W0men',s realm I-aos: two can atlannlan ? , The Stars Say - - 3, Oonnlovo lunblo I is For Tomorrow THE most worltaday an prac- tical commitments and pla of the day may get I dynamic "l " by the surprising advent of the romantic. dramatic. llnususl- or "unpredictable. A sudden spurt. an r adroit or thrilling maneuver. may '- lift affairs from the prosaic. or ”.' humdrum, into the realm of the emotional, romantic and breath- '. zaking. sudden. quick moves. bring 37 excitement, surprise and the un- expected to pervade all relations and contacts. if rt 1- Your nlrtlulsyl ' I. Those whose birthday it is, are Iiustlfled in anticipating the -un- i usual, strange, unforeseen and un- 3 predictable. in all their relations. activities and contacts, business, domestic, romantic and intellect- ual - all are tinged by the dyna- mic, with exciting denoument. novel and vivid as well as radical and far-reaching. Enjoyment. hap- piness. rare moments of elation and thrill, combine to make an un- forgettable adventure into the speculative realm of the unknown. A child born on this day, is promised a life of the unusual. ..dramatic. adventurous and singu- ,lar. with all contacts and aspira- .tions. lifted beyond the prosaic and commonplace. NOW 10 IILIIVI COIIGIIS... FALSE CIIOIIP Rub worm oil into neck and chart. Mos- soge neeil. Cover with warm llunnoI.Af drug- glsts' for 35 yours. "4 MARCH 21, 1951 Better English as, u. o. willin- : 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "I haven't any idea as to whom you lnean, but I do know that Tom stood outside of the Jlouse for hours." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "prestige"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? liinderance, hinter- land. " popotalnus, hysterical. 4. what does the word "arrog- ant" mean? 5. What i is a word beginning with as that means "ardent de- sire or longing"? ANSWERS 1. say. "I haven't any idea (omit as to) whom you mean," and say. "Tom stood outside (omit oi) the house." 2. Pronounce pres- tezh. first e as in press. second e as in tea, accent second syllable. 3. Hindrance. 4. Undtlly proud: overbearing: haughty. "The man is an arrogant fool." 5. Aspiration. ii.R56"mtec E How Can I ! l 1 K By Anne Ashley ' s;cxa:o:c.s.s.:s.-sszcss Q. How can I remove the odor from an empty medicine bottle? A. Fill the bottle half full of cold water and add one tablespoon of dry mustard. Shake thorough- ly. let stand for half a day, and then rinse carefully in cold water. Q. How can I clean the bricks in the fireplace? A. These bricks can be cleaned very well if they are covered with a paste of powdered pumice stone and ammonia. Leave this on for an hour and then scrub with warm soapsuds. Q. How can I clean jewelry? A. A solution of onehalf am- monia and one-half water is ex- cellent for cleaning jewelry. Then g;g.:sncv.V.x., polish with a chamois. gas you please! ' ' lNylon Gowns, priced from ' V 4 Lovely shades of em but iompthins - Choose from Queenly Lingerie ! ' -Lingerie as lovely as would suit any Queen's taste! ' .Glea.ming rayon and silk satins, lush nylon knits and' ' pobbly rayon. cresee-frothy with lime or as tailored ome, make your selection now for your own needs and for Easter Gifts. Persian Pink, Bouffant Blue, and Princess White. 1 Nylon slips-so pretty, so practical- from ...............,,,,, .,m,.................... ....... 95.95 to 910.95. Crepe slips-Lsvishly trimlnsd, with lace- Pdjsrnsg: and 'Pantlu Galore. .............. .. 8.95 to 916.95 38-95. 34-95. 05-95 . . km, ,'r.!.k,'P5'x,'l'.).'r.-sgs 55 s p.'s.fv7- , Contrary myuli. but nothing does any good. J9 - Begin you want to do. prefer to have the parlor papered. end of time. he is and the easier he is to work. of her hand and she may do with of fact. household money for weeks to get a me and calls me terrible names. He doing. for a. place among the saints through a lifetime of suffering the man has property out bad matter worse. You self and your children. DEAR. mes nix": married again. stay with them this summer, I will mer? I am a girl of 16. ANSWER: You seem to You would probably have a your soul. DOROTHY DIX cumot inolioillv Ex sus- .:-urn;-u , . usband a Mulish Man Should Be Handled Like Donkey lDEA.R M155 DIX:. I am married to the most stubborn. contrary man on earth. How can you get-along with I husband with that kind of disposition? I have tried gentleness. patience. fighting, being mean DISGUSTED WIFE. ANSWER: or course. one would like to any that the but w-y to treat a contrary man is to bat. him over the head with a coffee pot; but unfortunately women lack the physical strenllh W BN0?” 3"” ll” -- . argument against contrsriness. Besides which. our effete civilization discourages such primitive mean! of family discipline. . All that is left, then.. for the woman who is mar- ried to a man with a ' him as she would any other donkey who hunt sense enough to do what is right and proper. but Who 11” to be cajoled along the way he should go. LET HIM SUGGEST l'l' " ' disposition is to treat by letting him think that he has suggested everything that if you want to have the parlor pspered in green ill- stcad of purple. don't rashly say that you are going to have green or your donkey will put his foot down and. declare for purple. On the contrary. gently and insidiously suggest the idea of (Teen Paper and. when you perceive that the time is right. ask him what color he would He will say green and berate you for not having thought of it yourself. . Avoid all arguments as you would the pestilence. An argument with a contrary man is like a mordant that sets a dye and makes it indelible. If he says black is white, what opinion he expressed and recognize white for the color it is. But if he once commits himself that black is white, he will stick to it to the let. it go at that and he may forget Of course, the less sense a man has the more amenable to flattery so there is nothing for the woman who is married to a contrary man to do but to get busy with the salve and plaster him over daily with flllsome compliments. If she tells him how big and wise and strong And wonderful he is and how she defers to his judgment in every particular. he will eat nllt him as she will. some women can do this, solne can't. some do not think it worth while and, as a matter it isn't worth any sensible woman's trouble to humor such childish weakness, for such a man makes her very.. very tired. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My husband and I have been married for fifteen years and have two lovely children. I have always been a good and faithful wife and mother, a thrifty and economical housekee have done my duty the best I knew how. But in all the time we have been married my husband has never taken me anywhere for pleasure. when he is home he always nags me about how much money I spend. He never gives me any extra money for clothes. I have to pinch the and pair of shoes. He always. swears at has never brought me 9. gift of any kind. And just these little things mean so much to a women. What should a. wife do under these circumstances? DISCOURAGED. ANSWER: I don't know what she can do except qualify, as you are and martyrs. Many a one has been nanonized for less suffering than the women endures who has to go insults and neglects of a husband who regrets being tied down by marriage and who takes out on his wife W” help "u" '0 his discontent and his selfish fury at having money he would like to spend on himself. If a woman has money of her own. or if she is childless, or if the of which a decent alimony can be wrung.. the "'9 h””d "9 mu” mm the wife can, of course, leave a husband who mistreats her. But in a case neighbmmg WWd13"d5- like yours where there are little children to be considered and where the husband has nothing but his daily wage, go hung up the home James offered "but it's among the 'V0U1d Only be lumping out of the frying pan into the fire and making g first you hear in spring." Another Could not possibly earn enough to support your- "W " A WW9? 0' "it "0Ck- Wm! to spend on his family the My parents are divorced and both of them have WM" 1" me Ycunlstefs 30 OK- I am staying with my mother and stepfather. Ifl not be able to wear shorts, to use cosmetics and go to dances. as th 11 1 , dad and stepmother” I will be ableey tataredgelzhgtefegug rilfesiegoblit father drinks. At which place would you advise me to spend the sum- PUZZLED. ha; arts! ClTlIl3B1ltlh3&5I'nCHt of riches in pm-gnu, Jamie and I. one day last . 8 1' me w - i A d d k h stepmother, but your stricter mother and lteg?:t!il::5:l,0?l?dngbe1;tett::x-311:: ofn thgnlgll lilgw W at came om reply rstmsil to Problems of general interest t.hrol::h her o:')lum'n.Z.d,"' bu. "in "awe! Cook's Corner w smwx' FROSTED MINT CnocoLA-pp; 3 lquares (2 or.) chocolate 1 cup water 1.5 cup sugar ii teaspoon salt 1 quart milk 1 teaspoon vanilla ti teaspoon peppermint extract 1 cup ice cream Mmil-IOD: Place the chocolate with the water in the top of a double boiler. I-feat until the choco- late is melted. then stir and cook over low. direct heat until slightly thickened. Add the sugu and milk and cook for 5 minutes. Chill. then add flavoring. salt and ice cream and beat with a rotary beater until well blended. Serve in tall glasses with or without the addition of another unsweetened tablespoon of ice cream. The Neighbors PI” me'io"”tiua ' you the scene w is jar .'i '" . el3"l:ut,l:.i:"a','r:a5,arounG.'V.,'f" ' .v - g. E2Household Scrapbook! E? In Iobom us ; T Dull Window. Window glass that is duil-look- ing and hasn't been cleaned for I length of time should be rubbed with diluted rnuristic acid. one part acid to 10 parts water. and then polished with a cloth moist- ened with whiting. Flour looks The lettering can be removed from flour and sugar sacks bv soaking in kerosene for several hours and then washing. The asek should be boiled in clear water to remove the odor of the kerosene. Paint Brushes Paint -brushes can be cleaned by washing them in hot soda water and soft loop. ly George Clerk. l overweight; are healthy and live V normal weight an s-WCT- my --OTC!" " Ell.Ell'S. nuliv v IJIIIIHIUFIIOOVIWIO -m... Granddaughter went along to fetch the until this morning. of comes not entirely alone. but at- tended by the faithful black dot and a kitten. Kept in sight by her father at his choring about the plggories, and by Jamespwho ind voiced his misgivings 'ovea- the outing II from the cellar he car- ried baskets of roots to the stock. We came to a. veruldsh whue we too could take note of her trip. "Her father gave her permission" James said stopping to shake his head over its hazards. "But she'll soon be five" we commented, "and it's only I step. Surely no harm can come to her. Othu children -why what tiny ones play on the sidewalks and streets in town and village! only babes you might say, weaving in and out among the traffic. They soon learn to take care of thetnselvu." "Yes" James agreed soberly "and they meet with accidents tool Parents can't be too careful. I never want to send anyone, least of all a child into any danger. Now if she is curious and leans over the edge of the bridge . . . or a car or truck happens to turn 'into the lane - the elders are. thick there . . . ." l O C 0 Down the winter short-cut through the old orchard went our small one, slipping quickly be- tween the wires of the enclosing fence, and then on smart resolute steps she continued along the meadow which leads presently to the "gangway" bridge - a little dark-clad figure, a dog and a cat. "Did you warn her to keep to the very middle of the way?" James asked her father. Footsteps as we watched slipped into familiar prints as she made the crossing safely, above where the waters run deep and dark. Then she was hidden around an aldered bend at lane's end. We awaited her re- appearance anxiously. what if a truck cr car was approaching now. making a quick turn there? But "Here she comes!" Jame said, is pleased smile spreading . . . . she wore a "matching smile and was flushed from her exertion and proud as were we of her acocm- plishment. "And now. since I've brought the mail. I think 1 should he the one to have the paper! Come in" she beamed "and let's yc-u and me rear: the children's story!" In the sun and miidness of to- day which gatherod Mr. A. and the ,threshing. and the hunting at the close which entertains adults and chil- dfm. dots Ind cats. spring calls "I can't tell you the name of the bird" more endeavour than wisdom pre- sented us with a first egg of the claim over and hold. "It's no good Just looking at it" granddaughter smiled. ''I want to hold'it" a senti- ment her younger cousin shared. "Specklcdi" he said. "We found some just like this only tiny wee ones in a nest down the lane ' whispered miracle. "Lit-tie blr-rdsl" I O C the supper was a stirring meal we remember after four decorous small ones with bent heads and folded hands got reverently past the Grace. Two are so clcse in age that neither can suffer the other to be first in any enterprise. even in being served at table. "But I should be" she explained when this issue appeared "you see it's always: 'Ladies first!' " "Well. I don't care, which should be .. 1 shculd be - I'm going to be!" the other dilnpled up in a merry way it is difficult to deny. Their male parents threatened as events thickened but James arbitrsted, following as usual the line of least resistence. "You'll both be first" he prcmised. "your grandmother will see to that! Here, Ellen" he said about to resume a conversa- that both of them are served first!" a feat of hands that for peace must be timed to I split second. "Now if this weather Just holds" James says. lowering his newspapu "we'll get that stack thrashed tomorrowl" Until tomorrow - - Diary Good-night. . . . ” That Body Of Yours; Q Jones I. lnton. ILD. LII! INSURANCE OOMPANIII DIAL WITH lull! AND DEATH A middle-and man applied for more ' in I. oonvany in which he slroldy had axpoiicy. The insurance agent gave him the rates for his age but was afraid the inaursince physician would not pass him because he was 8 to so pounds overweight. while many to 1 good this is not usually the can. . Insurance can aniu. surgeons, a aeathstists on general physio- laaaaroaiiagtaodtbotthoonn weight scenes, are poms surgica r or take anaesthetic diabetes on and other illnesses than one of A duunruuhoairum-an vinrlm In nutrition Item that his veatlgltiom 1:11! out the f e n or tion with Mr. A. "You see to it v operation. , develop clrl-zscl-:elwT.. CATRNIVAL , 1 "Why, good evening" Olivier! f- sllnply couldn't resist the temple- tion of coming to see your lovely little house any longer. I can tell that it's charming, just from the first glimpse. And I'm doubly glad to have that. because unfor.tu.nate- iy I'm going away tonight and I don't. know when I'll be back. You an .. "You are going away tonight?" he echoed, in a voice that was not regretful and not even curious. "I am sorry that you did not let me know beforehand that I might ex- pect the honor of I visit from you. Mrs. Breckenridge. In fact. there has unfortunately never been a time when I could receive you less suitably. This morning after my housekeeper had served my lunch, she had a chill and collapsed. Then she crawled rather miserably to bed. That is how I h " I to open the door for you myself. In fact. when you rang.I thought you were probably the doctor. Unfor- tunately I could 'not reach John Beal. This man is A comparative stranger. named Bresux. But he seierns to be. unaccountahly delay- e .' . "Then I will come in, just for 3 minute.' Anna had no idea of re- treating now. As he reluctantly drew back to let her pass, she swept into the little drawing room. "You have no idea how glad I am that I came." Olivier bowed in his characteristic stiff and distant fashion, and Anna went on, "Es- pecially as I do not know when I shall have another chance to see it. I'm on my way to Boston." "Indeed? But that is very inter- esting. Your train leaves early in the evening, doesn't it?" "No. not until eight o'clock. have plenty of time." "Indeed?" Olivier said. "Excuse me. I think I hear the telephone ringing. I am so sorry that I must answer it myself." The telephone was in in rear room, probably Olivier's bedronm, Anna thought. as she watched him ollt of sight. Anna rose with dir- nity and moved across the little drawing room. There was really Continued on page 3. pounds. But after this needed fat on and in the body (to hold the abdominal organs up in their pro- per places) has been acquired, every extra pound of fat added thereafter is a liability to health and to the life span. This does not mean that not to have this needed fat for the purpose noted above is an asset. What it means is that the extra or unnended fat put on your body from eating more than you nerd. taking more sleep or rest than you need and not taking enough exercise to give a natural appetite. is a real danger. Remember. we get the highest authoritative information on health and the life span from lifc insurance companies. Insuring an overweight individual is such a risk that they have to refuse him a policy or make him pay a much higher rate for insurance than if I .--FORHTI-IE I48! to run Thilfa oneoftluairoplcstof washable styles, the kind that you can run up on your machine in no time at all! Note the deep waist- line darts-a new way of making you seem slimmer. ll. 3). 30. 39. I). 43. M. M Ind C. alias 18. 396 yarh S-inch. 235 yards m. ' Send 36c for each PAITEN which includes complete sewing guide. Print Your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state also you want. Include postal unit. or none number in your address. Address Pattern Department. The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. M15 NIRII . Address Province ' Morning Smile v'w.”xKx7mmxwer " Alteylow City "Is it true. girls, that sally Jane has a new fur coat? Her old one is only three years old. What's that? Two spades? I wonder what I should do! is that a demand. or can I pass if I have a bust? Say. have you girls heard about Jack smith? My sister says she saw him and that good-looking secretary of his lunching at the Hidden Gave last week. Jack is the best catch in town. and he must be at least 30 years old. They ' -Neecllecra. 1.; ,No. 2216 is cut in sizes in. 14. 16. , say he's making lots of money. What? You bid two spades. partner? Oh. dear. everyone has been talking. I've forgotten. Let's review the bidding." V Modern, Etiquette by Roberta us (.: vvam&xs Q. When friends, who have moved into a new home. invite you to an open house." are you ob- ligated to bring a gift? A. No: this is merely an invita- tion to visit these friends and see their new home. If, however, you are giving a "house-warming" in their honor, then, of course. you are expected to give a gift. Q, when you have been asked to pass a dish at the table. and you were just about to partake of that dish yourself. is it all right to help yourself first? ? A. No; this would be very crude COMFOIIIIIG RELIEF FROM ASTHMA No need to wheeze. sp. cough. choice- Templcton's RAZ- MH loosens the strangling phlegm-gives you quick com- forting rrlici. Lets you sleep restiully on vour back. Recommended by user: for Hay Fever and Bronchitis. he were of normal weight. l1lGF.:' & S. - V ..4:- -s 4Q-I Vf' to their Illl-. . harmful v t -ftpv. v Hove?"-.j and ill-bred. unless of course the other person insists that you help yourself first. Q. Is a. girl ever perullitcrl to ask a man to dance with her. A. Only if the man is her llus. bsnd, brother. brother-in-law, cousin. or perhaps an old child- hood friend. Musrnno ggizfl QAJJIII7 .-. Ht, , .1 'H'l3i5HiER SIIIAD French Dressing V, my salad oil Va Manon used M cog VKIOQI? Va teaspoon Cci- v I teaspoon salt men's Mustard 9- Piace the ingredients in 3' glass isr. Just before servq ing, shake the contents wells Fad free recipe book, "Cul- inuy An", write to Reckitt & Colman (Canada) Ltd., Station 1'. Montreal. MILLIONS or FAMILIES Acres wm-l sclsurlrlc FINDINGS TWA" COIGAI COICAII MARI! 'l'Il'lIl 'SPAIKl.ll Yes. Colgote's I pgllllhing cleans your test to o duliinilln FOI COMPLITI . . I HOIAl.DIN1'AI., CARI I . cgi,0A'l'I . Always brush your math .. cuans Islam . nun rslvaur sscavl cglggfg can prove that do 7 out of tooth decay with 18"” . 0 cases. Golgsto instantly for our two group! DINTAI. CIIAM stops oral bad breath! of college are gYtI.bntllIGd - v coiggwg pg their teeth. 2 glut after gets into crevices teeth . . ioglpa sides: out haying Illlvapmodonl t- Illa! natural wblmmxl Col to's' -quickly removes but harming delicate enala Havoc-loaurtasth. ..wbltor teeth ...uao the toothpaste millions of I families prefer-Colgate Danni Cream! ' agent to-Don