_ Sutherland good and prices attracâ€" lient display greets the houseâ€" vegetable markets, choice is the vegetables are beets, 4* Jf" y Coké â€" Welsh Anthracite â€" Pennsylvama Blue â€" . $ Briqueftes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" / en â€" Nut Slack â€"Steam Coal and Cannel. values and oranzes, bananas and ; apâ€" ples are inexpensive. Now is the to think of pickling. If you have not made your batch of spiced peaches or pears you may like to put up a few quarts while the fruit is abundant. \ Sundayâ€"Breakfast | Blackberries I S ud l ies eggplant, potatces, cabbage, yrieppers and . tomatoes. Corn, beans, | peas, squuh, parsnips and turnips ae allg reasonable. Fruits, too, are abundant. PMms,g The New Red for Lips and Nails tw . > s 0h » t It goes â€"with <every smart shade of Helena Rubinstein‘s Molisture .â€" proof Face Powder which never dries your skin. .Town and Country Makeâ€"up Film is a perfect powder base, also conceals ‘blemishes and keeps makeâ€"up fresh all day long. Sporting Pink Lipstick .................... $1.10, $1.50 Sporting Pink Nail Groom ...................... 75c g!olsture-!?roof Face Powder ..........$1,10, $1.65, $3.50 Town Country Makeâ€"up Fim.......:.......}:.}....... $1.00, $1.65 Vivid, vibrantâ€"the colour of the English hunting coats, alâ€" ways paradoxically, called "pink." â€"With it, fingertips flash with matching Sport- ing "Pink" Nail Groom. by Helena Rubinstein Helena Rubinstein‘s Special Representative, ° Miss Fellows will be here Until Saturday @ ~Make an Appointment now : for FREE CONSULTATION J. Bert GIST â€"0 ® Phone 808 || Bleirmore â€" Enterprise:â€"A passerby stopped to watch an olé man in the garden weeding. |"Which weeds do you consider ‘the easiest to kill?" he asked. "Well, the widow‘s weeds," answered the old man. "You only say ‘wilt thou!‘ and they wilt." raisins. â€" Pat and roll oneâ€"half inch thick. Cut in rounds or sqares, brush with egg yolks, sprinkle with granuâ€" lated sugar and bake in a hot oven (A50 degrees Fahrenheit) twelve minâ€" 2â€"cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 2 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons 2 4 cup cream 4 cup raisins Mix and sift flour, baking powder, sugar and salt. Rub or cut in shortenâ€" ing, add egzs wellâ€"beaten, cream and (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Dinner Baked fish fillets Paked potatoes Creole tomatoes Dinner Grilled lamb chops Mint sauce Buttered: potatoes Scalloped cabbage and celery ; ..,;. Pineapple sherbert Coffee Fridayâ€"Breakfast Orange juice Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal Scftâ€"cooked ezgs. Tcast Coffee Luncheon Molded vegetable salad Chilled Dinner Deviled crabmeat + Potato chips Buttered string beans Lettuce, chiffonade dressing Deep dish hucklebefry pie Iced coffee Thursdayâ€"Breakfast Sliced bananas Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal Bacon Bran muffins Coffee Luncheon Cheese and chopped pimento sandwiches Watercress salad Orange Chilled plums Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal Bacon Toaster muffins Coffee Luncheon Chicken soup with rice T‘cmato salad Mixed green salad, spicy dressing Watermelon Coffee Raisin Scones Orange â€"juice Readyâ€"toâ€"eat ceréal Bm'ambled eggs Toast Luncheon Mixed sandwiches Avocado salad Vanilla it¢e cream, chocolate mint sauce Little gold cakes Dinner Sliced chicken, currant jelly Rice ring with buttered carrots Apple dumplings, hard sauce Coffee Tuesdayâ€"Breakfast Luncheon Fresh fruit salad bowl Wednesdayâ€"Breakfast Apple crisp Coffee Saturdayâ€"Breakfast Chilled grapes Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal ‘Stewed prunes _ Readyâ€"tojeat cereal Mondayâ€"Breakfast Dinner Meat Loaf us potatoes Buttered beets Brown bread Dinner Baked ham Luncheon E elfluwmshwldmtlum mdmwhbhmhnmlemonm young skinsâ€"the strongey tanning loâ€" crackers Iced chocolate Cornâ€"onâ€"cob Coffee Tea tea shields your skin from the destrucâ€" tive actinic rays. Put it on before and after you swim and keep ancintâ€" ing skin with it even after your first coat of. tan. If you have dry skin gpply plenty of lubricating cream or oll on your face and about your eyes. Use the gentlest of seap and 1 wanz to wash your skin, if Sun Bathe Wisely I‘ve told. you all about timing your sunbathsbeginnlngwit.hafewmin- utes the first day and increasing graâ€" The more delicate your skin the more careful you must be. "The pigment cells hasten to create more pigment in an eager effort to protect the skin. The cells on the cuter surface of the skin thicken. Naâ€" ture is trying to PROTECT YOU, but the sun conquers. The cells are actuâ€" ally poisoned. The surface blood vesâ€" sels are clogged. Circulation is blockâ€" ed. are numbed. The oils and moisture, so necessary to keep the skin.supple and soft, are drained from the skinâ€"sucked out by greedy rays. The resultâ€"burns and blisters. Shiny skin is made shinier; dry skin is made drier. One brief summer of this can age the skin FIVE YEARS!" So whenever you play in the sun shield ycour skinâ€"and that means after you come out from your dip into the | sea as well as before you jump into it! â€" Burprising as it may seem, scientists tell us that it is hot the heat ofâ€" the sun which causes the damage, but its light. The infraâ€"red rays give ‘you warmth, but the ultraviolet rays speeds up the activity of the cells and littleq dose of them go a long way. ‘Intense activity causes a fever. If you want to get a better picture of what happens under the sun when you are foolish enough not to protect your skin I‘ll quote an authority: The sun is like a fickle friend it lures you into confidence and you purr under its warming rays. You let it permeate your entire body and give yourself without reserve to its soothing warmth. But like a fickle friend, it holds malice and ~betrays your confidence by scorching your skin and giving you a nasty fever! That many of these tendencies are hereditary and others developed at an There are other cases where there is selfâ€"torment, excessive kindness one day uand crueity the next, fear and bravery and other contrasting condi. tions present. Unfortunately these obsessions take on forms that make the individual do things for which he is terribly ashamed because he knows, his caim mind tells him, that these acts are harmful to him. On the other hand, these obsesâ€" sions sometimes take on the form where the individual shows excessive cleanâ€" liness, orderliness, conscientiousness. It is thus some senseless impulse developed in persisting in another form perhaps into adult life that is called an obsession. was "senseless." As you grew older you just did not obey the impulse; you recâ€" ognized how senseless it was. as a youngster you may have had the fesling that you must touch each picket in a fence, step only on wood or stonsg going to school, or cther equally foolish or. senseless act. Something inside you seemed to drive you or:compel you to do this thing which even as a youngster you knew sessions, but, in a general way, an obâ€" session ~might be described as feeling that you must do @a‘certain thing which when you think calmly about it, is a foolish, or senseless thing to do. REMOVING AN OBSESSION There are various definitions of obâ€" Take Beauty Precautions If You Play in the Sun After her dip this wise beauty is anointing her body with a soothing protective lotion. Her skin will keep young! tions are not for them.. Mothers should be careful to select a cream for their children which is mild yet effiâ€" cacious. Just any sun lotion is flirting with skin, irritation or. more serious results. 3 (Released by The Bell Syndicate Inc.) same foods. "Food Anergy," booklet (No. 106) by Doctor Barton, tells how to discover the offending foods and what to do about them. You may obtain this booklet by sending ten cents to cover nardling and service to the Bell Liâ€" It is a long process, sometimes reâ€" quiring care in an institution, but the chances of recovery are very good. Food E < "What is one man‘s food is another man‘s poison" is an old saying but the truth of it is being proved almost daily by leading research physicians throughout the world. Sm individuals are over._sensitive to cartuin foods and will have colds in their. heads "snuffy" noses, pains in the stomach or abdomen when they eat those foods, while other people suffer no il effect eating the Special Attention toâ€" . Health of School Children (Registered in accordance with the : Copyright Act,) (From Health League of Canada) All over Canada thosusands of childâ€" e (Courtesy Elizabeth ‘Arden) , 247 West 43rd St.. New York, and 24 Monthly | ' Payments of $3.45 1 U Thor‘s exclusive Turbâ€"oâ€"roll Tub and patented Super Agitator ensure THOROUGH washing action without damage to clothes. The model 79 illustrated is full 7 pounds capacity. Complete with wringer for only $79 Cash. The Thor Model 0 Ironer can be attached to the wringer post of any model Thorâ€"it makes child‘s play of ironing yet costs but $30.00 Cash (when purâ€" chased with a Thor Washerâ€"$39.95 separately). or $5 down Get this BIG _ Streamlmed TH OR ELECTRIC WASHER â€" tion has not already been provided. Toxoid to prevent diphtheria, should be given of course as soon after a child is six months old as possible, but many parents neglect this until the child goes to school. Certainly then, it should be delayed no longer. _ The doctor should not examine the child to correct physical shortcomings but also to recommend the proper things to eat to build up resistance against disease. This will be of special value when the child comes into contact with <ther children who may have a comâ€" municable . disease. Fortunately imâ€" munity can be provided in two of the most serious of such diseasesâ€"smallpox and diphtheria. Hence, the parent of child entering on school life should see that the child is vaccinated and given toxoid treatment, if this protecâ€" Upon. entering school, every child should have any correctable defects atâ€" tended to. Many a boy and girl have rapidly developed a sense of inferiority because of defective eyesight or of other handicaps that might have been overcome. _ Besides the drawback of such development, there is the more positive interference with the child‘s studies, when vision, speech or hearing are defective or when tonsils or adeâ€" noids are infected. Decayed teeth are a common source of trouble for the .young student. The result is that many children have to repeat grades unâ€" ';'necessarfly «‘The problem is of such wide applicaâ€" tionâ€"a problem of nearly ‘half of those entering schoolâ€"that at the very comâ€" mencement of the term, each child should have a thorough examinaticn by. the family doctor. | With decaying teeth attended to, glasses supplied to those with defective vision and with other corrections made, the child has a much greater chance of succeeding in his studies and of being happy in his school life. > ren this month embark on the great adventure of going to schcool. It is a time when parents should have partiâ€" cular thought to the child‘s health, for upon health depends all progress in natural . pigskin belt fastens over a zipper closing concealed under the fily front. Saddle stitching emphasizes the highâ€"placed patch pockets with nitched flaps, also the small collar. Skirt is flared in back, with a little flare in front. Feminine but practical By VERA WINSTON HERE IS a dress which is feminine yet practical. The fabric is soft flanâ€" nel, the color, a lovely stone blue. A Mr. Michael Beardini, brother of the groom, acted as groomsman. j Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was served at the â€"heme of the ‘bride‘s parents, 8 Balsam street south, to relatives and close friends Mrs, Marinacci chose for‘the occasion a becominz ensemble of ‘black dJace and Pretty Miss Georging Beardini, sister of the groom, was the dainty little fowâ€" erâ€"girl, wearing a frock of peach* crepe de chene, made with numerous rows of shirring, and trimmed with itiny blue flowers. (She wore a large white rose in her dark hair, and mhite lace gloves and white shoes. Master Gino Martignago was the ringâ€"bearer, appropriately attired in black velvet Lord Fauntieroy ‘guit, and bearing the ring on an embroddered black velvet cushion. . _ _ _\ . Mrs. J. Marietti was the matron of honopr, attrastively attired in a gown of pale midnight blue sheer, made on long fitted lines, with a rhinestone clip at the Vâ€"neckline, and bearing a shortâ€" sleeved bolero jacket. She wore a matching ‘braided turban, and Ibng white gloves and white shoes, and carâ€" ried an arm bouquet of Templar roses and baby‘s breath. The lovely bride made an attractive picture as she entered the church on the arm of her father. She was beâ€" comingly attired in a gown of bridal satin, made on fitted lines, shirred at the waistline in the new gindle style. Insets of Chantilly lace flattered the shoulderline, and fell into long leg o‘ mutton sleeves, and the square neckline was fashioned with a narrow row of lace. â€" The skirt flared gracefully into a short train, fashioned with insets of lace, and the bride wore white lace gloves and shoes. Her lonz, full veil of embroidered tulle was caught in a corâ€" onet of orange blossoms, and she carâ€" ried a shower bouquet of Butterfly roses and baby‘s breath. of Mr. and‘Mrs. Hector Marinacci, of 8 Balsam street south, became the bride of Mr. Anthony Pasquale Beardini, son 6f Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reardini, of 160 Charming Wedding at Sacred Heart Church Monday Morning Miss Christina Marinacci and ~Mr.â€"Anthony Pasquale Beardini Married. Wedding Breakfast Served at the Home of the Bride‘s Parents. <Wedding Tour in the United States. * x charming weddin; on Monday moming at 9 o‘clock, when Christina, dGaughter suitable selections. ed with calla HHes and tall yvases, the Sac la" g:gi::::' § dwu oi 1--64 pag,: Stamp Album. 2â€"100 allâ€"different stamps. 3â€"Big list of uumk of stemps oï¬cnd Free in exchange for SALADA labels ELV ELEA _i * W C { SALADA STAMP CLUB â€"<461 King St. W., Teronto @. For ten cents and the label end, showing the teapot tradeâ€" mark, from any packet of SALADA TEA we will send you fixed for Oct. 9, but Canadians have every reason for tunksglvmg every day of the year when: they compare theirâ€" position with that of the counâ€" tries of Europe, where the people‘ live m constant dread of agrial bombs‘ and eyen the.invasion of their country. .‘ 10w w8 ) . WALLIL A004d. IAIVUIUZ U the groom, wore an afterncon dress of salmonâ€" pink â€"sheer crepe, wih white picture hat and white accessories. Later in the afternoon, the bride and groom left on a motor trip to Windsor, Ont.. where they.will visit the bride‘s brother and sisterâ€"inâ€"law, Mr. and Mrs. "A quiet wedding took place at the St. Anthomr # Roman â€" ‘Catholic Chureh on Monday morning at 5.30 o‘clock, when the Rev. . Fr. Guevremont united in marriage Jean, daughter of Mr.‘ and Mrs. ‘Cyprien Mallette, and Mr. Lionel Lauzgon,. son of Mr. and Mrs. Damase Lauzon, of 'I'immins Witnesses., were Messrs. Cyprien Maiâ€" lette, Damase Laum the fathers of the bride and groom. Kingston Whig-Standard â€"-Omclal Thanksgiving Day for CGCanada has been Pretty Wedding Monday . Morning at St. Anthony‘s Mr and Mrs:fmï¬on will mside in Timmins.