F ' Keiuwo Exciting new llquld creme shampoo . . o enriched with sggl Non-drying, foams quickly lnlo lavish lather . . . giving your Qwlnit ql-l-tuliin HAIR PREPARATIONS I EGG CREME SHAMPOO 5 oz.-1.25 2 CREME RINSE s oz.—l.25 3 DANDRUFF TREATMENT 8 OIw-l-ZS 4 CREME HAIR DRESSING l dl-LZS GLORIOUS, CARESSABLE HAIR . . . SPARKLINtB WITH "LOVELIGHTS' 0man’s Realm J “ocial INTRODUCTORY OFFER SPECIAL Hair Beauty Ritual . Package ‘Containing 2 oz. Bottles ol lFour Richard Hudnuls aids to I Hair Beauty. Only $1.25 ' rue {Re/null srune" DISPENSING GHEIVIISTSTPIIDNE ‘ZIQ .GT. GEORGE iSKENT 5T5. [IIIAII TTETUWN.P.E.I. The Stars Say - By GENEVIEVE KEMBLE For Sot-isrday, October l8 ‘DEFINITE progress and success are Indicated. if the proper and logi- cal elements of productive programs be submitted to practical judgment and sound techniques, and not dis- tarted by "flash-in-the-pan" ‘rdeas o: distorted reasoning. ‘Iihere are excellent promises for worthy plans and projects, provid- ed. these are not wrecked by lllfbill" erit or limpetuous moves. Seek aid. 1nd abide by the superior judgment a! tihose ready to cooperate, "ERA?! [is rich lather ' lasting protection d 2. 3 m-[QWONDERF t bum ‘was for me. | kngvl Illl 9 n: IIlSl-I," CLEAN scent is YOUR GUARANTEE or riiorecrioii cleso scent of Lifebuoy‘! chick rich- 1b 1| you: gulrsntee a few. seconds the Lifebuoy scent has ‘b; and so hos every mce of “B.O." y odor). Iifebuoy is the only sosp specially XII“! to “o? 08.0.1! O I, "I WAS BUSY typing when out of the carrier of my eye I saw Jim and Dick looking at me kind cf funny. Then I heard Dick whisper, ‘What a pity Jane has "B.O."-she could be so popularl“ Ulwhatadailyilfobuoy. I never wort“! QYMQIP‘ lwoys fresh and dainIY- yigsoivi HEAb Birthday Forecast Those whose birthday it. is have excellent augurles for a productive and expansive year, with proper recognition. aid and practical sup- port from those in influential places. But do not put such good prospects in jeopardy by erratic. irascible. or reckless emoti-analisan. which ‘could defeat or annihilate all fair pros- pects. rewards and Constructive ef- forts. Seek to ccrric to sane and amicable understandings, in per- sonal as well as busines affairs. A child born of this day while having fair ambitions, with promise of aid from superiors. yet may have the faculty of undermining good work by impeiuous. ungoveniable and riotous behavior. Early disci- pline is admonished. That whisper almost‘ broke my herr! THE GUARDIAN. cimxno-rrm-owu A DOROTHY 01x SA YS— . v<it tiq 1 Unwifely Wife ' tlaii Should Slioil Woiiiaii lliialilo To Book 0r Do lloiisowork DEAR. MISS DIX: I am a man o! 37 of the home-loving type. A few months ago I married a girl whom I believed would make me s good wife. for she bragged about being domestic and a good cook and housekeeper. Well. on our wedding night she hid in a clothes closet and had to br talked out of it. Next morning she didn't offer to get up a and. get breakfast. I waited as I0ilg‘flS I could, then told her she would have to gct up as I had to eat and go to work. I waiiccl and waited for breakfast and when it came. ha" '°""°"l'¢ all she had fixed was a small bowl of oatmeal. I I ate same and went to work. _ ludmncav Mid-day I went home hungry. thinking she _ _ would have a good dinner. but. all she had was ihlmmBfIllQ some fricd potatoes. Nothing inure. Told her I would have to have more food as I worked hard. scftnessl but I had to cook things for myself. Needless to say I became exasperated and threatened to send her bat-k to her folks. Finally ' did so. after which she begged me to take hcr back and‘ said she would start all ovor, and as hcr mother also spoke for hcr I agreed. thinking she had leaned hcr lesson and would do better. Bu‘. it was the same old story. 1 threatened lo send hci" home to her mother and make it filial, but she irfuscs to go. Sn what shall I do? Love soon flics out of the window when a nian has lo cook his own meals and ‘have his wife walk in and eat them. What do you suggest? K. S. M. ANSWER: Perhaps if mothers knew that their daughters would be sent back home to them it they were allergic to the cooking stove and preferred to snooze of a morning. instead of getting up and getting their husbands’ breakfasts. they would take lhc time and trouble to lcach their Mamios and Susics how to be good housewives. instead of foisting lhcin on unsuspecting young bridcgrooins who married under the illusion that every girl was born knowing how to make biscuit like Mother's. Many a man could get a divorce from his wife on the grounds of having been lured into marriage under false representations. Your case is indeed a pitiful one, and you will be fully Justified in returning your bride in licr mother, blit il- 1S going to take some douigs to make her go. for she evidently rrcogiiizrs that she has a soft snap in having acquired o. husband ivho will not only bring home the baron. bill fry it and ivasli the dishes afterwards. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We are a group of young married vicin-iezi mill husbands who make jllni moderate lllCOillCS. We are all worked up over the prospect. of hziiing to throw awny all of our good clothes that. we had depended upon for most. of our winters wear. or else go about looking like trumps and as if we didn't know what was what if we wear our olrl Sillll.’ We can't. afford a ivardrobetof ncw.»clothcs_ and we can't. make nrer our old cincs and lengthen kvnce high skirts so that they trail lll the dust. ll. certainly won't keep the high cost of living dawn for rvciy woman to run up a rlfarge account by buying a int. of new tinriqy. Whal. shall Wl.‘ do? MRS. S. M. ANSWER. Women have the remedy In their own hands. If even a small percentage of the women of this rouniigv had the backbone and the good. hard. common sense lo refuse to throw away their good clothes of ycsicryear. they could not be cocrccd iiiIQ buying things thal they cannot afford. They could do as they have always done hereto- fore-be frce agents. instead of cringing slaves tn a few fashion de- signers. - ' DEAR. MISS DIX: Was it right for two young people. a bo_\' and his girl friend. both l9. lo slay at. a summer resort for n week vrith- out. a chapcrone? We. the boy's parrnls. CIJjECICd. but the girl's par- enis didn't. She is an uncontrollable redhead. BEWILDERED PARENTS. ANSWER: Of course. ll was highly‘ improper for a boy and girl in spend their summer vacation togcthri" without a chwpnrnne. No girl who valued her good name would think of doini: so llnr would a boy ask a girl he rcspcctcd lo do such an uncunvcn "ninl act. LIIoDCY- VII-Mil boat-l" veins . ' mg GlI-OVQI; gwesgainst 'B.O."' long- of protection. In USI IT DAILY Tests prove you csn build up protectionsgsinss ~ ' by bathing with Lifebuoy every day. Try it for seven dsys. Your skin feels so clesn, fresh and gently caressed! And, with Lifebuoyis ‘ l°fi8fl~llsting protection, you're-completely free of "B.O." worries. ro TOE-LIFEBUOY sirors "mo." A LEVER PIOIIUQI r and Personal J Fasli hands; Close t.o the sun in lonely lands. Rinfd with the szurs world. he stands. The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; He watches from his walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls. —“'I‘he Eagle." Aliced Tennyson. mountain‘ In the clays when our great- grandmothers. vrore indcntical right and left shoes. there were only two widths; slim and stout! Uppcrs were pulled loosely about the last. attached to soles and the result railed “shoes". NO BATHTUB RINGS I OHIOAGO—'I'he ring around the bathtub is going to disappear. R. C _Gueiither_ Laporte, Ind. presi- dent of an association of soft water service operators. said a new water softening device would prevent formation of the tattle-tale gray line. He predicted that. every home eventually would be equipped with the new gadget. . i Hints on Etiquette If you wish to bring a. business or other important letter to the attention of a certain person. write “Attention ol Mr. -" on the same line as the salutation or beneath it to the right. Foot specialists say that chil- dren outgrow their shoes every one to six months until they are fifteen. Don't- be in too much of a hurry when you use paint and varnish remover. Give the remover time l-o soften the paint film before you start. to scrape it off, because if the remover has had a chance to do its work, the paint uill in all probability come off without trouble. BUTTON roads“ DOWN our. yams In the history of costume. hut- tons are comparatively new-com- Lrs. But. since the time when pep- ' m: inn of Yoursl l James w. bur-mu M. u. EMOTIONAL IJISTURBANL IJS i LAN strum-smut.» ssiri. I have an acquaintance who al- ways has been strung lsiyéififllly Bllts gJlEt’; Wi-al Illul‘? tilJlI iifliidfltr‘ nientai (IIJIIII), viiiu lhlllbbl. uc.o.i any cyo, gauuaiiy has become as, weak that Iit.‘ is unable lu do Li. cnores about his home-cutting grass, weeding his flowers, which were ins greatest. price-and. fin- nliy unable to go to business. rte has una:rgoiic_scvcrai physic- QI CXJIITIIIIBuUIIS. Illfllildiilg .s-l'ii)S of his stomach amt intestine, ticc- tro-cardiagrapn. urine and blood tests. Notining_definite has been found, yet he pracncaiiy has be- come bed ridden. I have watched his case because I believe tnal. lize repealed "knocks" this man has re- ceived in his every/day business. soc- ial and domestic liie have upset his nervous system, which i-n turn has upset all his body processes. Ln as guarded a way as possible I have infoi-zned his physician about the great change in this paticnt, and of the various trials and tribulations he has undergone. The serious outstanding symptom is his inability ta eat and digest food; yet neither ulcer nor cancer is present. In the "Review of Gastroentcro- logy" (stomach and intestines), Dr. Sidney A. Portis states that s nor- mal stomach and intestine cannot have emotional disturbances reach it day after day, week after week, month after month and even year after year without showing evidence h the workiig pronoun and oven in the structure of the stomach and intestine. "A normal digestive tract, work- ing harmoniously with s nonmai no symptoms." Why, then. do our siomsah spec- ialists nnd symptoms when no cancer. ulcer, or inflsmmstion is present? This ls their answer: "Wehave been much too busy in the laboratory, making test-tube diagnoses, using special forms of treatment and forgetting that we are treating s patient who is in o troubled world with its many tn- sults (emotional disturbances) snd who is iii because, he has a mol- sdiusted emotional household." It thus on: be soon that unless s physician knows more about his potlentb homo and business life. and helps him [at adjusted. his treatment is likely to fail. NIUIOSII Neurosis-believing you have a physical ailment when none exists- is becoming increasingly common. Send today for Dr. Barton's inform- ative booklet on this subject entit- led "Neurosis." To obtain it. send 10 cents and a l-cont stssnp. tn com colt o! hsndliig and maiiinl. 'i'o Th4 Boll Syndicate. Ind. in can o! this newspaper. Post Office . Box 00, Station G, New York 1B. and non-irritating diet should grve . ILI-Jndoskiocyourwn. LivingiS. Leisure ' rTHE WUMANS REALM! — ll dllill 9N fill with crooked lums. veils copes and various - other articles of clothing were either fastened with hooks or tied with ribbons buttons have held théir own against all competition even in the form of steel or plastic zippers. They enjoyed their greatest vogue in the 18th century. Tlicn. hand-painted to match the em- broidered satins of the day in France. They marched in never- ending processions down the fab- ulous Waistcoats affertcdby the elegant young rakes surrounding the Duke of Orleans. The FFPIIVII Iiave always kept an eye on blit- tons. Evan the izrcat novelist, Marcel Proust. famous for his minute descriptions. notcd the rows of pearl buttons which trim- med the dress oi Odette Swan! when she strolled through the Bois dc Boulognc. ‘Po-day buttons oftcn give a dross m" suit that clever touch that sets it apart from all others. The use oi buttons by a skillful drcssmaker amounts to a fine art. They are used at the neck of dresses on the front, or llZiCk of bodivcs. at the waist. on the skirt at the wrists, clbows or even shoulders. Why is an otherwise plain tunic buttoned diagonally or the lzist. button on a skirt generally left. undone if noL to pique the eye? TRANSFERS 0N WALLS EASILY REMOVED r Now you can rrinove dci-uico- mania ti-rinsieis quickly. All you have to do is soak a ivatl ill’ pad of tltfiilslilg tissue. toilet pzipci‘ or blotter and place on ilie IFIIIISIPI‘ romplcteiy- FDVEFIIIE ll, nothing else is rcuuirrd. ‘The net. _i\;il‘.l‘!' sticks. lo the “all rind rifirr sov- cral hours you vziii l'f‘lllO\P tlic transfers easily uitn inigciiiiiil. Altar the transfer IS irmoleil a little vicanscr. lightly airplicd will make your walls rciidy fur n new dcsigii. Before this (IlbL'l)\(‘l‘_\, tixiiisfrrs were particularly hard to rcmove= They were lilflllilI;ltIlll‘L‘;I flint way so that they ivoulcl not fail off. nor could "busy lIlIlt‘ iingcrs" them. The; stick like glue and resemble oil pziiiitiiizs. With the anilounccnicnt of l. housewives will i'(‘_i0l.‘t‘. 'I'nc_v now have all the advautazcs oi’ perma- v iiczit. lrzinsfcrs which will witli- stand the usvxi houseiiolii “ca. and tear suili its Wiltlllllg O\'(‘l when houscvlcaiiiiig. At‘ llic same time they. can change crilv their decorating scheme wlicnovcr desir- ed. Boar's oils PAINS NEED QUICK HELP- Don't lake chances-don't. lri biiiiy he mis- eraiiie and lune nrcilcii rest from gas pninn In stomach or bowels when Baby's Own Tablets-gentle and reliable-quickly help sweeten sour little schs rind clear away overload o! waste and gar. Easy to take - quickly crushed to s nowdcr. if desired. See how soon baby tr. haiinv and comfort- able ngiiin. Nn"alcep.\"'atiil\'-nn dullini: of. fccLUactt with confidence for over 50 xriim by thousands of motlirra. 'I‘ry Baby's Ow ii To ets. 1°‘). for teething fevers, simple fe- ver, constipation and other minor Ills, 26g‘. MESH ANDTEAN-l-IESHIN DESIGN N0. E401 Square doilies and an oblong dolly are crocheted to sst ii beau- tiful table. Pattern No. 2-807 con- tains complete instructions. To order: Send 20 cents in coin to Needlework Bureau, Charlotte- town Guardian. Denim No. E407 Nome Address 91f! defare 1 discovery. ‘ ions f Literatu i iouoT-li reg IIILJIIIuiHLiJI-H viiian-Qr-"J "l I By Roberto Lee i D9<QSIJIIFQZT INI\__ZZ‘IO%$QIWI"‘~ l ' Q. What rcfrcsluncnts should be i served zit a reception that follows y the christening of a child? . A. The incnu is the usual one for an afternoon informal ten. with refreshments served in buffet style. l . Isn't it permissible to ac- I knowledge a gifi- over the tele- i phone? A. A letter or note of thanks is fill" morn prcfcrziblt‘. ,Q. \\'lio should pay for the on- grain-iig and mailing of lhr ivoddiiig nnnnunttmwcnls n.'.*.:i invitations? A. The bride's parents. Q»? yxfilciafi/filbildbiiklO i t. How Can 1!! (y lIi 8y Anna Ashley l-Q/i =§E£ i~§~sir§eos s Q. liow 0.1.11 I rr-niore scorched spots frcun cottons and linens’! .\. ‘fhrse can be removed; if only slightly scorched. by wetting in cold writer and laying in the sun as often as tho water evaporates. If the article l5 coloicci. lrrziiitncnt might fade ll. Q. liow can I_ swcotcn acid: _ fruits, such as gooscberrlcs. with- ‘ out using so niuch sugar? A. i.r:.r. sugar will b0 required if onc-hiilf traspnoitful of sodn is used ' to a qtlnrl of fruit. and stirred be- ] fora .°\\'0$’l'nIllf_! l Q. liow can I remove all stains ' from the floor? ‘ A. By wetting the spots with mimonin. lhnn washing with soap niltl wnrin \'.filt‘i'. , =<~i> -. Better English a>@oi§eo@oo@et1esi oi course. this- It. t‘. Williams ~zv z-cw-g; I I. What is wrung \\ill'i in: sen-i "This ‘tense? is plenty good» l i. pronunc- iation of "vxubcruncc . 1i. ivhii-li cll" of this? words is misspelled? Ucurrrncr, concurrence, " temperance. i 4 What docs line word "garrill- Ily" mean‘? , .'i. What is a word beginning \\I'.Ii g 'l‘ ihni niraiis "u:e of lofty, luiizui_-;v"'.‘ l ANSWERS 1 l unlit plenty. 2. Pronountel Ggg-Zil-IJEI-fiilli, u as in cube. and -ber-a.ns. 3. Occurrence.’ "ivoncss. (Pronounce line u m “ills garrullly’ was iirc- qucn 2c. SOFT SIDE DBAPEBY Sleek, oznoothdress styled with I Lront overskirt that falls into a gently flattering duper - lee how it stresses one side o the sli- houettei Have either caps, three- quarter, or long sleeves. No. 2279 is cut in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. 36. 3B. 40, 42, 44, 46 and 4B. Size 36 requires 4% yards 39-inch. Send 20o for RATTHIRN, which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Add-toss sad Style Number plainly. Bo sure to state slzs you wish. include posts] unit or zone number in your adv dress. Address Pattern Do srtihent, Tbs Charlottetown Guard n, Plttetoi N0. 2279 i¢in Nuns _ Address some lo his listeners.“ 5. Urandilm- fNeedlecraftn IFUR TI-IE HOME! ‘llorelisvomiseriss -lr'i:'II> sit“; Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Maniouring Nails ‘f All-cl‘ you have sllioinpooed you, hair and it is drying, Is a good my, to manicure your nails, The soapy water and lemon rinse hat-n put your hands inlo excellent condition for the manicure. Cleaning Blue Serge 'i'o clean blue sci-go, sppjzgg H wibh strong indigo blue ivntn , ma" it on a board after the ivairr hai born allowed to evaporal», 1nd prcrs with a viarln iron. wilted Flowers Slightly WIIIPKI llovrcit. w...» t4 freslicried by cutting llicir Vivi" under warm winter and then plirig. mg them into cold water and l"fi\- ring, - Morning Smile -. ctQ/rl nan :@ e: WITH ENDEARMENT "May I have this cheque cashed please?" asked the young trornan oi the paying teller. “Of course. madam." the teller rcplicd. "Just endorse it please." "Must I endorse it?" she asked. apparently puzzled. “I'm Mrs. Smith you know. My-husband is out of flit cllypnd mailed the cheque to me.‘ “Yes. it must be endorsed. Sign it on the book, please, and Mr. Smith will know we paid it to you." Mrs. Smith took her pen from her Dllrfio rind passed the cheque back to the teller endorsed: voted wife. I'll-lint." "Your de- CONDENSED Great to start a meal. De- licious in sauces and casserole dishes. 3 QII __¢ Ifthoutdolibmlubol Ea