-‘ ~.,»:_:P.f '17P" f‘ vvv vv- yv wv L vvvvvvv w ’s_ R n‘ asks ‘masks Ywvivvwww Vwvvv _ vvw v 4 a... o‘ -_k' i. i ":;";i~ cola... _ r.» vgvx w mum's noose 1b truths house there is a sinslo , which is - experience. Kc L asks oemvrsu woman .. - ‘ ro nnnss gross snmx to drea in more aimoie ’ ' aimdermpi-svsniwamoctextue , materials and, it issuggested, to _ ",.... achieve that “much coveted slender- wastefulness of pleats and trains, but he suggests with a. guile that suggests he knows the feminine minds, that they emphasise the "rotundity" that wmnen fear. . ill-vi- ' mum of imported raw material. "ms Fashion Institute is in organise a travelling exhibition to encourage the use of substitute fab sits . ’ . CLOCHES IN STIAW ‘c .1 is showing new models is 'papyruastraw.'l‘his isused in ciocheswibhtbstlmof tbecrown ‘tlationed by a group of tucks which mam slieels or blisters Omani and - lacquer red felts are another fea- i e 5 E3 E ill-l i ,5? lilalé it and. 3 the akin cannot be fed from with- out. Skins differ in their require- mtsanditis wisetotrydiffer- ent producm until you find one that suits you-then stick to that particular brand. FASHIX TIPS FOB TALL AND SMALL WOMEN Ifyouaretall. . . watchout against “striking" clothes. It is a mistaken idea. that the tall woman can get away with daring colors and daring line. The writer under- stood this while talking recently to a well known designer about a tall, elegant woman client. ' "How you must enjoy dressing her!" "Yes," aha replied, “but with what precaution! Everything she puts on oxaggerates and becomes too important." Soft clinging silks are more advis- able than taffetas and fa-illes and many of the new blstered and quilt- ed materials, but the heavy elastic mp9! and '*broches" are parti- cularly adapted to the tail woman's needs. Three-quarter tunics and two-tone dresses and indeed any combination that breaks the line between the thighs and knees is to be recommended. Brimmed hats and sleeve l- terests both help to reduce height. use Ifyouaresmall. . .thereare many daring fashions that you must deny yourself. For example, you will avoid two-color frocks in which the 90D ls lighter than the skirt, or vioeversa. This type dress, becoming to a tall woman, will cut you off _at the waist and make you look smaller than you really are. You will avoid three-quarter- lflllith coats like the pll8lle..If you‘ are thinking about a patterned material choose stripes rather than checks and little designs in pm- ferencs to large. 0n the other hand, bright colors are to be recommeneded. m even- 1118 W81‘. ' simple clinging Bowns in preference to frilly frocks or "robes dc style." Never com- HIGH NEOKIJNES fons and rich James, with black skirts and jackets. 'ro on: on N01‘ 'ro on: I! wmnnY-nrsoussnn qossnon ‘rhedayawomandiscoverghu- comm K39"? * . '|\‘\ ” ' i ‘ 5unNY nus-rm Divinity i... An aqua: < Aweal Bissau I I 9i. cup boiling water 2-3 white corn syrup ii teaspoon vanilla Reg: whites ‘A cup chopped nuts '4 WP O . 01mm. chewed it cup tgieen cherrres, chopped i4 teaspoosnsait Put into a saucepan, sugar, water. Place over slow heat and stir imtli sugar is dil- solvcd. Piltwveronponandbofllp salt, corn syrup. 350 dances I"; (or until to cool somewhat. Beat the egg whites still, vanilla, nutsand cherries ( are already pre EQUINE. cedure, the candy may be warm water, l tablespoon flour 1 tablespoon butler 1 cup milk i can tomato soup Orisp bacon slices . Toast nec y. Place slices over toast. Garnish w.th it pound fresh m mento 1 small slice onion 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour ii to i6 teaspoon salt Cayenne Chop the ni .n pan over low heat unt 5 minutes). ‘too thick, t. ' room stc '1: or water. Add cayene. cool. Spread lightly buttered mushroom gone right past it." ‘dropped m cold water will form a. firm ball.) Remove from heat when this stage is reached. and allow syrup gradually beat the syrup into them. Continue to best until the mixtire begins to thicken well-then add pared.) 1'11"! candy into buttered deep plate or a cake pan and mark into Or drop by small spoonfuls buttered pan or platter-or mould in small balls. For this slower pro- enough by placln: its bowl ovu- Savoury Tomaio Toast With Bacon Make a white sauce with milk, flour and butter. Add tomato soup. Reheat and stir smooth. Season ii of toast on heated serving plates and pour sauce crksp bacon and serve at once. Toasted Mushroom Sandwiches 1 eight-ounce can mushrooms or ushrooms 1 three-and-a-half ounce can pi- ushroonis, pimento and onion. Saute in melted butter rooms and onion are tender (about Stir occasi rally. Sprinkle flour over mushrooms and stir and cock until thickened. If in a little mush- Ousuanerf“! haven't come to Hunk yo! noticed the yeI hppieathourloeeurondayewin youfeolyoai-beaf Have more cl time happy hya- Tcl and all your family. Guard health while you have it. Keep an the‘ sunny side of lilo. The greatest enemy of llealtb is common constipation. l: may eeue lou of appetite and snsrgy. Certainly a km. enthusiasm! Yd l’ can bs banlabed by eating a delicious cereal. Laboratory lest! allow Kellogg's ALL-BIA! implies “bulk” and visa- liin B to relieve common coali- pafiou. Also fron for the blood. The “bulk” in ALL-Bun is much like that in leafy vegetables. How Jmeb pleaeanler to eat this dell- eions ready-local cereal than ce his patent medicines. Two tablo- apoonfnla daily are ulna“! "'5' clout. Chronic cues, will: each meal. If not Io- llevad this way. see your doctor. Made by Kellogg l" hfl“ 9'": {lime andvsry which all ' (It kept soft: Threatening Gestures Iiittle Bobby hall been taken to a concert by his father. It was the first he had heard, and his mother was eager to learn how he liked ii. “Daddy thinks it was a good con- cert," she said. "The band played very woiL What do you tlnnlk, Bobby?" “On, it was pretty good," sail the boy off-handediy. "They played well ‘ cause they had to." "Whatever do you mean?‘ ‘asked mother, stifled. "Well, they had a man in front of them three them with a stick," explained the boy. allies o! Double L058 Outside the station the rain fell in torrents, and the one passenger who had alightcd from the last. train galed dismally around There was no help for it; he would have to take a taxi home. - "How much do you charge to drive to ——-——Strect?" he called to the solitary driver. "Five shillings," replied the man. Fora time they haggled, but the driver refused to come lower than four shillings. At last the prospec- il mush- saltand slicesof m“ ‘m’ = "=4 tive m» his l. mm wave httfifih? °“‘ p3,, J" w» M “M - m driver agreed. m called, "Heads." and beads it was. "Rotten luck" growled the other, WM“? "Ta “ab” mu" whose name by the way was Isaac- Oustomer (taking another huge l ’ ' mouthful): "Now. ma. m!‘ rlrikiahall have to walk after Waiter: "Hm-mi You must have Uaellnarfalarlorolbct iLDofotlty 0136s, ~ MuetWeJimtUwur OWIIT——SlZI'IlK‘ht Talk ioWife" o Com lalna Hus- band W ants Her to Get reakfast osuuiisnu-oemuiuwtmtbsreuscirtuiimumim bymturemfgegiverypeuaoenordoycubelieve thstitisuptoustoeelcct ourown ‘LA-S- Answer: ' Iameentimentalenaugiiciabeliavathet thereisamateforeachofualomowhercin tbewidmwideworlmaouisonewhoisour very our affinity are so remote as to be neilifllflfi- Occasionally a man and woman who are Jedosttned mates do meet, and when that happens we have what we call love at first sight. "They recognise each other at once and are drawn together irresistibly. They have no need to aetscqusintcd. They have known each other always. They do not need to test their feelings. ‘fliey know they have found what they are seeking and the quest is at an and. Such marriages are, as the old phrase goes, made in. heaven. _ The happy marriages are those of the lucfl 990910 who have found their mates. The unhsPPy marriages are those in which the husband and wife are mismated. The whole problem of the success or failure of a marriage is bound up in getting the husband or wife who is the right one or the individual. ‘rhcintriusiowcrthofthepersonhasverylittlaifanythingntodo with it. Every day we see fretful, discontented women married totuien who are model husbands, who are tender. kind, considerate and ,. vide them with every comfort. And we see men wlioare unfaithful to wives who are beautiful, intelligent, amiable, domestic-paragon: of wives. And we see women happy and content with bands who fall of! the water wagon now and then, who are high-tempered and irritable, who are shift- less and lazy and poor providers. _ And we lee husbands crazy about wives who are homely or dumb or extravagant or sloppy~and alovenly housekeepers. The explanation is that the happy married people are those who have found their mates, the ones who had the qualities that satisfied- them, and that outweighed all their faults. Whereas the rnisznated found even their husbands’ and Does Nature lfirovideltfatefor-Each‘ of us, of I Fclskions -:-, 1co6-_'e-a_pee_o~,4e--ee¢f~§“*" g ... SMART ROCK? g ' "IIIONABLE PEOPLE I illustrated Dr wives’ virtues intolerable because they answered no o need in themselves, For proof of this theory you have only lo lliillud how often second meninges are happier than first. Inasmuch, however, as our chances 'of winning out in the matrimon- ial lottery by finding the mate which Nature intended for us are about a milllon-to-one shot, it is not safe to sit down and fold our hands and trust toLady Luck to bring ourprize to us-that is, ifwe wantto getmarried at all. Nor is it feasible to wander about with a. dark lenrorn in our hands searching for the Right One, as Diogenes searched for an honest man. The best we can do is to look 'em over as carefully as we can, and to try to deduce irom this and that whether he or she fills the bill or not. It is, of course,‘ a procedure in which one, is liable to make mistakes, but it leaves us an opportunity to at least exercise our own taste and discrim- inatlon. Unfortunately, however, very few people take tlieItroubIe really to select their mates. ‘lhey leave the most important thing in their lives to chance and marry the girls or menthey work next to in an 031cc 01‘ the girl or boy they. met on a week-end. without any reference whatever to whether they coma up to their ideals or satisfy their testes or not. 8o it~is no wonder that we have so many mismated husbands and wives. DORAYIHY DIX. ‘ Dear Miss Dix-J am married to a man who is good and kind, with- out any bad liabim, and who is a good provider. But we are unhappy with each other and quarrel over little things. He complains because I like tosoayuplateatnight andreadandsieep inthe morning andhehusto get his own breakfast. He has to work early, but I leave the things on the table at night for him to cook Also, when bringng in wood and water he does not clean his feet properly and tracks in dirt, and when I scold him he only says: "What harm does it do?" And he leaves his shoes on the floor for me to pick up. Dont you think that he is un- reasonable in these matters? _ 5.1!. M. No, I think you are marking mountains out of mole hi and that if all you have to complaLu of in your husband is thaiihe leav his shoes on the floor and tracks in a little dirt when he is your work easier, you are blessed among ma I. llildbanll who beat ins mistreated you Od’ one If YOU Whom you had t0 haul in thl i100!‘ because he couldn't hismind. Answer : heartbreak. a keyhole or if you had one who was a philanderer who kept you awake “King Oobn” White - Python ByMIIKCIIIIIIIIIIQAIII-llolfl General. . ‘I dontaee any connection at all Down?" "lif I Gdnt, any. 1°11 wouldn't bedining with me! This Mont- as a pin." %?;t§¥\ Simietblng inside Gray Jumped. “What I'm. going to say, General, 3?? ‘rhefleneral lightly, and placing his xiapkln on blskneatook outs nowqaaper 011006118- "Bead the marked bit at the and. will you." In mid. “It's the lafost the silk- Finally ‘ todenriltccncluded) thatmsuddhicninmetis elflier decadent ordead The heart ofthefaith $illbeets_m.rongly. Thoeedeqiinitseeczetsknowthet theteachiluofthelom Buddha willyetccoquerthe world. The India. if Ohorjiemf suceefbd- ' “Now for his reasons. I seemed “d story oftbat l” “That you'll find out when get to Tibet, Gray," he said. And replaced the monocle. E 1' 9°““..T’i.‘°".&‘ I'm °”°- I" m‘- " ""7"" n: to go there? Why I've wanted—" ohmnhug-lamrn. s weigolhe trufi phesy, and it's as holy as Heaven to ‘em. Tbey-‘credit it Just such a lot of bunkum u Sinhalese friend tallved Twoothersweioin the. 1i but I'm giving thoiobtoyou, Gray, becaur oftheemellentworkyou have done for us; also yours the iToilrleve The wuvw- Quicker “'1 a: l’ C h Ablllgome Huvyrdbblycrsooalkicnui-cie. monrucwnoi-ciaexumotusi-it- ca}, IIIBQVOQOIOO. '7, Btylelmflmisdesignsdforairea urisysm. acmomsamcnu bustfliasscrequiresiiii no. m. sue OIIIIIIIIIIOIJOIIOIIIIOIIIIIbill! I .-"use:sun-ne-"unseen-aye..- , . - .teoaaaaOO-eosaIOeal-aallo...-u. ,IIIQBYOUWOII'SIGKIIPIIIHIN IIBVQ It isn't. ovary successiul m proportion and see if yours doesn't york outpetter, O Dear Dorothy Dix-Every girl dreams of getting an ideal husband. have one. rlowever, Lie is not so rosy as you would think. Every time he has a pain I am scared blue for fear I am going to lose him. E18 mgut you are. we [c0 we nave to pay tor. ‘i A A - .4- AA‘; v-yv -—vw-v-v-.,_~~v~"- ,. ,_~T'__.| L:.. .@¢u .. " '1 .. 0O With‘ Each Pattern mu a- .”® <31‘:- his Anrzaimn ejssmaklng Lessons Furnished wondering what pretty young girl he was out with, then you would haw aqright to bewall yourself, but you have no cause to weep over a pair oi shoes or a mud or snow stain on the floor. Also, it seems to me you are giving your husband a mighty raw deal breakfast for him of a morning, and patient as Job he wouldn't stand for it. If a man is that ICE brine! home. ...- l‘ d all day to support his wife, she might at least be will. he It must make a man feel up in the cold gray dawn and cook himself up mess between dressing and shaving, while his wife snuzslw down into her warm bed for a couple of hours’ more sleep. Any woman who isn't sick-and I mean good and sick, not slightly ailing-is a quitter if sne doesn't start her husband of! in the morning on the right foot, with a good, hot, nourishing breakfast tucked in his stom- acn and the memory o1.’ a cheerful woman in a clean bungalow apron in I apprecalts your love of ceding and applaud it, but why out of the twenty-low: hours need you select the night to do it in. when it interferes with your husband's m: and keeps you ironi giving mm his breakfast-i Way don't you read in the day and sleep at nlslrt. since it Will add to his cos-nor». and your eiiiclenoy? Evidentlyyouareooeoftbewonicnwhothinkmarriageisagraft Be has to be played tlity-nity. 'I‘ry this DOzf/OTHY DIX. l Thenisnotbingfornothinginthisworldandwhsu essianotsfstalmalady ingaa dawn tomorrow; but I want mtogiveadsycrtwotollnfl. flhambara." Ahalfaohourlatorehatwomen werestandingneartheawingdoora of the Babylonia. Gray was shrug- ging himself into his traveling ulster 9611M by bers joined. oommlttoee reported. 4 l‘ mmittees for next Taylor. And only too often the price of happiness is Many a woman who hes known twenty or thirty years of the goy OJ. a periect marriage has spent the balanoewf her life in loneli- ness and desolation. rinjoy your ideal husband while you have him and don't worry about losing him. Goodn and the mortality among faithful husbands is no Igreater than among rcunders. DOROTHY Dllk. srasrnooua woman's msrmrro i"... - meeting of the 8i atchcona women's Institute mci at the home of Mrs. Henry Burdctt, on Wednesday evening January 9th with an attendance of eight mem- bers and three visitors. ‘The meet- ing o a verse and chorus of “Old Kentucky Home" followed by roll call answe ed by each mem- ber paying a nickel. Two new mem- Ths minutes of last meeting wen read and approved. school and sic! month: Sick. Mrs. Russel Hunter and lvirs. Alex- MacKay. Programme. 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