.Woman’s Rea mfS Mllnnnnu:Munich»KllhlnlncpqpqxlaMic-binIlbc-cnunpqupdnnyqpqrclibiknbdblm P p.11 wiioii wiiiii n tutti? page. Ve/n/iea/Ge/m.’ veuaousi 628?.’ now-men.’ You'll love whole wheat the ALL-WHEAT way. Spoon into Nature's choice grain— magically transformed into crunchy flakes. Quick to serve -eas_v to digest. Every bite su plieswholewheatwithvalu- ablle wheat germ retained for good nutrition! You get vital whole-grain minerals-Janene- fitsi of hfiln. Try a bowlful to- morrow with milk, sugar and fruit. Delicious ALL-WHEATl Nutritious ALL-WHEAT! Great to eat anytime! Get a package today. ALL-WHEAT "is made KELLOGG-GOOD by Kellogg's of London, Ontario. Q dfi Household Scrapbook By Rubvrla Leo Al. Etiquette- ‘ By Roberta Lee .\ ll l x7. 0 n s r x . ./ a. *1 -‘< ._-.z\.®~£ ma» tear/whim; ' Q. what is the correct way to hold a coffee cup in the hated? A. The handle 0i the cup should be held by the thumb and first two fingers. the other two fingers being bent slightly towards the palm oi the hand. Q. Is it correct for a bride to re- move her engagement ring before the vxedding ceremony? A, Yes; she may either transfer it to her right hand or leave it al home. Q. When should the candles be lighted when used on the dinner table’? A. Immediately before dinner is announced. The Canary Sometzzr=s the canary will refuse ‘o take a bnili in its bird tub so try i ' '1" - a Littic clean sand iii .1‘. oi the tub. Often, the reason for thc bird's refusal to en- ".2: thc luli is its slippery bottom. Scorched Milk If the hcaied milk has a Slight scorched taste. remove it by puffing llie pan into cold water and addiir; a pinch of salt l0 the milk Biuini: Streak: soak the garment that is streak- ad from a strong hiuing solution in ulfOIig ammonia water. Better English LARGEST or ORKNEYS '_ a Wm“ The central and large-‘Il/ 351mm nf the Orkneys north of Scotland. 3s Pomona. 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? “Mary has many adml-"ble female traits." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of “villain”? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Acoustics, acerbity, ac- essability. 4. what does the word “impas- sloned" mean? _ s. What is a word bezmniflt; with gr that means "siateof de- serving serious consideration’? ANSWERS BY WORD OF DIOUTH sagas were a collection of Norse legends, transmitted verbally b8- ior: Norserxen began to write. Twenty-elght-year-oid Edward Ilnmack, secn with his dog, left |his Windsor, Ont., home on Thurs- lday and headed for Westminster hospital, London, Ont, for a scr- lies of critical operations that gov- ernment surgeons hope will re- store his health. An American from South Bend. Indiana, Lamack came to Canada to enlist three day: after the outbreak of war. Eighty-six time: he parachuted behind enemy lines in North Af- 'rica, as an escort for Allied agents. Wounded by shrapnel during Sic- ily campaign, Lamack has been suffering from temporary am- ‘nesia, dizzy spells. These are ali- linentl doctor: are hoping to cure. 1, say, “feminine traits." 2. Pro- nounce vii-in, both i's as in it. and not vii-yen. 3. Accessibility. 4. Moved to strong feeling; Bfdenl?’ "Hi: impassioned vcords brouihl tears to her 9Y5)‘ 5' Gravlly- Q0<§0bi iyi0ilkfg l Cook ’s Corner 3 no§>oo%oe§>oc@>oo%oof Pineapple Cocoanut Cupcakes 3 tablespoons butter, y: cup sugar, i egg, 1,4 teaspoon almond extract. 1 cup pastry flour. ‘A IM- spoor: salt. ili teaspoons baking powder, ll. cup crushed drained pineapple. l‘; cup cocoanut, 3 table- lpoon: milk. Cream the butter uid luga Mid the egg and extract. Sift the flour, measure, sift twice with the salt and baking powder. Add one- half to the egg mixture with the cocoarrut and thoroughly drained pineapple. Then add milk and re- maining flour. Fill small paper cups 2/3 full, mange on n. cookie sheet. and bake at 375 degrees F. for 15 to 18 minutes. Frost with white icing. Makes 2 dozen cup" cakes. How Can I H! ly Anne Alhloy ran Q. How can I restore butter which has taken on the flavor of something else in the refrigerator? Tihat‘ Botfyl l7 Of Yours ll .. By Jame: W. Bar-ton, M. D. 4 stoic THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PHYSICIAN T0 PATIENT ABOUT TO LEAVE HOSPITAL Now that practising physicians and research workers have been able to extend the normal life span from 49 years in 1900 to 66 years in 1949, it would be thought that their responsibilities to their patients had cc-nie to an end. It is true that treatment for elderly patients is now“ being given by a. new group. specialty geriatrics. geriatricians, just as in past years the special group locking after infants and children were and are known as pediatricians. ‘that responsibility of the physic- ian for iiie continued care cf a par- ient recovering from an illness or , operation is suggested by Dr. How- ard A. Rusk, Professor of Physical Medicine, New York University College of Medicine in the "Journal of the American Medical Associa- tion." After pointing out the excel- lent results obtained in rehabilita- ting returned men during and after World War I anti II, Dr. Rusk sug- gests that the work of continuing treatment iii civilian hospitals of patients almost, but not quite. ready to return to their former or new occupations should be the responsibility of the members of the staff of these hospitals. Same patients remain in the hospital months longer than necessary, and oihcr patients are discharged from thi- hospital still unfit to do gainful work. The first comprehensive, total rc- habiiilation program in any con- rriunity hospital ln the United States was started in i947 at Beiievue Hospital in New York. This service offers B. program of physical medi- cine-lieat, massage, baths, exer- cises - social service, corrective physical rehabilitation, corrective speech, vocational guidance. educa- tion and planned recreation. It is really a "service" department to all the other departments of the hospi- tal in much the same manner as the X-ray department. and labora- tory for examination of blood. urine, and specimens of the cells of various parts of the body. Regardless of the type nf disabil- ity (chronic illness, loss of a. llmbl. the responsibility of the physician cannot end when the acute injury is cared for. It ends only when the physician has taken the responsi- bility for seeing that his patient has becn referred to those agencies and institutions which are equipped to rehabilitate and retrain the MUCH! so that he can live and work with what he has left. w/wmmoeacmeea-o- i Morning Smile ?9€®~i¢0%¢0<i*90<i€0i A Washington barber had n. :ign on his window. “Icl On Parle Eancais." One day a. Frenchman called fpr a. shave. He addressed a few remarks to the barber in French, and the following conver- sation took place: Barber: “I can't understand what you are saying." Customer: "But you hrve the sign ‘Ici On Parie Friincais’ on your window!” "Well what does that mean?" “It means that Hench is spoken here.” "Oh, is that it? The fellow who painted it on my window told me it was Latin for ‘God Bies: Our Happy Hcmefl" in cold water in which a pinch of bicarbonate of soda ha: been dis- solved. The taste of the butter will then be as pleasing as ever. Q. How should woolen materials be pressed A. Press them on the wrong side. Use l. damp cloth between the iron and the material. The iron should be moderately hot and should be applied until the cloth l: quite dry. Q. How can I clean gold and silver jewelry A. Gold and silver articles can be cleaned very nicely by dipping wet cloth into cigar ashes and A. Soak the lmtter for two hours scouring. FRAGRANCI IS SEALED IN VACUUM THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ocial and Personal 65G Th0 Kill of Slain and ills Future Queen His majesty, Pumipol, King of Siam, who look over the throne af- ter his brother was found shot to death in Bangkok in 1946, is shown \viih his fiancee, Miss Sirikit Kitnakara, daughter of thc Siamncsc ani- bassador in London. Couple are at Lziusannc, Switzerland, ivherc he is studying law and Sirikit is attending boarding school. No date has been set for the wedding. l iF4l>i®%0®iO®€>®®i0®§0®€>@®%M€>0®i00fl|' i DOROTHY DIX SAYS- ,@>tio@-o@<e>co<>c Meddlesome Mother Trying To Dominate Grown Children Will Only Alienate Them DEAR MISS DIX: l.’ am a man of 28. My father has been out of work and I have gladly kept up the home because I feel that it is ml’ duty. But here is my trouble: My mother absolutely onslaves me and tries to take away from me every vestige of personal liberty. Why do mothers feel that it is their God-given right to boss their (‘hildrf-‘Il even to the extent of icliing them where tn go, what to do. what to eat, what to wear. whom lo associate with and when to blow their noses? Isn't there some way of making mothers mind their own business after their children are grown-up men and women and perfectly able to run their own affairs’? ROBERT ANSWER: I'm afraid not, Robert, because you sec mothers never find out that their children grow up and set to be intelligent men and women, capable of shaping their own lives, To mother her sons and daughters arc always toddling in- fants who have to be held by the hand and told ici eat iiicir spinach, arid not to sit up later than 8 o'clock. ‘WON'T GIVE l And because mother knew hcst when her children were 3 years old she continues to think she knows best for them as 1on1! as they live. That is \viiy she nicddles in all of their affairs and thrusts un- sought advice upon them rind tries to impose her own opinions and habits upon them. It never occurs to her that her children have any minds or personality of their own, or that their tastes and inclinations and talents may be different from hers. and that she can no more steer them along the course they must travel than a landsnian could furnish a chart to a pilot to cross the ocean. One of the wisest women I know :ays that her tongue i: two inches shorter than it used to be, because she has chewed off that much of it keeping from asking her children where they were going and when they were coming back and telling them not to say out too long. And what woman's children adore licr and go to her continually for advice becnuses he never tries lo make them do her way. Would that more women would imitate her example. DEAR MISS DIX: Before my marriage I was a luccessfui busineu woman with money to spend on myself, so I was well dressed and good-looking. I married a man I was much in love with rind we have. several children, all fine, mifi their father is devoted to them, but he has grown very careless of me. If I buy for myself n new dress or a pair of new shoes or a hat, he will say: "Now you could have done without that." and I buy as little as any woman can get along with. Have never had an allowance of any luxury since I have been mar- ried. I have done a man's work to keep my husband‘: business going when otherwise it would have failed, but now he is beginning to think himself a martyr in having me for a “rife while he is in daily contact with women who have the money to dross wt-il and look attractive. My husband's one fault is his gross selfishness. I don't doubt another woman could make my husband a model, but is it worth while for me to try to change him? C, B. ANSWER: After a wife spoils her husband, it is about as difficult a matter to unspoli him as it is to unscrumbie eggs. Also selfishness i: an incurable fault because no one ever recognizes it in himself. However, anything is worth trying one and your best plan is to stage a revolution. Begin it by going out and getting yourself some good clothes and having a session at the beauty parlor. This will prob- ably cause husband to throw a fit, but when he comes out of it and regain: consciousness, tell him that you consider that you are worth more to your family a: a Lady Love than you are as a domestic liave. and that henceforth you are going to demand a marriage that i: rim on a fifty-fifty bui: instead of on: u: which he got: d1 the pl- oontnn. I-fulbnnd: can in reformed, but it take: a woman with the nerve of : lion-tamer to do it. DEAR. MISS DIX: We are two girl: who are engaged to be mar- ried lhd we want our hmband: to change their name: to our: instead of changing our name: to their. Our reason for this i: that our name: are more widely known than those of our future husband: are. Would you udviu u: to do thin’! . . AND B. ANSWER: It depend: upon what the young men think of thi:. It i: up to them to decide the matter. Probably they are n: much attached to their name: a: you are to yours. In Japan it i: very common for a man who marries into n. more aristocratic family to take hi: wife’: name and I have often thought myself that when'the wife had a euphoniou: name and the man had Mi urly. often ridiculoul mm. it Wu: n pity for m: lake of future generation: for the girl’: name not to be perpetuated instead of the m:n':, ~— / _ - DOI-OTIIY. DIX cannot reply perlonllly m roman, but will ammo: problem: of general lnterclt through her column. Oi t. ilfJA ll». FLOUR ZOIQMOOZOOZOOQ ELIQEIPS DIARY By An bland Farmer’: Wife lt ltl September i: commencing to spill her brighter hue: on the maplel-or perhap: it i: only that these days, Autumn i: beginning to cast "lhadow: before". In any event, we found a change in them today——in those of Pat's, which keep marching for u: beyond the house on the hill While we are about our duties, and in the" neat squares. now our own woodlands. There was a time when this ex- panse was unbroken. Bordering rear fields, it st. tched its dis- tance to lie always in exquisite array. A mist o’ red in Spring, changing then before our eyes. while We went about our cleaning and bits of gardening, to’ the fresh greens of Summer, when we tended our round and the like of granddaughter and Jamie and Gage pattered barefoot through the pleasant days. But wearyirig all too soon. leaving these to don thc scarlet and crimson of Autumn. O . The stump-field, the remains of many a Winter wood chopping has stolen in through the years to divide the woodlands, to make for u; still changefui scenes but of grazing cattle and pasturing sheep liITild the brackcn and against the background of sky, it reaches up to caress. And often from there at the edge of a Summer evening, beribboned with roblns’ evensong, whefi night had com- menced to dim the fields, a lonely plaintive blent was borne to us in the twilight, when for the moment a lambkin that has strayed iwar concerned about the circumstance. and night lowering. O O O “'e recall now that on a last call before her retiring-and drawn by the prospect of an in- trlguing undertaking at this house granddaughter came out of the dusk this evening into the lamp- light with a breath of relief. Blue eyes were ashlne. and curls ntanglc nnd she slammed the door to close it tightly. "There!" she exclaimed "the dark’; all shut out now." "But the dark ls lovely," we fold her, hoping to teach her of its peace and calm and beauty "it has stars to wish upon and give us star- beams, and a moon. . . " "for a cow to ump over!" she chuckled. well acquainted with her nursery rhymes, "And for cows to lie in. baby ones too, unafraid and for birds to sleep in without fear" we explained. "I know" she nodded “but all the same, I don't like it. I'd rather the day!" She had brav- ed it however lo be present at a rite which at Alderlea, always has preceded the Aid Chicken Supper, an annual affair, which tomorrow's sunset will return. O O O O In spite of our protests to “run home now-your mother's calling!" an injunction which does not bring the results it Once did, grand- daughter had remained well with- in slght of the earlier gory oper- ation, when wiih a stub of an axe and on the chopping block with fair accuracy-though continued!- we had managed to sever the head from the body of the chicken which was later to tickle some/pal- ate pleasantly, as delectable fare. "Be careful you don't miss-anti lct him get clear of you!" she warned us in a James-like way. though more gleefully through the gloom. noon She has no fear of these sights. which may indicate that one day she will be an "Angel of Mercy" or perhaps she incline: to a lclen- tiflc bend because “Nowl" lhe breathed with excitement "do :how me the head!" And then later she joined us, patiently perched on a chair beside an elbow, to watch the drawing with obvious pleasure. And if we had some difficulty in explaining that little girls are not given gizzardr, vihen one was brought to light, they had heart: “just like that" to pulse like the engine in the pump-house and we suspected to give her a blened mixture of pleasure and pain in the years to come. Through star- shlne and darkness loft a: velvet. and client, we returned her in time, a pup at heel: to the house across the lane. O O O Between times, so busy she is now with her increased family cares, Jeanie wa: making pickle: today, the aroma of the spices which go into the work drifting to the yard to become part and par- cal of the scent: which make up Septunbrr’: gold. Karoiyn wa: “d0 in: up" a balkct of pucher, while with granddaughter We contented ournlf today with our fruit: In the raw, gathering them from n bouxh in the orchard and our waif: of plum tree: in the gar- den. Thl: latter! proved to be n /Fashion 5E ‘,1 C Dry-S Salon, >0 IYPEMBER 21, 194-, <_-— nnnnnnnnnnIlrmxplrultxwllnxllnnnrinnlrll“ "mom- ,~.,,.fl s/ Literature -IK LEANSING CREAMSl REO-UIARLY u“ $3.00 luy than lgmcu: Dorothy Omy (learning Cram: lwlnl ulo and IIVO kin Cleanser . . . denim Ind when drv skin to new lovclilml- Cold Cream . . . nnftcne your OMII plexion and keeps it glowing fresh. CMGDRE 8- M9LE0DL‘F; f+O&O-5-O0-§+§+%§40 § at hand. There are sigma of pleas- ant and perhaps festive contacts that may assume domestic, reman- tic or social relations. Home and property thrive and family accord increase. For the Birthday I Those whose birthday it is, may be called upon to aittack certain static. stubborn or congested con- ditions, in which it might be pro- fitable to confer with friends, rela- tives or elders in social, flnamhal or business standing. Cooperation might be a. factor for overcoming a difficult or harrowing circumstance in which family, home or romantic on a solid basis by mutual aloo- menl. might bring security :nd happy relations all around. A child born on this day wliil: sencl... siutnous aiiu perseveriiig. also has social and family trllll considerate of others. Thin ohouid assure a happy and fruitful life, with security and responsibility. BITES STINGS a _ _ 5¢RAT¢HF5 Ziiilmllli 5011f; as it hcals. Antiu-pticand medi- cated. 69c. Economy I122. 6 time: as much. $2.23. l! Quickly take tlil "lmart" out oi wasp ctingq. innecl bites. acntcher- ties are involved. The pleasant sta- tus of affairs may involve property. possessions as well as business un- derstandings. Placing the fortunes Needlecraft f FOR THE HOME .- SCHOOL TEAM DR. CHASPS Antiseptic OINTMENT Ensemble of three pieces - to send l little girl back to school in style! The jumper flares in circu- lar fullness and boasts its own but- ton up bolero-Jacket and neatly col- lared blouse. No. 301B 1.: cut ln nu: 2. 4. 6. 8 md i0. size B jumper. 1% yards 35- inch; Jacket. 1% yards 36-inch; blouse, 1% yards 35-inch. ' Send 25 cents for each Pattern which Jncludes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Address nnd Style Numbenplalnly. Be sure m atria size you want. Include postal unit. or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Department Thu Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 3078 Name Address C"? Province NOIIEIBN EXPLOIIR John Cabot discovered Hudson Strait in i498. SPECIAL BURDEN! From flatly times. white mules were reserved for the use of hon- ored persons. 3078 SIZES 1 - l0 continued operation, l in spite of our protutl, at the up- pearsnce of a round face at the doorway and an appeal: "Don't you think it‘: time now for more plumn? It’: been a long. long time since we had any!" -Night. now. ha: tucked luch small one: away in slumber-cut: and a clock chime: to remind the older folk: at Alder- iea to "fold up their tents" too and a: "silently lteli away." Until tomorrow — Diary-Good- night. . . . 77w Stars Say-- l: Genevieve l-bi: Ihrflntnihmloptunborfl mm: there may be l blocked or difficult stat: of main. mm and ltubbcm. the uituotim i: not too miou: for waii-nudied and perdatont eflbrtl. It may be that ulilllull return: may crown diligent t m . a"§f.'-$'§1&'.’3Ib".1l“2.a '13»: viii"?!