rw~ . -‘--n_ ‘ ' "-=»<-@ Ff‘ J A ~. _ "9 < . J__- -_.-\-_:__-|,_ ’ more exacting 11., to ill-i‘ nllltclzials ,,.,.vr‘ .l v‘ PAGE __ Womarfs Realm -:- gSocial and Personal -:- _"Listen to me on CONSTIPATION I ti! r-vvv-nninv» mend ' I-"ruit-a- ‘ liven t l l "Pcrsonallygl SutTcrcri from f constipation g and Lilf/IHCSS, . a n d hcvcr kncw which good nlglr: :; siccp \\'.l'; i~'- . ‘I {arc I tall}; Fruir-a-tlrcs. 'l'lwv llIWC (lone mc a worldofgood." .\lr..1\. i'.,:\},'llllcr,i. .i.'. Thousands Oflltffic ll m: ilccrl cw‘- plctcl nmi P01!" llmnlly r ' only roln Cum llu kcrlnus illncss ill . propcr use ct Pm szinnllan-s Fill‘. \' liurllrilil}! Til: m bcnciii. 25c. and ._ ll. . lFruii-a at... y; LL um AND inn '.lo'u wl: L For The’ Cook SPICY This is a d.“ with mcnts, or ' salad group, wh :- chcery color-in... (‘.\'1.<l l‘ I..~‘.l to .“[‘l'\'C ‘g \ .3 i W 71S pleasant flavor and texture. Tonlzli o Relish l 3 Cups <1": Dv11111l-'>" Pfluut"! ?1*111~\- ‘spent in an cosy-chair look better to him than stepping out. I '3 To the l g Concludes cm ’ > Atiribulcs About D h D For Success To ' y 1x With Marry Husband rub culgl:Lcrrsrgygrr: cctinri-hl FEBRUARY 24-1932 : ‘The Girl Who Plans a; Marry Should Know lalow to Cook and How t0 Use Money- She Should Have Philosophy and liumor and be a Good Sport, and Ellie Should Know HOW ‘I0 Get Along With Men flliN RULES FOR. PROSPECTIVE BRIDES (Continued from ltlonday) . lhforc a girl gets married: _ W“ 6. Sllll rallOULD KNOW HOW TO COOK. It is hardly too much 1.1;; ihzi: lili‘ success of a marriage depends more ul1°11 U19 “V0 Milli; 11 1 . lkcqlcl" than upon any other one single thiniZ- A “T111135 H111)‘ be as good a lookcr as a Follies beauty; 5110 may have the conversational line of a Sllciibluilfl”; Si"? may have tllc virtues of all flllgel. but HWY will avail her nothing itshe docs not know how to make her husband comfortable ' ride 111m with good food. i-. The first disilluslon that many B. bridc87°°m gets witirrnatrimony is when he comes home at night, tired and hungry, to a meal that would kill an ostrich, and when he bcholds his bride throwing his salary in the garbage can. It is then that “w they quarrel and say things that neither ever for- Of course, in time the wife docs learn how to cook and bu)’ yis. <15 i‘ iluirllrrs.‘ meat, but bciore she docs this she has 81W“ 1191' huwand iPS :1 pip-Unit; (lyspcpsiit and turned him into a. grouch. 1i‘ c\'L‘l'y girl was a good Al cook when she got married, she could kccp her ilusband eating out of heFhifnd and prevent him from roam- ing, for nothing nails a man so securely to his own fireside as a rich. lCi\\‘_V (iinllcr of the things he likes best and that makes an evening Inn umer- tors. 'l. SIIE SHOULD KNOW now TO HANDLE MONEY. 61’: cups <23’. pounds) sugar inmo- murl-icd couples fight from the altar to the divorce court 0r the i 1 bottle pectin, - glare ovcr the money question. This is partly because most men think that lunrl-lage can bc run on hot air and they never get over being shock- Boil 4 cups crilshcd tnnlatocs i minutes, ullcovc , . ionally. Add l". (will l and grated rind of l l» 11love Irolu ll: cold, covcr \\.t,‘l rifill. Roll glass on sides. Sl-ts l»- y l ho‘. par- to d imryiiiin 1 teaspoon lllu; turd. any money. oi i'.ll*il' own. cd ovcr the monthly bills. And it, is partly because so many wives seem to btlicvc that money grows on trees and all that their husbands have to (p) is to pull off u. fc\v more grccnbacks when they want them. hlost girls have never had an allowance. They have never handled They have never had more than a. little street-car fare Mother has bought their clothes for them and the first l'L‘l\i dollar that rvcr jlllglcs in their handbags is ‘their husband's, and illcy have llo idca of its value or how far it will g0. slinul salary seems the wealth of Henry Ford and a. charge account a miracle like the widow's cruse of oil that never gave out. are recklessly extravagant without intending it and keep their poor hus- ‘ bands‘ noses to the grindstone as long as they live. One of tho reasons why every girl should earn her own living before uhc is married is because it teaches her the value of money and how to use it wizscly. ' always as the symbol of safety and independence and precious because She never looks lightly on a. dollar again. She sees it required. oi tilc toil and wcarincss and suffering that have gone into the making Applc ("lisup ‘of it. with!’ fliiiw¥nlllll§l7 i"l-~'.‘\l'1l‘~"\'-'1v‘""'-‘- ‘ '~ I (wart iurt ill\'3i.‘S_ i 8. SHE SHOULD KNOW HOW TO USE SOME COMMON SENSE. 1 pint vll _, ___.. 1 cup brown ‘Al’. l 2 luccliuln siz l ruliolzs. Z 1 tcilfillotlli rkvyur, E / l ‘teaspoon pa‘ ' I tablespoon so". 2 teaspoons cinnamon. Peel and QllflWICl‘ npylhs. as little waicr as p." through a riclc. (‘i stew in » \'illCt1;nl', 4 . . l1 " 1S hastened 0/7 Mfig, by 1 \ l ova LTI t? E" i1] TO them QVCII B. Hence they ‘Stubborn Cough M . . .1 Ended by Recipe, 52%. Mixed at Home 1 Here is the farnou! old reci c which THE WRONG LINE A business man who had an im- portant telephone call to put through finally interrupted u. fern- iuine conversation which seemed liable to continue indefinitely. "Say," snapped one of the women illdignantiy, "what line do you think you're on, anyway?" "Well," replied the business man, "I've come to the conclusion that I must be on the clothcsline." millions of housewives have nund to hr the most dcpcndnillc means of break- lnfi up stubborn coughs due to colds. It ia cs but u moment t0 prepare, costs little and suvcs llloucy, butit gives rcul rvlicf cvcn [or those dreaded coughs tlult follow scvcrc cold c lidcmics. From any druglzist, gct J/y ounces n! Piucx, pour it iuio n 1(i_oz. bottle and iill the bottle with plain granulated sugar s rup or stroillcll lloucy. Thus you run e 16 ouuccs of better rclucdy iiiiill you could buy ready-made for ihrce times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so ood that ovcll cilildrculike it. Not ouy docs this simple mixture soothe the inilulucd tllrnut mclubruncs with surprising cnsc, but also it is ah- sorbrd into tllc blond, and acts dircctly upon tile bronchial tubcs, thus aiding i_ilc whole systclu in throwing off tilc cough. It looscns the germ-laden phlegm and cllsr-s chcsi: soreness in l wny that is really astonishing. Pint-x is n highly conccntratcd com- pound of Norway Pin», containing the active agent of crcosilic, in n rcfincli, palatable form. Nothing known in Incdicinc is more helpful in cases of, scv re coughsllnd bronchial irritations. i i 0 not: ncccpt l1 substitute for Plncx. lt is guarantor-ll to give prompt relief or uloney refunded. Trumps, A young man had "panned "18 tgucstion" and was anxious}: await- ing the answer that was to decide his ifate. “Do you ever gamble at; cards?" the young lady asked. "No," i he answered, "but if I did now would be the iimc," Why?" she en- quired. “Bccauscfl he said, with a‘ smile," "I hold such a. beautiful hand!" That means putting the right values on things. Not exaggerating petty difficulties. Not making mountains out of molehills. Looking at things from a sane instead of a morbid point of vlcw. Realizing that a mull may not Como up to all of a. girl's dreams of a iomantic hero and yc may be a. mighty good provided. Realizing that a. husband has to pu‘ up with just as many faults in a wife as she has to overlook imperfec- tions ln him. _ A wife with common sense meets the problems of marriage with phil» Fashions -:- Litera § . turei m. osophy and humor. She laughs things of! instead of making tragedies out of them. She doesn't think her husband has ceased to love he: he- cause he isn't forever telling her so. She knows that as long as he works himself to death for her and the children he is giving the best possible proof of devotion. She doesn't nag him about his faults. She jokes him out of them if she can 41nd if she can't. she calls them John's little ways and loves them because they are his. And because she doesn't expect the impossible of marriage or of her husband she is happy and he is happy and they live happily till thcir golden wedding day, '9. SHE SHOULD~KNOW HOW TO BE A GOOD SPORT. She should not look upon marriage as a graft in which she expects to get all and give nothing, but she should o0 nsidc: it as a. partnership in which she should do her share of the work and pull her weight in the boat, 11 she is marrying a. poor young man, she should not whine because she has to do her own cooking and washing and baby-tending and wear cheap clothcs. Nor should she howl and complain because she cannot have the things that she had as a girl and reproach her husband for not being a go-getter and a nloney-maker. Nor should she pack up her things and go back to mother every time anything unpleasant happens , in the family circle and marriage tu ms out to be a. hard sledding pm. position instead o! the rosy romance she thought it would be. A woman should be a good enough sport to bc a good loser and to stand by her matrimonial bargain and make the bcst of it, instead of being a qultter. she should be Willing to sacrifice and toll and econ. omize to help her husband get a. start in the world, and l: misfortunes _ come to him she should stand by him even more faithfully in adversity ; than she did in prosperity. 1o. sum snouno Know HOW T0 crrr ALONG Wm: A MAN. Bcforc she is married every girl has some sort of technique about mun- aglng men, or else she would never get a. husband. No girl has dates until shc discovers how to please boys and Jolly them along and keep on i 1118 81111113’ Side 0f them and 10m,’ be fore a maiden is invited by any man i to accompany him to the altar she has discovered how to give the soft | answer that turns away wrath; how to choose the psychological moment; i t0 1111115145 burl nf-‘WS: how to sidestep his llttlc prejudices and to lend an | attentive ear while he talks about himself am the things he 1s interested “i om '1 i This kindergarten knowledge that every girl has of how to manage a man is all that any woman needs to know of no! only how to catch a husband, but how to hold him. knoggcfoursca there are millions of other things that every girl should e ore s 1c gets married, but if she can pass her I, Q, test 1n those the balance won't matter. DOROTHY DIX TONIC FOOD BEVERAGE quickly. furiously. John Gresham ’s Girl By Qzmcordia Merrel “You rcalizc at last that he may have something to say, then?" he ‘said roughly. “You realize that you . Iwcre not so almighty infallible when you had me jailed?” I Try Lydia E. Pinkbam’: Vcgeinble Compound i q, overlook you for cvcr. . . . Stand up and take it!" Jim was thundering cu: the xvords and. Mnoklin shrank dcwn ngan, f..'§.‘.'5.?‘.‘.“.ti.:t;.ii‘ii'.i."§:“.i's°'°="....."'"'°'*"" Famous stage Beauty ' declares no woman need look her age REALLY am 39 years oldi” says Billie Burke. “And I don't see why any woman should look her age. “We on the stage, of course, must keep our youthful freshness. Youth wins and holds the public as nothing else can. “So one must be wise enough to keep ,this charm right through the years. To layer Bruthal Swrnnkm by Innointmmc w mo» Bxcdiencien u» ithat doesn't mcanthat it's going to ed through his mind. But Ames said stcrnly: finc. add to a; sugar and spi flliii blil for an hour. 'l'h'.* is lll-‘c a \"‘ Ni lncrlis, ‘ and can ho undo 'l~1~.~ pick- » lint: l‘ i - a?“ u: . l I-KiJIP- ' .-__-.............._._..-_.- l For Sale li-y ifilfltldl‘ SALE OF 1.01 ' PLANT, BIN." ~ ' ; TIIl-l l' I l£.-\>'1'l'.l( l, l.l‘» i Scaled it'll:l\'I\ iiiiill“ -'\i i.» ilw undcrslgalcn iilli iv.‘ l; ...l up ll! ‘you and inc-mun; .ll|1.i' . l.......i., i‘ 2b, 193;: zit turn tilc purchase m pcrly. 1.01‘ NU. l. ill-ml in: .- h-II}; plll~ I . i’ "lilil uUJllLuluczl; cycs. . . . But that, ii‘ .t should ‘happen, svas for hereafter. Now, his ~ "10 $00G for scum like job plainly was to kccp a ‘c001 "Gil i1°1"-'31°1'°11-‘; “U0 b01152 hcad and a steady nerve and bc ¢‘.1'¢\‘1l ‘.110 Efvflt fist of hi5 l'Cll(iy for anything. so he sat still "I ‘ m’ ‘l £0119 i“ his V0539 outwardly calm; in reality, all key- Hzcstcli that i110 VOJCP-IIO lludicpl up and tcllscly watchful. 'l-‘.v l)"'_'llll to show its full,‘ "Kllingls too good for you, you y » . 4- l .. She s all worn out again ~ Poor girl . . . sh: llas (h: samc old hcadacllcs . . . bzckucllcs . .. mi - ill: ou ht to try Lydia ' Egct ed after a moment. "I (isn't want you m 53y any. l: Compound in ‘i next. I'm only waiing to clear my account with liiacklin. Your film's "L993 “id 1111"“- 100113113’ M111 funcrylng over and ovcr again: "I _ ‘in the I209. "I realize iii" he drew W111 a bfeflih- “What can I say?" he add 1 W111!" “I'm rcadyx‘, said Allies, placing 11111112." rcturnrd Lcc in the some a ‘vming"1’:'d bellow him “m! m" 1 a ‘rough ‘my. “Your mm is commglng the top c.f a fountain pen. - . . "Tall; Itfuckliu." . . lvarringilarl, I \':'.11. . . . 1N. Boligllivill l~ lory, ullilc, ilz. sleeping-hon c, ~ lug, leusciulni l therewith, in dorics; trap all as ilclnizru hereinafter [Cit LU'l‘ N0. 7 factory build claps, rope, (‘ii Schedule l0 LOT N0. 1;. Georgetown u" wharf, wnrchol: equipment flilii equipment all r duic "C" heroin LOT NO. 4. . 1 l- out-buildlngs at |‘.i-~ l'l"' they stand. LOT ‘NO. 5. ' (a) At 'Strollcr" l0 ll. Smack "Louis .'\i. kl Engine. 14 Fishing Boats llnli ll wwlwl-w. 6 Flat-Bottcrlcd Dnlic . 1 Large Dory. ‘(bl At Lnllhcliiuly, 1 ii» . l; I. and 3 Englncs. (c) At Anhandzlic, l ikitlll; and Engine. All no listed numilorrll iillii Ii‘ 1;. crlbed In Schcllulc '1)“ llrrr-‘lvlii. r referred In. Scheduler whore-in Ur" nlroir- pr" per-ties are listed and li("'>(‘l'i'.'l'i| Will! pm-tlcnlm-g may hr ln<pr~ "Hi i\\‘ n/‘r. Inns interested M. im- Unit‘? vi‘ u.» Company In GCOHIPtTHVII or ui, ihl‘ office of the undcrsignr-ll. Tenders will he rrrcivcz! 0r nu the above property m- i'~l- nm- p»: n. listed or for any item of soul W. H Dlttll 1"» 5th day o! Tclvllarg; ‘A. l‘. "" ‘Y, F. WYTrPIITI-I " ‘lltvfiff. (‘burl-Hot urn. fl-l‘ ' - ‘ ‘Mrhlflin’ of ('m*.".p_l|v\- r1 -* o " '" ‘o f" '1". 21-7. ( , M... ., -,-. A» A lulu‘, too, that awokcpittle beast," Lee was slyillg again, ’ ""11 y ("it OM13 5911111193 and 11's frec fist drew back menac- ' Iuillfl elcarcd, and hringly. Macklin shrelkcd to Ames. ' ‘t for i110 ncrt nlol"cl__'garc you going to sit still and so: . t be, lie uladc no mc killed He's lying! I don't know l1 i11'1"1“-@ 111 111W flClivr-“allytllillg about the tllcft! Aren't izcd would bl! you going to hclp mo?" l 11-1113771‘ lrad to n] "No," said Amos, alul his vo'ce p all round. llc saw fcll with a curious icllillg coldness . t now nulxlt be to keepl "my 11111‘ 5P1? thfli L00 didinot going to help you Macklln. I ‘ ii" ""111 -“"'1"1"5 ‘i-’1111118<‘- can sec that he is not lying. Your ' it he llrzrf. lcavc the set-guilt is as clear to me now as if it _ c more i0 Leo. And he were written in words on your 1111M 11 luslny big score rorcilclzd. Lee owes you a good deal. ' I'm Q0111! to Ict him pay it. . . ." “ll (‘llllC aftcrlvurds he 1430's fist drew back further, and 1- 1’ 1'1‘-'1-l>s It would be iilC menace of it bccamc more and 111 1~ i’ '1 1hr storm. of that nlfiic acute. . . Macklin saw that " " ‘ 1d i0 look illiKl thc fls‘, coming towards hs fate. . . ' Pr‘ of film». lJiflZiTlZHl-P-FOPG it landed, he almost felt the AUME T firearm Cheese MHr/c bl] 1/l¢-M.1/¢@rl'o/ ("mm- into the fury of the sccnc. “I Ami “"3511 01' ill on his flesh’ . . . Ilc a tone of auihdrltv that made Jim ‘hesitate. That hesitatlml probably ‘saved Macklixl, i! not his lire at least whatever ckfnl he 5°°d 1°01“ And it Sflved Jim from a to realize the difference in size bc-, him time t0 realize what um (fffcf. encc might moan. It gave him time to remember that, no matter what h! envoy had done m him. he might hit a fellow his own size, but not a little, clinging worm o: a thing like Mal-kiln. 'I'llcre could be no fighting this questbn out; T0 fight would be simply to kill, It would be as Mlwklin had called i‘. —murder. . . H's fist, trembling with the desire "You needn't kick up such a row. Macklin. I'm no; going to smash you. Not yet. at any role. There's quite g Iot for you to d3 first. Do lyou understand?" His voice wan hush and menacing. Ames nodded his agreement. I "'I'm ready to take dwm gnythng "’5“"i"XflIi:hl' - ' that Macklin says, Lcc," he said‘ quietly. Jim ulmcd towards him coming, all right." smmw. It was quietly m‘, but Mm Hr I05 so nltnfictilcr of Aladdin's C." SQ ‘dragged him up again threateninziknow “hat he hnd done’ nor hi had to I l good dcal mom} It gave hm mm itftxcklin, sobbing now. in his ublcctlu error. tween 111m and his enemy It gavct “you didq-t firm; letting lnc take yo watched that happcll; made it hop-i pen. and rzrmaincd spry enough. take it yourself . . . . long time coming: to you. ' . Sl1akillg,cl~yill!!. irulu; running suddenly cave out a hicrcillg: sllrizl: “I “m “mic ready," nnswcrcdifioufcsson l-lc had found tl"c wal- mld 88am Amrs’ voice fcll, coo! Agncs’ H] h‘ J~ h 1. l 1 1 l1 id ‘t and clear throuvh me It? d. (lln turned back i0 Mlclliill- 1m lflf 0a . ant 11c ea a llorr d f a ‘I ML ' "Nc-w ihcu you littlc bcast talk lmsgracc mm hm T cm out or that ' orzm ur. ' '- ~~"‘ . .~ , “Dim Ht ]y_ . ‘ ._ _ _ D-Wu mdb,.s._am,? Tan“ _ _,,;He had paid hnlf-ulticd Billy Brady i 1 1-m- Lce. 1W5 i119 lto do the uciual lobbcry for him. {He had nlcnyllt mu this fooish to to plncc the blame whcrc i5 was really due. But hc had proved to be not M. ncw. and the miserable man, w n “k to the m,” “m1 a groan Jimmrcalurc would not ha.e the wit m with that tcrri‘ ‘I will. . . fist. | . I will. . . ." cried; rad, and with a. hand that trezniblcd i(i0Wil his face, hlarklin made his“, that the Sgnature only Just got ncarly so lacking ill intelligence, of sort, as pccplc had ithought. And he had been ruth- ‘Icssly blackmailillg ltiilckiln cvcr ur Youl . slncr. Mac-kin had succeeded in punlshmcnt for you. but by means oi‘ a lsitcr lcit in the , lroots o.’ the "now stricken clm. tlw its bfegnilhalf-wllt had always brcn able to, Ilnake Malrklhi kccp any npptfn" _,\_-mcnt he chose to make. And al~l ' ithougfh hc could never i"n:l on? whole fir: THOEIDY was ‘piddcn, hci colfd always not vllant he v. '.ltcd.| Macklin was too much afraid of; ' him to rciuse him anything he ask- ’ . Now sumo up, damn you, and 14;" Colds. Sore f/iroaf to 6° its w°rk' neverihmss“ i?" 5° cd. In a pause in ihc ‘wrcichcd hisside and his hold of Mucklin ‘Sm-y, Anjps asked; relaxed" J "What spite had you against Walrington that you should have‘ done tills to hlln?" INSTHJIENT 4i Mallclln hcslntcd. The tho-light ,vinclng lie even now and so lvlnkc '1}, sccm that Ilc rcalv ha‘. 1w] n salons grievance against luv j.i."f'.- {D 30],. i!“ l-Y 1 . t. mun w caumm .....,...-....,._.~van=nn~. . always. i hiding the stolen ncics from him! that he might make up some con- , ‘flfimylqp-m m.» .. . yqn 1;. . mpision beauty. rmiliifizccgf; 39 .. SAYS BILLIEBURKE do this it is important above everything else to guard complexion beauty-imp one’s skin tcmptingly fresh and smooth. "For years I“ have’ used Lux Toilet _Soap regularly. It leaves my skin amaz- mgly clear and sofi.” At 39 Billie Burke has just signed up for a Series of motion pictures in Holly- wood! She will find thc actresses there, like the stage stars, are devoted to Lu: Toilet Soap. Actually 605 of the 613 im- portant ones use this fragrant white soap to guard complexion beauty-regularly! Umihdflfhmh Ovvu-mr-Ocnuuludfimmdflahuurgh. iiiX Toilet SoapJOi written. Macklin signed the inffll oua story and collapsed into ll ll - on the floor. His uverwmught nerves had - 1- thelr revenge, and gone W" to pieces. Thai; effectively put - 1 out of reach or Jim's violence. ~- it was obvious that ho was n ~ for a doctor now. He was 191118 thg floor, to all intents and l» poses dead. But Amcs, coins! w ‘ “ quickly, found that illS heart ‘ beating and that his breaiiliuilw" tolerably even. Ho picked the “m” man up and set him in his 0h! again. "The truth, please, Macklln." And the truth came. “He was gettng on too fast. . . Threatening to get in my way. I meant to be manager and I saw that he meant to do me out of the job. ' . ." the whining voice said. and Amos faithfully wrote it all down. When the last word of the confession had been spoken, Ames handed the pen to Maoklin. "Your name please, Macklirl," he (To Be Continued) (‘m .4‘- For‘ every kind o! bakiilfi Quaker Flour. .., perfect results arckguaranteed i UR guarantee of Flour covers all kinds of baking . . . bread, cakes, pastry and every- thing else. By many teats, we know that - every sack of Quaker Flour will bake perfectly. So we authorize your dealer to refund your money if for any reason Quaker Flour does not give you perfect aatinfaciion. Quaker Flour is the highest: quality all-purpose household flour. It excels in the hands of the young home baker as well as those with experience. Won’t you try Quaker Hour? In the quality of your baking and satisfaction it gives, it will repay you many time: its small extra cost over second-grade flour. 211i "mlwayo tho OlIO-{MWIYF ‘N M",