___ ___ ,,,,_..,...-..vt~a.--_.__-. s PAGE TWO cvo l” W5" vvwvvvvv v "l L Vvvv vvVvvv-V 7w man's R alm -:- Social rm; CHARLOTTETOWN JANUARY Pg, 1931 . I and vv vvvY The HOUSEWIFE and ' HER‘ ACTIVITIES Whn Jqvceps 9, mom as for Thy ‘symbolic of’ the RHFSUAS hurled in, Luvs, Mukts tiidl. and the act. on fine. “George Herbert “UR/Ill WIIIIIIlE THOUGHTS ‘c ncvq‘ was a good war, or peace . ‘1-Fraitklin. “Ti a bud "VX1111: you dislike in another, take (are to correct in. yourself." —Sprat. "One vicious habit each year root d out. in time miglu make the worst man gocd"-Franklin. {futile rage by the outstripped re-y !latives as the rein-filing cantor. The "best man" is also a relic of‘ fthese times. Bride stealing was a .little mo difficult single-handed. so, ilhe groom used to take some of hisl friends with him to help carry outl little violet the raidmand here we find the modern “best mun." l FACTORY GIRL HEARD 1 MORE 'I‘H.\N WHEELS l . ago a little in Aberdeen. She did not Not so many yr rs Scotch girl. born worked in a factory. i BLOSSOM THOUGHT so IJOAN IKNNEDY- (Continued) So they knelt in the sweetness, the white violets between them s.-enting the air with the wonder of their blooming. “Blossom. you're just a sweet . yourself-Abe little ‘flower I want for all my own. Dear, little dear! Didn't you know when we met lat night. that we were meant to meet Didn't some- thing tell you that—that—" Now he ‘flushed face where wonder dwelt. _ 0h she knoiv now. This was love. an m5 b88538” or a.‘ bold¢alwwivs hear whirl of the wheels as and “he undcrswod why the "own atlrlntiireixs and reformers to be p. rlfllfll insliic."‘~G. B. Checvcr. ‘Boys will b4‘ ‘Boys w ll "Some one tys, lwiw‘: he forgo: to atld, be incn'."—.loubcrt. "llc who reforms doiio more toward himself. has reforming the public than a crowd of noisy, im—‘ poivnt patriois."-Lavater. ILYNNING AWAY Shrinking duty. Or running away. from the thiiw- that we feel we ought. to do. has u peculiarly deinor- ‘ ulnng effect on ones high purpose or right. our judgment of what our duty s may be a mistaken one. but ‘lit-re is SOlllPllilllfl imperious about the cull o.‘ duly that makes the sllgliting of it a vcry serious matier indeed . —Thc New Outlook. LARGE FUR MUFFS T0 BE SMART FOR WINTER Fashions in both fur and fabric coats for the winter season demonstrate the effectiveness of fur muffs. as accessories of parti- cular fitness to complement the coats of either straightllne or prin- i- silhoucttcsflLarge muffs take ,_wcre given I ary, David Livingstone. in 187-1. was, l l they t fabrics. for she was listening intently to the whisper- ings of One who controlled the business of the universe He was speaking to hcr of a foreign land, .whose people were black and whose Iclvilization was even blacker. Working twelve hours eiich day deprived Mary Slessor the most meagre education. Slit’! ,g1V0 her heart to Christ early. and. although too timid to even miike a tallk in prayer meeting when men were present. she decided to berome a servant o" Christ in that mys- terious and terrible land. ruled b_v witchcraft and skull Nirshippers. At the age of 28 she bsriizn her mis- sion work after having prepared herself by working in the slums of Dundee. Her education was very limited. her prcpnrafion far from adequate. but her heart and life entirely to God-and that was the thin: that counted. The death of that great mission- a challenge to the Chrisfnn world. 'Mary Slessor answered it by first setting her timid feet on African soil in l874.-'I‘he Canadian Baptist NEW APPARATUS TO BANISII FEAR IN DENTAL CHAIR of all but] , of his fingers had been so different g from the touch of any other fingers. He loved her and his fingers had told her so even then. 1 So sweet her lips. waiting in trembling wonder. So beautiful .thoe widely opened eyes where l little lights were flickering, com- ing and going in the love-glow. He closed them with a kiss, then l pit-lied back the soft curls, filled ‘his eyes with the bcatlty’ of her, j felt the throb and beat Q1’ 1119 trenching out to this moment which was his, stooped to her lips and felt their response-a thing which madc hzs blood race and sing in his vein '. "l love you! I love you!" Cllnging arms of newly awakened love! Radiant hour! They forgot the violets. forgot time and place and all the world except themselves and the glory which wrapped them about. So beautiful this wakenlng to love. So sweet this blossom of girlhood, "I lovc you so! I love you so!" And the man knew the marvel to be true. So short l5 time to lovers and it did not matter that twenty- four hours ago they had no: met. , Nothing mattered but that Fate \ ho had designer‘. them to meet. should have brought about completion of her plans. has drawn- her clove, and was looking down into a softly ‘ the i ‘the various ens of orig‘ tlity and novelty. Thry are good fashion accessories, for the completely unfurred cos-' A "stop," "caution," ‘go’ appa- tume as well as for the fur coat ratus by which patients can reveal pm]: l to the dentist exactly how they feel i__._ ’is the latest device for banishing snlocxlyq usEn 0N ifear from the dental surgery being CHILDREN'S (EARMENTS .uscd in Britain. The patient holds the control switch in his hand while his teeth Smocking is being revived in a‘ are being drilled. A box containing’ big way in the children's wear being shown in London. History reveals that at one time‘ counties of England own type of smacking- ~ Sll-ELX smacking. Essex smock- . i and so on. Different designs are being traced and reproduced in. chic little mi-mcnts for the yontur tachcd to a collar dentist institntlyi if he should stop. go cautiously, or g0 all out. The lights were fir<i to the inventor. a. leading Wolver- hampton dcntst, as a joke. He per- the appartus and found hi" ini - ~. fccted - e lthat its psychological effect nus .\l.\!iRl.-\G|-; SLTEIRSTITIONS LYCIIIPIIZIOIIS. It itsuzilly gives pa- tients so much confidence that they.‘ do not signal "stop" at all. Eixperimcnts reveal that when ilislies areldamaged in manlf-aciur/r The old custom of “marriage by ClllTllFP." when the bridegroom‘ fancied for his ilcrl her home and * anti jut-i‘. 1 'l lur. . msponsiblc for bv “spll-oul“ this eruption on the ni of our mozlcrn weddlnf: qlazc is due to moisture aidcrl bv sit: i‘..on~, gas-producing substances; and now The old shoe that we tic on be- preventive measures are being hind thc bride‘; carriage today 1s,sought. 1,’ r, i’ 7471a ,1 a van ‘up/J, ‘ E v Mayfair Needle-an Design No, 201, Steaming platters and hot dishes leave no marks when polished tables are protected by these pretty mats. They are crocheted of heavy cord, using a simple stitch and are made in sets of three-an oblong for plut- ters and smaller mats for vegetable dishes or plates. The pattern contains full chochet instructions, without abbreviations, sample of cotton uscd in original model. Scnd 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) to The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. DEGIGN NO. 201 Name — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — - Slzaui All]: l. - ~ _ - - — - — - _ - - _ - _ - - ~ - — —- — Cllg-_-._______—-_f|-gylngg_——__——f the red, amber and green lights at- , placed on the . shoulder o.‘ the patient shows the, stiggesttvl l It wa". long afterwards that they ‘I talked rsClLfilbly. And Blossom said, “Mother always said 1 mug; never nmrry a poor man." l-‘Iis arm tightened about her. _'I'lns_ child had such perfect, trust; in him. and the only urge with mm then was that he must make her huppv. She loved him. and he did not want to cloud that love. He would give her all he had to give- thc worship of his heart. S0, as lovers will, they planned their meetings. For Blosom life had altered. Such wonderful even- lllgs when he and she spent radiant hours, Nothing he could do for her was seemed that simple pleasures ])1(‘!!$C(‘l her most-those long bus rich-s when he and she sat close in ever too much. But it] longed to another world. But per- Imps he had been taken ill and they hadn't been able to move him. Somehow those immaculate clothes of his didn't seem to fit in with the squalou: of the neighbour- hood, and she smiled as she found the house given her. A card in the window indicated that rooms were to let. ‘ there- her wonderful Jack who be- GUARDIAN fl-W-cwa" e n" n- n"- -- - - - Per on v1 ‘.144 m» sci:- Dem“ D h l ‘ix $1.13.. 1);.» 010i y the Rule It: is up to Husbands to do 50 Per Cent 0f the Entertaining and Share Alike the Res- ponsibilities of the Home if Marriage is to be Happy One of the unsolved mysteries of the relationship between the 56x88 is why men demand so much more of women" than women do of men, and why women make so much more efiort to please men than, men do w please women. Considering that women. ‘It was the woman who had come to the store who opened the door. “Go on up to Number Seven, deariel You'll find him," she said. Blossom went up the shabby mairway, with its bit. of cheap drugget placed for the tread, with its faded walls and general dreari- tress, but that stairway migh); have been of gold to judge by the shine ' on her face-the love-glow which radiated there. She tapped at the door marked seven and heard his voice-such a tired voice, which called out, “Come 1n!" She opened the door. Somebody m1". lying still in a none too coni- foriable looking bed. There were a lot of papers scattered about a large table. Some of them were on the floor. The room looked dreary as the rooms in Winter's Building 1o. :e.l dreary, and a sob rose in the throat of Blossom. Her won- derful lover to have to lie here! She moved nearer to the bed and a the figure moved, " ITo be Continued) l l foday’: Short Wave Radio Program (Allnqinhnernaunhli) FRIDAY. JANUARY 8 BOSTON 4:30 p.m.—'I‘he Monitor gviews the News. WIXAL, 25.4 m., 11.79 meg. l ROME 6 p.m.--News in Einglish. Royal Opera. House-"Madame Sans Gene "Rome‘s Midnight Volve." Folk Songs. 2RD. 31.1 m., 9.63 meg. l LONDON 6:45 p.m.-—Some of Iondorvs ‘foremost Variety artists. GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; GSC. $1.3m,» 9.5a meg.; GSlB, 31.5 m., 9.51 l"? Moscow l 7 p.m.-A Broadcast for Shop Assistants. Accordion music, Russ- taking them by and large, are more fastidious in their tastes and harder to suit about other things than men. it would Seem that it should be the other way around 811d thflfi it should be men who were breaking their necks trying to make themselves popular with women, instead of women working them- with men. Such 15 the case, however, and 1t has al- ways been that way, women have always danced before men and been humbly STEW- ful to any kind of a sheik who would throw them the handkerchief. Nor have they look- ed the gift bridegroom in the mouth. They have taken whnt attentions men were pleased to bestow upon them, and married their opportunities when they couldn't get their preferences, while men have demanded to be amused and diverted, and have taken their pick and choice among the fairest maidens. that no one will dispute. You can begin with morais it you like. Very few men will ntarry a girl whose slate isn't clean, but every day we see white and innocent little lambs accompanying some black $199}; with a, lurid past to the altar. Furthermore, wives are expected to forgive and forget the philunderlng of their husbands, but nobody expecbg a husband w Overlook his wlffs side-stepping. He drags her mm the divorce court. Then there is the matter of personal appearance. A man demands pulchritude in the girl he dates. She must be good looking, or at least appear to be. She must be well dressed. She must be neat, and have the latest thing in bobs and curls and be something he is proud to show 011 You CH1" inlfltlillfi B boy talking out a girl who was fat and frowsy ‘ That men demand more of women than women do of men is a fact I - like somcthng that the cat brought in. and slovenly and who looked But do girls demand the same smartness in appbarance in bgys that boys do in them? Not at all. No girl turns down a man because he is forty pounds overweight- and has a bay window and a bald head. Every- where you go you are confronted with the spectacle of girls, who are as neat as a pin and who look like a daily hint from Paris, who are‘ out with l young men who have a three-day stubbe of beard on the}; face; and who look as if they needed to run through the laundry, Every g“; {e815 that she has to doll herself up for the Boy Friend, but a lot of boys consider that they are the girls’ answer to a prayer, so it isn't necessary to bother with shaves and haircuts. Watch any group of men and women at dinner, at the theatre, at r. restaurant. Occasionally you see a mun who is entertaining the woman, but ninety-nine times out of a hundred it will be the woman who is work- ing like a coal-beaver 1.0 try to moke the man have a. good time. She is ‘ the one who is keeping the conversational ball rolling. She is the one who is being bright and vivacious and amusing while the man only grimts now and then to show he is still awake. Half of the time if an oyster with a pocketbook was substituted for the man who took her out for the evening, the woman would never find out she had changed companions. In marriage the same rule holds good of the husband demanding more of the wife than she docs of him and of the wife having to make more effort to please the husband than the husband ever dreams of making t0 l please the wife. It is only men who elxpect their mates to keep perpet- ually young and beautiful and woh think for a wife to lose her figure and her complexion justifies their phllanderlng. or calls for a divorce. N0 man lies awake at night wondering if his wife will cease to love him when he grows old‘. You never hear of a man doing without the things he likes H“, g Llhming dusk’ the days m u“, inn lesson. RAN, 31.2 m., 9 6 meg. y to oat in order to retain his boying figure, m- buying a. toupee so that he coimu-y at the week-end, when they wandered hand in hand tell- ingof their love. He bought her flowers and gave hcr gifts. but she loved nothing as she loved the kives of her lover. those close embraces when he told her the secrets of his heart. He realised how fragrant was this , blostom he ached to_ own a; hi5 l wife. _Yct never» a word of mani- nge did he say. and and she did not think it strange. The days were so jovou; as the wave o! love lifted her beyond earth's worries. Someday, she supposed, they would marry. All lovers did. But for the present she was content to go on meeting him, her dearest cit-a" who made her world seem goid and wonderful. So to the day when bleakness came. He had arranged their meeting. place and he was not there. Blossom waited and waited. but he never came. And. at lost she went home. Her pale face was not noticed that night. There was so "WW thinks to worry Sarah Wild. "Oh!" said Blossom that night to the stars. The pain in her heart was hurling in n “my that; made p, sci-m as though she could not breathe. She did not s-Jeep that night. Why ltadift he come? Then another day drifting by and no sign of the man. Another wnit- l BERLIN 8:30 p.m.—"Porcelain.” Fairy Wale by Manfred Kyber. DJD 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. l BOSTON 8:45 p.m.—'1‘lie World of Poetry. WlXAL, 4-9 6 m., 6.04 meg. IDNDON ,1 9 p.m.—A Program or Marches. The BBC Military Band. ‘ 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; GSC, 31.3 m., 59.58 meg; GStB, 32.5 m., 9 51 meg. PARIS 10:40 p.m.--'I'heat.rlcal Program. 'I'PA—-4, 25.8 m., 11.72 meg. WINNIPEG 11730 D-m-Live, Laugh and’ Inve,—orchestra with soloists and Count Pravda. CJRD, 48.7 m., 6.15 meg.; CJRX, 25.5 m., 11.72 meg. lclrelfs Colds . . . . Beat treated without "dosing" . VlSlfifi Now ‘wmrz-srluutzss will have the ambrosiitl locks his wife fell in love with. But millions of women subsist on a starvation diet and suffer mar- tyrdom in beauty parlors being pounded and boiled and painted and dyed trying to keep their husbands in love with them and from finding out that they have grown fortyish and stout. And it is wives who have to do the smiling and the handling with velvet gloves if husband is kept happy and satisfied and glad he married the lady he did instead of wondering what. made him do it, though why it isn't as much up to a husband to help make marriage a. success as it is to 65D, a wife, nobody knows. Men always demand more of women than women Only it isn't done. DOROTHY DIX. do of men. And they get it. chair and, going to the desk, de manded to see the manager. "What for," asked the girl. AMomingSmile “I've got a complaint," he re- plied. "Complaint," retorted the girl, ‘PUNIWMENT- lhaughtily. "nus is a. cafe, not a __.__B__ l .. FatheF-"So yoifvc been fightlnglhoslumL again, have. you? Thcn you go to bed without supper, youngman." Freddy-"All right, dad, I've only got two teef left», anyhow." TR-ANSFERRED HERE WFSTVILI-E, N.S., Jan. 4-(0?) —Lloyd Mulrhead, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mitrray Muirhead of West- vllle, has been transferred to the Charlottetown branch of the Royal Bank of Canada. MISTAIIEN. Ho had betn trying to secure the attention of a waitress for 20 min- utcs. but at last got up from int: zit tho tryst and another drift- iui homewrtrds not having seen him. Why hadn't he come? What had hlimcned? Blossoms face grew strangely thin and pale. That cruel pain hurt so deep down, and the lmtiring was like a knife tum- lng in her heart. On the ncxt day, just towards closing time, she fogid someong at the soap counter asking. Are you the young lady called Blossom?" She nodded. "He wants you-he's bad-cruel bad." said the woman. She was a homely creature. with the drawn face Blossom knew so well in Winter's Building. But there was kindness in her eyes. Blossom caught at the worn Ilfllld. held it firmly. cried "When is he?" For answer the woman thrust a. rcrap of paper into her hand. ‘Come us soon as you can, dearie," she said. He keeps asking so for you." O O I O That last hour went on leaden wings. seeming that it would never pass. But down in her heart a little pulse was leaping all the time —he hadn't forgotten her. There was some reason why he had not kept the tryst. The woman had said that, he was cruel bad. Her glear lover ‘was asking for her. 'I‘hcn, at last, freedom. She nltnosi‘. ran through the lizi" ‘siding: to thahvery ordin- B1,,’ quarter given on the scrap of 981m‘. runny that Jack lbwld be NEW MODE 110R 1931 Marie, tiny member of the famous t Dionne quintet, has a new hobby, the collection of men's hats. Herc we see her after appropriating Dr. Allan Roy Dame's best chupeau. Both Marie and the doctor seem highly pleased about. ll all. .wl selves to death in an attempt to make a hit. vvvvvvvvv vv vwvvvv v al -:- Fashi ns -: Literature AA_4AA_AAQAg thread lace will: a l ms COOK'S CORNER BUTTIJRSCOTCII PIE 1 cup brown sugar 4 tablespoons flour 1-4 teaspoon salt 3 B885 2 cups milk 1 teaspoon butterscotch flavor- ing 2 tablespoons butter Baked pic shell Method: Sift, the sugar, flour and . salt and add the well beaten egg yolks. Scald the milk and p0ur 1t slowly over the first mixture. Re- ltum to the double boiler and cook over hot water until the filling is thick, stlndng frequently. Add i110, flavoring and the butter, and c001- P0111‘ into a well baked vie shell- Beat the egg whites until thcyl are stiff. Add 51X ta-bicspoons l brown sugar and 1-4 ten-slim?" 531*‘; Continue beating until the mix-i tune stands in peaks. Sprefld 5‘ roughly over _the top of the P19. and brown in a slow, 325 deg. FE.‘ oven about 20 to 25 11111111165- PECAN BARS: One-half cup melted butteizl cup brown sugar. Beat well together, then add 1 beaten egg,_1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon. OOOOOO Color ‘Adds Touch Colorful lpulllettes unbmldcnd the flowered vrlht lacket and cut-flut- prlnl. belt which enliven: the gown of royal blue allk rnarqulaette shown here at the LEFT. The lovely tiered frock ls of while 11111107995 595W bouquet of red and pink flowers. vanilla. about one-half cut in squares. nrinen. OnL, mo: ucrmed to be ‘all nerves.’ I did not fccl at all well. uchcs also sapprd my ntreiuqtli. l to use Dr. and l! strengthened me and rid me of that run-down, Fashions ’ Latest i -O§OQOQ&Q-O¢QQQQQA t G to Latest Styles baking powder, 1 cup pecan nut meats (broken), 1 scant teaspoon Cook in moderate oven hour. When c001 Use tin about 9 x 10 inches. RECORD IIERRING CATCH FORT WILLIAM-A record catch of herring was harvested here in the season just closed. The total was erilmated at more than 1,500 tons—the equivalent to 100 car- loads. There has been an tmpreced- ented demand for fish at mink farms this year and fishermen have bee‘: lzcpt busy. "| WAS All. NERVES" V. . FOR young girls growing illln womanhood, for \yomen_ in middle life going through the “changc," or those who suffer from headache, weakening drains, backache and ncr- V O U S I Plerccbu Favorite Prescription‘ abut vegetable tonic needed, Read 1111;; n William Roy of l8 Ptlhlm Road, st, (13th: “I was all rundown and _ I rnnld not do a day's hourc. Work without from; tired to death. Ilead- V, ‘ ‘ I decided lien-es Favorite Prescription upset condition." ,Buy now] For Chic Dressers l Your figure will be a dream in. this dress with molded bodice. A decorative slide-fastener zips 1t right up the center through the shtrrcd bosom to the tied neck. The lively swinging sk'rt is fitted I’ beautifully through the hip area. The first model, intended for afternoons, was of lustrous satin @9116. It's a fascinating affair of bright red wool crepe with gleaming dark blue slide-fastener. Crepe silk and velvet are equally lovely materials for this easily made dress. Style No. 1905 is designed for sizes 11, 18', 15, 17 and 19 years. Size 15 requires 3 3-8 yards of 39-inch material with 1-4 yard of 35-inch contrasting. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) wrap coin carefully address to Charlottetown Guardian giving- Style No. 1915 Name DIIII‘ Street Address City Stats DIES FROM EXCITEMENT NEW YORK-Morris Fenycs, 34, a Brooklyn printer, died from a cerebral hemorrhage brought. on, n is believed. by excitement when his 11 year old daughter won second place in a radio spelling bee. Una Iliad’: for ooldl.