s 3 .,-. iii , i | “l ,wi i.| _iw tif E; .S r i \ i ¢ ii \ - t r i 1 1 _'_ 1 i _ li it. E, I. i;, iii if AV lr i .5-< _»»--~ _ - ' i U4 UQ, -,iv V tri. ii li '.1 l v: ‘i. i i i v ws `s (ei-2-is a " n.- i _ 'i i I 1 i r _ -»_ -. "1’*>_. _ee is-1.* 'U _~ F! _. ti . _, ._ =-.away li ~¢g_i~_._ ,_,... _ Ilbfhd-l'-Ql'§J<.i~'41v 1 ~ and, chan I H \ .,, _ .v.’,`,,y‘.,,€_`, J _Ji 0%* vvooo-0-A -0-**0‘1 Quilt _Patterns _A 3 woormaun earn ;, _ V f Cut out all pieces and sew to- 9 _f_~.`_T ” _ ‘E / .I / »e .-.. _<,?,"---~e, . -r'°s=, .r’“°.-_ - .\- ,_;i. ..-.-_ua l1here’s cheer and inspiration in a fine cup of tea-confidently anticipated, gratefully enjoyed. (( It’s cost is such a very small part of the weekly budget that anyone can afford it. (I Nothing on i your table repays you so fully as fine tea. O; 6-M.\¢ S it été hopdlolf -u 2°' Q' Can Second Love be as Wonderful as First Love?-Pity Poor Woman Whose Hus- band Starves Her for a Few Words of Love-Why Sl\ouldn’t Man of ‘ 50 and Woman of 40 Marry? -Doesspersonev - idthefirsttime. he be as happy had married his first love? What do you think of first love? M158 B. Answer: 9 ' I think that first love ‘ which dreams are mode and beautiful and iu1substantial as We romanticize it and elsdieia hiaiirstloveoven inlovssooom- soomdlovqwill as he would have been lf he is i-4*; rE= 522 fi* EZ age irt 588 lether on small block. Pieces may be plain colors or print material. Set _b ocks together' with plain blocks as shows on quilt diagram. Plain blocks may be either white or col- IL-ored. Finish with 3 inch border iround quilt. ' Allow for all seams when cutting _ Uattern.. __ _Block iinishes i5 inches square. i . '20 pieced blocks. U ,. ._. 10 plain blocks. 3 inch border around quilt. Material Required >' _~ 31 2-3 yards green material for 12;' -_pieced blocks. 1 2-3 yards yellow material for 'pieced blocks. 1% yards material for plain blocks. 1% yards red material ' 1% yards white material for pieced blocks. 9 I-3 yards 3 inch binding for bor- der around quilt. _ When ordering give Number 26-6. ir `- Bend 15c for a book of quilt pat- ntainin 7 beautiful Grand- »» ;` fi "ms co 8 , g .» ` er quilt designs - every pat- . .::_ rn different. ‘i . THE COOK’S i <:clRuvruQ Uoloa Frosthg (Uncookod) tablespoons butter cup confectionerb sugar tablespoons strong coffee teaspoon cocoa (dry.) - Guam butter and swat' well. Odd ing me cocoa, men the liquid and liavoring. Stir until thin enough to spread. E u . t AMomingSmil¢ .. | threats the new inmaking ei li; gcsigggél ag; aS"i5!S Sriiiiig Q 3 ‘ia ti iii; by resorting _ the street , the nearest _ ,V ces 'nm ali An elderly man of ultraemvival habits, but withal learned and book- ieh,washauledbo!oto thobsrof .._...iilticeinaoo|rnh-y_ town. "Yoh charged with bein' drunk and disorderly,” mapped the mag -iistrate. “Have ye anything to why sentence should not nounced?" "M'an’s hihumanitq to man OLDEN cw” "*'~'°_,-ffl 1 D i ,.e°§°§°v\“-" . - "-_ ' “A M V9* ~ ' '-°':-; " ¥\»5 . ~.-“~:.l»-l` if ,_ ,£27 ii-.», at ., 5. was , * ,s _.. 1 .f;iefai lf \ x ~ “._»§gt _ a ~ sei., fig” ~ _ ‘ gmifif " ,..-- "13-°’»~ , 1” ,_f` _i “Y\,t-¥';¥‘5q0§‘ I _ _ V ig.-1, .-;__'._. g,\::“_q.\:;,‘*p.' ‘ ' _ _'-.‘_' 12"" '.___1_._ E - n..»=;'.'..~> -f ‘ .~»»».i.;fl »-“‘.¢- _f . U cant , ,<~f¢‘/ ii is it QM '..>`>" : I 4 i ¢ ` Yoon. cools 'fairs ozciouo ' The- HOUSEWIFE and HER ACTIVITIES in ian i TIBED FEET aching fleet certainly are vo to beauty charm y smile. A painful com, on or a feeling of gen- dlscomfort about the arches the iovelieot disposition. the important part our physical well- n you are planning E it _ 2 geiégs ggéti dig then on our heels super sensitive, bathe them being. fortable. massage foot cream fro o !i8'uN,1:lromise yourself tlmt your gotobedi feet will not be neglected. They need daily exercise to i i 3 gr ¢ th I t. Co t t . P8-lid' ig; H; siewmmg xximgwgc ml even if they never mention the fact. They know that no man stays hemm1_ wm Take M. your uma- faithful to his wife unless he prefers her to all other women. They know when you are alone in your room and walk around on your tip toes- y _ If the bottoms of you feet are wi th hotsaltandwaterilwoor three :hh:e‘°;,{,';1';s°°l‘;_yI"r‘£g;’1h°and°°“°“n"I7: make a fuss over everything she does and tell her that she is the most countle`lniouae.ndsmourn,"begen ”°“‘¢°h°Um°il` m“9°i°8 l-U4 W me prisoner, in ». night or ei-story. been them some end wmrorwble- -qg .m nu; gg debaged 9,, p°pe_ ,O You never heard of serious foot -3,;-ofugate “Bm-on, 55 “nm-agaful M troubles among natives of hot "Keats, so intemperate as Burns_ 50 climates, did you? Well, iihe.t’s eimlaurennyeen. so vulgar as beesusetlwyso bimiooted and aiakespeermso..." ‘thou-feetsetvlohf-Jvftlloris-ht "I'hes'll do," intu-rupted the mag- kind of exercise. Nabumllay. W0 0811"? mmm. "Ninety sayin .emi ciriceui, eo barerooied. but we can so mer take down that list of names he beneficial things- --mentioned and round 'em up. Ithinlr For instance, trying to pick up \he'y'reasbadasheie." imsxibleewithyourbaretoeeisgood i 1 r i - °-2:1'-° ¢ init4iri' iancnczsns fini? _, _rlisiiizintiiiliz iaszniatia Iiiuetigatgd Dressmaking Lessons Furnished , ` With Each Pattern 1 ` ` > S? ff §§=%§~ Egg rggiiz iii, it-fi; Z gi F is .E _ _Y . _ * .J 1" ‘L ) _ .-' 1 _ "' .§5?§'::::::!f;;;,'Y,:*, ' -' _"-'f./.Z-`.'."====SEv:Wir ..'-'Lil-ii -..~ ~`\¢ »- =ei.as= ;s;ssa'=\’~1fr~~’~\ ` :::::::::§' ` - '='=i;z==;; -.. .» ight to fourteen year htfuliy smart and dif- being quite simple to S" checked woolen with plain red Red buttons trip of the "butcher boy” il f ._ __ 'E zr'/!S?_::::: _.im ' 55312 :4 `-- . eiir' _ J K ___/ \\ \\\ Daughtlrwilllovetiiis tooin navy .. .....¢__==; miunwoeimoovlih brlshtndtrim. : `:i§£2iEiiE==- riser venice skirt' with pinned '..‘. ..::::5:::;;;','_ blouse with the plsirl woolen used _ VE' ._:5!i§E: Ili for trim is still another suggestion. 4 \ -,' 'rweeey acetone, linen, comm crui- * ' :E55;;;;j;; in prima. ow.. an nice tumble §§1:;;;;;;¢;i abflol for cuts* died. " ,P 5" .`: _:~ ::'.:::', ...tg g~:'::.- .nu _` . -- 75"* ` ...- -_-1 ..... : ',__ ._ ....3 ___ _, -y. . ..- ...i ' l.|»ui;§,,|!.-- ..-»- ,...... < ir itil _ gi? "iii ¢._ 15.129 h oblrtridf ’l'I‘li\llioomtsin ooiuisprefer-red). ii Q » f¢_;x». ..»- »-_..._-»_..._--_.__-_ lk il. 1 ...................... wesaeelssnoeu --H-s-»¢se»-sie" I ._ ` he _ \~,l se|,._.ess~~w_sIli.»»»e~esp_n;.»ue 1 sl " " SKDIT VOGUEB Straight and narrow, slashed an 8’ 2*; tr i. we do everything concerning our Y i itisonaperwiththinkingthetoui-school ` days were our happiest days and that apples now don’t have the navorthsy used to have when we were hungry y0\l!l88¥°II. ‘ Of course, sometimes drst love endures and there are cases where men and women marry their first sweetheart-s. but this does not often happen. Most men and women have thought themselves in love s dozen times before they ever experienced a real case of the grand passion. The truth is that boys and girls in their adolescent state are in love with love and so overflowing with sentiment that they fancy themselves in love with any one of the opposite sex who happens to be near lenlgugh for theses? hang] their ai‘1€<>i»i°Ht: £1061; ttmlilglrily. Butca veisassu tocangeasstas ooo creams 'or neckties. Hence the boy that il girl was crazy about one year she won't look at the next, and the girl that s boy was sure was his predestined mate one season bores him to tears the next. Unfortunately, frequently boys and girls get married while they are still under the delusion of their first romantic attachment, and diuorce statistics show how rieeting is youthful romance and what it broken reed it is to lean upon on the long, hard matrimonial Joiirney. As for a man getting over his first love, there is nothing from which he recovers so completely. Of course, in the back of his mind a certain glamour may hang around the memory of his first sweetheart, but let him out meet her again alter a lapse ol years and he is filled with wonder at i what he could possibly have seen in her that caught his immature fancy. ! First love is more or lem like the mumps or the measles, or the other .Woman’s _Realm -:- Social and Personal -:E-Fashions -:- Llferdfllre cm,.¢1,,..,¢;.,,», ir -_ -1 Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Boa' new ull" ‘°‘f‘ cow ,C¢nada’s favourite for over 40 years 'oNE PouNo ...W HALF POUND »ww15_c Original Quality Maintained ailments incident to our childhood. Sometimes they are latal or leave is chronic weakness of the heart, but for the most pert they are but pass- ing attacks of which we are c0mp.ei.ely cured and wlilcn we xorgct. no. many oi us can even recall the names of our early flames. Real love ls an experience that belongs to maturity, not to our salac days. it is only alter we are grown-up men and womli and know tht needs oi our own natures that we are capable of I-he love -that can breai. our nearts if it is unreturned and mai; endures lor a l.u'eti.me. Whetneramanwillbehapplerirhemarrieshissecoudlovethanh. would if he married his lirst depends entirely upon the women and which one would be the most congenial to him. rossioly the mst love might nave been his predest.ned mate, but it is more likely to have been me second, because generally a boy's first love is his teacher or some woman old enough to be his mother. First love is a. beautiful theme for the poet, but in reel life it is a snare and a delusion from which most of us are mercifully saved by a beneficient Providence. DOROTHY DIX. D951' M186 Dix-WhY <10 men €XP€Ct the "I love you's" they say Defol marriage to last a woman the balance of her life? I have been marriot. ten years to a man who is good and kind and faithzui to ine, but _since our wedding day he has never told me he loved me. One time I asked himifhedldandhcseidz “Ofoourse,Ido. Whydoyousuppoeelmar- ried you?" I am starved for affection and feel as if I cannot live with- out it. Do all msn drop their courtship at the altar? And is that the price li. woman pays for a, home and children? 11'. 0, B, Answer: I get thousands of letters like this from women who have good homes. lovely children, husbands who lavish upon them everything in the world IUWJ WNW °K°@Pt a little petting and a few words of appreciation and af- ec on. And as I read these letters I never know which I think have less in- telligence-the wives who make themselves miserable over a puny imag- inary wrong, or the husbands who know that they could make their wives happy by a kiss or a word and who are too dumb to give it. For these women in their hearts know that their. husbands love them that the man who spends his evenings gt home does so beeguge he find; his own fireside the pleasantest spot on earth. They know that the miu. who tolls early and late to keep his wife soft and warm, to give her pretty clothes and cars and trips and every luxury is giving her s proof of de- votion that is worth all the high-flown love talk in the world. And why any intelligent woman oan't satisfy herself with that know- ledge and rest assured of her himbsnd’s love, why she needs to have him beautiful creature on earth, why she can’t. realise that actions speak m routines to beautify hair, face and toes upward tc ankles before y u mud" than wmds n°b°d knows v Y - ` But there are innumerable women who lack this philosophical view . oi their husbands and who torture themselves with doubts or their hus- bands’ love unless they are continually being told of thqstate of their affections. They starve for compliments as one might for sugar, md it either makes them sour and disgruntled, or else they seek the iove-mak- d ing outside of the home that they do not get within it. _ And why, when husbands know this when they know they can make the" “V” MPPY Wm* ° lmle i°l1vins.'th~=i' withhold lt. nobody wi ex- everling. Lengths vary with hours. A FELLOW’S MOTHER , A fellow has a lot cd friends ‘Of boys and girls to play And aunts and uncles that IPGDIH An afternoon or day with. Ilikethefolksiuirothestieet And men with smiling faces, In church and other places, A ds/ddy’s good, so big and tail, A sister, or s brother. B-ui: one friend is the best of s.ll, And that a fellow’s mother. are nice to chatter, t Nur motlier When someiihing is the mutter. Perhaps a finger you may hit, Because the hammer misses; Your mother always fixes it , With two and kisses. A mother tahoe the ‘ She can, somehow One friend you need day. And that/s s fellow’s mother. iii li eel e§_§ 5 HBEMX f““*i’€i".';‘.‘l`.“"' 'W f ; “*ii({ti~ __ _ A D..- BAQBADDS a e \ ‘a _-_r__ 2? 4; V ~f\¢.*.i*v with ii, woman of forty are very much B0 every calls "The People _of Illinois againatf -Woman’s World. plain any more than they can why the wives have to be lollied in order '10 D0 HIDDY- It is Just one of the mysteries of marriage, but if husbands would only make it a rille and a pert of their daily dozen to begin the day by telling their wives that they love them and that they are the marvels of creation, it would set the sun in many a disgrimtled wli'e’s Heaven and make her feel that all is well with the world. Dear Miss Dix-A business 5;; 5;- ge? ri ...E55 . ing marriage. Is the differen Answer: _ Certainly not. They are practically in the same age class, sim; women age more quickly than men do. The only disparity in age that And pleasant pw” that you mm should count in marriage is when people are very young. 'rpm megan or twenty years makes s great gulf between them gn _ ated by different traditions, ideals and points of view. separated by different traditions, ideals and Dbints of view, but after they are in their thirties or forties they are mature. Their tastes are settled. They know what they want in a husband or wife and the matter oi' a few additional years one way or the other is negligible. DORATFHY DUI. know "* ,_ 11.a¢°R§,71¢ 'Girl- nl Wllrt. the mlollimfl 0! the llwl oner‘s mother be hold his (lanes. _il F034! fb Operate when s clerk The tension of the capital case, in which death-deliberate, decreed death-was the aim of his efforts, his muscles. man from tba panel the ill!! presented him- examinstion and Galvin gaaodatihedarkforeignfaoeofthe fellow and rallied to s feeling of of- fense whish banished his quslm be- fore his duty. _ i Gslaski was the fellow’a name: an Asiariean he called himsel; he even Frederic Ketlar." | Calvin drew up, stiffly, _ moment his mind would the business before him, but play [with the phrase, "The People of Il- ‘linois": and he thought of them ,busy in their tivo: of offices iii they tremendous downtown blocks, and 'lndolent in their apartments and ,suburban residences; he thought of the people of the country town and il the farms, overooated and mithn- claimed American birth; but Galvin as they went about their chores pmulg have none meh eg mm upon snow over the flat, Illinois this jury. ' “Have you eorisoientious acruples Si it? iii? ii* s' _iv §§§§§§;a ‘gag is es i§“ `l*ld_l\iln."Ol'U\¥0\l°”@d\0 thlllllif" "BhhiWhl¢1"ddl\al|dldUnl§. ily Edwin Balmer I °hl°.¢"‘nd __.n _ ani il srgggag '§§‘i§§§ §,gr,.i grii is gg ing gr- §§° 8 ri =e§;i§ 55.2%; Ualv "Aperialitypressrfbedbythsla otthisltste.T'explsinsd0sivlnpa`z-' ieht|y,°';n1i;edthfs.amsnoeu~ vioted in er. yoampuud tovotingthedesthpmaityfera msnfoimdgililtyl” s i "Not ml: I ain't Retry! 'assured nd flowwhlshome, neiaouggsgeinst capital puniahmsmti* Calvin yes l _.ills-cif”»»“ I’ 1 °‘:‘§‘2»= °‘“" B$_\5» c»°"“"" PURE PERFEBTIUN 1\\ vi°§.»ea»_ o\\"°s‘~fs°f.f;~‘=§‘l§°"{`-¥~*°°“""°" 'rim cii.».`RLO'r'rETOWN GUARDIAN _ I.. _ -~.-»--»~ ~ -$3-in 1°’ 1”’ _ ' W ,_= , ,F Juggh LY, .=L -- » -~'~~-~~"""’"' IIIIIM,” " O'*O-§00O'¢4'O-O4-*ooo-9, ¢"-‘_ |fl'\ ‘£2 C. casii coupons A'r.A|.|. eizocsnv sronss -I nam-' the outpoets before sn iml>°rt:i.nt eu- “Tne state, not an individual, re- gagement, and in order Prevent quires the penalty," said Calvin. treachery, he commanded. Put only ggmly 1-epelling the ma.n’s offer to Americans on guard to-night!" do null s personal raver. , oeivia looked st ilu candidate; "Have you formed and expressed for jury service. longing to see lean. my opinion as to this case?" he con- angular faces of blue-eyed, brown- ‘t\m,ed_ haired men whom he could trust, "Sure I get an opinion. I can read' longing to read upon the jury lm! the papers. I said he done it," Glaskl \ names like Webster and Bradford and Bancroft. Instead he encountered "N“¢fi' cans" of swarthy skin and dark eyvb or rlomsnolstule and mentality Slml- lar to Gelaski. Twoeeme up. 0" after the other. neither eonscient' icueiy opposed is me cum vwlv nor prejudiced by having Aeimrgutd (continued on page 6> #1 replied, heartily; and thereupon to A __ _ 0slvin's relief, the man was dis- , ‘missed for cause. He wanted Americans. true Ameri- cans, to try this case; and there ran in his head a sentence from a story ` which his mother used to tell t0 him when he was a little boy. rtnadtodowithaeriaisinr-he Revolutionary War, when Gonerll Washington himself was seeing 2 Made in if §2? -2 ffresh yeast. Quick Only Kaysr Inks hi Hr-0-Klear* smoking- olear as an Alpine lakciclcar as a polished mlrror‘No'sl|adows, no sbadlngs, no streaks. and up s “oh laik! ' Just like Kayser s Mir 0 Klear Stocking! Canada Mlll.-0-KLEEB STDCKINGS by 'nuns liani rn-o emacs ian ne. suns K A YSER e ivimo-KLi:ER _J 1 ‘ SILK HOSE A _._ |¢r“k.....ug¢ f alt- °“.'*¢i...?.°."'~»'~=".‘:.".'.' - N°t¢i; mwtudzwim sink hots _ 9 -- sono iN cl-iA1u.ofi"rr:'rowN ""§- °9"` At 75c uv. by o¢iun,<»mmam5imuun.~r1i ` ` oA __- Ovml 1° if '_ ° ~ ` ___.._.....-...g ; l