Nowl Now! Deluxe Kit wllh Professional llliflfi filKiififi Home Pwmunenls made udslorl Here's uliy: The ncw TONI Professional Plastic Curlers are big (more curling surface). New Deluxe Kl! with pluslic cutlets SD I ‘g Q . nu mm: PERMANENT _ I I p}; redzsabfc, to m- bu‘. [LU/IC/lf ion/its [Cranial 1.1.‘, jtbs/ tlulcrs. $159 Thfiykfl round. for easier wind- ing, smoother curlThcyre ribbed your hair won't slip. They're r178 v-Ju maize)" $122 ) IQQQ< - . ..\\_~\§K;r,~5-<< The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kcmblc -. For Wednesday, March 8i. THERE are excellent prospect?‘ uxL _. a - é Cook ’s Corn 81’ CHEESE. CORN AND ronmro TOAST 2 least 53 per cent. one 1*" persons Lcekiii; doctor's off cc of the lightening of the current burden, not only by marshalling of 3 tableslmons “W? all forces, resources and advanz- 3 “Plesimmls melted fit ages. but by the friendly interven- ?;°n~‘°“- sliced tion of influential persons, iin» “ cups ‘iirkked i < W" pressed by the direct. aggressiie 2 Cups "wk"! Wm ind practical tackling of a diffi- f’, teaspwns 5515 1° ’= Pound cheese, out than l1 to ‘.3 cupsl. Brown the flour in a heavy 5kg]. let. Take flour from the skillet and blend with 2 tablespoons or he fat. Brown the onion in the ye. 11151111118 fat. add the tomatoes, corn, salt and flour-fat mixture and cook for about 10 minutes, i Stir in the cheese. when it has melted, serve on thin crisp toast, out and stubborn problem. Shicwd and astute measures, with industry‘ rerseverance and unwavering "aith in final outcomes. not only in one's own efforts but in timely uid cf outsiders are important. Work for hlgih goals. ' For the Birthday Those whose birthday it is may be blessed with a far vision of suc- E55 and hgh achievement follow- n g defeat and frustration of ma,’- menacc. The long View of final nesults, backed up by logical plan- ng, industry, unflagging energy pnd confidence, are bound to at- firact concrete assistance from in- Duentlal sources, ready to give due xmzidcration to worthy alnd reai~ istic effort, diligence and persist- bncy when the going seems all but iopcless and frustration inevitable. A child born on this day may be hell armied for defeat, impediment and frustration by its realistic cir- [dilation 0f underlying factors. pow-xx- oc-Sifi i i When he put a penny in the slot of a stamp-machine outsde a sub- urban post office a man was sur- prised to receive not only half a dozen stamps. but a small shower of copper-s. So he went into the post office and said, “That stamp- maohhie—-" He got no farther. "Oh. I know," said the girl b21- iiind the counter, “it's jammed again," and she pushed a penny across the counter. with the vim. courage and deter- ination to win against all odds. . hus gainitig friendly aid from in- [luential sources. This stainless noel serrated edge riveted handle BREAD KNIFE 69 ONLY wuss Ytlll nut A m 0F REGAL Fllllll o It’! bargain day, every any, u: yna ocefls, while these outstandi Bread nives last. Just imagine-a rustlesa, stainless steel bread knife with double- cut, serrated edge and beautiful c0001 bolo handlo for onl 69d. The and‘ edge ‘a guaranteed or c lifetime. _ lg’; wonderful value. You an’: du- licate it anywhere. its the greatest rgam Ill town. There u a trenaenw dous demand for these Bread Knives. So act quickly. Bette: see your grocel y. ‘a :.-'.~*-.~.1i'-.:.-'.~:.-.-ss'~. an 881 ° -' , , whim, w truly fine. its high quality, lull-flavour, integral ,, lsgutl that extra uehciousness that bnup "chi" and "aha" from all the family. ‘Illl l1. l-AWIINCI Fl-OUI Mil-B CO. "I. Illfl None Dom 80nd. Wat, Mound, l6. in your“ dale: does not have n supply of this Tho lull Kalb cuts falter. eu- ler. more evenly Qhlmilifuléil! Bread Knife, Illa bmd. ask him to se- cure one for you. 72B lilll Flflllll 0'5 wo/va/c/f/r. é Morning Smile ‘he Wk“ about. This is the essence of psy- chiatry. That’ Body ' Of Yours ‘has W. Barton, M. II. A» s m v- \f\_'k%?~'k')s'h.flk'ki'kl%?c5"i COMMON sansa PSYCHIATRY “M11 physicians imp graduated 3U o" "w"? Y9K“ 8E0 ruinozivber the short time. i! any. given to Piyfllllatry, they naturally feel lh-i. 111W‘ llilSSBd much that they; Could u” P“ H1953 Jill's of psychosamauc medic nu While it is true that there have been various schools of psychi» 115TY~Ollar l-‘rcud, Janet rid o:hers—D1'. L. B. l-‘arrar, Toronzo, Willi many years of practical <f- pfrlcwce in psyzhiatry, atates in lac “cenazlvl Medical Asscc..l.- tzcn Journa." that the average gen. era! practitioner llE€fl have no concern w th the various st-hrm; and their teachings. “Rather Li") liivcliotherapy We are ccncerntd with is a sWnple proccdur» “A11. vcrsallv_s' applicable in medicinv and is essentially only appii-al COl/llflluil sense. We may dvfirle it as the influence of one mind on Tl- othcr to promote health." Dr. Farm: stresses the imposi- ance of the first iist. or cont-act with m? pnticnk-listcning lo con- plaints, observing ihe patients behavior, taking the history and malfng the first thorouah examin- ation. After the examinat on, the p-hy- sician must ask himself how much of the symptoms are ciusrd by zlil emotions and how much by soz-ie actual illness of the body. Some physicians bclicvc that. in the liLlj- oriiy of cases. about thrce- quar- ters of the Symptoms are due to the emotions and only one-quar- ter to illness of the body. "It is a that statement at t HF conservative uicical . and n1 . v li-Olp. wards will have emotional concil- tions that have t1 rlcfinite bearing on the case." His domestic or busi- ness life may be aggravating a real illness or his illness gravstmz dtrniestic rclatioiis. may he 1g- and business Thc phys cLa-n must know mcrc than just the condition of the pat- ent‘s organs. He must become ac- quainted with him as "a. person," to understand ally and make him feel that he is him sympathetic- nterestecl in him as well as in his ilness. l-le wants to know what thinks and worrcs By explaining to the patient llhil his symptoms are real but are not caused by an organic ailment and showing him how emotions inter- fere with the normal action of an organ or many. organs. mon sense method brngs results. this coin- Moclern Etiquette By Roberta L60 Q. Whaidare the most import- ant things to remember when set- ting the dinner table? A. 'I‘wo of the most i-nportant things are that the centerpiece be placed exactly in the center. and that the chairs of the guests are exactly opposite each other. Q. When culling on a friend. should a guest smoke without being invited to do so? A. No. The guest should either ask permission or await an invita- tion to smoke. A hospitable host or hostess will usually suggest it. Q. Where should the carving knife and fork be placed on 5h» dinner table? A. The knfe should be placed at the right of the meat platte". the fork at the left. ikw3i°$fiW Household Scrapbook By Roberto L60 I \-.~»\\A--\~~-\ Butter and Chocolate I! both butter and chocolate are called for in a recipe, it is a very simple matter to melt the choc- alate.by putting both ingredients into a pan together over a low firs. t The fat from the butter will also prevent the chocolate from stick- ing or burning whie melting. Futu- Defroetlng The defrosting process in your refrigerator can be speeded up considerably i! you remove the ice from the trays. fill them with boiling water. and jrlaoe them baa‘: tn the freezing compartment. Laundering Sillu A little salt added to the water when laundering slken garment: will set the color. m. " How Can I ll! By Anne Ashley Q. How can I renew dull patent leather? A. Tlho dull patent leather bog. or other articles of this leather. can be made to look like new by rubbing it thoroughly wJ-h u little milk and thou polishing with a dry cloth. Q. How om I separate stamps l. THE GUARDIAN.‘ a l Dorothy Dix (vx. That become atmosphere so filled with quarrels word-s can adequately describe. But numerous and. pathetic as and wife trust how their marriage SUCMSS. ifarys pet prejudices. b: nd or wife. witty h»: was? mcmd if h times out of ‘ ‘rencc. v The husband dropped expected his wife lo know that lie didn't divorce hcr. CHARLOTTETOWR Says- i “not: c045 Incompatible Unions Tragedies Greater Than Divorces In Marriages Endurance Tests i , when vie are told that one tin-triage out of every three endthir: divorce. we are horrified at the thought °l a“ 01 the UnhflPPlfi955 1 i1 lies behind the final break of a relationship that was entered no with such high hopes and fond anticipations. > of the broken dreams and shattered illusions, of the cruel fights be- tween the man and woman who had once loved each other so tenderly, of the wrecked home, of the be- wildered, half-orphaned little children. and we feel that life can have no greater tragedy than divorce. But I think there is a tragedy as great as div- orce in the long, drawn-out suffering of those whpse ma ‘Z2355 are merely an bends and wives whose love has turned to hatred, who take a merciless revenge for their disappoint- ment in their mates by cruel speeches that stab them to the heart, whose homes are places of gloom and strife. and whose children grow up We think. with pity. endurance test. Hus- in an and vltwperatiotis that it ivithers everything that is gay and tender and generous in their souls. Yet there are thousands upon tens of thousands of such inismated marriages in which husbands and wives live together. year after year. and what they endure in the frustrations of all of their plans for a happy marriage. and in their loneliness in being tied to a mate who does not understand them and with whom they have nothing in com~ 1110a. and their despair while they wait for death to set them free, nn SELYES T0 BLAME the unhappily married are, their misfortune is mainly upon their own heads, for the average husband turns out to luck, instead of de- voting every ounce of intelligence that they possess to making it a Most of them don't even bother to get acquainted with the strangers whcm they have taken on as life partners. yet it would save them a lot of grief if they knew how to keep off of Tom's or The general idea with many married couples seem to be that they should save their good manners and their best clothes and their funny stories for company. that they are too good to waste on a. mere hus- hfavbe so. but did you ever know a husband who took id-srin; if he had a. wife who prettied herself for his coming an evening and whose theme song v-as how handsome and And did you ever know a wife whoa: husband couldn't stop her nagging with a kiss? And can't any man feast like a gour- has wit enough to praise his wife‘s cooking? Yea, verily. Prvbilb Y every man and ivnman start out in marriage to be good husbands and wives. and when they fall down on the job. ninety-nine a hundred. it is because they didn't work on it with any his love-making at the altar and continued to love her because he Or he began fault-finding. or he never took her to places of amusement. or even tried to be an interesting companion And because the wife felt neglected and got bored and tired of being a baby-sitter. she began using woman's deadliest weapon. her tongue. on her husband. and they quarreled and killed love. other marriage that should have been a success turned into a failure. And an- FAITH Frozt is an assassin grim. Dead his victims see-m to fall-- Plant and vine and bush and tree Broken. lifeless. one and all. Gone from every twig the leaf; Gone the strength from stalk and stem. In a furious frenzy brief Frost, the killer. fell on them. But when come the sun and rain. steadfastly the faith I hold: That the rose will bloom again. And the phlox and marigold. —Edgar Guest. Eight pounds of raw potatoes are reouired to make one pound of dehydrated potatoes. Leonardo da Vinci drew plans for flame throwers, grenades. tanks and a flying machine. Soybean oilmeal now constitutes 58 per cent. of all oilmeal fed t»; livestock in the United States. An atomic energy uranium chain reaction pile has been built at Ham-ell, England, for power pru~ duction study. Electric escalators now are being manufactured. The lifts go into operation only when someone has boarded them. Coloured wood being grown m the spessart Forest of Germany's American zone is obtained by in- jecting dyes near the roots of the growing trees. POPULAR HAT SHAPES NEW YORK - The season's pop- ular shapes include bonnets, side- slant huts with clinging contours. and those tending to a generous side-to-side width. Multiply these that are stuck together? A. If they are stuck together or to a. piece of paper. place u thin piece of paper over them and than run a hot iron over this paper. very lightly. Q. How can I dissolve beeswax and turpentine floor wax‘! A. Mix a little ammonia with the beeswax and turpent no. M13 kiving&Leisure JTHE WOMAN'S REALM r with dozens of varieties under each heading and you have a clear plc< ture of this whimsical kaleidoscope. Haddock is an excellent choice of fish for chowder and other fish soups. It is also excellent for such Scandinavian specialties as fish pudding and fish balls. "No Sell llillll .. Jlosirils Choked lip. “Both of my nostrils were filled with thick discharga. l had a rotten cold. day and night." Thus runs the letter of an Eastern business man. “The relief 1 got from inhaling Ca- terrh-o-zouo was as quick as it was helpful. There is something destruc- tive to a Grlppy Cold in Catarrh-o- zone: its penetrating vapor opened my nose so l could breathe freely again. That tight. raspy feeling in the throat was cleared away. New health came to me with Cutarrh-o- tone. l recovered fast and am still quite well." If you have an unhealthy nose or throat condition due to cold. use Catarrh-o-zone and get started on the road to better health. Two months‘ treatment. 50c; smaller size, 25c, at all druggista. R. Better English D. C. Wlllhul i. What it wrong with this ecu- tenee‘! “Lb ion than ten people applied." 2. What 1| the correct pronunc- iation of "lapia lazuli"? 3. Which one of iihese words is misspelled? Ransom, rationaliza rathskellar. 4. What does the word tzicious" mean? 5. What is c word beginning ‘with vo that means ‘making a loud outcry"? “merc- ANSWERS 1. Bay, "No fewer than ten peo- ple applied." 2. Pronounce lap-is las-u-li, both u’: as in add. first i as in it, u u in unit, second i n in ice. accent both words on first syllable. 3. Ruthskeller. 4. Ailui-ng by false chow. “People are often deceived by mmtricioua displays" the wax will dissolve readily. asthma mud ‘ “ ‘ trouble; am, effective, inn-pond" W! Combat That Cough m. wmam Norway Pine Syrup in I Proust. plouunt and efioctuul round! f" mil"! and" hmnqu”, p" thzoct, bronchitic, lplimodla croflP: o“. N pi” gymp liclpe to loom phlegm lull IIWII. :1» "Lqhw-zi bring quick rolls! for cough and will. y. . pupply of m. 1mm new P1» In: Hw- ‘hulhfll-Jhlulhdsfi 5. vociferous. - , 4.1.1., m. dearth ‘eyed fair lady this. gently spoken fFashions ~Ellen’e Diary i, a; elhhud lunar’! W!!! “F A nice breath from _ the .Wee'. reached Alderleo‘ this morning on a card which came to Jamos and me from an Islander who in late years spends only Summer holl- days on her native heath. A wom- an now, indeed a grand-mother. she, it seems not so long ago, sun ny and always obedient attendee classes in the old school down Lhc river road. In later years with her small son she came to liv’ with her parents "neighboring us on a. farm beyond our line. A blur. her crowning glory a matter o; envy since like Judy's it fell into natural curls about her neck. She was a kindly soul and I recalled today that she sometimes came a- long the fields in the gold of '1 harvest day to help me with th. duties which devolved upon w: with the appearance of the thresh- ing gear. I I Indoors there were the meals and if one were inclined to be not too provident spots of hasty baking and of course there were spells of emptying baskets of grain and perhaps substituting handing sheaves in moments of leisure. She was a natural in music and sank in an exceedingly sweet voice and once in a breathing spell from barn work when we came lfldOOi" dusty and hot and dist-levelled from our labors, I sat down and picked out a tune on the pian- while she sang. We became quite absorbed in it until she laughed “Isn't this funny, Ellen?" sh! chuckled. "What would James say if he caught us at this in the mid- dle of threshing? He'd think w: ment between Dawn and ON SALE AT THE 109 QUEEN ST. flatten House Dresses _ on sale at “ma: 01.0mm" all this week- ~ Good Prints in Floral and Striped Patterns. Sizes I4 to 46. Regular $2.75 i0 $2.98 value- 'WHERE SMARTER women sump" I MARC_I-I_ so. __19_43 FOR ONE WEEK ONLY 2.29 PHONE 614 Three For Egypt I B) Violet M. Mcthley i i 1t was impossible to refuse, and after a loud and prolongtd BPBII‘ the donkey-boys, the cavalcade set out. They reached El Tembu before verc as he says ‘doing well nowi‘ I I I In the course of years her pa:- ents passed avray. her son ivent to interests of his own. and slv to a position in Montreal. Her card said: “Dear James and Ellen: l-lert I am in Edmonton, about to start on the return trip to Montreal Had a leave of absence from work to take a trip to visit my kin in the West which took me £50 miles North West of here. Witl. the brother, who is an M. L. a I attended and much enjoyed hearing the House in session here. As I have now, in all, twenty-four relatives settled in Alberta, you may know what a delightful holi day I have had. On my fELlIIf. trip and at Calgary I shall stop over to see the scenery and beaut," mer down on The Island . . . "What heart-warming re-unions, what greetings of old and new kith and kin there must have been in that Province so far away from the home shores! I I Now in the moonlight our horses wad sleighs come down along me mu that tonight is a snadowe" spot. I hear Patti's excited bark. He must have met the procession wei. beyond the summit for some mi: utes ago in answer to a pleading expression I led him from confine- ment in the kitchen and in I streak of white he was off dowr the short-cut to find them. Jamie too, is with our farmers. He pro- tested strongly when I went tn tie a neat scar! about his collar. don't need it at all" he said "it's as warm as can be tonight." thats no way to talk, Jamie“ Rab reasoned and the ceremony was quickly over. Jamie had appeared unexpectedly this afternoon, whe-"l with Tabby in my la-p. I sat m a sunny window watching a num- ber of farm slelghs go out the road. With a nlceoldtzmeirohc" of helpers, a rleignbor was getting his seed potatoes to a truck ma. awaited them in the vicinity of the corner store. Realizing now that spring has arrived and that. there will likely be a lapse in the. hauling farmers became busier at it today. That is why our: are out now in the moonlight/hauling more feed from the highway mush of. it this time for ifob. I I There it has been that u first litter of piglets came. Fortunately waiting for the milder weather a’ last week, a circumstance to James‘ mind that assures a better percentage of survival. l overheard him stress this fact recently out of years of experience in farming "But mine had hers on a cold night -and in next thing to a mow bank" u visiting farmer said. "And how did she fare?" inquired James. “Just lost two" was the reply. I spoke up for James. "Well. there was your profit!” And James nud ded. "You can't tell me" he observ ed “but that it pays every time m have young stock come to warm comfortable quarters." That was why, though there wu really no need of it that Kurolyn had to relay such messages as "tell hm. to see that she's warm -and dry" ' from James to Rob on an anxious night of last week. And Para? vu n Quip!» P RK llND BE ‘yillLliiu of Banfff Themvveather is wonder from Mavis Grunge 9W8 ht!" ‘H ful and I have had agrand time new string l0 pull, if she needed Hoping to see everyone next Sum it ' ~ somehow at Cairo, when he was mattered to her? Little she cared others if Only he could be hers ln h; to the village gt the further end of the oasis, ilNow set her heart on getting a pair of those cunning yellow leather slip- pers. dry if the other their handkerchiefs. mile there and back to the village I-le_ _is atthe door -an'.i a sleigh is on the driveway. night. fNeedlecraft/ JFQR THE noon and made camp on its edge under a clump of date-palms by the stream which fed the two wefls, forming the oasis and yvuterfid ‘J18 patches of maize. lucerne and sugar-cane. After lunch there was a time of peace while Dawn Dawney slept off the effects of incredible quantities of chocolates and cigar- ettes which she had consumed. Zenda, too, appeared to be dozing but in reality she watched Kay from under her drooping eyelids, while complicated plans and count. er plans fotméd and reformed themselves like a kaleidoscope in her twisted mind. Lovelace and Kay were both, on the whole, behaving much as she had wished and Scliemed: the knowledge she had just acquired Kit Carson-Zenda frowned and stirred uneasily as she thought of him, for was he not, at i-he moment the knot in her skein, the unknown factor. Until she knew “more he was, what he intended to do there was a touch of uncertainty which fretted her nerves. She had not been clever where Kit was concerned, Zenda told herself: she ought to have held him there under her hand. For after all, wasn't Kit the only one the only person in the world who really of "ihe what happened to any the end . . . Dawn announced they must go s-he insisted: she'd She'd soon have her feet two lent her They decided to walk the half Until tomorrow - Diary -Guou- leaving their donkeys tethered. The little cluster of mud hut: which they reached in about I0 minutes was disappointingly squalid and not particularly picturesque. There was no sign of o. bazaar after the styyic of Cairo, such til Dawn expected; the villagers did not seem very keen to produce their wares for sale, and the American girl was not offered much choice in the way of footwear. - But the little actress was nothing if not persistent She insisted on trying to make the natives bring out other and better slippers, and thcn began a course of bargaining and haggling which lasted until the sun was very near the jagged hill; horizon. u; "Well, I suppose I gotta leavv it, then." he decided at last, “I'm not; paying what they ask for those shoes; you must bargain with these folk - they expect it. But. I guess they'll came down and not talk so big if we look like were leaving." This theory made her dawdie over their departure, pausing to examine this and that until her‘ companions could have shaken her. At last. when they had almost reached the village boundaries, leaving a, grumbling and discon- tented srvlm vf...uativei behind. them a small brown baby todilicd across the path and caught Dawn‘: attention. “Isn't he just ioo cute to live." she cried. "Not so dirty as some, either. Why what's funnyrihin; he's: got around his neck? Looks some. thins like a little green noisn head: it isn't that, though.’ 5 "That Osiris 135w», Lady", Abdul? the senior donkey boy told her. "Made same as old antika’: front‘ mummy irlnbs—vcry ll-lvKy t-harnng Baby wear it, keep him. Evil Eye; awayy (To Be Continued) sl- “i”? nrrsflflc sv The '68”? [Mg/Es fASTRH/FF Also NW5“. - mm vcess casrm l‘ \lll.liilllllll CURRENT EVENTS A perfect pair to bring the new 16s: to your wardrobe is this Gib- son Girl nhirtswaist. styled with the smet and pretty touches of huffling . . . this whirling ballerina skirt that can be cut in a ballet or shorter daytime length. (Two se- arute patterns.) No. 2390, the blouse. l: cut in sizes 12. 14; 16. 18. 20. 36. 38- 4°- 42 and 44. Size requires 2% V5753 39-inch. , No. 2391. the skirt. l: cut l“ waist alas M. 26. '13. 3°» 37 5'15 M 51m 3g requires 2% yards 39-inch in m. ihorter moat-h: 2%“ W" 39-inch in the longer length. Sand 20c to: elch Pattern. which Style Number plainly- dress. Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern Noe. 2300 and \ NlfllI Addrcll includes complete‘ mun: Ill-l“ print your Nmie, Address and Be lure to state also you want. Include 909W unit or zone number in Y0“? 54' Addreu Pattern Department. The Cm Provinc