First cut a band or strip twelve inches wide and long enough to go around the child’s body comfortably and lap over enough to make an inch hem at each end. For my seven-year- old daughter this strip was twentyâ€" seven inches Long. Make an inch hem in the bog) pf this and a narrow one in the bottom. Also an inch hem in each end. Cut two pieces for the bloomers from your regular bloomer pattern. Do not sew all the way up the front of the bloomers but ï¬nish about three They can be made of any ï¬ne ma- terial for the best suit but for every day and even common school wear I have ï¬mmd that eugar sacks (i0 very well]. Using this material and some coarse crochet lace I made dainty little suits for less than thirty cents; of course, not counting the labor. Two sugar sacks, two spools of No. 40 crochet thread, some buttons and a little sewing machine thread are the materials needed. Combination Suits for Home and inches of top for centre front closing. School. Make fourâ€"inch slashes at centre top These little combinations are con-:fm‘ seat opening. Sew Up back of venienat and comfortable. Daughteribloomers. likes them because they button down] JOin under parts of the legs and the front so she can button herselfiput on bands long enough to go up, and [because being all in one piece‘ around leg well above the knee so it only takes a minute to dress. MotherI they will not be too ï¬ght if crowded likes them because she does not have: up when playing. Place a band at top to stop her work to button up little! of back for top of seat. For average mvderwaists and petticoats. [size this will be about twelve inches About the Hause Why risk your health? Instant Postum FOR HEALTH and the worst is yet to come Camdinn Posmm Cereal 60., Ltd., 45 Front Street, 8., Toronto. 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The crochet lace used was an easyl‘Cash Account,†“Addresses,†can lie pattern and quickly made but any kind may be used or it may be ï¬nished with two plain bends over the shoul- diers and a hem on the bottom of the skirt, bringing the cost down to about ï¬fteen cents. utilized for jotting d‘own matters of transitory interest. But a boy or a girl will make no mistake in learning to keep a careful account of all money received and expended. An occasion- al review of such a record serves as a One suit was made from the bottomlvaluabl-e lesson in handling your ï¬n- of a lace trimmed pillowslip whichi anccs properly. One suit was made from the bottom of a lace trimmed pillowslip which was worn in the centre. Another was Make a skirt of the required depth, entry. and sew onto waist at a point about] AS You g‘a'in experience You Will “0 one indh above the bloomers. This dlou‘bt outgrow the small diary and one was twelve inches deep and had‘lnake Your dain entries in 33‘ ample threeâ€"inch lace, making ï¬fteen inychresl blank book, which will en-abLe you to in all, but it is deeper than you will; give more important matters the comâ€" Want if you wish to expose the bare! prelie-nsive treatment to which their knee. Sew on lace yoke and you arel special interest entitles them. ready for the buttons and ’button holes.| The other departments included in This requires about four down the! the back part of commercial diaries, front and three for the back. (“Bil-ls Payable.†“Bills Receivable.†Join under parts of the Legs and put on hands long enough to go around leg well above the knee so they will not be too tight if crowded up when playing. Place a band at top of back for top of seat. For average size this wild be about twelve inches hang and three inches wide before ï¬nishing. Sew the bloomers to bot- tom of und‘erwailsvt on each side of front and about one inch up on the umderw'uis't. “There’s a Reason I“Bil-l-s Payable,†“Bills Receivable,†"‘Cash Account,†“Addresses,†can be utilized for jotting down matters of tnansitory interest. But a boy or a girl will make no mistake in learning to keep a careful account of all money lfl‘om sister's worn petticoat. One for best was made of ï¬ne White linen and trimmed with a ï¬ne crochet lace. The coarse lace usually sold for pillow- slips makes a satisfactory substitute for the crocheting if one has no time to make trimming. Of course the regular entries in a small (ti-ary must be briecf; but if you wish to make a more elaborate ac- ‘ count of any particular event, you can [write it in the space devoted to “Memoranda†that appears in the back of all standard diaries. Append 'the note, “See Mem.,†to the regular entry. Every child, as soon as he is able to write legibly, should be encouraged to keep a diary. The material beneï¬ts that result from the practice are many; and as time goes on, reviewing what, if properly dame, will be a miniature history of his life will give more and more pleasure to him who keeps a diary. For the beginner, one of the smaller sizes of regular dliaries that provide half a dozen lines each day will do. You should keep carefully a wound of births, deaths and marriages in the family and among intimate friends, for you are likely to have to refer to them to verify dates or other cir- cumstances. ' As you gain experience you will no doubt outgrow the small diary and make your daily entries in an ample Be methodical. Give the ï¬rst line of every entry 21 half-inch margin and, at least in the case of the more im- porrbant subjects to which you are Likely to refer in the future, begin the entry with a word that wi-lnl most read- ily suggest the matter recorded. For example, “Freshenâ€"Swift River sweeps away diam, mi‘lil‘, other build- inug‘sâ€; orr, “Fireâ€"Smith’s garage burned, Park Hotel damaged.†By following that method you make it possible, when you desire to ï¬nd a particular entry, simply to run your eye down the left-hand side of the pages until you ï¬nd the index word. Try these and see how well sister will like them. One of the ï¬rst things to consider in beginning ’a diary is persistence. Mentally pledlge yours-elf to write something every day. All else fail- ing, there will remains the weather. You can at least jot down “Fair,†“Foul,†“Cold,†“Thundershowers†or “Windy,†as the case may be. How- ever, you will rarely ï¬nd yourself so hard put to it. Something in some degree noteworthy happens every day, and, although incidents may seem trifling when they occur, many of them will be found in later years to have had an important bearing on your subsequent life. Do not enter upon the Keeping a Diary. k lightly The scorched. sleeve was dipped intol cold water, hung dripping on the line in the hot sunshine. As soon as the water had dried it was dipped again, and the process repeated over and over. It took two days and one night’s exposure out of doors to bring the cloth to whiteness, but it came so. perfectly that one would not know which had been the sleeve browned by the iron. Just cold water, hot sun- light and persistence worked the cure‘ The sleeve has been worn months since then and shows no indication of b'féaking. A white waist w-as scorched so badâ€" ly that the print of the iron had gone through both sWof the sleeve and colored the ironing board. It seemed a. ruined article, for nothing could have been ruibbed on it Without break« mg the ï¬bres of the cloth. Bluebird, sing not at my door, But be you swiftly flown To where perhaps some little child In silence sits alone. Roadside berries, ‘red in June, Change your place to grow, fear some lonely little child May empty-handed go. â€"Josephine Van Dolzen Peasel Newton for the erection of a perman- ent national memorial to commemor- ate one of the most heroic episodes in early Canadian history. At this time the hereditary feud between the Ito quois and Huron nations reached its climax and a terrible visitation of the Iroquois resulted in the practical an~ nihilation of the Huron tribe. Urged to flee. the heroic missionaries de- A Thought. Wishing star that shines {Do-night, Do not smile at me. Look you toward some lovely chili Who in the dark may be. The most probable 'sité‘bi' the mar- tyrdom of the Jesuit missionaries, Fathers Brebeuf and Lalemant, by the Iroquois in 1649 at the mission of St. Ignace situated near the present town of Midland, Simcoe County, Ontario. has been donated by Mr. Charles E. and waste time and space in careless and irregular entries of nonsensical paragraphs, but rather take it up with the serious aim to make the most com- prehensive and womth-while record possible in the space that you have. Above all, write plainly. On comâ€" pleting each volume mark the year on the binding and place it on ï¬le. Get a new back well in advance, .so as to be sure to Ibe ready on the ï¬rst day of the new year. Fillring in from memory is an untrustworthy method, to be avoided at all} times. To Erect Memorial to Early Missionaries. Bo Vou Reaaiza That You Ban Gwn An ï¬veriand Motor Car Fully Equipped For TOURING ROADSTER SEDAN COUPE Now $785 Now $785 Now $1295 Now $1095 Remedy for Scorched Fabric. Frelght from Toronto and Taxes Extra. i Millions of mothers keep "CalifornL's lFig Syrup†handy. They know a. tea.- gspoonful to-day save 8 a sick child m- i marrow. Ask your druggist for geruina “California. Fig Syrup" which 165 d1- rections for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say “California†or you may get an Imitation flg syrup. Even a sick child loves the “fruity’ taste of "California. Fig Syrup." If the little tongue is coated, or if your child is listless, cross, feverish. full of cold. or has colic, a. teaspoonful will never fail to open the bowels. In a. few hours you can see for yourself how thorough- ly it works all the constipation poison, sour bile and waste from the tender little bowels and gives you a. well, playful child again. Chinla starts exporting its ‘waln crop in September. Clean Child’s Boweis with “California Fig Syrup†them? “Phwat are thim buckets for on the shilf in the hall?†“Can’t yez read? It says on them, ‘For Fire Only.’ †“Thin why hov they put watrr in clared that the priest must stay with his people and amid the whoops and yells of the Iroquois they were drag- ged through the forest and subjected to the most frightful tortures until death released them from their suï¬ter- ings. Mr. Newton, at one time reeve of the township of Tay and for many years in the service of the provincial government, has shown much public spirit and historic interest in preserv- ing the site and at the request of the Canadian National Parks Branch has deeded over an acre and a quarter of his farm for the erection of a suitable memorial and tablet in memory of the heroic priests. The work will shortly be taken in hand and the memorial will add one more to the notable his~ toric shrines of Canada. What Pat Wanted to Know‘ MOTHER!