om: Frwo i Two Z’Z‘£S/L’Z’E"osr”fi#' ' 1E5! l ' OODL Sfi/EQBUT NOTlfiElGHT! QFSE L? \%KEEPiN UR DIET? wHi/o-"cse; aocrok: m4 sue/v grams nun-Ha- ma». ____-_-_—--——— Prlf a friend comes to you for ad- vice and tells you about his or her personal affairs, you should keep the confidence, even.if later you are a member of a group which l: discussing those affairs. 1 -- wQ-oo-oooe-o»; man's R " Lilith; If you are planning for one year. plant grain; plant trees: years, plant men. Chinese Proverb HINTS 0N ETIQUITTI ,at your place at dinner, place but- ter on the edge of the dinner plate. " wmnzivs sriiTci-Iiis Walk the country roads and ridge paths now and you will be discovering little mirror ponds at almost every turn, ivintcr ice poc- , kets that will either be dried away or hidden completely once the first lllrcen of spring has touched the ‘woods. They are the cold-weather seep and snows melt, caught in the hollows and frozen there through the cold weeks. Catch them on a bright day and they have the shimmery blue of the winter sky. Come upon them when the sky is winter gray and they are sticky in their cold reflection. For they reflect the sky's mood and the mood of the weather even more clearly than does a summer pond. A drifting of snow hides them completely, of course, even the thinnest of snowfalls .But when the woods are gray in snowless, nakedness they are lUie jewels ii the landscape. Cauliflower leaves cooked until tender and served with butter taste like Brussels sprouts. Bacon‘ drippings are good used for making spoon bread, corn bread and meat pie toppers. ffee can he kept fresh by put- tirsit in a tightly sealed can and leaving it ln the refrigerator. MIGHT IMPROVE PHONE MANNE RS If the gadget that records tele- phone conversations does go into ass production so that any one who wants on? can have it-and such a thing s even now under discusslon—-the quality of tele- phone manns-rs should undergo much marked improvement. Else how will we ever be able to stand listening to a play-back of the re- col-dings? ealm/ &Leisur I ma" twomizvzs REALM 1f you are planning for ten years. If you are planning for a hundred If no bread and butter plate is they had to listen to a half-hour such dribble repeated. d could Mrs. Jones, who can talk for M minutes on the state of her health as of this morning, bear to have to listen to the re- . port herself? And About Gonllp? if of Fear of having their malicious hints and predictions saved for posterity would certainly make the telephone gossips more cautious. And many a woman might be shocked to learn just how many minutes a day she actually spends in ointless telephone visiting. I we can stand to hear ourselves as others hear us-which is siire to be as disiliusioning an experience as seeing ourselves as others see us-teleplione recorders in the home would probably do a lot to improve the tele hone manners of our time, whic unquestionably could stand some improvement. The juice of fruit pies and the gravy of meat pies can be kept from boiling over and soaking _into the crust, if they are laced i.n a tin of boiling water w en put in the over to cook. You can erase ink from P8P" by clipping a cloth in a liquid bleach; wring the cloth and rub it over the ink. NIGHT SHIRT LOOK" Soci vv lDb o . . vo-ooogev ‘a could mention. be of help? u IN LINEN FROCKS NEW YORK—Pui-e linen dresses in shirtwaist effect are called “The night shirt look." the fuller skirts, the "covered wagon look," dresses for club women are called. “Mad ' time president." The middy effectsl are “New Peter Thompson," the casual for daily wear or play clothes get the name "peon look." Sleeves are called “trumpet flower," ruches of white that stand up around the shoulder line of dro shoulder dresses are called the “garden fence embroidery." That should be enough to show you how hard the designers have pushed themselves to launch new lines in dress in a season when yardage of materials has not,‘ yet been released in any of the quan- tities promised before the year i946 dawned. Good clothes like stock- ings, may continue scarce for some time ahead. Fashion's mood as she greets 1946 is soft and feminine and spec- tacular. Curves at shoulders and Surely it will he a jolt for many hips accentuated by tightly molded a woman to discover lilting “l-Iello" changes "Oh... hello" caller-turns out to be not CDIYUTIBD K8101‘. oursteen-agers of their “he said. “I said" giggle, giggle conversation It ought to he quite simple to how her first waistlines and diflllhfflglms 5W9, a to a flat new femininity to the figure which when her telephone is flattering. You must have a snug the waistline. president of the woman's clubnbut just a husband, says an Amencan INYC-KERS The time has come when zili B0011 men should unite to stem the head- (Cmrtinu-ed on Page ' S ,0 nishf rvtliy Dix $¢y3f _s.5(.ii.-..i, Brats , llvor-Sollcitus Paronnts Got lliily rm.- unaatowrrmwu ouhabiau- " oo-o-o-obo-oooo-oo-oc» ‘ ~ M ‘MM aland Personal 1 T AAAAAAA w . ww vt-Ywv w chin Dalia. mas mx: In our earnest. desire to slve our children some o! the advantages we never had, my husband and l have succeeded in making them selfish brats. We have two toes-ail? 50W Bud EH03"?! eighryears old who have ovary type of WP and Si"!!! eillllP-lllmt W“ They are allowed to bring their friends in foi- play and meals at any time, but yet they are dissatisfied and calmly say that there is nothing to do a-niund home. ' They are dlscbedient. cross ing to do a little chore. The only tune they feel it necessary to be even civil to us la when they want something. and whether we can afford it or not: la of no consequence to them. we realize what. a mistake we have made Lu roaring our children, but we don't know what to do about it. or how to tum them into normal. harm! kids. Can you make any suggestions that might. and are never will- DOORMAT PAREN '15. MADE SELVES DOOIMAIS ANSWER: Your signature is rrvealintl- I! 81V” B Perle“ Picture of the situation. You have made yourselves doormats for your children and they are using you as they would a doormat, trampling over you and wiping their feet on you and kicking you around. 0f course, it is always easier to spoil children than it is to correct the faults you have cultivated in them, and I don't think you and your husband have enougih backbone to fight it out with your self-willed youngsters. So my earnest advice to you is to send the two older children off to some good, strict. military school where the‘, will be made to sub- mit to discipline and conform to rules and have some of their arrogance and egotism taken out. of them. It will put the lads in their place and make them realise that they / are not t-he most. important people iii the world. and that everyone will not kowtow to them and take their lmpudenee. I have never seen this remedy for spoiled brats fail. Try it. And don't weaken when your teen- agers write back how cruelly they are being treated. Nobody knows exactly what the unforgivable sin is, but I think it l; spoiling children, giving them the wrong start in life and cultivating in them faults that will be a curse t-z t-hem to the longest day tihey live. For a chi-id's characte: is set. iisvoholosist-s any. by the time it is thrw years old. Up to then and perhaps a few years longer ‘t is clay for its parents to mold into something of beauty if they will. But it turns into a. gargoyle if the hands of the putters shake. ‘ DEAR MISS DIX: How many beatings does the la/w allow a man to give his wife? My husband beats me until I am black and blue. He believes it does a woman good to beat her, slap he!‘ face and throw things at her. Do I have to stand this? AN ABUBED WIFE. ANSWER: Goodness me. no. Wife-beating lsan out-lowed sport. and if you don't enjoy being knocked about. al‘. you have to do is to have your husband arrested for assault and battery oi- else take the rolling-pin to him. No woman has to stand brutal treatment from her husband be- cause any man who would strike hvs wife is a coward whom she could run out of the house with a. broomstick. Just try it. on him the next; time he gives you s. black eye. (Continued on Pose I First shipments of Orient‘ Nylons an now being released to retailers. A: this in but the vanguard of the main parade to follow. we realize. and regret. that there cannot possibly be enough for everyone. Happily m m future. our mills an going full speed ahead. so that Orient‘ llcautl-§kln' Nylons will soon be available to the discriminating women of Canada in quant emands of all. itleu sufficient to meet the Don't be too disappointed V 4; your tore is out of stdck whenyou call.‘ ill be regular and increasing - w" IIAUIIJULAS lleauti -Skln~ Nylond tocxiuos B) Household Scrapbook O-§4-9§4ffO-O-O+ Brass Ornament: Always keep the brass candle- sticks or vases émliahed iuitll they gleam. Wipe o carefully with a clean_ soft cloth and app a thin coating of white shellac. his will keep them bright for a long time. Care must. be taken when washing them that t-he thin coating does not come off. Sewing Hint When sewing. it. is always well to baste with co ored thread on light materials and viihlte thread on dark materials. This will make it easy to find the basting threads when you are ready to pull them out. Treatment. of Soalda Cover a bad scald immediately with cloths wet with strong alum gplllcatlons over the min stops, This will usually prevent fu ure scars. 0-090 Morning Smile o4 eo-o-vww MAKING SURE The easterly wind had dried the land, and the crops were suffering from the drought, so the agricultur- iata of the waited on the minister with a request to "pit, up a word or two for rain." The minister who had a reputa- tion for the efficacy of his suppli- ations on i-evloiu oocuions. beard the deputa on qxavelv and after a silence. during which ha care- fully scanned t-he horizon. re lied: “A Wllll. but It'll bide a wee til me wind‘: malr all’ the west!" Cook '3 Corner FRUIT OIIIAL MOULDI fine. white canal of which we make this cold deautt. assures flnn moulding. If you have some of thou fancy moulds than. would be approprl te l w uld st Fthls mixture. lof m: little’ loin‘ yh famil daaldrt Ibelicve this would be vo d highly eaunt lin flavor and an we from more familiar le more typos of dessert iluiilolgigm a rind % cup chopped rallflia (or dates I .uwamwas G i -" in the i 1mm. tmtli and cool-l um for about 3) :1’: ralllia ‘ ) ma» illdlvldxkmmilda um w rinltd cola wow. mould and one will name -Ell'en ’s Diary A By an laluul Farmer's Wife o+++o I doubt if there may be found any outdoor exercise more satisfy- ing or more entertaining than a stroll on a quiet lonely country road on a moonlit Winter nigh . Or so I found ll; when I returned. with James, a short time since, a tar making several calls at farm- houses “ln the road"—homea from whence smoke lifted straight from chimneys and that held eace and security within their wa ls. Lamp- llght shone brightly from kitchen windows and trails wound to their “door-stones" not only by way of the Summer lanes, though if one wished it, she might follow those, but along intimate winding ones that angled a field in a more di- 4_Q_AAAAQA Fashions/ I rect route. There was no evening light lit, when I came alone to Rob's, walking thither in the love- ly brightness that remains when the sun has gone down to rest be- hind a rosy bank, partly hidden by the trees on ‘the. __ll‘Ol‘lZOI\. I should have set out earlier for (funny tool) Jamie and I had ur- ranged previously to spend some time coasting. "Bring your sled" he told me earlier in the day, but the supper hour, I had intended vras not convenient for the work at the barns. Consequentlw-lamle and I have postponed our amuse- ment for a later date. The walk across the fields, unfamiliar now that they are in Winter dress, I found enjoyable and when I en- tered the path that leads through a corner of the woodlands, I came t0 B Strange place. No shy droop- lni! ferns nor other plants, were there in a beautiful profusion this evening. It was car eted in white, all low growing th ngs blanketed. and each small evergreen weighted with its snowy burden. The scene of the recent wood-cutting there, now holds a bareness, that only Mother Nature herself will be able to restore to a semblance of its former beauty—if in a different manner. “The-re" I thought 1Q my. self, viewing the cleanly-cut stumps “should be the best place in a year or two for wild raspberries to grow." . I The woodlands have many tenants. even ‘if none were in slizht at the time of mv pass- . rnnnlaizv 18.1040 l ills ‘ggg Q AAAALAkAAvQ4AA‘A‘A a‘ 4 l busiest time IS just starting _ Thou In will up _' _ lngandabodybulilat. ' “oouuimum- Sflmflwbod IVAIOIIATIII MILK s‘ a‘ vvvv‘ Good Meals" BUY SOME TODAY I llulolollu Vitamin"? ’ 5MP I A Job Only You. Can Do Price Control Questions and Answers Questions mil Answers on hi“ Control will appear in The Guard inn as a regular feature each day The questions are those which ha" ruched the Wartime Prices and Trade Board from housewives In this region. The answers an pro- vided by the Board Readers. rer- aoaa who have intelligent question to n: an price control are vlted llo send them ln writing to the Women's llogional advisory Com milieu. Q. At our church we are plan- ning to give a reception for the men wiho have returned from overseas. We will require a number of cakes and pies and would like to know where we apply for extra sugar? A. Unfor uinabely you will not be allowed extra sugar for this pur- pose . . . so many receptions and celebrations of this kind are being ven just now the demand would very heavy. therefore. no extra allowances are made. If the mem- bers of your group would each like ins. Rabbit tracks- like a pretty problem in numbers: two up and two singles to carry proclaimed to all who read lt, that 42nd cousins to Jamie's pair were living in this place, if perhaps over on another avenue. Squirrels too, had been a- broad, red ones, neighbourly ones with small dainty footprints, and a-zog with the news from [hp vi- cinity. Ah, ha! Pa’tridge or maybe it was a manimy or a poppy pheas- ant, who had made that queer scratching over there or Lawsy it might be only one of those raven- birds that we had seen hovering near with dolefui caws ivlien po- tato-digging days were here. James would have known, and that strange dog-like track, that never was left by any hound, but then James was to join me later at Rob's when his day's rhorlng had been completed. Now, between wires, or being fairly tall, step- plnlz over them, and in a like man- ner across two ilne fences to Rob's near the foot of the slope. Quiet and serene the countryside spread away before me. §Old?l‘l-Wl‘lll(‘—— rose from the afterglow. dark ever- greens, hare birches iirl snur: homesteads; the West, a lght with lhfl dying shades of day llllfl sky meeting earth clearly in tlii- tijs- tanre. Jamie's sleds were ldlc ht a door and a small shovel ir. a heap of snow nearby gave evidence of agoodly part of his day's activi- ties. A harn door was open-Rob at his rhorinvz and Karolyrfs Whsll hung dry and motionless along the ‘Jib O O I James said "it wouldn't he so had. if Ellen went prowling alone -without taking other folks from their work.“ “Othcrs" iisualli- holng interpreted to mean himself. How- ever, it was with Karoiyn that I later sct off in the moonlluii to make our calls. At one farmhouse -and the treasures the most mod-‘ eat ones hold-a lady was “just listening to the news." Blossom- lng plants were on the vindow sills and the blooms were barely ‘O6 Better English i D . C Wllllaml v0 l. What is wrong with this sen- geliilce? "The man is dark-compiect- 2. What la the correct pronunc- laition of "mercantile"? 3. which one of these words is misspelled? Eforveaca, edeiweiaa. elixir. 4. What does the word "tamper- a1; ma?!‘ k d . a a wol- beginning. with a: that means "of an earlier or more primitive time"? . ANSWER! "The man is dark-com- Q4 1. Say, lexionadlz In fen-ed; a'a in tile la also correct. never I4 ee in feel. 3. Limited by tuna. " may attanizri telln l M U‘, never oo a ea pptneaa.‘ W. Scott. 5? Arch ic. Attbaflhtalgiiolloold-tliaqitl: immediately rubbed with Muatcvlo. it MUSTba I ‘ . Mun adnauntlyutartatorailm anliinm lvun lyl aaotningtba. IOU! i ammhfbih. 51:11!!!‘ ‘k in u‘ Q "' 02353.“ ‘i Wm...‘ R to contribute butter and sugar out of their own rations they may do so. Q. I have been thinking about offering one room in my home to two boarders. As I'm near a high school I wanted to take in two teachers who are away from their own homes. Please advise how much can I charge and how much notice must I give them to leave if the plan does not work out satisfactorily. ' . There is no definite cell price set on the amount of ran you may charge when these teach- ers are taking their meals as well as living at your home . , , the amount of board charged depends on tlhe type of accommodation. the quality of meals served, the num- ber served etc. Would suggest that you enquire around the neighbor- ood and set a comparable rent to what. is be charged. If the plan does not wor out; to your satisfac- tion you may give these boarders one week's notice if they pav bv the week and one month's notice if t-hev pay by the month. Q. I bought a can of unsweet- aned peaches and had to surren- der a coupon. Why must I have to give up a sugar coupon and then add sugar to the peaches when l’ use tihem? A. We lihvc received so many letters asking this same question_ we will answer it just once moae. Canned fruit is rationed whether it contains sugar or not . . . the reason for this is that canned fruit of all kinds is in very limited eup- ply and it is necessary to include it on the ration list in order that everyone will receive their fair are. faded on a giant cactus. We cupped tea there, when out of doors, awn and fields were stippletl lllilfl and white and admired the lovely old china and quaintly framed and \V0l‘l(F‘(l mottnes: "Home sweet home" and "What is Home without father?" done in softly faded yams by loving hands long since at rest. Knrolyii forgot to wonder "if Rob would put a sweater on Jamie as well as pajamas at his bedtime hour or if it came to her mind again, there was no sign. We left this quiet spot regretfully and came then loitering through the night, stars above the hill-top: and (Continued on Page 3i HEAD 60LDS ACRES-PINS pf carsutss Th! dpmal l l van n- - “w” retell‘ ‘ziiidill milling lirbnillontmnllon’: lion they we -- l-Iollovoo Iah and lovabl- - anthol- * I-llvol Inigo! l-QIBI Idle!- 8—Clvu Io IN you my nood- Modern Etiquette ByRobel-hhee . . t in»; n h i- n»; -¢; ri tin..- ; Sift: Il-Lrb-{ni- rt! I :o1.#~H-(>€.ri§9§.r\1§l.|¢r¢ n ijiiij m? - Q. When a man accompanies a 3 woman to the dinner table, should ' he sit down at the same time i. ahe does? w... A. No; he should first draw ma, the chair for his dinner partner, or, for the woman who sits next to . When giving o lft, of silver- ' ware to a bride. aho d tihe initials of the bride's maiden name or those of her husband's name be engraved on it? » A. The initials should be thaw- of tihe bride's maiden name. Q. What is the beat. or prefer- able. acknowledgement that society uses w-hen one is being introduced! A. "How do you do?" gflfififilhm lllll". llllllllll 3 ‘BIT Bllli" 0n “CERTAIN DAYS" 0| the Month? If fenale fimctional monthl! dmllfbui” make you feel auvmu. ‘will. flflfllr-f at. auob timer-U‘! Lydia E. Pinkhlml V-qetable Compound to relieve much r I ptomn. Pinkliam’: Compound in a angina wil- lln. This mane it has a aootbinl P111‘ on nneof womaifa moot important organs. 1t’: one of the mat elective medium woman helped. Try ill iviiiii r. riiiitiiiirs as... 4+§O-O-§§O44-O§-O4~§~O4 F%O—Q 04¢ lHow Can I H? B! Anne Ashley i I OO-O-fO-‘Q§§§-O-§O'§+§O§4+§§§§- Q- How can I make a hole l| glassfFu t .. A s cover the area when the hole ls to be witih putty‘; malt . a hule the size desired in e put ._~ Then Pour into this hole a ll v .. melted lead. and if the glass labia!‘ QRBDt-lonally thick, a perfect _ wig rersiult. h‘ 1;“; . ow can l a in fabric waterproof? ke 0rd “U3- A. To make ordinary fabrllL. roof. dissolve equal parts of llflm. and son separ- n water. ‘Him mix a three. and brush the mixture on the wrong aide of the clOlih. . How can I clean medicine droppers? ' A Medicine droppers may be cleaned effectively witth pipe cleaners, grand lnusta GRHQG . liquid. Sinner dawn to '/1 our! Combine 2 up.- Hula: Brown Hound. 1 Ive- nor. ll on salt, 2 ti». mind ‘vaglllbl! abonnalag o: laid oil. 3 IP- lamoa juice, speck‘ of pent!- Sd: into vegmblo liquid. Hut. Pourombozn-logbannbocu orlimamfoadufulaxszbasut Hula: Min-