~ vovooo-ei O-twoooo-A-ovvoupoacco l-LQAA. 00-1 l A . . . - Printed Dresses, Printed Dresses, Printed Dresses, l. ,,. sills Hail: P weeks to wear your $10.05 Spring Coats selling for iii 5.1‘ $121M Spring (‘oats selling for 0 ti.i\ $11.95 Spring Coats selling for iii Li.“ mm CLEAR AT TODAY THEN, While you still have pleasure, comes this opportunity i, $25.01) Sp. Coats selling; for $12.50 $29.50 Sp. Coats rice purchase with .$1t3.lJ:'i Spring Coats i selling for $ 5J9 i f“ $19.50 Spring Coats soiling for it 9-75 $22.50 Spring Coats l selling for $11.25 i i you have it in you to be charming. l Your ilobby. if it is a true hobby- ‘is enrolled ill a = and action and regularly renewing ' such a good time, she attracts a ‘_ . fu _ ', , wi selling for $14.75 I‘ I 1‘ if While Flannel and _ 11f.‘ “l ‘ ' ; _ g Jigger COATS i ' o 3:, O .1 l ONE THIRD OFF $ 5.95 Jiggei‘ Coats, selling it: for . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. iii 3.97 _‘~ _, I ' $312.95 Flannel (‘oats sglliiag Bis 1214.95 Flannel Coats selli-ng ,2 ‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t? 9.97 8y $16.95 li‘lalluel Coats selling for $11.30 the furnace smoked. ‘how the kitch- $19.50 Flannel Coats selling for . . . . . . . . . . . . . iiltidll) $19.50 White Flannel Stilts selling for . . . . . . . . . . . $13.00 $22.50 White Flannel Suits selling for . . . . . . . . . . . $15.00 Two Piece Suits HALF PRIC iii’ '79.‘.‘T‘T1‘T‘T’T’T’.“T‘.".‘I .7” .‘ 9.“? $ 9.75 §§§'9‘.’.‘.".‘T1‘T’?.°T’§‘.“.‘I T‘??? $1 2.50 ."T’T‘.”.°.°.°. ‘.S.".".'.’.“.”.‘T $1 2.50 l§§*¥§§7.’.°T’I‘T‘.e.“.". lT‘.“.'.S.°.'.'T $1 4.75 $1 7.50 $ 1 8 .50 $35.00 three-piece Suit, sell- ing for . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . $39.00 three-piece Suit, sell- ingfor All Summer Dresses All Slililllifll‘ Dresses selling at One-Third Off. 'l‘lt~-.-»e int-hide Sheers, Laces, Nets, Linens and Q1“. pus -— 94 2.’. ) selling t: 5135' iliiilteii ' piéééééf ' §tllliiig' $ Till‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. soiling $2.64 $5.30 . A TERMS CASH N0 CHARGES UOIIIB. Thank you a terse‘ as i\|i\l'fil'lli I .. ‘otigll ‘ ll ‘lie! , i‘t\"if‘P on t.- iltrni "it i‘lii-n'ri- i "till mid ; i ‘HTII- . fir; N0 APPROBATIDN NO APPROYIATION . . . because tilthdiigh there is good elliltlsiliu . . . still the assortment is more or less iimitt-tl and we want you to see them ALL when you NO CHARGES . . . because the prices are so absurdly 10y that we cannot afford the charge service. tflmlli: e i"l¥LE other 110N505 nurturing Broadway's Ask Zorina, Being an II slttldbfl-TR 10B laummcr led Broadwav those days lBtit air-uioliillr as "I Married all feel like the zievil, Artur-l," as elsewhere, Pntls at the »-» ~- A k l foot-liwllts. l these day's, hundred or so ' " pnv cheques in the eight ‘ Zoriilzi and tier .81.’; qlestizil frigid- "l Edd l! M11" stirvivois. is air-coo . flack of them, from RECEPTION sffltfe apron to walk-up dreming- M 4_- of lowilest. walk-oils. the my Tiii- (‘gnadign Pi-mq illvftillr- are humid blast, furnaces CAIQARY vyam-W n y_ “a- HWOTS 8T1.‘ Ilill )lilV hltil a llnrvntlv Will RN‘ the in so; lzinlilv-r illlI‘(illifll_ Untiulibtrrllv "Mend tllevii iv lluu :lleir ltrnntlrllil- , , rlreil l.ll lit tivnwl ilteir liVliliZ Qmpf m i in, m, ‘ t, brows iilrouyh '2 m‘ - lite ‘ Anti \tl~.l ‘i \ in ' rlllv oi them thP 0110i’- 'i ll ‘lrtnh- > ab: ilonv more tliiully" 'hniu t f 4 cock of TOTIIHTO, brother of author Stophen Lem-rick. enjoyed on origi- recontion on arrival here t0 tile Director JM, Dillon and an Indian native costume the station, throutrh ihronifcri m2 makes you Stampede. Sta mpede led him tied him on oi a mule and paraded v feet because vou will not have time streets, Hobbies D0 Things For You (Maritime Farmer) A lwblry 0°98 0108s for you! A hubby will_ make you charming. For illat “somethillg" admin 3Q iiiuch in other women is latent in you. It can be awakened and de- veloped by some deep interest. Your life may become as exciting as tho lives 0f the wolnenyou envy. You have only to put into action this slillple formula: Interest is the basis or all charm. If you are interested you will be t-liamnng. It does not matter wile- tiler the interest is pagelitry or photography, patchwork or pottery, JUSL so it who ly absorbs you. For charm lies in self-forgetfullless. something that is play for you—i\'i11 ke you out of yourself and figur- atively, ll not literally, out of doors, and bring you back with sparkling eye and restful step and something to talk about. The more you have to talk about, the more people you can its d the more charming : u will be. 1r your mind is pleas- urably occupied going interesting paces, meeting» interesting people, doing interesting things, you will be free from gossip and pettiness, fllli of 200d talk and uood humor- ll truly 6118111111151 person, Hobbies will make you popular. Check up on the most sought-after woman in your club, neigliliorhord or town, and you will be sure to find some deep interest as the source of the Plillllisliislll which illakcs her a favorite, Whether she CUUTSC iii ‘tudv or is designini: a trailer. the effect is the SlllIIl‘.,$llC ls CGIISIBIlIlY cultivating new patterns o!‘ thought her interest in life. She is havinfi who yegtfn to enjoy life, And she is sure to have at least one self-start- lilY culusenlcnt winch lllakes her in epeildent of’ companionship. That very independence winch keeps her from being a duty to her friends makes them covet llcr com- pany all the more. Hobbies, in moderation, will con- tribute to your sticcess as a busi- ness or nrofessioilal woman. Women whose names are in the ll0\\‘5 kllOW the rest and reileival that come from a hobby which not oni keeps them fit, bttt somehow subt y per- meates whatever they are doing. A novelists love of anti ues pretties up a stark, realistic ta e. A school teacher's penchant, for pottery en- llvens the subject oi geography. A coffee shop proprietors lliild mania for maps sDUTS lagging table talk. t If you are a housewife, remem- ber that all work and no play will make you a, very tiresome person. Your husband cannot be blamed for tiring of you if he hears nothing when he comes at night but how en sink got stopped up, and how the grocery bov tracked the clean porch. You will be a washout at a party if your talk runs to the price 0i potatoes and whether or not Junior and Joan should wear socks or stockings, Hobbies, if ridden wisely, will cheat the years, The woman who keeps her youthfulness and good looks is invariably an enthusiastic hobby rider. She holds her head lush and walks as if she were on Win35. und she liums, For her. life 1s n. daily adventure. a glorious ex- ploration. Tile look of tiptoe expec- tancy on her face as she enters an antique shop may be even more be- coming than the new frock she cannot afford because she covets a Windsor chair for her earlyjimeri- can bedroom. Not her physician, her ychiatrist, nor even her beautic- an could have done for her what her hobby has done. You, too. can learn how to use leisure beautifully. Dispel the looming bogey of high blood pressure with miniatures, marionettes or mythology. It does not matter what, just so it is lay- participation in something t at is fun for voti. It must rest and relax you, Women can act tied up in knots over a, hobby just as they do; dailv task. Working at a hobby lWill not discover the fountain of youth. Hobbies will‘ cure you of the blues. Days will speed on running for the self-attention ivhicll incap- aeitates. You will know the inn of creating beauty. the thrill of rang- ing ill new fields of knowle e, the lov of discovering possibilit es in yourself. An acquaintance with nature, the arts and crafts will put lueanlng ill a thousand things. Trees, birds and butterflies are an ever- >resciit antidote to loneliness. Ho bies are a solace when all your world seems m go wrong. Women who have mastered the art of living, who have not been con- tent merely to simply fit into the social and economic scheme of life. will have less trouble in making adjustments when trouble comes. Valiant is indeed the word for women who realize that what has happened to them Ls of infinitely less importance than is What they thev do about it. When death took the invalid husband of a childless professional woman, she continued to carry on their mutual hobby of collecting pottery. Instead of be- wailing the terrible permanence things have when people die, she found solace in them. When ‘she returned from the office m- milht it was not to an empty house. but to the hobby she and her husband shared so haapily, prowling about in remote vil ges. to other pottery lovers over the world. rentiilla every sentence of information they could fllld, catal- oging their treasures, dusting them untl showing them w interested friends. The home-loving unassuminr wife of’ a national y known writer has in recent ycails become almost as famed for her charm as her hus- band is for his editorials. No doubt Slle always was charming,_ but it. was not until after the tragic ticnth 0t her only (latighter that she dev- eloped interests outside her home and thus ilvidened the circle oi‘ her personalittg. Hunting antiques to fumish e livi room of the ilurses’ home; see n; to it there was a hostcs for the town dance hall; providing comforts for the women at the country farm: demanding a rest room for the mlored girls at. the him school: lantlng flowers in the park, she on her husband pre- sented to the town in memory of their daughter; keeping touch with the boys and rls who were in her dflilithtcrk hlir -school class: bring- fnq national and oven world-fam- ous men and women to speak to the woman's club, an organization. at her fnaisteme. open to every woman in mwn. These are just some of‘ the major interests of thfo muraireous woman who, when tra - edv and sorrow came b0 her, dd something about it. A single hobby, collection of Amer-leg, h the personality of a. onoe (llffident, self-conscious woman to blossom as the rose. She had an inferiority complex because she was the only one in her set who did not have a college education. kicked confidence, rm: crmatgjrgafrowu GUARDIAN FOR SMOOTIIER, SURGING POWER BUY ESSO There's a real thrill in the extra power and smoother performance ou get with Essa. Never a sign ofkaocz ing. It’: the *1: it‘ IMPERIAL DEALER p"liow about a real lubrication job ramiuiuuounroavotmcan- hthobeocklndolimuzanceonyour YOU lubrication IIIVQSIIDCIII- We've got the apocificuionl for you make aodmodel right here. And we carry a com lea lino of top quality l one kind ofmotor fuel today's high com- firession motors need to operate at their est. And remember, Esso contains the exclusive patented solvent which dis- solves gum, ends carbon trouble, keep! your motor clean. Next time fill up with Imperial lubricants. It’: part o out job to check every lubrication point scientifically. So drive right in and we'll give you a real lubrication job-and we'll ‘check tho time, battery, radiator and lights, and shine up the windshield and rear window. writing letters f FATE NTED MOTOR FUEL without the benefit of sheepskin, but it took a hobby to make her appreciate herself, NOW a recognized authority on her subject, she has lost all trace of self-coilsciousnass. Fortified with the power which knowledge gener- ates. she makes a better address than most of her college-trained friends. Not ‘only is the a forceful and interesting speaker, but with her tilnidity gone she displays a rare sense of humor few knew she ssessed, Frequently she appears efore strange audiences without a tremor because she knows her sub- Ject. And because she knows, she feels her equality. There is some- thing tremendously reassuring in being well-informed on some sub- ject, even thoush it is not one of utmost importance. It is enthusiasm for somethinrz which makes a life worth lookirg And when that life is Cl- cumwriibed by affliction and there still ls enthusiasm. you are inspired by the sight of it. Here in her own words is a glimpse of the absorb- ing interests which color the per- sonality of a charming woman de- nled normal social contacts: " rid that the hobbies I have developed‘ and maintained through the years have unconsciously be- come those I can, to a large ex- tent, pursue alone or by colres- pondencwgames I can play by myself, They are‘ lass, genealogy, and gardening. Nei er have I been conscious of what. they were doin for me except to izive me a lot. o fun. When 1 stop to think of it. I realize they have made me more interesting, at. any litre to my own amt In my glass-hunting there has been a great deal of ‘Well, see what mothers dragged in now!’ And as I seek the roots of my fam- ily tree, my husband L; fond of rc- mfndlmz me that: “ ‘Kind hearts are more than coronets And simple faith than Norman blood‘ “However, for all their banter. I am convinced that it is these same hobbies that have kept me from becoming in their eyes ‘just moth- er.‘ and have kept me, or made me, a personality. "And naturally these interests have made me friends. My‘ Blass attracts other glass-lovers. y pe- onies and izladioli, other gardeners. I have formed friendships over the exchan of chrysanthemum or artemis a plants, or a common war- fare on some insect pest, with per- sons with whom I 9g sure I should have no other nd of in- terest. “But especially have my hobbies brought. me long-distance friend- ships! Glass fans in other towns and ‘states who have read of’ my interest in commemorative pat.- t i” F’ b A. a. curcurrr t, Funeral Director p . And Embolmer Ambulance Service ease at a party and positively pan- 1 a icky yvtlen it was her turn tn a ar on her club program. Her c t DAY and NIGHT w num It. - rum as "- THE SMOOTIIER v NEXT TIME terns, Cousins, distant in miles and relationships. who share my inter- ost in the famllys beginnings. These studies have love of Early American history which threatens to eclipse the par- ent hobbies, My knowledge of geo- graphy has broadened, A map has come to have a new meaning to me. I confess to a satisfaction hat amounts almost smugness recognizing and using the botani- cal names or plants. "All these hobbies qr man were undertaken purely for their present pleasure, but as the years have passed and my family is growing up and away, I realize that Dljlnclpal benefit to me eventually will be one of which I had not thought or knowledge when started them—that of insurance against a, bored and lonely old age." —American Cookery. TELL 0F CONDITIONS IN WAR-TORN CHINA WINNIPEG, Aug. 4—-(CP)--Dif- fel-ent views on business conditions in war-torn China were expressed by three commercial travellers who passed through Winnipeg. -J. Arthur Duff, representative in China for an automobile manufac- turing company, said conditions were steadily becoming worse. "Although the sale of motors, es- pecially trucks, touched a new high a few months ago, at the present time it is almost nil." Enroute w New York, Hails Vog- elsand said commercial industry in Chilia is at a standstill. The pup- pet government of Japan has taken over all of Shanghai except the International Settlement. and the resulting uncertainty makes it d1!- flcult to build up new business. H. B. Beaumont. steamship pae- senger agent, said: “The conflict in China has not greatly affected tourist traffic to the Orient." “Our steamship lines have car- ried a steady traffic of educational tours from Canada and United States to both China and Japan despite the Sino-Jap struggle." DEVICE TO CUT COST OF X-RAY (By The Canadian Praia) WINNIPEG, Aug. 4—Dractio ro- duction in the cost of operating morlern X-ray machines requ for development of high direct. current volt-ages in treatment of cancer and other -‘ was demonstrated here by Prof. John W. Dorsey of the University of Manitoba. Prof. Dorsey exhibited two inex- pensive machines, one of which turned out 100.000 volts and tho Other 40,000. The machines, which look in be nothing more than a collection of radfa tubes and small transformers immersed in an oil bath, make use of vacuum tube rectifier; costing only about 8150 each. These tubes can be replaced at. any radio sup- ply company whereac expensive tubes now must. come direct from the manufacturer. A drop of your favorite bath oil on a heated electric light bulb in the livfn “rpom will scent the non m5 and daiiuhufli aroused a dormant is Yuri-Inga: l: worth tolhavc a time am — ' . like you to door; in “B” Whether you shield wiped in whore you lee the Imperial oval lign. woucflvc of dean, we'll regular check on at‘! why we'd or your wind- ghd to a you. just drive IMPERIAL OIL DEALERS Everywhere In Canada PICNIC IIAMPER REIVHNDERE On the door of many hotel room: a. sign which picnic- ackers ought to have near by. e sign reads: "Look around, have you for- gotten anything?" Such a sign pasted on the cover of the picnic hamper, would re- mind us of the ti-ifles that. make 11 for picnic success. 1s there salt and pepper for the hard-boiled eggs? Is there a small pot of pre- pared mustard for the sandwiches and tl-iefrankfurters? Have we re- membered sugar for the coffee, and is there a jar of mayonnaise to moisten the potato salad? We can do without a good many I of the implements of civilization at an out-door meal, but the sea.- soners are vital. Fingers were used before forks, and so were spices. Picnic food needs to be savory and it is important to include makings” of fine flavor in the basket. These are the new hose shades that you see other women wearing -maybe—and wish you knew what to ask for when you o to buy: Radiance-a beige wih a rose cast, hatlnonizes with muted colors and evening shades; am- Sandy McThriII Says: IIEIE'E WHY I ALWAYE BUY I! I C K E Y ’ E ILACKTWIET It was popular when Harry i Lauder long his first song. It has not changed since and TRY AI IMPERIAL OIL DEALER berose~bright amber, good with blues. white and bright prints; cedar-lively sun tan, for white, pastels, sports, as well as town nav and black; bisquette-a ale, neu ral beige. for mustards, bues, neutrals and black. cooxao cvciiliinizaqs ey- usuin. VEGETABLE Cucumber cooked is one of the very best vegetables, and any tricks it may play when raw on delicate digestions are quite cir- cumvented by cooking. Peel a moderate-sized JCUIIIIJPI‘, uarter and remove the ilips. lour pkepper and salt: the pieces. Fry lig tly in butter. Add to the pan two good tablespoons of stock (or milk can be used instead. it "the evory- vatehful care against curdling is ihown). stew the cu- cumber gently for 20minutes, then remove the pieces and keep hot. Thicken the liquid with flour, taste and season if required, and boil up. Serve the cucumber in it. Cubes of cucumber may also be breaded and fried, like Pgg-plfillt, or boiled in water and served with butter, like summersquash. Use Mlnard’: for bites. ._;... CHEWING inmacnmntiianmofineleatintlia immeoldwoy. It hoops its place in the public eye because of its 1m- fllllc quill!- lOc For Fig launched By Hickey & Nicholson