__ 3m TWO N0 WAITING-no enrastepel Pull-wrought- Pleischmann‘: fresh active Yeeet goes right to work. Makes sweeter, finer bread! And makes it jailer.’ You can be sure of tender, enoofi tenure - lightness — delicious levee: 0001i IF YOU BAKE AT HOME, insist on Fleildlmanrfs fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow label. It's depend- able-Canade’; tested favourite for Iqlnllan 70 years. A JOB ONLY YOU Ollll OO y‘ Price Control Questions 3 and Answers b¢ mxxxc Control will appear in The Guard inn as a regular feature each day The questions are those which have reached the Wartime Prices and Trade Board iron housewives in thle region. The answer: are pro- vided by the Board Readers. Per sons who have intelligent questions ta lei on pflee control are invited to eend them in writing to thv Women's Regional Advisory Com mittee. Q. I waat to preserve some peechee but I have used all my cannklg coupons. I4 there any wax‘ I. can set more? ~ A. Because of the short-ale in - sugar supplies there ls no possi- - bility oi mores-sing the sugar ration ior . IDXIUEQI’ Question; and Answer! on Price punpoeee However, you may use your preserves coupons pin-chases. Bach preserves, coupon is good for the purchase d and think the price was too high. Where can I find out the correct ceiling price? A. Apply to the the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. All used cars have a. fixed ceiling price. Q. Ii I buy and pay for meat before meat rationing is lntroduc-i ed and take delivery afterwards do I have to surrender coupons. A. Yes. must be sur- rendered for all meat deliveed after the announcement of the ef- fective d-ate of meat rationiny. ETHIETTI fikhihlll Q- Isltnezaesuy w yumm- telegraph for reservations oi hotel rooms? it isn't Wmnffiéii’ heoifia y the size oi the room without bath aglrd an “ti?” or m"! _. y o er de- Q. Ii a man is calling on a girl i lllllll I IIIIIILI WIY TO RELIEVE ~ mnlteauuapnumw-l If you suffer this way due to female functional periodic disturbances, try Lydia E. Pinkham’: Vegetable Com- pound to relieve such symptoms. This time-tested formula nous MORE than relieve such monthly pain. It ALSO re- lieves tired. cranky, nervous, blue feelings of such days—when due to this cause. Pinkham'a Compound is what is known ae a uterine sedative because it ha! a soothing effect on one of woman's most important organs. Thie medicine hrles nature. It'll one of the moat effective medicines of its kind. Follow label directions. Buy a bottle of Lydia Pinkham’a Compound Qey at Z drug store adaéim-iikam VICETAILE COMPOUND mlvl’ and 1 “‘ men arrl , may; one should be first to ‘lave’? A. The mu nhould be the m7‘? 12$?“ m“ the beet for Q- ll iurln 8M‘!!! inlmtutlorls to a stag dinner? A. They M! usually given verb. ally. in person. or over the tele- phone. s l. t is wrong with this sen- tence? "I calculate on going to- moi-row." 2. What ie the correct pronunc- ietlon c! "inoppcrtune"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Arsenal, argument. ar- roganoe. 4. What does the word "indom- itable" mean? 5. What is e word beginning with ant that means "opposition in ieeling"? ANSWERS 1. Say. "I think I shell go,” or. "I intend to go tomorrow." 2. Pro- nounce the u as in unit. and accent last syllable. 3. Argument. 4. Not to be sulbdued" uncon uerable. "l-le has an indomitable w 1.” 5. Antl- pathy. The man walked angrily into the boot repairerb shop. “Look here, he said. "you advertise "Boots re- paired you wait" - end you have had mine e week and not fin- ished ‘em yeti" “Weill? replied the nearest office oi w ~ nolvmn mn Escape From Heartbreak 1M le- bede-oom doorway. “OH already?" the latter and, YBWDBIZ and stmtchirlg her arms above her netted blonde head. .'Yes it's time to go." Well. good luck." Dot yewned Main and sank into e chair. "Bup- l>°l0 Ilildl W11 llpettheschool f/his afternoon about four? You should Bet around and see the shops-buy some clothes." B" Blanca swept Vaierleb simple coat and hat disparagingly. Valerie iludted. "I know, but 1 haverlt any money to spend on clothes yet. It will hke all Ten-y advanced simply to set my train- and pay my eXlI-lenses oumdvlllggsiflg; Dot eyled ‘her cu“. - .. 8 011 Lin] my"; l!’ "link you havey to pay bang: 1311B: money io Terry?" Valeria stood at the door ready to leave. “Oi course I'll pay it, "why?" "Because I owe i; so himl" tom .'i£i'.’-J.Yl;"'" - four." I l e —see yw It Valerie debated, f l‘ However, shre s00: lllgrgglflggr anger upon reaching the schooy h“ she WM Dill-Med into a strenuom routine that leit her m, time $0 think of anything 913g Among other things she Iggfngd that her Posture was Wrong and she set to_ work to remedy it un. der the instructions which were given her. She walked up and down step with a block of wood On her head until her neck was stiff and her muscles one tihrob. hing‘ ache Wlth a srcup o! other girls, she sat against a wall for a Buddha ex. ercise. her shoulders against ch; "QPUY. 1 thought modeling was lullgl grumbled 5 girl beside V5.1. “I feel like a race horse." said another “Thais exactly the idea." snap. pod the teacher. "A rage horse must be trained to move with speed and Brace lf_ it expects i0 win. You want to win don't you?" All that day Valerie worked hard, but she took Joy in it. Her thoughts ran ahead to the visionary day when she would be a. success. Ter. ry vrould be proud oi her-and sqmcthl-IIS else. She would make him look at her then with some. lame "If! EVAPORATED llllli Q The Idle! Os Ml» L III’ l'l' ll‘ YOUR GIIOOEIW ‘IDIMY MODERN WOMEN TEARLESS Unlike Grandma. Ladies Of Today Do‘ Not Resort '.l‘o Pampered Sobbing Whatever the faults oi the modern woman, and heaven knows they are a-plenty, she isn't a weeper. She doesn't sit down and howl over everything that goes wrong with her. In Grandma's time the feminine sex was mainly composed of moist, unpleasant bodies. as Mr. Mantilllni used to say, but nowadays you are Just as much surprised to see a wo- man burt into tears as you would be if a man did it. i In the pa?‘ "* ~ "y out loud seems to have been regarded as an elegant accomplishment. The heroines oi all the old novels were perfect geyoers of tears that they fumed 1m at the slightest provoca- llon. Sweet Alice Benbolt "wept with delight when you gave her a smile," and a poet of the time as- serted. just as a matter of fact. that "men must work but women must weep. so runs the world away." THRILLING TEARFESTS 0F YOBE ‘ \ All oi u: who are-well, no long- er bobby-sockets can well re- call certain melancholy ladies, swathed in crepe. who used to come and spend the day with our moth- ers, holding a teariest. They were women who never "got over" things. and who took a mournful pride in ‘having wept for 30 or 40 years over a ialthless lover. or having lost .their money. or Grandpa having passed on when he was only 90. d Mother would mingle her tears with theirs, and a pleasant time would be had by all. , But you cannot even imagine the women oi today indulging in any such gruesome orgy, yet God knows that ii ever a woman had ltears to shed. now is the time to shed them. Never were so many mot?!- ‘ers' hearts tom with anxiety. never so many women whose bread is isorrcw and whose drink is tears, as now. Yet these women who wet ‘their pillows with tears at night weep in private and turn a brave face upon the world. Recently I spent several months at a resort in which there were ‘fhlevfvid WM la hie zray Iyes besides the good-natured irlendllneas whkh 91011891 heart-wa.rzni.rlg, was so maddening. Late in the aiternoon, when she was finished, she iound D_0f, wan- ing for her m the reception room. wvell» 110W (lid H10 first day g0?” Dot asked. "YOIIFd show better sense to email your Inoncy on clothes. Thats what gets you placed," They Went on a shopping tour. Wfl-Ildeflni 1n and out oi stores "hm Dot bouant lltu, but locked l‘ evmtluna 1mm. higlnpriced furs to amen. lingerie. The" filler llavlne supper in a tearoom. Dot suggested that they 80_t0 a movie. has an engagement to. Ill-Bill. $116 EXDIBl-Dcd, "so ior one "2'.’ . "m ‘ a2’. e movi m, m licléflildlllfl in lihe windy theeylrwiselcf ta when ‘ oi beside them. a ma“ v °° m“ ‘J-lello. girls." alerie coking round, w t . tied to see that it was miif“ Dot stared at him "I thought you had an engagmet. “Not until later. My drehegm; 1, 801118 W Play on the stage here next week. so I dropped mum; to see the manager." Duke glanced at his wrisqwstch. "I've gem mg Elly. and now it's hours before my hgagement. so why don't you two girls come and have a bite to eat with me ?" had told her previously that he would be tied up this evening. and now. he acted as though he had all the time in the world. Did Dot think that he was now t g to date them because she. Valerie, was present? lboot-mender, "ymrre waitin’. aren't you?" Heron's ."P.7”"‘ NOODLE SD (To Be (Iontinned) ~ v .. hil d then use wire wool and mogfyve just eaten‘ Dot mm glgilfiéelfiaxlxf, is to ‘the pan Valerie could ch t and also to e e w en e furious with ma? mlndeilillleynwll: m” l‘ m“ ‘°' mm‘ Imore than a hundred women with‘ husbands and sons at the front. and I did not see a single one of them shed a tear. or hear one speak oi the terror that gnawed ceaselessly at her heart. And I thought that it was no wonder that such heroic women bore heroic sons. No doubt in time science will trace the evolution oi’ the iemlnine tear ducts into a backbone, but the process has not been without loss to women. because it has deprived them of their most potent wearpon, which has always been tears. Women early discovered that the easiest way to get what they wanted was to cry for it, for there is some chemical in their tears that melts down a man's resistance so that any woman who can cry wihout getting her nose red can get out of him anything she wants. whether it is a mink coat or a. marriage license. Many a man marries the woman he doesn't love and doesn't want because she robs on the second button oi his vest. And multitudes of his brethren find out that wiping the tears from a woman's eyes [or a bin or to ask? “How mary UHARLUTTETUWN MGLUARDIAN Jemiewiillhalybeetlllflfl-m qnfitht hotheheewetéfiu" on!“ - moe.*"......*" veeeneilhhlnewiiilskill. , KAN Mild 681G111 Y a n mile reisimth’; nous: fill IIIHUO their care. broad back And when the men went to the harvesting, and the work indoors became tedious. we went down to the remnant oi or- chard and iound a sunny knoll swept by e wendoflng Autumn breeze, near the early ap le tree. Presently Jeanie. flushed m her exertions in the kitchen of the house across the lane iound us. Jeanie, much experienced in the ways of children. is one oi Jamie's favorite "in-laws." He trusts her implicitly. Now, with Judy . wel to Jamie, Judy was a uzzle. And Julie_ much as we all ll e her quiet way. is as yet only a stranger m him. Jeanie shook the tree gently and gathered the now me.- lowi irult. Jamie turned an ap- ple s wly searching for the best place to insert sharp white teeth, and then asked Jeanie: “Was there any fog out at your place this moming?" and when she ra- plled. he added soberly in a man- ner iamiliar to me: “It wouldn't be too good for ‘the potatoes." The wraith: oi its that wrap the stream and pond these mornings are only iorerunners oi warm sunn hours to come. The other mem ers oi the iamlly except Julie and me, took time from their cares to go motoring. from choice but from necessity. Ihey went a distance to an implement dealer's place oi business to obtain a. binder art, for the reels on ours were stil in this momlnfls sun- shlne. Julie and I were leit at home to hold the fort, a delight- ful undertaking, although Julie as- sured me just this evening with a weary air “We wer busy today. weren't we? We wo t be so busy every day will we?" I would say mine family combined pleasure with their business-and then not pleasure but farm interests. Even on this important mission with fields ripened, James would not be loath to pause a minute to inspect a horse; a. mare with foal at loot: a fat heifer; a field of potatoes. unds oi twine did you use, this arvest?" The time spent thus, would not be wasted even in the insistence of the season for by comparing notes with others. farm iolk are able to improve their own handiwork. more perhaps by actual contact with those who have tried and proved some method, than in reading or in llsifnipg to a theory. Mine was the theoretical part of the dinner Julie prepared. And then dejected because of our em- aty stomaches, we sank down idly aWBlt the others return. "They could be to land's end and back" I said testily, ior food in the warm- is one oi the most hazardous and expensive experiences in which they can engage. Undoubtedly the modern woman who laughs nii the misadventures of life instead of crying over them is a much ilner human being than was her tear-sudden sister. hops. the cry-baby wasn't as simple as she seemed. m». wa ~ - 1~ \~\\ \’>1'§’~“ HOUSEHOLD SOMPIOOK By Roberta Lee c'x'~>c\_.».xg . REGAL noun #6:”? 72401.2 . REGAL noun Scraping Pane Do not use a. kniie for ' pans to remove food that hes ad- hered to them. Let them soak for slnfled Dltee or Prunee weir. dry. stone and the t eknost in half, all half marehmal 7463:”? -7Aw REGAL FLOUR out! wh 101w“; “ml-ill they will wear longer But she is oitener an old maid. So, per-' ing oven gets cool and loses its appeal. Julio rememberingJames air oi pessimism as to "perhaps we won't be able to get it on the Island" said casually "perhaps they went to Moncton for it" I do not know what we should have done in the interim. if it had not happened that that housewife-lov- ed and farmer-feared magazine had come in the morning mail. "Yes" the mailman said cheerfully "I'm later today-the mail order cata- logues came this. morning." - Julie hailed that book's arrival with delight. and sat down at once to enjoy its pages. Nothing therc escaped her eye. She interspiced her scanning with a running chat- ter. "M-m. what a coat! Would I love to own that dress? Just my colors. and here's one made for QI-Iowcenlloosenihedirlinl clothes end also make than whiter‘ A. Pour e iew oi turpen- tine into the wad: giler end ltl will help loosen m, dirt. A spoon- iul oi bonx in hot water and then dded the last rinse water lends . Also reme dried slowly will those dried quickly. Q. Haw can I force out particles, oi potatoes or meat that cling to the knives o! the food grinder‘! | A. Run two or three crackers or pieces of ehle bread q. Bow can I line? A. Probably the best wey to clean i; is to wrap it around the weahboeru and scrub with a brush and eeoplude a LIGHTER WHITER b‘ ihet whiter tihen thr h it. clean 3i’: clothes nllrs Plilill msmlnnn srols All nun IITIIOIJT IIIITATIIIG ‘I'll’! SKIN ARRID givee you double protection. l: p you from penpimion odor, and helps protect your clothes from perspin. don apou. Arrid ll en odorless deodorant, th the fine texture of a beauty (rum, It vaniabei lnsrlarly — giving lmmedigrg rennin, With Arrid, you ere absolutely ufe —caa enjoy yourself wherever you ere-regardless of the weather. Protect your delnzlneu end charm wlrh Ania, Sm: using l: today. I: is very economical. 15¢. 39¢ uni 59¢. lllllllll The largest KITCHEN GAIETY Festive apron brightens up yo kitchen and keeps your dresses spic ‘n’ span. 60 thrifty to make y can use that yard remnant tucked away in a drawer. No. 2910 is out in aims medium and large. Medium re- quires l yard 35- nch. 2% yards ric rec. Send 20 cents for pattern which includes complete sewing uuide. Print your Name. Address. and Style Number plainly. Be sure h. Department ‘Ph- charlottetown Guardian. To order pattern: Write or send above picture with your name an address with 20 cents in coin or Postal Scrip to Needlework Bureau Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern No. 2910 Name Street Address ou" I laid the pa er aside and eit the comfort o James’ arm- chair to sit on the couch beside her. Page alter page, we went inio—and came out oi. Our col- ors, our sizes our likes. "Turn over, Julie." I begged tiring oi one leaf and ressing onward, all the while we id our wishiul shipping. To the cover we came regr ully. I got up to view the road beyond the hlll top. It was there. our car returning. Julie still sat spell bound, the catalogue in her lap. “Have you ever thought it queer" she as ed me, "that they don't sell pianos?" I had hot noticed the omission. I suppose there could be musical instruments some- where between a needle and an anchor. “A catalogue." Jeanie said pleasantly when she came indoors and James. when he caught sight of the new ic cover remark- ed: "Well, Ellen. the cows might have had a grand time ic them- selves in the tlpnipathis morning!" Quiet at Alderlea tonight. Jamie is here asleep on the kitchen couch tanned sturdy limbs and a tired body relaxed. Pard, knowing that some of the folks are away. barks at each passing car. Jeanie came, over "a minute to get the papers and sat awhile to hel me ‘pull the wool" ‘till a sma mountain oi it_ like e. soft summery cloud, was on the kitchen ilocr beside us. No sound now. only Jamie's Don't Make This Mistake When Child ls onstipated . Don't upset e dilld elnedy nt by eon- ltipetion with neety-tutin etivee or eetheniu. Ive Phlldren’: Own ’i‘e leis. is new corrective nude ea- l.'“-‘..'L°"""“li} "r- '- ee an ‘ “IO! Ilbb flit n won’ meetdtheir end younelf. 21%| ‘hblete today at your drutlilt. Ill- ‘é 8111811,. i FOR THE . ' SEPTEMBER 1a. 194s Woman's Re alm v. _S0cia| and Personal 1 Fashions 1 Literature _ lake sweeter, iceller brecdl HOME SMALL I MEDIUM‘ LARGE a friendly wind in the birches on the lawn. Pard is off the ver rush oi feet. tcllinr: coming! day, Ellen, some of are coming home." Until tomorrow — night... prelu- A lew dwP‘ °l Jove,‘ _'nn¢_l, 9' breathing. the old vlfwlfi lick "n5 tops oi the And now. andah lil a mo "Lhcyre For tllc second lime t0- nllly D iur_v—G<l0<l' _\'0'.ll‘ in T l llouslnoin us: m. 1r