' s A‘; ‘ ‘V w. ““ rkmkknk a LDorotIly Dixie Letter Box I Success or Failure in Marriage is Determined , . on Far Side of Altar, so Look Before You ' Lear-Does Bold Girl or Modest Girl ’ Please Men’s Fancy More‘! DearssissDlx-I amamanofacandmyfriendstnlimstbatlhave reached the marriageable age. I wish to be married, but I don't intend . to do it Just to be marrying. I am working on a salary of $100 a month ' lnasmalltowrgbutldouotlutendtoltly there always- I intend to save my mo»! and go into business for myself. determines his success or failure in business. and I have known too many menwhoee Im- ‘bltlcns have been ruined, because they mar- make this mistake. I must have a wife W110 ls intelligent, ambitious, eoDnOitiiflll, indus- trious and who knows the value of money and the necessity for saving it. 4 Am 1 too cold- bloodsd in my attitude toward we! answer: I do not think that a man is cold-blodeod when he uses his head as well as his heart in choosing a wife. 1f more people were guided by their_ common sense instead of their emotions in marriage, We should have fewer divorqs. _ It is a curious thing that a man so often throws all reason to the winds when he marries. He knows himself and his circumstances in life. He has a definite idea of the kind of wife he needs and with whom he will be happy. Ii he is a student, he plans to marry a bookish girl. If he is poor and ambitious, he wants a. Wife who will WOIk 51101111101’ $0 shoulder with him and help him rise. 1f he ishome-loving and dom- estic, he wants an Alice-slt-by-the-flre. If he is poor, he wants a W110 who will know how to work and economize. Then, knowing all this, he will meet some little iiufly ruffles who hasrft got a single quality that he desires and who cannot possibly ht into his pattern of life, and he will marry her because she has it pretty lace, or a cute way, or blonde hair. ~ Every day we see intellectual men bored to death by nitwit wives. Embittered men whose wives have been mlllstones around their necks that have dragged them down from the pinnacles of success they meant to reach. Poor men whose noses are kept to the grindstone by extravag- ant wives. And we wonder why they did not use as much intelligence in picking out a wife as they would have in picking out a suit of clothes. For not. one of these men would have bousht a linen suit to wear in the Winter, or expected a dress suit to turn into a business suit or overalls after he got it home. We are forever talking about making a success of e, but the success or failure of a marriage is determined on the iai aide of the altar. It 11085 1101 depend 60 11111011 119011 What either the husband or wife does as upon the mate they picked out. Ii’ they selected one they needed and that suited them. alllwill be well, but it they married some one who hap- pened to hit their fancy for the moment and who had none of the quali- fications they required in a wife or husband, then they are just out __.l Wo.mqn"s ‘Reqlm Irealist tbstmarriagetosmanistheonethingtliat ried girls who were not willing to do without a few things in the early years of» their mar- ried life in order to help their husbands I" a start in business, and I ‘do not want in a i -:- Social AAA aha-tuna» 50000-0400 Aooooo-aa-Ao-o- -4‘,. ww-v... v LQAA , I I “Kmo coLv-ehe ‘res your’ mother used-is ready waiting to give you the same happy glow oi" satisfaction. There 1' .°°11‘°111"1. I wwwubly ernoyable in a “real" cup of. tea. Why a W911 anything . less for the sake ‘of just ‘a few cents’ questionable saving P Fifi LR°ESbi§B Minnow rrsvon. - CH d-nidi iPiersonqlgié. RICH. “Till Ill’! FLAVOR 'IX'I'IA' IN CIIOIOI TIA." 'o~s WILL sun vourx msrs" luck. For by the time people are old enouflh to marry their k ‘ are settled and there is little charming them, Do not listen to your friends who urge you to marry because you have reached a certain ag . Thor ls no age that is a suitable age to marry unless the other conditions are propitious. With you this is not the ease. If you marry on your small salary, you can kiss all of your ambitions and hopes of getting along in the world good-bye. With a family to support, you will be hopelessly sunk, without a chance of ever saving even a cent toward realizing your dream of going into bus‘ for yourself. The door of opportunity has a slot lock into which you mint drop money to make it open. "He travels the fastest who travels alone," said Kipling. wigs and children are a luxury, but they are also a handicap and for the poor man a fatal one. To marry just to be amarrying is the most foolhardy thing that guy human belns ever does Nothlns can Justify marriage but love. Nothing can make it worth while but love. And if you are not in love and, no; m a financial condition to marry, why run all the risks of matrimony Just because your friends think it is time for you to marry? ' ' . _ ' ‘ . DOROTHY DIX, Dear Miss Dix-Which do men prefer-the modest, reticent country girl, or a bold woman who will go places, drink and raise caln generally? A COUNTRY EDITOR. Answer: Depends upon the man. The is eral t universally admired by all men. ltlot gferfglhysicalylg? orhzlfilalxiaghsiy’: mill P111111‘ 1110111185. but 111 Halli? Just as many men fall for the brunette. Look about you and you will see that some men like ‘em tall m4 some like ‘em short. Some men adore Amazons and others are crazy about pocket Venuses. Some men like the clinging vine and other; 11kg m; giégsbuimixht ¥011118 woman who can stand on her own feet and tight he! And men have this some di srsit i’ l l 111,911’ m“. £133 and morals. There are rnen ‘to wgozg cg: tlllglgh apgesls, A. m“ woman is anathema to them. They are attracted by the modest. hr 0°11 - 0011M?! girl. But another typo of man prefers the showy, sun woman who dresses in loud clothes, who will drink him undor the "1118 811d Whose style is crowed by no moral inhibitions. My observation has been that men, curiously enough are attrgctgd by women who are their opposites and that the more a ‘man has been a rounder, the more out/breaking his own life has been the more likely is he glhelzirdfiil‘ the mtgdesnrrrétioents dlllliflod girl o: nail. ideals. at least. comes ma ug. While th ui t, ldJ likelg t? tltiekgmled by the brazen woniah. e “w” y m“ h m’ mo“ ll B. g men 1b dl , I h ul ' neither ‘the unsophistlgatzld cgurgfry gairfnoirszlfetwginglielvrlligbitluwgmm‘: much of life. It is the in-between woman who knows her way sxbout - . who is mistress of any situatlmnwho has seen much ‘or m9 mg y” who has kept her sweetness, her dignity and he; standby-u so,“ w“, "m 23f.‘.‘i2$.:‘§;.l“.."°?““'.°‘ ~ "““1=-"~ cm- ~== e- u» er ace ifted nor lowerd her ideals, and that about ox. presses what I think most msn prefer 1n women, A‘ “"1 Y°1111s girls, only unvveflkflble Young boys and Villain; wggt __ ..-‘~‘:.=er.-o;-'»-" . .. _ _ .. .,_ ... ..-_.__e_» mi... ,.ie.._.,,~,,.-_-,=,y~;q~,,,..,,,_g. SMART FROCKS FOR FASHION ABLE PEOPLE i-i-i. ~ ~.;__.i-...... m‘; . Plaits are used with delightful ciicot down the front of this school. A plaided woolen in Copenhagen blue and navy with plain Oqpgn. hagen blue woolen trim made this cunning dress. The bone buttons re- peated the lighter blue elude. ~ Scotch plaided gingham, cotton or g wool challls prints, wool crepe in * 011111 <11‘ intern. linen. percale , ' prints. wool jersey are all excellent fabrics for this easy to ins-lie dress. '. Style No. 690 is designed for sine i ., s, a, i0 and 12 years. Sine 8 requires I 2 yards of 80-inch material with 56 e yard of 89-inch contrasting. Price of PATTERN l5 omtl in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). - _ Wrap coin carefully. s-t-.__~q-_.,_-___ w». mo. sue Qsbrolaquoloeudsel-essssulloslefcoln u 1 4nanounnonsense-unecon-.1-1.4 ‘M111 1° 11° 111154111118 but Pure B-hd sweet. I a drunken young girl o;- m, wéiaoa dives is something that makes every ggém mgnnyggyg go Youns msfliwu? 1x_v1&evlnnd me mo“ t” momwm“ "'° ‘W’ duo“ mm“ buggy; o es alll alike, with no thrill to them. Olub Q“ m tfkmudo b 111*" es- Brldse some: stupid. We feel that lit NM! bOOkS Hid ruin our eygg, gun you B01211!!!‘ ll 1Q" m IGVIOG 0D. Whit l0 d0? BQRED Gnua_ We get out of life nothin b t h P111 I117 interest. 111i’ enthusisashll. w M w’ 11°. i1}!!! arenigound to get boredom 7°“ d “W13 t0 51111150 Yourself so wearisome and dull W711 i1’! WOIK for a chang , Y ' why do?“ Your’; own ‘aligns. to say nothing (l); that? ayglircviotfidudleituixgultielpgrylofi 111° B1’! the housework. Even readin 1; n s asltsooints sscanbetestl- m t” W mmm" °5 P901116 W110 have found in it a never-failing divers- l d £1‘: g-hlnyokrlicewthat has never pulled upon them. vgiéy dun-t “Lin?” i" not Put 11190 it. Mid if you do into anything you any sportsmanship out of it. ,7 w‘ rt ,, v-v vv v shite -.»¢»¢e‘osss 17w HCOUSEWIFF and -PQiflI'-IMNI@DIRIIZ . HER ACTYVITIE-s t xvi ii... | - ._,,__,.._ .outofsesscn. . . Amntctnoiesd andaoorm tonmfi 319mm,‘ F: ‘m’ " ' map be ~itnu smgcewimmmeuaeuwwmgmmimmwmm_ ‘m’ Don't shop after you am ipmlamweeehosmuuemm“ mum‘ M‘ m. "‘°"..§'.§Z°'s$..u»“.' . “.'."°'"9‘” igwmemwmufigm," mim‘ "w" » ‘ oéfififiii verbal.- ,soruetandaeorosr- tbotilgve_'m“thmd°q“m°'"°m'°w ' mm‘ "mum " ‘ . overceond IIMIO with w*°*,‘,:n'“:°m&'$ M w‘ toomuoir-too llllloiourlilflilhlfd. use- ~ , ' lesehi-ie-s-brmsneeossppleturee. -*”4*'”"3°7"°“""“"'""‘, nentweerskimenetosoymir careeonisaaftor. ~ wmw"wku_ Andigasmisilisfinsstolfcih Dw.tm"wmm_ ma“ Andtfmtis-lfel '°“°'“"*‘“°4“' - IJIII I'll-INCH DRESSING. “m” m" Tnlmwmm" nub a mining m: or um bowl 4 i I , I w w we». m 1 - meavnacesrzcr. “MP5” W“ “"11" 11'” ‘l- amount a salad oil. And 1-: as m“ b‘ ma‘ w b“ “QM” much vinegar-or lemon juries as oil. ‘b11111’ 1" ‘"1" i1“"“°‘“°"- 1 see salt and peopu- m an and Don't forget that the ape: enough n. w m“ m. m.” ctrtsofmoatsaiiordmirch “Nmfmdduhwdnmuamm mentuoley mproperly cooked. Md “my “m, m“ m; 9°“ b“! mm‘ m‘ “w!” powd ‘eugartotam. Best with i ca: until oil and acid form a upon hard, sharp ground. not flat but steBply sloped. unless he was very dizzy. Edges of glass touched him everywhere. altogether too much glass for the windshield; l0 he cams to realise-not connect- edly, but now a little and next s little more amid other discoveries -thathewaalyingonthssidsof a deep ditch which must have frol- broken. ‘ He spoke to the Royle girl and heard her voice; she, claimed that lay at the‘ bottom of the ditch under the steering wheel. ’ "Where's the gun?" Neski groan- ed. swearing. "Where's the gun?" Calvin felt for it, remembering that he had clutched it when the ear went over; it must be at hand, he thought, and he must find it to fight the savages who, in cold blood and without a omentfii mercy. would kill them all. ‘ll-lair engine had stowed. and in the silence Calvin heard the crunch of wheels slowly a on the it! ground; it came very cautiously, that motor car of Cunmw. and u it drew alongside. some one began fliootihg. His lint bullet tors flirouth 131° bottom oi.’ the dash-board; the ;seccnd splintered the bottom of the nont seat; the third struck almost in the same place and the heal came a little rearward as the gun- men deliberately and accurately raked the wreck from did to and. ‘ “ pistol took up the task. That Royle Girl _ B? Edwin Balmer “WHERE'S MY GUN" They had agreed, Neski and Galvin, to keep to the road as long as they were ahead; but before the car was overtskm Neeki would turn into the fields. Calvin had given the signal for this. and he braced himself for the jolt. or perhaps the overturn, when the little car left the mad: and with one hand he held firmly to Joan Daisy. Es expected firing at omerit, with bullets ripping through the flimsy canvas of the rear. He carried no pistol. so he had taken Neakfs, only to find himself helpless to use it until the pur- suers declared themselves beyond doubt. They would do this with a volley, if they were Beretta/s gun- men, Galvin knew; yet he must wai , a Hswasflurigwiththelsspofths little car as Neskl swerved it from the road and upon the burws of the irosen iisld; he heard shotl. heard the windshield crack and wood splinter, and he thrust Neski's pistol between the cur- talns and tired. It was almost at random, he ros- lised, with no chance of hitting while the car iounced in the fros- en furrows, so he withdrew his hand: the other ear, too, ceased to fire. It had run on the road pest the point where Neski had taken to the fields: it was, Galvin saw, a EVERY MUTHER LB KNIJW SHIILI oi pistol shots, three or four gun- men. with his leit hand, Galvin clung to the arm of Joan Daisy. “You hurt?" he asked her. Quaker Oats "No. u.‘ "u," _ baildsmoee s- u . d. m‘ “:3” All fight?‘ he asked 0f IBM. “Yes. What “l0? doing?" Neg girl's dress. Not only do they trim, beam rldi la w“ not u“ m‘ W“ n” l’..“‘.l'.‘:°..t.“..:i°‘“°"°°““‘“‘“"' ~mu~o is?‘ 5 a 53% much larger and heavier car and it. carried, to judge from the volley perhaps in the same hand; per- haps mother gunman fired in his turn- Oaivin smuggled and stifled him- self. gasping in helplessness under tho horror of these methodical shots. - "Down." he whisper“! V1 ~70“ Daisy. "Down as M You can." For the bullets struck above them. ‘rho metal o! the car in protested them, but their chief shield was that which had ‘the car-the depth o‘ the ditch. The gunmen underesti- mated itorelseccnidnotflrelow- er without shooting’ into the around. for neither Calvin nor Joan Daisy nor Neski was hit. "Where's my gun?“ Nash ds- manded: and Oalvirvs fingers turn-t bled for it amid the ies. The pistol shots eesesd- Galvin heard the Illflflldlfa car maneu ing. Likely they had come to the edge of the ditch and were back- ing before making stern. The shots some again. and the car was near- tor; bullets ltflicl into the ditch. but they were strays deflected from the frame of the ear. Still nobody was hit, though more than two automatic! must have been vmbtliifi- - The signs of life at all: time. beaten lutoothmixture. lie-beet at * AMomingSmile The en over when full, and later had gem f. “m”. m emptied, leaving a thin surface of , guitcggggl “m, ‘on m,“ “d . h.“ ice through which the car had boxontherack andtbsn porter fund couple ' 111118911100 . tvfi| ushereda Lire 1 ..All Wop Fm» FASHION LEADERS ‘V. v v1 .STAN‘|"|E‘lj.-Cl3’$"“ l Lingerie Wt?“ .. . f thlimelderlymanandalarseiieroe- 111011118 woman into the car. , HI iuformcdthemtbattheirport- I l desiring WARIVITI-l plus ,1 she was all right; and he felt her rnantesu was on, board, um m". ' hands at hisshoulder. Neski, bs- lwas a luncheon-ear on the side him, fared like himself, and Y u. I "blouse mo, sir but did the young lady you saw o find ‘er ‘and-bag afl right?" As the man began to dignant denials theporter gave a knowing wink and m as that man would, and did. could . 111111- that they would have to change '. lkilro . . . The eflicieht services was-twopsn 1 . The porter looked at the coins in reward for these wool the other evening .. uh departed. not make his wife believe Paddington for months. and ._ No need ‘ lortablo In thewhiler . . . lnitaod/‘he modem woman wean Fedthomolght Purv Botany Woo menu, no heavier n . . . smooth and comforts o. im- -'lu-'-'l.¢l"'.." whler: it ha: boon 11am. ‘Add: In a Ids: variety o! drowning "m; sly u. - - ST STYLE 1 new to wool old-fashioned‘ underwear lo hop vmm o Llnqivio . . . dellghilullydulnly gor- illa silk . . |"°m'fl‘."|“ . . . perfect y tailored from soil MADE IN CANADA EXCLUSIVELY BY ANFIELUS LIMITED ' TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA certainly had seen no young ndcon- STANFIELUS . _, ninhhiiaii ' a ‘.1 j She .2.“ thfifiluau. catechls- C I C , 2...... mains {Wlllgdxlfitlllilieh ““‘m“‘""“'“‘°“"" ' ‘Oreain the buter use the sugfl" ; Help Kidneys l! Kidney ‘trouble on Bladder Weak.- li? "““" o o ill)- Blillllfllfllfia Btiflisllls lmarting, Itching or Acidity Doctor's resort» thoroughly with other candy-just puddings and steaming coffee. eerc prices. Write for two free Babies.” Address Carnation Co. Umiwd. Torofltfit Ontario. Carnation & comm bndlllhthth the Olltflmltl with the hand after adding each you suffer from Getting Nights. Nervenanasa. Dlsllnlll. tints your re Only ‘I @I!ll( llhll I R's-telecom- cunrsnms OAK! One pound butter. l pound caster l1“- sugar, l pound mixed peel. 1% almonds, picked sultanas, and lastly stirintheilounmtmixturelna cake tin lined with three folds cl buttered paper, and bake from three “n pounds flour, 1 pound dried cherries. ‘to four hours in s moderate oven it fl ti? \ fi “its . I , F you hear an amateur candy maker say that, you can be almost sure she uses Carnation Milk. Candy and creamy-evaporated to double makes specially delicious p butter-fat particles are finely divided and evenly distributed. Carnation blends ingredients and makes unusually smooth and manly as it makes such smooth; delicious cream sauces. ‘cream soups; ice cream. And the same qualities make Carnation ideal to: als and fruit, even though it is so inexpensive at tie-day's booklets — "100 Glorified Recipes” and "Contented l 4 candy because dentition-uncanny. lhlleas .,' {Z makcrsuse Carnation becauscitisso rich the richness of bottle milk. And it is homogenized. In this process the ‘in l r I . r1 2 21 a/a ‘l! N! J) E1'I..7N‘\..7M'\" ¢ .1; tiny}: time, beating well for five minutes "f! egg. Mix in the chopped cherries, _, L-nk .51; 51mm}; rim. a .4 kioess-ifiasaaz: