£54.15 Llui: l‘ l nr. prim‘ "\LU'i"i'l-.'i'u\‘v'Iv‘ C} U ARDLAN . .W0man’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions l-:- Literdtllre AUGUSL 9. law .What the Fashionable Are Wearing Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington illustrated l / .‘ Here's a splendid dress to freshen your arid-summer wardrobe for either town or vacation. It is clear leaf green and white printed batistc, for smart folk are now wearing cotton frocks almost exclusively for daytime occasions. It individualized by s flaring shoulder cape with scalloped edge which shows iingeris m: in white crgandle piped in green. Horizontal tucks mark natural waistline and create a smart nipped- in afloat. The pointed treatment of the cir- cular skirt is quite unique and slim- mlng. Style No- 3471 can be copied for s mere trifle. It takes but 3 yards of 35-inch batiste with 9i yard of 32- inch organdie. It comes in sizes i2, i4, id, l8 and 20 years. Printed dimity, linen. lawn, fine muslin, shantung, voile, pique and tub silks appropriate. Pattern price l5 cents in stamps or shear coin (coin preferred.) Be sure to fill in sins of pattern. NO. S171. Sim ...............-...... sues-nuns“...-...---.-snu--u-. ,!.‘t':l'e£".h9_- Nam’ ............;3;;;£.AAL;;............ IIIEl;;IIIIII;IITII,:I:IIIlIE5g...-. s; ' i w i . Etiquette For The C00,? masseus- I ' ORANGE RICE MOLD Q. when should invitations to s veddifli be sent? A. Not earlier than four weeks More, the wedding. and not later han fifteen days before. Q, Should one interrupt s con- versation to introduce a newcomer? A. No; it is very ill-bred. Q. How long do guests liter dinner has been served? A. Generally from two to three lours. - remain People “All Nerves” What to do if You Find Yourself in This Condition. The sort of thing that specialists all nervous debiliiy is tne run-down ondltlon caused by over-work and lcusehold worries. The silflercrs find hemselves tired, low-spirited and lnable to keep their mind on any- hing. any sudden noise startle! and ets the heart palpltating violently. They cannot sleep well at night; heir hands tremble and legs seem lnable to support them. Such a con- lition is indeed pltlable. Doctoring the nerves with seda- ives is a terrible mistake. The only ealInerve tonic ls a supply of good ed iblood. Therefore the treatment or nervousness and run-down health 5 Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which vromptly build up and enrich the vlood. The revived appetite, the tslgtlaencd nerves, improved spir- ts 8nd new strength which come a.f- er a course d: these pills will delight ‘very sufferer. You can get these pills from any neQclne dealer or by mall at 50 *5 cup rice. ‘A teaspoon salt. l5 cup boiling water. I cups milk. 4 ess yolk-v- lé cup sugar. i teaspoon vanilla ‘A teaspoon lemon juice. Wash the rice and add with the salt to the boiling water. Let boll for 2 minutes .add the milk and cook in der. Stir the egg yolks and the sugar together. Add the lemon Juice and the vanilla and fold into the rice. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring occas- ionally. Chill and serve with creole oranges or garnish with candied orange slices- SOLVED THE DIFFIOULTY The pompous and influential-look- ing man settled himself in the best arm-chair the room contained. "Well," he said to the master of the school, "I've made my fortune and I retire to-morrow. I feel that I'd like to do something for the old school. I wish I could remember the studies I excelled in and then—" “Oh," interrupted the scholarly professor softly, "in my classes you slept most of the time." "Marvellous!" beamed the old boy. "I'll endow a new dormitory." lVinSmith: "You'll never get that dog to obey you, my dear." Mrs. Smith: "Oh, it only needs a enfl a box from The Dr. Williams vleflclnc 00., Brockvllle, Ont- llttls patience. You were difficult too, at first. ~ lliiifia '“ baaiwossx-s... .,,,.,.,,,c..‘.~,,g,-u “Are ‘you prepared lo reader t si and quick comfort thI ment your youn ster has an ct of any sort? ould you do right thing-immcdistel;— ugh the emergency came with- wsrning-perhsps tonight? ioris is a mother's standby st h times. There is nothing like in emergencies, and nothing er for everyday use. For a den attack of colic, or the tle relief of constipation; to y s feverish condition, or so he a fretful baby that can't . This ‘pure vegetable props- op is always ready to can an sglgumrlt is- as more 1-" w» (will l~ |\|\~4|'. harmless as the recipe on the wrap r reads. If you see Chas. H. letcher's signature, it is genuine Csstoris. it is harmless to the smallest infant; doctors will tell you so. You can tell from the recipe on the vvrs r how mild it is, and how _ for little systems. Bus continue with Csstoris s is nova. ___,_~__._ a double boiler until the rice is ten- - A MorningSmile _ - Doro thy Dix Letter Box Magic Formula for Making a Girl Attractive to Men. Shall This Girl Confess Her Love for Her Sister’s Husband? - Tactless Widow Who Married Again Dear Miss Dix-I don't sgreawith you that it is impossible to hand out a patented formula for making a girl attractive to me. There is an old, attested recipe that my mother used when she was a girl, and shs taught it to me and I have handed it down to my daughter, and lt still works in this modern day just as it did in the old mid-Victorian period because all men of all ages are alike. For a conversational line tell ‘em that they are great and wonderful and big boys. Learn how to do things-how tn swim, play tennis, golf and so on. And especially how to dance. Find out what s boy's fav- orite sport is and get him to teach it to you. Iearn how to do it well enough to keep him interested, but never get proficient enough to beat him. Don't ever try to be brilliant or show of‘! before a man. Keep . the spotlight on him. And always surround an un- attractive girl with plenty of other girls who have it. They will draw the man and the homely sister gets the left-overs. Try this rule, it never fails. THE FLAPPER. MOTHER. 0F‘ A IFLAPPER DAUGHTER. __ n4 Doubtless the first thing that Eva said to Adam as sho rolled her eyes at him and gave him the once over was to exclalm about how big and strong and wonderful he was and tell him that she fell for him the first time that she saw him. And Adam lent an attractive ear, as every man has ever done ever since when a woman talked to him about himself and decided in his own mind that she was a young person of superior taste and Judgment and so entertaining that he could go on listening to her forever. Of course, it may be said that it was no great trick for Eve to date up Adam, inasmuch as she was the only woman in the world and so had no competition, but it really wouldn't have mattered how many other females there had been nor how much pulchrltude they had possessed if sho had i been able to get in her line of chatter about his perfectlons. He would never have known the others were there as long as the siren was singing this i saga of his charms. It is all very well for a girl to be a good locker and a swell dresser, be- cause that gives her her chance at a man, but the thing that holds him is for her to be a good talker, and when I say a good talker I don't mean that she must be brilliant nor intellectual nor witty. Indeed, far from it. ‘rho farther the better. No man wants a girl around which is a wise-cracker be- _cause, inthe first place, he may not feel himself caprble of handing her a. snappy comeback and in the second place because it shocks a man's ideal of a girl for her to be “wise" and cynical. No matter. how hard-boiled he may be he wants a girl's soul to wear white muslin and blue ribbon and for her to say her prayers and believe in Santa Claus and be generally sweet and gentle and unsophisticated. Nor do men want to discuss high-brewed subjects with women. When they talk about the Einstein theory and the modern movements in literature and art and politics, they want to talk with other men, and there are two good reasons for this also. One is that their vanity will not. permit them to enjoy talking to a woman who knows more than they do on any subject and ths other is that if she doesn't know anything about the subject she bores them to tears. . And no woman makes a greater mistake than in trying to be humorous with men. Men don't like funny women. Nor women who laugh too much. They always have an uneasy suspicion that she is laughing at them. Therefore, the woman who is a good talker with men talks to them about themselves to the exclusion. of any other topic. She is the human questionnaire. She asks them minutely about their childhood, about how they succeeded in business, about their golf or their car, and she listens with bated breath while they tell the stories of their lives and how they pulled of! a deal or sold a bit of goods or what vMr. llfoover should do about prohibition. Then, in this day, girls have to be up and doing. Gone are the halcyon times when men sought out the shrinking violet. Now a maiden has to be not only a. sunflower but one who takes the precaution of planting herself in a man's way so that he stumbles over her if she gets noticed. In other words, she has to be Sally on the spot. I iii- That is why so many girls who do not need to support themselves are going into business. They don't sit at home and suck their thumbs and wait for some fairy prince to come riding by and espy them. They go down into the offices where the good chances are and where they have the op- portunity of plying their arts and wiles on men at close range. Many a man marries a girl he never would have noticed in society just because she works beside him every day and she gets to be a habit with him. Many girls who are homely avoid being seen out with pretty girls be- cause they fear comparisons. This is a mistake. Every plain girl should hunt up the best-looking girl she can find for a running mate, because the pretty girl will attract the boys and that will give her a chance to do her stuff. For beauties do not always wear well on closer acquaintance. Nearly always they are egotistic and selfish and like to show their power by order- ing men about, and this does not make a hit with tho ‘sex that likes to have the kow-towlng done to it. So here is where Little Plain Face gets in her deadly work. She is so much sweeter, so much less self-centered, so willing and anxious to be pleased and so appreciative of every attention that oftener than not she wins out instead of the beauty. So perhaps the formula for a girl making herself popular with men can be summed up into one phrase: keep s man pleased with himself and he will be pleased with you. DOROTHY DIX. I I Dear Miss Dix-I am a young and attractive girl of 20. My parents are both dead and since childhood I have lived with my married sister, who has three darling children. Nowthe trouble is my brothar-in-law and I are desperately in love with each other. He would get a divorce and marry mo, but we both love the children so much that we hate to give them up. I want to go to my sister and confess tho whole matter snd ask her to divorce her husband, who is unhappy with her. Don't you think I am entitled to some happiness? VIOLA- Answer: Certainly you are entitled to happiness, but 1 don't think you will over children of their father. You can't build s house that will stand on s rotten foundation and you can't. find happiness in bringing misery on mother. The only fslr and non- entlroly and go sway somewhere to livs whore you will not be s traitor under the roof that shelte a you. JI-leszn-snlzlmmlmnh-sss-l-aaimw get lt by taking your sister's husband sway from her and robbing little - orablo thing for you to do is to out your sister's husband out of your thoughts , I Happenings The kitchen in my modest home Is warm and snug. With painted cupboards by the wall, A braided rug: ’ The snowy curtains softly frame A window bright, with red geraniums on the sill- ‘A cheery sight. I think I like this room the best Of all we own. For here I reign-a happy queen Upon her throne; For those I love I wash and mend, l I broil and bake, Iron ruffles set on little frocks; Make gingercakc, And to my kitchen comes at night My homing flock, _ with all the great world shut away Beyond the lock, And all the warmth of loving hearts Kept safe inside; With such a kitchen, who would not Ba satisfied? ' I I I Her Excellency Lady ivillingdon, has accepted the honorary vice-pres- idency of the Canadian Branch of Dr. Bsrnardds Homes. Lady Willingdon is a daughter of the late Lord Bras- sey, the latter being president of the Bomardds Homes organization in lzmgland at the time of her birth, and a great personal friend of the late Dr. ‘Thomas Barnardo. Her father took a keen interest in the migration of boys and girls to Canada. Q I I Miss Mildred Bennett, sister of the Prime Minister-elect, will likely ac- company her distinguished brother to the Imperial Conference in London this fall. Miss Bennett refuses to be- lieve that she was a factor in the vic- tory scored electon day, although she accompanied her brother on his en- tire tour and addressed munerous campaign meetings on his behalf. I I I A quiet family gathering over the wreck-end at Glamis, Scotland, temp- ered by an air of expectancy, marked the thirtieth birthday of the Duchess of York, The Countess of Stratlmfore, mother of the Duchess, received Sir Henry Simson, the only outside guest in the old hall which is hung with exquisite embrolderles and tapestries testifying to the skill of those ladies of Glamls, ancient seat of tho Earls of Strathmore and Kinghorne, who were the ancestors of the little Duchess. It was in the heavy pile cf stone, Answer: ; These are words of gold framed in silver which every girl who wishes‘ to make a hit with men should hang over her dressing table, for, as my correspondent says, men are pretty much of a muchness as far as their taste is concerned and the poor fishi are still caught with the same bait that the lady fishermen have used from generation to generation. of the Week i Macbeth reputedly started on his bloody career, ‘ dicstin; that Glamls was a feudal fortress ss early ss the eleventh century. It had been the life long home of the little Duchess whom Queen Mary described as, "not one of these modern girls, thank Heaven." The King and Queen on Monday Jolepho ‘ their greetings to the Duchess over a special wire from the Isle of Wight where they had gone yachting. Princess Elizabeth four years old, gave her mother a mysterious parcel for her birthday. The little Princess does not yet know that all the bustle and subdued excitement ln the ancient castle is preliminary to giving her a little brother or sister. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nicholson are enjoying a holiday at Stanhope Beach Inn. Miss Shea has been, for th Machine and the very popu I I o At the Golf Links this afternoon tea will be served by Mrs. J. P. Hlllion ma. E.W. McKinnon, Miss Nicholson, Miss Emma Nicholson. I I I Mrs. A. A. Bartlett entertained at 5 chllflliflsly arranged luncheon par- ty at Beach Grove Inn on Tuesday ln honor of Mrs. H. A. Richardson or Toronto. and other visiting ladies, covers being laid for fourteen. ‘rho afternoon was pleasantly occupied hy Bridge. Rev. George Morris and family who motored here from Stanstead, Que, and have been visiting relatives in Granville, have left on return home. I I I The tea hostesses at the Tennis Courts this afternoon will be Miss Lillian McKenzie, Miss Effie Brehaut, and Miss Ester Rattenbury. I I I Dr. S. A. McDonald is being wel- comed home from Edinburgh, Scot- land, on a visit to his father, Mr. S. A. and Mrs. McDonald. I I I Sir William stavert of Montreal was a visitor to Summerslde this week the guest of his brothers, Messrs. H. W. B. and E. P. Stavert. I I I Rev. George Taylor, Montreal, is among the annual summer visitors being cordially ‘welcomed. I I I Mr. Frank Dean oi Wmhington is visiting with Mrs. Artemas Lord after an absence of seventeen years. Mrs. P. Barlo'w been spending and oblong cluster of turrets guard- ing the noble tower in the centre that is Glamis Castle, where Shakespeare's Guard »Baby’s Health in the Summer The summer months are the most dangerous to children. The com- plaints of that season. which are cholera. infantum, colic, diarrhoea and dysentery, coma on so quickly that often a. little one is beyond aid before the mother realizes he is ill. The mother must be on her guard to prevent these troubles, or if they do coma on suddenly to banish them. No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during hot weather as Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the stomach and bowels and are ab- solutely safe. Sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., a pleasant holiday with her sister Miss Beth Whidden in Halifax. I I I Rev. D. J. and Mrs. Morrison and two children, Arthur and Gordon of Whyoocomagh, C. B., are spending a vacation in Bonshaw guests at Mrs. iliorrlsorrs old home. I I I Mrs. H. T. Begg has returned to her home in Summersida after a delight- ful vlsit with her mother, Mrs. RDb- ert Keith in Stellarton, N. S. Her sister, Miss Margaret Keith, accom- panied her and will be her guest for some time. I I I Mrs. McCready is stopping at Beach Grove Inn for a. few days. I I I When Queen Mary opened the Bethlehem Royal Hospital, recently the architect asked the Queen if she would accept a special memento in- stead of the customary golden key, Brockvllle, Ont. and her majesty was obviously de- She is everything that I wish except of him? Answer: finer feelings. equals the stupidity and unintentional his first wife used to do thinls. Ill $- first husband on our dresser, and that hurts mo very much. that she loves me dearly-and that I am everything in the world to her now,» so why should she not do away with his picture and all the other reminders She would if she had a grain of sense or a particle of tact. and women who keep reminders of their dear departed around after they are married s second time are lacking not only in discretion but in all the i sister falling in love with her brother-in-law and the husband falling in love with her that I have come to doubt the wisdom, human nature being what it is, of any woman having a. younger woman coma to live under her roof. So often the generosity of a wife is abused by the girl to whom she gives the shelter and protection of her home. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-l married a wonderful woman who was a young widow. that she will keep the picture of her She claims WORRIED HUSBAND. The men v For the one thlrlg that a second husband or wife wishes to forget. more than anything else on earth ls that he or she had s predecessor. Nothing cruelty of tho woman who ls always talking about her first. husband or the man who tells his second wife how DOROTHY DIX. Insure Him a Haalt Skin throng life by using Cuticnra Soap {far Soothing] an Antiseptic i """"‘1-....u: 5&1‘; sflfi-‘S-‘ififvn . MISS E. M. 223 Queen Street Miss-- LOUISE SHEA 223 QUEEN STREET PHONE 1209 MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW erator in the Lindsay Beauty Parlors, Halifax. The equipment used is the most up-to-date Eugene Wind equipment. _ Electric needle to remove superfluous hair, moles and warts; also marcel waving by . PERMANENT WA VI N G" Done by at e past four years, an op- lar Realistic Croquignolo LEBLMIB Charlottetown v lighted as she was handed an antique Chinese Vfl-le which she had admired I on a previous visit to ths 01¢ hm. Y pltal. The new hospital buildings are h situated in two hundred acres of: parkland at Monk's Orchard. Among "W blllldmxs are a science and treat- ment laborstorypgiven by Lurk wake- field. a chapel and organ given by Lid)’ Wakefield. and a $35,000 re- creation hall given by Lady Cooper in memory of her husband, the late Sir Edward Cooper. I I I Lieut-Colonel D. A. and Mrs. McKinnon have as their welcome guest Mrs. McKinnonil sister, Mrs. Lord of Pitchburg. » I I I Mr. and ivns. AlexanderCaJnpbell of Summersids returned this week from Montreal; where Mr. Campbell has been undergoing treatment. They are at present staying at the Beach‘ Grove Inn. Mr. and Mrs. James Paton who have been making a. tour of tho British Isles for the past several weeks are expected home tonight. I I I - Miss Ina Muir is home from New York to be with her mother in the trying illness of the Rev. Mr. Muir whose condition is very serious. I I I The Charlottetown Golfers to Am- herst on Wednesday afternoon had an exceptionally pleasant outing and greatly appreciated the hospitality of the Amherst Club members. I I I Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Jelly of Sum- merslde are summering at their sum- mer home "Bokny Cottage," Bouquet cove, chelwn. They have as their guest Mrs. Jelly's sister, Mrs. G. F. Stone and her husband, "of Summer- vllle, Mass, who motored to the Isl- uld visiting different places of inter- est on the way. They ware the guests for a few days of Mr. Stone's cousin, Dr. Rand, at his beautiful summer residence in Maine. I I I Tho sympathy of many friends will go out to the family of the late Mrs. John Saunders who is so kindly re- membered by relatives and friends. I I I Mrs. G. E. Full and her sister, Miss Trowan have returned from a thor- oughly delightful trip to England are! Europe where they visited many his- torical points of interest and were charmed with the wonders of the Continent. I I I Miss Nora Holman is visiting her mother, Mrs. R. T. Holman of Sum- merside. I I I Dr. and Mrs. Goodwill have as their weloomb guests this week Mrs. W. L. Bailey and Miss Florence Bail- ey of Weston, Ill. I I I Mn. (Dr). Moore of South Bend, Ind., is being welcomed home and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith. a _o I Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Saunders arrived this week from Virginia to visit Judge A. C. Ssun‘ New York. They were aocompsniodd III ong the visitors st Beach Grove Inn I IDI Mrs. ; . h Saunders. They came by boat from in DDD for acne and eczema An active fluid that attsdss dlsosso germs in tho skin. In harmony with h th fth‘ ostostll shin ' Zahara“? ‘i. tiff-s msnyvh-tfillsns suocosoos over skin . rlughes smsg Co. LIA E. A. roster ‘ G. Jsmleson J. welcome are Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Ron- kln of Fitchburg, Mass, who an here this year accompanied by their friend Miss A. E. Crandon. I I I Mrs. Brodie of Montreal is visiting her daughter M11. (DL) J- P. Lasts. I I I Miss Dorothy Morrell of Montreal istbnvveleoms zuestofMlssEna Clark at the Experimental Station. The hostesses at the Summersida Golf Links this afternoon will be Mrs. J. LeRoy Holman, Mrs. W. G. Church. Miss F. I-f. Hunt. Miss Enid McFar- lane and Miss Ella Gay. o I a _ Mrs. Frank Mahar and intcffltlh! little son Ian, are being welcomed on a visit to Mrs. J. A. Messervy. Miss Mona Saunders, daughter of Judge and Mrs. Saunders entertained at the family residence in Summer- side on Wednesday in honor of he! sister, Mrs. F. M. Cleveland, and Mrs. Garth Toombs, who is visiting he: parents, Dr. and Mrs. Ileard. ‘There were ten tables of bridge and i-hfl prizes were won by Miss Emma Brad- shaw and Mr. Edwin libtty- 6W" c’! honor prizes were given to Mrs. Cleveland, Mrs. Toombs and Mr. Ross Hamilton. Rrefreshments were served by the hostess at the conclus- ion of play. I I I The Duchess of York has her own suite of rooms at Glamis Castle in Forfarshire, her ancestral home to which she went recently, writes a spo- cial correspondent of the Telegraph. They are simple apartments which were set aside for her on her ma!" rlage, and where the Duke and her- self and the Princess Elizabeth have spent happy carve-free and health- giving holiday. They have 50¢!’ very carefully prepared for the 0°- casion of her present visit, 5° m“ every possible comfort and 68" shall be in readiness. To those vim know this retreat in tho Hllhllnd‘ it, is certain that no better choice could have been made. In this far- from-the-outer world glen that sur- rounds tha eight centuries old castla is perfect peace and slim-ions M!!! air. . (Continued on page l2) lilorrlnis now learn value 0f MAGNESIA Because it is so i101?‘ m in keeping MW [stud children ea tboyfllil: sp , every la shougE know about. Phil- lips Milk of MsgMlil- Thls harmless, all“? tasteless preparation most effective in reliev- g those symptoms of babies and chil- ron norslly caused by souriug food ill by Mr. Ross Hamilton. who is also a a0 lttlo digestive tract, such as sour- guc“ of Judge “d Mm smndm’ ‘clicking; frequent vomftin , favorishnlll- s mild laxative, t acts goat! but certainly, to open tho little bowoll m. M“, g, 5mm 0g Momma], 1,; m- constipation, colds, children's diseases. A taqspoonful of Philll s Milk of Mlle nesls does the work of hs f s pint of limo water in neutralising cow's milk for ills a e v {out feeding, and preventing as: Miss Kathleen Harrington has re- fuglmzzYlrilil f" "W!" ‘E ' nod in intorostl book turned to her home 11'" M1141"! I "u-{rul nformationfggt will be olhhtm very pleasant holiday in Truro and FREE. Writs The Chas. l1. Phi 5t JOML Chemical Co., Windsor, Ont... ' Inbu in ,basura to got guwtsoflll‘ lips Mil o Magnesia. Dootorg B: flan renewing former friendships. 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