; .STOP PRESS 1 AUCTION ADVERTISEMENTS APPEAB ON PAGE S OF THIS ISSUE. HOPEFUL OUTLOOK POST-WAR PLANS & YOUTH That young people are desirous of accepting responsibility for the postwar days was made evident by the enthusiastic and objective discussion which took place when representatives of Y.W.C.A. clubs met together to consider how they could prepare for the days of peace. The discussion ranged over many aspects of post-war planning, including the following questions: How could clubs help their members to resist the, lure of well- j paid but "dead-end" jobs? Was unemployment in the immediate post-war period a danger? If so, could clubs help their members to prepare for it by learning new skills and becoming more efficient in their own work, in their leisure time? How can slumps be prevented was! another question that claimed the attention of the meeting. Some felt that one way to avoid them was continuation of central methods of control, such as rationing. : The meeting decided to ask the Army Education Welfare Service for help and advice, and to set up a small committee to make suggestions to clubs about how to interest their members so that all might take their share of responsibility in post-war planning. . EASY NAPOLEON CAKE Try this easy recipe. Get half a pound of Fether Flake puff pastry. I It's ready-mixed—just roll and bake. Divide the Fether Flake into two pieces; roll out thin. Line an oblong or square tin with one piece, prick and spread with raspberry jim. Make a nice sponge sandwich mixture and spread over pastry. Coyer the other piece of Fether Flake with jam and place jam side down on top of sponge, Bake in a moderate oven about | hour. Ice when cold and decorate with chopped nuts. Fether Flake puff pastry is made fresh daily by Adams Bruce, Ltd., only. Kept under hygienic refrigeration, and sold only in their shops at Cuba St., Manners. St. (next the Plaza), and 12 Willis St. (near the Grand Hotel). Ask for your Fether Flake to be vvrapped in Recipe Sheet No. 4, which gives this Napoleon Cake recipe and five others. —P.B.A. 1 '" — Are You Ready for the GARDENING SEASON? GOOD TOOLS WILL HELP TO MAKE !T ENJOYABLE. "The Tool People," 119-123 CUBA STREET. 'Phone 54-930 (2 lines).
k frietft to .Mw* . excess add m X M Ponder neutralize b Umng , De Witt's > nt s a o °jj s Ind protects the stom *afiSSßaßa ** I*^^1 *^^ fek fl Aft A £roduct of E. C. D,e Witt & C«* jfij ' Sj *J|«iS i'*A Cherry Orchard Road, Croydon, ©Slia S$ Mb m mBV SB From air Chemists and Stores is BsW&4s^WlM*sVlM fB M*J& iky-blue canisters, 2/1' (plus Sales W** ■ ANTACID POWDER
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Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 83, 5 October 1944, Page 10
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449Page 10 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 83, 5 October 1944, Page 10
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