i {What u... Fan. ionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished l With Every Pattern By Anneldelle Worthington las all the little French hand-made ‘ garments. It can be made with long sleeves, gathered into narrow cut! bands of.’ the pique, or with short sleeves, with turn-back cuff: of the pique with scalloped ecigc finished W121 button- liole stitch. The generously full cut bloomers have elastic inserted through the hem at the knees and at the waistline. It's a dress that will give EXCBXfl. \ lent wear, for by making it, you can] lwell afford to purchase best. quality! Y, gingham that is tub fast and will ai- l ways retain its newness. Style No. 3222 is designed in sizes ' l, 2 and 4 years. In the 4-year sizci 1 u takes 22'. yards of 40-inch material‘ ,with “e yard of 32-inch contrasting. ' Pastel wool Jersey, cotton broad- fcloth prints, nursery-rhyme prints. _ chanibray’, linen, batlste, dotted swissp, 1 sprigged dimity, pastel crepe dc; - chine and printed sateen appropriate} Pattern price l5 cents. Bo sure to} fill in size of pattern. Address Pat-l 1 tern Department . Our Fashlcni ' Magazine is 15 cents but you may‘ order a pattern and a Fashion Magazine together for 25 cents. Green and white woven Slflihlm bloomer outfi: that is Plum“ l‘ n is smart. Front and back of dress are gath- ered iiro round yoke o! crisp while u" pique wash diminutive turn-over col-Ii 1.1:. Bosom inse: at front is cut in‘ m... 41131 "we round yoke and is ac-i h....-"n".-.....-..------.".-...- cenicd \\".'.'1 ‘ " en pearl biizoiis} snub Addres: Buttonhole s \ embroidery in! ’ "u". . "nnun". green thread on the white piqhv. "'56" " m“ st“. gives it the same interesting to"i:h _ ___._._.__._-_-_--,-_- ,V No. 3222. Size .. "nun-nun".- nun“.....----,uunnuua- Name Etiquette - Character Close-Ups I "_ ,_- Q. What is the best acknowledge- Hwls ‘ mcnc society has to an introduction? lT H» j A. “l-low do you do?" THE‘ SMfiLLl $H~ EYE F- fi R. ‘ ‘F ROM THY: ‘ ‘EY l‘: B l1‘ OW ~W\LL"»BE object? A. No; the guest should replace it. Q. When a guest and a hostess enter first? , Q- U a Bu“! break-t a dish and! score is wiped out, and everything is just as it was before. asks to replace it, should the hostess enter a room together, who should HARD TO ,3 A. The hostess should never go i first unless it is necessary for her to I lead the was’. then she should excuse t herself for doing s0. . agree/told Hints l "" Bylinberl-nbeg '4 Pupcring ‘Vhllfwlflllfd Walls itcsasyncd ‘walls satis- tne ‘Nfliis nith strong i‘ applying ‘he papar. ‘I'll; '-\.'.l make inc paper siifk l‘ ruq Bile A " fr“: l-"ii‘.‘-' \'..'.ii v'rui'.g 0i’. ..'~ colrl i'.':i‘.c.. the patina‘ away from source of hcziz. .~ Lo rib Ln cloths and keep any direct ‘flaunt-t. l..~r n!‘ Zulu] lives-inn 'l‘ai;e ' * m}: n: on: fro-n u: and m.x it tiiiilcrqioonflils of olive 0i] very iiiizvlfl, udtl l‘; spoonluis of mustard. ‘l spomlililr. of salt, 2 spoon- fuls oi \l.'l"-{.<l‘, and a little pepper. BM: the v 11cc of the egg to a stiff froth. and litzirly slir it. t 4 a» r él/fl/fllmm. vilunuafl‘“\.\\‘n§\\\i as Jimmie Jingle Says: Ring out glad hells for (‘hrhlmu cheer limo for joyous feasting‘; here. The —-Sl€Wll’l.'s BNMI- EAT on " Susar in a dry saucepan until l; , For The Cook i i CUSTARD CUPS CARAMELIZED Melt tablesp0°h granulated one |becomes a golden brown, but be l . sure you do not let it burn, Add . one pint of hot milk and a pinch of salt. Pour this over thrce well-beat- } PH 688s. Mix a teaspoon cronsthrch v with a little milk and add to the . milk mixture. Add a. teaspoon van- illa or one-half teaspoon grated nut- meg- PP“? In“! Well-greased custard CUBE. place them in a pan of ho; “m? Md 600k in a moderate oven until set. Serve cold, LQpped mm a little whlppgd cream and "d Currant Jolly, IARMOUR THAT DEFIES BULLETS ‘mfllsh Yflllcd Pre~si _ LONDON. Dec. i7.-A far reach- 1118 effect an the meanshmd mm; ods of warfare is foreshadowed by " m“ Bmhh d°V°1°l>ment. Recent armament research has brought with ..1- ir-och a new type of armour plate JfillCfi is so much hardn- m propel, m” 1° "s welsh: that it win afford "tally double the resistance and so airo protection. The new armour-plate L; mung 1"‘ ha“? a bill influence on naval warfare and ship design Bu; it L, m“ f“ "m" important for the mechan- dsations of armies, in which England ihas taken the lead, Hitherto. l4 millimetres of armour ihnve been required to keep out an ‘ordinary armour-piercing bullet. And armour more than half as mic); Wm!" is "elm-Wily to give protection iatzalnst the latest anti-tank machine ilm“ fill"? flrmourmlerrlng bullets. i711" 116W filminlly hardened armour ‘Plate which has been produccd p; ‘We ‘>7 mitlandls great armament Marvels at Missal,“ ‘menu. “E” b0 rotliy Dix of Women l’ ' Abstractly Men May Profess to Consider Us Women as Human Beings, But Actually They Think of Us as Something That Never Was on Land 0r Sea, Declares Dorothy Dix I often wonder what men really think of women. I don't meanmhot they say about women, for in speech they glorify us and erect beautiful o“- torical pedestals upon which they perch us, all dolled up in chlflons of every‘ real and imaginary virtue. Nor do I mean howqnen ~ rate women as they consider us abstractly as human beings. What I mean is just the subconscious feel- ing that men have about women that is apart from any reasoning about us. and that makes them treat us as they do. Of course, when men have portrayed their ideal of womanhood. they have always represented woman as an angel with wings. just ready to ascend to heaven, _ but in reality if you could get a composite picture of women that is in men's minds I think it would show something that never was on land or sea-a fantastic creature that is a combination of a jelly fish, a clean slate, a porous plaster, a dilated heart and a perpetual-motion machine. Of course, men will deny this assertion, but listen: What does a man like most in a woman? Complaisanee. He wants a woman to agree with him. not one who will argue with him. He wants a woman who will accept his opinions, not one who will thrust her views on him. He wants a. woman who will rub his fur the right way and jolly him along, not one that he has to exert himself to please. It is the yes-yes girls who get the men every time. A man seldom thinks oi a woman as having any individuality whatever. Nor any desire for independence. Nor any yearning for a life of her own. i That is why he can't vnderstandwhy, when he marries a girl who has spent l years fitting herself to follow some profession or occupation for which she | has a talent. and in which she is making a. brilliant success, she isn‘t willing 1.10 give it up and Just be a wife and mother. He would hate like blazes to I. give up his life work and be nothing but a husband and father, but hefeels, ;someho\v. that it is abnormal for his wife to regard her career in the same l light he does his. and it is why a man can't understand why his wife insists on having an allowance instead of coming to him for every cent she ED611115. He would feel humiliated to have to panhandle his father for his carfare, especially when he knew he had earned it a hundred times over, but he can't see why a I woman has any feeling about. rattling her tin cup like a beggar at thebreak- - f ast table every morning and having a. few dimes doled out of her. i Then there ‘is forgiveness. Men always think of women as having an i abnormal power of forgiveness. They think that they can commit any offense l against a woman and all that they have to do is tn say they are sorry and the ‘ A man will insult and abuse his wife and treat her worse than he would ; treat a dog and never even suspect that she resents his conduct. Amen will iphilander around for thirty years with other women and then, when he is cld and tired and broken, he will expect his wife to receive him back with open arms and tears of joy when he returns to the domestic fold. A man gets the shock and surprise of his life when he finds out that his wife's mem- ory doesn't automatically blot. out all recollections of his side-stepping and enablc her to keep unclimlnished trust in him, no matter how unfaithful he has been. ‘ Then there is the childlike belief that men have that a vcziirin can love any man, no matter how unattractive he is, and that once shc lovcs a man nothing can destroy her affection for him. She is lust bound to g0 0n IOViXIB him to the end of‘ the chapter because she is built. that way and. can't help it. No man is so homely, so stupid, so poverty-stricken that it keeps him from thinking that every girl he knows would llimp at the chance to marry him. because he thinks the poor things are just so sloshing over with love that they are ready to expend it on the first man who comes along. And it never crosses the mind of a husband, apparently, that his wile could get tired of him and cease to love him, and that he has to keep on his tiptocs and make himscli’ interesting and attractive of he holds her affec- tions. All the middle-aged women you know are scared to death about los- lng their husbands, and are bunting and reading up on things their husbands are interested in, and trying to keep themselves looking young and beautiful and vampy, but you don't see any husbands counting their calories, or put- ting themselves m any trouble trying to make a hit with their wives. Because they are just. sold to the idea that women are all heart and no brain, and that they love a grouchy tlghtwad Just as much as they do a fairy prince Just because it is their nature to. Then there is work. A man knows his own job, that lasts from 9 to 5. is hard labor, and that he is tired when he comes home at night and wants i-cst and recreation. He also knows that when he has to take care of the baby on Sunday he is reduced to a nervous wreck, and that when Mamie and Sadie and Tommy and Johnny are quarreilng and fighting and playing horse with the dining-room chairs it almost runs him crazy. But he considers that his wife's lob, although it lasts all the way around the clock, is mere child's play. He doesn't understand why she complains of being tied when she has nothing to do but to cook and sew and wash and scrub and baby-tend all day, nor why she finds her task dull and monotonous. nor why she craves to go out in the evening for a little amusement. And he often says to hcr: "Gosh, but you have it. easy! I wish I didn't have any- thing to do but to stay at home all the time." ft is funny, isn't it, how men think of us as being so different from them- selves‘, yet we arc all cut off the same bolt of human cloth. DOROTHY DIX. ‘ Washed ashore after burial at sea. in the interests of the speed neces~ l m; 2°45’ “ww-‘m’ Eggmmlzeefi- 3i _ r ovey, recen sary to dodge and outflank the op | Abenrch Pwuhe“. wile,‘ . posing anti-tank guns. Continental} ____ p tank design in wmrast. has tendedi German customs authorities at Ain'- towards thicker armour, even at the | llhaillgllf-‘i hi!" "Wmh: sacrifice of speed. gm‘ u d w. “use” Now. however, British tanks may i “numb: cu“ m the mt W“ bc able to combine both fast speed| 9cm 1g "gimp; a gubventjgn m and strong armour through the im- - that: an acre in allldczh; put under mensc saving of weight made pos- w] V‘ “m! w u n“ prev‘ slblc by the new plate. ‘only been ‘mud’ sacrificed to a lightening of Weight: The first of three destroyers built for the Argentine government fa ex- imrks- promises to change thg Whqirg |p:obleiri. l Refill-link the supreme importance 10f mobility. Britain's tank de=ignf ‘in recent years has tended toward‘ ‘fast and lightly-armoured mashinzs in which stoutnsa or protection win; u U to i in oypb5m|j|t§mt m, "' m" "" “FE v VA PO R Ilinldalhol Hon. John Coventry, captain of the Worcestershire cricktl. team, has been elect/ed Mayor of Worcester. Mi lady Beautiful . Iylnlaudl EYE WKINKLES A small group of clubwomen were dlscusing the delicate subject of age, “A few frankly told how many years‘ they numbered, but the majority avoided giving this confidence. “Buaff as one of the franker ones observed-y “what is the use of trying to hide your age alter all? Those tell-talc wrinkles around the eyes won't kccp any secrets for the 30 or 40 year olds. so we might as well own up." _ Whether one cares to announce‘ the number of years that one hasi lived or not is certainly a matter of \ right in observing that eye wrinkles true that these ‘wrinkles can be kept away for a good many years if one] is willing to put forth a little effort In the first place irillady needs plenty of sleep. Mother Nature is arbitrary in her demands and she who delib- erately breaks health by keeping late hours will pay the price by becoming prematurely wrinkled and old in appearance. 1n addition tn insisting on the cor- rect amount of sleep one must pay strict attention to other health rulcs l in order to keep the years at bay. lAn intelligent diet and plenty of icitcrclse in the fresh air have much ‘no do with both one's mental and j physical condition. so neither of these ' can be neglected. Besides obeying rules for health, it must bc remembered in trying to avoid eye wrinkles that the tissues about the eyes need the same sort of treatment and care that other parts of the body require - exercis- ing, cleansing, nourishment and wise use, By wise use ls meant the proper protection of the eyes them- or any defect in vision is pretty sure‘ to cause wrinkles about the eyes. I Massage ls important. Almond oil or a light oily cream may be used] ._around the cycs and across the path l oftlic eye wrinkles. minutes. then remove the excess ! creased skin during sleep. , a choice, but the speaker was quitc‘ are brutally frank. But it is also’ ' the rules of 300d! " ' selves against eye strain. Tired eyes l. l to lubricate the massage movement‘ L‘ a _ n- 41;. .. 4;- 2;. 2a,: C Jt- ‘l,- T?s~’lo f re = Literdtu AR A 1' AL~LEY’.S _ Guaranfeed Service‘ &_ Comfort With Tone “ Make Your Selections,bui§§‘Guqraniee thetQaality . sneakers‘- PmceimlE D heel). An amllent wmein require a light wdght S1041: H ul. Style No. 300V 'A Light Savicc Weigh: Hose fol Wear with the fimpwwd ' spedally adapted forgthose who mnbining satisfactory service with - silken SDI-finds a: a popular price. $1.50 w fir, S1110 N0. 300 ram: 4.: above will $1.50 and i $2.00 A very atlntive gift box (no. Mada In Auburn, N. Y. In nun from 87.00 to $8.00. Our fifth lhlp- ment has lust been reeived this fall, panned mddng stodring sous u, up ‘m... l» in m rm In aim. or brown v p ‘ I OVERSHOES A: nnul our stock contains all offitho new n in Brown 0r B1103. rlfllilll h prleo from $2.00 t» $4.50‘ m Carri-III Mt‘ a! idea: (OI Brown or Blink Velvet. n‘, Men's Ovsrahoea .................. 82-15 Boys Ovsrahoes .. Girls Over-shoe: . Children: Ovenhoee .... . SLIPPERS The dvcr popular Christmas Gift. 4 .......... 75o to 53-50 L} lg? Evcry night' give this gentle massage for sevcrni _ ~V cream and leave a thin film of cream i W ;around the eyes to smooth out the" As it al- L‘ rWBYI is easier to prevent. wrinkles "I ‘than it is tn try to. erase them. onepshould not wait. until wrin- 3 klcs appear before, beginning this ltreatment. The woman m he; lgte 20's.would be very wise if she gave her eyes this treatment every night, Make sure, however, that the mas. sage is very gentle and that’ the skin is not stretched too much lest, instead of preventing wrinkles, one! efforts be unfortunate enough to cause them. , PM?" mil-KNEE. however, has the addfli advantage ofstimulating cir- culation. JUse both hands, plflcg the fiIIBEPl-IDB directly beneath the eyes. pres! Bemly around the outer cor- ners and upwardgfollowing the cork tour of the eyes. Place the fore- 11118811 at the outer corners of the eyes, then massage under ‘the eyes toths nose and ‘over the bridge of the nose, around the eyebrows, and back again under the eyes. Frown wrinkles often appear very early, usually as a. result of defects A fimome Gougli Was Left By A Severe Cold Mn. Chas. Eldon-thaw, Harrell, P.E.I., writaz-“Bome time ago I was seiasd wfthaaeverewldlhatlefcnewitha b6 tiresome song “I? ‘W: ll. ‘Cum trylxidllorllt ‘nines, lo no a my husband no home a bottle of l Dr. Wood's i Norway 1 Pine 5mm which I canal to take at one, and before I liul taken meal does I Iotised I dingo, and whm I Md flnlalleyd bottle my eon“ y" “u. 9m”- 35f- l bottle; large family la 60s.; at all dxuggiu "d 5mg"; manufactured only by Th, 1; Kuhn c’ t%t€%t%t"é.“-4 “skis Children's l foot uneaonlaeoleo ‘I’ SNOW SHOES Women's neon . 8H0 Boy: 88-50 Ilruelllk c’ c ' v i‘ - ""-*.r- ‘fou feel new viFiiilfvitallty“, ‘l i1.» ease as because the shoe is designed to '- “string it fit the feet and relieve them of 1r this new - any strain. ‘We would be glad . ending or onhoiv you how the “Prop-r- yfoot comfort arch" shoe set: a n_ew_atandard r. t‘ "~ car value} y. SALLEY o» C0., Ltd. FASHIONABLE FOOTWEAR in vision or of nervous habits. First try to remove the cause and then make an effort to erase the vlrrfnkles. To massage the frown wrinkles. stretch the skin slightly between the eyes, smooth between the thumb end index finger of one hand, and give a rotary upward massage with the first fingers ofthe other hand. Re- peat several times. Use a light, oily cream or some special oil to lubri- catc the massags-~ ' As wrinkles appear much more quickly when the eyes themselves are tired it is a 800d idea to arranllh‘ for some real relaxation and rest. When the eyes are tired saturate .'.____T___.__. A Morning Smile l The governor of the staw was in- specting some of its institutions. When he l ached ons of the insane hospital; he received‘: message to call his oflice on an important mat- m. Not getting as quick service as he thought he should. he barked at the operator. "I guess you don't know who I am?" 00-, United, Toronto, 0m, "No." replied the operator, "but I know where you are." clean pieces of absorbent cotton with if they are not. rcstcd sufficiently. l. witch-hazel and lay them over thifyou valflfi Y0"! 9Y8! YOU W111 ill" closed lids, then lie down and relax them the bcst kind of treatment niif. completely for half an hour or more.'Wi5¢ um It is 8 good plan to hurl The eyes will be rested. strength-Wile eyesight examined at regular in- cned and noticeably brighter and tcrilals 0s that glasses may 11' the tiny mimelea around them will changed or prescribed when 11E.) be relaxed. It la the contraction of 955M)’. these tiny muscles that‘ causes the' —-——- eye wrinkles to become, deeply etched. T°'"°"'|’°" — BQIUlI-sllllflll-"ll! Answered. _ Hurry! Hurry! Now ls the time lo order your Cii-‘stma; Ugh and Plllfy- Not forgetting our hlah quality bread. We are making deliveries ‘dill! from now until Christmas. McINNIS ‘BAKERY PHONE NO. 470 l?