.__...-.»—-o¢~ nuu-rIQQD-‘ZDQQ PAGE TWO M ‘ ‘fiflrfifi-DQQQQGQQ-QQ-Dflfi! fiD-Dfifififififififi-IZIQQ lWomain’s Realm f- Social and Personal 1A5 CAROL A CHRIS There's a song in the airl There's zi stai- in the skyl _ Tlterfs ii mother's {I03}: prayer And 1,; bfli“ ‘s low cry! . And i..._ . tr rains its fire while the B titiiiil sing, For ilie iii-auger o: Betlilulieni criiilles a King. Tlu-rt-‘s a ttiiiiiilt of Joy Orr the \\'Ull\l('l‘ilii birth. For the Virgin's sweet boy Is the Lord of the eiirtdi Ay! the star i'l'iill$ its f.rc an the Beiiitiiltil ng, For tin‘ lil.ll'.1_'(‘l‘ cintlles u King. of Bethlehem In the light oi that star Lies the £120., inzputtiled; And tt..- .- n ttom llllll‘ sour handbag. And it's always a H“ gap”, Cd..- U“. “mp1, iitiis:\iice litiving to more over Evvn- ntoltn Li illllllllt‘, iillfl the iwtrdvr wmimcr. lipstick. rouge. . jénpyihjul gm; scent, and all the other beauty x 1n the homes cl the nations that 39¢" W“ ca"? 5P°und~ one" 7 Jesus is King. We ..~_toicc in the light, v And up echo the mug _ lTiiiit coinrsiiuun fruit the night Fioin the heavenly throng. Ay! we shout. to tne l0ve.y evangel thoy bring. And we greet in the cradle our Saviour and King. i rzisiiios FLASH-ES A diagonal ivoollcn oi tweed type is used in chamois yellow for a ‘Paquin coat with original shoulder ‘line and twisted belt which disap- pears at the sides. Points of black Persian llldllb finish the collar, and The Housewife And Her Activities Some of the inexpensive acces- sories she suggests are Japanese prints, which g0 well with simlpie furniture; wallhangings of colorful posters, decorators‘ samples of chintzes and other fabrics, colored prints for pictures of famous mod- ern paintings, Indian raffia. bas- kets, willow ware plates and other such objects which can be picked up economically, little colored ani- mals uiiich are made of pressed paper or pottery, pottery vases. bowls, jugs and candlestlcks. and wooden dishes in bright colors. GET COSlblETlC CASE FOR YOUR. IIANDBAG When you change your frock you generally have to change when you got out you find that . half your things are in the bag you left at home. Get a. small zipper case to carry all your make-up and slip inside any bag. NO "GLOSILD SEASON" THE PESKY MOTH FOR We think oi spring as precau- tion time against moths, but in sections where the weatlm is equublo all the year around and in homes whero an equsblc gem. perature is maintained, ovary month of the year is open season Just Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Alflmoillldernflollllld) TUESDAY, DECEVIBER. ‘l PAR] 9:30 a.in.-"Licbelei," a P1111‘ by Artlitr Schontzler. TPA-J. 19.6 m.. 15.24 meg. TOKYO 4:45 p.m.-Jazz Selections. JZK. 19.7 m., 15.15 meg; JZJ, 25.4 m.. 11.80 meg. SCHENECTADY 6:35 p.m.-Short Wave Mail Bag. W2XAD,19I5 m.. 15.33 meg; W2XAF, 31.4 m., 9.53 meg. BERLIN 6:45 p tin-Solo Concert: Li Stadelmann, Munioh cembalist DJD, 25.4 m..1l '17 meg. MOSCOW 7:00 p.m.-Neu's and Program for English Listeners, RAN, 3i m.. 9.6 meg. . LONDON for time avid little pests. two large black buttons at. front are matched by smaller cries on the belt. problems as they solve old ones. Warmth and darkness make a moth paradise, so summer tweeds and the family's bathing suits, summer furs and light woolcoats, Floral prints, hand-screened, but 100K111; as if their rich colors had bten directly" handpaint/ed in an impressionistic style are among some of the striking evening prints careful winter storage. Anything shown. made of or trimmed with wool or _.i_ fur or containing hair or feathers Ollskln rainwats of loose, slightly or any animal fibres is "pie" for bulky cut lines, with. fur, are hav- ing a big success among the Schin- parelli clients, many women using up slightly wom fur coats this new way. tect family belongings moths? First clean, brush, bent and sun before storing. Dry clean- lng is a wi<e prccnution—moths like soiled places. Next, store in a tightly sealed container with “SPRUCING UP" YOUR. DAUGHTEIVS ROOM Thlsisagoodtinwtochoose for “spruclng up" the home-mak- er's own room. or the room occu- picd by her daughter. selecting a suitable btcgipoiind of null-paper or pant. iiirht fabrics for curtains or bedspreads and accessories — stich as pictures. pottery, boxos and table runners —the home- maker can add a distinctive touch to hvi‘ room which will make it livelier (luring the winter. “If you do not know how to place cause-cries on a desk, talie or shelf," advises lvIrs. Nancy H.0- man oi flie New York State Col- lege of Home Economics, "use as Iexv rt." possible and experiment with them for attractive color combinations and arrangements. Large numbers oi accessories are pdifiioult to place and require ex- " ten-nt- experience." . £1 "*' " , Doll's ljaslgonable Wardrobe zene <P.D.B. or gum camphor sprinkle among the clothes or hung in a. loose-meshed bag among them. Use a pound of either of these moth killers for every hun- dred cubic feet. of storage space. So-called “rnoth-proof" bags are of value chiefly because oi the fact that they are made of heavy tan-per not easily torn. Trust to P.D.B. or naptha and use plenty. A tight well-made cedar chest containing at least 70 per cent of red cedar heart-wood is good pro- tection, if no larvae are present when clothes are packed away. ‘Those cute little gadgets which you are instruct-ed to hang in the closet are of no use if the closet is of the open-and-shtit- variety. Avoid all preparations containing arsenic or other poisons. For furs commercial dry storage is safest, ‘Mayfair Design No. 410 Every little girl likes pretty clothes for her doll. Christmas morning will be so much brighter if there is a new and complete wardrobe for Miss Dollie. In her stocking on the Christmas tree. Make the dress, coat and bonnet oi bright scraps left over from daughter's own clothes and the undies of dainty white cotton made festive with whisks oi lace. These will win her whole hearted gratitude. ‘The set includes a cutting pat- ilefia for the coat, bonnet, dress, slip and panties complete with easy to- follow sewing lesson and all making lnstructfons. For complete pattern and instructions for all 0i these designs, lend 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) to Th: Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department. u" ‘M, (joupnn, Print your name and addreu plainly. To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework 11cm. DESIGN N0. 410 Name - - - - -__.___... _ _ _ _ ______.- street Addrcss — — - — — — - - — - - - - - - " " "‘ - ’ " ¢|g'__.___.__-—--Pgu1|gcQ--———-————-i 1 . 'v>I-_D'J>\‘i‘ 8:15 p.m.--"Mtisic by Modern British composers." GSD, 25.5 m.. 11.75 meg; GSC, 313 m.. 9 5B meg; G613, 3i 5 m., 9.51 meg. CARACAS 8:30 p.m.- Vaudeville Theatre. YV5RC. 51.7 m., 5.8 meg. LONDON 9:15 pm-"Entertainment at St. George's, 1867-1937." The story of a. London Hall of Entertainment. 649D, 25 5 m.. 11.75 meg: G80, 131.3 m., 9.58 meg; G88, 31.5 111-. 9.51 meg. TOKYO 12:45 a.m.——Guide 0o Fnmous Places Series. JZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 meg. SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA 1:15 a.m.—'I‘allk on Australia. VKZME, 31.28 m., 9.59 mBS. another instance of comfort and _ modern convenlenoas bringing new ‘ light-weight blankets, etc, all need f I hungry moth larvae. l How shall the homemaker pro- : against, either napihallne, para-diclcmbcri- ' A MorningSm ile MAKING SURE "I shall leave all my property to my wife on condition that she marries again within a year." “Why do you say that?" "I want somebody to be sorry I died " A QUIET SABBATH It was the sabbath. and Donald was hammering away at the 150t- iom of his barrow, when his wife came to the door. "Mon," she exclaimed, makin’ a muckle clatter. will the neebors say?" "Never mind the neebcrs." said the busy ope. "I maun get my barra mendit." 'I‘he woman thought this over for a minute or two. then: "Uh. but Donald, it's vei-ra wrong iae work on the Sabbath." she pxnnstulatcd. "Ye ought to use screws." "yew What ‘ o QIAVICQ Add Zcsts to Dates Witty Toasts With Gay toasts put sparkle in your charm. Suppose your favorite leans across the table with: "Here's looking at you- Now's my chance to tell you What a nice thing That is to do." Or a bit oi flattery: "You can't be as grai-d a: I think you be But you're grand enough to daule me» eocon Reward him with a comeback like this one: “There lro million: of tout: But heaven: above, Here’: the one I ilk: molt: Here’: to love!" When a crowd gathers, propolo this grand old classic: "Here's to Eternity-may we spend it in as good company u this night find: us." 0r better yet: "A health to all those whom wo love, A health to all those who love u: . . ." Turn to our SZ-pags booklet for loam for every occnlo . Toast: for two, tender or witty; party fouls. weddings, anniversaries, holiday: J okes, limerick; Send 20c in coins for your copy oi Toasts, Joies. And Limericks to The Guardian. Home i3"l'i'i-‘.P, Ad- dress. Ba sum to writs plainly your Name, Address. and the Name of booklet. Name Street Address rm; CHARLOTTETOWN cuannim 1§ flfi-fifi-QM-fifi ridqzt/ DEVCENIBER - ll>937 ‘F: i _ DAY LIKE MINEYDUBDO ‘i WHAT I INTEND T0 DOMSTAY PUI/ ' ACHI... AS sauna as m: time’: BRIDGET 11's rm: 1o rssr ME rum! aur saloon... ‘iwssneonutmimoinetv MAY-BUT BRIWFI? “m” “m” * | DIDNI mus! ‘ 1o on twweuuousst MNEY-J "il- 5“°w T°'"°“T' ' rooms roams names A new mu ALREADY- ~’ ' '4 7 ‘ q Qwmrm g mess] IF voub HAD ATOUGH ANDTOTHINK WE NBNRTNED THIS GRAND ‘MAXWELL HOUSE FLAVOUR BEEREIIIWHY I NEVERTASTED ANYTHING S0 RICHAND SMOOTH lint , YOU NEEDNT WAIT uv, 51,931 35- BRlDGETmWEiJ. as our urr vouits our m (We "no mun FIXER M; own m] saucer»; HOW THAT‘ MAXWELL BREAKFAST. HOUSE Maxwell House gives you luch a in a super-vacuum tin-the one P’ NCKED quick, luch a welcome lift . . . it lure way to bring you coffee that ME up! buoys you tip-never let: you i: truly roaster-fresh. For any ~ " down. And you'll love the superb drip-pct or glen: coffee maker get 55 5"" a-mu of thi: blend of ChC world’: Drip Grind Maxwell I-Iou:e—-for fineat coffee: . . . ifuo smooth . . . boiled or pcroointed coffee get the :0 rich and mellow. Refiulur Grind. MAXWELL IIOUSENCOFFEE lls Friendly Stimulation Buoys Youllp . . . Novor Lois You Down Ti-ie friendly stimulation of Maxwell House some: to you now 2 camps om sumo ,. AND vacuum - Dorothy Dix 's Letter Box l i Pirates In Fact And Fiction 150w Cooking: and Slipshod Meals Do More Than Any Other Things to Make Mar- Waters Where No Vessel ls Safe By CAPTAIN PNIBIUK CLIFFORD. (Author of ‘Tints Cruise”, “Mon Without Fear", etc.) iages Unhappy and Break Up Homes DearMllssDix-I-Iaschulbandanyright to Nlhilwllswhatho wants to eat and how he wants it prepared? Would a wife listen to him and oc-operaic with him in the selection oi food and the cooking thereof, or would she serve him whatever she wanted to? I would like in know these things ‘be- fore I get married because I work with about 150 girls mnd I notice that they are very care- less about what they cat. They eat I ony- thlng that pleases their palates regardless of what it does to their swmachs, and as a re- sult they are sick a great deal. I wuldnw afford to marry a girl who would be sick half the time and who would keep me sick and lWflY from work. I am tired of single life, but I must. be sure of getting a wife who will be healthy herself and keep me healthy by feeding us properly. R. E. M. . Answer: ‘a Well. son. a man has a right to tell his ' wife what he wants to eat- and how he want: it prepared, but whether or not he gets it is qultc another matter. Prob- ably no other one thing raises more family motions than the husband's criticism of his wife's cooking. and after a few stormy scenes over whether the morning beverage is coffee or dishwater, and whether the biscuits were intended for ammunition orhumim consumption, the poor creature generally gives in, eats what is set before him and asks no questions. But you show yourself a wise man, a Solomon indeed. in appreciating the part that what we oat plays in our health, prosperity and happiness, and in your determination not to get a wife who is so absymaliy ignorant of food values that she does not know the difference between a. dainty salgd and something that will stick to a man's bones and give him energy an pep. It is particularly important that a man should inquire intoa girl‘: idea about food before he pops the question, because nowadays when every woman's chief ambition is to become a living skeleton the average wife is only too prone to set a slimming diet before her husband in order that. she herself may not. be tempted to eat. Also, there is no denying that in tiy- ing to keep thin the great majority of girls are suffering from malnutrition and are a. doctor's bill to their husbands. So in picking out a wife the preferred choice is not only a girl who looks well mi hemp bu; who knows how to feed her man. It is unromantlc, but true, that the success of a. marriage depends more upon the kind of a. housekeeper a. woman is than upon any other one thing. It promotes domestic felicity, for one thing, for it is an axiom that the well-fed man is so gentle and amiable and at peace with all the world that a child can handle him. on the contrary, one who ha; been set. down to a. meal of burned meat and soggy pqtfltoes, with nothing m, for human consumption on the table. is like a. raging lion ready to devour any one he meets. Also, there is no other such efficient way to keep a man at home of evenings as to stuff him so full of the things he likes best, that he is virtually unable to wander from his own fireside. _ Likewise, the way a wife feeds her husband determines whether he will be a nervous wreck at 40 or still going strong at '70. More husbands are annually slain by bad cooking than are by automobiles. A man's success in life depends largely upon the way his wife feeds him. Many a man fails because his wife's cooking has made him such a dyspetic grouch that he cannot get along with anybody, or so pessimistic that he cannot believe that anything but the worst, can happen, A break- fast of greasy cakes and five-minute eggs has made many a man quarrel with his boss ,or insult his clients. or turn down some proposition that would have led him on to fortune. It is when a man feels well and happy and believes that this is the best of all good worlds that he does things. when l1 ma" mime-W he n0?- OMY puts his heart but also his stomach into his wife's hands. and he should consider well what sort of care she is going to take of them. I O l l I I Dear Miss Dix- Inm a woman 30 years old. Have been married twice. My first husband and I lived together three years, then I be- came Jissatisfied and started stepping out on him, so I got a. divorce and met another man, whom I married. My present husband is seventeen year: older than I. He does not l'ke to go to the places I do and will not take ma anywhere unless I make him. I like to go and have a good time. but I don't like to go my myself. Lately I have been seeing my former husband and we find that we still iovc each other and want to be re- married, but tmder the circumstances and the position my husband and 1 hold I don't want to divorce him now. But. 5t the game time 1 gull want, my first husband and am miserable when I un not with him. We have m hide out when we meet, for he is married, mo, ‘no 1 4on1; 11kg mot, for I want the world to know he is mine again. I can't divorce‘ my husband an d I cant‘ give up my former husband, either. Do you think we could be happy again if we split up our present homes and made one for our- selves? - DISSATISFIED. Answer: If this latter isn't a commentary on the modern custom of ping husband: as casually as you would turn in an old car for a new model that had caught you reye ,and then liking the new one no better than you did the old, I don't know what it is. Here is a woman who has ric idea whatever of the sanctity of marriage: no conception of a. wife having any duties or respcnsibilitis: in marriage that she is bound in honor to fulfill; who leave: her hulbmd for no ru- son except that she lost her tasts for him and matrimony had begun in get fiat and lose its thrills. Then sne marries another man and proposes to divorce him just because he doesn't want to go of nights to the places she wants to go. And aha ha. alost her taste for him, too. Then she thinks she would like to go back to her No. 1 husband. who is alluring to her due to the fact that he is . ‘l' woman and so forbidden fruit. And she \ . ..... to know if she will be happy and if a marriage founded on the wreck of two home sand two divorces would be succeasfu . I don't think thcre is a chance of it. To be successful a marriage has u» have in it ‘“' more stable than a fickle woman‘: light love: and her desire for pleas u. It has to have courage and endurance and inselflshnes: and a determination to make a go of it. The "mm" ‘"10 b?!“ “D their homes and divorce their husband: for n0 800d "E5011 "0 Myer any happier 1n their wound or third or fourth chiooos than they were in their first. may u; my" “mags, You ooflbavoyotrvnddinqcokoaadoatigico, 9030:3193, .. _ I . Mediterranean or the Scandinavian fjlors, will consider the idea of a luxury liner being pirated. as ab- surd. It will be impossible, they will my, in seize o liner of 70,009 tons, carrying hundreds of D85" EEIIKCIS, stewards and sailors. and with warships of all nations at hand to render aid. As far as Eur- , opean waters’ are concerned, pro-, bably they are correct. -at any rate, no pirate has ever tried the experiment. But considr for a moment the vastly different conditions of China. The huge, unpollced coast- line, possessed of countless bays and inlets where pirates may hide with impunity, the numerous fighting men. descended from gen- erations of pirates, who would risk their lives for as little as a dol- lar, and the impossibility of war- ships controlling the whole of that tremendous coast. All these things prove that piracy on the grand scale I have suggested. is both practisable and profitable, and may quite easily occur in the fu- ture. Rsaders should know that 20.000- wn liners carry a. guard of British troops 1n the danger zone between I-lorig Kong and Shanghai. ‘Flats system resulted from the discovery by the l-Iong Kong police of a plot to seize a Canadian litter. Every detail was planned, and there is little doubt that the plot would have been successful, save for the brilliant detective work of the Criminal Intelligence Department oi the Hong Kong Police. Frantic radio messagss were despaiched to Shanghai when the plot was un- earthed. and a platoon of the King's Own Scottish Borderers was placed abroad the liner, complete with Lewis guns, Mills bombs, and other useful articles of war. The pirates wisely made no attempt w carry out their original plans. and ever since the Canadian Pacafic vessels have carried a. simi- lar guard. It is estimated that over one million dollars is lost annually by snipownerson the China coast, as the result of piratical activities. Under the new marine laws of Hang Kong Government, all Brit- ish ships must carry an anti- piracy guard. build steel grilles to prevent access to the vital parts oi the ship report the positions bl- hourly to the Royal Naval 0f- Msny thousand of holidly-ml-ll- i deck of 8.1M. l. lbiriinl. I erg, basking in the peacc of the ‘ British destroyer sent to the aid of the stricken vessel. » steamer was taken despllc the most rigor- 01s precautions, ls Admiral Ar- thur Walsh-ell, Commander-in- Chicf of tho Chins. Station at that time, complimented the R118- kingls owners. the Douglas Steam Navigation Company, on the ci- ficacy of their anti-piracy system- The ship was grilled fore and aft. and carried a guard. of heavily armed Skhs. two of whom died in defence of the vesscl- Captain Far- mr, awarded the O. B. E- for his valiant efforts in the battle. told me that he considered piracy of even the largest vessel. W811 with"! tho realm of possibility. In fact. he added, the chief reason why such an attempt has never been made is due most likely to the fact- thut more money is made by ca?‘ iuring smaller vessels. Con- sequently, I imagine that any liner carrying a million dollars, such as the R. M. S. Gigantic in my story The Riddle oi the Black Pir- ate, would be in great peril off the China coast. g 1 would particularly like m)’ Our people got wind of a con- spiracy to aelu the gold on board the Asiatic, continued thQ Ameri- can, a tall, well-drssed Virginian of little more than thirty years. S0 very quietly they arranged T01‘ ‘he Gigantic to pick up the buIiion instead. at New York. She's got a strong-room like the Bank of England, and there's not a soul that suspects the stuff is not aboard the Asiatic, so that my job's really a ainocuro. They put Ser- geant lWGurk aboard with inc and so far we've had a good tile and no worries. ‘Ilo Be Continued FASHION THE COOK ‘S CORNER mlUilHEL FROSTING 1-2 cup white sugar -2 cup white stigar 1 tablespoon corn synrp 1 ow mlfi 1 _ halter Method: Mix the lupr, on syrup and milk and ‘bol dowly uribilafew dmpsincoldwaterionn aaoitball. ‘lhebrownmigarnuy curdloalittlo 1II@OHII,MIIBI will beat smooth, so don't be con- earned. Addthe butboruidoooluntillic syrup 1s itikcwarm. Then boa/t until it La creamy and oi the right con- sistency to spread. Wb triad. this moat M6190 ban in tho Modal Kibofhcn and were do- ligfmed with the 118M. Wider uh that it made. m is easy to get read; and very inexpemlw The “will! is baked right on, so you don't even have to bother with that, for it i: all dam when it comes from tin oven. TOASTED COCOANUT CAKE 3 9889 I cup granulated sugar 3-4 cup chopped walnuts Method: Beat the eggs until tiiq are very light, then add the sugu and continua beating until it is dis solved and the mixture thicken: Measure the flour Before you sin it, then sift with the baking powder and cinnamon. Add to the egg mixture alternately with the milk. It makes a very thin batter, but that is as it should be. Now burn this info a shallow pan lined with waxed paper and sprinkle the mils over the batter. It is so thin that unless you do it this way they all sink to the bot- tom Bakc in s. moderate. 875 deg. 1"- oven for about 25 minutes, until the cake rises and begins to brow Then remove from the oven and spread the topping over it. 44- GUIDES l FOR THE ' HOME DRESS AKER_ Tailored two-piece pajamas of dark ground satin-finished cotton broadcloth like brother's will de- light the smart ‘teencrs. A tied sash to "pull-in" at the waist adds a feminine touch. It matches the ilce at Hong Kong. 1n spite oi these precautions, however, piracies accur with alarming frequency. and render the passage of even the largest llnci- a dangerous one in the dreaded plratc zone. I recall the piracy oi s. a. Hang- klng. which I witnessed from the plain bias binds that edge the Peter Pan collar, the front closing and the patch pocket. If she likes something with wannth. . .somq. thing out of the ordinaiy...then stone blue wool crepe with wine contrast is captivating. For 10mm. m8 NW1‘ a busy day at school or this office... marine blus flannel M01156}! Wli-h gray topper wqm "tuck-in" has lots o! dash and dis- tinction. I fowl certain you won't hardly be able to wait for the pgg. tern to arrive to stitch up several sets...“ a big saving to gtrohgh your Xmas budget. Th; pattern and the material also make a very llttrldivo gift, Style No. 290v is designed for sizes 12. 14, 16. 18, 20 years. 30. 32, 34. 36 and Bil-inches bust. Sine 16 requires 4 1-4 yards of 39-inch m:- torisl with 8-! 11rd of 99-inch con- trasting and 2 yards of binding. Send fifteen cams (Ibo) in stamp: or coin (coin preferred) wnp coin usefully. address to "if!!! Street Address "- > Charlottetown Guardian giving:- swie m. 2am so... ‘Provinc: City