_ Mmmw _‘.~’d¢‘a¢*~i‘m y1 .-.>-<-»~>.,_-l .__. _. . PAGE EIGHT -—-i_----n-4 -:- Social and Pejsonal -:- FCIShIOIIS run CHA (‘rUARDIAN -:-i Literature J . igvmoat i ¢ I ittWomarg ’s Realm How ‘ v fl Would “Take t h D ' a Long Look ch01” y lx at Her a Wife ' - M°"‘°' l ' M‘ ht S f B tfor Any Young Man It tit? gicklfilug that: ‘Iaiinfil of Mother-in-Law He Wants and Then Marry _Her Daughter, for as H_er lllother 1S, S0 Will Be His Wife A you“; may; g<k5' "new can a chap find out before marrlfle Whe- ther a girl will make a good wife or not?" You can't. SOH- Marriage is one of the things that is not soverned 11v any law of cause or effect and it defies all 1081c and reason. Even experience counts for nvihlflll in it, for a three-time ividowei‘ is lust 8/5 likely W be a bad picker as an adolescent boy. r. You cannot say "do this" or “do that" in mar- riage and you will make a success of it, or "choose this one" or "that one" and you will be hBPPY- F01’ to ever-v rule for attaining connubial bliss there are a million exceptions. You simply DB? 5'0“? money for your weddins T 1H8 and take W” chances. hre are, however. certain signs and portents that will flP B Tsllwg: to the kind of wife a girl is likely: to make and wise l5 the 37f)“ heeds them. The first and most important, of these is the girls mother, and cannv and foriviird-looking is the youth who gives that lady the once over ‘before he pops the question to Arflbcllii- O4skuOUP Grocer / For, in ninc-Lv-niiie cases out of a hundred, what mother is at middle ‘The way mother keeps house will be the way Arabella will keep home. Mother's attitude toward domesticity will be Arrtoellis tidy of loo g at familyiife. And, above all, the way mother treats father will be the way Arabella will treat her husband. >-- age Arabella will be a. ~13. For. in the case of a girl and her mother, both heredity and environ- ment have a. chance to do their perfect ivork. Mother not only probably transmiitctl to Arabella the Jones‘ temper or the Smith's amiabiiity, but hers was the hand that molded the plastic character of the baby girl into the shape that it ivoultl carry through life. Hers was the influence that formed the ideals tho: ivcre to guide Arabella and make her a blessing or a. curse :0 her husband. So it will pay any young man, who is casting a favorable eye upon a young git to get acquainted with he r mother before he commits himself. If he finds that mother is intelligent and wide awake and broad-minded and tolerant in her views and an interesting companion to spend an ev- ening with, then he may safely go forward and tie up with Arabella for life. For the odds are that Arabella will have plenty of sense and that she has been accustomed from her infancy to reading and keeping up with all that. is going on in the world and to according every one the privilege of their ovrn opinion without argument or discussion. But if, on the other hand, mother is narrow and bigoted and cock- aure that she is always right and her way is the only way, and if she is dull and stupid and boring to talk to, then a man takes a fool-hardy risk if he cspouses Arabella. For she is almost sure to be a dead ringer for mother and make one of the petty tyrants who henpeck their husbands to extinction and from whom one cannot differ on the slightest point without starting something. Same vmy about housekeeping. Like mother, like daughter. If mother is a thrifty manager and a crackerjack housekeeper, then daugh- ter is pretty sure to know how to run a house on a schedule and how to feed her hurlmrid and children properly. She has been brought up ln an atmosphcrc of ordcrlinc-ss and ncatncss ancl she cannot sit down in com- fort in an uxiilclj: room. Also. she has been taught how to cook and she regards cooking as an art instead of looking upon it as a drudgery. But if a girl has been brought up in a slovenly house where nobody ever su-et-ps lliliiyl‘ the beds or irashes a dish until it is needed, where money is wastrd and half of father's income goes into the garbage can, then she IS iery l y to kcci) the same sort of house that mother did simply because she has learned idle and wasteful and untidy habits in her childhood. H And observe closely mother's attitude toward her husband, son. If mother is solicitoiis of his comfort; if she caters to his little whims; if she is compnnloiinble with, him; i1 she shows him in a thousand ways that she lorcs ‘him tiiicl appreciates him, then grab Arabella. and rush with her to the nearest parson. She will be, like mother, a wife whose price is above rubies. For mother's example has taught her how to treat a husband. Never hesitate to marry a girl irhose father looks happy and Joilyaiiti contented around home. But i)U\‘.‘lll‘E of marrying a girl whose father is a meek, suppressed, downtrodden than who sneaks about. his own house with an apologetic air and who goes shabby ivhile his wife and the girls are dressed like Solomon in rill his glory. Mother has regarded her husband as nothing but. a slave to work and earn money for her and so will Arabella regard you if you ll I her. ’l‘hcre i1. only one cxccption to this rule of judging a girl by her mother. and tliu‘. is tihr-n the daughter disapprovcs so much of her mother that she swings to the opposite extremes. Somcti (‘w the chiuahter of a shrew is so disgusted with the spectacle that r mo ' malzcs of h - elf in her rages that she acquires an iron self-control. Soriztii a '.,‘ll'l who has been brought up in a. quarrel- some homo, iihcrc ci'cr_v word ivtis a fighting word, never permits an argument in hcr llOillL‘. Sometimes a girl is so repelled by her mother's slorenliness and bad hciiseizet-ping that she becomesamodcl of order and ncalness. Often a girl is so filled with pity for the way her mother treats her father that she spoils her husband to death. But you 01in c. toll whcthvr a girl is going to imitate her mother or be warned by her example by obs erving whether she admires her mother and thinks mother knows best or not. So, taking it by and large, it is a rnlzlifj.‘ safe be: for any young man to pick out the kind of motlier-iii-lazi: h’. irailts and then marry her daughter, DOROTHY DIX. Style Chats For The Cook BEEF PUDDING Cut lean beef into small pieces, or put through the meat chopper, using coarse grinder. Season. A finely- chopped onion may be added if de- sired. Make a stifl dough of 1% cups flour, 1,4 cup finely-chopped suet, 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder and a little salt. Molstan with water or milk to make a dough that will roll. Line a basin with this dough, put in the chopped meat and fold the dough over to cover the top, moisterling the edges and sticking them together so that no flavors may be lost. Steam from two to four hours, according to the aim of the pudding. It should turn onto a plat- ter without breaking so that all the Juices are contained within the pud- ding. If desired, this may be put into a. floured pudding cloth and boiled instead of steamed. Fashion Dictdfcs (By Mary Knight, United Press Staff Correspondent) PARIS, July 3.—(U.P.) —It is "Demi-Saison" time in Paris-the “Little Season," when the dress- makers are showing their models to small groups of live-at-homes, and a fe wvisitors. Largely, they are the models displayed in January and February, with a scattering of new frocks to enliven the collection. Irene Dana's . black marocain dress is perfect, for spring and sum- mer, for a rather tall hlonde. It has frilly white lace on white linen cuffs and there are three little bows of white linen and lace down the front of the blouse. The skirt has flanges of silk down the sides, and an un- even hemline lets several rows of lace of a dainty petticoat be seen. White Jackets with black dresses are rodolent of spring, and espe- cially one of Lenief, S. A. It is of white broadcloth, with the collar, made in rovers, and cuffs encrusted with black broadtail. There are four white covered buttons down the front and the length of the Jac- ket is Just to the hips. A dress with asmany uses as a cat has lives has proved itself a great favorite among smart women, and comes from Martial et /*""“'.ld. It ls made of black georgette and has an apron-skirt and removable long-sleeved bolero that ties in the back with two gay little flowers. _.i._. Avoid g. Young daughter will love to wear this frock. It's cut on such modish lines. The peplum flounced hipline gives it such a grown-up air. The cape collar is a. bit audacious. And the skirt sways in circular fulness. What the Fashionables are Weariny Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington And into the bargain it's so easily made. You can either fashion it of sheer dainty cotton or a heavy weight cotton. A sprigged dimity in rose-pink colouring is sketched. The binding of organdie is in the deepest tone of the print. The collar and bow of organdie choose the lightest tone. Again you can make it all in yel- low linen and it looks delightful. Sailor-blue pique with white dots. plain blue binding and white pique collar, is Just as snappy and smart as any little girl would want. Style No. 3147 may be had in sizes 6, B, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires 2% yards 35-inch material with l‘: yard 89-inch wri- trusting. Vacation Days are here e811“! So nearly here, at least, that it's time for you to be thinking about. your Summer wardrobe. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of Pattern l5 cents. ._--....__._.__.__._._._ No. a141, Size .................................... » Name --un¢|u~.-.-...... nus-un- Street Address -u-u-n-n-n-.-nu- State n-cvnollllo City The dress proper has a deep sleeve- less yoke of lime-colored georgette embroidered in rows of tiny beads. It has the informality of a morning bridge, the send-formality of an af- ternoon gown when the bolero is removed. Different shoes and hat. costume jewelry, gloves and purse may further serve to prolong its nine lives r’ originality. COBRAS MENACE PASSENGERS SYDNEY, July 3. (Briltsh United Presm-A zoologlst, M. M. Ward. travelling from Egypt to Australia on the steamer Jervis Bay with 10 deadly Egyptian cobras- had a dreadful experience. The reptiles were imprisoned in a stout wooden case, and Ward left them with a feeling of security. In mid-ocean he looked at the case casually, and to his horror found that the box had warped and that through a large crack an unknown number of the cobrae had escaped- The loss was kept a secret from the passengers. An organised hunt was made by Ward, assisted by mmebers of the crew, and several of the snakes were recaptured. How ever, 1t was impossible to count the reptiles, which were all intertwined in their case. As there was th prospect of ‘one or more of the deadlY teptiles being lose, it decided to kill the snakes count them one by one. ‘ When the cobras were killed thrown overboard Mr. Ward relleved,'but keenly disappointed to find that they had all been recep- tured, and that his sacrifice had been unnecessary. m T0 DRIVE CAR BLINDFOLDED PARIS, July 3. (British United Pressl-With a bandage around his ‘eyes, an err-soldier will drive ‘his "cai- through traffic on several of the busiest thoroughfares in Par- is. to prove to sceptics that he can see quite as well blindfolded as not. M. Ouvricii, who comes from Cog- nac, whence also comes the fam- ous brandy, is anxious to give a public demonstration of,the un- canny faculty which he says came to him as the result of injuries re- ceived in the war. He was so ser- iously injured in the head when in the trenches on~ the Somme that for some time he seemed bereft of all mental power. Then one day he not only felt his reason return, but direct command of General Perish- ing, backed by the French troops under General Gouraud, broke the strong German line and recaptured this strategic point. This was one of the bloodiest battles of the World War. In the first encounter 960 American troops were killed, 169 taken prisoner and 6,894 wounded. ~ PLANE SAVES 20 LIVES BORDEN, Sweden, July 4 (U. P.) -—Ambula.nce planes of the Swedish Red Cross last year saved 20 lives in the sparsely settled communities of Lapland. This was brought out by‘ Doctor Axel Odelberg, head physician of the garrison hospital at Borden, located in northernmost Sweden. Prince Carl, brother of King Gustaf, is head of the Swed- lsh Red Gross. Mlnard’! Llnlmrnt for bin-mi. you drink five cups 0i “KING 00L]! TEA” a day, your tea costs you less than a cent a day. Think of that-less than a cent a day for the lux- ury of drinking “KING CDLE TEA.” Wheres else can a cent buy so much real value? Kept positively fresh In It: dean aluminum package. Paris Styles i By MARY KNIGHT United Press Stat! Correspondent PARIS, July L-(U. PJ-When skies an gloomy and it rains- it is time to get the blues. And by blues we mean the smartest, brightest, newest blues of the Paris season. Lunching at the Ritz on just such a gloomy day one is apt to find a member o! one of the royal families o! Europe stopping over in Full for a little shopping, ivearing a. Worm model called “Bluetfl an ensemble in lapis blue fantasy woolen with the amusing collar and Jabot of blue and white striped pique and long, straight coat collared 1n gray astrakhan. One is also apt to see a Marie-(‘nristiane hat in blue faille to match, and brown opera pumps and brown patent Bag completing the costume. Mme. Fenwick, who is well known for her chic, has selected "Nippon" from Worth. It is in dark blue and white tuasor, the skirt being dark blue and the Jae ket white. She has a pull-over of white angora wool and satin and the regular blouse in white with a. broad band of the dark blue, on which is embroidered her - monogram. ' A bit of royal blue on a. black hat worn wlthon Ill-black coa- tume llvens things up, and a bit of bright or light blue on a scarf. All blue ensembles in lapis or: navy are greatly ‘to be coveted, and brown combined with beige seems to be one of the smartest "sec- ond bests." Mme. Rene Revtllon, a petite Parlalenne, hu Just or- dered a beige crepe marocain short Jacket to wear with a brown outfit, and the same Mrs. Rnwick mentioned above is going to have a simple sports coat in beige velveteen which is long, with a belt at the natural waist and cut to the figure. I Etiquette Iylubchlln Q. n it propor w uu pa,“ domes in the summertime to avg laundering? A. Yen. ' Q. In 1t con-oat. to n1 “flow u! when acknowloddnl m fnllodugq tiont A. No; any "new do you do!" Q. For whom on the mum pews of the church mound h: tag wedding ceremony? / A. Ivor the famfliu of the brim and the groom. AMorningfSmfld OAUTIOUI I -_-_- l little Dov“ . will no pious give me a tranferf’ Oondueior-"Cerhinly. Winn M my little man?" Little Boy-“Oh. I can“: m1 you that. It’: a sin-prise part7.‘ Reduction In Express Ra tes" On Lobsters‘ Jlw 3._A reduon The Mar i ago - HALIFAX, tion has been secured 1:1 the rates l0!‘ labours seal express to Boston. oowrdin: to announcement Just made by Dr, Richard Homer, ‘Secretory of m4 United Maritime Flahennen. A flu to: in the situation which bu clue-n ed the express companies to yield to the complaint of the Central Secretary b69023 i316 BOH-rd 0f Rail-n way Commissioner: has been thq activity o1 the association in uv ranging collection servioel at vulv ous points 510M the chores of Non Bcotia and the insistence by thg secretary and some of tho fiaberq men's federations of P. l. L, ma! the rates for Prince Edward Inland and New Brunswick were (no high. The newrates are of medal inton- est to lobster fishermen 'd the“ parts o! the Maritime! 8nd lhmlld result in making it polalble for the local dealers to pay their fisherman higher prices for that: catches. The new rates apply between Si. John, N.B., and Yarmouth, N5. t0 Cape Tormentine, Point du Ohonq and Pictou, for ordinary chipmunk and for through unload-shipment; to Boston from summer-aide, Plotou, Mulgrave, Harbor au Mouoho, Bella m, Shedfac. Point du Ohene. Oaqo "m. and r ‘ m. Serious Disorder: big cities say 3 . nice it always Ieavea our mam district the other day. He came back at me right quick with this: “Rats nailed like ermine, leoparrliiics, freak blue foxes, mink gills, moire ponies, ombre rats and shaded kids." Thinking he was trapping me with a new cult, I took the next street car fl-‘B- 1T1 Wfllliy. mink paws in light brown and white, resembling nothing so much as a swell marble cake. Guess about the others. I can't go on. So ‘clp ‘em! I .. "BABY'S own’ TABLEYS ,|I,'D. ..,. In, To such a degree of perfection is he thus endowed that he can walk about the streets in safety with his eyes bandaged. The facts of his Montfaucon in honor of theAmerl- can soldiers killed there in the World War. 0n September 2'1, 018, American troop! under the O , .-,- \!\/’\ul\il ma,” 0,“,- LUX FOR DISHES - Lo And 2011-95 out of ovary I00- llroc on one way to oolvo thin-nu- ricp problem! ~ ‘fOld-faahioned wivel thought vely Hands for less than 1c BMIIIIUIIIIQTIIIIQ. ill ____ when he closed his eyes he could ~ “OPOOUBBE werogo ' Y see the 4mm, g m; in tok house andwaahdialiel. ' ' ' ' ' III Quf | dfgnl 0 fllrroundlncs 8 $9? _ _ Millions of experienced wives, WITH anus ARCHER quite u thaw, 1,, w” actwly But were not going to lose a bit m, u” L“; in m, dj|hp'n h . I "What's new in furs?" I asked a big wizard in the pelting 1mm“: M’ them‘ of our charm and look". kw!) their hind! bflllfiflll- - » Beauty Exports in 305 Famous Beauty Shop: nyi “With all our upon-lance wfulft home. However, if you ivant to get hot, baby, and buy yourself m“ became kxmwn t° mum“ difllwa§hinfiag¢lnt 79d» mlflh ullthndllhrona between thclandu a new rigging in fur, this iS probably what he intended to convey. 5980mm‘ “d manaement‘ have 1901mm ha“ ' “w” chumml d 5V“. "h° ""101! llidflwlilll The lowly miiskrat is being glorified by shaping and piecing been made ‘or mm to give '\ public sub ay‘ ‘bnnun ‘uh mud“, the skins as expensive ermines are handled. and often shade from exhibmon M his uncanny ‘mm,’ “But '9 modam‘ wive‘ Wm Ylm “n lava 7°“! Mud! ‘hi! light through the shoulders to dark around the bottom of the coat. “w NEVER bu‘ DISHPAN 115N175 1308M)‘ 0820 8t such filth ml" A leopard is God's work, but a lcopardine is man's accomplish- W0 llbédlffr-fOl‘ With LU; in the Lux f0!‘ ll] your (lilhfl COIU ‘All merit. doiic b_\' stcnciling 13pm, and not so bad for a mug like man YANK non-runs nouoaan hon: for lourk dialiwulun our than lc a day! , either. Frak blue foxes look as though a bit of skuliduggery '-"_' h“, “n °° Jun u 9° h “d ' ' m.“ __ might 118W transpired between a badger and a blue fox. 'I'hey're l” wmmm ma“! 1s “m” 5°!“ VERDUN’ July 41 (uPJ-A "h" a bean we n" muned’ 1.0;) 2f fiat lllfllanowdzlh; very scarce and gorgeous as a trim on white caracul evening wraps. n my and!“ mOnume ‘ has Just been erected "wowfl 50911 “in! L” f" 9“? dull‘! 5°“ 5nd ‘P1331558! Mink gills are not “all the better m breathe with, grandma," but W" the ruin! o! the villus: of fine things-And we know how u on your dingday. ada,