ci The Housewife And Her A cti vi t ies t an definitely approved, aometimea don: in lace, aomctimea in loca- taffeta. Combinations of color are observed, such feminine combina- tions as pink with black, for ex- ample. In dinner costumes, too, the color contrast theme is noted. One amart dinner ensemble with bolero jacket is done in black crepe, the bodice yellow and the wide glidie and ltipline applique a. _soit violet blue. l TINY TDYS CAROL ‘v.1. "God bless ua every one,” prayed Tiny Tim. flrimalcti anti dwarfed in body, yet so tzill pf soul. we tiptce earth b0 look on him Efli towering over all. n-mrcoefirfi-fl H . fie loved the loveless world. not rlreziiiieil, indeed, [lint it, at iJLni, cctitl give to him tile while w" U.“ ,, , A, . is he tunic sometimes adopts a Bu" 212k, 1° ‘mncm “hen h only definitely fitted and clinsing line. in wrist length, and further strength is given the tunic idea in frocksin which the tunic is allied with a pleated foundation, in dresses with the tunic introducing massed ful- nesaatbacihandagaininadress in which the tunic lino appeara at the back only. 'I'l1\: bolero appears in expres- sions sponsorcd by Schiaparclli, flaring at the front over the bosom. and introduced as a separate item wcm with a dress, also as a sec- tlcn of a jacket. Sometimes, too a jacket it longer, in Eton style tree at the back iintl at ihc front cciiiiiied by the fiisteniug of a bfil. was bu! a cheery smile. 81nd llillg he ‘,.il'.l_‘t'(i. “God bless us fiery oiivl" ' plffiitllllg ztil the crccds within the “Om ._ -.. -_-.»- 6 heart, and a0, despis- ti saint tzinn mun. i.. in Paradise, - .- lllt‘ rhythmic ll=l.“l\l2lg. ‘,\' arzi, Wm si.l‘.i-ii--.iht- angels iiicro Iiivi‘. wals ~-the mom- FiUIOIYS BEAUTYS DESCEND- ANT T() “ARE DEBUT NEXT S SON Mothers oi young girl. who are Oollllilg‘ out next. year are thinking already of plans for the London Season. Memories of a lovely eighteenth- typss ) centuiy mother and daughter will [be recalled by the csming out in tlie near future of one important debutante, 17-year-old Lady Anne Spenctr. Lady Anne belongs to a family of beauties, including Geor- , giane, Duchess 0i Devonshirc, who was painted in childhood with her mother, Lady Spencer, by Sir Jothua Reynolds. Lady Anne is the great-great- g-zeat-niece of the beautiful Geor- gland. l-ier mother, Lady Spencer, is a lariy-in-vvaiiing to the Queen. At present Lady Spencer is at Althoiip, her home in North- arnptonsirire. Queen Mary, who is godmother to her son. Viscount Althoip, stayed there during the summer. F numb’: i-‘LASIIES For 0v. ziiiig \\'l(lC-Sl{ll'i/€d __. ~-—< _._ , a I if. "Crown Brand” Corn Syrup makes happy, healthy chil- dren. No doubt about that, for doctors aay it creates ' Energy and helps to build strong, sturdy bodies. Chil- dren love it and never tire of its delicious flavor. GOOD LIGHTING 1S VERY IM- PORTANT IN THE HOME Bight is one of our moat knpor- ant senses and depends 0n good vision. No normal person - would question the fact that blind- ness is a great human affliction. yet the standard of natural and artificial lighting in most homes is so far below that required for per- fect seeing that the unfortunate people living there are wilfully in- flicted upon themselves partial blindness. - CHRISTMAS GREENS Christmas trees, as a family, are the oldest of all trees. scientists say that their direct ancestors were the first flowering plants on earth. They are believedtohave originated PM.» CANADA STARCll comma? Limit-i filer. Tl: -_ _ Gayly Dressed w»? stirred Drills Mayfair No. E1 i181 To cuddle and cherish when the Christmas tree has been put away! singly or as u happy family these unusual but very appealing rag dolls will delight children of a.l lages. If you have never made 9, stuffed Lay you will iiiui iii-aw ll‘l‘l'lfli‘}'.lil)iy simple and quick both to construct and to dross. Select bright odds and ends out of your own work-basket and watch them tzr-iw into amusing little creatures to tuck into stockings and Christmas packages. Almost as much fun to make as they are to own. The pattern ncludes cuttlnB chart and eBsy-to-follow sewing instructions. For complete pattern and instructions for all of these designs, send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) to The charlottemw: (lunrilinn Needlework Department. Pse this coupon. Print your name and address plainly. To The Chnrloiii-tnwn Guardian Ncr-tilt-wnrk Dept. IIICSKLN NO. 1511182. M|m9______.--.--__-__--____-- SlrcetAddrr-ss———-—————--—— - — — - - '-—-_ becomes Super-Soup 47 when you add ‘a a few drops 31 of SAlI CE ‘H! ADDID TOUCH TMAY MEANS ififlfll iiTirln? a period of very severe - mate, their needlelike leaves pre- senting less surface to cold and qx- posure than the broad leaved trees that evolved in later periods of the earth's hlsibfl. JANE ointme- Hovv can l ever thank you enough for ?uggestin Cuticura Soa an Ointment o Culioura gets to work. The whole family uses it now: Always. Murwfioap 25!, Oint- ment 25f. llhil. sample. rite 'Cuticura”. Dept. l2, 2st. ht. Paul St. W“ Montreal. QFL/CQ i These Apyiaaling Gifts Are Quickly Made Thrills for the kiddies! Gay toy chest and adorable quintuplets’ bassinet. Both these gifts are easy and inexpensive to make. A candy box decked with a lace- edgcd ruffle and half-moon pillow to cuddle five tiny baby dolls, makes a bassinet to delight any little girl. The toy chest is a roomy wooden box enamelled gally. A border of elephants, easily outlined and cut from colored paper. is glued on, then the whole box is shellacked. Pictures cut from magazines cQuld decorate this handsome and pr“. tical gift. Our 32-pin booklet gives atop-by- IWP illustrated directions for mak- ing these smart gifts. Direction; for many other quickly, lnexpgn. sively made novelties for grown-ups —-sofa pillows, vanity sets. luncheon sets. shoe been. knitting bags. handkerchief and napkin can; =P2£t:.'=::s°lsv.—t<= Hem» - ew- Send 20c in coins for your copy of Hand-Made Gift Novelties to The Guardian, Home service, Ad- drem. Be sure to write plainly your Name, Address, and the Name of booklet. Name Street Addffll city ssh... “ m-m-m L; this qood BREAD" "MY mother makes the beat bread ever, but she says ahe couldn't make it nearly ao good if the didn't use REGAL Flour. No matter how hungry I get between meala, a good thick alice of mother’: bread, with Jam _or peanut butter on it, always rnakea me feel good an ever. I'm aure glad ahe bakea with REGAL Flour. You should juat taate her bum and bilcuita, too." REGAL C|¢y_-_.____-——_Pfq1|n“__—— 2"- "m k._.~ " ‘HWW- "I'm-g ‘ MIVZ-‘HWWW’ Ill-OUR THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIEY Q al Dorothy ca’. Letter Box Marriage is More Than a Petting Party, so Young Brides Will Have to Learn to Take Cooling Ardor as a Matter of Course Dear msaDix-I am averyunhappy bridqandunlemyoueaaihelp _mefdonotknowwhattodo. 1am loyearauldandhavobemmamed eight weeks. I was very happy for the first six weeks, but. ainca two weeks A, ago I can see that my huabanrfa love for ma ' dyinaanditbreakamyhaa-rt. Hadcemt good-by he leavua in the mon- w? i i i rs i é please nothing oeema to do any good. We o a promise before we got married that would never let our romance fade, and going right before my cyan. Gee. Whatcanido? ANUNHAPPY is i o-uSQ E 3 ' arable over her imaginings. Yo ct m; 1m, m1 herself with a. bugaboo of her 0WtiiaffVgllliglel, e a 1e c d who ‘cues If you were old enough to‘ have any knowledge of life, you would know that your marriase is Just 20mg through the inevitable period of settling down that every marriage does when a. bride and groom descend from the heights of courtship to the flat realities o1 matrimony. Before marriage all lovers swear to each other, as you did, that they are going t0 keep their “lma-"Ce WNDPQd "l! Cellophane so that it shall never tarnish, and that they are never going to stop billing and owing and thrilling at each others footsteps. But they flnd that nobody can live up w a high emotion pitch (or very long. The human constitution can't stand it. Romance wears to tattei-s in a woi-kaiday world. No man looks like a romantic hero; no woman stays a dream girl when once their wives and husbands have got a close-up on them. The kick dies out of thrills when once they become , a habit, and you can get more fed up on kisses than you can on thirty quails in thirty days. ‘ Bo there you are, my poor little bride, and you can't help it or change it. You will have to make the best c! it and realize that; because your hIISbB-fid doesn't 11155 you every time he goes and comes is no sign he has ceased to love you. It is because kisses used to be a rarity when he was courting you and now they are commonplace. Just part of the daily menu and nothing to get excited about any more than the ham and egg: for breakfast. And it is no sign he has ceased to love you because ht doesn't make life a perpetual petting party for you. He is doing some- . thing a lot better. He is trying to make you a comfortable living, and, . believe me, my dear ,the test of a husband's love is not how many pretty i speeches he makes nor how often he kisses her, but how hard he is willing to work for his wife. So wipe your eyes and quit telling your husband that he doesn't l-o-v-e you. Out out the kissing yourself. Maybe he has got satisfied with too much sweets. Get busy learning how to be a good, thrifty housekeeper and manager. Kissing isn't the proof of love. Judas be- trayed his Lord with a kiss. O O O I O Dear Dorothy Dix-J am 23 years old, 1n 10v; with a, man f have been going with for three years who also loves mo, but we are not engaged In fact, he hasn't even asked me to marry him, yet he doesn't want mi to go with other men, and when I do he sulks and calls me a cheat Cain I be happy if married to a man like that? R. M. O. Answer: Your problem is not whether you would be happy married to a man with that sort of dog-in-the-mariger disposition or not, because the indic- ations are that he hasn't the slightest intention in the world of ever mar- rying you. No man who was really in love with a girl and whose heart's desire was to make her his wife could go with her for three years without even ever mentioning the subject of wedding rings in her. Circumstances l might be such that he could not nun-y her at the time, but to save his life he couldn't keep from talking to her about it and making plans for the future and building the castles in Spain which is the universal ' pastime of all lovers during their engagement. Evidently your boy friend is one of the many men whose attentions are without intentions, and who selflshly monopolize a sirl and drive all other men away. Then they get tired of her and kiss and ride away, leaving the poor girl flat. Today's _$horl Wave Radio Program uan-iiag-nauna THURSDAY, DIOIIIIII I Iflhlllllnlillll 0:00 p. m. -»A1ter'a Bahlaika Band. ZTJ. 4a.: 1a.. 0.00 mel- ‘lbkyo 4:40 P. m. -Nntional Pronam. Jzx, 10.7 m., 10.10 meg; JZ-J. 10.4 m, 11.00 meg- landed 7:00 p. m- -'1‘he Ooddela hr- tune, a drama or hack-stake life. 05D, 20.0 b., 11.70 1768.; G50. 01.0 m,‘ 9.08 meg; G53, 81.0 m. 0.01 meg. hrla 0.00 p. m. -Talk by um. de Gramont (in Bullish). TPA4, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. Prague, Olechollovakia 0:80 p. m. -Orcheatral Music OLRAA, 26.04 m, 11.84 meg. Berlin 0:40 p. m, —'I'-.he German Labor Front. DJD, 20.4 m., 11.77 meg. inndon 10:00 p. m. —Meinories of Queen Victoria, a talk by the Right Rev. sir David Hunter Blair, Bt- GSD, 30.0 m, 11.70 meg, GBO, 31.3 m., 0.08 meg; G-SB, 31 6 m., 9-51 meg. Tokyo 12:40 a. m. —Talk of industry JZK, 19.7 m, 10.10 meg. Sydney Australia 4:50 a. m. (Fbidaw-Chlmea from G. P. 0. Sydney VK2ME. 31.28 m., 9.09 meg. Every girl knows that when she is young and pretty and gay and full of life is her marrying time. It is when she is most attractive to men, and if she lets that season pass without making hay while her sun shines she is very apt to be an old maid. Hence I think that any glrl is just lacking in good, hard commonsense who wastes her time on a man who c0 and courts and never pops the question. Three months is long enough for any man to make up his mind about how much he likes a girl and whether he wants her or not, and i! he doesn't flle a declaration of his intentions in that time she is wise to send him packing. Certainly a man who won't marry a girl himself, yet arrogates to him- self the right to keep her from going with any other man, hu his nerve, and if she has a spark of indgperidence she will recent it. I Dear Miss Dix-I am a widow of 35. Mother of nine children. Am very much in love with a. young man of 19. Do you think 1 will be doing wrong to marry him? D. M- Answer: 4 Ithink you must have an overgrown mother oomplel if you contem- plate taking another child to rear when you already have nine. lf you are really thinking oi.’ marriage to a boy of that age, you are more a can- didate for a lunatic asylum than you are for matrimony, and some kind friend should look you up in a padded cell until you come to your senses. DOROTHY DIX picking flamers even as he fell in his doom." Mandy had been given leave in attend her sister's wedding, and on her return entertained her em- ployer with a full account of the A Morning/Smile He was reading to his wife an promedings. After listening to a account of a famous naturalists glowing description 0i the scwns. “gm, the wedding breakfast and the guests, Mandy's employer said: "You haven't told me anvthinfl about the bridegroom, Mandy. What is he like?" "Why, miram dat man never did show up." ‘Willie for a rare plant, he alipped over the cliff. and asihe fell he gathered momentum." "Oh, George," she interrupted. "the poor manl What an enthusi- ast he must have been. Fancy -.. _ _,_ L. Y,WHA'T'S HAPPENED HERE? THIS TASTES SWELL H ran Coin A few drops brln ~ Eomforting reliefs. ears cl mu ’ swollen membranea- helps keep sinuses open. Vicns cove VA-TRO-IIOI. THE COOK'S CORNER .-_-' NAMON roasr. Slightly stale bread, butter. 1 toa- spoon ground cinnamon, 1 cup granulated sugar. Mix together the cinnamon and sugar and transfer to a shaker. Cut. the bread l-dt-inohthick, trim off crusts. and toast quickly so that it will be soft in the middle. Butter generously elirlze the diinnamou mixture over. put; together in pain and out in triangles. Place in a hot oven for a minute or t/wo and serve on a folded napkin on a hot. plate. CORN CHOWDER. Fat salt pork 1 inch by 3 inchet, ~i sliced onion, 4 potatoes cut in 1-4 inch slices. 1 can corn, 1 quart milk, a uackers, salt and pepper. Out pork into mall pieces and itry it out in a pan over a slow fire. Add the sliced onion and cook 5 minutes without burning. Strain fat into a. saucepan. Add potatoes and 2 cups boiling water to fat and cook until potatoes are soft. Then add the milk and corn. Heat to ‘boiling point. Season with salt and pepper. Moisten trackers in cold milk. Serve crackers on top o! chowder. VIENNA DOLLS. One ounce yeast, 1 pound broad (flour, 1 ounce butter, 1 ounce sugar 1 teaspoon salt, sufficient warm milkandwatertomix. Bekeinl veryhot oven 10 to 10 minutes. Putyealtinacupwithaltttlo sugar and 5 or 6 tableopoc of the warm milk and water. Pour into ‘a. basin with 1-4 pound flour, stir to a. batter. Stand in a warm place covered for one hour. Put 3-4 pound flour into abaaimrubintbebut- ter, add sugar and salt. Make a hole . in the flour. pour in the sponge andsufflcient warm milk and water to mix. Knead for a0 minutes. Let rise m to three hours covered in a. warm place. when risen burn on to a floured board. divide into small lpi90$. Shape into rolls. Bet to rise 20 to 30 minutes. Brad: over with milk and bake. Fashion's return to the l900's_with collars mldwoytwixtchlnand wishbone turna the highlight strongly on the throat. . Does yours stcmd up? There la no glamour or elegance in a wrinkled, crepey neck . . . but ' CHARLES o! the R112 nmoar FIRMING cum willropdiriheravcxgeaoiikna and weather and keep you: neck fin-n, amooth, youthlui. SPECIAL s50 it“ 1.00 OnnWackOnhv 'Largeraius5.00and10m' THE JEN/KINS PHARMACY i. .,\;~1*§§ 1m“ ~:i:~,;_i.~iw-.in.r Lhtllliiil‘. ZHARLQUEIUHPUEI v... ._.._. AFTERNOON DRESSES ARE piece I NOW ESSENTIAL hyacinth blue hat and gloves For the first time in years, the black purse and shoes. afternoon dress has become not only important but essential. Ohooae a chic, elegantly simple black silk, velvet or velveteen model, then nave it for special occasions. Depend on accessories for variation. One smart shop shows a lovely, very p‘a.iri two- GOOD" BOOKS ‘Let every man, i! poubio, gath- or some good books under hi: moi and obtain zooms for himself and family to some social library. Al- most every luxury should be sacri- ficed to thisP-SJLL, How tio Make a Splendid ~ Cough Remedy at Home A Big Saving, and n’. So p“ 1m m» "Ilgeggwqeqh fig; Easy! N0 Cooking! or W" ma” on never spoils, and children love t. Cough medicines usually contain a Tm! 1B I V"! Q1605". dependable. large uantity of augar syrup-a good trick-acting cough remedy for the whole ingred out, but one which you can cae- lm “huh Y0“ 1081 it! 0001f“! fly make at home. Take 2 cupa of gran- i"! 0 N"? ll Q10 Ill‘ Plllllel- 0100M!" u ated augar and 1 cup of water, and the phlegm, soothes the irritated anem- atir a few mgmgnu “n11 (“golygqt branea and makes breathin easy. You'll No cooking! No trouble at all. 5° 111°" hill 301111364 W ti! "I quick Then {at from your druggifl; 2% eftectin clearing up bad coughs. ounces o Pliiex, pour it into a 16 ca. Pine: is a compound containing Nor- bottle, and add your a rup. Thin glvea way Pine, in concentrated form, a. well you 18 ounces of real y splendid medi- known and reliable soothing a at for cine for bad winter ccugha. It makea a winter coughs. Money refun ed i! it real saving for you, because it gives doesn't please you in every way. a FASHION GUIDES - FOR . THE Home DRESSMAKER ooay little outfit include aingle or dotible breasted coat, leggings and hat. Sister will proba- bly like her coat to be single breasted while brother will prefer the double breasted model. The matching legginga have zippers at the sideamso easy to put on.... ' elastic holds them snug at the waistline. The cunning hat "pulls down” well on the head, and "aiayl put." The pattam and the match ial will make a delightful gift 00 your niece or nephew. Soft plain woolens in dark or light shades, tweedy woolens, etc, there's a choice! Style No ‘and 1 1-4 yards a 39-inch lining. Send fifteen cents i150! In atampa or coin (coin preferred) wrap coin carefully, addreaa to Charlottetown Guardian givinm- Style m." ma Size... ... ... Name Street Addral oitv >75; TIMPTATION Whoever yielda to temptation da- buea himself with a dduasement from which he can never rise. A man can be wronged and live; but the unrestricted, unchecked im- pulse to do wrong la the first and the second deaflL-Ifonce Mann.