vase rwo I p , - ‘ v . . l . Living8lLeisure = ' Woman t .1 u-ucuvcuax: ;>._ - i/QTHE woman's REALM/ THE LITTLE MUSIC I The sound of a flute comes from‘ tho waterfall; Qn the bank. playing s clear and small, 5 coolle sits, lost in a noonclay . trance. [Beside the rainbow spray and the pouring thunder. The reedy notes dart in and out .and under Ihe pounding_ plunge of sound like. birds that glance lmong the columns of wafer \\ith wings unwet. Eh: years roar over "Never forget." Iweetly the flute is saying, "The waterfall l Without my ruiisic uould never bel heard at all." l meicdi the brink. ——Robert Hilly-er, in the New York Times. FOR LIGHT LASHES Women with light. fuzzy eye- brows should not use an eyebrow pencil which is more apt to darken tho skin underneath. Instead, ac- tent your brows lightly with mas- cara. Use very little water to moisten the brush and you'll do a amoother, more effective Job of it. BANISH SHINE Many homemakers have askei for a good method to remove shine. from a worsted suit. And here's rthe answer: shine may be removed by pressing the worsted suit witn s. warm iron and cloth dipped in water and vinegar. Then scuff lightly with fine sandpaper. i HANDY uocnaii ,,. ‘ A handy twine holder n a mlall hlnnel suspended from the kitchen wall in a convenient place by a pmall ring attached to the funnel Place a. ball of string inside and un end of the string out through {he funnel end. ii PERFUME!) HAIR. BRUSH COMES FROM ENGLAND \ Revolutionary in functional de- mgn. s new Einglish hair brush I ntalrls s refillable bristle base. hind this bristle base is s per- Iuma pad which can be saturated with personal perfume. and with pach stroke of the brush the deli- bate essence is imparted to the ir. The pnntlcal design combines e elemenhbf both glamour and ygiene. Its removable and re- labls bristle base makes it the ilirst brush which can be thorough- ly washed and cleaned from tip t? root separately from the handle. It kirtes in one third the time requir- od by ordinary brushes. if desired. additional bristle base can be t in reserve to be placed into lire handle while the other is dry- lng. A similar procedure can be Iollowed. with the perfume pads tJ Iuit the mood-of the moment. Are you going thru the functional ‘middle- ngo’ period peculiar to women (38-52 yrs)? D001 this make you suffer from hot flashes, fool so nervous. high-strung. tired? Then no fry Lydia E. Pinkham’: Vegetable Com- . off poundtorelievssuch symptoms! Pinkharnby Compound also has what Doctors call a stomachlc tonic cfloctl LYDIA E. PINKMIWS gfiglllfllli h. in. Sh! Ill only lllWId M mania}. . FRIENDSHIP IS WORTH EFFORT The most intporcant rule for the person who wants to make and keep friends in this: ‘You cant be with friends, and do things for them, only “hen it is convenient for vou." ; The woman uho always makes friends, but never keeps the same friends for long. is the woman wh‘ says. "I wanted so much to have Martha‘ out to dinner while her mother was visiting her, but 1 was so busy \\ltll liouseclcailing." She is also, of course. the wom- an ivho says, "Now don't expect I0 to write. I simply loathe writing letters." When licr friends are in trouble she is terribly sorry and she wish es there were something she couiil do. But she doesn't know quite what to do. She keeps putting it until it is too late. Or she thinks she has done all that she can uhen sllc say-s. "If there i: anything I can do, let me know.’ Such a woman never realizes that the person who makes and keeps friends through the years is the person who 1S willing to make the effort to do things. whether it is convenient or lioz. willing to find time somehow for reaching out a helping hand at the very moment when it is needed. ‘The woman who makes an ef fort to be with and do things for 'tliosc she likes. at the right time from their point oi view, rathe: than always at the times that are most convenient for her, is sure to keep her friends. I! I l How Can I... 2 By Anne Ashley . How can I stop a Small leak in a pan or bucket? A. Turn the receptacle upside down. cover the leak with a little powdered sulphur. heat an old krllle blade until it is very hot and 000-. spread the sulphur around tihe leak. Q. How can l rlcaii varnished wall paper A. Melt a bar of yellow soap and poll:- into a pan of warm ureter. Apply with a soft whitewash brush. Do not have the brush t-oo wet. Q. How can I keep lettuce crisp and fresh for several days? A. it will stay crisp if washed thoroughly, the leaves yeparated. linen put into a thin receptacle Milli an air-tight cover. Modern g Etiquette 3y Roberts Les Q. When a divorced woman is going to marry again, what should she do with her first engagement and weddrig rings? A. Remove the wedding ring. She may wear the engagement ring. l! sire wishes and her fiance has no objection, and on the right hand. Q. After a meal at home. what should the members of tllie famil- ics do with their napkins? A. Unless a fresh napkin ls provided for cacti meal, it should be folded neatly into its orLginal creases and left by the plate. Q. When walking with two women, should the man walk be- tween thom or on the outside? A. He should walk on tliie out- side. One of the most dramatic incidents in Hamilton. Ont, court history enacted at the trial of Mrs. meets Cartmeli. 21-year-old widowed dlothlng designer, who is charged with manslaughter smug to provide necessities of llfa for sn infant daughter, ion of tbs court was ssksd to csll in Mrs. Csrtmelfs four-yesr-oio hunter Holly, shown (have with he: mother. for the purpose of show- ng what s loving mother tbs accused is. Every eye In the coilrtroonl focusedon the msnnerly little girl in the neat spring suit ss she and neglect. by Permis- rsmain s few minutes befors be- 44- ' \ 's Realm so» Ellen ’s Diary Ihlllslsmlfarnfswlfs The small pigs, our earliest Spring litter. that had arrived dul- ing the chill oi’ the Easter season and to James‘ mind had seemed rather listless. appeared to be stimulated by today's pleasant weather and to an individual con- centrated on his or her supplng and sleeping —to our farmers‘ sat- isfaction. True lll the interval there had been a loss or two from tne number. rather discouraging. though as they agreed "it might have been worse." It was no troub- le for James to recall instances out of his lengthy experience in farm- ing—tiiough rarer in later years. when we “lost all the young ones" and indeed there was the occasion when we “lost. sow and all!” a trying catastrophe to farm folks. "I've always seen" James coni- merited coming from surveying the lot iii the pen this morning.“ that sows have better luck when they re on the thin side. You've iloticed that too?“ he appealed to Josk who nodded in agreement. "Yes" James continued "I think that's one reason why this little liilcr didn't do so well _ apart from ar- riving in the cold spell. She's too fat." "Much too fat" l whispered to Jamie, shovelling industriousiy to clear a path in the yard ne fancied for the passage of the small wheel barrow he had just taker. from Winter storage in the wood shed. “She's too fat for me" Jamie finished the line of what he terms "that silly song" chuckling so heartily that James tumed in his tracks towards the barns to ilnd out the cause of his merrlmeni. O O I Jamie had come unexpectedly. having seized a favorable oppor- tunity to ride this far with Rob on his way to the corner store. "They're intending to thresli here this afternoon" he told me “so mightrft l as well come this morn- ing? I'd be coming this afternoon anyway!” 1f Jamie had not arrived I doubt if the cooks would have been so well prepared for the ev- ent. His tidings overlooked b; James in his busy-ness, were the cue to beat up a cake and go on u. mix a pan of Rob's favorite cin namon rolls, for supper. Later there were humorous suggestions oi food being wasted when some o! the help chanced to come by the doorway near which Jamie stood surrounded by our sizable family of cats. 1n a box in the small bar row rested a number of grey bod- lea of mice taken in an exciting hunt among the sheaves ill the granary. He proceeded to hand them in turn to the mowing cats commenting "I guess you'll be wondering where they've gone to. when they don't come to the stable for their milk this evening. By the time they eat all of these they'll be too full to hold one more bitei" The threshing, which progressed nicely in a. faint pulsing of mach inery that reached us indoors was suspended when the sun's wester- ing reminded the workers that chore-time had returned. I l I For those of the family who en Joy the social side oi rural lite there was a basket social this eve ning in the hall down the rivei road. As a means of raising funds for community enterprises, it ap- pears that these once most popu- lar festivals are enjoying a return to favor. 1t is amusing and often satisfying to note that in a cycle of years. Time's pendulum is apt to swing back to revive many at. old custom that had been almost lost in the past. From a pcrspcc tive afforded by a lapse of years many folks, contrasting the pres- ent. ivith the past, can realize how wonderfully wise in most directions were those oi our iorbcars an; picking out the best features o! their ways of life that had been wholly good. would try to integrate them into the times at hand. O O O “And how do you teach your pu- pilsiwlaskedaliubllc School teach- er last Summer. a visitor from the south. She teaches a beginners‘ class. "By sound. perhaps?" She shook her head. "No" she replica "neither by sound nor by sight. You will be surprised to know that I teach them by the same method that my mother taught me. And she learned it down here in one of your “little red schools." 1 teach them the letters of the Alphabet, from A to Z, and to spell words in time. And" she chuckled "the fun- ny thing about it; is the interest the Principal takes in my work. He even asked me where I learn- ed my splendid method!" If much of the qualntness u! the setting has been given up to progress. there were familiar parts to this evening's scene. The same delicate flush suffused maidens’ cheeks when their baskets came to be auctioned, and l suspect that some of the mstrons’ hearts skipped a best when the bidding on their: passed the sum that s husband had declared on the way thither: "I'll be darned if I'll go one oem. higher than that-good cause o: not!" All in all, socially and ll- nsncislly the basket social in the hall down the River road has been a decided . Until tomorrow -- Diary -Good night. N0 INTEREST IN BUDGET LONDON. April L-(APi-Erit- one. who usually love to try to guess the surprises in the annual national hudletdon’: seem to csrs nluch this year. The budget. to he opened in Parliament Tuesday, sums to hold no prospect of any slum u: sat. , ‘l5. \/\P\"\—\#r\fw positions- frcrm them. have pity upon them! nothing to us. long journey through life. SOKHPOHE. sledding gets hard, march, instead of always look on the dark side the spirit out of us? providing ourselves with an traveled and made his mind which to entertain us. So lciis all try to Qvkxr L\3\7\)\'\)\7\)\. A70 The Stars Say-- By Genevieve Kembls ‘I For Wednesday, April 1 THEE progressive stale of affair; seems suddenly endangered by s false move, wrong decision, or the intervention of an unusual, abrupt and perhaps devastating or shag. wring event or experence. Under P75551139 0! Slmln. suddenness. or excitement, the judgment may be warped or erroneous, opening the way for tricky, "phoney" or 51113;. lar contacts in which finances, plains. even personal or romantic relations are in jeopardy. For com- ba-tting this it is as well to safe- guard all avenues of loss or peril. For the Bfi-thday , U Those iviiose birthday it is may be startled into restless or excit- able conduct by the sudden qd- vent o! an unusual. lrre ular or inexplicable circumstanc, which lends to threaten o:- upsct, a train of progressive programs .g,m;1 gub- ject them to tricky, false or sus- piciotls entanglements. The plans. objectives. affiliations, business and private. may assume erratic or curious proportions. Emotional impulses may magnify such perils Dorothy Dix Says- Our personality ls always with us. less we are right with ourselves we are wrong with the universe. Un- 135s we can approve of our own conduct. the applause of others is as l l». ' ‘Most Unhappy People Individuals With Grouchy Dispositions llave Trouble Living With Selves - * Did you ever realize that the most unhappy P801116 l" those W310" worst enemy is themselves? That the lonely people are those W110 cannot bear their own society, and that the bored people are the ignorant; who have no resources within themselves? There are no other people in the world for whom I feel so sorry as I do for those who have bad dis- The people who are gluln and grouchp The people who are filled with bitte less and envy and jealousy and malice and spite, who sec the worst in everybody, who have no friends and who even alienate tho affections of their own families Now we can avoid these meanies and seek pleas- anter company, but the curse upon them is that they can never get away fromwhemselves. Thev have to live with themselves. of having to endure such a companionship through theryears, and Think of the horror We cannot escape that, so un- CANNOT ESCAPE SELVES if our parents are pessimistic and make home a depressing place. we leave them as soon us possible. If our husbands and wives are violent-tempered and uncongenial and hard to get along with. we can divorce them. But we cannot get away from ourselves. to me tllatdXE do not sufficiently appreciate this fact. nor realize how important it is to provide ourselves with good company during the It seems Surely if we did. more People would cultivate a pleasant, amiable disposition. for there are few men and women who are more disagree- able l0 b8 brought in daily contact with than peevlsh, irritable ones who are always flying into rages and who always have a feud on with Why. H1811. should one choose as one‘s most intimate com- panion as individual whose nerves are always shaken to pieces storms. and whose very blood is poisoned with hate? If People would consider how long they have to be together, thev would cultivate a cheerful outlook on life. l Gloomy Guses and Calamity Janos. b81112 with are the genial. courageous optimists who snap their fing- ers at Fate and carry on with a gay laugh on their lips, even when tho by! Nobody seeks the society of On the contrary, those we enjoy Why. then. shouldn't we provide ourselves with a high-hearted Bvmlmnlon. who will whistle and keep our spirits up during m; 1on3 Wins up with a. whiner and a complainer who will of things and sap our strength by taking Surely, as we have to endure our own society so long, it is worm v r interesting companion. “ill never bore us. because he has read and thought and observed am; which he h l t l a storehouse of thrilling memoy-lg; in“, as ‘my ° do and brine out something interesting with We would never tire of such a one. - make ourselves better company for ourselves. Someone who Household Scrapbook By Roberts Ln Mflwnny sum T° "w" a mahosan stain, mix 1 qt. boiled linseed 0.1’: 1 qt. tur- Pmmm» 1 Pl- Whiting. l tablespoon burnt sienna. ‘A tablespoon yellow when l5 tablespoon Bismarck Brown. Stains on Mahala- To remove water sights (mm mflhnll‘. rub the entire sin-face with a cloth wjrung out of cold water, Tlhefl H-Pmlse with equal parts of alcohol and ether. ' - Boiled Rica Squoeae s little leumn Jules into the boiling nee. It will whiten the rice and also improve the flavor. thm-l lnto devastating Hold the ground unti and tum channels. the predicrment may be solved by g time and circumstance. A child born Oihlllllf, day may be easily set off its balance by un- toward events. or by its own emo- tlonal rather than objective urges or temperament. - -~ GlMPLE snwrno / fllli .4. _l\ __ a __ i fbleedlecraft/ IFOR THE HQME/ A fresh-looking frock like this with bnef cap sleeves and deep square neckline . . . will make a. sweet start for Bpring- Add s ‘sprinkling of scallops for an eye- outobing accent No. 2653 is cut in afaes 10. l2. l4, 18. 18. 20. 36. 38, and 40. Blue l6 requires 5% yards 35-inch. _ Send 2Q for each Pattern, which -- eludes complete sewing guide. Print your NMTAC, Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to stats size you wsnt. include posts) unit or sons number ‘in your ad- dress. Address Pattern Department, The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2653 NUUO Address City Province i PIOTKT YOUR WOOIINS l Mom-bro IVHITHPROOFING SPRAY ' 3m - sum - iconomcsl 771a! BQJJ’ (if Your: IsnnsI.!snoI.I-I- LINING 0F NOS! AND SINUSES IMPOBRKNT T0 HEALTH -.._~_- o _ It is only within the last few years that nose and throat spec- ialists have begun using more medcal and less surglcaltrost- ment in sinus diseases. Previously, surgery was almost the first thought. as straightening uhe septum of the nose and 0pm’!- ing a. hole fol‘ drainage from a sinus was considered proper treat- ment. What physicians have been finding out is that. the lining of the nose is Aamt to general health. s: a healthy lining des- troys tfhe great majority of organ- isms that set up disease not only in the nose and throat but throughout the whole body. Dr. F. Johnson Piltney, Jeffer- son, Medical college. in the ‘Medi- cal Clinics of’ North America," states that the main use of the n e and the sinus (three on each sl a o! the nose) as a. part of the breathing or respiratory system of the body, is to aid proper ventila- tion by warming and filtering air gong down to the lungs. as ‘he mouth is not equipped to do this. We all know how dry and sore the throat becomes when the nose is blocked with a cold. The mucous manufactuoed by the lining of the nose and the lining of the sinus. which is really a contin- uatlon of the lining of the nose. keeps the upper part of the resvlrfl- tory system moist and prevents dryng which then would be fol- lowed by crusts, stagnation and infection. It is this moist mucous on the lining of the nose and sinu- seg which keeps the cells c! this lining in proper shape to kill and marry off ,t'he ozganlsms which cause infection. Once the lining loss this power to kill harmful organisms, these organisms get the upper hand. form pus. and a real case of infected sinus-sinusitis — develops. While headache is one SWIIDWI“ o! sinusitis, pain is the serious symptom. as tih’: pain is causerkby the pressure of the pus in the sin- us. unable to drain out through the opening into the nose. Loss of smell and bad breath are other symptoms. Treatment today consists in nose drops or sorays to shrink the lin- yn; Opgfgtlflj l, the treatment in serious cases. where pus cannot be rained despite medcal treatment. THE COMMON COLD Never neglect the common cold as it may often be the forerunner of other more dangerous condi- tions. Send l0 cents and a S-cenl stamp. to cover cost of handling amd mailing. to The Bell Svndicate. in care of this newspaper. Post Of- fice Box 99. Station G. New York 1o. N. Y.. and ask for your vow of the Barton booklet entitled "The Corrmon Cold." m: Q) %.; Q- 5 Vi, 1,8 C; H}. (b. y..- Q) Fl‘: {gs l5“. Ifbr Don't-Say Broad-r i l i l LANE’! high quality-bakery products bread, cakes, etc, o}: Available or your favorite Groc- now on sale, fresh dolly. er's. Say LANE'8'BREAll-'Pleare*' aPRlC- is, 194a Charlottetown and District Representative . ROY (Buck) WHITLOCK-Pliono l78l-L juimzfs BAKERIES uwrrui o-Q-ao-bootooaaiosstccl o I CARAMEL CHIFFON PIE tin ‘A cup old wstl 1 cup sugar ‘A. teaspoon s2! 2/3 cup boiling wate- 1 cup cream 1 teaspoon valnilla 3 egg whites. stiffly beaten Whpped cream Chopped nuts METHOD: Place the cold water in a bowl and sprinkle the gela- tine over it. Allow to stand for 5 minutes. Add the salt to the sugar and heat in a heavy skillet until the sugar is melted and a delicate straw color. Add the boiling water and stir and cook until the cara- rnel melts and the mixture thick- ens sonuewhat. Remove from the fire and cool. slightly. then add the cream and the vanilla. Add the soaked gela- tne and stir until this is dissolved. Strain the mixture into a bowl that has been rinsed in cold water. and set in a cool place until it reaches a honey - like coilsistency. Now beat the gelatlne mixture thoroughly and fold in the stlffly beaten egg whites. Turn into a baked no shell or a prepared crumb crust of acme kind. and chill until fL-m. Serve this toppled with sweetened and flavored whipped cream that ls ‘A. tablespoons granulated gela- E- A normsl baby's dict really shouldn't rsks much pon- dering! Nor when Heinz sprinkled with a few chopped nuts. mootha- 1 5 tempting r .1 Cooks Comer g Better English .1 D. O. Williams 1. What is wrong with this scu- tcnce? "He is a cigarette fiend." ject them tricky. false or sus- iaiiorl of " mboo"? 3. Whfch'ons of these words is misspelled’! Recompenae, recomezi- datiom. recognizance. 4. What does thc- word "dis- sertation" mean? 5. What is a. word beginni-ig with te that means "limited by time"! . AN SWEBS ' i. Say. "He is a cigarette ud- dict." 2.: Accent last syllable. not the first. 3. Recomme -' ‘ion. 4. An essay; thesis. "The professor is writing a. dissertation on the habits of the vulture." 5. Temporal. \ § O ‘ . I l Morning Smile i l-‘ather-Hullol Where's rAifrvc gone to? ----- ~ » Mothf -If the ice is as thick as n..- tiiinlrr it ‘is, he‘: gone skaiiii; but if it is as thin as I think it he's gone bathing. FOR. BETTER CAKES For baking cakes, fairly light metal pans are generally used. they heat. quickly, yet reflect the heat. so that the cake-browns delicate- ly. when baby is older-around twelve of Heinz junior Foods m st 'Isis Baby Foods offer 2! delicious varieties from which to choose his menus. And ml! of them nourishing -chosen specially for babies from the pick of the nation's mesa, vegetables sod {suits-cooked and vacuum-peek ‘ of their freshen to retain minerals and vitamins in high snd- uniform degree. And service and yours. Ulsellslnz Baby " Foods, Heinz junior Foods are constantly checked sod mud‘ in tho Quality Control Department for flavor, color, texture and ‘nutritive vslus. So gin your biby _ foods that bu: tho dependable‘ name of Heinz. Look fossils plus [in of Heios Bib; foods. ‘