. 1-..--.¢-.-= (Jvcan-uq-Q-ng-aa- -_ [jlWoman ’s PAGF- TWO THE Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN wvv .A SPECIAL R EPRESENTATIVE Coca/ac. IS HERE "M, ‘n. A boon to your beauty! Miss Arden's specially trained representative is here with news of the latest research in the New York Solon. She will be delighted J0 tell you how to acquire o flawless complexion. JAMIESONS DRUG STORE and HER ACTIVITIES l WONDER typical state of affairs among wo- “ men workers such as. for example, f wonan if the sap .‘< ' r . store assistants, waitresses or hos- Ii’ wintry bmds are d. gvial nurses, shows how rare shoe mute, wisdom is, If frozen snoutlicopz. fuel as ytt the sun. And crocus fires are kindilrl: by one. a Florida is finding the kudzu vine one ‘valuable in controlling gullying and erosion of land. ——Cilrist1na G. Rosetti.‘ A European hypnotist has re- ported -success in hypnotlzing a CllhllPflnzee in the London zoo. UNSUTTABLE CLOTHING LOWERS EFFICIENCY Do you realise the important ei- fect your working clothes may Germany will use military scro- have on the effectiveness of yourililfllles in spraying large farm and work’). asks a “Titer in New Health Howls areas where insect pests Magazine. D0 you study the clothes threaten trouble. you wear in relation to your job, so that your efficiency mflv not, be To speedup their experiments in Realm -::iSocialil vw and uceb“ Personal .-:-A Fashi 0:1 “Aboook Lvitera tu re oaoeooeeoo 0000000000-004109000}: MAY 3. 1937 Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Alfblhflfllblfill) MONDAY. MAY 3 TOKYO 4 pan-Broadcast. to eastern section of U. S. A. JVN. 28.14 m.. 10.68 meg; JZJ, 26.42 m . 11.8 meg. BOMB s p.m.—-News in English; Opera; The new Italian fuels on test; 2304s Mail Bag. 2R0. 31.1 111-- 9.s3 meg. BOSTON 6:30 par-Course in Modem Radio. WIXAL, 48.8 m.. 6 04 meg. MOSCOW 7 p.m.—Tbe automobile industry. RAN, 31.2 m.. 9-3 m°8~ _ PRAGUE. CZECHOSLOVAKTA 8:30 1).m.—C7A¢h "H11! #01185- omt, 4A. 25.34 m..11.B4 mes. CABACAS 5110.51,’! m.. 5.8 meg. PRAGUE. CZECTTOSLOVAKIA 9pm p_m,-— Popular Concert. OLR. 4A. 25.84 m..11.84 m6!- PARIS l0 p.m.— Gramophone Records- TPa-c, 25.2 m . 11.88 r1108. nonnon n 10:15 p.m.--"Vill88e 0l>lh1°h~ oer‘. 19a m.. 15.14 meg: 68D- $.5 m.. 11.75 meg-i G60. 31.8 rn., 9.5a mefl- PRINCE ALBERT 11;45 pJim-BOOI! Review by James stuart Wood. CJRO. 48.7 m.. 6.15 meg.; CJRX. 25-5 111-- 1l.72 mes. ii"_" tarragon vinegar, two tablespwni red current Jelly, 1-2 teaspoon dry mustard. sprinkling of salt and cavenne pepper. Heat slowly until Jelly has dill- solved. Add rtiqlllrefil numb" °f lamb slices to the sauce, ‘warm them up and serve. LONDOWS BEST SELLERS. Books on kingship and the Cor- onation, for, adults and for boys and girls, are best sellers today in London. Baroness Eilgerle de Rothschild. hostess to the Duke 0f Wind-SQ!‘ I" the Castle of Emzesfiold n?!“ Vienna, but Just bought a new spring halt. made entirely of ribbon. This toque, from Caroline Rleboux, is made entirely of tiny cockades of ribbon in three different colors. The cockades are stitched upon a lowered through unsuitable cloth- improving varieties of corn, plant ing? Clothing has both a psycho- lbreeders are growing a winter crop logical and phy's‘o‘ogical effectlof corn in greenhouses. which may be of the greatest im- portance in relation to lleaith and. A museum of surgery, showing efflvielirli lthe history and progress of surgery, Some time ago an examinafiolymay be established in New York, was made of the feet and shoes of: jccofdrftj to plans recently an- 97 women workini: in a rlflm"iI‘fl‘l"l" nmmcqy store. Thirty-seven women had foot trouble or foot strain, 4t: wvr.‘ The fgllowing states of the shoes that uteri»: too short. 40 Wore American union have officially heels that upset the body b1lance,|ndopted state trees: Georgia, 19 wore heels so high 8s to be in- furious to the rest of’ the body and 59 wore shoes that fitted so badly that they distorted the feet. If one is enzaged on a job which Idaho. Illinois. Indiana. Louisiana. Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carofina, Texas. Utah. BARRT-‘FTYETT T"'“7§ TS requires a lot of “talking and ,_AP|>|-;Tr<~r"- "rn UNUSUAL standing about. it surely is an cle- .___ '"'“ _i ' mentary principle that one should An apppmi. annual way take special care to select com- [of using up a joint. Put two fortable, well-fitting shoes. Yet the l1l7l0II7CfTl1flil< melted butter inun above example. whirhfdeililcts a n saucepan, add a bare tablespoon U tulle foundation which matches exactly the b1ond.e hair of the Baroness do Rothschild who, by the way. is an American from Philadelphia. lvLrs. Harison Williams, New York socialite. has ordered a new ribbon hat from Sum’. the milliner of the Duchess of Kent. This is a turban with a black foundation trimmed with bands of purple and red ribbon which are knotted in back with fringed streamers hang- ing loosely behind. THE COOK ’S ' CORNER Quilted Applique Knitting Bag / I 34a, PAiiuklilf. llU U 51:.‘ ROLLS (30 rolls) Two cup; scolded milk, 3 table- 51390115 wtter. 2 tablespoons gran- ulated sugar. 2 teaspoons salt, 1 cake compressed yeast, 1-4. cup lukewarm water. 1 to 2 pounds bread flour (about 6 cups). Scald milk. add shortening. sugar and salt. When cooled to lukewarm,‘ add yeast which has been dissolved in water. Sift in albout 2-3 of the total quantity of flour and beat well. Let stand until it rises to double the orig‘nal bulk. Add remaining flour and knead well. Let rise again until double in bulk. Roll dough to thicknss of 1-4 Inch. Cut with biscuit cutter (3 inches in dimme- ter). brush each piece with melted butter and crease each roll through the centre with dull edge of knife. Fold over double, pinch edges to- gether. and place on well greased pan, 1 inch apart. Allow to rise until double in bulk, then brush tops of’ rolls with melted butter. Bake in hot oven (425 deg. F.) for about 15 minutes, until done. That quantity of ao may seem large at first but waft until the family gets wind of these hot. “cakes? And there's always to- rnorrcw. WITOLEWTTBAT NUT ROLL! ( 15 roll!) One and three-quarters table- spoons sugar. 1 1-2 teaspoon salt. 9;3o p.m.—-Dance Orchestra. YV- l fifi . 55’ ".11.? lDorot/ly DIX .531‘, ‘You May Think That Families Make No } Difference in Marriage, But Neither Boy Nor Girl Can Forget Former Environments A young man who belongs to a fine and cultured family that for gon- erations has stood for tlie things that are the most admirable in human- ity has fallen in love with a pretty girl who was born and reared “on the wrong side of the tracks" as the phrase Bees, and whose people are uneducated, shfftlesa and mm. less and given to drunken brawls Naturally, the boy's parents object strenuously tp m; mguflL "But, says the enamored youth, "I am marrying Rosie. I am not marrying her family." This is a mistake into which those who have had no personal experience o1 matrimony often iflli- Nothifls is more common than to hear n. boy 5B1’! "I 081"- StB-ild Mary's sloppy old mother, but. thank i-Ieaven, I am not marrying Mflfy'5 family," Qr a. girl w;1l say: "John's family Q11} Just; per. , let-ill’ “Willi. my dear. but I am not marrying them, praise be.” _ l . But after _John and Mary get married they find. to their surprise and constenlation, that they are not more firmly wedded to each other than they are to each other‘; families; that noth. mg but death or the divorce court can part. them from each otherfis par- that go with them. Of course. the men and women who marry into families below them think that to separate their wives and husbands from the own people is as simple as it is to pluck the one perfect flower from a. str gly bush and ride away and forget all about the plant that, bore it, but, family m; are not so brittle as that, nor are family Obligations so easily gvgglggL ~i——i e Because John Poorman marries into the ulgfpcrgtlc De vm-e gamfly doesn't make him cease to love his mother ow forget new an, glgvgd Qver the wilt/uh to nut him through college, nor does it make him love his socialite wife for shooting his mother and treating her like an interloper when she comes to pay them a visit. ' Ewell-W Susie's nui-rriase took her from Poverty Flat u» Easy Street.‘ doesn't make her cailously indifferent as w whether her family starve or not. or less anxious to give her old parents a. few luxuries and to send a pretty sister a new dress and to help a wild brother out of trouble, So Miss De Verre finds that. after all, she has married her husband's family fl-nd unless she alienates his affections from her completely she has to nlake his people as welcome in their home as her own, and send the baby as often tc see Grandma Pool-man as she does Grandmother Million- bucks. The rich man discovers that when he married the poor girl he also married her family and took them on to support. Furthermore. every one who takes a hilslaand or wife not; only mer- ries their families but. also all that they have done and been for centuries. All of us are what heredity and environment have made us. Our traits of character come down to us through long lines of mcegtopg Our pun. @1111“. 011i’ points of view. our habits. our manners and our morals are what our fathers and mothers taught; 115, If parents have a. high code of conduct that they live up to; if they are broad-minded and Just and generous; 11 they are honest, mg honor- able; if they are industrious and ambitions, ninety-nine times out of a hundred their children will be that way, too, and safe matrimonial bets. Good‘, families to marry. But a man or woman‘ is taking a 1on3 mo; at, hatppiness ‘who marries a woman or man whose family tree has borne only ro n ru . Hence the young should quit deluding themselves with the fallacy that when they marry they only merry the individual, not his 01‘ her fam- ily. John marries Mary's mother's virtues or her faults; her culture, her thrlftiness, her unselflshness, OR her ignorance, her sloveniiness, but loose morals. Mary marries John's father's good qualities or his bad; his courage, his uprghtness, his chivalry, OR his meanness, his etingines, his bieilfef titihat a wife is nothing but an unpaid servant who cells for no cons era on. And inasmuch as this is true and that when you marry you marry the wihclc family, it is just as important to pick out the kind of family you desire for life companions as it; is to choose um mdlvklugl m”, m- mm“, you want for a husband or wife. DOROTHY DIX. l l l Frances Shelley We es “r I been: ml“. II-IVIGI. (Continued) mre my.eif until two hours ago. "So now," Tubby said, eying him, when 1 telephoned you. I couldn't when it doesn't look as if it might telephone her,, could I Hello, be e0 fine, you feel responsible? Piiar, I'm going tc may a 311-1 m g 1e that it? Ie that. why you're few minutes. And then‘: no cuts. sisters. brothers. cousins. aunts and all the afflictions and drawbacks - throwing yourself away like a sack of soft potatoes " l Bryn sighed. "I do wish you'd; go and change your clothes," he t said. "You cant be best man in a white tie and tails. not. when Pm . reason why I should. I've never asked her to marry me, qr even hinted about it." “Well, I don't have to tell her. do I?" “That's e bright idea," Bryan wearing e. lounge suit. We'd prob- t 551d “ppm, mun“ 01d mm I.“ ably have another earthquake." "And what about Pilaf?" "Pilar?" "Ptlar D’Avillo? What. her?" "Well, whet about her?" For two years you've carted her around. She's had a emile for the last 23 months like a mouse in a cheese-barrel. Everybody thinks about l 1 cake compressed yeast. 2 1-8 Mayfair Needle-art Deslflli NO- 345 A really handsome utility bag that will keep your knittini; 8M0 81111 sound. will accompany you to the shops. carry your sewing when you go to use, hold no end of things when you go a-travelllng and safeguard a. mul- ‘titude of odds and ends wh~n you lealc it at home. The applique de- gign Le bright-colored and easy to do. The flowers and leaves are email l ends of grosgran ribbon appliqucd to the background with czoiorful . threads. The quilting is part. of the transfer and is also done with em- ' bmldery threads. A perfect gift and quite the handlest. accessory tc own. Th; pgflllm contains trmlsfvr pattern for the bag, transfers of pplique ' designs, instructions for quilting. embroidery, and applique as well as ‘ easy-to-understand instructions for making and finishing bag. ‘ For complete patterns and instructions for all of these designs. ‘ lend 30 cents tn stamps or coin ‘coin preferred) to The Charlottetown i Guardian Needlework Department. U. u“, Mumm Print your name and address plainly. ‘_ To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept.- D$IGN N0. 346 N$”__________________,___-____¢u '§fil'Dfllll|l'¢U—-—————@___-------"-_" W__-——n ainuc-u—a_____munpnpnxqZi— cups water, 1 on. 3 cups breadl flour, 2 cups wholewheet flour. 13-4 tablespoons melted butter. chopped walnuts. Use a large bowl, Mix sugar and salt. Crumble yeast cake end add. Beet egg well and combine‘ with the lukewarm water. slowly. stir intc mixture in bowl. 51ft, then j measure bread flour and add tol wholewheat. flour. Beat 1-2 of flour into yeast mixture, add melted butter. then beet tn the remeininrz flour. stand in warm place unit! it rises to double in bulk. Greer" muffin tine, pinch off pieces of dough and half fill the muffin tins. Brush the will 0f the rolls with melted butter and stand until they rise to double in bulk. Bake ‘n hot. oven (425 deg. 1".) for about 80 minutes. Brush again with melted butter and dust with clien- ped nut meats. Return to oven for a few minutes. They are good eating, eepednily with some of unbound! cebme 1Q l you're going to marry her. Shell go blooey when shc hears this. Have you told her anything at all?” “How could I tell her? l wasn't T00 FIT? T00 THIIZ Your Liver Mun: Be Healthy and Active to Regain Normal Weight. .a'-'°"m'".‘ I3"'°Ll§‘.“'m",'§'l ‘It’. "fir" n e for the properpglgeetlon and lbeorptfon {I your food. ll It In not healthy, you may develop colt Inky tleeue. or on the con- ttlfl- [of no reel benefit from anything melt. You mud to get too (at or too thin. uee, blood ml glands an elected, n and one!!! ll low. Diet, urclee or t producers will not uce the edelect. llel nature sh"I’rult-e- n‘ blchcon ol Illll rue", w “use e: IO ma" for over IO Inn. Inn new n: help 71m!" we and vitality with "halt-n- tlvle , Ind 50c ll lll drug notes. FRlllT-A-TIVES rkllfiis . ~tosi do the same for you one of these days." "What/ll happen," Tubby said MW"- ly. “is that she'll have me me ng her myself." "Well that's e11 right," Bryan assured him. "You've y always wanted to. anyway. Now, on your way, Tubby. Go and get. dressed. Burch will bring you your cocktail, and lend you one of his shirts and a collar. You can weer my pant: if you're careful not to take a deep breath. but I don't think you'd better try butfoning the coat. M1 in keeping....ehe’ll think you lot them second hand." M8117 Piles-f" ' . Ilse‘! hilt the wife for you. ‘There's the blood of the conquietsdom in Piler. It'll take thattckeepyou from gettingl-ny . Go on. You've only got five minutes." O U O O _ Twenty-three years previoiuly, Anne Whittaker tamed had eioped. on the morning of the day of he: wedding to Courtney Graham, and had married a young man, who, bed he been e. women, would never have been received h the eociety in which the urnede nioved. The consequences were disastrous. The youngmenhedmmonombfithe llndexpectcdto heveenutdeel IF YOUR roorl-i PASTE oosswr FIGHT "emu TOOTH snusmz: Any dentin will tell youths: you can’: have lovely teeth and lovely smiles wilhou having firm, healthy coo. Because teeth are seldom white and spark- eoh and under-nourished. And sifive gums often 8K1": ling when gums are ' t’ th d gulf; ‘i: Rzienkortootllaleblflzhsflailafilnother dental dis- orders.- “Pink tooth brush“ Is a serious warning." ignore it-never dismiss u trifling the: "tinge of pmlf - ic-see your dentist promptly. l: can mean troublr-serioul gum disorder.- But usually it Qnly means gums robbed of exercise and work- IPANA TOOTH PASTE When you see fi Gums must be health for teeth to be sound-Keep gums firm, teeth clean with lpann and Massage victim: of our modern diet of sofa super-refined foods , that will quickly respond lo the healthful! stimulation of‘ 1pm: and massage; For lpnne is n double-duty tooth pom, designed em only to clean the teeth but to aid In massaging the gums. Rub a little extra [pane onto your gums every time you brush your teeth; you will coca notice im- provement. LII! sums awaken as circulation nimulnces the tissues.- and lee ifyou don't when the Iierneds relented and forgave their only daushtcr. How- ever. he encountered unexpected difficulties with the daughter her- self; for when she discovered will’ he had married her, she crept away from him, her heart u nearly broken as n. physical organ can be broken by hiunan unhappiness, and when her daughter was only e. few days old, she died. Fortunately the young father-who never knew that he was a. father-was kicked in a vital spot by a horse, and, died before he could. cause any more misfortune; thus strengthening the belief of a. number of people in the vengeance and Juztaice of God. The aged and broken grand- parents took their daughter's child and also the blame for their daughter's IIIIhEPPl-ITQSS. If. they tcld themselves miserably, they had guarded hei- well, she would never have met this handsome youn8 scoundriel, and all would have been as they had planned. Bhe would have married Courtney Graham. scion of an old and spotless faintly. and all her ways would have been ways of pleasantntrs and all her paths would have been paths of peace. The Grahams were among the first people of ‘ . Nowhere on their eecutcheon could be found a blot, and even the erasure marks ware so carefgliy done as to leave no trace. A perfect marriage, it. would have been. But. their daugh- ter was dead, and their bitter re- gret was in vain. However, they still had the child. and over the mother's grave they vowed to themselves that nothing should mar this girl's life. They dedicated their remaining years to her. It seemed to them that they must creep out of the world with her. hide her, find for hen a. sanctuary. ‘They had sold the historic mah- slon in Boston, and with their beautiful old household goods. had gone west. ae far as they could go. out to the Omgon wilderness. There in the moat. glorious natural surroundings, they had built a huge atone house, a: like the Boston house es possible, and filled it with their treasures. They were mile-s from the nee-reef. town, and out off from all easy contact with civiliz- atlon. Here the child. Deborah, grew up. years old, die had scarcely been off her grandfather's land. In the early yum, when ehe wee yet l a smell child, she went infrequently with her grandparents over the rough momma-in mob to the little country town, or wu perhaps allowed to accompany old Gory. hfl‘ IIlId-PI-IUIIII, fl - IRRITATION OF PIMPLES, RASHES. QUICKLY IEIIEVED blat- [UTIEUH “M” ‘l ___ ..._...~__._. _......_ ._._.._. ._ that die grew up completely out vii from companions of her own age and generation. She had, however. a library full of books. and three people entirely devoted to her wel- fare. It must be emitted that of the thus, G/mndfhther, Grmidniother and Gary, it was Gary who taught her the moat interesting things. amnaifamar taught her history. and science, and geography. and political aoono ; if he was a little vague 1a place; i was because there are matters, of course. with which a woman need not sully her pure mind. Grandmother taught her needlework, and a number of things that made them bot-h blush and over which they both dripped as hastily as . But $17- Gary told her stories of PQQDIe. “Now you'll never believe It.‘ he would begin, ‘but. it's l. font. 1 saw it with my own eyes." "Saw what, Gory darling?" DB- bonh would at dvlwmedly. fill- ing up he: feet underneath he! on timetable. "Whntdidyoifeeevlflh your very own eyees?" "It was once when I wee in New Yor " would begin. "I wee walking own Fifth avenue one my .. ....tile.t's n. very Intonastlflfl street. Mine Deborah, the moet. in- teresting street in the world. I've been tcld.....and right. in front. of me there was a yolllls lady Willi“! along, all dressed up in a plot-um hat and feather boa two yards long, and ehe was crying. Crying fit. to kill, if you can 1111581116 i’¢--~' Yes there was Ga-fy- 911ml‘ father and Grandmother kept the i iron gatm leading to the world locked and barred, but Gary lifted the shutters of a thousand little Wllldmt °9F.°1‘_°;'_"E.-fl_°‘ 1P4!” (Continued on 113g 8) Switch to Tpene and massage today. Try It for e month find your gums firmer, teeth whiter. and your smile more attractive; MADE IN CANADA I'll! AMomivqSnai! HARD To SWALLOW Captain — "You bathed hem without my permission. Don't you knnwfllet thcseaisfullofstlerks?’ Sailor - "Yea. sir. but llmllfl can't worry me. I am tattooed." Captain --“What has that to do with it?" Baiior-“On my but I have in tattoo, ‘Premier Eng ha; ended the Depression,’ and even a shark can't; swallow that." _ Tonm TALK. Young Worsley was teaohirlk hi5 fiancee to dflvc. and aha was doing well till they came to a "flair-Vin bend. she took it quickly lid skidded badly on the turn. "I say- said he, ‘you dld that ‘hair-bill’ dangerously." "Oh." said she- "Willi that; g, ‘lair-phi’? It felt more lil<¢ a ‘slide?’ illlttiikSjllltlllilililts NO need for wom- m or girls to sutTer eve lmllili from ri ic pqinl. headafi or_ side- aches. In llrlll°°d Dr. Pierce's_ Fayet- ite Prescription is_a very beneficial tonic. _ This is what Mr!- ‘ Sarah Jorgianuxf lifiillhihyslli‘ sgllfiiloldbslillihiilllg hold v3 w z a wink at head u and - ole hlllgfiulnlsllf Ilfifiirslfilylliiia cave me ready y; q-y, had lnl In the bllrlkvo: my heed. bud used Dr. Plegitlfil h; n itc Prescription only a abort w a W l m helped me wonderfully. Tl"! :13". “d longer troubled me an the he: a go‘; pain dillppemd." New aim "l"- U iiXCLUSlVE STYSEES F0 PEERLESS Th1; ymmg and feminine pa-inoees line breakfast or morning dress that does thine! to your win-lim- and flatixeogt at the hem. flatter! "In? 3975' . It, simple straight time make It guy w wear, easy to new and easy to launder. compliment: will fly and Nil’ kitchen chcree will be 11811141104‘ I you make it. of lwnolnth bill!" W159 yellow or that: new looking “Gw- guin" plhk ricwmd cotton print, ‘Prim the collar. short eleevee and the potbete with crisp oralmdle mum; 1n whttc or in color to tone with your 11PM- Youll find it. useful for lcoli shopping or the beach for simmer. lean cotton print with multicoi ric rec also a vol‘! 8W and youthful choice. weer a leath- erbelthomaheitlmleerteiloxed inch rafting. Price of pattern i! 081B h (com preferred) wrap coin carefully address to pharlottctcwn Gulrdiln Ilvinl- style No. am Size"... .......... Home BRIO} Adfifi Gill! Ito“ UINTM! NT DRESSERS