_. n n _._ .-\¢.b.<- 5r‘ *9.” ‘s? Wv-llr“ . i‘ Old Ilakli Cleanser Is mails with pure “seis- motite" (pronounced slV-mo-tlte), cleaning and polishing material origin. a fine, flaky of yolcanie Old Dufeli does more square yards of scratcbless cleaning per penny of cost be- cause its flaky, flat-shaped particles cover more surface and clean more efficiently; ‘Oldfiufcll doesn't scratch because it's free from harsh, scratchy grit and crude abrasives. It's kind to the hands, doesn't clog drains, is odorless and sq- moves odors. Buy dlltl fry Old Dllfcll today for cleaning kitchen utensils, painted woodwork, floors, refrigerators, stoves . . . in fact for all cleaning throughout the house. Notice that Old Dutch leaves a brilliant polish as it cleans porcelain, enamel, tile. No other cleanser can do so much at so little cost, nor so well at any price. ' ' e HOUSEWIFE and ma" LY-tid‘ ACTIVITIES SUMMER FEMBR I 31h tired of thought, and of labour. Of th task that is set me to do, l am aired of seeing my neighbor, He looks tired of seeing me too. I afiweary of struggling and 91v; s ' ining, . "Ihis ceasing work doesn't Day. i1 find.‘ myself daily- complaining, lLAnddgs growing "worse day after It ls to be ollf on vacation, To bg careless, untrammelled and fry. (To efloy a few weeks‘ relaxation, iAnd that's what's the matter with ' _~—Fl'Om. the Somerville Journal. V rlsjii ‘it; " FOR TALL GIRLS ' If you are tall andthin, you should; avoid vertical, unbroken line! ‘tin your gowning. For you, orlzontal lines and broken lines areJ-iest. Belted frocks, bcleros. tunikiiind cape dresses may all be fWOrn by the tall, thin types, as they ,cut the height and add to the. ibi-samn of the figure, Hares, ruf- u» ‘tering shades for .__q also tend to increase the apparent width of the figure, and to cut the height. In colors, the most flat- the tall. thin individual are warm, bright one... Dark, subbued shades should be avoided as they are slenderizing and present too definite outlines. _________ \______ IMPORTANT TRIFLES Cracking door hinges should be touched with an oiled feather oc- casionally. CLEAN WINDOW SHADES To clean window shades, pull them down as far as they will go Dust a. strip across the top. them roll up that. strip, dusting the right side as it goes over the roller, un- til the whole shade is dusted. WAYS OF JAVANESE BRIDES. A Javanese bride rubs her face with saffron to intensify the gold- en color of her skin. Her hair is shaved in elaborate points and, in- stead of a. misty coronet of tulle El? STYLES illustrated Dressmaking Lessons Furnished ; With Each Pattern Today's pattern brings this Parisl rlreasto your very door. Tbs allure of the covered siioul- ders,_ma.lies it so much more fem- f lninpugnd flattering. The fluttering hein, traits the ground. You'll look as pretty as a picture ln this dress of crisp slipper satin in wloletgblue as the original model. Ib-could be carried out in Lyons welvstor taffeta, with equally chann- lnglrlesult. It's-simplicity itself to make it. The small cost will surprise you. Style N0. 459 is designed for sizes 14, .16, 1B years, 36. 38 and 40 inches lbust. ,Si:e l6 requires 5N yards of 59-inch material and 7 yards bind- éiirb of PATTERN is cents in stamps‘ m- coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. __-_.‘_.__._..__.___...___._ . Size "n". . . . . - . H-u-ussgqnpn. Nome “- . . . . . . . . saloons-amass a n-u-étmaA FY I e cnlnese government has buted improved seed to cot- growers and has undertaker: to ardizo the quality of the raw not and educate factory man- and technicians in the cot- industry. emen st Wellesley, um, have t from spare parts of old sp- wvisliing to still Grandmother’: Quilt Patterns IVIISSISSIPPI OAK LEAF Evidently a native of Mississippi, further honor her home Stain. used the oak leaf as a s_vmbol. Taking the "Wandering Foot" pattern and adding a few simple pieces to the center block, she was successful in giving us a brand iiew design under the above title. Material Required: ' 6 yards While 2‘; yards Plain Color 3 yards Print l'l‘liis includes border.) Blocks finish 12 inches square 28 pieced blocks 28 plain blocks 6 inch border all sides. Join three leaf petals and applique on a i3 inch square of white. Sew pieces marked No. 1 to center piece of plain color and applique on center of block as shown in sketch. Set t0- gether with alternate blocks of white. Make border of one 2 inch strip of print and 4 inches of color. Allow for scams when cutting pat- terns. When ordering give N0. B-Z-l-C. send 15c for a book of quilt pat- terns containing 7 beautiful Grand- mother quilt designs - every pat- tern different. and orange blossoms she wears a sort of crown made of good leaf- ORIGINAL BRIDGE.‘ PRIZES. Instead of buying odds and ends to use as bridge prizes get a loose- leaf notebook, type or write out your recipes which your friends have been interested in, add a few little hints you have found useful in the running of your house and give these books as prizes CARE OF PANAMA. Don't toss your panama onto the highest closet shelf and leave it their, says n, Pniinma hat expert. Put it in a hat box and store it at the bottom of the closet, where it's coolest For heat and dryness are the enemies of these hats, and many a beautiful panama has been de- stroyed by people who store them in hot places, get them out later and handle then roughly, thus cracking the brittle fibres into a thousand pi"Cf‘S. After that, of course, it is hopeless. A MomingSmile EXPER IENCED An old negro had just paid the last installment on a small farm when the realtor who sold it said; "Well, Uncle Joe. I will make you a. rived to the fnrm now since it, has been paid for." "Boss," the old darky replied, "if it am all de same to you I had much rather you would give me a mort- gage to dc place." The rrriltor, somewhat surprised, said, “Uncle Joe you don't seem to know the difference between a mort- gage and a deed." “Well, maybe not," said Uncle Joe reminiscentlv, “but I owned a small farm once to which I had a deed and do First National Bank had o, mortgage and do hank got do farm." NO NOVICE Editor-Do you know how to run a nclvspaper? Applirnnt-N0, sir. Editor ~-Wcll, I'll try you, 1 guegs you're had nxrx-rienrc. . _—-—--_________. A Russian biologist has found that fish frozen in dry air m“ be l.’ "WQXJH? "Bil 1.‘- ‘TPPJE- Wat"- ? - viii {rfiwiel kwdflrersoh-I " l '1) '7 THE ___C_I_HARLUI‘TETOWI§J_ GUARDIAN fleece- I I I I Dorothy Dix ZsLetter Box What Are Chances of Happy Marria e for Couple Whose Tastes Differ Radicgily?‘ Women Have to Pad Bills to Get Money _From Tight Husbands! Cries ex-Business Girl Dear Miss Dix-Should a man and woman ma who are diflerent 1n tastes and habits? She likes to dance.‘ He dolegft and won't. Ho believes in hard work. Bhe is a trifle lazy. He is extremely practlgg]- minded. She is sentimental. She likes to read. ‘He never touches a book. She is talk- ative and makes friends easily. He is silent and unsoclsble. He is money-saving. She is extravagant.‘ she has more business train- ihfthan he_ has and has u. more important Position and a larger salary. They have been engaged for about five or six months and can drive miles or sit through an entire dinner with hardly a word spoken, yet they are sure their love will make up for these differences between them.’ What do you think? H. R. M. Answer: I think that a. couple who are as radically different as this one is should have a. divorce coupon attached to their marriage license. They will need it inside of six months, for by that time they will have got upon each other's nerves so completely that they will not be able to endure each other. What draws this man and woman together is a physical attraction which soon passes unless there is spiritual attraction added to it. The only love that endures the wear and tear of marriage is the love that takes in both the body and soul. The only happy marriages are those that are based on congeniality. It does not matter how good-looking, how intelligent, how high-princip- led, how kind and considerate and worthy a man and woman may be, they can find no happiness in each other unless they have the same view- point, unless they enjoy the same things, unless they have the same “ways? It i.s the husband and wife who do not think along the same lines who are in a perpetual argument, and who can start a fight over the wea- ther. It is the husband and wife who have different tastes in music, in plays and movies who never enjoy going to any place of amusement to- gether. It is when the thing that interests the husband bores the wife and the thing the wife wants to do the husband thinks silly that the first rift comes between married couples. The thing that is at the bottom of virtually every divorce is the lack of the same taste. A man likes to play golf and his wife hates it. The woman wants to step out of an evening and the husband wants to stay at home. The man likes gay parties. The woman sbhors them. The husband thinks children should be put to bed and left to go to sleep alone. The mother thinks she should sit and watch them breathe. The woman loves pretty clothes. The husband is a tlghtwad. And so on and on. But any couple can have s. perfectly beautiful time together if they enjoy the same things; if they are both highbrow; or lowbrows; if they love to eat or travel or dance or whatnot. But if one has to drag the other along against his or her will, it is all over except paying the alimony, It is astonishing how foolish and wrong everything that we don't like to do seems to us when another does it. Why can't John stay at home of an evening? What does he see in his frowsy old friends? Why is he so particular about his food? Why does Mary always put cold cream on her face at night? Why can't she learn how to cook? And why does she waste so much time and money in beauty shops? And why are we so irritated by the Opinions that are opposite to our own? Goodness knows. But the fact remains that the people we love and. enjoy are these who think as we think and like the same kind of pie. And it is folly to marry any other. DOROTHY DIX. . _ I 8 I O I O Dear Miss Dix-Your article on the husband who had such miracu- lous housekeeping ability amused me, but I consider it dangerous. For Heaven's sake, don't start the men to thinking that they can run a. house on half of what their wives spend. Besides, it would cut off the little percentage that is all that a lot of us wives have for our taxis, bridge. tees, Turkish baths, cold creams, water waves and such. The only sur- plus most women ever get for such frills is what they squeeze out of the house money. I have a fine husband and do not regret marrying him ten years ago, but after I had to ask for carfare, a dollar for a wave, 50 cents for a mani- cure, I just started padding the bills. It seemed simple and saved argu- ment. There are thousands of other women doing the same thing. We do it willingly, for the most part, because we love our men, and if they are willing to spend their money on the grocer and the butcher instead of giving it to Friend Wife, why not put it that way? Ask husband to give us an allowance, you say? Just try it, lady, just try it. AN EX-BUSINHS GIRL. Answer. I have tried it, lady. For thirty years I have been nagging husbands about giving their wives allowances, and trying to make the poor, dumb creatures see not only how unfair and unjust they are to expect a wife to work for her board and clothes, but also to realize how it humiliates a woman to have to go like a beggar to her husband for every cent she spends, and how it outrages her sense of justice never to have any of the money that she earns given her as her right instead of as a gratuity, And, above all, I have warned men time and time again that there was no surer way of disenchantiitg their wives with them and chilling their wives‘ love for them than by withholding from them their due share of the family income and by assuming this Lord-of-the-Pocketbook at- titude toward them. And occasionally, I am glad to say, I have had proof that my efforts have not been in vain. More than one woman has told me with tears in her eyes that after reading something that I had written her husband had given her the allowance that she had been struggling for during her entire married life. Sometimes the husbands even made a rough apology by saying that they had no idea that wives felt that way about being dependent and having to ask for money. Probably that's true. Not every man who refuses to give his wifs an allowance is a tightwad. Many of them think that women do not feel about money as men do, and that they don't mind having to do the men- dlcant act to get a few cents or wheedle a. ne‘ " dress out of them by prac- ticing the arts of a. gold-digger, or even by fomiying their accounts. Men know they wouldn't like to be dependent on the most generous father in the world, and that they would die of self-contempt if they had to ask every morning for s. little carfare or the price of s. package of cigarettes and know that they couldn't pay their share of any little treat, but. they think that being of the feminine persuasion just naturally gives a woman the soul of a parasite. which, of course, isn't true. Them never was any justification for s. man's refusing to give his wife an allowance, and there is still less in these days when the majority of girls who marry have given up s. good Job to go into their hilsbands’ kltchfins. The new wife ls going to demand a fifty-fifty deal and M. least the wages of a servant. Bhe isn't going to be satisfied with a. little petty lar- ceny. whatever the temptation to take what really belongs to her. . . ‘ _ . ' DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-I am s girl 16 years old and have the greatest habit of tacking picture of movie and radio stars on my wall. My mother threatens to tear them down and my father says it is disgusting for me to have a lot of silly looking faces glaring down at me. But I get a great deal of pleasure out of them. should I be deprived of this small en- joyment? LEONA. Answer: Fashions l i .. i] i l,‘ i “ 4i l MADE iii I) I'M“ IN CANADA . l». m, fl “lal i Q ‘y “P”, ‘VI whip, l l. AUUUIT -:- Lztera tare it it to get breakfast ' " l egf, you serve ‘"1 It no wonder that millions of mother; | . Iii l4, . ~ serve Shredded Wheat every day. Shredded, Wheat gives your system all the vuakeleu, meats stored by Nature in whale when in |,' most di brown milk or your health stible form. Try these crisp, oldee- t iscoits with fled!’ tries an fruit, cream. You'll fi them helpful to Till CANADIAN IIIIIDIIID WIIIAI’ L‘ imilil ill‘ ! llii. H u WHEAT or, CANADIAN WHEAT COMPANY, LTD. Illaprs Falls, Canada THE COOK'S CORNER No Permit Needed To Serve This When you would serve cocktail that has the sophistication of fish and the refreshment of fruit-coin- bine the two in this grapefruit-und- crabmeat mixture: 3 grapefruit '7: pound fresh crabnieat 1-3 cup tomato catsup ‘.4 cup grapegruit juice l. tablespoon Worcestershire sauce Few drops tabasco {a teaspoon salt cut we grcipegruit in halves cross- wise and remove pulp, Drain. Mix the crabmcat uvhich has been looked over carefully for any bone and flaked) with grapefruit pulp and add seasonings. chill and servo in grapefruit skins or baskets, or in sherbet glasses. Pour grapefruit juice over cocktail. _. ' - Cinnamon Cakes ~ One half cup butter or slim-toning one cup sugar; two eggs; one half cup milk; one and three-fourths cup flour; two and one-half teaspoons baking powder; one-fourth teaspoon salt; one tablespoon of cinnamon. Cream the butter or shortening and sugar until light and fluffy; add the beaten eggs; sift the cinnamon and flour, mix with the baking pow- der and salt. and sift again; add al- ‘ tcrnatcly with the milk to the first mixture. , Fill greased muffin pans two- thirds full of mixture. Place in oven at 375 degrees. or moderate. and bake for twentyto twenty-five minu- tes. Delicious with lemon or orange sauce. PLEASANT CIRCLE INSTITUTE The July meeting of "Pleasant Circle" Institute was held at tho home of Mrs. Hugh Walker with an attendance of twelve members and fourteen visitors. The President opened the meeting by singing "Ode" and repeating “Creed? Roll call was answered by “What Men Disliliililost“ in‘ Women." Minutes of last regular meeting read and adopted. A letter was read from the Provincial Sanatarium thank- ing the members for n donation of $8.40 which they had collectod in the district. Four sick calls were inade during the month and treats taken. New committees were ap- pointed. Sick: Mrs. George Mac- Kay and Mrs. Hugh Walker. Pro- gram: Mrs. Elmer Gamble and Mrs Orville Large, It was moved and seconded that Mrs; Emmet Grokeii and. Mrs. Earle Boulter be appoint- ed. on the lunch committee for the district convention. Miss Flossie Large thanked the members for their kindness in sending treats m her- mother who is ill. An interest- ing report from the annual Conven- tion in Charlotteiowirwas read by Mirs. Arthur. MacKsy. A hearty vote of thanks was tendered to Mrs. MacKay. A paper entitled “How s Will should be Written," sent in by Mr. J. . 10rd was read by Mrs, George MacKay. A bill of $134 was paid for fruit. Collection 67c. Mrs Emmett Croken kindly invited the members to her home for the Aug- ust meeting. Roll call to be answer. ed by "A Weed I Will Pull Each Time I See It." A dainty lunch was served by the hostess. Meeting closed by singing National Anthem, Keeping out of the way when in use. one new electric appliance cord is made in the form of a coil spring, while another is drawn brick into a wall outlet when idle by s spring controlled reel. For warming automobiles an Italian has invented a compact fireless stove that is operated by a chemical reaction of gasoline. 4;» Something‘ F you haven't tried Carnation for creaming your breahiast cereal, you have a delightful NEW ECONOMY AT TODAYS Of course, it is silly, but the pleasure of 16 all seem silly to older peo- ple, and since there can be no possible harm in your having the portraits of your movie and radio heroes on your walls I think your parents are foolish to make an issue of the matter, It is just one phase of the adolescence through which you are pass- surprise in store. You'll find it appetizingly different when you add that distinctive Carnation flavour, Carnatioifs double rioh- ness and smooth crea 'ness. Ina! as with coflec or fruit, Camatiou is so much better for cereals be- cause it is evaporated to twice tho richness of ordinary milk, and il homogenized to make it equally smooth and creamy through every drop. Try Carnation for meaning both cofloe and cereals. Very economical at today's price» Write for two fies book-lets“ "100 Glorified Recipes" 5d "Contented Babiesfi Cssladen Co. Limited, Possess, Onassis. ing, and if your parents will think back age they did exactly the seine think and es and baseball stars of that day. Tell them to summon their memory and f their sense of humor, and leave you alone with your harmless pleasure. they will remember that at your collected pictures of the actress- DOROTHY DIX. --“Ioney-Baok Plus iii-no.” Guarantee Protects You L: 7},“ . Bllllyllflll‘, Pa In“ i .I