. -_ ‘.1... <0" .-acaognn~nwwm~ 'UIw<_-n-;~ . "l? EKFZBJPHQEC! ‘ll "PAGE EIGHT v ? . -_. lWrat the Fashionable: are Wearing Illuglratgd Qressmaking Leon Furglshed With . 1 . ~- "“’V'IVH" -l Bu Knnabelle Worthington - 1t has charming youthful lines with several helpful points for the Woman of slightly heavier figure. It's neat and smart in a. navy and white crepe silk print with plain white pique trim and red leather belt. Or if you prefer, you can use white and plain blue crepe silk for the collar and vest. It's also zidorabie in gayer col- ours, lay for instance a Jed and white spotted crepe silk with plain uhite trim. Or for real summery wear cotton pr silk pique, linen, cotton mesh and tubbable silk crepes are snappy for this model. Style N0. 550 is designed for sizes 16, l8, 20 years, 36, 38, 4O and 42 inches bust. size 36 requires 3% yurds of 39-inch material with 1/2 yard of 35-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) _wrap coin carefully. Size .................... No. 550. ....n..u.---..u-...--..“n. Name yr... y.......-unu.n.nuu» §IIIIIII"‘ Street Address pi.cu.-volooovocllconolcloolvliloool City State I.*'.'or The Cook . Every Pattern Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal! .-:- Fdshivngéi f-' Raspberry Jam Weigh equal quantities of fruit hnd sugar; put the former into a preserving-pan, boil and break it, stir constantly, and let it boll very quickly. When most of the juice is wasted, add the sugar, and simmer half an hour. This way the Jan is greatly 5upEtQ0l‘ 11-1 color and flavor t0 that which is made by putting the sugar in first. Another Way Put the fruit in a jar in a kettle ‘of water, or on s. hot hearth, till the Juice will run from it; then take away a. quarter of a pint from every pound of fruit; boil and bruise it half an hour, then put in the weight of the fruit in sugar, and adding the same quantity o.‘ currant juice, boll it to a. strong fielly. The raspberry-juice will serve to put into brandy, or may be boiled with its weight in sugar for mak- ing the jelly for raspberry-ice or cream. Cornwall Mr. Edward MbPhail, school in- ‘specter who is attending the sum- mer school at Sackvllle spent the week end at his home. Miss Nellie Walker, Georgetown, and Mr. Everett Moore of Mon- tague were the guests of Miss Mary Scott on Sunday. Miss Hester Inman of Bedeque who is camping at York Pt. was a welcome visitor to (Jornwall on Sunday. M'ss Mary Macmillan, York Pt., has returned home from st. John pzhero aha spent a pleasant holi- day. Miss Florence Platts, R. N.. and Miss Emily Piatts, Charlottetown. formerly teacher of Cornwall School were visltros to Cornwall on Sun- day. Felt Terribly- Nervous Fnggod out . . . nlway! mehuchol and blue. She should fake Lydia B. ink- hsm‘: Vegetable Compound. In tonic action builds up the system. Try it. Mr. Arthur Woolner, Rustioo. and Mr. Robert Btu-us, Charlottetown, were Sunday visitors to Comwall. York Point is fast becoming l. very popular summer camping ground. Many groups of young pepole have enjoyed the wonderful scenery and the good swimming. Mr. Colin McPhail, Meadowbank, has her cousin, Mr. Theo Ling, Wheatley River, as her guest. Mr. Percy Boyle, Hunter River, spent Sunday at his home in Mead- owbank. Ths many friends of lVlrs. Nellie MoEwen. will be glad to know that she is better after a severe attack of blood poisoning. The couple were married and travelled to the lakes for their hon- eymoon. As son as they arrived they took a boat out upon the lake. The (allowing morning the bridab mother got a postcard, which read: "Arrived safely. Grand row be- fore supper." "My!" she muttered. “I didn't think they'd begin qudrreiiing so soon." "These fashion-plates in the paper are absurd!" Wife: “But they arc all taken from actual photographs." Husband: "Well, this one can't he. Here are two women going in opposite directions, both wearing brand-new frocks, and neither is Husband: looking back at the otherl" i STILLLOVELYAFIERTHEMSTDANCE‘ bids cream... moitr P0 \\\\\\‘ \\\\\\\ llllll ill/l How you thrilled In the certainty oi your lasting Iovzlincss-hzlghtcncd by the clinging, velvet- lcxfurc oi Pompclan Beauty Powder. As his eye: caressed you, howthrllllngto know that s touch of Pompclcn Rouge had kept for you 51¢ alrlish flush he loved. married Judges For Divorce Cases? Baohololl Mon s; mpathetio l , Dorothy no. Women Who Ask for Married Judge t0 T17 Divorce and Breach of Promise C2898 Pass up Best Bet, for 0H1)’ the Ba“ ' elor Judge Believes That the Woman 1s Always, the In- jured Party The women)of Australia are demanding m“ W‘? mnrhd “d!” shall be Permitted to trv divorce and b""°l"°"l“°m““ w“ The’ m‘ that no bachelor ls fitted to puss upon thqdellvflie 11"" Pmblem" “hi” arise in the relationship of men and women, and that only one who has been throush the ‘mm’ monlal mill himself knows Just what it is thuli causes husbands and wives to become unendurable to uch other. ~ 0n the face of 1t, this looks fair enough. but 11mins, so far as women are concerned, ls likely - to be a boomerang that flies back and annihilullfis them. What they willy crave is mercy. bud this being the case. the less a man knows about women. the more likely he is to be swayed by Sell’ timent in dealing with them. Take this matter of the breach-of-proinise suit, for instance. The bachelor Judge looks upon the plaintiff, particularly if she is young and pulchritudenous and can weep without her nose getting red, and sees in her only the victim of man's perfldy. Here is a guileless and trust- ing maiden whose pure and innocent affections have been won by a. das- tard with a promise of marriage. Dreaming of her wedding day, she has gathered together her trousseau an d the contents of her hope chest only to have her visions of bliss blasted at last by her false lover wearying of her and breaking his truth. Wherefore, she has sustained injuries to her heart that can only be healed by a pouitlce of greenbacks, It is a sad picture as a bachelor Judge sees it. Betrayed trust. A broken contract. A deliberate defaulter. And the party of the other part is so blameless. so unsophisticated. Bo easily deceived. so bereft. Stabbed by the hand she loved. Tut. Tut. Make the recreant Romeo pay for his phllandering. _ Soak him good aadjhard, \ ' But would the married Judge in such a case be so sympathetic? I tm wnot. He would know that any girl baby is born knowing more about the art of love than any gray beard ever acquires after ninety years of living. So he would not share in the bachelor's belief that the woman is always the victim in sentimental affairs. Ho would know the arts and wiles by which girls lnveigls, snitch, coerce and blackjack engagement rings out of men and the dlfllcuity it is ever to recover one from them. He would know thataman who loses his taste for a girl does her a kindness and not a wrong in refusing to let her drag him to the altar, and, above all, he knows. that u. woman who sets a cash value on her love hasn't any affection that is worthn paying for. So I think the lady with the breach-of-promlse suit would be out of luck if her case came up before a. married Judge. Nor is ‘it likely that the married Judge would be more lenient to the fair plalntifl in divorce cases than the bachelor Judge would be, Certainly hmbsnds, as alleged, know the inside of married life as no bachelor ever can, and by the same token they know [that many of the grievances of which wives complain are imaginary, or that they are inevitably a part of humdrum domestic life. Tho chief thing that dlssatisfies women with marriage, and that sends them under one pretext or another into the divorce court, is that it does not come up to what they had decei ved themselves into thinking it would be. Heaven knows whv. considering that she has been a daily witness to her own parents‘ marriage and to the marriages of hundreds of people all about her, but every woman believes that her own marriage is going to be entirely different and that she is going to live in a world of thrills and tremors and hectic romance with a. husband who remains an impas- sioned lover and in a home that au tomatically fl tions without work or money. Of course, this never happens And when she finds out that she has to wok and scrub and nincn Donnie s n» votes marriage afaliure. When her husband comes home too tired of an evening to take her out to any it for granted that she has sense enough to know that a man who spends his life toiling to make her comfortable still loves her without his telling her so every day, she walls out that he has ceased to care for her. Every married man knows these things and so the married Judge will take a pinch of salt the abused wife's tale of her husband's brutality and reflect that it probably consisted in nothing more than the poor man forgetting the anniversary of their wedding qr refusing to buy a new car. Also, the married Judge, who has ‘had experience in the ways of women, will know that when a. home is wrecked it is always an inside job and that, as a rule, the wife has had as much part in it as the man. Also, he knows that by looking at a woman when she has her bestcom- plcxion and her good manners on you can never tell what she is in private life with the make-up off. Ho has seen foo many tompters kept for homo consumption. Too many nB-figers who are more cruel torturers than any the Inquisition ever kuew- Too muuvblbve-drivera buying flnery with their husband's heart blood. It is only the baohei -r who has never tried matrimony who be- lieves all wives angels and the husbands always wrong, 50 I think i! I WEN u 18d!’ and wanting an easy divorce and alimony I would trust uw luck u» the bachel Judge rather than to the man-led man who has rll of the inside dope on matrimony. DOROTHY DIX. t A Mo rningSmilc Two Georgia uegroeo wan dis. cussing the financial condition of W wuutrv- 'I‘hev didn't acne. B: sure alwaysl Us: Pom- Ian. You may pqy mo" //// or bmrv re arctic / // o?” u.» u. NEW ,,,// ibeiAiia .B£Aurv rmvlI¢T$..%/%.¢a*:<::ss's "Yen's all wrong," one vocifer- ltod. "Day ain't no money shortage. Ah asked man bankuh is be out o‘ mono? Ind he tuk mo in do vault 8nd showed mo piles an’ piles o‘ 1110M?- An’ Ah says could m let mo hive 1w a little. An’ hasays lsltto‘ h: could. Has Ah any ool- , I '11! An‘ Ah hasn't. Now ' doth what's de mattuh wif dis _ country. Deyb plenty o‘ money but} ["47 " ' wake Ju running shot on oolinthii. .» A Screenarfarr ee i iée zféamgqguié x i CREEN STARS know how im- portant it is to keep youthful charm. So they begin very early to give their lovely complexiono zeal- ous and regular care. Jean Harlow, delightful young stansays:“IdiacovcredHo1lywood's secret and started using Lux Toilet ‘ Soap my first day in the studio." Lovelier than ever at 30, Viola Dana says: “Nowadays no woman need worry about growing old. I ‘use Luir Toilet Soap ‘regularly to keep my akin at it's very best." And the glamour-cue Nazimova, for so long an idol of the stage and screen, can well say: "Very few ac- ~ tresses look their age. Like mo, they take care of their compicxions with Lux Toilet Soap!" Of the 694 important actresses in Hollywood, including all stars, 686 use fragrant Lux Toilet Soap. It is the oificial soap in all the big film studios. So gentle —so very white that no other soap can rival it! Be- gin today to let it can for your skin. it? l place of amusement, she considers herself neglected, and when he takes » . also made. and they arcmost ut- . hash is deliciously savory for a ._ "ouobnlhwinamuaa 1mm. iVi-aycup chopped ‘ktbroqoulousourecupmiltyonetoa- .§ll5,ll¢fllmbl . thoroughly 3nd ago milk and sea- afiulifil by ' ‘fithalEqF lfrothm United, Toruuld like " " , LUX Toilet Soapalot ‘ulflomhuofkiccwgli. Vegetable Time Is Here "Ann your. naruv MENU suonnp rnovu n- Hundreds of home makers daily 1m the problem of serving whole- ‘some and palatable meals as econo- mically as possible. _ . During the summer months, ve- getsbles ane- plcntiful and cheap. More than this. they are rich in vitamins and mineral content and are essential to health. They should be served daily in abundance. How- ever. many men seem to have an innate and ingrown aversion to such plain, homely vegetables as carrots and spinach. Cornbtnation n Good Did you ever try mixing a little meat with vegetables? The smell and taste of meat is appetizlng and fonthis cause, if no other meat is worth serving. But too much ls not a good thing; so if just enough can be used in combination with vege- tables to make them liked, s happy m “ launched. If half u pound of meat can be made to serve four people and at the some time furnish l. wholesome and adequate diet, economy would prompt most of us to give the half pound a "fair. trial. A meat and vegetable hash is the simplest version of the combination dish. Obowders and timbales are tractivs concoctions, quits elaborate in effect. Veal and carrot timbales, ham and spinach tlmbaies, lamb and pea aiel-theso are worthy of IJIIIOG on thooompmy menu. g The mut and vegetable mash makes idlll summer fare from the cookgs standpoint. It takes can of twp items ontbomsnu in onsdlsh and ‘one mucus, effecting n. . sub- stantial saving, of time, labor and dish washing. This aristocratic summer-Jinan served withu crisp [salad and fruit dessert. Vbfectinid vmuti. 1min III ONTO“; two cups raw chopped potatoes, spoon. nit. one tablespoon minced nlrllwntlfl hunm ‘newer. but- -. nu molt. fccrfoil. and ouioal through food oboppir. Mix \ crumbs. Bake one hour in a hot oven. Serve from. casserole. Pic Made of Left Overs Meat and vegetable pie is anoth- er good combination. It can be made of left overs with a baking powder“ biscuit crust, or freshly cooked meat and vegetables are Covered-with a. potato crust. The meat and vegetables cm cooked un- til tender and then covered with mashed potatoes beatfn up with a little hot milk, salt. pepper and butter. Score the “crust” in also with the blunt edge of a knife and mark the edge with a fork/always dipping the knife and fork in milk before marking with them. Brown SPRING HERALD! ORIGINAL FLARE T0 NEW SLEEVES Sleeves an much in evidence as this applies to coats as well as frocks. Fashion has certainly upo- ken with originality in regard to the elbow puff 0nd the long drap- ed effect of the informal afternoon frock. The woman who ls interested in rslim, long‘ cuff may have that. Those who like the wide sleeves. m!‘ blinded. will be able to delight themselves in this style. But they will not find a fur collar on the coat that bears lths deep fur cuffs. Wide choloo involves length for’ now an added ti: groups from Pa- ril. diminutive -' cleaves-for day- top in a hot oven. time. These n \w brief puffs of "I F. Fenximan, Ottawa West, Ona, "and find good. Too, the children like made the l Acts Likc Magic much better." Certo -—the easy, modern, "short-boil" method hu many advantages. You Boil for just a few minutes and if direc- (ions are carefully followed you can always rely on l porb fee: m, 50% more jun o: ]clly from a given amount of fruit-no failure-ab wane. Think of rho vadety Gem provides. UM tiny fruit you‘ like-fresh, canned. o: dricd —or fruit juice. Benin m always pctfifl. bottle. Thou homo- recipoa aliow how to fruit with cure moms in ing fruits that never b org would kl!- Don’: lie by any, problem ofjun otjelly '_- lag. Should you chain information whatsoever, fro the Consume: Qua!“ Do- _ pamnont, Gcucril P 051g‘ i. llfala In Con); soningl no into a buttered casse- micaudcoverwitucoaruhutureo ' " "'3; T." to style trcatment this season and’ hlgher-than-elbow length, expr ing the most novel type lntrodu ifor spring, are developed in oi ~ 'fabrio or fur. Modified verb! touch the elbow and are not P ed, but are more like simple d sleeves. The contrast of their s pie cut with a large fox or erm collar is new and striking. E the already popular bloused sl looks new in elbow lengths, ea oiaiiy us they are done now ~ exaggerated fuiness coming fr dropped shoulders. To present o. complete group novelty sleeves the 1932 versions leg o'mutton should be lnclu They are more nearly the real oauutton silhouette -than anyt we have had today. Draped h mntal fulness between elbow . shoulder frankly develops this - old sleeve silhouette. v-Iufnsitfld“ L-Tlu amoral 10117181 335;} [goon fruit. --Jclh o- iuu- u» re“ " Loud ‘y.’ h, {ho old i ....;.t.p..,,,,..t