"‘ - -. » Al; ,.. ' ~ "l "‘.-"-"'v.-.y.-..r-.....,,;i..-... ' .>'lII.'0If"*l:-.I‘. " 4i i" v,a__._,.-. assist! if -? u: r ‘<-'<;8:r.1; ' "r- city-t}: f‘5".~i l‘! 1. .Womank Realm -:- Social and Personal -:-' Fashions i .. Xpung. Mothers “l took Lydia E. Pinkham’: Vegerirlile Compound for a rundou n condition before my baby was born. I saw it adver- tised in a booklet and a friend told nu: about it too. It cer- i tai ‘y helped me for my nerves 1 ar 'er, I am in good spirits ; zmil feel well. You may use my letter and l will write to women who are interested in the (Iornp0und."—-F\frs. John ll”. F'.'7iclicv1berge1, RR. #5, Strat- foril, Ontario. , illitii»‘E._"_Pifikha|t1'§ yi/liégelablellnmnuuntl t? l n m! c,» u-mmv u ' ' ' t. -.- (w. .5 a... 1 i For The Cook”, DEAN’! Wlfll CURRY Cue hcet heart, 1 tablespw" W"? g1 mhiospocirs fat, 2 table- lluill‘, salt, pepper. 1 small onion 2 cups boiling water. POW‘ boiling water over heart and let grand about l5 minutes, then out EWIIY int and arteries and cut heart up 1n suanll pieces. I~‘1'.\' m" emmgh of the fat to make 2 tnblcslloons» chop the onion, place fat and onion m pan and simmer a few Flinlli/fi- R011 the pieces of heart in flour and larowzi in the fat and onions. Add the water and e00‘! gently “Hill meat l5 tend“ Add mgrg “rater if necessary during L‘O()ki1‘lg_ xvhcn done add curry poster and salt and DPPDQT "ll-fed with cold water and let boll up. I! necessary. thicken lr-‘Tfllfili 1L: L. 51h) shoultl the tip be ninth to a maid who has looked after one's Lg. its". room Wllfll sinying only 9 511°" while A. time dollar. , Q ls irreall ever cut nt the table? A. Never; always break it into small pieces and lilt it to the mouth with the fiitizers. Q. liov: (loo: an irpera party dif- fer iron‘. a theatre party? ‘ A. It is obligatory to wear full Evening dress at m". opera. 1nd director says our; people have given up sag-pig ;',10i1(‘_‘.-'. They have also given up wage-u: their tails, and for the same z-cnron. 'l‘hc lllllllilliillllf? shoppers are those who wt ("Flhlll lll the rush of shop- per,- shopping early to avoid the iiAll Pains G0. Quick Women's regular pains, cramps, ear-ache, neuralgia, neuritis, rhr-u matism, headaches-get faster relief with Dr. Jack's Tablets. The same with Flu and Colds. Good u gargle in water, too. Dr. jacks help the heart, soothe the stomach, are safe for babies in split doses. No narro- giu, These facts prove Dr. Jack's different and better. 25C. box, all druggistl- iDr. Jack’s ~_ Tablets yo... c- 9 '~‘.e-w~¥1.L~.F_'_'!E*.?'!- s» Answer: f ‘Doroth y Dix ' Letter Box l l l l Penny-Pinching Wife Who Can’t Learn to Enjoy Prosperity-Is a Girl 0f 19 Old Enough to Care for Her Infant Sister? Discarded Wife Dear Miss Dix-My wife and I were married when we were young and poor. We both worked very hard and saved, looking forward to the time when we would have plenty. That time has arrived. I am wealthy and _ ready to enjoy life. I want to travel, to entertain, to belong to a nice social group, but my wife refuses. She has grown economical to the point of stinginess and is not willing to spend a penny that can do avoided. I had even to buy a home secretly without telling her until all the jaapers were signed, because she would never have agreed to an expensive house. Now we have the lovely home but my wife will never go out with me because she is busy with the house and the children, although I hcg her to hire servants. I give her more money than she knows what to do with. but she banks it all. Is there any possible way r 1o make her spend enough money on servants and clothes su that she will enjoy llfc and entertain and have friends? JACK. Perhaps if you will make your wife understand that you are going to get some good out of your money by traveling and entertaining and you tell her that she must either keep up with you or be left behind, she will loosen her grip on her pocketbook. Possibly she may love you more than she does money. but I doubt it. for the passion of the miser for his horde trans- cends all human affections. I know of a case in which a father worth millions let his only son die for want of the medical attention that would in all probability have saved him and who let his only daughter, who was married to a fine but poor man, literally perish for wnnt of the ordinary comforts of life. Women run to extremes, and when they are stingy they are incredibly tlghtflsted. They get a mania for saving and pinch every nickel until the buflalo howls in agony. The highest joy that existence offers them is the entry in their bankbonk and to see this get bigger and bigger they are will- ing to sacrifice themselves and their families. Evidently your wife belongs to this group of feminine tightwads, and the hope of ever changing her is slight, because spending has become a pain to her. She cannot endure to part with a dollar. You will never be able to make her realize that preserving intact the bond between husband and wife is more important than buying another Government bond nor that giv- ing her children the right sort of environment and social contacts will be worth more to them than any inheritance she can leave them nor that pre- ferred friends are better than preferred stocks. She is like a dead woman with her eyelids weighted down by dollars. It is one of life's little ironies that we can turn good into evil if we overdo it and that often our virtues develop into vices, andthis is never more vividly illustrated than when we let thrift grow into miserliness. » This is the easiest thing in the world to do. It is obviously the duty of us all to live well within our incomes and to lay up something for the rainy day and the old age that are bound to come to us all if we live. In order to do this it is often necessary for us to drny ;oixrselves many pleasures and luxuries and indulgenccs that we crave. But we should not push this too far, Doing without things gets to be a habit just as spending does. We can do without the things we want until we atrophy our desires and we come to the place where we no longer want any- thing. - So there should be moderation in saving even as in spending. It is folly to put oil‘ all enjoyment until some distant future because we may never reach it at all. Nothing is truer than the old proverb about getting nuts to eat after we have no teeth to crack them. Of what use to sit down to a feast when you have neither appetite nor digestion for it and the only foodthat agrees with you is crackers and milk? Of what avail to buy l. ticket around the world when your poor old rheumatic bones cry out for the home radiator and you are miserable away from your familiar sur- roundings? It is just as much a duty for the rich to spend as it is for the poor to save. and no money ts better invested than that which is spent on making a beautiful and comfortable home, in giving children advantages. in the broadening of view that travel gives, in hospitality, in giving to those less fortunate than oneself and in generally making life soft and gracious. Avarice is a vice that grows on one as insldiously as the dope habit. ‘ft is n vice to which age is particularly addicted, and it is well for prosperous men and women who have acquired the saving habit in their youth not to let it grow upon them and turn them into mere money-grabbers. DOROTHY DIX. 000000 Dear Dorothy Dix—I am a girl just 19. I have-a sister of 7 and a bro- ther of 4. A few weeks ago my mother died, leaving a. nevr-born baby girl. I want. to keep the baby and raise it. but my father thinks I am too young and that it would be best to board it out for at least two years. If I were married and had a baby of my own I would have to rear it and I would be thought old enough to do it. Do you think I am too young to mother my mntherlcss sisters and brothers? My father makes good money and says he will not marry again. We have agreed to abide by your decision in this matter. IIELEN. Answer: I think you are a very fine and unselfish girl, Helen, to desire to bur- den yourself at your age with your baby sister. It is a lot of care and worry and calls for a lot of work and self-sacrifice to rear a baby, and you will have to give up many of the good times that belong to your time of life to walk the colic and tell bedtime stories and run after restless little feet. But it’ you are willing to make the sacrifice there is no reason why you should not do it and make the best possible substitute to the baby for the mother she has lost. As you say, if the baby were your own nobody would question your abil- ity to take proper care of her. There are plenty of 19-year-old mothers whose youngsters take prizes in better-baby shows. Indeed, the modern young mothers’ babies are generally more scientifically reared than those of the nlder mothers because the young mothers pin their faith to some baby doctor's book as if it were the Bible and go by it. And you will be able to give your baby sister something that not the highest-priced baby specialist can give it. That is love and, queerly enough. it seems that babies cannot live without love. 'I‘hey.have to be potted and kissed and corldled into taking hold of life, and that is why they often live and thrive in dirt and squalor if they have some woman to cuddle them and hold them warm on her breast while they die like flies inthl moat sterilized and antlrcptlc and scientifically run nsyiuma lit any rate. lf you are ever to have the baby keep it from the first. Don't let some one else have it for two years and their. bring it back to you. It will be much easier for you to develop it from the first than it will be malice this model distinctly unusual. preferred.) 1n¢1d¢gtal1y the tapering movement oftho upper edge o! rounded outline is very lllmmmi- neckline that also minimizes the breadth throush the "Mil"- sleeve frills are Pretty- crepy woolen with novel ring dots is perfectly stunning and wearable too.’ ' City m, 1a years, as, as, 40 and 42 inches? bust. cents in the sleeve frills and in the! gardenla at the left shoulder is ehle. marocain are charming for model. how to dress up to the minute at very little expense. It contains most attractive Paris designs and children, embroidery, Xmas sug- gestions, etc. Vhat the Fashionable are Wearing Illustrated Dreissmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington _ i”. The modtshly cut gored skirt pattern. Send stnrnPS v0! ml“ "m" Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents. the gores in “W1 No. 2842. Size .. ...-.---u---~.... NBITAO nnnolanlllllllolllo It features the becominfl The‘ u Street Address Jun-s . . . . . . . 10$ . . . - . . . . . . "n"... Stats The original model in dark green Style No. 2642 may be had in sizes‘ A MorningSmile Black canton crepe with white ac- v Church was over and. the congre-j | gation formed itself into little groups in the churchyard. Presently the vicar appeared and joined a select little party. He introduced a sea cap- tain to a wealthy and generous par- ishioncr. “You have sccn church today," parson. “Surc," said the old sailor". was sleeping in the Be sure to fill in the size of the me." Transparent velvet and crepe this Size 36 requires 4M yards 39-inch. Our large Fashion Book shows each other in said the beaming for adults “He next bunk to j. 7mm? 0 znwp u. -.---_l_—-..-. . ._,, -:- Literature lw- -.-;»£,~»_~ - win , ________ ' ‘ Can't Can't —child needs Castoria WHEN a child is fretful and irritable, seems distressed and .1111- oomfortable, can't play. Can't Fleet?’ it is a pretty sure sign that some- thing is wrong. Right here IS where Castoria fits into a child's scheme- Inna-u sleuth-u ml IINIMIIICOJ~5MH . . l ,,,.,., .. .1 .1 the very purpose for which it was l: “Dvfzvfliorlegrs formulated years ago! A few drops and the condition which caused the trouble is riglited; comfort quickly brings restful sleep. Nothing can take the place of Castoria for children; it s perfectly harmless, yet always effective. ltor the protection of your wee one- for your own peace of m_md—-kccp this old reliable preparation fllwflYs on hand. But do_n t keep it just fur emergencies; let it be an every-day aid, Its gentle action will case and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. In more liberal doses it will effectively help to regulate sluggish bowels in an ultlcr child. All druggists have Cililufldi it's genuine if you see Chas. H. Fletcher's signature and this name-plate: 8.842. Iuim||||||nulluunnlllmlulilluiruluuan ‘ 910w M.- G; M: star: “l always Lux Toilet Soap for my sk of the lovely complexion: you see on tbe screen and tbe radi- ant skin of lovely girls everywhere for you to take it after its habits are fwfirscrl. DOROTHY DIX. ‘ ' “ ' 1d Continued on page ll are kept exquisite with . - (w) Aux-rs Pson adored Lox Toilet C0MPLExI0Ns drum/A; haunted . ’ Lovely skin l: lrrlsisdblq any: Hollywood! Do you flee your close-up test u confi- dently u the stars Face theta? Is yours, too, a skin lovely in i‘ the most pitiless ligtbt? HOW people love the close-up! enthusiasm has made it thefoficial How irresistibly they are drawn _ _ soap in all the great‘ film studios. by the loveliness revealed m a flood on Broadway’ mo’ the stage Sta” of light near to them. l are so dependent on its delicate "onlY ‘he Sid with exqllislte ski" luxury that it is in the dressing rooms can pass the close-up test," 45 Holly- _ of legitimate theatres all over the wood directors declare. qmmrrflgnd we“ in Europe the A cruel test of beauty which you, screen stars know the secret of this too, must pass! Admiring eyes close dainty way to loveliness, and use this to you must find your skin temptiugly fragrant white soap for their beauty. soft and smooth. Have you the con- fidence in your power to attract » which only such alluring skin can give? You can have! You can use the same gentle care that the Hollywood favorites enjoy. You too can keep your skin lovely wit]: Lux Toilet Soap.’ Of the 521 important actresses in Hollywood, 5 1 1 use Lux Toilet Soap w guard complexion beauty. Their {Rich} EvsLYN Bnsur, alluring Columbia star, says: “Almost every girl I know in Hollywood uses it." {Left} CONSTANCB Bnnusrr Pnhé star fscesthe close-u felrlenly and nyl: ‘It’: a wonderfu soap."- Soap 10’? “ii! Haw. Tumwfimr-IEJEJQ by moiatfnenl lo thil‘ m u“