i l ‘ ' ~ . . " .. ‘a .. ' rgdciraaiporraglgw QUAflDIAN rsonal -.:- Fashions Woman s Realm jetr/SOCIGI and Pe ‘ ‘ A .;| Fl Fashion Hint l IABOT BLOUSE A slender, blouse with sunburst‘ effect diagonal neckline wit}; (.95-; cading Jabot irill, creating youthful‘! one-sidedneas. The hipiinc is ex-' tremely snug and is cut in from earhl side oi waistline, and the upper edge! gathered and stitched to lovvop edge’ ' which gives soft blousing and swnthU ed effect. Style 1'10. 481, so entirely‘ feminine, can be had in sizes 16. 18,5 20 Ycars, 3G, 28, 40 and 42 inches beg-ti measure. It is especially fashionable, in eggshell shw dull finished crepe‘ satin and i‘! silk crepe in gay prlntl or honey-inn» shade. Flowered t-unl ion, handkerchief linen in jcnquill yellow, chartrcuse green gccnzettei crepe, printed dimity, navy blue: crepe do chine and printed raiah silk l" newly lmilortant C0lllbillZiti0nS,l Fallen‘ Drice 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. We Sllfliest thatwhcn you scn-sl roi- this pattern, you enclose 10 cents rid- ditional for a copy of our Spring. Fashion Magazine. Its Just fillecrwithl dfilllhtllll Myles, includingsmcrt en- sembles and cute designs ior the, kiddies. , . r llinardh Llnlmont for Cong-ha g Cnlda, ‘ Ho; "bold Hints ‘.111 B! lobarhlno whirring Thick cream" Whcn cream is too mic]; place m‘ dish in another dish of cold wam, "vhe" l‘ '5 filmed. Dllce in avdiah of - hot water. It will than whip Qasily, Fresh PQII ‘ T0 improve the flavor when boiling fresh peas, add a unfit c1 mint to the water. _ lllatch Economy KP?!) a small m1 mo; on m, n; range to hold burnt matches. Uao these burnt sticks m 113m, other burners instead o! using l fresh match every time, l For The Cook l __*____i Scalloped niche; Prepare the creamed foods as dir- ectcd above and put into small bsk. lug dish or ramkin, covor with but. tcred dried bread crumbs, or sprinkle with buttered bread crumb; and d“ with buttcr. Set in pan qt not on“; and place in oven to brown, $l1cclal Preparation of Sweotbroada Swcetbrcuds should be parboiled be- fore preparing ior serving; To Parboil_Put sweetbreads into cold water and allow to stand an hour then drain. Put water on in saucepan to boil, adding one teaspoonfui each salt and vinegar to a quart. when will" b11118. but in theswectbreada and allow to simmer from Ill to I0 minutes. Drain and put immediately into cold water to cool them quickly; Remove the membrane, veins and fat. They are then ready to serve in any method desired. zzl-lard and soft coms both yield to l-lolloways Corn Remover, whicl-flil entirely safe to "use, and certain and satisfactory in its action. Canada’ s Cleaning _with Bon utensils, etc. ‘ magic ingredients- Favorite Window Cleaner / Nothing is so widely used for keeping windows and mirrors crystal clear as Bon Ami Cake! Thirty- market and today more popular than ever. wally funl With a_damp cloth apply a thin ' lather of Bon Ami over the glass. When it dries, rub oFf with a cle. I ‘l, dry cloth. Gone I8 everystreakeverysmeaneveryfinger-mark. And remember Bon Ami Cake has _n partner-Bon Ami Powder. Youlliike it for cleaning bathtubs, tiling, fine kitchen Both forms have the came both blot up dirt without scratching. Never redden the hands. non AMI Lmrran. Mom“!- Powder and Cake eight years on the Ami is safe, easy- ' upon tlllirghomot o! an ovfning m‘ a ‘thundercloud and blot out every ray of is,- lud,ak,th_ef'oundl gijwnooo, key in the mo: his innocent little child- ‘maNi-iorfthe cellar. Neither be one of those graven images who spend the - it -u~. ‘F. ‘ 11ft, My} ‘you the i-oiioroi pearls and the luxuries rich women have. Be Q ~ it! wind - blamed. a Qsflalqilpq v - ‘ . . now 2W‘; Dorothy Dzx '.";..“Z.'.‘i.. Fill"! . ~ - __ Home The Privilege of Having a Home Should be Worth Having to Work for it, and the Blessing of, Being One of a Family Should Make it Easy to Show Cour- tesy and Appreciation at Home (TIN COMMANDMINTS FOB A HAPPY HOME CONTINUED.) . SIXTH-TECH BHALT NOT BEGRUDGE THE PRICE ‘THY HOMl-‘i COBTETH ‘PHIIE. . Ii you are a man, be not onaoi the tlghtwads who L1 always reminding his wiio and children about how much it costs to iced and clothe them, and who makes the first of over-y month when the bills come in such a day oi terror and wrath that. they dread it as much as they do the Judgment Day. Oi course, it takes money to support a family. Oi course, u baby is almost as much a lux- ury a! a yacht. O1 course, wives and their ilummeries, and boys and girls who have to be educate‘ and started in life do make a man dig deep in his pocket. but you have to pay for every good thing you get in this world, and they are worth the price. I _ so be a sport andpay it cheeriuily. Whether you can givs your family Rolls-Royce cars or bicycles, whether you iced them on caviar and champagne or com bee! and cabbage, do it with a good grace. Make tho generous gesture. Make your wife and children feel that you Bon- slder it a privilege to work ior them, and that your great regret is that Y0" cannot present thorn with the best of everything on a silver salver. » Half oi the wives you know choke on the bread they eat because their husband! give it so unwillingly, and the reason so many sons and daughters show to little gratitude to their fathers-fl: because they have had to badger their sport cars and Paris irwks out oi the old man. Their fathers have never give them anything ‘willingly. If you are n. woman, don't be forever whining and complaining about how hard you have to work tr: make a comfortable home, and how many sacrifices a wife and mother has to make, and how much trouble children are to take cardoi. Oi courts, housework is hard work, so is every other kind oi work. Oi course, you have to make sacrifices, that is part of your job. Q1 course. children an troublesome and need incessant care. s ~80 buck up and have the grit to hold up your end without complaining. Thvbolt dinner in flavor-less ii- your family have to listen, while they eat it. to your tale of t». about how many hours you stood over the stove cooking it. 1t comic mud your husband-fender of you roi- you to make him feel that he is making a domestic oiavo oi you and that you resent it. 1t doesn't mats yogu- childrcn idea-line ‘you when they see that you regard motherhood (s1 Marlossadd themscivesas little nuisances who interiere with your slingshot... r . ' v. _ .3 . 1 _, Jflfhcxeiordl if you wdnt a happy home, pay the price without prcmst. , . . ’ i , a . ‘ i‘ ) _ snvwm-‘mouvsnam Nor BE axmnaoy. -- '- 1i you m a. man, do not be one of thaso gloomy Guses who descend r b "ulii their prattle, his wiiofmeyes take on a look of terror, and the cat‘ wrappdd ‘in a. iliencafitiiat no one dares to break and that sends the dcfdfit itmosphoro down_ to zero. l " '- 1 i‘ , .~ ' I _ i ~ ii‘ ' are a‘ woman, do not be one oi those wives who consider it their aidted ‘ iity to lntlclpah‘ ‘trouble, and who take the pleasure out oi every iittllavegilursion by tliirnai iorebodings about automobile accidents and wrecks at act. llldjflli! inhotols. btc. Neither be one. oi those conscientiou objectors trio tbihkipvorytbing they don't want to do themselves is wrong, and, above lilijb oath cocci time wives ‘and mothers who Wet-blanket every hope jpdllapgaftioubi thin: hullbandaand children until they take the starch out oifl ly prbpotpdd naive it amp and hopeless and lifeless. The Gloom: have ll ’ l rlhuyoi-tonurei. : III-uvfl‘ I 1104,‘: -.: ~L- a. l? m ‘ ' T150211- mock‘ ifbim. thrawdway-tbe hammer. Don't remark that the soup ' ' liitlil, it and omit toisay that the balance of the dinner ' .bon*t'harp on‘tha time your wife paid $25. for a hat and keep mum _ tlmasjhl his" worn-her last year's lid when business was bad. Don't . the rditrictlons" oi "domestic life. Say something about its . .l r ' ~ ' . \ . r .13 l a ,'._ 1'. .,.»‘_~' ~»,_.t,i._"*" Iiibou, rate-a woman, don't always be complaining that your husband iiikiiii you bays .1‘ to stand between you and the world. Don't iibibast‘ your hulband uooguu he stayed out at night one time at a lodge nillitlnl. _ Praise him for beings fireside companion. Don't always be telling the children cl their-hulls. Hand them a iew compliments now and then. imtrnirrioij sriairr nor ‘normvmn wonos on my Tonoua. pom om- uutil yourwiiels dead to put on her tombstone how much you lovoduher, niri wlm o wonderful wlio she wit. It isdoubtlui n angels in ' fvoujmrs any inmost in the postmortem tributes of their husbands, but ' warm thé cookies of any livs woman's heart to know that her hus- blhd iolild liidrirpprsciated her and thought she was the greatest wire ever. l6 it'll plrtbi your daily dozen to say Ivmflhmg sweet to your wuo ovary so that it can sing? in hor soul like a happy bird all day. ' l "I ‘and remember, Mrs. Wife, that there lsnt a husband alive who just iodint out up loft WF- Why. that's the line the Vamps catch ‘em with, and Mklbwité“ no foolish enough to turn over the bait can to some other woman bills Mb; ‘literature, if you want to keep your husband eating out oi your ulna, sugar in ‘it. Tall him how great and wonderful you think he u. Ml hint how grgtcful you are ior all he does ior you if you want to turn ‘rough into a willing worker. It is mighty easy to do things for molt wnozippmiam ‘itfuna lriilhty-hlrd to do it ibl’ those who never even ' ' ‘A \ i l l opoau qtaraaiu by awn‘ yam» - . ‘ Arturo-risen any spasm arm win mo cr-rmnncn wrra alfludu noon-muss as n‘ ram: warm smmonaaa. polite. to courtooul. keapect their privacy. Defer to their opinions. unlit than m: poi-noun llborty. Dress up for the family as you would ior olimpquy. i m)» no u bumping and entertaining as you would be u you to mikb a good imprusion on a new acquaintance or sell youraoll to‘ a tuitoam, ubd you will make a. hit with mono Family. i than ton commabdlncnts and you will make home truly "Homof ‘YCQI HUNG." ' DORUTHY DIX. a niiumny n more!!!) it u relief. Administered internal’ . it will still the irritation in the throat which ‘of any good iood cream. Spread it Milady Beaulifg.’ - Iililnlfi m ... / , oouorv quasncfivs-aflawcncn Baldness in Spots Dear Miss Deeds - I have had ~ trouble with dandruf! and ring worm l on my scalp, but 1 am rid oi them ' now. My hair is in fine condition now and I brush it and massage my scalp . daily, but I have two bald spots in _ front and my hair is rather thin. will my hair grow in on these spots? My health is none too good. ass/images. . Answer-The usual treatment ior baldness in spots, called alopecia areata, includes hot oil treatments and painting the spots with, iodine. You may use costor oil or a commcr cial scalp oil mixture ior this -pur- pose. Warm oil in a double boiler or set it in a jar in a. pan of boiling water. Apply it to the scalp quite warm, but not hot enough to burn, of course. After covering the scalp with the oil, wring outga towel in hot water and wrap it around your head. Be- fore this cools replace it with trace- ond hot towel. Repeat the hotlappli- cations about fourntimes, leaving the last on until cool. "Now ‘vfaahuyour scalp and hair and dry thoroughly; ‘The iodine may ba painted cngtho bald spots with a mun mincurusn once a day for threa or tour succes- sive days. Since you have-been hav- ing scalp trouble it would boibettar for you to go, to a specialist in hair troubles u... to...‘ treatments; qrhe iodine may ‘be too irritating if ryour scalp is still sensitive, but your hair specialist could Judge how beat,to adapt the treatmen‘ to your individ- ual needs. Of course, you should-also build upyour generarhealtlcos health depends a. great deal on leo- eral physlcal fitness. ' LOIS Correcting a Dry Skin Doar Miss Reds-Please send your advice on how to correct a dryakln and suggest a facial pack also; " * MRS. cr-raanas“ on. - Answer-You forgot to inclosc a stamped, self-addressed envelope jglith your request so that I could send my reply through the mail. A very [dry skin may be the result of wrong dict or wrong local treatments. My first suggestion to you is to build up your general health. For a local treatment, cleanse your skin with a cleansing cream or oil at bedtime, then it with warm water and pure caddie soap. Rinse very thoroughly, dry. and rub in a little iood cream if your skin feels sensitive or dry. . ' ' Once a week iollow the daily cleansing treatment with a. facial pack made oi cornmeal or- barley fiourmixed with milk or rose water. Leave the soothing pack on until dry. Or you may make a. face pagk out thickly over your iace. lie down, and relax (or about hali an hour beiore wiping it ofl. LOIS Flolll Hair ' l cling to the pan and scorch. upon good It contains PQWDER. -:- Literature “Simillia” is can il~Eskimo Belle. She lives near the North Pole . v THE accompanying illustration is repro- duced irom a. snapshot taken at Grace Harbor, Ellesmere Island, in the Arctic Circle, about eight hundred miles south of the North Pole. “Simillia" is the name of the young Eskimo woman, and she is busily engaged in scrap- ing away the fat from the inside oi a seal- skin, with a young “Husky” looking on with great interest. No doubt the fat has long since reached Similliifs inside and‘the sealskin itself at this moment adorns hcr outside, for it is apt , - to be a trifle chilly up near the North Pole. ' You observe, of course, that hcr work-bench is a Magic Baking Powder shipping box. From this it may be deduced that‘ tha;}'5, people at Grace Harbor like to eat some t‘. loathsome tea biscuits andcakes and rely “ make them lighttand wholesome. The popularity of Magic Baking Powder in every part of Canada is astounding. But there is the very best reason for lt-quality. phate, Starch and Soda—the very finest grades of each, expertly blended. No alum. No adulterants or “cheapeners” of any kind, and the quality is always uniform. Naturally, people residing far from ther busy haunts of men, away up in the Arctic regions, take, no chances when they buy baking powder. They buy the kind that is absolutely rcliable—MAGIC BAKING '~ t old Magic Baking Powder to just three ingredients-Phos- l A. Ouite A Trick‘ Making Caramel h 15MB‘: rllBL H19 l low. . Gradually the melted sugar will be- The real caramel flavor is to be, come a light brown., and as soon as had only from caramelized sugar, * every grain has disappeared, pour in. which made intoasyrup. maybe kept to the pan, haii as much water as ior months. For a small quantity‘ sugar used. Either hot or cold will mods irom one cupiul of sugar a. do. Should the sugar harden into a light-weight pan may be used but sheet it will soon again dissolve, ‘ flame ls turned very i make sure it has a smooth surface. When used to ilavor custards, the J BY HANNAH WING Put the sugarin a pan over a very syrup may be stirred right inio the low. flame and keep it in constant mixture or the custard baked on it, motion as it warms through evenly In the latter case, to kepp u"; can. before beginning to melt. Then con- mel syrup and custard from flowing iinue the stirring until entirely melt- ltogether in the cup, pour in a table_ ed, being careful to keep the whole ‘$90011 01' Syrup, rest the spoon over p; mass in motion, so that it does not i119" 51°W1Y pour the custard onto the 111B Spoon, rather than directly on to Even with the greatest degree oi the suriace 0t the syrup. care, the sugar may still form into Custards put together in this way 1612c. hard lumps, when it begins 1o g EYE baked in a pan oi water just as ‘ melt. Do not let that trouble you ' "sim- “l 35° decrees r- until sot, but ; howeverfior they will melt com- When cool and turned out, the car-a; l pietely in a short time ii you will‘ just continue the stirring and make, a delicious sauce. | l Daily A rguments AUNT HET BY CLAUDE CALLAN "Pa used to have me cut his hair until he said somethln‘ hateful about my brother Ben once when I was cuttln’ close to his ear." ' Mu mel BYWP flows over them, forming 1 . Mlnard’: Llnlrnent for Chnpped llnnfll Dear Miss Leeds-I have conlider- able "down" on my face and though’ it is not dark or very noticeable, 1 would like to know ii the irequent use of cleansing cream might have a. tendency to promots the growth of the hair. Also, if washed ofl thor- ~~d toot/name and oughly, does it tend to make the skin oily? VERA. Answer-Ii you wipe of! the cream‘ well and wash your akin afterward there will be no tendency to grow hairs or promote oilincss. It is naté ural to have some "down" on the face. LOIS LEEDS. Tomorrow-Mindy‘: Anna and lamb Etiquette Iylobubho Q. Who follows dlnctly behind the usher when entering a cam. the man or the woman? ‘ I 5.. Tho man. , . . Q. What is the proper way to tat iruits ouch u apples or peaches! A. They‘ chouid be pooled with-a small uilvor fruit kniie, cut into tors, and then eaten with the mam o. When Oils ‘mvim gum roi- a brisk rubbing. Dr. Thoma: domino reduces coughing and will relieve ai- oli nods-on pom and pmotlitol iactlonl of the br-dooiim tubaa and taullhctoooufigtmmvotltne roapiratoryorglnl. m it aodbt ma. and i? onerous»: ‘Pufled Rice is Goad, too (iuakcr Pulled Rice is ex- goded rhc same way as uifccl Whcaaand is equally delicious. Full ofthe ready cncr of the finest white supreme. The wheat bran concealed. rice. Yor variety, keep both kinds in the house. set other food aside. golflnrparty what lhmild. the" but pay rm - ‘ aura, should]!!! ior meadow. tbs pour-ama- nonhuman. n. Linton l NATURAL GOODNESS N ENTIRELY DIFFERENT kind of cereal is Quaker Putfcd Wheat. Airy deiiciousness and toasted crunchincss are combined with all the nutriment of the grain you would not notice it, so delicately is it Pufling the wheat grain to eight times its natural size cooks i: thoroughly and explodes millions of food cells in each grain. Rid: storesof protein, carbohydrates and minerals are released for easy digestion. Each puEed grain has a tempting, nut-like flavour that always intrigues slugging appetite. Always have Quaker Pufied Wheat ready to serve at‘ any meal or a: any time between meals. It is relished when fickle appetites Quaker PU FFED WHEAT lem/vlirzy is retained, bu: i