MQ‘ so‘ PAGE TWO rim GUARDIAN, UHARUII"I‘E'I‘OWN _ oEFfEMBER 23, 1949 lfprereanepanuIaIalanunanenaIInaIaMnnunaIenanaIa-ena Woman's RealmrS >1 eannnanananuianaeanaeanule)! LADIES! l WATCH THIS! KENNEDTS OFFER YOU ' I Rack of Junior Coats Goingat................5.00 1 Rack 0f Dresses ‘ All Sizes and Shades Goingat 52-00 i lot Of Sweaters Pullovers and Cardigans out ow- Q>w~§,~ovg>oos§oo:9»w $1.00 -b~b 4W i -§<90 i499 KENNEDWS 166 Queen St. "Q perspiration STOPS Offending Odor effectively — gently Always creamy, smooth. Harmless to normal skin I5¢ 39¢ 59¢ DTAYS MOIST lN JAR t Lot Of Purses Goingat 51-93 Also:—A Complete Line ‘Of Misses and Women s Coats V€-TIL>O® ‘<99 '.i_>€l0_’i>@® @4915 to $3.95 i ' é/itdgmj/‘éldiWi '9- Ladies’ Wear tiext iioor to Bus Stop S~_ ;% l ¢>Q i ilk/QT (l 3C4}? a’ eo<@oo@oo-soo@>oo<@oo< Cook ’s Corner l o-Q-oo-easo-l‘ BAKED SALMON STUFFIN G WITH One pound can of Salmon mixed with 1/: cup cracker crumbs. one egg unbeaten. STUFFING 1 cup bread crumbs l4 teaspoon salt ‘A teaspoon pepper (cayenne) 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon onion juice 1 tasspoori capers or parsley. Mix seasonings with crumbs and add to melted butter. Moisten with milk or an egg. if a. more moist stuffing is desired. Put half Salmon mixture into greased pan, shaping like a. fresh fish. Pile stuffing on this (thicker in centre). Shape the other half of Salmon mixture and place on top of stuffing. Strip with bacon. Cook in moderate oven until browned. Garnish on hot platter, serve with tomato sauce. chopped aa-aaaaa-a-au-e-a-aauseaenseuu-a-‘t? ' " ' ". Z l. .. ___._.a ELLEIFS lllAllY k By An Island Farmer's Wife k mot-ee-t-oo-too-Iwoe-Q In spite of James’ apprehen- sions over the outcome of our baby sitting last evening. when , we had assumed the care of the small fellow in the house across the lane during his family's ab- sence attending the Aid Chicken Supper in the aged community hall down the river road, the interval , passed smoothly and without in- cident. The “heavenly peace“ con- tinued lo prevail, Jnterrupted, of course at odd times, when a door was opened softly upon us and our sterner half appeared there to whisper in amazement recalling the perplexity of some sessions we have had as granddaughters ‘ early keeper: "And he hasn't wak- cned yet‘. Isn't that remarkable! Perhaps the child's ill, Ellen, Have you looked at him lately — just to be sure that lic-‘s all right?" one And all the time, as a balmy darkness, unlit by either moon- light or star-shine enclosed our quiet surroundings, the wee lad slept, unaware of his mother's temporary desertion, and linking carth to heaven for us in his sleep. else if he was not talking with zlngels, why did we catch him smil- , ing in his dreams? He continues to ‘ thrive well. indeed beyond our l fondest expectations. Jeanie weigh- cd him today, very exact in her calculations as is her custom in all her undertakings, to find that his first month in this bewildering old world had given him a gain in weight of one ounce and three pounds, bringing him now to ten pounds and an extra ounce upon which to "come.an'd go." Perhaps on account of his kin- ship to a grandfather, who likes to own a reserve of old oats, of hay and straw, to carry us all securely into the untrodden days! Darkish hair which Jeanie be- lieves inclines to curl, adorns his head and the eyes which follow granddaughters face when she bends over his cot remain dark- ly blue. I O I At Alderlea this morning faces with blue eyes and brown, came in good time to attend to a pleas- ant chore in the yard. There the cream of the pens of fattening hogs was collected to the truck to be taken to market. What a pleasant occasion for the family this event, the first shipping of the season continues to be. Housewives at all able to drag anchors, forsake the more humdrum interests of indoors to lend at least a hearty and ob- viouly inspiring moral support, and there is bound to be an inci- dental errand of fetching or car- rying to do or an insistent "jump in here, Ellen and hold this door closed for us!" and scaling the pen- side "at the drop of a hat" we won- der what succeeding years will bring to the likes‘of..l'ames and me. Well exercised muscles keep us in trim to render always such as- flContinued Fl Rage 3) SIIUBKEII Oilifll and Personal/Pas E55 ' DOROTHY DIX SAYS- - Stay-At-llome Wife Woman Refuses To Meet Husband's Friends DEAR. MISS DIX: I am a man of 33 and have been married ten years. Only knew my wife three months before we married. She has the sweetest and most jovial disposition I ever saw, never frets or worries about anything. But: she is perfectly satisfied to stay at home and never go anywhere and to have no companionship except her mother's and sister's. She will not even attempt to make new friends or even return calls. It would be greatly to my ad- vantage for her to make social contacts, but; she re- fuses to do so, and when I want to entertain my friends I always have to take them to a restaurant. She is never willing for me to bring them to our home. If I want to go to see my friends or even to a show I have to go alone. Do you think that. it is good for a young couple to llve just to themselves, with no out- , side interests or friends? One other thing. I have never been able to carry on an intelligent conversation with my wife. X. ANSWER: Well, Mr. X., if you are married to a woman with whom you cannot carry on an intelligent conversation, you must admit that the fault is yours. Even if you knew your wife for only three months before you married her, that certainly should have given you ample time to get a line on her intellectual range fllid find out ap- proximately, at least, how much brains and culture she had. LIKE MANY OTHERS Evidently you did not think it worth while to try to find out what was inside the head whose pretty outside you were admiring. In that you arc like thousands of other men who are so enamcured of a girl's looks or so swept off their feet by her physical appeal that they never stop to consider whether she will make an entertaining life companion or not. Of course, your wife's mental limitations explains why she does not want to meet strangers or go out into society. She feels her in- feriority and it humtliates her. Also, she is doubless self-indulgent and lazy and doesn't want to make the effort required in trying to enter- tain people. Better faixfor a couple to step out too much than not to step out at all. They keep alive, with their interests always fresh and alert. They have been to places and done things and they have amusing in- cidents to discuss and things to laugh over and are not the Gloomy Guses whose world is bounded by their homes inhabited only by their own families and whose most thrilling news is that Aunt Sara's rheumatism is worse. DEAR. MISS DIX: I am a bride of 23 and I want to be the right kind of a wife. I want. to be unselfish and big and kind in dealing with my husband, but I do not want to make the mistake of ovcr- doing unselfishness, Do you not think that if a woman always puts her husband and children before herself, they will consider her last, also? My husband is big and he admires bigness and fineness in other people, but if I put myself last, will he after a while slop considering me, or will be think more of me? SEEKING. ANSWER: Of course, any virtue can be overdone until it becomes a vice. Nothing easier. If a woman makes a doormat of herself for her Continued on page 9 ssoo-Qxo-Qwo-Qwomow | -- s.» .-~-.-.-,-.»ot->---:--l-- t Q M0 d9 l‘ fl l Household i lgEtiquette l Scrapbook _ By Roberta Lee l§>eo-fizcosawoo@cosé\sc-sn By Roberta Lee 6 Q. Should a. woman refer to her] husband as “Mr. Jones" when talk- ing with an acquaintance? A- It would be better to say “my, When washing bottles that have husballdd’ We" when talk-ll‘! Wll/ll contained sour milk, use some bak- a stranaer- “Mr- Jones" wt be w, mg soda in the bottle. Pour hot served for the servants and em- “am over the soda and shake well. Dlvyees- | Then rinse ln cold water, and the Q. How much tip should be elven bottle will fairly shine. to a check girl in a night club? l A. Twenty-five cents is the usual minimum. Q. What is the correct way to Sour Milk Silverware . Flat silver can be quickly clean- acknowledge an invitation to a ed. and Without- Mly harm dfllle l0 christening? . it. by covering with sour milk and A, Either by 1cm; o;- gele. boiling for three minutes. This is phone, a very effective method. Identify Shekel Washing the pantry shelves with a. hot solution of alum water occas- ionally will drive away all roaches and insects. hions/Literoture ' 11.45 Body Of Yours Jamel W. Berton. I. D. causes’ or mzzmase (vans-mo) Our first thought in a cud of vertigo (dizziness) la that it is caused by a disturbance of the ear or the liver. If objects go mund and round we blame it on the ear; if they do up and down we blame it on the liver. That this is true is often dis- Wvflfld by treatment of these two organs with the disappearance of dizziness for the time being. Some clear-cut information re- garding‘ dizziness is given in "An- nals of Ear. Nose and Throat" by Dr. A. C, I-‘urstenberg, Ann Arbor, Michigan. who states that vertigo may be caused by some septic (poison) disorder in the body and also after having been given the germ-killing drug streptomycin foi- months. The dizziness following use of streptomycin caused the patient to feel that when he turned over in bed he felt that he was con- tinulng to turn. Vertigo may be one o: the symp- toms of a nervous depression, the dizziness passing away when a quleting drug such as dilantln (a barbital drug) is used. Dizziness is sometimes e symptom of high blood pressure, in fact many individuals believe that high blood pressure is the cause of most cases of vertigo. Dr. Furstenberg states that high blood pressure is occasion- ally the cause. In case; where high blood pressure is the cause. surgery "substantially" reduces the blood pressure. Vetrtlgo may be caused by dis- tuilbances or disease of the central nervous system, the brain, but dis- turbance or disease in the brain is usually associated with other symptoms of brain disease, vertigo being but one symptom thereof. Thus brain tumor is one cause of vertigo. In some cases vertigo is the re- sult of a disturbance in the acous- tic (hearing) nerve as in Meniere‘: disease in which the vertigo is ac- companied by loss of hearing. nau- sea. and vomiting. Dr. Furstenberg states that if a. patient has a vio- lent paroxysmal attack of vertlg0— BurraR-Nurfllzlaao ----~-unsar ___,,. \ .10 APPIIIIIIG HIM-S PACKED Vlllll IIIIRIIIOII {nerqy-rich BllllElHllll Bflfl _ one that is disabling-it is probably due to disease of the hearing nerve and not to brain tumor or other diseases of the brain. This is an important point for sufferers with dizziness. If an attack of dizziness ccmes on suddenly (with a bang) it is more likely to be caused by a dis- turbance of the hearing nerve, in which cutting down on table salt and salt foods brings relief rather than a tumor oi- brain disease re- quiring operation. "Di l4’ Morning Smile The prim old lady was given the first glass of beer she ever had. After sipping it for a moment she looked up with a puzzled air. “How odd!" she murmured. "it tastes just like the medicine my atacxueaog Don't squeeze blackheede-dleaalve them. two ouneee of peroxine powder from any drug store and apply gently with wet, hoe elaI-h over blackheads. They dissolve and lleevpea by this aafe simple method. ‘ has been taking for the last. twenty years." Policeman: "Why didn't. you give this lady driver her half of the road." Motorist: “I was going to as soon as I found out which half she wanted." e y, .\\iliil l / _ cgow cenIcleen the irside of - aco - A. Soak a piece of cotton in J How Lifebuoy’: exclusive Ingredient gives you long-lasting protection No other soap like Lifebuoy. Its mild, gentle lather contains an exclusive purifying ingredient that gives you the long-lasting, ell-over protec- tion careful people demand. Yes, Lifebuoy soap is the only soap especially made to stop "B.O." Lifebuoy in the bath will keep you safe from offending . . . leave you feeling extra clean, extra fresh. Get Lifebuoy today . . . in the handler new BATH slzs. FROM NEW SIZE Otvee yea mere bathe-exile protection szunere eeepferitierneneyt l-IEAO TO TOE a . . Lll-‘EBUOY STOPS "B. O." Lifebuoy for met" "now couto llliave been so carelsssl From now on it's BY THAT WHISPER! BATH LIFEBUOY I kerosene and place inside the clock. at the bottom of the case. Leave it. for a few days, then remove it. It’ will remove much of the accumul- ated dust. Q. How can I easily sew mater- ial that must be held tightly? A. Cover a brick with a. thick padding, and use this to pin the goods that must be held tightly while the work is in progress. Q. How can I preserve the pol- ish on a varnished floor? A. By sprinkling coarse salt on the floor. allowing it to remain for about five minutes. and then sweeping of’! with a soft bloom. “The Stars Say-- l; Genevieve Iemble For Saturday, September 24 0 ALTHOUGH the forces. faculties and drives are under highly stimu- lated tension for constructive per- formance, at the force or drastic action could defeat promising prospects of major sig- nificance. A peevish. irritable or temperamental state of feelings and emotions could result in wrang- ling, disagreement and other fatal crises. The judgment ls not depend- able and emotional urges could cre- ate ill will or treachery. Keep‘ with- in lines of reason and accept offers on a basis of sound principle and integrity. II It Ia Your Birthday Better English D. O. Wllianal l. What is wrong with this acn- tense? "We are sure that he is the one who done it." 1 What is the correct pronunc- iation of "sagactous"? 3. which one of these words ts misspelled? Cleopatra, Gasser. 01o- ero, Hannibal. 4. What does the word “propi- tious" mean? r 5. What is a word beginning with comm that. means "sorrow or compassion"? ANBWII-l 1. Bey, "We are sure that he ta the one who did it." 2. Pronounce se-ge-ehus. first a mutt-eased. sec- ond e as in lay, accent aecandayl- table. 3. Oeeaar. 4. levorebly dia- poeed; helpful. "The fatee are pro- pitious." 5. Commieeretion. Those whose birthday it is. may find themselves equipped for new lively and greedy stimulated ener- gies for putting over transactions or deals of more than passing sig- nificance. yet any show of fordng issues. resorting to sharp practice or any form of trioklness, subtlety o intrigue, could have not only dis- eeeble but ruinous climax to cherished plans. 'I'i1e mentality is not wholly clear or dependable and the feelingsend emotions could in- cite to regrettable activities. In all commitments or contacts, adhere to high purpose and sound principles. A child born on this day. white forceful, energetic _end ambitious may be lead astray from high pur- pose by treacherous inner urges. sacrifice... it! l /\.’.i/lt‘l"i [USSUM \o*‘<X-X\/.-*®’ ‘I same time any ~ ‘HM-SI FLOUR Coats for Fall . . . man-tailored in woolens famous for beauty. quality‘ and wear. Individually created to your measurements. - $4659