Tm: cnnnnorrsrow GUARDIIIN ' . s PA-CPTEWHT -r pa. iuANUARY3;gn 4.. 4a‘ ;*;Woman ’s Realm Eh}.- Fashionable are. Weaigng tz..........~ ". . -_..:..-_ ”II testes gpoodi?’ -:- Social and Personq! i-:- Fasltionsx;_-:-_ HAD smozvc PERSONALITY I Princess Louise married man of her choice w P1! .- . i Doroth y Dix ’ Letter Box '_ Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished ' ' _ . “yo”- ..v-. -,.-.- “flu "- Y . . _. ,' ' i h l1 comedian used to ro- i ' I i I A i i‘ i ‘it 7V 1th Every Pattern l Cautious Young Bachelor who Lookscat the of Iéhleegilncizszxxgf; elllfis: gig “ti; 3:12:53 rif/iaitzvgfsnrgr: . I . ' i,‘ . _ ' ' i _ an a King Edward v11. ho dicd dd 1 “m ° “ ° _' ' " ' i -_-" AHIIElbCIIG WOIiIhIIIKtOH i Grocery Slde of Marr age in mi- sieei; on simviviay mi 1:2! and one stanza of these verses ran. Husband Forgive His Wife One Slip? " h Prl I , S t. ticularly noted among the members It Sh”? gwd sense m t e nee ° - - w. - - ~ . HOW t0 stop Belng areas 1c of the royal family of Great Britain we es , -— It has the fashionable diagonal mi. he, retiring disposition and he‘. And in his eldest slaughter seams through the hlpllne. At each -—}- aversion to publicity. Because of this 7° chm" l 1119M 710m the British 7 lower Point. the skirt is laid into an Dear Miss Dix-I am a. young man contemplating matrimony. but I ciiaracieiisiic, which developed in Isles. ' l inverted plait, which creates the all- ’l!rOlll1(‘l widc box-plait cflcct. It's all so simple to itiakc. The Fhndlce cuts in one until it joins the want. to look on both sides of the fencc before I decide to climb ovcr witn my towel and toothbrush. ‘I want to get thc right sort of wife so I won't be continually arguing and scrapping with her like some young married couples I know. I want to marry And not from over the waur. . '- l So the hard-earned money of En!- hcr early girlhood, she became known as "her royal shyness," a nickname that had been associated with her all '2sso Small girls are never too small to smart. Htylc conscicusncss it would seem Huibffillls at the cradle there days. Todzlyis moclcl vsoulcl evcn be en- vied by older sister. It's so thor- nugiwly chic. It would only have come of Prcnch origin. of 6, B. l0 and l2 years. for this model. with ‘L- yard 35-inch contrasting. Our large Fashion attractive Paris designs for gestions, etc. preferred.» Price of book l0 cents. Price of pattern l5 cents. M12668. Size . . . . . ,.... . . . . Name Street Address l I ..... mu- ............. W City State gowns, onc for the, festive days. for Sunday and one for the home?’ In the original, pin dotted forcstl green wool cr-cpc ivas chosen. Whitci pique fashioned the collar and cuffs. 1 i Style No. 2869 is designed for girls Covert cloth, wool jersey, tweed; and tweed-like cottons are lovely I Size 8 requires l-‘i yards 54_lnch Book shows . how to dress up to the minute atipoielty is king“ very little expense. 1t contains most adults and children, embroidery, and sug- Be sure ‘.0 fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin one wife who didn't have enough money to clothe herself properly. You know, when I see a woman with a couple, or twice a couple, of klds trailing along I wonder where she thinks that marriage pays. And the poor kids whose parents can't even dress them comfortably or give them the right sort of food. Where in the world does love flt in in that kind of marriage? Or do the wife and husband have time for love when they are struggling to find n crust to eat and a roof i i them? , Now I likc n girl very much. but I don't want to offer her a home whore \ to cover J. W. Answer: as the sentimental side of marriage before you take that fatal hurdle over the fence. And I think you show n very line spirit toward the girl in not wanting to marry her until you can offer hcr adequate support. because, after all. poverty falls harder on the wife than it does on the husband. She is the onc who has to do the scrlmplng and saving and who lives in greatest terror of the wolf at thc door. She is the one who is the least fit- ted to do without the comforts of life. She ls the onc who has most dc- sirc for a nice house, nice clothes. for softness, easc and luxury. Under hcuvcn thcrc is no more pitiful figure than the overworked, undernourished, dragged down, shabby mothrr with her poor little anemic children clinging to hcr skirt, and it scents to me that no man who really loved a woman would take a chance on bringing this fate upon her. Before he married her he would wait until he was sure that he would be able to provide for a family. Of course. it is all very romantic to say that love is enough and that itwo young hearts should not be kept apart by a sordid consideration of mch things as food and rent and clothes, but in real life they are the very things that we do have to consider first and foremost. I think you are a very wise man, J. W, to consider the financial as welli hcr life. Princess Royal by her father some years prior to 1905. when he isued . royal pronouncement to the effect that. he was "pleased to declare" that she should be known hereafter as the Princess Royal. Notwithstanding her retiring dis- position, the Princess Royal devel- oped a strong personality and took ‘. firm and unalterable stand when she made af decision. Although her grandmother, Queen Victoria, planned ‘that the Princess should marry a. foreign prince, the Princess Royal, _when she fell in love with Lord Fife, ldid not ltcsitate to let it be known that she would marry the man of her choice or remain single. The marriage of Lord Fife and the Princess Royal took place July 27. 1889. and was a very happy one. The royal bride was l7 years her hus- ibands Junior. At thc time of the lwedding Lord Fife was made a. duke. lHedled in i912. One of the cherished lstorles in connection with the ro- imance is that Lord Fife followed an old Highland custom when he pro- posed and presented the princess with 1 sprig of white heather, which grows wild in the country districts where the princess spent much of her child- hood. ' Two daughters were born of the - skirt. . , 1131mm ~ for love. but on the other hand I wouldnt want a _ i, i - _ 1 1 . The collar and cuffs are charming’ ‘ . . 1 I" cw" cl“: cs n “as 551d m" we can keep at home Just now in dainty scalloped Outline‘ cheap home with a. couple of dirtymosed kids and a “he name was bestowed “pan the Sh“! ' And give it all i0 the Earl of Fife, And not stick it in German trousers." In finding partners for his daugh- ters withln the borders of the islands m‘? WWW K1118 Edward than only reverted in a custom of earlier 30v- ereigns and the whole world has be. held how this manner of matchmaln lng has been pursued into the present generation with the happiest results. The frequency of the name Louise 81110118 princesses of the Royal house has caused considerable confusion. It has been written of the princess Royal that her marriage was opposed by Queen Victoria, her grandmother. It was the marriage of Queen Vic. torlafs fourth daughter, the prime“ Louise, to the Marquis of Lame, (m. er Duke of Argyll) which the Queen was said to have frowned upon and not the marriage of her granddaugh- ter, the Princess Royal. who died Saturday. Only this year the publishing of 811N319? 0f Queen Victoria's diaries clears up this point. Under dam of Windsor Castle, June 1'7. 1889. Her Majesty wrote: "Bertie, Alix and the Blrls came to luncheon. but they ask- ed specially to speak to me before and I was still on the sofa. rtie (Edward) Said he had somethl g very important to communicam-that he I - , Roioico, molhonw-hero’: wonderful new: about _cod- Iivpr oil - _ You know how children hate cod- liver oil. What a. ntru le it is to make them take it! fit try this mulnfiod form-and you'll make the lame happy discovery that Mrs. Butterworth of Edgewood Rd» In? Brunch. Ontario, did. Mrs. utter-worth. like thou- V-undl of other mothers, Imows been able to make her daughter let Betty _ Betty took I spoonful. "Why Pleasunior to lake?- cod-liver oil. Give it the!!!)lunat- wimt wonders cod-liver oil can do for youngster» but she’: never like it. So wlien we called on he: recently, she gully consented to ti. s Emulsion of Cod-Liver us, tum was u» smiled. "i like it!" ' but that isn't ulll _ PaIeJhiznrun-down children need eat war-give Scott's y‘ muluion. 0W“ “PS R E dodofi U!’ a building“, . i ‘c 10°‘ qi Scott's Emulsion hasn't tim; “"1118 "511 " $88159. It brings ypu purest. orwegun cod-liver oil in its pleasantest form-g p". feet emulsion. Easier to take- easier to di eat. You et more good out of ott’! Emu aion and you feel the benefits quicker. Scott's Emulsion contains no alcohol. It is rich in vitamin A, the promoting vitamin that ei a guard against disease; It is ric in vitamin D, the sun. shine vitamin that prevents rick- ets. It also contain: vital mineral elements that aid in forming , sound, bones and teeth. This given Scott’: Emulsion especial advm. tage for growing children. infants, nursing and expoc- taut mothers. Get Scott’ Emul- sion to-day._At your V druggishinlargehoma size and small travel- ' ing size bottles. Sales Agents: Harold F. RilzhieandCompuny, an Limited. Toronto. "scouts emutslou They were not satisfied with new‘ lllflfflflle. P11110955 Arthur 0f C911- AMorning Smile l wished to ask my consent to his {119110115- 501111‘ arranging their 11M!‘ Love may satisfy the heart. but it doesn't stay the stomach, and after 1131181“. and Lady Maud Carnegie, Innis“ marriage Wm‘ Lord m: I 9| D L E R o U l A passengm. in a very elaborate way and others l marriage we are just as hungry as we were before. A shelter is just; a5 “cc- who was married in 1923 to Captain ‘ ' VIIIMIN-llfll i - i tram W95 setting’ Lord Carnegie of the Sea“ Guards iwas much pleased and readily gave lflkil-[I luidfl 111 $110 bobbed 1111i? WK- ‘ cssary, because there are still rains and sleets and snows. Clothes wear out.‘ l‘ l‘ ‘ready to lrz-uuc. h "All right brick there?" bnwlctl the conductor. "Hol' on! H01’ on!" shrilied a fem- ' lnlne voice from outside the waiting _ '3‘ room. "Jusr; wait till I- gets mall __ clothes on." _ And then, as the occilpants of the train craned their flocks cspcctantiy. Hnnshc appeared with a baskctfltl of laundry. Morrrmsm. Jan. fl-Father Fiéhcnu, noted French Dominican, lecturing here on “El/crash of the Mid- dlcAgcs"ch0.scths' book by Robert dc _ Blols on the "Education of Women" "for his chief theme. In those early days, women were already the slaves of fashion. more‘ elaborate hats replacing the modest Jihonnet. shoes becoming more fancy gnddresscs styled to suit refined Ixgtnstes. A writer cxclaims "what has become of tho simplicity of other jays, whcn women had only three iCc-smr-stlcs formed part of the fair iscvs box of tricks, even at Itimo. DcBlois declared that the educat- ion of women was a very delicate and ciifficult mutter, and it was not ani easy task to teach them to walk with r1386, elegance and grace, not to talk flii.“'1th a ‘h? timf-‘v and to °b5""° 9' Certain i‘ feed two or more and to be ablc to assure her of a bungalow or a flat and discrat-lon- in their looks; s _____________ BREADLINE POET TOO A Few months he's in a breadline. inillicitairc from drowning; he ntiilionairr- died. to fellow poets and authors. llonaire. praise t|1 ‘- % of 73m Clark Family i!) a Husbands RECIPE: Beans in earthen dish or bake pun. Mix Place contents of can of Clark's Pork and in iecspoonful of dry mustard. Place slices of oven--when for quicker and i" i through-servo. lot tho Clark Kitchens help you if (itnmrs roan and BEA ‘ (With Tomato, '" i iii”. CLAP. K ._lttn11;p_, bacon or salt pork on top, than pop dish info l1 e ate d P. Propane! In Canada for more than 50 yuan. butler much. ‘till or Plain Sauce) Enhblinhmonh at Mammal, I.G., Si. hml, 7.0., and Harrow, Ont. it.’ ML‘. __ __ v.1, —ul>w . m1¢-.».-...vup~v\.....~».. GENEROUS-WH ILE IT LASTED ago a. Greenwich IVillnge. poet. had 5800.030. Today The post once saved a. Pittsburghj cot; the $800.000 1'01‘ 1111‘ Pfilllw “11911 lihfij There are mighty few young men who are willing to give up keeping He gave away most of the moneyi Now he's looking for another mil- r "'\“‘¢”"Y'N1‘Y'4~W%~trm:t~|».~ ., - |and even the most enamored heart has to be covered from th public gaze. ma! and if there is no money to supply even the necessities of existence, romance fis likely to run pretty thin. For, sad to relate, we have to be comfortable Iphyslcally and mentally in order to be sentimental. It is not. of course. necessary to be rich before one ventures upon mar- A man doesn't need to take his bride to a palace nor provide hcr limousine and diamonds. but he does need n. settled income that will ‘street-car fnrc and a bead chain or two thrown in for good measure. i Just how much money a couple need to marry on depends upon the istandard of living to which they have been accustomed. It ls never safe to go far below that because we are all the slaves of our habits. and it takes more strength of character than most of us possess to be happy if we are iforced to do without the comforts and luxuries which we have been used to. ‘And it takes more ability to love than most of us are capable of to be able to go on loving the one for whom we have made the sacrifice of our tastes. our ease and our pleasures and still think it worth while. an automobile to keep a baby carriage. Mighty few who have been used to going out to places of amusement every evening who can have Just as much fun staying at home wiping the dishes. Mighty few who have been accus- tomed to belonging to clubs and playing golf and dressing well who do not resent seeing all of their money go to furnishing a bare and poor living for their families and who do not feel that they are paying too high a price for marriage. ~ Moreover, the man who fell in love with a pretty, dainty, well-dressed girl often finds himself disillusioned when poverty reduces her to a shabby, , tired, domestic slave. So. taking it by and large. a man does well if he looks at the grocery bill side of marriage as well as the billing and cooing side. DOROTHY DIX. O O Dear Miss Dix—After twelve years of great happiness my wife has bccn untrue to me. I did. not know of it until my wife confessed everything. She said she had suffered untold agony over her wrong-doing; that she loved mc only. and she does not know what impulse made hcr transgress. She says she has been true ever sinec and has learned a great lesson and she wants me to give her just one chance. The affair hat; nearly killed mc. I cannot talk it over with any one I know. so I beg you to give me your advice. HEARTBROKEN HUSBAND. Answer: I urge you to forgive your wife and try l0 fOTBBt- Mlmy WlVf-‘S 01/61" look their husbands‘ unfaithfulness. Why cannot a man occasionally over- look his wife's unfaithfulness? Try to see that there is a great difference between a. woman yielding once to a temptation that was for the moment irresistible and a. woman who habitually carries on love affairs with men. Even a. good woman may yield to the sudden impulse that is born of the mental state she is in; of some mood of longing for romance and adventure and love; something that would change the drab of humdrum married life into flaming purple; some mood that came with moonlight and sobbing music; but. having been swept from her moorlngsbv this gust of passion, such a woman returns in tears of repentance, as your wife has. Her shame, her humiliation, her self-loathing sears her very soul. and there is not the remotest chance of her very straying off the strait and nar- row path again. or of her ever liateningto the voice of the tempter. So you need not be afraid to trust your wife. She will be as true as steel to you and if you forgive her. her gratitude will make her your slave for life. And before you condemn her, look well into your own mlniod life and see if you are entitled in out I ltono it her. Certainly your wife hu done wrong. She hu done wrong twice. Pint, in committing her sin, and, second. by eonfenin; it. lho has and her own soul at the expanse of yours. for if aha bu! not told you of tho wronl- dolng you would never have known. DOROTHY DIX. , I I O i Dear Miss Dix-Can you give a cure for amount We m two lfi-yoor old llfll 1nd nuke boy friends very cull). but hi! b tho liqublo: Mil 1- .. a‘ ~ -»-~.- m-t-mwr-un-rswwn, , ‘N, i “gm” ma‘ t...- ... ,, I.’ .- cliesi son of the bcnth Earl of South- Iiniy 5:35:11? Sgispltizgiqlzgyatfi life‘; e5 ' n pleased as it was the one wish of The Princess Royal at one time irulse herself and Fife also had 10h: was the most active theatrc-goer of (‘Jed for her. Bertie. telegraphed to the royal family and her advice often 1' IccDufF as Fife is always RHOWH $0 was sought by members of the royal! 1 friends.“ ' circle as trwhich of theseasons, I11 111103191‘ Dlflw 111 1191‘ @1111’? plays were really worth seeing. FoNQuven vicwrla suvs: “Just before many years she was a subscriber t'. 1 tmer Bertie brought 10rd Fife 11190 Covent Garden, having at her dispos- lie audience room that I might wish al a box facing the royal box. She lJm joy and he thanked me X01‘ 8114118 was the first member of the royal rv consent to his murrla-se to Louise- famlly to take an interest in moving In was very nervous when he kissed picture entertainments. In recent my hand, but seemed very much years she had devoted much of her pleased." time to philanthropic work. | The husband of the Princess Royal Tm Princess Royal was born atlwas raised from his earidozn to the Marlborough House, February 20, ‘cgnity of Duke on his marriage 1867, and was christened Louis Vic- which was conducted in the private toria. Alexandra. Dagmar. She was a napel of Buckingham Palace. favourite with her brother, King George, as well as with Queen Mary and her two sisters, Princess Victoria and Princess Maud Charlotte, who was married to Charles, Prince of Denmark, now King Haakon of Nor- tway. King George often characteriz- ed his sister as his "ministering an- gel." with reference particularly to the time when as a boy he faced many difficulties and had no expec- tations of ascending the throne. The marriage of the Princess to the Earl of Fife in 1889 immensely pleas- ed the public. She was the first of For The Cook WHITE CAKE Cream three-eighth: n cup of but, ter, and add, gradually, one cup of softed sugar, then, alternately, on» half a cup of milk, and one cup and one-half of putty flour, which hu been mixed with one teaspoonful and one-half of baking powder. Flavor Edward's children to marry and the (act that a man of the highest lineage but belonging completely to the isl- ands was selected as hm‘ Chvlw 1'8- with one teaspoonful of vanilla and fold in the stiff-beaten whites of two eggs. When well mixed pour into a buttered pan lined with buttered -_..._.__-____, degrees _I"ah. Pour slowly over the stiff-beaten whites of two eggs, beat- ing all the time with the egg beater. Mien syrup ls all in} remove beater and beat with a wooden spoon until the right consistency in spread. Re- serve one-third of the icing. flavor, ing it with a little lemon Juice, and to the remaining two-thirds. add two tablespoonfuls of fine-sliced glue pineapple, one tablespoonful of slic- ed glace cherries and two tablespoon- fuls of chopped pecan nut meats. Add a. pinch of salt, and spread over the top of the cake. cover the top-of this and the lldeo of the cake with the plain icing. and mark into squares, and decorate. Ploacunlor to take-Innin- to dlgul nicer l -.._.‘ Hiquette ' synonym‘ u. After an introduction to a stranger, and he takes leave with the statement, "I am very glad to havl met you", what should you any? A. "thunk you" is all that is nec- essary. ~ Q. Should the womln who is marrying for the second time have an elaborate wedding? A. No; she should avoid. it. Q. When should the service 1111M be removed from. the table? A. Before the meatcourseyvhen hot meal: plates take their place. There's Nothing’ than 1 Chriflies, SooAW RS ccived emphatic popular approbation. Great as was the reverence ac- corded Queen Victoria there is n0 galnsaylng that in the earlier years of her reign her partlallty 101' G"- man, prlncellngs as husbands f0!‘ U16 daughters of the English Royal house aroused some resentment among the British people. Soon after this wedding was announced l fam- cake paper (parchment), and bake in u. moderate oven about forty minutes. ICING This icing keeps soft and oreuny because there is so much syrup 1'01‘ the amount of egg-white. Boil two cups of sugar, twojhirdo a cup of water, undone-eighth I ten- upoonful of cream of tartar to 286 t; first date they never return because we are always so sarcastic in what we my 1 PEG AND KITTY. Answer: - I shouldn't think the boys would bother you much. becnuse n0 W011i“ ll so unlovely and unattractive as the shsrp-tongued one. I suppose you mean by sarcasm that you make cutting remarks to thp boys and ridicule their appearance, their manners or their personal ldiolyn. crasles. and that you are generally amlrt-alecky. You think that ahowl how clever you are. but making fun of people in the cheapest sort of wit. Any fool can say things about us that ‘will make people laugh, bccnulo we are all more or less ridiculous in our little poses and pretensions, but Jult remember thlt every time you hold. up any one l! a figure of mirth you make an enemy. We. will forgive anything sooner than being made ridi- culous. ‘ No lurer way can be found to make yituraell unpopular than in aiwlyl be saying bitter, sax-cutie things, so the sooner you stop this and 101m to laugh with people, instead of at them. and to any pleasant instead or dil- agreuble things, the mm- for you. men-fly dmmm hi“ W! 1'" I» woman when toncuo min like n two-edcedhvord. l - . wwhswltwusaiieflwwwfifiaflii‘ _ ~ ~ ~ vmmgp a wflh soups M.“ cheese saladsm andimiilk. f] "i. and other a yfl ['0 Delicious! Cris ,.\ .v " . 4 A.