. PAGE TWO W0 WHITE HANDKERCi-liEFé i’ YESMNM-WIKTCCXDI? watt ANVTH/NG w/r/r 41v l/V/T/AL - HERE'S TODAV€ éPbC/AL- ‘iOU GET A CHOICE OF 1G INITIALS ‘ IS THATALZZZQN 6E7 A7’ GOOSHV/‘E/MEPS,’ HERE YOU ARE. MADNW- OQE LLAQ EACH- WHVD/DN7 YOU $4750 , //V THE FIRST?! f /NS754D OF M45 ALL Mi/ T/ME? i t | suaaeszrzi/sv ‘OZ-i???” new. an ma...“ .-v-OO-O-Q-O-0-O-O-O04 m A ¢ man's Real Modern Etiquette u, about» ‘AA AmiAi QOOQ Q. Siwuki s mm remove his hat when in the elevator of a hotel or an loo building. when a grown sons and da A. Send one 1n fatiher and mother, and a so invitation to each son and Q. Is ll, proper, in a night club. for a. man to s$ a girl he lmows to dance, when me is sitting. at sn- with some peopl he does not know‘! No, it, is better not to do so. he may stq: at her table words)! 5 or tatlon to the ate Bustli- whom A. Clear head and nose and keep r h em c le s r. Bfenrholsrum checks gerher- ing of mucus sod relieves jruly nostrils... MENTHOLATU h... . CONN-URI’ Dally +e++eo+eo t t 4 gCoo/z ’s Corner naval-ram wrurn CAKE E85)’ to manage . . . easy to “l5 With r ary beater beat eggs ‘m. ‘£15121’: on Grirldualil a Mulligan M Sm Y. van a ex- lhtellbsbetb uqslsnim MllllTlllY » FEMALE Pllll Wlih l8 flrud, nervous, erunlry feelings! If fen-tale functional periodic diaturbanofl cause you to suffer from crampl. ' backache. feel nervous, jittery, cranky—ut such timu~lry Lydia E. Pinkhamb Vege- table Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham‘: Compound boss MORE than relieve such monthly pain. It also relieves panying tired, nervous. u-anky lee!- ingr-of such nature. One of the but known and most effusive medicines you can buy for this purpose. If you suffer like this-we urp you to give Pinkham’! Compound a fair and honest trial! - LYDIA E. HNKHIWS ‘ébifllfdki ‘.'§§-§fO-§-O-O-§O-O-O Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee , 0 e e0 ee+e+e+++ee4+e++e 40-0 0400 eeeee Painting Over Glass When painting over glagg p, g5 important that the glass be ab- solutely clean of grease, and 1126s can be done b washing it, with benzinc or also o1. and then letting it rm- "iwrwshly. A satisfactory first cont is a straight, white lead. “mew 9-1 Paint. and over tihis may be applied the desired oolor cos/ts. _ Squeaky Shoes 545-1111 BQWBKY shoes in enough linseed oil to cover the soles and let stand all night. This usually gzritrmrsmulléqueak. llowever, d? E tmschflse . I the shoes, or it will rain Prevent W In; _ The pluminun oook ng pans will be easzly warped out of shape if one persists in putting cold water into tihem while they are still hot. X 7" Dim 01‘ 9" layer pan. Bake in Ilmdflffliell! hilt oven; 315 degrees -. 25 minutes. Remove from pan; cool on wire rack, OQf-O-O-OO 5 Better English i l). O. Williams i O-O-QO-QO-O fifi-bfi-fi-fOfi-fO-GO ‘Q-Qfifi 1- “Khat is wrong with this san- tattoe? “Please endorse on the back of this check." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation of "flnis"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Stomach. rwustaai, S 4. yvhst does the word "docile" may“ - Wlht is 0rd with fr that m:unsw"ocon ANSWERS 1. Say. "Please endorse this cheek." Endorse means "to write qn the back of." 2. Pronounce llslllflilhliotaslnfln. 3. tacit-re; also moustache. 4. Dis to be taught- tractable, "A ocile disposition ll. with application, surmount every difficulty." - Manlius. 5. Frugal. st M115- as? immi. marines llllFilllll ueethlselleetlvsruhler lllllilllrlllllll It Must Ie Geelll At the first sign of u chest cold-the Quintuplets’ c eats. throats and bucks are immediately rubbed with warming, soothing Muster-ole. Muaterole instantly starts to relieve coughs, soretilroat. bronchitisandmuscio soreness. It actually helm break upperm- ful congestion. Mskss thing call. Fine for grown-ups. tool In 3 strengths. v DISSOLVID O EL nan RAI. VACCINE a CATARRH mfSoci ¢¢¢¢““¢¢¢‘ ‘ L‘; O i Questions and Answers on Price control will appear in The Guard iau as a regular feature euoh day The questions nrs those which have reached the Wsritne Prices and Trade Board from housewives In this region. The answers are P"- vlded by the Board Readers. rer- sens wh have intelligent ,uestiona to ask on price control are invite to send them ln writing the Women's Regional Advisory Com- mittee. A, A week ago I bought B chen- ille housecoat and paid $8.95. I 8m enclosing an advertisement clipped from the paper show1n8 the 59""? housecoat at allot-filer store for $6.95- When I opened up my Parcel i" home I found all tags had berm re- moved and the bill was not enclosed. Was I overcharged. A. A difference of $2 on one article seems very high B-lld We have passed your letter along to our investigation department. The labels on the garments are me pro- A Job Only You Can Do and Answers Price Control Questions ¢***O-O-OOOOO-OO-OO+OF$OOO¢‘V““Qv¢““ ‘¢_‘¢v“‘ onal 1F Betty of the buyer and should have can left on the housecoat “when you purchased it will check on the s nection as well as t0 Price- Q, when d9 the butter coupcais change in value? A. The coupons do not chanEB l" value . _ _ the butter ration was re- duced from seven to six ounces per person per week commencm8 ‘hi5 month, but, iihe reduction is effected by sfponlng a coupon every fourtgoweek instead of ever Ellzillull week as was the practice efore. tore in this con- "I hear you're wlting a book 0ft ‘How to RenrjYour BabY- D9!" you find writing it nln awful his; with your own baby 1° 10°!‘ “nerd "Oh. no. Babys at lilS ilffmh" mother's 50's I can get 0n Willi i B book!" try this vegetable auce made without Combine salad oil (or melted vegetable shortening) with rich brown and tangy Heinz “57-Sauce"--using equal parts. Heat well but do not boil. This quick and easily prepared sauce is really delicious over.‘ hot cooked broccoli, Brussels sprouts, green beans, spinach, " or lima beans. I C-IZIN DESIGN NO. 11-1281 Knitted mltima and socks are igesl for men. ' Both socks and iits are knitted in sizes 10H». 11 and ill»; Pat-tern No, E4281 con- tains complete truetlons. To order Pattern: Write or send above picture with your name and address with 20 cents in coin or Postal Scrip to Needlework Bureau Charottetown Guardian. Design No. 5-1281 ___._____.____. Name ' Street Address v i Province Our investigators . THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN aland Pers AAAAAAAA¢AA Guaranteed lo Keep You “Regular” or double your A . o+eeoe4&e+e-e-e+e+e+e+eo+ee+e4 0+0 » . i Dorothy Dix Says- Teen Age Marriages Boy of 18 And Girl 0f 14 T00 Young To Take Vows DEAR MISS DIX: I am a. young man of l8 and am very much in love w th a girl of 1t. We have been in love for ih-rec years and \ve know that. it is true love. Both cf our parents know that we are going to get married, but her parents are nut willing right now. I am a busi- ness man and have my own businew and $1,400 in the bank. Also, my parents are wealthy. We plan to go to college after we are married. our minds on our books and not on each other. would like to have your suggestions. W C. MARRIAGE IS FOB. ADULTS ANSWER: You won't like my not for children marriages than it is among ol-"ier people. And that represents only a small part of the tragedy, for there are thousands upon thousands of marriages that are nothing but long endurance tests to the men and women who entered into them when they were too young to know wihat they were going to be themselves or “that they would want in a life partner. The theory that when an unforlned boy and girl marry they will be congenial because they gf0w'llp together is the cruelest lie in the world. When teen-agers marry, it is sheer chance how they will de- velop, and almost always one outgrow-s the other and they have nothing in common. One has a good mind The other is dull and stupid. One is gay and pleasure-loving. The other is a stlclt-by-the-fire who never Wallis l0 E0 anywhere. One 1s warm-hearted and affectionate. The other is a human frigiduire. And so they bore each other m tears and only too often in their maturity’ they meet the one who should have been their mate. If you have no concern for your own fate, let me beseech you to have mercy on this little 14-year-old girl who, you say, has been in love with you since she was ii years old. Don't marry her before she is 01d enough to know uiliat she is doing. You know that no ginl of that nge is capable of an enduring, mature love, and to marry her is noth- ing short of crudlo-silatohlng. Dani commit such a crme against her. Give her a chance at selecting hrr mate. In all of the thousands of letters that I get from unhuppily married people almost every one starts wlth' “I married tuner: I was too young." DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I cm engaged to a boy who ls in the ser- vice. We were to be married as soon as. he came home. Now lie is com- ing and the time ls so close that people have been giving me showers. But lately he has changed so I don't know what to think. Instead of wrting me love letters he bosses me and tells me that I have to learn a few things, and fast. He makes remarks that are uncalled for and says things boys don't say to girls. I am all mixed-up and unhappy. Do you third: I should break our engagement? What Shall I do witl: the shower presents? What shall I say to people when they ask m: why I have broken my engage- ment? Unless he changes a. lot I du not think we can be happy. What shall I do? . JANE ANSWER: Wait imtll the boy comes ziome and see how you feel about him thcn. But my 1321112.; advice is not to marry a boy who has evidently lcst his taste for you and who is trying to boss you eve-n be- fore marriage. And, above all, cierit tie up with a gruuoh. E-Zicwcr presents are rarely valuable, so you might keep the staqk. lngs and the towels your friends gave you as a sort of consolation prize. DEAR MISS DIX: I am in lnve with a girl “"110 has a husband and two snmll children. She drinks heavily and has no sense of responsi- bility or the value of money. Wc brtize up und l um miserable because I love har terribly. What. do you think our chances of happiness would be if she were free? WORRIED. ANSWER: None, brother. You are certainly hunting for trouble if you marry a woman who has nc single quality that recommends her as a w fe. O-O-§-§-O-§§-§-§O-O-§-§ ‘O04 Q QO§§~§4 How Can I Hi 3 I-low can I mend s crook in Q. the linoleum‘! A. Mix some finely chopped cork with liquJd lglue. When the crack has been fl ed with this, and it has set. hard.d down wig em paper- an en paint maaii the limolemn. Qhrlow can I cook garlic with ‘P A. Never cook garlic in with soup or goulash, One or two cloves of garlic will give sufficient flay; ' run rnolm ncuu "will!!! NIIPIIS bsssm PIIMKIEDO l1. Pre- ‘hem ‘Ilfllllfm . cuncuns mo: ,, 21233421“ I-____—__—_—I By Anne Ashley AAAAA Yvw We think that is best, because then we will have I suggestion, \wi.lch is that. you wait until you are grown-up bo- iore you get married. Marriage is for adults and Statistics show that the percent- age 0f divorces is far greater among boy and girl (i: h a as AA Isak‘ Ellen '3 Diary lysnlslendIsr-ers Wls .044 I thought there could be no lub- buth morning more beautiful than the winter one which greeted rne, when I came to the new window yesterday. It was mlld then, and ,the light of the sun seemed to shed a lovely benediction over the peace and quiet of the ‘country- side; above the house on the hll and the mill in the valley; on the evergreens below and on every field and tree and woodland. Tho road, wLnding outward towards the highway was a deserted place, but Pat would be on his way urch, rhsps on foot or comfortable beh nd a white horse. '“’I‘ls but right to Ttend Church" Pabwill say to me, when he comes calling of un evening. And then, in the afternoon, when com ny had come to Alderlea folks rom this road, who worship each Sabbath ut the old Kirk at the corner, went by horse and sleigh, along the snowy trail. Karolyn alone repre- sented the family. "It was so nice today” and she asked me: "Did you ever notice how pretty the grounds and Church are now, in their Win- ter setting?" O U But if yesterday was mellow that country folk were able to u - tend the Church of their cholc . in comfort, today the "strain weather" changed. "Ellen" Jam s called m'e softly from my slec this morning “do you hear that It was the frost sna ' startling report, like t l fire-arm. “ .nd look at that. wl - dow!" he sold, raising himself an elbow, as if he found it ha to believe, what his first glen had revealed “I knew we were. for a cold spell. Remember ho queer the sun set Saturday —whe we were up after the hay," I dl recollect a prism of rainbow cu- ors, a distance to the right of th\ dying sun. So that was what it meant: this depth of frost on thr window, so that all day to huvl any sight of the Sputh, one wal obliged to clear a small space iron a frosty pane. The cold and th small restless drifts, that. ersiste until sundown. were exce lent ex (‘uses to keep one of the women a Alderlea lhd00fS—-0l'lCQ the enrlie chores were done. I00 Jeanie, a small overallecl figure braved it at a time or two, when I suspect matters of great moment occurring in the poultry-name claimed her immediate attention. James himself came indoors grate- fully, and to complain of the sudden change. "But James" I4 warm by the fire made light of ‘ "A person could travel tel Land's End today. It's not that, cold!" "And" he said "in here, I» suppose you would never dream- ii’s about l4 below?" with ti wind that was next to a gale. If then“ they could not go to their work in‘ the woods, nor at the hauling he- cause as I overheard them decide mutually “it's not fit for a horsc to he out" they were not long idle. James, his pioneer instinct upper- most, cut some of the green wood to mix with the seasoned "to make a safer fire, Ellen, and to lessen the danger of sparks from the flue ~lhis would he a had day for s pipe or a flue to catch." Neither Jeanie nor I had any lack o! delivered fuel today." I saw Jock take an armfnl of harness from the stnbic and (hero was un inquiry for rivets and I knew that halters and bridles were being repaired and put shipshnpo in the shelter of Jamie's kitchen James with a few minutes leisure before the evening feeding, got himself tangled up in a story n! romance and because it was a sec ial, when I could not enliuhtcn him as to what had gone before, guessed he "might as well rest’ There was a little conversation ss to: is there any one moving on the road or to the mill? and then satisfied, that other farmers had accepted the day us he did, his toil-worn hands relaxed and ll(‘ slept. It was. as I have said. ra- ther difficult. to answer these quor- les for the south window, which overlooks the mill held a coating of white, that served to isolate us in a world of our own. There was really little to see. No team mov- ed in or out the road; no grey horse came hurrying down the hlll to draw in at the mailbox. We had, however, communication with the outside world. We had the radio and ’phone and the young ex-alrman from the house on the hill, made his way on foot to the corner-store. “Lots of cars moving on the highway?" I asked, when he came over this evening. He looked at me in surprise. "Heavens no, Ellen" he said “there's no mov- ing out there-that I could see. 'I‘he roads are drifted in". No won- der then, the ‘mail did not get through. But it has been a nice day —lnd0Ol‘l. There was time to mend; to do most of the daily round and even to read. At Jssnlets the mete o! u lock lengthened br~ neath her fingers. Karolyn "didn't wash" but with Jamie and his toys spread about the kitchen and room, found plenty both to enter- tain and keep‘ her ‘busy. The wind still blows sternlv, but with less violence about the house-eaves, and the country is beautiful in the cold moon ighr. “Frontier” Jock said u few min- utes a o, when the lust round to the sta 1e! included a visit to the oring and these should be the kettle before qmting in, the other ingredients. method will give" flavor without proving over- powering. v .2...*::"...:.r.:.':"~u...- rm ll- MOIItm it with peroxide of hydrog Blended for 600d Taste! ORANGE PEKOE ' Canada's largest .., ti...» n“ at s cold corner of house. And new James has re urned from the ours across the lune, where of all things for him to do, he listened to the Radio theatre, with the you er fdk there-end evidently o eyed it, for he is will to discuss if. with rne. Hr finds is slip rs, draws his chair nearer the fro and be- cause as he “We'll stay up a; prepares for a chu y watches the moving shadow of -_ smoke on the snow besld silver-birch, and then sighs. len" he be s rne put sway writing an let's have u telr-i ‘s l lonesome sort of night." I sup- p to consider that tor night nothin this quiet coun hour, unless perhaps it_ s fox on the prowl or _ furred creature of the 11s sinister muslsrst ‘or u slim midi. it is s lonesome n ' ions/l.iteirature JAyuARY 21.1w AA‘ vs- it IQEJIQAQISQVOII Hluivllllll llo ells ffwf‘ ltIlQ‘Il-lIlI\I|ll|"i lllllll! Hint: til? H. Bucsgo Sun Syndicate Before Joining the wlde-st-theslde skirt fashion for spring, wait because weight is important. Your best bet is a slim sllhouettl. You can have skirt fulness but within ycur silhouette, not shooting out sldr flare wl-rfcli adds width. Boat neckline broadens. lantern sleeves broad. en, side skirt flare broadens, so don't. A round or shallow V-neckline slims, simple sleeves are most slim. ming, straight skirt sides with Just enoU-Bh fulnesa to hang awpy from bulges, create the narrow silhouette you want. Plain fabric, dark colors or small chock or polka dot more slender- lzlng than print. e-e-eao-oe-e-emo-oeao-ee-eo-e-e-e school, and the lng enthusiastic "For instance," he said, "sllppos i118 you want to remember tlu name of a poet-Bobbydiurns, Fir in your mind's eye a picture of r policeman in flames. See-Bobby Burns?" ' "Yes, I see," said a briglit pupil "But how is one to krlowfit doe: not represent Robert Browning?" teacher was beoorn Morning Smile ‘QQ-OOQ-O-O-OO-OQ MEMORY TRAINING A new system of memory train- taught, in a village "Good Milk Makes ' Good Meals”- SILVBRWOOUS BVAPORATED MILK can bu‘ used for all household , r’ --I-Iomogsnizetioss mules it an ideal Mill: for Bsbies—lt’s SAFE for it's sterilized. The best milli good cows [ivr-be sure w ssl: for S :0 ' l! Irradiated ferfifsmln "D" s ewuronxrsan MILK 6MP I/Needlecrafti/ FOR THE HOME TAILORED CHARM Here is a real treasure: a style with limitless uses. Softly tailored shirtwaist frock, corn looks and comfort, and especially tin up \_ tlhe good yoke and graceful lorg sleeves. No. 2508 is cut in sizes 12, l4. 16, 18, 20. , 42. 44, 46 and 48. Size 16 r 3% yards 39inch fabric, Send 20 cents for each Pattern- which includu oomNplete sewing .. Print your ame. Address and Style Number blainlv Be sure to state also you wish. Include postal unit or zone number in your address. A dress Pattern Department The Charlottetown Guard an. Patten: No. 2506 some TODAY Name Its-set Morass III-VIOIYAILI LAIAIIVI Bendable-Flu sing Article’ sore lips esused by windbure or exposure sre toothed instantly by h“ Until tomorrow -- ry - Good- night. ' *-- - ilfhilillllaltvlli hype I. Lyyisyi rail sqtflflll; st n s om s