PAGE TWO ; i, Knowing Nursing Fundamcn- tals ls Essential Today loll in wartime You can never . » whcr you \\lll be called upon t0 help tavc a lilo. Sn learn the funda- g and be prepared! so crowded today that if yotfre ill you may not be able lo get a bcd in a hospital. Some might even be having their babies at home or might return home from the izwnitai t\'.o or three clays after the birth. There is nothing disturb- ing about this. particularly if you know a little about home nursing. Undoubtedly you were instructed at the hospital about the care of your baby after you got home. Often. however, you forget im- portunt poirts. Refresh your memory on the points that rcqtlire emphasis. Learn how to take care of a bed patient with a contagious disease, or after an oprratioit, or with any common ailment. y ‘ In clear every-day’ language our i‘ 32~pagc booklet gives the home nurse tho important "do's." Ia Send 15c in coins for your copy 0f What You Shoudl Know About -Nursir3 to the Charlottetown Gusztiian l-lrmg Service Address. Be sure to svritc plainly your name, address and the name oi booklet. . Name Street Address . city Proylnce TOOTIIPASTE T0 THE RESCUE If you have llFPfl the last drop of silver polish and you have to pol- ish your bureau sliver for company, l use a little of your toothpaste on n I soft rlnth and lt will clean beauti- A Job Only You Can Do Prise Control questions And Answers Questions and Answan on Price Control will appear in Ths Guard- lsn as s regular future each dsy The questions are thou which havc ruched tho Wartime Prices s-nd Trsds Board from ‘housewives in this region. The smwars are pm- vrdcd by the Board Readers. Psr sons who hsvs intelligent questions to ask on price control are invited to send them in writing to the Women's Regional Advisory Com- mittee of the Wartlms Prices and Trad; Board. this month. We ordered the wed- there was only one envelope for each announcement. Shouldn't there be two envelopes? A. An order which came into ef- fect March 3i of this year states "No person manufacturing wedding supply more than one envelope for use with each invitation or an- nouncement. " Q. Who should tear off coupons winch are invalid-the customer or the merchant? A. The customer should destroy all coupons which have become in- valid. They should not be given to the merchant. minimum-ii». HE COOK '3 CORNER ILHUBARB OATMEAL PUDDING Four cups diced rhubarb (1 lb.) 1-2 cup water. 1-2 cup sugar. 2 tabtlespoors cornstarch, 1-4 teaspoon s TOPPING One cup pastry or 7-8 cup all- purposo flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1-2 cup rolled cats, 1 egg l~4 cup melted fat, 1-2 teaspoon grated lemon rind. 1-4 teaspoon grated nutmeg. Wash and fice rhubarb. Cover with boiling water and let stand five minutes; drain. Add water and boil two minutes Mix corn- stnrch. sugar and salt and stir into rhubarb. TOPPING Mix and sift flour and baking powder, add rolled oats. Ccmblne e88. milk or water. sugar and melted fat. Mix lightly into dry ingredients. Add flavourlng. Spread this mixture over the boiling rhu- barb: cover closely and continue cooking over a low flame for 30 minutes, without lifting cover. Turn upside down onto a serving dish and serve hot. Separate with two forks rather than cut as the mixture is fully. Rub to n. polish with a clean . clozh. I "l Happy? You bell awn’ A tux very light and delicate in texture. Q My daughter is being married ding announcements and found that invitations or announcements shall ‘ IFHE 4 CHARLOTTETOWN? GUARDIAN" _ Woman's Re alm z Social and Persona l‘ Dorothy‘ Dix Sas- FEAR OF MICE NOT JOKE BUT SYMBOL OF WOMAN'S WEAKNESS Some Get Married For Protecttionl, Others Go To Live With In-Laws Though Unwelcome _ The great trouble with women is their lack of o0 . It handicaps happiness. They never reall tomorrow. They spend the lives dreading misfortunes that new!‘ happen to them and terrorized of b their imaginations. It is a svmbol of the sex An m exam is of this taks low. whim l4 u‘ ways the most portant thing in the world ure of happiness because they a.e always scared losi g it. thank Heaven for her luck. WILL HE LOVE HER TOMORROW T _ She lies awake at night wondering if he will 1W! her when she is old and fat. and haunted by appall- tlcus o.‘ beautiful blond secretaries. with sylPh-lllie fllllfes. who W111 m“: him away from her. The beauty shops BIB Inn 0n the‘ 18B! 0f WlYE-l m“ thev Will lose their husbands’ affections if they dont keep youns and beautiful. it is fear that drives innumerable women into making unsuitable marriagcs. When the average woman gets into the thirties und i5 still single she flies into a blind panic in which she loses her reason and will marry anything in trousers that happens along. She may be a wflmfln of independent means. She may be a successful business woman. And life may be full of family affection, good friends, interests and amuse- men's, as agreeable an existence as one could wish. But she gets scared of the future and afraid that she may be lone- some, or regret not having married. and so she takes the rejected BMW!‘ whom she has refused a dozen times, or marries the widower with Bel/en chllcirrn, or the down-nnd-outel she has to support. FEARS DOMINATING SOME MARRIAGES Other women marry becaue they are afraid of being called old maids. They arr. not in love with themen they marry. They know they are not bettcring their condition, socially or financially. by marrying. They have no urge towards marriage. On the contrary, they are celibate by nature. and much prefer their own freedom to a husband. but they ‘havent the nerve to go along and live their own lives the way they want to d0. us men do. and marry. or not, as they please. It is sheer cowardice that makes so many women endure the martyr- dom ti miserable marriages. They submit to every sort of humiliation. Tnev lt-t their husband: insult and revile them. They put. up with $18!"- wads cf husbands who begrudge them the very food they eat. They slave for husbands who never give them a kind word. They stand for gfullclll- ness and surlincss and ill-temper simply because they lack the backbone to get up and get out. They are so ilfhild of whut might happen to them in the outside world, though nothing could be any worse than what they are Sufferln! at home. No one could be crueler to them than their husbands art'- Ncwhere would they have to work harder than thev do in their Homes- But they stay on in sodden misery, downtrodden, despised, kicked BBO“! like a dog. because they haven't the courage to put up a fight for their own happiness, or to rebel against their tyrants. AFRAID T0 WORK TO SUPPORT THEMSELVES It is womcrrs lack of courage that keeps them from snapping their finger: in Mrs. G1undv's face and doing the things they wanted to on and that Nature intended them to do. They are so afraid of what P9011“? will say if they take in sewing, or start a boarding house, or get a 10b Nik- lng care of children. that they would pay them gOOd money and let them be independent and happy, that they go to live with their children, where they kntw thev are unwelcome guests to their in-laws, or they become parasites and hangers-on oi relatives who grudge them the pittance they dole out to them. And it is lack of courage. nine tlrnes out of ten. that mukes women commit the supreme follv of trying to keep up with people who are better off than they are. Thcv are afraid that they might be criticised if their entertainments are not as elaborate as somebody else‘s: if their clothe! are nr-t as smart; 1f their cars are not as expensive, so they run into debt that swamps them and ruins them. six. Se YVCS THEN A DASH OF COOL- WAC= and put-ting on a uniform will keep them from being scared cats? l “Ii fakes soft, adorable skin to pul Poor women. so afraid of nothing! I wonder if being WAVES and .4; t; x."<*§1;1,¢\~r; ' ' l WI.» nononnr umour has u am, she's aura her skin will pass the test of close, admiring eyes! Soft, smooth, lovely, ll'.'8 ChO kind Of skin that wing mmgnc; and holds it. She gives you a beauty tipi ROMANCE COMPLEXION m’ LIGHTLY 1'0 oav. now wucn voun sum! ITS FLOWER-FRESH, rests EXQUISITELY son/mp moons! f all d ‘In’ them at every turn and is rupoerixsigetggiéymgelsgagsemtxelgfareursgs‘spam o! aboos that. they conjure up Wt 0! Their traditions fear of mice ls more than s .101“- tn women, but out of which they never get the full rneag; n A woman may have u husband who 8W8! every proof of devotion, who tolls like a slave to KW? her soft and comfortable and who spoils her to death. but she can't settle down ln peace and security find- . above picture with your nsms and GIVING AND IOBGIVING "What mskas life worth living I; our giving and for q. Giving tiny its of kindness Tbst will save s Joy behind us, And forslving trifle; ‘Inst the right word often stiflcs. nor the iitMe Lbinss m bigger Than we oftcn stop w figure. What makes life worth living, Is the giving and forgiving." A SECRET WEAPON An old shipmnto wrote to a nsval officer that he is now in command S‘ i‘ crew of five is as follows. Mate-former insurance broker; Engineer -a ‘ an of private means -m profession; Dock-hands —one a farmer and the other s fectioner; Cook —s wealthy club proprietor. Not easy work to which they have committed themselves, but who can estimate the force of such united service, because each has voluntarily given himself to the work of demo- cmcy. Britain's secret weapon? Assured- lyl Things of tbs spirit are ever more potent that material weapons. MONTGOMERY ROSE I _..__ General Sir Bernard Montgomery of the famous 8th Army can now be said t0 havo "arrived." He has l had an orchid named after him, the "cymbidlum General Montgomery." . The White Ensign has been flown in Trafalgar Square. London, for the first time in history at a. drum- hesd service attended by 1,000 navy people. To keep plates on edge at the back of a cupboard shelf set them, in a flat curtain rod screwed to the shelf with the open side up. Clipped to the finger ring of a kettle cover, a spring type clothes- pin protects fingers from burn. A laundry-bag llnlnii 1°? I hamper saves stoopin: to retrieve last hankie from the hamper. If the sweetness of cream is doubtful. a pinch of salt will pre- vent curdling. To keep carrots crisp and tasty wrap them in wet cloth and wax paper cnocrrwrnn LAPEL onus- MENTs ARE SMART _5_51 .- .-. DESIGN’ N0. 361 A patriotic trio of crocheted lapel ornaments, a be: of the WAVES. n. WAAC. and a Red Cross nurse are pleasant llttle figures so crochet from odds and ends o1 wool. Pattern No. 361 contains complete instructions. To order pattern. Write. or send address with 1n cents in stamps to Needlework Charlottetown Guardian. Needlework Department, DN|U1\*-‘ NAMI——-----__- coin or Bureau Living 8 Leisure The Woman's Realm of g Motor Fishing-vessel, and that ‘ ironing tuck s clssn 1hb0 m’ wan d M" child's has: or suit — ssvos last» minim moor-up when hild dresses- TOB CLUB s ‘ FOB ARMY WIVES w . Called Lhc Stork Club. it Pmllldea a. complete lsyettc for sll wives of servicemen who have difflclllw ll gettin! clothing and squlnmmt for their coming babies. i Karin Ellis (By Michael Jackson) Author of Popular Stories in National Mlllllll" Sure. And after this. don't W081‘ your good clothes. You'll 1115'» Win them." Veronica b68811 WHPPWTEP the paper from her lunch. ineres a place across the street where you can get a stew cheap. But tomorrow start bringing your own lunch You'll safe money ind besides. by the time you run up and down them stairs and wait to stuff your thrpflt. you won't have no time b0 est.’ The half-hour break revived Emily and by mid-afternoon she was as adept at her job as she ever would be. At slx a bell rang, and as soon after that as the table was clear- ed the girls were free to go home. | mnlly walked with Veronica. They went slowly. "I never knew thervl l was so much powder in the worldf’, Emily said. "Who do you N99056- ufies all 0f it?" Veronica shrugged her thin shoulders . "Everybody, I guess.‘ Everybody uses powder now.” "Where does our company," llhnily! thought of it what way already, “sell its powder?" For all I know they take it down, to the river and feed it to the sea gulls. They did not speak again un- til they neared their rooming hDUSB-l Anyway. Veronica said, tomorrow's pay day. Do you know how much you get?" “No," Emily admitted shame- faced. I just assumed that I'd get wha-t the others do. You will. And it's six dollars s week. At Emily's door they parted. Sud- denly. in an affectionate gesture that touched Emily, Veronica. put out her hand. Nighty-nlght, Kiddo, she said. And then. looking a-t liimily, Ver- onica mused. You're the odd one all right. so holty-wlty. so sure. And still you're nothing but s baby. ain't you? Veronica Riley. the first person to emerge as an individual from the anonymous mass about Emily, be-l came Emily's best friend. On Sun-| day afternoons they would sit on a bench in Union Square, watching; the hawkers, listening to the babble of tongues. Part of it Emily en- joyed. The monkeys that held cut little red hats for pennies for zhe hurdy-gurdy men - she liked that.‘ And she liked the privacy that. the uninterested crowd threw about her. There were things about Veronica -her blunt language and he;- 1m. tidiness. And though she was not more than ten wars older than Emily, already she without plans for the future. Bnily could] not understand anyone who took the davs as they came. ‘ When Emily discovered that Ver~ onlcs did not like to walk, she used Bet up early and af- | she'd walk to Wash- i uare. resting there. aniovlng 5Q Ir iii Suffer irrnmme’ FEMALE Wonk, Grsnlry, lions”- I If lik ...r"2§".....£ f.‘.‘.'."“.’lii‘i‘i°.°éi.h“s.‘li‘f - ache, "irregulari ias", blues — due to functional monthly dlg-urbarzcca- M} a onus-take Lydia I. Pink- ham s Vsgstablo Compound. “"34" "quid not only helps relieve mvnthly rmn but also urea. wash, "mm" 199N119. This is because of its soothing effect on an: or woman's Ion nuns-nun osoms. Tsk fink Wtlnpf-‘Ylnnd lnfifil“; “.1333 ""5 Iylnptoms. Thousands . smnrsnnanss ----- upon thousandsrsporthsipliisoa *“ iln - 4 bi a, in m UlTY———PHDV1NCE—-—— "°°““°“““°'"“'l"°‘"“ w a W“ w; Fashion . and for blouse. l 5-6 yards 35-in. PAIN Which um.» You l ' have had periods of tho M"- home. but ah. POor lad, he's got to This so abroad. mlzht call his embrocation leave!" 178d Al: l. lump post and pulled out his key. m ___._______i i138!!!" P0 e tioed him lllel , "N bod h " - m“ m W111 yssy tgiereyislggtild the drunl : tngmst. nurtured.j"l'here's_gllgnt_upstalrs.jj, . s z Literature "AUGUST 1s. m; 60 FURTHER! ‘Six Iasy Ways! ‘I B your coin for flavor.- Gesusynpcr-rich Clsssc k San- bornCoIocl 2 Alwsyshcpcolocinsnsim- tighroonrslner. I Mcssure bod: was: and codes carefully _i'or desired strc . 4 Keep rha cola-pot scoured clean." 5 Make only can amount needed-nevu- more; 6 Sens codes soon sfrer it's nude; nears now YOU cm nun corrrr CHASE 8t SANBORN COFFEE WEI-RICH Chase S Colon brings you “m? choice coihes of the world. cm. Earn it ounce for-ounce for Bus" n! Chase d: Sauborn Colo... qualify sodas docs f urfhet. O the greennessl Later, in time for tho after-church promenade, she'd go up l Fifth Avenue. That. was the best‘ pm of’ all. l stwd stand at the entrance to a ' church and watch the crowd emerge, l the men ln dark coats and striped trousers, the wcmen lovely in fea- thered hats and billowing lace. Here was Boodness and cleanliness and quite richness. .When the crowds thinned, she went inn an cxpensi c confectionery. That, in those early would think the were tof Veronica had liegun to izintilseih when they started home throatsso dry," she said, ' think Id been eating powder | week mtead of packing 1w We could get soda pop w“ we get back, Emily guggesfed _- Heres a place We could sip] Veronica pointed to the eonfectlmi ery where Dnlly went when m“: Something stiffened in 111.11,: She nod>1 toward the bronze mm 3 days, was her chief luxury. She er besdle the door. But it Ill ‘ disadlelrid flier her lgundae, glowing Caterer. i; w te neservefroznth ' Bttn ' fountain girls. e “up ouucan 3231f fyiiiltiitaln hum Early one Sunda as she was starting out, Vero cs met her 1n the hallway. Going for another one of them walks? Emily flushed guiltlly. Yes. It's so nice, I thought- Wait for rne then. I'll go with you. I can be ready in a Jiffy. When she was dressed. Emily was ashamed to be seen with her. and ashamed of herself for feeling that. Veronica's costume blazed with brightly con- flicting colors. Her shoes were un- shined and her huir fell in wisps. They walked quickly. Churches were letting out and Emily walked with her eyes straight ahead, see- ing nothing. Gee! Veronica. culled at last, my feet are killing ma. wherere we Boing, Canada? She leaned against a lamp post and bent to rub her foot. Emily stood apart and hoped that no one Needlecraft ' themselves at the fr: any lrrnon pop? Veronica asked, lock. Vg _ the wlndoi 2 unuiln. o,“ - We have lemonade, madam, It/s the same thing. (To Be Continued) KELLOGG’S ASTHMA RELIEF FOR ASTHMA a HAYFEVER "' For The Home i. THE JUMPER OB PINAFORE In Moblier-snd-Daughter Sims Such u charming custom. this mo- ther-and-daughter fashion -snd ill-it as nice for big and little sister. This Jumper frcclr for instance if you make it up in a. clean-looking little print, makes mother look younger and daughter feel more grown up. Both make cool comfort- able sunbacks, to wear without the blouses. And if mother 3463 is designed for sizes 10 to 20 Size 10 requires a 1-8 yards M-ln fabric for the pluafore, Style No 3430 l.s designed for sizes B to l6 Size B uires 2 1-3 yards 35 in. fabric for t jumper; 1 1-2 yards fill-in for the blouse. Bend twenty cents for Write your name. address and styls Street Address Cit! "I was very gli-{i w see that you your soldier son at heme, Brown." "Yes, Mr. smith. Tom's been st It was only what you HE KNEW On-his-Jwav home s drunk Our Boarding House By Major Hoopla Out Our~ Way nit-am racist’: any girl across. Try this gentle Lux a V - ,, g ' l . ' _ I l . "A," m, Toilet Soup can)! slio says Kfificb . w‘.$rét‘.%°§.fw"" llliflgésibislzi.‘ §$i§§l§i?s%‘7s, .. Fmgf ml m; "Ms-ELF! Nexi- sup! Fe Ruaahw-VOURE BOLDER .: CREAMY LAT“ THQN FRY LHDlEQ IN QLACKQ/ 5"‘ AND you've ear ALLTHE '~ l-‘GHTLY IN — Tgéqgmmikaa: wiu. courioauce or- ‘me M21258 03a" ‘ GTRUTTNG To "me OWL rucvlso talus i wmi A QUARTER m ms - MCQ ' l“ MKPLB POCK T.’ _ Kai! no '1 a E """ By J. R. Williams 514-63 uzas 0-201 ,. Q1 .1 -| LET‘B But 001‘, ' "ms TREASURV-