i ' ~ - . ' V \ THE GUARDIAN, cnsacorrarowu . _ - . ‘ 1tii§RUARY‘__1z._194s _ " - —~———-—-- m - ‘ ' "-4 r- --';- . ~ . i PAGE TWO Wx“ ccc- \>\.-<\_-..\<\<\l\-u\<\4\\-~<\4\-\&\ c‘..............\....cci,<.c~cv."<.~<.\ \4\‘\-\.\.~. en's cal/Social rsonal/Fashions/Literature i deco-AAA“... - . c c \-\4\414\- \ ‘.,.,-,-.-,.»..-.-. i .\'.\.\,\ THE ART OI ART! Iomo girls are gifted with the art painting like the master; While others with their ready pens nd hours oi busy pleasure; polishing prose, or then light poetic measure other like a woodland bird ay set the sad World ringing ith carols sweet as ever heard, era is the art oi singing. put there's a maid and there's an art o which the world is looking he nearest art unto the heart The good old art of cpoking. FRENCH CHIC Elvii-e Popesco. famous French Izomedienne, chose her gowns at the establishment of Jacoues Path. She prefers sharply defined lines and subtle shades. Her recent choice was a. gray-green suit witn u clinging skift of which the hem- line is eight inches from the ground and o. blue-white satin Qvening gown with sn‘1880 bodice Ind a bustle. "Write it in your heart that jvery day is the best clay o! the year. No man has learned any- thing until he know! thatT-Em- ‘r503. Water for the farm home should be can-led by Pumps and P1P°§~ “i?” hands; and that's no pipe dream- You must expect w be bored if ' u are not interested in anything t yourself. The hostess may 5"" t“ 595' ert at the table, and pass it down he 11m, just as her husband car- yed the roast and passed it. is DAINTY naassmu smol- lf you have an old piano stool. pvliy not transform it into s. very pretty and useful dressing stool for Livingo. Leisure VILTHE WClMiLV§ REALMI. your bedroom? Got NM husband to saw ofli psrt at the legs first. then get l. small tin of Japanese lacquer and paint them to go with your colour scheme. Now took l piece of damask or casement cloth over the stool with lax-ass up- Where there is no honour there is no grief. EXERCISE CARE BUYING GIRDLE Wise women will try on the inundation garment they plan to ' buy under the supervision of an experienced saleswoman. This is the best way to insure a comfor- table and proper fit, say the ex- perts. When you try on o girdle, test its fit and comfort by walking, sit- ting, bending and standing. A pro- periy fitted girdle will permit yol to move with ease. Check the placement of boning. seams, lnseis and darts. 'I‘hese should be placed so that they do not pinch or push into flesh. A girdle should come down well over the hips and be long enough to control thighs. It should not, however. be so light that it cuts into skin or pushes flesh over the top of the waistband. In buying a pani-y girdle, make sure that it is long ‘enough so that it won't ride up or bind the legs. Inspect workmanship and mater- ial. stitching should be-even arid strong, girdle garters fastened se- curely. X cranky ‘every month’ ‘I Are you troubled by dis of fumaiu functional riodicdilturb eel? Dealt-hi! make you eel no tired, high-struck ncrwus 7 do try ydia E. Pinkbam’: Vegetable Compound to rolievo such lymptonul Pinklum l Compound il made especially for womln. Ind il very helpful for women troubled thin way. Any Drugstore. Lllllll E. PINKIIIIWS lsliligwu$ Doctors Prove 2 out of 3 Women ( can have Lovelicr Skin in lztdays . Thai new lipstick ls WClfldeFfUl but ll lusl culls attention to how dull and course my complexion lsl ' Palmolive Flory WONDERFUL WORK OF ‘IRE X -RAY Ail-timid’: the X-ray wu discover- ed by Roentgen in i895. it was not listed as is major specialty by the the “Journal of the Aimerican Medical Association." states that the Xray revolutionized iihe prac- tice oi medicine, and that one year after its discovery—-that is, 1896- more than 1,000 articles and 50 books on the X-ray had been pur- chased. Many physicians, and others, udll remambm" that. the two points about the X-ray ilhal. first were brought to notice was that the physician could loll at once li a bone wore broken, and if an object got inio the stomach or lung the X-ray would show it and also its exact location. Today lihe physic- ian not only known at once if a bone is broken, but also can set it by means of the X-ray. When the bone has been splinied or band- aged. he can-inspect it again by X- ray to make sure the two ends of the bone are in their right posi- tions. The condition of diseased bones-rheumatism, osieomyrelitis —can be detected by X-ray, and icnprovmient or non-improvement noted. X-raying the chest now is con- sidered iihe best single method of detecting tuberculosis, and diseases of the bronchial tulbe clearly are shown by use of the X-ray or the lluoroscope. X-raying ihs- stomach also is considered the best single method of detecting ulcer and cancer. The gastroscope, which allows the phy- sician to see the lining oi the stom- ach, is considered a, valuable aid in confimiiing the diagnosis made by X-ray. The presence of gall stones was deiccied by X-ray as early as 1900. But it was not till i924 that the present method of using a dye with the X-i-ay definitely estab- lished the presence of stones. The presence of stones in the kidney, as well as the general condition oi the inside of the kidney is shown y X-ray. 'I'hen came the examination of k the nervous system by iiijbciing (Continued on Page 34) I You're about Iliefiflli person who's told mo thul. Jwll‘ Thou of biliYr Mm“ omgon 36 d°"°"" ~ “can, ‘km specialists Aasiod this Plon on 128$ women and prwld You should fry the 14-Day l! con bvlnfl 5 f3 complexion lo 2 out O in it» i4 dcP/‘l lovellsr This boihls3llnwlddiYl°fl4dcw 3 elonnslflfl"“°“°" bTrqnYu-Iafia Palmolive: full boot! l‘! 9 "° Dorothy Dix ‘Soil-l - ~$~0~ Fallacy or Marriase y i Increasing lllyorcos Ills“ To False llopss ' For Perpetual lloiisynool that other husbands and wives get on eaoh others nerves at times. and have spats, and fights and arguments. and that may a bride secs to bed in tears after what John has said about ‘her biscuits. ind m“ many a John wonders what made him pick out a little nincounpoop, who can't even add up the groc- ery bill, ior a wife. They also are aware that one marriage out o! every three goes on the rocks aria that, any way you look at it, marriage is s hazard- ous undertaking. But not. for than. h. can't happen to than Their marriage will be all sweetness and light and billing and cooing, with never a harsh word nor o cross look. And that, when you come down to brass tacks, is what's the matter with marriage. It is because the optimistic youngsters are so sure that their marriage is going to be a great success that they ta/ke no steps to keep it from being s. failure. In vain does Mother, who has cut hour wisdom teeth on Father's little peculiarities. try to give daughter o. few tips on how to smooth her husband's fur the right way. Daughter feels that she doesn't need them because she is so certain that her husband will always purr under nor hand. She can't imagine a time ever coming when her John will cease to be a great lover and become just a more husband who takes her for granted and brings home bee! steaks instead of orchids, and who do¢n't feel that he is called upon to tell her how much he loves her ‘when he is providing it by his actions. Most wives find that their rolos have been shiiiod from lady love to cook, and some it makes bitter and resentful and whining and complaining, and’ some it makes wise to the fact that the way to re- tain a husband's affection is to keep him well fed and comfortable. It is natural enough for a. girl who has been through a high-press- ure courtship to expect it to continue in iull force after marriage. Oi course. she has seen other men drop theixvlove-msking like it was‘ s. not potato as soon as they got homo from their wedding tour, but it knocks her for a goal when it happens to her. She thought 5110 was going to be the one shining exception to the rule that men don't chase after tho bus alter they have caught it. ‘men there is the temperament. bot-h e and female, that lovers never take into consideration before manage, but that looms the biggest and most menacing thing in their lives after marriage. No matter how infatuated a young couple may be with each other, no matter if they belong to the same class. and have the some amount of Bdlwaillw. n0 Infill-e! 310W 800d and kind and worthy they are, if they don’t laugh at the same Jokes, read. the some books, like the same kind of food, they will never be happy together. Each expects the other to change into the sort u! wife the man wanted. or the kind o! a husband who was the woman's heart's desire, and when they don't. because they can't, another marriage goes into the discard. ' Nothing is more tragic than that so many marriages that are ent- ered into with such high hopes and great expectations oi happiness fail, and the pitiiul part of it is that they fail because neither men nor women realize that the disasters that wreck so many other marriages CAN happen to them. ‘I l Morning Smile l ‘m Lady of the House: "Norah. the window in your room is so dirty you can't see out oi it." Norah: "But, arisen, when I wan to look out I open it.” - MOB! IMPORTANT In answer to he!‘ advert‘ ‘ for a cook, the housowiio received only om reply. “I supple I needn't bother o?- ing for references, Jolm?" s e naked, disoussi _ the matter with her husband. “N0. my den-r." said John, "just elk her to submit sainiiples." Plan. It's oosY i" you can sec. Jusl follow no!" 1' 2 and - - " Wash 7°" h“ Mm Palmolive $009‘ Than for oilnconill‘. _ mouuld‘ Wm‘ Panning!‘ soft. lovol‘! hlh" ‘4‘4<<-\,\ c» ‘€\-1-¥. How Can By Anna Alhlcy ‘*4 m Q. How cln I avoid accidents caused by a stepladdsi- slipping an wet floors? A. ‘Fir-id an old womnout rubber WOYIhOQ. out out a few snail reo- tnxmilur pieces to nt the bottoms of the ‘epluid logs, and tuck 01- glus u piece to the bottom o! eaoh . Ellen's [Diary ByulhIandIlruioflWIfo m‘ spite cl the coldness pro- vsuing than, and in our respect- ive kitchens. Rsrolyn and I mixed our bread-doughs lsst night, one of the frostiest in our memory at Aldorlea. 'I‘i-iough in the calm- ness sny of the family who went to read it could scarcely believe the glass at s house corner. “But she must be o. cold one!" Jock most, here beside the stream of fresh water." And as folks will we brought to mind, other cold nights from the past. James re- called "that one in late March. when it dropped to twenty-eight below." That ls one which James can bring back easily because in a way tragedy was stalking our fortunes that night. However as it happened everything turned out well for us in the end. I O O But only that James, thought- ful man that he is, having what he calls "a. feeling" chanced ' to look into a pen in a corner oi the cow stable before retiring to find a litter of piglets new-born. most of them strayed from the side oi’ their mother and almost perished with the cold. (James is bound that having piglets arrive in the cold Winter months is going def- initely against nature and there- fore they need much expert care, riot needed in warmer seasons). “Don't you mind. Ellen?" he will ask me such times as we speak of that cold night, I suspect anxious to know whether or not, I care- lessly have forgotten so import- ant sh iternln our years of farm- ing together. Then satisfied when Ihavs “passed muster" he will continue: "It was indeed a mir- acle that we were able to save them-there were thirteen in all. Cold! Even in that ivai-m place. it was coldl" I secretly~believe that the incident would have been pretty well swallowed up among many others were it not for the fact that from the results-selfish creatures that women kind can bel-I got a fine new hat that Srpring. But when the stars glit- ter irostily and I see a moon late- risirig lighting up the diriits and moving to another side of the heavens out of respect to the ris- ing sun. the it is that such nights are brig t in my marnory. O I O Last night however was frostier than any we could recollect. "And how did your bread do?" Karolyn asked me this afternoon when we chatted by ‘phone. I hesitated ior I like always to bear a good re- port to either my daughters-in- lsw. "It's-Al's not quite ready for the oven yet?” I said. "And Qgonllfilled on Page 3) gCoplfs Corner a BEEF MOT POT Cut 1% lb. lean stewilng beef into 1-inch cubes. Peel 6 white potatoes and slice 14-inch thick. Peel and thinvsllce 3 medium.- siud onions crosswise. Put a layer o! 1/8 the potato in an oiled cu- serole. Cover with s. thin layer o! onion, then with half the meat. Dust with salt and pepper. Repeal, adding another layer each of pota- toes, remaining onions and meat. T09 with the rnnsinimg potato. Dot with 2 tablespoons butter dlust with salt and pepper. Pour in boiling water to a little more than half fill the casserole. Add 2 bouillon cubes dissolved in ‘A cup water. Cover; bake 2 hours in a slow oven 325 to 360 F.‘ Top with minced parsley and serve. o dullest canvas they impart holsm-y gwkg 1 gm gum you Ameriflm Medical Association l I h c“ mama ~15 mmly_wn. came in to observe and James Dhe freshness o! the pasture. Will. be pleased with the result. iéilijiilcgg;u‘l‘ilatfiigitniigsyygitsiollater; "lncggttfrilifltfllélirfivflergglgglélllgg czulpeeargebpegual honeymoon. may “w, awe at inlaid; agifleccniroifiezle fir; _ uoxzruli '$r£c:ii 25¢ JAR only l9‘ Take a tip from professional poo- ple! Give your hands 3-way help with medicated Noxzema. This greaseless v ' ' cream helps heal tiny cracks and cuts. . . soothes and smooths irritated skin .. . whiten: red, rough hands. And Noxzerna works so quickly overnightl This special ofler gives you n See how Chopped hails heal FASTER! you can see andfeel results-often - .. .iill chance to see for yourself how much Noxzema can do for pain- fully chapped, rough hands. Get your jar now at your nearest drug or department storm. M<- Household Scrapbook By Robertl Leo Brno and Copper Foi- cleaniugvbrass and copper, there is nothing better than salt mixed with an equal part of flour and vingwr, enough to make a paste. Let this remain on for an hour or so, then rub of! with a soft cloiib. Afterwards wash and use a. soft brush for places that cannot be reached with s. cloth. The-n polish. The Cleanser (h! To prevent the rim of rust wher- ever the can oi cleanser is placed, secure a wire tumbler holder and screw it to also kltdhen wall, close to the sink. Pouring Catnip Who hasn't experienced tho dif- ficulty of pouring catnip from a bottle? But all necessary is to push back the thickened portion that congeals around the top. It will then pour easily. I fancies or dubious colluboratrs. Keep well organized. _ Those whose birthday it is may shew a siraight-and-narrow course by adhering to logic and reason, shrewd and well-thought out plans or policies ignoring the fanciful suggestions o! oiiioious or disbtful persons. too eager to tslns part in sound and workable propositions. A keen and clover policy of keep- lng to the right and true might work for stable and enduring re- wards with future stability and growth. A child born on this day may have practical and sterling factors for success and sound place in life, aliihougih easily victimized by ialse hopes or the machinations of clev- Modern Etiquette n; ammu- Q. when s, young man tsku his girl homo iron: a date, and wishes to kiss hei- goodniglht, should in ask permission? A. About the only thing I nu. suggest here is to "take a charm." Most girls dislike the "foo proper" method of asking permission. The young man will soon flnd out who- blier his kiss is acceptable oi- not. Q. At a church wedding. when the minister, bridegroom. and best man us to enter from tho rou door. in what order should they walk? A. At the first strains oi thl music, the minister enters, followed in order by the bridegroom and; his best man. r If two who luvs -~ some tutor-est in common an beinl introduced, should the one who l.l making the introduction mention ;_ this interest? A. Certainly; this will draw 1hr. twp persons into imcnodiate orm- versation. er inloksters. YDILTOO, may look for these icc- , 6mm Arm ruonmc » ' | 1 D a3‘... t guide to ‘M m“ 14 ' mu f f ' ' ' ome sat ‘i’ . cup ar- skin improvements in on y 4 ays L m“ ‘ w“ £10m um u“ 4 m“ “m” ‘ ‘ tupcfthovesaslinwhiohilaoiood ltoimlimr is oookinl. and the steam. will ‘>4 toalllwli "l! Srno 1"» Olly . _ ofhor, Young", k oo | _ _ ’ llltCocrso-Ioolrin n‘. - ‘ooh in :2 all‘; bcreosnwm m“: n‘ dudm‘ dutmctbn‘ m'" I.............. i, Mmnon.phuu”mttum.notljing nicer than the two-voice Fawn Tiny ||,m|,|.,"_ ’ "m" p“ "m. M“ mm muted‘ suit-dress. And here's one destined loss Incipient Blackheads. ... . .. ... Fresher..................... ..- lplghior, Clearer Color. . . . . . . . If want a complexio the envy of every woman- tho admiration of every mun-start the 14-Day Palmolive (Piusfodsyl R 1 "361 I 1i -.un‘ r1 dram the alt into the cloth. Q. How can l remove caster oil stains from washable fabrics? tter English ILGWIIIhnI mwaseismagwitauiu twcc1"“§o came nearly ti: game. What is tho correct mung- llyn of “floods”! w ' one of these worm is ~ llilllflllfll. Aflliflny. smclsrorflns, annlill. Vs teaspoon cinnamon 2% mlpl course graham wafer churn-bl s Spread the spplos over the butter evmiv. Now rnixthe white migar. salt and cinnamon and sprinkle this over the apples. - Crush unibsm wafers coarsely and mi: with lino brown nuns. Moisten this cnixturo with the cream and qrud over the first imlktun. Blkedn I moderate oven (375 deg. F.) for about 36 to 4O uwrmtes, or until the‘ apples are tender. This may be served either hot or cold, with well chilled cream. ‘ ‘IIMELY , TWO-PIECE! to take top honors with the fitted jacket that ccmrses out with a flare for fashion . . . buttons up to a sweetheart of a nocklixie. ' No. 2162 is out in silos 10. 12. 14. 10. 18 and 20. Size 16 requires 8% yards 39-min. Sand 20o for nob Pattern. which includes complete sowing guido. Print your Nuns, Address and Style Number plllllly. Be sure to stats sir- you wish. include Willi unit or sono number in your I4- d i-ess. Address Pattern Department The g his-tasted this Plan on 1285 womouohll ages. ‘m; the word “ob- ‘ g W W; It?“ ‘ ‘ l ‘ _ chlflosluwwnngrgqgm_ ' and d; V‘ . _ _ ' I 4 v ' ' PING!!! N0. ‘I’ *- ' - c. °"' " "s"? r" "c" c m" "c" l ,..i. Y."‘..'..'.' ...:...."i...m"~........ 11... so... Sdy- _ this Palmolive Pisa in their own homes, woman with For M: and shower, goflhq in thrsincsrity of ‘ motives“! ‘ j, 0am". ‘nu, _‘ N 0 ~ llltypcldlkin. i Oil! Normal! Y l a """"'-"""'Y'=”'5'" ' ' . . - n” ’ m‘ o‘ ‘d Polmcrllvo-onloy Palmolive’: "5""! ‘ “' ” Y ' ' ' Address 4'4 3 W" °¢ 5 l" Wwlbis wmrifiiw imrwvmw! sell, lovely lather all over! 1- - m. "as unis ma: wmiu m ma», mum is h just 14 days! No mutter who! skin can they lml “will”? ' City used lashes! Do start this new Beauty Plu will: Palmolive Soap: : : today! o h ‘reactors nova _ ssuosivs-s IIAIIIY sssum. ,- , .-=-—n—un. , '- 'm"'i»'” unis .\ l- andalgfgzfixmogxiizmvpl: r-I V- -' \ wnnj the lliral indications Jflllblo mshior-a suooosdiifl and well- pisnned schedule. will: sound and Proms: