i" p. l i‘ - . \ l s i . . ‘l . t In’. l i "i i i .I .. . ‘I _ a ~ t i s g .- l i i‘ i‘ we p -.- PAGE TWO - - -- -_ - - - - Lwomank Re alm I Social and Personal I Fash Serve llim tlte Coffee that's fioadta tfielastfimp” ET’S all take this opportunity for meeting and knowing the fine boys pf Canadtfs Army. Let’s turn out to see the parades and other activities. Above all, let every home within reach of our troops try to entertain at least one soldier during the week. mixwgu nous: com: M, A llllME 0N By Serve flie Boys THE RANGE Bentley Ridge l DOYIESTIC WORRIES “I shank. sleep to-niglit, I shall be terrified of the rats!" Alter Joe had gone to get stores from his “\\'harc," Mrs. Daintry grew fluntic with protest. The roar- mg wood fire, which Joe had made to air the mattresses, failed to add much comfort to the scene. The room was thick with dust, dull and dingy, with its old-fashioned. flow- ered paper, horsehair couch, and lllioleumed floor, "it's a little rough. perhaps, but- ahl-it Wlll look better when its cleaned." Captain Daintry tried. to coax his wile into checrfulness. "And who is gcin to clean it? I cant do it, and ‘m sure Myrls can't. No taps, no lights, no cook- ing arrangements, but an old range!" Alemories of their Brook-st. flat, wizh its decorations by an ultra- nicdern artist, swam before Mrs. Daintrys eyes. “Now, mother--” Myrle, lym - thetic and slightly impatient, pat her shoulder. “I wasn't brought up to things like this I’vc never know what it is to be without two or three servants -or at least one. My mother always kept four." “Things have changed in these days." Captain Datntry attempted to assure her. but Mrs. Daintry insist- ed hysterically: In “It will have to be completely re- decorated and done up before we can live here. We'll have to have new furniture, a. bathroom. I can't stay here as it ls-I retusel" aptain Dalntry looked so miser- able that Myrle came to his rescue. ‘We ll have to stay here for to- night. anyhow. The first thing to do ls to get some food. That man said he would bring over some bread and eggs and bacon, There's tea in the picnic-box in the car. I'll boll a ket- tle on this fire." She slipped her ieet into her sod- den shoes; and, taking a. candle, made her way gingerly into the gloom of the lean-to kitchen. There was a huge old iron kettle on the range. Lifting it seemed to take most of her strenyth, and to fill it she had to carry it out to the pump they had located earlier, out-side by the fence. lt was raining again. in gusts, which shook the dark tow- ering heads of thc pines. By the time she had overcome the diffi- culty of holding the gigantic kettle with one hand and Dumping with thelother, she was wet to the skin a ag n. She scuttled inside at last. one thought foremost in her mind, "Mother is perfectly rlglit~we simply can't stand this!” When she came into the living- room her father was saying: "I don't see how we could manage lt—ah!--really. I've worked every- thing out to the last shilling. There (Continued on page 8. Col 3) UP-TO-THE-IVIINUTE iii-t DESIGN If you can crochet, you can make this stunnin hat at very little ex- se. The crown is high with a. roll brim and N0 1114 nished with a. fringe. n Fitter-n No. 1114 contains list of materials needed. illustration of stitches end ompletc instructions. To order pattern: Write or send above picture wttn your name and address with l5 cents in coin or stomps to Needlework Bureau, Charlotte- town Guardian To Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department Design No. i114 ‘ mums-L----~--—--------__.___ smrmrr impnnss----- m11__._...___--- PROVDICI:__-__....- 2 Grincls Drip and Regular Roasted and Packed in Canada oouoovvovooooloooooocoo THE COOK'S CORNER o+>oooo+oooo~a++oooo+o~ COTTAGE CHEESE PII l cup cottage cheese 2-3 cup sugar 2-3 cup milk 1 tablespoon melted butter Bait 1-8 teaspoon vanilla 2 egg yolks Mix the i edisnts In the order given. Bake n one-crust pie shell 1n the usual way. Cool slightly, cover with meringue made of two egg whites, two tablespoons sugar and brown in a slow oven (MSd). TOMATO ASPIC Tomato Asplc ls especially gold when served with a tangy son: cream dressing. To make the as lo soak 2 tablespoons granulated a- tln 5 minutes in cold water. im- mer, covered, for a) minutes, 8 cups tomatoes, 2 bay leaves, 4 celery leaves, 2 onion slices, 6 whole cloves teaspoon salt. 1-4 teaspoon paprika, teaspoon granulated sugar, 2 par- sley sprigs and 1-2 cup boiling water. Strain. reheat to boiling and pour over gelatin mix. stlr until disolved, add tablespoon lemon Juice, pour into a mold and chili until firm. JELLIED TUNA Here is a. recipe for Jellled tuna. with mayonnaise that will yield 8 rtions. Dissolve a. package of emon flavored gelatin in one pint hot water. Add 2 tablespoons vin- gar, teaspoon salt and 1-2 teaspoon black pepper. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in one cup flaked tuna fish, one cup cooked canned or fresh peas, 2 tablespoons chopped pimento, 1-2 cup mayonnaise and tablespoon paprika. Chill until firm. Unmold on crisp lettuce and gar- nish with mayonnaise and paprika. 382 Livings DIES AT 98 SAINT JOHN. N, B- June 26- (CPl-Mrs. Sarah Drummond Gal- livan, believed to have been Saint John's oldest resident, died today at the age of 98. Leisure . The Woman's Realm Ml There are so many of me- Tlaeres the me in the looking gloass There's the mo that the neigh ts see There's the me that I om, alas. There's the me l used to be There's a new me when I awake- There are so many of me. No wonder my arches schei MAY RICHSTONE. ARMY TH’ Here's»; conservation note from the boys in the camps: ‘they've that colorless nail polisi. keeps their buttons shlnier for g longer time. With every bit of metal _so precious - on your bugs, your Jewelry. you" buttons - use the polish to protect the metal from scratches and keep it shiny and bright. Besides the sink brush, tree c small round one with three- nch handle, to clean frying pan or 000k. ing dish. Boll the brushes in soda water every few days and drv in the sun. ' Genuine pearls and diamonds will squeak or rattle when rubbed EBB-inst dry loo. distinguish- ing them from counterfeits. Male asperagus plants are heav- ier and yield more spears, while spears from female plants are larg- er and better quality. OF REAL VALUE If sne is a. bride who will begin her new life In a. miniature apart- ment with few material blessmgs but an appreciation of nice things, then for her the gift of some lovely something that she wouldn't be able to have other wise. Real lane place doilies, for instance, with linen nap. klns to match. 01' a. china tea set, or service plates of modern pottery, lovely and expensive. Or c sterling silver tray or an old silver coffee urn, 0r s. hand quilted throw of pure silk, flowered on one aide. plain on the other. IOI ll TIME FOR I§AIR5 I‘! your furnace will need new pipes next fall, If your radiators need new valves, if your boiler will need new insulation. this is the time of year to see to it instead of walt- ln until the next bus season. next two or rec months are naturally normally quiet ones 1n the heat: contractor's men- dI-r- 00mm" '. he in in a beb- te-r position evote attention to home heatin, oblema during this period; furthermore, his stock of repair parts is fullest just now and he in able to offer a wider range of equipment and replacements. Another factor which suggests having the heating plant attended to now la that it will cause least inconveniences to all concerned to carry out such repairs at l. season of the year when the sys- tem is not ln operation. Repairs can, of course. be effected in the vdnter but as many of such repairs involve shutting down the flit-em the summer is the most comfort- able season in which to have such work accomplished. FLOORS "GLAMORIZED" BY USE OF STENCIL! An old floor nan be glgmoflzed with stencfs. In a. young girls zoom the floor was enamelled white and a two-color flower sten- cil appllsd at wifelxi spaced inter- val~ gave real swank to an old and badly worn floor, In another -_ a study bed-room - one large equate deslin repeated to make an all-over minim wcrk"d magic in camouflag. thc maven floor. HOW TO OBTAIN A PICKLEI) PINE FINISH a pickled finish can be produced it on yellow pine by rubbing in a. coat or rather thin vrhlte oil paint. After the paint is dry the surface is sanded and given a. coat of flat varnish. When this is dry, either paste or liquid wax is applied. For a gray effect, gray paint is used Instead 0f white. If the wood is open-grain In character, a white filler can be spied. When the siuplus filler is wiped off, the fill- ed part will show up white, GAY OUTSIDE COLORS GIVE HOME NEW LIFE Many an otherwise dull and splritless house has been made to glow with new life by repainting the exterior in gay and lively col- ors. In choosing the color scheme care should be taken to avoid com- binations that do not properly harmonize. The following are s. few suggested combinations: Forest-green roof, with pale coral sides and deeper com.‘ trim and red-orange doors. Russet-colored roof. white sides and white trim, mist-colored shut- ters and front door. Brick-red roof. off-white sides and trim and the front door In Dutch blue. A blue-gray roof, light yellow sides, with daffodil-yellow trim and deep gray for the front. door, A blend of red and deep orange for the roof. yellow walls, orange shutters. and a. dark blue front popularity. Parents worry about W Needlecraft/ For The Home A hint for service workers in l-lll-B Practical cover-all apron, simil- ar to that prescribed for nurse's aid work. _Wear it at home. and feel your efficiency-rating go up. Style No. 2504 is desl ed for . Medium. an forge. Medium size requires 3 3-4 yards 35-inch fabric. No. 3148, sizes 12, l4, 15. 13. 20. 38 38. 4°. £2 and 44, is a separate pattern. To order pattern: Write or 99nd picture with your name and ad- dress with I0 cents coin or stem to the Needlecraft Bureau, Char ottetown Guardian. The Charlottetown Guardian Needlecraft Department. Style No. 2m Name Street Address Sure-Quick lloliel from Asthma and llay l-‘mr with KELLOGGS THE CHARUTIVTETOWN GUARDIAN “""'“ AAAAA ask‘ m 4 Dix Says- {Oorothy 1 l t OUR SWEET GIRL GRADUATES SHOULD BE SELF-SUPPORTING Men Will Be Scarce When War Is Over; Getting Husband Called Sheer Luck ‘rhe schools are sending forth their ormlea of sweet ‘IE1 graduates who are about to face their first great battle with life. It a spectacle that always brings a lump into the throat of the beholder, for these little soldiers axe so brave, so gallant, so full of hope and faith, so ill-prepared for the dan era they must meet and so bewildered by them, and we old- sters know t at many of them will be maimed and broken in the struggle. many will be slain. Every year this same human drama. is enacted when our girls, u the ironic phrase goes, “finish their education," but. never before has it had such significance as It has now when war has changed the status of their sex and when their country is calling upon the womanpower, as well as the manpower, to save It in its hour of need. ‘mic world which the sweet plrl graduate of today enters is a different world rom that which her mother knew. No time now for pleasant dalliance, for idle flirtatious, for gay parties, for s. trifle hbrowed and very advanced, of which mother te in speaking of her own girlhood. Now everything is grim reality, The party is over. There is no make-believe work. It is back-breaking and heart-breakin labor. Girls are not embroiderlng doilies. ey are making precision machines. They are not going buggy riding with their best beaux. They are not screaming at the sight of a mouse. ‘They! are daring death without the quiver of m eye d. All these altered conditions have brought up strange, new, difficult problems that the modern Irl has to solve, for well she knows that life will never be for her what t was for her mother. when Mother was l rl she didn't know whether she wanted to go into business or not. Daughter knows she will have to be self-supporting. or starve- It never crossed Mother's mind that she wouldn't marry and have a husband to take care of her- Daughter knows that after every war there are not enough men left to go around, and that even if she does get l. husband he may be so crippled. that she will have to be the breadwlnner. Mother made being a woman an alibi for sloppv work. Daughter knows that war took the sex out of work, and that if a woman expects a man's salary she must dc s. man's labor. so when the sweet gllrl graduate of today sits down to try to plan her future, she should do a. ot of serious thinlnng and try to decide on some occupation for which she not only has a natural bent. but that she will be interested in doing the balance of her life. There is no use In her kid- ding herself into thinking that it doesn't make any difference whether she goes in for stenograph because Jane is doing it. or modeling because it must be fun to do nothlng but put on expensive gowns, because she won't be doing it for long, anyway, for the chances are that she has en- listed for the duration and the war with hard times is never going to be over for her. Nor need she deceive herself into the wishful thinking that It is not necessary to make herself proficient in her job because some man will soon come along and marry her and she will stand before a counter in- stead of behind it. When this war is over there will be millions more women than there are men in the world, and ettln s. husband will be an act of God, or sheer luck. So every girl shou d ma. e herself an expert in her line of work in order that she may command a. fat pay envelope instead of a thin one. I ho that when the sweet girl graduate of '42 asks herself "where do l go rom here?" she will see that the only road. that leads to success is the rockv one of hard work, and that most of the women who travel are those who do commonplace, everyday things, such as superlative cooking, or tying a bow on a. hat that makes every woman want one. or cutting a dress so that it takes twenty pounds off a fat woman, or nursing sick people. But whatever she does and wherever she goes here's wishing the zyivtelethglrl, graduate good luck, and. as the Mexicans say, "may God walk er.’ l‘ “ ““““ the wear and tear on the living ‘ room rug and furniture, but still éA MC rning-srnit€ they want to keep their "Jitterbug- wers" at home. O-OOQOQOOOQQQQ-QQnQQQQQ In - In many homes the problem has beerli) solved to the_ satisfaction of all a rum us om t e - YRWATE meaty p r0 In h base Jones had gone to ‘he trlnenia, but the inane chatter of two women seated immediately In front of Zlim at last became more than he could stand. He tapped one of the women on the shoulder and said: "Pardon me, madam, but I cant Clever Chart Shows You How to Play the Plano hear." The woman snorted. "You're not. supposed to~thls 1,; a private con- versatlon," she snapped. Bobby was in a store with lus‘ mother when he was given candy by one of the clerks. “What must you saiy, Bobby?" “Charge it." he repl ed. GASEMENT GAME ROOM ' REDUCED RUG CUTTING (Lterbug dancin —- a delight to the youngsters an a source of m. gret to parents - still reigns 1 What delightful fun to play the piano and get gay compliments wherever you gel You can so easily learn to play these days with a clever keyboard chart to help. The chart is a "life-size" repro duction of your piano keyboart With each key is pictured the not e -A, B, C. D. E. l‘. G-os It 8PM"- on sheet music. When you stand the chart up behind your real keyboard you see at once which keys to strike for which notes. Easy then to read simple sheet music right at the start. As for popular hits and complicated cc- ccmpanimenta, you can play them this short-cut way. Just follow the melody line with your right hand and play simple harmonizing chords with your left. A table shows by number the keys to play for these harmonizing chords; the numbers correspond It numbered keyl on your chart. Soon you have quite o repertoire, enter tnin friends! Our 24-psge Instruction book Ir eludes keyboard chart, shown yoi how to read music, ‘play chords iv oll keys, undentan rhythm Ind rudiments of music. Hal three ens; popular pieces. _ ind i5 cents in cclna for you copy of QUICK COARSE IN PIAlV. PLAYING b0 The Gizarlottetow Guardian, Home service. Address Be sure to write plainly your NAM" ADDRESS. and the NAME of lr struction book. flame 5..."... Address ions 1 Literalur swanky debuts. for playing at a career if you are . - JUNE 29. 1.942 f E SEVEN STEPS IN CANNING First step in calming ls to select, sort and grndc good fruit '1". of canned food depends upon the quality of the raw material used ‘Nam’ Check all equipment. Needed are sharp knives, a colander. bowls meal- urlng cups, enamel pic plates, wooden spoons, n wide mouthed funnel a jar lifter and sterilizer which may be the wash boiler, own or stem:- pressure cooker. c; lee that It Isn't cracked and there are no chill! l! l ll with water, cool and Invert to test. Test jar for lea the rim or cover, . . 31$: . .. a Toot rubber rln s. To be effective Workqulckly pack the Ia tllfll m they must be afoot-Io, Bend "m, "mun. ' Pack corn, beans and d ubl ' _ ztlsgi.'.i".tt'a°“.ttf.il°'3ftl “T332 nilnwh - i. t» now mt we ac tratlon for even sterilization. I-‘cr processing. aillllst sterilized m‘: hen and to!!!’ I'm-m "allmt do Ire clamp ars nd s1 "l" :9; "m" own loan. Wlth screw to]! m». umw "mm" a “I'll; To remove or bubbles. after Illllng dip the blade of o. knife In belllng water and run down and around Inside of the ll!‘ until all hubblu have disappeared completob.