PAGE TWO v-Vvvv-Tvv v v vvvv v mk‘... OO-OOOOO-OQOOQ f‘; Q5‘ 47V‘ When you smock your lips oml soy... .. . you know it's Kellogg} Corn Flakes in the bowl! ‘ The first delicious spoonful ofKelloglfs Corn Flake] tells the story! As thousands of women have told im- Four out of Five say "Kellogg's" "Whatisytr linily-‘s fllvouriterezldy- tn-t-at cereal.’ Itch year for the last titrat- _\"t.l s an enormous maiority of (.lll.‘\ll.l|\ wtlnleu from coast t0 crust lime will us Kellogg's Corn lilllkes. A~kl~ll \|\tJL'lllLllll_\', "\\ llicll brllml of " (our out offive 5.: Kelioggs". aste experts, mo, hlze Kellogg's “first for Flavour!" Your flllnily, likewise, will cnioy Kalltiggfls (Turn Flakes. Now. in two ciunenietlt si ‘s. \\ hen you cot uut, nsl; for the triplt--\vr;lppetl im/lt-ir/l/ul fnltlmlgt. .\l.l\l0 hy Kellogg's in London, (‘ulfllltlfh [..uri//i/.~r't'.r/, mo.’ The "SO-second tr. iltilltt" costs only a few pennies for the ulmlc fllnlily’. average sen ing with milk SERVE BY SAVING! IUY WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES! purtialinlestigiltors."Kellogg'sarefirstlorllnvour!" And this mellow deliciousrlcss stimulates your appetiti.—makcs digestion easier! llYn/t’: more, an and sugar gives you needed jam! energy. (jet several packages tomorrow.’ Your Individual H O R O S C O P E l=~—— By Frances Drake———4 l-‘nr 'l‘hursil:ly, September 11 l. SEPTEMBER 241 toi OCTOBFR l ilyinrai - Outslte nor lo, ma - n afq wt m APRIL 2o (Al-lost i tors etitlcerlling nation t euvlc ' and pro- . affairs and the nlakn handl- ' ‘jl lng of counnociitzes essen l. to our l l L l everyday life are more favored than l ‘ persnlal selfish. desires. _ t t. i OCTOBER 24 t) NOVEMBER 22 ‘ pleased tScorpio; - The on , an: for you nou- 01-; l evenly allocate your a ions for new. you do not- crovvti or o " tnflndat-ory. 1 any one lime. Avoid Cxlrenles, emo- work can i tional upsets. , NOVEMBLR 23 l0 DECFINIBER 22 ‘ (Sllglllfilitlr) - Be ‘ watch filld‘ listen ill least dom tells yoil you lscmetlling of vllillc. r i nuldloilg into a! lLng but slop up ' Z0 "rtllii‘u.<l—* l. rosy but if you'll \c"" eriuiir where you can. c and acqnsztlve _\'oli'll i DECEMBER 23 t0 JANUARY 21: 1 ~ in your particular it .. ...n- ~ Avsid worry" about what or how much your returns lvill be or \\'ll(‘lllCl' you are qeltulg Mint you think is your due. Keel) ill mind your tnany ble-ssings and the con- tentment that always attends work ,._.,.~.v JANUARY 22 to FEBRUARY 20 t‘\lll1 tails» — 'l‘ake tn heart advice given Cll'li‘l("‘.l' cstions and a to ll'.(,‘(l‘ll sound adv JULY 2~i to AU warp}; ylilr 40p today, friend Leo. Your “tillffllly quick mind and itmgue will nred a cut-h. It's essen- tial that. yon think before you p to MARCH 207 soc k or net, Progress can be made , “Plsrmst —- Today the Moon goes to h‘; 5-...“ y”. l e rod“: f"\'fll"‘l7l(‘ appel- vvith your sary obstacles or (‘FlltliUili an but o. winner is always the one who for- ges ahead. doing his best and re-l fusing to stay "put". PEER UARY 2i .1 T 22 to 2a, planet. Neptune. ni seems good .. ,, __ Y,“ my“ lwfoise Sop-l :..inz- 11:" your (M: .. E pecally r 7 halo a slight edge on‘ favored: Maritime and navy in- all of you willl terests, dealing in beverages, oils. chemicals, drugs; investigations, re- search. M5 - CPIIIVQJ3PLPL QILTILEIS. DAY other" Vii": tan: but. . re steady, c0nstruc-‘ ' about. new mat- BIIAXTIFIIL SNOWTLAKE MEDALLION DESIGN NO. 94‘! ‘Phil: unilsunl crocheted mczlallloxi consists of a snowflake motif banter. surrounded by ftll attractive tic-sign setting it off lll individual iquares. Pattern No. 947 contains list of materials ilecrlcd, lllnslraticn of stitches used and complete instructions. lo UHlCf paltlcern. wrlu- or senn above picture with l5 cunts m coin or stamps to Nrtdevvtlrk Bureau. Charlottetown Guardian. To C|\fll"llIlll‘ltJ\\'fl (ilutrtilan NPPfllfllVflfk nz-nartment Dflfilfll] No. 947 NAXVIE-—--—-——-- ---——-—-———-- STREET ADDRESS-———-C1TY"-—"“-‘"’-"' yROnycgs.______-___----____...-_ o , r , make XlYtiilCC pubiLc." , jnilrnalist. i inns, You. like they.. " ~ nlay meet with sccltungly‘ unneces-| . l t AMomirtiSmllc A NEW VIEW A woman wearing an off-the-face hat she had just bought asked the Negro cock how she liked it. "It's ll light pretty hat", the cook gave ju: nont. "But it suah do "Ignorance", remarked young Burt-tn, "Urey say is bliss". “That probably accounts for it", rejoined Miss Cutting “Accsunls for what?" “The contented and‘ happy look you usually wear", ‘Conscientious. dependable. unself- ish, talented in music and probably other arts. Could be successful as a. critic, playwright; at zartletliilg: as a stylist, Could also be a good detective. Synlpattnetic but’ very chcosey in choice of as- sociates, Slruld avoid too much fastidiousness. . 1 .-.-_-_- i m1; COOK'S CORNER MlNTEl) FRUIT RELISH (About 9 half-pint jars) Five cups <2 pounds) prepared watermelon rind. 1 teaspoon salt. 2 medium-sized oranges, 7 cups t3 pounds» sugar, 2 cups cider vinegar. 3-4 cup water. 3 cu-ps (1 1-2 pounds) drained, crushed pineapple, 1-3 cup finely chopped mint leaves, firmly packed‘. Remove green skin and all pink flesh from rind of firm. bllt not liver-ripe watermelon. Put rind THE CHARl-()’_I"I‘l-‘.T()WN GUARDIAN - -—:i__ i Woman's Re alm Y. Social .II ‘Dorothy Dix S-ays- BOYS PREFER GIRLS WHO ADHERE TO MORAL CODE If Girl Lets Man Kiss Her On Her First Date With Him She Immediately Loses His Respect Dear Ivllss Dix-We are a. group of is 17 yam of are greatly pul- zled by the many questions we are unab e to answer. Here are n few of them: (l) Ln general what type of girls do boys prefer? (2) 1s 1t right » » for a girl to let a boy kiss her the first- time he takes her out? (3) Why do boys get mad if l girl refuses to let them pet and kiss, and then. t! she consents to their" tting. call her fast and gossl about her to telr friends? (4) Is there anyt ing wrong in a girl staying out until 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning if she behaves herself? t5) Is it wrong to go to taverns to dance it there are no other places to dance? Many people think there is a priest deal of harm in going to these laces. (6 How should we answer a boy when e asks “why” when we refuse to PUZZ GIRLS. ANSWER-G) There is no specific type of girl that boys universally admire. Girls are a matter of taste. Some boys like ‘em tall and stately and dignified. Others like them cute and cuddly. Some boys like feminine nitwltu. _ ' Others like them to have brains. Some boys like girls who run after them. Others like to do the chasing themselves. Gen- erally speaking. boys like girls who are good-looking; who dress neatly; who do not pose; who are prudent without being prim; who are not gold- diggers, and who are friendly and good-natured and not hard to enter- n (2) A girl who lets a boy kiss her the first time she goes out with him loses his respect right then and there. She shows herself cheap and easy. Also she decreases his interest in her. No man wants the overripe peach that is ready to fall into his mouth. She Holds Res ct (3) Virtual y every man tries out every girl he meets t.o see what her standards of conduct are. If she refuses to pet and kiss as the price of his attentions he may leave her for some gir of loose morals, But he respects her. If she consents he brags about his conquests and smeals her name, which the girl has no right to resent. She gave him the pri- vilege of telling the truth about her. (4) Under exceptional circumstances, such as a big party, there is no harm in a girl staying out until 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning, but she cannot do it often without: ruining her health and her reputation. Be- sides, it isn't fair to her escort. No boy can stay out that late at night and then do the sort of work that will get him anywhere. (5) Whether it. is wrong to go to taverns or not depends upon the tavern. Some of them are places no decent girl should put her foot 1n. Others are places where you might take your grandmother. t6) Try laughing it off first and telling him that's not your line. If he tells you that everybody does it ,say maybe so, but that you don't fol- low the common herd and that you don't. have t0 86$ 110W men thflt W83’; that, anyway, it ls no pettlngtwigh ¥Ol1‘8.tl'd he can take lit or leave it. Follow Golden Rule Dear Dorothy Dix-I am past middle age, have lived alone for years and crave companionship. Some time ago I met a. man about: m own age who has proved very cl company. Am with him a grett deal. Have him up for meals. dr ves or wherever we vrlsh to s nd our hours. I know he is a married man with a wife and family elsew ere. What should I do? Keep on accepting his company and. attention and forsake mv old friends, or tell him it has to stop, refuse to see him and retum to my old ways of living? PERPLEIKEID. ANSWER-When 1n doubt follow the Golden Rule. Whenever n woman aids and abets tt married man 1n bein unfaithful to his wife one ls doing something to a. sister woman that. she open and prays no woman will ever do to her if she gets married. Anyway. a. woman who has an affair with B. married man is bound to lose out one way or another. If he divorces his wife for her. she takes her happiness at the price of another woman's miser . she breaks up a home and half-orphans little children. That cflme s always on her soul and is a shadow over her happiness. If the man doesn't divorce his wife and merry her. she knows all the bitterness of the hope deferred that maketh the heart sick; the weary waiting for the thing to happen that never happens; tine agony of living on the outskirts of the life of the man she loves; the humiliation of know- ing that he is ashamed of her and the certainty that in the end he will go back to his wife or discard her for some younger and fresher woman. So I certainly advise you to say good-by to your charming companion. It is better to be lonesome than to have a. tarnished nazne—and that brings lonesomeness, too, when all of your old frlencgo drop 110;. DIX. Living is Leisure ——Tlte Woman’s Realm PRAYER “Be not afraid to D1115’. l0 P"? l5 rt , Pray ‘if thou canst. with hope; but Lemons keep their vitamins O potency longer than most. fruits because cf a favourable degree 0f acidity. It ls not unusual for migrating ever pray. qhopgh be weak or sick with birds to travel at night. ong eay- ———— Pray in the darkness, Lf there be Cactus fllbre is now used in pad- no iigh . ding upholstery of acme motor "Far ls the time, remote from hu- cars. man sig . String the empty spools from When war and tumult on the earth cotton and give them m baby to shall cease; la . Yet every prayer for universal peace Avulls the blessed truce to ex- pedtte." SCOWL LINES llorsl through. food chopper, using coarse knife. Drain and weigh or measure. Cover with water, add salt. and let stand overniizht, angcs, cut into eights. remove Feeds and all coarse membrane. Cut crosswise in very thin slices, Cover watermelon rlnd and oranges with fresh uxatcr. Bring to a bail and simmer, covered. about 45 minutes, or until watermelon rind is tender. Drain. Miirsiluar, vinegar and 3-4 cup Water in large preserving ket- tle. Bring to a boil. stirring only until sugar is disolved. Boil rapidly until syrup is thick. Add watermelon-orange mixture. pineapple. and mint tied loose! 1n dleescioth bag. Bring slowly lo c. boll and boil about 40 minutes or until fruit and rind are clear and syrup is somewhat. thick. stirring frequently to prevent scorching. Re- move mint bag and skim. Pour into clean, hot sterilized jars and seal at once, / " wr-MKID Swans Down Cake Flour is miter, finer flour that makes it easier for anyone to make more tempting, lighter cakes. Milled by the Swans Down "Controlled lthlltnp Process," this selected grain is ground and re-ground, RECIPES FOR THE I MOSTPOPULAI CAKES III ON ‘I'll’ PACKIOI.’ THE INSURANCE POlICY FOR BHTIR CAKES Drain. scrub or-, ‘anvil’, I . fl/uifl/ll/l?‘ m” Swans Down Cake In the Pantry Brings Jlmmle Made only from sol’: Canadian winter wheat, grown for Swans Down in one particular section, You ought to wear dark glasses for vivid sunshine, and shady hat. The lines warn you that your eyes need protecting. Protect the eyes and it Elves the lines a chance. But you’ve got to get rid of the INDIGESTIDN Wl\lLOP Y0l| ones you've already made At B ') night hold the skin smooth and I taut. and fix a square of court Help Your Pullman "28" For The Kim! 0| Reltal Th! Help: Mnh You Ruin' To G0 More than hull of your digeotfun || den. below the belt- fn your 28 feet of bowels. So when lndigeltinn ltrlku. try aomgthfn that helm dilution in the ltomlch AN below the belt. nlllhlfi lihfiiiifidtfi (‘QZYKLL-‘lm L?” anal-ill" d Li: t. om m t and otlconnflarltltenll‘. Tnkeultk" Pm h“: of the U tnnln tllfflllVl juf och AND Boswell-help you digeot what 1m: have eaten in Nature] own way. Then molt folkl [It the kind of relic! tllll makes you feel better from your had to your wen. Jun be nun you IO! the lfllllllll Cnmr‘: Little Lin: Pills from your druqm... p“, plaster over the skin to keep it in position for several hours. Do this for a few nights and you'll find the trouble lessening, PICNIC TABLE CLOTH One housewife whose family loves to picnic, made a taible cloth ci- aiiv for these occasions out in- expensive materlai with a pocket in each corner. When spreading the cloth on the picnic table, a stone l5 but In each pocket. thus holding m“? Cmh firm in the wind. It even works 1f the cloth ls spread direct. 1v on the ground. pllilllllllllllflg MFA/l,” then lifted again and again through silk to produce l cake flour which i: 27 time: n fine n n ordinary flout. The superlative fineneasnnd unvnryinghl bqunl- ity of every pncknge o Swan! Down belpsg ve to Swans Down Cake Flour t a: fine, even grain which memo extra delicnc goodness in every cake you eke. a-u and Perso al vFashions '1. ‘ C; --.v.--t;u. MAN-TMLIIRED DISTINCTIUN Canadian women are among the best- dressed in the world. Many of these "women gladly give Tip Top Tailors‘ tmannish-tailored suits the credit for their always-stylish appearance. I To deserve this confidence, Tip Top Tailors again presents ct brilliant parade -o_f tailored clothes. Here we show a sparkling new style for ‘the new season. ‘many Danbury models available in both isuifs and cools, tailored to your individ- ‘ual measure and requirements, in your choice of hundreds of British fabrics and styles. lNDlVIDUl-‘ILLY CREATED FOR THE WEHREH m rorrilltops 99 Grafton Street, Sunnyside l Girls Try to Avoid Men Who Dance But One Step It is but one of the ,4 youthful, llendorlllnfl suit‘ to serve many occasions. A double-breasted, fitted mode! P-three buttons (two to buf- ton) — peaked lapel: — lower ‘jetted pockets. Skirt, in- verted pIeats—-l'ronf only, LIMITED e_edleciraft- ‘ SEPTEMBER _11._1941 ‘Literature --F'or The Hnmefi___ It just meats as though you can't have mo many skirts on hand. ‘Ithey make your wardrobe go t/wlce as far and are varied complements for your classic sweaters and blous- es. This pattern includes two very different designs-a slim pleated skirt tlrlevs right for every type 0f figure. and s. young-looking dirndl skirt that. may be worn either with or without suspender straps. You'll find they're just what you need to round out. your early Pall wardrobe. Style No, 3088 ls designed for sizes 24. 26, 28. 30. 32 and 84-inche5 waist. 28-inch waist requires 2 yards of 54-inch fabric for leated skirt; l 7-8 yards for plat skirt, Plaid skirt may be made with or without suspenders. Dian-um Show Smart " Th3 nun in hero again-mill eager to dance the one and only Itep he knows! if 01R Iltll try to elude you it dances. nfuybe it‘: because you need to dreol up your steps, learn a new one and in n while! Footprint din- grtmj flow you all the popular ones. The k420i ll llwlyl l favorite and Lg lob of graceful variations. Herc’! Ill that‘: very limple-the Side-Clan Left. in our sketch. Counflll l. 2. 3, 4. on Count 1 lien forward on left foot. Z-Step lot-ward on right foot. 8—Plnce left loot I lhort distance to lide of right loot. 4—Clole with right foot. It helps, too. to chance your dl- tectlon III and then. and to know how to combine naps. Learn tht Two-Stop Turn Right and follow with the Side-Close Left. Easy- gug your partners will be tm przuedl And an you considered a "gem leader"? Our fl-page booklet ha flpl on lending and following, glvc Iootprlnt diagrams for all the popu l" ncpo-fox-tt-ot. Westchutcr waltz. tango, rhumbn. Conn? _¢ -..-.,.,|v_ yo.“ Send 20c in coins for your copy of "How '1!) Do The Newest Dance steps and Variations" to The Guardian f-l:me Service. Be sure to write plainly your Name. Address. and the Name of booklet. 0 Irradiated Carnation Millt i! ro creamy-smooth and so con- venient-keeps indefinitely on your pantry shell. And so economical for cruming coffee, cereals, fruit. A CA/V/JD/A/V FRODUT Blouse No. 2960 ls degotaflgulfl sizes 12. 14. 16. ta Eng ma‘ “m... requires 2 3-8 Yflfdl 3 ' m L, p" "my s... tel-red. for Pattern “d m‘ a l, Your "Name. Address "m. m. numbfirh Be lure tn I blilewiio. aoee S*"_';:_':'_'I-" '_ Noting- 55;; mmu- y d. m“; product i‘. City o