a . ‘Juana. r Illustrated .. v- s-caina-a-p-a- 22:4 ':*.-_.:::......--~ “:7 —.—:.-_._- zrtzfi‘ ":31: 7211-..." ~:=‘a-o-p<- ._..“_ -......-....»...._.. ~unv -._.. “- figs siuuhihg outfit m: the deb and “l8 litt)! sub-deb who follows closely !f‘| I . HQ. ‘to whom are wedding presents t? ‘- . ‘they are sent to the bride. Edit all rightvfor the persona rd to b_e cream colored? ' ‘ },.A. No; the personal card should riever bewcream or tinted. , _ , 1h. When one asks foran invita- titn fools friend to‘ a dance,’ is it nacessarynto introduce him .to the hltstess? f . Yes; the poi-son who vouched 1' him should personally present =the hostess. r HottseholdHints at __ n _ Curtain Holders 41' I v’ Q ‘L -’ To keep curtains clean when the windows are open paint safety clothes-pins gay colors, and snap i > llluing Stains ‘ Blulng stains can be removed from fqbricsby soaking in strong am- monia‘ water. Or soak in kerosene and wash with naptha soap in tepid Cocoanuts cocoanut can be broken without wiliflculty 1r it is first placed in the ovanwuntil warm. i‘rgin_r<_sSr_sjwhnrs ‘I, i Whittle Sayer i H iflaflalflles women folk" bake . - .. nclbreadnoaoora A MomingSmile " - ~-w~»\q\¢nuu~p.-c_..- .........__.... . i¥wui ““‘ ' ‘- m an» u... ... . J v Willa! the fashionable Are A" Wear-in Drcssrnaking Lesson Furnished ~ With Every Pattern- ‘? v By Annebellc Worthington in the styles of her debutante stator. Btyls N0. 3262 is a rayon printed crepe that would appeal to any smart miss in its attractive vivid rod tones. The “ouldor and hiplinc bows are of plain crepe in the deepest shade of the print. The long-waisted bodice is caught with plaits at left hip beneath the bow, which makes the right side quite deep cmphasisingits d‘ ' line. The gathered tiers of skirt are decidedly youthful and rippley softly each time wearer moves. This versatile model comes in sizes l2, l4, 16, 1B and 20 years. It is dainty 'for afternoons in chif- fon in tomato red shade, or soft faille silk crepe in Independence blue. I Navy blue wool crepe with vivid red bows of faiile silk crepe is nest and girlish for classroom. Wool challis prints, feather-weight self-checked tweed. crepe de chine, crepe satin, and canton-crepe appro- priate. “Pattern prics 15 cents. Ba sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. Our Tashim Magazine is i5 cents, but you may order a pattern and a Fashion Maga- zine together for 25 cents.- uq._a2a2. ‘Size Name . Street ‘Address “ city state “For The Cook, PINEAPPLE PUDDING Two eggs, l cup sugar, 4 cups milk, z cups tine bread crumbs, salt, 1 tea- ‘ spoon lemon extract. 1W cups i, crushed pineapple. 4 tablespoons f powdered sugar. Beat egg yolks, sugar, salt. and the flavoring tn- gether, udd milk and pour over the bread crumbs. Mix well, and bake in a greased dish in a moderate oven. |When' firm cover top with drained ‘pineapple, top this with meringue Qmade from beaten egg-whites and ‘powdered sugar. Return tops slow oven, and cook until meringue is a. light brown. Serve cold. I ' Two young men had been behaving -‘ in a disorderly manner at a Revival- ist. meeting and the missioner asked them: “Why did you come to thisJneet- ing?" "To see miracles perfonned," an- swered one of them. whereupon they were summarily ejected. "We don't perform mir- acles," explained the mlssioner, "but -we cast out devils!" | Character Close-Ups , HOPT PUDGYNECK nun Pi-UMP SHOULDI-RS lNDlCHTl- "ri-us .6191. ~ v ~==I$ wor~~ l-fiSiLY ._ pxcirt-o r ~mmuih IAIIMI! sass -4vill~reet and relax the tlfld muscles. . I Was Wsaktliirny "After baby was born. I was very weak, skinny. Since taking lronised Yeast feel fine. Gained 22 lbs."- ' Mrs. Laura Benoit. Thousand! Writs new Ironiud Yeast adds 5 tn l5 lbs. in 3 ‘weeks. hollows fill out. Bony limbs get grace- ful roundnesa. Muddy skin gcta heal- thy oolor like magic. NGfl/Gillflfllflflli- digestion, constipation vanish over- night. Sound sleep, new pep from very first day. - Two great tonlcs in one -—_. special weight-building Malt Yeast and strsn “‘ ‘ Iron. Z“ ‘ little tablets. Far stronger than unmedi- catcd yeast. Results in ti time. No yessty taste, no gas. . so quit being "skinny," tired. un- attractive. Get Ironiacd Yeast ‘from drugglst today. Peel Irtat tomorrow. Money back from manufacturer if not delighted with quick results. lMilady Beautiful I: Isa can ‘ ' Brass}, liptJfl-Pd. rrahury Questions suswanan Oily Hair Dear Miss Leeds-My hair is very oily.It will not keep a curl in one day, even after it is washed. My headis very dry. Will you please tell me what I can use on my hair? Thank- ing you. JESSIE. Answer-Very oily hair is often the indication of s. rundown state of health Ind then, of course, them-st step is to tone up the ‘health in gen- eral. If you feel that your general should advise you waohsuit‘ a physi- cian. v - ' Now, for-the care of the hair it- self: first see that thehair is thor- oughiy-aired every day. Let it hang loosely while it is shaken and fan- ned. Do not wear tight, unventilated hats. Brush your hair thoroughly every day, and when brushins use forward, upward strokes so that the air may get to the scalp. Here is a splendid tonic for oily hair: One-fourth ounce bicarbonate of soda; two ounces cologne water; one ounce distilled water; two drains Gained ZZIJIS." a ugly? i vidc the becfsteaks and she will never find it out. health is not what it should be, Ii _ l ._ ‘, mu‘ g ':afi:r‘ _‘ u bitum- l inIlar-rlaga \ i _ .. j — _ Relationship If a" Woman_-Bec_eivcs Appreciation of-All Her Efforts FronrHBl‘. Husband‘ Her‘ Married - ‘ Life is a Success; if She Doesn’t Get it "Marriage Becomes Aslies‘ in Her " Teeth, Says Dorothy Dix What do woman want of marriage? Thsyi want safety first. This is a primeval dcairothat we have inherited from our cave mothers who looked out forisomc place. secure from danger in which to bear and rear their > ' - . young. That is why every woman yearns for her own ' home and why every we...- , no matter how mansi- ' patcd she is, wants some man to ‘cling to an protoct her and to stand between her and the world. Every woman wants to look up to her husband. "She wants him to be stronger than she is. wiser than she is,- more poised than she is and less dominated by emotions. she wants him to be a staff to learn on, a rock of refuge to which to iiec in every time of tron-V hie, and unless he is, marriage is a blight-lug disap- pointment to her. ' _ ' It is true that you sec women love wesklings. You see them love drunk- srds and philanderers‘ and shiftless nenr-do-wclis, but the affection they give to these is not the love of a woman for her mate. It is a maternal lovc contented. . Marriage has not given her what she longed for and expected. A woman. wantsilove in marriage. Above all earthly things she desires a husbandwho isa perpetual lover, and not a dumb one either. A girl nearly always says “yes" to her most ardent suitor, the_ one who has the most fiery ‘line of love-making, and she looks forward to spending the balance of her days in an atmosphere of adulation with one who will tell her how-beautiful and wonderful she is and how ha couldn't live without her. . ' _ .. . And as long as a man will feed his wits on soft talk he may fail to pro- As long as he will hold her hands she will cheerfully work them to the bones for him, as long as he will kiss her on the eyes she will be as blind as a bat to his every fault and shortcoming. At ‘the ‘bottom of fever-y peovlsh wife's disgruntlemcnt is the fact that her husband never gives her a kiss that isn't the peck of duty and habit; that he never pays her a compliment or notices what she has on and that he expects her to. be mind-reader enough to know that he still loves her, evetn if he never gives any outward and visible sign of it. Woman want companionship of marriage. Women are gregarious crea- tures who dearly ioveths sound of their own voices, and when they marry the big idea is to get asteady to whom they can teli everything they think and who will entertain and am use them by recounting the things he hssseen and heard during the day. I Picture, then, the disappointment orthe woman who finds out that in marriage she‘ has acquired ‘not h fireside companion but a human clam that nothing‘ can make oponiup. In many a household a mummy could be sub- farmrhis convmationilpcwers went. Nor does the woman whogspcnds . every Sunday and holiday alone while her husband is off playing golf con- sider that marriage is a gay and alluring adventure; If she had known that ' she would be left to not: by her lonesome, she would have stayed single where lhc could,‘at least,‘ have had other men's society without scysndal. . Women want justice in marriage. ‘I'hey put into it just as much as men do. A wife works. Just as hard and longer hours than her husband does. Ehe makcsrnore sicrliloea on the altar of the home than he does. All that she has of body and mind and soul have gone into the firm of Bone- dict d: 00., and. she feels that she has the right to be treated as a full part- a ner with a voice in thdmanagcmcnt of the firm and to receive her‘ fair share of the profits. ’ ‘ r And a wurhsh mu that she has been cheatedvand fllmflumfncd and that tincture of cantharides; four ounces bay rum; thirty grains quinine sul- phate. ‘rhls may be applied every other night and the scalp massaged, for ten minutes. L018 LEEDS. Eyes Are Painful . Dear Miss Leeds — Every night when sleeping my eyes water and in the morning they burn and are very painful. I donot wear glasses, as my sight is very good. However, the pain seems to last all day. Can you advise me of anything that will help this condition? ‘ ashram. Answer-The fact that your vision is good is not necessarily a sign that your eyes do not need attention. The painful and burning condition seems to me to be reason enough to consult I. reliable eye specidiist to prevent the appearance of any more serious eye trouble. During the do! practice routine’ your eyes for a raw. minutes, -8hut them for a minute or two, _thsn focus them on a distant object. Do not stare, but blink the eyes and move them first to one object and than to another; now close them again. "nus Alsodilolveapinohofsaitina cupful of water, which may be cold U anoyeoup and marriage has been a_. losing venture for her when aha finds out that she is married to a tightwad who will not give her a square deal and who expects _ her to work like a slave for her board and clothes. Perhaps the most blight- ing disappointme ‘ that ever comes to any woman is when herfree-handcd lover, who lavished ‘gifts uponiher in their courting days, turns into the nig- gardly husband who doles out neckaia" in her and asks her what she did with that quarter he gave her week before last. Women expect faithfulness in marriage. before he is morriodaman has the whole world of women from which to pick and choose, and when he iinally docs select one girl from all the others‘ of her so: and asks her to be his wife, she naturally supposes that she _-up‘to his ideal and fires hi5 fancy and is what he des‘ in a life companion. A180. 8M. 00l101\ld¢$.that._ being an individual of reasonable intel“ nce, he will not marry until hc is ready to settle down. . » Fancy the shock of surprise and honor with which shc realises that man is still an imperfectly, domestica‘ ’ animal and thlt it la 115N101‘ W 35°F a wild lion in a cage and that when ilwoman marries her rcol work begins because it is a huhureu times as aiuicult to m» l'b\ilbifld' l! "'- 11 W I“ 0M. And, perhaps above alt-what women want moat idmarrlagc is apprecia- tion. - They resent beinl Mun for aranwd- 11M! W" "will!" ""- ml‘ t v do for mu. families her the salcriiloes rheinléfl-le for them, but they want their families togivrsomc indication that they have at least known when auinner- u goodamtthat mother is tired am: sham nabbed f" weeks baaida a my dblft want,» have»? be a female shqriock Holmes who will locum that their hubahiirirtili 1m thfm (Wm ti" ‘m’ that they haven't been divorocd and tho-s ai-s to mun M "W? "ilfmfl- rhsv want their tallthitinitiiltfii‘ “ti”! "° “w” 1suxineusuthovm_wmimwo1orum4sbl=-W'1W°mmm°". and more aver! day. Thaymant thsi\"bRQ'I,oflA,.W mFW‘-°Y”I°"~ hmuvm havingbeatowatthennupon-tbomvas wives. ~ {riser will "I!" that-have fathom was": time that w“ ll" flslbsrhickwheatcakas.‘..~‘~" i ‘~ -<- . ' :_ ',_'. l Jlandifwetlflillilllilfldlufl a. »h g ‘/....i‘ that is half pity, half contempt, and the woman is never happy herself or. 3, Peter D. Peters. Helen R. Bark; Marv M. Sark, for the husband and. the wife would never i'ind~ out tho difference so. ,,_ '1. Bark. - Qvkhaqriuarranoui, ~ a M. Bark; 2, El Bark; 2.1mm. hands. i .- Bark; a, Mark Knockwood dioKnockwood. ’ ~ ‘ " i Writs for, , _ I FRBB Recipe ' ~ Book iurlsuvtwuskmmmatuuu-t. g "More, FRY’S please mQmmY if?’ n. m, use‘ of ray-s delicious Cocoa keeps chil. dren rosy- checked and healthy. It ‘is a complete food for a growing child. English Gatcohlsnr zhq.:oii_q,-1. g, Madeline sci-k; a, w t (t) Grammar-if Margaret‘ M. v i ,, o)‘ 6th Standard-i,’ mm hands; 2, Margaret M. Bark. 4th Standard-l, Patrick J. Labobo; 2, Madeline Bark. . 3rd Standard-J, Helena ._I‘rancls: 3, William Mar-r; 3, Mary L. Bernard. 2nd Standard-i, Helen n. Bark; 2, Mary M. Bark; s, Elisabeth‘ , 1st Standard-i, Mary Arnrpapleu; 2, Mary Knockwood; I, Pater T. Labobe. -- ~ .Gcogrsphy—1, Margarst-Jl. Bark; a, Elissrrancls. ~‘ History of England-i, “Margaret Francis. T ~, Canadian -1, hlwrgarlt‘ M‘, jrablss, Senior-i, Helena transfer a, ‘Patrick Labobs; a. Madeline sark.‘ Tables, Junior-J, Maniac. ssrk‘; a, Helena R. Bark; 8, Elisabeth Marr.‘ Arithmetic, m ‘class-i, miss Francis; 2, Margaret M. Sark, ' Arithmetic. 2nd.» Gilli-i,‘ Madeline Sark: a, Helenif-‘Yrancis; afirarrnk a. ' Labobo. Arithmetic, 8rd O " . .7. ufiary u. mumm- x, .. "Regular AtHhdlnoe-J. ' M“! _I. Bark,“ Helen It.‘ Bark, cquali I, Mary NZ ll“. Battier MIX. lquaiil. Francis, Helena ‘Francis, Margaret‘ Bark. Willi. i Mr. and Mrs’. were visitors to Oapa ‘Havens on 1mm llwmwfl. "19 ‘stasis of their dsuflr- matbuaarfatrvnt " mutin- ~ m. aha Mrs. James ltocmn was visitors to liirnmetalda oaasturssy. \ , Bessie ‘J verse. iaspsndlrifa-faw sarrio Al- . , ui~ra==.--"-.i~1.-~w Mrs-v ddrftitilaalilailtllliifl ~ ‘ » Miss Ruby Burns has returned home, after spending the week end in Caps Traverse. Whilathors jshu was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Olaudc Howatt. . , ,_ .... .5 Misses Jean and MargarsLAf- fleck were visitors to bummersidc on’ oveni-ll- While W" they‘ attapdedtha hockey match. ' McsarsfMicliacl aha smiley ne- laney were visitors to 19v!!!‘ ‘Bcdcquo “rruasaayl tbs guests o! Mr. anti‘ ‘Harbor. was a visitor to the ciw rec- rn-ainsu mums. __ ‘. Messrs. George“ and Lloyd Walsh jwsrs paspsngers on the capital’ train‘ sir-Tuesday mums to Summer-aide in stress‘ qtas 0mm vs Abbies hockey matth. on». Charles fwd. as... Bede-y qua, was a visitor us Bummer-side on ‘iusscay; V_ '\ v w. George Burns made a business trip toglnmmersida last week. Mr. Joe McDonald. Bedaquo, at- untied the hockey match inOapa ‘traverse rink on Monday night. m. o. s. musty-Qua passenger" on the train to Surnmarahis on Tucs- day evening. ’ . MlssiMa Walsh has ntufflfii home‘ after spending S. A. - Mrs. George Heifer-and Mr. Harold Heffeli weresmone the many from this vicinity who attendodtho hockey match in senior-nus‘ 0ft rumor pvbaiag. '. _ _ sir.- has ra- ‘after spcfldlng moms time visiting _ ' and‘ relatives “Alumni!- "t? i‘ O bovsralanonths ih-ot A f/fm 'a biilrirsulinsvl Miss Ida MscKay of Mount Stews art. has left recently for Montreal ‘rho schools have all rc-opcnet after their holidays. sndflboth teach- ‘ crs and pupils feeling greatly rs- frcshed to start another half year cl studying. . . The monthly meeting of the Mount Stewart Women's Institute was hell on Tuesday in the I. O. F. Hall- Mrshlicccy L. Colin of Savage eutlr. »>'.';_ v . I ___'_~ ‘The annual meeting of the Mount Sfswart‘ United Church was held as Wednesday, January eighth and was ‘vary wsii attended. . ‘. - v v a‘ " ‘Mrsyira Johnson of Gansvoy, left “Ireoently on an extended visit to A i ‘friends and relatives in Toronto. an! ‘heroianyrrisnds wish her-aver; pleasant trip. lithe-runny friends of Miss Gladys ‘Aflicckiof Mount Stewart. lrs sofl‘! is learn‘ that she is cbhflncd to in: homo owing tsruhsss. and 110M w Bab on» es. Iaaasl!» I haul