4- PAGE EIGHT gllfe"? A L AAA A v v vvv vvv v HOSPITALITY Mix a little starch with mllk and By Henryrvan Dyke The lintel low enough W keen out pomp and pride, ‘the threshold high enough to turn deceit aside, . The door-builds istrong enough from robbcrs to defend. The door will open at a touch to every fricnd. clothes. It will prevent streakiness and clothes will dry quicker. with a clean piece of rough towel; civr. YOUR nor A 00o h will‘ ‘he “w” The 510:7 is told of "l-laney“ the HOLIDAYS dog that, Ahrahanm Lincoln, \'.l'2("ll al boy. on his wav hcmc from the mzll. w;th a big or corn men] on his but Iffllllfl at the inoi of a r1'-I-¢1niw— hLs leg broken ‘lite ha: of mcal on h: ‘ shculticrs. the do: in his armswriflrk “gs our meals Ymmg Lincd“ ""69 m5 ‘WY l" hl-‘Jarc- arrrlngcd at on: own pleasure: cabin home in the K1104 Crrck Hills ‘m, do,” have to be anywhere a; MEAN A n,’ Kentucl-zv. where he airrl h stem. > I 1mm. mother Nancy flank: Liiica’ ,l‘_llTS-: Bu’ m Inns,‘ be" m mmd that " 31-5 b? l i’; you can't upset routine without _ ‘having to pay [or it. Theory ls all "l-d- b'"“~‘m‘" one ,vcry well, but in practice you will .ZF_u.-¢ ' m9 me “find that. for fhc first fcw days. if‘; “Yfllytfthe change is not don; you any ant iJOUg .g(.,;d‘ l fulncss for o l» zuay have been; you ma; “wry, disinclined‘ to do the iiifltienci; of tits dog. Ilia; hem- imuchv 3.0m. 5mm“), is a lime my ed w are the Afllfllfen "allotment. Instead of that brisk, let's-do- one of its lflllllfiflflls. I d-tcn-1,,j;@_,,.31k I-Pelmgl m“ fee, Anrivriy, continues the story, Lin- final? like wing m Sh,“ “ win “'35 59"“ u‘ m? ‘mfzfr “hpni This fcclitiz soon passes as one caught bciiveen We mks =1 m", ‘gets aoclimatI-zcd so dnnt be m». 31PM?!’ lh‘? Pecmiar antics “M Jprcssed at thc thought that you have wild harkmi: of lHonc-v." ogcxcf inc ‘grunt’. to the wronf; Place. mast, lnval fricn s the pa c..c boy! ‘w’ ll“- l . BLACKHEADS Docs are nIPlDfIhl‘; the moi! ‘ti; intelligent of all our dumb animal friends Their forgiving nature. and- demtlm‘ Y“ “m” ‘"3519’ L‘ Prmwr’ lmay be removed before they turn to hi“ Th“ ""’"l’“"‘”“5hjl’ "r a dogfpimples by gentle squeezuig through brightens our hcmcs. brings twlcas-ia dean handkerchmt- m‘, m“ ‘m’ m m“ hearts “f ‘hldmn’ and ‘yshould he washed twice a day with often courage to mcn and womenwlsnap and h“ wit“. and mm flns_ It is probclzlo that more often thanlpd mm 601d water before drying “"9 79am’? mo? protect [me and 'I"hcse children should not eat a lot 57'°7"~“’3" b ‘ of- sweet things. When they get Do not nvstroat a dosz, and if your larder the blackheads rend M d.5_ boy wants one. and you believe he lappear_ ' will be kind and generous toward it. get h;m a dog. . The boy: xvho learns to respect the feelings of his dog. and to care for hzs comfort. wiEl bocanxe a better man. much more capable of making friends, while the man with no love or forebcarancc for dumb animals. will hat-q- fcwcr human friends. ' The bread given to your boys’ dog may be like that cast upon the water, returning a hundred fold in the molding of his character, and helping to shape the destiny of his life, by filling his heart with deter- mination and love, that will help to carry hlm far toward good cftizcn- ship. Fffilffifiifliffiiu Children about the school often suffer with blackheads. 8E9 TIRED AND IRRITABLE? Take Lydia E. Pinkham’: Vegetable Compound It ateadlas the nerves and helps to build you up. You wlIJ eat bet- ter . . . sleep better . . . look bet- ter. Life will seem worth living again. Remember that 98 out of I00 women say, "It helps me.". Let l! help you too. Llquld or tab- let form, as you prefer. . LABOR - SAVING LUNCHES ----_.. HO USEHOLD HINTS In homes where several rriembers attend school or business, the busy housewife begrudges the time spent daily in cutting piles of lunch sand- wiches. This task may he simplified by suppjtdng each 1119311192‘ with two rolls lpurchased daily from the ___ __-~ '.'.3--.. 5$~w9re53 White turnip, well grated and mixed with a little mustard and vinegar. is an excellent substitute ‘for horse-radish. Z5‘ 5i I When roiling or roasting chicken rub a little ground ginger ovcr the fowl before cocking I‘, “Q11 nqnkn it more tcntlr-r. and be a great im- provcii~.on:. I hold jam. and a smaller one for but- ler. Sometimes a few tomatoes iaurnzcnt each luncheon. sometimes n helping of cold meat wrapped in m: F12 Add a pic-cc of butzcr to the mil xvhcri nialzn: hlanr-matigze. Itwil turn on" of rii~ irioulrl much inorc cask)‘. _-—__._______-._._.______ ___.. Sll ffhf? NEW DOUBLE romc 7 ADDS FLESH-EASILY Hundreds gaining attractive pounds in a few zztcc/‘s. [fir/zest 11cm‘ yeast now cmicmfrafcd 7 limes and combined with iron. OtTORS; {or \"*'ll‘S ays homc-nzade cakcs and plenty ‘ f frrsh m“, tn complete a light, ‘and ypt rip ‘sing and nourishing inxcal. HEIGHTSFT 4IN. WEIGHT lZO LBS. “i Compare ' YO UR lllcnsure- ment5 llnvc proscribed health. But now <ry voifcan not iu \\ ith ordiziarj/ h h. not! in addition put on pounds of solid llCSl1*"fl)I!1 in a strv/irisirnulti slim! Ifuyc, Ifiot orly are l of people now gaming licriutv-‘zi . tit; pounds, but also clear. radiant skin. ncw pop. Concentrated 7 times This new product, lrrmizcd Ycnst. is made from apr-rially rulturrtl, imported lurr (can. the richi-st 5 cast wr- knuwnf, whip}; y a new prof-c is concrntratczl 7 time! —mm1e 7 limes 1min pmrrrfvil. Rut that is not all! This super-rich, health-building ynast. l! thou rrnnin-d with 2 kinds ofslrl-iictlwumg iron. DllyllfterdnymxynviIakelronizerlYflulll, Watch flat chest dew-lop. skinny limbs round out attractively. skin clear. Results guaranteed No matter how skinny and weak you rmiv be, this now Ironizrvl Yrast. should hllllrl you up in n (PW short works as i‘ has Fn many ntbr-rn. If you flfl‘ not di-lighml with the rraulls of Ibr- vlery first park- lge. your mom-y instantly refunded. Only be sure you get, genuine lronlzell Special FREE offer! To ntart _vnu building up our health "M! nirllll. wo make this REE offer. Purchase, a package of lronized You! ut one», cut. nut, Ar-ril nn box nnd mall it to us wilh a clipping of this nlfar, We will Fmdrmm fascinating new book on health, "New F‘ Your llody". hy an authority. Remember. resullsareguaran- tredwlthtbc very firs! package-or mom-y . Yeast. not some imilntinn that cannot rrfvndrrl. Al‘. all druggista. Canadian give the name results. Insist on the an- Ironized Yeast Corn any, Desk 224A, B0! uinl with "KY" stamped on each fight. 1823, Montreal, Quegac. ....a........¢_.-...._...- . .._c.. . ... an ’s Redlm‘ f:- vvwv- add to the blue water whenrlnsing When felt hats become soiled do’ not let them get too, dirty. but sprinkle well with househord salt. Rub firmly and well into the felt] then shake well. You wii be pieasedl CIL-LYGE IN ROUTINE One o! the things we look for- These l bzzkerJ a screw top glass jar to] grease-proof paper. There are al-‘ not being one of them. i111? AAA neinruq , ri-Ivww-w n4 iPrr. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN '11 F618,! - -+¢¢¢»04+om+o11+vovo+v“*‘ ‘ \ Dorothy Dix ’s Lettler Box Tragedy of Cultivated Daughter Who Revolts at Mothers Slovenly Ways - Dislllusion- ed Middle-Aged Pair see too Much of ' Each Other ' Dear Miss Dix-J tlm a college graduate with a job and live at home. ‘If I could improve my relations with my mother, my‘ happiness would be immeasurably increased. I do not believe that I am overly fastidious, but every day I find it harder not to revolt at my mother's slovenly ways. I have tried to tell he!‘ kindly that it ls hard to love a mother with a. dirty face. but she always responds with anger and tears and reproaches and says that after all she has done for me I have only scorn and censure for-her. I have tried since childhood to ignore or become accustomed to her ways. Can I hope that she will ever change, or must the word “mother” alwayl mean to me a slattern who ls not personally clean and who often sets the table with unwashed dishes? A DAUGHTER WPIO WOULD LIKE TO RESPECT HER MOTHER. Answer: ' There are no greater tragedies than those of growth. The husband who outgroivs the wife, the wife who outgrows the husband, the children who outgrow their parents. ~ i How often we see a brilliant man tied down to an ignorant and ‘simple wife whom he married in his boyhood. He has gone on learning, [sludyirigq being polished by the attrition of other minds. She has stayed ‘Just as shc was and not had a new idea since her wedding day. How oftcn we sec an intellectual woman, broad-minded, understanding, bound to a husband who is nothing but a dull clod. How often wcsce children, educated, cultured, refined, who have so ‘outgrown thrir parents that they live in a different world and have not one taste or thought or impulse in common. l when I have seen ignorant fathers and mothers working their fingers .‘ to the bone to give their children advantages that. they never had them- Isclvos, lifting their children above them, I have thought that it was as Ihcroic an nct as humanity was capable of performing. For they knew that where lllPll‘ children were going they could not follow them. That. they were making Wllh IhPlI‘ own hands a gulf between them over which they icould not imss, and were separating themselves from their children as if by death. 1 For all parents desire above everything else on earth to be loved and admired by their children, to be oracles to them, and it must have been bittcr in their mouths tn know that their educated and cultured children would be ashamed of them and critical and scornful of thelr humble ways. l In n Wily this is what has happened to you. You have acquired idainty personal habits. refined tastes and your mothers slovenly habits i arc repulsive lo you. That is inevitable. But be as patient with her as lyou can. for if she gets upon your nerves the knowledge that she is an offense tn you stabs her to the heart. But mothers make a terrible mistake when they do not try to keep up with their children and change their ways according to the children's progress. For with children, as in marriage, a. woman must keep up with her loved ones or else lose them. The besctfing sin of prircnts is vanity. When their children are little they are the supromc authority. Father's Word is law. Mother knows best about. everything, and when the children go out into the world and go to school and come back with new ideas and new customs father and mother scorn them instead of adopting them because they cannot bear for thr-ir children not. to continue in think that they m‘? iflfiflfllflfe Wi8d0m. brother won't change hcr pronunciation of a word to the ne\v- fanzlcd way the children arc tau‘ ht to say it in school. She wont cook a dish or sot the tablc the way Itfary has learned to do it in the domestic science class. She won't bothcr to read the books or the papers the children bring homc. She Just stays put while they are advancing, and before she knows it they have gone on and lcft her. DOROTHY DIX. t O Dear Dorothy Dix-I am fat and 47. Have worked hard. scrlmped and ,savecl so thit Friend Husband and I might. have comfort in our old age. Well, we have arrived. The strain has lessened, life easier, nest egg laid aside and I find myself an unwanted wife. husband and I lmve been continually together day and night, and while the isn't mcnn to inc and tries to hldn the fact that he doesnt love me I any more I lznoiv that kc is fired nf me. What I want to know is should I I go on and try to harden myself so as not to care or get out? I really lmean GET OUT because when my home is gone all is gone. We have i children, but they are married and gone. What shall I do? MISERABLE WIFE. soot lAnsv/ci‘; Get out, but only temporarily. separation 0r dead love or what-not . aginary. l Ibi- what ails you and your husband is that you have been together too much and too continually. and you are fed up on each other and lhave got, on each othci-‘s nerves and you are imagining things. Any woman and any man would fcel that way about each other if they were together day and night for three years without a break or a respite. Human nature simply cannot stand it. It is like the thlrty quails In thirty days. and I'm thinking that if we gives a five-day week and a six-hour day with husbands sitting around the house and cluttering things up so much more than they used to. it is going to makc for divorce. - And this isirt n-ioro theory because it is the common experience with wives that. when their husbands retire from business they become pests. For the first time in their lives they are idle, utith nothing to interest them, nothing to do. no interests of their own, and they begin prying in the garbage can and criticizing their wives’ housekeeping and snooping Ifave no foolish talk of divorce or matrimonial grievances. real or lm- jaround listening to thcm gossip with their friends and become generally perfect nuisances. And only too often husband. who ls as bored with his wife as she is with him takes to philanderfng in his old age. . Scfthe indication for your case is plain. It is a. railroad or steamship ticket for yourself and o job for your husband. Try to get blm to go back into business. And. anyway. go of! for a couple of months yourself and when you come back you will have a. new honeymoon, DOROTHY DIX. w I Dear Dorothy Dire-I am n. happily married man, aged 51. I am very emotional. Is this unmanly ln one of my sex? When 1 read uny- thlng that 1s fine or touching or see a sentimental scene on the stage. my throat.’ rotistrlcts and tcnrs spring to my eyes. It ls very embarrassing. What would you suggest to overcome this fault or state of mind? RICHARD. '4 -__ Answer: Emotlnnalism ls only to he condemned when it becomes hystcrital and sweeps onc beyond the. bounds of reason. The kind of emotlonallam you describe is only the expression of a deep and understanding nature. You are what they uscd tn ("all in old-fashioned novels "a man of sentiment.“ and I like the phrase and the man who can be touched to tears by what ls flu!- and nobie ln literature or art or drama.- I I __" No people are less attractive than the human clams. Dent regret DOROTHYDIX- Daintiriess PVith Chic Styles ILLUSTRATED DK-BBNVIAKING LESSON FUl-NISBID WITH EVERY PATTERN ._________ BY _ ANNABKLLB WOII-TBINGMN AMomingSmile , For the last three years my ' Widow (buying a. parrot): “Does; this one talk?" Dealer: "Unfortunately, madam. he does not. But when anvmlfi speaks to him he looks as lf he understands perfectly.” Widow: "I'll take him. Ho, will remind me of my late husband." WHO TOLD YOU THAT 7 A large New York hotel recently conspicuously displayed a huge sign reading: "Open All Night." Close by there was a restaurant which displayed a sign which read: “We Never Close." Between the large hotel and the restaurant was a small shop owned byone Sam Lung and Sam would not be outdone. He erected aslgu across the from/t of his little estab- It's a.‘ summer's delight, designed for sllmness and for youthfulness- It's exciting in white moussellxw de sole so exceedingly flattering to suntan skin. Flutter-y detail 1s expressed in the brief puffed sleeves. crossed bodice that terminates at the back in bow tied sash and self-fabric bouton- niere. ' _ And it's just child's play to make it. And so inexpensive, you'll scarce- ly believe 1t. , It is also lovely in darker shadesi of’ moussellne de sole in plain or stripes in brown. navy or black. Organdie. chiffon cotton vaflo prints, chiffon in plain or print and clotted swlss lend an equally charm- ing effect. Style No. 813 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15 and 17 years. Size 15 requires 5 yards 39-inch. Price of PATIERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. ' .11.}; Llffliliff .......... MQQJMM- WWWQQQQQMWM .&;. -mmmm State THE COOK ’S l CORNER FILLINGS Here is interest for the cake maker this morning. Prostings are the first auxiliary most of us think about when we want to vary a fam- iliar cake. But sometimes, we can do more with the filling-actually, than with any added effort in the matter of a frosting-speaking from the point of obtaining novelty. You can make quite an exciting cake with a simple batter, a. quickly-mixed un- cooked dressing and a. filling which can claim real character. ' These thfce fillings should bring ‘some entirely new cakes to Table .-Talk meals. ‘- Cocolmut Dale Fllllng 3 tablespoons cocoanut llshinent as follatvs: “Ale Writs-e “Tno." Wheat! Butter Cheese} MilklTomatoesll l5 cupful water l ‘é teaspon salt . r s -'.{=-l',l.it AAA‘ .Ik_k f? Q \ \ cause the iaggedJoflgh rnclorlcl scratches the surfucekrivh it: sharp, hard points; wagfoful because If does not conlcct the surface com- - plctelyund thus cleans lnelflclonlly. This l: a magnified drdv/lngcf . o gritty particle such as I: pmgnl In ordinary cleansers. Obvloully, f such cleansers urolduirucflvo bo- ,“§,'1_ \ Thll l: a magnified drawing of a particle of Old Dutch-the on! cleanser made of p re "selsmollto, the safest, most elf economical cleaning material. You can-see that that: particles are flaky and flat-shaped. They clean quickly without scratching, cover moresurfcce, and go further. That's why Old Dutch costs less to use. Old Dutch does more square yards of cleaning per penny 0| cost than anything else because if cleans so many things perfectly. It's your home. cleanser you need In 1 cup dates, ground 3 tablespoons orange juice 3 tablespoons sugar Mix ingredients and cook slowly together until thick enough to spread between cakes. Remove from 1% teaspoons vanilla " fire. cool, and add vanilla. Chocolate Filling 2 cups milk , 54 cup sugar ,~ 1-3 cup flour l5 teaspoon salt 2 squares chocolate 1 es: ~ 1 teaspoon vanilla scald milk. Mix sugar, flour, and salt, and add milk gradually. Add l MADI 1N CANADA you can buy. ll offers an exfra saving the oply OldDulch cleans quicker, l: kind 9o the hunch, doesn't clog ‘drains, l: - odorless and remove: odors. No wonder Canadian housewives prefer ll lo anything else. lit quality can- not be imitated or lh economy equalled. chocolate, ‘grated, and cook In‘. double boiler l5 minutes, constantly uptll thickened. Add o“ slightly beaten ana cook than van- minutes longer. Cool and add llla. I-‘rult and Nut Filling 1 cup, chopped raisins ‘A cup chopped nuts , ‘A cup shredded cdcomut I egg white Currant jelly ‘l l then with the filling. clenl and moat . (t. ordnirrrfi Mix the raisins, nuts, and 00000: ‘nut. and add them to the lflflllo _;_ beaten white. Spread the layer: M‘ _"“".‘ cake first with current Jolly Ind ' N... 0 all‘ I . / "’WIYI*I//// ll 60.0KB!) SPAGHETTI In Heinz Cooked Spaghetti, five of naturc’.s finest foods, skilfully sim- mered with Heinz matchléss tomato sauce, create a delicious, healthful dish. H. l. Huln: (0., Tamils Hull Ellabllahcd ova N you: at I-oalluton, Candl- O For your next luncheon try a nour- ishing dish of Heinz Cooked Spaghetti. Prices are down. With all of its other excellent qualities Heinz Spaghetti is economical —priced most attractively. , 111i’, fi/Il/l/ WIIIIIl/l/l/l/l/l/l/lflll/lll/l/ll COOKED SPAGH ETTI All nmno Snuqg IIZT-TL-i Stores are featuring Heinz Cooked Spaghetti . this week . . . . be, sure to get a su PP‘