PAGE ? (\F‘ f0’. fi/fl, 00/0655 r/a/T .70 oéxi-‘ecixss _’\\ How Can By Anne Ashlcy i495 n Q. How can I make a remccly for neuralgia? A. For face neuralgia. apply dry flannels as hot as can be borne. A woolen cloth saturated with csscnte of peppermint is an cflcciive pain- killer. Be sure ti] avoid draughts. as these cncouragn neuralgia. Q. How can I restore the nap of velvet? A. If any portion of a velvet dress is crushed, hold that part over a wide basin of hot. water. placing the wrong side nc-xt to the water. The pile will be restored. How can I keep the raisins from sinking to the bottom nf the rake? A. They will not. sink if rolled in butter before stirring them into the batter. ’\f.\£7\'.\{.\f\C “(A M‘ #00» 7\’\, T145 GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN J m Jvvv0mxmv&\ \\"93€\‘\'-1r \'J\)-\I7\'X7\'A\4 v\I\7\'\. Jqruvu» Jsxrcnrx. Tfiirs DIARYg £40 asiw-tc-Qvvwieaiv-nvw-al And now at last wn havo come to tho point of recording tho re- cipn for the molasses cookies. which with granddaughter an in- terested onlookcr and taster at an elbow, we followed in our mixing last Saturday morning. Only "homely" fare these arc, and yct highly pleasing and satis- fying as a tasty material for a piecing-out between meals, or with a glass of milk which in- clincs to crcain, for a bed-time lunch, conducivc oiily to pleasant dreams. Jaiiics, EIIJOYIHQ tonight‘ a sample one of our recent bak- ing, recollccted that there was a time he much prized the like of l___ a- _ these. It was when he was help- ing neighbors to haul their sur- plus of grain to town-off a sec- ‘ 0nd farm it was. and drawn by hoisc and farm-wagon .n a thcn imposing and rathci" ciiviablo pro- ,ccssion. Brisk siccds, well har- nessed and ablc, thcyscomcd to cuter into thc spirit of their mas- iters to know that their burdens represented a trophy to the year's , cropping: a cash reserve. "It would ‘ (Continued on Page l6) l N. l igéHousehold Scrapbookg By Roberta Lee d) woosx.‘ OO““"RK\TQR>“&RRRRAT z$¥iéli~i Vc-gctablcs Vegetables that grow underground should be covered in cooking. and those that grow above ground should be left tincovcrcd. To keep th» green color lll grccii vcgctablcs. ctvik thcni in an iinriiicicd kcttlc un-iil they art- jmt. icudcr. Silk Pmbrclla The silk umbrella should not be opened in nrdcr to dry it as it will cause the silk to strt-tch and bcccnir stifl’. The propcr way is to close the u-mbrclla and turn ll llpsidc dmvn. The water will drain off uithout in- juring the fabric. Varnish Remover To remove varnish from filffll- ture use ammonia and yvaicr in equal quantitirs. uNeedlecrafL - FOR THE HOME — III-STYLE LASSTE Pleated skirt on susperider top plus a. smart little wcskit spell style appeal in any little girl's vocalbulary. Add a. little scotch cap to make the whole thing perfect. (Two separate patterns) No. 2936 is cut in sizes 2. 4. 6 and B. Size 4 requires l‘. yards 35-inch for skirt; 1-,- yard 15-inch for weskit; and iii yards 33-inch for blouse. Blouse and embroidery design in- cluded in pattern. No. D52 (hat) is cut in head sizes l9. 20, 21 and 2'2. Any of these sizes requires 1-;- yard 18-inch. Send 2.5 ccnts for each Pattern which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Mimber plainly. Be gill‘? to state size you want. Include postal unit. or Zone number in your address. Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2936 and N0. 295B Name _ Address City Province Designer Brigance has intro- duced a blouse that looks like a dress when the suit jacket is re- moved. Cut and detailed with as much care of a custom-made dress they look cxtrcmcly smart over an office desk or bridge table. ID APPITIZIIIO MEALS PACKED Ylllli IIIJIRIIIOII ‘Energy-rich BUTlER-NUI BREAD lltalthful and Satisfying always A Country Garden By Mrs. Gordon Macmillan ‘Therefore all R180!) shall be sweet to thu. Whether the summer clothe the general earth With greenness, or the red-breast sit and sing Betwixt the tufts of mow on tzhe barren branch Of mossy apple-tree, while the nigh thatch Smokes in the sun-thaw; Whether the cave-drops fall Hoard only in the trances of the ‘ blast Or if the secret ministry of frost Shall hang them up in silent icicles Quietly shining to the quiet moon." This is the time of year in the garden when we do everything we can so as to rclicxic u..- pta-asurc of spring rush of work The cleaning up of the borders and cutting down of perennials. the gathering of the dead stalks and general clean up can be donc on any fine day. Also the mulch- ing of the different shrubs and borders. I use any old rotted manure that is available and thc country garden is fortunate in this respect, even after heavy frost thi! work may be done and it is usual with me to finish about Christmas time. I O O With hardy plant.‘ that have good drainage no wiiiler covcring is necessary, especially if snow is covering them, It is tha finest cover for gardens and snow ls more liable to drift and sla near evergreen hedges, so I neve have any trouble in wintering my gar- den. In exposed places a few spruce boughs laid over the plants i5 all that is needed and after the ground is frozen is the proper time to attend to this. 1t is possible in our climate in plant tulips and other spring blooming bulbs until heavy freeze up. usually around the last of the year and the results are good. as I know from my own experience, I still have some to plant. but last wcck was very busy with another gift of daffodils and a new gar- den in the sunny bank near the evergreen hedge. Preparing the soil with rich earth around the forsytliia and planting forget-me- nois for a carpet for the bulbs was a busy job. t O O Daffodils are divided into many groups and the correct botanical name is narcissus. They are the glory of the early spring garden. coming before the display of tulips. The old fashioned daffodil was always yellow but now iihe trum- pet or cups are quite often rich orange to almost a true red and a revelation in size and beauty. Many bexauiiftil types were in- cluded in my gift box and plani- ed last week. Roxane with a beautiful overlapping white peri- anth broad white trumpet frilled at mouth, strong vigorous grower. an exquisite variety. Red Bird in- tense glowing dark red the most expensive of the lot and more tulips in special varieties have been planted. Princess Margaret Rose, a yel- low edged orange red, a lovely sport, and Blue Eagle intense deep purple. Sweet Harmony, lemon yellow edged white and Grenfell of Labrador an immense flower of dark red, stems tall and very strong. Famous people have flowers named after them, tulips, roses and glads and many other lovely flowers. In the rock garden I planted a dwarf species of tulip with flow- ers of sacrlet orange wilih two or three flowers on each stem. These were planted near the lavender bushes and the purple pansies. l l O The fragrance of apples in the fruit cellar now makes up for the garden fragrance in the sum- mcr time as Sir William Temple wrote in sixtccn hundred and eight-five. No part of diet, in any season, is l0 healthful, l0 natural, and so agreeable to the stomach as good well-ripened ults, and let the kinds be wha they will, if they will not ripen perfectly in our climate, they are better never planted or never eaten. And who- ever would be Iure to eat good fruit must do it out otf a garden of his own; for besides the choice so necessary in the sorts, the soil, and so many circumstances that go to compose a good garden, and produce good fruit, there i: something very nice in gathering them. and choosing the best, even from the same tree. All things out of a garden, either ob salads or fruits. a poor man will eat better. that ‘hath one of his own, than a rich man that has none. And that is all, I thlnk,_ necessary and useful to be known upon this subject. I n». ho\v or why because I you So, son, stand And certainly its \\(Jl'§[ phase a nicul tickct. groom to thc altar. it. morr, what can she do about it? DEAR MISS DIX: DOROTHY DIX SAYS- Marriage- Unwilling Man Advised To Stand Up For His Rights DEAR MISS DIX: I have got engaged to a girl. I don't know dent love her and don't want to marry her and I realize that she would not make me was in love with a fine young man. the midst of it he was cnllcd away on business and I never heard from him any more. As I thought he had given me up, I married a goorl man, hut he only llvr-d a short time. (‘Olllfl back and has made my mother confess that she intercepted ih<~ lctiers he wrote me asking for a reconciliation. Now this man wants m» to marry him, but he has twn children whose mother was an immoral woman who ran away and left them, but I feel that I cannot lake these little girls for fear they might iurn out like their moths-r. (Continued on Page 1.1) Benl Girl a companionable wife at: all. Besides, I don't want to marry and I'm not in a position i0 marry if I did want to. I have told the girl this and she threatens to take some vcry drastic steps if I break the engagement. suggest anything to do? Can you M. H. D. ANSWER: A girl who is that determined to marry is certainly a formidable proposition and she will get if you don't watch out. firm. Don't let her bulldoza you ’ into marrying her if you don't want to, becauso marri- age ll no picnic even at lis best and it is hcll on earth at its worst. REGARDS AS MEAL TICKET is whcn a man is shniighaicd lnin it against his will by n woman who evidently regards him as mcrely Bccnusc no woman of any delicacy of feeling would he willing to marry a man against his will or drag an unwilling bride- I should say in your case the best thing for you to do would be to play a waiting game and simply wcar her out. You do not nccd formally to brcak the engagement, but you can make it so unlntcrcsi- lng tn hcr and so hopeless of any results that you can make hcr hrvak As long as you are not married lo her she has no jurisdiction mor you. so you can run around with other girls as much as you plcase. Nor has she any power by which she can compel you to nml-zi- datcs with ht-r, so if you just quit. cold and never go to see her any- Always you have the perfectly valid excuse that you are not fin- ancially able to marry and are in no position to support a family. Seven yearn ago when I was quite young I We had a foolish quarrel and in Lately my first sweetlicart ]\‘\\ i J l i ~ -\\. \ »-\-\'\'\'\'\'\'\-\ ~\,-\-\-\-\-\~ us.“ Aivu cnaasr; noasr 2 cups White (navy) beans 1‘: cups grated "medium" Ched- dar cheese l small onion, finely chopped ‘l 9UP flncly chopped celery or apple 1 teaspoon chopped parsley 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 1 egg 2 tablespoons fat 2 cups soft. stale bread crumbs Drain beans and mash. Add cheese, onion. celery or apple, pars- 193’. salt and pepper. Add slightly beaten egg and mix thoroughly. Molt fat in a saucepan, add crumbs, "lilting ivcil and cook until slightly browned. Add sufficient crumlbs to choose mixture until thick enough l0 Shape into a loaf. Roll the loaf in the remaining cruimlm. Bake in a. moderate oven. 350 degrees F“ until heated through and nicely browned, about 20 minutes. Serve hot with tomato sauce. Yield: six servings. be prepared for some sudden and disintegrating visitation, or unfor- scon event, unpredictable and breath-taking, when all may 509m uprooting and devastating. And while the suddcnness and futility appear quite ‘beyond repair yet quite as stiddcnly and surprisingly ar- rives the benevolent hand of a friend. or others interested or ambi- tious. to turn the tide of disaster into prolific and happy channeLs. A child born on this day, while possessing surprising and unpre- dictable traits. may likewise have unusual ambitions and constructive talents l0 its bcncflt. EEIIION NOTE Some trends in fashion come as surprises, other as "Naturals." Among_thc latter trends this season is the coat-and-dress com- bination, more in evidence than ever in New York collections. and quite understandably. First of all. the cloth coat itself is newly im- portant, in a windfall of lengths and styles — loose, belted, wrap- ped. or gently-fitted. Then, too, lhis is a season of many interest- ing fabrics, some in coat weights and others in dress weights, but in colors that either shade in or otherwise go pleasingly together. The logical result is an ensemble, not necessarily all of a fabric or all of a color, but definitely all of a scheme. THE ORIGINAL it The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kemblo YWHIIAE For Wednndsy. November l0 coma sudden. perhaps drastic. occurrence may prove alarming in wellas devastating. with a ccmpletc and hapless mvolution in the affairs, yet the surprising advent of the proverbial "eleventh- hour friends" may turn the tide and "aavc the pieces" when all seems forlwn and futile. F0! lhe Blrtllhy ‘flumwhonobu-rhdaaitlanav Hi‘)! Ull’. Vfifi‘ Til‘! ' IHiYlNIUINlh-‘Nl u. thy; | ,.‘ illl ll '» I Cook's Corner i? 4_! gThai Body Of Yours; ' By Jamel w. Bari-on, nu). éj 00000 3 THE NERVOUS PATIENT AND THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER Physicians who have been prac- tising for years will agree with the statement that as students they were shown many of the rarer types 0f disease in medicine and surgery and few of the common everyday types. While this is perhaps nat- ural, Dr. Walter C. Alvarez. Mayo Clinic. in "The Iowa Stale Medical Society Journal." Des Molries, states that althouflh the family physician is frequently helped in making a diagnosis by knowing the patient and his baclqround, the average physician does not think enough of B neurosis. (A method is a condi- tion in which the mind and the emotions are a factor in causing the physical symptoms present). Phy- siclans sometimes fail to notice a neurosis among their own relatives. While laboratory tests are of great importance. Dr. Alverez points out that emotional disturbances can cause symptoms similar to physio- logical slenormaliiies. But a physio- logical cause revealed by a labora- tory test is usually considered tho real cause. What the physicians will lee every day will be nervous men and women with negative reactions to tests of all sorts and all sort of distress everywhere; baclcachcs. headaches. painful monthly periods, gas pres- sure, fatigue. and lack of energy. Instead of making all the labora- tory tests, and, if nothing ls found. just calling the patient a neurotic. his mental and emotional reactions should first be considered, because any little abnormality found by the laboratory might be considered the real or fundamental cause of his symptoms and given full attention instead of the small attention it de- SCH/ES. This L9 not to say that a complete physical examination should not. b» made. but that the nervous and emotional patient should be studied more from the standpoint of his nervousness and emotlonallsm — as a human being—nnd less ficm thc standpoint of any little physical de- fect or alight abnormality found by laboratory methods. Two conditions often caused by emotional disturbances and not re- cognized as such are migraine (one- aided headache) and distress of stomach and intestines not related to meals or bowel movement. R§K'?<>L%% "““""""“"" """) E Better English g5 é By n. o. Williams 1. What i; wrong with this len- tence? "Did she skate any while ah; was there?" 2. What in the correct pmmm. lation of "mermcrizc"? s. which one of the“ ward; 1, misspelled? Havana, lfawalan, Halt- ian. Hungarian. 4. What does the WM "hideous" mean’! 5. What ll a word beginning with lo that means " a kind of eyg. glue"? lmswzns ' i. Bay. “Did she do any skating while aha was there?‘ 2. Pronounce first syllable mez. not mesa; accent first syllable. 3. Hawaiian. 4. Re- voltlng; horribly ugly or discord- ant. "It was like a hideous dream." l- lMIflattA- 0v» é Modern Etiquette B! Roberta In Q. Just what la the meaning of "semi-fornml" u applied u, the dress of both men and women? A. This would depend ilpon the community. In some places where the men customarily wear tails, then semi-formal tuxedos for thcun and simple evening dresses for the women. In a simpler community, it WOllld be plain dark blue o; grey business suits for the men and afternoon frocks for the woanen. Q. If an engagement has a1. ready been announced in the news- papers, and is then broken, is it all right to send an announcement to Only KAYSER mulul ~—quoronleod not to twist H O S I E R Y ‘Fcbdfindlnl Woman's Realm/Social and Personal/Poshions/Literature Morning Smile I ~0o'“"63 ORGANS A professor of physiology w” d". mdbing tho organs of lflile, m" and finally asked for a summary of his lecture. The star of the dag; arose and said. "Well, Prof. as I see it. I see with my eye organ, I hear with my ear organ, I smell ivith my nose organ, I cat with my mouth organ. and 1 fecl with my hand organ." this effcct to the papers? A- Yes. it is all right, if desired. Some people. though. prefer to "to famous "Flt-All-Hcef‘ Be wiser- ‘N? avoid any publicity in matter-g o! this nature. oovmwmm -~, " miificisvc This Clears N ' of Nasty llisciiztrgt 5"“ llwuah Cfltlirrh lh , _ “m”! n irerstatit netfficttlaséllyetrxliftl? £23m; Cltnrrh-o-aona, from sneezing, cg'1%:ym;*%\'!d u" Teliorted every d5 “an Catnrrito-zone. When ypuy I“ in the soothing vapor of (‘brawn ""11""! You send hclpflll medqhnfh‘ to those remote Mares imam“ breathing organs “-i,,.,.,, ,0 “ llio "u" 5'01: trouble ,» f‘. m“ “d entire breathing n, ,,,.,.LSM3'°"! you inhale (futiirrh-ti-niiiii!when You should pct 11.4,, W, r u “Pill. this mcdicaicd vapm, ll. (j rm"! o-lone assist you on t! ' t diarrh- dovery from l~. Y) ‘Yum ‘i’ 1's bronchitis. 35c fields M‘ dwxgisis. W" l! All _ , ‘_ T’ . yokq, Luoloq §nowmanl And lucky you who receives KAYSER stockings — nicest gift of all. KAYSER'S five "Fii-All-Proporlions" suit every figure, every fancy. Al all the smorlesl shops. From $1.40 ll" ll GLOVES ' li..ll|i.]lll""l...$' Iii UNDERTHING5 SDLD DY MGDRE €~ MFLEOD DIIARLDTTETDWII P. E. I. ill-tin DE YIISER, DIVE KAYSER FRDM R. T. Holman SIIMMEIISIDE — DIIRDLDTTETDYII Ltd. _ .