:-' Social and“ Personal -:-f Fashions - it . 1 wise. one must buy on a rising market-that is. select a To be vl* fashion Adina-r - :‘ l dress with a e chic, rather than, C-u- 70 <3 $7115. of course. one must be on tip-toe "noticing the little things that make a dress this season‘; u.- dlc 2e16, Sacral indications of the future mode are shown in the evening dress in the Vogue sketch at; the ir-ft above. Finely tucked bands encrusted on the skirt release the fullness in front and back and in- terollrt the length of the sllhouettexThe attached scarf, which crosses in the front. ties and hangs low in tho blob ilimby wmenlrellna the decal- letece treatment in the back-a new emphasis. While we are thus looking ~ forward. we need not forget that it is still the open season for the short the long ""1111? 30'!" 'I‘ho‘on-: shown above in the .=i-.»".h is chic and prac- carf collar. which tics in n hm 5n the back at one sl-nultler. On the right Film‘ evening WY-‘ill. made in cape ci- fect, and outlined with sable-Sketch wrap-that perfect romplemenn J1 tlcal when. “dado of velvet, It tut; as Norma. Shear-er YJYV-‘iflg a STl-‘t e1"- ls by Vogue. T536215? withiTlluig‘ nu? Elisa- ‘ed to cup of whipped cream will supply filling for a dozen graham- | cracker sandwiches. Three tablespoons of currant Jelly, chopped peacans, and a small pack- - age cream cheese, mixed together. Graham crackers may be used ‘or ‘ also make a delectable filling. Bits of makmg many crunchy 5ahdwlches_ 1 banana and" chopped walnut may-be l For The Cooklg GRAHAM-CRACKED SANID. WICHE S . One cup of peanut brittle crushed to l used in a cream cheese fining" For those who are fond of the malted-milk flavor, a sandwich fill- ,ing of 2 tablespoons of chocolate malted-milk powder and i teaspoon '01’ vanilla, added to a cream cheese lfilling, is delicious. I lhcmnatismfiijfg l lliscovers Way to t. Banish all Painj Called incurable Till Shel Took A MorningSmile "FRU|T_A_T|VEsH|lI It happened at s. boisterous meet- “Had rheumatism. mg of the village council, where the ior 23 years. HOspLITOWIETVlUB trolley meets all the tals couldn't help me.itrains. The chairman could not con- gvggokiflm:iegfa_t‘lil\lfgsliyl trol the meeting and in despair. he They have done “yonflarose from his chair and called, den can d0 my.‘ Order, order," gentlemen. If we can- wod. and no more pain." _ Mrs, A, not work in harmonlum I snail be N- Fleld- Wrmyard, Sask. compelled to vaccinate my seat Just one of thousands who say‘ ' rheumatism, neuralgia, neuritis fly Will’ quick with “Frult-a-tives." Chronic constipation and liver trou- bles end overnight. Bad stomach, illloll-iness. indigestion. heartburn, lilo vanish like i . Kid bladder ills, painmirtgbick g0 rffiyhufi‘; The semi-annual examination of Nerves quiet, sound sleep at Once, Green Road School was held on Fri- mgeblznoé motor-gs greatest remedies day afternoon June 27th, e. number e n andy little tablet. o’ parents and visitors being resent u l * P ' am Qua discovery 0t famm“ cm“ The pupils were examined in their ldlflll doctor. Speedy 1m Get "Fruit-a-tivesjefi-lom diuggm various subjects by their teacher wdly- Sleep fine, nfuke up great, Miss Gerlrude King assisted by Miss GREEN ROAD SCHOOL l . l Marie Darrah a:.d't'lie"'Ml.=Ts'€s"Elslei and Katie McKaye. At the close of ‘ the examination a short programme “as carried out which was enjoyed by all. Public School Certificates were presented to Mary McGaughey and Ella. Toole. A prize for perfect aflendance during the term which was equally n-leritied by Ella Toole and Mary McGaughey was drawn by Mary Mc- Gaughey. An address was then read by Johanzah McGaughey and the able gift by Ella Tocle. ‘The teacher expressed her appreci- ation cf the thoughtfulness of her pupils and the kindness shown to her by the people of Green Road. The examination ivrzs closed by the singing of the Natiotlal Anthem. . ' cciitfifilllurs Plus u "m: sroilucn l$‘.i.-‘l°d.’“‘..’f‘2‘s2€il$'.3 ‘ifikfiiétififi; lcholera colic, cramps and pains in the} | sto comes gomptly. ‘ l Prlce,50c.a ttlestalidru ' l l‘ ‘ wot up only by Tlmgfi M1015? mat-tame Provinces to Montreal The Luxurious All Sleeping Car Train Leaves HALIFAX . . . 7.45 a.m. Aftivfl MONTREAL o . 6.45 mm. (Bmlventun Si) Daily except Sunday, firm Halifax, This all-steel fiyer includes radio-equipped compartment observation library cu, unend- ud sleeping cars, dining can. Standard sleeping cu, Sydney-Montreal. ‘his the Audion for you: holiday or business III to ebcc or Montreal. Convenient commit for mm. Toronto and all poinu wen. ALI. STANDARD TIMES Other Noted Train: Till OCEAN LIMITED Lava Hall!“ 1.00 1,5, dilly In" detail: from W. K. Hogan. City Tlrket Aunt. L. P. Illa-hie. Ticket Aunt. Station. P. W. Giulio. , District Pnlenler Agent. Th! MAMTIMI EXPRESS l-hvel Hllihz J0 p.15, d1“! except unday. lsmartest women are wearing sheer l "nun-tunes"... w» o». y-naeelgrs-teo. w. teacher was preIented ivith a sult- l lbs been onltlzemarket for the poet‘ DOUBLE BOILER PLEASES WOODSTOCK LADY Free premiums for poker hands with Rosebud out plug ‘obaceo. “Do l like my husband to smoke I pi 1'" czclaimed a lady x_n Woodstock. ‘ most certainly do. _It rs hl-{zreatest leasure. and I share m his euoymont; or be gives me the poker bands that come with Rosebud. and I exchangs lheso for things I have always wunteckfol- the house. My detest prezzuuni rs a ‘titers-EVE!’ aluminum double boiler, which I obtained ior five complete pets of poker hands. My advice to the ladies who want to do their cooking conveniently, and et the best results, is to have their bus ands smoke Rosebud cut pluE and save i118 P01"); hands for ‘Wear-Ever’ aluminum ware. Rosebud cut plug and the poker hurl-is form an ideal combination for family satisfaction, for this smoklngtobacco bl a enuine cut plug mth a nob, fragrant gavour~that gives the smoker the brat value on the mar- kct—~auri the Ina- mi urns certalnlyflo please the family. Tho large ten cent packagepf Rosebud contain! one poker hand-- the ‘larger fiftflcll cent package con- tains two Pbker l hands. ‘h t * Write for spccia llremlum ec o- ‘Departmeut T.S., Post Officc Box i320. Montreal. Etiquette & IDDQIOB ‘IQ lkni-s-q-i‘ Q. When should n girl weal" her engagement ring in public for the first time? A. On the day of the announce- l merit. 1 Q. tVhen a man turns to walk with a woman, should he continue to smoke his cigar? l A. No; he should throw itaway. l Q. Should one always leave some- l thing on ones plate when through l eating dinner? . A. No; one should eat as much or l as little as he likes. BEFUIQED BRITISH PASPORT l ‘l (By The Canadian Press) \ I LONDON, July 2O.,—M1s5 Marie ‘Vliliiams, a Scotch operatic singe‘, _ha.s married he": husband. M, Sergei lftadamslzi’. a Russo-American singer, "for the second time. she explained ltha‘. she married him first in Moscow. lAs he was a naturalized American lcltlzen she assumed that she would iautcmdiically become an American ‘citizen. The British authorities wok tl-lu view and said that as Marie was no longer a British subject she was not entitled to a British passport, Americans, however. decline to re- cognise weddings celebrated in Rus- sia, and she was refused an American passport, ‘The authoritltes stated that the solution was to re-marry in Eng- land, after which Marie becomes a provisional American citizen. M. Radamsky saig pessimistically that he , could sec himself re-marrylng his wifel in every county to which they go to- gether, He would not mind marrying her a hundred times. but it was likely to prove an expensive business. For semi-formal occasions is a printed batiste in cool light green tones. You'll like it immensely. The cottons for afternoons. The scalloped cape collar fits sleckly across the back. It termi- nates in gathered fulness at the front. It is set low and effects a novel becoming yoke and capelet sleeves. An inset circular section in pointed outline at the upper edge concen- trates the fuiness in the skirt at the front, so as to retain its slim straight lines. , This fascinating model style No- 2584 comes in sizes i6. 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Other equally charming ideas for its development are misty-violet blue washable crepe silk, coral-red chif- fon. sheer linen in~apple green. yel- low and white printed dimity and dusty pink shantung. Pattern price l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Be sure to nil in size of pattern. No. 258A. Size ...................... "nu-mun"...-....--.---uuuu. Name -.~nn|unn-~u....-.. Street Address . “W.” l/Vhat the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelie Worthington l the hours of labor she has given to achieve this result. ' the hundred things it takes to make a good meal, darn the some old socks. l goes downtown and works among other people, so she doesn't see what he l‘ w»- i» l 1°" ‘Ll o With nu?" ’ Bmwvygifilll’: l If Husbands and Wives Could Change Jobs for a I_Jay, So That Each Could See How Hard 1s the Other One’s Work, They Would Never Again Belittle Each 0ther’s Achievements A woman writes mo! "My husband and I are always quarrellng over my Work- H‘? 533/51 "Gosh, haven't you got those trousers mended for me yet? l Gee, what do you do with your time? I could do all the work you do in a , whole day in thirty minutes and have the balance of the time left to play golf in. Why, youve got a reg- ular snap, with nothing to do but to take care of the children and do the housework. Wish I could have it easy like that." To which I respond with heat: "1 I have a snap. have I, and you are Mr. Efficiency who‘ could do all of my work in thirty minutes and be a l play boy the balance of the time, could you‘? How l do you get that way? Don't you ever notice me get- l ting up at; o'clock in the morning to get the break- fact while you and the kids are still sleeping? Did you ' ever watch me doing a marathon between the kitchen , i and the bathroom. trying to cook the cereal with one hand and wash behind the children's ears with the other? Did you ever watch me double-timing. trying to soothe a teething baby and find you a clean shirt and get the children dressed for school? "And how do you think the house gets cleaned up and three meals a day cocked and the laundry work done and the food bought and the stocking; darned if I don't do it? Let me tell you, my good man, that homes are still run by womanpower, and in this particular one I'm it, and I am about the ‘- nearest thing to a. perpetual-motion machine you ever saw. “Workl! I wish I had a part-time job like yours, ‘that only lasts from 9 to 5. with an hour off for lunch, and I had nothing to do but stand around and gab with a lot of men and pretty stenographers." And then fnend husband Jams on his hat and bangs the front door behind him and I g0 and scrub out the bathtub for the seven-milionth time and pick up the papers that he has scattered around for the billionth time and start on my l59S36th - round of the domestic treadmill. And we are no nearer settling the ques- tion of which one of us works the harder than we were the first time we ever debated it. And. it is still good for a. fight every time it comes up." In thousands of other homes husbands and wives are snarling at each other over this some bone of contention, because eachone thinks that he or she has got the wore: end of the matrimonial bargain. This is natural and . inevitable, because each of us know the difficulties and the hardslrps of our own lot and we do not know what others have to suffer. It is that way allthrough life. We put the loudspeaker on our own troub- les and the soft pedal on other people's. We pity ourselves because we have to work and struggle and strain and deny ourselves in order to get the things we want, and we look enviously onthose who. we imagine have had everything handed to them on a. silver salver without any effort on their part. But if we only l-znew the truth, they have bought success with their ‘ life blood, even as we have. You often hear a business man say: "I don't want my sen to go into the grocery trade and have to slave as I have done. I want hllTl to be a pro- fessional man. so he can take things easy." And you Will hear a professional man say: "I don't want my son to have to go through the agony of weary waiting for ckents that I did. It is heart-breaking. I want him to go into business where he can make a quick success." l So it ls not surprising that husbands and ‘wives should each underratc the work that the other does, and I often wish that it were possible for them i to swap places for a day or a week and thus have an opportunity to find out. l from actual experience how heavy is the burden the party of the other part has to bear. , iative- Believe me, it would make them wondrous land and apprec- As it is. their estimate of each other's work is based on ignorance and j , lack of personal experience. The man comes home to a house that is clean l And. l I From Cl M91’? than eiklltv thousand peoplg caught typhoid [ever last ygar, and about one in every ten died. You can OTEIY Q16! fyilhoid {ever by eating 0r drln lng something containing lhg TYDhOId 2¢‘l'm—and these germs are :- Literature Yourchilcleon phoid Feve Lifi-w - The U. S. ' Public Health Service says: l "Typhoid Fever is one of the most‘ common Diseases“. Carried by Flies": Fly often carried by flies. What is your ‘I be“ Protection against this danger.’ l .’ BB ¢0mi0rtablc and safe. Keep Fliz it sold only _ .. your home insect-free. Spray flit, in rilisyclbw : :- whlchlsguaranteed (or money back) d“ 4 __~ to be quick-death to flfcs, mo5qui, ‘O55: ‘B01115, roaches, bed bugs and other household insects. Yet it; clean-smelling Wflpor. i; harmlass to the q ‘ Ifllt kills qlallCkehifygu use ~Pccla IHCAPCDMVC Flit Sprayer, don't accept a humans. Insist on Flit substitute. (lot and yours today! [Qkgest S Formica: lusn s: Tile “brlcls oiling insect FlifoTl-sixns‘ or‘ rid-hills" “:- VZSIT GERMANY TO STOP AT CflARLEiVtAGffrfS T011111 _______ l . . AIX-Lél-CHAPELLE. July 23-—TilOllT~C eluding many 1 German‘; the Roman Catnollc Church, wk. come from all imrts of Europe to this ancient city between July l'l' and July 27. 73s tixeil- l'il‘.‘l€“.'?, before them have done every ‘ zPYFYl yea". for the pJL-t seven tcnzurlcs. Then” goal is the venerable where Charlemagne is buried. where for T00 ye." , $llTf‘("Si\"‘ mfm 0l1lpe!"‘.r§. were c‘) reverence tn lilo innin- are kept in the FSIl/‘Viillji’ there. Religious. will glecl V-‘lfll the evarual the or- _ pelle ranked in ti: cenrurzes with Home. Compnstella and ' foremost. pllce Christendom. In more than 158.000 pllf’ corded. Intcr1~l:pted d: h‘ of m1: "* ‘ lure-r: c‘: first telttli clv l‘ and orderly, a well-cooked meal and children who are all tidied up. int the, ‘we: f,‘ one 1;, never having swept a floor or cooked a meal or washed and dressed a baby ' bear an m: y ' in his life, he has a. vague general idea that these things happen automati- Th‘. m.‘ n \.,,,.m,..,tp(l h,” ‘Vi, b, cally and he hasn't an idea oi’ the thousands of steps his wife has taken and But if he could. just for one day. do his wife's work. sweep over the samr floor a dozen times, wash the same little faces over and over again. assemble answer to the incessant call for M-o-t-h-e-r, wrestle with a crying baby Whllf: l doing all the other jobs, why, Mr. Husband would simply flee back to his} own Job and never again think of his wife as leading a life of inglorious ease. 1 And it is the same way with women. When a woman goes downtown it is s. sort of lark to her. She gets a thrill out of see new faces. The stir and activity of people moving about amuse her- The pretty things in the stora delight her. It is a treat to her to have lunch in a restaurant and not have to eat her own cocking. And, for the llfe of her, she can't help picturing her husband's going to work as going to a sort of party because he has to complain about nor why he should be to tired when he comes home at night. ' But if she could exchange places with him for a day; if she could know the nerve-racking strain under which he works and the fierce competition ho has to meet; if she could know the anxiety that tears at his soul when he wonders how he is to meet a note in the bank; ii she could know the despair that fills him as he sees his life work and all that he has built up tumbling down about him; if she could know the aggravation of dealing with stupid and careless and uninterested employes or if she could know what it was to be bowled out and ground down and insulted by ,a tyrannical employer and to have to endure insults because one dared not give up one's Job, she would never again disparage her husband's work. Now that so many women go into business they have an opportunity of putting themselves in a man's place and knowing what his work is really like, and it makes them very tender and sympathetic to their husbands. But men never do a woman's work and so they still think that cooking and scrub- bing and baby-tending is not work, it is Just the diversion of an idle hour. Which 1S a pity. DOROTHY DIX. CRJPPLED LADY WINS GOLDENselI by her labors. CROSS In giving her the golden cross, the i premier award. the judges pronounced (By The Clllldlln Press) her work on such articles as bags and LONDON. Ens- July ilk-A w ~ l blotting Pads to be some of the finest man whose life is spent in a. spinal ever produced. Miss Hope Lucas ivho flllfllllt Won the highest award in the has won minor awards on prevoius beaten leather section at the British occasions, was unable to attend the Handicraft; Exhibition of the liomr exhibition, as she cannot be moved. Ari-i "Id Ihdllitflrs ABOCiItiOn inlAnother woman winner of a. golden struggled to support ner- l London which is credited with mllCllg-fgsg was Mrs, g MgEwgn Qsbm-ng csicurznd ingenuity, She k Miss E.‘ ‘ho rrrltnvl a methanol en h... hm. Hope Lucas of Cambridge. who for the: killed ln the war, and framedl it in boa-ten metal and enamel. Al; {exhibited for tilc fizz". time in 31 wears, The.» arr- “Lil rw iw PM of the Vlriill ‘v ' {clothes of the min. cloth worn by ,\ 1 ' and the cloth that. col-cred the haul of Si. '~ kept in a ‘casket of earl;- 1 on inn John the Baptist. T‘ mlrroio-l: rim Prl l3 ill can" ry '.'.'OI'l~‘.— fates. reservations, flow Irmll 0E0. S. BEER l0 king Sued Saint John. N.‘ nod cntilcdrnl l _ ' and . , Vlfeav-‘fns. it was lovely‘. I was Up here in lho Canadian Rockies is o world cs exciting os u new planet! Alps to ride, climb, motor. Golf on d chompion- " ship 18. Swims in tonic sulphur pool. Divine," music of concert and dances. The international ,"svvish" of Bonfi’; princely dc-us-wo-pleoso‘ life. Two weeks here~worth o month of ordinary vocotionsLComo this summer. ~ tan Pacific, World's amazon Travel Syotarn " roactotn“ White Cloud. I see you in the skies Like wool, before my eager eyes; ‘Joli rem to drift along at vrili ‘ .1" l! .~‘ cdown. ilpon the hill; Lnd a; I lvatrh you from afar I wonder what you really are. \‘.“.~.l‘e Crrlcl. W!!! I: so soft titrre fur. ups: a polar bear; now in folds you gently sail, . to a lovely ‘b "dzl veil; e I lzocp "latching from afar, . \\.'0:"(i'rll1; xvhat you reallv are. lo‘ Lftze (‘l'-'lrl. as lazzlj: here we lie ‘AP hill. roll in the sky: ‘ A luff» hlrri I'd lllze to he b. mil": to fijv right up and see. r won really are Jclltfi’? from afar. Vi‘; m; A. Rose MacDougall. Shore P. E. I COSCERT. - iveli do; mu enjoy tlu 'rrt? to Mrs, Joyce.‘ A 5o:- several month: ‘mrl we ililfl so much l0 talk about“ . "to Ell no}: :T.'Jl'f‘il'f soon he: ?l€hild$e_nCry l 3g! fl-KeZUzZe/tli. 3 A BABY REMEDY a uvaoveo or nocrons - \ rcacouc (ZWSTWATIOPMDIARRHEA ";LT_¢+“F"_’-L' ‘l Social Centers, Spectacular ,r f‘