m». it'll‘ ti?“ i pt,» Y'2s.'1l>‘2<>‘.. --_.. .Woman’s Realm‘ i-:- Social and Personal -:-‘ Faions YIDUR day starts with a smile when Kellogg's Corn Flakes come to break- fast. crisp They are so and delicious 12,000,000 people enjoy them every clay. CORNDFLAKES * Ideal for the children's supper IIJI by Kellogg in London, Ontario Fruit Dishes to _Tempt the Appetite i Starting at the head of the list for beginners. we have to consider the ever-present, ail-Canadian fruit locktall. Bananas, oranges and grape- fruit provide endless possibilities tor satisfying our culinary imagina- i.on in making fruit cocktails in both summer or ivlnter. However, there are many fresh fruits. seaso able only in summer, which suggest iliequent use either as beginnings or endings. ‘Pry one of the following concoctions as the various ingredients appear in the market. For Red Raspberry Cocktail, arrange in rather small servings carefully sel- ected raspberries. Squeeze over these a. few drops of lime juice. Chill just before serving, mash with one table- lpoonful of granulated sugar for each lerving, add several finely-cut, fresh mint leaves. Sprinkle over raspberries and garnish with sprigs o1 mint. "W at." "After Operation “After having an operation, l wu V very miserable, weak, nervous and very near unfit to work. l nw Lydia E. Pinkham‘: Vegetable Compound advertised and cried i: and believe it helped me wonderfully. l have no weak spell: any more, the pains have » left m: and my nerves are much bez- i‘ tar‘. l feel safe in saying Lydia E. Pinkhnm‘; medicines have helped me wondcrfullyf-Mn. Wm. H. Beoclwsller, Bo: r43. Port Colbvrflfl» on?“ ttishhbil\l\~ ' lyiiia E. Pinkliaufs Vetellhulc t‘. llllltllilltl v . ' " cmapivs mm convenience " economy -' '- i355»? , richness a ' [ville-any o; m ultra umum his; nu Company of Candi I-linlteliferonlo P’ For Frosted Sultana Grapes. stem firm green sultana grapes and chill -,hqroughly m a bowl of cracked ice. When ready to serve. cover with mint- ed sugar described above. k For Watermelon Cup, scoop out balls of watermelon heart. Chill and garnish with mint. The watermelon balls may be combined with delicate balk of honeydew melon or sultana grapes. This combination served in 3green or coral glasses, makes a charming course for the summer din- ner or luncheon table. It will be noted that any one of the above mentioned cups maybe used as a dessert by adding a fluffy sponge cake or brownie. Note- further that none of these call for cream. NEWEST "Undies" EASILY PACKED Of Chiffon weight In Various Styles; Nightgown: to Match With thoughts of vacation in mind the problem arises of finding how to get as much possible into a suit- case. A partial answer is found in some new underwear of chiffon ‘weight and sheerness. It is made in lstyles to meet the requirements of different, types of clothing. For ev- ening wear there are enveloped chem- ises cut with backs Open below the normal waistline and fronts and step- in parts shaped to the natural part of the body. The shoulder straps are made o1 the fabric and offer a cer- tain elastictty because of the nature of the fabric. To prevent the should- er straps from slipping this garment has two bands up each side of the back and giving a slightly fitted ef- ect. Sets composing vest, bandeau, and step-in are made with the step-ins in different styles. Some have yolks back and front and button on the hip. One has a yoke that fastens on the hips. but has a partial yoke in black which ls adjusted by lacing. This step-in has open knees. To prevent the step-ins which have elastic casing in the knees from slipping, the shirrings are con- fined to the outer parts, the inside being plain and smooth. Nightgovms to match this sheer underwear are made up in two styl- es. one, the short negligee type, which is often wom with a Jacket or negli- gee, and boasts an uneven hemline; (he other o1 regulation length with straight hem. In place of lace trim- ming these gowns have fine applique work of the same fabric in a contrast- ing color. Silk mesh similiar to the used in mesh stockings ls also hcng made n- lo summer underwear. In addition to the accepted patel shades, black and beige are being used for wear with evening dresses. The bnndeaux are lined with matching net and the step- ins mounted on belts of crepe do chine or georgstte. KOWl" ‘Inn for Instill“: a "l!!! Way Recipe m: l I w. -— ....__..._-__ I ‘Milady Beautiful "nu-um v- Mfififc cfiaanorrsrowiv cums ~' What's the Waiter With Wives f Iludn Trouble Lieu With Husbands Dorothy Dix - BEAUTY QUESTION! ANSWERED Dark Elbow; Dear Miss leeds-(l) What can I do for dark. rough elbows? (2) I have a. low forehead with a rather broad face and brown. wavy hair. What is a becoming way to mess it? MARIETTA. Answer-fl) Scrub the elbows every night with warm water and soap. using n null brush to work up the lather. Rinse well and without dry- ing the skin rub on. it the inside of a freshly put lemon for several min-l utes. Rinse and rub in a lemonf cream or a. little of the following} mixture: Twenty (20) grains pow-l dared benzom, fifteen (ill) drops witch-hazel and four (i) ounces olive oil. Do this every night. (2) You might try brushing your hair straight back from your forehead. Usually naturally wavy hair tends to wave in a certain direction, and by noting this and dressing the hair accordingly one may be sure of getting a becom- ing coiffure. Let thehair on the sides wave forward on your cheeks; cover the ears. LOIS LEEDS. Dear Miss Leeds-ti) Sometimes when my eyes feel tired I wash them in boric acid solution. Will this bleach the lashes? (2) Can the eye- lashes be made to grow as long as you want them with vaseiine? which is better, the white or the yellow? (3) 1 am l8 years old and 5 feet tall. What should I weigh? (4) How many hours should a schoolboy sleep who is 7'4; years old? (5) I have dark blue eyes. medium skin and brown hair. What colors in plain and printed dress materials would suit me? What color in hats should It wear? DOLORES. Answer-(l) You should have an eye specialist examine your eyes. The tired feeling may come from unsus- pected strain. When using the eyei wash drop it into the eyes with a medicine dropper. It will not bleach the lashes. (2) No. Vaseline improves the growth of the lashes, but if they are naturally short and stubby they will never become long and curling. They will be longer and darker than they would have been without the vsseline. however. Use the white kind. (3) The average Weight for your age and height is 1086 pounds. (4) A child of this age should have an afternoon rest or nap of an hour. and in addition sleep eleven or twelve hours at night. <5) Pretty colors for you include dark and bright navy, Wedgwood and other medium shades of blue, dark green. almond green. reseds, the sun-tan shades. beige, eggshell. cameo. fig, eapucine, orange, warm tans. brown. henna. rust, brick- red, touches of lipstick red, deep cream. black, dull yellow. peach. old rose, dull orchid. A frock of any of the above colors would be becoming. When you wear n. dark color like navy trim it with bright blue, peach or cream. In prints, a pretty com- bination would be. orange and brown on n fig ground; two or three shades of blue; blue, black and white; rose. green nnd cream: blue. orange and beige. Choose your hats to har- monize with your coats and frocks. If your costume is a neutral shade. choose a bright color for hat hand- bag and necklace. If your costume is bright choose neutral color ac- cessories. Medium blue or light sand hats are likely in be most becoming to Your WW- LOIS LEEDS. “At the Root‘ of Most Men’s Discontent With Their Wives is the Fact That They do Not Possess the Characteristics of Half a Dozen Different Women,” Decides Dorothy Dix. . After having studied the whys and wherefores of the complaints of some tens of thousands of disgruntled husbands. I have about come to the con- clusion that_t.he real grievance that most men have against their wives is that each lady is not a whole harem in herself. In the frank and candid Par East they do these things better. In the countries in which polygamy exists they solve the problem of the eclectic tastes of men in women by numbers. For the head of his home the Oriental sheik picks out n. woman of rank and ex- ecutive ability. To provide him with thrills, he adds to his household n charmer with superabundant sex appeal. For his daillanco he annexes a maiden who plays with skill upon stringed instruments and dancers who are light upon their feet. For a com- panion who will keep him amused and entertained. he chooses a spellbinder who has a thousand good tales on her tongues end. And he keeps up the supply of youth and beauty by judicious selections from each year's crop of flappers. He doesn't expect any one poor, lone. lorn woman to be a pendfum of every feminine charm and virtue, and so when he stocks up on wines he lays in n varied assortment of women to meet his dlflerent needs and desires, wives who are grave and gay. wives who ‘are useful and ornamental, wives who are hlghbrowed and lowbrowed, wives who are sirens and wives who look on life in a serious way. But the trouble with monoguny is that it does not nvb man of his poly- gamous tendencies and so, in the Occident. where the poor dear can only have one wife, he expects his one wife to be many women in one. He isn't content to take her as she is. with one single line of attraction, no matter how good it is. l-le expects her to double up and in her one propria persons to unite to all of the fucinstlous and desirable qualities of her entire sex. This is such n large order that it is not surprising that so few women are able to fill it. For what the average man expects of his wife l5 that she shall be domestic, yet never smell of the kitchen; that she shall look like a fashion-plate, yet run up no bills for clothes. That sheshall be an ingrowing mother who never leaves her children, yet always be ready to step out with him when he feels like going; that she shall be a home woman who never gads around or belongs "to clubs, yet she shall be scintillating and up w the minute and help m» husband make n position in society. That she shall do the work of two servants. yet rend all the new books. be vivacious and amusing and always keep her hands beautifully manicured. Most wives can qualify one or the other of these points. and n1 would be well and wedlock a. grand, sweet song and we should have happy homes. inhabited by contented married couples if only husbands could mil!!! up their minds to be satisfied with the one virtue their Marla: in- stead of demanding that she should come across with the allure of a whole bunch of women. Mm. Sailor he vufinoflulo.‘ Duringbl our, in 1914, unlawf- el 5y l Jifinltiu lftbnl Iinmh 5w now uhhnrd .11») on l Quiflbo Imliul ration in a! -" harmful Gums. Sb: gnalifid n bar liplonu in Paris and m:- tinud rrulying rbm forum rim X95 For The Cook l Of course, men will deny that they expect the impossible of their wives. but expect in the few cases in which women are out-and-out totters, and there are mt many of these. at the root of most men's discontent with their wives is the'fuct that they do not possess the characteristics of half a m» different women. A man doesn't say for himself, as he beholds the fat, common-place wife of his bosom: “My. but I am lucky to have got Mary Jane! True, she isn't much to look at and her conversation never runs farther than frdm the nursery to the kitchen and over the back fence, but she is a wizard with the po.s and pans and can get a hundred and ten cents out of every dollar and I never had n button of! nor a. hole in my stockings. If I were n. leper she would wash my clothes with her own hands, and if all the world turned against me she would stillebe standing faithfully by my side." 0h, no. the man doesn't say this to himself and purr with contentment over hi: wife's devotion and the good comfortable home she has made him- l-le says: “Gee. but Mary Jane has got old and homely and she bores me l0 tears. I feel as f I could scream when she babbles on about Johnny's tooth and how liver had gone up in price. and the Smiths‘ baby, and the row with Mrs. Jones has had with her cook. and what time the Thompson girl got home this morning. "Why can't she be beautiful and slim like my stenogrnpher and with that adorable freshnfi and youth about her? And why isn't she interesting and witty like Mrs. Black, who keeps a fellow on his tiptoes? And why isn't there that something about her that makes me thrill and want to kiss her instead of hnving to set my teeth and nerve myself to it when I give her a peck on the cheek when I nm leaving for work in the momlng?" Nor does the man who is married to the woman who is amiable and sweet and companionable. but a poor housekeeper, congratulate himself upon his good fortune in having n wife who never nags or delivers curtain lec- tures or tells him of his faults or reminds him of his mistakes, but who is always good-natured and jolly and lauflhlns- ' Oh. no, far from it. He howls out that his stomach has been ruined b! bad cooking and his money wasted by careless splmllll! 5nd W“ h’! Vi" and the ennui-m always look sloppy and the house like n. nliflr and hr wonders why his Sally Ann isn't nest and orderly like Mrs. A. and can't make bread like Mrs. 1a.. and isn't- economicni like Mm 0- Nor isthe man who in married to n wife who looks like a livinl Fla-ll" in a million-dollar frame satisfied Just to admire her u n. work of art and consider it n. privilege w vcy for her upma- H: complains haw!" Ihs "l" as thrifty as Mrs. 2.. and as humble as Patient Griselda. And the ma! who is married to s highbrow isn't satisfied to have an intellectual compen- ion. f-fe wants her to be also I. cook and a seamstress and a vamp and whet h!" Y0“. And no it goes, and the reason that men get tired of their Ilvll ll I!“ because of what the wives m. but because of the tmnu may m M IM because every woman isn't o. whole iumn in herself. DQ501117 D13- whioharenohlrd l0 Iflliflll" used. ‘hrsiolm ‘llousehold Hints IIIIVIU@ dlkorwmtedmatsrlnleitllllt runovodbyrubungwiliantabol. lwletoilorllrdnrbbedontorflf. flhbotelnlwiliremontbmifcl_ VEGETABLE CHOWDER One cup chopped carrots. one cup chopped turnips. ‘one cup chopped eight cups water, three-quarter cup butter, half cup diced onions. salt. Mix together all the vegetables ex- oept the potatoes and simmer in the butter ten minutes. Add the potatoes and cook in l. covered pan for five celery, three cups diced potatoes. ' ____ _ ___.§vu-»~._.-_ -,-- flgheuhhu. l In I914 Mn. Sailor‘: f oped J I101! 060m. In Geneva Mme. I. S tells women of the diplomatic set how to retain skin beauty tera tu re .1 fi-eo 'All our patrons are advised to use Palmolive Soap twice daily -to provide really thorough cleansing and to soothe the tissue into that healthy, RE. SPONSIVE condition that is the pssermlal foundation of beauty.” Ganrvn ADAM]! SEILER, of Geneva, feels mi pride in the work she accomplishes. "Helping the world's smmesz women to retain zhelr berury—it is a glorious work," she says, "worthy of the most painstaking and scientific effort." To see that patron's complexion: have proper care tonlinuourb, Mme. Seller has de- cided upon a home treatment which is the favorite oi’ prominent beauty authorities nil over Europe, the United Sines and Canada. “All our patrons are advised to use Palmolive Soap twice daily," she says. Massage the face gently for two full min- urcslwizh Palmolive lather. Rinse this ed thoroughly, and with i: all impurities and lccreflons. Follow with n cold rinse . . . to icy temperature, in the morning, as an astrin- gent. All other treatments, all make-up should be preceded by this basic skin gleanm. Una Cavalieri, of Paris, gives her smm patrons this same advice; so do Muss, Payer, Vincent and all other great spccislim. minutes, then add the water and cook until the vegetables are tender and can be forced through a colander. To the puree add the seasoning and the parsley. Reheat and serve. (A Morning/Smile Mr. Sharpe returned from the whist drive in rather a bad frame of mind. “Really. Ruby," he said to his wife. as she filled the hot-water bottles- "realiy Ruby, you were most aggrav- ating this evening. You must have asked me what were trumps at is» a doezn times." l-lis wife put down the kettle ‘m! screwed in the stopper. g "Yes. dear," she explained simply. "I know: but 1 didn't really apatite- 1 Just did it to show you I was tok- ing an interest in the game." ‘Ilhe largest number of iourQu since construction days are expedled in Panama this year. ' \ The Queen of Norway has sent $500 to the Thankoffering Fund for till recovery of King George. ' HY put off enjoying the of em - eilely bcauli ul rugs any longer. when such an array ninth-active patterns are ob- tainable in n- ine Con o cum Gold Sea! agent the present low prices? _ Practical . . . too i? all times. k t<ir\\~