lblEil wot Dor . Re) will 0i’ 1m] n. c Fro clm cio: ‘Th: yCll \‘ hnc ' for yea Fr: 4 ..._..,_.,.. -... ‘,_,,,., rvw- ~- What thefashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fttrnlshed _Wltl Every Pattern — Qy Annabelle Worthington "v - Kai And it is delightfully easy to fashion. ‘ "Printed silk in dark blue and‘ gwhite-which bids fair to be pop-i ular all summer—combined with white makes a snappy scheme for such a frock. It is appropriate for town, travel or resort. Style No. 643 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. size 3d requires 3% yards 39-inch with 1,5 yard 35-inch contrasting. Batiste prints, voile prints and white and pastel tub silks can also be considered. _ All patterns l5 cents in stamps l or coin (coin preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. I;-,_ or ‘ 1:50,’. ' " s... . . . . ...-.------u I I~I4UOIOIIQI Name Pretty Hands He" Are Never Rough, Calloused or Stained. When you throw your glove in the beauty ring, the hand that does the tin-owing must be properly cared for. Your manicure may be perfect but if your hand is rough or calloused or stained nobody will consider it attractive. ' l No doubt number-less matrons will welcome such a model as this» 1i? has so many good points to aid the heavier figure. Don't be the type oi’ person who puts on her gloves with a sigh of re- lief ‘ they will conceal blem- "closefiHarmony B UT F0 R '_'Clothes" Harmony Hosiely‘ a nd Sweat Cl’! s1 ishes. Rather, rejoice when you have occasion to remove them. If your hands have stains, lem- on juice is an effective. whitener. Use it faithfully. Rub the lemon on and leave it on for a. little while. The lemon has a. tendency to whiten the flesh, as well. Pumice For Stains _ If cigarette stains have made your hands unlovely, rub powdered pumice, or a pumice stone, over the stains. Don't become discouraged. Repeat the process day after day. Afterwhile the oflending spots will give up and fade out of the picture. Don't be too rough. Firmness will do the work. ' If your veins are too pronounced, be especially careful to keep your hands in a position in which the palms will be turned upward when away from the hands, and they re- lax. Knotted blue lines are never attractive. Rubber gloves may seem uncom- fortable when you first start to wear them for the performance of house- hold duties, but the discomfort passes soon, and you will discover that a hand in a glove is worth two that meet the soapy dishwater directly. Keep a hand lotion in the kitchen and use it as you think about, it, Show your hands proudly. There is beauty in your hands if you will cultivate it. §u»<anm9Iu!flE§$1HB!RQ$39§5§§§§§g§§EEF cn-a-as-a-“u . A1s;uniaau"CZZfiib ....andSAFE because P RE problem is to have always that problem. “Dorothy” Evaporated Milk is pure mw’: milk concentrated Puma mu: a “y. Mlll(—ih0 venlently at hand milk that is truly "fresh", rich, pure and safe. "Dorothy" Evaporated Milk solves honour §- BRAND *4 ‘YIIILIIIO COD- ob MM an» m ears! ' ‘Vitoaarzo \ "NIWIIYIMIQ into double richness, homogenized for easier digestion, and sterilized "Dorothyf Evaporated Milk. in the can for absolute safety. Wherever unsweetened milk is preferred for cooking or beverages, use ‘Dorothy’. lt makes coffee, tea and cocoa deliciously creamy and satisfying. All good grocers sell ‘ Order a supply today. ISD DOROTHY Evaporated you are sitting. The blood rushes I A M hrningSmilc A man greatly esteemed by his employers informed the cashier that a mistake-had been made in his wages. He had been given ten dollars too much, he explained. The cashier, after counting the contents of the open Wage Willie‘- sald it was correct, his Wage?- hall" ing been increased by instruction of the management. “How long have I been havinK this?" was the next inquiry of the man — a. husband, and the proud father of two children. "The alteration was made thme months ago," rejoined the cashier after a glance at his books.“ “The cat!" ejaculated the man. "And she never told me!" Su m mer ' Complaint: "I have found Baby's Own Tablets the best of all children's remedies for Sum- mer Complaint, Colic, Teething and Constipation," writes Mrs. George Walker, Thomas- burg, Ont. Certifi- cate of SAFETY in each 25c package. , More than 1,250,- . Q00 packages sold*~ in i931. 242 III. Williams’ OWN TABLETS BABY'S For The Cook ’ LITTLE LEMON CAKES (Makes 8-10 cakes.) 1-3 cup shortening. 2-3 cup sugar. ‘i. teaspoon grated lemon rind. 3 tablespoons lemon Juice. 2 eggs. 1% cups flour. . v 2%.’. teaspons baking powder. ‘A teaspoon salt. Cream shortening and sugar and add lemon rind and juice and beaten egg yolks. Add fiour sifted with baking powder and salt. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Bake in greased and floured muffin tins in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 20 minutes. Cool and cut into 2 layers. Spread lemon cream filling (which you will ind in the related group of frostings and fillings in another column) between layers and dredge each cake with powdered sugar. IN DEPTIIS 0F llSAlll RS.‘ MARY JONES "N! ll! NOW England. Every month was a nightm e to her. Her letter aaya,“l aufiered periodical pains through my head, backache and female weakness." She tried everything. Visited clinics. Nothing helped her. Finally she gave Lydia B. Pinkham’: Vegetable Com- pound a trial a ; : scarcely hoping i! would succeed where more ex- pensive things had failed." But she was surprised. Through its tonic action, it built up her health r s t lessened her pain. She aayl, "My backache is completely relieved." A. f'lii.’.x..<.... VlCFTARil illllviWiilNii _ Foolish Girls ~Who Plan to Make up for Par- - was consume -"—~*——"fi “w” f‘ l Woman's Realm j-:- Social anilPersonalg -.: _ D0705?!’ Letferuhlox. ants’ ‘Strictness When The)’ L68" ' Home - Shall a Girl Tell How Old Sheis? - Marriage as Escape From Work ‘ Dear Miss Dix—We are two lively girls who want to 5% I 31¢! 0115 of life. We have chances to go places and do thins-i. but Oil!‘ PERM! are very strict and won't let us go to dances or stay out late at any 911' tertainments. We intend to go to a business col- lege in a city and make up for what we have miss- ed then, for we will be free. Does it do our Pa?" ents any good to be strict now, for we will soon be doing as we please in spite o! them? SWEET BEVENTEENB Answer: ' No. It doesn't do any good for parents to be too strict nor does it do girls any good to have too much liberty, and the pity of the thing is that parents and children find it so hard to strike the happy medium in which youth can have its fling with age guiding and protecting it. Both sides are right from their respective points of view. The par- ents know so well the dangers and temptations that lie along the broad highway that their children are so eager to follow. They have seen so many drunken boys and girls coming home from wild parties late at night. automobiles. They have known so many girls’ reputations torn to tattera by gossiping tongues that they are determined to keep their own little ewe lambs safe in the home fold and locked up at night behind their own doors. Bo they deny the girls every pleasure that belongs to their time of life. They are kept virtual prisoners at home. They are never allowed to go to a dance or a party. No boy is permitted to cross their threshold and father and mother sit back complacent}; sure that they have done their duty and no matter what other lax parents let their children do that they have kept their daughters safe. But theyhaveht. _ In reality they have increased the danger that besets every modern girl. For by forbidding every plea-sun to their daughters and denying them every amusement and association with the opposite sex, they have given a false and fictions value to these pleasures land made the girls so avid for them that they will have them at any price. Every woman from Mother Eve down has hungered for forbid- ‘den fruit and eaten her apple, no mltter if she knew beforehand the price she hadto pay for it. Tell a girl that the world is a wicked place and that she must keep out of it and you simply make her mad to see how bad it is. Refuse to let a girl bring her boy friend's home and she meets them in corner drug stores. Never let her go to a party and she lies about going to stay all night with a girl chum and goes God knows where with God knows whom. Parents might just as well face these facts honestly and realize that the only way they can protect their daughters is by letting them have all the innocent pleasures that they can and by teaching them to walk warily among the temptations that lie along their pathway. Let them go to plenty of nice‘ parties where there is a. lot of fun and livellness and they will not be mad for the whoopee ones. Let them dance their fill at dec- ent places and they will not be doing the rhumba in spesk-easies. If they must drink and smoke, at least teach them how to do it in moder- ation and ‘make them realize how disgusting a girl is who gets tight. Above all, make-their boy friends welcome and thus get a chance to weed out the undesirable ones and help them choose for their associates the kind ‘of lads that you would not mind their marrying. And parents may well realize this: That they cannot always hold their girl children by the hands or keep them locked at home twiddling their thumbs. Very soon these little daughters are grown up and out in the world and then ii they have always been repressed at home they break the bounds. They mistake liberty for license. They go crazy with their freedom. In the exuberance of their spirits, let loose for the first time, they do things that they spend the balance of their lives repenting. Ignorance is never innocence. Inexperienee does not insure safety. And so the stern parents who try hardest to protect their children really do most to throw them to the wolves. For there are many other girls bsides these two poor, silly, 17-year- olds who are planning to make up for lost time and lost pleasures as soon as "my get out from under father's and mother's thumbs. . > DOROTHY DIX. I O I Dear Miss Dix—I am four years older than the man I am going to marry. He does not know it. Shall I tell him? PERPLEXED. Answer: . A woman's age is a secret between herself and her mirror and it is nobody else's business, not evén her fiance's, and she is perfectly justified in telling him a tarrydiddle or refusing to answer if he asks her the direct question. I once heard a very charming elderly beau get out of this situation in a particularly diplomatic manner. An nquisitive woman asked him bluntly how old he was, to which he responded: "If you will forgive me for not telling you, I will forgive you for asking the question." - Butpersonally, why do you mind? What are four years either way in a lifetime? Age is not a mere matter of chronology. There are plenty of people at. '70 who are really younger than others at 17, and if a woman Ilooks and acts and has the spirit of 26 or 30 or 35, that is how old she is, no matter what her birth certificate may say to the contrary. There are many things so much mom important in marriage than age that I am constantly amaud that people put such stress upon it. There is congeniality of taste, of habits‘. There is personality. There is sweetness of disposition. There is mutual understanding. There is kindness and helpfulness, a thousand things that matter so much more than whether a woman is four years younger or four years older than a man. So tell your sweetheart that it is none of his blislness how old you are and that so far as he is concerned you are Just exactly the right age for him. And that you are going to stay that age as long as you live. DOR/CYPHY DIX. IIDIOO my mother with the housework. running away and getting married. Answer: l Well, if you don't want to work, I would certainly advise you to re. fraln from getting married. Believe ma, that is no soft snap where a girl What shall I do? I am thinking of M. G. They have heard such lurid tales of petting parties and parked ' - Fash an“ - BUY THIS FOOD BARGAIN AND BOOST CANADA HERE'S no easier we to make a few cents do a lat o good than by spending them for Shredded away. Here's natural energy to keep you on your noes. Body-build- ing nourishment, mo, direct from 7W I) [-1- '\>-' i2 are BISCUITS Dear Miss Dix-I am 18 years old and I don't want to work or help _ Wheat. They buy you a great food Canada-s m“ and mm bargain. At "the same time, they _ ‘ boost your country's greatest indus- Remember, inst a few cents buys this l N EVE RY uy and help to keep it great. For only Canadian wheat is used for Shredded Wheat ‘. . . all the wheat, with nothing added, nothing taken ingtodaymnfor fand Wheat. MADE IN CANADA -. BY CAN-ADIANS ‘v OF all-family food. Start them work- this country by o ring Shredded Ill! CANADIAN SHREDDED Vllllll‘ COMPANY, LID. - UIAGIIA Fllllv CAIADA v SHRED IJEI] WH for BOX EAT CANADIAN WHEAT served. To do this, dip pepper in scalding water and letstand two minutes. Dip into cold water and rub of! the thin coating. Remember, too, that even in sweet peppers the seeds are bitey and be sure that all the seeds and white fibre are removed before serv- ing in any fashion. Green Peppers Add Variety To Left-Overs -_-ui Meals May Be Made More Inviting by Use of This Inexpensive . Vegetable, ———- Delicious Stuffed Sweet peppers give . an excellent opportunity for the cook to use vegetables and left~overs attract- ively and lighten the meat course -in hot weather. Be it remembered thta meat produces heat and any substitute in the way of vegetables, milk and eggs‘ is desirable. Although peppers have compara- tively little food value in the way of calories, they are a. good source of vitamins and are not difficult to di- gcst if properly used. They are a stimulant to the appetite, and if used raw are acceptable in a salad as a garnish and to give a piquant Peppers are delicious stuffed with a combination of vegetables or a rice combination. Corn and green beans or lima beans, corn and to- matoes, carrots and peas, carrots and cabbage-the combinations are innumerable. Left-over cooked vege- tables can be used or ‘fresh ones specially prepared and used alone or in combinations. Planked dishes and vegetable “platcs" gain much by the addition of peppers stuffed with some appe- tizing comb‘ tions. A combination of rice and cheese oistenei with touch to the taste. tomato Juice is an appetizing stuf- There is a thin film over tho out- ,flng for the vegetable plate meal. side flesh of a pepper that is lndi-i For Salads gestible. This should be removed no Raw sweet peppers can be filled matter how the pepper is to be with almost any wanted salad com- "Wereift we lucky . . our sweaters didn't shrink or fade the a least‘ bit!" LUX won’t fade colours sits down on a silk cushion and does nothing but feed upon strawberries, 8118M‘ 8nd cream. For most women, marriage means a fourteen-hour-a- day Job with no holidays and layoffs. Look around among the married women-you know and see how many of them lead idle and luxurious lives. But. m!‘ dear child, work isn't a curse. 1t is our greatest blessing It is what puts interest and pep in existence and justifies our having lived. If you don't want to help your mother, get a good Job into which won’t shrink woollens You cln but your heart and your back and you will find happiness in it. laconic: aluminum; a: al‘,'§—‘-'°"'°“,'5,‘“l°°" 1°93’ “delicate spiciness of swcct peppers “The saiesgiri told _ us they wouldn't, with Lux." Thank goodness we washed them this way—-"* sud, d‘ bination. From fruit, to fish, ihs__ blends uppetlzln ly. A fruit salad“ garnished with filled pepper rlllll gains nourishment as well as inter est. Blend cheese and finely chop-- ped nuts. Pack in well shaped awed. peppers which have been blanched and freed from pith and seeds. M stand on ice for several hours ti‘ chill and become firm. Cut in slice! about one-half inch thick uni serve one or two slices on W! salad. Use peppers to add variety to yell menus. Buccotash served in a p091 per shell is not the sumo thin! l‘ plain succotash. You will find economical meals can b-s ma“ by the use of this inexpensive v98‘ table. ._.___€_______.. Two little girls were coming Mo! from school when one basal! tease the other. "I don‘; 05W said Mabel. "You are only Q adopted child. Your father mother are not really 3W"! don't care, either," said (lrace. “ll! papa and mamma picked me Mil-- Yours had to take Y0“ i115‘- M F" camel" ___-¥ git-st, measure the sure"? then make lliukcwnnrli Lliligrs and reset cm gem X" . ' -—doli't rub theleast ivulRm" iniilukewarm wat=rs._vl"'l“‘°" a board to dry, slmPmi! t“ f t. measurementsyoumadcalt‘ l" . Thlseasywayprescrves cit!‘ tlcity"-—-leavea _your ewe!" soft, perfect-fittmE"I‘k° m“ Ordinary soaps-Cal“?! 9° dernchips-often contain halal: ful alkali which shrinks "h" and fades coloursrw“ uxhin no harmful alkali. AnYtLuj safcin watcrnloncirsnfvl" .|.