oman’s .0...‘--n--n__--uunuu->uauuu.n41-"- nun-Ch Inna “ml-Ur..- ' Spend wisely-Save wisely i RED ROSE TEA more cups per pound Q*N‘-5_iLQOWQQ€I-5§€."EQWWI i’ H0 ass/told i Scrapbook By Roberta Lee 5£>\£w-.t~>\/<> sv<QZ€tEKQ 491i 43$ :3‘ Spots on the Floor an; very dirty sflfiiS-Ofl the floor or ompolished wood. can be treated with a cloth fllppffl in paraffin "rm; will f(v‘ll(‘l\‘B the dirt. r id slicki- ‘ mess and lea\e it clean, a. :1 ready for the furniture polish. i Douhle Blanket: Ixiuble blankets will be easier to handle, both in laundering and on: L'he bed, if they are cut apart and‘ bound separately Thcn. if both prove lo be L00 \\ arm. one Of thcn‘. may be removed. Linens The linens will have a beautiful, luster after they are ironed, if a‘ little salt is added to the starch. l l BABY’S I RASHES ‘ are often a sign of upset digestion. SM how quickly fill! type nf rash often as“... ears after the use of Baby's Own Tablets. leaaant t.- take. easily crushed to a vow. rler if Ileairad, these little tablets sweeten up baby's stomach and rlcar nut lfflllflflfl material that also rnay be causing gas, fe- vertshness and fretftilncss. Get Baby's Own Tablets today. The)‘ have been the standby of mothers for over 50 years. Only 25¢. -' The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kembla For Saturday, Juno 4 THE situation seems difficult to nverccme, since there is an under- tone of the sinister antd complic- ated. impossible to analyse or put the finger on. The judgment seems unable to cope with hostility, false promises and lack of cooperation from influential sources. While there seem to be plots or organized opposition. nevertheless a sudden inspiration, a “hunch" or intuition, may drive the clouds away defini- tely. Bo prepared to grasp this - practically and intensively. For the Birthday 'l‘hose whose birthday it is. are tinder a sign of a complex and in- volved state of affairs, difficult to fathom and baffling as to proced- ure. There are undercurrents of sinister and inexplicable challerrge. with no aid from higher-ups or those already bound by promise or pledge. However, a sudden gleam from inner sources. an inspiration, a shrewd creative impulse or drive, may shed light on the problem and set. in motion practical tactics. Re prepared to put into action such in- tuitive lead and work quietly for practical results. Use emotions and feelings skillfully A child born on oouragement, or sh rew drress. this day twill have emellcnt creative abilities. in- ner drives. or ideals. but may find itself beset by lack of support. en- lnherent méntal llow Well llo You A Know Your Island ‘t * By Uncle J00 24 Junior Farmers‘ Institutes are now in active operation, and there’ are 283 W. S. with a member- shlp enrollment of about 5.000. The purpose behind the Farmers’ Fed- eration, namely: to provide a mg =dium of contact and to cultivate higher standards of community ac- tivity among young folk of rural districts, Hunter River got its name from George Hunter whose ashes lie in an unmarked grave some distance up the stream bearing the same . name. The. four registered egg-grading stations now operating in the Pro- vince are located at the following placcs: Elmsdale, Bloomfield, New I London and St. Peter's. Each plant has modern and up-to-date equip- . ment. ‘ ‘ The value of our poultry industry t i at the end of 1948 stood at approxi- mately ‘ 652,319 quarts of ice cream val- ued at $215,583.42, were consumed here during the year i948. Cornwall is named after Corn- wall, Eng, the first settlers to the district. having emigrated from the, Mother Country early ln 1800. l 4.476.379 lbs. butler were pro-i dured last year. This product had a gross value of $3,077,728, the aver- age price per lb. was 68.75 cts. To- tal net value of same, $2,860.309. Paid bounties on skunk and owls last year amounted to $5,391.25. The Jewell Road lying between‘ Kingston and North River was named after one of its carly set- tlers, Jamea Jewell. vOOm0 b§é0mffl i . . - Morning Smile l, s/OQ i QAWQ When they pulled the absent- mnnded professor. half drowned, from the lake. he sputtered: "How cxasperatlng! I've just rc-mem- bered that. I can swim.” A LOT OF CRUST WOODSTOCK Ont, -~ (CF) — Bob Adair for 50 years a baker and chef here, estimated that in that time he has baked no fewer than, 207,000 pies. Now 72. Bob is recog-l ynlzed as Woodstoclrs leading cook.‘ o wonosa they’re all cheering! No wonder they're storming the counters! Surf, in the new Giant Package, is the greatest waahdoy bargain ever offered. Now you can get real Surf-Clean washes at the lowest coat. And remember, use Surf for all your washing needs-for finest wash- ablea aa well aa heavy laundry. Get the big, blue Giant Package today. Al: your dealer's now. a LEVER raooocl ‘Term-flee fur/sample fie 4 [£57 M44 ‘i’ »;-:is.- '- '°"l¥K¥;r=- . 1 Dishes come Crystal-Clear without even wiping! Keep a Giant P in your lritcbemtomartdlet doallyour dlahea faster. ,no sewn-conceit wlplngJut mlnbctwaoarasyua-dleiaaa aredom. THE GUARDIAN. Réalmfsfltial and £11.»... i. Dim» B: an Island Hunt's Wile Indoors today. we continued with our work of decorating the kitchen, which ia proving to be an extend- ed endeavour. A light buff la the shade we are using, without other color for contrast-the windows in white. We continue it with fresh inspiration each morning, once the first choring and breakfast ls pdst, though we have fur interruptions. O O An unusual noise among the Jowl in the barnyard. warns one that likely one of the sitting hens is off her nest. perhaps has been for some time. In any event it will bear investigating, and when one is out about. it is good planning to gather some smallish sticks from the wood-shed. for tended indiffer- enlly in the fascination of the painting, the fire is apt to reach a distressing stale, where only small embers remain, when Pard trots lo the yard with tidings that IJames ls on the way home to din- ner. It is only a step from the woodbcx to ascertain. nnce the thought comes to mind. if a Jack- in-the-Pulpit survived the Winter frosts, and if grand-daughter is out, there is certain to be an lnvl- tafiort to visit the kittens or rab- bits, before we are able to once more take up our brush. O O O Working near a window we were able to observe a young farmer, an interesting chap. gifted musical- ly. with tractor and trailer draw- ing loads of manure by way of our lane and field to an adjacent farm. We suppose he found a pleasant tune in the hum of the machine, and we admired the expert manner in which this one of the young generation could handle what. ap- peared to be an unwieldy rig. meeting no difficulty at abrupt turns or gateways. The folks at the house on the hill sawed fire- wood today, and as we brushed our painting. we found we were listen- ing for the regular ring of the saw as it. came across the valley to us in a delayed sound. We recall now that in the midst of it, an intense and repeated gobble in the yard brought us in haste to see if grand- daughter vvas in a state-of seigo. a terrifying position for one to ar- rive at and sometimes happens when that "Gobbler-turkey" is about. e e e _ And once in a pretty sight from the window. she came up the driveway with her hands full of cowslips. She had gathered them when on a stroll with her mother which took them as far as the CIIARLOTTETOWN Persona DEAR MISS DIX: ANSWER: Well, I should say tlon I have come to what age we marry, ners they want. themselves. v Boys and girls are not ready for matrimony because they ha\e not, had their playtime. responsibilities of marriage. financially to marry, Very family, and there is mighty little of shabblness and sordid living and ‘Their tastes and habits are formed. sire in the one with whom they are and is able to provide for his hom and be fireside companions. boy and girl can. They have learned EH09. is the ideal age for marriage. and that no girl can ever take her p love hlm dearly. I would rather give play second fiddle to his mother. ANSWER: l/Fosbiofns/Litereitu re Needlecraft J‘ FOR THE HOME .1 DOROTHY DIX says- Besl ige For Marriage Couples Who Wed Around 3O Make Fewer Mistakes I have been going with a man for two years and we have become engaged. Will you please tell us what chances of happiness a couple of 35 have if they We talk about the adaptability of youth. Nonsense. age to teach us how to give and fake. For these and many other reasons I think that around the thirties Z1 1* Jifiwlrrfififlflfifififlfi get married? AN ENGAGED COUPLE. that. if there ls one period in life more auspicloua than any other in which to enter into matrimony it is between 28 and 35. From my many years of observa- the conclusion that the chief reason that marriage is so often a failure ls because boys and girls get married before they are ready for it. Marriage ls bound to be a gamble, no matter at. but youth takes a greater risk in it because they have no idea of what kind of life part- Their tastes are not formed, and they do not even know what they \\'ill develop into They do not want to settle clown and assume the Nor is the average young couple ready few boys make enough money to support a love strong enough to stand the strain anxiety about where the money is coming from to pay the rent and the grocer. HABITS FORMED All of these pitfalls the two avoid who marry around the thirties. They know what qualities they de- to spend the balance of their lives. and their knowledge of the world and people makes them capable of judging the character and disposition of the man or woman they select as a mote. Then, by the time a man is 30 or 35 he has got on his feet e. Also, by the time a man and woman are 30 they have had their fling and are ready to settle down Above all, the mature man and woman have had enough experience of life to be able to make the adjustments of matrimony better than any self-control, acquired tact and pati- lt takes ‘ DEAR MISS DIX: Would you take a chance on marrying a man who tells you frankly that his mother will always be first with hlm lace in his affections? Although I hlm up now than marry hlm and UNDECIDED I think any other man in the world makes a better husband than the one with a mother fixation. (Continued on Page 3) I think there is more spring in the field across the creek. They stop to drink there, and al- ways carry some nf the clear. cool water to the folks ail-tome. The small one‘: curls were wind-blown; her cheeks were touched with the pink of wild roses and her eyes told one that their outing had been most pleasant. “What -- no squirrel at the mailbox today?" we inquired. "Not one," she replied. “and no slgn of a rabbit either!" Wee, dainty “chilluns"——twins have recently arrived ln the hutch when, hers and Jeanie! parent bunnies dwell. O I O And all day, in a way which bodes ill for this new moon's young days, dark clouds moved along the sky or dropped to hlde the treetops on the hill-tops, and a cold wind blew over the fields to postpone the sowing. And Jeanie coming in with the newspaper saldr “Now isn't this a sort of dreary day for the Commencement! You know.” she smiled doubtless thinking back through her own years, "I always fhlnk the College closing deserves a lovely day. sunny and warm-in keeping with the white gowns, and the sentiment of the occasion. It's really a wonder- ful day to many a one~—a day of dreams-come-true! All the work and worry of the year over at. last, and the student so rnuch near- er to some hoped for goal." O O O And she looked towards grand- daughter. and what she was seeing In the years beyond, we knew. "and what shall we do, lf she falls?" I chuckled. "I don't just know," Jeanie replied laughing, for to her the time must seem fai- and ever away, “We'll love her just the same-or perhaps more for we'll know. how disappointed aha will he," I suggested. "Yes, that's It." ileanlv- agreed softly. "we'll love her just the same. O O "Now what would you be saying to a bit of a car ride. Ellen?" James comes to the door to in- quire. "It's dark and it looks like rain, but we won't be sway long. Got to s». about a chain for that lprelider!" O O Until tomorrow - - - Diary - - - Good-night. - - - ___, _ __ _ Cook ’s_Corner CHOCOLATE CIIIITON PIE 1 tablespoon granulated geletlne ‘A cup cold water 1 square (l. 0a.) unsweetened chocolate ‘>6 cup milk 2 eggs, separated ‘A cup sugar . 5i teaspoon salt. 1 toalpoori vanilla 5i cup heavy cream. whipped 1 baked pie aheii MEPHOD: SwllI-lb tho gelatin! over cold water and allow to stand for five mlnuws Grate the choco- late and combine with the milk in the top part. ' of a dotbie boiler. Oook over hot, not boiling water, stirring constantly, until the choco- LThat Body 0f Yours ‘I luau W. Barton. l. I. casss or runancunous MENINGITIS now BEING cunsn On making a. social call on a noted professional man. l observed a life-sized painting of his only child who had died of tuberculous meningitis some years ago. There was, at that time, nothing known to medical science that could help sufferers with this disease. All cases died. During World War I all patients at our base hospital suffering from lnfluenzal meningitis died despite all the efforts of the staff and vis- lting consultants. Today the lives of many men aind women stricken with both tuber- culous and influenzal meningitis are being saved by our new drugs- penicillin, sulfas and streptomycin I have written before of patients with influcnzal meningitis in both military and civilian life who have been saved by the sulfa drugs and by penicillin. That the new drug. streptomycin, used in various tub- erculous conditions — lungs. bones and others-ls able to save patients with tuberculosis, ls not reported. In the "Lance," London, four Greek physlclans-Drs. K. Chore- mls. N. Zervos. V. Constantlnides and S. Panlazls-report that from April to November of 194'! a total of 72 patients with tuberculous meningitis were treated at the Unl- versity of Athens. All 9 patients who did not receive streptomycin died, whereas of the 83 patients who received injections of the drug 29 survived. The earlier the treat- ment the greater were the chances 0f recovery — early. meaning the first 10 days after the onset of the attack. The best results with intermittent treatment with intervals of rest. Because tuber- culous glands in children appear to b0 a forerunner of tuberculous meningitis, these physicians ad- vise that streptomycin should b! used in early tuberculosis in child- ren. Of 18 such patients. l2 later contracted tuberculous meninBitis. As We think of these formerly i"- eurablo cases of tuberculous menin- gitls now being cured°by strepto- mycln, if given early, and remem- bsi- that inflammation of the lining of the heart. a former fatal dia- Nga, 319w lg belfll illifld b)’ DQfllOl- llln. and that diabetes and pernic- ious anmia (also former fatal dis- eases) are now controlled. we should not despair of finding the cause and cure of cancer. ‘lllll; COMMON COLD were obtained of other moan dangerous conditions. to cover coat. of handling and mat lnl. 11"" "Plifll- led “The Common Beat the on yotiu rugtluy and wif.” “m . , i“ °i "if" "mid"! Fl“ ma u» u» omit-chocolate mixture _._______ "M" II"- mm wrht slowly. stirring constantly. Add the tlalld thickened gelauno mixture (o, |_ m,» comm, sugar. salt and flavoring and than into them. Fold lama Whipped‘ ‘m. my o“. “and” add the aoakod golatlne. stirring cream and pour the mixture into a ant-ti this, and ma are com- habad puny shell and eblli tmttl he" nadr-b-aat rim plainly dissolved. thautmm first enough to out. anal. ‘hy ‘ca today!‘ until slightly maimed. » when near to um. sarnllh ‘Beattheeggwhluauntfl tuft. olthnawoneianoflavoreawhlp-_ ht b not m. am loll the are poo mast. man's Never neglect. the clrcmton cold as it may often be tho fvlffll-Ylflfll‘ Bend t0 cant: and a a-mt stamp. to The Bell Syndicate. in cars of this newspaper. Post Office Box 9o, guns“ u, my York t9, N, Y.. and ask for your copy of the Barton arm-sac; ‘rmaloau The shaped midriff docs it -— gives this sum-back plnafors the new woe-waisted effect you're look- ing for this season. And for that added touch, crisp armhole ruffles to keep you cool. and unrufflcd. N0_ 30$ is cut in sizes 12. 14. 16, 18. 20. 38. 38, 40 and 42. Size 18, 4% yards 35-inch. Send 25c for each PATTERN which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name, Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you want. include postal unit, or zone number ln your Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 3062 Name Address I Province Better English D. C. Wllllaml 1. What ls wrong with this sen- tence? "Their children were never born in California." 2. What is the correct protnunc-I iation of “incorrigible”? l 3 which one of these words ial misspelled? arduous, armature, arlal. aridity. 4, What does does the word “al- legiance" mean’! 5. What is a word beginning with fe that means “fit to be dealt with successfully"? Ah‘ SINERS 1 Say. "were not. born in Cali- fornia." 2. Pronounce ln-kor-i-Jl- b'l. o as in on. all 1'5 as in it, ac- cent. second syllable. 3. Aerial. 4, Devotion or loyalty where obed- ience and respect are due. “This unwavering allegiance de- serves recognition." 5. Feasible, TIIEUIIATIB’ PAIRS‘ GIVEN FIST BELIEF Eat meat sparingly and take but little sugar. Avolrl tntoxlcrinls. Keep away from dampness. Drink water abundantly and rely upon Kervlllnn as a quick relief for rheumatic and muscular pain. "l. proclaim Nervlllno grand relief for Rheumatic pain," writes an old sufferer. "After years of suffering l can say it ls the most penetrating linlrnent I ever used. With Nervlllno I have hclpcd to rub away all my aches and pains, and I urge other: to use Nsrvlilns for sore joints, stiffness and muscular pain of the rheumatic tyre." All dealera sell Nervlline ll 85c nnttlss. XmliOb-IOWQ‘ How Can I U! Dy Anne Ashley e-Qv Q. How can I keep the acid from batteries which has been spill. ed on clothing. from eating the material? A. Apply some baking soda im- mediately to the material on both sides. This will prevent. the acid frcm eating through the fabric Rinse in clear water when the bub- bling has ccastd. Q. How can I easily remove fingerprints from a patent leather ltandibag? A It can be cleaned with a cloth dipPéd into milk. After the leather has dried. rub with a soft cloth until the shine returns. Q. llow can 1 purify the refrig- erator? A. Place a small piece of char- coal in the back of the refrigerator. a-nd this will act as an absorbent of the various odors that. will ac- J UNI‘; 3. 1949 "nksea-smsmane’ .1 5062 SIZES l2 . 4i aiackt-tsaos simply dlsaolvs and disappear by ihla an. simple, aafs and lura method. Get twq ounces of neroxina powder from any dru store. sprinkle on a hot. wet cloth, an apply gently-ovary blackhaad will be goau. STAR AND FAN DESIGN l . l I tat-ms DESIGN NO. E4110 This flower, star and fan dnlll‘ ll crocheted in two sizes. 10 and 14 inches in diameter. Pattern N" E-llltl contains complete instruc- tlons. To order: Send 2O cents in Nil m Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- town Guardian. Design No. mus Name ‘has; u cumulate. l better VIII, IOII Yea, ova-y GIV/SP/ ocuucav- oooo m ivuuci Provl ca City