_4‘”m—.mvv v Woman's Re w‘ wvvvv v v v N 0-00-0000000 PAGE rwo_~_ [Dorothy Dix Says- VO fOXOOOQOOO-VOQfO-O QQ§OOOQ TOO MANY YOUNG COUPLES LACK THE WILL TO FIGHT They Start Married Life On The Idea Theyl Should Live Far Beyond Their Means | And Refuse To Work For ' Comforts The number of young people who get divorces is out of all proportion )0 lll('ll' t-ltlcis. ‘led tlirtc or four A misery is as wonder why rocks. We tum. " t‘ ll boy 13 lntniiiis old. is so common for boys and girls who have l)€fi1 mur- rs to part that it would almost seem that domestic much of a juvenile disease as the mumps or _the measles. and that fcw who have an attack of it have the stamina to stand it. parently they lack what the doctors call “the w to live,‘ which ls the main factor iii any recov- ery, and when they have to undergo a little suf- fering and cannot Dlav about they make no effort. to better the situatitn oi to help themselves. tluow up their hands and pass out. And we Ap- as they used to Tliev moan and groan and another marriage has gone on ttie wonder svhy two young people who are so desperately in love before marriage that they thought they could not live without o.her find after marriage that they cannot t;ve with each other, They are fine individuals. children who will be crushed and maimed in tllc wreck of the home that their parents are pul down over their heads. women do such a. thing? Here is the answer written by a young , each For neither one is a rolter , And they have little» ling ' Why do decent young . ‘been married three years and have one child, ti flnc little l My husband and 1 love each other desperately, but lie qlniirrl COllllnllflllV and call each othcr names we would not call a dog Now lit- lliiS taken to slap ping me and twisting my arm when he b€C0l1l£S angry, and l feel that we should part before he does me great bodily harm 01' 'ing Apart I lost- niv mind. because these scenes make me so nervous that I be» k, get hysterical and stamnicr after each quarrel, ' "life have tricd living apart. but every minute of the time away from each other is torture to us both. quarrels started again. V But when 1 come buck, the I think perhaps it is because my husband ‘ls a. endle'»s clerk who makes a small salary so thzu we have to deprive ourselves of pleasures. nice clothes and good times, that makes oi_her‘s _n V, es us get so on each (Continued on page 10, Col 1) Mother, This Home-Mixed Cough Rfils Splendid Saves Real Money. No Cooking. Real Results. To rzr-t rc-nily surprising relief from title 1n colds. you can easily n medicine, right in your own kltt-litn. lt‘s very easy-anyone can llo ii~nectls no cooking. and tastes so ooti that children take it willingly. lut you'll say it's hard to beat, for quick results. First, make a. syrup by stirring 2 cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water u. few moments, until dis- ioivctl. Thcnl get 23 ounces of Pinex ‘mm any druggist, and pour it into a. l DESIGN N0. 001 ~ This bright red beanie only takes minutes to crochet and everyone will ndniire it. and complete instructions. To order pattern: Write, or send above picture. with 15 cents in coin or slumps to btcccllcwork Bureau, Charlottetown Guardian - To Charlottetown Guardiar NGKlRHVOTl-l Department Design No. 991 NAME _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - - — — — ~ — — - — omen-r ADDRESS - - - - - CITY - - - — - - — — - --- ' ROVINCE — — — — — — - — AN “APPLE FOR THE TEACHER" Finished with a green leaf on top, lt _ Pattern No, 991 contains list of materials needed, illustration of stitches 16 ounce bottle. Then add your syrup. This gives you 16 ounces of really splendid cough syrup—about 4 times as much for your money. It never spoils, and lasts a family o. long time. And for real, quick rclici’. it is actu- ally splendid. It works in three ways --looscns the phlegm, soothes the ir- ritated membranes, and. helps clear the air passages. Pinex is a special compound of proven ingredients. in concentrated form, woll known for prompt notion in coughs and bronchial irritations. Money refunded if it doesn't please you in every wuy. BE ANIE is lust the thing. % l l \ \ 15mm our Mdfiflflllfplani ilie fiflR/YDWE’ Favvrile/ y, '55:? 150R sum/vs - snr ran nnu m.’ alm ll-IZ When you feel weary. tired, cold. hot BOVRIL is very comforting. H's rich beefy flavor is de- lightful. Why don't you fry it! You will enioy a I Social and (IHARLQTTE'I‘()WN (iUAlfUlAN _______ km‘; - Fnr Wednesday, October 29th MARCH 21 to APRIL Z0 (Aries) -More iavorable star aspects than yesterday generally. Should be an especially good time for matters pertaining to advertising dealing with the public, industrial and mechanical interests. conferences. APRIL 21 to MAY 20 (Taurus) -Many helpful influences prevail but rte s advs d in handling fi- nances, taking on added monetary Aqnnsiomty. Dealing with su- peiiors and business associates. steady advancement favored MAY 21 to JUNE 21 (Gemini)- Much depends uoon your duties and your own enthusiasm arid at- "itude toward them, If you'll con- rentrate on essentials and not waste energy or t'me on side issues. vou can do well tcday. JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)- Iinportant personal interests, do- mesticty’ and scc‘al przbiems are equally favored with industrial and employment matters. Fine period fcr manufacturing. buildng; laborious and technical work: azmy ‘and navy maneuvers. l JULY 24 to aucusr 22 (lent... ‘Skilled mechari. ~, executive work- ers. sceciallsis in designing and other crafts, government and civic Allomirufinilc daily cup of delicious BOVRIL 9 O 0Q Q OOOW-O-O-OQQ OQ§§'§'§~§-0 Plane Jane BY ROBERTA COURTLAND swvooamwaomsww" CHAPTER XXXI Jane spent a long and sleepless night. Sam's news about Greg and Doris had been a severe blow, Site had thought herself prepared for it, but sne wasn't. Although Greg had made it plain that his in- terest in her was purely casual, and though she had told herself agnn and again that he was probably in love with Doris, she had uncon- sciousiv clung to a. small hope ',,ir.t perhlips she was mistaken. Now that that hope was dashed, she felt as though the bottom of the world had dropped out. She arose in the morning wtih dark circles under her eyes but mthl a grim determination to find for- getlulness in work. From now on, she would concentrate all her attention on achieving her ambition of be-l coming a pilot. Perhaps, in time, she could forget that such s. person as‘ Greg Prescott existed. When she went to the airfltld that morning. she was welcomed tu- multuously by all her friends - the grease monkeys, her fellow studen s. the field attendants, and Joe of the diner. She was soothed a little by their frankly expressed affection for her. but it was meager consolation. As the days passed, the rest of Oakton treated her a bit guaroedly. Though she has brought the town considerable advantageous publicity, is had culminated rather sourly in the widely published account oi Marise Sinclair's remarks about ner in Miami, Hence, the town was not quite sure just what attitude to take toward her. She ha. doniy occasional glimpses of Greg. After the night o1 her ai- rival home, he did not come to the house again, but she ran into itun on the street two or three time-s. Each brief meeting wlis torture to her. She tried to uct natural wu-n him. but it was hard to hide ihe turmoil of emotion thzt the sight of him stirred up in her. Meanwhile, she had picked up again the former routine of her tile adding daiiv to her hours in the air, adding to her ability as a flyer. To her surprise, flattering oiiers came to her from several sources — oi- fers prompted by the publicity she had had. She turned them all sown -even an fer from a Hollywood talent scout. He was incredulous when she flatly refused to take a screen test. Her one driving ambition was tu build toward the day when she could take her place in a. gathering of women flyers such as she had met in Miami and could match their ex- loits with her own. No one could hen call her a "little phony." She still cringed at the memory of that humiliating experience, Well some day, she told herself grimly, she was gluing to make Marise Sinclair eat ose words! By her achievements. she would force Marlse to apologize as publicly as she had condemned er 'I‘iiat was the goal towards which she aimed and, whenever Sam or one of her fellow students applaud- ed. her for some expert bit of flying, she knew she had gone one step fur- ther!‘ along the trail toward that fl, . go . Then, one murky, sullen after- noon. ubout a month after her re- turn, Sam grounded the whole alr- fleld crew and sent them home. “With the ceiling zero, visibility "Have you read ‘Freckles’, Mr. Jchnsni‘: " "No, ma‘am", he stammered. blushing, “mine are the brown kind". “Ho. ha", laughed the American lad, "Jack said iie always thought Sandy Hook was a Scotsman!" "Haw, haw!” crortied his Eng- lis-li companion. “And just what nationality ls the bally blighter, anyhow"? baby in her arms. There was a wild, desperate look in the girl's white face. "You're Miss Jane Andrews, l aren't you?" she asked breathlessly. , "Yes," said Jane. "Do come in. What in the world are you dt-in: out in this storm with a baby?" The girl stepped swiftly inside. “He — he's terribly sick. He's golig to — to die — unless you'll help him!‘ (Continued on page 6, Col 2) Your g Individual " H O R O S C O P i-——By Frances Drake v vVv-v vvwvv Personal I .000‘ Ll wmpioyees, you interested in the motion picture industry and radio are prime favorites this good day. AUGUST 23 to SEPIEBAZBER 38 (Virgo) - Difficult work, tedious physical tasks and your "w" routine probably won't give you as much trouble today as will finan- cial Lansactions, Be discriminat- ng in spending and shoppml- EPIEMB 24 to BER. zastLibral - Both favorable for major and minor matters. indus- trial and private affairs. You should improve your skill and, the quality of your work now. Dont 8° into debt needlessly. OCTOBER. (sew-pier - Gains indicated and favored in your particular line of endeavor and in all worth while uctivlt es. Tzday sponsors Leah personal trys and achievement in them. Be hopeful. ambitious. NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 22 (Sagittarius) Don't neglect urgent conferences, meetings. dis- cusslons, plans. dealings with su- periors and fellow business associ- ates. Ooorpfiraiive measures; news- papers. magazines; advertising; de- tense efforts. business in Reneral favored for gains. DECEMBER 23 to JANUARY 2i (Ca ricornl Reasonable and ed expansion can be handled advantageously an friendltv days like tc-day Benefits for all worthy effoz-ts. investments should be carefully studies before under- taken. JANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20 (Aquarlust - Minor e==ential mat- ters and work are the favorite now. Research. lmtrrcvhg machinery, tools and other me"hanical and in- dustrial eqiiipm=r~t are highly sponsored, Benefit: rays. FEBRUARY 21 t0 MARCH 20 (Psces) - Favorable time for fnishing incomolef-rd and familiar matters or for starting new under- takings However, forethought and dlscreton in spend-pg urged. Returns will depend greatly upon your efforts. A CHILD BORN ON THIS DAY Capable, ingenious, self-assertive, intuitive. generous, yet inclined to prccrastfnations, great energy and talent for lilélJfilllIj. music, the sciences Mai; be equally as effic- lent in mechanics. A horn execut- ive but must ie-rn to tcke orders b! l as well as give them Elizuld also cu:'b a tendency to give sharp B DSWGTS . FRIENDS MARVEL AT MY BRILLIANT WASHES... THE CREDIT GOES TO ‘l NEVER sAw SUCH WHITE ., LINENS! WHAT'S YOUR secret? ASKED ALICE. suutleltr, OF counsel i’ AND svenvone REMARKS on ‘m: SWIEIZCLIAN SMELL THAT SUNLiG-HT GIVES MY WASH. zero, the wind risin and a tnow- siorm threatening," e said, "there is no sense in hanging around heic All of you might as well take the rest of the clay off." By the time Jane reached nome, snow had begun to fail. She changed‘ from her breeches and shirt to a| housecoat .then went down to the kitchen to help Aunt Emily with the] supper preparations. " L's so cold, I thought 1t would be nice to have supper here 'n me kitchen bv the stove tonight," said Aunt Emily. Thclv did and. afterwards, when’ the d shes had been washed, Yancy’ built a fire in the living room. Lire work. It was nine o'clock when the dn"‘1e11 rank sharply, "Now who in the world can that be on a stormy night like this?" wondered Aunt Etmily. "I'll see.“ said Jane rising. When she cnened the front dror, she was startled i0 find a showy young woman with o bundled-on ll FOR WHITENESS AND SUNLIG-l-IT/ t, NATURAL IIIGHTNESS onten MOTHERS ARE FOREVER ASKING uow tree? MARY Ann's GINGHAMB so BRIO-III‘. IT'S EASY wtm auuttci-n/ SAFE FOR EVERYIHINO YOU WASH Q You'll b0 thrilled by the uuturnlly whiter, brighter. nectar-smoking wuiioo that Sunlight given you ovary week. Sunlight conuino no harmful lflllllflllllil—ll'l all-pun coup .. . Info for cvaryfhfng you wash Easy on Your Hands! And Sunlight‘: no any on ymu funds. No more rough, "work. n-duy" hand! when you In! Sunlight in both Wllh-hlb and dish-pan! Sunlight mnku dlohoo chino yo: keeps hands white and » lmooth. It’: thrifty. too-for. .. with Sunlight, than’: no wane. no spilling. Got Sunlight at yam wore today. -|f’s ail-PURE Soqi 24 m NOVEMBER 22‘ are , 0C’ ‘OBEK 29, 1941 ATES ORANGE NUT COOKIES 1 cup shortening 1-2 cup white 5118i" 1-2 cup brown sugar 1 e88 . 2 tablespoons orange juice 1 tablesposn grated orange rind 2 a-c cups all purpose flour 1 teaspoon salt 1-4 teas/noon soda 1-2 cup chopped nuts Method; Crown the shortening until light. Then cream in first the white sugar, and then the brown. Beat well. Add the 888 whic has been Well befllen. find ccnti ue beating the mixture until light and fluffy, Add the orange juice and the grated orange rind to the creamed mixtuze. S'ft the flour with the salt and soda, and gradually blend this into the creamed m xture, a small amount at a time. Lastly add the nuts, and tmese may be either wal- nuts, or pecans. - when well-mixed. form the dough into rolls about 2 inches in diam- .eter. Wrap these in waxed paper 1 and store in the refrigerator until ready to use. If desired, the dough may be left in the bowl in which it was mixed, merely covered, and stored. When you wish to bake the cookes, lipwrap the rolls and slice thinly. If the dough hasn't been shaped, it will have to rolled out and cut with a cookie cutter Place the cookies on a llghtlv greased bflklflg sheet. and bake in a moderate even (375 deg. F.) for from 8 to 10 minutes. LEMON SPONGE PUDDING 3-4 cum sugar l 1-2 tablespoons butter 3 egg yolks. beaten thick 3 tablespoons flour 1-2 teaspoon salt 1 1-2 cups milk 1 lemon. juice and Z8Tafed rind . 3 egg whites. stiffiy beaten ' Meilicd: Blend together the sugar and butter. then e/‘d lhe well-beat- en egg yolks. Add the flour and salt. the milk. lemon juice and grated rind, Fold in the stiffly beaten eve vcirles Pour into a baking r"=h this in a pan of hci v:_= ‘v. a MOflfFflllB oven (350 rle! about 35 to 40 m‘ni\tes. good served either hct or and s6‘ Bake in Count Calories to Have Fash- ionably Slim Figure 300 cats ZOOc/tu ISO nAu Diet Reduces 2 Pounds A Week When you're decidedly fat, the smartest dress can do little for you —ofteu you look FATTERI Only diet can restore the lovely figure of youth; and on a scientific low-calory diet you can lose 2 pounds u week and perhaps improve your health. too. The ides in to eat your fill. but only of low-celery foods like Swlsl steak (200 calories a serving) and lemon jelly (150 in ‘l; cup). Eating hlgh-calory dishes like bee! hash (400 n cup) and lemon meringue pic (800) you quickly exceed the re- ducers cnlory allowance cud loin weight. Al many low-celery foods have lots of vitamins, the slimmer you ‘get the peppier you feel-the morn l radiant, smooth-skinned you iooki Spinach ha: only 40 calorie: a cup, whole wheat bread I10 o slice. You'll feel so encouraged offer u week or two. you won't be tempted by luch u bulge-maker as hot chocolate (300 a cup). You'll happily lip fen and lemon (no calories). To know which foods are the reducerb friend: lee the calory chart in our 82-pin booklet. Hal 42 testy low-cniory menus. 8-day liquid diet to start reducing; “get- flt_" menus, too. Send 10c in coins for your copy of “The New Way to A Youthful Figure" to The Ouradiezi Home Service. Be sure m write plainly your Name, Address and the Nome of boo Name ' Street Addnll U!!! Province Fashions '1 Literature .00 STEPLADDBR 0F LIFE It takes a. little courage And a. little self control And some grim deteiminotion 1f u want to reach the goal It es a lot of striving And a. firm and stern-set chin No matter what the battle If you're really cut. to win. MATERIAL lS CHEAPEST LN PAINTING JOB When you set out to do your own painting job on the country or wwn home bear in mind that '15 per cent of a aint surfacing project, goes into la r costs. Only one-fourth of the entire cost of an exterior painting job goes inw the materials. ‘lihe other '15 per cent is spent for labor. In- fer or paint is one of the moot short-sighted fozms of economy. Such products do not, cover as much surface and do ziot last as Most of the eye-glasses now worn in the Philippines are from Amer- ca. MEN as rinses WALKING Somewhere in Britain is a secret camouflage research centre, where sculptors, painters, illustrators, and artists of all sozt are perfecting methods of making cur armies in- visible. The van shing trick is now a scientific fact. All the research- ers men and women, are in the Services. They can make a man vanish at 50 yards; he may have become a tree. They can conceal anything from a big gun to a trot-p of tanks. You could walk over machine-gun nests they have triiled with and never know they were there. Every new idea is rigoyously tested. and the inventor is only satisfied when he cannot find what he =s looking for himself. MAGENTA FOR YOUR BRIL- LIANT MOMENTS FROM DAWN T0 DUSK Magenta — the colour of the hour — subtle, exciting new red. mauve toned and very "high fash- ion" -_ Born to be worn With gay. mad combinations of colour that are so smart this Full — the com- binations of vivid purple with lemon yellow or gfowlng turquoise and with the Autumn grape shades all the way from vibrant ma enta itself to pastel pink - and it ends unusual chic to classic black and white — and to beige or grey. Wear Magenta in the daytime, says Miss Arden. It will be excit- ing against your dark wcols, deep Livingo Leisure -Thei Woman's Realm long as a paint of proven quality.‘- jerseys Ind tailo d wear 1t. mo. for evrtiningnfiinju,‘ iniluenm if head cover. Wild} 115 colorful new l“ 811d lavish. , harem drapes 1y jewciled ornaments. The at lc best. s1 m ‘ditessm er suit", sesdieti" M)“ woollen dress With short jag]; be worn under a. coat all winiecii.” Crocheted and knitted are a big feature in turn-nil?“ Black satin crepe, comlyng net to make the edges s; 3,33; provides and original theme 1°. _ K-‘RESCS. 6B3’ or ilcor length inner wear -these with nab‘ row tunics and wide sleeves. There's a ied ore ‘all long and narrow, ii/lieth e3 the shoulder and again at the c, where the full ieng.h skirt is 5m“ The tiered fringe blouse is n. vived again, this t‘me with 19w working which follows from '11.. dzopped shoulder treatmenf, Evening glitter is manifested in a quilted silver, metal cloiii med. ium-length fitted jacket N311. heads, and bead embroideries, m used over metal cloth appiiques for other evening fashions, Braid, m and bugle beads are worked in 0.. lgirial effects, such as overshouldgy “waterfallsfi and also to accept waistline-s. SHE'S A WISE WOMAN- Wlho keeps in mind that a little credit is a dangerous thing. Who is able both to mend m; husband's clothes and his ways, Who has learned the paradox that to have joy one must give it. Who can tell the difference be- tween her first. child and a genjul, Who m admires those eyes v/hioh belong to a man who under- stand her, Who acknowledges the allowance made by her husband by making ollowanese for h'm. Who appreciates that the larg. est room in any house is that left for self-improvement. Who manages to keep not only her house and her temper, but he: servants and her figure as well. Wiho can distinguish between the meant to show off a Adapted from Nancy Craig's Wo- man of Tomorrow Program. instead of taking needless risks, Vicks treatment that takes only ,_ n61‘! I W4" "o PEIIHIATB to upper ‘s bronchiaitubeswith \ soothing medicinal ‘i vapors. I I mlilllkltschestaud I back stirfaces like a ,1 pouitioo. ,0 fl ~- to IIIIIO 1m“ Mothers of Growing _ Children, listen- WHEN CHFST, COUGHING COLDS STRIKE Relieve Misery the Improved Home-Tested Vick: Way take the advice of many expe mothers . . . relieve miseries of our minutes and EVEN BETIER RESULTS Tlllll EVER IEO rienofil child ' colds with the improv m‘ inakes Vlcks VapoRub El" To c this improved iron-rum!"- nll yogedo is massage VapoRub for! minutes 0N BACK as well as throat and chest. then spread a thick layer on dust and cover with wunneddothJPi-yltl ». . 1:2‘ Needle A skirt and a jacket to wear to- m m with othe; every school r1‘s wardrobe. trim jacket cut on the new longer lines that m favored by the older girls u well. '1\ie skirt is flared for comfort u well as for chic You might make two skirts. one to match and one to contract with lthe jacket. Be sure that. the rubric you choose is aturd enough withstand the rough reatment it's bound to noeive from m w- for. 8t 81M in designed for sires 6. 8. 10, 12 and 14 years. Blue 8 requires 1 1-8 yards of 54-inch gal-tic for jacket; 7-8 yard for Send Twenty mom coin to rm- fcrred. for Pattern Write plainly your Name. Address and the style n ber Be lure to state the nu you wish. Style No. 8100 812s Nuns not-mindin- City w rrovlueo nllum llstms from lllllltlll. FEMALE WEAKNESS Lydia I. Plath ' ; gig: no§u~;i:?.:i=-ii.i"r=lt:i: olua tendon-duo to any’ am‘ —F0r The Home craft/ m""‘t""uv°s'-"fia“-'u t onui dicturhunogmtt-liizlllpo hu l diltrll of ' Onions.