loeplecs and t hpiiluimriirmnnmfinuuinmmmiusuuuim '= ,nulmmnnmmmnn|||||||||u|n|n||n|mi|||a|||m||u|nununlnlnnuhuu Flilltlvl in»? nutrition suns. . . u» vssruonrs fuiinwnilht cu: mixrur "Willie has: Hollywood magic ion tbeWesmerec; ABGCICHkIELkC-UPIII; lanolin to prevent drying s | | and light textured to make i: ‘ comfortable to wear and 4 prevent a mask-like appearance. Goes on easily, smoothly. Give; aayouthful, exciting com- plexion. Never fools you x tbout in color — the cold fl the cake is the colof you'll see on you: face. Try it —— you'll agree it's terrific. Comes in seven flattering the.‘ matic skin tinted shades; $1.25 g s s s s = s s s s g s S i l: Meant s. WLEODHEE . Binds of 3 oranges Water a cup brown sugar .1 ea: 2% cup white sugar i 21.6 cups flour ,2 teaspoons baking powder ' 1 teaspoon salt I 1 cup milk . MEN-DOD: Peel the rinds frcm lhree oranges and then cut this in yvery thin strips, using a, pair of hcissors. Cover with cold water Ind. allow to come‘ to a boil. Drain pnd repeat this step twice more. YIhe third time, however. retain t enough water to dissolve 1 0111p brown sugar. mixed with peel. {Bold the mixture for 2 or 3 min- lltes and set aside to cooh When pool, add the egg which has been beaten. ~ Sift the flour, then méasure lind. lift again with hhe White. sugar, lour, baking powder and. salt. Add this to the orangc peel mixture alternately with nhe milk. Turn the-batter into a well [reused oblong loaf pan and allow to stun-d for 20 minutes. Then bake In a moderately slow oven i325 Beg. F.) for about 1 hour. Cool thoroughly and then wrap 1n wax paper for storing. X§~.C1RJ\§RQ\5Q~ The Stars Sa -- By Genevieve Kensblo For Friday, Much 5 IN spite of high tension and an inclination to either tricky or Gully judgments, there are good indications of a day of steady pro- tress toward ambitious objectives. In this there is hope of those in 3118!’! places being heartily in ac- cord with such propositions, with probably personal or social as well as professional factors proving in. fluential. Being alert to duplicity, false values. and refraining from rash acts or turbulence, there Should be productive work. The af- fectional, sentimental and domestic relations also flourish. l! It Is Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is have an augury for success and progress in the launching of projects of 1113.101‘ Significance in which the re- sources and friendly cooperation of influential personages are es- sential. But be alert to false values or dubious entanglements born of “@116 Judgment or overconfldence in ones self or others. Refrain from flash ideas or plunging, and 35 well make prudent use of the per- sunal or social element. A child born on this day should make progress in ambitious objec- tives in life. with corresponding gratification, happiness and influ- ence in its romantic. social and professional life. l 0y Of Your: OB New that thee ioa general movement all over the world ton I l 4 LEE NEEIILFOR A FAMILY ‘ DOCT ’ Dorothy Dix Says-in- Skill In Marriage ' Job Training For Yflfolmd leaded For lioatcntlnont when a man hire: a new secretary who is just out o! the school make it‘ 9mm“ m’ “w” “m”! room and who has had no previous experience in the business world. ‘Ionian and child ‘o receive medi" he doesn't exipect her to turn out an carport job. On the contrary, he ‘cal care with some help from the governments, the question of the ‘standing of specialists and of gen. ‘oral practitioners in regard to ‘hours of work. amount of fees and ‘the distribution of physicians in cities, town, ‘communities, is all being discussed -'by the various governments and iby physicians themselves. v A brilliant busy children's spec- ialist recently stated that if t3 Govemmetn took him on its pay roll, he would do a 40 hour-a-week job like others. and no more. Also he would do office work only, no visiting. Other specialists may have the same thought. However. what most of us want to know is what about the general practitioner, the first physician to see the patient despite any special xieed demanded by his symptoms? 1t is the family doctor or general villages, and nun]. knows that she will make mistakes and bungle accounts, and not know where things are in the files. or how to handle clients or customers smoothly, and he prepares himself to use patience and diplomacy in breaking her ln to the office rou- hhey think that tine and in teaching her how to d.o'the work the way he wants it done so that eventually she be- comes "our invaluable fvflss Smith." Yet, strangely enough, there are very few men who ever consider training the girls they marry into being the kind of wives they want. Whether there is some magic in the marri- age ceremony that will automatically turn their brides into whatever they desire them to be as wives. Heaven alone knows. But it. is sadly true _ that when the average girl gets married she hasn't the faintest idea. on earth of wha/t her husband really wants her to be. Not only has her prospective husband never told her what he ex- pects of her, he has unintentionally misled her by giving her the gen- eral idea that marriage is a state of’ perpetual billing and cooing and being dressed up in wedding finer-y, and looking pretty and stepping out of evenings to a night club. It is significant that when girls buy their trousseaux they seldom include any working clothes. and in their courtship men rarely even mention wash tubs and cooking stoves. physician who coimts for most with governments do to him and to the‘, carrying out of his all-round work? He is a greatly "needed man."_ In "Rocky Mountain Journal." Dr. Lewis J. Moorman. o-f our civilization is a. fzumlly doc-_ .ior who can see the human organ- _is|n as a composite or complete whole and deal with it physically. and psychologically. according to its individual needs. The rapid development of ad- vanced sclentiflc methods of diag- ‘time-honored relationship between ‘patient and doctor. "Humanity. though blessed with the gift of science, never has been so in need of human understanding endowed wdth thc- prirrw} sympathy of man, for man." DBSpllr‘ the fact that’ about 80 per cent oi’ the people who call for a doctor will recover without his aid, they would have a poor t‘me from the mental and emotional standpoint without the advice of a wise doctor. i "When illness strikes it is of -param0unt importance to Zonow how to stay the storm, to soothe the soul. to quiet the heart an restore mental and emotional bal- ance. This is always the general ,practition.er‘s privilege, rarely the f specialists." l L“ Betterl English I). C. Wllllnml I I I l 1. Whatiis wong with this sem- tence? “They bought. two dozens of oranges." the majority o! people. Wihat will! WANTS GOOD COOK And that goes a long way towards explaining why so many marri- ages go on the rocks and why there are so many peevlsh. fretful, dis- Mpdicall contented wives and so many grumpy husbands. For how can Mary Anne come up to her husband's desire in a wife when she thinks he only cook? And how can Mary Anne be her what it is that gripes him? ta. . s ms that the mast urgent nefll wants her to look pretty and act cute, whereas what he wants is a good satisfied with a husband who just ‘passes into the silence when anything goes wrong, instead of telling Love of itself is not enough for the average man. He wants per- formances, besides. And when he marries he wants his wife to have all of the domestic virtues. as well as good looks and a. line of fascina- tions. And when she fails to make good on any. or all. of these points. Apparently it seldom occurs to a ‘nosing and treating all the differ-, he considers that he has been gypped and he acts accordingly, which ‘ent ailments has p-usihed aside the doesn't make him pleasant to live with. man that when he marries a young ignorant girl, who has had no experience in smoothing men's fur down the right way and knowing how to get along with him. and who knows nothing oi’ how to cook or handle money. it is up to him to teach her how to be a good wife and come up to his standards. " There isn't a woman who couldn't be turned into a good cook ‘.2 her imsband look an interest in it and praised her‘ broad and pits in the market place. There isn't a woman whose husband couldn't teach her to be thrlfiy if he showed her how to handle money. There isn’t a woman who wouldn't learn to control her temper if her husband told her what a Mona Lisa smile she had. Second marriages are notoriously happy. and the reason- for this is that widows have been taught. by good wives. precept and experience, how to be iaticn of “cogncmen”? 3. which one of these words is misspelled? Kimono. keeness. kang- aroo. 4. What does the word "pcrrnp- ous" mean? ‘ 5. What is a word beginning with la that means "expending or bestowing profusely"? ANSYVERS | 1. ‘gay, “They bought two dozen oranges." 2. Pronounce keg-no- nzen. first o as in on, second o as in no. e as in men. accent on sec- ond syllable. 3. Keenness. 4. Char- acterized by excessive self-import- ance; pretentious. "The pompous vanity of the old s:|l1oolrxiistress."— 2. What is the correct pronunc- Thackeray. 5. Lavish. . I . ~ llllIll. YOII on‘ nu mums HEW FIRST lo get dishes so eloon they Shine I-OVOII HIST Io out dlchwnshlng time In half! FIRST to give you gronselen dlshwcchlngl FIRST to perform miracles no soap In _ _ the world eon mimhli hm peeve m ‘topical 1- h-ritatinl dhhwaahlfll - noun a caucus '- "mme wot eneovdlf IMPROVED DRIFT! without tvlplngl ntomoustv” ‘kusgliiflfl Dreftflghfnl u n d“; My mes... a... R>l7~5 ?<2\’§?.\‘ . <v '9 Household Scrapbook l), Roberta Leo i | -F\R.%'\'\\ _\_ l~ Dlslnfecting A Room When disinfecting a. room, paste 5mm °Y Paper over the cracks of the doors and the windows. Loosen the bedding and the carpets. Then burn two or three formaldehyde candles. according to directions on the box, which can be secured from any druggist. Leave the rocm clos- ed about eigiht hours. then open and air. T116 1150115 will he quicker 5nd "w" Ffiliisflwiflfy if a. smaller flame is used when cooking any. thing in an aluminum pan. Turn the flame higher when using an iron vessel. Stains on Steel The brown stains on the steel fillings of the range can be easily Tfi-‘flol/Pd by using a rag dipped im Then polish in the usual How Can l N! Iy Anne Ashley Q. How can I make mock goose? A. Parboil a leg of pQrk and remove the skin. Then rub wm; ‘butter and sprinkle with salt, pep. Per- Wwdfifil H89. bread crumbs, and minced onion. Rout in a mod. crate oven. A well-seasoned bread 1119951118 can be baked in the pan with the PQrk. Serve with fried apples. Q. How can I keep the leather inbotter ouflf- A. If the doors of tbs bookcase are left open once in awhile, al. 1W1“: the an w reach the books. itQwi-llnheb. _ . ow can I e mum A‘ gnmhu‘? l‘ BIOVQ V Y using snmoufa and t In 00ml quantities. n u u BITTER PIACTICE I l" Youluve a ‘sign in your ahopflwo aim to pious," n. marked the crutouier. "(Dflllll-ly." reriied the shop- kglver. "theta our motto." WOW’- d the miatamer, "you oughvto ts- a little tkne of! for toilet ticei" T" OAMQI-ING 1mm ‘It! dlloulin‘ the camels of their hlpeotive pariah whats. "Ow clergyman." said mo. "is so allot that he won't -even pee- f a mix-rings ceremony." " " "Dull thl out‘, sweat. that m to do ma an acumen-dinners Ellen's Diary Mainline-defile I wonder who invented booking? Jeanie and I have tried to find the answer in her Book of Know- ledge without result. It, must ‘revs been a woman of considerable vision and courage! Much n he admires a pretty new hooked rue. James is bound the era-ft is "noth- ilig short of an invention of the d---". And another male much older remarked to me recently: "Ellen, hooking may be as you saiy. fascinating to the women but more reputations have been lost over c. set of hooking frames than any- where else I can think of!" "Not lost" I chuckled "just discussed!" "Oh, but avidly, Ellen, I don't mean these times, but in the long ago when the women covered their floors from edge to edge with mate --and wore themselves out after- wards shaking them and sweeping them and trying to keep them clean. I O U They used to have these here hooking bees at one place-or an- other then —' in March mostly though some commenced it earlier. Ann used to be crazy to go. After she'd get the dinner over and the house tidy. she'd take her hook and the scissors and sometimes a bit o! cake or a pic and off she would go. If it was handy she would walk or if it was far. I'd hitch up the horse and take her" and he laughed "and before we would get there, I'd have the sleigh full of women. You never heard such a clatter in your life! They'd hook ‘till the moon would go down and their nerves stand on end. Yes. sirl And the news Ann would have when she'd come home!" coo He mentioned this with a tltblC contempt as though the weaker sex had no right to gossip. ‘En- ough to last fur a week” l laughed. “A week!" he said "look here through the Summer she'd let fall something. and where did you hear that? I'd ask her. And where was it but at l. hooking frolic! No.‘ he continued "l guess there's none of those parties nowadays. I'm not saying they didn't learn a lot too exchanging receipts and patterns and such like and I sumose 1t did them lots of good too, if it was only to get away from home for a spell. Certainly Ann always came back in good spirits. She loved tn get off to a hooking!" And l felt some regret for the younger gen- eration that many of the friend- ly old customs which combined work and entertainment in a well balanced way have almost disap- peared from rural life. I look back wistfully. recalling that some of our number have since moved a- way and some gone from earthly scenes. to our wartime community quiltings, so worthwhile and en- joyable. Then the women at ‘this end" gathered at one or another of the houses on this or the spruce road and learned to know and value each other better-and we ate part of our “peck of salt" to- gether. We were more concerned with our quilting than in bother- ing with "reputations" though we did discuss world-wide and local happenings and at that time the former much o'er shadowed the latter. "Act well THY part" the poet wrote “there all the honor lies." Q I U At Alder-lea the threshing com- menced in the sunshine o! this af- ternoon and continued until at a time towards sunset when James cams to the door to put an end to what had been a delightful spell for Jamie and me. I was hooking not without certain effort at a small rug and he was beside me interested in the blending of col- ors as the work progressed. “El- len" James said "have the supper on the tablets soon as you can -the men have all their choring to do when they go home!" i sup- pose Jeanie also received like no- tice. And Jamie and 1 chuckled when the door closed behind him and then went hurriedly and re- gretfully to spreading the table. Rob. dusty from feeding the mill came in when I was serving the soup. "What!" he laughed, mak- ing light of any thrifty ways I might have "not from the lame bone!" “Exactly? I pinned, deal- ing beck tsulngly “it's only the girls of the old brigade who can make use of the some one. I dare- say tomorrow, I shalluse the meat off that bit of shank for a tasty meet pie for your father's dinner!" And James came in then dull-y too from hie quell hauling- sheaves -though he would have a. roving commission: "In she oiled?" "Is that for loft filling?" and "How's the granary-doing?" - but happy that the gear worked a0 well, and in time to hearmyworda. no look- ed around at the otherr with a twinkle and nid:»"l'1l be lueley to get as much we meat pie- and her atthe hooking!" Ifntil tomorrow --gDinry -_-G0od- iiisvrnum comma a m era-quasar» _‘ flflflfljllf; asssezrs Wherefore every man. When his affairs go on most swim- mlnaly. Even then it most behaves to arm himself Against the coming "storm. ~—Terence. T00 blUCl-l TESTXN G When cooking meat and root vegetables, do not continually thrust a fork into them to see if they are done sufficiently. Test them as little, as possible as this only lets out the juice in both meat and vegetables and causes them to lose flavor. BRIGHTER KITCHEN Paint the walls and woodwork of the kitchen a cheerful color that reflects rather than absorbs the light. Many times it is only a poor choice in the color of the paint that makes the kitchen gloomy. A USE FOR SCREENS Save old screening when repair- ing your window screens now. Then you can spread the screen- ing over the soil after sowing seeds outdoors this spring. This will break the force of raindrops and check erosion of your soil. Modern Etinuette Bylhbertnlne -v\ Q. After the knife has been used to cut a bite of food. what should be done with it while con- veying the food to the mouth? A. Place the knife across the edge of the plate, but never with the handle resting on the table- cloth. Sometimes the knife is held closely to the plate with the right hand. Q. Is it all right to oioee a soc"- iai letter vritl! the phrase. "With best wishes, I am sincerely"? A. Omit the "I cm" (which is understood), and add the word "your-a.” "With best wvi-shea. (then on the ltne below) "Sincerely yours." Q. Is it obligatory to send a gift upon receiving an announcement of a birth? .A. No; but, it is a nice getsure on your part if you do IO. lLivingeSlLeiasure zTHE WOMANSREALM/i YOUTH IS OFTEN PRETTY ' BRAS ' How "fresh" can a young per- son be with her elders without being considered disrespcciiul‘! 1 bring up this question lit-cause readers’ letters are reminders that some youngsters exceed the bounds of good taste in the manners of breezy informality taken toward older people, writes a commenta- tor on manners. . Certainly adults with a youthful viewpoint enjoy the companionship of young people. Basic good man- ners, however, will limit the lib- erties a wise youngster l1 take in her relationships older people. For example, one woman writes that it shocks her to have flip teen-agar: call her by her firs! name. The first-name familiarity liked by some adults meets with disapproval from others. Unless an older friend has specifically asked to be called by her first name. a teen-agei- will be-wiser to stick it the conventional Mr. and Mrs. pre- fixes when addressing an 01d!!! person. This rule, of course. doe: not apply to the close friends oi parents. These friends quite often prefer to be called by intimate names. ______._-- DEVELOPED FERTXLIZERS Scientific investigation of fertil- lzers and their effect 0n CHIPS W“ started by John Lawes in i822 (‘II an estate he inherited at Rvl hnmsted. England. Get Better I-‘aster From AliTllIilTlti PAIIIS LUMBAGO acnme MUSCLES Don't wfiev needlessly another mlnulo. Jun montage time aching upon with deeper-penetrating IUCKLIYS STAN- LISS WHITI lUl. Immediately n oomfortlng, glowing warmth tolls you fan rellol |l on the way. Circulation is stimulated, surface congestion relieved. poln onsed-wdns begin to go. Don't delay, get o [or of this duper-poncho- tlng stnlnleu, non-greasy rvb today and get relief leaf. 30c and 50c e0 ell drug ' INNS. W2 "UC KLEYS B STAINLESS CLEAN-CUT (MSUAL Ibu- the many occasions ahead when you'll wont in look your eae uni beot- choose this ahirtwaist special. You'll especially-like its front-buttonlng dressing cone . . . comfortable cap sleeves . . . hand- hendy pockets! No. 2231 lo cut in sizes 12, 1d. 10, 1l.20.88.3l.40.42.44 and 46. Bias as requires 3% Yards 30-inch. Send 20c foo each Pattern. which includes complete newind guide. Print your Name. Jddreu and Style Number ‘ ‘ ‘ B cure to ltlla size you want. include postal :11" or lone number in your ad- ‘Adakeu Pattern Department. The Charlottetown Guardian. ~ Patten: 80,2231 V v City l last- ‘s.’ fNéedlecraftf IFOR THE HOME/