“.2 . BECAUSE IT'S FULL-STRENGTH this arrive fresh Yeast goes right to work. No waiting —n0 extra steps! And Flcischmanffs fresh Yeast makes bread that taster sweeter, is fighter, finer-textured every time. IF YOU BAKE AT HOME — get Fleischrnands active fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow label. Dependable-Canada's tested favor- ite for over 70 years. /%7v““'”’/””Ww MADI IN CANADA _ _____ _.a ___ _ __ Q '\<\(\’\(\£\\Y\Y\\ _,,,_,. “AVA” -_,-. \, \4\’ \ u» v\..\_ \_\.\/\ I ‘co i, ‘n BETTER ENGLISH? f; cooks connenéi n. c. Williams Noxxy, KRK~Z9J ""\‘1‘\‘r1'~ 1 25k- -\'r<>oo<w\7‘€v“€>"o~:r<.\“” n: CREAM PIE t l. gallant is wrong llVliiél {this sga- j enoe “The man pa orty - lars per week." atom,‘ mm‘ 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "ealoslfl? 3. which one of these words is h cup granulated sugar Thinly shaved rind of ‘A lemon it cup once-sifted flour . ‘II (I685 S misspelled? dmsposublc.‘ dispensa- 2 eggs pgffgnhuy beaten U011, dlspeptic, (llsparity. teasboon Wm a What doe; the word “por- lwblqnon " mm‘ Baked and cooled i» shell ‘a: ‘£81. i? a. u" Yaw 2gp“ pan w 13"” "mean of double boiler and add e lemon "h" 15 mergwmm rin, place over boiling water i. say‘, “forty dollars a. week." 2. Pronounce go-iosh, a as in ask un- stressed, o as in of, accent last syllable. 3. Dyspeptic. 4. Taking away a right of action. debate, etc; COHCIIISIVP. "The officer's peremp- tory command was obeyed." 5. Re- dundunt. remove lemon rind. Combine the sugar, flour and salt very thoroughly; slowly stir in part of the scolded milk, then stir back into remaining milk in d heat, stirring constantly. until smoothly thickened; cover A JOB ONLY S" \/\/\ Ylili Gilli B0 Price Control Question and Answers Qlolibna and Answer; on Pr] Cfllllrol wlll lppenr in The Guar inn as a regular feature each do The lllloltlons nre those which hav reached the Wartime Prices an Trude Board from housewives ‘ this region. The answers are rlded hy the Board Readers. Ben- Sons who have intelligent questions to ask on price control are invited to Send them In writing lo the Women’: Regional Advisory Com- mlttce. Q- Are clubs and organization; planning welcome home celebra- tions for returning servicemen al- lowed to app (mxx:>o~“““""\.‘~ ministration for additional rations? A. The T. B. is very much in sympathy with welcome home receptions but it cannot ford to allot extra rations for this purpose. anizers of such rec- eptions must, therefore, use indivi- dual members’ ratlon allowances if they serve refreshments involving rationed foods. Q. How does a ccnstuner use tokens? A. I1 you purchase less meat than the coupon value allows, your retailer will give you change in tokens to cover the unused amount. These tokens may be used for a later purchase. Q. My baby's formula requires more corn syrup than the ration allows. Mo. I obtain extra coupons to buy ad ‘clonal quantiies of corn syrup? _ A.’ To obtain additional quanti- ties of corn syrup [or your baby's formula. you may bring your baby's ration book to the Local Ration Board and exchange sugar coupons from your baby's ration book for preserves coupons at the rate of 2 preserves coupons for every 5118B! coupon surrendered. I cook, over boiling water, stirring oc- casionally, until no raw flavor of flour remains - about three minu- tee longer. Stir part of the cooked mixture into the beaten eggs; return all. to double boiler and cook, stirring ou-, ble boiler; cook over low direetf and fire or oflier catastrophe constantly for one minute lon er. Add vanilla, and butter, bit, by it. turn filling into baked and cool- ed pie shell. Chill thoroughly before serving. HINTS 0N ETIQUETTE You would not think of inter. rupting a friend who happened to be reading Don't lniernupt your family who is doing the same thins. unless of course. there is a flrgrrw: WHY IS YOUR SHEET so MUCH WHITER THAN MINE ? IT ONCE YOU SEE RINSO wI-IITE YOU'LL NEVER ea- SATISFIED WITH ANYTHING ELSE LITTLE BOY TOLD MY SON ABOUT IT IND . BILLY SAID ms MOTHER uses RINSO ‘CAUSE WH ITEST scum. . RINSO CERTAINLY 651s our MORE DIRT! EVEN VERY DIRTY CLOTHES COME DAZZLING WHITE... YET RINsds SAFE FOR 557D PIA/SO 4 1/11,’; Ii”; um: you 54.9% GIVES THE ly to the Ration Ad» __\J_._ cwaoc in: cold, out pieces of paper the maelstrom sucIIi in desserts, '1'": ~.--'-~* '2'": n u nenau y Inflation. fio/dcn/fi EVAPORATED MllK on a sumv non vouIt onoem next nu: vou snor €¥~Y§§ EMX JSXSPQYY? Dorothy Wx Says- PRE-MARITAL CONFESSIONS Baring Faults During Courtship Would Wreck N uptiai Institution DEAR. mes DIX: Don't you think that if young men and women would explain their faults to each other before marriage it would do a great deal to avert unhappy marriages and prevent divorce? H BILL . ANSWER: 1f lovers were dleillulioned before marriage, it would wreck the institution of marriage altogether. Tom would never lead Busie to the altar if he had u close-up of Susie's temper and tongue. " nor would Susie ever sign up in a life partnership with Tom i! she had the remotcst idea that he would grab all the profits and emoluments of the firm, and that she would never be able to collect the wages of a hired girl for her labors as wife and mother and cook and housemald and butler and seamstress and nurse and so on ad inflnitum. NOBLE THOUGHT BUT- Of course. your plan is theoretically correct. The honest thing for every prospective bridal couple to do is to lay their oardt on the table and expose all their faults and weakness and [in the party of the other pert a chance to take them or leave them. Certainly it in but common honesty for a man to tell the woman who is going to be in his power whether he is industrious or lazy; whether he is go-getter nr an also ran; whether he is good-natured or irritable, and particularly what his views are regarding the status of a wife and the claim she hes upon her hudmnds pocketbook. But prob- ably no man in the world ever told a woman the whole truth about himself. Maybe he could not. even if he so desired, because we are all so lenient to our own faults. We make such convincing alibls for them and we lee them in such I different light from the way they are going to look to the men and women we marry. And it l: the some wey with s wonun. Angelina could call her temper nerves, her unreuon temperament, her shiftlessness she could camouflage as bad health, her extravagance could masquerade under her love of beauty, and by the time she got through making out her list of faults it would read like a schedule of all the most desirable virtues. , Nor would the lovers be warned by even an honest confession of each others faults. The thing that would later get on their nerves and rubl them ra/w would seem scarcely a blemish seen from the far distance ofI courtship. Then, such is the vality of lovers that they would believe that they would be able to work miracles and make him or her Into the perfect husband or wife of his or her desire. So I greatly fear that the ante-matrimony confessional would be barren of practical results. DEAR M156 DIX: I um r bride and very happy. except for one thing. All the week I cook my husband's breakfast so he can get off to work, but on Sundays he is at home and I feel that he should cook my breakfast and serve it to me in bed. What do you advise? DISILLUSIONED ANSWER: For you to have a little common sense and not to be so selfish. Your part of the partnership is preparing the food that your husband works to pay for, and you have no more right to renege on your part of the Job than he has on his. He doesn't ask you to go out and do his work one day of the week. Whv should you expect him to do yours? - DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My hiubuid left me after we had been married for five yelrs for a women mrny years older than he, whom he married because she was rich. He did not love her-he lust needed money. Now she has died leaving him her estate and he wants me to marry him again. I have no children. What would you advise? MRS. HTJ-i. ANSWER: Why not, if you still love that sort of cad? But hr seems to m: a poor kind of creature for any woman to tie to. If you marry him, make him settle some of the poor deceased lady's money on you, because the next time he goes broke he will desert you again y I uonIIIIIo suiusgj msmmAozaMMQ-sM-Q-,.gV-, 5 p comm-tuna u: run /‘Q'\./\\\.,\ every time you have to cook the ‘mm your m“. "deduct nfty cents that clock," said the . "I've had to come Egg/p and get the breakfast my. "Well. what about it?" replied iha Kiri. "I'm paying you for it. ain't I7" ‘ I WAI\¢\_\_P\_>NJ\&A1 z aousruotn , scnnraoox By Roberta Lee s~ > Mouse Traps ‘ After a mouse has been caught I "W. do not use the trap again until it has been thoroughly scam. ed, dried, and aired, to take away all scent. Do this. or use a new imv- 11w trans can be Purchased s... IH: lolollo lifil Ideal if you ouffer this way due to female functional periodic disturbances, try Lydia E. Pinkham’! Vegetable Com- pound to relieve such symptomr. This time-tested formula boas non than relieve ruch monthly pain. It ALSO re- iievol tired, cranky, nuvoul, blue feelings of such days-when due to this cause. Pinkhnm‘: Compound is what is known a: a uterine sedative bemuse it so cheaply, um; mm _ ha: a soothing elect on one of woman's fer to throw them r§r'y'°'lv§1°t’l'°tl§i m°'"'“P°'“"' "W"- mlce in them. This medicine hip: mom. It’: one of the molt efiective medicines of its kind. Follow llbei direetionr. Buy a bottle oi Lydia Pinkhlrn’: Compound today at any drug ltore déaéiflb-Mem Boiler Volii-obll Vegetables will retain melt- f1". it’ a33§'“-i~“31".€3°l‘n "$31" ""‘°"I‘”' s we er instead of cold water. m“ . Cold Feet T0 Prevent the feet from becom- uo or; lhlpeoftlnsol fthesh and p1.“ m. h VlCUlll-I €OMPOUNI i‘ A aunt's lilAllY g By on Hand Forum's Wllo ~~~~~ v .oo~7o~'\ , of Iw yeotId-lyl mowers bro on an expanse o! Yet evon before the first of these bannm dawn, James‘ mind. I H1990!‘ being occupied with the plsns for the forthcoming day, he was 66h- taln when he awakened much earlier from his dreams, that 211-. ready the morning had come. At _ that, time the moon, its full. be ocy brandi- uoft olowntroeslentourrooln a brightness almost like dawn. "mien," he callecLto mo in an anxious voice, "did you hear that; alarm. rlng?", at the same time making haste to go to the wi over a shoulder. I regretted hav- ing my sleep so suddenly interrupt- ed then. But not now. An un- broken stillness lay over the fann- stead and surroundings at that time, similar I thought to that place wherein the princess lay sleeping, awaiting the touch of the fairy prince to bring her and all who dwelt there out of their slum- ber. At Alderlea, nothing moved. No leaf stirred on the branches; no small night wind Mus red. There was no sign of life- even a prowling cat. An unlit torn, mocked by the moonlight, nnd |o small I thought in comparison, was in the yard, where some one had lcfi; it last evening. as well as a pail from the bull's feeding. Lonely it is at this hour and to view it from a window. there it a mystery in the silentneu and it seems a: if one has happened on a strange deserted spot. That wu what l thought when I turned a- way and found rest again beside James in the old, old bed. I O I On every Island farm, where tile folk worked at the digging, I cult poet, for them there would what James descriptively temui: “No slack lifts" today-not eveh 7100/90 If! UHF _ alenaotdlrutwfl (contlhucrfon page 1o) '\7\?~" C let B bold Gould \ 7 prmmlogtiluz: u 31' rm.» a74- uonrnn W“ v nrunm BIOW ETIQIIETTE l i By Roberta L00 if M- MAM ‘N Q. Who are the cal one can ask to fill 1,13%. party at the last minute? A. Ask only g Very ma...» friend. as it is a favor you i: B-skins- The true friend will , as he never knows when he mqy wan-t to ask you to do the samd one is introducing Mr- Jones to Mr. Smith, is it pro- per to say, “Mr. Jones, my friend Mr. Smith"? A. Not if Mr. Jones is also a friend, This expression implies that Mr. Smith only is your friend. Q. How should a divorced man on, hares pxinceu dreu ines and a b moaned pocket. theuottol blthelirh will "adorable." No. 274i ircut in sine: I, l0, 12. 14 and l6. sire l2 requires 3% yards 39-inch. J uot vote . for pattern and woman act if they should by send 3o “n” chance meet in public? "mob mam“ A courteous bow u all um n m“ necessary. Slilliillilii Relieved FastThis Easy Way! Put a. few dro s of Vicks Va-tro-nrfl soothln relief UP each nostr and feel it go to work from m rable iscAiiiiIrtrif V pgttoi unit or none number in 8 Address Pattern Department. Tho Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern Nomi-l "l1 a Stilt-Admiral bringing quick, ,,,,,,,,,,, “Gliw Oily Pnvheo T00 OUDIOUI A A frliionubl y ’ woman £- proached the lower-seller and - ed for a dollar’: worth of flowers. Afilr the pwchue Ibo : ‘ifinnuanculnrs , I dull nut romp flown l]: “dffliier? 3w’: coming out "She shall have the best market, mount." replied the seller._"W'l"In.t’s she in for?" on the flower Ill" PREVENT PEISPIIIIIOI SHIIS iiill liliiili IITIIQIIT IIIITATIIII Tlll llllll ARIID gim you double protection. It asserts you from murder odor, and pl protect your cs tom perspira- tion ipou. Amid in on odorless deodorant, withdufieotertuxeofnberurycream. f: vanishes lnluntly- giving immediate results. With An-ld, you are absolutely safe --uu eoioy yourself wherever you aro- tegnoileu of the weather. Protect your dnintiacu and chum with Amid. Bu: uh; it uodey. It is very economical. DESIGN N0. l0“ The bineop le item. e sl n. Irish crgcheluand low m’ st tch are beautiful ed cheied on handkerchieg. Pattern p110. ooa contains complete Instr-un- ons. To order puttern: Write or 1mg above oict re with vow mm; ggdtrlfss with 20 cents in coin or l Scr t Needl charlootetaevn oGuaxxliam “m.” Design No. 1008 de- er’: knot p» liftfilflilfll. “ "c" . ii II I I D Street Addrgu A ' W‘? fNeedlecraftx. FOR THE HOME 7 now cIIII I. t: IyAlIllAlIlly Saar-ya moisture to m without dunlw “if-twill” Howcuulnlw REE tho ‘filing it grill water. The V Jeep oulb- wifiafikflt ’i.»-°"°‘.$‘i$l twat? A. omeuttruwollwil ‘mltmdwogonwnw willloomznurdooubo I“! Iaywcgtilrfilwlloilfil I II. evrllhwtmdfl'%m “'_-.,'q 3'13“ andwotthohvfil Don't Nlaltei ,This Mistake I When Child is ~ Oonstipeted ‘X