' Womanis Realm -:- Social land Personal -: " Household Hints » or ROBERTA LEE The Hull-Worn Whisk 8.5.... _ A half worn whisk broom makes a good scrubbing brush for enameled * ware. When the whisk broom becomes ‘worn, trim it to a stub. Then scald Ywlth soapy water, then with clear lwatcr lillLl finally rinse with cold ’ water. . A suqipculslnk t‘ . ‘»" When a sink bccomes clogged, if “strong copprrns water is poured “down the drain pipe it will open lt. The Doughnut Box A slice of broad placed in the doughnut box will keep the dough- mm soft and light. 1 Au inventor ha< found room for a l’ coin mriiv in a new vanity case for The Dqily fl " Argument A U NT HET “l but that old striped voile o-dress or mine in the missionary ‘ box. but I dyed it first so the v heathen wouldn't thlnkjhe mis- sinnurys wife too gay an’ frivol- - l ons." POOR PA "Pawn-hers can‘! get wives to spit Wu. She says our new prcziclii-i-‘s wife is too Intellec- tual, an‘ she suld our old prom-berks wife was a drawback I TYPICALLY SPORT! unusual tweed pat For tlri Cook Quick orange marmalade. 2 cups sugar, A Fashion a Day A distinct type that has created attraction in fashionable circles is a sports dross o! light- weight woolen in chartreuse shade. Style No, 892 designed in sizes l6, 18, 20 years, so, 38, 40 and .42 inches bust, takes but 3% yards of 40-inch mater- ial to make it.‘ The inset vcstca clos- “ing at center-front, underfaccd and rolled with collar, and completed with youthful bow, gives splendid idea for stitching, to achieve tailored finish. The attached two-piece skirt with wide box-plaits across front makes it so appropriate for sports. Plain silk crepe, jersey, crepello, silk crepe in and canton Lille crepe are smart suggestions suitable for practical daytime wear. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin ls preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for this pattern you enclosc l0 cents ad- ditional for a copy of our Spring Fashion Magazine. It's just filled with delightful styles, lncludin smart en- sembles, and cute designs for the i kiddies. ' ' Two oranges, 2 lemons, 2 cups cold water. 2 tablespoons corn- To the aural i] Dorothy Dix Popular lam-u the Qualities That Charm The Attributes That Set a ‘Woman Above Her Sisters in the Eyes of Those About Her Are Beauty, Gentleness and Intelligence, and These. Any Industrious Maiden Can ' Cultivate for Herself TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR. GIRLS 1—Be pretty. If you have been blessed with a pcachcs-and-cream conv- plexion, naturally wavy halr and a classic profile, thank heaven for its mercies, and preserve them. If you were passed over when good looks were handed out, get busy circumventing nature. Camou- flage your defects. and turn the spotlight on your good points. Learn how to dress, which is nine-tenths of being easy on the eyes. Find out what lines and colors flatter you and stick to them. Acquire the art of make-up. It is a virtue to sug- gest the bloom of roses on sallow cheeks and to give a warm glow t o pale, thin lips, but it is a crime to daub your face up with color like a circus wagon, and to slap on lipstick until your mouth looks like a cut of raw beef in a. butcher shop. Above all, be neat - and well groomed. More attractive is a splck-and-span homely girl than a slovcnly beauty who looks as if she needed to be run through the laundry. 2—Be feminine. When God made both men and women. He knew what He was about, and He implanted in our breasts some instinct that makes either one of them repulsive to us when he or she apes the characteristics of the other. Every one feels a contempt for the effcmlnate man and dis.- gust for the mannish woman. The prettiest girl in the world turns herself into a. scarecrow when she puts on breaches, because the feminine figure is not designed for pants, If shc is fat she looks the shape of a turnip. I! she is thin enough not to have any hips she appears to be an undernourished street gamin with tuberculosis. At best the girl who copycats men in clothes and manners is but a poor imitation of the real thing that has neither allure nor worth, When a girl casts aside her femininity, she has thrown away her one best bet, especially where men are concerned, for her sex is the thing with which a woman conjures. Every woman who has ever been a great vamp has had femininity raised to the ‘nth power. Shc dressed like a woman, talked like a woman, and acted like a woman. Probably no man svcr asked anything in trousers to marry him. ti-Be sweet. Be gentle in your judgments. Be tender and pitiful to old people and little children. Keep your faith in everything that is holy and beautiful. Hold on with both hands to your cnthusiasms. Keep on believing in love and romance, and that some day a. fairy prince will come your way. Don't get bitter because you have to stand behind the counter instead of buying chlffons over lt. Don't let yourself got hard-boiled and cynical. Don't make the mistake of thinking it_is clever to be sophisticated and like Lady Kswk daughter, who was 40 years old and had heard all there was to tell- Nobody aclmlres that type of girl. The girl that we want about us, and that we go out of our way to do nice things for, is the sweet girl who is gentle and tender and loving, and whose starry eyes are still filled with the illusions of youth. _ 4-Be Amlable. Therevls no other virtue in the world that pays such heavy dividends as amiability. 1f you are beautiful, your rivals will envy you and backbltc you. If you are witty, people will laugh at your wisecracks, but they will avoid you because they are afraid of you, but good nature makes no enemies. It rouses no Jealousies. It inspires no fears. Nobody ever tires of starch. iPut the oranges through the food chopper. Add ths juice and pulp of the lemon and the water. Cook until the orange rind is tender. Add the sugar with which the c- rnstarch is ' mixed and cook five minutes longsr. a good-natured girl. Everybody likes to have her around because she is so pleasant and agreeable, and every one plugs her game. The high-tempered girl who is always going into hysterical rages, the catty girl who Ls always scratching at other girls, the ill-natured girl who is g About 800 languages and dialects are used among the natives of Africa. always saying mean things that hurt like dagger thrusts the irritable girl whose fur has to always be smoothed the rhht. way gets nowhere. It is the girl who wears the smile that won't. come ofl, the girl who can laugh at mis- adventures. the girl who Jollies usalong and says the pleasant thing to us “IHETHER your ~ baby is one your’: that we long to hear, who has hosts of friends and dates to burn, who can marry whom she pleases and who never figures in the divorce court, 5-Be Intelligent. Don't make the~mlstake of thinking that good looks is all the capital a woman needs to do business on in life. It isn't. True, beauty may get her a husband, but it won't keep him. Shs needs brains for that. No man can spend. forty or fifty years gazing rapturously at a living picture. He is bound to grow tired of it in time. Besides which, living pictures deter- iorate with time. Their colors fade, their outlines blur, so that what was once one of nature's masterpieces onlytoo often turns into a chromo. The woman who is beautiful but dumb is bound to loss out in a few years, but tho woman who has intelligence grows more and more fascinating because she adds continually to her charms. She reads, she studies, she thinks. and so she bccomes a companion of whom we never weary because shc keeps us always interested. Milady Beautiful BY L0] LEEDS .__, ‘ IQQJ) ‘EXERCISES FOR. WEAK FEET It has been estimated that more than three-quarters of the popula- tion enter adult life with some sort of acquired foot trouble. Among girls this weakness L; largely due to wear- ing the wrong type of shoes—shoes too high in the heel and too narrow and short in the toe. Such shoes de- form and cramp the feet so that they cannot correctly perform their nor- ma] function of supporting the body and propelling it forward in walking. In his book on "Preventive and Corrective Physical Education" George T. Stafford has written a valuable chapter on feet, which in- cludes a. long list of useful exercises for strengthening weak feet. While exercise alone cannot cure all types of weak feet, especially those in ad- vanced stages, it is a very valuable aid. Many of my readers have asked for such, a list of exercises, so I am describing some of them below with the hope that those who are inter- ested ln them will turn to Mr. Stuf- ford's book for s more comprehensive treatment of the subject than‘ I can give here. Two types of foot exercises are recognized, namely, nonweight-bear- lng and weight-bearing. In the for- mer class are the foilowin; (l) Sit on a chair with the outer side oi’ your right ankle resting,on your left knee. Grasp the right foot in your hand and bend it inward ancs. This is called adducting the right foot. Relax and repeat with each foot. (2) Sit on a chair and stretch both legs out in front, knees straight and feet together. The toes are pointed strongly downward (plantar flexed) and the soles turned inward until they almost face each other. The feet are then bent upward at the is made to keep the soles turned inward. Relax and repeat. (3) Sit on a chair with knees bent Ourl the toes in strongly, attempting to raise the arches as high as possible but keeping the heels on the floor. Relax and repeat. After the feet have become accus- tomed to the exercises in the above group,the following "weight-bearing" exercises may be begun: four inches apart and parallel. Roll borders of the feet. Curl the toes under and hold the position for thirty seconds. Relax and repeat. (b) Stand erect and place hands lightly on the back of a chair. Bend feet upward (dorsi-flex), resting weight on heels only. Relax and repeat. (c) Stand erect with feet about ten inches apart The forepart of the right foot is adducted (turned in- ward) and rests on the end of a towel Try to draw the towel toward you by clutching it with the tocs of the right foot, using the heel as a pivot for the action. which occurs at and below the Illlllc Only. The knee-cap is facing straight ahead. sideways to the left against resist-i ankle (dorsi-flcxed) and an attempt, and feet flat on the floor and parallel; (a) Stand erect with feet about, the weight of the body to the outer‘ llcrc is‘ a. trio of advance sprlns’ hats which feature tho Wllllllm small, snug-fitting and brhnlcss Lessons in English By W. L. GORDON WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Use “herd" to designate a number of ani- mals. When speaking of persons, say. "a disorderly rabble." OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: fill- swer; a as in "ask? not as in "an." OFTEN MISSPELLEQ: yeast. SYNONYMS: shrewd, ‘ sagaclous, clear-sighted, discerning, keen, intel- llgent. WORD‘ STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us’ in- crease our vocabulary by masterln! one word each day. Today's Wflfdi REETTECT; to turn back the thoughts; to think; ponder. "l-lavc you reflected what the conseqllflw“ might be?" The Threatened Cook (From the Manchester Guardian) Mr. Henry Ford. supreme organ- izer of “mechanized warfare" on the i industrial front. has made another prophecy. “The day will come when cooking in the homc will no longer be necessary. Meals will be deliver- :.-d in e hot, appetlzlng condition to? r everyone." They may be hot and they v ;mcy be appetizlng, but it is by no: lmeans certain that‘ the process will‘ ‘the completely satisfactory to all con- ' lsumcrs. t Domestic cooking is not, after all.) __ Is-W idea. On the left is a felt hat, Mll- med with black silk to imitate hair; in the centre, a. felt trimmed model‘ helps to keep the grains separate and makes them whiter. v Tough meat may be made tender by adding lemon Juice to the water ln which it is boiled. A refreshing drink ls made by adding freshly beaten egg to lemon- ode. Two or three slices of lemon in a cup of strong hot tea will cure a nervous headache. As a remedy for hoarscncss lemon juice and loaf sugar are excellent. To make lemonade for a cold, use two tablespoons lemon Juice and one tablespoon sugar to three-quarter cup boiling water. The old-fashion- ed method of adding the sugar to the boiling water and letting it dissolve before adding lemon Juice will be found better than adding sugar last, as usually done.‘ Lemon juice will tatlon of insect bites. After brushing the teeth, rinse the mouth with plain water, to which a little lemon Juice has been added. It leaves o. pleasing taste in the mouth. relieve the irri- When washing the hair, add lemon juice to final rinsei water. It leaves‘ , the hair with a nice gloss. Lemon juice and rose water ‘a form of penal servitude but a falr- u ly high fine art. and most women‘ ‘and a great many men take a nut-X ‘ural interest in it. To cook family] lmeuls clay after day and week after} ,weck. with no change at all for the.’ separator, may become a dull routine‘ {and drudgery. but so do many formsl ,‘of human activity ii‘ there ls no break l jin the obligation to pursue them. In; lthc very nature of the subject there‘ lis more variety in cooking than there ‘is in any other aspect of housework; ‘there ls onl one way of brushing a floor, or eve of bathing a baby. but there arc any numbercf ways of y cooking a dinner. And nothing could 5 be more of u routine than an endless y‘ succession of mechanized meals de-v ilivcrcd from a common centre. | What is more, the disappearance of . the cook implies the disappearance of i ltlle kitchen. which would be a very l ivital organ to remove from the do- 1 mestic system. The first hearth was,‘ a kitchen hearth. and “the homo" is an extension of that hearth: a home may lack a good many things, but up to how no home can lack a. kitchen. Nevertheless, times change and ideas ‘ 'wlth them. The day may come when ‘zeven the kitchen will vanish and the l, ‘housewife will sit at a desk and ad- ' minister what remains of the estab- 1 llshmcnt by pressing buttons. Even’ the Queen of. Heal-is. seized by an old-fashioned whim, will be unable} to. make her own tarts. for there will; be nowhere to make the pastry. She, with gold sequins, and on h, flu“ a smart cap-like hat with g w‘ pom. rain water will remove tan. It u” removes fruit and vegetable stun, from the hands. Equal portions of giycarlng m“ lemon juice-make a. very good hand lotion. ' These are some of the u," o; lemons, but one may flnd other u", for them. Li? MT. PLEASANT A bill-for m“ at Christmas for aged folks of d15- trict was presented and paid, u" bill for needles for knitting magnum It was decided to buy s. new sauce- lmn for children to make 1mg m, means of raishig money were dis- cussed and it was decided to hold a whlst and dance in the near futm-g, $16.00 was reaiiized, ‘from a resent social and two dollars was given yo, a High Mass for a deceased msm. bcr. Next meeting will be at homo of Mrs. A. D. MacCornmck. Cilllfvllllfl- Chemists have develop. ed a method using sulphur dioxide .for killing insects and pffiventlng the formation of mold 0n fruit use, it is loaded in refrigerator cars for m’ shipment. old or more, you'll find Therefore, if you want to be a woman who will be just as much sought will have to pull a lever and they CG Blue Box means money saved- after when she is 50 as she is at 20, cultivate your mind. Make it a rule to learn sometfiiug every day. Read the daily papers. Read magazines. Read books. That will mach you how to talk and how in listen intelligently. Tomorrow-Busty Questions Answered will be shot at her through a tube connected with the tart branch of the Communal Bakehouse and Biscuit ‘Works. ’ MANY AND VARIED . ARE USES FOR LEMONS ‘ Lemons are useful in so many ways l that I always keep a supply on hand. "Vaseline" Petroleum i Jelly is the right: remedy for allrhc licclc ailments. ' Millions of mothers use i: daily. And remember, when you buy, that the trade marl: Vaseline on the pack- age gives you the assur- ancc that you are getting the genuine product of the Chcsebrough Manu- facturing Co., Cons'd, 5520 Chsboz Avenue, ' Montreal, Canada. . ARELESS WASHING is harder on clothes than actual wear, experts say. Every time you wash silks, rayons, woollens or °°l°l7_°d “"1185 With soaps containing harmful “nil-ll, fibres are weakened, colors clullc& They wear out sooner! ' - i That means money wasted! Don't run th risk f b ' soaps-whether flakes, cllips ggncn cLI-nkno“ When you buy Luz you know it is safe! _Lux contains no harmful alkali-nothing to mpu-c the finest fabric, the most delicate color. It will do morc to insure your popularity than dancing the Charleston, for it will save you from becoming that pest of society, the feminine borc who can do nothing but simper. It will bs money in your pay snvslops if you arc in business. It will make your husband vamp-proof if you get one. And it will insure your own happiness, because no woman who can say ‘finy mind to mo a kingdom is" is aver helpless or lonely. ' Remainder of series will appear on February 20. DOROTHY DIX en and when kept in a gloss jar do uot become dry. If they should bc- lcsms dry, place them in a saucepan ‘of hot water (not boiling) leave at lthe back of the stove for about two ‘ hours. wipe drv um they will be m: iThey are cheaper bought by the doz- Restored] to numb} ‘Modern Eticyuette Lydia E. Plnlsharn’: III I/OIIITA LII A Morning Smile External ' Uses 'Cd¢IIg-Rub the irritated part gently .wl'th "Vaseline" Jelly. Gills-Wash undcr running wanes and apply "Vssciioc” Jelly. Bum: and Scaldr-Ccvcr the . affected area with "VsselinrWjelly, * ~ a ad ob clean linen or gauze. ge dressing frequcncl, . Q. Is it iqusttc for a woman to keep her h|.t on at a luncheon? A. Yes. in largo cities womeugsn- srally retain ‘their hats, but it does not show bad form. however, to rs- movc it. Q. May an answer to an invita- tion, no mattsr bow informal, ovsr 1 bovrrittsnonavlsitingcard! . A. Never, under an) circum- stances. - i Q What Is tho correct waistcoat in wear with a dinnsr coat! asclinc PITIOl-IUHJILLY Internal Us: A. lithos- thcwhitc waistcoat or‘ She called to flnd out ths stawor her Mishbork health. but was un- abls to make anyons bur. lo sho wandsreirround to the back c: the houss and there" dlscovsrsd her frlcnrrsuiiiusband osrpsntcring in the "How's Ibnma?" inquired the wo- man: but the man's reply was drown- cdbythssoundot a viclsntfltof combing. / ’ cu that her mains!» ashd u» visitor. when the sounds ceased. Vegetable Compound v N. Br-"FOP time i aadwsakwitii i 1min -- "No." cams-tbs abrupt answer "7510!!! www- and juicy. Do not use until cold. Before peeling lemons. _,_ and grape fruit, cover with boiling water and lot stand a few minutes. The skin will then peel off easily arid take with it the inner white skin which has a blttlr taste. -I- often cut a lemon in small pieces aha place in the soft whit! frosting bltwlensndontcpoflayorsinalay. orcak . Itisvcry nics thatway. Inmcn juice is an excellent flavor r sugar cookies. I like tbs flahd with 1-118. clothes. curtains, blankets, cm- blfiggfeftlablinensi Printed cottons-Jshcer and It . a tOO-‘l - I mum“, 3%" toy new looking more Lux is sold only lathe blue‘ box, never in ‘E t cvic s... m" .l‘.‘.‘;‘,‘l’..‘;..".°.‘l’,‘i# a mass, ' tgmmllauhz" "lllmitohspeiotbcslasw lndofcnolamonasaflavorfor acuhonsmohmn fnbfcb w ricpisbotllr" [rte t... inthcbllwbox, a ihft-Luc