tin‘-:<a‘:i6 4::~1L; y lie beauty parlor was. h vs; - . our for about an hour. _‘ are you ionising at?" asked . “Is this lie nut mot- C ' ‘t. (a funny i Oifihiey) tuned and gave her a good bly that she .qh; "You aqua wu_'i._t ter go V mucking your has about. Why geoqptay as yhrvkplain but ‘ole- or Girl (as they dance)—Isn’t Jtig lapping floor and a topping '11? Akin A‘! —d was just goinc Pineheui ~*-itucfiy that. You really must leave Ill! something to ‘Elk about. vvvv v vvyyvvv v .‘ vvvv vvvvvvvvwvvvvyv is .—Rea .a ~ < . beauty that ..i...~“_"'.-....n..."i‘r'.'.'.'. face and uthful . . . lovely all over. LIL -'l'lRilE BEAUTY ‘fill wot" AND you do have this til-ever leveli- ps you've envied in thmet, wboldlibdtkunbe just as youthfuily soft fllf ‘IIV TIIIS PALMOLIVE IEAIITV 'I'llEl'lMEl|'I' Useit not oni for face, throat and shoulders, but for the nth as well. Gently massage into your skin a warm, rich Palmolive lather. Cleanse the pores thoroughly. Rinse with warm water, then with cold. That's all there is to this simple beauty treat- ment. Yet there is no surer way to real, all- over akin beauty. And here’: Inothefbeluty hint. Palmolive, used as a shampoo, keeps your scalp healthy, hair soft and lustrous. cial -v'vvvV‘V e i VVVVVNVI 3 mauv- 9 .3 ... .3‘ .vv vwv vv '7 ........~ ' A so-, -, |DorotI.y There is N early Always a Cure for Unhappy Ll Marriage, But Most ‘People Involved in » SuchAretooLazyandDulltoSearch so far the oak solution out what‘: wronil the has been one t riage has been divans and that aodsmoo P0ll0W"Pl..lElolive':lIIl'll in beauty centinun. on can - Clesaseafieotiiesfleeiitillee whmwwhmufiwmmgngyuamwmqmwmnnml coulyelive shdpeim ‘I give to Pain» about it? Why do they endure the greatest martyrdorn t-bot °;=db°wL1_' ‘clients ‘aglatlier. Going meted on a human being? Nobody knows. The Inst IIDNIIW mu r*--vi:.~ .. ..:."..i....‘"“ ‘3:"..“”:.“..“.§3."y'T.‘.‘."£’«:$":“’y’«$i‘=“'«u~=»unc”‘“" _ p ... ‘ch’ E.'“:“.:..:°::*'...‘.‘:i'.':**s“°= . .“:‘:';.:.°'.:.?”?:..'.i..‘3‘;“:‘3.:“s..u“‘“”‘«a«-i‘“«»a=~ fiuheeaadsootiies yourtk.in...leIvd rm-cheii-i~eie£se,xo tiuoush I '=°11°“ ~- -itbulrhriedniiinot earth at L‘ the-1W°“°“°"‘° ;g¢m¢.p.imy‘y. Ueelr improve their ‘is omditim “"7" ‘mm M" °""?-:'nth'a3" :11“ '.!'hey don't permit themselves to be even You ll have a complexion I Y I ‘mutton I and D ersona The HoU.§EW1i=E and HER ACTIVITIES srmnmia GRASS With gentle dignity they bend be- fore the wind. The summer Ehythmicaliy, quietly, As the wind passes. The golden light of evening baths in color Their bending heads. . Where the wind treads. Endlessly they bend. and rise and «bend again. And when Day fades. And night’: blue supplanh Its golden shades, Still quietly they bend their tufted heads-— Though no one sees- In silver ripples Under the breeze. —iPhyllis M Scott. in the Nation and Athenaeum. PLAYIIOUSE 1'-‘OB CIHIJIRIIN A week-end playhouse for Lon- donboyeandgirlshasbeenopenr ed. It is the gift of a mother! in memory of her child. CLASSIC SUIT The classic tailored suit with a fitted, hip-length racket remains popular. OIL IAINTINGS Oil paintings can be washed with warm milk and water. rubbing very gently, then drying without rinsing. CHECK AND DOUBLE CHECK FOR FASHION A good criterion of the styles which have been accepted by the smart set of Paris can be found in the Cnillon bar when society nctabltn meet for the I cocktail hour. Particularly to be noted are the masses of " ‘ ‘blue and dark red. green and brown as well as black and white. The checked materials are seen made up into short coat tailored suits as well as the three-quarter length coats ‘ worn over plain dresses. On warm days. printed linen suite with short sleeved jackets are worn. _The prints are particu- larly amusing this year in animal designs. colorful umibrrellas on a black background, a white heck- ground printed with a balloon man carrying, dozens of different color- ed balloons and groups of peanuts in bright rosirumes dancing over a sand colored background. The new materials attract so much at- tention that the lines of these summer suits are kept quite simple. :1 f hearing her coin?!‘-“I bemE‘?;-ylehjifsigigreid find wife know Just exactly what faults they have tint ' . I-{ea know theyaretoldaboutthern ;1fltee¥l8:;0ol?:§:l1:)e1r;;,ml‘::VIll‘le;v;a workingmclisgransi of Just what to do and what not to do to keep husband or wife eatinz out 01' 1155.01’ ‘*5’ mm» “W passing strange that they do not take the trouble in do it Whfln “*0 "" wards are so FEE‘- The remedy for an unhappy marriage is very simple. 1‘. is twins the party of the other part what he or she wants, and refrainfiig frignwtrylnll. rtoram abnoxiousdosesdown hisorher throat. Ifawoman stint her husband loves good food, it is giving him dinners that bring him home. If she knows that he has the head-of-the-house complecr, it is burninz iuicense before him. 11 he is or a say and i1ea5me"1°V1n3 nature. it is stepping out with him. If a man ilmows that his wife craves P¢l'P°¥‘-ll-l love-making, it l.§_hB.l'idlXlB her soft talk. if he knows that sh; to have everything she does noticed. it is tellinz her how won is. It he knows that she likes to so about, it is taking her out at lent ek_ . onwohuthere is a cure for an unhappy marriage if we weren't too my and dull to use it. DOROTHY 913- Viv " 1:- MADE IN CAN biotic Lt’ ‘_‘ v vvv .- .-.- 1- v ' SHREDDED OF CANAD|AN ADA want to lose me my Job?" “Pan Duro,“ aged and wither-oi. snarled: Hold “who are you talking to? your tongue! Looki The commissionai: e's jaw dropped and his eyes goggled as he behold the contents of the old leather bag. which the beam‘ thrust openly be- neaflt his nose. Gold! English sovereigns; Ameri- can twenty dollar pieces; Napol- eons! "I want to see the manage1~—pri- 730811." demanded the beggar, speaking from the corner of his twisted mouth and showing as he did so his long yellow incisor-teeth, :‘:fall the world like an old grey The ccinmissionaire hesitated as once more he surveyed "Pan Du:-o's" PAN DURO By GUILLAN HOPPER Riowasaflnetown inthe boom years. A town full of hardboilcd ad- venturers and beautiful women—I man's tcvwni Yankee railroad enginexl. 131%- llsh financiers, sea--CSPWDS ‘mm the four corners of the earth and pretty French revue artists. Oh!- and the begga.rs—a sure sirn oi prosperity in a south American city. "Aims. for the love of God!" Young beggars. old bessliflv 111°“ and women—even chlldren—ali his- ging and every passer-by giving — not much but always somethinz. The money made by the boss“! of Rio in the boom yeairsl Thaw crowded the steps oi the fashion- able churches-—the Candelazia, the sac Bento and the Gloria. little purse to be substituted by a inilreis-—a whole sixpencei Seven sixpances, twenty-two three- penny-bits, one hundred find forty- three pennies. one hundred and sev- enty-eight halipennies, and nearly four hundred farthingsi More than seventy milreis for meiely rolling cne's eyes and stretching out a dirty palmi In a day he had gained as much as he would have received after I. month of hard work in the coffee plantations. ‘ ' ' But, as he turned into the dark nliey known as the Becoo das Can- cellas, “Pan Duro's fellow mmd'.e- ants fell upon him and beat him imtii he droppel unconscious on the wom cobble—stonee. When he regained his senses. Noted at the Crillon one day A) i gritty residue trouble. But that is only one of the reasons why We an ideal cleanser for kitchen sinks. Try Ben AmiiNoI:lce how ' thoroughly it clean: and how it hoe E ‘at the no; time. I .*..I take great pains You'll find Bon Ami washes away quick- ly, easily and com letely . . . leaving no (1 to cause drain N can A ‘ f‘ ‘flies. - was Suzy’: famous water lily hat. Susy. who is the Paris milliner for the Duchess of Kent. has created a medium-brimm ‘ hat with the crown left open at the top to dis- play the hair. The lower part of the crown is made up of water 5. AT? fiierican resident or the Oi-illon. who dresses at Bchiapm nelli. wears a black crepe dress which fastens down the back with a zipper. with that she wear: I newspaper scarf, printed in yellow and in black on a white back- ground. and a black straw hat trimmed with a single yellow and white long-stemmed tulip. HIGHER PAY FOB WOMEN "Aims. for the love of God!" All the beggars were getting rich. “Pan Duro" found himself in the cedeia—a pi-isoner—charged with E, but one wretched old n-ian—a BIN! lard known as "Stale 1Bread"——be- came far richer than any Rio bot- gar ever dreamt of being. “Pan Duro" as they called him. was a thin weedy. old devil of about sixty years 0! age. He had come to Brazil some forty odd years prev- iously, a husky willing worker from Spain. Then “Pan Duro" saw the beggar: on the church steps and the never- ending stream of farthinge that fell into their outstretched scabby, lms. Itwasnotbecausehewaslafl being dninigu and incapable. .3‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ figure, but then the magic contained in the old leather bag cast him under its spell. . The bank manager, too, caught his breath and stared wildly at the Zfotesque being that stood tremb- linsbeforehisdesLJustaehewas about to recall the commissionaire. "Pen Duro" poured out the golden tents of his bag upon the glass- _°,_ .. "Fernandez — Juan ’Ferna.ndeii," snarled "Pan Du.ro." That was the first of many visits that the old inendicant paid to the Spanish Bank. Gradually the com- missionaire outgrew his initial as- tonishment, and when the old man posed in through the bronze gates the guardian would curse him softly under his breath: "viejo maldlwi old skin-mm! What the deuce is the good or money to him?" All 310. that is. those who ziiew of the beggar-‘s fortune, echoed the commissionairos sentiments. ii and while warm. add the butter eg whim until stiff. fold in the whipped cream and the remaining sugar and fold this into the goose- bevri-iee. Hemp into sherbet glasses and serve. If the berries an W17 noon. theyareeipttoberltllursourand you may need a little moo emu-. . wretched hovel. which is not wit.hi'ivehundrediIfyoudon’t like the arrangement, go to the Monte do and see flint they will give you." Themisermadoaeiftomoveofl, chuckling tliroatily. "But wait a minute.” The widow took him by the sleeve. "It is good secuirity— my little house-—it is all I have—e.in I likely to risk loa- ing it? I must have this money——my little Pepe. is dangerously ill, and she must go to Petropolis—the doo- YOU! 0 mm the first. stitutea one trouble for another and the hex: &;<;i’8:mmS' mu 0, _______ lhglrehadrmmsy you Tlfiiiblllm dwm‘”iI:°;3 “d ‘'°‘“‘‘'‘ ”‘ "M mm fiicefegiiili ed henna of Rio de Jan- ‘ or you may new 00 "'°’°‘ 5 ly in ,. ii al. and cynical little children who have been hopeless Ls have M m em mu“ onward‘ Pa“ ‘ , bun” wit flmukwd mu! bfuiesgrii in their sotil:i:‘rbyleth.£5.mecks of the homs that their paren Dumu fieigmem wealthhyw fire Ililif S “,3 gm‘ mfi the egg white ull own over en, eaithier e came ‘ gg-gm , . P mdeed. the price of divorce coins; so mggttlfifi 113:9”: 1:3‘ 1*:f‘gs;'e°c‘:‘wy grew “muons C anmd uni: an 1”‘ on” ‘ “uh .°"°“ "M9 m” m mummy mic ..'3'i‘a.. the weu-being of their chuu— His little attic was too 9°?’ ‘D n pinoemie omen desert. no not when they realize that they have us‘ new dew“ and bow mm. mums 5 mgm, HQ t a re.s- ‘ 5' you “hot ‘ nun “P. “nun. “n w mnd me “nun “mama,” 1 them at every step of the way tau-rant-keeperto allow him to sleep mt, ‘M. m. In mm W. mu, pm, necks to the yoke oi a niarriasii me fig it me“ so hesvfly, or doing in an outhouse for nothing. gco-you morn tut wk .00 wm without ever 017198 *0 find °"" wast 913 are dumb as driven cattle pood mo, seemed to 870W 13°" rout pountb beef, 6 quarts wtter. “§u‘3'°l“§§ut?n°g§:°m°b E M W dexwmivem:!nt:V;ri;1in:1lf"$;'“ inn-uoau-ee.4oomi-.390!» rlneeyfleandllee ii u - mg,“ 00 .11 t, or - mu mm... “mm. ._ . 01 mm?‘ the“ an mfifi:m“mnm‘ :$d ‘marriesb tamlfeiiisn. §§°ius°¢itaya, he btigahgto spend 1131:! ‘med :6“ 1 cu; hm g,.,1,"y' :12 ‘D?’ l‘ 5 d'u°‘°“' 3: could 10111 80198 W A d..m,km-d, 0, 9, pmian- mo night. begging at the kitchens o 1. ‘ma I 491'?‘ Pm“ mmv ' spoiled overindulzed girl. or a women mm” " Ks ch ashi bl hotels. livingcntbe P°1"’°' - rice. our-r. 1-4 can think main. “°*°.:~. 2' ‘ °°;°:.****'.":.*:..°**.:i.;=:..“:..'".:'. as o:°?:u°mrown m w em ..‘*..2.'*.*.;':;, *'°“... ....°"'“**'‘.. use .3‘: mm mm“; Wm :3; '3: y upw « ' ho - mind chef ' ' simmer — finial“ be em’-“*1 *”‘° °““’ W “‘°‘°,""° ”° “him by mm’ M W m-%l'»ve nielidpiecesot pan duro." be 1‘“‘?° 9°" -"""u‘:,‘°b°'“‘.‘°' “*4 fl rind till the min his all been ab- "°8l“'5°°“"“’P‘”““‘“““'* mg-rxggggucxurttheresultot wouldgroan,"i'uatalitt.lepieceo1 B°‘°P°“1°"' v‘'‘‘‘‘ w smeeauinzeohounoohiiaou B"tm°“°°°m”°m'ydunmFW ‘ wifew-reohedtheniarrlsse staiem-cad." °‘“"9“h°""°t‘u°"‘“d“‘ panandtherioeshould not bb Em“ ’-"‘8°‘“°" ’’°‘' ’‘‘“’° "“‘“°' "‘° 1‘ W2’... 04 the stupidity and my so it was that mo came to know the boilinc mm M5 “'0 W” stirred. Add Iufncien new in '"‘h °’1‘"m“‘1 mwnh may W 1"“ ‘M53:-mm that marriage wasn't me him as "Pan DuI°»”-Pf1“°° 0‘ W‘ ‘mu ‘'°'‘' ‘‘1'' ‘M 9”” ‘° “"‘°‘ sweeten and the eieun. cool. pile on °”‘“""“'h°"‘f°°' °° cdedutthatmhrflogewaaailumoggm A11°""'°‘“°"”°°“"‘““""°"‘ cahhnennoothintospyumie. Elysium they had supposed lttobe.“ 0*’ of mnkruywy um one uwrmon in me ,u_m_ 1°“; mm. mm . 3“. ‘ad’ an ptnumk out n mdmmmeflmwmeizamc no“ that important ma-011923 “Pan nuro"aiui1fl°¢ slioeeandtheslieaehaived-than mdwmmmwmmanfiw theyoiV°1°lI“1°“““"‘D°°"" ' ' °“°““‘°°°‘“" °°°9"""'“'*"“ ammihosoakeatonrewzhmue ohinginrheworidtothanisnnntsinnpn $8‘-_£imng‘fl.°en'm,,y°, Worm .13 J,,,,;,.,_ laud-‘comma in udmrwammfl "“”"°’""’ f‘:m‘fl”m'”°’ heiinuninteusivsutudy Theburly commissionaireonduty iiaihieepoonimim om1mfln' “““"““°“k° ‘”m”"’“dm“'lm au1i:‘°what's wrong with his :ooxonesLmoo.nhsrmeuscm— 2 ioina I or inesmm m§h§B&1f§nitl‘i°§f$2}‘:cv§:i“a§§f‘mm”fl7r‘lvhymmiemmmmmim orowbhotstoodblinitlngi.nthesun- 1;"’;;p“m - mitt-opierémgmdwlo me .U°° lacedhislocd ' ' “"“"° "’°“‘ up for him or taking 8113' l«1'°‘1b1° Wm‘ u':_1d1“n‘°r' 1;; womfimh: Ego: gig: ::d..1§::uD'?n.°.s.. 5h°u1dg._ V 3 088 V0335 syrup over the whole. dust lnvitcdti'g>!ii1o;i ahclubuor is iggeog mdggnwwif-it um“ own, ,0 .3“ wt 0, mm mm. nu me 11“ ghugd whivfipzg 6333* um chopped Pistachios. and serve fl ta 8 erse B8199 ! . u _ - xxh‘ ' heuérthat the reason her husband has taken to stepping out at man: is uniformed giant savaeely. do rm “mm mm ‘M “M Md W, n_nb am and the well beien m yolks and finely. oookfor abouts minutes. Add 1 ibeechpouzidofftiiitallowone eu,po¢sugarandci'ii1l.Bea1:tho pcnmdqfsu:a.r.therind|.nd1uice ofalelnmm potaendeealimm Spring Fashions For ' Home Dress-Making I Everymotherlihe: to see but chiidi-ensmartlyan appropriately dressed The costume is one type thatwillalways be popular for. children. Both small girls and boys look delightful in sailor tau. ‘Phase in something so neat and iol'i1n~about them. Today’: models are particularly likable. Brother‘: hloine has a robe to match sister's dress. The satia- collar is small and comfortable. They are so easy to make. sleevu to set in! schemes in white cotton as broadcloth, pique, linen-like weaves, etc..wlthnavy blueorinnevywnha white are most labored. Printed ect- N0 with 2 (-1 binding for drau- Boy's suit requiru 1% of 35- inch inaterlsl I of bind- ing. Pattern inelndu models in same site. data are won two will luv! to be nice of PA'l.'.l.‘Z.!IlI cumin etenilllot-¢eIn(coinlexarefI'red.) wnpeoiaoarefdlly. —-_.-—-V---n-.c-._—--nu} N0. ” _uIeeeIeneeeeoeeeel , lent