‘-+..-,{ .e.»...~_._._. i. s-.. IH-‘QQQ, IModern PAGE TWO ’ . v HO-OQ-OOO-OOOO O-OO ‘*“ l rni: ulARLorTETowN. GUARDIAN . - a AAAAAA AAQAAAALAAAA AAAAA .‘-‘ A A‘: l Woman's Realm/Socialclnd Personal fFashio vLzlving& révv HELLO PIGEON- I'M IN TROUBLE- $TAYIN JAIL A FEW 9W5, 054/?! NEH/Iii INNER. Ks‘! ARE HERE ANVMAV! "‘_“ I El S: g; IMEAN CAR TROUBL I ‘ I CANT START! Yet all the world which I have “fir.” “.1‘."'“°‘l§€ ‘ttfi “ill” ' . o Its/lore daear Yhiaan jewels ofv coin “or a MR7,‘ HUH? gold _ I have no wealth behind strong NO! No: I CAN'T set m! me I5 snuff OF course" >00 0W7! s vcv/ HAVE 7o OPE/V/Tf ~ THAT5 JUST IT! I LOCKED THE KEV5 INSIDE FOR KEEPING! i rs. But I have a kev to the moon and stars. -Maur11:e Hill in The Clulstian Science Monitor. HINTS ON ETIQUETTE Lorre office buildings are. num- bered with the rooms on the sec- 0nd floor in the 200's: those on the third. in the 300's and so on. People who are unused to en. such buildings are often confus as to what floor the number they want mav be Apple orchards contain about 100 trees to the acre at cipDDlmZ age. and beach ordhards 120 or slightly more l?" GLAD KDUPEGETT/A/G 5O CARFfWL/DEAF. 50!] ' NE VER USED 7O KAOW WHEQE 7745i’ WERE.’ To keep crumbs from dancing to the floor when puttin! drv bread uhmugh the food chopper. cover the mouth of the choDDfl‘ with 8 paper sack I when cooking a young turkey. do not put. water in the bottom 0f (file nail steaming breaks the skin and forces luica cut of the meat. i A steaming bowl of 800d nour- ishing soup can well be made the mainstay of the meal Cook cheese It low temperatures to prevent curdling. scorching cr strinlzlness HINTS 01v aTFitYl-rs If your bov friend asks vcu for a date and he says he will be at vcur house at 8:30. be sure to be ready when he comes I Indigestion Pains If fermentation of food in the stomach can ho prevented, you go a Ion: wny fowsrds stopping a most reqnent ailment of the day. After onoo nshg DI. IIAMILTONS PILLS, may sufferers find the stolnsdr is cleared of tho sour, fer- mol rnsflcr thst cslues gu, Ilufl- , indigestion and head- aches. Yo! may be pleasantly gqr. Etiquette .3 “I “W” L" 3 5752i.‘ 'i‘..‘“°a‘l‘"il’1°i"i~'o§5li’ ‘l-‘iiif? * 99-00-040 can tone g the bowels, liver and n Where should tile address m‘? use“: ‘w?’ IIIIII... sppesr on a visit card? $MIIIIONI PILLS a god; trlsl. A The address ould nip ar in loll by nll drllggloto, 25c. tfhedlowei‘ ileft, hihnd cornerhof the ,. c l’ , nlmf“ “ “Pa e‘ “Y” ‘ ‘m m“, F‘? HAMILTON S PILLS Q. When conversing with a per-i - - - son, is it good form. to use this -| son's name frequently, as: " hat 0-90-0440 +004» d? ‘you. tftililrllkka M ltAgtl/fr. Allen?" 6 ‘ " on't. n so, r, en." “Let's , i. h ,M_All "'2 “Area, Y w ,§ Better English g Q. How long should a. guest, re- Iflilfl alfterudlnfner has beenwsert-léed? D. C. Williams g . sun y rom -wo rec ‘AAA A on". . v v 4-00404-0-0-4-00-00» l 1. What l8 . “*'**“ tence? “We Ixltlgtngflyvfvlilg‘ glllxgl 55:. 1 ’ ' i otlziervblluitderflth 6 . z H Ow CCU! I o a iation cfayGila sinful??? ‘ 3 hlch one of these pronunc- words is o By Alllg “u” uel§lfmalnlflgls1ieanset, Monon- ' ‘ ‘ "“"*'"'°*" k" hat does the word “quies- Ql How cm can mean? What, l d with trl thats meagre’ beginning suffering"? AN SWEBS 1» Si)’. “We nuust avoid another such blunder.’ g, Pronounce first word he-la, e as in he, a as in ask ‘unstressed. accent last syllable. 3. Narragansett. 4. At rest; motion. less, After a violent eruption the volcano become quiescent." 5. Trl~ bulatiom. stantly. Use a. putty knife to p11 in the cracks. After the paste has hardened, applv a stain, and the filled cracks will hardly be visible. _ I Prevent clothes from freezing in the winter? A. Add a handful of salt to the last rinsing waten A [eflspo n of f22‘.‘.".lti“i‘3.'.€h"l° w?“ l.‘ “c” r0 of the clothes, m rec “g om Q. What kind of potatoes should be served with a broiled steak‘! A. Serve creamed pomtqes and I. (‘fltSp fried vegetable, such as tgg an . Q. How n I k for floor ercfeim m e a gm finer A. Make a paste of two cups of "Our. o nelablespoonful of alum. and three quarts of water soak zeces of newspaper in this solu- lon and boll well, stirring con- r “distress or Hora’: swootor, tastier brood with HEISCHMANWS IT'S Hill. STRENGTH so it goes right no work, No waiting. No cars steps. Pleiqlimsnn’; an]; active Yeast nukes brad disc's more delicious and tender, sweeter-using mry find ,I YOU IAKI A1’ HOMl-Gst Heischnsnn’: salon huh Your ‘ ‘ with fie familiar yellow lobe]- Dsftlrlnblc-ifi been Candis‘ Indie for more than 70 you-g, f-f-"WW um: m owns’ Leisure THE WQMAN’S REALM A tunic coat lavishly bordered in bluedyed red fox fastens at the side and Ls softly belted at the with s. wide fabric sash. The winged sleeves are cuffed and fixtimd from deeply flamed smi- O Q8. When pruning twigs. do so iust atboge the bud Never leave a long s u INTERIOR MOIQTUIIE PAINT FAILURE CAUSE Moisture. which works out from inside a painted surface and upsets the anchorage of the paint film is one cf the most common causes of paint. failures The presence of blisters in the paint is the common siizn of a moisture-faulted surface underneath. Australia is one of the world's larcest exporters of agricultural products: approximately 50 per- cent of the value of all mods produced in that oountrv and over 75 percent. of its exports. are agri- cultural, includinvz livestock. In Denmark the Julenissen. or Christmas elf. is a. legend. He rides a zc-at instead of a reindeer. The Danes leave bowls of rice and milk in their attics on Christmas Eve. it being a 200d luck Sign l! me mil: disappears duriu" the night. When paper sticks to a varnish- ed tabh ton it can be removed without marrlnr the surface by rubbing with Ollva oil Use a small paint brush with a lomr handle when cleaning the carts r-t the saw-inc machine to reach into th\ crevices with little tmillrle ;, 1t t. helleyP-rl that poker is an s-rlorwn» of a B-veiew veme and w»: kwrtmht f». #1,». vmitgd sun.» h. m». vvnv p‘ us“. rwhqn; pun Howl! nnIr/av “an. F" r-~--'= v-n- w.» “no”: "ul.-i (ikrqyl ‘can. uflfllwu now“ did "'-‘ "m" into existence until the Civil “Yer Tn the F» "PEN UWCFQ u. Feet successful Mmvwnv-nlal “w-wlvhtblflh ravon “was crown m r’—\“l'“" that [re wmqa (\'\|wc~\1YT\I‘lI'\n “(AM-Ir Hut 0r \vr-'\I t; 1': u..." GV"‘G‘IV“ n“... silk. and is surpassed onlv bv cot- :§-§ 1 ;Cook 's Corner l OQVfQO-O-O-O-O-Q l: pound sausage meat (or saus- ages slipped from their casings) 5 cups crumbs from day-old bread. lightly acked 1 tab espoon salt ‘.5 teaspoon ‘pepper 1 cup finely iced raw celery ‘i cup finely ohopp parsley h cup nely choppe onion 1-3 cup sausage and other fine flavored dripplngs, Pan-fry the sa/usa-Ee meat in a little heated dripping, stirring oc- casionally, untll cooked thr h trmtd golden brown. Drain from t e ll. Measure bread crumbs into a bowl and sprinkle with salt, pe r, celery, parsley and onion; oss lightly together. Add the cooked "Rim metflil‘ drl ping a easure esaussge an if necessary, add sufflc em; other drippi to bring the measure to 1-3 cup ul. Let dripping stand until delicately firm. Add dripping to bread crumb l-nli- ture and rub 1t in lightly using tho fingertips. The Mulberry Bush b1 HELEN TOPPING MILLER 4++o+o+++v+o4 o4 ++¢+o++o o "I was Roing to say that for a llflffilbfllléd gal who has taken the world by the neck and shaken suc cess out of it. you're still a roman- tic soul You read glamour books in secret. I'll bet a hat. You cry over poetry when nobodyb looking. And you don't know that. a sener- ation has grown up around you who can look life in the teeth. take the best out 0f it. and dodge the bars and chains." "You have lead too many hooks written by brilliant ymlnll crack- pots like yourself. There isn't any such Reneratlon. Men and women haven't changed-not. down under Just paused at the door. "In: some to marry herl" "Over mv dead body." “What will you but?" "I won't champagne. ‘her that .Al'ld you'd bet- ter order the chunnasne now." For days, Mike gave ("*"y no peace. no time to think things through. He was at her door early downtctheatreetsfterabtlsydsy in tho office, chem he was. waiting. She hldtcbuthimotltoftm at . Discovering SAUSAGE-MEAT STUFFING 1 4QQO-O-O-O-O-GO , l OITOt/ly Dix Says-e? ’I l‘ l Y‘ , v AA¢¢AAAA¢A¢AAIA ¢ Second Marriages ~ - - Divorce Statistics Show Repeat!’ Ventures Less Risky _ A cuu sponde t asks: "Are second marriages ever as happy as first ones?" Certainly. If we take divorce statistics as a crltorlor of domestic blisfi- it would seem that a second marriage is a better risk than a first one. For fewer widows and widowers whoremsrry find their mates unendurable than do the amateurs who are entvlfilg upon the great adventure for the first time. This is. of course, in direct corttradlction to all -the romantic theories about marriage. It is the tra- dition to glorify young love and talk about one dream to a lifetime. and to assume that every starryeyed girl and boy who get married are con- sumed by a passion for each otheigthat will never die, and that they will inevitably be happy with each other; whereas we look with a cynical eye upon a middle-aged couple getting married for the second time and think that there is no more thrill to it for them than if they were taking a sec- ond helping of a wedding cake that has grown ale SELDOM END IN DIVORCE Naturally no one can prophesy how any wedding Ls going to turn out. but the fact that second marriages so seldom end in divorce proves Several "links. One is that youth has no monopoly on love, which is the main ingredient of every happy marriage. Indeed, in many cases a second wife or husband has been given. a devotion that the first. never received, for the passion cf a mature man or woman compared to that of an undeveloped boy or girl is as water unto wine. Also, in choosing a husband or wife, as in everything else in life, experience makes for success. Boys and girls who have never been through the endurance test of marriage plunge recklssly into it, but the men and women who have been martyrized by an uncongenial mate are much more careful about their second picks than they were about their first, unless they are congenial idiots who would buy any sort of a pig in a poke. Many a man and woman get their hearts’ de- sire in their number two's. still another reason why second marriages are generally happy is because both the husband and wife are house-broken. They have cut their wisdom teeth on their wedding rings and they do not expect the impossible of marriage. They know that no two people of different sexes, brought up in .a different environment and with different tastes and habits, can always see eye to eye on every subject; but they also know the folly of ruining a perfectly good marriage by fighting ove" tigikfles. so they use the salve-spreader instead of the hammer on each o er. Another thing that makes for happiness in a second marriage is that the husband and wife have learned how to handle their mates. and they have gotten lnured to many of the trials and tribulations of matrimony so that they are hardened to them. The husband has found out that it takes money to run a house and submit a family. so he doesn't raise ructions when the bills come in. The wife has discovered that if she is going to retain her husband's affections, she husk to appeal to his stomach as well as his heart and Iegm how to coo . Both have become svise to ohe danger signals that the other runs ur- So when friend husband sees that hls wife has gotten up with s bad headache and a grouch. he doesn't start an argument with her, and when husband comes home tired and wom-out, friend wife holds her peace instead of telling him bad news. And no man and woman can have lost their mates, whether through death or divorce. without wishing that they had tried u; have been been a better husband or wife. The happiness of a second mar- riage is often founded on remorse over a first one. alive. A piece of thins with a brain and hands and ears but no heart. You've taken the heart out of me_. its yours forever. If you nmrry me —we won't be Mike Paul-l. and Vlrlllnla Warfield-wfll be us. One heart and on; dream. I'll be crim- ‘Olete then Not half a person and a 90°?‘ 1181f at that You do love me- Ginny-whv don't you break down and admit it?" Yes. I do love you. Mike, Its mad and crazv and than’; no logic in lt-I know its dangerous-I've fought it-and vnu make u, so mm for me to fight!" (Continued on Page 3) grc¢el maklns us the two happiest. peo- Dle in the world? Ginny. I can't work. I'm zoimz to ruin I'm a wreck because I can think of noth- 1111 but you. I don’ give a hc-ot if all the-mad nations of the world slit _each others throats I don't care now mariv women and chldren Rel. bombed. History is making all round me and I'm blind a; a mummy I haven't written a line thti< week." ‘Then marrying me. obliviouslv. would be about the worst thins that. could happen to you " Marrying you would make a man “of me Nc-w I'm only half i? f. we i? liy Colelle Jma/l of 54C’! 1m! Agate- Don't put loo- lcrqe hGl on loo small lace. Do have brim and trim in proportion. D.- Msko certain that your hat ls in bslsnce with thou dainty fost- ures and that miniature figure. Too high hot squashu you down, too largo trim Ilulshcs tiny f ‘ You plqumt chsnn cslls for small bows rather than huge. I Another thing. Don't choose milky hot-if your cost or cult is - bulky. Deselect s amok hot with bulky silhouette. And when you war ‘frilly druses, let your hot be simple. Too msny frills look style. “fights today are pretty and you're tho typo that csn wool‘ pretty nlI-te. while he leans/l across the her fable f0 plead with . “Mike, I can't. It wouldn't work. If Wlfd t0 mc-J "Ginny. darling I don't wont to listen. Ginny. If vou and mo WiV I cam-J’ ‘ "I-uilnk I do care. Mike. But I can see clearly for all 821st. I con soe what it would do-to of I‘ .. "Aadvflotwofldttlo-lrdll Ilothordlfol lo llano for the Gillian’: Golds ..... ~-"..e--‘"*.-,-—-...,...~~ '2': II ' I moohelw"; mum-teal toosud- dsnly-get wotndokolthoboddothosqnd dos dorm _ . mo.» m» collsb in" Prbufloslmllhowdlfanllydsqsbontllisanssmitlgd '"e""""""_7"ru1r.apun.I-.u-n-srumus Elléri s" Did ry Bysnlslsndhrlor‘: Wife‘ pa“ ' A now cor cams to mo. barely put mid ght. I found it n second time in the rosy blush of morning, above the old silver birch that held motionless branches against thj sky. Here it was, being given to mo "one step" st a time and that oftnn vague, but to live u I choose, brlngln to the future the bane t of exper ence snd tolerance gained through the psst years. Some will say that New Year res- olutions are “like pie crust-made to be broken"- which might be so. and ‘yet many are k t, and worl is the better or it. comes to mind now, that if I, as I ho g .1 shall, continue to honor wll lighten the way at least for family and friends: "Let me serve a little better, those that I am striv- ing for." . _ I 0 I James and I have been absent from Alderleu for our New Year's. We went before noon and returned when this first day of the brand new year had about gone down the river of time. We went an in- vitation, to s end it with several members of ames’ family a: the home of a favorite nlece. She ls the eldest of hls nieces and nep- hews and on this account always held an enviable place of her own in hls esteem. Suppllanted per- hops among the younger fry only by Jamie. Jamie, of course, went to the city with his parents for his day and as far as we can make out from certain signs that had to do with slelghs and horse's, Jock and Jeanie stayed "to home" in their house acres’; the lane. James’ niece-and husband and son lives in n new house beside the broad river when. the lights from cars travelling westward on an important city street seeks to span the intervening dlstancl- in the darkness. The house and other buildings are protected by a grove, where amid the greenness of sum- mer, s lane winds lnvitingly. This farmstead is a lovely spot then. There's blrdscng in the trees and the gentle lap of white-tipped waves that break lightly on the sands of the beach below. Softly caressing winds, wander shove the meadows, where an aristocratic herd moves quietly across their pasture. With the bustle and smoke of the clty only a mile distant, here ls found the peace and quiet that only the Island countryside can give. Trim motor boats, like over- size gulls, may come into ones line of vision on a mid-summe day and in winter, patient plodding teams drawing loads of produce or the pick of aty or stable to market. or more swanky ones, the_ occu- pants snug in furs, the sleigh be- robed when to the musical llnille of bells, a handsome roadster picks out the trail across this natural bridge of ice.‘ _ . James was of two opinions this morning, marshallliig various ex- cuses that as he said were suffic- ient reasons for “wlse" people to remain at home. Our note of an: ceptance, had included at James lnslstdnce s post script pertaining to roads and weather, which be- cause he guessed the former would bc-"prettv icy" afforded him some O Q44§OQfOQ-O-G§OQ+Q %O-O§-§§-O4 l . JANUARY 8. 1946 ‘ nsj AAAAkkkkkngksksAIAAAAAILAAIAAIAA v vv vv v ALAAAA AQAAAAAAAAAA A AAAA A AA‘; x . literature i ‘a... l that.) l: tram!" lflltlll germs could be breeding Iiclrety-split in your bathroom this minuiol Why wait for someone to get hick. lady? Nun take s chance when you clean . . . slwnys use the proved "hospital" gerln-lriller-Lysol disinfectant. Elm-y time you clean floors, bathroom, kitchen, add Lysol to the cleaning water. Helps clean because it's “sospy". Powerful germ-killer . you need up to 0 time: less than of bleach disinfectants. Don't risk being without it. Get n bottle of Iysol today st your druggisfs. Eng single limo you clcon . .' . disinfect with Copyrlqhf, Lehn n Flu-i (Canada) Ltd. ed along" merrily behind the brown mare, with whom of late I am becoming better acquainted. She, I may say ls one of our own rearing. lHooséhold i . .5 l I I ‘ § . And now, James unloosens his z " tle arSd tgkesdoff lair jacket‘. "I en oye to ay" e e s me "l ' I am a little tired." So our today £ b? Mun‘ h. j was lovely but the year ahead will .>¢+o-o++m+o-+»++0++-Qo not hold a sheaf of these for us. However, like Whittier, and in hls Stain! words To remove stains from the flng "I know not what the future hath ers, use a little owderod 0 of marvel or surprise. mixed with a few ops of oi ve oil. Assured alone that life and ‘death. pod with Use an orange stick wrap God's mercy underlies." cotton to app y the paste under the Until tomorrcw-Dlary- Good- flnser nails. l ht. n a Winter Laundering 0am» QWH-QQ“ Clothes Will not freeze to the lino 9 on a cold day if the line is om 0 - over with a dam/p cloth sprln ed Mofnlng S'“lle§ with equal parts of soda and salt. Suede Shoes If the suede shoes become spot» tered wltlh mud, rub the spots with the fine emery board from thl manicure see. It will loosen the mud, which can then be brushed off easily. gave him e llclt directions to steel l l th time. togglfdadhfie evgrythlng went well. Helen ~— You know, Lucy, I've always had a presentlment that I would die young. Lucy (sweetly) —- Well, darling, you didn't, after all, did you? PICK ANOTHER ‘Ilhe sea was calm and the cap- but flnall the YOWE P110!» 8°li m" tain decided it would be a good to diffi-cu ty. ~ "captain," lie called. ‘I've passed that star; Will you please come and pick 01p, another?" time to satisfy the cabin boy's de- sire to take the helm. He pointed out the North Star to the boy, and leeway. James ls one t0 DON“? over hls decisions. How else could I get the thrills that are the spice of , ill he would not provide them for me this way? Tncre ls nothing more effective in causing. a feminine heart to stand’ still than the uncertainty of such an occasion. Reaching a much sought for goal; finding s pearl in M oyster or s pot of gold at the foot of a rainbow might equal but could never surpass the thrill of excite- ment I experience when the decis- ion "to go or not to go‘ hunks "T1 the mere thread of a word on my husband's ll sl" The oldlsh rlin- ohram rema ns motionless; hands busy themselves st "HIIQCESSGPY doings to conceal feelings and n0 matter how fair the day. BT93’ clouds ‘crowd close to the very Win‘ dows. And than when James says .._probably concealing an ulterior motlve-"Well, Ellen since Y0“, Wm“ to so, I'll be ready ln ten mnmulefl .-did you lay my c othes out? Even tr I begin to live again and "l0 old sun shines for me alone. vgls Eve entirely to blame f" ,.,°' queathing us our womanly wit‘! to be brought out on some occa- sions’! . ‘ . - We were royally (lined and en- [ertnlned while we lolteretdh ‘til: rlsy away pleasantly ln ths p hp by the river's side and Ollrfslilth’ seeing included a round 011mm stables with the you“! g9" 5 Mb of ti...» familY-"we "1"" f‘ be _ mired "Queen the pony. W _3 3 god her master for tld-blts. Vi" met the shanty 00"" l-"d agprgn‘: ed the broad-backed He!!!" ! were interested in 889 Ind “M!” gs presented by this alert farmer- to-be. And the hours followed Emil! other in quick succesllslonl lights shone from “will w “ h in the farmhouses we Yrlflbhflk our returnlnl- Todlylw‘; ‘Q l‘ m“ llsnt almost balmy ll" l m shine and then later ln a b! B but stsrless night. I found 1110B’! locusts-fame! himself couldnt llcvo" it was so lute as we "howl- x Who Riqlit Bust-Known lloms Remedy ~ You tan Ilsa Ila Special , Penetrating-Stimulating mirth: duo Into bronchial Actlonllnstflorltslustflnl -~ y '- Sthnulahs tulm with It: weclsl modlclnsl vapors wsnn ng ocu llama-proved Vspokub’: special penetratlnpstlmulafng action starts to work mighty fast-and keeps on workinglfor hours-to relieve such miseries of colds as OOWIIQ spasms, bronchial congestion, muscular tightness. en you rub Vicks VaEoRub on throat, chest and back ' 2112i] seet e gfiuilts-yoirll lilllu0W wll hit ls av'cxs ystqnds; somanyrn onso om . V"°RU' KGrand for dren and grownups. Try it. iNeedlecraftf FUR THE HOME NEW ‘ A blouse psbtarn it looks when? to offgs b?» differ- ent types of s ve, and tlhrec dif- ferent neoklineq-lncludlng the new oil-tie nook. . no eel" 11.1.‘. , . as 89-inch for short. sleeved vars- ........."°- "rm mum e ant, stylus g! lettering. w *1 an- whlch incl '/.Is J to not: . postal unit ‘or your address. Addnls swan pep-A The Charlottetown Guard an. Nuns sons number in v strut soar-in Province Cit?