i i r V._-..__.__._-.. ..;._.~.-_» _ __ . _ . wrapped»- . ,. _ g Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- g vii/halt” the Fashionable Are Wearing illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished \,_- With Every Pattern , By Armebelle Worthington skirt treatment model of xiavy Unique wrapped distinguishes this blue crepe silk- The hips are snugly fitted. The waistline is belted at normal; which is generally becoming. The surplice bodice is rolled into rovers that show smart facing in white crepe silk. n“ . sum “$.31” f. Dorothy Dzx Ell.‘ Husband I‘ III m!!!" Wives, if You Want to Help Your Husbands Succeed, Believe in Them, for a Man’s Faith in Himself Sets the Measure of His Achievements, and if a Wife Des- troys This She Has Destroyed His Ability to Succeed, Says Dorothy Dix W! an exclusive type of slenderiz- ing lines that is charmingly appro» ; priate for ail-day occasions. Style No. 255i can be had in sizes‘ l8, l8 years, 30, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. It is lovely in black and white chif- fon, printed voile with white trim, hyacinth blue chiffon. lime green coin dotted crepe silk and aquamarine blue crepe de chine. Pattern price l5 cents. Be sure to flll in size of pattern. Address Pat- tern Department. The Summer Fash- ‘ ion bfagazine is ready! It contains’ most interesting styles for adults for)‘ cents if ordered same time ‘as pat- torn. ‘- __.--____-_..___.___ 110.2551. Bin ...................... "nu-nu"... . . - . . ..-..--...-----.- Nama . iv, t.‘ -.\nnnn---u--....-.-.--.-.-.---~-. Street Address "--"u"..."-~»»-.-.¢.....-...-n-- city Stats Ad? nonsa xoras e Norway m4 fewer wunst motors ‘> _____. '1 unis year than last. when they stop at. North Tryon .- on July 23rd. American maohlnonv is being H5841 The no 1h TTyon Driving Park is in '10 countries throughout the world n“ new by any means. It, l: one _0l m. ..~“~.... . in thk. wtica and a ccrr- A can that mmsums definite quan __ P, and x-Pénmized byitlties of its contents when they are UNIX“: |,,h\wc,a,,_m_ Thewoured out of a spout has been in_ are now bunt: reccnstruct- Vented for coffee, sugar, and several , W, ‘Y... be 85 5pm other household comodities. "\..L‘f1 .. . u n; as a r.~"s' dollar. .. G. B. Thomas, of v Szabic-s has the follow . h\-..C.S in hing: i I.iinr.ic_.\l ‘ the handsome grey prtcer hv .7, Afalcolm Forbes. hi", iroftcr by HDYQV oifcr. Operated by wires from the pilot's seat. a cearohlight that can be turn ed 30 degrees in all directions has been invented to assist aviators in ‘landing airplanes at night. the France has organized a force of zairplane 1301106 to control the more 1‘~‘"°"- m‘? ‘$5999’ umflment of fliers. especially tourists. ,over that country, signals being acer. the loftylgiven by make bgrmby ' W v. . ' f] ' Raba- K. chestnut by Protrilla, Bliss Bu”. Aquirtt, by Grand Be- Closed oars represented 89.4 per to make a fast ‘cent of the passenger automobile ‘production of the United States and ', trotterfby LacoplsfCanmda last year. a greater pro- . groan bu‘. very prom-‘Wnlql ma“ $491‘ W707i .. . Tt""1n rack Record main by Upton Prince is 2.1", footwear has been estimated at 100, 000.000 pairs, the industry consum- ing between '75 and 80 par cent of the country's leather output. llunril 1 Lmlnn-nt girl‘: quirk rullrf. town or vacation wear. Also darling, together. styles for the kiddies. It is l5 cents a‘ working cluips. full of pep c093‘. but may be obtained for 10 ‘, which they were not responsible, their venture ended disastrously. Drmn: Park] France's annual production of There is no question that women ask me oftener than this: "How can I 3 help my husband to succeed? i To which I can reply almost in a word: Believe in him. Have faith in nlm. Keep him on his tiptoes by making him feel , mgthat you expect him to achieve great things. Somehow his wife's admiration seems‘ to be ab- ‘ solutely necessary t/o a man. As long as she thinks he is a world beater, he puts up the best fight that is in him. but when he knows that she considers him noth- lug but a poor weakling, without the brains or strength or courage to win out, he quits cold. I-lis morale is gone his energy atrophied. his ambition killed. Many a. wife's belief that her husband is a failure turns him into a failure. I knew two young men who started out in business ‘ They were oi about equal ability. Both were intelligent, hard- and go, but through a series of misfortunes for 1 l One of the young men had a wife who believed in him. "Oi course, this i L; bad," she saidto him. “It is a terrible disappointment, after all the work ‘ and thought and struggle you have put into it to see it all go blooey, but don't worry over it. Itis Just a temporary setback. They can't keep a good man down, and with your ability you will soon be on the top again. You'll show them. "Suppose we do have to give up the house and the car and economize for a while. It will be fun helping you get on your feet again, and I'll yct be I riding around in Rolls-Royccs and wearing diamonds as big as turnpike rocks. So cheerio, my dear. Up and atthem again, andthis time you Will land at the top. I'm your prophet, for I know my mail“ And that man, because his wife was a brace and. a tonic and breathed fresh hope and courage into him, has succeeded and his wife is a million- alress who could buy out an automobile or a. Jewelry shop if she wanted to. The other mans wife was of a different caliber. When the business went to pot, she sat down and wept and lamented, and beat upon her breast over their misfortune and reproached her husband with his lack of judgment‘ and wondered why he didn't have enough sense to make money as other imen did, and told how she had always had a premonition that he never would succeed, anyway. She croaked failure at the poor fellow until she. killed the last bit of self-confidence he had, and he lost faith in his own ability. She went about ‘telling everybody that poor. dear John Just didn't seem to have any busi- ness faculty, or know how to get along. until she made John actually achieve ‘ himself that he was so incompetent thatthere was no use in his trying any- thing for himself again. And John today is holding down a small Job that barely makes a poor living. He is a failure, sunk by his wife's lack of faith in him. When women think about helping their husbands, they always have some chimcrical dream of writing a book or a. play that will make a vast. fortune, or being offered a million-dollar contract to go into the movies, none of . which ever happens. Or else they try to do it by pinching nickels and nurs- ing dimes and cutting clown on the grocery bill and wearing their year-be- ‘, fore-lasts hats. r Now, of ccursc. when a woman marries a poor man who is ambitious to succeed, thrift is absolutely essential, for it takes money to make money and the door of opportunity Ls only opened with c. golden key. But thrift is only a small part of the techinque of success, and it is far more important for a woman to inspire her husband to make money than it is for her to save it. ‘ Far more important for her to keep up his fighting spirit, to bolster up his belief in his star, to keep his faith in himself alive, than it is for hcr to do without things. Far better for her to be a fluttering flag of victory always waving before his eyes than to be a bundle of rags at double the need for this dcodorizing protection KOTEX IS SOFT ._____‘_ _ l -Not I deceptive softness, that soon packs into chafing hard- ness. But a delicate, lasting N warm weather. . .wbcn danger of ntxrnse is so much greater. . . vflkn a relief to know that Kora completely dcodonzes! What a re- sgfmggg, l :i i . id f k ‘ » :1. 2zr;1:.....i;':.. ....::.;?"" 1-3pm- liar other reasons. too. make Kotc: c~ 21ml on warm days. Kuttx is non-detectable. The cor- not". arc rourdc-d and tapered so no outline shows even under filmiest frocks. Kotcx disposes like (jgsug, _3_Kotex flu» i. d. lighter and cooler than cotton, yo: absorbs 5 times as much. 4._ln boxpitalr Kotex is the identical material used by surgeons in Canada's leading hospitals. Kom-socfmil-utmnlrunhypod; vrdmmm nova. Rom Super-Size-H: for l1 Kntex stay: soft, cool Rom i: always hghr, cool, com- fibftlblt’. it never loses its softness. l: ' rr. Iv (lflflOt adc. Ir -" 3- ; c‘. ‘liar that w-sohr - . ~ _" mdfiflhwl‘ , , n .:'lf" 0f N € X ' ' ‘u’ T!" N" 58bit»? PM which deodorizu home. For, while a man may not always be able to do all he thinks he can do. he assuredly can do nothing that he thinks he cannot do. His fath in himself sets the measure of his achievements, and if his wife destroys this, she has destrofvcd his ability to succeed. It is the man who never knows when he is beaten who is unbeatable. It is a common thing to soo men slow down as soon as they are married. All of us know men who, when they were young, were full of promise. and who have just fizzled out and amounted to nothing. Before marriage they were keenly interested in their professions or their business they read and studied and talked of nothing but their caves, or the bridges they were b;uildlng, or the cotton business, and we fully expected them to become big doctors or lawyers or engineers or big business men. But after marriage they lust seemed to lose their grip and settled down into mediocrity. Nine tics out of ten the secret of those men's failure is that they married women who were human wet blankets. They had wives who didn't believe in them, wives who had no faith in their ability, and who knocked everything they did and belittled all their achievements until they killed their self-con fidence and made failures of them. so l say. Wives, if you wantto help your husbands, believe in them, DOROTHY DIX. FAREWELL AT BRADALBANE so your efficient work in the Sunday School and Mssion Band. You came On the evening of June 30th., i930, among us a. stranger and willingly R Evfldlli number _ gathered at theientered into the work of the church. manse, Bradalbane. to bid farewell You have endeared yguyself 9;, l“ to M155 Gwendoiyne Paiethrupe. pri- who had m; Qppgfflunlty o; working or to her departure for Nova Scotia, ‘with you. We have seen in you the Mrs. Hugh F. McKay, presided aridjxalts of character that will malts walled on Mrs. John A, McLeod who ' you a. leader. especially among one ‘read an address, Mrs. Gordon Mc- young. As you go from u; to further ~Kfly. mcklnz the Dfcflefltltion. Miss your education may the blessing of Palethorpe replied in a very pleasing God attend you is the earnest wish ‘manner and fitting words were also-of yOur- many friends. Pleas; scoop; spoken by several present, A daintyilghl; purse p5 g, 5mm token o; o“, lunch was served and all Joined in esteem, in behalf of the conga-egg. singing Blast be the tie that Binds. tion. ADDRESS FAREWELL ADDRESS _ T0 TEACHEI. Dear Miss Palet-horpe: ‘The mem. bors of Bradalbane congregation, of Dear Miss Cfraig: Again, in our the United Church of Canada, wish school‘ , we have come to anothu Mt $3118 time t0 eXpfess our apprecla- ‘closing term and are looking far- “Eqaette ' yinhrblao ‘r ' Q. At a wedding breakfast, who ienters the dining room first? A. The bride and groom. Q- When one is sending a bon i voyage gift. how should the package be addressed? A. The address should include the name ofthe vessel, the line to which it belongs, and the number of the pier. Q. Is it good taste tcrhave the nails highly polished and much col- ored? . ‘ A. No; the nails should be immac- ulate and dull-polished. i A MomingSmile bl. L-h RUAQLN SE Pnfau Onltinu Cold TbI-l’ WI]! Add two ca- -—-——— lpoushln of eol_ Doctor (to new patient): “Have you ' °' w been to see any one before coming to nae?" PaflfilltYes. sir, I went to the chem- lst for a little advice. billets, 01' cOLDoricedOvaltineinfunorcllinnldcflch-au summadrink. Itilabuilderof nervous necessary ' , fbodil vitali and ,ud' srs..:.:::;:.......u ‘Y m“ -- COLD OVALTINB, than d1 ' ' for it nndquicklynssimihmdfcrnnllahconunfinlviuninn food element: conducivc to growth. flIlfl-mll’ young and o C under}: Ovaldnaisgoodforbodl ‘ HVALTINE‘ m 3L1: Alallgoodsforesinfil 75 31.250111 84.50 05$ size thu;|l:?m:/,ed It solo x I y i New andfiodu fountains. Only a. putter 1, n nya. Doctor-And what nonsense did he Torn Thurnb"s Gols used. The charge for playim is tell you? Patient-J-Ie told m9 you! to come to One of the business romances of a The patient was examined without iyear wvhich has been not too kind to mrther remark‘ business is found in the story of the ' |T0m Thumb miniature golf courses. ' _ ‘The details are from the magazine Time: For fie Cook i "Inventor of and apparently chief aassrtz-i rlslsarrpr: SALAD .“""°°*"’,l' l" m“ "e" mdmw i! Gt"- ‘net Carter, the mild. easy-going Place 5m“ o! canned pmeappb on drawling oumer, of Fairyland Inn on crisp lettuce on individual plates. Lookout Mountain. Thnncsseo Cover with mayonnaise containing Abfillt l1 Yea? 8E0 M!" 311W" 51d lemon Juice. Slice bananas, and coat W118i mun? B. U- 5- hOSl-cler had dime each slice with well-ground pecang, in the past-installed a miniature Covertha pineapple with these slices, nuttins course on his lawns- Find- and in the centre place a. roll of ing guests used this more than they cheese relish mixed with a little cay- i enne pepper. Have all ingredients very cold. ——--——-i'.-i-—-i-- Then he invented a putting green we learn that you are akin; your departure from amongst us. As our teacher for the past, year, you have won our love and respect, You have diligently and untiringly helped us in our studies. for which we thank you. and-have faithfully urged us to be dilligent, also. in our tasln, 1.11110 Sometimes we may have been very did his $340,000 regular course, he made improvements. Tunnels, bunk- ers, miniature traps were added. made of cotton seed hulls, sure to wear long and well. “Guests saw the course. paid Mr. Carter to build others in their home cities. The U. S. asked him to design one for a District. of Columbia park. At this point a great. idea came to the Master of Fairyland Inn. He patented his special greens. the name; ‘Tom Thumb Golf.‘ Patents for his usually 35o in the daytime, 50c by night. "Any vaLcant lot o! so rt. iby 12o rt. or more will do for the Tom Thumb Golf course. ‘The outfit costs $2.000, and an additional sum (more than $1,000) is required for lighting, office and fence equipment. So far NB‘. Carter has reaped royalties from about 5,000 courses, 150 of which were sold ‘by the New York office alone during the past 8O days. Btill slightly incredulous. he is amazed at the increasing backlog of unfilled orders." The miniature game has spread to Canada and the filling stations have a. competitor in the demand for vacant lots. It is a development which should be good for the future of golf and for the encouragement of the stars of the next generation. And if it proves a gold-mine for Mir. Carter that is the Just reward of one who provides the world writh a new amusement. Many new cerium are bo- ing developed in South Africa. Scruiih Africa. is passing 18MB to tryins..you have been patient with hollow log hazard and other teaturesiencounsge its factories. rs, and conscientinnuy ‘wdeavpred to direct our young minds to acquire knowledge, which we are told is more to be dashed than riches, In the social life of the community whore you have always taken p, plea-sing and helpful pm, you shall ‘be greatly missed but as we have lcome to the parting of our ways, Where W8 must say farewell, our hearty good Wishes go with you for the future. Please accept this small gift as a token of our esteem and sincere good-will. signed, Pupils of Wheatley River school. are pending. Tom Thumb Golf courses became his private property, The Irish Pres State has a boom to use as he would. And he used in motor-bus services. them shrewdly. A. Mfr. J. P. Young o! Florida, land of many real estate schemes joined with him and they Practically all skilled workers in started to organlz". Regional dls- Brazil are being kept busy. trlcis were created in which were started manufacturing and distribut- Pazmna. has appropisted $25,000 irg companies for Tom Thumb Golf ‘to fight smallpox. coiuses. "Thus was inaugurated the newest U. S. industry. miniature golf. The Carter course consists 0518 holes. each from 26_ ft. to 50 ft. long. iThere are runways, small bunkers, Peru has placed g, tax of four -cents a. gallon on gasoline. Nearly 1.200.000 opossums were killed in Queensland, Australia, this year. Old Age Pensions (From the Halifax citizen, an Inde- pendent Labor Journal) One of the chief planks of Organ. ized Labor is Old Ago Pensions That has been a battle cry of Labor for many years. lnd Labor is not con- cerned as to which of the two politi- cal parties, Liberal or conservative. brings such legislation into force. Labor's one concern is to realize a long cherished goal-to see Old Age Pensions written into the Leg- islation of the nonunion. V We are on the eve of a general elec- tlon-what do rival leaders soy snout this question of such grave intend to the toiling muses? Premier King, whilst o. believer in Old Age Pensions, declars that "tbs payment of money to the province: in Old Age Pensions is a vicious prin. ciple." What does Eon. R. B. Bennett. conservative lopdar, have to say? H4 makes a. definite. clear-cut statement: "If the Conservative Government succeeds on July 28, and I have every reason to believe it will, I will see N it that Old Age Pensions up paid t4 every province of the Dominion from the ilfederal treasury. "ifhntismyanswartolprimomiih. later who is not concerned with tlu importation into Canada. of Russian coal and ‘New zealand butta. "Thatismy answer tosprime minister who says the payment of money-to the provlncel in Old Ago Pensions is a. vicious principle. it ll a. national obligation. Premier Kim says it cannot be done constitutional- ly. If the Dominion can pay 50 pei cent. of Old Age Pensions, Why cu not it pay 99 per cont/l" \'\\\\'\‘i‘\\\\\ @\‘\\\\ ‘Kilt’? ‘\Z\I\\' loom ton of your services as organist in ward to spending d happy vacation. m..- church during the nast veer. al- hut it la with folinna of rare: that . ilUTHl ‘Ll ll. Everywhere in the Home Absolutely ant odor. » Whiz Fly Fume protects your home against flies, moths, mosquitoes and other insects. '\ Try Whiz Fly Fume now. humans, pets and food. Pleas- Sold by leading stores everywhere. harmless to