s- L: i-llfqmqa vvvvvvvvvv ’s Rea I Hausa WIFE and urn Acnwnss mo" 2g? waist. you have done rediscingenerciseseccirtirneyvuw A Poor Sleepers then filled withno noise whal- have no shower hose purchase two feet of rubber tubing that will fit the faucet. It will mower as well» E French Jewelry. Fruit slwllld Gil/WI?! be vmd mm. ITAB GABDIINIB Gardenllg h a favorite recrea- llon in Hollywood. lean Mair. motion picture star, is shown tran- planflng I cluntp of monlbretias which ‘grow luxuriously in the guise of her home. suns wnnusss oupgrwbed out intoansll squares. Fry to a light brown in butter. turning just once. THE SICK DOG If the dog ins an upset stomach. stop feeding him inunodviafely and let his siounach vest for a day. The following morning give him a phy- slc and feed lightly. lt will strongman his digmive tract. N0 WHIPPIR AT HAND When there is no cream whip- per at hand the double boiler comes in very handy. Put a little‘ ice and salt in the lower section and the cream in the upper and whip with an egg beater, You will be pleased how quickly your Job will be finished. Facts and l-‘nncies Ground cinnamon mrinkled on top of the stove will remove dis- agreeable odors. That, old discarded barharbor cushion will make a grand winter bed for the dog. Have you located your nearest fire bow and do you know how to turn in an alarm? Add s few drops of glycerine to the soapsuds when the youngsters are blowing bubbles and make the bubbles particularly colorful. Fasten the snaps together be- fore mating the garment through the wringer and they will rim be smashed flat and ruined for fur- ther use. A GREAT MAN The first test of a truly great man is his hiunility. All great men not only know their business, but usually know that they know it, and are not only right in their main opinions but usually know that they are right in them; only they do not think much of themselves on that account and they see some- thing divine in every other man; Ruskin. IIEALTN MEANS. BIIANM AND HAPPINESS a bhps yon srenoireslly yet when the - day's work is done yonarefootired no enter into the god times rim ochcrwomeaen . rum , my Lydia B-hflahsggemle lRememher-zim98onrofi00 ‘women report benefi. Let i: help yonmoa -.-,FASHIONS FOR SPRING .~- Ellen Worth offers pattern of this youthful ensemble so popular for spring. Btyie No. 781 is designed for sizes 14 to it years, 36 to iii-inches bust. Size l6 requires 5 yards of N inch material with 2 yards of 39 inch lining for jacket. Price of PATTERN ill cents in or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap com carefully. m: ‘m’: Golds that drops from '- 1': "..::~.."~"*=.. c"- a ou I with Damon's. ‘in are cleared. besd- yon feel libs a new frouyourdrug saunas’ Ifltmmrlglluaio: 1 inhaler. i . . ‘Ax vvv~ 7' Y -:- Social $1 *= MRS. ADGOA NORMAN DIN Mrs. Normandin. 1367 La ancho- tlere Street, Montreal, tels in a sworn statement how her constipation and indigestion were completely relieved by Fruit-a- tives. She. explains that she is now entirely well and full of life and energy. So you can be certain of the truth of her statement, Mrs. Normandln made it under oath before a notary. She statcm-“l was sleepy and dizzy after meals. l suffered badly from indigestion. Everything l ate formed a lump in the stomach and gas which caused heartburn. I found that by takin Fruit-a-tives my indi- gestion isappeared. I am lively and energetic all day now." Copy of Mrs. “u. andln's complete sworn statement will be sent on request. Write Frulratlves Limited, Onswa, glliTu-AXZTIVES-IS: and We EVERYWHERE THE COOK'S CORNER noqvamnr srurrao sumo roramcs 6 large baked potatoes 1! tablespoons grated Roquefort cheese. 1-3 cup hot milk 2 teaspoons salt Paprika Outsalicsfromtbetcpofthe hot baked potatoes and scoop out the mealy centres. Whip these lightly with the hot milk and salt. and mix in the zestfu‘. cheese. when your conscience approves the fluffiness of the mixture, pile it back into the waiting shells and rc- turn them to the hot oven (with a gay dash of paprika on each) to achieve a crusty browned top. White Python By Mark Channing, Author oi . “King Cobra" The hunchback was now shuffling limselg towards the fissure. With a onvulsive movement he toro out .he knife. “Behold the end of thy ‘king pro- ,.hecy. Samdad Chiembai" he creamed. “I hold it! l hold it! The Iing prophecy is mine!" ,And he fell into subterranean Jres. Running stumblingly, at" times .half carrying Piers, Gray followed the lepcha up the passage. More than once, the open lamp which the tribesman was carrying shield- ed with one hand, nearly..fiiokercd out. Crossing the last of the big caverns, his elbow knocked against an angle in the rock wall, and the lamp fell and was extinguished thought they felt long and carefully n the darkness, they could not flnd it The horror of their situationwas increased by the thunderous noise of Ialllllg invisible masses of rock ‘and the grinding and groaning of the mountain. The vastness of the cavern and its towering roof caus- ed every sound to be multiplied a thousand fold. But only once did fragments fall near them, and then the wind created by a fail o; rock drove clouds of dust into their faoes and half-blinded them. At last the upper door was reach- ed. But they could not open it. The earthquake shocks had shifted the wall, and it was jammed. Frantic- ally Gray and the lepcha labored at it. Piers sitting in silent torror, lis- toning. "We'll have to wait for the next tremor, and try while it's on!" said Gray, momentarily pausing to wipe the sweat from his eyes. His plan only half-worked. ‘The door swung partly open, towards the end of the tremor, and again s Ho pushed Piers ._,_“. and in- sisted on the lepcha following. His own bulk was loo great to allow him iopass. Aloneontheothsraflsdfihhs allowed himself to think cf what wal 801118 to to him. lie must get thro —0r die. Piecing his back against the edge 0g the pivotted block 0f masonry, he dug his heels into a groove in the rock shoved with ail his I!" IPMMMIY- bill Thmmflh c5nada suggently for him to squeeze post. ill ‘It 1M0 l_ y,“ , “n; 1mm ' rlbfifllibfllh Pnfingsyliv. chaminis. was still l1 H" swinglngtomdfrmOupboarddoors were open. The dragon em- broldery had fallen a trailing glory on the littered floor. The altar of black magic was overset, statues had fallen from their niches. books and‘ rs. scattered from the pigeon- hoe book case arrangement, were lying everywhere. Great cranks yoxvutrl in the painted walls. Crossing towards the exit pass- age, Piers suddenly gave s cry of astonishment. and stooping, picked up something from the floor. "Why here's n. photograph of you, Vcollnl How on earth- did it come have?" _ v vvvvvv 11W‘ erackingbs One! g%i%i___i?’efs l‘ Dorothy Dixs Letter Boar How Can Mother Make Husband Pal Up‘ With Son? — Our Quarrels Private Affairs,” Say Parents, But Nervous Daughter Bears Pitiful Witness to Fallacy of This Argument Dear Miss Dix-I have a sou, an only child a bright, gflegflqngtg boy of n. 1 try to be mothar and father mm w him for he has a father in name only. but I find that I cannot make the grade alone. I need his father‘: help in bringing up the boy and I have not got it. y husband is a good man, nothing the matte with him except that he Just seems to have no interest in his son. Never pals with him, never speaks to him un- less it is to curse him and fuss at something he has done. never forgets any childish misde- meanor and brings it up on every occasion. never helps him with his lessons. but when his report isn’t perfect tells him he is going to whip him if it isn't better next time. He goes fish- ing sometimes twice a week, but never takes the boy along. He never shows the boy any af- fection. What can I do to make my husband realize what a wrong attitude he is taking to- ward the boy, and that if he doesnt change the 110i’ Will grow up with neither love nor res- pect for him? MRS. B. Answer: It would seem that your husband is entirely lacking in all parental instinct. If that is the case nothing can be done about it. It is a nat- ural defect and he will always feel that a child is a bore and an incumb- rance. Also, it would seem that he is Jealous of the boy. He resents your love for the little fellow and takes ‘out his spleen upon him by neB- iectlng and ill-treating him. ‘ A great many more men are Jealous of their children than we realize. Before there were children the husband was the little tin god of the house- hold. the one the wife adored, the one she catered to, the one for whom she dressed up, the one she tried to entertain and amuse, but with the advent of the first baby all this is changed. Junior has the pedestal. He is the one who is worshiped. He is the one wh ois petted and cflrwled whose comfort and well-being comes first and thereafter husband runs a bad second to the occupants of tbs nursery. I l! the man is as much a father as the woman is a mother. all is well. 1 They can worship together before the cradle. Nothing will seem more beautiful and touching to the man than his wife's devotion to the child- ren because he shares it, but if he regards all babies as brats and nuisanc- es he will resent her preferring the children before him and giving to them all her kisses and caresses. He wants to be babied himself and he sets green-eyed when he sees all the cooing and gooing and chuckln under 5;- Faslions -:- ‘ vvvvvv v w v v v vvv vvv nggqaaovsss rcoroofid-bwv~“ Another Royal Wedding _ announcement of the-be- Outstanding in her chsnn and the chin going to a little equalling, red-faced creature instead of lmself. It is often said that children draw a husband and wife closer to- gether. So it does in many cases. but in Just as many others children make a cleavage between them that begins almost in the maternity ward at the hospital. Young mothers do well to take into account this jealous of fathers of their own children and to walk wsrily when their first bflbl comes. They have reached a crisis in their married life and much oi their after L ‘ ’ , ‘ on not‘ “’ their ‘ ‘ see that their noses have been put out of joint and that they have rivals with whom they can never hope to cope successfully. Besides the Jealous father there is the indifferent father. who for some inexplicable reason never seems to feel any responsibility for his children’ or to take any intert or pleasure in them. He is the kind of man who says, “I let my wife raise the children." although he knows perfectly well i it is s Job that no woman can do properly single-handed. He may even know that his wife lacks the intelligence and the strength to do it, but it is a common thing to see a man who wouldn't trust his wife's judgment to bgliy ten shares of stock put his children's whole duture lives in her han s. . There can be no excuse for such a crime, but it brings its own Just ent. For the children who might have been fine men and women if they had had a wise and strong father to guide them and con- trol them, grow up to be wastrels and disgrace him. The children wh- would have loved him if he had ever palled with them and shown then tenderness and sympathy have no affection for him. as why should th: have for one who has never shown them love? And so his old age l: one y. have children to be grateful for to a father who hasn't even fialoen the trouble to get acquainted with them? DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-l am a most unhappy girl of 18 and my unhappi- ness is caused by the constant quarreling between my mother and father. There is never a day that there isn’t a fight between them over the silliesc miles and the most unimportant things. Then they make up and all is forgotten by them. but not by me. Their quarrels have made mo lose all interest in life. I have got so nervous that things fall from my hands and I am on the verge of a breakdown. I sometimes think of taking my own life to be out of it all. My parents say that their quarrels are be- tween them and have nothing to do with me, but they are ruining my life. What can I d0? A DAUGHTER. Answer: A great many parents besides yours think that their quarrels are their private affairs and that i1 they get any fun out oi a cst-aod-dog fight they have a right to take their peasura as they find it. So they do not hesitate to stage the most disgraceful scenes before their children. They fling open the skeleton closet and rattle every bone in it. They call each other every vile name they can lay their tongues to. ‘they accuse each other of the most atrocious crimes. They liter- ally tear each other limb from limb and hold up the gory fragments before their children's horrified eyes. Often they call upon the children to take part in the orgy, and because these quarrels do not end in murder or the divorce court they think that no harm has been done. Apparently they have no conception of the suffering‘ they are inflict- ing upon their children and the injury they are doing them. ‘Ihey do not seem to realize how it tears a c-hllds heart to tatters to see the mother and father it loves hurting each other so cruelly. They do not seem to sense the shame and degradation that fills a child's soul at having the reverence it feels for its parents torn from it and having them de- graded before it. For the charges the husband and wife bring against each other in anger and which they themselves know to be false; the ' children accept as truth. They do not seem Even to imagine how the loud voices and the shouting and the hysterics and the tears and the ex- citement prostrate a child. But any neurologist will toll you that ‘no misfortune can happen to a child worse than being brought up in a quarrelsome home, and that it is which the father and mother are continually arguing and fighting with each other. It wrecks them in body and mind and as long as they live i they suffer from the shocks that their parents gave them when they were young. One famous doctor said that-he had never had a case of nervous breakdown of a middle-aged man or woman who had been reared in a, peaceful home and by parents who got along harmoniously. ~ Inasmuch as children have to pay not only with their happiness but with their health and with the failure of their lives for their parents‘ . quarrcllng, it does seem that fathers and mothers might deny themselves ‘ the kick they get out. of fighting for the sake of the helpless 11mg omseures they have brought into the world. DOROTHY DIX. "Give it to me." Gray worriedly. "We haven't a moment to lose!" ills eyes fixed on the door in front of them, mechanically he could not tell. and took it from her. glowed a dull-red, inverted cone. Slightly to the left of it was a white light. What the white light was, he The dull red cone reached out e knew to be the glow of subter- Ashethrustitlntoths h: sneeniirssbenestb theflhimney his robmhsremmbareddhioht- pf Hell. reflectbd on steam and edlmenioringhlsoabinon -srnoke Thoy were fortune-h in having the lepcba for their guide. He had. not boasted when he said he knew thesehillsssthsveinscnthe back of his bands! He knew every path in them. Guided by him, they soon ‘reached the track w to the tableland. ‘Then began the upward climb. (To Be Oontinusd.) 1o u». PREVENAlA-‘coios a {e Fraiiow (or iu-iivr OF CUHlS You hear many fathers talk about their ungrateful children, but who: , better for one to be reared even in an orphan asylum than in a home in ‘ ' Formal mum of Princess mgrid of Sweden I ‘reauty in a family noted for many nabovek-daughlor of the‘ Crown sautiful prinoeses, the golden- Prince Gustav Adolf, to Crown mired Ingrid is 25 years old. Drlnce Frederick unset) of Denmm- r she inherits from her grandfather, k is expected at Stockholm shortly. hing Gustav. a keen love for sports. The princess, who is as. has in the ri-ought up with four brothers. the pas; frequently been mentioned as a i zlways has been fond of tennis. possible bride for the Prince of motoring, dancing andriding. Wales, and her approaching mar- T Frederick, at 36 is tall and hand- rlage to the heir to the Danish ; some. l-le is the great-nephew of the throne eliminates anothm of the ‘ late Queen Alexandria and second [ew remaining eligible foreign prln cousin of the Prince of Wales. ~‘ ‘Illu- Crown Prince had been en- gaged in i022 to Princess Olgo of Lite raid i. * n s A maiden onsome months ‘W- down u. m1... W11 8hr been bright, b soul. a118, berm a gm‘ her a pair of lombstolgieg-laltivbgyhfiil "Yllltion to carve thereon? Bus“; she had none, accomplishments 1 f This ll her epitaph; e“ "She Done u... Best She 1mg... ed How." E had never and m.....-..':.":.?.s:?“ A brief statement from the palm posted throughout Stockholm a. Z Nyal’ decree. confirmed the oil- repeated rumors of the royal m_ mance . "wllh the approval 9mm or Sweden." if ‘iii; ‘Princess Ingrid of Sweden has promised herself in marriage to Orown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Iceland. Shortly before the announcement, Hrince Frederik and his mother, Alexandr‘ of Denmark, W!“ t0 “I Palace in automobiles accompanied by Princess Ingrid and other menlbers of the Swedish mm togrlphs Princess and enthusiastic congratu- lotions. The engagement is regarded in political circles ss of unique 1m- portsnce since the marriage will serve to bind the royal families of Sweden and Denmark even more closely. ' .1‘n Denmark, King Christian. astride an Irish hunter. Iinilingly t Ilbetings of s with the official announcement. The news was welcomed by the Danish prlslicin gcnerelwhichhas beenanzioustoseeitsOrvw-nnin ssec. The date for the wedding was not w ‘ ‘ announced. Greeeeaslsterofthemidiessof __ ____ 1mm: A ‘IIQXIRIIPQIIIII IIIfl-lw \ \ WEAR MlR-O-KLEER“ HOSIERYHJSt. ‘~- MADE m CANADA Kass: - Stockings -— Gloves -’~~~- Undergarments _ sMoore ibtMcLeod Ltd. mtanendtohisbsohelorbood. MAKESIT ___—