h , man's old home restored as Woman is ReaIm.. race two ' In ouarunau ' sarrnuaaa 21, 1950 Tall Tales Iyr.n.aIsasnasr lucentiy 1 received a letter Miro I. Sunaneraide reader who was very much intreated in the songs of Larry German. some of which ap- peared in my column. The writer of that letter says in part. "I would like to see Larry Gor- :- ahrine. Our poets and authors ought . to receive more recognition." The writer" then goes on to say. i "What about our old time story tellers whose tall tales have never been put into print? These story tellers made up yarns as they told them and some of them were very amusing if a bit fantastic. The oyster fishing shacks that used fp dot the end of the shore .Road was a favorite spot for the teller of tall tales. on a windy day the fisherfolic would all congre- -gata in one shanty, sitting on long ,home-made benches. when you ,opened the door. the smell of dry- ing oilskins assailed your nostrils. An old Waterloo stove gave out its - That Body Of Yours lull-eaW.lortoa.II.Il. ANGINA (PAIN IN CHEST) OI" EITOIT AND 0! BEST When the pain known as angina pectorla occurs, it is usually dur. ing or foliowiru effort and the pat. font is advised in stop immediate- ly whatever he is doing and the P111! will Rradually go away. dow- ever. a cartoonist has pictured :1 mm Mn: on a couch who. when the pain came on explained, "But i I wasn't doing anything!" That angina. pectoris may occu: when the patient is at complete rest is stated by Dr. Louis A. Soloff. Temple University,,m the Journal of the American Medical Association, quoting Sir Thomas Lewis, the noted heart authority. Dr. soloff gives the history of three cases, aged respectively 79, 58, and 49, all of whom had at- tacks of angina pectoris whi.'e resting in bed. He therefore used the terms angina on exertion and angina during rest. While angina at rest and angim during effort are due to dliferenr heart conditions, the symptoms!- comfcrtabie warmth and usually! held a deep pan of steaming oys-y ters. or a tempting piover stew. The place would be swept clean by, means of a fir broom. Everything about the shack looked epic and span. What were the men doing who were seated on the long benches? Some of them were cutting old Is- land twist tobacco. Every now and then theytd stop to rub it between, their palms, thus making it finer for pipe use. ' with pipes filled. each in turn would pick up a live coal with their. fingers and talnp it on top of the! tobacco. In the meantime. all eyes were focused upon the story teller. slowly. he would clear his throat and begin,- ”I was working in Richard's ship- yard at Bideford and a swanky little-vessel was all ready except for. her masts. Soon a teamster drove up-, with the finest log I've ever seen.; We all leftlthe shack to admire: the forest giant. 'What kind of wood is thati" ask-' ed one feiler. And as nobody could name it. old Luke eibowed his way! through the others and cutting a chip from the log, popped it into his mouth. 'Me boys: said he. a oanrot'. .n.s . I '9 0 One day Luke was out hunting when he saw a dozen parnridgej roosting on a straight limb. but: with only one charge in his muzzle: loader, how was he to make a good kill. For a moment he stroked his. Blip Van Winkle beaird, then a bright idea flashed across his ac- tive mind. He put the ramrod in the muzzle of the gun. crept a bit closer and fired at the end of the limb. Bring! the gun i spoke and lo. every parirrldge was held fast to the limb by their toes. His William Tell shot had split the limb just enough to let the toes of the birds drop into the seam. Another time old Luke was strolling along the shore near Block Banks when he spied a fine specimen of black fox cutting a corner bluff. Now, old Luke always wanted a black fox. but he knew the animal would be out of sight long before he'd have time to reach the wood. 80, he quickly put his gun over his hree. bent the barrel and aimed at the bluff. Lady Iluck was on his side again for he killed the animal. believe it or mil" 0 O 0 Almost as famous for his stories was George Banks who was a neighbour of Mr. Luke. Here are a couple from his imaginative mind. "One evening in late Fall. I ar- rived home intending to drive to a neighbours only to find father had turned the horses out to pasture. It was a. very dark night and the pas- ture lay half a mile from the house limrounded by tall rpruce. "I felt my way about the field till I put my hands on one of the horses. It was asleep. so I roused it and led the critter home. It seem- ed rather nervous when I started to throw on the harness but not until I had had it fully hitched, did I discover the animal was I bear. I C O The second story as told by George Banks had to do with a dumping steer. No matter how high he built the fence the animal would clear it at one leap. Finally in des- pair he thought of his near-sighted (That is why driving , irregularly? Write today painful chest-are the same. "Angina pcctorls of dccubitus (at. rest) is usually longer in duratioxf than angina of exertion,” writes Dr. Soioff. "The patient can talk. will complain of i flushed warm face with fullness in the neck, in contrast to the pallid cold lace of angina of effort. Also. in angina of rest. the blood pressure and heart rate are increased during an attack. But. more important than the differences in syrnptomc are the differences in treatment. The attack in both types of angina is stopped by nitroglycerin. However. angina of effort or exertion is prevented by getting rid nf or abolishing the type of effort that produces the pain-, angina of rest is abolished by cutting down on table salt and by driving water out of the tissues of the body." We learn from the above state- ment og Dr. Scloff that when angina at rest occurs. it is caused by too much work being placed on the heart by the sudden increase: in fluid returning to the heart. the wales from the body tissues by use of drugs gives. relief from angina oecioris and also enables the nav- ie-nt to breathe more freely. Nat- urally he feels more active and his activity will do no harm whereas in angina of effort. rest is in-. im- portant part of the treatment. Why Worry About Your Heart? Do you get out of breath easliv on slight exertion? Does your heart seem to skip beats or beat for Bi. Barton's interesting booklet on this subject entitled "why Worry About Your Heart?" To obtain it. send 10 cents and a 3-cent stamp. to cover cast of handling and mail- ing. to The Bell Syndicate, Inc.. in care of this newspaper, Post or- fice Box 99. Station G, New York 19. N. Y., and ask for your copy. V Better English If I. O. WIIHIIIII fg ' 2 K 4 By D. C. Wihinnn 1. What is wrong with this sent- ence? "Mrs. Brown called upon me yesterday." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "trough"? 3. which one of these words is misspelled? Articulate. Artie. arti- ficer, arrogance. 4. What does the word "acme" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with do that means "rains"? I ANSWERS X. as "Mrs. Brown called on me," or. "called to see me" 2. Pronounce trof, o as in soft. 3. Arctic. 4. The top, or highest point; "He has reached the acme of suc- cess." 5. Debris. grandmother. So he borrowed her glasses and put them on the steer. The mac worked. Now the animal. though some distance from the fence, gave a mighty leap and, of course, came down on" the same side of the fence, much to its as- tonishment. story teller Banks said the critter never tried to jump a fence after that." Mr. and Mrs, Albert Wilfred ricer. R. A. F. C. station Clinton attendants during their wedding reception at the Charlottetown Hotel ioliowlns their mm!-89 It bride the former 'Molly' Lewis. st. Paul's church. From left to Miss Lillian Lewis who was her right Mr. John Stevenson was an usher. Mr. George groomsman, the groom and who sister's bridesmand, and Miss Bet- Ives ty MacPherson as bridesmaid. Gamhum photo '4 slants. fresh ideas and a determin- ation to forge ahead on a firm and orderly foundation, with system precision and unwavering applic- ation, the mentality is kewd in new perspective and the energies ready to sustain and develop new techniques or routines. While some changes may be in order. the pro- gram, born of defeat. should thrive. Readjustmenis could begir with attention to details, creating new systems, carefully and p'si"ently worked out. - If It Is Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is. are encouraged to take up the course of constructive living, after a siege of possible upset. opposition or d!- reat. The experience should have incited fresh plans. policies, con- tscts, with the will to rise awve all harrowing conditions with re- organized plans as well as the as- surance of security and e.1.1urinf-' values. Versatility and logic as well as philosophy could be the basis for a solid future, and me solace of obligations faithfully met. respon- sibilities dutifully performed. A child born on this day is bcunteously gifted with talents. adaptability and character for a constructive and worthy life with obligations well met and duty er. inspiration. Modern Etiquette By Roberta Leo g oWV0NWN&.”Nx xx-sxs . Q. When an introduction is forc- ed upon you, and you know from things you have heard and seen that you will not like this person, is it possible to show your feelings by your manner of acknowledg- ment? A. If you do. you will also be guilty of rudeness and ill-breeding. Acknowledge the introduction with a courteous "How do you do?" and you will be under no further obli- gation. Q. If one has never met the bride. but is well acquainted with the bridegroom, would it be all right to send the wedding gift to him? A. This should never be done. All wedding gifts belong to the bride, and should, therefore, be sent to her. Q. Is it evtc correct to send for- Imai invitations in the first person? A. No; formal invitations are al- ways written in the third person. V3 ibrmuia Only wafer token out-oxfro goodness put in refined. Absolutely sofa b ck-tight in the con. F-rovldos oil iyuse Milli mail-AMY .-u&.ewj-vM't''- ' W ?,MOW Carnation is good whole mill:-doubly concoroled by evaporation ode more digestible, more nourishing, by Cornmionh eereful processing. Easier to digest than baffled milk. because It is hoof use if is sterilized offer If is sealed the food value: of pealw Izod whole milk; plus 400 Units of vitamin D par pint. Deeien oceapi Comotion as on ldaol milk for infant feeding. Ask your doctor about Cdmotion. - I 3 The 5-" savn gt; DOROTHY oix SAYS- W ( dxnlllytcenevievo lie-bible V tags UN':;R”'f;j' M indecisive Husband Man Starts For Reno 3 Times in I6 Months 01'' Marriage DEAR DOROTHY Dix: I am a man of 50. Have been married ,sixieen months to a woman sixteen years younger than I am. Didn't gmuch want to marry. but did it to please her and a matchmaking irelaiive. I have no fault to find with my wife. She is good, consid- (erate of me. sweet and neat, and has never been unpleasant or nag- ging. She is not pretty and I catch myself not looking at her because she isn't. I have been so little satisfied with marriage that I have started three times to Reno. The first two times I was so uncomfortable in my mind that after ten days I went back home. only to begin wishing I had never married at all. Now I have just completed six weeks at Reno and with the divorce so near I am beginning to think I might want her after all. Still I have not Enjoyed married life enough even :4 to fly to fix up our house, and I am not stingy. and I am not in love with her or anyone else. but I hate to think of being tied to her as long as I live. What shall I do? R H S ANSWER: My advice to you is to go on and get your Reno di- vorce for the psychological effect it will have on you. It will clarify your feelings for you as nothing else can. You will lose your wife Only to find her. so to speak. and my prophecy is that the next you will do after getting your decree absolute will be to buy a mar- riage license. ACT YOUR AGE 5 You are suffering from two mlliakea. The first is that you are refusing to be your age. At 50 you are expecting yourself in be as sentimental and romantic as a boy, and have all the thrills and palpi- tations of a young lover. ' Forget it. Don't expect to have a young heart any more than to have a young body. You cant: run and jump as you did when you were 20. You dontt want to sing just for the sheer joy of living. You've lost plenty of the enthusiasms and beliefs with which you started out as a boy. but that doesn't keep you from enjoying life in a saner. soberer way, nor from having many years of usefulness and happiness before you. Only your emotions have slowed down to the tempo of 50 Your second mistake was throwing marriage info the discard be- fore you ever gave it a chance. You didn't.even try to make it a success. You didn't even attempt to build ii home together. Any- thing would have been .a failure that you went into with that spirit. After marriage almost every husband and wife go through a period of panic in which for a moment they regret the step they have taken. A sudden horrible sense of finality seizes upon them of hav- ing to live with this man or this woman until death ahali part them. A sunk feeling at realizing that they ave forfeited their personal liberty. Marriage isn't as glamorous a they expected and probably nine out of ten would call it off if they could without scandal or complications. But the mood paasea.- They get their second wind and a clearer insight into marriale and turn it into what It was meant to be - a happy companionship of a man and woman. - You are suffering from a kind of matrimonial shell ahock and you need a sense of liberty to cure you. Once you realize you are fires. 1 think you will deliberately put yourself back into double arneas. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am a young woman of 22 torn between two loves. One of these young men iminsanely jealous. so much so that he makes scenes and says he la going to whip any one who tries to go with me. He has a new car. but doesn't have a job. and it seems that he is not able to hold one because he devotes ioomuch time to me. The other young men I go with has a job. but no car. Neither of these young' men could support me. Would you drop both and fry someone else. or would you try to work out the present situation? If ' A GIRL IN DISTRESS ANSWER: Neither one of the young men seem anything to write home to Mother about from your account of them. but if you must choose between them take the man with the Job who isn't "try- inlt to support a car he canlt afford. At least. he seems a gentleman, and a reasonable human being-and to have some consideration for your dignity and good name. which the cad who goes around making scenes and assuming the right to boas you does not possess. Whatever you do. don't be foolish enough to marry a Jealous man. Thatd way milery lies. for Jealousy is one of the faults that cannot be cure . DEAR MISS DIX: Speaking as an elderly man. I wonder why the modern girl does not realize that the greatea charm and attract. iveness for men that a woman can have is femini ity. If girls knew how they looked to men they would cast their short: and their britches into the ragbag and get some skirts. GR.AN'Dl'A'I'l-flit ANSWER: I agree with you, Grandfather, that a girl never makes a greater mistake than when she throws her femininity into the dia- card. It is her trump card and the one on which she can depend on winning out in both the game of love and of bual I have often wondered if any man ever proposed to a girl who had on trousers. It must make one feel as if he were popping the question to bid little brother. noao-my nrx cannot or: ammo: readon ' wee questions of general infioreat through IoI'..O0IlllIII. M. ""1 I- urine. 4: . . pm ;;su'eii': mm as as mu yiarnufa Wile Here it was again in to turn of the months though we could ihardy believe it -- a coating of white on are cover of the nearer waste-gate of he dam this moro- iagi And the strange. cold veil of dampness which we dwellers by inland streams recognize as an t .,animent to a lowering gun, linger-lpg above the wind- ings of the stream and river. "Iberia now, Ellenl" Jame: ex- claimed. "it's just what. I expected to pee m why I found it chilly in bed! Yes. a white frost! The day look; promising, but I wouldntt give too much for it - there's likely to be rain in the offing. And we about to start the on-eshinai Now if we had just . . ."' James is one inclined in any situation to dwell on alternatives. the "ifs" that are usualiy disturbing! "And the flow- ers. James -4 are they frosted, do you suppose?" we queried with unassumed concern, our voice muffled by the dress - a faded red and white gingham - we were drawing over our head. "Flowers. Ellen!" James returned shortly, "you'll have to find out that for yourself. I've got more on my mind than a few flowers about the yard. They'll be gone one of these-days anyway . . . And make haste now. Ellen, with the breakfast -- and give us a hand with the milking! I declare." he grumbled descending the stair- way. "these days are so short there's nothing to them at all! Falks wouldn't be striking for shorter hours of work. I'm think- ing, if they lived on a farm. They'd be wishing. well this time of year anyway. that the days were twice as long!" I 0 As it happened this one has ex- tended inio the twilight. and past it. "What moon is this?” we in- quired of James crossing the yard, while we lingered on a verendah admiring the mellow crescent of her that climbed above a dark hill. ”'Moon? I don't know Pm sure.” James replied. "but I can tell that it appears to be pret- ty 'watery' -- and I can also fell by the sounds round about that the millring'a .siil.l to be done!" The threshing came to Alderlea today. So easily as that? Oh, no neither so effortlessly not so calmly as the telling might in- dicaie. It's r urn is always her- alded by the fair-weather spell of seasoning. the so-many days that at least satisfies James. and if one be extra alert to the farm- ing one may catch sight of him thrusting an experienced hand into the stocked sheaves here or there about the early-reaped field be- fore it commences. 'llhen. ah then; the bustle of if is felt! This comes in hasty searches for escaped tools or pieces of equipment that were "right there yesterday - I know because 1 saw it! Dear help ' E2 Cook's Corner l HONEY LEMONADE ..,..... Quarter cup fresh lemon iuice. 1.1 cup honey. 4 cups water. Com- bine lemon Juice with the nonev and stir well. Pour into pitcher with water, stir again and add ice cubes. serve in four tail glasses Top with twists of lemon peel and mint sprigs. :- '-!i?d-J5'-!-)&9!fs3&&X.&”4-o!-;1&!-.!.l0!u!7a&'- How Can lili 5 By Anna Ashley g Q. How can I hear fabric that is too heavy to make a neat rolled hem? ' A. Stitch a piece of tape to the material. turn the hem up on the wrong side, and stitch the tape to the material. It will make a much neater job, as it avoids the neces- sity of folding the material twice. Q. How can I clean enamel- ware utensils in which food has been burned? A. Pill them with cold water. add one tabiespoonful of washing soda for every quart, heat slowly, and let boil for five to ten minutes. The burned food can then be removed Q. How can 1 keep cheese moist and free from mold? thoroughly saturated with vinegar. Two-year-old Bonnie Prince Charles. proud as a 'big brother" can be, is seen kissing his tiny sister, Princess Anne. who is full one month old. as she made her camera debut. The new baby, first daughter: born to Prlncessnnu. bath and Prince Philip, is third in line by succession to the 5...” throne, She is sold to have he, father's characteristic nose mt, mouth. as well as his fair and blur eyes. us what a place this is - a fellow can't put down anything and ex- pect to find it again! Now that oil-can was right. on the top of this here gate-post last evening . . . and that washer we need. I put it here beside the clock. lust the other day . . . but where is it now. I ask you, where is it now? ' Then presently follows a spell of calm in which one blissfully reaches down from a ouvpiboard without in- terrupfion "a pinch" of this and "a dash" of that, contributing in- gredients in some mixing of the moment. The silence indicates that satisfying progress is being made in the "setting-up" of the gear or that the wagons are off to the field for the loads. And then soon. lovely sound that it is. fad- ing in with the hum of sieamml kettle and cooking pols. one ca iches the deep rumble and rhythm of the machine. The threshing is on! O I 0 ”But mind you. Ellen," James nods a head to emphasize his words ”wc didn't finish it todayl" And where is James. now that night has deepened and the farmstead is coming into its real? On the stairway of morning! Until tomorrow - Disry-Good- night. . . . MINIMUM or MATBBI-IL Because they take a minimum of material and sewlnl u'"'- the” b" ruffled aprons are a quick answer to the question of what to give for gifts. bridge prizes. bazaars! (Al in one pattem.)) No. 2880 is cut in one size. Each apron requires no more than 11.4 yards 35-inch if one f la is used. Send 3c for each ATTERN which includes complete miinl gums, Print your Name. Address and style Number plainly 30 W” to state me you want include postal unit, or acne number in your address. . Address Pattern Depsrtmem i'be. Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2880 11 Nainay Address . . ' C", PIOVDICO 'c'o'r'nZGEE ?..-E.-.:-.. i I I For PROMPT neuar : S imiHcali1nmli- pgh u I c:read.Highiy Iuc- : E IAIHI I lover yum . v-we---n A. Keep It wrappedin I cloth Imam:-eunuch---J -Needlecraft-s .. FOR THE HOME - 7'Household Scrapbook 3 By Roberta Lee mmm The Carpets my sheets of brown pa 1- on the carpet. This gives a gift fang: mg to the feet, and by diminish. ing the wear, adds longer li'.e in the canpet. At the same time it tends to keep away the air coming through the floor and makes the room warmer. Pastries Try to remember that an m. gradients used in making p should be cold. The colder I53: pas is when placed in the oven. the iakier will be the finished product. . Mending lllllllel When mending hole; in enamel- ware use equal parts of soft putty, table salt.. and sifted coal ashes. Cover the holes well and heat. on the stove until the cement is nerd