\»Ih-nrI-)u.vam-&n.-1 Al. .._. Clll. center-back. 1 PAGE EIGHT {_ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN i 1+ Woman ’s Realm -:-. Social and Personal -: lVhat the Fashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson [Furnished Wllh Every Pallern By Annubelle Worthington ' You'll love this attractive set con- sisting of :1 tandem: and side-Clus- bust. Size 10 rcqtilrcs 1%. yards of 39-inch material 111th 5.‘. yards of binding. - It will make o most welcome Xmas gilt. Ami think of the sav- ing 1:1 cost. Pale p111}; crepe (‘u c1.l.1c with pale blue binding 1.1 ‘.1 \'t‘l'_',' pructzcul "18, 20 years, :16, 3B and 4O inches 1911 crepe 2:11.21 1s exquisite ' 11.111110 lzgs of \\".lll 111111111‘ _, '.. . l; ..l.1. _ lie sure 1o 1111 m lhc size ct the pnttcm. Send stamps or coin (ruin ;>".-efer:'v'1.1 Pic: of palilrii 15 crnts. lute 1'11, N01 1M. Bile ...................... N 111116 S.rect Address .......~-.--..u.n»1-....... City State His Failure! uponln. lllul-ll. The ho llhy credit to his parents. 111x puntles. The flat slimness through the hips ls marvelous. And note the unusual ‘ (lure given the lOWCl‘ purt of the; panties through its clever circular‘ The bandcau closes at the! And let me tell you. after you have I made one sot, you'll want to make l several. Yculllincl it such interest- 1111; "Didi-HP" sewing. imd wmtelll’ band are like a red rag to a mad bull. They are Just as good for a hot simple, even i1’ you are an amateur. \ Style No. 124 comes 1n sizes 14, 16, ' Scratched Yet” Never a scratch . . . but llly—-Wll3l‘t"fl"'p0IlSlll One of the nice things about u while cnnmol link lg that it just invites you 1o keep it white. Ono of the nice things about Bon Ami is that ltmalneo it so easy to keep those sinks gleaming clean. Suppbse the orange squcezcr is upset l Or you dropped tho coffee filler bog — full of grounds! T'here’s always Bon Ami! Just a few shakes “of the snowy-while Powder 3nd a few brisk rubs. Gone are ‘lhc Hluinfl. Clean l! lllbilnk. Clean ycs--nn(l 11r1s0rnIr~l1 1'41. Bon Ami never scratches. Bon Ami is nllurlvss. BonAml nevcrreddcnsor roughcns your lmmls. Sold at all grocery stores. If your rliild h a s :1 c n 1 <1 , simple icvi-r, collt-d ton :1 uc —if l1.‘ is irri- slless or z petite elvc Baby's Own Till)- lcls. They are 11.". live laxntivc—~ sale oven for the young ' ° 25 cents a 1 < I13 (Dr. Williams’) 9 llladc in Canada 1 she is perfectly aware will bring on a shindig? She drags them 1n by the ears or the tail and they have their millionth battle over religion or poll- _..'w ‘ I - 1 ' 1 l: MAFTERFUL BLENDINO ! F0,- ne couk why . 5w“ uNUs lJ1-Y . ‘if’ D0)‘ Dlx am eon-m cuocomu-a cum Public 7 0| Married g-Zutpsilzlf. » 2 eggs. ‘.5 cup milk. Why Can’t Husbands and Wives Avoid Fric- tion by Letting Their Partners Do Their Own Way Without Argument, Inas- much as They Are Going lo do it Anyway —- And Why Must They Qllarrel Publicly? What makes them do it? Whnt makes husbands and wives stage their quarrels 1n public? .‘\1o1ri1non_v is a dull ufialr and if 1t breaks the monotony to have a daily scrap let them go to it and heaven forbid that we should interfere with their yileasure. But common courtesy to Sirflnfiflrs demands that they should have enough consideration for ou; feelings to do their fighting in private, with the doors shut and locked and the keynote stopped up and the window shades down and with no innoc- ent bystanders compelled to be an eye witness to , the massacre. QLE TEA ‘r1.- rich llrenglh cl nan. lhc lugnnea nncl lluvnl of _ ccylan mu. l auizhlful m when nltilllully com- bined. For lhc "Ema" in Chain Tea. ml: your grocer In: King Col: Qllnge Pekoe. 1 cup hot mashed potatoes." 2 cups flour. 1 teaspoon each o! cloves, cinna- mon and nutmeg. 1 cup grated chocolate. 2 tablespoons baking powder. 1 cup chopped walnuts. Cream butter and sugar well. Separate the yolks o1 the eggs from me capital m,“ 1 the whites. Add the well beaten e yolks and sweet milk, beat well, add 3 the mashed potatoes and men the grated chocolate. Then ado me well- sifted flour which has been mixed with the baking powder and spices; add the chopped walnuts and lastly, ‘the stiflly beaten egg whites. Bake ‘for one hour 1n a. moderate oven. This cake keeps well and 1s very delicious. _ 1 There 1s no more painful and embarrassing , situation in the world than to assist at one o1 these! cl-iminntions and recriminatlons at each other and shamelessly drag every skeleton out of its closets and rottle its bones and tell each other 110x110 truths that their tongues should be blostcd for uttcrillg- Yel? 1L 15 a Common thing to go riding with a. married couple who got into such a. violent altercation over as simple a thing as the turn o1’ o road that you ‘ think that either the back-seat chauffeur will murder the driver or that lthcdrivea- will slop long enough to strunglethe back-scat chauffeur. keep on doing 1L And it 1s an even commoner thing for husbands and wives to say things to each other across o. card table that would make u brazen image blush with shame for them and for them to spoil an evening for a guest by getting into a row over the seats at a theatre or the menu at a res- taurant and calling 1111011 the luckless outsider to referee it. - Now why do ‘men and women, who are otherwise well bred and well mannered and observant of the conventions that prevail in polite society, outrage our sense of decency by having their domestic squobbles abroad and dragging us into them? persist in doing it. Why can't women ever accept a thing as final and forget it? Why cant they say a thing once and let it go at that? Why must they n1- woys harp on the same string? on his judgmem and taste‘ l Every wile knows that there are certain subjects which to her hus- argument and a. fight as a nlckelisforaginger cake. But does she avoid them? She docs not. Does she gumshoe warily around the topics that tics or vmether, 1! they ever should happen to have a. boy baby, they would send 111m to college when he ls grown. Thzre are women who wages. forty-year war against their husbands smoking, although they know perfectly well they will never stop the poor man from even lighting a single cigarette. There are \vlves who never let their husbands cot a meal in peace without telling them everything they like ls so bad for their digestions. There are wlves who never let their husbands go to e. lodge meeting without a. scene. him instead o1 laughing at his wit. Why do people do these things? ....24§ go on smoking and belonging to their lodges and eating what they please. Why can't the wlves realize this and see that they can avoid frie- mmfly bmwls m which U" husband and Wm: hurl tlon by letting their husbands do their own way without argument, lnas- much as they are going w d0 if anyway? i——- | Why can't mothers quit nagging their children? They know that‘ 1t doesn't do 11 bit of good to tell Johnny for the millionth time nottodo that and that it makes their adolescent boys and girls perfectly furious to be put through u questionnaire about their every movement, yct they Tom and Mary can't start out o1 the house without mother stopping them to ZLSRVl-llélll where they are going and whom they are going witlr and. when they expect to be buck and to give them a thousand warnings 1 that makes them determined never to tell her anything that they can help and to let her spy on them and find out if she can. Even the stupidest mothers know that their nagging drives thelri children away from them and alienates their confidence, and yet they Why do husbands think it clever and witty to disparage their wives? You would think that a man wouldn't want the general public to think? he had man-led a fool for she is his pick and that would be a. reflection As a matter of fact, most men have a. profound respect for their‘, wlves’ good sense, but i! you will notice you will observe a man rarely : mentions anything intelligent that his wife has done. He always tells‘ about some fool mistake she has made. “ Furthermore, nearly every man's best story, the one that; he tolls mj for the month o.’ September. set the table in a roar at a. dinner party, virtually always centers around 501116 Weakness 0f his Wife's or some blunder that she has mode and that ‘ Elsie Dignan. he has dressed up until it makes 1t a. scream. . Many is the time that we are all called upon to witness the helpless writing of some poor wile whose husband h; holding her up 11s 1t figure o: m“ t0 be leered at until we have felt like taking the carving knife to don Dlgnan, 3. Ethel Flnnln. DOROTHY DIX. ' " ginning of a stag supper or dinner? - Fashions Wllhemlna, Queen of the litzner- landa, aged 51, 1s the wofldk lenlm‘ ruler. She ascended the throne 1n 1890. The heir to her throne ls her only daughter, Princess Juliana, who 1s 1n her twenty-second year. 01:15 a1; the peat in bogs Just‘ outside o! Moscow, Russia. The peat supplies the powerhouse that gives light to the 2,500,000 who live 1n= y The lhiaharanee o1 Kashmir re-j cently appeared 1n the streets of i Jammu City, India, without a vell. ll; was the first time the wife o1 a iullng Indian prince had discarded the veil 1n public. The transit company 1n Matanza ‘Cuba, now employs women 1n place of motormen on street cars. I ' With many new structures going up in Russia, young women are c1111- ; ed on to learn building trades while ‘ ion the Job. . l $11k has become so cheap in Os- aka, Japan, that young women of . the factories and even of the peas- ant class now wear silk garments ievery day 1n the week. It ls a1- ! most as cheap as cotton. Mlle. Lauterbach of Vienna, Aus- tra, 1s noted as the possessor of one oLthe largest mixed kennels 1n the world. She specializes 1n Alsatlans, Borzols, Dalmatians, lvlastlfis, St.‘ Bernards, Elkhounds and Great lDunes. The hobby of Mrs. A. W. Scott of . Woodland, Wash, is collecthig dolls. ‘Her lame spread, and now she has 1 800 sent to her from n11 parts of the world. She began her collection with the first doll she received as a. baby. WOODSTCK SCHOOL Standing o1’ Woodstock school Grade VIII.—1. Pair] Sweet, 2. f Grade VI-—1. Leone Arblng, 2. Mable Sweet, 3. Esther Gallant. Grade V.—1. Lois Sweet, 2. Wel- Gmdc IV--1. Lelth Arblng 2.‘ Locy Gallant," 3. Belleno. Shaw, Johnny Gallant (equal). Grade IIL-l. Plus Flnnln, 2. -:- literature I ' lVhat Other WomenAre Doing églléifihz: . SHOES . J/fg ‘JAB II/(l T? . as comforlqble as your stockings And as smart in style . . IS “no in workmanship. . l5 graceful and loot-Flattering u shou can be. Come in and see the dainty new models . . available in width: from AAAto EE..in siznlromlbo l2. We can lit any loot and gun» untee absolute loot-gap. n. uuuu/nurluuun-u-n ‘numb/mold. < 115557 DDD ion- skin ‘SHOES \/ >.*,- I ' G) . WIDTHS‘ $11, ‘SIZ E S AAAWEEK$75Q _ 1'61’). URINE & FRGUSON Ch.- lottotown I McLEOD s. McGREGOR lllonluluu Grade I. (A).—'l. Gabriel flnnln, 2. Ray Wright. 3. Ice-Gallup Grade I. <B>-—1. Bcdlo Wright, Ruby Wright (equal). Perfect attendancet~Pellrl Sweet Leone Arblng. Mable Sweet, Ethel Flnnin, Lois Sweet, Weldon D13- nan, Lclth Arblng, Bellena Show, Plus Flnnin, Rita Gallant. Revada Dlgnlm, Ezlna Gallant, Lorraine Gallznt, Eileen Gallant. Gabriel Flnnln. Loo Gallant. Shirley Arb- lng. Teacher, Emily Arsennuit. disorders Yet they ac- husbands‘ minds and make ‘them determined not to be henpecked and to complish nothing by their protests except to scl: up an irritation in their fA Mofningsynil‘ A New Yorker visiting Engla A. Grapefruit. m , 1 1130112111.? Egyptian Linlment ls a m] quick, certain remedy for Hoot Rot glinkatellivo thatuiiixlghesitlpto tale e ssues. ear s so, s00 - z Grade II (A)-—1. Rita Gallant, Zing elements Bentham Itching "o" 1m B11016. 3- Revnda Disrwn- on the instant-eruptions disappear. Grade II. (B)—1. Iorraine Geu-Thotreahnenthumrlval- Edgar Buote. POWDER & CAK E English names as Sinjln (St. John), Ghumley (Cholmondeley), Maudlin (Magdalen), and so forth, and he managed to get back at One oi his correctors. She was his hostess and she happened to mention Niagara Fnllsl He pretended he had no knowledge of the place. “But surely you must have heard of those 111111-- velous falls that. pour into Lake Erie?" she explained. “Oh," said the New Yorker. "I know what you mean now. But we don't call them Niagara Falls; we speak o! them as Nlffles." Recil relief from due loAcid INDIGESTION 50v: STOMACN cgzlmrlunu GMSmATION 1 Etiquette l U Ilberh I40 1 Q. In what way con a woman pay a. restaurant bill gracefully, when enteomlxilng both men nncl WHENEVER digestive distress follows meal-lime, you can suspect in lhcslomoch. Every trace nfover- 1 an acid condition. acidity _soon disappears. All sour Acidity affects lhc appetite. gas is dispelled. Stomach, liver and What food ou do cat sours in lhc iowcls have a better chance l0 stomach. l"ho tongue becomes function. cooled. The breath is bad. Sick ll‘ lhcrc is the least hinl ol‘ loo headaches become frequent. You much ac1d.just take a spoonful of well. and their food doesn't ferment are constipated. _ Philli s‘ Milk o1’ Magnesia today, women? , These arc danger signals which and or several days. Feel this 5- mdel‘ the dimer 811d Ply in should ncvcr go unhcederl. Your sweeten your stomach. Nolc how advunom :1 petite improves. And elimination. ou will wonder how anything so pleosnnt-lnstmg con be so promptly ellcclixic. 50c bottles at drug stores everywhere in lhc dominion. Phillips’ Dental Magnesia Toolli- asle guards against acid-mouth; cops gums firm and leolh pearly while. (Made in Canada.) system is fmrly shoulin 11s need of help: something to he p remove the acid waste and restore alkaline balance. An null-acid to ollsel. the cllcct of loo rich a dict, nervous- ness. cxcilcmcnl, clc. » Men and women who meet this nccd promptly with Phillips’ Milk of blognesin do not sufler. They cat Q- 15 t-hlre Any difference 1n 1.1m size o1’ a man's cord and a womimn card? A- Th6 mill’! card is narrower. Q. What 1s considered bcttz: taste than a lrult cup for the be- arc usually enough. MAos CANADIAN GEN - {he °" EDI SCH MAI DA LAM P S O comfort in your home is so important—none costs so little —as adequate lighting. Choose Edigon Mazda Lamps-product of General Electric-and make sure that the watt- age of each lamp is sulfieient. ' ‘o; fired o; being wnected on such 1 0r n“ “Sh- Fm" °T five flllbllcatlons‘ ant. 2. Ezlna. Gallant. 8. Eileen E‘ A‘ Fm“ ‘Gallant. IN CANADA ERAL ELE {Mien to General Electric CTRIC C? LlHllllr Hugh” Drug Co», 14l- Johnlon k Johnnon, Drlllllltl Vanbolld: nay Toad 12min; nu Canada-u network. L-lll MR. AND MRS. Some Remarks Are Out of Order By BRIGGS TAXI! HEXTTQW l // HAVING A Pewwmerrrlwlviz’ Jone‘? cu-r ourTls WISECRACKS.’