_> nlr&>'.~ ;=-, u... . _,_',__ ~ < f~ ' 11» --..=.. .....1.».........i-.. to“ r.,_ _i__ ‘gigs EIGHT ir THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN‘. i DECEMBER 18 w, .-____._______1 i Complete your toilet with @111 icura Talcum Amen a baili with Cutlcura Soap, there is nothing more refreshing than (‘ulleuru Taleum dusted over all the body. Antiseptic and fragrant, it is an iileal Imwder for every member of the family. Frill evnyi-lii-ru. Soap 35a. Olllllul 25¢. all Mo. in ‘J! 2.1;. li-undiiui lloyon l. T. Wall Company. IJiL, llnuirvnL l? flint the . ashionable are Wearing ‘ruled llire~ssn1akii1g‘ Lesson Ifurnished With Every ‘zittern his». lly Annabelle Worthington . . ,5 ._ nztlon illustrated :\ rlinriinnitlfl filflldcr type in Princes suggt N’ ‘Mu: Tl e minted treatment zit front cmllhfiblzes the k l 1 h“ i‘: fflmmi‘ 'mlvxw"i'lir~ dlvrdulni‘ fikllllllilS l1 KYMWM ‘nllmlmg tmvard slim ill-l‘ "l m" “W " ‘ .. . -- =16 l8 years . . .- - ' Destined I01 >14“ - - ' lhi-ni ‘lllkllfdlhWf;llll(ll-1ill\(~ ililllllll! fulllcb‘ I _ _ H _ , _. 1 ~ <\ll 1nd 4" inches bust. The 36-inch size Nqulfcs 5 5M“ or '59 m“ m" U. l’ ~ l ‘n l of 1B inch contrasting rind 1‘~ Yards °Y 1”‘ ‘nch lace‘ In.i'i\ii'il will : 3'1"“ ' ' l "t The soltlv Nu. coco-at is unmistakably new and exceedingly saga! -k the bread“; l: ' ..1l:iii rr-vrr». irembine with the cmss-ovei" \estee to iea i ~ , , » ... ~-;ii'd¢ii iim- .-ii::li ll.c bodice. Ilie ]70lfll.(‘(l tieiitiiiencof lllebklll iifluilll; enjoin!“- ‘rri- hezvltied belted at normal WfliSUlllC is W“ pr I’ ‘n- lr‘ i3 vmrs ‘l6 38 40 l2 14 46 and 48 inches bust. The ii i (FINES l. _.i iw- - - - ' , _ . .4 w J. i f27-lnch y] Si“, rcquirp. 4i. yards of 39-inch innteiial with ‘. lflrd 0 , . . - ~' 1 0e ‘our small "Tin; A CHIP mntliei liulilinirl chess that will eln l‘i\ll “in me hem , |.,- pimp»... It has bloomers ten that llfTll 5111-"13 1911C‘ U, d I .,. ,_ VHF“, ‘Wm-r ir fClClllllll with deep mund scallopcel lull- “ ‘ ‘I P‘ i» Pt _ llie Peter Pan collar and cuff bands give Ollllvfhllllll’ l0? ‘W. d‘ W‘ W‘ u: lie ‘gncil for SlZl" ‘l 4 and 6 years. T110 4W0" all" r, " ~ ("P/l 2 5- -’ ‘" “ . r “I, Vt, F, w m,“ nmtcrial with l‘, yard of (iii-inch contrasting fr’ ‘rrfl -~. :-:i<-- ~ [:1 ; ». _\.n'cl ul milling. ‘ ‘ All patterns 15 gpms pllllll in stamps or coln (coin preferred» "izn- large hlon Book shows how to dress up t0 the minute Bi Very ‘l"1i‘(~_\'|!l‘llf»,(‘_ ll. contains most attractive Paris designs 101‘ "dum ‘m4 pgfili- n, enibriiii _ Xmas suggestions, etc. ,-,».. 1., pl‘ in the size of the pattern. Send Wtllllijls or (woin lcoln |1<~ . l ):< ‘i l. .1 ]'l'l(‘1' iif Liouk l0 cents. dildos - tluet last! This Lhrinlmus give Ilolpnlnlv Iilrrlriral Srrvnnlil. They are , moderately priced lml ensure 3mm of joy lo lhe recipient. Sec thr- widl- rnngr of apgllnneoo T\I)\\' on display. HAM-HO Electrical Servants Sold by_ rissocl/vriao GA. AND EM; Why is Marriage the Only Undertaking Which and whose result depended upon your luck, but that it wan an exact science. l much in love with each other. A-wf Y- .‘ i. r ,.. Dorothy Dix ' Letter Box l _.-. . ,._ Requires No Training?—Is New Furniture Worth More Than a Wedding Ringl- Family Goat Dear Miss Dix-The crying need of the day ls for o school of matrimony in WhlCh boys and girls could be taught how to harmonize their dispositions and warned of the things that cause marriages to be wrecked and which . turn what should be happy homes into funeral homes. 1t would prevent many of the tragedies that are caus- ed by bhe hlt-and-aklp marriages. Jusncg, Answer: Thank you for that phrue-Jilt-nnd-sklp m". rlages. It certainly does vividly describe many of’ the modern marriages in which the young husbands and wives strike out blindly in their fury at each other; faults and weaknesseshand then skip out ti; m; divorce court, without even waiting to see what damage they have done or whether the one he or she has left is fatally injured or not. I agree with you that a school of matrimony would fill a long-felt want rind have s. wide field of usefulness. It is a little cynical, when you come lo think of lt, that. marriage is the only undertaking in the world which is tliouglit to require no training, no knowledge, no previous experience. A plumber must serve an apprenticeship before he can become even a helper permitted to tinker with our pipes. A doctor has to spend years of time studying medicine before he ls given a license to practice. Nobody would hire a. girl as a. secretary unless she had learned typing and stenc- graphy. We wouldn't think of risking our lives by starting up in an air. plane with a pilot who had never flown before, or setting out on an ocean voyage with a captain who was going to sail over unchartercd waters for the first time. . Yet we expect tyros to make a success of marriage, which ls the most complicated and difficult of all professions, and the one that requires the finest technique. We let mere children undertake a business that taxes the wisdom of gray beards, and we let boys and girls, whose judgment we would not: trust to buy an automobile or a fur coat, select their lifc mates. We send novices out to handle situations that require the finesse of a trained diplomat. No wonder that we have so many divorces. not universal. The marvel ls that theyare Certainly a school of matrimony would do a great work l! it only took marriage out of the amateur class and put it into the rank of the learned professions. It would help a. lot 1f lb only made youngsters realize that mar- riage wasntjust a. lark or a thrill or a. chance that you took at happiness to be studied seriously and with all the intelligence that one possessed, and that the any ls turned out was just as inevitable iis that two plus two make four, or that two minus two leaves nothing. , The theory that clashing dispositions can be harmonized ls as revolu- tionary as Einstein's theory of relativity. Most husbands and wives, when they flnd that they do not think alike and have different tastes and opin- ions, fight it out to the bitter end, but a school of matrimony could teach the young hopefuls how foolish this ls. It could teach them that a husband or wife has just the same right to an individual opinion as any stranger has, and that 1t ls just as much up to married people to avoid topics upon which they disagree when they talk with each other as it 1s when they hold converse with outsiders. No man tells the lady that he takes to dinner that she ls a fool, no matter what he thinks on the subject, nor does he criticize the politics or religion of his best customer or client. Nor does any woman try to coerce the men she meets ln society into going to her church or get into a tantrum because they don't like her favorite author. Certainly n school ol matrimony could leach young 1rcople how to keep ull each otliei-‘s toes; how to avoid quarrels; the value of politeness and showing each other little courtesics and attentions. Aiirl there should be special courses in humor, and how to ilciil Willi in- i laws, niiil the best and most successful way to apply jolly, and ivhzit to iluf with a wile who cries or a husband who swears, and how to cure n wife of extravagance and a husband of tlglit-fistedness and so on. Oli, yes. there is need of a. school of matrimony and I would advise mak- lng its curriculum so strenuous and so long that by the time a student had got his or her P. M. (Prepared Mate) degree he or she would be old enough te know what he or she really needed in a wife or husband. DOROTHY DIX. O O l I O I - Dear Dorothy Dlx—I am a woman 25 years of age, a grass widow, and with one child to support. I have met a splendid man and we are very He is married, not. divorced, but separated , frnm his wile. He ivants me to live with him as his wile. Neither one ul u: are divori-eil. but my husband told mo to go ahead, lie wouldn't. botlierl me, so why should I spend so much money for a divorce? My lover wants to trike the money he has saved up to buy a modern home and nice furniture instead of spending it on i1 divorce. I know in the eyes of tlic law we would be doing wrong, yet haven't we any right to happbiess, loving each other as we do? LOIS. Answer: Certainly you have n right to happiness, but I don't think you will find it. by taking the road you propose and putting yourself in the class of women who are outside of respectable society. 'I'lie lnw and the conventions are the bulwarks that civilization has built up around society. They are particularly designed for the protection of women and children, and the woman who puts herself beyond their pale docs so at her peril. Marriage gives a woman a legal claim upon a man and if he means to stick to her he makes no objection to being married to licr. Marriage ls the conventional announcement that n. couple make to the world that they are going to live together as husband and wife, 9nd lf a man respects a woman he offers her marriage because he wants her to have an honorable position in society and does not wish to subject her to the humiliation of being looked down upon and despised by the people ln their community. So if ii mrin does not want to marry you, you may be very certain that lie Intends to get rld of you when he tires of you without any bother about divorce or about having to pay any allmony- A150 ma?’ hi! ha! I10 ("Rd"- ness or real love for you. ‘The idea that any woman would rather have some new fumlture than a wedding ring la so preposterous that I cm- hardly credit it. I should think that any woman would rather have respsctnblllty than even the newest fangled radio, or a kitchen done in futuristic colon. nonormr D11. ' o 0 o o p a Dear Miss Dix-My wife blames me for everything that goes wrong. when I ask her opinion on my matter aha will never decide lt. Always says do u youthlnk but and then if It turns out badly I110 110W!‘ M!!!" l1- proachlng mo. What shall I do? X- ' ELECTRIC svsr mi. iii lllll lil mm I Answer: Just laugh at her. Her cue ll very common. I often wonder ll’ hus- favorlte and is Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:-N__Literdture The Silhouette ra. 3 Diem ‘Pen Se! at $60. . Other PEE- tenu at $6600 the set. Etiquette Iyltlufilnl Q. Does an American wife ever share her husband's title, 1f he be a doctor, professor, judge, or the like? A. N0. Q. How far apart should the plates be set on the table? A. About two feet apart, so that the persons have plenty of elbow rcom. ’ Q. May a young girl ever go to a ball alone? A. Not unless she is a marked certain of being taken care of. A Morning Smile 4M)’ wile and I agree perfectly about some things." "Indeed." "Yes. When anything goes wrong I take lt for granted that. ll: ls my fault. Ancl Henrietta always thinks so, too." For The Cooli A l847ROGERSBRO& Each Christmas Mom In the Homes of the Finest Families, Shoe (ZHBSl‘MASMO'BN-—undoftbo bmngoflfihuaof hnp iness. Carei are forgotten an in Housewife’; hopes aha be realizcd—‘a chest of gleaming 184- Ro Bms. genuine original Rogers Silvcrp l And vvithtbonorVlANDllnifi and och What greattgoy m be has? And tbere’s Coma M or mo, who 118 voyaged along u h of tableware worncs. Now she wifi an]. on happily. n c hum-o ' finn- onedgwfierlyrofnu? than p] the 'd a1 ' lloabcsutiful oomploltlet-or risen-Elsie two of Hollownre to match a Ealtnrn. It la a Silverwnro No Christmas. appineas can be realized than Lhltwhicli 1847 05ers Bros. Silver-plate will bring. Tnqmn Tron 1| lurid reproduction of n QhandJo-(zu “i1....""“‘“f"‘“..'#“..#.i’.‘f.“’3i'.°.fl‘$.'.‘ a a - tnfed $55-75 ‘i215 the usual Holld: ban o Dinner or Dessert val gnd Forks at $41.26. iinilffififliiflenisfi Your clmloo of pgturnn. THEE GIFPS are in your nearest silverware dealefs store --awa.iting your call. They are priced to meet your every need-from single pieces at $1.50 to the larger, complete sets. Aiid,—to insure a lifetime of remembrance and hap iness, insistu n products of the International Silver Co. of ‘anada Limi —makers of the finest in Silver-plate and Sterling Silver. ' Mode in Canada-Keeping Canulhm Buy-Without lnacumg Prices . .- s - - aaczssemumzzcawrsaxa%a<wanwawwozsézcaw fiavafi THE FAMILY PLATE FOR OVER 80 YEARS ‘Rd. NNTnloIlI-lfllilm ‘|_ . I CALGARY “Ulfl. Dec. i7,~<sydiieis and edstwbllsluncnt of secondary 5am, Th9 next mp “to; be any u. The Canadian Press). Era of great. industries. fablllshmgnf, o1 n, plant where s“ ‘distribution of gas by pipe lines, par.‘ Hydrogen. benzlne, antllreeoe comes out of the ground. 1n order to gtlcularly for fuel, is envisioned in the solut/lo-ns for m-omncars. and carbon- 14:51; l1; on g 138g @919, immediate future by Dr. RC. Wal-|blnek used extensively in auto-tire I1 gas were lii welk 1a"?- Presldent. of the University of manufacture, were some of the pos. by Imllmtlon of pressure. he bellow. Alberta. Recently Dr. Wallace revlev- sible prodcuts of natural gas he men- ca, a larger w. ‘outage of gasoline ed the natural gas industry, lioldlng|tloned._ Work in connection with ex. in the ground might eventually in out wide possibilities for the future,| tiatctlon of bonzlno and hydrogen recovered for vise than 1a being ob especially in development of by mroJliad been developed a. long way, he mined at present with wells runnlnt ' wild. Give Her a Hoover and you glue her the best! A l I RICH PLUM CAKE chopped almonds, four and a pinch of salt. well washed and thoroughly dried cool on n. wire clove ln swarm place hands and wives do not mai-rylii order to get some one to lav their mis- takes on. DOROTHY DIX. spread this evenly over the coke. The following recipe for rleh plum i cake is rather new and comes direct l from England. Take one pound of selllralsing flour, three-quarters of a pound of butter, half a pound of brown sugar, one pound of sultanas, half a pound of raisins, three-quart. crs of a. pound of currents, a quarter ‘ of a pound of glace cherries, the s-imo of mixed peel, two ounces of eggs,‘ a quarter of a teaspoon of mixed spices Beat the butter and sugar to a cream, beat the whites of the eggs to u. stiff froth, then add the yolks and beat in the sifted flour gradually, adding last the fruit. The raisins are to be stoned, and as I have said before the currents must A good way to dry them ls to cover, . . them with a towel and set. the plate on which they are on the radiator. It is best to beat a heavy cake of this kind with the hand rather than a spoon. When the cake la ready for the oven lino a pan with two thick. nesses of greased paper, put in a moderate oven and gradually lower the heat. Bake for three hours and Ibr the almond fclng take three quarter: of l. pound of cuter sum and half a pound of-ground almond! ‘ mixed with the-yolks of three eggl. i l HnChristmas Hoover i will i». delivuod iii mne- i fivechllltmllclfwnflreldy ' to be put under the ireo for erxactly the same price as its prede? . cesuor. - . v If you give your wile the New Hoover Model 725 for Christmas, you can have the satisfaction of know- Y bu _ _ _ lag that you are giving her the finest ma“ y “on mnvmmc " . . paying only$6.2S down and the balance _ elect-no cleaner ever built! in man monthly mmmm we Wm In efficiency surpasses that of any also five you a liberal allowance for previous Hoover by 25%. Yet it sells ‘ your old cleaner. ' ' HOLMANQS A_Where Christmas Gift Selection is Easiest e-i-r? n-ia-ai, _