r Y as. 1936 £4/— Woman '3 ’"“,...ouooooo+o Yvonne is All ‘Ready For. Celebration :....¢-. ._ Llfiiw Yvonne c.I_tparent‘y has become exclusive and decided to hlild m liiri'l lay celihratioris all by herself. To-dly marks the second birth- “Y of Xvcnne and her four fI.me\'.| sisters And here she is shown fill may to start eating her birthday cake. 4: -.---.-..eo+$o-0+0-on-to-ooooov-we». m New Features “Miracle Stones” 0“ St°Ve5 In Dionne District — combustion ‘stoves with Call-Se Queer Legend doors or converting them into open furs have become common A legend which has grown con- durirg the last decade. A recent earning "niiraclc stories‘ of Cal- example of thL~'. type. besides pos- ses=i11g the iisuai features. has one or two characteristics that are Worlhv of mention. Made by I con- cern 11-liose name has become a ho-.1.~e!iol-1 word for stoves and ranges. it will burn any kind of lander threatens either to make Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe a wealthy man. or to make him give up his practice to answer letters. the quintuplets‘ famous physician told the Ontario Public Health Officer's Asaocatlcn yesterday The story of the stones ap- parently started some months ago, when a couple who had been mar- coal. coke. c0J‘lt:‘, or anthracite. or my mixture of these fuels. One of the novel features is the utilisa- ' i.on of the front bar as I. fall-bar. rfed ten or twelve years visited Another is ii loose bottom grate. Callander. They had been child- which can be drawn out by the leg. but they picked ilp some operating handle. allowing the stones around the hospital. took lemains of the fire to fall into the ssh-pan. But this procedure is necesniry only at long intervals. for the removal of clinkers. Ordin- arily. the ashes are shaken through into the ash-pan by rocking the bottom grate by an external shaker inch with the operating handle. Folding doors in the front of the stove have the usual mica wind- ows to show a cheerful glow when the doors are closed. says Oramb- them home and “put them under their pillows." according to Dr Dafoe. A year later they came back to Caliander, exhibiting a fine. healthy baby The story got a.round. Jean Her- sholt, who played the role of Dr Dafoe in “The Country Doctor." took a. box of stone home with him to his friends in California Now scores of letters pour in to Dr. Dafoe. usually accompanied by ers's Journal. A flue nozzle may be a. dollar bill or more, asking for either at the back. for standing the “miracle stcnes." The doctor has stove in an open-fire 119137-11. 0!’ It always returned the money. and the toll. fol‘ I Venlcll flue-WD9. without. the stones When closed. with the drluiihll The quints' physician mixed ills Idlustcd. these stoves will burn humorous talk on his five wards 5l0WlY all night with some advice to expectant mothers. "Call in your family dor- tor." he said. “and let him look after things in his own way and ev-rvthin: will be 0 K He said too many mcthers were inclined "to shop around" for a physician. instead of turning to their family friend and doctor. sa.id Dr. Defoe. NO MORE PAIN l\'hon you take a Psradoi tablet, pun disappears quickly and there is REAL COMEDY. Extract from a boy's letter: "We 9 with my husband and I am certain he loves me Very much, too. THE (TrlARL(TI'l'E'|‘()W N (_iU_A_lfl)lA1'vf Rveavlm -:- Social and Pa son Q-009000” 0060690960-69606-0006-666066600-O09-60069-#960-0004606-604000I O00-09960600600 _D0r0thy D13c’s Letter Box Family Skeleton Hidden Deeply in the Closet — Truth Will Often Keep One From Harm BeIt)ter Than Secrets 0 that it will disgrace me for life. few very close girl friends and to keep them from finding out about it I have told them 0 81980 mfiny lies. Please tell me what 1 should do about this lying. shall 1 keep on with it? MARY EIJJJN. Answer: No, no, you poor, little bewflderel kid- You will only get yourself in deeper trouble and make the situation more difficult DY lyins about it. You will lose your friends far more surely by telling them falsehoods than you would by telling them the ‘Nth. for they will find out that you have deceived them and lose all confidence in you. It is folly to try to hide the family skeleton. The door always pops open at the wrong time, or somebody peeks through the keyhole and whis- pers what. he thinks he saw to somebody else and that starts all the 806' siping tongues to wagging. The result is that everybody rattles the bones and tells an exaggerated tale about them. Everything is milde W appear ten times as badly as it is. so when anything unpleasant hlirpilens in a family it is far better to make no mystery about it, but Just to W“ the plain truth about it and open the closet door so your friends and nciglibors may see for themselves what is in it. That satisfies their cur- iosity and still their tongues. because it leaves them not-hing to 5D€C“13‘= about. If your incther and father are going to set a dlV0l'Ce. you can't Keel? it at secret. It will be published in the newspapers. No doubt all of your acquaintances know about it already, so you are doing a silly thins in telling your pitiful little lies. They discredit you and do not save your mother's and fathers faces. While you need not broadcast their matrimonial differences to the world, you had best tell the truth about it when you have to speak of it. And try to get over the morbid view you are taking of the sublech Remember how common divorce is in these days and that it is no lollB¢|' considered a disgrace, and certainly it puts no public stigma on the child- ren of the divorcees. The only sentiment it arouses in any breast is one of pity for them. But inasmuch as you feel so deeply about the matter and as your parents seem to have done each other no unforzlveabie wrong. why don"- you make an appeal to them to try to forget their differences for YOU! sake? Try to make them understand what a crime they are committing against you and how they are warping your life by this divorce that they are entering into so lightly. Tell them that you feel disgraced a.nd that you fear that you will be ostracized by your paymates when it is known that they have parted. Tell them that you have been so crushed with shame at this thought that you have been driven to lying in order to put. off the evil day as long as P05- sibic. If they have any licarts in their bosoins; if they have any love for you; if they have any sense of responsibility and duty to the child they have brought into the world. they certainly will not sacrifice you to some whim of boredom or some gust of passion. They will wait until you are grown before they part. DOROTHY DIX. -to Dear Dorothy Dix—-I have been inarrled a year, am terribly ll‘iHi0‘.\ ow- ever, he has recent‘y opened a business of his own and he is so iuixfous to make this Véllllire 11 success that he works every night until midnight. I scarcely know 1 am married to him except on week-ends. 1 work my self in an office, so the days are all right, but my evenings are very lonely and his t‘CllV'(‘l‘S£‘.LilOll, when at home. is made up mostly of his work and his plans and prospects. What. can I do? 1 can't go out alone. My friends have their men folks and I am Just Olll, in the cold. A LONELY BRIDE. net Answer: I think the Lhllig for you to do is to try to be a good sport about this situation. if your husband was iEiI.\'illg you alone every night, to play poker with boys downtoivii or step out with some other woman, then you would be Justified in thinking he was giving you a raw deal and for pity- It is no Longer the Better Policy to Keep the Dear Dorothy Dix—My parents are going to get, 3 dl\'Ol'cc although they are still on friendly terms. My father comes to the iiousn, nearly every night and is very nice to us. - I am a girl 12 years old and l am very sensitive about this divorce and feel I have a ai returns. ‘ fng yourself as a poor neglected wife. But he isn‘t doing that. He is working himself half to death to try to get. a strrt iii the world and to build up a. business that will enable him to keep you soil and comfortable an dglve you the pretty things you crave. ;ll%slli\'el_\' no disagreeable aftcneflecis. llsnnds have written us that thy never knew anything to stop so ““i°“’“ an ¢IlAll'I PARADOL gave a. performance of Hamlet‘ before we broke up for Christmas and ,e. lot of fathers and mothers came Although some of them had seen it before they laughed just the same." Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making Here's a darling dress to add to your summer Joys. You can imagine how ravishing it would be in dot.e:l sheer cotton print. white nr pastel tub silk or in linen. The young rape-’.i.kc frelilig iibout the shoulders. makes the sa h-licd waistline almost wasp-like. so much of the newest neckwcar has a shirt type appearance so here we have a ‘ new and very dainty shirt, collar. Handkerchief linen prints. cotton chsllis prints, tub pastel silks. etc, are other nice suggestions for this fascinating dress. You'll find it exceedingly simple and inexpensive to sew, particularly so, for the charming result gained. Style No. 1759 is designed for sizes 14. 10, 18 yel.rs, 36. 38 and 40-inches bust. Sin it requires 3*; yards of 30-inch material with 2!’: yards of I-inch ribbon for sash. Price of PATTERN lb cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No.17». sin .................... Instead of birckiiig him up and telling him what a fine fellow he is and how you admire him, you sit down and whine and cry because he isn't, at home every evening and can't take you out to the movies. You are it business girl and you must know that it is a hard thing to get any new enterprise launched. Every business at the beginning has to be watched and tended as carefully as it it were 3, sick baby_ mvery expense has to be cut. Every opportunity taken advantage of. Every new customer cultivated. Nobody in the woi~.'d- but the man who has his all invested in it, whose every hope and ambition is tied up in ft, is going to do the watchful waiting that is necessary to make it a success, Of Course. it is hard on you being left to spend the evenings alone, but as your husband is sacrificing so much, don't, you think it is up to you to make a. few sacrifices yourself? Don't you think you might be cheeriiii about the sacrifices you are called upon to make and help him by boost. ing him up, instead of taking the heart out of him by oolnpiiuiiirig about being lonesome? M .V0lll‘ 0V€l?lll85 “Y0 iollil. Wily don't you go to night school? If you don t want to tnizc a. literary course, why don't. you take up doiliestic sc.ence and .car1i how to cook, or ho\v to make your own dresses and trim your own hats? ihat woud be useful knowledge for you to have as long as you live. I O O 0 Dear Miss Dix—What do you think about girls paying the way of boys to the battles and dances they ask thelri to? All my friends do it and don t llndt-3l‘Sl.lIi‘id why I refuse to. I l'eel it is going to be the ruiiiation of the young men and make them just common spongcrs. What do you tfilrlk? KAY_ Answer: I agree with you to a certain extent, but where boys and girls work together and earn virtually the same salaries I don‘t see why either one should my the others way. They should go Dutch treat. Undoubtedly, however, it is true that it is undermining the manhood of boys for girls to be so anxious for a date that they are willing to pay their escort,-5 to the theatre or at party or any pace of amusement. it turns the boy into a male parasite and there is nothing lower than that. DOROTHY DIX. Homeiy Measures powderiiig in public Ls "not done." However, a little that by using them she can always depend on ..__._._._._ Name Street Address _._____._.__——- (my State ALI. EXPLAINIED Pstron-‘look here. Will“ I fiflqnd ghfch pie. and there isn't e single piece of chicken in ii w'a||er\—'i'iiet'a being consistent, 5|:-, wg also have cottage cheese. mg” g" u 1 know there isnt It fltlflinit CUP AND SPOON QUANTHIES her quantities being exact Cum and spoons Vary md spglwlo teaspoons— one dessert. therefore a recipe given with these quantities can seldom be relied snag? d°sS""5p°°"5_°"° "me" upon to turn out successfully. Al- though the recipe given may be perfectly satisfactory. it. is the variation in the shoe of the cups used which makes all the differ- enoe. of course, if you are using a pro- per measuring cup or spoon it is a different matter. for these are standardised; but falling these. I do advise every houswife who does not already possess household scales to invest in a pair. for they will sbve their cost over and over again. quite apart from the fact more ewecieiiy porhspl. now that Six tablespoons—onc small tea- cup One teacup—oiie gill. One brcskfastc1ip—liaif pint. one ouncd dry substanctL—one tablespoon One oillice butter or dip|)il1g—- onc de.\<-ertspooii Quarter pound lencup Half-pound flour—one breakfast- cup One sack--280 lb (This will make about to Hi: lflVH ) of flour—one T approximately 5.05 a.m., E.S.T., Thursday, May 28th, 1936, the Dionne Quintuplets will 1:? "Five Past Two”. We join an admiring world in wishing them many happy Since the eventful morning of their birth, “Lysol” has been the only dis- infectant used to keep their sur- roundings "hospital-clean”. ‘ Old Conventions For The Wedding Ceremony mm In a, world of contlnlloiis change. brides alone are bound by a semi- mental feeling for ritual and quality, and to a traditional cere- mony as precise as a military cere- monial. Conventions older than their grand-mothers accompany them ‘.0 the altar and the bride who wants to remain serene will never flaunt them even to the tini- est detail. The ceremonial etiquette provides that the bridesmaids meet at the house of the bride and proceed to the church shortly before the tint- fr~- the appointed ceremony. Melin- whiie the usher: are at the church seating the guests relatives and friends of the bride on the left . those of the groom on the right. Each lady guest is escorted by an usher who has offered her his right arm. l-{is silk hat. by the way, he may have left in the vesti- bule. or he may have preferred to carry it in gallant fashion under his left arm. The guests he escorts to front pews marked by rib- bong or garlands of flowers The bridegroom and the best man according to the best. tradi- tions. arrive l5 minutes before the hour. enter the church by the side door and take 11p their position in the church at the first intimation that the bride‘s mother has arrived the clergyman having preceded them to the altar. The groom‘s mother should be escorted to the front pew on the rioht before the bride's the groom fsbter foliowina fiend taking up hLs position beside r In leaving the bride's home, the mother and members of the family not taking part in the ceremony. 80 first to the church. The brides- rnsids follow and finally ‘the bride and her father or whoever gives her in marriage. The head iislwr escorts the bride's mother to the front pew on the left. The organist our the weddfnl lnlrch. Wedding Procession. The wedding Di'C(‘(‘S1ii(lll comes down the aisle. the ushers leariiiig in twos or iii l_.‘. The brirlssiiiaicis or singly. the short- : then i”Ol'i“.(‘< the maid of honor. followed by the f‘.o\\':l‘ gisls or ring bf‘fil'(‘!" 'I‘h‘n f‘”l“.P\ vvvvvvv vvvv -:- Fashions -:- O66-OO6OCOOOO60¥OO'OOOOOOO 096604 040 OOOQQQQQOOOOO 00 This scrupulous care of the little Dionnes is an example for all mothers. Importantlin every home, the fight against germs is vital in homes where there are growing children. Babies are so apt to touch, and even taste, everything they see. Keep your home "hospital-clean” with "Lysol”. Wash stair-rails, door- knobs, toys, drain-boards, bath- ' .to this 1 l the beautiful bride (lE‘llllll‘L‘ on her i father's right aim. and a page. if any carrying her train. Tliry rill walk in measured time with four . paces between each, except in the case of the bride \\'llf‘ll there should be six pfiL‘1’S bel\\'t‘fli her and her immediate aticndaiit The bride tak:-s her place beside the groom. Each usher goes in the left of the groom. tin" "“"“i‘i‘i Mn“ standing closest to him. Each Your GUARANTEE of PUillTY fl GE NINE‘ ‘.44 Zitera tare 9049-006-O60-66001 f|,oI-"flue: con- ngllf Sur Nun-_ papar Sada. . . . another year made safe with "LYSCL" rooms, telephone mo1.ith'pieces,' furni- ture, Walls and floors . . . especially in.’ the childrcn’s room . . with a solution of dependable “Lyso1". And use it in laundering handkerchiefs, towels, bed-linen, underclothes. "Lysol” is so easy to use, costs so little—and may save you so many heartaches and vain‘ regrets. LYSOL (Canada) Limited. Dept. X—8 9 Davies Avenue, Toronto 8, Canada. Plus: d h “L . l fl l fbruy” mnt.Iinssfl\11lnlmefac‘Lse Ib0i)l‘lo“Pl:g1ll'hlli!t‘>ll fa’ hi:i‘i‘.l:,’i J . B! "Ire you get 0’: gkflubw "Lysol" I hood" and “Keeping a Healthy ome". : in the brown bottle will) (be onng: label and carton. I i'V""‘ ------ I , I SfrezI..._.. ____ ..___,_____ ____ __ l nun: IAII "uh-oi." | I neutrrnlb II cnuna I C“ I 3' —-v-- — —— —- ......._k...._ ,5 '—————_.__.o'__.__I 7 ‘ 7W_”“v7'7 Am ' 7"“-‘~77 A‘ 'm_——"'' ""”T-‘ :-—‘~—-' —>———— _-. ;;;;-.:'-_*‘: bridesmaid takes up her position to " the left Of the bride. the maid of honor or chief bridesmaid standing just back of the bride to the left. ‘ Tile bride's father remains Just back of the bride to the left. The l bride removes her left glove and l with her bouquet hands it to tho 3'” mad“ "0"" 3 “uti D°W“ “'1 maid of honor who see that her E3“3d°'- 0“ the W95‘ 9°33‘ °f train is attractively arranged. 5°“u‘ Am‘3“°“i they 3'0“ 3 “ut- Whcn the minister inquires: "Who the T“§““-_ which L‘ “5°d f°" gives “us woman ,0 be married niimilfacturing buttons and collar m 3 non L h 9 0 n 9 studs. Ecuador's principal export is who Ewes her in m 8 1. H 3 g e oil. other important exports are amwers ..I don and steps back mm cocoa. ivory nuts. rubber, tobacco, the pew beside the bride's mother. °mm'h°““ b~“'k' hm 5m‘W ("T°‘ qu_illa"i and tropical fruits. accord- I ing to the Industrial Department of the Canadian National Railways. Gold ore is also exported. forming l3.'l3 per cent of the total exports. BUTTONS AND ()0LLAl'I. sruns FROM A mu‘ You might not think it but a great many buttons and collar studs Leaving the Church When the bride and groom go into the vestry to sign the register. it is customary for the bride's father and mother anal the groom's . father and mother to follow, than the bridal attedants. As the bride '1 and bgrrcm enter the church again. i he ride on his left arm. ther l- . lo.‘ pages. flower girls. maido roof Famous T"(‘atm9“‘ Reheves .honor and best man. bridesmaids ‘. You don't unit long for relief each paired with an usher accord- . when van use mildly medicated 1 ing to our custom then the bride's ‘ Cuticurn Soap and Ointment.'Stub- mother on the arm of the brides- ‘born itching and irritation of pim- SKIN BLEMISIIES groom's father. and the brldc- pies, eczema and rashes respond til groom's mother with the bride's ‘ its soothing. yet highly P‘79C“"° father ‘ action Just. bathe affected parts with the Soap, dry gently, and anoint with the ointment. Over ha'f-century of success Ointment 25:‘. soap 25c. all grams and talk. and the bride and ‘gr-uggisis. finmnltc l'l;l:»E§385bYs:‘"l1;lfil:g lrzroon-i disappear in a cloud ‘of con- . Cutf.cu‘rAa. MDtl“l)h-H1 . - ,fettl. rose petals and hm'Sf‘Sh0f‘S lstrem, .. o . ‘and good lshes A‘. the reception, the parents of I ‘the bride and groom receive with ‘ I the bridal party. There follows the wedding breakfast. toasts, tele- ,wi1is“sio viii in iris‘ CALLENDER. ont.. May 25- 1 lng tabic of their weights in pounds Ic.ei—-Development of the Dionne ‘quintuplets is shown in the follow- vals since their birth: and ounces at three-month inter! _- Yvonne Annette Cecile Emilie Marie Totals six days 2 6‘. 2 «i 2 l i 13 1 ‘iii W 2% Three months 7 2“. ll 12 8 l‘i 5 0 4 12% II 12 Six months 11 ll‘. 11 ii”; ll Ni 9 ii". 9 3'5 53 3%‘ Nine months 15 4 15 3 15 6 13 l0 l3 3%’; '1! lllffl One Year 1'! 7% 1'1 9'5 1'1 ii‘é 18 6% l5 3'5 M 0%. ‘.5 months 20 8'5 19 H‘; lb 9“. 18 15% id 11% 13' I9“ in months 22 Ill. 22 ll’: Ii 9 to it it it IN -é 21 months aw/. as lav. an o 22 4% an 2 11: tm