Vraca TWO I LivingcSiLeisure l KZTHEW "anther v. < lake the world es it is! - there are good end bed in it. {And good end bed will be from now to the end; Lei-id they. who expect to make saints in e minute. [Are in danger of marring more hearts than they'll mend, [f ye wish to be happy ne'er seek for the faults, Dr you're sure to find something or other amiss, Mid much that debates, end mucl: that exalts, [he world's not a bad one if left es it is. —Charles Swain ' Use vegetables to stretch eggs, Potatoes, added to an omelet, make . I. hearty dish. Beat potatoes until they are lump-free and fluffy. Then add to the egg mixture and cook le usual. When arranging furniture in lhe bedroom. experts recommend- ld placing beds at the right o: eft of the window instead of across ‘ to avoid the glare of daylight sleepers’ eyes. l GIVE-AWAY "Fool's gold" is the common eme for iron pyrite. It can he‘ ‘ tingulshed from real gold by the dor of sulphur it gives off under eat. IODINE IN FOOD l Medical authorities on of simple goitre. Iodine is IGCGSSEPy fill‘ D POP?!‘ pf the thyroid gland. Food con- oste Van Qampfis you'll wont (‘FAN/S REAL. recommend j tie use of iodized salt for preveii- ‘ functioning i Ma avail telns lit-tie iodine, and, in some in- land regions, ivater and food e- vailable may fall to suPNv even the small amount we need. Public health authorities suggut that the family doctor be consulted as to whether there is enough iodine in ones diet. Il' he recommends l:. Canadians should use iodized sail. lin their food. I ‘THY DO HENS CACKLE‘! v 3 A hen cackles after she lays an iegg because it is a characteristic she has inherited from her ances- ‘tors, the wild jungle fowl of the ‘Malay Peninsula and India, states an American journal. Uusually these birds run in iiociis of from six to eight, and consist of one cock and several hens. The hen steals away from the rest o: the flock and lays her egg in a con- lcealed nest. , In tho meantime the flock has Jvaudered away’. and the lien nas ibecome lost, It is then that she tackles. This action attracts the atten- tion of all the cocks in the vicinity. and they all begin to cackle and icroiv. The lost iicii recognizes the ‘voice of the leader of her flock 13nd returns. This trait has never been bred out of domesticated hens or roost- - day to visit with her eiri folk in e Ellen ’e Diary fielfllolhlnnhille Susan went. barely peet noon io- neighborlng Province after en ex- tended absence from them on rhe Island. The sadness that prepara- tions for leaving invariably bring was brightened by the pleasant anticipations for her of meeting her people again. "I may remain there" Susan said. neatly folding her dresses and all in her packing “and then again. I just might come bark again to The Island." A smile and a. ivave and she was off, a small brave figure against the world . and James and I are alone again. ' ' ' Pat called presently to tell of their lumbering in the woodlands across the road from us at Alder lea. "And you cut down the big hemlock?" I said regretfully, "Shure an‘ what else wds there for us to do but cut it down. since it's time was ripe?" Pat replied with a chuckle. "There's no stop pin‘ av time or tide, you know, El- lcn -an’ faith but wouldn't the world be a quare place if wan could? Now I'm askln’ you a fair question, would you iak everything to come to a standstill all av a sudden?" "Sometimes I would, Pat" I confessed. He laughed "Variety-- an’ shure an’ that's but a fancy name for ‘Change’ is the spice av life you know. An’ I expect when ers. and that is why today all the _ roosters in a barnyard will set " 3 a cianicur when a hen starts crackle. THREAD STRETCHES A5 IT STITCHES SQEIIIlSlICSEES will gcl. better r ~ lsulis for their efforts if they lillOiV their stuff about thread. Nylon |seiving thread is the johnny-come- ‘lately that is as fine as silk, has ‘elasticity and strength at least iequal to the silkwornfs spinnings 'Becausc or its ability to stretch itollenl u-ith-uie fabric it stitches, nylon is especially recommended for sew- ' lng knitted fabrics. (medium-weight "N," rayons, glass curtains arid draper SPAGHITTI ies. Wu“ Better suited to the texture of sheer fabrics such as net. and TANGY batlste are the finest tightly twist- >' CHRIS! ed mercerized or cord cotton threads. ' nocs i l l c“ l WALLUP Yllll our time's come, Ellen. there'll be no stoppin‘ any longer naytherl" (Continued on Page 3) INDIGESTIUN \ BELOW m: BELT’! Help Your Forgofleo "28" For The Kind Of leliel The! Hclpe Make You Rerin’ To Go More than half of your digestion in done lvolow the bolt-in your 28 feet of bowels. 5o when indigestion strikes, try something that helps digestion in the etonucl: AND bolow lhc bolt. What. ypu may need in Carter's Little Liver Pills to give needed help to tint "forgotten ‘.38 feet" ol bowels. Tale one Carla-r’: Little Liver Pill before and one after meals. Take them acccrdi to directions. They help wake up a Larger ow of the 3 main digestiie juica in yourstomaeh AND bowels —bolp you digest what you have eaten in Nature's own way. Then most folks get the kind of relief that maku you feel better from your heed to your Food Holds Husband s lleart ls Through Stomach . Still Holds Good Way To Man’ DEAR MISS DIX: My husband is a. very hard-working man and one in a million for his goodness and kindness. He is now 55 years old and his full week's pay is $85. I love him very much 5nd we are very happy together except for this one thinEI I hi"? E 1553' friend living with me who thinks I= feed my husband too well. She says if she ivere married to him, she would cut down on the amount. of butter and eggs arid other expensive food that he eats. She thinks he is a pig- Biit I don't feel that way about him. He ls six feet two and a. perfect rail. and I feel that he needs nourishing food. Don't you think I am right in giv- ing my wonderfully good. kind husband all the but- ter he wants and of. least a. dozen eggs a week foi his breakfast? ANXIOUS WIFE ANSWER: Indeed. I do. Evidently your ladl‘ friend. who believes iii keeping a man on a. starva- tion diet. has had little experience with the masculine sex. or else she would know that the way to a man's heart is through his stomach. The old adage that says that the best way to retain a. husband's affection is to feed the brute, is founded on rock-bottom truth. Every man who gets married expects his wife to feed him on beef steak and onions and pies like Mother used to make, Just as much as be expects her to show him tenderness and love. If you will think of the happy homes you have known, you will recognize that. they were all founded on the same formula-the husband was a good provider and the wife a crackerjack cook. MARITAL MISTAKE The wives who are too lazy and trifling to give their husbands good meals, or who pinch the grocery money to buy themselves flnery. make a fatal mistake. They are literally killing the goose that lays the golden egg. because, for one thing. it cuts down a man's earning capacity for him to be half-fed and, for another thing, a hungry man is always cross and surly and hard to live with. So don't. begrudge your husband his butler and eggs and pork chops, or adiatever. The laborer is worthy of his hire. DEAR MISS DIX: I am married to a good niaii who wot-ls hard and is very kind to me, and I have been very happy. But. a problem has come up in our lives that I do not know how to solve. I have a younger sister who seems to have fallen violently in lovu with my husband. She smothers him with kisses when she comes to visit us, She sits on his lap. and kisses him over and over again. and throws her arms around him when she is leaving. All of which is very em- barrassing for mo. I am not jealous. but l’ think if my husband was half tho man I have always thought he was, he would not encourage her. What can I do about it? e BEWILDERED SISTER; ANSWER: Brother-lh-lawltis is quite a. common complaint among the bobby-soxers. ‘l get many letters from wives whose homes have been broken up by little sisters‘ pursuit of their husbands. And toes. Juet be eure you get the genuine Carter‘: Little Liver Pills from your druggiet-Mo- (Continued on Page s) Am" "r60 brilliant 115v barely/ester... with all the lilting freshness of May flowers ‘I.’ . Desert Sun and Frolic .1. You'll love the outrageous flattery of Desert ‘Sun, e radiant, sun-warmed brown . . . you'll adore your exciting self in Frolic, .0. sparkling sun-tanned beige. Yours in famous Fit-All-Proportions and Pic-Ali- “Tope to fit all legs. Ask for them at the . nicest scores everywhere. \ '| ogoin makes heodhnes nylon colours ‘asst/er sung’ fkoz/c” ummwuyluspn" ceievr-‘Aoeseiir sun - riiouc - cuic -- CASUAI. K Cook ’s Corner CHOCOLATE WALNUT CAKE 2 cups sifted cake flouz 1 teaspoon baking soda. ‘>6 teaspoon salt ‘>4 cup butter 11.1 cups sugar 2 888s 1 teaspoon vanilla 2% squares (2% ounces) un- Iweetened chocolate. melted 1 oup milk 2/3 to 1 cup elleed. walnut meats Sift flour, baking soda and salt together. Cream butter, add sugar gradually and cream until light and fluffy. Add vanilla. Beat in eggs, one at a time. extremely weii. Add unsweetened chocolate which has been melted over ho“. waicr and blend. Add flour, about 1/3 cup at a time, alternately with milk; begin and and virltih flour. Mix in walnut meats with last of flour. Blend until smooth after each ad- dition but do not overheat. Grease 2 8-inch pans that are at least 2 inches deep; line with wax paper and grease the paper. Turn cake into pans and bake in a moderate (350 1".) oven for 30 minutes or - uintll done. Turn out on calm racks and do not put together with flll- ing or frost until cold. loshion with MorningSmile DOESN'T MIND “Do you like the longer dreuee women ere wearing these days?" asked the young lady. Replied the . young men: “It doesn't worry me. I've got o good mermoryl" _ CROOKED GAME f The party of tough card-players were returning home by train from the races. “1’m finished." eeld one. flinging down his hand in disgust. “The game ainlt straight." "Wot yer mean-not straight?" demanded another fiercely. 4‘! menu it's crooked." snarled the first. “You eint playing the head I dealt yer." Q. How een I remove tho odor of gasoline from elm- oleening? - AuI-leng the elothiuinthenin end wind. If that, does not remove the odor completely, hang the gor- ment in e heated room, or prose it wig: e hot iron. . Ho! oeo I invent e bruiee from discolored? A. Itieelamedthetiflebniiu ll rubbed-with buiur u coon n; the bump ooeure, it will seldom be- come discolored lenuEloriomI-U- CAUSES 0F RHVGING IN EARS. MEAD NOISES A: no many cases of tinni- tus aurium-rlnging in one ear: - are caused by disturbance of the car, most physicians refer these patients ‘e0 an ear specialist. The ear specialist usually finds by blowing open the eustachlan tube carrying air from the throat to the middle ear and advising the patient to eat less salt and salty foods. the ringing passes away iii the majority of cases. water in the tissues, and the pres- sure of this water affects the bal- ancing canals of the ear. That the disturbance is not. al- ways of a ringing nature but just noise and may have nothing to do with any oar disturbance. is stated by Dr. A. P. Seltzer in "Laryngo- scope," St, Louis. Head noises are not really a dis- ease but just symptoms, even as a cough is not a disease but a symp- tom of a number of diseases or dis- turbed condition of the body. Head noises occur in a number of abmr- mal states, yet all patients with head noises do not have abnomiai conditions. Dr. Seltzer shows that head noises accompany some ear dis- orders. But. as these herd noises are not always present. yet tlie eai disturbance is always present, the ear disturbance cannot Ie the main cause of the head noises. Head noises hiay be caused by drugs; yet these drugs do not ‘have the same action or effect in the body, such drugs as quinine aril atropine being typical examples. Yet these drugs do not cause head noises in all persons. l-lead iiolscs occur in persons who are not. only free of any ear disturbances. but free of other bodily disease. I What do we learn that is new from the above facts stated by Di‘. Seltzer? While the majority of cases oi tinnitus nurium. buzzing ears, head noises are caused by ear disturb- nnccs, particularly too much water hi the tissues adjoining the ear. there are other conditions or bod- ily ailments that also can cause head noises. This means that phy- sicians will now look for other than ear conditions before sending the patient To the ear specialist.- MENIERIYS DISEASE-BUZZING EARS Send today for Dr. Barton's helpful leaflet on Menlere’: dis- ease—rlrtglng "ears, heed noises. Just send 5 cents. coin preferred, and a. 3-cent stamp, to cover cost of handling and mailing. to The Bell Syndicate, Post Office Box 99. Station G. New York 19, N. Y., and ask for leaflet entitled ‘tlvleniersfs Disease." able kid gloves? A. Dye them e. tan color by dip- ping them in saffron water until the desired sitiede is obtained. EMBROIDERY SETS the cause of the disturbance and.‘ Salt holds v ‘BiiiTtrnR-Nur Bang» ma GUARDIAN. ~ ' form!- l 21.- _=_“ Woman's Realm/Social and Personalf.Fashions/Literature nix atb€b;:ur‘ coop cacao is all useoble. T h e re is no waste It sensible to be thrifty. 4 'r|-“'-'v~ r~7~svv Household _ Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Recipe File Inst/cad of having the ordinary scrapbook, buy c. quantity of small 3 x 5 cards at any stationery store. Each recipe or houseiliold sugges- tion can be pasted on a card and t-heii filed alphabetically. Bendiny Exercise I ‘Most housewives try f avoid stooping. But if’ one can nember lo pick up things from ic floor without bending the kn , bend- 111g only from the waist .t will on excellent exercise each time it. is done. Pie Crust The bottom crust of the pie will be nice and flaky if the pie is cool- ed on a wire rack when taken from the oven. allowing it to cool on the bottom as well as the top. 91R? Q‘ XJYR The Stars Say-- By Generlevl Kemhle X For Thursday, April 22 CIIERISHED dreams. hopes and wishes, as well as more realistic ambitions and objectives are under excellent auspices for fulfillment. This will come about by very straight-forward and direct action based on previous sound efforts and wise procedures. Industry, aagacity. nrm groundwork uiay bring important affairs to the place for quick action and sharp decisions, affecting both ‘the busi- ness and private life. Both ere sti- mulating and adventurous, wlzh fine prospect for rich rewards for clever work and probably exciting denouaments in all directions. Originality end innovation count. For the Birthday ‘Illiose iii-hose birthday it is. may have certain unexpected and ex- citing crisis to important plans and programs already -dvonced by hard work. Sound ideas developed along fresh, unique or strange tech- niques, and holding adventure. romance and surprising dernoue- mrnt. possibly with a. spectacular climax to solid and astute ground- work oii ambitious projects are forecast. ' Those uihose birthday it. is pos- sess special talents and skills. backed up by sound and practical grasp of basic elements for suc- cess and recognition. Romance and . “*1 Modern Etiquette By Roberto Lee flI-v. Q. If e young man l: engageq to be married. should he resent if if the girl's father asks him qucs. tions pertaining to his finanm; affairs, business position, and health’! A. No; the father has e perfect right to be concerned about every- thing that migilil. affect the happi- ness of his daughter. Q. Who sliouid give the ordcr to the waiter, wilicn a wot-nan u entertaining another woman at e luncheon or dinner in a restaurant f A. The hostess usually gives the order for both. . Q. Would it be all rigilitfor e ohild's mother to vivlte the in\'lta- tions to his party? A. Yen. unless the child is old enough to write tiho invitations himself. It would be nice to have him write them if he can. 1. What is wrong with this un- tence? “He is e smell man, but lie ls e good fighter at that." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of “hysteria/T 3. Which one of these words i: misspelled? Acetylene, aohievment. accumulator‘. d. What doee the WON1"1Ml'fl- otive" mean? 5. What is a word beginzilnl with pr that means “unreasonably absurd"? ANSWERS 1. Say, “but he i: a good flglilcl nevertheless." 2. Pronounce his- ter-i-a. both i'e as in ill, e as in here,‘ a as in ask unstressed. accent eecond syllable. 3. Achievement, 4. Giving or having the power of giv- ing form; plastic. "These c1496" fences date beck to the formative period of my llfe." 5. Ifreposterous. I Are vou going through {be functional ‘middle ego‘ riod uliar to vioinen 38 In 52 yrnJPDoea 53: make you suffer om hot flashes feel so nerwus. lull!" ltrung, tired? Thou no try l._\'ci|a_ l». _ Plnkhnm’: vegetable Compound lll n-hrvn Inch Iymptome. Plukham‘: Compound lul what Doctore call a aiumurliic tonic ofloeti , vrunuir... LYDIA E. Pllililllilli 8 eomrouno -- advcnture are in the offing. Iuiri’ Thii dainty little dress, PRETT l’ beauti- Yll-lly blmldlils Elie basque top and gathered skirt . . . brings the new berths. collar styling to the young. est member of the family! For added eiichantmeni, accent wnh N0. 2:91 is cut in sizes 2, 4. 6 and 8. Size 4 requires i-‘lfi yard; 35-inch 5% yards edging. DESIGN N0. 8-543 Here ere three good looking eels of embroidery motifs which may be used to decorate pillow cases or towels. Hot iron transfer pet- mn Ne, 151-543 contains six motifs with complete instructlona/ Needlework Book NoJOO 20cen‘s. Crochet Knitting Book No. 101 20 ante. To order: Send 20 cents in ooln to Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- town Guardian. shaman-wen»- Dfllfl! N0. E-SQB l Name Addrlll Province‘- Send 20c for each Pattern, which includes complew Print Your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. B; gun to 55!" 8110 You went. Include postal unit or zone number in your ed- dress. v Address Pattern Department. The Charlottetown (luardine. Pattern N0.‘ 2431 N“!!! Address Oity Province On very cold windy den. its ed- vieeble to dry clothee indocre. If clothe! ere hung outdoors end ti- lnwed to freese stiff on lines, they suffer unnecessary weer and leer sewing guide, . fNeedleclraft/ 7 1 FOR THE HOME/. 2431 SIZES z - l q . when the wind whip: them. 1943 ‘r