LivingeSlLeisure THE woman's REALM‘ toris man. but what about the man of the future? will he be an im- provement upon the man of today. lnthepasttheneedsolfthediy made man, as he learned to adapt himself umblgtertiviornmantévllt bi: suggested t. u ulre men taller than at pnseztt, and some figures seem to Harvard freshmen, were two in of 1866-185. The brain also seems to be in creasing in sine. And the head seems tobe getting munder with; the years. The wisdom teeth ‘Will probably disappear. and our httlal I toes, used less and lees, will grow ' even sznaller. And, more to be» lamented, we seem to be Betting baidler and baider. It is imterestmg to speculate on Juflt whot we shallj be. butitls well nothhbll~ matic a-bout it. v vac MOTHS ARE HOUSEHOLD ENEMY N0 1! Th3 industrial". 0'15"" experts tell us, does over $100.000 worth of damage every V591‘! b ' ‘.- th-e eggs usually hatch wlthin four, to eight days of the tune they are‘ hid. Mrs. Average Housewife has‘ to be orn her toes to find the maths before they find her clothes.‘ For pmfmslonal results. store all wintter stimulants-including funs— a moth-free cupboard. First. make sure each garment. is thor- ruvhll.’ "P171 Fur: need m b9 DWELL DEEP .p! The little . ~ and fret. 0 \\ st: n goicrn a thcm hc=dl - thoughtless wrong, IorgFI; _ ~lf lorgrt in serving Others’ cl. faith in God through ;._~ for man shall keep. ‘z (P51). my soul dwell deep! things h ours to i in 1906-1915 QIPYFCPPZO the pleasure if‘ ‘l 1 .1 duly; cotter-crate each i l .. (I t1 s. soul. (lwvll @999!) F. B. Mayer » (ér in plants of the [If ‘ ' mtffiu >5. humility. wfoztlcn if aluitys You Never Saw Such Snowy Washes! OXYDOL’S “Hustle-Bubblc" Suds Are So Lively They Lilli Dirt Out! Even Big- gest Washes Come S0 Clean They're White Without Bleaching! . * YOU'LL BE THRILLED by an Oxydol wash = : : it's so gleaming, snowy-white! I OxydoYs "Hustle-Bubble" suds an so lively they lift dirt out! All your white things, except of course for unusual stains, come while with; out bleaching. Radiantly white! SAVE CLOTHES IN WARTIMII With Oxydol there's no need for hard rubbing" or harsh bleaching-so clothes last longer in these wartimesl And Oxydol is so safe-for wash colors, rayons, and your own precious hands! Economical-you'll be surprised how much clothes or dishes a box of Oxydol will wash! mm m CANADA-Trude Mm Renewed ‘baggy WASIIES Wll l1‘! WITHOUT QLEACI-IING- J : I": " point that way. ‘ ches taller than those. . will accentuate her short I | "fiftieth. snournr . I l! Roberta I ______ _.- _._ Q. What. sat apples. beaches and (Hills at the table? A. Peel the fruit lt I suygr mm w h a small ‘quarters. I and than convey it to the mguthl with the fingers . nstead of sending engraved finvitations. ls lt_all right for one | to write wedding invitations to close friends? A. .Yes; simple informal notes. written on one's personal station- ery. ‘are all right Q. should a. short. stout woman wear a hat with a wide brim A. N0. the widencss of tlgte r ‘I brim t re. soiin swfbiunci’ For lhnl nasty upset fooling - lulu brushed and aired; woclens washed in good soapy-rich suds, coats and ‘suits sent to the dry cleaners. Next use one pound of-fumlgant (such as paradichlom-benzene) for every 75 to 100 cubic feet of ispace in the cupboard. rfiunigant lshould be placed 1n r pm- ; portion, near the top of the closet so that fumes can settle. Then seal {all four sides of the cupboard. If lno closet is available for storage- lgaxment bags, boxes or chests l give excellent protection from moths providing they are tightly sealed and the correct proportion of paradlghloro-benzene l y 5O 'Ruzs. (commercial- as dichloricide) is ilsed. furniture and upholstered pieces can be protected by spraying xczluarly with a. liquki insecti- cide_ When motzh damage is un- duly recurrent, however, the house- wife is wise to call in the services of a reliable firm t0 de-moth and treat chairs and chesterficld and ‘protect them against further in- roads. ‘MAY KEEP KIT l A naval service announcement made today in Ottawa states that [Wren mt-lngs will be allowed to |keep all the kit issued to them in Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service. This means an av- erage of two summer and two winter iackets and skirts for each of the 6.000 Wrens now on active lservioe. They will also have their lsailor hats. adaptable to all kinds .of milllnezy angles, trioornes nevy gresutcoats for whiter wear. and their ga-bardlne ralncoats, which lock well as a casual coat. Some Wrens \vlll be keeping bell- bottom trousers because of their jobs as motor transport drivers, signallers. 1 - -c.an't keep include coats. rubber and similar clothing issued on loam for certain duties. Another item but the Wrens say they won't mind this. Even gowns have Jumped three sulks, and two crying spells higher than prewar days. Brighten your kitchen with pot- ted plants, colorful towels and gay pioturu. Rust can be removed from an iron! kettle with keiosene and steel woo . ‘ may b able todrlve your from the eameaoan continent DESIGN N0. 1014 A dog is a favorite worked fn filet crochet to create this attrac- tive chair set. Pattern No. i014 contains complete instructions. To ordcr pattern: Write or send above picture with vour name and address with l5 rents in coin cr Postal Scrip to Needlework Bureau Charlottetown Guardian. Design No. 1014. -_. Name 55m Address Province is the correct way to similar knife. out it into they cant keep ls their gas mask—| ___ Th n! l... w’ in»; cu T‘ . ARDIAN en's Re alm Y Social ond* Pers0”n fl.| iFoSh ' I D Mfafizf wnett" w; . on.‘ » yfThe same rich flavoured Tea over '35 years m- __ | __ __ ...._._ ~- Dorothy Dix “Says- FIR-ST’ HUSBAND RETURNS ‘Widow’ Who Rerpnbrried Should Consult Lawyer To Determine Legal Status DEAR. MISS DIX: Four years ago when I was in school I mar- ried a boy of a well-to-do family. We told no one of our marriage be- cause we were afraid his famfiily would have it annulled. I-Ie was ship- ped overseas and at first I heard from him daily, then for months noth- ing at all. until one day I read in the paper that he had been killed in action. . Believing him dead. I married a very nice man and we expect a. baby in a. few months. Now I find that my first husband is not dead, but a prisoner of war who has been liberated and is on his way home. I have never told anyone of my first marri- age, not even my present husband. All of this has made me very nervous and up- set. I don't know what to do, or where to turn. The only solution I can think of ls to take my own life so nw innocent child Wlll not be brought up with sin upon him. But I thought I would write and ask your advice before 1 did anything fatal. MRS. J. L. IAULTS 0F YOUTH ANSWER: first of all, try to look at your situation sanely and aw the matter straight. Clear your mind of the idea that you have com- mitted nny sin or that what you have done could reflect in any way upon your child. You have been young and foolish and overly impulsive. but these are the faults of youth-they are not crimes. The next thing for you to do is to try to straighten out your tangled acts. Begin by not only telling your present husband the en- tire story of your life, but by going to your first husband's family and telling it to them and showing them your marriage certificate. That will prove to both par-ties that you acted in good faith and that you really believed that you were a widow and free to marry again. Also. it will lift a load off of your mind and heart, because there is no other burden that can lie so heavy on us as a secret that we fear will be discovered. ‘ Then I think you should consult a lawyer to find out your legal status and whether your second marriage is valid or not. inasmuch as it. was contracted while your first husband was still alive. although you believed him to be dead. Then what happens is on the knees of the gods. for no one can foretell what attitude the two men are going to take towards you. I But your sad case should be a warning to other women not w con- tract second marriages on the mere supposition that their husbands are dead because they have not heard from them, or because they have been reported missing. They should. at least, wait until they have had ‘l aunt's anunv By A: hind Inrmnfi Wlfc . that than a thick or thin red stream he looked up towards the clouds still covering the face of the sun and remarked in a gondola-lake manngr: "I - ere‘ no woo -peckers ou day" and added with a slgh going to rain." I-lc-w he came to as- sociate these naughty birds as fair- weather ones only. I do not know. But presently the sun came bril- llantLv from behind the whole world about us was glad- denedand each one of us went hflPPily to hls‘or‘ her self Jock went with thlee mares to the cultivating-at the ground” which both he and his father hold ls easier and better to have well one before than after it ls planted. S9 “cut" after "out" is tirelessly given ‘till it critical inspection. the new mare in a to the comer-store a mile distant. Jud-y. when she oonmdered the near-empty state of the flour bar- rel. flied her best persuade James to go there with the car last evening. James however pre- fers a more certain and more fam- iliar mode of travel. This also ap- . Other xwcesalties be- wcre need-ed and when I had explained our wants to James who “never bothers with the shop- ping" because it “ ' - ache" b 988505 James hitched fawn-cart to 8o : "let me o Mrs. Ellen. I‘d love the "It's "m; its veiling and 5 -set task. ed? aflnaiyug 0H8. ride." This is ~¢j1ualitim—¢ oy everything lumbering among her endearing even a ride on a as much as her enthusiasm and good wanted passenger. had to make a call at a l l the authoritative announcement from the War Department. DEAR. MISS DIX: My brother has us all upset. He is over 30 years old and has never worked. He was in the army 18 months and‘ ys he never intends to w . supporting? ANSWER: Yes. Kick him out. Lock the door on him and tell him you are not handing out any more feeds to lazy loafers. As long as he has n comfortable place to sleep and three square meals a day, he will never go to work. but when hunger begins to gnaw at his vltms j he will hunt up a Job. The industrious members of a family commit no greater crime than when they encourage the deadbeat in being one by supporting him I gr litter-for there are plenty of female parasites also-in idleness. Don‘: o . ..__._____ DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My mother is a widow. My husband's mother is a widow. Both are planning to live with us after the war, but my husband and I would like to have our home to ourselves. What shall we do? DAUGHTHR-IN-LAW. ANSWER: Tell them u gently as you can, but as firmly, that three grownups in any home is a crowd and four is a riot and that they will have to make other arrangements No twn mothers-in-law with the mall-man. appointed for this was have lain neglected since the snows of winter. and for her "there was no letter in the mail today." W?» 011M111: 1n the afternoon and today Judy sans to her heart content. with her thoughts. doubt- less on the Communion Service the old Kink on the Sabbath now RPPYOMFIUIR she chose sacred songs for the mos-t of her selections. Not altozcthiar. for at times a word she fancied 1n one or a thought at once suggested that her next one be in a lighter or even a more humorous vein. If there are occasional bar- ren places in our fields of potatoes I shall make no apology to anyone on Judy's account. I found it pleas- ant to hear her fresh untirlng voice when as an especial favor for Jeanie and me she sang “the one: You like" as she sat on a low stool beside us and continued her cut- line. now with more practised fingers. In the early evening when ominous thunder clouds that were could possibly live in the same house with their respective children without always being in each others hair. Help your mothers financially to live comfortabl Y. but let it be under some other roof than your own. HOUSEHOLD f 50Blrd00K! . .. l B! Roberta Lee - hat is wrong with m4; 5 . -——- -v-_._____-.___ fin“? on I‘ mug": like so not“; w“ u m‘ Ant: e correct pronunc- ‘iwgibnwolfat 1 - ""‘¢'""Y' Ql-llcklime thrown Which tn m... 1 t o-iilelino; m water“ one of misspelled. Gellatzln, {them Also green sage when .. _ - . placed ltl4§en$tléigfi?nl’h° “mm "n?" about: ants infest. will cause thcm What Ls a word beginning We“ mam H‘ “m” n‘ Iron Vessels 5. a with er that fatty"! New ironwatre vessels should b mama: soda before used to: c . When in the store they an greased to keep them lrcm rusting '5 Pleasant on»: Currant ell, b f ' , - mixed u...‘ u. " fir" are. ious and palatable drink for an in- valid. ' ETTER ENGLISH ILC Wlllllml lull’; on) ant nests will destroy ANSWB-l - 9W. "It is not nearly so hot it was yesterday." 2. nonounce st a. as in ah unstressed. " as in mo’. and accent second syl- the first 8. Gelatin ___.__i_.i CANADA'S BA SE METALS Ounadn in among the world's _ ‘ .. producers of the u- baee_m sum: Watch lhese 4 Teething-lime Troubles 0f Bab Ibljnllvo (ht l vpim when Ihclhlnnn y’ h 1 w we m‘ mu u I u on o Munich, clear 0:0 hnrlnlnl ab‘; thn. SUCH IGNOEANCE Def Worker's Wife — But tbs 133i» notes in last night's paper any black kids have tan I and vice vcrsa. I see the tan rtltches but not the vice verza. Bales Girl (sweetly) — Oh, you ‘see. ‘vice versa’ ls French for ‘one button.’ Two erlcan soldiers boarded a bus in ccadllly. One went cn ton. the other inside. The latter offer- ed their farm to a man in uniform. ,, ‘ saying: "Two io Trafalgar Square." Inah bnbyfrctful and reltlfl rclllu dinr- ‘Excuse ma". W38 m9 "Pl-V- "If" t rbcndnntn nmuu. fhonmnow ,not the conductor. I'm a naval o.- quickly baby's fever ulunlly Iublldfl and . flggh" "°'°‘“"“"' The American went on to th: . your tiny ‘one drift: all in I P ' platform of the bus and called uu ~i"|“u°"oo'F |m his friend: "say. Buddy. come m OI not at all to their word. massed in the wast and the breathless hush peculiar to such a time was in the air, when echoes come clear and lovely we found excuses to loiter out of doors. Judv and I brushed and dusted the living-mom furni- ture out for its spring airing. Jeanie weeaed the dahlias in her flower border, the plants already well above ground. Juxiv was busy too at other extra work. The kitchen-floor was given its week- end bath and the new stove was polished lmtil it fairly sparklsd. "If you as much as scratch a match on that" I heard hcr threat- en James. Houses and their hold- ings are not meant to be “places of torment" for tired men to ccmeto. but ralther a restful. De-‘lfififiil. happy abode to which to tum with grateful hearts when day is done. - Rob and Karobm ‘and Jamie canto this , when Jam-fie when his grandfa er remembered it found a small wagon fashioned in the long ago by "mine." Lt has been resting in an upstairs-clcset for years. Jamie was so excited about his flnd he could scarcely renmln longer but wished to be off home at once "to flnd sane nails to fix t gear." Karolym will likely flnd her Saturday's baking an interrupted affair to-morrow. Now that they have gone. Judy isl still busy setting things to rights- dusting, polishing. James suspic- ious of her actions mentions it: ‘éllifjzwlwirha: go yrg: mean by all n_us ry ” an umlnz me he says: "It wouldn't be . . . andlooksatmeasiflhadstld- denly lost my senses—in the emp- pinz . . . I shall notmake my final decision until the rmrning. ‘Then if all things are in conjunction, both *"<*..*.........- ~a~..=<:..:"..y on a h ~ llmtil mnorrow - glory-Good- ng . n to me. she seems to en-i farm-art or wagon quite‘ in a fine machine and! “M m‘ “an ‘an: “yflmm Dab’ ‘Lpiflts on| m“ “d such an outing are so contageouspmmm she at once becomes a popular andi fuse James] a arm- ouscs on the return trip. she rode home sauce?“ “m 5km” New h‘ we‘ I I a any when stantly. over low direct dhsflt. 112W she expected some snap-shots thatimmmy “lidwned u‘ “° We went to join Jeanie at thci‘m°k' -s'and store in ml ‘if A 40B OILY .Yflll fill l0 PEP9E- PE .5‘ i is? r” E all zi-fs; r a 3P g5 t? lllmope noon‘ and butch ers be allowed to raise their IUOM ‘lulu 5% Trade Bond no |tl.l.l in ef- fect Price tain ceilings must be maln- ed the same as at the present; on 1 ha m: w filpomofifbomaorgolen this nllow- aohllfiwn "o. fir? bl’???- l3? iiiiéflfo-"léfitfiwm ‘m’ m” tuna oombwxllotwhga-Wfiumt i‘ over the one charted dwlnl ill 19W IRIS. “tuors contain! .____..i _. . . _ COOKED SALAD DRESSING WITH OIL ' _ corn ltaml-l 1 cup cold water y Beat egg slightly. measure and blend to Ie. Stir in the vinegar. lemon luice nd salad oil Measure the corn starch into a cold water. . s n- " flavor of starch remains. Slowly beat hot mixture into cold mixture. beating vigorously with a rotary beater until smooth and into clear Jar. cool. WV a cool place. g‘! . POTATO SALAD LOAF 8 or 9 medium POMWQB- °°°k°d and chopped 1 medium onion. g "Y cup gm 01.09pm pickle 1 n nit l6 t GDP m. showed Mix together well. Blend with V: cup salad dressinn 311x941 tablespoons wmflw c939“- lnib 11' mm potato mixturmalzligg to 55nd Qgsed 10-51 Pa“ gin cold and wolket. a m a hug?‘ Turn out. Ohm Via-mt‘ 35a,‘ with cold meat, sliced 0 ~ - y BLACKHEADS geroxlne powder Get two ounces of from your drugglst. prlnkie on a hot. wet cloth and apply to the face gently. Every blackhcad will be dissolved. The one sale. sure and simple way to remove blackheads. Simplicity of out is the keynote‘ in a dress that. is made outstand- lna by the contrasting bands at the waist. neck and pockets. A dress so suitable on so many occas- ons. - No. $33 is out. in sizes 10. l2, l4. ldlfiandnslzeloreqammiili yams 36-inch. ‘.6 yard 35-inch contrasting. ' for PATTERN. I sewing Send 20 cents which includes complete guide. Print. vau- Name. Audi-em] and Style Num rploinly. Be sure; to state size you wish. Address Pattern Department Th '1' Charlottetown Guardian. e1 Name BfiNOtAMNII ty Province IIOW Gill ll!" By Anne Alhlay Q. How can I wtiffen sheer iirtlcles of clothing without starch- n '2 8 A. B .placln;z while da-mp on a well rtayrched pillow case or towel. down. wow-o not. on a bus; we're » [on a battleship." and ironing vwth a hot iron. Q. How can I prevent the mud sputtering of grease when fryinc egfla? Add n generous pinch of to the grease and lr. 5m- lyftrbefore putting in the y‘ a conven- How can I make pin cushion for the aewinlf mach ne? A. Wind a piece of flannel sev- eral time; around thalmn 0f the sewing machine. It will mm much time and annoyance. A. flour 1a m rated w, 4 UNE 22, 1945 in wood ~e=deliglitfiglb l 8101118116 Ollllifo instreiig “and”? a long‘ way RADSTOCK. Hlgland -- (C?)- Lord Hylron, Conservative u. P. for Wells, Somerset. front 18o9_!o 1899. Lord-in-Waiting m the Kmg in the last war and Captain of the Yeoman of the Guard from 191B to 1934. died at the n3." vl B2 it his home near hero.