' - is out of harmony ‘with ones natural = skin tints and eye-color in most cas- ' prevent many of my readers from féhl dye (not a metallic dye). The pene- ‘ u shaving and melting castile soap in '_ , light enough, repeat the lathering and t i; Miilacly Beautiful ‘ a! ‘Lois rsans >---- __.___... ‘ There have been so many requests for treatments for lond hair that is ‘ turning dark that I am going to dis- cuss the subject of hair-bleaching in‘ g ‘ some detail today. l In the first place I personally do ‘ — not recommend bleaching the hair for three reasons: First, bleached hair es. Second, as the hair grows in v dark at the roots it must be re- touched regularly by an expert. It is the upkeep and not the original cost of a. bleached head that mounts up] , in time and money. Third, bleached _ hair is never so elastic and healthy as unbleached hair. although the for- I {I er may be dressed attractively and . mgynlook healthy to the casual ob- serve I know, that these reasons will not wanting to keep their hair light. so I am describing for you today a bleaching shampoo that will lighten hair that has not previously been bleached. The same shampoo may be used for hair that has been dyed too dark a shade with a penetrating trating dyes come in two bottles, the first of which is peroxide. The bleaching shampoo is made by mixing two tablespoonfuls of peroxide with six tablespoonfuis of a liquid shampoo mixture. You may use a . commercial liquid or make one by . hot water. Do not boil it. however. Moisten the hair and rub in the shampoo, working up a rich lather all ‘over the hair, including the ends. Leave the lather on for five minutes and then rinse ‘it ofl’. If the hair is rinse again after another five min- ; utes. The longer the lather is left on the iighterthe hair becomes. Re- member, however, that peroxide com- es in different strengths, or volumes, ' and also that its quality deteriorates if the battle is left open in a warm place. fCosmeticans use peroxide of fifteen volumes or more for their hair-bleaching work; Naturally the time taken to bleach to a given shade depends on the strength of the peroxide. The bleaching shampoo is far bet- ter than the method some girls use to bleach their hair. rubbing on the per- , oxide with the palms of their hands. j This gives a strcaky effect. If bleach- ing is done at all it should be done by an expert. Retouching the dark hair at the roots is not a job for amat- eurs, either, as great care must be . taken not to let the new bleach over- AWomuQ, Realm . saouis JDorothyDix e":- Disciplined? Halls New Era of Small»: Machine “There is no Other Such Sinister Figure in Mod. parts of the country have invented a patent spanking machine that is guaranteed to csrry repentence and reformation in its wake when properly approval of most mothers, and that I shall be considered a rank Phillstine by the child culture devotees, but to my mind there is no other auch alnistu‘ figure in modern life as the child Bolshevik, nor is there any other crime against society equal to letting a child make itself and everybody elpe miser- able and uncomfortable when it could be sweetened, made agreeable and op- timistic by a. judiciously administered spank. , it is happy just in proportion as it is amenable to it. The child criminal is just as unrestful as the adult criminaL. we take toward children, and its fundamental principle is that a child must not be made to behave. He is no longer forced into the straight and narrow path__snd compelled to stay there. ways of righteousness and politeness and civility, and. if he condaecends to walk in that direction everybody offers up prayers of thanksgiving. behaves, it is simply a matter of grace. Nobody is rash enough to try to make him. ‘ about rearing children, and when most of us older ones were brought up it was a perfectly plain and simple proposition without any sterilized milk or sterilized philosophizingi about it. kissed when we were good, taught obedience to our parents, respect for our elders, and that our place in the scheme of things was in the background. nobody expects to get any rational conservation out of either parent for the It is always what Tommy thinks or Baily says or de chine, georgette crepe in modem- Mio Print. plsln crepe in fade gum and cbartreuu mm wool jersey. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or next twenty years. Johnny did, and no effort is made to suppress these infant terrors. 0n the lap the old. ' ' While I am discussing bleaching, a word on the treatment of over- bleached hair would be timely. The typical "peroxide blonde” restore health and beauty to her hair. The best treatment for this condition is the use of warm oil followed by an Y egg shampoo. The oil may be a com- mercial hair oil or a mixture of equal 1 , parts of olive oil and mineral oil. lhave conquered raw’ . Four to six eggs are required; l whites and yolks are beaten separ/ ately and then folded together. The head is "lathered" in the egg and l . than rinsed. three or four times. Tomorrow-Beauty Questions ' Answered. it “PlNKHlifS i tmmrnuun is wuunuru I " Road This Letter from a Grateful Woman Ontp-"I think Lydia E , b .‘ 7m“. ~'..<=2::. hi3: l . _’ had six um . their lives have drifted from place to place and occupation to occupation. i with halrl . like old dry straw often wishes to the ‘ have to obey its parents. It is altogether probably that Mrs. Washington and I! lMrs. Jefferson and Mrs. Lincoln and millions of other women who brought , up sons who were s credit to them never once suspected that little George or‘ _ They were lust om and they amt wlthi 5m"! "lolly. o I-ooooo Window ' cleaner. 8s is sbls in sing tenor. switch lo a deep bass, and than pro- Thomas or Abe was s pro lem. d childhood is the school of life and as we learn it: lesson we stand or fall. ern Life as the Child Bolshevik, Nor is There y Any Other Crime Equal “to Letting a Child Make Itself and Everybody Else Miserable” ' 1 ' ii. . The simultaneous announcement that two dlflerent men in different used is more than a coincidence. It is a prophecy, and it indicates - that flaming youth is about to get its comeuppance. Of course. there is nothing the matter with the old-fashioned hand-made spank, except that there is not enough of it to go around. Hence the invention o! 50111991158 that promises to enlarge its scope and usefulness meets a long-felt want, for there is" no other such crying need in America today as for some method of dealing with the obstreperous children who are in need of a good paddling. I am quite aware that these heterodox views will not meet with the For the spank stands to the child for law, order and respectability, and The most curious evolution of the civilization of our day ls the attitude An effort is made to beguile him into the SLIM HIPS n he An exclusive new blouse of bro- caded lame the smartest women everywhere are wearing with black sheer b°"“ l" 51911419!‘ N08. achieved yum skirt. Style u». m In other times there didn't seem to be any‘ particular difficulty or flurry thrown molded bodm and ‘may We were just dressed simply, reared plainly, spanked when we were bad. fitted hipband, sbirred through “n. ter-front to create swathed move- ment. ‘It‘s so simple to make and re- quires but 1% yards of 40-inch material with u‘ yard of 36-inch con- trasting for the 86-inch slse. It is da- ollned in sizes 16, 1B, 20 years; so, as, , Now all of that is changed. After the first baby is born into a. family 40 811d 43 111411198 bu"- It 15 W?!’ It’ contrary, they are dragged to the front and kept there. trsctive made of silk bright red crepe Now I do not believe in suppressing children, but I hold it is a rank com (mm g5 pram-ed) w,” “u, injustice to any child to bring him up to think that he la of supreme and cgmgujm paramount importance. 1t is going to be a bitter day for him when he finds We suggest that when you send for out, when he is grown, that nobody will listen to him ,and life will give him this pattern you enclose 10 cbnts ad- many a hard knock before it kicks the inflated self-esteem out of him and mum‘; go,- ‘ w” o; w, 5mm‘ reduces him to the proper size for the little bitof place he is going to flll Fashion Magazine. It's in the world. Many a man is a. failure because his mother has brought him with deuflmm lust filled styles, including up to think thathe ought to start out by being President of the Unlisd mm Qgumbjgg’ mg m“ “an, States instead of emptying somebodys wastsback ‘. Another cherished theory is that you must never force a child to do anything. Lead him to it. Entica him. Always present duty with a. halo around it. “I never give my children any duties to do at home as duties, because it would be distasteful to them, but I make a. game of it and, they never dis- rover it is anything but play," said a woman to me. exploiting this theory. Yes, but how about the day when that child grows up and feces the work that is stripped of its tinsel and disguise, and that. is nothing but a hard. unromantic, twelve-hour-a-day job? We get the answer to that in the down-and-outers who have never had the grit to do anything hard, who sll trying to find a soft snap in which there was good pay and no work. for the kiddies. [IIIPSES 19H Calendar Started Calculations for the world's ofliclsl calendar for 103i are under way, and There isn't any use in trying to sugar-coat life in the hope that we can swallo.v it and never discover there is a bitter pill inside. The sweet always gullsbexgzflzd mafia trfflqifificrfiflit rubs oil at the critical-moment. Far better to cultivate enough backbone in ma" b m “d or ~19” Th o“ a child to make him strong enough to choose the right, even if it is hard. 5i 5° yd 1;: A u" amen‘ When any one has learned to do what they have to do without fuss of com- munmtumwm the Grufmwlchyouewh l t , th plaint, when ihey have learned to take the r pill withou making faces ey wry and the Nautical Alma“ 0mm‘ In the new attitude inward children it is held that obedience is desirable, but that it is tyrannical, and brutal to enforce it. You must not say MUST to a child, but instead insinuate your desire in a diplomatic way. That ii why you hear parents say that they can do nothing with a l0 or 12-year-old boy or girl. That is why mothers are sitting up at night, with their hearts torn with fear. waiting for their flapper daughter to come in at 3 o'clock in the morning ,and why fathers are going down to the police courts to pay the fines of their hoodlum sons. \_ The greatest misfortune that has fallen the human race since the Eden‘ episode is the discovery that the child is s problem. Up to that time we hadn't been pestered and confused with theories. In the mercy of Heaven, it had not occurred to anybody that there was danger of cowing s proud spirit by making a child behave, or that it was s humiliation for a child to them on that platform. the great work They are working out for all nations the right ascension and declination of the sun. moon and 84 of the fixed stars for each of the 24 hours for every one of the year's 16B days. ly August of this your there will be printed and sent to the directors of National Observatories in the United States, Germany, I'll-nee and Spain. to enable each to begin his quota of mutually allocated. The three European countries sup- ply calculationa on many stars. _.___- Msa Isl Three Voices Accidental discovery of a freak i voice may bring fsme and fortune to Children are Just as adorable now as they ova were and we need to let,‘ 4"" b!" 15¢ “l”? llmllltlllwlll-ll- DORUII‘! D11. For tl_z_e_ Cook back mm a eaner attitude toward them. They need to be disciplined. ‘they; “"41"”! "Y it ll II l! "o mo" voo- need tcbe taught obedience. They need tobostrengthndfomeot u» aux-dill!" "o" Iloliol 1o I out MM requirements of life. not taught that they may shirk its responsibilities. for URL. st u; , other two. Mackay discovered hil ‘ double voice while mine to imitate a . bboaolrlbhlo Mooduoticu of Barf! shrimp or lobster. seaaonllll them piggy. “w; gm“ “guy”; with we. mover. ofl. vines-r loo while cosine as be clnssd window! moot mum nous ros LUNCBION Parsley. and thickened with msm- of u» some of lit William nlllo-hrthecovmontov.plooosnsmisostuuoatlsucleun,hcwsl_ fihooflamdl. plain rolls lboutucnroumaboootcruaaaosis-ngmaygnm m: inches long ma m» menu roundwithollvlalhcrkingsndiiny Jidmmttbewpoflcarafullnandradlahesiarvsst we and acrapcootall the crumbeleevlngqg; muummmnnnupmawim f1 '21» _ ’ ' i QWI$UF . 1" adian Battalion. bad been summoned w the palace to be decorated with the Victoria cross. “for valor." - afternoon oi’ afternoons which stands out in his life. George as “s. little frail man, but a regular human being. No frills, no side, just a common man like one of us twins to be friendly and do his job as well as he can." thrkingk right hand, with the queen on his majesty! left. next to Bill and Corp. Metcalf next to the queen. The Princess Mary sat between the colonel and the corporal. Just the six at a. homey dinner spec- ially set in front of s grate lire after the guests arrived. happy and everybody at ease. "You could tell the king enjoyed it. "u the "meant The queen didn't talk very much. But the king bad. arlot to say, and I never met a liner man. modest, and a real human being." only one wsiler—a returned soldier. Ills majesty asked Bill to please pass the peas. thing but the steak, the potatoes and the peas," said Bill. and when I started on the steak- about an inch thick—I said to the king: private herd. When ever I hear people talk about 800d mos-t I advise them to go to Sandringham for their steaks." great war to Aigoma. thought Passcbcndseie had been the toughest battle of the war on account of the mud. “I was there myself for a while." said Serg. Merrifield, "but 1 got knocked out. and had to leave." Military Medal for nndinc the 4th Battalion. daele "in the fall of l9l7"—he doesn't remember the exact date. I-le was act- ing as a strstclu. bearer at the time. There. was a duck walk, that ran up past s. pill box (military term for cement machine gun fortification). The Canadians were trying to avoid the German fire but a shell lit in front of the pill box and knocked over sight of them. ‘ ‘ the duck walk, and could hear some- body yelling for me. I used up all the dressing I had on the men yet alive. There was a young fellow named Lamb who bad an artery cut close to his groin and he wok most of the shell dressing. his ankle. he had so many. I met him afterwards in Toronto lame. It was caused by the wound I misled. captain, pointed out a red light two miles sway. vue lpur. and Pssscbendsele ls just over the hill from it. You get up there. The boys will need you.’ got there. I had w go through bush and swamp. it seemed to ma, with no bar of exhibitions this winter that were out of the ordinary. and crowds have unloved the novel ideas. one ,was an extensive display of live fur - Fashions -:- Literature “Please Pass The Potatoes, Sergeant” By J. W. Csrrsn (In Vancouver Sunday Province) sergeant?" speaking to Sergeant William Merri- guide. but I got tberc somehow. The men were surprised to sec me, and “Will you rlwo nu the Potatoes. wondered how 1 cm it. nut 1 didn't last long as I got wounded and had to It was His Majesty King George V. 19;", "We spent about half an hour at "Id- V- c» 11- I» 51"‘? 590 H8110’! dinner at Bandringham, and I never "m 3111"“ smfimihlm. 011 Jil- enjoycd either the food or the com- uary 2'1, 1919. Bill bad been Ilsetfdd pony more. His majesty is certainly on JAIN"? 6- The Kins. Queen Mary and the Princess Mary were-mm. talning at dinner Bill. Col. Peck of British Columbia and Corporal Met- caif an American from Los Angelou. who hl-d signed up with the 16th Can- good company and likes to meet Peo- ple. He ate a fairly good dinner, but for all that he didn't seem up to the mark. He ls quite a small man, some shorter than the Prince of Wales. It was when he tried to_ pin my mcdfll Tho ‘hm floldloro on my tunic that I realized what a frail man he was. He couldn't drive the pin through the cloth, and the Prin- cess Mary stepped up‘ and did it for It was. Barium Morflflod says. the him. My tunic was unbuttoned m: this and when the princess had clasp- He delorlbed K1118 ‘ed the medal she said to the king. ‘There father, that's all right,‘ and she handed me the little mahogany case for um medal. And both of them looked up snd smiled at me. “Then his majesty handed me a B111. on that afternoon. had m: on cigarette with a little holder attach- Col. Peck sat ed and told me he liked them." “And you smoked it?" “I sure did." The presentation of the Victoria Cross medal took place just ofter din- ner in an adjoining room, Col. Peck was taken in first. Everybody I" second, and Corp. Metcalf last. "It was quite a lengthy ceremony," Sergt. Merriileld "We were invited into the other room one at a time. and the king spent half an hour in talking. and giving the medal. When I went in first I stood stiffly at atten- It W" I "lull! homo dinner with tion feeling s little nervous that 1 "What vegetables did you have?" might do something I shouldn't and the king came over to me and said, soothingly, And he added. ‘Take oi! your hat.’ He ‘Take it easy. sergeant. "I don't remember much lbout Iov- didn't want me w feel uncomfortable, "I was hungry "This is great steak, sir." "The king said it was from his own you I09. "So he just talked away and gently Pushed me over against the wall. where he wanted me, ssif I were an old acquaintance. The queen and the princess were then and‘ they smiled and talked like ordinary people. I began to feel quite at home. “His majesty asked mevwhere I liv- ed and what my occupation was. I Th” “m” i’! ‘Wnthm? ‘mm m“ told him I was an Aigoma Central m‘ mic“? railway man and had been with the O. P. R. l-le knew all about the C. P. R. and about my old run which was army. l Household Hints A Morning Smile n: soassra us an hadn't wue n,“ I'd‘ Boll n wu their am lllplugg 111“. Dirtsnddutcanberemovcdfrom flgygung woman of the m", u‘ a mt hat and it made w look like mm, mm“ "l! "new if the entire surface is rubbgl “you Wm hm‘ m but ' with fine sandpaper. won't you?" she said to the allow‘. Fllllor A Milo n rether .111» smile. l5 u, n“ When filling a small. slender bottle. ‘you; 9,, ‘um q n" or the barrel 0X an old-fashioned "Qt Con," I "m, mum» he fountain pen, if a straw is placed in h", mucking m. le-mer it, it will prevent the formation of “m, m“, l,“ who“ up air bubbles. yet," " Odor On Frying Pan Pour allittle vinegar in the frying ,ne Dal, i pan immediatelysftcr use and. heat over a flref Then wash well. This - A .. rgllment will destroy any odor. Modern Etiquette u! nonaara ms o What is the only one stereo- typed phrase that best society ‘ac- cepts in acknowledgement of an in- troducticn? A. “How do you do?" Q. Does the father stand in line with the mother and daughter when receiving at a coming-out party? A. No. Q- What is the highest form of courtesy? A. The dinner invitation. BY fulfill“ "Stills Way; l dug’; m!“ h bein’ absent-minded, h; u n". ms the creeps aver’ “m, h. Scratches before Colnpgny," -PO0R PA n: cam Csllsn One of the best sellers among phonograph records in London rec- ently has been a Bach fugue. A huge landslide into the sea near Cape Ala, Crimea, was recently re- ported. More than 18,000,000 worth of gold was mined in the Rand gold district of South Africa in a recent month. around the north shore of Lake Bup- erlor. "I asked him if he remembered the Mink tunnel, and he was able to tell me all about it. He seemed to know as much about that part of the rail- Wfly as 1 did. I heard in London that the king had s most unusual memory and that all his family possessed the same faculty of remembering places and names and people. "There was one thing he said when he started to Din my medal on my tunic. It was this: ‘I have 5.000.000 men worthy to wear this. I only wish 1' “mild Present each one of them with “Jones m’ his wife qusrrelled while Ms an’ me was there, an’ I w» ‘unecthr u when lnoficel that at every breath they was callln‘ each other dear an’ it.’ He was terribly proud of the whole darlinfl" ~ It was there the sergeant won the Bill won the M. M. at Passchen "1 cut across the angled corner of I missed a wound in and he was “Old Dad Lyons.‘ as we called our " ‘lee that. Merrincldl That's Belic- “I set 01f, and I don't know how I llcrllo in Exhibitions Unique .. Berlin, Germaayphss had a num- ‘ 52». MnWTIIIoT/Flfbiol.‘ _ _ Jlatulla g sum‘ HET ‘i,