mug] g Mothers Know That Genuine llastoria uSBi . For liver; Thirty Years Slillllll en! corneas". newscast orrv. . fl-llfiflkqint-fii‘ - luau.» 1, m“, c-w l i l l i l I O An Infinite Variety of Uses \\ SAVE money and get the best results by using Alsbastine for Plain white work. Tinting. Priming under paint. Renovating cotton signs, movie screens, etc. Window back-grounds and scenic efiects. CHURCITS The Alabastiue Co. Paris. Ontario. Stencilling. Q 1' ". pa me efiecta 5-"). Package ' 5c. ‘ Zlj-lb. Pack- age 40c. COL _-__---—-_ D 1m: Ontv root WATER. NIIDED 1'0 APPLY Paris, Limited 3 i l l Winniiw". 7-1 nltolsa- E. R. BROW hi6 Richmond Street Charlottetown Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Good Stong Stock Companies. i O l | I l l l $ 9 i i i § l I E i ‘(fill PAY IT TODAY MR. READER:- If you promised to help a candidate win one of the big prizes, “make good” on your promise now. Clip out the coupon below, fill ibkin and send it direct to the Guardia or to your candidate. The most votes are given now. Get your subscription in by next Saturday night. HELP YOUR FAVORITE WIN THE STUDEBAKER Date Campaign Dept. The Guadian Find enclosed S .............. .. in payment of my aub- scrlptien toffhe Guardian for one year. Credit ..... .... votes in the great eentea‘ to (Name of your favorite candidate) le subscription new or renewal! .-_-._-._ i‘ (Name of Subscriber l Atldreee _ A renewal or old subscription for one year earns 12000 votes. . A new euhen-Iptlm earne 2200) votes if _ l: efore Ooh-Nth. DO lT NOV!“ HILP YOUI OANDIDATI paid v a 1"ru. y..l. c (Continued from Pugh 9) ounce every 8 days. The water should ibe reduced by one-half ounce every two weeks. At 6 mouths the average child requires 24 ounces of mllk daily. wblchlbould be diluted with 12 ounces of water. To this should be even tablespoonfuls of sugar. This should be given in live feedings. The amount of milk should be in- creased by, one-lhalf ounce every week. The milk-should be increased only ll’ the child is hungry and eating his food well. it should not he increased unless he is hungry, nor if he ls, suffering from indiges- tion. even though he seems hun- ry. A1,!) months the average child re quires 30 ounces o f-milk daily. which should he diluted with 10 ounces of wafer. To this should be added 2 even tablespoonfuls of sug- ar and 2 ounces of llmewatei‘. This should he given in five feedings. Al 3 months. sometimes earlier, a weak barley water may be used in the place of plain water; it is made of onehalf level tablespoon» ful of barley fiour to l6 ounces of wafer and cooked for 20 minutes. .\i 6 months the barley iiour may be increased lo 1% even tabl spoon- fuls cooked in the 12 ou ces of water. Al. 9 months the barley flour may] be increased to 3 level tablespoon-d fuls cooked in 8 ounces of water. EQUIPMENT Select granite ware utensils of good quality and use them only for preparing the baby's milk. T-hey musl always be kept scrupulously clean and scalded each time before using. The following uieusllsnre needed»- 1. Nursing bottles (l2) to hold, eight ounces. Large necked bottles are more easily cleaned. 2. Nipples (l2) Select nipples that can easily he lurned inside out for cleaning. 3. Absorbent cotton, one pound‘ roll. - 4. Bottle-brush. 5. Bottle rack ‘or container. ilay be home-made out of any small pail with wires fitted to separate the bottles. 6. Tho-quart pitcher (for mixing.) 7, Measuring glass. holding at least eight ounces. graduated in one-half ounces. I 8. Measuring spoons (fable, tea and half-tea sizes.) ll. Mixing spoons (table and tea w; \. _ l0. Dflllllli-l holler. holding one 3a "Ppun, to boil wafer or iii-trill mllk. , l2. rial-bottomed soup kettle. fit- ‘ v Hi false bottom, for steriliz- ing utensils. ‘ ‘um, auras ‘ a. n. usury -_-e- years agopand so whenever l feel a little run down I take a couple me on my fest again." declared Freeman Peters, valued employs; of the Canadian NationalRallwsy. shediao. N. B. . "l had stomach trouble quite a while and it~.got so bod mygeloep was all" broken up and l began to feel the effects in my WOPKrI would get up ‘after s. restless night will» out any appetite for breakfast, and absolutely hated to drag myself oi! to work. Whenever l would eat any- thing I had terrible pains in my stomach, and n smothering feeling in mychest I used to have head- ache for a day or two at a time, and pains in my back nearly drove me wild. “Statements in the papers started me faking Tanlac the first time, and three bottles ended all my troubles. My ' mach ls sound. I can eat just about anything on the table and sleep like a top st night. Tuulac ls my stand-by now, and I flm more than glad to recommend it." Tuning ls sold by all good drug- glslll. cover of the box. This ice box should be kept covered and in a shady, cool place. The water from melted ice should be poured off and the ice renewed at least once each day . GIHVING THE BOTTLE A‘! feeding time take the bottle of modified mllk from the ice box, remove the cotton stopper and. put on a clean nipple. The hands that’ put on the nipple should be freshly washed and clean and only the rim oi‘ the nipple should he touched. Warm the bottle .iu a pan of hot water and test the temperature by letting a tea’ drops fall on the wrist, where it should feel pleas- antly warm. but not hot. The hole in the nipple should allow the milk l0 drop rapidly but not to flow in a stream. If the hole is too ‘small. enlarge it with a heated needle. The nipples -to ‘be used each day should be boiled for five minutes land then kept covered in the small glass jar. After u feeding the nipple should be rinsed inside and out in cold water and put away until ster- ilized the following day. Use a fresh nipple for each feeding. A baby should be held while tak- ‘ing the bottle. or lie on his side in lthe crib while the bottle is held in ,place for him. A smut-upright posi- 13_ Swan Eh,“ j-M- M“, cuverftion is best if there is disturbance PREPARATION OF FOOD Bottles. ixipples. mixing pitcher, can be spoiled by dirty handling. The hands should be carefully washed. the utensils reuioved from the sterilizer and placed 0n a clean towel. Measure the sugar in a mea- suring spoon and dissolve it in hot water in the measuring glass. Mea- sure the boiled water or isereal wat- er in, the measuring glass. Empty the sugar and water into the mix- ing pitcher. dlensure the mllk in the measuring glass. Add it to the water ln the mixing pitcher. Stir it with the mixing spoon. Fill the bot- ties with. the desired amount for each feeding, measuring it only in the measuring glass. and cork each _ bottle with a small plug of absorb- ent cotton. Place the bottles of mllk in u cov- ered pot containing enough tepid water to cover the bottles to the neck. Allow this to stand on the top oi the stove until the water be- gins to simmer. Then remove the pot from the stove to s table and lei it stand for 20 minutes covered. Cool the bottles of mllk by placing , Lheirvfirsl in water at room temper- ature and afterwards add cold wat- er. When quite cold place the bot- tles in the icebox. A HOMEMADE ICE BOX This is easily made as follows: Gel from your grocer a deep box about l8 incnes square and put 3 inches of sawdust in the bottom. . Place two pails in this box, one a smaller pail. inside the other. and fill the splice between the outer pull and the box with sawdust. The nursing bottles filled with mllk are placed -in the inner pail. This pail is then filled with cracked ice. which surrounds the bottles. The inner pail should have n tin cover. Null several thicknesses of news- paper on the under surface of the ongl of ' lubricating liquid 1 dueed in the bowel the f waste soft moving. , n prescri Nujol beanie it acts this natural l thus replsees t. ifrom gas. Twenty minutes is thel llongesv. ‘time and ten minutes the ‘shortest time that should be allow- led for taking a bottle. i After feeding. the infant should for this purpose. RULES FOR NURSING During the first month the aver- age healthy baby nurses every three hours by day and once at night. By the end of the first month it is usual to omit the night feed- llng. During the second and third months the three hpur interval is kept during the day. From the be- ginning of the fourth mon-th most babies do best with five nursings at intervals of 4 hours during the day. This system of feeding is shown by the following schedule: Month of Age. First, Time of Nursing-6 a. m.. 9 a. m., Noon, 3, 6 and 9 p. m. Once during night. Second and Third, Time of Nurs- ing-—6 a. m.. 9 a. m., Noon. 3. 6 and 9 p. m. Fourth to Ninth, Time of Nursing —6 a. m.. 10 a. m., 2 p. m., 6 p. m. 10 p. m. It is very important to nurse art regular hours. Feed the baby by the clock and you can set the clock by the baby. Good habits are formed just as readily as bad ones and punctual nursing is an excellent wuy to develop good health habits in a baby. lf baby is fed every time he cries, his digestion soon will be upset. lf he cries between feedings, give him plain. cooled, boiled water. Babies are as likely to cry from over-ileedlng as from hunger. ll‘ a child does not take all the feeding, whui is left should be thrown away; never warmed over again for a later Yeeding. The child should be given from one to three tsblsspoonfnls of strained orange or tomato juice once a day after be is seven or eight months old unless he has diarrhoea. If neither orange nor tomato juice is available, Add 6 drops of pure cod liver oil in each of two feedings a day. After he is ulna months old. be may be given squeezed beef juice. beef tea or plain mutton or chicken broth. once a day. When he is ten months old. he may have part of a sol-t ‘egg. a small piece of crisp toastmr a crust of breed to chew, immediately after his feeding. Otbefiselld foods should not be glvefi during the first year. At l2 mouths. he may take his milk un- diluted and strained cereal may be given twice a day. HEALTH snuexnou asmzs Copies of the following leafleti may be obtained free upon applic- ation to any Red Cross Provincial Divislonz-J The Community Health Centre. The Public Health Nurse. Care Before Birth. Breast Feeding. " Bottle Feedllll. Weaning the Baby. i Fegdlng Ba ond ear ' camel-u. "no and ma" ‘ '~ ~V -‘ E.- ‘fq ;,.l\ _v'( "Tanlac fixed ms up fine three. of bottles. and it never falls to put ‘gm bios During the See-J .. ,_ %'ndy_‘oflu%:_ ‘figllifltlrillt! ._ (Continued. from Page ll) ~ hi8"! ta speaks, French, 0e isuqgt the lee of eight be began Ne musical education at All Solute (Xthedrsl lln Albany’ where for gjre he was boy soprano soloist. e. studied musical interpretation s and publi ' speaker and an and liai- muslcal‘ couser- tories in the country. in L917 Mr. Haser wee radiated from the New York teteiColiege for Teachers and la- ter taught iFrencb and public. speakiing at Batavle. N. Y., and, Allbany, N. Y. l-llgb Schools. While with the A. E. I" he directed and book the leadllw Dirt in . the doughboy production, “Isle of As You Were," which was produced in many pieces fin France. ling of temperamental artists many of whombecome more tem- peramental in the fact. of the un; ususil experience of singing or playing to an unseen and appar- ently unresponsive audience. He must be familiar with music ann stand] between the‘ listener and the very mediocre performer whose work if coarse or poorly ex- ecuted would tormenf, the dlscrln» lusting critic. The studio manager and announcer must know the pre- por pionouncistlon for musical numbers and composers for among the Illsteners are thousands wno know Spanish or ‘French or Ger~ man and their sans must not be oilfended. \ Broadcasting stations operate on fixed schedule, the listener-in must nut be kept waiting. Occas- sionally there are dlsnppolnb meats, an artist is late or fails to appear‘; perhaps one member of a quartet is absent and the other- three cannot go on. Mr. Huger has on many occasions llil’led in with solo or with a quartet num-ber and always with credit to himself and the station. What is believed to have been s record distance for daylight radio broadcasting at this time Ofyear was made by WGY. the General lllectnlc Company, broadcasting station, in reporting the World Series busebaill games. Radio ‘fans in Havana, Cuba, 1500 miles from Schenectady reported distinct re- cepillen of the game of Thursday. October 4. _ The series was reported. play hy.pll1_\'. by W. 0. -MeGeehan. sporting editor of the New York Herald. A leased wire carried the . Heistruneo both as ‘ the opera at one‘ of the bear. f The manager-o! a broadcasting studio must be tactful in the haud- . _ levueveeeueleeeeslelelleeeeereeeeoweesesensuus- ‘Bu; a flevourwieu i . .... ..;;.l.......-s l . . rely) please your ' m only mun in theJworld who is still |worklug daily at his trade at such an advanced age. He is hale and ‘hearty. with faculties - unimpaired, S and takes a keen interest in life. ' He was assoc-axed wltbE lias Howe » v in the invention of the sewing "machine and was himself inventor ' ’ i‘ of the first machine used for har- ness sewing. l-le 1s a master 881d- dler. BABV BMOTHERED BV MILK BOTTLE VANCOUVER Oct. 27.—Churles "Dad" Quick celebrated his 102ml anniversary of an active and useful life. Salturday, 0y engaging in some extra ‘hard work-his recipe for s long llfe- . WINDSOR. Out. Oct. 25. -- In addition to his regular daily smothered by a milk home in m; leek v1 saddle nwklns. he wok a crib, Nelson, the ms months old whirl at plumbing, repairing a re- factory faucet. lgeem o; Charles Quick probably is the lygsuyrday by the mother. Dr. = E story of the game from the press box in the Polo Grounds to the transmitting apparatus of WGYI in Bcheuec dv 150 miles HWBYI and from GY the story traveled? on Hertlzian waves to hstenerfl within hundreds of miles. Msnifl letters and telesrainswvere re- -celved from ‘baseball-radio fans_ Expressing their appreciation forf lwere able to follow e-very play and‘ [actually vlsualze the game with- "Qupuflgg expense and discomfort: nmensurln ruduule 11d s lO0IlS'he False-i] "ii-Fem"? ‘l9 the "ml-harm! M "Evening lshotlld begyvagsihed in ha: water: andlshuulder and Pflfleil ""9"" ilmesl ' The “Mowing cablegmm w“ m: Fneriuleu five minutes by bollinglml the Nwk with the flat 01' the‘ tin water before using. lt is very im- hand i0 bring 11D 8B8 01' all" Swill-i iporlttnl to do this. for clean miutllvwed Willi the 10ml- Svme babies; -need to be taken up during feeding ceived from Havana: . ‘MAVANA urn may wblishd story which is part DW-“lleiami _,.,-| a from pnge story whnch in part! lstaites: "The broadcasting of the} I ‘vni-irf-lersld and wov. has ma“ Isl-great bit in Culra. lt was heard ‘distinctly througllvll! ti"! Felmwm according to reports received by Havana Life. Our msnaslns em‘ wr, Fred M. do‘ Stefano, heard the report from the recelvill! stallion of Cecil J. Dale at Marianne near the Oriental Park race track. Ra- dio fnns here throilflh "Walla u“ thunk The Herald for its BT98! service rendered. F. ~W. B0110“- president of the Electrical Equip ment Company of Cuba. 1881""! radio fan. PM‘! B Feat ‘wmpumegl on the clearness with khlch i 9 report was received here.’ - t ghI-ee weeks extraor- difigrghirttzmlssfon rectuwtgv ha: been malts by station M . General Electric Co. broadcas n8 station at Schenectady. Two W981- ern correspondents. ‘E. J. (Ionkelli- men. of Enterprise. QIBEW- ""1 h- M. Baclgslulll. M Hiilvfld- WW‘ mnton. reported "°°°°°'“‘ “°°°l" tion of the WGY concert of i881?‘ tember 26 and in both cases their reports checked up accurately Wm! wicv station 1oz. niuyflrd is 1% miles northeast of SPOKRYW- M“, 2 200 miles from Schenectady. The distance has ‘been battered by WGiY but never-during the earl! nu Mr. ‘Bsclgaltilll repel-Mural ‘hhTQOBDtlOD was made on decgec: or alone with a Grebe 01-9 an n nmpllflltfllllln. His time of recep- tion was 6.15 to 6.30 P-m- 75cm‘: time. .01; September 29 Private G. G. Westfall,oPB1'fl-¢°l' i"- Fil" Rim‘ dul-pb. Canal Zone, Panama. 2.253 miles from Schenectady. T9170?” um be had on that em beard wmr in fsplte of a powerful m get. which operates twenty mile! away at the Bellroailiflllml- ‘Ml’- Weetfall is operator u! the U. S. “my station and his i '-‘l 1* WNCI- able because of Viv Ilsa "f r-‘ltlf which prevails in the WHPiWF l-‘Hm’ ate of the isthmus of Panama. .tsfl" another unusual reception is reported by J. C. Grinddll. RIBB- ager nruls Rectifier Department vi the Valley lElOClflC company. 8t- Lpuis, Mo. Mr. Grlndell reports that ‘he vheard WKW’! P"°3",."‘ TH’ day evening. "Senilflibflf 99-, °" i‘ home-made cfyll-li I91 "mmn "l" pllllcatlon. nu erlsl. he explain- ed, is one wire ti feet ion; 0nd 39 feet high. s1. Louis ls avrrvli- mately 875 miles from ‘Schenect- ady. "Yum. program was very dis- tinet,” he wrote. "and ll "l film‘ flly very much eurprlaedxto hear a- atstlon your distance; Quch a simple eflair. Canefidv‘ Te node. V‘ "Do you know wit! ‘W! "Ill "l" world series £81119 b?’ Th” New. This reception l! V's‘ ‘ ~" "~‘"""k'_ away with - rtoua) the prompt baseball service. The)’; S taining ‘all the most desirab pastry flour. ' fieally’ supplemented by the strength latter, in iust the right proportion baby boy of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer, Riverside, was found oeudioccsslonally he glided lntodanger. AVES shortening and. produces bread, pies, and pastry like mother used to make. that is ideal for all baking purposes.‘ r Blackley 88W it‘ ’ as his opinion.‘- tbat the child bad "been smothered ‘- because it was unable tow-enmvaf the mllk bottle from its mouth. ‘ GLIDER FRJIE WON "' sv FitE-NCl-l rim. = --—+- . _ ‘NEW RAY‘ zilflislanrl. Qoi, g7 —The Frenc flying without a . was awa-rded the wrsflzyggs r and in his Peyret ‘ "mqnoplsne, m, showed extraordinary sbimy h, spite ol.’ very changing windy ous eddies. but ‘always recovered. cake ‘_.-» i-N- .. BEAVER FLOUR is a great saver! Wlfen it is used the waste of unappetizing bakings is eliminated. It saves ‘shortening because it is a blended flour con- _ le qualities of the finest ‘I BEAVER FLOUR is made from the finest of Ontario Winter Wheat combined with Western HardiWheat. The richness and goodness of the former is scienti- and body of the to give a flo Don't imagine um BEAVER FLOUR s n} u... it is still unrivalled. and delicate. flaky, crispy crusts. your green. , "n... ‘r. H. TAYLOR UNITED l ONTAEIO a ' ‘s umber worm" w-lituvafl eta a i "blisse tried, new brand. For 50 Years this Flour has been the “‘ old reliable,” used in thousands of Canadian- households-and the standard of pe rfection set" by Try BEAVER FLOUR in your next has... and obtain bread with that appet-izing, delicious, nutlike taste-pies, cakes and pastry of light, even texture em VER rsoua n sold‘ oy- Co, . . "film? Meniscus, won the competition‘. for. Gliders‘ ‘ "time I l-ls was in the sir for 81 ‘minutes’