quicker baker \ it, I I I Best Yeast-the dtcsen favorite with commercial and home bakers alike-now comes in o NEW white dress to sscl in its extra strength and keep its freshness at the peak of efficiency. This means / better-textured bread and buns for you. Insist now more than ever on BEST YEAST. Born and bred in the Maritimes, it's Canada's best for baking-and best for eating, tooi 9E5 $51 fisffas flmtzhg; Besfjbt flea/fl! ’/It11|\\\ / x Until“ I time-with lighter, whiter, and ‘ RETAIN COLOUR Tn keep beets and red cabbage from 11151111: illPll‘ rich red colour, adrl ailoul one tablespoon of lemon ‘like to the water in which they re_cnp>kcd_ For Streng and Full Flavou ih w? Lger iPJ-lblla ‘Speaking "Panic" Die polled by Horne Study Member Makes Bad Impression So you never thought hey‘! 0* you to speak! You can't avoid being asked sooner or later, if you belong to s grnup. And evcn if you only say one little sentence, you sound love~ b or awful depending on whether w not you know public speekisu rules. Maybe you get stage fright, make a pnor impression before you even open your mouth. Simple "Don'ts" help prevent this. DON'T scramble to your feet-take your time DON'T hold anything while meek- I g. It helps your poise to practise enuncintion at home. Then you're sure you won't ruin people's iml pression of you by saying "Yes. ar c'middee's maken the sam- wlcbes"; you'll enunciate clearly "Yes, our committee is making the sandwiches." Important, too, to be up on par- larnentary rules~ to know how to address the chair. Learn to speak up confidentlyi Our SZ-page booklet tells how you ean improve your vocabulary, voice, pronunciation. Describes how to prepare .a speech, hold attention, be at ease. Gives sample speeches, rules of parliamentary procedure. Bend 20c in coins for your carry ' p! "Public Speaking Self-Taught" In the Charlottetown Guardian Home Service, Addres Be sure to write nlainly your name, address. and the name of booklet. n._. Street Address Living f? Kill UUPPL! I love eotfee. I love tca. I love you. And you love me. No more coffeet No more beat No more lovet That cannot be! Tea I'll weaken But lovei I see How that abounb It doesn't Brow In coffee ground-l. Nor need the 891m‘ Tea leaves’ shade- It. wongt ugtivei £11k; I'm no re - Across an emvt! "will?" 5"," 1'11 only smile. and think "1 him- From The Boston Herald. WATCH YOUR. STEP m our homes the seventh col- mm_ qareleemeds which causes sc- cldent ——~ki11s 153150 persons yearly through falls alone. People need- lessly fall downstaire. 911mb“ "*”'e\' toys and over r085» OLIAN A Anu- you've turned l! lit-Ill? attic and cellar thoroughly clean these places. prevent Inorg- taneous 0cm t‘ . Rubbish sine the seventh column, the careless- ness that destroys lives and ma- beriels. CINNAMON TOAST when making cinnamon toast, now that sugar is short, you might use honey instead. Heat the honey (strained) and pour over hot but- tered toast and sprinkle with clans»- mon. _.._._. TAKE CARI Many host-inflammable cleaners are be ng diverted to war use, and removing clothing spots requires extra caution. Don't light the stove soon after using elesn g fluids in the kitchen. CIIINTZ ENVELOPE! PROTECT LINENS A gracious small gift for a fastidi- ous bride would be chintz envelopes for keeping her company linens 1m- mflwlettiv fresh and ever so delic- elcll‘ perfumed. Even in the most particular household, seldom-used linens Eel dull? and mussy looking, IIUITOIILMPII 8 cups milk. I s-s tablespoon flour 1 1-2 tmblewoons cornstarch. ll Method: Mix the flour and corn- starch with l-i-cup cold milk to a. thin, smooth paste. Then scald the restraining milk. Beat the egg yolks. add the sugar and alt. Add a smell amount 4st tihe scolded milk to the flour paste and some to the egg and sugar mixture. Pour each mix- ture slowly into the remander of the swirled milk. Stir together to prevent lumping and cook until thick. Remove from time fire, add the butter and flavoring. Oool sontewhat. Line a. baked pie shell with well drained canned fruit. Peaches, pears, or plums could be used here. Pour the cooled filling over the fruit in the pie shell. Gover with s meringue made by beating the 2 whites until stiff. but not dry, an adding 4 tablespoons sugar. Bake in a mod- erately slow oven (325 ces- F ) tor to 15 minutes, or until {TORI l2 the meringue is M681)’ blilwned- Leisure The Woman's Realm on e “fir... envelopes of chintz u»; easy to make, cltarmine to use, and can be taken out frequently and flnsed in rich suds to keel! “"311” colors bright and gay. They 1'8 0m’- of those rare things-a thoroughly practical idea that looks fresh and frivolous. i Yiill WOIIEII WIIO SIIFFEI\ liiii’ iiASilES u you mel- not flashes. dimmer. dlltrell 0! ties". blue spells, are week nervous or irritable — due to the ‘middle age" period in a woman's life-take Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable C ound. It's helped thousands upon thousands of women to relieve such symptoms. Made in Canada. Plnkham‘: Com- pound is worth trying! Yes Gan iio Iilee Control Qlestluss And Answers ‘u Qlllilels and LIIIOIQ‘Q|\ n1 "hi"! will 11mm In The aunt-am ll l Miller feature each day. The lltseltlons are those which have ‘iewxbcd the Wartime Prices and l" ' 5°!“ from hoasewivee in vi _ Nllflll- The answers erg u. ' l fin‘ “longer! ‘he P's control as: tam?! "m" h "Emil! to the Women's min" “hi”?! Committee or the ‘Wwtisne Price; up fr“, Board‘ '°"'W"l Refill-rs. Charlottetown, Q- W!’ 10w‘ yea-rs now we have rented the same house and have al- Weys had the use of the garage. In 1941 the property changed hands but the rental continued on the savlne basis. Reoentlyo my landlord bod me if I wished continue us- 1B8 the garage I woud have to pay Ill lddl Onal rental. I; my land- lord rmiiltcd to charge garage ren- tal en he did rfbt do so during the basic period? A If you have been using the gar- BBe constantly, your landlord can- not add rent. for me garage, which has always been included in the house rental. If vou will report the complete details to your nearest Wartime Prices and Trade Board office. the matter will be investig- ‘Dorothy Dix Says-i WICKED WOMAN SUFFERS LESS THAN YOUNG GIRL BADLY MATED Husbands With New Job Qut-of-Town Cflllllflt Always Take Wife With Him At Once 1x53141551) yesrsoldlgotmsrrfedtoamm who has been a good, kind husband w me. and 9531'“; gig’ 1 i‘ now 9 years old. six months ago I met a man an“ w u‘ I (‘Home desperately in love. He is in love with m0 and ivomwlli: on nvmg u I from my husband and m 1 feel that age l in u canliitii hudllbutnii lieiiei-aiiié triigulgliilibtitnihai ~wm K v g p € g l‘ , Bil C5 ' m I know I made a mistake in marrying so young but must I Ev for it the rest of mv life? IX-When I was 14 ANSWER-I em afraid so. It has been said that we have to pay for our mistakes more dearly than we do for our sins, and certainly that is true of marriage, me wickedest woman in the world 1; not punished so severely for her misdeeds as is the innocent and unsophisticated little girl who blunders into marryins the m“! ml“- I think that there is nothing else in life so pathetic as the fact that. prac- tically every wmepbv marrlflse is the n11; o1 a ' ~ ' . An adolescent boy and girl rush into marriage too soon and are tired of each other almost be- fore the ink an their mflfllifle lint!" has dried. Young e mistake a passing fancy for a gtggiiiless passion. Girls marry drunkards or phllander- ers thinking they have some magic by which they can reform them. Boys marry girls out of their own class be- lieving that their love will cover t-hl lack of the girls’ education and breed- ing. Countless couples marry under the delusion that. love is enough and that l! they can only be together they won't mind being hungry and cold and shabby, and spending their time dodgln bill-collectors. And for these mistakes, entered into wit such hope. such faith, such Rood intentions, they .v with long years of misery. of heart-starvation, o1 poverty, or wretche , of stoical enduranoepr bitter fights that. lead 17o the divorce court. And, alas, the pity of it. is that there is no way we can escape the consequences of our mistakes. What. we have done, we have done. It. is a blot on our Lives that not all our tears can wash out. We can get a. div- orce, but we can't: get away from the better memories of the broken faith and blasted hope of that. first marriage. We can't for t the wrecked home. And sometimes we have to make the cruel cho e between the chlldsken we love, who are bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh and a new ve. That is the desperate situation in which you find yourself. Miserable, and there is no happy solution of it for you. For when a woman has to choose between her child and her lover, she tears her heart in two. No fin? can tell her what; to do. We can only be sorry for her and say God e p er, DEAR MISS DIX-We have been married more than s. year. time we have never been separated. Now my husband is considering a lob out oi town. He wants to go and leave me behind and then send lcr me later on. I will not. agree to that, as I think I should go with hm wherever and whenever he goes. Please advise. A WIFE, IFE CANNOT ALWAYS G0 WITH HUSBAND _ANSWER.—C1rcumstances alter cases. As a general principle, it is advisable that a wife should say to her husband, as Rut-b did to Naomi, "whether thou goest. I will go," but even that depends upon whether Friend Husband invites her to go along with him or not, and whether she ivlil be an asset or a liability if she does go. ‘And the wife should use some discretion and common sense about de. cldlng this matter. If the husband is going to a new place to take a 10b with which he is unfamiliar and which he doesn't know whether he will be able to hold or not, and if he has no place to take his wife, then she ls certainly cramping his style and injuring his chances of making a suc- cess by insisting on being taken along. , One or the big headaches of this war is the wives who, with their cluldren, have left comfortable homes near their families and friends 1o follow their husbands to the training camps where they have had to live in trailers, or hastily thrown together huts, or in over-crowded apart,- ments where they have had noneof the comforts or vOIIVGDlQHCES to which they were accustomed. Maybe these wives think this shows their devotion to their husbands, but, if so, it is a selfish devotion became it has added immeasurably to the anxieties and worries of the soldiers who already have plenty of trials and tribulations. without. having the family burden added to them. - As a matter of fact, there are no wives of whom their husban‘ get S0 fed 11D us they do with those who tag them everywhere they go, and who never let them have any freedom of action. So with a husband as l with anyone else. it is manners for a wife to be asked before she invites herself m go along with him. 4 In that PROPER. EDUCATION FOR Z00 SUPERINTENDENT DEAR MISS DIX-I am ap aling to you for help. I am a fresh. man at one of our dlstlnguishe universities. My work is difficult, and demands serious study, but. how can 1 study if the boys upstairs are con- tinually banging tennis bails and footballs and playing on the piang md tootlni on their trumpets and clarinets and trombones and taming a peace ul atmosphere into a A-l am session? Nor 1s that all. I see mto ave struck the ackpot as far as room- mates go. I never know what I am going to fin floating around in my room. One boy collects bats and spiders. I was absolutely horrified to find three bats warming my bed the first night. and with four turtles in , the bathtub, and now he is getting lonely for snakes. . The other boy has a faraway look in his eyes and ls seriously con- itcmplstlng entrance into the Mohammedan reli ion. also revels in bats and spiders, tenni them "sweet and lovab e," and between the bats and spiders and the Mo ammedan-to-be, I am going batty. It. is im- possible bo change until March. What. can I do? , DESPERATE AND LOW ANSWER-And they call this the higher education! musicians and the naturalists I should think you would be prcparln for a padded cell in a lunatic asylum, instead of the brilliant. career for w ch your fond parents think the are fitting you. My advice to you is to ave a heart-to-heart session with your clean of men and tell him your troubles. If he doesn't. listen. see if t e Society l for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals won't come to your rescue. Biiftd immediately, oua high price. Is he allowed t0 do Q. My grocer reduced the price this? on certain commodities below that A. Certainly: Aretalier may he was charging in tlhe basic per- charge less than his highest basic lod, Sept l5 to October ll. 1941. period price. But he may come back Recently he reverted to the previ- up to that price at any time. mats Y it“ tables 2.‘ If <7» "i ILK iseessntial to goodhealth andtitesi is no more delicious way of drinking it than in e cup of nourishing Fry's Cocoa. Fry's Cocoa, made with milk, ofiesl you more than the well-known health value ofthe milk. This delicious cocoa gives you extra energyaewell. A cup of Fry's istrulya sup of food. And remember-the unrivalietfcitoeoisty flavour of this famous Fry's Cocoa is the result of more than 200 years experience. * Include a thermos o] Fry's/or the war worker's lunch. It is rich in food value and makes a most appetizing hot drink. y a a. “(,0 F000 1M Between the ' liiichell fijl§_ CHARLOTTETQWN GUARDIAN ______ 301:. Woman's Re aim '1. Social and Personal r Fashions lirweatee are aesdedistrnedi- stsly ier so I-Y trades: Stenognphers Send fortbis free booklet of life in the . .A.l". Wrlte_to Director of Manning, R. . . ., Jackson Building, Ortsw or the nearest Recruiting Centre listed below. Recruiting Centres d Vancowevflcigury, Edmonton, Sanita- teen, Regina, Winni- peg, Nerth lay, Windsor, London, Hamilton, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec, Mcneten, Halifax. T pore Driven Cooks . . . Fabric Workers . . s Clerks. FEBRUARY I1. 1943 OIN THE R.C.A.F. s t = get into this new, exciting life in eromantic fighting Service. After initial training ; a z first st Manning Depot : s then trade courses s : : you'll take an active pan in winning the was by releasing men from ground jobs for active duty in air crews. You'll be busy from morn ‘til night with parades, duties and recreation. You'll enjoy plenty of good food, fresh sir and fun. You'll love this life! Regular hours s s it careful supervision . . . plenty of rest . . . make- cheeks glow and eyes sparkle with health. You'll meet new faces . . . make new friends. . . . become better fitted to play your pan in’ the new world to come. What's more, you'll have the satisfaction of knowing you are \ playing a real pert in helping the United Nations win this war! R-Cfi. . R I mm»..- ail/anti s Tbs R.C.A.F. needs girls, egos f8 I0 4!, wilb s! lust Hi bScbool Entrance. Apply “your nonfat 0 OPPORTUNITIES FOR PROMOTION Recruiting Centre Hours McndcysJuesdays, Thursdays and Fri- days. 9 can. to I psnq Wednesdcyfi 9 ss-ln. te s esn.§ Sqttndays, 9 can. to I pun-r TUESDAY AND FRIDAY EVEN- INGS RESERVED‘ IO l W O M E N AFRICAN?! ONLV. 11m on m. 1...... By JOSEPH OHADWICK CHAPTER. XXXIR It. was not until John was driving Harriet. home that he learned oi her encounter with Virginia. Dane. lie felt a little shocked as Harriet. told him about it—shocked at Harriet for provoking the scene. "I told her aha better not try tn come between you and me." Harriet. related, in a choked voice. "And she said bold as you please, ‘I could take John Stacy away from you by merely raising my tlngeri’ Then spiel, ‘And don't be surprised i1 ‘Do what?" asked John. d "Why, take you sway from me ' "Nonsense!" said John. v ‘She didn't mean that-she doesnt care anything about me. She lust. said that because halite was. fy at you- u etyllellic. son °g A QIIAPIIJLY BLIP First. Aid to the Silhouette Make the most of your frocks by doing Justice to your flmue- Blwrt mt to a. nice. smooth silhouette is s well-cut slitp like this one. with a shapely bra section and lower section carefully des ed to elim- inate unsightly wrink es. Make it in rayon and feel repaid when you see how well your frocks set over it. in cotton. and have some to wear later 01h PIVHDOI ...."'...= "ell "°“'°“t'°.i'i errata; . "8 an to know wliatmyou intcnd to do m to the ‘ .p e lit a iteiuiii “y'all; should r do "You meslslkybltltire a0 V0 title“: r at. an no o *""'°"-~*=» a lie bessn g um e was mums um Virginie might cam out her threat. With a si b. h! waged 1-. clg out of t. e all‘ window, then s W“! hi! "m you want me to d0. PI nvee him. "Oh. John “Etmfl game's-led rlsht 1W1: That would show herl We fir!“ have a v"! quiet "ddinl- h dab it's foolish of me — but — 0 - our, . I m so afraid I_ milht 1°" ‘l ‘Not. e chancel’ John as!“ her. but. his voice sounded hollow. "However. I'll do as vou Wilh- W° l be married as soon asésc wfillylgénif I ilk m!" be mm advriliis m‘; until Mr Nd not stand th I'll tell you whct I'll tic-I'll hone léihnt tgtnormw 05nd‘ find ‘on just en e ns ge beak- d-llarriets eyes lit up. "Oh. John. w you " "I promise." he said. As Harriet ass cheek sgainstrhés. he‘ eld heft-ed oee, but“: wave o espe r engul him- heart cried out that this was all gran .t He shouldn't be msrryinl s e . . . . when ints repolned her fath- er in Room after her c th Harris urea o herself. How absurd of her to have threatened to take John steer away from the other Blrl when John didn't mean a thing to herl But she had so en ed by Hamlet's at.- tsckmtskn‘ lgghtba she bad wanted to s Now, as a result cf the delradins scene, her emotions were in such a stein that. she felt she had to lit away-get ofl’ by _berseii'. Bhs could e crowded room, the noisy chatter and the blaring or- chestra. Pleading a headache she told her father she wanted to leave. He escortcd her out. to her car. As he was swvbigs there at. the hotel. she told him e needn't accompany on "khfif. from Weshlnlibll- to ly. me hi!‘ r Needlecraft For The Home vou dim u 7.. m “t” unions‘ qpiutagvgholti sufleus could w!’ mhfle be Ooatlnusfl -