Kr 4¥<aw< uQrcrd-v-tiiwai-wcoi. at‘ Body MORE STOMACII THAN ALL OTHERS COMDINED CANCER! A close relative came into my of- Ifice contplainirlg of a pain in his Ihlp, no pain anywhere else. How- ;ever, as he admitted a feeling of "tightness" across his abdocnen and {and that he didn't enjoy smoking any more, I examined his abdomen ‘and found a large rnass—cancer—~ 1 too late for operation. He died three -months later and suffered very little pain. ‘Ilhe pain in his hip wu really a "secondary growth carried from the stomach cancer. ~He had not complained of pain in the stomach nor of indigestion. This is not on unusual case. Where the symptoms are thus "hiC-den‘, even a physician may not suspect cancer of the stomach. However, physicians and medical students are becoming stomach- lcancer conscious, especially where ‘the patient is past 40 years of age. iThis ls because some patients do ‘not suffer much pain or other dis- turbance; yet cancer of the stom- aoh occurs more often than cancer of the uterus or breast. in women. Figures quoted by Government ‘and cancer organizations show that Fof deaths from cancer, 30 to 40 per jcent are caused by stomach cancer. gwhen we remember that any sur- face tissue of tlhe body-skin, lin- ‘ing of organs-can develop cancer. ‘and remember further that cases of renowned frogroneo of a meadow in Kentucky, captured In Elizabeth Arden‘: exquisite Blue Grass. So fresh, so young, it glvos u fooling of exhilaration. The perfect trogronco ‘l to givo or to woor yourself C. D. lluo Oran lath Mlt, w» 772a Stars Say-- ! Dlfleaeviovofianblo F" Tllllllly. November 2| A VIGOROUB and concerted st- i-"ll "W1 Program, plans and i101”! o! lasting and long-term ob- jectives. should at this time be v-Oseoute’ without delays or post- ponements, and with thoroughly or- iianlzed sys and procedures. e ellent promise for working toward advanced futures, with concentrated energies and sound objectives for future solidity and reaping. In such ambitious and probably diligent and carefully- outlined and studied effort. there is prospect of cooperation from eld- era. especially of feminine persuas- ion Social and purely personal fac- tors are encouraged. For the Birthday ‘Ilhose whose birthday it is are urged to forge ahead, with all avail- able resources and influences, and with unflagging energy for the nt- italnment of their moat ambitious [projects and desires, especially when the efforts and plans have a future of stability, enduring prog- lress and a keen urge tor lasting re- wards, peace and security. Investments and long-range real- istic plans should be pursued with vigor, thereby attracting hearty support and probable rewards of merit from either social or profes- sional superiors. Sudden changes or revision» are probable but favor- able. A child born on this day is splen- didly equipped for long-range suc- I 7.; ; in delightfully guy sets. A. lluo Cross Flowor Mist and Dusting Powder‘ . . . 3.75 I. lluo Oroso Flower Mist, Dusting Powder and Iody Sochol . . . 6.75 lluo Gross Dusting Powder, and Flowor Mist . . . 3.75 Dusting Powder, Flowor Mist and Hond Soup . . . 6.50 l. lluo Gross Luxury lath Solis, Dusting Powder and Hand Soup . . . 8.75 P1@RE £~ P19LEOD Mil?! Houseizyoxld Scrapbook By Roberto Leo Cleaning Puts An excellent cleaning paste for stomach cancer outnumber all other cases. everyone with any persistent indigestion (however slight) should consult his or her physician and {undergo any test: prescribed, in- cluding X-ray. l The fact that cases of cancer of .the stomach outnumlber all other [cancer cases, and the unfortunate fact also that more than half the cases of stomach cancer consult 'their physician when 1t is too late to obtain a cure, should cause an early visit to the family physician should- ilhere be: (a) Any feeling of discomfort in the region of the stomach, which discomfort passcs away at night, (b) belching and dis- tension. (c) loss of appetite, espec- ially for meat, (d) tired feeling and loss of welgl. . ' Any two or more of these symp- toms at the cancer age points t0 cancer, until proved otherwise. CHIIGNAL. Essex. England - (CP)— Arthur Matthams has com- pleted 60 years’ work on the same farm. (H ESTCOlDS I 9511139118111- Blllkl. U165. discolored fihllw. stone, paint. etc, can be, madoas follows: Take equal part5. "1 Whltins. soft soap. fine white‘ Sand and soda. Place the ingred- ients in a saucepan, adding enough water to fonm a smooth paste. Boll uni-ll dissolved and pour into jars for future use. Apply with a clean’ flannel wrung out of hot water and afterwards rinse with clear warm! water. k ‘more will be no odor of fruit! juice when it run; out in an oven,. or on top of the stove. if salt is| thrown on it. It can be easily cltaned when burned to a crisp. Juice Odors Chocolate Stains When the table linen bears choc- olate stains. sprinkle the stain with powdered borax and then pour boil- ing water through it. ccss in life. accomplishing much by its own skill and industry. but also having solid support from friendly interests. ‘Quality duloftlr \ plo fillings, lgrovioo and louoll Roll for qualify ingredients — lnoot lrnportorl lot which a IConodo Com Starch, .to its outstanding quality. o prodod of outdondlrlfquolltyf I Dopondolslo — Its popularity with Conodlsn _ liousowlvoo ovor tho yoors ls tho but recommendation or Aha Maoofsrmm of Cnwn Brand Com Syrup o 1' "I'll! cannon snack co. umrro transatlant- sauna r Toronto Design No. 2-128‘! NMEBGIFUINTMENI mu musllnn Pillllllili Don't uh chances ea a Chest Gold- rnoy become very serious. A poultieo mid! "D of two tables oons of Mecca "id I Wllbocn of ustard excellent results. It relieves oongu. d rod __ m“, fineness". t... .1: u t co twice dolly. Mecca Olnhnont ld s _ flrusksouyahdullnllium“ 25°‘ '5' HUG JtIkE-TIGHT IS BIVLABT . DESIGN NO. l-llfl This crocheted bolero burg-mo- flght is a quick and simple crochet job but highly effective. Pattern No. 111-1237 contains complete in- atrlactionl for making sizes 82 to 43. Needlework Book I! cents. To order: Send M cents in ooin to Needlework Bureau, Charlotte- town Guardian. NIIIO Address Olty the bed linens, and then next and lilo preserve their color. -~.\.\.~u\'.\.<.\.\.'<.\.<'.1’{\w€\'. \.\. Personal/Fa shio Pictured above after their ma 1'ith are: Mr. Deane Payne, groornsman; G. C. Gillespie, younger son of Mrpi and Mrs. T. B. Gillespie, Principals In Gillespie-Manhunt Wedding rrlage at Wolfvllle, N. S., on Sept. Carleton; the bride, formerly Miss Kathryn Machum, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Machuln, Wolf- ville; and bridesmaid, Miss Connie Gilllland. St. John. LivingeS. Leisure /THE WUMANX REALM/ Listen . . . . With faint dry sound, Like steps of passing ghosts, The leaves, frost-crispd from the trees. And fall. —November Night by Adelaide Crspsey. break "men, 1.1mm: nousa" uas SERIOUS DEFICIENCY “Our apartments and houses are so compactly planned there is no room. in the fllllll)’ group for de- pendent old parents, except the living room couch where they are in the way," says a New York wo- znan in a money-raising appeal for a home and hospital for the aged. She’ is right, of course. And mere are plenty of other draw- backs in the modern trend toward cramped, compact little houses, says a woman writer. There's no room for Papa or the children in the efficient little Kit- chen, so Mama spends just as little time in it as possible. The compact little house has dis- carded the dining room as so much waste space. When a family sits down to a meal in the little dream house, a gate-leg table has to be set up in the living room and din- ller is hurried. The neat little two-bedroom house looked adequate to the coup- le with only one or two children. But it doesn't allow for growth. No Den For Dad And, of course the compact little houses don't offer any place where s member of the family can get off by himself. So, at night, Papa yells, "For the last time, will you be quletl" at the kids and. in the daytime. Mama keeps telling them. "No, you can't play in the house." There's no room for the old folks in the space-saving little house. And there's not enough room for lhe young folks, either. COW's HOMING INSTINCTS Though highly domesticated ani- mals like cats and dogs frequently walk long distances to get back to tneir former homes, it is vary tare to hear of a cow doing so. This was what happened, how- ever, in the case of a cow from Cropton, in the North Riding of a 5 Q. How can I remedy dry hair‘! A. A hot oil shampoo is good forr ir. Heat pruro olive oil and the hair and scalp thor- dry y at bedtime. Bind the hair as?" with g towel, to prevent staining i 5 '\9Q%9\'>'7\3“" ' How can 1'” O l I By Anna Ashley morning wash with a mild, liquid shampoo. Use this treatment about once a week. Q. How con I make string beans retain a bright color after cooking? a. uspiaoaorbskinswdail addod to stein! boom while ti!” aro it will rotten them Q. How can‘ I prevent tho thread from cuflinl Mid knottinl while sewing‘! . A. Before cutting the U!!!“ from the spool, thread tho noodle and make a knot at the freshly-out- end of the tilreadv. I v iorkshire, Eng, who, more than a year ago, was sold to a farmer at Salton. Some time later she was sold again and went to Lance nutts Farm, near Normandy. But sweet memories of her old lor the other day she broke loose and wandered five miles or more back to High Farm, Cropton. There she made her way straight to her stall - and there she \vas found later; no doubt placidly contented- ly chewing the cud, home at last. And later that day she was turned out into the pasture and gave birth to a flue calf. An appeal to parents to permit their children to take life's little knocks, in order to develop self- diSClpllXlB and adjust their behavior to social standards, is made by the Department of National Health and Welfare, Ottawa. "Learning the hard way has advantages," the de- partment states. A pampered child has little opportunity to learn to solve life's problems in the school of hard-knocks, through trial and error. Only through personal ex- perience can we learn to conform to the standards of conduct which living demands." Nvv.“ -v~.~ '\/\/\ MEXICAN SALAD ‘a’. cup salad oil 1 clove garlic 1 cup diced bread 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon chill powder 2 tablespoons vinegar ‘é cup diced celery l pimento, diced ‘A cup finely chopped onion V. cup finely chopped carrot 1 cup diced cooked potato 2 tablespoons minced green pepper. 1 cup cooked string beans Salad greens l-leat 1 talespoon til. add garlic and bread and cook until light brown. Remove garlic, add remain- ing oil and seasonings. Add vege- tables and toss. Serve in large salad bowl with salad greens. Yield: 6 servings. Better English l D. C. Williams 1. Wlhat is wrong with this san- tence? "There isn't but one apple in the box." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "entree"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Proof. proove, groove. 4. What does the word “volatile” mean? 5. What with um that means being agreeable”? ANIWIIB i. lay. ‘There is but one apple or "rhea-e is only one amle." 2. Pronounce an-tra, first a as in oh, second l. as in tray, accent first syl- lable. 3. Prove. 4. HUM-hearted; airy; hence, fickle. "Love without esteem is volatile." ohnson. 5. Amenity. is a word beginning "quality of butstdtulingly Qqgd / home must have arisen within her,‘ Cook ’s Corner 2 __ Z49 ‘l flaw Ellen ‘s Diary gygglsllllIllllflwlh We at. Aldorlea have onioyld to- day unlur perhaps grand-dllllhifl‘ 1n the house across the lane, of ad of ua, confined indoors found the hours rather tedious in pass- ing. But for the rest of us, even though thick mists of rain st tilnos swept into our valley and a wind, which held an edge of Winter in its teeth blustered through the bare lawn trees, yet the day passed with ‘iir usual swiftness. I suppose that ‘f this had been a fine day, the plowing would have been continued, and probably by dusk "that there first field" would now have been a sea of furrows. Bufl then I'm sure Jock should have had no time at all to invite me to come with him on a tour of inspection along the feed-way in the piggery, when I had chanced to come to the door there with a pitcher of sour milk to contribute to small or older ones rations. snug and warmly bedded the pens were then, and I think that to a farmer's wife not even a. full blown and fragrant yellow rose ' is more bewiwhing than a huddled group of sleeping piglets or a row oi them, as those of ours were then, standing shouldelr w shoul- der along their feeding trough a- waiting their fresh meal, that was their breakfast. O O Alert, roughish lads and lassies of piggles, already developing into a more mature class. "An unlucky number" I said, counting, after a queer habit of mine, which has perhaps lingered with me since school-room days. "Yes" Jock said ‘I guess we shouldn't have sold any of the litter. We sold three- then added one firom another lit- ter to them. I suppose you can find him?" It is "passing strange" tc me, this ability of our farmers to be able to sort out members of different families of piglets at a glance. I fancy if one of the num- ber were to be set down ‘Without his knowledge before him on‘ a strange highway, Jock -or James would have no difficulty in identi- fying it right away. But I confess to a bewilderment. I scanned the .219 of them -came back to repeat it. There was no difference - at least none that I could recognize A11 were as alike as peas in a pod. "There" Jock pointed to one, up to his eyes now in the food, "didn't you notice? Oh it's no trouble at all to pick him out. Look at his smaller and pointed earsl" O O O And I suspect if it had not been raining this morning there doubt- less would have been no time fol- the men to attend to a recent‘ en- grossing interest_ a hope of Jocks which finally was realized today. We were busy about our house- work, Jeanie to her Monday's wash - and I to the churning, which lat- -ter as I had pointed out to James m breakfast declining his assist-i ance at it "doesn't amount to much l anyway this time of year." And as I sat leisurely at my work, I listened to the Radio. It was some- thing about the wedding of the. (Contntlfid On Page a) i i l &Dooothy Dix. ‘Soyo- _- - Illness And_ Marriage Ailing lrl In Postponing Wedding - llltll lifter Full Recovery Iii " DEAR. M158 DIX: I am enzaged to a very fine and understand- ing bgy and we expected to be married very soon. but our plans have ~ suddenly gone awry. I knew that I was not in good health. but 1 did not know that I was seriously ill until my doctor told me the other day that I would have to be under treatment for at least two years, and that 1 must not think about marrying until I was entirely curcgL I have told my fiance how the matter stands and offered to release him from the engagement, but he refuses and ' 53y; he will wait for lne until the Judgment Day if he m; to before he gives me up. If we have to Wall; two years, I will be 2i and he will be 23. Shall I keep his ring as he wishes ma to do, or shovel I return . it and not let him lose two years o! his life just be. oouso of me? We love each other very much. nswnnman GIRL ANSWER: You are right to wait until you are thoroughly cured of whatever disease you have be. fore you marry, for youjo not-want to be a burden on you; husband, as you would be if you were tile victim of some chronic ailment. No wife wants to beJu-it a doctor's bill to her husband. IDEAL MARITAL AGE But you are foolish when you get melodramatic and want to break 91f your engagement because you have to put off your marriage for Lin; years, and you talk as if you will be so old and feeble by that time that you would hardly be able to totter up to the altar. You say he would be 23 and you all of 21 Dear, dearl I-low sad that you will have to wait until you are senile befnre you get married] Yet 23 for the man and 11 for the girl are. in 793ml’. the ideal ages fo. marriage and quite as young as any couple should marry. You will have s lot better chance of making your marriage a success if you wed at 23 and 21 than you would have if you carried out your original plan of marrying ln your teen-s. And why do you think that your sweetheart will lose the two best years of his life if he doesn't marry before he is old enough to vole? It isn't true. Statistics show that far more boy-and-girl marriages end in divorce than that of older people. and this is because boys and girls lack the discipline and the wisdom that come with maturity and hence are unable to make the adjustments that marriage requires. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: D0 you think that a boy of l8 is too old fol- a girl of 15, even if her mentality is higher than a girl of l5? Do you think it is right for my boy friend to spank me every time I dis- please him, even if he is my steady? It humiliates me terribly. but he doesn't care and does it even if we are st a party. He has told his boy friend that he thinks a girl should be tamed every once in a while. Please answer this as soon as possible. ' TRDUBLED ANSWER: You do well to sign yourself Troubled because that will be your middle name if you marry the young brute with whom you think yourself in love. How’ any girl, with even a thimbleful of brains, will permit a boy to beat her up in this day of women's rights, and pub- licly humiliate her before others, passes any comprehension. Haven‘! you a other or a father or anyone who will protect you against your- sell by t least calling in the police? ‘" DEAR. DOROTHY DIX: Do you know any women who would like to help me out in my housework? I have two kids, '1 and 3 years of age. I will gladly give her her meals, a place to live and her clothes. I want her to be an elderly woman with no family and also she must be my companion. I want someone who would appreciate ll pleasant home, but I do not pay any wages. B. S. A. \ ANSWER: I certainly do not know of any woman who will do housework and take care of children and be a companion without re- fill/in! an)’ salary for her labor. If you have tried to hire a servant in W158 days when mi Price of a good maid is above rubies, you must know that no such domestic angel now exists. Modern Etiauette; By ‘abort! Lee A-~A-A~ \.\:~'- wen“ "s? é MomingSmile ‘Kfiik? .,-.-. GOOD BUSINESS A recently demobbed soldier, who had establishcd- a shoe-repair shop in a town, was asked how he was getting on with his work. Q. _When giving the floor 111L11- ber ‘to an elevator operator. should one say "pleasemr, .- fflle please." A. Yes. Say, " A “Couldn't be better," was the 1- 19.5,» m- , “m, o -- are Small cheery reply. "We weeks behind cgurtesies that clgty llothing, but 1119141" mark the well-bred person. Y - ‘ Q. When carving meal for I l DIDN'T IT‘; dinner and one part is more choice than the other, to whcrn should it His wife began to laugh at him. M? Elven? "You silly," she said: "fancy, A. It should be divided as W611 being superstitious after all there ‘as possible i419 81195"- years! Why. do you remember the} Q- Bhvuid a ma" held 0n i° i first time we met? We walked girl's arm when walking elm W under a ladder, and you said you street with her’! were sure sclmcthlng horrible would | A. No. it is not necessonn unki ‘happen to you." of course he expects her to b"! . “Well?" said he. away and run. é_____ fNeedlecraftf IFOR THE HOM E/ “POCKBT EDITION” kVobd pretty panel apron di- tinod to steal tho kitchen scones with its bright binding trim . . big notch pockets. Make it-from only one yard of material! No. 2699 is cut in one size and requires 1 yard 35-inch. 80110100 for PATTERN. which include! complete sowing guide. Print your Nome.’ Addrou and Style Number plainly. 8c sure to rtatc size you wish. Include postal unit or none number in your ad- d when Pattern Department. Tho Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 3699 Name