ma CHARDQFTETOWN $9 i/THEWOMA THE HUMAN TOUGH Tis the human touch in this world that counts. The touch of your hand and mine. Which moans far more to the faint- rni: heart Than shelter and bread and wine; Pir ~l‘."ll(‘l l3 gone when the night is o'er, Anti broad lasts only a day. But the touch c-f the hand end", the sound of the voles Bin: on in ttie soul alu-ay. ONLY CORPS WITH BELL Pelflii. Ohina, is the only @5- riese Salvation Army Corps with; p, bell that calls the people to wor- ship . Officers dmtivorcd that the neo- i plt- feared the druni, heariiig lt l so frequently‘ Yn the constant war- fare, conscqtielttly the Corps. bought ii hell and it ls rung early tn the lilflftlllli.‘ l0 awaken the peri- ‘p18 and a l: ll hour later tn call. them to ivo hip. HOW DOE FATHER RATE? Here i: a hént for fathers. Three hundred anti twenty-six t‘lllli'lil‘i'l‘ 1n a New England school district‘ were asked to “Tllfl anonymously. just what each thought of nis father. A: may he imagined, the result was mterestl-ng, if not start- ling. Mziny rea. ns were give-n by thcse u-fto ilerlziroq tlteli‘ liking for l tlatldy. Ha built my dall house; he taught me to swim; he helps me with my school work; he take; me in the park; he gave me a calf to fatten and sell. Scores of essays would be reduced to "I like my rladdy". he plays with me_" Not one rlr-lcl mentioned the family house. cs1". food or clothing. Wealth i, counts for little with a Clilld. What. i tnakes a daddy really ivorth while I .s h;s Zlbllll) and inclrnatioii to,‘ b» a plflymale to hi: children. "BARRISTER" SLEEVES TEATIIRE NEH’ COAT arrister" sleeves 1 tant appearance three-quarter coat wrth a curving cutaway in front and a legal-looking chain to fasten it at the neck. Portia her- self could scarcely appear more jtldit-iiil in her robes than the one . For N'S REALMJ euled sleeves. This ooet also comes in black faille and is extremely smart and useful for summer wear in afternobns and evenings. A neat navy blue number i: de- signed as a greatcoat. yet it shows a short cape outlined in braid to kFPp itself in the mood for curves. NEWS ABOUT BABY When grandparents are. through vflttllmSlflilCéS not of their choos- lniz. ieparated frrni their grand- '~ rhild, what a delight when a friend remarks. "Do tell me about the baby." Then they can let themselves g0. They can say that they have ' st hall n, letter and that the baby is fine. It nnw weighs 14 pounds ivhirli is twice as much as . when it was horn. And what do you think! They put it. in a pen the other day and it turned over all by itself! Can you imagine anything more re.- inarkablc? But that isn't all It has a gnnnasium outfit that hangs over its crib and its mother says it skins the cat! Of course. it dnesnt really. but it does throw its logs over its head which is much the same thing. It is wonderful lioiv the baby is beginning to notice things, too. example. the other day its mctlivr left it Wllh a stranger and rt hogan In cry like any-thing. So tho straiijzci- called the lia ‘= mother tind ivlirin the baby recog- nized its, mother it stopped right away. Now you know that shows a lot of intelligence Surely the friend would like to see the latest snapshots of the baby. Unfortunately they are blur- red. Either they Cid not forus the camera right or the baby moved. Whom do you think the baby’ looks like? Like its mother? Well. a lot of people thinkit looks like ‘the father. The probable truth is it i; a conihitiation of the two. That would be reasonable. wouldn't i-i? After this, grandparents would like to go o-n and tell about. what the baby eats and how long i‘. , sleeps. and \\'li£lf clothes it ivears and hoiv much hair it. has and what color it is. But they decide they had better not. Because if they do, the next time they see the friend the friend might not remark, “Do tell sir-aunt: thcze full, circular un- 9 out of l0 Screen Stars use Lux Toilet nie about the hairy?" -C. B. "Betty Greblc le iiure That Body of Yours . B! lime: W. Berton M. D. _____i_l _____ CUTTING DOWN 0N TABLE SALT T0 RELIEVE CONGEST- IVE HEART FAILURE 1t is difficult for moist of us to out. down on teible gait in or an mildf" l! 4191118 to make food more --Y1v1l1fl8» “WWW. despite the fact that every colt in the body needs some salt, and those who virork hard in healed places during worm weather need extra salt, those of middle age and older should carc- fully watch their salt intake, This is because too much salt in the liquid in the tissues, which in turn tnOH-lis more work for the heart and blood tissues means to much tacks of dizziness. ringing 1n ears, nausea and vomiting get. almost im- mediate relief by cutting down on salt. 1t is the extra liquids in tis- sues surrounding the ears that up- sets the balancing canals in the ears When the heart. is beginning to fail tcongcstion). cutting down on salt will relieve congestion. 'Itl'iis is stair-d by Drs. Ediivin O. Wheeler, William C. Bridges, and Paul D. White. Boston. in the “Journal of the American Medical Association." ’l‘hese physicians report that out- ting down on salt is more effective than cutting down on liquids in congestive heart, failure. a fact first pointed out in 194i by Dr. ll. A. Schroeder. Active lather ie gentle ll I certs: on the skin." it ti $0- DOROTHY. Dig: SA YS--' fb-Iwbiwlfi Beauty Isn’t_ Everything l Fiance Won't Marry Glrl Because 0f Looks Without Make-lip i DEAR. MISS DIX: For the past three months I have been en- GUARDIAN gaged to e. man whom I expect/ed to marry shortly. One afternoon. he dropped into my home while I was helping my sister clean house. I was wearing an old pair of slacks, had on no make-up and my hair was in bobby pins. Since that day, he has refused to see me. He in- forms me that he could never marry me now because whenever he looked at me thereafter, he would remember how I looked that after- noon. . I love him very much. But I now wonder if his love for me could really be true, for I have always believed that. he should s ill care for me, no matter what I looked like. What should I do in" this matter? .. PERM}. ANSWER: There is nothing you can do under the circumstances except to make a.gracei'ul exit because if a man refuses to marry you, you can't drag him to the altar against his desires. _ I think your boy friend is Just. putting on an not and is making the way you looked in your house-cleaning regalla an excuse for breaking the engagement. You may not have looked llke {I 8181110111‘ Elfl without make-up and your working clothes on, bu‘. certainly your 1ack_ of being dolled up couldn't have turned you into such a. hideous creature that he couldn't endure the sight of you. _ Anyway, I think you are lucky to be rid of the boy before you are tied up with him for keeps, for surely any husband who expected his iiife to be always dressed up to within an inch of her life would be e. pest to live with. (Cc-ntinued on piageizlr) The signs of congestive heart failure are swelling of the ankles. increase of venous blood pressure. and accumulation of \\'3l‘3i‘ in the abdcmrtinBy cutting down on table . salt. and allowing tlio patient to iliavo more fluids. the patient is i more contented in spirit than when he is not allowed to use more fluids, cspecialy drinking vt-oter. In fact, in some cases. patients are urged to drink more water—evei1 up to two or three quarts daily. The diet used in treating these eases of cor.- gestlve failure in hospitals consists of 1.5 Gm. of salt daily with an 1800 calorie dict. The precautions in using tine low salt diet are: 1. Salli. so-da. or inking powder should not be used ‘ui cooking or at ta-blc. 2. Sweet butter or butter Wflflll- cd frcc of salt may be used. Bread land salad dressings must be ipre- l pared ivithcut salt. Cannid foods. l tinlcss prepared without salt, should not. be used. 3. Salty appetizers or salted foods. such as nuts. potato chips, sardines, olives, ptickles and relish- l cs should nct be Iised. ' Better English t Mo de rn _ s E t i u e t t e i - <§®<§>€ tKij-u Gx-Cie-i By Roberta Lee D. C. Williams 013G? 1. What is tiiirioing with this sen- tence? "It is a good sort of game." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of “amibuscade”? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Aimlerater, accczory. acclimate. 4. What does the word "dissem- inate" moan? 5. What is a word beginning with ma. that means "to enroll"? S. I! a husband and wife are traveling by auto, is it. all right for the iivifc to go into the hotel to make room arrangnments Iviihile the hus- band waits in tine car? A. No; the man should take care of all the neccsary arragemonts. Q. May engraved cards be used to acknowledge note of sympathy? ANSWERS A- Yes- Q. L; it. obligatory for a bride to display her wedding gifts? A. She may or she may not; it is entirely optional, 1. Say. "it is a niice kind of game." 2. Pronounce am-bus-kad. first a as in am. u as iii us unstress- ed. ETCC-Zld a a" in aid. accent last 'é?“ syllable 3. Accelerator. 4. To spread w°<§@°@w"§e°@wg'w abroad. tAccont follows the m). "A l How Can I ! ! _ iifatrvicuiato. .7; nearly unlfcnm and CCiZl-Elflfllt nre or body of the earth." - Woodward. 5. § By Anne Ashley a heat disseminated throughout the _ . ....__. ._v v _ _ _l Q_ 110w mm 1 tighten screws in! furniture that are loose and keep falling out? W" a A. Dip them in glue and screw Woman's Realm J Social and Personal J Fashions J L Ellen ’s Digry B! all Island lei-user’: Wife Rain tumble: noisily now from the roof to the rein barrel :t : house-corner as it. might on a Sum- mer or Autumn evening and at dusk, just before the lamp light- ing. the up: of the trees dovm along the river were hidden in a silvery mist. A keen wind whines about the house and at times dashes the wetness against the panes. April then is leaving The Island iii a tearful farewell. “Ap- ril certainly gave us little good weather to remember her by" Jeanie remarked when she came in a few minutes since to leave the morning‘: milk bottles. and to pick tip the days papers. “The one thing. above all that I shall not forget" I replied “was the cold breath of the North wind)’ I re- call facing into it so mLny limp in this month now about gone. Perhaps most of all on the fte- quciit trips to the woodshed to gather our supply of seasoned wood and kindling, for the maw of the box on the porch. We also mo‘. the same breeze on brisk walks from the corner store o-r from the old Kirk on a Sabbath morning or again I faced it beside James those times we set out along the fields towards Rob's. I O U But if April fetched North winds and thin night. coverings of ice to the pond, it. brought odd times brilliant sunlight, to dance on the ivavelets and silver sides of trout flashing above them. If some days. April snow lay in a coverlel. a- cross the fields and meadows, there were also the warmer days wrcn these were bare and Jamie and the Mutt-dog played merrily anti ran races there. Yes, iictvv that I lhliik of it, April ha: been a nice month. April held Easter ivitli precious family gatherings-And our new grandson saw the old homestead for the first time that day. It brought the delight of wild disks and geese winging their way into the brightness of the sunset and robins back to the old birch. on the lawn. A robiirs evenscng has been entwined about more than one April evening. Kit-cats came to Tabby for Jamie and the rest of us to admire up there in the straw loft; lambkins came to the fold;_ piglets to the sties and calves with great wondering eyes and staggering logs to stand presently beside their mothers in the stalls. A second one came to us today -—u roan heifer. her mother's first- born. She was curled comfortably in a warm pen on a barn floor when I came there to see her and I heard a low but concerned in- quiry from lici" mother in a stall in the underground stable nearby. O I I The field work which has bten planned for this afternoon at tire other farm did not comment-c lie- i Household V i; Scrapbook v l; loberte 1A0 Traveling wiu. am 1f you must. travel with n. vet! young baby. don't won‘! IDOL". l ibed for him 1n the hotels. Use one ' of the larger dresser drawers for a star nl 70th Ciiiituty Fox's "THE SHOCKING right! Luz Soup's creamy cos-nu true." ‘t “hdy Beauty Facials give skin fresh new Lovelinessfmni... M»...- MISS PILGRIM" J Adieu. "It's thrilling when his eye: come close. he whisper: You're lovely‘ . . . it’: like e drum t" They ratio of the int-leniency of the twcnlhcr. Cold showers of rain dis- couraged all thought of such out buck in place iirtncdiately. will not loosen again, _ Q_ new can I set the colors in bash-let and his mattress can be ‘E pillqw from your own bed. He will be just as comfortable as in his crib. with no extra trouble. Better Bwvo Service 11h; gas range will give mruch bei- ter service if once a week the burn- ers are removed. turned upside dolw-n and tapped gently to remove any particles of food or nut. Spotted Felt Hail n your felt not. become spotted by rain. rub over with nine wire wool until the nap is raised. The 59°15 will have disappeared- QT-XL-tWWMJWOWOWOuQ Cook ’s Carper BAKED SPARERIBS AND STUFFING “i lbs sporeribs. it own water 1 teaspoon salt Select. sections of spareribe to riiatcli; rub slightly with salt. Place section of sparerlbe in bakinZ pan; pile stuffing on top. cover with other section 0f $879M“ Add water. Cove;- ond bake in hot oven (450 degrees F.) 45 nuniites. Re- move cover and bake 15 mlhllifl longer to brown. Yield: 6 servings. BEAN TUFFING 1 bouillon cube ‘>1 oup hot water 6 cups fine soft. breed crumbs ‘Ki cup cereal bran u cup minced onion 1 teaspoon salt - l.’ teaspoon pepper _ '1 teaspoon P0111111’ selenium: Dissolve boutilion cube in water. Add to remaining ingredients; mix ligihtly, . THE STARS SAY- By GENEVIEVE KEMIBLE For Thursday, May 8 MOST propitious auguries are indicated for ahold, adventurous and detcrimincd attack and concen- tration of cnergics on important cl) jrctivcs, with enterprise, fresh techniques and well-ivorkcd-out. plans and programs, iii which Joint l a men’: usual request of the waiter when fooling tired and out of sorts. For there‘: elway: quick comfort for body and spirit inthi: friendly bevereqe. And especially so if the brow i: Schwartz Tlaeimalm Roasted-tbs! rich and mel- low blend oi Canada‘: Oldest Coffee House, W. H. Schwartz t! Sons. Limited. Try e pound of Schwartz today for e new taste thrill in coffee. 30¢ 441/ 54404118; and la sme/ Seo>cQQ>aoQ>ooQeoQt W l Morning Smile vac-armaments; @0349 roost JUDGMENT Mr. and Mrs. Netvibride wm nearing the tearful stage of their first tiff. "You talk of poeseslng Judg- mettitt," sniffed Mrs. Newbride. "My Judgment is superiors to yours!" "Oh, unquestionably." rctorted Mr. Netwftaricle. “Our choice of life partners proves that." THE RIGHT SPIRIT Simpson had bean an abstahier for tiwenty years. but fell from the ways of grace. Feeling the nerd ol’ recuperation, he sent. his boy for s bottle of wihlsky. . Goon TBEiTiFEYESEi-itirko i Soop__ It‘: thrilling the way Luz Sup facials really make skin lovelior," eaye Betty Greble. "Work the rich lather well info ypur skin. Rinse with wlrrn water and splash with cold. Ae you pet gently with a soft towel to dry. ekin take: onJreeh new beauty." I ‘8 Don't lot neglect cheat you of Rominoe. This buinlfyiii can Betty Gable recommend: wil nuke you lovulier tonight! . Lux active lather fnciel: will nuke your skin clearer, smoother, more romantic. See the dllernoe elm juet one treatment! crash materials? A. Add five cents worth of sugar of load to four quarts of main‘, dis-solve, and soak the 20°15 for about 12 hours. Then ruse and dry in ilir Slade. ~ _ Q_ lww can I skin beets with t the least dlfflzulty’! . _ A, Let the beets stand in codi water for avs-iiilc aftcr bcilirifl- be‘ for; ynngvlng the skins i I 1150 DESIGN NO. Every crochet worker le alert for a bod spread that i: different. This one is e beiut and not. difficult to create. Putt. .N0-"1159 0011011“ eunplete tnnnactions. Needlework Book l) cents. To order: Send 20 cent: in coinl .- u, Needlework But-mi. Ciisrtotto- town Guardian. Design Ne. 11$ Name Addrel: u" . .. _. door work as building a substan- ti-al bridge across thi.- stream or the “trimming out" of ce.'.ain trecs. preparatory to ercrlirtg a new ferirr: along one cl tho llfilfls tlicrc. The nien lheii turned infill‘ attention lo some neglected iii- door tasks. At Alderlca. on g day like this, there is usually a manger to he repaired, e feeding pen built for the small pigs or. s troiigl: for theirs elders and so today several of these minor but most important. pieces of carpentry were done_ I could hear the sciunci of the busy hammer and saw at the piggery when about my house work; tak- ing the pans of brcati from the oven or making a lIICZll to tempt James’ appetite and to help liiir. forget. the disagreeable day at hand. This was no time to offer a "pick-up meal. No indeed, James’ favorite foods. done "to a turn" or according to his liking. Now. supper was ol‘ tliin slices of liar-on. tried crltply and brown. and eggs like over large daisies. cooked in the "drippinis." Among meats, James prefers this dish to slcak and onions, though, I believe. the l'\li.9l' comes a close second. And, of cc-ursc there is tlio herring. \VlIlCl1 he himself professes is second to none. For dessert or whet-have-you, there were two pieces of a cake freshly, baked. with s, coverlet of frostins. which “do; many a short-coming. Ost- meel cookies and these would doubtless have been improved if according to the recetpe, which its vcry simple, 1 had added only soda to the crumbly mixture. But when I came to it. to my surprise my soda tin had been rifled of '_Tc8iTiinTe?iTs§ Fifi? operations with others who may be iivilling to cooperate on major pro- jc-cts. Change, n-tiiv Ways and means. supported by vgcroius efforts and "But." said the hotel moprietor. "who's it for?" "For Father." said the boy. "Ncmsznsel Your father's bccti l utnfiageriitg rncigy. nsL/uro gen- teetotali-r for longer years than uine and substantial progress for you“, lived;- worthsiihile objectives. “Well, at all events. he sent me i for it." Birthday Forecast ‘What docs he want it for?_“ _ “To let you into a secret.‘ said the boy, "he's going fishing. and lit want: to use one cork for n float. 'l‘hose “those birthday it is are assured a year of accompaniment, progreea and prosperity by the con- centrated effort, constructive plans and tactics. demonstrated with courage, initiative and aggressive activities and possibly the solid support of those who may be im- prcscd by such imitative mid skills or talents. Adventure. progress. end tangible results crown strenuous and zealous efforts. Push vigorous- ly for important plane end dbject- ivcs, well organized. A child born C-‘I this day is equip- ped wait-h splendid initiative, energy. courage and determination to lim- prcss others ready to further e pro- grcssive and adventurfitls WE- “$15M sine en." 0N1 F0 fldeedlecraft/ JFOR THE HOM EJ COTTON Lovely little wmheble ha: pretty ecallopyand a woistline nipped in with neat crisp sash. will do both suvmmer and housefmck duty. No. 2184 is cut in sizes 12. if. 16. 18. 20. 36. 38. 40, 42 and 44. Size 3 requires 4 yards 35-inch. Bend 20 cent: for PATTERN. which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Number pisinly. B! sure to state the size you wish. 1n- clude postal unit or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Dlplrtment. Tho Charlottetown Guardian Pattern No. 2164 TIMI "IMO , seem: City Province Wasps end hornets know sxlct- Iy where to dting en enemy Insect to paralyze it. yet not cutie: death. Thus young wasp: are ab]: to hid 0U ilvtns N01.