Rea 11.}; Hausa WIFE and HER Acnvlnlss A A is t 8'8 ‘III FLORAL CLUSTER . ‘— Imnotforgetthataieamoonful Floral clusters, worn in different of stimulant _ will 023g hi2 _..-wsys, are a feature of both after-Kin pulling anybne to!‘ 881 noon and evening toilettes. ‘This after such a shock, and a hot- Jpshion is otmtl: lish century hem: I water btgtttlenlfyilimwlthuzodgilg ' Boat furs v ve coats, hot wa 0 . IW ' blousesmdstaln t eafiubegeemwltllllalsonueullotulwlwdnflofg gtseocilicd with 11181113 3'5 he!‘ 9 P5 "um- " o; violets, carnatlons, lilies, and!tempera.ture is always low ht thew rohlik. . agothesedusiersVAb iseolwbfliiflfili" consisted or real flowers, for then cases o1’ emergency is a B11118 ‘"1131 "men-twain! flower had. not at- everywolrlanwillfindofuse at Mined present-day perfection. some thime or another. but. it is E surfaced 1'31 ~ Does Avera e Girl Make Bad Bar r , colours, “dead" shares ,mulberry and Tile dark and chill prune and ripe purple plum are; r the best background for these floral‘ V ‘decorations ' A FIRST-AID BOX When you consider how quickly accidents happen lnthe home. I hm sure you will agree that every ‘ home needs and should have a first-aid box. It is quite uneasy and. inexpensive matter to fit up a box of this description. but the comfort‘ and convenience of having it pro- perly equipped cannot be ove-r- ' estimated. Now that we can buy minute, quantities of all such things as; boraoic lint, medicated wool, gauze,‘ and similar requisties, these coat merely a few pence. I will now give you a fair idea ot the really neces- sary things required to fix up your first-aid box. always wise either to telephone or send for a doctor at once to make perfectly certain that there are no complications and that we are do- ing the right thing. WHEY ARMS GET TOO PLUM? Many an otherwise slim 11am is given away by a tell-tale thickenilw around the top of the arms. PM’. strangely enough, a too P11111111 upper arm gives a. very settled look- appeanance to its owner, which 1118 l is hardly becoming- In summer time arms are even more to the fore than during the winter months, with its attendant round of dances and parties, and, naturally, we all want to show them to their best advantage, so if our arms are showing any inclination of becoming too plump, we must 89f- busy and see what we can do about it. The most annoying part of this state of affairs is that, no nmtter what ordinary exercise or work we do, it only, as a rule, strengthens J 10m narrow and one wider roller f_ e, some strong, medium:- sTzed safety pins, a roll or two oi’ medicated strapping, which is sold PPWIWY b‘ '* “Pk” “d the muscles of the forearm, thus fitlgepu” dxewng‘ A "insular leaving our problem still unsolved. n We’ to ‘aw u " u The only thing left for us to do is sling nece y. A small but very sharp / pair of scissors. _ “Youwillalsoneedasznallbottle * of olive oil for treating burns; a slnall bottle o! iodine, mother con- "il-lnml DeW-ldde of hydrogen, some salvolatile or some good 1111181431‘ Jmtther with the things I ’h.ave already enumerated above. » Wm Pflwtically omnplete the outfit, unlessyvucaretoinoludeatinot yaseline and a phiai of new skin, is useful in case of stings, Allyouneeddoisgetalargetin box, enamel it white. then with some red enamel paint a. red cross .~aerossit.sothatan:70heeauseeat ~a~glance 111st what it is and what it 0011mm. and keep the box in some 18811? accessible mot. so that it can ‘be ""1111 111 H’! emergency. It saves to s/lnply direct methods to the too plump part if we really intend to reduce our arms. Massage can do a good deal, if we persist until our arms really tingle from it; but this alone will not be sufficient in itself. A stiff course of dumb-bell exercises two or three times daily, if possible, but twice for certain is what we must prepare ourselves for, for several weeks at least. This arm-reducing business is not athingwhiohcanbe dongin a moment. It has to be slow and 8W8!!!’ Persistent effort on our part; , but whet a. Joy when once more we are able to see shapely upper arms reflected in our mirmrsl If your prospective hoetem takes Smut pride in her» batiunoms, she'll ;love a. Jar of bath salts, box or both Dirwder and bottle of toilet water in matching odor. Add a. of individual bath Powder Duffs to that and she'll be doubl glad that you came to visit. ‘go wrong to know that everything you will need to den with ole acci-[ ~dent can be relied upon m h, young; altogether, instead of having to scour the house tc find first one gulf-LY MAKES IT IIZIGTBIIIAIQIQIIQIOXI KA YSER MIR-O-KLEER SILK Hosa . ‘Not a ring-not a streak-not a fault- the perfect, flawless SILK HOSE SOLD IN ETOWN At 75¢ up. bY. mute.- aJ. _.;..__- ‘....._+.~;.=»-.' r u 055 " u;,.~‘ ‘.--\ .‘ , rvéé“. vvvv w and ~$<><=iql Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box ' When She M es Poor Man‘! -~ Gold-D er~ Had Best Give up Hope That Marri Man Will Divorce His Wife ‘ for Her l Dearlllas Dlx-Yousaymarriage oifera ‘good career to gwqmm‘ evsnfrom the financial standpoint. That is true if she marries; man whflillflhlaiciflsuwfildbutithnottmeflshemgrrlesgpgwmgmgm thctistbefaioofthsvastlnliori ofwolnen. Iunawomanofiihmar toagcbd overlie man. but. me who is no money- maker. I have l-lwaya worn cheap clothes, worked hard, had few pleasures. We have no bank account, no car, and I-riend Husband carries no life insurance because he doesn't believeinit. Ifhsshouldloschiswsition or his life, I would be left stranded. With twenty years’ experience as chief cook and bottle-washer, the only position open to me would be that of a domestic servant. That is the answer to your question of why women see red when you writs articles about wlvsa trying to hold their husbands’ love. ALICE S. Answer: No one will deny that the lot of the woman married to a poor man has small earning capacity is a hard one. she must work early and late. ‘There is no thirty-hour week nor holidays for her. Even Sunday, the proverbial day of rest, brings extra labor to her in prepsrin more elab- orate meals and getting the children dressed and of! to Bun ay School. She has not the money for fine clothes or for any Emu-Elements. Y“ in spite of these drawbacks marriage is for the average woman not only the career that nature intended her to follow but the one in which she is most prosperous and happiest. I will say nothing now o1 the ioy that a wife has in the companion- ship of a husband who loves her. Thank God, there is no price-tag on that and the poor woman has it more often than the rich. Nor will I speak of the happiness that a mother finds in her children, nor the re- wani she gets in seeing them grow up into fine men and women. Nor will I mention the fact that children are a good financial investment that pays about a. ‘L uaand per cent on_the dollar in dividends. They are an old-age pension fund that seldom fails. look about you and see how many old. parents are being supported by their children. When a woman complains that marriage, viewed from a money standpoint, is a losing venture for the girl who marries a poor man, she ls going on the assumption that the girl had some special talents or ability which would have brought her great success in some business or profess- ion. lf that were the case, it would be true that a. glrl who invested her all in marriage to a man who was not a go-getter made an unprofitable bargain. Certainly Greta Garbo can get nlure money out oi a movie contract than she could at washlrlg pots and puns, and it WUlLid never have paid Hetty Green to have stayed in the kitchen instead oi the ac- counting room. , But, uniortunately, Just the common, or garden, variety o! woman has not been endowed by nature with any great talent either rinauclal or artistic. She is no genius in any line. she ls JUSB so-so as w looks and braln and education and energy and initiative, and incua‘ tile qualities that it takes to make a great success in a world in wnlcn the competition ls keen in every line. ' Furthermore, the girl has no vauiting ambition. She has no great drive toward B. fixed goal, 8nd even when she noes the best. mat. lg in her to do it is a second-rare periormance. hence we pave tno mulutuue of women in business wno Just barely mB-ke the grade. are slow and rumbling in their work and never learn to spell. sales- women wno never learn anytnlnc about the goods tney are trying to sell and wno never make a. sale unless the customer is Qviklfmlilriii lo buy. school teachers who know nothing beyond their tektmoks, women wno are writers, actresses, singers in the also-ran CAB§5. Hordes o! women who barely eke out a poor living by their work and who will never get good pay because they have not the aunlty w oo the kmd of work that commands a. good salary. not ln a thousand years could these women by their own ellorls make enough money w support a glodrofortahle home and keep a little car and lay up something ror their age. Yet a great many women who marry poor men do attain these com- forts bymamage. And that is what makes marriage a. good career xor a. woman, even‘ if she marries a man who is not much oi a. money-maker. He inakes more than she can. He is stronger and, bet“;- 3mg to wot-g and less likely to lose his job. And she has somebody to depend 0n. - j _ j "Duflu/PAY m... Dear Dorothy Dix-I am s divorced woman oi 3's, engaged to be mar- ried to a. very mce man, btvi have had an aiiair with a married man who has a. lovely wife and iour grown children. He gives me BXDcUBAVO presents, pays for my sperm-lent and takes ms out of town on tugs, but he seems very anxious to keep‘ our affair from his wlie, although he has promised to divorce her and marry me as soon as his youngest son fin- ishes college. I have tried to have his wife hear oi h.s auair with me in the hope she would divorce him so 1 could many him. as he could give memuchmoremoneythanidlemanIamengagedtoca-n. Doyouuhnk thismanwillevermarrymaorwillhe go backtohls wile? IiIma-rry the other man to whom 1 am enlfl-Zfid and the wife ever finds out about me and her husband, do you think she wlll cause me any LAUuD-tif WORRIED. Answer: ~ Evidently it is your cupidity and not your that is ‘ _ you all hot and bothered. Hence I can set. your mind at rest on one point. at least, and assure you that you need lose no sleep over the man's wife making trouble for you if you many the other man. She will be so glad to have you out of the picture that she will never worry you. And, anyway, she is a lady, and the last thing she would want to do would be to involve her husband in a scandal and bring shame upon her children. Also. though not posing as a matrimonial handicapper, 1 have a ‘strong hunch that your best matrimonial bet is the single man to whom you are engaged. I am quite sure that the married min has no inten- tion whatever of divorcing his wife and marrying you. Don't bank on that, for it is a hundxed-to-one shot that by the time his youngest son is‘ through college he will have tired of you and found some younger and prettier lndylove. Virtually all married men who are philanderers have the same line. They all have wives who do not understand them, or cold and unsympath- etic wives. and they are pining for a little love. They all speak vaguely of some day divorcing their wives and marrying the women they are try- ing to persuade into a liaison. and the strange part of it is that there is even a female moron who is credulous enough to fall for this antiquated hooey. For not once in a. thousand times does the man have the slight- est idea of ever making good on his promises. 8e has no notion in the world of divorcing his wife and breaking up hishomeandaeparatlnghimselffromhischildren, andoimessinguphis life in a scandal that will forfeit the esteem of all who know him and injure his business standing. But 1 wish it were your conscience, instead of your desire to Bet the moat money out of these men, that was worrying you. Then, perhaps. youwculdseewhatadasturdlythingyoilaredoingintryinliowreck Colitis may be described as A more serious form of nervous Indigestion. The patient ia usually thin and anaemic, And suffers from indigestion, With constipation and diarrhoea alternating. Fearing indigestion and pains in bowels. I-le becomes fussy and worried about what he I‘ o He la nervous and irritable and sleepless, And takes a gloomy view of life. The treatment cal ed for . Ia Dr. Chan's Nerve Food. The dl tlvo and excretory organs have failed For lac of nerve force. The power which runs the machinery of the This treatment puta iron into the blood. Thrau h the circulation of the blood New or and energy is carried to every organ of the body. ~ - The natural functions are restored And aoon you are‘ felling fine. u‘ w; 4bwnulMDunvz>~auvvn-uuuo-nsuam-a~.. ........... n» ......-~@aa¢-- uuaua-"a-u Tar - “Pars vvwwv . f? vvw na -:-'Fas ions -:-'-i lax kkkkmkk mks A v ovvvvvvvwvw k L‘ A vvvv-v yw vv ‘A_AAA4A AA A\Ll w vyvvv n vvv Yv-v ra mks ,yw1vvvvV ¢§¢¢v~‘¢¢$¢¢vv‘ v Try-g . . . Happy’. .‘ .i COUNT those friends of yours rich source ‘of blood- Wise! -I. IMPORTANT Kellogg's ALn-BMNP-becauae it is Stcnogl-apners wno ' of living. Health they’re healthy. Downcast days It may cause heads a delicious cereal. PEBENNIAL SEED FOR. FALL SOWING Seeds of many perennial plants maybe sown this fall rather than next qzring. They will germinate earlier and will have a correspond- ing longer growing season next yea-r .Then. too the weathering of winter weeds up germination in many cf them which, sown in the spring. are slow to appear. In fact. some of them will lie over a year in do not have the weathering .'I‘hs irlises, the gas plant, Dictsmnus and phloxes sometimes show these traits Bow delphiniums, columbines gaillordias, foxgloves, G- ‘ y bells, peach-leaned bellflowers ooreopsis-in fact any of the hardy perennials-late this fall and save that much spring work and Lat better results in the way oi’ germ- ination. Primrose seed gives much higher percentage of germination ii sown in the fall than in the follow- ingapring. Bowtheaeed inrows when it who get a lot of happiness out see the bright side of things —smooths over the every-day bumps. They’re happy because . follow common constipation. appetite and energy. Yet it can be overcome usually by eating Laboratory tests show Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN supplies “bulk” and vitamin B to aid regularity. ALL-BRAN is also a the ground before appearing if they, firl-tinella, and delphinliuns trolliusitwo u; nfrizlts at! liflident ll! to nplantlpiqqaa deals cl h! planting ia pan. helps them frequently BRAN more ches, lose of ‘I181’? brill- i AMorrizingSmile I A Problem Father had taken his small son to church. He sat and lidened very at- tentively without sayi-M a. word until the clergyman announced, "We almli 110W 81118 hymn two hundred and ‘twenty-two. ‘Ten thousand times ton Ahouussnd.’ Two hundred and twenty- Tile puzzled boy nudged his mm- er- “Dad. we don't have to work this out, do we?" the wash from heavy rains. a #911861’ l1“?! in planting seeds in the open. To obviate this danger, mulch the beds with some material that will not mat down solidly, such as oak leaves. pine needles, or fresh smmlntheqalringthebedsmsy be protected by fmmes hovered with window screen, which breaks the force of driving reins and prevents the tiny aeedings from being washed out oil-existence. This scheme is uséd quite widely. by professional gardeners lo their , a large proportion of which might be lost if fully exposed to spring urs. Those who glow irisae from seed, a. popular garden pastilne ct res- cent years, should plant the seed an inch deep this fall, Siberian, Jamie». ms tn. ml bearded sorts. This will give good germina- tion next wring, which will not result with as much certainty from lead. ‘some -ol which a year ore appearing P02601115] ed sown Q1“ hi) Will live plants next toll. The perennial seed-bed should bemadendw. wading inc good supply o! fertilaar ‘and sowing it 119011, the surface cl the bed to the plants so that they may better withstand the hot cry weather cf rnihummer, which takes such toll of seedlings each year.‘ American importers have contrac- ted for $500,000 seventy-two yard man building iron. v’ -'i‘hcl“bulk” in"ALL- BRAN is much like that in‘leafy vegetables. Special ‘processes of cooking and flavoring make Kelloggh ALL- Two tablespoonfuls daily are usuallysuflicienLChroniccasea, with each meal. If not relieved this way, see yourdoctor. Get the red-and-green pluck- age at your grocer’s.gMade- by Kellogg in London, Ontario. anooullageastrongearbirowth cf ~ ufactufld in Jo. all bran palatable than ordi- givea you the generous amount of “hulk” ‘needed to elimination. It is recommended as much more eflicien! in, relieving constipation than part-bran products which can- not contain as much “bulk.” with only flavor added, promote proper Keep on the sunngside of life 1€1(Z(»¢i’<22__ THE COOK -’SA CORNER GRIN-N TOMATO MINQEMIAT 0110 P901! lrreen tomatoes. .1 dozen HD1113.‘ W put l through the iood chop r. Sea-id and drain well. Add l poufiia srwulatcd swear. l pound ourrunta, 1 Wund raisins. it pound suet (put through chopper). l tablespoon mt, 1 cub cider ' _ , g, teaspoon, around sllspice. 2 teaspoons cinna- mon. 2 teaspoons (scant) nutmeg, Juice oi’ l lemon. _ Boil until thick, $6111 1n sterilised Jars. Recipe makes about 8 pints. To make pies or tarts, fill unbaked shells. cover with pastry, and when baked dust with icing sugar, serve hot. PUMPKIN?“ Paufllhfllding I-lav hall a pumpkin. ontpin milhvthraa Ugh. lllll of white wine. peel ct one lemon, two oullhceaoiourrahtc, two oi’ sugar. ‘P - * ash weil,_corc apples, and , Grandmother's - Quilt Patterns BABY CHICK Out out applique pieces and ecu u indicated on small block. Body color is yellow, black e es ora-nlii beak and feet. Set app que block-I with plain blocks in arranseme!" indicated on diagram. Finish eds! around quilt with 0 inch yellow bor- chr to match Baby Ohick. Allow for all seams when cuttlni pattern. Material Required . ii yard yello wmawriai for body 1-0 yard orange material. it yard yellow material for bodi- 4 2-8 yards 6 inch material M border. Block finishes 8 inches I011!"- O applique blocks. fplain blocks 6 inch border. When mm give Number 394 Send 16o for a book oi quilt W” urns containing ‘l beautiful Grand- mother quilt ‘designs - every w" tern different. ‘BIITIIAD 0F MUOILAOE down B! ihe 811"- wh loi‘. dlbruids