a.._...-..._.4. an nun iVoma ti. www-In . i our: can. ‘ill/e cannot all be rerun And thrill a. hemisphere 30th some greet daring venture. r flame deed that mocks at fear, 48m. we can fill e lifetime ' , With kindly deeds and true, There's always noble service m: noble eoula to do " .. --¢D ~ - during the Winter months. house you will have no. and packages. ' v MAN‘! USES ,1- ~14 piece of cheesecloth laid over the dressing-table access l“ when - using powder. and then shaken out of the window, will save many a » " . Colored cheesecloth makes an ideal rag bag and button bag. l ' as the exact material wanted can . \ . be easily seen, which saves empty- ‘ ing the bag for a weary search. A piece of cheesecloth should also be kept in the ironing basket so that Whet adamp cloth is needed for pressing purposes -one is always at i; g .; a . . .. sLove is blind; marriage la an 03v,- opener. The follow who has ambition is'seldom fired. Gtafi-ing a. task is more difficult l fihat the task itself. .Wc can't believe all we hear is flue, but we can repeat it. The only standard wows dur- olng the depression were the wages s in. . Oppurtimltiea always look bigger when they're headed the other fellowk way. .Folk who are wise enough to expect nothing are s when they d0 get something. blow that business-is entire up- grade we'll need a loin: sandto keep the wheels from slipping. yrne woman who gossips repeats “everything she hears except the mash things she hears about her- ae . A dcbafe is an argiunent with - filmed speakers; an srgumlm. is _ debate with both parties talk- lrg at once. v o‘ vss Lnrr: rrarms 4' csrrrvan-Jiowoox 7”, . Madcap-craved which Add: 0K- -_I0aY like hands have made their ‘fipearsnce in London. They are ‘tirade offiesh-oolor suede and the ~ {tips of the fingers are varnished to represent nails. Pink, red and gold are the favorite colors for this var- . mph. At a. short distance, these . glows look just llhe hands, especi- a burning f.‘ n. t‘, III-IBE- WAS ANOTHER , Jhc magistrate glowered at the 331311 in the witness box. "You say this man robbed you?" he said. ‘ _ heavily. “Can you piok out any of mypur prQDerty from this heap of W-xriticles round on the prisoner?’ ‘Yes; that's my handkerchief 1' ‘with '3' in the corner," said the fir...» v , 23;" tness. _ "But that is no proof, my man," - lifepped teh magistrate. "I have a handkerchief with ‘B’ in the cor- e; "bu. IT‘ _“Well, I'm not surprised, I lost two handkerchlefs." retortecl the witness. GOOD BUSINESS _ - A countryman, rather simple- mlndad, was paying his first visit to the seaside, and was struck by the vast expanse of water. ‘ t v boetmm on the beach, he said: "I'd _' like in take some of thishoure to the wife. Do you think you could fill me a bottleful?" ‘The boatman assented eagerly, and charged the man six pence for rbottle of sea-water. A few hours later the visitor hap- , ‘planed tosce the same urea at the 1 mne spot, after he wad been for a an: round the town. In the meal- ; J1me the tide had gone out. - ~»'_I‘he rnan gazed open-mouthed at the wectacie. “By gooml mister," he " llhi. tuning to the baseman, I “you've done a good trade today." NEURITIS PAiN$ SODN ‘JJiNiSi-l (Selected tyi-rdm Pete.) tire pantry well stoclcelcrl weather conditions prevent. the grocer or butcher reaching your difficult)’ inpreparingamcalifyouhaveon your pantry shelves foods in cans Alb when rims are worn on the outside of them. Nwer use linen to cleeen mil-rods or window, ea it sheds lint and of ten causes streaks. - Among the Congo tribes the wo- men. are the putters- Women in Buslneal Warren's organizations in Can- ada. have more than 250.000 memb- ers. There are upward of B00900 women in business in the DIIlIll-Il- ion. Women workers in cotton fields of Bokhara are reported to be picking three times as much as the men. ~ . Import-rt. Trifles One girl measures her woollen sweaters carefully before washing them. than block them to that size while they are still wet. lemon halves filled with grape or current Jelly, make effective gar-niches for roast hsm, or veal. Mushrooms arid cauliflower blend welL Oolnblne them after cooking and serve with butter or cream sauce- Good for luncheon dish. DUCIESS TAMES HORSES WHEN FBREAKIIBS" FAIL mun-cum wild horses from Canada's prairies, given upas ‘hopeless demons" by cowboys and professional horse-breakers, have been tamed by the Ducheses of Iiamiiton. wife of Scotland's premier peer. Theyueall thatremalnolftbe .70 bronchus brought to London for the rodeo of 193i. When the rodeo "outfit" returned to America. the Dumb Friends’ 1008119. bWifht the horses and sent them to a-n estate at Waminglid (Sussex). . ' Hrtsaional horse-breakers were .ullcd lnflrhey retired defeated. "The animals were costing e62 a weehAsthey cfllildfwtbeputto work their destruction seemed the only wly out. ‘hwy-two had. rd m: been de- li”!!! when the Duchus heard. 8m? Blended for the lives of the ‘ 1!, convinced that her power over animals would have the desired effect. The horses were beat t0 her estate at. guns, Shatter- hlfiillborset). ' a few weeks she" had mound- And now some of the bronchus are hauling farm carts or p19“- 111E quietly before the plough. The Others are in riding stables, eoolv YOU'LL have A reun- ruous nv YOUR POCKET A' rxket telephone is on the wsy. 4 Signor Mastlni has perlgglgd m invention to enable the telephone subscriber to receive and “swel- calls what driving about. in g, a; as well as r: he were at hQme o.’ the office. A Specially designed wirelua re- ceiver and transmitter are affixed t0 the instrument at home and p, similar equipm ‘ “twig” m headphones is carried in the C... The ecu-parent's bulk a the chief drawback at present, but the inventor rs confident that. i1; can be "d"? l0 Docket-camera size, g nrcurr-‘mo GOWNs “mum evmlnfl Bflwns have taken m I WW dlknlty and elegance. ‘m WEAR GLOVES AT NIGET [m]; SMOOTH HANDS 11 you desire to keep your hands of the alluring, velvety texture, the bestlplan is to give them plenty of humfim “T1118 the cold wea- not use cold wgtu- m- "F1188 Your hands during m; season. Your water should be warm. or at least tepid. and your soap “will be I cure. blend product. 5M s-lways. after washing your Realm n. Houssmrs and IIER AC7TW17E19 _-rm: cznakuorrcrowu GUARDIAN ' ,0. lmtllyzx The Good 8H6 Only Tfglxo “"5",” ""2 An You . and n GOING TO ADDIS ABABA Miss Fiona Maclmckie of nor-onto, forrnefly of Preston, is leaving shortly with e. party of mission l“ from the United States under the Soudan Interior Minion, to take up mission work in Addie Abate and surrounding district. be handsomely pensloned and his occupation placed under a glass oasc in the London Museum. He is the last of the London cross- lag-sweepers, the heroes of many of the old-time ballads and pathetic realizations. < . They have all vanished together with the link-boy, the chairman the flaring-gas street lamps, and ofusisa gated by our wife ‘who coll accepted each other “as is." there be many friendships others had to give them and not eqeect the - .. When Husbands Wives Learn to Take Each Other as They Really Are, to Over- ' look Faults and Accept Each 0ther’s Good Points, Life‘ Will be More, more tears to be shed, more divorcy and more heart-anus and » than any other one‘ thing. The good or altogether bad. Our shortcomings are miti- qnalities. There probably never ldn‘t have lived together in reasonable peace if they good Worth While II]! yolfiiowagt to Si: B-llghhflminodl nut of you: human relationships, Y0" "B B9980 8-! Biueaud t wouldh modem ‘if you had been consulted about their we em Of course. we admit that we are not. ab- solutely ’ ourselves. In- ran momaus of hunflity we concede that. we have a few mlnm furlte. But we expect our families, our friends and our acquaintances no over- look these and concentrate their alum-ion upon our shining vbtues. However, tbs mercy we demand of others we,do not ex- tend to them- We emtct dram not only to be without new or blemish, but also jut to our tastes; and when they are not, it enme- how takes the edge off of the Plealun We might have had" ill-them. ‘Hie inability to accept people as or‘; a many in the oiniznentbag d a friendship‘ ,and has pro y coupe loneliness they ' c flendlsjustasrsreasthenintJlone were a husband and had Just as the shipping manifests say. Nor would if people would only take the best thflt oselble of them. broken the growler cabs. ousran av MACHINERY Muddy roads are no longer popu- lar in these days of water-proof highways. and with organized streecleanlng machinery the Metro- politan boroughs have swept the old crossing-sweepers into oblivion. All except old Joe Pond, Lon- don's last crossing sweeper. Eighty- seven years old, Joe has lived with the postchaisos, the bustlas, the trailing skffis and the coffee houses in the days when the Cockneys had a language of their own and spelt it "vlth a wee." And in this era. when gangsters imported on to the screens are even bumping off the old Cockney dialect, old Joe still steps out from a. little Chelsea street with his broom to the stately and distinguished environment of Eaton Square-the last of his kind. KINSHIP 0F AGE Only once a week now, though. Every Sunday he gees at church time, and although Eaton Square is scrupulously clean, there are old swells and toffs, a world apart from Joe in status, who feel so sadly near him in age that they compas- slonately drop a copper for the sake of the days gone by. "I've not missed a Sunday for 30 years.” said Joe, "and my people there include an err-Prime M.nlster._ Lord Aberdare, Lady caddgdn, Lord Gladstone, and maybe Mr. W. E. Gladstone himself! "I used to be called to the big houses to Iet the coal in and to sweep out the areas, but I can't do that now." Joe remembers Chelsea when it was little more than a village. with cottages and green lanes. Pour-in- hands used to run from Chelsea to London, and out Kenslngton way wane vast orchard ,arveas. His mother lived in a. little cottage in Chelsea for 50 years. A FIGHTING MAN Joe was a great fighter over 80 years ago. "You had to ire said. "Gangs came to Chelsea from London. Dne fellow down this very street was cock of the place "I fcught hlrn for an hour and beat him. I had my nose broken twice and all my teeth knocked out." ' Poor old Joe! He has worked hard for something like 75 years, and although he suffers badly from bronchitis, if spared, as he says, he will be at the crossing again next Sunday—“alone in London." to crib a Victorian play title. " ODD CHURCHES MARK LONDON ‘London churchgoers worship in strange places, and the strangest of all is an utra-modem church at Cranium, Middlesexl with its con- crete altar. open-air DRIP" 8nd 5 "hooter" instead of belle to summon - snob! ‘a ood hill 10am mflm. 1n orde? to construct. airy drying effects of the chiming. 3-‘ sou really want to do the but by your hands, too, get mo. the “b” v! WWW m“ at cum. More "who. cleanse your hands W" Vmlkifld water and a bland II-P- ‘Then dry then and massage a rich cream into ‘them. Knead it well into the skin, m; fingers‘ all along their length. Then don apeirof tome comm _Qf chamnieeth gloves. You may lightly coat the inside of each g/iovo with ~.lovce toremalnon overnight. And in tiavi. you'll be delighted n; pow loft and satiny smooth ymu hum; will beccane. ' ‘ devouts. - The Essex church. known as Si. George's. is of stately cubic archi- tecture and its shining while con- crete alter, illuminated by con- cealed lighting, gives the edifice the appearance of a memorial. One of the most fescinatlng of England's churches is filr-lty 917"‘ g-regational in London, where the cosmopolitan populations of Lime- lurae and Canning Town are called disillusion of wedlock.‘ young husband thought she was. romantic lover that disgruntled and miserable, and situation. are nothing to rave over and ing as bread pudding, but and that she would no more would of blasphuning God. Nor does he say that Maud is a. dull in her company. naggerandhnsa. temper that gom step on one of her pet prelhdices, champion peny~pincher, and that hadn't been for her. on deeds, and that while from. Nor does she say that even lightfui of compani - Nor‘ does she in his business and breast is a ten-point jump in stocks, as long as she pleases. No. as they m: without trying to rc.arm a little. contrary to English church tradi- tion. At the rear is fur ancient sailors‘ gallery, while the church- yard contains a. wcll-patronleed tennis court. ‘rrlnity Church was founded nearly 100 years ago by an eccentric shipowner and phllianthropist. Richard Green, who decided to "gong" his‘ followers to church, when he learned that bells could\ he rung only in bulldinfl 0°11‘ secreted at the Church of Ensland. Every Sunday for nearly a cen- tury the congregation has been "ganged" lo services The Children's Church in Bark- ing road on London's eastern side has a congregation that consists en- tirely of boys and girls. They man- age the church's affairs almost unaided by their elders, and several of tho "boy deacons" are under l5. A special church for the deaf and dumb, with services and sermons conducted ln sign language, has been maintained at Deptford for many years. The deaf and dumb also have a combination church and motion picture theatre at Y-arnbeth- Probably the only church to be found in a railroad station is a quaint sight at Halnault Station near Ilfoni. To save thclcirurohgcers a two- mile walk to Barkinleide Parish At the bottom cf every unhappy marriage there ls whet we call the The wife does not tum out to be the H1861 the The husband doesn't prove to be the the wife dreamed she was getting. So they are both either make marriage a 1on8. dfiVn-mll- purgatory to each other or else fight their way w Apparently it never occurs to either one as they are and love what is lovable in ‘them, get whatever or entertainment and arnusemen‘ and profit there ls in 111B 1A man does not say to himself, for that her conversation that she warships the very ground he walk: on. think of uitlclzing anything he does than Ibo that her cooking would kill an ostrich, but that she amusing that she feeds him mentally on angels’ food and Nor does he say that it ls nil‘ by spontaneous combustion if Y0" but she is a crackerjack cook and i! he wouldn't be where he is now lf it she has never had to worry where her we should he saved from so many messy spectacle of so many middle-uni women who have thrown up good homes, and husbands who were good providers because the men they Were married to were not romantic or had grouchy dispositions 01' Phlliildlred the divorce court. of them to take their ins-m enjoy what ls enjoyable aBd instance, that Bella's 100E is lust about as emit- sloppy and slovenly housekeeper and is so entertaining and he has never H true Jane ls a grain‘: khaki/a Benny Use n massage info your la he . Cleanse pores zboro wish: water. then with cold. - v rmoaur s. rm " i bee-WWW", Trudeau! _ faceacdehroa: and for lb: bulb. Gently ' akin, a warm, rich Palmolive ; bly. Rinse with 1's all lhereis to - rhis simplebeeury treatment. Andbere‘: enorhcr = beauty blur. Palmolive, used u a shampoo, your lalp healthy, hair soft and lustrous. -.~-'Soc1'al and Ibersonal -.-i-iFashiqrls -.--Lif¢ "Ii-‘Iife I , E BEAUTY 0123B S TRU AND-you ceri have this all owr skin lcvelinee . Your whole body-no: just ce. throat and shoulders-can beuduy yoachirl. rm fellow the ample Balmoliva ucyueaunenr given below. It’: recommended by over. 20,060 beauty equate. liven in wince: time you can mu: Palmolive to keep your skin lovely. Trust the oils ofelive and palm that are carefully blended In this famous beauty soap. For i: is these costly, oriental oils that make - Palmolive‘: lather soofhlngsad softening for your skin. ene- tmiag rlre pores, it keep: all your ekiayouxbfulendredlam . Hui: gently ‘ and refruhes. So lflctwith Palmolive cocky. uni keep your ccmplulon lovely, even Ill wrote: nmc. 1M1» Mistaken Kindness No one knows better than the doctorhowfutlleitistotellan invalid not to go out loo 50011- ‘Fhe adult ‘skeptic learns to his ' sorrow that his lowered resistance Nor does a woman sw that while John is short on words he is 10118 she may be a trifle heart hungry now and then. next illet mlgnon was coming if Percival has a. roaming foot and does occasionally stray away from the home fireside, that. when he l5 It home he treats her like a Lady Love and is the most lkfwlble and de- say that while Thomas is Bbwlbbd the only thing that can really raise a thrill in his that she has charge accounts at the best stores and rides in limousines and can go when Ind where and eta! The husband concentrates on his wife's lack of youth c‘: beauty or charm or domesticity or whatever her faults are until they become un- endurable. He lacks the philosophy to realize that if he would just accept her shortcomings as part of herself, 1118c p flaw in the jewel, and that ii" he would dwell upon her good qualities he would not mind the defects at all. So wii-h wives. 1r only they hhd the wisdom to time their husbands them nearer to their hearts’ desire. divorces and from the pltioble And if we would only take our friends as they are, with their little peculiarities, their aggravating habits, their queer little of sweetness and happiness it would add to our lives. _ only real definition of friendship is that of the little boy who said that a friend was one who knew you and liked you still. ways, how much For, after all, the DO%'I’HY DIX. permission of the railway company. Strange places of worship crust in the provinces also 0n Whale Island. r-ortsmouth Harbor, the Church of Bl». Barbara. devoted to men of the sea, was built by éhipwrights from salvaged por- tions of old vessels. The floor and ceiling are like a ship's deck, and above the rugged altar hangs a ship's lamp. The altar cross is a memorial to Rear Admiral Hood. who died in the Battle of Jutland. Throughout England the travel- ler finds numerous churches where the stone towers are some distance from the main building. Those edi- fices, mostly in Suffolk and led- fordshlle. date back to times when the towers were used to defend the churches against attacks and as vaults for “ ' measures. TlhflllAvnidhr ‘Ibo many pictures of uncertain value. . ‘Ibo many overstuffed pieces of mrnltule. ‘Ibo many heavy draperies in small rooms. ‘Ibomany things ofnovalue no the mantel. Too than! periods of furniture in the some room. Too many articles of furniture on the bias across col-lets pbced to service by the booming of a Church. a waittmroom at the of the room. ship's gong. . station has been converted info Too little evidence of the indi- Inside. the worshippers llslen to a. hall o1 worship. and communion vlduel living in the homo and ex- p __ “ who ls hatless. services are held there by specielfipmuion of their own taste. after grlppe, or flu or a hard cold. ls doubly ready to pick up another. germ, and it's all to do over again. Perhaps he won't be sick the same way, most likely not, because three are literally fifths . of so-called “low-grade" germs ,and symptoms ace rarely the same. , his should teach us soznethlilfl about children. When a boy or girl has besn'li1 abed and the doctor sap. “Stay there for a few more days," he means exactly what he says. The child may feel all right and fever may be gone, so he wants to get up and about. “Please. mother, can't I put my bath robe on and go downstairs?" ruinous wank r-zvsnvwnma Perhaps it is warm down there and perhaps not- Who notices the draught under the living room door that teases bare ankles? Who secs hlrn slip to the door and call across the street to his friend. Later his mother cannot imagine where he got another spell of grlppe. Not the some kind, mind you. but something that isn't even e. collateral cousin of the first that laid him low. This time he stays sick longer, in all probability, because lie has already nnd - up much of his "resistance" on the first attack. Now, he has to defend lumself with what is left There is. furthermore, another reason why children should be careful for awhile after an ill- nus, especially after e high tom- peratum siege. Tissues are repleted, naturally: blood chemistry is not up t0 normal; muscles and bone material w-_ i...»- ' ‘cl ell . d infirm l 1'1 I l _ are not at par; nerves have siffe? ed in the fight. WEAKNIISS AGGBAVATEE STRAIN when ho is better he feels well. butisJustsbltwea-kliiseyesare bright. He eats like a hungry wolf. His spirits mount. He inside on action. Denied this. he reeds. If not denied. he, per-haml- Kvee out with his sled or skates and makes up for lost time. Who suspects that. eye muscles and nerve are weak? 0r that heart muscles are tired? Or that font muscles are fiabbyl. In later years he will. remark in all perplexlty to the specialist looking after his eyes or his heart or the orthopedist trying to relieve the pain in his flat-arched that, "What. has caused all this iz-ouble, doctor?" . "Strain of some sort ‘or other, when you were rundown, very likely," he may answer. "Sometime when you were sick you may have gotten up too soon. Thmc things often start in childhood when vitality is low and spirits loo high." "Why didn't mother watch me then?" sighs the sufferer- lwothers are always too kind. FRUIT COOKIES One and one-half cups sugar. one cup butter or aubmtute: cream to- gether. Add three B!!!» beaten well. llé tablespoons of water in which is dissolved one level teaspoon soda. Sift one-half teaspoon nit with 8% cups flour. add one half the flour to the mixture and then add one peek- age of rnincemeat softened with one-third cup of hot waiter and the remainder of flour. Drop by tea- spoons lnto pan and bake. Spread out to cool. This makes about dive dozen. E S. lélhvkpple and halved candied cher- es WEE OOQE , Dream together one cup of sugar, and ‘A cup butter. When they are thoroughly creamed. add a well beaten egg and two tablemoom miik- Add three tablespoons, i! bee» cola. Flavor with we vanilla. Lest of all add two cups o: sifteddlour to which you have ade- ed a. liberal pinch cI nit and one heaping teIBDWu o! baking powder. Roll ontvery thin and bake lne quick open. This recipe will make four-or ilve doren cookies. VEGETABLE LOAII 1 cup cooked carrots 2 unions cooked . V l cup cooked parsulps finely) 1 can peas. ilramed l tablespoons parsley’ 2 tablespoons butter ‘A teaspoon white pepper ‘.6 teaspom celery salt 2 teaspoons salt 2 all! l, uaspooa Worcestershire sauce Mailed potatoes or bread crumb. Mix carrots. parsnips, cnism, peas, minced parsley and melted butter together and beat in eggs and seasonings. Then add enough mash- ed potatoes or hreed crumbs to ab- sorb moisture so that the loaf will be the consistency of soft dough. Season well and sprinkle with grat- ed cheese. Bake in a moderate oven 360B‘. for 30 minutes. Serve with mushroom sauce. MINOR-HEAT lb. finely chopped cooked br" lb. finely-chopped suet lb- brown sugar 2 lb. currants. washed and l chopped 2 lb. seeded raisins ‘A lb. mixed chopped, cum] ‘.5 lb. slivered caudiedwitron peel I cups finch chopped apples 2 teaspoons of ammo lemma find l our halved and shelled illbula it teaspoon of salt ' - 1 teaspoon each of ground “ma. moo. nutmeg, ailapibe, cloves and lauartofeidcr or: other-mic lee and store in sterile Jere. WI’!!! BBB‘ NW1!’ my vegetable goes wlO roan beef or fillet. T0 SIB CHINA IOI. HIS’! TIM! - Annaiilaywougaoledliiraetan ehovmaaaheaalladfarfllialfll world four. SMART ctomss FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER Paris is always thinking up corne- thing newl This time-it's match- ing undies. Yes! to be really upda- the minute your undies must match. Much practicality and daintlness has the undle ensemble patterned for today. And it's such an Bil)’ um; ur- semble to fashion, even for In Ima- teur sewer. Note how beautifully both the slip and the step-in mould the fig- ure. the hips ad waist. They both have brsseiere cope. out comfortably low under the arms. You'll want to make. several am in satin or crepe alik. Trim with lace or finish in more talimod ef- fectwlthbiublndehemlllceat to make this set. will Ira-prise you. Style Ho. i868 is designed linden 14. 10.10 years. 3i, ll and ell-inches bait. Bile . lace for slip with 1% led: nebonalforpantiee. Price of PIPER-N t! cents in stem! or coin (coin ll PfifIred-i Wm: coin carefully- 110.1663. Sine llllellillb~laelllaQilll “nan-en Nana _ Odour-resetneedlesavaseeaunleleeebll a ear-acme Sec that moan‘ u: If ti...» .1‘. ‘W’... were can I'D eelae. '\