,___- __... M... sr- V " k b` mul of course, and chooses fllmly chiffon -mu-,wav y 1-' ..,._-5-» ew ,..,-_ -\ - -1n~n- -» --in-» ' I _,,m___(V_____,Y\, _\ V l V _ _ ,f , ,_ , _ ` .,.,,,,.,v. _ ....,,,,_~,--.---.-.» If-_.-1,?-,-v_` ‘. `~,.~q_-f_-;..1",~"--_-Il* _ _ _ . , _ ' rin:cxnxn1xrrre1tnwrltursaruarr ' _ - _ 'l 'M ' ' ,gg_____,,__,=g,g;§§§g§g}929 i _ r _ ` ' . ) 0 . ’H"Fashion Hint ..\\ \ ( / /\$ll .ll (vi gave me strength to my ' . T 1; work. My nerves are better and , i ; Ifeel well and strong`and have ' a ood appetitciil sleep well " ané am in pretty good spirits _ land able to work every day ‘ 1 reconlnleréil tllciVcge- Compoun an . you this letter as a testi- 2824 -Miss Dclvena Wai , Street, North Devon, ' HHS* and _ ,/ *_ 4'; e =|§“\@> "'\LA__,_ \ I , \_/ DISTINCTLY INDIVIDUAL 'The style No, zsza is a harming ` _ jacket ensemble that adopts a. dis- _ _ _ , F tinctly individual idea in scarf collar. Hlnts l The dress with molded bodice. snug ., l hips and flaring skirt rather suggests I B7 305°” I” Prinecss lines. It ,achieves clever con- --_ trast through manipulation of fabric , made easily possible by deep bodice Napkins yoke and hip treatment. 1t’s sleeveless 'Plain heavy linen ma es eau _ in violet and purple. Remove the little ngpkms aid tablecloui Tr l:;;§'no$y jacket, and you have a stunning din- s vs en they w e _ nerdress Hollolehlflonsndprtnt- °n°°"n is M' I ml 3' d oile hic For s orts select red " _ _ e v c _ p , Q! use as it wrinkles more readily and white polkmdotted Suk crepe. min damask fnile Breen shantung or printed rajah. Ivy Pnisomns _ The Pattem is easy to understand. y because it contains a Picture Chart. ' This new method sl-lows how the gar- ..:__::_°;::;°:.;;.;°f.:.’::;l.::i.:zzi is W imm- ` ‘ the instructions in Pictures. It makes °r ivy poisoning' it especially easy for the amateur Gr", sewer. rt is designed in sires 1s, is - years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust I and offered at cost price 15 cents Kew on hand ° quantity °f bmw” (stamps or coin) as a service to read- ed flour for making gravy and a great ers h Sew I w o amount' ° time Wm be saved* i New Summer Fashion Book is just _, filled with Paris and New York styles "i,fTp'"lEM FIGHT" attractively presented and cleverly ,* ' SAYS THE JUDGEI adapted for the use of home sewers. }“ °’°- 1 A book far superior to all previous I/iELBoUnNE, Australia, June 22. l issues, price is cents, but may be ob- ":3Y Tm Cfmadlan Pf°“l“"l°t tained for 10 cents if ordered with at tiara fight,” suggested Justice Was-i pa¢¢em_ lei ip the First Civil Court here rec- ` eflly when counsel for both parties A woman of Perth, Austraum has if an action said they believed a just len her entire estate of nomo s&tlement could be effected if an ad- i to reduce Great Bmam.‘ national .lglfliment were granted for a fewi debt Y hhrs. Later on however. 'after the tfal had proceeded several hours, .._.______i___i___ tdlrjudge agreed to the adjournment K of the case inacnniiely. t was f-0 be employed bv the company e case was an action for $10,000 1 until his death or total incapacity glrli-‘ages for alleged wrongful dis- and af-tsl his death his dependents ngssal from the management of a 4 were to draw $20 B week S0 10118 88 l\@lbourne company. The plaintiff they held Certain Share! in the coin- p¢aded that he had been engaged ptlny, but the agfeelllellii hld MCD ag manager by the defendant com- wrongflllll' t¢I'mll\Bi¥¢d and ll¢ had pa at a salary of $50 it week and not been paid any commission. ` on sales, and subse- The defence was that no such it had been agreed that he agreement had been made. .ids W] €_/tsl .r.¢',r,.r il, » E slakiathtdlylwlleufilslfoncllahooaof' coach horses n.ag'on, cobbled streets Ysrdley's l Old English Invcnder Soap was cherished for in _ perfect purity and lovable fragrance. I "Then, as now, laveldv ladies used_Yard1ey's to , softensndreiinehansandfaocs-andtoldd the sweetly clinging breath of lavender to enriched \skim. I . Jrllgpgctlfxnridot 3 s it Ei; fl takes. me to the best restaurants for dinner and to the best places of amusement, yet some people have told he is "closo." Now I would certainly halo to marry s man like that. Am I to judge him by the way I know him or are all men lavish before marriage and stlngy afterward? I have not a onservatlvo nature. but I Opposes Privy _ lbfsuloli. Premier of Ontario, ox- pusudt°thoRotlfyGubofOt- twawtwssrhlloweoitiaamtne I Dorotlgy Le_ftefBox f I How to Tell Whether a Man Will Make a Generou or a»Tight-Fisted Husband-Folly of Letting Superstitions Intert'ere‘ _ With Happiness g Dear Miss Dlx-I am engaged to be married to a man with whom I have been going four or five years and I have never known a more gon- erolls person than he is. He is always giving me bbautiful presents md also gives nies things to the members of my family. He - me he is stlngy. 1-Ie says himself that he has a. very conservative nature; ln fact, so much so that he knows am not a spendthrift either. I sm not so muh ln' love that I cannot back out. What is your advice? THE NUT. Answerr Certainly there is no other husband in the world who is harder for his wife to cndune than the one who is a. tightwad. Nothing can compensstg s woman for the humiliation sho undergoes in having tp pry every nickel out pf ta man and tell what she did with the quarter hs gave her week before as . I have known men so stingy that they begrudged their wives and child. ren the very clothes on their backs and the food they sts and who made the first of the month, when the bills camo ln. such s day of wrath and terror that their families dreaded ft as they didthe Judgment day. I have known rich men whose wives never had a penny of their own that they could spend as they pleased. I have known men who loved their P°Cket-books so much better than they did their own flesh and blood that they denied their child- ren education and decent clothes and all the pleasures of youth. Therefore, if a girl even suspects a man of being miserly she does well to consider long and thoughtfully before sho marries himfbecause she will have small Joy in s marriage ln which everything will bc subordinated to dime-nursing and where the husbands chief concern will be not what he can do for his wife and children, but what he_can make them do without. Love soon wlthers and dies in that sort of atmosphere and the wife comes to feel contempt for the man who can see nothing in the world but s dollar. But while the mlser is despicable, the spondthrift is a weakling who is equally unworthy ax admiration, ma between tm two. is time is my amass I think it goes to the tightwad. For he at least does not bri.rig his wife and children to beggary as the spcndthrlftdoes. Nor does he injure other people as the spendthrift does, for in the endsomebody always has to support the waste: after he has spent his money Qu rlotous living t ‘ So, while the stingy man fs to be avoided ss a. husband, it is no disad- vantage tn a man as a husband for him to be what the Sotch call “nanny” about money and for him to have the good sense and Judgment and courage to keep his expenditures well within his means. That sort of msn lathe one who is sitting pretty on Easy street by the time he is middle-aged and who is s director in banks and a man of standing in his community. And he makes the sort of husband and father who gives his family a nice homo and a good car and educates his boys and girls and gives them a start in the world. ‘ So I should advise any girl to pick out for a. husband the young nun who gives her the sort of good times and presents that he can afford and who adds up the dinner check and counts his change, rather than the youth who sends her orchids that he hs.; to go in debt for and blows her off to parties that he has to borrow the money to pay for. ` From your account of your young msn, I sec no evidences of parsimony. Rather. he seems to be s sane and sensible spender and one who, perhaps, realizing that he has a tendency toward loving money too well, is guarding himself against it. And that kind of man, who is just as well as generous. is one to tio to. Of ourso, you can't always judge by the way s msn spends money. on A girl before marriage how much he will bs willing to spend on her after marriage. There are some men who matic t hat one splash of generos- ity in their courtship last forthe balance of their wives’ lives. They never repeat lt. And there ara other men whose wives have to pay for scrlmplng economics aftsr marriage for the extravagant presents their husbands sont them before marriage. But if you are in any doubt as to how your fiance will react to the money question, why not settle it before marriage? Sound him out as to his position on the allowance question and get his views as to what propor- tion of a man‘s income he thinks s wife should receive with which to run the house and for her own personal behoof and benefit. If he talks vaguely about everything hs has being yours and refuses to come down to bras: tucks. pus him up. ‘Hs will make one of the husbands who will not even give you carfare without a row and who will make you buy everything on a bill that he will go over with s microscope and he will lsm~ bast you for not buying closer. Also, ascertain if he thinks that a wife should work for her board and clothes or whether she is entitled to an individual allowance sssome return for hor labor. T Any girl who marries without settling the money question beforehand il lacking in natural gumptlpn. DOROTHY DIX. Deli' Miss Dix-I um I younlbridc of ii year, married to tho best mln in the world and perfectly happy. The only thing that disturbs my complete contentment is that the other day I wont to s fortune-teller and abs told me that within four years I would be s widdw, and the thought of it breaks my heart. Would you let that trouble you? MARY. Answer: No. I wouldn't be such sn idiot. NB' bib can forsses the fixture. If fortune-tellers know what wld |0158 to hlpven th” W°\lldD'¢ D0 i°f¢4m°' tellers. They would corner the stock market and be bllllonsires. DOROTHY DIZ. _ ` 'side as he inode the declaration, and Chief Justice Anglin and other Judges of thc Supreme Court of » Csnsds were st the same table when CUUHCII the reference was made to the abol- - . ition of the Privy Council sppssl. I T . ( OTTAWA. Jima 36-Hon. I-foward A london woman with I4 children wirrecently granted s separation from her husband. "' ' i h -_ - -n-s_p1u_ tion by a doctor ts see what it um - trouble. Have All y°\u° teeth X-rayll ‘ 9' U' '*°* it the doctor cannot nas the nun of your thinness. Do not dole your- self' with patent medicines without un ‘_ ng\isttno.nmw='»vm, lbolltionorths |.ppultotboPrlv! ctunqu aaa names that no aovi crnor-Gdlarslshonldoometo Usa- au, |mfrom`tlunfituli mac lirlobertlordcnsuglcstodinfbt- ss Usnsdvl nrstuwumh The Welt Indlu mt nearly U87,- 000,060 worth of sugar to the United States lllt yllr. . #i Nuirly 33.000 Portuguese settled-in nmulastnsr. . cinema _ou mr An i li |_|_ J lsr?-~' BEAUTY QUESTIONS ANSWERED' Reducing Exercise Dear Miss Leeds-I am 26 Yea” old, 5 feet 6‘/a inches tall and wci8l1 143 pounds. My measurements arer Bust, 40; waist. 32: hips, 40; calf, 14,' ankle. 9. How can I redxe my bust., which is flabby, and also reduce at large abdomen? A. C. B. ` Answer-The average weight for ‘ your age and height is between 135. and 139 pounds. The measurements you give are rather large. Try t0 bring your weight down a few pounds and take plenty of active exercise to replace the flabby muscles with hard. firm ones, Here is a special exercise' for the bust. Stand elect with arms; out straight at shoulder level. Keep elbows and wrists stiff. To help you do so. hold s stick or 18-inch ruler fn. each hand. letting it llc along the; forearm, Swing the right arm front» and then begin rotating it at the' shoulder, describing continuous circ- les in the air with the end of the ruler. The circles should be at least two feet in diameter. As you make the circles let your arm travel to the right until it is at the starting position at the right ride again. Repeat exercise with left curl. Repeat the whole ex- ercise sevenil times s day. Another-` exercise for the bust is beglln with, elbows bent and hands on shouidersl Thrust the arms out in front, then bring them back to the first position. Thrust them up above your head; bring them down. Repeat exercise briskly. For reducing the abdomen do trunk bending and twl: