WOMEN fll:GuaTdi;d- LETS EAT Specialties Based On Chefis Salad Bowl By IDA BAILEY ALLEN "THE salad bowls we serxe at the United National Delegates Res- taurant are largely based on a tossed Chef's Salad," explained Manager J. L. Hever. "We turn them into spccialtics by adding. on order. the needed ingredients. such as diced Jumbo shrimp; lobster viiiaigretto; Por- tuguese sardines; diced Bismarck herring and onion l'lllf:SL or jui- lennes of turkey or hnm. The basic salad must be crisp. cvcry ingred- lent glistening with dressing. but never. never soggy 1'' Many families who entertain m- formally Saurdays with a buffet dinner, might like to try a big bowl of orlsp Chef's salad. surrounded with the tinakings' for salad spec- ialties. Supply thin mayonnaise and Thousand Island Dressing. Each person mixes his own. (,'lief's Salad Bowl: Rub a good- stzed salad bout with a cut section of garlic. and remote. , Heap in a. combination of crispl Inlad greens, such as 3 c. shredded lettuce. 1'. c. shrcddcd romaine or ClllCtil')'. 1 c. shredded crisp young spinach leaves. 2 tbsp. each sliced radishes and scallrons. i diced small ptmieiilo or grncn pepper. an:l1 in c. thin-sliced celery. cucumber. or flnochio. Slowly add l7 c. not-sweet French dressing; toss until the dressing is ahsorbcd and the salad leaves glis- tcn. . with Cheese: Toss in crumbled: Bleu cheese and peeled, diced tomato. with Anchovies: Add sliced an-1 chnvy fillets and extra diced pim-i lento. MARY HAWORTIPS MAIL ---,:M--M:--- Hurt Easily; Loses Friends DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I have a neighbor and friend. I'll call her Mrs.. Jones. a very fine person except for one trait which causes her. and those around her much heartache. She is just too semitive, and though she has tried through the years to over- come the fault it seems she can't. She is 64. She was married at 23 and divorced 10 years later-mainly her fault, she admits. as her feelings were just too easily hurt. She reared two children alone and did a fine job: they are both college grad- uates and happily married. she has many good friends but loses it lot of them. For example if guests at her table refuse a second piece of pie. she taken it Morning Smile ”N.'iiv. tell me. do Fl'EllCl'lnl?l1 understand American slang?" '1 guess some of them do. Why?" "Well. you see. my youngest daughter is to be married in Paris. and the Count has cabled me to come across," - . n Why not serve gr-apefniit as a dessert occulonallyl Cut out the whm center. till the hole with strained honey. then act the nwceienorl grapefruit in the refrigera- tor for a few houin so that thc an-2'.-man" an y,e,ne.tr-w 9" tr-v.c.i.r9rt.ttt-3.:-rm lpan. Add 1 qt. boiling water and land the meat loosens from the lthe bits of meat and add to the .in touch if he doesn't cure any 'F?i?ia,iTo&t3i;171,”1951f Chicken and Egg: Add shredded chicken. coarse-chopped hard- cooked eggs and small-diced to- mate. With Smoked Salmon: Add smoked salmon cut in jullennes. Ham-Swiss: Add jullennes smoked ham and Swiss cheese. BITFET DINNER. FOR TOMORROW Of Dutch Pea Soup Croutons Chef's Salad Bowl of Young Choice Chicken Croquettes Mushroom Sauce Peach Tartlettes a la Mode Coffee Tea Milk Dutch Pen Soup: Measure 2 c. split green peas into a 4-qt. sauce- let stand 30 min. Then add 11,4 tsp. salt. 2 cleaned pigs feet. 4 chopped cleaned leeks, 1 c chopped celery and 2 qts. boiling water. . Cover and simmer about 2 hrs.. or until the pigs feet are tender. bones from the pigs feet: out of! soup . Thirty min. before serving, add 34'. c. small-diced smoked sausage or sliced skinless frankfurters. Heat thomughlylserve in shallow soup bowls and garnish with croutons. CROQUETTES TRICK OF THE CHEF After shaping Chicken Croquettes roll in flour; brush generously with mayonnaise and roll Again in nnc dry crumbs. Bake-fry in it very hot oven. 450 degrees F. as a reflection on her cooking. Al- though she la a good cook and they tell her so.'she refuses to believe them. Later. alone. she cries. After she dines with friends. she always sends an elaborate thank-you letter, and as few of her guests do the name, she feels insulted and thinks they aren't appreciative. WHEN OFFENDED SHE'S GRANITE Once she quit her job for a while in care for a neighbor who was; ill. then later crossed the neighbor of! her list. because she felt the neighbor hadn't. shown enough appreciation of All she (Mrs. Jonest had done for her. No amount of apology will smooth things out with Mrs. Jones once she has taken offense. She simply drops the offenders, who often don't know why. Recently she is desperate because her children. having babies of their own, aren't. visiting her as often as she thinks they should. She has stopped writing to her son. after telling him not to bother to keep more. She cries and worries until she is almost ill and says she doesn't know why people dislike her so. It is all in her mind. she is religious, likes music and poetry and has great artistic abil- ity. Can you suggest any books to help her? I. C. Mrs. ers. But Provinces gardens every year.-(('P Photo). it kept growing until CORNWADL. P. E. 1., (CF)-Mrs. Gordon MacMlllan is a stocky little woman with a hearty laugh and I love for people. She also loves flowers, and as a result up to 3,000 persons a year drop in to see her. Local an ,visiting gardeners alike say she has one of the most attractive pri- vate gardens in the Marltimes. It rates high as a tourist attraction. Most of the visitors have never seen Mrs. MacMlllan before, but they go out of their way to drive over a dusty road to the neat little white house five miles from Char- lottetown. The gardens and their immedi- ate backgrounds cover the best part of an acre with scores of varieties of flowers and shrubs, planted on a schedule which guar- Gorrlon Macftiillan started her flowcr it antees a continuous bloom of color during the summer months. i Mrs. MacMillan and Her Famous Flower Garden is considered Two CUTS GRASS, T00 Mabel MacMillnn does all work, including grass-cutting. She admits freely to being 62 "live been a farmer since I was born," she says. "I tvas born on a farm and my grandmother was from northern Scotland. Perhaps that's why I like so many hedges.” ishe waved her sun - browned arms toward the neatly-clipped hedges of native spruce and cedar. "I started this garden for my own pleasuro between feeding the chickens and doing the house- work." she st-till. "lt just comes natural. Why. in school I found rotation of crops :1 lot. easier than French or Latin." As her garden grew in size. people started to drop around to have It look. Two years ago she had to put up a sign at the end of the the A little wandering wind of night stirs the curtain. it is the samel that happy and sun-filled camel blue denim on the knee of an overall widely rent . . . From Is- knew? Beyond that boundary where silver-blue of wishing-star appeared. And some- Thence. from these once familiar to these inland places of ours. I O I o UNHAPPY WOMAN DECEIVES i SELF DEAR s. c.: Confronted by a similar complaint from another Mrs. Jones. it modern saint and religious teacher remarked that she was dealing with people like a mendicant. passing a begging basket. In effect she was passing the hat for handouts of love - solicltlng devotion in return for her subservient attention fixed on the persons she approaches. Continued on page 9 Anne Adams Patterns RHAPELY BREATH with this shapely sheath in your wardrobe, you'll never have another "what-to-wear" worryl It's so var- snttle. smart. anew-looking! Note the easy squared armhole. squared hip pockets. sew this NOW in fnllle. wool. jersey. or winter cotton -you'll love it! Plitem 4060: MJAMI aim i2. 14. 30-inch fabric. plete illustrated instructions coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly site Name. Address, style. Number. Send order in ANN! ADAMS care The Guardian. so Front street Wut. Toronto. Better with S. MUSTARD 1, , l A . i y H . . U . .1”-no---v-s i3; ,. Md: 16. 1B. 30; 40. line is takes 4 yards This pattern any to me, simple to sew. is tested for fit. I-in oom- send Thirty-Five Cents (35c) in All Kinds of Meals Souvenirs it brought us . . . glimpses of meadow and amber stubble; of enchanting paths through the woodlands of autumn -not so vividly shaded al in form- er years it may be. but still very lovely. It told of gardens bright with last flowerings . . . orange and gold of "the marigold famllly, rain- bow shades of the asters. It spoke of brooks and ripening ferns. What nice things the breeze bore in us this afternoon while we stitched -that happy sun-filled wind of the West. It helped winnow the grain for the farmer: who today moving wagons and gearing to I. far field of "the other farm" continued there the threshing to have it done by supper-time. But not their day finished. Then came the baling of straw . . . and the hauling home to this or that born of the farms. the grain won in the endeavour and the bales. working into the night. is not this farming of theirs n wearisome business to our farm- ers? Apparently not. only an oc- cupation which seems ever to pre- sent some interesting chlllengo to them as their day! come and go. And as we on it. in this an of many it convenience of machinery and electricity about. not nearly ELLENiS DIARY by an Island Farmer's Wife the toilsome life of once. . . . out of the west today. It came in tractor all M I window of the sunporcri lhislmrmer of the times offer the other afternoon. as we set a patch of day. timer commented with a smile. "But land's edge it had come, or was it did you not born of further places? Back stump with an axe and a grub hoe. of a headland where a white light- and a stout pry? I'd say. there was house sits toward a west we once more , int-Flliulns call treal labor' Um?! if 0116 RW8"-Cd it-5 magic. in ours, furthering the work of our a miracle of the heavens ever fas- hands goes now, clnatlne and eternally new. a cres- mantle jet-trimmed. crowned in a cent-piece of new moon climbed. dmdem or gnu-p. scenes came the west wind of today s. .. .. .. Good-night , . ”It's not much fun operating 11 day." we overheard H "No . . . I reckon not." an old- ever take out a pine well. what you might to that!" O O 0 And the day so good to us and wrapped in 5 Until tomorrow - - - - Diary -.- GRAPENUT BDEAD 1 cup grapenuts 2 cups sour milk (part. 'l'P3m) Pour milk over grnpenuta and let standifor 15 minutes 1 heaping tbs. butter is cup brown sugar 1 beaten egg Salt 1 tsp. soda (dissolved in n. iLt;Llc sour milk). av. cups-flour 4 tap. baking win-.. Let. rise for 1 mmuta. Bake 1 hour in niodgntg ovgn. -Mn. Jot... menu, Cherry Valley W. I. n . 0 Fl! Gr-Jon cI.',,., Crank n..,,,.j I I & uoulzusuueur A garden at Cornwall. P.l-3.1.. because she loves flow-. one of the most attractive gardens in the Maritime and is considered a top Island tourist attraction. or three thousand visitors see the lane. "Beechwood Gardens" she called her farm and it took so much of her time showing visitors around she started to ask 25 cents Der car. More crime than evcr. STARTED CATERING Then she started to cater to them. fixing up an old hen house as a rest house and up old shed for serving tea. "I had to sacrifice owgi house work to do some of the gardening and its hard work. But its still a pleasure." Mrs. MacMillan finds other out- lets for her energy. she is active in community projects, has di- rected plays in regional drama festivals. worked on the executive of the Music Festival Association and interested the kids of the com- munity in Scottish dancing. I She plays the pinno by ear and last year performed at Christmas my plays on five successive nights. "Not too bad fur an old lady," she said. she also writes a weekly column on gardening for the daily Char- lottetown Guardian. its a hodge- podge of gardening hints. poetry and homespun philosophy. A - mu l1Dlll.iIIit Postponing Old Age N. lundeuu, M. D. oiwwma old gmciouiny is good advice. But how much better to postpone the physical signs of e. I! It is I bad habit to count I per- son's age by the number of years he has left. First. if he has Injoyed every minute of his life, no matter what the span. it can be said that he has been living. second. if he on- joys every minute of his life, he not only will live longer. counting by years. but he will do more pro- ductive work. The study of Tiunoo When we count the length of life by the number of years. we call it chronology. If age is measured by how well all the body tissues are standing up under the modern strain of life. we call it biology. In the later years of life. we can make every minute count by pay-- lng attention to changes - I few important things: diet, exercise. rest. regular checkups. It is well accepted now that the diet in later years must be high in proteins. particularly those known as complete proteins, because they supply the ten essential amino acid substances from which proteins are made. These ten essential amino Acids are needed because they can- not be built in the body and they. in turn. are necessary for rebuild- ing worn-out tissues. Foods supplying these complete proteins in greatest abundance are meat, milk and eggs. The diet must be kept high in vitamins and min- erals. and should not contain ex- cessive fat. since it may lead to dis- position of fat in the liver. and LVI equent interference with the many duties of this important part of the body. Just. enough starchyq foods and sugars must be included to maintain body energy. Dangers of Obesity The tendency in the later years is to overeat, which with the de- creased expenditure of physical en- ergy at this time of life, will re- sult lnevltably in gain of weight. overeating puts a strain on the heart and other Iparis of the body One of the best ways to guard against the so-called degenerative diseases of later years-heart dis- ease. cancer. diabetes or chronic kidney disorders - is a regular checkup by the doctor nt lcast once a year or. better. twice a year. Signs of deterioration can be quickly discovered and diet and habits so adjusted as not only to add years to your life but. life to your years. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mr. E.: is drinking of alcoholic beverages dangerous in an ulcer patient? Answer: Yes. it is. Alcoholic bev- erages increase the amount of gas- trlc or stomach juices which are present. which in turn often pre- vents the ulcer from healing pro- perly. WAGE FREQUENTLY Of the 22 bones in the skull- eight cranial and if facial-only the jaw-bone is movable. i iUSl ADD Mlill Pictured above in tho Nellson-Mackenzie wedding group. from left to right are: Cpl. Hat-vie C. Dennis. best man; Reading A. C George Landon Neilson. groom; Mrs. George Landon Neilson. bride; and Mrs. Harvie C. Dennis, matron of honor. The ceremony tool plade on August. 28 at St. John's United Church Manse, Halifax. N. S. with the Rev. E. W. Brains officiating. The bride was the former Edna Kathleen. cldut daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mackenzie. Charlottetown. and the groom is the son of Mr. Stewart Nellson and the late Mrs. Neilson. Prince Albert. Suk. The bride was attired in a steel blue suit with navy accessories and a corlage of pink rosel. The matron of honor wore a navy suit with red accessories and I corsage of red roses. After the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride's cousin, Mrs. Edward Lane, 24 Sebastian Place. Salmon Roll Take a biscuit dough 2 cups flour 4115 tsps. baking powder Salt to taste 3 tblsps. shortening Butter. lard or shortening 1 cup milk. Sift flour add Islt. baking pow- der and cut in shortening. Make hollow in centre and add liquid slowly. Mix on a floured board V4 inch thick. and mix together: 115 lb. flaked canned salmon. 4 tblsps. milk 2 tblsps. lemon juice 1 tblsp. chopped onion Little parsle3' llnd pepper salt. Spread evenly in dough. Roll up like a jelly roll and bake on I bak- ing sheet in 425 degrees F. oven and 30-35 minutes. Serve with creamed peas or hot egg sauce. Redeem your coupons . at your girocer's now! Household Hint Upright vacuum cleaners should be checked by a service nun about once A year. and oftener. if vacuum is used a great deal of the time For most efficient cleaning. and for the life of your vacuum. clean tht -hag after "each use. A smoother, nrht-i in ull Banfroww STABILIZED PEANUT BUTTER at it ' lo eggs to buy... . y no egg: to udll... 7 C limo ml the complete mixes min: in tip YOU son The famous mixesthat make the big. beautiful cakes are now at your grocers in your four favorite davors -Dream cakes every one of them. So fresh, moist and marvelous you just can't You, must try them, you really must. ' ,. . .,,- g. y? -Pilinttiryi.. intimma