.f;.':e<=a1'y<> LAQ ‘AAA ‘A; w; . ._-._...-. - l‘; O‘IA11HI'I'S . .~~ .i.-.-.....~.....-...,l. . twddhvitfltsiwh. _ The Housewife -AND- Her Activities Till DON! LAMP gometimss on one lone mm IN mfafin the midnight with its Andraizcsahder what the torturing cares, The agonies and fainting prayers. That keep that lonely lamp a ght Amid the desert of the night, Yet, spite of questioning" ‘in vain We strive to read anothers pain: Each life within itself is sealed, Nor can to others be revealed: One Mind alone. that dwells apart, Can read the secrets of the heart. -H. R. Pyatt. HAVE YOU A BOW TO YOUR ‘ Edwardian and Victorian in- fluences are tying everything low LJV/kllfltn in the newest hats. B1B smashing bows, medium sized bows covering the entire tops of hats makes more and more bow news. And what gives thB fashion a real kick is the choice of ribbons -picot edged, checked, plaided, striped. dotted, ombred — all with loads of color and most often of zaffeta. But wide and narrow velvet ribbons are anoher remated :hoice of designers, the rich pile adding to the color value. and con- Lrastinfz with silken floyvrrs. IN paras"? "i: FEMININE vnmry Whatever our v".ews on film star faces. the mass cult of beauty which has developed since the war has, on balance, been a contribution to the national health. True we have passed throigh some dangerous phases. Plenty of voung women ruined their health when the skeleton silhou- ette was fashionable. But out of those early excesses has emerged some real commonsense. Young women still “let, but they diet with a difference. Wliole- when. bread and butter, fruit and milk have replaced the bun and cup of tea or coffee of a. few years ago. Business girls are vitamin-conscious. The coveted physique is not emaciated, but ithe and taut with healthy vital- tty. Women are realising that good looks can not be bought in tubes and Jars, but that they are the re- sult of observing the lawn of health. of which the law of clean- liness is the greatest. ‘I11;- personal vanity which takes nearly every young woman to the. hairdressers once n fortnight to hay; her per-mangn_t_wave_set_with uunneokuun-nunu 1thorough wuhssmindispens- able preliminary leads to good grooming Soap ranks as s beauty product of the fir order. Combined with such ts as milk, avocado pears, cucumber, lettuce and countless other s rising things, it is the basis of a beauty treat- ments, for it alone produces that degree of cleanliness without wtlilich skin perfection is unattain- n e. To-day every woman under- stands the axiom that make-up, no matter how exotic, must have, $1 a base, a healthy functioning IL A MomingSmile Two men were discussng a. half- wit who was walking in front of ihem-"A great want!" whispered the one to the other. "Ay, the want o’ siller," replied the half- wit. THERES VISION Young Douglas had reached the age of seven, when he was pro- moted to the dignity of having a room to himself. I-Iis parents had furnished it with a great care arid showed it to hit" "utfi no little pride and satisfaction. Douglas viewed it in silence. "Now, son." said his father. this furniture is of’ the best. It will 1e" "c" a lifetime." Still Douglas kept silent. "Wont you like it. Douglas?" "Oh. yes. I like it. Rut how do I know my wife will like It?“ nemowot-cooo-oao-ooaawef i Modern Etiquette z lBy ROBERTA LLEI O OO-O-O-§0-§9-00 Q. When there is some item on the menu which one does not un- derstand. is it all right to ask the waiter what it is? A. Yes. Only a timid person would hesitate to do so. Q. What should a person say when being] introduced to some- one whom e has met previously? A. "I think I met Mr. Marshall several months ago." telephone to acknowledge receipt of a gift? A. No,.it_i_s not goodjorm. Fish. Real _VO'O. Q. It is proper for one to use a» RSI! AND VIGITAIII IOAI Fish 2 nipfilh (1 pound) of canned or cooked fish and ofsbumercdmmilcLCoverwirlnlnyer of cbWPd. hooked spinach, with ult and pepper. Firmly pack n layer of whole kernel corn on cop. Pour our this 2 aipfuls of medium whim sauce which In: been seasoned with III! and pepper, l cnblespoonful of chopped onion and blended with two IIIghtIy beacen eggs. Sprinkle the cop of the nimild with cracker crumbs. Place in s pan of ho: water and bake In n modern oven (550 deg. Fnhr.) for one hour. Serve unmoulded and garnished with fresh parsley. Serves 6. —-n——-_-|-—-|_——-— _ . _ . _ __ mes. . ..,,, “$13,, Dorothy Dix 121-; Married Life Cannot Remain One Long Period of ~ Romance-After a Time it Settles Into a Friendship That Should be Jealously _ Guarded Awomsnasksfliisquuiio. Whyeamtwewivegatnymlmwiu; our husbands? Now take me. for instance, and I am typical of the great majority of married women," she goes on to say. "I have been married ten years. When I was first married I was so piufihy in Ayiggwlth my hpsbanliéulncoilild a er- ec thril evening us-t ‘it... while he read the newspapers. lg 0° n“ at him ck out of being clothes as he d what I was do . dm bloodboiledlfheevenaomuc as looked at ano er woman "Now when I look at him ashe sits opposite he has got and how tired I am of hearing him ted about what happened in the office. 1 don't bother to cook extra dishes for film. I have quit in - out his clothes for him. for I say to rnysel he knows where they are and is Just as able to at them as I am. And as for Jealousy of other women, why, he can h re America" for his private secretary for all I care. “Now my husband is no Don Juan or bnute. Technically I have no fault to find with him. He has been good and kind in his way but somehow 1 have lust fallen out of love with him. Why is this? w... is it when I once wanted to be his slave, now I resent my chains?" Probab y most middle-aged married cowples—husba.nds and wives alike — fee. this way about marriage. Somehow it has gone flat and lost its savor for them. They think that they have ceased to care for eacih ‘cu-her and that they have lost their taste for bread-and-butm dqm- esi. ci y The state of mind is easily explained, It is the reaction from the high-pressure romance of courtrhlp and the first exaltatlon of possess- ion. But the husband and wife who find that. they no longer have hectic chill. and fevers at the sound of each others footsteps, or feel like - lng peans of thanksgiving when they face each other across the - last table every morning, need not think they have ceased to .0ve each other. lt is Just because we can only live at a high emotional pitch for a limited lengn of time. We are bound to get over being surprised and hysterical. We are compelled to calm down and take even our greatest blessings in our stride. Men don't bother so much about their emotions. They don't sit with their fingers on uheir pulses counting their heartbeats. Most of them get over being bridegrooms normally and, uniess otherwise disturb- cd, never find out that they are no longer romantically in love. But i; is the curse of women that they want to go on feeling like brides until they are 90, and it simply can't be done. These deluded souls do not realize ihat romantic love does not Test any looser than their wedding W11. nor wli. 1r. any more stand the wear and fear of everyday use. Nor do they comprehend that it is no sign that they do not love their husbands becau e they have ceased to see m8!" B5 Will"? 911E095. II- IS 0111i when love sctdes dawn into a glorified friendship after marriage that there is any peace and comfort in it That marriage should pal at ttmos upon every htisband and wife is also inevitable. We all go into every new enterprise with an enthusiasm eters out a little as we encounter the difficulties and the drudgery and t e disap intment». All of us at times wish we had chosen some Other WHY 01 lfe than the One we are f0Il0Wlng. All of us are tempted to throw up our hands end quit. All of us feel that no job could be as dull and monotonous and hard as the one we have undergnken But tlnese are momentary moods with mosi of us. Theypass, and we know that the work to which we have set our hands is our work- that in it we find a happiness and a satisfaction that we could find nowhere else. That is the way with marriage with the great ma tv of men and woingiéuth 'I'hleir matesfimay not. come up to al of the ideas; they may no e amorous ures the 0h they are a. part gf their llvesgjust the a t “my were marrying’ but No one will den that there are husbands and wives who do 1511 gut of love with each o her, but I think most of them who think they have ceased to care for each other have dIBRIIDSEd gym,- sympgcm; wrong 3e- cause they have ceased to tihrill is no sign they have waged to "¢ve_ DO Y D RECIPES DELIGHT THE FAMILY f‘ Isn't it grand to see the family thoroughly enjoying the meal you've planned for them? It's a thrill you get often when you tempt their appetites with the dainty apperizing recipes in which you can use Fish. There are over 60 kinds of Canadian Food Fish and Shellfish, available all the year ‘round, each of which can be served in many enticing ways. “I00 Tempting Fish Recipes" is the name of a free Booklet prepared by skilled dietitians under the Department of Fisheries at Ottawa. It is yours for the asking . . . just use the coupon below. Serve Fish to your family several times a week. Thousands of Canadian homes are getting delicious new variety with health-giving meals of DEPARTMBU OF FISHERIES, OTTAWA.- piscelntbeborcom e yed nothing could of me which he had had no previous Iwith a. rapidl m '/ Social and P rsonal NEDFOBACAESAB In a few short years the multi- tudinous common man throughout the earth had to make what he a stupendous fact, o! warning. namely Rud. the World 'I‘ruswe_ And Rud beingl himself. as indeed he always a eged. m morn: than a common man. had also, with scarcely more Drelflfl" tion, to make what he could of The ome- hilnselrf. P6150 ation of himself as the universal common man twals thtehaigio-lstad t . g I: hm? bu?!“ for a time he clung to it In; would like to have mid I0 mankind that he was lust them- selves in a concentrated form. Hid to him was demanded I thm fiebuflflebiecti leadership 1 u; o ve End paternalism. They writ-red to live in him, they kevt them- selves to themselves, but they were r Fashions 1 Literature if dhimselfinvoivedfn one". euxansfonofflieokf slant!» ti: t, and in- Wrath I i’..“"‘u..’°‘.°¢..*‘u“q.u an raining o van armies . in the a plicstion o! film and radio .0 sohoo use "zhrougiiout the world o! miléions f th unity tha - festly had to replace the schools and home instnctlon of mt. He had assembled p, ma nt group of assoc ies and an ever-in- creasing multiaude of mentally quickened helpers; he was sustained by an increasi realization _that most humandybe m wan: to earl: d one rea mee capob m half w ; but for all that me p .- and e it imd to him that w establish even the broad framework for the mental re- oonitioning of manlcnd, would be a task that would demand the nus- tained devotion o! hundreds thousands of workers through some scores of ears. And in eintsrimwhstwastobe done for the generations? For the prescn and for the rest of his lifetime, itwaspain to him that he would have to endure the spec- tacle o! vast masses of the pula- tion. white. yellow. brown an bnc under-educated no fsult o their own and for eer lack of O n quitereadytoliveuxiderhim. So diminishing reluc- tance Rud a1 wed a sym f-hetlfi et heroic version of him-Be I0 b‘? built in the public mind. And. as this ob ective version was establish- ed throifliout. the world, it M00811‘ conviction to himself. Bleep: in MTG moments of ivate exal MOB. h? ceased to be t universal man o! his profounder speculations an in- stead he became merely the 819"‘ est and most greatly advertised of men. Norvel, like so many of the 810W and their associates. was 8mm!!! rapidly to the scale of his occasions. He was getting a firmer and more corn rehensive grasp upon his r- tlcu ai- aspect o the world prob em. and he was gathering round him a _ or gollengues who shared ideas and purposes with hlrn. It was a parallel proces to Bel consolidation of the world servlofis o1 tr distributnn. to IrwelYs successful invention of a financial network practically frce from speculative corruption, and to the scientific reorganization of pro- duction by Roots and Holbank, who- were now, luring other innovations, manufacturing toil and resettl agricultural workers at the rate o a hundred square mies a Week. Norvel had observed the decad- ence of the newspaper. in the days before the War of Ideol m. 1m i1 t become a mere do Y £11m- tainment and bazaar display, he had d and dominated the world- wide tribution of cheap . and he had acquired a ve exten- sive mass of experience wi all the new and multi lying appliances for menial stimu a on and exchange by cinema, radio, mlcrophotography and the like. He had organized an effective world survey of schools and colleges, and he was now in a pon- remodcl, mulipiy an: ex- him. ‘Ilhat was a. tremendous tas . The Revolution had indeed cr.p- pled the power of business litter- ests and tne- old religions to hinder the liberation of the human mind, but. it had done little to e uip the minds it had emanc.pa.ed. or the purposes of a world community, he found the world even in its most prograsive regons. thiny educated, .h.n<.y to a dismaying degree. Quite as much as Roots an Ho bank, who had realized the limits set to veg- etabie growth by soil insufficiency, he found he had to begin the new crop of humanity from the ground upward. 4§+OO-O-§O O o iflousehold Scrapbook; .(By ROBERTA LEI] o Woolen: that Scratch To prevent woolen garments from scratching when worn. add a few tablespoons of glycerin: to the last rinse when warning them. Always be sure that each water is the some temperature when’ wash- ing woolens, as it is the change from warm to cold water that shrinks them, ' Identifying Mushrooms Mushrooms may be identified as follows: f a little salt sprinkled on the g turns than: yellow, they srtilpoisonous; if it turns fl-iem black, ey are good to eat. Cod Liver Oil If a spoon is first wet with milk, the odor of cod liver oil will not cling to it. _ eq moat, staffing and on - ation, still largely un-educz-taible, With e. job too big for him before him, it was manifest he had 0 ec- onomize all his resources. He had to concentrate first u the bare scaffold of the new in Jectuni order and work for pm; increments in enli tenment, and beyond that the in titude would have to be left to much the same methods of in- formation and a tion as had served before the volution. "We may atop some of the quack medicines at e source." he anid, "but until we have put doctors. teachers and then more and more of gh the mill of a real llc wants. Putting more and more of our own propervstuf! into the mix- ture as time goes on. . . ." “Preciselyfl said Thlrp. “So since a Revolution seems to be impossible without an incarna- tion," said Norvel, turning to Rud, “we have to hand over to n gene agent and the Revolution has or for you. You have to Humanity, no less-until Humanity comes of 25c." Rud tri to su press n faint geam of encitemen _ "So be it," he said. Youlhagpdnever, I suppose, reed Hour en “Never had time " said Rud. “About those sacrificial kin ." said Norvel. “You'd be interes ." (To be Continued) How Can I 7 '7 x (By ANNE ASHLEY) A O-O-O-OQ-OQQ Q. How can I remove n scratch from walnut furniture? A. out a walnut or a Brazil nut kernel in half and rub the scratch vigorously with the freshly-cut nut. The oil from the kernel will refinish the wood. Q. How can I prevent lumps of flour from forming when mixing batter? A. Add the salt to the flour be- fore wettlng. Then pour flour into the liquid, instead of liquid into the flour. and beat it with a fork. In this way lumps will not form. Q. How can I insure a smooth cover on my ironing board? . Tack the cover on the board while it is wet and it will be smooth and tight after it has dried. Gay Games Give Spice tn Valentine Party THE COOK ’S it msksinecrust soggy. til you are rendy._nt' Insh m flour "um-tr 3"" l" l" Yourself how our plrtv mm. “Slfety Spots," stir: m up and literally stretches 'srn Pin Valentine hearts o! red paper on your wall-n heart for each pllrer except one. Start up some frisky music thnt'ii tsks the players right out of themselves ll they march mupd the room. when er gnu-d dd blow s shrill whistle: ‘an: safety spot!” The player that fails to got l hind on one drops out. Then take s heart down and stsrt the crowd marching spin. Game ends with two players frantically making for one remaining heart. it's merry nonlensd- such u this that makes our ll-pngo booklet" so popular! It's full of ice-breakers. mixer-games and many other iollffi to rnske your parties hum. send m in coins for your copy of Party llbr All Occasions in ‘rho an B0 sun to e p figures, and the before, if you .___I_..___.__." ntnstlldrem Town and the eatabdshment 1 r "P"! I!- Style No. 2151 is designed for m 5 s s 5 i. e r 5 a Service. ‘ y your Nuns. Nome of book- isnuesx so. we» ' w-o?» ¢¢¢4+¢o4+ TIMELYHNTIPS —'FOR THE _ HOME SEWER n I dress, down the front in ahirtwnist styl- ing. ‘Ilhe bib front apron has s sus- pender back that revents it alip- ping off the ouldere....n iie sash to snug it at the waist. ‘Hie pocket and lower edges of the flared skirt of the apron, repent the scalloped detail of the dress ool1ar....and uses the print cot- ton for trim. Either the a ron or- the are: pattern may also used sizes l4, l8, l8, 20 years, 32, 34, 88, 38, 40, 42 and fl-inches bust. Size 86 uires 3 1-4 yards of 39-inch mate n1 with 2 yards of 35-inch contrasting for scalloped collar, cuffs and apron. Bend fifteen cents (ll) in stamps or coin fooiri preferred) wrap coin carefully, address to (imriotitetown ~.-....-u-.n ivivfnpf... 5W1! N0- 3153 Silo no. 00o n...- ltrect Addre- cuy t Province NEW GOLD FIELD covered near (he In- i-n Gavel-omen I. inning lease over five square miles. A r isfied the deposits are workable. Kenn Mfnsnl‘: in the homo. To-Day’ s Popular Design By Carol Aime: NOA-I-PB ARK NUR/SERX QUIIII.‘ O 81.2 N . l Miss Aimee receives st least I00 wine for each denim! before it la I64 copped for this column Bend us your votes We print all the oovulfl ties . ar Reader-s: Our artist has sketched a "Man Ohild" in this tlnl cot but that is because this ulsr srtht is a. man. We think Oli-I Noah's Ark Quilt is lust abou perfect for any child. We are amflous t4 have it. in print so that all who wrote ouch urgent requests for it mil’ have it without deiay. The pattern includes transfers of the = which may be BP- upliqued or merely embroidered. material renu ments, directions for as- sembling and finishing, stitch and color keys, guides and diagrams 01 atitdhes. Bend 20 cents, coins preferred. Pattern Order Form-To be used when ordering Patterns and Vffinl for POPULAR. DESIGNS. To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. 110.012 Name.--____. _ __ _._ _.__. _...._. _....- StreetAddress-------.___.-.___----—- mtu---------- sup _..._....--.-—--' 1 t-bsfollowing no nmron____"_'_____..____---~ mMhmhDQQ W I I 9 Th! Dure, nppetiring BEMA Extra Fancy Tabla Molasses msken it of supreme value In homo baking. Use it in mufinn, cakes, ginger- U, I06. w. itn a.‘ n i BAR EAIJUS MUMISSE5