.13. 1 m,‘ r12. ~. ‘ . o». 71- v \ .- ,3 .......... ’s Realm ‘ uwvv \ Social on v llllll khan; j d. qv w, v w v1 v .T7lat Royle Girl ByEdwhlBelmer‘ ‘ were» be ALL LOVE ASK! in: A brave, true heart to be glad and Si! in} A garden of tender thoughts tc P11? 111i A faliltelzzunsweiving through cold or T111 the heart whet! love ledga forget to beat. Jem Blewelt. I --.--.---.__._. The old gardener says it is impor- FRETTED AND FUMED AT ' SLUGGISl-l DRAINS It dissolves clogging grease —never harms the plumbing t t that apples and similar fruits aho ld never be put into winter quarters while wet with dew or rain. A very good way to keep apples pears and some vegetables as well in o, crisp, fresh state ls to pack them in clean, nearly dry leaves, using first a layer of leaves and ‘then a layer of fruit or egetables, and so on. More leaves will be re- quired if the room or cellar i! dry than if it is moist. Vegetables may be kept in leaves which are decided- ly moist. Peaches and plums will not keep long unless the tem u- tture is down to as degrees. These fruits, like grapes, must be ripened before being picked to be of the best quality. O Don't throw away the paraffin on jelly and marmalades. Wash each piece and save it. Boil the accumu- lation and there will be clear paraf- fin for next Jellly time. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Rub bronze ornaments all over with a piece of flannel which has been dipped in methlyated spirit. Have a little methlyated spirit in a. saucer and use an old tooth-brush to clean the crevices that cannot be reached by the cloth. Then dry with a clean soft duster. a e Soak white lace in unboiied, luke- warm milk for at least two hours. then press between the hands and do not rub. Change the milk and keep the lace soaked in it until clean. Rinse in warm water to which granulated sugar (one table- spoon to two pints of water) has been added. Before squeezing lemons, drop WHY be annoyed bystopped- up drains? It’s so easy to keep them clear and free-running. Simply sprinkle Gillett’: Pure _ Flake Lye down each week. Use it_ full strength-it will not in any . them into boiling water for a min- ute. They will then render more juice than in the ordinary way. ‘ TO ARRANGE AYWWTMN’! SHORT-STEMMED FLOWERS It is sometimes difficult just new to find enoueh long-stemmed way harm the enamel or plumb- “flowers suitable for house decora- ing. It cuts right: through all clogging nutter . . . kills germs and destroys odors. Ifiseasytobeyourownplumbcr this workless way, and you've no 1mm unwelcome bills to pay after-' wards! Get a tin of Gillettfs Lye i from your grocer today. It will save you hours of unnecessary scrubbing and rubbing all over; the house. [lever dissolve lye in hot water. The ac- tion of the lye itaeif hears the water. - 0 FREE BOOKLET-The new edition of‘ the Gilletfs Lye Booklet gives doz- ens of‘ practical hints for saving time and work with this powerful cleanser and disinfectant, also taina full di- rections for soap making, thorough cleansing and other uses on the farm. Address Standard Brands Limited, ' FraserAvenuehLibenyStreet, Toronto, Ontario. GILLETTS LYE i , AMomingSmile EATS DIRT NOW WE KNOW "To bring national prosperity, we must spend. To fortify individual prosperity, we must save." . Now that's all straightened out. COPIED ART Niece (in the picture gallery)- is the famous Aunt Sarah, this "Angela" by Millet. Aunt Sarah-Well, I never! That man had the nerve to copy the cal- endar that has hung in oin- kitchen for a doaen years or more. tion Last week a friend showed us such a facinatino idea-e Victorian Innsy made in a bowl and lilst the thing to make us 6f odd, short . ms. - She filled a medium-sized bowl about thrPe-quirflters full-hers was yellow—with wall-moistened sand. ‘Then with ‘mutt-colored nhlcx. dean-toned bollvhmle blmssoms. and blue. rov-nflowers she arrerwerl her vivid round bououet. sticking the ends into the moist sand. Any flewers may b~ used. and it is the greatest fuh devi-in" colour schemes, "umnvnir-nl tnn- the. flcw. ‘pvjq ‘reef, fnv aeamwe worn M» fHn, ‘ow arrangement is ideal for a din- ner table. MWTTON was». Tw-v Fowl-Hr“? mutton GHOH! this way and they will be found as tan- der 11nd suveulent u any lovnls ohm). ‘ But. the Whom in a helrlni! tin with a 1min Hnfnhfilnv en/[Mvik in ‘a. very. uc-v -‘~-' oven for about an hour hvvi a M". 1|- g-v-evv emu-m n 1mm» time (m- pllhh “Wm vale." f... flhnwl By} t... owe ‘vvsnsrvl H“ hw-vlwnqf, ghm; can be iender and sure-t. PROVE‘!!! S Who watches not, catches not. -$lrotch. mo“ weter‘ it yiv-Wm-(la-rrnan. ow"- nnv'\rtv.—-G"eek. "“-~ "cote-t wi""'\m in man con- sts‘; ‘n knowin" his fo"ies.—l"un-h. l A woman who loci-a much in the ‘glass snins but litW- —1l‘rencl1. . A rich man's wooing is seldom lonr of doing. ch back thorns-German. A word unreasonably spoken may mar the source of a whole life. —Greek. , g One must talk soothingly to the doc until he has poled him. -Greek. The dog's kennel is not a place to keep a sausuga-Danbh. .___.__........._ ‘the new cabinet sink is a kitchen workshop in itself. Portable and easily removed. ‘flue sink is fifty- two inches by twenty-two, with a chem e: right or left drainbomvd. Alllcveaskaisahearttostayfiawer The more the. well ls used, the‘ —QBOC . Many go out for wool that come l“ Under the sink is a three-compart- ment drawer for cutlery. a large for storing utensil! and ens, shelf space for pots and pans. It has a large ventilated compartment for waste container, also spaces for soaps, brushes, etc. iThe doors and drawers are specially planned for silent operation. The ‘sink comes equipped with a swing- ing double faucet. soap dish and guumh-catehixig strainer in chro- um. Some day when vou find your- self with nothing on hand for del- sert but stale cake. don't despair. A little doctoring will give you an excellent dessert. How about a cot- tage pudding? First. out away all the frosting from the cake. Ar- range in slices on individual plates and pour hot lemon sauce over it. The flavor of cold slaw is con- siderably enhanced when shredded cabbage is used in combination with shredded pineapple. Canned pine- apple may be used for this pur- pose. or pineapple juice. in the absence of pineapple. FAT CHILDREN ABE NOT ABNORMAL A great deal of mystery has been made about the occurrence of obesity in childhood. and the Pituit- ary gland is often blamed for exces- sive fatness, when an inherited tendency plus abnormal appetite are clearly the main factors. In a careful study of 5c fat chil- dren made in the children's depart- ment of the London Hospital and reported in the current issue of "The Lancet." it ls made clear that the glands of internal secretion (the endocrine glands), such as the pit- uitazw, and thyroid, play-no part in the occurrence of such cases. In 30 of these children there was a definite family history of obesity, and in 23 cases excessive ,, "‘ and diet alone accounted for the condition. There is present in others some of inborn tendency to store fat, especially noted where the condition dated from infancy. The important conclusion from what has been a most careful in- vestigation is that fat children should for the most part be left alone unless their extra weight is causing troublesome ny f , Dietetic restrictions (of starch and sugar in particular) will often reduce weight in a striking way, but it is pointed out, first, that such restrictions may seriously interfere with grow-‘h, and secondly. that the type of diet suitable for fat-neduc- ing is relatively expensive and more trouble to prepare In poorer families. therefore. a strict regime is impossible. It is pointed out that-the majority of overewiohf. children tend to graviatc towards the normal in adolescence. "VTQTIWI WILL BE REVISED EDWARDIAN An Edwardian feahro o’ enter- talnino-f-he staircase-will once Main "rainy its decorative role at London serial fimciions this winter. The ton n‘ the stair-core was the ate-vs on WW1“ the F/lwerdien indie-g muse tn great their ‘hoehgq, and inrideni-lv m dimi-v their "owns. towels and fans. much as the mwlem munneniiln pousgs on the ("as fa phow all the point»; of a new model. ‘The more elaborate evening modes of last summer helped to popularize the revival at the top of the staircase. A GIRL lTPfifiviowa FOR THREE WEEKS A twentv-flne-"ear-old Londen girl, secretary of a. business man. was attacked by hiocoughs nearly a month son she continued with her work 9"" t-ri"nr.r the usual cures Put fhe attack would not stop. “or weeks it continued. She lost ‘we atmne in wei-vht. "w- c-e-r- dw-e-a n» Noth- inv was o! the slirflitest use Jsondon hospital ~nd mu. und~ an unearthed": he on law-t < This is llIWlllV a ewe for the most ‘obstinate eases. l She came to arain.....stui hic- I . Ame girl remained in hospital, during the night was given an anaesthetic. this time for two hours. , time the remedy was suc. cessful. She came to again, q. hauled, but without hiccoughs. ‘The next day-she stayed in bed m "W"? h" strength. and the day after that she was back at work, . -_-i____.. HUI’! FOI- MOINING ‘ NOON AND NIGHT The First Rule for a Happy Marriage is to Avoid Picking the Wrong Mani -- And When You do ‘Get the Right One Don't Expect Him to be Perfect, _But Jolly Him Along Until He is Ayouagwomanwhoiagoingtobemarriedaakamstolistforher the chief mistakes that wives make in order that sbe may avoid them. Well, daughter, the ‘am and the greatest mistake that women make in marriage is in picking out the wrong men for husbands. A girl will give less serious thought and stucLY and use less iudsment in selecting the man she expects to spend the next thirty or forty years with than she does to the choice of a dress or a hat. , She wouldn't pick out a spangled ball gown and expect it to turn into a sweeter suit for hard wear when she needed it. She wouldn't put a hundred ’ “ars in a dress without examining its quality and seeing whether it was near silk or all Bil-k. Bud whe- ther its dye was fast and would hold the col- y. a hat without giving-profound consideration to whether it was the par- ticular shade that sulted her and had the angles that brought out her best points. . But she will marry a man jut because he is a good-locker and a good‘ dancer or has a good line, without ever even trying to find out whether he can make a good living or has a good temper or has a 800d character or whether he will wear well or has a disposition that will suit hers. I! women were as good shoppers for husbands as they are for clothes. there would be mighty few unhappy marriages. The next mistake that wives make is in expecting too much of Ina-r- riage. In spits of all the evidence to the cont that the have seen about them in their own homes and the hom s of their ends, they expect to pass from the altar into an earthly Paradise in which all m9? will have to do will be to sit on a silk cushion and sew a fins seam and feed upon strawberries, sugar and cream and be made love to- And they expect their husbands to be little tin gods, with the money-making ability of Henry Ford. ~ And when they find out that marriage is a hard lob and full of bills and ills and sacrifices and that their husbands are mere mortal men with plenty of faults and weaknesses, they beat upon their breasts and wail over their lots. Ninety per cent of women's disillusion ln marriage is the result of their demanding the impossible of it and their being dis- gruntled because it is not all play and no work and because their hard- worked husbands do not remain romantic lovers. The third mistake that wives make is in defaulting on their end of the matrimonial partnership. Most men marry to get a hvme- 111W are sick and tired of eating ar ’ at restaurants and in cafeterias and having to order their own meals. ‘They are worn out with having tc re- membe to send out their laudry and they hate to go back at night l0 I dark and lonely room and so the main thing that makes them run their necks in the matrimonial halter is to get the kind of pie that moth made and to have a bright, clean, cheery home with a smiling wife to welcome them after their hard day's work. Figure, then, their disappointment when they get wives who set them down tofineals that would give an ostrich dyspepsia, whose houses are like plgsties, who waste their money and Whomiav so ions at the bridle ill-ms or the matinee that they bring home the dinner in paper bags and tin cans. No wonder statistics show that most of the wife-deserfcra have been driven away from home by their wives’ bad cooking. g v The fourth mistake that wives makes is nasslns- There is notoae woman in a million who can say a thing once and drop the subject or who can let bygones be bygones. Let a husband make a mistake in Judgment and he never hears the last of it. Let him have some personal pecular"y, and wife never ceases tc harp upon it. ‘ There are men who have had to listen hundreds of times to the wives’ dissertation upon the time they lost a thousand dollars in l. bud investment. There are men who are regaled with a lecture on m0 W11! of smoking every time they light a cigar, through forty or filly Yell‘! u! wedlock. There are men who never start downtown without being told to watch out for automobiles or not to get their feet wet. 1719M 5P6 ‘men who never even eat a single meal after they are married without brink told how bad everything they like is for their 111M118. i And the fact that nagging wives neg oitener through 111M101! lbw through sheer cussedness does not ameliorate their offense nor make them any easier to endure. The mu. mistake that wives make is m throwing away their bait i" soon as they catch their 170°!‘ 55h- They $111!“! m“ "100 “W? h!" the" man they can't lose him, and they don't need to waste iuwn him my 01 the arts and wiles that they used in traumas ma» The? s0 81°11?!’ and slovenly before him, ignoring the fact that he goes from an untidy Wm’; to a business oflice filled with apick-and-span young women who are; balm to the eyes. ’ , y Worse still, wife goes nogligee in temper at home. She doesnt con- sider it worth while to put on her good manners for a mere husband. an! mm than 1t is to put on her good clot-hes for him. She is peevi-eh m6 shrewish and fretiul and makes no effort to be entertang and amusing, and thatis why husband so often goes tothe yea-m sirla who make 111° eaeant 101.‘. him. p‘ many; the greatest mistake of all that wives make is in not iqllyinl their husbands along. They never pay their husbands a wmlllimeni- They never tell them how handsome and clever they are. ‘Yhey never or or whether it would fade and run after a little use. She wouldn't bu? ' v a AA‘A'A'A ever know it. She is so self-conscious She has become a mere phantom of her true self. If you, too. are troubled with ' skin eruptions, you know only too well the price you pay. It ls one fault people fnever ‘forgive. Why then let this curse prevent you from enjoying life and the opportunities life affords? Why Do Others Know You A: You Really Ara? Or are you clumsy, embarrassed, uncertain ofyoarsaU~ hidden behind a phantom self? Many a girl is charming, delightful .. . yet no one would complexion that her true personality la never allowed ' to reveal itself. Instead of entering freely and whole- heartedly into life, she hinge back einbarr uncertain what others think o! her . . . driven alnioet to despair. All her poise and self-assurance are gone. letancihoffililllbywltboutdotegaomethingabomig, Gentle, aoothingCuflcui-a Soap is the answer. Dur- icghalfacenturyaemoraeillcaciousaldnueannea: hubeanloundthanthlshapusedalongwlditba equally famed Out-icon Ointment. Thousands upon thousands of letters attest their remarkable healing properties. ‘ Whawudearahaadcacforotheaitcaadoaiaofw 7W- Getltartedtodayontbercadtobetterakin healthandbeautywithiiuticurmnandyouflbegiad later. Oinunent25cand BOInSoapZiSeatIeediiudl-iq anddeparnnentatorea. Alaoatvarleiyatoeeainloa about a blotch! eased... OINTMENT s" AP ,' ‘. . . . 00064! ' m”; -- ieuatrclliagaadi qtfuabla. ‘THE. COOK ’S CORNER ' . Last of the Garden Mustard Pickle 2 cups cubed cucumbers, a cups small onions. i" cups araely cubed green tomatoes, 6 green peppers, out in strips, 8 cups sugar, ‘A pound dry mustard, 1 cup flour. 2 heads cauli- flower, 3 quarts vinegar, lb cup salt, ti» cup vinegar, 2 tablespoons tur- merlc. Method: Heat 3 quarts vinegar in boiling point; add the vegetables (the cauliflower having been broken into fiowerets), except the cucum- ber, and thoroughly scald Remove vegetables. Combine sugar, ‘ erio, mustard, salt, flour, and blend to a smooth paste with the l4 cup vine- gar. Add to the boiling vinegar. stirring constantly. Oook until thick and smooth. Add all the vegetables, ' including the cucumber. stir until well blended. Heat thoroughly. Pour into sterilized Jars. Seal at once. This is a large recipe. Half of this should make approximately lB half- Polllo Biscuit 1 cake compressed yeast Ipintmilk lquartflour legg l quart mashed potatoes - 1 tablespoon gr ted sugar 2 tablespoons butterZ teaspoons sai Bake and mash six large potatoes, t tobe i abl o toenter into their husbandsplansandhopes 3d mtlfiiii?“ 12:11 the trime they don't even listen when their husban‘ , try to discuss their affairs with them. 'I‘hey take all of the comforts BB4 luxuries that their husbands give them as no more than their due. 111d "ft" three W-"ks she iv-is so ex- - Witrifim adorns ri"hes and shad- 3151199"! "W; F?" Vi‘! foken in a. never even say "thank you." | And that is where the vampa have their innings, because every mil-ll ihas to have some woman who admires him and flatten him and Inn- ‘ pathizes with him and to whom he can brag and tellthe thlntl m" 11° could tell to no other man and if his wife won't do this. -some other woman will. I so, my dear, if you will pick out your husband carefully and take matrimony with a grain of salt and refrain ‘and be liberal with the salve-spreader, you will never loin the ranks of l the divorcees. DORUPHY D13- from nagging your husband containing the potatoes. and nutter. Royal Family at §cottisli Gathering- ( h to make one quart), place in bowl, add salt, sugar and butter. Take a eupful of the milk, heat till lukewarm, dissolve yeast cake in it, and add enough flour to make a sponge-about one cup. Bet sponge aside in warm place, free from draught. to rise. - small green halved tomatoes, 2 cups - .S'MART FROCKS FOR FASHIONABLE PEOPLE Illustrated Dressmaklngi Lessons Furnished i, With. "Each Pattern , Today's pattern points the way to an altogether charming, inexpensive and simple to create dress. It's snappy too. as pictured in dark green woolen with gold metal threads. The velvet mm tones with the men. An adorable idea too. is black canton crepe with self-fabric applied bands, aa seen in miniature back view. The pattern provides perfora- tions for same. A gay angora plaidwould alaobe charming for it with collar and deep cufls of plain‘ toning woolen. In sapphire blue velvet. its‘s stun- ning for more dressy occasions with silver lame collar and culls. Btyle No. 8'10 ia designed for dies 14.10. lilyearaadseaoandfl inches bust. Bize 36 requires 3% Ylrda of 89-inch maternal with l IaaaeIll6ellaa---e-.- Name .. ooiltejellgsq blesiaooeoeoelecaoaaaeaalaoeeaoeso a .--..ann~e---na\---"u".. “E2 it: i § 5.5 ii Bring balance oi the milk to boil- ing point and then add it to bowl; salt, sugar i when sponge has risen and drop- f \ tgs g ii 5.555: l‘? ti table Compound It tcnea,up whole yyatem-quiets quivering ‘ “J” L?<T“§"'-. ‘"