use: "rwo E . E r RHEUMATIC f langg’ en "¢" DISSOLVElI ORAI. VACCINE FOR ‘DISORDERS AND NEIIRITIS See Page 3 LivincSLeisure THE WUMAN'§ REALM STARS AND THE DEAD Are faithful; These you nmy set your clock b)’. Promise to meet at such and such a time And simh a Diane. The living can keep face With no constancy. lock on this W118 Wm: disenchanted eyes; Do not elqlect the livinil’ m ‘m’ ' Mom Gould for rheumatism inolud such items as: Wear I» by"; ring; wear a silver ring; wear sleek-bring; wear a M888 1mm; wear a nutmeg necklace; sleep with a dog; wear red flan- nels: carry a potato: or carry a horse chestnut or blwlwyfi. Two-way radio ‘ ‘ “ commlunicatiaxt between P181155 an owtmd stations was established l . Bats not attracted to light the “Elimination. “my Clear water is best for wash windows ii’ they are not, foo dirty Th5 secret of sparkling 018B!‘ W1"- dows is no soap. Soap merely streaks the glass and is hard ho rub off. Bm-ay water on. or Wipe it on with a charnois then d0’ inseotswhich arethus_ windows with a lintless cloth. Imidon women, when lbfi Bu!‘ ridge threwtemd to be- by sealing them hermetically Jam Jars. Brazil has begun the manufac- uure of glass for domestic needs. Potash is a potasium carbon- ate and ‘is the oldest known of the compounds out this metal. when potting garden plants for winter Qipplny in the home. thty 310.11g be cameftllly for insect dons. ‘me United States nommlly con stun-es about 76.000 tons of tin a year, m- approximately 5 per cent. the total world output; domestic production is 1cm iihan 1'10 one armually. aonumc SMILEE u-o-oo++o++oo++o+o+o+++o-o A MEMENTO Answering a determined ta at the door. Mrs. Jones opened t to face her neighbor, who was obvious- ly very wrought up. “It's that boy of yours," she ssksk4ssAs AA ~ WDman’sl1eaIm/~S0c rwv ‘w wv vvvwv v1 t . » . i ours cornea. ¢ IOBTON IIOWN 1 cup rye meal or white flour 1 cup corn meal 1 cup coarse entire wheat flour ‘i6 tablespoon soda 1 teaspoon salt X cupmolnsses I cups sour milk or 1% eiipl sweet milk Mix all dry ingredients, add mol- sases and milk, stir untilwell mixed. l! a well- reused mold not more than 24$ fu l. Cover closel and place mold on a trivct in ettle containing boiling water, allowln water to come halfway up ar ung mold. Cover closely and s earn 3 1~2 hours. keeping water at boil- ing point. Add more boiling water if needed. Take from water. re- move cover and set in slow oven i300 degrees) 15 minutes to dr off. Remove from mold. Cut with a string while hot. by drawin string around bread, crossing an pulling ends. Makes 2 loaves. this Mrs. she will snorted. “He's just thrown brick through my window." A pleased ‘look came lnw Jones’ face. "Really! How interesting!" exclaimed, "I wonder if you let me have the brick? We're ing to keep all the little memories of his youthful pranks; they'll be so interesting when he grows up." ev- IIBW BAN I i IHE CHARLOTTETO'WN___QUARDIA ALA ial Perso ‘kA vY ‘Al-A .| > {j g1fl",‘,';‘f Np,‘ ’AAL“ A A‘ A..AAJ~A a v vv i mar-a; tum lIuIfill-hInIfl-Ilu Ifishiion AAAAmA‘ ‘ vvvvw, Wvv s1 vv 11:4 Dl....ii.§“b.x \ i cost of living. worldly goods, discovers that he is 4 By Anne Ashley Q4-OO~OQ—&O+O&O~O+Q~EGO—OO+O+Q Q. How can I distinguish good flour from bad? . Look at its color, It is not good if very white with a bluish cast, or with black specks in it. If the flour is white with a. straw- colored or slightly yellowish tint, it is a 800d sign. ‘ Q How can I prevent the egg from coming out of a cracked shell? A. The white of the cracked egg that Ls w be boiled will not come out if a little salt is rubbed on the cracked shell before putting it in water. Q. How can I decipher faded inscriptions and dates on coins? A. Heat them and radually the inscriptions will. un ess entirely effzwed, make their appearance. l wumus! BliliiiES MAY waif-WW? -unless “you gel offer those extra-dirty spots with Sunlighfs j ' exiru-soupiness a SUIIJGIIY? IT'S TRUE! YOU “I? 0O WIUIOIII’ ATOUCII M’ CUFFSJIEMS. (DIES, DOES ‘DIE JOI f minimum m animal ~ nu ovu- unuotn nun mm l ixru-sohrtusss A [MK UU I . r he for yourself-e- IRIGIITER CLQIHES All OVER —witl|o|n hard work t scrimmage. Such bsinz the case. and the success of m-a-trlmosy being largely 9- mm" 0f mOMY. a5 B Dunster has said. it ls strange that lovers give i!" "N16 thiliilht to it before marriage when it is bound to be their main preoccupation after marriage. But that is the way ,lt happens. Every day we see youngsters blithely marching to the altar without a thin dime in their pockets, or any way of making one. And it leaves us wondering at. the optimism of those who befool themselves into thinking that love is all the capital they need to marry Money and Marriage Financing liarita| Bliss More lntporiant ‘Than Love The most controversial subject in the family circle is the money question. That starts more quarrels than how to bring up the chfldfgn, or religion, or even in-laws, and if we could grow our own fine feathers! and scratch our own worms for sustenance, the holy estate would be a,‘ lot. holler and far more peaceful than it is. All that i5 the matter with many a marriage that goes bloocy is that it has to be financed, for the aver- age husband never gets over the shock of finding out how much it costs w run a home. He has had a nebulous idea that a wife could conjure food and raunent out of the air, and when the bills come in he feels tbat she is somehow to blame for the high LAII. DISCOVERY And 0n h" Dirt the wife. who thought her hus- band meant it when he swore at the altar to endow ha: with all or hi; giving her an allowance for her personal use, and that she has to pan. hind-k him f0!‘ W"! bent she gets. She wonders why sire ever was 6111i’ QIIWBh to swap of. a 800d job for a wedding ring, Thus it. will be seen that even when husbands and wives love each other and are otherwise congenial, they hold different views financial proposition, and the pay envelope is always good for a domestic vv; ‘s59..- vvv allergic to even the suggestion of ont-lle our winter's come, Janos." Ilfly a to his fact and from the. w . f morning aring a rinkliuirlg of white. bdore he went; down to the kitchen. The cute-Tabby and the Darhr one, at once moved into their winter tlons on I broad gill topping a cement wall in a warm stable. lwund parcels of fur, they waited in pleasant anti- cipation while the milking was done and then decorously lad the rest of us towards the separator- house. Pard came ts not the dis- heveled gentleman of must o! last week but dressed in a. fresh white coat befitting ‘a new week's days. I picked out Pat's foot-steps on the driveway. dra ging a little, I thought. for PM; ad walked a wnaidemble distance before com- ing last evening to Alder-lea. To Church in the city, as he told me, "not walking it enioircly but get- ting several lifts” which would be far enough, after his busy week, at the turnips and ing and what-not. He rode home 0n the bus to the corner. I saw the pin point of light like a lost will o’ the wisp come down from the hill to and while the recent ale spent tself in the tree tops. t, e three of us, were comfortable in the kitchen. "Shara" e said removing his pipe, to put l. bit. more tobacco therein. then hand the package compsnionably to James "to try". "it's only right. to‘go tb Church if ye-re able at all, at all.” A young service lad his wife and sister were also amonz our yesterday's guests, very young and now at ,the branching of the road, following demobilization. "Which way shall we take?" is now their important uestion. Fairly blown across the fie ds they came and I wondered if she, a. city girl from the mainland could see the deep green of the trees and the symmentry of the nude ones against the brown red and gold of the fields. and the wind- in; stream they skirted, snug in its sheltering woodlands. Or did she see only a drabness. a closing down of warm summer days and on, and that i! they can only be together they can live on bread and. cheese and kisses and desire no other amusement than holding hands. But before the honeymoon is over they find 800d 100d Just as much as they did lust their taste for new clothes; that they get fed up with asking “d0 Y0“ 10W me? and want to step out and have good times with their old cmwd- 511d i! they lack the Price to do this, their nerves get, on edge‘ and they are more than human if they don't pep up their gun gvgningg by quarreling. 0i will“. i110 fflmily spat is not the exclusive "diversion of the poor. tRlch husbands and wives indulge in 1t, also, for you cannot; buy peace . ever the counter, nor are tact and in the market places. But with ‘the moneyproblem eliminated married couples have far less to fight over than those with whom ii is; a bum. ing daily issue. 511d W5 i5 Somflhlns that ahe thousands of young girls aond boys.“ "m "9 "ism"! m") marriage Wlihmlt counting the cost. should stop! yield do you For married happiness, like every other good thing in‘ and consider. 1J6. has a price tag on it. * norm. 5 ETIQIIETTE By Roberta Lee O@'QO-Q-FO-O-O~Q-O*OO O-O-§OO-O-OQ~O-OO- Q. When dinner is announced and there are guests of all ages present, who should precede from thelivlngroom to the diningrcon: the older or the younger people? A. The older people should re mile, the younger guests fol ow Q. Is it ell right for a bUSlIlfl. man to use his business letterhead‘. when he writes his social letters at his hfficifl, A. ,No; he should keep a box of cor-res dance stationery in his desk or this purpose. 0O l ililllSEiiiillI WBAPBOOK lyloburhlno Innovating I Leather Colt What's le r .fllt has become faded, try a lying a stain made . Pu tb hulls into ‘E ‘and. boll until . n . a iy two or strain it and apply wi a paint three coats, alter subsequent coat. is dry. g latter on a cake or batter on an enamel ti‘! DUMB: a damp towel under tbs pen on it will prevent the ‘pm from turning while beating. ‘Iheflolllllli wl ramo depoei f Qu-mgldfinh’ a clog: din: v THE way, Sunlight whip! up into richest, deepen cleaning sudnisaioymfuo. Ion of nil. no more "half- i " wulnd" looking clothes. With Sunlight on the lob, everything-even your fines! washable colon and workciothoa-conc bright: f amen slaitsa . i 0 ' that they crave feel our Island wind much too boisterous in its pwsent brecni- ness? O O t from his lantern. A From the indifferent beginning.‘ this proved to be an ideal day for harvesting-the turnips and our men repaired to the field. after the drift of snow was gone. Gloves worn at the commencement of the work, were discarded later and as the tempo of their activity and the sun's rays increased, jackets were tossed aside as well. I saw these askew on the orchard fence and below them Pard guarded ~ and slept in this sunny sheltered spnt. I pl fessed to have small interest in the task other than that of a not too curious bystander. “What expect?" and "are they mostly tops as you once sus- pected," I asked James at the din- ner table and at once turned our wttention to other things. And then when the hauling began in all effort to "save what you nave before marriage; that they haven't Sliflvlly and 800d dispositions sold trlonic" mean? 5. What is a word beginning delilcious lunch was served by the E E \ home, tired lids will lilVflllllfli to close a busy day. Where has Jams been? Among other ports of take note o! the m- glnyed more, It; is not so back- reaklng as the one used at Alder- leg, qvops are severed with a hoe 3nd then the beater potato-dig- ger loosens the turnip from the clay, "It. worked well today James tells me, still unconverted to the. scheme. And now he looks search- ingly beneath the couch for that mt." and then suggestively towards .$e old lgeighghwllbr us. e sands ay ave run. Until tomorrow — Diary-Good- night. ‘ | 8!‘. ANTIIONYB CREDIT UNION MEETING HELD 5t. Anthony's Credit Union Ltd. recently held thdr annual m , ing at 8t. Anthony's Hall, Lot 5. share capital of over, 10,000 dolara _eclared Mr. C. J‘ Gallant, treasurer of the union. e dividend of 2 per cent. and a re-| bate of 15 per cent, int. paid back to borrowers, Mr. Melvin Bridges. president. of the union, welcomed the members, and representatives from St. Louis, St. Marks, Milo.‘ and Lot li Credit Unions. Mr. Peter Gallant reported for Credit Committee, Rev. M. J. Rooney for the Supervisory Com- m . = Following the reports was the election of officers. Mr. Bruce Oar-| ruthers and William Shields were elected t0 the board of directors for a tcnn of three years. Mr.| Peter G. Doiron, _ Henry J. Peters and Kler Thomas were eleced to the Credit Committee, Rev. M. J. Rooney to the super- visor-y Committee. Words of advice and encourage- ment were spoken by the ‘Rev. Fathers Robin, Croken. Rooney, and McDonald. They told them that they had made a good be- ginning and advised them to con~ tilii-lfl B10118 the co-operative way. Rev. Father Francis. of the Ex- tension Dept, of St. Dunstan‘s| Collage, addressed the meeting. A s. Violin selections were rendered ‘fiiuéa ff/VJYI/Ea/zyfim MALE WEAKNESS‘ ' M112? with if: nervous fonslon vault, fired cranky fooling": O Have you at such Limes noticed With 1H0 that nrzanw "thoughtless"? SWERS I AN l~ 55y. "Mr. and Mrs, Smith have two children." 2. Pronounce medi-o-ker, first e as in me, l as in it. o as in no. and accent first syllable. not the third. 3. Under- rate. 4. Pcrlclning to the stage or to actors: theatrical. "The role required a sreat amount .of his- cut’ and James came in once to remark "It doesn't take loo lung before the port-holes are full" thus delaying the storing I went clown to the cellar to clear the way for succeeding lo;ds._0nly for an extremely small numoer asdamzw. remnded me when not to be boast- ful but merely to show that I wa not a drone in the family. 1 men- trionic ability." 5. Incogiianf. finned my who“, w Known "Three or four. was it. Ellen?" h: asked me as if in grave doubt. His command of figures on these occas» ions is not nearly so good nor 5-’. accurate as irhen he reckons Lifi! number p! sacks he bears to a potato truck-which must. I sup- e be taken as one of the mis- ortunes of matrimony. Perhaps the reason I descended to the cellar e-t all was that I saw Jeanie! red ken-chief down in the field, weilding a fork at the loading and then beheading the vegetable while she “rested? The work was gtuponded for the day when the prettiest rose and orange was shove the to a of the trees that seam to one rcie the stream be- yond the public bridge and “up m. and; s; *:..--....:*'.-...=°.~.*=-.: spo . , w re vac drift softly to bl a other: have been yous. down the rlylr came a-visi carry hol o dirough tho of time. this teeth-ah! 1110M lfli Y - Will m lye?” and I. fliil N‘! 1559"“ in M 091M111 GI H0. 1m apron in eapy to crochet ntitcla-Pattorn No.‘ complete itutruo- _ . ordfl : ri . wax ca" " - * n: - a Poe i all“ fufii‘ v31. Btu-ea nottmsn» 0 .92.‘... m. 1012mm“ "IThYiVQP. t)’ U. 1mg Mdif. y tto e. p if O a3 5 _ gas‘? _‘ hum i ii yourself feeling nervous. "dragged out." irritable, a bit blur-due to fimctional periodic disturbances? Then don't. dell)’. try Lydia E. Pinkhamh Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham‘: Compound is one of the most effec- tive medicines for this purpose. Pinkhnm’: Compound ia what]: known as a uterine sedative bamuae it has a soothing effect on one of woman's moat important organs. fNeedlecraftz FOR THE IIOH A IIIIANT lhrvoloils way to gave money is make time pretty apmm, each AAAAAAsAAA. rfi- "vi v11" Lit.-=~ r.. r u re i . 11mm ’ will u... ' i" m, "i" of elm In l: ‘ its advent. not “u; "Wazylmflh- ' ~ " it Yhafuwmzom of“: a we; builder- ilil’ hl M0. Rabi It ‘a I i 2135i?" he ism a ‘ Mm“ G 0434,41,» face "All naming; o he “d” ‘u? m“? IUY 80MB TODAY tvmmc was I» when I said neurons-run MILK. SIP‘ i JOB oluv a vou can no _ P1400 Control Qileliidnl i and Answers Jxestlons and Answer; on hi“ Clmtrol will a pear in The (laud. lanssarel rfentureeaohdq The questions are than which inn reached the Wartime Prices and Trade Board from housewivq i. this region. The answer: are m vlded by the Board Readers. er sons who have intelligent question; to uk on price control are invited to sand them in wrl the Women's legions! Advisory Cam Q. What farm machinery is still ' rationed? A. All restrictions on the sale of farm machinery. and equipment have been removed. . As a farmer are than any restrictions reventlng me from killing a. p or my own use‘) A. No. ou must, however. sub. mit ration coupons tn your local ration board at the rate of one coupon for every four pounds. Q. Could u tell me i1 of restauran are allowed t0 sell their soft ks at ten or twelve cents per bottle? Has the govern- ment given them the right to do so? I . No merchant is permitted by law to sell soft drinks at prices other than those prevailing during the basic period from September l1 to October 1%, i941. If the res- taurant to which you refer sold soft drinks at ten and twelve cent: during that period, then they are quite within th law in continuing to sell at this p ca. Other-wuss you should advise your nearest, office of the Prices Board concerning the matter. by Joseph M. Wedge. accompanied by C. J. Gallant and Gilbert Gau- cl-at on the piano. ‘The meeting eon- cluded with the singing of the ational Anthem. Pinkhamb Compound is made from wholesome roots and herbs (plus Vitamin B1). Here's I medi- cine that HELPS NATURE. Just see if you're not delighted with resultei Follow label directions. VlOITlIl-I COMPOUND HOME