc hat. Tne Countess Oonstantlniiin a not oven, Reader lessons and Number bust Incum- Bin 36 requires 4 yards of 30-inch material. Io. ODD-Smart Simplicity. Thin style is dclllllfid in aim N, ll, ll, 20 years, 36, 88 and 40 inches bud measure. size 16 requires 256 yardl of 89-inch mntérill with 1% ymh of 35-inch contrasting. _ No, Dis-Dainty Home Hock. This style is designed in lilo: 18, ll, 20 years, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inohel bust meuum size 16 rcquiru 3% yards oral-inch moterill wittfm Soot/aim] Ilrillinr] rm, 50c. a bottle azyiilnémgglm NI or deal Ladders, Grades I. and II. m Ylljdl 0! 85-inch Will-lilting and CK I yards 9f binding. No. fill-Practical TYDQ- ‘Phil style is designed in sizes 8. l0, 12 In! -~ 14 yam. Btu 8 requirta 1% 7min‘ of 30-inch material with 1% Yl-Nl ma» i, , of 35-inch contrasting and 1 yard of ribbon for bow, q N0. lflil-Adcrlblo Blouu. ‘B!!! style in designed iii-aim u. 10.1w :0 ysmjao am an inchal mamm. sine 16 requires flit yard: of 80-inch material with if yard su-mail nam- ~ Mlplttlrnl i6 centainntampla/ coin (coin preferred.) Wrap och-- . carefully. Hn-raunnnunains“:us. M5 .5, i i 6'