l qnonfl.‘ FUR. vlrfiic “naslolifls-lui DEODORANT Safely Checks Perspirofion | Ful 01., 3t NOT JUST A HALF OZ. Non-Greasy . . . Stainless . L . Takes odor from perspiration Use before or offer shoving Non-irritating . . . won't horm dresses No woitingfodrymvonishes quickly GUlIANYlL-Money refunded if you don't agree that this new cream is the best deodorant you've ever tried! The Odoronn Company. Ltd. 980 Si. Antoine Street, Montreal, P.Q. generously, but thTbulkTfhileir FLFENCED BY HISTORY purchases for 1940 will be o1 a W136 more generally accepted 1:1 ylorg than in any Swing in a more o! rears ictoti; oi the glory of her homes, as the second quarter of 1940 gets this community; 13111 Canada. ls con- oil French styles noticeable. Century mahogany; modem walnut; Early Canadian maple; with some influx and for is making ltsl ulitier wa_\'. As soft Spring colors Outdoor I n , rcme iziro their own, gay outdoor brlgihtlc]. malllmgvétllle’ sgftvlaglie tint; and tones évill g2 refleccteci lawn and porch i. the interiors. anti a, prou o SDH-ng debut (Ltd her homes, will do well by them namynqclqt, 10v: egiiatsllonable this year. lien-Zinnia home from their tours to the PlTill home furii slings mur- ket centres bring with them ncwg that liititzoii \\'lll be it'll. lll the hcme furnish- ln s of ‘i0. "Gone Witli the Wizid" .\\‘l the forthcoming "Northwest. Pas- sage" dramas of the penthouse will mirror modern furnishings. While "Gone With the W:n:l"liag not actually created any new SW19 of fumztiirc. it his revived interest in Vzcterian Filing he's'ererl in gay ifilfihll Ewen nnrl white Slflnrs . their ivfih button t ft t» = , Wk m“ be Ken hlgmad sat and i to r.choi Local furniture merchants liilllpi l f T!!! t-xr ed this type of top tables. nnw available in ilvater Pfilltilflil. finishes. picture influences reflect the delightfully old South. Col:nial ‘lglfllld will be rcflccteci in or Colonial furniture "W11? was available higher within tihe range of all. Tile many drau-irg fogm school lint-sand rounded combined with Cffllvfllmlif‘? features which .r more eiffieiw-it lving, l'il‘l\‘ in ll‘i"ll'f'i]‘l'il‘l.'lll "T111. suns | crux" l1’ V11 sml; up. rod _\ c1l‘.".i'l'; n rcckmg ‘mcvrtl fr in tans. 11nd there. ‘young people have tailored sit-ylc well furluturc lsmoller, simpler licme, old-la- liionrd hPirc are . l l t {vomit/Hf _ (91th 1m arr/f! Altrrgvoifve ‘seen the slim, lithe loveliness of the Charming heroine in Gone With the Wind," you, “>0. will wanllo enjovthatdelightlully feminine grace - - - YOU Con, comfortable in a Ligne Lelong foundation Manulsclurcd in Canada exclusively by maple S1lll-l'llll“i‘-T‘f‘l flushes ‘lhc Qmirch» m... n1O.-9.‘l194‘i'1112 aiid Miss Arabella find n51 stiitcd to the , .Filiiilllil'li0ll8_1 and wrought iron chairs will atrgment the tea carts. umbrellas, and Q1355- Covering fabrics are and 5llll Oiic l!llf.‘l'\"Sl.llig (lQVEIiCDHlPllI is the fact that 18th Century Engilsh ivhzch lor- _ only in the piriced brackets, is now Modern slylrs are silll holdiig their owii in public fancy. Smooth corners ccm-hartirents aild 25nd you are lucky .. make | ' 1'1 irticu- ‘llltuswl. flPFY"m”n[ RYE ha‘ this n°MlNl0N CORSET C0. LIMITED 1- QUEIIO, P-Q- uncut CANADIAN rum! 112,21: m4 ' ' v'l‘fn5fifi'ffi'nfi'a'a'a\fi'a5fi'b'hfifi'afifim'i5'ffififla%fi'afififl'afil 5-‘ FOR TUNE FROM ILLICIT VO YA GES Armmlc car-rams coucaauin waauui Ill the days wh 1 u“, L, V’ en lie saleof llqunr was forbidden In “r r-gkiéezi‘ simziexséhtziimuney was made ‘by those who took “ha! became of those fortunes? 'l'hcre l1 an old belief [melted b - y many examples. that fifigflmgfliltiacld by illicit means never does .ts iectplents any "m", imennmlilgflflpgilllfziirrlll be the lot of those who tie- What. then. Wan the late of th l rtu e d b ram ggrléfil‘. ‘toaster ul South Atlantic ahlltmou-htllralllilamfanyya hll “as cnzvtohartlband into the states III the days when money sum“). ‘m'_";uppl?::?cnxaled in the liquor rnclfef. paid hand. l‘ “'“ 11 "d! fortune and seller h had d id d to 2:211"! (lnpfirltiflairin BLIEIQIiOIICC to his natlvylllitain. W?! rleluc- “11 lirolessed to dlglla tlllefllilulillgelrlilllgallh m“: I w."- But money must be d it d m h d but Llitéilivner knew where Snell’: headalleffzitzllellll-n no | brat?‘ l" lmluisitlve about it. and h a nearest relatives well er anu a niece away ln England. Th0 Captain had an election for his niece, Diana, and all‘: came about that ahe became Involved in his lllgotten This la the situation with w lch R dnr- Parkman deals :1" hlii remarkable story “South hAtlan lc Lzgacy." ll la I whly‘ In line with the finest of Mr. Parkman’; work. And | i‘ Irlnd stories of romance and lllVGlll-Illu at sea are up“. dull on the shelves under Sydney Pullman's name- “ 11 ‘er Bar.‘ "Sunk without Trace." "The Phasing o! Ton! "111 among them. Th . ...i.£."l‘§.‘i'§':.i’lil.tl.°.'l".$n"€22ii'..'lt'i"ii.f.i“f;"' m r - . i111 Wliffilll. .3325! “irirtinr ..l-2.".:.:'"“' "'" Order your copy now. ...._.‘.-. ‘IQHHVU nfi¥flhfihfifi"a'a'u'fa'a'n'a'u'a'n'q'hfin'a'a'a'u'n'n'n'a'n' - n” ____l‘H_E WCHARLQIIIQIOWN GUARDIAN f___ OQOOOQOOOOOQ; ‘ AAA ‘Akkkkkkkkkk I11 "f. Social and Personal '1 Fashions ANGUS MaeVlCAn a .--__-_i- ,, "VFW interesting," Do ofl-‘gll 11 “range how things "wDfifld ay-n twink , thing l!“ 3495579801‘ was sitting the circle on his Jen, “m eljifavlélxenci on the red c 5°11‘ know how 11611) in bringin ‘lllrlrqlgflgllfalllliglfifl lllrtilch," a .V 11 e chair sznll d lailfllqlllllllmed a Celtic tune. e flier“ Dvace ill Invercon m. day. she mllrmnred D1-e5enuy_ “I grit’ It rclnlnds nie o; a June “fcl%_ ll?!llI€—lll the islands of the cqfnnufllli I can hear the peewitg "av f “km feel ll-v warm sun on c“ t ce lllld the wee Will/CS are 1111112 on the white beaches. 1' ulilcl‘ yufltoi" rose: ' ' ' _, “fl-Kl you ujouidlfl: be so mys. . , v n83. i églifllzieagigo (flifrlégfilragGlranrgyspiYou 1 hgllgtiyolld lady chucklecll and waved "You are g fine Tillyd 1:111" Rood at illilrllifltnécolireasleilztlat B 1 -. 0n of the Celt is not in you. H .1'011-" Miss McC-regor r H Tell me. can you actuallv "f N°~‘h "ildDfivld belr: married —‘i‘n \l"lll' flllltfi S (lVe. I moan?" l O11. .i'l‘~"- And its a tzav affair in and the fishermen are . , Ma"- Greznr is snffini: the Grants ‘and plctciiding she is mtlch super- ilsglmeblll. hel", heart is nappy n11 the "Thank _*____; l Miss IvlalvGregor tossed hci- head iliioucli there was a faint light of llatlgliter in lier_ eves. _ (snort iiiorliln, Granny. You're inst i‘l_l'!—3.ll old rauo!‘ Again G‘l'l1ll‘l‘lV.'I‘l:OlllS0ll chuckled. . NORAIPS DECISION Norah spent the morning in bed, Slic Wits sore all over and rather tired but othclwvisc slie was qlutc recovered from licr ordeal. l She fclt hopper than slie had done for‘ months. She had saved .David’s ilfc. She had shown hor- sclf. contrary to the opinion of the lYPlFZPFS. to be a real fishcriiianfis ;rla_iiglitcr, nnu slie had defeated lirr pride. S. c hurl niadc up her mind to 2 [conic to an agreement — a busincis ‘agreement. of course-with Datnd lMacGrcgor, and in the thought she discovered infill te ccnifort and ,cnlitciit. The b'lICl'll(‘5S and hurt cf |the old struggle hadbccn greater iallnnst than she could bear. i Alter lunch Dr. McNeill called and looked stocked of his patient. l "No ill effects." he concluded. \"Yl1ll'|'(‘ stronger . ‘Norah. I'd advise you to get. iimv. ‘Exercise will hc'p the bruises and ilakc the stiffness out of your ic .. She smiled. "You're i; cruel old. taskmaster aren_'t ,-ou. doctor?" Miss Mathiesoli. the housekeeper. came llito the bedroom. ‘There was an odd look on her face. "Mr. Davd McGregor has called." she said. “I left him with Archie ln the drawing-mom." Norah grew white and then flushed vcrv prettlly. l-ler heart thudded like a hammer. "Doctor!" she exclaimed in sud- ,deii, unaccountable panic. "I can't isee lim. I'm sure I'm not we.l eiiotrgh. 1——-" His eye twinkled. S‘ m 5 4 2 é?‘ E a far as I am concerned there's no reason Wily you sliouidnt sea Mr. McGregoi " 'I'herc was leading in her eyes. "I'm real v not presentable enough," she began again. "Th s plaster oil my cheek. ‘Ihe bandage on my knee. . . ." "But surely Mr. McGregor has no interest either in your clieek or m your knee," replied D1‘. McNelil with iso much portentous gravity that I lulss Mathiesmi had to turn aviay to hlue uii irrepressible smile. Norah's face grew more flushetymm we mm l than ever. - "Mary," slie appealed to the housekeeper, "I'm sure you under- stand. 1 can't-l can't possibly lee ailyclic today." _ "Why not, Miss Norah? Im sure Mr. McGrcgoi' won't bite you, and as for the plaster on your cheek and ttic bandages, he'll never notice turni. He'll I11-ft think y011'1'1l B5 lovel as ever.’ , "b¥4_*‘-¢Lll.'—' Norah beat the bed- clotlics with her fists. She desisted unruplly, however, when she struck i.cr burned fingers against. the doc- tor's brig. uiien he fate became 1111,111- "All right!’ she sanppcu. "Yourc both heartless. I can t_ understand _t'Gll,.,1li get up, anti Ill probably c. ‘the doctor rose. At the door he trausccl. . , l ‘llll Rlad." he said 11"l°l»y “MB! you wcrc able to uav r011: drill W “ml mist ltntlihw ul kly Sic ooe uull 6 - ~~l)ebt?" she inquired. "011 ~Y011 mean about the trme he rescued Arclile from drowning at the D181‘? "no," replcd Dr. McNclll. glancing to/cards Mary Mathleson. "1111 Ye‘ fer-ring l0 the occasion when Archie had diphtheria and David sat with lilm all night. lint-l the crisis wag passed. He told MLSS Mathleson an myself at the Lme not to tell you about it. but circumstaces have ai- tered since then, and l believe 1m Justified in giving you the" truth. Good afternoonaMlsis Nolflh- David had literally been pushed forth to inquire after the health of his rescuer. His aunt had been c0111 to use her mosg scxathrlng . C 8 °°°°°§§fillln lgfiltbll; ltltllv or} street- ‘Illildllvlsfllllgslelflln llllllfllllll ‘(llldlgd glac- Ions-there W08 that naor a111- 118K- lng her life 01ft ;__S> . to ow- tlle ‘x8180 I iixreed .l k, Love l5 ‘ax Wflllljlllleisflieil While these two confirmed b en. elors dlscoursed wisely on “We. h! s beloved ‘v Wat ._ A d cruel sheelimllg go to tlllelssalllorllall “tall: bIMk-hillrd man with the may]; or 81w rocked gently in erciiiii-"lier oals. ' replied Miss Meat-ego,‘ "I makeya forecast iiilglliigllifii°fin§l w” 1 ve “me w think you for your I I The I . . Helpful Hints For A MorningSmile i l Ship's Officer: "Oh. there goes ght bells. Excuse me, it's my watch ielow." Old Lady: "Gracious! Fancy l lyour watch striking as loud aSl that!" i anovr rum ——— I l ‘Tl-lo other way down. please." called out the lady tram conductor, as tine very portly charwoiman was descending at the driver's enct. “You're mighty fussy now there's a. war on." sna-pped the erring one. And she turned round and stari- ed down backwards! CHARLOTTE 0F FRUIT Line a deep mould with bread cut ‘half an inch thick. Pour into this some leftover stewed apples. well whisked. Leave to stand till next day. 'I‘l1l'l'l out carefully, then pour boiled custard over it. Any kind of stewed fruit can be used for the same impose. Women Folk A PLEASANT THING rt is a very pleasant thing 'I‘0 have the neighbors in And bring them bread and cherry m Ja Oci our beat porcelain; And find a single daffodil And set it candle-wise; A cheerful. UIITEXPBZlECl thought, A fresh and glad sulrpflsel Tea. and cocoa growers of Ceylon are not seeking large war orders te- cause they say they do not wish to disturb their regular business. SUBMARINE IN 1620 The submarine is regarded as a. micclern invention. but the first one was built in England in 1620. It was a wocden shell. covered with leather and navigated by 12 rc-wers. Tomato ketchup varies the flavor of codifish cakes. Mix one or two tableipccins with the batter, de- pending on the quantity cf cakes. FURNACE FILTER Alr filters oil furnaces sift out dust and dart from the ali- enter- ing the furnace and often save extra cleaning and dusting for hcuseewives. Creoles are not mulrt-toes, as many people imagine. They are descendants of white famlles, long settled in tropical climeis. Spin out your meat budget by buying cheap cuts. Hl8!“llfi(l€ thclii in vlnccal‘ for some hours and they will taste as gotd g5 the bei meat. Keep your kettles and siauccpaiis as clean as pilris outside and save gal: socty deposits mean that more gas i; required to heat. the contents. varnish the soles of lilll‘ children's shoes to make t-hcin last ionizer. and get. them into the hahit. of changing into licuse slip- pers \V'l1(>"’.l they come home. Sugar the teapot if you all have a siweet tooth instead of stigaring individual cuips: you uie fair less that way. Butter your toast when it is ccol instead of hot, and you need less butter. Tea EJUPOH! give three requisites for making perfect tea. Measure one teaspoon tea leaves to each cup 0! boiling water: add an extra tea- upoonful. Use only fresh. boiling watert bubbling, not just hct) a-ncl pour over the diry tea leaves. Steep until the flavor you prefer is ob- l.%ll1€d—\15li8lly three to five min- u es. The well-cooked potato is Miite "Youre quite well. Miss Norah. As and flcnry-a. result you'll find far easier to attain if you take this tip. Just boil a slice of lemon with the potatoes, and you'll be suirficised at the difference it will ma e to the color. ‘me addition of the lemon Juice has a particularly good effect on old potatoes. Unsalted fats are best for greas- ing cake pans. since salt tends to make the mixture stick. 0r if you prefer to use butter because of better flavor, melt the butter and The salt in the butter will sink to the bot-tom. FOOD VALUES FOB. IVER! DAY ‘Hie food we eat mould serve three purposes:- 1-It mould give energy to the body. 2—It mould protect the body from disease. 3-—It should build up the body. The energy-giving foods, or, carbohydrates. are - bread, sugar, honey, cereals, potatoes, etc. In addition to these, frets such as hitter. bacon. dripping. etc. pro- vide energy as well as fulfilling other functions. Vitamins A.B.C. and D. Mitch give protection against disease are to be found in many foodstuffs. Vim-lain A i; present iin milk, yolk of egg. butter. liver. etc. vitamin B l‘.‘l pulse foods. milk, cheese. etc" and so on, but i:-i order to get lull protection fresh fruit and green day and thank her. What a creature to bear the name of McGregorl" He walked towards Norah's house. feeling as he had done before his first light in an aeroplane, both asclnalsd and terrified. He could not analyse his emotions. but his mind reiterated the warning that when he saw her he must not make g fool of himself. she was a Grant. e was a McGregor; and though he wanted her more than anything else on earth he must not al ow her to suspect his feelings. He couldnt de- on the fact that she had gone g l. rescue; that didn't mean she cared for him: she'd have done the same for Jock. for Brown, for Mentolth . m; you last night. and] m» be continued)‘ e .. -__ _ vegetables sihould be included in the daily diet if possible. The principal body - building foods, or proteins, are meat, cheese, milk, eggs, fish, pulse foods TIMELY IIINTS l So mu-cli for tlie (Llfirent. glflllf)» Now u. few hints applicable to the times we live in. A great many adults eat far more meat than is eltiher necessary OT good for thcni, and vegetable proteins (dried lett- tils. haricot beans, etc.) can be sub- stituted for meat and provide most excellent meals. The cheaper cuts of meat often- contain at. much Ll not more 110Ui‘lF‘l‘lfil'?i'lt than the ex- pen-‘ive ones, and if ccmh ned with plenty of vegetables iii a stew make a mcst allnetising dish. . Herrlngs are part-"cularli" rich in .TlGl1f‘lE'h1'l’l€Z‘ll- as' are milk and jolieese. As regards the latter. the cheaper kinds contain just as lntzch nourishment as the more exp:n ive varieties. and one great advantage cf cheese is that it can be eaten raw. Anyone who can digest meat should be able to digest cheese, but it is made more digestible by grai- lng it and mixing it with a starchy fccd. Wlicii asking cheese bcwarc of overcooking it. as it then lic- comes stringy and indigo-tine, and be certain to season the ClZSh well. Handbags generally match the iccstvme color or cc-lifwrst. in lzrlght shade. Nctv... TEACHING TECHNIQUE Almost every (‘llllfl has some icapaclty’ for musical cypress-ten, lll ~the opinion of child causation (x- ' pert. \Vli0lli" " not '.llS innate tal- flF-‘,'.‘f‘i'.(‘$ llPTll the instrtrtznsi lie rev‘ take tcavarfl his lei £0115. The old methods of piano in- sl-rtlclaon that called for endless practicing of scalcs. playing dull lpiews in the heat of n metroiioltir‘. and balancing pfllllie". on the backs of t-he iiatirls are likely lri ciastroi‘ tihe child's n-attira] love for music. the experts say. Instead. parents should see to it that their children are taught ac.- coiding to the modicrii methods that emphasize the fun in leaf-rim; W play. Here the emphasis for tine be- ginner is on melody rather than scales. Prom almost the first lesson. he 15 playing simple tunes that can be eiurig and hulmmed as well as played. At no time in the leaminfl Dm- c955 l5 one beginner allowed to feel that he is not making PTOKWSS- 0'1‘ to become lfiscouraged, Rntlirr he 15 constantly conscious of hi5 111' . creasing ability by the W0€l'1’9>1°11 of pieces given hlm l0 ‘Plfly- W"? of these include scales in their com- position. so that he is mastering them in a painless fashion. m addition to the arm heme- nesa that the olilld gets from dis- covering the pleasure in music. there are many other aiclvantazfs- A self-conscious clilld ncqtiires‘ poise and confidence at the P1111112‘- A nervous child learns rhythm B11 coordination whldfl h; cam“ if" into his other aetwit-ea- A11 111 m-| ripectlve child finds a way 1116*‘, " KISS Yllllli TIRED FEELING GUODBYE! Pepleu Many Suffer Low Blood Count-And Don't Know It. The bafllling thing about low hlorid eonnl in that you can weigh about as mill-h u you ever did—- even look healthy and strung. yet —-you can feel aa if you hrui lead ln your legs, dopey. tired and fir-pleas. ' Low blood count means you haven t. got enough red blond cnrriulicleli. lt la their Vllll lob to carry life-giving oxygen fr_om r0111’ lurin throulhoilt your body/trad Just as lt up" oxygen to explode gasoline ln ,\'nur ear aml make the power to turn the wheels, an you must have Plenty of hill"! 1a excl-pile flin energy in your body and rive you 801118 hover. Get Dr. Williams Pink Fills today. They l are world-famous for the help they give in Increasing the number and strength of Yell eorpusriea. Then with your blood enunt up, [you'll feel like bounding up the stairs ill if you were floating onlir. Ask your drunlat for Dr. Williams Pink Pills today. your: aas-rmcoslilEl-lr: You will scarcely believe that‘ your towel is your bet (‘35lll0ll('—-— ‘ but it's truel Towels are some- thing more than a gcod ivay to dry-they are a first-aid arr-- vice to health and beauty. The ‘ correct, use oil a towel is something .essen~t.lal to gocd looks and an dmnlaculatc appearance. when‘ lyou step straight from your tub. I'm“ rub f f- G PAGE Ni v. Literature PEG: “We need a rug for our iiiliii; 70°11!» but wejust can't nil't.r.l _ , ,'* I MEGWAnybody can nllllrll ii lriri :2 l» 1:11 Rug! And Congoleurli ls Ittll fi"l‘-' "g economical, if’a flu: i-zir-iiiii tiij---- £11 )1 the world f0 keep t-lmm.’ ‘j . ,1, . Wipe UP SPOlS ln u jlil), Illlil l-‘fl l, occasional ivnxing liflrpr. i; ,.,_,,, |,_ i 5- lollsly bright mill Ill'\\l it... p. », t _ ~ ' I ' lluve l0 luck if clown (‘lllifl ;' -: l lll.flllllt\lNl-'.-—Nli.-rvl4 flul willmlll fastening; of“ .1...» .1" PEG! “But how could I over gut it... 1;) harmonize with my walls lllitl i.ir.. niahings?” MEG? "011. Congoleum denii-r- li lVfl dozens oflovely colour eomiiin ~i {mm to choose from, and the strip-t mt, designs you ever saw!” PEG: “Then let's go alirl sec flir- new Congoleum patterns today .‘ "’ z W0‘ . I CANTO“ “N” A55 NIL-Remember, Ladies, f0 II)fIIr'_ffIY r1. a Cold Seal for lasting saiis;frivri',.y._i ‘ Askyour dealer about the new Con- golcum book on Iiousefltrnisllinga or wrilefor a copy to: CONGOLEUIH CANADA LIMITED 3700 St. Patrick Street - Montreal Our Stock of Congoleum Rugs is Complete JOHN MacLEAN & SON l Montague --- aaflnrnitli See Our Fine Selection of the Latest i R. T. HULMAN L111» SUMMERSIDE CHARLOTTETOWN Call and Inspect Oar Display of CONGOLEUM RUGS BRA CE, McKA Y & c0., LTD. SUMMERSIDE For CONGOLEUM RUGS at LOWEST PRICEZ See 05., LTD- We Carry a Complete Line of CONGOLEUM RUGS MOORE & McLEOD LTD. your laurel-around you and Th rub. rub every inch of ysur skin into action in the thiowing old Donaltfbody with such guto that it. will off of im-pilritirs. This towel mas.- malte you tingle all over and set sage is a grad way to crmbat any blood arm-idling in will" ve.ns. tendency w a "spotty beet." 1t isusipurs cvery'little"ccll'of your lsrflffiecfesgsfiiyjowrillijtlie’sklndoff‘:Egillglllfifl‘? “ '7 yourself-or even make your tklii rind than maisa f: _ sore, but a brisk rub will really little olive 01.. \\.l., work wonders. Bring beauty too. l)" l0 "Y lto those elbows of yours, by knead- ibeauty. "the to