4, .,T § _. if A i i . ”7PAGEl'IIGH'l' ' 1'1"- mARi.m'i1rrowN __ ___.__,,__,___. N .g_6.193s 'QM M I 1 I l M \ i .t . Y '., Wamanfs Realm -.°- Social and Personal -.°-. Fashi ~; V.: .li . ~ f Vi il; _. ..,...,...~.......- 1 l. .-wr.;_ Ts....;.." I Htl lilil lf( :,i 1 l Iii* o l _ |.l .,».¢,.;_.2s qs .. r ‘ 'B ,v ¥Y§irIBl.lQLl!\.i 2-ar`='a»'.~,I»"-`rlHIl its best, Ei ‘-Y M MARIE AN'l`0INETTE’S v IAST LETTER FOUND Arrangements are being made at Buckingham Palace for the pre- A letter which is deélaied to be partition of the suite formerly oc- is remade into s brand new nest. i as ,' OUR. NIST rf Duke of Isnt. The gold will be I gift to the Duke and his bride _*A little home, and s lot of hope, from Welsh miners. One ounce " A bit.of paint and a. cake of soap; of gold is to be sent to London for And a run,-down place, fu' pest the ring, which will be made by craftsmen in the West End. A Hunting HoneYm°°l\ ` Let's buy an old house that is lt was learned on Monday that lonesome now, i ' the Duke of Gloucester and his' A house with a hedge _and an bride, Lady Alice scott, will spend "fi apple-bough, ' , a hunting honeymoon at Boughton . Could we find the paint, and stlie House, near Kettering. "fi hope, my dear, _ The Duke and Lsdy Alice have 7 and make it into our nest' this both given orders that their horse! tl-` year? should be cent to Boughton House '~ -Mary Carolyn Davies in readiness. ` Salk nt Bucklngilllm Plllco the last written by Marie An- _cupied by the Duke of York which " inette has been discovered the will be used by the Duke of if-.to , in ' itwbrary of Count Heinrich Apponyir Gloucester and Lady Alice Scott _.at Opponice, says a despatch from ,I after their marriage. .Prague It is supposed to be her The Duke will be attached YD farewell to Princess Elizabeth and the staff College at Camberley. Rnd to have been written in her cell for the first year of their married just before her execution. life the Royal couple will spend ___“I have been sentenced," she most of their time in Surrey. They "_ ys, “to a shameful death reserved have abandoned th idea of a -3;: or1minals,‘but so that I should separate London house for the 'Mxneet my brother again." present. .Before you put the wicker fur- zooo Invitation _allure away for- the sesson,.scrub ,..- weu with salt and water, using 'nie :sooo invitations to the I.;_£i`b soap. '1'he'sslt cleans and wedding include. invitations to stiffens the cane, and your furni- , ture will look like new. _ .I ' , e s g _ Be sure that our rch s `n is repaesentativui of the 10th 'Hussars Old Ooinrades’ Association -the Duke's regiment. The regi- ment itself is in India, .» Y no wi iz 7.:,,"`Tl>one-dry before you put it away.” The Weddmg Wm be “n “mmm” 7,:-if thfiu-ise it will mildew;-‘"8-nd its 2:-‘lolgice appearance will be spoiled. ' it ‘ . 1?; When you are dusting `rub s Evjitiic of the furniture polish into , $112* wrong side of your duskr; then ?° ‘Iold and dust. Your worktwiil not-_ smeared, but you will have a. ."iii% rfect polish. , O O 0 A resourceful woman told me the ~ ther dev that she had discovered 7. way of utilizing the old buttons has been swine mi: as buttons "lite now so stylish. She mints them with colorless nail varnish some- times, or if she 'wishes to have them pink or red she uses those colors. 4 4 o 0 e ,.,".!I'hose bread cmsts which sc- .§mii1ate with sandwich-making for-nbemadegooduse of.P1sco‘ "“ tlem in a. slow oven until they are anice brown, then crush with a xling pin and place in a glans jar, YB. be used to roll meat cakes, cut- lets and fish in before frying. "` O O O When you are dusting those dainty lampshades. do you use a " soft-bristle brush? It is the dust "'“li’iat rots the silk and destroys the ""'c`olor, and a cloth will not alto- "`“`§ether remove it. ROYAL WEEDDING PRDBIEM _,,,_,_A novel situation has arisen in ,__,_coiineciion with the invitations in Lord Provosts to attend the marri.. age of the Duke of Gloucester and ,_Lady Alice Scott. The choice of November 6 as the date of the wedding means that not one of the _, larger cities will have a lord Pro- _yost. The civic heads of Edinburgh, . ..Cv72Ss0W. Aberdeen, a.nd_Dundee all fall to retire at the end of this , '_-municipal year, which expires st .midnight on the 4th. The muncipal elections take plaos on the 5th, and the new Lord Provosts are not .elected until the end of the week. Invitations have been sent to the Lord Provosts and their wives, and there is some dubiety as to how to ' act in the circumstances. Conse- quently, the Lord Chamberlain is i bring consulted as to the wishes of ' the Royal couple in the circum- stances. Gold For Ring _ _The ` gold for the Royal wedding- ‘ ring was mined in Wales, as was the case at the wedding of the tary affair. The Duke himself will wear the !-lussors' uniform. and it . _ _ . __.__.is_ pmhablc that his father and brothers will also wear military uniforms. _Holiday for School Children 'Ilia children of England, Soot- lnnd, and Wales are to have a general holiday in November 6, the wedding day. The holiday is at the express wish of the King. NEW HOUSE FOB SCOTTISH-BOB-N SULTANA OF JOBABE Ass gifttchisscottishwifqin celebration of his 40 wears reign, the Sultan of Johore has presented her with A new and sumpuwusly appointed house in Singapore. _ The Sultans., who was formerly Miss Helen Bartholomew, oi’ Glas- gow, designed much of the furni- turg herself and the house named Woodneauk, is built on the lines of an Ekiglish country mansion, with the necessary alterations for a tropical climate. Much of the bronze work was designed by the Sultana, while she was in England six months ago, and has been carried out by a =Lon- don firm. The furniture was made by Chinese craftsmen in singapore. The entire house has the special distinction the Malays call "Ban- tosa"-repose and refreshment. The Sultan and Sultana will stay at this house when they come to Singapore for social events. RESTAURANT SHUFFLE BECOMFS A HABIT Do you do the "Restaurant Bhuffle"? asks a London (Eng.) correspondent. It is not a. new dance, or even an old dance under a new name, but whit rw-ses for the fox-trot, the rumbs,.the tango, and the waltz among many of those who nightly crowd the dance-floors of Mayfair restaurants. ' That, at any rate, is the com- plaint of tho leader of one of Londorrs most hizhly paid dance bands. We were talking about the com. ins busy dance season, and I had asked him what rythms will be F . vet sofneeacvs Morice A Nice comrtexuou i -'fnri nmol had tae WM to .Hill CelndellrhilY¢\iedus eeanetiee mimorir yr; 'ram-cw. ru scrxvl '"‘ latter grunts the-4llF°! `2“&.'.i*""'“‘”~‘5"fi§i’»”t " i VDW, AREWT S01) GLAD id) TR\ED LUX TDILET 5587? IT SURE HAS 'KEPT Ml FROM- GET" TNG' (GSMETK ' ii. 5: Outcome; of 5”.; on > Mlllllll U Annu' ',,,""""".,,,,,,,,,, ”‘° Di# ;§g_»_-_° V oriihlinn piness All Depends on the Attitude? Husband and Wife Take on V Wedlock I ll before hand and woman ay after mar- fs o;E Ei; tit iii A correspondent wants to whether or .not A marriage will who are madly in love before marrieg §§i§§§i§~ gaégigébg iiiiitiill 2;2§= "§és§ chmciest tum out. er ough of a. nor H88 uide to the marriages that um into little hells sem marriages that ed to go on the rocks within six months sail over peaceful ness to s golden wedding. We have seen dfathers display as little judgment in p g out their wives as their caliow grmdsons do. We have seen astute business' men and learned couege professors and dumb halfwils 1113138 W0 “UW “F9 °f ‘W1 m‘“"'i°3°5' And every day we see the divorced, who have just been freed from their matrimonial bonds, pdring their holds again in the matrimonial yoke. So what? Bo nothing. Of course, there are s thousand resso rings is bound to be unpredictable, One ever really acquainted with each other un 1-led. They may have made mud pies toge in the some block all of their lives and think of each other-'s disposition and tsxnperlment. But after marriage they discover that each have faults and foibles and peculiarities that the other never dreamed that he or she Possessed and that they are. in reality, just as much strangers as if they were meet- ing for the nrst time. How can Percival know that Annabelle looks like heck with cold cream on her face Olld her hair up in curl papers, and that she has fussy little ways thot lot on his Dervm, Ind that he will al- wayshsvewrunspoorsecmdtomlmml. _ . And how em Annabelle know that' Percival is going to turn from the perfect lover intoaportectgxiimnmrthetheiszoinetobecriticalot her cooking and sly things about her bridge that will send her to bed in tears or that he has a Yale lock on his pocketbcok and that she will have to pay for the presents he gave hsr when he was courting her by skimping on the housekeeping money? Perhaps not many men and women deliberately try to deceive those they many by assuming virtues and charms they do not possess, but we will do it. In courtship we all put our best foot foremost. The girl who wishes to attract a man puts on her prettiest clothes and sn extra daub of lipstick and rouge, and che is so sweet md amiable that butter wouldn't melt in her mouth, and she listens to him as if he were Old Man Solomon when he ex,pi-eased sn opinion. Same way with o man. When he wants tomake a hit with s girihc never comes to see her exC°Pt when he ist shaven and shorn md perfumed and dressed within an inch of his life, and he is all tenderness, gallsntry and devotion, and everything the Little Women says goes. Otherwise then' every woman knew there would certainly- holy estate. Butthemlinnlsonwhyit isimpmsiblctotellon the safe 'ideof the altar how afmerriage is going to tum’ out and whether the temperature of iovm is going tp remain so fever heat or go down to Subnormal. depends not so much on the party of the other Port as it does upon ourselves. th Ilbr in its last analysis attitude towani it, whether w or thrilled by it, whether our does it matter what kind of that matters is whether he Husbands and wives its purely s matter of tests end, alas and alack. we cannot guarantee our tutes md bccluso we like chocolate sundaes to- day be certain that we will crave them ten or fifteen years hence. Tastes change as wegrow older, as we grow more sophisticated, as we see more of the world, ss we broaden mir outlook. _And so it often hs thot the simple, pretty girl who was a perfect mate for the country when he married her is no mate at all for him when he becomes A successfu business er professional man. Nor does the wife always see in her husband, grown stodgy and fat, thc hero oi hei glrlish dreams. Perhaps, if the §r_uth were known, virtually every divorce is granted because husbands and wives have lost their taste for _each other. Worstof \l.l,we connoteventellwhenwemerryiiwcare in loveor not because so often what we feel is merely s pee-sing fancy or a tempor- ary infatuation that-eaves nothing behind it when it is gone. Bo nobody can tell whether a marriage will tum out s success or fail- ure. ‘We have to take our chances and keep our fingers crossed for luck. ‘ DORCYFHY DIX. utcome of a mar- an and woman are ey have been mar- eir infancy and lived ey know every quirk 52;” E535; hgggg it git all ei is very man and e or husband, at counts in marriage is our 8*wo¢ E-ev - EEE Elsie ia;gg t, whether we are bored by it it of paradise or a prison. Nor wife we get. The only thing |.-'° _ .-._ the winter. His "Heiress ..,...... ml C00K’S d f are concerned I d s o say the same old ance or rythm- the restsiirant shuffle! hs slid. is it not ironiosi tint so msn; We wmed Pumpkin. if you vw- of thaw people there is in mod nothing more to spired rythms lsnguid shuffle Of course, t wig; mv, tug but fer that to cooking your own. The dems bands do other ingredients will all ue the their most in- same in either case. We think you than s lazy, will like this blend of spices. Insid- round entally, the absence of s\igar_is-ex- he limited spice on pluined. by the use of sweetened condensed milk--a double-rich milk Marriage is a Great Gamble and Future Hap- ` ? /12 - ~ ‘ ,i " " ‘ u _ _ _ . f- Q., ‘ '1\ ` ~‘ ., -' » < r i. S. .- ~ ,S gk* ’ Y; w ,s .9 I 11.¢_11oU.slrw1FE .ma 7%/im facie -.°- Literature HAVE ALREADY USED ONE year ago this month, che Dionne quintuplcts received their first feeding of Carnation Milk. And Carnation is the only milk they have had since - using over 2,000 tall tins. Bottle days are over, but these precious babies still get their Irradiated Carnation Milk. The clay Carnation Milk first went into the babies' bottles, the com- bined weight of the Eve little girls was 54 pounds. Today it is over 103 pounds. All have teeth, wavy black hair, and large brown eyes, and they are the picture of health. All walk with a little guiding. They drink ` Qi/er QQQQ Tins of IRRADIATED Carmaiion Milk their Camation Milk ode of mugs, and ea: it on their cereal.; What a lesson for every mother in elite story! Not only that Irre- diated Carnation Milk is a safe, dependable, easily digested food for babies-but :be important ferr that children should go on gexting their Irmdiaecd Carnation Milk with its extra supply of vitamin D after bottle days are over. Ask your doctor for a Camation feeding formula for your baby. Write for two valuable free booklets - "Contented Babies” and “l0Q Gloriiied Recipes". Address Cami tion Co., Toconeo, Ontario) I 'l9°°iu§pV ¢»&r=¢_q THE WORLD'S LARGEST-SELLING BRAND OF EVAPORATED MILK = | -l--i -__-_----1 2 teaspoons cinnamon 3 eggs . 1 cup weetened condensed milk 1 cup water Unbaked pie crust (9 inches) Beat eggs slightly and add the combined pumpkin, salt and spices Blend the sweetened condensed milk with water and stir into pumpkin mixture. Tum into unbaked ple shell; place in e. hot oven, 450 de- grees F., for 10 minutes to set crust and brown rim slightly. Lower heat sharply to 350 degrees F., moderate and bake until a knife inserted in the centre comes out clean (about 30 minute longer.) Cool and chill the pie and serve plain or with whipped cream or ice cream. Chop- ped nutments may be added to the filling if desired, and it may oe bak- ed in individual tart shells, rather than as a large pie. For delicious pumpkin custards, turn the pumpkin mixture into wet individual custard cups instead of pie paste. Pace custard cups in a pan oi’ hot water and bake in a rather slow oven, 326 degrees F., until set; or steam over gently boil- ing water. (Time for baking or steaming individuel custerds, about 20 to 25 minutes.) Cool the cooked custards, chill, then tum out on glass serving plates, Top with u fluff of whipped cream and garnish the cream with chopped nutments, chopped candied Bible! ol' a spoon- ful of bright jelly. BTEAMED CARBUI PUDDING cup grated clrr0t cup grated potato 1 tempoon soda l cup brown sugar 1 cup flour 'A teaspoon salt ‘A cup milk 1 cup seedless raisins ‘A cup chopped citron Method:--Put the carrot and the potato through the food chopper separately. Add the soda to the po- tato. Sift the flour and salt over the raisins and citron. Mix all in- gredients together and turn into e. well-greased mold. Bteam for 8% hours: This pudding will serve 10 moderate-sized helpings. Serve with hand sauce. Hn-A SMART CLOTHES FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER Here's n snappy shirtwaist blouse that even s, novice at sewing can make. The buttons down the front flatter the youthful ngure and have a rather slimming edect for the more mature figure. Inverted pin tucks give a pleasing ilat effect to the hipline. Have your way about the sleeves; long sleeves finished with tailored cum or short culled sleeves. And last but not least-you’ll find it so inexpensive to make it. Bottle green wool jersey as the original is very smart for school, college. oifioe or ordinary dsy wear. Style No. 480 is designed for sues 14, le, 18 years. 86, 38, 40 and 43 inches bust. size 86 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material for long sleeved blouse. Price of PA'I'I‘iiLRN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 490. Bile ..................... ` ian \"\ 9 to do with the d ing in resteursn oneeeesoquples rythmssthe seine ot the floors has something h of real danc- Wedding Gown F or Royal Bride _ i tl. But the Lhuffle :firmly fixed that doing it an an nl- to such s tiring habit il DOW--lo popular during bit ancers oi May air h uld all the latest times but n ern cart most empty floor* rumbs. in which sugar has been blended by e. special process. The consistency of the sweetened condensed nilk is largely responsible for the particular virtues of this pie. 1 cup cooked, strained pumpkin $6 telwodn salt $6 teaspoon ground ginger $6 teaspoon cloves l .........,-.... .................. Name ns...-...--.... . ......~»....».. .......................» `~ FOR COUGH5 ;:$\ -cousin ma". .- . _ . “"°”“”‘s"'“° and an cough "oh, th ‘ » ° . ....-» “f “"‘- Quickly, at One . nm vaio; siqimm, ' » I genera-films .io Fourth the Costil .am md.” lieu-urns: uscosuqu nun' PM ~ 'mt mb “un Tbcundsefhemewlvuei’isu;xef:lvéil_d smith how he drseuvo es; whether he "1 13°' consumsihor hid °’ differet iohl, etc. ‘rhesmith me Job done, lil 0hll‘lU hlll th” hsilow. Then Ill ¢l'lDt. YOU CID I0 sségé Ellie? 2.. i" in tits r s itll? .stil l§§a ounces of ew stu Img mad: o ...ai°'.ii..‘§i‘“a' . It's no trouble- at mn remedy. ron love its in loclming the .si ...oa¢""i°' "“o%iI.B$,» ml g to be uw universally I 1. ~ is e compound containing Nor- in concentrated form, well en throat mm- Y itll; ti 335%? g eg '3 s§ Egagggz Est 8 i g. mmmoisumynnhmips wlfewemtebmto oldfrimdnvhosk- ri Ritdollllt 2 § 5 it _ ..~ _ 1 _ i i it 5 ,-3 iii as iii rj. SE; it i. Malhielluls §§ ' f sf ` if $1' ' ~ 11 Setup A » hmm All Haven e -~ r Ketterflavor - For lim the little touch oi flavor that makes cakelt P04 dlngs end other good things eo eat. decidedly honor-use Silver. Seal Pore Flevorinl