fxm Rule ior success in "Get, all you can without hurting our our soul. syaeighbor. '—=lohn Wesley I Woman's. businun- M YMH goo-oo-ow-o-on-oio-w. vvvv y Mother "Errs in DEAR MISS DIX: tention to them. 111C? waste your time that you would ii you a . one you loathed. you are speaking. lHow Can 1 l! By Anne Ashley +o+eo+c~oo++owo+oe++o+vo+ Q How can I make a good den- tiigcei j 1 - . emon uce is a good denti- frice. Dilute it with water and use as a mouth wash. It will make ttie mouth and teeth ieel clean and wholesome. Q. How can I revive faded col- ors in a garment? -- A. Use a little vinegar ‘in the rinse water alter laundering, and it, will help revive the colors. Q. How can I improve the aip- pearance oi palms and ferns? A. Two tablespooniuls oi olive oil at the root of the palm or fern once a month will make a decided improvement in the plaint. Realm) §Dorothy Dix Says- Facial Expressions ~ ruin; Girl She Looks ’ I can't lock anyone in the h talking to them and naturally-they don’ eyes w en I am I I look dumb. My mo ace. Ihave practiced! f t i’ uh i h " " an I do is just look a lriit M203“ :1 ber-eimerlror ow to luck intelligent. but Is there any facial exercise that I Cu] ANS-WEE: Oi course. actors do 16am i, g register dliiferent emotions, Ow u or mirth. or anger. but 1 think it would be a hope- 1958 lmdefilkill! 101' any amateur to acquire what ll ‘la-UH! I Smoking countenance Anyway; an individuals expression should com front wlthln- ulsieaci ct without, i: it is to make any genuine “iIPPBQI to the beholder. gain would be to look hypocritical a glad, expectant look when you were talking to a bore, or ii you tried to look tender and loving at some- AAAAAAA ‘AAA vwv vv wvv v ‘nan Y vvv‘ Dumb t‘ ‘think I am paying any at- ther says i have a dead pan my smile is a friendly sneer. d take that would help LOREEN such as iear. or joy, 2% ocialeitnd Piersonail A~~Ae AA Q n AA ' .7 . __-__-_- Andshters lid B do Y g EIIIOOUh and bright Sing a song oi imtprints On a path oi white. And a window glowing With a welcome light, Sing a song o! home again 1n the winter night. —Sara Van Abtyne Allen. SINGING KETTLE We have come to the time when. with all respect to Mr. shinweil, s so you will in smirking before a nlirrur. nu GAIN SELF-CONFIDENCE Your inability to look people in conquer that by gaining self-confidence, and the way to get that is t0 quit thinking so much about yourseli and the impression you are making on others and concentrate your attention on the one to whom the eye is shyness and you can _ Your mother has done you a great. ii unintentional. wrong. by con- tinually telling you that you look dumb. To be shortcomings impresses them on us far oiterier than zt cures them. Mil- 110115 0! P°°Dle are failures in the world because their families have always thrown up to them that they would neves (Continued on Page 3) made conscious oi our amount to anything Modern Etiduette By Roberta Lec i“ l O60 Q. Shouldn't one congratulate the bride at a wedding reception? A. No; nnlv the bridegroom is to be congratulated. but very best wishes should be extended to the bride. _ Q. Is it customary for the par- ents o! a well-bred girl to sit up during the evening until her cai- ers haxye departed? . es Q. What are a tow intimate closings for a letter? A. Ailectlonately yours, Lovingly yours, Devotedly yours. .an excusaible lu iire becomes a goody-indeed. a “WES-wry — thing. So, providing you chain the poker out ct reach of the iire. a well-doing blaze is xury. And out comes the black kettle in our home at last. - Take warning. Science advances. The coal iire is doomed. The black kettle-ha. it belonss to the Middle Ages that knew not the electric kettle so shiny and efficient and songless An electric ketitie does not sin . It iusses and screams and bol all its water out and explodes in a nasty bang to eject its plug A biack kettle sits at the side o! an interior grate (the modern granny) and puns. I switch ofi the radio to listen to it. Frctn purring to sweet music. A blazing fire, s, singing kettle with a spume or two oi steam-cling to these simple pleas- ures. my hcarties. beiore the elec- tricians produce an electric iire with a kettle painted on it a. little dynamo arrangement to produce synthetic singing. Confession - Actually our black kettle is a soot-blackened aluminum one. Not a real black iron kettle with a glass marble inside it-as it should be. More's the pity. PLASTIC DIAPERS ON THE WAY HERE NIAGARA FALLS - Canada's nylon future was visualized here by delegates attending the Canadian section of the Society oi Plastic Industries. Nylon evening gowns and bath- ing suits. plastic diapers so in- expensive they will not be worth the price oi laundering. were also forecast ior this own-try Canada now is cerned. delegates were told. Basic manufacturing in most industri self-sustaining q Qk as far as plastic materials are con- AAAAQAAQAA I .xv n AAAAAAA4 ‘A‘A n THE i WOMAN'S REALM l a “ ocnfluetedthmugh- mflioml rrsaroosaun- Tomeasluesmenbytbeooat WGIH mm Judge s men's thhkiilg by grammar. ‘no estimate value by price or mince. o approve oi something Just because it is financially profitable. To ndemn an idea just because it is new. HELPFUL DISCIPLINE A loose wile gives out no musical note: but fasten the ends. and the piano. the harp. or the violin, la born. with their world oi musi- cal possibilities. Pree steam drives no zucchini; but hamper and confine it with piston and imbibe, and you have the eat world oi machinery made pose le. The unhampered river drives no dynamos: but dam it up and we get power suificient to light a great city. So our lives must be disciplined. and our very thoughts kept under control ii we are to be o! any real service in the world. LANDSCAPE LANGUAGE ‘There are more than a dozen dilierenifiworda ior valley. a par- ticular part of the country being suggested by the term used. There is the dale oi the North oi England. the glen or den oi Scotland, the nant or glyn oi Wales. and the coomib or combe- the short valley running up from the coast-oi the West Country. A dell is a little village with tree- clad sides: a chine a narrow and deep ravine: a gill or ghyll, chief- ly used in Scotland. a narrow val- ley with a stream; while a shallow valley is called a slask: a steep valley. usually with a torrent bed. a clough: a narrow opening. gen- erally with a stream. between steep mountains or hills. a gorge; the track or road between high moun- tains. a bass or hause; a small galley or green spot in a dale a aw. lion's Welcome Relief Finm llilllE llllilllllll i’ dro oiVa-tro-nol up each figfdiffiu 1:1 it go to work right where cstarrh 1'7 i! - - - bmlgml mil Ymoirom {dangle-s Yul‘ —-P va-rao-uoi. 6+ Morning Smile O-§§-§4-§+C A AAAAAAAA vw v Vvvviw Liozag-&Loi;n re yfFosliions/Literaiurer nourishing 0a a "cooked" SW4“ AAAAAAA‘A‘AA4AA44AAA‘lA wuar a soon to busy broakfusieorsl Place Nabisco l Shredded Wheat in strainer-pour boiling We!" 0" biscuits. brain. salt to taste, serve with sugar and cream for a breakfast hearty enough to till Junior I “hollow leg." This l0 second HOT breakfast is on cause Nabisco Shredded Wheat is pure whole wheat steamed, shredded. bfllwd- For the original Niagara Falls product ask for Nabisco Shredded Wheat. i Inna‘ AAAA“AAAAAAAAAA l, HiHlIhH-‘iliii1d '1 roundly cereal be- Ellen ’s Diary By an Island Farmer's Wile Q0404 James said at breakfast, glanc- ing towards the old clock on the shell: "Well Ellen, ii I live ’tlll ten o'clock. I'll be another year older." Fortunately for the rest oi.’ us at any rate for one oi u: at thls house, James lasted all through the events 0i today, obviously with a measure of enjoyment. Old? Not so ancient yet but old enough to acquire much "wisdom and under- standing" that seems to come with the years. Physically, he is not much changed though he does say his step is slower and he "can't run like I used to." If not, the spirit is still there. His hair is showing more oi the ilver, a hair for each Winter storm and one ior each oi his worries—and even a farmer can find them-and ior those that never happened but it they had. would have found him prepared and admirably calm an cool in any em- ergency. "Ellen" he will tell me “you disregard any signs oi trouble until it is too late-I believe in preventive measures so that distres- sing eventualitles may not get a chance to develop." That is among his philosophies. So he carries an *0 COMING, GOING, GONE A man hired a small hall in a country town. lie en aged no as- sistance. but a mon before the date for which he had rented the hall he ut up slgins all over the town sta ing in large letters: "lie is coming." A wee before the fateful night, that was replaced by: “lie will be at the Towrn Hall in April." The day beiore the event there was the simple legend: here." The following morning: "I-le will be at the Town Hall tonight at eight o'clock" ‘Iihat night the man himself sat in the box oflice and sold tickets at one ehillih a head to a capac- ity sudience. en the lights went up lgilldfi, however. all the crowd cou see was a huge sign read- ing: "lie’s gone.” msclrfmn A British oiiicer was arguing with an American officer as to wllliich army had the better disci- p ne As the American was talking, one oi his men came in. "Cap." said the private, "can I have your Jeep tonight? I've got to take out a dame." “Sure? replied the oiilcer. Then. to the Briton. he said: "Ilheres a grout of our discipline. He needn't ave asked me." g Cook ’s Corner E aimed. . id h molasses . Pour into mold which has been . cold water. until nrln. Unmold. OIIOOOLATI BPANIIII OIIAM 1 Irvelope imflsvoured WINK extra rug or a pair oi mittens on a ilne Winter's day for blizzurds come suddenly; or closes stove- dampors in the wind; ur scatters snow on the glib of the ice or does many other thoughtful acts. which all go to prevent disaster. The family fol-gathered this ovo- ning to help him in celebrate the return of his natal day. Rob's came after dark, when the new moon lit their way, Rob had been helping Mac in the woods and his chores were to be done and as, Karolyn said "it all lakes time’ beiore the animals wore made com- fortable for the night. Jamie came in ahead oi his mother; “We ve br0ll"'1l candles-Jour oi them —— two for the kittens at home and two ior the rabbits." Where he found this ides for decorating (Continued on Page 3) Household Scrapbook By Roberts Lee Removing Wallpaper About the simplest method oi removing old wallpaper is w soak it with hot water and then scrape. Use a brum to wet the paper and repeat until the gper and te are soaked throug . when al the papfr has been removed, wash the wa with clean water. lvoryroilstarllslua '1' whiten the toilstsniclar theghs/ve becomewyzgllawed. wash I: soap and water and place in the sim to 8y. I! necessary. repent. lust sum ' I! ir rust ltekil he lpwred on itidmporcelsin the ‘den re- moved lennu mice. o a cou- ws Foil l to: rims andvlrvlpedry. ‘n4 ‘AA AA AA Better English I). 0.. Williams OOQOOOQOQOQOOQOOOOQOOUQ4 1. Wits tones? " e and o! our 4 0 4 ..--.--.--$ The Courteous Way at The Table! slowly. It's no ion ood mail- nera to wait ior a to e served. But never spread arms on tm table. hump low over food and gcoble nosi y. Do not lean -n an elbow and wave your cup in He!‘ tlculatlon. any "view" w! "ihrrl you" to even the smallest family membe and never make loin reaches. Do not spread bread. or any thing else, with your iork. D0 no drink water or any other liqul down in long gulps without | breath. Don't grunt. Imeqk vol-H lips, or eat or drink nosily 0i stir the bottom out oi coiiee or ten cup ol- glass. Stir quietly and re may, s con at once.’ Sin will quietly rom side oi spoon -—fi0t|il'il end. Never pour tea or coffee. nit saucer. Accidents Will Happen NQVCRXIOUCG accidents unduly, o1 scold about carelessness or stupid- ity at the table. Don't hold you: |l ver in your hand when pdllln: your plate-place the knife an iork beside each other on back oi plate. Never return anything iron your plate to a platter. do no! peck at food on your plate as ii locking for something noxious. and don't cut iat or anything from mui as ii it were disgusting. (F nitinued on Page 3) imitation =----. i? by Colette ii WVM‘ tn- A, .’J K The table isn't a ieed trough. battleground, or place Whelle 3°“ manners should ever devlan, no matter how iew are present or whether its home or cornDlhy din- ner, All reprimands. criticisms. personalities. Inuit-findings. un- pleasant gossip. tribulations. busi- neu worries. bad tempers, moods. grouches woes should be tern or srily banished for good diesel 0" and general peace. One set oi man- ners should be lnsiatedupon be- cause lts easier in the long run and avoid further humiliation: and enibarrassmenis. In training children, good ample is very important. So don't slouch it, flop down any old way, plant elbows on table and vent immediate lamentations over house- hold Prleis aches and pains. or anyth ng else unpleasant. Be smil- ing, greet everyone courteously and never ‘be unpunctltlai withcutt a. l- OKY. 0r perm unpunc iia ty. Don't bicker or quarrel or tolerate it from the children says the Marl- tlme Farmer. Sit down s uarely and unfold your napkin mmedistely, Ii ou ask a blessing do it simply be ore the meal. Ii not, ask ii a guest does and ask him to do it. When Eefvéd. QXDress your preference promptly. if asked. Ii not, take w"!!! Riven you and‘ begin to eat Mb o hove so i v obe harmoni- ous wiih your Limqfluyp Don't have ihi bulky fabrics. 1/ \ The material oi all your clot-hill should suggest the sthenll- 111"’ cry quality oi your appealing persontlifiy- Md K W" ‘m’ l” p romantically. it is easy for your inlillty to dress in. the wit!“ “f reniiuiaeytrsiiest orrobus. ‘may. wit; do you 100MB] pathetic and lost in bulky. drab robe? Plain drownrmirmutmintmmmsntiiibuikyneclifl- -_.-_-___.___._-...aa.