'vYY 6; wk l me H8 kkkkkkkkkkkk L_ __ WHAT I8 GOOD! “Wilt h the Nil good!" 1 nnked in musing mood: “Order,” it'd the luv court "Knowledge," said the school; “Truth,” said the wise man; ‘Illlnlflf’ said the fool; “Love.” llld the maiden: "Beauty." aid the pege: “Freedom: said the dreamer; "Home." said the sage: "Fame," said thc soldii-r; "Equity," said the secl‘. .. spur: my heart full sady. 7Softly this I heard; ' 41inch heart holds the secret- Qiindness’ is the word " ‘M ——-JOhll Bryle Olteilly. l?’ BRAYERY WORTH NBTICDVG It is so much easier sometimes, b do brave things than to be brave ‘in tlie- bearing of sorrow and ill- ri .~'s Jiilizi OYPT-llltfi-‘viiy rescues a child ir‘m the (‘rush of the niotol’ lorry, and we talk about it for wrecks! But Sam Next~Dcor just. bZIlYPS away’ at some work absolute- ly diverse to the profession he \\ iiid have selected as a. ‘iv lihood, and “lllSUUS as lic does ii. then bears niitiently with the sick fan- ("is of an invalid wlfe—to say nothing of dong some of the do- kiiistic round and "seezng to" the dliildrrn. ‘A dear fried lad down lid!‘ life in the Wfll‘~—'ll(l\\' “e priiiwd lier courage. her grit h~r heroism! But what of tiiit other friend mho lvcs on s. ireze pittance and makes it appear affluence? Who has ill health. but appears to be robust: who fiends‘ :0 much that no one u‘ ll t-ve-r gums at: who gives, day zii and tiny out. of her very best to tlisse around h r, ask- ing nothing ll! exchange? I! the asigels trod the earth, setting a visible w?‘ cn the souls of courage, Irlint .~ui-prisrs. we should get! HISTOR l‘ ‘There is Qthlrig that solidifies and strengthens a natLon like nud- lng of the nations mvn history, whether that liistciy is recorded in IDDks Ol‘ embodied iri customs, in- stitiitons and monuments-Joseph Anderson. PEWLQLE DISCTYLEQ 0F IZAAK ” “ELTON MANY ‘llir fair s x ‘s iziyidiially’ p011!‘- Drating one cf mtiiis most hrday . ports-fishing. ‘ A check by game protectors of P€T¥ qiiE I museum! New rm aim a the m»... a Lithgow ldpcrcontof theflsliingcianinl. seven months’ period were women, the commissioner revenled today. The guardians o! the coma-va- tion law reported that in seven mvntlil 213d out of 247,218 pur- sonl shaded were female disciples of funk Walton. The figures while considerably sh:rt cf the actual numbzr of those who fished durng the period, give M1 ldel. said Comniisiouer 0s- borne, of the advent of women in- to a field heretofore considered al- most exclusively for men. CHI-BM ROUGE BLENDS WITH YOUR. NATURAL COLOR livery girl realizes that rouge- does much to improve her appear- ance» The era of the pale, wan beauty vanished long ago and a. girl's aim these days, is to look healthy and fu‘l of vitality. R-w of us have much natural oo- lor. It is impossible for busy wo- men of this day nd age to get. enough exercise actually to make our cheeks red. Consequently, we depend on the rouge pot to do the trick. Cream rouge: are conrdered best both for evening and for daytime. ‘They stay on much longer and do not have a drying effect oii the skin- Try to select a rouge which is about the tone your complexion would be if you had a natural hgh color. And then put it on in ex- actly the place which nature se- lects when she decided to favor you with some coloring ‘n your chi-vies. Don't Ucrid in down too low on your cheeks. You dorit want your face to have that "dragged down" appearance. Apply cream rouge in thrive little dots. Put one on the point of the cheek bone, another in toward llie nose and the third one outside to- ward your ear. Rub and blend until you have a smooth, even, high color‘ which locks perfectly natural. Use a inundation ‘nton before you put on cream rouge and pcw~ der carefully when you have finish- ed blending it. NEW CREATIONS BY PARIS MILLTNER A hat that rrakes you laugh nd love it is made by Robert: Cusey of Paris. It is u toque in black eatin- ed taupe. trimmed with a pompon of glyserned ostrich feathers, per- Rec; m CHILDREN vgy y’ only 90$. “I0 hqhhglvlngVltdlilmln makes drone 5"" 1'1"‘ ,- SCOT T 'S_ ‘E M UtSEI-Q N‘ A MorningSmilo SCOTTISH HUMOR. "Alec," said Meg outside the dew- ellefs, d‘ye mind some o’ us lite lovely things?" "Aye. that's why we hre police." the A “CUT Maid: "No, sir, and I don't know how long he'll be. lli-‘s been called out on an El-Pllllll cuss.“ alrmed her. By her order, the new royal saloon, built in i850, bore u strange disc and sriiiiiphon on the roof, and a chair at the back of the coal tender of the ongine- If the Queen lhOlLlht the train was going tcc slow, and particularly if she thought is was gozng to fast, or ought to stop. an attendant inside the carriaje could iiork the d’sc and semrphorc, A porter, sitting with his back to the engine, on the chair on the coal tender, instarify noted the Nye-l instructions, as expressed on the roof of the saloon, and passed them to the engine driver, who acted up- on them, Even with this safeguard, how- ever, all was not well, for a confi- dential letter presently reached the company, n which insistence on ri- gid adherence to the approved time table was expressed. Ths was be- cause one cl‘ the directors of the company had told Her Majesty "that. they had been driving n train at the rate of 60 miles an hour, a gratuitous piece of information which very naturally alarmed Her ..-."s'....-..t 5nd “““¢€§QO§OOOO-OOOOO OOO-OO-OGOOOOQO an‘ awfy strong desire tac possess voice (on phonei: "ls the doctor .‘,.. Persona -lGWU!99U§N.' t AA km‘ A 1'. O 1Q :- _Fasliions -:- AAA‘ vvv 11E‘ COOK'S CORNER i eggs, slightly beaten ‘i6 C119 I118" 1 tablespoon lemon Juice ‘m teupon vmillb Wash the rice thoroughly. cover ..lth cold water. lock one hour and iraiii. Dilute the milk with 2 cups water and put into the WP 0! I JOHNS boiler, with the rim, lemon rind nnd ult. Cook until the rice ll sugar and lemon Juice. Add witn butter to the hot rice and cook until the eggs set uibout live minutely. vanilla. Pour into n buttered P1111" um; dish. m. into a III-l d 1w!’- water and bun in a moderm oven about twenty minutes- One-half cup seeded raisina ma! be added. GBAPEI-‘BUIT TAPIOCA PUDDING 1_3 pup quick-cooking tapioca 1i,- cups hot. water ;. cup sugar ‘M teaspoon salt l cup grapefruit juice 2 grapefruit 1 orange Add tapioca to water and cook in double boiler l5 minutes or until [aplflflll is clear, stirring frequently- Add sugar and ilrflllflfll“ i111“- ting 3 or 4 sections in the bottom of each sherbet dish. CooPtelflWl mixture, pour over the grapefruit sections. Garnish with Will-lull °1 orange. Pqwdgrgd sugar is best for lwoet- should be constantly varied. Add I few drops of an extract that will both contrast and blend with the main flavors. Good crenm doubles itl volume when whlplrd- n Before putting cake into theoven to bake give the tin several tbmnpl on the table and the cake will not full. If the crust of B. custard pie l8 brushed over with the white of ll! egg before filling it will not sock. tender. Blend towel-Mr m! Qlfiu Remove from the tire and odd the . Section grapefruit and orange, put- l mm; whipped cream—und ilnvfn/ f Dvorotliy m. i. Letter B... i Think They lbllofllhllklpthcr lvlllblwel 5????‘ Dullardl nln without remone. bar of their own cunacien of punishment. old poem uyl, “Every eye‘ grew lessness alienate; people instead o! heart. You neg, even though you those whom you would bind to you ' doing. Why? and self-centered that rho i others. cuse to go on an orgy of self-pity. Of course. the shrew: and fault: of tempernnient iult _ have the cancer cutout that is , lift our faces. it can be done. Any woman can to hnvc that perticulnr thing to be n nnggur if nbe will only Pity Those Who Want to Stop Nagging and Cawtl-Splnstefe Gay Life Beats Marriage to Stick-ln-thedlliud, Cries Bored Wife DeulliuDlx-Iummover-ngu the wise and right thing to do, yet lack the strength w do it. 11bi- they an not only at odds with all about them. they are perpetually at war with themselves. one else but themsolvu for their wrong doings end their Influx-cg. But the intelligent have no such ace, goats. and know that they have brought their mis- fortunes on their own heads. And that is the bitterest drop in their cup That seems to be your unhappy fate. You would like to be popular. to know that you nlwnya carried your welcome with you Ind that, u the bfllhtec at your coming," yet your tact- slonately to be loved, yet you slay love by making of your tongue a. two- edged sword with which you slay even those near and dear to you to the These are common feminine faults. They ure at the bottom of moat of the tragedies of women's lives. A womm knows that she drives her ‘ and children sway from her by her nagging. she makes her home a hell on earth by her tnmiier. has no friendl, yet ahe goes on doing the $111118! $11M 1119 1191' 0WD 1111' B¢o5uuwhmy0u|Qtd0WliMbrlI$lCh,lllB|ll0l$-mlh gm bu some sort of divine right to run roughshod over other: and that they should take it Ind like it become she does it. She is tnctless because aha does not stop to consider the feelinsl 01 She id . thleu about vv- uncinz the" ‘fluibflitles and humus their vanity. She nag: because she is determined to have her own way and tcbend otliento her will. Bbeilthuone who muatbeobflflfi I114 every one‘: tutu and habits must. be mode to 001110!!! t0 N!‘ OWB- 51'1" mes into rngee because lhe gets n kick out o! acenu. She even “t: a thrill out of knowing nhe in lonely ma tmloved becoulc it rim her In fl- thc tuctlesn and the MIKEY! 6mm "151 iti .b tthisia ottruc- they cannot. help their dilllusu 0n: yuu you 6:‘ I and“. w. th t lt um; u eating um our when“! v1 hlpuinell‘! if: no. its!“ of a. trick m lift. our personality when it us: then 1t 1I 1° it Id . m‘ mum‘ ‘b o om ‘animate throughhthe taunt-cum lfflrst dscclng ow c m“ o‘ w“ omdmm‘ magi-eun- mu 31w. Any vommvlniwl" mukeupiieemindmietotnerpeonhhl" They pun the buck and blame every They stand convicted at the drawing them to you. You long pu- kncw that it; will drive away from you with hoops of steel. She known that She knows that she nobody but hu-lolf and kbe feel: tlut You cui Cure uur systeml. W11! not umlvll" m‘ And surely uie niziun say. but the iwint 11 the! of independent action and mi’ L A44 Q {ferocity m ‘.193; . vvvOOQQg.‘ T8 u...“ Miss Friday-Q. l6!Hf!!3’]flClLhV'/2lI7¢h4;g The Holnl chef In: prepared this extra- chocry, warming, lppctlzlng dish, Heinz Cooked Spaghetti, for your lunchoon- n wel- come change from the woePl routine meals. Hero ll the food value of durum wheat, milk, butter, cheese and Heinz enticing tomato sauce. Price! are low. Miss Saturday- /5!e1'ea3: )/zazlvisr Baked Beam for Saturday h more than a tradition — when thcy’rc Heinz Baked Beans. Thefts oven-baked —big, brown, tender, delicious —n lot of nourishment for very little money. Four kinds. Get come today. me 51mg rights uhe clinme for herself dher tongue !.f she Wlhtd t0. "°“‘5‘.°£i.°°$§‘;".§‘ $11 w Mom Quit shining. Quit emmeiungmeiiwuvuuwuhnwmsflnlmmm- “m” u not me of u: who cannot conquer our fuults if we really denim to do no. Itilbeceuoewo wmtwmJ0Y011i"°@m"'°"nd 11° "‘"'°'°1"“ for them that. nukes us coddle our faults without M1118 11° l" 114 °1 m", Domrmr nix. ched right. a-bove the forehead and trickling down between the eye- brown. Another one by this modiste is a small brown suede affair. gevmetric in its angles and folds, worn with all the hair out of sight about the face- Majesty, although it. was probably incorrect" . §....'..i..; "MEANS CHARM gun HAPPINESS 37-" Sparkliu lye: and smi - ' Ing lips toll 1th o i r o w n :Itory of health find vitality. Clear skin n- I r a c t s . T h e healthy lctivc "girl is usually ~ orb kn py and po . - » Perhaps you 1n no: really ill and yet when the (:75 vol-Isadora: got: are Loo _ comm o0 nines! n a _ Ivan edict or that um cnngy _-ypullay y ' ii. Plnklum’: Veg- rlbblo l: mun up your general ch. Giver you morn pep- mon chum By muakiecarl-d, 9s cabling) tonnes ." r me." r ‘you ooduyi VtEElABlE CUMPUUNU BOILED CUSTARD WITH SNOW EGG 1 pint niiik. scolded 3 egg yolks '6 teaspoon nit 9i teaspoon vanilla Beat the egg yolks and beat the sugar into them. add salt, mix n little of the hot milk into them, then return the rest into double boiler and stir constantly until it. thickenl, enough to coat n spoon. The cimtsrd will thicken more on cooling. Set the dish of custard at. once into cold water, continue the stirring for three minutes, then re- new the water and stir a few minu- tes longer. Flavor with vanilla Just before serving. Serve the custard in glass cups with a Snow Egg on the top of the custard in each cup. Grate a little nutmeg cn top cf each egg if de- sired. Dix-There seems to be a hankering on the part 0f 01d lpllllntz: mogwuns flipper! fur mltflmvnv- MY “'1” 1° “"1" l‘ DON'T. ‘Thole is nothing in it. l have n hlilblnd above the averali- Ho nu nil the virtues and none of the vices, yet life with hlrn bores me to death. I married him six yen-s ago when f was ill and he 62 and we ‘settled down to be old married fol-ks. I have danced exactly three times ‘since I was married. I am fond of the theatre. My husband never takes me to see n play. He never talks at home. After dinner he reads his paper listen: to the radio, then goes tc bed. l used to be 91'9")‘. but therein no use in dressing up for a mm who doesn't notice Whether I you have an a gingham apron or u. chiffon dinner dress. So Cfiunt 7°11!’ blessings lplnsters. You get out and see people and go 9186M Ind ¢~ things instead of being tied down to a husband who thinks that all the plluure that n wife wants u w sit up and look at him llsginlgznw "II radio of an eveninl- ~ ' ' ygu us, girll, in one you hove the bud luck. like Mrs. M .0. 1)., to dnw a husband who thinks that. just being married to him ll D1611!!! , mo“); 1°1- my womnn and that she can get all the fun she wuntu in gunning the vacuum cleaner and D¢Yf°T111111I 1711 u" I" ""189 ""3 m“ m; gaunt even need to be cheered up by a little conversation of on 11;" are plenty of husband: like tl-ist. who forget that when u lively ,g“n‘ ‘lrl gets married she doesn't automatically lone her fondneu for mum‘ q,- going to places of unulcrnerit 1nd become u old u her grand- mother. They ignore the fact that. one of the reuons that l llrl I"! mpg-ted u to get. n permanent date. and that if she had any inkling that he: hmband would never ask her to step out with him again. she wouldn't drnmofmnrrylnt Al l. nutter of “an; qggung reference! to burned her linkers. fll-mingly con- Borltowlru - acioue of Vern Dayton’; interested u , Evidently Bnrltowe’: abrupt d¢- $11M"?- "d"“' “"14"! i" l" "I? W11- wmu‘ mm we nth“- hou, "Qh m» he,“ muggy- nary frock for lmnrt dnytimn weer. "I must run along." Adda m» puny in complny with Von. Dnv- "W111 1M!" he demanded uton- °11° 1' *1" WP "W! wlllr with ma “ma” “P h" m"- "311" ton lad reulurod Omby. H: be- ilbod. epculctts that perk out over the dmppedintomifthcrndoingmvqgnqiminotbingtofenrfrcm “ltiooko-queerl".vennnemadoa'h°“m"m¢ bwflflllhllllthl over the apartment to luit me. Iix- "m; Victor when Jeanne wu VIII-ll Illtufl. “I'd ntbcr you neck u shown here in olive green at! u. be yourtnellhbor um week. coma-Md, l m gig?’ g1: 5w ghouls? i: 321m. i . 1111!! ‘M161 118111911!) u mu theun w. onwunn word- wlth your Drtlllieygtlvegsltn-llwa. ‘an!’ J§Si'.'.“§i¢"‘£§'..“i.n fork with a to luww that yo? Ina-kc investments tau”? °“" " “m?!” “"111"- generally have u card up my mm troubled ieokin hcr m; for your friendl " ' “Jmmf 1' i" *1" "11" “m,” mu nailing n m: "Dcntbenfooll" mwbodIJu-i- °°"" "° °“°P°“ “"1111 . "mbgmmggdjoininltllilfihy. _wmnmlinlichiermmcfmm Sbehad notbecngnne vmnuytcnnndmotbnrlifl when cnnby rang Joanne up. hi‘: m n erimlon toque. P10111111! ""1 m9 m?“ 1°? l" 1 MUN the The slip-on gloves repent wanted her to lunch with him, had trench visitor. ‘mm “W” “h” m he WWW!» llkhtcr green for QUEEN vlcrolnfé “Flnsr CANADIAN MAD! Al’ LIAAQIOTON. CANADA. FOR OVII I4 YIAII “Am JOURNEY out 1nd give her some plenum and amusement u be docs to provide he with food and clothe: and lbeltcr, for n wumm doesn't live by bred alone. She has to have Ionic spiritual sustcnuice. She has to luv! something to break the ouotony of housework, for all work and no p11! makes June n very dull girl indeed. And n-peevish and M31111 01W» One of the argument: for n girl marrying a. man about. her own I81 iltbnthe informers npttobeeplsylellcwwith her than m olderirmu The older mun in opt to have been eveflwhem and done cvcrythiui! 11114 be tired of it. 1nd want to rattle down and never step out of an even- ing. Whereas the young mun still wants to Winder lmvns the hi!!!“ lights a little. A: for the woman who is married to a Stiok-in-the-mud who v11 never go anywhere of an evening .the only thing she can dc is to Sfralll! for some diversion in the afternoons. unlcu rho can persuade him to B1" her n fn-lr den! and combine some diversion with domesticity. DOROTHY DIX. How Queen Victoria made her first train journey, and how she insisting oii attaching a. signal to the royal saloon to tall the driver when he was going too fast, in re- counted in the Great Western RA!!- wuy Magazine. The Prince Consort conceived the daring idea. that the Queen mght travel from Windsor Castle to London by train. instead of by coach, and in October, 1840, the Greet Western built e royal uloon much Ike a modern guard’; vln for a goods trsiri. It was not until June, 184-2. how- ever, that the Queen cons=nted to travel by it, and then the great. Brunei himself was on the foot- plnu. The trktn reached Pudding- ton 5 minutes later. and the Qlueen emerged to deafening ap- p ause, and "in a most condescend- ing manner returned the congratu- ’ A waspoon M vines" added to lotions of the assembhge present." turd ‘md m’ “Yml pmven“ u“ The Qpggd, 110mm,; hum-guy food from absorbing too much fat. Improve them mlernigllt with this famous cream I0, 000,000 jars cold yearly HAPPID hull an lc —m qty. pflonnndnowtomdun udnylcn . ub on sill-tale- flo-xubann. It’: mow-w lootbin‘—,' 3‘-3.“‘-..ii-“25. to 320w noutlinz. flaunt from all och: ‘db-q w "q-quqq. n Try it. for you-ml! why la ‘éflginrumnoldyunrly. Alkyourdrq- Tm. Week-Special Ofier I 83¢ Boudoir Jar Only 04¢ Daintinm With Chic Styles ILLUIIIATQ Dilflllfl IIIIII IXKIII IIQ IVQY Pill him. fkct, every hulbend owes it u much to tnke his wife Jeanne hnd finished. "So war was declared from the start? Well, I'm not. surprised! I always knew that Barstowe woman would Pull some- thing like that when Vic flnllly selected a wife; unieu, of course, it was Vera. Dayton . . ." flhe chuck- led as rhe recalled Jeanne’; Account of Veras expression when Vic find addressed her as “darling". "I'd give my pearl necklace to have witnessed that! Oh, what a vnllop for Dayton!" "What should I do now?" Jeanne asked frankly, “Sit tight and let the Barstawe it. Al she, too, looking out for g wealthy marriage, u m; lgugmnfly pretended to be? There m the loveliest little UIAPPII I OOMPLIGATIONS m of our acquaintance, I have some new: for you." said Jelnne u . can‘ y “s” know?“ blnndly urcutfc, “mince you think gimflfl ‘ Mn. Parkinson no announced tho following morning Almost be- (on Jeanne hnd flniind lmckfut. “You ARI u. leisurely young per- !" commented time widow, u e rented herself by a window over_ "I'm glad to hear it." Adele re- plied heurtily. "I hop! you're going tn tell mo that Von Dayton got bar eonge at the hands of Vic Bur-A stowv. I never heard of anything l0 high-handed as the way she bore him of! from the Ibrbea‘ on Sun- famlly rave," advised Adele Pfblllpr ly. "They cnn‘t find an objection to you except thnt you're not. dnrling Vern. Trust Vic to win them over! That young man clwnyu get: what he wants in the end." "But I feel l good proposition for her in the market. day," be urged her. "Don't lot it got. cold on you! ‘time enough to atop when if. turn: lgninlt you." Jeanne accepted the invitation "F011" up mn- luck of nmr- mm‘ fut. Iehldtnkanlomooflinlnl-lod- It. u ho somebody N11 M M "m r zeneurvz w“: w»- tbook. am- Io. n: includu the collar. DING, gum; “Q osmium-i». ' m” lmnlLmodiumlnd so humiliated, no snubbed-——" ! "Fiddlcltiokl! Iorget it!" sniffed the widow, "If I'd routed to al. the snubs I've got, I'd be mashed soflntnFord couldrunoverme without a jolt! 0f course Mother Bnmiowe tried to snub you! Women with money and pmltion always try Llut on unattached, uttruetive girl: Jeanne impullively. - lly if mid chnrmcn Ara "I lime you'll be awfully happy. mined up with their men folks." Vic iii an oid dlrling—l know you'll "You're such o comfort!" mur- never have cause to regret it." muted Jemne gratefully. reaching Jeanne laughed. over to aqueous ‘the other woman's "But why the fclicitut 7 arm. didn't my I accepted him, did l?" Ihc wu really morning very "My dear, you're not. e fool!" re- fund of the young widow plied Adele bruaquely, seating ber- Plrkinlon lupplied the nit on the foot of Jeanne‘: chain: companlonabip she nod needed. lounge. ‘Tel! me all about it. Did Joanne had tlnd of Dllilh: n lane binmtlmnble mother throw tbohnnd. Sbeludnclectvhopodw . mun! fit!" mid someone u tolerant and under- Jcnnne hesitated a mommt and dny.“ Joanna nmilcd demunly into her cbocolnte. "Ir. Bnrlwwe 110d no to merry him A low whistle came from Mrs. Parkinson. - “lly word!" Then ab: came over end kiuod looking the Park and drew of! her IMVBI- "Allin. I sigh ‘Youth’! When I w“ ycurage, I could lie Lu bed into, too and breakfast on chocolate without a thought for my kmllbw I‘ have toipnnce all miItlloPdrk for lipura tckeep an locking n fright, and I bunk- flltfln todwithlemonendollioo at unbuttarud tout." Rifle not jovm plump!” Jeanne lnillingly, no Ibo herself a fresh cup of choc- lbe wu genuinely glnd to Adel! Plrkinum, and had d0- ‘F595 fitiiinsi 1 . Mn. feminine mam. jult what tho widcwaowngnmemlie cdlfhchtylndyotldwtiollyofmqg "Minn!" Ibo murmm-ed when