PAGE EIGHT an ’s eel!" r595 a A A A a a A A.‘ Q r vvvvvvv a ha; a L 4 vuvv-v Y - v w-é v Daintiness With Chic Sltyles ii-j ILLUSTRATED DBISSIIAKING LISBON FURNISH!!! - WITH BVBB! PATIIIN BY ANNABELLI WOBTIIINGIDR It's so fresh and lovely for the warm days as pictured ln powder- blue non-crushable linen. Blue and white sheer linen adds a gay con- trast, used for the yoke and puffed sleeves. Its clever seaming create: a sup- pleness that gives the figure that sleek slenderness and smart tail ap- pearance. That's why you'll want t0 make it. And it's nu entirely simple. Cool and lovely for town and the last word in chic, is dotted swiss in navy blue and white, wine-red and white or in black dotted in black or in white. Cotton voile prints, dimity prints, batiste prints and tub silks in white or pastels lend themselves perfectly to this model. Style No. 990 is designed for sizes 14, l6, i8, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size l6 requires 2% yards of 39-inch material with 1% yards of 35-inch contrasting. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully, " City ‘f may be stupid, No doubt I'm dumb. But the world hasrvt got m‘ Under its thumb. I won't be downed By a mere depression Though I haven't a coin In my possession. Among the jobless I may be ranked; I'm lean and shabby, But Gcd be thanked. I can wink at poverty‘s Cracked old‘ shoes. And with flippant shou‘(l' Shrug off the blues. I can snap my fingers And patch my clothes And at mounting worries Turn up my nose. And thus contrive To stand the gaff, And manage never To cry, but laugh. For life‘: loo short To be hoarded sadly; I much prefer to Spend mine gladly! HOUSEHOLD HINTS The best way to remove ink atains from lincn and other white articles is to cover the mark with mixed mustard before washing. Then boil in the usual way. Ordinary soft red indiarubber will clean ofi dirty, marks made by amcke on red-brick fireplaces. A simple way to clean wallpaper i: to mix a cup of flour, water, and plaster of Paris. Roll if: into a moist but not sticky, ball, and clean the paper downyards, turning in the dirty surface. To scald mllk easily, set the jug in a pan of cold water: when water boils milk is ready. While wailing to be cooked veal lh0llld be hung in a cool place. Do not lay it on a dish. PRESENT A SLEEK HEAD TO THE WORLD As hats continue to use less and less material, your ooiffure be. comes more and more important Consider your hair as part of your hat, if you would present e. suave, sleek head for all the world to see. New hats sit right. up on top of your head and cover very little more ter ng with the new hats. The back of a woman's neck. lust along the hairline. is a nice line. Why cover it up? its a. gmd idea in part your hair on the rizht side, leaving the thick- lcst amount. of hair on the left side. lflls the left side that shows. l Pnriiilg your hair in the middle. i i i broadens your face. Don't wear it that way if your face is naturally i broad. l Ears lend character to your fS/CB. if you have nice ones, why not show them? I 'I‘ll°l‘€ are many new ways to "do" ‘long hair. One famous French coif- lure expert says to part it in the ;m.d<l1e, wave both sides and leave, Ithe back straight so that your hair {clings to your head and shows its |natural contour. Tue natural line . {of a woinans head is a thing of ibcauty. Don't let your hair get clilclr enough to hide the shape of Q your hcad. Have your locks thinned ‘out occasionally. For variety in your home. mange your pictures once in a while. Leave expensive oils and etchings for ‘winter. Simple prints and casual pictures look much better in the summer. Heavy frames look rather incongruous with most slip covers— use them in the winter when your fumiturc- isn't covered up. CALGARY GIRL l-HS ROYAL DEED GIVEN T0 HER. ANCESTRESS An ancient deed to 200 acres of land in Ontario, granted over 100 years ago by England's reiknlfl! monarch of that period, is in pos- session of Miss Genevieve Lent, 0f Calgary. The deed is written on parchment as thick as velvet w-iih the Royal seal in beeswax attached. The Royal Act transferred 200 acres of land in the townshlP 01 Chatham to Amelia Van Dusen, daughter of Caspar Van Dusen. Unitsd Empire Loyalist spin-lilo?- Miss Lent is a descendant of Amel- ia Van Dusen, one of the first wo- men to hoid land ln her own name in Canada. She i: also the only woman on record to have received a direct grant from the K1118 in those early day's. GRAPEFRIIIT SALAD Fresh grapefruit mixed with cot- tage cheese makes a dellciou: hot weather salad. Peel the fruit and remove the than just the upper right side of skin and pulp from the indlvldunl sections. This is one time when you do not have to be careful ahfllli breaking the sectons into little pieces. with cottage ciuese and serve, ice I uzciras THAT can. . . Mix the grapefruit meat lightly’ your hair and perhaps your right’ mid, on‘ a bed of lettuce. eye. What are you going to do This makes a handsome salad for about the back and the left side of ridivldual portions. particularly l! your oolffuic? ,yuu top inch plate with a whole Girl: with long hair will be Il-adflsection of grapefruit and one red to know that fashion dictates thatgcherry. your "snood" la to be worn higher’ Serve French dressing in a bowl up on your head. Itb more com- and let each pctsrn help himself at 1411M!!! that way. And more fiat- tne tabla THE COOK’S CORNER , FOR. EGGS AND LEMONS Here are a few recipes calling for lemons, which are plentiful and consequently cheap lust now. LEMON MERINGUE Put the grated rind and the strained Juice of 2 lemons into a saucepan with a dessertspoon of l sugar and 1 pint water. Bring to , the boil. Mix 5 teaspoonfuls corn- j starch to a. cream with cold milk l and pour the boiling lemon water y on to it. Stir well, put back into the i saucepan and cook gently for 10 minutes. Leave to get a little cool, I then stir in the beaten yolks of 2 eggs. Cook for a few minutes, then rinsed out with cold water. i Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiiT froth with 2 tablespoons sugar. add a few drops vanilla, heap the l mixture on top of the pudding and bake in a slow oven till delicately. brown. It can be eaten hot or cold.‘ LEMON CASIIIJS Weigh 2 eggs and measure the same quantity of flour, butter and sugar. Put the butter inln a basin and beat it with a wooden spoon until it is quite soft, arid the sugar and beat llntil like whipped cream Beat the eggs till frothy, then add them gradually to the biltter, etc. Mix 1/.- teaspoon baking powder and the grated rind oi a lemon with the flour and stir into the eggs mix- ture. Add the strained jlllUB of the lemon and 2 tablespoons milk and mix well. Butter some moulds or small cups and hull‘ fill with the mixture. Cover uiith greased paper and stand in a baking tin of water- do not let the water come more than half-way lip-and steam for ‘ti of an hour. Turn out and pour round a jam sauce. This mixture is also very‘ good if put into a pie-dish and bak- ed for ‘~_- hour. LEMON CREAM Wash 3 lemons, peel the rind as thinly as possible anl put into a Jug with 6 oz, sugar. flour over ‘A pint boiling Wale‘: and leave to stand for an hour. Take out the peel and stir in 2 eggs, well beaten, o. bare 1,5 oz. gelaitinc iprevlollsly dissolved in 3 tizblcspoons hot unleri and the strained juice. c5 the ienlolis. Stand the jug in a pan of boiling water and cook gently till the mixture thickens. Put into a mould and turn out when set. AGATES TO TEMPT TOURIST Cutting and polishing of agates may prove a profitable industry for settlers on the Queen Chalotte Islands, several of whom have set up outfits for this purpose. The products are expected to be attrac- tive to tourists. Some of the stones‘ which have been sent away have been pronounced excellent. STIBSTPPIJTES FOR “T101. The shortage of supplies of sheeps’ wool has led the Soviet au- thorities, says lhe Empire Market- ing Board, to investigate the pos- sibility of other sources of supply of raw material for the wool tex- tile industry. Rabbits, cattle, hor- ses, donkeys, mules and dogs have been suggested as being capable of supplying thousands of tons of wool substitutes, and experiments have been undertaken recently with regard to the utilization of human hair clippings. Common House H)‘ Spreader of Diaeawl “Vomit Slims" which lie leaves as a by-product of his mastication process. “Imam numberless virulent dlscait? germs. Think of this re- pulsive process when Y°“ Q" a fly about food on your 4"‘- ing table-UR FLY-TOX There is Only One FLY-TOX I327 Mrs. Budd: "Before we were mar- i tied you used to say f was the sun- "shino of your life.” Mr. Budd: , “Well, I admit you still do your best to make things hot for me." turn into a pie dish, previously, o rmed: » ~ ' , I . Y nluuuu "$.25? Dorothy Dzx ‘Il..“;"".;‘.‘ l Ronunce l0: J “Perfect Love” With Youngster is Due for Tragic Disillusionment, When the Flare-up of Youth Dies Out and Leaves Them With All They Cared for in the World Lost Forever There is a new novel called “Marriage in Gotham" by Ishbcl Ros: that every man and woman approaching the ago of lndiscretion should Primarily its theme i: the disastrous effect that the divorce of their parent: ha: upon adolescent children, but sharing interest with this i: the picture it paints of the tragedy of Indian summer romance in those who are old enough to know better. The heroine of the story i: a woman who i: intelligent, beautiful and good in the best sense of the word. She has wealth, social position, a. son and a daughter about to finish college, a dis- tinguished husband who, in his way, is devoted to her and who give: her everything but ardent love. Fbr twenty-five year: she and her husband live along placidly and happily together, he absorbed in hi: work, she in her children and her clubs and . her many social activities, and then suddenly she falls wildly, madly, passionately in love with a boy young enough to be her son and proceeds to wreck not only her own life but her whole family. read. She throws her cap over the windmill without a moment’: hesitation. She tramples in the dust all the tenets by which she ha: lived. Neither right nor wrong, nor her children, nor her husband, nor scandal, nor any- thing else matters. She l: starved for youth, for thrills, for burning, pulsing love, and she grabs ruthlessly at what the lad offers her as a famlshed woman would food. The husband divorces her and she marries the boy, and then begins the pitiful inevitable end of her dreams. She loses her home, her child- ren, her place in society, and she find: that love isn't enough to pay for these, as she had fondly imagined. Worse still, she finds that she has lost her boy-lover because when the excitement of the adventure is over and he finds himself tied to an aging woman he wearie: of her. Youth calls to youth and he turns from her to the girls of his own age. Then ‘come: the woman‘: martyrdom, of an old wife trying to live up to a young husband, trying physically to look his age by hair dyeings and face-llftlnga, by massaging sagging flesh to try to make it firm again. Trying to keep spiritually young and interested in the things, a boy ls in- terested in. ' ‘frying to go hi: pace with weary body and aching feet. Suf- fering the torture: of the damned in an effort to perform a. miracle that no woman can work, of recapturing her lost girlhood. And finally the woman realizes-and that lenowledgo i: the bittoreet of all-that what she thought was a great and consuming love was noth- ing but a little flare-up of physical desire that has burned itself out, and that at middle age we are no longer capable of a grand passion. She l: as bored with the boy as he is with her and all that ahe desires is to crawl back to her husband and try to rebuild the home that she pulled down in her folly. I have told thi: story at length because we see it happen’ lg about u: every day in real life, and I hope that it: lesson will stay the feet of many a man and woman who at middle age are starting out on a quest of rom- antic adventure. For they seldom find it, and, if they do, it. turns to Dead Sea fruit on their lips. They discover that there is no bridging of the gulf between the generations over which love may walk. They realize at last that they only befool themselves when they think that they are younger than they really are, and that the gayety, the laughter, the high spirits that they have to pump up i: like the artificial respiration that i: induced in a corpse. ‘ Yet this hunger of the 40s for romance i: a very pitiful thing. It i: Nature's last plea for a final bite of angel’: food. Men and women realize suddenly that their youth is nearly gone, that soon their attraction for the opposite sex will be gone. They may in their hearts still be faithful to their mates, but Mary i: getting stout and grizzled, and John has lost his figure and hi: hair and their life together ha: become humdrum and flat and stale, with never a thrill in it or a kiss that isn't a flabby peck of duty. ~ ~ And John and Mary feel that they must have one last fling before it I is too late. So they imagine vain thing: about themselves, that they are still a mere girl and boy, still capable of feeling and inspiring the love that their middle-aged wife or huaband i: incapable of giving. And then it is that they do the thing: that wreck their lives and that of their families. Mary gets into a scandal that drags her through the slime of a divorce court and makes her children ashamed of the mother who bore them. Or John swap: of! his faithful old wife for argold-digger young enough to be his daughter. And then, when it is too late, they 0-000 QQQQQOOQ 0999 Middle-Aged Husband or Wife Who Finds we s»..- vvvvvfTvv and Perso alt-:- Fashion's -:- OvQOO-O-O- w‘.w%;‘ HAPPY VACATIONISTS Illastei- William Herridge, son AAA‘L AQA gm of Hon. W. D. Herrldge, Canadian liiinister to Washington and Mrs. Herridge, and nephew of Canada‘: Prime Minister, Rt. lion. R. B. Bennett, is seen here with his mother, both of them apparently enjoying themselves at Canada’: great Maritime playground, the Katy's Cove beach of the Algonquin Hotel St. Androws-by-the-Sep, New Brunswick, where they are spending their vacation. biaior Herridge loined them there for a, while. ' gether with other waste portions of the animals, while the skins were placed out Ln the sun to dry with pieces of flesh and fat adhering. Now the Kea is one of the most inquisitive birds in existence, and he wants to investigate everything new. Moreover, he is by nature a friendly creature, and, until ex- perience tauzht him that man was the last creature in the world to be trusted, he had no fear of human beings, and would freely enter camps. Many kinds of Parrots are fond of fat when they can get it, and the Kea is no egrccption. At the sheep- killing stations he found all he wanted and more, waste, and so fond did he get of it thrown out a as that he returned day after day with all his family and friends, and so acquired a great liking for this new food, and who can blame him? The Kea, being a very intelligent bird, was soon to realise the fact that this new food which man had taught him to like was to be ob. tained, not only in the neighbour- hood of slaughter-houses. but walk- ing about in the paddocks and on the mountain slopes. Sheep Attacked and Killed And, from the evidence oi’ the farmers, there seem: little doubt that in certain districts Keas do actually attack and kill sheep in order to obtain their fat. But every Kea is not n sheep killer, and many are found right up in the moun- tains where lhere are no sheep, and Whfire they cannot do any harm. both find that you cannot put new wine into old bottles, or a boy‘: or girl's heart into a middle-aged man or woman. Perhaps for youth love i: enough, but it t: not enough for age. Then the blood ha: cooled and nothing aeem: so desirable as it once did. Habit is stronger than desire, and on: find: more happiness in one’: comfort and easetand in the respect of one’: friends than in one‘: emotions. Wise, then, are those who watch theirsteps when they reach the dangerous 40: and who satisfy their hunger for romance on homemade bread and butter instead of nibbling on forbidden fruit. DOROTHY DIX. A Parrot of Sinister Repute How The Kea Came To Like ‘Sheep's Fat By D. Beth-Smith, 1.2.5., M.B.O.U., the daily ration of carrot: and 1n “all! Birds". other vegeterl-u commodities. The Kea. Parrot of New Zealand is one of the most interesting mem. bers of lta tribe, because it ha; the unenvlable reputation of huvin‘ m far departed from the habits and custom: of it: family a: to imltgu the feeding habits of a wolf, or even a lion. Ind 0'0 feed “P011 aheepl Naturally. the» fflflwnslbl: for A Zoo Legend Legend ha: it that when, in for- mar dnyl, a Kea arrived at the Zoo, luscious mut‘ chops appeared in the weekly bills. But the records do not state who ate them l The natural habitat of the Kea i: the mountainous districts of the South Island of New Zealand the upkeep o! the zoo collection were delighted when llmree example: of this fearsome creature arrived at the Garden: recently. But instead of purchasing forth- with a flock of sheep for their nourishment, or even applying u; the nurolt butcher for mutton chops, all they did we: to increue where, before the arrival of sheep, it fed chiefly upon roots, which it dill up with it: specially fldlpted bill. wild fruitl. Grain, and, doubt- leu. Irubl. Then came the cheep farmers with their flock: and their slaught- ering stations. The eheepe’ head: were thrown away a: ueeleu, to- Beveral of the most Interesting of the New Zealand birds have already disappeared for ever. thanks to the llladvised introduction of alien species. to the destruction of the native bush, and the wrgfphgfl habit of the New Zealand youth of going out with hi: gun and shoot- l"! ei/"ythlllfl in the form of a bird he sees. m"! new it arrears that the Kea l5 i0 Bo, too, if the Government can have it: way. for it ha: placed a price on it: head and pay: two 51111111186 or more for every bee: that is brought in. Hlsh 11D in the mountains the Kea: are still unsuspieioua, friend- ly, and inquisitive, and hero the New Zealand youth like: to make his collection of trophies, filling his pocket: with the beak: of un- wi ‘ specimens which, on his return to the nearest town, he hands over to the repmaentauvg o; the Government and receives his Just rwardl L“ 118 110m there are part: of the mflllntalflfl too difficult to climb by the most greedy bealbhunter, and where this unique and most inter- estlng Parrot may long gum“, """""“"""--- . A you!!! man we: threatened with, an action for breach of pro- mise, and had gone to consult his lawyer. “Are there any letter: m exist- ence?" wa: the first question the lawyer asked, when he had heard the young man’: story. _ “Hundreds. of them, unfortunate. 1Y1.‘ replied the young man disco“- solately. "What a may." said the other. "that you ‘had never heard the old M1888. ‘D0 Ylkht and fear no man; AA n ALAAAQAAA AiJlGUolf, 16M195$ Y v ~—v—rw- i eifa tare A L_Q~Q 4.4.‘ , g _ Y Y 1-1 AMomingSmilc In a small country total u meet. lng had been called to iliacusg u“ question of a brighter Sunday 1°; the people. Borlou: momma were put for- ward, when some dtrln: soul eug- gelted a “Pleasant Sunday after. awn-II A dignified old lady rose in th: meeting and said: “There will be m ‘plflllllil Sunday afternoon: where l ‘my A man who was motoring along a country road oflered a. stranger a lift. The stranger accepted. Shortly afterward the motorist noticed, hi: . .. 1-. watch was missing. - ' Whipping out a revolver " happened to be carrying," ‘fiat: into the ‘other man's rib. '--' as. claimed: "Hand over that w. The stranger meekly cornpL. fore allowing himself to be booted out of the car. When the motoriat returned home he was greeted by his wife. “How did you get on without your watch?" she naked. "I suppose you know that you left lt_ on your dress- ing table?" THE BROWN RAT Everywhere the brown rat de- stroys unceaslngly, yerlts presencA is tolerated. Besides the enormoul destruction of food supplies, thu brown rat l: a serious menace t1 public health. It i: a. carrier of Lhf bubonic plague, one of the mod devastating human diseases whlcll has been carried by the rat all ovel the world. In the fourteenth cen- tury, says the Dominion Entomol- ogist, it is estimated that abou 25,000,000 people d'ed in Europa from the “Black Death." as this dil- ease was called and 2,000,000 death. are stated to have occurred durlnl the epidemic of the plague in In- dia. in 19M. Bubonic plague is tranl mitted from rats to human being by fleas, and modern methods cl preventing the spread of the plaguf involve the most vigorous eradica- tion. pf rats, and the prevention d their landing in seaports from ocean going vessels. ~ 0.1K. Mrs. Brown (interviewing the PYB-Sbcctive oook)—-And another $111M. Mr. Brow-n and I are strict vegetarians. Prospective (Boob-That's all right with mo, ma’am. I was never much of a haggier over what church m; employers attended. N0 SALE The old commercial traveller war INF-Uni his experiences to a young mm. in the same business. And don't forget, he said, nevel try to sell an encyclopedia to a bride Why IlOt? The old man smiled cynically She always thinks her husband know: everything. _i____r__ A prominent New York businesi 111111. who decline: the use of hi! name for reason: most obvious, ii telling thl: one on hl: wife: On hlr return from a. long tour of the we:t the buslneumanls wife am: narrat- ina to him the delightful fines she had while he we: away, "one night I was invited to a dih- n" DENY Bil a. smart cafe," she said "and one of the guests was the Turkish ambassrr‘ He was well informed on every subject and war one of the moat entertaining din- ner companions I ever knew." “Did he wear a fez?" asked tin husband.’ don't write and fear no woman‘l" blending of o rve clear, soft, healthy. ladle: of‘ olive oil pnufrnla dust and din the complexion. Protect their tender skin Witb tbs safl, soothing olive oil in Palmolive HILDRBNS SGGSlIlVGVIklII demands special cafe. That is why Palmolive i: the ideal soap for youngsters, and for you, too. fr: secret oil keeps render skin: safe, Every ni h: and morning, massage a rich molive Soap and warm were: gently info the skin of face, throat and shoulders. Rinse well, dry carefully. _ Here‘: what happens. Palmolive‘: soothing ev there daily by the. akin. This is true foun adon dancing which brings our the healthy, radiant, natural colouring of - Buy 5 cake: of’ Palmolive todnl. only in Palmolive will you n "No indeed!" she replied. "l-is was clean-shaved." pore, floats out the Remember, d this rich, cosmetic blending of olive oil. Use Palmolive, for only two weeks. Note how the akin has become radiant, soft, lovely. Now, it com 1m to beep that Scboohgirl Complexion MAD! IN CANADA all i