i-:- Literature 454 FOR PLAY HOURS which are ' - in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years tching Brosgrain ribbon tie. __,'price‘i5 centsf-ln stamps or coin preferred.) Wrap coin _: . Just a simple nile green chain-i with white ‘piqlla J collar and‘ _ embroidered i“ a to two rounding teaspoons, or four 1- stitch in nile green nierccr- otton. It's one piece too, with l ffect at froiit formed by clever g, which makes Style Ne. 454 y to make. This shirred effect edimercly by j cutting along ted line at front closing, the; edge or which is shirred and ed to upper edge. Pattern can _pique'in T rose tones with . . pique collar, cotton broadcloth nch blue with white polka- _ _ th white qique collar, tiny blue “ hits checked ~ gingham » with -~ andio collarfand beige Jersey llar and cufis embroidered in blue with blue bone buttons‘ cute and modest a. real saving. I . ' ‘i i‘. Household Hints ‘Bylnhcrtnliso Finishing The Floor Always dust the floor. Just before ~- applying any finishing coats. with a ‘cloth dampened in bcnzine. Every - dust speck that is varnished or paint- ed under, becomes magnified and y spoils the beauty of the finish. I Coat Collars l To clean coat collars, moisten with ‘ benzine, and after it dries thoroughly i sponge with soap suds. Keep the i bcnzine away from any fire. j Crust On Bread If the crust on not bread is baked ion hard. grease and place in open j window and it will soften. i | .,..._-‘ Measuring A “level teaspoon” is the bowl of I the teaspoon filled to the level of the i edges 0t the spoon. A “rounding tea- spoon" ls equal to two level tea- . spoons. A “heaping teaspoon" is equal . lei el teaspoons. l To Freshen Rugs ‘=1 Scatter dry salt over the rug before sweeping. It brightens the colors and checks the ravages of moths. Dried Yeast iii» ' Dried yeast can be kept for come time, and by soaking it. before mix- ing gives very good results. carefully. We suggest that when you send foi- this pattern you enclose l0 cents ad- ditional for a copy of our Spring Fashion Magazine. It's Just filled with delightful styles, including smart en- sembles, and cute designs for the kiddies. l 4-’ . U R I N G ‘t h e ' weeks before baby arrives there is one service of love even more imporgang than the tiny gar. _ments so carefully chosen z ; make sure tbatyolz will be able to ted baby yourself.‘ So much depends upon ghis} _ rickets . : of and sturdy. iipe barley malt, fresh I m this; n else can, durln rerun: so nor-ml- hutch.- and s tlficlal feeding can never take it, place. Doctors have proved cog- cluslvely that breast-fed babies ‘i have much better chances of , IVOIdIIIg nutritional diseases like growing up strong Ovaltine is no haphazard mixture of its several ingredients; but is manufactured by an exclusive scientific process. This retains, Iinmpaxrea’, all the essential ele- ments of its valuable ingredients llitlcreamy mjlk from Englaengcg: this: pastures. .Q.-.e‘¢¢pf,,1 of , Ovallme contains more nodrish- ment tlian 3 eggs or l2 cupfulg ~ f beef tea. Ovnltinehas enabled liousagds of mothers 'all‘over i c world to breast-feed their - bies. Your doctor will com dour and easily digested, Oval- svill maintain you: strength, a; ' f confinement y afterwards wil ensure you g *~ ‘-’"‘2'-"i can: ' s4 . ' , basin mm WANDBR LIMITED. 45s KING STREET wasr A ronomo, QNfARlO I / / reparing for I‘ Ag. OVALTI N E RUSKS qrs pbrfect when baby n tutblng. Tlnu, 154118 fivmfinest Cinna- J frcshins iv take afici" a busy rluy i0 And the iull-cuiwa egg-plant, purple Mlqdy Beautiful ‘For-i i1:- n; mu Lceds 211- Etiquette‘ Ivlhberhha -:- Social anclpPersonal -:- {Foshionsg Q‘ Dorothy 0a Q. Is it -ecess y to give a. kind word of appreciation to a considerate servant, ln addition to a tip? A. It ls not necessary, ‘but very nice. Q. How are large dinner napkins folded?’ - Aln thirds. . Q. What card for man and wife is sent with flowers to a funeral? A. The double card. For Tlze Cook l Jellied ChlCk(l\ namasnnvo BEAUTY PACKS I have often heard women say that‘ they cannot use a facial pack be-a cause it "raws" the skin too much. maklns 1t blvwhy and sensitive. This effect follows the use of clay or mud packs on delicate skins, but there are other kinds that smooth and soften the skin. ‘f. cupfui‘ chicken broth. One such pack is made with a. base 2 tablcsllwllluls ¢°°l=°¢l of barley flour. (Fine oatmeal, bram C1lQDPQd~ ' or almond meal will serve Just-est sprinkling 0f Sult- well.) First cleanse the face with a! nl°th°d—5°**k 891M111 lfl the Wild cleansing cream. Wipe off all traces. water 5 minutes. Heat the chicken of the cream with a soft cloth or tis-l blolll l0 bvlllllg Point find 9°"? 0V" we square; than Sponge the 5km wnhi the gelatin, stirring it until dissolved, your favorite 5km mflqn. 1f you use; then season. Wet a mold with cold the tissue squares, which pf course,‘ watcr and pour in Just sufficient sel- are more sanitary than a cloth, fold‘ atni mixture to coat the bottom. Set them diagonally into a triangle. wrap: t0 harden. When set. arrange a little the triangle around your fingers so‘ 0f the choDliled Chicken End 8. {OW that the ends may be folded around! drops o! the gelatin mixture and n1- the front of the fingers and held in‘ 10W f0 Set-- When this is firm, add the place with your thumb (A), This w-gy? remainder of the chicken and gela- 0X holding the tissue; 15 used by C05.’ tin, put in n ccol place to become meticians and prevents the delicate firm. When desired to serve. unmold paper from rolling into balls as youhhc jelly and garnish with lettuce. nib it on the race, fi ‘iparsley or crcss and radish cut in Take a hall cup of tile barley flour fancy Shapes» BCQOYdlIIB t0 the 599-50" {and slowly stir in enough orangclvf U10 X6211‘- flower water to make a smooth paste. NONI-If B mvrc elflbflfate mflld l5 Pat some tissue cream on the nncoesired. a slice of hard cooked ass. wrinkles at the corners of the eycsh slice of lemon or a little pimento and mouth and under the eyes. Nowlmal‘ be used f°r the first layer 1n- spread the barley paste on evcnlystead of the diced chicken, the latter over face and neck. Lie down and being added to the gelatin. relax until the pack drics. Cut a. square of clean absorbent cotton large enough to cover your, face. Fold it twice and lay it in a‘ dish of tepid water. Remove from the; water and press it between your palms to squeeze out the excess water (B) Now mold the wet cotton mask over: V0111‘ 159B 5° 1°05“ me all’ barleyl Slender cold grcen cucumbers, pack so that it. may be washed ofil Tcmatccs living n=@__ ellfilly- BDORKB the Skin with leilld‘ Onions are pearly comets with trails water until all the paste has been re-Q o; green MOVE-ill and m"! b1“ dlY- Finally»: The wax of beans and yellow of cel- put on your skin tonic. Make-up lllByi my fronds, b9 Blllllled- l The bulging pea-pods The above treatment is very re- Arc pleasant r0100}; an 1!. tcaspoonful gelatin. 3 teaspoonfuls cold water, THE POET’S CORNER VEGETABLE STORE remove the tired lilies from milzidys 1n col-Duh“; royany‘ race and hclli her to lwk her bust-The cauliflower is a bride, goes daint- for the evening hours, when social. “y engagements claim her attention. 3395141., the cabbages and floumed Tomorrow-Beauty Questions i lemme bang Ansllcfcll- lThe still‘, piiclzlcy foreignness of pineapples, A lime boy was 5911'? Wm‘! a "Ole l0 .‘ Asparagus like stacked-up spears and the clinic doctor. ‘The note ran: lance,” "Please will you do something to Patsy-ups m rustic brown’ Willie's 1M8? He's had ll a “m8 time ‘ Lean pink of carrots, watercress and and it's spreading."-—Thc Teacher. i mint, __ _ . And the crooked gnarled horse-radish roots . . . Gold-availed squashes, ragged endive, And hcrc lie peppers made of green Jade. —Helen Hoyt. spinach and Daily Arguments i AUNT HE'I‘ , l By nonaiu" QUILLEN “Wandals uncle has left her $5,000 - a year in perpetuity." ‘Tine! But £100.", she have tlicrc and live to get it? togo v i ‘ i it ' “When P: buys somcthlln‘ foolish an’ extravagant, he always eases his conscience by chicken: - l‘ great a success you may achieve in the outside world nor how highly strang- altflurr tliey have failed in everything they ever tried themselves. When you are sick they prescribe for you, though they never saw even the outside of a medical book. They tell you how to manage YWY will? 0P husband "m1 raise you‘: children, they have made messes of their own domestic affairs. friends for you and» are generally Sol omon on the spot so far as you are con- cerned. You rise up and lie down to the continual admonition: that, it is bad for your stomach.‘ Or, ‘Do eat this. it is so good for you.‘ And ‘Don't sit up at night and read.’ ‘Don't get your feet wet.‘ ‘Don't get run over by an automobile.’ until it gets on your nerves so you are ready toscream. badger you to death with their advice, but it makes living among your ene- mics, who don't feel called upon to supply you with gratuitous advice. mighty comfortable and peaceful. it to your family to take the Joy out of everything and, believe me, when the Amalgamated Order of Domestic Cold-Water Throwers are done with a 110W or plan or ambition it is as limp and pupless as 8- dwwfled I'M- to make in his business. Mother puts on the extinguisher by reminding him - of all the blunders and mistakes he has ever made and by propliesylng that he will fail in this also. Mother is flllcd with joy over her new dining-room set. Father takes all of her pleasure out of it by Pfovln! l0 he? ma‘ ll? l! an imitation antique and that she paid three times too much for it. out the flame by telling him that he has just mediocre ability and only men of genius succeed. You no crazy over your new automobile until the family i literally pull it to pieces and convince you that you are a fool not to have ' ._ . bought any other make except the one you did. and strike out for themselves succeed while the stay-at-home ones nave: amount to much is because the stay-at-home ones are kept in such l. limp. shivering state from ‘the family could couche to which they are continually subjected that they never have the courage to stiffen up and make an clfort to do anything." wonun. “Your own family are the only ones who ever fecl called upon to tell you the things that you would rather die than hear. This may be good for our souls, but it isn't soothing to our vanity. t Most Families Take Advantage of Their Close Relation to Invade Each 0ther’s Prlyacy, Give U nsought Advice, Damp Enthusiasm and Bring Carefully Hidden Blemlshes Into the Limelight What are the chief family faults? One woman to whom I Pill "ll! W05‘ tion answers emphatically: “Family curiosity. ‘The eternal family qllflmn‘ nsire. Being put through the cverlastinz llmlly third deflfefi "ml"- ""5" thing you do or don't do. That is the thing that breaks up families and sends the different members scuff!- ‘ ing to the four comers of the earth in search of some place where they can have a little privacy of thought and action. Why we should all hate to be 1111989101195 so I don't know. But we do. I have never yet met 8n individual who did not resent having his or her 91'1"‘ ate affairs pried into. It isn't because we are twin! to hide something. It is just; that we feel that our secrets are our own secrets and when they are drag- ged out of .us against our will it hurts like having a. 100m pullgd and leaves us Just as sore in the mouth. ‘. ‘ Left to ourselves we would voluntarily tell the thlnS-‘l that it makes us n furious to have wormed out of us. “But you haven't the ghost of a show of keeping aifithing to yourself as long aa- you live at home. You can't get a letter without every member of the family turning it over and reading the postmark and wanting to know who it is from and. what it is about andywhy he or she should be writink from that particular place, and mother feels liurt if you don't tum it over to hcrand let her read it herself. “You can't get a telephone call vrithout. the dear family listening in and demanding to know who was speaking to you and asking what they said that made you say what you replied. You can't step out for a. call or go to a. party without being asked: ‘Where are you going? Why are you going? Who are you going with? Why are you going with that particular individual? How long are you going to stay? When will you be back? Whom do you expect to see?‘ “And so so and on and on. Millions or questions that sting like gadfiies and that irritate you until you are imllling to do anything in the world to get away from them. » “It is family curiosity, vulgar snooping that makes us break away from home and get among strangers who don't take enough interest in us to care ilvhat wc do. “I think thechief family fault is giving unsought advice. No matter how ers may value your Judgmentfyour ‘own family always regard you as a. low- grade- imbecile entirely incapable of deciding the simplest matter for yourself. "Therefore, they fee‘. that it is their sacred duty W T980111"! Y0"! (lllllfe life for you. The: tell you Just how you should manage your business. "They try-to settle your religion and your politics and p161! Out Y0“? ‘Don't eat “Of course, you know that it is because your family loves you that they "I think the chief family vice is wet-blanketing every enthusiasm. leave "Father is all on fire with his plans about a new departure he is going \ "Johnny is on his tiptocs with ambition to beadoctor. The family snuff "I often think that the reason that the boys and girls who leave home “I think the chief family fault is telling home truths," said another “It is only your own family that. tell you that your new hat is too yoilns strictest simplciity. friends in Hol- , land tell me that it is an open sec- ret that" the high spirits of Dutch Princess sometimes rebel not. supposed to do ess there on her way home to buy pelt- Illln’ he dons it. for me." dian beaten flour lo u'bicb Ovaltine i: an more appe- tsnrlg, sully Jllggfgd 9nd. 4r ma: nourish- mg n mlwyp-mg; or Mulls. i '1 n11 POOR PA av CLAUDE cars/m ‘Ifilllldliycfléfllylfllbld lilalwugohfooquiitryirvlo D3000 her. n’ she sold she Illfl nun are notice the difference." - table Compound t sick every month the: l had to keep my bud for two days and l luflersd so rim l fdr b-dlv all the time. l hill been working in s foamy bu: f" g long time was not able so work u] was lo run-down Ind nervous. My friends told me of the Compound. l am now sound on‘! "u "'4 h!" lane buck on work. l m" ‘ I°°d lPPflllfi. my color ll good and l llll in Iood lpvlflu,"- EM!" BWMW. 132 Ali-M Siren, Nomi. New musk. V lllness Kept ‘l-ler From Work "hook Lydia E. Plnlthlin’: Vege- l wu so \r v n for you and that you look like a figure of fun dressing like s. dapper at your age and that you have put on tWOlil-Tlfllllld! in weight or that you look as u you might be going into tuberculosis and that you ought to do comet-bins for your complexion, it is getting so sallow. It is only your family that in- terrupts your pet story to remark that they have heard it before and that in- variably got you with their criticisms becsusqthey know so wet), your weak spots. hr none of our blemishes an hidden from our family and they don't protand that they are. 0a the contrary, they turn the Iflilllbt on them." ___-_ I Itisbecauseourfsmilies are toononvmatoonlltyondbecsuu thsrc is nothing as cruel as the candor of a near-relation that. makes us love our families, oven our parents. better when we Ifit fu- snmllh l!!! 9°01 "W" mgotnpu-Ipoctiveontlisii-virtuss. POI-WWII)!!- [Yiliél l. Pmil~.ii'|:'; Jltliéiliii} lllilfilliiliiil for every 0 or l0 of the population. These 0811mm strikinl wbonitls recalled that it is only: few yuan use comparatively tbs the first eu- mado its appearance the Domin- ion. cam-is loads wiui mono; Que- bec next with 10,100 and lest- atchewln third with 110.000. 2M0.- THE LAND WE LOVE P: null mo! I010! VIIIOLII IN OANAIM Q-Hnmearnotorvebieluwne rulletmdinoanmilllll? Lilia registration of motor The dunnontlo - tendencies J of this presto day and ads have not Wt succeeded in l “lnlWr-incea and princesses o! their romantic interest for tho world in general. espccialLv if they are of marriage.- ablq age and still unwedfnumfgr. rarely believable clwm"uisli- iius4 band, sslollcs their lives and des- tinies s dozen times before the roy- al victim takes sweet revenge by deciding on the least expected ooune of all, writes Lady Drum- mend-flay in the Sphere. A recent HJQIBQUMI that Prin- cess Juliana, heiress to the throne cf the Netherlands, may pay a vis- it 00 England during ‘the spring, naturally awakens speculation re- garding flu matrimonial plans of Queen Wilhelmina for her precious only child. Princess Julian». who will be .30 this year. is the most important unmarried princess in Europe, and already many possible} alliances have ‘been suggested for: tho futum Queen of the Nether-I lands. The latest, I hear Irom- a friend. comes from picturesque Co- burg, the stronghold of loyal B81108. nestling in the beautiful Thuringen Forest in South Germany, where rumor is linking the name of the pretty Duizch Princess with that of Prince Leopold, eldest son of the Duko of Ooburg. of English parent- age. Rumor ln this case was en-l couragecl by ‘the fact that Queen.’ Wilhelmina visited the Duke and Duchess of Cobuxg at Callenburg last surnmer- Princess Jullanh speelm cellent English, and is re- lated to Princess Alice. Countess of Athlone ano Lady May Cambridge. with whom she has stayed on sever- nl occasions. Brough up in the the against royal convention. She is never happier than in the company of her fellow students at the Un- iversity of Leyden, and although by virtue of Royal etiquette‘ she is her .own shopping in the local stores. Princ- times and it is yours." crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. UNDENIABLE; not. t0 b: “Those things are undeniable." Juliana Of Holand Important Princess onakmqiaimmema, even so . m. 041°’ ‘ “in ” w”. slismmiilngly told berm m...‘ rades waiting outside on u“ "up " mcnt wnitingfor her. Omen wu. helmina. queen at the ago o: y“ f realizes ‘better than y» . pould tell companionship and the 10y of cars- free years, tries hard not u; 1m: terliere withthsgirbsh funofl-lq daughiier." but when Princess Jul.‘ iiimamk w name in o» reysq‘ tram cars, I am told that the. Qusq‘ did protest. Itpis Just as wsllfoi‘ the l0- yeur-Old maiden that she does not feel the burden of responsibility which will some day be hora. A; Queen of the Netherlands sho will rule over some 57,000,000 peopl, 0g whom only 'l.000,000-t.he plypuhflog of Greater London-arc in ramps, Th0 oomflation of the Dutch col. onies numbers around 50,000,000 and includes Java, the treason house of Holland. an island of some 50,000 miles area. and the only trope ical island in the world with g dense native population. Lesson in English ByW.B~GOIIOI WORDS OFTEN MIBUBED: D0 not say, "She was that stubborn." Say, "sb stubborn." _ OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: ludi- tion. Pronounce a-dlsh-un, s as in “all," accent second syllable. OFTEN MISSPEIJLED: Japanese; note the csc. sYNONYMS: accustomed, addicted. devoted, disposed, predisposed. in- ciincd. WORD STUDY: "Us: a word three Let lls in- Today's word: denied. Juliana “runs in here and i lliiiiirvffn '.i ':- "-‘ |\.'r~oj"‘\ ’ Foundation- Garments conzbinc the irresistible ’ appeals of v style~— i comfort and value. leading flora; n11 M: youndarim- " Qarrnent: z-ia Z- vlhiclll in 010th. nachos in ml. mflljllllliilllili-llldlblqlijlcls cu. ——-- — ‘a... g