.‘.I Y ntgi... n=..»_ An exclusive sports dress of dark green tweed of diagonal weave. it buttgns-down-the-front with clr- , tor-front. The narrow belt indicates. the fashionable raised waistline.‘ ‘rhere arellnset | kets at each side. er front with diagonal ‘outline ac-l muted by button trim. I The m... interesting detail ls the‘ i- Sngerle note in deep turn-over collar and turn-back ilared cuffs of white i pique. _ / 1 Style Ne. 2906 can be had in sizes '5 l2, l4, l6, ll. ‘J0 years. 30. 38 inches bust, It is very simple to make. You must include it in your new ward- , Realm liialaiul-iirashionosze Are who... Dressrnaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington robe for it is Just the type of dress one needs so much for all-day occa- sions. Navy blue crepe silk with collar and culls o! white crepe silk is chic end an ad anced idea for Bprlng for street. Purple wool crepe with collar and cufls oi eggshell silk is ultra-new and smart. Feather-weight oolen in belg! and brown, with brown bone buttons. piping and suede belt, with collar and cuffs oi beige fallle silk crepe is Jaunty. _ Wool jersey, tlat silk crepe, printed silk crepe,.csnton crepe sud rayon , novelty crepe smartly appropriate. Pattern price l5 cents. Be sure t! iill in size oi‘ pattern. Address Pat- tern lT-"rtrnent. Our Fashion Magazine is l5 cents, but you may order a pattern and a Fashion Magazine together ior 25 cents. no. 2906. sine .......-.............. "nuns-u".-...------ssasansnov Name nan-s“...- . . . . . . t-ssosvseellleilel ' street Address tapas-asaesalaaoassaaellloosalnae-ell guy State Etiquette‘ Ilabseealb eular skirt that dips its hem at con-l l Q. What is the difference between; a luncheon and a dinner party? ' A. The luncheo is less formal in arrangement and in the amount of good food; and the manner oi tho guests is also less formal. Q. when a man takes a girl to a dance ls he responsible for seeing . that his partner has every dance? A. Yes; he should either dance l with her or see to it that someone else does. v Q. Should one say "Thank you" to servants? A. Yes; politeness demands it. Household Hints Qlihlh cum an; it‘... 1t the rug curls_ at the edges, use this corrective. Make a thin starch; dissolve a small amount of gum ara- ble in a little water and add to the starch. and apply the solution with a paint’ brush. Let it dry. Wilted Vegetables To freshen wilted vegetables. add a slice oi lemon to a pan oi water and soak the vegetables in it for about a half hour; This is particularly effect- ive for spinach, lettuce and parsley. Moths Moths can be prevented by sprink- ling the contents oi closets and draw- ors with white cloves. Manycorislde this better than camphor or cedar. A MorningSmile I Sandy McDougall sent his son Andy to Aberdeen University to be trained for a. minister. In due time Andy graduated, was ordalnqi and appointed to a church. Before going to the scene oi his la- bors his father said to him one day: "Andy, now you are a person. I want. to give you three pieces oi.’ good ‘advice, via, one is preach long ser- mons. Scotchmen like plenty for their money; secondly. always verify your quotations. Scotehmen lovc accuracy; thirdly, lastly but not leastly. din!!! go on too much about the Devil. 1i‘ there was no Devil there would be no persons." | For The Cook CHINESE CUKES J Mix together t; cup of icing sugar and i tablespoon flour, i cup chop- ped nuts, 1 cup chopped dates, ti cup cocoanut and a pinch oi baking pow- der. Add z well-beaten cggs, a pinch oi salt and l teaspoo vanilla. Spread on shallow pan, such as a. dripping pan or a cookie pan, and bake in a moderate oven about fifteen minutes, or until brown. Remove, and cut in squares and place on waxed paper to cool. Woumawr it plc asc you to find a better kind-—- softer. safer, more comfortable? Modes: is the result: of years of research in the Johnson ls 1011119911 laboratories. As the cost is no greater than you are accustomed to Pllfifll. why not give Modes: a trial? Try one box-you are almost sure to like it. \ Modess Agstmtgttm-tfltals IAII II GAIQDA also wit: largest makers o] surgical tins-slugs. “#44!”- ebsorbru! cotton. m. Turn the rug upside down ‘ \ . ' “n” m“ ' - I ' u Woman's . Limitation D D ' __, u m“: i. m! y w . ...:...:;r.. Make-up J 3 l- ram The Great Majority of Women Will N ever Achieve Outstanding Success "sin Business, Despite the Fact that they are Just as Capable as Men, for Nature has ’ l? x-rced that to a Woman Home . -iist Always Come First, Says Dorothy Dix ‘A correspondent asks: "What, in your opinion, is the greatest bar t0 women's success in business and the pi- fcscions?‘ To which l unhesltatingly answer: Sex. Being women. And the trouble - about it is that there is nothing they can do about it. -. ho uay in which they can overcome this fatal hiindi- cap. Having been born women, they are doamul to remain women, with all of women's disabilities, pliy- siin‘, mental and social, upon their heads to the end oi tho chapter. ‘ There will always be women ln the business and pioiesslonsl world. Doubtlcss an increasing number as the years go by and as customs and conditions change. Many of them will achieve a moderate success and he able to earn comfortable incomes. A very few will be brilliantly successful. but for the great majority, of bridge of sighs over which they pass from the schoolroom to the altar. \ . 1X1 iifliflllll ‘WUl-linliil-ll-‘l and how few of them ever attain any executive 1105i- whcre they r-in demand real money for their services, they arc likely t-l bllfllli KIWI! I01‘ ii. lfld 01')‘ hilt lteinst the discrilnination that is made against ‘ women. - But the fault is Nature's rather than man's, for Nature is ever a step-l mother to women. She may give one as good a brain as a‘ man. and endow‘ her with Just as much energy and ambition and start her out with every BIO-Ives: oi lashing to the top of the ladder, then she throws a monkey- wrench into the works by saddling the poor woman with a nervous system that goes boocy Just when the goal is in sight, or with an ingrowing con- rclencc that makes her give up hei: career to take care oi’ an old mother or father, or with a heart that makes her sacrifice everything to love. - Probably the average girl and boy have about the seine amount of in- telligence. In schools and colleges the girls rate quite as well, if not better, than the boys, but as soon as they go to work the boy soon ‘outstrips the girl, and this is because the boy knows that he has begun his lifework. What he ls doing he expects to do to the end of his days, am’. so ii he has any sense at all he sets uooiit learning how to do it WC“. ilc tricsto become an e5- pert. lle looks forward to achieving fame and fortune at the end o: t lifetime of llltlliill service to his occupation. --. _ "it ‘lot so the girl. She knows her real lob in the world is being a wife and mother and she looks upon whatever other work she does as a. mere m 1 shift that is not worth taking seriously. she doesnt ezipect to stay in’; store or an olhce long. a sort o! hunting ground for a husband, and that is why she spends more time pondering her nose and making up her lipsthan she does in trying to perfect herself in the work she is supposed to do. {an Comparallvely few girls takc any real heart interest in their jobs, be- cause they leg-int them as so temporary. They don't strive ior perfection. ’l'hey merely try to get by. They haven't gone into an occupation ior the long pull, as a. man does. They haven't even considered whether they have any aptitude ior the work they have taken up. They have taken the first thing that was handy in order to make a little money to buy some finery with which to llllfl the masculine eye. 5o when you come down to brass tacks the real reason that girls. arc paid less than boys is because they are worth less. Furthermore, the reu- son that so few women ever achieve executive positions is because every cm- ployer knows that just about the time he has spent three or four years train- mg a clover ar.c snappy girl up to nil some special position, she goes oi! and gets married. i Now when a man marries he simply annexes the comforts of a home and the Joy o. having wife and children to his occupation. lie becomes oi ill'.“.‘C value to li‘ nur because. be is better taken care oi. l-lc becomes HIYE ambitious and efllclcrit because his wile is behind him, encouraging hiui and urging him on. But when a woman gets married she nearly iii ays has to choose be- tween love and he: career. She cannot have them th as n man cnn. If | she tries to keep on with her work, it imposes an intolerable burden upon ‘her because’ size has to do the work oi botifa man and a woman. I l-ler home is not a place of rest ior her. 1t is a plncc oi added toil. ilcr husband doesn't encourage her in her ambitions. He grouches because she .loesn‘t do all for him that the purely domestic woman does for her husband. I lf siie has children, they take her away from her occupation boforc they -rc born, an l after they are born she gives one lobe oi her brain to what she a doing, and the balance of her thouflits and interest to wondering it some lilrcllng liar. rcmembe l to give the baby its bottle. and scc that little ‘Johnny isn't getting his feet wet. and that Susie atc her spinach for lunch. it is folly to deny all oi these drawbacks to a woman's success in busi- ness or the professions. She is not to blame for them. But there they are, and there they will remain, because no matter how for women progress they ‘can never get beyond the limitations of their sex. And that is why women's 'greate'st sucei s: will always be in just being women. DOROTHY DIX. l in Memoriam K5. GICORGIZBEARS OI‘ IBTOUGHTON, MASS. a m‘ time since there passed ‘sway at the home oi her son. Thom- éieep 0.. Right Side, Best For Your Heart ivoineiiflbusiness and the professions will simply bc a When women look aorund and sec how many of their sex are cmploycdfl tlons in the rirm for which they work, how few even CV81‘ get to the lllllC" . In fact, she regards the commercial world as lust ' - -—- i an illness of u "s . ohd .1411 the Governor l u rtrfzfiitztfzbf: ablr. i Lax is uul." family Cumr. Lever amino Limited. Terwtl, ' Soap niakm b eppoinfleaét to ux’ is saf . . .* we use Lux for everything of babyi s ” fimaus Motemirj/ Center tells motbersl. o. i . my precious contain ‘alkali skin-theft: and ALL GAR- TS can be h)! babies rem/in"!- r nfuionsbk- ‘ IKE mos: youotmotbers, f want to give sby the very best care. "A: the famous Maternity Center in New York they told me how important it was to choose the safest, ares! soap in wash- ing baby's thin s. _ used for every! ing-clothes, diapers, blankets, bottles-even toys! “For these ex eras say that many soaps at will irritate a babfs t the Center Lux is inflame. Lu: has we harmful alkali-is absolutely safe.- ‘~‘-Theii with-Lux, there's no rubbing to mar wool fibres. leavin harsh and» shrunken. _ using Lux is that is is a truly sanitary form of soap because, unlike cake song, the same Lia: is never used twice." Give your baby's things this safe care advised by famous ex cris. Then you will be sure that none oi’ ‘s tiny garments can shirts and bands nother reason for ever chsfe or irritate his reads: skin- that eve iog lie touches is levees and fresh an safelyclnn- 9U! s a h__ _.___._.__._._.._.- _-.--.-~~ as Beam, of South Slciugliton, Mass" Mrs. George T. Bears, formerly oi Brooklyn, P. E. L. in the 85th year or her age. The deceased was a woli known resident 0i tho Island from her birth until her removal to New England. some twenty years ago. The doc-caused had since the death oi her husband. five years ago, made her home ivith her sons, Thomas, oi Qioughton and Wellington of Water- tnwn. Mars, Until quite recently the deceased lmd vnlqved average health and carried he: eighty four year; wcl] ' She loaves to sorrow for her demise. one sister, Mrs. Andrew lVLcCrae oi Charlottetown and several brothers In rliic West. seven sans and one (laughter in the Uiziitcd States, lhlflv tlrcc grandchildren, and eight grentgrandchildren. She was through out all her long and self samiliioing‘ life a. loyal member oi the Church of Scotland and of late years a wor- shipper in the Cambridge congrega- tion of that body. Funeral services at the home or her son Thomas Bears. Nelson Street. Btourhmn. Wm con- ducted b!’ her Pistol Rev. J. W. B. inwry of Cambridge. and the re- mains were laid to rest ln the Bfough ton Cemetery. MRS. WM. ll. HAMILTON. On Thursday night o! last week. thorn passed peacefully away after about three month's duration, Mrs. Wm. H. Hamilton. of Pearl Street, Cambridge. in the 76th year oi heir age. The deceased. who was the caught-el- of the late Mr. and Mrs. fifhomll E. Robenloon, Wll been at Wood Island. P. E. 1., the fasn-_ ily moving later togilfl Birch Hiiliod- iiiity, from which place she_ went to Massachusetts over fifty Wat's where she resided ever slnoe. a young woman she was h William D'Arcy of oiououtnr. to which marriage a sonmas Dori‘. Mr. D’Arey‘belng removed a few yearsaiiierward, she i? cleanse your stomach and bowels and su how good you hall Hughes Drus 90.. m. g » | usage; li you in bed all‘ night and. "l" WW" °i"'2..'.‘."".2'.‘...'.““‘..'.“’°' aim? THE‘ MAQ"\V? 6N! doeo relieves stomach "m" ‘ znwur" '.§’...’..‘i“..1'.‘i.'.'3 M elite, Adlorinka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, removing poisons QUICK youmever knew were there. Relieves AND , oohlflnation in I hoursi Let Adlerlka rkd tojilphonso W» Inrivii. use of Gloucester. to which m sens was born. namely, CAMBRIDGE. MASS. . , . 7.? Brownoi SwampscoitpMasa, and Roland E. mom oi Ossnbrldge. Mir. Brow having pasgod away. she be- cfl-lne the wife oi’ Wm. Henry Ham- llton of Cambridge, toyzlwm she was a moot devoted peltner for lush-ty- two years. Beeidea her husband and an elderly lloter, Mrs. Jane Hardy. of Lynn, Mass, Mrs. Hamilton leaves her eldest eon. Albert D'Arcy. of Semen-ville, together with two sons by the second marrliv. three grand- children. and two great grandchild- ren. The deceased has been a well known and much esteemed citizen of Clmbrldgo for about forty years, bo- lng a‘ faithful member of-the Old Scottish Kirk there, oi’ which , gatlon she was one of the original founders and in which she was a de- vout worshipper "evee since. ‘rho funeral on Sunday afternoon last was very _ , attended. the‘ser- irloe boisig‘ held in the Ohureh or Scotland, Rev. JJW. l. horny eon- ducting impressive devotional exer- olsee and giving a very oemfertlng and sympathetic eiddrel. Intllnsent Ill mode in the Cambridge Olty Oom- 0M1- SOUIIB HIGH EOIIOOL ‘rhe following is the standing oi Sour-is High lschool for January:-- Principal's Dept. Grads X,-i. lllva Lewis. 2. Jmeph Mdtllhorl S. Dtla lllllonlld. Grads lit-i. Jessie Bushoy. I. l:- nut O'Donnell. s. Iowan! saaynagin- Grade Vm,-l. Denies-d Mooney. 2. Ernest 8t. John, s, um; ping. well. g ills movie's Dept-Grade VIL-l. my Ohoverleiirlan momenta. l. frauds swam. j‘ '_ ' " . QM! WrrU-IOIIIYIOQMIsh. sous mists; loaders - w... emu v.-i. so mom. 2. m- - .. ‘~ ' fiufilfl‘! h-‘(ltifle IV --l. massive-cashless. anion (Ii-lists. l noun Mosh and sterling ,osaa ,m.-|. osaaeresiaziq-i qaeiavuiaaosniiisosgvvraisaa vim-n (UMIlDW-QBIPQWUM‘ Andrew Pryne (equal) 4. Reggie 1'0- quet. Mliss O'Donnell Dept. Grade 11,- 1. Waldron Melanie, s. unions Souls 3. Meirvyn IileDonaid. 4- Andrew Maui-ant. Grade i.-i. Goons llaquat. I- lldlth (Irouflior. 8. ‘flu-lines Castor and John McIntosh (tequal) 4. Hm- est Dugas. New hotels and apartments in Europe are being wired for televlaill so that the floors will not have to be taken up when the invention becomes practicable.