.‘_. b o n 8 ‘. .. - ~ ‘l’ a ll I 1 3 A l . 4 v fPTAola TWO rm: CHARLOTTETOWLI GUARDIAN JCTOBER 26. 1935 A ‘ill Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Lite rature" "ii, “c; - . f firm new Duke of Buccleuch and “Queensberry. "s Earl of Dalkeith, was ADD. at Government House here 1n 1920, in the regime of Lord His younger brother. 10rd William Walter Scott, M.C., will al- so be remembered as an Aide de Camp to His Elxcellency Lord Byng - of Vimy. He, was particularly pop- ular with the younger set in tlle Capital. s s Col. K. S. and Mrs. Rogers are enjoying a pleasant holiday in New York. I I I Mr. and Mrs. A. Bert Davison left yesterday morning on a holi- day trip to Boston and New York. I I I Mrs. W., E. Bearsto. Miss Edith McRae, Mrs. A. Spilleti, were joint hostesses at a miscellaneous show- or last Tuesday at Mrs. Beairstofis attractive home in honour of Miss Estelle Wise, who ,wu the recip- ient of many pretty and valuable gifts to addto her hope chest. I I I Lady Byllg has presented the banner which belonged to the late Field-Marshal Lord Byng of vlmy as a Grand Commander of the Order of the Bath to Beaumont parish church. Essex. where he used to worship. I I I Mrl. L. Ripley of Hunter River is oonvalescing nicely after an oper- ation in the P. E. Island Hospital on Wednesday morning. a Q Mrs. John Agnew is among the welcome arrivals having come home inst week from Port Arthur, 0nt., to join her daughters. Miss Bell and Miss Amy Agnew for the win- ter months. I I I Mrs. Percy Gulfison entertained % a jolly masquerade party on lursday evening in honour of Miss Estelle Wise, whose engage- ment was recently announced. Dur-. lug the evening the young guest of honor was surprised with a show- or of lovely giftsfrom her numer- ous friends present. I I I Mr. Allan Mosher of Truro who is spending a few days in the city Is being warmly welcomed. Mr. Mosher is making a fine recovery after his long and tedious illness. s s s Mrs. G. S. Inman of Bummerside lment a few days this week with her sister, Mrs. E. M. Bagnall and was)?“ For Quick Cough left w spend rnnnksglvms with her son at Mt. Allison- . . Hon. W. D. Herrldge and Mrs- I j BOOKS}ARTJ 1 1 4 1 Chateau Laurier, will shortly take up residence at 499 Wilbrcd street. Ottawa. I I I The tea hostesses atnhe Golf Links on Thanksgiving Day were Mrs. GIC. Hughes‘. Mffi- P-- W- Turner, Mrs. D. A. McKlnnon, Mrs. J. A. McMillan, Miss Agnew. s s s A cordial welcome is being ex- tended to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur transferred to the C.N.R. here. Mr Bruce sang "O Promise Me" at Clarke-McLean nuptials Wednes- day morning, Mrs. Clarke being his niece. > I I I Thanksgiving Day passed quietly in Charlottetown with largely at- Herridge, who are stayini it the , l. I " RelieflMixThis “"3": . Remedy at Home, i, ,, , ,...“Z'..’;,“", ,1’, ,- “Nofiookingl NoWorkl Rul loving! Q “Tm” Engushmenr, Gabe" €:::§..;"$.,'{:i‘§' .‘;°".‘....'.'°“.°:.°.'3 s"st.zz"s.l.seir.rs.iizstss'"°""-1 w- evidently cows a dance’ Mr. Bruce having been Quickly you feel it, penetrating e1, , what he is writing. Whether or not .. IY°"'1l 11"" 1111°W "110? duh!!! n bld i Franklin's newest novel is a most 351,11‘, fiyvléi; f}: ‘y: rehsggd. fir?! you ‘substantial and satisfying one. ll 11C! B l] ' z Comprised of well over six hundred Zfititfi. E553. it2i.“‘..'i‘l‘él‘s.l'l?§2t2.i’§ e raw“ "cal/Blows" 01 It's no trouble at all to mix, and coats i the years 110111 1599 5° 1935- The . pages it is bu; I; tgfli-e b I 2 ‘chief event-s and people of these no rm , l . ounces of Piucoklfintthen add gegillhl 2,5 ‘Wars am an muched on but not fit natur- nugnr syru 1 m 1; 13 _ s ill‘ an obvious way. They ia easily $.51 with 2 ghnicilf alylgclig 41y "1143 the V"! “n9 narmnve °f and 1 cup of water, stirreg a few mo- tile lives 0f th-NB B-VBTBIR. normal. monis until dissolved. No cooking but. totally different Englishmen needed. This glvcll you four times as who happen to be very gm“ friends, feet. it loosens tile phlegm, helps ‘i120 - 119 W118 8t 1131f 3°95‘ wit‘ 91' everbi? court e air passages, an _sootllcst e ‘Kipling/Ls In B. I 0 n0 knOW u irgmtted m]°".‘|:"“““§—y g1‘? .fl"'°°£h lle must have taken part in ‘that c_lo exp a_l s _\v v rings c quick relic! lu distressing coughs. 13511“; He???“ 1mm xomlotgliexll‘: Piuexls-n COHIIIOUIIdOOIICBlIIlIIQNOF mfg 65cm) m“ ma“ 5 e way Pine in concentrated form, well —' A1111 1°11! flue!‘ 51111599 - - - We" remnants . . . who still stood fast. known for its soothing eEect on throat membranes. Money retundedi! it does sti‘l having no orders to diseilgfldfi t lease uin w tended church services in the no p yo we" u“ morning and family dinner parties and gatherings for the day. I I I Mrs. Brownell and Mrs. Vanicek and two children who were visiting with Mrs. Harry Brown at the Queen Hotel, returned to Newport. R.I., thLs week accompanied by Mrs. Brown. I I I Mrs. Dan McDonald of Edmon- ton and Mrs. Bruce Howat-t of Wetaskiwin, who have been on a holiday visit and widely entertain- ed by their friends, are leaving AMorningSmile "YW 59-1! you want to redu, "g Why don't you try golf?“ fie that once, but it's no good, when I can't hit it, and when I put, jg where I can hit it I can't see it. ZIP! Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrew. n s s s Maser ‘flow fast isshe?" _w1*511- 130i’. she's so fast rigt when Ah streaks down de lille all 116 1108s yaide de roads looks like 1m}; sausage. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Andrew who had a pleasant visit here, stopping at Belmont Mills, returned home last week to Gladstone, Michigan. s s s Princess Margaret Rose of York is an excited young lady just now. She has been invited by Lady Alice Scott to be one of her bridesmaids. Princes; Elizabeth, of course, is quite experienced in this duty and will accompany her little sister at the wedding. This will be the first time that Princess Margaret has officiated in this capacity. She was present at the wedding ‘of the Duchess of Kent, but only as a. guest. She then rehealsed the ordeal with her sister. and wished to be a tralnbearer, but her parents and the Queen thought her a,little mo young. 171E COOK ’S CORNER ' ATTRACTIVE COCKTAILS AND GARNISHES GIVE FESTIVE Toucll By Katharine Bake;- Any dinner is improved by a good start with either a. fine soup, cog-k- W11. or frult cup. On festive occas- ions, the first course adds much u; BY JULIE ANNE MOO]! Feather in Her Hath l CHAPTER- 18 Ann sat in the lobby of the hotel in Boston and tried to persuade herself that after the events of the past two months, life could produce neither surprise nor complexity that she could not face with comparative calm, The wdrst, she reflected, was behind. Their night and day in Boston had had a. quieting efiect on her nerves. In flict their entire journey from Washington has been so com- pletely satisfactory that she was a little ashamed of the uneasiness she had entertained when she was leav- ing Mollle‘s apartment. Mollie, always the martyr. had taken it on herself in the beginning to relieve Ann and Rita of any fears concerning Deane. Without consult- ing anyone, she announced that slle and Deane would ride in the rumble of Selmas car and that Carl would sit with Selma. That. left Rita and Ann to crowd into the seat with Bill, their several pieces of luggage being packed into the rumble of Bill's car. In New York the hotel arrange- ments had been substantially as they were her ein Boston, Mollie and Selma occupying one of two adjoin- ing separatc rooms on another floor. Thus any possibility of friction between Selma and Ruth-appar- ently unlikely in view of Selmnb changed attitude toward Rita- had been removed, and Ann had barely seen Deane Runbrecker since leav- ing Washington. Watching the constant flow of well dressed men and women thnough the hotel lobby, Ann thought of these things and was more grateful to Mollie than Mollie would ever know. Bhe had not for- otten the night she surprised Mol- rle and Bill in the apartment kitch- en, but she had gmwn so fond of Mollie that she knew now that noth- ing could ever seriously impair their friendship- lut for a. greater service than Mollie had performed, Ann was in- debate’ tn a. mechanical accident. Over every mile of their long ride she has dreaded the moment of her He would be waiting, of course, Mollie would And fatigued as the moot certainly would be, she would have no choice but to face meeting with Lee. haie- arranged that. the BDDeai-ance of the dinner table if it has a touch of colour. lmnerald Print Cup is one of Lhcsg 1c‘ ever dishes valued by the small ome — it can be made early and Put 1n_ the refrigerator when 1g KEEPS its top form until ready to be served. "I tried put the ball where I can 59¢ 1; 1 Monday for their homes. stopping wflShi "Yo' hear ‘bout dag n - , a b5 -- ofi at Gladstone, Michigan, to. visit 359C131" got? Boy. she got Sfllilv: “gQQSQ-rtzfilrgaslfili thliclgoxeifthe from battle. And of those remnants alone the tale is an Odyssey] For although many died fighting in the rain-swept darkness, and many, too weary even to press. a trigger, were captured in the dawn, those remnants held back a whole army for a whole night . . . “He has great scorn for the pseudo-paclflclsts who pin their whole faith on disarm- ament, and stresses the horrors of the War, "loosed upon a. world that should have been. and may still be. secure—li’ only you who were saved will not altogether forget . . . Shall ought except your own strength, your own preparedness, guard you years with a clear and comprehen- sive vision and we are cheered to find that unlike many modern novelists he is not altogether pes- simistic of the future. His treat- ment of the readiustmenis of his characters to the post-war years is sane and logical and includes a very exciting trial of one of the three friends. . These three Englishmen-the simple, straightforward soldier. the skilled. modest surgeon craving to be oi’ the pioneers of his profession, and the too-confident financier, even Mr. Frankauk minor charac- ters, are very real humans, and their story one of the best. Morgan Powell mecomnlends "Three Erlglishmari’ as "one of the finest novels that has come from any pen in the Empire for thirty years." In the art. of book production llklgland has exerted, for the last fifty years, the main Wlmkraphiml influences in Europe. In the field of binding, however, Blgllsh books lag somewhat behind Continental work. ,_ On their private pressw. William him and try to justify her abrupt decision to break of! their engage- ment. Given a night's rest and an opportunity to organize her thoughts and feelings, she would be better able to cope with him. Lee, however, had not been vrait- ing when they reached the hotel last night and it was not until this morning that they learned he had been forced down near some isolated village because of motor trouble. His wire to Mollie explained he re- quired a new part to repair his en- gine and owing to the difficulty of getting it, probably would not reach Boston before four or five o‘clo:k. All day Mollie had been in a fev- er of anxiety and when at a. quar- ter of seven she called the airport and was informed that Lee had not yet arrived, she suddenly burst into tears . . . And it was then that Ann. giving her lips a last touch of vivid color, caught up her coat and hat and, with a signal to Rita, sFip- ped out of the room. Unable to share Mollie's premature disappoint- ment-if she could have been so selfish, she would have considered lt extraordinarily good fortune if Lee had not arrived at all-she had coma to this deep chair in the lobby and let her thoughts come and go as they would. I I I I I I “Ann . . .!" Eyes fixed on the mezzanine, ob- serving the seemingly endless pro- cession of lovely women in evening gowns and immaculately attired men, she had not seen Lee come through the aide entrance and was so startled by the sound of his voice that for a moment she could only stare, dumbiy, without even the semblance of a smile on her lips. "Gosh. it's good to see you," Lee said earnestly. He took her hands from her lap and pulled her to her feet. For a moment Ann thought that he would kiss her there in view of the hundred pairs of eyes that had already identified him; but he only laughed when he saw the un- casinos? in her face and stood back to look at her appraisingly. ‘You're gor nous, Ann. I've never seen you rea y dressed up before, have I . . Where's the gang " Ann had recovered from her con- fusion now. “They're up in their several rooms walking the floor- worried sick for fear you won't be FOR BUILDING ‘T t3 N i VITALITY AND R ESISTANCE vUaedtlihocpitalnand a ‘ ALTIHIE ifOOfi GYVERACB ~,,- oved by doctor: EMERALD FRUIT CUP powder 1 pint warm water 1111111811. (Pears. peaches, h pineapple, etc.) c ewes than lukewarm but not into cranberry molds, ' smartly different, too. CRANBERRY MOLD jelly powder V: cup celery, finely cut, Juice ‘A lemon 1% cups warm water 1 cup thick cranberry sauce, sweetened Dissolve jelly powder cranberry sauce. Turn be also served as salad by unmold with mayonnaise. on hand for your lecture. Are yo stopping here?" He was digging in his ,. taking ofl’ for W111?’ seats, of course, but as fal- no I ca when you get there." Looking at his dark gray suit, An asked, irrelevantiy, bring any luggage, Lee?" I hope." apposite wall. It was now twenty eight minutes after seven. get to the hall. You'll never dolt." ‘Eaailyf’ Lee smiled. "But listen with the others. Mollie had it I1 back to Washington. you?" olsnoouanuanw 1 package quick-setting lime jelly 2 cups mixed fruit, diced m. Dissolve the jelly powder in wat. er, which should be slightly hotter boiling. Pour into shallow pan. Chill until firm. Cut ma» ‘wd-lllCh cubes. Com- bine with fruit. Pile into sherbet 815-565. adding». small amount of frult juice to each serving. serve; g, Cranberries become most decor- ative and flavorsome when made They're 1 package quick-setting lemon ‘b cup canned crushed pineapple in warm water which should be slightly hot- ter than lukewarm but not boiling. Chill. When slightly thickened, add lemon juice, celery, pineapple and into mold. Chill until firm. Serves 6. Mold may lng an crisp lettuce and garnishing =L__;_i_r:. an you call it stopping," he said. "I'm lately after the powwow." At last his eager search had been rewarded- “Give these tickets to Mollie, will you? I had to wire for them _at the last minute and the man who hand- ed them to me at the airport said he'd had the devil's own time rounding them up. They're reserved make out, no two are together. You may be able to swap with some one "Didn't you He grinned. "Afraid I'll do my act intheac togsi. . . I'd,do a better in when I did. They're in my room, He looked down at his watch and Ann's eyes automatically ~ lifted to the shadow clock on the She groaned. "fires-quarters of on hour to dress, have dinner and Ann. I'll need a few minutes to brush up on my notes and I may not got a chance to have a private word planned that you and I would fly Did she tell "Yea/f Jinn said. quietly. "And I saw your wire ‘saying you had same sort of important cargo to can? Morris. Charles Ricketts and T. J. Cobden-Sanderson produced books which were models and inspira- tions to the Continent. Today the private press in England no longer maintains its pre-eminenoe because printing has become almost oom- . pletely mechanized, and. in the hands of the most expert masters the machine has caught up to the level of handicraft. , Mr. Francis Meyncll, Mr. Oliver Simon and Mr. Stanley Morison are talented and important figures among present day printers. and Mr. Meynell has shown that book production does not depmd on printing alone, but on harmcnising paper, binding, illustrations and setting. It costs no more to use a good type than a bad one and we now have good books with well ar- ranged setting and suitable flus- tration, produced at low prices. The revival of illustration is one of the most notable features of modern book production. Among the artists in England. whose “work accords with type," are Eric Gill. whose woodcuts in “Canterbury Tales" and “Four Gos- pels" are already counted among the classics of illustrated books: Rex Whistler, whose “always witty drawings reached high-water mark in his "Gulliver's Travels? Ed- " ward Bawden, Albert Rutherston, Paul Nash. John Nash, John Far- LDorothy Dix’: LettcrBox-J Husbands and Wives Need Deal Justly With Each Other When it Comes to Sending Money to Relatives Dear Miss Dix-I am one of the old fools who want a divorce. Am 57 years old, married to the same wife thirty years and, lovo he: better today than ever. There is no woman in the cue, It is my wife's good-for-noihlng brother who was a minor irritation for the first twenty-six years of our married life and who has been a. major nui- sance and expense for the last four years. :1; is now a. man 46 years old. He has been o. Whining supplicant for aims from my wife all of his life, and she seems unable to say “no" to him. Some years ago I gave my wife a nice book of stockjhat pays considerable dividends. I told her it was a. nest-egg for her old age, but it is only a. golden egg for her lazy, idle brother. This pest lives 500 miles away, but about twice a week we Bet a letter and every time the postman comes my blood pres- sure goes up and up for I know it is just another touch. My wife will not listen to any argument that I advance. Say: she can't let her brother but I loaned an old uncle $10 and aho worth In to I“; hridm-N ‘I starve. women wonderful? ‘Answer: , They certainly are, wonderful problem of matrimony have a right to burden the party of the relatives. Flor there is so much to be said on both sides of the question. To be- gin with, a husband and a wife who work together, shoulder to shoulder. building up the family fortune are equally responsible for the success or failure of the firm. Doing teamwork they can succeed, but either one of them can wreck it by making too heavy drains on the capital. Also it is undeniable that both the husband and the wife have an equal r1811‘? to some of the money that they mutually earn to spend as they 80 1195119. without any reference to what the other thinks about it. Most husbaxm and wives will agree m this as an abstract statement of the case, but. when it comes to practical application of it, that is some- thing else yet again, Maurice. The husband feels that because he makes the money he has a right to spend as much as he pleases on his own people, but that it is an imposition for the wife to inflict her family's sup- port upon him. The wife says that if she were in business and had her own salary she would give what she pleased to her family, and that inas- much as she works harder for her husband than she would for any em- ployer, she has the right to give some of the money she earns by her own labor to her father and mother and brothers and sisters. Mr. T. M. N, and so are men, and about the most is how much a husband and n. wife other part with their dependent Both arguments are cogent, but the l-igiht of each to give to their families is just only so long as it does not work a. hardship on the other. But often both husbands and wives are ruthless in the way they enslave their mates to their own people. I have in mind now a man who was o. fine money-maker, who gave virtually everything he made to a parasitic brother. I-us wife was the most industrious and thrifty of women. She helped him in every way, but she never got any advantage of the money she earned. she and her children lived in a poor house and dressed plainly and walked, while his brother's family lived in luxury in a city, dressed finely, had horses and carriages and looked down upon their poor relatives whose earnings they were spending. And I know a woman who sold her hilaband into slavery to her family on her wedding day. He was a competent and high-salaried man, but every cent that he made except a bare living for themselves went to sup- port his wife's drunken brother and send her sisters of! to college and pay for operations and having little nieces’ and. nephews’ teeth straightened and their adenolds out, etc, etc. I think that husbands and wives should deal more justly with each other than they do in this matter of the dependent relatives. For many of these relatives are dependent simply because they are gold-diggers. At any rate, the husband and wife have the first claim on the family purse. As fas as you are concerned, Mr. T. M. N, the only thing you can do ill to realize that. your wife is worth more to you than the money she gives her brother, and just try to forget about it. You can't change her, nor can you keep him from IIOMJEIQ up aild getting all he can out of her.‘ I Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a young woman of 22 torn between two loves. One of these young men is insanely jealous, a0 much so that he makes scenes and says he is going to whip any one who tries to go with me. I have tried to explain to him that I like him and have a deep feeling for him, but that I want to go with other men. However, he says that he will not allow me to go with any one other than himself. He m; g new car, but doesn't have a job, and it seems that he is not able to hold one because he devotes too much time to me. The other young man I go with has a job, but no car. Neither of these young men could support me- Wollld Y0“ 610D both and" try some one else, or would you try to work out the present situation? A 013,1. m nlsmms, Answer: Neither one of the young men seem anything w write home m Mother about from your amount of them. but if you must- choose between them take the man with the job who isn't trying to support a cgf he mm’; g1- ford. At least, he seems a gentleman. and a reasonable human being and to have some consideration for your dignity and good name, which the cad who goes around making scenes and assuming the right to boss you does not possess. _ Whatever you do, don't be foolsh enough to marry a jealous man. ‘Phat Way misery lies. for Jealousy is one of the faults that canot be cured. If you marry a. jealous man, you will never have one minute's peace and you will go in fear and trembling all your days, dreading to do or say something that will rouse the devil in him. You will never have any freedom because he will always be watching you. You won't even dare to have the slightest conversation with an old man friend or a pleasant stranger. You will be afraid to even speak to your own grandfather, ‘b9- cause he will raise ructions if y do. He will accuse you of every vile and low thing that his obscene imagination can conjure up. He will insult you by calling you lowdown names. I-le will never trust you nor believe that there 1a any honor or dlgruw in you, and he will continually humil- iate you by making scenes that humble you mm tho dug; arm make ya“ the laughing stock of all who know you. This jealus youth has already shown you what you can expect as his leigh, Clare Leighton. Marion Dorn. Stephen Gooden and many others. u This nil, in England, The Three ..._.. ‘ , H ‘ ‘ Gloucester-held their annual “'1invv ‘.These'rhree Choirs rutivalm, founded over two hundred years ago, combine music with charity. for their profits go to the widows and orphans of the clergy. ' Worcester was the native city of Edward Iiilga-r who for many years before his death trained and con- ducted the 'I‘hreo Choirs. and this year the Festival honoured his memory, in many ways. Prominence was given to his works and a stain- ed glass window reproducing scenes from _"The Dream of Gerontius" was unveiled in the Cathedral and the ce y was followed by a performance of "The Dream." Worcester, Hereford, and Glou- cester were, in the days of Elgar. where the Elgar enthusiast could go and hear his oratorioa and compositions played with the can due them. h II Q Jobofihrllbet. ..Mybagscn.n1 Three novelties were introduced at the Three Choirs Festival this ' year. all by musicians of establish- ed reputation 5n England. Dr. W. H. Harm, organist at 8t. l George's Cirnpei, Windsor-one of the most coveted positions in the official musical life of England- contributed "Michael Angelo’: 0on- msldn of mum" 15:. acme Dy- con. music master of Wilzcileste: School confirmed h’; former auc- cesses with his "Nebuchldneuan" and wife. If you marry him, you will deserve just what you get. DOROTHY DIX. 11.. House WIFE and 1 HER ACTIVITIES _ ..__.._ _......__ "Earthforalnlned with heaven, once was, owing to the breeding of theulimalsovn farms. \ But only he n ak m, ghmgflw o m‘ i " m A aonl. sum MY LADTS FURS Astrid stamp (says the Star.) Full t hathe were. - mm w t y For theapecialstampslgold 111E111)’ time’: tendency was far from a illlsfiflllhgufm; now ful- coats are u on es so slimming a; u; Please the most devoted addicts of m’ cult TM? Dal-lees a ooftneu and a flexibility that was unknown even a few years ago, ‘PM military style of fur also. ls new Begin this season, Pm- out; re seen with the h EH01? m“ “We on fur canes are v popujfl‘ yet the newaeat cape; u; yqy 1m‘: seal is one of the moat fruition filrstobuynsitcanbe wornacany time of the day. Sable remains the ‘111991101 fllfl. but itiadreadfully g]- pensive. squirrel can be dyed to match sable. Astrakhan is much IOQII in Paris. Silve- fox is not so expensive Ia it TIII WARNING LIGHT A leader who liven 0n the Ntlth Glfih worms commune, a wriggling head of what appealed to be worms (says the Morning Post). On impaction they provedvto in setting‘ for Henry Vaughan‘: poem "TIM MOPED‘ WIUIW-ilw QOY’ and Arnold Sox's compositions-o newly hatched addu-I. to tin num- hI of uviflw. IIIIIIQ odvolyaoeoptoblo v g IF a very am carries o EFIANT" .crou nabeu... when your child llu "day!" like this, ‘take vnrningl There‘: often a pllyuical caunc for n. child's llauglltinesa. And usually it in limply —- constipation. Give a Child's Laxative It il a wise promotion to give a laxative. Not an adult laxative which may cause griping pain, or upset ltomach . . . but a child's laxative. Give Cutoriol Caloric il made especially for children — from babyllood to 11 years. It il coir-contain: no llarlh purgntivea. no narcotics. It in gentle. It is eflectiva. And it hu a pleuallt tutu that children like! Auk your doctor Next‘ time you see your doctor for your child’: regull health exami- I Don't 3'01! just adore this attrac- tive daytime dress? And it's just l5 51111916 as falling off a 10g to make! It's the wee pleated r1111; stitched on afterwards, which do the trick. Have the frills pleated pro- fessionally. And of course, we mugt not forget the buttons down the back in "little girl" fashion, add a very youthful note. NWBWY 01‘ Dlain silks of various types, thin wolens. or velvet are 1°V0|J for this model. Greens, lllllf, and blues are among favored colors for winter. Style No. 493 is designed for sizes 14. 10, I8 years, 36. 38 and QO-inches bust. Sire 16 requires 8% ytrds of 39-inch material and 1A yard of SB. inch contrasting material, Price of PATTERN 15 cents in "M11116 or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 498. 51m Name """""s't;eé.--Add£successes-f City ~-'o--<-.l--......-... State‘ ' local tradition, he drown Wm boaldmh. ed the 8T 601111 f0] district still enter-mam {mmbziizi $11819. in what ever way you jdll the North Downs adder, even by the mid-day sun. it will not die until mmset. They will fell you that the glow-worm‘; light is Nature's guide mo» r r ‘ oitho adder. BELTS ASSUME IMPORTANCE N ITALIAN MOD! Pa! ha: "jalod vraistlfneoofdinnq- aeheflbeltcofloldkldcccunedb! mum out-out work and of beaten silver- linhatuddedwith tur- evening u are bag) belie with little silver kid puma homing from the aide. like those worn in the middle ages to 111-"? QUILTING. LAGI ~. AND COIDI. BIG 11ml! or LINGIII! all shoulder chip . .1. nation, ask lliln about Cutoria. H. will assure you that Custoria contains only sue hgrcdients as are lllltflblk for a cll' d’: system. Buy a bottle of Cutoria to-lligllt, (If you're thrifty you'll buy ill, family-size bottle.) Keep it handy, always. Give it‘ for constipation and a! the firs! sign of a cold. 1 The Children's Laxative SMART CLOTHES FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER‘ ‘when the black aide la nhowins- Iondon fol- mndf! OthcrI-reoilng gowM-l" 1mm of brown taffeta. or silver“ m, skint. mien- belts m made lazuli and P9571“ °‘ turquoise-studded suver P1W“°“' huBIIIIItO transom; micel- aim pu1¢d.flllR of 41217.00" 995*“; and dictator over mlv 11"‘ poomiovls. _. Reduced Prices Ofl Permanent Waves ~ f: __.___,——~" ‘ EliteBcautj | Salon