s- n, ... s. PAGE EIGHT THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN s... Avousr 2s. 1931 \§ . ’ . ’ w . 4 ‘ . ‘ .' i i? t. Woman s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- légteratu re l!‘ I What I ll You ,i> o _ ;._, w???“ Dorothy 32:15:11’ y Laboratory-Tested 1 . g 0 es are Weanng l Ilfllc Over - . . ‘X i y, ‘ ;._ I ‘ , l Illustrated Dre-ssrEaIrIngPLesson Furnished mu. ‘ JP"? :', .15" v ' it‘ . I -' very amrn l‘? l1. " l‘llll}L,»,"-ll;,fir". What Errors Would You Avoid if You Had. B A" be" W "\\““‘ ‘l:'“'“""’ m" . Your Married Life to Live 0ver?-—Would ‘i v a ' °'”"""'"" . Y You Take Your Husband's Short- ‘ MADE l" “ti/WA ~; comings Less Seriously, Smile l ‘"5935 Illgfianfly fioérsléiuiltozaydgzs; i l “l l l’ ll ll ill. l l1. l ‘The o At all Good Drug and Department Stores YARDLEY y Old Bond Street E \\'I\D~\i Yflflllfl’ H0050. Barbour It York $1., Toronto. ltis impossible, now, to conceive of society I lllll I l. , deprived of the Yard. l, illitllliltl --- izl..izriai;z..l"r "’ y‘ it,‘ '_ _ . u. . lllvtihllfii Perfiflm h“ vivacious Freshness of “d. H! PM“ Gm theLovableFragrance lllH-‘lllllllu w Pa“. Day and has become a very l” lNis/“Crww. part of Canadian “l 5'?‘- “Q social custom-just as i m IMP dwx: it has been in England V,“ » “m, these 16o years G51} Com. Fragrance LONDON U.S.A.: 4S2 Filth Ava, New York. Paris new?" someone asked after the lions of winter models from the scope. Greys and pinks, wines and poured. over satin. ’ i WITH ALMA ARCHER PARIS, August 27.—(U. P.)—-"W'hat color combinations are ask back, “What. colors can we rightfully call new?" nishcs us with our color palate and now for several thousand years we have been dabbling our brushes into first this and then that, ' mixing and mussing and blending and fussing-and then giving our findings a new name, full of imagination rather than description. But something new has happened this year and this is what. Nature is still in the picture, but along has come science and ‘ the microscope and a minute examination of rock crystals in cross- sections has given us a marvelous new range of colors. And, believe it as you like, or dislike, but; even some of the most. deadly germs ' have furnished. modern manufacturers of materials with new color ideas and combinations not found in the colors of land, sea. or skyl Wierd blues, lustre browns and heavenly greens and reds have i been revealed through the powerful lenses of the scientists micro- that seems to be made of nothing else but million of dollars worth - of brilliant precious stones powdered to a pulp, melted into a liquid Styles showing of the first four collec- Parls salons. I was tempted to Nature fur- and hydrangae blue, and a shade i iFor The Cool: _ MILK ROLLS Zicupfuls scalded milk. 1 tablespoon salt. 1 tablespoon sugar. l. tablespoon butter or other shortening. 1L- ounce compressed yeast dis- solved in half cupful lukewarm yvater. 6 to 6% cupfuls flour. Put salt, sugar and butter in mix- lng~bowl, add the hot milk. When lukewarm add dissolved yeast and. five cupfuls of flour and mix well. Add remaining flour, mix and turn the dough out on a floured board and knead until soft and elastic. Put back into bowl, moisten, cover and let rise in a warm place until double in bulk. Cut down and toss on flour- Brown Fricasse of Veal (a "left-over" recipe) Cut into small dice a piece of cold cooked veal; dredge with flour pepper and salt. Fry until crisp four thin slices of bacon or salt pork and to the fat add two table- spoons of flour. Cook until well browned, then add gradually a pint of stock. Season and add the meat and a teaspoonful of chopped parsley or celery leaves. When well heated, serve with boiled rice, buttered noodles, or mashed potato. Garnish with the fried bacon. ed board. Cut in small even pieces; knead and place in greased muffin tins an dallow to rise almost to top of tins. Bake from twenty minutes to half an hour. -... eAeefleadache” LONE...wi:h the BLUES. All her friends having a '- wonderful‘ limo. ' " ‘And everybody knew what rho meant. by “headache”. Any woman who does nothing lo relieve the bearing-down plinl, nervousness. depression “and general physical lusiludo in ' ho! giving herself a flair brook vloro and-during tho “painful period." l}. 1m’! i! mniblo lo try lhi sim- ' info remedy that lm helped no V ‘runny women? Your trouble! . pron‘: diflhmu. Your coloring itch ho rcllovod by this r Ilronglhenlng medicine. II Ion help you! Won't you i Vlmynboscndlryilplcosol l!” f. , "warrants kept her from the Dance nvM-au ypu column priosom ' Love Instead you avoid making? cussing this interesting subject the experience in learn what it any good. and all you can “Now, if I poor, pitiful, t1 mountains out Everything so filial. do. They just do that way because way at the time. marriage for granted before you find Rochefort cheese because you happen "So if I were a bride, starting out V“I wouldn't always keep out my perature of my husband's affections and tear my hair when I discovered jealousy every time he admired a. w was. over if I had to do it again." “I would take my husband ‘as is,’ as a husband should be. been married six months. him an oracle I apparently thought umbrella. “So if I had my married life to grammar and pronunciation. I woul with such a kick to it that it would about my husband forsaklng me for have got nothing, not because my "We were poor when we married thing of him in the way of attention. venlence." NEW YORK BANK ASKS DEPOSITORS TO WITH- DRAW AND SPEND MONEY NEW YORK, Aug- 27.-One big New York bank advises its depos- ltors to withdraw money fromtheir savings and thrift accounts and spend it-now, when the purchasing power of the dollar is 1G per cent. above what it was in 1928. The bank, the Emigrant Indus- trial Savings Bank, with 249,000 depositors, suggests that its clients should leave on deposit a sufficient “reserve , ‘ ‘ emergencies-at least six months‘ salary," and with the surplus "make careful pur- chase of things you want for per- manent use while prices remain Instead of Nagging, Be a Lady didn't come up to my girlish dreams of a Fairy Prince. my eyes to everything I didn't want to see and I wouldn't go into fits of neglectful but just because men always take a woman at. her own valu- ation and if she holds herself cheaply they also hold her cheaply. of a Slave? If you had your married life to live over again what mistakes would A group of middle-aged married women were dis- "- other day, and one of them said: "The trouble with experience in marriage is like everything else. By the time “you teaches you it is too late to do you You have made your blunders and up- set the apple-cart and generally messed things up do is to gather up the fragments and make the best you can of what's left. had to live my married life over, again I wouldn’t take marriage and especially 1 \vouldn't take my husband so seriously. Brides are ‘agic things because they make such of mole hills and weep over so many things at which they should laugh. Everything is so important to them. Everything so significant, when, as a matter of fact, not much matters and husbands ncvcr mean a thing by what they they happen to feel like doing that "But ycu have to be 40 years old and to have learned how to take that out and realize that your hus- band hasn't ceased to love you because he has quit telling you about the state of his affections and that bringing home a couple of pounds of to like it is just as much of an ex- pression of romance as a bunch of orchids and that you can overdo being a good wife and mother and that both husbands and children loathe being smothered in devotion and attentions and want to be lct alone a lot. again in marriage, I would get a lot more fun out of being married than I have. I would take it easier. l little thermometer taking the tem- and trying to find out if they had gone down from fever heat to subnormal. I wouldn't beat 0n my breast that he was just a mere man and I would shut omnn younger and prettier than I "Oh, I would laugh off o. lot of things I have shed barrels of tours "If I had to live my married life over again," said the second woman, the shipping manifests say, instead of trying to make him over according to my little paper pattern of what When I think about how I nagged my poor John about everything he did and didn't do and tried to alter his habits and whole mode of life and how I criticize everything about him from the way he had his hair cut to his taste in literature, I wonder that he didn't drag me to the divorce court by the hair of my head before we had “It took me a. long time to realize how it must hurt his vanity to find out that instead of admiring and looking up to him and considering | he was a nitwlt. without oven intel- ligence enough to know what he wanted to eat or when to carry an -_- live over again I wouldn't start out in the role of a. reformer and I would leavc it to somebody else to tell my husband oi’ his faults and shortcomings and set him right about his dn't. sit in judgment on his friends and I wouldn't tell him how bad everything he liked to eat was for his digestion and I would hand him out a brand of home-brewed adulation make that brewed by any other woman seem as weak and insipid as skimmed milk. “And would we have a happy home? And would I have to worry a flapper? I ask you.’ “If I had to live my married life over again," said the third woman, "I would be a parlor ornament instead of u doormat. made was in not demanding anything of my husband, and as a result I The mistake I husband is intentionally unkind or; and I was ambitious for my husband to get along and anxious to hell‘) him, so I did the work of half a dozen servants and pinched cvcry penny and went shabby and never asked uni’- “Somehow that established in his mind the idea that I couldn't be happy unless I was slaving and that I was different from other women in not wanting pretty clothes or jewelry or to go to places of amusement. And now that we are rich it never occurs to my husband to make-me" a present or to take me out unless I badger him into doing it, and I know that he never sees me as a lady love but just as a useful domestic con- "The reason that second marriages are happier than first,’ said ah- other woman, "is because women bring t.o their second marriages the wisdom they have acquired in their first." DOROTHY DIX. Eolng up," the bank says, "Judi. clous spending will set the wheels of industry turning more fgpjdly and restore employment to thous. ands now out of work. In our 0pm. ion the millions of savings and thrift depositors in this country “M” it l" 91°51‘ WWcr to change the Whole aspect of industrial and trade conditions." “That radiator is the most prom- inent part. of a car,’ says a writer. It is certainly the first thing that strikes you. low." "Wise spending at the right timo is as much a part of good thrift so 4 l I Styled l l and occasionally makes husbands may now throw away: of buttoning, lamps and interior white, or blamed near it, ice-cube out manners. ' Monograms for Linen The paitcm of the cloth and napkins and the type and size of the’ monograms embroidered on them should be in perfect har- mony. That is to say, regardless of the fascinating modern mono- grams . . . . one should not use them unless the design of the cloth and to a certain extent, the type of china, glass and silver are in unify. For tablecloths ihc size of the monogram should bc from two and a half to about five inches . . _ . ncvcr larger. For dinner napkins it may be from one to two inches; for luncheon and breakfast nap- kins and doilies from three-fourths of an inch to an inch and a half. The proper placing of the mono- gram depends to some extent upon the design of the cloth.‘ Try lay- Eng your yardstick at the edge of the corner of the table, and measure twelve inches in a diagon- al line toward the opposite corner of the table. This is a good point at which to place the monogram. unless at that point it will inter- fere with the design of the cloth. If it docs, raise or lower the letters to give better placing. On small cloths of two yards square or less, only one monogram is placed. Large cloths may have two monograms diagonally opposite each other. Dinner napkins are embroidered in what is known I5 the “centre of the side"; that is, on the top_of the ccntrc $001110. Wm‘ the selvcdge edge toward 9°"- Dinner napkins are not ironed in the old-fashioned square like l1 man's handkerchief, but first in half, then in threes, and once again, and then the initial will be at the top. when one initial instead of a monogram is desired it should be the initial of the last name. On very fine linen tea napkins, cut monogrums are often uwd. JWQLLISQITS RECORD FLIGHT FROM AUSTRALIA TO ENGLAND (Canadian Press) LONDON, Aug., Bil-Luck and great physical endurance are not alone sufficient to explain the new record flight between Australia and England. J. A. Mollison, who land- ed at Croydon, Aug. 6 on his ninth day out from Wyndham, Western Australia, has to his credit one of the most carefully planned ions distance solo flights in aviation history and his triumph is but the culmination of l2 months of ardu- ous preparation. No detail was o~ mltted. The route was studied a- gain and again, his machine - a standard "Gipsy Moth" light bi- plane fitted. with extr; fuel tank- ggg-pfgpflfpd to perfection, infor- mation of my Hm “"1! t0 5° useful along the way W88 eoscrly sought. finally, all these data were condensed into a notable document, a guidebook of the route showlnll nflnutg particulars of/ every loro- dmme, facts about prevailing winds and weather along every section. times of sunrise and moonriso, fuel stocks, an engine impaction sched- ule and a tune-table which, if fa- , ON SALE EVERYWHERE - HARMLESS TO PEOPLE I101! —n—_ By MARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent’ W I adore the general wave of insanity which controls fashion, and roan: the wastes and never come back to where there might be any shops. However, if you are made of sturdy fiber and don't. get all entwined in loving memories of your favorite ladle“. Y0“ All your berets, plain beige gloves, gloves, brown and white costumes, hair too long, or too short, diag- onul linc evening dresses, wrapped effect coats, automobiles with- out free-wheeling, husband's light sport shoes that aren't Whlio with black soles, radios with basket of flowers painted on front fabric where sound comes throug h, men's pajamas that tics instead ishes that are too red, dogs that aren't Scotties, and children with- _;._'---——-———-—- Chats wish all the women would go out exaggerated flare fabric decorative accessories that aren't pans that aren't rubber, nail pol- rsas. limgland one day earlier than ho did. Add to this intense preliminary work a dogged insistence on thorough routine inspection of en- gine and aeroplane at the end of every stage and astonishing trust-i worthiness of the engine-though‘ run at full throttle for several days sometimes for more than 20 hours at a time, it never missed g beat- and the almost mhlfillbllfl achieve- ment may be more accurately esti- fixated. "Mollison not only knocked two days off the time taken a, few weeks ago by C. W. A. Scott, in a similar machine for the homewsrd journ- ey; he also beat by several hours Scott's record for the outward flight $0 iiustralia and, therefore, has made the quickest journey in, history between Australia and this country. His machine lifted into the air no less than 11o gallons of fuel (nine gallons more than Scottfs fuel load) the heaviest load ever air borne by a. light aeroplane. With tanks full Molllson‘: plane could remain aloft for a distance non- stop of approximately 2.000 miles. A cigarette was his first request at Croydon. Then he had a bath. 0n reaching his London hotel he went straight to bed. He had tfov‘ elled 12,000 miles with Only 10 hours’ sleep. He left Rome at midnigh‘ on the last "hop" of 900 miles. H; had to fight bad weather all the way and at the time he was expected at Lympe he was cruising over Mar- seilles waltlng for the weather to improve to enable him to fly up the Rhone Valley. In the end he had to risk the weather-and he landed at Le Bourget to refuel shortly after 11 o'clock. '~ Minster George Bison was the first of a party of children to reach the aeroplane when it landed on the Crumble-f. near the famous Mlh on murder bungalow. "What is the time " asked the airman. On b61118 told it was 1.35. he said: “I am M01 llson, the Australian airman. Am I near Iblkestone? I have lost mi way. I must be at Lymlmé B010"! tea-time to break thsrecord." Try Cooked Cucumbers You will like creamed cucumbers if you will prepare them in this manner: Peel and slice one large or two medium-sized- cucumbers and cover them with boiling water for about ten minutes. Drain, put them in hot salted water and let them ilmmer until tender. Drain again, mash them and add a rich cream sauce until the desired con- sistency to serve. If you like the taste of onion, add a few drops of onion juice to this recipe. EIECTRIC TRAIN MAKES ITS OWN CURRENT (British United Press) IDNDON, Aug, 26-—An electrict railway train, which generates its ‘own current, is to b; tested soon at the works of a famous engineering company. Engineers believe that this new type of Diesel locomotive will revo- lutionlze rail hnnsport, as it re- presents a great advance on the ordinary type of electric train, and completely outdistances in speed and efficiency the best achieve- ments of the steam engine. It is claimed that a saving of fifty million dollars a year on the fuel bill of British railways could be affected through the general adop- tion of this type of engine. "Our business, madam," said the ranger to the city vacationlst, "is to go about day after day looking for forest fires." “And I suppose you find a great many." “N0: lust one or two a season." "Mercy! I should think you'd get terribly discouraged." _______.:._-_ Mlnardm Llnlmsnt for Chllblolnl. Ihotou I ~ luau-ills’. “m”. now ro nuns OVALTINI com. Addh-uvw-rutsronunm ‘lcupolcoldmflh. Whiiimo; IlNfb-mnnyconlp-yqgg tlguo hui not defeated him, mm- "M-W- tyre» 01131101121: the autumn Illplilo woolen mixture 1,, his! brown tones made the orlgimy Th“ crmwv” 5°41“ with 3| closure, conceals breadth beau“! (it t-hroush the bodice and hlpun, ‘my share toward sllumess the breadth through the bfrixd-lirgowlm Style No. B26 is designed forlslu, 36; 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 men“ bust. The 88-inch size requires 3% yards of 30-inch material with y, yard of 85-inch contrasting. 1' mfl" "P equally attractive a plain or printed crepe 511g thtilllfllsdzild shantung are lovely m; Bolumfoflllinthssizeoftlu Pattern. Send stamps n; w“, (com preferred.) Price of pattern l5 cents, N0. 926. Silo colossus-coolness: olcIooIIlIoooIou-ooaoll Name “nu-un-s---.......u-.unuu. Street Address aonconoloiloooloollll Cit? ' Etiquette IyIobcrtaI-oo Q. When should the water glasr. es be filled? l A. Two minutes before the med ls annolinced. Q. When saluting a formal ac- quaintance on the street, is it neces- sary to say anything? A. No; it is altogether optional. Q. What characteristic is the basis of all points of etiquette? A. A genome consideration fol others. A MomingSmile‘ The Back Row Bcholar-‘rhe in- spector was testing the general knowledge of the junior. class. Slap- ping s. half-dollar on the desk, he said she-WU. "What's that?" Instantly a voice from the bacl row, “Tails, sir." MRS. JAMIE FBIER SHIEDIAC, N. 13., A08. air-DEB“ yesterday momlng at the old hem! stead, East Shedlac, in the person of Mrs. James Frier and man! friends hero as well as in othel parts of Canada will loam with rc- grct of her passing. Posscsslns l charming personality and fin! womanlyjttributcs, the late MN Frier had greatly endeared herself to all who knew her and enlovvd a wide circle of friends. to WWW her passing will mean a personal loss. v Mrs. Irier wos a daughter of thl late George Wilson, of Rlchibucw and is survived by her husband. Jamios Friar, and six sons: John of Charlottetown, P- E. I.; Gwrsll of Infayette, Indiana; slmlcv. oi aynn, U. S. A.; Ilerllc, of Moncibni Arthur and Gordon, at home; I-lsl two brothers, David, of Vfctoril B. 0., and George of Bhediac. Supplement light Summer Meah with Ovaltine Served Cold IT Isa he: that in Summer, when people arc active and need oo ho nourished m"! mull In lighter and lea nourishing than o: orbit particularly Vi‘ seasons. . Su lament your mosh with Ovsltino Cold ‘or h“)! i‘! y°“'"'t.m'mb¢lelI.fPu0dIifll8V¢Iy ooddo- meat required for food h lh. Ovnlfine in drcconvur trnocdgoodnesso cggqnmlgnnglnflkinenrzoctly a-+.:e~*e".:.*-~......*-- .....,.......... ous a o ' ouo exercise. Give i: so the Y "In otmdocuor ' this course. Avoid n-ulld -'ovAr.11Ns' Md COLD 1°" ‘II ha: clubs. ' "Nwlw and. .............::..':.'...,... “M339”, M’ ‘W14 ‘l’; five-ganglia Mb’ MW’ m‘ cm“ Onflrll ~ no mad u mic formulas‘. m'1l' mhffuhsallllY-hl 51:’ pwg: fill" ' ' l hooky ‘Amory ll _ _ ‘u ,,. .. l. _ . . , _:__ J1 l = ‘ \ Th9 Veil“ also contributes m. claimed one of the oldest resident: ‘ so! Shediac. N. 8., at an early hour