inn‘ 5",“: .. .. -....;'.... i .-:~ , _, PA-GE EIGHT If . ‘knnnmkkk w v .W man ’s HOUSE WEARY I l!!! going out! I'm tired of tables and chairs; fin tired of walls that hedge me all about; I'm tired of rooms and ceilings, carpets and stairs And so-Pm going out! Somehow or other what I need to- dey l Are skies and birds that winds that shout! I want Dame Nature's fncndship. Thus I say "Gzod-bye-Im goingi out!" It Just house-tiredness. humclrum strain! Mcnotony! But when I've climbed the hll, My heart refrehed, will laugh and, sing again. Deu- hornel I'll love it still. l 1 . -Iun Drag. i BE GLAD 8e glad that a friend has done well over something. just as you would have them beeglad if you had done well. Don't be sarcasti- oally jealous—be glad. Be- glad that the rain is doing the flowers and vegetables good. Don't grumble Just because you, as _ one small unit in the scheme of‘ things, are compelled t-o put off] some small pleasure. Be glad! Be glad that the world is at peace. don't go about saying it, won't last. Be glad that you can go about your business in safety. Be glad that you have yourl health and strength; don't moan; about the amount of h". ti» "~r.~;~..»-.~;....-.. _ m» ...-1 r. -.i - YEZFZ 114$ luau nsaosn -carry on what you have started. , s'tt'ng and attend to those things you think are so important, when .. a...‘ , .. awake-oh, al;ve! be glad that you're WHAT IS A BOY? He ls a person who ls going to; He is to sit right where you are -:- Social and Cont] CDOLJ like it {Brit's _ strenpth and - i delicacy of i i flavor " .A$%Sr THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN AAAAQA ,7‘ ‘V, ‘ Personal 1:- on" I AUGUST 25, 1933 fa re ' Yew; I. -v‘nlivitera Q vvvv i l .1111: COOK'S CORNER O-Off9 s. 4 . "i" A Usslultable $1: I I Match __ r- - ‘l Break off Your Child’s Undesirable Love Affair, Advises Dorothy Dix-It Will Peter Out Like a Spent Fire- cracker During a Long En- gagement, or Wither Away Under Ridicule, !Sf0p the Heavy Parent Stuff if You Want to IABJNA rmirr runnmo l pint milk ‘A cup fsrlne 2 eggs it cup sugar $4 teaspoon vanilla‘ it te , -n salt Cook milk. farlna and salt in double boiler for ‘)6 hour. Add egg yolks which have been beaten with the sugar and one tablespoon cold ‘Is/liens i SKINNY GIRLS listen to this! f Amazing easy way , adds pounds -In a few weeks! Hosts of people gaining solid flak, new health with new double tonic Y v-v-w urtsurts rr vmcur 11$: l camh iyou please. but how they will be you are gone. i You may adopt all the policies run: VANILL or nun-J: carried out depends on hm. i Even if you will make leagues and treaties he Will have to mam‘ ' age them. i " oi .- ren are determined to make. Every day I got letters from agonlzed fathers and mothers asking how they can break off unsuitable marriages that their infatuated child- They see their fine, upright, honest John caught in the tolls of some silly llltle flapper with- out heart or brains or principles, and they know that if he marries her it is bound to break his water. Cook a little longer, remove‘ QQTQRS for can h", from heat and add 2 egg whites, to build upli beaten stiff, and the vanilla. Pour, n" dlewvwtvw “Wt!” into custard cups rinsed ln cold,‘ wster and when cold, turn out andl inqsmpmynglyyhmggim, ealth. But now with ter results yeast this and th rdmary t- health l in adrlllionoput on pliiaiiua of solid fleeh~and _ Trivial in the Senate 'place in the Supreme Court. ‘cit es, states and naton. iover your prisons. churches. unl- versities and corporations. All your work is going to be judged and praised or condemned l by him. . are in his hands. All your work is for him, and the fate of the na- t'on and of hands. some attention. tomorrow. ten difficult rows you have done, Wvrk you i a pin-cushion He is going to sit at your desk and occupy your He will assume control of your He is going to more in and take Your reputation and your futur humanity is in his So it might be well to pay him The boy of today is the man of HOUSEHOLD HINTS 2239x221 fish. ‘jtvimlrr, p"! ym“ ilcft alone, the affair would simply simmer out and amount to nothing. , m“) f‘ p Co? of “can curtain l But the minute father and mother begin doing the heavy parent stuff mo“ knitting a‘ pattern H’ is 0L1‘ net and he‘ lthc inevitable happens. to remember how , To overcome this difficulty, place on the table and, Don't throw away your old curtnns. Wash out thc starch and‘ you have excellent mii-rrr plislvrs, 11nd if you don't‘ A XICFVOUS VANILLA ened in the following way: To the juice of a lemrn add enough flow- ers of hulpliur to make a cream. Rub this cream into the straw with I a clean toothbrush. rinse with cold] water, r-nd then put ou n flat sur- l. face to dry. The straw will conic up quite like new. This keeps the fish firm and particularly prevents it from falling to pieces. when other people are in the room. When dishing HP- young barrister was have to do. Just do it, and be glad stick into it as many pins as you wnducllns his first vase. that you are able to do so. Be glad that the sun is shining. Ilfi- D0117’ 8W1 "ll/S lmbeflfflblyiwhen all the pins are down you, lllnaie-efrslfll’ YPTY have rows to do. ‘My further-and gentlemen of At the end of each row press one’ the-Pfflllry." he stanlnlvrerl. “My Win 88 3'01! IMP YOIII‘ strélmlflfiypin right down into the cushion! lmrflrlllllfile-Br —~I soy my unfor- unfortunate IIOU" 1711.103’ 91¢ 51m and be Bled. know you have knitted the correct; PH°YI@—9T—ET—~" Be glad that the birds are sing- fngbe glad that the ‘ cows are lowing, be glad that nature is I number of rows. White straw hats may be fresh-i “Yes. yes." said the judge, “pray ‘ proceed. The court is undoubtedly with you so far." r4 v;"‘*_""il~du-ai*¢-r\ynn u... ...... t 9 77f: " A‘?! Gallery played an imfnvfavlt part in the social life of half a century ago. There society viewed the latest ictures brought over , w»: Eng- land or the Cont: ant. To he alile to dzscuis the latest Mailer 01 Millet ffnm. first hand lnowledge our pug of their sducnzion. 4 was ‘the ‘In/w’ e'll!’ gpteflwlng the fin! I I" rude in 8J3: M’ 49 gun up. Thu " unlit Wll hi“. N-B-. b3 Iiu 1mm lum a Illl quality Im more”: 1:42? odoanxi: l ‘l, ll II I‘ l modem ngutunrinfi. . ,- Thcre Were Fewer Leisure Hours in the Eighties . . . before SURPRISE SOAP was made '° Many new labour-saving aids have come to us since then, but hundreds of thousands of house- wives still rely on Surprise to free them from the back-breaking hours of wash day. ° The gentle Surprise suds reach and loosen every article of dirt, so that rinsing leaves the washing ragrant and beautifully clean. And a soap that washes thoroughly in less time for the housewife. means more leisure ° You can trust even your finest things to Sur- prise Soap. possibly harm even the most d Its rich, penetrating lather cannot elicate fabric. not wiidow and . heart and wreck his whole future. down life-long misery on her head. But they are powerless to save their children from the catas- trophes they are about to preczpltate upon them- selves. John and Mary turn a. deaf ear to their ' ' parents’ warnings and entreatlcs, and father and ‘mother wring their hands in futile anguish and ask what can they do to _, r. iprcvcnt the tragedy. First. I should say, qult opposing the match. Not even proplnquity l5 such a matchmaker as is opposition, and there is no other quicker way to rush young people into a hasty and ill-advised marriage than to for- bid it. ' Yct that seems to be the only idea. that parents have of breaking off an unsuitable marriage. Mary has a beau of whom they disapprove, and they forthwith forbid him to come to the house, and threaten her with dire penalties lf she so much as looks at him or speaks to him again. , Perhaps Mnry any the boy are not really in love with each other and, if They throw the young couple into each father's arms. The faint spark of affection is fanned into a flame of passion by opposition. Lock a girl of spirit up in her room to keep her away from a man and she will climb out of the window to get to him. Forbid a. young lman to come to the house and he will meet her on the street corner and ‘ take her to the nearest Marriage License Bureau. The contrarlness of the human heart has thrown s. magic halo about multitudes of commonplace girls and boys.and mode other boys and girls I ditcrmint-d to marry them just because their families opposed the match. {It is the eternal lure of the forbidden fruit. _ I The next move in breaking off a match is to quit criticising the boy v or girl your children think they are in love with. There is no other way s0 potent for enhancing the charms of a. girl or boy in Mary's or John's eyes as to force them to become his or her champions. Yet that ls what parents do when they nag Mary ceaselessly about Tom's faults and find fault with everything that Bob's girl does and leaves undone. It puts Bob and Mary on the defensive. It makes them go on a still-hunt for every god quality ln Tom and Sally, and to make every excuse for their shortcomings, and so they end up by hypnotlzlng them- selves into the belief that Tom and Sally really are the paragons they have represented them to be ln the heat of the argument with mother or father. ‘ It ls a. curious thing that parents never realize that their children grow up and get beyond the age where they can force blind obedience upon them, and that they do not perceive that when this time arrives they must use subtlety instead of force ln dealing with their youngsters. And particularly must they approach the marriage question with all the finesse of a diplomat. Now there are many ways in which an undesirable montage can be broken off, but forbidding the balms and locking the door and using the hammer are eflete methods that do not work in these days of emancip- ated youth. First aid to the parents in such a case ls time, which ls their most potent ally and fights on their side. Almost any unsuitable match can be prevented by stringing an en- gagement out from year to year. For, after all, love isn't totally blind. It merely suffers from a temporary astigmatism, and sooner or later it focuses its vision on. the blemishes that would make the man or woman a misfit husband or wife. Mary gets tired of Tom's shlftlessness. or disgusted st his drunken- ness. John gets a. llne on Sally's greedlness and selfishness and begins to wonder how he would like to spend his life with a gold-digger. So grad- ually and imperceptibly time gets in its deadly work and the love affair that would have been fatal if rushed into marriage by parental opposition peters out harmlessly, like a spent firecracker. Ridicule is another effective weapon with which you can puncture the little red balloons of romance. The young who are deaf to pleadings and impervious to reason can always be stabbed to the soul by a Jeer. A girl may defy her mother and go with s. man whose moral char- actor ls as soiled as evil can make it, but she will drop him cold if soms one makes fun of him for wearing a. dirty collar. And many l. young man has been saved from the folly of marrying a. woman old enough to be his mother by somebody calling her grandma. and a. cradle-snatcher. There are many ways of breaking up an undesirable match, but op- position and forbidding the young man the house are not two of them, and Parents would be far wiser to give s. girl or boy an overdose of the society o! those whom they do not wish them to marry than to try to keep them apart. DQRQTHY DIX COOKING HINTS Rldh cakes need cooking 2m a 10h! time. and should have several AMomingSmilo thicknesses of newspaper; tied around. standinl; well above tths The old commercial traveler was t-ln- relating his experience to o. young Whites of eggs ma/y be stlffly whisked more quickly if they ere quite cold. Flour absorbs odors and moisture from its surroundings, therefore keep closely covered. For better poetry ranking ugg g heavy rolling pin lightly, rather than s. light one heavily. A little fresh cream added to bottled mayonnaise wmlderfully improves its flavor. To make steak tender smear with olive oil and leave for at least an hour before grilling. To darken pale baked pudding. dredge lightly with sugar and brown undr a grilier. To enrich the color of the plalner fruit cakes add s teaspoon of w. ooa to each 1-4 lb. flour; flavor 1| not affected. man in the some business. "And don't forget," he sold, “never try to sell an cuuyulOpledlfl to a bride." "Why not?" The old mm smiled cynically. "Bhe always thinks her husband knows everything." y Jones come back from his holiday proud of his bulging muscles. "Look at these arms," he sold. - They were certainly in good con- dition. His colleagues put it down to rowing, but Jones withered them with scorn. "Rowing be blowedl" he snorted. "I got them pulling up fish." Osnado has been the leading exporter of flour to the Trinidad market for many years. Day-old chicks are being 1m. ported into St. Lucia, British West Indies, from Florida vls the Pan. Holland dslvlsced Canada in 1m no the urgent sirppllcr of con American Mrwayl. They see their patted _and adored Mary, who has never known a hardship or. even an ungranted wish since the day she was born, fascinated by some drunkard or picturesque neer-clo-well, and they know that if she marries him she will bring add a level half-cupful of vegetable solid or fat and a half-teaspoonful of salt. Gently mix with the tips of , the fingers. When the materials are thoroughly mixed and separated into little granulatlons, add sufllc-i lent ice water to bind them to- gether. Roll out, handling as little as possible, and remove only enough paste for one crust from the bowl at a time. Line a pie pan and flll with the following raisln mixture: Soak two cupfuls of raisins for an hour or two and cook them until tender in the water in which they were soaked. Before placing on the flre add a half cupful of sugar. When done, leave sufficient Juice lust to cover the raisins. Add to this a tablespoonful of flour, Juice of one orange and half a lemon and, cook until thick. Cover with crust and bake in a hot oven. i PAPER. LAMP SHADES These summer days, when dust and grime and sun play havoc with jflne furnishings paper lamp shade covers are a boon to careful housewives. They "solve the prob- lbnl of how to protect fine shades of silk and parchment. ‘Ilhe idea is simply to use pale yellow or white crepe paper. which does not obscure the light. There aw only a few simple steps in making them. You cut a piece of crepe, across, the grain. about an inch more than’ the desired depth, and long enough‘ to use a. ruler or guide of heavyf You wish m make the pleats. To' hold the pleats together, 110198 about 1 1-2 from the lion edge and run a. cord in and out of the holes. The shade last pleats at each end and pasting them tamper. AdJust the pleats to flt your lamp before tying the cord securely. Ml hens that have stopped lay- ing at the latter part qf August should be culled. pour any fresh berries over it. Not onlyhfe mun; mbqrg gglnjngbq . __;_ bringing pounds, but also clmr skin. new Sig. “M?!” "E 2 great body-builders in l To cach cupful of flour required lmmwuabluw"mmp'°°upm,m"fl“mmmm 7 “m” to fold in loose pleats. An easy way 14. 1B. l8, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 in measure the pleats accurately is 1110M! bust. cardboard, out as large or small as with 3 yflrds lat-inch lace. punch‘ stamps or coin (coin is preferred). inches down' Wrap coin carefully, t p“, newer by werlawma “ml No. m. Size .......... This new prodwlronlnod Yout is mode from 3mm Cllllllrfid mu rmli todfro o Brfllsh Illfl—~tl1:pg€ll8fi‘Y68-fl 15%“ of: But that is not nlll This lupin-rich youtis then fronfudwitlmklndsoflron. ‘M with "n," “amped on “an “bu Day after day. u you take Ironised Y . lldnn ' fii-Xuiifihoilfifil-idiiiiivyflfillla mall T “ipwlfll FREE 05¢?! - o b ' Results guaranteed gugpékwefiakfilglgfixfifdihalwmmammfl“ N *1“ lee o r0 east t once. l thlrnmno vJas“-§s§i°ii°‘i»lii§ fir‘ 3f," m‘ °" lg‘ “"1 m" l“ '3 "I Wit-g“- upm.mwueksum “human” rupxmgoft aoffenwewllloondxouq not deglglltod with the results of the v p m‘! M" b°°k °“ Jlwi-hi N" flnt v use. money tly refund . “$5M” 3W5’ 5 “mm Y 011:)’ ma!!!" 7011 mfityflltlgllg Ironlzed k oar-“gariloneu rcfzlrldewrl 0A0‘ ens no seine on t cam; , ' ’ give the some results. Insist on the gem‘: $51. mglligsillffaltlolao" ' I O o ‘ Damtmess Wrth Ch rc Styles mtusnsrm nusaauxum meson runumnm wnln Ivm! rag-mam _, I! ' _LIIAZII WOIITIINGER It's so dainty with cool low neck- line for warm weather wear. It moulds the figure beautifully throush the bodice and the hips. Bias seaming creates a. suppleness. The lower part aflects s. skirt which makes it most appropriate for sheer frocks. You could run it up on the sew- lng machine ln an hour and never notice it. Or make it all by hand, it will give it French accent and you'll find it very pleasant work. Think of the saving ln cost. Bend 5°!’ W!!!‘ Dattem todI-v and stretch your budget. flesh Dink crepe do chine with ecnr Alencon lace ls pictured. It's also lovely in white with either ecru or white lace trim. Style No. 348 is designed in slses ‘at; Size 36 requires 2% yards 39-inch Price of PATTERN 15 cents in - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ ,. ., Name Street Address State ‘s Schooldays ahead! Tim; g9 ; think of Outfitting the khildren. Long, sturdy y“; i"...nnd satisfying psi“ economy... llwlys your; when you ask for Penmgng, ilkJ|g>vtklL ‘Sifosfilucsi edlnllktohlnkhd. f ‘l. I V t ./. , . .,., ._v_,_‘__'vv_ e. w, ._-,,,.1H5,mlr,. n»