.._;;;_>'.;._;-_-:._-."_._. ._.._. y" v Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With » Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington ‘ hi‘ Qti. ‘Hit. < l-l, 1t? ltiil 4.’, 4i and 41‘, Ti yards of binding. No. 672-—DeCidedly Smart, T1115 . 44 and 46 inches bust measure. .36 requires 3 N vards of 39-inch ei-ini with '1.- yard of 35-inch sting. ............................-..-.-.. Name , IIIIIQCIIU - - . . . . . . . . sllliillOlllllIl Street Address -.nu..."---..-i---o-.-...---.-->. State cleanliness, accuracy and IHJOKi-SChOId T-Eifrie So ve rs _--_,-.'--- Till? '. l can see no reason why 1 ' iii-zilil spend long hours preparing iting vegetables for soup when arty zi-ocrre soup containing a n choice vegetables may be pur- ed for a few cents, I do not use ‘i-aiiiitxl vegetable soup merely as a Isoiili. 1t is one of the most useful of ‘oiziiioii foods for adding flavour and ihiiriiiieiit to made-over meat dish- , for clding to steamed meat pud- ". casserole ciishes, in jellied sal- and countless other appetlzing ll (fishes suitable for luncheon ' rfilllllflll oiie tlillt‘.——lil'll(‘ll I wished to ' ..i- tomato soup-I bought toma- ' i - .. washed them, cut them, cook- ixl tiieni with seasonings. rubbed fliiiiii through a sieve, then made up i which I combined the WlilJlU , .. 1.. Nniv I merely open a '..ii of condt nut-d tomato soup, dilute - 1i. \‘.'l'll an urinal amount of mill,- id u"-ii-i~ seasonings. if desired, and ' ".',;'h the result that; a i.iii of delicious soup is pro- ‘ ~ (3.. a: it moment's netted-and 11'“ ‘i\\'l'lii/?l't soiling countless dishes ln 111" lilir i'l'4iC('s5. Liki- tho vegetable soup ~'- U1"11'(‘.ll!'i'!l tomato soup is of inesti- klhlilv‘ lutngilill (I"li' HUT villi .i-ll f)!" \ Will. l’\.\"i'll\' t1 '1” iiiilih: value in general household till‘ .\,, ‘l"iiilii‘l'f.'.——llS it may be used .l‘ltt‘. lllilllC-(l\'L‘l' dishes. " ‘ '51‘ pix-hrs, jcllied salads, etc. . v lill-‘(llbill11111111“; at one time-when I required 11“1\“'-~= ' i ' ~-* ‘l 1“‘,i’,t.ll.'iOll‘llllC——3. soul) that is necessary *~1“-‘“1‘1 l“ 1“ -' *' “1 '- 1" ‘iiii all households iii which the mak- 1’»1l "5 M1115 -$'“-~ -i '~‘1" in: of well-flavoured foods is at- tciiilited,-I purchased beef and veal and ham and chicken-and ~ (“"1144 i-piiit, long hours making up the -“‘-‘~ 1" l lcoiisoniuie.—the recipe for which i ll(ili:t"‘.‘.l\L‘!~'i have walled for a dozen or more diflerent ljit 1L'lll‘ll‘.Li l i ' ti) di. turd a lmdi- l mgl-mllcnls‘_lncludlng in cereal \1i!l|1l Lilli. . “iii ex- What the Fasliionables are Wearing I 1 (‘hit-f ‘ . 518mb l - Dorothy Dzx 31753,?“ 1 “l, a, Partners / I More Conversation and Theatre lilckfitfi on the Husband~’s Part, and a Iolttle illore Pity for the Exhaustion Resulting From a Hard Day’s Work on the Wife’s y/te ‘ea/big cream fir Cola/s. Cbfarrfi. Jere ffiroat‘. e/c. ._,, MAD; |n CANADA Wes of the world are revcrently fastened at the moment, is om; of. the smoothest racketeers ever to » gain Prominence in the United: States. The mother and an American father of , ilil‘»\'l‘11'Y-'l1>1° C1111" covenanting Scottish descent, he'll 11 11°\'~1"“1“1’1" has had ‘an advcntumous career‘ (“SQQYPY rim i,‘ lilisbfinds, who used to hang upon their words by the and no“ still a youlllflll ma“, he l5 jlioiir during COllri‘ in. and with whom they held endless discussion on one of the world's celebrities. The l" subject lllltlll‘ the sun, never seem to hear a word they sill’ flftfil‘ extent of his fortune is not known 111%‘ are itiziri-ieit. but his income ls probably far’ greater than that of the averaiz". Every bride looks forward to marriage being a pcrlwlllfll ttflkffist- millionaire, and the tournament lii ‘ but Sm, 8mm ,l,_,un,_,.s that as soon as hubby wmes hgme of an evening wmch he 15 énglged W111 n” ‘W111i and has lils lllllllrl‘, he takes refuge behind his paper and B11 that S116 m"! "MUY imrease 1t I!“ dms “M get out of hiiii is iiii (iccasloniil grunt. Loving the sound oi’ her own V0108. make 1118 mQIIBY bl’ 911N408 601115» ‘Slll. bflllllgg “l, iist. this for a while and then, wearylng of monologuing. f“ 1“ the mdmary 9011131“ O1 C1“ tt-lli‘ hive."- up. and the hours that she had thought t0 5P°m31 111 115N313’ Con‘ 6M5 116 W0l11d 11ml fPW D0091? 1° verse are spent in a dull, sickening silence in which you could hear a P1,“ play against him. Indeed he says,lflll_ i that there are just l3 real experts: ---j— in the United States, one of them, Not this do women expect of marriage, and the thing that chiefly being Lenz. his opponent. Cl11'lli'\",( wives with domesticity is its long, dull, lonely evenings spent with bertson's bridge income is derived llllsllllllilli who are about as loquacloiis as a. store dummy. from his books, the fees he rccclvesj ——-;— from other instructors licensed fol The husband. on the other hand, pleads in his own defense that he tggch his new sl/stcm, [he 511g or‘ tired of talking oiio tired of listening. That he has spent his dflv syndlcaled al-llcles Such as appml- lplldillg ii wciii-y car to boring conviersationalists and that he has worn in the Mail and Empire. and .1 himself to it frizzle trying to bc bright mid Witty and 6119517 and Sflmu‘ tables. lamps, pencils, cards, ctc.1liitiii:: and convincing and that he yearns focnothlng else on earth when Cgnnected with the llama, hi- ucts to the shelter of his own home but silence. Deep, dark chunks Rulmd in Russ"; ,'ef silence. so thick that you could cut them with o. knife. He owns and edits ‘t mac; .. l and is his own publisher. llisl 1,000 graduate teachers pay hlni an annual fee of $60. He need not envy the affluence of the card player who broke the bank at Monte Carlo. Yet he li"s been playing bridge only a short time tioii between them. And the woman‘ counters by 5ILV1I18 @1131? 5119 15 surfing ‘or com’ iiziiiicinsliip while licr husband is fed up on it. She has been B10118 1!! tlic house all day. with nobody to talk to except the baby. End however 'iiiurli you may love an infant there ls nothing to get excited about 118- i. nl-io- to its saying ga-ga. and gogly-BOO- whit 5119 31951715 1°!‘ 1-5 9' bus’ ‘mild 21,1111) vsill conic hack with a lot of cheery gossip that he has ¢0119¢15Ed ll, lllc m. , a world and ivho will divert hei- by telling some good stories a professor oi’ sociology and hclp “"1 1m‘ my‘ rcmould the world nearer to the heart's desire. His messianic urge was derived from Russia \\‘ll‘.i‘l‘. he spent his boyhood. while his father was busy (lcvcloping oil \\'“l!~'. l-‘.‘._v fell into the company of a group o.’ young radicals, many of w-lioiii were later on to play a part‘ in the Bolsheviz revolution, and adcp‘ ~i their theories with cnthuirasni When the war broke out lie served in the French Red Cross. The Russian revolution spelt ruin for the Culbertson family and Ely still , has an account or sirinriooo which he says the Bolsheviks owe him for, It if; llllltirlllllfltO uiot the vci-v circumstances of *1 man's “"4 \.';oi:*"ii's life should he a bnrriti‘ between them and keep them $10M iiiiilei-standiug and synipathiziiig Wiill each other. 13119 $11911 15 the m5“ Take this. matter to talk for one illustration. Men complaining that their wires tall: too much. Women i-viinplaining that their husbands do not Hill»; enough. For another illustration take the matter of going out of an vxciiing ,\\‘lllL‘1.l is the cause of as many family rows as any other one viii: on earth. l The man's day is spent in store or office or shop, in the midst; of hi5 f Hair-creatures. All day long he is seeing {NOD16 and B01118 '50 P194355 rd to izoiiii: lioinc and getting into slippers and dressing gown Mid ng over thr paper or listening to the radio as the most dcllghtilfl in which he can spend his evening. \' .i “Onfiscatmg 111$ 1"“~11°1"5 °11 P101’ lint the wife has been shut in the four walls of ‘her house. All day efty- i1li‘ has doiio the s .iie dull, monotonous tasks, cooking, sewing, cleaninB. His First Coupe viii, tfllldlllfl, \ ‘ ‘. nothing to give her thoughts a new turn. By night After i119 W?" 11¢‘ lilliin 811011’ if‘ is ready to sci-cam with boredom and she wants to put on a 1376M)’ P8115 and GBHCYR llYlllil 1Y1 11"‘ tires and step out. even if it is only to the neighborhood movie or to get mY5tEY1OUS mil-Tm?!‘ 0f c5111‘? 101a bile at the delicatessen shop. fugecs without visible sources oil —————i.—- income. It. was at this time he S0 the man regards his wife as unreasonable and a Qflfflbtillt 1169111155 turned to cards. In tlir- cafes he H» i \"I1lll§ to go out to some place of amusement in the evening and the became known as r.ot only 1 poor player but a. stubborn on" lie v not so much interested lii whining; as in learning why a certain play had been made. l-ic became a bore. and people declined to pl _v with him. It 1s related by Ardrmv A. Freeman in The Outlook that, one evening he dropped into Paris gambling club with 100 franc: in: his pocket. Hi; put a. 20-franc chip on the table and as he did so br- lfc thinks hcr husband is a selfish old grouch because he won't take her. And lt takes more unselfishness and wisdom for each to‘ see the others point. of view than most husbands and wives possess. Hence these rliiari-ris. and it is pitiful to think how much domestic misery and iliscord and divorces could be prevented by just a llttle.bit more con- versation iii the family circle and a few theatre tickets on the husbands‘ part. And by wives showing a little more pity for husband whose daily ivork has exhausted them, body and brain and vocal cords. ' DOROTHY DIX. his wife. Miss Dillon was a well- came involved in an altercation 11110111“ P1411111‘ and. ma?“ or! with another Player who had brldgp’ and ‘She cotwmém My 111ml Stepped on h“ to?‘ “my ‘mired: lic lheuctl plillseltlllalllllllltlmls to make to fight and when Culbertson, a g1?" ‘ Somewhat dishcvencdy rntumpd min Itcvolutzonrii-y l’la,\cr v ~ ‘the Knickerbocker Whlst Club found that ms 204mm“ Chm haul Bridge as he played it iii those ‘ posted a notice to the ef ect that miraculously multiplied itself mm years was less a diversion thanlCuibertson had won only tafter be- 20480 n was an". m-S coup hard work. Ho kept n. record ofilng warned by the commltee. “m; m, Mt Europe and went m every hand Vhe DLycd 0': saw p.uy- An Ungraclous Record me Unltcd stakes’ lonkmg for a ed. He dissected I thi; play to The charge was that he and his loll H‘, might new, have become detect where the lllnblilkfifl had partner had witheld their score noled as a ca"! player but m, thgbccn made and why. A». the endkcard until that of the other mem- recldent of meetin! Wlth1MlFS1of the month he modumd “them of his team 01m“: was ready mwplllne Dmon with whomvm mllstatlstical chart such as grcatwto be turned in. Culbertson said. in love, and who mm. U“ became business executives used to keep in effect. that the mlmiler was a character since Hon-atlas. Natur- ally he is not popular. In a con- troversy over the Vanderbilt Cup, a bridge trophy which the Culbertson llbn uliieii liii-i iiriwaiii» obsolete. I ',wllli_,._q m; "clean-mg" lhe soul Now (lo know tliai ilmiiii; illi‘ early learsll 11ml llml; where (mly a, small vi my iiim"i'i~l lite I \'-='-"» finely iivc- ‘iimoiiiit of stock is required-as is ililiidu avail. t all C:i:in"(l liif)d.'~',—~ the (~35;- ln households when the Willi." r 1.1.1. 1.1a. i:.< at. vegetables. family is of moderate alive-one can oi- .' iulia. l lzziui. i it, l frirliiiiitly I of (jgnggmmg Suppllgg the l-qqulred “as ilul-lv e1 l» iiiii wilted veiie- I amount of stock for sauce. izravles. tillllfu uiul du o -rilir- fruit..- iliiiiiziiit; that t foudi were sap r- lor ‘ui the (‘Zllllliifi lomls. lion-ever, There are other appetlzing soups ECEFZJI visits Y’! 181m: cnnlliiit; iiw-lput up in cans. I have mentioned tfllli"; taught lllf‘ n lesson.--ior Ilmily three of the type which may lcariiid that the lillffit of frui's and be used In many dishes other than 'i.ll)lf‘S went into‘ the ting-that soups. '- :_v liroi-i- s svas carried on with A IIARMLESS SEDATIVE - iilniest rare and attention to etc, at a mlnlmumiof trouble and expense. four egg- . ,ritlonlsts and psyehologlstswlll be One begins to wonder-in this age dawn. of scientific progress-whether mil: Vvhait the Average Home Needs is a Little qi- that has recently been made of a hundred married coup- lltlh‘ chief complaint WBS that their wives talked too much, and ‘he \"‘\»"3' cliicl‘ complaint was that their husbands talked too 11tt19~ Inasmuch as most men and women presumably Magnate get marrtiled forlthe purpose of Sflitlilfilllg 10033121123:- ' slit) for iemse , ' ueei‘ an ron c ' Brldge Has A verlsatlon shouldvli liolfeqof contention in so many Great lzflfiket 5 households, but it; is. Apparently after marriage a ——-— man's ideal of the perfect wife is one who is both (By J. V. McArce. in Toronto Mall deaf and dumb, and who can neither talk herself and Empire.) nor listen to talk, Mille the woman still yearns for Ely Culbertson, upon whom the cheerful chatter, and this gives rise to endless fric- Why the man who before mairlage could not get enough of a woman's society can do with 50 so“ of a Russian lllllp (,5 l; iiiu-i- l!l',ll"l-’lfZC, no one can explain. It is merely 0110 0f t11°5° that matrimony works in the masculine SEX. 10111? 111 amazement and a never-ending grievance to Wives t0 \.'.‘. (lay long! there is the babble of conversation in his ears. and he 10°35 . team \von in 1930, the manager ofl me 8178 put our on h i s His orlgmal plans were to bgcom,‘ he has picked up and who will listen with interest to all the little details Secrets Dew Ponds A number of British stock farm- ers recently asked the agricultural editor of the London Dally Express if he could tell them anything about the old dew ponds. They have questioned if they really are effect- ive in prolonged rainless spells. It is certanlyi extraordinary that these ponds iii exposed positions on the tops of chalk hills should re- main full of water while large ponds in the valleys dry up, but “seeing is believing," and in the driest spells I have seen these ponds still full. though largo numbers of cattle and sheep have drunk daily from them. Why are they not more freely used? The answer is rather startling. The makng of these ponds is a secret, centuries old, and of the considerable nuiiibcr who once shar- edlt, only two men remain. They are two brothers named Smith, who live near Basingstoke. They have taken the oath of sec- recy, handed down through their family for many generations, and they may divulge their secret to no one but their descendants. They are unmarried, and are now about forty years old. They have been asked to leave their secret to the nation when they die. They say they cannot because of their oath. ‘These two brothers have made ponds in almost every county in England and Wales, and no pond has ever failed to provide water. They have been asked to go abroad and make ponds in California and elsewhere. They say they have all the work they need, and prefer England. I have seen them at. work, and they have described tome as much of their process as they dare. ‘Theydlg out the soil to a. depth Physicians of the future! to the conclusion that 11l"I‘e WQSVSCSSHJR in the last two years tifwheffl 1t 18 bank“ "it eighteen somemln‘ fgdlcfllly wrong Will] the lggnsldef 5 protest unlua Culbert- game. He insisted that iii» fault ‘son had been either n. plaintiff or lay with the teachers.‘ i-‘fl for aldefcndant. We gltht-‘f that Ely. considerable time heron» time aged 39, la regnrdedasayburig up‘ was actually established. iv s the start and flounder in circles where like bridge plu- Zigzag’ 1e hatinterl. r he cvolygd I. theory 1i.’ “which now. h" mil" “m, and which ls formally: ltnmltfiieh z ' = nqnlnst:wrlting 134mg, er l! l‘ iiil more i iiavoi-tiiilna Wt 0t bulk». than anvlimr Recently, we heard of a man WllO lconsulted a well-known nerve SllVLt ‘iallst regarding frequent uttaific of insomnia which were lnterl-sriiiir, with his work. This man was a writer-one of the temperamental folks who work best during the late hours of the night. Night after |nlght - after he had retired --- he spent long hours, tosslnv. turning and worrylng~bodlly tired but act- ive of brain-until the app-Rachel in bed. H’: t l l inches. The pond is then llncd with clay. buckles. He never walks. 1:11;,- wants ‘to go even half it block h»; iii any lhc ls not accorded the veiirratlon '1 hire; o, taxi. with n tormci- mem- lltlllflllyiwlilhfild in thug circles from Babe ' ber of the Russian dumii iv,- ownRuth or Prof. Einstein. His one collaborating. on a block tn Show lldhCr-IHOO, apart from card playing. ls1tiie inevitability of a wiir between i H‘: tested smoking cigarettes. He does all his‘ soviet has three. States. is now Russia and the United 8o for ‘in the present con- secretnrfei, and ‘his sole vanity is a; test Culbertson has ds/incily out- of suspenders V1111 ioldf hiked Lenz. , A “GIFT” ron SANTA oils “ Sure, Santa Claus is oing to bring won’t forget one little toy, even.” “ Pll bet when he reads i! hem and sec.” Womtatnis Realngfa- Social and Personal -:- ,Fashions -:- Literature . i» OUR JIMMY I l “ThnPo-‘cuuae I wrote and‘ prom- ised him somethin’ awful good. I ' d f . H hmg I as e or e guess he’o got my letter by now.” house~lhe1very firs! list. Just you wait Lac the Clark Kitchens Help You for Quicker and Batter Meals. i .4 ‘Canadian firm through and through, established 1877 Will-l ‘romaro. CHILI DR PLAIN ‘AUCE. There’s a real, home-made flavour to Clark’: i ~ v Pudding; raa famonsiold Englislrrecipeisresponsible!—-————————— \ i Etiquette, ‘ lilubettllnc IA MorningSmile Q. What kind of clothing should be worn by a woman staying alone in a hotel? A. The most modest and least conspicuous dress appropriate to the hour of the day. Full dress should not be worn unless she has an es- cort. Q. Must an invitation to a ree- eptlon always be acknowledged? A. Yes. if the letters R. a. v. p. appear on it. Q. Does the hostess or her daughter pour tea at a dermal tea? A. No; waiters perform this task. and the clay covered with lime, and the lime must on no account be al- lowed to mix with the clay lining, A special substance is mixed with the lime, and it is in the constitu- tion of this substance that the chief Dart of the secret lies. I was not al lowed even to see the substance. Plain earth is then laid over the lime, and hammered down with wooden rams to make the bed, or "stun," of the pond. That finishes the job, and it only remains to wait for the pond w fill, which takes about six months. Af- ter that, the less ruin there ls the more easily the pond remains fill- ed, and any number of stock with- in reason may be watered from it when other sources have dried up. The accepted scientific explana- tion seems to be that the layer of dry straw insulates the earth below and prevents heat passing from it to the water in the pond. ‘rhe wot. er. therefore, remains oold and causes the moisture-laden night air to part with its water. The heat of the day also causes t-‘v-llwrfitlvn 0f the pond water. and _ , ~ l this increases it id cl f . their offices before ihi-y threw liar. The manager then polntedfilf n" 19°13 °1‘5°11"11° cfifltrmslop- s 0° new m m. them out; of the window. iii i030. ‘out thet no notional tournment 1118 "Pwflfdfl t0 the "F1805. where it , A revoluflgngry at heart, ii. m"... commune had been called in l becomes level with tlic mum] BY f°-1°W1"8 the-w principles. l thcr facilitates condensation. i firms usln gmodern scientific meth- ods guarantee to make ponds and provide water. Yet the fact remains that men who have Vltlflteii for ~ years with the brothers Smith have A SMIIE 0R Two _____. I-Bdv of the House-"rvq all“ You in about a damp patch 1n m, kitchen?‘ Plumber—“'Erel Steady, lads. 51mm 1miuase never 'elpedi" For The Cook CREAM PUFFS with cool weather. everyone will 118W! 8 Great deal more ambition B10118 cookery lines. Ono of theli days, you will want to make thou custardfllled cream pufla. It la I most intriguing business, the makln| of choux paste-and you can work up a wide variety Oil-IS!!! for ft with different fillings (savory as well u sweet)! if cup butter. 1 cup hot water. 1 cup flour. ‘A teaspoon salt. 4 eggs. “ Add the butter to the hot-water, bring to the boiling point, and um the flour and salt, all at one time. Stir rapidly and constantly until the paste leaves tho sides of the pm. Remove from the fire and when cool beat ln the eggs one at; a time until thoroughly blended with the pasta mixture. Drop by spoonful about I inches apart on a greased lnvorted baking pan. and bake in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) until puffed and golden brown. When cool cut and fill the lower sections with seasoned whipped cream or custard. put thu tops in place, and sprinkle with powdered sugar. ' Pull Filling l cup cream or rich milk. 2 tablespoon cornstarch. 2 tablespoons sugar. Vi. teaspon salt. 2 egg yolks. l6 teaspoon vanilla. 2 tablespoons butter. Heat the "cream. or milk In I 1 somztlmes left them and set up as pond-makers On thei- own; but. while meeting with srme. 11:12:52.1 they have never produced ponds an! cffsztive in rcafly dry imlgs, ' Now the age-sis! system that. in the cplnlon of sszne ex 2r».a,,:i,ito:' frcrsi i'c*l1t‘i'.e '.' ~~, r-- ~~-~l l, i118"! by the i..ir.a:l of two lizet. ‘double boiler. Mix the cornstarch 808111". and stilt. add the heated cream or null- rotiiz-ii to the double boiler. stir Ll thickened, cover. and caol: f2:- lti to 15 mlnutés. Pour szme cf the hot mixture slowiy into the well-berten c’!!! yoiks. ml": all tofcther. aid the butter, and vanilla. "i"! ’ ‘t r-ei’. VIZ: ~ _c‘::l. u..c as t':i.: filling for the puffs. *. is