lsove that ‘man. ll no love at all. but s lie. ow" "$5.- W?» . ~- . fruit cusizporfrsrown cuaaoniu, I should never be spoken or written I of as though it _were a kind of magic phiitre which can charm away all difficulties and relieve men of the need for serious thought and resolute endeavour. If this is forgotten. the effectupon those who have to wrestle with the hard realities of life is likely to take the form of a sharp reaction against what they fudge to be a fantasy, in which things are taken not as they are. but as an emo- tional piety would have them be. Love is never to be thought of sa a master key that will immediately unlock all doors. Because it is of God it directs itself to the achieve- ment of all good, even as that is God's will for his creation: and its method is the divine method of not forgetting the humblest in- dividual in the magnificence of e universal scheme Wha Lenten Meditations from ‘rhe London Times nova sup saw when in a sermon St. Augustine summed up the rule of conduct in in; wards "Love and do ivhat you like." he said something both true .and dangerous. Love. as 5t. Paul had 531d, "worketh M 111 _to its neighbour; therefore, love is the fulfilment of the law." Si. M18" ustine had ground for seeing in love the secursty for the risht manner of life. Yet his statement. however true to the nature of love. when love is without alloy. and however wise when addressed to a particular person who can use it and not misuse it, is not a precept that could be proclaimed to all men everywhere without the peril of folly and evil ensuing. For love. like every great power in the moral and spiritual order, must be known for what it really is. and practise- according to the laws oi its nature. Where love is con- cerned. knowledge and action must go hand-in-hand. Love that does not show itself kindly. patient. un- grudging, humble, is not true love. etentlousl claims to words that doubtless startled his hearers is that the service of God is perfect eedom. Love is not lawless. nor can the Christian. in virtue of his freedom. dispense himself from keeping the corn- dments of God. But in ‘both cases the thought is that the moral and religious life of man finds its tnie principle of char- acter in an inner spiritual real- ity. For that. no external law. however great its prestige. can be a substitute. SUPPLIES FOR FRANCE oblect- w he it hates samr JOHN. us, March 2s- (CP) - The first cargo of relief Just because the prublrms 0! supplies for shipment direct to the world. from those of the ln-fFrtm" from Canada is being as- dividual life to those of the inter- sembled at this port.. The sub- national order, seem at times so in- plies were inspected yesterday by tractable. love. apart from which officials of they cannot be rightly orderedJAid Board- make God i \\ TESTS SHOW [UXED STOCKINGS LAST TWICE AS LONGI luxed stockings last twice as long without going into runs, strain tests show, as stockings rubbed with cake soap or washed with a strong soap. Lct Lux help you make one pair givc the wear of two. It's like getting an axtra pair every time you buy one. Tests on rayon, silk, nylon, cotton show similar results. Dip your stockings in Lux tonight! oil/Wt. 5W LUXed stockings FIT better- WEAR longer! t st. Augustine meant by- Q. ,were given six months’ notice tc the Canadian Mutual I , me. : Lemon scraps "Whenthere :0! lemon sfterm s LIVER rsooocr ii J08 ONLY ' YOII Blll D0 v Price Qontroi Qsmtioaa and Answers -___ _. . Questions and Answers Jh-iee {Jontrol will appear In Thqmqgm. ti‘. itself-Ti’. fififfiifi‘ i?" reached the Wartime a _ a Woman's Re alm Skocial and ~- in. Levi's lilAliY trel In invited A friend of mine wants to my used sewing e. ‘s not a new machine but I haven't used it veiw much. Is there any way I could find out how much I e Prices Board office they will provide you with the new schedule of prices that have been established for used household sp- pliances. We are renting a house and gvacste by May 1. We have been un- able to locate another place. Gan the landlord put us out on May 1? l A. your notice was given ac- cording to the regulations and is in order the landlord is entitled to take possession on May i and if you do not. vacate tho landlord can make application to the wits-t for mssession, undcr Provincial Law. . Can you teil me why people tin large cities ore still allowed to have five and six layer ivedding cakes? 1t seems like an unneces- sary waste of sugar and butter to A. If you wens able to examine ,tl~_ese oekes carefully you would find the cake is at Icnst three quartus plywood and plaster cf paris and only a small section of genuine cake inserted for cutting purposes. ‘jam 1 "iiiéiittt scnsrsoox Iy Bmbertllnl are left over pieces node or iced tee. rub the breadboard or kitchen table (of wood) with these pieces. allow the wood to dry. then scour with soap and water. The scriéitemakes the wood beautifully MINNII Springs If the mattress springs are rub- bed occasionally with a cloth that has been dipped in melted paraf- Dorothy Dix u Says- ENSLAVED DAUGHTERS Mothers. Selfish In Making Girls ‘ Life-Long Martyrs The most insoluble of all d cutie ab] 1,5 the selfish old mother who rut-hleusialy saclllficeesnkier chvikltdxlertiotoduhxeoltlt Almost always her victim is a daughter. for most men have enough backbone to refuse to be enslaved by their mothers. and. anyway, thqy are not so overburdened by conscience as their sisters are, nor are they so vulnerable to pity. _ So this leaves a girl who is unlucky enomh to have a, wig-auger“ nd egot-lstic mother as mother's fore-ordained prey. Mother begins shackling her fetters on daughter while she is still a mere infant in the cradle by Dfllflhlflg to her about her duty to mother, and teaching her that she must alwuys put. mother's pleasure and happiness before her own, so that by the time the girl is grownup she is sold in gugh bondage to mother that she doesn't even aspire to have any life of her own. MAITYIDD Gills! All cf us know dozens of cases of these martyred daughters. All of us know girls whose mothers put them to work the minute they ans old enough to hold a Job and who take every cent of their pay away from them, but who never think of such a thing as making their sons turn over their pay envelopes to them. And we know laly mothers who make their daughters do the housework after they oome home worn- out from a hard day's work. And we all know mothers who break up all of their daughters’ love affairs and doom than to old nvaidenhood so that t_hey will not hve to give up their girl's earnings. But the selfish mother's selfishness doesn't stop in taking her daughter's money from her, It ~more often robs her of something far more necessary to her happiness than her pay en-velope, and that is her personal liberty. Many a girl is Just as much a prisoner in her home as if she were locked up in a jail cell. Mother won't let her go off to college. Mother won't let her have dates. Mother won't let her have friends. Mother won't let her go anywhere by herself or with another girl. Mother opens her mail and reads her letters and listens in on her telephone conversations beca she is determined to mono- polize her, and she is afraid that if daughter ever got out of her clutches she would never get her back again. A woman. whose selfish mother has stolen her youth from her. writes me a. pitiful letter in which she tells me that she is a teacher who has supported her mother since her early girlhood. She spends her days between dealing with obstrcperous children and a peevish and fretful old woman. The mother has shut herself away from the world and forced her daughter to go in her seclusion with her. She to a movie she walls and weeps over being left. alone and neglected. "1 have gotten so nervous that I am getting unfit for my work." fin, it will prevent rust. I l lirnamanfsl 'I‘o kee ornaments from scratch- ing fuml me. paste a piece of blot- ting paper on _the bottom of each ornament. LivingtSl Leisure s THE WQMAWS REALM RESURBICTION 517318 Will return. and morning. the bare hollow; of Hull be gay again with the our crocus And clarions of the qiffodils. Hope will return, and laughter; The soul once desolate and dark Shall flower again, shall be full of the music if the imnet und tn. lug, iihfnk foreverh 817GB l m“ ewed_rep enishedt t e And we behold and hear the I lair ma?! '°‘°“..°.i“. ‘sumac’ m 8 n8 out of —AI Alus-ndra Brown but?» Wlnllheg Free Flour can be sisbstituted for hi’ using twice as much ‘ xsernvo osssu London's laundry problem is so ihehiils be! writes this woman, "and I feel that ifil cannot get away for'a day or two I will go to piece; but when I suggest it my m ‘L threatens suicide so I do not. know what to do." Yet the answer is-plain. It is to go. it is to refuse to be, enslaved by the selfishness of the old. But few of us have the courage to do this because the tears of the old melt us down into a m-ush of pity. = kete yearly. . That the RAJ". Transport Gourmand flaw four million miles in January without s. single ac- cident causing death or injury tq a passenger. , That more and more United; Kingdom merchant ships are b€'l g fitted with forced draught ventilation to equip them for ser-' vice Fur Eastern waters. Older ships not already equipped for tropical service are fitted with electric fans and awninfls. That 503.200 bomb houses in London have undergone stories of wartime fashions, for ‘they are prettier, more dramatic undo more fashionable than ever re. Th6? turn old clothes into new interest. with their fresh design September. This i 70 per cent. of s. of button gives a dis- the target figure l»: 110.000 sched- tinctive touch to "assembly line" uled for "repair by the end of clothes. I March . Now buttons are of two sorts. The simple disks of pearl, of bone of horn, which "button; up" men's suits, Johnny's diirt and all kinds of underwear. ‘rhe second sort are the novelty or fancy buttons. These are the ‘conversation pieces‘ on a woman’ dresses that sparkle, gleaém, and "style", a frock, suit or coa . BRIDETS BOUQUET QUILT n DID YOU KNOW That in the United Kingdom lo- day only one person in four can buy a teapot or lug. one in seven can buy a mug, knife, fork, or one in three a. kettle or frying pan. acute that one men sends laundry each week to a northern town-e. round fox-shirts somewmiies m‘ HINT! 0N l f! you find you have s meat or a fish bone in your mouth while CAN'T 8H1. A IOUBI i ‘the Mndon Bpeetstor propounda this orie- ‘ Here is a q give no answer, though I have no doubt definite rulings on the sub- iect have been given. How oln you sell a house, in a country where no land registration exists. when all the relevant deeds have been destroyed by ‘Ilhe owner of th cams, which is uncertain, they were with his solicitor, whose of- fice was also blitzed. He himself- was killed by enemy action. Bis executors are now told thev cannot sell a house towhich they can show no title. ‘Phi: seems to be clearly wrono-lbvit l‘ should like to know what the clearly rlzht answer is i 31:71am! naval Up OLD CI OTlIl-IS l Buttons are one of the success won't go anywhere herself and when her daughter even wants to go Vie?" "first ai " repairs since the end of " it for m . Too much," I James complain at times. Every fat hog, that had an in- vitation to theweighing yesterday here. the house market. hs were backed to the lpigery oorsandafterdlnnerthe ; oa begs-n. It was merely force .0! it that prompted ms to put on my rubbers and cross the yard to the soene of the work. Judy, now my faithful shadow followed. We were not going to be needed. We only went to v ew the animal's slim sid to sort of speed on their way. Before the loa“ was completed. more helpers could have been of use. Onlv to “stand here" and “there? and in a low but compelling voice: "Don't let them pass you" at the door. It would be an adventure to no than the pig if a hefty animal should happen to slip by although when life was younger, I've often wondered what would take place supposing one found himself. all of a sudden. ‘it large. But today was no day to bother with any conjecturing. In no time. horses were attached to the sloighs and they were away to meet the truck. Judy returned to the house. and I went down tlirougdthe orchard to meet Jamie at lanes end. meet- ing Kamlvn also: "Shall I bring you something to read?’ and Robs’ "Could you lend rne a few dollars’) and Mr. A. who very kiIidlY—'I'hQl’Q are good neighbors on this mod- ed" some of Rob's hogs for him, “Now Ellen. you won't but this in the Diary." Continued on page d way to fami-sl it; can”: l z By Anne Ashley Q. How can 1 save time when cleaning the bird cage? A. Cut eight or ten tliicknfises of heavy white paper and place at the bottom of the cauarys cage. ot In the morning . g barman; ‘P course I EGHT, digestible home-made cake is as whole- sodieadessereasireverwas. And youcan bake wonderful cakes, even in wartime, if you use Swans Down. ' Swans Dcwdmskes aka: deliciously light, tender, moist and velvety-numbed! Eves if you must skimp onaboroeoing...sogar...oregp...resulum thrilling with Swans Down. MllledfxomehsliearcolsoltCsoa- dian wheat, Swans Down is sliced again and again through silk, until amazingly uaiform,snd27 aimesas fineasordinary flour. Yoiflibakea better oaks with Swans Down! See recipes ostisepacksgs. IACAKIUWOIIIINAIIIIIVIWOIIIIIIAKIIIOVIITII m swans oown CAKE FLOUR Anastasia-mum. noose] ' mourn: lylabaesa Lee : BDOIPS lilillllili ' __. LEIIDN snap usausasna 3 lie Water my measure measure Method: Wipe the orsn es and of! s’ E a couple an engaged ;ed. is one ever invited is; aifair-wlthout invit- r mute-nary t1 mvita is im- ible for to utwntim" ' walking wanna Wgmi: oorryingnnum e a,s o man offer to holdit for her? ‘P5525388 igésti lemons-d the white. clfihsfihll? to shreds with s 'I‘ie that‘; to- F 2%? 5 P E oi "tfrui some ved Who ou esekiim? thee end for every cup of this add 2 cups water. well and stand overnight Next morning the mixture slow]. for two hours. BETTER ENGLISH D. C. Williams 2. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "The man with the cane is gnly one househglfi- tin for‘; can 111m," W!!!» 0 N Han 0M 2Wh lathe t - household in five a pair of blan- elation oi "moeaiwgorxec pron“ im 3. Which one of these words is lied? Hammock, ettiok. miss - hancllgvork, disembark. 4. What does the word "hyper- bole" mean a word beginning with q: that means "s surmise; a ANSWII! linigy, '"I'he man with like gene . .Pmnounce mo-aa- , as in , i it accent alfi-sblefl stldclus. ‘iyident . ed “authors writ; lecture. DESIGN N0. BOO One of the lovliest uiit patterns BUM‘ ti}. lflfl “h...” ma...‘ "°"‘ w. p ted are the scrap . Pattern No. 890 con- tsina comp! vamtrurtvtiloiras. m a this combine .s§3. lllfiiuiaiitiimvsw name ‘:36 “gmmmgug” m‘ u “u” address with it cents in coin or “wmhuv .. _ stem Needlework Bureau timaflen .. .seo geh“iggl§'°'gu mlmm“ standbygoestowosthsbilr 5 °- ywqsstoaee-toreiievooomh- __ niamaaséhesse muscular sue- m“. ltreet Address org lTevlnee udflgefiiled for a parcel address Titanium: SMILE _N0 FIGURE-BIA!) ' A woman, over-laden with parcels, 1w h up and the rs platform looking for a see/t. and a porter at last came to her - " with mo. ’ and I'll fix you up 5n the front of the train." he said y. . "Y ‘ii d0 nothing of the sort." she answered orossly. "I'm not s mascot." IDENTICAL South." the nun an- nounced in the vii c post office. "Oh. ‘ave ee." re: d the post- master. "But how o Oi know ‘ee "Why. have a look at this." the man answered, taki out a photo- graph of himself. " looks, lib | arc Mr. smith?" hole ture at the Every morning a sheet can re- w moved. leaving a nice ‘clean floor. gisitzysmi u!“ m“, 15111:: N‘ ti‘: 'I'his will save m/uch cleaning of the fled “m; mm‘ m, mum, q “it"- cheese-cloth bag the add u. the anfa, 3°" "a" ‘ “m” W“ "W liselslms lssenpslyill strained liquid and boll this scan ~ S“? 0 w?“ 1:8 val be at? L song? lenses, VleslhTired against‘) ftgléixiltégaéil9gndlgqolllfl lliBd t Vi. N them remain in the water for Flllllll-llfhmm" Wm“ canwfg s‘? fm m. about a half hour, and whe . no ' ' ' " ‘bring in a full rolling boil and cracked the meats can be l f. makeyoufednngvmrgjittqy-llilh‘ u” v rouslv until l-hl with no trouble. ‘mm. _ may.“ “d; timq? mkmm M,“ m, 19m. mo} 5113m- Q. How can i make a shampoo Tlmfdon.‘ “l, _u.y Lydi, |;_ 1y n m‘ frequ-enfly. and the, she-p? . pihithamt vqetshecompound w"- pétu- w hot sternum: ars and A. An cxceilm: shampoo can be ‘icvenlmwmpwm, 1ngugun-ruual "l Mm melt“ pammm when "W" "m" W‘ i“ m1" "i" m“ Pinkhanfs Con: notonlY hues his first cost herdens add a m- liave been boiled with a little m u "m, mommy “in b“; .1” d I o: m“ gow- m; water and left in jellied form. ' ° - mug. - ‘m w" m ‘L d” time. _________i__ t - jars and store s. coo u“ etrungf ' 0! “PM dam In this recipe all orange-l. b. PinitbamaCompoiutd iaeo W gfmpgfflflfi or, ell lemons mu because it has a soothing effect on one “my ' t i rtant organs. itiiimiiiti dnir:c‘tior?e%uy hi». 1r- Needlecrafi w FOR THE HUME h ‘Pry ch09!“ P into “up 1m before serving“: will enhance the flavor» me, doesn't it?‘ ' "Ah .so it do," answered the postmaster, and handed over the assess-no The headmaster was sbproaohed hv one o! his com thb h w" wee flail-d $1....“ av - sham" which asked. " . yes, s number." "I'm glad of that. i never bu? what to do with my week-end. awn, shy not k001i W"! h" °l l am