PAGE_ElGH‘-- .Wokrnan ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature Till?” CHARLOTTETOWN" GUARDIAN JUNE g6, r939 HEW HATS Just arrived by Express, a Mohair Hats. Speial at.... .-'\‘iso a new line of Ladies’ Sport Hats in stitched Silks, Crepes and Tweeds. Special at .. . .. We have also received a large assortment of Angora Tums in Whites and all Pastel shades at $2.2.» s. A. MacDONALADS ~ ' Etiquette klnbufllrh [I Dorothy Dix ‘I Letter Box: Q. If at an informal wedding, the ibride wears an afternoon frock or ilfflVOllllg suit, should she carry a ’ i bouquet? _ _ i A. No but. she may wear a corsage large shipment of Ladies’ b°“q“°'* _ _ s1 Q8 . ; Q- At a dance, on which side of ‘ ] her partner does a woman walk, in a grand march? A. On the right. Q. At a dinner table, where should the floral decorations be placed? A. In the center of the table. . $3.98 A Morning Smile ; SAND I '5 DILLALHA l Representative Cluistopherson said kiwi/hat the'Fashionable Afe Weafing ‘,\couiitries, is an earthly paradise, and Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished . With Every Pattern . : . By Annebelle Worthington ,,' ' A .. s»: {é | at a dinner in Sioux Falls: i, “Auicriczi, _ compared with other whm I hear Commuuistic growls, I lcant help thinking of‘ Sandy Mc- i Pherson. "Sandy, the atone mason, was drawing $12 a day, but when his bro- ther from the country asked him how i he was situated he shook lllS head. “BM your jobs a good one, ain't it?‘ said the brc-iher. “ "Sure is,’ said sandy. " ‘How about the hours?‘ g brown and yellow-beige printed linen wraps its bodicue in tuxedo mat styling. The collar is plain brown linen. Its long moulded line makes it es-, " ‘Short? pecially desirable for ‘vise Larger, “ygm; m, mg;- woman. The curved seaming of the‘, “‘P](3;\5a11{_' “ ‘Whats the trouble, then?‘ " ‘The wages-that's the trouble.‘ "But, holy smoke-J “ ‘The wages, that the trouble.‘ growled Sandy. ‘They're so darn high, I can't ever afford to take a day ofI." joining ofthe bodice and the circular skirt does much toward minimizing the width through the hips. It's an opportunity to have a smart . linen frock for general wear whose cost will be very small. It will place, you in the “know" of fashion. Style No. 2560 comes in sizes i6, 18 years. 36, 3B, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. Pique, shantung, tub silk and silk or cotton shirting are attractive fab- rics for its development. to twenty circles with each arm. Then suing both arms together. After you have practiced with both ' arms separately and both amis to- Im real life love seems to need a background of respectability to make it Pattern price 15 cents. Be sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pat-i tern Department. The Summer Fash- ion Magazine is ready! It. contains most interesting styles for adults for gether, try to take one arm to the left and one arm to the right. wind- mill fashion. Repeat tcn to twenty times and reverse agaizt using the same ide as in swinging Indian <Milady Beautiful By hi: Inch ROUND SHOIILDERS AND FLAT CHEST There are a great many slender girls agd women with round should- era Uld flat chests. This defect is often due to incrroect posture when sitting, standing or walking. which, M “Skinny! I Gained 11 lbs. in 8 Weeks and Boy Friend” “After trying several wines tried Ironized Yeast. In 8 weeks gained 11 lbs. new complexion. round ' limbs; best of nu a hvv triend.“-S. M. Saline. Men and women are amazed at Iain of 5 In l5 lbs. in 3 weeks. Ugly hoi- lows vanish. Bony limbs round out. Sallow, blemished skin gets clear and rosy like magic. Nervousneu, indig- estion, constipation disappear over- nighn Sound sloop. New pop from very first day. TM: great tonic: in one — special weight-building Malt Yeast and ctrengthening Iron. Pleasant little table . For stronger than unmodi- eate yeast. Resultlin $6 time. No yeasw taste, no gas. Dopk. go round “skinny.” ugly, un- attractive. Get nonlaaa Yeast. from aru today. Feel grout wom- [Uwh .|»..i n}. 7 .-- . .___ a_..._. J wide circle above m"?! 0P "Mai-m" wear‘ 515° darling clubs in the reverse circle motion: ,styles for the kiddies. It is l5 cents a lone arm swings backward and the "P-"i but may be ‘mtamed m’ Ioiother arm swings fOFflIRYd. This is “m5 u “flared same time as pa“ rather a complicaili exercise to tern‘ grasp at first. butvit '.s a very bene- ' ficiril one for the chest, back, should- ers, bust. throat and neck. Exercise 13v. Stand erect before ____“"""_________ an open window or out of doors. , Name Inhale slowly. raising the arms above ‘ i- the head as you do so. Hold the breath for two to six counts, then exhale and brirg your arms in a your head and your arms as you exhale. Exercise Mi. Stand erect, arms at No. 2560. Size nun-nun."- Street Address (my State lower ,0! course. in time causes a iiarroiv, ,uhdeveloped chest, round shoulder huulcici- level. Swing the arms out tgagging bust and weak back tnuscicj. together in front elbows straight. “The cure for it is habitual erect icxhaliiiz. Fling them back as far as carriage. deep breathing and exercise they will on, inhaling as you do so. plus suflicient nourishing. bodv- Brug them front again to the chest building foods for manila‘ ziigiand repeat. the movements ten to health. An erect carriage is veryitiventv times. ‘Tiais exercise is esggnflal. fQT keeping the figure fsplandid for the chest. neck and bust. youthful. Swimming is n $]7lf‘ll(llCi,'T'hlO\\' your head ivell bnck as you exercise for bringing into play all the j doc-crib!- n wide circle. bringing the muscles of the whole body, inrliitliiiq arms as far baclczrard as they will go {he chest and back muscles, and sIXbPncI the elbows and shoot the arms developing the bust; it gives theirtraiaht out in froit again without muscles a long smooth graceful out-qiriuso. line and keeps them firm. flexible, Tomorrow-Ronni; Questions and strong. To derive the IIIOFIl Ansivwod benefit from swimming it six/Quid be‘; indulged in regularljv two or three_ times a. week. but. like ‘any other, exercise, it should not be taken to ti,‘ point u-here it pisoduces fatigue andi stiffness of the muscle-s. It 2s 11» 1 good plan to have expert l.'5i.‘.‘ilC‘.iI7l\: ‘ until one has mastered the wrrcct movements of the strokes combined with the correct breathing. A splen- did way to keep the body muscles limbered up so that they coordin- ate smoothly is to take a few minutes every morning for special exercises, thus gradually training the muscles and making them strong and more flexible. Here are a few exercises that may be taken regularly every night rind morning, to correct round shoulders, flat chest and weak back muscles: First. Stand erect hands clasped in front, shoulders well back and chin up. Step forward on the left foot. Swing arms upward. elbows straight. rising on the toes as you do so. In- hale deeply on this upward move- ment. throwing the chest out and head back. Unclasp the hands aid throw the arms backward and down- ward, exhaling and lowering the writ“, I w,“ cenainw ‘mwet ma‘ u w“ 5° 5°" mm“ m “m” her IettcrP-Mrs. George R. we wile» “wt w“ time crew ‘Gillespie, Punnichy, Saskatche- nlght and morzing. Step forward on (yam the right and left foot alternately. , E, itft-iiii? 0i ‘ _.A'l(?Zllll1-N0\V “In Ma and June I wan badly run own and had faint spells until it was a drag to do my work. In July and August I didn't seem to pick u IO Ide- cided to try Lydia . Pink- ham’: Vegetable Compound because I saw it advertised. l rook two bottles and now l am the picture of health. I feel fine, do all my work and milk two cows. If any woman Why Success in Marriage Depends as Much on the State of Our Pocketbooks as on the State of Our Affections—Untold Misery That Lies in Marriage With a Jealous Hus- band — Time to Count the Cost Dear Miss Dix-How practical this age is becoming! I used to shudder when I read of the metter-of-fact customs of the Spartans, but I doubt. if they were any more hard-boiled than the present generation. Even love, ' like everything else, ls governed by material consider- ations. I am a. young man of 22, but I cannot think of love or marriage because I could not support a wife in that degree of comfort and security which my pride demands. As a. matter of fact, I am not in love, but I should like to know at. what age a girlshoulcl marry and how old a girl a man of 80 should marry? Or has age nothing to do with it? And is the marriage mark- etgoverned by the law of supply and demand and the time to get the best bargain when the market is most favorable. DON, ‘ Answer: One of the reasons why so many marriages are faihires, Don, is because novelists and poets have taught us to look at it only from a romantic and sentunental standpoint, whereas in reality it is the most practical thing in the world. "All for love and the world well lost" is a. beautiful and inspiring slogan that has led innumerable men and women into committing fatal follies that wrecked their lives, for after all as long as we are in the world we can't lase it. We are a part of it and bound by its rules and conventions and its point of view and no affection can defy these and survive. Very often we see a man elope with another man's wife or u. woman goes off with another womans husband. They leave behind them family, friends and position and think they will be happy having only each other. but in a little while the love that was to suffice begins to die out. their nerves grow raw at. being looked at askance and they commence to quarrel and fight and blame each other for their plight and almost always they end by parting. In novels the illicit love is the one that. is strong and beautiful and tender, but thrive. The theory that love is enough to marry on and that those who have been accustomed to caviar and fllet mignon will ask nothing but bread and cheese and kisses has led innumerable lovesick lads and lassies to rush into the holy bonds of matrimony before they had the price of the bracelet. To their surprise they have found out. that very soon they got fed up on a meager diet and craved the good food they were used to and that after mar- riage they took just the same interest in clothes and amusements as they did before. Also, they discovered that shabbiness and sordid surroundings are not. eonducivl to romance and that uihen one is sick with worry over where, the money is to come from to pay the rent and buy the dinner, sentiment, seems the least important thing in the world. The truth of the matter is that love has to be financed. like everything else. For it is only in our hours of ease, when we are comfortable and well | fed and craefree, that ivethink about the state of our hearts. And whether? a marriage is a success or not depends just as much upon the state of ones’ pocketbook as it does upon the state of ones affections. If good clothes grew, on our backs as feathers do on birds; if we could build our nests in any con- , venient tree and subsist on a few early worms, we might mate on the love impulse ivitli no thought of any sordid consideration intruding to spoil our romance; But as long as millinery and imported frocks are what they are and we have to have homes withthe latest things in plumbing and cover charges re- main sky high and there are cars and radios and things necessary to our happiness and our errant hearts are only held by ladies and gentlemen who frequent the beauty shops and good tailors, why, then love has to be backed up by money and Cupid has to tip his arrows with silver if they make a last- 1P4: Peri. , As to what age a girl should marry, I should say any time after she is 2i or 22. Women develop quicker than men and a girl of 22 is as worldly wise as a man of 30. Of course, it is wise to marry on a bull market, but the love market is , like the stock market, you never know when it has reached its peak and when E it is best to go in and make a killing or wisest to stay out and avoid a total , loss. And sometimes when you see your chance you haven! the ability to play It. DOROTHY DIX. O O I I O I O I Dear Miss Dix-I am engaged to a man whom I love very deeply. ivc are well suited as to age, tastes and habits and are congenial in every u-ay. 1 would be happy if it were not for my fiance's unreasonable Jealousy. He does not trust me out of his sight. suspects every man who approaches me of the most evil intentions, a compliment, orthe most innocent attention from a mutual man friend brings forth a torrent of accusations. On the days we do not see each other he phones ‘me every few hours so that he may know exactly where and with whom I am and wherever possible he checks up on me. In fact, he will not. take my word about where I have been until my assertions have been corroborated. - I have given up must of my friends and limited my social activities, but to no avail. He claims he will be different when we are married and living under the same roof, but will he? Can I hope to overcome this feeling? What shall 1 do? c. o. Answer: If you are a meek and humble woman with no pride or self-respect, you may possibly endure a marriage with this man, but you will have to put. up with daily insults and abuse that would make even a worm of the dust turn. If you are an independent woman, conscious of your own dignity and honor- able conduct and accustomed to the respect and admiration of all you know, you will writhe for a. few years under the accusations this man will bring against you and at last you will rebel at. his tyranny and get a. divorce. "" ‘Qi-i-a In either event you will go through untold misery, and my earnest advice to you is to be forewarned and refuse to marry him. There is no possible ray of happiness for you as the wife of such an inordinately jealous husband and there is no cure for the situation because it ls one that is brought about by an abnormal condition in the man. He is not really responsible because he is insane. He cannot see things straight. llwerything takes on the dark and sinister character of his lmnginlngs. . . Any man who accuses you of the things this man does, who thinks that. pus every hour you are away from him in some degrading orgy has a per- verted mind. His thoughts ran on degraded happenings and he behaves you capable of being as low as his basest thought. Certainly he can offer you no greater insult. ' Don't believe for an instant that after you marry him his point of view will change. It will be intensified, if anything, because then he will feel that you are his property and that he has a right to supervise you every act and wot; and thought. I get many letters from women who haw married men such u your swing the right arm with a free. fiat. to the right and then to the c left; let the trunk twist Exercise (21. Stand erect and sweeping motion in large can... i- goigia |g [lgmiigiiiigl freely. Re-i ' - ‘- - n " ~ ._;_ . -" - '-. __-_i. ..-_Z._- fiance and they tell of leading lives that are worse than that of any woman shut up in a harem. A Marquis, Sash.) Mother's Experience LitUe_]oyccTaylor‘s mothcrwdtea: “The first three months of her life Joyce had a hard time finding a suitable food. Nothing seemed co agree with her. Then we put her on Eagle Brand and from her very first feed she came right: along. I went by the directions on the can. Now at l3 months she is a sweet, happy childin perfect health all the time." progress. And from Saint John, N.B. JiIrs. Gourley writes: “One after mother different foods were tried for our baby, but Una couldn't digest them. ‘At birth she weighed 14 lbs. but she dropped to 10 lbs. ac3months. Then we tried Eagle Brand, and she bcgantothrive almost immediately. At 2% years Mosa- babies show normal natural. If your baby is not: steadily‘ gaining consult your doctor. If it is a food problem, we suggest that you and your doctor consider Eagle Brand. For bottle-fed babies, Eagle Brand has been the standby of mothers for three ‘generations. It: is especially valuable in difficult feeding cases, being such a safe food—pure, uniform, easily digested. You will be pleased to see your baby begin to thrive immediately when placed on a carefully prepared Eagle Brand diet. It is highly endorsed by doctors and nurses. That is quite ' FREE BABY BOOKS Milk Eaglega/za’ CONDENSED * Mail this coupon to The Borden Co. LimftaLMontreaLif youwouldlike copies of‘ “Baby's Welfare“ and “The BestBabyi" you cannot have an innocent conversation with another man and that. you, Nan: For 17w Cook’ l. IHAKING SAN DWICHES ilspreading thin slices of brown bread nnd butter with the following mix- ture: Mince equal quantities of seed- less raisins and good plump curt-ants -do not omit the curt-ants, for they , are rich in mineral salts-add to , them the Juice and grated rind of an I orange. For savoury sandwiches a new idea is thin slices of white bread ,'spread with butter that has been mixed with horseradish. On this is spread a layer of cream cheese. Olives and cream cheese, and chutney and Tcream cheese are other popular fill- ings for savoury sandwiches. ,Dainty sandwicuhes are always pop- ular for afternoon tea, bridge par- ties. and informal evening functions, and it is a pleasure to a hostess to be able to introduce novel and attractive sandwiches to her guests. For child- rcn‘s lunches at school, for the mid- day meal of hungry workers, for mot- , orists and picnic parties, more sub- -~i—-—i—- stantial sandwiches are required. , Albany and Viginity There are a great many fillings‘, both , sweet and savoury. to try. and the; Mrs. Daniel MacPhce. Springton. woman who Likes experimenting will 35 spending a yew day; m Albany, be able to ac eve some original mix- 'he guest, Q; M; and M5, Ewen cam. tures. For afternoon tea and similarterom occasions. the bread and butter must; beltlzut verxytzthin. S518 brougnmbreadlas,‘ Misses Jean and Margaret, Ame“, we as w 18"!“ ‘ave r 5e m {motored to Bedeque last week. split, buttered and filled with various l mixtures for a change. Tllny sponge, Mr, and Mrfi Adrean Murray, re_ fingers or rounds are delicious filled. - l t to S id . with Devonshirc cream. Grntedicemy mo Ored ummets e chocolates mixed with whipped cream i makes a very nice sweet filling, so does honey and ground almonds. Quite a novel sandwich is made by Miss Ruby Bums and Mr. Waldron Cameron motored t/a- Stanchel on Wednesday. the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Cameron and family. allowed to have any woman friends orto belong to a club or to go to any place of amusement unless their jail era are along. They cannot even go to the corner grocery without husband holding a stopwatch on them, and woe betide them if they are two minutes late in getting back. And, worst. of all, their husbands accuse them even before their children of degrading crimes that they have never thought of committing. The very worst fault a husband can possibly have is Jealousy. Whoever else you marry, don't marry a green-eyed man. DORUFHY DIX. _.. .... i... t I U I I U v O U Dear Miss Dix-I am a trained nurse, 23 years old, madly fn love with a. man, 33, who has a wife and little daughter. Our affair has been going on for three years and he has been taking me out to places of amusement almost every evening. New some busybody has found out. about it and told his family and he is afraid to take me out any more. What. shall I do? ' mouanan NURSE. Answer: Give him up. You know you are doing a wrong and foolish thing in encouraging the attentions of a married man and taking him away from his wife. New you have a chance to count the cost. You can see that‘ he is only playing around with you, amusing himself with an adventure, and that he is ready to drop you at the first intimation that it. will injure him with his business or his famly. ' DOROTHY 91x OO-OO O O4 OO-OOQQ-QWO 0000005 OQ WHEN YOU BAKE USE MIIIIARBII BAKIIIG PIIWIJER AIIII 84900000000000» 0 . , Mrs. Anna MacDonald, spi-ingzton was a. visitor here over last wetk end the guest of her daughter Mrs. W. P Cameron, An ice cream social was held on Wednesday evening at Albany Noni: under the auspices of the Baptist Church. ‘The social was a big succes: and a snug sum was realized. Messrs. John MacKenzie and Lorne McKenno, recently motored t4 Int 65. A very successful foe cream socim was held 0n ‘Thursday evening Jum 19th.. on Searletown Hall grounds.- Sweetheart/i The meefallifre“ of ire-RIM beau lThe mail: of a perfect skin! e and nut/I l Why will any woman look Ion than her but, when a p¢rl¢¢t skin may be acquired’? easily . . .80 lncxmmlvelv I-fl l" tell you about Pompelon s new me . smelt POMPEIAN.‘ towymcas. mwuiqwn '-.:.i filF-a? w-v. Ill- onoto, Candl- WIIITE STAB YEAST av 0 m: burnt i_iu.__ an» 19v‘ Ii‘??- v-yis a ‘In I.-?-.',| E$il€Il—"'-" SPYTl-Pv = ' ‘ "‘ “"' “ "“‘ ‘"“"‘ "“"“"""\'*'II>--w#—vvv~vw\s==s u-nena-i n xxrnli! zu-anuniueua I snn-rnuxucv r u »