L. “nétz-rsniébla rams - Eiifiyctroszz S‘! ,.. NM-Qfi ‘Ififil-fil I -:- Social and Personal -:- ‘Fashions - ii ‘WTFTCHKR A A Fashion pg ‘Day. ‘ a S‘). W») 'i EXTREMELY GRACEFUL‘ Extremely graceful aftcrnon dress ,0! marked individuality’. The scalop- ped hemline of low placed shirred skirt, attached o0 hipband, creates smart rippling movement to hein- line so popular at the moment. it is especially lovely in sheer printed velvet with plain velvet flounce for afternoons and informal ‘evenings. Silk crepe, crepe satin. cairton-faille crepe dc chine, crepe Elizabeth, geor- gette crepe and chlflon also charm- ing fabrics to select for Style No, 244. Pattern is designed in sizes l6, i8, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 1U. yards oi 36-inch material for skirt, belt and neckband with 2'1 yards of 36- inch matreial for blouse. Price 15 cents in stamps or c0ln\fc0in pre- ferred.) Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send ‘ for this pattern you enclose l0 cents additional for a copy of our Spring Fashion Magazine. It's Just filled with delightful styles, including smart en- aembles, and cute designs for the kiddies. A Morning Smile Mrs. Byrnefs only lodger. an actor, gave her two tickets, for herself and daughter, to see him play‘ the villain In the (lrama, "All for Love." Smiles-Lind. Mrs. Byrne watched the villain pursue his wicked way through thrce acts. It was a great shock to hcr to find she had harbor- ed such a-villain, but worse was to follow. In the last act the hero shot the villain through the heart. "Oh, motherl" cried her daughter, “they've shot our lodgcr and he owes us three weeks‘ rent." .i__._..-__._ Work has been begun on an exten- lfve irrigation plan for Algeria. streams in the northern section of the country being dammed and wclls drilled in the southern. For saving life at fires and holst- hd hose a New Jersey inventor has developed a telescoping tower to be carried on a truck and elevated to a height of 220 feet. r 1 TIRED, WEAK, NERVUUS WUMAN BENEFITEI] i m» Lydia a Psalm’. i VegefablaCoupomid g the birth oihlifiy abxfjlléfwt French Books For Boy King To form the beginning of a French King, Michael of Roumanla, through a French publisher, was recently presented a collection of children's books in French, The books are re- ported to be beautifully illitstrated. Cheese In _T_'he Diet During the last few years certain changes in the diet of Canadians have been noticeable. The more ex- tensive use of dairy products, fruits, vegetables, and the coarser cereals, is been particularly striking; this year, the per capita consumption of cheese ll about four pounds which is one pound per caplta more than in 1924. Not- withstanding this recent increase, Irish ‘Race lfydroplanes Hydroplane racing has been intro- duced into Northern Ireland with great success. The first meet was recently hcld by the Ulster Motor ' Boat Club, and was over a 100-mile ‘course on the Bonn, the longest in Europe. Eleven hydroplanes com- peted. Another incet will be held in the spring. ‘ llugc Plune Approved After the fullest flying tests, the new British Viclzcrs Vellore plane is declared to be one of the most re- markable aircraft ever constructed. Built as a "tramp" of the skyways, it can be used as a freight carrier for the transport of troops. or as a long (listaiicc bomber. Birds Get Live-Wire Sense Electrical engineers in South Wales declare that birds are being gradually educated to the danger of electric wires ,anrl when they see one of their number shocked to death, they pass the information on. In districts where there are overhead main lines the birds, seeing others elcctrocuted, real- ize the danger. Buttons Direct Chauffeur You won't have to yell directions ttryour chauffeur if you use the de- vice being installed in a European car. Instead of a speaking tube a set of buttons is placed near the rear scat. By laressing a button a signal is flashed on the dashboard. The sig- nals include: Start, stop, quick, slow. left, right, turn around, go home. Car Sold For Cups of’ Coffee When the proprietor of a cafe at ROVOYCLO, Italy, recently offered to] buy a small car from a motorist cus- tomer, he was told it could be had for, cash down. He, hadn't the money with him,’ and the laanks were closed. stcad of cash, I'll take. payable on demand, cups of coffee, 10.000 of them." The bargain was struck. With the establishment of u bus service to Dublin. Ireland, by a Bel- fast man, officials of Dublin recently made a (lrastic rate cut for its muni- cipal bus lines. ‘ The Daily Argument AUNT HET "I don't like to criticize I prayer, hut llcaven must get fired of hearfn’ old man Ezra fcllfn‘ fnles on the younger gen- eration." a POOR PA "I 'wfah that widow Dapper wouldn't talk so much about bar Insurance when aha cornea bare. be always makes Ma sorter dis- satisfied." “Very vrcll," said the customer, “in- , ‘ the consumption o! cheese in Canada is lower than it is in other countries. l One wonders why this is so when its ,nutritlve value, relative cheapness, and its flavour ail recommend it. 3 So says the dairy food expert, Miss ‘Helen G. Campbell, Lecturer and IDemonstrater, Dairy and Cold Stor- Iage Branch, Ottawa. Miss Campbell ;states further: ‘~ The housekeeper when she buys cheese receives full value for her imoney. She does not have to pay for iwaste as is the case with many other lfoods. Then, too, she gets value from a nutritive standpoint; it contains protein, minerals, vitamins and fat. Cheese is not food for the very lyoung. but it has a useful place in {the diet of the active school child, ibeing as it is the source of energy and miracle-building material. It is iimportant as food for the adult, and if! Properly served, most “grown-ups" Qwho take a moderate amount of lexercise are able to eat it with rel- lish and without fear of digestive dis- Iturbance. The prevalent idea that lcheese is hard to digest, has resulted chiefly from a. lack of knowledge re- garding its proper use and place in ‘tthe menu. If it is used to replace {rather than supplement other "hear- ity" foods, it will be digested thor- |oughly and with ease. Where cheese ifs the main dish of the meal, vege- ;_tables are excellent accompaniments iand a light dessert such as fruit is liadvisabie. _ The culinary possibilities of cheese are endless, and permit of great y"- iety. A cheese dish is particularly ‘appetlzing on a. cold winter evening, yand the following recipe for an old {favorite will be perhaps a helpful zsuggestlon to some housekeeper. i F ' ciiaasa runnmo .1 cup stale bread crumbs. 1 cup grated cheese. 2 cups milk. 2 eggs. < 2 tablespoons butter. .‘ 1-4 teaspoon mustard. Salt. ~ Beat the eggs and add the other l‘ ingredients. Let stand in a buttered ‘baking dish about ten" minutes, then iset in a pan of hot water and bakeln a moderate oven. , It is well to remember that dishes icontaining cheese as an ingredient ashould be cooked at a low temperature ; and for not too long a time. Care in ; this regard is necess y to satisfac- , t/ary results. I i Freak "Champs" in Europe Being a champion is getting to be a f common thing in Europe. All one l needs to do is to think up some eccen- itrlc feat, and do it long enough to i declare oneself "champion." The past year was a busy one in freak honors. l-lcrr Fritz sinner, of Berlin, roused l admiration by eating a-liilo-pound pig l in 10 days. Another Berliner consum- l ed seven yards four inches of sausages iin a little more than half an hour. ‘Francesco Marini, an Italian, got away with two and n. quarter miles oi spaghetti in one sitting. Another "champion" is Price McBride, of Man- chester, England, who played ,"Alwaya" 1,000 times on the piano ‘without stopping. A .1811, blind l" lPoland played continuously for 33 ihourl. Edward Kemp pounded the ' piano for B3 hours without swillllfll. while Pietro Luccf played a trem- bom for six hours 20 minutes while treading water. ' HONOR FIRST ENGLISH AIR HAN In honor of James Baffler, the first English aarouaut, a memorial tablet was recently erected at Oxford. fill- land. At the time of ita dedication. stories of the fifat flight in that country were told. Badlar astonish- ed people on October l. 1184. "ascend- ing into the IWQIPBWQ with firm- neu and inftlpidfty." fill balloon ‘was 170 feat iii circumference and ‘carried a small brakier. suspended . proof of improvement. In the case of - library in the Royal Palace, the boyi dalryfoods. the increase has \ Dorothy lDix imgjgggm i Thanks I Fortune That They m l “The Greatest Benefactor‘ to Her Sex Was the Woman Who First Originated and Put Across the Theory That There Was Some- thing Occult and Mysterious About Women One of women's standard grievances is that men do not understand them. Particularly do wives moan and lament that their husbands don't under- stand theni. Which shows we are playing in great luck. For suppose men did understand us? Suppose they werelwise to all of our arts and wiles? Suppose they were on to all of our littleytricks? Would you have a. Chinawomanb chance of getting away with them? I'll say we would not. Thmgreatest benefactor to her sex was the woman ho first originated and put across the theory that here was something occult and mysterious about women that no man could comprehend. Myself, I have always believed that that was the secret the Serpent whispered to Mother Eve under the apple tree and that she tried out on Adam the first time aha got in a Jam, and he fell for it without a struggle. l-lis sons and his grandsons and his great-great-grandsons down until the present day have accepted the propaganda and have gone on blindly believing that no man can solve the human conundrum to which he is married, so there is no use in his making the effort. Of course, this is all nonsense. Women are really as transparent as a. pane of glass, and as simple as 1 plus 2, and any man could see through them and get their number who tried but he has been told so long about the inacrutabiiity of woman that he never makes the attempt. Which makes a great graft which women do not suf- ficiently appreciate. ‘ ‘ , How, pray, would nine women out of ten ever acquire husbands if men understood them? There is no idea. more firmly fixed in the masculine mind than that in love affairs man 1s the pursue: and woman is the pursued, and every man is firmly persuaded tlfat he discovered the shrinking violet that he tore up by the roots from the dell and bore off to adorn his home. Let a woman openly chase a mall and he outsprints her. Let her throw herself at him and he dodges. Let her try to capture him and he evades the halter, but apparently he never asks how the shrinking violet hap- pened to plant herself so directly in his path that he was bound to stumble over her. The bereaved widower never questions the sympathy of the lady who feels called upon to comfort him and look after his motherless children. The eligible bachelor never dreams that the good-looking widow, who is always asking," him to dinner, is casting bread upon the waters that she ex- pects to have returned to her in wedding cake. If some malignant fairy should take wives at their word. and grant them their wish to have their husbands understand them, how would the said wives work the said husbands? Tell me that, if you can. Suppose, for instance, hus- bands knew Just how many clothes a wife needed, instead of having to take her word for it that aha was absolutely naked and didn't have a rag fit to wear, beacuse she had seen a perfectly ravishing frock downtown, or a stun- ning new hat that she felt she couldn't live without? - Suppose men could assay women's tears and tell when they cry whether they are weeping for grief or for revenue only? Suppose when you began to talk about Johnny's cough, or how run-down Mamie got last summer,‘ hubby saw that yor. had your eye on Florida or the seashore, and you were already planning your wardrobe? Suppose no man could be mollified by a good din- ner of all the things he lllfls to eat. so that it was safe to present him with a bill for a new coat? Suppose no man could be Jollied or flattered or bamboozled? suppose, in short, men did understand women, as women say they want them to do, wouldn't it be awful, ‘ii/fable? Another complaint that wives make is that their husbands forget anniversaries and neglect to send them flowers and presents on their birth- days, though why any woman, after she is 20, wants to call any she's atten- tion to how old she is getting is an inscrutable mystery past all under- standing. In reality, instead of raproaching her husband for neglect because he forgets her birthday, a woman should consider it a gallant gesture that indi- cates that for him she grows no older, but is perpetually young and beautiful. llalf the men in the world would never find out their wives had got middle-aged if it wasn't for the fetish women make of anniversaries. It is after a husband has been hugged into buying a birthday present that he suddenly wakes up and says to himself: “By Jinks, this is Mary's 45th birth- day. Why, she is getting OLDl" Still another grievance that woman have is that their husbands never really look at them and never notice what they have on, or what they have done to their hair. "Why, when I had my hair bobbed I waited for a week for my husband to say something about it and then I had to ask him how he liked it,” cried one exasperated woman. "When I ask iny husband what he thinks of a. new dress. he always says, ‘Is that a new one? I thought that was the tningam-a bob you bought last winter,‘ " chimes in another woman. "when I ask my husband whether he likes blue or green on me. or yellow or pink. he says- ‘Ugh-hughi” said another woman. It's all true probably there is not one man in a thousand who, if his wife should suddenly disappear when he is out with her, could give even a working clue to the police about how she was dressed, or what she looked like. ‘ women bitterly resent their husbands not paying any closer utlentlfm to themthan they do, but if they only know it. it is Heaven's mercy i0 111""- Fur it keeps Friend Husband from seeing many a blemish that time works in the living picture he led to the altar. ._._.-...... As a matter of fact about the ‘hit hard look ‘a man ever 8W6! W h“ wife i: in his courting days, unless he hlllliflll l° ‘In ‘M’ Wm‘ h" “m! 8° w 100mm; {or defect; that will justify a divorce. 1f ha stays in love with her, he still sees her as she was when he married her, young and beautiful, and dressed in the ‘ “ions of twenty-five or tillrty Years ago. That is why Y0" hear men speak of their wives as "httlo woman" after they tilt the I¢B1¢l 8i 2M .They have never even seen their slim brides have lot 50t- All of which goal to show that when women deal with menthey don always know when the! IN "u 93- DOROTHY m‘ "coop" u a man with poor taste in draw. and the game of "dooping" is played by only member: of the llll‘ lax. London is having much fun with it. One‘ b11791’ reported that aha noticed a man wearing n. jersey in piles of a waistcoat and tucked iu'lik0'a nhirt, rumbling for his train ticket he displayed a "hideously gaudy" pair of braces. Braces should tain heated air to If" 9W" 9° u" ascension. The balloon shot up to a height of 8,000 feet, when Baffin" accidentally dropped to earth t!!! fork used to handle tho fuel. Be avoided landing in a wood by ulfnl oars. and landed after traveling If! rnilaa In a half-hour. After l"!!! up aviation for l6 nan be All"! tried, and made other flights. registered two marks. Anotbcf re- poma a pair of "terrible suede mini tbuoolmorpaaeoinawppeabyt brown suit." Women are enjoying the nuio. and tailor: mourned" LATIIT dun How many "door!" did you notice today? Ifyoubavofballutfium- iyafaiuatteea. in Min. p. blrlodlerfbo you until-more vfllrobml-ielmfllfflfljil’ J not be can in public, l0 the "deeper" , " GUAIIDTAN . . Milady Beautiful l! L015 LEIDI COIFFURES FOR GROWING HAIR While there are some 8111-‘! Wh° still cling to a short, mannish bob because it is especially becoming t0 them, the swing toward long hair has even been more noticeable since the first of the year than it was the latter part of 1928. My mail is full 01' requests for coiffure sugfleiilliln! 1°!‘ hair that is being allowed to grow and is in tho difficult stage between long and short. Hair that has 8Y°Wn lbw‘? ‘we’ inches below the ear lobes or that is at shoulder length may be dremd l" a, number of charming styles’. It is possible to introduce more variety into the arrangement of hair 0f $1118 length than in bobbed hair. ""1 this. peyhaps ,1s the real reason why the vogue of the bob has not lasted long- er, It remains among the subdebs and little girls and also 8.1110118 some types of women. It is likely to sur- vive in a limited way for many years to come. but the heyday of 1L5 W791!" larlty is over. so far as I Can 8e6- The first coiffure that I am 80in: to describe today is becoming to illrls with rather prominent features and slender faces. ‘The hair is P111185 0" the left side. A narrow strand of hair is combed in front of the left ear and curled up on the cheek. The remainder of hair on that side is brushed behind the left ear and waved. One of the waves may be brought over the top of the ear if the latter is inclined to stand away from the head tou much. very wide. deep waves are put in the right sec- tion of hair. The first wave dips over the center of the forehead. The sec- ond wavc comes forward to the level ofthe cheekbone. If the ends of hair are short they should be curled up- ward on the right cheek. The right ear is covered. If the hair is long enough it may be made into a row of sculpture curls across the back of the head from ear to ear. The sculpture curl is a. short, round curl flattened out and pinned so that it looks some- thing like a rOSBKt/fi- Another coiflure for crowing hair also has the left-hand. part and a flat curl in front of the left ear. The rest of the hair is- to be brushed back. It is then divided into an upper and lower layer, each of which is made into a row of sculpture curls across the back of the head. If tbs hair is thick, three rows or tiers may be made. This coiffure is becoming to the girl with a low forehead, regular features, small, well-shaped cars and a. head that is rather too flat behind. The curls give an attractive round contour to the back of the head. Tomorrow-Beauty Questions Answered. Modern Etiquette BY R0 BEBTA LEE Q. If a woman is given a corsage bouquet at a formal dinner, should she pin it on immediately or wait until after dinner? A. She should pin it on immed- lately. Q. What must one know if invited to fill in the place of an absent mem- ber of a card club? . A. One should be thoroughly fam- iliar with the rules of the game. Q, If traveling inexpensively. should one give the same tips u first-class passengers? A. No; one must be governed en- tirely by what he feels he can afford and what he considers the service rendered iswortb. Household, ‘Hints I! ROBERTA LII , Baking Powder Milk, water, or any fluid. when added to any combination containing baking powder, should always be cool or cold. If warm or hot, the heat ex- panda and releases the guea in the baking powder too rapidly. t Woolen Blanket; After washing woolen blankets, dry them on curtain funnel-n. This will prevent them from shrinking. ' Eyelashes ‘; n. stimulate the growth of the and ‘hlbéf-g V Avumallrlmuivmnmoffiffl-Mbvmmwlwm 1 eyelashes, rub with ‘pure vueline :- Literaturq HOW BREAD BEGAN Few people realize that their daily bread is the result of n. discovery made more than six thousand years ago--a discovery that changed the whole outlook of man and let his foot upon the first rung of the lad- der of civilization. I Untilithen he had been a wander- 1118 Silage. forced to hunt and slay before he could eat. Bays T. R's weekly. It was not until he/found that the seeds of certain grasses when cast on upturned ground brought forth a hundred-fold, and made a perfect food, that he was able to settle in villages and live on what the Bods hadecnt. There is evidence to prove that grain was grown before any other vefetable crop. Oats is believed to have originated in North Europe; Africa and Asia both have strong claims to wheat and barley. We have a school of thought that attributes every good thing to Egypt! It su88€ste that barley was first crown by the Nile and that the seeds were carried to Asia, where wheat was cultivated as well. This theory arises from the Pact that por- tions of pottery with fragments of barley still adhering to ‘them have been unearthed in Egyptian toombs. The problem of dating the graves correotly-nrost experts disagree on this subject-makes it difficult to prove conclusively that the Egyp- tians‘ of piedynastic times made Greece has announced 34 holidays for this year, most of them being re- ligious occasions. Time-honored stone buildings in Edinbuigh. Scotland. are giving way to those of brick and frame covered with stucco. For protection during falls in the snow, people of Bwitreriand are wearing coats lined with rubber or oiled cloth this winter. With feet so small that. she can wear children's size l3 shoes, a Lon- don woman is keen on outdoor sports and a great hiker, » ' State-aid construction of the 50-‘ called “subsldy" houses has caused a marked increase in the building of homes in Scotland. James S. Deal, who at 96 retired as member of the Deal, EnglarndHlife- boat crcy last year, after saving hundreds of lives, has Just died. An invisible ray which will detect bogus checks and postage stamps, has Just been installed in a bank in Germany. "If use independent anemia-y u. ‘ ture. ' ' Asia's claim l5 5m thfll? grain was cuitivflialamw. otamla before the 1am ‘ taken by/tha great mod‘ m us as Noah's deluge. it t; V,‘ fihflt bread wheat is a gm" I two cereals called einkom ‘m mer. Wild einkorn 51,111 some reaches of the Euphnh- emmer has been found a y" red miles to the south, ‘This region of the old wqm have been near the 1mm den of Eden and this farm, ,, is likely to have been meow ‘ wheat was first cultivatqph of civilization. We have evldeiiq Mesopotamian tombs that m. flood occurrerpduylng u,‘ around 4,500 B. C. and that Brown in this district mo" date. - A Woman discovered wk, , a woman who, threatened wig, vation while her imam w" homing, ate bliaseedgofwm Finding them 30w, mg __ ‘ gathered a score. Perhaps .. the seeds were spilled m- “PM We c511 imlklne how grief w“ ., ed to Joy when after many the masses she sought 5pm" miraculously at her door‘ H. band would be persuaded to my; new food, and some greet m“ on» . ' For tl_z_e_Cooli FILLED COOKIE sou‘ , One-half cupful, shorten“ cup sugar, one-half cupful rich two and one-half cupfuls flour, "ffiiloflns creambi tartanorn spoon ‘baking soda, one teaspoon "fl-lions egg. .,, Mix all the i- enh well, andpour hall’ the i.» into a well-greased shallow Cover with the following filling pour the rest of the bitter When baked and cooled, ~- squares. HQJHING: Cook until thick -~ ghgillggg raisins, one-half cupiul fir,‘ one-half cupful water, two rspoons lemonsjuice, and a »-- Lsvimm done. add a- llttll mixed with cold water in ~ - FElIIlCFSI} the mixture a little. beforepusing. I “I s68" Y has‘ identiillil prirgt§t4§$ thnn 2501000 » w-ftnaputfirfsingie ' error, decl oAIicials. a t, i -- '?' Nit"? .&\&1I,4°°.$",*"l“'“-! ' halfthe of flawl- ipsw’ $1 ' )f'l_fim‘wwlk, according to “ant estimate. ,,_ Apps‘ oflthe. uests invited to tfztyiunent’ for those over pxr, Elltfillfld, recently. more“ than 105.0130 years. ‘lfilled less than half a mil! nearlythriee years ago. I - 4 . Wuiedgigficaks has‘ Just been . . to a Breton, Vvkleis. resident. if daily’ -_ N OT one but hundreds of women write to u: ally about: the mm um ti: _ , Petroleum Jelly. For “ aseiine" %lly is a_ H914“ as intrinsic " aria for” ‘iiii scalds. Heals w" scratches. Soothe: bumps and bruises. Relieve! ' coughs, huakincal and head colds. Keep: small from bocomin bi once. Hardly a home 18 "Vnpeliuflje y. n ian and tubes-on uleev And remember, when you buy, that the m4‘ ' Vaseline on the ackagc give: ou the an!!!” ' ou u: getting z e g. Co, Coafd, 5 2O ' of the ‘gliibot Age‘, M00591’ aw-eW-“M TIAIBI IIAPI ’ I pVaselin<€.', J I