PAGE ‘TWO _ y vvvvvvvvvv JWammis Realm -:- Social and Pe vvv7$vvvvv vvvvvvv 411E UHARLOTTETUWN .I . ‘ecoowv-v-ov-vbaitsz- ‘AAA LA v vvvfivv- vv, 1v vwwvvvvv GUARDIAN \ a s‘. a _'_ s a as ‘gQgg sass‘ a AAAQAA vvvvvvvvvv VVVVVVVwvV-vwvvwvvvi rsondl -:- Fashions -:- Literatd ._ »/ i» r L ' 22 Dofiign N0. 227 Vivid hues of the handsome peacock are transferred to linen b'y sim- ple embroidery stitches. Used on a add color to any room. table or buffet rtsnner this design will Equally attractive as a wall decoration, living- mom pillow or under the glass top of a tray. - The pattern includes instructions for embroldering and finishing, de- tails of stitches, color chart and stitch chart. Pattern also contains sample of the thread used for the original model. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) to The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department. To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. DESIGN N0. Z27 ' Nam¢._.__.._... .__._ ..__ Street Address — — — — — — -- - Clty — — — — — — — — Z‘_ A MomingSmile CLOSELY LINKED In a kindergarten class. flags were shown, and in answer io a CHEST Cotes . Distressing symptoms relieved by rubbing on 8K5 VAPO RUB STAINLESS —--Provlnce—--—--—--—-—-- the re- question a little girl gave isponse that was expected of her. ,“This is the flag of my country," , “And what. is the name of your ‘country?’ was the next question. reply. ‘Good morning‘ Martha; always knitting. Do you find the siockinfl< givezir longer if knitted by hand?" i "Wear longer? Yes, of co rsc. ‘mum. You wouldn't believe it, but ‘HIS pair of my husbLindZs socks I knitted five years ago and I've kn t- lied new legs to ‘em t\v‘ce and new- jfocted ‘em five times. Seems to me ‘they'll never wear out.’ l ""I'is of thee," was the prompt, Changes in Family Life, But There is Still Love and Ties That ind the Members Together A group of ‘eminent sociologists are trying ic find out what Ls causing the breaking up of family life as it used to exist. They say that the old- i fashioned home, in which devoted parents and dutiful children, lovin! brothers and sisters formed a close-knit iam- ily circie is 8s extinct as the dodo. That if and mother and children gathered about the = lamp to spend a happy evening together you could sell it to any museum for a curiosity. l And they want to know why this is thus. i Many explanations may be offered for the decline and fall-off of home life. One a that a home feeling has necessarily to bi- built about one‘s abiding place, and when we gave up living permanently in houses and began migrating from flat to flat we broke the tie that bound us to any one spot. You can't form any deep attachment for a place ~ " that you leave before you ever really get its street number fixed in your memory. Nor can you sing "There 1s No Place Like Home about a cubicle that is an exact duplicate of hundreds of om. . ers all about you. | | we are Wm in hospitals. We live in rented apartments. we are - . buried from a funeral parlor. And after we have been away fiom our 1 I} ‘ old home for a couple of years we couldn't g0 back to 1y, if we wanted to, , because it has been torn down and a garage or filing station erected where i once our infant feet trod. , It isnt the fault of the young that they are not sentimental about home. On the contrary, they are actually maudlin over the subject, as i5 Pmved by the fact that almost the first thing the new rich buy is some- body elses ancestral home, and that almost any old place that locks as 1f it dated back to the Rutherford B. Hayes Administration will fetch twice what it is worth. Another reason for the decline in family life is that there is so much more gayety now than there was formerly. 1n {no gogd old days a fannly stayed at home in the evenings and listened to somebody read aloud or Play on the melodeon because there wns nowiiere to get and nothing else to do. There were no cheap amusements. No automobile chrmiped at, the ‘ curb eager for a spin over a good mad. No roadhouses, no movies, no taxi klances, no hotdog stands, none of the thousahd-and-one inexpensive diversions that tempt old and young, rich and poor, away from home, which, after all, if we are honest €il011gh to admit, n’ does ga dull and monotonous and on the nerves‘ of even the most domestic, But after a.l, isn't this wailing over the breaking up oi the fajnily p, little premature grief? For the catastrophe hasn't happened yet. The famiy circle may have lost its original shape and become a little bent and lopsided, but it hasn't been broken. Blood ls still thicker ma“ “ma; Brothers and sisters have stood shoulder to shoulder during the depression and divided their last penny with each other. Buys and, girls who coll their parents "the old man" and ‘the old woiiiail“, and flout their author- ity and mock their opinions, sacrifice their desires for love and marriage and homes of their own in order to support their fathers and mothers, And parents never turn a deaf ear to their children's cry for help. No matter how small their house it is always big enchgli to lake in me 116mg- 1055- N0 mail" 110W tilih thtii‘ Purse there is always something in it to divide svith the needy. No matter how bent the back it can always lake ; on the burden of the son or daughter inltrouble. And so the elol-mj mm. 1 il_v ilc still holds, no matter how widely a, family scatters. ‘ Furthermore, we mustremember before we get out the tear jug. lhn; while family life can be the most beautiful thing in the world, it can also be the most hideous and cruel. There were homes that were prisons and in which every joy and hope and ambition was crushed out of the inmates. There were parents who were grinding tyrants and who ruined the lives l of their children by forcing them to do things they were not fitted to do, laud ivlio doomed tlicm to loneliness and heartbreak by preventing them from marrying those they loved. To bemoan the passing of such homes (lilCi to bewail the breaking up of such families is an incongruous as it would be to grieve over the fall of the‘ Bastille or the abolisliment of slav- , cry. . Not nljioiiies are places of peace and rest. Not all parents are wise ,iint! tender and just. Not till brothers and sisters are congenial, The members of inziiiy a famiy never really love and appreciate each other until they live a. thousand miles apart. So perhaps the breaking up of ‘ the old-fashioned home is not as great a tragedy as we suppose. DOROTHY DIX. you could find a home in which the father i 9 nose MARIE BEAUTY snow The HOUSE W/IFE and HER ACTIVITIES out part of 70w IPNIIIWQ- 0.]- ygvlug will M you moot critical inspection. All tn“ given, Including ZOTOB maeh- ,1 fueled. ' Special Prices-Phone 1M3. y, ful swing hem is moderately flared. The skirt is cleverly gored to keep the back slim and has an inverted platt at the front. A decidedly slender-lung feature is the panel effect from neck to hem. Use your own taste about the neck. It may have a shirt type collar or a stand-up collar. The sleeves add slight shoulder fulness to make your waist slim. ‘Ihiaeasyioaewdmutsalao dia- iiriotive in wool with braid trim or a {é ' 4 J Silent night, holy night. All is calm, all is bright‘ Round yon virgin, mother and child, Holy infant, so tender and mild, Sleep in heavenly peace, Sleep in heavenly peace. Silent night‘ holy night, Shepherds pray at the sight. Glories stream from heaven afar, Heawnly hosts sing Alleluia. Christ the Saviour is born, Christ the Saviour is born. Bells call many to church, but few enter. If women had any sense, would be more bachelors. An executive is an important there funits" are substituted. This means that when you buy bedroom fumi- ture, for example. 17°“ may i-‘lwm vou.i- bed and then will be shown four or five chests. any one of which will harmonize with the bed. Chinese des‘ being prominently shown‘ and brown being the com- ing color. The wood base lamp. in walnut or mahogany, is gaining popularity, with silk shades the favorites. As in women's apparel, manufac: tuners have at last become con- scious of the small woman, and are paying more attention to designing ladies’ chairs correctly proportioned for her comfort. person who hasn't much to do. It's a wise fool who can keep his lack of wisdom to himself. The louder a. man squawks in his office, the softer he talks 8'» home. Most girls use make-up because they haven't the face to go with- out it. Friendship is a. noble sentiment ou-t of which a lot of us hope to make money. Trouble should never be unex- pected. There are always so many people predicting them. It's as hard to stop a man who is always on the go as it is to quiet a woman who wants to talk. Mother used to save her wedding drex for daughter. Now daughter saves her wedding dress for another wedding. WHAT'S NEWS IN FURNITURE. Modem and eighteenth century styles share the popular approval in furniture this season. Early American, French, colonial and early English are also in the pic- Lure. Mahogany is the rriost fashionable wood’ for it is the traditional wood of the Chippendalle-Hepplewhite- Sheraton-Adam quartet. Walnut comes next. And as to finishes, the furniture market seems to have broken out into a rash of "blonds" creations. Suites of furniture are out, and today's Short Wave Radio Program (human-anemone Orientals are still tops in rugsf in crepe silk with two-tone velvet ribbon. Style No. 190i is designed for sires 14, 16’ l8 yearn, aa, 38, 40, 42. 44, 46 and tit-inches bust. Size 36 require; 4 1-4 yards of 39-inch material with 4 yards of 1 l-i-inch braid. oeoooccoeooeooeooawoos,““_. For Chic D ressers" — s - *-:e¢:-._ "u" “cwecscser-‘c es“ M ~ - ~-oeo“-‘ ““ “““ ‘ ““‘ ‘ ' ' ‘"- " " wnn“ v 0 1...... 3a;- , , T f Fashrons’ Latest Dorothy Dix - P5""4'"5" . This black satin-back crepe dress Changing Conditions Hate Brought Equal m. m. i. I very tnitport- Qmfiwnffiilwiiiufgéfi? Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) wrap coin carefully address to Charlottetown Guardian giving- Style 210.1904 512e,. . . . . .. Name ~ Street Address City State wzxar. 31.4 m., nuns“. nauuu 82m p.m. — Songs by Robert Schumann. DJD, 25.4 m.’ 11.77 meg. LONDON 9:55 p.m.-"I.ondon at Christmas Time." GSD, 25.5 m., 11.15 meg; G80, 31.8 m., 9.58 meg. MONTREAL 10 p.rn.—"Ici Paris"—muslcal entertainment in the Parisian manner. CRCX, fill in.’ 11.72 meg. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER. 23 PARIS 3:45 p m.—Comedy: Seven Four are Twenty-Blight, by Romain Coolus. TPA-S, 25.2 m., 11.88 meg. ROME 6 p.m.— News in English. ‘Symphonic Concert. "Topics of interest” a talk. Vocal concert. 6:55 p.m.—'ilmpire Magazine," No. l9. Christmas Number. GSD. 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; GSC, 31.3 m.’ 9.58 meg.; GSB, 31.5 m., 9.51 meg. MOSCOW 7 pun-Women's half-hour. A Woman Goes Shopping. RAN, 31.2 m., 9.6 meg. EINDHOVEJN. NETHERLANDS] 7 p.m. -—Happy Programs. PCJ‘ 31.2 m., 9.59 meg. BERLIN 7:30 p.m.—The rising light, or the New Year. Cantata by Erich Kruger. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. SUHENECTADY 8 p.m.—Latin American Concert. THE COOK'S CORNER PLUM PUDDHWG BARS. One-half cup citron peel, 1-2 cup raisins, i-2 cup dates, 1-4 cup sweetened condensed milk’ icing sugar. Put frilit through food chopper. Moisten with sweetene’ condensed milk and dust with icing sugar. Set in refrigerator overnight. Cut in bars and serve.‘ ‘These are very different from any home-made candy and are delicious. CHRISTMAS CANAPES. Cut the bread for the foundations of the canapes with a star-shaped cutter. Beat a cream cheese with a /._) m“ f§~ ‘a =~woo re fork until light, adding a little cream if necessfl-W; tint it a dqlicaie green. Also tint some mayonnaise .i light green. Spread part of the sfars wlzli the cheese and part with tlie ma}- onnulse. Garnish the points with ii narrow border o.‘ pzirsley chopped very fine and just wiiliin tlte lllif! of the parsley add a row of clioppril radish with a tiny star cut from radish for the centre, or cut narrow strips of pimicnto and arrange them on the slur to rad rite from the centre points. cauimr runbrivo rort CHRISTMAS. One cupful grated, rniv carrot, one cupful grated raw potato, one cupful bread crumbs‘ one cupfii Sultana raisins, one cupful curraiiis, one cupful brown sirgur. three- fourths cupful ground kidney sue‘ one teaspoon cinnamon, one-hal teaspoon each of cloves’ nitme ‘and ginger, one teaspoon salt, oii saltspoon baking soda, two table spoons sour cream, OIlC-‘ililif cupfii flour. Mix thoroughly" tiii-ii iii: well-greased mould, and steam fo three hours. Serve \\‘1lll r i sauce. This makes a. very ' pudding for the Christians dnrer Gravely peering out from a firm stance in her high-chair. this little Scotch lnsie certainly had no idea. lhat she was one day to be u rqueen. BY MILTON BRONNER Idea Service Staff Correspondent London, Dec, 00.—I.ady Elizabeth was brought up in the best and happiest aspect of English country life. Except for a couple of brief terms at a London day-school, all her childhood was closely linked to the rural life of St. Paul's Walden- bury in Hertfordshlre. turned t0 grassy lawn=, an dthe drone of bee; over the clipped yew hedges. There were alluring woods there- about, as there were also at Glamis. where the earl and his family went for : stay each year. It was her youngest brother avid who was Elizabeth's evpecial laymii e in foray.. lrto barn lofts ' and hay tncku and iii ciiai-ades and in the cvcn- j game; 01' reciictisn. 4112s. _ . Lovely long dark hair was a feature of the girlhood beauty of Elizabeth, at 5, a: tn the top picture, and in the yearn Just before her marriage, lower photo. I The talent for entertaining de- veloped young, and many visitors i were much impressed by the fa- . cilitywith which the little lady of 3 or 4 managed to engage" them l- conversation at tea. Education was by private tutors at home, and progressed rapidly, with the typical continental course, which included foreign languages, m\sic, and dancing. Wai- Came Close bet it not be forgotten, however, that Lady Elizabeth, like the son: of the king himself, was a. child of the war-time generation. It was on her 14th birthday, the dark Fourlh ofAiignst, 1914. that Eliza- bnh ra: in Landon theatre with her mcther and brothers and heard the new: that. war had been de- [clued The crown of motherhood, twice bestowed on Elizabeth before she became queen, became her well, In the eyes of her subjoctsmllere she is, as Duchess of York, with the tiny Princess Margaret Rooe ln 1980, when the Princess Elizabeth was a bonnie glrl of almost 5. Elizabeth's personal care m u“ Pelfihl 0! her girls has endeared her to domestleminded Britons who have watched with keenes‘ fnferegt the growing up of thol ohudl-w who may themael - be queen; i, , Elizabeth ’s Girl/marl Happy, Busy; Wins Duke ’s Hea rt The big day in every woman's life, even a queen's!. Lady Elizabeth Bowel-Lyon leaves her father's house for her wedding In Weat- mlnhter Abbey. l Within a few days, her four ' older brothers, Patrick, John, Michael and Fergus were all with the colors. Fergus died at Loos. and Michael was badly shot up. and was invalided home after a long stay in a German hospital. 1 Immediately Glamis Castle was turned into a convalescent home ‘ for the healing of the broken bodies that began to stream back from the fields of France. Ward cots , were installed in the dining room. i and a aoldiera’ mesa maintained in i the ancient crypt when armored i figures suggesting Macbeth himself ; looked down on the weary and bottle-torn soldiers. i Fire ahreatens Cutie Elizabeth was. ' of course, too K young to do any actual‘ nursing, Even l seven-pound New zealand salmon trout known his place when the Duchess of York goes a-fiahing. It’! at the end of a gaff! Note the soldiers, talked with and enter- tained them with singing and music, helped them write their letters, and o. thousand and one things that helped them through the weary weeks of convaleseence. Once during this period, Glainis took fire, and Elizabeth was one of those who helped direct the in- adequate fire brigade from nearby Pbrfar and Dundee. Through only 16 at the time, she took an active hand in removing art treasure: and other valuables from the threat- ened castle. It was not until mid-iillil that the last of‘ the w ’ soldiers, health restored, left the castle, and brother Michael was at last re- patrlated from Germany, his health incompletely restored two years 0M vi the queen‘: tut photol u Poise andlrepose, . DWI"! 0| York. made as she went queen's most characteristic Ililem‘ for u walk with Princess Margaret lo), are suggested by this ‘W0 of (I115 “PW new and and mam: lnlormul portrait stud!’ wit" i‘ P“ hospital camp. v , Active in Girl’: Work ‘This four-year experience lerved to sober somewhat the 1117mm little gtriofthecotimry frolic; Anda formal “coming ou ‘j into society was "not done" in those days. Be- cause her sister, Lady Rose, bad married urn-in: the war, Indy Elisabeth become her mothe’: chief assistant in running the extensive domestic aide of the earl’: affairs. Journeys to London now became more frequent, however, and the librfarshire Girl Guides took a great deal of her attention. And when ‘the Princess Mary visited in I the neighborhood, her own inur- est in the Girl Guides formed a i common link of interest. The i Duke of York, he who in now king. lbutaheknitted sunbeam for-the o: confinement in a oei-mmlwunuutttoiiiaamganame. Informal garb. Three Proposals? It was shortly after this that llliaabeth was one of the white-and silver bridesmaids at the weddin! a! the Princess Royal in Welt- ninisier Abbey to Viscount Las- eelles. Two short Journeys to Par-ta were her only trips outside the British Isles. Her friendship with the royal family firmly established in thc public mind, Lady Elisabeth w. one of the popular objects of spec- ulation when the British public took part in its chief recreation, that of suggesting a mate for the ‘then Prince of Wales. But the Duke of York had a different view n. the aituation. One Sunday while he was again a victim‘ to 8t. Paul's Waldenbury, thoymmg couple did not goto church, but Illlltl inched in the Bone (In light colt) Elisabeth. woods when Elizabeth had so often played ls a child. When the duke returned to Lion- don on Monday, he had news for his royal parents. It is generally believed in Britain that he had to ark three time: for the hand of Iody Iilizubeth before she was con- vinced that he really loved her and was not alnipiy being driven by parental or public preszure Recitation to accept the burden of the dukes public responsibilitie- would be ohly natural. But three liner or once, the engagement was innounced in the Court Circular Jan. 10, 1928. The following week she motored to Sandringham to receive the royal blfllllhl. which was gladly given. Welding Ia lrupnaiva Jrbn woddinl was hokfon the dog. following April 26. Willi all till pomp of royalty. _ _' As she entered the Abbfi- t1]; bride paused for a. moment We 0- her bridal bouquet on the of“ ‘h $111 Unknown Warrior, Th0" in advanced down the dim aisle a§ned_ sun broke. through the Sifiijbey "glass windows or the hrtoi-lc A w; The Prince of Woes handed 0rd the ring to his br:t"ie:'. Aibfllwjnl" . the Archbishom of Cantr m" ‘allowed the vows with S01; ‘- words to “you yourselves as sin P man and maid." u p Be consecrated the couP1¢ lwdln; public service, and concu and “Through all the change» y chances of this morial life. 1111:“ God's love overshadow i'0"i n" power protect yo". Hi5 Pane u ma you.‘