11 LQ-c _ gnu-vii, __ 1 rww- tjaqtzhrttto I)? 00"‘ , see .\l'w'u'r'n'n':'n'u'n'u‘u'fi'fa' tout lllllllllnulll IIURUsUDPE tCopythht, i939, King Feature: Syndicate lrre.) Look in the serliun your birthday comes in, and find will: your outlook L1, according to Lb: nan- \\'lu'k'l-'i'ln'r‘ln'u'u'v' For Monday, March l8!!! _ 33G .. ll I! ".0 APRLL 20_ ‘Awe; the ' ,0‘ e 0C‘; OEPIP. 23 . ztbraiclns Gazrcs Navy Beau Joseph Levlzs CDEQWLCK 7t CHAPTER xv ‘B destroyer clld not remain m‘ ~ a c Before that. seen D he vca. .a.'.'.er's de- note about O J ~' . T‘ .718 a. C11€LrC ouzh. _ ‘ _ fvvas. b3, k 32$‘? me and ache "lac come to me en- , of} ‘ ' t. on hi.» o he told ‘was a. a 520111, and I toldl i.” 12s! becomes you." "lo a to conceal es. the might come to tr. l had it." l , £7011 once sugzgestedjgélkflP? lndedd dbl I .. " ogl-ce. o r‘ n':." . 1 merely said “You I: “Ohv I y L} ' about it?" “I 0 "that had IIBDDTXIJ}. lir- BEAUTIFIIL MEDALLION TABLE CLOT DESIGN N0. X ‘l! _ ’I‘hree simple crochet stitches unite to make this medallion lace tab e- cloth. The loner medallions are united ‘nv means of Jmaller ones. Pat- tern No. X '72 contains list of materials needed, illustration of stitches and h complete instructions. To order this design write your name and address on a piece of paper and send with l5 cents in coin or stamps to Needlework Department Charlottetown Guardian. To Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department. peslglllmxvz NAME-—————-——"'- -----—-—-—---- smarrr--------—--- - — — — — — —--— cmt--------—- rrwvmca---—---—- r. ‘J89 3 s a. fool ‘to do d me _.‘i ll ffffffffJfuVfIffPfff-fv - _ . ffiVlvilffl'nfilffffff ffl"ffffflfi'u-f l ‘likely if you will wold restlessness ' ‘ A gccd day to OCFOBSR 24 ‘o NOTE-BER. 22 , .,. s ., . v . r didn't b»:- reve Therbahe I walrne :0 ee 1e , . - said was n trouble. He was 5lmp.y angry some- ' — zrlrrlg wasn't done. Well I go: fflifhl- glvlnz h;m a , l _ t» ' ‘m' . tar-c he . .. 43v ' _ c. .. . tsu 1e. n Dave z m“) m’ righ: zhen and there and ask ‘nrrn should have but I d'dn't ‘ _ _ n left Then. afte. th~ . I phoned Dav him _ ,i2i*.‘fLlTl(l_"'5 —hut he dldn’; lien; that nc actualv , set-med awfully upset, UlDUKh. so l, IYOFK. Nola, the fellow wows up out ‘here-Y’ l "1 don t buppue€_)'0l1 have any idea i where 1 cturu geturlolld 0f Costlgan? l. ‘ ‘T l'__._ ! l‘ Lenten Medrtatlon B! B”. Dr. John Baillie Prof f Di cliifilll‘; of "admits." m ‘h’ , — __ MORNING PBAYKB _Qi-l10liW0OiQQ£€i11flprm¢gg¢fl ma berunu the yell m ngpugg m. akkinfi ..llc mun or marl, and has than: m-“ .44 lac-SH.» Carl.» our Llalu. AJMNSW-‘lfllfllflfl-"llfl- n-a bizpa. Jasus Cnrkt said Lay not up (or - JUN-rile.) ueastues up n earn, l v. uvu and rus lagnt- lle my heart to fo.low rn Ivsanc. Do good and lend, . ..-,.'1..'.g ih§arlL 4&4‘: LAX] Alum. t4 AUG-um‘ £11 Laid. Love your enemres. be my heart to IOAJOW l~4;. . . sad Fear not, only id. Except ye turn ...e a. 4th: chuc- .0. enzer into ...e l . Cairn. m; heart -,o follow tn DulL .e.. vty-n memor- urlccrxe that ought to And things done - 041.11 done. God ' . has oifered ‘.0 me Jesus Crust my Lord. For m": deceitful heart and crooked . gm words spoken delibcr-v words ughtless spoken h . For em» andpivtng eyes; For ears that relolce rrl rrkqurtv and relotce not 1X1 the truth: For greedy hands: _ For wandering and loitering feet: For haugh: .00 ; Hat's mercy upon me, O God. If we say that we have no sin, we ldecelve ourselves. Almighty God. Spirit of purity and graze. in asking Thy 101?“? mess I cannot claim a right to U? f In but only cast myself upon T nbounded love. I can head no merit or desert: u I can trltad no extenuating circum- SZHHCEI ,0 I cannrr plead the frailty of my X‘ eplead the force of the E5 E >4 o t! a é >1 other. who led me asirflyr 1 can only say, rm the sake of Jesus Christ Tny Son my Lord. en. llla. uostlgan had come to me. when 1 tr.ed to make him tell_me what rt wa. all about, he woulnn t. "inter, when I went dovm to San 1 Diego to see nun just before he, m1- ed, l tried again to persuade hrm w Hllllce m lll-: but I could not. He GEILGLTI I'd better tell you about it. Pnrl nozlceu grimly. "rt lsnt en—. tlrely news to me. I've known that some-Jung was tvrong. 1 got the first rnkung of it rn Annapolis. 1n tact. I hau a couple or clashes wnth covlgarl over Dave at that time like you, 1 couldn't pry any- tl .. g cut or Date. 'rnen, right aster LIL‘ came to San Dlegv. one o. his lsmplrlatts t0.u rlle Uostlllflfl had ex- ‘toncu money from him in hew “can't anything be done about lit?" asked lwytc. "No-i haven t. _ _ ‘.ll I could meet up with the guy, might be able to get no the D0.- lom or the business: nook nere. rr he should come to you again. find 011V- J Iyolr can where he's staying, then let i Dave Manning was. J "Hasn't he dlsculsee it with you at all?" he asked. "All he has said is that he’: o- lng to gland guilty-hind then res gn ecl with worry. “There's more to it his friend knnw all the circumstances." me know. trtnerwrse, 1m afraid- lh€f85 nothing we can do. If Dave rslsts m belng secretive. I writ a bow we can help nun." CHAPTER XVI r- um». A--:= that All: has lert LLB‘ an exam”: that r. would follow in‘ bu. .a_l u,» N: gourselms treas- lacs ... ..-.-.l"le."l. 0 Cw. li- “l: m; heart to .'0l.ov.‘ in .4‘; '10s]. ~ Jest.» c _.. sale, Seek ye first 13¢; re my heart w follow 2.11) ma. CHARLOIIETOWN GUARDIAN ' Q§.@\..Q§§QQQQbO§-O§QQ'§OCAA¢4 as.» s00ALOQCOCO0OQOAOOOOQOOOOOQOOQOOQOO .“‘QQAAAAAQQAAQAAQ m: Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box CORNER l tmrzornv mx SAYS? The W0 . telilgenu moJler tshlch ‘The brugm. Jewes Eli kiclatzine ce l Hi3 5.1T: 3 I {(3% ‘.418 :0 earn ht-r otvrl eating cccupzzrcn. rgiveness and faith bothered much to consider whether there were“? rams in the head under which the dladem rated. 1n tact t: has been considered that any little fool female knew" enml“ WES JCKlDK 1D 111.8 3:11.035}.- prcvided With rt by me mere act of hav- lrl; a baby. No one will wry that nowhere el-w m we wmcl r. the ngrtest grade or good. bard _Zbe a0 1113C.’ tram be" us." forced tangconzampaxe the sad spectacle 0f mm)‘ women bezng so befuddled by DJOLQEIDOCIII the)‘ 8P- pa.:en:.y- take leave o! whatever intelligence the)‘ nave and become entrrelt‘ rncavflble 05 “B31158 n“ {CELT 0215131218. ‘l’ ll l: L00 rilJ: t0 C0 Ad} ou. lt. amp; by and large, there are pad mothers rn the “or-d. . are clutered up r< ' ls encour- ii"€l ‘lung a: sonle inter- THERE ARE MORE MOTHERS .4 warml- WHO ARE FOOLS THAN ARE BAD 543.5%?“ w" Intelligence Must Be Added To The Virtue of Motherhood in Rearing Children '5 C<nzress has been mute to select nmvrka‘: most 1n- L; a procedure that Ls startling in its nWG-Ii- ' - patzence, ml:- Nobod has Tl hate aiv-‘flt-Lsvbeen l9". funess. that if lugence that she would needed as rrr motherhood. r chhcren we“. ~ l ls lilac . grounded on the tolid earth. th 1o l-lligerli mother - 11d easy" for them. ‘duds and weaknesses are Sal rainy: how to ge: along w: 8:8 8 over to their fortunate < '7 .._-.'.,.. I . t .. . Sierclred [mm , ojurionalnrvdd IMPROVED FORHULA -ALKALINE— SWEETENS THE STOHACH starting Seen |ll sllllll Si. BGlhETlHESrIIfdQ Sags Bliflklifl’! Mixlm Acts Prumpilg on COUGHS, ‘ COI-DS, SORE THROAT Everyone who suffers from frequent coughl, colds and lore throat should follow thl example of Mn. C. Burrell, St. Catharina, .5 Ont. She writes: "For many year: I have used ~ Buckley’: Mixture for cold: to which I am very ausseptible. These cold: are nlwuyl accompanied by wre throat. I find Buckley‘: Mixture act: promptly and thoroughly or: both.” A: the fin! sign of a cough or cold, rake this grand medicine. It instant relief by softening the phlegm (ha: clog: your air panagel; eale: breaching, soothe: and head. Don't experiment. Buy Buckley's. 2;, OVER 1O MILLION BOTTLES SOLD! bring: almost heal: your throat, clear: your 9 ‘l New And Safer Method SHALLOW BOXJBGJT 271.‘ TO 3' DEEP PREFEQABLY OF NEW - MATERIAL. WHEN SEEDS ARE SOWN, COVER WlTH PANE OF GLQSS AND ‘DARK PAPER UNTIL GERMINATION. Phil did not see or hear from Joyce agaln and, two months later, hrs ..upmarr.ne was ordered to Hawaii. un ms first night in Honolulu, he rah into uaves friend, Eric Llaw- renoe. "How's Dave?" he asbed, when they had exchanged greetings. Lawrence SIIOC-li hrs heau. "Not so good. he's quite broken up." "broken up? Why?" "navent you heard? Dave's due for a court rllartial." "What! A court martial!" Phll was stunned. "What happened " "Durrrrg maneuvers at night with the ships running without lrghts, the banning and another destroyer col- lided. Al. the inqurrv it developed that neglrgenceon Dave's part W8: responsrb e — other negligence or a mrstake. Anyway, the charge against him is culpable negligence in the performance of dutu." “When is the court to meet?" "Tomorrow." "What is Dave's story?" "fir: isn't talking. You know how e 1| Phil nodded. He ara KNOW how from t e Navy. "Resign?" "Right." Lawrence's face was 11n- thun I like to tell but. since you are you'd probabl like to "I would". said Phil. (To be Continued), for "flats" Pam" pots. Sirlce they water, boxes should be tight at the Joints and preferably held together by a wire enclrcllng the sides of the box and tzght/ened, Drainage hole; are more neces- sary than with sozl, this time to let water in rather than out. Flats or ‘ pans must be. clean-brush off old soil. The sand must be clean 0f soil and other foreign matter. sand seeds may surface; NOW DRAINAGE HOLES TO ADMlT WATER LINE bOTggM WITH CL Q BURLAP TO PREVENT SAND FROM FILTERING THROUGH HOLES FILL WlTHV§+ SAND NEARL OB l". SMALL SEEDS MAY BE ' SOWN ON SURFACE ' A method of growing seedlings 1n sand which is kept saturated has been developed by lrzperlrnenters with sallless plant culture, lnclud- ing United States Department of Agriculture who have sunny windows rn a warm room may find it easier than the more orthodox method of Llslng flat boxes filled with potting soil, The saturated sana msthcd calls - shallow boxes ~01‘ which are shallow flower are to stand in YVOFKQFS . will excludg light. place ill Pin or flit I l Amateurs Wash thoroughly, To keep sand from sifting through the drainage holes cover the bottom with clean burlap. Fill the flat or pan with the clean sand to within half an inch 0f the top. level the sand, then ccw your seed as in any seed bcx. Very fine be bl ndcasted on the larger seeds should be sown in rows and carefully covered. Cover the flat or pan with a pane of glass and a paper blanket which rshallow tray of water, so that the water comes to within half an inch 10f the sand surface. Be sure the ‘sand absorbs the water, Place the lwhole array in a sunny window, 1 and keep the sand covered wit-h the glass and paper until the seeds ‘sprout, then remove paper and ‘glass to admit air and sunlight. The seedlings may be exposed to . ;direct sunlight without injury, :0 long I’; the water level is main- tained constant They should grow sturdlly without damping-cf! and other troubles which often effect those grown in soil. It will not be necessary to feed the seedlings for sevtlal weeks. when they arrive at a. sine that you think calls for extra nourishment, prepare a nutrient solution, or liq- uid fertilizer, which may be made from a balanced plant food using one quarter the strength recom- mended for mature plants. To up- ply, pour off the water from your ent solution. After a few days drain off the nutrient solution and re- place with water. The water level should be a little h'* er than that of the nutrient solution. Seedling plants started in this manner may me transplanted w other boxes, with more mace, or grown to considerable sine by fol- lowing the some method; or they wbcmtyvfiddlfiflllllkbfllfillfv 1 a l b61111! horse l So far _ axed o. U115 we are contlnuawfind 1 ascn are the great majority of women t)‘ Oi. 5€€ U1 doesn't nuke the mstake of the srrl ers who make failures of their, mines m t0 878K!!!’ 111911’ 0W1 "llnfnot ulltrvate selfisnn - lthe contrary. she throws responsi- fits herblllty upon them. e. she knows that‘ o which they must go .1 . And so from the time, the backbon babies she tmches themlworld. to take blows and ccrne up smil- l , her to play the game squarel Ito people, and the 200d manner tray and replace it wit-h your mrtri- | THE COOK'S MARCH>18. 1940 i 0040-09490000090000000e000000000000004040000000000000000oeeeeeeovevvfifififi99O>0¢g..‘.*._.%.%’.~ x...’...............'.............‘...”'..‘.“.0......»”’....,‘,qqqqqeeeee000»; Women's Realm/Social and Personal;FashionsnLiterature “vvvOOOOQQXOOOO QQOOOQQ O0 QOQOOO-OOOOOOQOQOO§OOOOOOOOOOOOQOOO-OQ-QOOOQOOQOQ-OOO if . ...‘-.“§€ CIQSI DROP IISOIJITI Bifitogethericuilhardwheat powder Cuttnl and flour poonfuhontoa sbaetand a tureoftfi Time blcuita are nice eaten fbllfl .,hot, and are very quickly made. GOLDEN HG CONSEBVZ grapefrmt lmore if necessary l well l stand overnigh: * for pamper and indulge them She breeds ‘lion to others. - unu. The She, teaches them s stand on their mistakes w learn from them. so lea-n support trrenrseuves. Sh decency and seibrespect lthmg., she lets them g0 cording to their own patterns above all, not be left, desolate. ' Husband Help; Wife ix —— 1 have a won- we have been as o l Dear Mkss D derful husband and happy as any coupe could be fly in the amber except his mother, who feel. that her sOn 2s a poor, persecuted martyr because he helps me with the housework. The reason he does this is because that in order that we may buy a. home and fur- nish it I have kept 0n wllhdthe ab I had before we were marrre asmuch as I help with the money earning my husband feels that he should hep with the housawork. On the days when I come home too tired to cook a decent meal. he very sweetly tells me that he isn't a bit tired and will get dinner. This burn; and I am never with her for five mnutes that e does not tell me that lt ls the my mother-in-law up l (Continued on page 6. Col 7) l Clever Fortunes I-‘un to Play Cryahl-Guer 1t‘: a clever girl who can keep a man hanging on her every word. But that's just what your beau will do when you play crystal-guer- read his fate from symbols you pretend to see in an old fish bowl. "A bouquet of flowers! You're going to get married in the near future. And I see a legal-looking document-a legacy. A ship, too, promising an exciting jnumey." With a few tip: on traditional crystal-gazing :ymbol:, you d1:- cover all sort: of glamorous prophecies in your innocent glas: wl. Or find out hi: birth date-then reveal his horoscope. "Born between November 21 and December 20'! Sagittarius, the Archer, is your llgn. An adventurous life is yours: you're energetic, generous to the point of extravagance," you say. Purple i: his color, the amethyst hi: gem. Hi: lucky numbe ‘s three. Exciting. too, are the fortune: you can tell with tea leaves, cardl, dominoes, dice. You'll find the full directions for these in our 32-pin booklet. Tells how to deal the card: Bypsy style, gives the meaning of every card in the deck. Has a horo- scope for each month, tip: on "crystal-gazing," lively fortune game: for parties. Semi 20c in coins for your copy of Pun With Fortune-Telling to The Guardian Home Service. Be sure to write plainly your Name, Addrteu and the Name of booklet. p m-tenrng cup nlppy, grated cheese. Add milk to make a thick, drop batter. Drop by s greeiedbaking bake abnut l2 miativm It degree: bash and remove the stems of 1 ,pound dried figs. Chop these in- Jredzents fine and place in a ket- tle. Add the luce and chopped rind gof 1 large lemon, 2 large oranges Add 6 cups ;sug~a,g and 3 cups water, e little u the amount lo! lulce yielded by the fruit may tar-y slightly. Stir all tozether untu blended and let the mixture In the morrungi Iplace over hear and bung slowly ‘to the boiling point. Watch care» u‘ fully and stir often while cocking three-quarters of an hour. Pour the hot mixture into sterle as m. can. bu; a; we same, gkrsses and seal with paraffin sees to rt that the rad who l while hot. plodcer gets his feet well z '—-——i—————- shelspoil her children. Shedoes not Y in the ey cannot afford. She does ess 1n them. On ‘lnem a sense of duty and cf Oblzga- She teaches them instrik in rnem the krm of grrt that She carries on through auverstly and . nobody" L; going to ex- hardships until lt vans out in the ‘ ‘ V “at; sonl and OBURIILE-fii are and Johns the kind o meet; iflg-gimgxllldflwgbgfsfili The “mm of the intelligent mother doesn't try: mm W“! 11511813’ kcejgdher chJdren in perpetual] _ own feet. to use tnelrl .t:cr of credit the worldpown Judgment, and 1f they fig the bold rs. | 'I‘:le lntelzgent mother does not knows that ho one is really free who lis not. economically independent. she sees to rt that both her sons and daughters are taught. some trade or profession by whrch theyl e 188G065,’ [them that honor and honesty anal are thel foundation stones on which all hap- l prness and success in life must be; purlt. And, havng taught them these = their ovm ways and work out their lives ac- lntelligent A mother keep; something of her own l llrfe for herself so that when her. children go from ner she wlil have‘ : mends and interests of her own and Hold Him Spellbound‘ With New lndmvm 1': endeavor Till life i: gone. renderuniqtre service to whowishtotakeahollday of the “allbi" locations. ‘and the: ironed from the 1mm; lmeans of a tablespoon ‘been made very hot. , the folds ithere vrhile the Qiressed against lsort issue paper. WALL STRIPING DIONOTONY in the housewfefs complaint job. when finished, looks band; of paint around few inches from the the wood 1r:m_ and the distance from to- door and window casings. The best for the lanolin. or sheep {up base into the beauty bunnes. which is practically 11118 ovemrght. WALLS AND LIGHT than. tool Every member enjoy the dcliclotu flavor that Ema Fancy Tabla ' all baked mode. And Taiknottoomtrnhabotrtsouienew You mean to make a little late: on. Who idle: now will idle on forever Several firm: in Park, H1308, per-eons in a certain city or country but, wlsh to make others believe that they l i“! 14 d‘ are eLsewhere. companies cfgg: lmepflpomlgnd supply atatronery of the leading , “sh-l 14 cups seedless “m”, hotels. mail the letters at the proper time and place, and even vwmre Phvwsrarzru of the patron in the native clothes and scenery BEJUVBNATING RIBBON ON YOUR HAT I! ribbon bows on a hat begn to look crushed or limp they should be steamed for a minute or 1W0 that has The bowl of Ithe spoon should be slipped Psfde of the bows and held ribbon Ls gently f it with a pad of WILL BREAK SiYlPBIS ma)‘ be the answer to‘ Y that a plain one-color interior-wall paznt "all right." but let seems to lack "something." Striping means running narrow the walls, a parallel with stripe. its color. l the wcod depend on the sue of the room. the amcunt of decoration requzred to offset the objet-tlonal plainness. and also on ness or prominence of the than» l-t probably a curl frrend-when you consider that B5 percent. of all prescriptions Cart? of the skin have a here's a big woollen mill breaking with wan. e clean-Sine preparation 1m. , trsuaily rich in lunolln and a. cream a medical salve. though it's delicately scent- ed to hide the stench of the ongm. al fat. All mod reasonably priced too. and the salve heals chappgq Dark walls soak up light just as l IPWEe soaks VP WHY-er. A dark l COWS ‘respond to gentle treazmexz. are many the condor is the flies. A condor has been g» - lhave a wing-spread of four.» ._ lone-half feet. In making parchment, Dflper is run over mtnel tubes 1m ‘concentrated acid baths whmh g," ;the surface a gelatinous and rral; ruoent fzni-ch. " ' It pays to be kuld Janners are told: hzgh pr/rduczng 18 jl-H-elp-ful Hints For IIDOt walled room whmh ltimuiiy well illuminated byuggg: light is bound to require electric light in the Qlffliljig Wm, dull dark walls. light L; a Blflllfllifli. 111011 1m ahq ‘"88 b: lamest one m" hit-h Bade —-__. Rabbits are such a nuisance l“ New Zealand that lanclcvmsrg an assessed a monthly fine g0; keeping their numbers down. X10! to cows. y; ll)‘ are he. - and A filcker-‘s tongue is (cater! “m, a sticky substance useful 1n catch- ,‘ ing flflfS. Children or Nexus, i: ~' lhamas. buy sugar cane bt -, or yard, with a penny a m), ' 1151131 f8!0 Ba- loot as the A MomingSm ile NOT SO KIND The costermcn er smzled hauplly _at the thought r.vt his don . ‘CHIOYIIIQ a free iecd. : TN t "You're a good little girl to b; so kind to a dumb friend," he sad. "But who gave you thrse carrots?" * The good izttle girl also srrcled J happily . l "1 took them from the back oi I. your barrow,” she said, simply, DAUGlT-Tft PREFERRED "Give me a kLs-t, darling " "No, no. My mother is against klssng." , "But. my dear. I don't “all: m ~kiss your mother " _i_________ FALSE ECONOWY Don't economize on sash cord . Cheap cord will soon wear out. and lt is a difficult Job to replace 1:. If there are weatherstrips 0n the windows, these must be xmwm and are likely to be damaged dur- ing the operation. ym"_-_ of vour hm 0 The pure, appedzing flavor o! BEMA Extra Fancy Table Molaucs make: it of mprem: value ln home baking. Une it in making muflim, cakes, ginger- bread, cookies, etc. Ill; will EMA Mohue: impart: to it’: on pod (or SOLD IN DUI-K ll‘ YOII OIOCII’! —HRANI)_ BARBADOS MOlASSES Smartest Ciiskcally cut casually cor- rect . Jtut what every young girl and woman neess for town and country this Spring. A pastel tweed akirt with neat and decorative tab: ,'to hold the belt in place, and I contrasting silk or rayon shirt, ‘make the perfect ensemble. Top this costume with a Jacket you jneve on hand or make it of one lcolor. like a. shirtwalst dress. ‘I'm: yersatile style has so many pos- fslbiiltha that you will want to ‘make it up several ways. ; Style No. 3200 is designed for ‘sizes 12, 11, 1B, 36, 38. 40 and 42. ,Size 36 requires 1 7-8 yards of 54- linch material for the skirt; 2 1-3 yards of 39-inch for the long JbQVQd blouse. I Bend fifteen (the) (coin i: pro- teredl tor pattern. write plainly Your Nune. Audra: and nvin number Be cure to mu the nu vou wish. style No. 3200 Sine ..--n|--:a:-:: ltreet Addflll GIG . Province 'ol!0Tl|ER$ FEEL SAFER Fashions And Winter Sty|€$ SlZES l2 ~42