a-u é . . . =1‘ ‘in. PAGE izrcirr. . ..... - IA in ».- - . ,.' ....”.‘...*J.£.u.'...a. a-Qrnnwanlt o.» <-.-.-;~..~i~- .2 Jxisblf’ Woman ’_s Realm -:- Social and Personal -: T1111: _(_I_ljIA GUARDIAN raisKuAR ' _____Y_ F. 119g -__ :- Literature vu/naii/lairosihzbnobze on Lllllistrated lggiessmaking 143550“ I i With Every Pattern ---\ i : Wearing” ‘ 5F Furnished . V-‘ BY Annabelle Worthington ran-iii- ‘f Springs gift is the lovely crepe printed silks, so smart, so fascinat- ing and wearable for all-day occa- aions. Today's dress delights in a plain crepe cowl yoked neckline. And it's amazing how charming and flatter- ing this addition can bo. The little flounced sleeve frills repeat the plain crepe in their lining, This model is decidedly slimming and therefore suitable for many fig- ures. The curved outline of the skirt seaming that tapers to the ocn- ter-front waistline conceals hip breadth. Style No. 2085 may be had in sizes 16, l8 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Plain sat crepe with contrasting shade and patterned and plain crapy woolen are splendid coinbinatio . You will see one attractive style after another as you turn over the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss, the matron, the stoutFand s. series of dressmaking articles. It is a book that will save you money. e Besuretoiillinthesizeof the pattern. Send stansps or coin (coin preferred). Price of book 1o cents. Price of pattern 15 cents. No. 2985. Bloc ...................... Name Street Address Oaasaaassassin-saunaslsaaaalaalallollO City Stltb Iaasaldllllllaaaaaobhssaalllalllaalla FARMEIPS WIFE GETS STRENGTH By Tlkizg Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Wilton, Ont.—"I am taking Lydia E. Pinkhamh Vegetable Compound throughtheChanga of Life. It helps ma in the ncwspaprs your ad about the Vegetable Com- ' pound and thought to give it a trial. The first bottle gave rue relief and I have tolrl others what it does for me. I am willing for you to use my letter if on choose."—-—MBI- D. B. PETERS, ilton, Ontario. Ask Your Neighbor Fabric Mode Already Set PARIS, Feb.2,—At this season every one_ in Paris, closely or dist- antly connected with the great game of fashion, is looking. forward to the big spring and summer collections. In all probability they, as usual, re- serve some sensational surprises, but we can accurately forecast certain tendencies. The eouturiers have ai- ready chosen the materials for their forthcoming creations, and some oi them are willing to accord us half- wnfidences as to their intention, though they do not always wish to be quoted so far in advance. Color is to play an important role in the style composition of spring costumes. Everybody is tired of black and of the somber tones worn so much this winter. Pastels are com- ing_back for sports costumes, sum- mer dresses, accessories and hats. The new pastels are called "dra- gees" because they have the opaque quality peculiar to the small pale pink, green or white bonbons of that name that are showered on children FAULTLESB UTENSILS ahnainnm is acknowledged lo be ihe supreme material for the mama. faciurc of puts. pans and other cooking utensils. Because particular housewives will use no other kind, we offer them with our recommenda- tion at prices which are pleasinJy low. Our assortment of *" ware of every description gives you a wide choice. If he Rogers f Hardware C0., Limited at French baptlsms. Pale pink, blue and green are favorite shades. Beiges and greys will be rivals for Golden beiges and light browns are’ to be featured by several houses. A1 l very pale lily grey and a medium, false grey will be extensively shown.’ Lelong will continue to sponsorthe greys he launched in mldseason. Ivory Jewellery Predicted Both greys and belges will often be combined with a vivid color, such as bright red, salmon, tarra cotta, emerald, moss green or flag blue. The bicolor vogue is due to continue in popularity at least until next fall. Dark shades will be relieved by pas- tel tr’ ‘ and ‘i=- in rose coral, sky blue or pals jado. Ivory jewellery and touches are also fore- cast. Turquoise is at last giving way be- fore a grayish aky-biuo. Almost all shddes of blue will be fashionable. Navy, midnight and corbeau will supplant black for street wear. Grey, the supremacy of the daytime mode. _ hast Colds throat and chest h Viiiiié For The Cook IIDZIN’ NEW YOBKIB. LUNOHION DESSERT Dissolve three-fourths cup fniit sugar in one and three-fourths cup orange juice mixed with one-quarter cup lemon juice. Turn into the mould of the electric refrigerator. Whip up one cup heavy cream, add three-fourths cup powdered sugar (orleqifyoudpnotlikeadeasert very sweet), and also add one and three-fourths cups chopped burned almonds and one teaspoon vanilla. Pour over the first mixture, and lei stay in refrigerator four or five hours. servo for any special lunch- eon. pale beige or orchid pink are appro- priate accessory tones for these dark blues. Greens, contrary to what might have been expected, will continue to enjoy a wide popularity. The lighter shades-dragee, leaf green, and pale moss-will be good for sports. Vivid Irish and emerald will be combined with white or neutral tones. All shades of green will appear in the afternoon and evening. Yellow For Summer Wear Golden yellows will be used by everybody for summer costumes, thin, frocks and beach clothes. Old ~gold will be 800d, although it will not be a “volume" color. Pale pink both in rose and salmon tints will gain in popularity. One leading house will feature shell pink. Orchid pink will be used alone and as an accessory color with navy blue. ’I‘l_ie rust and brown combination shown in the midseason by Lelong, Rzgny and others, will be the favor- lb color scheme for sports, appear- ing in many variations of the two tones. All tonesSHRDL JiMSI-IRDL tones. All colors that have a touch of the sun in them will gain in popu- larity as the summer Ipyrolches, 5mm! will compete with plaids for supremacy of the outdoor mode. Algerian, Moorish and Roman strip- ed fabrics in strong contrasting col- ors will be featured. Stripes will run "m" Pill size to twelve inches or more in width. Printed and patterned fabrics are significant of a l action from the Main-surfaced materials of this win. ter; but the general Opinion seems to be that in the long run plain sur. faces will predominate for reasons of economy. Paul Brion announces large snug] 0f hi» Bcotmmn and Scotvellah-ln mind tweed? patterns: a quantity of Plaid and checked woollens are being shown that suggest a return to merm- ioud tweeds. Men's suiting have been extensively reserved by all the con- turiers, for there is no doubt that it will continue to be a suit “Mom lace continues to be popular. Mother: Your Frail Child Needs McCoy's W‘!!! W0 M! M0001’! we mean of course McCoy's God Liver Extract Tablets. each one of which is brim- ful of tho weight building, mam- ins substance extracted from cod- fish Livers. The gain in weight, strength and activity in the weak, rundown child in just a fow weeks will surprise you. Those famous health tablets are small, sular coated and children love in take thorn. Get 60 tablets for 60 cents at any drug store anywhere -let ths ailing child take them for 2B days-then if you are not satisfied with the health improvement-why: Rub well over ‘ . cldentally in telling me of some little incident that L ,, Dorothy Dix Letter Box Why the Happy Home is Also the Clean Home. Should a Wife Resent Her Husband’s Men- tioning His First WifeT-Will the Girl Who Gives up a Good Business to Marry a Poor Man be HBPPY. on His Income? _ _' huge m s Dear Miss nn-Amozgzuxpyhlrnonus aiénxze mm“ m“, m“- have ended; unhprppigy an w” Wuumflml m. My“ we“ ulwenly m“, up- rinses wen on “not,” They "mud eome home at night to find the beds unmade. the floors cluttered, their wives slop- pm; ground in untidy dresses and a dinner to eat that was first aid to the Coroner. I mink I don't think these are exceptional cases. that m, bgglnning of many an estrangenient between a husband and wife that ends in a divorce l8 tho N- sult of a bride's untidiness and that many a yoiml mm“! couple's troubles could have ‘been averted with plain soap and water. I Poverty does kill love rrequenflr. but it is dirty poverty, not clean POVBYW- 1i l! u" Fubby- mm“ » ,1 little things that start a ywis will" °° b1°*°“"¢- and I ish you would warn brides in the interests of marital bliss that it is t lust as important to keep a cotta8° shim!!! 1W1" WP i" will“; ‘I; l; l5 ° keep a palace clean. ' ' ' Ans : vxvelriopc every bride who reads this letter will take its warning to heart, for all faults that a wife can have the worst from her husband's P0111‘? °3 view is for her to be a slovenly housekeelifil‘. 11nd I h!" “w” w°nd°nd why’ when men framed the divorce laws, they didn't include it as the first and foremost reason that would entitle a man to return his wife to the bar!!!" counter and get back his freedom. , At any rate, without doubt an untidy home has sent more men to roam- ing and driven more men to drink than all other causes combined, for m; man can take any pleasure in looking at a wife who looks as if shabpozdet to be run through the steam laundry, nor can no sw-n to w!“ ° I; night to a home that looks as if it had just been struck by a cfllbm- ! ° keep a man sitting by his own hearth and make him a fireside compan on you have to make it attractive. _ ‘There are two things that every wife should bear in mind. Ono is, how ordered is her husband's life away from homo. In the factory 0V0?! MEN"; is clean and oiled, every tool P0119195 and ‘hmkw- In m‘ om“ every boo must be balanced, every letter that is sent out immlclllli-Q- 1!! m" 59°" every pile of goods must be neat and symmetrical, every floor spoil“!- Think, then, how a home gets on the nerves of a man trained to order- lliiess when the floors are scattered with papers, when clothes are hung "P on chairs instead of hangers, when the sink l8 filled m“ °1 ‘any dishes’ when everything is‘ helter-skelter, with no order, no system anywhere. And the other thing the wife should a member is that when the aver- age man coma home at night he is dead tired, spent with the strain of the day, nerve-wrecked. He longs for nothing so much as peace and rest. and it is impossible to rest in a house of confusion, a house where there are I thousand things crying out to be done. There is no rest for either body or mind in an untidy house where nothing has been done to make it oom- fortable. A slovenly kept house is no home. It is a place from which husband and children flee as fast as they can go. A real home, the kind of home in which there is love and harmony and in which children grow up to be fine men and women, is always one in which there is cleanlines and order and good cooking. And this is true whether the house be a cheap cottage or a. palace, whe- there it be filled with period furniture or cheap stuff bought on the install- - Fashions LUX Toilet Soap-JOi Paramount =- rounso-pfigfllkf smooth for rho do‘ "b" YOU, zoo, b". g ‘ 41'1"‘? tm to pd There’s Witchery in Lovely Skin . says Hollywood HOW people thrill to the charm of a beloved star when the revealing close-up brings her NEAR. A severe test of beauty, 45 Hollywood directors declare, that only the girl with exquisite skin can pass. That is why the famous stars take de- voted care of their skin with Lux Toilet Soap. “It takes such beautiful care of our skin,” say 5 1 1 of the 52 1 important Hollywood actresseswho use irregularly. YOU will want to try if. For you, too, have a close-up test to pass! Admiring eyes close to YOUR skin must find it temptingly soft and smooth-alluringly lovely in the most trying light,- ' Use this fragrant white soap for tho close-up complexion every girl warm; Order some and begin today. LOIS MORAN bo- loved Fox afar: "I al- ways use it. It's a joy." 98% oftbs lovely screen complexion: and radi- an! complexion: everywhere an cared/hr wit]: ' l‘ ‘ ‘° 51111111151’? Dear Miss Dix-I am married to a widower with one son, a boy of l0, who is very fond of me. Now heer is my trouble. People are always say- ing to me: "Don't you object to your husband talking about his first wife? Doesn't it make you jealous?" The only way he aver mentions her is in- ed. ll-io never throws her up to me. Another thing my friends say is that my little step- son should call me mother; I think that since he remembers his real mother, what ‘he calls me’ is up to him, don't you? Do you think my friends are right in what they say? ' AIRS. G. O. Answer: - No. I think your friends are a. flno bunch of meddlors and mhohief ment plan. A shining stove and a floor you could eat from and rows of polished pans and pots on the dresser are more attractive than a drawing _ ' p I e room with dust on its mahogany and litter on its Persian rug. And there ' 1”" B‘°‘“'" I-"mwl- Tilmw mo isn't a mun in the world who doesn't think a woman prettier in a spick-and- span bungalow apron than in 8011M 011111011- - | i arrl . - d ter wmiirtfixgy :ge;:l:°:5h1:s:::g,:°1gxlt2: 2:“ p-faumnzfihewces, mother. Plenty of children call their mothers and fathers by their first . . a . weapon that a woman can use in _, (ending h" hum u the brwmmck M names, or by some nickname, so it is no sign of lack of affection or respect Etiquette ‘on! m She keeps busy with m" ‘he can keep the OTHER WOMAN w,“ for you. Let him call you what he will. The only thing that is important‘ - _ Down“, mx is that there should be love in his voice, and there will be if you are tactful B1 I-obwb In , _ , , , , ' with him and kind to him. DOROTHY mx. Dear Miss Dix-J have a fair trade in my beauty shop and live very nicely on my own money, but I am very much in love with a young man who has asked me to marry him as soon as he is earning a fair living. set the mark of‘$145 per month, but his prospects are poor for reaching that figure. work? after I married. now makes? Answer. I should certainly advise you to stick to your beauty shop after you are aaaaaa Q. Haw far over the e68" l” | dinner table should the tebledofi hang? a.nsnouiohaaaa1mostw"l' floor at the corners. Q. How is a social note dated? A. No figures arsusadI-MU name of the year is omitV-‘d- Q.- What is the am nqulrvmfl‘ or s theater or opera wy? A. ‘Hint this Imp number of NI and women be included I have Would you suggest that we get married and I keep on with my My job is monotonous and I have sworn that I would never do it Do you think I would be satisfied to live on the little he Harm. makers, and that the less you listen to them the batter for your peace of mind and happiness. ' Why shouldn't your husband mention his first wifa to you? Why should he avoid her name in conversation as if it was offering you an insult for him even to refer to her? You knew that he had been married and that many years of his past life had been associated with her. His mar- riage to you did not eliminate everything that had happened from his mam- ory, and you would be a perfect idiot if you resented his talking of the things that had taken place during this time. Certainly s. widow and a widower ars guilty of extremely bad taste if they are continually calling their second wife's or husband's attention to the married if your prospective husband is making so little. It is easy to accus- tom ourselves to luxuries, but hard to learn to do without them, and after you have been used to pretty clothes and dainty belonging and good food you will find it very dlslllusionlng to have to come down to shabbiness and doing without all the things that you enjoy. As for your work being dull and monotonous so is all other work by which we earn a living and, believe mo, you won't find it any more thrilling to scrub pots and pans than you do shampooing heads, nor is there any- thing more exciting in polishing a cook stove than there is in polishing fingernails. And there is a lot more money and less labor in one than in the other. virtues of their first mans and instituting invldious comparisons between Honey back. . An .'.' Annual Examination of Your Eyes will Safeguard Your Vision and Comfort u: .1. w. JillilSTfll Optometrist 151 Kent Street Phone 430-‘ Charlottetown Dr. Wood's "iifbofi 0n llTcliosf“ [lad To Stay In Bod rlco 85a a bottle; largo family also 65a; at al I gtio roliai’. ll Ihwoodb orwayPinofl tookonlyonobottloaad ' tosayoaa wlthaeold." husband in his teeth and rsproaohed him for not making ai much money u darling John did or forbid hla smoking boaaula John nova: slnohd. ‘ the time that they went up the Nils with Mary or John, or recount what Mary or John said or did on some particular occasion, is silly and un- reasonable. . t j lng that second wives and husbands have to fear. Not those who are tucked away under a ton of granite in the cemetery. them. Naturally any woman would resent her husband telling her how much better bread his first wife made than she did, or that his dear dead Marla ran the house on air and never had but onco hat a season. Nor would any second husband enjoy having his wlfa fling hsr first But for a husband or wife to get jealoil because their spouseajoil about .0. noun-nan; It is the live rivals who are still on tho job-of husband and wife snatch- ..__..___- byTkaT. _A N°Pi°5|1¢f0ll1¥"llftllillflflltorosonttlioiittlaboynotoalliaggou Girls who marry Door men because they are til-so of working us at m- matsa for a lunatic asylum. pogpq-gg p11 Beautiful Women Love New Powder Beautiful woman, admired youthful complaxions, use 0H0. the new wonderful French fl P" cess face powder. Purast and smooth‘ est powder known. its?! 11" m“ mt. _ pores and never smarts or feel! No flaky pasty look. No Km" ' Iago-CLO prevents l"! my. Blends naturally with any "mplw ion_ Demand Malia-Gin. Bold through all smash" I" Toilet Goods Counters. snonr nouns: “much-e- . IIOIIE. EGOIIUMIG §§mu-":"“ . "- Beginnlm on February 16th, the Women’! (MINQT ; LINIJZLE NT ,.\< Institute \Branch of the Department of AKIMIIW" will conduct a three weeks course in Home Economic!- Those wishing to take advantage of this courld. WW9‘ is given free of charge, will please apply before F65- ru ‘ 11th, and applications will be considered jll 1|" or or received up to that date. Address all communications to the Siiporvifll‘ "i" Women's Institute, Box 123, Charlottetown. - di