‘*4 "r-sqv-sn-“qww-“(zrw .~"_,_ I your young active figure Lighres: lirrle "figure-smoorl-ier‘ you'll ever wear. So very free and airy, you hardly know it's there! Oorseea in girdle and pantie-for the young acrivefigure-is yours at a young-budget price. your Cos-sees with a Flexaire Bra for young loveliness. Insist on genuine Come: st better More: everywhere by Snworld‘: loveliest foundations" ‘IQ. I M l prevent scars Q. How can paused by burns? _ A. It is claimed that scars from bums can be prevented if. when the bin-m or scalds are healing. the new slcln is rubbed several times a diary with good sweet oil. Ilheae treatments should be kept lp regularly until the new skin is loft and flexible. a. How can I wash a bottle pm- per y that has contained sour milk? A. Put some baking soda in the Mttle, then pour hot water over fie soda and shake thoroughly. nae in oold water. Q. How can I prolong the life If a rubber bathing cap? A. After the cap is dry, place it In a. bag of cornmeal and give it a good flicking. l. "l WAS BUSY typing when out of the comer of my eye I sow Jim ond Dick looking at me kind cf funny. Then l hecird Dick whisper, ‘Whot o pity Jone hos "B.O."-she could be so populorl"' avvv- é Morning Smile A crowd gathered around a Stole front the other day. Two etopllfld to observe the disturbance: First—What do you suppose is the cause of that crowd? Second-I suppose it is ill" W1‘ gar curiosity. First-Let's goover and see. _ P003 OUTLOOK 1r patient in an asylum w“ 0b- served winding up and making irri- aginary pitches, although he didnt have a. baseball in his hand. M; lnqujyhjg visitor- was told that the men was a farmer and bad times had unsettled his mind. Said the visitor: "I'm a farmer. too, and if I don't get a good u-op this year I'll be catching for that chap." 2,"Tl'lAT'S WHE its rich lother lusting protection 0 3 ' both does for iiie- l i know I'm elwavi N l begun using Mm‘ iv” m; oil-over,‘ loflfl‘ golnst 'B.O. ~- . DilFULwlioti-idolll/uhbwy. ‘ wswo" never wort‘! "WY,"- fresh and doifllll- REFORMING CRIMINAL! BY PLASTIC SURGERY In s. home for aged women a visi- tor noticed that practically all the inmates wore aprons. she learned that it iwas not to protect their dresses. but because these inmates felt that wearing, an apron made them a part of the institution and they were ready to do any house- hold duties should they be required. There is nothing that makes elderly men and women feel their age like having nothing to do and believing that they are nog- needed any longer. - In our mental institutions it was found that haivng the inmates keep themselves clean. brush their teeth, have a hair-do regularly look their minds off themselves and. be- ginning to look outwards instead of inwards. so improved their mental condition that many were able to return home and be Liseful there. A recent news item states that outstanding results in the reform of criminals with facial defects by corrective plastic surgerv have been carried out at Stpteville Peni- tentlivy in lllinois. Those who hnrl undergone plastic surgery which corrected facial defects did heifer when allowed out on parole. thera- belng ‘n’ very low rate of parole violations in these men. ‘Phei-e has been ii transformation of person- alliv and character." The idea that these men would be more sociable. u-riuld nviduall" lose ariv persecution ocmulev i’ they were able tn face the world o“ an equal rev-tin" with other: ‘NW no p-m flefnfmlflbe nun-i.“ “.1. 5g" nhv§lnlIy1< to gin-e Mqlq “heli- . m, lv-e-Myyysanf’ 1n The result: harm hulvl he.» fllvrl "lends lvi referrv-lri-v r"'l'*l‘\fi'S """ in the rllsnlnllvvn pr -.-r......=_ w. fYlsflri vii-news“. s-i-i FeVQ-Jg w.» qpffjnrv nyle-mpye anew-f lean!“ n‘\\ss\-r in appearance. ll="'ll'!1."§ our-l s~~ lal Printer-i. '[ hgllfivP that "we rev-ant wielrw-"r" of us. had We f~~ial dew“: m A» formifles of h-vlv, would have '- nei-seoution FF*V\I\lnY prvl p»... .- "bln rm o!" =hoiilrlerj or we n-nivl" have an lnfei-h-Hw w-mfld molrp 11g ma» (vs/NM Hip, wm-w ‘Fhaag virlemq vihvelplnw-is were rwvotflotvlvr ‘FTHWMHO M“ “- "ft. in gnlv-"s than WfWllfl‘ resin» ll‘ ‘been unfortunate inmates received “he ‘heln tbev nee-led. YYBGv-g awn nqvvwnlg‘ u... i '.F,,v~.. A nice rleiniv wit‘? for iii-iv invalid is n box of tissues covered with 1- rirettv wall parser covering. (‘iii miner to m, pasta (m, ",5 pnvvnr edges with passe-narimit. This will he much nnrirnr-Intnrl. Tt will mlrl a touch of DOlfiiir m n room, T hat whisper almost broke my heart! m FRESH," CLIAN scam is YOUR ouaiiaurss or riiorscrion‘ The clean scens of Llfebuofs thick rich lather is your giisnaree of . a few seconds the lifebuoy seen: has dlse and so has every trace of "l0." (boggllreird). Lifebiioy is the only soap specially spade on stop "l0." I in "E0." by fresh and gently Tests prove you can build up ‘an s91“; thing with Li ebuoy every day, ‘Itylrforssveadays. Yourskinfeelssod we caressed! And, with Llfebnoyb 0f "B-O." worries; IISI If DAILY o lmllfl-llllifllpfotecdoa, yoifreooaiplerelyfree FROM l-IEAD 1.0 IIOE-LIFEBUOY g_r_qlg»-ig,g,--- l évnnoosro owi- ~.<.~<.'<.~<.M~<>cw.s.~.~~;-.<;<.<.~..u <. ..~. .. aw‘. aao-o-oxwww l D OROTHY DIX lletlreil Aiiil Miserable SA YS iliisliaiiil Ila Longer lioosplsil Develops liliroiilo liriiiioi, Imaginary Ills DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My husband has retired from business and is in the house most of the time. He is always complaining that he is not well and is continually taking some kind of medicine. He can't even put on his clothes without my help. But if I go away for a while he is perfectly well and has no difficulty in doing everything for himself. Can you suggest some way of breaking him of time? the habit of wantlngyme to wait on him.all of the I have a large home and I am kept very busy doing the household chores. MRS. ARTHUR ii. ANSWEI}: My advice is to get your husband lo go back to work. All he needs ls something to do, ' something to occupy his mind so that he won't have so much leisure to explore his system for symptoms and imagine things being the matter with him. Lay your case before your family doctor and get him to urge your husband to go back into business. If he doesn't go back he probably will die, because he will literally think himself sick. SICK WITH BOBEDOM If you will notice, the men who retire from business seldom live but a few years. they become hypochondrlacs. The reason for this is that having nothing else to do, They fancy they can't edt this and they can't. eat that. They get hipped on the idea that they can't do this and they can't do that. Having nothing interesting to do, they do nohing but brood and end up by boring themselves to death. And Heaven help the wife whose husband retires from business and sits around the house all day with nothing to ‘do but criticize the way she runs it and make suggestions about things he doesn't under- stand. There is no other domestic pest equal to an idle man on the premises. ~ DEAR DORQTHY DIX: As far back as l can remember Mother has always instilled superstitious thoughts in us and they make me very miserable. Cnii you suggest ANSWER: using a little common sense. a cure? WORRIED DAUGHTER. The remedy for superstition is simple. It consists lri Just ask yourself how a black cat running across your priili could possibly affect your life, or why you should be any more likely to meet with an accident on Friday the 13th than on any other day, or liow tea leaves in a cup could indicate that you are going to mnke n rich marriage or not, and you will laugh at your- self for your folly. Superstition is the offspring of ignorance and it melts away like snow in the sun when you turn the rays of intelligence upon it. Don't worry over signs and pretends. They mean absolutely nothing, ex- cept what you make them mean by your fears. ECUADOR BIRDS Ecuador can claim one bird out of every 13 on earth. WOMEN PAY BIG PRICE F0ll »P00ll "BLDUDMAKE llP" You women who feel and look "washed out"—llrnp and droopy-ma! be p171! tho price of hemoglobin shortage in the b nod. Nature's regular monthly dernande on l woman's system often tend to bring about this shortage of the vital red coloring inat- u: ‘in red blood eeils. Try Dr. Williams s. Pin They help‘ increase hemoglobin where there s a a ortase of it due to in den.- elency and help chase away that “leaden" feeling of tiredness so often due to this condition. Start your course oi’ Dr. lllielnl Pink Pills today. Ask your drulrlet. aLIVIInseeI Q. What should a hostess say if B Win18 man whom she has invited lg“; Deity asks to bring a certain A. The hostess should tell him that she would be glad to have him brine the girl. and she should ob- tain the girl's address and invite her to the party. Q. lf a wedding reception is to be held in the home of a relative of the bride. ls the bride's family expected to pay the expenses? A. Certainly. Q- ls it correct to eat patty shells? A. Yes. if they are made of pastry. and they should be eaten with the fork. Household Scrapbook Iwlbbflllleli Cleaning A Vase If the tall. slender vase hes be- come discolored on the inside. and is too nazrow in diameter to get a cloth down into it, soak a few tea leaves in vinegar, put this in tihe vase, and keep shaking it until the discoloration has disappeared. Iron Bill. Use lemon juice and salt to re- move iron rust from linen. Cover with salt and moisten with the lemon juice, then place in the sun. Repeat until the stain is gone. Slippers ‘ To brighten black satin slippers and make them look like new. wipe with a cloth dipped -in ammonia which has been wrung aknost dry. r-{Qffifk}. ‘i’?! ‘.\-.\'. The Stars Say- a; o ‘ ~ Isa-ass For Saturday, October I 1'1‘ inlpht‘ as well be a weekend of pleasure-seeking and relaxation or spiritual development, since workaday matters are of such a complicated, peculiar and chal- lenging a character as to snake ' DOIVPOIIKIIGHII Of Pllbblfill fiddl- ions desirable. Those in high places may be disposed to be suspicious, uncooperative and dssnending and the personal proelivities may be toward diueinbling or min-epresen- tation. Emotional drives or inner feelings also may mislead. which details may give mush eon- eem, involving complications, eiibtle inclination to deception. to misrepresent and otherwise tangle motto-s. and in such manner as to arouse suspicion and reeenonent. ft maybe es veil to sidestep vital decisions until the basis and oom- a Ellen _’e Diary ~al1alIe—c'eID "Oh yea", "Aunt" Bet would chuckle other single state, "I guess it was meant that I shouldn't —there's no doubt of it, don't you think that folks are left in the planes best suited to them? Call it Fate or whet you will-in any event it seems that way." And so she remained there as many an- other maiden lady is left "to the glory of God" lri similar posltlons_ —-to become the kind foster-moth- ers of rnotherless children; to be towers of strength in helping ear those come to the old homest d or to do with unmatched skill and understanding the numberless turns that falls to their willing hands. As Providence grows a buttercup here or a wlnsome daisy there in His meadows setting them always truly and beautifully in their respective places, to carpet the whole with marvellous and colorful tapestry, so He. fgshlons His world of wo- men unwed or married like "Aunt" Bets and me. — U O O The two farmed—she and her brother, the land that had come down to them from their forbears though the term to James’ mind would have been rather unfltting, now that I go back to recall the easy existence, but exceedingly comfortable, which they enjoyed. To farm with James mearls no quiet but instead a continual hustling and bustling, a catching of dawns at the choi-lng and a‘ dusk enclosing him often in the fields. It means stables and stles and grain bins and mows and basements filled to over-flowing if at ell possible. Fields must be tidy and fences in order and every clear acre produc- ing its best. l O I often wonder how James would have liked that hedge of Sweet Briar that in the years since its planting had flourished so that it had encroached on the meadow where the one cow and the team paatured until in June-time and in- deed into July the bushes were vast mounds of pink. And that pasture! An immense sea of the low sweet white clover with the white and gold daisies spotting It and sway- ing to the whisper of any gay rov- lng breeze. It wandered away past an old rail fence, grey and unre- paired, though most intriguing. un- til a dyke of mossy stones tried to divide it. from the hayfield and a bit. of grain arid the patch of pota- toes. Beyond that sturdy little spruces dared the lnronds of any plough and began to claim the land of that furthermost field for the neighboring woodlands from whence it had come. O U I How James would have actually mourned over those wasted fields! "Farming!" he would have said expreaslvely, “cull that forming! "That's just staying on earth!" He would certainly have "broke up" more to crop and with hoe and axe would soon have caused the ranks of the valiant little spruces to re- treat wlthln an orderly line of the woodlands. l-ie would have kept an extra cow or two and there would be more “young stuff" than the one sleek heifer that went pres- ently to companion her mother in the pasture. He would have built fences sighting every last post. to have them straight and true, tear- ing down the old without qualm or a backward look and erecting anew. He would have raised the sagging house and barn, new-allied them hurrying at the work between sea- sons iind he would have shingled the grayed rooves. He would have installed s pump in the old well. to replace the dropped bucket and would have instituted dozens of changes that would have made for the appearance of more prosperity about the place. But I preferred it as it was. The acres faced the years leisurely and the buildings seemed always to be a nice comple- ment lo them. I liked the old well with its weathered board top and the Windlass that revolved so fast and creekingly when the bucket descended. It was a lovely-a fear- ful‘ and mystic place akin to the wishing ones out of old tales. In certain sunlight if one wished to peer into the depths one could see the bright glint of the water and a face reflected there wide-eyed with wonder. I member the field- atone path that led to it and the one that, clean-swept as a floor, took one from the narrow turnatlle by the lane, past the cinnamon rose tree and the colorful bed of ‘atortlons up to the kitchen door and "Aunt" Bets smiling face and welcoming hands. . . . “Do you know what, Ellen?" James breaks into my‘ story, "l believe it's going to rain. Now won't that be a ter- ror, and ua getting along s_o well with the threshing?” Until tomorrow . . Good-night. . . . .Dlary... KEPT IN IGNOIANOE Queen Victoria did not know that she one day‘ would be ruler of Great Britain until she was 12 years old. when she heard it during a history lesson. Relieve Your Irietliil, loves-Isl: TEETllllili Biliil BurraR-Nur BREAD t... Economist-é Nourishment Eot More Little bits of paper, little wisps of SlffiW Make the finest kindling a body 6V6!‘ S6W'— Twisted into faggots, neatly laid away. Start the kitchen fire and not a cent to pay. Savoury little dripplngs from the roast or fry, Take the place of butter which you have to buy, Kept out from the garbage just for savings sake, Add u pleasing flavour to many things you bake. ‘ - that extra biscuit sonny couldn't eat- Day old bread and biscuits are not wasted wheat. Toasted in the oven til they're nice- ly browned- Just as good as cereal._once they have been ground. Take Strings from off the bundles from the grocer’: shop, Crochet dandy dish cloths, fillers for the mop, Handles for the skillets, mats to set ‘em on, Bag to hold the clothes handy every one. plnl.— Don't deprive your household of the things they need. Constant deprivation only tend! t0- ward greed. Minimize your wastuge—that's the better plan. Don't beat anybody-just. the gerb- age can. —A.C.T. Do not. shell fresh peas until you are ready to cook them. Cook them rapidly in just enough boiling wat- er to keep them from burning, for as short a time as possible. A pound of shelled young pens will often cook in less than 10 min- utea. Mix a cup of canned creamed corn with a well-beaten egg,‘ two ._.€_-__________-_ CHEESE PASTRY One and a half cups flour. it teaspoon salt. $6 cup lhliflfllllhl. it cup grated cheese, about 3 table- ns cold water. Sift together flour and salt. Cut ln shortening with 2 knives. Add cheese‘. mix well. Add enough water to hold in- gredients together. sprinkling evenly and mixing with fork to form balls. Roll out dough as re- liivingfileisure mu: WOMAN'S-REALM ' tablespoons of flour. one table- spoon of butter, salt, pepper and onion juice; fry in shallow fat, turning once. Use eggs for a nutritious and economical supper dish. Chop s medium-sized onion end s green pepper, and saute them in a little butter. a greased baking dish and break half ‘a dozen eggs over the mixture. Sprinkle the eggs with salt and pepper ,and place the baking dish in a shallow pan of water in s moderate oven for about 15 min- utes, or until lhe eggs ar eset. Tradition: A wedding gown may be cloth of silver but shouldn't be cloth as that is too lavish for a dress which symbolizes purity. In Holland, it is traditional for the Princess of Orange to wear as orange wedding gown. In China. brides weer red. An old rhyme says: "Marry in while, you've chess alright. Marry in blue, he'll alwayl be true, Marry in pink, of you only he'll think, Marry lri green, ashamed to DI seen. _ Marry in yellow, ashamed of yous fellow, - Marry in red, you'll wish you were deed!" There are two ancient supersti- tions about the wedding veil-one held that the veil symbolized lub- mlsalon. Another, that it was to conceal the bride from the groom's rivals. . 1...... ILGWilliesI i. what is wrong with this an» tonne? "I feel kind of dubtoil about the result of such action!“ 2. What is the correct pronunc- lotion o! "quay"? 3. which one o! these words is Alphlbcilll. allusion, alright. s. What does the were "im- gih" mean? puS. What is a word beglnnlll with bl that means "brawlinl; olsmorous; noisy”? l_ ANlWlI-l 1. Say, "1 i‘... somewhat dias- ions." 2. Pronounce as theush, spelled kee. 3. All right (two WON!)- 4. To attack by words or still- ments; to contradict. “The truth hereof I will not rashly 11119118". 0P overboldly effairm." - Peachern. qulred. YOUNG SET These two wonderful patterns translate a timely ensemble styling to s little glrlssiaes. No. Z86 makes a new pleated skirt, a lie- coining bolero. and a neat round- collared blouse. No. 2519 cuts a. bereat to complete the costume. ' No. $06 is out in siaes 2. 4, 6, and l. Size 4 blouse, 1% yards 35- inch; skirt, ‘ii yard 54-inch; bolero. $6 yard 54-inch. No. 2510 is out in head sisea l9. aananazasise 2o, 9i youth- inch. Bend 30 for each PATTERN, which includes complete sewing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state size you want. Include postal unit. or lone number in your address; Address Pattern Department. ‘ The Charlottetown Guardian. Pattern N08. 261D, 25$. 3519 ILAWKHIADS 5. Blatant. ‘i; Needlecraft FOR THE HOME Turn the vegetables into '