' JULY 29. 1937 r l H. F? __ f'"AJ3.l-.‘_’ '.....___'ET°"."_.N ("LEAR Dl " PAGE seven What the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished ' I Jfilt, 7.1,’; QAPE SOFTENS NECKLINE With Every ‘ Pattern By Aunebelleaworthington most unusual manner revealing a round neckline. This becoming cape. A sheer yellow organdie collar adds let is further enhanced with an ap. chic femininity arid girlish prettl- plied band of the dimIty print, ness to a yellow and white printed The skirt shows soft gather-pd gimity frock. It 096m at the fl-‘Ollt 1n treatment at the front. A straight hip effect i5 5°11‘ ieved through the “we girdle that ‘m5 youthfully in bow at the left side. This attractive tire summery dress that is quite 5;,- practical as it g slllilfti and cool, may be copied ex- , arlly in the eight- yczir size with 2% yards of 39-inch dimity with 5t yard oi’ 32-inch orgondie. Style No. 3360 is designed for girls of 8, i0, l2 and l4 years. l"s simple to maize! The skirt is in two sections and merely to be seamed at sides. It 15 attached to botlm that has a front and back_ section that is jfilliPfi at the sides and shoulders. The neckline and armhoies are fin- ished with bias binding, and the iapelet collar stitched at the neckline. other i d e a s you'll like quite as well are navy blue voile with white ‘ pin clots with col- lar iizth picot edge with band joined with hemstitched, orchid and white tiny checked pattern in handkerchief laivn with white lawn collar trimmed Willi the orchid checked lawn, red and white polka-dotted batlste, nile green voile in small fioral pattern and marine blue tub silk. Pale blue organdie with collar trimmed around lower edge with t\\‘fl-Ill(‘l’l Irish lace or shell pink crepe de chine with bias binding used to edge collar and girdle in baby blue shade, produce a very dainty effect ior "best" for parties or summer re- sort for afternoons. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Be sure to fill in size of pattern. No. 3360. Size ...................... "on.""u"...n-iu-"s-nn-nu» Name “mu-n..-nun...".-.--n--|-----. Street Address 91W State For The Cook' TOMATO SALAD Scald, peel and chill ,slx small, round tomatoes. hollow them out, and cut into points. Into each tomato pour one teaspoon French dressing to which has been added one dessert- Bmon each of chopped green, sweet Peppers and cress. Arrange these tomatoes on crisp lettuce and serve with a cream cheese ball rolled in llfliirika. Serve with the dressing to which the peppers and cress have let-ii added. ' Farmer's Wil‘ P Beneiitircl "A farmer's wife is always busy and l have a big garden to cultivate all summer. I used to feel weak and tired but since have taken Lydia E. Pink- hams Vegetable Compound I I can do all my work alone. ‘ Ev"? day I speak of the good Your Vegetable Compound has done in making me rosy l and strong as l was at 18. I will write to any women in French about: the Compound.”- l Madame lrenee P n, Saint: 8548 dc Laval, o. Nicola, Ends PE Quick Pile sufferers can only get quick, safe and lasting relief by removing the cause-bad circulation of the blood in the lower bowel. Cutting and external remedies can't do this-an internal medicine must be used. HEM-ROID. the prescription of Dr. J. S. Leonhardt. a. specialist, suc- ceeds, because it relieves this blood congestion and strengthens the af-- fected parts. I-IEM-ROID is sold by druggists everywhere, and has such a wonderful record of success right in this city that Hughes Drug Co., Ltd, says to every Pile sufferer, try HEM- ROID at any risk. It must end all Pile agony or you get your money back. SEALS SLAUGHTERED IN ANNUAL FUR HUN’! Furs for milady's sealskin coat daily are taken on the Pribiloff Islands during the season in a well- organizcd hunt that is scarcely more thrilling than the slaughter of beef cattle. Under careful government super- vision, numbers of the great herd are selected and killed. _0nly males, 3 years old, are vic- tims of the hunters, and the animals are increasing in» number each year. The early days of July are best for the hunting, as the females do not arrive until early in August. Native sealers. after beating the young males, silently creep along the shore and form s, line that will pre- vent the animals from reaching the wiatcr. An alarm is given and ‘the startled seals look up, see that their rem-eat to the ocean is cut off, and lumber inland. The seals are carefully herded, usually at night. to the killing grounds, where those of proper age are killed. They are first dealt a blow on the skull and a knife then in thrust into the heart. Death is entirely painless. In days of old. when knights were bold, ' And towels were not invented. Men vmiped their feet with a. blade of wheat. And went away contented. Don't ask him to iet- you use it. Just get in and drive ofl before he can l Dorothy Dix’ Letter Bo; Caln aowife Have Faith in a Man Who is Faith- ess. Advice and Comfort to the Woman Whose _Husband Killed Her Love. for Him — Who Owns the Car ? not irfgxlt: gzgrlyhllilulsbar: complains bitterly because he says I have h" been jolted time and tim ow can I have fa.th in him when that faith e again? How can I have faith in him when see him philendering with other women and when I kmw that he Spends hours in questionable places? Is it possible and human not to wonder what he is doing when he stays out night after night? Can I help being suspicious of the letters he gets from other "Omen ‘Jr What happens when he goes joyriding with them? I am only a poor, human woman and I don't seem able to summon up the faith in him that he expects me to home. MARIELOUISE. i. Answer: _ A cynic has defined faith as the ability to believe something that you know isn't true. " Evidently your husband belongs to this school of thought, and he ex- pects you to be one of those gifted wives who can shut their eyes to all that they -do not want to see and put an agreeable interpretation upon every act of the men to whom they are married and make it square with what they would like it to be. Arid, curiously enough, there are such women. I once knew one who said that her faith in her husband was so great that oven if she should see him doing something wrong she would know that it was her lying eyes that had deceived her and that he really had not done it. But few, alas! of us have thishappy faculty of believing that we are be- loved Just because we desire to be loved and that we are the only ones to our husbands just because we desire to monopolize them. This is a. hard-boiled age in which we look our gift horses in the mouth and in which we take very little for granted. Most wives hail from Missouri and have to be shown. And so, when their husbands cease to take any interest in holding their hand and pass up petting parties, and especially when their husbands display more interest in other women than they do in them, they grow suspicious and fail to show their lovely, wifely trust which wandering husbands laud so loudly and do so little to deserve. It always seems to me that men and women expect impossible virtues in the partners of their bosom. A husband will be unfaithful to his wife and then, because she finds it out or because he has an acute attack of con- science, he-will ask her forgiveness and feel ill-used because she docs not have the same implicit faith in him that she had before he betrayed her. He does notseem to realize that faith is not an act of volition, and that we can no more believe in a person that we have found untrustworthy than we can make a broken staff whole again- And men and women expect their husbands and wives to love them whether they are lovable or not, whether they do anything to hold affection or not. The man who never shows his wife any tenderness or affection, who growls at her and curses her, who is stingy and mean to her, is sur- prised when he finds out that she hates him. I The woman who nags and whines and curses end complains, who is lazy and extravagant and never does o. single solitary thing to make her husband comfortable or happy, considers herself a martyr when he ceases to care for her and falls in love with another woman. ‘ Why? Goodness only knows, for it is certain that we cannot have our cake and throw it away, too. We can only have faith in the husbands and wives who deserve faith and we can only love those who are lovable. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-I have been married more than five years and have two beautiful children, but due to my husbands ugly disposition and abusive treatment of me my love for him is entirely dead. I have met another man for whom I care very much and who loves me. I told my husband about this other man and that I was thinking of leaving him. Since then he is a changed man and says that if I will only give him another chance he will prove that he can make me happy. . What must I do? Divorce my husband and marry this other man? Or stay with my husband? Do you think we can ever be happy together? Can love that is dead ever be revived? WORRIED. Answer: I think, that all things considered, you will stand a better chance of happiness with your husband than you would with the other man. Because there are the children, you see, and they make an alien clement in any sec- ond marriage that nearly always wrecks it. It seems almost impossible for eit her n; man or a woman to rise to the heights of not being Jealous of their stepchildren. A man adores the mater- nal passion in a. woman when it is expended on his own children. He ex- cuses her absorption in them, but he resents it. with every fiber of his being when she displays this mother love toward another man‘s children. A woman gloats over their father's attention and generosity to her child- ren, but she cannot endure him to be generous to his first wife's children and absorbed in them. 5o if you take your children away from their own father and give them a. stepfather, you not only do them a grievous wrong in depriving them cf a father's love and care, but you will almost surely put yourself in the un- happy predicament of having always to keep peace between them, and w.ll perhaps have to suffer the agony of seeing your little ones ill-treated. Evidently your husband has received a badly needed lesson in finding out that he has lost your love by his cruelty toward you, so you may safely count, on his trying to make things pleasant for you hereafter. He will mind his p's and Q's and probably make a. pleasanter companion than the other mm whose peculiarities of temper and temperament you would have to risk. For every man shows himself in a. different guise to a. woman after he is married to her from the one he wore when he was courting her. I do not believe that there is‘any way of breathing the breath of life into dead love. I do not think that you can ever bring back the thrill and the glamour once they are gun , but I do believe that on the ashes of a cold and comfortable to sit by during the declining years of your life. And I think that you will always have the happiness of knowing that you have put duty before inclination and that you have donethe brave thing and the right thing. DOROTHY DIX. O I I Dear Miss Dix—My husband has a car that he warships and when I ask him to lend it to me he refuses. We live in the country and he doesn't mind my driving the cows and pigs and chickens, but he “isn't let me drive the flivver. How can I persuade him to let me use it? COUNTRY. Answer: hoerthstone you can light the fires of a friendship that will be very warm ilealth Finer A ‘Than In Years I “In 1927 I had a. complete nervous breakdown that left me in a deplor- ably rundown condition generally. MRS. rzuzarsarn a. MURPHY Notwithstanding a. pnm- appgfite 1 was compelled to diet on account of indigestion. A disordered liver kept me badly constipated with a. tired ‘don't care’ feeling all the time. It was perfectly marvelous the way 6 bottles of Sargon restored my health and strength. I eat anything I want. my food agrees with me splendidly and it has been years since I have enjoyed such delightfully refreshing sleep. ' "There was nothing about Sargon Pills to upset me in the slightest but they gave me perfect bowel regula- tlon."—Mrs. Elizabeth A. Murphy, 113 Saint David St., St. John, N. B. plate: then cut it with the fork. l fortune. One day he and an acquain- tance were’ talking, when the latter- said to old Duncan: .W0mdn’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature Etiquette filoberillQ time; Q. What does a letter of introduc-l tion require? l A. Prompt recognition. Q. At a week-end party, what does the hostess usually discuss withl her guests at the first dinner? I A. She should discuss plans for’ the ivcck-end. l Q. When a banana is served! whole, should one skin it and eat it! with the fingers? A. No; strap off the skin and’ place the banana on the dessert into mouthfuls A Morning Smile \...i.u_l_ a u“... - An uneducated Scotsman made a‘ l l “You don't know enough to g0 ln-l doors when it rains. Why‘, you can't spell "bird." "Bfl-I-fi." said Duncan. “I tell you you don't know any-' “lins- Whr. if you had to spell tol make a living Ymlkl have been dead‘ years ago. Ill bet you a fl\61‘ you can't spell "birdi" After the money was put down Duncan said, "B-i-r-d." "That's not the way you spelled it. the first time." "I warn: hettin‘ thrn.“ Sargon may be obtained in Char- lottetown from Hughes Drug‘ Co, Ltd. _ Paris, July 28 All the brunette women in the whole world can be put into three types. These types are Just like the colors of the rainbow, which have dif- ferent shades, yet are still the same color. Basically, all brunettes are one of the three types, Castilian brunet-l te, madonna. brunette and vivid brun- ' ette although they may be dlfferentl shades of each type. i Therefore the following color sug- gestions apply only to the colors, but not the shades to be worn by the different women cf each type. Using, say "Scat!" As his wife, you have a half Do You Know Four’ Most Becoming Colors? sity of color. Jewel-like tones are more the livestock on a place to water and pasture has earned the right to drive a Rolls-Royce, to say nothing of a. fllvver. therefore, these color suggestions as a basis, experiment in the shades that you will find in each color to ascer- tain which shades is the most becom- lug to your particular coloring. The Castilian Brunette This type has very fair colorless complexion. dark hair and eyes. Se- lect the shades of the following col- ors that correspondent to your inten- becoming than pastel shades. Red—ikt.remcly becoming in all interest in it. Any woman ivl-io drives DOROTHY DIX. ‘Q L ‘Anmleq sang..- airfoil crshiimmif‘xppai Rea Ross Tani ¢ "i-s m. 3e.” ‘M: Quarries - - has mo. fk 0mm. tutu; the clear, transparent. but not too vivid shades. ORANGE-Good wlvri it has yellowish cast “pumpkin vivid." YELLOW-In every shade. is un- a doubtedly the most becoming of all colors for this typo. GREEN—-Bs<"i:i1ii: only ill clear. transparent shades, ranging itorii, yellowish-green to bllll5l1-5l‘t‘£’fl. BLUE—Only becoming in rich. vivid shades, verging on green; not becoming in the softi pastel hluer be- longing to the hit-radio. PURPLE-—:3‘C02lllll§ when clear. without too much intensity; but not the rich wine or heavy shades. ORCHID-blow becoming in clear. transparent tones than the smoky pastel shades. V GREY-Wearable, but not as be- coming as BEIGE-Which this type can wear in all of its lovely shades better than can any other type. BROWN~Not especially becoming. BLACK-Becoming, but sometimes too heavy and sombre for very fragile women of this type. SILVER. ANTD GOLD-Both be- coming, with silver a bit more becom- ing to the personality of this type. Madonna. Brunette Type Dark hair and eyes, colorless. ivory or olive skin. Must select doe-p, rich. dark shades. u RED-Very becoming in the deep rich wine and rose shades, but de- cidedly’ unbecoming in any: shades of pink. ORANGE-Not becoming. except in soft burnt orange shades bordering .9 rl-iJl iILJ-“ZI on henna. YEZLLOW—Decide:lly unbecoming l0 m5 LVPE- as well as to any typr and l! l5 1T1‘- til’) - with dark colorless skin. GREEN-Wearable only in the very soft green-blue shades, and then not especially good. and to be chosen with cifircmr» rari- because of its sal- lT-"lll? 65M‘? ‘than your skin. BLUE -Bncsmin; only Ln soft, |chalky navy shades. and bluish-twine shades. PURPLE—B""oming to this type Ln sentr- srft ivizir shades. but must be selrcicri with or-ztrome care because oi its sallovving efftrt upon the 5km, ORCHID.-Usua1l_v too light a col- _0r to he becoming to any olive com- plcxicn. &§-§~O Here ’sl Your Favorite Food PutVup in a new Package. Mon delicious soups, all varieties in thnil original flavor condensed to powder form. Easy to make-Cheap and nullit- ishing. ' 15c Per Package which makes two quarts. ,, Use what portion of package you require-the remainder keeps fredb. When you buy soup ' Say Jamison‘s Compressed’ Soup At All Grocers. A Canadian Product. o 4053-5-29-tst8a'oeks. , i with each regular Mod found in Modess. the New‘ apt... lyo At no extra cost your favourite store is now offer» ing a special package containing 3 Modcss Compacts package of Modess. I Y ess Compact I fitting ggowns can be worn with assurance. One or two can be carried in the pocketbook. Modess compact has exactly the. same remarkable absorbency as regular Modess. The only difference is that it has been gently compressed to nearly half the thickness. This is an exclusive refinement only Peale. MADE INCANADA l World's largest makers ofSii1g:cal Dressings, Bandages, Absorbent Cartons, etc. l Much thinnenbut equally safe-its inconspicuous- ’ ness is such that even the sheercst and most tightly Special Offer g t0 introduce (less Cosimo! (1 in box) Rcetssilodw or Modess (bmpaaii - 15¢ ZPackagau/ortli 65‘ fir - ‘t {:11 r naturism; 49¢