-.< ...i.-.u‘. s‘ . -*..=L~; .‘_..‘..'.1..._-_»asr~.as.._-.. . .-.<.-..;.;.;-_.....- _. . . .5. 1 g ’iH“L-i.‘¢‘\ “_;)y';,._;.*;,1:,;..i k->- mil-g m»; ulna. ' ,-,..' Woman IVhat the Fashionable F“ _--_ Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished Wlth Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington bu". and is made with 856 yardaoi ' '8 Realm, Are Wearing , 40-inch material in the medium sine. Think oi itl You also can match your bag to your costume. It takes very little material and can easily becut from 1117mm“)! mikes alter the dress is cut out. As the quilted bag is the smartest thing o! the moment, you'll be Just thrilled with limb. No. 760. - Uhildren Cry Yorlt/ A pare vegetable preparation to re- lieve common baby ailments, ouch as constipation, colic, gea, colds. etc. It provides iour difierent designs ior lour styles o! bags. to be quilted. Trans. comes in blue, and may also be used ior pillow tops and table runners. ‘ ‘the dress is one-piece aflair with applied iront yoke. Plaited sections are inserted st each side oi iront below batch Dflckeis that provide all the iulness one needs ior-sports ac- tivities. It is the most simple. dress imaginable to make. The Picture Construction rules included * does the thinking ior you. Everything you'd wish to know is explained in Pictures. l Linen, cotton voile, gingham cheek, shantung. raJah silk, tub pastel silks. and silk pique chic suggestions. Pattern price 15 cents. 3e sure to iill in size o! pattern. limb. Trans. pattern cost 15 cents extra. Address Pattern Department. The New Fashion Magazine is 15 cents. but only l0 cents when ordered with a pattern. m. 3129. Size Trans. No. 760. A slum!" fir!" in film!" Yfl- ow cotton pique that is yours Just ' Nam, ' lorths making and a iew yards oi lnlwrlal- It ls absolutely periwt- a flattering combination ior‘ the much 5g”; gem-m lalked oi sun-tan complexion. style No. 812B comes in sizes l8. l8 yes-rs. 38, 88, 40 and 42 inches City Stale I . ' ' o c Household Hunts A Momlngsmtle By Ioberta u. ' _ , MISCUED ‘ Boiling semis, y ~ " Bride (starting- usual *iormula)—_ Boiling liquids jellies, or-iruits may‘ ls turned into the gl-‘lss containers without dank" oi cracklnk the glass. l the bowl o! a spoon‘ is inserted while iilling. wrinkled Bedding A young child's lender flesh will lometimes be irritated by wrinkles formed in the bed clothing. It will oiten cause him to cry until exhaust- ed or until he is removed. Thank youso much, Mr. Jones." ior your splendid present. We'll think oi you every time we eat out oi it. Guest-It's awfully nice oi you to say so-but won't it be a. little diiil- cult eating out oi a vacuum cleaner? Black Orepa To restore black crepe, hold it over the steam oi a. boiling kettle. The crepe will be like ‘new. _. A (Small Purchase .l . .l but an important g hygienic servicc‘ K43", '5' N" "4 . paw" an“ b" V’, do not think that you can build up a llwavsw." ' F”: good ngure and more shapely legs ‘hmkddmnlm " ‘flmmg: ‘image; h 8km; ‘m. until you have gained your normal ‘mafia’ m“ m‘, taken l y ‘ weight. Be sure to est plenty oi it: ‘eaa mwmkwplay “mind and “a, nourishing iood including a quart oi my um welsh desire, w: be obtained: only oomfbifi- m‘ m“ d“ ‘midis 112$? No kid's?‘ ‘ L46"? 1 eachside._ " '17 years old and weigh only am Bylloilieedl BEAUTY QUESTIONQ ANS\VERED Reducing flips and Legs i ,Dear Miss, Leeds -_ Won't you please tell me some ways to reduce my hips and legs? l". F._ 1 Answe“ I! you are overweight you will probably need to restrict your dict in addition to doing the exercises that I am going to suggest ior you. .Walklng and stair climbing are among the best and simplest exer- cises ior keeping the hips slender. Here arc a iew spgcial exercises ior yoll: (l) Sit erect with the leit leg crossed over the right knee. Stretch the leit toe and trace circles in the air with it. The motion _is_a rota- tion oi the leg at the lmee. Repeat ‘twenty times. then cross the right knee over the leit and circle with the right too. (ZYStand erect with one ioot several inches in advance" oi the other. Hold your figure tall with chest out, chin and abdomen in. Rise on‘ the toes, swinlnglng, the weight oi the lndy- ontle to the iorward loot. Now let the weight swing gback on the heel oi the loot This 1g a rocking mo ‘. g Repeat ten times. ' Now add deep knee bending the ioi-ward ._rocking_ movement. stralghteningwhe knees on the back- ward movement. Repeat ten times. (3) Lie on your back .on the floor. Swing the right leg over the leit leg, twisting the hips over to the leit as you do so. Keep the upper part oi your body flat on the floor, but roll irom the waist only. Repeat the roll- m; gndlegswinging ten times to LOIS LEEDS. Developing a Thin Figure -Dea.r_Miss LeedsV-(l) I am almost L pounds. My measuremen are: call’. l3; ankle, 1%; but. 29: waist. 11- - Social and Petrsondld"i-fl:- . ¥E3€7€Za¢ ACASTORIA . ‘ Not one day. But his wiie works ior him and scrimps and saves without Tl-lEiCl-IARLMTETOWNGUAR AN‘ wi} Dorothy Dir Letter Box Slim Chance of Happiness-What Can the Woman Do Who Has aTight-Fisted Husband ? - ' Dear Miss Dix-We hear so much about men getting ied up on their wives. Why don't they get led up on‘ the glrlin the ofilce‘ when they see every day and spend maybe eight hours with, when they really spend only about iour waking hours at _home with the wiie? " l Another thing, why does a man get mad i! his wiie buys a new dress or cost, then admire the oflice girl's clothes? Men seem. to be conceited thinifi. thillkini every yourg girl is in love and admires them; think- ing they lool: younger than they really are. Why can't a. man be a regular man and let his oilice girl , know he ls married, loves his wits. and when she hints ior him to take her out Just ignore her or hrs her? Ii she is the right kind o! girl she will not try to be sweet to a married man. _ - Do you think that two people working together _ day aitc- day are bound to" become ‘more or less at- ‘ . iached to each other? Why should a. man talk conhdcntany with .his stenographer about his business and not his wile? Why does the girl work for him for money only? I-Iow long would she work i1 he couldn't pay her? pay and she would stick to him through thick and thin. A WIFE, Answer: You have summed up the whole situation oi the man and the girl in the oflice, but you have got the wrong slant on it. You seemto think. as many other jealous wives do. that because a girl works in a man's oiIice hais bound to be in love with her and that there is inevitably s sentimental aihir between them. 0t course this does some- times happen, but it also sornetirneinhappens that a man falls in love with the girl who lives acrossths street, or the girl he meets at a party or the girl at the soda-water stand or the glrlhis wlis invites to visit, her or any girl whatever. ' - , i _ t ' There is always a. possibility oi a married man's ialling in love with a girl, but _ o! that danger you (ain't keep girls segregated and prevent the catastrophes happening now and then by locking all ot the pulckritudi- nous young maidens up in s. dark closet where men can't see them. And, as a matter oi tact- men aria in‘ no more danger-irom the girls’ in their onice than lromthe girls in society, and probably no more men iall in love with their stenographers than isll in love with the girl next door, so. I think wives are unduly" alarmed. ' Indeed, I think that a man is less inclined to iall in love with the girl who works ior him and. she with him than they would be with strangers: They sec each othlr at too close range to have much illusion about each other. They get the brunt o! each others temper and, nerves and little eo- centricities c! character and that_doesn't ulsto romantic love. Mr. Employer isn't noticing what lovely eyes his secretary has nor how beautliully the halr grows on the naps or her neck. Hebisnoflcingizhe words that she misspelledmnd how dumb she was to get that order mixed and he is bowling her out because she got irriiiteen minutes late. And ‘Miss Pothook doesn't co lslder Mr. Employer the hero oi he: girlish dreams. She thinks he is a lat, funny, tussy old thing and thanks Qod isn't- marrlcd to and she doesn't have to stand him except ‘during oflice hours. You ssk why men don't get ied up on the ‘girl in the oiflze whomlthey see every day. For Heaven's sake, lsclycarelyou under the impression that your husband and his stenographer sit up and converse ior. eilht hours a day? Most likely they dotnot even speak. a dozen words that are not im- medlately connected with the work in ‘hand and the reason he get tired o! her and want a change l! because he spent time and money b11511" ing her into her job and he doesn't. want to have to go through that with another girl. It she is any gobdat all she has the routine oi’ the ofliceat hre fingers end and the longer she stays the more valuable she is to him. And as ior why he knocks his wiis ior buying a dress and compliments the oflice girl's clothes, that's because he has to pay ior his wiie's iinery and he doesn't ior his stenographers. He would bother extravagancatoo. i! he had to settle the bill. ' 0i course the oflice girl works ior theimoney sheiieia and. she would chuck her Job ii she wasn't paid. Why not? ‘That is her way o! making a living. She has no claim on her employer's estate la his wliellss. Just remember this ior your corniort, poor, Jealous A man's oflice is the place he goes to make money, not to keeps. love tryst and the day he is chasing dollars, not skirts. ‘ ' His mind is concentrateu on his business and he has no time nor in- Exploding the Theory of the Oificc Romance.- Natural Exercise Costly, Tedious Treatments 7 It_ia possible tocombat certain gum conditions and give your teeth the exer- claelhey require by other means than the chewingpf iood. You can massage or "lnctlonlse" your gums ior several min- utes several times a day with a still tooth brush. _You can exercise the Jaws by means oi various devices, such as biting down bard a given number oi times every day upona reslstant rubber pad. You can use vanous_ preparations designed by astring- eni action to stir up the circulation and tone weak tissues. But-doesn't common sense suggest that all these methods are but substitutes tor the natural method- the Jar pleasanier, iar less troublesome, far lezdgrpenslve method-oi chewing your Just ask your dentist about this! 1i you come to him already suflcring irom the elects of lazy teeth, he has to treat your gums, oi course; But he will tell you that you mustraid his eflorts by introducing anust-be-cllewed foods into your daily I . IN fact there are many reasons wh J ct. . liutdolft think you must revert to the l pnmltlvc, rough, coarse fare of unciviiizcd man! Don't think you must entirely forc- go the, delicacies that civilized palates crave. Such heroism isn't ry. Instead, just iorm the habit of making ""7 meal, every day, include some foods that must be chewed. And be sure that they are ioods that you really enjoy chew- - lngl That's important if the good habit ls to be iaithiuily continued. There is one crisp, crunchy food that mllhons love to chew-so that they may enjoy to the full it: wonderful, nut-like flavour. ‘This food is Grape-Nuts. And in addition to the "chewy" feature oi Grape-Nuts, is a wealth oi nourishment. Dextrins, maltose and other carbohydrates for energy. Iron to enrich the blood. Phosphorus ior teeth and bones. Protein ior muscle and body-building. The im- portant vitamin-B. This is the nourish- ment value oi Grape-Nuts. The special process _by which it is prepared makes Grape-huts rcady ior easy " ' digestion easier still. foods to serve. one cent’: worth-is a helping. package. just add milk or cream. firapo r Dept. eatGn e-Nucs to enjoy "better than health. Think of it giving you five vital element! of nutrition. And in such tcmptingly-tasteful form! And then, Grape-Nuts is crirp-to urge you to chew your way to good teeth and diges- tion. And'in addition it is twice-baked to make All dais-and it's one of the least expensive Four teaspoonfuls-Jess than comes ready to serve from the wax-wrapped Made in Canada SEND FOR FREE TRIAL PACKAGES Address: Canadian Postum Company, Ltd, 7 , Sterling Tower, Toronto 2, Ont. - l?» -~.->.:.alz$§l-Snasalz-ll ~ ,_-_ .5“. 2-5:.‘ s‘- == y you should u Grape-Nuts =Nuts and you have a passing attraction ior him, but his affection ior you_is not‘ strong enough to make him want to bind himseli to you ior llic. How little respect this man has ior you he shows when he says that, when he gets ready to merry he will tell you. 122s idea is that perhaps some day he will throw the hsndkerchiei to you like the grand Ifilrk used to do to the woman who was the favorite oi the hour and he knows you will scramble to! get it. Not much chance for happiness ior the wiie when the husband‘ adopts that attitude toward her. He will always consider that she should‘ be grateful to him ior having condescended to marry her, The man who is really in love with a woman is’ eager to marry her. He‘ is hurrying on the wedding day. l-le is willing to take risks to get her. So} you can Judge your fiance's state oi aiiectlon by his apathy. I could weep at the iolly oi girls who cannot see that all the barriers thatl surround marriage have been built ior their protection and that when they‘, their honor they throw away their real chance ior happiness in llie. , DOROTHY DIX. j olooooou Dear MlssDix-I have been married ilve years and my husband and I get along Just fine and we never quarrel except about one thing. He never will give me a cent oi money oi my own. Ii I ask him ior things he will buy them for me. but if I only had $3 a week oi my own, Just ior little things likelcmbroidery floss andmaterial to sew on I would be so happy. I work hard and am a good h: usekeep and cook and my husbanJ ls well-to-do. ' L. M. Answer: » Ii $3 a week would make you happy your husband deserves the Meanest Man's Medal ior not giving it to you. Why, you earn that over many times by doing your cooking and washing and cleaning and scrubbing and sewing and all the other labor it takes to keep a corniortable home. as he would find‘ out ii he tried to hire a servant to take your place. I! your husband is such a tlghtwad that he Will not even give you $3 a week to spend ior the little things you need, why don't you go out, and get‘ yourseli a Job and work ior some man who believes that the laborer is worthy oi nei- hire? DOROTHY mx. ‘ JAMS AND JELLIES IN A JIFFY ‘apples. Other iruits can be used by lcombining them with ‘a juice rich in lpectln. or by using commercial pectin. Lock the fruit over carefully. Add a ‘small amount oi water to Juice iruits By Barbara B. Brooks Gone are the days when the kitch- 1 motoring. Etiquette ‘ By Ilobcfll Lee Q. \....Ab tie some popular lomli oi’ entertainment for young people at house parties? A. Goli, tennis, swimming, Q. Does the bridegroom buy the rings when s. double service is used? A. He buys the ring ior his bride, but she buys the one ior him. Q. Do pines cards show good form? A. Yes, ior anything but family break them down they do so at their peril and that when they throw ‘away, parties, . or hot biscuits: as a garnish or relish with meat; ior Jelly cake or Jelly Jumbles. ' l-Zcrs are recipes for tilled cookie- and jrlly muflins. Jelly Cookies l Cup butjer. l cup bTOETl sugar. '3": cups ilour. 2 cups corn flakes. 2 teaspoons baking powder. ‘s’ teaspoon salt. iécup water Jelly. . . Crezm the buter. add the sugar, and beat thoroughly. Add the ilour, which has been sited with the bak- ing powder and salt. then the water and last the corn flakes. Rail the cocky dough thin. and cut into round: Spread one round with Jelly and put a second layer on top, pressing the edges together. Bake in a moderate oven (370 c2") ior ten to twelve min- utes. ‘ a am a embarrassment yvhmtlzlllala ' Jllaxqflu 503: Super-else 75¢- Dirwiw m "=1 9&8? How can I develop my legs and 88in weight? (2) Do you advise the use of eilaxseed curling fluid when wav- us‘ the hair with combs? (a) Is it harmful to use powder and- rouge daily? (4) I have brown hair, me- dium conlblexion and BIIY 6Y0!- What shades oi powder and rouge u‘. becoming? (s) How can 1 darken my. Mu- without injuring it? _ (6) What is good (or a chaied iace? ‘ ANXIOUS SIIXIRN. Anawnv-(l) You iorgot to state your height, but l1 you are live ieet gm. you should weiglf at least lo! pounds. Your bust and waist meas- ' _ urements are not exceedingly thin. I hours each night. tion. ‘lake a moderate amount oi adercile every day. (2) Ii there is much natural wave in ithe hair a cur-line fluid ia not necessary. I: the wave islalilht the fluid will help keep “it in shape/Planned is good ior the purpose. (l) Younl llria who use “ADA €X cllnatlon to philander, and helooks upon his iemala employee Just as he does his male employes. as a means to an end.‘ Hall the time they have no personality to him. - I It is only the men who are such phlls-nderers that they would have ai- iairs with any woman who came along and who couldn't be trusted anywhere or anyhow who makes love to the girls in their ollice. That sort oi a man isn't worth worrying about. o s DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dlx—I am a young woman, 21 years old. and have been en- gaged roi- two years w a young man who is a you and a nut my iunlw- 1 am very much in love with him and he with me and he takes me every- where and lavishes beautiiul presents “P011 mo. I have a splendid 10b I114 11° is well oi! and will some day come into quite a 11110 lim-lllli- 511$ h"! ll my problem: Although this man is so dear to rne and speaks oi our marrilfl vaguely some day, he doesn't set the day and when I brooch the subJect he says that he is not ready to marry now and that I must truat him and that when he gets ready to marry he will tell mes Now this man has been and ls my lover. Do you think he woul hum! ‘he marriage propolitldh i! l should send him away or would I lose his love? SANDRA. Answer: ’ ‘ ‘ ' _ ' 1 do not think the man has the slishtest invention oi marrylns you- why should he when he does not have to suplflfi W" I114 i! i"! "P 1°!" 7°“ without the mess o! a divorce or havlnk to Ply 111mm? Whmhe l!“ ti!" 0! YOU ? -____4__ en steamed all day with boiling Jelly i-when all svailabe tabes were cover- ed wiih bottles and Jars-when the Jelly-maker herself came to the end oi this imperiect day stained, hot and ‘tired. The 1929 method is to make a iew glasses oi Jelly or Jam at a time and hide it from the iamily so that it will be ready ior the lean iruit months. Six or eight glasses oi Jelly at a time will not tire any one and made on several day's during each special iruit season will net a result which does honor to any preserve closet. curl-ants, red raspberries (slightly un- der-rlpe) grapes and apples and crab ' and cover the hard fruits, such as apples. Cook until xender and strain .hrough a Jelly bag without sqeez- ing. Do no: attempt to use more than ‘two qllBT-S oi Juice at a time. Use a ten quart kettle. Boil the Juice rap- " idly ior live minutes. add the sugar‘ and stir until it is dissolved. Usually ‘ two-thirds oi s. cup ci sugar to each ‘ cup oi Juice will give a Jelly oi the right consistency. Boil rapidly until; the Jelly test is obtained (two drops I which ilow together and sheer, irom I , the spoon.) Pour into clean, hot gles- ‘ hot parraiiln. | Jelly is served as s spread ior bread Jelly Corn-Meal biufilns l cup corn meal. 1 cup flour. ‘i tesspcon sal‘. 4 teaspoons baking pcnvix 1 cup milk. 1 =3! 2 tablespoons shortening. Jelly. Mix and slit the corn- meal. flour. salt, and baking powder. Add the milk gradually, then the weli- . beaten egg. and melted iat. Fill grease Among the best lruits ior jellies are ses. When cool and set, cover with ed muflin tins one-tourth full. put a teaspoon ci Jelly on the top oi the batter and bake in a hot oven. (40001), and- i=1" ‘ l‘- In your particular case there is no reason to put oi! the wedding, except the very excellent one that the man" doeentwant to tie lumsll! down b7 marriage. l-le ilnds 7011 ""9151! “a ahermml- l 4513mm “mww” make-up regularly usually ilnd that i I 140' their kins baco coarse and blem- skn, N"um ished ‘in a iaw ‘Jars. Build up your advise You to fly’! PW!‘ hi" In! Vllbmli ‘Tub l um‘ b" °1 i?“ m" “w . _ . -. ~ l mus I0 that you will um a nat- darker. (s) Iludls that you: um ml» 1mm you nun ra- ms sum- ,‘ Fllflffl 0f lb! N Q10‘ did Improved ‘Kdlflfi “"11; n“; rosy akin without the is dry on account oi your under- Next morning cleanse the shin with I loner endachalek Plhblelllnr ‘ "‘ a . “ aid o! cosmetics. (4) The occasional It condition. Perhaps you do cold crease, wipe it c8 and pat 9n a . 3: oevldaaeooiaanltary. u“ g1 pswder and rouge will not not eat enough butter, milk and akin tonic. I think a thin film oi t mfimur“ hurt you i! you are careful to re- cheese. Build up Your weight. Use cold cream would.» make the best 4- Ml'ml“°7°“' “g "NI-lam mo" it "f! t-Bflfvlllhl! before you cold cream to cleanse your lace It powder baaeioryour typeoi ssln. l. lflaaagllydlsjoealol. No uoplmaaat laundry. t, w p“, Ohoaae a medium shade bedtime, then wash with mild aodp a L018 LIIDI. natural skin tints. (5) I would not Olllhll. I! thd akin ieela GI‘! sitar . i. . r '1 qgwygqgndnugatomatchyourandwarmwater. snlnaa verythor- dhslerrow-‘Ita llaevelemleda. la c. n. "~45 oe~liulA 1H4‘