a. five-nionth M811 PACE TWO ---- -_---nw----nunnxu»_-_~--- W0man’ s Realm/Social and P ‘I7 _ --_---1-wuu‘-u---- --_w»uununn»__u~------- rm: GUARDIAN, cnannorrsrovwm u-t... -- _..-- -,uu£| r Q“ (*2. ft ‘:‘Qf_frm- ‘I our (‘no wise. Frankfurt Ouails ‘ Slit Swift's ?rernium Franks length- Fill with V4-inch stick of sharp cheese, cut Vz-inch shorter than frankfurt. Wrap a whole slice of bacon spiral fashion round each Frank, and fasten ends with tootbpicks. Place in a row, split side up, in a baking dish. Bake in bot oven (425°F.) until bacon is crisp. To serve four, use l lb. of Fiemium Pranks. You‘ll enjoy this new treatl m “My ‘success’ dish for dinner: ' - Swift's PREMIUM Franks!" They're all tender beef...and iUiCY POfk- "I'm lucky." says Mrs. Canadian Homemaker. “I've discovered that Swift's Premium Franks are tops for dinner- and what a success they are with my family!" You'll like easy-to-serve Swift's Premium Franks. too. and your family will want them again and again. Spiced just right for grown- ups and children alike. They're fresh! Digestible! Nutritious! Cellophane seals in the flavour of these plump Franks. All their natural goodness is protected. So enjoy this new main meal dish. Ask for Swifts Premium Franks. Serve them tonight! I I I I l SWIFT CQNADIAN CO. LIMITED |_ HRS G ALICE SLATE‘ CLARENCE LOGAN h. Flblfl battle over custody of a mother-less eilhiivnvisl- k, t., ' l nded with chief Justice J. O. McRuer p ng mmsifictheoizxaregld-f her grandmother in preference to her father. pnggngling the complicated evidence of max-rinse. dlvflrflfi. ffimflffllfle and the dehth of the child's mother, the diner justice awarded custody of Anne Logan to Mrs. Alice Dolenn Slater- r"' DOOQOOV Hook's Corner IGALLOPED TUNA Ingredients I seven-ounce can tuna nah. 1% cups shredded wheat crunuos (about 5 biscuits). 2 cups milk. l tablespoons melted butter, p i egg (beaten), 4 tahl minc- ed onion. 1A cup finely diad celery, 1 tablespoon minced parsley. 1 tes- spoon salt. 9i teaspoon dry mus- tard. ‘A w: , Plbrika, l6 tse- Qoon tabasoo sauce. 6 lemdn slices. Method. Turn tuna fish with all Rom can into mixing bowl; break fish into {mail plecel. Combine with other ingredients, except lemon slices. mixing thoroughly. Turn into individual scallop shells or baking dishes. Top gach shell with lemon slice. Bake in a moderate (350 F) oven farlbminutss. Mstuaeaerv- . The following dish is a savory ~ one suitable for ripper. larva it Qulitlrv VOOD I €'-/ _-_.-_-.---__----_1 Puro Pork Sausage | A rizzlin’ free! for break- fasf-Suvff’: BrooL/ield Slang: witb tbr ‘jun! right‘ flavour.’ | . That Body Of Yours luau W. Barton. l. D. MHNUFACTURING A DRY. HOT CLIMATE T0 TREAT RHEUMATISM One of tbs advantages of going to a different climate for the treat- ment of a special disease - heart. lungs. rheumatisnn -- is the change of surroundings. A change of scene gives the mind a lift, unless the patient is one of the many home lovers who are not happy away‘ from it. For ‘these who are unhappy away from thorne, it is interesting to know that for 50mg diseases and symp- toms the climate they need to get relief can ‘be brought to them. I have in mind particularly the cli- mate best suited for rheumatic conditions. A warm. moist climate helps heart and nerve oases. And these patients are satisfied to rest - the treatment most needed — and have no desire to engage in exercise of any kind. In regard to rheumatism and arthritis, it is known that a hot. dry climate is best for patients with painful joints and muscles. thus. 1n some of the western states -Arizona., Colorado, parts of Cali- fornia. Nevada-many eastern pat- ients are treated every year. What can be dong for patients who are unhappy away from home or cannot afford to go to the special climate most suitable for them? In "Annals of Rheumatic Dis- eases," London. Drs. G. Ddstrom, G. Lundin. and-T. Wramner report that for the last slX years they have had One ward in the rheumatologlc department of the University Hos- pital in I/und, Sweden. constantly air-conditioned at about Q degrees Fahrenheit and humidity at 35iper cent. This is much wanmer and dry- er than could be found elsewhere than in a very dry climate. In this ward. these physicians have treated arthritic patients. each of them for about 100 dayas. The circulation of the blood to and in the outer part of the body. skin and tissues beneath the skin in- creased in all patients. particularly tn the hands and feet. Harmful organisms found in the throat, often a factor in causing rheuma- tism anad arthritis. wars killed by this hot. dry air in the room. General results from this hot.,_ air tr ‘ ‘ for 100 days were rei ductlon in swelling of the akin and joints. relief from pain. disappear- ance of the blue appearance of hands and feet and better appetite. The symptoms did not return when the patients moved bad: to an ordinary room. with cauliflower and snap beans. sooth only anti! up. DOROTHY DIX SAYS- llecipei Forllielpdlng Husband Understanding Masculine Psychology Gets Results‘ For Wife ' DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My aim in life has always been to keep my home and family together. This-is not always easy. because there comes a time in many a marriage when the husband seems to lose his affection for his wife. Such was my case, and this is the way I handled ii: I tried putting myself in my husband's place and to act as I would want him to treat me if the situation were reversed. I made home life as pleasant as possible. I didn't nag him in any way or ask him any questions. I let him completely alone so far as showing any affection toward him, but never repulsed him or criticized him in any way. I treated him just as I would a stranger whom l was trying to win over. That has been several years now and it has worked successfully. We are happier today than we have ever been in our married life. and we have been married al- most 20 years. _ A READER ANSWER: lf every wife would follow this woman's recipe for holding her husband's affections and keeping him eating out of her hand, it would practically revolu- tionizc marriage and shut up the divorce courts. For what ails marriage more than anything else is that so few wives ever have the slightest inkling of masculine psychology, so they treat ihelr husbands as they would like to be treated themselves, and then they wonder why their mates lose their taste for them. DOMINATING \VOMEN The average woman's idea of being a good wifc is to dominate her husband completely. To see that he eats what she thinks he should eat; that he wears the clothes she selects; that he has no friends but her friends; that he goes nowhere without dragging her along with him; and if she can reduce him to being a stoogc. she is happy and thinks he is. But woe to the man who doesn't want ln talk at night when he comes home tired from work, or who likes to go fishing. or hunting. or take a little- lrip by himself. it is an exceptional case when his wift doesn't consider herself a martyr and spend her time telling anyone who will lisicn in her about what a poor. neglected creature she is. Anti ii all hoils down lo this: That husbands and wives want their mates to be happy, but that each wants lo write the happiness prescrip- tion for the other. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Probably it is inevitable for youth to rebel against age. I often admire our children when they disagree with us, but why must they be so rude about it? I sec many cases of out and out harbarily and cruelty “beyond the call of duty," so to speak, so it raises my blood pressure when I hear the young insult the old. contra- dict flatly everything they say, ride over the deepest convictions of their elders and argue each tiny point until the aged groan inwardly. Can't the revolution of youth against age be n bloodless one? A BATTERED GRANDMOTHER ANSWER: As youth ls the only time in life when anyone is abso- lutely certain that he or she is possessed of supernatural wisdom, we probably should be more patient with the teen-agers ‘than we are. It docs not take long for the know-it-alls to have a lot of the conceit knock- ed out of them. But while it lasts it is certainly hard to take to have your opinions scoffed at. your tastes derided, your judgment floutcd. When our children and our grandchildren think so poorly of us. it ls strange that they never ask how it happened that we occupy p081- tlons of importance, ahd made the money that they are spending so freely. Of course, in time they will acquire better manners and more sense; but in the meantime they are a pain in the neck. DEAR MISS DIX: There are two young men whom we like very much and who seem to like us, but they have never asked us for an actual date, though when we meet them at social gatherings they mon- opolize our time. They are not youngsters. They are men who have been in the service and have seen action. What do you think our chances are with themi’. Shall we be patient and wait, or shall we make it our business to be where they are? TWO SISTERS ANSWER: Perhaps the reason that your G. I.'s do not show more ardor in their pursuit of you is because a courtship costs money and they lack the price. There are many reasons why men can't marry these days, so it is up to the girls whether they are willing to wait or not. \%W%OQ€>M>$OM%OO‘ VETERAN DOCTQR DIES t . » t . Ellen s Diary MONTREAL, March 14-40m- i Dr. Carlyle Amot Porteous. '12. B, u, "m"; pgmgp. w". one of the first Canadians to use t" ‘I M _ a electric and insulin shocks for treatment of mental dlsorders. died "Well, ‘how did this get in here. here today. Ellen?" James had asked me with obvious surprise last evening, puz- zled to find a strange newspaper clipping among hls personal papers. while searching out a receipt for some purchase made ln the recent or more distant past. in connection with our farming. It was in an odd print. dls-slmlliar to this and was faded and yellow with age. But from a copy of an old newspaper. which likely had been among the few delivered by some bearded of- ficial of the long ago, important and sole n in the discharge of his duty wh ch brought him once or perhaps twice a week to a Post Office at a house at the corner. "Why I must have put it there." I replied. then having read it, to called the occasion to mind. I I U How it came to be where I had chanced to flnd it, I cannot say. Perhaps folks were more appreci- ative of any strange happenings in those days. and treasured more the printed word. At-any rate. it was there between the leaves of a book. tucked In with other clippings and keepsak Kc came upon them in a house-clan ng season, in a nicely bound and sizable "Conversations on the Old Testament". an informa- tive and most interesting volume. and which when we first opened it already bore evidence of much Ilfldy- Pefhlps on Sabbath after- noons. for James himself can re- call when no light reading, not even a newspaper was allowed to be opened in this house on the by akin specialists, (Continued on page 11) v "o-o-o-u What Moms Said lo Papal" Mama sure was mad when Papa brou bt home the wrong brand of tea. ut you can't blame any woman for insisting on Lipton Tea. After all, it's Canada's only Bonded tea—and |t's bonded because it's better! You et a real "Flavor-Lift" with Lipton ea. And, Lipton ’l‘ea is, so eco- nornioal you can actually use less tea ser cu . Switch to better-tasting ipton ‘ea today. Better English D. C. Wlllhml l. What is wrong with this sen- tence; "He spoke very friendly." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iatlnn of "physique"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Extravaganza, evan- gelical. eylet. 4. What does the word "puerlle" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with ca that means "to instruct by question and answer”? AN SWEBS 1. “He spoke very kindly" is preferable. 2. Pronounce fl-aek, i as in it, e as in me. accent last syl- lable. 3. Eyelet. 4. Childish. as con- trasted with mature "It was a puer- ile remark." 5. Oatechize. - sfihvokQvo - Household i, Scrapbook i By Roberta Lea .&0e€>t0<&>uw@-co%c0~b Grease Spoil As soon as you notice a fresh grease spot on the kitchen wall paper near the stove, apply some cornstarch to it immediately. Work it is lightly with the fingers. Brush off and repeat, and you will find that the cornstarch absorbs the fresh grease. Bleaching Faded Dress To bleach a faded dress entirely white. dissolve a half cup of cream of tartar in two gallons of water, and boil [fig dress. boiled Potatoes Boiled potatoes often become watery because they are allowed to remain in water after they are cooked. Test them with a fork. and as soon as they are tender. drain and shake them for a minute over "Just work the creamy Lux Soap lather well into your skin." sayi Rosalind Russell. "Rinse with warm water, splash with cold. As you pat gently with a soft towel to dry, skin takes on ‘fresh new beauty!" Don't: let neglect cheat you of Romance. This beauty care Rosalind Russell recommend! will make you lovelier tonight! In mun mu of Luz Tolletploap facials "y 3 out of 4 eomplexlons improved in a time; a low fire. ersonalz Fashliolns/Li.tér atu re Legends . I i Of -- P. E. ‘Island (By Uncle Joel THE LIGHTHOUSE WARNING Almost a century has passed since that fateful Saturday of March 10. 1885. when disaster descended upon the four men and three passengcls who left New Brunswick by ice boat for Prince Edward Island. The day did not promise well for crosslng the strait, with the mer- cury at zero and a stiff wind blow- ing in from the berth-east. But Lady Luck stayed with the party till they ran into open water when within a mile or so of their destina- tion. / Two of the passengers were young men returning from a medi- cal coilege in the U. S. A. Neither wore sufficient clothing for such a hazardous trip. . All night long they were pushed about by drifting ice fields. At ap- proximately two a.m. a great beam of light flashed across their path. The surprised men looked‘ toward the Island shore and. lo! they he- held a light shl ‘mg from n lofty tower-the llg ouse warning. "Strange". they murmured, for they knew no lighthouse existed at that point. While ‘their eyes were focused upon the light. it blacked out and never was seen again. - Sunday, March 11, still found the exhausted and feeble companv adrift in the lolly. Would the hours ever pass? Would anyone come in lhr-ir rescue? Must they all perish from hunger and frost- bite? Still they kept on the move, as inaction meant certain death. Monday morning found them near Charlottetown, within a short dis- tance of the students‘ homes. The morning broke frosty and clear. with the snow-capped hills of Nova Scotia glistening in the distance. Hasgard, one of the ‘students, ho- gan to show signs of derangement. Frequently he referred to the light. they had seen that first night n! sea“ It could portend only one thing-death. With great difficulty the others kept him under control. Hunger drove them to kill a dof! belonging to a passenger named Weir. All but the owner eagerly drank of its blond. The blood eas- ed their craving for food. It gave them n temporary lift. so to speak. and they tossed everything aboard the ice bunt into the sea-that ls. everything but the mails. Soon they drifted to safer ice and they resolved to make a try for the shore. come what might. Hasgard, by this time. was a rav- (Continued on page 11) The buxom woman was applying for a separation from her small spouse. ‘Your worship." she said. "he broke every dish in the house over my head. and treated me cruelly." "Did your husband apologize or BXDNBB my "wet for his actions M; the time?" asked the judge pat- iently. "No, Your Worship. The ambu. lance wok him alway before he could speak to me." LIKE nus m mmurts Don't snuflla, mun and blow end "L. things worse. Just put a few it”, a IUCKLIYS NEZINE, the new non-oily M. drops up each nostril and olmetl Instantly the clogged nasal passage l: clear, brlngls‘ welcome breathing comfort. Soother and reduces swollen membranes. IMIOITINT-To all who rufier from HE“) COLDS, CATARRH, SINUS PAlNs-“f-Ompg. lanl authorities prefer non-oily drop: (s; many r|asena—1ho|'s why you um,“ m. NEZINE. AI all Drug Stern, with "mm dropper, 50c. BUCKLE-ITS Iii/M‘ *9 m How Can . By Anne Ashley Odlidwiim ~ if! Q- How can I easily meuym medicine by drops? A. If it is to be measured t; drops from a bottle. try dipping m. finger in water and molstening m; rim of the bottle in one plug l!“ this place frrrnjvhich to drop m. contents. The drops will come out quite evenly. I Q. I-low can I easily pour moi. asses? ' A. when meldllflng molgggq dip the measuring spoon or cu) into scalding water first, and m; molasses will pour readily. O. I-Iow can I remove score] stains? A. By rubbing at one with dr; starch and then SpOnglng on. 11 necessary. repeat until the stair disappears. CHICKENS. PlGS-IIIJIINED BURLJINCVION. Ont, March 1| (CPl-Atbout 3.000 chickens and more than 50 pigs were destroyed in a fire last night u-hicb levelled a barn and chicken coop on mt farm of Bryce Lockhart near here. The glow from the fire could be scru tn Hamilton, about 10 mile: I away. ' DUES INDIGESTIDN i WALLOP Y0ll i BELllW TllE BELT? I m, Y»... Flqfllll! "u" r... no ram Relic! The! Help: Make You Rana Ts More t-baa half of your sauna is d: below the bulb-in your 28 act of 4 lo when lndiguflon atrikaa. try warm that halpa digestion in the stomach ) below the bolt. What you may need la Carin‘: Little 1h! Pllla to give needed help to that “lvflvlll bowel: gilmtdiiddigiftin-flm hr mun ln Nature's own way._ , Thea moat lnlh get the hnd of mild t3 nah: youblasi bettar lnghyw ma“ ma “ll-inc ‘gig ywivpg""""4il t!