l. L‘-‘I"l€ "vswrra. —p._ aif-‘Quirgn &:A”_:n§]_aw yl-rasc EIGHT i ' a 'r'>\x~r:>~'xsx.u_>oss>tl.awxn" can; Woman's Realm u. w; aware Rififi” ' Social and Personal w; Fashions vLiterat v.1. a» some v x. ca. ~0- (rtiuw u JENKINS UR beauty consultant bee juet taken e special course at the Richard Hudnut DuBuny School. She has returned simply aglow with beauty secrete and ideanusbieeagctohelpyoqwlth them, Ifyou want to look younger. loveller . . . let bar tell you all about the new DuBarry Beauty-Angle Thelma"! It stimulates the circulation naturally and will do wonders for your complexion. If youJvant is [my what make-up to wear with the season's new colore . . . abecanbelpyouachieveanewnuartneesandg‘ L Cemeinandooneultlm-Youhbeeogladyoudidl ' THE REXALL STORE Dispensing Chemlele Phone l9 - Cor. Gt. CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. PHARMACY George ii Kent Ste. ilLivingcSiLeisure THE woman's REALM s SPEAK NO ILL " Nay, speak no ill-a kindly word Can never leave a sting behind, _. Andhoh! to breathe each tale we've ‘ ea ls far beneath the noble mind. Pull oft a better seed is sown, .‘ By choosing thus a kinder plan; For if but little good be known, Still let, us keep the best we can lGive me the heart that fain would hide Would fain anothera fault sfface, How can it pleasure human -j To prove humanity but base No, let us reach a higher mood, i A nobler estimate of man, ‘ Be earliest in the search for good, " And speak of all the best we can. Then speak no ill-but lenient be ' . To others’ failings as your own, '1! you're the first a fault to see. ~ Be not the first to make it -_'. known. For life is but a passing day. No lip may tell how brief its . span. ‘Then oh_ the little time we stay, Let's speak of all the good we can —Selected LIKE NEW You can make that old linolcrm ' look like new with a brush. some ~~ aint and a sponge. Paint the lnoleum bladr and when it has “thoroughly dried silpple it with white. dubbing the pain‘. on with a f‘ sponge When perfectly dry apply ,a coat of vamish. Presto! a stun. y‘ nlng new floor for the price of a litlte paint . LOTS OF ALMONDS ‘ California is contrilrting the Jarrlest crop of almonds in her history this year Aaterbeokaathelhyeofllomer, thetGreeks used sulphur as a fuml- gan . Archacolwiflts say that the week among different people varied from five to fifteen days Our species of fly lays about 4,. 000 eggs on leaves; these will not hatch unless swallowed by a cater. pillar. Low grade altnninum ores con. talnirrg as much as i6 per cent. de silica can be med as a source of this Widely used light metal by l. process developed during the war. Abandoned woodchuck holes, dug by these strong and skilled am. mals. are often used, as a temp. orary refuge against enemies, by sktmlea, foxes, weasels. and cotton. tails and occasionally by pheas. ants A pinch of soda mixed with the salt op top of a roast will keep it from shrinking. Eating boiled potatoes skin and all gives extra returns in food value becausg of the measure of vita. mins and minerals in the tin and close beneath ‘lb nuke e dishes the main. stay of a delcious and easily. prepared meal keep these tips in mind; to avoid cracking]! when cooking eggs in their she , place eggsinooldwaterandb gtoa boil. At this point the eggs will be sofhcooked. Egg whites are quickly beaten if the whites and uten. siis are cold. To make the finest cakes use recipes which require a generous supbly of eggs. A JOB llllLY Yllll llAll I10 Price Control Questions llld AIIIBII Questions and Answers on Price fiontrol will a ptnir 1:1 The finder’!- n as a reg r ea are one The questions are those which have reached the Wartime Prices and Trade Board from ‘e _,_ this region. The answers are ro- vidod by the Board Readers. en lone who have intelligent questions to ask on price control are invited t‘; send them In‘ in the omens Regions v Com. mlttee. n Q. When will sugar coupon es become valid? A. Sugar coupon 65 will become valid October i8. . ls there a ceiling price on Canadian-grown rapes? A. Yes, the ceiing price on Can- sdian-rrown grapes la the some as and became effective Some friends in the city want to buy some of my homemade resp- berry jelly this year. Do 1 have to collect coupons for this. A. Yes. If you sell any kind of homemade preserves you must col- lect coupons. You collect one cou- pon for every l2 ounces of jelly. You return these ccupons to the nearest Local Ration Board. ibs/ddmémk/QT IlOIISEIIOLII SBRAPBODK By Roberta Lee = Removing Fat, From Soup All fat should be removed from the top of soup, as it. is indigestible. If unable to do this with a spoon. wet a clean cloth with sold water. wipe over the top of the soup and the hot fat will adhere to the cloth. Mending Ovcrshoos When the children's rubber c-ver- shoes are worn thin on the bot- tom. or have scuffed tces, stick ad- hesive tape on the inside of the Meat Grllldfl After using the meat grinder for anything inclined to stick, run a few slices of dry bread through it anaghit will make it much easier to “FACTORY Rlsu DON'T DELAY ~‘,, . v’ A ANOTHER MOMENT! ‘ t Try This Prompt Medicated Relief! Use what thousands have tried for clearing u eczema, rash, pimples, itch. Cuticuxa l Solent‘ - ioally predicated. Used by many nurses. Satis- faction guaranteedorrnakerwlilrefundmoney. At all druggista. Made in Canada. SDAP AND EUTIIIUR OINTMENT MOTHERS! TRY CUTICURA BABY Olh i‘? BOOKS cons all i Wait CREAMED MEAT 1 cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons fat i teaspoon grated onion 4 tablespoons flour , 4 tablespoons milk 2 clips cubed cooked meat stock ‘ivifovmfitf ’ OD: Cook the celery until tender in water t0 barely cover. Drain. Melt the fat and add the onions, then cook until this lightly browned. Blend the fl I and then the milk into the OnlO mixture. Heat the celery with th cubed meat. meat stock and reasonl ings and add to the onion mixture‘. Cook until the mixture thickens and then serve hot on hot biscuits. l" .. " {it's Quality‘ l Stands Supreme a _. - I » ‘1%Y‘~/ Tfi¥¥ 112?}. . E f Dorothy ‘x, Says-A GI’S ALIEN WIFE’S PLIGHT American Women Should Lighten Woes Of Vets’ Mates .- There has been tearing of hair and gnashing of teeth among the girls of our own fair land when they have learned about the thousands upon thousands of stalwart American lads who have taken unto them- selves wivee in the foreign countries in which they have been billeted. They naturally feel that they have bceu robbed of God's beat gift to a women, a good American husband, but they may. at least. take a bitter satisfaction in knowing that the matrimonial situation isn't all pie for the husband-watchers, either. For, from the innumerable teax-sodden letters that, come to this column. it appears that the in, temationai marriage, which was seldom a success even in the lush days when fcreisn titles were ex- changed for good U. B. cash, is running true to form in humbler circles, and that the imported brides are going through the world's greatest orgy of homeslckness. 8ND PLIGIIT FOR ALIEN WIVES in; what made him do it, and many a young wife is blotting her marri- age certificate with her tears And this is no reflection on either the party of the first part or the party of the second part. It is Just that love and ‘romance are one thing. and that your own tastes and habits are another thing, and that it is almost impossible to mix them. It ia sad to deretand the why of these marriages. Any. skirt looked good to lads fed up on gaeing upon nothing but uniforms, and a boy could think himae! in love with any girl who looked klssable. Besides, the strange woman has always had an irresistible lure for the masculine sex. Also, it is easy to see why any gooddooking youth ap- peared the answer to a maiderfs prayer ln a land that the war had left virtually an Adamleas Eden. Add to this a whirlwind courtship to which the girl was not accustomed and the picture the boy painted of his hometown as an eertllq paradise. and it ie not amazing that Matilda or Yvonne or Olrmen, or whatever her name was, rushed to the altar with him. - Now very few weddings ever come up to expectations, so judge ho\v devastating has been the dieillusaon of thaee wives from overseas. Nothing is as they expected it to be. Main Street isn't Broadway. Joe inftamillloueln Keieoneofanrliltonmen huntAMIIJOlIThQY haven't beOn received with glad acclaim by their husbands families. They are looked upon with suspicion as foreigners, with queer ways. Often they don't speak the some language. They don't under- stand the manners and the ctr-stoma. They don't know how to cook like their husbands’ mothers. They have nobodry to visit with. The)’ are strangers in a strange land, than which there is no greater desolation Even their husbands are changed. They are no longer lovers. They are Just married men. They have dmriped their wives down into an alien environment, and they expect them to be happy and satisfied. and to know by intuition all the local folkways and the passwords into the good graces of the community. And when the poor bride, who is bewildered and confused and lonesome and miserable, weeps for Mother and the girls, who are thousands of miles away, and who la hungry for her own kind of food and pines for the amusem ta she was accustomed to. her husband is seldom sympathetic with her. He is lust irritated with her for being different. Of course, in time these brides will adjust themselves lo their new lives, but in the meantime they are some throush a purzawry. and one that we sister women should lighten by hollding out the hand of i'r' -‘ ‘-' to GI Joe's foreign wife. ‘v MORNING suing '\7\%:\J‘< "Why have you got "Push‘ print- ed on that door when it opens out- ward?" "That's so people will be sure to pull it." They were undetectable summed up the smoke- room philosopher, “I'll tell you this about him. He might haxe typhoid and recover; he might A mm. llllW lllll I l! ByAnne Ailey wnocx. M Q. How can I brighten a dulled mirror? A. 1t a little spiris of camohor or alcohol la rubbed on the mirror after it baa been dusted. it will htear it wonderfully. How can I make a lighter pie c A. Do not use soft butter or lard when making pie crust. If the shortening that is to be used is hard and cold, it will make a lighter discussing a certain and irrepresible havoprieirmonia. and recover; he might have cerebral meningitis. and recover; he might have yel- Try hefltlnil B Neel lmlWl-‘lll low fever, and recover; but — if needle red not. than bum in the he ever ma lock-jaw find. sir, hole where needed. Hold the needle he-d bust)- with pliers. Q. ‘How can I put another notch in a leather bolt? A. t \N 71/3‘ Fla/I é/ea/ jé’ Felicia/ls provides’ other food Benefilsfioo And as a result many a GI Joe ia vvonder- him BRAN to belp keep you lit- wholesome wheat nourish- ment-a marvellous flavor unlike that of any other cereal you ever tried. You got them all in Post's Bran Flakes. These crisp, appetiaing flakes contain enough bran to help pro- tect you against the dull, logy feeling that comes from a slug- gish eystem."l'bey are a natural regulator. Yet they also contain other parts of wheat" . provide wheat nourishment not found in every bran cereal.- protein and carbo- hydrates as well as iron and phosphorus. Eat Post’e Bran Flakes for their diflerent, nut-like flavor. Eat them because they are so good for you. Equally delicious and effective in bran muflina. Sugar-loss recipe on both the Regular and Giant Economy packages. a Baku ragga "ta OTHER wars or W“ Ahodveloltlonerdloedl 90o: .590 o.'>~:>4r~.:v:.~:-*»- av». '* ELLWS llll Y By an Ialaad Farmer’: Wife coed ‘£o(.~4-€’<.\.‘1.*6%\-<.4.4..u ‘Ibis was a morning of increased activity at Alderlaa, at leaetdo Q appeared to me. Steps were q ckcr about the yard; breskfastwasnot the leisurely meal it has been since the end of the haryest and there was o expectation. The weather was almost the only that would induce any oom- meht and that only in clipped “n. tences. All at once, the digging y“ upon us at Alderlea. “if they'll ever grow"; Then pest the joy of the first billing, when YOURS. vigorous plants were hid- den beneath tLe rod of the clay; thrroush the bloasoming; by thB ED119138 and disturbing vie- its of roving destroying insects. then safely beyond the required N days of growth, kissed by the frost ga deathly caress and up to this ay. I O I When the day set for the open ceremonies of the digging cont“: certain preparations must be made. This morning at Alderlea, cumbersome farm carts were put in order and baskets were gather- ed from granary and basements. "Where's yours?" James asbd me, when he came a minute to the house for a drink. “Mine?” I said. feigning surprise. “The new one-I Bot that one on pu e for you". "I think. James. I’ keep that basket always new and unsvlled" I said smiling my brightest at "as a sort of souvenir the diggings that were". Janos cleared his throat to reply than must have forgotten my words foa- he war of_f presently leading Nell, the foal dancing beside her, to put them out of the way of the fann work ln the field aofoa: the creek. That was not really half the preparations. Jeanie. trim in a pair of navy slacks, her curls hid- den beneath a red kerchief was about her work. Washing the sep- arator, attending to the cream. feeding Mattie the Muscovey and the other poultry and young Nod- din, the lone surviving twh. when Bobbin’ went, no one knows. Rb was and then wasn't. There is neither down nor feather nou- bill to be seen of him. A loss like this goes clown in a fenuers wife's ‘e- cord under the heading of: lence. Jeanie hurried at her work, for she was to go to the field to the Diddfllz. while I was to stay at home to play with "the pots and pip- kins." O O O I saw the procession leave for the field, horses and carts ,two nxr and a woman, then came indoors to my cooking. Lifted a corner of the cloth covering the bread, treb- ling its bulk in the pans on of the warming oven and wish a (Continued on Page l0) - 3 '\7\7s7\, _7\.. i? mourns g ETIlllIETTE B! Roherln L60 3:15; Q. When two women friend; have always remembered r each others wedding anniversary with a gift and one’: husband he; pas;- ed away, should the other continua doing so? to do . Q. Should a man remove his hat, when etting into an elevator cf any pu lic building, where there ls a Xronén whom ho knows? . es. Q. Isitprnpertooutillawlih the knife when eating it? can be easily cut with the f ____._,_____ ___ CROCHETDD ACCBGBOII§ DESIGN N0. 8-1218 A pretty little Dutch hat and bag to match are quickly o. ‘" d Make it. in your favorite chenille. Pattern No. 17-12’?! talns complete instructions. To order pattern: Write or lend above picture with your name and address with 20 cents in coin of Postal Scrip w Needlework Bureau Charlottetown Guardian. Design No. 15-1273 Name color con- ltreet Addrel A. lstowould be more tactful not ' rNeedlecraru/ a. No; fish a so tender that it ' ork. QUICK HELP WITH FllI-l-‘TRINGTH FREfiI YBQ] Watclrllleiecbmaorfeufiwfreab YCIICBOIIWQM -belp give your bread ‘mode delectable flavor, h‘ smoother texture may time» . IF YOU sax: Al‘ nous, be w» to get llleischmannh/ fresh Yeast with the finalliar yellow label. Dqendebh - Canada's favor-lea yeast for more than 70 years. fi ll BETTER EllGLlSll n. o. winner l i. ie no this “@9359... $51.1. tau point." I l l What is the“ correct pronunc- l 2. iatlorr of "species i‘ lea 3. Which one of these words is "It ‘l sneoalar. snuggle: on tech." l. ‘lkueuleuee. as; filfli/E/myfiwhe -"""‘"f MALETWEAKNESS 21/: wedr, keel cranky feelings Il-lavcyouat euch times noticed yourself feeling nervous, “dragged out," irritable, a bit blue-due to functional periodic diaturbanoee? Th don't delay, fry Lydia E. Pinkhamh Vegetable Compound to relieve such eymptome. Pinkhanfe Compound is one of the most effec- tive medicines for this purpose. Plnkhanfe (Iompound is what la known as a ulerine sedalivr because lt has a soothing effect on one of if ymfre not doliilhted Wit-h results! woman's moat important organs. Follow label directions. awe 6. tasters: p, Pinkhanfs Compound is made from wholesome mote and herbs (plus Vitamin B1). Here's a medL, cine that nears NATURE- Just see FOR THE HOME IIIIDIAJIIIY choose this euybfofimake luring: nd 20 cents for lmllm sewinl R80. includes comlflfl" LII . IDOQV-Il‘ PIAQUI 0101i, Sept . deliv m . The wolrcor was’ Selma York. l'l—-Fkeal. ad. pl u ia the B eeof New_