A THE CHAT?" l A Woman ’s Realm -.‘- Social and Personal i-:- Fashion Paris the sailor type, which he has ma collection for 1931. The tcagown, too, has passe i By MARY KNIGHT United Press Btafl Correspondent PARIS. March 25.—(U. PJ-Jesn Patou has frowned upon the i little hat of the past few years and smiled upon the sailor hat and "Demode" leaving its its place the "intimate gown." the mistress of the house, to accentuate the “home" atmosphere and informality of her party, wears such a gown ranging from the rather formal evening dress to the new pajama. depending on the Styles ile a distinct feature of his spring cl through the doorway labeled In this case, ~ Dorothy Dix Letter Box Advice to Young/Girls on How to be Popular. Sporting Girl of 22 Whom Boys Pass up Because She has a Mother to Support Dear Miss Dix-Lam one of the many young readers of your column and I wish you would writs more for us than you do because we need it more than the old married folks who have already made their nnal steps in life. Tell us how to'prepare ior marriage. make the best husbands and wives. How boys and girls may attract each other. l-low to be popular. Howto- Style "count your wrinkles over o ‘round your brains." you're Icing WITH ALMA ARCHER Such was the advice that a facial expert asked me to aw 11101111 while we‘ chatted about the new hat styles. i l "h Even the clebutautes, whose skins should be as a r as a P6 . have lines and lines and then some. BT16 991d m9- the continual wearing of the ofl-ths-forehe: hat! protection for the eyes, and result in wrin e; l danger of complexion casualties, dont buy u R0 to look like a skinned bunny in it. Chats ne by one before you wflp l him They are from, which offer no Aside from the hat anyway if Try on all the trite-tire S ' if it variations of this heavenly theme and then decide for yourlsielti l l ndoes" anymjng for you. I personally adore the new croc e c P encircled with the halo oi tiny massed flllweflei- degree of lntamacy oi the gathering. Let Mo lsieur Patou tell you in his own words about the colors he has chosen this year. "For this Spring," he says, "I give you And discuss the many other problem that arise in our young minds. And right now ii you will write something about choosing your vocation I will ap- a" the!’ 8°$8viping about of last summer, the ‘Rose,’ have lector. cttes and some women with copp Patou takes no hali-way sta when many houses are wavering ‘Opaline Yellow‘ and ‘Opallne Green, which, like their predecessor shades, worn by our great grandmothers, and oi which I am a col- The green will suit blondes and auburns. the yellow brun- blue question. he states definitely, "Black will continue to play an important part in_ the scheme oi things this Spring, and all the col- ors of the palette will be used to enrich and adorn our beautiful been copied from the old opaiine er-colored hair." nd about things fashionable, and between the black and the navy For The Cooh GOOD FLAKY PASTRY 1'1: cup flour. 1: teaspoon salt. 1.: cup shortening. Cold water to make a paste. This paste will be very good in- deed if you use hard, cold shorten- ing oi neutral flavor, or if you pre- fer, you can use butter for half the shortening and one of the neutral solid shortcnings ior the other half. It will snvc time .uld make for eas- ier handling, if you will wash the butter first under running cold water ulitil it is \\'llll0 and u'ax_v, or _\'ou can (‘lllll a bo'.vl and spoon and wash the butter in the uOWl, in very cold water, pressing and working the butter with the spoon. Then pat it, in a wet cloth. Mix the dry ingredients and sift them ithe beginner may add 1/1. tea- spon baking powder to the flour); then cut in half the shortening with a knife, using a short chopping motion: or perhaps ‘you use two knives or a little pastry chopper. Add cold water, s little at a time, mixing it in lightly with yourknife. Turn out your stiff dough on a light- ly floured board and roll in a sheet ‘.5 inch thick. Now cut the butter or half your white shortening, which has been held aside in a cold place, into small pieces and place half of these over one-half of the sheet oi paste. Fold the other half over to enclose as much air as possible (re- memborlllg that the air you enclose now will expand during baking and help to make your paste light.) Press the edges together and roll ‘out lightly. . Chilling the dough at this stage' is a good plan. Then again dot ha! its surface with the other half oi the fat, fold the paste over to cover it, enclosing air and pressing the edges as before, and roll out lightly. If the pastry has a tendency to stick or the iat breaks through, chill the dough rather than keep adding more flour, and if at all possible. chill it well be- 1 fore putting into the oven. , A Morning Smile Conductor its olil lady who hasl just entered a first-class compart-l , pains. Gothic Suitable For Halls Lobbles and entrance halls oi large public buildings make approp- riate settlngs for the fumlture of the past; furniture that was used for’ display rather than comfort. The large rooms and high, im- pressive ceilings oi main entrance Hobbies, give ample space for the ‘majestic, architectural furniture of ‘the Gothic and Renaissance periods. lln the Gothic times of religious fer- qvor the soul was stressed instead of ‘the body, and so little thought yvas ‘given to physical comfort. f Although the Renaissance days had somewhat oi a sensual and pag- 'an philosophy‘, it was revealed idisplay rather than comfort, for in ‘those days of constant warfare there was not a hospitable attitude toward ‘ones neighbor, but rather a desire to show how much more wealth and strength one had than, the other. The furniture oi these times, there- fore, does not invite one to rest back and indulge in a long conversation, but rather to transact necessary business, or the like, and be on ones way. The furniture stands aloof from intimacy. yet it has great charm and beauty-Jndeed, an appropriate at- mosphere for the impersonal yet im- pressive lobby. English furniture, with its sober qualities. ls especially iine for this form of decoration. It is as practical 11s it is beautiful. Its rugged, strong oak can stand the wear oi use, and, in fact, become more beautiful than shabby through the hard wear given it by transient guests. Gas in the Stomach g Hurts the Heart Gal Pressure from a Sour, Acid, Upset Stomach l| not only highly uncomfort- able, but some ilsy may prove fnlsll ll hen your lueala are followed lly bloating a fuelling oi fullness autl pains around the Heart-you lllsy be sure that S'i'i).\i.-\L'H GAS la pushing und crowd- lllg upwards That's the reason ior the shortness of breath and shllrp, shooting 'i‘o quickly banish this Gus, neutralise the llclillly and cleanse and ilweeten the atulnnch-nuililng is UOUPI than the elm- pls use oi Blsurnteil Magnesia (powder or tnllietin, which glvea almost instant relief. Pleasant hnrlnlela and inexpen- aire iilsurilied Magnesia hna been used and recommended by Doctors nlld Drug- Any iii ' preciate it. A GIRL READER. . . Answer: Why, my child, I am always writing about those topics, because so many girls and boys write to me asking about how they can make a hit with oppos- ite sex and what qualities boys and girls like in each other, and so on. - v . As to what makes boys and girls popular with each other, it is more a matter of personality than anything else. Having a will‘ with W11. 811d part of that is a gift oi Nature, and part oi it is a matter of cultivation. Of course, if Providence has endowed a girl with what the old-fashioned novel- lsts used to call “the fatal gift of beauty," she can travel a long way on her face. At least for a time. Men are naturally attracted to a good-lookerfbut if all that she has of charm is ln her show window, ii she has no reserve goods on her shelves, so to speak, they soon tire of her and pass on. ii you will notice the K1115 who are beautiful but dumb have many admirers, but no steady. They catch the eye oi every passing youth, but after he finds that they are dull com- pany he forsakes them. Especially, asis so often the i e ' if the pretty girl is spoiled and arrogant and selfish. Many a homely B11‘! WhO l! P16553113 and amiable and easy to get along with is more popular than the veauty of her set, and makes a better marriage in the end. So whether you are a good-locker or just merely passable, li you want to be popular study and rcad and acquire an interesting iine of conversa- sgmghpw, it jilst seems necessary to be able to make swd 111s! Father loves it, ci- the grow-up membm oi the family look on it as thebesl of all sweet courses. 01' if 011E i135 only a youthful family and therefore does not bring pie to the family table, there is always the church social or community affair to which one ls asked to contribute pies. What humiliation if they are not good! 1 am going to give one kind of paste; ' though of course, there are several good ones. This is a superior paste and may be kept for a week or so in a oool place-in fact. it is im- fore baking. Pastry S-hclls. Roll out plain paste or the paste just given, to one-eight inch thick- rlon. Every woman should read over again, at least once a week, the ~tory of Scheherazade, who kept her husband so enthralled by the stories she told him that hc never could make up his mind to kill iler as he had his other wives. ness. Invrrt shallow pie plate, cover the outside oi it with the paste. prick in o. number oi places so that it will proved ii-it is at least a day old 1;:- ' Wholesome Pie- Tarts lined with uncooked pu-M- Put m“ a hot oven and when the Pu“ h" begun to bake, reduce its hell f0 rather low iemPQTB-tu" m“ bake until custard is firmly set. (Egg mix- tures, you know, 11111111? I 147w ma“ Chocolate Cream. 3 tablespoon cornstarch, or 6 tablespoons flour. 1 cup sugar. 1 square chocolate, grated. l 1-2 cups hot milk, 1-4 teaspoon salt. 2 egg yolks, Few drops vanilla. Mix the oornstrcch or flour (new that ittakes half as much corrlstarch as flour to thicken the mixture). sugar and grated chocolate; stir in the hot milk and cook in the double boiler over hot water about three- quarters of an hour, stirring the-mix- ,ture frequently. Add the egg yolks . (with a little of the hot mixture ’l‘h.'li. lady should bc the patron saint of all wolneli. for she taught i not 195g its shape, and balm-in {stirred mm them first)’ and me “AL the great lesson that ihc way to keep a mull is lo kevp him interested. And 1m; oven for plain imslie, 475 deg. toianow w cook just, @117” mmug” her plan still works. x l l Then, if you want to be popular, learn how to do things. 500 deg. F, or not quite so hot for the paste given on this page. If you ilonger; remove from fire, allow to cool somewhat, add the flavoring and My 3m i“ "M" 11 mick ‘"189 °11 W"? shell» m", pour the mixture into a baked shell. these days who does not know how to swim and dance and play a good game B, narrow strip oi thin paste and Cqver with mom-jg“; and pug, m“, . oi bridge and tennis and golf is absolutely sunk. and boys don't date her because she doesn't fit in anywhere. 1i you are the‘ 1105mm 110111 flak herlplace it around the edge o! the Irv, very slow oven (275 deg y.) to brown yerted plate first; brush the surface dellcatcm at the sewing cimle (Sc- Friday’: pm.) ("ihfi-fhe Fashion/ville ‘Vearin 8' Illustrated Uressniamng than,“ With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington one-piece front has an inset at tn, . center-front, with inverted plslts st either side. Sew in the sleeves- and it's ready to wear, Style No. 3013 ls designed for 51m; bust. Wool jersey, shantung, linen, mom striped silk shirtlng and pastel tub silks are fetching in this model. Size 36 requires 31f. yards 35-inch for dress. You will see one attractive style after another as you turn over the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss, the matron, the stout-and a series of dressmaking articles. It is a book that will save you money. Be sure to fill in the size oi the pattern. Bend stamps or coin (coin preferred.) 16. 18 years. 36. 88. 4o and 42 inches . best dancer in your crowd you will never be a wall flower, and if you arewith cold water, than put the sheetl good at games you will never lack for a partner. [of pastry in place on the plate and! ' t gpress it around the edge; trim, prick‘ Then, if you wish to be popular, be a good sport. Don't crow when and bake. ' you win. Don't whine when you lose. Don't sulk ii you can't have every- thing your own way, don't take your doll rags and go himself if you can't ' 2 eggs, boss the show. And don't keep your feelings spread out all over the place! 4 tablespoons sugar, Meringue. Boat two egg whitm with a. wire beat/er until stiff. Add Just a little ‘at a time, four tablespoons pulverized ,sugar, or fine granulated sugar. Drop ; in spoonfuls or spread on the pie and Custard Pie. lI1EI1l.).'*‘ATC you first-class madam?“ l “m! m, “mm "m" "He," NHL Old Lady: “Yes. thank you. How, gnufl llruggll! can supply you-try it are you?" I toil-m IVE million modern mothers tell you that children DO c will for Fletcher's Castoria. For mothers a ways give a few drops of this pure vegetable preparation when a child has any of the symptoms that tell of sluggish bowels. colic, or other upsets. When tongues are coated and breath ls villi When a child is restless: irritable. Always soothing and comforting to an infant- yet it is effective for children in their teens. You never have to coax children to take Castoria; they love its taste. Be ready for the next case of soul stomach, constipation, or other need for Castorial When . buying lock for the signaturb of Chas. H. Fletcher on wrapper. The cry-baby is anathema. Always be willing to do your part. Always be willing to fall in with other people's plans. Let other people raise the tune occasionally. Share your beaux and your chocolate creams with other girls. So shall they ln= 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 1-2 cups hot milk, 1-4 teaspoon vanilla or A little grated nutmeg. Beat the eggs slightly, add troduce you to their boyfriends and brothers. Don't be one cf the little cats - 5118111" and hot milk; Strain. B001. sdd who has her claws out for every other female. Don't be snifly. snobbish. Don't try to high-hat people; there is no crime they won't for-_- give you sooner than that. 1 Be friendly to boys and meet them hali way, but don't run after them When a girl begins chasing a boy he tum ences beating it away from her.‘ Never telephone a. boy asking him why he hasn't been to see you. It makes ‘ him think he is too important and that you are dying for a few attentions from him. And no boy wants to go to see t girl who is so hard up for dates that she has to hunt them up for herself. If you want a boy to be eager to take you out make himthink that you are willing to go, but not anxious. And never telephone a boy during working hours. It may losc him his Job and he will hate you for it. Never write to a boy until he has written to you, and then write the sort of letter that you wouldn't object to the chambermaids in boarding houses and his mother and sisters reading. When a boy takes you out go easy on his pocketbook. Every youth hasn't the fortune of a millionaire. And when a boy does take you out, pretend to have a good time whether you do or not. It is the least run you can give him for the money he has spent on you. ' And, above all, if you want to be popular with boys be natural. Don't put on airs. Don't affect high society manners. Don't pretend to be lit- erary or artistic or anything you are not. Just be yourself. There is nothing sweeter than a simple, innocent young girl. As to choosing a vocation, all that anybody can tell you is to take the line of least resistance. Sit down and analyze yourself to the best oi your ability, and try to find out what you have a natural aptitude ior, but don't try to be something that Nature never intended you to be just because the other girls are doing it, or because you think it is romantic and high- falutlng. ‘ And don't deluds yourself into thinking that just because you think you would like to write or sing or act, that necessarily means you have a talent ior any of these things. I get thousands of letters from girls who can't even write one sentence correctly, who tell me that they want to be novelists or playwrights because they have always thought they would like to write. And Hollywood is full of starving girls who thought they would like to be Mary Pickfords. Remember that the practical things ln life are always ill greatest de- mand. Everybody has to eat and have things and have somebody to sell them goods in the stores, and so on. so the nearer you come to picking out , her a solar-plexus blow. You are a darn good little sport, and lucky will be some vocation that supplies human necessities, the better chance you have of succeeding. DOROTHY DIX. I O O O I I 4 Dear Miss Dix-I am lonesome and terribly discouraged. I'm 32, a sec- retary, earning a fair salary, but the sole support oi my mother, and alter household expenses are deducted there is not much left ior either entertain- ment or clothes. Gosh, Miss Dix, it is hard to have the gift oi youth in your hands and not be able to use it? It is not that 1 begrudge my mother one single thing. I would gladly give her twice as much ii 1 had it. 1 am not without charm, but when 1 receive invitations from men I can't accept them unless they are to the movies because 1 have nothing to wear. Further- more, when men become interested in me, as soon as they find out that I have a mother to support that is the end. 0i course, they ADMIRE me for being able to do it, but evidently Gentlemen Prefer Orphans. It surely looks as if I am doomed to a B. M. (Bachelor Maids) degree earned in the University oi Hard Knocks when 1 would so much rather be Chief Cook and Bottle Washer in some little old house and the mother of nine children. DOR-Ofl-IY. Answer: Well, if I were a man, Dorothy, I'd marry you, even if you had a regi- Doirt be the 1151101111! and pour into pie plate LAUGHING, animated, after-theatre crowd-and yet. in the midst of it all, they were alone. Throughout the perform- ance Nedra has been conscious of David's adlnirin glances, his eyes filled with desire. , t, satin-like glow of her akin tanta- lum, he wanted to rake her in his arms, to whisper his hopes for the future. l Nerlra is uet one of the millions of woolen who use ompeian products, for she knows that while it is possible to pay more, it la impossible to buy better. Pcmpeisn Beauty Powder a reads evenly —- it does not cake — it clings or hours. One of its five shades has been prepared for your type. It is now avail‘ able in cake form in an eaqulsitc new Compact. indelible Lipstick ode.~Ni in Cream (ciflhliu Coll Cram) ‘lie-Day Cream smelling) 60c.— ausgs Cram 6ik.-—Powti¢i (kimono: com-Tale Beauty Powder (Do-Bloom 60c. lend . De .l6.'l'h P la CooLid 396 mlhfioi‘? WTTMonI; owhaii Paneharopyofmir lxioklel “Your Ty of Beauty and cf Pompuan Day and Night runs. POM P€lA IIAUYY IOWDII IND ISODU the man who gets you. l salt, i l l l brown in slow oven—tempere.ture a- bout 275 deg. F. Chocolate Custard. 2 egg yolks. 1 whole egg, 1-3 cup sugar, 14-1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons cocoa, 1 1-2 cups hot mlliz, 1-3 teaspoon vanilla, 2 egg whites. ' Beat the two yolks and the whole egg and the sugar, salt and cocoa. Stir 1n the hot milk gradually; strain the mixture, let it cool, add the van- illa, and bake just as instructed in; plain custard pe. Use the two egg whites which you will have left, to make a meringue for the top, following instruction; given above for beating and baking it. Special Lemon Pie. 2 71111115900118 cornstarch, 3 9Z8 yfllkfl. 1 teaspoon butter, 2<3 cup sugar, 1 cup boiling water, a tablespoons lemon juice. 1 Wflapwn grated lemon rind. 3 iableiwm" "MW cut candied tiemonpeel. Mix cornstarch with the sugar and Mid the boiling water; cook until no taste of the starch remains-Stirring until the mixture hag heoom, “my; B8111 the ess yolks in s. bowl and add a little of hot cornstarch mixture to them, then turn all back into the double boiler and cook over low heat for a few minutes until the egg thickens. Remove from the fire, add the lemon juice and rind and but: ter; mix well, allow to cool, then pour llnto bfllféd shell. Cover with mag-- lingue made as above, and put into a lslow oven until it begins to brown, lsprinlnc with the candied lemon mo; and finish browning. For 1 believe that not all men are blind and dumb and stupid, and that 3"“ a snappy $l>0rts_ costume. And not a lot of pleats to keep in orderl It's so easily represent“; The Oflllnal of today's model. in Dlaided crepe silk in navy and white with navy bindings, was very, very French. The close iltting not or the beret type matched the dress,_the pattern for which is included. And to make itl Could you imagine anything more simple? The back is in one piece and moulds the figure through the alst and the hips. The] Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern l5 cents. _.__..._.__.___-._—__ No. 3013. Size ........c-c--o-co-cco socaneonleeuasseneusueasllusaosoooeeaq NEED cc-.-----......--..-. Street Address vaasaasaoasesall City I l l Etats Etiquette Bylobuhln Q. What is the usual size of a theater party? A. Six or eight persons. Q. What are the most important dishes for an informal luncheon? A. ‘A casserole, or chicken a la king, with a single salad and a de- licate dessert. Q. Is it correct to give wearing apparel for a bridal gilt? A No. _._..i_.. ._....__-—— Frcm luscious merit of mothers instead oi one. just for the pleasure oi enjoying your wit, and the bigb spirits of e sirl who can iauah at life even when it baa given some Prince Charming will ride your way and see what a treasure you are, and that he will invite you into a spic-and-span blue-and-white kitchen to be chief cook and bottle washer and perambulator trundler for his nursery. Don't lose heart at 22. Why, you are just beginning to get old enough to marry, and every year for the next flve or six you will be getting more and more attractive and desirable as a wife. But don't be too hard on the men ior hesitating about marrying both you and your mother. Most men simply can't afford the luxury. It takes just all the average young man makes to support a wife, and ii he has to start out also with a mother-in-law hung around his neck, ft puts marriage ‘in the class of things he can't afford, like setting up a yacht.“ Also, moat men want their homes to themselves, and especially they don't want s mother-in-law in it. All of which makes it very sad ior the girl, and sadder still ior the mother who cannot help but realize that she is ‘ p blight upon her daughter's matrimonial prospects. whet Were is to do about it. It ll Jialt life. But I don't know DORUPHY DIX. ...inabotilel- keichupl s‘ \\ l \,\\\L\\ \ x‘ in. lll/l/l/V/y/y Canadian toatoes No coloring. No preservaiiver-simply the wholesome goodness of vine-fresh tomatoes l Truly, you never bought, or tasted, q fiflQl h! the Clark Kitchens help you fer euleliev and balm meals Ci. Anmlimnn. Establishments oi Montreal. P-o-I M. level, F.0d one Harrow. 011;‘