First of all, a coin purseâ€"â€"with nickels sand dimes in it and not white pennies that look like dimesâ€"should be ;pinned with a safety pin to the side o your bag, where a groper can ifind it Next, take two minutes out before you sling on your bag to orrgani# its contents. Toss out old letters, empty matchbooks, yearâ€"old »receipts, cluttered scraps of paper which a woman‘s bag provides quartters for but which aren‘t worth their keep. Put ration books and curreently use documents and papers in the side pockets. If there aren‘t enowugh pocke‘s, sew in some more. The projection cabinet in a movie theatre has biitherto been a masculine preserve. The war ended the male monopoly tthere, and it is now thought that, after the war, giris will be splicing ffilm and feedâ€" ing it into machines for movie audiences. The girl proojectionist has made goud in a motion picture‘s technician school in the F2rooklyn naval yard. ‘The officer in charge says, "It is wonderful the vway the women have turnec out. We haven‘t had a woman fail yet aand we can‘t say that for the mex? though most of them are trained teechnicians to beâ€" gin with and the majority of the women have had 20 ;previous techniâ€" cal training. On the other bhand, ue declared that all tthor» graduating ut the top of the class have been men. ‘The girls get :an cight weeks‘ course in the theory of light physics of sound, in ucovastics, electricity and in practical workshop and operating practice. Grraduates are qualiâ€" fied to step into any movie projection bootb aud run : it. Purse Fumblers Should Reform When a womar passenger on a public vekhicle gropes around bilindly in her bag for five minutes for her fare wrhile other people have to walit, she should do something about it. Herd your maukeâ€"up aids and other whatâ€"nots into a separate litâ€" tle case, where any one of the flock can be ‘had without fumbling or without turning a bag inside out. Perkaps that woman isn‘t you. But in tthis day of congested travel by public comveyanceâ€"and of big bags vwith almost everything we own stowed in themâ€"it‘s a good idee for us sall to check up on what Telephone 69 DYMOND‘S, The Rexal! ‘rug Store A Winnipeg columnist the other ‘zy lowghed at a good many erroncous ideas men have about women. "Me:n," he says, "laugh at women‘s hats. ‘They think they are the silliest thrings. Yet they attract men‘s attention, which is what they are intended ifor. So what‘s silly «bout that. Talking about hats, how about the coâ€"ceniled lucky hat that so many fishermen hang on to? Isn‘t it silly to supppose that fish poy any attention to the hat a fisherman is wearing? /And now let‘s take up the wellâ€"wors subject of how a woman changes ‘ber mind without the slightest apparent reason. Do men do the same‘}? ‘They certainly do. How often huve I heard ma.e friends returning f{from the races exâ€" plain: "I would have made money if I hadn‘t changeed my mind at the lnast morient." And yet men laugh at woman‘s intuiition What‘s the difference between s man‘s hunch and a womanr‘s intubition. Yet many a man after a successful deel says proudiyv: "I fust pplayed a hunch." Poor Man A Montreal paper‘s correspondent overseas has been asking Canadian soldiers what they want to do aifter the war. None of them seem to be planning their future without wromen. Those who have w.ves are eager to get home to them and those who are not married plan to marry elither in England or in Canada. One .man, who is married with foar children, is a cook in the army, but he lintends &o let his wife do all the cooking when be gets home. He doesin‘t mind what he does as long as it isn‘t cooking or peeling potatoes. m'ï¬mm gold mines before the war intends to return to tthem. He says "I gold mining is about the only ihi== that will sttand up afucr the war." Almost without exception, the so>» s, if marriced, propose to return to the state of matrimony or, If o« wrried, to ernter it And yst ther, are pessimists at home who ‘him. that the posstâ€"war divorce rate wl be higher. C P P P P F j Rexal) At modern weddings the best man may be almost as intonspicuâ€" ous as the bridegroom, but his position was mu sinecure in ancient Scandinavia in days when a Viking thought it more to his credit to wrest a bride from his rival rather than woo one pe2zefully for himâ€" self. The best man then, according to ome historian, was the head of the band of friends of the bridegroom who protected the bride from capture. In the buttles that took place it often nappened that th groom was killed. One of the best man‘s functioms was to choose his successor in cuse the assailants were repelied. In mome cases, the choice was by lot und this may or may not have been the crigin of the saying that marriage is a lottery. Just About Hats T imes Have Changed T hey All W ant A Wite FOUR vod y 1108 he fir=t *I IBEERBDEREO DPEDRDOODRDCE hbrancs Mainly For xall Bronchi#* ,-.-'Mnd_â€h.‘ t Ou MILADY vour .fllb _. and yoo0th ld-“"“wâ€" 11 relieves cÂ¥ bes irrinated en‘ chial Syrup is ; .-L.Ald†1zk work» 05 af aa118 n#1@01 * #1 at Aure 10087 fwâ€" Now an4 Ephedrin® Anered 1# cdog AaY w 16 out 9 nasal pastas* Throat _ , 495 NS “’.lm # m 1A wyet * (# d k {qbse +D w* WA , ue Kexall AAy clear® t pame Prug ©Uir the ts upon TD , Best VWar â€" Lue‘n wenknens. ‘The Best Medicin and temperance. «n innocent child. The Best Bcwnce msunahine from a clou ledge The decorator also wared against using coarse acouring powâ€" ders or strong alkali paints. THE GRIMSBY ITINDEPENDENT ‘The right way to wash the wall is to rub it with a cloth or sponge wrung out of light suds made with the mildest of soap or soup powdéer, using even up and down strokes. Pinse the wulls with a cloth or nponge wrung out of tu* clear water, then wipe dry with a soft cloth. Only a emall area should be washed at ¢. time. wortky of good care." A wellâ€" known decorator made this «tateâ€" ment the other day, and proceeded to illustrate wrong end right ways of. cleaning the walls. ‘The wrong way to clean painted walls is to wash them down with strong laundry soup or soap powâ€" der. ‘The dirt will be removed, but so will some of the paint. The reâ€" sult will be far from agrseadle. Protect Walls While W ashing H Very Best Thing nfo _ _ _ t ~\ l%â€%m $ mc weeoeee: MILLYARD‘S DRUG STORE MILLYARD presents ... be and Beat Telegraphingâ€"Aashing # munshine inio e rAdoomy n the ahate Bext Biography â€" that life willes charity in the largent st brew LEKIROCNTg¢ â€" nullding fulth acrous the river M us+~ Philosophy Mathemat valle #he Jucs of Childh« irnallem â€" utifu) on LOADS OF ATTRACTIVE GIFTS AT POPULAR PRICES polc PhL i n 9 the 108 * bng 1be m 1e# &Fre & permanent War heerfuiness extrm 4e an gr hoh ep * PM boverr oA tm m lon w athrgr 1O E i =9EALS;‘TAGS ! WRAPPINGS & 5 «â€"râ€" 25° | y 3 REDRE E _‘WHI.TE“ 5 wWaALNUTS | CHOCOLATES ns 1 erartmnper Câ€gjip'é ° i srarronery 29c to 89¢ â€"| GIFT BOXES 4 Oz Per Lt. Neilson‘s Annie Laurie Moir‘s GIFT SETS For Men i __..__‘ 4 Or. 8 aRV A A 15 C | 16 Oz + 96 3A | *s"â€" 29° | 2 3 MIXED PEEDS POR CHICKENS, PIGS anp CoOwWs, 1 POrty ALSO RABBIT PEEDS ALMONDS California Budded POXED SHELLED 509° 35¢ to $5.00 l lwé fi“fsmk Evening of Paris 1.25 KT Cirt sets | _"_""*® MEN‘S SETSâ€" LADIES‘® SETSâ€" PEGGY SAGE CUTEX SETS Lt COMPACTS $1.00 $1.15 to $7.50 GIFT SETS MIXED PEEL £3.35 to $4.25 60c to $1.25 $2.65 to $6.85 Special MAXWELL HOUSE COPrFEE ... ... .per Ib. 43¢ CHASE & =ANBORYN COFFEE ... .. . pgr Ib. 48¢ CROW!H BRAND TEA. Black .. ... . . per Ib. 559¢ ARG TWEED PECANS &A XON I A AND tA 1 N SHELLED 69° [ o 9 e W Thursday, December 14, 1944 MAX FACTOR HOLLYWOOD Jr enc incaaite, PECANS FRUiTS SHELLED MIXED 43° 10° 1# JA R $a hh