'"'--—-w--.,Q.€I . sermons: - Goaaoihiv -vnwrI'@vr-i' __ ""3 i‘ atlthe Fashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With v Every Pattern Bu Handball: Worthington Here's a slimming costume 511p ha“ Perle hes deslsnea on the lines d the new frock. The interesting cut of the mould- d bodice extending into a deep rolnt at the front proves a. patflg- iiarly slenderizing feature and give; ‘math. The skirt being circular, falls o gracefully beneath the frock with lmilar circular flaring her-nuns The "'1 0f the slip may be rolled by “m1 which gives it a French finish ‘"_ l“ may be finished professionally "ill PlCOt-edge. Lace edging pro- ides a dainty trim which may also ‘lm the upper edge of the bodiu, 1t can easily be made in an hour or possibly two. And the cost will prove surprisingly small. Style No. 228 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years. 36 and 3 inches bust. Size l6 requires 2% yards of 35-inch material with 3% yards of edging. Crepe de chine and flat crepe silk are popularly used for the excellent service they give. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern 15 cents. No. 22a. Size ...................... sun-nun“¢-..--.---|--nnusuuooi l i . Name avenue-nu"...“uni-uncommon Street Address .....................-.............. City State l try-h. “My NERVES Were Terrible” _ Now Mrs. Hyland Fools Happy and Woll—0wing to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills (ionic). "My nervm were terrible," writes Mn. Alex. Hyland, Clar- endon Station, On- tario. “Mother told me to take Pink Pills. so I started and I soon felt that they were helping me. Today I am happy and well, and I feel I owe it all to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills." 'l‘he iron and the: elements in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pi (tonic) increase the amount of haemogl ‘do or the oxygen- izrrynig agent in the blood. The in- creased oxygen re-vitalizes your tissues, sharpening your appetite, giving you a. imling of happiness and well-being. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are available at 50 cents a package at any drug- gist’s. Be sure to say "Dr. Williams’ ” so that the druggist will know exactly what you want. 135 Feels Like UN" Parson". Always {fresh ~3- because he keeps‘ his. mouth fresh, with WR|GLEY'§- r The cooling flavor of WRIGLEY'S Chewing Gum sweetens the breath Ind removes all trace of eating and smoking. WRIGLEVY'S ChewlngfGum-“after ‘every meal”—is recommended by doctors and dentists. It aids digev don-cleanses the __IIIEXPENSIVE SATISFYING T . Quicker, Better Repairs__ in the home can be made when you Sturdy, hatchet screw "l6 Bill‘ lllfjh grids tools. well-made planes; -:- Social and Personal -:- F'ashion.s _—r ls Tlllllll I ‘ - Congo;- Dorothy Dix g3 For Divorce? Import“: Whether Marriage is a Success or a Failure Depends. Not Upon What Man and Woman Are, But Upon Whether They Are Congenial - Nothing Comes so Near Justifying Divorce as Incompat- ibility of Temper temper, we instinctively figure that it is too trivial a. reason for breaking up a home, and we condemn them as poor sports _who did not have grit enough to carry on and make the best of their bargain. 1f they bad been divorced for something big, now. Such as drunkenness. Or the drug habit. Or infidelity. Or if the husband had been a brute vlrago. We could have sympathized with them. But Just to get a divorce because they didn't belong to the same church or the same political party. Or didn't relish the same sort o! nle- Peoh- Qulttere- A yellow streak in them. the whole wide world that comes so near to justifying divorce as incom- patibility of temper? Is there any other such good reason for a man have not one thought or desire or interest in common? Is there any other torture comparable with having to live in intimate daily contact with n person who continually rubs your fur the wrong way, who bores you to death, who gets on your nerves, who rasps your smslbilities and keeps you in a perpetual bad humor? It is a lot easier to forgive an occasional big fault than to endure never-ending petty irritations. The sinners at least take a day off from their vices now and then; they are not perpetually drunk nor everlasting- ly phllandering. But those who are antagonistic to us are always on the job. When you consider the difficulties there are in the way of any man andwoman who marry adjusting themselves to each other, you 8X8 sur- prised that they ever do it, and you are not ama ‘ that divorce is so common. You only wonder that it is not universal. Here are two persons of different sexes, doomed by Nature to look at everything from different standpoints and to react differently to every situation. Back of them is a different heredity, often a. diflerent race. ‘They have been brought up in different standards and different schools of thought. What marvel that such a. couple come to grief on the rocks of incompatibility of temper? But the terrible and pathetic thing about it ls that in hundreds of these cases in which husbands and wives live a. cat-and-dog life and make each other perfectly miserable nobody is to blame. Each is per- fectly right from his or her standpoint. Only they can't agree because they look at everything from different angles. The woman who has been brought up in a happy-go-lucky house- hold, where the only use any one saw for "a dollar was to spend it as quickly as possible, where meals were movable feasts that were as liable to happen at one hour as another, is the thorn in the ‘side of husband who has been trained from his youth up to make a fetish of thrift and order and promptness. » 0 nthe other hand, the woman whose mother has brought her up to make r. sacred rite of cleanliness and who scrubs the back of every kit- chen shclf and regards a chair out of place or ashes on the rug as a. high crime and misdemeanor is fretted into nervous prostration by a husband who never can be taught to wipe his feet on the doormat or keep from mussing up the best sofa cushion. There are women who die of broken hearts, frozen to death by the coldness of their husbands. They have come from warm-hearted, dem- onstrative families. They have been accustomed to having a fuss made over them and to seeing their father's lover-like attentions to their mother, and they think their husbands do not love them because they never tell them so. They cannot understand the dumb. repressed tem- perament that is utterly incapable of showing what it feels. And there is the gay, pleasure-loving man who likes to dine and dance in restaurants, the good fellow who has holes in his pockets that IlO'Wll€'S economy can ‘ever sew up. How inevitable that an austere wife should nag him for his frivolity and for his spending, and that he should regard her as a jailer that in time he comes to hale. Then there is the eternal conflict over little trivial personal habits and ways, over things as small as cooking. Irving cm said once that the Civil War was not fought over secession or slavery, but over hot bis- cuit or cold bro: '1. Certainly many thirty or forty year family wars are waged over what strength the breakfast coffee should be and the use of onions in the soup. It is the little things, the nlceties of life that the one has been taught to observe and the other one hasn't. The order and thrift one has been bred to and the other one hasn't; whether one likes to step out and the other one wants to sit by the fireside; whether one likes symphony music and the other prefers jazz; the difference of point of view in tastes and habits that makes the inevitable friction between husbands and wives that is at the bottom of almost every divorce. For whether marriage is a. success or a failure depends not upon what a man and woman are, but upon whether they are congenial. DOROTHY DIX. MR. AND MRS. When we hear about a couple getting a divorce for incompatibility of _ who beat his wife. Or if the wife had been l. ‘ Yet, in reality, is there any other one ‘thing in ‘ and woman parting and going their separate ways as the fact that they _ f For The Cools i CUBD FONDU AND SOUFFLE Cheese souffle is a. favorite with most people, and it is simple to make. Follow the instructions for cheese sauce, but use only half a cup of scolded milk for the liquid. Sea- son with salt and a. few grains of cayenne. when tho cheese is melted, remove the sauce from the heat and pour it over the yolks of three eggs which have been beaten until they are thick and lemon colored. Let the mixture cool and then fold in three egg whltes,. which have been beaten untll'they are stlfl and dry. Tum into a. buttered bakins dish and bake about 20 minutes, having the oven slow, instead of moderate, as for the other dishes, because this is essentially an egg dish and must? therefore, be cooked at a low tem- GITY SllllllllLS i Bil-OPEN on ruasnsv, sarrmvmau. m We have provided a full stock of AND School Supplies for the BOYS and GIRLS. We sell all SCHOOL BOOKS at prices fixed by the BOARD of EDUCATION and are giving the biggest values posslblq for SCHOOL SUPPLIES of all kinds. BLANK BOOKS, BCRJB- BLERS. EXERCISE BOOKS. PENCILS. INKS. EBASEBS. NOTE BOOKS, 8nd, 8m. Store open till six o'clock in tbs evening. BAARTEB 8i B0. l Limited B! MARY Rene Recover by the 23 visiting representatives. his home town and the date. A skin. Capes are still finding a way plte the fact- that they have been Paris Styles United i»... aim corresponded: _ PARIS, Auziht 22.--(U. PJ-Origlnality is the? "High C’ on the Paris fashion piano. One proof is l. oigaret case presented to M. Racovergirrangcd thstrip for the Americans and his gift from them bore the facsimile signature of sachjdayor, Another originality note of importance, this time for a woman. is to have her profile etched in gold, or silver, on her vanity case, with her name engraved beneath. Yteb, the Russian oouturler in the Rue Royalebhas designed a novel frock called a cinema dress. with mousseline dc sole, which matches long, There are cross straps in the back like suspenders and the mou- sseline de sole is like a silver mist against the velvety surface of_ the ishin; what can be done with th ese little things to make them completely different from the other members of their family. You never know what they are going to do. shoulder, or they may flutter down the back and front without - touching either shoulder; they may reach only to the waist or theymay bend over and touch the ground with their chiffon hems. .___€ I The eyes .- have “IT” KNIGHT United States Mayors and their gilt he will always treasure. It has a deep decollets veiled fluttering sleeves. ECAUSE you ALW B look your best, you‘ 12338:; m twill" 5110i"; your complexion, “w, you’! Just the right cream, the mm perfect shade of rouge and pond, flattering ‘lipstick—wliat about y“; eyes’), _ . to be original at the races, des- worn for months. It is aston- They may cover only one To make your eyes attractive m ' want long thick lashes and 5mm], brows. To have them, try this 51mph addition to your regular beauty program: MorningSmll: Crusty Golfer (to chatty caddie)- When I want your advice I'll ask for it. Caddie-Ah, but I’m not always in the mood to give it. perature: i is the better, too, of being place in a pan containing a little boiling water. The souffle makes a delicious luncheon or supper dish, or an at- tractive coirrse at dinner i! it is baked in small individual ramekins. Cheese fondu is _very similar to the souffle, except that it is made more substantial by the use of bread crumbs, or small bread cubes. Mix l cup of crumbs or bread cubes with» 1.4‘ cup of grated cheese, 1 cup of scolded milk, 1 tablespoon butter, ii teaspoon saltand a few grains of cayenne; add 2 well-beaten egg yolks to the mixture, then fold in z stlfily- beaten egg whites and bake Just like the souffle. er ': i‘ ‘l mlllbllu- l YQUR. tiiliii Ilot Stupid- Handicapped The seeming stupidity of many school children, is directly chargeable to faulty vision. Correctly fitted glasses often work wonders. Have your child's eyes examined o. or. iiurouesoii F. Gordon l-lutcheson Optometrists-At your service. TRUST A HUSBAND TO i ' SPOIL HIS WIFE’S DAY {it bedtime. ennlv a tiny bit of ‘y... I line" Petroleum Jelly to the my“ close to the lashes. Leave it on. It m. couragea them to grow thick and long Apply a little to the eyebrow‘, M and train them in a graceful arch wit] a small brush. i'Vaseline" Jelly is m fectly harmless to the eyes, even i1 i; gets on the eyeball. Etiquette lylobsrtoho u. what u. tne one samotypeil phrase that best society accepts in acknowledgement of an introduc- tlon? _ A. ‘Elowldo you do?“ , Q- 18 it NOD" 3°!‘ One t0 100k ,You can get {‘Vaseliue'f Jelly in j“ over the shoulder of a person who or tubes everywhere. And remembu is playing bridge? _when you buy that the trade-mm ‘ A. No; this is very bad form. rvflselirle 0n the label isyour assunnq Q. Who makes the first mwe- that you are getting the genuine prod. merit to rise from the table when uet of the Cheeebrough Manuiactio dinner isflnished? in: Company. Consolidated. mi A_ Th, huge“ jChabot Avenue, Montreal, Clash, - Style (limits i WITH ALMA ARCHER Even if you resort to padding, don't labor under some sedative and think you can appear on the main st.\n this winter without plenty of shoulder width to contrast the pinched-in waist. We've stayed etetle lens enoush now in this clothes biz, and it ought to afford everyone considerable good, clean fun to patch up the wardrobe and push the shoulders out and the waist in. Higher necklines, shoulder shlrrings, capelets, muscle trims above the elbow, dropped, raglan, or saddle shoulders, revere and cravat collars, will turn the trick and help you cough less em- barrasssdly when you bust in on your first fall bridge game, or tea. ,1 Youmsy but» . ..tuervl'y,.iinves.o clay . . ._ bul" " S. C. UflfSoiled ‘Clothes Odor): for: outweighs‘ bodily cleanliness and smsrl‘ cg"- peeroocé. The soiled dresqeven Hioogli freshly pressed, can kill |:>_opoilari'ty_-—beoouse if hes ollerreive "S. C. C." ilew Method Gleoners PHONE 983 '1'" ‘milk TTlE NEWEST "lilmo m HATS no‘.- n’ lion‘, LEW Finns uses Tc wean we slimmer ‘our? one Luce Tm‘ _ llWVf-wsxcwsivefldotii- inokxrmrswmnoss-rriecsa . . Q - W 0 ii: mfliiAva been one. Julie All!» or >bv AT Tie Mil-LINERS Broncos" drivers that always work; saws that cut free and easy - the" are bu], a few typical suggestions (or she handy man in the home. An in. apection of our large stock will be well worth your while. The Rogers Hardware Co, Limited