r be v'~f_ ' sum: 12. 192a . L Wavwnt Realty; Consider Escorts Clothe; When Dressing For Dinner , ram stresses the importance of 1F us: wslans wnrrn martinis. guessing a dinner frock which is in AND DARK JACKET-Which ma complete‘ harmony with the inform- ihflppen during the "mm" month: ality of your escort's suit. Thus will llvhen men wear this suit instead of one avoid the incongruis sight of a ‘the more formal ones-you may m" man in a good business suit and a la loss formal frock either sheer m- womlfl Ilwmld i0!‘ a more formal ‘fhenvler silk, sleeveleds caped or jack- affair. Here are three dlsiinct dinner ‘eied. Prints or bright summer colors fashions of men ‘and their attendant ‘should prevail u wen u . deflnm feminine costumes as stresccl byislmplicity 0g 1165mm Paton-and s. foiu-th for good megs- ‘ _ m‘ . U‘ § WEAR-B A SACK SUIT“ you ml! 61100” n simple flat crepe ‘ ‘ ' dinner frock whose sleevelessness is Etlqlwtté discreetly covered with a matching‘ umber-tau. three quarter length Jacket. Or per- ‘ nap you will prefer one of the new aftpmoon dresses in printed silk with i a cape collar andcape sleeves. | tr rm warms ATUXEDO-Your ‘ costume cue should be formal but not I bye" ‘wpamlely’, ' to much so. a lace oi- church irocisi A" N“ A “Ydial “IM-bya" and with the ubiquitous ‘jacket is the per- i a “m” "l" include-i alarms is all foot choice. The hemline of your skirt - m" L‘ “"°°“‘"Y- should not tend too exaggerzitediy to Q- Docs "pie, a ls, mode" mean D19 the long sweeping silhouette. i “Mel-ed “in i“ "em"? lr ml: WEARS rum. onnss- A; N°~ A l“ mm" 111w“ "la- You may indulge in the deep dccol- cording m the m°d°' °' "551"- lou" w you, mm deughffithe berm Q- Who should be the first to leave line may trail and the fabric may be a dinner party? lace, net. satin, chiffon, or any of A The guests °f h°n°" the more formal fabrics. Q. When taking leave of a group to which you have been presented, is is necessary to bid each one "good- Ailnnnrs Liniment for Coughs A Colds, bFreedom to Work . . . t0 Play i £ without discomfort’ or worry Knox, flu New and Improved Jdnirsiy Napkin, comes as a real benefactor to women everywhere. I: brings comfort, scour. icy and mental composure, never found with old-fashioned home-made napkins. Doctors and nurses agree that Kocex is a modern, necessary safeguard to health. It marks the mos: forward step in intimate feminine hygiene. N0 embarrassment when buying. Just say Kotcx at my drug, dry goods or departmental store. Regular size 60c. for box of dozen. Super-size 75c. Directions in every package. it 5 Features of the New and Improved Kofex 1. i-'...-d:.-..-r.-..=:~.-is.- incl! ‘ fission vandal. N 2' evidence?’ Inltnry prou- 3 —-ll'd!. thor- "onghly yanewandpdt- eotodpsecees- 4- $fsi°hficfii “it”; quint- "~ , K hlADB IN CANADA OT€X Sanitary N apkinr Full Fashioned Hosiery Knnouncing a New Member of the Orient Hosiery Family (Number 650 V.) - A sheer, flne gauge Chiffon Bose of pure thread from top to toe. with the improved Orient Contour heal the latest Pieot top. PRICE . $1.85 (Iioaad only in stores of QltalitH are new available In authentic ' " l!!!‘ i ‘rune - m 0010K. mun: swam" n-asvv SILK to um "It W" yurfla stripe amp-run, and four inch double lials thin“ t», lfiasn fashionable shades to choose mil m i0 10%- i . ALLEY 5.; COMPANY LTD. rasmoiuasbs roorvvsalt i - Ohlrlotbetfll, r. a. I. i-A.'-.- Socia nitilurv ours-cross answltun coiirurss ror nouns nose -. ocsrluiss Leeds-How should 1 weer my hair. I have a very round face. Could I wear the wind-blown bob? K. B. '1‘. Answer-So many of my readers ask this question that 1am going in detcrlbs several coiifures todayifor thit type of face. Of course, in. de- cidlng how to wear lane's hair one should consider mac's height, the length of the neck, breadth o! flture and features. (i) Part the hair on the right side. Bring the hair down in a deep dip over the middle and left side of the forehead. Push the hair up at the 1m temple, fastening it with a clip. and then let the ends twing forward and curl up on the cheek. ‘rhe right side of the fore- head is uncovered, the hair being brushed back from the temple on that side and brought forward on the cheek to match the other side. The hair is waved in a swirl effect around the heed. ‘ (2) Thehairlspariedlowonthl right. The small strand of hairmt the front is divided out and made into two flat curls. The first curl is rather large andis airspeed inthe center of the forehead; tbs smaller curl is above the end of the left eye- bro . The hairionthe sides is long enough to cover the ears. (ti) When the roundness of the face is to be accentuated, weariong bangs. The bangs may be cut in an oyal shape, straight across or in a point like a low widow's peak. The hair should cover the ears. The wind- blown bob, since it covers the fore- head, makes the face ‘seem l under andshorter. LOIS LEEDS. _' consuls; the nearmssuéds~wheu1wesu years old I put my hands in water containing a chemical, and since then the palms of my ‘ hands have been hard and full of deep lines. For s. humberof years I have been using all kinds of creams, but have riot ob- tained good results. What do your suggest. n. N. s. "Answer-At bedtime cleanse your hands with cornmeal and warm water, di-y caiefully and coat the paints with lanolin or cocoa butter. Weir old gloves overnight tn keep the grhss om Do this every night for two weeks, and if you do not no- ticcsh improvement by that time r suggest that you consult a doctor. hon: you: description Icannot tell lust how much iniury the chemical dld W Your skin. LOIS LES. Adolescent Complexion Troubles not: mu Leeds-I lm l4 years old and my face is full of pimples. blackheads and everything you can think of. I do not use any make-up. Plssse tell me what is the cause of this condition. JENNIE o. _ answer-it is probably a combina- tion 0f causes. Begin you; campaign Against these blemishes by eatibg fruit (oranges. apples, etc.) at least twine a day and including ih your daily diet a large serving of lettuce and two kinds of watery vegetables like spinach, cabbage, osiciy. toma- toes. etc. as well ‘a-vyoilr usual choice 0t cereal, bread. potatoes and a mod- "a." amwni, of» protein food like ineat. ~Aa a beverage, drink milk. between meals “drink silt giassfulsof ‘ -\\-';,.‘ Iva " ‘ " " ' ‘lfiifflililTflwN nmannw [band Personal -:- Fashions Dorothy Dzx G15‘ The Two Most Important Things in Life are the Very 0nes§We are Most Casual About-We Take Any Job and Marry Any Person ' That Turns up and Then Blame the Cruel Fate ThatMade Us Misfits the two most momeniouj decisions of our entire lives. Our prosperity and our hsppium depehduirnt upon our choice of an occupation, and then upon our selection or our hllsbdnd or wife, yet we givs to ' these two vital matteri practically no serious thought and ccnsideratlou. We‘ lay them on the lap of Lady Luck and let be: settle our fate. we are the puppets of chance when walnut need to be the architects o1 our fate. ' . we know well enmigh that the successful i-nen ind women Am those. who follow some trade or pro- fession for which theybave an aptitude, and who do work in which they dnd such perpetual joy and inter- sat that they never ‘countthe labor they give to it. And we know that most of the men a_nd women who are failures are just the misfits, the round pegs in . . "i! will" lwlél. thott who are trying to do Something that, Nature he"; intended them to do mo who find their work so distasteful that they hate it and alight it, and always tum out a bungling job for which no one is ever willing to pay good money. We all know starving lawyers and doctors who would have made fortunes ll "will"! B1011. and wt know bankrupt business men who would have be. come iamousls lawyers or doctors. We know poor carpenters who would have made good pretcilers and poor preachers who would have made good carpenters. We know ‘men who‘ have cooked for thirty years without ever having learned how to mans a loar of bread that wasn't first-aid to the Coroner, but who would have orackerjack office women, And we imow stem. graphers who never ltarn to spell, or to write a letter that doesn't look as if it had srysinelas. who would have wrought miracles with the pots and pans in the kitchen. ,. ‘ , Yet spite of knowing that whether they are going w achieve fame and fortune or poor obscure. that whether their ilfcwork is going to be a thrillinl adventure to them“ or bore them to tears, depends upon their getting into the right occupation, three-fourths of the people in the world let accid- ent décids their profession or trade for them. They make no effort to shape tlleircwu destiny. ‘rbey make no study of their own talents. They don't even coi-isider their own likes or dislikes. John in for medicine because father is a doctor, although he is “not of a studious or scientific‘ bent of mind and has ground through public school by the hat-debt llbor, and the thing that he really gets s. kick out o! doingdil; trading marl; and ' swapping Jackknives with the other boys. Bob, who has n0 Pflflflflllity, goes into bond selling because mother thinks that isstylish. 'I‘om embarks in‘the grocery trade because Cousin Silas happened tobe shy a clerk. Mary gets a Job in a drygoods store or a beauty parlor, betaun hetchum is going to work there. Susie studies nursing or social service because _a lot of the older girls are going in for it. l I l ' i People are that casual about picking out their occupations. They don't givt As much thought to the thing they are going to do the balance of their lllesasthey do to how they shall spend a week-end. And their parents take the matter eqaulis lightly. When their children arrive at the age at which ilxy must go to work, their fathers and Others can seldom offer them any suggestion in the matter. They can live with a boy or girl for twenty years and never observeany characteristic that is a straw that shows which way the winds of his of her talents blow. ' Yet one would think that from the time a baby is born its parents would watch it ilice a hawk for signs and portents thatwould indicate its natural abilities and show whether a boy was most likely to succeed in a garage or a pulpit, or a girl was cut for a schoolmslam or s. maniklm. But they don't. Apparently it means nothing to father and mother that John is a book- worm and nob always engaged in some hair-raising adventure ,or that Susie can tie a bow that has genius in it, o? that Carrie has bossed everybody around her ever since she was ln-her cradle. And so the poor kids, with none to guide them and‘ no ability to psychoanalyu themselves, stumble into any sort of a ‘lob that lb handy and sometimes it is the right thing for them andaometimss the wrong thing. . And we are equally casual about marriage. If a man ls going to buy an automobile he considertit from every angle, whether he can afford it, whe- ther it is adiptdid tohis need or not. He finds out all about its horsepower, its speed. ltefcpduraiice and culcurstes its upkeep. He is even fussy about its “Pb But what man ever gives that much thought and care to picking out a wife? "He doetn‘t find out before he asks a girl to marry him whether she is strong and hQllthYpWhQthOI she‘ has good wearing qualities, whether she is easy, to handle, whether she is the kind of a wife he hceos. whether she will be ahelp.‘ or prove a rank extravallhiw thlt W111 "in him- Probably not one ‘man in a thousmdever deilbefbtely picks out his wife. He just ‘marries the girl he does because she is Pretty and cute and has a good ‘lihogor because he workednext‘ to her at a desk, or boarded with her mothelnfor because _sns happened to be around some day when he was lone- some‘ or‘ ‘sentimental or-had a bad cold and wanted cbody to moth" 111m- And women an equally chancy in‘ pickin: Oui- elr husband-i- . Is-lt any wonder that we say that life is a gamble when we take such s. casual attitude toward the two most ‘important things in it? _ , DOROTHY Dix. v - . . \ water durinmhe day. n- - _out- 4M5 dailv- '_ Avoid constipation. M Wilma wash mu- face with warm. inter-and soap. Lather and "n" “W95 "I"! who out the larger blackheads and apply an‘ mflnpflg lotion. Doric acid solution wlll- do. A stod lotion for pimples ‘and arm. Mill lily be medias follows: bis- "1" b"! MI! Mun-to of aine in I ounces of ms water and. dis- solve pns dram of sulphurettsd M- ashintwooudossofrosewater. llil the two tolutions together. This may N .. ‘at bldtima and also ami- lb. mi ha been washed in eold WSW in u» musing. you will prob- ibly outgrow this medley. . -- 100115.000 obstetric the United dialet m‘ imbibe artifisiei ‘flowers. . Household Hints ByIobu-hlna Zllldifidlleiéoole _- cnooobsn ‘ism. _ Three-fourths cup sugar, 4 table- "Mi speeds button-it cup milk. 1-! cup dptir, 2 eggs, _d tablespoons cocoa, 1-3 tsupotia aalt,'l teaspoon vanilla, 1% teaspoons baking powder. Cream butter, mean yolks and vanilla togeih .sixt the ill’! lnklcdients, and add al ly- with tbapiillcto the ' .é " will “b: warm water and add a few drops of ‘fiummfm b5,’ “m; m5, ‘n; violet perfume or violet water. nit-tints‘ spines main. bard cause ' sputum-aw" . we» P - Rain spots can be removed from velvet if sponged with gasoline, always rubbing in one direction. Perfume for the Boom Pill any bowl or vase half full of . i Lumpy lalt lalt will not form into lumps if about‘ three" tealpoonfuls of com- uipail ' stat ‘more J ttiao- ileum lsvssssblcsctrtciiao of. nliotv. abacus have alums isasslua. emu,- Home-» tpeatarehuwlwizvllaltllniitlgm veins. Ins-intrus- ...a_‘s contain‘ i‘ The most curiousthing in the world is the casual way in which we make h b’ - Literdturefé‘ START .1... JUNE Bar; on her way to divided. homes. Se! of Si: Teaspoon: $4.25 c - esantp lleasladind a was by ‘ STANDARD SILVER COBWANY OE TORONTO, LIMITED SaoccdJMFadoIySJT. _\ offiansdql-ilnifl n: sure to see the beautiful display a‘. the following high-class dealers: Charlottetown ' C. ‘V. PATTERSON, \V. N, TANTON, G. H. TAYLOR Summer-side ii. n. CROCKETT csTaTn and oonxm BROS. FR E E! _ This coupon brings you a FREE booklet explaining an easy, inexpen- sive way to buy Silver-a plan that makes the cherished wish of every hostess a reality. I --IIll 'I__I__—__-‘ ‘Hslnismaaioualiilvnskpalyoffiasgaija’, " I ldaclI-smAvelnoNoflL 2;: m.:'....'ir..."".....“°1=.“-""""'- Nnqan 1x 4....- (‘in Holmes 8c Edwards Silver Ware isju b outstanding in Style and Quality than to-day it is preferred in most Finely proportioned, varied in and appeal, Hold-la dc Edwards Table Wave with the famous Super-Place presents at the rat poinu of the pieces, blodcs of solid Silver, inlaid to ensure permanent service. ‘Then, too, Holmes R a. Edwards Hollow Ware is made in ' comazcbl-Iolmesdclidwardsfiatware; ~ SetofSixPotll $8.50 I HQLMES h EDWARD IFfiZfilD -- ‘n Puflird ‘Rice I: Cjood, Too Quaker PuiTcd Rice is ufTccl like Pulled Wheat. he food cclls are ex- loded and broken down. iTed Rice is another de- lidous dainty, full of the ready energy of fine white rice. For variety, keep both kinds in the house. \ reZis/z good for them. Then let them have Quaker PuEcd Wheat. Serve it at any time of the day or at any meal. Use berries, jam or jelly, or just milk or cream. These crisp and delicious food morsels make an instant appeal to fickle appetites. Puflin rhewhoie . ' . wheat grains to eight time: their natur size cooks . them rhoroughiy and gives them a texture and a nut-like flavour which children revel in. “Choosebf Appetites Quaker puffed Wheat h HEN children are finicky and chbosey . . . won't eat this, and won't cat that . . but crave for things that are none too Millions of food cells are exploded in each grain. Rich food stores are released and made easy for diges- tion. All the bran is retained bu: so congealed- you do not notice it. Quaker Puifod Wheat tempts the lagging appetizer -‘ of grown-ups, too. A: any meal or as a snack between meals. <1. SILVER TABLE SERVICE; i A Lfiyocirgiftbetlsel-lollnicsd; Edwards Silverplate- Starting. Service -—one of four which finally build into a Cmnplet: serviceofsilverwareaxacostthatin never noticed because the expense is’