/<-.|..-»-i'w>2:r:22 Hsiurfit B P 3i z I gr b- r r'=-Q.I z ram: iriurrr >4‘ v vv 1W0 an ’s Rea m NOTETl-IE FOR THE MODERN HOME- MAKER ' ODERN women are Intelligent and thrifty. They have neither time nor money to waste. The new, easy-opening ACADIA Baking Powder tin saves time. One twist and the top lifts ell. same LOW PRICE 25c THE POUND TIN THE double-acting principle of Barbour's ACADIA Baking Powder also saves money. The first action takes place in the mixing bowl when the liquid is added. The second in the oven when heat is applied. The perfect balance between these two actions as- sures successful baking results. The up-to-date woman is quick to appreci- ate both these savings. MEN'S KNIT s CAEFS l\ln_vf:iii" Ncczlle-nrt ‘Wyn N0- 195 Hand knit scarfs are always fashionable and ever iii demand by the nrascullne sex. Wake these up either in three contrasting ‘colors, or they would be equally effective in solid co ars as well as all white. You c111 knit these in wool, wool and silk mixture, or of all silk for formal Weill‘. Tlzr 1mueri1 includes working instructions ,color suggestions, detail "hurl. for making fringe and sample of yarn used for llic Original m°d§1~ mid 2'1 cents in stamps or Clllll (C0111 preferred) to Tiiu Charlottetown Cluurrliirn Needlework Department. l'o Thefharloiteiown Guardian Veediework Dept. DESIGN x0. 19s c,_m,_;____ __.__ ____._ ____ ___._- Elrcet Address — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — ~ — — _ " _ City — — — — - — ——-—-——-—Province——--———--——- AKI N G wmi ‘IE JwaéeIlLga/iy Mririion Moire lierrer. lighter breed lnil / rnlls wirhouz kneading or over- nighr neuinlt. Lin: Quaker Flour nnil the Quaker Mrrhnil of EnlV linking. . . iii: rrieihod ihnfnhcen tried mil rvrnven by rhnuuruh o! CanadianhnusewivrmScndiorinv 1m ynn! (npy of i-REE hackle: felling how. Value Yunnan; Book rue: The Qn-imon-cnrnn-nv-D=v=- TBI "‘éi.'i'.‘é"l‘ii'l' n mo» ~11» Quaker Method of Eur BM“ 91km:- Nnml __________________________ .. Adah-n Dealer's Name ------- v- ‘,_-----_----q Best .12 Always the Same for Bread, Cakes and Pastry lm -: today's Short Weve Radio Progren in an. il In!!! lumber THURSDAY, DECEMBER l0 BOSTON 6 p. m-World-wide news. WIXAL, 35.4 m., 11.79 meg. LONDON 8:22 p. m.—Lew Stone and his Band. from the Cafe de Paris, London. GSP. 19.6 m., 15.81 meg; GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; GSC. 313 m., 9.58 meg. PARIS 7:15 p. m-Muslcal pro-gram. TPA-é, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. ' SLIIENECTADY 7:30 p. nL-Science WZXAF, 31.4 m., 9.53 meg. BER LIN 7:30 p. m.—A German Village a" a living museum. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. MONTREAL 9 p. m., 6.15 meg; CJRX, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. BERLIN 9:15 m-coneert of Light Music. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. LONDON 9:45 p. m-“A Scottish Note- book." A talk by John R. Allan. GSD,25.5 m., 11.75 meg.;~ GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg. TOKYO 12 midnight- "Overseas Pro- gram." JVH. Nszaki, 20.5 m. 14.6 m. THE COOK'S CORNER . BANANA ALL BRAN NUT BREAD -4 cup shortening -2 cup sugar egg (well beaten) cup all bran 1~2 cups flour tsps. baking powder tsp. salt tsp. soda cup chopped nut meals -2 cups mashed bananas tbsps. water 1 tsp. vanilla extract Cream shortening and sugar well. Add egg and all bran. Sift flour with baking powder, salt and soda. Mix nuts with flour and add al- ternately with mashed bananas to which the water has been added. Stir in vanilla. Pour into greased loaf tin. Let stand 30 minutes and bake in a moderife oven (875 F.) one hour. Let cool before cutting. Yield: 1 loaf 8 1-3 inches. ALL BEAN APRICOT BREAD 1 cup chopped dried apricots 1 1-3 cups sour milk or buttermilk 3 tbsps. shortening 1-3 cup sugar 1 68E l 1-2 cups all bran 2 cups flour 2 tsps. balflng powder l-Z tsp. soda l-2 tsp. salt 1-4 tsp. nutmeg 1~2 cup chopped nut meats. Soak chopped apficots in milk about 15 minutes. Cream shorten- ing and sugar thoroughly; add egg, beat until creamy. Add all bran apricots and milk. Let soak until most of moisture is taken up. Sift flour with bak‘ng powder. soda sslt and nutmeg; combine with nut meats; add to first mixture, stir- ring only until f'our disappears. Bake in greased loaf pen with waxed paper in the bottom, in moderate oven (350 F.) about 1 hour and 10 minutes. Y"eld: lloef (4 1-2 bv 9 1-2 inches). CHOCOLATE PUDDING |2 squares r2 ounces) unsweetened chocolate 3 cups milk 3 shreded whole wheat biscuits 2 eggs 1-2 cup sugar 3-4 tsp. salt l tsp. vanilla extract Put chocolire and milk in top of double boiler and cook over hot water until milk is scolded. Beet with rotary beater to comhlne melted chocolate and milk. Put bircuifs in greased casserole and pour hot mixture over them; let soak aliout..15 nrinutes. Best ezge slightly with remainder of iri- grcdients and add to soaked bis- cuits, stirring well. Place uncov- ered caeserole in shallow pan about half full of hot water. Bake in slow oven (325 l“. ) about 1 hour, or until knife inserted in the center comes out c'een, Serve warm or cold, as desired. Yieldzd servings. NORTII BEDEQUE SCHOOL The honor roll of North Bedeque School for month of November: Senior Delvlrtrnent Grade X-l Muriel England. 2 Mildred MacMurdo, 3 Helen Bar- wise. Grade VIII-l Norms MscMurdo. 2 David Bsrwise, 3 Billie Schurmr Grade V1I—l Janet MncMurdo, Louise Perry, 3 John Iecky. Grade VI (Sin) 1 Helen Arsen- ault, I Dorothy Reeves, 3 01ers Al- - Social and Persona 1111'. ( JHARIAIFITLNYIWN (iUAKlIi Al! ~1vvv~1 we've nv vv vvvv" ..-ies““ “ “ I Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box Early or Long Engagements Are Dangerous for Young People Who Still Have in Acquire a College or Professional Education, so it’s Best to Shun Them Deg: Miss Dix-I am verymuch in love with s Kiri sud think abs loves me. However. nothing has been said about love s! I have loll-i’ years of schooling ahead of me. My friend Says that I should tell heir how I feel about her, but I think it "will not be fair to ask her to wait that long for ine, especially as We shell be Mplrlted 101‘ lirce of the four years. 1 feel that in that ime either she or I might change our minds ind we would be bound by a promise if we ecame engaged now. What do you thinl bout this? A STUDENT. " JlSWBf. I think you are taking the wise course Jild one that will, make for the hlDPl-nlee 0i both you and the girl. Any young mm who starts off for a long term in college bummer- with a long engagement lays a heavy htndi- qap upon himself and so jeopardizes tin girl's future. If college does anything for a man it changes him. 1t educates, broadens, refines him. It changes his tastes, his habits, hi; outjoqig on life. He is thrown with different people from the ones with whom he has been accustomed to associate. He meets a different type of girl from the ones he went with at home. - So it happens oftener than not that four years at college returns lo the girl he left behind illm that he doesn't want her at all. He has outgrown her. - His taste has changed. Bally doesn't look as pretty to him as she did four years ago. Her manners that seemed so fascinating to him later appear provincial Her artlese con- versation bores him. But if she has waited for him and been faithful he hasn't the heart to break her clinging arms away from him and refuge to marry her. when the boy who has been sway Arid no marriages are more miserable than those entered into from a sense of duty and because a man fees in honor bound to merry s slrl c. whom he has grown tired. Such a husband always feels that hi; wife h; forced him into marrying her and unless he is of a. slnguarly noble cl-ia. scter he takes it out upon her in neglect and suriiness. It ls far bettc when a. man cannot ask a girl to marry him to leave her free if they mufi be separated for a long Lime. Then he is not keeping her from making i. marriage if some man she fancies comes along. Nor does he obligat. himself to mairy her if his taste in woman chooses. If they both really .ve each other their affection will survive and their marriage wil be our: u. volition and not compulsion. Anyway, it is not good for s. student no be preoccupied with In en- gagement. He should be giving his attention to his books and not to I sentimental aflalr. Dear lwlss Dix-How can we cultivate a. feeling of love, sppmoiation and respect for our parents who have never taught us these things? They are good to us. we have almost everything we want and do as we plenbe. but we seem to have no feeling for them. ls it 0.11 our fault that we are this way? TWO SISTERS. Answer: _ » No. Your parents are to blame. You are as they have mode you. All chiidren have to be taught the amenities of life. They have to be taught obedience and respect for their elders and appreciation and un- selflshsness and truthfulness and honesty. A child at heart is a. iittl. savage and its natural instincts are to grab what it wants for itself, with- out regard for the rights of others, and to run roughshod over all who will let 117. “As the twig is bent so is the tree inclined," yet many parents through ignorance or lndoience ignore this. They never teach their children to obey them, so by the time they are in their teens they defy them. ‘Ihey never teach their children to respect them, so when they are grown they revile and insult them. They never teach their children that they iisve any duty to them, so when they are grown they feel no obligation w them. The love of a. child for its parents must begin in the cradle, but surely you can cultivate an affection for your father and mother by remembering their kindness to you, and you can show some appreciation 0f the I639!‘ osity that has folowed you all of your life. I O U O l O Dear Miss Dix-I am deeply in love with a young girl who“ p”. crits are divorced. Although her mother has legal custody 0g her, 5119 loves her father the most and blames the mother for the separation. she has had a pretty hard road to go and hence ls down on matrimony, Al- though she loves me, she is afraid that if we were married it would end unhiippily. What can I say to her that will make her change her mind and realize that because her parents‘ marriage was a. failure ours need not be? A. C. W. t Answer: You cim tell her that marriage is like everything else in life-en in- dividual experiment — and because one person does not make a go of it is no sign that another will not do so. The world would stop still if we were all afraid to undertake any adventure because some one else had felled at it. There are bankers and merchants, manufacturers, doctors, lawyers and preachers who have a l gone bankrupt in their respective ceilings. And there are Just as rnimy others who have made fortunes in them. It is natural that a. girl who has been the victim of an unhappy mm‘- risge should look upon marriage with apprehension, but for that very reason she is the more likely to make her own marriage a success. She he: seen the bitter end to which family quarrels can come and that will make her the more careful to keep her own home peaceful. She has seen how a husband and wife can antagonize each other until they kill love end so she will take the more trouble to p acute her husband and to do everything to retain his affections. ' Most of all, she has known the misery of a child uprooted from its home, torn beaveen its parents, its little life blighted by their feuds, end so she wil be very careful to shield her own children from such 5 fete, 1 should 5B1’ that no woman would be happier in her own home or more appreciative of a. husband's love and care than a girl whose parents are divorced and who comes to a sufc anchor at lost. She need fest marriage no more than any other girl, for, while it is true that many marriages are failures, the great majority of them are still going DOROTHY DIX. scnsuit. Grsde VI (J12) 1 Betty Barwlse, 2 Evs Fraser. Junior Department Grade V-l Will Tucker, 2 Lioyd Lefurgey, 3 Jack Waugh. Grade IV-l Norma England, 2 Magiori MacMurdo, 3. Winnie Arsen- sul . Grade III-l Catherine Gaudet, 2 Wilfred Arsenault 3 Garth Clark. Grade 1.1-1 Bernice Arscnault. Grade I (Sh) 1 Selim Perry and Allan Fraser, 2 Lorene Arsensult Beryl Clark Grade I lJr.) 1 Patriots Clark. Perfect attendance: Helen Esr- wise. Muriel Lefurgy, Muriel Eng- land. Marian MaeMurdo, Beryl Clark. Principal, J. Alban MacDonald. Assistant, Frances Dingwell. THE GREAT ENERGY FOOD with the delicious Flavor ' EIDWAIIIIIIIIIIIG lIliliVlii BiiAiiil lliiiiiYliliP fluGAlIAiM Irumoounnv umae Neltleel Send in a Iabeljbr "Canada's Prise Recipes" e miuebie boob-Ill! fzgilrtgiz. ns -:- Literature UISUEMBEJR i0. w.» ‘ n I". “m: rvvvv-vw-vvvvv _ v J ? I Qne dozen pairs or iwo or fliree oi Koyser Mir-O-Kleer‘ Hose. 0h,’ so slicer and diomond-clecir-ilie first on ilie lisi of feminine necessiiiesl Koyser lull-losliioned hosiery is the pride ol ilie British Empire-—-mode in Canada and sold throughout il-ie world. AMomingSmile PROFITABLI MEMO!!! A certain Oxford professor rc- tumed from church one Sunday morning. trlumphsntl wsving on umbreiis. "Well. my dear," he said to his wife, "you will kindly oberrve that I have not left it beh’nd in the pew todsy." "No." milled the wife; "the trouble is thst you didn't take one wiltfiuyou. "You'll find your: in the ii .' SATISFIED Perms-r Giles was in town seeing the sigh coming to s lune suv ALL KAYSER PRODU ;rs STOCKED AND SOLD BY i MOORE t? McLEOD ‘LTD 4i building he sew "llmplwment lx- "n is." scowledjhe “Wmfl-l m, change." and s little fart-her it sold "Olh," he said. and “i” y “Women's Exchange." He enterd woman?" and was met by the glare of a "Yes. I am." d mm,“ fierce women behind the counter. . "Thank limb" 112 "ha? m m "Is this the Women's Exchange." ing to go. wddfld. 111 5“ he inquired. missus." is ii nu; (lowered With Pimple: Gauss: Much Emliarrassmenl llRl)(i('l\ the soil oh will impoverished blood is filled pimples d9. “o” M’ ‘ma’ $3’ that nothing short B i 3M5 7'“ “mitt-in... blood prior-g | ( ) ( ) | ) ma‘: will eradicate min tomb]; d i _,§'=g$,§’r§,"§{:;'. ‘filltilbil. n. Bil I l» 12s i>~$1m~§3&1’§§‘§mm.u. There u little doubt but that imlm" "at,"