~. -§<-s'--.<yv_..o-f»-~wl>-r . ' ' 4 . Needlecraft 1|=0R THE HOME: FAVORITE FALL TEAM i. l Better English lllWlllhml 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "My husband would have wane. only he was too busy." 2. What is the correct pronunc- Mtion of "flsile"? 8. Which one of these words ls misspelled? Baptist. baptise, bap- tlmn, baptismal. d. What doa the word "trans- lent’ mean? I. What is a word beginning with bu that means "rustic" ? ‘ ANSWERS 1. Bay, "but he was too busy." ¢_ Pronounce aj-ll, a as in at. 1 n5 l. 111 (not a; in rile), accent first syllable. 3. Baptize. 4. Brief; fleet- fng. "Mirth is short and transient. ‘cheerfulness fixed and perman- eat.” — Addison. 5. Bucallc. hoe in Aanl hay Ivcrywoekdly — Que-Canada Network ‘ THERE'S nothing like extra-soapy Sunlight for any washing and cleaning job. Those hard-driving Sunlight suds send dirt lfllying, leave washes shiny clean and sweet-smelling, make dishes, pots and pans, woodwork gleam. And there's no hard rubbing or scrubbing needed. So get s: your dealer's and see for yourself. WHITEB var, sunuc-ur can wssues mum! !.'1'HI SEC A- PA;HING IS” Dirt-chasing Slmucur BFZIGHTEK smooth silhouette in Jumpers — princess styled with a. swooping V- -neckline in front and back. Smart theme in companion blouses - neatly collared and cuffed! (Both in one pattern). No. 3083 is cut ln sizes 12, 14, 19. 1a, 20, 36. 38 and 40. Size l6 Jumper. Zia yards 54-inch; blollSe. 25a yards 39-inch. Send 25 cents for each Pattern which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Address and style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you want. Include postal unit. or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Depdrtlllrlt The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern N0- 3083 NMYlQ Address City Province i avu§4lQ<?;-v1“"*~> “i- iwEKQEM Household g Scrapbook By _ Roberta Lee Silverware For scratched table buy a small amount of putty pow- der and put into a saucer with enough olive oil to form a paste. Then, with a. soft rag rub this paste onto the silver and polish with a. channels. The scratches will no longer be visible. silverware, Corks THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTT ET OWN ~.OELI.EII’S DIARY By An Island Farmer's Wile “The Iran is crisp!" a last night's visitor to the house across the lane remarked as he stepped aside from the beaten pathway to better gauge the prevailing tem- perature, before setting off home- ward. "No!" we sighed. "But yes". he laughed, "there's ‘frost on the pumpkins’ tonight all right!“ and added "there's no holding on-to the Summer——a fellow has to get reconciled to that!" This was l visiting farmer from towards an end of the community, one as James, much taken up with the af- fairs of his farming. Owning broad acres, fields. of stubble now and lush aftermath and pasture for flocks and herds that possess it. A quiet kindly man, experienced in every phase of his mixed farm- ing. knowing well when to plant. and reap, and save, to the best ad- vantage, for there is an art to these endeavours, mysterious to those unacquainied with farm ways, and yet as an open book to farmers who down the years have taken the rules to heart, And through it all, like many a farmer, inclined to remember the teachings and traditions of the 01d YOIRS-lhe Pioneers who gal- lantly blazed our trails. To per- haps scoff at ancient practices in the enlightenment of successive ages, and yet not to disregard "lam entirely. ‘F0 recall that if you plant except in the dark of the moon, your potatoes will all go to tops, and if you butcher a Dig for the home barrel beneath any other quarter of it, you are going direclly against a former Custom. and will live to rue it, when you find the meat shrink "dly at cooking-time‘, and a sur_ plus of grease in the pan. I-Ie will regard winds and weathers, and keep an eye to the calendar to mmme"! "We may Just get a week of this—the moon came ln on it" and to remember always that "the last quarter of the old rules the first one of the new!" Familiar with the number-leg; “is required of him and living Boil corks for five minutes to soften them. before fastening them into bottles. Then while still hot. press them into the bottles. The corks will fit tightly when cool. Poached Eggs If a tablespoonful of lemon Juice is added to the water ln which eggs are to be poached. it will make them firmer. 3' cakes of Sunlight today not as some would suspect of farm folks 1n a haphazard fashion but on the contrary always by rote and by rule. Unspoken ones perhaps, but there for the farmer to fol. 1°w vfmm Yen's beginning to YEBFS 9nd. 8nd into the next, A 200d farmer? Much is demanded °f him. so that ordinarily he lg a specialist in many a ling. we Smlled last night to overhear ames inquire m an eager voice of the visitor: "How's the foal . 401K137 ’ and the reply equally apir. "ed 310N811 modest, "well! Yea he's devewlllnk into quite a coltQ ghouldlmake a fine horse some ca’. Broad fertile acres, horses an cattle, sheep and hogs, mi; 15d "ll/HS. but—sad thought-nary a wife, nor bairn! There was "frost on the pump- kins" this morning and on the roofs and waste-gates, a white cw. "fink which was presently gone, dissolved before the rays of the sun which searched the depths of "l9 "BURY. "This will be a great day for the threshing," James oft. ered drawing on his wogkaday boots. "this, nip of frost will w“... ""118! UP- It has been a good day though rather strange for us. Due to a misery picked up in the recent spell of colder weather, Jeanie was obliged to give over some of the care of her babe to us. He is a likesble, sturdy chap, but we fancied for today somewhat ffiflvm. as are all children who mull 101180 a. mother's care. But good-content to sleep away much of his time. and when awake, granddaughter was our helpful right hand. "Now where shall we find a napkin?" We inquired of her. “Not ‘napkln'." she corrected. "'diaper'—-right there!" And then bewildered after a hasty and fruit- less search, “Where on earth have we put that other safety pin? - - - now don't you mention to your grandfather that I lost a pin when I was taking care of Mack-or he'll have a search-party out!" we laughed to her. "Lost it!" she scoffed, "you didn't lose it at all! Can't your glasses see it? It's right there in your dress!" So it was! In a familiar gesture we could have sworn was quite lost to us, we found ii fastened for convenience in the bosom of our blouse. And now frdm ‘the. old armchair: DEAR MISS DIX: instinct of any normal person to come. a wife? is your opinion? ANSWER t for a meal ticket. she in making it. acquaintances. The value of a wife runs into real ford to buy gold-digging ladies. around to parties? the rocks in matrimony. ily to marry. a ginger cake. any criticism. DEAR MISS DIX: ANSWER: DOROTHY DIX cannot reply wer problems of much alike they can't get along together? stance, who both resent criticism but both like to criticize, and they are in a perpetual row. How about it? I am a young married woman. poor and I am quite disagreeable at times and I guess I don't make life any too pleasant for my husband and he is so sweet and good to me, never says a harsh word. How can I stop being so hateful? sEPTEMBER 19. 1949 i: DOROTHYDIX SAYS- The Price Of Matrimony Musf Marriage Be Denied To Fundless Young Men? I am a young man, 23 years old, and have the marry, but am not economically independent, nor do I have any prospect of being such for years to Is a man supposed to stay single just because he can't al-IPP"! Women only marry when men have money, and I fall to as; where that makes them any better than women of the street, What J. A. C. I think there is no other such bunk as the charge that men make that women marry only for money. Perhaps there may have been some grain of truth in it in the old daya when there were no avocationa open to women but teaching and housework, and a woman had i0 marry in order to get. somebody to support her. But certainly ln these days, when any intelligent. able-bodied girl can support herself quite as likely as a husband will be able lo do it, women do not marry They go out and earn their own bread and butterpand nine times out of ten when they get married it is because they l0\'e some man well enough to give up a good job for him. And mighty often it is a poor trade, and the girl knows it when PROOF For the proof of this statement look around among your own I-Iow many girls do you know whom you even suspect of having married for money? How many men do you know who have the price to buy a wife, even if girls were willing to sell themselves? money and only rich men can af- On the contrary, don't you know dozens and dozens of girls who have married poor boys, knowing that they would have to give up n mahogany desk for a cookstove, that they would have to pinch and economize as they have not had to do when earning their own money and living at home, and knowing that they would have to go shabby and push their own perambulators and undergo all the hardships of a poor man's wife, but doing it gladly because some man was more to them than good clothes and their own pay envelopes and running So don't talk any more nonsense about girls only marrying for money. It doesn't make sense in these times when women pull their share in the boat instead of being clinging vines. DEAR MISS DIX: You say that for a man aild wife to have the same tastes, habits, etc, is the best guarantee against their going on But haven't you noticed couples who are so I know a couple, for in- CURIOUS ANSWER: Congenfllty implies that people are interested in and like the same things, not that they have the same temperament. Peo- ple who have the same temperament can rarely get along together. That is why families fly apart as soon as they can, and why ‘people seek somebody as different as possible from the members of their fam- If Jones, who is irritable and high-tempered, marries a red-headed. nervous woman, they ale as good for a stormy life as a nickel is for But if Jones marries a placid, amiable, good-natured wife he will be as happy as the day is long, and his counterpart will also get along beautifully if she gets a jolly, amiable husband. A man and woman may have the same tastes and yet have differ- ent temperaments. They may have a mutual fondness for books or the theatre or golf or good cooking and yet one be optimistic and the other pessimistic or one thin-skinned and the other able to laugh off My health is R5. T. C. T. Just snap out of it. dhut your teeth'on the hateful things you are about to say. Bite off your tongue rather than make the disagreeable speech that would hurt your husband's feelings. It ll just a matter of self-control and you can do it if you wish. ‘ly to readers; but will una- ' interest through her column. ‘Howfiznlg Dlllllllllll Q- How can I improve my com- plexlon? A. A glass of water. into which half a lemon has been squeezed. drunk every morning upon rising, is very helpful. Also form the habit of drinking water through- out the day. This will carry of! poisons that otherwise mar the com- plexion. Water that is cool. but not ice water. is the best. Q. How can I remove iodine stains? A. Try taking finely shaved white soap, moistened with cold water, spreading it over the stain. and allowing it to remain for a. few hours. Q. I-Iow can I make cake flour’! A. By adding two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch to each cup ‘of or- dinary flour. ry this tested way to relieve "Don't you think, Ellen, you should run and ee how things are now in the house person. the lane?" Until tomorrow - - - Diary - - - Good-night. - - - Modern Etiquette By lobertelaaa Q. Is the double-ring ceremony consider‘... most proper these days‘! A. Whether the man we rs a wedding ring or not is entirely a. tter of personal taste. and not. of etiquette. He may or may not LIGHTER, I Twoman who is with him. if -happens to be standing behind ihlll? ding ments in the name of the brother 0f the bride if their parents are dead’! wear a wedding ring. as he chooses, and in either event he will be perfectly proper. Q. In ii. proper for a man to step out of an elevator before ta: a A. YOlPlt will lam tllfll and avoid Plishing sgaimt some other person. Q. Is it proper to send out wed- invitetiona- and announse- av-e. -i'| S in emlsbeayield promptlytoCu curs and Oin ant emollient aeienti call Jnedicated wit vu usbla medicinal In- gredients. Buy uticuru at ruggut today! CIITIGIIIA igllllllrs-llucllllllt OIITIIIY 4 litre delicious when aervedwlthlrvitl 771a Stars Say-- D Genevieve labia Fvr Tue-flu. September 2o EXCELLENT prospects shown for quick action and shrewd I28 handling should some peculiar, strange or novel plan or idea. come up for consideration. This with des. Pllbh lfld precision (night 355mg practical technique with Qoopeyg. lion by those whose vision or ob. jective talents could widen the 800D!- or explain away difficult angles or over-idealistic endeavors, Pwmllt and sagacious attack might yield spectacular results. Change, travel. new agreements or commit- ments demand sound organisation. If It n Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is may be called upon to consider new prop- Wmolw. Plans or objectives. with mt only prompt dispatch, but sondly considered from many mg. lea. in which there are likely to be curious. exceptional or Intrlguln‘ aspects to be realistically managed in order to win support from essen. tial sources. Advice from such may clarify perplexing problems. throw. "l! "l9 llsht of ionic and reason on complex situations. Unusual profit or combinations could grow l"!!! WfiWfIl-Mwd and realistic efforts. A child born onthia day will be Vi/ly dlsu shrewd, sagacioua. intelligent. aloe /\ or ream Breakfast Treat / _ 1c nd browned _ HERE'S A RECIPE you've probably wanted for yum Pli-‘Ce oftiiiiaigd tmdFfl a mas,” A half-size cake as feather-light, melting and tender An it is reall ‘maker, ‘m as the finest you ever made. Bur. . . for sure success with ‘hi! Win you Guess?’ '° make cakes recipes like this, you must have flour with Swans Dawn's baker. Bu: do remfimlfetlion as '1 flew‘ fineness and lightness. good.’ ll for army that m.“ 5-‘ I _ _ _ _ _ ‘mmyusrcgivm memmfllltruc- Milled by Jpectalsnr lfl the making of cake flour, Swans Take ‘he mm g _ Down is made from choicest soft wheat and siftedover W" "Insure ' _ ELSE :§""8 flour before and over again until 27 times as fine as ordinary flour. x5 8Q i; K be I s own in the Swans Down is made exprmly to make better cakes. be; womlrsslzzdisllpoobifore ' ur . HALF-size vawvs Foo» "we =- fimffifiqjfgf» 1313;»? . “ "I ruin i; 111 er I lfml s o c l. l , b» , iii} w“ W" a . “Izmir. latent’: Hummus ‘ 411d hcres a point go Vneoipoon belting sod: ed Chocolate, mind thuienigccefi‘ l-fl Cakeqnakl-Szmillnber- f0! m. u - mm l. l f "llflng cu ' "Y! u: 4 Mciepsogvirsllcrtlnlnj lit-mast: Yarn! u ‘nmvno ghekuqui ‘ah’: g g ‘Wlthbutmmor Ins lord, lf,wh _ _|ltl' ‘"'"" etcla~oel~ “i? °" '°“ ‘°°* -= 1= m» 9" consider . ‘ f; _ _ . til . ~. fihffiilfilfiiilfi, iii fiii?‘..'f."..'..i‘,’§'m'“" ‘iii’. m" y?‘ 3-1.. ...‘:°..‘.-"’.’L§.“.';~e» 11w! li A ; bea ll. Add ltld n Aflldnlouneasllternetetlrwlth ma,‘ n. lflflimllfimmgfliz: "PM" ""5 “Ire zhsmeslly smooth after earl: addition. Add Vlfliiil.1\lffl into a 1 a x z. Manna”, ' inch pan or deep 9-inch layer pan. Pm should be lined on ‘"4!!! m “numm llfll m bottom with paper, then greased. Bake in moderate oven for “pa. _ 7 0501'.) Ibouf so minutes. Delicious with Butterfly Froat- ff" t» m». m, d " m. m: 76 of "Learn so Bake-You'll Love u" (sea °'°'~ Md 20¢ ‘"5" “l: book ~ "'4 I4 ' ‘°' rsonalzFashions/Literature THE MOST WONDERFUL BABY IN THE WORLD That Body Of Yours James W. Barton. M. D. IOW THE BRAIN APPETITE AIDS DIGESTION I One of the great forward steps in the treatment of patients who have been l1l_a long time Ls the effort now made by the physician and hospital staff in getting thorn to eat enough of the proper kinds of food. A patient lying in bed, n0 exercise, no outdoor a.ir, with his mind full of worries about home and family is not usually hungry yet he must eat well to gain weight and strength. In most hospitals. nurses frcrn the begin-hing of their dion Babies tralninz. are taught to make the e r Candi tray of food attractive in appear- Mad. QQPGCIOIIY f0 Foods ance. Even if the food itself ls lmer sometimes not inviting. if the tray , . .AY Mothers with dishes and cutlery is taste- _ fully arranged. the patient will be attracted, not repelled. ' - dvito- What many of us forget is that mo“, AylmlllOfiifr iilyxrzznquulily gilded rixditugliiiialixileerilt ifftlie) 0210s,: mlwl-‘ch noundhriitnéonodo‘; lord”! not properly cooked, and if the food i, guumm” , and yQgQlGbifiL _ is not linked by u...» patient: We all can“... c! W" have what is called “brain ap- petite," that is the appetite arous- ed within us by the smell of the food. the remembrance of how it tastes, its appearance to the eye. Physiologists have discovered that when We see. smell. and remember the taste of the food placed be- fore us. immediately digestive juic- es in the mouth. stomach and small intestine-saliva, gastric (stomach) juice, bile from the liver. pan- creatic juice from the pancreas — all begin to flow. so that even be- fore the food enters our mouth these digestive Juices are pouring out, ready to digest the food. This is called "brain appetite" because the brain senses-sight, smell. touch, remembrance-all are af- fected and send word to the, organs of digestion so that they pour out their juices. Ali-d these organs, stimulated to pour out extra amounts of digestive Juices, continue to pour out these juices for 45 minutes after they start to flow. 1 like to call this “a flying YOUR BABY DESERVES AYLMER QUALITY W%O 0%00<i0o4 ii Cook 's Corner w mo} SALMON PASTIES ‘..¢W OV"?/\" Morning Smile poefice-é-oo-é-tu woe-er». "I-Iave‘ you ever noticed how a 1 Wllnd 99-" 551mm! it"? 1°!‘ digesthn- W“ a‘ we des‘ woman always lowers her voice 1 toasPWn 11W!‘ crlbe a flying start in a race of any when she asks B‘ flavor-r. y‘ cup mm; kllld- "Yes. and raises it when she l hard cooked e88 And for those who are not ill. housewives would do well. if. in a:l- ditlon to cooking food the family like, they would remember how much it seems to digestion to have the brain appetite aroused. 1 tablespoon butter Salt and pepper Flake salmon and egg. Stir lion- tened flour in the milk over sloa fire. When thickened, beat in sal- mon, egg. butter, salt and pepper. Cool. Make a rich pie crust and cui the turnovers with a saucer upside- down. Wet edges with cold water Put a good tablespoon of salmon mixture on half of crust. fold over other half and press well together. Cut small slits on top, brush with milk and bake in a quick oven. 50 practical- ' Swans Down’! Vet/ii? T0011 doesn't get lti" The kiddie party was just about over and Junlofs mama was bring- lng in the desert, a heaping platter of gelatine. As she placed it on the table, it quivered and shook. Most of the youngsters shouted with de- light, but one pudgy, tow-headed boy got up and started to leave the table. ' "None of that stuff for me." he said. "It ain't dead yet.” '1!‘ “TST COAST TREE Douglas fir comprises 24 per cent of the mature trees on the British Columbia coast. n m. or... QM,‘ on“: ca...“ lg,“ $wans"Do\t,n -»----»- cmcaasoun e p