PAGE TWO 0man’s Realm/Social and Persijm THE GUARDIAN; CHARLOTT JULY 14, 1949 NEW PRESIDENT — Margaret ClBPP. 39. above. succeeds Mil- dred McAfee Horton, wartime commander of the Wavog, u president of Wellesley College in Massachusetts. Miss Clapp has been an assistant professor of his- tory at Brooklyn College since 1947. She was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1948 for her biography on John Bigelow. New Butter Wrap Keeps Product In Better Condition The Bacteriology and Dairy n9. search Division. Science Service. of the Dominion Department of Agriculture has conducted ex- haustive tests with Aluminum Foil butter wraps. The results of these tests indicate that butter reaches Canadian tables in better condit- ion when wrapped in Aluminum Foil. Color is better. Moisture loss is reduced. Foreign flavors are not absorbed. The flavor score is higher. After months of study and rc- search Central Creameries Ltd., one of the oldest established but- ter producers in Canada, has adopted this revolutionary wrap. This decision to adopt Aluminum Foil will not only bring better butter to Island homemakers but will allow Prince Edward Island butter to travel with that fresh churned flavor to distant mar- kets. $00-90 That Body Of Yours ‘I Janos W. Barton. I. I. VITAMIN C PREVENTS HEAT EXHAUSTION During hot weather, it ls now the custom in many factories to have tablets containing about a quarter teaspoonful of table salt beside the water tap or cooler, and workers are advised to take a tablet every time they take a drink of water. It is loss of salt from the tissues that causes heat cramps and heat prostration o: exhaustion. Notwithstanding the fact that salt tablets have for years been used to prevent heat prostration in very hot climates, there arc still some prostrations among workers under heat exposure. Ac- cordingly Dr. W. L. Weaver, Rich- mond Virginia. reports in "South- ern Medical Journal," the great success of vitamin C in prevent- ing heat prostration in a cellu- lose factory. It became necessary ‘to repair the ventilating system :ln one large room with e tem- jierature from 95 to 100 F., with 50 per cent humidity while 42 workers were employed. Mainten- ance workers were brought in to repair the pipes and ducts locat- ed near the ceiling. The mainten- nncs group was given 100 mg. vi- tamin C daily and the regular workers, serving as controls, re- ceived no vitamin C. However both the maintenance workers and the employees were given 7 grains of table salt and 3 grains E dextrose (sugart hourly. Better English lQWlIlhml i. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "1 do not propose to accept their offer." 2. What is the correct pronun- ciation of "persuasive"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Cauterlze, temporlze, rcvlze. 4. What does the word "extol" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with du that mean-s “accaslcnlng doubt"? ANSWERS l. Say, "I do not. intend to ec- cept their offer." 2. Pronounce per- swa-siv. a as in say, both 5's as in so; not per-swa-zlv. 3. Revise. 4. To elevate by praise. "The book ex- tolled Lincoln's many virtues." ll Dubious. The maintenance workers aver- aged about nine years older than the control group and the main- tenance workers performed hard- er physical labor. Because venti- lation was not good during re- pairs both the temperature was 105 F. and the highest humidity 84 per cent. Since the maintenance group was working next to the ceiling they were exposed to tem- perature from 100 to 120 F. During the 29 days it took to finish repairs, not one of the 3i. men receiving ascorbic acid (vi- tamin C) showed symptoms of heat illness. in the control group of 42 workers who received salt only 9 cases of heat exhaustion developed. None of the casesuvas severe and only n few included muscle cramps. Since the use of ascorbic acid, (Continued on Page 9) N0 SOAP ~ Yes, Duz-the famous “does-everything” soap-is beret Your dealer has iti Therehjno other soap like itl Duz gala your white things the whitest white you'll ‘at with any soap-docs your heaviest wash fast and clean-yet it's safer for your W?“ ON EARTH BEATS DUZ AT GETTING CLOTHES ----»-.uaun_aan--n--uu-ausua-snan Ellen ’s Diary By an Island Fan-min Wife Pfdfit. "What to your mind hna been the beet happening of today?" we in- quired of Jamie, when prayers past this evening, he was lnug in bed. He stopped a moment to consider the query then repeated our words slowly: "What as the best hap- pening of today? ell perhaps you mlghtn't think it-——but for me lt was the coming of Tippy‘: pups. You see," he continued, "I'm pretty well used to calves and lambs and kittens by now, but I've never seen new pups before today. Just think of lt—-seven of them! It's wonder- ful, don't you think so?" “Wonder- full" we agreed, "in fact it's no- thing short of remarkable." And when he had "cuddled doon" in his pillow, and his voice was sleep- laden it was to talk of them still. to wonder if a person were allowed the pick of them, which would it be -—the one that was black as night? or a mate, with a fetching white vest? Or would one of those spot- ted ones turn out to be the prettiest and best of them‘ all? o It was n perplexing question to ponder over, especially to a lad like Jamie, whose favored friend since his toddling days has been the Mutt-dog. "That hound of yours is fairly useless," we overheard James remark to his namesake after Pard has done a brilliant piece of work in rounding up the cows. "Why. he won't look at a cow!" And Jamie's comment was, “No, he's not much of a cattle dog, but ‘he's good to do other things." Certainly any can- ine that has been one's playmate since infancy, whose name was the first one on one’: lips, next to one s parents and who needed no teach- ing to be in the lane to greet one joyously when returning from clagges is "good to. do‘ other things! And who is Tipiw? 5119 ill grand-daughter's property. h "M", short-haired creature. of a brownish (Continued on Pose 3) How Can I!!! Iy Anna Alblcy remove white Q. How can 1 water stains from hardwood floors? A. First rinse the spotted area with cold water. Then rub it well with a. cloth dipped in two cups of clear water in which two table- spoonfuls of spirits of camphor have been placed. Next, wipe the area. dry and apply floor polish. Q. How can I make a chocolate icing that will harden easily in warm weather? A. Buy a cake of milk chocolate and melt over hot water. It will be o. delicious substitute if used as a frosting, and is also cheaper than icing. Q. How can I remove paper that has become stuck to the polished; surface of a table? i A. By softening it with olive oil, and then rubbing gently with a soft cloth. ‘ DUI-Procter 8t Gumb|e's famous soup that does Everything in the family wash! gay colored washable: than any other gran- ulated laundry aoepl Why, It's almost unbelievable that one soap can do so much-yet Dun does it!‘ So get a boa today-try those heaps of reel, soapy-rich Duz audo for your next big wash! Ereqfl/izy zxmvem/zrumv/ —I——"— mastuuufli 415g: 5&5 - Parenial Maichmakers . Education Good Preparation For Successful Marriage DEAR MISS DIX: I em a girl 19 yearn old. Have finished hlgb school and want to go to college and after that to build up a business career. But my family object very much. They wish me to get mar- rled and have even picked out my husband, but I don't want to get married yet. I haven't seen enough of life. Also, I want to earn my , own living for a while at least. Would you advise me to follow my own desires, or take the advice of my family? UNDECIDED ANSWER: If you marry a man you don't love just to please your family and because they have the old- fashioned idea that marriage is the only career a girl should follow, you will be a miserable, discontented wo- man as long as you live. Because you will have been kept from doing the thing you wanted to do and your heart will be always full of frustrated desires. You will always be dwelling on the thought of what you might have don , and what might have been, and the happiness you might have has, and that will make even the good that you have turn to dust and ashes in your teeth. Marriage is hard on a woman and full of sacrifices that she must make, even when she marries a man she loves and when it ls the thing on earth she most desires, but it is almost unendurable when she mar- ries a man she does not care for and when she goes into it against her will. The parents who think that they can find security for their daughter in a forced marriage have not reckoned with‘ the modern wo- man. Nine times out of ten she endures its misery and discontent for a. few years and then gets a. divorce. Whether your parents send you to college or not, they. at least, owe it to you to give you o. training for some occupation by which you will be made self-sustaining. That ls your due whether they marry you off or not. For marriage does not solve the problem of a girl's future. Sometimes husbands die. Sometimes they become lnvalida. Sometimes they lose their jobs. And often a woman after marriage has far more need of some way of maklngmoney than she had before. Also. there is no better preparation for marriage than for a girl to have a thorough business training. It disciplines her. It teaches hei- self-control, promptness, efficiency and the value of a dollar, all of which fit her to be a better wife, housekeeper and mother. DOROTHY DIX DEAR MISS DIX: How can I cure myself of being suspicious of my wife? The reason I feel this way is because one night she and a woman friend, under the pretense of going to a show, motored with two young men to a hotel out of the city for a glass of beer. I found out through the lle she told me when she came back, and since then l always think the worst of everything she does. The worry over this ls not increasing my earning capacity as a father and sometime: I feel like sending the whole affair to the devil and buylflfl "W891! l fine-Way ticket to Mexico. FRANK ANSWER: When once our faith has been shaken in a person it is very hard to restore it, and the best ‘you can do for yourself is to keep your thoughts firmly fixed upon your wife's good qualities. and 88y. like Dr. Coue, that every day in every way you believe her truer and truer. But it doesn't seem to me that motoring with three friends to an- other town for a glass of beer was such a helnou! offense. Probably ninety-nine married women out of a hundred have gone on an innocent little lark like that, for women are human after all and like a little harmless fling every now and then, and there ls nothing for their hus- band; to get green-eyed over about it. The little slipping of the yoke made them better and more contented wives. When husbands and wives have to lle to each other and sneak off for an evening out, the blame should be laid on the wlfe or husband whose tyranny has enslaved 'them and debflved the"! °f ‘u freedmn" If you had not denied your wife all liberty and most PIBBWFBS. Sh! W°“1d have been glad to have told you frankly about what she did. d m l I think you are making a mountain out of a molehlll an e W s3 {hing for you to do ls to forget it. I wonder if you have never steppe out of an evening with a girl. DOROTHY DIX DEAR DOROTHY DIX: What do you think of the modern system of courting? Most of the girls are ready t0 be 11118895 811d klfled the (Continued on Page 9) - -- cio-Qww Household Scrapbook '1‘ n: Roberta Leo Woodwork For washing enameled or paint. ed woodwork or furnliun use l‘ "Wm" o! 1 we of vinegar, 1 WP of kerosene, and 2 cup; o; warm water, going over a small Portion at a time, and then drying with a soft cloth. It will removg Zrcase and dirt and leave a glossy surface. Do not use on varnished surfaces. - Pineapple Plant Cut off the top of a pmeapme and place in a glass ju- wim water It will soon take root. Then plgcé $111“; flW" Pvt. and the result c a pretty, inexpensive plant. Insect Bu" Sometimes the pain of a sting by a WI-‘ID or bee can be quickly m- ""1 by rubbing a niece of raw onion over the affected part. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH \. With Little Worry Eat. talk, laugh or sneeze with- out fear of insecure false teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FAUPEETH holds plates firmer and more comfortably. 'I‘hi.\ pleas- ant powder has no gummy. gooey. pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It's alkaline (non- acid). Checks "plate odor" (den- ture breath). Get IABTIIIIIB at any store. NO SOAP ON EARTH BEATS ouz AT earn NG WHITE THINGS WHITE! - ,_____.___ Cook's Comer ITUIIID MINTID DIAS! I summer purl a cups sugar 2 cups water '1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint 1-3 ounce package of cream cheese 2 ‘tablespoons butter or margar- ne French dressing salad greens 1-4 to 1-2 teaspoon green coloring Peel fresh pears. Remove core from flower and. Mix the sugar, water, mint leave: and-color in a large boiler and bring to a boil. (for. Obill. Soften the cream - chase with the butter. met until _ light. ltuff the pears. lervl on lettuce or your favorite salad puns with lunch dressing. ail/Fagin Add the pean and boil until ten-of important personals, Hobbies 0i, Local Citizens . By Uncle for White wings unfurled in the breeze-soft winds, blue skies and dancing waves that keep perfect time with the speed of a sailboat. What could be e prettier eight! Whether you are out to capture e trophy or merely for the love of it. you can get a great thrill out of a sailing boat. Sailing ls again coming back into its own, and this summer there will be many thousands of boys and girls saillng—and racing-their own boats in Canada and the U. S. A. Sailing has been called the fast- est sport ln the New World since the closing of World War II. Lloyd's Register of American Yachts lists about 750 clubs in Canada and the United States with over ltnfi boats ready to shake out their main- salls. To these figures might be added scores of others that are privately owned and not listed at all. I There are few hobbies thatvoffer such a thrill as boat sailing. If you don't think so, ask any youni.‘ sailor, or any old one for that mat- ter, and they'll tell you that it's tops in sport. O I If you are fortunate enough 1° possess a cat-rigged dinghy the whole family can enjoy the outing- There are many types of boats. however. When it comes time to chcnse, most young sailors prefer Snipes, Llghtnlngs, Woodpussies or Comets, as none of these is too hard to learn to sail. Once upon a time. the rivers and harbors of our Island boasted many sailing shins, and a prettier sight would be hard to see. their white sails glistening beneath the rays of the sun. So many of our local citizens find recreation in this sport that I am not going to single out any one individual but will treat this class of hobbyists as a unit. When I queried one hobbylfif 1'9- cently about this sport and the best types of boats to use, he quick- ly retorted, "There are no best boats, but there are plenty 0f good boats. But--and there is a 'bui'—you should know the WP" best suited to vour requirements and the ones that are. nolllll" l" vnur sailing community. Then you'll have a craft that is suitable 1'01‘ local conditions. You will also be assured of plenty of competition. should you decide to take up rnc~ ing." ' - I O O Another hobbyist I talked with had this to say: "Learning to sail is casyi Wt "'5 a game in which you never atop learning. I've known beginners who became nulie proficient after a few weeks of practice —- that ls. within reasonable limitations-Juli most of us old-timers know we haven't yet reached the end of sall- inv knowledge." Perhaps that accounts for the fas- cination of the sport and helps mnke it so popular with old and young. " "What about safeiv measures?" Y nuestioned my last informant. “What if a boat should capsize and throw its occupant into the water?" “I'm glad you asked that ques- tion." he said. "for it's a very im- nortant one. A non-sinknhle boat is best for beginners, as this type of boat will stay afloat after being capsized. The beginner ls hound to get a few ducklngs, but he will be able to hang onto the boat until somebody comes to his rescue. "Sailing a boat is much like learn- ing to ride a bicycle. You get a few tumbles but soon ncnulre an in- stinctive balance which makes rid- ing easy and loads of fun." MMQwoQ-QoQQMQr-aospoi , e I ., l Morning Smile f’ .i fla>oo<€oocboo<§>co<fico<éf° "Good grief." said the city slicker. "Why did they put the depot so far from the town?" “I dunno," said the local yokel. "unless they wanted to get the depot lust as close as possible to the railroad." The doctor was very pleased with his patient! progress. "You're Collfhlns more freely this mom- m .. Impatient patient: "Well, for gosh sakes, I ought to -bc. I've been practicing all night." “The Stars Say-- Iv Genevieve Ibis For Friday, July l! Although there are excellent aus- pices for promotion, splendid achievements, expansive and of far-reaching scope and opportunity. armed cooperation and capital from high financial sources, yet it. might be possible to over-play the hand, or undermine desired projects or plans, by reckless, extra- vagant. or lrasclble conduct of ma- - for affairs. It may seem an oc- casion for plunging, spinning for force and fury where calm Judg- ment and studied effort could bet- ter impress and Iain ends. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it le, have excellent prospects of putting over their momma programs and pro- jects, with much promise of in- creasing lcdpe and openings for mafor objectives. The cooperation whose capital and prestige is of prime significance. This might be leop- ardized by rash attempt: to force U10 lllilfil. to lose sight of values, or over-act in "piunlins" or extra- (ms/Lit .... ..................,.g3_ eratu re An apple, beets and a carrot are as good trimmings as any fa the Trim Your Own Hat contest at this year's C N. E. Judges will award $50 for best trimmed and modelled garden creation. Owens models hers. Florence Livingtfi Leisure ITHEWOMANS REALM! THE LOST.‘ ASSET He took care of his for money is wealth, But never once thought to take care of his health. His bank account thrived, since he made sure of that, But he never once thought he was growing too fat. money, The future, he knew, would have gray in the skies. To be ready for rainfall a man must be wise. So to stack up the dollars he cease- lessly slaved, Forgetting entirely that strength can be saved. He did without sleep for the for- tune desired: Forced himself to keep on when his body had ilred. But he got little comfort. from all 0f his wealth When he found to obtain it he'd squandered his health. —Edgar A. Guest. Save old newspapers to make “logs" to burn ln your fireplace on chilly summer evenings. Twist the paper into firm compact pieces and stow away in empty boxes. then use them as needed to cheer the living room. They give a good blaze and a surprising amount of heat. When frosting little cakes, spear them with an ordinary kitchen fork. You can turn them quickly and twist them around as you frost the top and sides. N0 sticky fin- gers or broken cakes. Nutmeg butter spread on warm coffee cake hits the spot. Rice cul- tard with a nutmeg flavor ls some- thing special. And before whipping heavy cream or evaporated milk. add a lltle nutmeg to taste. When you're away from home, the house plants are apt to droon and nine without their usual daily care But there's a way to avoid» letting down your indoor blooms without calling in the neighbors to do the watering. 9 Let bricks take care of the plants. Just put enough bricks to hole your plants 0n the bottom of a tll tub. Cover the bricks with water and stand a plant on each brick The bricks will absorb enough wa- ter to keep the plants in good con- dition for some time, When you make butter and con- fectioners’ sugar icing for cakes substitute peanut butter for ‘ialf the other. Peanut butter and marmalade mixed together will add variety t4 sandwiches. Mix 1-4 cup minced ham, 1-4 cu| peanut butter, 1-4 cup choppei sweet pickle, and two tablespoons mayonnaise. This makes a very nice filling for sandwiches or ten biscuits. Use two forks or a fork and a spatula tor turrrbaccn- ror-r- other meat when frying. WAIST AND SKIRT NEW YORK — Clare Potter, wha with Martha Stout, has gone int: shlrtwalst and skirt designing ex- clusively, tells a delightful summer (Continued on Page 9) Modern Etiquette QIONflIIQ Q. If a woman is on an elevator what should she say when a man holds back other men to allow he: to leave the elevator first? A. She should thank him, or nod her head in acknowledgment of the courtesy. Q. Is it all right to use the ex- pression. 'I want to make you ac- quainted with" when making an introduction? A. No: this phrase is extremely awkward. Q. What is customary to use as 1' centrepiece for the wedding break- fast table? A. The wedding cake. "Needlecraft ' I FOR THE HOME r COMPLIMENT CATCHEE Here's a simple little dress that. can be mode as individual as your own taste! its smart yoke styl- Qlg provides the chance for con- trming fabric, such as frosty Qyg. let. Or, it's equally nice in pmq with bias hip and shoulder um.- merit. No. 243d is cut in sizes ll, i8. i5. 17 and l0. Blze l6, 2 1-4 yda. 854a,, l l4 yds. M-in constructing. Send 25c for each Pattern which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name, Address and Style Number plainly. Bo lure to state size you want. Include postal unit. or acne number in your address. " Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2N6 Name M6365! Oil! Province \ vagant ideas. K tical where the undo of ‘other: may be threatened by ma. wild plunges. A child bofn on um ca; mu able. skillful and ambitious ‘may get out of hand, by extravagant gal. rp-hmun o: fiance or by the I 0 OII III Ill. ~ mu ‘ p»: calmandprac-l -