Living é? Leisure t ' tT he Woman's Realm QUIET mn- parts of machinery and mimitions. i- Tbey also find p, multitude of jobs Why do we so fraw day to day in the Army machine , m- With moisy haste upon our way? dromes and a d O ships. We push and jostle. tread un on toes. Our careless speech thinking flows. Canada. In 1N0 Canada. waned The God who made us does not from the United States. Ne ound- waste land, Australia. New Zealand and His enerBY in fruitless haste- the Netherlands. over teoooooo The calm of all the deep Unseen poundg, with m; ma”, o; m, ls His, and theirs on Him who lean., war. the“ “mm” w‘ m“ up T110 X1000. however. has min? tknes over. WALL SPIC. SPAN MEANS FBI- QUENT CLEAN-UP JOBS Why, therefore. do we crowd and mum,“ crush? Lord, give us of thy holy hush— The gr: cs to just go quietly. The beauty Thou hast made to Keeping the rooms of the house fresh and bright these days Ls a task for the busy housewife. who has Red Cross work and other war jobs to keep her going from morn- ing till night. rte-decorating bills which may families can ill-afford see: To be deaf sometimes. and some- times blin And often silent; always kind; To, take the time and gentle thought To love each other ns we ought; To have a boundless charity Pcr others’ fault and frailty- G-ant u: unhurried hearts. and pa" be avoided l; walls are cleaned SW09 - reauently. This i t diifi i That we may go on quiet feet. ‘ a; i; m“ seem s‘ 1112,56‘ wt —Jessie Findlay Brown. in ‘Up painted o, Pam,“ wan! "_ 931mm‘! M°°n-" "Hire Peaular dusting if dirt is not ~— i h m i b dd nmrs 0N aTmvETTa urittuicosrriuili‘ l... egnlghclge llgllslkllil upward nd th l t t '. A busines executive does not quenuy? l; so’: gal}: ¥glrslgdfrien rise when a member of his staff n bag We, a broom helps m get enters his office. or an applicant for s job. He does rise. however. when a feminine visitor enters his office, 3nd remains standing until she is seated, inst as he would in the work done more quickly and easily. EXTRA ENERG Y social usage. When she leaves he gt ‘l i-scorts her to the office door. m.xS§§n§§§"1w°§§f§§d§,‘§m,f‘“§§;‘§ denlng. cycling or walking. insteirl of driving —needs to be met with rvirn enerwv-nrorlucinir foods. Can- R441‘: Official ‘Food R111... Sun, nlv the varri stick bv whirl‘ mmis "an be measured and their nutri- tional value rated. IRONTNG TIP OLD FLOTl-IES "AV" "VRTIIER USE AS WAR WIPERS "Any rags today?" It isn't lust the iunkman. it's Canada csilline. Rags are needed. everywhere now that the whefils of ivnr ore turn- ing so quickly on land and sea and in the air. Rags of all kinds. particular-iv (M 51...", mew 0094 (sever; (m. , rotten ones. are needed as winers lrcmlqq bnqrds‘ “stead "'1- taé-tw, for the engines or planes used to i: n1.” m, Page can h, hémzzgd irain R. C A. F‘. fliers. Thr-v are and a drewsfrjnz Hm Qhfluwh ‘t also needed in huge nuantities to y; will be eflsler to remow m‘, clean nil frrm th~ marhinerv in the onvgr yo, washing and it Wm ‘as. great war plants turning out muni- longer. tforis arid all kinds of war sup. plies . 1, _ . Besides wipers. revs ye used n: AUNDRY "ENS ADVICE ._,J. FATHER JililllS iiiiililliil Mlle In Cnudq MORE 312m it helps 2 vtais- . u i- -;..":*..“:.:: 1' ‘ ; , as w" ‘ml’ v why ° a to 255.‘, 1. 0 f0 lam“ c. , (old. l “(es esiziffimer will wear better if the collars and cuffs are turned up and thcrcuohiv soaped along the folds before being placed in the tub or washing ma- chine for laundering. RENEW INSULATION Save coal by trapping the heat in furnace and pipes. Replace faulty insulation. Water and metal are 5110b 800d heat conductors fuel will be wasted unless these a‘ wranoinz for delicate milled Laundry experts 55y that Shh-ts Darts are well insulated. 0 A famous test laboratory recently discovered something you should know about stockings! Some stockings were rubbed with cake soap, some washed with new, improved Lux. Then they were pulled and strained as in everyday wear. These tests proved that washing with Lux cur down runs over 50% in rayon stockings. Similar results with cotton stockings, tool Dipping in Lux saves stocking e-l-a-s-t-i-c-i-t-y— that's why threads won't pop into runs so easily. join the Lux Daily Dippers and save your precious stockings, aoo. Dip them in Lu: every nigliu Dry rayon: thoroughly. , 7WR/F7 729$ WAIIIINO . . I Dip after each wearln]. Turn inside out-aqueous lukewarm. rich Luz suds through hose. Don't nu bot water- it may fade the colour. Don’: rub with cake amp-bolas may appear. llNllNO . . . Rinse thoroughly in lukewarm water. Do not wring or twist. Roll in Turkish towel to remove excess mola- mre. Unmll immediately. Shake out folds and wrlaklea. DIVING . . . Dry indoors. Hang our smooth rod-nave: oa radiator. Dry rayon ‘ ' thoroughly. QONIIIVAIION IIINTI . . . Buy stockings that an largo enough and the right len . Get at least two pain of acme colon: and wear alternate y. In washing, remove finger rings that may catch threads. Keep seams straight when wearing. The mllden, acfeat LUX ever medal E1, bigger package, more for your money! And remember, the u ll: la uneven better-m i a LEI/Iii nopuo z Social and Personal that I Oorothy Dirt Says- MAN. IN LOVE EAGER TOTALK ' Frequent Visits To our Not Sufficient To Believe Lad Has Serious Intentions nuaroissorx-r an. -AlI0$Q\NO unwell" a. swell fellow who has alwauis mini-y nice to He as always NW in touch withmeaudainoe ebaabeeainthearmynehaswrittentome regularly and come to ses me whenever he came home on a furloillb. During allthiatimehehal for me. H! hasn't mentioned dei hll hinted several times. I have tr tha is Ifiltliillgjglllfi o in love with - do. altbomh I am not sure Do you think that he probably considers ms l8 list another friend and is just trying to be nice to me? Or does he love m What shall I do? He is the kind of man who doesn't like to rue rushed or chased. DESPERATELY 1N DOVE. MAN IN LOVE SHOWS FEELINGS . ANSWER-Well, my dear, about the only thing that is certain about a. man in love matters is that as long as he keeps silent on the state of his affections his attentions an without intentions He isn't in love with you. He just likes you and thinks you are a nice. pleasant girl friend. He has no idea of pollpxiln! uestion. and when he thinks about marriage it is of something at is a sang. long way oft and that maybe he will escape, after all. when a man is really in love he doesn't hide his feelings. break out on him like the measles and he can't conceal them. Nor he keep silent on the subject. e babbles about it even to he The)’ does I-I strap ers, and he is never weary of tel everybody who will iisten how beautiful an marvelous and wonderful‘ girl is. And especiall he tells the girl. erself, that no man ever loved as he does, and he is full of lans for the future. drawing pictures of the bungalow that is oing t0 e a Heaven on earth for the two of them,_ figuring out how t ey 08-h save monzv by getting married on nothing a. year. Don't delude yourself into believ that a man is in love with you because he comes to see you occasional y; no. not even if he comes seven davs a week. He may be enamored of our mother's cooking, or it {nay be that you are or‘. company. or that e is lonesome and has .. 0 else to go. An hing else is Just wishful thinking on your part. And don't be ieve that the reason a man doesn't propose to you is because he is slzv. or something. No man was ever too bashful to ask for what b9 wants. Admittedly when a girl is in love with a man and doesn't know how he feels about her, she in a difficult position. She doesn't snow whe- ther m go out and try to ab him arid drag him to the altar before he knows what is happening him. or to wait for him to show a little speed in his wooin . if such there be Each course of action is frousht with danger. and t e bestthe poor girl can co is to try to psychuanalyze her sirbleci and find out as nearly as she can whether he belongs to the hunter o. the hunted type of man. Mom what you say. I should judge that your boy friend is u. onap who would like to do his own picking. and tha nothing would scare him off quicker than for a girl to show that she had designs upon him. If that is the case. keep your letters to the merel friend y tempo that they have been in. Don't warm them up by a sing e degree. But you might. without exciting his suspicions. write allttle ottener lZB.V.B.mu5lI\i-LR08- sipv chronicles that would leave him thinking what an interesting com- paruunuyou woulc. be for a life term. and that would keep 5'01! fresh 1h hi! mind the time. B it. as you want him. don't write him love letters. Sit on your hands when ‘you feel that you are getting sentimental and are likely to let V0111‘ emotions overflow on to paper. At the first hint of that he is 0f!» He is on his guard. '1he more you can make a man of‘ his type lee] that vou can take him or leave him. the more apt he is to you. Don throw YOUR" 09 any men's head. especially s soldier's. They fflfih 0008MB in the Hm!‘- . t m“ “h”? "t‘.."...t‘“°'i‘°i..ti'.fefi'h.‘l'ii Fiilhilfiié? £3‘ hvw years. a ave ou e_ s - other woman and that he is about to lose his égb because of it. Mother °.’...““.'...‘.."°““'i..i".~ii.%i' ‘Wt...é'“%.'ii%‘i°‘§i.‘2.“$.°‘..m“° e as er. a o . manager, and she has denied herself irumy .0! the thlnGB B110 019d l" order to get them where they are. Would it be wiser and kinder for one of its daughters to tell her of how Father is treating her. or should we have a talk with him first We know that he is verv much afraid of her finding out about it because he has asked us not to tell her. M330- L- 1"- PLAIN TALK MAI SMOOTH FATHER'S PATH ANSWER~By all means have e plain talk with you say anything to your Mother. Perhaps if vou ma e him realize that you are not going to protect him in his double dealings any longer. it will put the fear of God in him and he will behave himself. Probably he is still fond of your Mother in his way and admires B110 respects her and doesn't went her to r udiate him and dlvvrce hi-m- N"? does he want to have his good. comfor mt children alienated from him. He is just one of the foolish men who ti: t they can st" without being found out, and that thev can dance wit 0“ ever having to pay the piper. When he Ls called upon to settle the score. he may decide to go back to home and Mother. If he dour-rt. of course you have no alternative but to tell you!‘ Mother. but let nei- live in her fool's mums u ions as the can. em m mx-i h our-lg ueuFiter who is iust starting off to cglege 3%: has been This? ‘with a bov for two years and they in- 51st, upon getting engaged I oppose it. not because I object to the b0y. but because I think she should kee herself free to have a 300d “m9 and get. acquainted with many other l . What do you think MOTHER. WER- uii agreewith The iriisatth 0f 11?: sso is the! liovyfor that. meta: Thfill‘: tutu choc day and they should keep themselves free to change .he r , frlelifJ with their shifting ideals. The . whom a Bill la 0TB h this your, she. might not have on a bet next year. She will navehost a‘ taste for him as completely as she has for all-day 500R" and 0 °°°" sodas. formative time day t0 water to cover- Drain well. runove stones. and out prunes in small pieces. Sift the white flour, men. sure, it mix and sift the flour. salt, and baking powder, twice. Add graham flour sugar and nuts. with runes, and mix lihtly with a l llaralng Sails 110N581‘ ork- Beat eggs unt light. add- __i. . in; milk and orange juice. Blend The infants‘ school teacher was the two mixtures well. Pour into greased and floured loaf pan. and and set aside for 15 minutes. Bake in e. moderate oven ~65!) degreee, for about 1 hour. GINGER. 000K118 One cup dark minutes. let stand until cool. dissolve 1 teaspoon baking soda in buttoning-up the ooet of the five- years old. u "Did momma hook this coat? she asked. "H!!! to falten f-N “Si; miss.‘ came the reply- “lbs bought it!” AN swirwsnii‘"vrsnoa. An old lady, on being told thpt a visitor was a vegetarian. 3 tlbllipoons boilinl water. i table- ed. "mam aue o’ thae new M011 ainser. flour enough to roil religions I d y?" B10017. Roll thin. While those IN t IOIT 000KB! laughing the old bod!’ 1 W? llWfl-Qflllll‘ 1 1-2 cup; of I118". I eggs. 1-2 cup sour milk. g. lfilllioonful soda. and as little flour asflnwill xvii them out. no not m1] s devil! arrived and on being told the joke she laughed so heartily that her mother became nettled and map- ped, "I question very much if ye ken yersel what it means." The daughter controlled her mirth and said’ "Of course I ken: it’| an nuld sodgerl" IRE COOKS CGWWR PBUNI BREAD D0 YOU l-IATE T0 GET UP in llie IMIIIIIG? m...- mu be mill dear-e llelllrtgilreaedllullflzlltpleéllzllljetui . u t . 153%.: lrlmallvpleal their beat. ABOUT BEAUTIFUL" SWEETHEART ur Father before a E3??? Egzlizéiéé-E ll; i=2 it i’ Egiigfl: needing two weeks. the manne- merit much detach the followlnl ration coupons for each full two weeks of’ esidence, one sugar coupon. one tea or coffee 000F011. two butter coupons. four meat cou- pons and one preserves 00119011. Q. I will have 16 men tor thresh- for three meals which is 45 meals altogether. I find all the extra. sugar and meat one pound of sugar pounds of meat. Shouldn't it be more? A. No. that amount is all the rat- ion administration would allow in your case. You see. extra rations for temporary farm help are based on the same quantity consumers receive generally . . For example One person is allowed s. maximum of 1-2 lb. of sugar each week which presumably covers three meals a day or 2i meals a week. You will be serving 45 meals which is slightly over twice that number. which would entitle you to one pound- Each person is allowed e maximum of from one to 2 1-2 lbs. of rationed meat a week (there-ore several varieties of meat not ration- ed). At three meals a day. this would cover 31 meals a week. As you are serving twice this number of meals. you would be entitled to extra coupons for about four pounds. Q. My landlord says the new rental order gives him the right to increase the rent for my room. a. romning house and share part of the aocommoda" with the landlord. crease my rent? A. The new order makes it clear that the rates charged in occupants of "shared accommodation" are frozen and may not be increased without the mission of a Rentals Appraiser. You would be classed as renting shared accommodat Your landlord could not also the rent unless ha took the ecessary ateps provided for in the regula- ens. DALTON SCHOOL Grade VII—1. Dena Gavin~ . 2. Lorraine Arsenault; 3. Rete Harper. Grade VI—l. Aldona Perry; 2. Olive Perry; 8. Edward Desfioches. . {Theresa Gallant. Joan I-iogan. and Billy Cameron (egg): I0 use aiselu or CHILD'S coin ugly/tens VAPOIIII “'1 L_ era/ice ll You're an Artist at Cooking. Do Something Nowl ,-.=;‘>.;)~ IAIN MONEY Al‘ IOII Ara you a good cook? Do our friends and neighbors rave a t ynurcakea‘! Ifyouraallyaucalat Lifyeudo baveawayvvltlshodl. you might be able to make money for yourself selling your art. Making money at home is iota of fun. especially when you see the dollars you actually earned by yourself coma into your pocketbook. If you're handy with a sewing or knitting needle or crocheting try to sell your produc . " z Fashions y. Lileralure ~ Today? _ Any Rags, The old cry days. Rags along local salvage campaigns. Worn-hug converted to war uses. Rags, munitions and machinery. For The THIS FRONT-BUTTONS!) JUMPER M13" Th! 51118:"! of School Froc '17" i=1" l! 51111010. the lines are 800d. and the style is suited to either a washable fabric or some- thing warmer. Just the; thing to fill the bill. when a girl begins no yearn for a touch of sophistication in her clothes and mother believes l“ Y0"!!! simplicity- Blouse i; in. eluded in pattern. and features the Peter Pa: collar. Style No. 2615 is designed for sizes 6 to l4 Size 8 requires 1 3-4 yds. 35-in. fabric for the jumper with I 1-2 yds. for the blouse. Pat- ikrn is hand cut to United states Standard Measurements and in- cludes chart with step by step in- 5b . ‘Send twenty cents for pattern. Write your name. address and style number. Be sure to state size you Nlfllfi Street Address Province IN Oltv BEAUTIFUL CENTERPIECE FILET CROCHET ta Our iii-page booklet tells how many women have turned ideal into dollars and might help you along the lama liriaa. ‘flair sneer in the field of needlework, food. clerl ‘ work, merchandising and personal service may guide you to “CCEZI. Send lee in oina f your of 3i Wail want-u orllone “'1'; Home to the Charlottetown guard- ian Home Service Address. Be 1 cup (good mguun) of prune; Thurman uauallvaeernmen villa Boiling nui- w cover m“ Jifl will‘ 2 cups sifted white flour mmmgmmgm m“? 1 teaspoon salt yours. The natural an: iL “M” 4 teaspoons baking powder ‘if: If" ‘lffm: "4 fjf" mu’ B"; l CUP Bflhim n9“? lean‘: '..§°'l'.. ee tie they are called “The one-third of cup of sugar Medicine 1m Copiaa Nature". nae amall i: cup chopped pecans or wsl- xlla tun‘.- entgngmhlbg n" at t. nddail ' u- : e385 Youftuoliloeirtt anio ythat "Slad-to-bealiva" Juice of I orange feeling every day. ry Bile m r i m- 1 cuo of sweet milk 2;?‘ W": pa" V" gfflilkdgfhdawfl Wash and pick over prunes. and hn"fl‘¢'_fly|iu{f'gdinn,.un y 601k for hill an hour in bitllllll n. ilifefi lil”.i.'."'.il‘.'.l.’&‘"usi'it'él" NEE.‘- Street Adiirem Niki;- i DESIGN NO. “I Th" lflvflly centerpiece is inter- Ntlli! to Work in iliet crochet. The basket of gpiar has‘, kaiser-gm! rom- n . e complete instructions. w To order pattern: W its, ge a 000W Picture with voul- naiclle ahd hang“: ‘tkllh Nlibedleenmkln cum m Ohar ottetown Guardfirn. Bun-L DQMIIINILMQ I rmn--____-..'__ ssnmsnonlss'-____ Movement _2, 1943 "My was today?" has an important meaning the; _ with many other things are needed in the war eiforh Old trunks in the attic often disgorge n wealth 0y these magma“ m clothng. sweaters and socks .11 m, Mt" pmmsmg may find ‘paarticulalrly cotton, :28: t? armnlsnoiyal canndmg) Ahasrgcpeerrsnétvsrthe engines of plani ' Dans a ouse th to their me 2s “Vipers. 2:3 llsgltfgglnoéle tam taichinery. In addition it Needlecraft ‘m are needed urgently. Hundreds 0f Canadiai "TIP delicate parts d ll. -. t. v‘ Home SIZES G-ilt More than 1.600 Poles hi!" married English and Scottish i". since the fall of France when ti_ Polish army and air force came ; Britain. ' It ls stated that 10.000 NOIWEBUL have escaped to Britain since tho‘ country was occupied by the Cil!_ mans. Seventy-five per cent oi’ ll. Norwegian air force consists i: escapees : NOW under-am - Cream Deodorant :4 cl] - Steps Persplretloni ii not rot dream a: meifl Does no: irritate slun- ,. l- 09H ‘hm Caubeumi N . = nearer. M“ lll " iffiilimml’. odor. l. A pure. white. IIHRM" as mu mini shma ms?“ d | ‘M.“".'*.£:.i=EL"E€:..":~'-" M tit... ' flit/l “Odo 39. all! seminar-emu"; urn? nnrii tiufilcsl , till“. A.’ rid i"- -,\'llll\(.l i Ol'l'T—-——PR.OVlNOI--_