- shoes PAGE TWO Woman Vvvvv v v Livin i ALACKADAY l She bought a lovely dress For a very special night, Then she found she had to have a hat ['0 make the dress look right. But, trying an these garments. She knew them incomplete Until shepurchosed modish shoes To complement, her feet._ Arrayed in her new flnery She couldn't help but note That to attain real elegance Demanded a new coat. The coat cried out for glow‘ The gloves a pocketbook. To give the whole ensemble That really perfect look. But still she lacks perfection, A lack that's growing WDTSE< For now she has no money To complement her purse. -B_v Helen Howland Prommcl in New York Times. ROOMY SHOES HELP GRACEFUL WALK Almost any woman who halfway tries can walk sure-footedly arid gracefully in flat-heeled shoes- But a spirited and graceful walk In high heels takes a bit of doing Ind enough room i-n shoes for toes to spread. The more room for toes to ex- lend themselves and give feet bet- ter grip, the better balance you get. Imprisoned in tight shoes. toes are powerless to support you. You can give the impression that {nub-e skimming smoothly in high eels, if you'll also make sure that an properly fitted to your arches. Arches must be helped and hot hindered in their function if you want to walk well, Then. too, i! you choose a type lfowCanlHi i Q. How can I keep the akin of the face clean? A. Instead of using soap and Mater. a good way to cleanse the akin is to wet a piece of cotton in. cold water, squeeze it dry. ' ‘ at with a tonic made of witch haul iilliuted with a little toilet water, ‘slip im cold cream and apply. rub- bing upwards. Use a fresh piece of cotton when hhe used piece becomes Boiled. Q. How can I bleach wihite f A. By washing in the usual way and then soaking overnight in one- ihalf gallon of clear water. to which ls added two teaspoons of cream 0f tartar. Q. How can I prevent the i"- rvvvvvfi‘ By Anne Ashley Aglgkeisure —THE WOIILANS REALM- ’s Rea of slice that grip! your loot It the instep-an oxford or shoe with in- step straps. for instanpe — you'll finding walking easier because of better arch support. Pumps are usually the best choice of shoes for flattery but the poorest for 8Y1?- ping the foot and supporting the arch for prolonged Walk"!!- iii OYSTER! POPULAR The time has come to speak of oysters as this is one of the "R" months. They're rooulsr Stewed- friedf or even raw. The household budget may decree oysters are a luxury item. However. make I point of having them at least one! while they're in season. There's a secret to oosnlna i!!! oyster-shell -no. no. put down that chisel and hammer. and just place a thin knife under the back end of the right valve. or shell (the shallower shell is the right). Pilfill forward until the muscle, which holds the shells together. ls cut. The right valve can then be raised from the left. Oysters should not he placed in water before opening. When serving on the hnlf shell. clean the shells by snrinklmg them with water and brushing. In this way the oyster does not open to absorb any water. Lemon jguice, with salt and pepper, is the sauce needed on p raw oy- star. when frying oysters first put them for a few minutes in cold salted milk. then roll in fine bread- crumbs. Fry in butter or olive oil. The liquid can be used as a base for the accompanying white sauce. v PALATABLE DISH Clever You can make a meal of left-overs taste just as agreeable as something you've freshly prepar- ed, Use that dish of cooked fish from yesterday's dinner for a cas- serole of creamed fish and potato chips. Combine one cup of med- ium thick whlfe sauce with two cups of cooked fish, Place slacr- nately layers of the creamed fish and potato chips in a H9859’! dish- Season. Top with buttered fine bread crumbs and heat well in a moderate oven until the top l8 brown. BIRIYS NEST YOU CAN EAT You've got‘ to hand it to the stil- angane. This bird doesn't make just a house to live in. He builds one which can be eaten. foo. of birds‘ nest soup -and coniursd up a vision of iwi-iz-and-halr-nects floating in kettles of hot Wfliér- ‘The aalangane does not make this kind of a dwelling. and that is why the Orientals have found his home gqqd u, est, 111a salanganrfs nest is made of seaweed. It takes about ninety days for the completion of an edible nest. gtshlng of flat. silver? 3 A. By keeping a piece 0f Iii?" guuphor in the drawer- aoAllvoaswauatio-Allvaus assume traumas-comatos- DIJOHT- Whcn this one is stolen the ‘bird lm/ Socials No douht you have often heard ' 4A4 AAA k‘ vv 11v vvvvvvrv sssr REGULAR lsilnsttt in only thirty days. This nest is stolen too. the bird builds again, and this time is left in peace. The salangane is an East Indian swift. found in Malaya and Aus- tralia. -—Ida M. Purdue. If your hat veill-ng has gotten wet from a shower. dip it into a solution of gum arable which you can buy at your drug store. Dissolve one tablespoon of gum arable in one cup of hot water. It may take an hour or two to completely dis- solve. Dip the veiling in the solu- tion and spread it flat on a. towel to dry. keeping the edges straight. When dry, press it carefully with a warm iron. If the veiling is very flne- lay tissue Paper over it before pressing. O i Cook ’s Corner 6 LEMON CREAM PIE 1.6 cup sugar 2% tablespoons cornstarch Or 1 tablespoons all-purpose flour ‘é teaspoon salt 1% cups milk 2 egg yolks. well beaten ‘A. cup lemon Juice‘ ‘A teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 baked 9 inch pie shell 2 egg whites 2 tablespoons sugar Combine sugar, cornstarch, or flour. salt, milk and beaten egg yolks and cook in top of double boiler until thick. stirring frequent-l ly. Add lemon juice and rind. Cool custard slightly. Fill baked pie shell Top with- a meringue made from the 2 e53 whites and 2 tablespoons sugar and brown in a moderate. oven 325 degrees F Yield: one 9-inch pic Morning Smile %O-O-Q-§+§Q§ "Ia your husband I bookworln?" "No. just an ordinary one." Still not discouraged A junior reporter in England fre- quently reprimanded for relating» too many details arizi warned to be‘ brief turned in the following: patiently starts on another. cem- pletlng the second, oddly enough. “A shooting affair occurred lastl THE CIIARIUFFWPOWN GUARDIAN rid Person ‘Lam al a s ‘AAAA AAA a aka-‘ s- kakxa¢+e i DOROTHY 01x says- rvvvvvvvvé‘ v¢ v‘¢ vvw v vvwYVwvvv-VW _. Faithless liWife Woman's iittslliit Te Wreck 0w: lions And lrotier-is-Lsw‘: lllvliso a DEAR. DOROTHY DIX: Can you explain to me why a woman. who is craaily in love with her own husband and. perfectly happy with him. should still want another man to fall in love with hei when under no circumstances would she corlsider having an affair with him? That's my case. I un racking my brains trying to trap another man into fall- irig in love with zne. What makes it worse is that he is my husband's brother, that-he ls-rmarrfed- to a fine woman. and is a few years younger than I am. He is infatuated tvlth me but avoids me be- cause he doesn't trust himself. and he would hate to do anything that would make him look like a heel to his brother. or break his wife's heart. What do you make of all this. , ‘TINY. j ) ANSWER: It doesn't take any learned psy- chologist to read your character and see why you ‘ are acting the way you He doing. It is because you are a poor. nuserable compound of sex and selfishness and vanity. without a single honest bone in your body. and for the sake of a little excitement and to prove that you have the power to arouse the passions of men. you are willing to break up two homes and bring a lot of shame and sorrow on your husband and his family. COLD BLOODED VTXEN You haven't even the exicuse of not being in love with you: hus- band. or having fallen madly in love with your brother in-law. or o! intending to become your brother-in-lawk mistress after you have made him betray his wife for you. You are Just cold bloodedly amusing yourself by seducing a boy wiho is younger than you are. and less BXDRienoed in amorous affasira. And no piiy for the wife whose heart you are breaking and whose home you are wrecking, and no com. punction for the treachery you are showing to your own husband makes you stay our hand. , . YW delude yourself when you think you can do all of this evil without having to pay for it. but let me warn you it will end in your being the victim of our own wickedness, DEAR MISS DIX: I! this is life. what is death? I was born. lived a very unhappy childhood. My parents separated I was in- ducted lmo the Army. I was discharged. l loved a gir. very much vie became engaged. Then she broke it off after a long period. Again I ask. if this is life. what is death? Could it be any worse? JACK. ANSWER: Life is made up of many things. of tears and illlighifli‘. of work and play. of striving and success and failure, or cofnpflniQn. fihilll and loneliness. What death is made of we shall never know fin-ii we pass through the grim portals. Y°11 ha," made a mistake in per-shitting yourseLf to grow so mor- bid about life. because while life is not always skittles and becr , . nether is it always bitter tea. The courageous thing is lo meet it with your chin up and a determination to make the best of if and tic your part without whining and complaining. You have been a brave soldier in the war. Be one in peace. Don't kid yourself in to thinking that you are the only one who has ct ‘r had disappointments and sormws. lt is the common lot Many men besides yourself have loved and lost, and shut the door. and livedvto be thankful that they didn't marry tile girl they wanted in their youth. d“ The best proof that life is worth living is that none of us want 1.. l DEAR. DOROTHY DIX‘. I am a girl of l6. vary much in love with a 5°! 04 14- wile" I W" HWBY on my vacation l wro'e him a letter. but h! did 110$ answer it. and when I came back he was going with another girl. ‘That broke my heart very much. What shall I do? SAD MARY. ANSWER: A boy of l4 is nothing bu! a clilld. Don't worry abou: kindergarten trash. And don't take your broken heart seriously Bobby-sock hearts heal overnight. night. Sir Dwight Hopeless. a guest at Lady Pans-store's ball. complained of feeling ill, took a drink. his hat, his coat. his departure. no notice of his friends. a taxi. a pistol from his pocket. and finally.-his life. Nice chap. Regrets and all that." D-O-QOOO-§OO-G§O-O-O-QQOOO§§§OQ [douse/told Scrapbook lliiZEiiS 0F THINGS Til BLEMLBIJT . By Roberta Lea e-o-e-ovooeo-oeowoo Blancbed Nuts w” Nuts are blanched by immersing them in boiling water for two min. utes, then Ln cold water. Drain and remove sidna. then spread thinly h) pans and put into a warm oven to dry for a few hours. The crisp- ness of the nuts will depend upon their dryness. V q d. Patent Luther Vaseline petroleum jelly will pre- vent patent leather from cracking. Rub some of you: shoes before put- ting them on. Then polish well. Colds A stillborn cold can often be broken by dissolving a feaspoonfui 0f baking aotis in a half-glass of water. and taken every three boura Mo d e rn Etiquette and ha: gotlnlvorySuoli $17.4..- """"""‘° were - soapy, quick - nlsoriag lunll lit paaatrs gal-Lacs for IN" l In“ Q. In h t ooior d h soiling on buns, edges and collars. a‘: h, QL-MQ a; ‘.5. ha... W"? at?“ loo. Itloos- A" n“, ""7 b‘ °”““°d i“ grease fro dishes and pans fir. . Jmakssitllcloanin] quicker, Ye . with oxtrs-sbapy 4n . be kallghtyouczs" rm ‘Hanan ooks alIVllIanvI (vosaeommwaasttesosivouenneowlvhttpm iim-smrrsv/vuam . gold. slim, plain white m- in ool- ors at the top of the paper. the size and shape of the paper determining the correct position. Q, , Is it considered proper to wave s handkerchief ss s means of greeting an acquaintance or at- tracting attentim? A. No. This is not only a breach of etiquette. but it. should be for- biddm by health authorities as a gormespnador \ Dra and summer collections. When shaking rag them by the aides. If they lfilfl. capoiet sleeves rounding broader shoulders, are two hith- lights of designs for next spring rugs, hold are hell by the etude the weight ol the ‘a Ellen}: Diary By an Island hrmefs Wife Yesterday's hours wu-e long to James and me. We found it a lonely day notvrithstaiding much that was interesting aboit us; church. and folka who came to Sunday viait with us. and company to the house across the lane. But yasteiday. Jamie was alwa’. He and his mother had re- mained in town Saturday evening to spend the Sabbath with his other grandparents Rob and I returned without them. "And so Jamie stay- ed?" Jamesreps-rtttd. when I told him, and his tones wen wistful It is disappointing. to say the least. if James can not "kayley" with Jamie. some time or other during his day of rest. And sometimes it is Jamie. who~ with 1i: panais- comes to Alderlea and more ciifw; it is James. dressed “for Sunday’ who wanders away over the fielta happily in the direction of tool's So yesterday was a lonely day at Alilerlea. I myself, could sense it in James‘ restlessness. 1 Sound it loo in our surroundinsl. the way one will when loved ones are absent; in the very quiet of the place; in the sunlight shimmering cn the mill pond. Even the sparrows that convened on the ruse bushes seemed to be less ncisy, than l1 Jamie were Iierc to sec them. The pld grey-gabl-zd mil.‘ itself had a forlorn appearance. as it dosed in its surroundings, and Par/i that white dog of ours appeared to have caught the same spirit as he kept. idle watch after watch a; the gateway. Yes. lt was no trouble nl all for me to know yesterday mat Jamie, grandson to us. was awn’. And it was a pleased James who connected him by ‘phone in llic evening not lo.‘ long after his return. "And so vouh» home!" I heard him say. and the words spoke volumes to me and then James smil- ing caught up his cap. and was away along the fields, in ihe darkness. to Rob's "Would you giie a look. Ellen" James asked me this morning “and see if the grounds liard frozen?" The light of day was scattering the grey twilight oi murnirg then and ihc old blrcn beyond the window was lrnciiii! a (lcilcwic pfilieril against filo {uiiitli- coinil brightness of tlic ski" 'ifl‘.'t'il tie i-ivei‘. On an elbow then, f found for him the pleasing signs that guaranteed an- (IThCT day ill. ilie plowlnfl hem" Winter should conic tt put an end to an field work. On our strange and often-read baroincit: I saw the signs ~ —or. tile suflncc of the mill pond belc-x" the front meadow. “No ice" I volunteered lild llirn alter clue con- sideratlon "A West wind". '“'I‘iien" James said with enthusiasm, and it is a mutter about ivhich he is usually quite jovial in fact lie makes some- thing cf a gain.» oi i. "who's out first? I'll bent 0'1 to ii, Ellen!“ Wt‘ went, more riiortiuvnly into that Try faster Penetrating BUCKLEY' STAINLESS WHITE’ RUB "Turns BOY’! owns-ran 122% DESIGN N0. I406 This little sweater for the six year old boy is crocheted in the popular afghan stitch with a lam wooden hook, with zipper or button clos- ing. Pattern No. 11-25 contains complete lull 1'0 order: Semi f0 cents in etln to Needlework Bureau. Charlotte town Guardian- Deaigu No. I-fl C"! . and Style Nlllllitt- plainly. LA AAA A ‘AAA j, Fashions/ Literature NOVEMBER Z5, 1946 :_. fiq. ind-Ari 7 v Fludile" Pulclim Design Bras question this evening, when g fgyyn- rr and his wife. ncnghbcrg lo up Ciim€ visiting. ‘ a - u Boll! have had inc- pirivllcgc of .1 “film” BIIViIOIiIIW-W Hill‘. either James 01' "W501i. and I welcomed the op- Wfi-llflliy flllcrdcd by their pre- sence to get their respective and unbaised points of view. 'I‘he issue was still wann in my memory since morning. The findings at first were not unanimous, favoring now the head of the house and again his more fragile mate Finally “If the bed be in the middle u! the room. and nothing to interiors with a clear passage to the floor" the visit- i"! lfldl! SDOke up with the air of say it was clearly a case of equal rights or obligations" l-ler opin- ion. I felt was inclined to be part- ial She is s. lady.» and an ex- liemely iemaiknble woman. who Ila-s always if-It of pampered her husband. She is also an ideal mother of a large family, but she has been one of t-‘osc rare women. who never aii-vvred ner motherhood i0 stand in the way of being inter- ested companion and good comrade to hcr husband. il iticz-iin of World War I. “And wkio‘ liCl husband asked "would be so mean as to give a woman the job cf getting up first on a cold morning along with a wedding ring?" I glnced toward James He favors-J me with a neg- ativc shake o.’ the head alight but meaningful. I‘. was quite time to leave our intriguing question un- settled then and go on to talk of less personal affairs O O I "Ellen" James inivrrupls my work a moment to ask now that we are alone again and hz- is in the old armchair "which one o.’ ua did get up first this morning?" "I'm not certain" I answer abseiiily "Then" he tells me significantly at the same time rising to make his way to the stairway door "I know who'll be second to the ilcor tomorrowi" me who knew her topic “I would; iuntil THE STARS SAY— By GENEVIEVE KEMBLE For Tuesday. November 20 THE indications are for a day of little progress with s recommenda- tion that a. course oi’ least resist- ance be adopted in order to side- step expioslve. irdiscreet or erratic situations. The energies and facili- ties are under high tension and the emotions ready to fly into tan- trums. and into avenues of mistake and blunder. Resist nil forms oi pressure or coercion and kcep alert to snares and intrigues. Postpone important change and alliances more favorable conditions. Conserve resources and assets Ciire for the health. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it is may experience a year of difficulties and darrers unless particular effort be made to act with sound reason and not any form of emotional ouiburst or pressure from others. ciilizr pec- uliar persona or strange situations. Keep to the aide or safety and 5c:- urity in all transactions. safeguard- ing the health resources. property and‘ family obligaiior. Postpone mn- jor moves or change. A child bCIn on ihLs day mar be erratic. emotional and inslinrd i0 a sense of reprcsslanai physical limi- tation or depletion. Brings FAST relief from caesi- cptns coughs an throat - bronchitis Illl 0N Until tomorrow. Diary Good-night . Xsasssramn Round out your figure in s slin- lined dress with s beoomtngly curv- ed shoulder yoke. front button clos- ing. and knife-sharp pleats in its gently gored skirt. Naaoaoiscutinsisesilibll, '1l.30,38.3l.Q.4-2.M.flaud. Sine 36 requires 8% yards 80-inch. or 2% yards 56-inch. Send N cents for PNITIRN which includes guide. IIII to state silo you wish. Include postal unit or lone number in your addnl. act...- Pattern Department, The Qisriottntown Guardian. Pattern N0. X "IEO cmiii F" hi? rNeedlecraft/ii —F OR THE HOME- ‘Jvsvassssnnnsisaaltii iiiitltll.