3.5g: "rwo s... a. .. .. ‘THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Woman’s Realm -:i- Social and Personal -:-Fasliions -:- Literature MARCH 3, a i933 Has Depression a Bright , Side? Dorothy 0a I‘ “ ne 0f the Worst Phases of the Depression is >1 Remembering What You Used to Have— But Since it Can’t be Helped, Why Not Appreciate the Full Flavor of 1 Whatever You Have Left? Q y In these times of depression the world ls full of the ivails and lamen- tntions of those who have "seen better days," as the phrase goes. Theirs “ indeed, a sad lot, for no one will dispute the poet's assertion that "a sorrows crown of sorrw is remembering happier things." To have known riches and luxury and to be east down into the hard trays of sordid poverty. to , have been feted and flattered and admired and g their thrust into obscurity, to have known love and ' to be left lonely and forsaken, is to be tormented by tastes and habits that; caiiiiot be gratified, by de- sires that cannot be realized, by liuiniliations ti‘ t are alivays fresh, by longings that leave the heart open with emptiness, Fate can deal a human being no crueler blow than that. IHHHIHHiH-ZIH '1 ‘wlilfllililwln Fortunately, however, there is another side to _ tllls dark picture, although we seldom contemplate it. And just as our nfemory of the good times we have had and lost deepens our misery, so the memory of’ sorrows we have endured heightens our enjoyment of the gdod things that come to us. ‘I. The most common illustration of this is in our health. We may go along for years being hale and hearty and think nothing of it and have n; particular sense of ivell-beirig. Then let sickness come to us, let our bodies be torn with suffering, let the fear oi death cast its dark shadow oiier us, and then let health return to us again. I It is no commonplace then. It is a miracle. Just the relief of being out of pain, of being able to sleep again, of being able to eat once more, fills us with happiness, and when we feel our strength coming back and realize that we will soon be able to take up our ordinary lives again, we are flooded with a surging joy. It is so wonderful to be well agiiinl And it's the some way with money. The people who have always been ricli, who have been full-fcd, who have only had to write a check for‘ anything they thought they wanted in order to possess it, miss all the finest flavor of having the things one wants because they have always had them and so have no standard oi comparison. 'I‘he man who llllll sat down to a fine dinner every day of his life has iio silcrial relish tor it and finds fault if the chef has put a dash too much or a grain too little of seasoning in a. sauce. It takes the mun who has gone hungry in his youth, and who looks back upon the time when he thought he had a feast if he had all the corned beef and cabbage he could eat, to really savor s. good meal and offer up a genuine thanksgiving in his heart every time he sits down to a. well-spread table. The iionian who has always been lapped in luxury, who has always had beautiful clothes and lived in lovely houses and hos had somebody to _st-.uid between her and the world, is often peevish and fretful and dis- contented. But to the woman who had had a. hard, starved girlhood, who has had to scrimp and save in order to get the cheap, sleazy silk to make her a gown, who has gone without lunches to buy her a pair of near-silk stockings, it seems a fairy tale come true just to be able to buy licr a pair of near-silk stockings, it seems a, fairy talc come true just to beiable to buy-qt decent outfit of clothes. The woman who has never had a homo/oi’ her own before gets mori pleasure and thrill out of a three-room flat or a cheap bungalow in thv extend an yvote of thanks to her. 0X19. misfortunes. that come to us. Sunshine never seems so bright as when it follows the storm. perhaps that is a helpful thought for these days _ ‘Paclxecll in Wlicn a young man marries a girl who is sweet and amiable and unselfish and who makes him a. pleasant and comfortable home, lie thinks he is getting no more than is coming to him, and he doesn't feel called upon to So with a girl. Ii she gets a. husband who is domestic and faithful and considerate and courteous and kind and generous, she considers that he is doing no more than his duty and is nothing to write home about. But let; either one draw a grouchy, cantankerous, selilshqziuarrelsome, disagreeable mate inllie matrimonial lottery, and then if fate is kind enough to give thcm a second throw oi the dice and they win a bliie-rlb- bon prize husband or wife, they realize their luck. They know all the things that a hateful husband or wife can do to They know how unhappy a home can be, and so they know how to appreciate tenderness and sympathy and understanding when they get it and to value a home that is o. haven of rest and peace. We often wonder why we are called upon to endure hardships and Perhaps it is to enable us to enjoy the more the blessings And of depression. DOROTHY DIX. ..._._ i ‘(Ilia l lief (lion 5P m--- MapkLur Milling (b. m... ADIPLOMA m. a ll comfy mu N i wiv-Mme m. mm- a‘ Ilulninnh-rcaumqpmni. nu mum». um uullon rumination a. tuna-a i.- llil) rut-mm um»: -;<___ an lolnlniunl; A MomingSmile Little Wilfred had been absent from Sunday School, and the teach- er called to inquire why, “The real reason," said the boy's mother, because I fear he is learning things that tend to make him mischievous." "Mischievous?" exclaimed the astonished teacher. “I don't under- stand how Sunday School could have that effect on him." “You see," explained the parent, “it's like this: The last time Wilfred went to Sunday School he came home convinced that people are made of dust, and I found him try- ing to, draw his little sister into the vacuum cleaner." Irritated, she turned to her hus- band. “Fred I wish you wouldn't talk out of the corner of your mouth like that. It gets on my nerves." “I cant help it, dear," countered the‘ hen-peeked husband. “It's through always trying to get a word in edgeways." Neighbor (to woman whose hus- band has fallen off a. scarfolding)—- I ‘ope yer good man is gettin on all right, Mrs. Bangs. Mrs. Bangs—0l1, yes, ’e will be -out of the ’orspital in a week or two, but it smashed ‘is watch up somethin’ _cruel. A’ Good Way to Secure a Position suburbs than the \'.'(Jllll1ll who has always had, them docs out of her palace at, Nev/port and lier home on tlic avenue and her villa on theRiviera. And it takes the woman who has had to earn her own bread and but- ter, who has had to fight her own battle and be haunted by the fear of {irliat would happen i.) her if she fcll sick or lost her job, to know 110W l a thing it is to be just a home woman, safe and warm at her own g;»,~,.1,1n_ with a good ll\l?~l)'.lll(l to take care of her. A clever student who has enrolled for the splendid Cookery Course prepared by Anna. Lee Scott and offered by the makers of Maple Leaf (Cream of’ the West) Flour, wrote to them to say that if she was success- ful in securing lier diploma she planned to use ll. as a means of securing a domestic science position. The course took five years of preparation by Anna Lee Scott and is regarded as the most completeeand authoritative presentation obtainable on the subject of the preparation and serving of‘ innm-..¢.-__-..,_-..__...._ .....~ l. . .. ‘ifl _§“l1!Ql.Q stain And it is tlic some way with marriage. The only people who really food. appreciate a good husband or wife are those who have had bad ones. not only a. box for i-hem but we‘ll I The Double Act A Romance of the Theatre BY MARION TOMLINSON show." "Bof of us?" cried Anthony's young friend. "You mean you'll give a party wiv me?" "Why not?" responded Anthony, "1 like your friends the Flynns, and young Joe deserves a better deal than he seems to have, been given so far. Perhaps we can do some- thing about it. Who knows?” Rosemary looked at him for a moment, all her repressed love in her eyes. But being an artist, she did not even now forget her role. "Sir, I likes yer!" she burst out impulsively. "You are the real thing. ‘Ihat was an exciting luncheon, at least to Rosemary. She dared not let her mind rest for a moment on ‘U18 realization that hcrc was her lover near her, letting all the kind- ness and interest in his nature be giiinpscd»biit to a street waif, riot ; knowing it was a woman he loved. She entertained him vivaciously with tales, mostly fictitious and much practised before her mirror, of "me irieifs out in Bcihnal I knew 1V" Green-- Then, confused. Rosemary rose from the table. Anthony listened closely, becom- lng more and more convinced that ii’ this youngster could only be trusted before the footligllts, he was exactly rigiit for the part. Rosemary drew largely on her real experiences with young Joe and the Piylms- "Could I have a box for the first night so they can scc me act?" she asked. "I've ‘ad three ices," she remark- ed, "an’ don't find I could take any more Just now." Anthony paid the bill and follow- ed the transformed Rosemary out of the restaurant. I-le could see only her back in boy's suit and cap and ovcrlarge shoes. If he had seen her face he would have seen that she was fighting unboylsh tears. At the door she turned on him a. face that was again that of a Cock- new waif. She held out a small brown hand that was scratched and "Indeed you may," answered Carson smiling. “But first we have ito make sure that there is to be a first; night for you. If you do itS well oowr IOMEILHIAMK, a wAsu me DISHES m ensv WAV nowmwiru amso. if scans or: me cause m A JIFFY. I msr muse THEM<||>A~D "n-iev om ruemsetvec. rzmso is easier: ou MV umvosproo. I'll. GE IN RIGHT AWAY, ELSIE I AND HELP YOU WITH ‘ll-IE DISHES as I think you will you shall have give thcm a supper party after the _ ing off his natural speech. How‘ll he ‘unkempt and a bit grimy. “Gooybye, Mister Carson,” she said, “and tanks for the lunch.” “Au revoir, old man," returned Anthony, “Come early to rehearsal —say ten o'clock, and read the part over to me before the director ar- rlvcs." "Sure I will," said Rosemary, “See yer termorrer." . Rosemary went back to her lodg- ing house, but she did not seek out either the Flynns or young Joe. She | needed to concentrate. Their useful- ness was post, and the moment liad ‘not yet arrived WllCi) she could re- ipay what they had done for her. In the morning she presented her- self at Carson's office-mid read the Dart to him. lie-was pleased. Slic knew he was pleased, although he said nothing, except for a directioi. here and there. As a matter of fact he was agreeably astonished at how well she read. He had had u notion that he would have to teach her line by line. Still, he knew that a further and more arduous test oi his new find would come later. He might not work in well at rehears- als with the company. A further all-important test would follow, that of the footlights, those ruth- less searchers out of the amateur. Atkinson, the director, came in later, and listened to a second read- ing of the lines. He grunted doubtfully when he had heard. "Sounds all right," he admitted, "but after all, the kid is only read- show up on the stage? That's a point you seem to forget, Carson." “That's a point I'm waiting w investigate,” returned Anthony. led. Here and there old flats‘ leaned against the back wall, showing a part oi a painted interior incongru- ously thrown against a sea scene. A canvas door swung open, leading to nowhere but a briel: wall. There was a sound of hampering at the back, and an occasional shout from time. He may be awkward at. fir a chance and stop crabbing." Atkinson shrugged his shoulders. “Well, it's your funeral," he re- marked. "Bring him along now, will you? The company is here, or at least most oi it.” I-Ie went off and Anthony turned kindly to the waiting youngster. "Don't let them frighten you," he said. "Everyone tin the profession hates on amateur, but the fact re- mains that they were all amateurs once. All you have to do in to carry on and work your hardest. If any- thing worries you, come to me about it." "Iii bc all right," said Rosemary briefly and broe . JIClC through the empty the- atre, covered with brown liolland that. made it seemo place of ghosts, till they came to- the little door be- hind ono of the stage boxes that led to the boards. Here once again Rosemary sniff- ed the familiar smell of canvas flats, and dust, and mouldy ropes and old grease paint that is like nothing else in the world. She snif- fed it ecstatically, for her earliest memories were embalmed in that queer odour. It gave her courage. It was home! The stage was dim and dismant- WlLLIAM CREED, oi New Karen ADDITIONAL ORDER OF NOTICE 1_ NEW IIAVEN COUNTY, Common Table Salt Often Helps Stomach Drink plenty of water with pinch of’ salt. If bloated with gas add a ' spoon of Adierika. This washes out "No good scoring the boy ahead of one ‘vorkmnn to Enema rehearsal with the company], but for the lord's sake, Atkinson, give him ‘°11°W°d Anihflnl“ had returned to it. ' Millions use Riniso in many c. CREEIISdI parts unknown l SUPERIOR courvr. _ NEW IIAVEN, coNN, February 2, 1933. COMPLAINT FOR DIVORCE Ordered, that Additional notice of the , oi the ' ' in in the United States last year is Ltd BOTH stomach and bowels and rids you oi all gas. Hughes Drug (.70., What the Fashionables are _Wearr°n, By Annabelle Worthington . i F" "l $11111. vivid orangy-red bone button: echoed a gay note. The collar and tie were white pique. It was made detachable so u to be, readily laundered. It's so smart, trim and neat for school and for spring without ii l coat. ~ lsleeves, the pattern provides for same as shown in the miniature back view. Another fetching scheme is car-- rot red linen with‘ white chalk; bone buttons and white linen colla. with white chalky bone button and while linen collar and tie. A bias binding of the red on the col- If daughter prefers short pirfled ' Cl-lllliliiill VICKS VanoRuu OVER i-fmiiiiosi puts user) will"; lai-andtiomakemin‘ " ,,nn lsh. Style No. 508 it designed for size 8, 10, 12 and 14 rears. Size 8 requires 2% yards 35-inch, with $5 yard 35-inch contrasting. Price o! Patttn 15 cents in stamps or coin (min is preferred.) Wrap coin careiulll. No. 508.. Size .....-....-.......... A any checked sheer woolen of angoi-a weave in medium blue and white made today's model. Your Blood Stream Is Your Life Stream... Your Health-Your Vigor-Your Happiness Your Very Life Depends Upon Its Condition If your Blood Stream is thin and watery- If it is polluted and impoverished- If it is not carrying sufficient OXYGEN - Nature's Great Vital- izer - to the various parts oi your body-LOOK our FOR mouiauiii Revitalize YOUR Blood Stream 1 Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills will revi- and a fresh sense oi happiness and talirs your Blood Stream, as they have done for thousands of other people in '12 countries. . . Pills purify and enrich the Blood. so that energizing Oxygen is carried in a vitalizing stream to all parts and organs of the body. . . . Thus strength is renewed, appetite im- proved, new nerve force built up, poor appetite - upset digestion - rheumatism - heart palpitatlon — headaches - shattered nerves - mariy illnesses result from an un- healthy blood stream. iinms‘ Pink Pills are beneficial for . These needs enriching. . . lay - 50 cents a package. The company, looking iaale and haggard in the dusty light, sat on nondescript chairs about a small deal table beside which the director now sat, marking a. , manuscript There was an empty chair next him at the table. The members of the company murmured to each other, most of them shabbily dressed. That group of huddled people looking only half alive, those dingy, weary looking claubs of paint on ciinvas flats, that dusty half-lit stage yawning out on what looked like shrouded corpses in the auditorium ports, and doubles the burden of Some alleviation in Canada and his debts to doctor, lawyer, mer-lthe United States was provided chant, thief and rich man. recently. when the Prudential In- Opponents of inflation now beqsurance Company at Newarlcan- lieve that some such "bribe" as nounoed , ’ . of farm mort- ai-tlflcial raising of the price of n18. gages for one year. This afieotei crops and assistance with his debt! 2,200 farmers in n». imam im- must be offered to the farmer ir: ‘vgnce; 0g gum-la, order to persuade him to refrain‘ from a demand for currency ex- pei-iment. Russia has too many farm work- ers that can't easily be persuaded to work in mines and factories. Meantime the farmers have ta- | while in Italy Premier Mussolini’: ken foreclosureprocaedlngs into ggvernmgm; is now trying to their own hands and I sheer return 100,000 Italians to the soil. weight of public gathering force In B11 the“ pmbiem governments -surely there was no romance in itl Yet to Rosemary, following An-t thony over coils of rope and heap- cd derelict furniture, it was all romance. It was her life and she Rosemary took a chair modestly placed in the semi-darkness at the back oi the stage, and Anthony seated himself in the chair that had been placed for him at the deal table. He opened his manuscript to read, then looked searchingly over the assembled actors and actresses. Evidently he did not see some one he looked for, as he turned to speak in a low voice to Atkinson. (To be Continued.) FARMERS’ WOES ARE UNIVER- SAL ALSO NUMEROUS NEW YORK, Mar- 4-(0. P.)-— This is a world view of the farmer hoelng his corn which the middle of last month brought him half his pre-war price, gbout 32.9 cents per- bushel. Farmers of the United States to the number of nearly 1,000,000 are said to be threatemd with los'ng the old homestead. These men are. now over their ears in debt having mortgaged their estate: for more than half their original "value". The gross revenue for all farmers. " ‘ ‘ at half that for it") , the above entitled euo be given by publishing up, nfflgf h, m; Guffl|Q|h it newspaper published in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island of the zli-illsh Empire once a week for two weeks successively bpglmily-q r“ 0, The distress of the Ame‘ 1 farmer is importer.‘ to the re- , the world because he is the at aiwtiflfleflfs t0 SE11 11D their 191811- of the respective nations have been bors for $1.25 more or less. T119 asked to lend a. band-and money. barns anti eowsmrc then handed 3e39,} Evictions, gupefvlsion, re- back to tlic original owner free of gulgflQn. mortgage- The American farmer" ' has plenty of company abroad 1H his tax and mortgage misery Ca- nada, Spaiii, France, Japan, Ger- many and other countries are also troubled with low prices, overpro-‘ duction, credit conditions and debt payments. Strangely enough, the under- productlon of forage crops bothers Ireland; speculation in the wheat‘ market governmental concern in fiance mt long ago: the Spanish minister of Agriculture had his worries when wheat imports were too small. Argentina's province of Santa fe. leading producer of corn. wheat and linseed, has started a "strike" demanding the- government accede to certain demands including low- ering land rentals, stabilising corn prices, reducing land evaluations for taxation and lowering freight rates. PRINCE STREET SCHOOL Honor Roll for February: _ Grade X-l Doris Maonougall, ll Charlotte Gm. 8 Esther Macbean- all ti... time .—-s/ie thought- it was “NERVES” . BUT HER KIDNFY$ WERE REALLY TO BLAME £2l.‘l'l‘.‘..'t‘°'.'." 1.32:1" £l':"“"."" “Nerves”, olio tIioufht-but it hell-oblige: the filter: of bei- b and, that needed attention, D8117 meant r. She took Budd's Kidney Pill: at once. entered to healthy, normal scrim her kidneys noon cluml any blood ‘it’. elitist?" ii2l"‘“‘¢l’ "“'ia"""" nnépm“. l m: o L .1 dnnya For The Cook LEMON CAKE err: Cream 1 tablespoon shortening and 1 cup sugar. Add 2 egg yolks, beaten, 2 tablespoons flour, it tea.- spoon baking powder, 1 cup milk, l lemon, rind and juice. Fold in 2 egg whites, beaten. Pour into rich, uncooked pie crust. Bake in hot oven for 10 minutes, then moderate tes. The top will resemble a sponge cake and the bottom a custard. SWEET-SOUR. FISH Clean, remove head as desired, 21,4. pound fish. Fill fish with moist stuffing of’ 2 cups bread crumbs. fine; 2 small onions, cooked; it tea- spoon baking powder, ralt and pep- per; 2 tablespoons shortening; liq- uid from onions. ~ Hold sides of flsh together with small skewers, and then well-being is developed. Dr. Wil- young, growing girls, for men and women in middle life and later years — for ALL whose Life Stream . Get a sup- ply from your Druggist without de- _ i before i'.ie Sixth day el‘ lilarrh, 19:75:. tub, washer‘ and dishpcn By tlic Court, 1- w 1W9. luau. 0-1:. cit advert: oi’ inflation. It 1-. ' ed that the present high value . G. HERBERT BISHOP, Alllllnl. Clerk. I tbogoliildoliar orlppluhiler‘ NOW i-"iietiuciwigttfliiuks T0 Ootltfs pour 1 cup water over, and allow flsh to bake in a moderately hot ,over (375 degrees F.) To serve, 1,0“ 0g m-ength_ lowemd vltmty_- make a sauce of the following and -_ ‘spread over the fish: SAUCE . Cook and stir until smooth an.) thick, ‘A cup brown sugar, 0 ginger snaps, ‘A cup vinegar, one-third cup raisins, 1A teaspoon onion juice, 1 lemon, sliced. ORANGE SWEET POTATOES Boil sweet potatoes in salted wat- done, mash, add. shortening and-i seasonings, and fill orange shells. which have been previously prcpfll" ed by scooping out white lining About 20 minutes before serving. place shell.in a slow oven, and Just before they are ready to serve, plat! a marshmallow on top oi each illi- ed case. The potatoes will have a delicate flavor oi orange. Grade IX-i Katherine Bsgnall 2 Bernice Cudmore, 3 Jack Roach. Grade VIII—1 Thelma Dingwell 2 Jean Iilximan, 3 Nora. Downe. Grade VII-i Doreen Alley, 2 1 Janet Mobarfll, s oimiine Sinclair Grade Vii-i Grace Diamond, 5 Katherine Shaw, 3 Constance Mic Lure. Grade VI—1 John MoEwen, i Kimball Keeping‘. 3 Lloyd Weeks Grade V-l Winnifred Goes, l Richard Bagnall, 3 Elinor VanBus- kirk. ' Grade v-1 Donald MGLllrE‘, l Eleanor Mary Duffy, 3 Douglas McLennan. a Grade IV-i Ethel Hawkins, 2 Min-y McEachei-n and Freda Mc- Innis, 3 Dorothy Keeping. a Grade IV-i Verna Hooper, A Marjorie Mclilachern, 3 Beverley VanIdcrstine. Grade III--l Pauline Simmonds a Allen Thompso , 3 Joy Fraser. Grade III-i Alexia Bowness, I Hugh Campbell, 3 Vernon Garrett Grade 1I—1 Ben Williams, 2 Aletha Saunders, Olive Keepini Margaret Lawson, 3 Joyce Nichol- son. Grade II-1 Beverley Pound, Bernice Boyce, Joyce f-iowatt, Arlelizhn Ooles. ' i . 7 1 “lace" .. _ tightly together around the skewers with cord. Place in a. baking dish, f“ er and 1 tablespoon sugar. When _ 3fl8$$¢~ t; an FRFEA-KI}II$\'I>I no oven (350 degrees F.) for 45 mlnu- ‘ <c_ss\illauountosaoau l.