_Made restless by the witchcry PAQE "rwo 11> g Woman's Realm/Soci lfivingeSt Leisure -mE WOMAIWS REALM- MOONLIT NIGHT The cloud: are lined with silver. And sllvered in the gran, Between the rows of ancient tree: 'I'he gleaming roadways pass, The brooks are shining ribbons And argent mists arise From broad nocturnal meadows _ ‘Like incense to the skies; .And somewhere in the hedge: A wakefui bird complains. moonlit night contaiIns. —Frances M. Miller in the New ,York Times. HINTS 0N ETIQUETTI i You'll never "make friends" and 'IlLi\'€ a chance to “influence people" if you lake a lofty attitude in vour relations with those you know, and are constantly "bored" at their un- tertalnments. Learn appreciation nf others and express that feeling. Let foods coal before plating in Rfrigfilfllltil‘. Remove pickles, jcliir-s anti lill0'pt‘ll£‘(l cans that -nccd no cold. OPEN GLOVE FACTORY One of Australia's outstanding women business executives, Miss Hazel Woodhouse has established two successful glove factories at Parkes and Wellington. provinc- al centres in New South Wales. Iiss Woodhouse is a trained nurse but became a stenographer during the depression years of the arly 1930's and turned her nus- lness training to account when she bpened a factory at Sydney four years ago. Yellow mustard stimulates the glow of digestive fluid and a strong ose administered in water acts ls an emetic. Keep refrigerators away from rirect sunlight and away from he stove, water heater, or radia- will increase and prove er. Outside heat he_ operating costs aafmful to the finish. OLD FURNITURE If the luster of old furniture has dulled considerably, it can be restored by rubbing vigorously with a flannel naked in turpen- tine, drying. and then polishing with linseed oil, vinegar and meth- ylated spirits. FLANNELS The most sensitive skin wlll not be irritated by fiannels if they are pressed with a slightly warm iron on the wrong side after they are thoroughly dry. SIIOE POLISH To soften shoe polish that has become dry and hard in its con- tainer. trying adding a few drops of e to it. HARVEST JELLY IS FLAVOURSOME Early apples, if not too ripe, make good apple jelly, Plain ap- ple jelly, is en all-time favourite or it may be flavoured with mint. cinnamon. or old-fashioned scent- ed geranium leaves. Since these apples are bland in flavour they are excellent for use with other fruits such as plums or choke cherries. Jellies made with one half apple juice and one half juice of the other fruit taste entirely of the plum or cherry. One of the testing kitchenk tav- ourite recipes for jelly is this one for harvest jelly, which uses crab or snow apples, qulnces and cran- berries. Some of the ingredients won't be ready for a few weeks but it is a fine jelly to plan ahead for. . .1. The proportions for the jelly ore: two quarts of crab or snow apples one quart of cranberries, five quin- ces. sugar and water. Wash the_ apples and qulnces and remove stem and blosom ends, Cut hi quarters, cover with cold wotcr o-nd cook until tcndcr. Wash clan- berries and cook in one quart of water until tender. Pour 4139105 quinces and cranberries into lolly bag and let drain overnight, Mea- sure juice. Boil three minutes. Test for pectin. Add sugar (3-4 cup of sugar to one cup of juice). Boil to 220 degrees Fahrenheit or until syrup sheets from the spoon—ahout 10 mi-nutes. Remove scum, pour into sterilized glasses and seal. -~ n/x/r a raw: axes: so Mac/r W/l/TER WAN MIA/E? life. It is: Be Your Age. peak o! her attractiveness. to a woman. and man does to a starving and who bore “we girls." For no one inhabitants decided that some box- ing bouts might add a llttleto the excitement of the place. But the at- endance on the opening night was poor. The principal promoter suanmed up the situation, and them, step- ping lnto the ring, announced: ‘I've just received a telegram from the Marques of Queensbury. and he says he must have £5 for the use of his rules. Boys, l will now pass around the hat." WRONG IDENTIFICATION An old waiter at. the club was giving the new hand a few ti/ps. “See that old bloke who's just come in?" he whispered. “He's got a twin brother and they're as like as two peas, only this ones as deaf as apost. Watch the fun!" Going to the member's side. he antlled politely and said, in an or- dinary voice: “Well pleface. and what: do yotl want in the nosebag today?” “I'll have a ohop," was the cocl reply. “And. by the way, it’s my brother who is deaf." I 11s‘ R/ll/‘SU WHITE -I_I s Inugars us: k/Mfflw oer arm's oewzss/vawr my Moreen! (mum to um smso Aunfimme ma: m was/IE YOU'LL NEVER BB SATISFIED WITH ANYTHING ELSE once on no Riaoo WHITBNBSS! lolpy-ricl: your whites gleaming 51:. right. N0 man analyse is mcsssnnv. mu in din and Rialo gun out more diémflllt: y RINSO IS MARVBLOUS Yen, gentle, mo and: loot dlr: any in no time . . . e: washable colors lplfklrl‘ {round- IN BOTH TUB AND - Wfifllll. Sec how Rlmo loves you both time and Vi’ um of Peetual Youth. DOROTHY DIX SA YS-- I Be Your Age Each (tycla I: Vienna's Life lias 0m: ‘l’!!! 0f There is one motto that every woman should have hung wove her mirror’ where she will be sure to see it many times every day o! he!‘ For in that brief plum is comvfllfid I11 o! the law and the prophets about how a woman can slways be at the Few women will believe this. for the entire feminine sex is obses- sed by the belief that youth is the most important thing in the world 5o they cling to it. u l drowninl MJIW. long um: they are really sunk in the ocean of yesn. 'I‘hLs give: us the sorry spectacle of woml- who are old enough to know better, who themselves to a frazzle trying to be la young as their own granddaughters; themselves to maintain girlish figures. everyone wen’ who acquire wrinkles to tears talking about has as yet discovered the Foun- The years take their relentless toll of us l in graying hairs and stiffening joints and bones or fat. and no amount of hair dye or knee-length skirts is going to turn Granny into a l bobby-seeker. BEAUTY AND sufferings trying to keep young are come it, it is their friend. Many Equally pathetic are women's f with cosmetics, with a. cupid's bow out from a Welter of mascara. and who has the beauty that age c character. But worst of all the mistakes weep to see an old woman. dlked out blundering old feet take. her boy friends. For she throws a mother act. for practically all men love and enjoy the wise old women At every age a woman has t particular time must not mix her dates. Better English D. 0. Williams ‘[5].. i 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "Jane had been to a lecture earlier in the evenind" 2. What ls the correct rIOIWIlC- lotion of “fu.ror"? 3. Which one of tneae words is misspelled? Analyze, anamation, anagram, analogy. 4. What does the word "vulnerw able" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with app that means "fear or dis- trust"? - ANSWERS 1. Say, "Jane had been at a lec- t/ure" 2. Pronounce first syllable‘ few, o as in. or, accent first syllatble. 3. Animation. 4. Capable of being wounded; liable to injury. "His skill in finding out the vulnerable parts of strong mind: was consummate." -—Macsulay. 5. Apprehension. l g Cook ’s Corner GRAPE CONSIBVE 4 pounds Concord grape: I orange 1 cup raisins 4 cups sugar u cup chopped. nut-l. it desired. METHOD: Wash and stem the grapes and squeeze the pulp from the skins. Place the pulp in a pro- oerving kettle and cook until thy seed: are separated from the pulp. Tum into a sieve and press u uch of the pulp a: possible thro it. Combine the grape pulp, the orange. which has been cut in paper-thin mew. the raisins and the sugar. and cook mm the mil- tun is somewhat thick. Then add thegnponkimond wokuntll it thickens lnin. about 10 minutes. AdtLthe chopped nut: and mix well. Then pour into hot. sterilised jar: and cal with melted punffh. New hero in the nclpo for an IPWOQIPIPO Jill?- IPIOID GRAPE JELLY 6 poundl grapes 1 up vinegar 1 tablespoon whole elmil BllIl-f by mount; METHOD: Wash and ltln (l1 mpu, than weigh the require amount. Place in o. preserving kett with the vinegar and the vb in bug and ltnln off tho juice. Measure tho attained juice into the I kettle and bring to a boil. the juice. sud then fos- evary cup-of juice. odd 9i cup lilllr. Stir to dtuolvn libs boiling lilvfitlhls until the juice will toot for Jolly. Pour into not. , fir: and up! with melted paraffin. cam-with a ‘ coat when the am has hardened. ' lynttutlc‘ cubic: and upphlm‘ t are practically identical by every chmifllwlld IIMIMI nan d with natural null: and n be their age is trying tp act young. of life. but she has to take it in its sequence. She must be her age. CHARACTER In a small town in Ireland the: And the pitiful part otf it is that these women who undergo such throwing away their one best bet, for age is an enemy to the-m only when they fight it. When they wel- a woman who was an unattractive girl is a fascinating middle-aged woman because she has had dime to acquire tact and poise and make herself an interesting companion. utlle efforts to look sweet l6 after they are 60. Nothing ls more grotesque than an old face plastered mouth painted on lips that smirk above store teeth. and tired. old eyes that have seen too much looking And nothing is lovelier than the serene face of the womaxrwho has always been just her age; who is dkignlfied. poised. worldly wise. wither because it is founded on that women make who refuse to It is enough to make the angels like a debutante. gambolinglround a ballroom floor with some lad young enough to be her grandson, who is paying of: his dinner debts to her and cursing every step that her And surely no woman ever cornmlis a greater folly than the old woman who tries to be cute and flirtatious. and who kids herself about way her trump car. which is the fall for that, and they admire and who act their age. he attraction that belong: to that She gélHoz-zselzolcl‘ Scrapbook i 9 ‘ 7 B] Roberta Lea § Fresh Egg! An old test to determine the freshness of eggs is to place them in a pan. oi water. If they are ab- solutely fresh, they will lie JD their sides on the bottom of the pan. If ‘they are rather stale, they will stand on end. lf very stale, they will rise to the surface. The Waffle Iron An excellent method of cleaning ,the waffle iron is to make a. thick paste of three tablespoonfuln of baking soda and two teaspoonfuls of water. Apply with a thick brush. New shoes The new shoes will not burn the feet if talcum powder is sprinkled liberally into them. DESIGNS FOB KIDDIES ififiiifii Q-a-o-t-ia-w moron no. 14:0‘ Qmluumuvzx JAVIX transforms fiigy, dlIl-‘rgy doihu to sparkling white. Jinf a little In tho Washer or rlmo water produce: a swut-unoiiing, dodnor wash. it's death h germ: toe. AT YOUR Iillil‘! "~'-\.1.\.~-. <wflfifl’u\v\v\.uuu.m<<<< iter CROCUS-"Z INCHES. SCILLA MRS. OLEARTS COW N0 MYTH CHICAGO -An 80-year-old wo- man told cronies in the Methodist Old People's Home today how Nlrs. Catherine O'Leary's cow kicked over a lantern ‘l5 years ago '..-night -and started a fire that vritnnlly destroyed Chicago. It was a brown cow with white spots that did the damage. accord- ing to Mrs. Cyrus J. Wood. “Please do not contradict me and say that that story about Mrs. O'I..eary‘s cow was a myth" she said, "I've seen Mrs. 0'l'.leary and , enough in a. well drained location. where damp soil will them to decay, flowers the follow- 111g spring are as nearly certain a: anything in horticulture can be. tLThe depth of planting is im/por- ia to be preferred. But bulbs grow well in average garden soil, even when it is somewhat. heavy. minimum depth of planting for the various kinds is shown in the ac- companying illustrations. less than this, the injured by the h avlrz-g of the soil when it thaws out after freezing. There are‘ no flowers easier for the beginner to grow than hardy bulbs. If he plants them deep not. cause nt, and of course good porous soil The l! set are likely to be maps which are to be left in 3 INCHES. cow-seen it, I mean." has been blamed on light to an Irish barn dance. But the O’Lcary legend shaken hands with he'r. And her -The great Chicago fire of 1871 everything from boys shooting dice by i-intern mrsists. And Mrs. Wood who has believed it the fire our whole ‘was taken down to see Mrs. O'Leary since she was a iive-year-old girl isn't<'izoing to change her mind now. “About three or four years after school class und her cow" she related. "It was down an Exposition Hail. She was standing beside her cow and we filed by and shook her hand." Mrs. Wood admits that she “got it by word of mouth" but she says she knows "it's true that the row did kick over a lantern in the Dietary barn and start the fire". "One thing isn't true, though. She wasn't milking her cow. It was 9 o'clock on Sunday night, you know. She went out to the barn to bed her cow down. That's ‘low it, started." ‘lhlooctnning ammunition! lanai-cum on column comm. towels and nursery equipment. Hot iron transfer pattern No. E488 con- toinl .ll motile with. late in» ntnutienl. » ‘ - i ' : loud ll unto in coin “milk-abound u. Needlework amp-a. Charlotte F". can: BMW 514cm Zi-p-un-ma-La‘ W! The two-clay fire raced across 2.124 acres in a swath four miles long and a mile and a half wide n kj-lled 200 persons. destroyed 17,450 buildings and lcft 100.000 of the city's 334.270 residents. home- less. Don't Mal; ThislViistake When Child is the tulips: and prevents disturb- ance of the bulbs when planting perennials. deeply, if possible. plant food should be spread on the] grotmd is frozen. to prevent frost surface, 4 pounds to 100 square feet, heaving. lsh for the stove? stove polish with kerosene and tur- pentine until cream. Apply when range is slightly warm. Then pclLh with a rough cloth. This also pre- vent: rust. . white and yolk are distinct have not run. together, if there is no unpleasant Yolk is not stuck to the shell. ing of threads from linen? a damp cloth along the line where the thread is to be pulled. thread will pull easily while mo‘ cloth is damp. the ground from year to year wiah- out being iifbedvshouid be planted 10 inches deep. even more in sandy soil; a's deep planttrq keeps the bulbs from splitting into smaller bulbs. some of which will not bloom, and insures a longer life. It also enables you to grow annuals above $011 1'01‘ bulbs should be worked C- mercial DAFFOOILS "6 INCHE Fall Bolas and Their Bell: Planting Depth: and spaded in. When the bulbs u; planted among perennials, dig a good sized hole for each with a trowel. A digger may be used when planting in spaded boil, but take care that the bulb i.: not caught against the walls of the hole, with air beneath it. It should be firmly in contact with the soil at all points. When there is doubt ‘about. the thorough drainage of a bed. it may be elevated above the surrounding surface. and the bulbs then plant- ed. Bulbs should be planted a; soon as practical alter they have been received. ‘The more time they have to develop roots before the ground freezes. the less likely they are to suffer from frost heaving. Daffodils and hyacintha, which blossom early in tine sprlnl. benefit: from early planting in the fail; and so do the early flowering minor W156. BHOWdIODI. scilla: and cro- cures. But when early planting-is not practical, all fall bulbs may be set out late. as lor-g a; the soil is not frozen deeply. but can be dug and will pack well about the bulbs. When planting is done late. a mulch of leaves or similar covering should be Placed over the bed after the How Can I ! ! By Anne Ashley Q. 11.5fm. False a pal» A. Mix equal parts of a good the consistency of the stove or Q. Should broken egg: be used? A. may are fit to use i.f the and odor. and if the -Q How can I facilitate the null- Mo d e r n Etiquette By Roberla Leo " .-..v.*..-.'-'-' Q. when a woman stop! tn speak with another woman in a res- taurant, what should the men at the table with the latter woman do? A. They should rise and remain standing until the first woutm do- parta. ' Q. should the groom pay for the bridesmaids’ flowers? A. No: this is an obligation oi the bride. Q. in what. way can one repay A. Before pulling threads. rub Thai the courtesy of a. pleasant automo- bile ride? ~ A. By inviting the members bhe party to stop for tea. Constipated Don't uplet | child already u set. l1! 6°5- ltlpnion with nasty-until: _ uutlvu ol huh Iripinl elt-harlico. IVI Children's Own hbieta. This new corrective made I- poelully for growing. ounzltcfl need! II no leuan: to‘ take-snub? Ient-lyllnd ml; ‘All: vvit ou infirm o rue on: non the fuulut eh won't ohicct to theil In. Hake luntivc-tnkin: time all! on a ‘lid Ind rounelf. nwthorl Gut Children’: Tablet! hull! m at 1W! drutlinl- Thin coats of wax are better - and less :llppery—-than one thick coat. int: mmn rnmumn sms no om Ilfltolrl llllvafnll fill IIII Alli!) glva you double protection. l: w you from mini? Manx dampen. And-gluten odsrleuiclmnac, wldnlnfinnuusuneiubuucyaam. It vanish: infinity — giving ‘ media: Illllly V“! All". 1w no nbooloody l!“ “U! Ill" whiuvc r i ....."'..' nrctra . all all" ilfidly. ll l: very Qmmglml, w. s.» use , --.' “j- - ~ i guide. and Style an to state silo you wish. Include motel unit. or non. number in your Gamma cousin gsigllgrglililil mite P‘ U‘ Y medicated -— medicated with throat-nothing, _ cough-easingvingred - ems of Vick: apoRub. For speedy relief from throatdlstreasofooldo- nothing better! fNe-edlecraft/ -—FOR ma nona- IADI POI IMJI 01KB The aifinityuolf the olusic jumper for a trimly and shirt goes hap- QUYOIIIIGIYHIW'YQR...III new: i: in the fllilll-Mflilfll of the Mitten-shoulder moothl! amt: jumper limo Nismsolicunnuauututq, 10,1; and cousin 1s requires 29s 54-inch for junplr; 2 yard! yards 39-inch for blouse. Sfld D olllll for PATTERN which includes complete caving emu your Name. Adena Ntlnbor plainly. Be address. Andi-u: Pattern Beaumont, The Grumman Guardian. new» Ne. mo