~—.‘..—~ ax-L F4.:‘L;:_‘1.=..2 .~ '5" """" f 77v.‘ fir-w" B‘ .- .__. ~A-_._ ,_,_ man's Re al onfvmnon m AUNT curs- “YOUR CLOTHES LOOK No MATTER HOW YOU no YOUR WASH you NEED suuu ours “ExrR/l- 0 SOAP/IVES FOR EXTRA- DIRTY SPOTS KO DON'T RAVI TO II I1! final how much solspier Sunlight is. Just feel n fresh cake of Sunlight. Notice its grand extrs-soapiness. It's this mar- velous added cleansinj power that gets oven "toughest" spots brighter! No wonder women everywhere ssy Sunlight Soap makes the difference between clothes looking half-washed or brilliantly Night. Safe for colon JUSY rur A TOUCH of’ Sunlight at those extra-dirty places. Instantly s thin film of soap some: in contact with the dirt. As the clothes srs washed, Sunlight’: deep-cleansing power gets into the clothes -ueis even play clothes and grimy work shirts brighter! Yet Sunlight is so pure, It's absolutely sale for washable colors. ylOl A COMPLETE WASHING JOB YOU CAN'T DO WITHOUT SUNLIGHT A LEVER rlonucl rm: CHARIXTITETOWN cuARfiiAiv THE ETERNAL m s-il ills day! that srs l0 be These will be woman's loudest wish-es: A table set for company win. silverware and lovely ghomsihsisheosaosllhsr In; Agudentiutlieeosrshsstgud- Id And trinkets to be proudly shown Until the day her life ls ended. Man wanls his bit of wordly fame And aches w do his share of @1118. But woman, st s friendly flame, Prlefei-s to do the breakfast boast- 118. Hcr dreams are not of goals afar Or splendors past the strength for capture. In pretty lace and linen are Her hopes of peace of mind snd rapture. No mailer what the war may do "Twill little change the passions human to love her lifetime will be the dresm of every wo- an m . she'll want a place to trim herself, To cherish till from earth sh-e passes Willi here and there n. handy shelf For painted cups and crystal glasses Edger A. Guest. HINTS 0N ETIQUETTE Even if you are one of lhoSe con- stitutionally "moody" persons, don't spoil another person's enjoyment of any entertainment by showing ill telélper. That is Just being plain ru e DECORATIVE FURS STYLE-NEWS NOW NEW YORK. There is nothing more luxurious looking than the huge, squashy fur muffs women push up over ih-sli- aims those crisp autumn days, when a muff is carried not to keep one‘s hands but one‘s pride warm. The fur hat has also emerged long before its usual time Women seemingly accept furs for their decorative value. since they show a disincilnaticn to wail for weather cold enough to justify gelling info fur jackets and coats. The fur is often s visor, s trim or an accent rather than s11 fur. Hats have gone definitely dressy. one reason for this being that this busy woman who hasn't time to change her dress finds that changing he-i- hat does wonders for her. Another is that while most hats sie small, they are high snd often formal, making use of feathers or choux of velvet or ribbon or of much glitter yes, glitter - even for daly wear. RADIATOR SHIELD! ""' Honor Roll for October. (lmclo X.—1, Mary Mc-Grogor; 2, A‘ in Fvcliuii; .'l, Connie lilurlln. Glade lX.—1, Rowena Mercer; 2, Sari klivIcDougall; 3, Vernon Mac- a Grade VIDL-l, Ethel Iesrd; I. Peber McLeod; 3, Natalie Jay. Grade VI.-l. Ora beard: 2, Ram- Oml McDonnl : 3. Frank Plgol-t and Erursv. XICPIZKIIQYII, cquul. Grade ‘v.-1, Elm Collin; 2, Paul lag Li, Eileen McEacliern. rade lV.-1, Lottie McDougfi:_Cununlskgy,_Eunice Lund. McEachem. Gracie ll Grade II. Jr.—1, 2, Glurin FC-(lllifl; and Eileen Affleck, equal. bara. McAs Alice Gnriihum: 3. Joyce Joy. Pl‘1flCiplll——EdlLh Cameron. ohioillé '21 - UPSET STOMACH '2 One ingredient in Alina-Seltzer is an analgesic l . . relieves pain. Anollieringredientis an alkalizar ‘ . . helps neutralize excess acidity. .- hnt's why a tablet or two of ' ’ Alkn-Seltzer dissolved in a glass of water, so definitely helps you. It acts fast. "l8 pleasant to 021:. ‘ it De t. loin menial-slaw‘... so... v Streol, Toronto. f, Estelle MacDonald; 3, Marga; Grade III.—1, Myra -Griflin; 2, Pauline Cuiumiskoy; 3, Ivan Lmnrd. . Sl'.——1, Reggie lvlciiifvre. William Lacey; 3, ivlarlna Doyle Grade l. Sn-l, Jacqueline Cum- mlskcy; zklil/{argarct Ross; 3, Bar- Prewm that inevitable dust stein on your walls over the radiators, if Imsn Draperies to Yourself A B/ib Ribbons Dress up the Valance Charming are these gay chintz ‘lraperies —- their graceful valance looped up with bright ribbons. And hey'rs as easy to mske ss they're hexpenslvel For the slds draperies, choose s figured chlntz - for the valance, ylaln chinfz. Stunning is an ivory oallern on a soft green ground com- mined with plain ivory chintz. Use ribbons of s darker green for vsi- mce snd tie-backs. How no make the smartly draped '1. Social and Pers l Living 6v’ Leisure The Woman's Realm you would save yourself a serious cleaning Job later. Radiator shields throw sir out lnto the room instead of letlL-ig it flow steadily up the wall. Use them if you can OLD-TIME SHAWL BACK IN WARDROBE A pulsi- device of warmth ls the wi, the food old-fashioned shoulder shawl n wools, not s tiny neckplece Ol‘ one to tie on the head. This new slinvl is an honest, old- fasliioned Victorian shawl to keep one warm One that you grab up and wind around you in the house as t-he English and Scotch wear them. One that can he worn for additional warmth at a dinner party. Those shawls are in plaids in decorative wools Make one at home if you have a pretty square of wool adn bind it with ribbon or fringe and throw if on over your dress FLANNEL NIGHTIES ARE LONG-SLEEVED NEW YORK-- Nlghties -weli, my dears, no prejudice about long-sleeved, woolly outing flannel nigllilies Even the young lamb them in basic, thinking of the chill dormitory; or their own rooms at dark dawn No hint of opposition lo these sleepers even the long underwear is beyond their ken Youth may come to ll, of course. as the fuel shortage grows string- ent. More modern is the triangular plaslron of silk or wool, or any other fabric to be worn over the front of the blouse, s shield against the cold and buckled to the figure by a belt at the waistline and but- lons at the shoulder. LONG UNDERWEAR BACK ON COUNTERS NEW YORK, Long underwear is nearly an old wives tale i0 vasl numbcrs of the younger generation who nevci" have worn such trap- pings and indeed may never have seen such an anliqur-tej gntmint as a lady's union suit with long sleeves and legs of ankle-length Underwear counters in some handled" exhibitions, prove the room at 6% degrees is a reality’ close at hand. Obviously the way to meet this situation is to start your rest-- lng plant at that figure and hold it there regardless of outside cori- dltions Put on more clothes in the house is the correct answer bo this- temperature llour To llollsvo IMINTIILY FEMALE Pllll Take Lydia E. Plnkhamk Com- pound-ic has a soothing, helpful effect on one of woman's most 1m- poroant organs. Worth. trying! LYDIA E. PINKIIALTS ZIEIaPO-ll-Ii: x’ 7 A Morning Smile Bank-as your son thinking of geLLlIlg married? Hank-Oh. n0. I don't believe he'll ever marry now. He's decid- ed to study for his bachelor's de- greo. THBIITY MAO McTavish called at the head office of his balm and asked b0 see the general malicgzr. "Have you a card, sir?" he was asked. stores, the locale for these “long-fl {Uoi-othy Dix Says- WOMEN SHOULD LOOK AT MIDDLE AGE AS FRIEND AND ALLY B" This Time Average Woman Has Learned To Camouflage Bad Points. The one thing that. women dread more than they do death itself l5 middle age. Thfy can meet ihe seventies with philosophy and R8181"- lion, but, the forties panic them and sends them rushing for the hi1!" dyf! bottle and going on a slimming diet. And if. is this mai- Of middle 13¢ that causes so many women to stay thirty-nine for years and years snd years, and that makes ihe youth repair business the second largest and most profitable industry in the country. Now if, in hei- girlhood, a woman has been Miss America, it ls Easy to understand wily acquiring the middle-age spread, having her com- plexion go off a bit and gelling a few gray hairs, is s. tragedy. It must , __ be s heart-breaking experience to see one: ‘ beauty fade, day by day, and be powerless i0 stop it_ Probably no human being ever 806$ through a more agonizing moment than does the woman who has been the sinecure of all eyes, when, for the first time, she hears some- one say behind her back: "You should hlvo seen her fen years ago. My, but she was a knockout then!" When the truth is told, however, the number of women who are entitled to wear mourning over the loss of their good looks ls negligible. So far from having faces that would launch s. QhOEISBIId ships. the great majority of women haven't countenances that. wouldn't even float a canoe_ And they go out. of their way to borrow trouble when they worry ovoi- gelling middle-aged, IMPROVING WITH AG! Theirs is the case of blessed be nothing, for they can't lose what they never had, and, as a mailer of fact, middle age is their friend and ally instead of being their deadly enemy. Many and many a homely, awk- ward girl blossoms out lnlo a gorgeous middle-aged woman. Time chlsels rough hewn features into symmetry. While hair ls often more becoming than the original shade. Intelligence lights the eyes into which Nature failed to put a sparkle. And so not infrequently the ugly duckling emerges as a swan in her forties. Another perquislle of middle age that women habitually overlook is chat they can do business on half the capital that a young girl re- quires. We don't hand any bouquets lo the debutante unless she de- serves them. she has to deliver the goods and show that she possesses all the fifty-seven different varieties of puichriiude before we give her the blueribbon in a beauty contest. But, any ordinarily personable middle-aged woman, who knows how to comb her hair and buy her clothes, can gel. a reputation for being handsome that will make her husband proud to show her off in public. if in forty years s woman doesn't learn how so camouflage hei- bsd points and bring out hei- good ones. there is something radically wrong with the inside, ss well so the outside, of her head. - ' Women's dread of getting middle-aged is based upon the fear of losing their youth and good looks, and they make frantic efforts to hold on lo them by starving themselves into slrlngbean figures, piss- tering their faces with cosmetics and dyeing lhelr hair colors that never were on land or sen. It is lovds labor lost snd mmey wssteil No mater how many time, you lift Mother's face nor how many tucks you lake in it, she hasn't the light skin of daughter. And nobody ls fooled by dyed halt except the woman who has it on. CHARM BEATS LOOKS Far wiser would they be lf they chmgod their ieohnlque snd instead of trying‘ to hold on to a vanishing atractlon substituted a different one for it. They can't look like schoolgirls who, afber all, are of interest only to their families. but they can look like well-dressed, alert, intelligent. interesting women. And charm beats out looks every time. Another reason that women are afraid of middle-age is because then, if ever, they are apt to lose their husbands to predatory ladies who are on the outlook for men who have made their fortunes. Wives invariably attribute their husbands‘ roaming to their having gotten to be forty plus, but if. isn't. their wives‘ birthdays that make men easy preys for lhe husband-limiters. It ls because their wives have slumped on their jobs and have let themselves get fat and frumpy and sloppy; or they have become mig- gei-s snd bosses: or because they haven't. resd s. book or hsd s new idea. since Junior was born, snd they are dull company. As long s; s wife makes her husband a comfortable and cheerful home and jokes with him and jollles him. she is still “little girl" to him, and he doesn't even suspicion that she has god-ten to be middle-aged. SU-o-o-o, laciics, dismiss your fear of middle age. Quit dreading it. Capitalize ii. and make yourself more charming, more alluring thsn you have ever been before, because you have had time enough to lesm so "Aye, I have that," replied Mc- Tavish. "but. first let. me see if your hands are cfean." valance? Cut the fabric about Llrailo l. Jr.—-l, Eileen Lacey; 2, Assistants - Helen MacDonald- Iwice as deep as you want the fin- shed valance i0 be. Slant at each and and shape the lower edge in ihallow scallops as in diagram A. Stitch up in soft folds, loop ribbons wer stitches, according to diagram B. Top each ribbon loop with s perky bow. Now tack the valance to s valance board-and it'll look trim as can be. Bids curtains hang gracefully, too, it you make pinch pleats st the top, know such tricks as runnin, s weighted tape through the bottom em. Other "professional" details? Our BZ-page booklet gives step-by-step instructions. diagrams for many lovely drapery styles, vslsncss, llsu curtains. Suggests smart trimmings, fabrics, color schemes. Tips on cornices. Send 20¢ in coins for youru copy of “New Ideas in Melting Curtains and Draperies" Guardian Home service Address. Be sum to write your name address and the nsme of booklet. .___..____. ‘ ' ' Name "v- "r . Blreol Address Flavour T Llptoifs Noodle Soup Mix to syl See how guickly snd essilg it's prepare . See how muc more soup you gel {or your money. Tssie that delicious chicken- flsvour. Then you'll know w y it's the “soup senes- hon offhe union ". In 7 minutes Lipron’s Noodle Soup Mix makes a rlesr golden soup . . . so smooth snd appetiz- ing zhn i: issue: like the best slow-simmered soup ever made sf homeAnd remember, Lipton‘: Noodle Soup Mix is also con- venient for iendln, oversees. Eula; Ibis new ion rennin. Alb r "our fir ljpfns’: N: v Sea) Mix today. M! ll PTOITS uooous sourma The Quick Soup with the Real Chicken- A PRODUCT OF 9 £09 0f m. F I u N s Quint John W001] Dealers Stop Sales The Packers of LIPTON?» FULL-FLAVOURED (Small Leufl T many things about how to make yourself attractive. onal ,1 Fashions I Literature A4 n‘ pi NOVEMBER 25. 1942 "'" “ -' --= Co crevices and grooves. 2 Sediment and stains —correcily ground for making. grinds for each type of REGULAR. To Make Betier IN these days of coffee rationing, ability to make uniformly good coflee means much.‘ For this, proper care of your equipment is very important. To get best results, follow these simple rules: l Keep all utensils, whatever kind, n. upulously clcun. Use a slender brush for spouls, lulu-s, washing will no! remove them, so scour often with a suitable scouring material. 3 Never pui your coffee maker sway after use wifhoui washing wilh clean, hot, soapy water. Then rinse with boiling water, drain and dry. 4 If you use a cloth filler or bag, wash if after use with water and baking sods-no! soap. Rinse snd keep ii submerged in clean, cool water. 5 You can only gel best resulls from good coflae MAXWELL HOUSE is a blend of the very finest coflees the world produces, roasted by a special process that captures every atom of its extra flavor and rich, full-bodied goodness. It offers you precisely correct Because it comes sealed in a Super-Vacuum iiii by the V ila-Frcsh process, Maxwell House Cullen: reaches you as fresh as the very hour it left iiie roasting ovens. It is always: "GOOD TO THE LAST DROP" ee afieei flavor. Ordinary your method of coffee coffee-maker — DRIP sud For The ALERT LITTLE FROCK Nice For Illgh Shades This is pretty but unassuming _ young crowd is choosing lo wear both for dlytime and dates. Make ll. of either crepe or wool. Style No. 2677 is designed for firms COOK'S ‘ _CORNER LIGHT CHRISTMAS CAKE l 1-2 cups butter 2 cups fine granulated sugar 8 eggs. 2 oups blanched sultsna raisins 3-4 Owns chopped oltron peel 2 cups chopped red glaoe cherries ‘ 4 cups flour 1-2 easpoon salt 1 teaspoon baking pOWdCX‘ Cream butter \ve.l. add sugar gradually and cream thoroughly. Add unbeaten eggs one at a lime beating well between each sd- dltlon. Dredge the p cred fruits with part of the flour. lft. salt snd baking powder with the rest oi the flour and add to lh-z creamed mix- . lure. Add fruit. line a 9 x 9 inch :_~ fruit. cake H1101‘ two 4 pound - ils with two thicknesses of brown Piper, bake in s slow 30 delrees for approximately i ONION SIIORTCAKE Pace’; FOR LUNCH L - —-- Twooups biscuit mlx. 4 table- spoons butter, I duos sliced, large. mild onions. i slightly beaten egg. 1-2 clip sour cream, 1-2 iesspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon each of while pepper am _psnriks. Pat the i-esdv biscuit mix. mixed with milk, in s 8-inch» cake psn. R7133‘ Pin snd over low hoot m Soresd onions over the biscuit dough. Crrnblne egg. sour cream and seasonings and oour over onions mks in s moderately hot oven of 3'15 degrees about 75 minutes. or unti‘ custard is formed on top Just before serv- ing place eight grilled ssussgecn cake. snd serve st once SAINT JOHN. N.H.. Nov. 28 - slzes 12, 14, l6, l8 and 20 Size i6 requires 2 7-8 yards 39-fnch iabri" with 3-8 yard contrasting To order pattern: Write or send picture with your name and sd- dress with 20 cents in coin or stamps to the Needlecraft Bureau The Charlottetown Guardian Style No. 2677 NSMG Street Address Oil-Y Province — llnued ifs sale. ‘Ihey say the spvead -.lween the wholesale urine of $9 5') a co.d and the retail cf $14 a 16rd is insufficient as ex- penses average about $3.75 a cord. They say they cannot figure even on this 75 cents ber cord nro. fit because in order to supply 128 cubic feel per cord lo the con- sumer. as required. the dealer mus‘. saw up 153 cubic feet as ll. comes 1.0m the producer to his yard — in ‘fourfooc lengths. This "shrink- 8B! ls due to the fact that the ggogdflupscks tighter in the smsiei- The dealer buys his wood from the producer in 128 cubic feel: cords, which when sawed up make only Just. the type of frock-. appro ell 105 toomécxlvgithevyrood. cubic feel of Needlecraft SIZES Mother, Mix Your Own Cough Syrup. It’s Fine Gives Quick Relief. Saves Money. Easily Mixed. This well-known medicine, mixed in your own kitchen, costs very little. but it gives delightful. swift-acting relief from coughs due to colds. It takes but s. moment to prepare-it's aoensy any- one can do it. And it saves real money. Make s syrup by stirring l cups of granulated sugar and onecupof water s few momenta, until dissolved. No cooking is needed. 0r you can use corn syrup or liquid honey, instead of sugar syrup. Y Then not 2% ounces of Pine: from my drusllst. Pour this into s 1| as. rcPi-A RfOUp of Bslnt John desi- ers in hardwood for fuel bodsy fill-J nounosd that flay luvs disson- u botte and add your syrup. Thu-i yo: make Ioounces of really splendid coug syrup-snd it slves you four time! n! much cough medicine for your money- It never spoils, lasts a fnmliY B 1°" time, and children love its taste. '1' And forquick. satlsfyins’ Fem! W" say it's really splendid. It hnsa three- fold action. n loosens uio whim?‘- soothes the irritated membranes. all helps clear sir paaniuzes. You'll b" d" lighted by m prompt, plea-sir!!! mu"- Pinex ls a s-peclsi compmmd 0' 9 ven ingredients, in concentrated n wolf-known and reliable sorvffi agent forwintercoughs. Homeric 0d if it dosslrtplssls you lnenfl. _