glxca rwo Woman's R Happenings 0f The Week Field Marshal Viscount Mont- omery. chief of the Britishhrmrs mperiai General Staff, will visit President 'I‘ruman and tour‘ the United States‘ important’ nliJta-y Ichools during ins nineoay visit. (Viscount Montgomery, who turn- ed wily Field Marshal Erwin Ron»- Inel back in Egypt and served as a deputy to (‘lelleral Dwiant D Eisenhower, is scheduled tn arrive in New York ‘ruesdfly- H? W1“ visit West Point tllli-t clay. then ill’ to Washington. 0n September ‘ll he will place n. wreath on the tomb of the Urknown Soldier. bold a press confcrmr-e and call on Mr- Truman. . o Escorted by pip!" s. the Princesses Elizabeth and M-imgaret Saturday night attended a performance cf Highland and other Scotti-sh dances at Aberdeen in aid of the Scottish Children's Leigue of Pltv Princess Malt-taint is pirsident of the organization. After jolnlng u‘. ‘the singing oi Aulu Lang Syle tile Princesses rriofiored to Balmora. the Scottish willilry residence of the Royal Falliihl‘. Hon. T. W L. Prowse received ‘the happy comlatulatlons of his family and friends list. Saturday the occasion of ills ‘Idtlrl birthday. . . Mr. and lvlrs J P. Dolle 55 Fitzroy Street. ilave as their guest Mrs Doyle's sister Miss ‘beta Tel-- risn oi Halifax. Dr. R. Brow, Mrs. Brow ind il- teiosting family nave returned to Montreal. They nari a. wnnzleriul holiday at Gregor’: Howl. Brack- ley and in Charlottetown. I Regretful farewells were Skid to Mr. and Mrs rlnedon who have been the guests of Mrs. H. R. Hill- ‘aon, the Bir-chea. for the past six wedrs. They left- Wednesday going by bus tlo their home in Barton. . - - Mrs. E. F Greene of South- port, Conn, is moloring home Mori- day after- spenriuig several weeks at the Charlottetown. She will be accompanied to New York ny Miss Emma Nicholson. . . Rev. Mr. Hepburn and scn Ken- neth who have been the guests qf the Misses Townshend, Pleas- ant Street, left Tuesday or. return to Kirkland Lake, Ont., wreie Mr Hepburn is minister of the Pres- byterian church in that mining town. Mr. and Mrs W. Lloyd John- non and daughter Miss Fizabeth of Mechanicville, N. Y.. arrived by motor this week and are ti": guests of Mrs. Johnson‘; mother Mrs. Charles R. Harper and Miss Hilda Harper, Prince Street. O In O Mrs. D. J. Riley who nu been attending the Canadian Fitdcrailion of Convent Alumnae in Montreal arrived home Tuesday coming by plane from Nloncton. . . c Mr. and liirs. Archie Mclnnis of Washington, D. C.. accompan- ied by their son. Rlev. Father Mc- Innla alre on a motor trip reviv- ing friendships in different parts of the Province. - a 1 Misses Marvaret and Emma Dougan are visiting in Buffalo tile guests of their sister, Mrs. William Col-less and Mr. cal-less. l I I Min Isabelle Ucodwin. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard 1V. Good win leaves this morning to take up her studies at Mt. St. Vincent in Halifax prior to entering the church. Min Doria Eula‘ e54 m“ Muriel Weeks returned over tho weekend from a holiday trip to Ottawa arid Ii. a . a Mn. Simon Pauli was hostess ct l. smart two tabla bridge last Sut- urdaywafternmn at her pretty sum- mer mo in lfeppocb. Mrs. Emma Ryan retuwned Tues- day to her home l24 Prince Street after sevens: months in the. P. E. I. Hospital. lifrs. Ryan who acci- dentally fell several m/lrilts ago breakirg her hip has made a splendid recovery; Mr. and Mrs. Percy Dawson. of Ola/pond, were fr: Ottawa '02" the wedding tiwir d ivler, Min Jeanette Dawson, wh wok place September 3. While iii the Capital were the guests of their son. daughter-ln-aw, Mr. and Mrs. 10a P. Dawson‘. . Mr. H Brown's illness in re- gretted by ‘friends. lndllrl H 00mm Malone is visiting for a few vedu in ‘ 1m. J. n. mailman. Oitowl. iiu nun-nod from Chicago. win/re ans viaizfd he: sister, Mk1. Bolton bia- Ifl_ . Mr. and Mrs PR. Boy‘e, Hun- ter River and Mrs. Muriel Mac- donald, Brighton Road, motored to Cornwall ‘Tuesday where they were guests of the McLeod-Shaw wed- ding. 0 a - Mrs. J.W. McLeod, Bycney. N S, and he: sisfler. Mrs. Harold Hurry, Halifax, one making an ex- tended visit to imny frmnds on Prince Edward island. bill's. Mc- Leod and Mrs. Hzirry came over to attend the marriage of Mrs Mc- Le0d's son, Allen J. McLeod of the Dept. of Justice. Ottawa. and Misl Eileen Shaw, daughter of M: Mid Mrs. Walter R Shaw, C‘_vrie River, which took place ‘n Cornwall Unit- ed Church Tuesday. Sepi. ‘lid. Mrs. Mcbeods brother, Ml‘. Edward Jackson and HITS Jackson. reeval- stoke, B. C., were also _\;uPF'5 at the McLeod-Shaw wedding arxi while here were registered at t.ic Charlottetown. Mrs. Hurry a for- mer Islander, is a song ivri'el ard some of her mil-gs played by the noted Halifux organist Richard Fry have been heard recently over the radio. 0 . . The tea hostcszes at t‘.e Go?! Links this afierrorln will be Mrs. V. L. Goodwill, .4158 Norah Long- worth, Mrs. Gordon Foster. Miss Mary Haszard, was Muriel Weeks. . a . Miss Irene McKay is leaving by plane this morniu; for her home in Boston after a two weeks visit with Mrs. E. H NortonkFltzloy Street a Mr. Justice WiJlam F. A. ‘rur- Beoii. Canadian Ambassador to Belgium, and Madame ileury riTchambault, daughter lf -. plO- neer Prince Albert iamilv. were married in London August 2'1. ac- cording to a cahlcgrum received by Sheriff and Ma's A. J Hansen Prince Albert. Mrs. Harman is a sister of Madame dfllichambaui. "side. Marjorie will join her Madame dilclvlmbault married a captain in the French arr-y dur- ing the First (‘vreail War. Her hus- band was killed and she lived in France until 194D. when she escaped through Portugal with the Tui- geor. family. She is tile former Al- vina de la Gorgenniere. A mother, Robert, lives ln Itiontrcal Ambas- sador ‘Turgeon began his career as a young lawyer in Prince Albert early in the cemury‘. . . Three days oeioae her wedding to Pte. Emile Raymond of Quebec City was to have taken place Marjorie Evans of Harlesrien. Middiesex Cul- lapsed, stricken wilt-h l1 szrzillge form of paralysis: Unable to move without extreme pain and col:- fronted with a doctor's nromunce- merit that it would he a long while before she could walk wim- Mt"- jorle thought that her b“.ie silk wedding gown. the cake and the flowers all had been prepared in vain. But Eirniie, whose return to Car-aria. i: pendiri , was dc-tcrmili- ed to carry out 1 e wedding. b0 Marjorie was helped into the gown by her two sisters, placed on a stretcher and taken to church in n municipal ambulance. The stretcher was wheeled to t-le chance) of Willeadarl Roman (‘etho- llc Church and the ceremony ‘took , llkniie nan-in song- plm “m li-isuinu in Canada as soon as she recovers. u 0 a Mrs. Lloyd S. Cox of Morell aff- companied by Helen and David Cox motored i0 Wrllfvlllc this week taking David to Horton Acaderrvy and later visited Lloyd Jr. ir Hall- fax. I O Miss Betty McPherson l-rld Miss Jean Ramsay are the tei hostesses at. the Tennis Courts this after- noon. o a With many rieli/lacies still on tn: hard-to-get list zmd extra hrlll 41' most impossible to find, hostesses these day are entertaining smal. group oi friends, usually two zublcs of bridge, instead of at the larger. less ir-tiiriate gatllerinfll- To keep the ‘somethinl special" gflnpgphefg for these little affairs, care must be taken to have each detail perfect. for under the clos- nange scrutiny of your guests. each particular will he 11108115196- Luncheon or supper, as the can may be, is usually a more formal occasion, served in the dining rooln rather than at she card tables. The table itself can be an im- portant facwr in 8W1 Will‘ P5117 undesired..." l.'l‘necon- trupioco will givu 70a an ity to try your own d-corstiril ideal and thaw is no limit to tie number of mlorfill and unusual ar- rangements Imi can se- You will want something special, too, for our bridge prizes 1f you have inv ted couples, chores a woman’: and -- man's Orin to be gluon, or if are onhrtaininl! a group of girs, have gifts for till! two with the highest scores People enjoy r-miisinl prim It the time, but. ii useful lift i! preferable. and may low-cowl yet attractive articles arc now a- vailnble. A moot lccepiablc would be a act of eight indi ual maul salt dishes. couiplete with tiny 300m. Their chasm lies in that ey can double an uh rays and so finish hilnoomfgrtable reachi-M -a spill g on . c way. If your mm no the spnrimisn typo, a golf ball or two will bring a smile of laaaure and a. package “Hill” 11101:‘: spelled ‘hyzfihlglllfl g. . . .5 so, while you doflt IIIUIOUO OAIGO m?" (on - Pack a i boa 403d lmall "HIM... M: (l1 m) worth of oxlmhium flown fffi"ld.hfldl to l? do liemy dell was delaying. I leasures of Old Home Week to til’! Ellen 's Diary By an Inland Farmers Wife James gushed pack his chair from the saktast table and pick- ¢d 11D his cap. "I wish Ellen he Said in a voice that fairly puttgd "that vou'd listen to the ‘probs when they corms ~- I believe lo my heart. it's going to rain. TLQYQ m; a queer sunset lut evening us: I could hear the train so clearly when I was puviag the cows n“; to pasture - as if it was just bu]; l}! the isms." While we were eat- 1118. I had set aside earilrr plans for the day, that hald met win ""1""? flPDmvai from James. Hence his dillcet tor-es. For some time. I had been promising Jiygglf a long unhurrled day in the city with time to shcn an»: tire t.) visit with this one or that and hours out to "ee the “show." The Bells of St. Marys have been a- calline rue-evenings at dusk 11.1; then of all the Jays of this week was the one i hid selected to be my own. Indeed bath dflllghlt-rg-l“. law, knowing mv intention. canle recently to hBlp tloy our nmm» and $0 SPEed me un_lr.y way. And then because qf advised precautions re D0110. that are definitely seainst consmeatlnz. and uetwlmrtlndll-l; the entertainments offcled. better Judgment prevailed It wsu‘d be unthinkable for any adult to satisfy selfish interests .r the expense o1 the welfare cf u child or other member oi the family. So I aided at home today and this time "hope deferred" m consideration of the health oi other; did rlI-t make “the heart sick." i l . I must listen in to the weather forecast on. James‘ behalf for tic harvest was commencing at Alder- lea today. However, it bad Sear.» ll’ begun when sllowers crime to suspend the work, as we 59y hQpe fully "till the first of the zveek” R01? bmusht nis team lrlis morn- ing, and "the Hi-rry mulre" was riderless. I saw James nioo as no made last minme adjustments m the binder and. lizard him say l";- Zfelflllly: “And you didn't bring Jamie. What a snarl-lei For lie told me he wanted to see the first of i119 0111mm” i myself came pres- ellily. leaving the cake. I was mix 1H8- to sit on a convert-ant veran- dah rail to watch the first round of the machine and to B11105 __i with a poigneruy —— tile sirange rhythmic noise o1 the cutting. 1t 1S 111mm; the several farm ivpefll- lions that to me never losc their fascination and the manner ii". which this robot sheds the golden sheaves uniformly made and so. curely tied has lost none cf 1'2’; mystery through the wars. Ros, sometimes well content arld a1. 0t‘.- ei- times impatient with the per- fvrmrmce or the tic bindet, is t1.e sheaves caught up and hold ex. ptrtly for the moment under either arm. fashion the rows of stocks So, on this tne last oi Summer's gays the harvest began at Alder- one Evan now, as on this d-irk rainy night, I write cunlfortably .r. my room by lampkglit. August ls‘ ubolll. to g0. An August, stern-named, that doubtless brought many lrrals um perhaps deep so-iow to some Is- land folk and vet wiihal, much that was good. On farms came till end 01 lhe hBYLF-Z whcn last loads wcie tucked into mows and lofts th-lt had “settled" It brought bare hay- flelds shorn of their tonne‘ beauty replaced now that raiil haw conle to stimulate new growth oy tho tty green of zhe aftermath. Is- nd-born folk and their Lielulll horned to our shores tliLs month to renew old friendships and to visit again in well-remembered haunts. And at home the exqui- ite lragral-ze of the ripenrl rasp- berries, borne on a subtle breeze from hedgerows and stumplands was the excuse tor many a farm- wiie to wander mom indoor cares to gamer the rich. larges. of canes planted and trull-ed by Nature's generous hum. Pard and .i picked berries from lll-shes that grow near the pool below the waste- gate and liked the solitude there, with only the evening calla of birds and the gentle crop of water and echoes, for our company. To fill a lambs were sold lnls month Jamie am I should not rave loitmed that morning when we helped the men herd the flock to a convenient pel‘. in the stump fiald for the sad Iiareilvell rites. Hut there were law luscious berries and a sl: 1.9 in. a "What about those ewelambsi" I over- heard Jamea say n we inspected them through fence. 'Nc|" Jamie begged "lots keep every one of the ewe-lambs. ‘Ihose have ins lambs irl the Spring. Yrs!" he said nod- ding towarda a your»; one did-last Spring.’ o August brought the entertain- ment and viriad light: and undreds of Islanders and viiitors alrvil to those of us at. Aldel-lea cx- cept Jearlio Ind ner miall daugh- ter. In the afternoons we attend- ed. An evening mere loft an un- precedented stats of affairs in its wake. The following morning tlze crclun can missed the truck. And ure interrupted our several dreams Harvest apples, first tors and other vegetsb .s came to our tables during this luv. rnon-h \ mu‘; the llch yellows to the flower bolder no red berries to the rowan trees. Crickets’ tunes assume a sander melody and a dragon fl smeared shout the lawn. An precious bob swulkilv-‘a. made initia fliqnta, irg out, hesitant win-gr time sunny must boar them south. tomorrow, Taoby our meek cat and for their flight about yam and pond with longing arid in vain. . Down tumbles lbs 1.2m the mo! to the rain barrel. like a Pall night." James remarks to Mr. 0. who neighbors from his house on the hill. A stove cover is lifted Ind a fresh stick placed on the fire. The talk il of worthy things, of fields and porous: and lumber and harvest and other earthly tr wins oringi to my blind. tow that 'he Si h is com . that ohm’ treasures there from illloilthbml- notbolovodlcoonia hands mo heart ma? may Ind mow: Ollerator while luck and Iii: father, "' very small but empty wiles‘. 0'...“- shecn "their the sound of the vehicle's depart.- . her kin and lamlc and I shrill look ' ;__ i m? flsould a married woman work 5° many women have found that dreamed that i-hey possessed. and taste of financial independence. quarter he gave had nothing to he is. work. I get a estic in my tastes. I don't know over pots and pans. are born car-pan-ters or poets. Nor can get the same reaction to doing the home wife. The man's side of which all blessings flow. gray mare is the better horse. Furthermore, one of the main a hcrne. and in a man's picture of like a halo. no dinner cooking. and iviili his emergency cull lo a sick patient. town lo see about a contract. whether when a girl gels married By Roberta Lee . What is one to do when on a SLflCl. diet and he ls invited to a dinner party? A. Decline ilha invitation. This is much better than sitting at a dinner table and making apologies for not eating. Wlhen one has made a mis- take oi any kind. isn't a very effus- ive apology better than just a few words? A. No; an apology that is too takebAltfcw sincere words of regret. are e er. Q. Is it impolite lo stare at a person on the street, or in any pukucflaceit, Ls i lit lll bred - . mp0 e. - . and rude. In some countries it is against tlhe law to do so. and cellars lrlt only laid Heaven. Until Monday -- Diary _. 5m)“- night. lipin Morning Smile l CHAN OEABLE Throughout the evening meal, neither lhad spoken. But as soon as the dishes had been cleared away and they were seated before the flre, the husband's face lost some q: its hardness. ‘You know, dear," he said. break- In the Face of oi pota- " n? Perhaps _, f, In tin fus of akmu. eemin DH Miliml. Is. is incirably ill of trouble hit rho told he: mother, down flic iii“. but b0 Md In. DOROTHY DIX effusive merely emphasizes the mils-- yoimptm reason to be happy. Bevm-year-old Janice flllboth Hamel. M‘. SA YS- - Career Wife Business Woman Finds It Difficult To Return To Domestic likens outside of her home when he: fin- ancial aid is not needed for the support of the family? ‘Phat is the illeadachey problem with which many a modern girl has to wrestle. and wlllcll will be particularly acute in these day; after the war when tlhey have talents that they never have gotten their first intoxicating One of these brides who is debating whether to exchange a mahogany desk for a cooking stove puts her case like this: “to a good business man who nukes pléniy to sup- port u. comfortable home. would never have to tell him wlhat I did with the "I am married." she says. He is generous and 1 me week before lat. He loves his work and he would be bored to extinction if he do but to try to amuse himself. "Well, I'm precisely in the same position that I'm a good business woman. I love my kick out of planning big deals and matching my wits against other gocd brains. But I am not dom- how to cook. I can't get excited I have been used to handling mloney by the thou- sands of dollars and when I go out and buy a ten-cent bunch of car- rots for dinner. I feel it is as silly as it would be to harness up a higtl- i powered Diesel engine to a one horse-power job. HUSBAND OBJECTS "But mly husband insists on my giving up my job. and he can't‘ realize that all women are not born housewives any more than all men can I make him See that a woman the work she loves to do that a man does in following a congenial occupation. v “And, anyway. I would think that the woman who followed some . trade or profession and who saw new people and had new experiences p A, stinson. Her father is 0f- every hour of the day would be a more interesting companion to a man ficer in charlie 0i i119 51811011- than the one who spent her days cooking and washing and scrubbing. and who had nothing more exciting to talk about than that the baby had cui a too-iii, or that the price oi butchers’ meat had gone up." '1lhat is the woman's side of the problem of the office wife versus it is that it h-urts his pride for his wife to be as successful in her line as he is in his. He wants her to be dependent upon him and to look lip io him as the source from No marriage is a happy one in which the reasons that men marry is to get the home of his dreams there is al- ways a wife, in a pretty dress or a bungalow apron. coming to meet him with a glad smile and with the savor oi good cooking surrounding her He doesn't want to find a dark house. with no wife meeting him. only welcome a telephone message saying rlhe had been detained at the office. or that she has had an or that she has had to go out of Somehow. alas. women and marriage and careers don't mix. and she should give up her job or not would be an insoluble problem if the first baby didn't settle it. ggHousehold Scrapbook By ifooerta Lea Table Linen Always horn the table linen by hand. It. will mean a neater jo and there will be no streak of dirt under the edge after washing, as so often happens when the linen is machine stitched. Scrambled Eggs An inexpensive way of serving ‘scrambled eggs to use three crumbled soda crackers and two tablespoons cf milk to each egg. Mix thoroughly. then cram-hie in hot butter . Parsley Parsley will be much easier to cut if! it is! washed in hot water instead o co . in? the long silence. "I've been th nlring over our argument." "Well!" she snapped, without looking up from her sewing. _“Yes. dear. I've decided to agree with you after all," he said meek- nlsr “i???” "v s" Wife ( aylng an Unepxectgd all at the o fice): "You told me, John Henry. that your new stenographer was an old maid." Employer (flustered): rlllht. my dear; she's sway ill today fiddsent her granddaughter 1n. Death . . . . changed my mind." I I "ThlVl RECEPTION COMMITTEE ‘The mlplu ha worshipped an flaming, are flaming, Haunting red tcrcbu bright hill; Below in the valleys the lurncca are turning; Blue is the Autumn hue, breath- less and still, an every The loom on the river an calling, are calling, Plaintlve and far, u his skiff’: blunted prow . Noses the shore-line. We wait here to welcome him. ' I and the Autumn. But when in he now? Helen Middleton. Hint: o! Didi Some men always remove their hats when riding in elevators when women are present; some do not. If a man gets on an elevator ac- companied by ladies. he should remove hll hat unless the elevator is so crowded that he cannot pos- sibly do so wlthout holding it nlxh iri the aivr. The slick littlrzlilt m» daytime l It's harvest time in Canada's tobacccland in western Ontario and a bumper one it will be if the weather holds. Shown here among the tobacco plants at the Delhi. 001.. Dominion experimental farm ‘l; pretty Martha Stinson. three- year-old daughter of Ml‘. and lilirs. > Cook ’s Corner LEMON BREAD PUDDING 1y, mp5 dry bread crumbs, or 2 cups soft fresh crumbs 2 cups cold WMBI 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon grated 164.1101’! “m1 4 tablespoons butler | 2 eggs, separated 4 tablespoons sugar Method: Soak the bread crumbs in the water. lhen add tlhe lemon juice and grated rind. along with the 2/3 cup sugar and the cutter, which has been melted. Place in a greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (350 deg. F.) for about 1 hour. Then spread the top with any tart jelly. Beat the e38 vchites until stiff, but not dry. and gradually beat in the 4 tablespoons sugar, Spread the mering over the jelly and return the lid ing to a slightly lower oven <32 deg. FJ. leaving until the meringue is deli- cately brown. Serve this warm or cold. with cream if desired. APPLE billy-mantis l Aylmer Maopherson Two cups flour. 1.1; teaspoon salt. 4 teaspoons baking powder, 3 table- spoons shortenlng; about» h. cull milk, 6 apples. peeled and cored. sugar and. cinnamon and raisins. ‘,Mix and sift flour salt and baking powder. Cut in shortening, and add milk to make a soft biscuit dough. Roll to ‘a’ inch tlhick and Git dough in 6 squares. Place the pr ared ap- ples in centre of each. an fill cav- ity of each acple with ralsris. brown ysugar and cinnamon. Draw dough up around each apgle. Pierce with a fork. Place in uttered baking dish. and bake in moderate oven cf 350 degrees F- until apples are ten- rler-about 40 minutes. Serve with I cream. PARTY ITIIDSS lS-LACY i I i —the soft dress for date-timo—are giiold fashions for the young career r . TRY A SACK DRESS IT'S PRETTY T00 The sack ha: finally come into its own. Easy to make, low-priced promises to be a popular addition and attractive, the "sack" dress to many fall wardrobes. Made of tubular wool jersey. i: can be styled with a plain, high |neckllm or shaped into a low-cut I model. Shown in vibrant turquoise. warm coral, palest pink and deep purple, it can be dressed up or down. whatever the occasion rc~ I wires. RAYON F0! ALL PURPOSES Rayon can be designed for many purposes! In fact, rayon clothe us ent ly. from shoes. dresse, coats, suits. Well". lingerie, handkerchlefs. children's wear and men's wear. It ll designed for use in our homes in many products , . cilrtslns, draperies. upholstery, rugs and even tablecloths and napkins and blankets blended with wool. It can be and is being designed for such diverse fields a: lu gage, mats, optical lens wpcrl, even reinforcements for quilts and pap. er. Rayon textures can be designed to have various charactcriszics. They can be made so as to have the cool qualities delired in |u|n_ mer. They can be designed to have the WET"! qualities wanted for cold-weather wear. particularly all the new spun rayon 5nd wag] blends in tweed effects, flannels. :gabardilnes. and so on, It can have Ithe tailoring qualities wanted for l ‘ " How Can 1 11 2 Q. How om l mak o: m pods after shelling penis“ e A. Wash the pods and cook lthemrhwith some arse . ' milk Itlhickesn witch‘ d§'nlltfl? Wm‘ and season with salt, m4 q, tablespoonful of but er. El; mu“ dellclaus soup. Q. How can I strengthen but- toxholieg: - of titcliing a buttongiolrzwiwlll. strengtlfifig :22." ‘ma. ""1 - “=- nco M" i: “no "l!!! the buttonbole This l: i ‘ flllldrm pgvxltshtultllvrlallfolwmrhgatlrki‘: ' lac wllmcll m- utility. i thoroughly ' an onion and ; LivingolLeisure -—THE WOMAN ‘S REALM- usei cl many klndl. Th! 1111119. RIYOII. WI! invented’ Obi‘ 30 years ago to dnignatc the no textile fibre which was for [o many years before that known simply as "artificial silk." Today rayon has become, next to cotton, thelénost widely used fibrg in 1h, W01‘ . ALL ABOUT MARROW Squash is the name s i various types t-f edible $212112,‘ in? eluding pumpkin and Hubbard which are well liked and generally “'6' bl ogeta e marrow belongs to the squash family but might be called the weak sister since it; personal. it.) h so often ililnterntlng, Wm‘ STOW"? cooked and well season- d vegetable marrow is sw-eet, ten. der and has a mild nutty flavour 0M mum why vegetable marrow is unpopular is that when it is matured it develops a stringy coarse texture, so that it should ble used when of small or medium lze. The home economists of the Ag. riculture Department Cc-rlsiln“, Section suggest cooking Vegg- table marrow with tomatoes and onion: as the Europeans do. Vegetable Marrow Creole quire! one medium vegeinb), marrow, four medium tomatoes (two cups, cut), one medium n! alilt and 1-8 teaspoon of pepper, Peel marrow, cut one-inch slices and remove seeds. Peel und cut tomatoes in small pieces. Pee] arid slice onions. Cook the lama. ‘"8 and (‘man-s ivzcther for fivc minutes. add marrow and s93s0n~ _|"8- Cover and simmer {or 35 mini-lies. This makes six servings. f6- To clean bugs,- rnix flour and salt in equal parts to which vine- EBPthasAbeIein added to gmflntll m: e. ppy m xture and it Wash in suds and polish, a d" g Better English i; _. _.i 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? ‘Jane was very mad at hu husband." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of “august" (of majestic Wlhioh one of these words is misspelled? Rein nse, recom- pense. condense. 4. What does the word "animus iiy" mean? 5. What is a word with at that means a. spirltlik ANSWERS bath, gi-gndeur) 7 beginning "cclcstlal; i. Say. "Jane was very align with her husband." 2. Pronounce a-gust, a as in all. u as in us, ac cent second syllable. 3. Reminis- cence. 4. lll will; active enmity. "Animosity exists between illdivi- dull-s. hostility between nations." 5. Ethereal. Dr. ase‘: Ointment /l*/ (V/vlrf/nlyifi/n Murat/rum [4 10/110 of pictures. T“ I Fol-coll cane | suit. Flu- filgbfl ..€l.§."e.‘_.-,i.'$.‘}§ hi‘: ace of things-all in one Pat- A pretty dross is crocheted for a little lrl 2. 4 or 6 gen old. expensvc and easy make. ma No. I02 contains Its-notions. 0060i‘: Bend ll cent: Iii 00in find ol , a combination of bout and line "I'm not aihid to die" bowls death. than two Daddy la kl Rocha and he'll be there to take can of ma.” mushy! school class-mates help Clary Knlstoad, right. Gmnby center. N. Y, celebrate his fourth and probably not birthday. O ‘specialists called an incurable brain cancer lint already bu blinded 1 Mmlnmevyeaadnemyblfndediilmiiiihcoihlniiadtobsguidcd ' m. dying of Whit I To to Needlework Bureau, Ohvlotte- wrn a Nb. 2111 iscut in rim 1o. 1'2. 14. Pg: lino 16. gm mg Th ‘mm ‘n. m“, . lottctglwn durum:- "' on“ PING!!! N0. 3711 Name Admiral ca: ma“ TRIED KLEEIIEX gvgwrnlillllrul. Xi and‘ m. m 4 fNeedlecraftl —FOR THE HOME-