._~. _, . thaw-awn ,§"' ' 3'“ a . v.__>.,_-.-_.>-¢e-_;;-_-_,,\ ... Jimmy _.. -.- ,_ rial-e. A, ‘the Fashionable Are’ Wearing illlustratcd Lesson Furnish‘ '_ ed ~- W: With Every- Pattern By a Annabelle Worthington Style No. 8474 comes in rises 18, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 incl-lea bust. The ee-lueh sue ‘requires 3% Yards of 88-inch material with l4 yard of 39-inch contrasting. Emerald green crepe silk with egg- shell, brown crepe silk print with yellow-beige dots with yellow-beige contrast and shantung my’ qua-blue with collar Jabot and cuixs piped in navy blue as smart combinations. Pattern price l5 cents. Be sure to,» fill in size of pattern. Address Pat-l tern Department. Our Spring Fash- ion Magazine is 15 cents, but you may Order a vattcrn and‘ a mhiaal‘ Magazine together for 26 cents. sparkling One-cover the lather. Two-a dry cloth! Four...five.. .si.x. N» The 3-ste1; way t0 ofl€n.two..sthftflsos As quiclcand easy as can be! dry. Three—whisk it off with a clean, Ola of Bon Ami’: magic slicks! Not a streak, not a smudge, nota scratch -glasss0 clearyouhardlybilowltfitbesel Seoesuueightunline _‘ ~ and right on up-count the many uses of BonAmi Cake and Bun Ami Pqwdbrl The handy Cake is Canada's favorite for windows and mirroruwhila tha Powder" ' is especially convenient for bathtubs. basins and tiling-just dozens of things. sou AM! unrrso. uosrraul. Powder Cake N0. 3474. Size ........-.-.----.-.... / Name Street AddNII City ’ state I Etiquette M n; mum no ul 01 C Q.‘ Should a man ever take a V5 lady's arm? . ’P? A. No; nor should she cling to his K, arm unless it is for some mason nec- ’ . essary. 5f L» . . . ' $1 .1. AA new tailleur that is conspicuously WBdQiDZ 11¢ 1011mm! bl’. i! "l!" 15 H0 b‘ ~"s8mll'.t because of its lingerie details. wedding breakfast? _ i T ,1 qurhe straight skirt is slirnmig. A A. 1t should be followed by a rec- “ ~ flounce provides an interesting rlll- @9910"- 35 _---;p1ing flare. _ Q. What is the most fashionable :4: it"s decidedly wearable in light hour for luncheon? wnayy blue- crepe silk. The turn- A. One-thirty P. M. i» -7 over collar, flaring culls and Jabot 0' “tips; of white silk pique. Real the Sprain with lllnasfa. 5 an" _ E . B ( 1 m a m "Elilfiledyrneaniiful" "the World - . ' ~ .. ~ - " ~_ chm, Dorothy i. “Emit” . The suh May sou Riflein the. Eosiahd so lh u... W“ ‘"1’ . West, But No One Can Deny Thatqthe World t Itself Has Changemwjmt with-gem,“ " and the Mod Who Obey Their (Ihilgli-égi‘ - film’. as t vs ‘ . ' ADIIIWTUAIZ"YO\I say theworld my“ autumn M! chanced. What has changed? 1 see nothing has changed. The run still rises in the east and sets in the west. Water runs down hill and smoke goes up ius Of course when I said that the world has changed 1 meant it only i: s manner of speaking and writ- ing nowln a calm frame of, mind I‘ll tsbe of a few million alterations. Stfll, even the physical world lhas changed. Even in recent‘ times nat- ‘ure has blown of a few volcanoes and changed the courses of rivers and anathquakes have shaken down mountains, and mm has cut contin- ents in twain and made lakes where none were before, and constructed Q. What should a fashionablemcw islands and made lakes where bloom like the rose. Also climates have changed. and if some of our pre- historic ancestors who used to dis- port themselves in the tropical jung- les in Alaska and thereabouts should return they would find that the win- ters were a deal colder than the used to be. 0i t as it always has done: Men attract women and wom- en sttract men, lust as Adam and Eve were attrac- ted in the Gaul- en of Eden. Boys and girls fall ln love now Just as they did hundreds ersjnml “gym-l 5,5,,“ ma 35°: Ohlldrm are born _ in the some oi‘ way. 5o I ask you: What has chang- ed?" X611‘! -. Why, it is almost as hard for us to realize what the world was like even in our grandfather's time.‘ as it L1 for us to picture what it washe- . fore the flood. Why, only the other day a little flapper asked rnc Whl-t girls did when . I was young. and when I told her _ j that our "dates" only we called them ‘Jbeaux then. came and took us to \\ windows glass with the magic moment's wait for ityto every home needs both i ability Cmtalilly. i ichurch on Sunday night. and lwhen they called We spent theev- fening in talk and singing songs and ‘making fudge, or WPlJlngpoifrl and that it wasa. great event when we ‘were 'invit.ed to a ball. and that we ‘felt very adventurous _wlsen we went 3buggy riding with a boy gnd that girls stayed at home and helped moth er instead of going into business, she a!most wept with sympathy. 1- mask. '--_-_- menalld "What!" she cried. "no night clubs. ro going out anywhere to dinner and tu dance, no automobiles. no moving pictures,‘ just having to alt and talk to u boy all evening, what a terrible time you must have had. How thank- ful 1 am that everything has-chang- ed." 0f course, men are men and wom- en are women, Just as they were in the beginning. but whilerirho modern woman may take after ‘her great- grsndmother Eve in looks and {insure and have on just a few fill 1""!- ythat‘: about ‘all. The inner woman is" ‘totally different. llid it u folly to. jdenythat the emancipated woman oi‘ .- today. With her vote in on_s hand and .her pocketbook in the other and ‘her to stand on her own feet and hold dos-n a IOod lob. hasn't chang- ed h-om the helpless l pm- _ downtrodden, . clinging-vine inhale dftlse rial-eat- treated to sash: other ustar‘ my. have alwaya sash." frlisiwu, usuuas haw in as: amsal.‘_-And~ tbv! It!" a-‘m-ai-s-a-s-vn-m-o-A-u-o-é- r z ' ' -‘ f . em Woman and Parents" 133i 0f YUP! l!“ ‘Olflllflfifl w“ "lavished. but the rolsacoauo be- tween men and _ and ~_u have . A. _ .. Perhaps human la not m- “'9'?” ‘"1" "11."- lt has always “W-"Pflhlns ‘ac more faiflhfulno his wife. than his trandsan is. Doubtlasa "than have a]. Ravrbalrl men who Ifiephilanq. erers 1nd grouahaa and drunhrvds Mid tiahtwads. And women vrlio were ‘hWVIJ-Bd men-s." ‘and shlftliaa‘ hometown-s. Ind waatarraisd spend.‘ wlveabored each‘ other anirpot on" each others nervd and new‘ w"; of each other. ' But in the old days “on sot minted lbey_sts_yed"ha§rnd'y,. cause divorce wars‘ dllirace ahebeonfstillna’ tllsifsimply‘ Wasn't ourbeot Yamiliss. so’ ndma‘ cur-he'd d"buhd ‘aye in’ grandfather's wanderings and ‘gland.- flthar put up with grandmother's‘ alwfwmlnsl and lanes remained intact on the suicide. no initial- ylvhst civil an. "w... on 1h ‘m, in; side. ‘ - But how meat pun‘ epuplgg “t married with the thought in their minds that l! they don't like it they wont-stick in it and to get a divorce 01S no more a stigma thanip have the measles, and every modern hus- band sncl wife knows that the real work of courtship begins when they act nan-led ‘and that n" they keep each other and ‘ti-lair homes tossin- Mflwshavcsottcmakemallrlaioay and buts mo! pep into ‘ihhdll you think‘ ' “ "might elsaokad you almplyeoaw. ‘ "your amused hulk‘. why.- bibtishsatftg beso" osmhioh thbi.‘ even uiFWcr I ("or nus? z r .»-' REMODELING THE NOS!- Ars you satisfied with the shape of yournose? If-you are, you have great cause ‘for thankfulness. Judging from the dozens of letters from readers who want something done about the also fl-‘lllliie of their noses lt seams that I" Wound with- this feature. "My complexion is lovely.‘ writes one young lady. “and several times rhave overheard acquaintance; rs. mark that I sin good-looking, but suns one who hears it will be sure to lly. ‘Hi-la would be if it wasn't for her nose!" f‘ ‘Aswv have all been guilty o1 think. ihg thk aitherabout some One ‘W’! 11°" 0,1’ Will-Pa about our own. W" k110i how to sympathise when this lady continues. "Oh Miss Leeds la the!!! anythlfli I can do to change In". ilubby nose into a good-look- lng“ one?" v ‘ _ ~ And now let's sea what can be dune about these noses which‘ cause their owners "so much distress, ‘1! the mo; ll "Wally law-badly shaped-that it amounts to-a deformity, there 1i ob- viously no home treatment which will help s great deal. ' But I believe that few oi my m“. ers need to have their noses remode- led completely. Not all of us can af- ford to have an operation w alter the shape of the nose. so _let's see what clsqthcre l: to be done about it. 1h the fill". 5110c these are manydis- which affect the shapepf the bfany a mother has seen her ehlldle nose change from a slender, 6198.10 one to anus: with Jvlde, coarse outwa- aiwh daouw so caused by s5 mount». in the uaaallpcesases, tl-avthreatqr the slmumfanydis- “P twig“ b! P11 Pill‘! it once._as,_ such de- Nwptbips lllqlld-befi-reatcd ~ $1111 at The Gait; are cpmmmly sumwwi to have had thalr orlainin Denmark- as the earliest records of the iamilv indicates. Members of the raauly W1"- from Denmark to» Scotland and Ire- land, mg it is from them that the ‘American Galta are descended. - - one c! the oldest and most WW1“. iful of"Denmsrk's families is that ‘Of Gait. The armonial bearings are to be found 1n the claim cathedrals of that country, and there are twenty-six cs- tates there that have been owned and occupied by branches. 0f this family. The first or‘ the name was Herr Mqfgerqf Lagesoh Dill,‘ who 'Wi-I knighted ‘in ‘lac-l. no‘ was’ buried in the cathedral of hoeslrildejl-lu‘ grand- son‘; Hen Morgen! ilbbescn Galtfof qhrrestrup, was also khlghted and was‘ madeciovernor oftwo powerful cas- ties, Aalholm‘ ind noldinafixa died tury. _ , v .. ._ . . The younger brsnch_ of “the family became extinct in 1698 with tl1_e death oLKnud Henrik Gait. oiyiumgsai-d, _ the last man 9f the family, arm!‘ the descend ‘ of the, oldest branch have perpetuated the nameandusedtbe arms of the iamlly tothu day... Among prominent perilous today. of the Gait clan ls Herbert... Randolph Gait, editor, oi staraulJtlnn. . ‘Electric hammers for, Jog mono are being teawd on Ilmldon Puvemmu _ . . .. .. - Iceland r" ’ U10 Vllllh "£90,000 WNW! 0! PIVPFCCI "N! lid Wh‘ " wo _ I MRoIIdill-‘ciotgllvlll-‘Nfilli u y» ln_tlle latei-‘pn-t of the ‘niiodhth oeu- , "W PM! and Place‘ them in thaboll- _.s|hieb.la nothing but dvilil -. internal lubrication need. as much as any ma- chine. After you have taken Nujol- ior a few and have proved to change in your health and your hsppillsasflrhetaascaristllls: ~" " " I I Rqularly as clock work, Nuiol clears out.of_ our bodies those poi- sons (we all have than) which slow usupmsabeuabeadaclnnlowlllour nsiadal _ . Colorless as pure watssyNuiol cannot hurt you, no rihae*rourh;rafi* J - I 75mm h“ bu: w: take n. n u not a medicine. It contains no It forms no habit. It is non-I _ T13’ Nlllvl yourself and see hop muchlbetter you feel. Got in its sealed psclnge at store and be sure ltbtrsdsmaru “N ujolli It costs but a aw oqntfi. and it makaayoli feel ll ‘a dollars! Start taking Nujol night! I butth any mllliq; this my Hoaséhblifiiirltsiv‘ lrlobertalae - Cooking Peas '_ instead of shelling tho peas, wash 1.118 "l!" t0 6001131110 nods" will open and the pass settle to the bottom o: the vessel. Merely skim off the pods. Sorelaips For sormllplhxmix and ipply this solution: 1 ounce. of glycerine, 1 dram of Mm. Bnd=1 pint of water. _ ~ The- RaL-‘gersto could afford them by the doaen. Now they are in the luxury clad surf-tho upkeep of a small infant‘ chats/as ‘much sesnyacht or anliolla Royce." The used. to oauldibe born anywhere. pltsl. "They used to be saliailbd with mother as a~ refreshment‘ counter Now they have to have certified milk and out-of-aeesen" vegetables and ‘a. balanced-diet that‘ coats as much as living at a-swell restaurant. Ray used to Just tumble up‘. new any o; major ._ ‘ wouldn't/hold it! headQin a PM]! school. g And when they lire Older it la not children who mind their carious. no parents who obi! their children. Mother may have wbrnjvool stock- ings, but. daughtnr has to h!" luk- Fathcr may have walked five miles to the little red schoolhouse. son has to have an automobile to l0 W" blocks and ls ierturning I. bad child‘ body would even to it. ii. lot when you come to thinkoffit- DOIOTIY .151! i§¢¢" a '7 sincanrnpnclraon om .. .51, i; _~ I r.. i‘ cup sci-viii»! mllmn‘ child oi’ 13 who hasn't had a "douple 155g)?‘ 11,1", over your kneearld anlnklrillt 110- " Oh. yoatluosa have chanced a “ facts wili"no't only rdin the‘ shapg or the but will under-huh, {he mm ceaatltutioh.‘ _ g “ i“? if the trouble seems to be only fondly shined nose, without predis- - m“ WW tlwy have to be born in a‘ hoc- pnslnilto disease. something can be done seliiime‘ u. improve n. Since the 05H this future i.s_ composed p1 csirtilage“andh_mlii;cles_ it can be mol- ded by misuse. Thei-e___sre also nose support} which may v be Worn at night and which are’ sometimes helpful in mldlas‘ the up c! nose along “To the nose. place the-first and second fingers on the bridge and‘ eéntlv knead the flesh with the thumb ' ‘ of‘ the ‘some. hand. ‘rhcre sremany whale are flashy. a_dsiect which will glvt a coarse appearance to aface which ‘rhishi otherwise be‘quiie hi. trllctivt. Toreduce a flashy nose give lr. a rotary pinching massage between tbuasb and forefinger. ‘rhis move. MOM will also hsln those wiloaanasss {m} jgqtqoylspw in sprgsd at the up. swsred fzPél-iianjauu tonic: and stimul- atestha, skin. flagrant as a flower. Ono] aa hints-hing dn’. Safeguard; and the moat delicately-textual‘- cd skill. Oleatss‘ complesicns of ss- Qulllte Adda a subtle finish to the‘ dalntisst woman. Invaluable for aottorllng the hands, and making W»!!! main-n. ‘Delight- ful to use. Oblsn unhesitatingly by all can for Icminina - g Conoicts- __.- RIQIlIION. May 6.-Twcnty- four ‘routine-Quality Questions i... p, than} ‘flawlessly white. 006i and ra- _ ‘ ‘A ifs; . i Japoélapriouuaaliualau’ t ,~ Pmsoprondofnsy hos-shawl And lac‘wc\ra'l§vika“iron.""' f‘ "" ' ’ , ‘TH DEN couramr‘ _ ‘lsojimtani: _. j t rjli ooss uh‘ 1 +9.: .- .. .3‘. ....;..-.,_, a Y wlllbeysoad‘ A of“ ‘T? - eras-and the work and whenyonseewlsatl willdofoetlsenlfi "Fox-numbers is a Jae soonest every a] i‘ Lyn-e. I9 6776' 113st... a ,~-C l narra- 140M777 , v If uie____r_ai’_ri8¢mtflr lining leaks. m“ h” t6?" Campers ‘Dillard's. If’!!! z m. ,