PAGE Tvgo Wbmaifs E w‘ ooo-oovo-ooo-‘o “A l- Realm '1. Sggial an“ ocean- "v--- "a. 171v First - - - then and NOW! Years ago Schwartz established the FIRST mill tor grinding and blending Prepared Mustard in Canada. And now Schwartz Prepared Mustard is known from coast to coast. It haslhe distinctive mustard pun- gericy, yet it is mild and pleasing to the taste. For adding zest to sauces, salads and sand. wiches, Schwartz Prepared Mustard is the indispensable condiment. And lor bringing out the hidden flavours oi roasts, chops, steaks, tish and cheese it is without a rival. Say Schwartz——and be sure,‘ W. H. SCHWARTZ 8r SONS LIMITED Canada's Oldest Coffee and Spice Hougg HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA ‘ Y ‘it. sitar’ lnalivialrranl HOROSCOPE - »---~ 133' Fran 120s "rake OCTOBER 2i to \'OVF.\IIJFI{ 2i! v- " w-wfl n" nnnwcooogggggqngogggyiwmonnm . . . l"i-kl:tl Carrots i i i" s not lzirgcr than 2 ln.‘ . .t W115i} the dcisircd num- k a iniiiiiti-s lll boiling stilt- ‘ Drmn. Prick in hot steri- For each pint jar allow. e its lIll us: 3-4 cup ' ‘. l-4 (‘illl \\"‘°". l-l. lll iicd stigar, 1 tblsp. salt. lllillll-(Kw, Pfllll‘ 43\'iil' tlthlillo Button Cup (Iiilics. lied fl iir l .i.t. l 2 biking Ptirdcr ' sift out . 1 ll NOVY" BER l ' 3 1 l l t bi 1 . orcrilo it to the point of flJYlllLIl‘. s g1 "t .Il'.\'FI 21 iGQtninil-l or ritdeitcs‘! 2 \ '; ,- g, ;ti..i i;'i in Witirh DE‘ NIBYLR 23 t“ JANLIARY ll 1 l ' i step out. (Ce iiiii _I~'iiiiiiiiili- lu . 1.3 .4: ‘Ellll Clr- - ‘llifllSllftfi add baking t it ‘l g . salt and ‘f: trgetlicr ‘ which! nut .0, slrrrtcning, add . tho sccttrcl one Piiitilyzei inllv favored. Ctirtall lrii AYUKRY ° . J . i‘: ‘It JKTLY 23 (C:iiicer‘>—l (Ari. is very SICOCl. . t . i lire on-i n-i viliic if you don't ' "- 1 i" i (l n‘: try‘ ci-‘P it! Ski ii ik . _\‘Olll‘ ~ i . iiiqoit. i‘ w-i of mil: » i. Don‘; bsl rind iiicll-tzicniinig folk. ' ~' . ‘ l-“FBRUAltY 21 t‘ MKRCH 20 L12 rLx- rPl~cvs>-Ai'nld sv1f-itidtifszoncc— tics " mities lionPh. You can S‘i'C— rcorl \\' h rcasotii cffor‘ r0 rit- i.i.in }"‘lll‘ ]7l‘f‘fl$‘ Pd "l\l“'ll\'9. Cciicoiiitxifi- on ".10 l1l“3l‘ lll'l‘L',s_ A (‘HUD BO N’ ON TillS DAY ‘ is unlit-i" tho down.‘ nril ll‘lll'.".'l('(l o‘ . 23, Vcniis. Yours ls n prnc l nfttiiro n Lzxmtcs‘. which readily ridzipis itself tn ' iincl claims conditions. A kvcn srirwri $"fl ~l-nl very cviclrint. (‘o "c lJ‘lllL' riwur-liinttii l’? it . 2i {o OCTOBER: limos towwwl lhow who moon iinth. '~ ii 1' I"llY 023s. tic-i : . t , and brine cold" and fut‘- rezil friends. You we dis- ...nlivo , of keen procripttoir. Allomimsvnilc _v Doctor: ‘ Well. madam, what ls your ailment?" 01d Lady: “Pains in my arms, doctor. I can hardly lift them ovvr my tizzid. and it's the same with i my legs." A man ivent into a. bookshop to purchase a prcscnt, "1 uinnt an ill- ustrntcd edition of the PFHlCIlS, plczisc." he zuked the young lrizlyi behind tlic counter. The flFSlSIlllli wont some llfllf‘. mid then llFk, "Who's it by?" ziivzi)‘ for lCilllllCfl t.» ;~_— ~--—- ~-»— _ _ - __ , ,_;:-= flinlftlltllliIll) IHZNIGN DIAKES BEAUTHUL BEDSPREAD .lll‘ , i .2 l“ FCBRU. RY 20 coining well; add‘ til light and fluffy. Add 021:5 next. alternating and flavoring; mix well i adcfiion, boat well after "niblnt- l!‘.l(‘l.€(l tinswect-cned out", mclicd butter. sugar, . r and 5.6g rind mix troll; add‘ 1-2 cf batter. Put chocolate bat- . in greased cup cake pans; put, l -=. m» fn f batter on top. filling pans; l 2-3 i, Bake about. 20 minutes lfl l ic I“ oven. They may be lain or frosted. Help Bulld up Reslstancn fo FE ALE! FUNCTIONAL COMPLAINTS i TF3‘ Lydia E. Plnkhnmb Vegctuble Compound to help relieve monthly pnirnlictianches. backnche and ALSO Cfllm cmnk . restless nerves due to futictlonn disorders. Plnkhnmfl! is very effective to help build up rs- slstiince for wcuk, tired women. Mode in Ciinudnl fips That Help You Win Com- mercial Art Success Diagrams Guide In Home Study Do you look rticfully at your at- tempts to be an advertising artist? Perhaps your main trotiblc is not knowing how to make your draw- ings interesting. Commercial artists have a whole bag of tricks to add excitement to their folders or posters or what not. These methods you can study at homo, teaching yourself. One of the first steps tn lcnrn is l l ,_ s... n». . < -.-t-~ .7 r ti“ imafif?‘ ‘ . - "ca < any; ._ . I l l I | l ': DESIGN N0. 433 ‘This arrowhead bedspread design ls exceptionally‘ handsome. E.» - i- - _ , ~ ,- tried as Wonk progrcsrzcs. Pattirn N0. 45» (‘smrilrllicllllldllbfwnliztgiflnnlgenbgdcd, illustration of design and complete iii- mullltlilnlliltlrir pnttem: Write or send above picture with l5 cents Ln or sihiiiiis In Nr-t-dviwiinrii Bureau, Charlottetown Guardian. To (Jliriritmwinivn uurirtitan (hpjl nrk lli-partmcfll 433 NAME-_-_...._.__....._._...__...___-_-- STREET ADDRESS-———-crrY"-""“"""""' pgovmgg;.__----_—-n~~———--P"'F""""' handling tone valucs-blncks, whites and grnys, Begin. just for fun, with a travel poster-temple columns against a night sky and a forest. Decide where you'll place your columns. sky. moon and forest. Then divide the poster into areas of gray. while ancl black-the white for bril- liancy. black for accent and gray for quality. as in our sketch. Soc yvlint strength and dignity those vertical lines-the columns- glve the poster! Horizontal line: would suggest peace and calm, oblique lincs exciting action. This is the kind of knowledge that turns your "crude" stuff into the art that scllsl Our SZ-page booklet gives fundamentals of design. color; ex- plains techniques, lettering. repro- duction; also posters, booklets, other forms of advertising art. Tells how ‘and ivlicrc to scll art work. iiiii . in coins for your y f qmwi-ycng Dcsizn sr-lf-Tnur. t‘ .0 Tiv- chnrlottclovm Guardian H1111- Scrvlcc. Bc stirs to write plainly your name, address, and the name of boI-klcl. _.___.._.. i.‘ Inna IITIII lflflfl -_@_-____i_ Oil! Province Ins _T(I_ljlARl_._U'l"l‘E_1‘_QWN____(iUAR DIA cl Person Hi1 al '1. Fashions lDorothy Dix S-dys- THE HENPECKED HUSBAND 1s Grinds That They Refuse To Continue The Battle When They Get Home One of the interesting problems henpecked husband. does any man suffer himself to be put 1n such Dustllanlmous position unless he lacks lt of the worm that turned at last? ecause the coward and a duliaiid. cliers whose breasts bear hard-fought their wives speak to them. irol banking trusts or run not dare tolnvlte a guest lng their wives‘ permission. mysteries of marriage that will probably always Nmatn unsolved. discussing it recently with a group of men one of them said: night. They've battled all day with versary. Peace At Any Price “The real peace-at-anyi-ptiice advocates are men. and harmony at home, so they give in and let their wives want to do to save scenes. Maybe it ls cowardly. but. it prevents divorces. "I think it is nobility instead of weakness that makes many men suf-l fer the humiliation of being dominated by their wives." said another Iran. They suiore at the altar before God betwr or worse and cleave unto thcnii "They have respects for their oaths. anti llltlll to take their wives for until death parted them, and they feel honor bound to keep their vows. "'1hcy consider that they are as much obligated marriage contracts as they would business rlgnt to irclch on their bargains." ‘You are right about vl-flllb," said the third man, “and when I see a more liberty than a dog on a leash I don't jeei- at hlm. to a saint and a martyr. _ "ror I know he is standing these t-hlrggs through sheer “Pit fool to whom he ls married. He knows ie ls utterly dope her [l5 she hurts him.'_ The Crowning Agony "But the crowning agony of the henpecked husband." said the fourth‘ ll I i their fatlilgelrlltsitslrllg) H h l item, encoura n , e sees er Spa “g fe, but. which he tries to interfere; His wife has made herself head of the house and he is a- His children have no res ect for hlm and he has no auth- ienpcoked man drinks his cup of ' ‘Do these humble, uncompliilnlng, doormat husbands we all know ob- u red. man, when he sees his wife ruining his children and ls save tium. _ ireaklings of them, unflttuig them lor ll he is helpless. cipher in it. ority over them. It is then that the bitterness to the drcgs." ject to their estate?" In ln “More than anything else in the world," the men replied as with one voice. “Did you ever notice with wh at. Christian resignation wldowers bear the loss of their bossy iilivefiw‘ How Long Wldow’s Weeds? rid lléiSvllltfd? r lore she receives attention from other men? his pastor by the gossip about hlm? ANSWER-Cortven l correct for a woman to marry aftcr her husband dies. ‘ cil i ' ' l . tslywltliwiah It)?» iwlllgfllSuSgflh as her husband is lnid in his grove. Haw 4515c can you judge a man except by his est? 0rd. The sum of all that he has (lone in life. USUALLY MARTYR BY CHOICE Most Men Are So_ Tired From Their Daily of matrimony ls the why of the conceding that: there are women who are born tyrants and who are determined to rule every one wlthln their sphere of; influence, why does any man submit b0 lt? Why‘ even the] hcnpecked husband is always a’ We all know famous si-i-I medals they won on battlefields, but who Jump when We know great sli- Klorers who have led daring expeditions into un-‘ nown lands who always walk meekly behind their wives and sit where they tell them to, And we know men of great executive ability. who coir, r chains of stores ard rule over thousancs or eniployes. but who are not allowed to cot. what they want at home and would to dinner without ask- Now by what pro- cess a wife changes a man who ls a roaring llon abroad into a timld sheep at home ls one of the But. in _ ‘I think the reason why so litany mcn are lieiipccked by their wives lS because they are too tired to fight any more when they come home ati They are like an exhausted army meeting a fresh one all prlmrd l and ready for the fray, and so they surrender without making a struggle. incompetent employes. or unreasonable bosses. or cantankerous clients and they simply can't take on another ad- There 1s notliirg they won't do to avoid arguments and contentions and get n little quie. do what they to stand by their contracts. and the fact tliatl they used bad judgment in picking out their wives doesn't give them a for the _ en on hlm for every dollar she spends and her position in society, and he sticks Bind endures his sufferings because he ls not hard and cruel enough to hurt ' D‘ —H i l l lcl ' m remain a widow after her Dig‘; Mw‘ ‘X lggw lgilggsalfrlgr hgrwllusbhb death should it be oe- Should you judge 8 rlnlan by hands on sets a year as the shortest time ‘in ‘which it is Tgebmatter ‘Jdf i‘ . ‘ tt ti f th .e ou e govemt when a. VHClOW nriy receive u en Ctérxfiitaflillgl i0‘ Saga]; Sign‘ lack or taste That is his rec- t ls what we call lnsi at ‘QQVCOO-O-QQQCQO-OIOOXQ-QOQ THE LIKEABLE MAN SYLVESTER CAIRN O§§QO-OF%O-QO¢O4-O-§Q%9Q Q‘. Amid . Elizabeth ioomed larize. He still grew hot at the memory of he! expi ion. and the sting of her worn that particular moment. . He would have 09d) amazed mid‘ he known. She was sitting on Lie. side of her bed, a bundle of oauers crushed between her ink-stained She had taken them train the office. and did not know where to out. them untll she could destroy. them. Whatever happened Geraids name must be kcoc clear. Sh: toidi herself this was not. on iiis ilLCOllllnl but to snare Mrs, Dixon. Elizabeth trad decided to burn she; papers. Should any subsequent agent. character and he has proved himself either strong or weak, wise or slllyn gnqblggifi, she would say she had split e competent or incompetent. drunken or temperate. a man to one in whom no faith ls to be put. be trusted or‘ a of ink over them. anti as; they were illegible she haci not! 1 advise you to 100k very carefully into the Past 0f any ma" W" a" thought them worth keeping-and lfl thinking of marrrin the gossip that you Living s» Leisure -—The Womank Realm being marketed has a color range or {our hues to blerd harmoniously with each other and with natural surroundings. The natural basic colors o! thli flagging are blue. buff. gray and purple. In addition to these basic colors, there are many “surface" variations. such as gunmetals, rus- tic brooms. etc, mostly found on the faces of stsne one inch or less ln thickness. FASHION FLASHES A simple frock lights up for the the ‘After Five" look. done 1n metal jersey in metal and gold, with novai animal-head buttons 1n gold metal trlmmfdylth red. and then you will know whether or not ear about hlm. DOROTHY Ln life's earnest battle They only prevail, Who daily march onward And never say fall. -Anon Before weeding the garden SCFBJX! your nails full of 5C3p and run cream over your hands. Salt water ls the best cleaner for glass. Let the salt. water d on the glass and then polliih w th a piece of chamols. Rub a little olive oll over silver that is to be stored away to pre- vent any suspicion of tarnish. When marchlning muslin. not or lace. tack a pcce of tissue paper over the material and machine 13ml“ and gprons account for llifflllgh 1t. a more formal look in afternoon -———‘ (trusses. Instead of making the old-fash- o o a toned type ol’ kettle holder, make one ln the shape of s bag to enable your hands to slip inside. Thlisfliipt onl d _ away wth any P055 1 of h’ sglld should the kettle lid fall back also prevents slipping, The back or the bug need be only slmzle cloth prrvldlng the part you grtp ls properly reinforced. POUR-RUE!) FLAGS BLEND IN WALKS The casual. or functional trend in clothes this fall give; extra significance to ahirtwalst, dresses. O O i O buttons. French cuffs and a gored back l0 there are no pleats t? sit out. O I I American beauty red in shown linked with black accents or a black dress is worn with an Amer- ican beauty red hat.‘ I Flagstone wa ks, porches and ter- races have long been used by build- I ' 6Y5 and architects to give an ap-l Peplums are features on many pearance of smart d! lnlty to til-in very narrow. hlP-lcnlih» "Ki "9""!- h0IE.__Q_f1_e_lY_P_€_0l'_l_ ggstontnow dresses, done ln varylnLtypgL: to believe DIX. he thought her an idiot. she clltl 110i! care—\vhich was very unlike EL;- nbeth She did not know how she would explain his hurried departure, She would say he had very little eicper. lGHCG-flilld leave people to jump to their own conclusions. She wished she had not spoken so impulsively in the morning. A month's notice would have looked better. She would write and tell hlm so now. and send the note down after dinner. It might be hard to go on meeting hlm day. alter day, but it would save her! ‘dignity and his reputation. She scrawled the note hastily and dress- ed lnw; hurry-and was nearly iiiie for dinner. But the note was uls- inatched. and the papers safely ud- den ln her wardrobe to be disposed of later. I After dinner she announced that she was to take the terriers out. for la scamner. She oftcn did this-so it would arouse no suspicion, Nvstil , mcrclv said: “Wnat energy! By the way. is there no chance of Mr. Ashley COlIl-l iniz over? He's not been for ages. and we'll all forget how to ttanccl". She glanced cuflollslv at Ellztibezh. t "I haven't asked hlm. one ncisirti felt like dancing." Nesta stared and Elizabeth fnnc-i led that she suspected something {was odd. out she hurried upstairs to get her cont. and came down villi the papers stuifcd out of slizlit uniicr it. 1t did not trike her long to niuli them into the greenhouse furniicc. and if the Iardencr found a pile cf whale ash 1n the morning. he COUEd hardly say anything. As she wasl crossing the hall on her way ln.! Susan brought. her a note. l " cuse lss. but-——” Just, t-hen the drawing-room door opened.» “I'm very sorry. but Mr. Ashlcfis away. He left by the evening trail. - Mrs. Parsons says." I “How tiresome," Elizabeth tried to sound casual. "I honed this would have been in time to catch him." ‘She must not let oeople think hls hlllfrltld departure took her bv stir- brse Susan moved nolsclcssly throiuzh the swing door and Nesta. came tor- ward. "Mr Ashley gone? Elizabeth. why‘ PILLIE THE TOILER - THAT'S PLAYING THE GAME! Yss,1 cmr CHOOSE oi- TWEEN "mam-rams: BOTH PiR-FECT a ‘V - ' C It's Tllie fa our wasing-ine his worries. the thought ofl l . l-le wondered. wnat she was doing at. i nsncratlnizlv handsome — and unz- SEFFEMBER s. 1941 p ' *_ v. Literature vvv vvvv iv ‘ 0'14 44.40 ./ 7 Hit/E A ammo zvsw W/Isll/l/l/é- MAcw/A/s — A/vasr/rz M)’ czar/res max » away HOLD o~.sue! use lunso m THAT WASHER AND voult as THRILLED av rue RESULTS! Q Don't blame your washing. machine when clothes don't come out clean and fresh! Check up on your washing preparation. Remember —-only Rinso can give you peifm Rinso-whircnessl Rinso aursts instantly into rich, thick last. ing suds Jim: get: white things clean as snow. flakes l i i kccp colors bright and Sparklingi Once you've seen a Rinso wash, you'll never a ain be content with anything clsc. Orga- Rlns0——the GIANT box for extra economy-from your store today! WHAT A DIFFERENCE WITH RINSO IN MY WASHING~MAOHINEl NOW MY WASH lS SNOWY AND BRIGHT ,/ . A coon witlsnsli DEvSRl/ES RINSO. .l Needlecraft- - ~For The Home No matter how little your young daughter is, sjic wants to show per patriotism as the older girls are doing. Make this cunning sailor frock for her to wear nr/w as well as to school later on. Red or blue and white striped cotton ‘vitli a collar and lacing or solid color makes the petifect. little dress for every tiny fmliiotiablz‘. The same i ‘y-to-itse pattern also makes a. p.s.n collar. so you'll want. to Wllke this version. too. Pleats in the skirt front give ample room for an actlvg child's rooming. Style NJ. 3026 Ls designed for sizes 2, 4. 6. and 8. Size 4 requires 1 5-8 yiards of 35-inch fnbrlc with 3-8 yard of contrasting for sailor collar version; 1-4 yard [or high neck collar. Send Twenty (20ci coin is pre- ferred. for Pattern Write plainly your Name. Address and the style number Be sure to state the 512B you wish. hi?» iblTl-Btiiidre- City mm“- ‘M Province on earth?" Her voice was shrill with amazement. Elizabsth turned on her sharply. "Don't. cavesdiiob. Nesta. It's s. nasty habit.’ “I couldn't help over-hearing. and lt did surprise me. You were talk- ing about him half an hour alto and‘ you never told me he was going. I think it queer-and sincly m, wouldn't. take ll. ltuildliv now when he's alone in the office." Elizabeth?‘ nrepiircdh her ex lull; ntioiis-titi hoped t cy wou d convincing, 6 "l spoke to hlm to-dny. He's nad 5,255 2,8 very ntne experience, and-we dis- CUSS€Ll matters-snow" ----- " “You needn't tell me he bolted at a tnomcnvs notice because of that." lsm“ New‘ smcltdly‘ i tlon and he didn't rlse to it. I al- "What absurd ivords you use! No . - .- . - uu':e one said lie bolted." l goalfigknfigdlleltwas dumb‘ and y “Why cllzlnl he stav on as osslstq “You're merely vulgar not unus- nnt under n more experienced mani 1m» Elizabeth's mm W55 icy. ilic irvay he did with booi- Mr. Dixon? “Esta chuckled l thought you liked him." ' "But vou must: have qutirrellcd "Llktilv n man had nothing to do about sdmethmg or he wouidnii have with the Wav he noes his work." cleared out m a hurry‘ And roll Elizabeth lclt thntlicr words dszl not Lmmt, “mo; mm _., jmv. tutti! ... carry wclzht-and not know you would,” have Se," mm Wm“ °° S" 11°"- letter "m awfully queer — “W” Nesta laughed suddenly. her pretty» m“, ‘Wu making we“ a myggcll‘ “we mauclolls- abnlttflt. And 1 think therefs somr- . — ' ~ ' if‘ i- " ' " ..,"til§“$§l. “till lfilptlffit-fftfllfifll "imfl-fl-ihi-el “W l "l" i i " any and got on _\'O\ll"'l\lgll horse nnn i ‘t w“ “M” “w R . he ulxons-i sackcd hltn! I don't blame nlm» ‘ .. h . [((_'lH1H~3- either-the way you've been running ,,,,,§°‘E"Y,,§ff’ l?“ u fm 11° alter hlm. Purely platonic. of coursei -. ltztmeth was rarely —but the man mightift. know that." ,‘§,‘.}§‘.,d"‘{,‘,",“ud,Em he; cousin's nosi- slie wns mocklnz. l “on and the fact, that she did w "How dare you sneak llkr lhflt?"l now showed how worried she W“ Elizabeth's face flamed "l-lc wouldmyou need,“ make insulting re- ncvcr behave like-w cad." lmarks-ns lnsultlnft to hlm a! l0 “All right. then." Nesta was ntrvn me__51mnlv because an eml>1°ll°° “It's the other way round. You were happens to ‘ave;- kccn on hlm-and I admit he's cx- d) (To be Continue led for a kl53,_—_0Z‘_8_l"€if‘l_ Bjfllld fllljoj‘ By Weslover now wueu ‘flLLlES f we ma»: Aaouip YOU DO ALL ; HOW ‘rue siuaiue srou CHAR '94 wiTH Tun voice OF \0URS