""‘ '-'.'~»>-~.»»_~*"p¢\~:~;"j' . y- . MARCH 31. 18-732 Iv Appoimmcuflo Her Mslbsly E MAKE THE LOW“ NO other perfume. in all the world can greet you u-iihf-tlie tenderness an refreshing touch of tlie Yardley Lavender. ln 16'.’ _yc;irs none liaspre- auinuiltoinlicitsglace ‘n5 Fashion's est- l\\\.'C(lCfilll[){ll'IlOD}8n none ever xvill. Dlaliq ilio Yurdli-y Lavender 3mm" perfume-for ilic solace iliat it brings when you are tired and for (lie (oscillation that is Ynrillcvs alone. ln stop- [lured bottles at 35c~and gilixklsos from 85c to $10, alt all good clrilg and depart- uiciit slorcs. YQ U R, 30695.1... YARDLEY LONDON YA R o |_ EY _LLAV E N o E R N0 ,.,__ v 1l=!-/.¥iat the Fashionables are Wearing illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington piaits give graceful flare to the skirt when in motion. Carried out in sheer woolens, rib- bed wool jersey resembling a knit- ted weave and rough crepe silk, it's equally smart. Style No. 2677 may be had in sizes i4, ‘i6, l8. 2O years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. size so requires 2% yards 39-inch with ll‘. yards 39-inch contrasting. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern 15 cents. No. 2577. Size .................... '1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-..-.-~n--....-..i\ Name Street Address ...nnn-nn-"uuucan“... City State A MorningSmile -_..________J ~~—-~ ~~- i. ,_~ The vicar was paying a visit to the houses of his poorer parishion- ers, and in one of the houses he asked a good many questions about the family. A very grubby but very cheerful little boy attracted the kindly clerics attention, and he asked him his name. _ “Reginald duu-cy sinir, sir," rc- ....'..~_i ,1. plied. the boy, with a grin. The light. topped bodice proves The vicar turned to the boy's curly favorite in printed and plain father. “What made you give the crepe silk combination with the ool- boy a name like that?" he asked. loge girl. " '60s I want 1m tel- be a profes- What a, fascinating affair this ‘clonal boxer," returned the parent, model ls, so straight and slim of “an' wlv a name like that he'll get lino. Attrnctively arranged inverted plenty o’ practice at school." Your Beauty Survive Every Outdoor Test ? . _ Outdoors, as well as in- _ sdoors, cvcn after the most ~ ~strcnilous exercise, you can ‘still bc bcauilful. The ctlec- (lvcncss of Pornpcian Creams load Powders eudurz-J. Know the caress of the Day Cream which vanishes so ulckly. Choose one of the ve shades of Pompeian ‘ Beauty Powder, so suitable and ‘ agreeable to your complexion. Just the right weight-mot so light as to look grainy nor so heavy that it cakes. And POIDPClQIl Bloom (rouge)- Oriental, Light, Medium, buy higher quality than ‘Dark, Vivid or Orangc—onc Pompeian. g POM P€lAN BEAUTY PRODUCTS , lndelfhle Ll nick 60c. Nlghc Cream (Clumln Cold Cream) 60c. l): Lmm i aiushlc l 60c. Mun!» Cream 60c. wile: (Zompm 60c. , llC 29c. Beauty owdcr 60c. loom 60c. Dusting Powdcr $1.00. "y _ MAKE IEAUTY All All-DAY l-IAIIT " ‘ 35:41:: Agmis: Harold P. Ritchie I: Co. Int, l0-ll McCaul Sh. Toronto. Ont. .1... of these will exactly suit your individual coloring. The new Pompeian Lipstick gives a youthful, vital bril- Iianre. Three perfect shades. Unusually smooth and water- proof. Lasts all day. At night use Pompeian Night Cream. First as a thor- ough cleanser, then leave on a second film all night to soften, sooth . . . and protect. You'll be lovelier . . . tomorrow . . . in after years. You are assured that while you can pay more for your beauty products, you cannot l. ll For The Cook l noon; 0E1. etter Box pmUANTE BAUOI _______. 2 tablespoons butter or other ht- 2 onions. 2 carrots. 2 shallots. ‘rhyme. 2 cloves. 1 clove 85'1"- 1 tablespoon flour. l cup bee! or veal B000!- 35 cup vinfl". i tablespoon minced plrller- Bolt and pepper. Melt the fat, slice into it 01110111. carrots and shallots. Add a little thyme, minced parsley. <90?" l" clove of garlic. Let this mitt-um cook until the carrot ls wit. W911 add flour. w. it cook for 5 mlnvm more and add beef or veal stock l-nd vinegar. Skim and strain thwilib I sieve. Add salt and P9P)?" when boiling. CRESTS AND EPAULETS Crests and epsulets are WWW" iy seized upon as material for trum- forming the appearance of a dress. Some are of flowers, others of lace. each of which can be f tened to a. plain dinner dress. A large bow is adjusted at the waistline by a clasp, to make a simple frock “fancier? l MOURNING WARDROBE I “A death occurred in our family and I had to go in mourning. I could hardly afford _to buy all black clothes, so decided to dye jvbat I had. l consulted our dru t and lie advised using Dlamon D5 . Everything came out beautil’ l ' coats. wool dresses. stockings and all. l have since lcarnec to agpreciate the excellence of the b ack iamond Dyes. l tried another flack d c and the results were. impossible. I bad to get Diamond Dyes and dqthc work OV€l’._RCC6lltly I have tinted my curtains a beautiful raspberry shade nnd dyed a rug a lovely garnet with Dlilmoll" Dyes. T h? are rcalmoucy savers—the finest yes money can buy-I truly believe‘. ‘ _ Mrs- Lv.K.L., Montreal It’s Chocolate Time Heat and energy, energy and heat! That is what Canadians need these crisp, fresh days. Happy the mother who sees rosy-checked boys nnd girls race home from school to join in outdoor sports. And twice blessed is she if, in the few minutes between school time and play time, she has some nutritious toothsomc food for them. So the mother who wants to give hci: growing boys and girls a but and energy producing food to oar- ry them through theexhilurotlon of play in the fresh air, might keep a variety of chocoiaw cookies or cakes in the much sought cooky ha. Quickly made, inexpensive and easy to digest are chocolate cookies made with- PA cups sifted flour, 2 teaspoons baking powdcr, ‘A. teaspoon salt, ‘f: cup butter or other shortening, 1 cup sugar, 3 0888. Well beaten. 3 squares of unsweetened choco- late, melted, 1 teaspoon vanilla. 51ft flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder and salt, nnd lift to- gether three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream together until light and fluf- ly. Add eggs, chocolate and vanilla and then flour gradually. Belt un- til smooth. Chill. Roll o. mslll amount at s. time, on a slightly- floured board to ‘A inch thickness. Cut with floured cocky cutter. Bskc on greased baking. sheet in hot oven 400 degrees for six minutes. This makes six dozen cookies. Chocolate Crisples are so good that they take the place of candy, particularly when Mother thought- fully puts some chopped pelnuts on top. The recipe require»- 2 squares unsweeten ’ chocolate, ‘A cup butter ro other shtirtcning, 1 cup sugar, 3 988B. ‘l: cup sifted cake flour, 1b teaspoon vanilla, ‘A cup chopped peanut melts. Cut up the hocolntc and melt it in n bowl over not wntcr, than add butter, sugar and unbutcu eggs, l4 cup cake flour, and vanilla and but well. Spread mixture on baking ‘sheet 12 by 1c, or in three shallow pans about 8 by B. Sprinkle top with nuts. Bake in hot oven, 400 degrees for flficcn minutes. While worm, cut with cocky cutter or mike in two-inch squares. ‘rhun cool and break into squares. Make four dw- m cookies. - » .4.- Must Happy Couple Share Home With Hus- bancPs Mother and Sister '! -- Why Does Bold Girl Win Over Modest Girl With Men ? Wife Monopoiized by Husband D0" M186 DIX-I B-m n» man of 27, very happily married, no child- "11- W119! W9 We" 1118111041 my wife and I solemnly agreed that we would not live with relatives on either side. My father died, leaving m! mother and an unmarried sister a comfortable fortunc, which, unfortunately, they have lost. My sister says it is only right for the strong to pro- tect the weak and that my mother and herself should come and live with my wife and me. This would necessitate our getting a. larger apartment and incurring lurther expense which I cannot af- ford, ‘u my salary has been cut and I do well to keep my head above water. Nor is my wife anxious for my relatives to live with us. She cusses“ renting a nice room somewhere for them, at my expense, and that my single brother should help take care of them. I want to do the right thing. X. what is it? Answer: Take your wife's advice and establish your mother in n. little kitchen- en; gpgflment, where she can get her own meals and be independent. That will give her something to do and she will be a. million times hap- pier than she would be if she were living with you. n. is a queer thing that children always think they are belnfl send to their mothers when they deprive them of all occuPfll/lml- Nillhi-"B equals the self-complacent righteousness of a son or daughter who says: "Now. mother, you have worked hard all of your life and I don't want you to have a. thing to do the balance of your days but just to sit up with your hands folded." These poor, stupid, well-meaning children don't undemtand that malignity itself could not invent a WOTSe torture, and that a. woman who has been busy and active and helpful for fifty or sixty years simply can't sit down on the do-nothlng stool. she has lost all capacity for loaflng. She can't be idle. She has got to have some occupation, something to do, or else she simply dies of boredom. That is the real explanation of why old people make so much trouble in their children's homes when they go to live with them. They don't mean to interfere. They don't intend to put their fingers in every pie, but they just can't keep them out of them. Habit is too strong for them. ‘they can't sec anybody doing anything without wanting to pitch in and boss the job. ‘ It ls always so much better for all concerned for children to establish their parents in little homes of their own, no matter how humble they are, for the mother's sake as well as their own. And about nine times out of ten it would be better for mother if she would go out and get a. job, so that she would have the added joy of being mianclally independent. The idea of a wozxmn crawling up on the shelf and‘ waiting for he: children to support her just because she is in her 50s or her early 60s is ridiculous. And force your sister to go to work. Evidently that solution o! the situation has not occurred to her, so you will need to present it in her very iorcibly and firmly. Her idea seems w be a clinslnz vine and hang on to some one else for support. Tell her that in this day and generation there is no place for female parasites, and it is just as shame- ful for able-bodied girl to be a lazy loafer as it is for s. boy. Hunt her up a job and tell her that you arc through, and it is up to her to do the rest. This will be tho kindest and most brotherly thing you can do for her, because a. woman who is dependent is no}: hB-PPY- Sbe is always envious, dissatisfied, grasping and miserable because she is bound secretly in despise herself. To sec the truth of this you have only to look at the bright, cheer- ful, wide-awake faces oi the girls you see going to work every day, and the pccv-lsh, frctfui faces of the women who are sponzing on their rela- tives, and who have nothing to interest them, nothing to look forward to. Don't bring your sister and mother home to live with your wife. It will result in nothing but trouble. No manln the world is 1;: such a. terrible position as the one who is tom to pieces etween tho women of m; hmfly, DOROTHY DIX. O O O l I I Dear Mia Dix-Charlie and I had been sweethearts since childhood. We were engaged and tho wedding day not. far off when there came to our town a girl who smoked and drank and patter and cursed and swore. but sbc swept Charlie oi! his feet and he Jilted me and married her. I was a quiet, modest ‘girl, everything that she was not. It hurtmc ter- ribly, but I got over it and married a fine man, but 1 still wonder about it. Why do men prefer that type of girl to one who behaves herself? Why does a. man fall in love with a bold girl and pass over the modest one? Why? BET-TY- Answer: ‘The wisest man who ever lived declared that a serpent on a rock and the way of a. man with a. maid were mysteries that could never be fathomed. Bo there is no use in worrying your head over why men pus over the girls who have every virtue that would fit them to be good wives nnd deliberately pick out for wives tho sort of girls who will make them miseroblc all the way from the altar to tho grave. But you see this done every day tn the week. You see your Charlies and your Franks and your Jims living next door to sweet, refined, intel- ilient. modest, domestic girls, who belong to their own social class, and who would make any man the devoted, thrifty, amiable type of wife whose price is above rubies to her husband. But does charlie or Prank or Jim rush over and propose to her and secure this blessing for him- self? Not at all. He never oven gives her a second look, and he goes out to some night club and selects some half-naked little flapper who has had a. dozen hiahba-lls and is all lit up, and he marries her. . And she revolts every ides. of decency and respectability that he has, and shc runs him in debt and makes a homo that u’ just a plm soi- tossing up cocktails. and they fight like cats and dogs up to the door of the divorce court. Of course, the appeal oi the bold girl is the primitive one o! sex. she Phys upon that as upon a harp with a thousand string-s. Also, as men are her fereordnined prey shdhas no sham in openly stalking them, and it flutters mm! men. especially men with an inferiority wmoisx. W have a woman make love to them. The bold girl does the wooing and that makes it can! for the man. Likewise. tho bold m; knows more about how to work men. how w flatter and ccjolg them than the modest girl does, and that is why she can always take he: man sway from the timid violet. DOROTHY Dix. i O O O I l mo: Mill Dix-Before my marriage to a weil-to-do business man I bad dreamed ct o married iifc with long afternoons at homo when I would entertain or do u I liked. But, although I have pity of ser- voohtodoouotmrworkfarmlbsvgnoumcormyownbeuiucmy, 4 vuocucr or Cl ' Nssmib uumulo CONDENSED ._.. is ozs. BVAPORATBD (‘mi m! Bub! Sh! 8 t ned Condensed Milk has the Blue L81"! Uzrevzeztencd Evaporated Milk Ins the White Lab! ._._._ Nestlé’s—World’s Laréeast Producers and Sellers of > Condensed and Evaporated Milk Nasraais um; sim- ply ha: to be good! The experience and carc used in its making guaran- tee that. Pure, rich milk from selected cows-cou- ceutrated by evaporation to double richnesslscalcd in airtight containers. That's Nestléb. The Con- densed has had pure sugar added to it. husband monopollzes me. He telephones me to come to his ofilce. He WBIWB m6 t0 80 with him 011 WIN- He wants me with him every minu- ‘oa of the time. He is good and kind and dear, but, oh, what, wouldn't I give for just one day of every week that I could call my own and in which I could do as I choose! Miss Dix, what is your comment? MRS. W. O. B. Answer: I My comment ls that women are hard to please. Every day I get doz- ents of letters from women who weep and lament because thcir hus- bands neglect them, and her you are sobbing because you get, Lou much of your husband's society, Not that I blame you. Heavens, no. You can get fed up on even the people you like thebest, and nothing is more boring than never tobc able to get away from some one who hangs on to you like the old man oi the sea. ' But why don't you just strike for liberty? Tell your husband tilat you have just got to be by yourself one day a week or cise you will go crazy or get a divorce. That ought to settle that. DOROTHY DIX. caows ram GIVE‘ worm yams liwav are tremendously pleasing. But there are lines about eyes that come from other causes and do not have the same pleasing effect. The best way to treat these fine lines is to prevent them. This means that you who are under 30 should be giving the delicate skin around your eyes plenty of oil in which to thrive. It seems that you should keep the iine muscles firm by gen- tle message. No matter now much wou may take a cut in ages, psychologically, this year, crew's feet give your years away. By crows’ feet I do not mean those nice little fine laugh lines that experience brings a woman who has met life valiantly, with a high‘ heart. Eyes that crinkle as they laugh Gives It you have slipped up on pie. vcntion and lines are appearing that you greatly regret, the least you can _do is to work keeping them from growing deeper. Often these lines come from eye strain. Sec o specialist. Perhaps you need glasses for reading. Avoid eye strain. Make sure your house lighting systcln is all it should be. And, rest your eyes several times a day. The best way to do this is to lle clown, with a. hot pack on them. Fifteen minutes really does wonders, if you take that much time out from your routine about l1 "o'clock in m» morning and be- tweenfour and five in the after noon. Begin immediately to give the flesh around your eyes daily mas- sage. There are eye muscle oils that are very good. And nourishing cream that is very rich will do. But cilaare really better. Massage from the noce out to the temple below 1, the eye. Lift youpflnger and mas- ‘ sage from-the node out to the tem- ‘ pie over the lid. At the comers ni the eye massage in a circular line. y This all helps a. lot. But you must do it religiously, morning and night. if you really want results. Brimming Zest and Energy i Yet costs less brimming good health. water boils. Quick Quaker Oats tire of, because it is agreeable to digestion‘. For cleanliness and the kindly Quaker are packages you buy. n n also ofQuckcr rockets, Co", Flak”, "we". M; m one cereal which people never licious. so nourishing and so‘ always buy oats in packages, never loose in bags. For quality and dellciousncss, see that. the name and picture of Inlargehousehoidpackages, with or without chinawure. Also the small 10c size. Sealed Plckflltel only. NEVER in» BULK. All Quaker package; contain coupons. Save them and obtain useful articles. wax Q 0mm to Every Child than a cent a dish . . . delicious, nourishing Quaker Oats CHILDREN need boundless energy both in and out of school. An 70% oi’ the day's work and play comes in the four morning hours. health authorities everywhere recommend Quaker Oats for breakfast. No other food has such perfect balance of the elements for growth and energy. These, with plentiful mineral to enrich the blood, give children stamina and. And yet Quaker Oats costs less than a cent a dish. Women everywhere turn to it for economy. And for time saving, too. It cooks in 236 minutes after tho- is the so de- purity on the in Quick Quaker 0st}. marked “chinswm- Every package contains ‘, piméififiinuiluc . M. . dds" ' ll?" ‘$.93; " . . . v " A flue selection? hip handsome pieces. Ars Mada will: Quaker Oats 0am "y, Pcterborough and Sabkdoon, emu! miller! in the Impin. i highs! quality conch.- 2059 _ 4,}