l “.1... .»,-._...a_.- . PAGE EIGH’! ' "v ‘ ‘ - — mumn~AA~4u4wm..M.-a.n..-..~.ucaa.a~.. THE CHARIPTTETOWN GEARPW‘ Woman’s Realm -:-, Social and Personal .-:- Fashions n-:- Literature auovs-r e.___1_93¢ .What the Fashionable Are Wearing l Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington SMART LINEN SUIT PAHPERED SUMMER VOGUE The jacket dress ls probably one of sent us. No wonder for its popularity! The one illustrated has undoubted chic. It is cool flattering lime green coloumig in printed linen, of sportsl weight. It is accented by plain linen‘ of harmonizing tone in handkerchief T weight. 1t makes the simulated tuck- the most comfortable. smart prac- tzcal fashions that Paris has ever in bodice of the ' ‘JKlLCll by Li" ‘:.:_',' has cap slit-CRE- and closes at csnter- from with bow trlm. 1i is also used for cuffs, pOCEICM anti facing of Jacket tha: is rolled to form avers. A Rreer. buckle clasbs the mats’ n; grrcn lea- ther l> 5 . The LEDGEILILD§ ‘hue . pointed yoke treat- men: and m the lll- vtrtcd plane a; : fronts which create a varucal lanc- uvnin ui:cre:'"n,: model may be coped exactly as a real szw- big. st; 1c Ho. 3H6 1a designed Lfl SIZCS l4. l6, l3 years, 36, 38. £154.70 trachea l*t'=t The 16-year takes 4 yards of 39- lnch printed lzncn with 1% yards of 39- inch plain lllleh. It's exceedingly smart and sportive in gray shantung. l’ uzth- dusty - pink shantung Wllh blue coin dots. used for bodice and trim. For more dressy ‘ occasions. it's perfec- g tly charming! in hyacinth blue print- ed chiffon with plain chiffon of blending. tone. , . Coral-red flat. washable silk ll fil- fectxe uuth white crcpc. Yellow and white printed dlmzty I .v_~ is l5 cents a copy, but may be ob- , tamed for l0 cents if ordered same time as pattern. dress with the jacket of plain {vellow l linen with brovm trim l5 traczive. very at-y _ — _ _ _ _ _ _ “‘ imam. Size Striped cotton or sllk sl-iirtlng is,‘ jaunt)’ for sports and resort. Pattern przcc l5 cents 1n stamps or cozn iCOIII preferred.) The Summer Fashion Magazine contains most interesting styles for adults for town or vacation wear. Also darling styles forthe kiddies. It »..n---.............. Name ..------.--nu- nun-n...“ . . . . . . . . . . ......,....... Street Address ...-.---....-..-.-..-u~ State City Embroidery Stages Return , Par-ls July Ill-When. quite a few seasons ago, embroidery faded out of the style picture, hundreds of firms were obliged tn transfer their actlrvi- ties and discharge their workers. but how Paris embroiderers are return- ing b) their machines and their needles. for embroidery promises to be an important feature of the fall azt-l uintrr style’. Paris conmr-r: are using embroid- imy molt and more. both for occas- ional touches. Chanelis Sudss em- broidery QVBXHHI dresses with tulle hams and strasse shoulder straps are being wom by very smart womm this summer. and Sutiss embroidery ls to be transferred from muslin lo satin for fall wear. Already" Ashes ls using this nc"' material for hat‘. and 15min for t>lminin<t hcr frocks. lvfartial et Azrnanrl make tailored afternoon costumes for vacation wear o; Swiss embroidered muslin wmbmed with plain muslin. and Le- Iongr. mommg t-nlleurs of Swiss em- broidery are a. notable feature of his summer mode. Worth is tiring embroidery in a great, many wars. It aPDeurs in jewolled touches on harness decol- hues; let embroidery edges muslin frocks: tailored suits of fit-lured 610W su iiiiviifibinefiii" CAUSES MANY DEATHS AMONG INFANTS Thounndn of mother! throughout lCmada hnnnnd I l so . m] the tthubcn lllhemnrk and plrchildhlifo: Q‘ I Pr! bonyylroctl ytull aXi-‘n- i“ aaiybyrulrlfili- K I "- Jamaal-ammonia.» I'll-e put. together with chain stitch iand chain stitch motif: decorate" blouse (rants. Some of.'\~rt,'n‘u~lch- ,cst evening frocks are of net em- ‘lbrofdered solid with 201d or 511m lstraw: paillettes combined with silk t, scarves l IOT metal embroidery trim and evening frocks. Worth also uses lvery fine convent embroidered ba- tiste for the blouses of serge or taf- [feta suits. Bouc Soeurs have never abandon- ed their miraculously embroidered lllngere frocks that. are so cmnmletelv {in the new feminine feeling. ‘Ifhclr ‘bridtzc Pyjamas of embroidered ‘ or- Igandle combined with satin or taf- feta are drtlntly travel. Iouiseboulangcr uses dorcd with large motifs in silk or leather for some o; her newest gowns. and her erlzandlc {Woks and tunlcs are put together with delicate lines of embroidery. net embroi- All-over headed evening frocks are much favored b7: smart women here now. Channel continues doing unuslng things ivltif palllettec and her black paillcttcd frock with tulle hem was greatly adJnlre-d the other evening, chez Frisco. Molyncux urea all-over bead embroidery with Brent delicacy . White or clear cryntala on white chiffon make some of his moot effective evening ensembles.‘ Cross-stitch embroidery in cropp- lngupnglln here and there, on Agnes! linen skull caps. 0n Paul Polrefa sport costumes. and Lucille Ltd's afternoon frocks. Point de llauvals and pent-point are also seen in trimmings and details. Lucile Pnray makes all-over em- broidered dinner gowns: all-over braided Jackets accompany comc of her gun-gotta suits. This idea of weighting a dlaphnnmis Jacket. with embroidery 0-: braiding has also been used by Channel and lltartial et Armand. It ls natural that. with this re- vival 0f. erlbroidsy. it thlould be Are . I Sccond- I ‘ » Exits: ‘l ° 5. H. Dorothy Dvr with‘... Happy? |i m" “Marriage Without Love is Always and Under All Conditions a Risky Experiment - It Takes Ioove and a Lot of it to Make Matrimony Endurable,” Declares Dorothy Dix A correspondent asks: “If a man, loving one woman. marries another will such. a marriage be happy? What are the chances that he will learn to love his wnfe? "If the situation was reversed-if u woman who loves one man marries another-would your answer be the same l l Etiquette f IOUIHI IQ Q. After using silverware, should! one ever allow the knife or fork to mt on either side of the plate with the handle on the table? A. No; silverware, after being, used, must. never be allowed to touch the table again. Q. Is lt correct to make an after. noon call before three o'clock? 5- N01 it should not be made until after this hour. Q. Is it good form to use the suf- flX "in-law"? A. In good society it ls omitted‘ ; whenever possible. in her case?" I should tay that the man who marries one woman, loving another. would 0e just about as likely to be satisfied with his wife as he would be with a fllvver when his heart was set on a Rolls Royce. It may be an awfully good, useful, reliable little tin lizzle; it may get the biggest pouible mileage out of every gallon orgasoline and negotiate the roughest roads without a balk it may be much more suited to " ~ " his needs and his purse than the de luxe cu was and. anyway, he could get the one and he couldn't get the other. But, all the 1 same, he never cares a rap for it. It never raises a thrill in his breast. He ‘ never appreciates its many virtues because it lacks the streamline effects and ‘ gorgeous upholstery that ravlshed his fancy in the other and that his soul l craves. I So with wives. You can't substitute one woman for another with a ‘guarantee that she will be JUSL as good and fill the place of a wife Just as ,~' well as the man's first choice, because nobody knows just what. quality lt is f in a woman that makes her the perfect mate for some particular man. y i? l Because Susan lS amiable and hea lthy and a good cook and thrlftylsno _‘sign whatever that she would exactly suit John and that they would get. g along in peace and harmony together. On the contrary, her many virtues may bore him to extinction and send him phllandering as a lifesaver. where- as Mauds very frivollty would hold hlm bound to her to the end of the chapter. It is what a man secs in a woman, not what is really there, that. mat- ters. And if she does not look good and desirable to hlm before marriage, she will come to seem unendurablc to him after marriage. For marriage ls the great dispeller of illusions. It; is no fostcrer of dreams- It is the terrible awakener. It is frequently said, with grim humor, that. marriage ll the only cure for love, but. this is sardonically true only when men and women min’? those for whom they have a temporary passion. Matrimony ls death to romance l and not a great deal of affection survives the wear and tear of everyday liv- ing. of the clash of different temperaments, of fights over bills and personal habits, of the disenchantment of kimonos and ourl papers and cold cream and soiled collars and three days‘ stubble of beard. But while marriage may kill our love for the one we do marry, it does not slay our passion for the one we do not marry. Instead. lt breathes into it; fresh life and strength, for lt puts the beloved one among the unattainable blessings on which we waste our lives in vain longlngs and replnlngs. If John had married Amaryllls, he would have found in her a thousand faults and weaknesses. She would have got on his nerves many a time and oft. They would have had the usual number of family spats and she would have told hlm what she thought of his conduct when he came home late of He would have seen her stippcd of the chlrfons in which his imagination had draped her, just an ordinary human woman, with n11 of the shortwmlngs of her sex heavyupon her head. " would have lived ln an earthly paradise without a flaw in their bliss. "And. got the woman he wanted instead of having taken thegwoman he could get. Therefore, the man and woman who cherish a. hopeless passion are fool- ish to think that they can cure it by marrying some one for whom they have no real love. The remedy only aggravates the malady. Of course, not even the most. sentimental can spend tlurty or forty Years in continuous billing and coolng, and there comes a tune when even the most romantic love settles down into a Darby and Joan friendship. But, curiously enough, this companionship, to be perfect. and compbte must have underneath it the smoldering nres of a love that was so strong in youth that it will keep "the hearthstone warm through all the long years of old age. Enforced companionship does not. make for comradeshlp. It L; only those to whom we are drawn by the mysterious attraction of the heart to whom we open the secret doors of our souls- I do not believe onto in‘; l thousand times that a man or woman ever falls ln love with his or her wife For The Cook’ COTTAGE PUDDING In our "grandmother's time the lav-a orite company dessert was cottage pudding, but. unless brought to our minds we forgot all about this very good dessert. One cup sugar, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup milk, 21'. cups flour, 2%.- teaspoons baking pow- der, 5i teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon ex- tract Bake in a moderate oven from 20 to 3O minutes. Serve with a hard or lemon sauce. ‘A Morning Smile “Ten cents’ ivcrtn of bicarbonate of soda for indigestion at this time of night." cried the infuriated drugglst, who had been aroused at 2 a. m., "when a glass of hot. water would have done as Well!" Would Build Morring Mast Ianadlan Pr». l MONTREAL, Que., Aug, 4~If there is any possibility that the city , 9’ 5V 40ml- N- 3-. W111 be a landing? Plm, on the proposed Trans-Atlan- tlr airship route. the first flight oi which was made by the British di- rlglble R-IOO. the Government; gf New Brunswick will osslst in bul1d-| YOUNG and old-everybody I like! the delicious crispneu of Kellogg’: Rice Kricpies. Them toasted rice bubbles actually crackle out loud in milk or cream. And what a flavor! What tempt? ing goodness in every spoonful. Fine for you! Nourishing rice in a: . - - . " as Listen to them yzagkflg! for nursery suppers. Children. love milk with Rice Krispies. Use Rice Kricpies in candles in place of nulmeate. Make macaroons. Sprinkle into soups. There never wasa handler cereal. Order from your grocer. Oven-fresh in the rcd-and-green package with the inneneeal wim- Served hy hotels, restaurants. Made by Kellogg in 7M"??? anon KRAISPIES I {glean Weelf," returned MacDougal. easy-to-digest form. ' l" 0 th ' - . . . - - no’ bother-y; lifter eallfigcooildaxliltjghltp serve Klee Krupw‘ fol-break‘ the wrapper‘ fast, for lunch. Extra delicious with fruits or honey added. Ideal London, Ontario. in: a. mOVring mm at the st, John} Airport’ a°°°rdlng l” m“- J- B~ M- lrecowd with 51 ergs 54.2 points and BlXltf. Hemler 0f the Province, M5; H_ C_ Nluttax-t-s B_ R. pen g we" wh° “s "l mlfimed ‘Pewter at a third with 4a eggs, 52.2 points. nights and he would have expressed himself freely about her extravagance st- Huber‘ Fleld sallmlly “TWYIWOII - The Kensington Baby Chick Hat- l EGG LAYING CONTEST ichcry B. R_ hen No. 9 still leads the l conwest for individual laying with 1211 eggs. 229.9 points and Mr. A. L. Nofea on the Prise/e Edward Island Rogers B. R. hen No, 9 is second with But just because he did not. marry her, she will be his ideal woman l! E88 I-Ilylnl Cont/est for the week 198 eggs. 218.8 point; and my Km. long as he lives and he will be pcrfectly certain that 1f they had married they finding July 31, i930. lslngt-on Baby Hatchery. hen No. n The Dominion Experimental Fann is third with 190 eggs. 215.9 pofnhs. worse still, it is inevitable that in his thoughts he should continually oom- W. L. pen 1B led the contest for the‘ The pens leading in total produc- pare the woman he did marry with this paragon of perfection and contrast. week with 55 023s. 56.3 points; Mr. ' ticn are; his scrappy home with the blissful abode he might; have had l! he had only William Bensomb B. R. pen l0 were 1s“, Kensingtnn Baby Chick Hatch- l or husband lf he or she entered marriage without love. Fespect. gratitude, l a jailer, for marriage without love ls nothing but a prison against who» bars one beats ones self continually. When one sees how easily men fall out. of love after they are marriez; and how domestic ty irks them, it. ls obvious that they need to start. into matrimony geared up to the highest pitch of passion. With n. woman the cm la not quite so bad, because she has more cum, atlona Ln I mlteflal way to gain from matrimony than a man has and, like the canary, having been bred in a cage she ls better contented to have her wings crippled. Moreover, all the circumstances of a woman's life tend to concentrate her interest on her husband, and so if a man is good and kind to her, aha makes better shift to be content with hlm than a. man does with a mike- shift wife. But marnagc without love la always and under all conditions a risky expcrlment- It takes love and a lot of lt w make matrimony Influx-able. DOROTHY DIX. ‘and tailleurs by Moiyneux and furry surfwe will be “Misc wince: Maggy Rouff, and style prophets arelmatcrlal. heralding it for winter we.- It will ..- --_- appear. they my, even on velvet. ~ Packets. collars and cuffs. cormges ; will be enriched with close all-over patterns of silk. hemp. leather or metallic threads. ‘ma all-over arm. browned fabrics. launched by the tutti; creators. are going e0 well friendliness he or she may comc to feel, possibly, but oftener it ls hatred for ' that they are lrarizhlnz cut. along that lkie. Net to clrsely embrifier- ed .1110: chums that it greezm c n. “‘ '-. 2* ,%$E new M ery, I612 eggs. 1717.4 points. 2nd. Mr. Wm. 5111:0111. 1638 e835. 1700.6 points. 3rd, Mr. A. L, Rogers. 1581 eggs. 1653.9 points. 4th. Mr. James ‘hiplin. 1514 eggs. 1661 points. The production for the week was 762 and to date 38153, zzl-Ieal your horse while it works. Apply Douglas‘ Egyptian Ltnlment. to sore necks and galls. Sure, speedy treatment. ::Ml1ler's Worm Powders will ml only expel worms from the sylfbm but will induce healthful condition: of the system under which worms ca: no longer thrive. Worms keep I child ln a continual state of mtlouuu and pain. and there can be no oom- fort for the little one until the Clilll of suffering be removed, which can bl _ easily clone by the use of thou 90W- ders, than which there is uothlal more effective. " l-‘or all lkln Abrulonl -- Niall’! Llnimont. - Special ofier to introduce l Modess. Cbmpactsi We want every woman to know Modess Compact-to know the assurance of a towel so inconspicuous as to be unrevcaling even with the sheerest and most snugly fitting of summer frocks, yet which is perfectly safe and com’ fortable. So, during the summer, we offer you, free, three odcss Com acts, worth 15d, with each purchase of one box of regu r Modeas. , “no; Wmkwffi“ new _?_‘ 15° znwwm 65‘ OUR OFFER for -49‘ ‘Wlzfmrlrd World‘: largest makers of Surgical Dressings, Bandages. 8ft. Absorbent Cartons, 68A . _: ~ g‘ 7