....~.___.i. Expectant Mothers ' During the pre-natal period be sure that W" strength is maintained, your nerves are steodysliflfl your vitality is high. Then with a minimum of trouble you will pass the ordeal and danger. Baby. too; will have the best possible start. Fellows’ Syrup will raise the tone of your systerni enrich the blood. strengthen the nerves," and remark- ably increase vitality. FELL SYRUP Prescribed by physicians in 53 countries for over half a centufY Nervousness Retarded Convelescenes lor Loss of Appetite Malnutrition OWS’ Fqligug Anemia Bronchial Trouble: [What the Fashionables are Wearing .,,. . vfws» Illustrated Dressmakiug Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern ~ / l ’:- Bu Ilirlnabelle Worthington ; youthful type of woman. ‘- 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 3nd 40 d . l sash of sheer velvet toned with the dress. Decorative clips trimmed the unusually attractively cut neckline. And don't you like the bustle sash? Lace. sheer crepe and rough crepe silkare stunning for this model. It is cilite as suitable flor the Style No. 2627 is designed for slam inches bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with I yards of 10-inch ribbon. Be sure to flll in the size 0d the pattern. Send stamps or coin icoin preferred.) ' Price of pattern l5 cents. No. 2627. Size .................... ‘ Street Address r Iiooosaeoasuaunalslloosenanwll r City State - 1 l For 171a Cook NUT CABINET PUDDING Cabinet pudding is one of those fine old-time desserts that have some down to us with a never-dim- ming aura of distinction about them. But modern culinary thought has dared even to paint this lily, and the addition of moist ooooanut to the delicate mixture is Just one more delight. Do try this for a Sun- day supper treat or for your next guest dinner. 5 egg yolks, slightly beaten. 5 tablespoo gugar. 3t teaspoon salt. 2 cups milk. 1 tablespoon gelatin. '11 cup cold milk. it teaspoon vanilla. Lady fingers or strips of cake. 1% cups apflcots. sliced ' 1 can moist cocoanut. Combine egg yolks, sugar and salt with 2 cups milk, and cook in dou- ble boiler until mixture coat/s the spoon, stirring constantly. Soak gelatine in ‘A cup milk 5 minutes, and add hot custard. stir until gel- atin dissolves. Addvanllla. Strain custard into mold, filling 1% inches deep. Chill until firm. Dip lady fingers into part of custard mixture an dline sides of mold. Fill centre of mold with alternate layers of apri- cots, remaining custard, and cocoa- nut. Chill until firm. Unmold. Gar- nish with additional apricot halves, whipped cream nndstrips of sn- Fw“ “m” 5- sonnet-sit. 5e21,. gt‘;- doc heallnge’ Co’ qhfheadacfil 551")" é°c7l2Fi-_a;.<ii1$i Suggests Acid mu for suitors Dorothy The Girl Plans to Marry Should Make Sure That Her Fiance is Madly 1n Love With Her, That He Has Her Tastes and the Kind of Disposition She’d Like to Live With, and a Sane Attitude Toward Money, WHAT A GIRL SHOULD 1400K FOR IN MARRIAGE _. ' ' ._.‘_s... Continued From Monday i‘ ' ’ Not all men are husband-material, daughter, no matter how slick their hair, nor how nimble their feet in a dance, nor how much they re- semble s. collar advertisement in I mllfliine. Some men are domestic animals, easily tamed. Others are wild by nature and can never be housebrcken. So look well to any youth before you say “yes" to him when he " pops the question. l First, ascertain if he is wildly, madly, frantic- ally in love with you. This is vital. because a. man starts out in marriage with practically all oi the supply of sentiment and romance he is ever 801MB to have, and he does business, as it were, on a limited capital in a falling market that is more likely to go sour than it is tc go sweet. Few men ever idealize their wives, but happily the man who . marries a. girl believing her to be the most beauti- ‘ ~. ful creature in the world end an angel and a paragon seldom finds out that she isn't. , _, ___ R . l. Women are always complaining that their husbands don't notice what they have on or how they look. If they were wiser, they would know that this is God's mercy to them, for most men go on seeing their wives the way they looked in their they have changed. Next consider the man's disposition, because that is the thing you are going to have to live with and which will make you either happy or miserable. v some of the best men in the world are the meanest husbands. A man may be sober, moral honest and upright, yet make his wife's life a. torment to her by his grouchinees and faint-finding. On the other hand, a man may have half the faults on the calendar and yet be ador- able to live with because he is aflectionate and ’ ble and cheerful. If a youth is sullen and mozose and has always to be petted and humcred to keep him 1mm taknig o ifense; if you have to handle him with gloves; if he is critical of you, or argumentative and given to tak- ing the opposite side of any question in which you are interested; if he lacks enthusiasm and any Joy in life, pass him up. He will be a total loss as a husband. ' Then ‘observe his attitude toward money. Almost equally undesirable as a husband is the man who has holes in his pockets or a Yale lock on his wallet. I! a boy throws his money away without ever getting the value of a bridal flnery and never notice that. NANCE OTIEIL. “Stage and screen Nance O’Neil. Famous stage and screen star tells theseoret of keeping YouthfulC/tarm m over p NANCE o'Ns|L i - ... s;§%.‘£.°““,.m's”°. m Mamas “ ’M over 45--you see I admit so much,” says “Perhaps I should admit more, but it is said that a woman is as old as she looks, and a man as old as he feels. “For my part, I don't think anyone, especially years carewithLux I89- Toll formyskimandnowlamamouzgthesccsesd diseoveredtht _ etSoapwoulddowondQ lusty roar to which he offered, a V _ stage and screen stars who use it regularly?’ U I U _ 0i‘ the 613 important Hollywood amsemq including all stars, 605 agree with beast!!! star! So regularly do they use this women, should tag themselves with dates, and I believe the world in general would be happier and better if birthdays were never recorded, for as time goes on it cannot but bring with it a sense of limitation from which I am sure dollarpii’ he is an easy mark and lets himself be held up by every Jane; “mm yelp’ Th” 11°“ roared m°re if he never saves anything he will make the kind of husband whose wife . ygnfifiilylnzge gftfgmwrlgzigfit and children are always practicing pinching economies because he has human backed mm gm“ eeny spent the money that should have gone for rent and groceries and shoes m8 “kelp! Helpm a c y ' in buying a floral emblem to send to the Fireman's Ball, or because he has lent his next month's salary to an old friend. H will e b th me “on thereum“ came ems“ a cent, and when he dies he will leave his family oi}: the gaiglz. e ‘fro; is we an want to be free’ whim 903D t0 Build WmPk-“m bail-ll?- lt bl and said in a. hoarse whisper: "Shut “C ti th t d ftheskin beenmadeofiicialinallthcgreatfilmsmdioo- your mouth’ you mo], you are not the soul o! generosity, but he never has anything to be generous on at Omtflm W Ol-‘Eh an w‘? ° home._ ‘ mun-flu“ "ma, u“ ‘m!’ m“ mm“ m" °t “ sammsnwasmmzmaarflskuaamowummrmsoaumaauuwm- Ii A MomingSmile A bond salesman temporarily out ' of a. Job ran into a. friend who own- ed a circus and asked him for some- thing to do. "weu- u" 5mm‘ “may mid", 0n the other bend. the woman who marries a tightwad spends her ' For aftemoons, when you want young daughter to look as darling as posible, here's a lovely French model. i It can be carried out in several different materials with cqllflll! dainty eflects. Youthful rose-red canlon-fuille crepe silk made the original. The said the friend. "and i1 you want to 105-" get into his skin, swing on the trapeze, growl o. bit and irighten the children, you can have the Job." The man filled the bill well until one day the rope on which he was swinging snapped and 11B WIS will" pulted into the lion's cage. The lion, seeing him- let ‘Jul? a WILLING Clerk-“Bee here, little it for a penny?" Little Girl-“Lefs see it." i/FZFU LL-FLAVIIIUREIJ COFFEE This Question Must he Answered . ffi-fillwlwaas-s synapse . r wq-u ‘referee buying ooffw. ask yourself this question: Is these ANY air inaidethetinorpackageoreananyair m ill If so-coflee deteriorates, loses flavour. If not-coda keeps its full flavour in- definitely. Vita-Fresh Process Removes Every Trace ofOxygen Mazwallfliouseistlaecilyecfieepoeked byamelhodwhicluunovesarademhides all tmoesofoxygenfi-mnthe sealediin. Such protection afiosded the fansous qualityofthisoldsclnlnflllalmadm- suresriehIavnurQddHyhg-rsooth- nees-mosethanyumfveevurenjoyodin anyothcreoifeebelora. Gerafinfmmyotrgooees-today. look forthewordsWlIa-Fmi"mathedon thesesledandbehedfln. I It's the Mr lmaolllonnorPlehlgo fllstlluinslflouoofllvolr Loose QIQiQHQGQ IE flavaurh9hsfll>ruit Coleolll lfi-fid ID C Zi- Iaoordacauslcsmllfidhk? h9daysausraaak, MAXWELL House entree AND lucked n4 CANADA o"... I girl I cant spend all dsy allowing you penny candies. Do you want the earth with a little red fence around ‘ild life trying ic corkscrew pennies out of him. He expects her to toll like a. slave for her board and clothes and makes the first of the month when the bills come in as much of a tenor to he: as the Judgment Day. No husband is more anathema to his wife than the stingy one. So observe a boy's manner with small change, whether it slips through his fingers or whether he has a. death grip upon it. Ask yourself how he rates as a companion. What sort of line of conversation does he carry that will keep a modern, educated, intelligent woman interested during the many long years they are undertaking to spend together. Does he read anything except the sports page and the comic strip in the newspapers? Does he know the diflerence between a leltmotif and canned 800$? I5 the only thing that really thrills him the base- ball score or the stock market? Has he a sense of humor and 15 he pleasant and chatty, or one of those great silent men who never speak at home and m Just about u chummv as a sore-headed bear? More love is bored to death than is killed in any other way. 5o before you under- take to be the fireside companion of a man make sure that he has the gift of gab. Then there is congenlality. Whether your marriage will be a. grand sweet song or an anvil chorus depends altogether on whether you and your husband sing in the same key and have the some taste in every- thing from politics to pie. 11 you like to do the same things and go to the same places; if you enjoy the same books and plays and people and amusements, you will live together in peace and harmony. Otherwise, you will fight like the Kilkenny cats. Nfllélllv. Whiuh M"! flothinl for the happiness of the individual and - is only concerned with the good of the species, has ordained a fatal at- traction of opposites, but often the very qualities that drew people to- gether before marriage rend them asunder after marriage. A girl who is intrigued by a roue’s dark and wicked life page the life out of him be- cause he won't go to church with her after they are married. The man who married little fluffy ruffles just because she was so naive yawns his head ofl sfter they are married because she is so stupid and dull. Two golfers can have a perfectly grand time proving their game and holding post mortems together, but let one be a golf maniac and the other hate the game and you have the loud laments of golf widows and widowers. Two thrifty people can get a mansions thrill out of pinch- ing pennies. but let one be a savor and one a spender and there is s battle royal over every dollar. So don't marry any man who doesn't ride the same bobby-horse that you do and by whose side you can't center amiably and pleasanfy. These are some of the acid tests that girls may well apply to any i youth who wmes n-courtlns- I! they co, and the men assay good metal, they will live together in peace and happiness to their golden wedding d8)’. DOROTHY DIX. Old people are. invigorated ‘out! LTI . TONIC DOD IIVIRAGI \ Lux Toil el soapslOi Outdoor Living Room Garden planning takes s great deal of thought and it is not easy to find time for careful thought in the busy spring season. Then tasks crowd upon us, always more than there is time to do. We ilnderstand then what an advantage he has who plans his season's work in detail during the winter, when there is time to think. The first sicp in planning, we are often told, is to form a com- prehensive idiaa of the garden you will make. Just what does this mean? You would know, if it were many rooms, what style of archi- tecture, the chief materials in be used. All would be decided de- finitely. A house is standardized; our ideas are well fixed, but the function of the garden is less well known to us. Just what part do you wish your garden to play in relation to your home? Is it to be merely the orna- mental extericr of the house, the outside dress of the home? Or is it to be the outdoors of the home, a living room with a carpet of grass, a ceiling c! the blue sky, and decorations oi flowers, into which Ono's family and one's guests can enter without the feeling that they are going outside. The own- er's attitude toward his garden means everything to its develop- ment. The conception oi the garden as ‘an intimate part of the home is grwoing. It is coming as the use of screened porches came, in our house architecture. We moved from the inside rooms to the screened porch in summer, and now we are moving from the porch to the garden end findinl it possible to live outdoors in comfot and pleasure amid surroundings cf ordered beauty. This is the modern a house you were planning-how American conception of the home garden. The garden owner who accepts this conception and determines to build an outdoor living room will still have to compromise with the older ides, however, and decorate one portion of the home grounds for public display. This is the front yard, which in our American suburbs is to all practical purposes particf the street, as much so as the parkway. To introduce privacy in this portion of the grounds is usually impossible. It should be developed in harmony with the neighboring yards and in such a manner as beet to emphasize the house design and present at all seasons of the yesr a. dignified and inviting appearance. Having BuAsCHdOYQd his front ynrd to purely ornamental pur- poses, the home owner seeking outa door comfort, coolness and privacy, turns naturally to the back yard; and it is here the outdoor living room has been developed. The privstegardenisaroomprimarily,‘ for the owner's enjoyment and in that essential munchies a a be found the reason why the mod- ern style treats lightly questions which have sometimes been thought of great importance, suchas the l latlve merits and fitness of for- mal and naturalistic planting. An outdoor room, like an indoor room, calls fro designs. It requires de- finite boundaries. It must be in balance, for which purpose its axes need to be indicated, so that its occupants may not be made uneasy as in a house interior with un- matched wlndows and uneven wells. For purposes of privacy and sp- pearance the garden room needs ls be screened from outside view and from many views out; since them are few back yards where the sun- rounding spectacles are all attrac- live. This screen may be provided bytreesandshrulmorbyawsll or fence. Chi/drip E ch Cows GUNTAISIS qelnvaluablo s