PAGE _ l’ Lenten Meditation A Ieraing Sails From The Times, London H-ARQIONY NOT ESEINTILI: One of the commonest obstacles men feel to joining 111 the corporate 1111 111111 lsoisllip of tne Christian Ch-111x11 1s llie existence of differ- ences oi‘ opillluli among those who are reelzuileu 1o be interpreters of its nlessage. "Are not these differ. elites," they sily. "a sign that re- l1r;.cn ls buy 111111 our colllprehension. zillu 11 111111101" fol" specialists rather 111.111 1111" the ordinary‘ man and \1c11...11.' \\'11e1e our appointed dlsiigico about the path. how u inc 111.1111 mun know it?" cciligziulnls are Justified .i.'li<.‘l' CUli1Clill0Il l5 HIlSGd over 1-.» 1.1.11 " peiiv or when re- clouded by ‘II-I AGAIN “What are you st f’ askodthenew-richmo atria" youngest son. “We lily! Just begun the study of molesules" he answered. llbr a moment she looked blank, then a steam o: interest showed in her eyes. "I l1°i10 you will be attentive and llfwll" wllll-lhl-ly." she exclaimed tilizlly- "I "lgdtlgxlet ylour father ear one. u dn' it in his eye." ° °° “m” —————-__.___. Chervil is a pot herb you m. aueunltfgrisuillimktobg b“: ‘fkmm - sey l‘! 5'01‘, but liked better by many cook; Flam B 950k” and Bet a new flavor > 111 soups and stews. ‘\ ill \ ‘iuflllg 1Y0!“ 8 .u11l llllnultv or even i5 Ull-Cll ‘cl symptom 111111 settled down. 1.1- 1111111 1111 innate dis- ‘.0 l‘i)l'1~l(lt.‘l' thinks in! 1 fr. L‘Ullll'1l\'t’l'b'\' lliis a ..1ll t1 l)i‘l‘l0l'lll. 11 11s true,’ .111 1+1. 1i. TlliS 1s not ' .1~ 1w 1111-11111510111 debate 1111-11 11o 1111111: out their own n 111111101: of supreme ‘uuuli 1111s in itself is a - ' no mean value. 1 is more tor-reach- 1, 111 provide pent-up emotion and 111 spirit in the iJllbllC mind . 1' (‘lliillllfilfi in wh1ch to run, au 11111 1; _ j turn to positive faith and blllllilSlfl-Em. T11.- grcit figures of controversy- P11 -11 Alliqiurllie, a. Calvin. a . 1- » -1\'e .11111i\-s aimed at sim- ~ lliiulglit tvinch guided p 11nd conduct. For svs- 11" there must be. if the .1115 1111* Service 11111 15 inevitable wher- gf-‘Sliilllj but there is v for this in Christi . out the straitness of the paw 111111 i116 IHIITOWIIESE of the way ihe". 11111115 to life eternal. What limiters lS that the channels should b.» 11 and unobstructed; l llliiczlon of theological dis- on 1 to sweep nlvay the irrelev- - hiili-rrilths which so 011111 chose the free course of re- liglw 112111 to make its real ends AIDS smnd out firm and clear. - what is true for the s t ‘lie also for its individual The Lords controversy" '1 takes llace in Lian soul: and. as the 1 1- wl 11h taught. it is a bat- - oreat slmpllcitiee of faith. ce, humility. and mercy. v. v chrlstinn is called to keep . so 1.11‘ as he may. the chan- of 111a own mind and heart. so ' the {Tllill and grace ofGodmav '1. only into him. but B150 - 1 111111 to 111s fellow-men. No . of Christ is more often echoed 1111- New Testament than His i ri to His disciples to let ‘ so shine that men may ood works and come to . 1f men find differences l“ 1111:1112. the disturb- .e one thing needed to om snirltllnl complac- ‘h (lflllbi there are some risks - hi!’ it is silrelv better to inlto for truth and holiness ‘hair 1o lo. either 2o bv default. Bow maple-lag Iiaae lines te- lnnflellowh ‘A Paola: of Lilo." Haven't you often wished you had saved suob favorite poems. eouidjila o to for , xooflpf newiafi " by flsemu Bacon. Italic "Notfidihgardenoiwbnieovo iaoeel? Ray,bfl1 have: "liiaverysll-edodw hi." “"1, “Th-fie”. 1111‘: “ . been no. Qeufi Sufi? it ns-powor ‘to bl§. t This?‘ Love, although you peak I Ives MtQ" by J1‘. . ' Chi‘ 2 _ "?_'EZ(1'-7 ':‘{_.__,_. ':;_._._rr..:r.-: a 1m t Br booing we” tains vor y own orda- worii, Reba-t Burns, and many 0&1 send 15¢ in coins m: your of World’. Best-loved Poems to e oiisriotleiown Guardian Home Ber- vigplacidrees. Bedsure lawn": h 011i‘ Kill!!! l dlf P Y; n‘ 1 .1‘ _-__ _ "Pi. Home Besfforfiolringr l‘ Besfforlfea]! l .1 11E sll rllon MARITIME, Piliiii 01¢! Province cltrcllnrnn sLrPr-Enswovtll or 71m 533A! no; lkeet Add!!! -v., md o“ {DESIGN uaboieesnnmnmdmhem lip w rage rom ur scrap x, cu s ‘Sake t se lovely slippers. gghey are inexpensive to make and are ap- égpriate for lounging or beach. Pattern 10m contains list of mater- needed, illustration of stitches and complete instructions. To urtiel pattern: Write o1 send above picture with vuur name and “dress with l5 cents in coin or stambo w Needlework Bureau onarletu- town Guardian dl k Department. léiftrlentkglown Guardian sign No i005 Nm_.-_ ._ -@un1—n1¢1o—xq-¢—.-__,._§_ ITRIT ADDRIBB——————---------___ rll_i__z cnAnpgrIe-rowu .GUA_RDIAN i Jel ilniy You Ban lio tif- E s BLUE RIBBON BAX/AZ POWDER Qmulciflafiférgfuam Ell Prices "Israeli Building?“ Q. Can a person rent spare rcoms V if he is on-y renting the house him. Self? Could the landlord raise the rent in such e case? A. You are entitled to sublet M- commodatlon in your house, even though it is a rented place. The land- lord may not raise your rent until he has been granted pelmisslon on application to the rentals niittee. I Q- My husband . who is in the Veterans’ Guard is home for two was}?! leave. can he get o. ration A. He should apply\to his Local Ration Board for a temporary ration "-"- card covering his leave. He will lLl'°"“'"‘ °l' Mlmiemull have to present his leave pass, and Th1! melell’ Tfilllm‘ “"5" pal" mlat "gum m. temporary cam to rolled out and spread with liver- ehe qflicg 1mm whim he rggejves wurst mashed and mixed with cream 1|; when m, leave 1s We]; or milk until of spreading consist- Q I‘ 1g fofbldden w ma)“ a mp ency or mincemeat softened by the by our w l city 50 mugs away? addition of ground apples. The liver- A. ere are no restrictions on the WW“ m‘ mlmalle" l8 Bllfefld 0Y1 use of private passenger cars as long ll"? Nlled Wt Pastry. and then it is as your gasoline holds out. The rul- "M! "P and "WW4 l" W" WW ing apples only to prlvgfg com. and chilled thoroughly - prefer- rnemial vehicle; which must not go ably vvemlsht- When ready w bake mo“ m,“ 35 mile from they; 1-95,, and use, slice with very sham knife Lew-ed address, wifiwut 051,311,111; “into slices not more than 3-16 inch "my; |thiok and bake at 4.50 deg. Fahr. 4[(very hot) until biscuit colored ‘serve as m?“ "Her hqkmz M W's- '\' Ilbli T111680 C9116!“ “N10 IIOPIOlI N.W lllldlf-dffl llieltén your mouth. so provide pen . Cream Deodorant "fill Stops Pereplrofion fir? book's comm PASTRY PINWHEELS CHEESE PINWHEBLQ Use no butter at all. Mesh spread or grated old cheese with enough cream or meyonnehr g9 make it spready. Slice enriched white broad lengthwise of the loaf cutting off the crusts after bread is sliced Spread with the softened cheese and roll up and flasten with toothpick: and wrap up and let c ill through. When ready to use, glee into 8-4- ilmh slices and toast lightly under broiler. I. Don rot r teases or men's shim. not irritate akin. = e I, app: perepinaion for CONVENIENT The witness was certainly no chicken, and the young barrister thought it would be to his advant- age to get her rattled. “And now, madam," he said, "I must ask a personal question. How old are you?" "Young man," she replied. "It isn't more than an hour since the Judge, there, objected to hearsay evidence. And I don't remember be- ing born " The quickest annual flower to bloom i; leptosyne stillmanil, which will bear Lowers in five weeks from seed. The plant grow; eighteen inches tall and the flowers are yel- low daisies, borne for a long sea- son u o or. I. A pare, wnlzilrieiasgresaelcll. va I. Awarded Approval Seal of American institute oi builder- ~- . ~ lcir Arrldl5lhe selling de°d° 39‘ajar _ Alsoin 151111659! iln 995T rOfll l“ Dorothy Dix ‘Sway:- DAUGHTEIPS MARRIAGE CURE rim INEBRIATE DAD’S WEEKLY BINGEL When Genuine Love Comes After Marriag Onlly Individual Can Decide Future Cours DEAR M188 DIX-I am the youngest one of six children and 1. only one left at home. My problem is about my mother and father. l\ mo her is the sweetest, gent est creature in the world and beloved t everyone who knows her. but she is very timid. My father is a 00d 111111 but a heavy drinker. Every week-end he goes on a spree an when he teniffiels my mother s0 she shakes like a leaf r . nown my mothe could not possibly and m brothers and sisters have always 1 1o] me that I should stay with Mom. Now I am enga ed to be married to a very fine boy a cl he insists upon our being married at once, but I feel that I can't leave my mother. 1t seems to me that my dpzty is to her. What should I do? D UTE) DAUGHTER. f 1t lth eve thin . ‘This 8:113 tgrns oonlgfletelg white with Ever since I was a child I have be leit alone with m" fathe" DAUGIITEIVS MARRIAGE REMEDY ANSWER-Jlse a little common some in solving your problem Get married and live close enough to your mother to be able to protect her from our drunken father. The ractical ing for her to do would be o go over ano spend her week-ends in peace and quiet with you, and leave her husband to break the dishes without scaring her to death when he goes on his weekly inges. It might even reform him for prob- ably he loves his gentle, timid little wile, and if he realized that she was so afraid of him when he made a beast o1 himse i that she wouldn't even stay alone in the house with him. he might dread her leaving him altogether so much that he would control himself. It is very thoughtful of your brothers and sisters to provide for mother by wishin on you the Job of family martyr. They have married and set u the own homes and families, but you are to be an old maid and stan guard over mother and protect her from father when he comes home with a fighting drunk on. 1 never cease to marvel at. the nobility of the brothers and sisters who elect one articular member to be the fanzliy goat, and then wash their hands of a further responsibility in the ma er Tn ltpoor annyfollto rtth lcl enursethelnwhen they argysigk and igeble, ut u wlllfhpotheir .W 'o the spend their ‘linolgey on themselves an the pleasures and enjoy their reedom. Nice 0 I somehow, I other from your letter that tho idea of sacrificing your- self for your mo er rather appeals to you. If so, go to it. But, at least, have the honesty to tell the young man you are engaged to that - comes home he is very mean and abusive, throwing dishes and finding ~ MARCH 1i, 1943 =§ W0man's,Re aim '1. Social and Personal / Fashions 1 Literature IRRADIATED Carnation Milk keeps indefinitely in the unopened can, without refrigeration. l “d. diluted“ equal; ‘ required for cooking. Carnation used in cooking helps give your family the milk __ nourishment they need. Write for free Cook nook. cue-don c». tinned. 1111111111», 01.1.11... ) . . " "" mun/arm Carnation Milk a cauaoiau onooucr ->§wn aafsntvdfiwe’ ' r ‘ ' - '—_-—\ cal silence, is a roblem that only the individuals concerned can solve. But it shows tha we should look very deeply into our hearts berm we select our mates. Liking isn t enough. Love my some dny come, DEAR DOROTHY DIX-Do you believe that Fate decides everyt in life for us. as is Droven by the fact that if we hadn't gone to cert“; laces we would not have met the people who become a. great infillenq n our lives, such as our husbands and wives, or friends? CHILD or pnsrmv, ANSWER-I certainly believe that there is some force call it Pro. vldence, or Fate, or Kismet, what you will, that plays a leading role in W, lives, but I also think we have to supplement it with our own willpowq- Peiihalps that view isn't very logical, but there is nothing in life may 1| -03 c As you say, we are wandering idly down a street with no definite ob. jective. We turn to the right and we meet a stranger we marry, or someone who offers us a job that leads on to our fortune. Or by gecid. ent we miss a train that crashes through a bridge and on which every. body is killed. “mat i.s luck. ood, or bad. But we can't sit down an fold our hands and say we won't work ii we are destined w starve to death we will do it in s ite of all q! pup industry, or if we are destxiined to be fed somebody wi oome along m4 provide us with filet . back over my own life, 1 realise that all or n1 important decisions in i were made by Fate, and that f have very 11m. to do with it. But I don't pretend to understand it. 1 Living £11 Leisure you love your mother and value her comfort more than you do his happi- ness. and break of! the engagement. Give him a chance to find girl who hasn't such a bad case of the mother complex. _____i.___ DEAR. M188 DIX-Speaking of men who lose interest in their wives who are everything a wife should be, has it ever occurred to you that Fate sometimes deals a man a dirty blow that he is powerless to mslst? I am a man of 30. My married life was all I could wish until the day 1 realized with a sickening shook that I was really in love for the first time, but not with wife. I know now that my feeling for my wife has always been Just a warm affection, not the love that turns inside out and makes life a hell. The woman who is wrec my lllfgudoee not know 1 love her, neither does my wife suspect it bu something will have to break some where. some time, and then I will be just another one of those husbands who are suPDOsed to have gotten tired of their wives. ‘ m 1113; you anything to say to a man who has found love at last, but s. LOVI T00 LATE PROBLEM FOB INDIVIDUAL ANBWERr-Nothin , but to offer ou my sympathy. But I fear that this is a traged that appens to bot men and Women oftener than we know. There some man or woman who is good and kind and congen- ial and of whom they are very fond, and with whom they drift into mar- riage. All goes well. There is peace and comfort in the home. Children come. A thousand mutual interests draw them together, and they think this is married love. Then, some day they meet THE ONE. Perhaps not so fine a person as the one to whom they are married, but one m whom they are drawn by some irresistible attraction, who satisfies some hunger of their souls they did not even know they ossessed, who gives them something they have subconsciously craved all) their lives. And then they KIIOW that they have never loved before, and that between love and friendship there is a great gulf fixed. As the poet says: “They are to each other as moon- light unto sunslight, or as water unto wine." The Woman's Realm You can't very often find Savory gel in the market because they are net long keepers. Plant see know: and some at home They are caught the highest quality table eabbages. Their dark green crinkled leav identify them at once. OOLOI. OI‘ FOLIAGE COUNTS 1N PLAA 1 A HEBREW SAYING Iczultwoofmi-ghebgfltythtw rn e au a e The delimte blush of Qrinl nib: 3e01, uritmuelee amine or a w Draw? o'er a violin; the heartening go w Of fellowship when mind to mind Strikes spar of recognition. All kind eavors start Out of the heart. —1Laura Taylor Ayers. Modern lant foods are quick acting, an are available to pants before the weather warms up. Well fed in the beginning, plants will soon become sturdy enough to for- age more effectivelyfor themselves. Bfllwlli 00119630". Color of foliage must be token ink create pleasing picture; with lio- . plants. For that reason, experienced gardeners try to have several gleyg ieaved plants, sucn as the dusty mil er and lavender cotton, 1n then collections, because of the liamicny Whether men and women to whom this tra cdy has come should go to their husbands and wives and talk the mat r out. or whether they should bury the secret in their hearts and gu on trying to keep up the farce of being a happy husband of wife, and endure ‘their misery in stoi- \ ‘kin the old familiar u 4a ounce PACKAGE b. *1“ the NEW femur 80 ounce ECONOMY PACKAGE wounluvgmsnoun can get them in the familiar 48-ounce high quality Oats, No matter which good Oats with the distinctive, pan-dried avour that or all Robin Hood Om are made from bee: uality, that is heightened, and a toasty richness added pan-drying process. RobinHoodOeuazeai-idisonmoffoodener essential minerals, digestible proteins and a: least 72 of Vitamin B-l per ounoei join the thousands of ha delicious nus of Robin ood Oats every morning. 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Q1 wen‘ - Math UTICURIl consideration when one is trying ~ they bring to the usual hetelo