PAGE EIGHT . . THERE WILL BE no JNGREASE IN THE PRICE OF RED ROSE TEA or COFFEE ON ACCOUNT OF THE INCREASED -DUTY AND SALES TAX T. Estabrooks 00., Limited Saint John, ii. B. Style Cleats i “T!!! ALMA ARCHER. I think you heard me mention that I thought we should all give LllE royal nose-thumbing to candlesticks for wedding presents. Instead. if youre one of the few remaining big operates, come clean and contribute either a dozen English Rock Crystal goblets in pilliuv-cut, at a mere 550,000. or a dozen Waterford fine dia- mond-cut highhall glasses at considerably less. If you're playing small time, but love nice things, choose a pair: of English crystal swan suit cellars. These are extremely smart and only about $7.50 a pair. ' I _' There's quite an assortment of brides, too, that are straining at ’. l the leash to own silver Resist Wedgewood service plates. as well as Lobemevei‘ punch cups and saucers. Womanis Realm -:- Social andrwevrsonal‘ baa GUARDIAN ~ i Il Woman's . Cfllllllllfll i ,,,",.':',,, Dorothy DIX ,,, 31L, An Old Mild n‘ n” - Etiquette Q. Must every course that is pass- ; Why is it That Women i cape Being Old Maids'!—- * y do They Give r up Good Situations to Take up the Far Harder Job of Wife and Mother, Without Love to Gild the Sacrifice? So many girls write to me that they don't want I Why? Europe and the Of course, it is easy to understand that ‘every woman would want to marry if she were sure of get- ting s Fairy Prince for s husband. It is natural for every woman to desire her mate, her children, her to an earthly Eden on this troubled old earth of chances of getting 1n ldssl husband are lbout on s par with her chances of being elected Governor or Senator. might hit her. It docs some women, but she is reasonably safe from such an accident. No woman of intelligence looks around among her. married friends and secs many wives whom she envles. Yet she is so sfrsid of the bogie of old maldenhood that it terrlfles her into rushing into my sort of catch-as-catch-can marriage. . You can understand a woman marrying any sort of manif sheds madly in love with him. The heart is not amenable to reason and often it sets, itself upon a hopeless derelict. A woman may know that a man is a gsmb- ler or a drunkard or a philandcrer or that he ls shlftlcss and no account. she may know that he is a weskling without the strength to stand slone, that she can never trust him to depend upon him and that it is not in him to be faithful. Paris Styles 1i By IHARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, June 4.—(U. P.)—’I'he true Parisian fool: has ceased to be surprised at finding itself in a new and novel shoe almost every day. It has found, too, that it seldom appears with more than one or two frocks because it has become a definite accessory to Al-azlumos wardrobe and the same pair of shoes is therefore not to be worn with just any and every outfit. It spoils the exclusive- ness of the outfit in the first pia ce, and wears out the shoe quicker in the second. For town, Perugia endorses a dark red box-call.’ semi-pump, irimmcrl in front with an insert of lizard that also serves as a pip- ing around the upper edge of the shoe. It is worn with an en- i‘ scmble ‘of tsvced in deep red of the same tone, and a box-calf purse I of the same leather as the shoe proves that coordination is the l order of the day. ' A Porugia sport shoe is of Norwegian blue lapis colored leather and comes well up to the instep with two buckles on the outer side. Jane Regny furnishes the white jersey coat suit witlrwhich they are worn and the belt, collars and cuffs and band on the white panama hat accompanying it are made of matching leather. With a printed silk frock by Irene Dana, Ducerf-Scavini fur- nishes a shoe of white and brown or ivhite and black, depending on the bnckuround of the Irene Dana. model, whether it is black or brown. The flowers are white. The heel and toe takes the color and leaves the white for the instep and a curved design at the sitics. It has no ornament of any kind on it which gives it a much more dressy air informally. Toilman and Hellstein agree on a shoe of dark blue kid that has jUSL a tiny iucrustation of lizard beginning at the instep and running around the front of the toe and back to the other side. r ._ The ensemble with which it is worn is of dark blue crepe as a ' 1 two-piece suit. Gloves, hat, scarf and belt of a shade lighter blue l finish filings up, and the jiocketbok can either be of the same ‘a material as the silk scarf or of the same leather as the gloves and . ‘K belt. This is an afternoon outfit a nd for such a. definite contrast ' " lS not highly favored. Nevertheless, for some cause she can never explain even to herself, she feels that he is her man and that the few scant hours of happiness he will give hcr will pay for the months and years of misery he will make her suffer. 5o the woman who loves greatly is justlflcd in taking almost any risk in llflfilljlllg. But these women who marry just lo escape being old maids have no such urge of affection to drive them on toward making their leap in the clari: and they have no such consolation it they land in the purgatory of a miserable marriage instead of the heaven of a happy one. You could understand why women want to marry if marriage invsr- lably meant luxury and ease and every husband "supported his wife," as the phrase goes. But in the great majority of cases marriage is the hardest job with the least pay, that any woman can possibly tackle. No hired servant works as hard as the average woman does in her own home. No clerk, no stenographer, no factory employe has such long hours of toil as does the wife and mother. She has no union day, no holidays, not even Sundays off, and she gets no pay envelope at the end of the week. And no boss or foreman would dare say the things to her that her husband does. The girl who gives up a good situation to get married nine times out of ten has to work far harder than she ever did before, and nhslgets paid nei- ther ln money nor appreciation for what she does. Often she gets married, knowing that the man she is marrying cannot make" enough for the two of them to live upon and that she will have to go on with her job and super- lrnpose upon that the labor of making a home and cooking meals and wash- ing dishes and sweeping floors after her day's work at the ofllce or store is done. Nothing but the grand passion, you would think, would induce a. woman to marry under such conditions, but they do it every day, not because they are so much in love with some men that they are willing to enslave them- selves for him and make every sacrifice for him, but simply because they, don't want to be old maids. . ' ' Funny, isn't it? And idiotic. And pathetic. A queer hang-over of an old superstition from which women cannot free thcmsclves. An fdsa that there is something sort of disgraceful in being an old mild. ‘Inst it in- dicates that a woman has somehow lacked in feminine chsrmsand fasci- nations. . Women may have felt this way with reason in the old days when mat- Suc/za clean, flesh, lo cable fia grance- No wonder dainty women all over the world treasure its refreshing charm— n3 wonder our Canadian leaders of tastethan ‘ fashion find 1t indispensable for 0st informal occasions when heavier scents arc out of place. rimony was the sole respectable occupation open to them and when it was tried her best to get a busbmd because a ket but her passport into society and her everything that was interesting in life. s open door to freedom and But 've have changed all that in this enlightened age. Nowadays a hus- so that there will be no doubting or band is not a necessity. l-fe is a luxury. A girl doesn't have to man-y for a delay, Hughes Drug Co. and good living. She can make as good a one for herself, often a better one, than any dflllilfits verywhere are authorized man she is likely to marry can give her. ‘ magi?’ Wm gmfilyleigd ilgfignif: She doesn't have to remain the fringe on somébodyb family if she my om or money back. doesn't marry. She is perfectly free to set up her own establishment and be as independent as a woodchopper. She doesn't have to marry to gel; wine. Bhe has her business, her friends, her clubs, u thou- sandfold wider range of interest than the housewife. maid no w or looks askance at hsr. She is no longer a figure of fun. She is just as much the object of envy bachelor and people regard her lack of a husband as they do his wife as a matter of personal taste and inclination. _______. The soured, gossiping, meddling old m the dodo. In her place we have an in Nobody ridicules the old aid of the put. is u extinct as telilgent. capable, helpful, broad- Still Marry-Just to Es- to be old molds and that they are thinking of getting married just to keep from being old maids. I wonder. In these days of feminine emancipation tho-lot of the old maid is generally one of peace and freedom such as few hurried women ‘ever know. Often it is; one of ‘ emolument and power, of fine clothes and trips to luxuries that a fat pay envelope buys. home, and a happy marriage is the nearest approach ours. But it is also the rarest thing, and a woman's“ . Lightning . A-MorningSmilc not boll, and pour it over 3 ounces each of fine bread crumbs and cake crumbs. Cream together 2 table- spoons butter and 54 cup sugar; add 3 888s and i extra yolk which have been well beaten, 1 teaspoon grated orange rind and 8 tablespons orange juice and l. teaspoon lemon juice. Then add the soaked crumbs. Place this all in a greased baking dish, and bake in moderate oven 25 or 80 minutes.‘ "rop with the beaten and sweetened white of an egg, brown in the oven. Garnish with pieces of orange. ‘Thousands Bless Dr, Leonhardt, the knife is the only from the misery of piles, it's‘ because you haven't hoard of ‘the new tresv ment known as Dr. HEM-ROID. soiling yet harmless internal medi- cine. After years of study he dis- covercdi the exact cause of piles and then went further and compounded cause. of itching, bleeding or protruding piles to benefit by On that honorable basis every pile suflcrer should seizure a bottle of Dr. Lconhurdth da Y. minded. good-natured, humorous unmarr every uplift movement and th thers and who is universally men they do not love, men they kno them no prospect of bettering thei don't want to be old maids. ed be accepted at a formal dinner? A. Yes; whatever is passed is ac- cepted, and at least I pretense is mldc of eating it. Q, should s business woman stand when callers come into the office‘! A. No; it is unnecessary. Q. If o person is visiting and there are four or five servants, must one tip them nil? A. Yes. Nélf) Face Powder, f- Smooth as Satin I _ That lovely, nature.‘ bloom of moth! Find it in filislsLO-GLO. eursst. smoothest fscs powder known, New Irsnch process makes ft stay on longer. Coloring, approved iby United States government, blends iperfectly with any complexion. No flak-y or pasty- look. No ugly shine. MELLO-GLO prevents large pores. never irritates skin. Sold through all Druggists and st Toilet Goods Counters. Mrs. Brown (with newspaper)- "John, it refers here to some gun- imen taking a man for a ride. What kind of s ride?" Browri-"A slay ride, my dear." ill?) Sclswarlj 0111/ b 4' S urei. l For The Cook l ‘ORANGE SOUFI-‘LE Heat 1% cups" of rich milk, but do - _p Fashions A rally?” RICE KRISPIES PPETlllll, just listen! 1'1‘ MAKES you hungry just to heu- Kelloggh Rico Krispics pop and crackle u you pour on milk or cream. . . . And what a delicious taste when you dip Ira-your spoon! Toasted rice. Crisp and crunchy. You'll like Rico Krispios for breakfast or lunch, with fruits or honey added. Great for childreifc sup- pers. Nourishing and so easy to digest. Try a health- ful dill: when you’re hungry late at night. Kellogg's Rico Krispies take the place of nutmeais in mauroous, candies. Use for making delicious ice- cream sundaos. Butter and servo like pop corn. Order from your grocer. Bo sure to ask for genu- ine Kelloggh Rico Krispios in the red-and-green puck. ago. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. cared no crisp it crackles in cream. ' o c O You'll enjoy Kellogg's Slumber Mimic, broadcast over W11 and ' nations of tho N. B. C. eon-y Sunday svsliing a: 10.30 17.0.5. T. Also KI! Lo: Angela, KOMI) Sennls n: 10.00, and not Denver at 10.30. The only and No More Piles Specialist Who Discovered This Common Sense Inmedy If you think that the surgeon's method of escape Leonhsrdt’: The Doctor's prescription is a quick ing. remedy that would remove the br. Leonhcrdt wants every sufferer his discovery and bust. I-Illfli/l-ROID tablets to- MR- AuiMRs. I give “a up. ' And the three are arranged 'Whizi an. Fashionable are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking With Every By Annabelle Worthington Paris has such an 6115i! WBY 0! taking a piece of fabric and turning it into a stunning dress. Isn't this one irresistibly lovely? ft has such s charming neckline, so softly pretty and youthfully becom- Eyeiet batiste in pale blue. yellow led woman who is the backbone of e good angel of her married sisters and bro- sdmfrsd, respected and loved. Why,_then, are women so afraid of being old maids? Why do they marry w are unworthy of them, men who oflsr r condition in life, simply because they DOROTHY DIX. Joe Takes One on the Chin Jusf A auto: siuva, Vi, READY lN l $ICOND 112w- YARDLEY LAVENDER Perfimie, Face Powder. Compact. D47 “"4 N05," _ Creams, Talcum Powder, 547/1541“- m- " Th‘ LWWZV Soap oft/re World," and Gift Cases. Al: slhGéod Drug and Department Stores. ‘ YARDLEY g old Bond Street LONDON (mm; : Yardley House U.S.A. : 4p Filth Avenue Harbour at York Street, Toronto Nov Ywk semi" frills’: WHAT y... arr so; mums ma. icvr MYSELF psplum frills in new interesting manner so as not to interfere with the smooth fit of the moulded hip- line. The hemllne is comfortably full. It's delightfully cool. and exquisite- ly lovely fashioned of printed chiffon. Style No. 3144 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 1B, 20 years. (i6 and 38 inches Lesson Furnished Pattern nn-u-I? cobwebby lace, white crepe do. chino printed crops do chlnsfn red and white, chiffon voile print in green m tdwhite and organdis are so al.- tractlve. Size l6 requires 6% yards 39-inch. Vacation Days are here again! 8o nearly here, at least. that it's time for you to be thinking about your Bummer wardrobe. Bosurc toflllin thesize of tlho pattern. send stamps oi- coin (coin preferred). Price of pattern -- cents. _._.-.___-_._--—_._. No. am. Sise . ' . ..-.......--.uss|- Nuns .-suns-s"...---..--.-s.....---ssus uses-sun.“nun...”.. "-1...." sum: Address City ..................--.n Btltc “ fiffiftfdlié,“ lF ma: use» To oss-ruiw-‘ti. s: FROM A ttiqnmniscisu 1 Aum on d’ i/ft . \ ‘- v \ hair Foot. um n; awidsrucp" - or AGAmI