l i i l ,... PAGE EIGHT nus truARLUFrEIrOWN cuARnmp GUST 7, 193i; .Womdn% Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature i Etiquette EIIUUHIQ Dorothy Dix " Letter Boat Q- If one cannot remember a per- IS TIICIC t0 Make a Woman III Mar- l sons name, should he ever say point blank, "I have forgotten your name?" A. NO; this is very unflattering. Q. Are informal invitations to a wedding written in the first or third person? A. First person. Q. Should coffee or chocolate bel served at a luncheon? A. Either one is suitable. For The Cook Orange (‘ocoanut Trifle | 4 large oraugcsl 1,, cup powdered m3. 1 cup whzpped cream. i 11 cup shredded cocoanut. i Peel the oranges. remove sections o.‘ the pulp, and arrange in lllflN-‘Zdllfll i sherbet glasses. SprL-Rie with tho sugar and cover wnh the whipped cream combined with the cocoanut. y Orange and Mini, Jelly ‘i i tablespoons gelatin. $5 cup cold water. i 1 cup bcilzrig water. l I, cup suzar. l cup orange _l'llC£, i 1 Clip lemon guice. i 1p inznced mmt leaves. soak the gelatin in cold water arid f dissolve in the boiling water. Add the I sugar, stir untzl dissolved. then add‘ the fruit juices and mint leaves. l Pour into a mold and chill and set. . Turn out of the mold and garnish with whipped cream and sprigs of mint. 52,996 PER CAPITA SHOWN IN WEALTII O’I’I‘A\\'.-\. Aug ii-If all thei wealth in the Dominion of Canada were equally divided every citizen would have $2.996. This figure is the per capita wealth of the country, ac- cording to figures complied by the Bureau of Statistics for the year 1928. Th: aczrezaic wvcalth of the Domin- ion, EXClUFlYE: of undeveloped natural resources is placed at $28,940,000,000 an increase of 51.272.000.000 over the i927 estimate of 327.665.000.000- Indifldiially the people of British Coliuribia are the wealthiest, a1- though Ontario ranks first among the provinces Ln total wealth. 'I‘he Der caplta wealth of British Columbia. is $4.339. Alberta. comes second with $3.717. Saskatchewan third with $3,613 Ontario fourth with $3,063, Manitoba fifth with $2.986 and Quebec sixth with $2.759. Nova. Scotia had the lowest figure $1.589 ‘While Prim? Ed" ward Island had $1.759 and New Brunswick $1.877. yam property and farm products were the largest. single item in Can- adzils national vcalth, amounting to sa 052531.000 or 27.52 iivr vent 0f the total. The second largest item was urban real property, estimated at $1.582.’IB4,000 or 26.2 Pct cent 0! i116 total. l Rafts-sore Now they say they can vscigh the conscience. Student—B_v the ounce? Professor~l irnflilinfl gcrtiple! bythe To Build Up _Young Mothers “I took Lydia E. Pinkhun‘: Vegetable Compound for a rundown condition before my baby was bornt I saw it adver- tised in a booklet and n friend cold me about: l: too. I: cer- tainly helped me for my nerve: are better, I am in good lplrita and feel well. You may ule my letter and I will write to women who are interested in the Compound."—Mrs. John W. Schcllenberger, RR. f5- 311w lord, Ontario iyiiia E. Pirii;ii2m'~"= j only of llS hardships. h pence. 1. us all. riage? Does the Violet or the Butterfly Make Better Wife? Why American Women Slouch Dear Miss Dix-What is there in marriage to keep a woman GLAD? A man grooms himself every morning, takes his leisurely bath and shaves and steps out and away from the mesa of dirty dishes. crying children and dis- orderly house. Even if he does have business prob- lems, they at least offer e. change from the thing he walks away from every morning. strain. She can't even take a vacation alone, for she can't leave the children when they are babies. A man may have a hundred diversions where she may have none. Yet she is expected to keep her husband glad that he married her, and honored her by allowing her to slave her life away for less than a maids wages- Did it ever occur to you that many a woman ls so _ broken downthrough hard work, and child bearing and skimping to make ends meet that she doesn't give a hang whether her hus- band l5 glad that he married her or not? So I ask you, what is there to make a woman glad in marriage? MRS. M. Answer: There isn‘t much in life to make any of us glad, Mrs. M., if ive think In most of our lots there are more kicks than ha‘ There is sorrow and sickness and work and worry and anxiety for And especially is the road of the poor woman a hard one to travel. Her a work is the kind that is never done and it has the discouragement of show- ing no spectacular results... She cannot point to her book as a writer can. or her statue as a sculptor can, or her prosperous business and say, "I dld this. This is what I have achieved by my labor." She spends her days and strength in cooking meals that are eaten and forgotten; in sweeping floors that must be swept again; in washing little faces that must be washed over again the next hour; lu feeding babies that. are always hungry, in doing over and over again the million monotonous tasks that go into making a home and rearing e. family. And very rarely does she get the pay that would make it all worth while. the reward that would gild her tasks and set her labor to music. Every girl who marries a poor boy thinks that whatever the hardships of her lot may be they will be compensated for by the love and tenderness of the man she marries. She knows that their food may be only bread and cheese, but the thinks that their kissing lips will turn it into ambrosla. She knows she will have to wear shabby clothes, but she believe: that her husband will throw around her the royal cloak of his tenderness and his understanding, so that her shabbincss will be hidden even from her own eyes. But, alas, the poor husband, no more than the rich husband, proves to be a Prince Charming. Often when he feels the burden of a family's sup- port pressed heavily upon him, he regrets his marriage and he takes no trouble to hide from his wife the fact that he considers her and the children millstones around his neck. Offer he, too works beyond his strength and is nervous and peevish and hard to get along with. Perhaps there isn't so much to be glad about in the outward circum- stances of any marriage that is filled with hard work and poverty and in which there is not enough money to buy the rsoftneses and pleasures that pad the angles of life. But, thank God, not. everything has a. price tag on it and the poorest young husband and wife can be glad that they married each other if they have love and companionship. And, after all, we get out of marriage what we put into it, and we make it a success or o. failure, bad or sad, as we will. A woman can be glad she married the man she did because she would rather have him than anything else in the world. She can be glad that she can cook and clean and make him a. comfortable home because she cares enough for him to enjoy ministering to him. She can be glad to pinch pen- nies for him because it help: to build up his fortune. And she can be glad that she has children and get more thrill out of the feel of her babies‘ arms around hcr neck than she would out of a matched pearl necklace. She can be glad to keep them clean and well fed and know that she in building up ltrong little bodies and that she is giving to them attention that no millionaire’: child bu who la nursed by hired hands. So you see, dear Mrs. M., that whether housework is slavery or an inter- esting occupation, and whether husband and children are a bore, or the most worthwhile career in the world, depends upon your point of view. we have to make our glndneu in this world and we best do it by being good sports and taking the hardships of life with a grin instead of sitting down and bemoan- lng our fates. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dlx—Which do you think would make the better wife, the girl wbohu good time: while young and who ha: gone about with boys, or the girl whose parents have been so strict with her that she has never been al- lowed w g0 to parties and who has never had any attention from young men? L. N. A. Answer: Other things being equal, if I were : mcri I would always choose for a wife who has been popular with men. There are many reuons why she la a safer matrimonial bot than the girl who has never had any attention from boys. For one thing. qbn i: generally a better judge of wlut she wants in o. husband than the girl who jumpc ct her first opportunity. She has looked them over, and is a oonnolueur in men, so to speck, co she picks out some- thing to suit her taste and which lhe is pretty sure still to like after she get: it home. ‘Then aha know: how to handle men. She hll had experience and the know: how to jolly them along and dodge the angles in their dispositions and when to tum c blind eye on their faultc. But, best of all, she la reldy to settle down. She has had her fling. She is tired of dancing and running around. and her homo look: better to her than a night club. The moat domestic women are not the home-ltoylng girls, who are fed Eczema Iichecl Badl . Face figured. Hea ed by Cuticura. Vegeiaiiie Ufiiliiliiiliul “Scam tint abroad on my forehand in pimple-Ilka form. Lam It spread from my orchid towards m! n00 Ind gradually my whole i 13m“?! of? m f}: mulching’ " w 7&2 I l aclmbiizwonu intbnirplaa. bglacowudlailgmod’ ....."' - -'"*~"...'~="".-i-.-..':'-.:.-e.....°*-~a......- "r -...'-=..- was " (Ian-o llbl 6B8. Wind. In. -_ ,1 BS=%S%Z‘RR£EL‘JIEH"“ ""*“ ldunity frock with crisp organdie cope hipline which contributes new soph- Wfth a woman it is‘, the everlasting grind of work, with house and child-, ren, day in and day out with nothing to break they wl/hat the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished ‘ With Every Pattern By Aunebelle Worthington NEW SOPIIISTICATION EASY T0 of the orgnndle at the left side. MAKE! Gathered tiers add fulnesa to the skirt. Just like the elder mode, it Feminine details accent printed gives the appearance of tightened collar. It approves of the higher istication. Three little rosebuds made waistline and ties it with narrow belt. of organdie in tones that blend with the printed dimity, . are caught at center- amaze you with the front of the gathered cape collar. It. is an adorable dress for kiddie: of 6, ’_‘ 8, 1O and 12 years. It is so entirely smart and practical for summer afternoons- Style No. 3376 will small amount of ma- terlm it takes to copy it exactly. In the 8- year size, 1% yards of 39-inch material with if yard of 32- inch contrasting is sufficient. Gingham checks are back again 1nd lend themselves per- v fectly to this cute frock. You'll like it especially in nlle green and white with collar of white or- Bandie and belt of self-fabric. Another interesting idea. is candy striped batiste with the col- lar of plain batlcte I n predominating l l l l l i ,. "k. I I i i I i I I i i i515 cents a copy. but may be ob- tained for Iii-cents if ordered samc time as pattern. ll yellow or 1 gandle, clear . green printed lawn, flowered muslin in blue ind rose on ' white ground, corded seed dimlty in dusty pink, white dots on dark blue ground in __ voile, mu silk in " opaline pink tones and sheer linen in aquamarine ,are delightful combin- ations for this French model. For parties it in very dainty. in pale pink taffeta with the edge of the collar and skirt flounces finished with picoting- Pale blue georgette crepe and flowered organdle Ire very pretty. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) The Summer Fashion Magazine contains moat, interesting styles for adults for tow-n or vacation wear. Also darling styles for the. kiddies. It N0. 3375. Sim ......-....-..-....... ..-.¢--.---..--.. ....--...---u--u.. NM!!! |-.~nn-nu...-.- - . . . . . nun-nu“... Street Address nun-u-u-n-uuun-u-0..."... c"! State today on the steamshlps Caledonia and ‘Iransylvanla. The tourists, members of the Order of Scottish Clans, hailed Sir Harry enthusiastically, clamoring for a speech and songs. Sir Harry said, in a. brief address: “1 hope your stay Economy Corner OIIILLED FRUIT SALAD On lettuce covered salad plates. ar- range three mounds of sliced chilled frult. One of thou mound: should be of orange or grapefruit notions. Fm- the other mounds, use such sum- mer fruits as grape; and peachm or pears and strawberries. In the cen- ter place a ‘ of cottage choue. which may be moistened with drum or with fruit juice and seasoned with in Scotland will be most enjoyable and that you will go home impressed and invigorated by the visit. You have come from a. new country but the old country is not, dead yet and u. new Empire is growing up." A MomingSmile A patient in an insane asylum im- agined himself dead and nothlns could drive this delusion out. of his brain. One day his physician had a happy thought, and said to hlmr "Did you ever see l dud mm bleed?" "No," he replied. "Do you believe that n dead mm can bleed?" "No." "Well, if you will permit mo, I will try an experiment with you 1nd see if you bleed or not." The patient gave his consent, the doctor whipped out his scalpel and drew n. little blood. "Therefl he acid “you ace that you blood; that proves that you are not dead." “Not at all," the patient instantly replied, "that only proves thgt dud, men can bleed." Chaldeec. 'I’here you could see the ornaments and paints that the modern girl of 3,500 8.0. employed to make herself beautiful. The Happen, whp mod- elled themselves after a lady called Queen shub Ab, had jet black hair, delicately shaped noses and unall mouths. Their mouths were painted ruby, eyebrows were emboldened with black, and round eye: were drawn rims of green-much a: our actresses of today line theirs with blue. "We know," said Mr. Woolley, "thepaint: they used were red, black, white, green, and yellow." The chief and most obvious interest of the ex- hibition, he thinks. is the new light it throws on the deluge in Mesopo- tamia, and life just before aQnd af- ter it. The great Flood deposited sand over everything to a depth of ll feet. People before the flood were buried in a different manner from those after it. Pre-flood graves in some instances contain tiny female figures with slender, graceful bodies but inhuman heads - lpplmntly goddewes or demons. In one respect they are the most. remarkable things yet discovered at Ur; they are the first objects found there to which religious significance may safely be attached. Before the flood people lived in brick buildings, and soon afterwards buildings were constructed of cement bricks. CALIFORNIA FRUIT SALAD (Serves Five to Six) Three oranges (cut in pieces). 1 l . . _ -_.. +__*.______ _____% Don’t Starve The Teeth Teeth have to be built out of foods that are rich in phosphorus and calcium. Many children tak-e into adult life q teetli that are defective, unfit for the job tliat nature intended. Shredded Wheat witli milk helps develop sound teeth, good muscles and good bones. It is rich in the bone-making salts. The crisp, crunchy’ shreds make cliewing necessary and that develops healthy gums and lgood digestion. SHREDDED HEAT WITH All. THE SRAN ORTHEM/HOLE WHEAT‘ ~ THE CANADIAN IHRIDDID “IIIIAT COIIIIY: LTR cup sliced pineapple, drained and anas and peaches combined ‘é cup diced, #4 cup sliced pears, s; cup either black cherries or straw-borne: sliced peaches. Super-ate drange 2 teaspoons gelatin, soaked in 2 table- sectlons, removing all membrane, and 51900114; water and melt-ed OYBI b0‘ cut into pieces. Mix with other fruit. water, l cup mayonnaise. 1 cup cream This mixture may be packed in a jar whipped. Add melted gelatin to and placed in the refrigerator near |mnvonnalse and whipped meant the ice until well chilled. iFOld fruit into dressing. Pack in --_i-_-_ sealed can. Freeze. uciiu three part: FROZEN FRUIT SALAD ice to one part salt. (Serves Six) Note-This salad is very rich and 1'6 cups orange pulp, free fromgmny be served. as a. combination u! imembrane, W.» cups pineapple, ban-Jsalad and dessert, ‘MODERN GIRL’ IS 5,000 YEARS OLD - LONDON, Aug. 6.—'I‘ho modern girl is about 5,000 years old, according to J. l... Hodcon, writing in The News- - Chronicle. Ho continues: Illp-stick is c thing not so much of the past as a thing before the Flood. This con- clusion wu borna upon me at the Britich Museum when I called to see tho fnlaurec Mr. c. Leonard Wool- ley bu been digging up at Ur of the salt and paprika. Serve with fruit mayonnaise. Mix equal portions of mayonnaise and chilled orange juice, beating or ahckim well bogether. OLD COUNTRY STILL ALIVE GLASGOW, Allgtllt 6.—Sir H1117 Lauder wu the control figure o! a guy welcoming party which granted 1,600 United States Scot: who arrived up on evening: around the drop-light 1nd with cooking and being mother’: helper. ‘They are the girls who hlVO been in bulines: or society, and to whom c home of their own is a novelty. ‘rho girl who has never been lnywhcra wont: to step out after ab; is married. n is the girl who has been everywhere who want: to ctay put. alter she i: married and who get: a greater kick out of her own home and her husband and baby than lhl does out of any in: palace. furthermore. it is the girl: who have had plenty of love-fucking before marriage who 1n satisfied with the fictions ofthcir husbands. It i: the women who have never had any admiration from men who Ara IO starved for flattery that they indulge in flirtation: after marriage. And allot thilicpcrfectlynctnrlibooauu it lathe thincwehava never had thct we crave moot. . DOROTHY DIX. i O O O I I Dear Mil: Dix-Milli 7W Pleuc m: u: m the American Iirl: and women stand ilk: old tagged-our honour I moon tho way they cloucb down on one leg with one hip droopod down like they m exhausted and worn out? i fut became of coma unconceimi: form of modesty or just because they p," lggy? J. W. D. Answer: No, son. it is neither c mental not c physical oflllction. It l: because theythinktheyiookpicturolqueaadthoymimitctingtbapocuintho fashion ndverticemonu- Itueommndchictolookuuymwcninmmtmmoffitmcnd hld malformation of the hip jofatl, and thlt i! m I081!!! " them- IQIWI In f-hll Ilckldllllttl lltltildl. DOROTHY DIX. A‘ A Marquis, 80:12., Mother's Experience LftflcjoyoeTcykn-‘o mothnwrllm: “The first than mmifll d ht Ifh tho f: o Iwooghnppz ecthoolthnllflandmn. , Andfmm Saint Aloha, ma. Mrs. Gourloy writes: ‘Ononfoauwdnsdllmuntfoodo ,butUnn were cdedforotr os-r babies show normal progress. That is quite . natural. If’ your baby is not steadily gaining consult your doctor. If it i3 a food problem, we suggest that Y” andyourdoctorconsidez- Eagle Brand- For bottle-fed babies, Eagle Brand I188 been the standby of mothers for thrw generations. It is especially valuabb m dificult feeding cases, being wyh a aqfe food—-pure, uniform, Q8511? digested. You will be pleased to 86¢ yourbabybegintothrlve immedinwly when placed on a carefully pfePflfld EagleBranddiet. msmgmycndorsed bydodora and mama. J