. i -—--- *-~»_- —-v.-».--~w¢-v. . .».._ wr-Qw-s. P’.- _ . , 4 M‘. i}- ‘l i "q-s-mgg. us‘ PAGE EIGHT W021 vvvv ‘ v vvv v vvv AA -4- AAeiyAAAAlA A4 9901x555 Take one white cabbage heart, a I have been thinking of cool quantity of ripe red plums, oranges thinss- mayonnaise. Wash the cabbage, put theheart into a. saucepan and bring to the boil, drain thoroughly and shred very finely. Wi/pe the plums and icarefully extract stmes Out the oranges in half and scoop out the pulp. Fill the plums with some of this. then m‘): the remainder with the cabbage and a good mayonnaise. Pile on to a dish and set the plums in the bed of salad, pour over more Stare of frcst on windows, Moonlight on marble: Lilies white on the sapphire of lakes in early mom-trig. OO0il1E§-—- Sound of falling water in a gar- den at evening; Starlight over dark-hushed trees; Willow-leaves, rain at midnight; Wind from the sea, —Dolores Cairns. 5 ——————--— mayonnaise and decorate with REMOVE CHBV-“NG GUM cherries or other garnish. If somebody has dropped chew- ing cum on your fine rue. and it YOUNG cums snouLn I01‘ -——+————— ‘youngr. ‘ AN ENGL15¥l3I-\N'5 CON"; Lines and wrinkles naturally. j SCIENCE iconic with maturity and it is prac- 7 - u refunded their money n‘ the has been s‘eppcd on, no not rub "Avg, WRINKLES the nap all off the rug in trying to‘ There i; mum u; be said in fa- get thc gum out. Instead try wash/liver of lnes on the face of a. wo- ins the spot with gar-solute 0r iiir-‘man over thirty-five And much to‘ against them if she is‘ pentlne. This will loosen the gum.‘ b; 531d In an mglish movie house some; [igqlly impossible to prevent all of y A. time ago. nearly a thousand peo-k [hqm No; would you want to. P19 $8?’ “lilting fill‘ the f-fiiiirfl‘ i156“ few lines on the face of an older: ture. The nrvivetlen hwrhine bloke woman add a lot of character and down and the mrmsomrht an-iimrrrw u» her face. Some of the nouured tint 1hr lKl-ilWiF Wald be! most bcaufful old-er women in the bO-XJ world have many fine laugh lines office. But as their ivcre diffcrentlamund {half rye; and the may“- prive eerie tire iwbirm arose as w able vertical lines around their various claims for remuneration. mouths one cannot imagine them The manager melcli‘ but his vus- being beautiful without those lines. tomers on their honor. And ivlicn! B111, ‘vigor; it QQme5 w the young- the iii-it Diiymient WM midi“ the YP- , er grl, lines and wrinkles are ‘ an ceipts and the money piid out" cor- f cntrely different matter. You TP-“Wnded t9 i‘ PPY-Iili It 3 3 Tiiflik- a should take steps to prevent them 0f i119 mlddierluliileyour skin is still firrn and that he only,3-o\,ng_ A iirheieii There are nourishing creams for .1 l‘ an ’s Realm 92'?" Q-QQDOOOOQOQOO - 0 y Herc is our big, new bottle of Prepared ’Mustarc|. when inext you want mustard this ‘ is the brand t o buy. » >- PREPA RED IMUSTARQ “ONE OF A FAMOUS FAMILY lity, admiring the one and despis- ing the othcn. Teach me neither to proffer nor to receive cheap praise. If I am called upon to suffer, let, me be like a well-bred {mast that gocs away to suffer in silence. Teach me to win if I may; if I may not, teach me to be u gcod loser. Teach me ne;ther to cry for the There .s a fine pr losapliy of life in these various mar-aims. Their be u tn on thati the dry skin. Dryncss is one of the volume couki little incld n: to sliotv Pow a high- most prevgignf, $511995 of premature ly civiixzed people can have in- i IUTQS, grn ned flto them a scrse of pcr-‘ Why not shop around a bit for] reliable nourishing and tnsueg innd good sen" zand u";!r: reading enables one to understand bettcr The widom and restraint" swnding usefulness of King G ozge during his regn. Humblcr io.k iirhtii -:- Socia moon, nzr to czy over spilled irulk!“ ~ wanna-w»- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN "v ". . "twee". -" r " """t"v """. _e"""-""" t" Yo"- ersonal -:- Fashions OFOOOII and OQ§OOOO0OOOOHOO4§§OQ0O-O#§0OO4§O I Are you ‘p ' 3,13". fix w-ir-“r-iu» LDorothy Dzx “;‘.';,'.°'a'.‘l1‘°, Husband? u, snub It’s Good Business as Well as a Sentimental Satisfaction for a Woman to Keep Her Husband Thinking She's the One and Only, for Happy Home is the i Greatest Factor in a Man's " _ Success When a woman thinks about holding her husband's affections she always ccnzilcrs it in terms of sentiment. It is balm to her heart and 1 salve to her vanity to know that she is still "ll?" to the man to whom she ‘ . _ is married, and that no siren, charm she never so subtly, can take him away from her. But for a wife to keep her husband think- ing she is still the one and only woman and glad he married her is not only a sentimental satisfaction, it is good business. It is the best financial investment shs can rnaike. It is the surest and quickest way in which ehe can boost him up the ladder o1 success. For nothing puts vim and energy into a man's climbing like desiring to get luxuries and com- forts for the woman he loves, and nothing slows him down like being indifferent to his i l i wife and not caring whether she has anything or not. It is one thing for a man to toll and struggle and strive for a wife he adores, and who makes him a happy home and whose tenderness and ap- ipi-ccliition make all of his labor worth while, but it ls a different story ‘i when a man has to slave for a wife who is peevlsh and fretful and nag- ging, who makes his home a. place of torment and who takes all of his sacrifices without even so much as a "thank you." The happily married man has an incentive to labor that the unhappily married man does not possess, and it is a literal truth that many a wife .who complains bitterly because her husband does not get along in the i world has only herself to blame. With her own hand she has killed the goose that laid the golden egg. ' I I Of course, every woman wants her husband to stay in love with her, and, of course, every woman wants her husband to succeed, and it is ‘strange "that so few oi’ them ever perceive how intimately the one de- pends upon the other; how few realize that for a man to do his best _ work he must go to it with an untroubled mind and with a body that has i bccn well fed and well cared for. r No man who bangs out of the house of a morning after a. breakfast that would kill an ostrich and after a squabble with a. slovenly woman in 1 .1 soiled kimono and curl papers is in any condition, either mentally or ' physically, to do the kind of work that counts. His “gestion is upset. ilis spirit is sore and bruised. His mind has lost its poise, is recalling I ii cup soft bread crumbs ' apples and add to mixture. Beat ‘@444 THE COOK ’S CORNER Onion-Stalled Applel 0 tart apples a tablespoons bacon n» 9i cup chopped onion ‘A teaspoon salt 56 teaspoon paprika. 1 tablespoon sugar Pore, com apples. Place bacon fat, chopped onion in a mine pen, and saute to delicate brown. Season with salt, paprika and sugar. Add soft bread crumbs and m1 cavities of apples with this mixture. Sprinkle apples lightly with sugar and bake until tender. Serve with roast pork. Apple Filling for Layer Cake 1 cu 1 cup sugar Grated rind and juice of 1 lemon 3 tart apples Beat egg light and add sugar. Add grated rind and lemon juice. Grate well and cook. Stir until thick. Cool antfspread between layers of cake just before serving. Apple Charlotte 2 pounds tait cocking apples 6 tablespoons apricot puree (not necessary) 2-3 cup sugar cooked until clear with 3 tablespoons hot water. Cook peeled apples until very tender with the syrup, then dry out by constant stirrlnlg over the fire until like thick marmalade. Add either ‘A teaspoon cinnamon or the grated rind of half a lemon and 1 tablespoon butter. Out stale bread into finger shaped pieces or oblongs to fit side and bottom of a plain mould. Toast bread and then dip into melted butter and line sides and bottom of mould, putting the pieces as close together as possible. Fill the mould with the prepared SEPTEMBER 22 1933 r urfature YARDLEYI LAVENDET’: - 7-’: T117519 The one Lovable Fragrance of which Fashlqn never wearles - alwa s charming — so Ieasant y ‘ right ’ when eavy, exotic perfumes are not quite suited to the occasion. Complexion Cream, $1.10. Lavender Perfume, 40o to $13.20. Soap, Guest size, 20o cake, Toilet size 35o cake, Box of 3, $1.00, Bath size, 55c cake. Complexion Powder, $1.10. THE CRFAM’. The Yardley English Com- plexion Cream is an all- purpcee cream-tho only one you need use, cleansing cream, skln food and foun- dation for your powder- the moat efficient: and de- lightful cf all creams. YARDLEY — LONDON roaouro NEW YORK mus Mrs. Brown: "You told me that d I left my tablecloth out all nighi the fruit stains would be gone. So 1 put it out last night.” Mrs. Green: "Of course‘ the stein were gone in the morning?" Mrs. Brown: "Yes, and so was the a nounu: swarms]: ' . J sonal responsibility. Call it honesty ‘ every word of the quarrel and the mean things he said to his wife and the fruit and cover the top with bread tablecloth}. L‘. L. ‘. or honor or what. you will, behind it is a. grpd social conscience which' Creams? when you find one’ plmjlifes da ly battles may find some to use it every night after you havef 339mm“ i" these maxhm- T7193’ cleaned your face. Leave it on alli night occasionally. explains why London police do not have to carry gurs and rarcly even carry billics, and ivhy Old Bailey, cnt overlook the importance of the one criminal court in all Lon- muscle oils for the lines around don, only needs to hold sessions] y:ur eyes. The oil should be wann-f three days a wrek. The good Eng-r‘ patted on the spotsi lishman knows i: lfglrr dirty where jinrs may appear and left’ than the rcspsirsib tv o.’ individ- on all nigiit. uai citizenship-Don .t Free Press HIS XVIAJESTTF: MAXUWS (Regina Leader-Post) RECIPES FOR PLUM JAM AND SALAD An English Journal in its current; Take 4 lb. plums, l cup seeded ' issue g ves favorite quotations of j raisins. 2 oranges. juice of one le- celebrated people and shows quitei mon, 1-2 1b. iviiinuts. sugar. Wash plums, remove stones, add WiiOT.’ names and deeds are known} raisins and orangvs. which hriveflhrough the world fortify their] been slced very fine. Measure and lives by recalling great sayings and! add 3-4 cu?) sugar to each cup of sentiments. The list of great poo-f fruit and Jucv ole is headed by His Majesty King‘ Put into prcscwmg pan, cook‘ George and his list of quotations isi slowly about 45 minutes or untlhwvrthy of being reproduced for its! consistency of jam, stirring to pre- own sake as well as for the emin- are her: given to tltat end. THE ART OF CANNING Most of the hiusehcld arts had their begnn ng in the prmitive home. Canring, hcivevcr, was I1. nineteenth century discovery, and, it originated as a plan for mass production. v Napoleon, in an attempt to pro- vide for his armies, offered a prize for the develpmcnt of some me- thod of preserving ‘perishable food. A French cizcf and COIIiT inner,‘ clear-Ly how many men and women iNicholas Appert, won that 1111c by ‘gamed down mm same small 10h the success of h‘s rapvrinicnts w.th a process which we now know as canning. He cooked tlic food, then packed and scdecl it air- tight, and the food kcp‘, for monthsf- Neither Appert nor nnvbotiy else in his day knew why. imcan things she said to him. Many a man's judgment is so clouded by this battle he has Just had with his wife that he makes the decision that wrecks him. Many a. man breaks down at middle age because he has gone after his hard day's Wonk to a home that was an understudy of purgatory and has had no place in which he could find peace and rest. And many a man loses his grip and gives up the fight to succeed be- cause his wife has wet-blanketed his every hope and aspiration and taken like the sides. Cook in 350 degrees l". oven for 45 minutes, then un- mould carefully and, if desired, cover the side with apricot puree or glam. Heavy storms in the Alps stopped the heart out of him by her never-ending criticisms, and her ceaseless de- mands to know why he can't make as much money as some other man or why he can't write a best seller or get elected to some big office. She belittlcs everything he does until she kills his faith in himself, and because she thinks he is a failure he becomes one. - Time and again we have all seen talented, energetic, go-getting young Cilapspf whom we prophesied great things who just sort of petered out after they got married. seemed to lose their ambition and this push. Very often took to drink or phiiflll“, daring. And we wondered why and what happened to them. Nine times out of ten the answers was that they were unhappily mar- ricd. Didn't get along with their wives. Had homes that they dreaded to go bnck to at night and that they got away from as soon as possible“. Sometimes the man had married a woman who was a. bad house- keeper. _ She wouldn't get up and give him his breakfast in the morning and he had to cook himself a mess before he went to work. Sometimes it More than forty yents later the was an extravagant wife who kept him in debt and he never could take ad- vent burnng. Add lemon juice and once of the cne who uses it. ‘These ‘ great French scientist Lzuis PAS- i vantage of any opportunity because toil as he might he could never save chopped nuns. Pour into stcrfledisenilmefits that 113R‘; L11 his work- teur ilniTllliCfiii to ilic wsrld two a cent Jars. ~ [room at Buckingham Palace ready The jam is vex-y p-puiar in 5.; "Teach me to be obedient to the Africa, from whence the recipe | rulcs of the game. comes. I “Teach me in distinguish be-z Plum and Cabbage Salad |twocn sentiment and sentiments-j Daintiness With Chic Styles i IIINGQINIKD DBESSMAKING LRSSOH IUIINISBID WITH EVERY PATIIBI B! jNNABELIl IOKIINI§ l Sleeves that give height to the shoulders are very important this season. It shoulders it charmingly in this model. Don't you think? The] slim-line skirt has inverted plaits to i give freedom to the hem. This adorable frock can be car-i riled out in faille crepe silk, crepe satin, wool crepe, silk and synthetici crepe or wool and synthetic mix- tures. It's stunning as pictured in eel- gray faills crepe. Style No. 530 is designed for sizes l4, l0, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. size 16 requires 8% yards 30-inch material. Price of PATTERN l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 350. Size ..................... "p" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “run-a. Street Address .....~-.-..-¢.--.---. innocuous-con! C"? Etlts A charity collection drive for cat- tle drovers was taken recently in Cork, Irish Free State. Raiders cup off the water supply of Ballybunion, Irish Free State, by smashing the pipes near the reser- volt. ‘ ganisnu r impoztnn: discoveries. Mlcro-_cr- ‘llt in fcod, water and air caust» spiilage of food. Heat destroys those micro-organisms, and sterilizcs the food. Herc was the secret of Appervs success. Since ApperUs time, and espe- cially since Pasteur, there have been new developments in the can- ning process. The oid time ways was to c:ok the focd, pack it boil- ing hot into hot containers, and seal it quickly to shut out air. This is the “cpen-kettle" method and it: works with fruits and tomatoes, provided there is no contamination the moment between packing and sealing the containers. A later me- thod is the "cold-pack" by which the focd is packed cold and the fil- led container is "processed or sterfllaed, in a water bath or pres- sure canner. A third method is the “hot-pack" method which is recom- "open-kette" or “cold-pack" me- thods. For the “hot-pack" the food is heated in a minimum quaniity of liquid, in order to reduce the containers are {lacked with the bailing hot fond and processed in 'a water-bath, same as in the cold- pack method. These methods are ustd with the acid foods, such as fruits. torna- toes, pickled beets, and ripe pl- mlentos, because the prcsmcc of the acid together with the boiling temperature destroys the micr-or- ganlsms that cause spoilage. is recommended, as much higher temperatures are needed to destroy the micro-organisms of spoilage in acid foods. The problem of the ra- ther high cost of pressure cookers of housewives have "clubbed toge- ther‘ and pur:ha~ed the ccoker, which is usrd in tum by the dif- ferent households mended ln preference to either the i bulk and drive out air. Then thc' "processing" in a pressure cooker these foods than are required for has been solved in many communi- ties bya system whereby a number Sometimes the man had married a nagger who wore his nevers to tattcrs with her tongue. Sometimes she was a. vlrago who made his soul More than 127,000 visited the POZTSED WOMAN IS NEVER I Portsmouth, England, dockyard dur- SELF CONSCIOUS 1 ilig Navy Week. i i Some people are born with poise. Others have to acquire it. If you are one of the latter, then there are several exer- |cises which will help you to attain ;the poise so necessary to your ap- pearance as well as your happiness. Reading aloud helps your voice control, teaches you how to pm- imuncs words and gives you self assurance in speech. ‘ If you cantthink of anything to say when you're with people, re- member that reading a couple of newspapers every day from cover _ to cover, will furnish you with :plenty of conversational topics. By reading newspapers aloud, Iwull be making your first step to- 'ward poise do double duty. Your Kollcelvgll imrprove and so will your owe ge o conversational topics. ' -~ -’ i Wfliidns. sitting and standing “WE have n ten months’ old gmmmny 3nd C°H°°flY "9 W?! M baby; boy,” writes Mrs-D. zimmrtani if you wirri a» b: p013- core. ‘A ter the first week, we led, Never sit with, your legs wra. ii‘ h a l a ' l p‘ ZZi..'i‘.‘..°IL'af.i.Zf‘€y.‘iZ.'l2‘.‘2fl P" "mm" i“ “item of u» turd to trYEsxleBi-andMilkand “hi” m" Y°“i' knew together gar the last two months he ha: ‘and W!!!‘ feet in toward the chair. ecn gaining tremendously. Ho Omgglng yam» 13g, 13 permuted . ed 2 . 5.35.. rfifllili‘. liiiiiiafif i“ m i“ "time" "thrive- o“ irzg. I cannot speak too highly ‘etiquette the” id!"- A-nd 5105158 v Eagle Brand." them gracefully excludes awkward- Il you an unnblo lo mun your nun DB! on 1011.!‘ plrt, BQ gig-Q 5nd .1 llmluundl o] mm... “a it, ‘ewes them well above the knees. fBaby Moore thrived on fllaglelirand i l baby, Iallaw m. adv!“ o] llundnl; Phf nQn-QQ1d fQQds, such a5 EI|II Brand. Th0 Izllfllll filial III!’ yNeWr meats, mm. beans. peas. a-spiira- M" wum" fl Bflwuwwm’ ' The best thing to do of course gus and baby-beets and carrots, .1, m know that youxfmovun-ent; are graceful and than forget about yourself. No woman can have real poise if she is constantly thinking 1 about herself. i" , Palestine‘: foreign trade continues to increase. Eagle Brunt] CHW-"Milla 451mm Products are being used in the new Iraq oil pipe-line. Albanlab new highways are the finest in tbs Balkans. trains, interrupted motor traffic, and caused heavy property damage re- cently. ' ildrens Cold s Checked witho ut: C S i A 1115-11 neatly esteemed by his employers informed the cashier that a mistake had been made in his wages. He had been given ten dol- lars too much, he explained. Briggs was showing his nelghbcl over his house. "There's my equestrian portrait,‘ The cashier, after counting the azlidd’ r I n w a pmumm , contents of the envelope slid it was come,’ m, w,“ “was been m_ The neighbor gazed at it critw creased by instructions from the “n7- “A very flue snap-shot." he replied- “But what makes you call it a snapsho ," asked Briggs. "Well, you're still on the horse." management. "How long have I been having this?" was the next inquiry of the man-a husband and the proud father of two children. "The alteration was made three ' months ago," rejoined the cashier after a glance at his books. "What!" ejaculated the man. "And she never told me!" Hats, gloves and square pochstfa of real zebra skin, are popular in Paris. cause he was miserable and he asked for a. woman like, he slowed down. hlDDY- sick with her scenes. Sometimes she was just a. cold-hearted grafter who didn't disguise from him that she married him for a meal ticket. But, however, it was, she killed that something vital in him that 15 the mainspring of succes, because his wife had slain his love for her and be- So, wives, if you want your husbands to be successes, mgkg “mm Love them and jolly them and use tact in getting along ‘with them, and keep them thinking you are worth working for. Paris finery on your backs and limousines to ride in. For Baby’s Bath More than that of any other member of the family, babyk tender, delicate skin needs the greatest care and attention. The soft soothing oils in Baby's Own Soap make it specially suitable for babies, and its clinging fru- granes reminds one of the roses of France which help to inspire it. "If: bertfor you and Baby foo" himself what's the use of working Itwillbe DOROTHY DIX. STOCKINGS AND SWEATERS ‘liners’: Youth-there‘: Life- there's Pop in Penman: sweaters and Stockings-and best oi all, there's ruggedness to fake the punishment the youngsters give- 43-4