Woman is Realm... PAGE TWO THE GUARDIAN ' MAY 12, 1950 How Can I!!! By Llano Alhley 5 rQ. How can I prevent a akirt band from rolling over at the top? A. when a skirt band stretches and rolls at the top, sew a piece of elastic, about one-half inch in width, along the top. and this dit- nculty will be overcome. Q. How can I stop window rat- ties? A. Felt weather stripping tack- ed. or stuck on with glue. to the door or window that rattles will stop the annoyance. Q. How can I make eggs froth quickly? i A. Add a little salt to the whites of the eggs when beating, and it will make them froth quickly. ; Beiier English ( 5 By I. O. Willlanu XnWda 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "He acquired pneumonia while on his business trip." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "grievous"? 3. which one of these words is misspelled? surveyor, surrepti- titious. survcilance, suifeit. 4. What does the word dize" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with si that means "a smirk"? "jeopar- ANSWERS 1. Say. "He contradicted pneu- monia." 2. Pronounce greev-us, not greev-i-us, often heard. 3. Surveil- lance. 4. To expose to loss or in- jury. (Pronounce first syllable jep, e as in bet.) "Surrender might mean the jeopardizing of their fut- ure." 5. simper Modern Efiqueiie By lobe:-ta Lost a ma Q. Is it permissible to open and read a message or telegram that is brought to one while sitting and talking with guestsgm A. Yes; but be . e you have asked to be excused before open- ing the message. Q. On which of her father's arms does the bride proceed down the church aisle at her wedding? A. His right arm. before its christening? A. Unless the church regula- tions say otherwise, it may be christened when two to six months old. V V ”Household "-.rapi5ook By Boberta Lee has contain: Why not use a wide-mouthed glass Jar as a container for but- tons? You can then see the can- fents Ii'0:n the outside and avoid a great deal of searching when a particular style of button is de- sired. Ironing Hint Iron the button part of a gar- ment face down on a Turkish towel, and the spaces betwcen the buttons will be nice and smooth. Straw Hate The top of an old discarded straw hat will make an ideal iabic mat for hot"dishes. Bind the edge with some attractive material. vw w Cook's Corner 5? The Stars Say-- 5: 2; By Genevieve Kcinblo g a.x.'xcxooooocscVNxM,;4.x. 4x.x.xL-ocv.-.1 For Saturday, May 13 IT IS a difficult and dangerous day. according to adverse lunar configurations. There are harsh and open ruptures, as well as see- ret, sinister and subtle assaults UDOH progress. peace and happi- ness. While affairs generally arq under a challenging and provoca- tive situation, it is probable that the inner, secret and pd-lvatg re. lation-5 or activities may cause grave concern. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it is may have a. disagreeable duty to per- form before making any desired progress or finding peace of mjnd during the coming year. There may be sinister undertones to the life, with subtlety. treachery and duplicity to meet before other af- fairs can prosper. This undermin- ing substratum might be attrib- utable to a number of curious contacts and situations. Personal habits. indulgences or erratic feel- ings or emotions might be respon- sible. In any case. drastic meas- ures are in order, whether the menace be in business associations. frauds or in a more intimate and challenging private setup. A child born on this day is pos- sessed of conflicting and contra.- dictory traits of character, with eccentric drives, although impell- ed by forthright intent. FRIENDLY PET! DESIGN N0. I-GI. nnlnider these cute pets on kitchen towel; or place mats. omit lettering and frame. , Hot iron transfer pattern No. I-665 eon- tuna nine motif: about 4 by 1 inches each with complete untrue- tiona To. order. send an cents in coin to Needlework Bureau. Ohltlvtw Guardian Iowa - DIIIII N0.I-dd Rixxauvmxxmixxxxr some lucky souls are born to be "best cocks"-tlicy take to cooking like the duck to water. and for their whole lives they find it oh so simple to turn out imaginative. attractive meals. There are many more peciple though. not born with that talent. who spent valuable minutes pondering on "what to have for dinner." one of the "best oooks"' secrets is knowing how to turn an ordinary dish into an in- triguing one. Here. using Canned Salmon as a base. We suggest:-- SALMON HOLLANIJVAISE 1,5 lb. can Salmon 3; cup butter 4 eggs Juice of 1 lemon 15 teaspoon salt Paiprika. 54 cup boiling water 1 cup peas Patty shells Cream butter. add yolks of eggs. one at a time. Beat well. Add slow- ly juice of 1 lemon, salt. dash pap- rika. boiling water. Salmon flaked and peas. Cook over hot water un- til thick. Serve in patty shells. (Roll puff paste part 1 inch thick. part 1.1- inch thick. Cut rounds of paste for bottom of shells. Place on white paper on pan. Cut more thiolr rounds with a doughnut cut- ter. Place layer with hole on thin layer, fastening by brushing with water. Bake in hot oven 25 or 30 degrees. ICY I AND The total area of Greenland is about 330,000 square miles. of which only about 59,000 are free from ice. BABY'S GAS PAINS NEED QUICK HELP- Don't take chancel-don't lat baby be Inla- erable and loan needed rest from gal Patna in stomach or bowola when BIWI Own 'IhbletI-gentle and reliable-quickly help lweeun sour lltth afnmaehl and clear away overload of waste and III. Eur to take - iddy crushed to I powder. if desired. how soon baby is have -nd comfort- nbio again. No "Ileerr" atu -no dulling ef- fect. Used with confluence for over 50 nllrl Ii thouaamh of mothers. Baby's Own bleu. too. for taeunin fever-a. almple fe- var, constipation an o er minor lib. 29d. Q. How old should the baby be L Sum: Beauty is Finally Led To Altar; . Hollywood's child beauty, 18-year-old Elizabeth Taylor in seen with Conrad Hilton, Jr., heir to a hotel fortune. prior to their marriage on Saturday in Beverley Hills. The SPIPKNHS dirk-haired. blue-eycli It" became the bride of 23-year-old Hilton in a double-ring cerenio y. will to lie the biggest movie marriage since the Shirley Teinple-John Agar wedding of a few years ago. Liz walked down the aisle In I sasoo creation of off-white slipper satin made by Helen Rm. -Iudlo designer After reception. held at swank Bel-Air Country club, the newly-weds took chartered plane on a secret honeymoon. Life wedding ended her "spinsterhood" which has seen her engaged to three differ:-nt men. ? 'k')x7x'A'K7x'7x'7s'7x?s?s um xxxwosa 1 1': soot ' ""71 'AK 7-.3m'f'I ; DOROTHY DIX s is- -xooa ocscvvsr Teen-Agers' Rights Parenis ShouI.d”NTi';i Adolescents As Young Adults, Not Infants DEAR MISS DIX: We are iecn-agers of 15 who hope that you can help us keep the rest of our icon-age life from being as boring as our parents are iunkim: it now. Our trouble is that during the week we are not pormificd to go anywhere. not even to each other's , homes. because our fathers and mothers say that we should spend our time studying. Oli.iy for thnl. But when it comes to Friday affer- iinon and we ask if we can go in ilie teen-age dance, thcy say that we are loo young to stay out so late as nine o'clock. We have to be home by eight o'clock in the latest. Thai is how we are ircaied and we are so disgust- nd with our parents that we are ready to run away. Don't you think that we should he allowed to go out once a week and not Como home unlii 11 o'clock. DISGUSTED TEEN-AGERS ANSWER: i suppose if is utterly impossible for the great mn- joriiy of icon-agcrs in see their parents as anything but spoil-sports who are bent and clctci-mined on taking all the joy out of their young lives. And what confirms the kids in their opinion that they are persecuted martyrs is that so few fathers and mothers know how its deal with their children. They persist in treating their adolescent youngsters as if they were still babes in the crarilt-, with no intelligence. no initiative. no percep- tion of what is going on in the world about them. They try to force their own sinndiirds of taste and hohnvior on their children and squeeze them into patterns that society has outgrown. and it simply can't be done. I)l:2SI-JBVE PRJVILEGIJS Most of the Iroubie between parents and cliilfircn is not because the children want in do wrong. it is because they won't do exac'.Lv what Papa and Mama want them to do. The parents can't realize that their half-grown children are oniiiled to some rights and privileges. instead of being frciiied like infants. So Mamie is not allowed to have dates. or boy friends. or grown-up dresses. and Johnny has to lie and chest to got a cigarette. So we have the irngic speciacle of many homes in which there are perpetual fights between parents and children. and this is the more pitiful because ihcy could be so easily prevented if only the fathers and mothers would make a few compromises. If home were a training place where the leen-ant-rs could swap off cerialn obligaiions for cor- iiiin privileges, if the bobby-soxers knew that if they studied hard dur- ing flie woe-k their parents would see that they had a good week-end. it would do more to stabilize youth than any other one thing. For most children are reasonable ff treated fairly, and they would respect mothers” and fathers taboos if mother and fathers observed theirs. i DEAR DOROTHY Dix: I am a young man of 21 and have been married six months to A fine girl. but she is so jealous of me, that when friends of mine even speak to me she gets mad. I have worked hard at my job and have gotten to the top where I get a splendid salary, but my wife insists on my giving it up and going to some place she has found where there are only men workers and where I would only get. half fhepsalary that I do now. Do you think I should give up my good job to please my wife? R. L. ANSWER: I certainly do not. On -the contrary. I think you would show yourself to be u wcakling if you let your wire dominate you so much that you can't call your soul your own. Hen-peeked men are always failures in life, because they can never use their initi- ative, or do the thing they have a talent for doing. They have to do what their wives tell them to do and never have a chance to use their own Judgment. I have a discontented and broken-hearted daughter who is very melancholy because the youn man to whom she was engaged broke his promise to marry her. Th has upset her very much and she takes it out on the family. is there anything we can do about it? A. B. C. ANSWER: Not a ihing. unless you can make the girl see how lucky she is liiai her boy friend found out that he was tired of her before mnrriago insiend of afterwards. Tell her to buck. up and get some new clothes and go out nnd hunt up another beau. There are just as good fish in the son. you know. . DEAR MISS DIX: DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers. but will Inl- reotpotoo-sn-oo&-ooc ' ELI.Eli'S DIARY By An inland tacrnera wife '1 9-I1-1e'-QP- U; 3 WV 13-00? The white boat. drawn up for Winter to the meadow nearby was returned to the millpond today. and in spite of the invllaton of wavelets that danced in the sun- light, and a breeze 0' May that begged us to leave our cares to row along the golden path which leads beneath a bridge and up the creek. ' ;(jThai' Body Of Yours L395; Inna w. amen. aw. , awssa.uw;9a.-zww.wsawswws.s.w ? SIMILAR. SYMPTOMS FUNCTIONAL QB OIGANIC There fa no dijuiaing the fact that the whole 'world in in an up- set condition. and Physicians are finding a great many cases in real, or organioc. disease. which, after careful investigation turns MAYBE. which the symptoms point to a- iing poi, "not boiled eggs again!" ed and foamed in a bewitching we-r problem: of general interest through her column. of Charlottetown, who won so sheltered between woodland banks. and altogether delightful, we were obliged to put what James classes "childish leanings” behind us, and-continue our indoor clean- ing. Although our motto is "Excel- siorl" as we try to further this in- ierest, the work makes progress only according to the winds of Fate, made up wholly by the state of the farming, and in con- out to be functional (caused by the nerves or emotions). During World Wars I and 11 medical officers found a great many cases where symptoms , ' tinge to stomach ulcer or even cancer were found to be caused by emotional disturb- an-sea. It is because so many cases which appear to be organic disease turn out to be functional that at sequence it is often interrupted or ”m”' the funny Ph3'5id3”' "7 indeed su:-pended entirely for a 59”” the Inucm expeme treat” mane: or days. him from the emotional stand- , , , point (correct procedure in most cases). when, despite nervousness, the patient is really suffering frcm organic disease. In "Modern Medicine of Can- ada," Dr. L. D. Wilcox, London. states that the physician should. be slow to call a group of symp- toms functional in .1 person who first seeks his help after the age of 50. He should always do a phy- sical recheck with X-rays if nec- essary, every year while he is treating such patients as function- al cases. He records a ca.e ini which a. young woman of,30 yearsI of age. was treated ifor four years; as functional because she had re-:' ported to her physician with 9. seti of X-rays showing no organic dis-S ease. Because of the unfavorable, circumstances of home life, and: normal X-rays when she first con-i suited him, the physician treatedl her as functional for years where- as an X-ray showed an advanced state of cancer of the stomach. Patients are very unforgiving if "I reckon. Ellen". James remark- ed, coming in to supper this after- noon. granddaughter shadowing liini closely. "you should be got- ting nearly to the end of -your cleaning by this. isn't it quite a spell since you started it? Now. we did very well outdoors this week. SL1 back some by the more being sick. But we go: the turnips grad- ed and away and that was some- thing of a chore! "What", hc ex- claimed casting an eye to a cook- And the youngster sighed and add- ed wiih candor, "if ever anyone is sick of the sight of eggs, boiled 01' fried or any other way, I am!" . . . However cold sliced bccf left from the dinner roast was our main fare - presenied only by some twist of good fort e, with wafer-cross from the spring, fresh and crisp now and appctizing. There were as well pieces of cake mid about "nerves." when they cut from one that had been hu:-- lat," mm out to hgyg organic dis. ricd into the oven and as hastily eaSe.. withdrawn in a tempo which in twin seems to have increased as ihe days icngihcn to grant us more iime for our interests. Iced and further adorned by the addition of ground corn flakes, our small one confided to her grandfather "just a sprinkle of sugar on the top will improve ii!" 0 O C While nervousness and emotion- al disturbances cause symptoms resembling organic disease in more cases than when organic disease is really present, the physician should have patient consult hirn regularly for reassurance of the patienl's and the physician's peace of mind. The patient should be advised to check with his physician if any change in symptoms occurs or if The farmers were busy loo, his weight dmpsg taken up with ends of ienc.ng about the yards, their work being interrupted by the choring or sometimes to bring an cxpeciani ewe from the sunny meadow, and flock. to her solitary confinement in the empty shed. The Winter banking of clay was removed from this house in the afternoon, and "Ellen!" James called us from watching a pot of soap, that fold- "NEUIDOSIS" Believing you have a. physical ailment when none exists is a neu- rosis. and is becoming ingreasingly common. Send today for Dr. Bar- ton's informative booklet on this subject entitled 'N'turosis." To ob- tain it. send 10 cents and a 3-cent stamp. to cover cost of handling and mailing, to The Bell Syndicate. Inc, in care of this newspaper, Post Office Box 99, station G. New Comimled On Page 9 York 19, N. Y., and ask for your --jw-w- copy. DRYDOCKS BUSY In 1949. Britain's output of ships '”-xk&'3l7 totalled l.35l.000 gross tons. g Mom.n9 Sm.l T I I Q JOINED UNITED sures yswzwwgwm, V g; 'California was removed from Mexico's political control in 1346. M” "W" A doctor we know tells about a colleague of his whose hobby is venfriloquism and whose sense of humor leans toward the practical swear-iiamohizsor-iiiioruan I shall never forget my mother's Prayers joke. He needed a lad to help in When on her knees she knelt by his laboratory. The boy would need her clfair steady nerves and Doc was just She fervently prayed that her family be saved God an:-wered her prayers; nine are saved. I shall never forget, when her Bible she read Of God's infinite love some teara were shed Then told us why God sent His only Son from above Each child was so dear to heart of love. I shall never embrace When she fucked us in bed then looked into God's face the man to dream up a gri.-iy method of testing than. To the first promising youngster he hand- ed a bowl of steaming oatmeal, ex- plaining that he had a skeleton in the corner closet and go ahead and feed him. Quaverlng visibly. the boy opened the door. "That's too hot," fntoned the skeleton in sepulc-hral tones. That was the lad's exit line. The cereal crashed to the floor and he was gone. The next boy to get the ventriloquist treatment fainted. Then came a lanky, freckle-faced red head. He accepted his bowl of cereal with lifted eyebrow and bored express- all His forget her loving Her face was radiant so sweet lffi,;-.f,i,?-'"e.i.L.oLL.11eedcluiiiedooiireiggihl W” her smile "that's too hot!" ' Calm and with grace helped oth- --sure 1; Mn smgged the km. er: all the while. --mow on n nupgdgn BUTTER-FLAKE 1 A Doughnuts mm ' NOW-She'sGot Exciting ZIP and GLOW""""'"f""f"' Don't envy her charm or radiant health! Make it yours the way thousands of pale. listless, anemic people are doing-with Dr. Williams Pink Pills. By -' revitalizing and enriching your bloodstream, Dr. Williams Pink Pills may bring you new pep, energy, joy in life-often in only 30 days. So start today! Get back "in the pink" with DR. WILLIAMS PINK PILLS CRISPERI LIGHTER! MORE PER PAGKAGE' -Needlecraft: -- FOR THE HOME - Sl'NNl'-DAY nasr This is a dressed-up version of daughters favorite dirndl fashion- done with a rippling bertha collar nround scooped shoulders. Panties are included in the pattern. No. 2214 is cut.in sizes 2, 4. G. 8 and 10. Size 8. 24; yards 35-inch fcrhthe dress; panties, 74 yard 35- inc . Send 25 cents for each PATTERN whio.-i includes complete se-wing guide Print your Name. AIIIIFESA and Style Number plainly Be sure to state size you want. include postal unit. or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Departmeni The Charlottetown Guardian Pattern No. 2214 CWY Province BREAK UP THE DAY The Chinese divide the day into 12 parts of two hours each. She advised us to Word every day As a lamp to our feet and a light upon our way I'll praise the dear Lord for I praying mother Who taught us God's Word and always help others. -May Eaton 304 S. Marcngo Ave. read God's MUSICAL FESTIVAL WINNER ' - above is the St. Vincent's Orphanage chorus recent Feativalsoftlalat. dltw s first place in Close 67 in -the marks, the ' Everything is 's Teasing as a Vincents were. awarded 76 tries in this as. , -Smith Phoio. E-,'iW'n.y Side Up, V , Revlonis .......... A A young red...a tempting red,” for matching lips and fingertips Nail enamel 50c dz 75” Lipuici: we as 1-00 Lip-Fashion 1-50 butterdy kiui Revion'a new um-wutcmd erfiuoal that put: a lift in your ciothu...a laugh in your weal Suddenly you're walking on the canny side of the street. ..yonr lip: and fingertips all IIIIIIIIWIIII "Sunny Side Up". Have it today! i Nail Emmet. .. Lipsticks . . . Humanizing Fm Powder Fm Make-ups