PAGE TWO exams. . — .THE WOMAN'S REALM — IIAUT! HCIIIT Ihen bloom of youth has disap- peere lliilady tries to fake it. (‘ho hair is curled and lips are smeared. The still does not quite make it. Much time and effort goes to waste in trying for such graces, For Age shown is making haste In sundry other places. if she would pay a bit more heed (Forsaking beauty hunger) T‘o her poor feet, I'm sure that she'd l‘eel better and look younger. -—Engelagus. Q! j ahort evening gowns focus so much attention on your Eeet and legs that really beautiful rvening slippers are a "must" for ivery one this year. The smartest are very open san- lals with thin stripping or lacings ihat wrap around and tie high ibove the anklg The shoe itself a only the mcr t shell on a sole. iomet-imes with a tiny closed cap iver the toe, sometimes com- iletely open. You may match your dress in color or wear gold vr silver kid or a bright contrast- ng color. BELTS ARE IMPORTANT Don't belittle your middle b)’ ignoring the fashion importance ooooi soon Iologfs new, qulelr way to make I WITH IIAISIIII -be ' t §Z,""'“"’.s~.-a..¢"i i335 "Qimfiill °"' 1 as Kellogg's teaspoon aalt .311”; our Iugar or y! cup milk so dm vyruv asp ifhd 1 98g 2 ta leopoone flour ' g - soft shortening M mgwdef K w? ml!" l. Combine Ali-Bran and milk In mining bowl- ]. Sift to flier flour, baking powder andeal inti>daamamsnngbo$l.rad‘d ,e , o - ""," °' ..°..."..."T'“§a.'%.... lull“ 1 combined. Ifll peaked E no 3i full. .. Bake in ro-hle-aminrdarately bot oven (egtfll) about 25 minute; Mahoeflluacioua mufins. i of belts. Dog-leash narrow, waist- embrecers are highly popular — leather belts in narrowdo-corse- let widths are brave with color and trim , . . and the jersey sash in woven or knit weights is used sash or cummerbund fashion to encircle the middle. And don't forget the striking effects that can be achieved with printed scarves for waist-hugging wonders. A lovely walk is based on good posture. Your head must be held high. Your shoulders must be re- laxed. Your waist is pulled out of your hips and your hips are tuck- ed well under. Your knees are flexed (relaxed). Your weight, all of it, is on the balls of your feet. This is the posture you should be practicing every day. This is the way you should stand whenever you are on your feet. HOW T0 WALK Now you are ready to take your first step in the right direc- tion! 1. Place all your weight on the ball of your left foot. 2. Slowly lift the right foot a little off the floor. ' This lifting motion comes from the hip and knee joints (not the ankle). 3. Now as your right foot moves forward and as your heel very gently meets the ground, you transfer your weight to the right foot. 4. Your weight then rolls even- ly from the centre of your right heel, through the centre of your left ankle to your toes as your left —foot is lifted up and forward. lt is the unbroken continuity of the rhythmic rolling motion that gives smoothness to your walk. And it takes practice. COLLEGIATE CAPERS Two interesting skirts and one good jacket equals two suits in the co-ed wardrobe. Add a jump- er, as many blouses as the bud- get will allow—and toss in a clever jerkin or vestee-—and you don't-need a slide rule to discover the mathematical potential of a ‘basic and highly interesting. casual about-the-campus w a r d- robe. Don't be afraid to investigate a piece of meat, to find out where the bones are, before trying to carve it. A little advance explo- ration of this kind will help you slice the meat to perfection. COLLARS ARE NEWS PARIS -- Collars are fashion news. Never have they been more varied or larger. Scarfs and shawl collars, cape collars and cowl- collars, which can be pulled for- ward over the head as hoods, are plentiful. Cup collars often lined with fur, fit closely round the neck, funnel collars are taller still. Gisnt godets, circular or fan- i 5 1 E .. I pleated and set in at the back ngsées c/afiéerflgr "Ma/z ever define! Hflgmgnlrlflfesf Oxylel washes "Of-Em Li! y! Issldel “l? ouoaneeo waah inside. sydol you can wslfigiymtfl while Orydol your clothes wl dusting new whltenole for your clothes! ' G .10: ctranesr warn you can err non any soar n! m: wmo waebabla colors actually some out brighter. What's more-ea long as you use new fal’ r/Z/l? KING CQLE COFFE E VACUUM-PACKED /u/_/. 00077555 m or side-back, will make this sea- son's slim skirts suddenly open out with flare and grace. Are you fond of painting but hate the mess you always make? Try putting a cardboard pie plate beneath the can of paint. before starting operations. The plate will catch all dripping: and give you a place on which to rest your brush. Clean out dust and dirt from under typewriter keys at home by running the nozzle of the vacuum- cleaner along the underside of tho portable. CALIF-LENGTH FAVORED FOR. EVENING GOWNS PARIS — A word on evening dresses is most important at the moment. because the number of calf-length frocks is almost greater than that of ground-length models. They may be slim and straight. accompanied by little jackets turn- ing them into afternoon and dinner dresses, or full ballet-skirted types of tulle and lace with strapless bodice: and trimly marked waist- lines. Don’t Make This Mistake When Child ls Constipated Don't upset a child already upset by con- stipation with nasty-tasting laxatives or harsh. Rriping cathartics. Give Children's Own Tablets. This new corrective made es- paclally for growing youngsters’ needs is so Pleasant to take-acts an gently and nor- ms ly without disagreeable r that THE cuaaman. CHARLOTTETOWN WOmflIfS RéalmvSocial and Persbnalxlzashi Living&Leisure' DOROTHY rDIX_ SAYS- l j A Bad Boy Mother Complains Tliel Son, I7, Won't Study, Help Around House DEAR. MISS DIX: My son is 17 years old and in the tenth grade at school. I am a widow and my husband's great desire was that I should educate the boy with his insurance and make something out of him. But my son has begun to skip school, will not read or study, and wants to go out every night. He has a job on Saturday and works like a Turk until late, but when it comes to doing anything for me he refuses. I have to wait on him, pick up his clothes. I have tried kindness, pe-suasion and rewards to get him to do the work, but he refuses to mind me and is lmpudent. Do you think it would do any good to give him a good whipping? , MRS. W. J’. P. ~.\~/_, t av ANSWER: You are seventeen years too late now in teaching your boy obedience. You have to do that ln the cradle. If you whip a boy of 17, you will only make him so angry that he will probably run away from home. You will not make him mind you. ' But perhaps the situation is not as bad as you think it ls. You want your boy to be neat and clean and orderly, to be teacher's pet at school and studious at home. You want him to be eager for an education and ambitious about going to college and to prefer to spend his evenings at home with you to running around with other boys. Well, he is just exactly like millions of other boys who have grown up into fine citizens and the prop and stay of our country. ALL ALIKE Virtually all boys are like that at 17. They hat-e to work around home. They resent authority. They are irritable and impudent. And there is nothing that their mothers can do but just to keep hands off as much as they can. J You say your son likes to work. That will be his salvation. As soon as he finishes high school, let him get a Job that interests him. There is hope for every industrious person. They seldom go far wrong. But one thing I do urge upon you and that is not to waste your husband's insurance money in sending a boy like that to college. Keep that for yourself to live on and perhaps lend him a helping hand some time when he wants to start a little business of his own. You can lend a horse to water, says the old proverb, but you can't make it drink. So you can send a boy to college, but you can't make him a scholar unless he has a thirst for learning. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: For eight years I have kept company with a married man who has n Wife and two children, and, although he swears that he loves me well enough to give them up, he never does it. l-le always makes some excuse about not getting a divorce. Says he has no fault to find with his wife, so she would have to he the one to ask for a divorce. I am getting discouraged waiting and living on the back street of his life. Do you think I will over get this man all for myself? TEARS ANSWER: No. I do not thlifk that the man ever intends to divorce his wiife for you, and the sooner you realize that, the better it will be for you. Realize that if the man had ever wanted to marry you it would have been in the early days of your liaison, and he would then have asked his wife to set him free. Now, when his romance with you is as stale as his marriage, he hasn't the remotest idea of going through the mess of a divorce in order to make you his wife. It is a pity that the girls who fall for married men do not realize that nine times out of ten the man clings to his wife with hath hands and wouldn't part with her for the world, because she is his perpetual alibi. She is his excuse to the girl for not marrying her and he hides behind her skirts while he carries on his nefarious work of stealing n. girl's heart. Enduring the same purgatory with you are innumerable other women who are eating out their hearts for the love of some married man. No lot is sadder than that of the woman who wears out her life on hopeless waiting for a married man, but perhaps the woman who ls willing to break up another woman's home gets the punishment that fits. . DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We are a boy and girl of 17 and 16, very much in love with each other. Do you think it necessary for us to (Continued on page l0) T0 PRESERVE AUTUMN LEAVES even the fiissieat child won't object to their use. Make laxative-taking time easy on the child and yourself, mother! Get Children's Own ‘Tablets today It your druggist. 25¢- ll keep this the life of package odayl T l h- .7... the willful 0:11am“! I\ Gather sprays or small branches Th0 Slflfl SGY - - (don't forget a few green leaves). Bring inside immediately as the By Genevieve Kosnble air crinkles them quickly. 1 Spread several layers of news- m papers on the springs of an unused bed or couch: lay sprays on top; cover over with more newspapers; then lower the mattress carefully. Leaive for elx days. Leaves will retain their coloe always. Single leaves can b_e done the same way. Chinese lanterns or bittersweet add to a bouquet. Ior filthy, November d A FIRM-HIKING and intriguing state of affairs -ts likely to male- rialiao on thla day. according to pe- culiar planetary aspects. The curi- ous or irregular course of events may demand a keen analysis of mo- tives. minpose. schemes and propo- sitions, in which safety depends on a abrewd glimpse beihind the scenes. where false "and sinister plots and plans may be concocted. Regulate the feelings and emotions in favor of straight thinking. realism. facts. Ieelllellrthday Those whose birthday it is are advised to formulate plans and pro- grams. bosod upon honesty. truth, discretion. and straightforward thinking as well as right action and purpose. It would be easy to be 1n- drawn into equivocal, unprincipled. and expedient acts, lest the motives end machinations of others prove a subtle force, regrettable and sin- lster in outcome. Make ideals firm and practical, shunning alluring plots and schemes lest "dreams" miscarry. or licate. shun ln- trigues and glamorous tactics. A child born on this day may find itself the victim of sinister. con- nivfrig and elusive entanglements, won by Iibtlety. intrigue or came- dlency. Make ideals practical. Better English I! D. O. Wllllasns I. What is woo; with this sea- vence? "We mgoingto takeln a show tonight." 2. What is the correct monum- lstion of “overalls” (a garment)? S. Wtécb one of these words ls milqiell ? Ilrroneoul. Brwtfon, erratic. eradication. d. What does the word "insid- ious" mean! B. What is a wold begin! with de that means "till; nell" ‘I ANIIIII l. It la better to w. "We are going to a show tonight." Prououn sf son Tau: TOMATO FLAVOR H Veer Pauly Deserves Aylmer Duchy We Ire familiar with the adver. tisement of a paint company which states that if you n. e the surface you save _alL This itipro-bably true of wood and paint, tit ls not on. tirely true of teeth. Research dentists states that brushing the teeth with powder or paste regularly will preserve the en- amel or outside covering of the teeth. It is through the enamel that most decay or caries of the teeth occurs. Partlclu of food left on the teeth gradually cause a small crack or tiny cavity in the enamel, and once the enamel is broken. harmful organism cause decay of the under- lying structures. Thus it la good teeth insurance to brush the teéth. However. a-ll decay of teeth does n0_t occur from the break in enamel or surface covering of the teeth; the teeth must be kept strong by good nourkhing blood from good nourishing food. Thus several years age, the Drs. Agnew, from experi- ments in the foreign mission field were able to p vent decay of teeth by the use of ‘protectlv!’ foods. es- pecially milk and other dairy pru- ducts, and fruit and green vege- tables. Because there has been some con- troversy as to the benefits of nour- ishing foods preventing tooth decay, some information comes from Dr. Genevieve Stearm, State Univer- sity of Iowa. in the Journal of Den- tal Rmearch. These research work- ers found that before the full benc- fit of a nourishing diet could be estimated the child should be wail nourished. They believe that some of the nourishing diets to prevent decay are not apparently success- ful because the patient la in a run dciwn poorly nourished condition and often many months must elapse before the child becomes well nour- ished. At the State University. Iowa. keeping children under strictly con- trolled diets. completc BtOfp of decay occured with diets high in sugar and diets low in sugar but always with enough of the building foods. especially dairy products which are readily absorbed into the blood. In other words it la the stale of nourishment of the body when the protective foods are given that ls the important point as far so tooth decay is concerned. \ Household Scrapbook By Roberta lee Otis-talus Window curtains will keep clean much longer if they are dusted thor- ougthly each week. And. shake them before laundering. soak in cool, soarpy water for about a half hour. then wash in warm suds. Rinse thoroughly. Dry full length on the line if they are not to be placed on stretcliers. Preeervoa Place an asbestos mat directly over the burner and under the pot. in wihich preserves are cooking. You can then go ahead with other work and know that the preserves will not stick and burn. Wet Shoes that have become soaked in the rain should be- atuffed with paper and dried on their aides. away from the fire. How Canlll! 5 By Anne Ashley How can I clean the leather on furniture? A. Wash with one teaspoon o! vinegar to each cup of warm water used. Use aloft cloth wrung out of this solution. Wipe dry, then polish with one egg white. beaten and mixed with a. teaspoon of turpen- tine. A flamiel cloth should be used for polishing. Q. How can I remedy e sticking window sash? A. hour a small amount of hot lam between the window frame and the casing. and also smear it along the sash rope and on the roller. Q. How can I add to the flavor of stowed dried fruits. such as prunes. peaches or that A. Add a Inall amount of lemon juice and grated lemon rind white slowing. i; Cook's Corner cnooona-s-a "m..." mi: A 1% ewe milk if a grated uneweetened choc- o 1 tslileqoon plain gelatil 3 tableqoons cold water ‘A teaqsoon vanilla finch gait m cup eavy cream. w _ Rent milk in 0w of dotxlrgsotler, edd chocolate and stir until blend- edna Add slightly egg yolks a nutmeg to he e Iuaar. corn- te , mixture in double boiler and cook until thick- ened. sti Oool (m, an“, _ 1mm. which hen been %Z¢ toentra; etsleetsrleed vhlsoed with lienmlnhs we treaehnry and t. "ram "I" ‘ll: unsunswuwnnssnuwmuoYWWY-‘orvuvswwsuuiavma-mtxww onsxLiterature , novamnn a. 1949 e cwwwwxzw‘. Try This Grand sullen or surrsn * TREAT! morass on svexvmsavs . new su- or m is. sronosav sq ' G00z/fl/}Z1/_,iiit.isiii.;i .i< ‘Oil-Z -\l\l\ g Morning Smile Modern Etiquette By Roberta Loo that so POOR THROW " you're walki - Mabel again: I tllguglgllt thrgzn you over." " e did. but you kn i. girl throws." ow o. l Q. What are the courses make up a formal dimer? A. There are five or more courses. First, oysters or clams on thelhiill: shell. or canapes, or other lg relish; or grapefruit. fruit cup, or ,, Goon B5550“ melon. Second. soup. Third. fish. And MW m“ Y0" have had Fourth, game or roast with two '°PP°,‘,"““llY °!. hem“: my Opt!) vegetables. FLfth, salad. Sixth, des- lons’ ind. a Pamamelllllrl’ candi- sert, followed by fruit, nuts, candy ‘ma’ w", n 331'“ "h" m)’ and coffee. nent hasn t a. leg to stand on." Q. Is it all right to refuse a cig- 31"“ v31“ mm‘ the bfll-‘k 01 the arette someone has offered you. .f h! ~ All ll" "m" Film" Th)‘ lit you prefer your own brand? s ‘mm m” “m5 -' A. Yes; but be sure to smile and say, "thank you, I have some." Q. Who takes charge of the wed- ding fee for the clergyman? A. The bridegroom places it in an envelope and gives it to his best man. who hands it to the clergy- man after the wedding. Finn-fa: I 70M 6w’ I l b. Canard Salmon Bread l l I w : 1133.2": l I l I lilelie baskets by placing I slleee o! bread. erusle grmnved. Into lnsumd ruslanl cup. overlapping 2 eomrre of lhr bread sun bottom of rlinlnlner. Bake n s75 degrees F" S-lll mlnuln. Flelnr Salmon and fill hol bniirls. Mali! llure by mrltlng l cup butsn with 2 egg yolks In don.»- noller. stirring constantly. "ate! In bottom el’ double boiler olsould nol be bell- lng. Al Inlxluro lhlrhrnl. add annlhfl lrup butter. ‘h!!! shlrl. remove from heal. eilil eesvonlngs. Four sauce our Salmon Basket» k191i CANNED A»... .-:.: Sum. c» v it" w ‘ (my Proving cNEECllECFHf - — FOR THE HOME - TIIE JACKET DRESS A dress look. a two-piece look - both in this newest of ensembles mltlna a cap sleeve charmer with its own button-up bolero-Jacket! This is s style that takes well to m"! flbrics. from casual wool, to a dressy crisp faille or taffeta. No. 3060 is cut in sizes 12. 14. 10. 18. Nmilliidarldldflileltldrfl. 3% yards 39-inch; Jacket, 2% yards 30-inch. Send 2f: cents for each Pattern which i ‘ ’ complete sewing 1W"- Pflnt your Name. Address Ind Style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you want. Include postal unit. or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guarding Pattern No. 3060 DAHLIA DESIGN DESIGN N0. 5-1123 This beautiful crocheted dolly a dahlla center with pineapples a. ploot mesh edging. Pattern Ne E4123 contains complete instnia tlons. To order: Send 20 cents in coil to Needlework Bureau. Charlnlth town Guardian. Design No. 12-1123 Name Address NIIIIQ Address Q Hl(il.