. ._-,._-z<...‘-.~.-__-___~..,_..._ _ . smoothest. powder known. Stays on Toilet Goods Counters. GE EIGHT . thatsalt. "whenpure... ltimulates flavors. Be par- ticular! Insist upon REGALTable SALT(free running). It is of highest ‘purity. A whoiely Canadian pro- duct —- made-in-Windsor for over 18 years. _...~. ,4 Woman ’s Realm Write ['01 FREE Booklet - “Tbe Romance of Salt" . . .SCOIBI d! SPECIAL USES such as . . . “when making batter, a little salt mixed with dryflour prevents lumping.” 314 - REE RUNNING CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED REcApuursALT i: wmnsoll." ONTARIO 5.11 Cheer Message From California ’ (By John P. Mael-"hiel I read the following skit in a local paper and it started me to drop you a line. I rim not allowed to write much yet, butwili send whut others havc witten, which is much better than anything I can vrriic. Drop Me A Line Even if there's nothing new, 1 should like to hcnr from you, If yours burning coal or wood. What youvc had to eat that's good. What. trips you've hrid. whnt shows you've been to. What legacies you have come into. What kind of henltli you are en- ivyiniz. What things you ;ind most annoy- ing, You are busy,-I don't doubt it, Etill, I‘d like to hear about it. I have words of thanks from many friends. ‘that I was able to write a message a few days ago, for the papers. Thank you. I am the same old friend. Let me send you a new greeting from this land of sunrhinc and rest, for my heart turns toward my friends as the flowers turn toward the sun. Ovne Beautiful Women Love New Powder Beautiful women, admired for youthful complcxions, use MELLO- GLO, the 116W wonderful French process face powder. Pllfefit and longer. Nu flaky or pasty look. No grime or grit. MELLO-GLO prevents large pores and never smarts or iceis dry. Blends naturally with any complexion Demand Mello-glo. Sold through all Druggists and at may live to be a hundred years of age, but he can never forget his friends of long Ago. No under- taker can bury old memories and old friendships. 'I‘hey remain as fresh and sweet as a Joppa orange. So here I am: Pledging the same old friendships, Toasting the Long Ago, _ Knowing that nothing can equal The times we used to know. Hoping the years may bring you All that Iuwish them to be. Grasping the hand in memory Proud of a friend like you. One of the great scholars (if the 051e, was Charles W. Eliot. Dr. cause of education. Here is a bit of philosophy from him which dev- serves to'be given place of honor on the walls of the study room of every student in America: “If I hud the opportunity to say a final word to all the young people of America. it would be this: Don't think too much about yourselves. 1'11: to cultivate the habit cf thinking of others: this will reward you, Nourish your minds by good read- ing-. constant reading. Discover what your life work is, work in which you can do the most good. in which you can be happiest. Be unafraid in all things when you know you are in the right." One of the ministers in our city said last Sunday: “Count your bit-sings and you will grow stronger and happier for the counting. The emotions of good cheer and of courage bring new life and con- fidence. Even hard conditions sometimes are made less hard by the recognition that. they might be worse. An old veteran of the Civil Wur often used to speak of the time when they had only The Safe Mill: For Family e URE cow's milk, concentrated ro double richness . . . sterilized to make it absolutely safe-—thcn packed in airtight containers r0 keep i: Safe. NcsrLirs-w. .14’. u...“ Produrns and Seller: of Condmsm’ and Evaporated M ilk. NESTLE {IESTLES A "Rocucr orcA IIQIIYIIIO ’S Eliot spent his life for others. in the THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN A naming-small r ~' Peacemaker: "I wouldn't fight, my I good men." ' First Combatant: “He called. me a. liar, sir." . Second Combatant: "And he cull- ed me a lazy loafer." Peacemaker: “Well, I wouldn't fight over a difference or opinion. You may both be right." Then they started to fight him. For The Cook SCOTCH MIST 1 pint cream. 2 tablespoons powdered sugar. Bi teaspon vanilla. ‘.5.- dozen almond macnroons. 3 cocoanut mucuroons. Nut/s and marshmallows. Whip cream stiff, sweeten with sugar and add vuniiln. Crumb almond macuroons and cocoanut cakes. Chop nuts and cut mursh- mallows in pieces. Beat these light- ly into the whipped cream. Heap in sherbet glasses, decorate with a. pre- served cherry and chili before serv- ng. i i i I Etiquette Iylohrlnlnc Q- Is it necessary to make u c311 l‘ ‘me has bee" Present at on after- noon tea. or reception? A. No, it is not necessary if the Bflsir hns not been formal. Q. If favors are being given at u, (“"11" Barty. where should they be placed? A. Just below the place card, Q will’ should one be careful 110$ l0 quote the sayings of i1 child in his presence? b A- Because by doing so the child ecomes self-conscious, as well as‘ impcrtinent. parched ‘mm w CM. and how he ran across 11' middle-filled soldier wh° w“ Pmlndills his own corn and then thrusting a handful in hi5 mSllihmi-nd then giving a. broad Erin of thankfulness as he said," I've Only got two teeth but than}; 50d ihvy meet." If I was a minister preaching to a cimflregation now I would preach “i1 "w encouraging. optimistic sermons I could for people need 1161i) and encouragement these hard times. The Bible is full cf optimism and hope. Smile and the world smpcs with You- 5m"? and l/Ou snore alone. A Mans Pray“- Let me live, O Mighty Master, Such 11 life as men should know Tfisliflfl triumph and disaster, J0Y~and not; too much of woe; Let me run the ga-mut over, Let me fight nnd love and laugh, And Wllén I'm beneath the clover Let this be my Epitaph; Here lies one who took his chances I" “M5 busy World of men; Bottled fnte‘ and circumstances, Fought and fell; nnd fought again! Won sometimes. but did no crowing, Lost sometimes, but didn't wull, Took his beating, but kept going, Never let his courage fnii. "I BEGAN to uko Lydia E. Plnkbanfl Vegetable Com. pound when l was forty-five years old. l wan suffering n the Change of’ Life. "The Vegetable Compound w“ ldverfiscd so much the: I de- cided to try if. l: hu herped me in every wny. "M! color in good. I n: and lleep well nnd have more pep to do my housework." Mrs. G. Cole, Box 444, Trenton, Ontario. mam... VIBITAILE“ ‘COMPOUND "r A i, . "at." »»Y»»oml.o ~ Help Your t y obvhu Husband? ‘ "M" 1i How to Help a Husband to Succeed is a Prob- lem That Every Wife Tries to Solve, But N0 Task in the World Takes Such Delicate Handling in_ Order to Avert Destruction Every wife who is u. real woman, and not just u. dressed-up dim stuffed with sawdust, desires above everything else in the world to be of assistance to her husband. She yearns to be a real helpmlifl V) mm- but. there is no other problem no BYE“ 55 h°w m i do it. Beside the question of how to hGiP h" I husband, the riddle of the Sllhimi 599mm‘ “- °°“' undrum so simple that a feeble-minded child could guess it. 1r she tries to help him by makinz an "it" sacrifice of herself to him. he soon comes to rckard her as the family goat and has no respect for her or for her opinions. If she tries to prod him on to achieve things: she gets on his nerves and hurts his vanity W031“? she isn't. satisfied with him as he is. And the more successful she really is in helping him and pushing his fortune, the less he cares for her, for the minute a. husband knows that he dhould be grateful to his wife he begins to hate her. The old idea. was that a woman could best help her husband by sinying at home and doing the work of half-a-dczen servants and pinch- ing pennies so us to enable him to roll up a fortune. That plan doesn't seem to have worked out very successfully, at least from the woman's point of view. middle-aged and fat and was dull company, so he began stepping out with the pretty-profiles. Many a wife who has slaved her fingers to the bone helping her husband get rich has helped herself to divorce at the some time. Then there are the women who try to help their husbands by firing their ambition and pushing them on to success. I knew a woman who married n young writer who had plenty of talent, but who was one of the temperamental chaps who like to work when they feel like ii: and loaf and invite their souls the balance of the time and who are always going to do great things in the future, but. never get on the Job in the present. Not so his wife. She believed in him and she was determined to make him great. So she made him un artistic home in_which he could pose against a literary background. She assembled the right people about him. She press-ngented hlin discreetly. She marketed his work successfully and got orders for him. But she nailed him to his typewriter a certain num- ber of hours a day and simply made him work. He went forward by leaps and bounds. People began to talk about his stories and editors to ask for them but he couldnt stand the pace. He came to regard his wife as nothing but a. slave-driver and he left. her for a sloppy, easy-going woman, without any ambition, who wasn't always trying to jack him up. Thenwe come upon the curious paradox that sometimeslt seems that the best. wny for s. wife to help her husband is by being a. hindrance as it were and that. the heavier a. burden she is upon him, the more likely he is to win the race. Undoubtedly. the thrifty wife helps her husband to accumulate his fortune, but just as often it is a wife's extravagance that helps a. man on to riches. Many a mun who would be satisfied with a modest salary has to work so hard and scheme so much to pay the bills of a wife who‘ ‘is ahspender that he puts himself in the millionaire clans withoutintend- ng . If you notice, you will see that the women who have to have money seem always to have husbands who can make it, while the women who can do without things rarely have go-gettcrs: Let a. woman show that. she can support herself and many a husband will git; down and m, he; do it, whereas the helpless woman has a husband who gets up and hustles. mid. Curiously enough. While a illlsbflud seldom loves his wife for help- ini; him. he nearly always adores the wife for whom he has to slave and who demands everything of him. A woman who had been a great factor in her husband's success once said to me: , ‘ "I helped my husband by making hi... feel um z believed him the most gifted and brilliant man of the age and that there was nothing that he could not achieve. I have held the ideal of success unwavering- ly before his eyes. He knows that I expect him to do great things. pence and rest. a prize-fighter is trained for the ring. realize that I have had any hand in it, and so he still loves me" with dynamite. “h” “m” DOROTHY mx ‘lhcm so successfluily last season. For about the time she boosted him up on Easty street mm, m,“ It und he‘ accumulated enough money with her assisatnce to make him in- the snake cenmfl portion o; the ieresting to the gold-diggers, he discovered that Friend Wife had got model and Md mgwhing wide companied it. _ for these were of lace, or wool, in a “Then I have made for him a comfortable home in which he found sleeve, cut in various ways. all, I have built up his body and spirit for the fight, just as however, i veering toward “gut. nbove all. I have helped him so insidiously that he does not ensemble; Al"! that“ ihli- And trying to help your ‘husband u like fooling 3...,“ 1 1i "my elevate you into heaven or blow you into the Bagranyaine Evening Gowns Show Trend To Styles 0f Old Many Paris Home: Use Dlytlme Lines of Lint Yell BY MARY KNIGHT P IS. Sept SL-(UPJ-The col- lection of Philippe ct Gaston re- served all reference to the past for the realm of evening ‘ensembles. Street and dlytime ' coats, dresses and suits continued upon the wraight modern and modernistic Zines that began to characterize The quaintness of tn, i880 frocks designed in robe de style fashion for the evening. used black velvet almost exclusively and taffeta. as an admirable second material. ~ The use of a large oval cameo delicately carved, was an added uttraction- to one of the off-the shoulder gowns done in black chif.'on vilvet and trimmed only with twisted cords of the velvet around the oval neckline, waist and hem of the full-cut skirt. Muffs, of which there were sev- eral, were noticeably larger than those shown elsewhere. One re- sembled the very larger ones car- ried in more recent d8!!! thin the 1860 models, and was made of covered practically bands of the fur at the hem of the black broadcloth coat that ac- Extrerne Dcccllefagcs The decolletages were two ex- tremes, both very high and very SEPTEMBER 4. 1931 -:- Social andiPeijsonal -:i- Ehshions -:-p_Liteirature_ liVliat the Fashionableeare wean-n? lliultrated Dresamaking Lcggm Fumuhed WM E"?! Patten Bu Annabelle Worthingm; So entirely limple to mike in thin | fascinating model of printed crepe silk. It will answer mmy daytim occasions. Tucked sway at the neckline is u tiny crossover vest of white em- broidered organdio. The orgcndic appears iignui in friil of sleeves at the wrista. The cowl drape softens thedinc of the bodice. The skirt favors the deep moulded hiplinc with attached circular lower part. Style No. 261 may bc had in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 3B, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with if yard of 27-inch all-over lace. Crepe satin would be stunning for this model. Plain crepe silk in garnet-red is an advanced fall idea. l Be IIIN to flii in the lizc of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern i6 canto. No. 261. Size uouubuoulnnn . i Street Address lanyIOIIOIIIIIIIIIQIIOQcolonelIIIIIQ Oity c State - Unclean Hands Carry Infection low, and at. both back md front- Wing sleeves, in some cases quite mammoth in size, accentuated the slim linc of the dress and often were its only trimming. lllxtrcm- eiy large bail sleeves were entirely detached from the frock and slipped on above the elbow and allowed to full almost to the finger tips. 'I‘hcse furnished ground for much embroidery on the bands above the elbow as well as around the full width oflhe bell part. Most of the evening gowns show- sterillzed milking tube in a test we are Baked many questions re it is well to immerse the teat. for lative to udder and teat troubles i t in h t w i. in cows. In treating such cases Elana‘; ezuoghxrfiflc “l: 1cm- theie is great danger of infection dissolve or m a “mm 1w 10m , . "n: “:1?” 1mm’ “gzinshzfluiizi solution of chinoaoi. After using "l “shall dive lictsslapeen previous m” m!” It would “Mn be Clem. i’ “gs ' .ui ed a u. laced ly sterilized. To sterilize a. miik- f: :1; ti: cofmflfim mzmdglnm m! tube that n may be “My m‘ ting solution or some alcohol serted in the teat, first clear the The same one should be “ken u bind end by use of a wire and sec regards an w“ “pluasm mam" that no solid matter is left a/dher- buwurles’ or “Imam, and a“ km ing to any part of the tube which “For other instruments used m ed jeweiled straps crossing in the back like suspenders. A featured one strap up the bncki from the waistline to meet a. high; color formed closely around the throat that continued into the front bodice cut very low under the‘ arms. Another disconnected sleeve wok the motif of a very long glove, close and tight; and reaching ul- most to the shoulder. Only be- cause it had no hand could you be sure that you should not call it n. glove. Square buttons in round holes, gowns that showed no openings for getting in and out of but rather to be tied on, fur elbows and belts on ‘coats. much shining through the ‘waist and the choice of both high ‘nnd normal wiiistlines,‘ were other l features. For tailleurs, Dupoy Magnin preferred Jackets of a solid color with plaid skirts of the samema- terial but different weave. Blouses natural. easy to blend tone. Chief Chnrncteriflfic The chief characteristic of the afternoon models wu their kimono running diagonally. A the fluffy furs rather than the flat softened muny Rodier materials used by the house of Dupcy Magnin included Bacardi’. Djersutchilla. Dapellu. Bnccttn, include, in order of their names, twccds, wools, silk: and tissues Paris Styles _ By MARY KNIGHT (United Press Staff Correspondent) PARIS. Bent. 3.-(U. PJ-Bathtcwels have come out of the privacy of their original quarters and are parading on (“hionabie ‘mimics l5 110i» only the last word. but also the echo of what's what in summer pocketbooks. They have a rubberized silk lining so what matter if you do dTOD them overboard and-just a. second, we are coming to the matter of their probably sinking-they have beautifully curved cork tops that keep them floating on tha 511215“ 1h; u; 1mm a rescue can be effected! Now could anything n the world be more downright practical? Done in the colors that mltch your bflthin! wit. pajamas, bathrobe, beach slippers, em, you onn be n Symphony in crash. or more to the point, you can crush the fun- icn gate at any beach resort. - Another thing is the new swimming umbrella. The port that Protect! flsflinst the burning fury of so] is of rubberized silk: the DPOHBS. tips and handle are of flue steel, thickly coated with nov- with a dull satin feel but. miniu it! shine. Materials, as the laymen prefers to call them, included cropes, crepe satins, georgctte. crepe romein. velour: and retina. Oolcra com- prised Indim brown. bottle green. marine blue, ccq dc rochc, grey and black-these for daytime-and for evening. putel blue, veronica blue, lacquer red. ultrnmarine blue. fuschia, mauve rose. black nnd white. Furs mumbled utrakan, on-acul otter, lynx, kolinsky, fox and guillcc for daytime. and ermine. tlgouln (l manufactured fur) and fox for evening. Peau d‘Ange and Flerusoie. ‘These should also be perfectly smooth. Then piiwe the tube m a kettle or °"°"l‘;‘°:‘ u ‘:;r:,':$°l:‘mfl,;dm“ other receptabie of water and boil 5M“ a ' it for at. least 15 minutes before and after use. > Before inserting it in_ the teat apply carboiizc.‘ vasellne to the tube. which mean while should have been carried it a cup conifiining a. five percent 50-‘ lution of carbollc acid or some al- cohol- Before inserting even a. FoR Coins m; All irTi. ismuv Style Chats n11- WITH ALMA ARCHER As for u I'm concerned, thshoetess is a Wau-Wau if all! equips her guest room with a spread-comforhble-blariicet ensemble. featuring the same motif in pattern and color harmony. I don't know any tangible benefit to be derived from sleeliilll under an ensemble instead of no n-relatedmui: Morpheus may Si" you a better break at that. g And must we go into it again that all bed-clothing. esDwiB-lll’ lhcctl. should be long —‘ long enough m thoroughly envelop l 51X‘ foot person without a possibility of out-kicking. An loll-inch sheet is a. minimum and nothing to pal. yourself on the bMk 1°‘ supplying. If you have anything under 108 inches, it makes W" a mug -i no foclin‘. “jflllvl QIMWWI-‘l How fresh and ‘ i lovely is the wistful fragrance of the YarclleyLavender! Famous allover the world as the most exquisite example of this favourite English perfume, it is cherished: hi S6 ilvmrl‘ elty cork, and while doing a little light floating yourself you my place it on a small wavelet and it will decorate the lmdlccpc im- u’! J/N/ II)!‘ \Ill'4' alike by gay youth and by the older generation. YARDLEY LAVENDER k Pr? , F Ponder. Day and Ni C , .s.I='-'.':.--17=i..~.qsc¢p¢ww quwcm. YARDLEY ,, Old Bond Street Llcnldc i Y: Haunt UJAJ {It i I-llrhulwhk Tunic "