Women's realm Ftdirwo, tum ousumsn MAY 18. 1951 Ballet Slippers for the Beach If you're beach-bound this summer. make your ballet slippers in u quick-drying cotton -einshmh plaid or any our print For lounging at home, a more luxur- ious fabric is in order, such as satin or metal cloth. Those are easy to new by hand or machine. For your directions for making GINGHAM BALLET SLXPPERS. send a stamped. iali-addressed envelope to the Needlework Dept. of this paper requesting Leaflet No. E-883. How Can I ! ! ! By Anne Ashley ) .-ncwmxcx ) x g.,,s? xvnc oc- Q. How can I clean painted woodwork effectively '.' A. Boll two or three onions thoroughly, and the water in which they are boiled will clean painted woodwork very nicely. leaving the surface clean and glossy; no soap is required. Q. How can I prevent rust from forming on the inside of a tea kettle? A. Keep an oyster shell in the tea kettle and it will prevent rust from forming. How can I revive lemons that have become dry. and hard from standing? A. Cover the lemons with boil- ing water for a few minutes. TEET WITHOUT TEARS At fll- t r 1 ..u.'...:.-:"s:..:”..”.:':.':.'.'.:".':;r.::: th ll f MID lgalgfyiet ei:sf:ftulw:omlf::g .131: "sleoliy" stuff-no dulllng effect. g to I powder. i - strcddn use foroverboysermonl am ?Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee I I 4 Noam llcheated Itolls Brush over the tops of yester- day's rolls with fresh milk and put into a covered pan in the oven to steam through. After they are heated, remove the cover so the crust will crisp up again. They will be like newly-baked rolls. Rag Rugs After washing a rag rug. try. starching it somewhat heavily. This will make it lie flat on the floor, it will keep clean longer. and will be much easier to wash the next time. Gasoline odor To remove the odor of gasoline from freshly-cleaned garments. use oil of sassafras in the gasoline (about; ten drops to a quart of gasoline.) says; The Stars Say - - By Genevieve Kc-mbls r For Tomorrow IT may take smart strategies to launch any important plans without taking chances of decep- tion. There may be need of dis- cretion, precaution. with an eye to secrecy and soft pedaling. Mixed feelings and emotions. hunches and psychic premoni- tion: could create havoc to sec- ret plans. If It Is Your Birthday t That Body Of Your: I By James W.'lartoa. ID. Qt, -8v'&z3'X'Kf-,XNN!?&;X-VX3129-T-R”.!'E!9XQf53H LESS TIME AND MODE COM- FORT IN STAY IN HOSPITAL Today a patient. under his phy- sician's advice. can drive his car to hospital one morning. be pre- pared for a hernia. operation that same morning. he allowed on his feet for a few moments that same night, and be allowed up out of bed the next day for a few min- utes, two or three times during the day. and drive his car home the fifth day. This is a great change from the two or three weeks' stay in hospital that for- merly prevailed. One of the reasons for the change. as far as a hernia oper- ation is concerned, is that the individual is not sick, no infec- tion is present. and it is therefore safe for him to move his body. thereby helping circulation of blood and digestion and preventing constipation. Even when the pat- ient has an infection such as ap- pendicitis. the stay in hospitgl is now shortened to a week or 10 days when no complications are present. p It can be seen readily how a stay of five to 10 days instead of two or three weeks is going to make more hospital beds available for patients although, as men- tioned before, this is not the rea- son for the short hospital stay. Early rising from bed after illness or operation enables the patient to get back his strength in less time and be in better shape phy- sically than if he remained in bed longer. Another recent finding of inter- est to physicians. nurses, the pat- ient and the paticnt's family is that the use of the bed-pan in most cases is harder on the pat- ient, requiring more physical. mental and emotional edort. than the use of an adjoining commode. In The Journal of the American Medical Association, Drs. Joseph (3. Benton, Henry Brown and How- ard A. Rusk, New York City. with the technical assistance of Jean Birnbaum, M. S.. report that be- cause of the remark of many pat- ients, "I didn't mind the operation or anything at all about the hos- pital except the bed-pan." they in- vestigated the amount of effort re- quired f r use of bed-pan and commod . By measuring the amount of oxygen used in 13 patients with active heart disease and is heart patients whose hearts were com- pensated (heart able to pump nec- essary blood without breathless- ness) it was found that 'the energy expenditure was higher in use of bed-pans than in use of commode There may, of course. be excep. tions to this general rule, accord- ing to individual reactions. Urged to handle important affairs with alertness and discretion. They should avoid being carried into false situations by physic urges or premonitions or emo- tions. There may be dubious con- tacts made on sinister motives. Feelings and emotions should be regulated. . A child born on this day may be under strange urges. feelings or premonitions. EARLY raitmuts First French arrivals in Canada found the Huron and Iroquois Those uhose birthday it is ,arei Indians had extended cultivation of corn to the lower St. Law. rence. BABY'S OWN Tablels ingredient that NO OTHER" SOAP contains t llfeliuov's special purifying 0 Only Llfebaoy can possibly give you Lifcbuoy'e epccfsl purifying protection. That's because no other soap contains Lffcbuoy'e exclusive scien- dic ingredient. lt'e.thls wonderful cdectiveness that makes Llfebuoy the choice of careful people everywhere. Llfcbuoy gives you long-lasting. all over protection from odcnding . . . really stop! 98.0.” from head to toe. Get Llfcbuoy today. 2 non sun to rot... .. . . urnuov STOPS "no." People whisper when they notice "I. O.” STOPS ”s.o." llh ECONOMICAL v mane; odh. weep. I know cry. ANSWER: and the world. Personally, I have never had cry-baby woman. She has always her tears as a coward's weapon to I USE for them. from dissolving in tears. demmcd. moist, unpleasant body." private. weep to be seen and made much stantly. pay any attention. trouble. much frequency. alone at all. some sense to your viewpoint. me for another woman. could prefer me to her. to be faithful to any woman. long shot at happiness. ovux us: Dtlllollll otx sus- I-W, Qt -0h-N51tiihhi' Cry-Baby Womsn's' Randy Tears Disgusf Her Fiance DEAR. MISS DIX: I am very sensitive and easily hurt, and when I am wounded I can't keep from crying. This disgusts my fiance. He says I can keep from crying and when I burst into tears he is very inconsiderate. I thought if he loved me he would try to comfort king things harder on he does. never to cry before him again even if I have to leave him abruptly when I feel I am going to So I have resolved I am In cry-baby, but things pile up and up inside of me until I must have a good I feel so much better afterward. would be miserable if I couldn't cry sometimes. What do you think about it? I think I D. M. I am no crier myself, but I know . . - lots of women who are free weepers who seem to get a great deal of pleasure out of it and who come out of a de- bauch of tears looking as refreshed as a flower does after a rain. No doubt a psychologist would say that crying releases some sort of a nervous tension in them and leaves them at peace with themselves the slightest sympathy with the seemed to me is weak and con- temptible creature. one who sat down and howled for what she want- ed until somebody gave it to her to stop her yapping; one who used keep everyone around her walking on eggs for fear of her turning on the water works. UNFAIR TACTICS d kWhy everybody should'be so terrorized of crying women. I on't now, but they are. There is something in women's tears that just seems to melt down our backbones and make us incapable of casks new a pan or our equipment dealing with the weeper as we should. Millions of women have used tears as an excuse for their shlftlessness and laziness. down before a hard job and cried until somebody did their work They just cat I can but congratulate your fiance, though, on his farsightedness in putting a damper on your tears instead of encouraging them. It is the only way he can save himself from a lifetime of slavery to a woman who can never be treated like a rational human being and who will always have to be coddled and spoiled in every way to keep her 3b0"'- "- H9 03mn8 011 the Why And that gets pretty tiresome as the years go by. for the weep. declared "After being "5911 10 ing woman. as Mr. Mnntilini in Dickens' story used to say. is "a taps, 'tls a bother to have to pump 'a drink. An' " with a smile "quare As your boy friend appears to be of this same opinion you are wise to decide to do your crying in of. DEAR MISS DIX: My mother and father go somewhere nearly to cnmb 3 ste ' , g . ep hill. An ex er) night. My two younger sisters and myself are left alone con- when (mks cud wind it from 3, well, We have asked them not to leave us i b t th (1 "K ' What should we do? 30” " 93' 0" that was too good to belave. An ALICE ANSWER: It beats me how far some parents will go to ask for . And theyre the very ones to scream loudest when their children begin stepping out every night. have some social life of their own. but while children enough to need supervision. they should not be left alone with too Of course. if very young they should not be left I grant that parents should are small DEAR MISS DIX: we fell' dl l l are dimming the comers of told me he was married. but thriTaheywd'ulrlw:slrnl1i.iT v:'vife"f:)'r't l'i1i1setfrle!ee- mom where we Me at ”me dom, which he did. His wife graciously consented to divorce him be- we mm” nm5h' we have come to cause she said that was the only decent thing to do. to leave her immediately and so did she. but he has not done it am beginning to wonder if this man is really worth while gnd. If there is a chance of his growing tired of me some day and leaving ti? WW5” h, It could happen again. you know. '5 W1” '5 ” 1”V91Y W0mi1Inlln 9rVI'I9PY Tespectth antinl wonder how he we in o wouldn't be letting myself in for suchmarincssn 9 use", or else I I expected him I Besides, But is he worth it" PORTIA. ANSWER: He certainly doesn't look it. A man who leaves a fine wife for no cause at all except that he is fickle, is not likely The girl who marries him takes a DOROTHY DIX cannot repl If to d . wer problems of general fnteresyf 3:31.11 yher but M" In. M""i"9 S"""9 Cook's & . No Extra Charge Angry diner: See here. waiter, what's this button doing in my soup?" .- Waitcr: "Not so loud. sir, please. Don't let that gentleman at the next table hear you. I-le's dined here regularly for two years and we've never thrown in anything extra for him." Overdoing It Two men were having an argu- ment about their physical powers. "Why." said one. "every mom- lng before breakfast I get a bucket and pull up 100 gallons of water from the well." "That's nothing." retorted the other. "I get a boat every morn- ing and pull up the river." Get right at the cause of Headaches When edgy nerves and buds:-he make life misernblc. they may be "pain si ' from an upset digestive system. shed to the brain slon the sensitive Vague Nerve-your Tent Nerve. Bromo-Seltzer settles upset stomach. gets an at the muse of our headache and gy nerves, brings est relief. At. the eame time. Bron: an no the Vague Nerve and other nerves which an have added to your misery. eep Bromo-Seltser handy at ell times. to help fight hudachee. Ask your for Bro ucr today. It-I NOW-She's Got Exciting ZIP and GLOW snndfledyelleeu Don't can he: ' eherlnorndlnnl hoalthl Make it yours the way thousands of Ills revltalfslnl Dr . I! v d rlehl ' ..-,-...;t,-..-'--...,,,-::-.':-'-'.-.-.-.- of ' I ....""...-.. r.:'..: ...''r- ....t"" W Mlll SIZE on. WILLIAMS PlNl( Pitts SUPPER DISH salmon souffle Baked Potatoes Buttered Spinach Bread and Butter Jellled Fruit Salad Beverage SALMON BOUTFLE 1 cup enriched yellow corn meal I cup cold milk 2 cups scolded milk 3 eggs separated 2 tablespoons shortening 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 to 2 cups flake cooked salmon Mix corn meal with the cold milk. Slowly stir corn meal mix- ture into scalded milk and cook until thickened. stirring often. Best egg whites still; without w ” beater, beet yolks. Mix in yolks. shortening. baking powder, salt and salmon. Fold in whites. Bake in I IV. quart size greased baking dish in a moderate (350 degree 1".) oven 1 hour or until puffed and brown. serve at once. Make 6 servings. is gorgeous cam now You me win this mini: cent in swi t'nlng'e' febnloue 040.000 liar Coat Contut!..; Here's what youdo. Sendkhe topofe ilb. cenonofswift'- nlng. plus yourneme,end ed- . dress. to: Swlft'nfng's Fur Coat Contest, Box 4 6, frec- mlnsl A, Toronto. All the details are food store. Swift Co. Limited. such ELtEll's my IlLIIIlaEl'Il'II'lWlle We never cease to wond over the miracle of electric energy that in recent months has come to this farm. We suspect we always shall marvel as, respectfully touch- in: s. switch or entering the con-' necting plug of some appliance, that fanciful figure whom grand- daughter knows ae "Raddy Kille- wstt." immediately springs to our assistance. Nor have we yet be- come accustomed to the sight of that gleaming line of silver which runs now along this red bridge- spanned road of ours. Nor of that one which leads in above pond and field bearing the necessary cur- rent to houses and out-buildings. It has been of much help to us along the winter ' months. James himself has been heard to say he would just as soon chore by night now as in the daytime, and more especially during the sometimes exciting periods of farrowing at the piggeries when lights must be maintained there over-night, has the convenience proved its worth to the farmers. O The pumping of water too, to stables and stles, once a laborious task is now effected by moving a gadget on a wall in the pump- house. In time, we suppose, the line of hose, the water-tubs and will be replaced by taps and drink- ing-bowls, when finally a modern water system has been installed. Notwithstanding Pat's assertion that We'll soon get used to it, El- len" we know we shall never take changes casually. To our mind there will always be a magic last Sunday, the home from Church it is now when ye come to think av only that will take all the pep out of it because weepers it - once it was no trouble at all, at all to carry water from a spring or a hrook . . . an' mostly one had then. now we have but to turn a tap an' there we have it! I'm thinkin' they will have to be after Jnventfn' something alsier again. for hu- mans will get so lazy they won't want to be exertin' themselves at all. An' I'm sayln' doesn't it seem lak the truth: the more that's done for us. the more we expect? Ay" he Even older children need the companionship of their parents. and Wmkled "i'hei'9'5 "0 "59 511 m1k1n'. as the father usually is not home during the day, some evenings of the week surely should be set aside for family discussions, confer- ences or just plain sociability. Try pointing some of these things out to your father and mother, Alice, and see if you can't make them see .. 'tis a quare, quare worldl" see Indoors too. we are grateful for assistance. But some- Reddy's times when the shades of evcnigg t e task reach for those lamps of past years. and are somewhat surpris- ed to find a vacancy on the man- they once stood. A pair of "Room" lamps. quaint old pieces and possessions of the place for more years than James can re- member. has been modernized in W with pleasing effect. But that ich sat through every change of family and fortune on the parlour table neighboring the Family Bible still remains as it was, like an aged matriarch. who with fold- ed hands and tender smiles look- ing into the past, relives again the length of her yestcryears. U U I And what of the spring-clean- big? white curtains behind pol- ished wlndows greet us now from the house across the lane. At this one . . .but there are so many de- laying incidentsls to ours- a pair of wild ducks on wins. a "paint- ed" heron by pond-side. grand- daughter's invitations that must not be denied (is it s ions V-lme sincs you saw a red tulip? Then come with me right now. . . and what a surprise you'll getE"). an angler against a background of slders and spruces whipping the pond-waters, a blackblrd stealth- - FOR THE HOME - INIAI-I'll!!! Its simple. gentle lines make this dress in becoming silhouette for the half also figure . . . end one of the best of all basics for I sheer or print. Plesta give softness to the V-neck: seven gores bring one to the skirt. No. 2:58 is cut in half size: only. 14 1x2. 16 1x2, 13 -1I2, 20 1A2. 23 V2, 24 V2. Size 16 U2. 31,6 Yflrds 39-inch. send also for each PA'l:l'llt.N which includes complete sewing guide. Print Your Name, Address and style Number plainly Be sure to state size you want. Include postal unit, or sons n-anber in your address. Address Pattern Department rbe Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 23 '0 O- u N sme Address City Province Modern Eiiqueffo nu Roberta Lee - &VmahVhmAV94'aEV&a Q. when a secretary is opening her employer's mail and comes i0 an envelope that seems to be per- sonal. what should she do? .. A. This would depend upon cir- cumstances. Some emP103'91'I WWW resent having their personal mail opened. Usually it is better not to open anything that has the sp- pesrance of being personal. Q. Don't you consider it rudc' for a guest to talk at length about the exceptionally good time he had at another party, or when visiting other friends? A. Yes. it most certainly is rude-be-cause it gives the im- pression that he had a much bet- ter time then than he is having now. Q. our son has just become en- gaged, and so far we have not met the family of the girl. Isn't it our son's obligation to. take us to meet his .tlancec's family? A. It most certainly is, and as soon as possible. or - . &V4Y;.V4E iation of "height"? misspelled? alienation. alleglence, fagistion" mean? able or fitting"? ....m.m....:..s----- fly entering her doorway in s hol- low lawn-tree. the mail.msn's horse beyond the new green of a, hill. . . now we pause to count the stroke so many delightful delays. But. of "doom" - our hour for retiring. Until tomorrow -. -- Diary - Good-night. Allegiance. snt. graxr- a Better English '- 57 I. 0. Williams 4. What does the word "pm ANSWERS NV,-'24i,l, xxso:-X-s -,-..' ii (9Zf'.Vso!.lt-c-A-)1-kX3&Vr..o 1. What is wrong with ihl:' Senlencu "Th9? found it gun or the criminal. and confiscated it." 2. What is the correct pronuncf 3. Which one of these Viords 1; Alleilttdly. nllctzonc t I Whatls a. wdb i '-i with "fr" that mean?" eg mun" not app',1c.l 1. Say. "They found a gun ml possession of the criminal." 2. Pro.' nounce as hlte. not as lttthe 4. Act of G5i'Jeclally sacred things. "His pros fanation was shocking to the peo ple of the community." 5. Irrcl:-v' 3? prnf.1lllllg,; "Soon after we decided to redecor- ste our house we discovered s won- derful new kind of paint." reports Mrs. G. R. Konndocki, 650 Hender- son Highway. Winnipeg. Manitoba. "ifs FLO-GLAZE Colonim-and we found we could get it in our choice of bundnd: and lnmdredr of lovely colors! Even the most unusual 'in- bctwecn' colors were all ready for us to buy right over the counter. "So it was easy to pick out iust the exact shades of colors we wanted for every room in the house. And found I could even match the colors In rug, drapes or furniture without any messy. hit-or-miss color mixing. All I had to do was buy PLO-GLAZE Colonzer paint in that shade. "Now we're thrilled with fresh beauty and color harmony in our home. What's more, welve found that FLO-GLAZE paints perfectly covered the old paint: of many years. And they're so easy to apply!" Get high-quality oil-besc GLAZE Colorinr paints in interior gloss, scmi-gloss, Eat well paint, vel- MRS. G. R. KOMADOSKI vet dnlsh, 4-hour enamel or exterior paint. See the Calovizn samples at 701" FLO-GLAZE dealer's soon! 'r. El-W mt...- Helena Rubinstein creates Stay-long the most amazing indelible lipstick ever made! Here, for the hrst time, is an indelible lipstick that's as lurtraur sndyreamy as you could wtshl Here, for the first time, is an indelible lipstick in a full range of glowing colon! Helena Rubinstein's remarkable new Stay-long liP”id' not only cling: to your lips, but actually protect: them from drying and chopping the way that wonderful, moist, dcwy look lam! You'll find Stay-long lipstick, in can marvelous right here-for only 150 g reds: ' You can buy 1 new Stay-long refll f0I' Y0" W" lipstick case for only .75 . ' lAnd wait till you SCI more a r1stlEtoDt'.'”i"L"-" -Needlecrafb I