sen-ted to become honomry dem of the Victorian Order of fictional afllll (m, wife of the Governor-General. has consented to become patmnes of the order. I I O The Princess Juliana of the Neth- erlands celebrated her Iflth birth- uw at. the Hague on Wctmesday- Flags were diailayed t.bro hout the country and many Nether and- ers wore sprigs of Mil-nu: 11W?!“ m-rlbfoonsmtheir larpe . Attire J Prince £51m; ‘s consort. ernhard. decorated i2 Dutch Air Force men with the flying ems and the cross in the “gre- sence of the Princes and ti!‘ three dsughtuf. . ' A delightful visitor here this week ‘was Dr. Dhsrlotte Whftmn, CB B. M.A., D.C.L., L L.D.. one of (Jan- sdq‘; most brilliant people, l owed many friendidlips made on previous visits. 3100mm tcm-richome manure-ma _ Qveekln-lillw- . . Still! d bib? Gail. c J mMrs. Smith ‘the dlucbees f Windsor halt-Dur- ‘the simmer ward- fiagtm ggck sheath everéicrkg a flgrlng jacket m..°..;""f°%‘;fisa‘."ii.a.€;?.“‘ fill‘; ‘m’- “bandifl. ‘.?...!.’.1“°.‘é..."2.‘% ‘“* mfismstiibt‘ filial“! (11955 um tight waisted jack- Mrs. Bulldmizr Rogers. 5L, left‘ Wednesday on; _viai_t to MmWfl-L w. afidwMrS s???‘ Bgllejrélm F-ip are now visiting in New York. . . 'I‘.‘ne Duchess of Gloucester, wife of the Governor-General of Aus- ccessflill "l tB-naln .l-ler br ge club v11- lthelovely Kenwood Wlllifi .Ha-'penings 0i, , . Miss Lena C. McLure. WflO WM visiting he; parents, Mr. and Mrs. wm..."°.,§" '.i.°‘.“.‘"". M ""......?.§. llfi su u er or a returned to ‘Boron . Mrs. Mofure i; p.150 being welcomed home this week. t _ After a gay round qt festivities. while visiting her nwthei‘. Mrs Lorne Unaworth. Mm- Uhflrlefi E- Rdbetrtson, Jr.. left Thlursda "on ‘imam "’ “Fdyfififif. b‘; n52 . fill . MOE“ Iinturtson She is followed ‘gt-hm’ new home with hosts 0! 800d. Wlffiles- a M15 Helen Laiwson b vlsitifll vulth friends in Iyiqnw. Mrs. Orin McGregor. who motor- ed over‘ with her husband to: East- er and was storm-stayed. returned '° ifmiidfig. .‘t£¥°’...‘:...?§ ~ ul M11812. Owen and numerous friends. hem will be ssed to Cmdl‘. $11!! E (Johnnie). an F; hm ceughwbcm r lnasicmouttl, Mgrlaqyflrire, SQOY-IBXIIF. Aiflil Z4111- . . O O O Mrs. wiillitlkkfiflehglfi and gifted 0 P108135 0°11‘ eetrvative lelaader. Mr. John Brack- en, ave a luncheon in Ottawa. for all ghe women who attended the recent convention mere. Al» this delightful social BB-thertnS. the Qt- tawa Resident armounced the if by mqnqfthe fumishlngso a. room kn tine B WM clog touch with P“ loves pretty clothes but does not spguve of ladies leaving M! thdr ha when sitting-in at. committee sessions. Senator Iva Phillis W85 8i the head table as was also Mrs. Dennis cf Vancouver. Mrs. Ouffy Saskatche Mc- °’ N B°“""‘....."J.Yi’.l¢ w w»: fiayllga gtlaotia and Mm ‘$511191; land of Charlottetown. petite an mum, with he: up-fwept hair. ‘iliarl clothes. Wearing civ ed ilhe the d3 f1 .Beh h, . “Eras gmmgents from the various British counties- Wlth the King was the sen. *mn's» Ream/cello EA J31. Only, You Can Do Ill Cont“! tic can“ Quads Q-GOQ-OQ-O Questions and Answers on Price Control will pear in Thattluarrb in as n re u- featurs “u. day. The qua are those which have reached the Wartime. Pm: and Trade Board from phousewivea in Ildcd by Iona who have intelligent questions to askbn price control are invited to send them ln writing to the Women's Regional Advisory Com- milieu Q, My wife and I are holiday- ing at; a large hotel for a month. How many coupons out ui’ our ration books is the hotel entitled to take? A. After two weeks. you should surrender your ration books to the hotel management. For each two weeks of your stay. the hotel ls 8D- tltled to take one sugar-preserves coupon, one butter coupon and two meat. coupons. Q. I have just had a most. 1m»- fortunate_ accident. Our St. Ber- nard puppy got hold of my false teeth and chewed them up beyond repair. To make me a new set, us! exactly like the old ones. my en- tlsc wants to charge me one-third more. Is he allowed to do this? A. Artificial teeth and dentures have lust. lately been suspended from he price ceilirlfl- However. if many unduly high prices are re- ported the ceiling may be put on again at any time Better Englisli D. C. Williams 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "Are you going to back out of your promise?" . 2 What is the correct pro-nuriic- iation of "gratis"? 3, Which one of these words is misspelled? Prime dons. Presbyter- on . 73,52. the word "indem- word beginning with aff that means “a studle pretense"? ANSWERS 1. Say. "Are you ol draw your promise’; 2. the s as in gray. 4, Immunity from penalty for past offenses, “Havlrg first obfslred a promise of indemnity for the riot they hsd committed. they with- direw to their homes." 5. Affecta- ton. to witlh- ronounce Cook 's Corner O-O§Q~Q-Q—QQ>O~QQOOQOOOQAOQOQ RICH‘ COFFEE RINGS x 3 E cups-sifted flour ' tablespoons sugar 3 teaspoons baking powder ii teaspoon salt 1/3 cup shortexaing 2/3 cup milk ‘A cup currents ‘A cup finely chopped apple 1/. cup chopped nuts V.- teaspuon cinnamon ll cu brown sugar MET OD: Sift the flour and than measure it and sift again with the sugar, baking powder and salt. Add bhe shortening and cut in with two knives pr a pastry blender un- til the mixture is in fine crumbs, Add milk enough to make a soft dough. Knead llelltlv on a ll htly floured board ar-i roll to abou r.;_ weuhf 9, may, of biscuit ge. ¥H0l188hOld Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Batter ~ _ If. after mixing a cake, the bab- fer ls not smooth, but the flour is inclined to be in tiny lump!- W'- lt through a fine sieve and then pour into the tins for The cake may not be its so large but it will be fine in ure. Removing Soot ' ' When s soot cflimney needs cleaning try plac s. piece of zinc on a very hot lire. e vapor from the zinc decompgsea the soot. B CI 0 Wh n? dlred t freshen m thllcelnblack lovers-l m: llwxsiusnr. i H5? OUT - fir...” inc-h thickness in a rectangular shape, S read with a filling made by mix g the currents, brown sugar. chopped apple. nuts and cinnamon. Roll up like a. jelly roll, place on s. greased baking sheet and brim: the ' ends around to meet in the form of s circle. Cut gushes one inch apart (with scissors) around the outside of the ring. Brush the ton vwifh melted butter and sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon. Bake in a moderate oven (375 deg. F.) for about 35 to 40 minutes. Brazil is suited for the produc- tion of silk and in 1939 had 6.215 1cm. as compared with only 800 tons produced in 1938. A group lest seems to show that. older persons have a decided pref- erence for the odours of onion. garlic, Jasmine and hellofropc. 3. Prime donna.., L rm: CI-IARLQTTfEiTOWF '“ "— ' 3 A correspondent asks: portion. Motherhood much mother ly down on their job. a mother who ‘Ihese baby-worshippers are than malice itself could invent. on their own feet. ruined by Mother's tears. cat has for its kittens. God and our mothers made us. every ugly duckling a swan. glove. nknkkkk Mo d e rn Etiquette By Roberta Lee ‘ 00-00 A. qualnted with those Bruyere says, "Never risk a lire. and the most common. wi o. buffet supper at a formal ball’! only st dances. l1 riage ? ant, and more often none. How Can l!!! By Anne Ashley Q. What can I use instead of trowel when digging into fltxver pots? trowel when digging less dirt in a smab space How can clotted? come A. lam Mother Proper And Effective, Motherhood Ilanl To Practice In Moderation ' “Whit, in your opinion. is the most im- portant quality s mother can have?" no one can answer right off the bat, but I think it is a sense of pro- wpears to be one of the things that is hard w practice in moderation, and so most women with children N? elm" 5° they are scarcely human, as George Bernard Shaw says in one of his plays, m- else they are so little mother they lay complete- Q. Shouldn't one be very care- ful about joking when in a crowd? Yes. unless you are well sc- present. La. joke, even the least offensive in its na a person who is not well-bred. and ssessed of sense to comprehend would it bc proper to serve a A. No: buffet suppers are served How many attendants should widow have st her second mar- A. Never more than one attend- O-O-OOO-O-O-Oim O-O-OO-O4O4OO-O-OJQO small A metal shoe horn can be used to better advantage than s into small flower pots. It has much the same Q shape as a trowel and will make “lien . l remedy mayor» naisc that has separated and be Try adding the white of an Romance Japan .\ Well, that is s $64 question that And whether it is better for children to have keeps them Lied to her apron string!» or one who leis them run-wild. is another problem that it would take Solomon himself to answer. For the doting mother wrecks the lives of her, children Just as often as the neglectful one does. Generally speaking. a woman considers herself a good mother when she concentrates on her chil- dmn and has no other interest in life after her first baby is born. Junior puts her husband's nose so completely out of Joint that she never sees him as a. man again. He is Just a purveyor to the nurs- ery.’ She quits drmslng herself up. or even combing her hair. She has nothing on her table except what the children can eat. She never reads anything. or goes anywhere, and she has no conversM-llm except about what little Johnny did or little Susie did. BABY-WORSHJPPIIIS terribly smug about being ALL MOTHER. They boast about how they watch over children's diet and see that they eat their spinach; that they hold them by the hand when they go out on the street; that they pick out the children they play with: that they select their clothes and never let them have a boy friend. and they don't realize that they are doing their youngsters a greater harm Fbr they are spoiling them to death so that they will be self-center- ed egotists whom nobody can endure, and they are smothering their ini- tiative and turning them into wesklrlngs who will never be able to stand Sisters to the ALL MOTHERS are the POSSEESIVE MOTHERS who enslave their children to them. They are tyrants who never let their children draw s breath cf freedom. They keep their children from marrying. ‘They bslk their ambitions by appealing to them not to leave Door old Mothen Many and many a man's snd woman's life has been On the other hand, there are the umnmcrrm. Momma who have no more sense of responsibility for their children than an alley Li’ they are rich. they turn them over to nurs- ery governesscs and tutors to rear. If they sre poor. the street ls their nursery and hoodlums their educators. And in both cases it gives us the Juvenile delinquent problem. For it is inescspably t/rue that the mother's hand fashions the child's character. and what we are, ape what So it seems to me that the quality that mot-hers need most is a sense of proportion in dealing with their children. They need to see their YWHESWIS Clearly as they are. instead of through a rosy mist that makes And. above Ml. they need to be good mothers. but not too good; to love their children wisely. but not too well, and to give them liberty. but not license. The mother's hand should always be the iron hand in the vglvgi; Q "O-Ofi-Qf-QQ 1km‘ AAA Morning Smile QO $4 9Q O-Q P§O4§§ O0 O0 049% "Dad." said n. very pretty school- girl. "let me present. you to M s Dotham. our principal." Miss Dot- ham beamed on the old HIE-lb "I congratulate you. sir. on your ax- tremely large and affectionate family!" she ssid. “Large and af- fectionate?" he stsmmered. “Jes, indeed said Miss Dcthsrn. “No few- er than twelve of May's brothers have come regularly during the winter to lake he: driving or skat- l.".'. while uhe two older ones were most sssldious in escorting her to the theatre twice s week!" - He was an old friend of the fam- ily and calling one day. found the yctvhful daughter busy with needlework, After a little chat nhe lufomled him that her ' was wom out, wonderlrr: what reward she would receive for her industry. The next day he sent her s new one. ac “led by the following lines: - I send you a thlmble For fingers nimble, which I hope will flt when you try it. It will blast vou long if it's half as .5 one A; the nlnt. you gave me u: buy it. a egg, put-ting it in slowly. half s tes- spoonful at a time. until the mix- ture is again smooth. Usually the searafion will be overcome. . How can I lnwoart s bril- .t polish to articles of cut nlass? A. Add a little turpentine to the water, when cleaning them. Use about one tableapoctnful to two quarts of water. ~him"w1fh a bow 0n the There ‘ 62'" w l 1511...; Dialy- lvaluintslumvcwlfc- James hlnaelf ' at dinner tin his v and what. a y and to himl-wu a .“ buesv- "Mn! a. whip" l hm‘ ltl" was nobcvw on the whl the river and d kg the wring up thecteek. It was afar cry from the Easter snow storm. the first of the wed and when lalermeling out of the south. veils of mis shrouded the surrounding 1M Mofllfm’). c1 . m earth into fh n, variably mother would love - have just those few bits of mater- a 1.i.t..g e.= 1. The letter that I let to Might have run an for puss. but I fou d r ' threadbare and the’ daily roun . I could have touched upon ‘the town's concerns, of how scountry cousin The wor s were the us: trl Haul! 9 nrvallons on lpen . These winter-evenings, birch-leg burns, Bun ed the talk that etween friends. But loltlllellow what I started to re- cor ‘ Beeniled lessln important than a blue how l PIIIBI B l W Fldshlmg along the snow, or lun- llg l poured From a full morning-not g single thing . Of all that make! I locked-for- rcal ‘ ' letter _ Forgive me if I send you this. in- _ stead! -Leslle Nelson Jennlngsw-(QS. DARK KID GLOVES If you shake s llftle Fuller's e black or dark-color- ed kl-d gloves-after each wearing they will never have a heav o or from the action cf perlpirat on on the kid. The Fuller's earth will dry clean them. olvl: s-éfis r00 _.,_ yourluuoaxv you ‘dome up u, u 8.. itltlnl to f _ {it on one lhnuldcel-"wlllgxg, '4."st:°%l§m ‘finite 4' ‘ n g a o 7 feet ti inch‘: spurt. ctr-slim: toes, an plant weight on the m. side of your} t._ roLsroY-s DAllGIITElt In an old brownstone bllllllln‘ loaf among Manhattan's war.» hou|es._the daughter of Count l“ Tolstoy, novelist of Imperial Rus- sia, lrwcrklng- to-day in two smul] dim-lit offices. In 1939. Counter; Alexandra established the ‘Tommy Foundation" for Russian Wnfdra and Culture ‘to lid those needy Russians. who have wandered (c.- the past quarter-century as refu- fie‘: from both Communism u; was ruuulu-r eansalr ~ . Last summer's garden is xcul dark. muddy lllllld in l field yo“; brflwllrwllhered dress. A Ctlllple a; rows of broken-down ccmsmks stagger across its uneven surface mute testimony fo the fruits .1 m1 other year. Y9K. hidden dec m p, oozing mud. there ls for the pull- g-and for those who care "id;- them-one of the sweetest vcgs. tables of the garden. A hold over from lut summer, the psrsmp 1| When giving a child m article ‘ of clothing you have ms a your- self, include in the packages nieces, left over from the cutting out. They may seem very small but ln- to 1 for patching later on. A little turpentine cloth will make the blfhroom fixtures look like new. Wipe off afterward with a dry cloth. on n soft A ISO-yesr-old women in Nylaf- room. South Africa. has applied for an old age pension. Iron fucks lengthwise; until dry, pulling them out straight before using the iron. CORRECT CAUSE 0F EYE STRAIN d and the wows carried upward to us erg-runs the stream. to be hauling lum‘ the mill, with a sleigh‘ I heard James remark one day “and it so late in the season." That was after the snow-stoma which came out of season. The other farmers as well ss our-s. availed thelnselves of the excellent, hauling to get the last of their saw-logs to the mill. Karo lyn and Jamie came home after spending Easter in tihe clty- and Mrs. M. from iihe comer-store re- duties. - the he the ev "It's queer lo t "Am you going to keep it-for all the tine?" And all the time it was his own-small, winsotne and ‘black ‘as a coal And this week, some bldustriotls women in the community tended their broader stoves and others pre- ferring the older method set hroody hfllmhlbakh. follozved the pltllfter_ wa op .0 ge - .e to ‘em up the strength of her lay- ing flock. And s fat chicken for s mlrlhdsy or an anniversary or per- |haps for a. Sunduv dinner. And if ion a recent. stroll with James I picked the waxen loveliness of an arbutus. one morning Jeanie th- ered s bouquet of another s. It a hens nest in the poultry house. warm and delicately green. 'I‘he beginning of s flock of web- octed creatures that will one day —she hopes-fly up to roost along tOontihued oh Page l6» LOVELY ‘SWEATER I ' . ' . a-iosl‘ i Jim- ..<- The bad habits of squlntllig. close-peering, straining the’ muscles around the yes ' or scowllng as a woman re ds, talks, or_ sews indicate the need for glasses. If these habits are ra- sponsi-ble for horrid lltfle lines which cold cream fails to iron out. see an cullsf soon. for goodness sakes. ou can only iron out the lines by correcting the trouble. Face creams are helpless in rem- edylng-the damage, if you contin- ue in your habits. Wrinkle-taxes wl-ll also accrue- whlch will have to be faced one fine day--by the woman who in- dulges in facial posturin s. We're calling a few of these btfidly by name. so that you can be on your guard and battle them down. Wrinklhg the nose is one. As cute as the habit is. stoplt. You won't like to see the crinkle: etch- ed in. Raising eyebrows in naive wonder ls another bsd actor. Keep your brow serene. unless you like furrows in it. Drawing down .hc corners of the mouth. when .alk- i-ng, has two strikes sgalnsi The habit is unattractive. speed down the sagging menu of the face. mute on Etiquette In addressing a firm of frowning, ft will mave- women bé letter. the sslulation" should be. " ear Mesdamel." save: YOUR £11K WHEN WORKING Here's a list of back-savers to cut out and tack up as reminders, you tug and pull at furniture, from one row to another. if [ll-ft laundry or carry garden tools Lwhen you bend. bend at the knees and shift strain to tho log muscles.,1.egs are better able to take it than your back. I. Want to ive an object .l lift? Don't, lf it we ghs more than Per cent, cf your weight. If it's en, the back-saving frlck ll to stand near the object with, feet spaced l2 inches apart. lnwerhg a position for hoisting, pull the object up by straightening at its best sftera winter in. ha. tugs’: dce kegze. _ n en t. e r we were marked,“ planting time, it take some search. pg to find where the parsnip; have burrowed. Even when loch, ed, the 1on8. tlpering root d... mend: strong flngerrto pull 1g fr‘: from its earthy home. m; stl clings, ‘but beneath there i1 thliawhite, firm skin of the par- stes differ on how the mu should be eaten. some preferi‘. 1t i: a new and on»: raw spring some hold there is nothing quits so substantial and warming. 0m. ers like their, psranlps parbcuen. then fried a crisp brown in bulicl‘. Perliapman appetite for plrisnipl must be acquired-like a taste for green olives. rcguefcrt cheese, s: oystershFor when one doesn't cm for parlnl r- it's usually with em- {haslm-C rletian Science Maui. or. \ 200R Bill-Lil's LAMINT! . (Christian Science Monitor) “Dldyou know there is no lucll gin: as pingpoag? The name l: ng-pong. . To coin a para hrue: 0h. an;- llsh thy name s lnconslst . Anti the truth of this statement those who speak it seldom renllu. To be correct you should spell it flatcar; but flat tlre- one-way but elf-way; unequaled ut unequally; hcldu rid setup, but make-up and e-up. , " ' There's little ‘canon-although plenty of rhyme—n the spellin| of the English-language. The worst mischief-makers are those little fellows, the hyphens. They cob up and bob down Jn words just ilk: gremlins grinning and ilidlflg be- hind a board fence with utter du- rsgard of logic. good sense. mu vsniehce and the 40-hour week Yet they are‘ just a: much s art cf the spelling as ie and cl. Tier: 1L 1's manhole. butman-hour; prewar, but pre-eminent; mother-oi- peislrl, but rl-ghl of way snd port o! ca . Thole liffle hyphens ef ll. re quire more editors on carefully edited newspapers for the purpon o! preserving the purity-or "flu status duo-of the language. o‘ We are not demandln! in over- haul of the ab] edited Webster’: Dictionary or a the multifaceted Inllisll ‘bnguage itself. But. "f" -hcw do you spell it? crsncv courmms - ‘hvo British clergyman are hsv- ing their troubles. The first found a chalice smeared with llpntlel while conducting Holy CDlllmllll- ion. "If ou must use this kind oi cosmetic.‘ he has told his W911i!" parishioners, "will you please on- z; lure that the kind and method oi use are such u to render lmpor sible recurrence cf this unplan- antnelsf" ' The leconll is boll! 501M115 b’ unpullctusl ‘asides. A minute crll ~. (Oont ucd on P980 '7) ' fNeedleicraft/t -F0R T117135 Hvmse