.Ier moth , 1-; “kindly remembered here and the es will travel south togethe. I I I The indispoaltlon oi m. W. it. dman is regretted by his many lends. . V I I I The Monday night Bridge Club were-the gmsts oi Mrs. H. A. O. hearth icr their game this week. . I I I Mrs. W. S. Stewart entertained he weekly Bridge club on Thurs- y eitemoon. o Mm. L. B. MscMillsn- was amons Tweak-end hostesses entertain- "at Bridge last Saturday after- con‘ ‘at her attractive home. I I I I lib; E. A. Foster is entertaining today ior her friends M: an sf‘er- and ovenBg bridge at her 1y home 40 Greenfield Avenue. I I I Mfrs. Charles A. McKenzie, Brigh- ton, his arrived home from e. most snioyable visit to Boston. I I I Oopt. lined and returned from a holiday trip Upper canads and the West. I I I Mrs. H. J. Mabon of Montague is Visiting in the city the guest oi’ Mr. mtMXI. Benjamin Rogers, Prince I I I I The Duchess oi Kent, men at a hshionaible London restaurant, was wearing a black velvet evening gowmtoppcdbysmaasive cape oi liver iox: two diamond stars were worn in her hair. I I lbs. Read have to I Mrs. Percy Aylwin oi Ottawa sn- berta-irl ‘ at a delightful week-end tea in honor oi chiei Justice J. A. Iiathiuon and Mm. Mathieam oi mzas-lotteizown, who are spending some time in the Capital. I I I Mrs. (Dr) B. O. KBQMIlg is among the , ‘ hostesses this week, entertaining at the Canadian atlonal Hotel this afternoon at and tea. - e Mrs. Alien Ooah entertained ior ‘or Bridgr: club 0n ‘Thursday after- con. I I I Mrs. inmsn. wiie oi Judge G. B. oi lummeraide, is mending iewwoeksinfllecityandisbe- g warmly welcomed‘ by her friends. I I Miss Margaret Sterne was among m younpr hostesses entertaining week, having arranged eight lsbles oi Bride! M; the Iota! on ‘Ihluadoy ior her iriends. ar, Mrs. A. B. Fisher en- tertsined earlier in the week at twelve tables at the Oanadian Na- tionei. I Wlflollfllllt v v w 0.. Week Quecntben Tvwwv- w, -w . ‘e-e“ '10“; 1pm miller-inn is being cor dillly welcomed home on e short visit 1mm Detroit and isgthe guest 0i IBI- (Dr.)‘T.'I= _ ' ma. John l. bemercn pve s. psuttily of“ bridge at old Spa-in Blue Room yesterday, asking irienda in ior seven tables. I I I Ammg tbs Canadians sttendins the recent rcoqptbn given by the Eigh Commissioner and Mrs. How- ard Ferguson at their Queen Anne's Mansions, London, in honoln- oi the visiting Canadian delegates to the Em, Press Conference in south Akin appear the names oi Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mefsarvey. I I Among those attending the open- ing oi’ Parliament and the Drawins Room, at Ottawa, were Dr. Gordon l-lodgson, of Garden 01W. 10M 1'5- iand, NIL, and Miss ‘Laura Hodgson. I Oolouul W. Greater B. Mdiufl. MR, and Mrs. MuLln-e, oi Bonne- hlnley, Charlottetown, are in resi- dence at the Chateau Laurier in Ottawa ior the aessional months. Miss MoLure, who has been spend- ing s few days in ‘roronto, has joined her parents. _ I I Mrs. Maurice Mill oi Summerside was hostess at a. prettily arranged six table mixed bridge at her home Wednesday. ' I I Mrs. John Cobb and Mrs. Llew- elyn Rogers oi Summerside were joint hostesses at a. delightiul bridge party on Wednesday iive tables being in play. I I I On Monday evening Mrs. Oarl Crockett of Summerside entertained at two tables oi Bridge. e - . Mrs. S. K. Todd 0i‘ Summerside, invited. iriends in for four tables oi Bridge lest Wednesday evening. I I I Two delightful teas were given on Thursday and Friday afternoons oi this week by Miss Adrienne Perry of Summerslde for her‘ numerous iriends. I I I Min Doris McDonald entertained thirty young people at a Jolly party at her home last Saturday even- ing. I I I The Walsh Qorgl-s small type ved s. pliment remat- ly when the Duke oi York bought apuppyoi thisbreedasa,‘ , ‘ onion ’s l Realm AI-g- Social land, Persona ‘Charming Study Here is a vlwrmlns study airman. the Duchess of York and T.R..H. ftinoeifisnlélalgaiettaggxseflss they attended a concert at Royal AlbertHall, London. Princess Ma: ‘Annsnn AAmA‘ L44 a oi 11.3.11. Duoh ess oi Yok ~y {some Princess Elizabeth and at / THE COOK'S CORNER for Princess Elizabeth and her little sister, Princess Margaret, bath oi’ whom are very fond and proud o! their little Cambrian iriond. It is saie to say that none but the mmt tolerant and reliable oi dogs would have been chosen ior the young princesses. The iamily oi Corgis has two branches. The Cardigan Corgis have tails of med- ium length. but their cousins in Pembrokeshire broadcast happiess on a much shorter weveienru. Both kinds are bright and iriendly and are handsome little dose. with beau- tiiul coats and firmly-shaped heads. They are not unlike miniature Al- se“ on Daschund ‘legs-though they use somewhat higher-built than the little streamlined dogs. Their air of alertness and intelli- gence emphasizes the likeness oi erect eers and shapely mumles are reproduced in the welsh dogs. GIKIULESTEB. PUDDNG! Have 3 eggs, their weight in flour and butter, l2 almonds, and ilvo flour and butter, blsnohs and pound the almonds, roll the sugar, then whisk it well together ior half an hour; put the mixture into well- buttered dariole moulds, and nu them hsli full; bake in a moderate oven. SMART FROCKS FOR FASHIONABLE PEOPLE It's the simple type that needs no introducti It hugs the figure, being panelled at the ircnt to crest, e slender line. deep inset pockets either side oi thsircnt, soementieitothebuay housewife. You'll note it has deep open srmnolee. And this ior two good reasons. One is that coolness will he s. desirable quality. Another is that it will not crush the sleeves of the hock. owls No, m. is designed m: am as, as, 4o, 4n, 44 and ifl-inchea bust. SiIaMrequireaIyardsoiSO-inch materiel Prioecilmiflnlhilcenisin Ismpsorccinuaoinispreiarzved). Ikepeoinceruiillly. ' _--.._.__-_-_-_---— MLBLSII lcslbalassnoeo _Il1 nieces-nu.- Issceesse v neon-uses ....-suspense-nauseous“.-“us. Help»; million’; to the Corgis to the Alsatlana, whose a COUNTY PUDDINGS Durham Puddingz-Have s quart oi milk six ounces oi breadcrumbs, rind of a lemon, yolks oi five eggs and the whites oi three, six ounces oi melted butter, either jam or marmalade, and pull pastry. Put the milk into a. pan, and when boiling stir in the grated crumbs and grat- ed peel, together with the melted butter and the yolks, the white of the eggs stiilly beaten in be added separately; add sugar to taste; line a dish with pull pastry, put straw- berry jam or marmalade at the bottom, pour in the mixture, and bake until set. As these‘ quantities may be too large ior the average small iamily, it is an easy matter to divide them, using half. Noarour‘ ‘ ‘nirmmmos Take about a pound c! dough from a baking oi light bread, and divide it into small pieces, mould- ing them inio dumplings. Drop them into a pan oi fast boiling water, and boil quickly; send them to table the instant they are dished up with either sweetened melted butter or wine sauce. WARWICK PUDDWG This is rather a more expensive one. Have iour ounces oi fresh but- ter, four ounces oi sugar, iour ounces oi flour, iour eggs, two table- spoons oi cream, two tablespoonfuls of brandy two ounces oi candied orange or lunon peel, the juice and peel ci one lemon. Oreem the but- ter and sugar, then add n quarter oi a pound oi flour and the iour eggs well beaten, two large spoons of cream, and the same oi brandy; then odd the candied peel and m: everything well together, pour into small tins, and bake icr 20 minutes in a moderate oven. This quantity will make live small puddings. They are served with a. sauce in a sreie tureen, made with the iuice oi hall n lemon. e spoonful oi brandy, s little pounded sugar, mixed and wanned in some good melted butter. A kindly, but rornewhat patroniz- ing, landlady inquired of the young bride es to how she would spend l. hilull" exclaimed . sure you'll sn- IOP- they ever are Dorothy Dix ‘s Letter Box Here's One Way to Make a Man Propose to You. What is a Husband’s Most Dan- gerous H0ur?--C0nfide in Parents, Dorothy Dix édyises Anxious . lr Dear Miss Dix-A correspondent asks how she can makg g m“ ma; she feels sure is in love with her propose to her. I'll tell ygu 11w 1 ‘m1, A very ilne man, with whom I was much in love and who 1 was sure loved me. virtually camped 0n my doorstep. He Wfluld. refer vaguely to "when we were mar- ried, ' but never went any iarther. Finally one day I said to him: “Give me $2, I em going to buy you something with it." He did, and l bought s. marriage license. When I showed it to him he said: "Why did you do that? You know t'| a man's job." “Well, darling," 1 said in my sweetest tone, "I know the only reason you haven't got one is because you have been too busy, so I thought I would save you that trouble." as Laughed and thoulht it was a. good Joke on him, and ws stepped around the comer to the person's and got married and have been happy ever since. MR8 AMIS K. Answer : Evidently God helps those who help themsel w, ss the old proverb says. Especially when they are women and desire a husband, and l have no doubt your experience will be a lamp to guide the feet c1 many s. sister who is afllicted with one of these dilawry suitors whose woolnd “"8! m! and on without ever reaching the altar. The man whose attentionsmre without intentions is a. cad, but e woman can generally rid herself oi him by beginning to talk sbouwttifll married. and showing that she means business. Bhe calls his b1 . Ill as the last oi his intentions is to burden himseli with e wLis, be beets it ior some lady whose fireside is ill-st as warm. Wh°°° 00031118 ll lull’: ll 899d and who is just as pleasant a companion, but who has lees Herve and 'will sufler herself to be imposed upon. Butthemanwhorceliydoesmcentcmsrrybutwhoisntinany hurry about u. u m equally Issravai-iru wvwfltlvn M I Wm“ W 4°“ with. She knows that in God's own good time. maybe flier she 1s w old she will have to wear an auwphone to hear him. b0 W111 86$ W "l0 proposing point. But he wears out her patience with his seven-Yul’ 00m‘ That isn't what she wants. She wants an impatient 1°"!- ing plan. not one who apparently dreads his wedding day. She wants to est hi! wedding cake hot oi! the griddle. not when it has been on the wolf l» longithasgctstalashewouldliketoiiouthlmsndsivehimtnesir. Onlyheiswosvodtolose. l m l ' with domesticity than “m” ‘m’ $.23‘ ibfimiif’ “‘¥1.‘.‘;°§i'..... 13.2.1.1,‘ “r my; m. want ho ,goodiood,s.chairbytheilrs,swiiewo cg mill- sger stud w: will look sitar their little wants and make things bright and cheerful around the house for them. And when they iind beiore msrrillfl a woman who runs that kind oi home and makes than: welcome in it, they settle down into the role oi pseudo-lover. It is all the! want oi marriage ami costs them nothing but an 00088101151 ticket $0 7-119 theatre. They dangle e wedding ring in front oi the women's 07H. W‘ the! never get it near snoughjior her to grab it, unless she makes e bold leap m- at as my ‘t h“ ~ Bssbiulmeahnvetcbahendledinthsfllnewly. nwrllmnb can't screw their courage up to uttering the iseeiul wordlsamend the "m"! wbogetil-lemhsvetcpushihemcvorthe , WWQWWI" who didthisby 1m assuminatlmttnsmannnanrvwvvdwd “mim- ingtheweddlnldoy. (oomnucccnvaso 1°) -."' t3 I'd ' vwvw-vv titre vYvvw AA Q 17-‘ YY-vvvv v Vw_ v vvv v vv BOOKSJARTJ MUSIC i t mymnsu 1 AAAAAA :5‘ 4 . z § E? g,§ is 222225;: Sacred dune." clume three Wreath oi Cloud." and volume four “Blue Trousers." It has been trans- the East-one which, “even if oom- pared with the fiction o! Europe. takes its place as one oi the dozen greatest masterpieces oi the world." An interesting article in the De- cember issue oi Canadian Homes and Gardens makes the orillnal suggestion that a Japanese colour print be used as the key or source oi a colour scheme in decorating a loom. Japanese colour prints are noted for their exquisite combinations oi colours and endless varieties 0i patterns. lh-om them the‘ modern book illustrator and poster design- er may learn the use of line and the eiieetive placing oi figures in a panel. Th» Japanese school oi painters to which the colour print maker ba- longed received the name oi Ukly- eye-Mirror oi the Passing World. because in them prints inly be found much oi the daily life oi the people, their favourite legends and histories. examples oi architecture. oi domestic interiors, oi armour, oi ‘lacquer. oi metal work, musical in- struments and details ci drem and personal adornment. The classifica- tion Ukiyoye ajp rests on a char- acteristic style and method oi tech- nique. The colour print designs-rs and engrsvcrs invariably belonged to the peasant or artisan elsssaesnd these lowest, grades oi the Japanese pec- ple have during a century and l. half, evolved, periected and main- tained a. system so intricately tech- nical and so artistic that _it has in its own iield never been equalled. This speaks well for the skill and fine taste oi the average Ja/paneae. Oi the numerous Japanese col- our print designers, l-‘iokusai and are the most well known to Europeans and Americans. Hokusai was born in i100, the son 0f a mirror maker. One story oi his skill tells how in n. competition he drew, on one oi the screen-like doors o! paper. a river of deep blue. and dipping the feet oi s. cock, which he hi4 broulht in mi colour. he caused the cock lo walk over the painted door in such a. way as to produce a picture o! the river ‘Int-auto. with autumn- coioured mspls leaves floating dwwn the stream. l-‘iokussi st once becrsne s popular idol. It is by his landscapes that l-Iok- usai is best known in this country. The most iarnous are entitled "The Thirty-six Views 0i Mount run" all executed in s. characteristic col- ouring oi light blues. greens and yellows. with here and there e note oi rich red or brown to give strength end contrast. . Eiroshige was born in 179'! and. although his landscapes are less striking than those oi’ Hokusai, it wsshswholeiddownthelineam which the makers cf landscape col- our prints were henceforth to pro- ceed. Japanese colour prints de- voted to landscape form a class split in the art oi the world and Borsshige was one ci the desimsrs oi landscape prin lie Ill l senius and s. keen observer oi nature in all her moods. Espec- llllywashogreatlnex-preasingdii- ierent natural phenomena, such as snow, rain. mist dawn, night. ms “Fifty-three g Pisces on the lhkoldc" are his most ismous pub- lications. They sre looutiiui lsnd- scapes and the incidents ci the med are drawn with unfailing humour. "White Rain at Bhono" is little poems-measuring so ha- quently in "the Talc of Germ"- whioh embody with some pretty For agar] Cough, Mam BetterrRemedy at Home Qulclier, Lasting Rel|¢i..:‘,"'.,='°,:,:3,,,°“:§:,°:,;:“g$,°'§"' BigSevingI No Cooking! Rs anode ior iour t mes the mane . Here's en old home remedy sleet d hams s’. s ' at“ u dthsrs M?" s *3“ from? mother knew, baa for real resnl it g u . m is still the best in’ ever awaicr hi. you] gumluy, severe courhs. Try t once, end you'll (m, h] w, “q "fibl. ‘trouble st all. Mobs s ‘psmsgegmtx mm "euagbnarcnsdyeh" sum 2 r “use ° I "n: 2d one 2p first; ‘curbs mo’ “Pimnsgwiisuumuecmponnldma W‘. en ma. 1v u "$31M emblematic do 119°“ Now put 1% ounces of Pine: into s :l|iel membranes. It _ lflosbcttis, sndsddyour lrrapJrbis "iaisvnrmim wag 113M606. please you, or mole), _ .. rt dz, i, the ‘fllfléfilliuf century isvourite old romance "The ‘role oi Genii," by Indy Murssski. IIVIIU. hsvengcissaeetmn, iolliie‘: -M. do l. Mains-i k. WORSE "People who have cold belles in mndsbyymlinalotd trurbles youwuuldnt have had iiyou hadnt him; “Iihe um-iweflbtmsnmsynnlt liveqlslessioslg I hhthln braobssyblnhehssannsohbet- te-rtbneoiitwhilelnlssisfl-H. hi‘ geohllyelinhlnid lnidhtcolm’ WWhhOIbNW-' LEFT-OVER MEATS iiggiii §‘i§§i§%§“iE§§§i§§ i i? liiivizii a E g a 5 2 i? tr =11 iii: §§i;i§ gipzgié... _E§;gg§§s§E 11... HOUSEWIFE” .54 HER Acrmn “'l’\An.' i’? as know r loot treatment can do only in the way cl regards r com- play a. very big dbection- Ziihc effect of dflmliatea both the natural oil flow, which isnpxovu hhe texture oi in time will even help the toes themselves, hy ng the elasticity of the . Mild packs will also help nid the feet of come, callouses other unbeautlful blemishes. suppose you are wonder-nu; ‘a. mud pack wllSisis 0i, use it. It is a very t0 3W0 the feet n Nils description. ll you ‘ ‘ or brother you can 170W, 01' steal his Eihilvlllg you have neither, you . brush. F01‘ a shaving iilggigis ‘§§§il§§§%i §§i§.i.§.r.gi sgggg FER ii § 5 g s s’ 3 5- 5 fortably and wait lo the pack Ir dry, iihen the feet should he hhmudhly bathed again in warm water and. all the peck runovved all over with cold cream you like, iihc ieot can over wiiih an . This is the best time for a pedicure, while the nails are soft and easy to out. Do r member mm straight be dibbed lotion any tendency oi the nails to grow inwercb a tiny V-siheped piece cut in file centre will soon put this night. Oi course I need hardly mention “D911 PIVPETIY stockings and slwes, for a stocking whiolris too short in tihe foot can do ss much damage in this reaped as a. too tight shoe. BLOWING A FIRE Wihet could seem more absurz. thantoblowa. fire tnmsksli bum, and iihentobowacandlem pm; it out? Yet both these thing: and the reason is simple. are A suddonpuiioiwirldisioomuch for the small flame of the candle and there b not enough heat co In the iire iihere is more i. to the wind, and the cur- cri air carries more oxygen in- evmlbevn a/nd helps burn- it rent ART GEM FOUND . A statue oi a ;,.ung man, des- cribed by archeolcgists as one o! of Greco- ahnoer, perfectly preserved. slppronimatel iour ieet high and crowned with a wrest-h 0i laurel lean/m. . Grandmother's Quilt Patterns _ L SWAN WALFFIDWER. Out out applique pieces and sev as indicated on small diagram. Ar- miss applique and plain blocks H suggested on quilt diagram. Finish quilt with 3 inch border to match applique blocks, - . , Allow ior all seams when cut-Will llsperisl required ' i um yenis material n» mun-w gin-SSE? E gs g 5 l‘ s 5