.'< ' ». 4v:_r'rv v £- oinflan 's‘ i. ‘m vvv~v w 1V7 w v w. w ‘w vvu-v eeélni AQQAAAA “kkgkk -:- S l and i"- QM e P _er v . . 1 wv- Y- ‘ Y _, -f. .-i~---._fi .=;-f -¢'»x -A-a--~-- n. AHOUSE WIFE’ "and e HER ACTIVITTES “The Bing Boys?“ Reliuioecfy- A - ‘- NIW I rue mun“ °~ c" v ' , w nil who breathe f musttread, which lend the Living to the Dead, I enter; for it is my doom -_'I'o tread thy labyrinthine gloom; ‘Ibwazte who round ms watch and Ills love stew; perhaps to hate: And do all duties of my fate. —<Barry Cornwall VELVET MILLINERY ’ 1 FABRIC 0F HWPORTANOE ~~-~Whenever there is s more 0r less romantic quality to costumes agd millinery, velvet becomes a Igbrfc of importance. While this has _fit as yet developed into pronoun- med acceptance, sufficient‘ notice " has been taken of the idea. by Psr- jslan hat designers to make it s style point worth watching. One way in which it appears is . in entire crowns of draped velvet or ‘Ndlvet ribbon. in llvely light shades lsuoh as t ‘ , combinediwith a white or natural straw brim, leg- 4mm 01- myo. Bash effects which gluing down at back or may be draped around the throat, scarf- Hgfigshion, are charmingly arranged of the French hats as a striking trimming. lvlme. Agnes, for ezfimple, takes sapphire blue and s it on cyolsmen colored straw ‘I capellne. ‘ilwith the contrast theme so “strong in hats this season, applying 156th in color and media, velvet be- bfiies a plausible candidate in fur- ‘tlislr acknowledgment of this ides. i, OR. UNDISCOVDlbE-D OLD? Oontrovecsy is still going on as to what the Loch Ness monster may be, and the problem will probably Muster be satisfactorily settled until someone is able to get a. close-up fphotiagr-aph when the creature is "importing itself on the surface of stlwwafer or taking one of two oc- casional strolls on shore with which --oris or two visitors have credited it. >--'~'1‘he of the carcass of a monster in California. strengthens the view of those who hold that the 31inch Rees denlzen is s. creature strum; .to scientific authorities. ltlsnotonly inilhe lea-geomet- unpoftheesrth thotthissgeie ilbrhlgkig sin-prises. Many new in- ‘Usficl have been discovered in the winds. Over 7000 peoime l§ re- ~ dedinthepastthreeor four over so were previously ‘un- Filbwp in Gnu Britain. and at _ '18 sic mum; new to science. . -so mono "new" insects can fygnerge on ‘the loomed world, an ‘ oncl monster may reasonably withlnthe the realm of pos- ies. Vnolinnsuuusowsll: ; s to the Royal ficottlsh or Clinese tomb figure given llor M's. Morison Miller, ,. Qlrinese porwldin have been gifted Whemare two csups of Chelsea por- icelsin decorated in the style of f" mid overgiole lame to Japan h the, 17th oentu-y. OI‘ fiigki pieces Nvbll Mflfier ‘the. fit-looses of the {global sdonnnents gel Irfiyor in the porcelain factories of f“! WM- . ,T.8. Smith. some richly en- ~ , and heluding meoimnens '1“, m, QLIDIQIIOWILDUIPOIIJOI theilrst We sweet his to odfuot all the processes of ‘thinking and selection at once.’ How can he develq) ’ _, tolerance , acceptance, initiative, will, Jubnent, abstract truthful- neesondsllofodosmethervirtues without getting s few Imrls in the weaving‘! His reasoning cannot help ' being mixed. The common fib used as protec- tion. has its ' dation in fear. That has nothing to do with the point mode here. Reel hiu-t and therefore harm may be the result to the little child's sense of fairness and his self- nespect when he is too often se- cused of lying and he is “moi-ally" certain he is right. A little green light blinks ln his mind instead of red sndweorerightafterhim. It pays to try to get at causes and ~ reasons. Few little folk, if any, are actually and deliberately untruthful. The public was admitted to St. James Palace lest week to see the wedding presents given to the Duke and Duchess of Kent. Lugs num- bers of people visited the Palace. and progress through the rooms was slow. Frequently the queue of visitors. four or five deep, stretched fromthe entrance up to the Grand Staircase to the rooms where the presents sre on view. so One of the brightest parts in the life of the Csnsdian soldier over- seas was “Blighfy" leave and a visit-lo the London‘ Alhsmbra, where “The Bring Boys“, with George Robey and Violet Loraine wu the plsee do resistance. That‘ was nearly 2A) years ago, and yet the strains of “If You Were the Only Girl in the Wor " still fill the sir when the boys of the old brigade gather around the festive board. The other night the whole show came back with its old-time fervor when the revival was siaged in that same theatre, the Alhunb s. Violet Loraine, in retire- ment since those eventful days except for charity performance, emerged from Bluikiflfllp]! Castle In Northumber‘ ’ to once sglin grace footlighfs with her presence. But this time, instead of tin hots and hlveisucks, the audience WI! composed of boiled shin-ls. Mlss Loraine is the wife of Edward llaylton Jolcey, a north country colonel, and here she is selm with one of her sons in the grounds of her fine old English mansion. FIRST WOMAN EXPIDRER BE GIVEN BURTON MEDAL The Burton Memorial Medal, awarded triennially by the Royal Asiatic Society for the most out- standing achievement in the field of exploration and travel in Asia, was presented to JVLlss Freya Stark at s. meeting of the society in Lon- don. Loni Lloyd made the presen- tstion. Miss Stark is the first Women to be awarded the medal. It was con- ferred on her in recognition of her journeys of exploration in Persia. Lest yesr she was honored by the Rnysl Geographical Society for her pioneer visit to Persia-during which she dismvered a stronghold of the ancient secret society of the Assassins, a. Mohammedan sect. She onfiruned the tales 0f murder by the Assassins’ rulers which the Crusaders brought book with them. The sect gave the word “assssslrfl to the English language. gradients stand until they have reached room tempera/lure, before combining cake. 4. Take special care to make all measurements level, and to sift flour before measuring 5. Make all measm-ernen-ts (except that orf flavoring extracts), and cheek them with the recipe, before combining cake. (Measure flavor- ing extract just before adding.) 6. Have the method clearly in mLnd before starting to combine the sake, and follow direct-ions exactly ' 7. Bake cake inuncclintely .t ls com-billed and at exact. tempera- ture given, plazaing ii. in oven so that it receives an even heat on ell sides. Cakes of the butter type whidh OOIWQID baking powdgg-‘or soda. may be closely covered and kept deeply chilled in the refvlgem- tor, if delay in baking is necessary. 8 Do not Jar the coke during baking. I. Do not look mt 118M coke until shortly before the time lt should be done, according to the recipe. coke from oven as soonasmoneandeoolinsplsoe eschew free _of drought. “All it wants i :1 g1 Wt the vrofcswf-prabncsfre picking?» P" 1111i! reason why each of you lad. 1E5 and Bhntlemen shouldn't use your left hand with the same dexterity as your right." He Pick“! "P I Piece 0f chalk and began to draw a. figure with his right; "and. and then completed another figure with his left hand. Tm3N.'h6 MUd.'T dew unflmg in my audience to mention s. single action which I em perform with my right hand and which I can't do Bqufllly well with my left." ‘The silence that followed was bmkefl by the voice of a small child, "Mummy." be slid. "can this pro- fessor Put his left hand into the ‘mam M N8 rliht-hand trouser pocket?" - CANADIAN WOMAN IS MlUilATKS PRJOFESQGI AT U OI‘ CHENGTU Miter l) years cs mathematics professor at the Chinese University of Chenfllill. Mn. Frank Dick -n sold when interviewed in Calgary thot shefelt "liheamforehierhere although I was born and brought uponOonsdlmsoil."0nhert‘hird ‘ ' she will spend out of the time at Mount Allison University, Saokv-l-lle. N.B. Bhe will also engage in research work at either Oxford or Oolumbin University with hsr hus- band who is heed of the School of Agriculture It O 1n China, she explained, she is s white foreigner. but back in Canada she found ways strange. Chengtu is 2,000 miles inlsnd iron-l s. railway, APPROPRIATE The ortht was of the expresg- ionlst school. l-ie had just given the finishing touches to a purple-end- blue canvas when s friend entered the studio. "Just the fellow I ws-nt to see." exBII-lnwd the artist. "I have Just _I m . _. .. . Y l-nd like YW t0 Bllfllelt s title for it." "Why not coll it ‘Home’? "Home." cried the artist, puIled. DRAPBD HATS According lo report, the current demand in New York is for velvet hols. These are emecicliy designed smollomphubansand veilsforthe cocktail hour. llvr general daytime wear, one house introduces a. heavy ribbed silk, plain or novelty taffeta, all o! i“ “whmm m” ‘x m” w” 9”‘ n "Bzoatleuthtlwsfllsioploee lb: it" “m.‘wrnbqtmtwwh-uulfiflwdtflieofhelghtissgamaeored. Nlillsllseeliflone. ' Umveriby at Gssngiu oo-eduoo- tionsl. but its may girl students from Russia, Pekin. Java. and Korea are enrolled in the School of Dent- ‘Biis ls always irregular, however. Off-face sihouettes in cuff treet- ments, and narrow dipping brings with short book lines all other types belsived here to be interesting for , selves. , .ks.;; . A Den Inseam Ill! Ofhnou Jim-Ian!" lnmpls lowly» What Greater Proof Could Any One Ask That “Freedom? is. the Enemy of True Love Than-the Appearance in the Divorce ~- Courtiof the Greatest Exponents of Extra-Marital‘ Romance‘! ‘mepspmsnnmuioethstbertnndllusskthefomousqpestiesd free love sndsdvoestcs of lnubcnds and wives having extrs-mlrltal xe- lswmships, have just got s divorce on the ground of adultery. This would be urdonicc-lly amusing if the breaking~up of every msrrloga were not s tragedy. m you: and years the Rilssells hove be proclaiming in books and lectures _ that the thing that was the mutter with marriage was that husbands and wives were too much bound to each other. That was what suffocated them and got on their nerves. Monogamy was synonymous with monotony. Same wife serous the table every day. Bsms husband coming home every night. Home kisses. Home lino of talk. Same old bsll l-nd chain. IO wonder people got fed up on it. And the remedy they recommended for _ this horrible state of affairs was philaudering. Husbmih and wives must hlVO their little dings on the lids Ind thlll‘ mates must be brood-minded and intelligent enough to see that this took the curse of! marriage and kept them pepped up and thrilled and made them more interesting and desirable 0011196111005 0B thilf-"Qnmflfl l" home. ' 1.11m, flu; ghgrc-your-wlfe-or-hudvsnd plm doesn't work out u well in actual practice ssllt does in theory, not even with its , " “ their l:- " seems to have shrunk into the nsrrowvlew of possesslveness characteristic q! hllfibflll "Id wives when they see strangers poaching on their own preserves. Nor do they‘ appear to have got any enjoyable kick out of their mates‘ love men-s with younger and fairer women and more glamorous sheik; In short, ey seem to have got lust ls jealous over each others sidestep- It appears. however, OQQO-O-OQO smfiliwflK-i FOR s; l ~F4\>>'H1<>1\l*\1¥1<1='. PEQPl-E; illlustfated Dreeemsklng ,f .vbu vm we The yoked elpreuion is smart in metal threaded fsbriol. bengsline, satin, sequins, m. The extreme " neckline in stiff white linen is sponsored by Schisparelli. Anew scarf type suitable for tof- fete, hiitted woolons, satin. foulord tie silks, lsqliim, etc. mlfouwillflnditxeslfuntomsh em. . Style No. 560 isdeslgxied in one size only. See pattern envelope for materiel. requirements. Price of PATTERN 16 cents in temps or 00in (coin is preferred). Vrap coin carefully, N0. 500. ............................ "III ."nun".....-....-nnn--.---.¢ Street Address ..s.,.-u-.-..¢-.-|-.---- . . . . . .. 91W Stats ping s; my otherman or woman with an unfaithful wife or ‘ and to have taken just the some path to the divorce court. They could preach the doctrine of free love to other people, but they couldnt take it them- Nor can any one else. Real love is never free. It is holden. 1t is ‘ the most monopol‘ “ thing on earth. Not only are we not willing to divide it with any one else, but it bemmes degraded in our sight if even the smallest part is given to mother. Nobody can Imagine a WOMMI who loved her husband viewing will sympathetic interest his impli- sioned love affair with another women. Nor can one picture n. man who loved his wife, contentedly and philosophically waiting for her to return to him after s honeymoon trip with s hs-ndsome stranger. Ne. Whatever the secret 6f how to be happy though married. i‘ does not consist in ilirtstiousness. _ No one wants a. part-time Wife 0r husband. Nor does any one want s. husband or wife who keeps one guessing. What one wantsis certainty, not suspense, in marriafle. A husband or wife who is as stable as the Rook of Gibraltar, in whose un- changing sff “ one con zest secure and in whose fidelity and loyalty onecantnistuonetmminflod. As for the complaint that what people mostly resent in marrlase is the sense of bondage, why, that is what they marry for. They dell"! that bound feeling. They want to feel that they are bound to some- body snd some one is bound to them. that they are responsible for some one and some one has responsibilities to them. that there is some one whose very name is theirs It gives them the warm, safe feeling of s shut-in room when one settles down and is st rest instead of wandering without pmpose through a night of storm. Without ws are bound to some one we are as forlorn as masibrless dogsAnd that is why most P917919 are happier married thamthey are slngle,.even though they fail to Bel their idesl motes. Better s hard master than none at all. ‘men hes long been s romantic swerstition that the Gums?“ WI! to kill love is to put the chains ofmsrrioge around it. Never Wu "l!" s greater fsllmcy, as is amply proved by the feet that liaisons rarely last more than a. few months, while millions of marriages endure for forty 01‘ fifty years. so short-lived is the usual free-love union that the very few that have survived the acid test of living together have been rare enough to be immortalized in song and story. But nobody thinks 01’ sinking err of the Jmesses and the Smiths, who are celebrating their There are many reasons why marriage is a bulwark of love instead of its destroyer. One is thst nothing unites people like a mutual interest. and a husband and wife who must rise or fall together and whose pros- perlty depends upon such other 1nd whose children make an additional tie have the strongest of Ill possible bonds between them. Then, too, they have the sense of finality to keep them from rosm- They feel that they have made their choice and must abide by it ing. and so their eye is not out for every attractive man or woman who cross- es their paths. They are not counting their heartbeats. They are not always thinking of change. u are the free lovers whose liberty consists inilieu-bsingobleteswspportncruuofisn utheyllke. And finslly fliers is that sense of possession, s sort of Qlfitism that makes us put s high vslue on what belongs to us. and that makes us think that our husbsnds end our wives are supenor lust because they are ours, ssweihinkwehsve thebestcsrortbe best radio. V, Allofwhisbbrinyusbecktotbefset thstwithslilesfsultsmsr- ringeisstlllthebeltsrrmgement thlfhcsyetbeen devised for the com- flm"’bmtm*e°‘h“fl‘p°' both llm and trinmvlngs Dehrht Q diam! well" h-uhssndwlthnslralerflsvmr. M i ,.__ "" - ,, ‘Fried . fish-bunk“ yuan". unstressed hithellflfik‘ Mh-czudln! bow coming, sud psniondiip of the sexes and that the fewer liberties we take with it, the mm. ’ DOROTHY DIX. __ THE COOK'S CORNER With inch Pgigemj v ITALIAN CREAM One lb. of icing sugar, two whites of 68B. lemon essence, saffron, coch- ineol and vanilla . . Beat up the white of one egg and mix with the icing sugar. Knead this until smooth with the handed: too stiff add a few drops of water. Div- ide into three puts. With a skewer odd to onerportlon s few drops of lemon essence and a few drops of smron colouring. Into the second portion work some vanilla only, leav- ing this white, the third portion should be tinted with cochineal. Roll each piece to an equal thickness, brush each with white of egg on one surface, then place one above the other, press well together and lesve till next day to set ,when it is ready to out into bars. COFFEE BRAZILS Hove l lb. of icing sugar, one white of egg, strong coffee essence. I-Ilil shelled braille. _ Have the icing sugar free from lumps and sieve it. Place the white of egg in the centre of the sugar and work in gradually with s wooden spoon. Add enough coffee euenoe to colour and flavour suitnbly. Continue working the mixture until perfectly smooth and pliable. Wrap it up in greaseproof paper, and ut aside for a few hours. Mesnwh hove some whole bra-ails shelled. Then tsks s and wort round l. bra-nil with your fingers. these should have been prev- iously dusted with icing sugar. You can make coffee walnuts ln exactly the some way . AIJMOND IOOI HIUIIILMDIHIIIII luglr. I on. of almonds, one tsblapoonfm of lemon juice, and one tab espoonful of water. Blanch, quilt, and lightly bake the o moderate oven. Then lemon golden brown, stir in the olmmds. and pour info s. butts-ed tin to set. E i. issuing». lfurniehecb Grandmother's Quilt Patterns VEIIIBINA Out out applique pieces and sew an indicated on small block. Arron» oppllque and plain blocks as sui- gested on quilt diagram. Largo no» erl pre nd with‘ oreom circles. leave. up green. Finish edge of quilt with 3 inch border to nmtch applique hes. v Allow for all seams whencutthl s plain blocks. 8 inch border around entire my. Material required S 2-3 yards material for Nlilliqi" blooks 1 sic ma mlferlol m: plC 4 5-0 red materiel. 2 "£13m material. l0 1-3 yards 8 inch binding f0 border around quilt. Vlhon wdsflng give Number 87-6, 80M lie for {book of quiltpu terns containing '1 boou“‘ul Grand mother quilt designs - every p: tern different. , "Might be s good idea." sold 66- Qiavely slowly, as they rode up to th remoinsof thecomliuoh an on her horse, watching." icy!" hs sold in o sur- t be-no. a ‘l thltoldnlggerclsimed severed in softened-"I know how you're wor- ried on.‘ if I didn't know the danger was over,l'd start for town now. Now listen hero-if we find on; huh deudcow after inn-night, I'll get your vsrinsry. I'm saying this ‘cause 1 know the sloimess will stop, an’ I ain't goin’ a-foggln’ into town for no vetlnsry who couldn't do nothin’ after be got hen. mith stood thinking. She was not sf. that moment so very afraid of Snsvsly. Still . . . Anyway, she had thllill bypeopleforstbouundyounsn’ found tonworl, don't need no deems eutlo died. Ruth tallied the bulls and found only one, Number missing. she eroued his number her list. 8o for she had lost eighteen head, about one ouscnd ‘ “ b‘ fi § better putsome in the spring trow = ~42 ain't done that lstely. Better 1-. some in tonight-there's o lot s oothgpgrssen watering st “W? Tlut evening Ruth arched up v- tho medicine shelf, found the psr. i! egg: ‘fig > ding: félygi :$!aE§§5= gig .1 i s? v=i if a i: