PAGE - EIGHT rm; CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN, VRll.' concentrated Strength of Beef vlluildewlilutvgoso. without Patna: For The Cook AMorningSmile ITALIAN IKISOTPE 4 ' Place ‘l cup of butter in a sauce pun. \Vllf"ll slightly browned. add l small onion. chopped line, and l.- to i cup o! canned tomatoes. Stir well ‘llicii ndd "i cup of washed rice. Stir and cook for ‘i or 4 iiiinutcs. Atlcl l cup boiling \\'1'\I0l' and cook ovcr a LiOW iluine. When thc moisture is \'Jl!."llilll‘tl. add niorc boiling water. Continue lllllil ricc is tender. Suit mid pi-1>p.-i' to Mste. Just bcforc ivlllllg, stir in 1-3 cup grated tllccsc. fn- ..__. CAT'S )IE.\NI)ERINGS COST S30 OlilifiillOltlA CITY, July 22.- (U. l’.>—'l'iic nocturnal. prowling lLiilil ol Rusty, PtTSiLlil tomcat, has d. two iiitcrvstccl parties upwards of $20. E. B. Moore appealed u. court (Incision griuilino; Mrs. A. N. Buster, who adopted thg ciit when SllC louiid * on til»: street, a $5 juclgiileiit for A district c rulvcl that Moorc was inc i silllitll owner and was not rcs- p:u1>ii>il~ for Rusty's lncnnrlcrings and klnlltfi-Zfivfill the court costs cquully ufl- ar- w“ “bu: a u QFIIIIBII"JI'AR~ and cook until onions are brown; A Scottish actor came to London and took lodgings. With his mom- ing tea the landlady sent up two thin slices of bread and butter, whereupon he complained of the skimpy portion. The next day she sent him three slices, but still he complained. The third day she cut a loaf in two, put a quarter of a pound of butter on each slab, and sent that up. When he came down she asked defiantly: "Bread and butter all right?" "Aye, no‘ so bad," replied the Scotsman. "But you've gone back to two slices." MID-OCEAN AIRPORTS KEY TO TRANSATLANTIC SAFETY SALT LAKE CITY, Jul 22,. 1U. PJ-Only when mid-ocean alr- ports are established will trans- oceanlc flying be practical and safe, said Lieutenant Vlalter Hinton, the first man to fly the Atlantic. “Ocean flying at present 1s dolng the same for aviation as automobile racing did for the automobile ln- bt‘l\\'t'c.i llloore and Mrs. $14.85 Inch. Foster, dustry years ago." he remarked. , Mlnnrrlw Linlment cuts groan. EVEN THE “IN-LAWS” APPROVE HER COOKING How would you like to be a ng bride and malice that proud lxiast. That is what Mrs. E. N , down in Nova Scotia, can do. And all because she his discovered one simple cooking Bccrct! Here is her letter: “I never knew iii: could liuiiie such a difference in flicking. I really don't know how I ' n thank you enough for the wonderful Ilalfllfl cook book. l haven't failed in pm: single recipe. “You see. l liaven’t been housekeep- lng long and I didn't know much about cooking. and since I (liscovercd Carna- ition Milk my husband thinks 1 am a pndcrful cook, also ‘my in-laws.‘ QAnd now comes the secret of her suc- cess.) I ahvuys keep a large supply of Carnation Milk, for l use it in most everything I cook." Here is ‘the rcnson Mrs. N—— gets such wonderful cooking tesults with Carnation Milk. It is, in the first plilCB, [he best of pure, whole milk, protected pt ‘the source. Cztnizition “field mcn" Eevote their time to teaching dairymen ow to breed-up their herds to higher standards, and showing them what ood business it is to have clean herds, ouscd in clean barns, milked by clean ds into clean utensils. This safeguarded milk is evaporated. lo_ double crcamiiisass, so that every- thing in which it is uscd is rich and cream broken up minutely and distri- buted all through the milk~—so that every drop is rich with cream and every dish takes on the fineness of-telrture resulting from the fine ueam particles. Besides giving cooking results which even the best of bottled milk cannot equal, Carnation Milk offers a con- venience, economy and do clability whlilch can be had in no ot er form of mi . Here is a rec! which will prove to you the extraor inaiy goodness of Car- nation Milk. Write for the Carnation Cook Book and Baby Feeding Book. They are free. Address Carnation Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont. Carnation Tuna Fish a la Newburg- 2 tbs . butter, 2 tbsp. flour, tsp. salt, ew grains pepper, M cup arna- tlon Milk, 9/ cup water 2 egg yolks, 2 cups white luna fish, Stirs .pimiento, 1 tbsp. chopped parsley, tbsp. Wor- cestershire sauce. Ma e a white sauce of the butter, flour, seasonings, Cama- tion and water. Add the slightly beaten egg yolks and cook for 3 minutes. Add flaked tuna fish, diced pimiento and chopped parsley. Heat thoroughly and add Worcestershire sauce just before sewing. 3 tbsp. Sherry flavourirlg and a few gratings of nutmeg can be used instead of the Worcestershire sauce if desired. Serve in patty shells or on toast points. Garnish with stars cut lreamy. It ls "homogenized"-—-the -.-.. Army... s“.-. . ...>.~.~,.._.~; ' IN CANADA ' 93'?‘ at FEG UARDED Ms V For velvety soups and sauces, rich ice creams and candies, fine-textured cakes and puddings and cus- tnrds, always use Carnation Milk-convenient, econo- mical, always dependable. Clean housing of clean herds and clean handling of the milk safeguards Carnation Milk at the source and protects its purity. And this protection continues until Carnation reaches you in its hermetically sealed containers. (Sea recipe above.) Milk from Canadian cows. packed In Canada in Canadian cans and can, from pimiento and parsley. Serves 5. he 1M charming new sports typo. shade. with blue buckle. Hero lt ll to copy exactly at just the cost of the material and a few hours of your time. _ Style No. 8066 may be had in clue 14, l0, 18, 30 yum, I! and I! m" tho 16-year also. 2% you: of 80-inch material with 5i yard o! JB-lnch contrasting ll sufficient to nuke u. Thou lllln. you may be wanting one of than adorable new cotton meshes. ‘This model lends itself pcrfootly to um pqpulq- mg“ “m”. and ls lovely tn white, pm blue, yellow, 691! mm or duty pink ma». Then too, there's men's silk lhlrtlnl, linen, novelty pique, washable cups silk. printed bat-lite and gingham that 11m attract-Ml: tn this fascinating model. O Etiquette B7 30bit Ill im i Q. ll it correct to have one‘: inl- ttals engraved on a Vlaltlng oer-d? A. No initials are engraved ontbe card that tl faultlessly correct. Q. Whit 18 thd W090! It! to eat fruits, such u apples or peaches? A. They should be peeled with a small silver fruit knife, out into quarters. and than eaten with the fingers. Q- Am there any special rules of etiquette for the beach? A. No. FIW FULL DIES! OCCASIONS MADRID, July 22.—(U. P.)--The Spanish Army, which tn the days of the monarchy had frequent occas- ions to wet u an odor-lament. will hereafter have only a handful of occasions each year to wear its full dress uniforms. i By order Q1 m‘; Minister of War, Don Manuel Azona, the following are to be the only sat occasions in which full dress will b0 ‘W021i; New Year's Day: April 14, 8.11111- versary 0f the proclamation of the Republic; May 2, in Madrid only, celebration of the Second of May uprising of the Madrid garrison ass-inst Napoleon, 180B; Ombu- 7, Army 9W; October 12. anniversary Of H1O discovery o! Ampriqg; "may; de 1a Rsza"; day 1n which the new troop! promise fealty to the flag; dill’ in which troops finishing their enlistment bid farewell. SECOND REVERE BELL IN CHURCH AJVUIERST, Mus, July 31 (UP. A l» rout lEMPllNll ' nrlnl-nrcirrs .. a » .. - i i , . . . 1 u- .--_,...-. w, “II-Yum, r Woman's Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Qigteraturefigl i Dorothy Dix Letter ‘Box Babies ? Is Married Life Harder on Husband or Wife‘! Girl Who Would Marry a Man Wedded to His Art Tim familiar rQd-lnd-gteon BRAN package has four famous recently l ’ recipe! for hot breads printed was a wit" why mould we" w "Don it. uflliu. Griddle Coke» MR8. R. E. D. Brown end. And Ara-Bur Bread. Each of than recipes Answer, bu been tried successfully by‘ vol. thousands of bouuwi Kellogg's ALL-Bun brings roughage to bot broods. Without bulk 1n the idiot, o”. this vital atipation ls likely to occur. to prevent. Two tables of Kellogg's Abn-BMN Yet constipation 1a so any ufull are ranteed to prevent and ro- Illa-vs both temporary and recurring constipation. How much safer than using habit-forming pills and dru . ed iron for the body. At oil groco l. Made by Kellogg in Iiondoil, Oiit. ALL-BEAN also provldu n allow“ ALL-BRAN -What ls said to be the second bell which wu oust by Paul Revere hangs 1n the belfi-y of this town's Baptist church. The bell weighing 638 pounds, came t/o Amherst 1n 1793. It‘! Ill-St dear! 1'0. The collar was plain white, 11M bu“? IUGBIUN. Uboblbltwnllollfl- What the Fashionables are Wearinr Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished M‘ Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington wife got all the breaks because her work at home was light. 5° Sh" Pissed the time away at the movies, bridge, etc. and they thought it was no more than fair that women should work outside of their homes and pay for their own clothing, etc. althougl . . . . .. Answer: than 1t 1s on men. through the some suffering. flocks and herds was an asset to a family, while a girl was only anr" mouth to food. Later on sons were desired because they welc the ones who bro fame and fortune to a family and gave 1t n. place in the sun. lt wa the sons that the parents looked for support 1n their old age. not helpless daughters who could not even support tihemselvel. And, course, 1t was the sons who carried on thegname and gave a sort of ii mortality to a family. We still have that feeling, and that is why b», babies get a more cordial welcome than girl babies do. ‘ But, as a matter of fact, none of these reasons for preferring boy babies to girl babies holds water 1n those days when moat girls lyre just a good men as their brothers, and sometimes better. The average girl goes to work now at the same age that a boy does, and f! sbo does not make as much money as he does she takes far more of 1t home and 1s a greater help to her parents. In the average family where all the child- ran work 1t is the girls who fix up the house and buy new furniture and dress up mother and father. and spend their earninsl 101' tho 0081mm“! good. while-brother 1s spending his on having a good time. And 1t 1s daughters that parents depflld “P011 1n their old nee- Ii 1| always to one of the daughters that father and mother go to live when their home 1s broken up. More men are supporting their wives‘ parents than are supporting their own. Furthermore, if girls "do not have more affection for their parents than boys do, they at least show 1t more. There are thousands of bury i Why Are Girl Babies Less Desired Than Boy baby always welcomed 1n a family with more orlela ngret? We have ‘ a dear, sweet little baby girl and neither m! husband nor myself are son-y, yet every one who some! to see us exolaims: “Weren't you disappointed that it I Door Miss Duo-Why are baby girls at I discount? Why 1| the girl 1 think most mothers are sorry when their l babies are girls out of sheer sympathy and because i they realize how much harder life is on women Perhaps at the moment. run- emberlng the arony they hive lult Men fibrous!» they could weep over tho tiny mites on thou breast, knowing that they, too, will have to Bo But, of course, the real reason why B01! bib!" l" PERI?“ W Um 1mm“ and why everybody congratulates the proud. parents of a Ion and secretly oommlssrates with them on the dirty trick the stark played them , 1n bringing them a girl goes back to the time: when brute stnngth was 1 tho most desirable quality a human being could have. Then a boy who could hunt and bring in food or who could fight and defend ti . Zfi-mi: W‘! l i ii Paris Styles i l! MARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent PARIB. July 22.-(U. PJ-Old-fashtoned cottons and batlstu have a new-fashioned way about them this summer. They never have found themselves dolng such interesting and novel things, Simple little cotton frookl never were allowed to go tn llshiorlabls garden partial 1n the old days, or to club ma, or smart bridge lunohoona. But now they almost are imperative. The one Goupy radiates o prideful air ebouthnd justly, is made of white batlsto and English embroidery. A jacket of the embrolq. uy 1i worn over the frock, which makes 1t appropriate for many occasions. Block orlnollno braid lo used for a rather large and droopy hat to be worn with it, and black gloves, belt and shoes pronounce l definite cont-rest. Chantal prefers orgondts with the embroidery lnstead of bat. business men who never write home to their father and mother, or got to see them, or send them any little remembrance, but there or mighty nnd time to write home every week, and who do not continually give their parents some evidence o! their affection. ‘There 1s no truer saying than that "my soil is my son until he gets him a wife, but my daughter is my daughter all of her lite." And as for brlnslns distinction on a family a daughter does it per- ' hops oftener than a boy because she not only has agchanoe at achieving fame and fortune herself, but of marrying some rich or famous man} Many a family lives 1n luxury because Mary married a millionaire, or‘ bask: in the reflected glory of a son-ln-law. And l. queer thllll about this matter is that while probably most par- ents, if given a choicn. would ask for a boy if he was their own flesh and blood, when it comes to adopting a child the great majority of foster par- ents pick out girl babies. All orphan asllums tlnd that there ls a greater , demand for girl babies than they can supply, while boy babies are a drug on the market, so to speak. Funny, isn't it? DOROTHY DIX. i I 0000000 Dear Miss D1x—Recently a group of married men and women Wer. ' discussing whether married life was fair or not. The men held that it __ was not fair to be the men because the husband paid all the expenses oi i the woman he married and obligated himself to more than twice the liv- ing expenses he had when he was single, and as a result found that it was just twice as hard to save and get along. The men sold that the t few women, no matter how busy and hard worked they are, who do not " i l i. lsto. The plain Ind embroidered materials are combined 1n diagonal sections and the color is either all the same shade of yellow or two nrylnl lhadol. A cluster of nuturtlums, from polo yellow almost to burnt orange. rests on the left shoulder, and another cluster peeps out from under the lifted hat brim of brown straw, edged with beige horsehair. Brown gloves, three-quarter length, purse and pumps leave nothing to be desired 1n the realm of accessories. - Style Chats i WITH ALMA ARCHIE Now aside fmm the gorgeous plumage and highly artistic ma- terials Ind colors of tho 18th Century, which Plfll is threatening to reensct for us, just how will we reconcile In our present scheme of things some of the little personal whom: in which. the gentlemen of the period lndulzed? Both man and women used sachet. paint, powder and lowelry profusely. Both indulged in vivid color. Both used mum. Both used snuff. Now I don't went to be quoted in this thing, but be- tween you and mo, things will have come to e metty how are you 1f we have to look at a Rogers Poet window filled with sluts of wistarla velvet, mum and sachet for the well-drum men. The \'."nlll7l in the discussion couldn't seem to find‘ an answer, know that there is one somcwi- What do you think, ., v 14128.3. over them. having been roared on the street and deprived of her personal core. tually guard mdiwamhln: Nothing thlt the mother can earn can pay her children for Bo I should lI-Y that whether a married woman should work outside > fAR-IS SAYS “PLAlTS" It's informal enough to be right 1n the country and still smart enough for town for the real warm days that will soon be It is any wonder that Dame Fashion has taken no kindly to this The neat mouldod-w-the-dreu collar keeps 1n Discs better. and is so zenerslly becoming. and decidedly summing, It oflers splendid theme for contrast either in colour or fabric. 1t displays interesting new variation of skirt fulnels 1n fan plelts, so definitely smart. To secure smooth fit through the hlpl, the skirt 1s join- ed to a yoke. whose diagonal amine Itvu omphula to the flat rumour. It strikes that indispensable colour combination of skipper blue and white. so entirely chic this remn- Bhantung wu uud for the original model in white with coin dots in the twenty-dive coat I180 in the blue flho bolt Nlillfbd the plain white pllklfiot mokoupmolt noniretofultntiuuuoftlnpottaln. lladltcmploreolntootn wafer-rod.) It u married woman lives in s. kitchenette apartment or an apart- ment hotel and has no children, her husband has a right to regard her as a luxury and possibly as one that he finds too expensive to indulge 1n. I think that a woman under such conditions as that should got her e job and go to work and be self-supporting, not only because it would relieve her husband of the burden of taking can of her, but for her own self- respect. No woman can be a parasite without degenerating under 1t and no woman can pan her time 1n trying to amuse herself and with no serious purpose tn life beyond that and not get into trouble. Satan still find! work for idle hands to do and the women who have no occupation but bridge and matinees and movies and shopping are the one: who got into silly flirtation: with men, who become jealous and neurotic, who take up all sorts of feds and queer religions and who fill the senatorluml. Every man who wants to keep his wife wholesome and happy should give her plenty of good constructive work to do and keep her buoy. Buttfowomanhasahousetotakocoroofandohlldrantolook after. she has the biggest job on earth and tho hardest one and the 0m that takes the longest hours of the day at labor, and uotbln: else should be expected of her. She earns her board and keep and clothes l. thou- sand times over, as every man finds out 1f his wife dial and he tries to hire somebody to take her place. Sometimes a man has not the earning capacity to make enough of her homo or not depends on how much tho money 1s needed, how much the woman needs occupation and, molt of all, on whether there an children or not. DORUrI-IY DIX. > O I U I I I I I Deer Mlle Dix-l am in love with a man who never tells me that he ohm for ma. His whole heart and soul m bound up 1n m, and he ml that a women could over be hlDP! married to lum. as his thouEmfl l" only for it. What shall I do? TWENTY-Two. ‘ Answer: Leave him to his art. mm whet Mn. Oarlyle says about lnarrylne I - genius. No men are such cold and unsatisfactory husbands as those who m wedded to their m. and you will be perfectly foolish w we"? "l" men who 1s wiser than you and who knows that he would for!“ yo" l" alive in pursuit of his career. Jult a good, ordinary. untflmllemmmw ma: makes the but husband. DOROTHY 171K- AND srnvriwli MOM! to support hll family and it becomes necessary for his wife 7n work outside of the home to supply the deflclt. t Th1: is always a great misfortune because no women has the phylloll strength to do two Jobs and be a business woman as well as I housewife. She cannot com the broad and bake it, too, and the strain makes her peovish and fmtful and nervous and no flt companion for husband and children. You will find no cheerful and peaceful home prodded cvu- by owomulwhohu boenonastrain all day at the ofllceorltoroandtben rushes home to clean up the house and cook the dinner and wolb up tbl obfldnn- dni-jtuu-n Noroeaoaybodymoeslnstluioaituwoluldmpottobevotboir mothorwltbtbamalltbotfmonottobsvoamotbcratbomotowbcm loHho Clerk Kitchens help you l’, _ for quicker and boner meals. I g - *1 mound In Canada hr men than CLARKBQ" PORK and BEANS Mm Tomato, cmn q Plain louse) X ,