- ' tau-. Milk Drinks Top The Hit Parade Parly Al Your Home Probably like us, you humemak-i hollow-legged teenager so we've ors think you've heard the my pat-l lined up three milk drinks in their Ade songs just once too often. and honor. Much as they like to sip wonder why your teenagers never away at soft drinks we think seem to tire of them. Yet no mat- they'll welcome a switch to these tar how often the top ten are play- frothy concoctions. not only ap- ed. the youngsters love to get tir pealing to look at but mighty good nether. . .to repeat. the oldies (last to eat as well. And we say ciiting month's that is) and catch up with advisedly for as you know, milk the newest lfor "being" in the is a food, either combined with know is of prime importance for other ingredients or by itself. It's a teenager). There are always the the dairy food that's known as the illke UDXCS. 01' CUUFSE. bl-It W0lIldll'l- fluid food because of its protein. you rather have them expending calcium. riboflavin and vitamin A their excess energy in your own content. . .needed at any stage of rumpus room We think you would the game but especially in the pre- so we suggest an easy way to let ' twenty period. Since milk is a pop- the m whirl the popular platters.lgiver for you just the some as it enjoy their favorite fare and letvis for the youngsters whooping it loose on their uncensing line of' up in the basement, why don't you i a pink milk drink with its frothy meringue topping and cherry gar- nish. . .or you could add crushed peppermint candy instead. Anoth- er sure-fire winner. caramel hog, is one where the sauce can be made ahead of time. . .for a final blending with cream and milk. egg yolks and whites. salt and nutmeg ...and A sprinkling of the some spice on top for trim. Or make up 1! chocolate-ginger sauce and serve cocoa-ginger shakes. Just mix the sauce and milk then top with whipped cream and chopped preserved ginger. . .real cool. PINK PEPPERMINT LADY 1 cup sugar 4 cups milk 1 teaspoon peppermint extract 4 egg whites red food coloring toptional) red cherries or green minted cher- ries (optional) Combine to cup sugar in 2 cups milk and heat until all the sugar chatter at home. settle down upstairs to a party At such a party, or anytime for'milk drink of your own. . Perhaps that matter, the hit parader of the a pink peppermint lady. The menu is of utmost concern to thelyoungsters will love this dream of is dissolved. Add the remaining 2 f leaving room for topping. Beat egg whites until stiff: then grad- ually beat in remaining sugar and tint pink. Pile meringue high in each glass and garnish with I cherry. Serve with sippcr spoons or straws. Makes 4 large servings. CABAMEL N06 V: cup sugar 1 cup boiling water 3 eggs. separated 3 cups chilled milk K cup light cream dash of salt VI teaspoon nutmeg Place 6 tablespoons of the sug- ar in a pan, dissolve, and caramel- ize until golden brown. Slowly add the boiling water and stir until thick and pale lcmon in color. Beat egg whites, adding the remaining 2 tablespoons sugar. Combine the chilled caramel syrup with the milk and cream. Fold egg whites into yolks, and stir in the milk mixture, salt, and nutmeg. Serve with nutmeg sprinkled on top of each glass. Makes 6 servings. cups milk and chill. Add pepper- mint extract and tint the mixture a pale pink. Pour into glasses K. Cr! )4 taste sensation in the hot pudding mix that makes its own sauce while baking I New 4 fabulous flavours RAISIN - LEMON - CHOCOLATE - CARAMEL ADD ONLY WAER I Try o fabulous new .. -. Ill ll gx ding ll I ' . MK INA NIINUIEJ BANE IN sAM5 oxswl The famous family of this launch Mixes!" ml - orgugl Iunpiuos - Ill cuusr nix COCOA-GINGER SHAKE Id cup cocoa 2-3 cup sugar in teaspoon salt Hi to 2 teaspoons powdered ginger 1 cup hot water 4 cups chillcd milk . Pi cup heavy cream. whipped plreserved ginger, chopped toption- I l .. Mix cocoa. sugar. salt and ging- er in a saucepan. Add hot water and boil two minutes. stirring con- stantly. Chill. Add milk to cocoa- ginger sauce: mix thoroughly. Top each glass with whipped cream and chopped preserved ginger. makes 8 servings. ..........oooo-........ . A. o EBWM: gUiv8alrg.; -oooooooouooo MINI! COHICVID IV 775.19” QHOVMIIOII Even the moat ' contented babies get A bit out of sons from time to time. And even the most patient mother: sometimes get impatient trying to determine just what it in baby wnnls. But the wise mother nukes an effort to hide her irritation I her friendliest face for- ward. Attitudes Are easily trans- mitted. and more . often than not, ' this "applied psy- L ' "succeeds in bringing both mother and baby i Around in 1 hair pier frame of mind. 0 0 0 Good outing habits start with you. Introducing A variety of foods early in not only nutritionally dannble. but fcochoa bob the delights of many fastest, di ercnt textures... helps prevents "picky" outing in but yearn. u o 0 Variety union is in store for your little one with Gerber Strained Food:-all specially g the likes of tyku. There an 37 Fnntl. zwubla. Mam. Dinnan. 50!! .ooaDii.""""'i"' mldfn; Ion von, 1 co and the wm mm that foot plenum on bnbyio tongue. Enynsconbeoovuybnbyhnionn O O O In fun. A "cont-nothing" toy tbdh pond for bAby'r plAy pen. Fill A couple of stmll, plastic vegetable from with strips of bright-colored cellophane. Se- cure top: gwith fa sympathetic to the idea of leAvlng be. constructive reaction (for you) In Page 12, The Guardian Wed., April 18. 1956. ELLEN'S DIARY "In today's mail", the 193 writ- er of 'IIouse'-cleaning on the Farm.' continued "there came A large book of wall-paper samples. but Mary Ann will not have time to choose from it until ten or eleven o'clock tonight. She puts in full days at house-cleaning time." "Now, I don't object to keeping a house in decent shape but ours is over-done-once a year. Just for example. they are going to paper the front bedroom upstairs. The only people who slept in it since it was papered last were. the preacher once last winter and the tea-peddler once the summer be- fore last." "People who have never engag- ed in mixed farming may not S39 this affair from my vieWsP0'1"- We count a great deal on our eggs and butter to buy our cats and necessary clothes but meals and clothes are only of secondary im- portance just now. We eat our make-shift unappetizing meals of- ten in silence. When a conversat- ion is started. it is always turn- ed off into some phase of the work which seems so important to wom- . - Still House-Cleaning en folks and so ridiculous to me". "We don't lose time with after- dinner 'toasts' but leave the table on the installment plan. In fact I am .back in the barn before througn chewing. I feed the dairy cows all the alfalfa and chop they can Qat. I must do all the milk- ing how for several weeks- Il- thou we have a hired girl, and all e proceeds from my hay, fgrain. and labor goes into linol- leum, wail-papers etc." "A few days back I filled up a load of spring wheat to take ot town for money to buy clover seed but was informed that it was needed for the hens. It will go the same way as the cow feed. Every- thing goes to prove I was born on Friday." - "When I get started on the land, it is quite probable that clay will get into my boots. so I must take them off in ythe back oodshed. Probably by that'time they will have got to the last room - the kitchen - and meals will be ser- red as near the barn as possible. I'll eat my 'buffet luncheon” off rent-I don't look for it. Curtains and wall-paper rnAy harmonize I wlhsalel lot better than Mary Ann . "However I must not expect too much of A mortal woman. I might have done worse than take the one I did. some Acold every d of the week And All day " " the whole year around. Mary Ann is quite agreeable summer. Aut- umn, and winter. Her cleanliness is only nn,annual affalr..Just now she is over-particular about the proper arrangement of furniture, curtains. etc. but before. summer is well started everything will be topsy-turvy Again. She will leave sweeping: under the mat as for- merly nnd I may cary in All the mud my boots can accomodate. It will be like living then. By aut- umn. when so many feel sad, I will be quite happy unless I should happen to think of ap- proaching spring." Until tomorrow --Diary ---Good lthe work-bench. and climb a lad- night...... MARY HAWQRTII Alter Paying Taxes Man Learns Plans HAPPENINGS Mrs. A.W. Matheson, Crestwood Drive. is entertaining this Wed- nesday evening at bridge Don't Include Him DEAR MARY HAWORTH: It hope you can help me. This con- cerns my mother. She lives in ano- ther country. My father passed on 13 years ago, and as my mm? was far distant, I arrived late for the funeral services. My other bro- thers. who were then living there. and I came late. in a talk with my mother at the time, she led me to believe that father had willed his entire estate to me, and that I should shoulder support of the home and her. Beginlng in 1943. that I did; and was often confronted with un- necessary bills from various sour- ces, included by mother. Also I paid taxes on the estate, on the assumption that I was investing in my inheritance. Recently an older brother went to visit mother, and I heard from reliable sources that mother has signed over the place to him. Whereupon I wrote to mother, sug- gesting, in a diplomatic way. that as she is getting along in years. she should mail me the will. with the title (deed) to the property. so that I could file them with my other important papers for safe keeping. To my surprise. she didn't ans- wer promptly. as when she needs money, etc.--but she wrote event- ually and informed me that she has no papers and there is no will. Not wanting to hurt her, by say- ing things I might be sorry for. I haven't replied to her letter at all. Nor have I contributed to her support since then. In fact, I have taken a firm stand against doing anything for her. I am of I Christian nature. and have always tried to be right. and fair. And if mother has signed over the estate to some other mem- ber of the family, I feel he should assume all responsibilities. DM MAY BE INNOCENT DEAR D.M.: Because you lived a great distance away. you arriv- ed late at your father's funeral. you say. And you came late with your other brothers. who then liv- ed nearby. Why were they late? Just negligence? 0r had they been waiting en masse for you? I Am wondering if your status as absentee son. during your fath- er's last years. may have made you the favorite son. in your par- ents' lmaginlngs. in that period? As the other sons lived nearby. perhaps the pm-ents' memory was kept up-to-date, About their hum- an defects. Thus. towards the end of his life. perhaps your father fancied you the best of the lot. and talk- ed to your mother in that vein. possibly implying that he'd like to see you take care of her. and get his property in due course. SELF DAMAGING Evldenty your mother hasn't much business sense. to judge by her unnecessary bills and the be- fuddled pottern of her depend- ency. So. in giving you to under- stand that dad had left A will in your favor, perhaps she will sim- ply saying what she believed to be Dr. and Mrs. Eric Found entert- ained recently at a supper party at their residence, North River Road. ' Mrs. Kenneth A. Parker entert- ained Tuesday evening at A lup- per bridge. Rev. Edwin J. White, D.D. Ed- monton. who had been in Toronto and Montreal spent the weekend in Charlottetown with his mother, Mrs. Aubrey White. Dr. White has gone on to Smiths'Falls, Ontario, to attend the meetings in West- miuister Presbyterian Church of the Committee on Revision of the Book of Common Order. Mrs. and Mrs. William N. soil ler, Oak Park, Chicago, who have been recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Parent "Ravenwood" left Monday for their home. Mrs. Bol- ler holds a degree in horticulture from Chicago University and is well-known for her beautiful floral arrangements at Exhibitions and Flower Shows. Mrs. Boiler who belongs to the various garden soc- ieties of America spent a' morning of her visit here at the Cotton Memorial Nursery at Bunbury. She was delighted with the nur- sery and priased Mr. Snazelle highly. saying It was almost un- believable what he had accomp- anied in six years. Among those entertaining in hou- or of Mr. and Mrs. Boiler were: Dr. and Mrs. George Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. LePage. Hon. Mr. Justice George J. Tweedy and Mrs. Tweedy, and Col. and Mrs. F.I. Andrew. The Recorder which is being featured Thursday evening by Mrs. Rena Johnstone and her pupils is often referred to in his diary by Samuel Pepys. For example on April 18, 1668: "I did buy A re- corder, which I do intend to learn to play on, the sound of it being. pleasing to me." In the same year Pepys makes A quaint mention of the George in, built about 1320. He records in his dlary- of June II, 1668, his "Welcome to a silk bed and: veryygood diet, but next. day. on paying the reckoning. it was so exhorbitant that he was mad, and resolved to trouble the mistress about it and obtain something for the poor." The old George Hotel in Sails- bury now fitted with modern con- veniences. preserves the massive oak beams, Jacobean stair case. the with-drawing room. and the Courtyard garden, where Shake- speare acted when he visited the city. The George Inn is one of the oldest inns in England. Prince Ed- ward Island travellers have par- taken of its hospitality. In hear- ing the Recorder Thursday eve- ning we shall certainly be pleu- antly transported to old England. Flight-Sergeant Irwin Andrew, Mrs. Andrew, and their three sons have arrived from Clifton, Ontar- io, to spend A week with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Blair Andrews, New Glasgow. and with Mrs. And- rews' mother. Mrs. George Hoop- er, Milton. Flight-Sergeant And- rew and the boy: leave on the 25th. for Montreal, calling from JOHN n. nltwriioux caux of Kentvllle, N.S. The mar. riage will take place May 26 at the United Baptist Church, Char. lottetown. ELIZABETH E. lllncCALLUM Mr. And Mrs. George E. Mac- Callum the ----i of their daughter. Elizabeth Ethel to Mr. John Wallace Barteaux. son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace D. Bart- COOK'S CORNER an interesting portrayal of the Red Cross Blood Donors' service was presented by Miss Bessie Prowse. A "Silent Auction" was held in aid of the Lens Modesln Phillips En- dowment Fund and the Silver Jub- lice Memorial Fund of the Inter- natlon Federation. It was announced at the meet- ing that Miss Helen Yeo had been named as an alternate delegate for the Canadian Federation at the International Congress in Montreal. The club decided to contribute to in gift for the retiring president. Mrs. Hazel Laycoek of Winnipeg. The nominatlngl committee gals . n m :Miiis He en Yeo, Mrs. e- T E: Igilnbar. Miss Isabel MacDon- CHEESE DREAM ald. Miss R058 36" and M11 M811! Two double cheese sandwiches Fullerton. cut off crusts. and cut in four. Put The club agreed to provide I 'in baking dish. beat two eggs. add volunteer staff for one of the eve-I1 pt. milk. mix well. add salt and nlngs at the forthcoming Blood Donors' Clinic. and pledge cardsl for blood donors were given ont." The meeting was adjourned by the President, Miss Dorothy Cullen. Mrs. A.A. Lockhart has return- ed to her home in Summerslde after spending several weeks with members of her family in Toronto and Montreal. In Toronto she vis- ited her daughter. Mrs. A.S. Wort- fey, and Mr. Wortley and family. and her son Frank Lockhart. who is a student at the postgraduate school of Toronto University. while visiting Mr. and Mrs. R.W. Lock- hart at Dorval, Que., she had the pleasure of being present at the christening of their young son. Richard Arthur. by Rev. Percy J. Lambert in the beautiful new Strathmore United Church. Mrs. Alton Webb, 0'LeAryf has returned home after undergoing an operation in the P.E.I. Hospital. Words Of The Wise Calmneu of mind is one of the jewel: of wisdom. It is the result of llong. patient effort in self-con- tro . ' -(Jarnu Allen). pepper, paprika or onion salt. Bake in 300 oven. 1 hour. MORNING SMILE A man and two children entered a reasaurant and ordered three plates and three glasses of water. Then they produced sandwiches and began to eat. "Here". roared the "what are you doing?" "And who are you?" asked the diner. "I'm the manager." - "Good". said the man. "I was just going to send for you. Why isn't the orchestra playing?" HOUSEHOLD HINT Use wax on bamboo fishing rods to keep wrappings from fraying when wet and to guard against salt water. A thin coating of wax on all metal joints will make rods easier to assemble and take down. man nger. SOUTHAMPTON (AP) - Lon- don's Lord Mayor Cuthbert Ack- royd sailed in the liner United States Monday for an official visit to New York. . there for France. The regular monthly meetln of the Charlottetown Business and Profeulonnl Women'A Club was held on Monday. April 18. at the Charlottetown Hotel. The president Miss Dorothy Cullen wAs in the chair. The programme cornmt tea was as follows: MrA. Laura Clnpp, chairman. Miss Kay Sutherland. Mrs. Margaret Indy, Miss Mary McLennan. Miss Erma Taft, Mrs. Emma Bruce, Miss Emma Doug- an and Mn. Ruth 0Aborne. The club colors yellow and green were used on the table: and the head table had a beautiful bouquet of Innp dragons And chrynnthr mums. with tapers to match. of all sounds in the world, most The film "Prescription for Life", Se I true--without checking. first, to ob- tain the facts. Also maybe she was "PUT OUT" with your brother: at the time Maybe she felt they hadn't been peoperly dutiful. in ministering to the parenta' needs--and thus was all in your hands. In which case. her hints Ibout A will may hAve been colored (innocently) by wish- ful thlnklng. V A: for the recent rumor: And disclosures. I feel thAt you can't afford to let them upset you. If you gambled on getting on acute, that now is going to somebody also-well, let's hope you can take the "investment" loss in stride. If your has you, consciously or unwittingly. the .; to forgive And forget. Don't nurse A tonne of fnlnfy. STRAIGHT 'l'AI.Ivmt Why don't you your moth- or for I forthright talk About buri- nou mutton, to fun whAt'o nood- . K i at V , now on display At your wallpaper dulcn. go I They're compleufy wuhnblo . . . yourhornn will keep thlt Imort, Irullly-dewnfod look for yurl. 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