L‘ 9192209!!! .929‘: 5-5132‘? 375$ in: ,..._-...---____-_ - esced hourly, during milling, and every 3:, "m QUQLZEQ$_S;,2WAH' day, by bskin samples just as you bake in ‘n ' u,‘ y; g“ “aid d ,0!!!’ 0WD klflC 811. ‘ -. °...m"'-*”¥riillli'd'..'.rlifmm'“i"~ ' :2." "' =b=<>lz==lpros==mw=i “"1 "iv a!“ M _ cake, bread or rolls. sta r Sm“ w m!" ‘m. a-rmnuiucrauscmamcmmuvussym flu: - read fl- ‘ “ma: n: the booklet day-lolly e 1 . - ~- s... ( usu h, r1 YAGE EIGHT lWoniuan ’s Realm THE UHARLU'l"l‘E'l‘UWN GUARDIAN -'- Social and Personal -:-OFashions -p-:- Literature OCTOBER 11, 193 1:: a {llustrated "w" lbove normal. will be found extremely easy to make. ' The softly falling jobot collar has n. marvelous slimming effect‘ on the bodice. It offers opportunity for contrast. The scalloped outline of the skirt diminishes the width through the hips. There are any number of lovely schemes for its development. You'll like black canton crepe very. self-fabric- well with the vestee of with the jnbot carried out in white crepe. , Black transparent velvet. with the vestee of lace is charming. Style No. 2706 may be had in sizes B6, 38, 40, 42. 44, 46 and 4B inches bust. Size 36 requires Eli yards 40-inch lnaterial with ".4; yard 14inch all pver lace for vestce and ‘it yard 35 What the Fashionable are Wearing Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington llhis graceful model will have inch for collar. especial appeal to figures a little host Colds Rub well over throat and cheat Vtfilifi ' Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or ' a!’ uette {coin (coin preferred). Be sure to fill‘ q .ln size of pattern. Address Pattern 373mm“ I“ lDepartment. Spend 10c to save $10. |llowl By ordering s copy of our ‘new Fall and Winter Fashions. It gives the answer to the often asked quas-tion. "How does she do it?" For it shows how to dress up to the min- ute at little expense. You can save on every dress and save on the children's clothes too. That means more and better frocks for ~~u and yours. Order your copy now. Just enclose 10 cents in stamps or coin and mail with your name and ad- dress to Fashion Department. No. 2708. “-.-uun-u-u-nc-nu-cc,ans-n" Q. Should a man. when reg ster- ing in a hotel, write "Mr. John Smith“? A. No: if he is alone. he should never write but ii’ he is with his ivife, the prefix to their joint namse is correct. Q. What jewelry should the bride wear during the wedding ceremony? A. The necklace or brooch, which is the groom's present to her. Q. Are men usually invited to a luncheon or a breakfast? A. Usually the luncheon guests consist of women, but they are in- vited to a breakfast. Name Street Address .0...-u......---.---u.-.-...-...... ' Oity State For The cm.‘ ‘lied dyes give v1‘ _. richest colors! FOR every home use, Diamond D es are the finest you can buy. T e contain the highest quality lnilhies that can be produced. 4 It's the anilines in Diamond Dyes that give such soft, bright, pew colors to dresses, drapes, hlgerie. Diamond Dyes are easy to use. They go on smoothly and evenly; do not spot or streak; ever give things that re-dyed ook. Just true, even, new colors that keep their depth and brilliance ln spite of wear and washing. 15c packages. All drug stores. Diamonclobyos ."=-'-~e;~';2$~*~~ WDM E N WANTED Tn Sew for us at llomc. If you have a sewing machine, we offer you, regardless of where you live, an opportunity to make up to $10.00 or $15.00 a week sewing for us in your spare time, at home. No previous experience requir- ed, AND POSITIVELY N0 SELLING son YOU r0 no. When answering, enclose stamped, addressed envelope for reply. A.\IERICAN NECKTIE CO-. Dept. 44 Keefer Bldg, Montreal. Ti: _ PROM ONE HOME BAKER TO OTHERS WHO BAKE AT HOME i GINGER cacao WITH cnocopazre VERNONLTITVER AND VICINITY Miss Martha. Hynes has returned home after spending the week-end with friends in the city. One-half cup sour cream, 3 heap- ing teaspoons ginger, 1 saltspoon salt, l teaspoon cinnamon, 2% table- spoons melted butter, 2 cups pastry flour. l teaspoon soda, 2 ounces un- sweetened chocolate melted with one tablespoon butter. Mix the gin- ger, salt, and cinnamon together, and add gradually the sour cream then the melted butter. Mix and sift together the flour and soda and stir'into the cream mixture. Then add chocolate which has been melt- ed with the butter. Bake in a long cake pan in moderate over 35 or 40 minutes. When cool, frost with a marshmallow frosting. and put a. butter chocolate coating over this frosting. Eat while fresh. Mrs. Robert Coady and son. Ray, Alberry Plains, were visitors to Cardigan on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McLean, Albcrry Plains, are receiving congrat- ulations on the arrival of a baby girl. Mr. Elmer Lewellyn, Georgetown, was a visitor here Wednesday. Mr. James Valley has returned to Halifax after spending some time at his old home in Alberry Plain. The chicken supper held in the (7.! M. B. A. hall on Wednesday, Oct. 8th. was a decided success. Lots of goods things to eat and a large crowd to enjoy it. The sum of over $200 was realized. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Carmichael and son Duncan, Summerside, were visit- ors to Beech Hill Sunday. Miss Amy Myers, Hazelbrook, spent Sunday in Albany Plains, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Garfield Shaw. Mr. Jay Gillis, wig... was a. visitor to Vernon River Saturday. Mr, Alden Carver, Vernon River, It looks as if potatoes were a pret- _ was a visitor to Campbellton last ty good crop in this section as Mr. H. S. McLeod, Btneral merchant, load- week- ed eleven cars at Vernon River last -—- week Mrs. Margaret Praught has re- turned home after spending some time with her daughter. Mrs. Pearl Brothers. Elliotvale. Mr. Peter Cairns and son. Ralph. Everett, Mass., have returned to their home in Alberry Plains. w. Mrs. j. s. smaomm’ The Quaker Easy Method delights He: with its certainty and case in Bread Making "I cmnoc speak too highly of your Easy Method of Bread Bakin , for it certainly puts the old meth out of business and saves a lot of unnecessary work for the housewife. It's so easy when followed by your instructions. that one canooc help but ct the best of results, es cially when it is made from Quaker lour." Mas. J. E. STEADMAN, Peterborough, Ont. 'S a fact demonstrated by thousands of enthusiastic users. With this wonderful new wsy, bread or rolls, pipin hot and fresh, with half the work, in hzl the time. No more kneading, no more setting the sponge. You just follow simple directions, worked out by a master baker, and desaibod in the booklet "The Quaker Method of Easy Bread Baking." A copy will be sent you without charge, if you mail us the coupon, or ask any Quaker Flour dealer. gasket Flour is the fines: you can buy. Tbs: is why igualiry is using ur you are sure of zescfu pastry, ban . I huciasdc of the gags?” rogn ent users new method-ulna than . picture to the wall and cherish some woman who is hardly more than a . versation we flee as from a. pestilence, while we seek the society of other llS. i l ma... l; D h D- i “s” i '1 ° e , or... H, 0Y0!‘ y 1X can We Find That It Is Mostly Made Up of Three Things: Tact, Appreciation, Sympathy,” Finds Dorothy Dix A correspondent asks: What constitutes charm in a girl? No one can answer that question definitely. It is the riddle of the sphinx, for it is the same thing that makes that great battcrfld. 700811 figure. brooding over the sands of the desert. more intriguing, more fascinating than the most beautiful statue in any art gallery. ._.*_.- If we say that charm in a girl is personality- that. it is what we slangily describe as 1'1‘ we merely substitute one mystery for another, for no one can put his linger on just that particular intangible qual- ity in a woman that attracts us to her ss the magnet draws the noodle- It isn't. beauty clone, for often we turn the living chromo, yet good looks are certainly part of a girls charm. It isn't 11mm. gence alone. for we all know high-brewed ladies from those intellectual con- Womefl W110. 8S the phrase goes would never set the river on nrc. Yet cer- tainly dullnus has no place in a. woman's repertoire of charms. And assuredly goodness or baldness has nothing to do with s. woman's Chflfm. for there are female saints who set our teeth on edge and others whom we would follow into any sort of a. cult. And it is charm that gives thsv amps their power, for without that they would work their sorcerics in vain. As near as we can define charm is the come-hither look in a woman's eyes, but what lights that we do not. know. We only know that if she has that she may be plain of face and lumpy in figure, she may lack brilliance. and wit. She may not even be unselfish or amiable, and yet she will always have men running after her, she may marry as often as she pleases, and " she will even be popular with women. ' So far as outward earmarks of charm in a. girlrgo, they consist in her making herself as attractive as she can. She can do this, first, by develop- - ing to their fullest extent such good looks as nature has bestowed upon her. She can keep herself well groomed and learn how to comb her hair and make up her complexion, and she can dress so as to make herself easy on the eyas because none of us distinguish btween a woman and her clothes. If she presents a. pleasing appearance we call her pretty and let. it go at that, especially when she is young, for youth in itself is beauty. ‘No girl could have such a superhuman charm that it would function through dirt or disorder. No frump or slattern could ever charm us. Nor could any bore. But herein develops another of the inexplicable phenomena of charm, that those who have it never weary us, no matter if they babble along as meaninglessly as s. brook- We will even listen to their symptoms and the details of their operation and ask for more. Then it is part of a girl's charm to be able to do things, to be adapt- able, to fit in everywhere. She must be able to dance well to play a. good game of bride, to swim, to play tennis and golf so as to be one of the crowd. Nobody finds a girl charming who is a spoiled sport. No man would want to sit out a dance with eyen a siren, or be tolled ofl by l. hostess to sit on the rocks with even a Lorelei because she was afraid of the water. When we speak of charming Mary Brown or channing Susie Smith we mean, in a general way, that, they are regular girls who an good looking and well dressed and well mannered, and who know how to get along with people and who always fit in the picture and are in a. way the life of the party. " And when we come to analyze this charm in a girl I think that we and it is mostly made up of three things, tact, appreciation and sympathy. All of us are vain. All of us have our little peculiarities and prejudice, and we are just naturally attracted to those people who respect our "keep-ofl-the- grsss" signs, and who neatly sidestep our little ecccntricitios. We adore hav- ing our fur smoothed down the right way and we burr under the hand that does it. If you will observe you will see that the woman who has e. reputation for being charming has a sixth sense that enables her to divine the subjects that irritate us, and to anticipate our likes and dislikes. She never decents to an unsuccessful man about what s. go-getter some other man is. Sh: never tells the man who comes and takes her out. in a fliwer about how grand a Rolls-Royce rides. She never gets into arguments or disputes and, somehow, someway, she always manages to turn this spotlight on us and make us feel great and glorious and that she is filled with admiration for Then the charming girl is always apprecietive- We love to do things for her because she is grateful and because she lets us sec that we have made her happy. She is generous in her thanks and doesn't. take every favor as less than her due. Above all a charming woman is sympathetic. She enters into our joys and sorrows and rejoices with us when we rejoice and weeps with us when we weep. She is never too self-centered to enter into our lives and become part of them. And so perhaps the secret of charm is just kindness and sweetness and 16w DOROTHY our. I llo More Asthma ‘and llay Favor THE POTATO CROP Dry weather and blight wmdined to Ii “When We Come to Analyze Charm in a Girl - i I l l 7 delicious Ova/lino. t/llzmf/zg baby rinlz it ensures a rich milk 3 05¢ mother against gviidne from l‘ b l ' "s mm‘ and °888 I: is casil ' "p: a e7 ‘"410. " ' Y digested and quicu . a y l assimilated’ It i‘ suPef nourish . men: correqlygah, ted ixét-orlllcglliost delicious form. You will like it cicbeg 011th -~ -.r:r: 2-1;;- fluaoua tonic (so; a.".*.‘.‘.'-i*.3‘.":,:,:,>;- ‘hnl I has...» "$1.? - To" suites ur BRAIN. llcERVE ABNEhEAOE Allllguuduan-ln, OPY *- H-w u». u... “$117155; $3,,“ man family. a: sods found,‘ ‘u B RICHIE-ATKINS 0F BUG BEAUTY CENTURIES OLD Damn: ‘Ilcivi/luaenmofwunnubnpomd fiulnPcrsilcnd Iniditmongly pmcnun so magnificent upm- dnchbncfa Pobkh rug believed to bnabacn woven at Warsaw in abunboenmy. NOW... BARISTAN revs. of EVEN GREATER BEAUTY HE introduction of the Baristan Rug two years ago marked a revolutionary advance in the history of p rug weaving. The lustrous sheen, the exquisite coloring, the luxurious pile, won the admiration of Canadians from coast to coast. Now we announce new Baristan Rugs of really sur- passing beauty. . . adaptations and reproductions of the world’: rarest rug masterpieces . . . rugs tbat [rave adorned the wall: of museums and tbe floors of Oriental palaces. These beautiful rugs are available for your home at surprisingly moderate prices. See the Baristan display at any leading house-furnishing store. They are obtain- able in all sizes from small hall runners up to large room-size rugs. While in the store do not fail to see the Autumn 1930 presentation of Barrymore Guaranteed Rugs which include smart new designs in Saxonies, Wiltons and Axminstcrs. force a. reduction in the estimated potato crop this year following ex- tremely dry weather conditions. The survey of the Fruit Branch of the D0- ninion Department of AEYNHIWITB olaces 1930 production at 41.050000 hundredwoight, an increase of some 1.010 tons, or about 5 per cent. 0v" last year. Severe blight is reported from New Brunswick, Quebec, parts of Nova Sootie. and Albert-l. W116 insect injury is negligible. ‘The esti- mated production in hundrcdweishts by provinces is: Prince Edward Island. 4,500,000 Nova Scotia.. .. .. .- .. 3.139.900 New Brunswick" .. .. .. 4.070.000 Quebec" .. .. .. .. .. --1°.000.°°0 Ontario. .. .. .. .. .. ..10.000.000 Manitoba“ .. .. .. .. .. 3.790.000 Saskatchewan. .. .. .. 2.460.000 Alberto... .. .. .. .. .. 1360-090 British Columbia. .. ac ac 1.550.900 lees. 60M!) Every Asthma suffcnr in this city and district now has the opportunity to try Dr. Schiffmanns Asthmador without financial risk. Go to your druggiet and get s package of Asthmldor and, should it fail to give instant relief, the drulglst will cheer- fully refund your money without any " whatever. No matter how violent the attack. how obstinate the case. or what. else has( failed. Asthmador Cigarettes will give almost instant relief-usually in i0 seconds, but. always within 15 minutes. Hundreds of unsolicited testimon- ials abundantly prove what this da- pendable remedy has done. This ls why every crusglst sells Dr. schifl- msnn‘s Asthmador on s positive guar- antee of satisfaction or money back -and this guarsntceispriutedontbe label of every package, 1f your drug- giat csanoc supply Aathmador, write direct w The Lyman-Knox 00.. Limited, Montreal, remitting oeuta for vlmla of mummies prepaid. Designed, woven and guaranteed by THE TORONTO CARPET MFG. CO., TORONTO - CANADA nationals,» “Q“QJAEW. rm vnssrlvnho s N