....»..-.. K_~ nun-snu- uqm-uunuwu-‘A - l l l Illustrated Drcssmaking Lesson Furnished _ yard of 35-inch contrasting. l.“ o JLZSIGQ‘ Woniank Realm -:- Social and Personal .- :- Fashions .1 :- Literature vVliat the Fashionable are Wearing For The Cools I With Every Pattern By Aunebelle Worthington i, a. . a . #5.. * a; 229 H ~ Z558 i 53' '2 ~__ All paliorns l5 cents" each in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) luuiatu Lntsup 2 peeks sound ripe tomatoes. 2 cups vinegarf y, cup sugar. 4 level tablespoons salt. l level teaspoon black Pfilliler. '1 teaspoon ailzllicc. i level teaspoon mustard. 1,; teaspoon cloves. 2 level teaspoons paprika. l4 teaspoon cayenne pepper. Wash the tomatoes, cut into halves and press out. all the seeds. Put the flesh of tomatoes into preserving kettle; bring quickly to the boiling point, stirring every now and then. Boll 25 to 30 minutes and niashi through strainer to remove all seeds and skin. Return to the kettle; add the spices, which have been tied in a piece of cheesecloth, and boil it down rapidly to half; then add the vinegar and the rest of the ingredients and boil until thick. Take from tile fire and put at once in cit-an, ilvell-sterll- ized bottles. J... Chill Sauce ll pk. firm. ripe tomatoes. 1 quart onions 1 cup chopped green peppers l cups cider vinegar. 1 cup sugar 2-inch stick cinnamon. '1 tablespoon mixed pickling spices l tablespoon salt. scald and skin the tomatoes, press them gently and remove some of the 5seeds and cut into small pieces. Chop the onions and peppers fine and put. into preserving kettle with the toma- toes; add the rest of the ingredients and boil slowly one hour until thick. Fill into sterilized wide-mouthed bot- tles. Be sure the corks are boiled be- fore using. When cold dip the bottles in melted wax. Remember the wax may be used year after year if carefully removed and put into a carton or tin can. I keep wax in an old agate teapot. dur- ing the winter and when a bottle or glass ts opened the wax is nut into the teapot. When needed the pot is placed over slow fire to molt. the wax, and it ls very easy and economical to pour the wax from the teapot. The whole spices are tied in one or two small pieces of cheesecloth and removed when filling into the bottles, l" No. Kill-Lingerie detail accented in white crepe collar of a black and Jvhlte crepe silk print is decidedly chi c to wearer. The white crept! HD9685 y again in neat burn-back culls. Dcsigmed ior sizes 36. 38. 40. 43. 44 End 45 <inches bust. The 36-inch size requires 3% yarcis of 30-inch material with h» No. 25i9-A darling printed dimlty in yellow and green colouring reflects -the newest idea of Yaris in basque bodice with peplum frlll. The circular skirt is gathered to the bodice which creates a sort rippling fulncss. Designed 1m 51105 6, a, lU l? and 14 yours The 8-year size requires 2&4. yards of 39- inch material Wllh "i yard of 35-inch contrasting and l’... yards of lace and "n: yard oi 1-inch ribbon. Ho. 265ll-.-A clevrr black crepe silk with slenricrizin: line-Y ‘T116 Wfflllpfld l bodice is Opened at the neckline to show a pastel pink open-eyelet embroid_ cred batlste VCSiCP- An applied band nf the batiste trims the neckline and '15 carried down either side of the bodice. Designed for sizes i6, l8 years, '36, 88, 40, 42 rind 44 inches bust. Biz; .16 requires 4H yards of 39-inch mat- “ erial with l4. yard of 35-inch contrasting. Bpend 10c to save $10. How? By ordering a copy of our new Fall and vwinler Fashions. It gives the answer to the often asked question. "How does she do it?" For it shows how to dress up to the minute at little ex- P3359, You can save on every dress and save on the children's clothes too. lThot means more and better frocks for you and yours. It masts ill cents a , Qqpy, but only l0 rent-l when ordered same time as pattern. Backward Babies Thrive Alter Fsr of Talilrl- . Derangements of the digestive organ; are responsible for most of the ailments which afflict young children and keep lhcm backulard in development. Babys Own Tablets regulate the stomach and bowels re- storing them to normal action and this is all that is necessary to set the little sufferer safely on the road to health and happiness. Baby's Own Tablets are’ specially designed to correct indigestion, con- stipation. colic; break up colds and simple fevers and to allay teething pains. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at. 25 rents a. box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. Ba hy‘s Own Dorothy Dix ' Letter Box i Divorcee’s Matrimonial Chances Slim in Com- petition With ‘Sod’ Contender; Vogue for Tall Men Rather Fanciful; Love Letters Should be Returned Dear Miss Dix-I am a youus. good-looking divorcee with one child. I would like to marry again, but while men show ins a lot o! attention, ii. is the kind of attention that is without intention. They don't want ta marry me and the reason of it is because I am divorced. Why ts it that everybody touts a real widow as the best marriage yet while they warn a man against marrying a grass widow? I know I would make any man who would treat me halfway decent s good wife. l DIVORCE. Answer: There is an old saying that “nothing succeeds like success" and this applies to marriage as well as every other line of human endeavor. We all like to be u~ soclnted with the people wh o succeed and w»: inst-luc- . tively feel that they have some peculiar fitness, ability or talent that will cause tnem to make a go of anything which they under- take. And. conversely, we are afraid of fsllures and shun them. but we feel that somehow the reason the failure didn't succeed was because of lack o: intelligence or energy, or because of some fault of temperament, and also be- cause we have a sort of superstitious fear that the failure will bring down his boodoo on us. You can see this illustrated in the fact that when a man has a good job he is always being affored other good Jobs, but let him loss his Job and the very people who wanted him when he was prosperous don't want him when he needs the work that they could give him. mic point of view explains why the grass widow is not so much in de- mand ns the sod widow as a wife. The divorced woman is a matrimonial bankrupt. She has made a failure, and men shy oi! from her, thinking that it she couldn't get along with her first husband she probably couldn't get along ivith them, and that if she had the nerve to drag one man into the divorce court she might do it again, and they also might find themselves paying alimony. Also a man regards the mere fact. that. a woman is divorced as proof positive that she was not patient and long suffering and forgiving and meek and. humble, all of which he regards as star virtues in a wife, and qualities which he earnestly desires the lady he marries to possess. Indeed her divorce itself proves her to be a woman of spirit and determination who will expect her husband to we the mark or, if he doesn't, to take the consc- quenoes. _ ‘ All of which is more or less of a stop signal to n man and makes him think that he had better either man-y a. young girl who hasn't shown that she was a matrimonial washout and couldn't. get along with her husband, or clse marry a widow who had proved that she did know how to handle a husband. \ 0f course, this reasoning isn't always sound. It isn't always the wife's fault when a, marriage turns out a failure. Indeed, oftener than nut the husband is to blame. There are men so wild that no woman on earth is a gifted enough animal trainer to domasticate them. ‘There are men so tyr- annical and overbearing that Patient Griselda herself could not stand them. There are men who are drunkards and brutea and llbertines that no woman with any self-respect oould live with. and there is nothing in a woman div- arcing a man of any of these types that would disqualify her from making a splendid wife to any decentrman. And, on the other hand, there are many widows who are widows “ they actually killed their husblnds by their tempers and their nagging and their extravagance and their emotions as truly as if they had murdered than: with guns and poison. There are widows who were mean, cold, cruel, selfish wives to their first husbands, and who will be mean, cold. cruel, selfish wives to a second husband, or a third husband or a scwnth husband, if so many victims fall into their clutches. But as their husbands locked the secret of their misery in their bosoms and died to get out of it instead of going to the divorce court, there is no way for any other man to bs warned by their fate. But because a woman is divorced is no indication that she will not make a good wife. Generally she does because having been married to u. bad hus- band a good husband looks like a gift from God to her and sbe is in the state of mind to appreciate kindness and consideration at. their true worth. Also she has had her lesson and found out that temper and pride Ind It!!! neckednessdo not pay in marriage and that s. wife has to make many con- cesslons and shut her eyes to many things that her husband does, and so she too, is easier to get along with in her second estate than she was in her first. Many men consider these things in the divorcee/s favor, but it is not in FASHIONS FOR BETWEEN SEASONS In what more perfect way om the vivacily of youthful beauty find expression thin in the wlnsome breath of the Yardley lavender? In all the hundred and sixty yaks sine: the good Mr. Yardley firs: rejoiced Society will: it, there has not come another perfume of such gay young charm-n fi-agnnce of such soothing solace to the weary and the sorry and the sick. YARDLEY LAVENDER The Lovable Fragrance mo Fzm 65: Lin!’ bottle, of all good ‘.2 o K “rug an partmmt store: 15o d» ll» " i§§Y with the insistence of elegance loo. is popular. Much of the beauty deep brown velvet. White crepe all! gqfnnl, dusk uppblne. blackish groom and browns. ‘no suit in tho Veg no sketch at the right. above ll o! in lbs mode, it. wu inevitable that velvet should be mind. velveteen of the new volvats comes from their rich deep colors-who rods, In; Happenings "mom's no thrill in easy lllllhB when the skies are clear lad blilv 11mg; no joy in merely coins thin!‘ That anyone can do nut there is some satllfwtlvfl mi u mishtv sweet t» "ks when you rush a destination. Th" Wu though! you'd never make. l Princess Mu-v is snsndlns "Y! busy days at Hlrewood Home. In addition to mansion all her remn- al treasures brought from Goldabor- ougb Bail, tbs Princess has had w superintendent the removal of her m»; pets. She now breeds Blue navoren rabbits as well u fowls and Cairn terriers. Goldsborough will be let furnished lust as it af-Bmlfl- AB p; g m; family dowel-house, it will eymtually provide a residence for the youthful Lord Lsscelles, and it l ‘of parliamentarians. who are in 0t- of the Week l’ delightful dances at IXIIBQWIW‘ °l1 Thursday aveuinl. Wlwfl "l! WW8‘ er people had n. most. enivyilllfi time. The hospitality of the ship is being ext-ended by Commander Cur- tis and his oflcers and the only re- gret is that their stay in port is all too short. I I I Miss Mildred Bennett. sister of the Prime Minister, entertained at a smart luncheon ‘fiiesday at the Country Club in honor of the wives tawm Covers were laid for so, the table being prettly adorned with a variety of garden flowers. o o o Miss Ids. Henderson and Mrs. Ryan. Kent Street, left Wednesday morning on a holiday visit to New York. DRUMS! I I The tea hostesses at the Golf Links this afternoon will be Mrs. J. R. Paton. Mn. G. Fllliter, Mrs. H. A. C. Scu-th, Miss M. K. Peters, Miss B. iMcKinnon. is on that account that his parents ' are anxious to keep it intact. I I I The Queen has given to the Lion- don nuseum a number of illustrated papers containing descriptions of her wedding with the King, then George Duke of York, on July B. 1893. I I I I I I A lot of rubles will be worn this season and priceless pigeon blood stones are used in entire sets of Jew- ellery as lavishly as if there were no The visit of H. M. B. Wisteria is being made the occasion of much social activity this week. ins Honor hard-time wn-salvusnws- TM f" the Lieutenant Governor and Mrs. 101' imitation Stones i8 Wlnln! 11nd Heart: entertained at one of theirvfflclfll-IB 55°11" and m" “"11” m“ be denied that a divorce is a handicap to the widow who wishes to remarry. And worse still is a. child, for very few men in these days of the high cost of bringing up children are either willing or able to undertake the support of B ready-made family. D0307!" 91x- Dear Miss m“: have always looked forward to marrvinc I handsome- tall Prince charming, but. alas! my Prince Charming came dashing up on short legs and I have gone back on all of my dreams and fallen for him. What about it, Dorothy Dix? 1s stature an important consideration amen! other considerations? Does the csthetic clement enter here, or ls it all psy- chological? What. is the origin of the ides. and can you think up any sound reason for its survival and support? I Hm sizes for your '-' vents‘ Worth on this matter. mw-nisausp WILLA. Maggie is 5 cents‘ worth, Wills, and don't bother about the change. The origin of the idea. that a mun should be l. giant who over-topped his woman doubtless goes back to the time when the male had to defend the female with his good right arm. Then a man was mused solely by his slw 1nd prowess and if he wasn't big and strong there was nothing to him. He was an object of derision and contempt. ' Naturally in those clays every maiden wanted the biggest man she could get, the one who could lift the heaviest weight and throw a spear the farth- est: and it didn't matter whether he mid any brains in his hem or not w ion: as he towered above his fellow men. Any girl then would have turned up her nose at a small inslgnlficantjooklng man like Mr. Edison or Henry Ford or Rudyard Kipling and prayed that some double-listed chap who had Just choked a lionuo death or mauled his enemy into a jelly would grab her by the hair of her head and drag her of! to his cave. But. we have got miles and miles along the path of civilization since men had to defend women with physical force, and the human bra-in has also de- veloped to a point where it is for more important than human muscle. IO now it doesn't make a particle of difference whether a Juan is big or little. The thing that counts now is not how long his legs are but how tall he is above his ears. so long as your sweetheart isn't short on gray matter. don't 81V! lnfltllfl‘ thought, to how short he is in stature. It doesn't cut. snyice. 1t is the in- tellectual heavywelghts who run the world, not the men who gross 250 pounds on the scales. If you look about you, you will lind that most of the successful men are little men. v Don't marry a man that you look down upon intellectually. Thurs are no happy homes in which the wile knows herself w be her husband's luPer- ior in mind and Judgment, but as long as you look up to a man spiritually and feel that he is wiser and strong" thin Y0" IN- Y9" Wm b‘ “PP?- DORUIJ-IY DIX. I I DoarMissDlx-For more thanayeul have bow Iollllwlth lmll-‘l V110 isnucnisicvcwiiumsmawuomwnvmflaws-WWW" and showered ms with gifts. 1 plmd him 110a: because h» Wu a good thing, but. he wanted to mm v me. and when 1 refused be wanted his letters back. I sent most of them back, but I kept those mooning lfllrrlllv- N0‘! my best friend says that. f must return those particularly. but they I11 Etiquette Elnbfihllfl Q. 1s it proper for a married man to act as usher at n. wedding when hlswifeisnntaskedtotakepart’) a Yes, it ls entirely correct. Q. How is the breeding o! q woman most often shown? A. Probably by the courtesy aha shows to the clerks while shopping q; marketing. _. uauients are coming back into their own. a >I I I the welcome guest of Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Aitken and is being cordial- ly welcomed. I I Miss Nell Stewart left yesterday for Montreal after a pleasant holiday with her parents the Hon. J. D. and Mrs. Stewart. Miss Winhifred Gillan and her friend Miss Bertha Derick of Wor- cester, Mess. are leaving on return home this morning after a delightful holiday motoring through Nova 5co- tia and this Province with the for- mers mother, Mrs. B. Gillan Ind sister, Miss Ina Gillan, R. N. I I I Mrs. A. A. lacuna entertained in. formally at afternoon tea on Thurs- day in honor of Mrs! Legato, wig; q! the Rev. R. Moorehead Legato, who is being welcomed as the new chate- laine of the St. James Presbyterian Manse. Mlas Mai-ions Sinclair entertained at a shower this week at her 110mg on Crescent Road. Quebec. in honor of Miss Vivian Scott, whose may. W188 to Captain Ernest Geoffrey Weeks. formerly of Charlottetown, is to take place on October 4. In the centre of the‘ tea-tabla was a little white bride. and those assisting in serving the guests were the brides. maids to be: Miss Marjorie Ridout. Mrs. Glenholme Hughes. Miss Betty Ellsworth, Mrs. Eaton Burdqi. I I I Mrs. E. G. Saunders left Wednes- day for Guelph, out, sccombmvtns her son Heath who will attend. the Agricultural College there. Mrs. Saunders will visit. in New York bu. fore returning home. I I I Mrs. (Senator) oreelirisn MacAr- thur hss returned to her homo in Summersldc from Ottawa, when ab; attended the opening o! the spacial session of tho Home, I -I I ma. Beni- Rozm. Jr. paid a brief visit to be: home in Bummerstde this week. I I I The Missu Green entertained at bridge at their homo in Summer- side in honor of Miss Carrie Holman who Ls leaving for Montreal on Monday. Mia. n. n. a. show bu been spend- ing s week in Halifax accompanying her daughter. Miss Nan Shaw who is to continue her musical studies at Dalhousle. 5111115951109 do Pei-inlet. of Vancou- ver. while in Toronto loot weak con- ducted the christening service of bis Brandson, John Diunuresq, sou of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. do Psueier, ol Niagara Falls. After the service i: MINE and I may find them useful. What do you m’? POPULAR 011"»- Answer: I say that if you have one shred of honor or decency in you that you will return the letters to the man at. once. X can think of not-bib! m0" w“- mmptlble than for a girl to take advantage of s. man's honorable lovs for her m try to extort money out o! him. The lowest gold-digger should be uh- smed to use such tactics. 1303317” D13- i A Morning Smile Tbs fatal word had Just been spoken. ‘The rejected suitor wu standing before her listening to be: elaborate explanations of her da- cl-slon. The upsets of hildfe" "I trust that I have made myself sufficiently plain," she llid. "Well, 1 would usual: so w fir." he answered as his count! Iraduall! returned. "It's but fair to give natum the credit for that." he added, ls he retired in good order. l All FOII. OVER HALF ACENTUEYTHISPE- EN PIESCQIFTION HA9 MEN IIOOGNIZEO A! TNIHOST EFFECTNE RE QULATOD. G‘ THE LIVER KIDNEY! AND BOWELS mums All children are cabinet to little upsets. They come at unexpected times. They seem twice u serious in the dead of ni ht. But there's one lorm of com on on which a mother can always rely; good old Cutoria. s This pure vegetable preparation can't harm the tiniest infant. Yet mild as it in. it soothes miles the blouse which bu n drilled neckline. The Marla Any but of brown broadcloth felt. rolls up In front to show the entire forehead. The photograph at ti: ktt h c! a stint frockwltliabolerolletltlldfljflllqlkotobllbivonl ‘ ,,,.- ' rvyinwzuwwvurgfi "i" w...» . a restless, frctful baby like nothing else. its quick relief soon see: the t fomtl‘ l32£'&.‘.i.°.°.‘.“ s... §..°,“.i€..i"'°'.‘i Trinity College chapel a reception was held at Mrs. H. A. Richardson's house. Wlilmer road. Mrs. do Peuciei is visiting her mother, Mrs. Richard- son who has lately returned from s visit. to P. E. Island. .. (Continued on Page Tenl colic, or diarrhea, elds to QR soothing influence o _Cutofll- Keep Cuiorln in mind, and he] a bottle in the house-aim? Give a few drops to IflY d!" whose tongue is coated, or whose breath is bad. Continue with Castoria until fhl child is ‘will! Eve drugstore has Canons; "l: one has Chu. H. Fletch!’ fiwmiuuvuw l Mrs. Alfred Bridges of Montreal t; .