11... HOUSE WIFE and ‘ HER Acmvrnas Aurlxitrrrrownl Realm "-:- Social and Peltsonol e-Fashions l as "m j m narurm o} clmrsrmas Christmas once more, with joy sub- lime, . Directs our thought, o'er space and ime, , , , gTo far-off Bethlehem. Where, through the livelong hours of night, From evening until morning light, Shepherds their viglls keep. To them, amend, an angel bright, Enswatlrd in robes of dazzling light, essage brings ye watchmen A wondrous Dismiss your fears, true, For tidings good I bring to you, And to all men beside. To you, upon this hallowed morn, In David's city there is born, “A Savious, Christ the Lord. Then suddenly, from hosts above! A multitude, in radiant love, On earth the angel join. “Glory to God," in highest praise, They, their celestial voices raise, "And peace, good will to men." The vision fades, the host departs. The shepherds go, with trembling hearts. To see the new-born King. The crowded inn afforfs no place, For noblest scion of our race, He in a manger lies, What gracious condescension there! What mystery, beyond compare, That God with men should dwell! With reverence deep, the shepherds VlCW, And pay the loyallromage dug To Christ, their Saviour Lord, Their quest is ended. They return. What. raptures in their hosoms burn, . As praise to God they give.’ Now all abroad, whilst on their way, They tell to men, on that glad day, What they have seen and heard Their minds lllum‘d great wonder know And far and wide the tidings flow Of prophecies fulfilled! We in a later time may view, By living faith, our Saviour too, Andloygl service give. By deed and word where'er we stay, Tell all around, as well we may, What He for us hath done. By W. H. GARHAM WOMEN LACKING IN KNOWLERGE VITAL ‘FINANCE Mrs. Lorraine L. Blair, of Chi- cago, organizer of the women's finance forum, finds that women generally cannot answer simple questions 0n finance which would vitally concern their families’ future if they were widowed. She gave a list oi’ ten questions she said she had propounded be- fore women's clubs to show the members how little they were in- formed on famil, financial matters. The question were: l-las your husband a. will? Do you know the difference be- tween a stock and a bond? Do you know where your band's safety deposit box is? Is there a second beneficiary on yuor husband's insurance policy? What would you do if your hus- band died tonight? To whom would you go for fi- narcial advice? Homeless At Three hus- Do you know how much you should inherit from his estate? How would you invest any money from the estate? _._____-_---- A pretty manicurist has nailed" many a man. Never play with fire unless you have money to burn. The faster the man the bigger are his running expenses. It is surprising how short a time 1t takes some people to talk lw much- . When a man's wife is just a nag. she must expect him to follow the races. The fellow who does nothing but shoot off his‘ mouth seldom has an aim in life. Many a man seems to; feel he should get a. hero's medal for be- ing good to his wife. Success consists not so much in sitting up nights as in being awake in the daytime. Man is the only animal that gets the biggest kick out of things that aren't good for him. Some women are envious of oth- er women because other women have what some women would be glad to have. FLAVOR OF HONEY The flavor of honey is due to the aromatic substances found in the nectar of flowers. Since bees gather nectar from so many kinds of flow- ers, there are many flavors of honey. The lighter colored honeys, such as cloversorange. alfalfa and blends of these honeys are mlder in flavor and finer for general use in salads, sauces, with fruits, sand- wiches, cakes and light cookies. The dark honeys are splendid for gingerbread, fruit cakes, plum pud- dings, steamed puddings such as suet- Indian and the like, nut cook- ies and spiced cider. CANTOWS WIFE GIVES FOR- MULA FOR HAPPY LIFE .To be a successful wife, a woman must be willing to submerge her own ambitions. This is the success formula set forth b_ Ida Cantor. who celebrated_ her twenty-first wedding anniver- sary with Eddie Cantor during the shooting of “Shoot the Chutes," the famous comedians new Samuel Goldwyn musical for release through United Artists. "Eddie and I started married life with nothing but a great love and a lot of ambition,“ said Mrs. Cantor. "And right at the start we made this rule for success: When it tame to business, Eddie was to be boss; but when it. came to the management of our household, I was to be boss. "If you think it's a bad system. try it yourself, It's worked for twenty-one years for us." GFILMAN FRAULEIN CULTIVATES SLIM LINES v “Every day I am getting slim- mer and slimmer." This is the creed of the German Fraulein. Fashion shows of German models for export have taken place in Ber- lin, attended by buyers from many lands, including about a dozen from Great Britain. A striking feature is the extreme sllmness of the waist and hips in many of the models displayed —and thus a saving of yards of material. An official at one of these shows said: "German designers are now definitely aiming at slim lines. We find that clothes which emphasize nea‘. waist are the most popular with German girls. 'I'hey are also the most legant for export. “German girls are not at all like the caricatures of lumpy ‘fraulelns’. They are bent on keeping their fig- ures as good as anybody else's. They do not do this so much by dieting as by vigorous gymnastics, which are scientifically planned to reduce surplus fat." ________ Lightly Stlrched A light starching is well added when linens become old and strag- gly and never ace to stay fresh- looking for any length of time. It will rejuvenate them for several washings. i . mil- um a arranged smoothly When Traveling Your bottle of perfume will stand travelling better ii’ you will remove the ornamental stopper land replace with a tightly fitted cork for the journey. The dainty stopper may be taken along to put back in the bottle during the so- journ. Too Long l. Pipe The pipe which extends from a furnace to the chimney should only be of sufficient length to go just inside the .chimn flue. It should be sealed in tight. The draught of the furnace Is often retarded by having the pipe too long when inserted in the chim- nay. - A First-Aid Rule Take a tip from the first-aid book of rules and read the label on the bottle of medicine three times each time you take ‘a dose. once when removing the bottle from the cabinet, once jult be- fore pouring out the dose and third when replacing the bottle on the shelf. Then you really cannot make a vital mistake. _______?..._ DON'T LE1‘ YOUR COUTURE BPOIL YOUR PROFILE mldrward from the face and forc- givce the face a clean cut. well‘ groomed look and makes the profPe more interesting . This is AMorningSrnile I OTHER. BARGAINS "this." said the amateur art en- thusiast, ‘ with great pride to a small picture on the wall, "is a specimen I obtained very cheaply at a sale. It is a genuine Item- brandt, and it is actually worth about four times the price I paid for it." His guest, ‘who was extremely vague about matters connected with art. gasped. “Great Scott," he exclaimed, “you don't really say sol I've seen thou Rembrandt sales advertised, but all my wife ever gets at ‘em is bits of silk and ribbon." - SEEMS LOGICAL Liza. the negro cook, answered the telephone one morning and a cheerful voice inquired: "What number is this?" Liza was in no mood for trifling questions, and said with some as- perlty: "You ought to know. You done called it." of good hairdressers and beautici- ans. To prove this, all you have to do is look at a few before and after pictures of various stars. For instance. when one star first played in pictures, her hair was fuzzy instead of sleek and allowed to billow about her cheeks and to dip far down over her forehead. Her widow's peak was lost completely. Her nice profile was hidden. Even her eyes were overshadowed. Now, however, thanks to the coif- fure experts and to a new trend in hair styles, her locks are shorter and they're brushed backward from her face. Ker widow's peak shows. Her face has a neuter look and her eyes are accentuated. If you like little curls just in front of your ears, see that the; are extremely small and not especially fluffy. Remember that parts which do not extend all the way from front to back are generally more flattering. The shorter parts. per- haps even a crooked one that slants upward form the middle of your head. Remember, too, that a flat line across the back adds allure to a nicely shaped head. Most of the actresses have the front and sides waved but wear the back perfectly straight. One lovely player has two wide waves on the left side of her head, one on the right, a large bun at the back and not even a sugges- tion of a wave about it. "TEA-I-‘OR-TWO PERMITTED IN OXFORD ROOMS _,____ Ohaperon rules affecting women at Oxford university have been relaxed. Hitherto an undergraduate could not have a woman undergraduate in his room without a chapel-on, but women are now no longer for- bidden to go to undergraduates’ rooms, whether in college or lodg- ings, during the afternoon. The notice adds: "They may go to the men's rooms up to 7.15 pm. without their being a second wo- man with them." A woman undergradute said: "I think the notice announcing the concession might very well have been issued without the reminder that such permission is ‘intended to cover occasional visits only.’ "It is a step in the right direc- tion, however, and we are looking forward to the time when the ridiculous rule that a woman may not go out with an undergraduate in his car without permission, and then only when a second woman is present will also be a thing of the past." _____..__._._. CANADIAN DESIGNER SHOWS SMART STYLES Some of the most wearable frocks found in any Paris collection were seen at the Marjorie Dunton open- -w.-.=~ "of y Dir am . It's the Woman Who Stands by Her Man, no Matter What His Troubles — Reverse the l Situation, and the Man Flees One of the favorite topics of discussion between youths and maidens is the question of which sex is capable of the deepest and moat abiding passion; which loves more-men or women? ..._.__-_.._. Long ago a poet. settled titil wbblem b! declaring that “man's love is of man’: llfc a thing apart, ‘tls woman's whole tacos"; > an opiniOn which seem: w be pretty well cul- tained by the evidence we loc lll about uc. And pow comes along the Warden of a. State ltgkrlitentiary who clinches the matter by cay- .__.__._. "A woman prisoner 1| tbs ‘forgotten woman,’ so far, at least, as her husband sou. I cannot recall when a husband ever came to see his wife in prison. Wives seldom for- get their husbands who are behind the walla. but husbands never remember their wives. It ts a common sight to see a woman plead for her husband's release from prison, but per- sonally I have never known of a single husband who has shown that interest in his wife?" . Apparently, from the Wardens observation. husbands are fair- weather lovers and their affections do not stand the strain of public dis- grace as women's d0.‘ It is the wives who, on every visiting d5)’. 3°99 faithful tryst with their mates and whisper words of tenderness and cheer to them through the bars, and who wait outside of prison gates to take be poor, broken, degraded creatures back, and to so throw about them the cloak of their love that they hide their shame even from their Own eyes- But the woman criminal has no husband's love to sustain her, and when she comes out of jail she finds she has lost everything. Even her man. Of course there are exceptions to every rule that attempts to classify human hearts. There are many men who love deeply, truly, warmly and faithfully, and there are women who are as cold as an Arctic night and utterly incapable of any affection for any one but themselves. But, tak- ing it by and large, 1t is undoubtedly true that the feminine is the emo- tional sex, and that love plays a far greater part in their lives than it does in men's. Apparenly Nature has endowed them with a peculiar fac- ulty, not possesse‘ by men, that enables them to leave the unlovable, and stick to those on whom they have set their affections, no matter how much they revile and mistreat them. There is not a day on which I do not get pitiful letters from women who tell me they are married to brutes who have dragged them down into the gutter with them, who starve them and beat them and curse them, but who end their tales of woe by saying they cannot leave their husbands because they love them still. 1n every police court there are dozens of battered, bedraggled women who lie about the bruises their husbands have given them and claim that they got their black eyes 0r bloody heads by falling against a door. That woman's love is more enduring than man's is a fact so obvious it needs no confirmation. Only too often a man's love vanishes with his wife's youth and beauty, but you never hear of a woman ceasing to care for a good, kind, intelligent husband because he has acquired e. bay win- down and lost most of his hair. Indeed, it has become so common for mid- dle-aged men to forsake their wives for flapper-s that it scarcely raises a ripple of gossip. But for a middle-aged woman to divorce per middle- aged husband for a boy sheik is so rare it creates a. scandal that Bots on the front page of the newspapers. - It is also taken as a matter of course that a. wife's love is great enough to meet every vicissitude of matrimony. We expect a wife, for instance, when her husband falls sick to give up he» pleasures and aluu-rzlents and patiently nurse him through his illness, no matter if that involves years of invalldlsm. And none of us, not even the husband, hands her any bou- quets for the sacrifices she makes But let wife get tick and all that we expect. of husband is for him to poke his head in the door and ask how she feels, remark he is no good in a sick room and beat it for the ciubAnd when a husband does sit and hold a. wife's hand or care for her patiently through years of illness, we decorate him with a martyrs halo and sing his praises in the marketplace. That men themselves acknowledge that women's love is greater than their own ls proved by the fact that they expect their wives to forgive them the things that they would never-forgive their wives for doing, ._.___._.. It is love that makes the world go round, but'thcre is no denying that olnenjlrrnialrlrrcst of the motive power._ DIX. people. When it is ready. ask the are fond of it, of sliced pimento- " ‘—- few THE cook's comvm - ,. OHOOOIATI PIE Two cups scolded spoons cornstarch. 1-3 W9 Susi“. 5i teaspoon salt, 1A teaspoon vanilla, 2 egll Yolk!!- Mix cornstarch. sneer. cocoa salt. stu- in hot milk. return w double boiler. Cook over hot wate. for 10 minutes, stirring frequently. sac yolks of can. wok 3 minute longer. Remove from heat, coc- sligbtly, add vanilla. Pour info bak- ed pastry shell. Top with meringue made from 2 egg whites. W- spoon salt, a tabiespw" hub wear. l4 teaspoon vanilla. Beat egg whites with salt until stifl. heat in sugar gradually, add flavoring. Brown in slow oven 800 dvflwfl F- 9°!’ 15 minutes. TUTTI-FRUIT] CANDY BALLS ._____ Put through the food chopper ti: pound each of layer figs, seeded raisins, dates with the stones re- moved (weighed after stoninfl) 111d pecans or almonds, also 2 ounces of candied orange peel. Blend all m- gether, and put again through the chopper, using the finest of the plates, until the mixture is as smooth as possible. Form into balls the size of a cherry. molsttnms with syrup from canned fruit if too stifl and thickening with rolled and sifted macaroons if too soft. Divide into three parts, dip the first lot of balls into melted chocolate and roll. the second and» third in red and white granulated sugar, respectively. or dip in any good cake frostinB- ____ CRANBERRY JELLY Cook 1 quart of cranberries and 1 cup of water in covered pan, 5 or 6 minutes. Press through u. sieve and stir in z cups of sugar: and without reheating, pour the mixture into c. mould or lelly iflf$~ 13° 11°‘? "WY" to the fire after the sugar is added or the mixture will not jelly- The strong acid of the cranberry in con- nection with high heat "splits" the sugar and interferes with the jelly- lng process. savan - mmrra FROSTING 1 egg white, unbeaten a4, cup sugar, finely sifted 3 tablespoons cold water 1A teaspoon cream of tartar Few grains salt Combine ingredients in top of double boiler over briskly boiling water. Beat with dover beater until atifl enough to stand in peaks ('7 to 10 minutes). Flavor as desired and beat until thick enough to spread. During cooking. keep sides of double boiler cleaned down with spatula. RAISIN NUT FILLING l’. cup brown sugar, firmly packed 2 tablespoons butter V, cup water ~34. cup walnut meats, broken and toasted y. cup seeded raisins Top milk Heat sugar, butter and water in pan and cook until mixture forms a soft ball in cold xvaicr. Remove from fire, add nuts and raisins. Add cream until of consistency to spread. .the tinned kind is sliced olives, and a glass of, Bur- gundy or white wine (or half a udneglassiul of sherry). If the family do not like plmento you could use tomatoes instead, but your dish will not taste so puzzling and exotic if you do. Serve in the casserole or on a bed of macaroni or savoury rice. ._________ roukan nramoun, amass’! nucnr srona, 1s FOR sans butcher to stick a. skewer through it, or to secure it with string, and on the top of all to put a nlcc long slice of beef fat. You put the meat into a hot casserole in rather a. brisk oven for half an hour by it- self. Meantlme, fry lightly a quantity of onions and. carrots and. if you like, a little, but it must be a very little, turnip or parsnip. You take the beef out of the oven and with the vegetables put into the casserde a breakfastcuplulpf boil- ing water or boiling stock. Thcre should everywhere be vegetables between casserole and meat. Leave it in aslow oven for two and a half hours. If possible once or twice dur- Looking for a Christmas bauble for the wlfc or girl friend? The Junker diamond is for sale. Price $1,500,000. ing. ‘This is a. new house which has catered to private clients but until this year has never given showings for the press or for buy- era. Marjorie Danton is a Canadian who has lived in Paris for some time and has incorporated in her clothes the best features both English and Parisian fashions. Her sports clothes are particula - ly interesting with a variety of wooden materials in soft shades. Outstanding is a dress of rust colored wool a. yoke of beige wool applied in a double. V design back and front. This motif is rc- peaied in the small turn-over col- lar which trims the high neck. 'l‘he dress has pockets formed by double tucks, and there is a row of but- tons running up the back. She shows an ensemble in a plaid cf two shades of green and a bur- gundy red which has a plain skirt worn with a blouse of soft kidskln in the lighter shade of green. A fluted ruffle lines the front opening and edgec the collar and cuffs, and the kidzkin is crushed at the waist to form a girdle which fastens with a. buckle in front. The coat has a cape collar which may be pulled up high at the neck with a draped ef- fect or worn hanging lcouly as I shouldes cape- Burgundy red moire makes an evening gown with an intricate sash of crushed blue velvet. The sash circles the waist in front, then ll pulled through the side seams to emerge an an edging of the low back deccllete. Narrow shoulder straps are of velvet and there is an exaggerated circular peplum below the waist. AN INIXPINBIVI UNUSUAL Asktbebuiehcrwcutabouttwo and o. half pounds of stcwing steak. if lo in two long pieces about l. 1-2 inches k Then you Ink nu. IDIfIQmUIIdDIIIIPOuDdOI or then AND BIII‘ RECIPE cclecacctlcmc learn It sconce mpiiictoflnllndg. yd!‘ kl . m The ‘mo-carat gem, largest and rarest uncut diamond in the world was at a Pittsburgh jewelry store. Then it went to Boston, and after ing that time baste it with its own gravy. About half an hour before serving add about a breakfastcup- ful, or more if you and the "family -__._ that it probably will end its trans- continental "tour." returning to its owner. Harry Winston, Fifth avenue gcm dealer. Winston, who bought the dia- mond last spring in London, says. he may find it necessary to cut it into smaller pieces, of from l0 to 50 carats each, in order to dispose of it. The Jonker diamond, about the size of l, hair's egg was found Jan. 16, i934, by a poverty-stricken farmer in_8outh Africa named Jacobus Jenner. If he breaks his stone into smal- ler pieces. Winston said he would cut one section of 100 carats and continue to call it the Jonker dia- mond. ' _I Scampering’ s“! Th“; "r Quins Give Actors Movie nicucngogcd tnfilnifll’ “The It tiba Blon- m hcopiialatlllllllql‘. Ont. hiya gcnalntcrcptlrccovutbcbiollfl! aIl-tbeatlllvcftla. flvchncnitmicacaolflvb- Difficulties milk, 8 table- v 8 tablespoons cocoa. , and ‘ Christmas Lingerie $1.95 L $2.95 Lingerie‘ is alwfl?! an acceptable and welcome 8i“- In Pu" d ilk 6N1”: e slairsa sure beautifully’ bordered with Alen- con tyl" m“ i“ u“ $2.95 grade, and the lace trimmed csc and glove silk un- dies are 51-95- JTIIE MODERN PERMANENT Once upon a time an EeyPlI-iil lady-perhaps it was GU00!‘ Nefertiti herself-had the idea that straight black hair looked 070M517- She wanted hair with waves and crispy curled ends. But Queen Nefertiti and the lad- 195 0g ancient Egypt could not step into a. littler and command their slaves to carry them W m9 be“ hairdressing establishment on the Nile for a "perm"; they had to in- vent something for’ themselves. So all those years ago, they evolved a. method with the rude materials they had to hand. These consisted of short len8$hs of cane, round which the hair was wound. mud, which was plastered over the cane "curlers" to make the hair set, and the heat of the sun, which did the final work of drying and fixing. . - From the days of Iut-mkh- Amen to 1900 is a long step. Yet it was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that the brains of the hairdressing profession started to think seriously of pro- ducing a "permanent" wave. From being, if not a painful, cer- tainly an uncomfortable process that took up most of the day, a permanent wave is now a mat of spending a couple of hours at the hairdresser; a time which can be passed very pleasantly reading or writing letters. We are often asked which is the best system of permanent waving. All the wel-known modern systems are perfectly reliable and may al- most be used on every WM of hair. But a machine alone cannot give you a lovely head of curls. Success of failure of your "perm" is in he hands of the man or wo- man behind the machine, who must understand every type of hair; must know to a second how long it can be baked, must know whether to- usc wet or dry winding, whether to wind from point to root or from root to point; must know all these things just by the feel of your hair. With the advent of the close-cut. sculptured head, which entails the -.--. Lite .-atur<=. S. A. MC L——-—TH r-ii Donald LEADING STORE g1! ted, it is called-it is ‘:3; n5! dlffiiult to keep the hair clgnee. ‘s The first essential, of course. is to keep the hair in good condition. The next is to have the hair shap- ed and Weathered" regularly- When dressing the hair, comb it through and through in a sliahly upward direction well back from the face. (The comb may b! dampened with warm water cl light setting lotion.) Then let the halr fall back into position. assistw m; flfgwwazlfi by pressing them in with 891'!- To curl the ends in flat "snail" curls. dampen the ends of the hair with setting lotion and twist round ms finger. Hold firmly in position slip the finger out, and fasten the "snail" down flat to the head with hairpins or a curler. ___¢_---- MOOK PATE DE 1P0! GRAB If you are having in s lam 1111m- ber tn cocktail-u. try mwk PEN d! fol gras. This is made with liver- wurst, skinned and mashed, mixed with mayonnaise and truffles out fine. __.__Z.---_. CANADIAN SHEEP IIIIDEBS‘ ASSOCIATION DIRECTORS - ‘FOB. I936 Mr. R.-W. Wade, Secretary of the Canadian Sheep Breeders’ As- sociation, announces that the mail ballot closed December 15th, i935, electi ' Directors for the Mari- timcs. Nhfllfbbfi, Saskatchewan, Alberta. and British Columbia, re- sulting as follows:-- Maritime Provinces: Ronald Chisholm, Box 196, Antigonish. N. S. Manitoba: J. Basil Robinson. Belmont, Man. . Saskatchewan: W. C. Heron. Huntcon, Beak. Alberta: John Wilson Jr., Innis- fcll Alta Britishoclumbia: Charles ‘rum- er, Kllgard, B. C. . The Directors for Quebec will be elqcted at their own Provincial ' Sheep Breeders’ annual meeting and for Ontario at the annual meeting of the Canadian Sheep Breeders’ Association, to be held hair being thinned out and taper- in Toronto in February, i938. Rabbit's woolen or velveteen in c‘ "l? Dractical‘ material for this jaunty two-piece dress. It may also be worn as a 11cm and w“. over a thin sweater or s blouse. See small vlewl Then again you can m jacket blouse with a c-kh-p, Kara“: treats. and the skirt with sweater-g, It's“; splendid way of making gur- wa obe look m xt it really a, m e m," "n It's delightfully easy to fashion. and for a very moderate cost. Style '10. B15 ia deal ed 14. m. 1a ma. u. as fin iviiliiiffi bust. Biro l6 requl 4‘ .. inch materiel, m m” °‘ I’ Price of eawaau 1s cam; 1., Mmllc or coin (coin la preferred.) Wrap coin carefully, No‘ 515' she wwnucnnoecucn "nouns-u." x. vIOOIIIIIQQI ..........,,_,,, Street Addrcu renounce- Oily "--..-..-~-.---.¢¢..-" NOBIL PRIZE! Under the will of Dr. A. B. Nobclnwho died in 1mg, g1" "you Prices worth about “(Mm nah an awarded uch you - for du- wverlc: or improvements in (l) "We" W. (I) mm» o: medl- "M- i!) rlmlu, to lana- i-vh. (c) can . SMART CLOTHES FOR THE HOME DRES§MAKER 5.9 c . Yo“ 0 Q . 9 1&2 AQA 34.n- ~ ¢§°A7°'¢" c '55 °o , c’ * to sgii.