U t‘ U 4'*.oe~».~a -.-H__,_,_____ ‘ filimlimim Childrezfs Anklets and Sweaters Sweater time fa lean! But It's no pacblan when you Penmanime. FcrPenmanaColiflwl. Anklets and Sweatereae madefeathswaar and rear of children's sperm and games. Out- fir your children in Penmana Outer-war for juvenile smartneu, icr nalall-weeeon economy. ‘ITECOQS’ 5mg. g Golf Hose, salmon (large) na melted butter . e bread crumbs sag; mustard (prepared) salt E W r tr easpoona chopped parsley " \oiled ‘vermicelli salmon, add butter, bread g::‘n~pumn 9:: 4m» ‘itunzuuhrvini mm:mumionumunmu|ummmmllmmmmnutllirilllrlll l‘? pour into mould and steam " ’ II me how. Turn out on platter, gar- nlah with vennlcelll and serve with white muce. Servings, d. i‘ é g a a E. i l? HER ACHVITTES ‘T ‘ Jtatoodaboutil-Z feet was clapper-ted on four measurements were 36 in. fithd on it an unbleach mattress filled with flock. tacked lirniy to the wood- linally, covered it with a Thin was stretch- E 5. l: 3-51 515% t? i i E Q3 E " ICHOOLGIBUI LAMINT a plough and bough should rhyme ” with now, ‘my spell them same u rough? Qt why spell tough and rough Fke I plough g 1nd then sound them like bill" other} thing that muzzle-u mo that. said should rhyme with "M. __dii'teaandleaeoundthaaame t aa . W do they end with ans in- ; stead? I makes it very hard to learn when row isn't spelt like woe; Ind ll tum was only the same as ten t shouldn't get mixed up so. Iut do you think that it's quite " ht - 1'18 ‘Phat maid tan‘t spelt like shade, U! shouldn't ‘height be spelt like .: bib, fid weighed the lame an stuadf >0 SPEOTACLIS u‘. ,1’? r The Astronomer Royal. Dr. H’. Epencer Jones, said recently that l New Spring ' no extra beading. and it doaa not illustrated llrislsnaklng Lessons Furnished With Each Pattern By Ruth Rogers 5 2 Z 5 gu- aama way. the tops being covered m” with saline, tretonne, or velveteen. scanning to taste. Small tea cheats are Qlcndid lor these- wars-rnmr surru: n! r SUIITITUIIJDI Asa mvloaable ribeaeie naru axnclse underweanl mo» ailthaix- ' -———- ., Htrand (“guru Iywnwanttcretainagracelui. youthful figure, keep that wahtlina simple! Consider how a child walks. runs and sits. His waistline is u flexible as a wide rubber band. It’: nevar too lute to begin exer- cuim to attain this auppleneaa and its companion qualities. grace and poise. Ibr poise does come frun within and an awkward body ls not conducive to gracious bearing. S0 do your enercissa with a double purpose in mind. First, to be llmber and supple. second. to build health and poise. Let's begin with stret- ching and bending, When you have brushed your teeth and taken two lull glasses ol warm water, atand before an open —' ‘ and stretch. Raise your hands upward. trying to touch the ceiling and feeling your torso being pulled up. up, up. Relax alter each stretch and repeat at least. five times. Then begin bending, Keeping your knees still. swing ymr hands downward to the floor. You won't be able to touch it the first morning but alter a week, you will. Do it ten times. Continuedon page i0 in almost eve-y conceivable tint. ac qthatthe colon in flowered or em- broirdered lingerie can be perfect- ly matdied in the ribbon substitute. nalsma su_-r's Have you realised the attractive- naaa oi a lender-stool‘! One 1 saw recently cost very little. A handy human‘ made the foundation of Smartness Unaelilshnelisavirtue c a Easily Over- 21kg‘; done: Toll Your Ute Through for Other ktaalpeqafi“ Peoplaandlh WillDesiseYow- ,, ,,,,""°°°"nn w“ mm Give All to our n and f“; can You Will 'l‘um ' Them Into mam’ “o... M’ m“... "" Monster! gre ygu." ‘m 8:31am 1 atir- * Oflll . ‘Nllifibdculiebollearandoook Illheraiamevifluafliatnsabtcbepractlcedwimmmerflflnt "Illwfihgmslewuum- Pmlllyaltglnitialmsaliiahnem. mat-mm. tmditiuialwayflf %andhe'atuatuchm _' nu“ Mmommmuwumwnhdmy“ w‘! W! law comma smooth alt-e an literatura eeleiaataa o» G-btalt if same is ourdlsd or beauty sacrifice and c! subordinating one- bll- nellwothera Yetitisdoubt-fulilanyothar vice has wrecked so many lives. ruined so labaeflrnaleu manypotentiauygoodchsracterauxdbroken l0 filmy hoarm as unselfishneaa. 1 pound can tuna ca- salmon For the trouble with unselflshncas is that Ijcrwhitmdd itbllahtaallwhocome wlthlnlta banelul in- lt cbwatar nuance. No one seams to have auflicient Iteaapocneaiaryaale atnngthtoreeisticerbqiperiaqmqhm l ciw broad crumbs stand lb against it and light it. Everybody lwwmbu-kinapceeu succumbatoitandietaitdoitaevilwcrkuptm 1 Nlfllfl lllt them and tum them into pigs and grabben- ‘i 1mm (Juice) helmet! and petty tyrants. "whtll 1 would Dlfiflflhlll do good. evil is ever present with me." says 551:1 "Urdimll together well the Good Book, and it must have been written '“* m“! “<1 M“ In l of the unselfish who, no. m» nobleat motives m the world, do more mm than malice ltsell could invent. We see this illustrated everywhere: 1n business where the unselfish man, whoalweyaletstheotbsrfellowhavethebestofthabargaimnot only loser his own but other ncoplea money. In friendship when the mmelnsh, who lend their automobiles. and take care o! other peoplfa children while they go a-pleaauring, and who run free hotels fea- dead- beat friends and acquaintances and who let everybody pose ugh them. are never respected. or inspire any genuine aflectltm, and are variably dropped when they have served their pumosa. It is, however, in the family circle that unselllshneaa gets in its moat deadly work. There it has its unhindered opportunity to work at close range upon its victim. Flor almost every domestic martyr lg g, goat that has oflered himsell or hersell voluntarily as a sacrifice on the home altar. Practically every despotic husband, and every IlO-Mcount wile are the handiwork cl a self-sacrificing wile or husband. Every overbearing and ungrateful child has been made what he is by his unselfish parents. When the average man gets married he expects to give and take in matrimony as he does in business, and if his wife insists upon her per- centage of the profits and perquisites ol the matrimonial partnership he accords them to her freely and without question. He gives her as good clothes as he can afford. l-le takes her out with him to places ct amuse- ment. He assumes his pert ol the responsibility lcr bringing up the children and doing the chona about the home. But i! he marries a door-mat woman who casts herself at his feet and implores him to walk over her, he also does that as a matter ol course. He sets liinuell up as the ha-who-must-beobeyed in the house and nbe meokly does his bidding. He spends all the money on himself and dress- es like a clothing advertisement, while she looks as i Ishe had Just been fished out o lthe regbag. He leaves her to walk the colic and hear the children's lessons of an evening, while he {area forth into the 511K119 lights. And the net result cl the wile‘; unseliiahneaa is w make an egot- iat ol her husband and in the end hand him over to some woman who has thought enough about hersell to keep herself attractive looking. And the unselfish husband has just. as disastrous eflect upon a wile. He shoulders all of the burden ol matrimony end makes cl her a paraaite instead of a helpmeet. He has his old shoes patched so that she can h"! forty pairs o1 fancy pumps. i-le gets up with the children in the night lo that she can have her beauty sleep. l-le works himself to death to doll her 1.19 like the Queen of Sheba. And he turns the woman who could have been a good wile into a peevim, compllining hugger who is always whim!!! became he doesn't make more money, and who never considers him or anybody else on earth but herself. Then there are the unselfish mothers, those lovely, saintly matures who are always being held 19 lor our admiration. ‘They are ac selfish the? never even think ol themselves at all. They wear cotton underwear so that the baby may have real lace on its cap. They bake themselves on the kitchen range making three kinds ol cake because Johnny likes angel food, and Mary worrt eat anythin but chocolate,‘ and Sammy likes caramel. They deny themselves every p asure so that their boys and girls can have mgngy w 11mg away. They work their fingers to the bone so that their daughters may keep their hands sclt and manicured. ‘i-Jii- ‘rhcy never demand the slightest consideration from their children. They never expect anything in the way of assistance lrom them. They teach their children to think oi them only a; drudges and servants that they don't even have m be polite w- They tum "M! chum“ '0 mm" sters ol selfishness who not only kick them out of the way Vb"! ‘h!!!’ N" no longer serve them, but who are so arrogant, so undlscilillnfl. 80 11°F ing in sell-control that they cannot get along in the world until life un- does their mothers‘ teachings. Half ol the failures and half of the div- orces are directly traceable to unselflstrmotherl. Nor are the sacrifices ol unselfish children any 5W" "wudm- x have known unselfish daughters to give up the men mg their mothers an not want. them to leave them. find I W m Md the mothers reproach them for being old maids and burdens on em- 1 have in mind the case of a talented young man who sacrificed the O9- pqrtunlw that would have brought him a fortune to stay and do a dfl laborers work on the old farm. Yet had he considered his own 6M1“ "14 gone he would have been able to have given his parents 0W?! lllXllfy m" teed of th poor living his sacrifice doomed them all to . s mu usher. a plea (or selfishness. which in an cflenaive and unlpvely charaLeristic, but it u a warning not m overdo llfl W» I DU. Inokathcwdecel i c lllfiLillY ia<_ir<'"\.~av eeeeeaaeeeae- a - - 1L1 I eeeeeaeaeu au-...a'.....-.eeaqqeegeee keee M1 -'et-'"..i..u.¢--¢.......... ,......................... LOVE LIN ESS firso . . . -‘ v ~ '* llcoltaaclliilatolsnow Grandmother’: Quilt Patterns Ilia lux oi $0 daily use olupaehlon’! bel- lowed toiletries-the Yerdl Lav lee. Luxurygep of the clciséot wash ewa like leea finely m aoa lyatalcleex$nd renllnlng 15F: cL-mwtutm; auvrrrlanetlonfloi’: face any : like Yardley Pow- EVERYBWY la Happy wlifl Ialloda Rica Childrenhaveaomuohhlliflmhgtoillamlnapmrackleandpcp; in milk or _ chlldnaaaetwlthmdtlasaoildieicletcaeisdrieabnbblea. Kellegfsltieelriopieeueeflnaeerealforelllselnlmymnl- Sc convenient to serve. ‘ forthennreeryaapparorlstaevenhglnafik. Ellrldflllvlfllllvlill frultaoeholasyaddsil. Soldbygroeeraeverywlieae. Ieauareil on hotel and restaurant menus. Always oven-heahbecausellealrlqaleaareaealed in a waxrrrc liagplaeeil lnalda o» red- and-green lmulon, Ontario. Quality guaranteed. .. - y; r...‘ r '~ - . vnnfi-n-ai...» .- ¢ ‘W -_ _ _ 4_ H i." . i- - , c, —‘~' - It..- W°"!"!','§>!?f"' Hts-c. §¢¢1ql..¢nfi.. Boreas! F“*'"°"§ *-'- _':!?¢"“ Kriaplelarelarvel. cream. Andlllollielaliavefullvlcqwstchlngtlaeb Sononrialilng. Soeasytodigeetflne Made by Kellogg in A Momlngsmll; er apre gossamer-thin and elingm: no eaablu In pleea oi Y Levendaa ‘aldaa nth: KMIQMiIL m _"‘ ' liffinaa I Ii wen-r- .4.‘ itiiiiiasrairéfizi in 8 z ll: laiiiiisilll___l a" “ill Till Lilli l a it? hitter‘