is n dist it I sho Ki! Mr _B ~ » - ¥»~ ~\»-4 amacsasl all \4|‘(`|\L\l| I “ t\ ` lv "°"°" Do roth Dlx °°-'° i'__<5"_Illl.lstrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished u.fr'§..,. y l - :$53 With Every Pattern - - _ . If r By Annabellg W0;-¢hjn¢|;0|, Once a Couple Have Negotiated the First Ten Years of Marriage, They Think They Are ii. 5143:;-.au ._ i-rr Ii" gif I* 'J .ii cl, 1=_r.'v . t‘ ‘§ l . . lg' -mg for small daughter in this fas :inating dress. it looks complicated. But it's per fectly simple to make it. if slee\ es. ».-'Pale blue or coral-pink linen is lclorable. The ruflles with picot edge makes i dainty iinisll. The collar and peplums may have licot edge finish or bias binding. Fir simpler "best," a printed crepe 'le clline is darling. Yellow dotted swiss, old-fashioned lpriggdd dimlty ln pink tones, pale . __ .. o ,. ‘ig-Qui _. ..,,,.. _ ~ - V »_~,-.< ~-"-' "-2- ,. .oc .. -v » r .f __ .,.: _ _ V.-.:.; , » . ....l’here‘s something utterly charm- The double circular peplum ruifles _ihatitop the circular flaring skirt \ give it slnart individuality. The lecklinc is especially smart with .'lh'ouldel‘ cnpeiet that takes the place -,;:Btyle No. 2899 is designed for girls lf_8, 10. 12 and 14 tears, Size 8 re- juires 2%.- yards of 39-inch material. ¢ ci 1, I( 1 Q . #scanner ' _.___- i ,(.`L.l”~ _‘~..`-~,,,*.*_ ' __ _ M ~,r.:-. -._ ,_ _. ._ I Z »., ._'1; r., _ 1 rg! _ _`__ V \ . \` ¢`~ ~_.,_ 5-yr* f ’\» rggpgrp. I ‘.5 ii i wth white Pindots are typically French. B _ 4 '1‘lle_v rumrreled and kissed and m ade up and the kick oi thercconcilia- _tc sum E0 ml_ 1" mc me of me 1 Lion conlpcnsatcd for the tears and reproaches and home truths they told pa em' send "mmp5 °r "om (com each other. and they still had the sex allure for each other that ilrst drew PYCICHEGJ them together ' ` ` But by the end of the second year the novelty of marriage has worn off - No. 2899. ` ‘ ‘ der of having each other to themselves, and the fun of starting to house °8“'-‘~ keeping and the marvel of what Mr. Walter Winohell calls "blessed even $2, ting." That has taken up about two years agreeably and entertainlngiy, i ` and if each has discovered that marriage isnt quite so much of a picnic '-5 as they thought it was going to be and if they have been a little surprised blue shantung and nav blue d_ _ and pained to observe faults in each other that they never dreamed the I y "mty other had concealed about his or her person, it really hasn’i: mattered much. Safe for the Rest of Their Lives; But Let Them Beware the Perilous _ " »_'~ I Thirties, When Many a Matri- 6 \ ° monlal Venture Goes on the Rocks 5 What is the most dangerous time in marriage? German statistieians .» " 5 have discovered that the hardest years are from the ilfth to the tenth of ` FOI' me Cook . married ure, at least lu Germany. ' 1 ______,, _ . _ - simon nlsturl-:D VAMPIRES Being a younger, a more impulsive and a more CHOCOLATE SAUCE YELLOWED LETTER REVEALS undisciplined people, we begin to get dissatisfied with our matrimonial bargains soner than the Germans do, and I should say that in this country the timeof greatest peril to marriage is between the second and the fifth years. Let no young couple,/however, who have safely negotiated this storm center, congratulate I themselves that all danger is past, and that the bal- ance is fair sailing. For there lies ahead of them the hazardous thirties on which more domestic happineu' is wrecked than anywhere else along the course. _ig _ There was the thrill and excitement of getting married, and the won~ f ‘ ca 1 ° lr Ilan he - - fins y when one hu r°°°"°d ° """°” ‘°' lumsclz with thc brush. Generally speaking, the honeymoon begins to the time the bride‘s trousseau commences to give out ang get . . shabby, and the bridegroom discovers that marriage is a Job and not a ' romance. Up to then matrimony has been a gay adventure. l A. Yes. it imposes this °b1ls\¢1°\\-- gasped the guardian. tell me to wash my~self7" _ened chocolate add l tabllBP°°l1 buff ter, ilowl i-3 cup'of boiling water; rin Melt over ilre one square unsweet- y. W b to boiling point, add 1 cup .tae imm K granulated sugar and 2 tablespoons com syrup. Boll together for ave pires. minutes or until bf right consistency. Cool, and add Vi teaspoon vanilla B. eo poured over puddlngs or ice in _ faded letter- ever to ecoliomize. One watuxl save sh on clothes is by renewing e color stockings, and underwear. For dye- part he wrote: ing, or tiniing. I always use Dia- molid Dyes. They are the most economical ones by for because they b make u roud. Why, things look ~ belfer tylvga pncw when cd ` If streak. or run. They go on smoothly evea a ten year old child. Another ' ~' . A Scot had been sentenced to a _ ' ii l ' o rlso entandonhlst- _ ,-. , . -_ t term f imp nm » Q. what should llwlyl bt ‘Wd me day a burly warder arrived with WITH MAMA AICIIEB » , _ _ _,_a____.__~_-_ _.a__-__.______ 1' 0 but - .,_ - e-ag F- =_..r-em c _.. Womanb Realm \-:- Social and Pefrs,o'nal“E`-.°-i Fashions -:-‘_l.iit'érd,fure.ir ~--"."‘ i'“’ .“" _, "r" ='-‘-<~ ' sill; Farhamaszr are Wearing I *_ ` ..., T I ”"°"""" `=' Sfyle ¢'i'¢1¢#`it."; , under the tablecloth? a brush and a large bucket of water. ' A, A thick pdd 0! (Gill 0|' d0llbl0' wnutls to wash your Mn," he ‘im an lined cotton filll-M11 briefly and departed. tha Q- Whit 5h°“1d °“° "md in ° A few minutes later. hearing io! An important Roustabout shirt in chamoie has been copied in njlarlner of ways and causing nothing short of 3 gm-on _mow girl-wives who dress' the game. ` 'rhay'i'e` very biiabig, .mf 5;,- t and unrestraining that tbere's not a chance of using umm M letter of thanks? strange sounds, the warder returned In A-, T°° ml* °1!“°i"°“°” “"4 °°° to auufum soot rcbed lu Natures great abruptnesl. garb, -standing in the bucket, and Q ls it obligatory t° "nd ‘ 3”* .hive aclcfull as bc scrubbed Vitallml W I blbfl °h‘“°°“m'7, "Ere, wot' are you adolng of?" "Well," chattered Mae, “didn't you rm, t. M 4.--ll ‘"1 ml1iteraryMw,ll>1rld isahnaware 'of the "I mu" Y°“ th” I k"°W “Wh” t__Gem_ge Noel Gordon Bum' ing of the works in question. and This was revealed here when Harry! °° Henderson, holder of the Cor-i and pinch or salt. Um either not or nellus lr. Kelley research !¢11°W=hlP 1g ore dressing at Montana School mm, cl Mines, thumbed the cases °1 I The epistle, apparently written ` ‘ hastily, is dated Venice, April 27. Q n mm md addmsed go M.,,,,|e.,,- ute tc the huge tcm or chick lou ,_/ annum at that time pubmhe, ofiannually. most of which are prevent- a. _ A _L_ he Messengen Pm.1s_ able, are included chicks stolen; , as t . icks poisoned from eating salt, rat -11. g fd u .1 ¢ f Byron, the letter would indicate, °h m°n:yni=kuii°n°1i>r3imrm='f='¢{h=‘i= was incensed mar as Massager poison. mlntlrom old c-»u.l7\`,l.l0N'S;E'I»Y _I EY various methods employedieekas im- curately as possible to lrrive at the With the arrival of the bright number or cubic feet ln the stack, -‘Uufly dHyS Of spring and early sum- ' then to divide this figure by the mer and the wealth of bloom newinumber of cubic feet per ton Fine Paris Styles l By MARY KNIGHT United Press Stan' Correspondent PARIS, May 5.-UP.)-A cap, cuffs that look like bracelets, and a little roll collar that is at the same time a necklace-these all finely crocheted with bright gold metal thread, give you the right to be looked at, not once but twice, and then commented upon favorably by those who are well acquainted with what is smart in Parisian wearing apparel. Novelties used to be considered as accessories. Now they are necessities. One simply cannot appear without them for it is their responsibility to give you that air of knowing just how and where to put the finishing touch. And under the nomen of "novelties" comes costume jewelry, the thousand and one odd rings arid bracelets that have the same colors in them as your new scarf, the feather on your hat, or the buckle on your shoe; handkerchiefs that have clever little messages written around their borders or directly in the center; glove that have embroidered monogram; on their cuiis instead of flowers or leather bows and buckles; and slnali purses designed to carry for special occasion when you only need a part of your customary paraphemalia. ;,,_ Eyelet embroidery makes such cunning little flowers when the eglets are shaped like almonds. This makes the holes look like tiny leaves themselves, and yellow stamen are stuck through an eye in the heart of the newer to make it look real. 'number °f way' of esunuunf R' “|..|jv| ,U-|_n‘ 1" rn". _ growth br111ss.tnc bee battalions re-inns the length or the mer, then sume their annual work ol! storing its width, for the third dimension, ghvney- Clmadlb HHHUII h°l'lBy crop measure the distance over the stack _ranges into millions of pounds gath- from the ground on one aide gg the ered in at apiaries located through- ground on the other by throwing a out the entire Dominion. We all rope over the stack. With these thi-eg know that the proverbial busy bee measurements multiplied together- sets a commendable example, and the approximate number of cubic (nt that huge stores of honey accumul~ in tim ggggk ww be foumi b di id- ate in the healthy hive. A better ap- ing by one-third or one-quagter v If . preciation of the magnitude of the the stack is so built that it slant; task which is the bees' in building toward me wp from ch" to the up their stores, is afforded by figures bottom of the stack, one-fourth of just releases by the nee Division cr me product lr mem if the ` the Dominion Department of Agri- go" up pe,-p¢nd|c“|“.'°,. stnmhztzt culture, As the f H5111! 0 D Serie! Of about half its height and than slopes studies conducted over a period of toward the top, one-third of the pro- five years it has been found by quiygig tgkgm weighing hives thatan average of 31.- .*.______ 000 bees per hive wing their busy "wh" ' ',, way in seal-ch of sweet nectar from -'wine 1,: :ig day to day during the height of the gh, jug" .tu-n|y_ season. ..I hue,” mm.. mmm th’ colored prisoner, "1 just circulate lmlt, eo walcnllva my sracxs °°,_;‘I’:::‘°"' on md th wanton" n ." e Actual weighing is the only occur- Nun clerk’ um" th' "mmm" 1' me my of detemmm' the .mount herewith retired from circulation for . of hay in a stack. but there are al an d‘"'" .r 9 I . 5 /ag ~. . I Arrsno outa yer ° or me New salcloalnss ln clealvuuc wrllrs |»ol¢ce|.AlN You are cordially invited zo attend our Sp:-lag Showing and see the new, white, Porcelain-og. eteel Frigidaire s : : with many features which make it the :danced refrigerator, and the linen ever to bear its name.o o oYou will be de. lighted with the harmonizing beauty of the pure white cabinet. You will appreciate the “Cold 6001101" fvt faster freezing; the Quickube Trey _|__:R|Gl A3 R. T. HOLMAN, Limited . _Dealers in Prince Edward Island :ggi _ __u=== _ _ _ _ ____ _ ______,__;_, 1 J Zoe releasing ice cubes instantly; the Hydr-am; for fresheaing vegetables; the super-.p°w¢¢¢4‘ concealed unit that operates so quietly and ge such low cost. o o o Make _every eforr to be our guest while we are holding cpm hong You will had our Spring Showing rn be om of the most interesting displays ever presented in this city; oA|REy st raleloalass ans solo win-| N T E E \ _ IVIARITIME ELECTRIC ' C0., Limited I ' Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island ' " ’ ` . I- “_ - V _ _ ,.. V" . ,;~,_.,,.»,_.,,_l»_.-_..,..,_ », ,..» 1._ 1, . .. ,.-...,.,,,.s...»~ ¢»~...¢l»u.».¢