_ d- _..~r-.-,---_4 oman’: Re alm i. Socia Living e Leisure The Woman's Realm The common problem-yours-mlne -—e.ei"y one's_. Is not to fancy whe. twere fair in iie PIIH-lxlfll it could be; but finding l ltt “(hi1 iiioy be. then find how to. riiukc l‘. ir Up to our means, models. Bome lave inner memento to prevent lumping of cotton, and these, in turn. ere covered by ley- ers of felt‘. A new pad-type mattress has e filling which rims len wise so that lt can be easily ro ed for moving This partlcusr mattress has none of the bulk of former mod- els and can be fluffed up like l —W>bert BroWn-‘os- quilt to keep it buoyant, . stone is one muted A mninn rolls-flied her kettle by: 4 ll into a sandwich tiii,| solder around thei i g it new bottom on lll.\"l'S ON ETIQUETTE I it is good news .:il .i‘oi"ies. -' times limit your ability 1r as of yore, invite your .. -. and give them u cut afford but never w. iilll? tsll< 01-‘ FELT .i.\'l) c0" TON ivprv of lull rind soft cottons 11w vthoviniickspring vile cook's PUNK KIDNEYS AND QUILLUBLED EGGS T19 twine is for 4 servings. Cut " . 2 lurk kidneys, remove outer ' ‘ lut and veins. Soak for ‘"9 601d. salted writer. Dry .1 i’. xn imi‘. cut into thin slices. vvs lightly‘ with f.our and .n 2 tablespoons lard for i my"? Stir 11nd cook in butter or until done. Place Bvtfilii, v1 l v . '5 in border all around ~~i .i; v. til .1 green or tomato salad. nosey BUTTER shuns- 2 t: esnoons biltter ‘ . ins brown sugar 1'1 liquid honey . slightly beaten fllld sugar. add er: white and lllend all s vscll together. Mute 3-4 . This is a rich sauce with "W11 flavor. n less rich ic mzitle uslng 1 table- l_ i tablespoon brown ‘. vi oils with ica cream .1 r>l‘*(‘ rice and may be . i1 1min steamed or baked 119T FLPFFS’ (TIIOCQLATE SAUCE re . unsweetened chocolate; vi Viilllllg ruc/iiate to milk and heat l" "l" tltl of a double boiler. when n‘ l" ~ “hi. t _ is melted beat with egg lfwf u‘ tl mixture is smooth and b] ‘ "l. lllv four. sugar and salt ' ‘i "will amount 0f milk mix. W‘. "Ml to rcmniiilnl! milk mix. l'l‘l'il"‘i ‘n fin; and cook flu H) n touring for plain , ukr Tlll< sziilce may l cold but ncefls to be l" ’li additional milk before "l as it. thickens consider- "Ells- l to be the first, Season with salt and, . __ , _ . paper and makes it m“ 4 eggs “I'd “dd 4'surfiice softens m“ mll‘ or ‘valley’ 5a“ ‘m4 easier to remove, POTA TOES Laure Pepper, chief of the consum- er section, Department of Agricul- ture, comes up with a suggestion for giamorizing baked potatoes, which Mur 0n Harlow says have more yitumln C value if cooked 1n their skins. Slit your potatoes when baked and insert s sliver of butter and a square of quick-melting cheese --plit the potatoes buck in the oven just long enough to melt the _ 15mm be me one’ cheese. Inddentally this ls saving on the butter. If your begonles are not thriving tum them out of the pot and look carefully among the roots for e worn. common angleworms do a lot of damage to a piant. Take a. special box or drawer in the hall closet, in which to keep rubbers and overshoes. Or e. small shelf on one. side, a. foot from the floor, will serve the purpose. Ferns grown in the house will have a. rich green color if a tea.- spoon of household ammonia is acid- ed to a. quart of water and poured over the ferns once or twice a. month. ‘Pry adding a. little lemon juice to pineapple and prune pies. It im- proves their flavor. To make individual upside down cakes, place slices of fruit, well su- gared and spioad in buttered muf- fin tins, then cover with cake bat- ter and bake as usual. A little olive oil rubbed over pe- r that has stuck to a polished M . l An occasional bath or spraying 9w?’ m centre D1 plamnUhelps keep house plants healthy by freeing the leaves of dust. . . LESS BOUNCE IN NEW MATTBESSES ‘there will be less bounce in the new mattresses and we won't be able to sink quite so deeply into the cushion of the easy chairs mace from now on. But, despite the fact that manufacturers are facing in- creasing restrictions, they are con- tinuing to produce furniture that is just as attractive and Just as com- fcrtnble as ever. The use of any iron or stel, other than joining hardware, is not per- mitted in any upholstered pieces. Only a minimum amount of steel l5 alfowed for regulations bed- sprhigs. and the manufacture of in- ner-sprlng mattresses has been halted for the duration. Of course. there are still on the market large supplies of furniture "fiiede before the restrictions went into effect, but the new designs are beginning to ep- "pear and will fill in as other v suppiles are sold. UNPATRIOTIC NOT TO REPAIR CLOTHES In former times it we; our own affair whether we did conscientious mending or not, but now it is un- patriotic to throw away any clothes as lonk as they are worth being mended into further usefulness at a reasonable expenditure of tinle and energy Much mending can be done quick- ‘rand rieatlv on the sewing me- Clllllf‘. even without a darning al.- izichmcnt. To darn by machine. the eiiees of a, hole should nut; be trimmed. as the machine stitching will weave over end under ell the CROCHETED STAR ‘POTHOLDERS ragged edges. DESIGN NO. 1192 Crochet there two different pot-holders. One is a lder. Ideal lllllS. Pattern No. 1192 con ust-ration of stitches and complete instructions. To order pattern: Write. or sen town Guardian. Needlework Department. Charlottetown Guardian Design No, 1192 NAMg;_.._---'--'_- gfl-y.__.-.___-.__-- STREET ADDRIIIu-t-i-uuun <1 above picture with your name end address with l5 cents in coin or stamps to Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- ----—---mmon;a Dorothy Dix oys- EYrlESV or BLIND‘ voulru voenuno, WEAK-KNEED BRACED BY WAR Wails Of Despair Turn To Courageous Outbursts With Emergency At Hand Many hundreds of letters come to this column very 'I'hey are in no way like the fen mail of the movie earn. ere full of their own troubles. Dirnlexlties and doubts. For a. long time before the coming of the war were simply green and slimy w env . There youth 1n them; no DO 0X19. -~ On the contrary. their letters were walls of despair. They were written by defcatlsis who were beaten without ever having struck a. blow in their own defense. They shrieked their resent- ment at not having been born millionaires. They blainied the older gen- eration for having left the world in what they called a "mess" for them, forgetting that every big enterprise, evciy skyscraper, every railroad, every comfort und luxury they had was built out of the vision and the blood and the sweat of the men who had gone before them. Apparently their only ambition was to be playbbys; their only desire was for money and the things money buys. Their only conception of happiness going to night clubs and sgeecllng about in high-powered cars. At the glo oi achievement, at the t lll of work well done, they sneercd as at the o d-fashloned ideas of do . Not for theml "l am not going to sieve and save as my Father dlcl. Why, would you believe it, he was 4o years old before he had a car? I'm not going to be like that. I'm going to have the things I went while 1 em young and can enjoy them," wrcte one boy to me. And there were literally thousands of other letters in just the same tenor. Boys who were determaned not to work. Boys who loafed because they couldn't start out. as bank presidents. Boys who bisisphemed at God and man because the world. wasn't soft-cushion- ed and satin-lined for them. And my heart sank as 1 read these letters and wondered what would become of our country when it passed into the hands of these softies, these quittlersdnnd sliirkers who refused. to measure up to the responsibilities of Illa-ll 10D . But the war has changed all of that. A miracle has happened, fcr it is not too much to say that on the day that Pearl Harbor was raided a new generation of boys was born. and from that day to this I I-MVE NOT RECEIVED A SINGLE LETTER from a. lad complaining of his fate. or bemoaning the hardships he is enduring. e you: from boys. “c” "u: no fulsorne compliments. The have no personal in est in me. y These letters are written in the stress of some greet emotion that hes broken clown the barriers of reticence and shyness, and are the frank out- pow-lugs of iviiat ls in the hearts and minds of the writers. And because em the recipient of so many of these oonfldences, 1 venture to think that perhaps I know much about what the youth of this country is thinking. I was greatly saddened by the tone of t-heselet- ters. Almost without exception they were filled with bitterness, pessimism and frustration. They lth was none of the optimism that shoul belong w ne of the brave spirit of ad- venture that made difficulties a. challenge to them; none of the belief in themselves that made them feel that they could buck the world and take from it what they \vanted' none of that rugged individualism that made their forefathers crave an empire out of a wilderness and feel that they could stand on their own feet and with their own hands make their own fortunes, asking help of l‘; DEFEATISTS BLAME OLDER GENERATION COURAGE 0F YOUTH ASSERTS ITSELF Great and many are the sacrifices these boys have had to nmke. ‘Phey have had to leave those they love and g for from home. They have had to lfive up their jobs and fiuit their pr essions. and they know that they wl have to go through a the yeary end heart-breaking process of get- ting a. start again after the war ls over. ‘They have to face danger and dtéflléhhbxlxlbfthfiy are doing it with a smile and with a. heroism that is be- yeu e c . Somehow war has gut steel into flfllbby muscles end given them arms that are strong cnoug to defend their country. Somehow war has opened the eyes of those who were blind, so that they have had a. vision of some- thing that was greater than themselves, and that was worth living for and dying for if need be. Somehow the we: has braced up the weak- kneed and given them strength to be men. Somehow it has disciplined the undisciplined and undone the work of foolish "parents. War hes given us a. new generation of men who will carrv on the work that the founding fathers started. Great and terrible is the price of war, but if it has helped the youth o_f_tpday to find its soul, it is worth the price. ‘walarmlriilwaaliirmmiar ing e newspaper article very care- a fluliy. Whfin he hnltiiseowrrife to the end I I e remer ed o e: "Do you A know. dear. I think there's sonne- .. V I thing in what this article says - that the °levemess °f ‘he lath" " glflfien Proves e stumbling-block to nrsoimcenm B 8011-" - His wife heaved e sigh. of relief. “was it not disgrace“; the way u "Well, thank goodness," she said, Sniggs snored in church today?" c?" Bob‘)? WW’! have imlllihln! l0 “I should think it. was. Why, he "l1 °v°ll woke us all upi" --—- U-BOAT FOR SHORT N0 CAUSE FOR. WORRY -'—-——- The word U-boet is an abbreviat- ‘The head of the house was reed- gfllflvgetlgghiftggzrguoterm for sub- Needlecraft For the Home JUST THINK 01" THE FUN ti!‘ YOU'LL HAVE MAKING THEM They're so dainty and pretty. you'll probably hate to part with them; but you will, for the sake of, seeing the shine in the eyes of the little girl who finds them under the e . Seiyle No. 2690 is designed in _ 11m GUARDIAN I and Personal I Fashions '1 Literature beeswax 29. 1942_ sncque '\c.\r_\1_ CHAPTER XXVI Gradually, quiet descended on the‘ great house as the laughter, the busv tongues were stilled by sleep. Rud- olph, the incorrigible, went to the kitchen soon alter dinner, to sit, ln the chair he loved, to talk gravely with Gcsner and the cook and Flor- 18.11 and the other domestics, of waive end the aftermath of war, of his own experience in the army oi France in the First World war. he spoke of the great generals of his- tory. of the first greet Churchill, Corporal John, Duke of Marlbor- oug ; of Prince Eugene, of Nepo- leon, Wellington and Blucher. He loved kitchens, did Rudolph, were they of castles, inns or cottages. He, who was "w the manner born", found his greatest ease and happi- ness in the inglenook. Madame and Merldel shared the fire in the room ugstalrs. It had been a. good clay. 'I e events of last night had. not faded, any more than the wine stain on the taupe carpet. But the bceuties of the day hail taken some of the ugliness ircm them; the sweet and gentle spirit, the love that had pervaded the house had driven those dark shad- ows into hiding and both of them sizes for l2-lnch, id-inch 16-inch and 18-inch doll. See patterns for. fabric requirements. but do use uni’ ed to die, that they would not conic pretty pieces you have in the house. age prayed, the old lady and the young girl in whose eyes the dreams refus- ln. "You sentjwgerutwayjiappy this PIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS N15 5n TllE rnmciass or GRATZEN i y By Louis Arthur Cunningham, Author of “Of These l" Three Loves,” “Marionette,” Etc. time." said madame. "Never before have l sec-n liim go so gayly, leave so much that he loved behind and Mop-filo surging. put it was s0 today. I inink he must have taken some- thing very precious sway with him.” Merldel colored, looked at her hand that he had kissed. "some- thing very small l think, madame. I-le asked for my love and I tnlcl him it was freely given." The old iimy looked at her shrewdly for a moment; then at the flre. She rubbed her chin on the gleaming knob of her stick, “Freely, yes," she said after a moment. "Sometimes. I know. it 1s not in our power to give as we should like to ve." i "And is not that selfishness, madame?" The thin shoulders shrUBBN- “SB-y. rather, it is human nature-e. per- verse, stubborn, sometimes hateful thing. Logic stops at human nature. Why do we do the thinES we d0. hsin? why should we cause pain to those who love us most? Roger adores you, but you know what it is in inure-one who loves, one who p5!‘- nilis herself to be loved. It is like tum; in any match. There is no bel- ance. One gives, the other takes. Oh, I have seen it often. often." “You think it ls ‘like that with- llmple Cue for a Breed A Wonderful Energy Food 11b thousands of meril bakers. candlestick- makers.’ said madame given a. chance, can "IHBEWIBTSWUVG “rmvenshownrstha h t f king. “£91123 ‘u; marry ROBer d_ when he returns, if he iviints me still. I "P? not do better." M“! ' "Nor could he. Yo}; ever n. spin note they hem of $116 ui the suns ‘stroke madame sml-lslll- have my blesslnl. too bad there wfls m-this symphony of yours. lady's voice was thl k fhlm." "veuuJrllriellre-tohim. No more “l-‘aili 1-1 must forget him. You would not have me ‘Please, madame, you Ii inn 3. women, end I am old." is. Being s. woman I man .one man, the o to your heart when V011 being old, 1 will not deny it. The finest women have l0 h greatest lcnaves who eve to love like that." 2L res-cit. “lKuow You'll Be Good In Me!" Have you e case of puppy love‘! Is your brand-new dog little and wet-nosed, with innocent, lleepy eyes? Then be needs ell the love you can give him, if it takes the form of right care. Puppies are as helpless as babies. They, too, get sick, often fatally, from wrong food or exposure. They, mo, are naughty es e result of wrong training. S0 now, in winter, see that your puppy has warm but well-ventilated quarters and warm (but not hot) food. Also give raw or cooked meat daily, as well es milk, from the time he's three weeks old. In housebresklng, take him out- side five minutes to an hour after he eats. But not in places where dogs with distemper have been! Such simple care is about all e little dog needs to keep him happy. But at four months you'll went to start training him to obey com- mands. Our 32-page booklet shows how to train a dog to be obedient and do clever tricks. Tells food dogs may eat; how to housebreak them, groom ‘them. Gives symptoms and treatment of common dug ailments, including distemper; also how many Iilmmls 211i! he evoicled- . of "How to Choose and Care oi Your D05" to Charlottetown Guard- inn Home Service, Address. Be sure to writs plainly your name, address and the name‘ of booklet, Name A‘ Street Address :l‘§\:l_l'l:;il:;l?—fi§fiE . burns on all through one's life." him," said madame gen ._’.<.C2'1t&!9d <12 2w = 1 => $lllll$ Pfllll Get Reel Relief Willi S-Purpoeo Medicine Help: Cleu Ont Sinus Am: e congestion en e-tro-nol in eecb l- “Mon Dleu who shall say what it ls wrong to love? Not I, be assured with 2 er and me “Lsn’ it" covered her face wit}; Jie her hands. "1 do not know. 0h, he of that, my little ~11 me? 0h. I try not It waslonly for a co estlon and (3) soot es irritation. Many sinus suffer- ers say it's best re- lief they've found. Try it! --- piwiiia two-toned t pot- lains list of materials‘ rllreeded. -l-iEnE BUNCl-IY! HEQE cHARuE! HERE SCOOTER - - WHY DON'T YOU MY LAN CALL HIM JASPER- “JAS- PURE l l TO ANQQ/E ANY NAN uene JASTJURRl . WELL l NEVER He. lab-o: NY- Tl-lllzfi SQ A -. RiDlCULOL“ eon. c lmwll .26 98 To order pattern: Write or lend mcturo with your name and ed- dress with 20 cents in coin or stamps to the Needlecraft Bureeu The Charlottetown Guardian. Style N0. 3098 Name v Street Address City Province vvw.—v \$Tl-G _ a: urseawumliwfl bu‘ Send 20c in coin tor your cc y City Province miurea the sibyl. "A portion of a. moment. lt is all clone b a spark, 1 think. The fire is llghtc from that BPlr-k. Sometimes, most often. in tact, the fire needs to be nursed and replenished; sometimes-and here I 4P8 4141M lav e. tended and unfed except by diva-ms, "You meanml shell dlwe/ys-alwnys "my ' rill k bat h r “ ou w esp w ou ave 0 lly. "That. is woman's bllnden. To can-y with her things that can only hurt hefjlyn Sufferers of ' new don't suffer the fol-sures‘? eimlin in hn oumeyreeve open cl w B {h <1 KM"! uses e. c mice to drain. One power- iull helplful treatment is a. few drops of lcks nostrl Ve-tro-nnl is so 3~PIIPIII helpful because it III|QIII does these three rtaiit thinks. (l) shrinks swollen .. branes of the nose: (i!) helps clear out pnln-clill-Sllll