IIIEIQINlKWQ PAGE TWO 'l'l'll‘.' i;i1Ai<i.iIi'i'i-.;"i"ii_vv._i\' _ uu/umiaivi :__ _ .,\ ___ vvvVYv OQ-OQQ vvVvvvvvvTVYYw-vvv W man ’s Real m I..I vwvvvivvvv ‘é AAAAAA‘ 4 QQ QQ_AQ . ee-ooo-e-ew» wnenfi- n We. n+eo+ewu+vQHQ+w+Q+M++HW°4-O""4“ It's a real treat to get wvv-vvv vvv . . . NOW comesa new delight in using Bar- bour'sACADiA Baking Powder-the new, easy opening tin. No more struggles with a stub- born cover. . . no more temper (and Baking Powder) lost in a show- er of wasted powder. Your favorite, double- acting Baking Powder is now doubly easy to get at. ‘m: 5AM‘: Low rmc: 25¢ PER rouuo "rm this wonderful new tin, with the double-acting efficiency of along’ ACA IA, at the same double action makes it low price. ACADINS worth double what you pay for it. The first action takes place in your mixing bowl when liquid is added . . . the second when heat is applied. it is this well-timed, con- tinuous action that ensu re: your baking success. .5;Ai..i<,| N o Pownrn CHAPTER XVI i "Yourc j l" Aunt Harriet alarmed. solutcly crazy! I it have kroivii youd do some- ti..r.g insane. And now, pray, Just a JQDJLDQBF‘ n contrary. Johnny Anthony has made it very plain that he's not. going to ask me to marry him. S0 you stic," site added wearily. "you were wasting your time in not letting him spcitk to inc when he “lllll. do jvou propose to do, Alina?" ‘ phoned." Sh» glared iii. llPi‘ lll(‘('i'. i It \\'.'i the ni-xt 1i10i'li'.n;{ and she wi.» in Anna's UWlYOJlll. "Iiere I manage 1o bring 51g Borndikc back here, and tHVE you a bcatititiil opening. and instead of i opportunity, you ‘t-l with him, and "\\_ . vou 'i'ust my happiness ; To that man after knowing what ' 1Y0 did to 111v father?" Alma blazed, i ' .it shriizucil yimpati. .. before. not. riiaj." 1 as}; you 1 you iiiitind to do? You ‘ hope to continue bc- ‘ 1H5; a pampered. sheltered social. built‘ ' ‘ enough {of g-it a ' "Don't - ' . I, i. t "I ll ' \\ .1; l myself. But I'm certainly not ' vwu: w marry Sig Borndike, i whatever happen i" "It's that “of tramp at. the brick ">5 1? 11"" int-d it Ilazriet. Alinii 1 l‘lti'tl bitterly. "On the‘ iFashions’ Latest For Chic Dressers ,_.._._ ‘ may I ask? "You are being viery unreason- able. Alma!’ licr aunt said solilly. "Perhaps youll conic to your senses some day‘, and regret that you haven't heeded my adviice." "I'm sorry, Aunt Harriet. I appreciate what _vou've done for ilb‘~—\\'llil.t you're doing for Father." She stopped, and drew a deep breath. "As soon as straightened out a bit, I'll take the responsibility off your hands." "How?" Aunt Harriet inquired scathingly. "You've thrown away your one chance. After all, what (‘llll _\'Oll (‘l0 UXCODL lllHITfy’ SOIIICOIIC with enough money to look out for you and your father?" "I'm going to work. to get a job." "Job! Work!" Aunt lauglii-il tauniingly: “At I'm going Ilarrict what. You dont know how to do a single thing. To be a iarivate secretary, you'd have to i take a course at busincis college, and then would be a fortune to twenty-five a week, A _..__________________ (Continued olLpage 3t Ilercs a little smock that takes it.‘ 111' DIHLUOII from smart day- .:me clothes. It may be tin-Ce quarter or full length. It ts cut on princess lines with flaring hem. ’I‘iic tour pitch poi-Wit. are li5(‘liil and create a tailored ieol. "l8- The “Wk may have a shirt or Mandarin collar as in the small view. The sleeve» may be abovg-thc. clbow or wrist length. As this model cuts in one-piece from shoulder to hem, even a be- ginner at sewing can make it, The pattern 1s easily followed. Tyrolean. pin dotted or a checked cotton in chintz or percale 1s very effective for this princes: smock Sateen is also lovely. slylfl N0. 1891 is tics-kitted for sizm l4. l6, 18 years. Iiti. 38' 40. 42 and 44 int-hes bust. Sim 36 requires 3 1-4i yard: of 30-inch material. No. 189i Size . "-1-. "u. "nut-- Name Street Address State Y; l"l..‘i.‘i'l'lili W." HTS ‘i i‘ 8L1‘. '. 1" c- i; r-i an. cov r .. ...,'ili\l i. ‘c111; = n sat. citithf and their‘ . h. l I get things ‘ Today's Short Wave Radio Program ullnquhsternflelflrl)‘ i “ GOO OOOOOOw4““ t . . DOLLAR llAY SPECIALS AT THE BERLIN 5:30 p.m.-—For the Amateur. DJD, 25.4 m.’ 11.77 meg. ROME 6 pm-News in English. 2R0, 31.1 m., 9.63 meg. LONDON Novelty Quintet. GSP. 19.6 m., GSC. 31.3 m., 0.58 meg. PARIS 7:15 pm-Musical program. TPA —4. 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. TORONTO 7:30 p.m.-“Guess What?—un- usual :l(liS. GRCX, 49.2 m.’ 6.03 mPLf-I CJRO, 48.7 m., 6.15 meg; CJRX, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. BERLIN 8:30 p.m.-Gay Musical Items from Morzartfs Times. DJD, 25.4 m.‘ . 11.77 meg. l LONDON 9:45 p.m.—The Band of His Mu-i jestys Scouts Guard (by permission t o, Llolonel K. W. S. Balfour, D. S. 0.. O. B. M. C., commanding Scots Guard i, conducted by Lieut. H. . Dom-ll‘ Director of Music. Scots (iuards. GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; GSC. 31.3 m., 9.58 meg. TOKYO 12 midnight-"Overseas Program." JVil, Nazaki, 20.5 m.’ 14.6 m. Shortwave '7 pun-Fred Hartley and hi2. 15. 31 mcg.; GSD. 25.5 m.' 11.75 meg; i ' MODERN suor All Felt Hats - — — — DRESSES, large sizes 2.98 t... 3.50 Small sizes — _ - 1.59 Upstairs Over Canadian Stores A MomingSmile , Lady-"I wonder if you would be ‘so kind as to weigh this package for me?" Butcher — “Why, certainly; it , weighs three and a quarter pounds." Lildy——-"Tlldill( you~it curtains the i bones you sent me in that four-i pound roast yesterday." Basins-Ans sure advanced 1n de ‘pat’ couple ob years. : Mose-How's dat? _ ‘ Rnstusfiwell’ two years ago Ah ivas called a lazy loafer, and nowi 5 Ali's listed as an unfortunate victim ‘ , ob do unemployment situation. WIIVPE NEEDLES i _..___...__ ' i White knitting needles greatly‘ jhelp matters when WCrl-iill: a coin- plicnied pattern in artlilcal light iwith a dark shade of woo‘. vwa. ‘The HOUSE WIFE and HER ACTYVITIES when Duty comes a-knocking at your gate, Welcome him in; for if you bid him wait, He will depart only to come once ~ more And bring seven other duties to your door. —Edwin Markham. Real love seldom applies for a divorce. 'I'he man who isn't true to him- sei.‘ isn't true to anybody. Worry is the only interest paid by those who borrow trouble. There's a lot of difference in tak- ing a bribe and taking a. bride. Some men spend all their lives in A man hits to do considerable rush- ing around to keep square w.th the world. . The great trouble with remorse is that it seldom turns up till the next day. A burglar might. make a good husband after alt-he'd bc so quiet around the house. It's all right. for a man to rise to the occasion-but he should know when to sit down. The person who thinks he is just. as good as you are is as great an cgottst as yOLI are for thinking he isn't. NEIGHBORHOOD CHILDREN It is veiy difficult to make the ihrcc-ycar-oid take a nap when she can hear playmates outside having a fine time. Why not get in touch with the parents and try to set a uniform rest period for the children of the same age? There will not be objections to naps if this is the case and the neighborhood will be quiet It was always _ my favorite! YOU find REGAL best? So did I. It was always my favourite, and with six hungry children to feed I did a lot of bak- ing in my day. Always gave them plenty of good home-baked bread, made with REGAL. They thrived, and I saved-for I never had a poor batch of bread all the years I used it." RE GAL FLOUR enough for a few hours to render sleep possible. BACK TO THE LBOB A Return to short. hair styles has been decreed by the leadirg PflPlnlllll hairdres: crs. The fussy curls of last season arc, to give place to the short close-fitt- i ing shingle. ' ' i Most popular of itylcs at pres-i ent is short hair brushed closely to the head in a cap-like mould’ with} a round sausage-like curl edging the hairline. The hair 1s parted to one side. with the short ha:r combed back from the Jace and then t rncd im- doilli! 800d. others in making k000i- ‘ der in a. continuous roll to the nape of the neck where the haid i-a shing- led. The same style is worn with longer hair. but. in this case the roll continues all the way round the head. WHIPCORD FOR SPORTS - Vvl-iipcord, as used for riding breeches, makes country and sports wear tailored costumes. , Velvet is the fabric mot flitieriiig‘ most. colorful, most luxurious and most elegant. Its fragility has been a. handicap. but women have bought 1t and wom it regardless of the fact. that it marred and crushed. Now all i‘ thii: ls changed. Vclvets are crush- resistatit and practical, but still glamorous and beautiful. For Wraps velvet is the richest fabric in the world and the most elegant. It dos»; not mar when sitting in theatres or motorr. BY THEIR TEETH YE SHALL KNOW THEM! If you want to know a person“- character. look at his teeth’ says “Perltusfl and Austrian character- oiogist. The more civilized a. person l“. the more impenetrable the mask that hides his rical feelings, "Perl- tus" finds. But we cannot change our teeth. The real re-man. according to this expert, has four almost equal upper incisors and hic chin is usually square. The womanly woman‘ on the other hand. has a more or less poin- ted chin, and her two middle teeth are much larger than those flznik-, ing them. ‘ ‘ The man with large middle ln-i clsurs has female characteristics and therefore will respond readily to flattery. On the other hand, to flatter a woman with incisors of masculine evenness is just waste of g time. ' Similarly, the teeth has mothery instincts, while‘ the masculine-dentured woman will "Perltus" recommends using this knowledge in business as well as in private life-also with a mirror. STATESMEN ON STAMPS When Mr. Anthony Fden's effigy; appears on Egypt's new postage- stamp Lord Baden-Powell wi‘l be deprived of a. distfnctlm which he has hitherto trcirurcd as unique (rrtvs the Eveninz Standard.) 1 He was the only Engushman. apart. from Royalty ever to have arpem-d on fl. stamp in his 1'f t‘me. The stamp was issued in Mafcklrg. i In foreign cnuntfes livirg 'l.’ilZ"'-'—|‘ mcn are OTCil<l"Di'lllV r:pre"rn'rd on stcnu-"s. Dr. Bones. f:r ln-tnnc". has _ appeared on a Czeclr-lovaklan issue. an with female; ' try to be “boss? i 4 Dorothy Db: 's Letter Box Vitamin Addicts Are Adding Fuel to the Fires That Send Many Men Into the Divorce Courts or an Early Grave—Give Him Good Food Dear Miss Dix-Can anything be done to a wife who has suddenly gone vitamin crazy? I am a middle-fled man. IIEIBWIOTQ 118131311)’ 111"‘ rled to a noble woman, and all has been peace Mid 11111111111955 beiween "5 . until the present. Buy here 15 how trouble has reared l" horrible head in our home: I am a SW01!!- robust 200-pounder and having led an Milli’? life, 1 am all time and muscles. A11 my 111B I have been accustomed to eating r681 10°0- Even as a. child my mother fed me 81111111111‘ and black molasses in the Spring of’ the Y9" to build red corpuscles. Underfiuflld. I 5m not subject to obesity nor 8m I Elllmmiih. but I just have a regular lie-man aPPEMW W which, up to now, my wife has catered. But recently she has joined some sort of a. circle and the diet fad she has picked up there she is trying out on the family dinner table and especially on me. She scrutlnlzes with 8 hawks eye every morsel of food that. 1s introduced into my mouth. The bread slices are as thin as a paper napkin and the butler P839165 B" transparent. I can't have potatoes If I eat bread. And as for pie, that is anathema. Some evenings when I go home after an aciivie day's work in my law office or looking over the farm all I find is ll note saying that she and the children have had their supper and goui- to an early movie and that I'll find my supper in the refriger- ator, and lo and behold, when I open up that air-conditioned metal box all that 1 discover age several thin slices of tomatoes and a. lettuce leaf guarded on lllL‘ side with a few ripe black olives. In L. word, vitamin D or H or X, or whatever its alphabetical name is. is wrecking my home and my wife's nerves and reducing my mental as ' well as physical powers. If this is part of the new life, I am against it. A few evenings iigo I rebelled. I was hungry even for mere bread and butter, rind WllCll 1 beheld the unsavory layout on the table I gave my son (i. dollar and sent hiin to the corner grocery store t0 buy me a loaf of bYBBd and a pUUlId of butter. Upon his return I began carving bread and spreading butter to suit my own appetite, whereupon my wife burst into tears and has been wear- ing a miidcuied fnce ever since. That's what I can't stand. to make a. ivoinan \\'(-ep. RCtllly, Dorothy. don't you think this diet stuff ls all toiuinvroi? I wish you would tell my wife so. E. PLURIBUS UNIJM. Answer: Well, M1‘. Unuin. I certainly do agree with you and am against the whole diet racket, especially as practiced upon husbands by wives. It 1s- my honest and considered opinion that the increase in divorce, which so alarms the inoriiiists, is chiefly attributable to the present manta among women for keeping thin by the process of not. having anything fit to eat. on their tables, and also to thc fact that being hungry makes a woman as bad tempered as it docs any other half-starved animal. It isn't just merely a coincidence that domestic life isn't what 1t U506 to be and that husbands and children won't stay at home evenings as they did in the dear gone days when womcn prided themselves upon their housekeeping and had never heard of calories. Always the center of a happy home hns been the'dinlng room. Our ideal of family life has been father and mother and children gathered about a table that groaned with its load of good food. Smiles of contentment wreathcd every counten- ance while eager nostrils sniffed up savoiy odors and mouths watered 1n untiripatton of the luscious roast or fowl. Bui no imagination is strong enough to pictuie a happy family gath- i cred about a table sparsely furnished forth with a dab of spinach and a. fragile lctiucc lciif or two and some gosh-awful incss warranted t0 be nun- fzittcning but to include the proper vitamins that will sustain life, thTOUBh why anybody wants to sustain life under such conditions remains a mys- tcry only Ll tiictitian can fathom. 0f course. it would be all right for a vitamin hound to starve herself if she wanted to-and the quicker the better-if she could do so without inarlyri‘ 1g her unfortunate husband and children, and if it didn't reduce her amiabiiity even more drastically than it does her fiHWB; but, alas, such is not the case. When a woman suffers she xiever wants t0 suffer alone. She wants her family to be miserable with her. And so, Mr. Piiuibus, I can olicr you no help in solving your problem. Only sym- pathy. But—here is a thought-if you could only induce a few widows, known for the tables they set, to ask you to dinner a few times I think 1t. WOUICI liiy the vitamin bogey in your house. i I I I O I Dear Dorothy Dix—I am 26, deeply in love with a girl who has very honestly told me that she has a. past. The honorable attitude She h” taken makes me love h_er all the more, but I am tortured by the memory of the Other Man. I try to dispel the thought of him, but 1t is always present. Can you suggest some way that will enable me to forget? The girl ls lovely and I know that she deeply loves me, PAUL. Answer: Has your own life been so spotless that it has nothing in it that you would expect a girl to forgive and forget? Mighty few men are entitled to cast the first stone. Anyway, what the girl has done in the past is 110i. so important to you as what she 1s in the present and what she ls likely to do in the future. She has shown herself brave and honorable tn tell- ing you something that she need not have told you, and so I think that you need never fear that she will not. be trustworthy. ‘Fhcrc are two things a man should consider in marrying a girl with a past. The first is the character of the girl. There are girls who go WTOHB through the best that. is 1n them. Because they love too much and are too generous to withhold anything ‘from the man they love. These re- pent their wrongdoing in bitterness and tears, and once they have 805 l 75d4¢ihese healthy Dionne [luins 7had [luakerilats i z Keen Appefltes like Irene’: P depend in hrs: pug on children gclllflfl enough Vitamin B r0 nice up lp trite. ke from losing us: or food. nicer On: is rich in Vitamin B. Photon (Jupyrillht 19mi- News Service, I036 w. "w"... ionne Quin: i / have f0 do with me P "w" Doctor: my we gl/need l/ifa/n/n P for nerves and digestion. Get it a/ai/y in Quaker 00f: ll I V Xmlpiedhfl UAlSJlCll iriNatures Vi amin it" bTBF-iillitii’ [LQLZMLWLLQ .fli1('li5pp£‘lllt' N i936 . “MIWWMMM w Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature $TllllE 01F lllllLll FMHIUNS. GOATS 20 per cent 0ft MIDDY SUITS, regular $5.00 For—-———-—--____ SWEATERS, sizes 24-26. Special--———---'---..______ SKIRTS-Sreatly reduced for this sale CORDUROY DRESSES-Sizes 2-6 Regular $2.50 for - - -- - _. _ __ _ VESTS and BLOOMERS-Flcece-lined Sn¢¢ial—————————__ 29G With every dollar purchase you receive a coupon on a Snow Suit. Ask for yours. m Misses HOLMES & BRADLEY 152 Queen Street phone 92 {g '-——_~_—i , b91118 grit-ed. l-2 cup incited butter 1 1-2 cups sugar. 2 Pills’ 2 llEBptn| tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoon.»- mil‘; l-2 grafed ltutmeg. Mix batter with half of the hut nutmeg. Put into buttered baking. dish. Sift remaining nutmeg on (o. and bake 1 hour. To be cats-n li0i0l cold. THE COOK'S CORNER DUMPLING S. One-half teaspoon baking pqwder; CHOCOLATE RICE PUDDING. 1-4 teaspoon salt, 3-4 teaspoon butt- er’ 1 cup flour, milk or water to make a soft dough. Drop by spoonfuls into stew about 15 minutes before sewing. One cup rice, 1 pint milk, 2 lflblg. spoons chocolate’ grated. 1-2 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons melted butter, 1 cup raisins, chopped, salt. Cook in double boiler. BEAN BREAD. ____________ couto nor o0 Han Two cups bran. 2 cups flour, 1 cup brown sugar, 1 cup sour milk, 1 tea- spoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt. i Sift the salt and sods. with the rioiir. Add the brim and sift again. $12" ‘D's? Add sugnr and beat in sour milk. M, iisagbyurdtil Beike 1n greased pans. _,,, m you m -_-¢- . nervous and ini. STEAMED PUDDING. tablej-lfi‘ lhil - lmcdicinmhlt may Take any kind of stale cake‘ e “m “v My“ crumble and soak in milk. when i fi§f,°‘”f°,§,f,f‘,§,f soft. mix in 1 or 2 eggs, and sugar to taste. Put in ii. buttered mould and steam 1 1-2 hours. Raisins may be added if desired. This cannot be dlstlnguirhed from a freshly made steamed pudding. i L » drid c Miller of Belmont, N. S., coui not do bei- housework. She says, "l was in poor health for years. l tried variv ous medicines. Then a friend mid me about your Compound. it made a new women of me." L" '£@£w<h VEGETABLE CDMPIJUND BAKED CATlRDT rommvo. One quart carrots, measured after hick 11150 the Btffl-ikht and narrow way no temptation will ever make them stray of! it again. A man is sine in marrying such a. girl. The other girl is just loose morally. She is a philanderer by nature. She will always be out for adventure. She has no sense of shame or re- morse andi a man marries her at his peril. The other thing a man has to consider is his own attitude toward the girl. If he 1s alwi '- going to brood over what she has done and reproach per with it, he has no right to marry her, because he will make her miserable as well as himself. For- getting is just as important as forgiving in marriage. DOROTHY DIX. i marl: Embroidered Beclsprea t Mayfair Needle-art. 951g“ m‘ In us nmwfll‘ Any bedroom will automeciliy take on a. rich and luXilfi° . NICE with this beautifully embroidered bedspread and bolster. drh: popular floral design lends itself to miuiy computations t0 W" £91m“ trust with its surroundings. You will be pleasantly surmised M‘ time it will take to finish this task. Pattern includes transfer fox-bedspread and 1101B“? ' y stitches to be used ea well as complete color c tlons for finishing spread. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coir Guardian Needlework Department. To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. DESIGN NO. I98 Nune—-----__ _ - - --— — — — y, details 0i m? hart and d1!“ ctred) to The cliariottetowl .._—‘ _-—fl“ 8treetAdilres|—---------————-_" v Oi¢Y--.__._...__ _ _ - - --Pr0rince———""'""