D A Woman's Realm/fi LivingcS. Leisure u arm: woman's REALM nly l. boy can set free he music in a willow tree. Dan find the cricket and the lark Hidden in a Willow's bark. Can fife and flute, can lilt and LfODfl The notes that make a willow tune. Can blow an air winged as a this- tie From a little wilio\v whistle. -By Ethel R/omig Fuller. SALAD-DRESSING SIMPLE TO MAKE c Inna economics of the coma- lr section, Dominion Department if Agriculture, recommends two lxcellent dressings for the salad yhich should be on every menu ior lunches throughout the sum- ner. . French Drrssing- ingredients - one teaspoon salt; two teaspoons Jugar: one-half cup vinegar; one eup salad oil. Mix salt. sugar and paprika in -\ pint sealer. Add vinegar and oil. Ieal the sealer and shake well. Keep in cool place and shake well each time before using. Basic Boiled Dressing —ingredi- ents: two cups, milk; two tea- spoons salt: two tablespoons mus- tard; one-quarter cup flour; one cup sugar: few grains cayenne; three eggs; one cup vinegar. Heat milk in double boiler. Beat eggs until light and add dry in- gredients. Add hct milk and return to double boiler. Cook. stirring until thickened; then stir in vine- gar slowly. Cook two minutes long- lr. Yield: three cups. naatrn m cans It is important to include plenty If vegetables and fruit in ones diet all year round so nutrition experts at Ottawa issue some suggestions to householders planning to put up ‘health in cans.” Vegetables. they tell us. shouw ‘be canned when they are youn and tender, and the time to can fruit is when it is well-formed and mature. If it is under-ripe it may have poor flavour and texture and if over-ripe will be soft and unat- ‘traciive. WHITE HAT ADDS GLAMOUR TOUCH The old-er woman who thinks that a. pure white hat is an enemy which points up age is malig-ning one of her fashionable friends. An immaculate white hat is one of the most dependable accessories a woman can use to bring out the .fuli pinkness of her skin, to heigh- ten the colour of her eyes. to make 1 skin look more daisy fresh. White hats, which so many old- Q1‘ women think they shouldn't wear, are better able to do all of these things than pastel-coloured hats which so many women think are safer. Pastel tints worn above the face never seem to look as spec- tacularly fresh as white and quite nften‘ behave perversely and flag gmlookers’ eyes to fading skin tones. Among the most strikingly dress- ed older women in the Easter par- ade this year were those who wore 11am as white as snowdrops with their figure-slimming dark clothes. Besides relieving all-black or all- ziavy costumes and besides making a woman's face look fresh, immacu- late white hats seem to have a lifting effect on feminine morale. Ask any woman who wears one. Or simply watch a woman to see If she doesn't perk up under a flat- tering white hat. i} Quick coffee cakes taste as good In warm weather as they do in ,winter. Add some chopped unbal- nnced almonds to your favorite crumb topping and you'll be de- lighted with the rich nutty flavor. Prry this on an orange coffee cake when you want something you can jcrve for dessert.‘ ' QUICK ELIEF FINN A summer salad that never fails to please is cottage cheese and dried fruits. Let your imagination guide you in arranging the fruit and cheeseor make individual posy salads by placing the cottage cheese in the middle of each garnished salad plate and surrounding it with cooked prunes and cooked dried apricots. MOTHER 0F FIVE OFFERS ADVICE The mothers of one or two were marveliing at how the mother of five managed when it took all of their time to care for one or two children, says Ruth Millet. "It's really not so hard," the mother of five explaind. "I just cut out all the non-essentials. Act- ually 1 don't suppose I work many more hours a day than you do. But everything I do is something that has to be done." Thats the secret, of course, of how- one woman can manage to bring up five children while an- other woman thinks she is doing all she can to bring up one or two. It's a matter of getting back to the essentials in child care and cutting out the frills. It's being satisfied to give children the ne- cessities of life without bothering because they don't have every so- called advantage, But simple as it sounds, it is a solution a great many women don't realize is possible. Because they keep busy catering to every demand of one child. they figure five would be just five times as much work. But it doesn't work that way. With each additional child a wom- an learns that she has to keep cut- ting out unnecessary fuss and both- er. She must trim her daily sched- ule down to where everything she does is something that has to be done. _ If more mothers of one and two realized that, there might be more families today of three, four. or five or more children. iii I P01‘ GARDENING Some persons live where yards are entirely paved and are not in a position to start a garden. Oth- ers with_ small gardens find it dif- ficult to maintain a succession of bloom throughout an entire season. Gardening in pots~is the salvation for both. In fact, pot gardening can be extended into a beautiful thing by those who have only-a low wall or fence separating themselves from abutting properties. When thinking of a pot garden. one is apt to believe that the ver- satlle geranium. and old standby is the only fit material. While ger- aniums are happy in a tin can or decorative flower pot, it is also true that there are many other plants adaptable to pot-garden cui- ture. Among the many interesting subjects are the saipiglosis with trumpetlike flowers of purple and deed red, the lobelia, the paint- er's brush. or ageratum. file love- ly flowering tobacco. the lantana. the verbena. and foxglove. Then we can use the saivias and the Canterbury bells for early season bloom and chrysanthemums, ea- pecially the Korean types. for fill- ing long autumn evenings with col- or. The cultural requirements of pot gardens about equal those for plants growing in the open ground. Watering must be more generous r-"cd frequent. Because of the e- stricted amount of soil used. ferti- lizer additions should be made with greater frequency. The mineral staurolite forms in twinned crystals. often producing a symmetrical cross. GOD BLESS THE ROUTINE PEOPLE God bless the routine people of the world: The meek ones who inherit from the earth What no one really wants. yet with their portion Purchase from life the limit of its worth. ‘mosewho pisysecretpurtlhtkl public play- Drawers of curtains, shifter: of the scene. ' All money-raiaers in all noble cau- res, Ail human bolts in ovary big me- chine. i Chairmen of program. scrubber! of public floors . By night that some may know the ,dawn’e_ clear tread. Sellers of poppies down the day- long street. The clearer-uppers when tbs-crowd has fled. _ All water carriers at football gamed. nnbroideren of flour necks for church bazaars, All brothers of e brother. and eyes that glow » i n: having helped mother aaeb the stars. ' The checkers-in and checkers-out of tickets. The also-runs. the Ill who had no place. And every sub-subchairmsn of aub- eommittnu. ’ God bleu them all, for by their nigh momafim’ wens up of an over mu our! mm great "Jwfi "lit... 1.... Oil W Fl power lhlflofllm our-gens night amr. h} . . Ellen ’s Diary lillfilllllllrlnflWifi It baa been a new experience for me to spend Empire Day -"the good old twenty-fourth" away from The Island. and Alderiea. And when the clarion call of the handsome aster of our hosts’ pampered flock of a dozen fowis. greeting the dawn awakened me while the oth- er members of thehousehold were not yet stirring, at once I pictured the scene at home. Presently we would look up from our choring at Pard! excited barking to see fish- ermen motoring or perhaps cycling along the old mil] road. to eagerly and patiently cast lines along ponu and stream. As it has been here, so I think today would be fair and summery back home and our farm- ers would be busy at the first of their breaking down. It was a bit poignant to me and also amusing to see the farming being done here. Our host's garden. of late lying damp and untouched. except for stately rows of early peas and on ions on the far side, was cultivated this morning. Hearing the sound of voices _in a strange tongue I came to an open window with in- terest. O The air was fresh and invigorat- ing and sunlight blessed the light breeze that stirred in the trees. It was scented with the rare incense of apple blossoms and lilacs, thc white and purple and of other shrubs in bloom. Birds wove gay songs then, lilting tunes and haPDY. that one loved to hear. A cat-bird set me searching for a feline and our hostess at the moment spread- ing her wash called: "Listen to the phoebe! and the oricles Ellen- there on the oak!" but I saw one only in a flash of orange as it flew away to the orchard. The wash here seems to be no chore but only a pleasant pastime. One heard the hum of activity in the “asement in tune to the fragrance of our coffee and wast, and indeed earlier be- fore my fellow-travelling sister and I were up we were told that it had already come to the rinsing stage. It was spread on a line in a sunny intervals in the trees and what woman is there who would not pay to lolter there on such a morning amid so beautiful a set- ting oi scent and bloom? i l I The plourmen, ewarthy but rather handsome men. came in a farm- wagon drawn by "a strawberry roan," a turnout that looked out of place neighboring the streams of motor traffic. It James had been here it is likely he would nave run his hand along the horses neck. smoothing its mane in place in a way he has. He would per- haps have lifted the collar. easing it for a. moment. and glanced a- long its limbs. Amid strange con- versation it was hitched to the plow and then with a leader and a driver and much concentration on the task the cultivating com- menced. This evening the extent of land that lies between the rows of-fruit trees and intriguing grape arbors and goes by the name of garden has been turned up in lur- rows fresh and new. O O I Again thoughts revert to the homeland and the holiday now nearing an end: Empire Day. born of years that were good and kept in memory of a great Queen wh° ruled a vast empire wisely and well. One remembers now the con- flicts that have kept it secure — "Not since Christ died upon His lonely cross . ' Hus time such prospect held of life's new birth. Not since the world of chaos first was born Has man so clearly vfiaged hope of l. new earth. Not of our own might can we hope - to rise Above the rule and failures of the t . Butpxwsith His help who did the first earth build, v With hearts courageous W6 mil f er build at last." til Wednesday -— Diary - oodnilht. t. unlumua 401mm...» ma.» w-v 17881’ SPINACH RING I tablespoons butter. a tablespoons flour. 1 cup milk , 1-21». shredded cheese. 3 eggs, beaten. lcup finelly chopped spinach. - l l-l dufitlbft salt, plippor. ' 2 cllpl hot mubed potatoes. Buttered beets. cocked flour and milk. when thickened and month add the shredded stir until the cheep is melted. Add ad: crumbs, and seasonings to mte. Pour into a buttered I 1-2 lnchring mold and-make in e moderate aver. m: 40-h to Inla- utel. Unmcid on a serving pl to. Ilfllieh the plain sentence? work very good." misspelled? supervize. ation" mean‘) with pr that means "bountiful"? 2. Pronounce ao-no-rua, first o u beginning of wold! bread may Make a sauce a... the butter,’ cheese. lumen mm the fire and A the eggs, thoroulhl! drained spln- Y Iilithecdntrofithhotm lil- , GUARDIAN» . CHNBIJQTIEQE Motllar Fnrsakes Son, 19, low A1 ' Turning Point In Life DEAR. HIS DIX: Iamaboyl9 years old. ‘Three months ago my widowed mother married a man who has moved into our hcuge He disliked .me very Wt. as my mother advised it. mu h d l0 1718. and that would gtarntna natives-mistrial“? m‘ everything he Sam Finally I had to get‘ I h"! be”! lone over two months now and have ANSWER: deal him. But, Jack. For when a mother turns her son c t father's house to make room for a new husband 1g hurts "w" m"! my other blow that Fate can ever just been laid off oLwork, 1 bank and have only $15. Also. low‘ money m the Bifik. and I am not allowed to go back home. am terribly home. JACK You have my heartfelt s pafihy of his inasmuch as youiimother has cast you off. don't let it get you down. Determine that you will try all the harder i0 make to no it on your own. 'I'his‘is my advice to you: heart talk with the president. 800d. because you are going in have Go to the bank and have a heart to Tell him about your mother's treat- menr of you. That will be hard for you to do, but do it nevertheless because it will rouse the banker's sympathy. Then tell him you are 80in; to get a job and that you will pay off every cent that you owe the bank. Also, ask the banker if he will not try to help you. gct work. ‘There are very few older men who are not sympathetic with young boys who are trying to make something of themselves. TURNING POINT IN LIFE This is the crisis of your life. If you haven't the courage to face it out. you will be a failure all through life. But if you are bravo enough to make the fight, to work hard all day and go to school at night, instead of running around with wild crowds and drinking and carousing and spending your wages on gold-digging girls, you can make of yourself a fine man and be a success in the world. Plenty of men have done it before you. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My Wlit‘ ch08: to leave me instead of leaving her dear mother. She claims she can't live without her nmthgp around, and so she left me. But we hav year old and I love him very much, an a baby only a little over a neither his mother or his grandmother is capable of providing for him as I can. I love my baby. but I have no use for my mother-ln-law. What shall I do? A nmrsianra mm ANSWER: Evidently your wife doesn't hold with the Biblical in- junction about leaving father and mother and cleaving to a mere hus- band so it leaves a husband in a truly desperate position when his w e ups and takes the baby and goes back to Mom for no reason ex- cept that she cares more for her mother than she does for him. B"? my observation has been that in such cases money talks ‘the wildest‘ and that if you have the nerve to cut off your wife's income until she comes back on her job again, she will soon be once may; at home. For her mother isn't going to enjoy supporting her daughter and the baby on her small incc to give up the pretty clothes and rounded her. c. nor is your wife going to want mforts with which you have sur. Tnasmuch l! Sh! 18 dé-Sertini! you. it doesn't leave her in a good "Mil!!! P065011 t0 Wop you off for her mother. DEAR. DOROTHY DIX: I have been married now for four months thrgggy with imy; husband and love him very much, a... o... When my husband meds hi“, I cannot do cooking u he m“; n done‘ an I were going around together before we mar- ried, I told him that I had always worked outside of Lhg homq and knew nothing about cooking, but he said not to worry about that n; I could easily pick it up. N h t l other girls can cook, why clfrzt 1e a; 1s me I am very stupid and when it? This makes me very nervous and I cry a great deal. Can you 1.911 me what I should do? ANSWER: Well. of cou WONDERING. "e- the only thins you can do is to learn how to cook. And d ‘t be . 1°!‘ Bnl‘ zirl who canorrlead efisctggitgeliiféebl?“ivlfiiadfiigthgr. ‘$3.’ to manipulate the pots and pans, Bi" W" hlllbflvd isn't slvlnz you a m: deal. bu"! mlffiflse that he was and he has no right to expect that». turn you into a kitchen artist. Better English, D- Q Williams _l. What is wrong with "The girl done this her legalize. apprise, d. What does the word "alliter- 5.Wlhat is a word beginning ANSWERS l. Bay, "did her work very well." in obey, second c ls in no, u es in us unstres ‘ , accent second, syll- able. 3. Supervise. 4. Repetition of the some letter or sound at the succeeding each other, u, "In a summer aes- son Mien soft m: the sun. 6. Pro- fuse. . _____,______ RINBING HAIR. Your shampoo is not complete unless you give your hair e thor- ough rinu afterwards. Perhaps you have a favorite preparation that you ke to use. If not. you can get all _ soap out of your hair with a homemade rinse. llondea usual- You warned him 55km! hi! dkestion on your cooking, ‘l "mule "mild hlPPen that would How Can l: Anne mus, Q- How can 1 take preclutiohg against receiving a, snob; when and a new world in the making. 1W1.“ 1, the Con“; prom", using any household chagrin] One recalls John Oxenham! elation of "sonoruus”? 1 “WW? verses. 3. Which one cf these words is A-Never operate any of the even turn on the switch, if the hands are wet. And when turning on a switch of some device, or or an electric ‘light, use just QM hand. Keep the other hand free from any metallic contact. How can I make candles fit in o holders, when the candles are a little too large? \- -A. Hold the candle in bot water for a short time and it can easily be pressed to fit the candlestick. This is better than shaving it with a knife. Q.Whet can 1 do with cream that will not whip! A.'.'i‘ry adding ma whitewf an egg to it. Chill both the cream‘ and the egg thoroughly, then whip them together. ~ nude seem to prefer u vinegar rinee.- Whichever you use. follow it with several rinsing: of clear water. - , first steamboat to make ‘c regu- lar an voyage was the "Phoenix." » which steamed from Hoboken to 1y like to use the strained iulce of a lemon and brunettes and red- poteibii. and, Iltivlifli lneta. m]. .... . .' x Philadelphia in i800. household electrical devices, or p FOBMQLY INCURABLE SKIN TUBERCULOSIS (“SE8 NOW BEING CUB-ED Dlltfillg World War l we had u patient at our base hospital with lupus vulgaris —- tuberculosis of the skin. We were unable to help him to any extent, and even 30 years later there was no apparent improvement In all these years no real cure had been found for this disfiguring skin ailment. That research workers in tuber- culosis and our skin specialists are now getting somewhere in the treatment of Jupug vulgaris, is shown by reports from Europe the United States and Canada. The new treatment is oalclferol, a cry- stalline ergosterol believed-to be in vitamin D in u-ystalline form. In the “British Journal of Der- matology and Syphilis." Dr. D. E. Macrae reports his results obtained in 2o cases of lupus vulgaris in which patients were sent for insti- tutional treatment when otther forms of treatment had failed. The average age of the patients was 3t‘. and the average number of years they had the disease was 19. The dose used was 150.000 units of cai- ciferol per day by mouth 0r 60,000 tinlrta twice a week by injection. After the first ‘two or three weeks’ treatment, the lupus patches looked more "angry" or swollen. After three weeks improvement commenced but some of the worst cases showed no change for six weeks. after which “progress has been seen in every patient," Of the 20 patients, flve have been discharged as cured or greatly imi proved (just a few nodules). "All patients have shown some improve- meint." Unfortunately. since cslooferol was first used. there have been a few oases of poor reactions includ- ing kidney stones, which have made some p-yscians hesitate about using calciferol. However, as this fonm of tu‘ 1M“ is . " very disfiguring. physicians are trying the calciferol with careful supervision and frequent examin- ations of the general condition of the patient. The fact remains that many cases of a formerly incurable form of skin tuberculosis now are being cured or greatly helped- VITAMIN CHART Are you getting enough of the foods containing vitamin every day? Send today for Dr. Barton's handy “Vitamin Chart," with list-s or the foods containing good qua-ll- ti-ties of each c-f the vitamins. T0 obtain it, just send E-oents, ooin preferred. and a. B-cent stamp. w cover cost of handling and mailing. to The Bell Syndicate. Post office Box 99, Station G. New York 19. N, Y., and ask for your com’- wva- r""'"<5~\ § Morning Smile "How do you spell 'gruphic"‘ ask“; m; young woman. “With 911g "f" o1‘ 9W0?" " The older mln rlwd- We" be said at last. if cu are going to use any. you may an We“ s" ll" limit. High tide this momma at 4-59 and this afternoon stem. Sun sets this evening at 1.31 and rises tomorrow morning at 4J7. ' Last quarter moon May 30, 6.43 's'.'.'.'............ tide 1a mlnuw later than Charlottetown. - IOUII WAIIIING cum-u mlint n. Iiaenhower stands by his wife u they wave to that welcomed them Ao/‘ibeir an b 1t Oolumbin. calmly, an ck, y , . . Chief of ltuff nld lie wmudJpuud some time‘ writing tlioduties of proxy of the uni- vanity.‘ ‘ , ‘ . . ocial and Personal!Fashions/Literatured Y°ur 50W D _ I29 V Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Rust on Porceldn To remove rust stains from pug. celaln or enameled sinks. cover the stains with kerosene for about four hours. ‘Ithen wash oif with 111M118 hot water and strong soap. Or, rub the stains with a piece of raw lemon, followed by soap and water. Persplratlon Odor Dlftentlmes ordinary laundering fails to remove the perspiration odor in men's woolen shirts. A little vinegar added to the rinse water usually corrects this. Cleaning Photographs When an uncolorod. dull-finish photograph needs cleaning, wipe it with g damp cloth. Then place face down on a smooth dry cloth to dry. , llllolllc nnonelurl: Does choking. gasping. wheezing Chronic Brpnchltie make your life a misery? Are you kept awake by a dry. hocking or phlefmy bronchial cough? Get fut safe relic with- Tempietolfo RAZ-MAH-~ specially made to relieve the torment of BABY w‘ “mm Asthma. Chronic bronchitis. Hay Fever. -r->_-,-u->-- $IIAiIgg‘ PEAcllES won or w- Q. When wedding gifts are dis played. should the cards of th. donors be attached’) A. Noflrhe bride-elect or some- ma-nber of her family shoult make a list of the gifts with tho names of "the persons sending them before removing the card: This la to enable the bride ta acknowledge them. of course, the beat procedure for the bride ta follow is to write her note oi thanks as each gift is received. Q. Which is the more formal closing to a letter. "Yours very truly" or “Yours very sincerely"? A. "Yours ‘very truly." Q. Ia.it improperto eat the lettuce upon which a salad is ser- ved? A. Inclination may guide a per- son in this. He may or may not eat his lettuce, u he wishes. born are: roua urn Don't use a candle or a match for light when changing l. fuse es- pecially ft tl located in a closet. A flaahl ht is safer. And dont swioch- on s portable heater or radio when sitting in a bathtub. When the body is wet. a 818B!" amount of voltage can enter. Don't take chances with electric- ity in your home for it means thst you're risking your life. ~10. ll. audio. Sin l0 requires f l The Charlottetown Guardian. his memoirs before taking our" néoa‘ "m: something different. in a cool cap sleeved dress with trimming bands on the skirt and. shoulders. g big bow at the neckline - to finish in contrasting fabrics or ribbon trkn. ' No M00 is cut in aim l0. l). 1d yds. SO-lm. i-I. yd. ltin contest. ing for bands and bow. includes occupier/t sowing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Dd cure to stat: size you ma. Include poof-ll unit or gone number in your dd- dreu. . - Address » mum ' Department 2400. Pattern _No." . Send 20c to: eaebPsttct-n. which _ lNee-dlecraftf