lliiliinltituzealit DUO SUEDE GLOVES DUOSUEDE is an entirely new rayon fa- bric. Gloves must take it, these days . . . . So. Kayser gives you double-travel: l'2l_\'0ll litbric for double wear. double value. Two beguiling styles, keyed to today's func- tional clothes .. .. . . . $1.25 MGDRE €~ M9LEODME ‘ ~‘c‘ol'\.~1.\‘.\‘.\'2c§.\.\.\.\,\.\\ THE COOK'S i’ CORNER 5. Wvscesosxcssvoomi oomws noxsr mam ruurrrus Two cups sifted whole wheat flour (bran slftings included», 1 cup sifted white flotir, 1 cup bran (lifted out of uihoie vrheat. 11W“. leftover ilctir can be used as ycu a A» would use wlute__flotrr,_fDonny"s_ This answers uaspoons baking ‘.1 -i icrspcon sail, 3.4 cup is or raisins or a mixture of both, l egg. “e11 beaten, 1-2 cup strained honey, 1 1-4 cups whole milk lrnbiespotrn melted butter or lard. MlX and sift» flours. baking powder, salt. Sill‘ in the bran and. the 111115 or t raisins. Ccmbine fflllfllfllllg edients and add to the dry mix , stirr- irng only enough to mix mem well. Dip into greased 2-inch muffin tins by tablespoonftils, filling two-thirds full. Bake at 400 degrtes Fahrenheit from 25 to 30 minute-z. Makes 24 smaller 16 latye muffins. A 2 1-2 or 3-inch muffin requires 35 mm- ures baking. your question —“WHAT CAN I SERVE FOR \ é/ DESSERT?” l Dorothy“ Dix Says- WELL, AREN’T SOME HUSBANDS CHOOSY AND HARD TO PLEASE 7 One Of Them Complains Because His Wife Is Too Affectionate DEAR MISS nus-any years before we were married was really Heaven on earth. wifemdlkneweach other-mom tficntwo . During that time I was the lover and it But after we were married she 8°!- Vllfi ldel that the role should be reversed and that she should do the love-making and she is suflocating me with her affection. For no reason at all, and no matter where we are. she throws he!‘ arms around me. kisses me. and whispers in desperate tones: "Darling 1 love Then she stops and holds her breath. waiting for me to say: I At first I played up to her because I knew what she I didn't answer. she would say: lately: “'I‘ell me you love m6. t00- 0T1 you love me any more?” Now when I tell my wife I love her I want to put some feeling in those cherished words. but how can you do it when they are merely an ans- wer to a question that you have been booked into a wall and forced to make? I know a wlfe wants her husband to make love to her. but God knows if husbands are in any wav like me they lust. don't. have a chance to: their wives beat them to That isn't what nrfn want. w do the love-making after marriage as well as before. What can ou." ove you. too." waived to hear Besides. v. - Q1- things? snv it with ANSWER—Aren't husbands And hard to please? don't know how to handle them. ' one set of huslnndfi “n0 “"01 Mill-Tish") 5W1‘ a to marry after the war than he has been before it. bore that they really get married to put anend to rtnirnd to be_able to bee; steaks and shopping tickets instead of l-love-yons, I do? BELPLEBS HUSBAND. the don't haul them into the divorce court. And there is another set of husbands who are so romantically inclined that they want their wives to preserve the illusion of still being the bird ‘ wing. even after they have been captured and locked up in the do: tic hen-house. and always to keep them gitessntg. _ wile to do when one type of husband wnnts her to do all the love-making. and the other type of husgzgiéi wants to monopolize the 10b himself '1’ TER No one can tell her. and if sire gives the wrong answer. it is Just too bad. _ can be told with certainty. and that rs to go slow on her demonstrations of although She 1S m h" twenties‘ GO SLO“ "Well? Thev wn nt " and So what is a roor 1mm ci/KTRHWMYSWN spams‘ iv w. K Social and Personal '1. Fashions IF soaring war-time prices are bo- ginning to blitz your food budget, it’: time to switch from old-fashioned l(and now SO expensive) loovcning agents to Barbour‘: Acadia Baking Powder. Its DOUBLE ACTION gives uniformly satisfactory baking results —oven texture and delicate flavour-—- EIVBRY TIME. Actually, you'll got more baking satisfaction from money spent on Barbouz-‘s Acadia Baking Powder than on any other leavening agent you can buy today! Baftflrtru/tb ACADIA BAKING POWDER. . the service. What should I do? Tom says he loves me .but he has put hone fm- u; I ocjifpspiz 22.1942 s-i '1 Literature l ._:;__.. _ r _; ._;:i ranchers on the north marriage for about six years when he was Perfectly able l0 mBIry- side o: Thumb creek. You can put ofi our chqQsy Now he has left for the service and N‘, wmder W“ e5 a good job and am willing to keep the home fires burning. I Fm he“ 1s but am tired of being asked to wait on a man who may be no more eager What would you advise me to do? CO expects me to wait some rgprledwlz llplriyhe LLEEN. _ _ ANSWER,- I should certainly advise you to tell the gentleman that who expect their wives to take their affection for granted because they his option on your heart and hand has expired, for he evidently is not the msrrylnlz type. Otherwise you would have been Mrs. long ago. n I th .k any girl is foolish to waste her time for more than a year on a man who shows that ‘his attentions are without intentions. READ THIS, IF YOU WANT DATES DEAR MISS DIX—I took a girl out for an evening of danqng last. night. She is one of four girls who live together in an apartment. They are very nice and attractive, and I have often wondered whv they never Sh-e has to try it out on the individual man: seem to have any dates But one thing she Well. I found out. last night. The girl I took out could hardly dance. She was not dressed for dancing. . Her njlectxm, for nothing disillusions a man S0 Qlllfkll’ 59d 5° Ccmplewlv as skirt was ful enough. but she had a row of big. wooden buttons up the for a woman to thrust upon him ill-timed and llYiSOllCllIJd caresses. Even Solomon who holds the world's record as a great lover. cried out a Sore mace on my ch95; where the beads and the bmwns dug m to Say in disgust: "Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples. for I am SICK nothmg o; hum; my he‘ probably crippled for me by he, treading on of love." tions of affection from women. watch the next couple of spooners you see in an automobile or at the movies. boy's neck and her head reclining on his shoulder. and he is sitting up. iqn“ straitzht, with DAMN written all over him. The truth is that every woman who ever offers her lips l0 8 mun l0!‘ self. front of her dress and a double row of beads around her neck. I still have» 1f you want proof that men still react. the same way to exhibi- mem , I h had Till T-hl l1 t0 b l , h iIl T718 2W1 has h" firm-S around ll" would 13:59 on drefsssdfiiid lexiyfialrvztptlliea artemelltiiiilexlyl tirisgilzldego ‘tvheerdcfiasg Also. a girl should be dresed so that you can tell whether she is a tzirl or a bov other than bv the perfume with which she as anointed her- Certainly I don't think a girl is ever equipped to get what she a kiss. or asks him if he loves her. either before or after marriage. is ought to out of life unless she is up to the social graces and llnvvw; how a dumbbell who blocks her own game. She turns what should be an experience rare and nreclotis and thrilling into a conventional chore that has no important for a girl to educate her heels as her head. more meaning than a castial handshake. And when a woman asks a man dgnclng lessons 1g vou Wang; to have dams if hr- loves tier. she knows he doesn't. or else he woulrint wait to be asked: to pick out vQur domes n“; yourself h, the hands or she knows it has become a part of a daily ritual that has no more sen}; clerk 1n a dress {hop and 1st he, 5919c; them for you bv not making it hard to get. She takes the flavor out of a kiss timent to it than if she asked him whether he had brought home the por chops. ‘Love is a rummy thing any way you look at it. but one thing about it is certain-if you want. to keep it alive after you are married. you can't check it of! among your daily dozen. must. wait for the mood for its expression. If vou keep any romance in it. you Oil-T‘ kiss in the star light. when ones heart is filled with tenderness. is worth a whole year's ham- and-t-gg kisses, when one is lp a l/Lurrvio catch the 7.30 trnln. . o NOT THE MARRYING TYPE DEAR MISS DIX-lion have advised girls to be true to the boys in Even with your wartime budget you can still serve attractive desserts. A great variety of custards and puddings can be made FREE! Send for the excellent Recipe Booklet "52 Desserts". Write enclosing one box-top or complete label from any Canada Starch product. Address Dept. R 15, Canada Starch Home Service, Box 129, Montreal. CANADA CORN STARCII With pure, high quality Canada Corn Starch you can give your family the kind of desserts they’ve always wanted. easily and at little cost with Canada Corn Starch. When pantry stocks are low, and your menus are restricted by timely shortages, what more delightful desserts can you serve to the Family — delicious treats they will all appreciate. Canada Corn Starch makes inexpensive desserts that look glamorous - and that's a good Housoldier’: idea of real war-time economy. t. d‘? Willi‘ \ a \\\. r ‘l “r a hi. \ \\ ‘d: \.E\\\.\ \\\\ I product of THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited, Monuoal --Tg|-¢y|g° To Relieve Distress of MONTHLY llllill Wllllllli due to female functional disturb- ances-try Lydia E. Pinkhamfis Veg- etable Compound TABLETS (wt h added iron). They help build up red blood. Also fine tonic for stomach! Sort/ice Exciting jar Mystery Eardcn in n Plants Put In When "Babies" As mysterious as Grampa‘s ship- in-a-hottle! Everyone asks you. “HOW did those gorgeous flowers grow in that small-necked glass jar?" Easy-you put them in when they were tlnyl A garden in o bottle, u in any terrarlum, flourishes with tropical success. Rosy-flowered be- gonia. palms, ferns-nearly all plants love the warm, cosy shelter of glass walls. To start your garden in a ju, first drop cinders, for drainage, and next some soil, into ft. Next, ever so carefully, fold the leaves of each seedling around its stem and lower it to a hole in the soil with a homemade forceps-l length of wire folded in the middle. There’: a world of pleasure in such glass gardens, whether they're in jugs. lam jars or fish bowls! And a spoonful of water now and then keeps almost anything growing in them-even orchids. Our 32-page booklet tell: how to make many lovely types of glasl gardens, grow African violets. cacti, gardenias, other favorite plants. Also tells how to make dish gar- dens. grow a kitchen-window herb Iarden. _ Bend 20c in coins for your cow of "Glass Gardens and Novelty 1n- door Gardens" of Charlottetown Guardian Home Service, Address. Be sure to write plainly your name, address and the name o: booklet». t Name Street Address “Ail to dress. BOB. AN$WER~Read this. girls. and profit by it. Nowadays it is just as imfldtrangeriln i Shady Gulch Denver Budwcll I t ,__ ___ ______ cunrrm 1v Radkin whirled Tufly out of the willows and broke him into B run- I-Ie kept to the grass beside the road so that he would not leave a tlifllé of dust hanging on the air. 38h n him. the trees along the creek Cour-W hid him from the two followlnil rid- ers until they crossed the bridge. By that time. he was a mile away. turning up the lowland road beside a branch of Thumb Creek which came down from the northern hills. . Two miles up the nearly drv little stream. he crossed it. still pursuing the only road visible. The road 110W skirted the foot of the mesa rim- ming ‘Ihurnb Creek valley On the orth. n A gray. star-lit darkness shrouded d hills b. the time the iiiielatiiiti iiii; doe.‘ iopved 1n throuah the wide. oven gate to the MW ranch yard. _Il1'W because of Radki kn w it was _ ."ahs.§s-T"sse- Eesffbrfialring: BesfforHeaI! / RESII FllllM MARITIME P N So take some And if vou don't know how of the best-dressed spreading cottonwood beside the Rate. described to him by Scooter. There were lights in the big house of’! to the left and lampllght shone weakly through the windows of a long bunkhouse a short distance from the big cottonwood. As Rafldlfiln paused in the shadows under the tree. a man came hurry- gill toward him from the m ouse. ‘lus that you. Arlene?" the man cale . Then. Radkln heard Scooters voice from the direction of the barn straight ahead. "New. that ain't Miss Arlene, Chief. That's the coyote hunter we was tellin’ " to the barn. feller. and rest your saddle." Radkln rode to the wide barn door. halted. and slid to the ground. As a cowboy came out of the barn with a lighted lantern, Scooter and his employer aDllroaclied. Waller was a big man. with black hair graying at the temples. He now seemed thoroughly angry as he ad- dressed Scooter- and the man with the lantern. “If an. hing happens to that girl coming home in the dark alone." he boomed. "I'll fire you two Jug-head- ed rannies! When you saw she was 1n town. why didn't you stay and come home with her her?" "You been givin‘ us mighty ‘DOW-o erful orders lately,“ Scooter plied. without humility. "not. to hank 'round town Saturday nights since that last tangle with the Half Diamond bunch. How could we know Mis: Arlene wouldn't git in before dark?" "I auess your daulzhfenll be get- ting here pretty soon, Mr Waller." Radkin sald- her coming lust after I crossed Thumb Creek bridge." "Then why in blazes didn't you wait and come with her?" Waller stormed. “If you've come here to get work, young feller. vou sure don't rome Wit-h a very good recommenda- ilfln- leuvlnfi my girl to come homo in the dark alone!" Mr Waller." Radkin said quietly "A little whlte-hairrd boy, name or Tom was riding with her." Oh . . . Waller looked relieved. “But what do you mean by that ‘little white-haired boy‘ stuff? mung Tom is the only decent man left in the whole Lallv outfit. If VOlYK‘ Roinll to hang around here. "ranaer. you'd better tinrlerstand v that young Tom, Lally is the last ‘Q0 v _ I 0o KNNK‘ gfl “FOP W056i who holclll Fhelr leach high ‘iooux . I INISOQWTQI?’ l FRAMES a m. m: 12m blend individually lo; you o rhcdc of loco pom!” |° ‘mole your skin look vows". |_ mo" ‘OVQIY upon '0! I lcccontucle: th- m" "m, ‘Ming tints lo your own auti- O rrom Saturday, Oct. 17th till Saturday, Oct. 24th. You will receives gift of a full $1.45 box of CHARLES oi‘_ the RITZ Face Powder blended individually for you with your purchase of other CHARLES of the RITZ Toiletries to the value of $1.25 or more. TllE JENKINS PHARMACY Till BEXALL DBUGBTOBI Corner Great George and Kent streets Charlottetown Phone 21! wbcfiezsae" up your horse and stay over Sun- day, but I'm not hiring any more men-won't even b: able to keep the three I've still got, the wav everything looks now!" The worried rancher stalked off. Scooter gave Radkin a look. shook his head mournfully, then led the way into the barn. When Radkin had iuisaddled Tufiy and turned him into the cor- ral. he and Scoot/er went to the kitchen of the bio. house. Before entering. he ordered Caesar to lie down out under the trees. well away from the kitchen door. “We already ct." Scooter said. "and Cookys done turned in, but I Ruess I can shake out $01110 chuck for vou." While he set out some food on a table. Radkin glanced into the 1on2. dark dining room “Looks like vcu got a dining room here big enough for a lots larger crew." he commented. “The Chief used‘ to run a steady crew of fifteen to eighteen. and nearly that many more at [round- Mornlng Smile g '\'.\-7\9\"£\ '1\ho hawker had almost effected a sale o! s parrot. “Arc you sum-- tho maiden lady inquired tn doesn't swear much?" ’e doesn't swear much, mavam. Bu wot bit ‘e does swear e’ swears extremely loud an’ cleari" UP AND DOWN Old Gent-What does ‘your lath. er do for a ltvin sonny TQYITUIY —He chops down trees. _Old Gent —And what does he do when lie has chopped them down? Tommy --He chaps them up. work. Robblin’ lands. gettln" ready to shut us of! from Thrunb Crick. Before we and the other two spreads above us alone the hills knowed what was up, old Lallv had about twenty stools enter homestead and tree claims 1m the best valley lands. - "That was five Js-drs back. They lust built shacks and scratched the RTOILXIQ in a few spots. enough to prove up for land deeds. Now Chi)’ spankin‘ one of them stools has sold out ly. so he owns every foot of Thumb Crick up to where it turns ack ‘into his rcglar Half Diamond "Looked to mo like good mess country back of the hills here." Rad. kin said. "Isn't it good open rangl ?" "Best in the world between (irv seasons but, from July till the Win. ter ruins come in ovembt there ain't. enough water outsl Thumb Crick to wet a lizards “this. tie. That's why old Lally pulled m5 long whlzzer. gobblin’ up Thumb Crick where the Waller. Thule turd Ormoud herds used t0 range iu dry weather. That's why the Chief is so het up. "Old Lfllly is haulin’ in bobwlrt and fence posts right now. Conn July. they won't ghafta be cuttln’ MW beef down with lead and wild dogs, or rustlln’ plenty oows like they done till right recent. all to break the Chief. Thirst‘ll do it." "Why does Lolly want to bust these north-side ranchers?" CU’ 5 bank in Shady Gulch wants t/o out over some big deal with the coal lands undr thehorth oryBaca, mesa and build PA ' (Continued on page a, Col 2) AM LIPTON'S FULL- * A PROD . PTUII 5 The Packers of PACKAGES FOR 25¢ UCT OF AVOURED (Small Leaf) TEA Living o Leisure The Woman's Realm BUSY BEES H, Wyatt Washington Noon fields And the white clouds fur-led; Work yields To resting world: But who shall keep Bees from swce. c.uver ‘Ihat work and reap The noon hour over? Noon shade Where the horses rest: Plows aid By earth's turned breast; Brut vnhat of these Thai: harvest clover? who pays the bee; for working over? The ancient pmctlc_e___0f__ fishing $lllll$ PAIN Relieved Fast This Easy Way! Put a few dro of Vicks Va-tro-nol up each nostr and [eel it go to work bringing quick. soothin relief from m rable sinus pain. @—-> Vl-‘IRQIOL _._._.- with connorants , voracious web- éodpxted btrlgs, is sift-ill ftirxllowed ‘by tier; K ilk’ ' W“ youiififeithen lfllldsrofie eisilys tamed and trained. The Chinese cirrry them on poles to the river, when they are set free. T113‘ dive inlv with fish in their beaks. Strintle around their necks keep them frcrr swallowing the fish. SAVE ELECTRICITY Sweaters and other knitted 8N" merits need never be ironed. After l garmcnt has been di. d in smith suds that won't shrine woolens and spread on a flat silrfafle to dry. wk‘ a small piece of stiff clean WP" and snootlh the Wflnkles out b! drawlmg it lengthwise over the 8"" ment. 1r brown wrappiri Pallet l: used. be sure the shiny sde ls n“ the wool half -pound enletllfl"! A new “boil- ut" food package for arm! filer-sires been lnvmted. which con- tains c, day's noumlshnnent for l soldier. The complete ration will?“ about eight and one-fourth nun"! and fits into the pccket. 1t cont-tins a vitamimd chocolate bar. a bflX - malted milk-dextrose. table“ ' carton of dextrose alarm. a “i: of bouillon powder, and a stilt! dhowlng pun Hair is collected from b! shops in Germany to make m9"