Pm: I TWO v.,'._.'___ -_ - _ Woman's Re alm v. _ of Funny Gunen Mike §\ Puq I Suecell You are not allowed to use as-much“ {D0‘,j),h'y Dix Jffi-T. - - ocial and Per THE CHARIXYFTETOWN (illARlll u '_‘ "Ow Says‘ tea as formerly -- - - —but you can etlTl have all the tea enjoyment you need by using HORSES SELECTED ORANGE PEKOE. One pound makee 240 cupe of delicious full flavour- SAVE TEA l Meas-ure/tCan-fi/l/y I, Warn the Teapot. 2. Use l level gen nful per cup reqn 3 Pour one cup ' boiling water (carefully rnenured Ioreachcup re ulrl A wnespondent "h. “Wm m‘ a: than there used to be? Living-i L The, Woman's Realm i Four things a man must learn to do Egg yolks will keep fresh for days 1f he WOLUCl make his record true; in the refrigerator. if covered with To think without confusion clearly; cold water and a souoer. To love his fellow-man sincerely; ———— To act from honest motives purely; If you like a dry and. mealy baked potato. try this: Cut a slioe from To trust in God and heaven sec- urely. each end of scrubbed potato before -Henry Van Dyke. baking. EATING IN THE KITCHEN SPEND GAs-éd-ESS HOLIDAY IN If you serve a great many of your meals in one part of a large kitchen. have a low, attractive lamp for your table. Turn out the othcr kitchen lights and you entirely lose the feel- ing of kitchen eating as the lamp gives a festive appearance of the table and takes the light away from the other sections of the room. lie One’: Bored At This Pnriyf ‘nu Conga Line‘! Nope, it‘: l Bucking Bronco," st flu Ieyeet, flllila! party in town! l! you yearn to throw l de- lirious, wonderful party, rely on “Bucking Bronco" to start guests 0M in the right spirit. For each bronco, five people in up, each clasping the waist of the one in front. The "cowboy," the sixth player, tries to ride the bronco by clasping the waist of the lest one in the line. Of course, the bronco merrily plunging and whirling-tries to prevent him. Your guests are now in a perfect mood to appreciate any good game you have up your sleeve - like Card-Toss fortunes, which are fun and romantic, too. Cut ten cards from heavy card- board amd write a fortune word on each—Love, Marriage, Money, and lo on. Each player stands behind a chair (but not touching it!) and tries to pitch the cards into a hat on the floor in front of the chair. The cards that get in determine his fortune for the next 12 months! Our SZ-page booklet, s store- house of hilarious party games (some nice quiet ones, tool), can give you the reputation of most versatile hostess in town. Has ice- breakers, pen and pencil games, fortune stunts, many more. Send 15 cenls in coins for your copy of "Party Games for All Oc- casions" to The Charlottetown Guardian, Home Service, Address. Be sure to write plainly your name, address, and the name of booklet. and c good old The only Spend a. "gas-less" vacation ln the quiet about it back yard this year. It can be lots of fun. Children love having their own picnics, and grownups like out- door meals. too. Enlist the youn tors to help in the preparations. ey will enjoy it. Moth Let them set up card tables and carry the food and dishes out. To avoid possible damage to your beet china, use porcelain enameled were or paper dishes, Complete sets of enameled dishes are available in white with contrasting trims-every- thing from dinner plates to cups. saucers and serving dishes. If you use enameled dinnerware you won't mind cleaning u , for it requires so little time an effort. Hot water and mild soap whisk atvay every trace of food in a few minutes. Aida was written as part of the festivities for Empress Eugenie at u.» opening of the Suez canal in 1869. how we got stung. for a vote of public sympathy. A pencil with a revolving cylinder to aid in figtuing bridge scores is the idea of an inventor in New York. If your family doesn't care for prunes try this flavor trick; While soaking them, add 4 or 5 whole cloves and. a teaspoon of brown sugar. Remove cloves for cooking Bring prunes to a boil in the water in which you have soaked them and simmer until tender. Serve with cream either for breakfast fruit or for dessert, 1t was not because Grandpa and they made the best of their bargains. ered more or less of a disgrace. It HOP they would like better. Very thin slices of cheese may had to stick it and pretend in like it be cut without the cheese sticking to the knife by holding a piece of wax- ed paper over the knife while cut- ting. ‘e-mo-oo-o-eo-ooco-cc» 540-444 l’. m”. .. M1 Did you know that custards will l ' ' .' '31“ not curdle so readily if a tablespoon A have every qualification for doing so. of flour mixed with sugar is added? u; imeir Own mapm i?‘ gQ-g4 a v a a abO-QO-Q-OQ . Bt-met Addict Slpggluietg coorhrlndztecrngornélevréiagiaclo; ' ‘gnu; never would have dreamed of doing. coo n . . 1 E5 m a pan of-boillniz salted Water- Olty Proviso: When done, lift out and drain. This He (haughmy). “I can go W; with prevents sticking to the pan and any gm I please}. -—i—~——— there l5 11° need 5°Y Sllnmlz- She; "It's mo bad you don't please ; pAMrLY Anrgm ————— my of memo mand too much of marriage. To save dishwashing and scrub- feet, human institution, bing, clean fish. fowls and veget- ables on paper which can be dis- carded. . QUICK CHANGE Smith: “I wear the trousers ln my home." Ftiend: "Yeah, but right after sup- per I notice you wear an apron over than." Slx-weeks-old Yvonne lvloy and her six-month-old aunt, Rita Mo)". were christened together at All Saints Church in New Eltham, Eng- land. ln the presence of her grand- father, aged 42, and grandmother. d3. modicum of commonsense to bear in A half cup of cream and 2 table- spoons of molasses will yield 1 cup of mmflsse-‘cwhipllfdlream- change their whole natures so become fireside companions. He’s happy . . . but his clothes get grubby the modern generation is too soft. marriages in real life. Perhaps it was because Grandma we Has domestic but probably, the percentage of unhappy man-fa Id it. ls now. The ideal marriage in which bo desire and spend forty or ‘flft part o is Just a. es which, ‘more have always bands and nuBBi been husbands before the altar and like something the cat brought home after they are married. There have always been domestic tyrants of congenial people, who hadn't a thing in the world in common, have always had e fatal passion for marrying each other. There hasn't been a. single change in the matrimonial schedule since the first wedding took place. didn't do. instead of being fashionable as it is now. their misfit mates, instead of swapping them ofl’ for something they They expect the marriage ceremony ment that will tum the ordinary, faulty, run-of-the-mlll boy or girl they marry into saints and sages, and work a1 miracle in themselves that. will that ti? amiable, the extravagant thrifty: the undomestic will the lazy will go to ivork; the wild will be tamed. and the run-arounds will . It. wants a marriage in which the wife stays pe beautiful and the husband never ceases to be a grea live on wedding cake and champagne. And. ARE HAPPY MARRIAGES FEWER THAN IN DEAR GRANDMA’S DAY 7. Percentage Is The Same, But Divorce Wan Considered A Disgrace Then time fewer happy marrllfll 11W lty played out and is 1118111589 i ' '"°'- ed tea. mime, as so many assert it is? Do the modern boy and girl make worse husbands and wives than their andparents did? Do married co lea niakeiessefforttoaddtisttbemeeveetoewhotbernowtbmthey in ) the post?" , To ell these questions the answer is "yes" 1nd "mo." ‘more is no El S , I denying that the divorce rate has gone up since our gr n“ day. s was just as great then parties get their hearts’ years in bllligs e fiction of in reality, never were. been plhlluule hus- wives. ere hawalways wives who looked glamorous both sexes. Un- difference is that in the past when people guessed wrong in picking out their mates. they swallowed their , while we squawk to Heaven about Grandma may have gotten on Grandpa's nerves or bored him, but he didn't go around broadcasting his troubles and asking Grandpa may have had a wandering foot. but Grandma pretended not to know it and ation of a happy wife, instead of taking the ch er. disappointment and kept rson - gave a lifelike im i k to dren and going THEY MARRIED FOR. KEEPS Grandma were more happily mar- ried than their grandchildren are that they carried on, but because in those days people married for keeps and not for experimentation; and so Also, it was because divorce, no matter for what cause, was ponsid- was just something the best people So people endured So far as women. who are the chlefpatrons of the divorce courts, are concerned. the fact that most of them now are self-supporting makss them more choosy about their husbands than Grandma could have been. No matter how muoh Grandma may have lost her taste for Grandpa, she if he was her meal ticket. But now, when women can earn their own cakes and ale, they don't have to endure husbands who are too much unlike their favorite movie heroes. In reality, judged by the standards of the and wife are simply Grade A-l. They are the st the known and should make marriage a shining success, for apparently they ast, bhe modern husband world has ever . They man-y for love. They s51- Thoy are intelligent, educated, and accord their husbands and wives a degree of personal liberty that their grandparents WHY THEY FAILED But, that, in spite of all this, they so often make failures of their marriages is attributable chiefly to two things: The Fart is that they de- . They expect it to be the one and only per- They expect it to be a career in which one can achieve success without working at it, or bringing any patience or even z- solving its problems. to be some kind of an enchant- high-tem ered will beccone linow how to cook; When none of these things happen and their Marys and Johns are the same after marriage as they were before, they cry out that marriage is a failure, and throw up their hands and quit. The second reason why so many marriages are unhaPPY is because 1t can't take the punishment of mar- tually young lover. and to alas, there are no mush and Grandpa didn‘t expect so much of marriage as their grandchildren do that they were not so often disap- poin . 6-01 1 1 . THE COOK'S . CORNER -O-§-O-O-O 440x‘ i l - ‘ ‘ V cmmimoir nous You broil/bow Uddh: Try hot cinnamon rolls 11o:- break; , fast-they're lway favortes. Jus lowgmbbygdmu’ y?” toss them int: a hseavy brown bag, know, too, baa/the dirt adddl] legv sprlrciiklres 1;! iwatfi. twist . . up e ag an ea n e oven 5"’: rubbed "g," m” while the coffee is brewing. Orange iben- elapbq, juice and poached eggs will share in the spotlight too. Egg dishes are so vital but if eggs o high in price or become less pentiful, it ls good to have a lot of ideas for ex- tending and stretching egg dishes. Serve an egg dish as the main luncheon dish by dressing it up s bit, as with this recipe for scram led eggs. Mix two eggs, two slices of bologna sausage, chopped, also half teaspoon prepared mustard and tea- spoon water. ‘Foss mixture into melted butter in frying pan, or into double boiler, and cook slowly until let. Serve while still fluffy with golden brown toast. C ORNBD BEEF HASH ‘llo get back to breakfast, here are some good ideas. There's old eomeu beef hash, so han y ready packed in a can, so simple to pre- pare. Melt equal amounts of butter ind rich brown prepared mustard in ' frying pan, then turn in the hash Ind slowly brown until heated through, with a rich brown crust at the bottom. {Fold over, as with an omelet, and serve. Boiled ham, nicely grilled, is an- other breakfast special, Spread slices of the boiled ham with prepared mustard and grill under a low flame while the rest of the breakfast ls in progzess. Grill some bananas along with the savory ham, and you'll have a happy family. Another popular dish is healthful, nutrition packed, easy-to-prepare oatmeal date loaf. scald l 1-2 cups milk and remove from heat. Add one Cup oatmeal and one cup dates, out and cool. Sift 2 cups sifted flour, 4 teaspoons all-phosphate baking powder, i 1-2 teaspoons salt and 3-4 cuo sugar together, Bent an egg Suniight’s“EXlTRi4-SOAPINE$S” is exactly suited for applying straight on to the real dirt O Any good washing preparation will remnvg the average "all over" din from clothes, but where dirt is stubborn, concentrated, you need the help of Sunlight. Because of in "exun-sonpiness" Sunlight ls exactly right for fronting the very grubby pans of clothes. Sunlight enables you to get Itraight on to the real din at once-co give an exu-a soaping just where i‘: is most needed. If is only necessary to apply Sunlight lightly to the grubby pan. That is sufficient to leave n film of pure, rich soap in contact with the din. Then you'll find every speck of grime comes lwly readily. No hard rubbing or scrubbing il required at nil. Use Sunlight for everything you wash-for house- hold clenning n well ls laundry. it is absolutely safe and gentle to fabrics and to your hands. , I You can t do without to dry ingrei-Yenls, stirring only L H I until moistened. Pcur into gre'-s"d ALEVIZR rsonwr loaf pan (8 1-2 X 4 1-2 X 2 1-2) and bake nl. 325 degrees Fahrenheit until done. about one hour. CONSIDER THE FIJI-NAG! Your household heating plant ls precious. It is important to your family's health. Arid, because it is made of metals, the furnace you have has to do for the duration. Summerlstlwtlmetoeheokuvon it. Get it repaired now. Clean 1t thoroughly and wash all outside and §Q|1a| v Fashions '1 Li WARTIME CORSETRY HAS DOUBLE DUTY Women want FIRMER Foundations. _The war_ has ended soft living. Women are pouring into business and industries, they are working in canteens, at the RED CROSS, making bundles for Britain, and they have discovered that these new activities are tiring, they call for better figure support. At the same time come forecasts from the style cen- tres of a new narrower silhouette for Fall. will be leaner at the midriff, snugger round the hips, narrower in the skirt. The new minimum-rubber CORSETS and Corseletes now appearing on the market answer both needs, those of the active war workers and those of the new sil- houette . . . .firmer support, greater control, more comfort. Telephone number 49 and ask for an appointment, our certificated corsetiere will be glad to give your needs the most careful attention and help you choose the garment that is perfectly adapted to your needs. Illustrations show two popular models, others are 7811 . . 7634 5578 . TELEPHONE 49 Private Branch Exchange with felo- phones in all departments. Convenient fitting room. ti. easllv accessible parts with rich, greased-dissolving suds. Paint. grease or oil any parts of it that might rust- If your basement is damp build a fire in the furnace oo- cuionslly during the summer months. Bran Raisin Bread Good in Lunch Box my M ' MANY n homemlk who would like m lle MIA-v lbed ll celled upon these day: to rise with the sun and pack n lubetnnthl, testy lunch before she hu he: own breakfast. She'll find it no chore if he: breadboz contains n loaf’ of homemade All-Bren Raisin Bread. With erum cheese, plain butter, thin crilp Gfllléd breed makes superb sandwiches. mended for food value. The recipe follower ALL-BEAN BAISIN Bill-BAD 1 on ‘A cup sugar ‘A cup molasses 1 cu sour milk or buttermilk 2 tab espoons shortening Beat e well. Add s nnd stir it into ontenl mirture. Add and A] ' “m: m“ w‘ 13 19" "and "m" Alnde, or just highly recom- 1 c All-B an “alps “d? I to powder 1% teaspoons sail. te n soda aspoo l6 wn chopped raisin! or, molasses, milk, melted and cooled shorlenlrg most of moisture ls taken up. Sift flour. baking powder. salt and soda taretrer; um t“ m5; mixlur‘ with raisins and stir only until flour dlr "cow". Bnl“. l“ errand ion‘ pan with waxed paper in the bottom, in moderate over (350 degrees F.) about. one (1) hour. Yield: 1 louf (4)6 x 9% inch um.) . Inner Belt combination, firm control, Swami bust -$6.00 belt, lace bust — — —- - —$5.50 celient control — — —- —- —$5.50 5579 . . . .A very popular lighter weight corset — — - — — $4.00 Other styles at $5, $6.00, $7.95 $8.50‘ Dresses Junior style without . Front lace corset ex- MGDRE t} you will find somethin ‘AUGIEIILIZ- 1942 terature 01.1) HOME WEEK You are very cordially in ed to visit this store, whe 8 lu- trezxeiting in every depart 119-121 Queen Si, Charlottetown Noliding up,nolu§ st your gsilus or rhoulderiuapi. point iolhc womirr- iul palenlcd lrsltn, the lair-scoot: bxk, llui mslm lllll so MFLEOD Needlecraft; For The Home Tlhls dress combines the virtues of the shlrtwalst dress and of the coatdress. Smart enough to go any- where, yet casual enough for coun- try wear. Style No. 8562 is designed for sizes 15. l8. 20. 36. 38. 40. 42. 44, 48, and 50. Size 36 requires 3 1-2 yards 35- inch fabric. n. order pattern: Write or send picture with your name and ud- dreu with 20 oer-in m com or sll-m to the Needlecraft Bureau, char ottetown Guardian. the Charlottetown Guardian Needle-raft Department. Style No. 3562 Nlmn - . -__i_- Itreet Mdreu , ulfl The‘ leopard known as the - thcr in India. is more dreaded t ere than the lion or tiger. One leopard in India is known to have killed 200 persons in the space of two years. IF you suffer monthly fruit: m ‘ which makes you lllllllllllllll Nervous- If you're snn d, ' b! hfildlfigiol, cramps, he, Munro; bimaliinung period; $.l'u..“ll.=:.:.::r..'i..y'"""""- Plnkhunb -- ¢ L" This elective - eves p, n luwc"! “will! due .0 this coupe d Plnkhamb Compound ii You can buy today for women-token "Dill l i m“ aggmztlahp; build up resist- in Canada. wmnwfi?" Maj .-.~.- Mmsxnlll? ITEAMING iww f thO nuwhtelimlll cool’ llll 1n boiling vege-tnblw mineral content ls 10st 5° .5 is advocated as a metiwil This method. however. l “ti. ‘°°.‘.‘... as vege es s cauliflower end cobbw.