‘awn-as; .- @ PAGE.‘ ‘EIGHT l ;Woman ’s Realm _.-;;_$ocial and THE GUARDLQQ Personal -:- Fashions, -:- ywI/ghat the Fashionables dire Wearlng »_._.._ TEA-rum PAJAMAS the idea. of a skirt when not in . motion. Style No. 2631 comes in sizes 13, 14, i6, 18, 20 years, 36 and 88 inches bust. The 16-year size requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with 2% yards of 3-inch ribbon. If you prefer crepe silk, which is probably a bit more practical than velvet, you'll like this cute model immensely in a. vivid red shade with self-fabric sash. A gay printed crepe silk is also very attractive. Another charming scheme for lounging is the wool crepe or Jersey pajamas. Make them in the sznart brown shade with the neckline ruf- l rie and tie sash in Persian green shade. What about another paJama for teatime or lounging? A deep blue with sapphire cast transparent velvet made the orig- inal. The youthiully’ tied sash com- bnicd flame and blue crepe dc chine. Don't you think the xieckihle in- tercsting? And the sleeves are adorably spurt in capelrt czcet. Bias lznesflsee that the liipline is slim- ming. The trouser legs are cut so as to fall in full flaring hemline giving SAVEDAIMPORTED DRESS Fflifier a little wearing. a lovely green There 53-9 ymmy gntlglngly 1-5;“. \‘(lll0-—£il'l llTipOflC<l _dress-—losl color i so completely lllnt it was notrvczrr- lull“ “you novelties m. plum or able. A lflPllIl ulm hurl fl(llllll‘i‘ll it ,ln'mled Patterns that y°un find 9° asked mc uhy l w: n‘i wenrliiu it Jnexpensivc and wearable. fill.’ -'.'.l1'li';~.1°.'l\-.l‘-.Y.‘§5 "l5 -lllfi lY-iliilll l F” “Tim” “'"“~ my a" dam“ included lliurnonri lfilvesifo mnkc a ll“ Striped hm“ Wm‘ the stripes {Ullg Slflllfy Isholri, it ilnmfrl mil. 1running horizintally. The sleeves, lruwillifil y. zlvc n ow y new l, n“ r111 d ~ 5h could be of qlrggg that rcnlly cost just IIIC-‘illc (‘Jllilfllrlllnicll iEnD“C:1al)mllifl.tlll8 ‘i201’!!! FIN‘. of one piuelrugc of Diamond l ‘ l _‘ ' ‘ Be sure to hll in the size of the Y“ . . “l have since used Diamond Dyes lpattci-n. Scnd stamps or coin (coin for both ilnimr; and dyeing. They preferred) do ciihcr eriually well. am not an Price or‘ pattern 15 cénu expert dyer lutl never have a failure vviih Diamond Dyes. 'i‘iiey seem to . Ile nlzulc so they :il\v:|j,'5 go on smooth- Iy and evenly. 'lli<-y new-r spot, nircnk or run; and friends ncvcr know thc things I rlyc with Diamond Dyes are rcdyed at alli” Mrs. R11, Quebec. No. 2631. Size . . . . . . . . . . ~1GOIID Name 0on1 - . . . -noooooooloolllouun-onooolll Lady-And (lcetor, I blush so cas- ily-ii I set down and think, I blush. What can I do to prevent it? Doctor-Jfhink or something else. Z7I;L:'?':1;I~:f2i ' C‘ i 0000000:IoQIIIIIIIIIQOOOIOOIOOI Street Address ' If. I- I r lf-‘u-"n-u-nu-u-i nun-cone city _..' "r State Still Lovely - when the Evening WancsP. Lifter the last dance will his mental picture of you be sweet, charming, remember- ablc? For all dances to come, ‘let pure Pom peian Creams and Powders assure you of endur- ing beauty. Know the caress of the Day Cream which vanishes so Zuickly. Choose one of the ve shades of Pompcian Beauty Powder, so suitable to your complexion. just the right wcight—n0t so light as to look grainy, nor so heavy that it cakes. And Pompeian Bloom (rouge) . . . Oriental, Light, Medium, Dark, Vivid buy higher quality than or Orange . . . one ofithese Pompeian. " ', ,- POM P€|AN BEAUTY PRODUCTS ludcllbln Ll nick 60c. Night Cream (Clelnsin Cold Cram)‘ 80c- DlgCrenm ( anishln ) 60c. Massage Cream 60:. Powder Com ale 25c. Bcluty owder 60c. Bloom 60c. Dusting Powder 1.00. MAKE IEAUTY AN ALL-DAY HAIIT Sale! Agents: Ilareld F. Rirchie k Co. ltd" lO-ll McClul Sh, Toronto, Onl- will exactly suit your mar: vidual coloring. I The new Pompeian Lipstick gives a youthful, vital bril- ‘ance. Three perfect shades. Unusually smooth. Water- proof. Lasts all day. _ At night use Pompeian Night Cream. First as o thorough cleanser, then leave on a second film all night, to soften and soothe . . . and protect. You'll look lovelic: tomorrow . . . in aftcryears. You arc assured that while you can pa more for your beauty pro ucts, you unnot H "f. WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT ECONOMICAL AND NOURISHING lode in Cuuida will: Canadian Whoa! TIII CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY.‘ LTD. Shall Engaged Girl Finish High School or Take Course in Housekeeping? - Old ,, People Who Neglect Their Appear- 15.‘ ance -How Can Sheik Avoid l‘ ’ Importunate Girls ? p e Dear lvllss Dix-Which u more important-for a girl w have s. good education, or be s 300d housekeeper? I love housekeeping and I hate school and although I am only a. sophomore I want to stop school be- cause I am engaged to a young man and I think it would mean o. lot more to him for me to be able to take care of his house and give him good meals than it would ilor me to know about higher mathe- matics and so on. What do you say? A YOUNG GIRL. Answer: g If a man could only have one or the other. probably he would. prefer a. crockerjack cook to a college graduate and a wife who could make light biscuit to one who made heavy conversation, but fliers is no earthly reason why good education cannot be combined with good cooking. As a matter of lact, the more intelligent a woman is, the better wife she makes, and the better manager she is. It takes a lot of brains and knowledge to run a house, for it calls for at least a little information on every subject under the sun. The housekeeper must be a mathematician if she is going to budget her income wisely and keep her accounts straight and be able to figure out when a. bargain is a ba-rsaixi. She must know something of chemistry to be able to make a decent loaf of bread. She must understand the science of dietetlcs and give her family properly balanced meals with the necessary vitamins and pro- teins and carbohydrates and so on. She will need to be a good Jsokleg psychologist in order to manage her husband and bring up her children properly, and so on, and so on, and so on. Being a housekeeper and wife and mother is no Job for a Dumb Dora. It takes all the gray matter that the most intelligent woman can give to it to make a good job of it. That is true, even of cooking. Women don't cook by ear any more and trust to luck that their cake will be light or their mayonnaise won't curdle. They do it scientifically by a formula that regulates the proportion with minute exactness. They don't test their ovens by their hand to see if they are the right heat, but by ther- mostats, and the results are triumphs of science instead of the products of more or less lucky guesses. The very finest cook and housekeeper that I know is a. woman who was never in a. kitchen until she was nuddle-aged. But she was a woman of high intelligence and a succmlul business woman, and when she undertook to be a housekeeper she brought to bear on that her keen mind with its disciplined habit and thought and investigation, her know- ledge of food values, her discriminating taste and her energy and thoroughness and the result is that he: house moves on oiled bearings without a. cheak in the domestic machinery and her meals are gastrono- mic feats, no matter how simple they are. And there is another thing for you to consider, my dear young girl, and that is that man does not live by bread alone. He wants his wife to be s good housekeeper, but he wants her also to be a good companion, and you cannot be that if you have no education, no interest 1n books, or what is going on in the world. S0 my advice to you is to go on and finish your schooling. Get all the education that you can so that you may be able to feed your hus- band intellectually as well as physically. DOROTHY DIX. O O O O O O Dear Dorothy Dix-Why is it that so many old people are so careless about their person? So many of them are very "imperfect ablutioners," to quote the old Gilbert and Sullivan opera, and they will wear their clothes until they almost fall ofl them. They are also indiflerent to table etiquette and do things that are very mortifying to‘ their children. What can any one do to change them? DORA. ‘ Oldpeoplearesetintheirwaysandbardtnchnnge. Alsmtlieyan very sensitive and resent any miticlsm because, curiously enough, age seems to develop egotism to the nth degree, and old people, Just because they are old, feel that they are the fountain of wisdom, and that their . point of view and way of doing things is the only one, Of course, the reason that they get careless about their person is because it is more difllcult for them to do the little things that is neo- essu-y to do to be well groomed, and because their eyes have grown dull and they do not see the spots and wrinkles in their clothes that are so obvious to othm. Likewise, penuriqusness is another vice ol age, and many old people are not willing to spend upon themselves the money that is necessary to buy 300d clothes. Yet, u a matter or fact, it is much more important for old people to keep themselves dolled up than it is for young ones, because they have no longer the beauty of youth and their attractiveness depends more upon their clothes. When they do this, great is their reward, for we so seldom see old people who are immaculate in appearance that when we do‘ we make a. great to-do over it. We positively rave over an old gentleman who is the glass of fashion or an old woman who is a picture in her silks and laces and old-fashioned jewelry. We are always odJul-ixig the young to improve themselves, to keep well dressed and well groomed, to cultivate good nil-linen and the l-rt of making themselves pleasing and agreeable to people. We might well i give this some advice to age, for until they are too senile to be respon- sible, old men and women can correct their faults and improve them- selves, and make themselves more pleasant and agreeable and easier on the eyes for those who have to live with them. DOROTHY DIX. O O O O O O Dear Miss Dix-I am an attractive young man of 21. Being an ‘m. lete and a liberal. spender makes ms popular. While ‘I do not IIIIIOI women, I cannot endure their running after ms. ‘may are constantly cnfllnsmemthetelephomnndmlwrtlncmamiabthamoomimu For The Cook oamos rumkm rm ' 1% will flocked pumpkin 76 cup brown sugar. ‘b teaspoon ginger. l6 ‘teaspoon salt. 2 eggs (beaten) 3 tablespoons orange Juice. / $6 cup rich milk. “J, ‘A teaspoon cinnamon. Mix ginger, salt and cinnamon smoothly with 1 tablespoon water and add this, with sugar and eggs, to pumpkin. Blend thoroughly, then add milk and orange Juice. your into deep pie plate lined with rich pastry. Bake in a hot oven for 10 minutes, then reduce heat and con- tinue baking for 20 minutes or until filling is set. , Topped with whipped cream, there is no more delicious dessert than this delightfully-flavored pie. BANANA WHIP Bcald milk in double boiler; add sugar and when dissolved, stir in gelatlne (which has been dissolved in a little oold water.) Cool, add pulp of bananas, fold in gently the stiilly beaten eek whites and serve with whipped cream as a. garnish. Serves six. Sweetened Condensed Milk has rho Blue Label Unsweetened Evaporated jfilk bu tho White Lobe! lh3NESTL Literature ‘ Nsu.»._w..1.1». Largest Producers l and Sellers of Condensed and . Evaporated Milk Nssrwsmwuo- enedMilklsmore than tibiae as rich so herd-dunk. unequal parts of Nestled’: evaporated milk and lcupmilk.‘ ‘ wntuandyoustillob- 1 cup wear. uln a milk fiche: than 3 e88 While‘- ordinlry fluid milk. a “Wm gehlme‘ . Economical for all 3 bananas. CONDENSED - 1s ozs. gvApqgA-mn (h; d 34,, s“) wiinspwnwfl- social functions. How can r rid my self of these barman - wnmm x. Why not try saying "No" and sticking to it? After all, a woman cannot shanghai a man and force-him into taking her places if he is detemiined not to go. - Also, no matter how nimbly a woman runs after a man, he can ol- ways outsprint her if he really desires not to be "caught. The trouble with men like you, Winnie, is that while they do not wish to be caught, it tickles their vanity so much to have women kow-towing before them that they never really send the poor things about their business. They haven't the heart to take themselves entirely out of the reach of the hands that clutch at them. If you really want to be rid of this bunch of gold-diggers, all that you have to do is to cut ofi your tele phone and sell your automobiles and decline their invitations. They will soon puss up for an easier mark. DOROTHY DIX. kn=.,r.,........ dpflwlqyawp-n". MODIIISOHOOL -__-_ t - AMornzngSmilc Honor Roll of Model School tor . ' Marc-h. ‘ Grads VI-l-l. mun cum- ma Lloyd Ross; 2. Mary MacDonald; 8. Jackiecameaon. Ywmvelkelmflwatlh Grade V-1. ma. Robinson; 2. ‘WW1’- Drummond Cobb; 8. Anne Hudson. mllmwmmu"y°um'~7'lu" Grade IV-l. Catherine Bethune: 5"‘ "l; as.“ "*‘ 4°" °*\ e l" 2. Iouiss x: I. u Robinsm. Grade Iii-i. 11mins Doyle: 2. w"'lm flauwwu‘ Harry Ward; S. Harold Mickey. l Guide n4. Viola Young; 2. once 1-1. mayo mummy: a smile Alchom: a. Burton Hewett. Bettymoxsnxie: Lfionnoolla and Join demonic. ODE '10 SPRING *The ‘ by‘ mum that makes stockings WEAR and-FIT . Wul: before tho Em wearing with Don’: coo-wan: tlllo II ewmn water-the a qne c n; c on ia- will fit more smoothly. ucuy. It olao fade: colour. u: may be d! hot water - solved l ;,°_';='-=',f§§§; suntan-unbound especial! . I: will always look unmet this. Wub nits: FOR i f ' - —-l:slsttltmee:ll):nyit.tnke:s'$:lm m, “mm 7°‘? 7'“ "d 5"“. P?" alluli. Anything safe In wmr rauonlefzlnthgoeockimwillac- ‘hubnkiahu. i runliyroccheulk. wan“. |_ _ Doflnbwlchcnkoooozltde- HM“. stroys _e _ ucity o the silk, ‘m, - o“ lnlhn’ ‘l ldiilklifilpl m ‘W; 2. Sqoeae m do hum-urn n o - m Luz ee.“,'"“'- Malawi" ‘ well. for stockins IavI-loitnofldfihy Sai/iytlveir and even titre s/Jeefest stockings will lag THOSE cobwebby stockings, lust o bi: of mioeover - the slim curve of the leg-do you know that you - can make them really wm? _ They're knitted with incredibly delicate threads, but l here's the amazing thing: _ When the stocking is new, each silken thread ll elastic, like rubbcr-itgivos, doesn't break, under strain.‘ Stretches and comes right back again mto shape! Bu: when elasticity is destroyed the threads are life- less as old rubber. Ready to break into runs a: the leaacl strain-a bend of the knee, a ull of the-garter. Apt to sag-causing wrinkles, croo ed scams. That is why Lu: is made regressive uluridy. So if ou'll follow the Luz way eac night i: w ‘t be the east bi: extravagant to wear very sheer stock age every day-they'll always look lovely and-they'll rea ly Ian! Lux Way to preserve the Bmsncmr youdo wearing-with 2‘ minutes a day keeps them like new m ‘nlmdini-