PAGE TWO Woman s Realm s....~..1 and ,Personalgj_ THF- Cflektorrsrowusiueseiaig, .. ,.¢. .. .._-» VWIatOt/ie Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington 3.,x lgiafs 2961 mo. 25 _ i __._._.......i__ iii-An intriguing little frock with ycutnlul basque bodice and mugly fitted hips. It is tub silk in flattering watery-green colouring. ‘The capelet collar is of pla.n crepe .s;lk in matching tone. Designed for sizes l2, l4. l8, 18 and 20 years. The 16-year size requires 2P.» yards of 39-inch material with "s yard of 25-inch contrasting- No. 2961—-A simple daytime frock of printed silk crepe with becoming scarf neckline. It affects Princess sh aping through the moulded bodice and clever low placed flare of the circular skirt. Designed for sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 roqtiires 3'. yards of 39-inch material with ‘l yard of 35-inch contrasting and ‘-_- _vard of 35-inch material for bias binding and collar trimming. No. 3358—i\ little Dutch apron for small folk of 2. 4 and 6 years. It's delightfully comfv and smart. It can he worn as apron to keep little daugh- ter's frock spic and span. It is unsurparcd forthe warm day's of summer worn as a frock. The muiiattire diagram shows how utterly simple it is to make and latinder. The 4-year size require-z iii yards of 32-inch material with 2 yards of braid. v All patterns l5 cents each in stamp< or coin lcoln preferred.) The Summer Fashion Ivlagazinc contrxns most interesting styles for adults for town or vaczitioxi wear. Also darling styles for the kiddies. It is l5 cents a copy, but may be obtained for i0 cents if ordered same time as pattern- QhildgenCry ma. iCAsTfiR IA A BABY REMEDY APPROVED BY DOCTORS roa ccucxonsnp/inoicoimmiaa A Morning Smile i...“ .i wiir They: were riding nlong a beautiful stretch of country highway. She was (ll‘l\'l1l£!. and suddenly espied repair men climbing the telegraph poles. "Why, Harry. just look at those men,‘ rho exclaimed. "Do they think I nvrrr drove a car bcforo?". l Bow Deploreu - Do You . Unnecusary Treat D h D Dlailluaicn- Your Wife? =. y 1x ment of lll Marriage ' “D0 You Really Think, Mr. Man, That if You Had Treated Your Wife Before Marriage as You Treat Her Now, She Would Have Married You?” Queries Dorothy Dix Do you ever stop to think, Mr. Man, that your wife never in the world ' would have married you if you had employed the same technique as a lover that you do as a husband? ' when you were courting her you did everything that you could to make yourself attractive to her. When you went to call upon her you were shorn and shaven and manicured and pressed and looked as splc and span as if you had just come out of a bandbox. The nifty gentleman in the ready-made clothes ad- vertisements had nothing on you. " But you don't care how you appear to your wife. You regard matrimony as having emancipated you from the safety razor and given you the privilege of; sitting on the back of your neck and slopping around . _ the house in a soiled shirt with no collar and run- l d07~_if‘..p'ttlc'lkfel slippers. All intelligent wives doll up to try to lcok good to the.r husbands, but not one husband in a thousand ever gives a single.’ thought to whether he is balm to his wife's eyes or not. Believe me, there are plenty of married women who would still be writ- ing Mss before their names if they had had an inking of the kind of scare. - crow they were getting, and known that they would have to spend the bal- Bllce 0f their lives tryiris to shoo a husband who had c soap-and-water phobia into the bathroom. Before marriage you were assiduous in promoting your wife's happiness. l You put her pleasure before your own. You consulted her inclinations. Nothng was too much trouble for you to do for her. You were never tool tired or too busy to take her anywhere she wished to go. ' ' But now it is a different story. You should worry about whether shel is entertained or bored. You don't notice whether she is happy or unhaPPY- l You don't even take her to the movies until she badgers the life out of you about itpand then you go with the expression of an early Christian martyr. You dont work any harder now than you did before you were married, but you are always too tired now to take your wife out of an evening t5 the lhéflire. 0r t0 8o to a party with her. ' ‘l Don't you think there would have been one~more old maid, brother, if. your wife had even guessed that she was acquiring a husband who would get B11 i118 Pleasure he wantedhi the outside world, and who didn't care whether she had any or not? Before you were married you fed your wife on fiattery- You told her continually that she was the most beautiful and wonderful woman in the world. ‘ You praised her eyes, and the way she did her hair, and. younotiecd mery time she had on a new dress, and you thought all of her little man- nerisms so cute and cunning, and you led her to believe that you thought, ah: was simply IT. - " But as soon as you were married you substtuted the hammer for the sahe spreader, and you never comment on anything she does except to give it a ivallop, and if you should voluntarily pay her a compliment she would fall down dead with surprise. when she calls your attention to the fact that she has on a new dress you grunt and make some disparaging remark about its being too young for her, and ask what makes her fool enough to dress like a flapper. You eat the 999 good dinners she prepares for you in silence, but if the thousandth one has too much salt in the soup or the meat is overdone, you howl to heaven over it. . X D0 YOU 19811.‘! think. Mr. Man, that any woman marries to get somebody to tell her of her faults and how old she is getting and what a poor manager =he is? I l | Before you were married you showed your wife all sorts of delicate little attent...ns. You remembered her taste in candy and books and plays. You brought her the kind of flowers she liked best and you never forgot 1mm- vcrssrles. But now when you go out together you stalk along about. two feet in front of hcr and let her climb on the street cars the best way she can You never so much as bring her home a, peanut, or a IO-cent bag of gumdrups If she wants to see any particular play, she has to go and buy the “ck- the New Modess Chnpact At no extra cost your favourite store is now ofer’ ing a special package containing 3 Modess Compacts with each regular package of Modess. I I I Modess Compact Much thinner but equally safe-its inconspicuouy ness is such that even the sheer-est and most tightly- fitting gowns 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 ariexclusive refinement only found in Modess. Agdbnwows-goiimavw piotlucb MADE IN CANADA World's largest makers oflSurgical Dressings, Bandages, Absorbent Canons, etc. . Special Qffer i AUGUST 13, 175;, -g:- Fashions -:- Literature l5 a to introduce Rfiwsww-‘I-‘ml 1 for Miiaessmwdi-ii‘ 49¢ out-u)‘ Qfackagawvrtfi 65° “A this year on the 25th day of December, andthat her birthday occurs as usual, RWY 1mm lwme B5 Soon as you have had your dinner. and when you do stay and then so little interest do you take in her that you throw a check in her lap and say: "Get yourzelf something. I don't know what you want." Yet no wife but that straws her husband's pathway daily with hints of her desires. l Do you think, brother, a woman sheds her sweet tooth when she gets l married? . l‘ Before marriage it took you hours a day to tell your wife how you loved her, and how you couldn't live without her, and how you would pine away and perish with a broken heart if anything should separate you. You made her feel that she was absolutely necessary to your existence and that she 1 was the most important thing on earth to you. And not content with con- tinually telling her of your love, you used reams of paper in repeating it. But now that you are married you never mention the state of your af- fections to her. You never give her a kiss that isn't an insult, it is so cold and’ flabby and so obviously a kiss of duty instead of one of passion. She is Just a household convenience and you don't even pretend that you are as much interested in her as you are in the state of the stock market or the World Series. Do you ever think, Mr. Man, that of the house to get rid of you. ' ets herself. She has to remind you half a dozen times that Christmas comes woman who thinks she is marrying the perfect lover, who will feed her on angels‘ food the balance of her life, to find out that she has an indifferent husband who lets her starve for even a kind word? Before you were married you couldn't get enough of your wife's society and you gave every evidence of finding her interesting and amusing and en- tertaining and an enjoyable companion. it is a blighting disappaintmcnl i: I She had almost to throw you out Now you never spend a minute with her that you can help. You beat. it land let it come to boiling point. Take at home you sit up and read the paper or listen to the radio and an abou as chatty as a store dummy would be. Do you really think, Mr. Man, that if you had treated your wife befo - marriage as you treat her now, she would have married you’! DOROTHY DIX. For The Cook it right out onto a. sewing dish o: t sauce will curdie. ~ _ Be sure not to cook this cabb :- too long. Young new cabbage shou Ho; SLAW ‘ be scarcely cooked at all. ' iliqi-lieispilfixtffm- ounme BABY'S , V] m Wm TEETHING in 1 scant teaspoon of salt. Bu‘? 2 eggs. l» _ " _' a m» "or: marks? ii cup of vinegar. lmqu i; 5mg 15g 1 cup of cream. III Put. the butter into a sauce pan; Q '- when it begins to froth put in the ukQ __ water, the cabbage, the salt, and ” ‘i 3 scant half teaspoon of white pepper. I DrFflwLEng Cover closely and let the cabbage EXPO,- smm until it is pretty well cooked. w|LD 1t should not. be really soft. 5TRAWB[RRY Make a dressing of 2 egg yolks, “ml cup of sugar, ‘.5 cup of vinegar and 1 cup of cream. Just before lndpcbaps save tliababflflo- Q serving tu_rn this over tho cabbage “'80? 4...?’ c . ".""1"'._.. r011 SALE 6 rarloads nt‘ horses and 2 of cutie, l0 arrive in (liarlcitctown on or lbout August 18th. IIAMSZAY BROTHERS. Owners. I. A. DfacDONALD, Aucilhnecr. 5767-8-12-61. Shore Farm For Sale Lot 4H. six miles huim Charlottetown. rnntalnlng 70 acres of good farm land all clear. At Mermaid. New dtvelling house, new barn. llao Fox Ranch with 25 pens and two large fox sheds. If not sold by private sale will be sold by Auction. FRED DIXON Mermaid. 8-13-16-21, ,Valuable Property Married Quarters no ‘ DAVID want. l Continual "Well, because I heard 00-day idiot I have to report for foreign service Ithankftil man if I can leave Poppy in your care." Lady Augusta swallowed someth- ing in her throat. ‘ "Could you find her do you think?" "1 don't know, but I will go now w the canteen. If she Ls not there we shall Just have to wait till she turns up, she goes for long tramps with the dog; sometimes she is hours away. Will you please sit here or go upstairs or whatever you wish, Lady Augusta? Can I tell the maid to get you a cup of tea?" ‘ask you toWTYEitTJ-rrif If ‘oil? ma: Seen you that day at Cudham in- stead of the Rector: but you will rome, won't you, and forgive us all?’ Jim forget to be gauche, or shy, or even provincial. He raised the flrm,l ‘white hflfld to his lips, and‘ lcokedl istralght into her eyes. Then, wonder; for joy-riding to-day." c~f wonders, she leaned forward and 'kissed him, _ ‘ "Go and find Poppy, God, what a as a child. "Then come without, and now." he said Bravely, l 111111610 5% 11-" , Poppy decided to give in. Jim was not very sure of his steps: "It's my 0-0.. Jane. and I've Bot my in the passage. He went out quicklyl marching orders. Bav- Jim I like you to the waiting bicycle. and presently, like this, Why don't you do it of- after much noise and belching, got. teller?" he-r away, He smiled and got her inside the In less than five minutes he had “We c111" ‘m1 1'11"’ 1°“ °11 "m1 her in front of the Y.M.C.A. hut on men!’ whim-bin!’ Ind more “We the edge of the camp It was now half- 11"!" “elmd "Qcflfi-‘ITY- past three, and a slack afternoon on A m°'°"'b1°1l°1° 15 51W“?! l PWWI" lparade, so that a good many men U"! m"!!! 0f WHWYIIIOQ- l 011M111! 1w," jnglde the hut and n” 10mm: that seems at war with (m, . m; ghoul, the dom- Jim hm m M. Speech was, of course, not advisable “named” the usual 5511M, u he‘ till they quieted down in the stable “I don't want to come. I'm not com- lng. What do you want? I don't cure "1 want you round at the house, I'll tell you about it presently. Come now.“ he said. There was something again, probably m about a weeks fool I‘ve been! it was the gift of ano- queer and compelling in his voice. fume’ and n Wm make me a very - ther son He sent me, and I was too l After one rebellious toss of thg head, "Presently Go and find PoppyImlde his way uptn the counter, first," said Lady Augusta. "But. l‘ havnt quite finished with you. I I n ' l k i m l l will only take Poppy back on con- “ '1' “r 1“ V‘ ' *3" ° "m ° ‘ditl that ou come and spend the lhe late R. Percy Mutt-h. Mt. Ilcr- {ulstoza My o“: leave M Cudhtm bert. v-l miles from Chlrlniklowll, Ye Y - consisting of 212 acres of choice land ,1 919F959 m?!’ W111 51% W" 9"", In a high stale of cultivation. Good ‘leave?’ ; dwelling house and out buildings. "Probably foul-wen d]y3_" l ""11 "i" "m" 1" 11°11" ""1 "You will (mend them at CudhamWl burns. Fox ranch in connection, also ' extra house for farm help. , Property ls near to school. church- l FOR SALE ,.. it, Lady Augusta, Thank yum very; much." She went to him then am Girtiefh. ded her hl-fld llllfl. "I'm very may I've done wrong. I o: and nth-odd station. I-‘or further particulars apply to MR5. IL PERCY MUTCII. Mount Herbert. l-ll-Il- lI-NJI-ll- where, to his immense relief. he be- held POPPY behind a tea-urn. Her echanting head was bare. and her blouse open at. the throat, her white‘ jersey coat all making part of a most delicious whole. She saw him come in, and deli- berately winked at Jane. "Here's Jim. Say you can't spare ing with i-iim may!’ Jane hm no choice, however. Her cousin plllOd her with I. nod, and want round to whore Poppy stood. "Oct your but. door and oomo ou " ‘yard. Then as he was about to lift, ‘her out Jim suddenly stooped and ‘kissed her in the, qulclcpacsionata way. » "Run indoors, darling. I'll be there presently." - She went indoors obedient as I child. Jim pushed the bike away back ‘under cover beside Jane Ootmm’: Arnminta, and then took out another "Part of them at least. if you wish me, Jane, 1 don't want t0 g0 loy-rld- 618516"? Ind b”!!! i0 51110119 688i!!!" l ntely. 11¢ wanted to go away. and yet j wanted to stay, um finally ended in ' remaining where he wll. Poppy dub- oa through the kitchenynld someth- ing w mum Ami "nhoutrmt-lfll "I haven't gotua-liatfanlffm not, tea, and walked singififinfitliéillv coming out,“ she answered petulantly ’ lng-room, Then she gave a little cry. = It was a queer cry, almost like the come wliinuer of a. frightened child: then is)“ ran-yes. ran-and was gafhered ln her mother's arms 11nd held close there with a grip which hurt. "Mummy. Mummy!" was all she said, and began to cry weakly. all child she was. “l-Iow did it happen?“ she asked at last in an awe-stricken voice. "And have you seen Jim? And, oh. Mummy. I hope you weren't too hard on him?" "what you might better ask is whe- ther he was not too hard 0n me. POPPY." said Lady Augusta in a queer strained voice. "He has forslven mo and that, i5 all that is necessary back to Oudham." (To be Continued) A Disclaimer It hu been brought to our atten- tion that certlln people are spread- lug n rumor um we m overall": l retail place of business In Char- Iotletown. National Candy Limited wishes to deny this rumor and 0o state further. that, u It sells wholesale only, f: bu no interest, financial or other- wise, in any retail store. ‘Rumor: like this do n! harm by creating lulpielcn in the minds of retailers, and for the good of all concerned.‘ we hope that no more false statement: about iu will be cir- cabled. NATIONAL CANDY LETIII huddled up like the sick and _ sorry . meanwhile. I've oome w take you boih ' “FOR SALE Helen Dewey, valuable brood more, in foal at present time, also her first foal 12 months old by Longset, well broken. Both these horses are stand- l ard and registered and will be shown mt Provincial Exhibltlon- For further information apply to CLAUDE S. MacMILLAN, | ' Mt. Edward Road. 5943-8-11-41. |__._.__._-_.__ TENDERS Tenders will be received at the office of the City Clerk up to and including Friday. August 15th, for repairs to concrete retaining wall at .Vietor||. Park. P1111! and specifie- ntlons to be seen at the oflice of the City Clerk. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. GEO. P. NICHOLSON. City Clerk. 5771-8-12-41. Furngess Red Cross Line "S. S. ROSOLIND" Freight and Passengers. WA TER SHOR TA GE The unusually dry season has had a very serious eff upon the water supply of cities throughout the countfY- the next few months the strictest economy is absolutely ¢§5 tial, otherwise it may be necessary to resort to drastic m urea. The use of hose on lawns and the unnecessary W851i. of cars are two of the common ways in which water is was Citizens are urged to economize in every way possible. It better to put up with burnt lawns, or muddy cars now 111 to do without water for other purposes later in the seas Stop all leaks. Use water sparingly. CHARLOTTETOWN WATER DEPARTMENT _ J. A. MACMILLAN-Manager 8-11-13-15-31. Biiumiii National-Rum: ‘Acadian Celebration? Grand Pre. N. S. a Wednesday, Aug. 20th, 1930; lpoclnl Fuss have been put into effect by the Camdian National?" Arrive ChTown wayn for this event. _ Leave Montreal and nil for - St. J ha’ M, 1; Qufl, 1i lpaohl train will leave Moncion u m r. u. Ann-t "t" z’ ° A‘; g9 5",; I he, N. 8-. going and returning via ‘hum. Tutu will Icon 9" ’ Supt, 13 ‘Q’; || Q30 P. IL, Alllllt Nul- ‘ CARVELI. BROS. LTD. '°' m" '"“°""'~ 1"" - _ 555mg ____ __ 4 , _ F- non-r AGE] , mvrf-tf. 1 l-ll-ll-ll-lil- "1.