l 1 u . i ti i l ..;_..-_‘;.:;<; rang" ""- r-asrygg-vt: ..-.... ._ a lWzat the Fashionablea are Wearing, Illustrated Dressmaklug Lesson Furnished With l ;.". i Every Bu Qinnabelle Worthington '4 1G» White lace accents add much to the charm of this smart day model black crepe marocain. , The arrangement ofthe iulnees of the skirt is quite unique. Flaring in- sets have been added at the front. and the back, leaving the sides sinartly slim and straight. 1t can also be made in chiffon prints or printed crepe silk. Style N0. 851 is designed for sizes l4, 16, i8, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3% yards oi 39-inch material with ‘A yard of 35-inch contrasting. Tweed printed crepe silk is very lovely for general day occasions or for travel. Cicpy plain or patterned woolens are also adaptable for this chic model. . For resort, make it with short sleeves of pastel or white crepe tub silk or shantung. ' Be sure to flli 1h the size of the pattern. Send stomps or coin (coin preferred.) .14“. l Price of pattern i5 cents, '21)," _--'_.___.____-.$_ No. 851. Size ..................... Illlloncolloooaa-an-nuaaollillllill . Name .',-..‘_| L.‘ Oilollonnueu-ueanaloallllluilll Street Address ualiscu. ";....................e.............. li 1cm stuu '§Reu1m'“”' -:_- Social a Pattern Perky Cloves _ For Fall Wear .5'eminine hands are apt to be- ‘come unruly as the days shorten and the trees begin to deck them- selves for autumn. For gay, care- free weeks they have known free- dom from their ordinary tasks and from constricting gloves. They have laid a firm hold on a mashie or felt the exhilarating pull of a trolling line; they have temporarily forgotten the trick of turning the switch on the electric stove, to fan the flame of the campfire and the aluminum “perk" has been ousted from favor by a well blackened coffee pot. But summer is waning-sad, but true-and tanned and roughened hands must be tamed and softened Gloves are the answer, the need of thc moment, and women are look- ing for guidance as to colors and styles. Black Still Used Trom Paris comes the tale of black gloves; black for morning, for sports, for afternoon and evening. The distinction of black used with black or with lighter colors for contrast cannot be bettered. For ewe-i DYSENTERY ‘I "5 IS DANGEROUS GHEGK IT A1‘ OIGE is the remedy you should use. It ia not. an experiment but a tried [ad provon preparation that haa_boen use in Canada. for tho past aghty years for all bowel complarnta. I" 50c. bottle atalldruqfi m rleallelitala, put up only by The . Mil- burn do. Limited. Toronto. Ont. t Etiquette ’ II DOUGH Ill Q. What is the courteous way of Kivlng a gift to a servant? 5- A quiet. tactful way, free from Patronage, and showing only gram. lllllo and EOOd-will for the service rendered. ovonlns black the ‘favorite, is followed by a flesh shade which seems to have unsurped the place ullllelw held by white. However, ll clllllllly While will still ‘he used and also a pale blue. Certain very chic women have realized the possibilities of long brown suede, In general the rule for evening is color contrast between gloves and gown. Evening gloves for fall are long. the short glove being ap- lllolbrlate only for the informality of summer. Usually they '3" sixteen, eighteen or twenty button lensth in the mousquetaire style; sometimes for less formal occasions a ten or twelve button may be worn. With the exception of black, which is always best in suede, evening gloves will be of glace kid. For day wear black will continue to lead the field, followed closely by a rich brown shade named llPDPODPIB-tely chocolarde. For gen- eral wear a six-buttoned glove is best, and may be used throughout the afternoon, though for very formal engagements a twelve- buttoned length is preferable. For knockabout, everyday wear kid is ;but for which blends so much better than practical and almost everlasting; dressy occasions suede, kid into autumn fabrics, is smarter and more soignee. A long, tight suit or coat sleeve with a heavy cuff of fur cries for a short, neat glove. Nicolet, whose gloves are now obtainable at one of the New York shops, has a one- button capeskin with hand-sewn seams, and also a four or six button doeskln in black, white and beige. "lo/nus, Sept. 1.-(U. PJ-M. sh sleeves lu both frocks and typo have v Paris Styles _ _ By MARY KNIGHT Y (United Press Staff Correspondent) yott order your cook to prepare you a perfect dinner, you cannot 1 expect the desired results if you limit him in the amount of but- tefhe is to use, or the cut of meat he is to purchase. “Worth has not stinted this year,’ he adds, "in the quality, Jean Charles Worth says: "Ii ,4‘ . . u‘ v 4 ooon NEWS! srhncirs sum: b 1-1,, 11., cook AT roiuamrs Bus!“ Jim; FIRST snowmc Gowns Glitter With Beads and Gold and Silver Threads 1 tablespoon of gelatine. V. cup of cold water. 1% cups of stewed rhubarb. Few drops of lemon juice. soften the geiatine in cold water (By Mary Knight) and pour over it the hot rhubarb United Press Staff Correflpondent which h“ bee" Bweellened 9° tulle- Phms’ Aug. 31 _ If one word Stir until dissolved. Pour into a. had to be used to sum up the cub cold, wet mold. Rhubarb sponge may lection of Tolman, that one word u” muuu by beam‘! um’ the mlxture would umbubly be. "glittering;- two stiifly-beaten egg-whites when Even day time things had collars ‘he “u? ls Pmluuy (m1 "l4 bell" and cuffs and tie ends made of var- l” lul°u°u~ ious glittering materials, gold and suver threads’ uuuugles uud crystal item of her entire collection. An tube hem“ elaborate green cloth coat trimmed 60mg humedly over the general with a huge shawl collar made en- aspectu or me models Show“ the tlrely oi cock feathers. ‘ With it ‘onqwulu things were noted? went a muff of the same feathers. Skirts relatively the same length and u“ 186° hut lmnmeu with as last season. Colors rich and them u‘ the buck uud dmppeu deep with much bla.ck and white lll-‘wlllu- The ll°llll°o= of lllo for evening. Hustle tendencies, but mm“ mu blues ullu purples l" the never pronounced and achieved feathers Bu“ u“ uiueuumt Wu" through suggestion and cascade kle to the ensemble and created no draping of material. A lavish use and o’ smart tuuk" of ruffles, velvet, chiffon, lace and other umluguuhiug loollooool patent leather satin Leopard her collection included an entire 5km on both coats and evening omission of the bustle idea, a decid gowns- Diagonal neck lines and ed emphasis °f the uumuslllmled heavily beaded dinner gowns, some cape ‘mu “l” ‘muurl “he llllullu‘ with long sleeves but backless. up type Our grundmutuuru wore Many bow ties, not only at collars and which fen Just “V” the curve and cum,’ but also at the waist oi‘ the shoulder); bead fringe on line and about the hips. evening mwels; Spangled lueevus ‘ done in the vagabond manner; Remus couecunn a lavish use of sable and ermine The collection uet forth by M. u“ "m" u°lu°lllll “do ollllls Juuuuw Hem confirmed the ca» of lace and chiffon and the latter ier rumor that he was not interest- making elegant evening wraps ed in any drastic changes for the Wm‘ huge b°wu ‘u’ the ulm" m‘ winter season’ and that as n“ as stead of collars, the ends of which he was concerned, the hat that rewhed m the m”? u m" deal seems to have caused the trouble o! shun” °u bbuueu l” m? them could go and hang on a high “shay w the b°uy7 “Hues "m" “me m ‘he “mm” ‘crest. of velvet first and then of taffeta It's his mm conviction that each “u 1"’? °°w1 "emlllolli 11ml- seasonh fashions should grow out “he decouetuueu muumeu u? 19$ otf the lastFnot arbitrary affairs “mum” "°°"°‘-°P°ll "l" lilo» that are literally nurig at the “u "uumull °“ "Bl" W°°l=ll world. The lines of his gowns m frocks and beige colored glazed gently turning away from depres- Md gloves Wm‘ gauntlet cu,“- sion and sadness and reflecting Flu” N°u°°u more joy both 1n the“. colors uud Flllled kloves seem to have come intentions. His is a. rich use of t° “u” u"°“3ll ll“ lllll find Wlfltor colorful velvets - the shades of The m“ 15 m” us Plmwulllled l8 the centers and of rubies, ame- on this summer's gluvus- lllll ll» l8 thyats, sapphires and turquoise. present m‘ u°tu u" “ll "@111"!- His corsases are fitted snugly,( 0"“ °" u" "lllllllllll Blows o! the (which is, if any one must call it year i‘ '“u"°l°P°u l" the HEW so, h“ only mtereuca u) the past‘ chocolarde in suede, with hand- excep; the mum’ some with high stitching of white. It is cut with a mums, mes uubelted’ and other‘, bias flare in the eight-button length with narrow normal and upward “u ~15 Perle” ml‘ Well‘ will! belts. tweeds. The same model may also 111m 1,, m, ample Bum u, uu be had in black kid or suede with o1 111s 5km “mvemenu, and he h“ white stitching. Two of the attrac- vecrcd to the "u", and round tive Chanel models are: One of neck line; mum- mm u, the fob wine-colored kidskln fitting snugly mer V for evening. Heavy wool- w the “L” ‘lull Ebdels of itself ens and rich weeds combined with forming a sharp two-and-a-heli tricotc {or daytime and suofl,’ um; inch flare above: and one of navy next to velvet in importance for klll llBVlnB a straight flare above the evening come; satin‘ hmeuuce’ the wrist made by a. small inverted and chiffon. A pleat worn to the inside of the arm. The latter has narrow piping; o1 Rouff’: shew ouimu Wllllo ol the hem and half-war. Messy Rnuff lets _he1' rehdheuu lflugggutrig; gem arid the wrist. n; personal” ' adolescent girl needs protection from herself lust as she needs a. dentist m" quantity of fabrics, the amount of fine workmanship, the use of embroidery and other careful details of trimming, but it may lntQrest you to know that, thoulll the traditions of the house are tained, in this time of world-wide depression and fear, ‘s prices today are lower than pre-war values despito the ase in taxes and overhead expenses." dYou remember the latest innovations of Worth that have be- co [recognized-fashions such as his yachting pajamas cut like sa ' trousers; turquoise blue combined with black and brown; ' ; and hi ssuocessful interpretation of the informal evening eu- for rests rant dining and. theater? New ideas of this Nd llll Nil-SQ collection filling it llnin w nnpcipaawnichnemtohaveuoend. ' 717-‘ Wlfltfl‘ incite be‘ knowrfthro- "ch the series of marvelous snow outfits that inroduce her collect- ion of more than ever elegant en- sembles for the 1931-32 season. These treasure Ireens and browns $1111 "40 8nd greys and blues and furry, soft warm blouses of pure whiin. Is their special Property. coats, brown gloves for formal h." Inch ‘but “l” m "my M: the heaviest drifts, and bright, sally colored scarves keep the cold cat breeze from the neck. . AM M! for the most startling _fi1-8i "f-‘i’. PERMANENT .WA VIN G $ 7.50 Great heavy tau snow boots with 57 GRAFTON STREET Phone 159-1. for that appointment MISS MacDONALD Adolescent '13:’ Glthntlhlnn Mum“, With Love I‘ o be Protected Againflt H01’ Aluilifsltlfitflts lvtlore Than Anything Else in the World, for ‘the Husband Who Looks Ideal to Her at 17 May ' Look Hopeless at 24 ' A wise man said to me the other day: "Girls need to be protected from their first sweethearts more than anything else in the world. An when ahehas the toothache." 1 want to add my confirmation to this state- ment. There isn't a mail that doesn't bring me two or three heartbrbken letters from women whose lives were wrecked because they had no one l0 protect them from themselves when they were 17. "I thought I was in love with the man I mar- ried when I was 17," one woman will write. “Now I am 24 and I simply hate him. There isn't a thing he does that doesn't get upon my nerves. He ». bores me to extinction, and I cannot imagine what I ever saw in him that made me think I even fancied him." "I married when I was 1'1 a. man for whom I thought I had the grand passion,’ writes another. "I know thaftdit was a. child’! DQ551113 fancy, and I have met the man who is my real mate and whom I wor- ship with my whole soul." “I married when I was 17," writes still an- other. “Now I am 23. I have four babies, and I am worn and broken in health and old beforemy time. I have never had any of the pleas- urea of girlhood and I am tired of my husband, tired of my fretting children, tired of my home, tired of marriage. I would like to be free of them all and to dance and so to cabinets and on ior-rides and have a good time." So these letters run, each one stressing some pitiful phase of the too-early marriage. Oitener than not the man in-thc case ls not to blame. He took no advantage of the girl's inexperience to lure her into marriage. She was lust as anxious to marry him as he was to marry her. He has not changed and turned from a. Fairy Prince into a brute. l-Ie is Just the same ordinary chap he always was. 1h men that has altered. Nor has he failed m his duly to her as a husband. It is only that marriage is a life work and not a. Jazz DB1!’ and she wasn't ready to settle down to the business oi wiiehood and motherhood. Nevertheless, there is the tragedy of a wrecked life as bleak and piteous as can be made of broken hopes and blasted illusions and weari- ness and hopelessness and despair. For there is no undoing this thing that a girl did in the folly of her youth. It is because the too-early marriage almost invariably ends in dis- aster that it is so important to protect a girl against her first sweetheart. It doemft matter who he is or what qualities he possesses. He may be the incarnation of every charm and virtue and the girl may be crazy about him at the time, but that is no guarantee that when she grows up she will still be ravished by that particular line oi attractions in a man. For it is the girl herself who is in a. transition stage, whose needs are changing every clay, whose tastes are altering every hour, whose ideals difler from minute to minute and who at 17 has no more idea of what particular type of a. husband" she will want when she is 24 than she has of what style of hat she will feel she cannot live without seven years from now. Hence the danger of picking out a. husband for keeps before she even knows what she admires and wants in amen. Heaven knows matrimony is risky enough ior women without their taking any chances on what they are going to be and prefer themselves. Fiuthermore, there is this added danger: That the disgruntled and unhaPPY wife almost invariably finds some man with whom she does fall in love, and then, unless she is a woman of high moral Principle and great strength of character, there is another unsavory scandal and a wrecked home and orphaned little children. it is the women who marry too young who are the pleasure-mad, frivolous, silly, middle-aged and elderly woman, who make a laughing stock of themselves by wearing flapper clothes and who get into scrapes out of which their husbands have to pay them with tea. hounds and pro- fesslonal entertainers at 1am places, and who oarry on flirtatious with boys young enough tobe their grand sons. Somehow, it seems to be a law of. Nature that We must all have our playtime, and the woman who misses her girltima is sure to try to take it later on with disastrous re- suits. Above all, 1'1 is the dangerous age for a girl because then she is in love with love. She is just slopping over with sentiment. She is like a childswith a dollar in its hand that it is burning to spend and she is ready to lavish the whole treasure of her heart on the first plaserby without even loking to see whether he is worthy or not. In her heart she is singing as did the old Floradora sextet, "I must love somebody and it might as well be you." It is because a girl at i7 knows nothing of the world, nothing of life, nothing of men, because she has not even a yardstick with which to measure her own affections, that her ,rst love affair is so dangerous to her. Once get herpast that and she is reasonably safe because shqhas learned not to take her emotions too seriously or to think that every sporadic heart-affection is fatal. This is why it is so necessary to protect the young girl against her- self. But to do it requires the ge- tleness of the dove,.the wisdom of the serpent, the tact of a diplomat and the patience of Job. DORUIZHY DIX. x Style Cllzats WITH ALMA ARCHER D0 you kmw that there are young women whose whole lives are passllonatelyooncerned with lust such painless matters as ‘ =--- where they're soins to go “of an cveumg" and what they're going to wear and do you know that you may be estimated as dim and dull and crrvtlo l! you make the emi- of living these dolls an old-fashioned tinfoil-bound lily and sweet pea corsage in- stead oi a lei? ‘- - I, for one, was lust about to dose ofl when someone, probably Mo. Reginald Fellow“, thought about the fun of a ui. we had them this spring in fur scans, and now tlwyre smart and amusing in flower: slung carelessly over the shoulder-a. Scented violets, daisies, or gardenias, are slick used this new way. And llnlIl you're a lwain that's an absolute muggins with too much lllokum on your hair, you'll also know to send your gal some of the foolish, unexpected kinds of flowers this winter, like silly nasturtlums, or a string of white gardenias made like a 8am Browne belt, if she wears black a lot. 1t is only her taste l‘, Nearly always tired, vow sivloldv- To-day. non-hablt-lorming regu "Fllll I'I Sales Renee-amides: How a simple daily liealtli habit banished a persistent u ailment She was a victim of modern life, modern foods! depressed never just lick, never entire! internal conditions allowed poisons to form in he: system-kept he: vitality at a low ebb, Laxailveaweredrastlmsickeningandlostthelr _'I'l_ien a frieud—a bright-eyed. clear-skinned, roan Jookin woman brimming uritii cal -told er own health secret. Simpy a dash of ENO in a glass of water ev this once miserable girl aliehaajuatbeguntomjoyllfe. ENO acts aafelynnd wonderful. am“ i6€eiy'a'ehree""suhe¢auG uuuidIQaiei-ausoa ' Tanners . headachey- y well. Sluggish ood morning. tell you tor. \ (3451 ‘ ‘Srukljriiw for Null: kuerim: IJC,ID-II "m: Heel Is Lower 4 In New Fashion NEW YORK, Aug. SL-Ever since Cinderella lost her little glass slip- per and won a Prince, women have paid as much attention to the toe as to the tip of their fashion sil- houette. No less this year, even with the new little hat trying to capture the imagination. mu and winter shoes are of bet- ter quality and more perfectly made than they have been for many seasons, Miss Isabelle Ray- mond, New York shoe analyst said today. Although the Second Empire and Mid-Victorian influence ls noted in the fashioning of new shoes, there is nothing radical in their creat- ion. New modes merely point the way to a gradual change, she said. Heels, for instance, are lower. The continental Cuban heel, hover- ing around two inches in height, is r ommended for street and for day time wear. Heels for afternoon wear range from two to two and one half inches, and evening heels are not much higher. Striking s. correct posture is an important achievement to the wearer of the new costumes. The right heels solve this problem, Miss Raymond said. . "The debutante slouch of two see- sons ago is decidedly out," she said. "Fashionable women no longer stand with hips out and tomach in. They stand poised and straight, and wearing the new hats, they Derclnthelr heads coyly." Tailored town shoes and open- toed sandals are the two popular fashions. Theformer is fashioned of clslfskln, femlninely chiefly treated- I . ~ , The Darling I . What a are he is but how pre- e l o u a l Yo u r _‘ whole life ls oeu- ‘ trod in him . . . If he la to be well u and happy, ha musrbe strong and robust. Baby's Owu Ta b l a t a help mother: to keep their children wail. They are the ideal laxative for children — a limple and uie preventive, and a Iquiedy for colds simple fever, ind!- gmti and aldln ‘ I! cents a package a! inydruggistla. IAIY’! OWN TAIIJTS [Dr- Illaul’) gm A Morningfinile‘ Black Sambo, while ivalldng in the woods one day, W85 Slllilflded l1! a wild cat, which proceeded to chase him to the top branches of a. large tree on the edge of a deep canyon. The animal was climbing as iasi us Sambo and soon had forced him perilously near the decaying end oi a. long branch extending beyond the edge of the precipice. Sambo decid- ed it was time to remonstratc. “Wile cat," he said, impressively, "does yo‘ make me go one inch fur- da,' yo‘ is gwina to have to 111ml a long way fo‘ yo’ suppah.’ Pumps and tonguelass-tied Oiiiordi are best. Toes are rounded. and heels, continental in style, are leather covered, matching either the leather trim or leather used fol‘ the body of the shoe. 1i_.._.__ ; lélil-‘fi/u-l ' SHOES ‘if/n’ ("r/r/I Minor ailments of the feel . - - Seieviiillcaflydlllafldubfill‘ boautilully lino than hm -l the moi-Incas and 9"" "l u" 3°“ ""'""",;".‘.".";."a. .. Q f I lnanlivonaolll Elmlul" dem-eatebww- muueneunvwmfljzf“ whelawnbeenabdrlll" ' l§it [Lola AAA“ EE l7wi) Puamn s‘ raacusoll . cuuletutown McLEODu&~McGREGOR lentil" Val l WIDTHS 7 sl-ZES