PAGE EIGHT ____-.. " I .l-ite!'_¢!!.=.!r¢ l u-uvq-nuni -:- Fareftions on...» w... _ g Play SAFE with hWomanh Realm .,-. Scial anfid-glsersonal OROTHY Brand Milk is pure. fresh, cow's milk, cont-‘tfltrfllld and sterilized. Us: it in coffee, cocoa or tea. Use it on breakfast cereals. Diluted with an equal quantity of water, use it for all cooking and for dginking. 1t is a SAFE milk, and more asily digested because homogenized. DOROTHY Bmno . EVAPORATED IG What the Fashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington One of chic! greatest enemies is physical discomfort. How can one expect to appear chic if one is not properly dressed? And for a warm summer after- noon what could be more app"?- riatc than a cool looking printed chiffon voile? Herc it is! And when it's so easily made, why not have it? And it tubs so well, so will give excellent ser- vice. Style No. 3154 may be had in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Eyelet batiste is lovely in yellow shade. Shantung in dusty-pink worn with brown patent leather belt ls sportive. Pastel flat washable silk crepe, chiffon prints and self-pattemed or- gandie make up splendidly in this model. Size l6 requires 4% yards 39-inch. Vacation Days are here again! Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of Pattern 15 cents. No. 3154. Size .................... “nun-nu....------unnuoan. Name "nun-u..........--.-.-¢u----n Street Address a...nun"...-¢------n~-.-.-~-... City State \Skin Health Derived from _Daily Use of ’ utiqura Preparations Thtelsodil, pure and fragrant, to cleanse the skin, ' the Dflitflellt, antiseptic and healing, to reuifovo pimples, rashes and lrntauons and the Talclun, smooth and pure, to impart a pleasing fragrance to the akin. 52'." Tg.’.l'.?,'&§°."i§i° €_..t..“‘"'°‘“ 5§‘:,':‘.‘.‘l‘?"€'t‘$ °°"""‘1¢,“.t‘..'.;‘12“e";f.i... 5...... o... %//////////// c Style Chats i WITH ALMA ARCHER sleeves may fling a mean bell bottom from the looks of the early fall clothes. There's a whlfl of the old times in the new dress slccve silhouette v/ith a suggestion of the bell in the over- slceve and a softly wrinkled under-cuff tight about the wrist done in another fabric. The under-sleeve very often may match the collar or scarf fabric. A regular leg o‘ mutton sleove is somehow Dorothy“ Dix Letter Box. Night Policeman Warns Mothers of Danger of Letting Daughters Run Loose — Is a“ Boy or Girl Friend on the Side a Remedy for Boredom in Marriage? lDear Miss Dix-I am a night policeman in a tmm of about 4000 population and therefore soc more of tho doing; of tho younger people than the average person. Within a year thero have been more than ' twenty-five forced marriages in this llttlo town ~ that wore bound to result in misery becauso the young men had neither work nor money. I soo every night young girls from 12 in 15 you-s old out on the streets, or out joyriding with boys until as late at l2 or 1 o'clock. This includes most of tho girls in the town of the above ages. Is it posslblo that their mothers have no interest in them? Our county Judge says: "When a mother allows hor girls aged from 12 to 16 to run around this way of nights unprotected the mother should bo spanked. and spanked hard." , , Perhaps you can say something to these mothers to wake them up. x- Y~ z- Answer: Your Judge is too merciful. Something worse than spanking should be done to the mothers who let their little, silly, ignorant young girls run; ‘on the loose. It would take something with boiling oil in it, as they used! ‘ to say in the Gilbert and Sullivan opera. to make tho punishment at the crime. But most of these mothers do get that punishment. They get it in the shame that comes to their daughters and in the knowledge of their wrecked lives. Lives that were wrecked before they even began to llvo. Lives that were wrecked through ignorance and because mothers failed to do their duty. That is the pity of it. The tragedy is so senseless, so unnecessary. . when a little young girl goes wrong, it is her mother's fault. It was because her mother was so careless and indifferent that she never took the trouble to inculcate good principles in hor. She never taught her to be modest. She never taught her to hold her honor above hor life. She never taught hor how to protect herself against herself and, that her greatest foo and tho one sho must always be upon her guard against was herself. She novcr taught her that he! own impulses and her desire to be loved and potted and admired by men would be an ever-present danger against which she must protect herself, and that as long as she was mistress of herself sho need fear no man. The mother is to blame when a little young girl strays of! the straight and narrow path, because it was hor business to protect hor against the pitfalls that lie along the road of life. She knows its perils. She knows the places where the preciplces are steepest. She knows where the hair- pin turns are that it takes wisdom to negotiate safely. She knows whore a girl is likely to skid over tho brink unless oho puts on the brakes. And if she has failed to keep her little girl from joyriding down this dangerous road before she even knows how to drive, tho disaster that is bound to happen is on her own soul. ._._. __... The mother is to blame if she fails to control hor daughter and keep her doing the things that she knows she should not do. There isn't a woman in the world so ignorant that sho docs not know that the period of adolescence is the most dangerous time in a girl's whole lifo, the time when she most needs a mother's hand upon her and a mother's wisdom to guide her. There is not a woman who does not know that at that time of her life every girl is boy mad, that she is intoxicated with hor first awakening womanhood and that she can attract tho opposite sex and that through sheer ignorance she will do things and take risks that the most hardened woman oi’ the world will not do. There is not a woman who is not perfectly aware that no girl between 12 and 1'1 is capable of taking care of herself. It would be impossible for hor to have the know- ledge and experience to do so. And, knowing these things, how any mother can let hor little adol- escent daughter run the streets at night with boys and go oi! with them in automobiles, passes all comprehension, and it passes all comprehension how they can stultify themselves into believing that their daughters an different from other peoples’ daughters and that the terrible things that have happened to other girls are not going to happen to theirs. Of course, the mothers will say in their own defense that they can't keep their children from doing what other people's children do, and that as long as Mamie Bmlth and Badlo Jones and Jenny Brown parade the streets at night and go joyriding with boys they have to let‘ their Armies and Lulus and Floras do the same. Well, then, why don't the mothers get together and organize a girls‘ protective union and keep all of the girls at horns and see that they receive their boy friends there at proper hours and in a decent way? After all, tho mothers of the country hold tho real power ih their hands and could rule their children if they had backbone enough to assert themselves and fight it out with headstrong youngsters. when God sends a woman a girl baby He puts tho greatest reaps“. sibility on earth into her hands, and woo to hor if she fails in her obliga- tion. For it is the mother's hand that molds the child's character. It, 1s the "will" Wh° 111N465 the Kiri what she is and is answerable for the way she turns out. DOROTHY DIX. O I O O I O I O Dear Misc Dix-What do you think of a married man having a gm getting a little mossy now anyway, and this new double sleeve idea smartly replaces it. In wraps, the sleeve stylings are set-in versions achieving bulk below the elbow, while for coats the contour is simpler, with stress laid on fabric manipulation as frequently as upon the mode of fur trimming. Elbow cuffs or deep cuffs terminating at the elbow are marked trends. knitted to we ar- andto in every fashionable color and weight friend and a married woman having a boy friend? 0m m“ o; another’, company if one has it all the time. No man wants to come home and listen to the same lino of conversation night after night, nor does any woman want to listen to her husband's old stories over and over again. I think there would be more happy marriages if married couple; 11w friends on the outside with whom they spent one evening a week, A good idea would be for two couples to co-operate in such a manner that o , l AMdmlngsmglg r A Bootchman landed at the Royal York Just recently and arm- 4mm,- wandered down the rotunda, Noticing a rather pompous 1901;. ing, well dressed gentleman, ma)‘. in! a big fat cigar and looking quite It Deuce with the world, ho spoke wear well \ \\\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\ \\ IT] ERC lJ RY I l5’ I HOS O to him. "Hoot mon. and who might you be?" Tho American gontlentsn looked him over and replied as toiiowa: "I como from the wealthiest, molt influential and most wonderful country in the world." Tho Bcotehman looked at him a minute and thon answered. "Wool, wool, it didna tak’ you long to forgot your accent.‘ RV ITED IO I. I11 ‘NTAIL i For ThehCook , RICE AND PORK CHOP! Bear oi: lean pork chops on both sides, then place them in d doop casserole. Sprinkle over thom six tablespoons oflraw rice. one hi?! onion, sliced, one can of tomatoes and one shoppe’ stun P6111181‘. 0119- elghth teaspoon of black popper and three teaspoons salt. Add enough hot water to cover. Place oovor on casserole and bake in a moderate over (350 degrees F.) for one hour, or until rice is tender. Serve in the casserole. This will make a good basis for a one-dish summer meal. Etiquette Bylobortoldo Q. What is the average amount of tho wedding fee for the clergy- man? A. From ten to fifty dollars. Q. Is corn ever served at a for- mal dinner? A. Never. Q. Does the general etiquette on. a steamer differ from that on a train? CHILI, 0., July 5.-(U,P.) o five-foot blacksnakes rudely dis- rupted an outdoor church sorvico which was being conducted here ro- ccntly. The reptiles slid over the boughts of a tree under which the A. It does not. worms srunir zrsscusns‘: CAIBKHL, N.Y., July 5.-(U.P.) --Teachers supervising the annual Greene County spelling bee them- selves made mistakes in spelling congregation was seated and into certain words assigned to the cn- the first row of worshippers. trants. As a result the contest was ‘ called of! and a now one ordered. there would be nd ‘iealousy. When I marry I propose to adopt this plan. FRANKIE. Answer: If you do. I think you had better get a marriage license with a div- oroo coupin attached ” , human nature being what it is, I fear your plan would not work out. I can't see a. wife watchln, hor husband give himself an extra. close shave and dol ling himself up in his evening clothes in take his girl friend out when he novcr bothers to dross up when he is going to take his wifo out, without hor getting green-eyed nnd looking at him a little slantwiso ‘and having a few suspicions. Nor can 1 imagine a husband being pleased at noting how popped up and enthusiastic his wife is and how she hurries through dinner to put on hor prettiest frock and put perfume behind her ears when she is going out with her boy friend and being able to put any real enthusi- asm in his voico when he says be sure to have a good timo with Bob and not to hurry home. For you soc, Frankie, the trouble with platonic friendships is that they don't stay platonic, and the minute a. man and woman began think- ing of some other woman and man as a relief from matrimony and as some one who infused interest in life-somebody who represented their good times-the fat would be in the tlre of that marriage. The husband and wife would unconsciously fall 1n love with their sweeties. Of course, there are husbands and wives who boro each other, but this need not be the case if they have oven ordinary intelligence and take the slightest trouble to be interesting to each other. As a matter of fact, they should be the most interesting people in the world to each other and often are, because they have so many mutual interests. I know plenty of husbands and wives who have been married thirty and» forty years who haven't begun to talk out. All the same. I agree with you that husbands and wives should keep wa-wr. 0N wasn- oavn m anon-r m THE wuosr or scnuaamn cto-rnes - tar-s co snowman. sts|s....rn:as's a BIG sate n neuron-s THAT NIGHT JOHNM USED A NBN KIND OF LAUNDRY SOAP TODAY... RINSO. IT ACTUALLY SAVE$ SCRUBBING AND B I ILING THEN IF’ YOU'RE NOT TIRED...- LEPS GO AND SEE A SHOW for whiter clothes safe/q . . . .in tub or washer Serve” Summer Meals in a ~ Delightful Variety {Those no tho days when tho housewife most: appreciates relief from cooking. Why not ordon from your butcher or grocer, somoof tholo Swift Cooked Meats. They provide dainty and delightful menus for home, camp, or picnic. SWII-‘FS LLIBD . TONGUE BA§ED MgAT l-UNCHBON LOAF Swift Canadian Co". ' Limited ‘ lp their friendships and should bring a lot of other people into the! lives because that broadens their lives and gives them fresh interosl and brings to them the boon of friendship. which is one of the grcoiool blessings that any one can have. But the husband and wlfo each having a steady date won't wwk "Friendships with all, entangling alliances with none," is a good motY for married people as well as nations. DOROTHY DIX. I'LL RUN ALONG WITH YOU ANO GET SOME RINSO-i I'M SICK OF YOU OUGHT TO USE SCRUBBINO agusmvou woutowr‘ HAVE ro acaus-mo vou-o arr wv-ursn econ-ass. Too mmmmd! Write us letters Pk‘ h: I ct 's) (‘My w 'b o - a3 l8 g9 3nowyp: says Mrs, Argue Tow’; u v _ e e best so: h P 5"" lt nukes Iv; tozzvnttfizéuds stand up_ ruck Cc " "Paw... boilin 818:0 snfiwy] ___n a 0O. ‘nd it‘, ever scratches 1mm m,‘ Mummy-am; R. flfO 'ud~'/- far tub or washer ‘ m“ a cram?» llstin a ‘nd l. g SUdS Bl‘: glfe for th FWII washing 1,1311%” rilgotglrzlecgaai?! 37c, "WP Rinso ‘ - ° I "l? l°illlflr~itbgx 13:: s." much suds as Grout for dish”, t £011? "I llflver h