$LM rambles and cute designs I YOUTHFUL CAPE "w .~~ ' ' .A iiendersporls_ type in fiat silk _ crepe shelving the lFi-COiOTS in cap- llcillo tones, altogether youthful and _ flattering. It can be worn for street or resort. It's a spar-live idea that ls really practical. The hipliue is snugly fitted. The box-plans povide graceful giving to hem. It boasts of scarf neck- lmc too. Style No. 544 can be had in siaes 16, i8, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and i2 inches bustlt is very effective with bodice made of rcd and white printed ill; crepe with skirt and cape oi white silk crepe, with belt. in plain ' red. Navy blue gcorgette crepe is very =erviceable for business woman. Print- Ed Silk crepe chic for ‘all-around wear. illowered chiffon is quite formal for 18a. or bridge. Printed voile, printed rajah, shantung and crepe do chine i appropriate. Pattern price 15 cents in l» stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) , Wrap coin carefully. - We suggest that when you send for this pattern, you enclose l0 cents ad- ‘dltional for a copy of our Spring Edshlon Magazine. It's just. filled with - delightful styles, including smart en- for the Locales. lfiiqlfetté I! Roberta Ina .-_-. Ma. Should a social letter or hols be ins/n fl*..i.U..§-1J‘r.L-ii* ' "dated at the top of the first page? A. No. The date should be written on the last page, at the left of the signature. Q. When performing an introduc- tion should one use the expression, "my friend?" A. No; it is not good taste. Q. How la food served at a buffet supper? __ , A. The dishes, silver and food are placed on tables and the guests wait on themselves. Ask Your N e l g ll b0 rs -'-"l was all run-down, dredall rhe and could no: do my irouso work. My eye: were dull, my tongue was coated and l did not wan: no ' cat. A neighbor told he: about Lydia B. Pinlrhamb Vcgpuble Com- ~ - nd. lbflln taking itpnd now l no hungry all rhs‘ rims. l llelp well, also ydi dvgWaah andlfaelloubcftniaafll ba glad to answer any lama."- Mn. H. E. was. :_S.,Wilbw8s, . aibaulr, - ‘ Q nil-will‘ 4M1. . hands on hips, and kicking vigorously ‘ a “Old 01‘ Mild Sponge bath, followed illlWomanb Realm. -:-‘ Social and Personal BEAUTY QUESTION! ANBWEIID Reducing the lips Don Miss Leeds: (1)1 How cnn I reduce my hips? i: eat plenty of ‘food. especially sweet stuff. Is there any way I can keep myself from eating so much? k2) How can 1 develop my bust? (3) What is the cure for en- larged pores and blackheadt? MR5 CHAS. M. Answer-ii) A good hip-reduclnl exercise consists of standing erect, backward. Begin the kick with knee raised high in front, kick up as high as you can behind. Repeat with each leg until slightly tired. In addition to taking special reducing exercises you should make it a habit to walk outdoors four or five miles each day. You cannot hope to lose weight or have a good figule so long as you overeat. Instead of eating so much sweet food, which is so fattening. eat bulky foods like lettuce, spinach. cab- bage and fresh fruits that satisfy the appetite without adding to excess weight. For breakfast. you might eat an orange and a pint of milk. For lunch eat a large fruit aaiad and several cooked nonstarcl-ly vegetables. For dimer eat some meat or protein food and some nonstarchy vegetables. Have the meat dinner twioe a week and on the other days have a dinner consisting of a. starchy vegetable (bread of cereal) and several non- starchy vegetables and a dish of stewed flgs._ (2) Cultivate correct posture, with chest out and abdomen in. Swimming is a fine exercise for developing a well-formed bust. Deep-breathing and arm-flinging exercises are help- ful. r3» Enlarged pores and blackheads require regular daily oars. Wash your face with sobp and warm water “ch night at bedtime. Lather and rinse iwlve- Then‘ Dress out the blackheads without bruising the skin, p" an m astringent. In the morning waah your face with cold water and take by a. hard rubdown with s dry Lowe), Your skin will improve when you hi“? fldflllied a correct diet and take resular outdoor exercise. Avoid ooh- stipation. {p13 1,3595 to‘... 0n the Neck Dear Miss Leeds-I am 1'1 years old and have two lines that. encircle my neck and almost meet bgind, How can I remove them? My legs have a slight tendency to bs bow“, l Is there any exercise to correct this? l cousranoz. l Answer-These line; a" “um Venus‘ necklaces and used to be much admired in the days when plump necks were in vogug 1 mink m" mamas with a tissue cream 0V8)! filly Wlll hBlD- After cleansing the skin, pat on the cream and Bive a gentle pinching mm"; m; several minutes. Now give an up. ward, rotary mun" Wm, m. M, gers held cloao together. Do a few llwi-ll-Nwhllli exercises and than wipe on’ the cream and pat on an astringent lotion. In the. morning wuh your neck in oold watog- and powder base and powde. m ro- gard to the bowed legs, another reader of this column wrom me that she had improved hora greatly by riding a bicycle. Tho oxvrcfas da- vsloped the muscles of the calm so tharths legs looks straight. L015 LIIDI. Hossseholdffiafl* I flan-u ha A Nsadlabock 1110111061911”? found on tba inlldl of a cracker box makoa an dnnilont medicinal. Th; noodles will not rust. Owns ‘rolooaanscombindanlaupiaoo oflniionlronndltandcbangcdaily fortbfesorfomflymflilnadaktbe foolinwarnlwatsrandtnsodmcln boflailyrolnovsd. . ~ ToWluhnPIIhd _ Iflwbqn thofllaioaa are paced. my m placed in cold vats: rush MN it Ifltirl-sndnsr-i-p‘ auto son is getting marrio family s0 and that it is the thin! that hla martial! won't separate w“ 1mm wife. 1n fact, man nearly always Innrrclm m understanding of what wifehood an Don't resent his love for his wife. Maw i his wife and his mother don't Bil-Bh- of love, as any woman knows who has been ma feel that you rcnrd h" l! I“ interloper. and thyfl Mb r wise than your dsurhw-lh-ll" m“ ¥° control and tact in mostin! 4mm“ sliilflllmllf V‘ because it u far more imrorilht i" W“ l" h" l° ° fur you to love her. Bhs could klt. would mean nothlnl W Y "15 l! 417 with a 00am towel. Apply- laoro agpavatingdo liva with than tbs chronic adviser, and don't always ba ' toiling your dausbtor-in-iaw how you used i0 do Wlflthing, fIOB Hiking ooffaa toboaning a husband. ‘mere are an entirely mono: rulaa fa tbs [Illa m. yourbandaodandyouwillbaa rmand-Il-ind, Wflflil I 1lfl@llllli. Urgll Oourflaly and Good Will E5? I DorothyDb: Arlywoman Who Preserves the Same Kindly Relations That Exist Between Hostess and Guest in Her Dealings With Her Daugh- terin-Law Will Insure Her Own Peace ' and Popularity A woman writes to me: “My son. who ia my only child. is going to be married lnd it is necessary that ! should liva with hilt! want t0 got on hir- monloully with his wife and noobs a disturbing factor in bia boun- hold. can you give ms any point: about bow to b0 a good lnothor-in-lcwf" ' W011, the main factor in being a good mother- in-law consists in taking tbs right attitude toward it. The reason that most women fail as mothers-in law is because they are ao aurcbnrged with jealousy that it colors all their actions toward their sons‘ wivu. ’f‘l'loy look through green mwiwlfl Ii 1119 poor little brides their sons have brought homo and take a bllioua and distorted view of everything they l0. It i: a funny thing that women want their daughters to marry and that they elcoms their sona-in-law with open arms, but it is nearly, llWlyl tha bitterness of death to them to have their sons marry. I-hfl lhfly 1'1!"- sight unseen, the scheming rninxss who, they feel, have literally robbed them of their guileleas little boys. There is never any dlflieulty in tellins which is the bride's mother and which is the bridegroom} mother at, a ‘M4415; The aimlllng. triumphant lady who has the air of one who has lust pulled of! a good thing ia the bride's mother. The poor, inr-sodden creat- ure, who looks as 1r life was a. total loss. is the groom's mother- Begin. then by taking a sane and safe outlook on the situation. Don't eel that fate has dealt you a sinister blow because 30m‘ d. Don't talk about its being hard to have‘ to give him up. Don't wail out. that it wars your hwi l“ t" l" “l” w W" '“°lh°' womm ‘have yourself and love her better than he does Y9"- pity yourself and f moognlu that it u perfectly flllufl] for him to marry and Mhd I and that. he will be a. better and a more useful marl for doinl you should want him to do. Relllfl! ill" him unlug you quarrel with his cir mothers more after 1:11‘; , because marriage gives them a more v0 l" rage than they did before d motherhood "any Co“ ‘ wanna‘ he affection that a man has for They are‘two entirely different brands med herself. ii ‘ k h r new daughter-ln-law the Illd llmld- M“ e u so “gin by ‘MM you "usable addition to the family and not. as 0n '1 assiduously to work to varnP llu- U” ‘very your repertoire to win her heart. for on ' t i art and wile and blandiahrnen n“ when": yo“ keep you, ‘on of h." mm you making friends with her aspen alienated from yo“- mmmv, 1n drying this because you are older and more worldly u should have. at least, more self- l than she has. Also you than it is to her I along very well without Y0“. bill ll" l ou if she put a barrier between you mil Y°“' ‘m’ i Ind learn to oily uv w "Wm WW4 °l “ “mlf i ct her “K8W'9ll'lh"5"“ million; ; ‘rake the so study hor weaknesses l d m” them. Learn to dodIO l1" "l!" “l l signs. Jolly bar along and “aell yourself to her as if she were a dollar prosplci- , .____._-- n "u, dgufhur-ln-lnw has to live u. your house. mare h" H l"; hum,“ In“; 1f you [o in live in her house. "W" l0?!“ W" W“ l" ' . guest Ind om you must adopt yourself w the was’; of 1:3; hm“! "*4 Y" lrlin from interfering in the manaummt o! h" W" - i i u I You must remember how cockaurs you were of your judgment on every point when you were a bride, what atreaa you nut on trlflw 1H4 h" MW" you w," o; yam. .ucmlty_ lwgpy young married woman feels the same way, and the chief reason she hates having mother-ln-law around is be- rause not one woman in a million can n. another woman making a. pie without putting her finger in it. Treat your daughtnr- in-law as l! she were your daughter. If you had a daughter you would want her to have all the pretty things her husband could possibly give her. You would want her to hava all the pleasures that calm her way. Then show your daughter-in-law that you are pleased when aha gets ‘a new frock instead of looking sour and, making a few caustic rs- marks about wivu who wants their husband's money in extravsgancs. Urge her to go to places of merryment and to keep up with her clubs and her bridge Ind suggest to her husband that he take hol- out at hlsht-s nvw and than instead of grumbling about wives who gad too much every time you no her put on her hat. Don't. give your dsughtsr-in-law an overdose of your society. Don't be an old woman of the us. who is always hanging around the necks of nor son and l-lia wife. Ivory young couple who lms each other want to be by them- selves sometimes. ‘may have things to aay in each other that they don't wont even their mother to hear. lo don't always sit with than of an evening. Go of! to your own room and road a book or go visiting or go to tha movies with a fl0hy.'D%'b always fill up the back seat when they take n ride. If you possibly can, m on come- wbm now and than on a visit or to some pleasure ruort. ‘risers in nothing like judicious apnoea of ablonos to make tha hurt grow fonds: of an ill-law. Don't critioin ‘your daughtor-in-law. Her ways may not b0 your ways. but such an they an aha has a right. to than. Possibly they are a modern Improvement that an bofllr Hill! your own. If aha makes mistake ht ha: find out bar error for horaclf. Don't fall bar of her faulia. Nous of us loves mo ham or ill-am or mayo-homo: mun abbbad. l litsymlrtsnguaolrauwrthannraksmggaationmfobumanbaingia m a word. b0 kindly. I0 lunnsn. I0 affectionate and sympathetic. Knob 800d mothar-in-lsw. . DORUIIY DIX '. marl cannon nfioon. also mnuuoo. --- Grade m-ll sahay mam-s, a lawn of wlmm uumn. 0M» VII-I'M, mom lm- Omit n-l Idna Gould and llaasn lowtliarandlirthur mm, a rrankbluttort. b! cuppa can.“ "EAR * :- Fashions -:- Literaturew ‘A booklet pronoun] du mode rn Outstanding and . ' Quality Preferred in Home: OURdboatesaq Styll Quality in nay acquis- in foknthc home. That in why Holmes dz Table Ware is foundin homes from coast w 6018C- mootuaedpiecu. table service. Flatware. I NQI lddnna. Plancnndmayourfnahooklah-“Sup- pingSusaanamaParfacl Tabla Sea-vim”. c. w. rarraltsolv, Daily Arguments AUNT HET in wants co deed out uulo property we've pt In the child- rsn right now. but It's Iota easier to be kind to old folks if l Infra , ' aolnbthhf." l A Morning Smile wllo (with hswoooporl-"Juri think of itl A couple got married a. few days after a courtship which lasted fifty years." Husband “I suppose the poor old min WU too feeble to hold out any longer." . Strike Ties UL Builders CHICAGO. J1me 4~Building pro- ieoh involving $100,000,000 won tied upfn Obieaso today by a strike of the Bridle and Mnlctural Iron Workers Union. Tbs union demanded an in- craau of from 012 a day to $13 and tho oontrsoim-a tried tocornpromiss by olfltlng tbo workers 012.50. This offI was not aoosptlblo llfi of- flsfoll b00111 coiling rnon off their ioba when they npomd for work today. Buildings on which operation wcra halted included the marchsndils mart. tbs world's largest buildinn tbs now hours of tbs Ollioago Oivio Opal-a on m rim front, and the new Board of ‘Prado Duildinsa. Baldwin Government J-Ias Resigned ‘lwknofl. Juno l-At confines . H, - ~ mm Atilndlnokborotby rm- ovsavrk-arpralaluioreul-t. mm. um town». Illll‘ ,Grade iV-l mu 0mm. 2 Wanda mew. m» Gould. 1mm tanner.» with bu colleagues of bia cabinet this aftlrbden lt-non. ltanlly laid- wla Premier of 6m: Britain’ ma. Fashionable —- beautifully execu- ted-firdng-for evu-y mode of in- oerior decoration — you get rho famous hHolflnal t: Edwards Su -P t: n a‘ Qualify: blopcfa of Solid Silver inlaid at back of bowls and handles of Start the June Bride on her wny co colnpleoe silver table ware. Give her a Holmes 8 Edwards Silver- ware Susi-in] Service-mac of four auncssivc us: which finally build inao a complete silverware You may match in design Holmu 6t Edwards Hollow Ware and setofSixTenspoonyflflk SctofSixForhJlw nuke-abandon STANDARD smvnnoo. QFTQRONTQIJMITED Sccnddbhdayit. . r-o-ao-l Shun-Q. a 0-4.. inn-ll. y. Rs CROCKETT ESTATE JUNE 5, 1929 v i \ ‘\\\\\\\\\u HOLMES s EDWARDS '-'--Ii<i"1.l'i‘iD ~- Dc sure to ace the beautiful display n‘. the following nigh-class dealers: Charlottetown W. N. TANTON, Summersldo and GODKIN BROS. G. H. TAYLOR For The Cook PINEAPPLE SPONGE Heat one pint of grated or crushed pineapple over hot water. Sprinkle I into it one-half cup fine tapioca (a quick-cooking kind). mixed with two- third cup sugar and one-half teaspoon salt. When the tapioca ls transpar- ent, add the Juice of one lemon, andl j fold in the whites of two eggs which; have been beaten stifl and dry. Serve.’ with cream and sugar. _ Germany To Settle War Currency i l PARIS, Juns 4—Germany gavs a‘ solemn pledge to Belgium today that. l ans would settle the war currency l i i l I I ‘qumtion between them before the ' Owen Deyoung Reparations plan goes into effect September 1. L The pledge appeared to have re- moved the last barrier from sign- ing the general reparations ogre:- ment reached by the experts of seven nations on. saiurday after near four months delay. The pledge was contained in a noio from ths Ger-j man government to Dr. l-ljalmar ' Schacht, chief German delgatc. Schacht delivered the note to Young, I who in turn handed it to the Belgium i delegation. Belgium had refused to sign the ‘ reparations agreement until she was assured of satisfaction for ihe wreck- 5 lng of nor currency during tbs Ger- man oocupation when. Belgium francs l wen confiacatod and replaced byl German marks. g i i Birthday Honors l . LONDON. Juno 0-110! Bridger. poet lnuroate, and John Gnlaworthy. noted writer. and playwritor. m rs- cslpanta of tho order of merit in the urns tho order of knilh companion o the bath, and o k shthoos la oonfmpd on Dr. Robert Woodl. spa; olnm m urn-viola ray uoatmonu. both of whmn aaaiahd in the inat- msnt of tbs ling in his recent uri- ous illnoaa. V. about which had luidod tho nation rinse comer rm. apnoea to una- Flflvfilfiuivadn Here they’ are, Mother! OMEN in millions of homes rely on Bon Ami Powder and Cake for dozens of cleaning and polishing tasks. The soft, snowy-white Powder is so convenient to use on bathtubs, basins and tlilng; fine kitchen utensils of aluminium». enamel and again ware; floors of ~ tile, Congoleum, etc., painted ~ and ever so many other thin _And there's the handy, comp. ..l bring back shining spotiossness l L-Qllily wirldowa and mirrors . . . to restore the lustrous glean to nickel, brass 5rd copper. Cleaning with magic Bon Aim l5 easy as pie-quick as a/ wink! Just apply the Bon Ami with a dam lcloth. In a moment it dric. Then a Few brisk rubs with a clean, dry cloth and everything gllatens with shining cleanliness. 3°" QC UHITID. IIONTIIAL B“ mi