limate OW tist Peoples 1@ i¢ U an should be permanent.â€"â€"Atlanta Con;‘ stitution The honeymoon is cver when he sugges*s that a permanent wave In Japan there has change in the handlit pondence by governm larger business hous JAPAN MAKING GREATER USE OF TYPEWRITER There will be a revival of mole, and the general trend of fashion coâ€" lors for the autumn and coming winâ€" ter will be dstinctly kind to the older woman. Purple, hitherto an accepted color in this direction will not be larâ€" gely apparent this auti.mn, unless it be among the softer fuchsia shades. Next autumn will see a new blue green as one of the season‘s color sucâ€" eesses, _ This is a soft dark blue green very like a peacock green, which is particu‘ar‘y effective in aupple cloth, and in taffeta for evenâ€" ing wear. _ There is also a new dark almond green. There is no apparent almond green. _ ‘There is no apparent yellow in these shades, which makes them a distinct contrast to the yelâ€" umn The ¢volution of a {fashion colour is intoresting. _ This season the vogue for a soft turquoise biue under the name of Gainsborough duck egg, or majolica, has been a victory for the eolor fashion prophets. A color chart, suitable for household appliances has been adopted by leadâ€" ing firms, and this chart applies to other firms interested in interior decoration. _ Linking up the indusâ€" try by means of color is one of the chief explanations of the present day color harmony. It cannot fail to assist the eventual purchaser wheâ€" ther it be in choosing an ensemble for Gold Cup Day at Ascot or havâ€" ing the kitchen domain redecorated. today. e Household linen, table ware and the k_iuhgn have not been overlooked. werestco ate thus enabied to create harmonious color schemes in silk, woollen and cotton fabrics, knitwear, hosiery, shoes and gloves, bags and other accessories, The modern color scheme @xtends to embroideries and fine needlework whicn is absorbing w moss Much of the success of modern coâ€" lor schemes is due to a plan of stanâ€" dardization. The British Color Counâ€" ¢1l with the desire to place color detâ€" ermination for the British Empire in British hands has evolved systems of color research which provide early inâ€" formation of the trend of fashion in this direction. In this way a selection of the comâ€" ing fashion colors can be made, and the sponsored colored card and corâ€" related chart for the coming season is achieved. These cards and charts are sent out to members representing every kind of industry not only to all parts of Great Britain, but to all the parts of the world. AID TO MANUFACTURERS Manufacturers of every kind of production in which women are inâ€" terested are thus enabled to create harmonious color schemes in silk, wooller and cotton fabrics. knitwear. isn dyers and manufacturers. Only of recent years has it become possiâ€" ble to reproduce really beautiful colâ€" ors in all types of dress materials in this country. Foreign domination in color no longer holds sway now thnj British colors just as beautiful can be produced by our own textile and oth-‘ er color using industries. Even Parisiennes have succumbed to the London vogue of turquoise blue in spite of their affection for black, and black and white. There are pale golden yellows and glorious shades of red in tints and tones so far reâ€" moved from their primary form as to be hardly recognizabie. TRIUMPH FOR BRITISH This triumph of color in fashion and the home is a triumph for Brit. mucn attention from the women of KIND TO OLDER WOMEN Instance the wonderfully soft blues that one sees in the sheerest of silkâ€" en dress fabrics and wrollen suitings and can find also in table linens, and the accompanying tea or dinner serâ€" vice, in the crepe de Chine sheets and pillow cases of the luxuriously inclinâ€" ed, in motor cars and their {ittings,l and on the kitchen wa‘ls. British Colored Council Has Evolved Systems of Reâ€" search Where do the new co‘ors come from â€"â€"the lovely tints that one sees nowâ€" adays, which captiva‘te, and add to the charm of both the young and the elderly asks an English fashion wriâ€" ter in a London paper? HMow Color Vogues which were worn last aut n th: Are Originated About 1876 they took up farming in the township and later Mr. Watâ€" son engaged as a thresher for twenâ€" ty years. They now are retired. They have one daughter, Mrs. Joseph Abâ€" ©rerombie, Mrs. Watson was born near Meaâ€" ford, in May 1851. She too has good health and continues her daily house work. They were matrried Feb. 18, 1873 in the Meaford Methodist Church. T ‘Yes, I go up town every day," he remarked, "occasionally meet up with old friends from the country and talk over old times." There‘s still plenty of kick in life after a man passes hisJ 80th birthday, he says. Mr. Watson was born in the townâ€" ship of Portland, near Kingston, Ont., in 1847. Now in his 8§th year he is taking more interest in life than he éver did. Mr. and Mrs. Watsen recently celâ€" ebrated their diamond wedding anniâ€" versary and their storics of the trip were a revelation to some of the "youngsters" present The happy young couple of 1875 â€"â€"now @njoying life on the shores of Georgian Bayâ€" pitched their tent when they felt like it and cooked their meals as they went along. They were mostly "dirt" roads in those days but no automoâ€" biles to give them the dust. Even the bicycles were scearcoâ€"just the oldâ€" fashioned highâ€"wheeled kind, if any. The Canadian couple spent some time in Virginia and returned as they wentâ€"without a mishap. ’a honeymoon trip from Meaford Ont. to Virgina, there was u0 call for a checkâ€"up with immigration laws or commuters‘ regulations in getting acâ€" ross the border at Niagara Falls. It took three weeks to reach Virâ€" ginia, however, and that was fairly good going, with their transportation‘ facilities. They travelled by covered wagon, and team of horses. It was' real adventure. | Sixty years ago, when Alfred Fred Watson and his bride of cne year toos Ontario Couple Who Have Just Celebrated Diamond ]ubi!ec Tell of Trip Across Immigration Laws 60 Years Ao } TREES STRIPPED The caterpillar plague that stripped trees in Sudbury district last year is returning, reports from Drury Townâ€" ship says. Acres of poplar trees near Worthington are as bare as during the winter, Birds are so puzzled by the lack of foliage they fly screaming about the trees, apparently unwilling to build on bare boughs. \ aly s on . Aoâ€"‘aut heh year. _ ‘They all contribute towards our â€" general tourist income and every effort is made to encourage them. "CHUCInE to create interest in Canada‘s angling possibilities Whether it be salmon or trout, bass or maskinonge, Rainbow or â€" Steel head the angler can find it in Canâ€" ada. The tourist bureauy of the Canâ€" adian National Railwaye in Montreal stands ready at all limes to assist the angler to get properly located and to place him with a competent and re liable guide or at a comfortable fishâ€" ing lodge. Anglers form a goodly number of the vasi army of tourists who visit Janada szch year. _ They all contribute towards our â€" general tourist income and every efort ic _ .. . _ "I0 ADgIers to the Dominion was incidental and of small numerical account. Plenty of good fishing then / available in the Republic, combined . | with meagre knowledge of Canadian , | resources, public Jaws and methods of transport, rendered & "trip to Canâ€" | ada" an exceptional undertaking. Can. | adian National Raiilways records of recent years present a contrast not |only in the happy invasion of tens of thousands where hundreds came | before, but in the wide familiarity with Canadian geozraphy and the sporting resources that each section is peculiarly fitted t, furnish. This, of course, is the consequence of more diffused education on the subject of angling, and a new appreciation of the fact that Canada, with its unoccupied spaces, its "imitless wealth of forest and stream, richly endowed and as richly maintained, puts claims upon ; the fishing aspirant, which the older regions of the south cannot hope to| rival, _ In an effort to induce sportsmen to j visit Canadian fishing localities the Canadian Nationa} Railways have| published and given wide distribution, particularly in the United States, to a booklet describing the better fishing t locations. Motion picture films, deâ€" picting fishing in different parts of ¢ Canada are also circulated widely, h tending to create interest in Canada‘s angling possibilities 1 Border " N ZNIy.11ve years ago the drift of Amerlcqq AD&!ers to the Naminia. Whipping Canada‘s Lakes and Streams Twentyâ€"five er.bing the better fishing otion picture films, deâ€" ig in different parts of also _ circulated widely, raube se k02 ies L ‘No husband has a right to take a vacation unless he can provide. one for his wife and family also. The church has not done enough when it has sent a few mothers and children to the country, it must reâ€" move the conditions which make chaâ€" rity necessary. 'Noebnrehshonldbeclosedallthc There is something wrong with a society which permits a favoured few to spend their winters in Florida and their summers in Europe, while muiâ€" tudes, equally deserving do not have enough to eat. "No man has a right to spend moâ€" ney on a vacation if he is deeply in debt and doesn‘t know when he is go-{ ing to pay his bills. | "No emplojer has a right to take a varation unless his employees reâ€" ceive a wage that will allow at least a modest vacation. "No minister has aright to go aâ€" way all summer without first giving some thought to whethcr the church staff and congregation will receive any vacation," he said. Rev. Charles G. Cole of _ Grace Methodist Church, New York, has compiled a code of ethics regarding the vacation period. Neighborâ€"No, but I think she overdraws her account of her bank account to impress the nelghbors, Manâ€"Does your wifte draw her bank account? body...... man. Every young man looks forward to the time he will be able to boss someâ€" Patient (turning on his pillow and looking at his wife)â€"Julia, if any,of my creditors call, tell them that at last I am in a position to give them something, Doctor (coughing gravely and lookâ€" ing down at the man in bed)â€"I am sorry to tell you that there is no doubt you are suffering from small pox. Bohunkusâ€"No, I believe in the brotherhood of man, It would be no satisfaction to me to make a personal inspection of the same old family troubles all over the map. Citizenâ€"Wouldn‘t you like to traâ€" vel and see the world? Motherâ€"If I know anything about that young man he won‘t bave a relative left in a week‘s time, Daughterâ€"Well, 'mother dear, he told me he had just lost an uncle, and I felt so sorry for him. Motherâ€"Did I see yo young Allen last night? To become rich, conquer........ worry envy and hate. that there is fortyâ€"five trillion dollars worth of gold in the ocean, but we don‘t suppose it will comfort a sea. sick man much to know he‘s rolling in wealth. Vacation Ethics Girlâ€"Now that we are engaged, dear, you‘ll give me a ring, won‘t you? Boy Friendâ€"Yes, certaï¬:l}; _darllng. What‘s your number, "What‘s the use of learning an anâ€" cient history date, When I can have a modern one, at a quarter after eight?" Boss (noticing that the paper enâ€" closed in the envelope was absolutely blank)â€"Why, there‘s nothing written there, New Stenog (sighing)â€"I know, we are not speaking right now, | New Stenogâ€"It‘s from friend! Porterâ€"Sunset? burning. Touring Theatric fully, after a week houses)â€"An, this 1 is even a bright sun to town, The Smiphsonian Institute reveals When a wite loses ber hupband catches in‘ you you is. Old Darkie (to wastrel son)â€"I bearn tell that you is married, Is you? Son (ingratiatingly)â€"1 ain‘t sayin‘ I ain‘t, Old Darkie (severely)â€"1 ain‘t askâ€" in‘ you is you ain‘t. I ask you aln‘t van 4s Old bearn you? Son D Lll,l,___ °C S=0 news. Dapers is adequately reported to your wife by the bairdresser, _ _ +N (who had broken the engage. ‘ment)-Why do you want your letters returned? aArg you afraid Jj take them to court? Young Man (ughing)~No. but 1 paid to have those letters written by‘ an expert, and I may use them again some day some day, and so does every young woâ€" Girl (who you don‘t find in the id catches it, o Faqs Theatrical Manager (hopeâ€" Comparison a week of disappointing , this looks better, There sunset to welcome us loses per temper, ? That‘s tha theater you kissing that ever overâ€" my â€" boy This time when she "married rich and lived on Long Island" she nearly "lost her body", Mrs. Robinson deâ€" clares. That is, she did none of the exercises that had kept her supple all her life, and when she began to train again she could barely lift her leg as high as her waist, Now she can lift it as high as her head and higher, can bend and stretch any part of her body. Her fiesh is as firm and supple as that of a 16â€" yearâ€" old girl. Her figure is perfect and she weighs between 98 and a 100 pounds, never more. That‘s just rigttlorher“flntntmdamg- fut{on,†which according to her is 1 was tired all rightâ€"tired mainly of waiting around for maids to do this and that for me." ‘‘Never Be Tired." ""What I really teach, though, is how never to be tired. Anybody who studies with me learns how to wind up the body in the morning and keep it that way all day. 1 don‘t know the meaning of the word tired myâ€" self, and never did except for those 15 years when I ‘went society.‘ Then newsâ€" hee sasi 224 . @,â€"_â€"~ POML Dy aiming an 'accurate and extremely graceful kick fat the light fixture, "the thing that ruins many expensive and beautifal costumes worn by women today is the way the women carry themâ€" selves. They may have their hair just right. Their faces may be done in the latest modes as far as masâ€" sage and makeâ€"up go, but the clothes become mere rags unless they are worn well. And it takes good posâ€" ture to carry them off." l l Wearing Clothes Well "‘They need to know about correct posture not only for themselves, but also for guidance in drawing fashion figures and in supervising the trainâ€" ing of models whose movements must be rhythmical and effective," explained Ethel Traphagen, head of the school and originator of. the idea. "Yes," agreed Mrs. Robinson, deâ€" monstrating her point by aiming an accurate and extremely orarafnl 1â€"i.1. ers. The diminutive Mrs, Robinson‘s latest pioneer adventure is in a School of Fashion where she teaches correct posture to students who later will become fashion artists, stylists, buyers, style consultants and advisâ€" [ When she had proved her point, _and the desire to give her little adopted daughter a settled home had caused her to leave the ring, â€" this time for good, she started _ giving riding lessons. From that, she went on to open a dancing class which has in turn developed into the most famous posture school in the country, patronized chiefly by rich debutantes and society women who know they must carry themselves well to look‘ well. â€" es OCV CV W "You‘re an old woman â€" you can‘t do that!" somebody said _ tc pintâ€"sized Josiec, known to the cirâ€" cus profession as one of the great bareback riders of all time, up and showed them. She went back to the circus after fifteen years of what she contemptuously calls "soft livâ€" ing" and did difficult back _ somerâ€" saults in the middle ring at Madison Square Garden, setting a comeback record that has yet to be equalled, Moreover, she‘s still settng recordsâ€" and she looks younger than ever, though she must be seventy if she‘s a day. ‘ STRETCHâ€"IF YOU DESRE POISE, HEALTH AND STYLE MINNORrrrpmmmmemmmesn d Seventyâ€"Yearâ€"Old Exâ€"Circus Rider Gives Young Women Key to Smartness by Posture u‘re an old woman â€" you | but 1 won‘t tell you how man do that!" somebody said _ to | parrred merrly, rocking agi zed Josie, known to the cirâ€"| her heels. "Yan‘va .. _2 "P" koulec uce . vearing Clothes Well need to know about correct not only for themselves, but guidance in drawing fashion iown to the cirâ€" one of the great all time, up and went back to the : ¢e §% s c lj ;5119 It pays to "Roll Your Own" with E. Tre r@llt OOACCQ When you view it with her, she shows you how each rose bush is pruned at the right place, at the right time. Roses differ. Some will bloom better with cutting back, while The lady has a garden. It is beautiful place to behold indeed Unimportant Things May Often Cloud One‘s Happiness If you‘re middleâ€"aged, don‘t do any of these energetic "stunts" un> til you have consulted your doctor, and in any case, don‘t go at them too strenuously. Hearts are someâ€" times rather weak after years of what Mrs, Robinson calls "soft liv» tss ing." s xn + PM h tor} Voubling Yourself in Half For the spine balancing, sit on the floor and draw your knees up close to the body; then slowly stretch the legs upward with _ the toes pointing skyward. You‘ll find yourself tilting and finally falling backward, but by concentration you can double yourself in half, find balance and exentually complete this strenuous exercise successfully. "I find," says Mrs. Robinson, "that the simplest of all beneficial stretching can be done with the aid of a pole. Stand flat against it, feet firmly on the floor, _ with the heels, calves and shoulders touchâ€" ing the pole. The arms â€" reaching overhead to the top of the pole pull the entire body to a full length â€" flattening the stomach, raising the chest and actually stretching the spine so that round shoulders soon disappear. And it‘s so easy when done correctly," _ What matters in life is to stick to a thing and do a good jeb of it, whatever it is," she said firmly, "I came of a circus family. My father‘s people were mountebanks and _ we may have lacked some kinds _ of training but we certainly were taught that character and integrity counted above all else. Money? Bah, that was nothing." Among the exercises that â€" Mrs. Robinson gives to her talented stuâ€" dents are a spine balancing stunt, A stretching regimen and the heel and toe walking. For these last two you must get way up on heel or toe. It‘s hard but she can do it and so, she says, can anybody who will practice. With a Few Drops of POULTRY RAISERS Check ROUVUP so clear, whose f;-c-e and whose smile and are so youthful. fos C e e > lt her heels, "You‘re as young act, anyway, and so how ca say I‘m really old ?" Certainly it is difficult about one whose blue gray e so clear, whose face is so "What Doubling Yourself Po‘e. ihe arms reaching to the top of the pole pull e body to a full length â€" ; the stomach, raising â€" the d actually stretching the that round shoulders soon . And it‘s so easy when done ; ters in life is to stick d do a good jeb of it, s," she said firmly, "I cus family. My father‘s mountebanks and â€" we rocking agil'e'ly on arde mental outlook _ young as you how can you manY-" she a very to say eyes are unlined have no place Many noble animals of long lineage entered the lists. This was no time for holding aloof from the commoner herd. Breed and poise were evident in the numerous cages, Serene mas. tiffs, conscious of their class, gazed dreamily at the spectators Excitable terriers whose ethnological roots ran back to many lands across the sea yelped for attention, All aristocrats listed in the canine blue book were on hand, Represeniatives of the largâ€" er breeds sniffed ecntemptuously at the little fellows that any buman might put in his pocket. ‘These were n‘t dogs; they were toys. and conld v12__ ,_ _ ___" _ "CfI0 IRCTG was an amâ€" bition to mark in some suitable way Toronto‘s century o civic life, so it came about that all the best dogs in the neighborhoodâ€"the well bred, pub. licâ€"spirited dogs, leaders of thought in their several circlesâ€"decided to forâ€" gather at the Exhibition Grounds and hold a show, They would help their masters to make this, in every reâ€" spect, a redâ€"Jetter year in Toronto‘s vÂ¥ 100 m And all the while these big bugs CIGARETTE TOBACCO The happy "spirit"of the ho what lasts. Eventually the things close over and are lost view, _ _A family of children may be likenâ€" éd to a garden. There will be daily disturbances and worries but a moâ€" ther can, if she will be happy in the whole picture .She will weigh beauty against small breaks or even occasâ€" ional ugliness and glory in it. _ Her sky will not be perpetually overcast by smail clouds. } It seems such a pity er cannot enjoy what s noticing the little ann« allows all the happines tiful garden to be dest: minor mishaps. Or in there is no "sould or *ig has become a thing of ; al and almost prosaic i4 CCE mVC ET rive. He is rescued by his mother in time, The lady speaks of the weather, It has been too dry and then too wet., The wind has broken some delphinâ€" ium and some hollyhocks, LACK OF "sour,» ‘ We lock over the garden. Maraudâ€" ers and weather have made no dent that we can see. The thousands of blooms have closed like a wave over the vacancies l€ft by their broken brothers, Writes the Little, But Oh My! ** P"PPY Wanders in, An eleâ€" phant of a puppy, for he is a St. Berâ€" nard. Where he sets his foot, nothing ever grows agan, "Get outâ€"" shricks the _ lady, "Go home," she stamps. "He has alâ€" ready broken down two ‘snans" MINOR IRRITATIONS A puppy wanders in. 4 phant of a puppy, for he is a : nard. Where he sets his foot, ever grows agan, You look around at all the blooms and sigh and you wish that you could live in such a heaven. _ The bird bath has exactly the right amount of water. The pool is precise and clean, Not a dead leaf anywhere, She shows you the dry wall and the little rockâ€"plants clinging in its cre. vices. She expiains the difference beâ€" tween biennials and perennials and how she starts her annuals in sand boxes, h m omy NHB hear all this when you dy. others We Recommend "CHANTECLER® g the little annoyaac_;s." all the huppiness of her Toro_nt.p Globeâ€" Even eep : exactly the opposite a pity that the ownâ€" FINE CUT Annoyances, _ She iness of her beauâ€" lestroyed by a few in other words, r "spirit" here. Jt of partsâ€"technicâ€" uf the home is she has without ual, would Hence the ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO opposite. You talk to the laâ€" other FINB DARK MINK for quick saie. $11.00 each, either sex. Marmion Fur Farm, Chesley, Ontario. What a walk, and whaat a city, for an April morning‘â€"From "The Call of England" by H. V. Morton (New York: McBride), @a member of the solice force in the most romantic house in York Then Victor Bar, and Micklegate, which bears on heraidic shields the jons of England quartered with the filies of France; and so round the bend to Tanner Moat and right ahead the classic view of York Minster lifting its towers above the city and the white wall twisting on and or LYDIA E. PINKHANM‘3 The minster belt! chimed a balfâ€" hour. Smoke began to curt trom the chimneys above th« red roofs. Y ork was awakening, Reyond the walls bicycles went by. There were bells, bells, bells!! Did you ever hear of a medieval city without bel!s? (They even sell coal with a bel} in York.) So 1 went on to Monk Bar, where the stonemen have peen holding their missiles for centuries, on to Waimâ€" gate Bar, which has a great harbican, or outwork, lying betore it and a wire less aerial attache" to It! Here lives The walls offer you a threemile walk, which I consider to be the best beforeâ€"breakfast walk in England, It was one of those hushed, sweet, washedâ€"clean â€" April mornings, _ the smell of grass in th« air ana the wind running round corrers like a pup in search of his tail, An old man was shaking a religious mat on the south steps of the minster, the sun . was washing the east window, and the great church lay in unexpected early shadows . . . _ 10"%, JeL me teh you, is the last city left in England which a man should enter on horseback or on foot, Unfortunately few people know this, When I came to the high, white, maâ€" chiolated wall that circles this city 1 looked up at the Prieat bastions that guard its angles, at the crossâ€"slits for the bowmen, at the gateâ€"houses on whose topmost turrets lilttle stone men, outlined aga‘inst the sky, huge bowlders against their stomachs and seem about to beave them down on you as you pass, 1 EOCCs CC TRVW € ed pride of place as the best « exhibition, and won an array ; phies that would be a credit 1 kennel, "Melbourne _ Supre weighs less than three ponnds hasn‘t much to say for himso} he showed his haughty â€" neig that physical bulk and voca! ; do not mean everything at a dog But surely there is in his 1ittle & proud thought that he was the dog in a big showâ€"and during tennial year, Classified Advertising of the show ring were dwe‘ling upon the all round victory that must come to one of them, a small bundle of fluff, a Pomeranian bearing the soundâ€" IMe title ; "Malhnuems _ . _ 1monllt York, Jlet lIssue No. 29â€"‘34 â€" ~ Before Breakfast CC ould be a credit to any Aelbourne Supremacy" than three pounds, and to say for himself; but is haughty neighbors won an array of tro Aat a fog show, his little head ) was the heet voca!l ability dog on