ocllOlsllltilzfrllozo ' Womais Reqlyg . I Tl-lE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN -:- Literature 1 Pacer-seven- What the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressrnaki ng Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern ' By Annebelle Worthington i sheer velvet, The back of fitted bodies h“ 1101-1. zontal tucks across centre back at waistline that creaie a slight swathed movement at either side. The neck- line is collarless with deep V-shape at front, rounded at back. Sleeves fitted- with darts have turnback flared cuffs of plain velvet in har- moriizing tone in the lighter shade. The piping in deeper shade of plain canton crepe also appears in belt. ' The flaring skirt concentrates ful- ness at back which dips its hem. .A Parisian dress that you can copy A superb new m0del ivith peplum flOllDCO Nil-Ii emphasizes thg gmgt higher placement of wastline chooses plum tones in printed shimmering for a small expenditure, and about two hour's time. even if it is your ifirst experience at sewing, will in- i stantly appeal to ‘the thrifty wom-_ n an. Style uoJzosa is designed in sizes ' 1 l8. l8 years. 36. 38. 40 and 42 inches i bust. l Plain. sheer velvet in black or ‘botwe green is very smart. Silk crepe in Ensign B112. Ever-y glade green canton crepe, Java bPOWTi icrepe satin and crepe Elizabeth in Goya red are fascinating combiriaf tions. Pattern price 15 cents. Be sure to fill in siu of pattern. Address Pattern Department. The New Fall and Winter Fashion Magazine is 15 cents. but only l0 cents when ordered . with a pattern. ‘ -o-o.----.--....--o-o...-so.-o---on.- Name _ Street Address \ 0oeoolasolalllasalsaaaansaacsalaallli 31W State Milady Beautiful IIIAIIAIL BEAUTY QUESTIUN SANSWEBISD L Lemon Skin Lotion _ Dear Miss Leeds-In what propor- tion should I use lemon Juice glycer- in and rosewater for the skin? (2) I Man Jumps From Bed, Feels Gas 0n Heart "Stomach gas pressed so hard on my heart I had to_get up nights. I began using Adlerika and have been entirely reilevedfl-R. F. Krueger. Adleriks. relieves GAS and sour stomach in TEN minutes! Acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, re- moving old poisons you never knew were there. Don't take medicine which cleans only PART of bowels. but let Adlerika give stomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feell Hughes Drug 00.. Ltd. 'Kayser"s new “ Slendo ” Heel Silk Stocking g $1.50 PAIR “ "Slendo Heels " aaaaow cage narraamo Just a Ilanse la was! "M l\ is Paris inspired. There's III‘ m flg of pQfl ehie about the narrow heel that captivates- Yet, despite the slender lines. it completely protects the HMO ‘MI ION’. I lllVIOI $1 . crimson wuolrr CIIABLOTTITOIN Moore o McLeod Ltd. have short curly hair and it used to gllsten, but now it looks dull. What could I use to make it more glossy? (3) How could my girl friend cure her blackheads and fiat feet? HOPEFUL. {newer-You may mix one ounce of lemon juice, one ounce of glycerin and four ounces of rosewater to use as a mild bleaching lotion for the skin. (2) Massage your scalp and brush your hair for at least. ten min- utes every night and morning. Keep your scalp loose and flexible. Once or twice a week apply a little warm oil to your scalp and massage in thoroughly with the tips of your fingers. Us a good liquid tar sham- poo and rinse your hair free of every particle of soap. Give your hair and scalp an air or sun bath daily. (3) Blackheads are oil glands obstructed by the natural oil of the skin, dust. powder, make-up, etc. cleanse the face with a good cleansing oil or cream to remove surface dust and make-up. then wash with warm water and a mild soap. ' Rinse well. Apply a towel wrung out in hot water and steam the lace for several sec- onds. Gently Dress out the larger blackheadsgwith the finger tips cov- ered with a clean cloth. Bathe the face afterward for several , minutes in hotboric acid solution, which ls made by dissolving one heaping tea- spoonful of boric acid in one pint of boiling water. Allow it to cool before using. Dry the face and apply a little of the following salve to the At bedtime , [of _Dr. Hamilton's Pills. They flush out the system, keep it free from poisonous wastes. make the bowels - Socia . / . Not just blending- l but skillful blending IT takes years of training to distinguish in vari- ous teas the qualities which, blended together, give per- fection. The tea expert must know thegcrops of all the famous tea gardens; the ef- “ feet of the weather and the season of the year on each and every picking. Then to mix these in proper propor- tionisthemostdifiicultprob- lern of all. Perhaps that is why the flavor, fullness and strength of King Cole is so rarely found in any other tea. As you khow, King Cole is unique. You willjoy King Cole CoEee too stubborn blackheads and leave’ on overnight: One teaspoonful precipi- tated sulphur, two teaspoonfuls pow- dared starch, two teaspoonfuls zinc ide; four tcaspoonfuls pctrolatunl. Mix well into a smooth salve. In the morning wash the face with warm waiter and soap. Rinse in tepid water and finally with a cold, and dry the skin, using a little friction. Paflon a mild astringent. such as witch- hazel. Repeat the treatment several times a week. Wear specially fitted shoes with arch supports, prescribed by a foot specialist. Exercises are sometimes helpful a.o:l LOIS LEEDS. Use of Cold Cream Dear Miss Leeds.-Will the con- stant use of a good cold cream on the face tend to darken the complex- ion or encourage the growth of hair on the face? MISS R. A. Answer-You are safe in using a well-known reliable with advantage every day to keep the skin soft and lubricated. Use a mild skin tonic after removing the dream before you apply your face powder. (2) Nt, it will not encourage the growth of facial hair. LOIS LEEDS. ~ For The Cook BEETS FOR WINTER USE Use half water and half vinegar (or less); use whole spices to taste, and 1 cup brown sugar to l quart liquid. Method: Boil beets lu water till tender. Boil liquid separately. Skin the beets and place in sterilized jars. Cover with boiling liquid and seal tightly. Aged People Need Laxative Medicine With old age nature's forces slow down. Old folks need the assistance active and aid the stomach. To men and women past middle life Dr. Ham. ilton's Pills are of wonderful benefit. To keep regular. full of pep. in good aPifli-s, these vegetable Pills will prove aboon. Sold by druggists. “A GREAT TIINIB.” SAYS lus. RUSSELL After Taking Lydia B. Plnkham‘: Vegetable Compound ‘ P.l.l.' Ibnwiek. 0n “I am taking Lydia Piakhm ‘d?’ m‘ brand of coldi cream on your face. It may be uscdi l and Personal -:- Fashions H011 H81! m ‘Dorothy no. l."::r::'=.- for Life v A7179" It Takes Courage and Skill in 0ne’s Job, Deter- mination to - Endure Despite Discourage- ' ments and the Ability to Make and Hold Friends to Face Life and Conquer it ’ I A woman writes me: "I am a widow with four children that I must. bring up alone. How can I fit them for life?" Well, I should say that after you iave taught them to fear God, speak the truth, deal honestly and keep themselves clean. inside and out, the most important thing is to instill courage into them. To be brave is to be happy and successful. Cowards are not only miserable; they are failures. because fear paralyzes our energies. There are many men and women who have brains, who have talent, who are not lazy, yet who never achieve anything in'the world Just because they were too tlmit even to try to realize their ambitions. ‘ Elo I would teach children that life is s gay ad- venture and not a long, drawn-out lamentation. I , would teach them that it is fun t/o fight and work for - - - what you want, and-I would keep them from forming the self-pitying habit as I would from forming the dope ha bit, for one is Just as deadly a vice as. the other. I should make my children feel that to whine and complain is tr. be yellow through and through. I shouldn't weaken Johnny's morale by moaning over him because he couldn't go to college or have a sport car and spend his days playing golf when he wasn't tearing around the country breaking the speed laws. I should keep ever before him the fact that about 90 per cent of the men who are running this country and who have yachts and Rolls Royces and palaces and things were poor boys who began life just as he has, and I would impress on him that the door of opportunity is Just as wide open now as it ever was. 1 And I wouldnt weep over my poor, dear, little Mamie because she hadi to stand behind a counter instead of before it. I would tell her how lucky‘ she was thatshe lived now when girls can go out and be independent and self-supporting and earn the money to buy their own frillies instead of being a miserable, dependent ,p0or relation who was nothing but ari unpaid ser- vant as she would have been in her grandmother's days. And I would make hcr sec that the life of the working girl has a lot more thrills and kicks and beaux in it than that of the society girl and that it gives her ten times as good a chance to marry well. Then I would teach my children good manners. which will carry them further than any one thing in the world, for good manners are a letter of credit that LS honored at sight wherever one goes. Of course, a man may gargle hLs soup and spade in his food with his knife and still have the high- est moral principles. Of course. m uncouth exterior may mask a heart of gold.- Of course. a woman may be rude and brusk and still have a noble nature. but the trouble is that most of us are so rebuffed by the rough outside of ill-mannered persons that we don‘t bother to find out what ls inside of them. ' ‘ ‘ i I should not want my children to suffer from this handicap. I should know‘ that they would have to "sell" themselves to every human being with whom they came in contact and that nothing would help them to do it. so much as good approach. For the people we like to have about us and to do business with are those who have been drilled into the niceties of conduct until they have become habit. those who are courteous and cordial and who always say and do the gracious thing. Not without reason are the villains of novels and melodramas always depicted as having suave and polished man- ners. They carry with them a. magic that none can resist. Then I would teach my children how to get along with people. I would begin making social contacts for them in their very cradles and how to play with other children without quarreling and fighting. I would teach them how to give and take, how to control their tempers and their tongues and how to consi"er the other fellows rights. ‘The ability to make friends is one of the greatest assets in life. It is the very foundation stone of success, because people will do thlnil 101’ ill 1186i"!!! they like us that they would not do for us because it. is our due to. save our lives. Most of us go to some particular store not because it clfries s- beilifll‘ 11M of goods than another. but because the proprietor is so 8811B lblfi when W9 meet him or there is some particular clerk who takes trouble to please us. And by the same token we pick out our doctors and dentists and lawyers, not because they are headliners in their professions but because they are pleas- lant to deal with. Also. in teaching my children how to get along with people. I would know l had taken the best possible way of providing for their marital happiness. For the real reason that so many husbands and wives fight is merely because they have not been taught how to gumshoe around each other-‘s peculiarities instead of bumping into them. Nine divorces out of ten could be saved by Ithe judicious use of a little tact. and diplclmlcl’. flllmnd Wll-h- l “he'll amount of boloney. I would teach my children how to turn out a good Job. I would study them from their infancy up for the trace of some talent or aptitude W" would give me an inkling of what nature intended them to do and then I would bend their whole education toward developing them along the line of least resistance. I would try to see that my round pegs didn't get into square holes and then I would try to make them fit, because this is the day olexperts and only those who are trained to some specific thin: "l4 ‘WW "Gui" ‘km ""5 craftsmanship in it can hope to succeed. riiisuy, 1 would teach my children not io be qultwrl- Pram the time they were tiny tors 1 would make them finish whatever they started. no mli- I ter how trivial it was, for this would form in them the habit of carryng or) that almost invariably wins the battle at last. It is the man who never knows when he is beaten who cannot be downed by milfoflunt- M4 °°'“’°"°‘Y i‘ la the man who gives up when the sledding gets hard who always goes down in defeat. i I There are times when we all get diacourlded. times when we STOW delihly sick end weary of whatever we are doinl. HIM-B Whf-‘fl "6 l"! m" we ca" bear no more. and then whether Lady Luck turns her back on us or kisses us on both cheeks depends on whether our mothers have tausht us to did in find hold on or to throw up our hands and fill"?- These are some of the rudiment-bf! W985 1 511W“ “uh chum” u I were trying to flt them for life. DOB/OT?” Dix- A Morning Smile |l "Dear Bin-l regret to inform you that my rent is overdue. Please re- mlt same by return of poet." A day ortwo later Meanly received Meanly was an impatient landlord. this reply: and when the rent from a certain iendant was two dais overdue bl sent the oflender this letter: "Dear Sin-I don't know of any _ reason why I should ply Your rent. I can't dvei-iw my owe." Efiquette ‘ Byliobflrflllna ‘ I . Q- B it ever proper at the theater to begin putting on ones wraps be. fore the llil. curtain falls? A. No: this is very discourtcous. if necessary to leave before the curtain falls in order to take a certain train, leave very quietly and then put 0n the wraps attha back of the theater. Q- When eating vegetables or any- thing not requiring the use of the knife for cutting, in which hand should the fork be used? A. The right hand. Q- Is it Umlwr to refer to 0110's some as his "residence"? 5-‘ N0; say “house? Household Hints By Roberta bee. varnished Wall Paper To clean varnished wall pupal". mclt B bl!‘ 0f SEHOW soap and pour into a Dan of warm water. _ Apply with a soft whitewash brush. Do not hole the brush too wet. The Perrolator Top A new percoiator top should be tempered ilefore using by placing it in cold ivaicr, letting lt bgll ‘QIQWII,’ and then alloying it to cool slow-Li". sioéiiings When mending holes in children} stockings. always weave the thread around the hole before beginning to, darn. It stays the whole mend. TOURING BACTERIA LONDON. Oct. i9—(Brltish United Press)—A package of bacteria is be- I use it instead A 0f HE mother who wrote l ihc lincahovic kiicw what \\.i5 best for luby. lil the nlmlcrn up-to-dtitc llllitCfillfy illlil luhv hospitals they use "Ynssiiilc" Petroleum Jelly constantly. i ‘l rial: any iiursc or doctor. Tilt)’ | will tall you that it is wurc i lild healing aihl shuul be i kept fll\\’;i)'S at hand iii lllC zlurscry or bathroom. iGct a special tube Oi‘ ldl‘ for ‘baby’. And rcmcillbcr, when you buy, that the riuulcnlark Vaseline on (lie [wukugc is your assurance that you arc getting ill": ucnuinc product ‘o! tilciliescbrivugh l\i.iilui.li~ ill-flllg Lilmpanyg Coilsll, 5510 .Cl13l'iOt Avcuuc, Montreal, Canada “For ba by’s comificirt. Chafing-After the baby has hao ll. llalll, luba little "Vaseline" Jflllv uvcr the chsfed. parts. This treatment relieves the soreness, helps hcal the irrita- tiun. ‘ Colds-JR; kc a bit of "Vaseline" jelly on the illl er ti and ggeiiiiy massage tile briggc of ltihus uusc. This relieves the stuffy feeling. Sciz/p-If llaby has a scaly scalp or .1 rciidcucv to “cradle ca '_ iudssige the head gently with "VJSCllHCUJSllY every day af- tcr the bath. A lilacs inc TRAFIE MARK to ascertain if they will survme ills twelve weeks’ travel involved. This novel test is being carried out from the Rothamsied Experimental Station. Hcrtfordslllro. ‘Generous PE1ROiEiW1'ELLY ilir- Royal Agriculture Society d England have developed methods Ii preparing cultures of the beateria 6! a large scale for distribution to farm- crs for use in growing lucerne, I lng sent around the world in nrderlsrants from the Research Fund of valuable fodder plant. JUST IMAGINE—-hcre is be your dishpan-the wisest, most care known! Every time you wash dishes receive the soothing, gentle care that keeps them white and soft-and it costs almost nothing! Lux for all your dishes costs less than I c a day! Compare this with the expensive care many women of leisure give their hands. Have hands just as lovely——at almost no cost! The secret is this: the gentle the delicate oils of the skin, while ordinary soaps dry these beauty oils. That your hands beauty care-right And remember-Lux for dishes means lovely hands for less than I c a day. kves-Brotbuai-bnlted, 305 leading beauty shops answer: “With all our experience, we are unable to distinguish between the hands of a woman who never washes dishes and those of a house- wife who use: Lux in tbe dis/apart." auty care right in inexpensive beauty in Lux your hands Lux suds protect is why Lux gives in the dishpanl Tumnh L94: