MAY i9, 1930 l t . i cuaizimm T'AGT'7 .Wofizan’.s Realm. -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions Mi lady Beautiful lyloleleob PERMANENT WAVES A5 the warmer weather rolls iround again, a great many women md girls are considering having an- other permanent wave put in their hair. Numerous questions regarding :iiis method are coming to me now, w 1 am going to give a few general rules that will be helpful to my read- ers. in the first place there is no doubt that a successflil permanent wave is a great comfort to many business girls and women, especially if their There are degrees of satisfaction I1" is not wise to be satis- fied with something good, if you can get some- thing better. Most people in Eastern Canada seem to think that King Cole Tea is better. They back that judgment with their purchases. inofloiir iii-Them‘ RAIIGIPIKOE Another king of another ‘realm- - King Cole C0500 hair is exceptionally straight and in- Quad to be oily. While there are numerous types of permanent waving machines that are used and compe- img, operators who specialize in this‘ branch of theiwork, it is very neces- stir)‘ for the individual to do her part in the care of her hair both before and alter the wave has been given.‘ And it must be remembered. even w th the most successful and beauti- iul permanent wave, that the hair ind scalp require regular care if the riair is to stay glossy and healthy. Every girl or woman with straight hair would be glad to invest in a permanent wave if she could be surc that it would be as pretty as some of the pictures she has seen, and sure it would not harm her heir. Nobody ivants her hair ruined or turned into a fuzzy mop. " At‘ the samc iinll‘. very few women realize that the success of s permanent wave lies in several factors, the two chief ones being within their own‘ control, namely, the health of the hair and the care that is given to it both be- lore and after the wave. Agreat meny girls and women, too, have been guilty of neglecting to give the hair and scalp the proper care and rlaiiv, treatment that is necessary to the health pf the hair and scalp for fear of spoiling the wave. Neglect of ihis kind very soon registers in thin, ialllns and lusterless hair. It is so, easy to skip the daily brushing and! acalll massage for mverai days just because the wave looks pretty and one is afraid of disturbing it lest it oe lost. m time the scalp becomes and trouble to give it the proper care and treatment. 1r ‘your hllll’ is iiesiuiy- and of the right texture, a permanent wave will give beautiful results. When the hair is not in good condition to begin with, it needs even ’more care to ‘keep it looking, presentable. 1f your hair is inclined m be dry and you are both- ered with excessive dandruff, or if you have been using strong bleaches or dyes on your hair, it is not wise to have a permanent wave until you have had your heir reconditioned by a series of special treatments. After this have the operator test your heir and see if it will take a permanent wave successfully. 1t is wise to in- vest in e few scalp treatments and have your heir in good condition in the i‘irst place; then the chances for a successful permanent wave arc much greater. And remember that a successful- weve and artistic couture cannot conceal or cure scalp troubles due to neglect. frhorough brushing of the hair and scalp massage are very nec- essary to keep‘lt in good condition. Shampoo the hair at regular inter- vals, using a mild liquid shampoo mixture. Rinse well and dry with warm towels. Arrange the waves in place or have them reset at regular intervals. Choose a reliable operator to give the wave. WHOAREYOU? -:- Literature xiii HOCJC-éhald Hints ' Character Close-Upi’ _- isuriois to lcarii tho values ii v- 'cign n1onsy' when planning to iiiuiw: la trip abroad? A- Yco; Clil€l'\\.‘.‘.iD they {ii'C ilk-bi; gruntled by Marriage Would bind inc Peace 1 ' Y and Companionship They Seek if They Could be Good Enough Sports lo Take keep her husband, Flo Ziegfeld, who is surrounded by more feminine youth and pulchritude than any other man in the worici, against all comers, she rc- f plied succinctly: “I take him as iic is and lct i_i. go at that." - A. Either i: appropriate. turies, many of \\'il0i'il were dicLn- guislied iii venous call-mgr. in ill“. | The first Cornelius ti lziiiil llli The first of the Cornelius family American soil was Aaruii (Jornciiu:. was Faustus Cornelius, the first gcn- I a sea cziplaiii, wliu sciilcd at I'lii;ii- eral to enter the City of Jerusalem mg, Long lslaiid, in i639. He was under the attack of Pompey, 50 B. C. one of tho patcntecs of that section The next mention or the llfllfiC oi the island. Cornelius was Caius Cornelius, who] lJr. ilLara L'Ci‘i'iCl‘.lilfi. ui uClliilbVWlli The pronouncement of an oracle. A lady Solomon ' _ with pearls of wisdom falling from her lips, for ln these few words are comprised all oi‘ the-law and ‘the prophets about how to be happy though married and how to keep out of the divorce court. For what are the disiiluszons of matrimony of which we talk so much? Nothing on cartli but find- convertcd to the Christian faith. . Cornelius, the Bishop of Rome, twenty-first Pope, was a martyr 253 A. D. There have been persons boar- They are the men and women who are not good enough sports to make the bcst of them; quit? stand by the bargains they made and What isatthe bottom of nine-tent hs of the domestic scrapping that kills ‘muted him Wm] a sword’ which m“ I the love between husbands and vivivcs and kccps ilicin at odds with each other and that makes home a place oi strife and torment from which llilS- '_“" '1 ' bands and children flee for their livcs? it is the nagging and fretting and A . pecvishness and complaining of the wifc, the surlincss, tlic grouchincss and fault-finding of thehusband, who are dissatisfied bccuusc llic other is not something thatlhc or she iicvcr was and iicvcr could possibly; become. Back of every family quarrel lsthe lack of philosophy that enables a man and woman to fake their mates as they are and ict it go at that. _ They ‘want all the good qualities their husbands and wives possess and thensome. A man wants a wife with all the virtues, plus all the beauty and alluremeiits ofthe vamp. 0r lie wants all the beauty and allurmients" oi tiiepvampwzlth the domestic virtues superimposed upon tlicm. A woman wants a husband who is a go-gcttcr and o. money-maker, but she wants him to be in addition e playboy and a soulful poet. Or she wants the soulful poet andthe Playboy with the moneymak lrig bump of Henry Ford. I And because all of tlicsc divergent qualities seldom moot in the some person we go about beating upon our breasts and bewaiilng our mistakes in marriage and swapping old wives and husbands for new and finding out, when we get them home, that they liwise have their defects and don't come up to ouriideals any more than the Oncs we already had. In reality very few marriages would be failures if we brought any spirit of compromise to them. There are not many men who are out and out rot- ters and who deliberately set about making the women they marry miser- able. Nor are there many women who are consciously bad wives and who are liidifferet tothcir husbands‘ happiness. Most iiicn and women are in love when they marry and have every intention of being good husbands and wives. Most often they are good husbands and wives according to ihCll‘ lights, and when they fail it is generally because tliosc to whom they are married ex- _ Etiquette How n f D . , _ 0am The Romance of Your Name B, Mm,‘ u. B, mum l“ w Sh’ i I: 1x :1 Puma“. m aunv uasitnvs anus . mm“ s | y i]; or 0mm” i 11- bilJiLU u hciiliily’ in... ,.... l.'i.-.h Tu-siui. ' ' ' ' cter buy a trousscau for his Ufnii? , A. No; never. i, , i.» Most of the Men and Women Who Are uis-l o. is ii iic-icaii-i- ro- Aiii-i- _ ,i to make costly lllliilill-ZCL. _ t l. o. Crheir Spouses as Thcy Are Q. Wlizcii is" iipproprizitu llir ll J/ dinner, the round 0i‘ tiic Lfliiilll A flr-iiilrl chili 1i-i1i"i i1; 11 When a reporter asked Billie Burke the other day how she managed to ; 3 table? ‘ llfl iaiui~1 < 1i ii pxm .~ , A Morning Smile} inn aiiciitlaiit of Liciicrail Lalirrvtiic, l.<3 \ liii and ,thi'ougli a scverc illness, and for ha. I1 blurb. 111W. Ifuiiur. u ~ ‘care and attention the general prc- _ its passcntm‘, hc szixl: ing this name throughout llic cen- inrnto rcziininr: in ill!‘ fiuiily l'lll.i_)'- '50?" | MW f/iawa‘ i a fi/VJ/T/i/f" plifji/if“ .. gaa iii." . ‘iiri- Huck there was the rformanre. v mo, bot-F, but whar d'_‘,‘l.l ‘.'1‘l\l.'il'i|f‘|'§f)'." . ;ir..i.'-l1ri' ,' W115, the . was secretary of ihc treasury hi Long Island, iviis Ii liCYUlUi-tlilfl ~:l- ,,,_.,,,-».L rpm-- ' t ti at the individuals to whom we are married . g ,_"_ l‘ v I __ “ m3 m‘ 1 _ _ 1 b m” even as we are and Rome uiidcr Julius Caesar. Flicn i fl-d- H8 l-H» blade -1 l111i011fl‘ 111 “'51 v iiie final appeal. - q " ' "e Jus" °fdlual1y mm“ e "f" _ l t ‘be Cornelius the Centurion, commrmdcnand confincd iu Provost Pi‘i.‘i'(ll‘i, N. i1 i- Q-I]9|'p_ hqgg, 1 been not the romantic h€r0¢5 01' We "m9 u" 5°“ ma" we magma] iwm o ' of the Italians at Caesarea, A. D., 37. ‘ Y.. but made his cscnpc by svxiiii- ' rti‘ ia ; i r2: ‘mun to rim- your, and t *-—-'_f V‘ v H H t we To an about He is better known ls the convert of ming liic llud (iii Riinr Gilli room-vii 'l l ) .. 'r;- "IQO mi. aryqy W“ what makes tgetdlsgrgnxled. lwslzsjltijg ‘Gigi,’ l‘; ma; hands and the Apostle Peter and the first to be his icsiinciit. l.)i-. Eiiilf; CflfllFlillw ii-ii l 1 li‘ m .' lPll (l. li ..':r‘i' who: ilfi/ us, who cry out a marriage is a ' '- .. -. ii‘ all lil w‘! ". ii’ mtg bccl ocp rl off." ‘ Kiri rirvoiirifl trr-cicnors tinted izist l2 iiioirlis». at your Grocers or sent by mail post-paid j ilirti‘. dandruff accumulates and the 181i‘ becomes dead looking and lifillsi‘. Then one i sapt to think the Permanent wave was not a success Tomorrow - Beauty Questions Answered. Silk handbags suspended from bars honeymoon; that their husbands com o homo atnight tZi-cd and grouchy and are about as entertaining and conversational as a stuffed shirt. pcct the impossible of them and demand of them what they have not to give. neared. "“'"“~'¢'~¢5 ‘innumerable women, for instance, complain that they iiiiglit just as wcli l,’ 9'55 PASTRY be married to store dummies for all t he companionship that their husbands ” Rive them. They say that their husbands are so immersed in business that they have never athought for them; that their husbands have never paid _ them a compliment or given them a kiss that wasn't just a peck on the / /“' Z cheek that was so perfunctory it. was an insult instead of a caress since their I »_ . 1/ or the operator was to blame, but it b not always her fault. No one can out hair in good condition if it is Ylliflcd by neglect. too much bleach- Hin or dyeing. Nor is it right to “Wit U10 permanent wave to be a ‘ucim! if you will not take the time of briliiants are vogue in Paris . Many streets in Pepirig China. are being improved Msnchuria expects an early im- provement in business conditions .._.4o_._ ModesS To meet the requirements of the-modem woman and cushioned with e film d’ Gone M“ “the Md f“ old dovniy cotton for added me- l¢ fashioned methods I . . unnecessary discomforts. Modern women have deodorlsee edcccivrly- ' been quick toturri to Models end You. W! k110i"- Wl" 3' m“ "w" to praise its vital euperiorities. hilfflldldvinuie. “f Mum“ 111i! better [lfodlict ll infiniitly Au for i: Itvwr divs or chem‘ softer . . . safer, . . smote com- merit store. lt c¢°l11°"°‘“h“ u you usually pm fut-able. it is rounded On the sides v V ' sums-m CANADA - " Woyld‘; kypgg mks" of suirgitalfdressingr; Maddy!»- " ~ i . absorbent cottons, ' . .;..- .->..|\> 'W0l'nfll1 would rind if she would just realize that a man who works for a Or other women complain that their husbands are philandcrers. 0r that they are jealous. Or that they are UghlWfldS Oiqiliat Llicy can iicvcr be pried away from their own firesidcs to g0 to any place o1 amusement of an evening. ‘ innumerable women scrap their homes and half-orphan their children because their husbands arc dumb lovcmakcrs or iiioncygrubbcrs or petti- cont-chasers or Gloonipy Gusscs around tlic house or whatnot, when they could save the situation by applying Miss Burke's philosophy io it and Jusl. accepting their husbands as they are and letting it go aliiiat. What peace a woman proves lils love far more effectually than lie would by quoting poetry to her! Or that a man can bc i\ good provider xiii-l a poor entertainer or that a man can have an eye out for other wonicii and still PFCICI‘ his wifc or that even a stingy man leaves a rich widow. Any that, anyway, she can't Chilllgfi her husband nncl she saves herself a lot of gray hairs and worry and kccps from alienating liiiii by just taking him as he is and letting it go at that. And the same rule would apply equally wcll to nicn. Suppose Maria has got fair, fat and 40 and isn't as casy to look at as a flapper, she is amiable and easy to get along with and she is a wizard who can make $1 do the work of five. Suppose Sally no loiigcr raises a thrill iii iicr husband's breast. Neither does she cause any indigestion iii his little tum-tum with her cook- ing. . Suppose Fanny isn't a highbrow and is not a very exciting companion. Bhu is as faithful as ii dog and would stand by you if all the world fcil away ' from you. Bo why not take your wife as she is and lct it go til that? hearteches arid divorces ll. would save. A a For The Cook . . -BANANA PUDDING What a loi. of DOROTHY DIX. Kefipsi- Your Skin YUUNGER LOVEIIER Grate e fresh cocoenut, pour over ltia pint of milk and lot cook about 20 minutes in a double boiler. Dralii inga cheese-cloth bag, pressing out lli‘the liquid possible; return the llqiifdio a double boiler and stir iii 1-3.’ do of cornstarch mixed with a little‘ cold milk to e smooth con- elstehcy; stir until the mixture thickens; add h’. cup of sugar and ‘A teaspoon of salt, and mix thoroughly. Biice 4 or 5 peeled-and-scraped ban- anas into a buttered budding dish, pour. over-them the juice of half a lemon; pour on the mixture from the double boiler and let bake about l5 iiilnutsts. ‘Serve not with cream and sugar. scallop Y a special arrangement with Anna Lee Scott...the B famous domestic science authority whose hook “Cook- ery Arts and Kitchen Management" you’ve probably read, we are enabled to offer you a most remarkable bargain. We proposed to Miss Scott that if she would agree to share her recipe filing system with all her friends and pupils, we would make up duplicates and sell them for 25c.—0nly a small part of their actual cost to us. Miss Scott readily agreed and offered to let us include in the cabinet over 100 of her choicest recipes, and her most inter- esting cooking secrets as well. appearing, compact filing cabinet, containing over 100 of Miss Scott's newest recipe creations all filed under carefully indexed headings! Each recipe IS simply and briefly worded. Blank cards are included for pasting up additional recipes Your grocer will supply you with one of these duplicates of Anna Lee Scott's Recipe Filing (‘nhinet iprinted in English or French) for only 25c. _ ' any coupons. If your grocer has sold out his supply, mail us 25c. and we will send your cabinet post-paid as our contri- bution toward making cocking easier, more convenient, and more enjoyable for the housewives of Canada who have made possible the great success of Maple Leaf Flour. Maple Leaf Flour has won its widespread popularity among housewives through the fact that it enables them to make lighter, whiter and tastier bread. flrikier biscuits and cakes and pastries that fairly melt in nnc-‘s mouth. the most carefully selected Canadian hard wheat, every bag carries a “money hack" guarantee of satisfaction. Try it for your next halting. Lee Scott" recipe on a card to fit the filing cabinet, printed inboth English and French. So here it is. A smart You nccd not buy any flour or send blade from Each hag contains a new "Anna MAPLE LEAF MILLING ('0. LIMITED HEAD OFFICE - - TORONTO, ONTARIO