AGE TWO __ . . iBia ‘leaf: Belem") Millie Gums Healthier-Teeth Brighter with lpono and Massage . Woman's Realm/Soc ‘That’ Body Of Your: '7 IeneelIareemI-l IRON ADD! IRON T0 THE ' BLOOD Until we began to learn about the use of calf’s liver and how it pre- vented pernicious anemia, we all knew that the treatment for ordin- ary anemia was the use of tron pills. ln ordinary anemia the iron in the blood. the hemoglobin, is be- low normal; but the red cells con- taining the blood are not reduced lu number. In pernicious anemia. which formerly meant death in months or a few years, not only is the hemoglobin reduced in amount. blood and increase the number of red cells, as does folic acid, phys- icians are llsilig liver, liver extract and iolicacid in ordinary anemia -- sjirllwgoaltptllisw, cnantqrrlzrown u but also the red cells are reduced in number. Because liver and liver extrart built up the honoglobin in the‘ Firm, healthy gums are important to sound teeth and sparkling smiles. So switch to lpana-for lpana is specially made not iust to keep teeth clean, b-lt to . stimulate gum circulation. Try it. Brush your teeth with lpana. Gently massage a little extra lpana onto your gums.‘ Your mouth tingies with new freshness . . . gums wake up . . . your smile gains new charm. lie bright about your teeth and gums-lpuna bright. Change to ipono and massage today ‘ l-‘irrn, healthy gums are so important that 7 out oi 10 Canadian dentists recommend gum massage. Plodutl o] Brialot-biyzn-Mnde in Canadl‘ Drs. the Journal." given placebos l “Mississippi That the ordinary iron former years can give good resultg in ordinary anemia is reported by Steven O. Berthe E. Armstrong. Chicago, in Valley Medical p‘ Es c .iron or other medicinal. 0nd was tzivon iron only. no copper Schwartz pills of and Selected for study were a group of 55 female patients. whom the hemoglobin was down in ‘about 50 instcad of 83 normal amount. They were divided ‘into seven groups. each group re- cclvlng different treatment. first group, acting as controls. was in all of to 1G0. lili‘. Tile ontaining no The sec- or other substance. The third was ‘lPFPllf-Fl t-resacd. 'I"lie some as the fifth M7716 Stars Say- D! Genuine Keiflrle For Wednesday, oetobq- l UNDER I Benerally sinister. treacherous and intriguing gldgrggl r1110 it might. take more than cus- precaution. alertness, sagv I41"! and sound order to safely and profitably “v1. late the shoals. From every angle, end personal, tie-tiger from fraud. duplicity and rubtle snares with danger of en- tanglements with those in author- "! as‘ well as Ln social, cultural 1nd affectionsl relations. It might be as well to postpone major de- cisions, or to ect upon the highest tenets of principle and honor, dur- hig this menace. open and beclouded in merit prisiciple in there is liances. tegrfty. lest it harm. 1f It Is Your Birthday Those whose birthday it is are “in Tewlwd warned of a year in whlch 1M5 ad_ sixth. but iron was atlcled in a'dif- vised that the best preparatloll m; TPTPH! fowl. ‘he inwmina year is to establish an above-board policy of honesty. and high principle, since different forms of treatment were likely to about the same. Apparently, it was any other approach is enriched thr lead to a sinister morass o; sum the iron that really tlety, craft, schemes and intrigues, HMO “llhmmh ll" in which tho 9M1 Outccme 1s so stances added helped the general ecurity as to make anything Home. reputation. l A child barn on this day should‘ be grounded in high principle. hour 98ft’. strafghtforwardnesrandwin- own feelings and emotions, as well as sinister forces Well grounded it could escape all that the results Pffl sixth RCh-FOHTPHTTIilG added. the 'l‘he<:e l'PF‘.'ll'(‘l'l workers obinl FTVTiG ‘ygiveu iron and copper. The fourth iron and ‘rrfle and copper. rccrivcd thr- same but the rrnailnt of copne" was Fr.- monfum cl‘.- The fifth group as the fourth. ‘eceivetl the with liter-st om- The sev- as the report ned by the other sub- danger and ob_ health and feclindof ilvell being. the denoueg The second finding was that to but delectabm get best results iron should be the and ' and ignople al- ‘land - (CPl be the dupe of 15s recently. Gulls because from without “'85 and of damage they mmotionay taken daily for not less than twc. and spiritual life as well, could be months or more. ifldflwn to such pernicious baneful pitfalls BIRDS CLASSIFIED BRENTFORD, Middlesex. — Hedge sparrows, ldttitvakes. stints and thrushes are to he year-round "protected" birds in ltfiddlesex. it Eng- announced hawfinches, cause. come off the protection list. FOR HER AOVIOE 0N ALL YOllR COOKING PROBLEMS Marie Roy is now ready to offer all homemaker: her personal advice on problems relating to economical home cooking and kitchen planning. This ad- vice is free! All you need to do is to write her in care of The St. Lawrence Flour Mills Company Limited, P.O. Box 6084, Montreal, Quebec, and your problem will receive her personal attention. tfhousande d housewives have benefited from "Ill Roy‘! wide knowledge of home economics. She is a qualified graduate of a recog- nized university and has our new modern Regal Test Kitchen at her service. Her personal advice is not only scientifically dependable, but thoroughly practical for home application. Send Marie Roy a "get acquainted" question today! oer YOUR REGAL BREAD KNIFE It is yours for only 69¢ when you buy a hag of Regal Flour. Made of stainless steel with a coco-bolo handle, the serrated edge cuts faster, cleaner, thinner, because it is sharper. Ask your grocer about this big knife bargain today. I1. IAWIINCI HOUR Mil-ll COMPANY l-IMIYID l0. Ion 6004, NIAD OFIHCI, REGAL /7"5 IVOMDEPFUL YOU'LL neauv emov BAKING win-i REGAL FLOUR ‘Marie Roy says, “For temph ing, nourishing bread . . . for light, fluffy, delightful cakes . . . for pastry that is crisply tender and flaky . . . you can always depend on Regal Flour." Order a bag from your Regal dealer today. Montreal, Q0050! FLOU FOR ALL YOUR BAKING ial and Personal/ Fash lies Primes Margaret A ltlvelt Gossips in London, Eng" are wondering if blonde Sharman Doug- las (right), daughter of the U. S. ambassador. Lewis Douglas, is "ponch- f ing" on the romantic interests of Princess Margaret Rose. The gossip started when Miss Douglas was seen at a movie with the Marquis oi Blandford (left), whose name has been romantically linked with that of Princess Margaret's. Miss Douglas and the marquis have been scen together often at various places of entertainment. \~~~—~vv~ R-iaivifl. \)\'>0~\ DOROTHY DIX SA YS- i. "“ “"R'R"7‘(oooo\ ' ' “'x"2(o‘\7o<>cr\ _>\\ '\1. vmvxw. cmxmmwmscm vvxxcvvx. Sleuthing Fiance Wise filrl Seeks List 0f Practical Ouerles To Chart Happiness In Marriage — A girl who is contcnlpltltitig matrimony" wants to know wllut ques- tions tin engaged couple should ask each other. A wise young woman. A female Dunicl come to judgment. For if sweethearts did less billing and cooilig and more sleuthing into each otlicns habits and tastes umi mental processes before they took each other for better or worse, there would be a big slump in the number of divorces. According to the formula by which couriships are coilductcd, the high contracting parties spend their time telling each other how beautiful and wonderful they are and yes-yesing everything the other says. This makes it not only possible, but common, for boys and girls to enter into a con- tract that will be the making or the marriug of their lives, without having the slightest knowledge of what sort of life partners they are getting, or on what kind of platform they will stand. _ So it would save a lot of trouble if every engaged girl would break away from the petting long enough to ask her prospective husband just how much money he was making, how big a balance he hall at the bank, and whnt his views were concerning giving his wife an allow- ance for her own personal behoof and benefit, and no questions asked. DAZZLEI) BY SHOW Many a girl marries a man under the belief that he is rich because he showered orchids on her and took her to swanky places of amuse- ment, only io find out after marriage that he was a show-off trying to dazzle her, and that she has to pinch pennies for years to pay for the ex- pensive presents he made her. And many another wife discovers that when her husband swore at the altar to endow her with all of his earthly goods, lt _\vas a figure of speech, and that she has to chloroform him before she can get a quarter out of him. Another question the engaged girl should ask the man she is about to tie up with is whether he is going to spend his evenings with her or with the boys at the pool room. Still other pertinent questions on which girls should get reliable information before the wedding are: Whether the prospective bridegroom thinks that a wife's place is in the home, and that she should desire no livelier amusement than cook- ing and scrubbing and baby-tending and listening to him snore be- hind hls evening paper. Whether he will look upon her as an unpaid servant to whom he does not even have to be polite, because she can- not give notice and quit. Or whether he will be tender and kind'nnd do everything he can to make her happy. Whether he will be a critic on the hearth who will find fault. with everything she does, and tell her how fat she is getting; or whether she will always be a Lady Love to him and prettier than any glamour girl. Above all. every engaged girl should try to find out whether the man she is thinking of taking on as a life job is one of the kind who passes into the silence when things don't happen to please them, or who goes into tantrums and kicks the cat and spanks the baby if some- body has moved his pipe, and who has to be handled with gloves and flattered and cajoled to keep the peace. Or whether he is a reason- able humun being who doesn't have to be babied in order to get along with him. For on the answers to these questions depends her happi- ness, or her misery. ‘ Of course, there are questions that every man should ask the Girl Friend, but that's another story . Household Scrapbook I! Roberta Leo Q. Wouldn't. it be better w have. a home wedding lf the invitations are to be sent only to the immed- iate families and closest friends? A. This is a. matter of personal preference, but a church wedding] is preferable when many invita- tions are issued. Q. If one in butterlng arpiece of brood. should it be held in the left lilnd? A. No: hold it against the plate while buttering it. / Q. What is indicated if a neigh- bor does not return a first coll within a few weeks? A. ‘That. the neighbor does not desire to form a friendship. It is bad form not to return a first call within two weeks. Hat; Renewed Black felts and derbies which have become dull looking or rain- spattetred can be renewed by hold- ing them over the spout of a steaming kettle, and then, buffing with a soft brush or pieoe of felt to bring up the nap. Scratches and Cute Small scratches and cuts should not be ignored. I! a coat. of iodine is used it will guard against. infec- tion. It-teitee only a minute and may save a greet deal of trouble. Pie Crust Spread a little cream over the make the crust brown and flaky. Q. Does aluminum effect the flavor of any vegetable? A.‘ No. The Home Economies Department of the Aluminum Goods Mfg, 00., has conducted ex- tensive tests over many year and has not found any instane in which aluminum affected the flav- or of any vegetable. . . How can I prepare a sick- room disinfectant? A Put a teaspoonful of iodine on a small saucer. stretching a piece of gauze over the top. arid place it where the air will carry the fumes into the room. Q. when should the water glaeeea ho filled, before serving dinner? A. Just before the meal la served, especially in warm weather. Water glasses should be filled LQQAJmaQMQ l-Jl "creme/z pie crust before baking, and it will‘ uiivllituilir Ellen ’e Dia “lam” All day In the delightful weather prevailing, the family bent inter- eeta towards the harvesting, gath- ering it home to the safety of buildinga~great wagon loads of sheaves, rustling and sweet-smell- ing, holding odd piping members of the cricket band within the golden grain. Perched high amid the topmost sheaves the helpers r‘ e home and more than once gra d- daughter and I came to the barn to watch the unloading, I with feel- ings that amounted almost to envy. It ‘would be enchanting to be a worker in the field toduy-if "the flesh" were strong enough to stand the strain of lt. There, one would have no worry whether or not the meat was being done to the favor- ite turn. Back there in the gold of it, there would be no watching the clock to make sure that the meals would be served on time and certainly there would be no tire- some dishes to wash. But blue sky above-surprisingly near us the loud mounted towards it, and awuy beyond where the sky-line dipped to the treetops, flocks of cloudlets would roam at will and hlzily- the same fleecy ones that in childhoods Summers set fancies to roving. O O I Behind the fields that stretched away, still surprisingly emerald green in spite nf the advancing sea- ' son, or perhaps golden with harvest i glory, the woodlands were coloring »—morc pronounced now, in bronze and crimson and yellow, Warm lovely shades to set, at once, fem- irlinc minds to thinking of Aut- umrl-hued gowns, or wraps, or a llill, one a soft ivoodsy color adorned with a jiiunty feather trimming. There in the grain field one would be aware of crows on the wing, lending variety to the scene, or the wild ducks in startled flight u! a machine's pas- sing. One would see gossamer floating in long filmy strings of it and listen to the sun-bathed quiet winds that came a-wandering, as they spoke of this happy Septem- ber and many another past mellow one that had lllso spilled its largess iof fruit and vegetnble and sheaf over orchard and field. There would be no care at all out there at the harvesting~no vestige of it there in the blue and gold of the day. I O i But grand-daughter and I must be content at home. We must plan for the meals of the workers . . and stop many a time in carrying tlicm out to stoop and kiss a sore spot or to dress a thin line "where that kitten scratched me!" To wait. and match steps with short- er but very ivilling ones at the choring and to laugh with her when we tumbled down in the mow while searching for stolen hens’ nests there. Getting the dinner was really no trouble at all, not when we kept. our mind to our cooking though we found ourselves regretting much that it was the last. ham of all that we were slicing. First sharpening the knife on the old stone doorstep and she watch- ing and listening attentively when I said: “It's ll fllnny place this, to be sharpening a knife," and think- ing you'll never know how good it was to sharpen slate-pencils in rounded worn grooves on a school doorstep, loitering there to enjoy any clean stray wisp of wind that might blow in tangily from the Straits . . . or to hear a robin’s love-call, or a thrush away over at the shadowy woodlands. one Pink and sweet and safe-kept. the hame is, kept so by being stored in n barrel of last year's grain. It was the supper that taxed orie‘s in- genuity more, until one remember- ed the bone and bits left from yes- terday's roast of beef. A soup we nlacic, mlncing the vegetables very. fine-carrots, u parsnip, a handful of corn, and potatoes, making it in- to a puree of flavors, adding then a dash of tomato Juice for more color and mystery. "Good!" Jeanie said, but James asked: "What's next, Ellen, that was only an ap- petizer." Anti so the fish, brown- lng then in the oven and intended for the day-io-come went too, piece by piece, with Mr. C. from the hill drawing up a chair to our board when he came out of the dim cool dusk to join ut. Notwithstanding protests to the contrary, bachelo enjoy a taste of this or that. diah that has been prepared by femin- ine hands. indeed a maid or mai- den lady, given a deft touch at the baking of n cake or pie should have no difficulty at all in ensnnr- ing a bachelor's heart in the depths of the creamy mirangue! "Good-night!" Mr. C. lays replies “Good- now and Jamel night!" Until tomorrow . . . Diary . . . Good-night. . . . g , W sens-aw! GD-II ions/Literature i. OFFEE-AS YOU "'lli 1' GRAPE JUICE FAVOBED ' BY THE “HOLE FAMlLlll With grapes now in season. home economists. consumer section, Do- minion department of agriculture, have come up with a recipe for grape Juice. One basket grapes (six quarts“. seven cups water, 2 2-3 cups of sugar. Wash, stem and mash grapes. ‘ Add water and boll 10 minutes, Strain overnight through a jelly bag. in the morning add the sugar and bring to a fast boil. Pour at once into sterilized bottles. bath; sea in the boiling water tightly and store. the kettle while standing over-I night, or in bottles during stor- age. Shake well before using to distribute the sediment. which! contains valuable minerals. should not be discarded. SQUASH BAKE 6 cups sliced squash ‘é teaspoon salt Vt teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon minced parsle! Peel and slice squash. remove the seeds. Cut in 1-inch pieces. Place in a well-creased baking dish., Sprinkle with salt and oeooer and minutes. Remove cover and qdd milk rind continue baking. un- . servings. I i, Better English D. O. Wlllhms 1. What is wrong with this sen- tence? "I guess I'll go home now." 2. What is the correct pronunc-i iation of "comparable"? ‘ 3. Which one of these words il misspelled? Millionare, millennium, rnilllnery. I 4. What does the word “versa- tile" mean? 5. What ll a word beiinning with st that. means "dull: innpsss-l ive"? i ANSWERS \ 1. Say. "I think ll'l go home‘ now." 2. Accent first. syllable, not the second. 3. Millionaire. 4. ‘furn- ing with ease ftom one thing t1: another. "An actor is more likely! to succeed, if he ls versatile." 5.] Stolid. t THREE-IN-ONE Grand for e. little girl's first en- semble - this flare skirted jumper fashioned with its own pretty bol- ero and puff sleeve blouse. Add ap- plique for an eye-catching accent. No. 2417 is out in sizes 2. 4, 6, and a. size 4 jumper and bolero, 1% yards 54-inch blouse, 1% yards 35- inch. Send 30 for each PATPERN, which includes complete sewing guide, Print your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you want. Include postal unit. or zone number in your address. Address Pattern Department. The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 241'! Name Address City Province T0 MAKE rsurcnhm BONIBAY — (OP) - It. is es- timated that indie will be able to manufacture 100.000.000.000 un- its of penicillin a day when about 83.000000 worth of the necessary machinery arrives here. MaIAOen. Qolthey. director of the flalfltirle Institute, laid recently. liee hips prevent many colds from developing If used in time. Try iti You'll like iti Follow direc UIGKS “hi iroi>tex~o tially seal and process l0 mlnutesig A white sediment may form in, ‘ dot. with butter. Cover and bake in oven a moderte 3°45 tieil. F. oven for 45 your pig". wrinkli- with suizar and parsley. w" the “What did it cost. you t0 ‘wer. "but I had lsummer." Quickly Relieves Distress of 30a al.3123773, A little Va-tro-nol up each nostril promptly wit.» are N makesbres flier. tiona in package. VA-‘IllO-IOI. Iilorning Smile BUSINESS AS USUAL “d, a doctor and uelltist had been close friends for over fifty yearn, but each had always taken parti- cular care that the not discover his age. When. how- ever, the dentist died, the doctos could not he_lp looking forward 1'4 the funeral when he hoped at. last to know the dentist's secret. As the coffin was being loworog into the grave he stepped forwsr ,, . ‘to look at the brass plate, only N cCllp milk ‘read: other should "Angus McLeod, Dentist (Hours, 10 am. to 4 pm.) Two farmers were talking thing! Said one. "I hear you sold "Yep Sold him this morning", the answer. n "What did you get for hm? covered for 20 minutes. Yield: six “km the firs; (“g-nag "Eight dollars." ' "That doesn't‘ sound like much." first farmer commented. raise him?" “one so m him and e5 for hi: feed." wt-red. the second farmer onl- "nidrrt. make much. did you?" "None." was the cheerful ans- his company all —WEAli-— IIERVOIIS g I orenky every month '! troubled by diatrnn of fomalo‘ rindic disturbances? Dona this mahnyou eelaotlredJinth-Itrun .M,"WI -at such times‘) Then do try ydia E. Pinkhurfla Vngetnlrll (mmpound to rolls" Inch ayrnptomai Plnltham a Compound il made upzciully [or women. Ind in var! helpful for women troubled thin way. Any Drugnwro. LYDIA E. PillliiiAWS An fun onal Viflflllll COMPOUND Needlecraft FOR THE HOME l [NJ