LivingS. —THE WOMAN'S REALM— UNTIDY JANE It's getting late! Where are my shoes? Why do they always. always choose A Monday morning to be lost? They must be found at any cost. Where are my shoes? Where is my ling? It's gone again! Things will go wrong with mc. ‘tls plain. It's not as i it were so small. Somcones tkiicd up the hull! Where can it be? Where are my gloves? Here's one, you see! But what's the use of ONE to inc? Somec-ne's cleared it from the shelf. I'm Qrtaln it was not Ioioll! Where has it gone? Whcro is my piirsc? I'll miss the hits. If I um lzitc ih<-rc‘s sur-h a fuss! They're so particular at school. I'm always laie—wcll. as a rule. Where is mi‘ nursc? Margaret G. Rhodes. SERVE SHRIMP SALAD IN MAHOGANY BOWL NEW YORK -Hugc salad bowls for buffet supper DEll'll‘i‘§ romp :n truly u limited edition. as they arc made out age-old African mahoq. any trecs. The wood is already mellow and the more you ynlisli it the mellower it becomes. In one of these immense bowls picture a shrimp salad. because you always want lots of M! Serve it with a pair of long handled Victorian ‘l- ver dressing spoons. I think _ou won't want cheese this time— shrimp salad ls a law unto itself. FEATHER YOUR HEAD NEW YORK-—What a hefeathcr- ed lot are the new hats! Elaborate arrangements of ostrich, of goura. mottled feathers which may have come from a singing bird or barnyard fowl. After the rive and the processing of a fcathcr the bird of origin hardly gets a chance at identity. Bc that as it may. the fact remains that hats have taken on importance in the fall scheme of dress. Veils remain to soften silhouettes. furs come forward tn add richness, and the “little bats" have grown to larger prooortions finder the hand of the expert mil- ner. COLOR HIGH IN WOOLLENB NEW YORK --I\‘ew woolens for fall indicate that n i‘ woolens are soft in texture. though blahnt i-n color and design. Ffilllllffid for the season ahead are unusual mixtures of tweeds-liroad stripes of color on color; combinations like cherry and black. fuchsia and navy. green and honey beige. Fine pencil lines of color or duo tone add extra ‘m- terest, to the fine worsteds. Among the most exciting shades are some of the brown tones. one a beauti- ful deep color called rum brown and an off-white belege tone call- ed desert sand. Frarikfurters are a for use in casserole dishes. Try them with green beans and .‘i cheese sauce. with llma beans and corn, with scalloped potatoes and onl-ons. "natural" A handy funnel for filling salt. pepper or powder boxes can be quickly made by using the corner of an envelope. and cutting off a small portion of the tip. NORMAL DIET i In any weight-reducing pro- gramme it is OSSCClllHI that the diet be hased on normal food hab-I its. but that it be below normal, requirements in energy-producing foods. Protein should not b: re-' duced, however. ' CORRECT CARVING IMPROVES A ROAST With meat still scarce a roast is an occasion. Correct. deft carving‘ will heighten the family's enjoy-l mc-tit of it. A hi: platter is essential. And tel keep it roomy. ask your wife to, go easy on any accompanaments and garnislies. Drop the hint, too.‘ that it's her duty to carry on con-i vcrsation and keep it from your| cnd of the table while you carry t-ui your task. Hzivc a two tlvictl fork and a raz- or-sliarp knife with a 6-inch blade; i i Y i for carving a sicak, 8 or 9-inch‘ lilade for fowl or roasts. Kccp these knives in their own special drawer where they won't be dull-~ rd. Sharpen them just before each’ using by drawing the blade lightly, ovcr the steel talso a must! se\‘-, eral times on each side. Be sure. the entire blade edge passes over’ the steel by starting at the heel ofi the blade and drawing the knife across the steel towards the tip of the blade. “ANYTHING GOES" IN NEW LAMPS NEW YORK — The nation's} lamp makers who gathered in a‘ New York hotel for their ‘lrst large-scale postwar exblbitlo-rr democistrated that anything goes in new styles. Three hundred exhibitors were on hand to show arzain the well‘ known porcelain. 18th century English reproductions of urns bowls. leather and plaster. and to introduce the things that have been added-new plastics and a‘ fluorescent tube for illumination. i It. has been a long developmenti to the modern fluorescent. plasler| and plastic lights from the first- Amerlcan oil burning lamps. i We have progressed circuitously and whimsically from candle to kerosene to gas to electricity and‘ back to candles. For candlelight. is opular, oday's holders are made of a dozen different materials and some are glittering copies of the] 18th century crystals with tear-g drops (a few of whose prototypes can be found in antique shops. The newest thing in lamps is one which uses a fluorescent tube rather than an incandescent bulb. These lamps are being manufact- ered with classical bases and oth-_ er conventional forms. In a rorm they look very much like any oth- er except that they produce a more diffused and softer light, TRY ANYTHING ONCE In designs the are trying almost everything. Thcre are bases and shades in leather for library c-r den. There are painted paper shades. and imitation parchmnt hand-hammer- ed copper ones and plaster bases of the sort originally introduced by the queen of rococo decoration, Dorothy Draper. There are reproductions of the manufacturers so-called Gone - with - the-Wind Hill”, “RM/US MUIIS Willi, HANK/f! "If Wfillllll III/YI- IIIIMW M" IIUIII 15W] /’///n iii ii Iii ii ii w m uiiin ii'ili\il\\‘ WHERE EVERYTHING IQIRIGIITERI. M‘ MW PENN/ES! i i ooaorm’ 01x sA m. It Can't Happen To Me i Youth Llvos Aliuomally Vllthlt Thoughts To consequences i ‘The slogan of youth ls: 1t Can't Happen To Me. All about than they sze people reaping what tltey have sown. but. they no amfidcnt that they are darlings of the gods who will never haye to harvut their crop of thistles. Tihuy are sure that they can break all t-hq laws o; health without getting iii; that they can drive at breakneck speed without e-vei- having an accident. and that all of the Ten Coimnand- ments will be abrogated in their favor. This fatallstlc belief in its lmlnuufty from consequences makes youth a pitiful. as well us a heroic thing. to ua older ones who have tmdden the same path on which oiu‘ children are Just start- ing. who have cherished the same lllullons and who know. from bitter experience. that life plays no fav- orites. and that anything can happen to us. And does. It isn't through ignorance nor stupidity that our “Miccflommrur lampsowhich actually came out 100' late iaround 1885i to have-been an Scarlet O'Hara's last mansion, Oi - ULllTlillg, they became u rag? in a" era of gas and now are béinl TE‘ vived ‘m an era of electricity. They have round globes decorated witai flamboyant, embossed roses an are eagerly sought ior v.‘ ‘ . rooms. _ _ Iii the plastic lamp field. 3-‘515115 go from classical columns to abstract spirals which could be part of an automobile assembly‘ 1' . mlgor home decorators who arel ii-rcd of rods and spirals and blocks, piled on each other. tht-ie are always the genuine ‘ antique lamps. Antique lamp buyzcig has taken on a weird trend in recent year-s. The kerosene burning lamps of the 1880-1900 period are selling at prices which amount to a dollar ior every fi-ve cents of the origami investment-damps o-nce $1.98 now cost from $20 to $40. The studentf lamps with brass bases and green, or opaque glass shades which once sold for $2.50 to $7.50 now cost between $35 and $150, i Whether gunning for a modern, lamp or antique, select style and design carefully or you'll come home with something not unli-lze the novelties given away on the midway at a country fair. FEIVHNINITY TOPS, SAY iFALL FORECASTS NEW YORK —A big New York‘ department store has sent its‘ charge customers the following! forecast of fall fashions for wom- 0H1 The way you'll look this fall: Femlnicilty comes first . coupled with that new long look. Your skirts will be longer . . .by. one and one-half to two inches. many dipping hemlines , . AA bade over one knee, or on one side. Emphasis on hips. . .adroit drap- ing of fabric, with cascades or bows ending in centre back. Tiny waists continue. This means that you need a good girdle. Shoulder line normal, . . with exciting sleeve interest achieved‘ through shirrlng, yoke, cape or tiered effects on full, cuffed bishop sleeve. Push-up sleeves at peak of popularity. Fewer Dolmen sleeves seen. Neckll-nes cut very high or very low . . . .few V-necklines; bows scarcely at all, “ ‘$- \iiii WEI-IV! l" A ///////////, Iilifiiiiiililiiifliilil? ii I syrups or Jams. YOU get the briglhfi ou ever law with emu-soapy li 14:25. Sunli ht‘: quick-lather- ing suds m e deep-clown dirt vu luh like mu c. All our "Y" flfmwl- 3 “w”; ‘ .. fi:;‘.‘:‘:‘.‘.?.i'::r‘-°=>- ma." sit-teas: - Extra-soapy Sunlight makes housework Lighter. too. So wot-l around uH‘u_ Sunlight Home. youngsters commit the folldes for which they have to pay so dearly in after years. It is lust because they are sold on the belief that while others who dance must pay the piper. no account will be charged up against them. The sllliest girl knows that if Sally. who ls frail and delicate and with a TB. family background. goes out in paper thin satin slip- pers on icy streets that the is courting death. but she/la sure that she can do the same ihlng without even catching a oolid. NONE S0 BLIND A8 - - - All of us know dozens of girls who are starving themselves into anemia to keep their living skeleton figures. or wrecking their health for life by working all day and going to parties all night. all be- cause they thilnk they can break the laws of health without paying the penalty. No boy ever starts out in life with the deliberate intention of being a wastrel. or a drunkard. or a tramp, but. he doesn't like to go to school so he cuts his classes and gets rio education. He is lazy and prefers loafing to working. He is restless and he wanders from place to place. And his end is that of the seediy bum who panhandled you for a dime. He is the fiendish product of Mshful thinking that he ' can escape being what he makes himself. And look at the unhappy marriages that drcnch the world in woei Hardly a one of them but is the direct result of men and women talk- ing foolihardy chances in picking out their mates in tho fatuous belle! that they will be different after marriage from vuhat. they were before marriage. though there is no record of a girl who was u shrew sud a virago and a hugger turning into a butter-wouldn'tqnelt-in-her-mouth wife. and you oount cm your fingers the number of drunkurds who were changed into orohitbltionists by the wedding ceremony. And consider the marriages that go on the rOckx because they were not adequately financed. or the husband and wife were ohildren who were not ready to ‘assume the responsibilities of marriage. Shabby. Pleasure-starved. debt-harassed young couples who snap at each other because they are so miserable. Boy and girl marriages cluttering up the divorce courts. Awiful warnings against reckless marriages. But U"? YOVIISSIH‘: don't take them because they think it oouldcft happen to them. But it does. i How Can I By Anne Ashley gH0l18¢1l0ld Scrapbook ‘(vi I fibYvvvv‘ Q. How cm I pievent the irk B" “°"""' L“ from spreading when marking _ linen? A. Handkerchiefs and other pieces A Kltchrn flint of linen that are to be marked with indelible ink should be firs; starched. to prevent the ink from 511795411118 Mid blurring. Q. Whatshould one do winning SWNI-r-éss of cream seems doubt.- ful. and there is no more or. hand? A. Add a plnsh of 30113 and stir it. This will kcep it from curd!- ln even in hot coffee. . How can I prevent fciment- fltlAon T21 game? . e ermcntation can be pre- venwd b)’ lddiflfl’ l small niece of Blllhhate of potash to the boiling No matter how clean vou think the kitchen ls. my laying a sheet of fly aper iindu the sir-l: over night. e Illlmbel’ of insects that are stuck to it in the morning will astonlsh you Never leave aiiy food uncovered over night to a-t- tract these insects. Keeps Ont Moth: newspapers whoa-.- mt like printer's ink. Penplntlon an 5t} Perspiratlon stains on u delicate silk garment can usually he remov- ed by rubbing gcm-ly with a soft dry cloth. f S g \\\, g Better English D. 0. Williams l. What is wrong with this len- tsnoe? “There's only three apples Irma-sour inauivevhbiwzekfittgm t . I OOITQO DKHUHC- smaltggpI/{Tfyggggws "M," n, SUNLIGHT ens CLOTHES “,3,” mcgumflm; igmw; is eras-swan uunuour - _ W‘ s w 3% ?.‘i‘.’£l‘i"§i/$i".°”‘ 00mm azoim o0: nova‘ B RI G H T E R ';'::},'°11°°' °""°"- °"""""- I'm‘ ‘m Mo“ MAKES WORK u. what docs the word "p-rugon" mtlfl b. What in u ward beginning with ho that means "respect or rever- emu"? LIGHTER! Annmu f. lay ‘Then II only duos spiel". Theris 2| a contraction of than is. §._PN|lO\lfl¢U mu-nlk. u u in inuutc, i u in lick. accent wbimt, muted w gin-cud wflbont but! ct Sunlight today for u: clothes - Li ha: Make lure n in; house no: looks uhed." Live in a M o d e r n Etiquette i-i-Qii Ellen ’s “Diary By an Inland Farmers Wlh th lk l: vc buygvcp. oxalic-i 010:1. omit... an. . pressure of W011!- 1 1118 I!!!“ time to waste iu childish alas‘- “Mcrs too busy to come in an’ talk u; you" he laid in a tone that eon- voyed auiaacment that 1 had not noticed the insist-mice of thfll‘ d0- ings. "mom you kmw? In u! moving off to follow the others "U; sire detain; the binder that cuts the harvest out. a-dav. That was in the afternoon when a scat- tering of na-ln drips had come b0 put an end to the potew-srrsvins at Rob's. Then with Rob DIN-t 4911119- nurs had returned walderlca. Wh-eri our males met recently in a aim-l and more or less solemn convent- ton the concensuc. of ten was to the effect that the srraylng should be continued at least this week to further protect the tubers from the blight Though thus for there is no sign of the disease, yet i I .1; might be homo to us on ull: m- vailtng damp and iarquid wnds Jamie had been our Euest earlier. As he explained it nlmsed he les coined with granwiaddy to oimer i Indeed, he spent the whole day. according to nis own fancy- The!“ were numerous fascinating under- taklrqs to assist at and if one wished to be idle. there were others equally interesting to a bl’- standcr. To cver-‘osne the tedious labor of dlplptiig the water for the gppayef, pa. t) pail from the old mill stream ‘witch winds through Rob's front meadow a {lump Wfli installed near a brldBB i119"- Jamie told me about it with it wise old air. "It's n pretty slow business yet"'he said "an" you have to pum an.‘ pump. Casks are nawful big 51in s to fill. Don't‘. you see?" he quiered "dob does the spray- ing an’ sometimes him user. our horses an’ sometimes YOUR‘. 309k can pum the ‘tasks full all hivn- self at he bridfffl " "And_ 8'11"" daddy?" I wanted to know. ‘Gran- dgddy arr me mixes the_ stuff, what goes in the sprayer!‘ The"! were the usual rides between time: extended pleasingly at. times to iii- clude a. trip oi- t-vo t0 the P0411" store. Yesterday as well. there had been wonderful doings for Jamie at Al- derlea. The lambs were taken to the butchers. All summer we florli has grand in the stump field. Bl‘ day one might ace the ewes and their small fry moving anail the green-nests and at eveninr often a plaintive clean hung suspended or. the quiet air. Yestcrrlru came mo parting. There was m reed of mg going to nelo in the round-up w en the flock dust be heeded to a convenient och to be separated. Jamie himself uuesttor-zd try mot- ives later when accoidlnc M‘ ‘I P1511 of James, we were posted at points across the sizable stump field. _I suppose that lanile and l snouk. have been concentrating naoie or. our work andlcss on the pastime of raspberry-picking By rights, we should have been on the alert tc see the leudiiur cws make her ap- pearance from behind n clump of bushes. “Elleiii" James shouted from a distance "close in on them. quick nowi" But because I had seen .3, motto slip into a fern; dell |neasby and Jamie would livrer to gel: a last choice berry I had not. moved in a: quickly as or<’ered— Ilf the rest of .is had. "Where were i f: woolens are packed away inic edges are allikltb and kin. pasted together, i: will prevent anyulames grumbled making u 51311743 possibility of moths. u tmy do that oould have been the i l | i I Ammo: you, Ellen?" James called Bu stern- iy that “that old ewe" who leach; her kind in strait and wider paths startled raced throng‘; LlP gateway into tho pen followed loseiy by every last one of hgr “Always bFhlfKn" envy of mlny mi: his veurs And m:- gnu: was shut. Then it was thll Jl-ml? looked u? innocently to inquire ‘an’ who for Nauru. did mu cone buck with us to the stumps this morning?" I u 1 might have owned to several reasons. I had hoped. by szannlni! an horizon ‘.0 zutch a gllumse of the planes bcaruq the visiting pirty to the citv. I wanton to see 'Monty" come to The Ibllhd Mid seeing. from our tam. 8W0 ifibllw to bhis great soldier, who an m- strument ln the Hazuzls of The Al- might had saved many u doll‘ d1!’ {or Allins. But only til! far- off sound of motors N-‘lchfd me from above the lowered clouds. I came too, w soc again the eugulsltc carpet of bracken and wild i_l0W6l‘.! blended in a pattern. cf C’\|Ol' tic weaver oould can match. R-iuh yellows that oome with tho npenlng aeuon; creamy white and mauve and the ferns tinzod already With the bronze of Autumn I wanted to look out from the incline there. over the fields oi Aldeuleu to see the houses down tn the ville comfortable spin‘: at 8110M l‘ 1K mm chimneys and dissolving pm- llltly into the moi-ainl F‘ Mil- And the distant and nearer arm- utuds and woodlands; the will Ind tho Nd road ‘winding out over the hill. And any on a sky-line. but vaguely than, the spire of bio Au"! the air-qr.‘ mo: much Al!" 0f Pl!!!"- vnuthur man" Juno: tu-l- mu- Ho bu been to a vanuhh the mm: to observe tho k'l_ rid clouds. Van-ant raindrops cling’ t0 dot. "No sign of u ltsr h! going to tho tin l-oz in hill-strength Fresh Yeast goes to work away. Makes uweet, smooth-tex- tured buns that melt in your mouth. And makes than fast. o No wasted time, no extra utepc. Fleischmannbactivo rilht IF YOU BAKE A1‘ HOME, be sure to get Fieischmannb active Fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow label. You can depend pn Flciuchmanrfu-Canada’: favorite yeast for over 70 years. , Always f_rge§|_i_. oi your grocers Morning Smile RIGHT FOR THE JOI Ho was undersized, meek, m“. dent. subdued, and he hud applied fox; a. _Job as night watchman. Yes’ said the tnanaser dubi- ously. “but the tact is we want someone who is easy. especially no night. someone who sleeps with one rye opgn, Someone with remarkable hrarfrig. who starts at tno slightest sound. someone who is always listening, thinking there are bad char-note" around. We want a large, juggrgs- ive. intrepid and dar-zcmus per- wn. bfld-lemflwwl and revengeful In short. the kind of person who. when roused, is h fiend." "All right" uald the little man usuhe walked lwny, "r11 ‘e14 m, w e3. swim NEW It wn raini heavily and an °1d ""1"" W" ‘WW1!!! along the street with her siirts tnrowr. we}; over her head. A Policeman seeing her trus ap- t ached her and said quietly: “Look here, minus, you carrlt go about_ the streets ii. this fashion. Whats the idea showing your bare lees at your time cf life". “Young man." said the old womin- "I'd 115V? you kllfw I‘yg had these legs nearly 70 years but I only sot mi, hat yesterday." a Cook ’s Corner \")év\“- -< i ‘qvvvv. CUR-RANT, BLUEBERRY AND APPLE JAM l quart blB-tlf ourraiits l quart blucbe ' s I cups apples, cut in small restiels and un- . l ; THE GAB-DEN OI‘ THE GU" (By Lena Vessey, l3 Devcn Si,‘ Pvflllnd. Maine. fomeriv of i Montague) God made this world of our: ircei and flcwers To beautify the land. I have in mind u little Isle, ‘Tia blessed by God I know, His children love it all we while No nutter when they go It ll Prince Edward Island fair The Garden of ‘he Sea. In cresent form fie placed it there. So picturesque aid free. The Garden of the Gulf ‘us true It well deserves he name The most enchanting neatb the’, blue Of Oanadts vast domain PIXILADEILPX-lln, Aug. 30 --<APi —A11 shim ulvinii along m» East Coast of the United States were "Tiled Willy ‘JY the Coast Guard to avoid collision with two govern- ment vessels carrying ex;.;-,sive|. Operating between Cape ‘ifay N..i.. ar-l Ocean City. rid. after sept. i. the ships will be doing experiment- ul work. 1 nuas-muuumvrww C0 ciirrants, blueberries. apple and water. Bring to a bol. and simmer uncovered for l0 min-i utes. Add mtg-n, am»; to a hcil and! boll B to 10 minutes. Yield: about. 7 cups. GREEN GOOSEBERBBY JAM 2 qt.-.boxes i8 aups) green gooseberries 2 cups water 5 cups sugar Wash. tip and tall gocscbcrrles. Add water. bring to the boil and simmer uncovered for l5 ninutes. Add Infill‘. b-"lhil to the boil and boil unoove ed 5 to ‘I minutes. Stli f uentlg nrevon-t sticking. Yeld: 1-2 cups. DIAPER RilSH Prompt Iolluu Cutteun Antiseptic Baby Oil soothe: ‘m. n for a match u. um his p no t. of the, new moon " I nk wis ly. Ann n. is Plrd, that vmlu do; of ma‘: hurls into the abut-that in dark no iongmforulilhtbomrunof tho moon. but of u cur filll tho yard. y be Rob's ult- I limit lull/Z, Aluoflmtn f-f-Pmlzlfllfllfliflltililli 4 slur-Wm ,"' t‘; ' “mill.”