itAfiE TWO THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN NOVEMBER 1-,, I 1m m ‘rm w‘ WEEK-END GOING AT 1 RACK 0 ooiiio AT 166 tliieen St. \\»-\-\/\/ vwcvv z<xvvvox7w Modern Etiquette g By Roberta Leo i 6$K Q, What is the proper way for a woman to give a luncheon in her homo" A. ‘Invitations may be given by tqlaphono or informal note. The time usually is between one and Z30 e. M. The luncheon may provide m; only entertainment. or may be followed by bridge or 0th" 8m" A hmichoon menu should include an organizer; a main course of meat “g1 two vegetables; a salad; rolls M’ hot biscuits; dessert and coffee. q 1; it proper for a. {married woman to send a gift to a oride in hq- nsmo only. and eoveilallv l! tho bride is not known by h" 11"!‘ band? , A. Never; her husband! flame 11mm! always be included. . When ice cream is served on p“, should the ice cream be eaten HERE THEY ARE! KENNEDY’S 1 RACK DF WINTER CDATS GOING AT 1/2 PRICE 1 RACK DF SKIRTS with n. spoon? A. No; tho for‘; should be used. % Morning Smile ‘rho young husband had. Just ar- yived home from the office. n "What's the matter, darling? he ‘sired. "You lock flustered." I've had a. dreadful day”. his wife answered. "First baiby cut his first tooth, then he took his SPECIALS $1.98 F DRESSES 1/3 OFF KENNEDY’S LADIES’ WEAR llext Door to Bus Stop ~A---~VV~A The Stars Say-- l! ll oii By Genevieve Kemblo For Ifi-idzy, November l8 IT is probable that intimate, per- sonal and private matters come up for decision. and should be most carefully and objectively handled lest intrigue and subtlety obscure desirable and glamorous opportuni- ties. Affiliations may becune en- tangled or miscarry. Peculiar or curious factors may set aside real- istic and logical judgment. Weigh. cautiously hidden undercurrents. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it is may mid themselves involved in a. period of peculiar contacts. adventures and experiences in which it could be easy to lose sight of the realistic and logical in making decisions. Eonphaslzlng the unrealistic and impractical could lead to peculiar intrigues or complications. Keep alert. to all snares, schemes and singular personages lest plain facts and objectives be lost sight of. Ra- tionalize all matters and protect reputation; shun regrets. A child born on this day may swerve from the realistic and nor- msl, becoming involved and glamor- ized. by the subtle and intriguing to its personal detriment or sinister connivance. "Well, and then what happened?" asked her husband. “Oh. darling". she answered in a shocked voioe, "he said his first n"; n”, and then he fell and knocked out his tooth." word l " ‘V504.- Y5" fiioiioiiiv DIX SAYS- lioward {he subjcfl‘ > Courts Married Woman Man No Home-Wrecker If Couple ls Already Legally Separated DEAR MISS DIX: A psl of mine. s llksbls young fellow of 30. ‘is [wing out with ii woman ten years his senior-a married woman who has not lived with her husband for three years. l maintain it is not the correct thing to do. He can see no harm in it and asks my reasons for objecting. I don't seem to be able to find words to ex- plain my aversion. I only know that it is against my way of thinking. TOMMY ANSWER: If the woman were living with her hus- band. it. would certainly be very wrong for your friend to pay her any attentions which might: tend to win her heart sway ffflm her lawful mate and fill him with jealousy. prejudice that you, along with all other honorable and gilt-thinking people, have against home-Wreckers that makes you feel not there is something wrong in your friend going out with a woman .vho is still married, although she does not. live with her husband. And your sentiments do you credit. STATUS OF DIVORCE! But when a woman has been separated from her husband for three years she automatically takes on the status of a divorcee and there is no reason ivhy any man should not pay her attention if he wishes to. He is in no way responsible for the break between her and lier husband, and he docs nothing to augment the trouble between them. But I think, just to keep the record clean, that if the woman wishes to go about with the freedom of a single woman. she should got a divorce. That will prevent her from being the subject of gossip. Your friend's agc, loo, should make a difference in your attitude If he were a young and inexperienced boy. you would have reason to think that it was a foolish thing for him to be running around with a woman who was still legally bound to anoihcr man. and especially one who is ten years older than he. But a man of 30 is old enough to know his own mind and certainly nothing that any one can say is likely to change his opinion. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am scared to death that I am going to he on old maid and I don't want to be one, but there are no eligible men in my little city and I have no opportunity to meet many men from other places. In this town there are quite a few of the prettiest old malds~lovely women who have never married just because they never had the opportunity. Can you suggest anything for s girl in my position? GREEN EYES ANSWER: Nothing except to go where the fishing is better. But where the good catches lire to be made, Heaven alone knows. It is certainly not in the small town from which practically every able-bodied and energetic youth r-niigraies by the time he is 2O and where only senile grandpa; and schoolboys are left. Neither is it in ‘the cities, where the cost of living is so high that it puts marriage out of the question for most mcn until they are middle-aged and where the numbers of girl bachelors grow yearly larger and larger. Still, for all of that, nothing venture, nothing have, and the girl who finds eligible men scarce in her community is wise when she strikes out into new fields. For a new girl often attracts a man who hnd been thought a confirmed bachelor or widower and who has been given up as hopeless by the local maidens, DEAR MISS DIX: My husband is always chasing some woman. He spends his money on them and doesn't support my son and mo. I am desperate and am thinking of inking the easy way. I have traveled the hard straight road and got nothing in the end, and if I would go the other way I would at least have pretty clothes and the gay life. What do you think of it‘! PEGGY ANSWER: Well, Peggy, I don't think that two wrongs ever made a right, nor do I think that because a man welshos on his marriage vows it gives his wife n right to quit on hers. Your business is bringing up your son to be a fine man and you can't. do that if you are setting him the example of leading a bad life yourself. Besides, the primrose path isn't strewn with expensive clothes and night clubs for any but; the youngest and most alluring girls. Look about you at the bleary. slovenly, shabby women of the street if you want to know how much it pays. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, but will lnswer problems of general interest through her column. t malt/owl The Famous "Does-Everything" Soup for Wcishdayl l Yon, now you can get on EARTH BEATS w: AT GETTING CLOTHES count I that’s made especially to do everything in your wash! It’s Duz-and there's not an- other sosp in the world like it! Just no the amazing whiteness Duz gives even the dingiest, time-yellowed sheets and towels! See how clean, how fast Duz does even cthe grimiest overalls! And yet, j DWZaWrEIeM/izy ll 77/! fill/l)’ DWI/i’ NO SOAP tho famous soap sum: FOR COLORS THAN g_~_Y OTHER GRANULATED LAUNDRY Duz is safer for pretty colored washables —dresses, play clothes, slips-than any other granulated laundry soap! It's hard to believe that one soap can do so much-yet: Duz does it! So get a big red box of Duz today-use those heaps of real, soapy-rich suds for everything in your next: big wash! NO SOAP ON EARTH BEATS DUI ATGETTING WHITE THINGS waits.‘ YET DUI IS SOAP l A PROCTER I GAMBLE PRODQCT Woman's! RealmfSocial and Person as “Z004 ELLEWS DIARY l By An Inland Farmer's Wife Q .”W 1t. was our younger fume: who treated himself to a holiday from his farming today, but not with- out the assurance from the family that the work should not suffer during his absence, and choosing I day when all crops had been ga- thered and housed. This comes in truth as a “tell-earned outing t.) one who ever keeps the interests of family and home at heart. We are reminded of his and Jeanlel-i kindness to us by many an liirld- ent, and perhaps are most touch- ed, when granddaughter appears at the door or table to present Uh with a bit of something shared that "My daddy brought - some for grandaddy and some for you!" Not for the worth, as this is can- sidered do we value such tokens. but it is the kindly thought which plays the pleasant melody on the hearts’ strings, In regard 'to'th'is ' business of fanning. someone who has made a study of it has come to the ccncl-i- sion that; 0f all. there are two Iflfmfiffi. Who will never make a success of their vocation the one_\vho is continually on the road, and he who never can fiiiil time to leave home at zill. This trip then which was to take our junior member beyond the blue horizon of our childhood to the Winter Fair at Amherst is ilefiri- ltely in the interests of the farm. It will be we are sure, n happy combination of business and pic..- sure, the education gained from the excursion and place of visit, being always a worthwhile inv ment to any farmer, and in ths instance the pleasure to be found in the change of scene, and tho companionship of the two enter- prising farmers from the coni- munity who in our versatile mach- ine accompanied him away from "dull care" this morning. o a . EIntei-prising indeed these two are, interested in their farming’. and successful though their ic- specllve methods of gaining a. lli- in; from the soil differ widely. One uses tractor-drawn machincly almost entirely to form his acres. He and his sons are busy fellows. their days so full that. as at Alder- lea, the work sometimes continues into the night, And even while they sleep-or should oome to their rest, fresh clioring appears, ncx litters in the piggery, new calves in the stables, in a ceaseless TClullfl of it. Absences must be well plac- neil for, and even then one leivrs with a mind not entirely at case. Not that this is not a pleasant was‘ of farming. On the contrary, as we have found it at Alderlea, it has its nice compensations. O l O The other farmer employs povx- ered machinery only on occasion, and altogether operates his farm in a more leisurely way. His worl: is, as he says, “kept pretty wcll under control" at all times. and usually ends with the dusk. Except in the busier seasons, he is able to enjoy a day off, without neg- lectlng his cares and consequenty without regret, which state of farming Aunt: Kitty Maboney used to maintain “is as the Good Lord intended. Else why" she reasoned. "did He let roads be put right pai-b folks’ doors?" This farmer too has his blossoming acres and pastui- ing herds, though without "a chick or a. child" to plan for, naturally not in such numbers. O I I But as with the first farmer. comfort and security is written into his nestling farmstead. These were the two then, neither young nor old, born and reared in the light of this district, married to nice maidens from the same, that set out with Jock at strealr o‘ dawn this morning to enjoy a spell at the Fair. And for James? He was off 1t mid-morning to lend Rob a lviitd at the turnips. And there too we came over the hills and far away > L, WW Al‘ WW mm six CAN NED SALMDII PDFFS l lbClnned Sslmvfl y. up. alt l‘; tlplfillpfl’ g ¢up loft brood cnimbv 1 tbsp. lemon iulct s m1- RWYM‘ O ll l“ m“'i“““dmi'tilmnl“illnh' hit"- "ETQTA u: wlh- mm" "‘“' A hi. 1m fold in mob NW" "I guhlllfl‘ Plm tn ennui-d row g" in‘ hot W“: Ind built tn w um I'M IMO D14 CANNED $AlM°N alzFashionszLiteratuire How Canlll! By Anna Ashley i will mow A. An excellent method is to put s heaping tablespoonful of saltpetdr lni0 each gallon of hot water and apply liberally with s. brush. Keep the water hot. and after a few sp- plicatinns the paper can be pulled from the wall very readily. Q. How can I make pineapple filling for cake? l A. Mix one cup of grated pine- apple, one-half cup of pulverized sugar. and one tablespoon of lemon juice. Howvcaa I "l"? remove old \I\»v\.'\-\»\/\'\'w\r\ g Cook's Corner rosxxx APPLE DUMPLING P‘l:i'i<_v pastry MNlll-llll sized apples, peeled and cored Biittci- or margarine Sugar (iiiinamon Make your favorite short or flaky pastiy rccipc. Place an apple in a square of pastry. Fill the cavity \\'l!ll sugar. bits of butter and a dash n! cinnamon. Pinch the edges closely together. Placi- in a buttered baking pan and bake in an oven 450 degrees for 10 minutes then reduce heat to 400 degrees iincl bake 25 minutes. After they have been bak. ing for i5 minutes pour the follow- illfl SYTUD around the dumplings. T0 MAKE SYRUP 1 cup sugar “i cup water 4 tablespoons corn syrup Mix alliiigrecilents and boll for 5 minutes. Oi- serve dumplings wirith a hard sauce. ' éHousehold Scrapbook‘ é? By Roberta Lee ‘w f. l ( Grease on Rugs To remove grease or oil from car- pcts, use blotting paper, soaking up as iiflLiCll as possible, and using a fresh piece as it becomes splled. When the spot is obstinate, place a. warm iron on top of the blotting paper. Then apply whiting and al- low it i0 rrrnain n day or two before brushing off. Apricots If dried apricots tire to be used ln breads, puddings or desserts. ivash them with two inches of warm water. and allow to soak for a half hour. Then chop and use as desired. Lamp Cords The electric lamp cords may be kept of! the floor by using hair pins as cleats. Stick the points into thc crevice between the baseboard and the wall. along the farms this afternoon to join him. "Ellen". he breathed, "is this you! “which was sufficient reward to us for having faced to~ day's bitter wind of the North. We suppeil at. Kiirolynts on what appeared to be heavenly fare. af- ter our time in the open. Evening shoring came to us in the lantern- llght when a Fall wind complain- ed in the topsflnf the lawn trcm, and n chill which indicates a change of weather prevailed .. . . James looks up from his newspa- per now to comment: "We did very well today - for two old ones - now didn‘t we, Ellen?" Until tomorrow Good-night. . . . . . Diary - TAF SILK HOS ' : in ivnrm water, covcr‘ That Body Of Your: By Isms: W. Barton, M1). TIAIAL CARRIER-S AND TONSILLITIS In residential preparatory schools. the school physician, nurses and teachers are always on the alert for the first signs of an illness in any of the students. They are aware that , one ggge of measles, diphtheria. scarlet fever. tonsillitis, can start an epidemic. Accordingly the student is immediately isolated 1n the school hospital until the cause of his symptoms is discovered. One of the dangerous illnesses oc- curring ln schools is tonslllltis, for. while it does not last long. it is ex- tremely painful and may be the forerunner of rheumatic ifcver fol- lowed by heart dlsess»childhood's greatest enemy. It. is not necessary for In indivi- dual to be stricken with diphtheria {or tonslllitis in order to infect oili- ers. He may bc a “carrier” of the or- ‘ganlsms causing these and other diseases. and thus spread the dis- ERSP. . In “The British Medical Journal." Drs. G. T. Cook and D. Munro- Ashman dexrlbe an outbreak of toi-isillitis in which 57 of IHQ boys housod in five separate buildings developed tcnsilliils. ‘Ihcy found that the out-bicak spread rapidly through a house during the three {wrecks aft/er the roturn of 1-1.. who wart-led in his IIOSP the organisms- lstreptococcl — which cause miisliii- itis. During tho first 18 days niter the returni of H. 17 new cases oc- lcurrod in dormitories and nint‘ lamong those in single rooms, the number occupying dormitories and single room being 47 and 86 res- ;poclivel_v. This meant that the ‘chances of becoming infected were more than twice as great in dormit- ories than in single rocms. Also it was found that the dust in dor- mitories contained the organisms] causing tonsilliiis before the elpl-I demlc in dormitories occurred. Experience of this and other epi- rlemlcs has shown the frequent as- sociation of heavy nasal or nose car-| irlers with outbreaks of streptococci IIOIISlIILIS in residential schools. 1 | Nasal as well as throat swabs should be obtained in all cases, ;howcver mild the disease; heavy nasal carriers should be treated until their swabs are negative. This ‘is especially necessary ln the early stages of an attack before the wide- sprcad contamination of the en- vironment — carpets, curtains, bcd linen~and the build-up o! a carrier rate, has occurred. ‘ l Better English l‘ t i By n. o. Williams 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "We shall be happy to ac- cept your invitation." 2. What is the correct pronunc- lation of “ROquefOrW (cheese)? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Pastoral, pastime, pas- port. pasteurize. 4. What does the word ation" mean? 5. What is s Word beginning with ret ‘that means "a review of the pest"? "grad- ANSWERS l. Inasmuch as the invitation is being accepted now, say. "We'arc happy to acc t your invitation." 2. Pronounce ro ,-for, both 0'5 35 in no, accent on first syllable prefer- red. 3. Passport. 4. Any degree or relative position in an order or ser- los. "The several gradations of the intelligent universe." — I. Taylor. l. Retrospect. \ cl GOOD! GOOD! Kellogg's new, quick way lo mskn ‘to No creoming. no egg-booth »' any stirring! Mnko Elllllflllcfi-{Ihlgslt u“ 1 cu Kellogg's y’ teaspoon lt. AilzBran l: cup Bllgillfaor Q? cup milk gnliien syrq, cup sifted 1 egg our 2 tablespoons 2% teaspoons silt! Hllllflfilllfl‘ baking powder M cup raisins l. Combing fill-Bron niiil milk in mixing ow . Sift together flour, linking made and salt lnln some ruining biiill Ail ‘sugar (irdgoldon ayrus. egg, ohm-y“, lhbbblld raisins. Ltir only until com me . , Fill greased muflln piii: Bake in prc-lic-iiti-ti mu r0 mo: TOMATO mvoii Your Family Deserve: Aylmer Quolitl I GIFT SUGGESTIONS SATIN QUILTED HOUSECOATS SILK cw: mcnrcowus rvmmc surs FE TA SLIPS ANGORA ssnsrs ANGORA GLOVES HAND wovm SCARVES SWEATERS “mrrru onssssss FLANNEL BLAZERS CORDUROY SKIRTS cnsrs and WOOL JERSEY BLOUSES . . . - "AND-BAGS. KNITTING BAGS IERY All Atfractivsly Giff Boxed The GLORIA A a q DUI-IO