_. , '_ i. i,_~ i » i i ` i i --<~`. uw: i -.. is ~+_ i » i ~ i ,- sr. ~.-» -.cv nu... is » .* » c l ii I lf ,L 1 i M i `l I l i i i 1. I l l i l i ,_ I -i .. PAGi2__EIGH1'_____,__,__. , _ ,_,, _.__ g ___ 'umgHAi;L91rrorowNcuAgoi{u§1s_ . ___ ._____,.__,_,_____,_____~ ,_,____,.__,___,__._..___U.,_Ff'F,;;,;1y{B§F is -»_-W _ _ A 1 ’ - " ' `_' Y v*~ i -- r in What the Fashionable are Wearing V I _ggiqaeg-ite ' Wm A' - c_,_,w_ T, lvbldllilv 6"” ""“'““° l .mwius nooiu I P (N155 ‘I doll'l» I0 $0 Church," laid the .Woman’s Realm -.°- Social and Personal -.°- Fas!iions__ .; Lffégtqreg She will always be r ‘R Illustrated llressmaking Lesson Furnished i I l,,,,,,,,, D0fOl'hy cmpi-uw n' _ ' of a GAL With Every Pattern '“ “°" . V By Almabeue Worthington A- NW" ie i“ff°d“=° “rum un- No Girl Likes Boy Who is Stupid or Unkempt or ` _ T. :gy j'_ ~. .‘»>-‘A3 _ T. ~ W* .2884 The growing girl looks best in 1 _mplc one-piece frock like this. The ‘lt is rcniovablc and may be placed ih or low or worn at the natural listlinc as is most becoming to its .tie wearer. Inverted insets :it each side of the _'rout of the dress, topped by pockets, provide the necessary fulness to thc hem. Y-ou can carry it out in any of the new supple woolens. Wool jerseys in idark green made the original. Light *green jersey trim made lt strikingly smart and individual. The belt of isclf-fabric matched the metal buckle *tu the trim. Style No. 2884 is designed for thc uss of 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. , Rust red covert cloth with pockets and the front tab closing of the bodice of self-fabric with white ‘pique collar- and cuffs is so attrac- ‘ live. i Plain or patterned wool crepe, bleed mixture, ra_'.'oii iioveltics ami lwccrl-like coitons nrc exccilcilt ina- tcrials for this model. Size 8 requires 1"-i jxnril flfl-inch with _wird 35-inch coii'.i'iisting. our large Fusliioii Book shows how to dress up to the minute nt “fry little expense. lt contains most attractive Paris designs for adults and Cliildreii, embroidery, Xmas sug- gestions. etc. I Be sure to tlli in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of hook 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents. ‘ i i i 1 No. 2884. Size ............................._........ Name . . . . . . . . . Street Address | .city State i‘ii'ilr‘i‘i'~;”ii.-.T”'i"6.§§' -iii-_i»5iLi.rr¢'i“"T`l'”i§§i§§r"; T37wSiFi"§'2f{i 'gal' iii¢“"i'\i§i Slll|"l’lll) lf-Y \’\'£STERN POOL BA(.lO'l`~ !\iuiui. Doc 16-Bagot 'strict lwiillryincii -'»i`-1i>i>Cf1 13 DODS t turkey, goo;se and chicken for iristinas consumption. Shippers ere inembers cf ilic Co-operative sultry Pozl liznncii here and though ug quantity was .slightly leis than in prcvioits years the quality was better. I-‘lilly 75 per cent of the ship ment was turkey. cnc littlc kiss?" . Alice: “Certainly not~-1 have no wish to be added to the list of girls you have kissed." Athur: "I assure you Ihave never kissed a girl in my life." _ Alice: "Oh, then, I'm not going to let you serve your appi'enti.0eship on mo." ' Most men lizwo te die to become indicated. i E, i' A ./ Pa if M. xg ‘._\f Xt $7 Jarcliniere, or Wood gf! lil, ~ . SEE OUR pieces. El 3%2§ @%‘i&@% .The Unusual For the_ person who has “Everything” » ' Brassware is a happy thought. They are sure to be pleased with a bright set of Candle-Sticks, Jardiniere, Fire Tongs, Smoking Set, Ornamental Plate, Hanging _ We have a large variety of dainty e Rogers Hardware Company Limited 5! ¢‘\' ? lt ` 1`\ .\ ‘ | l t `. 'ent ivooilcn concerns. the decision to }\ .locate a plant iii Yi-rl; 'rgvinghip `\ ¢""=. 1`\ ‘ i"i .f‘\ BOX. fl, Y"\i ."C‘. WINDOW i" , . ei §ii~§i§r?h§i% i§§ir§r§i¥i%i§¥ 9969-12-17-Zi. = ._ .zz-.::;. _T .. . ---_ ._, __ ,_ :_ -_'__»-_f:~_-;-;_-, ,__ ______, _= i I . i , \c1~.¢..-".=.‘.~ = 'ii , ii " Y .-i '_-/_-¢‘%` l ` 1 IBIQIOQIISINCC The L ff" '»='f~'- T lll I -_ ;i.z‘ m“aia. RANGES A New Genuine Cui iron Bangs or improved design. Ono that you will ilu io be a vhlblo enrou- ion of the [ood into that you show in your homo and all of its llllidltmeuil. Oll Display lir- ~‘ Bethune Hardware Co.P__I:_t,i1|. A “Ill IBIINDI-I IAIDWAII STORE” » lcral occasions met the Commission, said to have its headquarters' izib:-ard. lin the miuiiripality. where rccentlyl Y ' i s ` 7 _ Q. What is a good plan to follow concerning introductions? less it is necessary to do so. I Q, Who is the nrst to announce is wedding engagement? A. The. family of the bride. Q. What is appropriate food for a children‘s party? ' A. Simple foods, such as eggs P i, sandwiches, and milk, followed by ice cream and cake. l For The Cook PLUM l’L'DDI.\'G THAT THE CHILDREN CAN EAT Two and oiie-liuli cups of stale in-cud crumbs, one cup of scolded (milk, three-quarters cup of sugar. four eggs. one cup of raisins, oilc cup of figs, onc~hnlf cup of dates, , two tablcspooiis of flour, one-quarter ` cup of candicd orange or citron peel, one-half pound of suet, one-quarter cup of grape luice or orange juice, one-half grated nutmeg, one-half teaspoon each of cinnamon, cloves and mace; one teaspoon of salt, one teaspoon extract of lemon. Pour hot milk over bread crumbs, add sugar and salt and leave until cool; then add yolks of eggs well ,licat/cn. raisiiis, figs and dates. all chopped coarsely. Chop suet fine, sifting the flour over it to facilitate the chopping, then cream it with thesplces and fruit juice, and add to the bread mixture. Flavor with the lemon extract and fold in the stiffiy iheaten egg whites. Turn into a. but- tered and floured mould, cover and 1 steam six hours. Leave the pudding in the mould after steriming, and ' just before scrvini; retreat il. Serve with orange-flavored hnrd sauce. NiL`W WOOLLEN MILL _ PLANNED FOR YQRK TORONTO Dec. 16-Yesterday it ,was made known that abcut three acres of land has been secured in ‘York Township. and upon which a large ixp.to-date woollcn mill is likely to be erected in the near future. While the name of the ccncem is for the present time withheld, it is understood that members of the York Industrial Comniission have ior some considerable time been nc- gotiating the matt/er. The fii'm ,whose representatives have on sev,I Said to be one of the world's larg- has given coiislc.:-i~:i.I>le satlsiautloii the unemployment situation has 'been one of the worst in the Prov_ ince. ‘ , At the present time another- large, concern engaged in the manufacture of eonfectloneries is erecting a. plant on Bude Street, while a construction firm is erecting a plant on Hope~ well Avenue, and recently a permit was issued ici- a new planing mill on Kenwood Avenue. I POLITICIANS BLAMED FOR SPREAD OF CRIME Ate./mv. N. Y. nec. 1s-r=oiit- ical interference and domineerlng have reduced the efficiency of police departments to about 15 per cent. with the result that criminals are running ramparit without fear c-I thc' law, declared Assemblyman Burton D. l'lsmor.d, Rep., Saratrga county.' vlce_chairman of the Bnumes crime, commission. in n. statement issued here to-day. E‘.smcnd's statement was l\1SDlf¢d by revelations of vicious practices in New York city 'police Cll'Cl€5 ‘Hd bl' news that Detroit Ka\‘k!6l~¢PS “C “°W using armored automobiles in i-M11' operations. vegetables, udqlng, fmi¢_ chick", “What do you dislike most in boys," I asked a group of girls. "I hate Condescending, Nor the One Who Thinks Himself a Second Valentino, but the Very Lowest in Her Scale of Values is the Tightwad n sloppy boy.‘T said the first girl. "I loathe one who looks as it he needed to be run through a steam laundry and a pressing establishment, and who cries out aloud for the mlnistratlons of a. barber. You know what I mean, the kind of boy whose trousers always bag at the knees and whose sleeves are always too short, and whwe ooat never fits around the neck , and who looks as if he should wear a bib when he | ate. “I don‘t like pretty men. I do.'x't calc whether a boy has n. classical profile or ai pug nose. but I du Wlllii him to be well groomed and well dressed and smart- looking. Something I would be proud to flaunt in the other girls' faces when I go out with him. and that will look as if I had made a killing instead of something that I had flslicd out of the gutter in desperation." "The boy that I hate most is the potter," said the second girl. “thu b°Y who is always trying to paw you and whose hands you have to fight ot! BS if they were slimy snakes and who thinks that because he takes you to a 50-cent movie he has a right to collect $5 worth of kisses at your front door. I'd rather have no dates than go out with one of these cheap skates who have to be paid with caresoes for their attentions. The price is too high for me." V "The boy I hate most." said the third girl, "is the one who high-liats all woiucn. No matter how dull and stupid and ignorant he is, no matter how unsuccessful he is, he thinks he is superior to the clcverest and most famous woman in the world just because he happened to be born of the masculine sex. I work in an ofiice with one of this species, and the way he con- descends to all the women who are his associates in business drives- us to the point of madness. “There are plenty of the women who are ten times as efficient as he is and who get three times his salary and whose judgment the boss relies on, but that doesn't keep this poor moron from patronizlng us and telling us that we do very well for women, but. of course, women can never really understand big affairs. They havent minds like his, poor dcars, for which incrcy wc thank God." _,______.._. It's his brother who gets on my nerves." said the fourth girl, "the boy who thinks that he has an irresistible line and that every girl he meets is in love with him and dying to marry him. You can't be decently polite to that sort of boy without his thinking you are running after him, and when he takes you out anywhere, or even asks you to dance, he feels that he has conferred the greatest possible favor on you and that you should be doing flip-flops of gratitude before him. 'Worse still that kind of boy always brags about his conquests and he tells you about how crazy this girl was about him and how many milllonairesses he could have married but didn't, and you know perfectly well that when he tells this story to the next girl he will be relating how you are plnlng away witli a broken heart because you couldnt get him, though. heaven knows, you wouldn‘t have him on a bet." iii-._ "The boy I hate," said the fifth girl, "ls the professional fascinator. I-le thinks he is a second Valentino and the minute you meet him he begins pulling his stuff. With the cocktails he will demand to know why he has never met you before. With the soup he will tell youthnt he had a. strange premonition the moment he saw you that Fate had brought you together. With the fish he will tellyou how unlike you are to all other women, that there is sou'ictl~iing strange, different nbout you from any other fcinale he has ever met. He can't explain it, but he feels it. “With the entree he informs you that you are the one woman he has been searching for all of his life, and by the time you reach the sweet you would think he had proposed to you if you hadn’t heard it all a hundred time before and knew that it was just his dinner party hooey. But being made love to by a mari who doesn't mean it is just as unappetizing as being gorged on that fluffy candy which has neither sweetness, taste nor staying qualities." "The think I hate most in boys is dumbncss." said the sixth girl. “I liatc the boys who never sense your mood and who never know when you are tired and when you are full of pep. when you want to go somewhere and dance, and when you just want to be offered a shoulder to cry on. "I hate the boys who never notice your taste, or what colors you can wear, and who will spend $10 in sending you chocolate creams thatyou hate when you would adore having ir. 10-cent bag of gumdrops that you like. I hate the boys who make love to you at the wrong time and pop the question to you when you are crossing the street and who muss'your hair when they kiss you and who will take 'no' for an answer when they should have enough sense to perceive that you are just wanting to be persuaded! ’ ' "And I hate boys who make me do all the talking and work like a cool heaver to entertain them." And "I hate boys who always get into a row with everybody." And "I hate tightwads," said another girl. "I'm no gold-dlgger, but I don‘t like the boy who puts down 10 cents in a little book every time he buys me 1. soda." , "So say we all." agreed the bunch. DOROTHY DIX. ruptlon by oontaminatnon with Little Tommy: Pa. when has o. man a rotten political system" as the horse sense? first step ln shattering underworld Father: When ‘he can say nay. my 'rm iissemblyman urged that po. lloe departments be l1u1‘K¢4i C4 "°°f' are so many hypocrites there " room for one more. ' PIICES OF FOOTWABE N. B. Cani\do.‘| Forest Wealth woods’ operations" sci!-satisfied person, "because there E . "Don’t let that keep you away,” ' -' smiles the minister, '-theres always ‘___ _A t *--- --°~~:_-; ;=-FB; /ff\ _;§~="' ,s‘& _ . . ~ ,F 1 ’ wi f-s - . s e , -.fst..-fr ' . N01' T0 BE ADVANCED MONTREAL, Dec 16-Canadian shoe manufacturers attending the twelfth annual convention here. took the pldge that they would ot raise the ,price of shoes because of any W l ~_ . 4 \ 1 ""~._\\.?i' "Q new tariff. They also promised to do ° icruniz im .might si. chills... 4 tam quuny' Pmoruiiig when she sees your gift, 1 General Electric Refrigerator! For days ` and months and years to como slie will always lie proud of iis gleaming lxauly . . . proud of the way ii lilhtenl her loadyof hum-drum drudgery . . . proud of the way it saves money on food bills. protection afforded by Camdirs everything in their power to main. John T. Tebutt, Three Rivers, Que., was re-elected presini-lit. John P. Maliale. london, was elected second vioeipresident: eaemtive council R.. J. Iieckie. Vancouver, G. H. Ansley, Perth; L. C. Van Clrecy. Tillsonburg; Allan A. Mink, Toron- to; S. H. Parker, Preston; A. M, Jarvis. London; Laurence M. Suv! 386, Preslbhl S. G. Underhill, Bar- rie, and J. D. Palmer. Fredericton, In the latest official estimate of Oa.n.a.d.ii’s national wealth, 5, -,.a|.,,e of over $l.866,000.000 is planed upon che forests of the Dominion, includ_ ini! the “ancsaible raw materials. iiuivwuod. and ouipital invested in \ me Mm gimme mm Associated Gas€o°E1ectric Syst Best of all, you ran give her .I Conan! lllcelric Refrigerator so easily that your poi-.ketbook will scarcely feel il. Now is the lime in drop in Ind A00 the Christina; display of General Eloeglg Refrigerators at the nearest dcaler’|. EASY TERMS ARRANGED ci~:Ni:icAiL@iELEcriuc ALL-STEEL nEFlrlGEl\A'ro|| i..,;~‘/A) For Sale byig»_“"\”° '*~l*__W --_--ls*-._ _ mimi? __ __ , v __ _ H __ pay much attention 1,9 '~_¢‘m¢s~»_ _, Cunnnieed by CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC C0., Um||¢§ ‘ Give H¢rCh1i.st~n\iuHoouu will in ddivuud in mu 6voQ&nUanmr\edy so in put under the use Her a Hoover and you give her the best! If you give your wife the New for exactly the same price as its prede-` Hoover Model 725 for Christmas, you can have the satisfaction of know- ‘ ing that you are giving her the finest electric cleaner wer built! In eiiiciency surpaes that of any previous Hoover by 25%. Yet it sells your old cleaner. ` ' H ) Ch'Town S at Where Christmas Gift Selection is Easiest . ¢~. l i ~.» *.1* __._.__1,__ , _ IDD!-L7!! C%S0l'. i i You can buy it on convenient terms: ravine only $6.25 down and die balance in small monthly amounts. We will also give you a liberal allowance lor d S Side a 1 organizations . S011- , 12-18-3|. . - - s _ =f _ _A __, ___ ____ ¢ f -----i BRINGING UP FATHER _..______-- --- -_-.~_';1 ' ` -BY GEORGE MCMANUS .mi _ur _ i Moo? l. www es-ir. Loewe. no »-ian. ~ri=.ur~i\< AN' nuns ‘sM~ si-\z°i.\.. Bl: ‘bun- r=>n.\s€D -sm' -aus Moe:-r maven Know _i wu'r Pu? BM 'rumm- /2-i7 'fusin- i "NYY, ARK N61’ Logyg AG] N _ IN TID "@\Jf|"\'l‘1 5EAR¢H ALL P°Q'i'\Vl-\‘Vl Tum qmgg. ID ‘£~°i'>"»°~`»l`““ ‘° ° \ You \.oo\m~i our O-°U! 1' 1