l l Woman’s Realm -:-"Socgial and Personal -:- Fashions-:- Literature‘ ‘l? What the Fash-ionables areulilu/earing l .4 n: Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With " Every Pattern By Znnabefle Worthington HAS SLlMIlIlNG POIN S Here's the new princess costume slip the smartest women are choos- ing fora their slim-line frocks. It lg-iform fitting, being cut in threegored sections at the front and iln three sections at the back. Note how it moulds the bust line, fol- lowing the figure line to well below the hips wherc it starts to widen into a graceful flaring hcmiine. The upper part may be lace trimmed or left plain, Just as you please about . it. fgbr The Cook I l CARDlNAl/S PUDDING Line a deep, circular baking Pa" Wm; 9, good puff-paste; prick sides and bottom with s fork, fill with beans, nuts, etc, to keep the Paste ln place, and bake in hot even until well browned. Allow to cool, and fill with a custard ice cream or any rich frozen mixture. Invert, on a handsome circular dish, and P011!‘ It will take you aboutoue hour to fashion this well fitting slip that lwill give that important unbroken line to your outer garment. It requires only 2H yards of 35- inch material with ill yards of 5%- lnch lace for the medium size. The saving in cost is enormous. Style No. 3431 may be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. I I-‘or general wear, flesh coloured crepe dc chine or flat crepe silk is popularly used with a narrow lace trimming at the upper and lower edge. ' , Very exquisitely lovely is a peach- . pink or eggshell washable crepe satin with deep lace trim at the upper and lower edges. The lace may be cut in applique effect in which case it is best to select a small floral pattern. It will make a stunning "shower" gift. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern i5 cents. over it a. quart can of apricots. nre- m. 3431. Size viously sifted, cooked down to m8 consistency of a thick lam. M15 with one-half a cup of sugar. Mid two tablespoons of lemon .1111“ fidd- ed, and then cooled. Decorate with whipped cream_ sprinkle with dhOII- ped maraschino cherries and an- gelica and serve at once. l I r$e i; GET RID of that old dread of indigestion, and eat without fear of distress. When food fennents; disagrees: lies like lead in thosiomach, it is a sign of loo much acid. The stomach nerves have been over-stimulated. The quick corrcclive is an alkali. Don't resort to burning doses of soda-take instead. an antacid that will correct the condition. Phillips’ Ivliik of’ Magnesia! .\ spoonful of this soolhin alkali rlfn-lfim the proper alkaline alanco to an acid-soaked system. Then the llnlllflCll, liver and bowels function as they should. Phillips‘ Milk of Ma nesia is _ what nu need when bad rcath or coaie tongue indicate too much acid. Tnkc o spoonful today, and for several dnys, and see how soon it swcetens the entire system. Your nsoul nun-u.“- nu...- Name . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . . . ...---n--..,...-. Street Address . . . . ..-.--uu--n----|u-...... ..i l City State V. DISTRESS alter eating digestion will be vastly improved. T in s \Vlll tasic hclter and you will col better in so mauy ways. Also, you will find when your system is properly alkaline you are not so susceptible in sickness and colds. 'i'hat you are no longer troubled with conslipulion, or with headaches, as on the stomach. An alkaline ba ancc builds resistance. Ask for Phillips‘ Milk of Mag- nesia, which is thcJvrcparaiion of magnesia prescribe and recour- mcnded by your own doctor for correcting excess acid. 50c bottle- are sol at drug stores everywhere in the imon. To avoid the condition of acid mouth. you should use a milk of magnesia tooth-paste. Your lcclh are worth of the best (lcnlifricc. Try Philips’ Denial Magnesia, which contains 757,’, concentrated Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia. I M I L K O F “t.S.i'..§.§."°* l? ~_______--.... .. . ~ Dorothy Dix [fetter Box Ten Rules for Boys to Observe in Choosing a Wife. Can Middle-Aged Wife and Mother Be Cured of Infatuation?-Is a Bach- elor of 45 Too Old to lllarrl’? Dem- Miss Dix-A few weeks ago you gavc the 81115 if" 3:310: follow m choosing a husband. Please give the men some ru es in cnoosuiq o. wife. It may save me uud some other boys from getting lemons. B013- Answer: _ Well, if I were a man picking out a W118. U" ii Em Happen ings of the Week "The wisest men the world o'er knew Have never dreamed it treason To rest a bit-and Jest a bit And balance up their reason ; To laugh a bit-and chafl a bit And Joke a bit in season." I I I Princess Elizabeth, elder daughter of the Duke and Duchess of York, will wear y-olloxv this spring and come known as “Princess Elizabeth Yellow." It is a rather deep shade of primrose. Recently the little first thing that I should consider \\'0Uld be her disposition, whether she is good-natured and swtct- lempered or a nervous, high-strung creature whose temper was set on a hair-trigger and linblc to explode at any minute. The wife's temper is the barometer of the home and there is Sillifihlni’ and fair \\'(‘lllll('1' in it. if she is amiable and jolly and iiicrc are storms and hurricanes that make u man want to set sail for another port if she is peeflsh and cross. Watch out for the girl who is irritated by little things, who takes offense at trifles, and whose voice gets a razor edge on it if she is crossed. She will make the sort of a wife whose husband lives in terror of her and walks on eggs for fear of offending her. Then I should consider how much ballast in the way of brains the lady carries. much to the good but what would concern me most was how much good, hard, horse slihse she had. Only fools are hopeless. Ii‘ a woman has intelligence she can be reasoned. with. She can be brought to see her mistakes. changed. She can aidupt herself to any environment, but the less sense she has lhc more sci in her ways she is, the more convinced she is that her harrmv viewpoint is the only outlook and the more impossible it is to change her. Next I should try to determine whether the girl carried any real fire of iiill-rosliin; convcrsiiiiou or whcthcr she Just twiitercd like a canary bird. ‘fire reason why most men wander from their own fire- sides is because they are bored to death by wives who have nothing on door gossip of the neighborhood. Next, I should observe a girl in the bosom of her family and see if hcr'iiiotl1ci' and sisters and brothers are afraid of her. If Angelina corrects her mother's grarumar and tells mother where she gets on and off about things and if she does not permit father to smoke in the parlor and if little brother and sist er slunk out of the room when An- gelina entered it, I should also go WllllC the going was good. Then I should find out if a girl could fced me in the way my mother had always fed mo. only my heart but my stomach in my wife's hands and that whether I developed into a grouch and a dyspeptic who would break down with nervous indigestion at 40 or whether I would be still going strong at 60 would depend on the way she cooked. Nor could I picture myself leaping rind pie that would kill an ostrich. I should put just as much stress on my wife being a. capable house- keeper as slie would have a right to expect me to be a competent business man who could fetch home the bacon for her to fry. And I should take note of whether a girl could say a. thing once and let it alone. No hugger for me, and no self-righteous woman who is al- ways in the right. And flnalLv, and most of all, I would observe whether a girl put my happiness before her own; whether I always had to do her way and go 1 to the places she wanted to or whether slie would give me a break now Qand then. And if I discovered that I was the goat wild horses couldn't drag me to the sacrificial matrimonial altar. It isn't hard to tell what kind of wife a girl will make, son. The signs stick out like n. sore thumb, only men won't heed them if a girl has a peaclics-and-cream complexion and naturally wavy hair. DOROTHY DIX. I I I I I I Dear Miss Dix-I am a man of 50, married to a woman eight years my Junior. We have seven children, the oldest 20 and the youngest 3. Up to now my wife has always been faithful to me but lately she has fallen madly in love with a neighbor. The man is'rather good-looking and flatters her and she seems carr ied away with it all. She goes out with him and he comes to see her and she threatens that she will leave me and the children if he asks her to. I still love my wife and don't want to see licr ruin. What can I do? WORRIED HUSBAND. Answer: There is nothing you can do with your wife, because for the time being she is beyond all sense of reason or appeal of conscience, but you might put the fear of God into the man. There was a time when they on a husband's preserves at tlic peril of his life. There weren't so many men who made a specialty of "understand- ing" nci_i_r_oiic__r__iiiirrivd women and consoling them for having hard-work- ing husbands \\‘ll1) were just more business men instead of cinema l0Vcl'::, when the end of the tale was likely to be a bullet or a horse whipping as there is now when all that happens is o. divorce, with the correspondent making his getaway. home he has broken up and whose meal ticke the has lost her. You nor-dirt worry about your wife forsaking you and your sevei. ' children to go ofI with he: lover. She wont have a chance to. l-ie will take it all out in more word-s, and before long when the situation gels acute and she gets troublesome, he will ditch her for some new flame. and lenw licr seven children. In tlic end the cry of her baby would drown out lllfl eloquviioo of her sweetheart. The trouble Wll-ll your wife is th at she has reached the age of in- discretion. It come..- m both men and women as they approach middle age if they are at all of the romantic temperament. It is the last narc- up of their youth. it is the larst call to the dining car. 'I'hcy stc age creeping on, their own good looks fading, their own tempos slowing down, and they lose their livuds. It is now or never with them and they lei-l that they miisl have ouc more fling, a few more thrills, alast kiss, not with passion. 'i‘lii~n it is iii-it mrn forsake their faithful old wives to whom they are really devoted and fall for flapperg and golddiggers, Then it; 1,1 that l“’"l""i 115"" f" fllil’ man who will tell them how beautiful and wonder- l fu! they are and how lie never loved before. Then it ls that women make fools of themsclvin- ow:- bciys young enough to be their sons and do the tliinlZS lllflli tiltl‘ f "nil l.'.(‘ balance 0f their lives repeating. Then lt l"; "l?" 5" iiiiiiii‘ families are wmckcd and so many hearts broken, and tho pity of it is that there is not some sort of nice padded cell where these If she is brilliant and talented and highly educated, so ~ She can be j I should reflect that when I got married I put not ‘ handled those Sllillllliillfi better and when the gay Intharo wcnt poaching ‘ For he doesn't even have to marry the lady whose i Princess was seen tearing up and (down tlic paths oi llydc Park on a small tricycle, lief" lulosi acquisition. But Elizabeth likes best to play in l the backyard of her Piccadilly home. lShe is oficii seen playing "tog" with ‘the children next door. t t . l Mrs. Stewart, wife of Premier J. D. Stewart entertained at u de- lightful Bridge Wednesday after- inoon honouring Mrs. lviatliieson. iTlic Chief Justice and Mrs. Mathie- Fson are leaving this morning for Halifax oh their way to England land points in Europe. I I I Mr. James Rcdrlin has been lion- gored by the Dalhousic Dental S0- : ciety in being elected as their presi- ldent for i932 and '33. I I II Mrs. A. B. Lou lioriie ii; the wel- lcomc guest. this week of Dr. and Mrs. Ira Yco. On Tlllli',iflllf,i, Mrs. lYco was liosicss at the QllilCll lio- {tel at a dvligliiiul lune-helm and iivc tables of Bridge in Airs. lloruci-a ‘honour and also for fifrs. (Judgp) 1G. S. lnmuu of Summeroidc who is I visiting lici‘ old home here. - . s earth to talk about but the children and‘ the cost of meat and the back- l Mr. Dick Filiiter has resumed his idutlcs iii ihc Bunk of Montreal, ‘Halifax, after his rccciil. accident which forced lilm Lo prolong his holidays. l I I I Mr. W. Chester S. McLure, M.P., and his daughter, Miss Lena Mc- ‘Lure, spent the week-end visiting ‘ friends in Montreal. o - a . Home friends will bc interested ‘ito know that Miss Adele West, lGraduate Nurse of Grace Hospital, . Winnipeg, has accepted a position gladly home at evening to a dinner of burnt meat and soggy vegetables in the Hunter General Hospital at i merslde entenalned very pleasantly _ Teulon, Manitoba. I I I Mrs. L. E. Prowse has gone up to Ottawa to spend two months with her daughter, Mrs. Harry Ritchie. I t - o lvfrs. McCready was hostess for the Thursday afternoon Bridge Club nt lier cosy home on Long- worth Avenue. v u a o i The University Women's club licld a rliiiner on Saturday evening in honor of Sir Robert Falconer, re- tiring president of the University of Toronto. Lady Falconer, who was also to have been an honored guest, was unfortunately prevented by illness from being present. Mrs, J- L- sflifilgfl welcomed Sir Robert. Dr. C. C. Benson, ln~ proposing a toast to his health, briefly and hu- morously outlined the many chang- ,cs both inside and outside the Uni- versity during the past 25 years. She dwelt particularly on the great iin- provemcni, in the status of women, and Daid a lilgh tribute to Sir Rob- ert for his part in bringing about the new order. The guest d: honor gave a delightfuland informal talk l over. Nor is it likely if it. came to a test that your wife would really walk of! , l .__ ; rile ago I counsel patience. Literally they do, and if the women and men l the wisdom and the courage to wait until they recover their sanity, they l save breaking up their homes and g 3 christened by their experiences and who never run amuck again. 00o Dear Dorothy Dix-Is a man too old to marry at 45? trade and o\vn my own shop. Would you advertise for a wife? It seems hard to remain a bachelor all my life. AIISWOTZ sort of matrimonial risk. i and to be ablc to appreciate one. right sort of women do not marry out some nice girl among your acquaintances. lire you know to be (lean. and who belongs to your class and has the l same sort of ideals that you have. summer, the color which has 130-’ To botli husbands and wives WlIOSC mates have gone haywire at mid- What, at 45 a man is a more boy in these days, and he is the best Old enough to know what he wants in a wife But don't advertise for a wife. about his student days in Germany I I I Mrs. H. S. Henderson was lun- cheon hostess on Tuesday in oonor of visiting Summer-side friends. I I I Many former friends will hear with regret of the death at her home in Paris on April 2nd of Prin- cess Michel Murat, who was the for- mer Helena Macdonald Stallo of Cinclnnatti, 0., whose summer the Sea. The Princess Murat was 38 years old. I I I. Among the recent guests at the i Alpine Inn, St. Marguerite P. Q. Mrs. (Dr-J Jack Jenkins and chil- dreii. I I I Scarves in silk are again the ‘thing in accessories this spring, but there is a I932 air about them and the novel ways in which they are worn. They are intended to be dec- ioratlve essentials to the costume; inot n colorful after-thought. Stiff ‘rakish plaid bows or ties are very new and smart. They give a perky note of color to tailored collarless suits and coats and the coat-frocks, especially in dark blue. The scarves are generally lined and short. Polka dots, all sizes, are a favored design. Stripes-vertical, diagonal, and hori- zontai-also have fashion's decided l approval as have scarves of solid ‘colors. Then ilierc are many new 1' designs both floral and geometrical. T ‘They come in all sizes from long to very short and from squares to mo- zieratcly narrow scarves. But the cardinal principle is that the scarves ‘must be gay and vlvld. Red and white is one of the most popular color combinations right now. l I I I ; Mrs. Ricki-rs, wife of the Ameri- - can Consul entertained delight- 'fully at afternoon Bridge on Wed- nesday in honor of friends. l I I I Mrs. Harry Brown was hostess at _a dinner bridge last evening hon- ‘oring Mrs. A. B. Lee Horne and jMrs. G. S. Inman of Summerside, lwho are being widely entertained l by their friends. . not l l Mrs. R. S. P. Jardine of Sum- l at Bridge on Thursday evening at l her home on Notre Dame Street, i Summersidc. l I I I 1 Mrs. (Judge) Inman entertained ' informally for her friends last Sat- urday evenlng at her home on ‘I Spring Street, Summerside. l o a s The Summorside Chapter of the I. O. D. E. held a very enjoyable bridge and afternoon tea on Thurs- day afternoon in the Library rooms. The prizes were won by Miss Sarah Green, Mrs. Carl Crockett and Mrs. Neil Durant. I I I Miss Violet Richardson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Richardson of Summerside, returned on Friday Evening from a. pleasant visit in Halifax, N. 8., where she was the guest of Col. A. A. and Mrs. Mont- gomerie-S. I I I Glnghams are back again! To some this statement may not hold a challenge, for the simple reason that their return has been repeat- edly and falsely heralded. But this year tells a different story. Ging- hams have a. definite place in the lslmplified fashions of today. Al- ‘. ready they have made quite an im- prcssion in guimpes and blouses. Plaids have been preferred to date, but checks are challenging atten- E tion once more. Ever since a famous l Paris dressmaker promoted them in Amer-atom (pflll-YHI-l‘ will rent a suite of royal apartments in the shadow of Windsor Castle. They are lofty rooms, emblsmnod with heraldic devices and haunted by the memories of Wellington, the Prince Consort, and Queen Victorb l herself. They are the former magnificent suite of waiting rooms at Windsor Jlailway Station specially built and home was at beautiful Dalvay-on- ' abetted for the reception and com- fort of royalty. . ROOMS UNUSED Royalty use the rooms no more, for when the King and Queen come to Windsor they usually travel by road. Since the death of Queen Victoria the rooms have been kept under lock and key. Now a "To Let" notice is in the window. In the wall on No. 3 platform of the station is an L‘ usivo door. A rusty key grates in the lock and It seems to be the lesson for "red rlots"--but don't let one occur at your dressing table! That is, don't let rouge run wild over your countenance. Police your- self, and handle those reds with caution. n»: rouge placed heltAr-ekelted upon the features isn't in line with springs vogue for meticulous ele- gance in dress and make-up. How- ever, the fact that rouge may ap- pear at’ unexpected places upcu the face, implies a studied nonchalance that is far from being plain care- lessness. For example, perhaps you are of that legion of women whose first glance at themselves in the mirror upon rising reveal faces of ghostly pallor. In this event. watch a syn- thetic bloom appear when you, give your forehead, nose and whole face a stingy applicatl of rouge. Don't use much, of course-just put it on with fingers that. have had a mere ' acquaintance with the rouge pot. After this, apply rouge in the regular places, powder. and note the lilt that you receive from the whole process. No longer will you dread facing the day. Evening gives splendid opportun- ity to try some more tricks of the rougeing trade. Do you feel short of beauty because your nose L1 long? Well, the faintest suggestion of rouge right smack under the tip of it will give it the appearance of be- ing considerably more abbreviated than it really is. Or perhaps you prefer a short up- per- lip to the long one which you have. All right-rouge the ridge extending from the nose to the mouth just the slightest bit, and you will be pleased with the result. Ranging the lobes of the can‘, you may or may not consider in good taste. It depends upon the extent of your desire for exotlcism. At any rate, rouge placed there often sp- pears to make alat face seem nar- rower. Do you have a long face that seems to grow even longer when you think about it? Well, hold your Rouge Does Help l’ l l For Rent, Queen Victoria ’s Waiting Rooms At Windsor one crosses the threshold of tho apartments which courtiers of the past had entered to bow before a little woman in black. DECAYED SPLENDOR. Decsyed ‘ ’ meets the eye everywhere. Long streams of cob- webs festoon the elaborately-plas- tered ceilings from which once hung magnificent candelabra. Dust lies thick on a magnificent Tudor fireplace in one of the 1n- ner rooms. Here, before a roaring log fire, Queen Victoria had warm- ed herself after enduring the dis- comforts of early railway travel eighty years ago. l-Iere the gallant Disraeli had advanced to kiss her hand and whisper compliments. Outside, huge iron-wrought gates, creaking on their hinges from dis- use, still bear the royal arms and V. R. monogram. A MorningSmile Jack was home nfter a long voy- age, and his grandmother wanted to hear of the wonders of the deep. "Well, granny," said Jack, "the first thing that surprised me was the flying fish." “Flying fish!" exclaimed the old lady. “Now Jack, don't try to gull your old granny with such cock- and-bull stories. Tell me something true." - "Well, then," continued Jack, "we had to cast anchor in a. calm cross- ing the Red_ Sea and when we hauled up the anbhor we found one of Pharaoh's chariot wheels st- tached to it!" ' “Ah," said granny, “that's gospel truth, Jacki But none of your fly- lng-nsh yarns for me." Home Surroundings Count "We are influenced to a greater extent than we realize by our sur- roundings" observes F. C. Nunnick, chairman of the More Beautiful Canada Campaign Committee of the Canadi l Horticultural Coun- oil. As he points out "children an particularly responsive to home surroundings and where these in- elude lawns, shrubs, trees and flowers they make a much better place in which to bring up chil- dren than in a home where no st- tention whatever is paid to these friends of the plant kingdom." In- vironment is an important factor with children. The constant con- tact with the beautiful things of nature which well kept home Blbunds affords is too important in the welfare of the home and the child to be overlooked. chin upl For a delicately rouged. chin appears shorter. And as for chins that hold dimples-don't neg- lect to rouge them for all tnc world to seel l blouses and linings of woolen coats, , interest has been stimulated con-l l slderably. Checked glnghams are l i being sampled for entire frocks and I costumes, as well as blouses and ac- cents on dresses. considered smart. Stripes are also . .__ £172.: locked up until their madness is they are not l sponuihle for what to vrhom they are married have Just ct back husbands and wives who are DOROTHY DIX. I have a good IBRINE. The mcu that they do not know. Pick Home girl whose past _ DORUIFHYDIX. e School B M Persistent study consumes an enormous quantity of nerve force and indoor life is not conducive to the formation of rich blood from which nerve force is made. _ Many boys and many girls fail at examinations be- cause their nervous systems play out. Some suffer from complete nervous break down. There is nothing like Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to form rich, red blood and restore the nervous system. Young people respond quickly to this treatment. " Dr. Chase’ Nerve Food Brings new health and vigor to all the fnmlily. {sizes s very of our is cu- meth-