jAtlfiUST 1. 1930 :17 1"rtr;_(:_r—u\t<i.0'l‘_'tjl;1;(_)WN ifacn seven _G_IJ/\l<n|/\~ Womank Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:-» Literature l l Can a Girl Find! ' Relax , No am l Mtg;- g, D h ) D Between A121." " ' Marriage? J lx and Grad” I I 4 t 6 l \ l i to t.» soon in blouses. as wcil. Louis or mukc-s effective use of ‘this in the blouse at the upper hr trio of Voguo sketches. If. w tussur, and its scnliolzeri for to cnc side and falls _ _. trtbot. The twczd skirt ‘tvorn Wlill i: l5 cut away at. each hip to 1t t Eifiquette Xlbbtfllll Q. What instruments are sufiic~' lent for a dance orchestra? A. A piano and two stringed in-i Sifliiilffills. . Q How are jellies eaten? A. With the spoon. ; Q. Whit is really required to bet in“ _ A Courage and sincerity; that is‘ ail. , 1r? t \ if Morning Smile “filly :1 very respzctablc man. and 11m his doctor advised him to fall" ‘~10 soif ho hesitated quite a long ‘while, because he had heard that rrtifers drank and used badi m. t 11st day he went out. after: to risk it, he got on quite‘ i he was unlucky enough to‘ to": ball in the way. He 1t it in dismay. stymied!" exclaimed his mo!" he exclaimtd, in- fill .' ‘Strong liquor never N» s my lips." EAR your sheerest clothes day after day the whole year lhmllBh. without the slightest fear 0f embarrassment . . . over. Kotex makes it possible. Kotex is the rbapol sanitary psd that is non-detectable. The corners l": rounded and rlagsered. There is “° awkward bulk. otcx dcodorizes, '*°°—so much more important on warm dgyg- ' Pg!!! and cool in warm weather lxotcx gives complete protection. It lbsorbs 1Q times its weight in moi!- "l". offering lightness . . . coolness -_~» perfect comfort. And disposes IfPfantly like tissue. Kotex Company > Canada. Limited, Toronto; Ont. Dainty frocks demand this inconspicuous sanitary protection show the blouse which tucks under- black crepe, too, has the surplice line ! ncath. lvfarie Bordes does not treat in its bodice, outlined by handker- each sido alike, but treats each side chief linen edged with Valenciennes equally well in the white crepe de lace. This surpllc: treatment ties in chine blouse shown at the right in lbows at the decolletage and the waist- the sketch. The opening is cut in a. iiine. On the right is a smart ensemble surplice line, which folds across one for the spectator of sports. of whitel side, and the scarf collar passing silk. combined with a Chinese rcti gracefully through slit-s, ties at the blouse which is treated with a broad cther side. Patous afternoon dregof diagonal stripe of mantle blue.- Sketch is by Vogue. : Do You Know Four _ Most Becoming Colors? _ BEIGE-Becoming only when it isi Pink and rose are shadcs of red, of of a. richnes that enlivens your col- I course. ' cring rather than matching it. | ORANGE-Becoming to this type: BEDWN-VBTY befioml-YIE 150 £1115 I if it does not have a sallowing effect} type in all of its soft. golden shades. l upon the complexion. But in shades BLACK-Not especially becoming 1 that are not too vivid for the person. Suggest navy blues and browns as a1 coloring of the wearer. the staple dark colors for this type] YELLOW-Becoming if the skin is instead of black. I fair. But not as becoming to this type GREY—Not becoming except in the _I of brunette as to the Cnstilian brun. salt. sand grcys and mousc colors ctte. sometimes designated as taupe, which GREEN-Becoming in the blujsh are greys bordering on beige. ; green shades, if they do not have a WHITE-Never becoming to olive sallowlng effect upon the 5km or dark skins. But a creamy skirt BLUE-Becoming, but-not. of espec. could wear creamy or ivory white. ial desirability. certain shades 0g a GOLD AND SILVER-Both be- certain blue-green, however, are very coming, but only in tho soft old met- becoming. ai tones. PURPLE-Becoming to this type fr. shades that are not too rich and heavy‘, but select shades that have not a sallowing effect upon your skin. v ORCHID-Becoming, but must al- ways be selected for its effect upon the complexion. BEIGE-Becoming only to the very Vivid Brunette Typo Dark hair and eyes. either fair or‘ clive skin, but coloring in cheeks tnafural or artificial». Select» your shades among the following colors to d with your intensit of I 3:55?” Y iiiltinstveiy colored shadcs of this RED-Extremely becoming in all GREY very becoming m an u _ l shades, governed by the intensity of coloring and vivacity of the wearer. warm, rose-tinted shades. BROWN-Becoming only to the vividly-colored examples of this type. BLACK—Very becoming. WHITE-Very becoming when the skin is fair. GOLD AND SILVER—Gold pre- ferred for the more vivid types. silver for the softer editions of this type. There are two other types, just in between the blondcs and the bru- "mes. that I Hm coins to tell you about in this leaflet. Then, if you have not, found your particular com- blnatlon of coloring in any of’ these. you will find it in a future wcck‘s leaflet which will contain all of the other types that there are. The demi-brunette is the name giv- en to the type with hair of the brun- ette and eyes of the blonde-dark hair and blue eyes. And the other deml-type. with blonde hair and dark eyes, is called the deml-blonde. The Deni-Brunette Type Dark hair and blue-grey or green eyes. Soft, medium shades desirable. Usually avoid rouging cheeks. RED-Wearable. but not quite as becoming to this type as some of the other colors. One certain shade of cerise, however, is indeed very be-' DEODORIZBS . . . l-Snfl .th . s t- fluzdypxoggtlm” b’ p. coming to the vivid. black-haired and blue-eyed edition of this type. z gg;'"i'zuu':"'h'p'l°“ ORANGE-Usually foo vivid to be becoming unless the personality and coloring of the wearer are intense 3-Korer fifln ls for lighter |to look forward to marriage as a sort of Elysium in which I could ‘all the work and worry and struggle and trials and tribulations of ti l ‘While it is Easy to Catch a Husband, it is Hard f0 Hold One, and the Woman Who Does it Has t0 be 0n Her Job all the Time," Declares One Who Has Succeeded—- “It's N0 Cinch” 1 “Vihen I was a girl," said an attractive woman the other day. tnake myself attractive to men and Just let my slump the balance of my life. , "‘Ha!‘ I would say to myself of a night as I y“ my hair up in curlers and rubbed in the cold n" and the skin food, and did my daily ciczeri, " '" of this torture for me after I am married. going to have the stingy hair and the saler complexion, and be just as homely as Gcd 1221a: ._.t: “Hum-um! I would say to myself at the t" g I count/ed my calories with the hungry tears dn» z ' - my eyes, ‘no more of this starvation bus rtcss, iii c. to keep a boyish figure, for me after I am married. Then I am going to c all the whipped cream and mayonnaise and chocolate creams and 8221, desserts that I want, and if I get to be a perfect 46 it won't make a. bit o. difference, for I'll have my man. -\..- " ‘And oh, me, and oh, my, won't it be perfectly grand not to have to b: always breaking your neck to please some man, and keep him interested and fascinated, and to have to be reading up on the subjects he is dotty over and that. you don't care a rap about?’ I would say to myself as I swal- lowed a yawn while attcmpting to hold a thrilled expression while some mar. mcnologucd to me about the stock market, or the grocery trade, or what cver he was tloitig. ‘How restful it will be to be married and have a hur- baud that you don't. have to jolly or keep amused and to be able to rear; the six best sellers because you like ‘em, and not something to improve your mind.’ "But alas. and alack. I hadn't been married very long before I dsmv- crcd that my nrtless and unsophisticated ideas about matrimony were all wet. I also CllSCOifllBd that while it is easy to catch a husband, it, is hard to hold one, and the woman who does it has to be on her Job all the time, and that there is no place between the altar and the grave in which she, can sit down and take it easy and feel that she is safe. | "That settled my delusion that, marriage was going to emancipate me from the permanent wave and the cosmetic Jars. For, you see, one of the rea- sons that my husband had picked me out as a wife was because I was a good looker, and it sort of dawned on me that if I failed to deliver the good: he might regret his bargain. “I couldn't soc that getting married had afflicted him with my astig-y mafism that would prevent his taking note of the feminine pulchritude that was always about him, and I had the hunch that if I let myself get fat and flabby and dowdy, and went about looking as if I were in need of a shampoo and a tnanicttre, he could but. compare meinvldiously’ with the snappy little flappcrs in his office and the lovely ladies he met out in society, and won- der what made him do it. “So I am still cutting out all the rich food I l.ke to eat and putting on‘ my complexion and dolling myself up when I would like to be ‘lounging; around in a kimono. and I have taken up in a scrious way woman's eternal problem of how to keep young and beautiful that I will spend the balance of my life trying w solve, because I realize that every wife has competition to meet nowadaysand if she can't do it, she is sunk. "And I smile when I remember that I once thought. that if a woman had put the comeiher over a man enough to make him assume her board bill and shopping ticket for life her work was done and she would never have‘ to make another effort to please him. I soon got. wise to the fact that youj can't fascinate a man once and let it go at that. It is something that you] have to do over again every day, like getting breakfast. I-le is just as hungry today for appreciation and understanding, and to be told that he is the most ‘ won-dcr-ful thing in the world as if he hadn't been fed on it yesterday. l "Believe me, I don't loll back and call it a day and knock off the work , of trying to keep myself attractive to my husband just because he is mar-| red to mc and has got to stand me. I don't want any man to stay with me I simply because he considers it his duty. I want him to stay because he wants; es, but. not in its too light shades as a rule. PURPLE-Very becoming in all of its heavier shades. flatter both the hair and eyes and are amenable to the complexion. YELLOW-Like orange. very be- coming in the exact, colors of the hair ORCHID - Particularly becoming only. to this type, save in too pale a GREEN-Is not especially becom- shade that docs not enhance the ing. Some soft, deep shades aret wearable. Attention for its sallowing‘ efIcct upon the skin. BLUE-Not. especially becoming. tThls seems to me to be such an ov- " erworked color in its becomingness to most types, that the few who are not V flattered by it should be glad to avoid depth of the eyes. GREY—Extren-icly' becoming to this type. BEIGE-Usually not becoming to othcr than very vivid editions of this type, and then not as becoming as grey. , BROWN-Jim, especially becoming it.) 1 as a rule. PURPLE—Fairly becoming in scft ‘ rich shades ff the skm ts very fair. ORCHID~Not especially becom- ing. GREY-Not becoming. BLACK — Becoming. but rather heavy for the personality unless lightened with lighter colored trim- ming. WHITE-Very becoming if the BEIGE-Fairly becoming and pre- skln is fair. ferable as n utility color to grey. BROWN-Becoming in the gold’ shades that flatter blonde hair. BLACK-Especially becoming t 3 this type. Although extensive wcarizr of black has to be judged not only l" its becomlngness to the complexion but by the size of the person. GOLD and SILVElL-Silver much more becoming to this type than gold. The Dernf-Blondc Type Blonde hair. brown eyes. Sslect shades according to intensity or col- or. Affect prints. and brocade rather than one solid color. RElL-Nof. becoming in any of its shades. including pink. Certain rose and cooler than cotton, yet absorbs 5 time: ss much. 4-In hospital: ...Kotex is the identical msterisl used by surgeons in Canada's leading hospitals. enough to stand it. Some burnt or-; ange and tomato shades are becom- ing. however. YELLOW-Not especially becom- ing to the coloring of this type, x°ga_5g¢fq]14(mydn|,fl7 simply because it is a color that has not o. great deal of character. GREEN-Very becoming in soft shades if the skin is fair enough so mwgfim I-IEM-ROID, the prescription of Dr J- 5. Leonhardt. is guaranteed t banish any form of Pile misery. I gives quick action even in old, stu‘. born cases. HEM-ROI!) succeeds hr cause it heals and strengthens ti affected parts and removes bio» shades are wearable if this type has coloring in the cheeks. ORANGE - Very becoming. but only in the shade that is the exact intensity of the hair. A lighter or- tinge cflcrs no contrast. and a more vivid orange kill-s the color of the ha" congestion in the lower bowel-ti ' ca e f ll . Oi it HEN-NA and BURNT ORANOI- mdldicin: theirs tilt’, “tin-tn Til; salves and cutting fall. Hughes Drug Made in Canada KOT€X Th Now hnltsrv Pad which doodorino that they will not have any sailow- in; effect upon it. this tvbe in all of its soft. rich abod- BLUE-Plrtfcularly becoming to browns. These colors sc'm to be the The most becoming shades for this type. as well as certain very golden Cc- Md- and flrurssts everywhere sell HEMROID with guarantee that‘ itncost you nothing if it doesn't eno a Pile smonu only ones for this type that really W l: e n ifs one of those ninety-in-fhe-shade days and you dorft know what you’d.1ike for lunch, just try a bowl of crisp Kfillflggss Corn Flakes. With cool milk or cream and a bit of fruit. You’ll notice new enthusiasm from your appetite and you'll feel better all afternoon. For Kclloggfs are extra easy to digest. They he] p you keep cool when. count amines KELLOGUS Corn Flakes are delicious for breakfast, lunch and supper. Ideal for the childrenh.‘ evening meal. And just try g bowlful when you wan! a bed-tiara snack. . Made of wholesome cons, one of naturtfs finest grain; ' Toasted. Crisp and crunchy. Always look for lhc rcd-aud-grccn Kellogg package. Oven. fresh in the inner-seal waxtitc wrapper. A! all gtvoccrs, Scrvgd by 1101815, Clfeleriru, realaunntv-wn dining-cars. Mada by kFu°G8 ill l-flfldfin. Ontario. The original Corn Flakes. to and because in his eyes all other women run a poor second to we I Friend Husband. laskhim if he is sure h ; faults. ~ one who does it 1n my precinct. i back to me- "Thereforc, I toil overtime at making myself pleasant and agreeable to N“ Id? Ifmmider it my dllil‘ as a wife to tell my husband of all his ‘has w hneeacvneqesogtéibtiytzlsrsrattz: brcai: that-bad tiews to 11m, Et-m-y ma" - r hzm and glad-hand him. and 1 And I maize my homebrev: 1 I .and so much to his taste, since I have the advantage of knoivinz Just what ' ihls little vanities are, that it tnakes the fiattertea of other women seem lweak and tasteless to him. ' "And I give myself the merry ha-ha because I evcr thought that as soon ' v-AY a5 1 8°! mEYTiBd I COUld 5ft down by the tva; ' I _ mun ‘when my husband wandered off in his or "So I saw that I would either have to lelse be permanently stranded, so I began really to rend and 5; Jake courses in this and that, and to tiiay the games my hushaixd pin keep myself mentally and physically alert and up-to-rlazo. It has r ' , work and worry and effort. but it has srtvctl me frcm irinf: a nztlcctcti tvifo I ‘ I If‘ he wants to talk, I am tlzcre to ltttn w», ‘YuPV-HZ him 1n the midst of his best story about how he put over a (1-51 w 8 but the cat out. or did he know th. t tl i"b~ ‘I cut a tooth. If he wants to go out at night I am ready to gI-ab fvfqvft g0, no matter if I nm tired and would far rather stay at home and m, Lit IYIIEZI“ am the so strong e and pci: rimsirs, and that OlfixlOfl he would always cattle‘ A little observation showed me the fallacv of this bciicf I saw that the’ ambztious men, the go-gettcrs, do not return to the m; and purposeless wives they‘ have left bsl-tmd, {generally link up with some other woman who is travclng iicir road, They keep going on kccp up Willi the ]7l"‘.['§,;5,(j11 g1- rm ti l’) . SOURIS NOTES i Messrs. Edmund and Cheste: lChevene, and Eugene Rooney haw turnccl to the United States after ymloymg a month's holidays ‘in soum and vicmicy" visiting friends and re- nations. l On Wednesday evening is very 511g. .Soc1al was held at the Exhibition Grounds 1n aid of the new 5t. M3115 ‘Church, the ladies of the Parish do- 111; the catering. The large crowd m , attendance heavily patronized the tlilltffellll refreshment booths and amusenzenta especially flu Bmgo vriluabie ptnzes wit‘ 111th away. It. 15 lmdersfdofl flhfii quite a large sum was netted Whifll Qies towards the building Wilt’ l‘€ many T? ; ILuicl. Bliss. Hazel Steins. of Boston, u. rived home on the 23rd to spend s. . ration visiting in St..."..~. 7.1x‘. F J. Casey. of Charlottetown, was a vistor to Souris on the 25x31, //» ,/\ Fly ii" F’ 32min \“ . _ tj], " g _ “Oh. marriage is a great career for n woman if rho doom’! v-~~.j.;.-;-__" Sign}. a 1,7,1. d ,.._:fr;_::m;n" concluded the woman, "but it is no cinch.“ DOROTHY DIX wank - r; I v _ x ' »~___. _--. “ s 1 *_..»-=u._._, Spray Whiz Fly Fume in the kitchen. Perfect protection against flies, roaches, mos- quitoes and other insects. Pleasantly perfumed. Harmless to food, humans and pets. Fume" tcessiul outdoor Bingo and Ice Cream ’