2. . "T = “o? R...1..-.- s. cial“ and- Bro i- .11.. uousrwzrr and ' HER ACTIVITIES CALI- pgmebohimboiihossunsatb- omodllilll! Wbucurlder steamedthl ‘W! 111d and drowse of unrecorded noon on noon t sunlld tho boat and plucked the 198M108!“ __________ cmnna our a var-rams ‘ Ibo cutting out a mum. I-i- “ are apt to move the ml»- Qg, o! position. Alwbyl u” scissors u the risht ti" u“ m, pgflgrn firmly with the g left hand. tssadsoon.lniillm*'”'m be tacked with silk thread. or memerized cotton will stuff when pressed. ‘y; uu-esd a needle with thfi tho thread that first cornea not the end that you will have no trouble at gs ggr 1; soft h; T IOU tinually knottini $1111“!!- When sewing on I bum" Film’ baween it and gilt? nlgtfsg; MA) 1 i. G U5“ B" ‘h: b“ n 0'“ n off, take out a 40 liun-liown LTPeople Benefit in Test at Hospital 33cm at a leading Canadian talus, scientific test was mad» d Value of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills in restoring energy and strength to a group of 40 students who, nudying hard for examinations, wero more or less run-down in health. These volunteer patients wens blood-tested before and 11w? n-flve weeks’ treatment with l-hll mlilm blood test showed these patients-male and female-had a. condition known as “low blood ." Their blood was deficient E‘; they alone, carry life-Bi oxygen from your inns! Ind B011!‘- Ishment from your food to every Ear-t of the body. Naturally, if your land is below normal in them, your is below normal. le have a Iitowublood knowing you ‘ , exhausted lea on exertion, nervous to. chances per cent. and, with it, a of energy, vigor and seat for a .5535 nfitééii These will show the position of Pluto When the garment has V1111“! m4 hols! you to form straight. Eli removed in favor of fear o! being “m. For a Better Disposition One mother claims when ha; children are disagreeable for no lllpsrent reason it is time for a dose of castor oil. So the punish- ment in that home for impudenoe and loss of temper is a good clear- 1118 out o! the system. Not a bad thought is it? A {-4 Job when you see a frock in the win- dow of a very exclusive shop and You feel certain you can copy it, go to it-but do not leave out one small detail even counting tn; u- act number of buttons used g trimming. These seemingly small details are usually what make ens dress, so when you copy, copy well. TABLOID m oil stains on silk stockings, rub the spot with a piecs of butter, then wash in warm, soapy water. BEAUTY PELOB IN SWAZI- LAND VILLAGE Mibabane, Swanland, village the Queen Mother of the Swazi Tribe, was transformed into one vast beauty parlor in preparation for the "incwala." ceremonies of the Swazi harvest festival, These ceremonies demand full d “n: warattineforthemenandanela- borats toilet for the women. So. in separate kraals, consisting of new beehive huts, panltioned by high reed fences into famliy suites the women indulged in beauty cul. turs for eight hours on end. Lying and knvellns on bed mats they massaged their faces with green Vesetable pulp, trimmed and pol- ished their nails, washed and re- packed their foot-high towers o! hair, and draped themselves from head to ankle in looao, gaily colored futive wraps. Meanwhile the men ‘ ‘ their mantles of white ox tails, washed and smoothed their belts c! colored cloth and leopard skins, and care- fully stuck colored feathers in their hair. ‘Phawhoisvlllagoparkledliksa ou liamlhugsdlamond seminars wore turned from side to side to study the effect of the festive regalia. Only when the horns sounded the summons to the ceremonial dancing was the tumult of gossb and laughter in the huge “beauw parlour“ stilled. L.’ r5 -' "if lracnva—n Daintineu With CH4: Styles Illustrated Drcusvusldssg Luna Furnished wlilulvcrg Pita": can t you imagine how inoculat- ing this modish scheme would be for this darling slender little model? The belt repeats the lighter blue tons. 40 inchesbult. ma“ Bisciiolequireelis yardsorg. lnehmaterialwitbfiyardotsa- III “Put Mdrsl "sun-no .....-n..u.-..-.-......-.........- i E g ‘r52 rsiiieil i i can be bought in jars-at most gro- cers or stores. mash mas-r ranms ‘ There is something very tempt- ing about crisp-looking meat pat- tics which makes a ‘ change from the more ordinary ways of serving moat. _ Ifycupreferfishtomeatforths fillings you can make a delicious fil- ling with kippers or “ "ock. You want half a pound of. rough puff pastry, 4 ounces of either veal, steak or fish as Preferred; l ounce of ham or lean bacon, pepper and salt, 172 teaspoonful chopped par- siey. little lemon rind grated, l hard boiled e88. chopped. Make tho pastry as usual. Cut the veal in thin slices, (or mince tbs beef.) Out the ham in dice and sprinkle with Ersley and lemon, salt and pep- per. Roll out the pastry and cut round to line and cover five pattc tins. Line the tins and fill with the mixture. Wet the edges o! the pastry. Place the tops on, and than make a hole in the centre of each. Brush over each patte with beaten G88. decorate with tiny leaves of pastry. Bake in a hot oven for 46 to 50 minutes, then pour a little hot stock into each. Berva garnlahod with parsley. ONCE RBALISIIHlVOW ROMAN. TIC NEW YORK. Mar. 3—(C. P9: people of the United States, once ardent realists, have become ro- manticism, says Jeffrey Parnol. lmgllsh novelist. ‘They've muddled through a de- pression," the writer said. “And now, in their own words, they're wise to themselves They knov now that the romanticist ls tin real realist. Their old heroes wer. those who wrote o! a man anr‘ wife quarrelling in the alums. Then they laughed at the romanticist who wrote of sunsets and of beau- ty. CHAPTER. 13 WANTED, AN UKPIII ing three young man brawling on her doorstep, especially when the door step is a shop step and she wants the shop to make a realm!‘- able living for her. Molly Benedict herself didn't scream when Lilla Allerton cried out her frenzied wall about “poor Mr, Collins". Indeed, Molly had difliculty in restraining herself from *“ her hand over Line's rathcr melodramatic shriek. Both young women hurried to tbs door of tbosbopintims tosoeths elegant Clarence Collins crawJng up from the vestibule floor dust the knees of his evening clothes. Dexter Hatchb bulky figure block- ed tbs doorway, Jimmie Gordon, a Dextefsarncwsssoillltinlowas- cited tones. "You fools! Do you want the street swarming with police? Raven's you any sense?" "Jimmlel" cried Molly softly, as aha ran toward him. Jimmic gave Dexter's arm a warnlnl lflli. "Nothing much. Molly, except that these two had some kind of run-in. llr-cr-Glossy Hair said somothing your rough diammad trisnd seemed to tab nuptial to and—" “He was insulting to—" Baxter's voles boomed out. SEALED TEIIIEIIS wll be nachos Insc- Illol U Iasfl ll. as ‘I I.‘ IQ hi a NOTICE! ‘angry ggtiiiiggi ‘iiiiiiii if Ncwcmanlikeatbeldsaotbav- your rastraininghand atlllrsstingmlmfl- ‘L442 ~v~vw A MorningSmile -IIDI FIJI “I say Bob," said Bert, "why did you break of! your engagement with Mildred?" Bob shrugged his shoulders. "It was because of her past," he replied. I “What! Did you ilnd out any- gtntg bad about her put?" asked "Well, not exactly," raplied Bob, “but it was too long for inc-thirty yeara too long." - OIIIIPIOIC The bride-to-be was showing her friend a list of the guuts to be m. vited to the wedding. After her friend bad unied readths dakedthe "Isn't that rather strange?“ quer- ied the friend. “You have only put sign the names of married coup- "Yas, that was Jack's ides. Don't you think it's rather clever? Ha ' any: that i1 we invite only married people the presents will be all clear profit." ' No flour is imported into Swit- . the dorrsstic nulls having I monopoly of this market. -—:r~~ — host Colds Rub well over throat andchcst \l'$£E!$§i TEEEI .lloI1>hlov l7ir' .£¥EEt- I . OIIIJ Three Cheers for Mae West, Who Made Women Realize That a Woman Ain’t no Sin; Who Abollshed the Boy- ish Form Movement and Pop- ularized Femininity and Ruffles . Hail Mac West, who has not only redlscoveod, but popularized the of woman, and made women realise that being a woman ltlsafeatsc amasinsaltobealmoatincrediblqyetseoing iabclieving, and wharevcrwegonowwehave thsevidalcoofourflnst-hat women h!" gone feminine lilin Fortbslastdccsdeor so the star of womanhood has been in eclililc. so to speak. and those unfortunate creatures who had the illluck tobeborn oltbe “@810 9915MB“! have dons everything in their power to can- oesl their shame. Tbs younger generstionhal considered it little less than a diam-ace to look feminine or dress feminine or talk feminine and probably there is no other epithet that the modern girl has considered so insulting as Q tobecalledalady. Ithasbeentheflghting word with her, even if you smiled when you said it. The ideal S: pulchritude among wcrmen has been to look boyish and possess a boyish figure, though if them is guy animal in Nature homeller than a hobbledehoy boy, it is not to be found in the mo. It is still un- discovered. Yet to attain this gawky lanklness every woman from flapper sum- to grandma has gone on a starvation diet and the choicest 00111911- ment you could pay any female has been to tell her that she looked llks her little brother. Still further trying to disguise their sex, women have adopted the hablllments of men and put on pants, regardless of their breadth of beam and the resemblance they oflered to a beet. They have ailom of! their hair, thereby confusing the purpose of God, for a merciful Provid- ence bestowed flowing locks upon wounen for the sole pilfPose of camou- fiaging their bad points and tangling the hearts o! men in it. They have smoked lib furnaces d drunk like fish and sworn like troopers and done everything else th could think of to allow that Whilo they still unfortunately were women they, at least, were not ladies, But, alas, all of this eflort of women to make themselves imitation men has been love's labor lost. It has been mere copycat stui! and as un- attractive and as undesirable as all hcr imitations. m: when a woman tries to make a man of horself she, somehow, never succeeds in making herself a gentleman. ~ So the effort of women to dose: themselves has been a ‘ all which has annihilated their hopes and purposes. Never before has the lav- cl of feminine good looks been so low. For in the era o! bobbed head! and mannish clothes, deprived of the beneficial aid of flowing chiflons and swirling skirts, it tc 1 a Miss Universe, and no lea, to register beauty. And never before has there been such a decline and falling oil in mar- riage as in this period when women were aplng men, which was a nat- ural result. For the attraction of the sexes is based upon the fact of their difference. No man wants to marry another man, He doeant even want to marry a woman who remotely resembles one in any way. A mair wants a woman to be all woman and the more feminine shc is, the more attractive aha is to him. Little iiuily rufflu can marry in drcles all aroimd the sturdy, independent Amaaon. Men like woman who wear pretty soft clothas, who are gentle in speech and manner, who are sympathetic and tender-hearted. ‘That is where the hard-boiled girl, who thought she was making a hit with men by being tougher than they were, by drinking more am. telling amuttier stories and by scoifing at all the old traditions of her sex, gueued wrong. m, no matter what a man may be him-so‘, he fwanta a womanly wqnaan, a woman who believes in God and says bar ‘I prayers and who can shed tears of pity; whine arms achs for the feel o! , a baby in them and on whose bender breast a man can lay his tired head and] y..,-- F4 shiorgsye- _Liitera tur com: when unz MAKES sour OUR Dealer and Helna ole: you fins loupa made your way —tho home-made way_ dmplo, honest, homo Ingredients cooked slowly in open kcttlea. That's the only way to make soups ovary family will like. Complete, all ready to heat and eat-saving you the time and trouble and expense and hazard ofmaking soup at home. Ask your Dealer for Heinz roady-to-scrve Soups today. Economically priced. HEINZ HOME STYLE SOUPS Crocus Soups: Mushroom, O star, Tunas, Green Pea, s1. Olin" Heads: Bean, Chitin with Rico, Vegetable, Beef Broth Most Turtle, Mutton nma (Scotch broth), Checkers with Nomadic. lib ‘I IIUII; OI Ialsmbljhn. is} ONE OI ‘I'll mroalityawomanalwayathrowsllvdybumlmpcardwbmfl oasis hat femininity into the discard. She succeeds best in wbstavsr m undertakes when she does it in a woman's way instead of trying to u“ in a man's way. Furthermore, she is wise when she chooses for her w. eer some line of work which her sex has done for ages and for which m has an inhcritcd aptitude. and tho tools with which a woman worira boot are tbs old femlnil tools that have been banded down to be: from tbs days of Mother l‘ Tho vewomanwhoiightsforhcrrightsandantagoniaqm- never gets them. It is tbs sweet, gentle, suave woman to whom mm m not only her rights but privileges besides. lt is the woman who uses us, andllnaase indsalingwithmenwho has everymsn givcberahaudrg the laddar, while thoy block the way of the woman who bluaters. It is sl- ways the woman in the high-heeled satin slippers who walks over ma, Never the woman in the brogan. lo. in brinlinl back femininity tohsr sax and in teaching themh precept and oflmrle how valuable an asset their womanhood is, In West has been a ‘ hefactreas to womanhood. More power and more curva ‘ and be rested and comforted. in her. DONOR-TY DIX. What Every Widow Knows! By. Lucmu: van SLYKE a "But, gantlemen—" scorn deeoend his eons." I'm sure you both "l1- laothatsomeothsrtlmeandplaco wouldbemorosuitablsforsettlinl to hear any more of this-J’ Webster, stamina down from tho most, nearly collided with youns Collins, who seemed away. “Lilla Allsrrtcn ran toward Web- ster wins. "Oh Mr. Webster-tho most ter- " you . Io ' fl We uldnt mind kaoplng still.‘ Jimmie! half-whis- pered threat named of! Lilln h!!- inf-la Molly grateful as she was for he had assumed charge of the situ- § g i. '5. 5 s ? 5 i 3 i its: ‘ r §r§Er§r.=: t? in“ o I zit E ii! or diflerancsa-Olearmlftbof-ilfll film Jimmle's chivalrous air with whicb| back and forth. That's one of tho reasons Mr. Wcbstar came hem io- night. First I only rented this base- ment fioor and then I found l could got the floor above-four rooms and bath. I'm going to take it and uao one room for myself and rent the others-J‘ "To whom?” demanded Jimmie. "‘ f _ that comes along-J’ They were val-king up the desert- ed Avenue now, Molly moving slow- ly for she was very tired from her hard day. "Molly." exploded tbs unusually Jimmie your sensual Just asking for troub- lasl Taking in any rid-rail that coma: along-v‘ "Jimmie! Don't be abaurdi O! course I'll ask for references am. all tbs . havl to wait until Jamison (Jug-don Esquin looks them over—" she teased Shecouldni. soothe m; mum feelings. "BmWus-rmwiththeplmnot oven opened." he filmed. “The vary m" iiliymlbick up acoupleot young buckos who come from heav- en knows where, let one of them take you to dinner and the other YOUHI pflifi WHO CD110?“ m‘, mach until m minim you an: m. sun ho was lust hue with blcndollfllwaantksansbotrthlr- inghsrbutlhadlflanyroasonfos- notdoingit Idont hiowwhat they W" BOW!!! about and l don't can. I'll probably never sec amm- ml M m"! l¢lin—" the! were It hlrboardios nomflhabsld author-band. "rbrehonruaandlasttimcaim- mic. Nod nflht." She sighed, n9 dcpfretting about mo-arldcomq aroundandlltlHIWhouso-Psbg Illdodilliiilhlv “Iwoificbargoyou ‘alazlnmcrotban lchargo anybody _'~’.§i’"§....'..’..2.2.2'.'2“‘§°“' ................. u... 7.3.21 1.1’. oonatoaco. hi?“ a M’ LINIVID IlI-l-rhfiwihestlflwlv- '- ' square-I A ,9‘. M-QQJO ibohaallwlrsrfllilllltvasst ""°""'*“"""' ‘ninghwdor... "Qfltivlvsltnswmm OounJparBoMImSdvvnm TabhdiancasrossMarillmi nmwbu-"m-umm Mngiiwderuomnshu- Inna ' wsvadabndtowasdthoboardhg . "' s ma: horrid sampl- mmm|wmdf w" Approval by its Chatelaine Iloliysoapeliknmhthedem vlggfiqtklgwotjq; _ W... -M ' 5m o evsia Rs w ' fibula n. “not: _ powerislitugfnotbfifiovtlhe WW0 nqoircmmolbsainiesGovua- ' ' aontmodadsndfihlildls m~@~uu sihcrstsnrlsvdbrslsdcoisalh." f0r29¢ m‘ £:r355;;5:ri::::.:: 1-~-~a- - "Qmflldusonfi: f Zilidifi. ' . , aangpt-n-n-n- dost. an _. "*-