w-‘Qc. .. czwitirt: ~ z3s7ffi¢l . ,,..crnan ’s Re c It Helped-Ail- My Troubles” 4 "l we: all run-down rind our oi spirits before my ‘rlrird baby was born, so ltlecidccl ru rry Lydia ii. Pinkhaufls Vegetable Compound as l had lleilrtl-so nidcii about it. lt ‘ helped m: with all my troubles and gave me un "appetite where beforel didn't cat a: all and had to stop work and rest every once in a while. I did all of my housework up to the Jay my baby crime, as l am a {arm- qr's will: and could not ailurd help before. l (ccl jusr dandy now and l will answer any lcrtcrs and l will tell every one how good Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegerabie Compound is."—- Mvx. lhrflrvycld, Box 63, Rocklake, . North Dakota. ,, j ' ' -;ly‘iiialj;fEi.; Piiikilamlsl i Yilgiiililliilf‘ fiiimluiiiiii - 6i Hi1 M12: .» til... a. 5.; loin», on Efiiquette B! Rnheflllrfl \_ Q. Should formal invitations for ~ ening affairs be addressed to both '. sband and wife? ' A. Yes. Neither one nor the other should be omigted._ Q. Is it good form for two women to kiss when meeting or taking leave? A. N0; in well-bred- society the kis- sing is omitted. - Q. Are menue cards ever used for vi dinner at homeifl A. No, unless it is a very formal and ceremonioits affair,‘ with pro- » bably some very distinguished guests. F...*7x.. cock‘ CHEES canon: ' wrru BACON. Saute 1 tablespoon diced onion, 2 tablespoons grecn pepper, chopped fine and 1 tablesoon butter. Add $6 cup tomato plup, canned-or fresh. I Cook five minutes, Add 1 cup grated cheese, % teaspoon salt and a few l grains cayenne. When cheese is melt- . ed. add 2 tablespoons milk and 1 '_ egg slightly beaten. Cook, stirring until smooth. about five minutes. - Serve on toast with broiled bacon, American bathing suits and caps ‘ lead in popularity in Chile. Railways of Japan are considering T the operation of bus feeder lines. u'|¢aa.a.|s.ck\ \In(17!I!i nun-a ever-rp- ' brnnanaahS Illustrated‘ Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington The simple pastel voile dress for wee maids of 2, 4 and 6 years for summer days is illustrated in Style MALPEQUE Many friends will be interested in the following clipping which was taken from the “Calgary Herald" of recent date. A quite wedding took place at Knox United church, Cal- gary at 2 P. M. Saturday, June 29th. when Mary Adelaide MacNutt, daugh- ter of Nir. and Mrs. George B. Mac- Nutt of Summerslde, P. E. 1., was united in marriage to Henry Darn- ley Furnish of Calgary, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Furnish, Seattle, Wash. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. George Dixon in the pres- ence of the immediate friends of the bride and groom. The wedding march was played by the organist Clifford l-liggon. The bride who was unat- tended looked charming in an ensemble of beige lace and georgette with lacs and mohair hat in same tone and carried ophelia roses and lilies of the valley. Immediately folowing the cere- mony Mr. and Mrs. Furnish left; cu a motor trip to Seattle and the coast cities. The bride travelled in a frock Wmr: iFon Ficus: of printed chiffon in tan and green Nssrlfs Miuo/ WAY STRAWBERRY Are Wearing No, 3407 in the new orchid ihflde- An embroidery Fruit Motif in c yellow pear with green leaves is placed at left side or tiny yoked bod- ice to prove its French origin It will delight mother for it is so easily made. 1t is simply s. one- piece dress. It is slurred at either side of front‘ and back Ind attacked to straight yokes, Inset shoulder bands join front and back of dress. The dress can be made in. full length or in shorter length as sketched with bloomers Peeping below. Pattern in- cludes bloomers that are held in with elastic at waist and knew. You can copy it exactly with 216 yards of 36-inch material for dress and bloomers in the four year sim- Pink and white gingham check with plain pink gingham, yellow and white pique with white pique, nile green chsmbray with green and white checked rinshflm. surfaced dimity. printed lawn, candy striped tub silks, and sailor blue cotton broadcloth with tiny white dots with plain white are adorable suggestions, Pattern price i5 cents. Be sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. The New Fash- ion Magazine is 15 cents, but only l0 cents when ordered with a pat- tern. No. 3407. Size ...................--- ‘rransrlo. ‘I00. NEXUS ..“uni..-...n..-...-....... Street Address sStHORTCAKE + . fiilbfikfisilfii-‘mu-lifiiififiii-mfifi “m” "m?! ;‘y0ui’1“‘h: ragga one ofmore ‘- . 4"“.‘, lllhY l ggi/Wmfitthlldwm aria in Natlfinwytolllgil; FJOmBOQi-a l! ll free. Write ‘fzr it today. Ncstié’: T°'°"!°.0ntam ‘of ullltld.‘ . otropoiitan Bldg, r".;‘i ,_.. City State u... shades, with coat of tan ‘French broadcloth and cloche hat to match. On their return Mr. and Mrs. Furnish will reside in Calgary. Mrs. Predk. Back, Waltham, Mass. Mrs. John McIntosh, Somerville, Mass, are guests for several weeks at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Major‘ Taylor, Hamilton. Mrs. H. Roy Cromwell of Paterson. N. J., is visiting ‘relatives in Mal- peque. Mrs Margaret Waller of Char- lotetown has been engaged as teacher for the Primary department of Fan- hing gschool. Miss Francis MacNutt of Calgary Alberta. is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. P. MacNutt, Malpeque and is re- knewing old friendships here. Among tha guests at Mrs. Sinclair MacCougsnk during the week may be mentioned the following: Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Grant, St. John, N. 3., Mr and Mrs. F. S. Jelly and Yvonne, Al- bany. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Atkinson. Wultham, Mass, Mr. and Mrs. Baack- inoor and Katherine, sackville, N. 13.. Major and Mrs. MacKenzie, Char- lottetown. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Rich Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrison Wind- sor Mills P Q. Mr. and Mrs. Emest Anderson and two children of Toronto, and Mr.. Villers Carr- of Lot 16, formed a mot- or party to Hamilton on Sunday, July 7th and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Les Owen. Mr. Harold Welsh of Summerside was hers on s. business trip ct. Sut- urday. Mr. and Mrs. Freak, Irving of Cape ‘Inverse and Mrs. Cssweil of Wil- mont Valley were recent guests at Miss Flora Mscdougsrrs. Miss Constance MacNutt left on Monday to spend two weeks in Char- lottstowri. Miss Wands. Graham has accepted tbs Primary department of 80s View school. lbs-trial»!!! Ind Mrs. Id- vlnbcuiawmiislmtalwtbsm- dime Ocnvmwu in Obarlottston cuwcdnssday. i _-n— _ Avsrycoriiiniwolccmoisbsingu- mam In. 11M. GrsntMPrincs- v ‘rnr. cuaiznbrrardwu GUARDIAN ____ H” .. I Ia the . American .. Wife ldxtruvlgunt? Finds I-lsr Wort-h All She Coats Dorothy Dix The American Wife May Demand More Upkeep Than the European Wife, but She Has to Combine All the "Virtues of Grand " Dame And Scullery Maid to Satisfy Her Husband MR. SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS, the famous novelist, is n. bear on tilt American woman. As an investment he regards her as a total loss. Ha sly! that the American men spend more money on their women than the men of any other nation spend on theirs. and that. they gel. less in return. He figures out that they don't even get a conservative 6 per cent on their money and then he asserts that the Frenchman expects iris wife to be a good cook and to make he‘: own’ clothes. The Englishman expects his wife to run his home expertly and to hold her own in any circle in which she may be put. The German expects his wife to be s good housekeeper and a good moth- er. And they all get what they demand. But the American man expects nothing of his wife except that she will be extravagant, And she is. Wherefore, Mr. Adams concludes that the woman's stock is too high in this country an-i should be brought down to its proper level. OF COURSE, American women will rise en masss and dispuip these allegations. They will point out that the American man is noted as the world's shrewdest trader and the one that is hardest to put anything over on, hence it may be safely concluded that if he plunges on American Fem- inine Common it. is because he regards it as a gilt-edged investment rc- turnirig an adequate dividend. ,i____ ALSO, if he spends money lavishly on his woman it is because he de- rives the sanle pleasure and satisfaction out of having a wife who looks like a. million dollars that he does out of having an expefmvc car. A truck or a flivver would .erve every useful purpose and cost little for upkeep. So would a purely domestic woman who is industrious and economical. But he wouldn't get the glow of pride and satisfaction out oi either that he "does out of the ornate article that advertises his prosperity to the world. And when you come to getting self-starters with streamline effects, with artistic color schemes and the latest thing in upholstery. you have to pay for it, whether it is an automobile or a. woman. runnrmnlvronm, Mr. Adams is sadly mistaken if he thinks that the ' American man demands less of his woman than the man of any otlftr nation does. On the contrary. he demands more, not less. Ha is the most generous man in thevyvorld to his wife and the most exacting. Ha pays veil. but he expects value received. . TO BEGIN with, the American husband is the only man who expects his wife 3.0 be both parlor ornament and a kitchen utensil. The foreign husband is satisfied if his wife makes good on the one particular qualifica- tion for which he married her. If he picked her out because she was n. go-wl cook and a penny-pincher. that is all he asks of her. Ha doesn't expect he‘ to perform on the kitchen range with one hand and the piano with the other. But the A-nerican husband expects his wife w be able to pull off this neat little feat in logerdemairl as part of the regular days work. 1F A foreign man marries a. woman who is elegant and brilliant and capable of presiding over a salon, that’t that. All she is expected to do is to scintillate. But the American man who marries a clever woman not only expects her to be l. star, but be s. housefrsu u well. Probably no English political hostess ever cooked with her own hands the dinner at which she presided with grace and distinction, but the wife of many an American politician has cleaned the house and polished the silver and set and decorated the table and prepared the food and led the conversation when she entertained her husband's guests. IN FOREIGN coutries men entertain and amuse women. They make, the talk. The American man lolls back in his chair like a. grand Turk uni; makes women do all the work of diverting him. Look about you at the theatre, at restaurants, at parties, wherever men and women are gathered together. It. is always the women who are being vivacious and sprightly, who arc smirking and smiling and going thnough their tricks like a monkey on s. stick trying to amuse men. 1'1‘ 1B always the women who “are doing the talking and fllb feel humbly repaid for their efforts if the men will only grunt now Ind than to show that they arc still awake. It is always the women who are studying and reading up on topics in which men are interested so that they may be able to meet them on their own conversational ground, but no American woman is ever silly enough to expect any American man to talk to her about the things she is interested in. ' WHY, American men even expect the women to do the courting, and if they didn't there would be mighty few wedding bells. It is the girls who make the dates. who call up young men over the telephone, who call for young men in their cars, who write three letters to the young man's one, and who finally practically do the proposing. One of the reasons that American woman fall so hard for foreign men is because it is such a novelty to have a man run after them instead of their having to track down the man they want. and such a luxury to have a. man put some pop into the him. THE American man expects his will to make his place in society. In the foreign countries. whore people stay more or less in that station in life in which it has pleased Heaven to call them, the man settles the family status, but in this country, when the poor man of today is often the millionaire of tomorrow, it is the wife who determines the family position in the great maiority of cases. ‘II-IE husband is absorbed in his monwy-msking, hut ho expects his wife to change with their changing fortunes, and to make the social contacts that he has not the time nor inclination to make. l-ls expects the grub he married w flutter forth as a butterfly of mall. and curiously lnmlln. the adaptable American woman frequently does ‘turn the trick and rolls down her sleeves as she comes out of the kitchen and whisk: off hsr checkered apron, and takes her place u s If!“ dim! 1h hllh 106M»!- And that is something no other woman in the world can do. m: American wife his hai- iiuiu, but she is worth all that sun costs her husband. Long ago the astute Mr. Morgan ulii any“!!! would I0 mks who wont short an this country- Md thlt so» 4W5" f" W MM‘ an woman. DOROTHY D13. the ‘impdrtant mun of m» arrived on amass usnifll u» mm uia Alla. m». omit preached nwm rm hoflw- with he mm isn't-ms malarial-incubus nscrn- w. ma ssrasimnm 0min. Dim- nlghilrsmarkloutbnwcrdlflflclcmflnrslstenllllsllinnimwhoroc- fwsivptb nllthsir. iaiqililll. wbocntlyuudsrwantsnopsrstiouinm mmhalilaysuuuawbonaum- Princs 0mm nil-vim is M41}: activists-circumcision“ imwwifll. tciiuvyraniamnvuiiuamag. ,--- mvi-smrbciawmcammauirslihrquwwmmciuaruua. approciatnd. ’ y‘cmn.,’iqvisiiinshllllrsalnp.ns townflhitnif Ohurchqnhipibturn ' can an iitsndd tip ofninrmchiiu" .1lfl-Mslr.wocd|ids. .- emrouwcacmnuuwmm‘ ' -A <1 love-making instead" of the girl's having to do it all. that they can't. resist ' alm -:- Social ‘and Personal -:- Fashions What the Fashionable 0111/ Satisfy the natural desire for sweets by serving plenty, of wholesome, delicious strawberry jam made the Ccrto way. Tfhink win: this moderulshorc- boil method means to you! To be able to make perfect straw- berry jam by boiling the fruit only two or three minutes means a saving of the busy housewife‘: time and attention, to say nothing of fuel. And the best of i: is, Certo is always sure. Even if you have never before made a glass lillllllil l in. srnawsrnny JAM JULY 19. m» ti“? s -:- Literature YOl-l (AN MAKE i - .',..:ii{!,,-,i, Z5 i |.l..i ' lilllliiliilll I .. . ' i.- . _ of jam or jelly, you cannot fail with Certo. With Certo, all the fragrance and natural color of your fresh fruit, instead of being boiled away, is sealed up in your jam jars for you and your family to enjoy next: winter. Try Certo and enjoy making the finest-tasting, nicest-looking, best-keeping jams and jellies you ever had. There’s a complete recipe book under the label of every bottle. . Jllll illlllllfli] ‘ T Tun Riel): Boob- "Rad in g Jams and Jellies ' (rnhhu 72 nrlpu). Also booth! of 97 n- rlfn In IIIUI] nu, L‘ l‘ l: I Mslllblr Goths. cans Home service Depsrmm. 12-115 "I Cobourg, Ont. ' Pius: send m: the new booklets. Fru sforTeiu - ilhes usul 1c.-. In nllsunu Ila. City IXIICIII! FOI- IIAUTIITIL BAND! ' Recently s 14-year-old girl wrote rno to ask "whethlr doing n little washing and ironinl would spoil the moo oi his: hum" A motivate amount of exorcise u mum-y to kosp the fingers and wrist supple. Iventbsbsnmmskor who does till-m- own houuksifllfll docs not not on- ough varied hand exorcise. Most diilmnuncvsmlats of tbs _ moot-l! unwise a broom lunch. c brush or in iron orotbsrfliings in bi lifted. If tho bands have no ctksr kind cf nor-sin will; into piu tbs miracles ma tendons "tau m ni- iim used they ion choir natural gnu in! Ihlvllilllll 0nd bcecmtiiicltufil awkward. 1mm moraine sboull Us 111M604 in mllldw‘: Input! llvttcm. lhlking careful m nation: ti! inducing mutation. Just ma: and usuyabmtluhsssssuiavnltz. iiiswrrrurutnbwalul-ilm of the pin-no students training no al- so good for developing expressive, graceful hands. Similar exercises are also used to make the typisils fingers and wrists strong and supple. Those of us who arc neither pianists nor typists may work out exercises of our own. Here are a few suggestions: (1.) Hold the hand out in front with palm down. Raise the index finger upward as far as possibl bonding the knuckle. Now shoot the linger out straight. Bend and stretch each finger in turn. (8.) Place the palms and fingers to- gether. hart pressure with the index iingsr of the loft hand. pushing the latter backup fur as it will go with- out discomfort. Now reverse the m pushing ths right indcx_ Household Hints Bylobarhhc SUEDE SHOES Suede shoes that have hem" spotted from rain can be renewed hi’ rubbing the spots with In em"! board. PROTECT BABY'S EYES Purchase a glass shield and l!!!‘ it in the baby's curls-Io t0 P the little eyes from strong winds. W‘ the tender skin from dust. finger bcskvm-d with the left one. Do this to ouch finger in turn. <8.) Pntcnd that you are playing tho scales on a piano, putting down thi fingers in quick succession. (4.) Piano finger tips together, lfivinl considerable space between tho palms. Now press the flnlcrs to- III-htrln s vertical position-with the Dllml horizontal. Separate ‘lingers and palm again. Repeat. (0.) Grasp‘ the corner of a news- Dllfl‘ Dill in cm hand and gradu- "IY “Wish it up until it 1cm. a Bl! in ti! hind. - ‘burrow-lusty questions An- ' sword. z A 59min; Smile’ CHICKEN To givc chicken ‘I delicious film place s. few slices of bacon on W of it when roasting. American motion-picture ouiflil are becoming popular in Brasil- thcydl welcome ~ a can _of tasty