RAGE. TYVQ Lli THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and ‘Personal -:- Fashions A MARCH 31_, 1933 {__—-—¢ -;'- Litera tare I TCanadian Cookery y For Canadian Women wliy Mari Jlunre. Specially contributed i0 The Guardians :07 Guardian Readers. one-third inch cubes until you have 3 cups: paiboll in a very 11m“ l . _ _A - water for 3 minutes then drain. Add __ q'hl;;-,,-ll.-» m‘ Friday night may 1-3 cup butter. and cook over very -oft<-n 11ml your supplies very lOW- lOW he“ "um P0953995 "e 3°“. ,- purchase pea-mealedland very delicately browned. Melti , 5,, ll... plQQO m, kecpsl 2 tablespoons butter, add a few~ --. “hut sin-ca» and drops of onion juice, 2 tablespoons cmerucucyyilour, and pour on gradually one jug-and when cup not milk. Season with salt and paprika. then pour it over one beat- en egg yolk. Pour sauce over po- (~_..,.,,],. m» [-,,,.<_,,,._, "m; “mm, ltutoes, and sprinkle with finely ' Llplc peel Chfipped D5519)’- uutl slico 1-8 inch re baking dish or, " ‘l \' eorerl LHOICE POTATO DISHES 13y _\l'.u",\' Moore ECONOMICAL SUPPER. MENU By Mary Moore We offered a prize, in a miniat- What the Fashion ables are Wearing ‘ Bu Annabella Worthington lodays model shows a charming caped sleeved style which ls carried out in a gay coral-red crlnkly crepe silk print. It is extremely jaunty, chic and youthful. If you please. you can omit the long sleeves as seen in the small back view. It would be difficult to find any- thing more simple to fashion. You can make it at a minimum Style No. 594 ls designed for sires 14, l8, 1B, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards 39-inch. Plain crinkly crepe silk in grey blue, beige or pale grey are lovely suggestions for spring that can be worn all through the summer. Price of Pattern 15 cents In stamps or coin (coin ls preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. . No. 594. Size ..................... Name . . . . . . .... Street Address AMorningSmile s, M1,. ovu- ure contest we held in our kitchen a l -,, l,“- this week, for the best economical ~: 1y thin onion will dolWPPfl‘ menu- Here W35 my 91mm" ‘i’ l ‘j with $.11‘. and paprika and 3°11“ P0714 h°°k5 Wml 551191‘ k751i‘? fl t all p; ';;~7r 1,, ,, , llwrelnnd dumplings. steamed cooking , i; '1 ;_ _. ;; ,-,v_.,-,,.,l , 1 w“ figs. Canadian cheese, toast. 71 | my.‘ L, . M, (1,; Mm; Al cm] Either pork hocks or shanks may .‘ l m; - I1:.u~ 00hr czuirc sur- l"! Purchafld W?!’ cheflllly- The _ g I‘. we C; ,,C.h.,,._,.,,;,.d back sauer kraut if bought in the bulk -= “g b: l». w 1-4 inch u.‘ l: mm finish cvmes very cheap tw- Boll the l‘. ‘j y -"' ~ uruw» will pork hocks in water to cover until r Go. . - -\ >3,,-,-e tender. Then pour some of the liquid ll me . _.-_, ,_. m‘, over the sauerkraut and heat it in n P“ “,,,,,,,,,,-,,. Pumlocs a separate dish. Put the dumplings n for‘, » pa“, m“, w, Immloes in over the boiling meat to cook for :1 m the last a or 1o minutes. u‘ i: _ Dumplings ' ‘ , m, 'I'wo cups flour, 4 teaspoons bak- uel ing powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 table- M spoons lard. 2 tablespoons butter, ‘n milk to make a moist batter. Sift a flour, baking powder and salt to- n gather and cut in shortening and w‘ blend in with finger tips. Add just w enough milk to make s stiff but still moist batter and drop by table- spoons on hot stew. Cover immed- iately and allow to steam for l; mimltfls. when you may test them, but do not remove the lid before this. Steam the figs in the strainer 0V0!‘ the bottom of the double boll- same platter with strips oi Canad. 1M1 cheese. and with toast which has been made in the oven, butter- ed. and then returned to the oven to crispen. —----______._._._ QUEEN VICTORIA MAY BE TALKIE CHARACTER Now Strong and lllc-althy thanks to Elhhllfiii EEEKAND "‘ CANNOT speak too highly regarding Eagle Brand," _ s-iys Mrs, R. Scott, 52 Willing- don Apia, Regina. Sasle. “I have found it very beneficial as 1| l-miv [milder for young child- .» rrn. l .“..\l'l(‘Il my lwv on Eagle Brand when he r s h wceks old. llo is now 21¢ yours and the ' picture of health and energy. " "l owe everything to EagleBrand I". and can recommend it to any .. mother who has .1 dclicntc baby." LONDON, Mar. lie-There is a project afoot-it looks like coming to fruition in e. few months’ time- for the production o1 q, large scale talkie in which Queen Victoria will be the leading figure. The idea comes from Maurice Elvey and I. leading British organi- zation is already taking prelimin- ary steps towards the production. Mr. Elvcy has arranged to use the group of “Palace Plays”, writ- ten by Laurence Housman as a ba- sis for his film. These little pieces, delicate in texm" and Perfect in understand- 1/ w... ....- "H.114" m mm.- y...” ("(71 (min, p.11...» l/l!‘ mhm- n/ summon o] .r.....-......-. ../ mullnns (Hid m. Ingl- n......l. 1:... rnupnn ca...» will - bring gnu lull ln/nrmnlirl Ill-mm". n. llnnhn c... Limlled. H, 1" ru, ans. _ - ... "m: mn nnw sdillnn n! Welfare." =31. disclosed by Queen Victoria. in her letters. cr, then chill them and serve on‘ ins. arc based on actual incidents After a. careful survey of the dis- play in the wkidows, Macpherson entered the shop and approached the counter. l "I want," he said, "a cheap coat- hanger." "Yes, sir," said the assistant. He took out s. drawer. ‘These are two- pence each," he added. Macpherson pondered over the collection for a. while, then shook his head. “Hue ye nothiu‘ cheaper?" asked. . "What about a nail?" suggested the assistant. he Clerk: “I have received -a letter from a firm asking for n reference for that man Brown who used to work here." Manager: "Tell them that he is a rogue and a. thief, and that any- thing hc knows he learned from us." A certain doctor charged ‘ls 6d for the first visit, and 5s for sub- sequent ones. A new patient thought he would save 2s 6d, so he said, room, “Good morning, doctor; here I am again!" The doctor looked at him and said. "Oh, yes: you are going on all before." whcngolng into the consulting- right-Take the some treatment as r." J: RICHARD GOYNE "ill ecu Lu that, Cynthia. You ;un 1.34.11;- uud inspect the troops. Joni Suit!" The phszsavord on his lips, he tum- rcl and went out, searching for d, u friend of his. and ~,___ , , ' '.'.r_.l' "i vdlom he ‘pund ln the Plltrunee hall making I \i:; nay towards the refreshment l. ‘ - m1‘. urns-u “Old man," he confided, drawing Coward aside. "I want you to seek out Cavendish. Tell him his aunts have phoned through and he's wanted urgently up at the Manor. Use any excuse. Illness or anything. We want him out of thc way. Yes- Cynthia. Get me?" Derek Coward grinned and nodd- ed and, none too steadily, for he had been drinking, went in search ‘of Peter Cavendish. He found him. Cynthia, watching anxiously, saw Peter's features set at the news. saw his eyes light with surprise and anxiety, and then he excused him- self from his companion and hur- rled out of the hall. Cynthia tossed her head as she turned away. She flew, then, into the shadowy maze of corridors about the hall. In seemingly countless places she discovered member of the Band, all of them in fantastic fancy-dress costumes," and all of them armed either with dummy weapons or wine bottles. The Black Band were ready for ND maddest freak in its history, and Cynthia's" mind had conceived lt. She left them and hurried of‘! to a waiting room. where she had sec- , Mothers . {MUS HOT BREAKFAST reted a leather suitcase an hour be- fore. Dicky had brought it in his car, since Peter had escorted Cyn- thia from the house. She went in, locked the door, switched on the light and began to undress. I Ten minutes later Cynthia. em- . . try this / ' . Nature provides, in wheat, all the cold-fighters. energy- buihlcrs, that lmtlici need. And watch the youngsters’ eycs shins, appetites pick up. when you scrrc 100"» whole wheat in that time and trouble-saving erged. Hod Peter seen her, as she stood there in the empty corridor, peering up and down, he would have been staggered. No cabaret dancer could have chosen a more daring attire than she wore, now. A filthy, trlvlal creation of frill and flower, barely covering her knees, cut scan- dalously low at the breast, barely reaching above the waist at the back, leaving uncovered the pink, waxen supple young arms and shoulders. Her lips were scarlet under a lib- eral application of cosmetic. The long lashes of her dazzling eyes were pencllled and heavy. Her And have you tried SHREDDED WHEAT as a porridge 7 Easy to maize . . . economical too. l Break up two or more Shredded When Biscuits in a saucepan. 2 Add l mp of water for each Shredded Wheat Biscuit and all to suit your lme. 3 Stir occasionally, boil for 5 minutes and serve steaming hot with milk or rream. brcz|kf.1st-—Shreddcd Whcat— llmr ' sssc MADE IN CANADA o n. wnm IY OANADIANS ~o OF CANADIAN ‘HIM! checks were flushed with an unnat- ural colour that rouge had urged. The whole effect was bizarre, sav- ourlng of the cabarets of Mont- martre, or the dance halls of Oc- tend. For The Cook rultn. IGUASTS 8 pork chops l4 cup fat‘ 1 teaspoon grated onion ‘A teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons poultry seasoning. u. teaspoon pepper ‘A cup boiling water 2 cups stale bread crumbs Have the chops cut very thick and an incision made on the top of each for a pocket. Prepare the stuf- flng by melting the fat, adding the onion and crumbs and stirring until the crumbs begin to get brown. Add seasoning and boiling water, cook- lng slightly before stuffing the chops. Insert a. toothpick to close the opening in each chop and place in hot fat for a few minutes to brown. Remove to baking dish and bake from twenty to thirty minutes, until tender. CHOCOLATE CAKE One-fifth pound butter One cup brown sugar One egg One-half cup milk One-half cup hot water One-half cup cocoa One teaspoon baking soda Two teaspoons baking powder One and one-half cups flour Flavoring . Method: Mix hot water, cocoa and sods, and let aside. Cream butter and sugar. Add egg, well beaten; add milk and cocoa. mixture. Add remaining ingredients and flavoring, if desired. Beat till smooth, and pour ln greased cake tins and bake thirty minutes ln moderate oven. silken black mask over her eyes, and then she fled to another round of her hectic followers. Group by group she muster ’ them, joining Dicky Smythe last of Iall. sue found him waiting behind a. curtained doorway admitting dir- ectly into the hall where the guests were dancing. "Ready, Sister?" he asked, eager- ly, as she came up, breathlessly. He gasped as he saw her made- up. the daring of her dress; but Cynthia had never laughed so reck- lessly as she regarded the dark, handsome young man in his own fantastic pie ‘s costume and grey, silk mask. In left hand he held an empty wine glass, in his right a bottle of champagne. “Everything! ready," she told him, excitedly. "And now, Brother of Beanfeasts, to shock Mldley once and for alll” In that moment she paused, and looked sway. Ho saw her stiffen. and knew what she was thinking. Her narrowed eyes set upon the thick curtains before them, through a. parting in which she could see the brilliant array beyond, her scar- let lips framed the words of l grlml If We Ils v . l. 2:25;: Dorothy Dsx :::.'i::; Alimony Married Kill the Graft in Alimony andYou Will See a Decline 1n Divorce — Matrimonial Graft- ers and Fair-Weather Wives Would. Then Hold on to Hubby With Both Hands I see in the papers. as Will Rogers would say, that the validity of the alimony decrees of Reno are to be contested. This is the first real body blow that has ever been struck at divorce. 1'01‘, as all honest people will admit. ltisnntsomuch bad husbands as easy money that sends so many women to the divorce courts, and if you would delete the alimony you would stabilize matrimony. There is nothing in our alleged modern civ- ilization that is so disgraceful as the fact that div- orce has become just as much a. racket among un- princlpled women as bootlegglng has among men. A large class of women have made a graft of wrecking homes and breaking up men's lives. They enter into the most binding of all human con- tracts with no intention whatever of fulfilling it. _ They perjure, their souls without even a qualm of conscience by taking upon their lips the most sol- emn of all oaths that they do not even mean to keep. In former days the woman who married for money expected to make some return for lt. She expected to live with a man as his wife, to bear ' him children, to keep his house and make him comfortable. But the woman who marries for money nowadays doesn't intend to make any re- turn for the support that the man gives her. She doesn't intend to even be bothered with him any longer than lt will take her to establish an alibi that will go with some senllely sentimental Judge before whom her trial for divorce takes place. < So after a. very brief span of matrimony she discovers that she and her husband are incompatible in temperament, or that he inflicts mental cruelty upon her by protesting at her extravagance or criticizing her piesl Or he trumps her ace in a. bridge game, or he objects to having her en- tire family saddled upon him, and forthwith she takes her woes to the divorce court and is granted a decree absolute with alimony that enables her to live in comfort and often to support a second husband as long as fittenSMoores‘ AVENDE MITCHAM IN SOAPS AND TALCUMS THE refined quality of Potter 8r Moore's famous Toilet and Beauty S ecislties l: notably expressed in Complexion Soaps‘ ‘ ‘ of unusual fineness of texfurr-Soaps that are rich in lather and beneficial to the skin-and in Tslcurn and Dusting Powders of exceptional lightness and smoothness. Frag- rsnlly perfumed with the original Potter 8r Moore's Mitchom Lavender. ' ' Imps-IO: to 50c a och. Tulcum In Glsu, 50¢; Dusting Powder. 8|. 4| p," 51m, .4 3"“, qmum MITCHAM LAVENDER PRODUCTS by POTTER c MOORE, LTD. fswmmf"‘s..°'"..".'r """.i:.'.".'.:"..‘:'"- all-riser: POTTER l. MOORE, LIMITED - Luanda r Home. LONDON she lives. No one can deny that there are plenty of women who marry for the‘ sole purpose of acquiring alimony. They have no affection for the men they marry, no intention of sticking to their bargains, and they never make the slightest efiort toward making their marriages s. success be- cause their real desire is not for a loving husband, but for an ex-husband whom they can hijack into supporting them. Aside from these matrimonial grafters. there are the women who marry ln good faith, but who throw up their hands and quit cold when they find out that their husbands are he-men instead orgodlings, and that marriage isn't a fairy-story romance. Nobody can. deny that the number of these fair-weather wives would be greatly diminished and that there would be very few divorces if these was no alimony. _ If every woman knew that when she left her husban‘ she would have to go out and support herself, that she would have to walk instead of riding in a car, that she would have to live in a cheap room in a boarding house instead of having a. comfortable home, she would think s long, long time before she divorced her husband just because she had lost her taste for him or he had some little peculiarity that irritated her. It is the old human desire to get something for nothing, to get money that you didn't have to work for, that lures many and many a. wife into the divorce court. - There seems no fair and just reason why men should be penalized more in marriage than women are, nor why a man should be compelled to continue to support a woman who has perhaps made his life a hell on earth. After all, marriage is a sporting proposition in which a man takes as much risk as the woman does, and if it turns out badly and they find out that they an maladjusted and cannot live in peace together, she no more loses out than he does.. Many women are honest and gallant enough to accept this view of the situation and refuse to ask for alimony, but most of them demand the last cent they can wring out of their husbands as payment for the wreck of a marriage that they did as much to ruin as he did. ~ The original justification for alimony was that a woman was a poor. helpless creature who would starve ii’ her ex-husban‘ did not provide for her. But nowadays that contention ls not valid. Nearly every woman in these days of feminine emanlcpatlon is trained to an occupation by which she can earn her own living. Many women have money of their own. Many have better paying jobs than their husbands and are more epilogue to her challenge: "Now, Peter Cavendish, you will see my way of wounding you. After to-night you'll be glad enough to re- lease me." Nevertheless, her white hand trembled as it went to her lips. pressing a silvery whistle against her mouth. Then she stiffened, flashed a glance at her smiling companion, shot out her free hand to the silk- en cord by the curtains, and wren- ched them open. "Nowl" ' Cynthia blew s. shrill blast on the whistle, sending high, echoing notes through the shadowed corridors. Out of the darkness streamed a horde of laughing, hysterical, reck- leu plerrots and plsrottes, glsdlo istcm dancln girls, Spaniards and Tlrolese and Portugese-tumbling over each over in their mad release from an impatient waiting, pouring llkeastreamofnoiso andoolourln the horrified throng in the hall be- yond. And Cynthia Marland, her lips parted in hystericalsllvery, defiant laughter, was at their head, waving them on to their lair-profiled el- aspade. J Tfllllhllltlhfillfibfl: up, “"1; ller "IQ llsl llavy Golds In ELI. writes:- 4-6, and last wists! ms s ma’ wan?‘ 11m’ t r. I their colds hid soon dis- thl best cough medicine CHAPTER VI. Peter Cavendish barely knew the young man, Derek Coward, who ap- proached him while he was chatting with several members of the Council interested in his business enterprise in the town. Coward touched his arm and drew him urgently aside, "A telephone call has come through from the Manor, Mr. Cav- endish. he announced. "You are wanted there urgently. I do not know what it is, but the butler said something about illness." Peter started in dismay. "lllh6Sl—-—?" It was the last thing on earth he would have ex- Pwted. but he was devoted to his maiden aunts who ran his home with splendid efficiency. "All right." he slid. quickly. "I'll return st once. flanks." I-le excused himself, looked round for Cynthia, and failing to find her, hurried out of his waiting car. He drove furiously up the hill road, wondering what on earth could have happened in his absence. When he hurried into the hall of Mldley Manor and questioned the elderly butler, that dignified scr- ’ not stored at him sskance. (‘lb be Continued.) FOR SALE As I urn leaving this country I will loll cheap for cash 1 him In- cubator O00 broader 1000 chicks, l Cblnolet Sedan Model 1920. 1 . l-Q-I’ T H E o R l G_,|____,A,L otter t} or MITCH/AM LAVENDEL competent. And there is no reason why these financially independent, women should-collect money from men who are literally enslaved by hav- ing to pay them alimony. Often second wives and little children, as well las the men themselves. are denied the necessities of life because most of s man's earnings have to go as tribute to the alimony racket. 0f course, if a. woman has given the best of her life to a man and l. she has worked by his side and helped him build up his fortune, she ha: s. valid claim on all that he has, and if they decide to separate she has l‘ right to half of his property, the community property they have earned together and which is as much hers as his. It is unthinkable that! good‘ old wife should be tumed out to starve like a wornout old wort horse because her husband falls for a flapper. But this kind ‘of oouplc seldom wants a Qvorce, and when they do, the husband rarely M11186! t4 nuke s. generous settlement on the wife. I think that before every young couple marry they should make s contract in which it would be definitely set forth what proportion of tlu property the woman is to receive in case of divorce. And I believe that no woman should be given alimony unless she can establish that she ,_ \ done her duty as a wife and made an effort to make the marriage a success. ‘ Kill the graft in alimony and you will see a decline in divorce. DOROTHY DIX. EDWARDSBURG cnuwunlllrln nourishing sweet for the whole family LIMITED. IIONTRIAL FARM FUR SALE I offer for sale, a farm situated I Pleasant Valley, Lot 2i, 1r. Inllv from Elliott's Station. School Church and Mills. 2% miles fr“! Fredericton Station. Church and‘ Stores. Farm consists of I00 new 70 acres cleared, balance covcrfll with Ilard and Soft wood. Land l". excellent state of cultivation. hover‘ mung sprllll months "l" form. t Dwelling house, and all out b11114‘ lngl In good repairs. n; Inspection st any time. Fol further plrtlculnrs apply to W. F. STEVENSON. m: m. Brsdslbanfl. R- R- z r. n. island- NOTICE Be the notice which appeared in the Guardian of march coin from Parker A. lforne, I wun to say that worker A. Horne has never pain or never been asked to my Ill)’ 51-1-9 contracted by Home urns, ounce 192d, s; l myself have carried on the humus of Home mom, Vi An-JDC and intend to do so in future. IIOJNE BROS. Pot J. IIBAGII IIOI-Nl 8666-8-21-11. NO TICE plbllo an hereby notified I have no connection whatso- wltls Home Bros, of Wlnsloe have not had since the your and I will not be respomlbln I any debts contracted in that name. Dated Much N, 1m. ' PABKII A. IIOBNI, ‘:7 mm. ao-u. The Bankruptcy Iitl SALE BY TENDER of iho T-Jslntc o? “$55? .__._.._. the nutter IGO-I-SQ-il. d I ed - lg: liugid.“ of ullednesdar. I988, tar one or morn of the in; pllflll! ' _ D lll . 12351:’); glxlures l!‘ ollow" ir i r. .... _ rsiigluwiflp. arsgeenxl in 5.7213’ w... ‘nu underlined elm for sale Pffififi‘ ..'?°i...."... North Try-on a his farm of IOU-sons with house n. x so n. with m". hull: £1122‘ and barn. IO mo: now ploughed y on, the m: lnelluilllhlgrvaihfret and in good state of cultivation, t b" 11° "W" “ ' balumlnnborsndhsrd wood. Neu- mmflnm, o; m, mo" "m: m '.i."'..".i.""'..'§§"i‘.°‘ ““' """’ ..".*..:":.-"f'.1:: mil? Charlottetown. W. I’. IAIDINR _ I -. nun mu HIIIIDUIO. °‘“""';‘,§,,{§"{,',',§J}.lf ’ l. l. Ne. l. P. l. bland. 31. 1's. s. aluminum“ 0114-04 m | I u- n North Trvolul" .