=. -i ._ . . "b...- ‘.~_t-_'llPIfl~fifiilg‘gyz'_‘l,vk_f’é4aflifrgQafiah€rgsj Lmrv.‘ n, i - old-age pension. vvvv \ . iWoman '3 Realm -:- Social .I. v64‘ vv w and Persona rm: Gl-rnanovrrsrowuousiioian l} \ _ 1 _v v vw \ l k AAA-LA A Fashions- :- Iliite isuisnsnvdv-v- luv-v k‘ klkjfxxigkxxkik‘xr ‘ rature = v.nu .{ t’ unsold 2a, 1935 v vm kknkxkkd g ‘ .- .v t‘ kkkkkkkx Klwvw A@AAAAA4AA AAAQAAQ 44 Q F Ul- LIN ID Just as the spiniest chestnut-burr Is lined within with the finest fur, So the stony-walled, snow-roofed _ house Of every squirrel and mole and ’ mouse 1a lined with thistledown. sea- gull’: feather. Velvet mullein-leaf, heaped to- gcther With balsam and Juniper, dry and curled, _ Sweeter than anything else in the world. O what a warm andtiarksome nest Where the wildest things are hid- den tc rest! It's there that I'd love to Ila and sleep. Soft, soft, soft, and deep, deep deep! —Elinor Wylie. A good leader attracLs good fol- lowers. . He who works hardest his rest most. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst and cold. wisdom is to the mind health ls the body. True love can stand almost any test-except monotony. . At least you don't have to tow a horse around the block to get him started- It'.a very easy to gain the ill will of a woman by simply refusing to admire her. . It's easier to take things as they come than it is to part with them as they go. “It is more blessed to givo than t0 receive." This is especially true with reference to advice. ' Always remember that the few seconds saved speeding in a ca: may never be needed —if someone else has the same idea. enjoys what LAST 0F THE RUSH MAT MAKERS IN ENGLAND A tiny wooden hut workshop ln a. cottage garden at Pavenham, near Bedford, England. is the last relic of an industry that once em- ployed the whole village. Soon even that will be closed for lack of work, and seventy-year-old George Purser will retire on his George Purser is the last of the rush matting makers at Pavenham. For three hundred years without a break his family gathered rushes fmm the River Ouse, plaited them, and made them into horse collars. baskets, chair seats. hassocks, and floor covering. -I-Iis father employed twelve men ' and seventy women. "Now nobody wants rush mat- ting," Mr. Purser and. “A firm I used to work for used to make 2,000 horse collars a week. Now I doubt if they make 150 a year. .“We sold thousands of workmen's dinner baskets. After the war men took to haversacks." PURPLY BLUES ~ There ls much black and white. brovrn and considerable use of our- ply-blues. ~~Many colorful touches register. a; the multicolor border to black fullskirted evening gown of chif- fon, posed over white, or the sleeves in rainbow gamut in- vroduced in a navy daytime dress. GROOM 0F '15 BREAKS CAMERA AT WEDDING More than 1.000 people besieged a Plymouth church in the rain when, on her 80th birthday, Mrs. Anne Bicslna Blake was married to her neighbor, Mr. Robert George Popplestone, aged 75. a retired master mariner. Mr. Popplestone resented the pncsence outside the church of photographers. whom he scattered- When the doors were opened there was a rush and the build- ing was quickly packed. Some women stood on the seats of the pews. The Vicar (the Rev. H. C. Mc- Making) asked the congregation t0 remember where they were. to cease talking. and not to stand on the seats, but his voice was hardly board above the chatter . At the restaurant where the sbception was held Mr. Poppie- stone lefLhLs bride and approach- ed the man, whose camera was damaged during all altercation. KEEP THE KITCHEN FRESH AND ODOBLESH ‘Now that amall houses and small flats are s0 popular, it is more than ever important to deal effectively with unpleasant smells fromythe kitchen. '11.. Houszwmr a.‘ ma, Acnwmsr of bread in the saucepan will ab- sorb the unpleasant smell- If cooking utensils or knives and forks smell of fish, they should be washed, directly after U89, in tepid water, in which a handful of salt has been dissolved. Rinse them in clear water, and dry. The odor of game or strong cheese can be removed by putting a small bag of charcoal beside it on the shelf. j If a. frying pan has been used ' for onions, scald a little vinegar in it, wash in the usual way, and the smell will disappear. Half an onion, cut side upper- most, will absorb the smell of new paint, and save a headache. CANADIAN SINGER. vfsm AIBERTA HOME . It takes a long absence to enable a person fully to appreciate the exhilaration of a crisp Alberta winter, says Odette de Foras, prima. donna of the Covent Garden Opera Company, nowwisiting her mother, Countess de Foras, of I-ligh River. The operatic singer is resting in Alberta. os the ranch that was her childhood home. It is many years since sho has been free to rettim home during the winter season. The crisp winter air is ideal for health, she claims, and an hour's hike daily through the woods, when she exploms all the familiar by- paths, is a. regular part of her gram. Miss do’ Forms. fresh from triumphs in London, Dublin, Glas- gow and'other centres of the Brit- ish Isles, will make few public ap- pearances here. She limits special activities to visits with friends. When she returns to England in Ilebruary she will fulful engage- ments with the British Broadcast- ing Company. Her contact with old friends and scenes has never been unbroken, she says, and she insists on being known as “Odette de Foras, of High River, Alberta, Canada" A dictionary recently completed at Vienna that indexes musical compositions by the letters of their first fsw notes shows a. close re- semblance between modern and old tunes. "Housework is a cure for nervous troubles," reads the latest report of the Institute of Medical Phychology of London. GLASS CURTAINS For glass curtains vollcs and ninons rather than nets are prefer- red. especially the new season's range carrying a formal pattern of either wreaths. star's, or wavy lines. ‘Your: suwmc. MACHINE Did you ever try to clean your sawing machine with the blower attachment of your vacuum clean- er? This method works to per- faction. STICK T0 TYPE FOR. SMART- NESS STAR ADVISES Whether your clothes budget runs into three figures or six. Gladys Swartbout says, you need observe Only five simple rules to be well dressed. The opera and screen star listed these cssentails of chic, remarking she herself “never pays much attention to current styles." “Study your own individuality and pick the clothes best suited to your type, making style‘ of second- ary importance. "Study your colors and stick to them. . "Organize your wardrobe so that it is iuterchangelable and practi- cal to your needs, "Cultivate a graceful carriage, for lack of carriage will ruin your costume" CAKES MATCH BRIDAL GOWNS FOR WEDDINGS Those new pastel colors-already revolutionizing clothes and ahnw styles-are doing things to the baking industry. Wedding guests who used to cut themselves a piece of snow-white cake now finds the confection more likely to resemble sliced rainbow". "It's the young folks," Joseph Lambeth. Chicago, explained at a convention of the Associated Bak- ers of America. "They want. some- thing new-and we have to give it in them." The "newest" thing, according to lnmbeth, whom felcw bakers rate as the world's No lexpert in the field of pastry ornamentation, is cakes baked to match the color of the bridal gown. When greens are cooked. n slim ciiuunsiis us new" ‘The day of white wedding cake is out," said Lmnbeth. "Now the bride wean a blue or pink gown. and she wants her cake in the aune color. Pink is most bODuIar." "The modam girl doesn't want a big flator box-like cake like the kind that thrilled her grand- mother. She wants one with a lho West curve," Inmbath said. COACH THINKS MOST - DIITIIIUTIVI Al!!!‘ 308B TEKis good tea” Uniform goodness y for over forty years YY xxx‘. vvfwv _-v,. '0 tones. It does not. A high soprano voice may be as soft well modulat- ed as a normally low one. “No womun should try to force her voice below its natural pitch. She may think this produce: an interesting result, but her listeners think only that she ls hoarse and that her vocal chords give ouf- raspingvgrating tones whenever she opens her mouth. "On the other hand, good speech is entirely up to the individual. Even education is no guarantee of correct and pleasant diction. It is the personal duly of every wrson to learn how to pronounce words correctly and to realize that suc- cess often is more dependent upon the-personality, as revealed through pleasant voice quality and unaf- fected speech than ‘on many things often considered paramount. “For instance, every girl_at the party may have her hair fixed exactly llke your. A dozen girls may be wearing white gowns very much like your own. There may be a marked similarity in counetic makeup. However, one thing no other woman at the party possibly can have is a voice just like yours- Our voices and our speech are our very own. We should guard. im- prove and treasure them. There is a correct way and a. wrong way to pronounce each word in the English language. Eveiv wo- man who cares about the appear- ance she makes should learn the right way. THE SEASONE BLUES Blues are most prominent- in purplish or medium shades. This second group is the traditional be- coming blue of spring. Individual shades cornflower blue, Pervenche blue, Chinese blue grayish blue. linen blue, midnight and purple blues, dark and light navy. Those that are decidedly on the lavender cast include: Patina violet. Russian lilac, mauve. BARBERS OF LONG AGO HAD "FUSSY" JOBS Kenneth Macgilivcry writes to The Toronto Globe of a barber he interviewed, who had plied his trade for a quarter of a century. Barber McSayre destroys some ill- usion but his remarks will fill most wives with glee: “McSayre celebrated his semi- centenary of barberlng in Toronto by turning back the clock to the faraway days in the 1880's, when he opened hi; first shop in the now defunct Eight i-lotcl on Church Street. ' The gentlemen who came in here‘ arrived in their carriages, fussed. and fumed at every clip of the scis- sors, glared and peered into two or three arrangements of mirrors to make sure they looked pretty from all angles, and then often came back in five minutes because I had left one or two hairs too long. A “And the work you had to do over them was terrific, compared to the rapid clippcr-anli-comb job on the man today. Why. they wanted their hair trimmed just so and parted in their own way, and their oustaches waxed or curled and fluffed. and their beards trim- med to a T. "And then hell tell you of your own contemporaries, in trousers, who fell asleep while the barber does his job, and hardly glance m, the results." Blind’ Date Romance How a “blind dale" m her into marriage with one of bachelors 4-fill All/lorningSmiile EVERY MAN T0 ml OWN TRADE The minister of the Old Kirk ask- ed a fisherman if he knew the First Commandment. “Aye, but that's a teaser," said the fisherman. . “Wellmio you know the Second Commandment?" asked the minis- ter. ' "You've got me again," replied the fisherman; "but can you tell me this-how many hooks are on my fishing line?" The minister was unable to_ans- wer the question. "Well, minister." said the fisher- man, "it's like, this: every man to his trade." ' A Tomntonian, motoring through Pennsylvania, stopped to chat with a. native in a small town. This tobacco-chewing individual was a. laconic soul, but friendly. They discussed various subjects, and the Torontonlan asked-"What is the principal industry of this town?" _ The native responded-Wain‘ on relief, I guess." ‘ 771E COOK ’S CORNER APRICOT SALAD ALALAAA A qlv time. apologize for not having pie who d fighting mots of their offspring. make over the world. Drunken cocktails they have h world for them. Old women who as sophisticated. dreams. who tious married people. but are still miserable. organs are their tear ducts- People who alather performers. rowers. _ on you when the cook baby ls sick. People who has lust left movies. Filthy play - Peop m... they reply to your letter. -lng me that they have People who are never on time. dlshwater soup. Here Are a Lot of Faults That Cause Annoy- ance tc Your Friends-A Little Self-An- alysis on Your Part and Proper Cor- rective Steps Will Make You More Popular With Friends ' wméilfo’ $35.11‘ '1 fivlfihalflfiiiy“ éfilifis-fi-r-iim-ll mi-Qgirhi» asked me to dinner by M11118? husband (or wife) that we MUST have Miss Dix ~up to the house soon." People who drag me away from m! good dinner to take pot-luck in theirs. Peo- and the food are ill-assorted and indilestible and seem to have been brought in, from tho delicatessen store around the comer in B. paper bag. stead of like ladies and gentlemen. People who talk about their operatic and their . Husbands and wives m... do their their marital troubles‘ and men with wives who do not understand" them- _,___..._._ hile the Parents who hold you ignogmunlstlcl’ cone“ w" who i" 80m‘ w little pipsquea‘ who boast of how mlhy ad, and tell you how the older generation ruined the iris h l! i. to b8 t llk flapper and W“!!! 8 W ° a 9° I-lard-boiledeyouth wisth no illusions. I10 Wmmiums- “° are bored by themselves and bore everybody else- Birla who specialize in Trouble hounds who h$mservesrigthgigoil>ifliplamera who“ only mwm“ you over with flattery Particularly those who recite- Unconuentioual. people who my W“ give letters o! introduction- doing everything that they do and thinking just as Qbaccno novels- by a cryptogram that is undociphenble. gpgwg: tlo tb t o have asked m"! 1e Wm new myagimirirlwnlrcsli ‘he deoria. owl-rs who think that they can force me to buy something I don't want by ‘tell- just sold one like it to Mrs. Croesus. Otherwise it is a grand old world. "I Just told m)‘ PM"! IlflI-WIWIIWbwos-"ol world's boot wloot-i-Illwaya walks-q llavor-loeookoqploqllokypootryaqq bu“. Annular znc poo may”, groans rroua Bésl‘ for s11 your Baking’ . . ' ' \_ v1.1- til 0WD give parties where both the guest People who drink like pigs in- love affairs. Monologlsts and in public. Women who tell you relate all of the infantile 5°“- Flirts- sifairs with married mell- earth to make them hB-Wy. and then ask a favor. Child Practical lokers. Book bor- surpriae visits and drop in and you no house-cleaning and the rrleuda who insist on W“! they think. BB People who sign their letters Arguers. Main boiled potlwfl 811d Two teaspoons granulated gela- tine, 2 tablespoons cold water. l6 cup of whipping cream, half cup of mayonnaise, 2 tablespoons powder- ed sugar, 2 tablespoons orange juice, I cup apricot puree. Soak dried apricots over night and stew until tender. Rub through a sieve but do not sweeten. Soften gelatine in cold- water for flue min- utes. and dissolve over hot water. Whip cream until stlfl. Add sugar, mayonnaise and melted gelatine and blend thoroughly- Add apricot puree and orange juice. Mix well and pour into a mould. Chill or freeze as preferred. Unmould On a bed of lettuce and serve with French dressing. OYSTERS WITH ALMONDS Given a little imagination, any good cook should be able to do in- teresting things with a few oysters and mushrooms and her ordinary pantry staples. In this particular instance, we suggest both the oys- ters and mushrooms, with some al- monds to be chopped and toasted. to boot. Three major interests for a single dlsh~but worth them. I pint oysters i cup milk or diluted evaporated milk , 1% tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour i-L. teaspoon salt Few grains cayenne V. cup cooked diced mushrooms (optional) at cup chopped toasted almonds Hot tea biscuits or buttered toast Drain oysters and remove hard portion; strain liquid. Combine oys- ter liquor and milk, add oysters and heat until the edges curl; remove oysters. Melt butter and blend in the combined flour and seasonings. Slowly stir the hot liquids into the butter and flour mixture. Stir and cook until the mixture has thick- ened smoothly and no raw flavor of starch remains. Add oysters, mush- rooms and almonds and serve at once between and over buttered hot biscuits, or on hot buttered toast. Garnish with parsley. BEII’ DOLLS 11.4.- lbs. ground round steak ‘A cup soft bread crulnbs 1 6Z8 1 teaspoon salt ‘A teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons chopped onion 2 teaspoons chopped parsley 4 ta “ catsup 1-3 cup flour 4 tablespoons shortening 1% cups hot water Method: Mix the meat. well beaten egg. seasonings. o n. parsley, and catsup. Pom info rolls 1 inch thick and 2 inches long. I-Ioll well in flour and brown in the melt- ed shortening. When wall browned. add the hot water, cover closely and cook over a moderate hut for about 30 minutes. ‘him once or twice dur- ing the cooking tima- Whlli done. the water will be mostly evaporated and Just a nice, brown sauce cover the meat. ~Now if youiwill servo brown pineapple slices with this. you will nd that it not only makers very attractive plotter w and in the table but that the combination of flavors is u enticing u it is dif- ferent. , To clean iinrd akin shoes. in some ordinary whiting to b plltl and apply evenly ovu- skin. Leave for a few hours crumbs. ‘I If you have neglected them, you can be sure that your feet will "find ouW-certalnly during hot weather if not at every other time of year. How few people realise the strain to which these two members of our bodies are putl When you coma to think of it. our feet are not so very much larger than our hands, and yct they have to support the entire weight of our bodies. which, to them, must be enormous. The con- trol and manipulation of our feet are also soiiethlng to wonder at. You who have at any time been "laid up" for more than a fortnight without putting the feet w the floor must have realised. when you again tried to walk, A little of the work your feet are expected to do. With the beauty culture of feet. there has developed a pride in their appearance which has had such fax-reaching effects on their health that, though you and I may not appreciate the vanity which has prompted the interest, the results generally are u satisfactory that women are no longer afraid (or. let, us say, reluctant) to show bare feet. , Tinted Toe-nails Are Ornamental You may think it rather exotic to varnish the toe-nails. I did -but now somehow, I feel that coat- ing of varnish does add attractive- ness to a pair of feet exposed tn view at the baths of the seaside or when the nails are seen shining through sheer silk stockings worn with the open-faced sandals which so many women are so fond of now. t Suitably tinted toe-nails are, in l sense, a furnishing (or omament) of naked feet. A timid woman who would like. on holiday, to give her feet the benefit of the sea air and sunshine, but who shrinks from ex- posing them. would, after a pedi- cure and "paint up," gain suffici- ently iii confidence to bare them openly. Toe-sail; really do need "furnishing." It is really the wonderful "clean up" and massage which an part of tho treatment at a first-class foot beauty parlour which make one realise the great comfort that can b0 derived from a pIOPQPW l4- mfnlsteiod pedicure. A’ low Tips for Home Treatment For those who cannot net such treatment as 1 have mentioned, hers are a few foot tips: First, soak onafoct utatimofora minute or so in softened water. Your fa - ourito foot-bath salts up excellent- Dry the foot. Filo the nail across t0 shape, using an emery board. and remove polish ,if any. Thou-make little pads 0i‘ "llcketl" of cotton- wooi soaked in cuticle remover and apply them to each im- I-ieavothcm on while your proceed with the u} other foot. Next. tidy the cuticle of the first fool. with an orange stick. Wash tho cuticwromove wail away- gnouesnbuysspocisl mp for WIN!) tier‘ inoown too mils. I ainrl ldvbapaokiugsflnrliklofeot- NIAWOOLJ-Ifllfliihltld with a medicated ointment oovm‘ between tbs null and too, to lift the nail sway from the tender ma. m: ohunsumsomas any llllrlmne brush m. bombing ~ with sloth flibllilllllllllllltlfllllfillb CARE OF THE FEE T‘ n. very short time, the trouble will have disappeared. . For a foot massage. you can buy a special massage cream-or olive oil will work wonders. Massage it into the foot, working always to- wards the ankles. Take the foot in both hands and gently work the toes up and down, then work the ankle. It is rather difficult to ex- ercise the arch, but rolling the bot- tom of the foot on. say. a golf ball. will help instep-you may do more harm than good. ‘Getting iua of rm Delonultlea Take each-toe in hand and try gently a slight rotary movement. Much can be done to get the large toe supple and to straighten it if it is out of line. Wipe off any cream or oil and dust talcum powder on the feet. There are excellent foot appliances which can be bought to help along the work of straighten- ing thc big toe and thus reducing the also of the first joint. Such homo treatment will do much to correct swollen icQtv due to hot weather. And do not forget that one of the best of all helps is to put up the feet. If possible, lie t THE BLUE DOOR a b Y RACHEL » VMACK CIIATEB. VIII‘ Ruth did. not realize liar own ex- hausted oonditlon. When aha sank into a deep, " eamleas sleep it was not to waiken at daybreak, as she had planned, but in ponse to a knock on her door hours later- Sitting up in consternation, she cried, "Como ini" and there entered this old woman with the bent back and peering eyes. "Oh!" cried Ruth. "I meant-—-" She stopped abruptly, for, of course she could not say, “I meant to run away before you caught me!" "I was worried about you, Miss Elalne.- Are you feeling batter? And will you take your breakfast now?" Ruth thought, "Now I'm in it up in my neck!" Yet a lilting happiness mingled with her dismay. Bho would have to spend soother day here and. another night! In this situation there were blended three elements that cheered her; adventure, a little respite from her wanderings, and (most important of all) the chance of seeing once more the young man named John. "Oh, Lawsy ma!" exclaimed the old woman. “Arc you too sick to talk, Miss Elaine?" She came to the bed and put her bond on the girl's forehead. “Where do You hurt most?" Ruth laughed. "I don't hurt at all, Penny, and I'm not sick. Just tired and stiff and sort of jumbled in the head. I was so surprised to find myself lure that I couldn't answer you." » Penny said. “When your letter came Tuesday. sayin‘ you were oomln‘ to the old house for crest I didn't think you'd be followin‘ it so soon. I thought you said you'd be here in a couple of weeks. My eyes are terrible bad- I reckon I read it wrong." "Don't you even wear glasses. Penny?" asked Rut sooidingly. “they don't h lp, Miss Elaine. I think it's cataract. I'll end up by bein‘ stone blind, I'm afraid." “Oh," said Ruth, “I'm c0117!" She impulsively took the old woman's hand and held it for a moment against her chaek.- Here was another human being with troubles as deep as her own, and without the hope of youth to help her bear them. “Poor penny!" aha murmured. "Not that I can't sea to take euro of the house!" the old woman da- clnred hastily. "Oh, no!" agreed Ruth. “Did you any breakfast, Penny?" "Yes. Elaine. ‘Iherdro plenty of fresh eggs. I still keep chickens -- white lcghorns, the same la when you were l. child." "I'd. like a. couple of your white laghorn eggs. Penny," Ruth said with enthusiasm, "and l. cup of coflee. Some toast, too. if it's not too much trouble." "It's not," Penny said. "You've changed a lot, Miss ‘Elaine. y.“ never used to think whether a thing was trouble or not." She went out, shaking her head in wonder. - . After breakfast the girl amazed the old servant yet further by mm. iiig her own bed and tidying her room. "I don't want to cause you any extra WOfK," Ruth explained. “You've enough to do as it is." "I can manage the work fine," the old woman declared posi- tively. “I hope you'll tell your mother and stepfather that. if you get a chance. I don't want to be penaloned on’, not till I drop in my tracks?’ Ruth saw that the old creature had a horror of giving up her place.’ She longed to reassure her, yet she felt that such deception would he cruel in the end. As she thought of the old woman's troubles, her own schemes took second place. The impulse came to tell Penny, then and there, that she was not sntertl "Elaine." but lust a trI-mp girl who had wandered in for shelter. "Penny." she said. "I've some- thing to tell you. I'm not—" There came a knocking at the front door and Penny said, “Tell mo later. Miss Elaine. It's young John McNelll coins to ask about you. Ha carried you upstairs when you fainted last night. He was worried—" She wont hobbling down the stairs to open tho door, while tbs knocking continued, with some im- patience. Presently Penny called, "Will you coins down, Miss Elaine?" Ruth made a quick survey of herself in the mirror, added a discreet touch of lipstick and. went down. f-Ior heart was pounding with both panic and pleas w. The young‘ man was waiting at the foot of the stairs. John Mc- Neill just missed being handsome, but Ruth's eyes, in their hasty sur- vey, saw that he had the rare qual- ity of distinction. He looked up at her qulazically and Ruth thought, “He'll ‘know I'm a fake. I chant have to confess." But he said. "Good morning. Blaine." and held out his hand. She was surprised m find herself saying, "John McNellll" and putting her hand in his; ' _ I ‘rim-o was i little silence between them after they had shaken hands, but it was not an awkward silence. Penny, who was observing them l banignant owl, remarked curiously. “Do you find her much changed. Mr. John? I can't depend on m! eyes any more—" "Changed for the better," John MoNeill answered coolly. (To Be Continued.) on the bed with your feet a shade higher than your body. At any time of your, one should change shoes at least twice n. day --and, during hot weather, more frequently. REGINA YOUTH WIN! CON- T!!!‘ REGINA, Feb. 2'7. (OP) —With his replica of the Saskatchewan legislative buildings, Jim Watson. Regina youth, has been awarded first prise in a Meccano com- petition open to boys throughout the world. His model, six foot long. took six months to complain. The model, shown in Liverpool. England, was adjudged the best in carried off the lame prise with Ill electrically-driven model of a nil- way engine. ' ram sons oo anoonio ioutwl-ncnmcio u» us a. month are going blgginl in the Blshtom dfit 1m single umm ei- govern- mcnt relief campaiwhore they ib- oeive $5 per month and board. summon. ~— tor.) - mm n m,“ Spring Fashions Forr ' Home Dress-Making What an urge for nice clothes seems to course through us with spring in the air. A perfectly stunning little model is patterned for . Whether you carry it out in the favored grey wool craps as sketched or in a little poly print crepe silk. you'll love it. If you carry it out in grov- Null like coral crepe for the collar and cord. trim. Plain lilk or self print crepe are equally nice for the print frock. Again plain om» silks with crepe print trlin. is very charming for this easily made dress. Style No. 1U‘! is declined for lllll I4, IO, ll years, I0. II, and 40-min: - material with 5i 7N1! 6t 8- inch contrasting. bust. Bias 10 Nilllitll 4'4 yarbol Price of PAITB-Nlloflilin stumpsoi-ooiatcsinisyofcroii.) Wrap coin olnflllf. -———-—_C———&_flSji.-_DC—§_ MOTHERS. MIIBIITERS NO need fog womanor girls to suffer ever! month from per odic psi head- ache or a In girlhood Dr. Pierce’: up. 1m. a ¢nnnniuunnnnb