PAE-l 1W2 ‘N Woman's Realm LIEVE the \vwwv¢¢ Moon Ointment 0i ‘."-°" ‘Wk wound and _ do- ntruot-lon of the tuna-then i in _ prunertiea are lbeor assisting nature to quickly). leaving no war. l v "Of-COG. Household By Roberta Me OOOOOQO-QGQOOO-VOQO-OKOO-Oi '$§-Q§4§§§¢0%00 Billing Stain; 1f the bluiug has iett a stair: on wtnte material, soak it in a strong dnunoiiiu. and water solution. or in kerosene. and wash with u naphtha soap in lukewarm water, rinsing thoroughly afterwards. Pia no C are Aftur the piano tuner has renew~ ed the felts of the piano and gen- erally put it into flne condition, guard against future trouble utith. moths and place piece of gum cani- phor insicle to keep the moths away. In the Conner (‘rumpled tissue paper danipotiesl with a little furniture polish works like magic in removing dust from the corners of rooms while polish- ing floors. O00 g Morning Smile .7 Y§$ ¢vrovooo A BIRD IN THE HAND The water-logged Scot lay gasp- ing on the deck. l-le had Just been rescued from drowning and was duly grateful. Looking up at his rescuer he ex- claimed, ‘Thank ‘ee, mon thank ‘ee, Git» me your name and Ah‘ll ro~ Incmiber ye i.n my will." iiis impecunlous delivereu- gazed down at him for a moment, and then replied. "All, guvlnor, Ah‘m no dcsarviiig 0' such an honor. Sup- pose ye just cut me off wi‘ u shill- ing right now?" WELL BLESSED A young husband did not like hash. His wife acquired l. French cookery book, giving many recipes for using leftovers. 'I\he next even- tng one of the fancy mixtures in a covered dish appeared on the table. The husband reached over and raised the cover, but the wife said: "Why don't you ask the blessing first. dear?" Replied the husband: "1 don't believe there is anything here that liasrrt already been blessed." Scrapbook 1 I I i i 0 IIILIII_II Mo d e rn I Etiquette IyInbeIl-IIAO o i Q. In it nil right for s mm to arette when he enter: an elevator? A. No: he should discard it be- _ fore he enters the clevator. J Q. Does an unmarried woman t use “Mis-s" when signing her name to a business letter‘! - A. Yes; but be sure that it is en‘ closed Ln parentheses, as, "tl\liss) Dorothy Johnson." Q- What dishes propriatc for an itiformal luncheon? A. A casserole. or chicken a la king, with a single salad and a deli- cate dessert JIFFY ROLLS Put 1H cups of scolded milk in a bowl with ‘.5.- cup of shortening, ‘.3 teaspoons salt and '1.- cttp sugar. When this mixture is lukewarm, add 2 yeast cakes which have been dissolved in Warm water. One wcil beaten egg and enough flour lo get away from the edges. Let stand in a warm place. covered. until twice its real size. Put ln shape and let rise again twice its size. Bake in an oven at 400 deg. F. ORANGE COCOANUT DROPS Half cup shortening. 1 cup brown sugar, 1.1.» cup orange juice. 2 eggs. ‘.3 cups flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder. ‘.5 cup cocoanut, 1-,- tea- spoon selt. Put in muffin pans and top with 1 tablespoon sugar. '-.- cup cocoanut, grated rind l orange. Bake 350 degrees F. 20 25 minutes. 12 large muffins BUTTERSCOTCII MU FFINS Two cups flour. ‘t cup sugar. 4 teaspoons baking powder. 1 tea- spoon salt, 4 tablespoons shorten- ing, 1 08g. 2-3 cup milk. 1 cup brown sugar, ".- cup raisins. 1/3 cup but- ter. Make a biscuit dough oi’ the first seven ingredients. Roll to ‘l.- inch thickness. sprinkle with sugar and raisins Roll up and cut into i- inch sections. Grease part. Sprinkle with sugar and dot with butter. Place biscuits on this with cut side up and bake in n. hot oven for 10 minutes These may be cooked in muffin puns. Ho... Can 1!! By Anne Ashley §+O~F§Q O-O-OQ-O- iodtlno 0-04 PO-O-OO FO-O- Q. How cm f remove stains? A. If iodine has been spilled on wearing apparel. cover the stains ‘with white laundry soap and allow it to remain in cold water for ht least two hours. It can then be the stains will wash out. Q. lfow can I soften and whiten the hands? A. Mix one ounce otf glycerine, three ounces of bay rum. l/i-dram oil bergaznot and apply- Or rub well at night with olive oil and wear sleeping gloves. Q. How can I keep parsley keep on mwklng hi5 cigar or cig-_ ._ T? ‘within hailing distant-g and "El- len" Jnntcs had called. in a nice , tc-ne "you may as well give mc l Cook s Carner luimi at. feeding this here calf.“ If * ‘ "finders" be "keepers" then this .,.,*,,,I,,,,,,,,,,,,,,‘ latest addition to our herd should, Ellen a Diary i By an Inland I'M-mar’: Wlh ~. 0 “Ellen” June: uid to m0 in hi: slernest voice this morning" you should ktiow by this time that when you turn c, pail on it: :ide. the contents are bound to run out." ‘Then in an a-shle, and as usual since the chore was about done “I ruiild have done it as well by my- ‘ ~ vvvvvvvv¢vv II Socialcnd Person DEAR DORD PHY DIX: DOROTHY DIX SA YS'—-l v vww Tyrant Parents Miserable For Daughters TIBEICHAKQQTYIIEZILQWN WGHAKDIAN II III al/ Fashions/ Strict Mothers And Fathers Malta "llfo I am t: girl of l6. l’ don't date because “e1” we had bet?" 59615118 a 119W my mother and fathtr, especially my fathcr. forbid it. The other calf there on a barn floor, James, night, my girl friend, uiho is u fine. Christian girl, asked me over to guiding an unused tongue. to the her house fcr a little Vhilc. ‘Iwo nice boys from out oi’ town drop- very new milk while I tried to hold pod in and we had a good time. the pail at a convenient but siiift- heme with me, which 2's only half a block. But I had stayed- later not of my choosing. While out at_ my choritig. which James is carey ful to explain "doesn't amount to much now" I had happened to come belong to Joanie for ohe happen-- r-d to find it. ii‘ in an indirect way. She had gone to that barn early, for scratch for her potiitry and at once was aware of the event and James who can hear every- first tileat of a ewe or a cc-tv in travail had not been there to usher it into this strange old world. But the occurrence ind not been at ail a. surprise to him. Oh no, James as‘ he said when I relayed the new: "had been just expecting it" either,’ today or tomorrow," and added, u- he left Jamie's side hurriedly. “and her not fed with that mind." James has n different for-' muin. lie-switches them to. wLen he anticipates such a blessed event in the stables or sties. But James and I have been rather penplexed of late. ciuc, I suspect to having to make too much of an effort at our pus. to kcc-p up with the inter- esis, that ore coming into our lives. I I I Like yesterday. when the young- er grand-son came ironic. It was fortunate, we had all agreed, that 3) a-‘wontinued on- Page >0 OO-O-O-OQ-O + Better English O go 1. What is wrong with unis sen- tence? "lie repeated the storyi again." _ l. 3; What Ls the correct pronum. iation of "frappc“? how to solve. and Father by break. And the tragedy of it is that children crave nothing else on earth so much as the love. tenderness and comipaniondiip o! their parents, Mild so many of them never get anything but harshness and criticism i and abuse. It is to wee-p vrlicn a girl writes that u-hen she sees g happy home, with loving parents and children in it, she is so envious | that she wishes she could die. DEAR. DOROTH Y DIX: Whey they left. my friend walked are mp5! gp- ‘rng angle. The ruic. I played was than I intended and it was 11:30 tvhen I got home. But nu! mother rind father were in a rage. He called me udainn fool and a night hawk and all sorts of awlful names and told me he was going to beat hell out of mo. I felt like running out of the door and away to where I could never see another human being. and i’ cried myself to sleep. But. 0h. Miss Dix. nhcn I see such a happy and wonderful home life as my friend has. it mains me want to die. D0 you tlitink it would settle everything if I were to stop going auywtherc at all ever again? Is there any way l can tnake my parents like mc find realize I aim not a bad girl? CONDITIONS HEAIi-TBREAKING (Contiiiued on Page 3) l JEANN IE ANSWER: This pitiful letter is one of the hundreds that I get from despairing young girls who are the victims of their overstrict parents, and who confront a problem that neither they, nor I, know For vlrat can you do with fathers and mothers who have no understanding or sympathy with youth, who never let tlitcii- daughters have a date, or a boy friend, or any o! the pleasures that i belong to their time o! life? Parents cant be’ punished for robbing their‘ children o! all the joys of! youth. Mothers and fathers can't be penalized for inflicting m‘ a discipline on their children harsher than tihat of any prison. Girls can’! run auay from the parents who reviic and insult them. and accuse them of wrongdoings that they never dreamed of committing, because they have nowhere to go. of this letter. devises a futile little plan of trying to appease Mother never going anywhere at all ever again, it is a heart- . And when one, like the writer :l have been married 12 years to a big, tall, husky man. For the first six months, he seemed fair enough, but after that, he grcw in/to ii tiny, tropical house-plant. who ex- §-..:.*;t:':::. ...-. LivingtSl Leisure —THE WOMAN '3 REALM— i v ALXWELL HOUSE contains choice . I-lllll-Allcrlcln when. n}: flu-idea l] upon: ind Illdhnl Rented to ' qty’ plum of extra flavor Which one of tihese words ll misspelled? Unconscious, undemorr strative. uudcrate. 4. What does the word "morose" incnni‘ f» What is a word beginning with sai that means “promoting health"? ANSWER! l. Again is redundant. as repeat tnenns to do or say again, 2, pm. nounce fro-pa. first a as in ask, sec- 0nd a as in pay. accent second syl- laundered m me usual “shim and table. 3. Undenate. 4. Of a sour or ; Beautiful nails. with jewel-like pol- gloomy temper. tPt-onoimce both o‘: as in no. s as in so. accent second syllable.) "A poet that fails in writ~ mg. becomes often a morose critic.’ —$henstone. 5. Sulutary. ‘fresh’? A- I! parsley is kept in n 1n with a tlg.ht lid. and in a cool place it will keep fresh for a long time. BEAUTIFUL HANDS Beautiful hands on n souhistiwlPd lady! What raipturee have been ‘by those Artistic fluid line! of flesh bone, Relaxed. gracefully curving to eni- tphasize Your slightest point? Cool. stud- iediy iLovely, your beautiful hands! stirred and iah. Careful grooming and petal-Suit skin With nary 5, tell-bale wrinkle. How carefully rnmrfv FETAL ERR-noun? DESIGN N0. 1C0. Graduated doilie; with a dainty pm cage are extremely NW1"- Tm‘ dug“ l‘ guy to crochet. PIO- torn m. moo oontllns comb!!!" iv»- ltructions. ' To emu: Bend a cent: in coin as Needlework Btlelu, Cluriotw town Guardian- Dflifll N0. 1000 - I --—-_-1__ NINE Mdfl-‘ll ‘Those hands of your: guard the jealous secret i Of'your ago. Beautiful jewels too, so‘ wisely Chosen to draw the eye. howmcr reluctant, To linger on those lovely hand: of yourl. Strarigc how they look a: though they never did A day of honest toil. Or i: it strange? 5 But glaze on them proudly. as well’ you might, " - Palms down and fingers curled Just right. ’ For if you turn them ovef. with u" start. m v A4A A A ‘L A The grand two-grain ‘Gnpe-Nutl‘ flavor in crisp, flake form. A: nour- hhing l! they are deligh ' ‘ to u; 'I‘_wo package size! - Ieflflu gm! [um cconnm STIE i0 nlwll" """'" Y-|7 You’ll realize that those lovely In- #579, Emit/forum?! l .7flhri5in6%arA£hne;i§;' m Wm,- t...» "‘°‘\gb4‘FlE:i}i;tiiiil/(3 iFEil||' IIII I-IIIIII II'II Lite d‘; Dressed ' 41.92.1247 . vv 7w hilt. YOU fiiust have noticed them at your grocer'a-tliogg bright new; cereals. packages of the famous Poet's breakfast Now you'll find four of your breukhg: fgvoyiu; 1n “iafnflyfl Pgckageo the! you can recognize quickly - bu,» easily from the grocer a shelf. The packages are new and gay — the products are the name fine quality you have always had under those truted names. Ono of tho (Inf teady-to-olt oorull -uiil unequalled for malty-sweet flavor- giveu you nourish- ’ Iucnl in concentrate-I ‘form l0 l]!!! 3 M510 lpoona i: a lufleieat unlng. you'll like. nun. Two Your favorite bubbly-Ugh; com flak" - delightfully sweet and crhp, with nil the quick food-emery ulna of fluent FMKES 72747-"0064, Zjgsfé m»: RAN The bran you need with u fllvnr Help: keep you regular -nnd make: bmkfut a delleln: plchp llgdl- regular and giant economy- ‘vvvv-Qq Patti re I 9 a l h: and |imt economy. white corn. Two package lilac-rep Product of 00mm! food: hands i Are empty, lady. like your ioneiyl heart. —By Dorothy Pechey in Regina. Iieader-Post. AIR IIUMIFIDIER A self-regulating air humidifier has been developed by an eastern company which claims it will mama tuin the proper amount of moist? ure in the air-n! QpBIIJIIEIXlS ind homes during the winter months l American home makers invested $40,000,000 last year in dQCOIUUVL‘ Oriental rugs. If g ring won't. part comPlPY with your finger, hold the finger undoi- cold water. This tends to re- duce swelling and ri-ng can be cu- ed off. ‘ EASY IQONING ‘Prick that bring: highly surch- ed collars, cuff: and other lllhd- up pieces front the ironing board looking their amoothmt in to mix paraffin with the starch. Melt the purhflh) and ntir a lmall quantity into the starch when it in propor- ed. Stir thoroughly to imun com- O I" IIWFR SIIIP... I plats mixing of starch and wax] before applying to clothes. FOUNDATION FIT For c sleek liihuuette, select foundation garments that develop the basic lines used in the design of the clothes with which they are , worn. Prcperly fitted. a foundation garment should be comfortable and should encourage good posture. STORY OF IIYMN Hvw the hymn Abide With Me, which i: to be filmed this year m England, came tn be written by its composer, the Rev. Henry Francis Lyle, is recalled by the’ London Daily Herald. The clergyman Virtu- of Brixhnm, Devonsthlre. died ‘of tuberculosis in i847. It was after] [trenching hi: last sermon at sun- set that he was inspired to write the hymn destined to become it'll- mortal. The text of this sen-non had, tbeen the disciples‘ words to Christ postal unit or zone number in your on the road to Emmnus, "Abide address. with us. for it i: evening. and the day i: fur spent." MAKING GOOD COFFEE Two lovl tablespoons of coffee to one measuring cup of water mike: coffee of good strength; u:e frelhly drawn. cold water; nerve an noon u: poulblc after fiewinz; for but remit: ulway: brew cob fee at full capacity of coffee mak- er; never boil coffee; never re-use coffee grounfh; never allow cloth (Continued on run S) _ in to pinyin main You ylirlc Ind wunm who nufier no [mm tingle lnnnln that golf" pnlu. well: d out" may be Pu to Iron tabled. i try Lydh E. l klnnfl fin nun! with added IP01 mot but hm: wuyc to m; ulna "pile item r-m an. Hnklnnn Tablet: are one u! mpctclplivnitun tanielyvuennbuyl ' iiu|£mnu:=~.......~""- a Pattern No. 2682 \ iNeedlecraftl —-F OR THE HOME-— SPRING FLATTEBY Soft charm in a dress with the longer cap sleeve and dainty ruf- fles. \ Makes up beautifully in a sheer or in crepe. Excellent line for the sizable figure. No. 2632 is cut in sizes 14, 16, 1B, 20, 36. 38. 40. 42. 44, 46. 48. Size 36 requires 2V: yards 39-inch. Send 20 cents for PATTERN. which ‘incudes complete aewing guide. Print you: Name. Audi-ell nut Style Number plainly. BO aura to unto size you wish. Include Addrm Pattern Department, The Charlottetown Guardian. NITRIC Addrel t1 Province m: mas SAY- ‘Iy GINIIE; For Tueulu, Mud: 11 AN alert and highly stimulated note of mind lhould incite to quick grasp of exceptional opponufplthl. with I11 inclination to launch out on new enterprlua and holder ob- jectives. although ouch initiutivl demlndt important change, of 0n- vlronl. contact: and "tumult!- "swift movll mum fulfil/Worm 0nd greatly denim! moon». Ilih pleasant trips. new ulcocintu. Thoie whose birthday it ll may you of yfghu. mnewim tncta m: ‘ Y tnvo into y; ‘cnvirflfll l" m‘ "“R".'it‘i’¢‘f~it=» " 9W‘ mm . .. A "U . “ prawn for: ' ohnninnwliflqll mun ‘ manu-