. » s...” ' - Mrs. Fred M. Nash “sews-A aarwr-t --. Page TWO _ p The Week Holiday greetings have been ex- Ihflnilcd between the King and Viscount Alexander on behalf of the people of Canada, 1t u 8.11- nounced from Government House In an exchange of telegrams, the Governor General said; "My hLLmh. 1c dill-Y to Your Majesty. 0n be- half of all Your Majesty's Canad- lfln Subjects I have the-honor with deep respect to send to Your Maj- esty and to Her Majesty the Queen our loyal greetings and good wishes for Christmas and the New Year." The King replied: “The Queen and I thank you sincerely for the - loyal meaeage which you have sent Ii behalf of all my Canadian aub~ jects and heartily reciprocate their good wishes." Hon. Winston Churchill's physic- ian ordered him to remain in beo Monday but reported his condi- tion as slightly improved. The for- mer British Prime Minister, vaca- , tionirig in Marrakesh, Morocco, has been suffering from a slight cold since Saturday. I I The Governor General and the Viscountess Alexander gave a small skating party in Ottavira. on Satur- day afternoon. Their librcellencies, accompanied by their guests, and attended by members of their staff, were present at the hockey game in the Auditorium on Saturday eve- ning. Miss Amelia Fitzroy and Miss Jiii Hawkins. both from England, arrived to stay at Government - House on Christmas Day. I I I Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Gus, Dr. and Mrs. Kennedy and Mr. and entertained jointly last Monday evening at the icturesque Gass home on the orth River Road at one of the oiliest and most enJoyed Christmas rties oi the season. I I I Hon. Thane A. Campbell and Mrs. Campbell were at home to their friends on Saturday evening at a late supper party. On Monday afternoon Mrs. Campbell entertain- pd again at a Yuletide Tea. The living room had an attractive back- ground of Christmas greenery and was illuminated with candles. I I I Misc Ruby MacNelll of MacDon- ald College, who has been spend- lng the Yuletide season with he: parents, Dr. arid Mrs. J. I‘. Mac- fieili in summerside will return to ontreal on Monday. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hubley, who have been visiting in Summereide iiuririg the Christmas holidays, left on Monday for Halifax to visit Mr. I-lubleys parents. before returning to Montreal. where Mr. Hubiey is I. student at McGiii University. I I I Mrs. Murdock MacKinnon, Fitz- roy Street, was hostess at a sup- per party for her friends last Sat- urday evening. I I Mr. and Mrs. l". P. T. McKinnon are being congratulated on the ar- rival of a young son Robert Pet- er. born in the Royal Victoria Hos- pltal. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Farnham Greene of Southport, Connecticut, are leaving early in the New Year on a trip to California and Honc- lulu and expect to be absent until April. Their Charlottetown friends ‘wish them a most enjoyable holi- Iiay. I I I 1t is pleasing that Mrs. J. P. iiilllon is convalescing nicely after her recent operation at the P.E.I. Hospital. ‘ . Mrs. G. Elliott Full entertained It afternoon tea last Saturday at her hospitable home, d9 Upper prince Street. . I I I Guests of Rev. Canon and Mrs. Q. F. Bate, Wall Street, saint John, for the Christmas season are Lt. Cmdr. and Mrs. Peter H. Sinclair. Ottawa; Mr. and Mrs. George Bate and small daughter Janet, Halifax, pnd iviiae Margaret Anne Bate, Mid- dle Sackville. . I I f we. I. I. Bell hoa- itality to her friends at her apae- ous Brighton home entertaining Ior groups of friends Wednesday and Friday at enjoyable afternoon kl‘ I I I Mrs. W. A. Currie was hoetela to ‘a bridge party at he: home in Binnmerside on qaturday evening. I Miss Gloria Cowan. Toronto. ar- vcd on I eeday to spend the New , ear holiday with her sister. Mrs. Wilfred Baiier and Mr. Sal Bummer-aide. . _ . Misc Barbara siliiphant left on ‘Iueeday for Montreal where ehe in a atudent nurse at at. Mary's Hoa- pital. after spending the Christmas vacation with her parents. Mr. and gm no: amipharituaur " " Mina Helen I-lebkirk was hostess It two delightful afternoon teas this wed, entertaining at the Char- '_ j Residence on ‘fuceday and altarnoona. I I I " lhs-‘Llhatdenur- ' __iatf_iiiate friends at their ll "II Ghkr IIVI. e . _' Jiala some» sum the Royal Canadian Army Service Corps, defence minister Claxton has announced. The corps becomes the fourth in the Canadian army to have a member of the Royai Family as its colonel-dn-chiei. I I I Mrs. George J. Rogers entertain- ed for her family at a New Year's eve party, and in honor of her house guest, Miss Barbara Qulgley who came over from Halifax for the New Year's festivities. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Marcus caider ‘ind their son, Dr. Ralph Calder, who is interning in the Royal victor-in Hospital. Montreal. home for the holidays. I A continual round of parties and dances of a more or less private nature kept the young people in a whirl of excitement this week and holidays were never more enjoyed I I I e b Mrs. Arthur Hurry has returned from a pleasant holiday in Boston. I I I Miss Mary Tait, daughter o1 Mr. and Mrs. Allisonflrait, Soutiiport, who is studying in the Saint John General Hospital is being con- gratulated on having received her cap as a reward for diligent study. I I I Birthday congratulations were being extended to Mr. A. E. Mor- rison on New Year's Day. I I I Several engagements were rumor- ed over the Christmas holidays and handsome diamond rings were being very much admired by inti- mate friends of the happy recip- lents. I I I Dr. Bruce McConnell,“ Amherst, a successful practitioner in that town, flew over to the city at the New Year lo greet his mother and other members of his family. I I I Relatives and friends heard with deep regret this week of the death in a motor accident recently of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haslam Hunt of Sacramento California. Mr. Hunts mother was the late Miss Emma Louise Haslam of Springfield and Mr. Hunt was a son of the lat’: Mr. Dougaid Hunt of Hfilyarcl, State of Washington. Their two sons are attending university in Moscow, Idaho, and will have the sympathy of all in their bereave- ment. I I I Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Fyfe, Hills- boro street, are leaving this morn- ing for Boston, Mass. Mr. Fyie has sold his property on Hillsboro St. and bought ahother in Boston. Mass, where he and Mrs. Fyfe will reside. I I Misc Diana Downing, X-Ray technician. wiii leave on Tuesday by rail for Portland. Oregon, where she will take up residence. I I I Mrs. Ingham Palmer entertained recently at her home in Summer- side in honor of her daughter, Miss Aieah, who is on vacation from King's University, Halifax, inviting in her friends and classmates. Those who assisted in serving were the Misses Sally Schurman, Annabel Allen and Dorothy Pills. I Miss Dorothy Keenan spent New Year's in Summerside. the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cameron, Chest- nut Avenue. I I I w“ Georgina Maclseac of New Waterford, N. 8.. left this morning on return to her home. after upend- ing two weeks holidays with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. A, Mac- Isaec of Brighton Road. I I I Dr. and Mrs. Wilfred Mac- Iaaac of Sydney were also the guests of their parents during the Christmas holiday and will return to Sydney Monday next. I I I Mien Mabel New/some, deaconeaa, formerly of Charlottetown arrived in surnmerelde from Glace Bay. N. S. on Tuesday evening to be the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Norman Wright for the‘ New Year holidaya. o a Mr. David Cornish. lummeralde was the guest cf Mrs. Champion. Irongworth Avenue over the New Year. I I I Mn. Vickuuon. Upper Hilllbrough 8t. had Mile Ioie Gravel ca her guest for New Year festivities. I I I Before going on to the dance New Year's live Misc Edith Ber- nard had a very enjoyable party at Government House for upward of twenty. . Handsome Marie I-farrimali wife of the U8. secretary of Commerce, probably is the wealthiest member of the Truman official family, but ahe proudly went on parade at the Whiu House in e last year's dreec converted into the "new, lock." comments a NANA correspondent. In hot. her design for a model- ing might give some practical pointers to other women caught with a wardrobe dated by the fash- ion revolution. Mra. Harrimar started outwith a long-sleeved. high-neck black jersey dinner dress made on the atraight iinea of i046. To thig‘ was added a new baby- round the waist on a belt and buckled in front. Black lace mam.- ing the back of the dress trimmed the top of the skirt. We. flan-i- Iwinklcd iaerfll) iaeab . blue was blue taffita over-skirt gathered a- unnrnvo ma HARD-OF. HEARING Organizations interested in help- ing those who are losing or have 1°" their hearing do not like to hear an individual described as deaf. They point out that the nurn. ber of deaf individuals is not large but the nu-mbor who arc hard-of- hwlllll 15 Very Erect. A great many of these can be helped to obtain sufficient hearing for Qntentment and happiness. In “Hyileiaf the health magaz- ine, Louise M. Neusohuiz states that when you flnd yourself not hearing distinctly or having to ilffiin your attention to hear the ordinary toice. the first step should be to obtain a. medical examination and diaknosis of the ear trouble that is the cause of your defective 1191171118. Impairment of hearing may be due merely to an obsiruc- outer ear or enlarged tonsils or adenoids. or to thin blood or eino- tionai disturbances. This examin- ation with siirnple treatment will "BB ma"? B90919 of their worry about loss of hearing. Just as defective vision is meas- ured in diopters, equal to a meter in mflflsllremenl. so defective hear- ing is-vmeasured in decibels. A dec- lbe is the lowest or least amount of sound that can be heard by the human ear. As the normal human ear can hear up to 120 decibels, it would seam. that we could lose the ability to hear several decibels less than 120 before we would be con- sidered hard-of-hearing. Hearing authorities state that when we lose l8 to 2O decibels. we are hard-of-hearing, although loss up to 3O decibels is present in scme cases with apparently no need for a ilelfmk aid. "When it progresses beyond this. understanding the spoken cord is no longer possible without the aid of an electrical or mechanical device. and the indm- dual is definitely classed as hard of hearing.‘ If your hearing u. not defective BIIOUSh to need a hearing aid or if the hearing aid does not give you "511" "If! help you need, the sugges- tion is made that you learn to read UPS. Reading the lips relieves your ears of the constant strain of lis- tening. This straining to hear not; only distorts the spoken word or other sounds, but tires the entire nervous system. ACNE — PIMPLES Ame (Di-invite) is one of the most distressing of ailments. Send today roi- Dr. Bartons helpful book- let on this subject entitled “Acne- Pirnples." enclosing i0 cents and a B-cent stamp. to cover cost o! handling and mailing to ‘Ilhe 13911 tion such as impacted wax in the _ THESE FOUR. THING! Four things a man must learn to cl o If he would keep his record true. To think without confusion, clear- lore his fellow-man sincerely, act from honest motives pure- To To LY; Lrust in God and Heaven ee- surely, '1‘o Henry van Dyke. TIPS FOR WOMEN 0N MANI TOPICS New board game for preschool children who can't read has only one playing piece and moves are. made through a garden populated with familiar nursery rhyme char- acters. Mother reads nursery rhyme card and the youngster follows the instructions. - - To tenderlze tough meal. wok it with an acid food such as a little vinegar or tomato. Meat should be cooked over moderate or low heat. High heat causes meat to shrink and toughen. When arranging furniture in the bedroonr experts recommend plac- ing beds at the right or left of the vi-indow instead oi’ across it to avoid the glare of daylight in sleep- .ers' eyes. Outdoor work shoes can be made moisture-resistant by rubbing with beeswax, fallow, wool grease or petroleum jelly. Shoelaces which have lost their tips can be stiffened up for their slide through shoe eies by twisting the ends and dipping in clear nail polish. Cords or heavy threads giv- en the same treatment simplify stringing beads. Tension shoe trees should iiot b: used ivlien shoes are wet because they may stretch the leather out of shape. Wet shoes should be stuffed with soft" paper to take up moisture inside. The outside of the shoe should be patted with a cloth to soak up excess moisture. NEW COIFFURES FITTED T0 HATS Hairdos have as new a look as this seasons hats. Coiffures cover ears as hair ls pulled down to bal- ance the lilgh, puffy attic-revival hat styles. Buns or figure eight swirls of hair brought. over one ear take care of the profile that's neglected by a side-slanted hat. One "profile" hairdo created for gals with long locks is swung this way: Draw hair iii a smooth drape and Perso LivingiS. Leisure ITHE WOMAN'S REALMJ. ‘skin soft and smooth. nal front and aide strands of hair. parted oft-side, beck through a heavier strand brushed down from the top. curl ends to make a semi- roll over one ear. Hair over the other ear is pulled straight back to meet criss crossed strands. A comb anchors the arrangement in back. Equally spectacular is an asym- metric hairdo that sweeps all the hair around to one side. Ends are curled in one puffy vertical rol. over the ear for .this effect and held neatly in place ivitih a comb. Other hairdds are as nostalgic reminders of the World War I era as the hats they're designed to complement. Reminiscent of the Irene Castle bob, for example, ll the feather cut casual designed oy New York hair stylist. Lura de Gez. For the 1947 revival of this old-timer, hair is side-parted, shap- edlto hug the head and pin-curled around the edges to frame the face. DISCIPLINE BRINGS ADULT ’ STABILITY When things go wrong, do you ever stop to consider that the fault may lie, not with the world around you, but with your own self? People vary greatly in their ability to deal with the strains of living. Medical authorities know that those who are emotionally mature handle problems best. They are adaptable and stable under stress. Self-examination and personal discipline are necessary for dc- velopment of adult personalities capable of coping with life's com- plexities. sums voua TEETH mar nears, r00 A toothsome tip comes from den- tal authorities. The only teeth af- fected by diet, they tell us, are growing teeth. But food alone won't guarantee good health. It helps greatly. but its good effects may be offset by illness while the teeth are growing and, afterwards. by sweets, unclean mouths and failure to have the little flaws in the tooth structure filled before they develop into large cavities. LADIES! READ TlllS: Unwanted hair rcznoved instantly '.-'| n-ac. unms, legs with Flash‘ Hair Remover. Actually destroys‘ the entire hair above and below the skin surface. l-lamiless - leaves You can't Syndicate. lri'1.'are"“’bf"t'iiis—news- paper. Post Office Box 99, Station G, New York 19, N. Y. g For Monday. January 5 MONDAYS astrological forecast; shows that while new, original, and really brilliantgideaa and projects are distinctly “in the air" awaiting an adventurous and progressive in. dividual to capture them and divert to material uses, there i; g dggp- rooted peril ready to 5:15p up the tiznorous or unwary. Because c; ¢-\'I1°i>10nal or mysterious angles it mlsht be danacrous w arouse false hopes. with schemes and tricks to 111" t-ly zullihle. “Stop. look and listen. prudently. before venturing into the unknown. If It Ia Your Birthdr-y Those whose birthday it is, while “V1118 Cflllln very definite and workable plans for the future. as Well as present experlunentation, are urged to subject all proposi- i-loflc. ca ticements and alliances be- fore either relinquishing their own ideas or adopting another‘; _ “M11 both be submit ed to the acid test- of reason, good sense and sound judgment. Snares. tricks and sub. tietiee hover in the background, to Pounce upon the innocent, gullible °1' "nWl-YY- Vigilance and time should be the test of dubious gig“. atione or alliances, personal or buri- net. A child born on this day while 16"". Qflcrllfic. intelligent and ready for adventure. might be cough-t in a whirlpool of snares, ache see or dubious connecti . The Stars Say-- I! Genevieve Kembie next day when ehe read how her last year's dram had rated the hfilvy adjectives in the Washing- ton social columns reporting .thc White House reception. if Morning Smile Pirbliaim Jamel Gordon Bennett wla intolerant of fighting. a prac- tice all too frequently followed in the old rough-and-ready daye of journalism. Thus. one of the printers who showed up at work one morning with a wellbiacked eye. knew that he must conceal it. or he fired. In a moment of inspiration he smear- ed hie entire face with ink. ‘ Bennett noticed him immediately‘, "Wihaitare we paying hilt amen?" he asked the foreman. hid-the amount. the old pub- lisher ordted: "Double iti It‘: over the ears and twist into a fig- ure eight cliignori slightly to one side of the back of the neck. Here's the criss-cross coif, a more elaborate "profile" hairdo de- signed by M. Louise, New York stylist. To swing this one, weave 105C. iviuiiey piumptly refunded if hair grows back after third all" piication with no questions asked- Price $2.00 postpald. (C. O. Dis — Postage extra.) KAPEX PRODUCTS (Dept. B5) Box 22. Station B. Montreal, Que. o0 7x7x ( if vwvvvvxx. vx. good home and nil by should stay out. broad-minded of shouldn't. expect he» being old-fashioned. down any opinion to little Tommy. old-fashioned to be decent. old-fashioned. not virtue. world. mebod, has said that a with married men. if he were a “lander-n? would staggering ehpme from a tavern? Proud of. obvclua thafhl’: doing more wofk ma aayuae eila ia the pleat!" u g Dorothy Dix What Is I 01a Fashioned? Youth ‘Brands Parents For insisting llpon Virtuous Conduct The most scathing criticism that the youth of today can bring against anyone, and especially against their parents, is to charge them with being Cid-Fashioned. Apparently it is the unforgivable sin, and salt are the tears and bitter the resentment of the teen-lagers who write me that they are the victims of their fathers and mothers who inflict intolerable cruelties upon them by reason of their old-fashioned ideas. They do not deny that Pop and Mom are good and kind and indulgent and provide them with a their poisonous old-fashioned views a-bout lip- stick and dates and petting and how late h girl as putting a crimp in their activities, and the more by attributing it to senility. and feel that they d U 1 Old. to keep up with the times. 'I‘iie poor things just can't Now just what me youngsters comider constitutes being old-fash- ioned, ls a puzzle to their elders. for their children apply this biighting epithet to their parents. no matter how brilliant and intelligent and progressive they are, Father may be a chief Justice, but he can't hand but she can't tell teen-age sally anything. What the parents think is old-fashioned and the children are not having any. ' "BTU! NU!‘ OLD-IASHIONED Certainly the catch word ofltoday among the young is that it. is Bu! little boys, v/ho need a spanking in- stead of a psychologist, boast of being problem children. Adolescent girls won't wear a dress that doesn't leave them as naked tease dancer. Baby girls have boy friends before they are in And when their mothers and fathers try to keep them from breaking all the laws of God and man, they call their parents old-fashioned. But that is where the young maloe their mistake. It ia ein that ie Wrong-doing is the oldest thing in the Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of lice-n. Girls think they are being smart. and up-to-date when they have illicit love affairs But. the prostitute is no new figure in mirmidat. She is as old- fashioned as vice iieeif. It. is a common thing to hear girls brag about how much they can drink. But. there is nothing new about that... drunken woman. filthy and hideous, has been wallowing in the gutter. so long that the memory of mm goeth not back to the-contrary. Bo what do these teen-aoere really mean parents cf minnow-fashioned? Would they redpect their father more sister to be. one of those forlorn outcait girls who must go through life wearing the scarlet iettor on her breast‘! No. a thousand times no! They want-parents when They want the protection that. has been built up about them by gcnarationa cf men and women who were old-fashioned. who bad Ila ideals cad 1M4 Iv ma. 0cm?» Says—_ cxnncvtmwvxnx. pretty clothes, but they spoil it This is a sore humiliation. u well the bobby-suckers try to excuse it fathers and mothers, who are all Mother may be a female Solomon. IMP 926...... new sin hasn't been inventod since The when they accuse their they like to use their mother come would they like their pretty young they can be JANUARY____3_. 194s /Fa Ellen '3 Diary By an Inland Farmer‘: Wife “Ellen's storm-stayed" one cf the family chuckled to a visitor today, when due to the continued falling weather my stay is being consid- erably extended, at the home of my girlhood. It. is, I may say, a pleasant place to be snow-bound, though there were times today when I found myself saying with certain nostalgia as I watched oth- -ers or helped at various household tasks: “James likes his vegetables cooked like this" or again as I happened to look through the fall- ing snow to hazy horizons: "James is not. very fond of these Winter storms." (The path between our house at Alderlea and the one a- cross the lane would likely hold drifts today but if one braved them there would be grand-daughters welcoming smile to reward her. Her curls uould twine winsomeiy, as with the white and tan kitten clutched tightly, she invited one to join her in some of her many in- terests.) Now, past. dark, they tell me the snow continues to fall, and by day, I could see the drifts a- bout the yard and lawn mount. "A rare day this one has been" someone now remarks "with all traffic at a stand-still on the road." Though not all ceased. Villagers plodded along a snowy trail to reach this farmhouse, and this af- ternoon in company with a sister we made our way slowly and rath- er breathlessly against the flurry then prevailing "up town" to shop. I I I This farmhouse which has own- ed to the family name for several generations sits snugly near to the village. Its rooms echo ones foot- steps, lonlly, now I fancy. All the noise and laughter of the large family reared here is missing, though many a time at evening she looks up from her knitting and he from his reading to talk of the days when "they were a1] "it home.“ Occasionally as at Christ- mas there is a family gathering but even then one or another is absent and though still unbroken there has never yet been a. for- gathering of the entire family down to the youngest great grand-child. in this room where I write, faces from photos smile down at me, if one of another of them. buds or lassies who now attend, university or college or training school. El- len's is here, she that is name- sake of mine ~steady of eye, and a quirk that ,is admirable linger- ing about a mouth. You suspect that presently she intends tn chuckle with you about some thing. Oh nothing very important as it is but which becomes intriguing with her telling. And there are many others but no two alike each u distinct individual and somewhere as we agree when we discuss the younger fry "if we look long en- ough" we find something to’ com-- mend them. some characteristic which at once endears them to the older members of the family. I The village which is of course the centre of the community in- terests begins only a stone's throw from this farmhouse. Thitlher it. was that we made our way this afternoon to our shopping. One has the choice of two stores of gen eral merchandise for this and while not everything "from a needle to an anchor" may be had. there is nevertheless a varied stock carried of the numberless items required by the customers. The village un- like many another does not sprew, LOVELY nun ahcficr a.- DItSIGN N0. a-ae This lovely crocheted shudder- ette ia attractively created in the simple yet effective cluster etltch. Pattern Nb. 3-23! contains com- plete fiutmctlone. Needlework Book 2o cent. . To order: Send i) cent: in coin to bfeedlewcrk Bureau, Charlotte tance Q. If a woman acquain speaks of her huaband (wbcm you do not know) as "Tom". should you also refer to him as "Tom"? A. No. You should refer to hiim aa "Mr. Nelson." Q. Should the fmiilly of an hom- ored speaker sit in the audience and register applause for what he is saying? I A. It is quite all right for them to look pleasecl‘ and happy over what he is saying, but their applause should be soft and brief. ‘ Q. Where should a woman guest leave her wraps when attending a large dinner? A. A wounanb wraps are uamlly left at the door. at the cross-roads but it aet down neatly and prettily there. lta time of origin is well beyond the old- est ‘resident's memory and it has grown and continues to grow witi. the year's turnings. Older folk etil‘ speak of “the old tannery" and l myself have distinct recollections of “the village smithy" the glowing‘ fire reflected in the face of the leather-aproned smith - and a sturdy farm-horse or a pet driver with arched neck and satiny coat awaiting its shoes. in a corner. And the church --when one thinks of this village they are certain to re- member; perhaps first of all the church with its spire pointing onu Heavenward. It site close to the road-intersection and to the rear the old manse settles itself com- fortably to look back to extreme- ly interesting history, of the manse folk who came and went with the changing years and whose lives were vroi-en in with those of the surrounding district. A strange air of stillness settled over the village today. Snug beneath snowy rooves the place was snow-bound. Only a few pedestrians werembroad. No mailman appeared to bring an at- tendant flutter of activity - no. could one expect him and there was no bus lo return weather- bound passengers to their homes. I I I “Any sign of the snow-plough?" I ask an incomer, with a powder- ing of snow flakes on his shoulders. "Snow-plough?" he replies "with snow still falling - and a drift?" then adds with a chuckle "it will be a spell yet before you get home to James!" Even so, as I said, this is a pleasant apot in which to be snow-bound. Until tomorrow - Diary -Good- night. Q. I-iow can I repair a chair rung that ha: became loose? A. Insert some furniture glue, tic it securely. and place aside for a. few days. This should be done at once. as one loose rung is frequent- Cough medicines usually contain a large quantity of plain ayrup-e. good inn-admit. but onewhlch you can eu- ily make in your own kitchen. Take 2 cups of granulat ‘ sugar and 1 cup of water, and stir a. few moments until dissolved. No cooking! No trou- ble! (Or you. can use corn syrup or liquid honey, inltead of lugarlynip.) Then get from your druggiet 2% ounces of Pinex, pour it 1mg g, 1g n, bottle, and flll up with your syrup. Th1! give! you 1a ounces of really "’ medicine lo bud winter n Household Scrapbook lyloberfaha Sweater-a The shoulders of sweaters will not lag if a piece of ribbon. the length of the shoulder of the person from neck to armhole, 1,; attached at each end of the ribbon to the sweater, An Economical Desuert An inexpensive and delicious dee- aeri. can be vmade by pouring hot lemon sauce over stale cake that has been heated in the oven, The Sick Boom Try using a broken. alanm clock in the sick room. setting the hands at the tinne when the medicine is next due. Better English“ D. C. Williama 1. What‘ is wrong with this len- tence? “Here are a pair of scissors.‘ 2. What. is the correct pronunc- iation of “bath”! 3. which one of these words in misspelled? Obsirepermia, obituary, obsequious. 4. What docs the word “perifld- ious" mean? 5. Wihat is a word beginning with ob that means "gone out of use"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "Here is a pair of ecis- sore." 2. Pronounce the a, as in ask. not as in at. 3. Obituary. 4. Hasely false to trust. "Involved in this peo- fidious fraud." - Milton. 5. Obsol- etc cvnzc. 4 i ' Cook ’s Cone‘ '~<:~c\<.~c~c~cc€\:~c€~€*sww~c¥~¢c (~4- TURKEY- ORAN BER-BY SQUARE! 2 tablespoons melted butter ‘é cup sugar 1 teaspoon grated orange peel 2 cups fresh cranberries 5 cups ground left-over turkay cu chicken 1 oup turkey stock or gravy 1 cup milk 1 teaspoon salt '4 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons finely chopped oniol 2 cups soft bread crumbs or left- oven atulflng. 2 slightly beaten eggs In 8-inch square pain melt butter: add sugar and orange peel. Blend. Q\_'\ v0 - .000“ ' Cover with cranberries.‘ Combine Ho!” can I remaining ingredients. Mix thor- ougi. y. 5! M" "m" Pack finrnlv over cranberries. I Bake in hot oven (400K) 45 min- utes. Turn" out on serving platter. Cut in 9 squares. _____%._________________ ly followed by a collapse of the whole chair. Q. How can I improve the flav- or of vegetable soup? A. Try adding an apple to it. How to Makes. Splendid Cough _S_yrup at Home it gives ycutour iimee aamucb couglf syrup for your money. lt lute along time, never apoila, and children love it. This ia a. very affective. dependable, quick-acting cough medicine for the whole family. Quickly, you feel its penetrating effect in the air passages. It iooeenl the phiegm,soothea the irri- inembr nd makeabreatbin: easy. You will be delighted with lie quick eflect in clearing up coughs. Pine: ie a. special mpound of pro- ven ingredients. in concentrated form. a well known reliable soothing agent for winter coughs. Money refunded if coughaltmakcaareal vinmbecauac JFDR’ TH IAl-DIOII MAGIC beautiful blouaea like than are wiaeintiawayeofdroaelngirpan outfit! One. No. 22cc, haa the popu- lar Peter Pan collar. wean lace ruf- fling on iihe front tucks. The other No. 21M boasts a bow at the nuk- line. (Two separate patterns). No. 21M. is cut in aim 12. 14. 16. 1s. 20. 9c. 1Q. U), d2 and“ Siae squirm 2% yard: 89-inch. No. 2145 is out in line i0. l2. 14. fc. 18. I). ac. D and 40. Sin iii requires 1% Yards 30-inch. send 30c for each Pathrn. which includes coax-plate wring guide. Print your Name. Adds-cal and Style Number plainly. Be lure to atate air‘.- you Iili. Include poatal unit or cone number in your ad- drell. Addreu Pattern Department The ~ Charlottetown Guardian. , Pattern ma. m4 o... nil ex ll Dependable. Given M it doesn't please you in every vi-ny. . oney. Italy ‘Io ' fNeedle-craft/ E HOMEJ. Iteviall team Guardian. "'5' Design N0. 1, ~ -Nm.- - l ' Addroaa Aildreae '