l‘ lle for many “an; Th, ‘ nhole of his e Qlleensyiore ahsllver- d the orchid and rose 11d‘! melnificent display of orch- flwis of therrost. which had hurt , .,n tlrr ' Wales. The Queen admired the scent of carnation-salmon pink flushed g, ih llellciwve-so much that she l. _.lsked for one of the blooms and . handed it to the King to smell. liter admiring it he told cw: of the Irowers that he liked pure colors, t on the whole preferred white flwers. He did not like heliotropes, fnauves and magentas. ‘Then he gardens of the Prince of as aille to get carnations all the ar round. - - one of the gardeners said that 25, even 10 years ago it would have _'ienn impossible to have a show Aiupprcaching this one in splendor. ic was surprised that in all the re- lvs of the progress made during e King's reign little or nothing lad been said of the extraordinary ilvelopment that had been going ll halthe gardening world, and of =iw great improvements in all kinds if flowers and vegetables that were i argely the result o1’ scientific work. ‘ o o o _Mrs. W. D. Herridge, wife of the Janaxlian Minister to _ Washington, ).C., is in Ottawa at- the Chateau auricr with her brother, Rt. Hon. ‘i. B. Bennett, the Prime Minister. its. l-lerridge is on her way to St. mdrews-by-the-Eiea. NB, to spend be summer months. ‘i to: Rev. T. J. and Mrs. Humphrey (ho have recently returned from ilennuda; are the guests of the onnelfs mother. Mrs. A. W. Hum- mpbrey has accepted a. call toll 13st ,.R.iver, st. Mary's, Pictou, icunty, Nova Scotia. I ', L I I I : 5%. .- fgmisi Lilian McKenzie was host- ' Q at-fla most delightfully arranged ' ty or her numerous friends last ulf ' y evening. " W- a o 2*, I Mrs: A. W. l-Iyndman entertain- ‘ d atiitea. Tursday afternoon invit- ig q e a number of ladies to her ome meet her guest Mrs. Char- 1; Hyndman of Edmonton. _Ml'. lid Mrs. l-Iyndman are being wide- r entyrtalned and greatly enjoyin! heir gllollday. _ ‘ _ w Mrfland ‘i/frsnH. K. S. I-Iemmlnl {ad as their guest this week Mr. lemmings son, Major H. H. Hem- lingqind Mrs. Hemming of Lon- ' on, England, who were very cor- isit. I I I YJ. Nelson Smith of Mone- H eing welcomed on a visit to ughter, Mrs. P. W. Turner. .numerous friends. ' t‘ a a um? Cecilia stocluim has arriv- ififthe city from Cuba and W111 ' (Line summer months here. At she is the guest of Miss . elle Wise. m. and Mrs. Stod- lare visiting in Scotland. s! I I I Muriel Weeks. Miss Marion Ids and Miss Grace policies rbfloint hos was at s. prettily muses and much enjoyed bridge arty at their attractive Ritz apart- . qenti-‘on Tuesday‘ eyening. .‘ Mréand Mrs. J. Fred Fraser» of "falllldir who have a hcst of friends ;qg'e,v_~jlav.e left on a trip i'.o the Old . ‘lllififiy. They will visit their son, , or, 1*.‘ Murray FJA-ser and Mrs. Ta-gsgi with whom they will tour 5 me continent before returning to l’ Alalifax early in August. ‘y. ”'- a a a I ‘S Mrif (Rev) J. Sidney Bonnell fmd children of New York have Jtlrljd to spend the summer at "helix cottage ill Cavend sh. If! I I Eighteen Canadian women have leenjhvited to attend His Majesty's ,oui't at Buckingham Palace on ‘une 25. They are: Mrs. Harvey -"-3'lacl&,- We'~tm0unt. Que»: Miss "Pamela Browne. Montreal; Mrs. lzqpbart Casscls, Toronto; Miss lglalne“ Ellsworth, Toronto; Mrs. Valfi? Greene Toronto. and Miss l lethea Grmnc; Miss Adelaide Har- _ son,‘ Memreal; Mrs. Rodney Kel- cl-pwltinlpcg; Miss Celia Lucas. _ ancollver; Miss Peggy Mackintosh “Hymns Ursula Piummer, Tor- kltqLMrs. Rouolph Timmlns, Mon- ir ffMrs. Christopher Vokes, Re- na; Miss Peggy Waldle. Toronto; yfrg Frank Duncan. Kirkland Lake. )nt‘§-;Mrs. Chnrkes Homer Smith. viagara-on-the-Lake; Miss VIEW! l, . i i . h; air-us at Flew-u Show recently but they . m m" mtlrly an hour and a “*5 10389!‘ time thBn they have King - e a white gardenia in the but. black overcoat, and ade a close inspectio of several the miniature flower gardens _ tents. while looking at Lionel do 11mm. the Kl!!! commented on tho s orchids and the rhododendrons jgflylfecelved on their first brief. ~l At the qolf club this afternoon tea will be served by Mrs. K. M. Martin, Mrs. E. F. Seller, Mrs. R. Boymond, Mrs. B. T. Green, Mrs. Ben]. J. Rogers,- Jr.‘ Miss Elizabeth Clark, B.A., M.Sc., of FTedpricton, N.B., arrived this week to join the staff of the Mar- ine Biological Station at Ell-erslie with Dr. Needles o1 the Biological Board. Miss Clark is no stranger here having been attached to thle staff on a previous occasion and is well qualified for her position. , I I I Mrs. . Percy W. Thomson was hostess informally at luncheon Wednesday at her residence in East Riverside, MIL, in honor of Mrs. A. B. Cosh of Charlottetown, who is the guest of Mrs. Hugh Mackay in Rothesay. I I I Mrs. I-fillhouse and two children Elsie and Donald have arrived from Toronto 0n a visit to Mrs. Hill- house‘s mother Mrs. Donald Nichol- son, Prince Street. I I I Mis Edith Brown has returned from a visit to New York. I I I The pnesent indispositlon of Mrs. J. A. s. Bayer is regretted by her numerous friends. I I I Mrs. H. E. Cantwell has as her guest for a few days her niece. Mrs. Tom Lewia, of Skawhegan, Maine. I I I Miss Maud Haslam is enjoying s. few days at her old home stone Cottage, Springfield, before leaving for Yarmouth, N.S.. to visit her brother, Rev. H. L. Haslam and Mrs. Haslam. I I I On Thursday evening a. large group of friends of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Christopher waited on them at their lovely home on Richmond Street, presenting them with a. beautiful silver tray, the occasion being the sliver Jubilee of their wedding. m. and Mrs. Christopher very flttlngly thanked, their friends and entertained them for the re- mainder of the evening with cards and music. I I I Mr. and Mrs. Reuben McDonald _ 6y. connaugh, Apartmflm Mr‘ entertained at a pretty house dance beize quilt- Thursday evening at ‘their new home West Street for their daugh- ter 'Miss Jean, in honor of Mr Gordon Bauld of Halifax. A three piece orchestra provided the latest musical hits, and a, jolly evening was enjoyed by the young P901316. . . I Mr. H. H. Shaw and Mrs. Shaw left Thursday on a short trip to Montreal. . I I I The Princess Elizabeth shows signs of delightful personality. She has never suffered from shyness_ the characteristic of most ordinal-y Children. She is too alive and alert, too curious and interested in peo- ple and thihss. to be bashful or retirine~and also (let it be whisp- ered) $00 conscious of her individ- uallty. The Duchess of York. who re- members how shy she was herself as a child and a girl, cannot quite understand why hr; dllughtgr i5 5D different, but by skllful and careful training she has moulded the Princess so that her strong persungl traits have not made her an ab- normal or precocious child. Yet not all the Duchess/s efforts can take that scrutinising and imperious look from the Plncessts eyes as they rest on any new or unfamiliar ob- ject or person. The first time in: Princess ac. companled her grandparents m Crathie Church a‘. Balmoral-she was barely four-her eager, darting looks at the minister, the congrega- tion, and the church interior, at- tracted attention. "That lass‘: will make a wise-like woman," commented afterwards an old Scottish woman who was Dres- ent at the service, “for she Sea; evefythlng with her bright wee e‘es." In police circles in Inndon, many stories circulate about the Prin- cess. One ofllcer on duty in Park Lane a few years ago, alleges that she saluted him the first time she was out in her pram in public; while lver quaint remarks to other policemen and detectives also go the rounds. "Why don't you take ofl‘ your hat when it is so hot," she once said to a tall policeman one warm sum- mer day last year, outside st. .James's Palace. Bhe had just been on a visit to her "Uncle David." It is not a'hat, Elizabeth; it is a hel- met," corrected the Duchess, who was with her. The Princess paused. a little puzzled. "It's on his head. anyway," sly: said finally with con- viction; but she remembered the word. Next time her father was in military uniform and came in to the "IIOI-DJIAKIITIIIM ‘lbeworkdourhandlhtbataowe I110? Lifeupoureyesandderotopray ‘rhewocrkofoir. hands-establish Thouit." DyelngCuflahuandMah lavetbetealeaveellfe overfrom MISS KATHLEEN moan, 1.1mm, MM Logan o! Halifax, who l; g grand-daughter of Mr. June: Paton, has vvun the lloentialo of the Royal College of Music, Iondun. 0m- gratulaiions are heartily extended toMiss Logan who is an umul visitor here. To Color Gravl When you run. out of gravy color- hsm or other cold mat no infill’ suitable for aim-me. mi! with will sauce or enoulrh 5'3“ "$5118 W moisten. and include a leaf of crisp lettuce or a low: o! finely shredded cabbflfl- SUPEBSTITION Maily oerstitlous beliefs cen- tred around the doc. Some of those are still heeded, but mlfly have been practically forgotten. Stray dogswerothe auntie of many u, titions. Should). por- son be followed by l. stray dog, of the animal's own volition, and without the slightest human en- couragement, immedlate good for- tune would foilow. But should one encounter a lost dog on a wet night. and should the dog persist in‘ following that person home, bad luck was supposed to be near at hand. Similarly if a lost dog haunted a. newly-washed doorstep and left its paw marks thereon and then disappeared, ill-fortune was believed coming to that house hold. To give a dog away was at one )When Piloting Seeds Iin the . when starting seeds in boxes or flats in the house, I always bake the earth in the oven till thoroughly heated through. This does away with weed seeds growing , or any worms hatching out. Mending China. . All 01d lady had a treasure pet- a chameleon. Returning from a Cflll-Yitfy visit. she could not see her chameleon, and rang for her f00t_ man. ‘Iltobert, where is Adolphus?" ‘Im sorry nrlady, very sorry, but it's dead-i" - "Dead! Good gracious, Robert, how did it happen?" “Well. you see. we put it on a blue cushion, and it turned blue; the“ W9 Put it on a yellow cushion, and it turned yellow." ‘7I'hat is quite natural." "Then we put it on a Scotch plaid cushion-andthen it burst itself." Colorless nail polish is excellent for mending small pieces of ora- lmental china. Apply a small amount of polish to the broken edges press firmly together and hold for a. few seconds. Spread e. little more polish over the m-acks, to form a "glass? and you will be able to detect the crack only with difficulty. leaned! for Damp Walls Bloom-n a. roll of blue plaster board, paste it on like burlap and, when dry. live it a good coat of paint. Wlhan the first coat 0f paint is dry another coat of paint (to which a little varnish has been added) applied you will have had no trouble with damp walls, and the board will last for years. former mom the curtains are white with an edging of nalvy-bhle braid, while the chairs are entirely covered in navy blue. In the bedroom the rough fabric of the curtains i: dyed a peach color, which contrasts delightfully with the blue-green of the satin bed cover, over which is laid t poach- As an artist herself, the Duchess appleoiatm lovely handwork, and. characteristic of her exquisite taste is the bed linen she has purchased. Sheets and pillow-cases of the finest white linen alpplllqued with a. pale blue satin edge and sprays of flowers comprise one set; another is in pale pink linen with leaves scattered over it. Equally charming are the sets in fine c1998 d6 9111115 wlth- the same irregular edge and flower trimmings carried out in matching or contrasting satin. Smart Clothes For Home Dressmaker When Paperlng "When papering. I use a. safety mm blade (set in a- holder) to trim the paper around the windows and doors. ORANGE. n‘ smvrin wrrn MEAT ADDS T0 rrs GLORY We have often spoken in s. gen- eral fashion of the orange as one of the best fruits to accompany meats. This m we very specifically suggest its use in e. certain way with ham. in the first instance, and with lamb chops in the second Hun With Orange Cook ham-enough to serve six. It is often wise to parboll it be- fore frying. A one-and-a-half- pound ham steak would suffice. Blend 2 tables is flour with 2 tablespoo fat from fried ham and cook until lightly browned. Add 2 cups orange Juice stirring well to avoid lumps. Cook 5 min- uta, stirring constantly, until sauce is thick, then pour sauce around ham on a serving dish. Garnish with parsley and a few . orange slices. lamb Chop! With Oranges. Trim fat frcl-n 6 thick laznb, veal .0: pork chops, then dip in melted butter or dripping. Grease broiler and broil chops until about half- done. Turn. and place a thick slice of peeled orange on each chop. Broil until chops are done _ and lprllitlo generously with sea- soningae-oalt, pepper and paprika. Servo hot. Suggestion for Sandwiok Filings Try some of thee suggestions, not as a substitute for the sliced meat and sliced cheese sandwiches which are both substantial and easy to make, but as s. means of varying the daiw lunch. 1. Chop hard-cooked eggs and mix with minced crisp fried bacon and enough salad dressing to moisten. 2. Wash primes, dates, raisins, or dried figs or apricots, chop fine - mix with about twice as much cot- tage cheese, add salt to season and chopped nuts if desired. 3. Smoked cooked fish or canned fiah-flaked-wtih lettuce or cross. 4. Mix dottllle cheese with chow- For summer, naturally, fresh cot- tons will be nicest for this dress. sheer cotton prints are partlcilllfly lovely and very voflllllh- nursery to kiss her. "Good morn- Again, plain sports cotton! 0f ing," she remarked, "Where is your linens with colorful bill‘ bmda- u‘ helmet, papa?" stunning for it. __________ Loads of other materials suggest Royal Brides Good Taste Displayed In House Furnishings Since she returned from her honeymoon, the latest ‘royal bride has been as happily engrossed as any other young married woman in the choice of furnishing for her new home. The Duchess of Kent, like the Duke. has, extremely good that her nlwlcillrtlinl. chair cov- myand wan decorations were such would make the ‘ideal back- as n4 fog-rho. barely furniture W». is one of the beauties of the h . oplibielflliclotilllflillll!’ um bola m u» mac's may and in his bedroomflrhebobs il-obvleusly fondd our new int!" themselves for this charming model u plain pastel or tub silk printl. ltflped t shining cottons, dotted. "ityéfifia. cs4 is deal. ‘ M‘ elm 1Q, 1a years, 36, 38, 40. 43 "l4 4*‘ ihchu bust. Size 36 requires 4 y"!!! of 39-inch material with 4 yards o; ‘.i§§...°."i‘.%‘."i..'t“ “ ""‘ °‘ “m Price of rarrmrl 1s l-enu m stamps or coin (coin ll 9'93".” Wrap coin careful-bl ___.--.-_-__i_-v -- NOHOM. Bills nun acnolcclel"lllfir otlllcsel-‘Olol-ilatIIIeII0OO!I""' chow. chili sauce. 0r chopped dill pith green pepper, watercress. onlon,’cr other salad vegetable, or with grated canned pineapple, or chopped nuts, and add salt to sea- Ion. 5. Spread slices of Graham or steamed blown bread with cottage cheese, and to one slice add a ted poa- Ilillll medium fine. mix with enough cream or salad dressing and add cult to season. This is particular-g whole-wheat more film 830st elm beef inumeléfid "_ butterinafrylng pan unt 0 ...........gfigét.k.é.............A m, m“ a m, “Kw m, _., m” a sandwich fllllna with crisp let- time considered. and exceptionally unlucky act. Forklore, however, is not too exact as to whether tho ill fortune would fa.l1 on the donor or the recipient! A great deal of superstition is attrached to the dogs physio pow- ers. Should a dog howl at night outside the house of a. sick person, this is supposed to foretell a death. In some districts, too, it was, and still is, believed that, should a dog be willing‘ to approach a. sick ‘person, it was taken as a sign that the invaled was in a precarious state of health. In the clays when the drown- irig of unwanted dogs was much more common than ‘it is to-day, it was considered by mum people tobeveryunluokytoseeflhecar- cas of a drowned dog. Many superstitions centred around the dog's behavior in the house. Should the dog run be- tween the master of the house and a. visiting friend, that friend- ship was supposed to be going to split. Similarly it was considered, nofeslor lilaodnnald. who Iflml to be my much needed oracle. h" suggested three different fields of literaturo with vvhiflh the H0889 modu- ebould make himself famil- iar in order to derive the unmet pouiblo enjoyment 8W1 "I51". - I have already mentioned his first field-tho Bible. Bic second mm unis atoryofkinshrthur. the sixth century ruler 0X Brill!!! WM held back the inroall 0f the 581W invaders for I BQBBIWB- King Arthur bu been the aub- ieot of countless tales and rom- ances and the best known of these 1| Sir Thomas a "Le Mme d'Arthur," a clear and fascinating narrative. In the very old Welsh stories of British legendary history there is an Arthur who is a (title chlsftain, and in the later welsh stories there is an Arthur who is an Emperor of mom. with some of the attributes of the French Charlemagne. These stories. originally Welsh, had been taken into Franco and Italy. Euro- peanlzed. and bmflflllt back to Ens- land again by the Normans. Two hundred, years after these later. Wglsh stories of Arthur, Mallory compiled his “Morte d'Arthur" from the Fmnch version which had developed on the continent. and made an English masterpiece English literature in the fourteenth century. The Welsh who called themselves "Cymry" looked upon themselves as the rightful inheritors of the Isl- and of Britain. They kept their an- cient speech and customs and om- hodled 1n their tradition all that was left of the heroic story and mythology of the British Celts. The Cymry were amongst the best story-tellers that the world has ever known and the greatest per- iod of all in their literature and in Welsh national life was from 1080-1360. They had many famous bards and story tellers and by the fourteenth century some o! their tile! were written down 1n a manu- script which has been translated, in the nineteenth century, into -snd this belief still persists-to be unlucky to tread on a dog. To a more modern outlook, this would depend on who was quick- er. the trodden or the treaderi A well-known piece of folk-lore has today become proverbial, viz: "let sleeping dogs lie.” But, should a dog fitfulw commence to bark in its sleep, it is better to wake it up, for such behaviour pmsages ill-luck to the household. When a dog rolls or scratches itself a great deal, this is supposed to in- dlcate the approach of rain; rain also is foretold when a dog eats grass or become listless in man- ner. When a dog frequently rubs its muzzle On grass, earth, or car- petsinthehuusathisis asign to the superstitious that a wind will soon rise. 171E COOK ‘S CORNER Some Attractive Recipes Fritters, either sweet or savoury, make an appctizing stand-by, and there are so many varieties that dullness should not be known in connection with them. A good bat- ter for fritters is made with eight ounces of flour, half a pint of water. two ounces of butter, and the whites of two eggs. Mix the flour with the water to a smooth batter, melt the butler over a low gas, then otlr it by degrees into the flour, add the stiflly beaten whites and fold in lightly. Portuguese Britten Have some slices of bread half an inch thick, half a pint of milk, two eggs, one lemon, and enough butter to fry them in. Remove the crust from the bread and shape the crumb in rounds about the size of a tumb- ler. Put them in a dish with half a pint of milk. but see that the milk docs not cover them. Let them soak for hail an hour, then lift out and drain for ten minutes on the side of a dish. Beat two eggs well (or om, according to the amount of bread you are using). dip the slices in the egg, then fry in butter to s. delicate brown. Serve on a. folded napkin with sifted white sugar and either sprinkle with lemon juice or spread with marmalade jelly, Danish Fritters Although this recipe requires rather a lot of eggs, than are at their cheapest now, and one can af- ford to be a little extravagant some- times. Five eggs, half a pint of flour, a pinch of salt, one teaspoon of powdered ' one ‘ , of grated lemon peel, one and a half ounces of grated candied peel and some sieved icing sugar. Beat the eggs well, add them to the flour and add enough milk to make it now add a pinch of salt and work this again, next add the powdered cinnamon peel and cltron cut into very sm i pieces. Have a white- lined pan, put in I tiny piece of fresh butter, then put in the paste and set over a very gentle but to cooklsiowly without sticking to the pail; wllsnthllilin amannerhak- ed, take it out and put in on a dish. Have a pan of fat reed). and when itboilscutthoputeioihollreof a finger, then cut it corona It each end to make it rise ‘and be hollow. Use a frying spoon or fork, put them into the pln and fry carefully u they rise vol-y quickly. when they thickly are done have a dish dredg- ed with icinl English under the title of "Mabin- osion." Welsh fdl‘ "Stories Known to an Apprentice Bard." The sense o! youthfulness in the title per- meates all the stories. They are "heroic. youthful. and told in a beautiful rhythmical language," but for some reason they have never become well known, like “Morte d‘ Arthur." Padraic Colum. a modem Irish writer who thinks the reason for their obscurity may he their m. pronounceable Welsh names and their title from which no sugges- tion comes. has gone over the en- tire work, simplified the names, con- densed and rearranged the storirs. and changed the title to “The Is- land of The Mighty." a name often lllitd in the original t0 designate Britain. NW yflung and old may have the stories. in a. very readable form. of the original Arthur. his court, his youthful knights. and fair maidens, and other ancient legends. “Myths and Legends of the Cel- tic Race" by '1‘. W. Rplleston is also a very readable and very compre- hensive and interesting history of the Celts of Mid-Europe, Gaul, Spain, Britain and Ireland. "Deirdre" by James Stephens is a. modern account of one of the oldest and best known Irish leg- ends of the Ultonian Cycle. "Midsummer Night" by John Masefield consists o: many tales, in verse. 0t the deeds of Arthur 6114i hi! Knllhte. and of the finding of the burial place of Arthur and Gwenl e at Glastonbury. "Two Glastonbury Legends" by J. Arn-iitage Robinson tels of the early Glastonbury tradition which connects first, Joseph o1 ’Al'lm&- thea and then Arthur with Glad- stonbilry. Some of the old legends suggest Arthur's descent from Jos- eph. The leaden cross from Arthur's grave is also described. but a mys- Wfy has always hung over his exact fate. Only last month an Ontario man has claimed that the Holy Grail, - unsuccessfully by King Arthur and his Knights, is now in 111! possession. "The vessel is an ancient one of olive wood, but thought to be remarkably well pre- served for its supposed age. It came from Jerusalem and was de- clared to have dresoended to a Ohria- tiln Jewish family whose ancestor was given the Holy Grail by Pon- tius Pilate. Tradition took the Grail to Glas- tonbury with Joseph of Azimatllea. Midwin- l e r“ ' y. T‘ ‘ cheater are the three places in England today most tmgibly con- nected with the King Arthur story. The ruins of a beautifulAbbey at Glastonbury on the alto of the first Christian‘ Church in lngland. (this church wu made of wattle». is the traditional burial place of Arthur. ' “M8881. Arthur's birthplace, has the remains of what in known u King Arthur's Cutie. It il a dia- lhpolntlng ruin but the situation is all it should be. , Winoheltq- t Hall stlhdl on the cite of not l‘ of King Arthur's Outlol. Blflllfli hizh on the one will of the, Hall is tire-supposed top 0f thllound Table. It has him: there for five hundred years. Henry VIII hid it repainted but left hi! lliflflfllfl mprlnt on it in the - a man could wish fu- witb the emapticn of bar grbid e which definitely helped to shape y Reolm .-.:_- Social rind I i‘y7ergll¢;jial ..,-f..-'Fq$llion<s' -:- .Lz terat¢1.re. 1 I ' Brmiaflwarinlflsvtfl .11|‘.-H0USEWIFE and g'eé3;lfl=l;léiire" u Dorothy Letter Box K y m Zfiflifii 6.5.3.2311’; ‘m’ “""“‘""’ ""-;'T”‘ Illreattoheatllerashycliopathic Case May Cure Wife of Senseless Jealousy -- Steer Clear of Sarcastic Man, for He Makes Impossible Husband q-i , Dax-MisaDix-Whatmultldowitbmywife? Bheilevmythlng picionofeveryvvomautowboml W110!!! I defend myself alnst her silly accusations. As a matter of truth, slum my marriage I have never even soul. ma. A. My business keeps ms occupied every minute throughput the day I have never been out at night without my wife. What can I do to make her realize that she is doing herself, me and Miss A. an unwarranted m. justice? HUSBAND Answer: Yourwife iss. casefora psychiatrist. Onlyoneakilledinministu- ing to a mind diseased can probe down into the depths of the morbid in- stinct that makes her get a pleasure out of torturing herself and you with suspicions that, in reality, she herself knows are not true, and. bring these unhealthy fancies out into the light where they may happily vanish. 1f anything will cure her this will. Also the shock that it will give hertoknow thatyouregardheruamentaloase thatloquiresweatmant will do s. lot to bring her to her senses. It. is one thing to have a Ifillfl. time throwing hysterical nts of Jealousy, and another to realise that they are liable to land you in a psychopathic ward. Or the divorce court. I think any man is perfectly justified in packing his trunk and leaving l4 womanwho takes all the Joy out of life for him by her false accusations, committed. ' It is a great pity that green-eyed women have not enough gumptioa to realize that jealousy will kill love more quickly than anything earth, because it makes tho woman afflicted with it do all of the thing! that men most loathe. It turns a woman into a nagger who harps upon her suspicions until the man (from to come near her for fear of having to listen w the accusations he has heard a thousand times before. She deprives him of his freedom so that he dare not even speak pleasantly to his grandmother for fear she will read into it some sinister meaning. Sh! watches his every move. she shadows him like a detectl w. she opens his letters and generally puts upon him the most deadening emotion than a husband can feel for a wife-and that is fear of her. And she offers him daily insults that would make him knock s. man down, for she accuses him. not only oitgross and indecent immoralitie; but of being a liar and absolutely unwo y of trust. And this affront in his self-respect and self-esteem no man forgives. ‘ It is a queer thing that wives are so stupid that they do not perceive the value of suggestion and know that there is no aurer way of turning a man into a philanderer than always to be accusln him of it. Many and many a man never even suspects that he is a lady killer whom no woman can resist until his wife puts the idea into his head by her jealousy of every woman be meets. They never come homoJrom a party without the wife's making a. scene and telling him that she could see how the women ran after him. He never has a good-looking girl employee that his wife doesn't nag him to get rid of because she can see the huasy is in love with him and after him. He never has a dinner partner that the wife doesn't catch inn-k- lng eyes at him. And so it goes until the man feels that he has to put this fatal fascination to its test. And many a man who started out perfectly innocent takes to having little affairs because he feels that if he is going to get the name he might her Jealousy it is nothing but sense to get some fun out o! it. DOrtOlJl-IY DB. I I I I I I Dear Miss Dlx—A very nloe young man likes me and I could can for him except that he has some faults that are intolerable to me. He has tho absurd notion that compliments once in a while spoil a girl and turn lwr head and is so apposed to flattery that he harps on the subject incessantly until he becomes a. bore. H9 is also very fond of teasing and very sar- castic. How should I act toward him? BABE Answer: - Give him the air before you fall in love with him and become a vic- tim of the hallucination, that so many women have, that you can change a man's nature and that he will be different after marriage. Nothing of the kind happens. A man has the same faults after as he had itigéore, only they are more apparent because he doesnt try lo conceal m. Never forget that it is a man's disposition that you have to live with and that your happiness is going to depend upon the way he treats you, not upon his abstract virtues. Some o! the best men in the world, so far as high principle goes, are the worst husbands, while many a mnegads who la as full of faults and weaknesses as an egg is of- meat makes a husband who is adorable to live with. This young man seems to have about all the faults that would dic- quallfy him for being an agreeable life companion. Hp never pays a compliment, you say. Well, a wife can no more live without a few oom- pliments than she can without sugar. It is a husband's compliments. his telling her that she is still beautiful to him, that she is a. grand cook and manager, that she is good company and he enjoys being with her. that sweetons her marriage and makes it worth while for her, no matter how hard she has to work and how much she has to economize. The people who boast that they never flatter any one, who never n! nice things or breathe a word of appreciation are cold, rolflsh egotists, too stingy even to give away a few kind words, and they are always people to avoid. Especially in matrimony. Andyouryollxlgmanissaroalticandllkeaiottals. Again. two signs of cruelty-and lack of sympathy and tenderness. A e husband always makes his wife the tarlet for lvaocbes that out like a. knife, because he is afraid to try them on other people and she is a help- less victim. A husband who loves to tease is a torturer who enjoys hold- ing his wife as a figure of fun for the ridicule of others. Never marry’ a sarcastic man or a. teaser unless you feel that you will enjoy being the stoogo at which he throws knives. , 903011-13! 91x, sluipeof a ruuol- rose placed in the centre or the famous table. The main thing of course, is to wear the right kind of butto ole on the rilbtkind of sui e- The following item appeared rac- entiy in the New York ‘Times: "Two concerts by the Washington Square College Chorus and String orchestra of New York University will take place during Spring Music Week. Under the direction of Plo- feuoi- Martin Bernstein, whet, is bl- iieved to be a first American per- formance of Purcell’; opera "Kin: Arthur" will be given in concert form. mule Spiller. Pearl Bummer“ Marian Rich and warren tee Terry assist." y. are om am __-- A boutonnicro o! IMABT BJUTO IIIUVIN will help to bring it‘ to if youpnnt to glitter, try garden-nu in cold or silver kid, quills dipped in [hid » and lilver time and lflflhfllll with I! you like something whlohtis Pdifforent," time are plenty pf feather flowers made so _ v only a horticulturbt know they are not real. f I For Baby's member of the ‘family, baby's tender, dolleeldslvln the gleeful can and ailqiiiloipifflle I09. loathing all: in Bolivia Ow. melee lmpoeiclly. illliuble For bublu. and if: clinging im- qrenco remind: one of Ilia rem of France which. help to inspire i0. l uor. or of brilliant t- e§°."lao.~y3§'£.. ' p. . 1 More ihonlihef of and who tel-merits the life out of him by nagging him for sins he never ' as well have the gain, and that if his wife is going to torment him with ‘. uflllfilflplflwlt” 114g":