.1- Aw“. ~_.‘ \'\r~\. -:- Social and Pcrsotid IX1-.-'-.' ' dun us,» will at. e. Dorothy Brand Evapob easy no digest. It atan to reason the: if it’: good for baby, you, too, will find i! a wholesome milk food. Dorochyficnrldin riclnnriliioa milk in concentrated form —— nozhing elcopt weer removed. Use i: wherever milk in required. I; in eafe, convenient and economical. DOHYIIWIIIZVAPIJIIATEIL w lAMorningSmile Several enthusiasts were enjoying a round of golf. Darkness was fall- ing, and one of the players had to be sent ahead to shout the direction of the greens. l Outof the blackness in front came a voice: "Do you see the moon?" “Aye," came back the response. "Weel, that's the direction, but no‘ sae far.’ ' ’ 1.01m AND LADY ASTOR Rem wood. pianist, who plays in 25 yEARs MARRIED a Joint recital with Katherine MC- Cullucli, soprano, in Emvorth Hall PLYMOUTH, Eng1and,._;._;ne13__. on Tuesday evening Julie 23 and in Two thousand persons gathered in Hem“ Monoriill Hall. Charlorte- Guild Hall to attend the presenta- tcwn on Thursday evening Julie 25. lion qf a sllver model of Drake's Ivliss Wood it will be remembered ship “Golden Hind," to Lord and was a. pupil of William E. Fletcher Lady Astor on their silver wedding anda well known teacher of this anniversary. city previous io her going to Boston The gift was subscribed to by ' IIW llulrs also. She has stucliccl with nearly 3,000 persons of all political some of Bostons leading teachers, shades as the vivacious member of among whom is Hans Ebcll, the Parliament and her nzflsnd are Russian master pianist who was a immensely popular in Lady Astor's pupil of Rachmaninoff, Godowsky constituency, and Hoffman. She also studied with Acknowledging the presentation, GOOYQe C. Vick at the Boston Con- Lady Astor said that she looked on 5°1'\fflt011\' 0f Music from which she politics as a “grim necessity," and was graduated in the year 1929. added; Miss Wood is a thorough musician "Things outside of political life having studied advanced harmony count more with me. But I take my and other theoretical subjects with work seriously, although I never Otto Straub andAlfred H. Meyer, take myself seriously." which enublcs her to give to her she deelerel-l that; he;- gregtggf, music the understanding and in- task was to bring Great Britain and sight of the refined musician. 5352 the United States closer together. THESE NICE LINEN HAND- KERCHIEFSI GAVE BILL FOR CHRISTMAS ARE BEGINNING TO LOOK GRAY YOU OUGHT TO USE RINSO. IT WASHES LINENS GLEAMING WHITE ONE WEEK LATER MY SHIRTS LOOK GREAT THIS WEEK. DEAR I'M USING RINSO NOW. _ IT'S A MARVELLOUS HARD'WATER SOAP THAT SAVES SCRUBBING IDorot/iy Dix Letter‘. Box! Must the Wife Who Can Make More Money Than Her Husband‘ Stop Working to Please Her Relatives?- Weak ‘ Mother ‘Whoslel Children Rule er Dear Dorothy Dlx—I married at 25 after six years in business in which I was°very succesful. I had four babies in nix years so I was absolutely dependent on my husband. but he was unable to make even e ‘ plain living for us. l-le is a splendid men, with the finest character I have ever known. » He is in- telligent, unselflsh, kindly and good. Ind I love him dearly for qualities that have nothing to do with money. He is also in dustrioue and willing’ to work, but he Just lacks the aggressiveness, the ini- tiative and the push that make success. Finally, in desperation, I went back to my old Job arid found that my experience as wife and mother had increased my business facility and 1 em now making an income that any men might be proud of. We have a nice home, two cars, the children are in a fine school, we are proaperoul and my husband and I are perfectly satisfied with the arrangement and l with each other. But the members of our mutual families and our friends take the attitude that it is my overwhelming ambition which has left my husband in the backwater-a of business and that If I would give up _my work he would bestlr himself more. But I know he does the belt he can and that it. Just isn't in hlmto be a go-getter. What shall I do? ' BUSINESS WIFE. Answer: Quit listening to your meddling relatives and friends. You have done the only right and sane thing under the circumstances, and the thing that thousands of women will do in the future when we become m- telligent enough to see that the head of a family should be the one to whom God gives the brains and the power, instead of being the one who wears the breeches. We are accustomed to thinking that'every man is a. sort of financial genius and that. every women is a fool about money and needs to have pennies doled out to her, but there is nothing in fact that justifies this superstition. Not every mania a money-getter, and very often a woman the wife has better Judgment, more insight and ‘* ‘ acumen than the husband. There are many women who are better sgleemen than their husbands are. ‘Ihey have a flair for business which their hus- bands lack. All of us know cases in which a widow has taken her hus- band's moribund business and made a great success of it. Nor need we be surprised at this since heredity zigzags from lather to daughter and mother to son, and many a daughter of e shrewd busi- ness man gets his talent for money-making and could duplicate his suc- cess if she had the chance. So when the gray mare is the better horse, financially speaking, why shouldn't she help pull the load? _A,fter all, the children are her children just as much as,t_.hcy' are her husband's, and it means Just as much to her as it does to him. that they should be Properly fed. and clothed and educated. And if he can't do it and she can do it, certain- ly it is up to her to do it. y . The general idea seems to be that when a woman works it slows her husband's ambition to work, this does happen sometim , but the kind of man who would knock of! work because his wife had become a money-earner would be the sort who would lie down on the Job of sup- porting his family, anyway, and leave some relative or the ommunity Chest to do it. _ W¢ thfise soak dmhes to U59 Rm vomit?" i been S! 4 erenc like 5m . - ma loosen ‘fmgflgepqnso ro (liothcsnfigixgeessary. bgilirggcfima spotless» - e 5 - coo- clie clothes- ashing m*°*““‘7;§'_ Cu - t‘. In w mefl inso is 8'“ ,3 iecom R I 38.waShe' e as ° me so“: and easi of Lux_ ken gugelémgéTl-gmled. Toronto in" inso l . b" Washer If"! dhhwn. m w! new 5°’ ‘“ ' ‘r-flfl‘! thee BIC paclwfie‘ The if; But there are plenty of men who cannot, alone and unaided, support a family in those‘ days because they ale lazy or shiftless, but simply be- cause Nature gave them small earning capacity. They can never do the kind of work that commands a high salary. They are not those who have the vision that sees opportunity afar oiI. They have not the hunches that lead to fortune, and they are no more to be blamed for this than they are to be blamed for not having tenor voices or Greek profiles. Many a. man loves and cherishes a wife who is inefllcient, who never learns how to keep house or how to cook or how to buy shrewdiy,but who is sweet and amiable and affectionate and interesting. Why may not e woman equally love and be equally willing to support a. husband who is not a money-maker, but who ls tender and aflectionete and pleasant to live with? The old ld.\i that a. woman ruined her husband by becoming a money-earner ls silly in this modern day. Oftener than not she IIVGI the family. DORUIHY DIX. t i O i t 0/ I O Dear Miss Dix-I have a good hu sband and three children and we are sufficiently well-to-do. My problem ls my children. I have e boy of 8 and another one of .5 and a girl of 4 and they are beyond my control. They are always fighting and sometimes the boy bites hie little sister until she carries the mark for weeks. They get on my nerves so that sometimes I whip them too severely. They make my life unebareble and I have aged ten years within the last year. The children don't eat well. Would that be the cause? My children are normal and are clever and good looking. A HEARTBRDKEN MOII-IER. Answer: - Any woman who admits that children as young as yours are beyond hei- control should be ashamed of herself, because she confesses that she has used no system nor intelligence nor firmness in rearing them. Evidently you have spoiled your children from the time they were born. You have established no regular system for their eating and sleep- reason that now they defy you and behave like little sevegel. The best thing that you can do now is get a. woman who is e trained nurse for children to come and take charge of them for e couple of months. Turn them over to her completely and ahe will give them the discipline that you have been too weak to give them, and that they will take from her without q because she la a stranger. And don't interfere with her methods 1n any respect. Don't let them appeal to you. I know e. case in which a spoiled child kept its mother up half the night because it couldn't or wouldn't sleep ,a.nd made such demands upon her that she was a nervous wreck . She got one of these child special-i lets and in two nights the obstreperous youngster was sleeping the night through without disturbing any one. eating the proper food without question, and lied turned from e ter ror into a beaming cherub. It would he a fine thing for you to go awayfrom home while thin reformation is in progress. But if you-can't do that, It least give the woman a free hand. And don't undo her work ea soon u it is done.- DORUTHY DIX. O I O I O I O I ‘- Dear Miss Dix-I was in love wite a former sweetheert and! divorced my husband thinking he would divorce his wife and merry me. But he refused to do this and disappointment faced me on every hand. I have ls Just a natural-born trader. Thus are innumerable cases in which ' ing, end have never taught them to respect any laws, and that is the v llluetratedlDreumaklng lesson Furnished With . - ' Every Pattern Bu Aiimiwu Worthing sroirrnvci cuic The Jacket dress proves Itself again indispensable part of smart woman's day wardrobe. _ And this one is especially desirable ‘ cause of its wearability. It is equally appropriate for active or spectator sports. It's adorable for golf as shown in miniature view, with brief sleeves formed by the drooped shoulders. The skirt Is interestingly plaited to allow ample room for freedom. And incidentiy plaits are tremendously chic. The skirt has yoked sides and back. The bodice provides theme for smart contract in colour or fabric. The box Jacket ls f ashlonable and comfortable length. Skipper blue and ‘white crepe silk print with plain white is exceed- in combination with yellow is sturdy and excellent good teats. - Style No. 2968 may be hair in sizes 16, l8 years, 3o, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. The medium size requires 4% yards of 39-inch materiel with 1% yards of 89-inch contrasting. “ It is perfectly stunning in pale blue flat washable silk crepe with the upper part of the bodice of dusty-pink silk crepe which also appears in the Wled collar and pockets of the Jacket, lending French accent. Other lovely summery materials suited to this model are linen, cotton angora. mesh phentung, shirting silks, glnghams and linen finished cot- tons. . The Jacket may also be made of white or pastel flannel or Jersey and worn flth either silk crepe or cotton frocks. Vacation Days are here again! . 8o nearly here, at least, that it's time for you to be thinking about your Summer wardrobe. ' , Be sure to n11 in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) i Price of pattern l5 cents. go back to my home and start life over again. . Do you think my hus- band wlll take me back? M531 Answer: I don't sec why he should. I don't see why any man would want the kind of a wife you proved yourself to be, but perhaps for love of. his child he will forgive you. If he does, try to repay him by your devotion {or his mercy in you. ...__.___ PVIuzt the Fashionables are Wedfingf ingly lovely for townhlndspectator sports. For golf, brown wool Jersey ~ Ibasketa or camp. i Mill's" ~ S Plllluilliliiyl 'I'II I - *.§e ~11 I swirrs _ , PREMIUM riznzircrunrs SMELTIB- COPPER OBIS SHOW BBQ!’ FOR- 1930 ii- WASHINGTON. June 16.—A drop of 30 per cent in the output of smelter copper ores from domes- tic origins for 1930 below the 1828 level was announced by the Census Bureau of the Commerce Depart- ment recently on the i080 census. 'I'he r in 1930 was 1.394,- 389327 pounds as compared with 2,- 002,863,135 for i929. The mine pro- duction figures for i930 are not yet available. At the same time re- finery production for domestic and foreign sources- showed a corres- ponding drep of 21 per cent. _ The average price per pound for But "it aeema to me that you are being paid back mndiare getting Just about what was coming to you when you find yourself left in the Style Chats. B ALMA ARCHER. Although I've never ad a flagrant fondness for tampering * with nitroglycerin, I certainly can go for Antoine's new coiflures in a big way. " If you're sick and tirwd. nigh unto death, of being yourself my head, brunette, or wit... And Jacob, Mary and Joseph, what an opportunity for doing a bit of spying, Ihlt 18. 0f Nurse. providing one cares for a dash of spying occg- sionally u a counter entertainment, because, after all,'you'll be someone elae, you’ won't be you,‘ when you buy your new-color top piece .end you can go in for your favorite pettlroggel-y without l possibility of detection. .-Truoubled With Lar e, Itchy , Pimples. uiicura Healed. » "lwaitrcubled wiui l a ; ' and inched at tlmee, caiiii-iip :1: glfaguanfiarfi: clone and sometimes l cou d not sl oiuecount o? the imam, m mac quite a while and I am Iflereot rlmediee m they did pine. ' DOC " lll and Oiimnent and at relief in a mo?“ about e week and half l l (sum) f8» Hum Stefanluk, m as‘, wiiiiii§§§if°i'i&'§u'i,h .83., ititfeflfifmilfifi’? vifififi-fflfiflmm?” “"' ""- ~l> 4 ' ' ‘ e little 5-year-old eon who loves his father and. cries fer him I want to copper ores. during. 1830_was 13.0 I I "Summer "Suggests ' _ .Swift’s t@0Ok6d Meats WITI-Ithe approach of summer. thou. » sands of housewives find in the Swift's Cooked Meet delicacies here illustrated, (in addition to a happy relief from hot kitchens) —a delightful assortment‘ of ready-made dishes-appetizing and satisfying, as main dishes for hearty meals-or as foundations for dainty summer luncheons-end for picnic Prepared in‘ the spotless Swift‘ Kitchens, for your convenience. Swift's Cooked Meats offer a wide variety for your selection. ' Your nearest butcher or grocer has them. M wnws JELLIED PORK ‘rououa SWIFT'S PREUM BAKED HAM Swift Canadian _Co. Limited ' ~ - Clll-Z‘! Etiquette n; mum n» Q. Is it necessary for a wvmnl who is seated to rise When acknow- ledging an introduction? A. No, it is not necessary. Q. What is the best and mosi correct method of serving food? A .Food should be served fro" me left end empty plates removef from the right. Q. Should a woman removv hi! glove to shake hands? A. No. cents as compared with 17.6 for tli! previous year.