sue.=1~e!u4!PisI9u~el-sul@=lfi \ A x . r I vvv w 7v n ’s ‘ Red "1. ‘- vV._wvv ww Li‘ Qkkl kl-kk -QL‘¢--A, 4 A m L v w . ' 4 Pe \ A‘; \ t.‘ ‘ ‘Lmin-n > v ma kknkkk‘ AQ-AAA‘ w cm Irouss WIFE land lTo tread thy labyrinthine gloom; "To note who round ms watch and we. - . "Ilclove o few; perhapsio hate; And do all duties of my fate. -<Barry Comwall vBLvm‘ Mil-LINER? 1' FABRIC 0F HHPORTANOE "kc-Whenever there is s more or less romantic quality to costumes _l'_ld millinery, velvet becomes a obric of importance. While this has ; t as yet developed into pronoun- veod acceptance, sufficient notice " has been taken of the idea by Par- isian hat designers to make it o style point worth watching. One way in which it appears is Tfnentire crowns of draped velvet or zvolvet ribbon. in lively light shades I sud! as turguoise, combinedyith a white or natural straw brim, leg- "dlnm or toyo. Sash effects which jbang down at back or may be draped around the throat, scarf- “ggshion, are charmingly arranged of the French hats as a. trimming. Mme. Agnes, for Heifimple, takes sapphire blue s it on cyclaulen colored straw A capellne. “With the contrast theme so ‘strong in hats this season, applying 136th in color and media, velvet be- some a plausible candidate in fur- ' acknowledgment of this idea. “DEF. 0R. UNDISCOVDBED OLD? Oontroversy is still going on as to what the Loch Ness monster may be, and tho problem will probably Llefer be satisfactorily settled until Someone is able to get a close-up ffphotowaph when the creature is "desporting itself on the surface of fhewvafor or taking one of two oc- casional strolls on shore with which --cne or two visitors hove credited it. ---'- The discovery of ‘Uhe carcase of a monster in California strengthens the view 0f those who hold that the 11inch Ness denizen is a creature sign-go do scientific authorities. ltisnctooly inthelszgccrect- mosoftheesrthtlmtthisage is ‘(lbelrlgkig surprises. Many new in- lbbbl have been discovered in the We. Over 7000 specimens re- - dedinthepastthleeol-fmlr who; over l0 were previously ‘un- ln Ouot nnmn, and at _ '18 do chi/holy now to “once. , "so many "new" irlsects can zgagrge on ‘the loomed world, an ' - 1 ohol monster may reasonably withlnthe the realm of pos- llfii IAII ~ - s to the Royal flcottish b __ .... gppmoent have on added ‘ ' in the case near the Main devoted to "Recent Addi- , v ‘ " ‘mercln o considerable num- . dOoioloolmeoiIncilsofval-lous are nor displayed. ' among those is a Loka- or Chinese tomb figure given ma. lbrison Millar, "jllle-Iihitislrlflieformofon ‘ -clod warrior Ion vic- *1’ g3 Some handsome eces of have been gifted " _ s. TS. Smith. some richly en- tk _ , and holuding qaoctmcns hwhlck imleoie how early naglfsh was influnced by, Ghinose and ‘ . Notable unong fhemhro two cups of Chelsea por- icclain decorated in the style of Jllslqoalda Kakdemon, ‘ eves-glue. enamel i issen or fDicsden school of decora ors, whose Qqlooal odomments gai high F aver h the porcelain factories of Y ha. Wm achild so much of lying when ho on our part, yet to tell the differ- 3 HER Acnvznss -h.-uttoondwltho cnhisomsotolnoshfcrthsiirst tone ‘ Wo oopcctMn toodfuot alithe processes of thinking and selection atonce.’ How con he develop decision, ‘ ‘ ‘ , initiative, will, j t. obstroct truthful- noosondollcfodooenothervirtues without getting o few marls in the weaving? His reasoning ‘ help being mixed. The common flb used as Prowl- tion. has its foundation in fear. ‘Phat has nothing to do with the point nude here. Rool hurt and therefore harm may be the result to the little child's sense of fairness and is self- respect when he is too often ac- cused of lying and he is “m0rally" certain he is right. A little green light blinks in his mind instead of redandwearerightofterhim. It pays to try to get at causes and reasons. Few little folk, if any, are actually and deliberately untruthful. The public was admitted to St. James Palace lest week to see the wedding presents given to the Duke and Duchess of Kent. Large num- bers of people visited the Palace. and N08198:! thromh the rooms was slow. Frequently the queue of visitors. four or five deep, stretched fromthc entrance up to the Grand Staircase to the rooms where the presents are on vlfi. FIRST WOMAN EXPIDRER. BE GIVEN BURTON MEDAL The Burton Memorial Modal, awarded triermially by the Royal Asiatic Society for the most out- standing achlevement in the field of exploration and travel in Asia, was presented to Miss Freya Stark at s meeting of the society in Lon- don. Lorrd Lloyd made the presen- tation. Miss Stark is the first woman to be awarded the medal. It was 60H- ferred on her in recognition of her journeys of exploration in Persia. Last year she was honored by the Royal Geographical Society for her pioneer visit to Persia-Aiming which she discovered a stronghold 0f the ancient secret society of the Assassins, a Mohammedan sect. She confirmed the tales of murder by the Assassins’ rulers which the Crusaders brought back with them. The sect gave the word "assassin" to the English language. CANADIAN WOMAN IS MSUjIATKS AT U OI‘ CHENGTU After l) years as mathematf professor at the Chinese University of Ghengtu, Mrs. Frank Dick said when interviewed in Calgary that shefelt "lihecmfoletaorhere although I was born and brought up on Canadian soil." On her third ‘ ‘own she will Illcnd Port of the time at Mount Allison University, Saclrville. NB. Bhe will also‘ eXIKEBQ in research work at either Oxford or Columbia University with her hus- band who is head of the lehcol of Agriculture of. Ghenglu. kl China, she explained, she is t white foreigner, but back in Canada she found ways strange. Chcngtu is 3.000 miles inland from a railwflf. in aoechusn. one cf the west pro- tlmial, but its may gbl students from Russia. Pekin, Java and Korea are enrolled in the School of Dent- ich-y, the only one in the East. They also study medicine, science, chom- im- ond agriculture in obout the some as men stildcnos. Akcd about food in so fools/ted o. locality, Mrs. Dickenson sold meat is scarce and very expensive. They hsveoyellow fruitwivhoverythiok skin, abmntthooie cfllllecgmpe- simia- flomr. 3 ls coiled poouilo. Her hsbond hod introduced alter ‘Then every your," "General Halgsi-le-la. military governor of the l A~-‘ ‘ALLA n deresistance. That‘ was nearly 24] ment since those eventful days emerged from Bluikinsopp Castle grace footlights with her prcseqce. and hoversacks, the audience WI! old English mansion. -:- Social a ‘“7he £Hhsu£kpc‘fwRev%v§d One of the brightest parts lu the life of the Canadian soldier over- sfas was "Bllghty" leave and a vlsltwfo the London‘ Alhambra, where “The Bring Boys", with George Robey and violet Loraine was the piece "If You Were the Only Girl‘ in the World” still fill the sir when the boys of the old brigade gather around the festive board. The other night the whole show came back with its old-time fervor when the revival was staged in that same theatre, the Alhomb Loraine is the wife of Edward Raylton Jolcey, a. north country colonel. and here she is sem with one cf her sons in the grounds of her fine AAAQAAA ‘LA -.41k¢ w‘ v-v; a l, years I80. find yet the strains cl‘ Violet Loraine, in retire- except for charity performance, In Noflhumbcrland lo once again But this time, instead of tin hots composed nf boiled ohlrfi. Miss gradients stand until they have reached room temperature, before combining cake. 4. ‘flake special care to make all measurements level, and g to sift flour before measuring. 5. Make all measurements (except that of flavoring extracts), and check thorn xvith the recipe, before combining cake. (Measure flavor- ing extract just befoo adding.) 6 Have the method clearly in mind before starting to combine the cake, and follow directions exactly. '1. Bake cake inuncdlately AL is combined and at exact tempera- ture given, platung it in oven- so that it receives an even heat on all sides. Cakes of the butter type which contain baking powderor soda. may be closely covered' and kept deeply chilled in the rofvlgero- tor, if delay in baking is necessary. 8. Do not Jar the cake during baking. 9- I» Mt lwk at Mont cake until shortly before time time i-t should be done, according to the recipe. 10. Remove cake from oven as soonasdonmaxidcoolinaplece exit/holy free pf draught. IYRAPID HATS According lo report, the current demand in New York is for velvet hats. These are eqlecloil-y designed suioloopinwbansandvefls forthe cocktail hour. [For general daytime wear, one house introduces a heavy ribbed silk, plain or novelty taffeta, all of ‘this h always irregular, however. Off-face siiioueties in cuff treat- ments. and narrow dipping brings with short back lines all other types belch-ed here to be interesting for ioinodnb woos. I Oecquh h another silk Hod l! Mums, one rnonkufloted hot being fmlohedottopwfms furtosoel. For resorts. tailored toyos ore im- ported. depending upon smart du- DIWIP! h the matter of lunflng both lino and trinnnifip. Dehcht- ful colors are stressed in the lfgfmn register. AMoming/Smile TBYIT “All it wants is t1 ," Wt the Professor. pracrnfre plzintflg 9913115! reason why each of you lad. ies and gentleme sho ldn’: left hand with this sanlie aexlfifiml: Your right." . He Picked "P 8- Dlece of chalk and began to draw a figure with his right hind. and then completed another figure with his left hand. T111939.’ he 861d. “I defy flnyqng in my udience to tion a single action which I can perform with my right hand and which I can't do Eilllfllly well with my left." The silence that followed was bmkell by the voice of a small child, "Mummy." hc cold. "can this pro- fwor out his 1m hand into the bottom cf his right-band t pocket?" - olive , w-m What Greater Proof Could All)’ One Ask That “Freedomffis, the Enemy of True Love Than the Appearance in the Divorce » Courtiof the Greatest Exponents of Extra-Marital‘ ‘Romance? ‘Impsporsonnmmco thotllortrondltmsollathofomoulopootlesof free love mdodvocotco of husbands and wives lnving extra-marital re- lationships, hove-Just got o. divorce on the ground of adultery. This would be ssrdonically amusing if the breaking-up of every were not o tragedy. llbryuroondyeorsthsnussellshsvebe iming in books and lectures _ that the thing that was the matter with marriage was that husbands and wives were too much bound to each other. That was what suffocated them and got on their nerves. Monogamy was synonymous with monotony. Same wife across the table every day. Home husband coming home every night. Some kisses. Some line of talk. Bsme old ball and chain. I0 wonder people got fed up on it. And the remedy they recommended for this horrible state of affairs was philanderini- ammo: and wives must have their um.» fllngs mi the Bide ms unu- mstss must be brood-minded and intelligent enough to sec that this $00k the curse of! marriage and kept them pepped up and thrilled and made them more interesting and desirable companions on thahyevenings at home. ‘ 1t appeal-o. however. that this shsre-your-wifc-or-hullond plan doesn't work out oowell in actual practice skit does in theory, not even with m.“ g, ~ ,, their b -' seems to have into the narrowview of possesslveness characteristic of husbands and wives when they see strangers poaching on their own preserves. Nor do they appear to have got any enjoyable kick out of their mates’ love affairs with younger and fairer women and more glamorous sheik-l In short. they seem to have got just as jealous over each other s sidestep- pmg s; any otherman or woman with an unfaithful wife or husband, and the doctrine of free love w other people. but they couldn't take it mm- , selves. Nor can my one else. Real love is never free. It is holden. It is the most monopol‘ “ thing on earth. Not only are we not willing to divide it with-any one else, but it becomes degraded in cur sight if even the smallest port is. given to another. Nobody can imagine o Wflmlfl who loved her husband viewing with sympathetic interest his imp“- sioned love affair with another woman. Nor can one picture a man who loved his wife, contentedly and philosophically waiting for her to return to him after s. honeymoon trip with I. handsome stranger. No. Whatever the secret of how to be happy though married. 51 does not consist in fllrtatiousness. _ No one wants a. part-time wife o!‘ husband. Nor does any one wont a husband or wife who keeps one guessing. What one wantsis certainty, not suspense, in marriage. A husband or wife who is as stable as the Rock of Gibraltar. in whose un- changing of! " onecantnlstosonctrustsinflod. As for the complaint that what people mostly resent in umrrlflflc is the sense of bondage. why, that u what they marry m. They desire that bound feeling. They want to feel that they are bound to some- body and some one is bound to them, that they are responsible for comfl one and some one has responsibilities to them. that there is some one whose very name is theirs. It given them the worm. cafe 19611118 0! I shut-in room where one settles down and is at rest instead of dering without purpose through a night of storm. Without we are bound to some one we are as forlorn as masizrless dogaAnd that is why most 990916 are happier married than-they are single,.even though they fall to get APPBOPBIATI The ortbt was of the exp-egg. lOXILfl 8611001. HO hid just glvgn thg finishing touches to a purple-and- blue canvas when o friend entered the studio. "Just the follow I want to see," exclaimed the artist. "1 have just completed my widower». I-nd should 111W V011 t0 M18868; n. title for it." “Why not call it ‘Home’? "Home." cried the artist, puIled. y call it thot?" "Because there's no he oondfl u com-ting nnnuvoohnor. ‘Ike foflul was in- chodoctown upon flieslfolr. Ono overall: he coiled the young moo odd». and sled: "Now, how money? Oon you keq) gg- ‘D Islfl mums- “I-I-Pm ck =4 f on! very well." “'4': film ha» coming," sold "he f!""o. their ideal motes. Better o hard master than none at all. ‘lhcro hos long been o romantic swcrstitlon that the quivkclt WI? to kill love is to put the chains oflmsrrioge around it. Novel‘ WM 9-116" o. greater fallacy, as is unply proved by the fact that liaisons rarely last more than a few months, while millions of marriagm endure for forty 01' fifty years. so short-lived is the usual free-love union that the very few that have survived the acid test of living together have been rare enough to be immortalized in song and story. But nobody thinks 0f making an epic of the Jeneooes and the smiths, who are celebrating their golden wedding. _ ‘Ifiece are many reasons why marriage is a bulwark of love instead of its destroyer. One is that nothing unites people like a mutual interest. and a husband and wife who must rise or fall together and whose N05- upon eoeh whet ond whose children make an additional P081177 dwflldl " tie have the strongest of all possible bonds between them. Then, too, they have the sense cf finality to keep them from roam- ing. They feel that they have made their choice and must abide by it and so their eye is not out for every attractive man or woman who cross- es their paths. They are not counting their heartbeats. They are not always thinking of change, u are the free lovers whose liberty consists inibeirbeingoblotcswoppoztnorooscftensstheylike. And finally dam is that sense cf possession, s sort of Qsctism that makes us put s. high value on what belongs to us, and that makes us think that our husbouds and our wives are simerior lust becauss they are ours. oswethinkwehavo thebeotcar orthe best radio. V‘ Alletwhichbrinpubodtothsfoctthotwithaliito faults mor- rlsge is still the best anongcment that has yet been devised for the com- penicnlih of the soles, and that the fewer liberties we take with it, the better. DOROTHY DIX. to have taken just the same path to the divorce court. They could preach ‘ one can rest secure and in whose fidelity and loyalty 1e wv'vv ‘ A - a " illustrated Eireooinhkfng, standing collkr. Bur-obs and plaided taffeta would also be lovely for it. i The yoked expression is smart in metal ‘threaded fabrics. bengolins, satin, sequins, otc. The extreme " " neckline in stiff white linen is sponsored by Schlaparelli. Anew scarf type suitable for taf- feta, knitted woolens, satin, foulsrd tie silks. loquino, m. thYou will find it real fun to mobs em. . Style No. 560 lrdesigned in one sire only. See pattern envelope for material. requirements. Price of. PATTERN l5 cents in lamps or coin (coin is preferred). Vrap coin carefully, N0. 5M. ounooo~soooonooosooolwlooooo ncoocsnoooooooosnos~ooolllooullol 1 NINE ..--"....-.--..-....n-nn--u--.. Street Address 61W Btsts TZHE CRDCHYE? CRDHZAHHR ITALIAN CREAM One lb. of icing sugar, two whites of egg, lemon essence, saffron, coch- ineoi. and vanilla. Beat up the white of one egg and mix with the icing sugar. Knead this until smooth with the handaif too stiff add a few drops of water. Div- ida into three parts. With a skewer odd to one/portion o few drops of moncssence andsfewdlopsof saflrcn colouring. Into tbs second portion work some vanilla only, leav- ing this white, the third portion should be tinted with cochlneal. Roll each piece to an equal thickness, brush each with white of egg on one surface, then place one above the other, press well together and leave till next day to set when it is ready to cut into bars. COFFEE BR-AZILS Have i lb. of icing sugar. one white of egg, strong coffee ucence, and shelled brosils. _ Have the icing sugar free from lumps and sieve it. Place the white of egg in the centre of the sugar and work in gradually with s wooden spoon. Add enough coffee essence to colour and flavour suitably. Continue working the mixture until perfectly smooth and pliable. Wrap it up in greascproof paper, and ut aside for s few hours. Meanwh hove some whole bruils shelled. ‘Yhon take o lingers, these should have been prev- iously dusfed with icing sugar. You can make coffee walnuts in exactly the some way . ‘ AUMOND look Half o lb. of Donn-on sugar. I on. of almonds. one tobl nful of lemon juice, and one tab espoonful of water. Blanch, quilt, and lightly bake the o model-o Thou they brown. stir in the olmonds. and pour into o. buttred tin to set. L "b1i""”r6Rl 1 VlIItIlQEAI-ch v A cons... Futniyahcd Grandmother's Quilt Patterns VIZEBENA Out out applique pieces and sew an indicated on small block. Arron» applique and Plain blocks as s - gcsted on quilt dlognm. Large 11c on ore red with‘ cream circles, leavc. are groan. Finish edge of quilt with 3 incl-l border to match applique patches. I Allow for all seams wherrcuttlif l. . 3 inch border around entire quw Material required ‘ 3 2-3 yards ntsterisl for 811911111" blocks. i. 5-6 yards moioeiol for pls.‘ blocb. 4 5-6 do red" material. 2 cream material. 101-3 yards 3 inch binding f0 border around quilt. When adoring give Number 31-6". 8nd 1|c for {book of quiltpu terns containing 1 beautiful Grand mother quilt designs - every p» tern different. , T {Iii 3 _ _, 'a § g'§i;s§=}&%;; "drill ‘ 3; sgzgggiail Eiiligflfilr R4181 sot on her horse, watching." Con" he soidtio o sur- fills; §_;!§el 2% . sol i“: P2 3? rled an‘ if I didn't know the danger Now listen hero-if we find one fresh dcadcow after to-night, I'll get your vefinory. I'm saying this ‘cause 1 vetlnsry oftsrbogotben Bnavely. still . . . Anyway, she had softened-J‘! know how you're wor- was over-Id start for town now. _ know the sickness will stop. an’ 1 oilft goin’ a-foggln‘ into town for no who couldn't do nothin’ moi stood thinking. She was not at that moment so very efrold of 5‘ iii” § is; e flit foot-hill mam um m tom s?‘ We ain't foundncsicknesodown’ put-some in the spring trou‘ < --I ain't done that lately. Better 1-. some in bO-hlflhlr-UIBICI o lot h foothill "groom wo a thew ‘nut evening Ruth ruched up n- the medicine shelf, found the par. filled bsniboord box and poure x small amcimt in At ' ‘airwo-