p cooking? . -w .. .v,.J g Boiler gEnglisiI' . Iii. cswuaa-a ' . l til wrong with this sen-; taneaf " reserve fund grow unaller as a result of the painful. accident he suffered." ' 4 1. Wlnt--ls the correct psoaune-: fation of "oblgatory"I i whi-.-h.one..of these words is" . Troubador. triviallty. tmueau, triennial. cl. What does the word "alter-': native" mean? 2 I. t is a word beginning with gr that means "vividly dea- cri " ; ANSWERS 1. Bay. "His reserve fund be- came smaller (grow means "to in. crease") as a result of the serious accident (or painful lnluryl." 2. Accent iirst syllable. not the sec- ond. 3. Troussaau. 4. An offer of two things. "If you refuse this of- fer. we can present an alterna- tive." 5. Graphic. ' Household Scrapbook Ily loberta (3 Iron You To break in a new iron poi. be- fore using it rub it over with ,suet and place over a low flame to heat. Allow the suet to remalnl on the iron surface over night; Wipe dry. but do not use soap or' , water on it until after it has been used. - old Drive” I! the draP”ies are old and are- tie be discarded. launder them and .snake pillow covers. They will be attractlce for the pillows for the dlvan. Storing Steel one a lump of ireshly turned lime in the box or drawer where, , steel articles are to be stored and , it will keep them from mating. I ( - 3 How Can I ! i i 3 Br Mun Amos , w I Q. How can I remedy gravy, vegetables. or soup. to which too much salt has been added while 4 I A. ltir a little coarse brown sugar into it. and the salty taste will lsappea . or. add one table- moonful or sugar and one oi vine- gar. Q. How can Lthoroughly clean and sweeten jars and lugs? A. If soap and water fail to )l'0Ve cifec ve. use lime water for this purpose. This is also sood for aleaning milk and nursing bot- es. Q. Bow can I prevent the lid of a pan from bouncing. when boiling starchy vegetables? A. By adding a teaspoonful of butter to the water. .i.. ldiet. a diabetic might be il9lilV..U.'..5illlW3'll53 V9" nioncnou: W), ooaaulan rnnnoanx 13. 16:51 - That Body Of Yours in loans w. am... sap. u WHAT WE SHOULD INOW ' ABOUT DIAIITII Physicians who were practising before the discovery of insulin by Dre. Banllna and. Best will re- anenilr the discouraging problem of diabetes. By following a rigid kept alive for a few months or even years. but the disease was prac- tically always fatal. Physicians today know. and their patients know. that there is no reason why- there should be any deaths from diabetes if the insulin treatment is followed faithfully. Diabetics have formed an as- sociation. the American Diabetes Association Inc.. which is spread- ing the good news that the lives of he diabetics may be prolonged so that most can live as long as if they did not have diabetes. During the Diabetes Detection Drive last November, a hamphlet was given general dlstr bution in which diabetics and the families of diabetics were given useful, in fact life-saving. information. Unfortunately. many diabetics are not being treated today be- cause they do not even know they have me disease." the pamphlet stat . "The symptoms of diabetes ms not be noticeable at all. or are not severe enough to make the individuals go to a doctor. It is es- timated that there are nearly as many undiscovered diabetics in this country as there are known cases. The search for these un- known diabetics is one of the major tasks of modern medicine." What is diabetes and what causes it? Diabetes interferes with the pat- lent's ability to use up certain kinds of food in a normal way. particularly starches and sugars (energy-giving foods). The body should use these foods up by mus- cular exercise, or store up in the liver what is not used or burned up by the body. This means that the sugar in the blood increases norsnously. the kidneys get rid of this excess sugar and other need- ed food fiements are thrown out in doing no. The danger signals as outlined for the public in the pamphlet are: 'w thirst and passage of urine. loss of weight. intense itching. xlcessive r. failing eyesight and cataracts. easy tir- ing. pain in feet and hands. slow healing of cuts and bruises. Mild cases may not show all these symptoms. Diabetes may attack any age. race or sex but it occurs oitenest in families with a history of dia- betes. in those over forty and par- iicularly in the overweight. Mem- bers of diabetic families may es- cspe diabetes by avoiding over- 11 ht. . .??.:.... DOVER. SCHOOL Report for January. Grade VIII-i. Elvira Macken- zie; 2. Florence Maclaire. Grade VI-l. Franklin W'hiteway. Grade V-l. Roy Whitevway. Grade IV-l. Wilma Macllachern: 2. John Whiteway. Grade III-l. Alice 1-layter. Teacher: Elva MacDonald. "VIIMTA !liOCX...lsearlng iimn whisper 'I.O.' about mel light linen I decided never to be careless about olendhg again. I'd get Lltebooy-we" ii regularly in my ' but to safeguard dohtiiess.” . A :- El.LEI'.8 lilllli ssasuiaassuuarsvvua "I like to take half flour and oatmeal" our busy city housewife said sharing her osillnll 100190 "for oatmeal cookies with ill. one dayotthlsv:bo.t.Aniiwe!have ha liking to go recipes or so - stantial foods and wholesome. items that give to the family the but in vitamin content. "Yes" she continued "a cup and I hall of each. A nip too. of white antar- it seems to give a more pleasing texture than the brown. A tes- spoon of salt than for lightening" aheamlledoverthislnauch away that we had a notion she was look- ing blck into a pantry 0L child- hood where a mother used these in her bakinu. knowing little oi baking powder in those days. "nvo teaspoons cream of tartar and one oi soda. To these assembled dry ingredients and a cupful of melted fat." "Shortening?" we asked. '1! you wish' she returned "but dripping: preferably - from bacon or. . . what I'm us- camo from yesterday's roast of pork. if one mlaht use part butter” use aianod. We too often find we are aighin for those by- gone di. - when clutching the :.-:s " and versatile IIOIQV tool: the butcher-knife. we had only to descend to the dairy in the cellar. to carve from the home- churned butter in the--crock, gold- en promise of delectable makings. a a . We can recall too. with some measure of shame that we could find an alibi there for a cake fail- ure. when we said casuallyplittle suspecting the alchemy with which we were blessed. 'There's something wrong with it -- it must be that there's too much butter in it!" Those days are now gone for- ever. Present living even on a farm gives us more "hand to mouth" circumstances. and values do not allow us to use it so pro- digaiiy. "Next add is beaten egg and the flavoring" she continued "and if more liquid is required to mix it to a consistency for hand- ling it easily, use warm water." "No milk?" we queried. "No milk!" she smiled. ”Just roll them. hand- ling as lightly as possible, rather thinly. cut according to your fan- cy and bake in a 'cookle' oven. The only fault I have with them is there's no last to them. they're so popular with the family!" 0 O I We know now that we neglected to find out' the exact temperature of baking. Not that it is a grave omznisaion. we usually consult the oven-register over a matter of baking, but if we have niislaid our glasses. we must then take our bearings by ihe kettle'a tune or the volume of fire at the moment. We admit there is an element of doubt in these methods, but. here it is the housewife, who may not even temporarily fly away from her cares, in one of the magic planes even then dividing the azure skies overhead. or come to other exquisite adventuring. may enjoy her thrills. How high a heart can leap when "hoping against hope" one takes is pictured pan of cookies from the oven! And on the other hand. what depths it plumbs. should listless rows only, appear in her sight! . - "And how did the day go?" we recall a question put to us once by an expert cook when our world The Sters'Say -' -fl as oeaavieve In-bio - l he Tomorrow I -rm: personal, intimate and pri- vate relaiions are emphasised and not very happily. while the darn- estie, social. and cultural affairs -are under high stimuli for activity. and sensitive appeshat the same time there may be an eagerness, a burning desire to over-act. oven-emphasize and carry to ex- tremes rash and strenuous. Wounded feeling. emotions and sentiments as well as physical activities may result in clash and clamor. if it Ia Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is. may be disposed to over-act. over-in- dulge. in excitement, leasure and manner of over-stepp ng bounds. in all activities. lndulgences, pae- slons and energies, with unhappy reactions. storms and stresses. This is true in personal contacts as well as in business. dnance. e'm- ployment, in which energy, strenu- ous and highly stimulated emo- tions or desires. may impel as well as compel. Do not in any en- terprise. indulgence or contact. keep rigidly in bounds. lest last- ing harm be retroactive and clam- orous. A child born on this day. may be prone to all forms of strenuous and exciting lndulgences in all its relations and desires. perhaps to its Own" sorrow and enduring regret. vwrvvx YKKT xwxzsxm. ; Morning Smile ? - :o4c6..:4.V3zN..&:sZ I Too Much The boxer was sitting at home with a bruised head after being badly ebaien. while his son was doing his homework. '"l"ommy.” said his wife. "donii count up to ten any more - it makes Dacldys head ache. Holiday Bound A salesman was sent to Alaska by a firm well known for its miserly practices. Some days after he had left his oiiice received a wire from him. reading "Ship ice- bound off coast. situation looks bad. May not got through for some time.” The manager of the firm immediately sent a reply: Don't worry. Start vacation as of today." lmowledged on a despairing note. ”Ay?" she waited for us to contin- ue. "Oh. a cake that should have been good fell. . . It is as flat as a pancake" we complained. what did you do with it. Ellen?" she inquired kindly. "Nothing -- not a thing. It was such a failurei" And why didn't you turn it into I bit of a pudding. . . dessert. you know. Cnimble it in milk - put it to bake in the oven - make a sauce. or use cream... and there you are! But then" she laughed merrily "not many know how to turn a failure into a suc- cess. It's a secret worth learning, I can tell you!" And now "1l.'s'a' frosty night. Ellen" James comes in to say. And adds with concern "A cold night it would be for a lamb to come!" Until tomorrow - - Diary was young. "Not too well" we ac- ..." 0.". NOT AFTER mi ” Good-night. . Tales Clinel Boy btei-ting College Shouldn't Enter into Long” Engagement DEAR MISS mx: I am very much in love with a girl iieloveasne. liowevesunothing has beqssaid four years of sdsoolissg ahead of me. herhowiieelabouther.butIihink wait that long for me. especially lie four years. I feel i iuvswm: 1 think you are taklngthe wise gs... does snyihing for a man it-changes him. it educates. broadens. refines him. it lineages his tastes. his habits. his outlook on life. He is thrown with different People from ihe ones with whom he has been accustomed in ae- spclaie. He meets a different type of girl from the com he went with at home. OUTGIOWI GIIL Oiiesier than not, when the boy who has been away four years at College returns to the girl he left behind him he finds that he doesn't want her at all. He has outgrown her. His taste has changed. But if she has waited for him and has been faithful to tu'rn.he hasft i.-he heart. to break her clinging arms away from him and refuse to mguy her. And no marriages are more miserable than those entered into from a sense of duty and because a man feels in honor bound to marry a girl of whom he has grown tired. Such a husband always feels that his wife has forced him into marrying her and unless he is oi a singularly noble diameter he takes it out upon her in neglect and surllnese. It is far better viihtn a man cannot ask a girl to rnarry him to leave her free if they must be separated for a long lime. Then he is not keeping he": from making a marriage if some man she fancies comes along. Nor does he obligate himself to marry her if his taste in woman dienges. If they both really love each other their aifeclioss will survive and their marriage will be one of volition and not compulsion. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Does a girl have to live a loose life in these days in order to get married? I am nearly 30. I have kept myself Pure. as the Phase does. but am still unmas-sled, while most of my friends who defied the conventions have husbands. I have had the admiration oi! many men. but I have never had marriage oifered me. is it oi-liy for a girl of my age to hold to principles that seem to net he,- rwihlng? i PUZZLED ANSWER: You must live in a community in which ihe moral stan- dards an unusually low if only so.iled- doves flutter to the alias and where men preicr wives with bednggled skirts to those who come lo them clean. You say that in your community loasc living helps a girl to get a husband. butdo you suppose that many such mlarrilges are happy? if you do. I wish that you could read some of the letters that come to me on the subject. Women write in me that although their husbands "forgave" (hem before marriage. after marriage they throw up their pasts to iivesn in every quarrel between them. And men write that although they believed iliat they were their w1'ves' only lovers before marriage and although their wives have been true to them. so iId' as they know. they feel that they can never trust them. Always in their minds is the thought that the woman who was weak enough to yield to tesnpiaatiuu once would do so again. and idiot ihe woman who had not enough moral principle to hold her straight would always go crooked under provocation. So you see iihe mer- Tlldu you envy may have little in ilhem to envy. if you knew all. Anyway. it seems to me that virtue is not a matter oi expediency but of eight and wrong, and that if you have to lower your ideals lo set a htuband you are better on without one. You can pay too high a price for a wedding ring. l DEAR. MISS DIX: I am the wife of a principal of a rural high school. it is his one ambition to get a city school, but his one big driwback is his I I1 rance. which is extremely slovenly. He thinks that it is J iioollahneaa aibou-t having at a clean shirt. or his ploiihes presed. or -is hair cut. or his shoes shined. or to have good manners. When I try to make him be neat he calls it nagging and it makes him angry. what smart I do? A ' WORRIED WIFE. ANSWER: I doubt if a slovcn. eiiiher male or female. was ever cm-ed of slovcnlinees. But one ihlng is sure. Unless your husband cures himself of the habit of looking like something the cat brounit in he will never in the world get a job as principal of a city school. For neatneas is one of the iihlnga that they try in impress meet on dh-iid.ren. and how can they do that if Teacher is one of the great un- llsautliul Lace is Factory Made (By The Canadian Press)-. NUITINOIIAM. panels of lace. .... , lace by mass production methods. are a new development of a Not- tingham lace factory which will be shown at the British Industries !'air this summer at London and Birmingham. ' 'Ihe finer qualities of upun rayon ..... yarns and Egyptian cotton yagi ur 3511,; are woven on a machine wh 1 60 .... produces five 72-ind: widths in To 95 cup of whiiped cream add one operation. As many M 8M0 15 mm, chgppgd L no", spools of rayon and cotton are Let stand in refrigerator or cool used in one panel of intricate de- place for an hour. Add 1 cup of all". chopped dates, walnuts, cherries The beautiful. quiet luster which ed in her friend. but she certainly or coceanut in, cream mixture. no" with l ubmmons 0' mum should include a message of sin- cere appreciation to the girl's graham wafers. Roll mixture into Mn" in "um" mm” "M p '0' mother. who usually deserves much of the credit for a pleasant visit. in refrigerator to set. Q. is it proper for a salesman r ,Cool:'s Corner g om runnna cooauis i i 993. one cup shortening. 2 eggs. 1 cup brown sugar. 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon'baking powder. it tea- spoon soda. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix well and break in small pieces. also of a walnut. roll into balls, then roll in granulated sugar or chopped nuts, preal thimble in centre and all with jam or glased cherries. ' ' to say ''good-bye'' to the reception . . girl when leaving the office of an Modgrn Ehqu.H. ”X”"3'r'.'f rim is not only can t . . P '3 "W" '3 eous. but also tactful. A small courtesy such as this is often re- membered the next tune the sales- When a girl has spent a man calls. . t wfelk-end in another girl's home. 0. with whomuahould the bride , ' Wins Baking. Prizes at Bear River Fair There's plenty of friendly com- petition in the Home-baking section of the Digby County Fair at Bear River. N.S., and a consistent winner is Miss Helen L. Woodworth, of Bear River. In yeast-raised baking especially it's been nip and tuck. and Miss Woodworth credits her yeast with giving her the edge. "ingredients are so important-and I'm extra says Miss .Woodworth. "For- years I've been baking with I Fieischmann's. I always find; F'laiscbmann's Yeast is good and lively. I know I can de- pend on it." i That's what the majority of prize-winning cooks sayi - You get finest results with Fleischmann's Yelat-proved dependable for 83 years. -Needlecraft-it - FOR THE HOME -- EASY TO MAKE simplicity - smart and sew easy - 15- the keynote of this end- lessly useful washable? capped kimono sleeves allow freedom in action. Four deep tucks make your waistline do a disappearing act. No. 2404 is cut in sites i2. 14. 16. 18. 20. 36. 86. 40. 42. 44. as and 48. size 11; 3'); yards :5-inch. send 25c for each PATTERN which includes complete sewing guide. Print Your Name. Address and style Number plainly. Be sure to state also you want. include postal unit. or zone nianber in your address. Address Pattern De artmenl The Charlottetown Guard an.l Pattern No. 2404 r-w--nu - -..... , Name -x-nu...-. Address city Province comes from the combination of cotton and rayon is enhanced when the finished clcths are vlved in fashionable pastel shades to fit in with modern color aohunes. The larger panels are for bed- spread and dinner table cloths. smaller panel nets are made for window decoration. with a form of construction that prevents the sel- vedges fraying when the sections are separated. . to when should she address her drive to the church for the ,-.-.-e''.. "bredd and butter" letter? ding ceremony! . A. This letter may be addrass- A. With ha father. Tasty? Sure, they're staosc bokedl careful about the yeast 1 us.,":'.,g