Si" - . . . i 8x113! lfhficetof peiilceful sleep if you re pestered with puma of heartburn handyp Diaeziilfalt But you can get qmc-k relief If yo“ keep Rennie‘ r B _ ennios are pleasant-tasting little tablets which you take like candies (no water needed). Dissolved in the mouth their gittrlxglfi ltflgredlenta soon help to neutralize excess acid; distregg and r. arcpromptly relieved. You ll be asleep before you know it! And for digestive upsets during the daytime, remember you can any Renniesnn pocket or brig; they're separately wrapped for that pin-pogo, If Rennies don't relieve you, it's high time you saw your dootor 25c and 75c all druggists. Ask for Digestive Rormios, LivingcSl Leisure "(THE WOMAN'S REALM MONEY h" "will" figure would have few worries if she wore colours, and weaves of fabrics which minimize her size. $19813’. soft or sheer fabrics are usually an uiuvise choice because rnany are unable to hold the ca“; line in clothes which a mature fig. ure needs. Wiser to wear for their sllmmlllg effects are fabrics of close weave and crisp finish, such as worsted woolens. fallle, sharkskm, linen. sleek cot-tons and heavy CIEIPBS. 9010111‘! Play as important a role as fabric weaves and finishes in minimizing ample curves. Bold 00101115. of course, should be rul- ed out by the woman who wants her outlines minimized. For sil- houette-whittling, there are no better choices to make than navy blue, black, dark brown and dark BT93’. The miser hides ithieath his bed The spcnciihrift for some pleas. ure spends it. Some save for rainy days ahead, The friendly fellow often lends it. Tricyaicked plot and plan to threw 1.. But when dea-th summons, all men leave it. Money is noble, nobly used; Good when it helps the weak and needy; Bitter when kindness is refused: Bad when iUs worshipped by the greedy. But howsoever men receive it Behind them pt their death they leave it. Money can pain and suffering ease. The old and broken it can pen- sion. Print fabrics are apt to be of 'I‘is pleasant when it's used w M help in slenderizing a figure please, unless the patterns are small, But ugly when it breeds dissension. But when is stilled the pulses rhythm, ‘closely-spaced and used to create .an inconspicuous design on a dark background. The lady who wants The dead don't take one penny to look pounds slimmer than she with ‘em. —Edga1' Guest, actually is never accomplishes that objective by wearing bold DARK COLOURS WHITTLE SIZE l The woman who worries about prints. SHOE DESIGNERS ARE UP ON having its fling. Shoe designers, on their toes, haven't missed a l trick. With great ingenuity and imagination they have madeshoes this season which mark s much lighter-hearted approach than anything we have worn for years. Today it is your footwear which will date your costume more than any other feature of your dress. Your feet will give you away. The heel height range is terrif- ic. Some heels are sharp and high, some are content to be medium, while those cut on sandal lines sink to such flatness as to imply we've become a race of desert no- mads. x’.- o THEIR TOES l Ho“) can NEW YORK - Foot/wear is By Anne Ashley Q. How can l disinfect a room properly? A. Paste strips of paper over the cracks of the doors and windows. Imnscn the bedding and the car- gpeis. Thcn burn two or three formaldehyde candles, according 1o directions on the box. vnhich lean be soured from any di-uggist. cave the rocm closed for about . i,:ht hours, then open and air. Q. llo\v can I clean la. kpcnge? A. Try rubbing a fresh lemon horoughly into the sponge and hen rinsing it several times in ukcwami water. It will become as ivcet as when new’. f Q. How can I uaterproof shoes? kn. Apply castor oil to the shoes SOUR‘ Cook ’s C llVN-Nvvyfflflaflm‘ TKNTCY. . . . j‘ hcut twicr- a week, and they will RHUHAMLPINEAYPLE JAM o iva tcrproof. 2 pounds rhubarb 2 pounds sugar 2 lemons 1 cup crushed pineapple. Method — Wash the rhubarb and cut into ill-inch lengths, Com- bine with the sugar. grated rind and juice of the lemons and the crushed pineapple. that has been thoroughly drained. Bring slowly to a boil and stir until the sugar is dissolved, then boil fairly rapidly until the mix- ture ls thickened somewhat. Stir the mixture quite often to prevent its sticking to the bottom of the pan. Pour at once into hot. sterilized jars and seal with melted paraffin. When this coat has hardened, an- other layer of paraffin may be added and then the covers put onto the jars. M" 5E1 4v » \ Mn IT'S NEW AND-EVEN MORE EFFECTIVE- SLIGHTLYPERFUMED IS NOT STICKY - LEAVES NO STAINS . s IQ IS NON-IRRITANT. ‘are auicii _FilES.MOSOU|TOES Jungle- Tested Tender bcsnroooked to un- tritiouc perfection in a. spicy tomato sauce - - - Illll "l0 right amount of pork for that "Boston Brown” flavor - - - tlutsAylmer. Your family. too. deserves Ailllfl "Ill"!- That Body Of Yours hnuI.lar\on.ld»I- WHOOPING COUGH AND IVIENTAL BACKWABDNESS When a boy or girl goes along into the teens and then begins to have attacks of epilepsy, physicians are of the opinion that he or she recently has had a fall or received a blow. Otherwise, symptoms of epilepsy would have appealed earlier. Some months ago I spoke of the fact that youngsters who have an attack of scarlet fever or whoop- ing cough in early childhood or in~ fancy may develop epilepsy in their teens or elen later. In the "American Journal of Mental Deficiency," Drs. Sol Levy and H. A. Perry, Eastern State Hospital, Medical Lake, Washing- ton, state that during earlier years. mental backwardness was regarded as an inherited disease but more recent investigations have seemed to show that only in a minority oi cases can mental deficiency be attributed directly to heredity. Furthermore, it has been found that mental or intellectual back- wardness is not a complete or whole disease in itself, bu’. rather a symptom of some underlying brain disorder organic in nature. There are two varieties of mental backwardness —- hereditary and acquired. “investigation and ex- amination ln these cases have shown that any injury, infiammat» ion, infection or degeneration occurlng before, during or after birth and involving the brain tissues may produce irreversible brain damage with mental de- ficiency the main symptom." Among the infections pausing changes in brain tissue with mental backwardness is whooping cough. Of 34 children who suffered an attack of whooping cough during the first two years of life, 24 - or 70 per cent - were rated below average in intelligence, as the re- sult of the attack of whooping cough. Where an early history of the youngsters could be obtained, it was found that in a group of 20 of these children whose backward- ness was caused by whooping cough injuring the brain tissue, there was a history of being late in walking and talking. p ' Fortunately, in the great major- ity of children who have attacks of whooping cough. no injury to the brain with mental backward- ness occurs, but it does occur in some cases and this should be known. c|i of Arc ou going through the functional ‘mid la age’ period peculiar to women (38 to 52 yra.i. Does this make you rufler from hot flnahel, feel so nervous, lugg- struug, tired? Then no try Lydia . Pinkham’: vegetable Compound to rclicvn uuch symptoms. Piukhnm’: Compound bu what Doctors call a stomlchiu tonic effect! Design No. 3-500. All colors of floss fi-cm the sowing buket are med to Gthbfoldfir these motifs on place mctl. twill. Ind aprons. iiot iron transfer WW!- No. n-oos coutcinria motif: with complete ins“ ctionl. Needlework Book 20c. To order: Bend 20 cents in coin r4 Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- town Guardian. Pattern No. 13-500- Nlllil Addtdll an. at nonomv 01x SA vs.- Teen-Age Wisdom “hi: iiii=:r.i'.ii.r'i.'iii "i" ma. Rflrl-fYDlxzllmsgirlcfldmdlihiuklcmin iwenwm, Pgoy of 22 who is very good to me. but he‘ likesottohhdrink. I told him I would marry him whenever he got s house own- Them are 5° many people I know who married when they were very young. They though they were in love thcmbut it soon disappear- ed after marriage. Do you think it would be better for me to break up with this boy? And do you think that it is true that 18-year-old love is only calf love and a girl would do better if she waited around until she was 20 before she married? - § BLUE EYES. suswm: Well, daughter. whether your em are blue, or brown, or green, they certainly are distrernlng eyes that have a keen insight into the problems that face a bobby-sorter. First of all, I want to commend you for having enough intelli- gence to try to analyze your emotions and find out whether you really are in love with this boy for keeps. oi- merely have apssslng fancy for him. So many girls of your age think they have the grand pas- sion when, in reality, they are only in love with love, and when they wake up from their romantic dream they wonder what they ever saw in the lad to make him even endurabic to them. COLD SIUBAGE PLAN My advice to every girl of 18 is to keep her feelings in cold stor- age until she has had time to look about her and see what sort of a chap she really wants for a husband. Be warned by the experience of your friends who married in haste and are repenting it at leisure. The present incumbent of your affections doesn't seem a very good bet to me. A boy of 22 who drinks never is a safe risk, for, no matter how ardentiy he protests that he will reform when you marry him, you can't depend upon his doing it. The first time you have an argument he will settle his end of it by going off on a. bender. Of course, sometimes calf love lasts, but mostly it doesn't, and you would be much better off if you would wait until you are I0 be- (Continued on Page 8) Modern Household Scrapbook Dy Rcblrl-l I00 Etique-ttie Iyloborhho Q. What expenses of l. wedding are born by the family of the bride? A. The trouuuu. , invitations and nounccmcnts, decorations for the church or b01116. music. conveyances for the bridal party. the bride's gifts to her bridesmaids their bouquets, and any entertainment that MJIDEW m suous To prevent shoes from mildew. 111B in a dark closet during warm, demo weather. keep them on shoe trees or stuffed with paper and Placed in a well ventilated, dry. light place. If any mildew is l attire, frns GUARDIAN. cuaauorrcrowu continual interruptions." syllable. make frivolous objections or critic- found, wash it off with warm water and soap, or simply wipe of: and dry the leather well afterwards. nu-noorrmo’ uosu nosaus Ifyouwishtoclipcrosebuah. wt M! your slip and then stick the stern into a white potato. You will find that the slip will take root. This is the surest way to make it root. PAINT ON TILE Paint spots on tile can be re- moved by dipping a cloth into nail polish remover and simply wiping the marks away. ‘A Better English LYDIAEPIZIKIIIINSVWJHfi °' “h” BIRDS. FLOWERS AND “UTTERFIJES 1. wim. is wrong with this ' sentence? "Ho wu bothered by continous ‘interruptlonr’ 2. What is the correct pmnuncat- ion of “lineage? 3. which one of these words is misspelled? Terrestrial, tern. cotta, terpsichorlan. 4.. What does the word "cavil" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with di that means "a vcxatious pre- dicament?" Answers 1. Say, “He was bothered by 2. Pro- nounce lin-e-ij, both 1's as in it, e as in me unstressed, accent first 3. Terpsichorcan. 4. To isms. (Pronounce the c as in at). “There is always a. disposition. also to cavil at the conduct of those in authority." - Irving. 5. Dilemma. l . “I love your dcughtcr vary dur- ly, sir," nid the younl min. earnestly. "I would suffer deeply if I cver caused her a moment's unhappincs." "You certainly would," punind , her father. ‘That girl in her mother all over‘ again. and I know!" firs»... 11m rtzyvi follows the ceremony. Q. Should a woman who is travelling alone and registering at c hotel always use the prefix "Miss" 0r “Mrsi”! A Yrs. always. Q. When a girl in preceding her escort and comes to c door, would it be correct for her to open it? A. No: she should stand to one side and allow her escort to open the door and hold it wide for her to pass through. T7: Iv e Stars Say-- Genuine Rumble I'd Tll§l$ Illly 1] A difficult and unpredictable day. with affairrmcving under a contradictory eouru of "sixes and sevens." One thing is certain: there will be much excitement. drlnutic and dynamic. under which it is the Dart of wisdom to "expect the un- expected." This holds true in rela- tion to all phases of livins. with business, finance, professional and social matters involved, but par- ticularly wcented will be romantic and ntimental r ‘ " , in which there may be spectacular or breath- taking denouemcnts. Erratic or unconventional behavior could pro- ducc estrangements or regrets. For the Birthday Those whose birthday it is. may be prepared foi- a period of the ad- venturous, sensational and unpre- dictable. in which the most succinct advice is summarized in "expect the unexpected." While there are indi- cations of adverse, revolutionary and fluttering experiences in con- nection with plans, hopes and whhu there 1a aim lion of pro- grclcivc and romantic adventures in which the fondest objectives may be brought to happy fruition. All contracts and relationships in life are in the balance. with sensational crises, and should not be jeopard- iccd by wild or emotional 1m, ‘ . eeecntricitics or imy-udcnce. Pause; count tho colt ovary indi of the way. for high adventure and happi- nus. A child born on this day will have a most occupier, baffling and spec- tacular character. with peculiar talents, cxpcricneoc or i ivcnturcl. with bonbn u well u m‘. arse vicis- ammo in life". BAGS- , in} Ind livinl; Ellen's D5411‘? ,, ,- fluid farmer's win Ono recalls of tall-I’! dclllbtl the machine lllhtlng up tho mod- est Scotch roses of James’ moth- er's planting, now blooming in numbers, the pink of the unfoia- ing bud fading into the creamy- whitc of the full-bloom blossom. The bush has now‘ spread far from it's original setting in the quail flower border, to grow in a wild state by the lane-side. We notice this when cleaning the yards in Spring and then James, given to neatncss in his work comments: "Ellen, we should cut those down —now shouldn't we? They make the place look very untidy!“ And I picturing at once the unfailing loveliness of a later scene nosi- ponc it with: "Not now, James. but after they blossom" and he making believe he is disappointed stays his axe. I know well that of any of the shrubs that choose to spread, the old roses of his mother's planting will be allowed always to wander at will. O O O \ The sun lifted their fragrance today, wafting it on a breath of breceze from the spot where bees held high carnival and a hum- ming bird on strange wings dip- ped. Brought by a bride in a year now long gone, one can fan- cy the pleasurc the appearance of the first bud would yield to her possessed as she was with an Iimglish liking for out-of-door flowers. The garden ‘at home would return to mind. set with old-fashioned plantings: sweet willisi-n and ribbon grass, fever - few and southern-wood to bring her fragrant recollections. I sus- pect too that as often in such things, I can ace the blue of the Strait. so she too would envision this water on the sunny south with a small Island set clearly or sometimes more hszily on its waves. A rose-slip from "home" and all bound up with a romance of the long ago. O O Such a romance we at Alder-lea were privileged to know about yesterday, an interesting and lovely affair, when by way of celebrating their fifteenth wed- ding Anniversary which interval one knew had been exceeding happy years, an Island couple had gathered their family in the car and leaving their farm-cares in good hands had gone holidaying. "There are so many beautiful spots to visit on the Island‘ she said. A nice incident in this holi- day outing, which was to last only for a. few days, was their worshipping at a Church in our adjoining community where the minister who had officiated at their marriage was holding an af- ternoon service. That perhaps was the high-light of their trio for ‘oulnless as they heard the Word and bowed in prayer with heir young family of five boys, in their hearts they renewed the fine old covenant which had made of the twain, one. "Well, at any event" James inclined always to make light of anything that one knows make: a deq: impression on hi: heart, laughed to the gentleman “you couldn't altogether lay it a- gainst the Minister!" Here, I thought is an example of what makes life on The Island good- s happy marriage that has and will corttinuc to be lasting, the two bound closely by the invisible strands of affection and loyalty, kept so in no small measure by the family of lads that are theirs and making altogether an exem- plary home which is the bedrock of good living.‘ ‘Ibday too Alderlcs was honor- ed when nurses came to call. These were of the number in rc- ccnt attendance at the executive meeting of the Canadian Nurses Association, some of whom were visiting ‘The Island for the first time. And one felt, finding it as did Cartier in the long ago. still "a pleasant land." Naturally a farmer's wlfc was somewhat in awe of these hdics who repre- sented most important institutions of learning and owned great rumes in the nursing services, but as well soon remembered how himbie are the truly gust. I'm sure that Mn. Robin who struts along om- lawn prdtily at even. giving herself airs. was much more important in he: own mind than any one of these! 0f the visit, woman-like I recall these things: lye; liquid brown or u blue almost u Irlnildlillhi-QIT. with most understanding expres- sions: attractive smiles that lin- gored there as well n at mouth- corncrs; tressel that waved PM?» my -- and in mind I crowned each head with a nurse's capl- hcnds that one know could smooth a sick pillow if nud be and were also lovely in repose. Interested in "the common thinfl" 0! ll" than ladies wore-in Island farm- in tantra-footed graad-dnighw. Ill-ll "0 m h" nap; in Jllhld. Had and dwind- nhlo; in Junii. whom tho)’ must "f; in "so untidy from ho;- Iondcfl Work" but still quiunutcinlub and human inthalpacdorsudincllthcrcst of u: and our “Dotty round" o! living at Aida-loo. horn u for not u Gunny Alberta. I new icnd-ccmpmtivol! — 1h WW of Confederation to mum Mon- irlll, when 411cm of an sari! Ulflldl. many of than lllllfl‘ andcomonotcohrsvoctlil move through old sconce. thou mt can in the aiming pm! on- 4 '» no. uuri mow vow! seen A PROBiEM EVER smfii VOUR BROTHER mo i svovvw SEEING PM" omzmonnuv! AND I wmr 1o mow wuv! WELLDDN saw vou ussnzo m as: voun DENVISY ABOUT BAD BRHTPLMISS crown! mo 1m sum MIXED m: w. I euessl new wlncvn cola/M's Aznv! nuzmnua roam we mm mourn vzsni csizvias - HELPS ma» out rooo cannons-sine STMNANT sauvs ovons- nmove n4: cause or MUCH BAD BREAD! l5: 25c 45c 75c ‘LATE R-Tinnb lo new Jmvnovtv tulgm ilnml 8mm rout or no aszscoisurs msmmv ' swaps om cw BRLATM‘ (Icons your breath-while it cleans your teeth‘! Something new under the sun- this bewltching basque dress feut- uring the full skirt that's wise in the ways of the whirl, the frisky flounce that carries out current hemline interest. Choice of a low square neck oi- high round collar. _ No. fidll is cut in sizes 10, 12, 14, 15. 18 and 20. Sim 16 requires 3 5-8 you. ail-in or 39-in. which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name, Address and Style Number plainly, ‘so sure to state rice you want. Include postal unit. or uonc number in your address. Address Pattern Department, The Charlotetown Guardian. Pattern No. A509. Name Addrcu C“! Province tlsh llll euuc in honor u: with a visit Jodly . . . "Well, wcli, well!” James nys dropping his nawmapcr "if it isn't bod-tune cirudyi" - . Until tomorrow -Disry—0ood- nltht. A duh of Worcester mice add- point up the flavor. - For l tangy nndwieh spread add finely chopped wwercrolc to cream ohccu; proud on thin clicu of azvwauiod‘ cud one cl our own Public colt! maul. c comm. lthfl-M ls"- brcad, roll ouch and chill in c Send 20c for- caoh PATTERN, i 0d to crnm of inmate soup helps dim? 01MB. rNec jlecraft/ r01: THE HOME» NEW HEMLINE INTEREST 3P9? 3‘ ~ 1 r ii