‘in: '_lil\'lllll .2~l:ég;.l.é 1e30, _-__ l What the Fashionalilesi are Vlclirhg l Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With i Every Pattern ' i By Annabelle Worthington The white satin collar creates in- teresting eflect in this slim-line black rough crepe silk dress. The collar is so young and smart the way it ties at the back. The pointed- fitted yoke gives tint llllllIlCSS across the hips. It's n. dress you'll enjoy making because of its unusual simplicity. eDelightfully smart and new ls mouse-gray tweed woolen with the collar of plain soft black woolen. 'l‘wo surfaces of crinkly crepe latin will make up admirably in this model. Black, rhum brown or wine-red is especially smart. Style No. 930 is (lesigneil fur sizes 14. 16, l8, ‘.20 years, ‘.36, 38 and 4U inches bust. Size l6 requires 3!’. yards 39-inch Iith 1% yards 39-inch contracting. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin leoin is prcferrcdi. Wrap coin carefully. Girls Love Kay/sens Exquisite stockings. Flaw- less, (‘lillgill_i. flattering. Gossamer slit-er, and lllltil y as adrcam. Stiiokiiius that look so frivolous, but wear so well. 'i‘lii- seawoifs smartest shailesa-ahiiiit- town. Dainty pivot. i-ilgi-s and Kaysefs el<:v<:i' fian- sheen‘ twist that gives smart dullness. . - Why not give lier three pairs or more? The more- the merrier lier (lhristnias will be. Your Christmas will be merry, too, for Kay- ser’i-i prices are in keeping with these Thrifty TlllfllCS. $1.00 $1.25 $1.50 O AT ALLTHE BETTER SHOPS I Knsili MADE IN CANADA ‘maocluuu: 127-2 ‘not kiluw what depressed him nor REAL RELIEF FROM RHEUMATISM Old Couple of 80 Find Effective treatment at Lost. Ara you one of those people who suffer from Rheumatism? Are you one of those who flit from so-calletl, "cure" to “eiire"—hoping vainly to find some real relief from the awful nagging pain? Then read what this lady writes in a letter quite uniisked for by us. She tells how her father nnd mother found genuine relief from attacks. You may have cause to bless her infomiation. "About ten or eleven yours ago." she writes, "my father and mother were both very poorly with Rheumatism. I at once put 'l‘liermogene’ where thmr pain was. The relief was xuch that they have never been without it again, and every winter they renew it as a preventive. They are both now well over 80, and should any one mention Rheumatism to them. their remedy is always ‘Thermogenivl’ Do you know why "1"- 05m," Medicated Wadding has“ released these two old people from the toils of Rheumatism? Slfnpl be. cause. unlike drugs which only dieaden t .e ache temporarily, it goes right to the root of the pain. It. works by the oldest and surest method known to doctors-that of counter-irritation. Place a layer of this scientifically prepared cotton wool just where the pain tsftrouli feel the benefit of its pain-relieving essences almost at once. And how much simpler it is to treat _voiirself with this clean, soft, fleecy ‘Wflddlilg than with messy poulflgeg and sticky embrocations. You “n Wear 1t day and night. 1c wm npvgr chew beneath your clothw-or mm them. If you once try "Therm ene" Afedicated Wadding, you will 2i...” keep it in tho house. ASHES of RDSES A Romance of Today By Joanna Cannan Jvlin G-lmour had taken some modest but highly respectable lodg. 1112s for his son, and when Geog- “CY “FPiYCd there he proceeded straightaway to unpack. 'I'he one 1111112 -n this future or in; n; whlcn lie liad looked forward with p163;- ure had ‘been such independence. but lie clicl not feel very pleased with his independence not“ The rooms were suiall, airless, and gum. 1511M with 8-_ drab deliberate ugli- ness. indefinitely mom depressing than the bareness o; acfiwj pow (‘FW- llc was no aesthete. He did t-i-ill ‘illut. lll a bare gafret with llOdllllg ugly to look at, he would have l)C(‘Il zibs-aiiitely content, m; mmm“ "i ' ‘ -""“" riVelit have lmlml nicer iiuxois tor mm and no ‘felt ii.-......, na no.1 l.ik.ii on, hi5 yltollsc and woilibrusii, and n15 Dy- ‘lamas and drcssng gown, and a ilthotoralah of his mother, one of iTllllWl‘ and one of Pat Lysardc, and LilOW lie lure up unpacking, walking ‘in tlie window’ of his sitting pqonh paitcd tlie Nottingham 1am cur. ‘£51713. and 100E011 out. The gtregt wng udeserted. There was nothing to look at. except the perspective lines of the lint-fronted houses, but; Geoffrey had noth ng else to do, so l-ie (oi-cad the window open as widely a; pug- sible and stood there, aimlessly looking out. Miss Bligh, tlie landlady, had pro- niised Jolin Gilmour that she would wait on Geoffrey herself-she had had a good character with Allge- but one never knew with girls. She W" B“ lRCOIKlDEWIt. elderly woman ‘drab. Only when he had turned Q ._. _._.__.-__. '-._ Isii’t Loved for Hi8 Working While is hard for me to believe- Answer: iovcs you? and stupid? disposition. If you h " w‘ with you, but being,- tlierc is no reason why a girl feet of idols who have not only feet near lier as a fortune hunter. going to iiizirry liiin for his money. them. I think that the rich exaggerate being married for their money. Of there are not many fortune hunters. for too little. tell wlietliei‘ she loves you or not. little ordinary affairs of life. companionship and wants to get h can listen by tlie hour to him while business and his golf score, then she But if siie always wants to go the boss and the boss said to him, can give her. ' to gel: hold of your pocketbook. all she e.iu get; out of hini. all slic can out of him. She is th Dorothy Dix‘ Letter ‘Box Dear Miss Dix-My case ie thus: haves wealthy father and she RHOWI 1i- What are some of the tests e. fellow can Dill’- crowd, then she doesnt love the man. ._.._..-»is.>-_ m..- THE CHARLUITETOWN GUARDIAN How Can a Wealthy Young Man be Sure He Money? -- Self-Cen- tered Daughter Objects to Father’s She Entertains Poor girl from poor family. I She says she loves me, but it to a girl to see if she really loves him? PUZZLED YOUNG MAN. Why do you find it hard to lzcii v: the slrl Are you hideously ugly? Aie you dull Are you selfish and overbearlni; 1" Are you quarrelsome and hard to get along _ with? ave any or all of these feultl. 7°" might think it impossible for a. girl to fall in love if you are a fairly average human shouldn't set her affections upon you. Look about you and you will see hundreds of women worshipiii"! It the of clay but are mostly mud. In fact, the one question that no one can ever answer is what some man or woman saw in some other woman or man to fall in love with. . It is 1i curious tiring that the possession of money seems to produce an inferiority complex in rich people, at least so far as matters of the heart are concerned. (Every rich girl looks upon every man who comes Every wealthy man is afraid some Elfl 15 Apparently the rich never think that they could possibly be loved for themselves alone, and that they have qualities ol head and heart that would inspire any one with affection i0!‘ very much the danger they have of course, it happens occasionally, but Most young people are more rom- antic tl:.iu avaririous, and when it comes to selling themselves to a rich _ husband or wife they simply bbflk at They would rather work and make the money for what they want, and marry tlie women and men they love. Of course. tlierc is no absolutely sure test you can apply to a Blrl to tlie bargain. It is giving too much You have to take her word for that and back it up as well as you can by observing lier reactions to just the Au iiifal!ib‘c test of a girl's lo\'e ls her attitude toward e. man and tlie amount of lils society that she craves. If she never WbHIlGS of his iiii off by herself alone, and if she lie tells all about his youth and his is in love with him. places and do things; if she comes down with lier hat on ready to go out when he calls; if she yawns and looks bored when he begins to tell about things that happened when hc_ was a little boy with pave-green warts on his hands, and what he said to ‘ and if she always wants to be in a She only loves the good times he It. should be fairly easy to tell whether this girl is in love with you or your bank account by observing whether she ls greedy or not. is always hinting for things and reminding you of lier birthday and sug- gesting that o. wrist. ivatcli would be an appropriate souvenir of the oc- casion, if she is always wanting to be taken to high-priced places of amusement, then.she is h. gold-digger and her fingers are fairly itching If she When a girl is really in love with a man slie doesn't hold him up for She doesnt want to run him in debt, or get inking of his prosperity as her own and wanting to help him get established in the world. Besides tlicse, there are a thousand other ways in which a girl shows wlietlier she is iii love or not. By her putting a man's pleasure before t licr own. By lier willingness to sacrifice to him. By her funny little l fussing over liim and wanting to mother him. By lier giving him just really love us or not." I I I ttlmt. sense of sincerity which, after all, makes us know whether people Dorothy Dix-My father has an office at home as well as at his nonori-iv DIX. eon i _ herself her only pleasure n gloat- ing over the sins and sorrows of other people as revealed to her by the dilly press. She told Geoffrey that-she liad seen a great. deal of trouble, while she set out a cold fillilper of salmon. stelced raspberries and dingy biotic-mange. By a quarter to eight the supper “'55 eaten and cleared away. The evening stretched before Geoffrey, siient, lonely dull. He had brought a book to read in the evenings. It. was called Business Methods. But he did not feel in the mood to read it now, indeed lie wondered how he could ever have expected to. So he set of! to explore Bloomsburf, and trudged wearily round the squares and up and down the streets which are be- tween Southampton Row and Tot.- teiiliain Court. Road, and saw the lace curtaiis and the areas and the private liotels and the hostels and the pigeons and the Indians and the arts and crafts shops and the schools of languages which give t-o Bloomsbury,‘ a character of its own. But llg was not a Londoner, would never be one, and to h'm it all seemed shabby. dirty lnexpressibiy FOIR GROWING CHILDREN insure sound and vigorous health GIVQ them SCOTT'S EMULSION oi Norwegian Cod Liver Oil Rub ilt home in the gathering twilight, and saw above the long, unlovely street the slender and silver moon selling in a. sky of palest green, he thought for a. moment of the moon in the branches of Hemshott and then of what. a. marvellous thing it would be to be there, or here, or indeed any- where, with Fay. It was one of those things, he thought, that; were too marvellous- ever to happen, too much to ask of Life, whose generosity he had begun to doubt for the first time that day. CHAPTER- Ill "UNITED WE STAND" "You two are great pols, aren't you?" said Geoffrey. " “Mr. Errans calls us the Insepar- ables," Connie Evcrs said complim- ently. "And Mr. Turner calls us- weli. he’: rather saucy and Mo: Bennett's pinching my arm black and blue though she knows I'm g0- lng out in a sleeveless frock tonight, so I won't tell that. Anyhow ‘United we stand.‘ That's our motto. Isn't l3‘ Fay?" "Thais right." "Do you live near each other." “We do. Arid I live the farthest away, so I see Miss Bennett DIM.- tieally to her door." She looked at Geoffrey and her merry eyes twink,- led. But he was not looking at m». l-le was looking at Fay. He saw her daily lathe office uid on such days u this, when his luck was in, as he went out to lunch lie m'ghc meet the two girls on the stairs. For a. few days that had been enough. A whole morrfng had been lit. by "the light that never was on see. or land" because she had ooine into the oillce later he and had passed h‘: table and said, "Good- ness, whiii. an early birdl" A whole evening had been lifted out of the Whflle world and set in Paradise be- cause ehe had stood for a moment Vttariiins A. .iii.i D I who cooked iiiximinobiy and found in the street beiide liim, and made n delicious lttle grimace at the sky, and mid that just because she » count your calories and lay on sweets and starches and fats, and you iii 1 -—-¢---___i.-.__ , . “w?” 4 A y -_ i Woman ’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions ff-i-ylferdturg place of business. He works every night. I em s girl of l9 and desire to have my friends come to see me. but I hate to ask them on this ac- count. I avoid boys, as I know they would not want to come to see me and sit. in the living room and watch my father work in his office and hear the click of his typewriter. There is one boy that I like very much who wonders why I treat him so cold, but I feel I can't ask him to the house and I don't want to suggest going out to my date. Don't you think a. father should consider his daughter a little bit, and when she has company stop working a while for her sake? ANXIOIJS. Answer: r . What about the daughter considering her father a little bit and try- lng to realize that the reason he works nights at home is because he is trying to provide a home for her and keep her safe and snug? Lots of young people look upon their fathers as nothing but money- miiklng machines who are geared up to perpetual action and who keep on going through the motion of tolling because they are built that way and can't stop. I have heard them sneer at father because he had got to be almost an automaton that vibrated between the house and the office and because he never took a vacation or went. to a bill game or did anything but work. I have seen them ashamed of father because he had got stoop-shouldered and went shabby and was out 0f the picture with the balance of the smartly dressed family. And I have wondered at. the lack of intelligence and the lack of heart and the lack of imagination that these young sons and daughters showed in never realizing that father was a hero and a martyr who offered him- self up as a sacrifice on the altar of his home and for his unappreelative wife and children who never even knew how grand a figure he was. For father is Just as human as the balance of us. l-le doesn't slave like a dray horse because he has some peculiar complex that. makes him prefer work to play and a. stuffy oft’ ice to. being outdoors in the sunshine l-le would love to go off fishing in the spring. l-le would love to travel and see the world. He would love to loaf in the sunshine. But he sticks to his Job winter and summer, day in and day out. Often he even works at night so that. his wife and children may have the pleasures he denies himself, Anyway, my poor little girl, you are very supersensitive to feel that your fathers working at home ls any disgrace and that your friends won't want; to come there if he docs. There isn't‘ a one of them who would care a. rap about that one way or the other. Probably they wouldn't; notice it, and as fer as your boy friend is con cerned he would admire it rather than criticize it. It would indicate to hiin ‘that if lie had that industrious a father-in- law he would probably never liiive to support his wife's family. So tlon't be silly and make a. mountain out) of a typewriter. ' ' DOROTHY DIX. I I I I I I Dear Miss Dix-Will boys ever learn to like fat girls. to be thin to be popular? Answer: According to the fashion reports, curves are coming in and Inglee are going out, so there is hope for the plump girl. If it is tnie that bones are no longer the object of an almost idolatrous worship, then boys‘ taste will change and they will prefer the girl who is n good armful to one who is a. living skeleton. But there is no reason for a girl to be fat. Do you have FATFIES. Take plenty of exercise, can reduce to any state of slimness you desire. DOROTHY Dix. “Birds moi-c unsuited to survive Iiuland would be hard to imagine," declared Dr. Blair. "The little uuk icannoi. get into the air from lend." , The zoo director stated that in tlie last. 40 years only 20 cases are irccorded when these Birds have been found inland, and then only generally one at c. time. ~'I'he little auk is a bird about the size of a. dove and has a. whitish breast andblack back. Its three webbed toes give it, means of pro- pulslon in the water and its ner- row but sturdy wings give ‘it a powerful take-off from its natural element, the sea. In flight its wings vibrate like those of a. humming bird, Dr. Blah‘ said. BEST FOR PIES AND CAKES hadn't brought her stump)’. it was g-oing to rein. But. now he wanted more. He wanted to talk to her. 8 long talk so that they would get to know each other, and he could never speak to her, even for a moment, alone. He had started for the omcc ridculously early one morning and liad waited about the bus halt in the hope o! walking the few yards to the door of the bu lding beside her, but. Connie Evers had been with her even then. At night as he turn- ed over and over in his lump? Nd at the lodging, his mind revolved e11 sorts of plans, none of them feasible by the sober lglit of day. l-le tried to console himself with the thought that winter was approaching. Miss Ever; looked as strong as they made them. but surely even she would not; go all through the winter without a eoldl (To Be Qontlnuedt Sea Birds Are Blown Inland -n.-- NEW YORK, Dec. 8-(0. P.) -— Says Girls Are sloppy Dressers PRYN MAWR, Pa, Decfl-(C. P.) -Clothes do make the women. 8o states the College News of Bryn Mawr College in ii scathing attefl on slopplly dressed women on the campus. An editorial entitled "tekt iski calling attention go "laziness and carelessness" the News mails the student body, and asks them to “remember that; college is not n. shambles, but e. dignified ' titu- tion." Said the editorial: “Clothes might be sent. to the cleaners, buttons might be sewn on and hair might, be brushed without any serious reflection being cut fi-Ai’? For 771a Cook l Pie omit Pie crust is a. bug-bear to many a bride, now we believe if Bride Mar- jorie who finds that when she rolls the cruel: “it breaks into a dozen pieces" would make lier paste by sifting 1-3 teaspoon salt with 1% cups flour (well sifted) then cut. or chop in 1,9 cup shortening (butter and lord) or whatever commercial shortening she prefers) then add enough ice-cold water to make a paste that will roll out, she will find it niltright. She should have the paste as cold as possible, ii session in the refrigerator will help it. It is wise to roll it as little as possible -—md on a floured board, of course. We hope Bride Marjorie will con- quer the ple crust problem, and that ehe will find her electric range ‘ ‘ what. others have-the some o! per- , fection. If we can help anytime‘, we are still at the same address. Hermite 1 cup butter, 1% cups brown sugar, 2 eggs. ‘A cup o! Sultan! raisins, 1.4 cup seeded raisins or cur- rants, 1 cup dates, 1-3 cup nuts, 2 tablespoons chopped preserved gin- ger, V; teaspoon baking soda, 3 tablespoon: boiling water, 2% to 2% cupeiilour, ‘A teaspoon salt“! teaspoo cinnamon, ‘A teaspoon all- spice. Cream butter well, work in the sugar gradually, add well-beat- en eggs and the fruit and nuts: dis- solve the baking soda. in boilins water and add to the mixture; mix the flour and spices and sift them in. Beat well and drop from a tea-t spoon on buttered pans, spacins well apart. Bake l2 to 15 minutes in a moderate oven-Boo degrees F. . polling ignorance of the fitness of things and-a mistaken conception conccrnlnifthe qualities of genius.‘ We can and mustrmoke an attempt to improve the general appearance of the student body." A prompt reply from the faculty declared the women dressed as well as other college women, and said there wee “no ce/uee or desire for any faculty actkm in the matter." A small gold quill slipped through a. slot on the outside throat of a bronze pump is u. new afternoon trimming chez Marouf. Different colored leathers match different costumes. .....MOTl||Ell Tlllll ER VIIY month itwn the limo R0111; Headache: and beclnchce. jumpy nerves. Always tired ourby mid-day. She [med to iiilk about lier trouble. She tried to hide it. But you can?! hide things like din from n mother.’ So lier mother told lier-who: on the Bryn Mowi- intellect. "Visitors to the campus are oun- frontcd on all sides by the intei-‘ lectuals with fingernails suffering from intimate contact with the good earth and hair resembling By some freak of nature, flocks of nine auks were blown into the me- tropolitan urea recently and fell exhausted in streets, unable to take off again for tllfl sea which is their natural home. Most»! the birds which breed in that of an East. Indian native after northeast Greenland and Iceland. a hard day in the rice fields and died from exhaustion. Dr. W. Reid clothes that would Blair. director said the which needs a. high wave to give have brought of the Bronx Zoo shame down upon o Belgian refu- littie auk is a see. bird gee. "The present Bryn Mowi- attitude towards dress reveals only on 1p- lt momentum for flight. m» - r fr<—<-_~.v~ 1e14, " ' mother ehould tell he: daughter. Lydhll. Pinkliun’: Vegetable Com pound vu mule for In: such trying iimu. Taken uplarly i: ends ' ‘gue Ind irritability. Ink life wonh liv- ingu in“! week a a aevery month. Won‘: youfln in chance to help you? » -. i.. "m A colored man got. hi; gather and took o night, n, m plane. A: h climbed out m‘. ride be t to ‘m. p“ acid, “Bub, Ah bu in mm" both dein rides." "What are you talking n ca-ld the ttor. “You ride." ‘l: h“ m‘ “N0. lllh." returned the .. ‘er. "Ah done had two-m, and mph last." L GBIMS ATTACK 510m Stones, no lesl than in", mals and plants, are iilmf,‘ germs. And these bactei-in ,, can cause serious damage n, h, ing materials. so 555i," PM G. Paine, of the Imperial ,, London, says Popular M. H Magazine. Reviewing tlie M other botanists as well is n, researches, Profemor Paine . ed out chat primarily tins b, _ disintegration of stone l5 ,_ ficial, for it ls one of the ,,_ that‘ breaks down solid rqgk coil fit for farms and forests, , on the works of man the i, ' some of them the identicii“ that are helpful in the soil, .~! make havoc. €krilledl .. How you thrilled in the certainty ol your lasting loveliness-heightened by the clinging, velvet- texture oi POlTip¢ldn Beauty Powder. , As his eyes carcsset) you, how thrilling know that a touch of Pom- peien Rouge had l<cpt loi you the girlish flush he loved. Be sure always! Use Pompeian. You may pay more lor beauty pie- partitions but you cannot buy better than . . . n. NEW I Z g noon POWDER CREAMS LIPSTICK IONDON FANS NEW YORK l ' Sales agents: Harold F. Ritchie e Coll 10-18 hkcdtil $1.. Torvnw liox llanch Equip’ l-‘(ili SALE Thirty-five coupe Pem- "l Houses at rock bottom prices. to C. L. lllacill Charlotte I’. E. 6762-11-26-ltih61. FAR FDR s 10D acre! of land, mostly Well watered. Buildinl’! l" l“. “u. Wit-hill i4 mile in church, store! and l1. 3-9 fiupeetlon any time- HERBERT BUCK“ neiiei-nm. '- . 6913-12-10-31. _..___--i— ‘ RADIO BATTERIES Rllflm“ “l iiioiir V. C. Smallw ' Radio 561'“ . izz North 111v" " .4.