- -,-~ wwyiG-uynvva. l... CL Q 9 P? 2? \ .gu'e'rer:'.=.':n"l=rn!::f|-1Ert5 i5 Hi1 '13 >1 2 / =3 ‘flf-‘QTHIHFIOEKQ ‘ i wl nlr from the very start. It's only marriage that she throws into dis- ' and never remind him of his faults, you need have no fear that any vamp PAGE EIGHT l fWoman ’s Realm How to Make a Success of’ Marriage ' Filth Bard Work First Rfiqalresneut Marriage is a Buiness as Well as a Senti- mental Proposition-Jf a Woman Makes .a go 0f it, She Will be One of the Richest Women in the W0rld—-If She Fails, She Will be Bankrupt Dorothy Dix ' 4 A bride asks me if I will give her a. few tips on how to make her uisrriage a success. Well, mv dear, thehlrst thing to bear in mind is that marriage is is business as well as a. sentimental proposition. It is an investment into which you are not only Put- ting your heart, but your body and soul and brains and the work of your hands and all your time and hopes and ambitions. If you make a go of it, you If it fails, you are bankrupt. So go into marriage with the same determination to make a. career of it as you would of any other calling that you had chosen. And. the same tactics that would enable you to make s. success of any other occupation will make a sticccas of marriage. If you started out to be a. lawyer or a. doctor or u writer or a buyer you wouldn't expect everylhlflg l0 be 1'51!‘ 55111118- Y0“ could know that there would‘ be many difficulties to surmount, many - ..".»t:1l'll‘s to overcome. You wouldn't expect to be flattered and cajoled uinl told how wonderful you were all the time. You would expect to put in years of hard work learning F0111‘ WW9- You would expect to have to put up with unreason and criticism. from _\'ulll' clients or youi- employer. You would expect to set your teeth and l .irry on when you fclt like throwing up your hands and quitting cold. 11 is only iii marriage that a woman expects everything to be all cakes card when she finds the cards running against her. Believe me, daughter, if women would put as much intelligence and [it'll .i:l(l lmrri work into making their marriages a success as they do into llljilfig to be movie actresses and if they would use as much self-control a l tact in dealing with their husbands as they do with their bosses there would be mighty few divorces. " ' it takes the wisdom of a. seeress, the charm of Cleopatra, the patience‘ :11 cu-iscldn and the financial ability of Hetty Green to make a woman ".1 good wife, ‘and yet any little moronic flapper thinks she can do it with iv“: left hand when she isn't giving her time and attention to something really serious, like parties or golf. Remember that you are starting out with the breaks in your favor in having your husband in love with you, for practically no man sacrifices his freedom and assumes the burden of a family unless he is so much en- nmorcd of a girl that he feels he cannot live without her. That lets you off to a good start, and if your husband gets tired. of you and bored jllill you it is mighty apt to be your own fault. Now the four chief things that dlsillusion men and cause them to wonder what the fool-killer was doing that he didn't get them on their “trifling day are untldiness, bad housekeeying, tyranny and nagging. I _~ l) the time a man marries a girl he has never seen her except when i: had her complexion on and was freshly waved and manicured and l. (lulled up and looked like a prize package. Imagine, then, his re- \~ . - ill oi fueling‘ when he gets his wedding gift home and it turns out i . 11c a. bundle of rags smeared over with cold cream. You don't wonder "lint so many men leave home when you see what they have to look at t.c:";.' tiny. Then every unmarried man labors under the delusion that all women ,lu:". tlfltllftiliy know how to cook and manage the way their mothers did. f "i you can understand how a. young husband feels when his bride sets 11.111 down to meals that would kill an ostrich. Hunger turns Us all into i Q ~~val savngcs and it is inevitable that the man who has to live on ilnilll, meat and soggy potatoes and heavy bread reverts to the cave man null lakes at least a. verbal club to the false alarm who has lured him lnio matrimony. That is not the comfortable and haPPy home for which he hooked his future. Reflect, too, daughter, that men befool themselves into believing that they can be free though bound. They think that when they slip their necks under the matrimonial yoke they will still be able to wander 8. little on’ the beaten path and make a. few innocent excursions into new Iiclds and greener pastures. They think of a. wife as an addition to their plr sures and they never dream that the sweet little thing that they are inf. ng lo the altar is going to be a female Simon Legree, who will crack her whip cvcr them the balance of their lives. Picture their dismay xvhcn they discover that they have not as much liberty as a dog on a leash, and that their owners decide all of their uprisings and downsittings, and evcn ‘whii: they shall eat and wear. l Also, remember that a woman strips the last pink chiffon from mat- rimony with hor tongue when she continually reminds her husband of his sins of omission and commission. Every other thing in the world will a man forgive his wife and love her still if she will refrain from nagging. S_o, daughter, if you will keep yourself attractive looking and 1t: if you will feed your husband well; if you will drive him with a light hand will ever steal him away from you. You have tied him to you for keeps. And ncvcr forget that the way to treat a husband is the way you would treat a baby. He wants to be petted and chucked under the chin and gooed over and told he is the most boofulest flng and shown of! to company, and it is the women who do that who keep their husbands in love with them to their golden wedding day. DOROTHY DIX. l QUTDOORS-BEQUTYS REALTEST /IIII _ ~HOWLOVELYyeuwl|Ibe A " lrlblftycf~fhenlzitofbc ‘l velvet-smooth, clinging texture of Pompelen Beauty Powder. And, how comforting to be assured of retaining your fresh, morning loveli- ness throughout even the most strenuous day out-of- , w doors. You may pay more for beauty preparations, but you saw buy better h M“ ‘lulu . .. v -* ‘u.’ than H18 u-I d“) m“ Mil l5 \\‘\\ &M§i|btar:a Clmflflu? \\ Po éiifi will be one of the richest women in the world.‘ rue COWNGUARDIAN ,.. .-_ -_. A-Jakii Wbore is the ihhasiill.) going? Shall it. be high as in (l) or is mi- lady destined to turn back to the formiess styles of a. few years ago "as pictured in (3)? This is the problem which is confronting the the problem stands at a. deadlock. Paris buyers just now, brought on (2) illustrates the normal waistline by Jean Paton, who startled every- and is one of the recent models for Several other houses at the same time hoisted the waistline to two inches below the bust. And the"? For The Cook SOUTHERN RELISH Right; Hon. Stanley Baldwin and Mrs. Baldwin occupy the Royal Suite on the first floor, their win- dows overlooking Parliament Hill. _Ono half of the first floor space is occupied by the members of Mr. Baldwin's staff._One room. conven" dent in the Royal Suite, has been converted into an office for the use of Mr. Baldwin. The whole of the second floor was assigned to the other members of the British dele- gatlon and their assistants and staff. The Tudor Suite. on this floor, is occupied by the Right H0"- Ncville Chamberlain, while other suites on this floor accommodate Lord and Lady Hailsham, Right Hon. Sir John Gllmour, Right Hon. Walter Runciman, Right Hon. Sir Philip Cunllffe-Lislef, and Right Hon. Lord weir. The Regina suite. on the third floor, ls occupied bv Right Hon. J. H. Thomas and Mrs Thomas, while the Australian and New Zealand delegations are also quartered 0n this floor. among the suites being those of Right Hon. .7. G. Coafes and Mrs. Coates and Right Hon. Stanley Bruce and Mrs. Bruce. 0n the fourth floor, the Wren Suite is the temporary home of Sir Atul and Lady Chatterjee. of the Indian delegation. Other suites on this floor are occupied by Sir Padamji Ginwala, Sir George Schuster and Seth Haji Haroon and the niembcis of his family. Hon. scan T. O'Kelly, of the Irish Free state, is in the Adam Suite 3 cups chopped sweet green pep- pers. 2 cups chopped sweet red peppers 4 cups chopped cabbage. 2 cups white onions. 2 tablespoons salt. l4 cup mustard seed. 2 tablespoons celery seed. 3 whole hot red peppers. 4 cups vinegar. ' % cup sugar. Soak the red and green peppers in brine for 24 hours, using one cupful of salt to four quarts of water. Remove from brine and place in clear, cold water for one or two hours to freshen. Drain, cut open, remove seeds and white portions and chop the peppers. Put onions and cabbage through food chopper and measure before mixing. Com- bine the chopped cabbage, onions and peppers. Add salt, spices, whole peppers, sugar and vinegar. Let ‘stand over night in a covered crock. Drain and heat the liquid. When hot, add all ingredients and cook for ten minutes. Seal in hot, sterilized jars. Here Are Tips NEW IDEAS FOR THE INTELLI- GENT WOMAN For inexpensive decorative fol- iage for your dining room, plant a row of grapefruit seeds, in a circle, close to the centre of .|. rounded one this week by setting the walst- ‘ u h In up line five inches below the normal. tiny 495i!" l" “"55" a" terestlng shoulder drape and a far!" cornfiowers. his innovation. says: "I sought sinmlicity of lines. n"; 1 suppressed the form-fitting second,‘ I 1 s “HZSSTLINE shoulder 0011MB i" Paton, explallllnfl gowns, of yester-year; Disposal of Empire Conference Guests at Chateau Laurze on the fifth noel". with other mem bers of the Irish delegation occupy" lng suites on the same floor. Hon. L. E. Emerson, who represents New- foundland, also has s suite on this floor. - Never before has any one hotel had the honor of housing so many British notables. This has no little significance in connection with the work of the conference when the representatives of the Domin- ions met these of the Mother Country, in London, each delega- tion resided at a, different hotel- They came together either only at the conference sessions or at for- maily arranged gatherings. The opportunity for chance meeting and little informal chats was lack- lng. Q O AMormngSmlle i WHO TOLD YOU THAT ‘I An old North Carolina colored farmer was complaining bitterly to his minister about the terribly bad weather for the crops, when tin minister reminded him that he had much to be grateful for. a2 the same . The Preacher-And remember, Brother White, Providence cares fd all. Even the birds of the air are fed each day. The Old Colored Man-Yes, Par- dish. filled with moistened earth. Within a few days plant another Jon, ofl mah corn. circle an inch beyond the first seeds. Keep repeating this process until the dish is comfortably filled The resulting ferns will grow in a tapering. rounded effect that is more artistic than an even growth. A sweet potato, placed in the neck of a milk bottle, will produce a vine that is a attractive, Or a carrot or beet, from which the top has been cut, if placed squarely on ‘Sweet Qdors l And Kill Quickly, Every "";_Ely or Mosquito Help“; [n pale blue fiat crepe with —~'%|— I» v-Eocial and. Personal -:- Foal/lions -:- Literat- dmppcd the waists and belts to U18 hips; third, l decided ‘that hats must be worn stralsllb" Al"! 7”“ by the way, has always had the greatest influence in American N111 ‘Canadian fashions. Tn-day unanei follows suit with the lowered waist- line. All Collected In Everyone has need now and then, for a scrapbag of-beauty hinte- Hnnds that are roughened from washing dishes, hangnails, eye- brows thnt don't want to grow . in [the right direction-mil fairly ask for help. If your eyebrows do not follow the line you want them to-or even if they (lo-keep a small camel's hair brush on your dressing table and every night". and every morning brush your brows into the shape that you desire. If they curve you can make the curve more pro-- nounccd by brushing it the way you want it. Before shaping the eyebrows with the brush, use it back and forth on the roots of the hairs in order to stimulate growth. White vuscline, rubbed on at night, will nourish them. Eyelashes too, profit from brush- ing. . - Keep a bottle of hand lotion in, your kitchen. “As quickly as you remove your hands from the wa- ‘or rub on the lotion. You will be uirprised at the smoothness and whiteness that will result. If your nulls are brittle, apply cream" or oil to their base. Now and then heat some oil and let your fingers rest in it for a. little while. Hangnalls, too, are benefit- edand can be removed easily if you follow this treatment. " Ion. When a chin begins to droop . .._.._._.___.-,- ‘ at the same time get a maximum Scrap Book For You » One chin is enough for any per- , AUGIl_ _ . Canadian Cookery A ', For Canadian. Ome By Mm Moore. Specially contributed m the chum-m, , ' Guardian Readers. m. Canadian cookery is a new feature that our page how one; women readers. Mrs. (D12) Mari Moore, who win conduct ms Belt merit, ls a Canadian dietitian, who is well equipped 1d " has had considerable experience in making cooking rlorc intcrcsm, Mrs. Moore will welcome and reply to lnqulfifis ‘mm ream" cookery, household management, table arrangement, ememunmenll I valid diets, etc, etc. . "*- Letters may be addressed in care of this paper to Mari bionic M, ery editor. A pen name should be chosen, fQf pubhcmon purplmu’ . addition to the writer's name and address, which, of course will m, published. It is our hope that this department will become a frifiidlv efficient household management. These contributions will Bfflilfll‘ on lflu rd 3', i ;:-, _ _-'_ each week. r i219 work k guide I szzluql l I I Now for a few hot dshes 1°, ' hcnrticr summer meals. Cool Recipes lfil a Iot Ahghst More time for leisure, more for out door exercise, more time with our families, cooler housewives-all are possible by planning meals that are simple and require little cook- cups fresh limit beans or use || ing. equal quantity of drained ca I have planned these reciples withlbcans. In the meantime melim; nofiweather in mind, when we tablespoons butter in the top onl; should spend only the minimum a- double boiler. Add 1 medium m mount of time in our kitchen and onion minced finely and cook uiiu the onion ls tender, Then add u teaspoon lemon juice, i 1-2 m. spoons curry powder, and 3 nut spoons flour and stir until smmi Then 1 1-2 cups milk grading; ‘ while stirring, return to the dolitk Cream 4 tablespoons butter or holler and cook until smooth mil margarine and add 1-2 teaspoon thickened-about 5 minutes. Pm finely minced mien. 1-2 cup finely over the llma beans and serve. flaped shrimp, 1 teaspoon lemon] juice, 1-2 teaspoon prepared mus-l tard, and 2 tablespoons finely chop-l _ ‘ pea stoned green olives Salt may; Chop 4 medium sized. peeled, be added, if needed. Use as a fill-‘Cogkgd pqtfltgfig rather coarsely,“ ms for graham bread. [and 1-2 small onion, 1 seeded pee ipepper, and l pimiento, all mind! ‘ lfinely, 1-2 teaspoon salt, and l-l ‘teaspoon paprika. ‘mm into a hf Add four tablespoons instant fyymg pm "m which 3 tablespooll 139ml» 511d 1'4 T-efl-lpm" "It t° butter or bacon fat have been melt’ 1 1-8 cups boiling water, and cook m‘ and wok gently until the ml: in a double boiler for 15 minutes m" is we“ beam; men pouf l; 0!‘ 1mm the tapioca 15 "anspalmb eggs which have been beaten wit‘ Sllrmw {Teqllenuy- The“ “dd. 1'3 tablespoons milk, 1 tablespoon "ri- cup sugar, 1 cup orange juice, and Cd butter and 1.3 tga5pogfl Ssltf the grated rind of 1-2 medium siz- 5m. unm the egg coats the pats ed orange. Stir well and then cool. and has a scrambicd “ppcafflfiq When cool. fold in 1-2 cup of cream whipped and piled in sherbei-t glass- es. , Chocoia‘ Ice Box Cake Curried Fresh Lima Beam Prepare and cook until iéiidqv] amount of nourishment, from our cold food. Creole Sandwiches Spanish flash Orange Tapioca Blueberry Graham Mum!!! a without any doubt these are i; best muffins I have ever tasted-f lwgasure and gift together in” pastry or cake flour, .1 1-4 m?‘ 5'" ham flour, 4 teaspoons baking PW‘ der, 2 tablespoons SHEET‘, 1'3 l" spoon salt. Add a-4 cup CW" blueberries and mix well. Belt l Use the round chocolate wafers about 2 3-4 inches in diameter which may be purchased in a tin tube. For each individual service pile up 4 latsglsvigielhlfi, ed,:ea'2,1f:,r::: egg until foamy and add 1 cup mill manner: First a wafer, then a 18y“: and 3 tablespoons mezrtledflfgflka: er o, whippbd wean.“ the“ a wafex-‘l the egg mixture mtg t; vigomul, and so on, having a wafer on top-flu" an “t “we Enigma an M Chill in the ice box for at least a uni" l“? d”. in“ lestirrini; 1a- houi-s, and serve topped with dflmPened~ Aw“ ‘We; iv)?!” whipped cream. One half Pint "i, medmtdy ‘up the is?!‘ WM cream is sufficient for six servingfi 9d mum“ fins’ m T]; Bake ,0), a You can see that this is a very “will Wmtmrds m ' of m’ d” quickly prepared and delicious suih- minutes in a hot oven mer dessert. Fahr. ’ What the Fashion/ables are Wearing h Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern ‘ y, i By Annabelle Worthington or multiply. something should be done about it immediately. First of all don't sleep on a. pillow. Your chin line will be smoother, firmer, freer, if you don't. That too, too solid flesh will melt be- cause it will be drawn straight, in the proper sort of line. There are l ;cience has discovered that a. flower grown in Japan repels‘ and kills vlnnged insects. Now the ex- tract of these flowers is employed to completely free your home_. and keep_ it free-from these germ-bearing pests. That flower extract is the basis of the bottom of a. dish, surrounded by an inch or so of water, will de- velop a luxurious fern. If You want to entertain at bridge, but your p- cketbook hasn't mist, harmless to eopie, stainless to walls or furnls ings. But that mist kills every insect that it touches. And they can't escape. ‘Think what that means to your home. Complete and constant pro- tection from these arm-bearing pests. These insects, y their feet exercises, too, in which the head is turned from side to side. carefully, 0! course. B0 you won't strain the neck. The pull on the muscles‘ breaks down the fleshy tissues. Lvmon. as nearly everyone knows, will cut the soap if you use a few drops in the rinse when you are shampoolng your hair. Vinegar does the same thing. ‘Use the one to which you" individual hill!‘ res- ponds better. Bride’s Linen Chest Experienced housewives claim that each bed should have at least enough extra coins to make - it worth while, don't let that stop you. Ask your friends to come early in the evening and when they ar- rive serve them with a dessert and coffee and then start your game. They won't mind eating the first l few courses of their dinner at home. Th1! tyne 0! party. known as a Dessert Bridge, has been growing 2.: popularity. ' If you are going to spend most r‘ your vacation in the outdoors or motoring. you will be much more comfortable in o. lightweight dress or suit of some material that enooucrs doesn't-wrinkle than in. knickers. Fly-Tex, developed in Mellon In. stitute of Industrial Research by Ibex Research Fellowship. Ten years and over $100410 have been spent by us in perfecting it. The result i rf d ca.lled Fly-Tait. ‘fiéii $35. ding: it creates in a room a, plgagang cloud of vapor. An all-pervading FLY-TO Aikofllloboeicth" mam Use Fly-Tex onl and ai the new-type 1% .11.; 33,-? Use it because o its mgrvegqg efficiency. Every lot is tested on flies in _our laboratory. Use it be- cause its extra strength mean; v5 y. l4.- or stings, carry the germs of ova;- 80 diseases. They-carry these germs to your food or to blood streams. Man thousands of ople-elpeci y children-die rom these infections every year. three pairs of sheets and pillow cases so that there will always be one, pair on the bed, one in the wash. and the other on hand for Fla-Tex offers ou an easy, cer- emerleflclflt 0M 0'1‘ W0 Dllrs of pmtocfigl: way to complete blankets are considered sufficient ,- for each bed and inizddltion one day-time cover and one comfortable or quilt. Each bathroom should have at least ten or twelve bath towels, the same number o; wuhl cloths and two- or three bath mgtg, Ten table cloths allow a spotless M18101" every day in the week with Poo lo. StainlesaFiy-Tox is made a “w M‘ °"°"vf°" ‘Pam 096E810"!- t cc to Y fihnhhi... ii°‘;....é’.‘i‘..i‘.2E - goo-r home. Get Fly-To: at once. oid everywhere. Harmless to You have only to note its slender . . paneled cut skirt. hi“ “Bmw m?‘ » ' ‘ line and becoming V-shalmi neck‘ line to realize this. And, it's the most comfortable dress to wear. ' And to make itl The bodice cull all in one until it_ joins the 8K1"- And by the way the gored skirt that gives one such charminB 318181171. you'll note is slightly circular to- ward the hem. ' Plain blue linen combines with B- blue and white printed crepe linen in this slim-line model. . Style No. 811 is designed for sizes 35, 3a, 4o, 52, M,’ 46 and 48 inches bust. size as requires 3% yards of 39-inch plat nmnterial with 1% yards of 35-inch figured material- It is equally attractive carried out in one material with contrast- ing collar and cuffs. All patterns 15 cents in stamps or coin (_coln preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. ' N0. 371. Bile "n..."- eeeeoaeo Illlil . . . . . . isnalallilll-u-eunnvlll Name nun-n»nun-us...“-....". Street Address IoIIIIIUIOOIIOOOOIOIIIIIII IIIII IIII! City State should be an ample supply. The iin- _ en chest should also have a dozen each of dish towels, glass towels, anada. Three trap cloths and three or four J sets of table (‘lollies and napkins kitchen towels, dish cloths and dust cloths. ‘