The R.C.A.E need: girls, rrges f8 to 45, u/ilb at least Higb Sc/mol Entrance. Apply n! your nearest R. CA. F. Recruiting Centre, bring- ing proof of education and birfb certificate. NO WAITING! EX- e CELLENT OPPORTUNITIEX FOR PROMOTION. ROYA WD-ZI-N CONSERVE , .1. lul‘ L. . wear, So don't thiow worn sl i1; " lnto tho rag-bag, even if they are‘ Cculnieteiy worn at the collar and cuffs. You'll find that you can transform them into rompers. dress- es. sun-suits, shirts and pinnfores for the younger members of the family inst by Rfliill"! hiisy with some ideas and the family bowing; Yiifi machine The Presldent 37st; is elected by oirect vets c! ill’? people for ii term of seven years. __ err/ice Party Cay and Romantic Games for All ‘ Party a flit With "llelrt-Tofl‘ Tossing hearts around! At your party it's flm! For the hearts are cardboard hearts, each bearing a romantic fortune like “Soon Wed," "Rival," "Love." Ii‘s easy to prepare this version of Card-Toss Fortunes. Have ready an ordinary hut-or you may make one of cardboard. Rules are for each guest to stand on a certain spot and try to see how many of 10 heart-fortunes he can toss into the hat. The hearts that land rcvcal his late for the next i2 months! Now, for u rcal blush-and-glggle game, play "Barney." Each per- son wriirs and signs a compliment for "It." who sits in the centre. Then "it" must read the compli- ments aloud and guess who wrote them. lvlany other hilarious games, for lll kinds of parties, arc in our 32- puge booklut. Has Ice-breakers. fortune-telling stunts, brain teasers to make you" parties the talk 0f $333.‘. tftfdfa rrlitrglggilaelhalitéegniléi m9 i°“’"- arm rests. Pattern N0. 1238 oon- Ssnzl 15c in coins for vour copy of Party Gamzs For All Occasions w the Charlottetown Guardian Hare Scrsice Address. Be sure to write plainly your name, addrcssJ ,_ \,l\'\ n. [my] m5 body deyglopg and the name cf booklet. xiggmfiflifiwflggiiigf§fl the specific stiffness of rigor morlis. Dianna street Address ii mu ~ Province tains complete instructions. CITY- — — PROVINCE —- —- — V playing a real part After the Justice of the Peace had the knot safely tied, the yov ng couple continued to stand before him as if expecting some further whereupon the imtice stammered out, in a. desperate attempt to und off the ceremony with soone- thing of a. religious turn, "There there. it's all over! Go and sin no more!" CAUGHT The colonel asked the newly-join- ed subaltem to stay for a minute or two after the other officers had left the mess, as he wanted a word with him. "I noticed,” he said, "that you drank rather too freely bon ht. That won't. do. Now, you see t ose four bottles on the table? When you begin to think than. there are eight bottles, it's time t0 stop. "But. sir," objected the Junior, "there are only two bottles on the table." LOVELY CROSUEEIIETED c551“ THE JOB you are doing today may be quite useful to the war efiort. But somewhere, at some R.C.A.F. station, there’s a more important job made- to-order for you! You’ll work hard at it . . . but you'll be healthier and happier than ever before. You’ll make new friends . . . do interesting things . . . on and ofl" duty. And, you'll know, at the end of every busy day, that you are in helping to win this war. Thousands of young women no smarter, no stronger than you . . . proudly wearing the R.C.A.F. uniform of Air Force Blue . . . are working on jobs that really count. More are urgently needed. Will you join them? Decide to enlist in the R.C.A.F. today. SAVORY MEAT LOAF 1 pound minced beef 1-2 pound minced veal 1-2 pound sausage meat 2 cups soft; crumbs 1-8 teaspoon pepper 1 teaspoon salt l~3 teaspoon sage 2 tablespoons minced parsley 1 9.112111 onion, chopped 1 egg. 1 can condensed tomato soup 1-2 cup milk. Method: Combine the minced beef, veal and sausage meat your- self, or have the but/Sher grind them together. Add the soft crumbs, seasonings and parsley Melt a little shortening or lard in a pan and cook the chopped onion in this until it is e, delica straw color. Add to the meat mix ure. Beat the e88 and combine with the condensed tomato soup and the miikl Stir this int/o the meat-crurl. mixture and blend thoroughly, Tum into a greased loaf pan and bake in a moderate oven (350 deg. F.) for about 1 hour. . FLUFFY MASHED POTATOES 8 p0tatoes.. . . 1 1-2 tnblespoog? butter a 1-2 teaspoon g Dash of owner Hot milk. 1 egg or 2 egg yolks. Method: scrub the potatoes thor- ourgly and cook, covered with" water, until tevler. Peel them when done and mash them. Put through a ricer and whip until light. and fluffy with the butter, seasonings and enough hot milk to moisten. Beat in the egg or the 2 rm: cnaizwrrsrown GUARDIAN _ "SHE SERVES that mm ma; flcl" ’ AIR FORCE A Job Only _ You Can Do Price Control Question! y And Answers Questions and Answers 0n P?!" Corfu-oi will appear ln The Guard- ian its a regular feature each iluy ‘lhc questions are those which nave reached the Wartime Prices and Trade Board from housewives in this region. ‘Ihe answers are pro- vldei by the Board Readers. Per sons who have intelligent questions to ask on price control are invited to send them in writing to the Women's Regional Advisory Com- mittee of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Q. Has my grocer any right to tear out coupons from my ration‘ book which are on longer good or] have not been us ‘l l A Definitely not! Unused cou- pons should be destroyed by the holder cf the ration book. Wnile void coupons are worthless to the consumer. they are still valid for_ the retail-er in purchasing his re-l placement stocks . . . Unless these are destroyed, storekeepers will be‘ able to buy supplies to which they. are not entitled and the purpose of.- rationing will be defeated. I Q When will we be getting our} new ration books? A. Ration Book No. 3 will be dia- tributed by the local ration boards the week of August 23. egg yolks and again beat until vcryr fluffy. Pile lightly in s greascdi baking dish. Brush over with melt- ed butter and brown is the oven. The apple dumplings can be baked in advance and served cold, or they may be reheated if desired“ l- _ DESIGN N0. 1236 This old fashioned girl forms the i'u order Ouuern. write. or 80nd move picture with vour nlmc and iddreiia with 15 cents in 00in oi camp: to Needlework Bureau f fneanwhllc. even thouflh life is Dre‘ O if the victim has been in the wat- er more than a few minutes, other cases it is not continued nu ticiently long. following pointers for iesczurs: immersion of an half started promptly at the scene 0f accident. and continued without in- tcrrupticr. until the victim begins to This may take six hours or evenl Design No. 1236 i i NAME-- -__.-____- slTREflT ADDRESS NTO, 0nt., Aug. i8 —- Newspsper reports of drowning oc- cidents in many parts of Caluda show that full use is not being made of the discoveries of the late Sir Frederick Banting and associates in the field of artificial respiration, the Health League of Canada reiter- ated today. y instances, artificial 1'0- n mistaken idea. that it is fu ile The Health League offered the l. People have been rgvived after our. 2. Artificial respiration should be wiser, and there imy be no sign i ‘ti. Care should be taken at thei utcide to see that air is not pre- the lungs been“ of reflex scum of the larynx. may be ascer- tained ml!!!‘ of air during artflcial reap tiqn. 1t air may often beuchieved by dr w- ing the tongue forward and ho d- ing it there with tongu some other object. 1n the absence of tongue fomcepa s. hat pin ed through the tongue has effective. It spiration is not attempted been‘ be live to obtain qualified medical help of if at. all possible but rescuers should not delay an instant In artificial respirnton, even f- (or p doctor. A few minute; of wait- lng may mean the difference be- tween life and death spiration, rais the body lentil‘ by the waist to lungs and stomach. Place the body in n prone position with the hem and chest lowest if possible. flnd apply the Pchsefer thud spirution. Keen the DRUM" by mews of blankets and hot wat- er bott fc or discernible heart hint, ficiul respiration may be furthered. -aclld a reocrt of any successful r.- scue. particulrlv '.' the patient was immersed more than a to the Health fcuuo of Cannon. ented from entering and leavinrrorontc. , fdliill!‘ (y IIAIHPR “LIAOU BROWNING ACCIDENTS z or cnnann, a by lisicnin for the believed that the passage of e forceps or puzlfl is, of course, impera- in beginning to wait Before beginning artificial n‘ rain water from the of rt- warm l»: . n so tahat scientific studvpfhrtl- few minutes. Y. Social and Personal Living é? Leisure The Woman's Realm Sow a thought, and You reap an Act, Sow an Act, and Ha. ' YOU XEBD B and your reap a Sow a Character, and you reap a Destiny. ASK THE CLERK When you buy a garment, ask the salesperson or department head: "Can it be dry cleaned?" Look for informative labels that tell how to clean and care for your garment. Follow label instructions; you'll avoid disappointment and possible damage to a garment. Cabbage. tomatoes and sweet corn should not be cultivated very much after the plants have begun to grow well. except for mere scraping of the ground with a garden slllfle hoe m..kill weeds. Deep cultivaticn is apt. to injure the roots of these pants which Brow close to the sur- we. As the early crop of peas or spinach in used up out the some soil urea to Brow- ing winter turnim. Probably the most satisfactory kinds are those of the rutabaBa twr". They grow large and keep perfectly. Lettuce resents crowding The plants should not touch one nn- other. ln fact. owemrowdin is the reason most head lettuce oes not "head up" in the home garden. Watercress can be grown in u tub of soil. It should be placed in a shady location, however, and kept well moistened. (Zilcor-z, cr endive an espbciallv '1' THE GARDEN Fashions m“ _ AAUGUST 11,1943 x Literatur I a I I1 {Dorothy Dix Says- ‘ARRIAGE WITH PLUCKY YOU M BETTER THAN ‘ TO RICH OLD Mother Wanting Daushtefs Life Happier With Ample Money A Woman To Be Pitied " m; DIX-I hove two niitorl. one u rich. middle- awcrn the oltlalesrsu Wm‘ 1° mln- m“ “tglwl” ‘M “mbiiiliw mo he: urges me to marry t e old one, I1 Oukh she knows 1 dim-g him and 1 do love tho ‘poor young mun. She says she doesn't rm; . have the hard life aha as had. I hate to hurt her. but feel I mum my new. wont do you advise? . um, MOTHER MEANS WELL ANSWERPMurry your poor young may up with him and be hnppiv- There is somet .. a little pathetic in a mot ers desire to hm daughter make a brilliant match. For. in i-eillt isn't as avaricious and Brushing as it seems, its her yearning to save her little ewe lllml; "w, ins gas that she has known. She wants to p he sol irls hands from the hard labour tiut has had do. and to save the tender feet from thorny path that she has trod. Mother should reflect that the man who can hment when he marries is, ninety-ritual c5 of u hundred. either old enouih to be her father, or a glldDfl youi. w selfish and spoiled, and wno regards marriage as lightly as he q fl . on with n chorus girl. We have all seen many young siris married to rich old men. vi It. takes more t Tr have never seen such a marria c a happy 0119- limousinc and point lace and ismonds ‘F: satisfy a woman's suul, the mes- miseruble women in the world are those who have mg youth for money. Furthermore, we have all seen mum’ Kiri-i muite SII-Cuiicd flue mi whun they married young fellows who had inherited fortunes. Wu also seen these same fortunes take wings and fly away illlll the ~ marriage end in poverty. Every day we read of some such match s . in divorce, because a youth which has been passed in sell-ind doesni fit. a man to stand the dlsillusiuns and trials oi iimnmuny. The mothers who are disappointed that their duusil » ‘s lire ill p001 jUtAi-K lawyers and clerks instead of rich men Will do well w alder this fact-that these poor young fellows are likely to be the big of tlic future‘ while thl: brilliant catch of today is almfls: certain - the iiobc o tomorrow. it lfiflylyifkllll too uiucn to say that. in marrying in America, a girl to decide wnemei- sne would rather be poor and struggle along wi mar. when she is young and be prosperous when she 1S middle-Hg be rich and splurge when she is young anti o: poverty ritkiii iii t-lu 10 my mind it is a. good micron wnen a girl marines ii mun \'lllil abut y and industry and pluck, and whom she loves well enough r ' glad w work WiIJl and help pusn on, and who makes c day a romance for her more thrilling than any novel. MISS DIX-l have taught school for eight long years. I fecl than 1 should like to marry and nave a. home of my 0Wn, but are not. attracted to me. ‘lnis is incomprehensible t0 me. us l um good-looking. Perhaps I am too intelligent. lsnt it true that men fer to tower mentally over the girls on whom they lavish their aim Or perhaps 1 am 00o reserved. renting parties make me suudtier. ti. T. YOUNG MAN EXPECTS SOME PETTING ANSWER-I get. thousands of such letters from girls, undlthe ~ sensus unlong tncni seems to be: nu petting parties, iiu beuux. they a unit in declaring that the average young man expects to be p ~ WAAuu-YMA tru-qccmco in: snows u gin p ueuig permuted io iriuui lier. n5, perhaps, you are right. in attributing your unpulluiflriil’ W reserve, out if such is the case. you should be glad oi being iolhflilill stead of repuiing. For, believe mo, dear girl, there are a. lot of lh u which you can pay too nign a price, and me girl wno siiciiiiuus tier -. esty for the sake of being taken to n movie makes u sorry bargain. As for your suggestion that. the reason you are not. popular i8 cause you are too intelligent, that nds on how iiiglibroweo you 1f you begin a COHVGFSBHOX] wim every young inan you irieet Dy r him his opinion of the Einstein theory of relativity. or if you try iii cuss the modern renlists with your jazz partners, I don't wonder that flee you. I liie fear of a bluestocking is as much a hereditary fear with ~~ the fear of snakes is with women. Why this is so, n0body known. even intellectual ineii seiuom care for learned ladies. Furthermore, a. curious foot in natural history that highly cultivated men very ~r picr; out. as wives nen-oraineu women wno never have im idea ab”! baby's bottle. . Not all knowledge comes put up in books, however, and in r w E .. n Live in the garden us much as you can, but hive a oeituui ...ii:u.lr. of shade for really hot spells. If, you havn L got. one oi unose covered garden seats or a summer house, you can improvise a shelter wiln scme saiicloli or awning. uet your nus- 0.11111 to 11x it on the wall of the house —if you have a French win- dcw 11x in uoovc that — uiiu support! tine 051101’ two corners on poles. The effect will be rather like n 5119i! window shade. but on a muchi lower level, of coursel l It you have o concrete surround to the house. keep it cool and dust- iree by :lu.cin,g n. down with water. 1t will help to cool the sir going into the house and prevent. we TIIULU oust going m, loo. ORANGES ARE DIFFERENT You have probably noticed that an apple always has five cells in which its seeds are held. . .. \..... an orunge it tt differ- ent. for the number of sections varies considerably. being ‘general- ly s. dozen or more. There it a way. says a writer, to tell in advance, how many sections l given orange has. and if you know the trick you can perform what seems to other people to be quite a wonderful mot. At the stem end of the orange you will find a little wheel-shaped depression, and if you will count the spokes in this wheel it will give you the numbe of sections. Each section of the orange is virtually a‘ scuvrate fruit, and the number of sections seem to be governed b the number of ce ls which are fert llzed in the bud. DRESSING NEEDS TIME AND SKILL fine fall salad green. It: bitterness disappears with the first light frosts O ain seed now fcr plsmt1n8 ill early July. NQVI under-am Cream Deodorant Wflbi Stops Porsplrctlon I- Doel ooi rot creases or men’! IEIIRI- Doe: no! imnte akin. I. Nownmngtodry Ciinbeund right aim shmng. l. Instantly nosigpenpirstion for l to 3 dun venu odor. l. A pure. white. greueluu smnlm unuhmg cream.‘ ’ A d d A I Se o .' Aihgcht lmhfiavdt LluEldfl- tn vol being humlveu to of... 39‘ n hr Armin mam when In these days when one cunnoit wsys ave a. su pressed as qu c as needed, pleasing is a. new indoor sport. It is strictly a game of skill Al’ Her than brawn, Whereas. in ironing you munt. press ham to dry he fabric in pressing you begin with dry fabric and add only us much waiver u you need with rapid strokes of n dlflip 51101180 over u d cloth. wn-i nave lime schooling nave graduated from the University ° ‘ Iinucks and have more real wisdom than a dozen colleges could} t em. Many men like intelligent women, but they dont’ want ll woml thrust her education upon them, and a really clever woman is one W smart. enough never to let a man find out now much shc kuOWS. DEAR MISS DIX-I am u widow and have been keeping for more than a year with an eligible bachelor who is very tlevvifli speaks of love, but never of marriage. How can I flnd out lwllglgiiii ANSWER-Use your common sense and you have the answer to ' question. You will know that he has no intentions beyond aiiiiisini ‘ self. live man who is a glib love-maker but who stops short of puPPi" questizn is only a philanderer and any woman is foolish to let him her time and keeqmarrylng men away. ‘ , _ .__ Needlecraft For The Home THE SUIT DIESS To Make of l. Bummer hint Here's u two-niece that's design- ed to make n woman look ten Pounds lighter and twice as smart; thets because it's so comfortably cut with a bit. of soft fullness from the shoudler yoke, a nice uniqth hipline, and a skirt that is generous enough for the free stride and easy sitting. With all this it takes n very moderate amount of fabric. A wonderful style for summer prints 8'. . 8517 in designed for 80. 6 to 50. re- quires 3 8-8 yds. 39-in. fabric. Pattern is hand-cut to United States Standard Measurements d includes chart with stop by step n- smschonl. Send twenty cents for pattern. write your name. address and style number. 8e sure m state sine you Nlllll and for; WI n8 1 ngth threads. You daft ghnt com fawn’: stretched in one direction and you lfhcrironlih a ei no You l-IATEA T0 on u? in the Millilillifi’ I Donn‘ Qwcll k I tho onlll ='=-'-.=l'.="i-"""'".l."7i."il':'§ Tl".‘lr*..":":":.r.'.- i ginlzfhevek gully feel thdr but. ' The reluon in was]!!! u common complaint-c c Strut Add-fill Git! Province don't pvyant wands: crust, ass o rs. u l shoulder 1t in l ousllo e firm enough tn hold the garment for easy pressing. Push the oint of the pyramid down into I seevc t0 do t trick for which s sleeve board il too flan. . Out the bus triangle with equal sides, each mesa ‘_ x es but. curved. cut. three tall sides of the pyramid so they fit the base SIZES 16-5 u“ M‘ eyixmnuznufixn (finches) withithair lonllzsgideatmg- you v ' a ng seven no u, u c . 1. §mfmwflfiflilif Now new the pillow together firmly. llmiumnc yet elfectlvn aid thouln my on. uni u eiiort stitch and three- Mnde from l0 Dllll vegetable cxtrletnhllk QlEh h! to OIIQ-hllf inch lenm. l‘ Leave a little open stretch to turn ‘l’ C N " Th n ll . bbgge :2..'"ss:.:.l‘.:i.is."2.'&..'a%'.:::. w... ~'=".*::..“l:..‘"r ‘Wuuinnien-nusliiy IEIIJIII“ ernbly the latter. Whip the open cauliflower D d be . y. ml, too. can enjoy that “ lnd-to-be-ullve" trolls; every riuy. Try Bile Econ: toni ht— they work while You llcerl- Over 7 miilofl boxes med lair year. com-Indus zvidncc of how greatly they nu hdpllll ethan- spnoe together by hand. Kean 1h! ti!" I i°°d children's clothes, you will wont IJi- or puffliifih “m” u other smaller one. Pi!“ ihogileh, red pill!‘ l“ a dance of 1°11“ mi" little pillow clean ycu ores! and stocky. ha“ i‘