MARCH 2]. 1257 \ fir. CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _ PAGE NINE vvvvvwv al and Personal .-:- Fashions -:- Literature § W m , ' ' l o an s Realm -:- Soc; 5' ;‘ - Add that extrastouch 5 0 0 K i I A [T J‘ to your new pring outfit with a luxur- M s | c W“ or r. l. m < . C Fur For this Easter column the subject . was intended to be "In the Steps of ’ St.Pau.l’bH.V.Mto,bt - fortunatelyyl was unilhle Xto P2002128 the‘ block in timed to read all of it. A flatterin S oft Bu have rea enough to know 1k K l. gk ' that it is quite up to the high Sl Y. ° "l5 . aankdsard of Mr. Morton's other re or brown .. ' - ° - g l y fit h d in"? Reading, in the second chapter, of Te _ c ~ r9 91 Sll- Mr. Morton's trip along the road of ver fox, etc” 91L“ glzufs vuislorrémlalntéiegf the Ivlljsgt rto rnasc " me o n e liyrneshflirother Salulé t-lhe wréténg , . I owc was eompee on on 0:19’! gggzlllixlylvlknwters FUR COAT now at a. tremendous saving; Friday i926. It is of course a 1 t M! PLAN. Ask us about it. fictional and more intimate account I l . ‘ cit Siaufllsdllfe, one written in asvery Vl c arm ng manner. ome S comparisons are perhaps interest- 11g. 1“ 3mg, an“ Mr. Morton suggests that of the , two roads from Jerusalem to Y’; n" Paul choe the longer =— _.__ _ a ,‘ __ _ z ._ one through Samaria andlGalilee __ and up into the foctllihs of Mount Fashions’ Latest . For Chic Dressers ..J Youribshionabies will be very proud to wear this smart acotmn jacket dress for Easter. It h! mows its inspiration from grown-u p ‘l8- tors Easter dress, She'll be particularly enthll siastlc about the brief bolero Jacket‘. with its shoulder sleeves. She'll wl mt to wear the jacket over other f ,.l'0Cl<§ Vlihen she takes the jaoll et off, the dress reveals the new fitt lad and flared lines. And there's a plait at the front of the smart flarel l skirt to allow for romp and _play . The brief full sleeves provide no end of flattery to chubby little an ms. Mummy will enjoy sewing it and malke several versions in plq 1n and cotton print. A detailed Sewing Guide accom- panies the pattern. Style No. 3102 is desizgnned for s‘zes 4. 6. 8. l0. 12 and 1.4. years. Size 8 requires 1 7-8 yardi; of 39- inch material for dress with 5-8 yard of 39-inch material fur bolero. Hermon; Donne Byrne also makes him travel this road. Mr. Morton thinks Paul used a trotting camel, a mule or a donkey for the journey; Donn Byrne's Soul rides a horse. Of Paul's vision lvfr. Morton writes:—- . . .1 {in “At a point on this road, about twelve miles from Damascus, we saw the low-lying white city shining far off, set on the sand, with domes and minarets-lifted above a. feathery greenness. Somewhere close by. Paul was converted to Christianity . - - The subconscious mind goes with hands open tomeet conversion, but the conscious mind remains fixed and firm until something happens-some little thing-and a man finds his whole life changed. That seems to have been happen- ing io Paul . . . There is a remark- able resemblance between Paul's conversion and the recorded ecsta"ies of Christian mystics: the suddenness of the vision, the burn- ing light unbearable to the eyes, the sound of a voice, the instant- aneous change of a man's nature and the dedication of his life to God; and, above all, the know- ledge that the purely sensory lim- itations of the physical body had been outdistanced for a moment. just long enough to permit the visionary toknow reality . , . So it was with Paul. Remade and in- spired, his physical body "shattered by contact with -- conditions for which man's phy"ica.l body was not designed, those who were with him led him by the hand. into n, .. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin pl referred) Wren wln carefully address to Charlottetown Guardian giving- Bl-yle No. 31M Size..." 4, . ...... Name Street Addrell State City l MUD STAINS Always brush a mud-star ‘lned gar- mellt from the top to th e bottom. You will never free it enti rely from dirt if you try to brush a1 rainst the warp. SPEAR HEEL‘ STOCKINGS av 6 “Donn Byrno in describing the Shelook, the Syrian storm, during which Salli had the vision on his way to Damascus, writes:- The hot, poisonous breath of the Never before have we made a more excti ling an- nouncemeni! “SPEAR HEELS” are truly tllae fash- ion's latest in smart hosiery, and are the Higih Style Feature for 1937. Note particularly how well the above pictu lre dem- onstrates the smart slenderlzing illusion creuted by the new “SPEAR HEEL”, an compared with. the or- dinary heel. See this exquisite style in the new Rainbow “Clearophone” High Twist Chiffon Hose favorite shades for street, for afternoon, in sizes 8 1-2 to l0 1-2. nu w, in all for evening, $1.00 pr- Prowse Bros. ‘Ltd- desert. choked him. His eyes were burning rores . . . and looking in- to the blackness he saw Stephen on the ground, kneeling, sinking into sleep . . . - ‘O brother‘, Saul cried out, ‘God has loosed spirits on me. He has opened the gates of brass. and‘ smitten the bars of iron in sunder' . _ . .The horses turned. pulling madly, rearing. Soul's mount gave a shudder and sank to itsknees. . . . The sky closed in like the sides and roof of a tent. There was a aackling in the air. like thorns under a pot. for sound. bu‘ that got under the skin and tortured each twisted nerve. Lights shone, little round balls of light, at the iances‘ heads. The‘ winged horse of the ensign was like a ghted lamp. and under it one could see, in the ligh-t, the ensign's face. white and set as the face of a dead man. Wet drops, as 0d poison, swirled through the dark- uless and struck their faces. The sky fell swiftly- Then, with one vaat, outrageous crash, the world ended. “It seemed to him when they pick- ed him up that all his old life had gone from him . . . l-le heard the voices about him. the stirring, but he could see nothing . . - He could not stand, so gently and silently, they put him on his horse and 19d him onward." And so Paul became the greatest of all Christian. Missionaries. _____ Ruth Green Harris describes for’ the Times a. unique collection of Miracle Pictures at Nice in the south of France :— "In the early nineteenth century. at a blessed spot behind Nice called Notre Dame de Laghet, the Virgin performed a miracle. Floating like an‘ apsara below him, she broke the fall of a. peasant climbing P- precipice. The gratful man paint- ed his story of hallowed interference and gave ft to the little church of Lmghet. “Since that time our may is said to have performed many a miracle round about Nice, asking only in return a token of gratitude from the faithful-drawing, paint- ing, carved wood, stltchery- prot- fered as a testimonial of the accl- dent from which one has been. or shallbmsaved .. . .a.ndsopor- traits of every imaginable I-ndnul}: NERVOUS WUMEN O need for women or girls to suffer every from pen- odic painl, head- ache or aidencl-lca. In girlhood Dr. ' Pierce‘; Favorite Prescription is a ,_ _ v or 1v daeneficial ~- Ionic. hla is what Mm Earl ohnlton d Hllllllofl SL, W.. Hamilton. . Illd: "I etedl from pain: in my back and aide plrlodiuli . I would Wllk- '1" ' i Ill! headache! url liluy spells Dr. a Incl’ e. r-llwTr-llh III t: °ll-'l’;"e§..""‘il dill! Inells. Thin medicine improved ‘Indy ill d helm! to build Iv: 2 III m“ _,..- A Dorothy Dix’: Letter Box I Long Engagements Are Dangerous for They -Frequently Give Love a Chance to Cool- Then Marriage Becomes Common- place ‘Rather Than an Adventure Dear Dorothy Dilx—I am a young man 23 years old and have been going with a girl for about a year and a. half. 1 have told her that I love her, but l cannot afford to marry for at least three years. I am wondering if my love will last that long. I am afraid that she will become a habit and that I W111 be so used to her that 1 may marry her without loving her as I should. Is this likely to happen? Am I wrongor foolish in being so doubtful of my feelings? BOB. Answer: I dc not think that a. man can be too careful in analyzing his feelings about. a. woman before marrying her and being sure that what. he feels for her is really a grand pasion instead of just a pass- ing fancy. Marriage lasts a. long, long time and it seems longer if you get the Wrong woman for a wife. Whether your love for this particular girl will last three years, or through all eternity, I cannot. possibly tell. Evidently you have misgivings on the subject. yourself. This shows both prudence and wisdom on your part, for none of us know what. we are going to want three years hence, nor how any person or thing is going to loci; to n5 0r appeal to us then. We change. Our tastes alter. Our point of view is diflerent. We outgrow people so that those whom we once thought alluring we later find commonplace. Those we esteemed brilliant and witty seem dull and stupid to us. Those we regarded as the glass of fashion and, the mold, of form we look upon as models of bad taste, This is what makes long engagements or even the pernicious custom_ of young people “going steady" with each other to the exclusion of other boys and girls such a bad thing for both parties. 1t often forces them 1M0 11181118805 for which they have lost all desire because the man feels that he is in honor bound to marry a. woman after he has blocked her chances of marrying any other man, and the girl feels that she has to marry the mun whom she has ceased to love and submit u; me humma- tlon of being an unwanted wife because he is her last call to the dining car. Of course, no man can keep up a high-pressure love-nlaklng for three years. Romance is bound to get frazzled out by being dragged through the dust of everyday living for that long, but, worse things can happen to a man than marrying the girl who has become a habit with him. That means that he must find her congenial, interesting and companionabe, or he would have dropped her. There may not be many thrills in such a mar- riage, but it is as comfortable as an old shoe. The happiest marriages are those in which husbands and wives have become a habit to each other. They have adjusted themselves so com- pletely to each other that they have no life apart. Each is necessary to complete the others pleasure in anything. They even love each others faults. Ma would rather rub Pasrheumatism than dance with the handsomest gigolo in the world. Pa thinks Ma's cooking better than that of the most famous chef. Motheruftollows best lgjental advice OF COURSE YOU MAY HAVE SOME WRIGLEY'S GUM - IT'S C_-i_O_O_l_) FOR YOU! 9 Everywhere mothers are learn- ing that children need extra chewing exercise to keep gums healthy, and teeth strong and white. Hundreds of Canadian dentists are recommending Wrlgley’a gum as an aid to the preservation of good teeth. Keep Wrigley’s gum handy in the house. SAVE WRIGLEWS OUTSIDE 5¢ PACKAGE WRAPPERS FOR VALUABLE GIFTS Wrappers 7. o... Spolrlnilll, Double Mint, Juicy Irult, Pepin. ‘In! Laura! and PJf-(Eaoh I.l(. wnpprworlhono in‘ wrapper.) blades, luraan ferrules. . . . . . . . . . .fur I30 wrapper enamel-finish ..for l05 wrapper: Micro-lilo pocket lllch- ‘Coronlllolf’ Union Incl: Painting uqfinesr water Iqnohlmllnl pocket . llghhfilnchicngth, solid Flamfldxfllnchcsnvlth colours, 54 tlntll, and lnulnstandnrd size, two brass nickel-plated grommets, colourflut, brulh, in convenient metal container . . made in England. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .for 190 wrappers . . . . . . . .50: 175 wrapper-l SAVE THIS FOR REFERE G N N0 CATALOGUE PRINTED!‘ Sln o click In rs not lccoplnbh our name and Iddreu to Mall r ulred Wfflppefl for gm, flung with oronlo, before July l, i937. Wm. Hr [Icy Jr. Co. Llmlbl, Clrlli Annuo, But if you have any doubts about your love for this girl lasting three years and whether she will be as glamorous to you then as she is now, why not keep yourself free to pick out the kind of a wife you want, when you want her and are able to marry her? Wedding cake is best when eaten hot. ’ I I i U I O Dear Miss Dix-I have been working for five years. This brings me irl contact with a number cf people of my age whose friendship I want to keep. but I don‘t know how to do it because my parents have never al- lowed me to have any friends or dates, or to bring any company to the house. This rule still continues, although I contribute to the upkeep of the nice home we have and am helping my brother through college. l am not privileged to ask my friends to come to see me and I even hesi- tate to accept invitations from men because I am afraid of the way my parents wil. treat them. When I have a date or two with a man 1 am told not to let him come to the house again. I am 24 years old and l’. see my chances of making friends and of perhaps marrying slipping fromine because of my parent's attitude. What can I do‘? _ ' DEBPONDENT BESS. Answer: Screw up your courage to the point of reading the Declaration ct Independence to your family and asserting your rights to some privileges in the home that you help support. Tell them tilat unless they make your friends welcome you are going to leave and set up an apartment with some other girl. Maybe when they see your money slipping out of their fingers they will treat you as well as they would a strange boaroc. who paid her way and more. are so utterly selfish that they are wiliing to bTight your youth to save themselves from the trouble of entertamln! young people and the annoyance of being kept, awake at night. by the coming and going of your friends, or else they are abY-‘Imfl-llll dllll and stupid not to realize that not only a young girl's happiness, but, also her chances of making a good marriage depend upon her being popular with the crowd. This she cannot be unless she can entertain them in her home as she is entertained in theirs. Either your parents A good mother who puts "welcome" on the doormat, who is sweet and gracious to all of her daughter's friends, who keeps the cookie jar full and a chocolate cake on the shelf, and whose rugs can be turned up at a min- ute's notice for dancing feet, not only helps her daughter to a good time, but she gives her the best possible chaperonage because she gets to luiow the young people she is running with and she knows where she is instead of wondering at what night club she may be. And she helps her lo marry because out of the boys who get in the habit of coming to the house there is sure to be one who will think that Janie will make just the sort of a wife her mother is. But. the. mother who bars the door against all young people cuts her daughter of! from all fun and dooms her to old maidenhood. Nobody ‘wants a prospective mother-in-law who is a gmuch. I U U O l U Dear Miss Dix-Is it better to marry a good-natured, slovenly wife than a neat, cross one? E. S. ii Answer: Give me the good-natured clove-n every time in preference to the acid-tempered neat-as-a-pin one. You can always live in a hotel or board, but can't get away from a. vixen. DOROTHY DIX. Matthew. The latter, so often imaginable horror. describing past heard at Easter. has been described and future rescue. crowd the walls m HOUSEWIFE and HER ACTIVITIES ought to be brushed twice a day. If you haven't time to keel! white gloves and white lingerie touches on dark dresses immacu- lately clean, don't blly ‘them. Nothing is worse than slightly dingy ones. When stone settings come out of your costume jewellery, use Continued from page 8) LABOR. IN VAIN Biffles came home about 4 am. and did not want. iris wle Lo know about it so he commenced YOCKZHQ the cradle. Alter about an hour of this ills wife said: "How long have you been rocking,- the cruuic, Join)?" “About an hour, dill-ling.“ he replied. "What a pity," she said, “because the baby has been in bed with inc nlost of the flight." AN ANCIENT EASTER. GREET- ING “The Lord is risen!" "l-lc i5 risen indeed!“ was the older form of Easter greeting and the response of the early Christians, Stripped of the Easter trappings —tlic clothes the rabbits. the Easter eggs. tho EusLr parties stripped cvvn of the flowers and music oi‘ the Eilsnwl‘ service, the real joy of Easier i185 in the secur- ity of an llllSllflkllbl€ faith. This is not necessarily our faith, not the Jaiih of your neighbor. but, it is your own faith. That greeting of the early Chrstian church “'21s not half- heartcd. there urns nothing llllii" warm about it. It Wis a triumph- ant Statement, a positive assertion of belief. That kind of faith c:lr1"10s hope and confidence in life; it. has the assuranm that. nukes possible the impossible. the sunle quulit faith tvhirh long Z1110 was rrcosiriz- ed by Si. Paul. thv apostle, u-hcn he wrote his mclnornialo leitvr to the Hebrews which began. "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen". AN OUNCE 0F PREVENTION 13'." an epidemic of a coniagi-us disease has broken out. in the school your child-attends encour- age your youngster to ploy ont- doors as lunch :1.- pnssllvlc after school hours. Koo-p his holxls moving freely by giwillg hm a light. laxative (‘V(‘l‘\’ fvw days. Watch his diet and don't give him many heavy foods to clog his system. The better the condition of the child. the less likelihood of his succumbing to the disease. MATURE WOlWAh-X MUST BE ' PERFECTLY GROOMED actually is . The of the church—a century and a half of art and activity. “The earliet date is 1802: a pric- ture of a sailing ship in a fright- ful sea, painted in sepia on por- flclw of the workmanship. the diffi- cult miniature technique was very well understood by the artist mariner; so was the storm; so was the ship. Numbers of works in this manner are drawn with spiderweb exactitude. . - . "One often thinks of Giotto and Blake. ‘I should like to have known more about the child staring with blind eyes from an evil crafty face. and more about the artist. . . But it is stupid lo assume this patronizing. gallery-visiting attitude toward these works of art. You find yourself increasingly at one with them. _ . ." _ ____ This week. March 21st. wa‘ the 262ml anniversary of the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach. one of the two men who lifted the school of sacred music to its highest possible expression. ~ Cantatas represent the bulk of Bmhis vocal olltmlt, supreme ma‘en>'""<~= we tll~ l" = l ai-‘iiiflit: i.“ m: {dwarf celain. Judging by the ease and l but hi" fro l in B- Minor, and tlze Pas icu of st. by Sir Hubert Parry as “the richest and noblest example of devotional music in existence." The Pasions, which are more or less the legitimate descendants of the Mystery play! of the Europe of Medieval times, come midway be.- tween the Oratorio and the Sacred Cantata. They reprcsen‘ without action but with definite dramatc feeling. the final scenes in lthe life of Jesus Christ, Bach, in 311k; 5t. Matthew Passion alway" bflllm in the string quartet to lwflllflfllly the words of Jesus. The perfectly groomed woman always looks Vyolmger than she Mr. Tea Poll Says: For a Delicious Cup of Full Flavoured Tea Use IRA HMIN Orange Pekoe Tea china cement to stick them into place again. This of course. does not. apply to preclous or semi- precious stones which do not have solid settings. older you get the more importance you should attach to each and every rule for ncatness and daintness. lot a daily bath, regular use of deodorants or anti-perspirants. clean, carefully pressed clothes and well manicured hands be the basis of your grooming. Get into the habit of brushing_yoilr coat. CURIOSITY A Scotch woman and her son were basing a iarlzc cnuinllering shop when the boy stopped and asked his mother: “What place is hat and dress when you take them that " The mother replied: "That off. Always keep shoe tree in your is the place where thev make en- 511095- h“? new 195th" lifts Pl"? RllleS. big guns, and stool plntcs " on the minute the old ones got “what dag they dm. “m, Hf“ even slightly crooked, and polish plflteg mm..- mev 5mm them?» leather shoes every day, suede ones asked the 3,01 ' Embroidered Monograms for Linens ____,4; j Mayfair Needle-art 13.35pm NQ 311 Monogrammed and inltialled linens are always in such good lilsii), and l"? a-WBYB Polllllul‘. They have long been the favorite of good house- keepers because they are dainty and beautifully decorative. 'I'hr,\sc have been designed to combine delicate tracery in the wreaths with o modem. istic influence in the initials themselves. There are two styles of Wreaths- ens oblons one for three initials and a round one for a sirlgle initial. Each wreath comes in four sizes. The initials also come 1n [our 5j'[,(l5-1" mmdu for handkerchiefs. pockets, napkins; 2%" size for finger-tip towels, purses mens scarfs and large 4" initials for sheets, blankets bath towels, chlflfln kerchlels. etc. etc There ls a size for every need, whether you are mak- ing household or personal things. Each initial is beautlfuily designer find Very Simple to work. The pattern includes transfers of oath letter "l the alphabet lll all 5011f designs. complete embroidery lnsi.i*ilril0iis_ de- tail chart of stitches, color suggestions, as well as sample of flu-cud usc< in the originals. so: complete patterns and instructions for all of these designs RM 3° cents ln swoon or coin loom preferred) to The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Deparinrlent. [In this coupon Io The Charlottetown Guardian Hoodlum? Dept. Print your name and address plahl; vltr———— ~-—————-'f-—{rQvImq--__'___. DESIGN N0. 31f Rnng----__ -_____ _.. _ ___.____' StreotAddron—-—---------_____.___._.._‘ Iimr