(‘ovra \J11J. core. r lVoman 's lWhat the Fasllionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington JACKET SMARTNESS , 1o be just right, of course, the clothes of the growing miss must have 1 bit of dash. Today's darling littlc sports dress accompanied by a jacket is de- finitely smart. It is practical as well. And it's simplicity itself to make it. And very inexpensive too. It's delightfully carried out in novelty pique —— a yellow Kmlmd Wm‘ tracings in brown. And by way of contrast, it trims its box 18-6116 1H plain matching brown pique. And the dress repeats the trim in the ca? sleeves and in the modish bows at the front closing. The skirt shows new distinction in its wide box-plait effect across the front and circular buck. A yellow rough straw hat with brown ribbon completes this snappy little costume. Style No. 3145 is designed for girls of 6, 8. 10, l2 and 14 years. For the miss of 8 years, 3%.’. yards of 35-inch material with éé yard of 35-inch contrasting is sufficient to copy it exactly- Then again you will like it immensely with the dress 15511101195 01 {white linen and the jacket in shipp er blue linen or flannel. ‘Trim the Qacket with brass buttons sewed about an inch and fluff-hall 5mm elm" outer edge to give the effect of double-breasted closing. Use three on either side. Red and white dotted dimlty dress with plain red pique Jacket. Dink and white men's shitting fabric with plain pink linen Jacket. opal green shantung with opal yellow and orchid and white checked gingham dress with plain orchid gingham jacket are most attractive suggestions. Be sure to flll in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) k Price of pattern l5 cents. Read These’ Jam and Jelly Secrets CERTO-Ahe easy modern way of jam and jelly making gives yml half again more glasses from the same 3r- nmount of fruit. Including fruit, sugar, d’ " Certo, fuel, everything . . . these extra g glasses bring your costs down to less 9° "f than jam or jelly made without Carrol Because Certo (fruit pectin) is the narural jellying substance extracted from fruit, you can make jams and jellies every month in the year in end- less variety using any fresh, dried or canned fruit or fruit juice. Never a waste nor failure. Certo ensures the gorgeous colour and delicate flavour of the fresh fruit itself. I o a s Look for the Certo recipe booklet under the label of every Certo bottle. Follow directions exactly and success is assured even with delirious varieties pin: never before would jell. Should any problem of Inn ol lolly mak- lng purple: you, or should you duln n17 Inlomurlon whatsoever, write ro the Domenic Selene: Drpllflnlm, General F0044 ., Coboiug, hat and accessories to correspond. Belt to taste Both bride and groom have a l4 teaspoon popper host of friends whose good wishes ‘>6 cup milk were evidenced in the large array of beautiful gifts received. The Vincent's University of New Brunsvflok, has been on the teaching staff of the Gampbellmn l-‘Iigh School for the last year. Tile groom, who in a graduate ofthe Ontario Agricul- THE GUARDIAN “Realmi -:- Social and Persona] -: Ecshle I _¢-__.-. A Msmzngsmzz?! "Alphonse," Illd tho heiress, "I have been thinking." "Thinking of mo, precious?" asked Alphonso. "Indirectly. yu- l have been thinking that if you married me everybody would say you only did so to get my money." "What care 1 for the unthinking world?’ "But, Alphonse, I will marry you." “My own dar-—-" "And I will not have people say ‘ unkind things about you, so I have arranged to give my fortune to the missionaries. Why, Alphonso, where are you going?" Alphonse paused long enough on his way to the door to look back and mutter: “I'm going to be a mil- slonary." For The, Cook cousaavu A LA rmrarrns i Have ready 1% quarts shredded pineapple and the pulp of 2 large oranges. Sprinkle the fruit with 2% quarts sugar and allow to stand ‘ overnight. Chop orange rinds until ' fine, cover with cold water and allow this also to stand overnight. Then This . Marvels Summer Ix Indlscnllonl Madness at Vocation Dorothy Somehow Men and Women Seem to Take a Vacation From Their Moral Principles m Summer, and to Feel Free to"Say and do Things for Which They Would be Conscience-Smitten in ‘Winter There is something queer about summer that seams to make it melt down our moral principles Just as it does our collars. Why we do things in June and July that we wouldn't dream of doing in December and January, nobody knows. We merely do them be- f cause it is the good old summertime, and we have left off our inhibitions along with our winter under- wear, and anything and everything goes. It is a kind of three months’ moratorium in which conscience collects no debts, and in which we fondly believe the Recording Angel lets everything slide and enters no score against us. Th“! d0 We feel free to commit follies in the dog days that would be impossible to us when the thermometer was down to were, though why virtue should be a matter of temperature is a riddle no one can solve. Still, no matter how inexplicable the fact may be, it is indisputable that summer does have a deleterious effect upon our morale. Take such a simple matter as veracity as an example of this. In the wintertime a woman may be 'f‘ruthful Jane. Her speech may be yea yea and nay nay. She may be almost fanatically punctllious about the accuracy of her statements, and nothing would induce her to embroider a story tolnake it more fetching. Also she would be horrified at the very thought of boasting of her possessions and representing herself as richer and more cook until tender. Add the rind tc , the fruit and cook gently until Etlqflette thick. - t, "bu," u. socially prominent than she is. But let this some woman go ofi to a summer resort and she is trans- formed lnto Saphira, and if snap judgment was taken upon liars and Baird — 0’Brien N uptials (So-int John Telegraph Journal) Holy Trinity church was the scene of an interesting wedding alt 8 o'clock Tuesday morning when Rev. J. W. Holland united in marri- age with nuptial Mass Miss Mary Mildred 0’Brien, daughter of Mrs. 0‘Brien and the late Joseph O'Brien o.’ this city, to Frank Fraser Baird of Charlottetown, P. E. I., son of Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Baird of Chipman, N. B. The organist, Miss ,Mary Har- the maid on a limited train? SGYVlCS. ing? A. The escort does. fer plates be used? A. At formal dinners. Light Dishes quail, played the Bridal Chorus Make Mans from Lohengrin as the bride en- tered the church and Mendelssohn! COUTSC E88)’ wedding march at the close of the ceremony. During the offertory and signing of the register, William Melody sang “Ave Maria" and 1'0 Salutaris." The bride, who was given in mar- riage byher uncle, Joseph McDer- mott, wore a lovely gown of shell pink georgette fashioned with long, full skirt and smart Jacket o! matching lace. Her large picture hat of pink mohair was trimmed with pink and blue French flowers and matching velvet ribbon. She wore pink brocaded slippers to match her gown and can-led Ophelia roses and gypsophlla. Miss Eva. Flieger of Ohatham, as bridesmaid, was becomlngly gowned in blue chiffon, with white hat, gloves and slippers, and carried an arm bouquet of pink and white cal-nations. J. Allan O'Brien, brother of the bride, was grooms- man, and James E- Fritch was usher. Following the ceremony a wedd- ing breakfast was served at the home of the bride, 64 Somerset street, with relatives and a few friends present. The rooms were prettily decorated with garden flowers in shades of pink and white and lighted with tall pink tapers. The bride's table, which had a beautiful cloth of drawn- work, was centred with. a decorated wedding cake, and had also for adornment bud vases of sweetheart roses and pale pink candles in silver candlesticks. Asshting in serving were Miss Rosalind Terris, Miss Margaret Walsh and Miss Clara Hawker. After the reception Mr. and Mrs. be easily made by taking: 1 cup white beans it cup rich beef stock is best) llé cupsstewed tomatoes )6 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon salt Pinch baking soda Sliced breakfast bacon 3 onions Soak beans several hours in cold water. Drain, cover with boiling water, add soda and salt and boil until tender. Drain, add tomatoes and beef stock and cook for five minutes. Pour half of this mixture into a baking dish, sprinkle with half the sugar_ and cover with the onions sliced thin. Add remainder of bean-mixture, cover top with slices of bacon, sprinkle with balance of the sugar and bake 20 to 30 minutes in a moderate oven. Liver on Casserole l lb. pork liver 4 large mushrooms 4 small carrots 1 medium onion Two cups tomato puree l cup boiling water 2 tablespoons flour l6 teaspoon salt 5t cup cold water 2 sprigs parsley Chop onion and parsley very fine, peel and cut carrots in rings. Cut up mushrooms. Cut thoulver in slices and put in a casserole and add the carrots, onion, mushrooms and parsley- Pour over the tomato puree and boiling water, cover and let cook in the oven vat 350 degrees Baird left for an automobile l". for two hours. Combine the journey of a. month through the flour, salt and water, stir into the Eastern States and Upper can“; liquid in the casserole until the and upon their return will take up mixture boils. Return to the oven residence in Charlottetown. roi- until read? to serve. traveling the bride wore a stylish Hem Patties redingote costume with coat of I cup finely chopped ham skipper blue and dress of eggshell l4 cup fine bread crumbs figured crepe. She wore eggshell I tablespoon butter (brown Mix the mesh with brad crumbl and seasonings; odd the butter, melted. Mouton with milk, and half fill greased patty pans with mixture. Break one egg carefully on the top of each, sprinkle with a little salt and pepper. Cover eight minutes in a quick oven. servo at once. bride, who is n. graduate of St- High Bchool and the tunl College, lo associated with the Dominion Livestock Branch for Prince Edward Island. Savory Hamburg 1% pounds Hunburg steak _ 2 teaspoons nit l6 tollmon more: Q. ls is obligatory for oue to tip A. Yes, if she has performed any Q. When a man goes horse-back riding with a woman and a groom is present, does he or the groom as- sist her 1n mounting and dismount- Q. When should bread flild blit- Ssvory Bean Supper dishes can they were stricken down dead for telling tarrydiddles, you would hear ' the feet of the young men coming in ‘with the stretcher: to bear out the body as soon as she opened her mouth. For every woman virtually at a summer hotel is, by her own assertion, a millionairess and a leader of society at home, and the only reason that she isn't dressed like So‘ n in all his glory and bedecked with jewels is because she thinks it is bad taste to wear Paris clothes in summe , and she left her pearls and her tiaras in her safety deposit box so as not to be a temptation to thieves. Why, I have heard women in summer, who were not fifty miles from home, talk about their second maids and their butlers and their chauf- feurs when they did their own housework, and discuss the merits of theil various imported cars when they walked to save street-car fare. And the summer has precisely the same effect on men. An honest nis_ '*"t-—’- ' Literati??- rum‘ 24, "1931 -—--__. _ .___~ ‘V; FIRED because he -. was always ' ti red In nun wspx of life you moot the "Drowsy Bills" . . . mm and women who no los- ing out because the are al- ways tired. They hard enough . . . but mo often the poisons from constipation up energy ‘and strength- and bring illness, defeat and d ago prematurely. What s lty, when eotiu a delicious pOdlQll could pro‘- vout it all! Kollo 3's Bus’ is guarantees to relieve both tampon and recurring constipation Two tables oons daily-at every meal, u severe cues. Kellogg’ ALL-BEAN bri nliyd ‘in amuturshtlfiealitlglll W! . lwee s n tines Jail po “:0!!! waste: Emu maul- ; , it u» um... ill-local ll‘! may become ineffective? Ann-Bum the blood. It is cereal with milk Use on tho acka car's. London, Ontario. “Lift this far better than hell)! keep l’ clean, pills an o ten habi d drugs that t-forming and also adds iron o, l delicloug it in cooking udp by wilder" .~ALi.-»BRAN Style Chats i WITH ALMA ABCKER If you own about a cupful of ohio and a permanent wave, per- haps you can get away with one of Agnes’ tonier new hots which 1| being designated as the “plate" hat. 4 It's no doubt in the spirit of the vegetable plate which is gain- ing such popularity at 60 cents. However, Agnes’ plate can put, t)“ iced embalmlng fluid on 60 cults and some more besides. The "plate" rides on the right ear like a cart-wheel, or vic. tl-ola record, but is made of knitted chenille, velvet, or felt so that it can be pulledinto a becoming angle. A band tied over the left ear gives you slight assurance that you'll still have the hat with you when you get home, and the complete expanse of hair between the band and the hat gives positive assurance that you'll let your. self in for a. terrible mauling at your first public appearance if you aren't really smart in this extreme type. man, a reliable man, whose word is his bond and who would be hung, drawn and quartered before he would tell you an. untruth, or deceive you about a potato or a paper of pins in winter, will lie shamelessly about his golf score or the weight of the fish he caught in summer. Then there ls the summer widow and summer widower. Men and. women who are absolutely contented husbands and wives and faithful to their Darbys and Joans nine months of the year, but who philander a little in the summertime and think it no harm, though they would be "hoe-smitten if they did it‘ in the winter. b. Somehow men and women seem to crave romance in summer as they do iced drinks, and to take a vacation from matrimony as they do from business. Anyhow, ft is in summer that pretty young wives are moat f given to parking their wedding rings, and even wives with a bunch of 5 olive branches about them, will pour into any sympathetic masculine ears the sad, sad tale of how they have missed their real soulmates and are ' married to men who do not understand them. While as for men-well, of course, there are just as many pretty, slim, blonds flappers one time of the year as another, but it is chiefly in that husbands take notice of them, and begin taking them out to dinner. In winter a man realizes he is a middle-aged family man, but in summer he gets the hallucination that he is a gay young blade and a second Valentino. tonguesand sets them to babbling? 1n winter they are asti gllt-llpped tongues and sets them‘ to babbling? 1n winter the yaro as tight-upped as a clam and you couldn't pry a confidence out of them with a crowbsr, but in summer they open up and tell to perfect strangers things that they have had hidden in their hearts for years. They will tell not only their own secrets and scandals, but those of their family and friends. They will tell things that they should be murdered for telling. But perhaps the worst thing that summer does is to people's man- ners. In winter we take it for granted that if our friends wish us to visit them they will ask us, the telephone and telegraph and the United States mall still functioning perfectly, but in summer we wish ourselves on people, regardless of their desires, if they happen to have a pleasant place in the country or on the seashore or in the mountains. We simply her shrine. you know how — and here's howl crln, and the skirt does likewise. the kite-tail of a dream. each edged with a double rucho. Paris Styles i By MARY KNIGHT United Press Stlfl Correspondent PARIS, July 23.—(U. P.)—A smart woman can make an Achil- -es out of any man she wants to, because. if she dresses herself tastefully and with real Parisian chic, she is his vulnerable spot, and one good glance in her direction brings him worshiplully to Here are two sure ways to slay your hero this summe . way is being gay and floworliko; the other is being fragile and al- luring. Regardless of your particular type, you can be both - if To be gay and dowel-like in the Lanvin manner (another way of saying Parisian and successful) is to avail yourself of the use of red tulle that makes you (and him) think immediately of mist from a waterfall, caught in the surlsets last rays. Sun-pleat the bodice and add a little ruoho all the way around at the top ,and have the ' straps going over the shoulders so narrow and fine that they are nothing more than the shadow of a thread. A peplum flares from the waist like a morning glory, because it is edged with a rim of Black not gloves and a soft black pa‘ files/trier belt are contrasts in themselves, but serve to hold the gown down to a world of reality, so that it doesn't fly away on To be fragile and alluring-use black not or tulle. One thick- ness of it is like a clear pool in the moonlight. Follow Jenny's ex- ample and wear the gown with an elaborate skirt in oval Pwflll. It veiled with one thickness of tulle drawn over the shoulders and finished with a soft bow in the front. Flesh net gloves go with it- and your Archllles is at your feet! ..__. .. ..._... 0H0 has a very decollete back, --.----- crash in on them because it is cheaper than paying hotel bills. I Nor is tlils all. If the Blanks asked us to dinner in winter, we would Tool: it first Nineteen Year: Ago never be guilty of taking along five or six other people with us, expecting them to be fed and comforted with drink. But we have no hesitation in stopping with a car full of people that the Blanks never saw or heard oi, if we happen to be passing the Blanks‘ summer home and expecting the Blanks to set out refreshments for the party. Funny what the summer does to us, isn't it? DORDTHY DIX. over the meat and place pared potatoes around it; after boiling 10_ rninutes- Dust them with flour and place o piece of butter on each or bssto with dripping. Roast for 30 minutes in a moderate oven. In the meantime warm the soup, and when the meat is done, place it on l. plotter, pour the soup around it and garnish with potatoes. Boiled rice can be substituted for the potatoes and served in a ring around tho meat. Bale or onion Juice can be added to season the moat further if desired. tlonnaire, telling what they earned and how they lived. ‘rho wages oi’ clerks of both sexes are described as “terribly low.” Manual workers of the some egos receive much higher wages than the white-collared workers, who have lbeen trained at expensive comipsr clal schools. The level of salaries among middle-aged and other of- lice workers show that brain work ls undervalued in Germany. P. E. l. WOMAN DIES AT DUDLEY, MAS! DUDLEY. Mu, July II-lllrl- Margaret McIntosh Gruniiok, l0. wile of Fred Gramlick. died It i101‘ home on Dudley Hill late lllt Illlht GERMAN OFFICES PAY LOW WAGE Mahmud meat and pat into a thin loaf. average monthly wage of s11 male “l” Sprinkle the bottom of the roast- office workers is little more than‘ 27w“; u ing pan and flour place meat in 865. . lug y"; the m and dredge with a little Nearly 150,000 German clerks and‘ clan Illa flour and salt. Dispose the butter tvputa replied t0 a trade union ques "I'M"- w I TOOK Lalo B: Plokiiom’: Vogoublo mpound firnwims lknowlwuoobooomoomorliot nearly olnmco you: ego. “I cenninl recommend this woudurfulm lclnolor pro nsucy. ll pod main ovorywsy sound no now subs Oi “lmoomyloosslldnyandul- dom Ila down. i mvnll. IIMPW“ fl fill “You may Ill my ammo and l lfll willing about rho Mn. icon, Wm, Hamilton, 01W"- sits... pound [walla v-~.."e":rl"- o m o m . Joule eormnck. 417 K‘ our of s loolugbravga’ a .' wswur lunch, Ark. Jul: 22.- (U.P.)—A stalk of corn O5 foot tall is growing hero. It is growing’ through the steopol of tho court- house. s mull round potatoes I tablespoons butter or noon dripping SIR-URN . GenninY. July 2a - (British United Prom-hols thgn $50 a month is the wage paid to 1 cm condensed vegetable soup m; m unnminll with thoployedlnflermsnofficeawhilethe more than half of the men em- after a long illness. she wu born In Prince Edward Island and bod liv- ed in Worcester, Dudley-and Provi- dence several yours. Burial will b0 in Prince Edward Talmud. v.l:ElAHiE l: nvmlynutil’ r