/ Daily Arguments AUNT HET . . \‘_ ' Air Trips Cure Whooperg __A e trips are the novel cure‘ - ooping cough, according to a u .in Germany, who claims to be discoverer" of the treatment. _young patients are taken for e501 an hour each at a height 0i , ast 10,000 feet. '. 4| Eniiway Porter Air Pilot v d to be the world's only railway r-air pilot, A. E. Cooper, 24, an loye at the Melton Constable 0n in England, has just! obtained iiot_'s license. He has had much ricnce with airplanes, and a bl'l{-‘ future hi aeronautics is prc- - d for him. "I guess the. biggest thrills I over gut was the time I got re- l'.',1\;n on‘ when Pu proposed an‘ tfe time l put 0h Silk slot-km s." 175T)??? ll Y CLAUDE CALLAN ' l: “Drinking Glasses of Ice inking glasses of ice have been ed in Europe. Apart from quickly v- g any liquid placed in them, - are claimed to be very hygienic. ,' lasswlll last- for about half an f: in a room of average tempera- ‘, ‘Ilwy may be had in attracsvc - .,,. A ‘ 3,000,000 Miles (In Road . S. Stephens, a guard on n. rail- ' 1n Eflfllejld. has just completed 000 miles of travel on the line.‘ »yeara he was on the Cornish- "5 “Pris, and it is estimated he has covered a round trip of ' ' lies six days a week during that “lily Worthless nephew is sch- tlmcntal- about his mother. He. crlcs whsn he thinks of the l worry he's caused her, an’ then he 111803 ahead causin’ her- a, lot H more." I ock Without Face, Hands aving neither face nor liancizs, n, at thelreenwich Observatory _ _ s correct time to a fraction of ai Animals treated 506 animals that had ‘_ nd. It is What is known a5 a, free‘ been cruelly treated. Iii 1B cases con- dulum timepiece, and has another vlrtlnns were obtained against drivers 1 ~ rwhich starts the mechanism to cf lio:..c:. and bullocks for perpetrat- g the pendulum. mg gross cruelty on their animals. I l 1 ‘ Three men were fined for abusing , Bombay Protects Animals their unfit buffaloes. There were also "o, campaign against cruelty to mnnv prosecutions for compelling . 3,15 in Bombay, India, 1,655 people: horses, bullorks and buffaloes to pull e arrested in a recent month, and, overlonclrd cunts. The society has ese use were fined. The Socictyi nlawl 40 agents in the city in the the "Prevention of Cruelty to drive to stop the crucities. u, w‘? a . Foundation- Garments combine the irresistible, appeals of style- comfort and _ value. Milady Beautiful COIFFURES THAT SHOW THE I snow Most coiffures bring the hair over the brow, partially concealing it. While this arrangement is flattering to many faces, it is not so to all. The face that is inclined to be \vide ap- pears wider and fatter when the hair is brought low over the forehead. When the forehead is lo\v, the hair should be brushed back from it. The off-tihe-face coifiure is becoming to youthful, lineless faces wilh dcll~ cate features. The woman with a large nose and permature wrinkles should cultivate waves and ringiets around her brow a d temples. Today I am descr bing two coiffures that are dressed with the hair brushed back to show the beauty of a well-formed forehead. One coiflurc is for straight hair, the other for waved hair. - COIFFURE 1 For Wavy flair Part the hair on the left side to a depth of about three inches, thus dividing it into a small left-hand section and a. large right-hand piece. Finger-wave the leit side and tuck it behind the car. Willi your comb pull the "scolding locks? tthe hair that grows in front ofthe ear) for- ward on the cheek, turning up the ends so that they form a curly fringe. Now comb the larger section of hair away from the face, and put in a few wide finger-waves. Curl the “scolding lock" in front of the right car. All the ends of hair ‘are now pushed to the back of the head where they are made into round curls a thick cluster across the back oi the head. This, arrangement is especially good for hair that is being allowed to grow and has not been shingled for several months. COIFFURE 2 For Long Straight iiair Part the hair in the middle, letting the part run well hack over the crown of the head. Brush the hair back from the face smoothly. The back hair is divided into two equal strands. Brush these smooth, cross them all the buck and fasten with wire clips. Bring the right; hand strand of hair over above the left ear and begin to braid it. Coil the braid in a. circle just in front of the ear. The lobe and rim of the ear show from a. back view. Pin securely. Treat the left; hand strand of hair in a similar way, braiding and coh- ing it over the right! ear. If a bandeau is “becoming it may be worn with the above which, in the finished coiiiure, form Urges Ber to l Money V Demonstrate Ber Value 0f a Good Wlf Usefuinu Realm -:-' Social and Personal _-':-i -.i'- Literature,- VA Fasllion Hint l W: “If the Domestic Woman Could Prove to Her Husband and Family Just What Her Work is Wor-th in Dollars and Cents She Would - Cease to be Regarded as a Scab Laborer” What is a good wife worth? According to the Bible, the price of l. good xvlfe is above rubies. In the estimation of a large number of men, a wife is barely worth her board and keep, and aha is not entitled to any money whatsoever for her labor in the home. The Department of Agriculture has been inflati- gating this phase of domestic economics and hon Just issued a bulletin showing the busy housewife how she can determine what her work is worth in dollan and cents per hour. And prove it to her husband. Stu has only to take some set task that she perform: daily, such as cooking the meals, or sweeping the house, or washing the dishes, and time herself at it. Then hire some one else to do the same chore. At the end of the two trial periods she compares the twcijotals, and by a littleludlcious subtracting and multiplying she ' , discovers Just what her time is worth. And lust how big a pay envelope she would have, if she could get it. I heartily recommend this experiment to those unfortunate sisters who are married to men who, when the subject of an allowance for Friend Wife is being discussed, always say: . "Gosh, but you've got it easy! I wish I had some good, kind person to support nie. Why, you've nothing on earth to do but keep the house and look after the children. You should have‘ to work like 1 do, then you would know what a cinch you've got." The queer part oi’ lb all is that the man honestly thinks what he says. He really believes that his wife's fourteen or flfteenhour Job is easier than his eight-hour job and that she is not. entitled to any compensation for her labor. 0f course, he concedes that it is right and nothing but: just and fair for the woman who works in-an office or a store or a factory to be paid good wages, but for the woman who works in the home, for her own family, to expect any pay envelope is ridiculous. Just nonsense. Why," she doesn't do any real work that is worth paying for. Housework and rearing children is lusu a light diversion that married women engaged in when not otherwise amusing themselves. v In uliis theory husbands are borne out by the popular attitude as to the- , value of woman's work in the home. Being a wife and mother is not rated lomong the learned professions, though it deserves to be, nor is making a jhome considered a trade, though upon a. woman's expertness in it depends lthe health, happiness and prosperity oi’ her family. Housewlfery is not listed lnmong the gainful occupations, as it certainly is not, but it is the work to ‘which ninc-tecnths of the women devote their lives without ever being re- paid in either money or thanks. Perhaps if the domestic woman would follow the suggestion of the De- pertinent. of Agriculture and prove to her husband and her family just what her work is svorth in dollars and cents, she would cease to be regarded as a scab laborer who isn't worth anything more than what she eats and a. few clothes, and she would be entitled to join the ranks of regular workers with a imlon card and union wages and union hours and double pay for overtime. The trouble would be that it would flake a. mathematician, even more ex- pert than thoszrsharks who can work out the problem of how much you owe the Government on your income tax, to figure out what would be coming to mother at! the end of the week. It wouldtake Mr. Einstein and those other geniuses who are on speaking terms with the fourth dimension to do it. To begin with, there would be the matter of overtime, for mother's day begins an hour before that of the balance of the family, and it runs along into any old time of the night, and often all night long if Johnny is reit- less, or Mary is running o. temperature, or the baby has a pain in his little insides. _. . . ' ,..,-\ ' 1.1m.” a g MODERN SPIRIT Prints seem to be definitely estab- lished, particularly in small patterns in silk crepe for all-day occasions. Style No. 424 features the pointed koye ail front of bodice with cor- responding pointed treatment in hip yoke, which tends to lengthen" its line, which makes it so suitable for woman of average full figure. Bows at wrists and neckline add import- ant touch of feminity. It's so easily made, and takes but 31.’: yards of 40- inch silk crepe forihe 36-inch size. Pattern is designed in sizes 16, l8, 20 years, 36, lib, 40 and 42 inches bust. Black dulrcrepe satin, almond green silk crepe, pervenche blue cantpn crepe and sheer tweed in tiny check pattern in greyish-blue tones, are strikingly smart for immediate wear, and later to wear without o. topcoat for about town. Chartresue green chiffon is ultra-new and smart for afternoons‘. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred), Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for ditionai for a. copy of our Spring Fashion Magazine. It's just filled with delightful stiylcs, including smart en. sernbles, and cute designs for the kiddies. Then there would be the matter of settling the part-time service, what. mother should bc paid for cooking three meals a day, how much for wash- ing the dishes; how much for making the beds and sweeping the floors; how much for scrubbing the bathroom; how much for her services as child's nurse and sick nurse; how much for sewing and patching and mending, How much for expert's shopping, bagging over butcher's meat, and tramp- lng the basement: in department stores in search of bargains; how much for‘ tutoring the children; how much for doing the laundry work; how much forg .her services as doctor, judge, teacher, religious instructor and nursery gov-T Lesson in English By W. B. Gordon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “That time is a great ways off." Say, “a great way off." 0 F T E N IMISPRONOUNCED: phlegm; pronounce flcm, e as in this pattern you enclose 10 cents ad~ . rum. “comm: or sramo Spring is here! At least, it. is here according to the calendar-having arrived yesterday. Often the fine balmy weather of spring does not come until after the calendar says it should! _ rfrk The goddess of spring weaves her magic spell. ‘ The calendar date for spring means equal daylight and darkness all over the earth. Now, as time goes on, the daylight will gain on darkness two. or three minutes a. day. In. June will come the longest daylight periods we shall have this year in the northern hemisphere. ' ' Even if spring is not always prompt in showing her pretty days, she is a welcome visitor. Sooner or later the weather will be lovely, for the open season is at hand. In olden times people spoke of the goddess of spring. In England long ago a goddess named Easter was wor- shipped as goddess of spring. The name of’ the famed feast day came from that goddess. Easter is a. feast of the springtime. {UNcLE Rays CORNER] that a. day has come when there is . Ara you making any apoclgl pl“; for the comm: open scuba? y m. member when I wal in fifth [A145, 22 years ago. and the spring wu coming on. I used to sit and dream of what I would do tho following Bum - I Md a special ulna for um summer, because I know I would spend ill in the country} Myplanwutodrou up like“ Indian. I would have my grung- mother make me an Indian bonnet of feathers, and also some garment; og red cloth fa wear instead of o, gull. I would get occuins of some 5011, and would carry a tomahawk u well as bow and arrows. To make it all seem real. I drew , pictures of myself as I thought; 1 would look when I became an Indlgn, The pictures were made mm‘ m. help of crayons in the back of m; geography.‘ ‘ I guess I had Spring fever) Tomorrow - A Little Saturday ‘hi! Etiquette" Bylhbertalfil Q. Is iii possible to plmgimu too far apart while dining? A. Yes, for one cannot be chatty when his partner is far away. Q. If ’one's name is pronounced wrong should one correct the pro- nunciation? A. Yea, if it loads to confusion. but do so in a friendly manner, never resentfully. Q. What is the proper dress for a man attending the opera, or an evening wedding? A. Full dress is required. z 1/ imam yowazmlaalfi’? l (Pl Qloriouslnhzjg/zl . ofrestfizl Sleep $11215? induced by drugs or sedatives l! neither natural nor refreshing. Oval» tine is therecognized best “night-cap” all l the world over,‘ refreshing sleep becauselit ensures sound, in a perfectly natural way. ' Ovaltina inducesuaieep by soothing and calming the frayed nerves-dire principal , r ' . cause of slceplessness. Oi equal impor- l l °°im"'°~ crncss to her children; how much for being social secretary, adviser, brake,: "fllfllL" . The Tlbbfm Elwllld D1155 through "W; (illtillgfi account and a standing excuse for all she does or doesn't do for her Qyq-FN wnggppnngg; surveyor; centre oi the coils and thus hclpl husbanty inote me m. and o“ ‘ _ _ _ hold them in place firmly. i . . simouvrzs: gaunt, thin. lankfl Iraq are busily reswriugnnd rebuilding T°"‘°"°W_B°M"Y Q"°5"°"5 This does not take iniio account the qualities for which the commercial] 1mm, enlaclaled, vmn wagmd, hum? the nerves and ctcadnl new "093 0f Amwemi‘ world pays its highest salaries-the loyalty, the devotion, the trustworthiness,‘ gry, fglmishlng, I 99°75? Yolf Wike refreshed and in- ! the putting of she's whole heart and soul and mind into pusbin! the good of, WORD STUDY: "Use a word three! vigomtedfwlth suenilth and "knit? '9 l the ilrm and making the head of it asuccess . These the wife throws in with? times and it is yours." Let us increasel any y°u "81" ihi-‘Wgh the d8)’- Ovaltina is no haphazard mixture of its, 1101‘ labor I01‘ 800d mBa-iilrv- iour vocabulary by mastering one several ingredients, but is manufactured . . 1 , h , _ THE LAND WE LOVE , ,word eac day. Todays word. EN- , l A pretty bill it would all run up. A bankrupting bill it would be if a fsILAGE; preservation of green fod- by an exclusive scientific ptocegg, oydgn, . man had to pay some woman for the services that his wife renders~him and, der by compressing it is a silo. “It is retains, unimpai ed, all ghg esscnfial d‘, ibis children every day. Yet there are plenty of men who think that the" only or recent years that ensmu h“ - memo of it; valuable ingggdignu-fl ‘woman's work in the home is worth nothing, and who never give their‘ become an important feature in b11161 11131!» {N811 ¢ggs and creamy will’: . from England's richest pastures. Eve wives, as their wages, a dollar of the money they earn. iggrlcllliyurpl Qconomy," particle of Ovallinc is easily disgngd an It is when a man's wife dies and he has to hire half o. dozen other; l assimilatuL women to do the work she did that it dawns on him that a wife's labor isf . ' . worth something after all. Thenfilhe begins looking around for another, A Morning Sfnlle wife who will work for her board d clothes and to whom he can refuseg to give an allowance. DQROTHY DIX- tance is the fact that, while you sleep, the food elements so richly supplied by 004l- By Fang; LEIGH CANADA'S NEWSPRINT Production Q. Whaii ll Canada's Newsprint . Production? _ Q. With an output in i928 -of f2,38l,000 tons of‘ newsprint, Canada's lcontribution to the production of the entire continent, including New- foundland and Mexico, is 59 per cent, the Dominion! figure being nearly a million more than that! of the United States. With the total continental production at 4,044,000 tons, being 60 per cent of the world's output, this means that Canada produces more than one-third of the newsprint of the entire world. Enjoy a. iorious night's rest i h v byfirinkilng delicious Ovaltinfi: egos“: zkas-txzzclsacscz.are» a u Naturewsweet Restorer. d m. a ind Ovaltlnliil d i E l; . soc. m. l all; fuaa-peiiu fififllgn‘; Si“; _ e_ larger tins are more ecqnq. mica! to urcbase. Ovnllin is excellent firkchiil ren as well as for own-up,‘ a e uh f mil ' . fie» bashful. 7 y“ m‘? b"""' "I wonder if Professor‘ Kidder meant anything by it " "By what?" ~ “Ho advertised a lecture on ‘Fools,’ and when I bought: a ticket it was marked ‘Admit One'." " CANADA'S xow" HoaseholdHinto By ‘Roberta HO - largo surface burns Ira fraquon .~ » treated with equal parts of Iweot oil - ~ ' , ' . . m: . it Write for fro; Nestle’: Milky Way R e c I 9e Book For 172a Cook MOWB SOFT GINGER. COOKIES and limo water. It is wall to-mix and keep n. supply on hand for emergency purposes. ovktnriii’ liven _ 5'" I AWUWIUN our) non ~ A mm . g QVANIJIRIJMZIBASSKINCIIIIIITVIST“ - i Ifwhmbakinlfoodhinaollloroio, ml°ml°~ m" “ . . - thomutlrhtlvewmamol .__ _ 11,11 neua-iummmama-hatu‘ ~ "' " " “butt: ' ‘ ‘ M» ' ENSURE! SOUND. NATURAL SLEEP.“ White-wash ‘ ' . " ‘ . -- Oolor destroyed by white-waive»: often bo roltored by being imméa; lately waned in otrong ylneeu. Blft together 1% quarts flour, one teaspoon nit. onofifeaspoon cinna- mon, 1% teaspoons soda, one tea- apooncloves, '0!!!" teaspoon all-spice, one teaspoon ginger. _,__ _ Melt one cup ‘shortening in one can boiling Stir together onecup mar and two cups ‘molasses in a mixing bowl and add to‘ it the above. Ioilcutyutlltdbflolhvlhotovon. I . __< _/_ , u i ‘ lzmuqfifihnl ' ‘ b’ Ills _ DOMIN ON CORSET O0. llfllnCmllobylhq rugby" ' o] Nomi’: Baby PM; l NCIIG’! Food Coimlflfiy 0| (toned: United. Tvmmm '. l... ,