i a NUKLADEB 00MB IN ALL VAR-IITIIS AAAAAA a‘ ‘ LL‘; —I‘r\ncel Frost. (ChrHlln Seiuiee Monitor). NEW YORK-—Practically every kind of necklace is being shown and worn! They run the gamut (ran tgrightghued leather orllog col- ars, oug three rows . lit coins. Plain gold or silverm an chokers. long strands around the b4 r . to the ever pular pearls which look rsthn prim and pure beside theeo blatant pieces. Iibdlions for bracelets and label have followed the lead and 4v; grown proportionately in Silt! and ornamentct. on. VARIETY OFFERED IN BIG HANDBAGS NEW YORK — The materials used for cveralmed cowhide. felt. hich is as soft and far The moat popular designs are the hull? Doiwh W i-h draws-trim, sometimes called the parachute bag. the over-the-shonll- der tyre baa. and the Liiiifis‘& Leisure wows mlrkilismimentssilli": en or in or cakes are mixed the night be- on. Tomslndaslnallholeorizar in a coat.»ravel yarns from a straight inside seam. we re- pairs with s self-thread are most nearly invisible. ineers recently unloved scl- entlf caily that lass is some 800 times r an satin. and allikoilt 415 times snoother than Earthquake cannot yet be fore cast‘ on a scientific is. Chewing gum on an aeroplane is said to help relieve the ear mes- sure of quickly changing altitudes. “Now-it-can-be-told" lectures on war-time activities. kiciudim scien- tific developments. are scheduled for a series at one univeleity. Gloucester. Mass. is New Eng- land's pfllrlcipal fishing port on the basis o he weight of sea products landed: Boston is second and New Bedford and Provincetown third and fourth. KNEE BBEECHES postman old. old favorite. the envelope —on.l_v there's more of it now. an . Pldloiiattebdly. there will be more n . . ere is also a. clever. hybrid called the belt- lookalike the answer to NEW YORK — Knee breeches. not of satin. but of good American lcottons. tied with a bold sas about a slim waist. have trouser legs slightly slit at the sides. and present a cross between Huck film's adventuring. ume and buocaneers of B‘ those worn b the l.*:*.r:...l'.1:.l."i.j§.i. it: = ma» ii».- QQIWM“ “M” “imm olliiil-l the mountains and et iiETIlil T0 BIIILIII LIFE brink-rill! rel rvi d an W,» “.'i‘.‘§€'s'§iii.f.'iii§“i.?i2 “ST... down. After rigorous army trai too v Iiucll rlch. fatty food and too little exer- cise may lead to an overloaded system clogged with toxic waste. No wonder so many eat-service D9091! lave ado ted a favourite Bmisli remedy for fit and trim despite rich. heavy iid now take Bile Buns nightly. This gentle all-vegetable regula- tor stimulates the liver and tones up the h. Overl7l millilon bosom sold year- rgeIt-se ing iver_p s in gut: Britain. All: your druggllt today w BILE BEANSIWIhe Remedy that aha UP Nature . 56 O/EJZA PERIOD OF TEN . YEAR5 xoiwe mo FIVE Mustangs. MADAM! GN EXPLAIN Tl-MT/ E HAD D $84K . TO 77/50? W/VE! E WU AWARE ‘ii-WI’ u! YOUR HRS . RRIAGE WA5 L L? their good tidings. Nature's pegoe will flow in fi as sunshine flows hi0 trees. winds will blow 7395/ Zysfe éE/‘rl-v fir; //?£6¢WP/ Q Cook '8. Corner o+0+ooo+o< ro- ONE-EGG CAKE You will note that the batter for this cake hlu a. nice consistency. glthnugh a. trifle on the stiff side compared to the average cake bat- ter. ' 2% cups once-sifted cake flour 2% teaspoons baking powdel 14 teaspoon salt 8 tablespoons shortenink ‘A cup granulated sugar 13 cup corn syrup 1 H88. well beaten. V‘ mp m“ anilla n v - hfiiifind silt together twice the rloiir, baking powder and salt- Cream shortening and grad blend in suillr and corn syfllili well-beaten e88. B 1M" i" i‘ um“: beating well after each addition. Combine milk a-nd vunllll. Add m? dry ingredients to the CPBB-"Wd mixture. alternately with the flav- o milk. combining after eadl addition. Turn info a buttered Hid lightly; floured a-liicli square ca" pun. aka in a moderate oven. 350 degreesmbout 55 “limit”- BAISIN PIE 2 cups raisins ‘it cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons cold water 2 tablespoons butter will dlw away from-you leaves of autumn-John Muir. zssu rlrrs KNOWS nu macs I-IOILYWOOD - Luella to home for dinner. Miss Gear asked Zasu where she lived and how Q sugar. anlll (vlombihe the raisBllJ 2 cups water. and salt. cook until the raisins are tend"- “if. ‘m’ “‘°“i§“..‘..‘i’é.“f’..?5 3.52m‘; ta espoons co . the first mixture. Stir and cock until thick, then remove and 000! until thick. the nremcve from the heat and add the butter and the vani1la..Cool slightly. Pour into a pastry lined P"! ‘m3 cover with a top crust. Cut a 16W gashes in the top pastry to allow ... DIAFR. lwb Mini week. eight reads the paper’ day. Bays it "We-lave l-I m, g undly 190mg towards you. misc or any other beast of burden, lift a linger to lighten 10% Your husband. you My. W“ day. ‘Iihat gives him ‘two days work seven days a- week and P cause any mother‘ with a young no Sundays or holidays off. but woman from sun when you think of g working lnan and the domestic.» ..i. .. L . -{. i~ I» anybodyb -‘ iwiv 8S ' v . ) u . Jllilflliltiif eauwiril g hcttfi Md», endyvhanholits ‘~30 positively ""5" W“ i-dumil isadayofrestthatflcdo Ilflflyll / slifill P Ru ma: five dsyas homo‘ stnkhtlieiust eats, 101' man. -dd baby who. needs-» mlusyilouii Ivocisnutoretaivh such as he would feel for a good work but it is not enough to make him _ labor. W I! NIVflIDONI " l0 ill-Ii," cci-mliily _ _ ‘s work is never done." said ii. mouthful. the inequality (Libs-labor perfumed by t1“ ks f-ive days siweek and eliht him" a off and forty hours a week work. You ractically twenty-four hours a day- N‘ bgby l; lm-tliq job all the time. with the poet who wrote: “Man works , you marvel. why women have stood it so iongfand, why they haven't staged a ‘sit-down strike for shorter hours and for fathers to share equlllli with mothers in rearing tlic children ms can theirtum it the dish-washing and floor-scrub- bin instead of a shambles. biaybe washing-the dishes and getting hlnicr of! of Mama's neck love tokerrfor a. husband to give his could drslw money on it at the bank. "rhey would y... out limes worldwouid stop if even for a s its bottle, no meals were cooked. no beds made. laundered. nothing done that made home a place of refit down, for the whole machinery of the lngle any, no balrywss washed or given no floors swept. no shirt and comfort taking the baby out in his Pram "I"! for an hour are not a highly‘ romantic wife, but it is cue so sure that she For if a man loves his wiie,_lle tries to ease the burden that wifellood lays upon her. DEAR MISS DIX: I am a 18-year-old girl who ls very blue. I was adopted by a couple when’! wasa ll-moritb-‘old baby. They have trest- ed me well, but l want my own parents. lhpecialiy I want my own moth- er whom l love. even if I don't know who she is. l feel that she is the only one whocan ever understand me. _ Ogn you tell me how I cl.n_ find out who she is and where she is? The people I am staying with won't tell-me anything about my parents. ANSWER: I wish that something that I could say would straighten WORRIID GIRL. out your thinking and make‘ you see your situation as it really is. for, if you didwyou wouldhavesome appreciation‘ of the "' dness and good- ness or the people who adopted. you. instead of regarding them as ene- mies who have done you‘ some . Before you call your. foster-mother, who has" led and clothed and cared for you for fifteen years, "that woolen". think of all she has done for you andthfgratitude‘ you owe her and renumber- that your own mother wanted you so little she deserted you when you were a helpless babe. 0f course, the mood that prompts you to resent your foster parents is common to your time of life. Nearly all adolescent children take a morbid pleasure, wlheuever they are frustrated in doing something they want to do, in thinking that their parents are not their real parents, but that they are doorstep babies whom they picked up somewhere. And they all toy with the‘ thought of running sway and seeking these mythi- i. cal parents whom they always picture es-llzillionaires. Try to get .over this silly idea and to realize that you never can be grateful enough. to the people who took you as a nameless and nonle- less ‘baby and who have given you a mother's and a father's care. i gnu Bun- ‘ t my hlmbalid doesn't » suoift: i»... it nyuuuserunnwub" 'nmk‘a“a It: was thilimornlng, when the Radio was m ‘ cumin ( tllattl.“ a storm was o g , ' ‘later proved tc- be. but‘ 3m a)?! was nctieo awful) that Jeanie’: ‘metha- lhe ‘lining, betlisver fie- llfll Ql‘ 0 . Ell‘ . I 0' want-with {mile l. was still outdoors about my morning chores. "If a storm gas‘ tobeccme irlilgly, l. was no go I o thug nap ping. Extra wcolLto the box "hard. wood, Ellen" James from the barnyard when I had so: the handsled‘ in place beside the wood- pile in the yard. And then because a storm might last. for days, I made s great supply of kindling unwell. There was no sight. of Jeanie out of doors at the time. "Women are lliqulsife creatures" James will say at times to me. and perhaps not entirely without reason. Perhaps - t was not altogatli this charac- "erintic alone which rumpled me o leave my work liud only and slip over to Jeanie’: in. the house across the llXlBr-MEHIOPIQLCOIIIE to me of younger days and indeed I doubt. no matter‘ in, age, there is i sus- pect no absence more noticeable nor. leaving such a void as when ones mother has gone either tem. Dorarily or for all time. Jeanie was not about her pantry or kitchen. Wlilvlhe llcencefhey allow me I called up the stairs, from where I heard a faint movement. "Jeanie" I clued "I [lobe you're not up "19" ¢PY|Iilzl "N-no" she returné ed in a muffled tone “I'm b-buay making the lrlledk." I laughed, with a merriness. which I hope did "Oi betray my feelings. ‘Do you "Y will)’. M“. Ellen?" a profes- sional nian asked me once. when I oh-ed and i“all-ed" for him in g yearly ‘checkup. “Cry? I said, I wgllldnt know what a tear feels llkei l ivondeu what blt of molg. "l" dripped down my withered cheek there alone by the fool of the stairs in Jamie's-house this miimlflfl? A lonesome breath‘ of mEIIwYy-dt must have been. U O O ' I might have been onlv imsgln. lull Jennies loneliness. this morn- ing for there are occasions when I make an assertion, that James will tell nos-and notin any awed manuer-‘why. You have the great. est imagination. Ellen." Presently her weeklv wash swayed on the line and then she too went about her preparations-for the storm, which was to break in the after- noon. But a bit cf blue sky and. .i glint of sunshine came through the zreyness to mislead us with a promise oi’ fair weather to con- tinue. James himself regarding winds and sky BI-lessed “it wouldn't be muciii" and Mr. A. hauled the gear an prepared to open e stack 1°? "F! thrashing. And then, when we least expected it, the mow "me i0 but an end to all out of docr work. Jeanie hurried to rs- move the washed pieces from the "M; Mr. C. the mailman hastened home from hill. round of "paper's and letters and stamps and ‘nibucco and yeast cakes to presently reach wfe haven: Rob and the others lefcflis ihreshlnr ‘a grist from the mill went out i e road and the miller hurried up the hill; Jock gave up the wood-splitting and James closed doors and oarne to the house. The flakes fell so thickly they enclosed us in a small world of our own. l heard a neglected door close with a bang and there w" 3332.23". out to Bileiitwooil" "°“m w ma” Fidlomillm" H“ instructed Zasu. "and ask any- oven (450 gag’, @5012“; w m“. " ibod where Shirley Temple lives. “d “Q50 due F) and continue I ve next door- I've lived there era]? (1 £13’; mmugg; longer f0 years and Shirley only b“ or a u ' eight But 1 know my place-I liv Modern Etiquette Q. Wihen a girl is walking clo tion should she take? A. ‘lihe girl should walk between the two men. Q; _How long should I. csll of A. For the length o! time “w”. sary to perform the required duty, never longer. V Q. What is "'marasehino". and he: is the word proiioufilced? tilled n-oiii mic ‘legiieli m“ d“ a certain cherry. Pronounce mar-s- ake-ue. first a as in at. second a uii- Bifflltd. d l8 in rne. o as in no, prin- cipal accent on third syllable. h A4 Better Englisll 4 E o. 0.. Willilllil QAAAAAQAL ‘a u with l-hll - ev wwegieuthueed 0:1. '2. What u uic correct preamb- ls of “war”? o‘ Athaimhum 1. Whl tense‘! " e or un il the crust is nicely brown . _______ m "5541. the street with two men, what pos - i Household Scrapbook s": Only Ones After the whites of dill h!" been beaten. do not t. again h add to the oak mixture. If she? e bueaaten again. et-hc sir that ha ten s ly in to make the cake ght will be beaten out again. Fold the egg whites into the cake mixture. - Treez‘tioel Some protection must be the growing tree wh ut vmto theknivegbear cnilotner tihestiztneu . walhitlohtimeit waits" "r"- "Mir "a mewaua 1. "Th , IIIO. amoral?!‘ niflm u .2. war. o as in or. 8. w: nasal eu any wire or rogleollrourld it. lain the wire _r L... t MEN {(I!V1I (DRY Colds Mestbolaten tilted mem- II.ii. y Morning. Smig 0mm rnovs: n" s, here ,.§..'-“;.ra",: ' braces.) Jars 1 ' ‘_ unduabiaooc» or you?" . . v4 p. laflelcrm llggve youhzn THOLATUM ~ " ' - OONOLUBIDN 1s alolnf. s? o o! old Hie‘ —O-O-GO-O-QQ-Q'O§OUQQQQ OQO-OQQ-O-Q “Stranger - FPsrdon me, are you d_yn_.° lonesome I 7.. l've been here for m. What can l dc ‘ hell? VNative - "Well. e pretty sux we have. but the-tag: e is we can’: J DWI! it!“ ..'“Wli your hue d badly hurt coiiéiiialcii of the u means conclusion. . iQ.‘ How can l prevent silver from “52"fil“%£‘“'it."i.‘l.”.’.. plnialdece _Il|lPl’W@$ . was a queer sound to the fire. James hearing it thought we should have cleaned out those stove pipes when the wind continued to howl and rage about the chimney and eaves. - O l O Allflkether this has been a sort o! grey day. one which Karolyn described when I talked to her thin “"51"! by Thane as "a lonesome decided to leave the others and retire esrlv. Bo l’ came without James to thll room above the kitchen. And the sound of the wind, which‘ has reached now to a small gala, il nearer to ms here. It's on the wires and about the roover and ha: a threatening note in its gum. is entertaining. His voice and Mr. 0.’: who has come il the short-silt for a "kaylay" renal‘: me diltlnctly. e converaatzcn has to do with fertil are and gra nll in mention a Y ‘hm h. ‘u _‘ ‘ c", Lin?» and potatoes and there um». i» -~= i=0...»- iii.°i.....i“‘€i‘i..’"...‘i’..§?"i““‘i}il flight this to try to get a doctor. ,'I‘liere is s plane up Jamel calls to me to verify the fact. it being difficult to diatingui with the wind bluitering so much. , Queer the noise of it in the gale and as many a tlme' before. I vrish them safe landings. And now. I must lay aside my pen for tonight, . for If tomorrow be fine. I may have -- ‘ a nlealsantmvsiliglola to ylzfoglré 0-: y u“ “u” k so o “ a a u ‘no " i - -+-1 :§..:”.i'.1:.'.‘.$i"...‘.‘.’.“.‘:.=..'i’l‘°3i..'£ undertaking. New. will Juries ‘re- and will lie wind the clock? if not thl l will ' u t ey are, for resigning all my cares to Heaven. I'm about to ro- ‘afim Zhiilifii?‘ m Q- lgwrcerv l on iliicii roi- 1.1331." "imvlrvv-m-W — QM- lidurlnalpm ha: cetluphoeie. .' i . ' as unwell: “$.10 We?“ ' . ‘ pliable flhvy och wfliu-be‘ as‘ mo... oc-- .. y‘ member to carry Tabby to the barn i just have to remain lllllls, Ml ilfllililllilliii lA akin which is youthfully smooth and . lovelyrefiecxsperfect health. Vitamins A and C are essential no health and the \ radiant complexion which goes with it. They discourage dryness: and roughness and help akin ' Make sure of sgood supply of vitamins A and C by » ‘ ‘drinking Libby's "Gentle Press" Tomato ' Juice; an excellent source. of ihese vitamins. lt= is a grand-tasting drink sparkling with the garden-fresh flavour of tomatoes picked at their prime. i . Milt! YOII litlll! lllil ' iiyoudm’: agree that Libby's _"Genrle Frau" Tomato‘ Products -- Juice ietclllliv. Chili Sauce cad Soup-If? tile but yoifvesver tasted. ' UTF-4! . Qentla‘ Iran TQMATQ JUICE ,O|MI|O 41 a mo. mucus. o censuses. umnb o- f needles-craft; g-FOR Tl-IE ‘HOME, ~ homicidal»: