i: a ' " 11m gnancorrarowu GUARDIAN Milady Bountiful unlit-uh l 1 Household Hints 1 Iylbblflllfll s-uo Advertisers have recently most nmkly called attention to such un- donable offences as a lack of tlgulous cleanliness and to urmplte whiomitlyrough perspiration omit un- picasiut odors. Through such state- ...,‘ may seem a bit too frank. there m tar too many instances where mag cnltdltions are true. and to say n," they are a handicap to ones M151 and brqsiness success is most qrtginly‘ not to far fetched. Every one should realize that the m; material from the body and that unle=s the pores are kept open, the function of the skin is interrup- ted. Such interruption not only causes body odors but also is detri- mental in health. Hence the unpert- ance oi daily bathing: it lsessential i to health as well as to daintmess. certain parts of the body have more active pores than others. and u {he nrlnplls belong to this class. they ulust be given even more atten- tion than the daily bath in order to keep them dainty and sweet. Milady vllu find it much easier to keep the s-mpl-ts dainty if they are free from hair. There are many reliable depii- stories which may be used for this purpose. and a safety razor is a method which rnany woollen find most convenient. After the morning bath it is a good idea to dampen the armpits with toilet water. This not only has an stringent eflect on the pores but it mparts a delicate pleasing scent to he body, Aftervthe warm cleansing ath at. night it lse. good plan to athe tho armpits with a strong solu- inn or salt water or a lotion made of "itch-haul and a little common king soda. _ At the t-illct counters are various roducts which will-prevent under-» nu perspiration. If used accordlnfl n directions these are very good and her not only givc milaxiy the assur- Rllf-c o! bciuz dainty, but they also Farr! her from the cxasperetingex- nerlenw of ruining a frock ‘by this annoying underarm perspiration, which is ap-t to be increased by ex- citement or nervousness. A t-nllci. water which is splendid for he arlnpits, since it has a sweet pent a: well ns astringent properties. matte as - follows: Four drama - r w»! amberzrls. one-half ounce ll or lavender. one ounce toilet aloo- hol. one-half dram oil of bcrgamot. lix ounces witch-hazel. ' Excexsive perspiration under the lrms may be counteracted to a great ‘Will by using the following lotion sdlrerteri ‘it is made by mixing lie-half ounce of aluminum chloride rith six ounces of distilled waterf llmly 1t to the armpits and allow it Y‘ flri’ nil the skin. Then dust with "W!" powder or BOTMI‘. powder, llilvlv i-hr lntlrn on alternate days one ivcek. then less frequently rfrl- You may dilute the above on with rosevratter or witohhazel it hours tm strong." Needless to" i" ‘i l‘ Fcflfbrly btmible to have ndernrm daintlnesa unless the arm- " "i! kort smooth and clean. A ‘n!’ “Wound-water wazhinris very W55"? and the use of an ordinary u" “tel- applied aftrward is very Qlbiul. Tomorrow-Beauty Questions Answered Morllsnsiiow learn ' value ofmlow '__. Dorothy Dir Letter Box g Has a ill/Ian“ a fltioreiAdecntionate Nature Than wuhm‘ Wm“ Bunk“ Woman’ - Mistaken View of the Up-to-Date Wife Who Dreads Returning to the Form. Is Practicality Inco mpatible With Love? .._ g . _ ., , ,_ , Dear Miss Dix-You. ElinorfGlyn and others of your profession always make the statement that: k wife wants affection and loving y‘ words from her husband. All of you say tell your wife you love her, show henyou love her by being offectioneté; ktss and pet her; treat her as ~ you did before you were married. ' I have found in my own ,clse» that this, does not work out. My wife is only 29, but ‘she says that while‘ ahe loves me, her affectionate days are ovenlnd when ever I attempt to kiss or pet her she asks me to stop. l To make woolen’ blankets softer and to hold their shape, hang them on a -line dripping wet instead of wringing them. Whip lightly several times while drying and after thoroughly dry, with a wire carpet beater. They will be soft and light. The Sick Room Windows should be opened in a sickroom every two hours in cold wee» an». fsociridl and ‘Personal ' 5-,:- 1 inuomzngsmzzo , "Honey," said tho husband. "I'm afraid W can't my for the no this ' mont ." _“W¢ll. dear." replied the wife, “don't let it leak out." tther and left to stand open l short ' while. to alve the proper ventilation. To liuten Cooking Add a pinch. of baking powder to to hasten cooking. Falling Balm-lull if! MIMI-dis. Fashions -:- Literature Etiquette QDDIOIQ Q. when going our. bu“... “to. how should a man leave the tileater’! A. He should turn his back to the stage when passing his own party. but when passing strangers, ladies and men both should face the stage. Q. For what purpose is an after- noon tea usually given? A. Usually to "brlngout" a daugh- ter, or to present a new daughter-in- law. l Q. Is it ever proper to exchange a the meat or vegetables when you wish gift‘! A. Yea. if a duplicate is received. Thlt Sore Throat Needs Mineral‘:- I For 77w Cook CHOCOLATE BREAD lIUDDING One cup bread crumbs. 8 cups milk ‘.5 cup sugar. 1 square chocolate. 3 eggs, speck of salt, l teaspoon vanilla. Bcald the milk, add to bread crumbs. Stlrc in sugar, salt, melted chocolate and egg yolks and vanilla. Bake inn baking dish until flnn. Make a me- ringue of beaten egg whites. Return in oven and brown. Serve witnplain cream. We maybe led into temptation the first time, but after that we can generally find our own way. _ by rubbing on v - Ovru 7! MiLLlUN _‘.'il1:.u'.l:l|l,.a.'=r' McGlnty: m; a terrible cum on . the bottom of my foot. Pat: That's a. folno place tie-have ll. Nobody can step on it_ but you.- _ Derioit News. The bridal veil or the famous Du- chess of Richmond, who gave the historical ball on the eve of the granddaughter other wedding in Batflc of Walerloo; was worn by Miss Mary A. Gucstya great-great- London recently. I have made inquiries or married men under :15 in six different cities during the last year and found that thirty-one out of forty men who have been mar- ried more than six years have hld the same erpen‘ lence. Will Irwin says: "Man is inourdbly romgn. tic. Woman is eternally practical." fbelieve he ’ » gets closer to the truth. for 1 believe that man has a more affectionate nature than woman. Wish you would write in your column, just how you arrive at the conclusion in regard to how a. married ivtlnliiih wants her husband to treat her. ALFRED. V I | Answer: g Undoubtedly there are women who are hwnan icicles just as there arel cold-hearted men who neither giver nor desire affection, but I hardly think? that they exist in the number that would seem to be indicated by the response tr your questionnaire on the subject. . I base, my conclusionstllat practically, all wives hunger and thirst for some definite concrete ex_l‘€5Bl0n of their htrsbandk love on the thousands upon thousands of letters that come to me from women from all over the country and in which they cry out for love as a starving man does for bread.‘ . economy. A These letters are written from the hearts of wives and voice their inner- most longing and it is for love. Sometimes these letter: are from rich women whose husbands give them everything else on earth but love, and. lacklngl that, the balance is dust and ashes. “I have a fine house, fine cars. one‘ ' clothes, everything that money will buy," {woman will write, "but my hus~i ' band never shows me any affection. He never gives me a kiss that isn't a‘ duty kiss, and I would give all of my Jewels for Just one sign that he really‘ cares for me the way he did before we were married." ' i Often a poor women will write that life is hard for her. She has to work‘ beyond her strength. lire is cverburdenedwitb children. She is always shabby. , She never has my pretty clothes, or any of the luxuries that women crave "But it isn't the poverty, nor the work, nor the hardships that I mind," shc will say. "it 'ls my husband's coldness ~t0 me. 1t 'is his never noticing what I do for him. It is his never giving me ._a kiss or a caress. 1t is his ncvc: wanting $011k! ine anywhere. even for e. walk. It is his being‘ grouchy ant- surly to me. -If he would only show, me that he loved me, it would make ul. that I do worth while." ' ' Judy Ofiredy and the Colonel's Lady are the same under the skin, an’. i when they are normal women with’ warm, loving women's hearts they want _ love for the love they give, they want some outward and visible manifestation ; that their husbands ltili love them and are still glad they married them and l , that they are still the only women in the world to their husbands. I l think the frlgidaire ladies you vmentlon are rare and abnormal vnr- , leties of their sex and I am sure that the greatest desire of most wlvcs‘ hearts is for their husban’ in stay perpetual lovers. l l ' Nor do I agree with Mr. lrwln that men as a rule have more affectionate nature than woolen.‘ Lthink women crave love more than men do_be'cause they live more in their emotions than men do, and because they have fewer interests in life than men have. A man who is married to a cold-natured woman, for instance, does not suffer from her lack of response to his affec- I lion as much as a woman would from her husband's failure to return her love because he has other things to think of . HcIis too busy trying to make a living for hLv family, he is too absorbed in his ambitions and has career tnihave time to brood over his loss. l-le simply shrugs his shoulde and ehargeait up to profit and loss, and that's that, while a woman can literally ‘starve to death if her husband fails to feed her on the brcnd of love. Nor does it devastate a man's life if he misses lovc altogether, as it does a woman..- "- ‘WALNUT FINISH D serviceable fitted with and plate mirror. Price nut finish, exceptional i .____.. ‘The Hench have asaying that some women are all wives and others are all mother. Perhaps the women who turn a cold cheek to their husband's 9381015- kissea lavish all of their tenderness and all their demonstrations of affection Price _ _ _ _ _ _ I ' _ I _ _ _ upon their babies. DOROTHY DIX- . . v ' ' ' ' ' ' ' COMMODE, to match Dear Miss Dix-l am a man 55 years o3 and have lost the use of my Price _ , , _ _ _ , , _ , _ , lcft hand through an accident. At my die and in my physical condition it is DRESSERS in surface oak or Wal- .-.-....‘ doom-n. .011.- Janaa ry Furniture Sale Spells “ V-A-L-U-E- ” for Everyone! special price . Sliding Couch JLIDING COUCH this is a value thatyou should not. overlook very comfortable and convenient, cover-- cd with attractive Cretonnc, fitted with spring and softisanitary filled mattress. See this at our 7' We are very pleased tot offer you during this week some very outstanding values in the furniture line, val- ues that comprise quality, appearance, service and The outstanding values illustrated below are but a few of those you can see at our store. youvrequire your taste will meet with splendid sugges- tions and unheard of values. Buy now and same money! No matter what °°“‘¥»'.°.‘.°. Mil-I'll ......... $515 - This is one of our outstanding bargains in a BED 0UT- j, FIT. The BED is WALNUT FINISH, conlinuousPost de- sign with five filling rods at each end and fitted with roller casters, height of head 4S inches, height oi‘ foot 3i inches, length 6 feet, widths 39, 48 and 54 inches. BED OUTFIT COMPRISING WALNUT FINISHED BED, STRONG LINK SPRING AND ALL FELT MATTRESS. o WI . . t; $9.95 RESSER, at- tractively finished, well made and 36 inch case $16.15 ly well made ' and rich looking with [three deep linen drawers and finished with $13.25 $6.75 ALI. FELT MATTRESS, extra soft a laycl upon layer of good grade Cotton Felt covered will! 8001i quality Art Ticking excellently finished. Wltltiu; fill, 4S and 54 inches. Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FELT l\I./\'I"I‘RESSES. excellent. quality that will give good satisfaction 39, 48 and 54 inches wide. Price...................... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. next to impossible to make a new job in I city. I have a little money and . wish to buy aismall place in the country _whe_re we can raise our own food ' and some chickens and things to sell.‘ lwas brought up on a farm and know how to do things. My wife oblecta and says going back to the farm is going back to grandma's day. Do you think we should do it or not? . HARRY. Answer: > I think, y__o_ur_ plan is fine and the moat feasible thing to do under the ooculnstances. 1t ls paying the landlord and thefood bill that who most B! our money in cities. and when you can rllse your own chickens and butter and eggs and vegetables it doesn't take much to live on. Tell your wife um. the luminolfohmzed since grandma's dny- Mont or the farmhouses now have" electricity in them and radios and phonograpln. and telephones, and o little car ptntinl in the same. and n postman ovmq ing by every day. and the isolation and the drudgery of farm life is a thing: o! the pest, ' _ ' - ' I lBut the beauty and the peace and the quiet still rcmllh- . - _ , DOROTHY mx. snrsrr CRIB AND easy running. casters ’ o‘ " o o‘ e o e o u "ma. m“ Duh". you a young man 28 years old and had been en- zmu w nj young My morqtmn ‘two yam who refused to marry you until Price . . . . \ a strong and sturdy Crib. very at- tractive in appearance fitted with able, sanitary mattress. MATTRESS leer and Felt Mattress. _ CAKD Price $201M nun ALON . ... ......... ... $1.50 and Herviw LINK SPRING ALONE . . . . . $6.00 $9.95 Wonderful Value- BED OUTFIT comprising :1 WAL- NUT FINISHED STEEL BED fil- ted with 2 inch continuous steel posts perforated steel panel medal lion and 4 filling rods, easy sliding casters, height of head 48 inches. height. of foot 34 inches and in threc “idths 3 feet 3 inches and 4 ft. and ‘ ft. 6 inches. Complete outfit com rising Bed, Link Spring with high FELT MATTRESS ALONE “$7.95 d)". Price . . A A ln“l“"it-l‘ ‘I "all? ll . . andchiidroagm that: be“; ovary mother r oho ovnbout il- lipe llilk of ,0“ h“ “v44 u, glngtywyqtllqnte you thlnkthtt lhc dldnthave much‘ con- ldencsin you. or that ‘the love you much? N. lnswar: .5‘ ‘A .- - , _ , - f cu--=~~<tl~~=~ ..."....*~ .2212: fiilifd-fidlliliifififiliffifi atlases: mag“;- moat: toll‘ 131i"? ‘.55.; m" i gvflgfifly ‘nil-oi, locksmith ‘oi m. um. u» mil. l-unooa .l;=ye»-i'iilé°.l:i?i."tl'.l}ill.ilik lulmrliwfw nation. $115 i ti”! .'_"".°?.‘."' 1"“ t "M? E°- “l: h’ M“ Hfflgrtlvlci , t vg-Jqflr- ouldadye blwould be a success. ff be could n}!!! if" 11° "W14 . I i"? énllfihttfltrifim, “madam. _. . . - ‘ - m, l.» , fill-iii‘ m». _- g ' "Jill" il'l.3i$l"i‘°"" “ - 1n n‘... {would scan-inn; n1, one and cowl-w new» m A ' Vi" "P Wt 9.1999“ ole-o git. interpret-hitch girl. am will mks a ._.~‘ w“ mg!“ "q pm and up a non gadwllptmttmenlnczmlr commun- ‘v- -~ . ~ "~ >i;_-..”°ml'Y-°m' ruler our; 1| m» m aeuimmintgyf inbu- .;lm~uaast.w.~maq inan- co em blown tam m- ., _ 4101b“? '=ll\§!l:1bed u 1i m m. of nalhlyyweh naut- imm divans of the‘ lumb- mlooa mm imflm wtnm of gogaad. -- llllelnle‘ , = tgs 1,, -- . taut-mu I -. doewheeoz" ‘ ‘an d h t tot-till n . cpl tot r ~ CABLE SPRING with high riser. This spring will give wonderful comfort and service and comes "in sizes 39, 48 and 54 inches wide, this ~ . is a value hard to equal at our-price of i Dont miss the wonderful va oflered on this page. Come in today‘ and see them and save money by buying now. ' ' nd cosy. Made up of TABLES excellent quality with grcen covered top size about 30 by 30 inches. extra strong and stur- $9.25 $6.25 $1.98 f ‘PAGE SEVEN ~ . .. i: lues lilTCl-IICN CHAIRS, set up ready for use. good quality and very ser- viceable. Don't. miss this’ bargain, 5135.50 i L ‘ ' q~ _ tzmmemde I’ 0L MAN, IL m _ .-., Charlottetown l " m,’ ,_ o- ..-._»o wv-i =1. ~ 4 ~ . 8"»; ‘ ~r-.—~ - "rrzr-fqrw-r-nc-s. .- __ 310"” ~ 1 .14: -.,-;:~ . ‘