-'- Socidlsdncl. tPersortal OFashioiz y Dix’: Letter Boar i is Husband Keep His Middle- v Wife From the Folly of Divorce? 1t Pa)’ f0_be Good? Asks Girl Finds Life Empty Without ' Man She Loves 133*“? mirrlflfle °l l-Wehly-live years has come to an and d 1:1? flit? m“ “W” mark. but she says that she is a "e a" Plenty or thrills in llle left for her. She says that she never got to g0 with anybody else blll ma he a sin and couldn't do the things She Wlmwd l0 d0. so now she is tired of marriage, our home must be broken up. and she has sued for divorce. And when I try to talk and ren- “m with he!‘ She 806s into tears and threatens Smckm she 555's that there is no other mun and Illa-l- She does not want to many again. I 5m all broken up over the affair and sick from WOYYY- _ How can I make her see that I am the best friend she will ever have? Will she be hflPDy 1n the course she is pursuing? AN’ UNHAPPY HUSBAND. Answer: Your wife is a pathological case and should ._ be under the care of some good doctor. She saved from herself and prevented from committing the crim- breaking up her home and divorcing a good husband. ter forties seem to be the age of indiscretion for both men and it is then that they most often commit the idiocies that they remainder of their lives in repentlng. it is a common thing to men p-nd women live upright, useful, virtuous lives. apparently happy thelx-"domestic relatlonshipand contentedly treading the straight and larrow no. until they reach middle use. than suddenly run unlucusmush Klclk over the traces and Grandpas turn into pl-eyboys and girl- lllliiirc. Sedate grandmas paint themselves up like flappers and hire llgolos. Feople who have celebrated their silver wedding anniversaries get divorces. ‘It is Nature's last call to the dining car. It is the realization men ind women have that youth is almost gone, that their good looks are fad- lllC. that soon they must sober down into the drabness of age, and so they ' leei that they must have one inst bite of romance. And because it is easy lo believe what we want to believe, they delude themselves into thinking llla y are still young and attractive to the opposite sex and that their s could still leap and thrill as when they were sweet and twenty. But they are mistaken, as they find out when they get their divorces md try. to go back to their boyhood and girlhood. Age has taken its toll if them. The joints that age hasutiflened cannot dance down the prim- rose path. The things that aunuse youth bore maturity, and in a little while tbwlittle flicker cf synthetic youth dies down and leaves a tired-and disillusioned. man or wamn bitterly regretting the old homo and the old companion he or she has left. " ' u. is bod enough for the man who thinks youth by divorcing his old wife and marrying some girl young enough to be his daughter, but ‘it is far worse for the middle-aged woman who de- ludes herself into believing that she can go back and gather up all her girlish dreams again and have the romantic ezqaerlences of 16 at 46. It cannot be done. What is past, is past. No miracle is going to happen that will give her back a girl's heart any more than it will give be: back her girlish figure. or her childish face, or the innocent child's eyes that. looked on life with awe and wonder. she has seen too much, known too much. experlencellwo much ever to palpitate again over the tlungs that thrilled her in her early youth. So the woman's dream that she can go back and have all the exper- opus that she missed in_ her girlhood can never be realized. She who has wn marriage and child bearing and. work and worry and struggle ,. ft- he wwiree and Baht-hearted as she was as a girl. She who has then to o thousand parties can't beexoited as she was when she went to first ball. She who is no longer young nor beautiful cannot hope to ' elven flocking about, eager to marry her. ~ »' ‘Bo when she has got her divorce she nnds herself with the door of closed behind her, with no home, no husband, a forlorn and lonely oiestarehwith a. hired gigolo to take her around to places and ulake paid love er. Every middle-aged woman who thinks that she is still Young and tie needs [>0 be put into the batty house until she gets old enough to DOROTHY mx. better. PDQ“ Dorothy D1114 hm Very mucn in love with a young man‘ who . ‘labial: he loves me. We can not be married because he does not make i0 support a. wife and he wants me to live with him without bene- _ of clergy. I refused. and he has gone away and hasn't even written mi anote, though he used to write to me almos every day and call me at It h breaking my heart to lose him, but 1 am not sorry 1 kept on right path. I have a good job as private secretary to a big business and make an excellent salary. I have a good home, lovely clothes, a Ind‘! suppose I should be happy, but I am not, and sometimes 1 won- ‘it really pays to be good. DLANNA r: . does pay to be good. Dianna. and in t you had the strength and coinage to keep on the right path. 1t l0 10W We mil-u you love, but the pain is not so great as it if you lost him a. few years tron: now, after you had given up _ ~ your honor and your self-respect. _ v H‘ Jillhl- l8 W118i Millions ninety-nine times out of-a hundred no the . u who enter into liaisons with men. Love nests am bull-t of flimsy 1 that seldom stands the storms and stress of everyday living. After vnovelty has worn ofi the gilt rubbed from the romance, as it does in . close companionship of a man and woman, the man is pretty sure to tired. to be attracted to some fairer face. And then, as he has noth- to. hold him, of! he goes. Then who so desolate as the woman. who is who has gambled her all on love and lwt. and who ls not entitled even the alimony of a discarded wile nor to the sympathy that the public ls for the woman whose husband has wearled of her. y ‘It pays a slrl to he seed because rizht is right, and to be happy we ‘(lflhhve the approval of our own consciences. What other people think V i “matters little in comparison with ourselves, and we never know any page if we are degraded in our own eyes. No woman with o. past, no Who l5 hiding a secret she is always afraid of having found- out. the end you will see it and be is any woman happy who knows that other women look upon he!‘ J - and about whom other women whisper behind their hands, and hey never invite to their parties. mlness is made up of many things and love is just one of the It is not the whole thing. DOR/OIHY DIX, THEY'RE MlR-O-KLEER’ HOSIERY L .155, MADE IN CANADA KAY!!!- ‘Yllfll KAIK PATIIYII Inl. I I311! /// "/// ERGARMEN’ Kern.‘ that hecanrcgainhlslost " Wyoumm of her life. For stone WOkLblS LA o’ ’ I A ‘ ' ‘ i’ _ on i MAY 28—-and the Eve Dionne babies reach the proud age of ltwelve monthsw-each entitled to a single candle on her birthday cake . . . each safely past that important first mile- months, the quintuplets have been rltriving on Carnation Evaporated Milk , . . gaining famously on it right along. . t, six of those twelve RGEST-SELLING 11.. Ho us]; WIFE and HER ACTIVITIES PLOWING The damp earth turns In glistening, serried rolls; New hovoe and faith, perennial, Flame in men's souls Nor storm, nor flood, Nor drought can daunt The courage that the centuries flaunt ‘through nalneless, countless springs. —Helen Hixon . _______._.___.. Mighty few become masters . of their subjects. Some men are so polished that even their heads shine Imagination is a great force-if it can be controlled. A lie, unspoken. but acted, may be the blackest of lies. Friendship is a commodity usual- ly valued in dolls-rs and cents. Success often lies not so much in what we do as in what we don't do. Weather is everyhodys business. yet nobody can do anything about it Agoodspontisonewho does wrong to win the praise ' of other weak-minded people. It takes a strong man to put up as an argument for what he believes ts right as he puts up for what he wants to do. ..________%_?__ KEEPING SALAD CRISP Here's a spring salad hint. Put your wilted lettuce, romaine. ea- of water to which has been added one cup of vinegar. bet stand for half an hour and then take out the greens, all crisply fresh and ready for the salad bowl. Also, wrap- ping lettuce in s, damp towel stick- ing the ends of the ipwel in a bowl of wetn- will keep the lettuce fresh. 1'0 IWIEP UP 800'!‘ rte-he's a simple little rule that will save you many a bad moment when soot falls on you- bust rug Donttrytosweepitupetoncdl! will have a smudge that you won't get off for goodness knows when. Instead, cover the spot thickly with dry salt. Lat stand. Then sweep and rejoice at pa: eiccn and bright the m will oo . FLOWERS FOB ‘IOUI. IUMIIII IBOGI Flowen. gal-denim and camellia, are ‘uni: (maul diifqent tones" of his) in vivid or sombre rod, and in mixed red and white. These a5: ». . . . . carols or what have you in a pan ’ an enchantlnl mllqllell 05 gentlans which wear with black or green. With evening dresses as flamboyant with tively and varieties .Wlth a simple. sophisticated and very modem dress the result can b- surprlslnsly good- ' __.____________- AN OLD-TIME CUSTOM Among Old-time Easter images which are disappearing, the oddest was probably that which gave to woman the privilege of beating their husbands on Easter Monday. It seems to have been confined to counties in the North of England. The custom also provided for the husbands retaliating on the suc- ceeding day-that is unless the 98 OUT OI.‘ 100 WOMEN REPORT BENEFIT Feels well}. 4. Always happy PALiAflbWlAKvnlllnhlci Lydial Haitian‘: Compound "Iwuwal: poloflnyc llru mu Iflhilfzfl Boulevard d; gfltmhnydiy do my mail l and akin; . I m "$3" $1,011 cc ‘a! ."1.7...|..$t,uua '0 “.'.‘I‘..°.l7.’°“.‘5.f'é'.. u» - pain taxi-u Lallrllfifi l! W you m nervous tow um c. nnnlnrs unmet: comma Uudbywonn/oronirdopd: i A L‘, -2 “twwwgk which has now vanished-ewes ‘heaving’ Monday. ‘This prwtice obtained in Dur while North of England districts. On the is quite lovely l0 Monday my two men might loin hands, lift any you caube m‘; your flowers u next you like. some people become 9°51‘ i men to cottage-Bflfdelllfi-h l-lld m1! . they were up any number of.’ different colors . 10m; the l women had token thQ adlninistermg such the rnenfolk on the utilise l‘ eadayk opportunity impossible! ,... .. "May you always enjoy curtailment”- is Carnation’: birthday wish to these five little winsome users of “its product. Ask your grocer for Improved. Carnation Milk—irradiated for “Sunshine” Wumin D. No extra cart. Write for two free booklets- “100 Glorified Recipes” and‘ “Contented Babies". Carnation Company LtcL, _Toronto. BRAND OF IV chance ‘of oastigation lo Monday that to was A related old -world unifie- or "lifting" on Easter ham Lancsshire- and other vroman in the street, carry her along the road. Th! day came the turn of the wo- “heavl? the men, provided buxom enough to per- bounclng and "chair- ing" custom. _ In Lancashlro the tale is still told of I. reverend cleric who, residing temporarily at a wayside inn. was aroused by several "lull/y" women hurrying into his room. bent on "lifting" him, whether the goodly man lunsentod or not. “Lift mel" exclaimed the astonished pastor drawing beck. “What on earth do you mean?" "Why, your rcveronce, we've come to lift you, cause its Easier Tusc- day,’ they declared in decisive and embarrassing chorus. “All us wo- men was lifted yesterday, and us 1 APQRATED sewn; A woman entered n. bunk to make u. deposit. She had some bills and checks to deposit, so she procured a deposit slip which required the list- ing of bills. specie, and checks. She listed her bills and checks ln their respective places, but was in doubt what to lint/under specie. After a few moments’ thought she wrote after the word specie "Female" and handed in her deposit. TELL-TALE SIGNS In North Carolina an old negro was brought into the city Police Court charged with vagrancy. Uncle Ben-"Lawsy. Jcdge, Ah ain't no vagrant or varmltl Fae a hard workin’, religions, colored gerfmm‘. (Pointing to several large patches on the knees of his pants) "Ah got dam from prayinl" 'i‘.‘he Sollcltor-“How about the patches on the seat of your punts?" Uncle Ben (Looking rather sheep- ish) - "Ah gues Ah done got dern “from bcciuslidmh" ill-ts the men to-day in tum. And in course, its our right and our duties b0 lift 'em." . They would certainly have car- ried out their imleritlon. had not the pastor offered them a silver produced from his pocket BABY'S QUESTION BOX amm- Ne need to be fanatic, on this subject. Urge world pence when in hold enough tc understand, but a little lu- nure now with toy cold m inft I to develop the war n t. ‘Here's one habit, owever, you mull MILK w»). -@-_- FOR. F IVE l" ‘l1 LY S PRINCES RRAUI4THD FOR SUNSHINE VITAMIN D A ARNATIAN MILIQ CANADIAN .8 rnooui-cr FASHIONS FOR SPRING .-; sunback sports O to make. length cape for Here's a smart dress, simple A. B. has a modisb pecta sports s wastlfgig silk nfieltydred dots made ure . p‘; smart combination is yellow linen for the dress with the ca?! °1 brown linen. Other lovely mediums Ire seer- sucker pique. pal-amt cmhy llhfll- plaided. gingham, shantung, m. Style No. oao u deaiaued for All” 14. 16, 18 years. 35. bust. Bile l6 Nqillre 39-inch material for dress and 1% yards of 30-inch material 1m.‘ I60‘ arato cape. I . Price of PAITERN 1b cents in stamps or coin (coin is PYQYQPNd-l Wrap coin carefully- ,._._.__..__.-.-.-_._-.-— No. 5B0. Bias ............‘......... ..-.q....---...-..-..-...u-uo-..uo- Name nun-n“... consequence-col . . . . . . . State City THE COOK ‘S ‘ CORNER SUGAR 000K!!! 2% cups sifted flour 1% teaspoons baking powder h. tcaupom nutmeg ii cup butter Sift the flour once, measure, add encourage in him-doll elimination. Oomlcmlly. you'll in Baby's Own ‘hbleh gust what he needs. They are the Infect form cf laxative for babin and m cblidrm. They ecu- ~ tablets, you ere llwuyl euro of the cer- reetdcugc. V EQWELIAIOR EXAMPLE _tc noldllfl? thumb cf Candi rcliul on l: u tannin: oi wasn't?» mu m. nlyucdioiuemyfmrrrh WWW“! Mn boiled» 0 m: Cum win: tsin no narcotic and, because they an Au eminent nnuii. novelist, n. c. Walk, speak: for peace, but doesn't he Iflmlfi tilt H used to enjoy pluyingwlth b“? children are invariably the can ml for more than a0 you: Motion have 0w‘: Tablets in the the minor ills, lndodhig tut and llmhoi. baking powdor and nu "ml lift together twice. Onam bu thor- oughly, and ma: us“! cream together t l .AMOIII. . cnamcndbcornll. Md flow‘. I aohodditicn-untilmbctltohiilin lmaliumunirito the '....~.. kettle. Add-potatoes i... ~ f)! potatoes ill-i 1:19.. Cook uhtu; tender, or for about lb minutes. Md" the liquor from the can of - add the chopped coca. unlit, and crackers. Bent (or 8 min utoa before serving. . -u. .-¢-.._ uuuluu