horn ill-L PAGE TWO f ____'l‘l'lE lJHAKLUWYETOVYN “GUARDIAN, ____,____.,______._.,__- “‘$w‘. v¢¢vwv 0-04 Mo d e rn, Etiquette by Roberta Ina wo4+4++a O-\*§§-O-OO4-O-O-§-0 0 eoooo-o-o o + t z Q. 15 it necessary to give a gift to a person just because this Peril?" gave you one? v A. No. Too much of this so- called "cxchangin; of 8W5" 15 done. 'l‘hc true spirit ol Hivilll; 15‘ mmqi “hen the giver expects equal value in return. . s, Should a widow. upon herl s€cond marriagc. wear the engage- inenl or wedding ring of hcr first! fliblfllltgf‘? _ ‘ A. N0; they should be put ubidv, Q, \\'h\_'l1 \\'ull.'.lll should a lllkllll scat at dinner. the woman on lib‘ right or the one on his left? ‘ ' A. The wouian on his rii- a toooooveoooroooo-cocoo-coo y v 0 , 1 : Cook s Corner ; ‘ o :ooo-oo-ooovo-o-oovvoooo00cc‘ DUMPLINCvS | Z’ Clips lieu; -l icaspuuiis biikiiil; lli-“dfl 1 tcaspocii salt 3 tablespoons shortening l 1 cup milk . METHOD: Sill 1t\QClLll€l' lllf‘ flour. taking ponder and salt. Add lhc shortening and cul this into llifli mixture until it IS iii fir.“ _L‘l_‘llllll.)5.‘ Add the milk gradually. mixing to‘ a soft. dough. Place on slew an 5193M. Th; pudding for dessert is steam- 0d in t-hc cvc-ii aioltg with the inc-at and requires the same length ul time for cooking. STEAMED PUDDING '3 cup butter N cup sugar 1 688 l.» cup milk 3 cups bread crumbs 2 cups chopped dried fruit ‘l cup flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon METHOD: Cream the butter and gradually cream in the sill)". Bf-‘al the egg and add to the milk. then add this to the creamed mixture along with the crumbs and chopped dried fruit. You may use figs. raiq sins, currents. dates or any mixture of these you happen to have 0X1 hand. Sift the baking powder with the flour and cirvnaimm and add this also. Beat. well. Pour the batter into well greased molds. Place t he molds in a pan or How Can 1!! By Anne Ashley i !‘\ Q. l-low can I scratches on new shoes? r aa-oyoooow 0Q +0rQ-&O+ 900-04 7 Q44 040-00 A. The first time a pair of ncw shoes is tron". stop at lihe first shoe- ; vwQQv ‘ ‘ vv‘v “¢v ‘¢¢’ ‘$¢$w‘ ‘¢“ ‘ v ‘ ““vw%vvv¢‘ “ ‘Q i oman s Realm " § .7 l‘ v‘v ‘ ‘v“‘ “‘%v¢‘$$#%$v—$"$#“%%‘§§§#4'Q§-Q'Q'Q-QQQ'QQ'QQQ§OQ‘FQ’.§§“§§'Q'QQ'§QQ§ --~**"""*"*“" Their Majestic t y tour. i | l \\'.':_',' cars “Eula on totlr. v I is. better flavor? New,“ deep‘ A. Sprinkle a small quantity of {flour on the potatoes before frying tihcm. It will give lhcm a delicious f1~avoi' and make llicm a rich golden roaster‘ bu. not the mohm place shining pairlor andhayg thcznvshiit.‘ pry-n.“ v ~ I _ m l! t’ in a 510w oven .275 deg‘ F’) and ed. By doing tlus. snatches will al-‘Sp%-ar?sOVi car rid e iousc o Serve hm feet only the surface. st urn for three hours. w hard sauce. ‘O fJ MEYERS STUDIO :9 g ANNOUNCE RESULTS 0N RECENT ‘Id ’ J h r atflhi ren s am o ee ‘$2 Wiruierl and riuuion-llp will be mailed prizes al previously announced on completion 6 MONTHS TO 1 YEAR. Q. How can I give fried potatoes a QC_8$Q3§D‘O<SHI DDUQUIOLTOOOC 03933 l A. Soak pieces of cotton wool in ,oil of parity-royal and place them (‘around the haunts of the spiders. ngQQ. wvo++++o+m Q44Q-O-O-O-QQH 0 Morning Smile Q. "Now remember. Pat." said a ser- gcanl: to an Irish soldier. "the pass~ _ word is Saxe~after lilamhal Saxe. you km " lat: BARBARA-ago ll months-daughter of Mrs. A. A. John- . son. (lrapsud ' v z D _ _ _ I _ and my uncle rcoalman?" _ “nd ‘MONALD-ago l IIIOIfl-hl-IOII of Mrl '1‘ J Llng Kan Lu" m the day, the Irishman - "on" j: was challenged. "Bags," he replied. ' m; JUDITH LOUlSE—a.go s months-daughter of Mrs. J. n. ¢'.' Chisholm, s4 Douglas Street. City. gt A Negro callcd at l-lie hospital and said: "I called to see how mah l YEAR TO Z YEARS fricn‘ Joe Brown lwas getting _ ' along." 1st. KONALD-lago 1 ye|u~_son of Mi-l. H. C. Melllsh. M Elm g The "u," “m. nwhy‘ he.’ uh "'~"“"°' C‘? . tir-yalong fine: he's conv-alcscing z d an n- ' . A . . . . “CW7 n THU age l9 years son of ‘Wrs H ‘Vfclnnis. Park c, “Wong, said me Negro. “n, s“ dale. R.R. N0. 3. Q _ _ _ H Q down and wail till hes through. 3rd: JEANETTE-ago 2 yuan-daughter of Mrs. Eve Arsen- Q‘ nult, 253 Fitzroy Street, City. ‘g1 '—--———~——- z YEARS r0 4 runs LOWELL-ago 3 years-hon of Mrs. Yictor Lirtg. ‘l2 Upper o Hillsboro Street, City. By GENEVIEVE KEMBLE THERESA-age 4 years-daughter of Mrs. Walter 0'Bi . . d " 2s Spring Park Road. City. H“ ! _ F" Sm" w‘ “hm” l JACKIEiHKQ 4 yanks“, o! Mm Fred "ynu, a3 Um” . A DAY o! a sudden and breath- ' s l ~ - PM ' 2' ::*:".t:;:>.t:.:"".::-."*;t:t.:":i‘ 4 YEA" 1Q Q “.1 §\ll:f11|m€HLa(afa notlonly gzmxianpdace _< '8.l wor yspansa ccvls LLolE-ugc 5 ycarwdaughtcr of Mrs. Herbert Love. East ,- bul also more sentimental and spiri- Roynlty- - tuai values. Thesq are time: excel- CAROL-agc 5 yearn-daughter of Mrs. A. Madman, l lie“! prQspecis 01 “h” m“ ‘rumor’ summu-gldg . . of cherished hopes anfl wilshlzeog. ltllCllftlEll-agn B ybhrl-IOII of Mrs. Imn Hughes. I2 v ‘ggezrgts ggagpmmunfiyefigls %yre:;ramé (um o and Street. City. lwpmsea 8 YEA BS T0 I YEARS t on m. y EDNA-age I yearn-daughter of Mrs. An llsalcm. lm- _ erald. Those whose birthday it is ml)‘ 2nd: JAMES-age ‘I yearn-won of Mrs. M. Costello. H05 Ilfvz- .' find ‘hmmelvea plmmed "no E n“ , _ =0! a. startling about-face. with new my stud’ mm .places, contacts. plans and objec- Jrd: SANDRA-ago 8 years-daughter of Mrs. Roy MacDon- m,“ rmnd [mo new new; 01w’. nld. presented by Mrs. 8am ftennedy. Sn. 44 Brighton ' anon’ and o; fgrq-Qgglflna mg (mp Iload. City. . ' ‘mntlc denounemeit. Change of ' ""8 T° 1= m" Liifilifili‘. ‘$252? Tilfixflflfii lat: LAURA DOBEEN-qgc I yQarl-daughlgr of M", w, “"005, _ nature. Forces and faculties should C ‘ottotovm, B. B. No. l. be keyed to high purpose. witcl-hgo- mamc and adventure not la g. 2nd: allllll-agc Dyan-son n! Mrl. G. M. Blue. Littlo ' Cum rm, m, Manon“ behnvlm all. A child born on this day should hi: NORMA LIE-ago l! yuan-daughter of Mn. Art. llns- ' be lalcssed wit-h much versatillfy~ lens. Emerald. ' ' TWIN! ILAINI III EMILY-Ila l’ “III-daughter! of Mr. Ed. Wood. II Kmllllhll Hold. Cit!- Wlnncra phonic will be published in this paper. Wntols for Euler Special in edition issued Thursday. Ich- gqgry lfln. Now ll the the lo prepare. Open Thursday and Inlay cvanlngs 0o accommodate bnlnm public. ' 128 B|.7I0fll| Street OIIAILOTIITOWN originality. ingcnuily. with grace and charm as wcll. A life c! adven- ture, romance and achievement i! indicated. Get two ounces of roainc powder from our druggisl. lnkle on a hot. wet cloth and apply to the face gently. Every blackhead will b! dllwlvld- The one safe. sure and Ijpk Way I nave b i. shows him “caring a naval uniform. trail. today. The royal party" wil‘. l guard for lbw long sea trip. and in the dominion LivingfiiLeisure —THE WOMAN'S REALM— i I LACK l-l IADS New CtllTlClB study of King George, taken prior to llie royal family leaving for its South African Queen Eilzabclfi is truly regal in this charming new por- Wtith the King and Princesses Eliuibcth and Margaret Rose she leaves England for South Africa new 42500-1011 battleship H. M. S. Van- tvill live in specially built and equipped private rall- rntrel aboard the mighty CONTENT Content to come, content to go, Content to wrestle or to rare, Content to know or not to kllOW. Each in his plat-c. Lord lzrant us grace to love 'l‘h<~e’ so, ‘ That glad of hctnl and glad ol‘ face, At lust we may sit, high 01' low. Each in his place. Where pleasures flow as rivers flow And loss has lcft no barren trace. Ami all that arc are pcrfert so. Each in his place. Christina Rossetti. USEFUL HINTS Water that is uncomfortably hi\'.~ to your hands is too hot for furni- lure, woodwork or painted wulls. Clean. warm water and a mild soap. if necessary. ls best for household work. Winter wool blankets should be carefully shaken at Interval; to fluff up the nap which supplies the warmth. A coat of wax applied to brass door knockers form; a, protective film which keeps of! tarnish. To safely change a blown fuse, ‘flril be sure your hands are com- (Plelfly dry. disconnect all ccirrls and appliances on the circuit, then Wmfllw the dead fuso by the rim and replace with new one. If your youngsters are pin-up enthusiasts, furnish them with good-sized. bulletin-typo bond; made of soft wood where they can thumb-tack their cutouts. It will save disfiguring marks on Wallpaper or painted walls. Baby-talk. once kept for the rm. vatc use of loving couples. fond mothers and wheedllng children, has now been brought.’ upon u, i ‘+§§-§§O-O-O-§~ OM Better English z l). C. Wlllllml "+¢4+ woaa» 1. What is wrong with lihls sen. fence? I wish I could play thc piano like you do." 2. What. is the correct. pronunc- iation of "rcmediabla"? 3. Which om of these word; 1; mlaapclled? Taliamcn. tangerine. tantalize. 4. What does theword "granlv- mono" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with per that means "a doing. cs- peclally of something bad morally"? aivswaas 1- 8w. "u you do." 2. Pronounce ra-medl-a-lfl. both c‘: as in ml. i as in it, a unstressed, accent ‘ syllable. 3. Talhman. 4. Feeding on nods or grain. (Accent second syl- \ 'JANUARY s1, .94; v ‘ é §+O§§O+OQ*OQOQ-o#OQQOQQQQ+OOQQQ+¥FO§£OQGO§QQ4QOD-OOQ+%OOO4¥OOQ4% v v f. Socialand Personal/ Fashions/ 0-0 8 PM fill’ flow flamers Portraits Before Departure. for South Africa l i ziradcinir plane b) a university‘ pru- fcssot- who has resurrected its! Greek name of “ll)'}JDl'0l‘l5nlu" until discussed it formally btfore a learn- cl_\*. Frunkly, the lovers, the‘ rs and even the univer-i sily wrofcssors can have their "ill_\- I bitty goo" ll only somebody would. start a campaign for the rmivall of good, standard English. Except! in the mouth of a Winston Churvh- l lil and the few who can rival him i- ln the use of forceful speuvh. Eng- I l lish is bevoflling glntusl as fiend n linglhige as Lttlin. Wlu-il is lakmr: its plat-e is n conglomeration of} slang anrl cliche of which nobody" can be proud. -l-lalifax Chronicle.‘ _.__._ ___.__. ‘ T0 TAKE OUT STAINS y Slighlh- sFuFClICGJXliIUCS on “llllbl shirts can he bleached while by‘ the ultraviolet rays of a sun lump. . l LA_(~‘.\' TEA APRON i l i? Household 6 o o a t D quart or so of boiling Water. so that the soda and form a s-cft soap and slop up the t l their beaks into the flowers ‘m the i l i . . 944-9044 vw vi Q rvvv v Literatur ‘ ““‘ ““““‘ ““ ‘ ¢v~vQ4, e . “~49 §§§OO+O-O-O-\ i oonorm’ 01x sA vs- cO-OQO-O vév Dollar-Chasing Husban §-O-§§-Q'§wvv¢ v vvwwwvwv -s m mu c’ ll‘ “ifivffi... ‘will. idhllilill’ DEAR MIISS DIX: My husband has a steady day-tum 10b “d comes home a.l 4 o'clock in the afternoon. Atnight he operates s business in which he is in partnership with another man, and m“ kcepjs him away from home until late at night-and includes s11 d“ Sun ay. _ The result is that he is a stranger in his own home and the ch11. dren scarcely know him. I feel that every child should have llic u. lcnlion and care of a father as well as a mother and that he should. at least. give us a COllplg n; nights of his society. Am I being too selfish 1n this and in bulking him in his ambition to may, t money? GIXPUSED WIFE. ANSWER: 1 think a man makes no his“, mistake than ullcn he lets his desire to niak. money become greater than his desire to be s) good husband and father. Yet it happens so on." _ in this country. So many men get so mapmd up in their business that they give to it all of their though“ and intcrisls and time. 'l'licii' liomcs are only placrs" where they come to cat and 5160p 'I‘hcy (like no part in the family life. They are too tired and spent with time days work lo want to talk or be talked to. or to take tltcir wives out to any place of entertainment. or to play games with the children. The mother is left to run the house and rear the youngsm-g without any advice from the husband and father. and she is, t0 “y; intents and purposes a widow and the children fiitltcrless. MONEY CANT BUY HAPPINESS Of course. tlicsc men, who are so absorbed in their business, just]. fy themselves by saying that the reason they work so hard is because they want to be able to give their families the advantages and lux. urics lhnl mom-y ')ll_,'5. They forget that liicrv la no price lug on t!» most valuable things in life. No amount of money can buy happinpg; for the wife whose husband never pals up with her. who never git-cs her niiy companionship, who takes no interest in anything that lhe i: intercstrd in, or docs anything towards making her happy except pay- ing the bills. And no money can compensate children for not ever having lisd a father who was guide. philosopher and friend to them and who shaped their lives along the right way. A father who remains a stranger to his children has cheated them out of their due, no matter how many automobiles he bestows upon them. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: f have been married over twenty ycsrl and do not wish a divorce. I ‘love my husband and try to look out for his interests. but he has adog he is crazy about and takes with him €\'l‘l'_\"\Vh(‘l‘E he goes and lets sleep in the bed at night, there not being room in our apartment for an extra bed. If I don't get to Scrapbook By Roberta Leo O Q FOO-Q §4~O4§4 0 O OQQQO-O-O-O Y0++94¢4 r4040- Drain Cleanser A cup of washing soda down lhei kitchen drain is an excellent cleans- cr, but be sure to follow it with a l I i l the grease do not draii‘. llalr Brushes “when buying hair brusbts, press the bristles down hard. _lt' they spring back immediately without a sign of bending Jficy will wmr well and you have an efficient brush. Nan-ow Shoulders if the shoulders are vtry itairow. dolman sleeves. avoid raglan or Wide lapcls. short cams and bright CQIDTCd yokcs aivl ncckwcnr are good. 533+“ t O§OO-O'O-Q§O§-O~O-O O~OO 0-0 t Ellen's Diary i ‘By an Island Farmer's Wife rO§@Q'§‘O-Q-O Q-Q-O-O FQ O-O O*O'§4-§1-O “Aiv what's the name of those little birds, that. g0 along sticking Summer time?“ Jamie asked hll bed first, the dog wont let me in until my husband holds him. If my husband is sitting in a chair with the dog on his lap. I can't pass through the room without the dog leaping and snarling at n10. I like most dogs and have tried to make friends with this one but he hates me. What would you do? "HAD ENUT" ANSWER: Well, you know the old proverb "love mo. love my dog.“ but that doesn't involve sleeping in the bed with a dog. and! think you would be fully justificd in leaving your husband to the companionship of his canine friend. Evidently your husband cares more for his dog than he does for you, and as the dog ls so Jealous of you as to be dangerous, I should think you would pack your bag and quit. DEAR MISS DIX: f met n woman on Monday and we were mar- rlcd on the following Wednesday. We lived together ltappily for more than 21 years. lifter she died I met n woman at 6:20 A. M. and at 9:30 A. M. we were married, three hours after we first saw each other. and this marriage has also been very happy. Evnryone tolls me that f ain a good Judge of hulnanily, bull think it ls a gift of some higher TIOWCI‘ that has guided rne. C. E. B. ANSWER: ]l niust be llial you are a favorite of the gods. or at least have sonic supernatural gift. Most men can't pick 'em right attttr knowing thcm for a lifetime. in vain. “Oh well" I remarked "If would be pretty small snyxivar" l gathered the dish towels from illi verandah rail and turned to go in. Jamie at my heels. "N' what “ill make it grow?" h; askcd. "And how would I know. Jamie?" I said "Well" he reasoned laughing “ll lycu want to make a, flower grow lcOfillfillcd on Page 8| ell inc with it decisive air that. "L-l always tastes hr-ltcr with it in." The cvviiing brought inc another pOSCl‘. I might have explained it to him. if James had not come in then from the \vork at the wood- chopping, when thc supper table was not, entirely l-DFCfld- It..\vas when I hail looked for n small nmv moon in the greyiiess above a hill. izrandfathcr this mornintl- It. was still 3 little too early to rise. 3110 Jamie was whillng flWfly the inter- lude. l-n o conversation. that if III’ teresiing to hear. was a bit one sided at times. His line of thought. was about birds. an intriguing sub- jccl. l0 him and one that never falls to lmld his interest. At the inoni- or clsg ha was straightening out. some more personal problem. Per- haps planning his schedule of work for the day she-ad. At any rate. his Igply to Jamie was only a vaguq ona. "You know the kind Gran‘ that buzz like s boa when travel.” "Oh yes" James agreed collecting his wandering thoughts, —let mo sea now-they're Honey- a moment then I heard him i-augh merrily. "Hill" he said like thntl" O Many of Jamie's questions most perplexing, or so I find them at many a. turn. Like the one this morning when wc stuffed a chicken for dinner and he was right sf my elbow then to tcll me how, "mother do’: it." "Tell me the name of ev- erything -every single thing [int will come nhtska chickens!" He unison no. a-ios-i A dab-lily’ tea apron may be cro~ circled in an interesting opcnwork design. inexpensive and easy to crcatc. Pattern No. E4037 contains complete instructions. To order: Send 20 cents in coin to Needlework Bureau. Cslaarlottc- town Guardian. / Design No. 153-103‘! Nam! fill" labia.) "Sumo animals are granivor- Pnotnuus \ w" wulrenuy tm familiar ground and 1‘ had ts concentrate to follow him. I suppose that Was the res. son. I iwalcvled to ndd the pinch of Savoury. forgetting It Cqmplgfg. l)’ until the bird was trusscd |m| mdy for the oval. m: that t. Tide much dlfflrcnca anyway, ts smas or me. though Jamie assur- cnt James must, have been dozing daddy?" Jamie persisted "tiny birds. they "of course I know these. They're sucklc birds." Jamie was silent for "I ncvar heard of birds, with a funny namc 8K0 l u] / You know that a healthy. W4! nourished child radiates joy and hap- piness and la a pleasure to behold. Active, growing children need large amounts of‘ vitamins and minerals ~- amounts they don't always get from their ordinary meals. So why not are to it that your child has the health- giving vitaminland mineral: henccds? The daily use of Vimaltol, the natural orange flavoured. fortified vitamin food. is a pleasant way to supply additional amounts of vitamins A. Bu, D, Riboflayin (B2), Niacin. and minerals Calcium, Phosphorus and available Iron. Thus, Vimaltol aids growth and maintenance of’ appetite- struigth and energy of buoys“! health. its vitamin content 01w helps build strong bones and teeth.‘ 0f special importance during winffl’ months, Vimlltol alda in mtonnl and maintaining natural redstante 1° I infection. its high concentration makes it vet? economical to use. Children love delicious Vimaltol by the spoonful °' spread on bread or biscuits. Get it at your drug store Ito-day . vIMsr-rvr» nucleus AMI acouomeal. vitamin I°°'l swuonumo, mun i @4421»; 1' fil