n‘ _ 3 I ‘can’: i r Also black, fashion. ls In The in At rue FASHION snore: There's a bright future for the girl who picks a Shortie Coat to round out her wardrobe. lnartast styles la all the bright new shades for Spring. Look over our complete stock,‘ the very latest in THE FASHION. suoeee -v.\. wa wxpocvrcxv~ocvw f/ z. g’! "THE STORE THAT FASHION BUILT" § Phone 55 Great George St. g - | I Iy Genevieve viable n} Wednesday, sum. u “O. When livingln an. apart- ment building where a doorman which me thank him each time? not? A courteous istlc and constructive most certainly indicates good breeding on your part. Q. When a woman has men serves sincere appreciation. a train, and some man offers to exchange with her. would rt be all is right for her to accept? A. Yes. and such a. courtesy de- Rained. %4.;. esfM/Wd/A/ l}; 7540/2/ This Stainless o... sarratad adaa. riveted handle. BREAD gluaadaiba: Oatyoarlspllsaad The Stars Say-- Q. What should the host do unable to secure a lower berth on while the hostess is receiving? A. The principal duty of the h-ixt to be alert. and see that every me o; the 8mm 15 min‘ mg". ergy, initiative, industry and the iwidaaomlnl Iadsolassaiifadmeil-llghqual» hy, aaay-co-daao sralnless noel Ibda with riveted handle made of durable, ’ It's diablggsscbargalain y“ —aspacialliap.l yonsforoaly69dwhaayoubui abagoflasal emotional, creative and. idealistic. Hard work Ln putting over ambl- tious objectives could bee: rich fruits, with promise of stability and long-range security and rewards. For the Birthday Those whose biruvrlay it ls are on the verge of a promising and A PARTICULARLY lively “d productive year. in which energy, initiative and an adventurous and °“‘"P"-‘1“I “Y i‘ *°'°°"" "1 bold spirit are sustained by dili- ‘ spirits. morale and “m” u“ 1°“ ""7 “"9 °n° “m” ideals as well, come to the front a“ or leaves’ is ll necessary lo canine t“ ‘and’ md Poam" *7“ tions and aspirations have gence, industry, sound ideas and wise purpose, in wihlch the emo- ‘PB-Pl. Prado” Th“ ml‘ ‘ml? °n Yell‘ giving substance and stability to A- Whv line but "mm: you" costs momma. mid sustained by the exceptional il. n. “h” “m” l” idealistic or con- spicuously creative. Service, intui- tioin, “hunches" may gratify. A child born on this day may have a. well-rounded character end high ideals but is sustained by en- long-range view and devotion. GUARANTEED POI A LIIETIMI Tasmanian-s adgegaarao- coco-bolo- rs ole: — and it's Ilour. There's rad value. And there's seal value in legal Flour, mo. ‘ihousands ofbakiag-wlse house- Q‘, wivasueanmiaingelsmiheyrely aa in uowsryiag fineness. i! nowy whiteness an areas-van. ’ Ybqeeawlllladaeoelselaazsoasaysoweakwitluee aoadamnly peodueflveoffllhfllnpfijiteed, calms. dalielausdaflcarha. nasse-misaiupi llklellfmmyfildhldtlouoothavaalnpplyd ahhlnad aakhlnaosanueoaaforyou) d uniformly dealer. nlsnlawlnflllan unsseorsranv. uumn lliallsaalaisshuu. ma. (Antonina. m illlllli Dorothy Dix Says- Ellen 's Diary IyaaIlaadIaraurbWlll Mother (dad's whose breast is she did it. knew what to do for minor juvenile own skins- union hours and no 40-hour week. babies trod on each others heels. own hands she raised her children might have good clothes. Hungry put that they might travel. "She never did any-thing." yet "She never did anything." yet pinched pennies and denied herself “She never did anything." No 11...: Body- {f Cf Yours ' Jasnea w. u. o. PRESSU/BE ELASTIC BANDAGES IN CHRONIC BHEUMIATISM We have been reading about early rising after operations and the great benefit to tihe general health and morale of the patient bybeimaailowedtobeoahisfeet for a few minutes the ssime day us the operation. These benefits are due to the better circulation of the blood and the prevention of ad- hesion; and stiffness. As students wa were taught that in cases of dwelling of a joint from rheumatism, the joint should be kept at absolute rest until all the swelling disappeared. Today some patients are told to rest the joint not only until tho swelling disap- pears but for some time after- wards, and other patients are told to begin moving the joint gently even when swelling is still present. Dr. Otto Meyer in “Rheumatism” devoted to the clinical aspects and treatment of all rheumatic disord- ers. states that rheumatic (arith- ritic) patients often receive am- fllctlng advice concerning rest and exercise. Scme are told to stay in bed until the joint inflammation subsides. Others are warned to keep the joints moving or they will become fixed 1t is generally agreed among physicians that where the ‘woma- tiem is causing severe pain and the joint o!‘ joints are swollen, cam- piote rest is necessary. As the case gradually improves, cantluuaflui of absolute rest may cause wasting of the muscles. eentraatsiira. and arikylosia (complete loss of move- ment.) "Some patients, aver-con- scientious about rest or fear of pain, may rest unduly and may learn that the prim of too much comfort is crippledoan." It is the movement of the mul- cles that brings the blood back to the heart through the veins. If the blood is mt moved along the veins by the movement of cnuedea. there is congestion about the joints. wastes are not removed, and the condition became! chronic. 'I'his congestion of the veins not only affects the joints. but also all the tissues of the body suffer for lack of fresh or oxygenated ‘blood. Dr. Meyer states that. instead o! rest in bed, rhaunasim are helped by elastic pressure bandages which help the circulation: and comfort the pat- ientaahewalksaroinidinstesdo! remaining lo bed. no is our-ed IOOBI. ‘ t . Home silk. rayons and woels are spotted by water. ‘lb remove sueii spots dampen the entire malarial evenly, either by Qonglug with clean wstar orjw shaking in tits mun from a briskly boiling lau- httia. Than press while still damp. lei-stoning with‘ the fingernail ll’ between the hands vrfli sometimes not even a Saturday afternoon off. do in a poor household where there were no servants and where the 4 Gift To Man ii Ex I Fniilf """°iiii‘i‘l'i'.'i.i°'ii ...°.'i".i';‘i..." n wide and mother. who says that she has gotten comfort and strength out of reading and rereading a column I wrote many- m"? years ago. asks if I will reprint it because. she says, mothers and wives haven't changed. They are still that-away. The article is about an oi woman, who, when selected to be paid some. especial honor in her com- munity. exclalmed: "Who, me? Why. 1V6 done anything. .1‘ve just brought up a houselui o! kids to be decent men and women. That's all. “She never did anythins." Yet 81W W" B 5°14“! who fought her battles as bravely as any general HBVO!‘ covered with medals and whose deeds live in song and story‘ Eisht times she faced death through torture that has became the synonym for suffering to bring her children into the world. Her life was always a liand-to-hand fight with poverty and ill health and discourasement. but she never once ran up the white flag. “She never dild anything," yet she was a. financier who would have been Secretary of the Treasury if she had gotten her just deserts. Bal- ancing the budget would have been no trick at all compared to spread- ing her husband's thin pay envelope over the needs of a. big family. Yet VERSATEI.’ EXPERT ‘She never did anything." yet she was a jack of all trades and good at them all. She was a judge who had to use the wisdom of Solomon in settling the disputes between her children. She was a doctor who ills and who could kiss a bump and make it well. She was a nurse whose hands had healing in their touch. and who could go without food or steep or rest while a sick child clung :0 her who would only be quiet in Mother's arms. “She never did anything." yet she was the character builder whose WOTk made the kind of men and women who are the glory of our coun- fry. She had. rock-bottom principles and she founded her children on Them. She had. high ideals that she always held before her sons‘ and daughters’ eyes. and she bred in them honor and honesty and decency until these qualities became as much a part of her youngsters as their “She never did anything.” yet aha was a day laborer who had no She had no holidays, no vacations. For there was always so much to "She never did anything," yet she was s. heroine because with her above herself and opened doors for them which would be forever closed to her. She went shabby that they that they might be fed. She stayed she cooked in the kitchen the good food on which her children entertained their friends in the parlor. She sat up of nights making the pretty dresses in which her lovely daugh- ters would dance at parties, and washing the shirts so that her boys would be spick and span and efficignt looking when they went to WOTR. for years and years she slaved and even the medical attention that she knew she needed. that her sons and daughters might have the educa- tion that would forever put them out of her class. 0f course, not. She was just Mom, and even her children never knew how greet she was. '\ KART 5% g Household Scrapbook ly Roberta Lea Alire Screen ‘lb snake en attractive fire screen form the frame work out oi heavy‘ picture molding. into which lSl placed a sheet o! glass m; the PlneL This will afford protection frtzu the heat and at the some time will give the pleasure of see. ing the fire. laelpa Illa Plating the picture of the dish on the reverse side of the recipe card. whenever possible, makes a imet attractive recipe flle; and you are not liable to forget the sugges- bl‘? The ‘corner woman” said ‘Add tell your mother ‘Thank you‘, ‘till she's better paid" and she turn- ed back td her weaving, dismissing ma with s stern "and mind that you shut that door —there's so many corner brats traipesing a- round. Their mothers don't seem to know enough to keep them home!" She was an unbemling sour-vlsagcd creature and 1 found it difficult to understand why the folks in the neighborhood thought so well of her. I remember I rny- seif being infinitely relieved when at last she moved away from The Island and a woman who loved children and was as happy "as the day was long" with them came to live there. Strangely enough, for childhood memories hold un- fathomable depths. when it was my privilege recently to step into that self-same room though garl- fied now. bare rafters hidden be- hind pretty wails and the "room well, and tastefully furnished in a corner of it over by s. udncimv- and with n shiver unnoticed ‘ly my hostess, I saw a woman dour and forbidding to small ones like I had been look up at me from a cumbersome loom. O O O And extra work was thrust upon our farmers this morning because of yesterday's storm. Drlfts that the winds had heaped against doors allowing scant space for entry then, were cleared in a spirited shovel- ling which fairly hid the work- ers from view. James himself int- er had to dig out the concealed mull box at lane's end. Presently streamieta will meander there; the dogwood will spread early leaves and the robin-birds, Jamie end I enjoy, will make love in the alders beside. Rob said "there's quite a depth of snow dovm at the gate --there's not a sign at all of the mailbox." He had come then fetch- ing. with the Hurry mare and sleigh, a. crate which moves be- tween the twc farms-one which is used for the weighing of hogs. On a morning like this when such a prospect was in sight. James wondered about it. "Yes" he said at breakfast "I bet you it's in at Rob's", and I suspect Rob often looks for it there to find that when he ivants it "its out home" at Alder-lea. And sometimes it trips to Mr. B.‘s and I believe as well to the house on the hill, for interested farmers like to make note of the gains in weight of certain members of their herds. O O O With Rob's arrival our men had stopped work to attend to the weighing in a pen in, the piggery. There a shoat ivltli a roguish twinkle in his eye, familiar with this weight-taking over a period cf months stepped nonchalantly into the crate. There was a iveigh- ing and a quick subtracting of the confusing number that is‘ the weight of the container and then they guessed "he'll stand over ‘till the next market day all riglii.‘ The men had come from the labor of carrying turnips to the cattle. from the cellar of this house they must be taken now snd when I paused a moment in my wood- getting to watch James weiglcd down by the heaw baskets I said "Won't it be a blessing when they're all done?" James dropped the baskets. “Ellenl" he advised me sterrily "don't say that. Say instead it's a blessing that we have them to feed. Theresnothing to equal a daily supply of turnips to keep cattle thrifty and doing well. We're very fortunate indeed ho have them." “But look at the i these obi-auto oases of m‘ s stiff brush oiqrubblng thrcioth- timia for gamiabings. l“ y,“ work of it each day" I pointed out "I should sell them and buy Th, "w W13; o; m e“ will no; grains." "Anyone that's frightened bgwmg dry 1g 1g, jg covered with oi a bit of wank, Ellen shouldn't mug q- “is; be farming" he returned "ano as for buying grain -none of them will take the place af the roots" and with a deep breath he was off to catch up with Jock similar- ly laden with baskets. O O O "I aw a Blue Jay in the orchard apellsgwlesliedouttoltnb 1, who h qmgym; this “u. when lfa came this morning. “A tonne? "when did you rayon-set Blue Jay, woman, in this frost? m‘ “t?” 2. What is the correct ,_ J-~ one o ass “gmwlililli woods a 5 M ' mild? Plagiarism, plsuaihiia, . urn!” , p . '5 er Elish H.0- Williams 4. What does the word “eyno- Iure" mean! WHERE‘! e. What is a word beeinnine rim srllhman: "vniieh would with Id that mew! "l0 revwve you rather be in, Pat-en explosion gently. but serially"? or a collision?" ' Second ditto: "In a collision. be- INIWIII esuae in a collision there yes are, but in an explosion, where are L"Whara did youflnd thotyes"? hat" fa preferred. 2. Pronounce sb-orij-i-nel. a sa in at. o u in obey, both 1's asin it. e as in ma. principal accent on third syllable: ward much later than his usual 3. Plaintiff. 4. A center of attrac- aisppartime. A friend of the family tion. (Pronounce si-rio-etioor, i as who happened to meet him said: in ebb, oo as in book. accent first "Why. Tommy, aren't you afraid syllable.) "The actress was the you will belate for supper?" oymenua of all eyes." l. Admon- "Nope," replied T012111 "I've got the meet." . MADE BUR! Tontny was meanda ing homa- l Heller's Fsvalrila- _ Far Golgi: all Golds lie unrly 80 years Dr. Wood's Norway-Pine lyrup has been a favourite remedy for coughs m5. . coida. Mothers everywhere know that children like its piaanlit taste and will take it without fuss or n; main adieiual proplrllu o! u» pine and char‘; barks, sTiucauy combined you. other cold-combating Illfletllbfltl. It liaipa to loosen phlDlIl-lld mucus, soothe irritated membranes, aisutiissirpssngcsaudnmulstoaiisbromhil-l vs!"- aae m. Wood's Norway Pins Syrup at your favourite drug store erature emu is A ouAinv roan When Bread is on the Table the Meal is Ready GET ISLAND MlID BREAD TODAY WHITE - WHOLE WHEAT - IAISIN - HOVIS “mm-s- ::i':.~:i.\:.i.v.r \ STEWART BAKERIES LTll. " Cook ’s Corner g RHUBARB CREAM PIE 1 tablespoon butter 2 cups diced rhubarb iii cups sugar 2 tablespoons vu tamll 2 eggs, separated 14 cup heavy cream ‘>6 teaspoon salt 1 baked pie shell METHOD: Melt the butter. add the rhubarb and 1 cup of the sugar. Cook slowly for about 10 minutes or until the rhubarb is lender. Combine the reunaiulng lt-cirp sugar with the com starch, the well beaten eggs yolks. the heavy cream and the salt. Add this to the fruit mixture and cook until this is thick (about 3 minutes). Pour the mixture into s. baked pie shell and allow to cool. Then top with s meringue made by b_it- ing the egg whites until stiff, but Ml dry. dmd then folding in 4 tablespoons sugar. Bake in a. mod- erately slow oven (325 dag. F.) for about 12 to 15 minutes, or untfl the meringue is delicately browned Why he must be frozen there." “But he was flying" I replied watching the snow fall in a gentle slide from a sunny roof "and this isrvt frosty. it's only invigorating. And I noticed the fire sputtering just‘ now when I added a stick." “Meaning-wliut?" he asked. ‘A thaw!" I replied. "A thaw!" he repeated “yes" he agreed chuckling “it does feel like a thaw —1'm not saying we couldn't do with one or at least with some milder weather" . . . , James has been lane. He returns now to say "It's pretty frosty again ‘—but a white frost. The Radio says ‘milder weather tomorrow!" ' Until tomorrow - Diary -Good- night. llllhlllii irllFi? A ll ' tnrfitmu.” g through lbs fouotlaual 33 W 53 Yrs.) Doaa rubs you solar atrunrttirld? herb: t lli Pinkhahfa vegetable Com r’ d.’ J5...‘ hi‘? hI-izwxhizlgnisolzinnhgia-Compouud LYDIA E. PIIIKIIIIWS g$ WOIIDIIIUL "All IIIKI It's both pretty and , " ‘ . . . this fresh-looking frock com- bining. the comfort. of brief cap sleeves. the eooveniauea of big patch poitats. For a flna finishing touch . . . tighten with braid! Nozzfliaeistinllsealzltll. 18.30.30.$.40.fl.44.@oasud4l. sisa 36 requires 3% yards 36-inch. includes eaimpleta sawing guide. Print your Name, Murals . and Style Number plainly. Ba aura to atata else you want. Include postal unit or Iona number 1p your ad- dflfl. O Adtoss Pattern Dapalrtsnantflriia Cli-HONQQOIII Guardian. v Pattern No. 2242 NEG visiting at the house across the. Bo You Suffer FROM A I Weak” Back. Does sitting in a draft or in a da chill room sometimes bring on an alga: mg afzk? Many people sa tlicvgej "mld' in the back-or lll l ie kidiii- —eo easily. At such times it's good ' lmow about the _quick_rclief of Dt. Chase's Kidne '-Liver_Pills. Remember, qth kidneys and iii-g must filter out impurities from your bloodstream. So if you _fecl tired worn-out, headachg —— with painllll joints and achin _ack—look to balls your kidneys an liver. Thais wily Canadians have been relying on Di’. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills for ovfl" tern a chance to wail; rrgoerly. ways keep Dr. Chase's] Tki ney-Liver Pile handy-especialfy. durin damp chilly weather. '1 he uanfs‘ “Dr. haee ' is your assurance. ‘I I '5. ’\"< . How cl... 1 urj B! Anne Ashley I make cues Q. How can tty? A, Mix whiting and aiiiknony sulphide (the latter finely powder- ed) with soluble gloss. It is clsiui- ed that after hardening. this putty can be polished with a bunilshing agate. Q. How cam I remove rust from steel? A. Rub with linseed oil and sl- iow it to soak for several days. Wipe off, then polish vrlih powder- ed. ulisliacked lime until llie rust is loosened. Q. How can I retain the ilavos cvf spitxs? A. Always keep spices in tight- ly-closed cam or boxes. as tht! will quickly lose their flavorsif left in open receptacles. " mnhrasrbffilif so earn I excess oisriic Advil lend 30c fcc asoh an». sum» l/Needlecrafl/ IFOR THE HOME/