1 .323? 15.19.11 ....@ fhfga Brace ‘EIGHT rim CHARLOTTETOWN r’:||.\|<m»\_\i___ , _ Luliltriit‘ i Woman? Realm -:- Social and Personal 1g; Fashione i ma? in; FGSIIIDIIGbIQGTC Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished . WithEvery Pattern By Annabelle Worthintton , u m g r ' iifsplte of repeated tubbiims this darling dress will always look de- liciously fresh and lovely. Fashioned of printed voile, soft and beautiful as chiffon, it holds its own for ever and a day. The circular skirt poses modish circular shaped peplums around it, just below the hipline, so as to keep that important slim silhouette. An exquisite effect is the cspelet collar that merges into a berths-that meets the skirt pepluin at the waist- line. 1153.8 for" re iMorning Sm?‘ A man touring Eumpg ‘mnqmk picture postcard “ - _ m,‘ M i O a D O Oilvi-v of the Week R RUGS: ' emodei the Old v ‘ I Happenings l a delightful glLinpse or the King o. "Mimi" RUG WORKS g A lacy cloth on the tabla spread, _ _ ‘ . 5 _, , N B ‘m: clown: soft candle iisht. ,"“““,d,”',,' ,'"ciml’nll““f‘i“_'f’t'gz‘e‘ ‘_ ‘ill/iiijsf .1‘? kT.>..;/..,- ' A silver bowl with the flowers of . . _ _ . spun‘, (wriiu Mi‘. Lukin Johnston in the - iqgn m; Pa“, “do you M“ m. And g cmcumg m“ n" bflzht Vancouver Province), were among the‘ '7'“ . ¢ ' pm“, u‘ u“ mcrmm ‘huh u. hich befall Canada‘ .... utans used - ieizesre erwto Washinflon Mali): T fenmissmemmt, Mill “need m“ i120 children. “m: m”; - , we o Jean er and Mr. you were h“ W. D. Hen-loge, and his wife, the ior- 51pm; w, qu-ueman of ‘£11110. i8 b91118 “You; ma]. m" m" 141E184 3mm“- YWWNW- pleasantly discussed by their numer- ' 1t W85 the twenty-first anniversary o“; gflenda The weddma Wm take‘ of His Majesty's accession to the 91m early m ‘ma,’ ‘ throne, so that as Major and Mrs. s s s , Hcrrldge drove along the tree-linml m, sudden death u; M!“ Nan road skirting Windsor Great Park, Reid, which occur,“ ~ - 1118M. flags fluttered gsily from HIE-staffs”, deeply regretted by he, menu and windows 1n the old wwn. thfliuiss Reid was loved by the little 3:13’? 3311mm fltmwd FY0111"; in children of her kindergarten and e reeze ove he grey will of > the "Round Tower" and theechoes of the salute of twenty-one guns fired ass-ss- ws- - -_suus_us~...,s .1‘ OILED =7‘. » Dorothy Dix Letter Box What to Do and What to Avoid to Become Pop- ular With Boys-Joyous Young Girl Whose Parents Want Her to Wait 4 Years for i a Missionary-Rushing it veer Miss Dix-What are the do's and don't for girls who want a lasting popularity with boys? SUE AND JANE- sssso s r '1'!1!'I"""‘?!?1"€!?44+f2t:-:?1:rr:r:= The hostess dressed in s. soft green 80W". Dispenser to you and me, The dsintiest things s0 sweet so Answer: ‘ Well, here are some of the do's: Make yourself as attractive-looking as you c an by keeping, ‘f well groomed and scrupulously clean and by wearing the clothes that emphasize your best points. Half of a woman's beauty is in the wsy she dresses. ' i Efiqaetie 800d. Don't you love afternoon tea? .H Ieblb l; She gives me a chance to find new thoughts . And my own to others lend— As I sipped tea by her ‘fire one day I found a delightful friend. not The Queen has recently set a new ‘Q. plow soon should the 19M thanking the hostess for he: h“; pitality. be written? - among her intimate friends she will A ymmegygmy . “m, roumw‘ always be very kindly remembered. home, O O O Learn how to do things. learn how to play a gzimc of bridge and how to play tennis and how to swim, how to do the things the other young people of your set do. That way you will ht in with any crowd and not be a spoilsport. You will hovel’ bfi 8539f! $0 " make a fourth at bridge if you trump your partner's o boy will ever cut in on your dances if you step on his toes or have 1o be hauled around like a loaded truck. On the other handi,“ Y0" 8Y6 BX! 0 yxpert at anything, you will always be sought after. Learn how to talk. Read the newspapers religiously every day so that you will know what is going on in the world and have some topic of interest It is an adorable dress for my woman. ' Style No. 310i. may be had in sizes 12, 14, 16, i8 years, 36 and 38 inches young girl or youthful type of bust. Yellow washable crepe silkiis irre- sistibly lovely. Embroidered organdie, eyelet ba- fashion in jewellery. She has ap- peared in public wearing earrings formed of rather large and almost square equamal-ines in which they are inserted tiny miniatures of her two grand-daughters, Princess Eliza- beth and Princess Margaret. So pleased is the Queen with the effect" in the castle grounds in honor of the day had‘ scarcely died sway in the Berkshire woods. Major Herridge had been comman- ded to the castle to ‘fkiss hands" on his appointment as His Majesty's Canadian minister to the United States capital, but meanwhile Mrs. Arecent issue of Newark Everl- ing News has a fine photograph of Miss Anna granddaughter of Mr. J. L. Thomp- son of this city, whose engagement to Mr. Frank D. Vreeland of Maple- wood, N. 1.1., was announced by her parents, Mr. M. Campbell, R. and Mrs. N. Adam G. q. wuenaia tile custom of mi bride having a hops chest Origin“ A. In the days. of the dowry, which in turn Brew out of up intended as a reward for the m, chase of the bride. Q. How should ice-cream h; eaten? ' ’ y A. Witlii a dessert spoon, or m‘ marriage by Purchase custom. It m; _ f h - o t ese ornaments that she has or Htmdge w“ received by the Queen, d t an???’ pa“ o’ gamma w and thereafter they lunched "tete- oon aln m n otures of her grandson-S l ‘new, Wm‘ the Km‘ and Queen To isc Laso l V cunt el es and his youngef be m “ken mm the mama“ o! b th , , m er ‘he Hon Gerald Lasceues their Majesties’ home life is an honor O O O f d e. charming M JDEM M t , t _ accorded to cw, an rs n‘ re o‘ he Leu en compliment to Canada. ant Governor, returned home last Monday after a delightful holiday in Boston. Mrs. Dalton, with thc Lieutenant Governor, Mrs. Murrai and the Governor's Aide, Major C- C. Thompson, is leaving Monday for Lauson, Quebec, where Mrs. Dalton will have the honor of cliristeiiiii“. the new liitcr-proviiicinl car Fen-y, S. S. Charlottetown to be launchczl Campbell of East Orange, N. J., at a bridge and tea early in the month. O O .O ‘There is a. lot ‘of informal enter- taining going on, the one table bridge with afternoon tea, helm; per- haps the most popular form Just at' But perhaps the most delightful present’ ' ' _ t f d h - momen o the fly came w an an" Miss Alena and Miss Irene Home luncheon, as the King and Queen , chatted wnh Maiw and Mrs He? e itcrtained very delightfully at 0on- ' tract Bridge Thursday evening and at ridge, a door was thrown open and A ti B~1d in bounced a merry, laughing child. ‘otglyonhmrrc if‘ llfittzrétggtrtlt‘ the“ as gay as could be, with sunshine ‘ ' I0 discuss. Read books, but don't try to talk to a boy about a. high-brewed ' rubject unless he introduces the topic first. Talk, but don't talk too much. No one is so boresorne as the girl who just babbles along like a brook that nothing can stop. tiste, dotted swiss, dimlty, printed batisteand handkerchief. linen are ideal suggestions. Size 1d requires 3% yards of 39-inch Be “sure to n11 in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) ice-cream fork, which resembles in; salad fork, although smaller, Be a good listener. In one of Henry James’ novels he tells of a woman who was a great success, although she was neither beautiful nor brilliant, but simply because she possessed the ability to look as if she was absolutely hypnotized by the individual who was talking to her. That plan never fails to work. Try it. For The Cook MAPLE NUT DATE BREAD.‘ No. 3101. Size ......-..-........... "~3-$~wu .. ~:.'._ smile that won't come on, but don't giggle and don't laugh too much. Men don't like laughing women. They are always afraid they are laughing at them. And don't wlsecrack. If you think of a witty comeback, swallow it. Men will forgive you anything else on earth except i being funny at their expense. No woman humorist ls ever a belle. lIIQQIIsIIII-a . . . . . . . . .-.,......,,,... Name Wear the Cut up enough, washed and stout dates to fill measuring cup. Put dam in a bowl with ll teakpoon bum‘ soda. sprinkled over them,‘ adding a cupful boiling water. Beat one cg] .s-..s-s-s.... - . . . . . . . . - . 1IOIOIIIIIIII Street Address dancing among 112i‘ golden curls. Iuounlallslilolonlollaala When boys take you out appear to be having the time of your life. ‘It ls the least return you can make for the money they are spending on you. Never make lnvidious comparisons. Never tell the boy who takes you to the movies that. some other boy took you to the opera. When a boy treats you to a sandwich don't regale him with the story of how somebody else took you to some ritzy place where you had a. ten-course dinner. The girl who makes a boy feel that she considers him a cheap sport never gets asked a iecond time. . City Style Chats at thc Davie Shipbuilding Yards o! Wednesday. at Government House for the thc Canadian Steamship Lilies. HCXHUDVGTEG from an illness. Mr. Paul Murray who child raii- up to him hi‘! said gently. has been visiting [his wife and family “My darling‘ child. you really must weekiuot bounce in like iliat-you make mill accompany the party part way, me positively giddy." But the afleih; as he is returning to his home in tion of the King and Queen for their. Boston. But. thc King has only recently re mid as the [grandchild is well known and the re~ a ‘ DRAPERIES MADE NEW “When we rcsmncil housekeeping a umiiili ago l found my draperies liar] lwcomc rrcaiscd from packing. [hung lliezn out on the line. ho lug in remove the creases.’ Then forgot i badly faded and sun-spotted. » “l was heartsick until the happ ihem. The result was they became one light and combine with it 1.»; w; maple syrup, then combine tlils mig. iure with the datee. Mix one teaspoon baking paw“ into one cup pastry flour; pm q couple of times, theirmlx well my one cup whole wheat flour. Add hslf a cup nut meats and one tsblespm melted shortening. - ‘WW5 W" "my that m’ mdulflllia thought struck me to’ dye them. grandparents. so the little Princess‘ lust dyed lhsm a deeper green. and as l used Diamond Dyes they look gorgeous and new. I have never seen easier d es to use ihnn Diamond D es. T ey give the most beautiful co ors-_—u'hen used either for tinting er dyeing-and never take the liie out. of cloth as other dyes do." Put mixture into a rather shallow buttered loaf pan: bake" in a sin oven (385 deg. 1".) for about l to ill . hours. After taking losf from the an‘, brush the top with maple syrup-flu When a boy comes to see you ask ‘him some time to spend the evening home and make fudge or a. Welsh rarebit or something that won't 20st him any money. Few boys are millionaires and they appreciate a. girl's going light on their pockets. Not long ago in this column I said that - girls would have more dates if they would do a little of the entertaining at dome themselves andtl-ie article was cut out and pasted on the bulletin WITH ALMA ARCHER Mrs. J, G. Macphall, of Ottawa. was hostess at a charmingly arranged chatted shyly with the visitors, and week-end tea in honor of. her guest, then before running of! to hei- play Mrs. J. D/Stewart, from Charlotte- she gravely curtesled to the Queen town, and also for Mrs. Murdock and Mrs. Herridge as riemurely as McKlnnon, o‘! Charlottetown. who is any early Victorian ynaid would have; in your _ / “There's a great deal of debunking necessary in puppy fash- ions," observed Annie, the favorite Scottie of Westbrook Pegler. “Can you imagine such low comedy as being given a beautiful pink and white pork chop, and then finding that it is. rubber? However, at that, these realistic ports-chops are more, fun than‘ _ put ’ Sospfiemntmentfisndfltcflfslcurnflc. Soldevcrywbsn. Sampleesdilsoa. . Moduli. i ‘i DOFLYd in a big high school. Within ten minutes nearly 200 boys h iown their names under it as approving the plan. _ Here are some of the don’ts: , Doirt run after boys. The more a. girl chases a iprints away from her. Don't telephone a. boy in working hours. The chances are that if you lo you will lose him his job. Don't write to a. boy until he opens up the correspondence. Don't write two letters to his one and don't write any- thing you wouldn't be willing to have his mother and his sisters and other girls and chainbermalds read. boy, the harder he Don't hint. Eat enough before you leave home to last you until you get back. Don't have but one birthday a year and don't express a. desire for something expensive at Christmas. Don't kiss every Toni, Dick and Harry. 1t is the kiss s. boy doesn't get that he values. Don't drink. Aygirl who is stone sober isn't half so likely to do some- thing foolish and that she will spend the balance of her life regretting as the cats’ heads folks have been paw-hing of!‘ on us to play_ with for some time. ' i . ' "As for the linen topcoats, I've just ordered a cunning light green one with a Peter Pan collar, which l hobo I won't be too embarrassed to wear, but I really thought it would be very practical in case I should have dust in my hair just when some white-gloved darling wanted to pick me up. _ . "I hope you'll excuse inc now, for there's my playmate, Dukey, the Airdale." ' one who has had a few swigs of bootleg liquor. Don't buy your good times at too high a price. Many a. girl has paid for one wild party with a. lifetime of shame. Above all, don't believe any boy is in love with you until he asks you to marry him and names the day. All the balance is hooey. DOROTHY D12. O O Dear Dorothy Dix—I am a girl 18 years of age. My family have chosen a. missionary, who is faithful but silent, for my future husband, but I must wait four years for him while at the time I am dying to get out and go places and do things. Do you think I should sit home reading his letters While all the time I am humming dance tunes? Do you think any man has the right to expect a girl to stand around and wait, giving up all her male companions. admiring and adoring, just because a hundred thousand days from new he will ask her to become his wife? Why should I give up my good times just because he ls not in a position to marry‘! A GIRL 1N TROUBLE. _..-_--,_. Answer: I should certainly advise you not to wait for the missionary, because, Obviously, you are not cut out for a missionaryb wife, gm u“; g; m ‘gm. tion on you nor on him. _ No greater misfortune can happen than for two people of diflereut typos and temperament to marry. ‘They destroy not only each others happiness but each others usefulness because they oppose each other at every turn and neutralize each othe r's efforts. The only wsy in which s marriage can be a success is for the husband and wife to do teamwork. There is no harm in s young girl like you craving laughter and enjoy- ment and in wanting to dance and run around yfth younB People of hei- own age and have a good time. It is perfectly natural and right and it belongs to your time of life, but it would ill accord with the serious work of fl- mlSsloflflfy- Fill’ better for him, as well as for you, for him to pick out some sedate maiden who prefers hymn tunes to jazz and when fagt win happily tread the hard and narrow path of duty instead of itching for s ballroom floor. And certainly parents commit s crime when they pick out their daugh- A. Troubled With Lar e, Itchy Pirnples. uiicura Healer]. “l was troubled with pimples on my face. They were large and m; and itched at times. cousin? me to scratch. Scratching caused snip- iions and sometimes l coo d not eleo on account oi the irritation. The}: llasted quite a while and .' tried lfleren: remedies but they did not e p me. . "l be l C Son week's tilranno, giuliiin aaimweckpaiifi ‘liiasislglit: (Signed) Miss Helen Steisnluk, Box 36, Willingdon, Alll-o Julyll, i930, Address Csnsdlsn Depot: J. T. Walt CllIO-I! I-lnlud, ters’ husbands and select man who accords with‘ their own taste in- stead of the girl's. They lfcrget that it is the girl who is going to have to a guest at the Chateau Laurier. Q F i. Among the visitors in Sydney this week attending the Conference of the W. M. S. of the United Church from this Province are Miss Mabel New- some, Charlottctownf Mrs. J. Adam- son, St. Peters; Mrs. H. J. Toombs, Kensington; Mrs. John Stirling, Montague; Mrs. A. J, Mstheson, 0'- Leary; Miss Pearle D. Johnstone, Charlottetown‘. Mrs. D. K. Ross, Cornwall; Mrs. Hanan Cornwall; Mrs. W. E. Aitken, Lot 16; Mrs. L. R. Allen, Summerside; live with the man and that whether shevls happy or miserable will depend not upon the man's moral principles but upon whether he is congenial to thc girl. Don't let your parents drive you into this unsuitable marriage. Break it 0d without waiting for the hundred thousand days to pass and run along and play as-niuch as you like with your affectionate and adoring male com- panions. " _ DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-I am a boy 19 ye are of age in love with a girl of about the same age. she wants to get married, but I think I. am too young. I want to go through the country and see some of the world until I get a few years older, but she insists on getting married right away. I don't know whatto do, so I am writing to you for advice. JAMES. Answer: Well, if you take my advice, Jam es, you certainly won't marry at 19 and you will take that trip around and see the world before you settle down. Don't let any girl rush you into marriage before you are ready for it. If you do you will be miserable. Marriage lasts a long time, anyway, and it seems longer if you go into it before you have on and before you have any freedom yourself. DIX. DO i‘ Paris Styles I ‘United Press staff Correspondent PARIS, May l5.-(U.P.)--Variety, they say, is the spice of life. It is also the aim of the oouturier to produce and the ambition of the client to possess, all of which certainly does add zest to life. Afterall tharhas been done with ruffles it does look like the ways and‘ rnesnsof varying themwould have become ei-‘austed- but no. ‘Listento what Patou has done with six of them, grad- uating in sizefronrthree inches to seven in width. l-le has chosen white ohiflon to begin with.‘ Then he starts with n‘. little hip-yoke that only covers the front and s. small por- tion o1 the sides. Around this he puts ruffle number- one; wool!- lng it up in the beck like a tiny circular apron. Now the other five have their cue so they go and do likewise and in a minute the whole skirt is finished. The front is a tier of ruffles almost par- allel but sloping st the sides, and the-back is a cascade of them all running perfectly perpendicular. New then. the welsh-what there is of it. V-neclred back and front.’ A narrow ruffle-starts lust here, right in center of the front fl, widens overthe cap of the shoulder and narrows again there, tight in the center of the back - V. The finishing touch is a bordorvof tiny white camelias all the way around the neckline. Isn't it simple?" amt a dream, that's all! " - .' ~ ' ' - This is the type of-drols that is lovely for bridesmaids too. Done in pals tints it is boautifuland for a touch of contrast the border of flowers ean always be varied and therefore spiced up a‘ bit. A "Frenohy" combination is ‘green for7 the chiffonaud blue for _ the flowers, or-blus for the gown and mauve for the poaies. \- _._-- .. us» the money to support a wife RUM-KY Mrs. F. E. Boothroyd, ‘York; Mrs Thompson, Charlottetown; Mrs. Jiorace Wright, Bedeque; Mrs. S. M. _ Martin, Valleyfield; Miss Hazel Ram- say, Charlottetown; Mrs. J. H. Ayers Charlottetown; Mrs. A. i). -McDon- ' aid, Souris. O O O ' Miss Norah Lnngworth left Mon- day morning on a visit to Montreal, Toronto and Hamilton. O O O Following the r. n. 1. Hospital graduation exercises on Tuesday eveni xg, the three graduates Miss Hattie E. Met-slim, Miss Beatrice Mc- Lean McLeod and Miss Linriie A. Platte were the guests of honor at a lolly reception in the Nurses Home attended by relatives and intimate friends. On the previous Sunday Miss Mair and Miss Howatt enter- tained the graduating nurses at dinner at the Canadian National Hotel. . O O O Captain Moiyneuz of Paris is showing his summer evening clothes accompanied by ropes of seed pearls. Although the necklaces are. short- a" modified choker length-the ropes themselves are composed of several strlngs- of pearls and reach about the thickness of a woman's finger. One of the important style features of this Jewellery fashion is the way the necklace clasps are made to hsrmoniu with the rut of the cos- tume. whenever possible, the Jew- elled "cusp of theneckisee matches exactly the color of tbefdreu; or, in the one of printed chiffon gowns some outstanding color in the ‘de- combination is his dark blue chif- foiwn wltna seed pearl Msilw WW "PEN". “PW l‘ the exact deep blue of the fabric. In every ease, no spatter what the color, the clasp is in rectangle form. O O O . i l 1 . . I . ' mslu-ivoin '0 "m"! with "w K111i and Queen git Windsor Oldie. to be shown all the alum of thscutlu by Downer Countess Minto, widow of the- former Canadian-Governor- ‘Genersl. and now lsdY-inzwaitlngdnv n» amt-m one»: w,» mo, Howard. _, done. _.-__._..é_.- ___.__ .__i..._._.- _ will nnlsh the losf with snlce alas. Mrs. J.F.T.,' Montreal l ____ _. 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