AGE mom‘ .. vvrvvv‘ v v "alin ti:- Anxxnnsngnxs-xn‘ a lsxananna;v¢vé¢ Five Princesses Among THE GIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN v w. v v - t: ll EN MARY'S NIECE, AGED 10 r‘... LAUY lRIS-MOUNTBATTEN, ENGLAND PRINCES RELATIVE, AGED 1L ' PRINCESS IRENE, nus-null“ . COUSIN, AGED 80. "{- r. ' “"3 . ifluuc .- Bets B5B EUGENE, GREECE PBINCESS KATHERINE, GRECE COUSIN, AGED M. SISTER, AGED 21. ~f :11! "ill lllyorrt areqaliownrthe cig hi bridesmaids who will attend Pr ' Jindcee Marina on the occasion of her marriage to Prince George on "Nllvcmbcr-ZS. Ofthe eightrflvs are princesses, three of whom are cousins and. one her aialer. Princes s Elizabeth and Lad Mary Clmbfl dge, two youngest bridesmaids will probably act as tr -bearer'~s, Gov: .lfl'li1"lllel_y'to' Hp of whitccrepe woven with delicate ' vvviv anal . -:- .snnsanhn4nn sliver thread , ‘totmakela perfect background for Princess Marinabsilver bridal gow n”. _ .~ ,.. u ' * _ ' . mrrvcess anrzasarn. _ _ ' nuonrrrqnramos _. -. sconce-s NmflE-Afilll. i The “HOUSE-WIFE and HER ACTIVITIES SUNSET 0F THE YEAR If misty earth below is wan l‘ r r- and dreur, I ‘» haying winch chase all the t " lnves away, - cruel hounds trembling deer; _ls a. solemn time, “out. of the year. pusisuethe the sun? THE DAYS WORK every day and be done lt. You have done what " could; some blunders and‘ ' ditlcs crsrpt in—forget them finsocn as you can. Tomorrow is, ipflwiday. you shall begin it verses serenely, and with too high-a. spirit to be encumbered gwltlptyour old nonsense-R. W. bn . ——_—- Zfr»—¢4>"-w><u»v~rs-v,*~v~0,~<>ur’f‘ .. .- r rscrs before every fact as o. ‘IRE child. Be prepared to give u every preconceived notion, 101-‘ l urnlbly wherever and to WIlEt-, er abysses Nature leads. or you shall learn nothing-T. R. Huxley. when Princess Marlm comes to llve ln London af-ter her wedding, Tesltisoertainshewilldofora r. portion of each year, she will find ‘_ her favourite Greek, sweets and pteserves easily dbtglxrable. On her return from’ ‘the Princess r intended to go tn Omsfield’! little store, which is stoked with national Greek delicacies. Here she will ‘find lookhmrm. which is made on the Island of S .~.._..fi.r.--s,vswe-s. - -. . and ls often called Turkish light igrtflls country, It is really grade" delight. pests l t ‘V z-iymemrs sen/t over for her E. household. I l’. m: srzwmo nssrnrr { _____ . . {How's wide piece of tape 0v: the Mp of your curtains ore m8- gg tlAtn in order to save strain of e curtain pins. i cnnanmo LEATHER. or berg is 'Ma a good purse siren “terse because rt A looks dlsreputably soiled. A great; deal. however, can sometimes be done at home to prolong the life of the self-same old favorite. Fl-rst lmnh ut the lining well, then soak some ksorbefirt cotton in a good liquid airer and rub the leather with e. movement. always keeping circle larger than; the particular skim you are attacking. The lin- l of the purse should be scrubbed t me ‘small ‘nailbnrslrwllpped in ‘ cleansing liquid . Sormctim thospurse ls small it won't hurt l w mp the whole thing m the d. When still damp rub B38. w rench click If a final polish ls . necosary, a good fumii-Me can be used. or one of the I’ ' f cream pnlifllflt, which ‘mil g’ be light in tubes, isagood thin! if themes: is yer? shabby- .,,_.._ f._..-.._ _ _. n. ..- .,.,.-‘<-—-: .. " ‘s. > ._ .. ._.o..~..-.. . ful grandmother, says: “Oorrrrplete- ly untrained and with no openinfl ass. B; Stoddard. _ is women guests excleim; ‘fwhert- outside of school teaching for women in those days, she fell bank on her needle." "Remlndlnt one.” comments A. W., "of the man who sat down on the 8W1- of the mo- ment." FORTUNES IN TIPS ., . Head porters at big hotels are finding that things arent what they were in their pl ‘essions, and they are a little annoyed ” the most authoritative amwrmt of Landon induct-l’? iii-day. the NW Survey of London Life and labour," persists in the old stories about their golden harvest of tips. The latest volume of the Survey. which has just appeared, says that although the head porter may receive no more in wages than a Dfl-Sc. his arurunl income may run into four figures But the head porters insist that this is only time in exceptional circumstances. Perhaps the record fortune left by a head porter was that of George Mowbray. of Manchester, who was worth £50,000 when he died. Add Nicholas Mooketlt. A’ Inndon, who died two. years am. left £20,000. But it seems that the head porters of to-day don't hope to equal even the smaller of thesk figures. mosewhoclobestintlaewayod tips are apparently the tread port» ers who can speak at least a little French, or German. or Italian to visitors from albroad. and who have tine smile and manner that make: pleasant man!" ~ The new volume of-tbi Survey as hotel worloers, and one-interest- ing point it notes is that the runn- ber of cleaks ln Greater London has increased by flit-per roent in the forty years-more than five times the lncrerme shown by the occupied population as a whole. DETAILS 0F GROOMING DETERMINE REAL BEAUTY The women who really are lovely and attract the most . attention are, with few exception, the ones who pay attention to the little de- tails of good grooming. After . deals with clerks and other as well r AMomingSmilc A traveller arrived at a wayside railway station, and in a wild burst of humor, asked the porter at was: time the 5.30 train left. "Al; hill- past llve precisely." the porter rs- plied. “But," said the traveller. "I ob- serve that the station clock points to 5.37 the post ofllce clock to 5.28, and the church clock to 5.29. Which one shall I go by?" Porter—-"You may go by which one you llke~the trains gone." CON UNDRUM Do Englishmen understand Am- erican slang? some of them. Why do you ask? My daughter is to be married to an earl, and he has just cabled..l0 me to come across. brewed. Air your party tcxeyou plrtizhem away- rebe- the side ofryorrr hats. The list could no longer, 0d course And f you're serious about your beauty, why not add o. few rules yourself? Then llve up to them! ' * an; ACID rasr ,_,..__ "Have you the fir-mow that en- ablu you to keep on doing ' your duty in the face of lngratitude and criticism." - ' "I guessed, ,1 ones cooked three weeks for. a charming-out psrrty.‘ _ a Mari“. or} nnrr. vHiBIIDTI"‘LECtUIQI-—CEII my‘ one ‘tell meqjwbat ‘makes the ma.» Pisa lean? ’ a . stout XMLYI -dmr’t i307 Q1’ I'd take mwrww. ' ’ _ __ ~ lNr THE FIRST PLACE. , ‘ " “Did. yblfieverQatoh your hfie- bandrfilrtidrglv" ‘ ‘ . ~ that's thbJvm-y way I‘ did --..--_-.1; I a ‘or-r 1"'i‘..l5li4!i|$lf\'°$ - Ylelrttg‘ the inciting action ‘I, ofihianedidns. Yon will sat ~bescect~..sgle'epbener...ieel .1“. look. beau. . Lib will seenwortb living again: Don't delay any longer. Begin taking i: today. rrnrrr E... rrrrrrrrrrws thick. wavy hair counts for notthing it it's dull and dusty. And per- fectly arpplled lipstick simply can- not make up for stained, yellowish teeth. ' Here are a few rules that any girl who wants to be beautiful and popular should follow: Brush your team twice a my and have therm cleaned by a dentist wirernever- they show dark stains on Take e. daily bath. Use a deodorant. _Remove superfluous heir fre- quentlry. ' Powder putts sirouid be spotless. Keep the cover on the box of pow- der-rthe rape on lotion bottles tightly screwed down. Give yourself a manicure at least one a. week and wash your hands. Have a shampoo at least once every two weeks and use s harirbrush daily. Put on fresh stocking! , morning. Make sme that, white ac- cessories actually are white. Bend clothes to the cleaner or laundry , ,_,_,,, srraar roam-res. ’ wMary Robert-a Rmehert. wrltinl InLSfMy Story" about her resource- =— r" r tivli alkali , fcornplet ' The distress and danger or “retarded diso- tion" can nearly always be‘ avoided by simply taking, after meals, a little Binrmud Mag- nesia (“ilmntlr in Magnesia). . . .This protec- ‘ allowing digestion to proceed comfortably and quite amnesia _ elective ‘bowdu orrn. orbeaily-csrried lableLr. whenever they look the least bit dowdjr. Keep everything neatly t ‘I swiftly ovdrctmer "acid stomach", . . . . Habit-forming Laxatives are .'. i‘. A! Alli Dru‘ Store, in which the brush has no effect. ' cléanybui‘ hills timfi" “SFOU _ each. ventilate cornrrourrrr r "Grandmother's _ Quilt Pqttems A inside of dark gloves and the 111-" Dofothy-Diacis Letter Box I 111.1: coorosg coRNER ‘How Can Young Widow Snare the Wily Bachelor? Quick Action Needed to i Save Children From Grand- mother's Spoiling - One Promise Better Broken Dear Miss Dix-J am a widow 28 y Id lth 5-year-old and hold down a good Job that may some si§ie°s big onae. m‘ in love with a man whose I am very much interests are similar to mine end feel that we would be very happy together, and that I could help hlm both socially and in hi; work. I know he is very fond of me, but he l; win-y o1 women Dlstrusts most of them, 111mm of them as having but one ambition-to catch their man. We see each other frequcntl, and he telephones me every day, but it goes no farther. How can I make him propqge m me? There should be some way to make him wake up and realize that he wants to marry me, but. how? Even in this day a woman can't go up to a man and say: "I love you and you love me, but you won't, admit it because it conflicts with the theories youhave expressed to so many People in the last ten years. Will you marry me?" L. M. Answer: ' Telling s. man to the altar in these times of trimoniel depression is a diflicult tasig and one that requires tact and finesse, plus luqk, For the men who are averse to marriage are generally a wary lot who scent danger‘ in a womsnsevery move and they develop an ability to wall: with an uncanny sdroltness among the best-laid traps. Still, closures, the thing can be done and is done every day. Many a man who thought himself secure in his bachelor-hood finds himself tak- ing some women for better or worse without knowing exactly how it all came about, or how his bride managed to put the comeehlther om- him, Sometimes a woman does it by wearing down the man's sales resist- ance until he signs on the dotted line. Sometimes she camps on his trail until he literally marries her to get rid of a her. _ sometimes she does the cry-baby act and weeps for hlm and is so unhappy because she can't get hlm that he dries her eyes on a marriage license, _ In-your'partlculrn' case I should think the best way to bring the man to therronbsinz mint would be by calling his bluff, so w speak, and giv- ing hlm to understand that he must either put up or shut up. Turn the cold shoulder on him. Withdraw from his society. Make him miss you. d if thetjllowft cause hlm to realize that you are necessary to his _ pinsss, nothing will. ' You seep the reason why men fight shy of the altar nowadays i; be- cause ‘they can have the pleasure of women's society without marrying them and assuming the responsibilities of matrlmonyr ~A man can fasten himself upon a pretty and eleven young woman, such as you are. He can monopolize as much of her society as he desires. He can have her for a chum with whom to go to places and do things. He can tell her all of his troubles and get the moral support of her sympathy and understanding. He can have the comfort and thrill of knowing that she la in love with hlm without tying hlrnzélf down to her or assuming her board bill and shopping ticket. In the old da s when fathers asked young men their intentions when they had called a ew times on Arabella, and when a man had u; play for the privilege of s. woman's companionship with a wedding Ting, there were few old bachelors. But now the tribe increases by leaps and bounds until what we call the “freedom of the sexesfpromises to become a boomerang to women. But your predicament, which is shared by thousands of other women, calls attention again to the injustice of the convention that uts a tatoo upon women doing their courting ppenly instead d: by steal . m) one can suggest any reason why the privilege o: picking out a mate should be a masculine "monopoly. and it is a strange thing why women who have fought men for everything else from the right to hold ofllce and enter ‘Iver? Owiltlltlml w the right to wear shorts have not also wrested from men the right to pop the question. . Certainly it la just as important to a women to get the husband she wants as it is to a man to get the wife he desires. and it would save a lot of heartbreak and disappointment and weary waiting if g gm could go up w the lad she fancied and ask him how about. it, mstrimonialiy speaking, instead or her having to sit. around in an attitude of hopeful expectancy while he made up his mind on the subject. And men would always have the veto power. DORQTHY DIX. s s s s mess...’ Dix-I ram-married. have two smallchildren, rrsid live with m? hll-Ibliidb “er. My mother-ln-law spoils them, particulm-ly the little girl, until they are being ruined and i am powerless to lrclp it. Neither" their father 0r I 118W any control over the children, for their Cut. out allpatterrls and. piece, =00- gcther as‘ shown on small diagrim. Piece blocks may be either print. or plain material. Set pieced blocks to- gether with-plain blocks as aungested in large diagram. Plain hlockaiilnlt bellxiqltlnohestonratchpilcad block. ‘finish with 8 inch bldfll‘ around entire quilt. - Allow for all seems when cutting pattern. Block finishes 9214M inches square 3 inolrborder- around quilt. Iateriatflnzqulrcd 1% yards white material. I yards blue material 1-3 yards red material. , 9 yards 3 inch binding; ~ When ordering give Number 99-1. Bend 13c for a book of quill pat- terns containing ‘l-beautiiul Grand- mother qulk like — III] li- 1"1'n difblufi , 1 s-dinrde material for plain‘ blocks ~ grandmot‘ opposes our every effort to discipline them. The little girl (Continued on Page 9) oaarrrraur-r ramooa 1-8 cup tapioca 1-1-2 cups hot water 3-4 cup suBB-l‘ 1 cup gitpefrlilt N109 a glnapclflllt, sections free from membrane 1 mange. 96011101! Y"! ‘Ym ' mam rune. Add tapioca to water. and cook In double boiler u mrnuws. v1" "m" tapioca is clear. stirrin! frequently- Add sugar and smvefwit 1'11"- Pour over grapefruit section Chill Serve in shec-bert glasses. Garnish with sections or creme. WW "X- BAKED OUSTABDS 2 eggs or 4 yolks. 6 tablespoons sugar. l 2 cups milk Flavoring. Beat ease or yolk: lisht; be“ 111 sugar; stir m nurrr-rps-ererebry M -etrai.n into buttered clwwrd 0UP! emf oook (covered in steamer ova gently boiling water or in the oven ._.ggt,t,1ng cups in dish wntalnine hot water and unng rather lbw heat-air: degrees l". A silver- knife clean. . urns flavoring m custard should! be kept. delicate-a in 81.1 ligitdes- sorts. But it should never remain horlngly the some. Use any of your half dozen delightful extracts-and chill thoroughly before servlnl- Don't overlookjiruit combinations- with s fluff of cream. A marshmallow in each cup be- fore the mixture is porn-ed in-o little coccanut folded into th». mixture-a few marachlno cherries —one third cup mscauoon crumbs molded in- these. with your dif- torrent rum-mos. rive many ermi- APRICOTS TAKE ORANGE FLAVOR Ooohed dried apricots which are served for bneefast or used in tha- serta are more interesting when a little grated lemorror orange rind is cooked in the syrup. BABE MANUSCRIPT DY BARBIE SHOWN Gabriel Wells, the bihliophlle. who has just acquired a 1623 edi- tion of Shakespeare's plays for $9.750, a rare 1664 folio for "-300 and about nine hundred words o1 Washington Irving for Wilt-has an interesting manuscript in his poa- sesslon which brings his collection up to the twentieth century says the New York Bun. It is the autobiography of a sig- nature, written in a few lines Sir James Barrie, which Mr. Wells rwqulred when he visited London last year. Written as a preface to a copy of a limited edi- tion of Barrie! play, "Quality Street," published in 1904, this un- usual morsel is being exhibited at the Fine Arts Exposition Rockefeller Center. six variations or! Barrios signature, but it is noteworthy also for a alight but sin-prising error, the famous author and pla-yright hav- ing written “t'wss" in mistake for "was." The mefube reads a! fol- lows: ' Artaixflwas thus Iwrote my . name. J. Barrie. Attweiveitwasnm. quits the same, James M. Barrie. At twenty thus. with a James Matthew Barrie. At thirty I admired it lea, J. M. Barrie. At forty-titty it was so, J . M. B. And siren I think the H. Will go, . B. ' Ono tea-r for twenlvs youthful swank ' And then the name. becomes . a blank. The gradual shortening of his lig- nstmeto initials may hays bean coincident with a disin- elination to use his right hand wltich has been crippled with neu- ritis for many years. Although he hes not published any work since Qdf ography of about I367 ' written worth. handonlytwenty copies were printsdandtiaereeipienta sworn nottodivuigethecontentg. Fasltzéivoin thrust in centre shouldcome out‘ I Not only does the preface contain 1922, Barrie eorrsaletorisnautobir thermos, 8f '9‘; an‘ s "TRIEND, AGED l5. “II ILK IAVI IAIAIA IOII IQ. Illllp NGVEMBER 3g. 1934 . r T-lb Literate rev Beautiful Brirfcsngrdrftls Who Will Attend PrincessMarinqiOn I-Icr .W¢ddl'"8'D¢y j . vramcsss JULIANA, notumn Glrllillllflgfi" Here's elegant Mlr-O-Kloeri‘ Only Ksyser makes it. Not a shadow, not a streak, not s flaw, even In darkest shades. Mcdslnfioaoda Mm-o-xnnsn swoclmvos by w ‘-~‘0p__ _ \ ESS KYIIA, RUSSIh END, “GED 25. l?’ ,. is MIR-O-KLEER t ;_ ILK HOSE" Not a ring-not a streak-not a fault- the perfect, flawlessfilLK. HOSE sou) IN CHARLOTTETOWN At 75¢ “n. by SMART FROCKS fro)? ‘ FASHIONABLE PEOPLE illustrated Dressmaking Lessons Furnished With Each Pattern Your flgrus problem solved! To- day's model was designed for figures who fesltbsy can support a few alendsriaing lines. From shoulder lo hem,- it detracts from beneath so as to give the figure height and slen- derness. It ira "splendid dress for casual deyiinre wear- that will do nonors for any occasion. It's so simple and easy to mp3s] The original choose black satin- baok crepe with the softly falling J-eyer-Lqtjlre shiny surface. . Bottle green wool crepe is very charming for this model with the revere of green nreiallic crepe or green velvet. l Ne. 686 is dawned for sizes 30.’; (0, 42, at and 4a inches bust. Bias m var-es of an-mer _ with ‘A yard of ae-rm treating. Price erparmnw 1a cents i. 588m)! M’ coin (coin ll P10102106). Wrap coin carefully. oasedilaaaasarabesaoaoalaaaoalait a Name oaasalIOIsae-ue-ss-sosraalOlOOIIpIM treat Addrsla a5’....u..-..s...s.suu-'ié; r i. u‘ ‘rroubzarbladdll - III If _ u oa 90‘ ffllll I Kidneys ransom "Aahrhvilrhaen ,...~.-....vitl"mttllf.e r. MN ‘I ibis I O am- . srvosnsll. Di lira . .. w. tuarnlmrsy c2115 -e-.~i-"'%”7'-'g-'%