- '...... ......-a-LL.---...44..L4.;4.4.a-o-o-u Women's realm PAGE TWO TEE GUARDIAN ' lg Cook's Corner -b PEACH LEDION CUP! I to 5 canned cling peach halves 2 tablespoons butter '5 cup granulated sugar V4 cup sifted all-purpose flour 36 teaspoon salt 13 teaspoon grated lemon rind 3 tablespoons lemon Juice 241 cup milk 2 eggs (separated) Drain peaches thoroughly and dice enough to make i cup. Melt butter and blend in sugar. flour and salt. Stir in lemon rind, juice and milk. Beat egg whites until stiff; without washing beater. beat yolks slightly. Add yolks to batter and mix well; fold in whites, then peaches. Pour into greased custard cups and set in pan of hot hater. Bake in moderate (350 F.) oven 35 min- utes. Cool thoroughly. Turn out. Makes 6 servings. There will be a custardy layer at the bottom and a cakelike layer at the top. Pancakes! Doughnuts! Gingerbread! They'll melt in your mout ! FREE booklet. ives new recipes. Write Church Dwi hi: Ltd., Sun Life COW BRAND BAKING SODA APRIL 25. 1951 rammi- How Can I ! ! ! I) Anus Ashley Q. How can I clean varnished furniture? A. First remove dust and dirt with a soft cloth dipped in tur- pentine. Then go. over the surface with a cloth dipped in boiled lin- seed oil. Finally. dry with another soft cloth. i Q. How can I keep rubber bands longer. without their rot- ting? A. Keep the rubber bands in a tightly closed tin box; they will retain their elasticity much longer than if exposed to the air. Q- How can I bleach in faded wash dress entirely white? A. Dissolve a half cup of cream of tartar in two gallons of water. and boil the dress. r "& mmmm ' Household Scrapbboltl g Ily Boborh I40 ,2 -vvsi V Scented Handkerchiefs The smell of the iron can be eli- minated. and a delicate scent of violet will be added to the hand- kerchlefs by placing some pieces of orris root into a muslin bag and putting this into the water in which they are boiled. Smelling Salts Fill a wide-mouthed bottle con- taining a glass stopper ncarly full of subcarbonate of ammonia in coarse powder form. and pour on enough oil of lavender to barely cover the ammonia. Fingermarks , Wash the furniture with water which has been colored with vine- ! gar to remove flngermarks. . . what to but for dessert tonight? Hot Gingerbread served with slpple sauce is a quick and easy treat. each for a package of Robin Hood Gingerbread Mir. In one mauu it's ready for the oven. accurately blended. sun to turn out moist. high and tender. chuckful of gin. old-fashioned slnsrrbrsad vour. en.” By James W. luton. nu). E:-'2!'A .rvvc-do ' 'Thaf Body Of Young v&31”AV-253:4)-E tvztuy 5 2' 5-5-4) -L93-3' rmnuvo roons (iausmo SYMPTOMS or ALLEBGY Now that allergy is an import- ant subject of discuasi among physicians. there is considerable controversy as to whether foods or substance floating in the air cause head colds and nose, throat and chest symptoms. Entering into the controversy also is whether skin tests of suspected foods or actual eating of the foods is the best method of locating which is to' blame in any case. In The Journal of the American Medical Association, Drs. I-larry Leibowitz. Alexander chest. and Harry Markow. Brooklyn, N. Y.. re- port their study of 70 patients with head colds, nose, throat and chest symptoms, on whom almost 4,000 skin tests were made. Each patient was tested with a total of 56 individual food extracts. There were 34 children and 36 adults. After the skin tests were made the patients were fed various foods to see which ones caused the nose. throat ,and chest (respiratory) symptoms. These food research workers found that in some cases in which the skin tests of a food were strongly positive. the actual eating of this food caused only slight symptoms or no symptoms at all. Thus lettuce (which in these lat- ter years is being suspected of causing many respiratory, stomacn and intestinal symptoms), while standing first as a cause by skin tests. stood eleventh as a cause of allergic symptoms when it was eaten, Another nnding that may sur- prise many was that skin testing with chocolate showed only slight symptoms whereas the eating of chocolate stood first as a cause of symptoms. still another interestin-3 finding was that fish and nuts by skin tests showed few positives and the highest number of negatives. yet it is well known .and actual eating of these foods by this group of patient showed. that fish and nuts were a frequent cause of allergic symptoms. ' Another surprising finding which differs with the findings of other food research workers was that wheat. milk and eggs did not cause allergic symptoms although most of us have friends or relatives who are allergic to one or all of these foods. While skin tests and actual eating of the foods to find foods causing gymptorrng undergo further investigation. it is worth while to remember the foods that gave a positive reaction (caused symp- tims) both by the skin test and clinical trial (eating the food) in the order in which actual allergic symtoms occurred: (1) chocolate. (2) tomato, (3) pineapple, (4) corn. (5) spinach. (8) banana, (7) cherry, (R) pepper, (9) coffee, (10) apple, (11) lettuce. Kmmw ' F E The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kemblo 4 ..- .. .-.,...... sasasa .....v.sc-a For Tomorrow CON'I7'l'.il'C'I'ING auguries indi- cate the miscarriage or frustration of ambitious plans and objectives. While the judgment may be sound. alert and shrewd. at the same time there are stubborn ob- stacles to cope with. It might be advisable to meet expanding and progressive techniques with subtle compromise. or agreement with the opposition or adversary, with generosity. Perhaps yielding with a measure of good grace rather than resentments. If It II Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is. may find in this instance that "the and: justify the means". While JANE POWELL, co-starring in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayan Technicolor Musical "ROYAL WEDDING" of i0 Screen Stars on lax 'I'ollot.Soop 7 fvfs-v'slv')ry'k'l'x R-..,. .4 .,..,-,4 nomv x sv A 9 5.9-99.9.9 5 ms. ---9.,-s:A:x'.r' ' Parents Can Control hem Parents Can Control Them By Closing Pocketbook DEAR MISS DIX: We have a 11-year-old daughter with whom we can do nothing and who is driving us wild with anxiety. She has her own automobile in which she tears around the country at breakneck speed without telling us where she is going or when she a is coming back. And now she thinks she is in love with a young boy who has never had a job and has no way to support her. What would you ad- vise us to do? ' TROUBLED MOTIIEP. ANSWER: Sell the automobile, to begin with. If she has no car you automatically restrict her activities to a certain extent. 1, , I get many letters from weak and overindul- k xv. gent parents who bewail the fact that they have no control over their youngsters who are doing things which they should not do. Apparently it never occurs to them that they have the remedy in their own hands and that it is the simplest and most effective one possible. It consists in cracking down on their children's expenditures. In snapping shut the good old pocketbook. VICE COSTS MONEY The lack of the price is the beginning of virtue. The kind of girls whom boys shouldn't know have scant use for the boys whore allowance is so small he can only feed them on sandwiches and beer and take them to the movies. The parasitic boys who hang around girls who have ihelr own cars and who are good for the loan of money after a little love-making. pass up those girls who are on foot and who have to save up to have their hair done? The same heroic remedy would prevent ninety-nine out of a hundred of the tragic adolescent marriages that wreck so many young lives and break so many parents' hearts. These children would not marry if they knew absolutely that father meant it when he said that if they married they would have to stand on their own feet. It is because the know their parents haven't the backbone to make them assume the csponsibillty for their acts that makes them rush into fool marriages. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Do you think it best for a man in his middle thirties to select a girl in her teens or one near his own age for his wife? Please give your reasons for choice. BILL ANSWER: The wise choice is a girl who is in his own age class. somewhere around the late twenties or the early thirties. Not once in a thousand times will a marriage between a man in his middle thirties and a girl in her teens turn out happily. The reason is obvious. There is too great A disparity in age. A man in his middle thirties is mature. His tastes and habits are formed. His ideals fixed. He has had his fling. He has seen the show and when he marries he wants to settle down and go domestic. A girl in her teens is unformed. She doesn't know herself what he is going to be when she is grown. nor what kind of a man she is going to want fora husband. She hasn't seen the show and she is avid to do everything and go everywhere and see everything in this interesting old world of ours. - A man in his middle thirties may easily full in love with a girl in her teens. because he is captured by her youth anzl beauty. But if he marries her she nearly always bores him to tears with her childish prattle and her always wanting to be jumping around and doing things and going places. But if he marries a woman approximately as old as he they have the some background. the same tastes and habits and every chance of being happy together. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My husband and I have been married only a few months. It was a second marriage for us both. He has two children who are with his ex-wife in a far-off state. I have a child who lives with us. We were married only five months after his divorce and I find now that he is still in love with his former wife. He drinks heavily and is quite cold toward my child and me. He denies that anything is wrong between us but I think he just hates to admit that he could make a failure of two marriages. Is there any way I can make him forget her nnd learn to love me or should I just give up and call it quits? I could support myself and child and I am so miserable this way. but I wish we could find hap- piness together. CONFUSED ANSWER: Your chances of finding happiness with your husband under the conditions you outline seem pretty dim to me. If you think he is still in love with his first wife. the best thing to do is to let him go and try another chance at happiness for yourself. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers. but will ans- wer problems of general interest through her column. stern and rigid tactics may serve. s N; at the same time larger gain and far horizons may be advanced by a generous show of understanElin.g. with revision of plans and ideals as well as ideas. While the men- tality is highly stimulated at the same time policy and good will are. Q, now mny ; womgn know Wisely. to be initiated 101' Progress whether or not she should offer and cherished aims and ambitions. her mud to . mgn when being gn. Modern Etiquette Br Roberta Les st-.sxr.&.10..c).2.4-2.c:.c:o.o.c:.-..-. .:c,:o.6A-11,.-' Use tact not force. troduced? , A child born on this day is A. There is no rule in go by. It amply endowed with mentality, is altogether optional with the woman. she may remember. how- ever. that the proffered hand is her way of showing sincere and genuine pleasure over the intro- duction. Q. Should the bride and bride- groom stand at the door of the church after the ceremony to re- ceive the good wishes of the guests? A. No. The wedding reception is the place for this. Q. Should the prongs of a fork be pointed upward when lifting a bite to the mouth? A. Yes. always. versatility, industry and sound ambitions for a successful career of potency and achievement. Better English II: I. Q Wllllum - MxeM&xwaLa&&- 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "I-Is accepted of our hospi- tality. and the party was enliven- ed with his tales of adventure." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of pa. nel"? 8. Which one of these words is misspelled? Accompanlst. accom- odation. scclivity, acquisitivs. 4. What does the word "intro- spection" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with at that means "any condition in an agreement"? ANSWER-S 1- say. "He accepted (omit of) our hospitality. and the party was enlivened by his tales of adven- ture." 2. Pronounce pur-so-nel. u as in fur. o as in on. e as in sell, pg-in. eipsl accent olulast syliabel. 3. Ac. oolnmodatlon. 4. A looking inward: self-examination: rstlsction. "After a thorough mu-ospection. I decided that my mind needed clarification." 5. Stipulation. KING lIlilE Q Ei.I.Ell'S mm Iylnlllllnvarnsrswlls The dogwood tree amonl its alders by the mailbox at lane's end is now loaflng and down the stream towards the sunrise a plantation of poplars is showing a misty spring shade. The maples in the woodlands beyond a fu- inosdow are putting on the rosy tons of the scum and on the lawn a white lilac is unfolding its buds. Already Jamie has Gathered the farm and in- the garden first ' , appear above ground. "Up? Why. so they are!" James fore knows nothing of elves or aisles of goblins or leprechsuns. ssml'sneiooreu1nom-uispicx- sis this morning. "'I'huo is growth in spite of so much dsmpneu." In its stead today April save of he: sunshine. It broke with benevol- ent face through the dark clouds to lend fresh vigor to the farmwives at the cleaning and to all workers in the world about. Mr. 0. came from his house on the hill briskly down to the scene of his labors. as did, our farmers off to their stint of fencing. painted in white the interior of a pantry cupboard. Karolyn too. was at the cleaning. At the house "in the road" Mr. D is coing a piece of carpentry which stands to im- prove it. similar to the hue and cry news of some approaching and gala event "And I haven't a thing to wear!" so up to this the smallish hallway there has provided no space to take care of the wrap!- Indeed Karolyn has had ”no Place to hang anything!" But now a wall beneath the stairs is being remov- ed to make one of her wishes come true. Today's sunshine and lively breeze called us to a sprlng-clean- lng wash . . . the heavy blankets and covers "kept" for just such a day as this one. we worked on the back verandah so that we might enjoy the delight of the outd . O 0 0 sorry for the industry of a pair of sparrows building a nest on a broad eaves-nook above. They worked busily, she helping happ- ily, or was she rather fusy and bothered with so much to be done . . so many duties crowding up in the season? was there resent- ment in her attitude over some- thing on her mind? Perhaps over his comment as he stopped to look up at her from the yard below be- fore he lifted the feather to soft- on her nest. Was be "putting his foot down" them hard and fast? Was he saying sternly: "New hat indeed. and you with one hi the press! The year before la.-it's? well. what difference - it's not a mite worn, is it?" or "new cost? Have you enough eaques now?" or may- be it was over suggested im- pfvemet lnthehouse.arid his remarks were "But you can't think or it . and we with build- ing to'doi YOU did very well to get the lights. That's more than for-mer wives at Alderlea got and they lived very happily! No sir, not this sumnmerr my desri" ' O 0 0 Or was he swine: "If it was for any other woman. I declare I wouldn't bother working at all. I wouldn't pick up one feather. As it is I'm almost exhausted with this refurbishing. And if it would stop at this! But once the children are here . .think of the work then - and the added responsi- billtiesl But your eyes shine and your smile is . . . there's no other Just like it. Why. it I only had the time. I'd come up there and kiss you right now! Anyway" spreading small tender wings "here I come with another feather - for you!" It was sad to remem” that their labors were for nothing. Presently their home must be destroyed. their belongings scattered. How- ever. they would have this day of delight. Their chatterings continu- ed blithely and we too. hummed a small tune as we worked at the washing. It was one . . never that late!" James exclaims. rising . . . Until tomorrow, Diary Gm ' ' ' ' 22 Morning Smile snlm and A farmer bought a parrot for 310 at an auction sale. When the sale was over he asked the sue, tioneer. "Does this bird talk in- telllgently?" "You cum: to know." said the auctioneer. "He's the only one that was bidding against y0ul" who must see to believe. and there- , Indoor work progressed. Joanie raised in feminine quarters at the ' We admired and were somewhat : Her As you can no. winnins prizes for home baking is an old story with Mrs. Guy Russell, of Moore's Mills. N.B. Her collection of prize- winning tags from the St. Stephen Fair goes back to 1924! She can give good rea- sons for her success, too. "I have baked bread as many as four times in a week," says Mrs. Russell. "But it isn't just C R E SCE NT CARNIVAL FRANCES PARKISON REYES ( Continued) "All right. You've been very sweet, Drew. about letting me have my way, up to now. I think it's time for me to let you have your way. At least partly." "What do you mean, partly?" "I think we ought to stay in New Orleans from now on. because that's what you want to do. But I think we ought to live in the shot- sun house, because that's what I want to do." "Good Lord, Patty! You haven't mentioned the shotgun house in months. I thought you'd forgotten all about it." "I really have a very good mem- ory. And a very strong will. Per- haps you didn't realise about the memory. But you ought to have realized about the will. You hall a pretty stiff warning of what that was like. before you married me." "You don't really want to go and live in that shabby little house. Patty." "You tried to tell me I didn't really know what I wanted when I said 1 was determined to be en- gaged. If I'd listened to you. I wouldn't have a husband: I wouldn't be expecting a baby." "Patty. I don't know what on earth to do with you." "Why, just what you have been doing, right along. Loving me. more and more all the time." That was unanswerable. like so many of the things she said. he did love her more and more all the time. It was increasingly re- vealed to him that he could no more compare the deep and in- tense feeling he had for her now with that primary passion of pos- session, which he had once be- lieved ' ' the in fulfillment, than he could com- pare that to the first impulse which had drawn him to her be- cause she was young and sweet and guileless and he was sick of ,” " " and artifice and cov- etousness. And she asked for so little. while she gave so much! surely, if there were any whim of hers which he could gratify, he could do no less. "Very well," he said. "I don't even know what sort of order the place is in. I haven't been near it costs no more than ordinary 50"! Mwtlorl. Mrs. Guy Rinall, Moon's Mills. 11.8.. 1950 winner as ' St. Sisphu Fair, use: Flsiselimau Baking Wins Prizes For 26 Years. n's Ynst ltduslvaly. experience or baking skill that makes you a prize winner. First you have to have the finest ingredients. For rolls and bread my choice is Fleischmann's Yeast. With Fleischma.rm's I'm sure of quick rising and fine . ll. That's just what they all say! Prize-winning cooks throughout the Maritirnes de- pend on Fleischmann's Yeast. Your Doctor Fora Friend When we're really sick. we'n scared and lonely-feel that we've a right to more than the professional services of our doctor. Most doctor: agree-but it takes two to rush friends. In May Reader's Digest. noted authority Paul de Kruif shows how we can help our doctors and gives dve simple tests to help you tell if your doctor is your friend. Be sure to read "Your Doctor For a Friend" in May Reader's Digest. It's just one of 43 articles of lasting ' ' ', condensed from leadingmagazineaandcurrentbooks. Got your new Digest, today. - in a long time. But I'll go and see." "That's sweet of you, Drew. You don't mind if we stay with your mother while we're getting it in order, do you? Because I'd like to go and-watch. and make a few suggestions, perhaps." "You may make suggestions, But Continued on page 16 D A T E M E M 0 164a iaxisdlmsoxi aaoylymamzxs lgsilhe-Qme Shampoo wlm uuouu leaves hair soft . . . perfect for home pormanenis.