.... ‘and. w¢-.¢..--.,~...v...... .. .. .- - ti’ all‘ i . ‘l, ' L a l n. finds A‘, . .' r1 ,7. .1, Y; R i M. f; ,1 I? 5r V ilr. .. ., f‘ .. , F?! c. l‘! )r. l ~ ti’ i‘ ' \ . _, .5 ._ . l. 1 tn} l ,§ , . i} w, x i § I f r5 i.‘ F‘. w h : 1 t M ' K ‘w i. u. i .‘i ll‘ .. i 7 “,1 Z 7' h knit‘ if -. i.‘ F: 5V H3." ‘ f \_ , ‘ i.‘ ‘u. , k3. a ' 1;; i It,‘ x‘- l: s g l‘ f. a g. . . ‘Ii 1,; fol ‘i? flag.‘ 11111111.. yu- Jug‘)! r 5-‘. Jtiw q l. pr’ t’ _' WY,’ 4‘ (Hi I.’ It, n’ ) :'> d’, PAGE EIGHT For 771a Cook l [ASPIO JELLY A LA CHICKEN Free from fat one quart of liquid in which a chicken has been cooked; add two stalks of celery, hall an onion, two cloves, two sprigs of pars- ley, the thin yellow paring of half a lemon, one package of gelatine (two ounces), softened in one cup of cold water, and the slightly beaten whites of two eggs with the crushed shells of several. Crush the celery, onion and parsley, that toe juices may be dissolved into the liquid. Stir constantly while heating the whole to the boiling point; let boil five or aix minutes, thcn draw to a cooler part of thc range to "settle." Wriiig a piece of doubled cheese cloth out of boiling water and spread it over a colander sct in an earthen or agate bowl. Set a strainer above the l Cheese cloth to catch the scum and shells that would clog the cloth. i Plans have been started for the growing of hemp on more than 4,- ' O00 acres in Colombia, and it is hop- 0d to produce 1,000,000 bags a year. VAvoRun ‘F Womank Realm -:- Etiquette Iylcbertalall Q. Whose place is it to speak first when meeting on the street, the man's or the Woman's? A. The woman's. Q. How is the formal introduc- tion phrased? v A. The phrase, “Mr. Jones, may I present Mr. Brown?" is always cor- rcct. Q. Should the person whose health or happiness is proposed at a banquet rise when the tout is drunk? A. N0. Housewife - “You look strong enough to work and cam your liv- ing." Tramp-"I know, madam, and you are beautiful enough to go on the stage, but evidently you prefer the Simple. happy home life.” P. S.—l~le got the sandwich. (Unit/ed Press Stat! bright hands on the wheel of a. three phases of the winter glove si tints have it their way for daytime do not match at all. If they do not Just the gloves. side, are the thing. Thcrc is a cuffed short evenin longs to the 1830 dress, but if your calls the days of pirates and bucca Paris Styles _ ' By MARY KNIGHT PARIS. October 17.—iU. PJ-Pale hands besides a. dull purse; sport roadster, a. wispy, cobwebby hand on the shoulder of a. black tuxcdo—this trio describes at least The belges and tans and greys with old blues and faded rose 0H Betting deeper and deeper in the same shade of hop to a quite difiezent shade, but always a good semi-neutral tone, But turn on the bright hues for sports-Ln all the accessories, And to be properly set off they should have the neutral blwkgrmmd- Bum‘? 01'5"!!! Eliiuntlets with dark brown inside hands are splendid for driving, and for golf the ones with green leather hands, inside, and bright yellow crocheted backs, out. back against itself as to be only wrist~doop_ /¢J-—~ Correspondent), tuation. with purses that match or that the latter sometimes they keep g glove of white giacc, so turned This little mitten be. nlifld is pretty active, it also m. neers. side have brought welcome everywhere. And_Modess is so entire provides perfect pro- tection always ; that is why women every- where are turning to it with enthusiasm. Modes: Compact (gently compressed) is designed for special occasions when less thickness is desirable. And re1ncmber——Mod¢“ Costs No More! PERFECT COMFORT watt/z. 6 50ft. fluify filler-rounded proof backing that prevents penetrative absorbency——a tapering contour that makes 1t 1nconspicuous~tbese features of Modess Modcss ’ . mp4,»... | Iluquunlu Modcss l 5——a special moisture- comfort co women ly dependable too! It ‘l3 .i DIDN'T KNOW WHY TllF. CHARLOTTETOWN cusnnn-iN i a ' ' ._. . . i .- . ________ _ :- Fashions -'— Litcrfltlllrel. Mother- , Ilnllo .35."... t Dorothy Dvt .... l1... Love . loflllo Our Assumption That Mothers and.Daugh- ters Are Always in Perfect Accord is Not Borne Out by the Facts-Often There Exists Between Them an Antag- onism That Only Separation _ . ' Can Cure We are in the way of thinking that Illi.’ tie between mother and daughter is about the closest bond that can exist between any two human beings and that just by nature they have an intuitive understanding and sympathy with ouch other. Especially do we think that Just because a mother has been a Blrl 1161101! and gone through all the experiences of alrlhood and womanhood she will feel a peculiar tenderness for her daughter and know how to make a. 00m- panion and confidante of iicr. This, ho\vever, is for from being the case. For there is an antagonism, as well as a solidarity, of sex, and the very fnct that mother and daughter are both women with feminine opinions a-nd desire! and impulses makes them get 7P0“ @5431 M319" _ _ nerves and clash, as they never do with their sons . .. ’ u and fathers. Of course, most mothers love their laughters dearly. So do most daughters love their mothers dearly, but for all of that, from the time Angelina begins to think of herself as grown 11D W the d“? Sh” l! 5' bride, in most families there exists a sort; of guerrilla warfare WWW! her and her mother. It is one of the things that we never tell, because it goes against all sentimental tradition, but there arc mlzhtl’ "W 11mm‘ ers and daughters who get along peaceably together. This explains why mothers are so anxious to get their daughters mar- will have their houses to themselves with no other female sticking her fingers in their pics. At a. wedding there is never and difficulty 1n dis- itinguishing which is the mother of the bridegroom and which is the mother-of the bride. The lady bathed in tears is breaking her heart because her son is getting married. The smiling lady, who looks like the cat that has just eaten the canary, is gloatingly witnessing her daugh- ter's nuptials. ' And one o: the reasons why girls marry is to get away from mother and mother's tyrannies and mother's QLlCSLIUIIHHlYC and mother tzeating one as if one were a fcebleniindcd illlJllE who hadn't enough Intellig- ence to come in out of the rain and to get the right to arrange one‘s furniture as one wants it and to go and conic without having an argu- ment. about it and to use dailies instead of tablecloths if one so desires. Furthermore, it is observable that llULlllllg strengthens the affection between mother and daughter and stimulates their admiration for each other as does separation. Every woman loves her daughter beiiifl B3561‘ she gets married than she did before. Every girl is Ionder oi’ her mother and understands her better after she is married than she did before. It is her married daughters that a mother quotes and holds up as models of perfections, never her single cues. Before marriage a girl may think her mother's ways and opinions antiquated, but after marriage he‘: guide and prop is "Mother says this" and "Mother does that." It is also a fallacy that mothers have an instinctive understanding of their daughters. 1111s is never the case unless the daughter happens to be a replica if the mother iii taste and character. If the girl has been cast in a different mold she remains a. bafiling mystery to which he": mother not only never finds the key but which is a. never-ceasing irrita- tion to her. Mothers seem to think that nature should make their daugh- ters rubber stamps o.’ them, and when this doesn't happen they resent it. 1f mother is a beauty it moi-Lilies her to death if Angeline. is homely. If mother is gay and frivolous and fond of society, she has no patience with Portia, who is serious-minded and studious and. who lothcs balls and parties and who has o. high brow instead oi dancing feet. If mother is a clinging vine who considers that the first duty of woman is to annex a. good husband and hang onto him the balance of her life, she thinks Emily is queer and a little horrid because she is crazy about being in- dependent and insists on going out into the world and earning her own living. When you hear a mother pathetically complaining that her daughter has been such a disappointment to her, don't jump to the conclusion that Social and Personal - iii ’ The Pendulum Swings , People who have drifted to low-grade “pri¢e" i988 are coming back to good package teas agaln and there's a reason. "A pound of “KING COLE," said a lady customer to her grocer recently: And she continued “l have been using a lower priced Bulk tea, but have found that a pound lasts my family just eight clays while a pound of " KING COLE " spends for fourteen days, and bc5id6$ gives us tea we enjoy." WOliTl-l voun PREFERENCE "v0.11 L11...- .1...- Paw..." ried. They are looking foxwvard to a. season oi restfulneas when they i ive habitat and that it is safe upon it, so the mother cannot understand that there is a new world in which women have learned how to take care of themselves and that the girl who works side by side with men all day is in no more danger from them and has no more need of n. chaperon in the evening than she did in the morning. Of course, in the end, mother and daughter do wine to understand each other, but it is a pity that this fundamental affection which exists between them should be marred by so many quarrels, so much bickering. They miss so much oi’ sweetness and ‘beauty, so much that would be a comfort and sustaining to their souls. For there is no other relationship in life that is so lovely as that of a mother and daughter who are in Perfect accord. DOROTHY DIX. What the Fablllonablea ore/Wearing Illustrated Drecilaklng lnqon Furnished With K701715118!!! i ' 8y Annabella Worthington 1pm.. neckline ml! b; finished with hon 1! desired. - And it’: surprising bow unity It can be made. and at a oubltlnflal saving foo. 10, 18, 20 years, 30, M, 40 and (I inches bust. size 36 requires 8% yards of SI- lach material with 2 yards of bind-i ing. Besuretoiillintheelnoftho pattern. Bend stamp: or coin (coin preferred.) pi Price of pattern it cents. N0. 275. llh on uolnau I0 unnuan:au-uunonuunucnolu N B1210 "nan-nun"- u-uununnanolo Street Addreel City o-oolllllollllllelilllll Btlti srniudaaooir scuoor. Following is the report for Aug. ust and September:- Grade 1X-— (Sm-l, 1M5 I00!- Grade IX (Jr.)—1, Eldl. Bernard. I Grade VIII-i, Elizabeth Gillel- pie. Grade v1-1, Duncan Maclieod; a Oliver Cole. Grade V-l, Hazel Meek; I, R0- becca Orr; 3, Thelma Paynter. Look at this charming slender . mods 1v-1, Verna Hamel; L model. It is cleverly fitted throuah Archie ole; 3, Della. Mcthleeon. the bodice and the liipline, tapcrins Grade III-l, Alva Joet. info a nice comfortable flaring hem. Grade 11-1, Henry Meek; I, Prod It's absolutely “ lmeath the Paynter; a, Joseph Harding. new silhouette frock, if you wish to Grade I (a)-1, Borden Mocha; look slim and youthful. z, nin-ry Locke, It is shown in crepe de chine that Grade I (b)--l, Marion M16800. wears for ever and a. day in spite of Grade I (tn-l, James Payntor; I,’ the wash tub, and is Just lovely in Wilson 1mm; 3, Leigh 001e, peach-pink shade. The hem and ‘Reuben-Mamie M. Mill. CAN NEVER [world-lemons writer on women's problems] sAYs DOROTHY DIX g ."BROKEN ILLUSIONS BEMENDED” ' 0U GIRLS AND WIVES who long to win love and hold it-llvo up to a. man's IDEAL! “It's a deep need of men's natulc to idealloe a woman-to think of her as more delicate, mom exquisite than himself. the girl- has smashed any one or all of the Ten C- its into smithereens. Nearly always it merely means that the girl is different from her mother and doesnt want to do the things that mother wants to do. _ The fight between mother and daughter never raged so actutely as it does now, and undoubtedly the conflict between these two, who really love each other but who hurt each other so cruelly, is due to the tact that mothers are making a last effort to force their daughters lntothair own holds instead of their having the ivisdom to see that this can never be ‘Jone and that if‘ they are to licip their daughters they must help them _nto developing their own individuality. Mother still makes "svhat I did when 1 was a girl" her standard 0t conduct, and shc worries herself sick and drives Angelina frantic be-' cause Angelina will not follow it. She docs not see that Angelina never i would have been that way bccauzic, whllc mother is little and dainty and _ Amorous, Angelina is big and husby and courageous and she could no more adapt herself to mother's ways than she could get into the eighteen- inch corset mother wore when she was a girl. | Nothing is more tragic than the old hens who hatch out swans and then have hgystcriss every time their ilcciglings go near the water, in which they are sure the yoiuigstcrs will be drowned. i And nothing is more pitiful thanthe anxiety of the mother who sees her daughter rushing, as she thinks, to destruction and who tries in vain to restrain her. But Just as the hen cannot understand that water ls the swans nat- PALE AND SICK, BUT So she want from bad to worse. But Dr. Williams’ . . . “Don't lot a fadcd» ‘hubby shoulder ribbon break charm’! IWH" “Don't let the ‘little’ things-cam- less, unfcminina details-spoil your lovely effect! VSUCH a ‘small’ offense against deintinQ u e faded shoulder ribbon peeping out . . . frayed lace ed as it might be. Such thing: an than rob till clip my gum mended. “I gyou all to do visible when you llft / upyourarmvmnilk elipnotsooolouo-freeh you of all lllualon In ‘Mo’ cyan! ,.,,,,,,, W, do", “And broken mu! "us, M, d“, a one can never be these two very simple things. ~ l. Buy the loveliest, molt oxqulnlu llm] gorio you can. v 3- :20p it always colour-huh, bnutlu] “JUST knowing your underthingl an lovely does something to you! 1g 1mg“ you FEEL feminine and charming. And when you feel so, you ARE! “ ‘But how caawekee delloatohngem' ' fresh and colourful?’ p girls of ten say to mo. ‘Frequent washing leaves it so faded and worn-looking.’ “It is true that ordinary ‘good’ soaps take sway the Pink Pills (ionic) brought her back to health. “w?” ""1 ll" ‘A FEW W." "o. ca" h . ‘ h cliamung new loolr of 5m,‘ lump," u H ‘lager! I wasénar- "l bioufl. ‘lliigselliar o3; rme, is: ‘kakunwkklylf ’ n ," _ . o ' ' ' girfctmfffnffinjffl myself ifiillh" lufiolgluby 0mm‘ hm‘ Theeewonderful LLZ£.""'"" m“ 1350,"! flfllflng for (Sm Mm FM 11,, 15mm, "u" eke: are elpacially gm; 1:33’: lmcclomnd fi-vlbllllfl the tinuc: in! msdewpreeerve COLOUR and NEWNESS, . . ldraftofalrklndlaa "Amy AT g .y "month m. hum flrc. The result ialunlwql OMB‘ m“ V"? 51m- warcnts, a1 that time, hanh_bmulpu l, A Secret of Dainty Fqglninlgy ROUNDINGS u“ MID Si"? F011 confidence 1h ii le - ' i . - - I ihiidfidlfmi“ ‘i’??? ""_..'""..;::':::.'.i.':r.':.':c: w,,,.---- ifiii-‘éiiifiiffiiiiiiiiiilfiiftiii; pulel If l we! upstairs phnuign {gr iiinnmlf i’? m: "Rifl- lhi garment uttnly “an u kept w" lovely with Lux", “ruched” m 333"‘ ‘albkbrtsulk brought about Don't Put oil this w.‘ ha", m‘ chmni"! Churn he Inca 1,001. . Down“! DIX P- y r. Williams’ Pink decision. Be sure to i ‘ . F lly time unwind i>'n-. _ -- ~ - . "Y 7 < girlie hey Dr. Williams’ l add L]: om’ ii-Lafiiollifi ’.'T°£§,".f §Z‘§,',{,,"f" Y," n»: ‘ ‘ W" ‘MM- I-wua. hum om ' ...~ Btyla N0. 27B I: designed IQ‘ 1Q . ,/