Women's realm PAGE 14 :-:-'I'-'-1:-r -:---;-;. .' HowCanll!l Q. How can I remove rust from shelves and trays in my refriger- ntor? A. Rub over them with steel wool; then wash with soap and water. when thomughly dry, apply It thin coat of colorless nail polish or clear lacquer to the part sub- ject to rust, to prevent future rust. Q. How can I make easier the -task of sewing patches on my can- yas awnings? A. Soak the fabric well and rub soap in, and this will make the needle slip through the canvas much more easily. Q. How can I prevent a custard filling from sinking and soaking Into a pie crust? . A. The custard filling is less likely to soak into the pie crust if the crust is baked before the cus- tard mixture is poured into it. G OT H A M GOLDiSHTRVll?VE ,1 NYLONS .BEAU'I'lFUL STOCKINGS Beautiful hair shines! And Ricna Creme Shampoo brings out all the natural, shining beauty of your own hair. it contains real egg-a natural hair beautifier. This golden lotion shampoo clea rinses out completely, leaves your hair dandruff-free . . . clean, beautiful and shining like bridal satin! Then, as a fragrant beauty finish after each shampoo-a quick rinse with Richard Hudnut Creme Rinse. RICHARD EGG CREME um GUARDIAN RICHARD HUDNUT EGO CREME SHAMPOO Dualgbenuliy-lyslcain OCTOBER 15. 1953 he Stirs Say - - For Tomorrow THIS day's vibrations are excel- lent for'the formulation of plans affecting future welfare and se- curity. While, in business affairs, it does not augur particularly w ll for the initiation of new enterpr es, it does favor rapid progress. on ven- tures hlready inaugurated. Use caution in any matter in which there is even the faintest possibil- ity of risking your cash. The evening hours are excellent for cultural and social interests and community projects are also under excellent aspect. Socially, the configurations are good for making plans for large scale entertain- merit. For the Birthday If tomorrow is your birthday. your horoscope indicates during the year ahead. a period in which you should experience a rich ful- fillment of long-cherished desires and great personal satisfaction in the honors and financial emolu- ments from steady endeavor. Through the clever use of your mental and manual skills you may find that some pursuit initi- ated merely as a hobby will have great remunerative value. There is promise of great social activity during the next three months and domestic and romantic affairs are under beneficent aspects, There is little possibility of travel until late spring or early summer. A child born on this day will be alert, ambitious and ingenious. TRY OTHER VEGETABLES The use of a variety of vegetables adds interesting flavours and col- ours to meals. Children should bet encouraged to try many veget-l ables: it's a good plan to serve a small portion the-first time. Many different cooking methods can be used to make meals more attractive. rd Hudrlut Egg nses quickly, 8 151.25 2.00 H U D N U T SHAMPOO NZ puts in the slum You add llNll water imam: Save V2 pint Wtlll a-vi-ry ll p llESllll:real Bream of When you buy straight Tomato Soup and add an equal amount of milk to produce a soup that tastes something like Cream of Tomato Soup, you loe'e out on getting; rich creamy x lavour andyanalsolose outoatheooet. Why not buy Cream of Touch Soup la IVIILK In of startvri!h,ae ll ill tx CREAM L TOMATO S l vitemarketi once with a long sigh. suvsonsillkundqetabetter imply adding water. Try a comparison between iraiqht tomato r" 'DllFdnIlhdWlullIllkdldHOlI.lC!ICld Tsaisto Soup the wonderful 1 I-2, Ell'S lllllldurdlnrnefewlb These October days 'wiian the sun chooses to withhold his cheer and the moon. young and shy, pre- fers to hide somewhere in the shadow of the night's skirts we are maimed to turn back the vase: of memory and linger with some nostalgia on the warn-Jng scenes of the summer now put . . . To see again on a. sweet dew- kist morning two lads and s. shag- gy-coated black .dog off to s spell of fishing 'along the millstresm, bringing home sooner or later not only treasure trove of the depth: but of green bank and near meadow as well: first violets . . . buttercups . . . daisies; and once with sad expressions over the tragedy that had befallen a little feathered mother. a fragment of fragile shell picked up along the way. "Br-r-rl It's coldl We'd better hurry back to the fire," we urged Gage on our outing to the mall- box in the mist and biting wind of today when he would have loitered. "I am hurrying." he replied, "but I just want to make sure that all the summer birds-unless it be a robin or two, have gone south be- fore today." "Wait just a minute!" he beg- god, parting a bit of shrubbery at the laiieside. "Here," he said softly, "is the little gray bird's nest! . . . Jamie didn't think she was nesting about here, but one day when I was pas- sing" lie explained "didn't she fly up out of here'And" he smiled, ”wasii't. there one wee egg already in the nest!" He fitted a neat fist into the deserted dwelling. "It feels cold" he offered. "There's . . . nobody . . . home" Not that this October day was not an enjoyable one for us; nor that this hearth-fire did not con- tinue to sparkle and glow inspir- ingly all day and at evening serve to draw about it the Family, don! now with the various cares which had kept them busy outdoors through its cold dampish hours. , "Wouldn't it be good if the weather would turn warm so that we might go barefoot again!" Gage "So that you could play with Mack and Granddaughter up in the playhouse in the orchard?" He nodded. "But before we went back to school . . . you see we knew we wouldn't be having so much time to play then-we tidied every thing up. We put away 0” W831" and ttea' and spices” and flour' for another summer." "Are you tired playing?" we ask- ed Mack one sunshine-filled morning of summer when he came in alone to at somewhat listlessly on the couch in the kitchen. "They needn't think I'm going to be their child" he commented. "They can have I. fine time making pies and cakes while I lmusn't touch' anything-Just sit and play with toys!" He considered his grievance a. moment. "I'm going down to the barn to build some- thing" he said sliding quickly to his feet. "I'm not going to play with them anymore. No sir!" he grinned sunnily "I'm not going in be anybodyls childl" Damp and gray was this day. the wind chill, and it seemed as if there was little color in tho length and breadth of our valley. But now the night-lights shut out the dark. And sometime out of the clouds will smile down the Hunter's new moon. And, if we but wait for it, theiewill yet come. scattering its bands of gloom, the radiance of sunlight to take the farmers with fresh resolve once more to the field-work. Until tomorrow - - - - Dllf! . - .- aood-nigm..'.... Albert Einstein produced his first paper on the relativity theory in 1906, when he was 26 Yeti-N Old- malo Soup r ludnbyHOlIIl?TlIlIl!OIlOI;: with only was: added. Tosh diihnnael - at -P.aE. 1. Nurses At Nevyggriqgpitaig V Department heads gather around a bouquet of flowers during the dedication 'of the new Union Hos- pital at Lynn, Mass. Left. to right are Mrs. Jessie Berryman. head of the medical department; Mrs Ell: Doylc.'daught.er of Mr. and Mn. James Collings, Montague, P.E.I., and another daughter, IMIse Tina (failings, assistant superintendent: Mrs. Elizabeth Perry, head of the surgical department, and Mrs. Thelma Burke, head of the obstetrical department. Both Mrs. Doyle and Miss Collings graduated from the Charlottetown Hospital School of Nursing several years ago. ' wnrusa vnonrainse are excellent and cheap ways to obtain vitamin A, as are yellow vegetables, such as carrots, squash. furnish energy. cabbage, turnip . and green peppers may be excel- Potatoes. if cooked properly, arellent sources of vitamin C. Green good sources of vitamin C and arelleaf vegetables, for example, outer a very cheap ',source of starch toipart of cabbage, spinach, chard, other minerals. Avoid 2 tiresome wasliday chores New CHEER is really different . with a difference you notice the moment you open the box. It's "BLUE! ' And new CHEER has Blue-Magic Whltener . not just an added bluing but a new whitening agent so effective you never need blue again! - Cheer's Ilue-Magic suds cut out two bothersome wasliday chores . . . bluing and bleaching (except for stubborn spots)! Cheer's magic blue granules billow up into oceans of snow-white rude I . . husky dirt-chasing suds that guarantee you the cleanest wuhes possible . . . wisliout blulng or bleaching! , . Cheer Is a one-step washing product for everything you wash -from heaviest, dirtiest clothes to tlisbrnort delicate washable colon. Double your money back if youldon't agree CHEER gives you the cleanest, whitest washes possible . . . without bluing. without bleaching! , p ' PS. You'll love CHEER for dishes, Oiverooesnsofwliltesudrlnsjily... ,- gets glassware and dishes sparkling clean without wlplog. No scum, no film ofanykindl Dslightflillyroented -. . ..end so gentle to your hands! l . - their wk Whatis" In, By Joan Bltblfll Canadian Press Stet! Writer The definition of s biscuit. cookie, bun, scone or other sunildr bsksd goods is somewhat of an in- dividusl matter. It may not be important, except to such persons II the Jlmglfsh Montreal restaurant, and was given hot tea biscuits. It rather put her out for the rest of ten-time. The dictionary is definite about what constitutes I icons. It de- scribes it as a soft cake or bsrlsy meal or wheat flour, of sin for single portion, usually triangular and cooked on A griddle. It comes from "schoon brat fine bread." The .definition- of a cookie is broader: "Plain bun. small flat cake, biscuit," says the dictionary. How to Keep Them- ,Wisely ignoring such intricacies the consumer section of the de- partment of agriculture has come up with the following sound advice on how to store "different types of cookies.” Cookies that are soft, like is her- mit or brownie, should be stored in a container with a tight fitting lid. It may be a cookie can or Just in plain cake pan. If the cookies still tend to dry out, add a piece of apple, orange or bread, but be sure to replace it frequently. An- other good way to keep soft cookies moist is to wrap them tightly in aluminum fall. with crisp cookies the treatment is Just the reverse. You store them in a. container with a very loose fitting cover. If the weather be- comes humid they may soften. but you can crisp them ggaln by five minutes before serving. Most. vegetables supply iron and l placing in a warm oven for about women who ordered scones in I' They Freere. Too 1XCmkkR, excellent way of storing weeqkiulstofreesethem.f!yqu happen to have a home from: or locksr. Almost any type of eookl. may .be frozen except msrlnguss, meearoons and any other small cake made with egg whites. Cook- iss bhwnisr. sugar cookies and so on are an excellent when froosn. Prepare cookies for freeur by waking, cooling and then wrapping them tightly in freezer wrappers or placing in freezer bags. Wrap- ped cookles may be placed in card- bosrd boxes so they will not crush in storage. . . AL Bfler Enis ByD.0.WilIiInl 1. What is wrong with this sea- tence? "We shall be happy to ac- cept of your invitation." 2. What is-the correct pronunci- ation of "roquefort" (cheese)? 8. Which one of these words ii misspelled? Pastoral, pastime, pasport, pasteurize. 4. What does the word "grad- ation" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with rat that means "a review of the past"? ANSWERS 1. Since you are weep” g the invitation now, say, "We are happy to accept (omit of) your invita- tion." 2. Pronounce rok-for,-both o's as in no, accent nrst syllable preferred. 3. Passport. 4. Any de- gres or relative position in an order or series. "We are studying the gradations of business." 5. Retros- pect. t And it makes oceans of rich, yvhife 0' lEll(llllllG! .0 ll .S?5))il4V c' " Xd7Xri ilh y. vou3'rIrs ctsAuIg'r,.wumc-r H suds! cc--" SUDL Qchx. such as oatmeal, cookies,-