HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-09-15, Page 6.;"".
Japanh
ave Few Chores
Time Spent in Cook,
aPd Dishwaahing
"A :thinithum of time labor
'required to get the. 7parese
family ;started every 'morning. Bed
• nnilt,s" are rolled uP and Put away
in a closet, t hopsticks• and bowls
are •rinsed -out in either hot 'or -
cold water and left to dry, says
the Ntzional Geographic Maga-
zine. Even the daily cooking takes
Iittle trine. Fish and rieare the
Staples. Fish is o''ften eaten raw,.
and rice may be cooked 'at any
time andset aside in a wooden
•tith to be served cold. Vegetables,'
are few. Peas , are goked in the
pad, and the big -White Carrots,
,and, cabbages are pickled.
,PtUer householkt,. duties are
quickly done. Except: among the
• well-to-do,sthe •general -putout' of
. going to :public baths and buying
ready-made ;clothing 'frees. the
• wonien front many hours, of house-
work. • The cotton , Inmonas are
• washed Mit and bung. to 'dry on
poles run through' . the sleeves.
Stretchinghon the •pole is the only
/ironing neeessary; ,
' Country /Women In Fields
The country ,woman; after
thetqamily a quick breakfast
of rice,, pickles, and hot tea, ties
• the baby' on her back and •makes
for the fields'. With kb:none tueked.
up, she engages ,in any kind' of
fermi labor. Sontetimes she works
alone, . more :etten. side. by side
with husband or sea! In the spring
she hoes or weeds, transplant's,
the Young rice, or cuts the winter
wheat. n autumn she moves with
. bent back down the field` with a '
helping dente* cut. and 1
thresh the rice—the major ere*:
.of Japan. Two farm . jobs ',seem.
exclusively hers, the picking of tea •
leaves and the: tending. of silk-
.
Worlee.'.; •
Piquant
Hues Featured
Fruit °Topes Doininate in Paris
Collections • for Autumn and
Winter; Greys are Assured
For Fall.
, •
, P4111S.7---The winter, collections
, introduce many novel color gamuts, .•
bath rich and piquant. But hayers
. and smart 'Avemen- have the last
• 'Wad col:teething their 'style per
nianencY. •, A ,few stayers are all of
the wine as wefl as many kif the
• fruit'iones, .suck as currant, mut-
berm Plant, 'Kane: retain; date and
amethyst. 'Lichen and •fern-kreens
are quietly • maintaining -their style
ground'. Grays are 'assured Ceder
faits4:-ail.shades are good • .from
' 'iron to Pearl; and that hold good
,for alt 'hours. Greys tinged: with
blue or ''amethyst I are especially '
notable. :y Elephant -gray -le import,
_ int . espeetelly for,•accessories ,of
snede-surfaced leathers, as shoes,
bag* andbelts; these accompany
green... wine. -.purple. red -brown or .
black costintiea. •
• --;" f ,Brick -reds,.. violets
.Ainong Colors Worth watching aredull and bright peacock, as well •
nitt-gold"' s. smartcorners are: the
•' shades between red and brown; .,-
ope,ritifis.aid. port; ,MadeFii, 'sherry,
yermotitk rirstiieda,
terra-cotta, carnelian and the Wood
tones, such as mahogany,, rosewood.
:and sandalwood. Rosy Georgian 1
brick -reds are prevalent,. Soldier*
7 red jackets; trinomiags or aports.,
costunies..entirely,-. of this shade
lend bright "accents :to the style 'pie-
ture. •Cerise and magentaare weg-
• ing A ,violent offensive against their •
paler"Plat4s;• Florentine pink is
sure te.tritimph.... • ,
Violets are seen everywhere in.
overwhelining quentities.
Woman Piot
• Mrs. Daphne Shelfikin, of Mini:.
Ontario,'Passes • '
.Tests Of '?riation
meinber:
• Of the liainilton Aete Club; iS.'he-
'. lieved to be the first woman in .
Canada to qualify for ' :public
transport airplane pilot's certifi-
cate; .It- Wap,.annouriced. she had
'passed successfully aIl-testa' of .the
departnietit of Civil aviation and '
• that she shortly would reCtive, her
certificate. ' • .• , •
: PesSeSsion of the certificate .
Will entitle • Mrs. SheIftion to 'pilot
paasenger'plenes, but she said she
does riot' expect to •take oVeit the
'. centrals of an 'air linet•Hei haf-•
'bend is one et 7$. Canadians
ing a transport. nilotts.licente and
the ;couple helieVed to be • the
In Canada reCeiVe Stich a.
tificate. •
Native of New Brunswick, Mks-.'
ShelfOon Went to IlarniltOn a feW
,
month a age, / To quaiitY' ;for the
• • license She had to fly "blind"
-over 'cross-country course,' With'
. only instruments to guide lict
Last Snly1 Mrs. :Slielfoon esCaped
• death when 'plane .in which
,
BEACH
7. a P.: lOP:411P Ittir r. ss* 7.011,2011.1r4 :dr 074074 P
'Synopsis
•'Young, "ambitions. and efficient
-Donald, Fisk of New York, engin--
-eer and key held manfor a small
. oilcorporation, is .sent into the
desert heat of El Centro, .S.A., to
bring in,:payine., wells in,'a ' veils
- promising' field.' He ieei , bis
issong wife, Gloria with him "wad
„ *together .they endure the soul,
• trying heat,: and duatAsi 'the blaz-
ing desert. Against great odds,
the drilling' has progressed until
Fisk is certain that oil will be
sruck, so he makes steamer reser-
vations to take them home' and
away from the hardships his young
Wife has 'endured so bravely.
Gloriai is beside herself with. jot,'
and days, too. soots start* to pack
luggage. Then . . Now Go, ON
WITH THE STORY.
'CHAPTER IV '
•• Don left again during the most.
cruel heat of, the afternoon; he
-'returned--about Midnight ---ttri-d-'
Gloria,gathered from: what be told
her that these fishing lobs were
tedious at 'best and that the Crew'''.
was getting along as Well as could
be expected.., ' .
For two days his _nightly repert.,
Was .the Sante. Had the aceldent,
occurred earlier, he would have
prOceeded, anon ;failure to gran-
ple the troublesome bit stem, to
tlie7ebstructien,' so . he ,
explained. 'In other . ',words : he '
`mould have drilled peat it by al- .
lowingthe seeond bit to be deflect-
ed by the 'first. .The lost toe' was
in reality a. forty -foot steel shaft '
standing in the bottom' .of the.
hole, :and it meighed many hun-
dreds Of • pounds. " Inasmuch as it
was tipped so,, that its upper 'end .
rested against the side of the well, :
it was not easy to get .bold of it. '
This new drilling would have re -
spited in a crooked • hole fifty
sixty feet: eep and • would have •
.left theI trueting toe' standing
Filon; elf of 'rock.; BY mcblocl'-'
mg .a email' shot a few feet below
this Shelf the lost :bit 'could have
• been . dropped into the Peehet
• sidetraaecl—after , Which ••• the
• shelf Could have , been carried'
'• -N-017.ta- *err*
old
But Fisk declared he was afraid
to attempt this Maneuver ,se. close
to ,the structure. Other oil Men
had warnedhim against doing so.
'Twice something of the .sort had
, been tried in the El Centro field
...end.* each instance a ruined well
• had %resulted. The abets had
; sear-
ed the rock—due perhaps ta,; Some
pecidiar,charactetistic• of the for-,,,
niation. Again ,he told his 'Wife
not. to Worry; tools •
e •were - on •',:the'-lwey up from ,the .
coat; McKay .-might :have t
strUction out before they .arrive
fact, he light' get held' of
:that. steno at any , Moment.' That
•••nras the 'WeY witi fishing jobs:
Don Maintained this lionefid.•at-
titude; in his Wife's „pretence' he,
continued to be cheery, but one at '
the Homestalre,.. AM'S': he . spent
twenty-four 'EMMA, he was any-
thingbut optimistic. 'Nei' was he
e pleasant ,person to get along
:with. ./.1!ider, :ordinary , circum-
' stance's be would have) refused to •
•, beunduly perturbed by the oil •
genie rdgrappling blindly' for a
bit Sterein the •bottom of a steel- •
lined; shaft a quarter of g Mile
deep. is slow work, at heat: Seine. -
trilled it takes .weeks...
• ):!,nt circumstances were not or: ;
diriaryll Gloria's heartwas set on
Catching that boat, the days were
:slipping • Past; ,arid' 'Dion could no
longer ,blind; himself :to • the truth
,that she was serionsly, ill and
• Ought to .'go. And yet there was
• nobody here: he could send with
her, nor could he IdeVe until. the'.
Well was in. , The diXeetors Woui&.
. ,
n:t Stand 'for that, even • •if he
.•
could bring himself to do such. a
' thing. It so happened -as it usu-
ally does' happert=that. no time
. in the entire history of the com-
pany's operations could have been
more unpropitious than the pres-
ent: for a. Mishap such as this The.
treasury was IoW, there Were bank
..
•
loans. seen to .be Met! Nothing
leas than big ,new 'production"
could evert a serious crisi . If he
: lost the Homestake, the earn'any
.; waS,, w-reckeFdit. work. • .„
tile
114 'drove his men v. ithc
Mercy, hut it was Maddening
futile woi•k, his blind grappling,
this interminable experimenting
With one' device aiter,•another.
becerne :irritable and junipy; his
0 /lends' Shook .,When he wiped the
stinging' aWent out of his eyes
he cursed the desert aloud when
it: heat rendered the vvoi•k doub-
ly herd 'Working en• that derrick
r was like working ninni
of Coala. Every piece of met.
hats ,fleali tell upon waS bet
Ugh to blister; the stale wntOr
she HOuselionld.Hin
Haye se -me plaster • aris .and
mix it with milk instead of Water
to fill up holes in Walls :The milk
• pro/eats the Wester from setting
tooqUickly; and it els9. makes it
waterproof when it is set and
therefore immune' frorri", the ef-
fects of damp. This mixture can
also be used for:filling up any
holes or knocks' in theWall before .
it is 'Papered. "
, flop
' was riding Was struck in ntid-rds • bed'
.by a plans piloted by Rome al t
' Chapple, killed ig the accident. eno
• ,
1
, • •
: •
that he•and hi men swilled down
their throats was tepid,,. and even
in their sleep . they were thirsty.
Fisk .told his wife grimly tine•
dei that.. they „could *net make the:
boat: • She: took the announcement
much as , she , wodld have taken' a
blew, in the fate, It left her pallid
and 'stricken. with something infin-
• itely worse than. pain, She crept,
away, and a:few minutes later. he
feUnd her weeping. • She madeno
sound, there4ves no expression of
grief abort her face, but tears: of
utter exhaustion were ' coursing
:down her cheeks.
To.: Miss the Boat
• "Honey! Homey girl!" her' hug- °
hand cried :in agony. "1:0on't take
, it .like that!".
She _tried to ,sinile.' "I'm se
, tired, Don!: Tye 'been planning .
so., Oh,- Dim, I' haven't strength,
- left. to stand. another disappoint-
ment!"
catch the next beat,
•
, , '
"I've beeni thinking so much
, about the greengrass and the Cool
waters! I'm so hot-L•ao, tired!"
Fisk nodded; his face was %fork-
ing. "I knew, But I can't, leave.
I. can't --•without throwing .away
everything we've fought fer: The
•
.ccitimeny 'will go to smash ---,-yen
:Understand! Pd clinch' it ea if it
Were-inine-,--but. the etow4 reVes
on. me, They'd never forgive me.•
Vd be a .qUitter,!" „ - •
11, suppose SO.", Gloria 'Wed
unsaccessfully to check the tears.
'My people, ton! 't• We wouldn't
have our triumphWould vre9' You
• mustn't mind tne. • I'm . such a
baby!' I'll be all right as v„en, 'as ,
I get home," •'
,Day after day tl work at the
well : went on., Many times Fisk:
yWas..tempte.d. to bia§t,, but the men.:
!talked him out of the - idea.
• ' (co BE CONTINEED)
New Hgh Reached
',-In Lencrthy Viords
," When, 'acientists got ttegether at'
Cambridge, England; for the 'meet-
ing of the British AsSociation for
the Ad.Vaneen,ent of Scienee. „ a
new high in long words was struck'
• by Prof sssor "Charles Gibson of
London University When he spoke
on Chemistry. Some Of tle words
he used Were:'
.DibeneylshulPhidedjethYlbromo-;
geld. :
,Moneethytenedialninoteranapro,-
phyldfaroinogold. ,
Theilouaa:.eijilacetone.;
• ,gthylenediumine.
—711ydraxYquinoline:
Diemondiethylether.
•
, Table knives—Ii' handles are
.stained, a good rubbing with a
, Soft Cloth, sprinkled with peroxide
". of ,hydrogen Will restore them to
their original Color. ,
41,1,1 Wheeler Jiffy Knit Sciikkires,:d.That. Are ,Really, Easy
=.,,A;
-41r.s
. --- -e•4
,-, . .4.4.-44, se. -v.,,,, --......,„„5„.•3,
_
.e...7.-•. ,e."." ..• P3.e44 g=9."V.55.-. —.....1.Z. -T, -...., -4.4 4, li,
.......--.0"t• ,..,,,z•-• ,-,--ms.., en... -.7., ..--
,..b7,1 ..2.%""eS.3 ;e:20)" VS1,-,:,, ...K... 4: .1.'4. a k.
.-4.-s• 4.-._:-z.v...ms. ,27.-p.;;;.0. •-es..y..k...cv....-- --,..p.••
'''''.:7_:'•,.?----17•E•-•''''../a - - %r- i•-•
-Iii-eitigc,r "- •
...MP s.-.4.:
v .. iie iffi l olibi it 1
Syei-i'e.:7,1- ,..„..,4‘. •:';"ii-' (rij
si it44 tia0._,Wi
•:,-,---,,, o, i,, .am,.,,,,,,;,:pifsmicso-r tsirocf.. Inc.
• tilfrFlf-KNIT .• • PATTERN ; 1E167 .
' Two : strands of , string and two large needles Make these squares 2.,..
• - . •
quick. tp „ kriit. As only the easiest stitches are used even • a -beginner ,
will 'enjoy making them, 'They're. lovely for a .bedspread. : Pattern .18.67 •
contains directions for making square; illustrations of it! and Of stitches;
materials 'required; in
of square. - •,--.1
Send 20 •cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this . pat-
tern to °Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St.', Toronto. Write
plainly pattern number,, yet* name and address. „ • . .-, .,
11 your electric door bellis get-
ting a bit Weak you can easily
remedy this by buying a little sal -
ammonias, then mixing this with
some water (about •three Pints to
half a pound) and filling- up the
battery. jar' with the. solution. •
•ItSometnnes happens that , a •
'door hinge will work loose owing
, • ,
to its weight making-thebOles 'ton
big. This fault can be got over by
plugging the screw holes' With .
/dead , matches or thick pieces. 'of :
wood, it the ,holes are 'very big.
.Sharpen the driving end ./of each
of the Plugs- '
•• }Ili a large old spoon with
alum powder and heat this over a
gas jet Until it melts. (It as bet-
ter, to use an iron spoon for this •
.Purpose.) ,Sinear the broken edges
pf ,a , china or .glass article with
this Ipreparation while it is , still '
'hot and linnid, then press firirilY
together. It Makes a very Sedure
jein. • •
Sortie Corks' will stiek, 'ne nutter
• what yon de with tiMm„but next ,
time just, try dipping them in ,pure
• glYceritie And you. Will .not find
that they will stick again:
Parquet flooring heeds to be
well brushed, dusted and then
cleaned occesionelly with a geed ,
wax . polish softened with turpen-
tine and then polished ' with, a
weighted polither covered with a
• ft duster., • ••
,When you're boitipg tnything ,
. in 'a saucepan;and it needs a 'lid,
, plate bowl• of water . over the
Pan in Place of it. You'll have
hotwater for 'washing Up then. A
washing-up • beWl.of,.Weter Placed
in the oven, if space for 'it, ;
also gets hot enough.: for •washing
while the reest gooks;
- :
d, Open the oven door After the
. gas bas,been alight fora few min.,: •
utes; it letethe steam ' out and
the oyen Will heat up quicker. •And •
/lever let a gas jet flare up around .
the aides Of saucepan. It's..,
' wasteful. , It's the underneath ,of
the saucenan;yeu went to heat,. not,
: the air ground it!' •
•
•Ileitbritshea can be. Cleaned
witlj pipeclay instead of .washing.'
them in the ordinary' way.
Spig-
kle the Pineclayover the: brushes
until the brifilesare filled with it •
LeaVe. for ;15 minutes, shake out, •
, and then rub the-brpshes togeth,'
erIO get all the Clay. out.
4. •
Whine holes in furniture can be
....filled almost • invisibly • by, this l.
'riiethed: 'CiuSb Some Whitening •
and rink:linseed oij to a paste.
Buy a 'littlecoloring matter of
the right shade and toa it Add
a :very little french polish Inst
be-
fore filling the holes. Polish when •
quite hardened. '
tilet han1s c;n. be refreshed
' with a fOvrder made iot to parts.
taleum powder .rniked with prie:
part bOtai, •
11.1.0Vit,..1f0 U. .CA.K.
. „... . ,
ATTRACT....M EN
• let hive and roisanc.c.psiss- You by. Men '
like girls With lots*Okpep and 'energy.
- SO Start.". taking titito,at.o*en • Lydia
Pinlchams Vediltidoio;Comtionfici an note
the difference. Pinkharn's CoMPOOrldit Made.
.iipeeiallp for, teOmen front WhelesOMe' herbs
and rents', helps Nature tentr.tip•Yonr tiYatern
and thni Calms irritable nerves and gives you •
tnorC pop to really etslok eat; ,
..ter over 60 years One wonaafl usa told an.
other non to. go ...smiling then"; in/tress trete'
• female: functional !diiintacte. witb Piolthain'S
Compound. Let
•
•14,
RIFYINQ
ccolate Cake
• all the .tb:ngs that chocolate ,
glorifies With, its . luseious
flavour, chocolate cake is the one
chocolate• tlt atreige•s aka tkpc,rge4mnen.lptAbn,ed me! an .1, idealsirnply .adding checalate to your
favourite cake recipe. •Chocelate
contains a considerable amount of
starch .as well as...L.cocoa butter and
.it cannot be •acided-suecessfully to
a plain cake recipe without clkang-
t'ha onnotmth of some of the
Other ingredients, Cocea, should'
neve* be pubstituted in any recipe
which ,:calls for cho co, late. beo nse
chocolate is fo. nuich richer in
cocoa hutter- than cocoa, it inakeS
a richer, more •tender -.cake and
one which remains •rneift longer.
•For the best results,the ingred-
ients specified In each recipe
should' be used. • .- •
Here is a• chocolate take which
will answer- any demand --'-whether
' it be for. a party, family . dinner,
or a fancy, tea. •
,
BLACK CHOCOLATE CAKE
cups sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1; teaspoon each arida and salt
14 cup butter or other shorten-
. "
ink • .
. 2 cups auger
, eggs, well beaten '
4 squares unsweetened cho'co•r
late; Melted
•• 1 c.up Water
. 1 teaspoon vanilia
Sift flour once;" measure, add
baking- powder, soda, and salt, and.
sift together` three times. Cream •
butt -6i'; add •-sugar gradually,
creaming; thoroughly. Add'. eggs
and beat, very well then chocolate
end. hien& Add flour, alternately' ,
with water, ,a .aniallA amount at a
'time' beating after each addition
until ,thnooth, ;Add 'vanilla. Bake
in 'greased Can, "10 x 3.0 it 2 in-
ches,. in meaerate oven. .(325; . de-
grees. F',.) 1 hour and 10 ,minutes.
This Cake is delicious Withtlie fol-
lowing frosting. .
SOUR tREAm..
2• cups, stigal„.. PROSTING
•
• -,telaPs sour
• ,
ctin „chopped walnutmeats •
: Bring anger' And cream te, a
boil, Stirring constantly. 'Boil, "
WithoUt, stirring, until a, :small
:amount of syrup terms a 'very sett
• hall.',i42,celd,-wo,ter---(24! • degrees
Cool to lukewarm (Jig de-
• grees..F.).;• heat until creamy and
of ,right' coispistennii' to. spread.
.Add and ants,' spread
quicklY. If necessary, 'place., over •'
hot water to • 'keep soft while.
. .
__spreading. '
msels
id To Women
- Ousehold----Experience-And-:*
Child: Raising Qualifies .
.; For
Public Life
:An inberent • "Sixth sense" and
ages ,of extierience. in running
honsehelds :and raising Children .
••qualify *eine* especially for par-- ,
.ticipatiOn in public'. affairs, said ••
Mrs. Millard E. Tydings in al talk.
at Balinnere last 1week.
, nt has long been My Contention '
: that women's place.in the political
scene is beeeming more; and more
initiortt.n`t,!' she '"When you •
consider : that it has been only :20 •
years ,we've had ' the,: vote, it is
phenomenet the ,extent to which
\wenien are participating ;in the, at- .
:fairs of their community, state Arid•
conntry." • . •
She said that women's "sixth
sense"; and the. CoMmon 'sense de-
rived from the household and
'child-rearing probleins prevented,
theni from being! fboled '
Men can , be, ' she ,intimated, 'be-
cause they haven't had -such valu-
ahle• ekperience. „
• When making mustard add, a
drop • • of salad oil. This improves
• flavour and appearance.
00 For Any ,Old
.,Lamp Or Lantern.
• Your Coleman Dealer pays
, TWO DOLLARS Inr any old
larap or lantern when you
trade It in on 49 new Cole.
man. This means you get
a new Coleman Lamp for
13.951 (Shade extra.) Dig
saving ' on Coleman Lan-
terns, toot See your Cote -
man Dealer. Trade today!
LAMP AND .f0tIE CO,)
RON ro, o N
youike.
t
les 'sew
a a
Neres a Christie Oiscuit for every taste
est
College Clothes
Remain Simple
Sweaters and Skirts Are Still
' The Most Popular .
• A ,poston story held a 'i"college
clinic reeently and obtained some
Surprising inforMation.. After'e tea
.Party,: lovely clothes were brought•
put-- with not a.•twinkle:ef inter -
. ••
The guests admitted, in a.hodY;.
that sweaters and skirt's were • all
0.. they .wanted,cardiga4-and pull-
oyereixiight he of giffefent shedes,
aeVeritt skirts are .easentian but
with the exception ot,"gaggets"I•to
enliven 'the -outfit it was a uniform
that they had no .4eSire in Change.
' "Cadgets"'. inciude oittiine• jewelry.•
' charm • braeeletf,,Vticky: lapel ,orna- '
' inenta and sehiVes... '
Sensible SUPPere,
•• .Letniging pYjanieS 'Might AS well
• . . .
net be peeked for Ahese',stittlents
.. Who. Study • in ftentiel, SipPer, •
ed down in the :front. Nor , should •
,, 'yea' send' your daughter . Off 'with
,cunning Mules; .oStr,ich?betrimnted..
They all Wear flat,heeled, soft slip-
pers. College rules deinand quiet in ,
the,. dernitteriei, 20:` far as lingerie
gOeS, they went pylimas". I Cented
trern.ineir. brothers, . a .few holding
out fer 'nighties. . • ' • '
Most Northerly
White Wedding
In °mink%
'
Picturesque Ceremony at Arctic
•Bay, Hudson's Bay Company -
Post. °
•
Probably tlic inost: northerly
ivIiite, 1.edditig &ter' berehrared '-:in• •
the Dominion, took .place at: Arctic
•JJay on
the niaentligro_share&•0P-Bak7
fio, wand!: last: week, when Ailan;•,••,
:Robei-toii Scott, 01:104.4Ws'
OOmPatik PeSt manager!. Married'
Eileeri Christina: Wallace, '•
,
The : tiridegroOoi was .forinerly of
Forgue, Scotland, ' add the bride is '
• the daughter of Mr. and Mrs', •Jas.
Wallace .of' -Peterh.ead„ Scotland,
The eercrnony was heldin these, •
locin.!.of...the ;government supply 'Ship
..Nastokie;,.notv 'op its annual ,Arc.,
Afe•tour. ' •I• • • •: • ; '
, .
;••• , Arctic.pOppies'
•Fiags.,end,'Atetic 'pennies, *Iced;
by gekinto• children„, decorated the
sateen.. The.. cereniOny.:. Was . per-
forMed. by Rev. A. Flending,..Afigli.',
can .liiShop;; of the, Arctic,... '' •
. PaseengerS'of thelsfascople, Shipe‘
',.olheers and s)1. /ed. cOated 'itoYel•••
'.Canadian •Mounted:POlice attended
:the wedging fcir Whichlthe bride
travelled '-ntOre tliaii 7;000. nines.
The Wedding,- Was held about 400
miles north or the. Arctic Circle and •
' 1,100 :Miles from4lieNorth Pole. „.
Happiness Makes Up ,
‘Height For What
IC Lacks.'In. Lipigth:fi
. •
Oh, storniy, storiny. world,;
' The days you Wer'd net 'sWirle,d;
Around wiili mist and. Cletid.:
Or Whipped as, in a abroad,
And the sun's brilliant hall • •
' 'Wei not in part or all
Obscured froni; mortal. .yiew,, •
Were days so Very le*. '
can but. wonder :whence
1 get the lasting genie.
Ot so much warmth and iight
if my mistrust is light
, It may he:altogether
Frem one day's perfect weather
,W hen. stetting- clear at daWii..
The daY ik/erit clearly on
To finish clear at etre. •
I verily believe , •
My _fair, impression may" ,
• Be all from that. one 0.y
No shadow 'crossed but .ours
As through the biating flowers
We Wentfront hOUSe to wood
For' change Of :Politude.
,,-.1•tobert Prost), in The ,Atlantle
lkionfhly:
Daytime Dresses
For Fall.. Stress
'Youthful Lines -
Skirts Aris:, Short, Necklines High
of Styles To
Choose From,
NEW YORK.7New; tali 'daytime.'
dresses 'dramatize • natural feminine
• curves and are, for. the most'part,
essentiallY,yeathful. ' „ •
. Daytime shirts are oak:, short
i14 to 16 inches 'from the floor; de-
pending On the shape at:Ent; legal.
Th� elaidritY,. are .'flarelT; 'although
straight;' VergiOnP .and - those
-with spaced. pleats ;are ..teatured;,
-Bodices'•are fitted tr accentti-
ate. the . besont„ Make the.. waistline '
,• tiny:and' hips necklines .
take :the •sPotlight '..,Slieulders are
very : definitely square, and .long ,
sleoveP are faycretl,:by meat'ceuttiri, „
veiled la;the., fall „
and winter dress : picttife „that.210
shopper, whateVer.:..4er ,perinnal '•
Iilces•and di1ikes possibly could
na-e .ally „diflienIty finding an
.,CeptedJ style that if especiallyflat- •
te.i.ingte. her, • -:-* .. • •
Bieck is as 'popular as ever; and
. your .tii7st fell sCreet,drets. more
. than likelY, will be Week.. But .for :`'
tbe teprind oneof for an afternoon ,
anode, leekat the Color situation
• carefully before choosing black
.again. Witte/iiltim"," rust; lavender,'
•piirple;, •mtiatard,,..... teal blue. sage
.green erid elephant gray arenot to.
be (lisniiSsed lightly. It titkesl.more' '•
tittle and ,:,thetight, to introduee
coi-
01- your °Wm-ere:be, but the:
.stifts Can W,ortli the ..'effort
• . , , . . • .
• '
"
Dentists. recommend Wrigley'
'Cunt as an aid to strong, healthy,
teeth', cleanses them of Ned par,
tides, massages the gyms. Aids di-
gestion, relieves stuffy feeling after
meals. Helps keep you 'healthy,t
Takoporne hoine:fOr the children
, too+ they will love It! • ".• c14.,
•
.'bh Bosil
miets m.
eetin,
eioai .
itis
E HIVE
lune No. 38-.7-18
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