__.._..- :.~.—~:'~‘~:-.- - “as -\ 5 o, 0i06~i—Use scraps to make this Dutch Boy quil PAGE TWO WHEAT l: Canada's basic had. Kellogg's All-Wheat is Canadian Wheat in ifs most delicious form . . . flaked, lousleri, reudy-lo-eall Gel d package at your grocefsl Woman's Re alm '1. ll'l. SAMSON "4 llmnlv hat. .. L; can Au-wiurl Your grocer will give you an "Adventures of Li‘l Stimson" Comic Booklet FREE with every package of Kellogg's All-Wheat. Get your free comics today! Luv u. l’ To order dress with wn Guardian To Charlottetown Guardian, Needlework Department. Design N0. 01027. N0. 0621. N0. 01064. No. 0102'I—Crocheted edging! and embroidered initials. N’ 0523- ot iron transfer contains 5 motifs measuring from 3% x 4% t0 4% x 7%". b. pattern: write. or send above picture with your name and 15 cents in coin or stamps to Needlework Bureau, Charlotte- IAMB——-————---—-—----------__ THE CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Oii‘vv, TII HEART HAD LITTLI ROOM The heart has lit/tie room For man things, But space will?‘ A poem I A memor’ sweet and clear 11111188. A bit or iaugzhier, and the Joy Tllalt kindnes brings. 'I‘he heart has little room, The wise may say, Its limits are the dawn And dusk oi’ day But love con fill the rcom With treasure guy That neither time or tears Can tuke away! -A.rthur Wallace Peach in The Ohristilain Science Monitor. uuvrs mom nousuvvrviis Typical housewives from all the food dvisious in Britain have been invited to spend a week Bil. {cod ministry headquarters in London They will drop and cook in the way they do at home and in this <way it: is hoped to pool recrpes and ‘kitchen economy throughout the country. First “typical housetvife“ to arrive in London was Mrs Lillie Taylor. of Abbeyltills road, Oldlmm, Lancashire. After her initial shop- ping expedition 1n London Mrs. ‘Baylor, a 45-year-old widow. said, "To-day at the ministry 1 um cook- ing for three people At home I um cookinw every day for five." S O S. VITAMINES lost: Quantities of vitamines somewhere between garden and gullet, Elusive as collar buttons. the vitamins and minerals in foods dis-appear in siz-eoble percentages. before you can tuck thrm away. The mere act of chewing a raw apple causes destruction of half its vitainme C content. one WW0?" ity declared recently‘ T119 queri- tlty oi’ vitamine C in tomatoes, it has been shotvn, mav KlUIiPlld on whether they're picked in the morning or afternoon, Special precautions in cocking must be taken to avoid boiling awa iron, viiamines C, B1 B2 and P- ; and f plays hob with vitamin A The east fragile vitamin is D. In concentrated form, however, all six essential vitamines are stable be- cauesé- they don't have to be pro- ces . MATERIAL 0T FUTURE Lock of man power to maintain civilian industries is causing scien- tists to search for a material that does not require spinning. weaving accord! lmit. , to t ‘o; ng reoen To make (his fibres untalsll, of cotton. or other matterialls. are mixed with cellulose acetate binder fibres which have normal latent adhesive E-operties. The mixture oi’ fibres spread out and treated with a solvent causing the fibres to bond with each other and unify the mixture. The fibrous siheet is then treated with an alkaline sclui-ion. converting the fibres to their ori- ein-al state. It is said that the re- sulting cloth has the feel and ap- pearance of lmitied cloth. RNlTTmS. TAKE NOTE! 'I‘here's double wom- in elbows oi‘ school sweaters if, when new they are reinforced by daming on the wrone s‘cle over B. wood nortlon with mutclviriiz wool. l‘! tfhis pre- catrtlon has been neglected, when holes break tlunugm o neat darn may be made, first crocheting in ribs, tihen dimming neatly crosswise. WHY JAYS Alt-E RUNT! e most Jarps sawed-oft! Whry ar runts? The probable answer is separations at mild starvation, The building c! bums and skeleton is IPREET sbnnms__...__ ___........_._..._.__ retarded by lack of proteins PM srveral vitamlnes and minerals, grry _ _ _ _ _ ___..___ pgyovmqg_____..-_ I among c calcium, price-rolls DISHPAN GREASE IS NO PROBLEM Social a Living o” Leisure The Woman's Realm safely r ___i____.__ -4 teaspoon mound flwzgsL-Ltsfl; i,... .t_ and vitamin D. there unrnlt enough o! these to go around in the body Nature ins-ti-vutes its c-vm rationing system. Thus while none of the various ly Junc- tions m adequately supplied. each gets a. subsistence portion of the available supply. With Nlppwfilfl diets to-day reported w be at an all time nutritional 10w,‘ present and future sons of the Rising Sun may be even more minted. In more wa-ys than one, Hirohiic and sub- jects am look forward to short WHEN SEWINIG SILK Lay a iurklsh towel over your larp to prevent silk from slipp ng when you are hand-sewing it. If you are machine-sewlns. fasten a towel over the table end of the sewing machine. ' ANNIVERSARIES some are sad and some are glad . . . . An anniversary --is Fke a milestone on the winding road of Memory . . birth —- u death _a wedding: sacred dates throughout the years - Some re- called with ha-oov i-iwushts and some with bunting tears. Do not cling too closely to these human rerkonlngs Time is nolhinv, when we think of deep e things . . . Do not count the birthdays in the fear of growing BT93’; do nc-t dwell too long upon the grlefs of yesterday. Every day's holy day —and Life's an endless track -Every morn we're born anew -and there's no tuming back . Dates have no significance in God's wide spheres nbove; there can be no calendars in His own world oi’ love. -Pa'tience Strong. g CORNER , q- Ignaz-run: z-x-z-z- ' mun. SPICE CAKE Ha-li cup lard, 1 1-2 cups honey, ‘two eggs, 3-4 cup sour milk, 2 1-2 cups flour, two teaspoons bakinfl wder, 1-2 teaspoon bakmi! 5°51. (Continued on 1188c B. Co! 4) Yllll WOMEN Will) SIIFFE lllll llllllil If you suffer hot flashes, dizziness, distress of “irregularitiesfi blue spells, are weak, nervous or irritable -—due t0 the "middle-age" period in a woman's life-take Lydia E. Pink- harxrs Vegetable Compound. It's helped thousands upon thousands nd Personal / Fas s; , w Mlgltf-iflillmfl 11° lftfxlmtéhhacntimwnupe. have this fiIIXIQ 1o“ all; priv- y. mu g ve, as you may see you we even (6 C S a grou oi’ tiny tots whispering together over some secret, though it may v, be not ng more than that they are going tn have gingerbread for suppsr. 7f in act. aloud from the housetops after we have read it ourselves, but we demand that little gesture of independence, we crave that little thrill And kept a diary in which she wrote d ggilrptions and which she would have ra destroyed that can never be restored. 0h. the pity or it! I I I I I I me and twelve My problem is this: {bovrollily s5)’;- ‘vvv w EVEN (HHLDREN LONG FOR A MEASURE OF PRIVACY Prying Mothers Make Mistake — May Sacrifice Child’s Confidence DEAR MISS DIX-I am 15 years old and have been keeping u diary. About a month ago my mother went into my bedroom, broke the lock and read it. I was very upset about it, although there was nothing in it that I Wmlld be 881mm“! f0!‘ lmybody W see. but I Just couldn't. believe my mother would do such a thing. ' - I have stopped a diary, althou h I en o ed doin it ve much be- cause I know it would never be mige “lazily. 1 have 1.3.. receiving mail. nothing in the lei-tors important. but I treasured them. Yesterday I found out that my mother had gone through all my letters and read i - them, for she has been questioning me about ' every little silly thing in them, and I am red- eyed myin over it because I know now that the only‘ way can keep my personal things safe is to ide them. If my mother would ask me, I would show her my letters after I have rend them, but I want the pleasure of opening them first. But who! burns me up is for her to sneak behind my back and spy on me. what can I do about it? ‘ DAUGH ANSWER - Nothing, Lam afraid, because mothers have u curious conceit that makes them always think that Mother knows best and that she has a. riight to pr into every comer of her children's mnds and carts, as well as their bureau drawers. It is a terrible mistake that a mother umkes when she does this, be- cause it forever shuts her out from the child's confidence. It turns Mother from a best friend into a snoo r, and it. raises a barrier between Mother and child that she can never ak down. And so I should advise this mother, before it is too late, to apologize to her little daughter and tell her that she didn't. realize what she was doing when she searched her be- longings, and that she will never do it again. one oi’ the things that we are all too prone w forget is that the run- damental longing of every human soul is for some degree of privacy. We want one secret chamber into which no one ever enters unless we, our- selves, open the door and invite them in. We never forgive those who do not respect; this, but who crash our locks and. force themselves upon our innermost thoughts and desires, and so despoil our holy of holies. AN INSTINCTIVE QUALITY There is something that ministers to our dignity, that reco izes our right as an individual, in having our letters given to us with gel: seals Not one of us hut who resents having our mail ofiixriedugnd read B and come to us second-hand. We may be perfectly wi read n; TER. .1 NOVEMBER 11, 194z__ l.lP'l'0ll’$ moot: sour MIX IS TllE QUICK SOUP WITII TIIE REAL CHICKEN-Y kxu g ‘wes-mswss» MRS. WIIITE WAS RIGHT. . .1 "#359715 A PRODUCT OF I-I FTI "'5 lfhe Packers of . L|PTON'S FULL-FLAVOURED (Small Leaf) TE hions / Literature ' k st-tluvo\"°d “i” “we ever "Mé {a w quickly l“ nu 4 Cu?’ o inuges. Cock 5°’ Zkmdowu to I o! e ct- ancy that we lose if another hand has opened the envelope, if othei-pzyes have read its contents before we get it. And dull, indeed, must. be the parents who do not realize that half the pleasure their children get in receiving a. letter is in opening it. how can any mother ever f when she was 15 and she, too, own er secret thoughts and hopes and ther died than have any grownup For a moment to pry into a child's soul is like a. rough hand tear- ing a folded bud to pieces. Something wonderful and beautiful has been CANNOT CARRY on Drum was DIX-I am a-r years old. u» mother of a 7-year-old and" s 8-year-old. The children drained some or my physical energv from years of married life have exhausted my nervous energy. I am only of average intelligence, married to a professional man who of women to relieve such symptoms. Mada in Canada. Pinkhanfa Com- pound ic worth. trying! Fat |96 can AvvtrsAuci cm o% IOO an 375 uu — they'll come oul sparkling! QUICK u lightning dishes are made spotless, gleaming -—the new Rinse way.- no dish they'll come clean and hard work every week-Ind uves your handmool Safe and entle, Riuso helps to kee hands soft, smooth an white. Start usln it today -—get the GIAN packnge for extra economy. Yes! even the granules: ones.- And there's no undissolved grease leftiloatin onthe water,- an scum to clean up afterwards. Al your chins. silverware, gloss into rich Rinso suds and out l lmngl Rinso saves you hours of you do is pop no you wisnyou could step oul of your exhausting fat into a youth- fully slim, enerietlc body’! t You could. of course. l! 1°“: DIET-the scientific way Qxplnine in our diet booklet. By lubflmllllnl low-calory for fattening high-‘IBIOPY dishes you ltoxselehlyaounris a week- d Ln BB “Yofiadonll. have to sacrifice. Hilb- cslory tuna fish? Go ahead. hlvlnl}: —s quarter of a c1111 in I "lid w low-calory lettuce, tomato And celery. Only 196 calories a serving. But avoid the tuna fish Newburg (447 s cup). The reason you saln enersy l! that many low-calory foods are high in vitamins-carrots 25 ench- lcan meat, 100 s slice. A diets no longer a cracker-tes- and-lemon affair, but three health- ful meals a day-even desserts: Fhough desserts like APP“ 59"!’ .475 gm- sg cup) urn forbidden, you an have delicious applesauce cake 100). ’ Eat all you want-Hi 80" lum ~l. young! Our 52-17189’ blwlkll“ . ,,.._,-n F4~‘Q‘I i- ndlilcinoolnsfor 0180011! ofsFqhe New Way ‘Do Youth- tu Figure" to Clmrlottetown Guardian Home Service Addrfll Be sure to write our name, address and the name Kiet- < Nuns street Address l is above the average in intelligence and who is highly ambitious, Our Egg-geg mndtlligerfitlyagposite and the disagreement we have are too num- to allow for them. but in vain. be satisfied and I can't keep up with him. iihe energy for a prolonged strullkle in the future, ii Low-Cnlory Food: Work Miracle l have tried to understand our different natures and He will always stay ambitious and never I want to relax. I haven't I h v ‘t th lifl ti , average? jillerydairqllilille 1°1ln§§se3§alu§ii3l§§fiii glare? foi-xiemvgill litany; at]; i‘;'%.‘li".'i82°.l2.§l'£"é¥ .§l.l‘..;'°.%;‘i;.:l°...‘..‘;°2§§'.l' "&"°“.."’“".'3'%."€‘l°5 n e ave e because o! the children, but we can't mak~ our marriage so. r TWO UNDER PRESSURE. of the bodice, immensely fluttering: sizes l2, 14, 16, 18, 2'), 36, 38. and 4 . dress with 20 stamps to the Needlecraft Bureau The Charlottetown Guardian. , Style No. 2650 , ANSWEHPYWPS 15 Ii Problem which you. of course, will have to settle Name To; yourselves, because vou alone know how high is the wall between you_ ---— ere are unfortunately, many marriages like yours A man and woman, Street Address hem both because they are so different in temperament, in aim anclde- Cit-Y SEVERAL NEW STYLE FEATURE In Ono New Dress Here yovu have the moulded look the slim skirt, softly draped; and the optimal fabric-contrast in the yéstee section, definitely Autumn Style No 2650 is designed for" 0. Size 16 requires 3 3-8 yards 39- inch fabric. To order pattern: Write or send picture with your name and afi- cents in coin or Province What thev should. do. whether the, should li t th i . f separate and live in peace, is a questlo: that ontvvihefigimfiefifii," 9'33: I think you are right in thinking that the decision should be made promptly, before you go through one oi’ those long drawuut marriages m" are nothing but an endurance test, and that not only take all the joy out gxflylifienéor both, but du.ll and deiiden ‘their ability m make a success in I I ONLY HIS rice-LET mm o0 DEAR MISS DIX-I am very much in love with u young man with whom I have been going for four years. Last week he asked me to him. but told me that he was not in love with me, but that I'm good for his e80 and that we would make a success of married life. What should I do? Marrv him as my heart tells me, or forget about him as my better judgment tells me? PUZZLED,» ANSWER-I never heard of a wife being a remedy for a man's ego before, and as I do not know whether one would be expected to inflate ~ r A Morning Smile? "1 N" " '-'\':>l3;'5<7‘é\5‘<>= n V susvus and bandagded, hedewu or separa. on or r. ‘will: ‘wife ain't sale, sir," he plea ed. shes been throwing things at me ever since we got mar- "And only now, after twenty $88M, 1.8 yo tffklllg l-..0 0.11115 protection," said the magistrate, .vv~-\'\\ Osfiibik um stron it or deflate it, I n t i i tn b t. H , 1 sventically. _ sly of all: ollnififiiflllfiitioillf“. i-iglblllttleit is ‘lift?’ to . " e11. air. her Him! swirl-is’ listen to your head than your heart. __ good!" s Rationing has taken its v0.1 oi a good many "old favorite" cookie recipies, but. it is by no mans neoessa y to banish the cookie Jar for the ‘ " Hero sre wartime cookies tested in the Experlmefllfll K"- chen oi the Consumer section of the Dominion Department of Agri- which are easy on the sugar ration and yet have all the Dre- l ow mflllwll’ dluflhllli Needlecraft For The Home 2650 SIZES l3"'° Roll Your Own In Latest When time is at s premium and a batch of cookies must bzvgm“ out in a hurry, this modern method of duping the cook!“ "dough time formerly required for chilling and rolling the doulll- mum m] first shaped into a roll about one inch in diameter, then m" he" m‘ lenghts; the pieces of dough are placed on a greased cookieid “rm pressed into shape with the bottom of l tumbler. "W" flfllfld 110th