‘w- <-ww 4..-. ..... n..-._.~_.~.. ..4-.-_.,.D._...__,_, ° \ G c‘ Rl/GHT 1x411 -.. --.-. --. . . . ___ NJ‘: rm; JQIjALILUFTETUWN (straying, OPOO! .1»; v e» ~-- ~ WWW-w »-~ - a " i" " . oman’s Realm -:~ Socia and Personal -:- Fashzons ,-:- Literature a _ _ “av W‘ ‘n ‘ Wwvuv v p‘ v “NJ” w‘ “ v _ _ _ __ M. ',.......»~---~,~-~-~-~~~~»~ i Dorothy on’. Letter Box pier} iiirl should Take Counsel With Her fiend 21>‘ Well us Her Heart When She t imsitlt-rs .\lztrrizige, for Only Then Will She Find the Right ' Answer ; l ~ zhe man i‘ have ,1 srigle qt, on '31-; cult rlv DIX. a t Lo the li/ziflg than their _ll)j)'-l".q i1, bu; if they it L-r do iii».- "tori-z that ' * ' se.\.i.g and ec- . half of “ch91? pay 1-11.. .1 va-iiiiwittiifi». liulllf; for - She works If they have "it them, ‘iifliiwkfid. ecciicy to feed and - and ‘site them the best chance he can in life. Lo make liit"li haze u. coiiu-nitit . - - 1 t~ particle o: Jlicciii/ii they might ._..., flu‘; -....i.-;c men; resolve to get. away from him as soon ii \ DOROTHY DIX. I V I I I I - one! toniaii with three smull liiliififCll who l fiiim. A bachelor mints to marry I- iii’ l my father is urging me to take him er opportunity to marry. Bu; 1 am o.i.: r znan I am and 1S dull and sea in his - me him, but still he wants or) marry . L. i » .1 lnr ('lll.dl'£'fl'! M533’, . If. . limit‘- you titirrt love for the sake of your children. U . won ii’. iii. (mu-pt. love and because you ivarit to 1"‘ ‘ ‘i "1111 41M 1m! ‘Hluenial and repulsive to you before ‘*1 ' '- 11' 4 dwliti 111M» more boring and distasteful to you oi‘ ‘ion have iiud one unhappy marriage. Don't risk an- YOU fitJ-‘Alflf: a better bleak iicxt, time. . are futile and bring no happiness to any one.’ sui-iiices that a woman makes when she marries at ‘t Riv-e m ordcr to give her children s home. Such mar- 1.‘i<‘;t‘» are win :' _ a bmmcrnmz that flies back and destroys her. For int ..i ;ll\ i l at i . "ti-pitchers us. well as cruel stepmothers and the home that iii-i: at innit tuxv-s h... s-‘r-pchlldren is a puyggtqry to men-L Many a mun ‘h’ l-ih 57"l>(tllllf]f0h. Many a one treats them with a cold- ihnt lll1llIP$ their childhood s torture that they rcm- i. iliw 11w. . ht ;\‘\ti lit 'iii'i1i .l Lori... It ttif/i» n 111M111)’ killd- 800d, generous man to hike on the support of 411011141‘ inns children. So before any widow marries for the sake of Pflttllitt u iiuiiic for her childreir, she docs well to mid out, n11 about the thildrens prospective father, and how he ls likely to treat them. DORUYHY DIX. iB moral "where tr 1 HZCIIIDCIS of the Rog - c, , ago and how ., ere illness of i_. ._ ' Holman of sunimcrside last Mon- lffappenings of the Week erode. Among the Ilvsmz.‘ g for them were the dressed ui H .s.r.d;c: sumrr . u . een. es enter’. ‘int burg, cosume, motored to S . Wednesday n; :0 meet Misses HLL. .. o: guests. It. K41; meal .s tovially d znformallyzl " arm-a; i ti; bred to day o!‘- 1' to wed other after a - "‘ , Paul; - - - - _ Miss Agnes Pauli Zef: tar: Satur- "urri to Brooklyn, N. Y., ~_o he; zazher Mr. Simon trig the Dukes and D.- ‘ ester, Ken: tad of a ca». Training Schoon It - - - - _ Mrs. D. Sharp of Bedeque has as ner gues: Mrs. McQiiarrie oi Rose- neath w-ho -.s a'.so being plea- ' i entertained by Summerszde friends. Icon i side has as he: guest he: sis‘ r his Rochford of Ottawa who ‘AJQ beer. the rue-s; o! gatherings. . o 0 - _ Rev. r. and lkL-s. Afalcoirr J. .\ls:'_cod azii '. 1e grand-dang Scrhze Arr. Kennedy‘ left 1h; “E for New ‘i rk a1‘. ' DESIRE; debq of Ho: c. s. our») p 0 To. * .\L'. and .\i:s. zes Ofi0't'E1)';)&1’Il65 Hooper H. Harrie e e'" "azneci at Wed. . . .-', w.i;i. after- on Wednesday for frzeri brzrlge enthusiasts. ch50“ and ca“ rs added a touch qzacious new spar» '. ct‘. Elm Avenue s-iio have beer - . ful summer at u" residence in Pm: R” H H __ v t for their home tn Buenos A es. V15- 1‘ ' L‘ ‘him’ "cu" “I H“? i iting their daughter it: Er. ' . Yarrnouth, N. 3.. mule .\frs. Hashim are . . . . i ~. a V1.31’. :0 Mrs. The Earl and Co 1:5 of borough wail at Szanszed t Park, Hams, untd :lie end o! Oc- tober, when they viii; return to . tendon. ' at five tables of . . . . 3" ‘wenmg a‘ h" at", The tea hostesses at the l1‘ _ _ _ Lmks this afternoon will be firs. A., W. Weeks, Miss Lorna Week. SL155? x- “Mm”- °i kTT-"S-‘i Rose Longworthflltfrs. L. D. blurray. ‘ Mrs. H. P. Found . I . . and m“ Dr‘ E C Fulmd‘ o! riewl Relatives and friends ziillbegnter- London, arrived Afoiiday‘ in New “m! w mo‘. ma, M53 Manon M“ Gxcsgozv, N. 5., and are guests of mam”. o! 5am, John, 3y B“ whose .\tr. and .\frs. O. R. Fraser for‘: marriage is taking place early m 1°", days‘ They are being warmly October, was the honor guest. at a we. - "rid was 11110?" M , delightfully‘ arranged tea and show- M" ‘ a W“ “r m“? er given by his Mary Lou Lynch _ ’ 559*“? m Kcmvfue- at. the family residence, Paradise lflllfiffi‘ he has been appointed to the Row‘ on Saturday afternoon‘ The sizfnof the .\ova scotia Sanatorium dmwmproom “.35 adorned Wm, for the ivinter. Dr. Found has eori- autumn flown,’ and m me dining ' Fa no W n: t’. l‘? 11 2 5' Th“! 10"“ gulpure lace cloth and centered with ' ' ' ' a Sheffieid silver bowl of cosmos. The table was lighted by orchid coi- orcd candles in silver candlesticks. Mrs H. O. sfcfiicmey, mother of the Birthday greetings from many friends were extended tr; Mm. R. '1‘, Mrs. R. S. P. Jardme, Suriuher- ' n honor in several social 7 1 §BOOK§IART/ MUSIC _ -———-—- 4 i ca: r. a. s.) , $o+0+0+o++o+o+o+o+o+o+0w ‘ qr, Recreational Rieatb. gra phy o: ' scd w» ' a Life of he of the newest s author tincent has aLready : by has award as the biography of . , Wttlrou‘. Lady Hamilton :he stark. r *3" scenes ' ecars none; 1s no: merely a ' . _ \v;'.h te excep- a;i,.e.i.s citarziciets In ghe nbcve mentioned article on Rccreati - ' Reading. along with various m z novels, books of trove‘. and bitvgtviphles the detective szo _ is f0C0ftifllelldéd-—"f0t‘ pure unaduiterated recreation ; . . give me the detective story. Here are all the elements of diveslon" and Conan Doyle, Dt»rii;!1y' Sayers, Freeman Wills Crofts, Atiszin Freeman, ‘Van Dine and. klztrjorle Alllngham are authors mentioned. A far dzfferent type of reading is next rioted-‘Wvha: could be bet- ter recreation than rereading thej classics of literature _ . . only last month I empiosted some of the leisure hours . . . in rereading (for the hoiv mzinycth time I cannot say» "Piide and Prejudice," “Em- ". l MOR5I§$TYIA on The s ilritflhgtiigrgufi i delicious Stepsister-ii’ It: ivcs new 14' e and Lithium the days oril_ The HOUSE WIFE and HER ACTIVITIES Like the Star 111a: shine: afar. haste And withoti: rest. Let each mar. "l-icei. with sw-ay. Round the task And do his best. ‘.3 or orange. When to this is added; some Sec-cream, and one whole ls Really Clean To get .10 all the deep cuts of good cu: glass a sot: (‘Mary The reai r rklo will never coc be ‘.1102? unless c‘. sec. ail the zvay thro". down into the crevices Dry n11!‘- a Turkish totvei. After the Hot Weather The first cool. windy dav take all the feather bed ptioxvs and hang their. out on. the line. .Afifi‘.‘ the particularly hot summer jut ‘ passed the pulows must either need a washing or a good airing to take sway al‘. perspiration orders No Place for Amntures If no one in the family really understands electrical apparatua. do riot taermlt amateur wiring. ere, It will always cost you more in the long run. besides the risk the novice has of receiving a bad shock. Get the neighborhood. elec-V irician for the job. . Now “Witch 0m: l: Aunt Adelia? Family" photographs shotild be labeled on the back with the per- son's name whose picture it is. {Otherwise..they' will prove useless ,to a future generation who mi-Elit tether-wise prize them very higltly. fGet out that box of pYIOtOUFJpIIS. ‘lput 0n your thinking esp and maize your pen in hand l, THE VELVET GLOVE She entered an Edinburgh tram- -car. Ln‘ dress she was quite \.D\-‘ idistiriguished. Her gown was black lwith touches of white; she were a lbaok hat with a white flower. I’. was on her hands-that ones attent- ; 131$ M51; ' rziics "he (lav. iiciotis \V"‘h the milk is mixed some fm bnvh is nec- sllfii-Zmi up. quite a delightful 0011-: ‘e back of some of Lhev s. ops zvherc you can iriduiget A .. ' cocktail can be very de-i juiCe 0r eserioe of what- is preferred-mu may. e raspberry or strawberry, lemon: produced, tube drunk‘; straws. i t Today's Short cWave Radio Program (alunqinhstmahnnfllti l Saturday, September 26 Paris 2.4.3 p. m-Naiisicsa. Comic Opera, by Reynaldo Hahn. TPA-S. 25.2 m., 11.88 meg. Geneva 5:30 p. mr-News from the League of Nations headquarters. H814, 3t 2 m., 9.65 meg. Schenectady 16:30 p. m.~sctence Forum \\".'.XAF, 31.4 m., 9.53 meg. Madrid '7 p. Xl1.-—~s])3Z1l5h Zifusic. Travei Talk. Watch Tower Program.‘ EAQ, 30.5 m., 9B7 meg. London 7:21 p. m.~"A syncopated Seren- ndeYGSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 megqj GSD, 25.5 m., 11.15 meg; 515C. 31.3 m., 9.58 meg. Caracas 8130 p. m.-Native Songs. YV- ZRC. 51.7 m., 5. 8 meg. I Berlin 9zl5 p. m.—-Club of Notions. DJD. 25. 4 m., 11.77 meg. . Letherbfidge 11 p. m.——The Sport ‘Week- ] Btfr fi-equmtly to prevent butnirg (lay on the ‘nappy occasion of her 89th birthday. During the after- noon firs. Holman dispensed after- noon tca to her callers being tis-i l sisted in her pleasant duties by her‘ (iaughzers Miss Carrie Holman and i .\ti.~:s Gladys Holman. . - . - Miss Jean McKenzie is leaving‘ this morning to complete her course ' in the Royal Victoria Hospital, sfontrcal. I l VfllfhCCd nicely after his recent aev- 1.00m the table was Coyevcd ‘vim a i t i l uu-e Afiss Katherine Maciehnah left yesterday‘ for Motitreal after a de- ‘ ligixlul holiday with Mr. and Mrs, 1 A. E}. .\lotri.~oil. . - o - hliss Muriel Lea. of Summersidg in... among the popular hostesses this week, entertaining at dinner and three tables of bridge on Mori- tlay ticiiiizg. u I I I A number of girl friends d fill Margaret McLean of Souris, whose marriage wok place to Mr. Andrew Strivzirt Weir on Wednesday, motor- ed t0 her home from Charlottetown Mmlflay evening and gave her a genuine surprise party carrying gifts and good wishes apropos her approaching wedding. The visitors WCTL‘ pleasantly entertained and the bride-to-be appreciated greatly their company and marks of friendship. _ . one Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Paton are spending a few days in Halifax. I I I I f-‘areweils were said. this week to Miss Mary Houle and Miss Gertrude Houie who left Monday for Boston after a delightful summer. Miss Gibbs is remaining over for some time. I I I I Mrs. J. J. Hornby, Miss Kathleen Homby and Mr. James Homby left yesterday by motor on a holiday visit to Halifax. I I I I Mrs. Mcquarrie, Mrs. Sutherland and Mrs. Ferguson left yesterday for their home in New Glasgow, NS, having greatly enjoyed their short holidly with Mrs. W. E. McDonald bride-elect, presided over the tea 1113i" ‘ma "Pcnsuaskmy and I 1mm" 11°“ becmne rwewd i 1 Henry’ Vlncy, sports commentator. She wore crimson ietvet gioves—' CJRQ w-umipeg 4&7 m" e15 meg ‘Souris, who is now gradually cups and Miss Cecily Kirby and , Miss Mary ' Mclnerney assisted in serving. During the afternoon thcl hcnor guest was made the recipient of an electric toaster and a gift of liren by hcr friends present. I I I I Mrs. Jeffrey B. Macphaii of Mon- treal, sailed from New York on Sep- tember 23, by the Bremen for Eng- land, where she will jtllll hoi- mother, Mrs. J. H. Garth, and with her proceed to the Continent, whore . 111W W111 Spend a few tweaks. Mrs. Garth has spent the summer abroad 1 and will return to Canada ivitli Mrs. Macphall. . - - . Many friends heard with regret of the serious illness of Mrs. A, Lord, TQ- covcring from an attack of ptui-Q. pneumonia. I I I I The Misses Doris and Lyma Wright entertained at a most; en~ Joyable three table bridge Wed- nesday night. I I I ‘Typical of the simple friendliness of members of the Royal Family is the incident of the Duke of Glou- cesiters breakdown one night when returning to ‘London from Aldorshot London. A man who stopped to help and who discovered that it was the Duke in distress, drove him to Bucklnghsm Palace, ‘and was promptly asked in for a drink. In the Duke's private apartments at the Palace the two men chatted, and presently in came the Duke of Kent to loin them without any farmallttfl ' I I I Mrs. D. J.‘ Riley entertained in- formally st. the tea hour yesterday in honour of Miss Dunning. Mrs. B. Pauli presided over the tea clips and was assisted by Mm Mlrk MC- Gulgan and Mrs. Edmund MurPhy- ________________ MANCHESTER, llifllll-ndrdcPl-r The city council has asked the Drl- tlsh government for I new Rent Restrictions Act to control house rentals o! fun thin 0175 I WM of no better prescription for rec- rctiilozif’ June Austen has been enjoying a1 rcviva‘. iii popularity tn the past your. begun rio doubt by the success ‘ of Helen Jerome's dramatic version of "Pride and Prejudice" in bothj London and New’ York. In New‘ York. Adrienne Allen, wife of the‘. Caiiiidiini actor Raymond Mssseyd ])'1l:_\'0(l the part of Elizabeth Bern‘ not. lii London, according to Charles i iMUlTflll, London correspondent to t the Times, il-S success was the more . remarkable, because Miss Jerome win-k survived "the fierce ordeal to which the Einglisn addicts of Jane Austen uerc bound to submit it, for Jitncism is a cult, a religion, the Jtmcitcs arc fanatics, and those who trend on their holy ground do so at tlitir peril . . - CCUB- Jllhnf-Qlli gave, as Elizabeth, a performance of extraordinary charm and wis- doni." The following paragraph about the dramatist Helen Jcronic, ap- peared in the New York Times of t May 3lstw"'l‘o the distinction of being one of the busiest. authors in two hemispheres Helen Jerome will soon odd another. For, according to Sir Barry Jackson, she will be the first feminine playwright ever to have a work presented at his hftiivcrn Ifestivttl. “June Eyre" is the itcm, presented at Sir Barry! Birmingham Repertory last winter and due in London after its summer cnil at Msivern. Thus will it move by easy stages, if you call those stages easy, to New York and the Theatre Guild next mid-season with Katharine Hepburn. "But Miss Jerome is not one for a single play at a time. Sli- Barry has also bought her "Llmel\ght"-—B comic strip in three acts, a satire 0n American theatrical and film press ngentry, she calls it. After a sum- mer in Mount Kisco she will g0 abroad to see it launched 1n Bir- mingham in September. Watch the long. gauntlet, gioves. The inside of the palm of’ the gloves were lined with silk, for as w: all know, veivet is easily rubbed. Her gloves were very conspicuousieall the more so t by reason of the quietness and re- ~_ serve of the re t of her toiieite. THE BULK BAR Never before was milk so popular Yet until quite recently Edinburgh was a stranger to the milk bir That is no longer the case. You will find little tables and chairs await- _€¢_~_ and may even catch another glimpse of "Pride and Prejudice" over there." A. A. Milne has also written a dramatic version of "Pride and Prejudice" called Eillilbfllil Bennett" but Just as it was com- pleted Helen Jeromes vesion open- ed fn London, so production had to be postponed. It has opened this month in Liverpool, England, as the first production of the twenty-sixth season of the Liverpool Repertory Theatre. ' Elizabeth Bowen, the English novelist has recently written a most interesting appreciation of Jane Austen called "Jane Austen: Artist on Ivory." It. is to constitute one of the essays in "The English Novel- ists." a survey of the novel by con- temporary novelists edited by Derek Vcrschoyle and soon to be publish- ed by Harcourt, Brace and Co. One of the items on Lady Willi- sonks list of books for September reading-in the Toronto Saturday Night~Ls "William Byrd“ by Ed- mund H. Fcllowes-a biography of the Brcat English Musician of the seventeenth century. Canon Fel- lowes states that "after a long per- iod of neglect, Byrd is again recog- nized as standing supreme in English music." The book is pub- lished by the Anglo-Canadian Music Company. arrival of "Jane Eyre" in tendon. CJRX, Winnipeg, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. Tokyo 1?. mldnightr-“Overseas Pro- gram." JVH. Nazakl, 20.5 m., 14.6 meg. Ino-oo¢ u. THE COOK ‘S CORNER COFFEE FRUIT CARL 54 cup butter 1 cup sugar 1 cup molaxes 1 cup very strong coti- 2- 1 teaspoon soda 3 cups browned flour 1!; cups seeded raisins 11.; cups cur-rants 5i. teaspoon cinnamon l teaspoon cloves Method: Cream the butter re; light, then add the suga- rad". ally and continue creatr the mixture is W17 1 fluffy. Sift the flcu: once mgasurlrig, then sift it a .. time with the salt, soda an Sift this mixture over the piumped by pouring boil .ei over them. Be sine to dry 11ers thoroughly or there std‘. be to: much moisture in the cake. Add the molasses and bee‘. 5.1:: for 2 minutes. Pour into a 1on1 pan lined with waxed paper azzc bake in a moderate 350 deg. F oven for 1 hour or until the cake responds to the totich. To Brown the Flour The browned flour gives tn.» cake s, particularly velvety texture To brown it, spread it in a shallow pan and place in a moderate ctezi, It. wilt take about 20 to '16 minus to brown 3 c1195- Ice this cake with a Creole tong CREOLE ICIXG 1 cup brown sugar, packed 8 tablespoons water 1 egg white 1 teaspoon navorme Method: Place the sugar. Wale ‘and unbeaten egg white iri a double boiler. Mix until the susar ‘a we“ moistened, then beat with s rotary egg beater until the icing wil stand tn peaks. Remove fi-oiii dis fine. odd the flavoring and beat until thick enough to spread. The water in the lower put of the double boiler should be boiling hard before you start to beat the icing and it should be deep e. ugh to touch the bottom of the AMorningSmile "As I understand it, doctor, if l believe I'm well, I'll be . well. If that the idea?" "It is." "Then if you believe you N! paid, I suppose you'll be Pit-iii?" "Not neceasar’ ." “But why shouldn't fazah ‘refit as well in one case as ‘J1 ofiier? "Why, you we, there is com cr- able difference between * faith in Providence and faith in you." the 1 Autumn‘ Fashions i For Chic Dressers Lightweight. woolen of a rosy- shade made this individual l 1 COBB"? t dress. _ the front. They give that import- ant new full string to the hem. i It's a perfect dress for first fail ‘ days and economical choice. l You'll wear it ‘heath your swagger fur coat later. Yoirll find black shiny crepe t satin interesting for a more “dessy" version. choice with the yoke of the lus- trous surface. Style No. 1837 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, years, 36, 38, and AO-inches bust. Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39~lnch material. Price of PATTERN 1B cent-s in stamps or coin (coin 1| preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. _---.----._----au NO. 1837. Size Name 8H0!!! Addreu The skirt is arranged in plaits at. l Satin-back crepe ts still gnothfl ‘ I E 1 u I ‘t l