u~nMMn PAGE TWO . fljivingwfi. Leisu re —7HE WOMAN'S REALM- POI ‘I'll SEASONS For sunny lpringtimg Wi-th happy play We thank Thee, Father, Upon this day. For golden . Green field and hill. For outdoor hours We thank Thee still. For lovely autumn With wild gees flying, ‘With acorns dropping And bright leaves flying; For chill white winter ' With snowy plays. For all the year We give Thee pmise. - The Story Hour. ‘TbPPYJOUPULLSUPIOX For the major part of a girl's ex- istence she wants the casual air and she wants to achieve it with- out looking sloppy, . That is mainly why "Joe," who has always been termed "sloppy." h-Is pulled up his sox. so to speak, and become aware of his more ‘ash- ionziblc possibilities. Tucked inside a sport skirt, “Joe" has taken a new lease on life, and the college girl and her career girl sister will nc-t be slow in adopting him. When the winter winds do blow and our muffs come back out of moth balls, Miss Business Girl will find a sweater and skirt handy articles to stretch her wardrobe. She can pair the comforts of school dress with the slick look called for in office atmosphere, a happy com- binatic-n. The full instead of giving her pet "Joes" to little sister Gertrude, the .budding career girl will wear them through the winter. The bag-over- the-hip look will be replaced bv the city waistline, and “Joe" will submit without fuss to being trimly ‘ belted. It's the figure that counts if the sweater is worn on the outside of the skirt. pepped up with a belt girdling the waist, but it better be slim and trim. Perfect foil for the new leather belts with the classic look, Miss Career Girl wl-ll lorve and rherish ‘her sweaters till next spring do .them part. CAIN NEWI Enough the cloth supply it pinches kirts are longer by two inches. THAT IF IT'S COLOR Qfif?‘ .. ' YOU ABE AFTER "NEW YORK-If it's color you're lfter, you'd fall (like the proverbial ton of bricks) for a finger-tip- length coat of clear red with a full. full back and aenwm sleeves. This was lined with seal, no less. and worn over a side-draped dress of thin black crepe adorned quite ‘andsomely with embroidered tabs. A coat of black wool faced in bright red matched a. wool dress with g three-button closing and a small collar. Dark green wool, band- ed with Persian lamb, was also used effectively in a side-buttoned jacket which was worn with s black accordion-pleated skirt and a blouse of black jersey. MUFFLE IT QUICK! Muffle it. The throat of course, with a scarf to suit your costume. Dress up an otherwise dull out- fit with a scarf or ascot in o sheer or opaque material. Mix them or match them with your suits and dresses. they will spell fashion personality. CROCHETED OF WOOL Matching hats and bags, hand- crocheted of wool or of strips of felt, have metal threads run through for added decoration and formality. Hats include off-face types, turbans and stocking-crown hats with ruffled brims. GRACEFUL HABITS ARE STYLE BEST A good test of a woman's poise and style is the way she takes off her jacket and gloves and the way she carries her hu-ndbag. If you pooh-pooh these things as trifles, you should sit in at a sas- sion where fashion models rehearse these practiced arts. None is taken for granted. A jacket isn't removed until a model settles in her chair and puts down her bag. Then. she slips her j-acket off one shoulder at a time. and either drops it behind her on the back of her chair- or presents it to her hostess. But she hands it over as though it were a prized possession, not as something to gather into a heap and try to dis own. Gloves? She removes these. one finger at a time, folds smoothly and either lays them carefully down or carries them with nicety. As for the handbag, you rarely see a fashion model posed without one. But she practices the ‘mack of carrying 1t smartly, not as some- thing to dangle from her wrist like a boxers glove, or like a. package which she is trying to hide. The prickly pear is a type of cactus brought here from the Unit- ed States. It has small, brittle branches which break off, attach themselves to the fur of foxes and rabbits and the wool of ohCEP, and arewidely spread. The segments root wherever they are deposited, shown in a recent fashion pamde. ‘For real mouth-w: reci in the new thing "You must mlinary exports. ness there's nothing is e the . su van — Boo And ch from damty, tasty tidbits no manly, delicious three-layer cakes. iythesetoothoome aacdngzmenusofagroupol "All recipes are baked with that ever so light, so whine, so truly fine Regal Ilour. You'll really on workingwith lFlour. L. Ito lgh quality, Javour, integral goodncuflzagoutltn: - can-a t spot’ with all the family. "fir. .;:-'-*--*....,"—- f0 REBM ‘ihfllillii ‘yd, i . . , m ~ . 4 _ _' u tccvrcuj jvom]lau]ccox[aocc\ I. I QCCmIVCCI IIIII III _' every- - . l . _ mass nov fi-"ifigf “d, m‘? Ea mm: economist been choIl, also], - uaod, and has passed the W0man‘s Realm/Social and THE W .,\~. » - Ellen's Diary i i By an Island Farmer's Wife i I art-loved my "brief hour" spent writ-h the rest of the family at tine Potato mom; at Rcibs yesterday afternoon. ‘Ilhis year the grading is being done on the new machine iihat was built not so 10mg since by Mir. D. after he had finished lfiifllTllld llhe barns at "the other ram". B-y turning a. crank the tubers are moved along a conveying clhazin which a: c-nce eliminates all undersioe potatoes. The larger cries escape than by way clf a slight drop to the picking ta-bie where 81W other undesiroibles are discov- ered and promptly weedisd out Only the elite, then are allowed to mil into the Waiting stencllled sacks. James himself contributes the energy l/"llflli sets this gear in motion. and it is just as well for the helpens, elen if some do belong to the strange cowgflli/ of unpaid assistants, to zend a loyal interest lJh-e a ' at hand I found that out press ity when slightly bewild- ered li-y the sewn-sis of the chore I had made several mistakes in my period of probation “Ellen" Jame: reminded me nt i451 “it you'd quit your tailing and take off your." gloves we uo-iud get alfuzg faster!" Hclwuever in sore o: my question- able assistance, the woik progress- ed rapidly, indeed it quickly got cvut 0t! bounds cf James‘ supervision for he is one whose eye likes to ream out to include every phme of the work. It was no wonder tlhen that as he stood a minute watching the first. truck; load move slowly wway from the premises he remarked: "I won't be a bi. . .y bit “Weed if trio: one gets burned up at the siding!" . v O ‘Ilhe gay riff-t of siuuise. freoicled by the thinning iealvcs of the old birch beyond our window, was being reflected on the wall when James startled me into wakefulness this morning. "Do you know” he asked me. quldsly ilurnmif the covers aside "tihat there's an hours difference in the length of the doylifslht now to what we had at the bqinning of our potato digging, Ellen?" Hcvw- ever our day has been long enough. From the time of our hastiy rising until close on the heels of our even- ing ohoring we lunched together on the remnants oi‘ Sunday's chicken and freshly brewed steaming ouipa Cl tea Ly our second meal of the duy together for soon after we had breakfasted he was of! with Jock to the concerns of the grading at Roth's. After a ‘ quiet mtlffling unbroken in its leisurely passing eowept. for the visit of our seed potato In.- spcctnr on his xwtine call, I went tepid: potatoes a neighbors the This paxtioialar Inspector and the faces of the mnnber of his predecessors ir. ofifloe throupn the years come in mind-is a methodical fellow. He Md a. set of questions relative to his duties new that we went into wltih due Illorbun ately Jennie and I were able to ons-werihombeingasitwesewell nurtured with this lore since the mo: of the planting. "Eaten" James had summoned me to the side of the family oar this very morning before mtting fort/h to his day's work "if that lnapecwi ‘ , to coma when we're away, ymf m- he had closed the ca: door and settled back in his seat a bit un- stil, and added. "Don't you Morning Smile "IIIDII" DAYS PAII M o d e r n Etiquette n, mun; l.» Q. ls it proper to attend a mas- querade dance. to which one has been invited, in ordinary dress? A. No, this is discourtcom. All guests should be suitably attired. and only if special permission has been secured from the host or host» as may one attend in ordinary dress. ' Q. When one has been introduc- ed to a person. and. upon leaving. that person says, "I am very glad to have met you." what should one re- ply? A. "Thank you" l; all necemry. Q. ‘Is it, necessary to give both engagement and wedding gifts? A. No, this is not required. CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Pers wvtmflvvv DOROTHY DIX SAtYS-F-l Marital Congeniality Pulling Tcgctbcrtlill Extend limynocl Tl illlll Ililtllll ll! _ w‘- 4 rupondent u»: "What is the stronsm tie will“? - . ill-Dd} ‘an wives?" 1 think it is conawlalltv- In ilzwuflvzffhzzf" t‘: no other bond J0 $11753 bflwem " mufled coup L" an d h the same tidbits and tastes until they 9r Y mfg laguls $1; but a 5111818 UWWM’ W“ hen“ m“ M“ l‘ 0N- . h- oompa onchip 1mm love newer dies. The , m"; grow; stale. They never get on $01 Ol-Mmlt: nerves. And if death robs them of fllgow who» 1M1 PM“? ‘mum when you see I W30 ears. has been faithful to a memory for 9° °l' Y man who has never tried to replace the bride ‘ct?! ‘his Youth. You BMW- Wlmlil" being mid‘ m“ may were bound together by the unbreakable tic cf cud “Egg” we ‘we thing may be said of divorce Like unto like is the recipe for a suc- ngsruluxiarriage that never fails. If people would 1w marry their doubles instead of u».- cooosllss. the" "mild l” m’ on . m, d qumeung couple,’ no phtiamdemrs, no broken homes. no hal ortlaxhzsaned chfldrgn, no Renos. Domestic life would be an isle 0f Dfflfc l" of a storm center. - BOTH MUST PULL TOGETHER lfists Bi. b0!- N...» i, mu ma to understand. Mobt of us are new t tom and Bsvtlslo by "mm and what we ‘mosdly fill; ‘in?’ 1:1]: e: fellow traveler wlho is 801118 Oll-l’ WY- l“ m glfledsant one by yefi-Yulr-S "5 "id “mum? 1° d0 the things we want to do, and enjqying the things that we enjoy. No main ever hastened his footsteps home 0f But eiltelzillllefidggegyh‘: hm ‘M,’ Wk’ u he “mi he w“ gfiggitltl? ‘its ’L‘§...".<>t an hat off . ct t arre e e - r,;§°.,.';‘;°..‘;.°“.‘§...“:.li..“5.: $.21 ... . ........ all...» thing she did and was a wet italangsgeorxlioltwléplzlgafllailllillggimgngrigar o; em mlsband‘ melt}? Tnllfanwive‘; who lie to their husbands about what liitxii- airing? are ll-le ones who buy W"? a‘ m‘? price d ‘madly’ . For better-tasting bran flakes, k for Kellogg's oldcn- llow package. éry the ig economy mo. As you know, some of the seoplc need Kellogg's ran Flakes allthe time . . . all the seople need Kellogg's ran Flakes some of the time . . . so isn't it lucky they tarts so good! GREATESY NAME IN CEREAlS . Cook ’s Corner i- ifr COTTAGE CHEESE SALAD AG COMPANIMENT . when you want to tum u. vege- table aalad into a main-course dish for lunch or supper. cheese is one of the things that suggests itself. Among the cheeses, none is better in this role than cottage cheese — tn t u never can tell how a rgmrewiiiingu-liliugitm ghee odiufiabiesklgslrla all: boy in ti“ "M" "l" in; gainer- they will ‘be harms or mmleble l‘ "h" ‘mml’ 5”“ °’ Jhhm“ ‘Itie answer is summed up in one wcrd: Congeniality. If the‘); see eye to eye 0“ “w” swim: u ‘my have the! 55321581153121!‘ $3.. vote the same ticket. and Like the same kind of pe. - 8m By ma: Ashley Q. What can ‘be done if th: toe! of shuns the‘: A. Wr. b" a cloth out of not water and lay it folded across tho toes while the shoes are on the feet. The leather will expand and conform to the shape of the foot. Q. How can I cut citron into thin slices for fruit cake? A. Put the citron in the oven and heat thoroughly. It can then be cut as thin as desired. and it will mt stick to the knife. Q- How can I prevent hose frcm tearing where the supporter is fas- tencd? A. Sew a piece of an old stock- ing on the underside of the good stocking where the hose supporter i see "Lilli... GIIIIGIIS":'BIII.IIS llmiarlii Oiid’: Mild . lr- field work away fmm the family W65 RM I Bflloycd the change of scene and company very vrell. I was in time to accompany thafarm ‘WW film. along the hne, carpet- ed now with fallen leaves that rusbled to our steps as we went to the field. She had her blessings with her: an older lad who in the oouzrso of the afternoon expertly drove mints and a younger fellow learning for the first time the strange intricacies of _hls mpdhg- ‘lllllflflle, who winiled sway most of his afternoon asleep costly in his cum-tinge In .1 switched shady spot he slept beneath an old bird: wliith wide spreading branches from mihenoe odd _, ‘den leaves that hadnotaohigslnceflirtedwith gentle breaaes on 1mg lazy Sum- mer days, drifted down to join their fellows below. O O I And now Janus and I are "hams again" and have recently ltmch- ed off “the 5st of the land". Not actually the fat of ou- hnd for as we ate, James doubtless recalling the hummus Of my latest days asked-if not in these exact waldo: ‘jffhar you-ail m. Us chntcn in no tun’ plane, worn-an," "Bought it" I Iwllod taking my comma in both hand; as it wen: "Elias!" hack- olaisncd pitting down a clean dnnn stick on his plate and leaning acmI the tabla towards m; "you . ‘ 1d gelding day. But if every word thecther figglijtn tilgiiiiti-‘Q gzzrdznovvevr which they go to the mat. their 1118114589 will be a puxsalvrr 101' ‘hm W9‘- Character has little to do with the halliiilll"! °¢ t“ mgnmgg Ts: husband may be a plaster saint. the wife a Pin-lea h’?! MG - ' if they don't flee. they Get "(Mimi bu‘ misery m“ o‘ thflrhrelguu§' §hjp_ 1g the wife is a ra-bid prchlblticnist, she nags her 11S in i life out of him about drinking an occasional glass of beer. If the husband i; a stay-at-homél‘. he grcuches over having l0 like hi5 "l" to m, nwvjgg so that it takes all of the pleasure out of it. It is only when the both enjoy doing the same things. when they can play together aynd work together. that they make marriage a success in- d f th st grisly failure on earth- steagoo! “@1131”. to s11 young couples thinking of matrimony: Make 60.19.5311“. the top drawer quality youdemand in a mate. 1t is the one Ehum that gge does not wither nor custom stale. It is the oil that lmhrlcates the domestic machinery and kw!” i‘ ‘mining wmwu" a hitch. Leasehold Scrapbook B, llooerla Ln A Wlnler Phat Why not transplant the bed of parsley to a pot. while it 1B 5"“ strong and healthy? It will make a nice winter plant for the kitchen window sill. and is convenient Whfll a garnish is wanted. Stains on Teeth 1f you have fruit stains on your teeth rub a mall quantity of salt an the stains. Then rinse the mouth immediately with hot water- KITCIIEN NOVELTIES Ttnwa-re Rub a freshly sliced onLcn over the tinware and then rub vigorous Ily with n dry clean cloth. to sive it a high polish. Better English D. U. Wllllama i 1. Whatiswronl withthissen- tence’! "Their home is awflull)’ putt " y. 2. What is the correct- P10110110- iation of "foreign"? 3. Which one of these ‘words ll lniqeiled? l-lylcint . urioane. lmorilt. . 4. What docs the word "laud- able" mean? i 5. What is a word beginning with ho that means "an act of open an- unity"? ANIWII! ‘Their homo h . "Bury man should b0 IIIICM in sane laudable pu- luit!’ ii. Hostility. Supreme in Quality 12a: _ no. stun anumtaum ma’ hm: m three an ptatholdorsé Thu ‘remin- upeum on creche a my short threw! lift. Pattern No. I133 contains complete in dfllotlfll. DBIGN ‘lo slsndflocontainooln MN Bursatcchaflotto Mm ‘ Dlfin No. I-IZ I Nllllt i and Style Number plainly. sure to state size you wish. Include postal unit or zone number in you‘ address. Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2930 City land — (OP) — A barber had a poo plastered solidly with modelling clay. and here we give you a delightful way of fixing it up to make it an important part of a salad meal and to put the tissue-building protein material usually expected of it. into the main course. 1% cups cottage cheese ‘A teaspoon salt ‘A cup finely chopped green pep- per . 1/3 cup cut-up orange it cup finely chopped apple 1 tablespoon orange Juice ‘A cup chopped almonds. toasted Measure the cottage into a bowl f meat, vegetable or fruit salad. and sprinkle with the salt; add DOVE OF A JUMPER A classic Jumper with new tricks . a. scalloped should-er and pook-I ets on this three-piece pattern maize it out of the ordinary for school‘ and office. Wear the shlrt with your! suits. too. N0. 2939 is cut in sizes 12. 14, 16, l8, 20, 3'5, 38. 40, 42 and 44. Size 36 requires 2% yards 54-inch. Blcue requires 2% yards 39-inch. Send 20 cents for which includes guide. PANERN complete sewing Print your Name. Address Be Address Pattern Department, The Name » ‘ia-ddrcas Province Mlddlesea: Eng- fulltime job with special sham- tn clean the hair of a boy. EXTRA TASTY IRIADI hnadthsttanu cmyaim. A - chaos wNeedlecraft/ —FOR ms HOME- BECAUSE IT'S lIlIpL-Sfllftku “an! chlana-talufsuh? 9 -nocmsupsim ?anhYnnmllffl sponsor, la lighflnflnlrfillm“ u- vgu Mira AI’ new as‘: wanna-ammo‘ 1-W- , M-..::....- anew-names: /4>~"*‘"">f"/':" m: green pepper. orange. appia, or Juice and almonds; mix lightly]; gather. Serve as an accompaniment |Sh| MARROW APPLE IA M 2 lemons 4 cups chopped. 2 cups diced apples 4% cups sugar METHOD: Quarter the lemons and remove the white pithy centru and the seeds. Now cut. the lemon sections into paper-thin slice-s. Banly cover these with water and cool; until the rind is tender. Now add the chopped marrow. the prepared apples and the sugar. Stir to dis- solve the sugar, while heating to bile b01111!!! Point. then stir fre- quently to prevent sticking to m; bottom of the pan. Cook until the mixture is thickened and clear. P0111“ boiling hot into hot. steri- lized jars and seal with melted paraffin. If covered with paraffin when hot. apply a second coat when the jam becomes cold. and than‘ cover the Jars with lids and store in a cool. dry place. O1’ f int canard