AGE“ rwo I \ Living & Leisure THE WOMAN ’S REALM MARCH . March is a hound-d . A wild devil-boundogoghg Who's racing and chas From sun-up to set. Whose ear iercins howlin And night looming grow ings Make men m to on His birth with regret. But he learns, and sadly. That living so madly Will age the mcst lively. Most vigorous one, And. suddenly static And staid and rheumatic He settles down Kladly To sleep in thc sun. —-By Ethel Barnett de Vito in New York Times. AH-lI-B-T! ‘lhe best news from deailnerl’ Is "This is the Spring to let out hips." Those left-over egg yolks will keep for a few days if you cover them with cold water in a tightly closed dish and place them in the refrigerator. 1r WON'T BE_ll0—NG TILL moon pnassas NEW YORK — Here's the big- best fashion news of this season! You will at some future date buy nylon fabric dresses that are the last, word in swishy dress parade flavor. Three basic colors. block, navy and brown are in prepara- Non. This nylon is wrlnkleproof. which auallt clicks instantly with any traveler and with any career girl who is rushed for time. -'I'he fa- bric resembles line smooth taffeta. in the dull effective sheen. It has the same delightful crisp swish of taffeta. but is the newest nylon fabric and probably will be the most exciting stuff for women's war obea. Blouses rate along with other limited merchandise for speedy ap- long s ves. offer everything for the captions women. Favorite materials are, first, the compara- tively thin rayon crepes: second. soft satins, and third, the sheer or not so sheer cottons. FOB DINNER WEAR NEW YORK - A bind: satin iBetter English l). C. Wlllllllll omank . Y 1- What is wrong with this sen- tence? "I was ravanously hungry.” 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "room"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Sirup. stlrup. cataup. wahwhat does the word "whimsi- 5. What is a word beginning with as that means “shrewdly dia- oemlxig"? ANSWERS 1. Say, “i was ravenous." which mearomvery hungry, or eager for food" 2. Pronounce the oo as in moon, not as in book. 3. Stirrup. 4. Freakish; odd; queer; fantastic. "The man of true anius willnever affect to disttngush himself by whimsical peculiarities." Sir your cards so that ceilinJ; prices » Ia .I_- A -II_I vwvvw hvvv dinner dress embodies several new trends. Superimposed on a Muell- slim skirt which has to be split uD for walking is a heavy draped hlp- line which is gathered into a large chiffon bow. the ends of which sweep the ground. A large bunch of snowdrope tops the loops of the bow to coutplete the bultla effect. The square, swathed neckline and long. tailored sleeves are features seen in many other British wring collections. ‘Someone has figured out that the r capita consumption o ma s in the United States is about 14 a day. No man is in true health who in the free air of heaven. with his feet on God's free turf. and thank his Creator for the simple luxury of physical exist- ence.—'l‘. W. l-Iigginson. Ideals are like stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands. but, like the seafaring man c-n the desert of waters. you choose them as your guides, and. following them. you reach your destiny-Carl Schurz. Do not keep the alabaster boxes of your love and tenderness sealed up until your friends are dead. Fill their lives with sweetness. spxeak approving. cheeri .word| w ile their ears can hear t em and while their hearts can be thrilled by than-Henry Ward Beecher. “BABY COAT" The “baby coat" implies more than the brief length, it refers. too. to the pastel colors and the shallow round collars often trim- med with rows of white embroid- ery; details taken from the baby's first coat. O A Job Only You Can Do ‘Price Control Question] and Answers Questions and Answer: on Price Control will a pear in The Gusrd~ lan as a. regulk-r feature each day. The question: an those which have “ “ the W Prion and Trude Board from hovucwlvos in this region, Tue answers are gro- vided by the Board Readers, er- solu who have htelllgcnt questions to ask on price control are invited to and them in writing to the Women's Regional A ' y Oom- mltloo Q. I have recently be charged from the Array and want to use my gratuity money to start a marl‘; wear shop. Could you tell me how to get a license, silpplies, etc? A. Before you invest. your gra- tuity money in any business, you should give it. vary careful consid- sideratioin. To help you imderstagxd the Prices Board regulations about o ng up a new business, we have mailed a booklet to you giv- ing all details. This booklet will be of help to you and will save you a lot of time and effort rurunin from place to place as correct ad resse; etc, are contained in.the booklet. _ I am contemplating a. small card business at hmrie. Just w at is the procedure to be taken with rs-‘ gard to a license? . A. You should apply to the near- est WPTB office for a home-craft- er's license, taking some samDlGS 01 Wm. Temple. 5. Astute. AAAAAAAALQLA AAAA Hoasefzolll _ Y Scrapbook uc Bran To lish- ‘Aqua brass articles rub th a no utiuu of vinegar and salt. It will not produce a real bright finish but will make thl art cle clean looking. An economical method for tim- l-“Z curtains is t0 use crepe paper. Wlhrlng boil water over it. et it stand tmtll the colorin is re- moved. Use as much of th water agsgouired Jo give the correct Flour 'I\he flour should be very cold when using it for cakes or pastry, but it is betterto warm it a little when using for bread, so the yeast will work quickly. -&O-O+§§ How Can I 1! i By Anna Ashley 0 §-O-6-%O-OO-§ Q. How should kid gloves be laundered? A. in warm soap water and time in tepid soapauds, adding to the last rinsing water one tablespoon of glyoerine. This od will make the gloves look like new. Q. How can I remove scratches from silver? A. Buy a small quantity of putty powder. put it into a saucer and add enough olive oil to make a paste. Rub this on the silver with a soft flannel cloth. Polish with a chamois and the matches will dis- ap ar. 8.2 How should potatoes be sea- soned? A, Salt should be added to boiled potatoes when they are almost done, but before they are drained from the water. When creaming potatoes or other vegetables, add a easpoon of onion juice to the sauce. Ellen ’s Diary By u: Island Farmer’: Wife 60-04. The unearthly sound we had heard, was repeated more once, last night as Mr. C. and his nephew from the house on the hill and James and I sat costly ll! ‘he kitchen. 1n the interim, between the Wind's passing to play a dirlfi- of-sorts on the hill tops to the North and the arrival of a succeed ing breeze which walled lonesome- ly about the house and then went on to join the former. Like a child's crying it came, a mournful, sobbing, heart-broken call of des- pair. "O-oo-oool" longdrawn, it was, the last notes dying away into the blackness of the ni ht. Jock was away at the time hav ng taken Jeanie on holiday to her home in another district and because a loneliness had come to us, increas- ed by the queer moan of the wind, the conversation had turned to the spinning of ghost stories until I had to acknowledge to a creepy feeling, If I had been obliged to go on an errand-and even as far as the dark porch, I'm sure. a ghostly garment would have whisked, s lently out of sight a- round a corner. and my feet would suddenly become leaden, and my breathing fast. until I had shut the ooor behind me in relief, when once I had come to the lamp-light. James was the chief narrator and may be fixed by the Boar he can put life into the most list- t matter of sheer nerve Lorrrr ouasbiak ‘ili ‘ooovo“‘4 - - -¢=¢=,..._v .. -.'\ ‘an ‘aaaaaaaaa AAAAA‘ J -.I-I-I-.»-- u": TDo rothillliac :4"AA$AA_AL4‘ Says-P W I ‘Pflreiiltls Influence re“ Gblld n " ' . a r it.‘ raw‘ Ailiiys filial?“ W"? child ls entitled totwo 300d parent-s, but if it can have only Ono." i1 more imwrtant that the superior one should be the ma". This is not to belittle father-sync are just as much needed morally and "@1511? B6 they fife blfllilfllel-lly and financially, it is only because mothers are the putters who handle the plastic clay and put their in- delible nmrk upon it. " To s large extent, the fact. that a man has a lesser Dart in the molding of his children is un- avoidable. He has to support his family and has to give most of his time and strength and thoughts W “M15588 and feeding and clothing his young- sters and "providing for their never-ending wants. He comes home at night tired andvworn. Without enough energy and pep left in him to get ohuminy with the children. ' So it happens that in-lthousands of families g there is the ironic situation of a man who works himself to death to give his children every comfort and luxury without ever setting acquainted with them. or having the slightest idea of what manner of individuals they are. The old story of the child who asked his mother who was that strange man who spent every Sunday at their houu is no quip. 1t is a bitter truth, for the children know their father as little as he knows them. v DETERMINED MOTHERS Another alibi that fathers have for taking so little part in the formation of their children's characters is that lt is generally the price of peace in the home. For so many mothers are determined to mon- opollu their children, and when the fathers try to assert any author- ity over the youngsters, they do it at their peril. Many a man's heart breaks when he sees his weak and silly wife ruining his children and knows that he is powerless to stop it. For the inferior woman's influence over her children is just as great as the superior woman's is over hers. Bo the wise child. if it cannot have both a great fathe! and a great mother, puts his money on Mom. It has been said that every great man had a great mother. That is because the women who have brains and brawn and st/rength of character hold their children to the best that is in them and make them develop whatever abilities they have. They fire their ambitions. They ooddle no weaklings. may put w with no quitters. Always they hold before them a flaming torch. The weak mothers weep over their children because they have to work. because they can't have the things that rich children have. be- cause hhey lack what they call opportunities afor advancement in the world. The superior mothers teach their children to make their own opportunities. They hold them to the hard task when it gets to be s to do it. They make hem feel that self-pity is RealmlSocialocrvld erscgvnall,» something to be ashamed of. They breed in them the conquering spirit that carries them on to whatever goal they have set before them. It is the superior mothers who see that their children get educa- tions; .who teach th self-control andcourflue even in their cradles; who make them vs themselves and mind their manners and their morals. and bring them up to be good citizens. Probably not one child out of a thousand who had a superior mother ever goes astray. Lucky, indeed. are the children who have both good fathers and good mothers. But if there can be only one parent who is on the job of rearing the family, it had better be ,Mom. ' less apparltion—life and a purpose and best of all, a legitimate reason for its prowling.’ f was glad that this was not one of Jamie's eveningat with us that he was at home snugly asleep In his bed. Tales of this ilk, I would say, should not be related before m“ o’ eliuetiei’ km lish d. usage an e ng usage, m its pronunciation? A In Fran v vvv i/Fashions/ l- iieifofur “l OBJECT-- EXl-IIBIT ISN'T BRIS “Objection sustained”, said His Honour.‘ “The defendant is guilty of serving her hus- band flat-tasting tea, and I order her to serve brisk tasting Lipton’s Tea as often as her husband desires.” \ Brisk tasting Lipton’s Tca- answers all argu- -ments over tea because Liptods has that: lively, spirited flavour which means more enjoyment in every cup. Experts say Liptoifs has brisk flavour, always fresh, tangy -and full-bodied, never flat or insipid. Ask your “grocer today for brisk tasting Liptorfs Tea. .1” Modern Etinuette Byllobortaho Q. Will you give the real mean- th the French oh usage, a dish serv- ed at the beginning of dinner to give zest to the lish usage, a side a Joint, or between courses. Pro- nounce ang-tra, first a as in etite; in Eng- ish, served with a child of tender years. Children should be taught early to walk un- afraid through the darkness. I cqn- fess to having pretty well lost- except on rare - occasions—th:it strange feeling of being afraid aut- doors after dusk which it seems to me, I must have developed from hearing fanciful tales recounted ln the ion: ago by careless adults. A time when I find I have a red. hot_and I think, a righteous indig- nation is when I overhear a thoughtless mother say to a small one: "Don't go in there in the dark. Johnnie sumethlngli get W!!!" When al the while the vel- vety curtain of night in or out of doors is a merciful, m g u (Continued on filmy e“ “d "sf, "' 3MP W". NEED! IT'S m: new 194s All-PIIRPQSE nmso ‘W50 6W“ T" arm wasiiam ootons nmso ulom- samv ‘I WHITEST WASH IIOS OUT DIRT ROM IIIMY WQlK-CLOTNIS ‘IIIOIOIIONCY cums vmu mo wooowom wmaour SCIATCHINO PIOTICITS IINIST IAIRICS WITH ULTRA OINTLI CARI wands niarv m» rum mo nan . mm ma You: imounonaooo srou ass gnu new 194a nmso uovn o GotdnncvTllinlocoda and mhcwicglvuyoumwllua waohublloolotl waldo, sparkling algal. It‘: ...""*.'".,‘£::r*"...i':'*..“m d h “a Halo docs a batter, finer ru s iualru whim was, woolen: fabrics isrlgbml. _ u: Bastian’:- m cal (a the y soap you need! l I ‘ ‘ All, no second u as in tray, principal ac- n‘ cmt on last syllable. Q. Would it be correct for a woman introducing her son-in-law to an old friend to sa “Iihls ls Malia You Fall Dick, Mary's husband"? A. Yes. - Is a hostess obligated to rise lllsmhiu 0n Such Days? O Do uuller from monthly and‘ greet each newcomer? A. Yes; a hostess who does not Clllll ‘ infill!» ‘ouadgekI-Lellsacchv In do so ls rude and inhoqaitable. lo llmctlonal periodic dilturbunou? Thsu LydiaEPir-ikhamkVsgetable In relieve such lymptoul. Com nous ma: 0% Morning Smile l It was father's birthday and mother had bought’ him a new tie. "i womier what would go best with it?" she cried coyly as she held it up. Father eyed the many-colored horror and rqllied briefly: “A bum). . A member of a Ladies’ Aid Soc- iety in a small town went to tho bank to deposit. as she told the banker, "some air money." Unfortunately the ban er thought die said “egg money." and re lied: "Remarkable isn't it how we the old hem are doing these days?" Then he couldn't understand why the woman gathered up her pass- book and hurried from the bank! Ofglm. FiTxT-an Compound mus naruui ‘Thoslmdlupmtbmlandaofwarmlbl upwind imam. Woorpyouw uy l: lllll E. PlIlllllVS i ' m» rum: 1 rusnunon sms mam IITIIOUT, IIINAYDII Til‘ Ollll Al!!!) glveryou double protection. I: prouenyqufionpqnpirdoo odoauyl laclpswme: you dodm from payin- an. ‘(Limb "ab" and charming. dnnspmhddinaaododuodeodonnr, .M'mflg°fl. - ‘n u" “Mm”? wlththofinltlxtumoflbuuqceam. gatttuamt-ioumumml! _ . "lflllmmilil" 1'» m Puccini: Wrlls above o: with your mgeflg m... 1 a ‘m, wmuwngr “in w m‘ d aadabarmwlflihnld. _ min] not!” , . c vuyaeobonkal. ‘Delhi . 1j‘§“‘“_m,} ._ jyl. Name pan-airs, DICE! RQL I-l“! 1'1"" 1 ‘Illlimra an ballot . g r .m_. s. fNeedlecraf-tr -FOR Tl-EIOAME- v doesn't hinder or bind {lo and nay movement-l. no wrap- around version —- with its gmeroill overlap — should be just the one you have been loo for. No, 2927 is cut in 12, 14, 16, 18, ,40,42.l4.46|nd4l. Sin 36 requires 4 yards 35-inch. _' Sand flfhcenta '10: PATTERN. lglilbib sewing lune. Address plainly. Be sure to state size you wish. Include post- al unit or zone number in your - g5; m . Address Pattern Department. The Charlottetown Guardian Pattern No. 2927 Name 0H1‘ Street Address City Province Cook 's Cornei" OXTAIL IOU! 1 email ‘A cwwlound rolled oat! 1 om lt ii aepo 2 tablespoons at ~ . ‘ tomatoes onion slices. Brim to the boil ar-i than simmer for from 2 to 4 hours, until the meat is very tender. Remove the meat from the bones enough onion in dice t: m ‘Acup. and out the carrots and tur- lp Ln fine strips. n or hred these . finely, Dice the celery Add the _ stock an ~ muier un ables are tender, addmll cestershlre sauce at the last. Servl this soup piping hot. p_____;_._ e . ared veg-- F“ “fills “OY- uite 11ml!- lel to t-hl yegel‘ H 1 see wnsaeao . Mu swEeKoecy, jfism I ,1