Realm -:- Social and Personal‘ -:-l-l_m Fashioned,‘ Are Wearing lust With . , aking Lesson Furnished Every " Pattern ByriAnnebellc Worthington lingerie t/ouc i a -{ bust, and is the most l imaginable to make. l h in ecru lace collar and deep burn-back curls. The doubl e circular. tiers .0! skirt sick or mother a Vegetable to take it. change in strong and _, [ydla ft “ Slendo bout iv sed Lydia E. Pinkham‘: taken the V since if l feel my me? also take Liv r Pills an a wonderful —Mr:. lama Femie, British Columbia. _t3b_ie;l3nn1ul11|nd U y "After iv baby was born l was very weak-end run-clown. l was not able to do day heavy work burl hid to be srouiid on my fee: strain rovidd too grcar and l was real all day. The two months. My ompound and I started pu should have seen the he. l am new well and ‘in good spirits. l have ltgetcble Compound ever y lacking. l l find them for constipation." Robson, Bax 693, u: fPinklanfs 1-5144” inn: Midi. .1 l f. r To clean finished add gracctui movement and width to hem, with hips slenderly flttad by wide girdle caught at center-front with buckle. The molded bodice is Illtbtl! blousod. style No. I797 is designed in sizes 16, i8 years, 86, 88, 40 and 42 inches ' dress l It la very eflective too in black transparent velvet eel! trimmed. and will answer many day time and in- icrmei evening occasions. Brinted rayon silk crepe in tweed pattern in dark red tones is very smart and so entirely wearable. Canton crepe in bottle green self trimmed is another choice for ser~ viceable wear. Anny blue crepe dc chins with col- lar and culls in eggshell shade is l‘ p choice oi college miss and business woman, as it presents such a neat smart lipficarhnce. Printed transparent velvet in wine red tones and dahlia purple plain sheer velvet are fascinating com- _ binations, Wool crepe, crepe Elizabeth and flat silk crepe are very fashionable fabrics that adept themselves charm- ingly to this model. Pattern price is cents. Be sure to fill in size of pattern. Address .Pattern Department. The New Fall and Winter Fashion Magazine is l5 cents, but only 10 cents when ordered with s pattern. .,-.__..~.._-_-_-.---_--._ ‘D N0. 2197. Bias ...-.-..-.-..-.....-. 4..-......................-....u..... Name "sue-nun".-“nun-nauseous: Street Address .............---..~...--.us... CltY State Household “Hinta bylobertalaa To Clean Furniture oak or walnut iurniture, wipe , with cheesecloth wrung out of tepid suds of white nsptha soap. Clean but c. small por- tion at a time and rub 617 Wit-h l flannel cloth before going on. Finish by applying a little high grade furni- ture polish on a clean piece o! flan- nel, and rubbing until the wood no longer Ieels greasy. laundering Sweaters ‘ It is advisable to sew the button- holes shut before washing a. sweater, or any other garment where the but)- ttmholcs are liable to stretch, ' Lemons Lemons can be kept irosh for a long time i! kept in an air-tight jar tilled with water. lllnard‘: Llnlsneeh-Ileed for l0 years Kaysefs new “$1éud<>.”. Heel §§~lli?*§if . ..... r .--~.. _ P A I R Heels‘. NAB-ROW CHIC FLATTEIIING _ Just a glance ls proelthat liq is Paris inspired. there's Jul! ~ an alr o! port chm about narrow heel that 1nd aptlva - Yet, despite the sander ~ it completely _ hose from wear. ‘ SIB-VICE ocking BEAUTY QUESTION‘! ANSWERED Nose Alwhys Sbhy Dear Mia! LeedsMy nose is always very shiny. What can I do to keep it from shining? (2) I have an olive complexion, black hair and brown eyes. What colors are most becom- ing? What make-up shall I use and what shade oi rouge? (3) What type am I supposed to be? STELLA. Answew-Apply a mild astringent such as witch hazel to your nose. and lace after washing with soap and water or after removing cream — before you aply your foundation cream. Two or three times a week bathe o... shiny nose in the iollouring lotion at bedtime and allow it to dry on the skin: One teaspoonful of boric acid, 2 ounces witch hazel. 6 drops simple tincture o! “enzoin, 2 ounces roaewater. Dissolve the borlc acid in the witch hazel, add the roseweter and the benzoin may drop by dron- ,r5haks well. Apply with apiece 0f clean absorbent cotton. (i) You may wear ivory, eggshell, mahogany and warm browns relieved with deep cream at the neck, ‘midnight blue and navy without any tinge oi purple, warm gray with touches of red, dark. silent tones in green, eggplant, dull vdhe shades, dark warm red, terrs cotta, light beige, lawn, apricot in sheer material or as trimming salmon pink, rust, brick and dull pinks. You may use a touch of rapsberry or crushed rose rouge ruby lipstick and ochre face powder with black or dark brown eye shadow. (3) You are an olive brunette, of the Latin type. LOIS LEEDS, Waving Htralght, Olly Hair Dear Miss Leeds-I have very straight. oily hair which I am obliged to wash every week. ‘When I wave it or have it max-celled the wave stays in only s. few hours. What would you advise and what kind of shampoo should I use? Would a finger wave last longer than a marcel? M158 JANE!‘ i". Anlweb-If you have a good marcel wave put in your hair it should last about one week. Oi course, your type of hair cannot be finger waved as successfully as some types of hair. It would probably stay in as long as your marcel wave, however. A per- manent wave mllht be the solution to your beauty problem. Shampoo your hair with tincture cf green soap. which ecntainsa small percentage o! alcohol that is helpful tor excessively oily hair. Two or three times a week remove the excess oil with an astrin- gent hair tonic. Give your hair and scalp an air and sun bath daily. Build up your health in general -by wise dict. Excessively oily hair will respond to correct treatment.’ L015 IEEDS. A lolly Reader-You may use the henna rinse alter your shampoo to brlngloul the reddish tints in your type of hair. (2) Watch my beauty column (or a talk on the subject. (l) Write me again and inclose a self-addressed. stamped envelope tor personal reply. LOIS LEEDS. Etiquette we...“- ‘q. When a man accompanies a "fill-Ii to the dinner table, should he sit down at the same tinh the does‘! A. Ne. he should first draw out the chair ior his dinner partner, or tor thewclnnnwholitlnekttnhlm. ' Q On which side o! the‘ taxi should a woman sit, l! she enters with a man? 1t ‘the seat llarthest from the curb. that he may not be trout o1 her, ‘ Q which is preferable conver- cation, "r ounvmad with ."' "or "1 talked lttb him?" . A. "I talked with him." .—-.-___ A Morning» Smile, twcedtopassin was“... teem..." , . n‘ bum’ nds Women ""32; Dorothy Dix "- "n"? Married The Girl Who Decides Never to ‘Marry Will Avoid Many of the Hardships of Marriage, But She Will Never Have the Feeling of Being N ecessaryjo Others That to Woman Makes Life Worth " Living _ To marry. or not to marry? ‘Phat is-the ouestlon that, this complicated modem life o! ours put up to many young women and they do not know how to answer it, nor which way their happiness lies. Of course, i! the girl is very much in love the problem automatically settles itself. Bhe grabs her man and lets theyconsequencea, be what they may. She knows that llib with him may be full of hard- ships, but without him it will be cinders, ashes and dust, and so tor her it is marriage or nothingness. Bill; V81’? often the girl is not the victim of the grand pension. She likes, admires and. esteem: some man who wants to marry her, but she is not in love with hlm- He isn't in any way necessary to m: well being. Bhe could take him or leave himyas the say- ing goes, and then it is that she begins to debate the . question whether she will be happier married or single. She is around the 80s and she res. lites that it is now or never with her. and that not only with every year vgll her chances c! marrying grow slim- mer, but that she herself willhave‘ less inclination to marry because she will settle more deeply into habits and ways that she will notwant to break for any man. . ' i‘ She finds life very pleasant as it is. She earns a good salary. Bbc is lntcrested in her workand it mis her lite agreeably. She has many pleas- ant friends and is welcomed in society. Above all, she has her liberty, her latch-key, her own pocketbook, the right to come and go _ " ’, and nobody with whose whims and ‘ she has to put up. It is a nice, tight, snug, safe life, with her own ego thecenter of it. Moreover, as she looks around at her married sisters she sees little to envy in their lots. There is Mary who gavc up being a, highly 5,1,1 y“. retcry to become a kitchen drudgc, and no salary envelope at the end of the week. There is Kitty, who used to be so high-spirited and gay, whom matrimony has turned into a pulled-down, subdued woman, with rretful and crying children hanging on to her skirts. There u independent s-uy‘. who rushes heme m the middle of a sum game because she is terrified of the wratirof her lord and master if his din- nsr shouldn't be smoking on the table wlvn he returns. There is poor little Mary, who watches night after night (or the drag of a drunken step, and Jenny, who eats her heart out with lealousy over the love aflsirs of a phil- anderlr. ‘ All o! these women work harder than they did in the oflfco or the store before they were married, and they are shcbbier and have less money to spend on themselves than they did when they were single. ‘rney look older. "may arc more depressed. They are less alert, have less pep than. their un- married cistern, and so it is no wonder that the bachelor girl asks herscli whether she will be happier melded or single. I! she were overwhilminglyfin lo ve. Yes. Itshe were going to marry a. Fairy Prince. Yes, Nobody questions that the girl has been kissed by Lady Luck herself whogsts a husbandwhois devoted, iaithiul, tender, kind, and who ls able to provide comfortably for his family, blit how about giving up a good Job to marry |. man who is selfish, high-tempered and grumpy, who will never be undsrstandinglbsnslympathetlc, and who will never _make enough money to more thmkeopithe woli a Jump or two from the door? No wonder the woman or 80 debates long and earnestly the question of whether she shall ‘marry or not‘. ' - A long time ago s. cynical ;wit hall-that whether one married or not one always regrotteddt. This is particularly true o! women whose lives are so much more protoundiy directed by marriage than men's are, but, on the whole. I think that women are happier married than sinllfl. even when their marriages are notyery successfuLWbe y are better oil, even though they are worse oil, if you get what I mean. ' Leaving out oi’ this discussion the primal ‘urge to mate that is part o! every woman's being, and theddsire for her man, her child and her home that is an instinctive longing in every woman's heart, there is some emo- tional quality in women that they must expend upon others, or else they do not and lite worth iivlngfi Bottle this up in them and it fills them with a icrmsnt o! discontent. Certainly the woman who never marries plays safe. She escapes many o! the hardships,‘ much o! the auflering. most o: the sacrifices that the wife and mother is called upon to make Slit even an, she realises that she has also missed much that the married. woman has had, and that she his 001V sipped at the ircth on the cup o! lite.‘ She has not drunk it tn its drags. She has been on the outside of thin gs. Not at its center. . Whi- ~' we often‘ see- men who are suilioient unto themselves and who seem satisfied with the casual ccntactawitnthelriellew creatures that business and society bring them, but that is ne ver enough (or a woman. Bhe wants love, she wants to teel herself necessary to others. She wants acme one on whom she can expend herself. Home one for whom she can do thinll and wlwsq happinell and ‘ort lies in ‘her hands, and she can only mad this in the closeness of the family clffilfl- . c Moreover. the one thingtbat women salvage out of even unhappy mar- riage u their children. The love that their husbands did not inspire. or-t-hlt their husbands trampled in the dust. they cm 1mm on their child?»- The interest in life that their husbands iai led to sum‘!!! their children give them. The wounds their husbgndsjtsndp dealt them their children's hands heal. . A,“ m m"m|t meashwbofwerkst-iier angers to the bones for her obildrmhalaatakoinilfaa richest old maid has not. ‘l. s n is because wonienliave an ’ needy! sown; qne to love. some our bead to m m, mt women are mppiqilusrm than jiggle. , .1511: captain muck‘; company‘ at aire- ssma hopaareasunierlivinp that the‘ '\ to cherish, some one w serve. and ' ' iusfooiruaace woman's arms use m7 k etiactiveiytla form ef act-Idle. and the, hollow of her breast for a baby’! is?“ . -" ’ Y -v P‘ a a Jill! always the same King Cole 1mm crops are never. twice alike. Even tea from the came will ebsngelnilavor. euand ‘iatrength from month t0 monthandseasontoseaeon. _ ¥etK’in¢ Coéeyisnlwsys s?“ up and skillfully - slesdiucueuparuvsgyntf" g1; ' pgrueillar‘ q itreeclll Co \l ' - "*":cn:dfit myolgorthcm India. the strength from Assam, the flavor from Ceylon. '.l‘he blend is Kink Cole. I Motoring With Mary a; sun! can uooaa Ivory revelation I! the Ill!!! grinds out wialon tee the we-au who driven a eel. one a! lie-s has discovered. Lneu CHEESE CAI-CARI The young man who taken his auto- mobile so seriously leaning over the rcnoe separating our yards as I was putting the car in the garage. ‘Hello,’ 1 remarked as I emerged irom the garage. "i! your thoughts werewcrthpennyandlhadonql might be unrated to buy them." "I was just thinking about the Chinese," he explained. - {You would be." I remarked. "If you don't stop. I'll report you to the league or Nations. It's tun. people stopped picking on the Chinese." ' "If I were your husbend—" be be- Il-n- ' -"You'd be a dirfmnt man. a man who would not have to trunk o! Chinese. But, go on with your thoughts. You're not my husband." "ltwasycurcartbatatartedmetc thinking about the Obinesee." was the next startling statement. "You see, tokeepthernwllliilstnedofwaiiing until they let sick and than paying to be made well. You would apply thatmetbodtoyoiuoanficinior preventative care instead of curative IgPI-if- . "As you turnedvlnto the driveway, I noticed the wheels were wob- bliul and out of line. Now. unlike the Chinese, you will wait until new bear. in: H‘! wind and the poor wheel alignment ruins that left front tire In other words. you will pa! a big bill needs an expensive bearing and u- peruive tire to make it antinly well. ltwouldbewisertopaysamailone now to have the bearings tkhtened and tho wheels realigned." ‘fNo, 1 suppose you want me to asy ‘a great people, these oiunessh". r interrupted. "Well, I won't do it." “You needn't." resumed the young man. Your saying or not saying it Ilillhave very little bearing upon the lfletneas o! the Chinese. "However. to get back to your oar and theverypoorclreyoutakeoiit. You know very well that you ought have weaned and polished." “You'll have to give me time to go - i? ti‘: 537E bdephln Llelll. so sent him this s» thechineselyltemistopaqdocturs‘ wbenthecartvlareall-ysickand_ totakeitwtheshWi-bilmlnutetry For The i‘ BNOWBALLS Have as manyb-‘inch squares o! cheesecloth asyou hsve' persons to serve. Bprcad 2 or 3 tablespoons o! not, well-cooked rice on the squares. Place s iaooked. pitted Prunes in the centre. Pick up corners of cloth and tie, l0 as to' entirely. cover the prunes. Drop into boiling‘ watenand cook _1o minutes. neural-imam, serve with sugar and cream or a thin custard sauce. ‘Ibis is an espec- ially good dlsh for children, and will be a delightful surprise to them. lfl‘. STIWAIII.‘ HCHOOL .__- ~ Honor roll o! Mt. Stewart School for "the month of September: Senior Department -“.--' L itc.to t51i rc and; 1-1, George McAssey; 2. Aletha McDonald: 3.. John McEach- ern and iorraine Timmins (equal); 4, Margaret Martin. ' Grade IX-1, Margaret Mcund: 2. Alice Martin: 3, Frank McLeod; 4. Ines Dunn. ‘ ._ Grade VIII-i, Helen McDonald; 3. Daniel Mcliskill; a, meddle our-re: 4- Rita mnonald. Grads VII-I, Ruth McKenzie; 2. Eleanor Douglas; 8. Ida Clarke: 4. Marjorie Affieck. Grads VI-l, Joyce Btahl; ll, Bar- ron McDonald: 8, Edison Airlock; i. Boyd McDonald. ' » ____..._.._._.._.__._--_-----—- costs about one-tenth as much. n-etcy soon.’ you know-es you PIO- bably don't-washing and polishing will not, be mouth-i "All Yright," I remarked. "sucrose I agree with’ the Chinese idea. What ii I take the car- down tn‘ the ‘service station this siitcrnoon and order all those things that ypu prescribe? Have you thought iar enough ahead to tell me what is there that might prevent meiromhalvingtoccnfibsckonttie , street oar or in a taxi?" "Oh, yes," said the young man» ‘That's part qfthe system, I'd-BO down with Wu and drive You back in nwsaar!" ‘ - - I exiwied- the Iylicm. uanvesiccne ,cau-r_e|.ee|=-.. “Fruitia-Ilves" restore; , good health Are ycutlred? Ilowueist most oi Q5’ umeiworlied at tnfles? Calvuleep; y. o. miuunutvvma-l. ac, “if: '.'.'3.’4‘-'»"J¢‘G.f.l"-l'.'.!"ue'.l.‘.T-.~' "' " ; "Frult-s-ilves” is ‘s combination oi h. _, lcnslfied fresh fruit iuiceflpd the m‘ scientific medicinal ingredients. In in. . tunl. gentle way it sun-sissy liver, be“ and kidneys, into normal, healthy goth. soothes the digestive tract, and calms thg troubled nerves. 25c c: 50c bores n, q druggists. QIflNOTTS ROAD $0800!» rbllowing is the standing o! M pupils of Burnett's Road school for the month o! EPW119971 Grade x. (b)--1. Jerwe 03M- GIMIO 1x (b)-1, 1min Pbsien. Grade VIL-l, Leonard Connolly] 2, Eileen O'Brien and Clara 171,1“ (equal) ;' 3. Mary ikainor and George Phaldn (equal-i ‘ Grade vI.-—1. Evelyn Phalen. Grade IV.-1, Ambrose UBflOllllfl Marlon O'Brien (equal); i. Joseph Connolly; 3, Harold Phalen. Grade u.-1, Rita syme; 2. Am- brose Cunningham; 8. John names- Eileen Connolly. ‘ Grade I. (jr-)--l, Isabel ‘Iraincrf 2, Celia O'Brien; 3. Vina, Connolly. Georgie MacDonald. teacher. NORTH. CARLTON SCHOOL _ -d—--v Grade VIII. —- 1, Dorothy Mo?!“ lane; 2, Arthur wright; 3. Lloyd Low ther. , Grade ‘VII-l. Alberta Muttart; Q Norma Pickering. oruqs V_L-—l. Rita Gould: a. no an Mommas. Grade IV.—l., Sadie Muttart: I. ‘Grade IlL-l. Hazcn Inwtlzer; s. Edna Gould; 3, Frank Muttart. Grade L-i, Everett McFal-lane. Perfect attendance: Dorothy Mu Farlane, Alberta Muttart. Rita Gould Wanda Inwther, 'I‘eresa Mutt-art Jennie Dlllflwell. (teacher-J (Patriotcplease copy.) shine and sanitary, It makes v ‘Hun’: g-- makes bathrooms LAYING? 0f course, she's playing -- i: really is child's play“ to- clean with Bon Ami. For it's so easy to use this soft. scratch- ' lees cleanser-so much fun to watch the way it blotsnp every trace of dirt and grime. -Bon Ami is truly a bathroom necessity in ‘millions of homes. Think of the many ways it can help you keep your bathroom spotless tiling glistenwith cleanliness-keeps o... nicloel v faucets and fixtures shining like news-cleans the white woodwork-gives the window and! snirror a crystal clear polhh, ' Sold in two convenient forms, a snowy. white Powder and a handy compact Co)”, Bonmniligbtensandquickensdopemol flllfllfli "lb throughout the house. cleanliness! the bathtub, basin and \ r Grade 1. (srJ-l. Ernest Pin-Iona, will: Lowther; A I Sandy Muttart; 8. Wilbert mom-t '