f PAGE TWO land. at." -* Who. has not found the below Will fail of it above. God's residence is next. to mine. His furniture is love. ' —Elmily Dickinso heaven Sewing Velvet Stitching up a velvet party dress challenges a seamstres‘ skill but a. few tricks from sewing centre experts simplify the task. Cut vel- vet, advise the experts so that nap runs in the same driectlon. Use n. fine needle in your sewing machine and lengthen the stitch. Don't make deep hems or rloubie velvet since this will cause fabric to stick. YD flflcta or organcLe for w- About Perfume To make perfume last longer stop petfilming your skin with it. Every time skin gets washed, you lose your perfume. But ii you Will scent cotton pellets and tuck them inside your clothes, the same dubs of perfume can be continued in service as long as there is a fragrant whiff. AGE TELLS TALEg IN FLABBY ARMS Arms can be as age-revealing as hands. As wa grow older. upper arms have a tendency to become soft and flabby, 'I‘his hammock of flesh that appears from elbow to should- er is usually s sign that muscles have weakened from insufficient use. A sudden loss of weight may also cause flesh to sag in this era. To combat flabbiness, here are invc exercises aimed at firming For the first, stand upright with arms outstretched st the sides, fists tightly clenched. Now stiffen arms and holding them taut. wave \hem up and down as energenticel- i Mo dern Etiquette Q- Is s host Ol‘ hostess aver jus- Nfled in lbPWlIvt-ly dhenging the sub- doct of conversation among guests? A. Yes, when an argument seans Imumlnent, or it is evident that the subject i5 extremely distasteful t0 I-ny of the guests. Q. How long after the death of friend. should om send s. card of ndolenee to the family? A. Wait at: least a. week before mailing the card or letter of sym- Pei-hy- Q- When a guest ls staying over- t. whose pm» a it w amen ilififlk. the guest or the hostess? g, A. The (hostess has this privilege. i . MorningSmile ‘ van! moodrrrrur. AnAtbordonian on a visltf-o a lend is Iamdou ovorstayod his It was I toward and his host thought a may hint would than the desired "D0111 YW think,” he said, “that us- wife and fondly will want you b0 with-them at Christmas?“ “Mon? ropliad the Abel-danish, "if believe you're riotht. It's rale flioctflu’ of you. r11 send fcr them." The absent-crnnded vicar stroll- lad ww-srds the village station, Where the local train had st -' lpresdvytodeputAshoutcai-nc rom the platform: "Rim, dr. run!" ‘ The vicar broke into a trot snd Ila-rived permirimg. to be hustled Into the coach. The whistle blew. ind as tho train gathered speed out. pf film station. the vicar settled himself comfortably in his seat. "I was lswky to catch it", he said with relief to s fellow-passenge . ffihen s startled Jook cane on his (we. "Good flacious", no exclaim- hd. “I don't walntlo go anywhere. I to invite the station- down m“ to bee!” a ‘ odd star. ptahlflnt that y.» A». Livingfi. Leisure t/THE WUEe-WS REALM/g ly as you can. For the second exercise, stand with arms doum at sides. Now go into a brisk routine of swinging arms over head and clapping hands together. Then let arms drop like deedweights to shoulder level bend elbow and touch shoulder with your fingertips. Relax by dropping arms down to sides. D0 this 1!) times at first and daily increase the count. New Mining Town Beauty will have priority in the new town that is being planned in Britain, especially for miners and their families. Britain's Min- ister of Town and Country Plan- ning. Lewis Silkin. has earmarked u 2,350 acre site at Easington, in the north-east of England for a town which will have a population of around 30,000 drawn mainly‘, from families living in congested settlements near the pit heads. In this first clean, well-laid out and fully equipped milling town, there will be work for the miners‘ wives and daughters. The town will be the recreational and shopping cen- ire for the whole district. IT'S NOT (IO-INCIDENCE ABOUT WEDDED HAPPINESS A man and wife who recently celebrated their 75th wedding an- niversary were asked, in custom- ary fashion, to give rules for a happy and successful marriage writes a columnist. The husband said, "1 always told hea- the truth about’. everything. Each o! us knew we could always count on the other to carry his part of the load." The wife said, among other things, "I always got up in the morning and cooked my husband a. good breakfast. The surprising thing about these “recipes for e happy marriage." that old folks give when interviewed on a wedding anniversary, is hqw much alike they are. Almost always they list s few sknple-sounding rules. In fact, they sound too simple to be impressive There's nothing new about thorn, nothing glamorous, nothing start- ling. But they should be impressive for one reason - they were tried and proxen. They worked, And a young couple, just start- ing a marriage, could do far worse than to follow some of the simple sounding rules. There were two in the list men- tioned that would dos great deal to make any marriage successful. Tell each, other the truth, And each carry his part o1 the load. Tlwt may not be s. glamorous receipo for a happy marriage. But it's a wholesome one. Cool: ’s Corner ‘ DEEP-DISH APPLE PI] d cups pared. sliced apples 1 to 5S cups sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon or ‘l; teaspoon nutmeg it teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter ‘A recipe standard pun-y Arrange layers of apples covered / r 1.4.4‘. Of Your: ‘I IallW.IarOaI.I.l. .., CANCER PREVENTION DETECTION CLINIC AND chest: of employees of to obtain an X-rey chest examin- ation free at general hospital; and cases of tuberculosis under super- vision and away from families and fellow workers. _We are familiar also with a411,. "Us clinics where the latest meth- ods of treating this old disease are in daily use. . Heart clinics have been eats» lished in practically‘ every hospital, and heart patients now are able to live cnany years by following in- structions obtained at these clinics. Today cancer i5 claiming so many men and women in the prion-e of life that same health departments are advocating a. mass survey of all men All X-rly examination o! u,‘ ind/ustrial ‘Jwlnizatioxis and am imitation to the cltizensof large communities tuberculosis institutions, have prov. ed °I Breat value in getting active and women of the cctn-m-unity who. Off-duty Fireman Fred Guest blaze. l-le roused Peter and Pats)‘ foot in the snow to neighbor's home. Q was on his way home when he saw Dennis, 11 and nine, who ran bare- are of the cancer age. This mnnns llhli- every healthy man and woman, mi Just those suspected of having cancer, would be given a thorough examination in an effort to locate the earliest possible signs or symp- tcms of cancer. When it is deni- finetly known that 1 woman in 20 beyond 40 years of age-and that 1 of l2 men past 50 years will die of concer of the stomach, it certainly would be worth-while for all (W911 and wcmen to be examined for cancer of the skmaoh and other organs of the body. In the "Journal of the American Medical Association." Dr. Leonard 3- 9015mm. Long Island, N. Y., describes the Cancer Prevention and Detection Clinic of Queens General Hospital. I-le poimts out that. the public. due to the effective educational campaign of the Aznleri- can Cancer Society, has been taught to seek medical advice at an early date and now is prepared for a preventive type of cancer control. ‘Ilhe average fcnrnily physician is not equipped to locate early cancer in apparently healthy rnen and women, and he already is busy looking after the sick. The clinic, however, is equipped to make the routine tests by examination under a. unicroscope of a_ rmall piece of tissue taken frcm any growth, gives laboratory tests, has social s e, and can follow lip patients in the home. CANCER: ITS SYMPTOMS AND TREATMENT We never should forget that cancer i; curable if discovered early. Send today for Dr. Barton's tn- formative bodklet ‘entitled “Cancer: Its spmptouns and Treatment." To obtain it just enclose 10 cents and B 3-cerit. stamp, to cover cost of hurd- ling and nailing. to The Bell Syn- dicate. in care of this newspl-PBT» Post Office Box 99. Station G. New York 19, N. Y., snd ask for your COPY. DOUBLE T!!! WEAR IDKNDON (GP) uniforms of Inndon Transport’! 40.000 drivers, conductors and conductre-w. must last a. Year instead of the usuabsix msonths. Shortages of cloth is causing delays in delivery. COMFORTABLE - -The lLIPPlI-l Sir Alexander 0 recently 11-min is up Touhglstsikingihrouahhaibonnotanddomsndeda - ~ l ' snvauxsotmmmnuslg ., any‘. ' » §E with sugar, cinnalmon or nutmeg. and salt in shallow baking dish or deep pic pan. nmd dot with butter. Roll pastry lightly to ‘A inch thiekq ness and about 1 inch larger than the dish. Fold snd out several slits with scissors. Place pastry over dish, unfold. and trfnn edge. ‘run-n under. pressing down on moistened edge of dish. Bs-iso in moderately hot oven (425 degrees F) 35 to 46 minutes. Yield: 6 liberal servings. HOT COCOA FOB I00 Thnnoupseooos (it lbhseups sugar, 1.5 teaspoon salt. 6 quarts boiling water, 10 quarts scolded milk 100 marshmallows (2 lbs.) Method: Mix cocoa. sugar and salt: add to boiling water end boil 5 nsimutns. Sosld milk, add to cocoa and best with wire whisk until frothy. Put s msnhnnsllow in esdh cup. . b not: DIIIGN NO. l!!! sthsotionl. Needlework Book $118. i‘ 1'0 02108250116 30 cents in coin to biudlawuzk Bureau, Chariot» town Guardian; _ basil! No. 1Z3 \ ' . .. "m. ...._.._. s: starvation. Bli- Alexander ' has an uneven bottcm and scratches sens Mu scraps in strips and crochet. time "xi slippers m s V017 short timonPat- “IN,” tern No. 1Z3 con-taihs complain in- N (7\4 (6 Dorothy l f Woman outside liaise DEAR MISS DIX: 1 hive 5 she has a. beautif- tire time to her claims that the ideal mother shoul home, that her about this? leave her. has her huuband there 1s nothing There may have been a time family. to expect: her to make. A popular w a. man can have. And s mother are grown. The woman who counts DEAR. MISS DIX: How much - er about her husband? suawm: Ithinkawtfafis the intimacy of married life. ness just because they are his. . A wife should glvs her husband (Continued on J’! How Can I!!! By Anna Ashley Q. How can I treat a vase that the furniture? '.' A. Out a piece of felt from an old hat or house slipper and paste it on the bottom of the vase. A thick piece of blotting paper will serve the PIITPOSO‘ if no felt is available. Q How can I make an ssh stain? A. Ml: 1 quart of boiled linseed oil. 1 mart of turpentine, 1 pint of wlbitivrlg. and 1 level tablomoonful of rsw sienna. Q. ‘How can I keep the mist of rolls and mum nnoth and bender when baking? A. Place a saucepan of boiling water in (the oven when baking. The steam will keep the crmt smooth aind fender. Biscuits that" or as her life completely. ANSWER: Yes. out to her sorrow when She will be a lucky woman if she even . '- Dix Says- Overly Devoted Wife. M03161‘ Makes Mistake In Giving tip Life Environment i sister who is married to a fins 1mm. ul home and uwo lovely children. She devotes her en- iarnily. Gods nowhere. Has no friends. And she d have no interests outside of h! husband and children should fill Don't you think she is wrong SISTER. I think your sister will find her children grow up and left to her in hcr empty house, for that drives a man out of a home as quickly and surely as havinr; a wife who has 810W?! dull from staying in it too much. when husbands end children were satisfied with a wife and mother who was nothing but a wife and moth- er, but that time is past. A wife and mother has to be a pal and com- ra-d-e end able to go all the gaits to satisfy the modern demand of a STAY-‘AT-HOME DOES FAMILY INJUSTICE Furthermore. the woman who stays put in her o\vn house and has no social contacts does her husband and children a great injustice be- cause she does not make for them a piece in the sun they have a right ife is one of the best. business assets who has kept: her friends and her place in society can open the right doors for her children when they it unto hersehf for righteousness because she has narrowed her interests down to the four wai-is of her home. and who boasts that she never goes anywhere and has given up all of her old friends. makes s_ fatal mistake. lives as full and broad s life as she can. The wise wife is the one who should a married girl tell her moth- ELIZABEIH H. guilty of s great disloyalty to her husband when she tells her mother of her husband's little faults and weaknesses, or _any of his personal peculiarities that she discovers in These should be sacred to her, and if she really loves her husband she will view these with s tender forgive- s square deal snd treat him as she would like to b0 treated. She knows very well it would make her furi- ous if her husband discussed her with his mother. Nor should a wife Page 3) Better English D.0.Wllllaus I 1. .What is Wrong with this sen- fenoellj‘! don't think he will come.” 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "oodicilml - S. Which one of these words is missp ‘led? Accimnen, accustomed, scot-mulatlon. 4. What does the word "vener- sfe" mean? 5. What is a word beginning wiGLi-atlrtmsanqhoappdovsand Auswsss l. h. “I think ha II not can." i. nonounca kod-i-sil, a as in rod, both i‘; as in it, accent first syllable. 3. Acumen. 4. To ngssd with reqaect, or with admiration and deference. "I vensrsto the man whose heart is wsnnN-Cowpsr. 5. Ratify. u 1/ the whole family mo, "what. even a word will bring back to ons's mind!" And immedi- ately he will go on to prove the assertion. It was not. a spoken word. howdvonbut the clout strik- ing an hour that brought. certain recollections back in ma this morning. '1' was mixing a desert at the time, for dinner it was to be, and wondering a little as I crumbled the crusts of bread and bits of stale cake if by conrblnlng these with milk and eggs, with sugar and raisins and spices (Jwnses likes a d " , of nutmeg on top) I were actually effect- ing a saving in making use of the discards or would it have been as well to throw them to Pard or the fowla and save "the new wins" I was about to put in with’ the old. O O O , Though Psrd is quite energetic. the food would certainly have giv- en him added strength to answer James‘ ‘call at -csttlc-wstering time. And I suppose. though only one educated along those lines could figure "out the exact time o! it, there ‘would likely be an in- crease in egg ploductio if be- stowed on the fowisWhen I chanc- ed to mention this to James he laughed snd said: "I reckon a. few crusts more wouldn't encourage our hens to over-do in regard to pioductio I"—And as I added the raisins at: last to the mixture, be- ing careful to ssvs a few for any small visitors, and smiling to my- self over the fact that. I was no nearer the answer to my question after several decades of house- keeping than at the beginning of it, the clock rang an hour and something else came to mind. O O I School-time had comet I thought then of the schools set at Island cross-roads or smug in a village or perhaps as s well remem red one. s-top a hill this represe tstlve of the heights of knowledge one would climb and the toilscme mount thereto. And in fancy I saw the scholars gather, along the wintry roads to their class- room. As I had seen those that attend ours. wend ways one day not long ago as I awaited a car at the corner. Warm and gay in winter wrappings. school, bags springing from a shoulder. sin-all and older made their ways to the school down the river road. Ex- tremely kind and good are those which attend, or it might be that we are inclined to ‘be partial when remembering them. Where in by- gone years manv wended eager or lagging steps thither. now the number is down to that of s sizable family. Definitelv more is teamed in a. school roam than lust "book-larnirf." Here it is to an extent little reaiizcd, hab- its in danortment and manners are established and ideals are formed to enable or haunt one through a life-time of ycars. Anal as I new the scholars from the community gather to classes. ‘my recollechons went back to view the (‘v-st school in my memory and bridged the years between. , l O I _ For what bright careers it may be the teachers’ privilege to set the mould. And with what emin- ent folk-to-be paipiis unwlttingiv neighbor Though at the time one might never dream it Even though "the twig" may be defin- itely bent. youm eves may rot see. or look s distance into the future. But looking back one can easily sea how this or that one out of the old class-or school- was so successful in his or her L profession. I was reading of such a one today, in s letter which reached me from a distance -cne from whom we often be!- ged harvest apples: "Saps o’Wine and " ‘- ‘- M-and ‘ “ ‘ and yarned and laughed with. light n‘ heart "in days when the earth was young." And Jook cams in to my oftfice-of-sol-‘ts. I 0* ‘Iaadlngffbo akod. I nodded. then stowed my reading in tell him-this time of an eminent clergyman. Ha listened with rs- speet though his mind might have been wandlriag. "I aipposa he's an old fallow now." ho said. “Oh not". I replied. "at least not much And Jock lulled lndullontiy. "Wall," in remarked slowly, "I llvrthatfs “Iss3”! rseali - ill n young seas out d the old days, "that would aim!’ new." In‘ 0110's mind olal- mates have a nice way of never growing old. ‘ ‘ m: em puddinl wasqslts tautafuiwhanitosm delicately brows to the tabla, but whether wasta is I011! atmoot Qillltion to Ila ‘ Until nhist. , ...__...._____. If! 1m .,,_ Tho ~ i mu older than 1+0:- your father."- rThe Stars Se -- ‘By Genevieve Ksmbla For Thursday, February 5 AN exceptionally important and possibly thrilling day is likely, in wihich dubious, complicated and dramatic events or ventures gain by patient, persistent, shrewd and far-seeing vision, in which well- orgsnized. plans end procedures may negative certain difficult and critical situations. While ambitions are high and the tlnpetus to go far is qulokened, yet unforseen eu- tanglaments or disintegration must be reckoned with and met astutely. These may involve personal rela- tions, in which all manor ofdouaes- tic, sentimental or even romantic interests have reaction on practical plans and business affairs ccrnpll- cstlng and confounding. A strict and practical course may win out. If It Is Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is, may pull difficult situations frcon du- bious. thwarting and upsetting com- plications by e. strict attention to the more rn-etter-of-fact and Endur- img objectives. drawn from rigid and dcmandtng constructive programs by the lure of exceptional factors or events, in vilhioh personal, senti- mental or. domestic affiliations may have pow-er to undermine or disrupt long-term values. A sudden event, n dramatic. gesture, or strange intervention might lure- BALLEBBVA STYLE Have the new look . . . in this bli- lpwing ballerina skirt . . soft mannered s-hlrtwaist blouse that wears ripples of frothy ruffllng on the collar and little sleeve cuffs. (Two separate patterns.) No. 2390, the blouse, is cut in sizes " 12, 14, 1s. 1a, 2o. so, as, 4o, 42. and 44. Size 36 requires 2% yards 39- inch. No. 2391. the skirt. is out m waist sizes 24. 26. 26, 30, 32 and 34. Sim 28 requires 2% yard; 38inch in the ballerina length; 2% yards 39-inch in a shorter length. ~ - Send 20o for each Pattern. which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Addresn and Style Number plainly Be sure to state sir- you wish. lncluds postal unit or zone number in your ad- dross. Address Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guardian Pattern Nos.2390 and 2391 Name Address Province City n be ‘crcqin’ i the msklngcfnchissiaveora . mm {M064 ' Home in ‘.9322. in rm w, b replaced A GOOD IRIAO That, low cos. nourishing food helps balance "16 F. a m I I v, Budget. g Bursa-Nut Bilbao “Household Scrapbook 3y Roberta Les l llhraLSpongea When s sponge has hardened fnm not being used, cover vrith cold water, to which has been added 1 teaspoon of box-ax. Then boll for about one minute. Remove the sponge. rub dry box-ax into it and ohm rinse in cold water. Worn Bod Spreads | Heavy, worn bed spreads make excellent sounding cloths. Pole them to fit tihe dining room will; and then stitoh ' around the edgy and through the center several throes. El II When separating yolks and whites of eggs, and a part of the yolk h dropped into the white, moisten s cloth with cold water. tom-lb to tin yolk snd it‘ will adhere to it. from "straight snd‘ narrow" consid- erations for s sudden and un- predictable Journey into fresh fields or by paths of lilgzh adventure or rqnance, with dire reaction on funds and more urgent objectives. The choice may be difficult and disconcerting. A child born on this day may pos- sesg a. rich endowment of skills, qualities and inclinations on: working dramatically "at sixes and sevens." fNeedlecraftf. 1 FOR TH E HUME/ ILOUSE ‘4 lllfo ‘of. Canada's iilr Ace Sculls iiivoroo. \