. 7' V1777 vvvvvvvvy v p. Woman is Re I I ax-Lxxhx: AAA: ¢xx=x¢kxxa ..- .4...“ __. ‘Inh- ll: l IT WASNT NHISSARY for them to go to Hollywood. Hollywood came to them! Not even for a movie contract wouldjhe Guardians relax the scientific care with which the Dionne Qointuplets are _ou_oded. An ' ant part of that scientific care is the use of ‘Lyaol" Disinfectant -_— to help protect them against infection. , This a- pulous care of the little Dionnes is an example for all mothers. The fight gums germs _ia vital in homes where ere are owing children. Use Lysol to keep ypur _ab_y'a surroundingflhos ital- clean._ Use it in laundering towels, and- lterchieB, bedlinen, underclothes. Wash stair-rails door-knobs, toys, drainboards, bathroom, telephone mouthpiece, furni- mruei- walllc and floor with a solution yao . "Lysol" is so easy to use, costs so little lfl_ ml)’ i!" you many heartache: and vain regrets. I “B! an: you as! fhs rennin: Lysol mike srown bolllswilli ths omvigslsbol and comm. TIADI asAItt "LVIOL" cfltyal“ s‘. IIIIITIIIB IN 38AM . Iva-soaps- Simu. '*""' I'm w‘? in» Housswme 08d are ACTIVITIES Goon Bums hat has been selected, all you have to do is to put it on your head and the chocolates will be under it. Then rum-Sent by W. White. Good deeds in this world done Are paid beyond the sun; As water on the rock l’; seen above in fruit. IIERBINGBONE AND GABAR- ~Wasana's Proverb. DINE LEAD SMARTEST TWEBDS suocnss 1t looks now as if gabardine and herringbone weaves will be head- lining it this spring. Gabardine is charted now as the second most popular in worsted lines. Twill is No success l5 good when it hnrdens out hearts to love and laughter, or to the appeal of tears. '1'P1'°"°*b~ doing very nicely, basking as it is "W HAPPINESS. tl.“i'§..i.‘“'.l§.?§.il’fl”““l§. “filfifi second fiddle to the herringbone "hue happiness. if understood. weave5_ x a‘ AAL_AA‘ AAA a xx Lamkhakxaxa A MorningSmile Three sailors were spending their Easter leave in the country. Pres- ently two of them got. into a heated argument over what kind of animal a heifer was. "It's a. sort of pig," saidone. “Not on your life," replied the other. “It's a kind of sheep'- Finally they called in the third amy- ‘ ill," said the first sailor, "wot's a heifer-As it a pig or a sheep?" Bill scratched his head, non- pl ussed. "To tell you the truth, shipmates," he said. "l dunno much about poul- Rastus was in thewar. At every explosion he tried to get to the rear line. "You shouldn't be afraid, Rastus," said the colonel. "What if you die? Heaven is your home." "Yes, suh, Ah knows, but Ah ain't homesick." the vital bodily functions. Self- polsoning sets in and rhematism flourishes undisturbed. .________h____ Less bread is wasted when cut- for bridge or tea when the loaf is sliced from end to end. Gayler Handkles so many of the brightly colored linen handkerchiefs wash nearly white in a few launderings. When next you are tinting underwear drop in a few of these Pile 115115‘ kerchiefs and produce a few in pastel shades. Whey will be more interesting- To Destroy Crasshopllcr Nests The breeding groulid of the grasshoppers that annually spread over S ter and Yuba. counties is believ centered aroud the Sutter Buttes, and farmers in Sutter county are planning an aggressive year, with the idea of killing off campaign against the pats next the hoppers, before they become strong enough to migrate. The grounds around the Buttes are chiefly arid grazinil lfllldfi- 5°‘ cording to insect specialists the Butte; grasshoppers are similar to the Utah pest, in whose breedlnk places 25.200 eggs to the square foot are depositedéan Francisco Chronicle. Rolling Hotels Few people who ride in parlor cars realize how stupendous is the system of which the cars are a. part. It is the equivalent of a‘ hotel with 260.000 beds and 2.960 office desks at which 26 million guests register every year. it has eight thousand negro porters t-hisls consists alone in doing good.— Spmerville. . SMALL THINGS TAll the small things of our llva, all our little thinkings and doings, go to the making of < a good or a bad habit. HA1‘ TRICK In such, navy is the outstanding color as one would expect since we have had prcdomlnantly_ navy springs for several years. Natural tans and grey are pushing forward, too, but for novelty there is a grey- ish green. Prom warmer climbs the fashion story ls that gabardine is outsand- ing. ' _chocolate. Then tell your Place three chocolates on the table and cover each with a hat. Lift each hat in turn and eat the friends will under By using a. third, or top. “sheet to cover blankets at night, after the day spread is removed. you protect them and make pouible a longer life of wear. that by your magic art you bring all the chocolates whichever hat they please. When a. KEEPING FIT Good health is best. appreciated when it's lost. Then is becomes the most valued of possesslo . ' If you are in good health, spare no effort to keep it. It is master kcy to happiness. If you have lost your good health, do something now to recover it. Don't just drift in the hope that things will right themselves. Minor com- plaints grow into major ones, and if you're wise, you will "catch' em when they're young." Take rheumatism, for example. This complaint is the scourge of modern life. Thousands suffer from it in vaiying degrees. Per- haps not very severely, so they let it go on, unaware that it is slowly undermining the system send pos- sibly leadlng to serious trouble lateron. Rheumatism has a. number of causes. Once the source is located, the enemy is often easily routed. But locating the source is apt to be a troublesome matter. Toxic rheumatism (one of the commonest forms) is due to poi- sons in the blood stream often set up by local infection. Teeth are frequent cause of the trouble. Diseased tonsils are another. Some- - i nf‘ - 1,; Have You ClNDIRELl-A linen worth two million dollars. and use; $60,000 worth of soap a year-Youthk Companion. Leftover Butter When saving the small bits of butter from guests‘ butter plates, run cold water over the butter while still on the plates to remove any crumbs that may have clung to it. Then store for cooking in a small container. The First Show 1f you are trying to make the first show at the movies and the dishes just. must be stacked, try to find time to wash the silver. If any water happens to be on it. it is liable to rust and cause more work than it not washed. CHARM CAN BE ACQUIRED WITH LITTLE EFFORT The beautiful Helen of Troy. whose face is said to have launch- ed a thousand ships in the great Trojan war, was at, least 46 years old when she pulled the vamp act on handsome Paris. This titlan- haired charmer certainly wasn't any spring chicken when the Greek and Trolan lads were battl- ing for her possession. She'd al- ready passed the first bloom of her youth. But Helen had charm. And the woman who DOSSQSFPS charm doesn't need much else, regardless of her age. , Charm is so elusive a. quality that it is difficult to give an exact definition of it. But everyone agrees that it is as valuable B. possession for a wpman as beauty itself. Andit. can make teven a truly ugl woman seem magnetic and fascihating. "Oharm, I think, can best be de- scribed as the power of attracting and Jen-sing people. And although some women are born with this happy faculty, it also is possible for every woman to develop charm in herself. It is more or less a mat»- ter of giving attentio . to the man- ner in which shs conducts herself ocia ting sandwiches in fancy patterns ' .- ~ A IP--a... r lvfllfl e -_cn' ‘aLoira-rowiv and Perso ‘ vvvv égleem. }..ii;§-J7i-".i.1;z¢ xamaasaaaxhxxx xxxxaaxkka v , v v vvyvv v vv w "galore/Ive don]: cleanses . . . yet eflecliveli; _ lay: MISS EDNA MAY IAPGER, attractive Winnipeg bl-Iltlll’ [H "It leaves my sltin clear slid sell" ' d ' be oastaa tin loses: lllat tocmske ins‘- ' ortbaion, a lovely complexion ls of real im she rtllss on Palmolive. the simple P treatment shown below. mended iaorethaafltflllllbeautyuptrtassn aura way to all-over beauty- lt is Miss people. And That's‘ wli soap that And alie so gently as ~ portnaoe. lfstlieolle fresh. Try lt today. It's recom- F/lbl; _ Soothe: and Baaiitlllas 73,1; m careful tun... of olive and "i... an. In avatar. Palmolive is the reason beauty all over reeommeiid it. these costly oriental m" tlie world V“ lather, O01!’ .olla give Palmolive its rich, gentle that cleanses the ' use it not only for lace, throat and \ alsouldera, but for the bath u well. Gently masaa warm, rich the pores thoroughl . Rinse with warm water, then a lather into your aHn a mollve lather. Cleanse th cold. That's alltlierelstoihlaalmpleheantytreat- meat. reaLaIl-oversklnbea soother nah-amt. ("has 6J0": ("lay £GJ§W m“ Badge! ll wm1‘l01_bllll2l firm of tts...sootliesyourakin...leavta ltalwa nlronitodayomforallyoilrakin. it restlull refreshed and radiant. Yoifll ve a leaion tliafirealiyyoutli- Somskefialmoliveyoursoasnllse luhulovaly over. Yet there is-rin sures way to . And here's live, used your scalp beauty hint. .;"‘.‘.’.'....... ,,, .,.. 4 a; :kk 4 a V‘ Literature wvv vwvvvwv v ‘ vv vvwvv y t Husbands Work Just as Hill-d. and Make as Many or More Sacrifices Than Do Wives _ for Their Children, Hence Should -. Not be Robbed of the Filial Love Due Them One of the most monstiously unfair things in the world is the n, women treat their husbands about their children. They demand that their husbands shall slave to sup rt their children and deny themseim ease and luxury m order that. Jérfihildrin may go to lush-priced collages _ vee - pensive cars and clothes; but that ends their conception of s father's ralatloosh , children. He is just a blolfllloal and finan- cial necessity and, having served his purlmv he goes into the aoraphesp like any other useless pieoe of junk. They don't even think of Ills having any rilht to a ‘part of the children, or any feeling about 0m. How women avai- t the idea that mothers alone love their‘ drcn and lhlt fathers have noniore affection for their offspring than an alley cat has for his, no one knows, but that they do hold to this theory is amply proven by the ruthlessnus with which they separate their children from their fathers when they happen to want. to divorce their husbands, _ Thousands of wives leavatheir husbands for no reason at all cxce that they have lost their taste for them. 'I'hey have got tired or qwpg-I in liei- COIIDBIHB with people. If you want to acquire , ; first remember always to give your entire attention to people 1n You!‘ {meetings with them- Don't make hem feel that you mind is half occupied with something else. It's not. very flattering to them. Make them feel that they are all im- portant to you, and they will suc- sumb to your interest. Again, if you want to cultivate charm, always be gracious and kind in your dealings with people- Don‘t. in a careless- moment, say something that you might regret later. People often thoughtleasly say unkind things that hurt more than they relize. And catty or unkind remarks, whether breezily made or seriously meant, usually hurt their speaker more than they do the individual at whom they are directed. As the final step in your cultiva- tion of charm, polish up on your. manners. Don't of course, act gushy or unnatural. And don't be apathetic or stlffly cold and con- ventional. Gracious ways help to develop true geniality. so be polite. courteous and considerate of people always, and you will make them feel at once the full fol-ce of your graciousness and charm- THE SMALLEST STAMP Nephew; who are interested in the fine hobby of stamp-collecting will like to know-if they are not. aware of the fact already~that the smallest stamp in the world is "the Bolivia ten-cent, green," is-' sued in 1863. It measures one- third of an inch by one-half of an inch. MEN ABE CRY BABIES. WOMEN TAKE IT 0N CHIN WHEN LOVE FAILS, SAYS "HEART PBOBER." After doing several sums .of addition and subtraction from her lodgers, Miss Lona. Bon- nell-put down the final answer that in the past year it was men. not women, who did most of the whimpering over lost love, says Sally Mscdoilgall in the New York World Telegram There is a growing tendency among women to be braver than men when affairs of the heart go askew, she pointed out. to keep their chins up and to put on a dra- matic pretence that they have found other interests in life to re- place a philandering male. The heart broken man, she said. more often sits alone with his despond- ent mood, wondering whether to turn on the gas right‘ away. Miss Bonnell ought to known how they feel, for every day several man and women and occasionally young girls with suicide or their minds pour their t oubles ‘into her ears. She is the kndly, middle- aged woman who sits at a desk in the National Save-a-life league of New Yorlt,,an organization that for years has been convincing people that it is far more sporting to face the music and go on living than to dodge responsibility by kil- ling oneself. "Anydool can die. It takes cour- age to live and serve," is one of her slogans. And because those words got under the skin of so many de- jected clients she had them lettered on a little motto which is placed subtly on her desk where callers can't. fail to see it. "I thinlk it. is a certain kind of pride that a woman has, different from a man's pride, that helps her to stand up and fight and to pie- tend that he does not care so much." Miss Bonnell said. "a man will go to pieces, willing to let all the world know that his heart is broken and that. he has nothing left to live for. "But women have more ‘of a cer- tain kind of stamina. They don't- give up quickly, They may be hurt just as much but they are far more subtle. ThisJg the experi- ence of all'our workers, that wo- men, for one reason or another, are more apt to fight through. To men or women it is a lifesaver to talk the situation over with some sym- pathetic stranger." c In the last year Miss Bonnell had 2,829 interviews with over 1,- 000 persons who had contemplated suicide. That was 769 interviews less than the preceding year. figures which convince her that. the work she and others are do- ing is having a good effect. “Strangely enough, a stranger can be a better fiiand than a member of one‘; family or even a beloved acquaintance when a per son get-s into such deep trouble that all hope seems "to be gone," Miss Bonnell said. "They will con- fide in me as they never would in. members of their own families, per- haps because I have learned t4 lift them go on talking. When they have talked it out, than I can be- gin to get in my work." SHORT CUTS T0 CHIC NEVER -/wear crumpled linen or cotton fro:ks;- nothing looks dowdier. —wca.r grubby gloves. Most gloves are washable nowadays and cleaning‘: quick and cheap. —wear "lingerie touches" that arent absolutely immaculate. -go about in town without gloves or stockings. —wear down-at-heel shoes. white shoes with dirty marks on them, or suede shoes with shiny patches. —lwear fussy accessories with ~ tailored things or big floppy hat-s with a coat and skirt. . I O I ALWAYS- —put on fresh stockings every day. It's so easy to wash them out in soap-flakes overnight. e-hsve your clothes washed or‘ cleaned as soon as them! the faintest suspicion of grubbiness about them. —match up your accessories carefully. Better a. bold contrast in your hat.,shoes, bag .etc-. than a match that iqrt dead tnie. -—keep your shoes on trees. -—hang up your clothes on hang- ers instead of flinging them over a chair. --keep a good stiff clothes brush, a bottle of cleansing fluid, and an iron and skirt board in constant action against dust, stains and creases. ORANGE JELLY MABMALADI _1“ive pounds of good orangu. Wash the oranges and peel them. Put the finest and thinnest skins in a pot of cold water with a. pinch of salt. Bring to the boil. then remove from the ns- Place a hair sieve in a basin. Out the oranges crosswise, remove the pips with a silver spoon and strain the juice on to tbs hair sieve. Pull the pulp to pieces and place in a preserving pm with squi- quarts of water. Boil all this fast for one hour. Strain through a jelly bag without squeezing and than add to the orange juice. Allow 1% ma" COOK'S CORNER Li‘ LN laN Lvlbj-i-‘LQIULE One pound baby beef liver, 2 cups chopped mushrooms, 1% cups scraped carrot, cutih rounds, l cup sliced onion, l tablespo iiiinceci parsley, 2 cups strained tomatoes, l cup boiling water, 2 tablespoons flour, is cup cold water, l teaspoon salt, ll teaspoon PBPPBf- Out liver in slices and place in casserole. Add. carrots, onions, parsley and musli- rooms. Pour the tomatoes and boil- ing water over all. oover and lat cook at 850 degrees Fahr. for 1% hours. Combine flour, salt and cold water, and stir in the liquid. Be- tiun to oven until reaihr to serve. CAB-AMEL LAYER CAKE 1-3 cup butter 1 cup fruit sugar 2 eggs, well beaten 1 2-3 cups cake flour . 1% teaspoons baking powder ‘A cup milk it teaspoon vanilla Method: Cream the butter. add the sugar gradually and cream until light and fluflv. Add the well-beat- en eggs. Sift the flour once, meas- ure and sift again with the biking powder- Add alternately with the milk. beating after each addition until the batter is smooth. Add the vanilla and pour into two eight- inch layer pans lined with waxed paper. Bake in a moderate, 375 deg. P. until it responds to the touch- about 25 minutes. Ice with: OARAMEL FROSTING . 3 cups brown sugar 1 cup water 1 tablespoon butter $6 teaspoon vanilla Cream Method: Boll the sugar water until the syrup forms a soft and “ or l" bend by them. or their husbands have little my. m, have got on their nerves. Bo they break up their homes, pick up their children and his away to the divorce court. "Of course, I can‘; give up my children. I'd die if I were parted from them," m” my B“, may give no thought to the father whose heart they are breaking when they. rob him of his children who are dearer than life to him. - They don't think of how his arms ache for the feel of a little chudi cuddling against his breast, or of how desolate the home-going is of nights with no little face watching for him at the window and no little m: scampering across the floor to meet him. They don't think of what, n? means to him tn know that his own flesh and blood are growing up stranl- f ers to him, that he will have no part. in his children's development no. hand in sniping their lives, no pride in their achievommta, m, 1..., {m them to comfort his old age. ‘ ; I In all the range of crime there is nous blacker or crueler than aepai-J sting a father from his children, and yst women do it every day without i pang of compunction because they consider that they have a monopo f of their children. They are not even fair about it because they know ' flthei‘ can't am n. his ennui-ea wi- he has no home in which w rapt them, nobody to take care of them- i» Mothers will rise up en inaase and deny tbs allegation, but it i; in that many of them are so jealous of their children's affection foi- their father that they. unwuwipilsly “ape, try to come between them and alienate them from each other. Many mothers never even let their child- ren imd their fatbeia get. acquainted with each other. They navgi- is; "l9 "m" W" l!" 0111M‘! 0i! W himself even for a ball game, or to go for a waflt in the park where they could really talk and get. to know saw other. Mother is always along. Bbe is the dominant fliure, with father’ an also-ran who is of no importance w the child, Mother is so determined that her children shall love her best and regard her as the source of all of their pleasures that she does father the swat iniiutlce of marina him earm- a hard and grinding tyrant, b. I tightwad, or a killjoy who doesn't make any effort. to make the children happy. Mother doesn't teach the children to go st once to their fatlisr for what they went- ln the aura belle! that If he can possibly grant their . requests he will do so. She represents herself as the intermediary who persuades liiin into gratifying the children's wishes. "I'll see if I can't Wtsuade your father to let you so" “I'll ti’! t0 I91- your father to give it to you," et cetera, ll cetera. And so poor father gets none of the reward and love and grati- tgd; from his children that he has earned by his endless sacrifices for Worse still, many mothers teach their children to hate and m" their fathers by holding them up to the children as a god of wrath and veng- vwfie» ‘flier mike Father punish the little sinner and their role is that of comforter, which is giving Father a rotten deal, "Just wait until your father comes home and he will give you a thrashing for bieaking the window. "I ll tell your father when he comes home how much trouble Yo“ have been s11 My." to the alosm With which many i. mother kilLs all of their lust reward by their wives. love and confidence between her childfonatid their father. Fathers went just as liars for ineli- children as metiim do. make lust as many sacrifices. audit. is a pity that they are so often balked DORUITIY They DIX. ball in cold water. Remove from the fire and add the butter and vanilla. When entirely cold, beat until thick and creamy. Thin with a few drops of cream until it is of the right consistency to spread. Oover the aides and" top of the cake and serve fresh to an enthusiastic BEAUTY BATH! FOB MIN __._ avoirdupois. One West. End firm of “slimming specialists" has started a “men's session" on Saturday morning- Telephones arc fitted in the rest-room. to enable the busi- ness men to make a few pounds while losing them in another way-_ Business men are becoming figure-conscious They are spend- ing ions hours ln the slimming baths of London beauty parlours, trying to lose their surplus audience I pounds of sugar to each pint of liquid, than place on the gas to boil for three-quarters of an hour. By the time the pan is on the gas, you can begin shredding the skins (it is possible to hire ‘dera from some places nowadays) either with a knife or with sharp scissors. Ten minutes bsfors the jelly is due to be done, throw in as many skin chips as you like. If you are pressed for time you can omit the chips alto- gether, as the jelly is quite as nice without them. Put up into clean dry jars, leava till cold, then tie do with parchments. . When brown shoes are badly stained. sponge them with s. little warm milk in which a small piece of washing soda has been dis- solved. End Bad Cough Quickly, at One Fourth the Costf times an 1-‘ Hands 7 l sponsible ,and again, the r " i p“ $1 "u; ma“ h“ bggq 'of an unhealthy appendix is often h“, “ab” w ha“ m“ kngdwn to disperse. the mischief for . Q . yV°*b7d'Y'7"l°°kl°"l7 s Unfortunately, thdze amines _ ‘often exist without any visible sign. . ' ' atiouchofthiltldiycleamy Teeth may be sound to outward - ma“; appearances, but. hopelessly poison- flnd . ed at the roots. Even tonsils may , I be septic without giving rive to voilent local discomfort, and the unhealthy appendix may be the meat secret of them all. It is only when an abscess forms that acute appendicitis forces" the sufferer to take immediate action. Remedial exercises are helpful to those with i-beumatiun. The! should be gentle and with move- ment. of the trunk i-stbsntban-with the limbs slime. enter named‘ chums- ct over-sauna.” Ir bloom Hus you saa ilia Hamilton laliqsumttlss ll ‘its. Yliivslldi Mbfl....mm- i . s Ileana-Iliad! Nollooilngl auyi’ Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making Here's something new and spring- like to brighten your mid-season wardrobe. It's honey beige wool crepe with pottery-brown and beige crepe print. It looks like a redingoto. It will fit. marvelously into your scheme for town. It will take place of a suit. fort-hose first ys. Plain navy blue crepe silk in binstioti with plain cwal erQs another delightful scheme. It's ea- Er The smart simplicity of model makes-it. vary quickly fash- ioned- , Style No. ill is designed for allfi l6, ll years. IO, ll, 60, GI, M and M-inches bust. Ills 36 3% yards of 30-inch material with lit yards of 80-inch cimtrastlng. Price of PMTIEN II esuts stamps or coin (coin is primed.) E Wrapcoinearsfully. _____f______T Nmifio. Bil! llama ltmtaifdrsu 0"»! Utah wais- iflusistastliaottbs. u vhsaanaysbepsmauvsvdsag sailollinaflafiliiylldllllll Qlllloqteil-tsbasllllfi Illdl fllliambotaiaassaaraadanuin wssmmmwstshiufor lb l“... “a. m . cauas bism- a su-