...---.,. .-.¢-'=._ I. wcnqnivu l ' Y‘. Wtiritdn 's Realm -:- Social and Personal r v Etiquette Irloicblno Paris Styles, _.._...--,_ . l By MARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, April 2'l.-(U. PJ-Joseph Paquin favors ruffles and frills. In other words, he favors women who are feminine and if he has anything to dowith what they wear, and he very decidedly has, he is going to make them that way. He does it several ways, all equally charming. One of them is with triple white georgette and inspired by the fashion of 100 years ago. Two sets of dainty ruffles fall over the shoulders exposing the curve of the shoulder but attached to a tiny strap that goes over it. A single ruffle scoops low in the back, ovally, and dips in like manner not so low in the front. The skirt is snug over the hips with curved lines slenderizing the body. Below the knee there are four pleated fan flares that meet at the bottom and become attached to two rows of ruffles matching those on the waist but slightly larger. The model wears all black suede gloves and carries an all black ebony fan. She wears a short necklace of octagon cut jet beads. At the natural waistline of the dress is a very narrow belt. not over half an inch in width, that fastens with a carved Jet buckle in front. Her shoes are white crepe with Jet pins placed at the side of the foot. A black chiffon velvet lined with white georgete is the accompanying wrap. It is not long and is held together with one hand, being of the wrap-closely’ type. The sleeves are large and fall in graceful folds returning to a tight cuff. i Q. What is the correct way for the Joint card of a doctor and his wife to be engraved? A. “Dr. and Mrs. Robert Harris." Q. Who escorts the woman guest of honor to the dinner table? A. The host. Q. Is it proper for a bride to dis- play her wedding presents: A. Yes, it is entirely optional. A MorningSmile Mrs. A. (with newspapen-"It says here that cooks are often dec- orated in France." Mr. A.—“I sometimes feel crowning the one we've got.” Find Wonderful New Face Powder like fvw. Illustrated Dressmaking lesson Furnished Poor complexions and old looking skins lack protection. Preserve your skin with the new wonderful Face Powder MELLO-GID used by so many beautiful women. Its special tint and finish are so youthful. MELLO-GLO stays on longer, pre- vents large pores, and spreads so smoothly. Purest powder made and b? the Fashionable are Wearing With Every Pattern ‘msiiiiihriiiiiiiitiiiwiiiiusgiiiiiiu and n _ Toilet Goods Counters. By Annabelle Worthington V -_--- insert and is quite as effective as made by hand. The crossover collar of plain crepe and simulated but- toned closing lend charming individ- uniuy. Thc short cuffed sleeves are chic. ‘The skirt to be certain, provides lulncss through jalaits in youthful killed arrangement nt the front. For The Cook BOHEMIAN SALAD Mix together equal parts of shred- ded new cabbage, tender celery, and hard-boiled eggs, and half the quan- tity of chopped hickory nuts and , English walnuts. Mix well with salad Style No. 3052 may be had in sizes i i6. i8 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches . (lrcssing, and sct in a cool place until Dorothy Dix Letter Box I this delightful What Women Need is an Efficiency Expert to,‘ Tell Them How to Run Their Families -' Will Widow or Spmster Make Better l Stepmother‘! Dear Miss Dix-The value of the efficiency expert, who is called in to diagnose the case when a business gets sick, has been proven beyond the Why don't women have something of the same sort? why do they not have an efficiency and budget ex- pert to go from house to house, look in the back yard, cellar, garbage can and closets so she can tell the vishadow of a doubt. domestic women where the waste in their household was located, how to improve their ditions and sav now has last longer. stead of a garbage can. happmest S. P. B. Answer: poison their families with bad cooking is ignorance. They have never been ance and make the sort of sloppy homes that send their husbands and child- ren to the street to try to find some place of comfort. And the main reason that women hate housework is becausethey don't know how to do it. We all have the pride of craftsmanship and enjoy doing thething that we doexpertly and for which we are applauded by our fel- low creatures. The opera singer adores singing. The famous writer can't be kept from her typewriter. The successful business woman thinks in terms of trade. The woman whose dresses are artistic creations enjoys sewing. The woman who is a marvelous cook delights in making her pies and bread. a It is the women who are bunglers who hate their work. It is the woman whose house is always messy who tells you that she hates domesticit_,. It is tho woman whose food would kill an ostrich who loathes the kitchen. Teach women how to systematize their housekeeping and do it with the least possible energy. Teach them how to cook and you will have women who glorify housekeeping and get real pleasure out of making homes. she could have more money or make the amount she How to have a stock pot in- ft seems to me that a vis- itinif female domestic efficiency expert might fill a long-felt wantwith women and do a~lot to promote domestic peace and That's B. grand idea, Mr. s. P. squid 1 am glad to push it alone. For the trouble with practically all the women who waste their money and trained for their jobs and so they ruin their husbands with their extravag- mod It the logo For wear now, you‘ll be interested .n this printed crepe silk two-piece fitting the head like a cup and permitting the hair to intrlguingly some o fthem are grand with a matching crochet brim. ing, these are adorable and a perfect solution for a hat that can be worn with sports print frocks as well as town things. Likewise a simple alternative for those of us who are about hats being too heavy for our share of brains. bust. in opaline yellow or flat washable crepe silk. Shantung with plain ‘ combinations. with ~11 yard 39-inch contrasting. preferred) Price of pattern 15 cents. NO. 3052. volcouolnonoloo . - - . » .. Name nlllllillollcnea Street llddress City State Checked witho ut: “dosing? Rub on cl. - makes smart use of fugoting in pointed yoke of the blouse. This ting may be bought already to Style Chats WITH ALMA ARCHER This has been a great week. l think it should be dedicated to all the lizile nut-cups in the world. cDo you remember shortly before Cnponels regime one particular Christmas when all your nearest and clearest exchanged starched, crocheted nut-cups made out of D. M. C. something thread? ' And now, clear public, believe it or no, as you will. those some nut-cups. in a glorified form, are the newest and smartest hats to be found. The crochet work, usually white, forms the hat crown, pCPk through. l like the narrow brim in dark Milan the best. but No fool- always complaining You'll like this model immensely opaline green skirt and printed blouse, skipper blue Jersey blouse with whlte Jersey skirt and orange-red linen skirt with 0rgange- red printed linen blouse are mappy _ Size 36 requires 37/. yards 39-inch Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin Size ..................... alculllnOllluoor . ...-.¢-nu-nn- -.-u.-t-n-n----... hldrenk Colds a“; ...-._.. <- ..... .2. . ,.,.., , ,,__, udns-k-s-"Qa-spé oni Buy Water» In flavor/hp [x/rac/J‘ of‘ 177 Perfume!‘ 7/3‘ f/reng/h no)‘ price fha/ coun/J‘ ‘ l5, gchvva PT5 needed. Steam whole, white cabbage leaves until tender, and place on ice until thoroughly chilled. When ready to serve, arrange cabbage leaves on a platter, and fill each leaf with this mixture. Garnish with rad- ishes and pimento-stuffed olives, and place a little dressing over each mound, and sprinkle with paprika and celery salt. Joe-s Cafarrh ma/re your EARS buzz? 1s yourHeqrmg Ho]? If your ears ring and buzz with loud noises it is an infallible sign of Catarrh, and if not checked may re. suit. in partial deafness The sim- Dlest remedy is CATARRHOBONE- inhale it soothing vapor a few times dolly, and it prevents Catarrh from spreading. Head noises, buzzing and P11181118 in the ears are soon correct- ed by CATARRHOZONE. Nasty nose discharges are stopped. Sore. inflam- ed cmsts are healed. Sickening muc- ous which drops back from the nose to the stomach is done, away with. , Headaches depart The breath is purified. You will be free from colds, coughs, sore throat and catarrh if you use CATARRHOZONE. Two months‘ treatment, 81.00; small size, 50c. At all dealers. On The Level Placing and the height of a wom- en's kitchen sink, wash-tub and work-table is an important factor in her well-being and well-doing. It takes more of her strength and tires her more to do the same amount of work when she has to bend over too far or hold her arms too high than when she ls in a comfortable posi- tion. Figures which make a good gen- eral guide in finding the correct height of working surfaces are im- possible. Each woman ought to find out for herself the working level at which she can work most easily and efficiently, and see that her work- table, wash-tub and sink are adjust- ed accordingly. she should remem- ber that the working level of a sink is the bottom, the working level of a wash tub a point about half-way be- tween the bottom and the top (where most of the work of scnibbing is done) and that for ironing a lower [surface is needed than for a general It is a great idea this of having a female efficiency expert, and there would be no end to her usefulness. Suppwe. 10f lflstP-BW- h" “minim” would include keeping an eye on the way her patrons dressed and telling women what clothes to buy. Women waste millions of dollars every year by buying the wrong things. Hats that are misadventures and dresses that are misfort nes. Things that looked all right in the shops and look all wrong at home. Colors that swear at everything else in their owner’s wardrobes. Styles that bring out all of their worst points. Many a woman could look like a daily hint from Paris if only the money that she throws away on buying bargains that she can never use was spent in purchasing Just the clothes, that her type demands. Think how our streets would be beautlfied if only st out ladies could be kept out of plaids and stringy ones out of stripes; if hard-feat cu women were forcibly pre- vented from buying knobby hats and pug-nosed ones from purchasing hats that turned up in the front. A shopping expert would be more than a convenience. She would be a god-send. And suppose the efliclency expert, in addition to peering into-garbage cans, could take a look in the skeleto closet and point out to wives how they were‘ wasting their happiness in worrying over the trivial faults of their‘ husbands and how they were scrapping their happiness by nagging and fault-finding and a hundred little errors they had fallen into without even knowing it. And perhaps the efficiency expert might show mothers how they were bringing on trouble for themselves by spoiling their children and how if they raised little Johnny and Mary to be selfish and uncontrolled they were bound to grow up into sons and daughters who break their parents’ hearts. 0h, there would be plenty of work for the efficiency expert and she is badly needed. DOROTHY DIX- Dear Miss Dix-I am a widower with children. There is a widow with children that I could marry. Also there is an unmarried woman. Which would make the best wife, the widow or the spinster? MR. X. Certainly there is no reason why a widower should not marry again, and every reason why he should if he can find a suitable mate. Being married seems to unfit people for the sinfle estate. They miss having their own homes. They miss the close companionship to which they have been accustomed. Theyeven miss having somebody handy to fight with, and they find that they are far lonelier than any old maid or bach- elor. Therefore, they do well to marry. But if they have children, they are not free to marry, as they please. any one on whom their family falls. They have their children to consider, and they should think more of what kind of a stepmother or stepfather they are giving their children than they do about what sort of husband or wife a man or woman is likely to make. ' A widow is generally a safe choice for a widower, because she also has had matrimonial experience, and understands the technique, so to speak, of matrimony. She is broken to the double harness and knows how to pull her half of the load. She learned how to cook on her first husband, and is apt to be a satis- factory housekeeper. Her experience with her first husband has taught her not to expect too much of a man, and also how to sidestep a husband's pec- uliarities. Therefore, she is easy to get along with. l She is quite as likely as any other woman to make a good stepmother. Often, if she is a childless woman, she takes her stepchildren into her heart, and satisfied her mother-yeaming by lavishing an aflsction and tenderness on them that makes them forget that they are motherless. |work-table. Generally speaking this table solves the problem: Height of Height of Working Surfaces 30% Woman u“ noon-lulle- ren of her own. It is madness even to think of marrying her, because she cannot keep from favoring her own to save her life. to another man's children, while his own are pushed aside and wear cast- But the widow is only a good wife for the widower if she has no child- In such a case a man finds that invariably he is toiling to give luxuries, .... 31% t... 34% .... 35 ofls, and are the Cinderellas of the family. Two families do notmix, and if a third is added to it, bedlam ensues. 37 SOUTHERN MAY QUEENS NAMED RALEIGH, N. 0., April rL-Miss Doris Charnblee, of Zebulon, N. c. and Miss Kathleen Durham, Lun- berton, N. 0., will rule as May Queens at St. Mary's College and Meredith and be ure/ College, Raleigh institutions. just stepmothers, to the mark, because they are trying -'f'he famom Natick elm, believed to have been at least three centuries oidilnomomjrbo huge mo. is As for spinsters, they are the real manspoilers. and they generally make who do their duty by their stepchildren and keepthem up out on the youngsters all their theories DOROTHY D13. feet in circumference, succumbed to age recently and crashed to the ground. Under this elm, according to tradition, the praying Indians of -____- NATIOK, Mass, Alpril 27. (U. P.) s Winnipeg Wcslem Home Monthly. 6 money? Bhe might criticize their deficiency in a dip- Scalloped Potatoes A B S U I T SIB lomatic way. Show them how to improve their lagég; ‘u Gkzgnh“ 2 n i?“ . I a housekeeping, how to take better care of their child- Ho‘ T" Biscuimy ‘fgzzogx: Musk %'cu“::fi‘ M ren, etc. Bhe could show the domestic n -how Applq Pie with Cheese king powd" Mfmm‘ “d L." a -:-, Literature .he West contributes l- Fashion. Sometime: it's difficult lo think up new ldcu for varying daily menus. Here's one that offers pleasing variety and combines healthful qualities as well. If was prepared by Miss Gertrude Dulion," Western Canada's bcsl known cookery expert, conductor of tho Better Cookery Section In lhl VEGETABLE DINNER Chase 8i Sanbom’: Tu or (offal Miss Dutton says: "l recommend Magic Baklnj - _, - s-nn e k‘ d a u. c 'u n. hllled 637:3: taxi-kg‘ siiiflilyhgivcsemghfiilablguiiai: sliorfenriiki... figveavlfdchll‘: chilled luiqriid t‘: make ins ,¢,u|;,_ Mo,‘ ink“; dig,” |°°k and h,“ soltdoug . Toss dough on foo floured board and better when Magic Baking Powder is used." do not handle more than ls necessary. Pat out with - w».- Q Look for this mark on cvoryfln: ll l: a guarantee that Magic Bnklng Powder don not con- hin alum or any bomilul ln- gradient. Try Miss Dutton's l Favorite Recipe For M teaspoon sell water 1 tablespoon butler the hand or roll out lightly. Cut out with a floured biscuit cutter. Bake on a buttered shoot in o hot oven, 450° F., 12 to 15 minutes. This recipe and dozens oi other equally delightful bakin suggestion! are’ ' “ J iniha New Ma id Cook Book. If ou bake at home a co y Willi! sent you. life to Standard ran s Limited, - Fraser Ave. and Liberty SL, Toronto, Qnf. Buy Made-in-Canada Goods. b FORGERY TS 0N INCREASE ' SALEM, Ore, April 27. 4U. P.J—~ While automobile theft has pro- dominatcd Juvenile law infractions in recent years, forgery rapidly is as- cvvr, W. H. Baillie, head of Oregon's rpolls can be, if Mayor James M. training school for boys, believes “"7. 73-. 13-51 that the boys of today are less law brraking than those of 40 years ago. _______..'____.__ BOSTON, Alpril 27 (U. P.)—Bos.' Somme alarming proportions. How- ton will be as noiseless as a metro- '66 JOHN BULBS years i thing glowing.” "Wok once Bothered to hear this words of wisdom of John Blot. , f "Nowadays no woman need be afraid of birth- days,” John Boles, Uni- versal singing star says. “Charm isn't by any _ means measured by “These days not only stage and screen stars but hundreds of other women have“ learned a very important secret of allure. YOUTl-I _is recognized for the priceless 1t 1s . . . complexions are kept How amazingly the famous stars youth! Ourley has his way. He has instruct- ed the city planning boa-rd to sur- vey the situation and make recom- mendations with a view to elimin- ating unnecessary din. beauty,’ aglow l" have for years. keep Your skin will Lever Brothers Lin-flied, Toronto * 99 Don't grow oiti WARNS JOHN Bows, motel-Jamie.- “To keep youth, guard complexion ’ they will tell you. “Keep your skin temptingly smooth, alluringly. The actresses famous for their charm the world over use Lux Toilet Soap, and Guard complexion beauty as 9 out of 10 lovely screen stars do Because they are so dependent on it, Lux Toilet Soap is found in theatres every- where——is the ofiicial soap in the dress- ing rooms of all the great film studios. respond to it, tool - Toilet Soap .. . 10¢ ~ T hecaress of dollar-awake French soap ll”