’ gm-y .mart snemoon dress dips _i-'eip __ __ ' GUARDIAN _ odronltlz-11 _ _ ~ - -»--~~~- s -'-..-.---- _+ - _ - _ , ‘ ' ' _ ,_ _- - _ -s Q' __ _ _ __ _ _ » __ ;: _' '_ .» . ,< _ _~._ S _ _ ._ - _, _ __ _ . ._ ._ ,_ _ _ . _ . \-. _ _ ~_ » V . _ x A : - _ ' ‘ ' . ’ ’ ` _ - . _'_ . ,' _ _ __ - -_ I; _ _ O 0 . _ _ _ _ » _ _ \ . .- ‘ . - _ _ _ :__ _ ____ v - V _ ‘ ' ' ._ _ - _ .» ' ` . ' \ % -e-_.ns ==r . oman s» Realm -°- Social and Personal -'- Fashzons -- Lzterature _lWlat the F¢13hf0t1¢1i_bll_@y"li Y ~ `M.°1odyBoo.¢.°f..1 'E V I A -»._»» _ DorothyDzx Letfe_r_B_o:_r= ,,,_.,.,,., 7'? _9_¢1|’Ul8` F' _ . _Illll_strated Dressmaking Lesson' Fllrllislied 9 With Ev ery- Pattern . _ By Annebelle f`Wo.fblog¢ou p _ - tif; ` »- ' ' -,1 . __ lf*/" f~.'-`.\\ Vi, i lg? ._ _ , _ ¢ _ _ _ ._.3_5}f`.,"./3 ' _..\,,~f,-/-/ ._., . _ ._ _/, ._,_- ._ .,- .‘- \‘ `/'-‘1~"-'Pi 'J _ 'uv _ :_ .0/__,___\ .___ _. :H '_ _'_' s ~.7*`.»_" 1 ._ . -,~ . _jr ¢_»-sl-r; `.;7\_-_. Q-.<`,e - ` ` :Qi :ll ,»<€2§ i` "_" -_-f* ____ _,in . 1 I uri. , 'F__‘f_'__ _ /'lr "_" v\' 2'. '.11'-"-"_".\ . __:»,_l_q.._'_',_‘.‘,_ I V: .__»-..§\ | £3 ‘“*i\_-__' i _ _ A _}°,»"§ Q `hns.__.\29_5_8» _. its back hem, but not all as graci- gugly gs Style No. 2958 illu.st!‘a.ted_il\ .en burgundy woes lb supple lilk crevl- ` The front is almost severely simple aug slightly circular. _The back flut- terslbesuuruliv with se'-hmd f\!‘“°*° stitched to deep hip yoke th\t"=°\" minates at centre-front sat weistline vm; huge dat bow centered with buckle. The bodicewith round neckline has a throw scarf that is caught at right beck shoulder with buckle. Sleeves are htted below the elbows. with dare that starts et wrists fell- ing softly over hands. This charming affair is very 'sim- ple to copy, and can be had in elses le, is years, 86, 8B_,__40 and 42 inches bust. ' ~ lt ls very dignified lo bison <>\\_i-11°" for afternoons _and_dinner Slate blue crepe Elizabeth is flatter- ing new combination popular with the chie‘Parlsisnne. Georgette crepe in noyaliblue is youthful. ' _ In crepe satin, the beige shade is irresistible with the hip yoke, bow and sca.rf_._collar cut from the re- verse of the crepe. ‘ Black crepe satin is very attrac- tive made of the dull surface with hip yoke, bow und eolri' will! mid! nf the ahiny surface. ns.-b rleb purple. elude lo crepe 4° °h1°°» *0!?\°_°9 N1' °f°P_°.'“¥ 911° almond greencenton oreps'm_‘!sv- orite combinations n'le»de‘_at_'ajeinall outlay. ~' ` 7 Pattern price iii cents. Be sureto cu ln_s1se oi pattern. address ret- tern Department. _The New and winter rlssbloo is is s'suvs,` but only lo'_e'e_nts_ when er- dered withspsttern. ` ` ’ No, cons. sine sessessssee-ess."sssesueaseeeeseees Nlml ......................`............L.. su-ee: Address City ` State __..l..i__i. nmce snwsnn lsnsuu ' Coma gentle Muses. Touch my wait- ing lyre That I may-write,_with true poetic fire, - ` ' _ ` some graphic lines descriptive of the View __ _ ~ Which ~most adorns-Dame Nltlltfl smiling face. _ ’ I-Iowe'er so graphic words can ne'er portray ' ' ` ' ' ‘ _ The wealth of charms that all arolllli it play. ‘ Then deign that cid and help- a mortal trace ' ~ Its lovely features and unwonted grew. _ ' For human pen alone can ne'er com- . P110 _ ' 'rby msmbisss bes`uues o prleue ze- ward Isle' That aid vouchsslcd now tulle my _notes to chaunt _ - The praises of that ancient fairy' ha/unt. For sure no spot on all this eartlfl :els form. _ Or far or near from North to eozltll- ern zone, _ .More suited place for fairies' home- ' `oo`u1s be _ _ I 'rbsn 'rbou fair me. bard by s sound- "ing Bee, < ' Where rippling wavcs` lave .all thy shlngly eave or sweues by Isles-in b°\ll\d_il\¢_ blk lows heave. A' Ia, westward lies flaps 'I'ormcntitvi'l rough bay And Eastward placid Blunnlerside doth lay. While all around thy 'North _and ‘ Bouthern_shoru`-_ _' '- __ ' ` Theirestleu tide unceasing ebba and flows. _ _ _. black crepe silk is captivating with scarf collar in eggshell shade. ' sion; my oosstxbe uisebvy mae- ahips glide, >Pays for Itself ' _ _ l - 'in Better Health _ Doctors and Nurses advise the use of Kotex Because icgives such a feeling of security and comfort, and fred ff . - s 1. ~ - - ~ of ..f‘l“‘....‘i1'Z'.`§‘f,..".i` lt'.°$2f°.i'. ?~r..2_'§.'.$‘if1','.¥.."i°§l§?l5‘, ‘ N'P*""- _ Besides Kotex provides assured 'section s c the serious 'consequences that may follow times ol hygienic lulffw. if proper precaution are no: taken. _ _ No embarrassment when buying. jose ;¢y__Koee`x seqm _ `l»¢hs°- _ , oods d _ - r":1...°"z.°. ....21 o.*:.£.°'.~.:.'. :.‘.»°°....,“* J Fasten: of tba Insgrovsd Kean ' 1. new le son-nos.. asespuvs noses., me .see |- peehlswehelesilssseess. su¢s.»suuees.-lseasgr A softness. _ 2. ser _ _ ' s. xo¢°é'§l°l"°}s-lsrshr°i&i.¢'sT'{ea“M»s»¢°°°¢°§°..s.¢...;,¢; _ I absorbs 5 times aslgscll ‘ I. lanes :sis . ¢as`is_¢ll`e ldseslal `ssa-ialussd _. éy 0¥l=|\ll|Wly \7__y»surgsens in leading _ Us . aafsly.tile|'eugi\ly._bya patented process. ` _ ___.. _ _ _` 1* . _...;» _. . - 1- ~_-. »‘ ‘ ' .e ._.-,»... ..._._._ ._ ~ c M’ And white winged ships in peacaful ` harbours ride; Upon t_h`y"sa.nd waves phosphorescen: _ _ _ “_ _ wuuevnlend streams thel.-_ pebuy courses 'take rl»'em¢1iving, springs, Whence purest 1 :waters rise, ' surpassed by non outside of paridisc North, and West 'along thy - _ _ winding shore, - with greenest verduc thickly covered o’er- While nestling low thy cllarmillg valleys lle, Fit homes and birth place for wee* WHY. » W'-here never ceasing. gently eepnyrs blow. And fruits and flowers in rich profus- ion grow. Their sweet perfumes pcrvadlrig ali_ the air Would lure Diana were lhe passing there. liven bluebirds here take on a deeper blue, ` The robln's-bresst__a bright crimson hue,- _ _ Here _first their throats piophetically _ ‘me ` . Of natu_re’s welcome to returning The white sea-gulls come sporting c’er the hay in sweeps and curves like livlllg » D°°'4l'y. Nor are _the 'skies of Italia m'.\l~c _ bright _ Than arothine own _on some calm _ stu-ut night, ` When grand Orion sweeps the North- _ v °"¥ “U” With glittering sword :nd fiery fissu- ms eyes. _ _ And I-Ieaven's l.ost comes trnnlpmg in hiatraln. Like Xerxu armiu o'er the Persia." _ Plein: ‘ Urea' Major swings around uhe _ I North, _ And'Venus queen of stars comes cou- . quering forth. Nor when fair Cynthia rising the '_ ‘ See. I ' Tips _all tlhyhllls with 'nild efful- * Kelley. ` Then mounting upwards to the ' ' _unitifs heigfiit _ 'Bai-hes'all thy ‘valleys Ln supeinal l _ ilgml' _ Nor when sled morning streak; the ol-mol blue fwiul brlgbtel- mints than -ryrla ever _'knew Like conoh shells pmk and every rainbow hue, Vermillion, orango and cel-uleafl ` _blue. _ In winterthe Aur'\ra’s ghostly light Is seen to'plerte the very heavens hcishi: _ . Its legtllcning splres in glorious ' ` eolllna rise Like 'piilared gal¢ss_ that lead to ' Paridise. Nor yet _when Sol slow marching to _ hisrest Binks in the Bea behind the golden splendid no other ciimcs ‘ unfold- __Dark'purple clouds full edged wil!-. f ' burnished gold Oh lovely Isle no :arid slirpasscth ' ' mme. _ Where earth, and sky and water all combi.ne,_ 'Iio make for thee -a heritage and home Whsnoe nonenere dwelling ever care _ _ to' roam. lily .beauties known the spacious T _ _ country o'er Fsbmilorida to frosen Labrailr. (Ted) ». Tarcyton Genge, Medical -College. Loma Linda. california _ CABDIGAN' UCHOOL ' in-lmery nepsruuesiu ' Grade IV-1, Gladys Redmond; 2, Rita Sullivan: l,_Ronan McDonald; 4. David _‘ McDonald; 5, lawrence B_hephsrd;__ ‘ 'Grade III-1. Halen MacAulay; 2, Mcbmald and Mary Mc- _l_wain` (equal). _Gfadsj II-1,' _Clarence Ryan; 2, F1319! __ Shepherd: .e. Leonard. ue- 1h\r`r_e:.4,'Ar_thur' el-others. _ Grass x..l,ns¢`s Murphy. of- Ireland are reioic~ the world _fashion decree lacels tobe used on lin- "”-'?f_ ` _ oldest resident lhglaml, dies recently as rblmplilegrsl-else wus for cbs el-ss _ __ it o ii’ 5 Is a Man in Love Blind tothe Charms of Other Girls? - Peculiar Point' of View _ of ’ _the Self-Invited Guest -v Husband Who- Likes Housework ’ 'Dear Miss Dix-My son, who ls 24 years old. _thinkshe is in love. For s year he has gone to see the same girl nearly every night. _ Bhe is very at- tractive and they are very congenial, but the fselinghe has forher doesn‘t keep bm. from being keenly interested lo other girls with wl-.om he is tm-own ln oonteot. no you think that he really does love this girl and that his interest ln other women is only the result of man's natural poly- gemous nature or do you think that he is still look- ing , perhaps unconsciously, for some- one who suits him better? I don’t went to interfere, ,but I do want him to be certain of his affections, M0'I'l'lI'R. Answer: ~ I should not think he cared very mucnfor the girl if he still has la roving eye for every skirt that flutters his way. My observation has been that ss long as s. man is really in love he has no interest in any woman than the one on whom he has bestowed his affections. He is blind to their beauty. deaf to their witty conversation, dumb to their lhtrmctions, indifferent, to their charms, no matter how great. _ Bo I am inclined to think that youlzson has mistaken liking for leving, which is a very different thing, andtliat-his feeling toward the young lady is merely one of friendship. I-Ie enjoys her society because they are con- genial and he goes to see her because they like the same things, - That isn‘t, of course, e. bad basis on which to merry, for a platonic af- fection often outlasts a fiery passion. It endures. while the connsgaration burns itself out. Therhusband and wife who have the same taste andthe same point of view and who can emble along riding ‘the same hobbies may not .have ss many thrills' as those who experience the grand passion, but they have a mighty comfortable, placid existence and seldom lend in the divorce courts. ' _ ‘ Perhaps your son is one of the men who love women in general rather then one in particular. There are plenty of men to whom women are al-_ luring as a sex and wllo`sre general 1overs,'so to speak. Every woman be-< tween the cradle and the grave intereststhem and has a certain charm for them. They seek women’s society instinctively. They are-interested in women's fashions and notice how every woman is dressed. They like to buy pretty things for women and to deck out the women they love chiifons and furs and velvets and jewels. They are connllsseurs of feminine pulchri- tude and will any that this girl has s pretty foot and ankle and that girls lovely neckline. They ere enebenwu by one women being bruiisnt and another one being a beautiful moron. ` _' ` _ But these men who diffuse their af fection for women _over the entire sex never love any woman supremely well, and if they merry they are philan- _derers, butterflies who flit from flower to. flower- in the roaebud' garden of lifll- I ; - _ ' V - Perhaps your son belongs to this type. but anywly he may restassured tl-let he is not really in love until one woman flllshis heart temporarily at least to the exclusion of all other women. _ DOR.0fI’I-IY DIZ. Des: Dorothy Dlx-I have been trying to figure out the point of view of a visitor who suddenly appears with -his family to stay__a week without previously notifying her hostess that she is coming; and I have decided that she does this way because she has no imagination. She cannot picture other households being subject to sickness, accident,._.'previoue` planssnd fatigue. While this matter has to do with etiquette and politeness, _it has fer more to do with mercy. It ls only mercy to give._a few dsys’_notlce to one's hostess that she is coming. '_ " . , JJULIA H. Answer: I that the self-invited guest who descends on you. _bag and baggage sod brees, without warning is lacking in common decency and'considerati4'-m far more would do such sl thing. ‘ ___ _ . It doesn’t take imagination to visualize at longprange the trouble and inconvenience that sn unexpected guest puts ahostesl to. Every- woman knows that from her own experience. Eheknows _that except in the houses ofmllllorlsires, and perhaps in millionaire homes,._for all Iknow tothe con- trary, the coming of guests disarrsnges the household scheduleand thatcer- tain arrangements' have to be made for the guest's comfort. Among 'people in ordinary circumstances it means a lot of extra cleaning up and cooking and snlmng me :emily sboub and pls._mling__fol; the guests' _comfort and amusement. ' " "" ' ` ` " _ _ _ ,, _ , ' If this isknown beforehand, it can all b`e_rioneo_r_d¢rly_a_n_d leisureiywith- out precipitating a domestic catastrophe, but for a lot of people to suddenly wish themselves upon a woman when perhaps the-baby is sick a.n_d_the_ maid bas isle and the lanler has run-low or tl-le -hostess ll`ss'_ a sick headache is e source of work, worry and mortification and ~turns what might havebeen a pleasant visit into a nightmare. _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ In these dsys of regular mail and air mail and telephone and telegraph and radio, we have plenty nf means of communicating _with those we wish to visit us and when we don't send an invitation to a _g\_i_est to come and bring along the children and sped s week with us; it is a deed 'sure' slgll we don't want her. ` I ' There is no excuse for any one thinking themselves on another as a guest, and only grafters do it. - D0iwff'f-IY Dlx. eooaasoe _________ ` Deal- Miss nlx‘-1 sm s cnet ln s large one where 1_feu_ls_l_love with a waitress. When I asked her to marry me .she refused because shejsaid ahc hated to keep house and to cook and I told her ifshe would marry me I would do all the cooking. We got married. and she _hes been_ the best wife anybody ever had and stuck to me throlllh thick and thin, but we are made very unhappy by our neighbors criticising me for doing tl1e_;h_ous_ewdi"k. What sbsn 1 .lol _x-rosesun. _ _ Answer: ' r A ` - Quit listening to the neighbors. It is !l8bo_dy's business' but your. own. If you like to cook and know how to do it go your without reference to ulyboay else? - » l>onm1rz1nisr.'»- - _ Y ..._-__!_... _,_-__ 'W' ' f"" ‘ __ __ _v'_'.s| _ _-1. _ if '~ ` Youthful_Lovel`iness _ x \ _ of ; _ _ S* _ °':l'°""$ -. up ._ .__ __ ___ _ _ - _-1 - l .st 1 iig ¥ D” ____ lil? it to You certainly take e. lenient view of the situation, Julia. . _I should say than she is in imagination and no one except one who was brutally selfish , I __ _-iseu_rseecl$mn¢v;nmuws. - . '¢__b__: ,-.m~\._;`_ _ - . .» _ -', .i__.»‘ -.~._.'.. " ` ~;"'i‘L.' `>v.'»‘ - £_J` 9) __ \‘-fu “*\ _ -’~'_s<={.,"/ -'iq "'¢>\L'UM:b`L_ AUTUMN STOCK TAKING ' ~\- --.~.-1. ' *Tr uf-_ | - ri .‘.;>»-` " _ l ~`\i\-95'" “ l , _@¢ . ' l Never' varies Users oi Magic Baking Powder' remark that it gives the sale geeegue. results at every baking, yeas' lla all yd! cut. Thislsdue to the rlgisleeatsoltlea" raw material by expert chemists beleao mixing. Additional tests are made every twenty minutes throughout the entire' packing' process, to assure uniform lakh quality and Strength In the' ooastellteel every can. A es sues sesgaivssn .es`n¥es»2a¢<` _ Now that the summer vacation sea-i son ls over it is a good time to bakef stock of one’s personal sppearsncel with special reference to the removal; of summertime complexion blemishcs_ such as tan and freckles. Perhaps; one should not class these skin; conditions altogether as blemishes.l because they are really becoming to_l _some types, but usually at this time of year mlledy has wearled of her suntan complexion and wishes to have a white skin again. Earlier this week I described for_ you a complete bleaching treatmenti for sun-darkened skins and today Il have another bleaching pack and lo-l tion for you who may be trying i°_ clear your compiexions of frezkles. Skins that freckle easily are usu- ally found on people of e. fair or sal.dy type 'of coloring, The lark pigment in the brunette‘s skin pro- tects it somewhat from this effect of the sun's rays. Thin. white tyD€S Of skin will freckle in summertime in spite of careful protection from ex posure to direct sunshine. The` freckles may be so light that theyl are scarcely noticeable or they may be very brown and large and hard to bleach. Various freckls remedies have been invented from time to time. but it must be candidly admitted_ that they are not effective in all cases. The pale freckles come of! easily but the dark ones often resistl all efforts to dislodge them, althoughi they will become lighter in colorl when bleached. While the socalled summer freckles usually disappear with the psssinz MAG'l€ EAEIENG POWDER l 'ggi f-'_!' _Af _,__, _...__ s-A4J'_f..¢o'..al»Ac.NE FRENCH lump Nun; and sizes are 8% to 10. Filled Postage