.on the other. One of the finest things a woman's club can do is to establish a com- munity house. Such a house can be used for many purposes. It may be a tenter of homekeeping, a model house where a model kitchen equip- ment is on display. Here may be club rooms, a tea room, play rooms for boys and girls, with especial provision made for farm bureau, home demonstration, 4-H clubs, Boys and Girl Scouts, re- ligious and civic bodies, and even gymnasinms. ; Such a house will give opportunity for a small party or furnish meeting place for boys and girls who do not have proper homes in which they can receive their guests or meet nice young people of their owa age. It will do much toward raising the standards of any community and the homes of the future. Think how your own folks gather in your home and nearly raise the roof. Where do the young people meet who come from very inferior homes? "What social life is there for them? Does not every women's club, in every community, owe a debt to such as these? A large out-of-style house, which has become a white elephant, is available in nearly every community, This would be ideal for a community house, though too large and old-fashioned for family living. Such a house is usually a family heirloom, built by some out- standing family of the past generation. What a fine thing for that home to be preserved and put to some good pub- lic use! It would be a good stunt for ithe members of that family, for senti- iment reasons as well as for motives of philanthropy, to deed such a place to the woman's club for such uses, or, 'at least, to sell it at a bargain price. Wall Paper Wall paper makes a room '"home- like." It is also economical as it will not show the rub of clothing ndr chair marks as plain walls will. Very good wall paper may be cleaned. Plain wall papers produce a restful effect and form refined backgrounds for furnishings, making them show up distinctly, The color may be bright and gay or neutral and softened. Some people prefer vivid, lively colors, al- though the general rule for decoration is that large areas, such as walls, should be neutral in tone and plain in design, leaving the color and decora- tion to the smaller and more easily changed accessories. However, this is the day of colored wall paper with designs or patterns on it. An expert tells us if we are to choose a figured wall paper, to let the design stand out clearly and distinctly and avoid those patterns in which the edges of the drawings are blurred. It is a wise idea to begin your wall paper scheme with the front hall. Choose a paper of rather quiet form- ality for this room, that the first im- pression be not startling. The paper of adjoining rooms may lead off from this room, following its color scheme. For example if the hall paper has both blue and green effects, pick up the green background for the room on one side and the blue for the room Thus the hall paper will knit the rooms togéther in a friendly harmony. Scenic papers are the style, "but large designs should be avoided, ex- cept in large rooms. A better pattern for the small or medium sized room would be one in which the scene is framed in scrolls. The small, tidy pat- terns make a room look ever smaller because of the obviousness of the measuring stick. Medium sized pat- terns are best. In papers with two tones of the same color, be sure that the contrasts are sufficient and strong enough to avoid flatness. The dining room paper is as gay and colorful as the room will stand. For bedrooms the wandering designs of chintz patterns are good since they seem to have no beginning nor end and their sizes are not too marked, though the colors are fresh and de- finite. Wall papers provide helpful suggestions for rugs, curtains and bed- spreads. Fashions, Fads, Foibles V-shaped necklines, deep in front or back, are helping the heavier woman to appear more slender. Deep reveres drop from the shoulder, wide and of a color contrasting to the dress. > The Season's hats are 'worn on the top rather than the back of the head. They are tilted forward and much on 'one side. The hair shows on both sides, but especially on the left and is scrupulously neat... There is the derby shaped hat, the square crowned hat, the wide-mouthed bell shape, the wide brim and the narrow brim. Ribbons and severe, skimpy feathers trim jmany tailored hats. The colorful, separate scarf, inter- woven into buttonhole-like slits in a dress, adds a color touch and"may be removed to be laundered or changed to one of another color. Fur is much used as a trimming for delicate dresses. Some coats have a wide fur cuff but no fur on the collar. Diagonal lines feature the new dress- es. Sleeves of elbow length have a wide open flounce dropping six inches below. Afternoon dresses are from six to ten inches from the floor. For these dresses the hips are tightly molded with a wide flare below. Skirts are very plain with the interest centering about the shoulders. Storing Dahlia Roots A national society is devoted to the interest of the dahlia, especially prized because its great blooms come in late summer when other flowers are not plentiful. Dahlias are easily grown and offer a variety of color. They may be grown from the seed and will often bloom as quickly as those grown from bulbs, but they are prone to revert to single or semi-double varieties, while those grown from the bulb remain full and more true to type. To save the bulbs, cut off the tops, about ten inches above the crown, as soon as they are killed by the frost. Let 'the roots dry in the air a few hours, then store them in & frost-free cellar which is not too dry. Too much dryness makes them shrivel and more difficult to start the next spring. If the cellar is too warm and dry, store them in barrels filled with dry sand or sawdust. This packing must be perfectly dry or it will cause the mass to rot. When digging the roots, one must be careful not to injure them, or decay will set in around the wound. Cinnamon Rolls Prepare a biscuit dough from two cups of flour, four teaspoons baking powder, a half teaspoon of salt, two teaspoon sugar, three tablespoons fat, and three-fourths cup milk. Roll this dough thin; spread it with melted but- ter; sprinkle it liberally with raisins, cinn..mon and brown sugar; roll it up and cut it into inch slices. Place these | close together in a pan and bake. Cretonnes To -stiffen cretcnnes, with a black background, wherz starch would leave a whitey look, uze a gum arabic solu- tion instead of starch. Dissolve two teaspoonfuls of gum arabic in one quart of hot water and allow to cool. If cretonnes with a dark or black background show fading in the lighter colors they may be renewed by wash- ing with a soap dye or by dipping into a bright dye. This will tinge the flow- er designs without affecting the dark background. Mrs. Solomon Says: It is better to be hungry in the stom- ach than in the head. There are homes where there is nothing to read but the mail order catalogue. With the uniersities so ready to give exten- sion courses and with travelling libra- ries knocking at your door, there is no excuse for suck starvation. oe e Blue Glass Windows Keep Flies Away Blue, yellow or red tinted window glass to keep flies out of butcher shops and cow barns has proved successful both in England and i Holland, it is stated by Professor J. W. Munro, of the Imperial College of Science and Technology, in London. Following ob- servations made originally by the Building Research Station of the Bri- tish Government, Professor Munro has tested the tendency of flies, wasps and other 'insects to remain in rooms pro- vided with window glass of various colors, as compared with their tenden- cies to congregate in similar rooms provided with ordinary window glass and illuminated with white daylight. Flies are found to prefer white light to any color. In similar tests with in- sects confined in cylinders of colored glass provided with one end made of clear glass, the insects move always to the clear glass end. Some of the observations may be explained, it is suspected, by the different percentages of heat rays which the various glasses' admit, the insects probably preferring more such rays and greater warmth. In addition to this, however, mere col- or seems to be repulsive to the insects. Red or yellow glass cannot be used in. meat shops, it is reported, because the tinted light makes the meat logk dull and stale so that customers will not buy it, but light that is tinted blue does not spoil the appearance of the meat and aids considerably in keeping out the insects, Andrew Hersey presenting the Hersey Challenge Trophy to Cox- R. Stiff, boatswain on the "Aurania" who brought his crew across the line first in the annual boat race of the Cunard liner "Aurania". mn SS What New York Is Wearing BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur- nished With Every Pattern NE & RR Aan £1 Sen 1 SRE XD a Ne Ne 3 v0 i i) ND nN NN NN TRE ~~ 3 OX RS = aS DD NN RR aN 7 Rx OR \ NN AN \\ 0 NE RR No aa 2 Tesh NNN NY 7 R AS os RR Here's a jounly dress for the eol- lege girl. It is not content with just contrast- ing trim, so chooses a plaided woolen in red and brown mixture for ts waistcoat bodice. The skirt is plain matching shade brown woolen. It's just as snappy as can be, and so smartly appropriate for fall with- out a topcoat. Style No. 3337 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2 yards 39-inch for blouse, 2 yards 54-inch for skirt. Black sheer woolen is stunning with white faille crepe isilk for the rever- collar. ; In dark green monotone tweed, it presents a very tailored-air. It's so wearab.e and so easily fash- ioned, and you'll love it. : HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. > =~ "Is he'd good story teller?" _ "Great." ""Can he them?" "Man, you expect too much." make his wife believe Paris Bookshors Go , "Colonial" Paris--Paris bockshops have "gone colonial," writes a correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor. Al- most every display window contains pictures oi African or Indo-Chinese natives, along with volumes written ! about French territories overseas. Many of these works are published because of the interest in such topics! which has been arcused by the In- ternationa. Colonial Exposition. But! this was not the case with M. Jac- ques Meniaud's two-volume work en- titled "Les Pionniers du Soudan." It was commenced long before the Colonial Exposition was being pre-' pared, and is an exhaustiv: and scholarly work written by one who had a large part in the development of French West Africa. M. Meniaud, a graduate of the Ecole Polytechni- que, was Secretary-General of Haut Senegal from 1906 to 1909, and chief of the French Mission to British Nigeria in 1909. His chronicle cen- ters around -the colonizing activities of General Archinard, and covers the period from 1879 tc 1894. In these days when a trans-Saharan railroad is still being talked of, it is inter- esting to note that this project domi- nated developments in the French Sudan fifty years ago. September Dusk The sofe puffballs of thistles And ground pine turning gold Are summer's last word set upon The glittering edge of cold. --Frances M. Frost, in the New York Sun. . a The worst of entert.ining guests is that so few of them are. Hat Customs In these days cf one-piece ba hing suits and the sun tan vozue it is ass tonishing to read of the' c¢instercae tion caused when a man walked down the street bareheaded. Hows ever, such is the case. We read: -- "Let him .walk at noonday," wrote Wilkie Collins, "from one end of Ox- ford street to the other without his hat, and let everyone whom Le passes be asked what they think of him, how many will abstain from deciding instantly that he is mad? For proof that this is no figment of the imagin- ation there is the incident in Sir Willam Hardman's diary, A gust of wind having blown his hat over the railings of a London square, he had to seek refuge in a cab to conceal his shameful nakedness. Hats always have played a promi- nent part in the affairs off mem Chaucer's Merchant wore "On his head a Flaunder, a beaver hat;" throughout mediaeval times the weare ing of a hat was regarded as a mark of distinction, and is it not on ree cord that Mr. Pepys "caught & strange cold" through flinging off his hat at a dinner? Victorian Age Best for Patters But the Golden Age of hats was the Victorian era. Then a man wore a silk hat, the hall-mark of stability and civilization, in the street, in the "House" and on 'Change. When he went to the theatre he had a dignie fied substitute in the opera hat, cole lapsible| and convenient / to carry about. When he travelled he fawe ored an intricate affair of tweedy with two peaks and ear-flaps, or ak ternatively a corded silk "Sans Souci," In the smoking room his artistic sense came to the surface and found expression in the elegant and chaste smoking caps of the pere iod, and when he retired at nights fearful lest he should be discovered hatless by a burglar, he pinned his faith in a nightcap. It is signifi the correspondent adds, that the ment he discarded this formidable array his troubles began. His workpeople went om strike, his sons ceased to_call him "Sir" and his daughters talked openmn- ly of women's suffrage. -- ee 438 en Presence of Mind The brakes on the' country bus had failed. Slowly the vehicle began to go back down the hill. Women screamed, the conductor turned pale. Faster and faster went the bus. Dis aster seemed inevitable. But never once did the driver lose his presence of mind. Presently he shouted to the come ductor: "Hi, Jerry," he called, "change the destination boards, quickly!" -- Guarding the Road to Good Health MMACULATELY clean, freed of impurities and harmful iris tants by scientific sterilization. Soft, absorbent tissues that protect the family health. THEE. B. EDDY COMPANY LIMITED HULL - - - « CANADA Manitsciurors of a wide range of Quality Papers for Commercial, Professional and Domestic Each 8 5 J + EDDY' STERILIZED "WHITE SWAN" A snowy white Sterilized Tissue. In wrapped, dustproof Rolls of 750 sheets. Also made in "RECESS" size to fit modern built-in fixtures. "DREADNOUGHT" A big value Eddy line. Seven ounces of Sterilized creped tissue in every roll. "NAVY" A full weight Roll of Sterilized quality Tissue-- 700 sheets of soft, safe, sani