Page

THE TYPEWRITER

H.M.

that Interested

THE KING

Imperial

The

“IMPERIAL" TYPEWRITER

Not only because it is

BRITISH

but because it is

CHEAPER and BETTER

Every Firm interested in

EFFICIENCY and ECONOMY

should call and inspect this wonderful now machine for themselves.

Sole Agents :

T. E. GRIFFITH, LTD.

6, Queen's Road Central,

Tel. C. 3517.

[LP]]

HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF

BLACK PUDDINGS

again

The Week-end Favourite

*t

60 Cents Per Ib.

ON SALE SATURDAY.

THE DAIRY FARM, ICE & COLD STORAGE CO., LTD.

Smokers/

A Word with You

We all smoke too much at times-inevitable perhap- with thus pleasant habit.

But a sore throat and a tongue that feels parched make smoking anything but enjoyable

Carry a on of "Allenburys Glycerine and Black Currant Pastilles with you, and when you experience these unpleasant symptoms take one. You will find them most effective

One at night, too, just at bedtime, will be found most effective.

Tour Chemist

stocks them...

"Packed in distinc

tive tin box co-

taining 4 bzi.

Allenburys

Allen & Hanburys Ltd.

London and Shanghai

Glycer&PASTILLES

·LONDON BELLING AGENTS

TEA, INDIGO

FIBRES

BRISTLERS

OFFERED

Sold on 02- missionin British and

Centinamat!

HIDES & SKINB Marketa.⠀⠀ RUBBER DRUGS

COTTON, WOOL/Bamples ORES, MICA ***

valued. Best

GUMA, ANDH ports for con- signments in. Teliantel

KEYMER, SON & CO. Telez. Keymar, Tandon." Est.

FELIX HAT SHOP

NEW YEAR SALE NOW ON

THE HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26th, 1929.

HATS, FROCKS

and Novelties at Bargain Prices.

Hozo Kore.

THE WOMAN'S CORNER.

PUBLIC LIFE WILL NOT HARM WOMEN.

[BY EDITH SHACKLETON.]

I cannot imagine why Lord Mal mesbury thinks that public life will harder women.

It has not yet hardened men..

Moreover, there are hard women aiready. There were hard women before women had the vote, before Married Women's Property Act was passed, before it was common for women to learn even to read and write.

+1

Better Opportunity At Home. If a woman is of the sort to harden she has better opportunities for hardened in the domestic circle, where, in her limited orbit, she holds full sway, than any committee or in any civil or basi aess chair.

The woman at home can be ab solute monarch. The woman on the town council or the board of direct tors has to listen to reason, and the woman M.P. has to gain the Buf frages of her constituency, to please her electors, and explain berielf to them...

The woman at home, when her children or servants ask for a reason for any hard command, can say, Because I say so "--and leare it triumphantly at that.

As Hard As She Likes. All over the world thrones, are falling, absolute monarchy is in dis- repute, industralism is being freed from tyranny. It is only in the seclusion of the homes which Lord Malmesbury appears to imagine can only be inhabited by tender-hearted, sympathetic women that supreme dictatorship is still in fall working ordet. Only at home can a woman grow as hard as she likes without being pulled up by associates or workmates,

· Desirable In Women.

A certain degree of hardness is surely desirabe in women, whether they are in public life or not. If Lord Malmesbury ever has to have abandage adjusted over a painful!

BEADED BODICE.

An unusual note is struck in this dance frock designed for d young girl. The bodice is close- ly beaded while the full fared skirt is left plain so as to give a pretty futtering movement when dancing.

ERMINE ON HATS.

A hat of black panne velvet has an original decoration in the form of an ermice's head, worked in the natural fur and finished with block beady eyes. To accompany this model there is a scarf, also of panne velvet with similar heads and ermino tails at either end.

'MATCHING" SHOES AND

POCHETTE.

wound he will be very thankful for the hardness of the nurse who can perform the feat with much less dis tress to himself than any fainting. sentimentalist could.

I do not know if Lord Malmes- bury thinks that somebody should be waiting with a bouquet for every woman who asks to be excused from from a jury if a case is particularly unpleasant, instead of with the grown-up equivalents of the "Cry- baby! and Cowardy-custard!?' which shirking of any kind gets in healthy nurseries:

Bofiness Not Due To Home Life, Softness is not necessarily gen erated by domestic life any more than are countless feminine refine- ments. know one woman who has lived in the secluded sovereignty of a house of her own for fifty years, and yet remains without any of those feminine traits which are sup. posed to be home-bred.

I also know pioneer women in 'professions who contrieve to keep about them all the femininition in the way of flowers and ribbons and perfumes, and are unfailing caree- sing in their manner to all their friends. Softness is not inevitably. made at home, like cowalip wine and crochet mats.

Public Private · Life. Lord Malmesbury is anxious that women should not begin to think their public life more important than their work at home. If he means that a woman guardian should hasten through, say, an ap- plication for out-relief from widow with three children lost her child's hair should not be curled. or the flowers not be arranged for her own bridge party, I disagree with him violently.

And if abs did. I should say that it was she who was hard, not some other guardian who might patiently consider the case even though there were stockings to darn" at home.

These Children Of Ours.

FIGHTING THEIR OWN

BATTLES.

Mothers should make themselves learn to let their children fight their own battles. They shouldn't interfere until it seems that murder may be immient.”

Waiting in a doctor's office not long ago with me were two little girls of about the same age (four ör five) with their mothers. Un- fortunately, although there were two little girls, there was only one fetching little wicker rocker. The one with the yellow curls made for it without hesitation. After eyeing. her deliberately for a moment, the one in the blue beret made a dash for the chair and tried to unsent the occupant.

Fellow curls didn't like it a bit. She had seen it first and got it

first and it was her!. Then ensued

what would have been a highly diverting battle except that both mothers felt called upon to take a hard in the proceedings

Peggy, let the little girl have the chair, she was there first.

"Oh no." countered the second mother.Pansy must get up now

he has had her turn."

And so it went on until both

mothers dragged the children apart -and the lovely little rocker stood empty...

HE ATE IT EVERY BIT.

Hilary had reached the stage when desert seemed the only part of his meal worth eating. Ho dawdled over soup, vegetables, milk Mother put a small dinner bell on Hilary's table.

CHESTNUTS PLAY MANY: PARTS.

SOUPS, ENTREES, VEGET- ABLES AND SWEET

DISHES, A Chestnuts are not yet properly appreciated by English people, the chief reason being that they take

Ittle time to prepare.

One method of shelling chestnuts" is to put them in boiling water on the stove for a few moments to make it easy to remove the outer shell, then to boil until soft and the inner shell will come off easily. The 'second method is to cut a half-inch gash on the fat side of the cheat- nut, place in an omelet pan, allow- ing half a teaspoon of buiter to each cup of chestnuts, shake over the store until, the butter ia melted. Put in a warm oven and let it stand for a few minutes, remove from the oven, and with a sharp kaife take off the shells.

Chestnuts can be used to alt places on the menu either for soup, entrée, vegetable, or sweet. They are perhaps best known in England as the stuffing for the Christmas turkey, but the same stuffing can be equally well used for. the everyday chicken.

"

Frock of Red Chiffon, with a Separate Jacket of Self Fabric, an Asymmetric Rever Cut in Points and Falling in Soft Flares. The Snugly Shirred Edge of the Jacket Throws Into Greater Belief the Very Full Skirt, Fashioned of Flared. Pointed Tiers...

CERAM CHESTNUT SOUP.--Take a cup of chestnuts and cook, in boil- ing water for two minutes, drain and remove shells. Add to the chestnuts a quart of good white stock-made from chicken bones it possible-bring it to the boil, and Bimmer until the chestnuts are soft. Rnb through a sieve, and add one and a half cups of cream, and

season

CEIBTNUT CROQUETTES.-Shell by the first method one cupful of chest- nuts. Pound into a puree, add two tablespoons of whipped cream, the beaten yolks of two eggs, one table- spoon of sugar, and a few drops of vanilla. Shape into balls, dip into egg and breadcrumbs, and fry in' deep ist.

TO MAKE "A GOOD STUFFING.--Make in the first method a pures of three cupfuis of chestnuts, add a quar ter" of a cup of butter, and the same amount of cream, one cupful of sausage meat, and one cupful of breadcrumbs, Bind together with two egga

Season well. It is a Ring the bell," said Mother, | great improvement to add a cup whenever you've finished each of the pured just before serving to course, just se Mother does. Then the gravy of either turkey or chic- you may have the next course,” ken,

"Ting-a-ling" Hilary's soup was eateni

"Ting-a-ling The vegetables

were gone.

There was no more trouble.

A DRINK IN TIME.

A little girl of four who cried on the least provocation was pain lessly cured by the simple expedient of always giving her a glass of water before allowing her to tell her troubles Coming in "from her play, sobbing as if her heart would break, she never found Mother un- responsive. There was a judicious amount of sympathy noncommittal ly given. That's too that funny automobile out there. I wonder what that man is doing, and so on, ad infinitum Mother was strangely garrulona Then

CHESTNUT SAUCE can be used with rissoles, cutlets, or steak. Fry some onion sad sliced carrot in a little butter for five minutes. Add three tablespoons of Bour, stir, until brown, then add one and a half

cups of stock, a sprig of parsley, and season. Let it simmer about twenty minutes. Strain, then add a little white wine, tablespoon of butter, and a chestnut puree

A cup of CASSEROLE CHESTNUTS make a good light supper dish, or can be used to take the place of a vegetable, Remove the shells by the second method from a pint of chestnute. Place them in a caserola, coser with some white stock highly seasoned. Bake until soft.

Chestnuts can be made into all manner of puddings. One excellent and well-known way of serving is to cock and shell the chestnuts, and

A pair of black satin shoes is effectively trimmed with gold kid worked to represent tooling similar to that used in book-binding, and has a pochette of satin to match. when the water had disappeared to put through a potato ricer, and The shock have a esilar of the tool let her have the floor, and the fact to heap into a glass bowl, HaLTS & Ing-wirishwako--edge-tac-marrow that someone had tosend. berseonglia bowl full of sliced atrap, while the flap of the pochette even, slapped her diar e greur near abger Si ir trimmed in the same, waya

ly so important.

cream.

DWGRIFFITH

presents

The

BATTLE of the SEXES

withi

Jean Hersholt

PHYLIS HAVER and DON ALVARADO See yourself as others see you in this amazing and amusing story of the home!

AT THE

QUEEN'S

FINAL SHOWINGS TO-DAY

At 280, 5.10, 7.15 & 9.20.

RAMPANT Youth in a basket-ball romance!

SALLY

PHIPPS

IN

HIGH SCHOOL AN

HERO

LAUGHS and THRILLS ALL THE WAY IN

FINAL SHOWINGS TO-DAY

AT THE

WORLD Orchestra

Interpreter

(5.15 & 9.20.280 & 7,15.

REAL ADVENTURE IN THE STIRRING DAYS OF THE WESTI

TIM

McCoy

JOAN CRAWFORD, REX LEASE

IN

THE LAW OF

THE RANGE

AT. THE

STAR

FINAL SHOWINGS TO-DAY

At 2.80 & 5.15.

TO-NIGHT AT 9.15 P.M.

THE COYNE MUSICAL COMEDY COMPANY

BOORD'S GINS

DRY & OLD TOM

ARE THE BEST.

UNRIVALLED FOR

COCKTAILS,

Sale Agenie

| GALDBECK, MACGREGOR & CO., LTD.

Incorpostei undar the Compeales Ordinscoe of Hong Kong,

THE NAVY'S CHOICE

Coates

ORIGINAL

TEL. 0.75.

PLYMOUTH GIN

OBTAINABLE EVERYWHERE.

Share This Page