"terns has been perfected, and new v wvvvvvvvvvv l. oman ’s Re ‘s -4 vvvvvvvwvvwvv 1v L a Ikkm A‘ vvwvV-wwvv alm -:-* Soucidl v and AAA s A A s vwtYvvvvvvviwv L. A‘ aiasnsknss ‘a ' Héilfllkiuklh THE EBIUE IJCTOER ‘I "'“' " a irarz: * vol any ;§,,“',',"°.‘;. h ‘Dix wt"... y“; a MiserabeColds by "- iw BM" i" era» PLUS Una-Melanie» lHv-d - s RACHEL MACK - 551* i: 1Q‘: filmn...‘ Edwin.“ a “may moms l Love is a Curious Malady and I_Iard to Diag- w Most Colds Start. 1:13 girlglermw m" .\_ Only one $1.1m: maniacal m. Thus, over the patient customer's 11086 _—- However, when a Girl Begum b0 Qua, “g1, 518551;]; raovzo m use av mmous 1 egg yolk, well um... Qfdflfjfi: medgffiifi film? flxuflm ‘f; $1‘ xnumfi; Think of Saving Her Boy Friend s Intheexcluslvefore mule of Vicks Vu tro-nol has been found a uni ua and ;, succassfula in pre- a venting many colds ' -wintcr's threat to cur comfort and health. v Va-tro-nol is es ially designed '- for the nose an upper throat- ~ where most colds start. It aids and s stimulates the functions provided by Nature-lathe nose-duo prevent colds, and to throw oil’ head _colds in the early sta es. Used 1n time-at the first nasa irritation, sniflle, or ;__sneeze- 'ust a few drops up each _, nostril- a-tro-nol helps to avoid manyicolds. W ere irritation has led to a. clogged-up nose g stuffy head cold or nasal catarrh) a-tro-nol reduces . swollen memb a ‘ ars clogging . mucus-brings comforting relief. For Fewer and Shorter Colds Note to mothers-who guard the family's health: Vicks has devel- o ed, especially for you, a practical , P an for Better Home Control of Colds. This guide to fewer and shorter colds has been clinically fited by practicing physicians and rthar roved in everyday home use by mi lions. Full details of Vicks ‘ Plan in each Va-tro-nol package. CHAMBRAYS COMING BACK . INTO FASHION PICTURE . Vita Borea is endorsing Cham- lrzw, showing lt in grey with yellow buttons and topping it with yellow corduroy docket. In fact, 1 dressmakar reveals a continu- Egappreciation for cottons, featur- some dresses individualized by 3rocheted yoke: and sleeves. Apropos of chambrays this season, {you will be seeing them in novelty colors and pattern treatments. not- ' ably Jacguard-like effects and satiny stripes of chalky hairline designs. New Comfort for zirhose Who Wear FALSE TEETH No longer does any wearer oi false teeth need to be imcomfortable. FASTEEPH, a new, greatly improv- ed powder, sprinkled on upper or lower plates, holds them flrm and comfortableflo gummy, gooey. Dusty taste or feeling. Deodorizas. Get r-ssrnn-m today at any good drug 1 egg white, stiilly beaten Flour to make a soft dough, (ap- proximately 2 cups.) Oream butter, add sugar gradual- ly, cream well together, add egg yolk and combine thoroughly, Fold in stiflly beaten egg white, then add sifted flour. Chill dough thoroughly. Roll out on lightly floured board to one-eighth or one-quarter inch thickness. Cut in round two inches in diameter. Slit each circle in four places almost to the centre of cookie and equal distance apart. Fold the points to the centre to form a pin- wheel. Garnish with cherry cut in form of a poinsettla. Bake at 325 de- grees F. for 8 minutes or until deli- cately browned. FRUIT COOKIES 1 cup butter 1% cups granulated sugar 2 eggs. well beaten 1 tablespoon corn syrup 3 cups pastry flour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon ‘>6 teaspoon salt 1 cup raisins 1 cup broken walnuts Cream butter, add sugar, cream well together, add eggs and corn syrup. Beat well. Then add sifted dry ingredlenm and fruit and nuts. Drop on a butered baking sheet. bake at 3'75 degrees F, for 12 to 15 minutes. Yield 6 to 7 dozen cookies. This is what we cal] s. nice drop cookie, most delicious in flavor and one every member of the family will enjoy. » DELICIOUS BAR. COOKIES 1/4. cup butter ‘i. cup fine granulated sugar 1 egg yolk, well beaten l6 cup flour ‘é teaspoon baking powder ‘A teaspoon vanilla, ‘.6 cup chopped dates V; cup choped walnuts 1 egg white u cup light brown sugar Cream butter and sugar well to- gether, add well beaten egg yolk, tihen sifted dry ingredients and van- illa. Spread in buttered a x 8-inch pan. Sprinkle dates and nuts on top of the batter. Beat egg white until stiff, then gradually beat in light brown sugar. spread on top of mir- tnrc. Bake at 825 degrees I". or‘25 to 60 minutes. Cut in hem while store. W311‘!!- - Many HdPPY Days With ThaNew Wonder Package queer." according to Mr. Begwlck. and to cause him great concern. Ha drove into a village garage to see what was wrong. It developed that an important part had broken and must be replaced before the journey could be resumed. 'I'he part could be supplied then and there, but neither the driver nor his worried wife could produce the $7 necessary to pay for it. They had been on a long trip and were almost down to their last dollar. It was flnall$y arranged by the easy- going garage owner that his cus- tomers should glve him a check for the amount. This Mr, Segwick did, writing his Cleveland address below his name at the m ‘* 10's uest. When they were on their way again Ruth said regretfully, “I wish I could have lent you the money till you got home. But I haven't a cent myself." Mrs. Segwlok replied, “That's all right, If you had money to lend you llkly wouldn't be hitch-hiking. Have you got a job waiting for you in the cl l" W "No," Ruth admitted. "Not a sign of a job. I hope to stay at the Sal- vation Army home till I can find something." Mrs. Segwlck clicked, her tongue in sympathy and changed the sub- ject. Later she returned to it, show- ing it had been on her mind. "Ed," she said to her husband, “do you think Miss Woodson would suit your Cousin Ella?" , “I've been wondering that, too," replied Mr. Segwiok. "In some ways I think she would." "If she's strong enough," Segwick speculated. “And likes that kind of work," Mr. Segwlck contributed. Ruth sat on the edge of the back seat, listening as they argued it back and forth. She was greatly intrigued. She wished they would speak out plainly about Cousin Ella, whoever she might be, and be more specific about the mysterious Job. She finally interrupted the argu- ment to say, "I'm willing to do any “wouldn't promise to keep the job, woudhft promise to keep the job, but I'd do my best at it till I could get something that suited me bet- ter." ' “That's fair enough," Mr. Seg- wick said. "Tell her, Lou, about what Ellen's looking for." I U l I Mrs. Beg-wick obeyed. "Well, it's this way. Nlrs. Ella Jones, Ed's cousin, has a beauty parlor and has to be at work all day. She's a widow and she's got two children to be looked after, and a house besides, Mrs. The introduction oi’ a new [pec- Ial service to women is of consid- erable interest during these trying times. An entirely new and very simple method of transferring pet- OBII be itflmed by wumgn guy- whore. . Patch work quilt patterns, P1111119. dloss-stttdn silhouettes, children's pictures of objects t love, beautiful gm- broidery patterns in the most oom- . pmhensive collection ever made. aoo "fncw and exclusive designs in one package, also three alphabets— "Script. Old Bill-lab and Japanese in three sizes of letters. Just select your design from the wllwflan. rub the yowl of a table- _ spoon over the moistened surface, and like magic, you have the de- sign transferred to your clmh. wood, 98-116!‘ or any surface you desire to decorate. Bo easy that even a child can do it, and they love to trans- fer the special children's patterns totheleeves of ascrapbooktobe painted or colored with cmqmia later. ' lhohpetterncanbeusedililmes. bndtbsmesaresodivarae, and fthenumhersogreatthatttisnot .8765 usggsratingtosa! thcWon- s life-time 5P- Iflctums of the patterns found on Just one-half of one of the big sheets. There are 12 large sheets, some containing as mgny 3,5 m g9. signs on a halt page. 11 Wu use the pattern on cloth for embroiderlng, you will be D1555- ed also to know that the transm- w"!"* Wt 98-5111’. which was not true of the old indelible 1m; m“- fers made with the hot iron. '13‘? the dfllsv spray on a delicate pastel tinted negligee. Work in dainty colors using lsgy dgigy and a delicately beautifuly gas-mane, The snoelallr shaped French Basket Design is a thing of beauty, citherinembioideryor, ‘tedon tcheveasupplyonhandwhenyou needitinihefutaro. You can have tbs package mailedtoyouforbmbutifyou cancallforititisonlymdhis Wbnderrachagcmsybehedat the Guardian Omcadlmfi In. Gettneembroidery msterlalsyou 3 and she has a time finding a re- liable girl she can trust to do it. Lacks like she changes about every month or two." "How old are the children?" Ruth asked. "Maud's 10 and Gracie Inuise is 12. Old enough to be helpful if a person knows how to get it out of them. But Ellie's spoiled them a lot. That's why the housekeepers pick up and leave. Ella pays $10 a week and board." Ruth said eagerly, "I'd like to try it, Mrs. Segwick. Would you be willing to take me there when we get to Cleveland? I'd be more grate- ful to you than I could ever tell you." They took her first to Mrs. Jones’ WWW 8h0l>—a busy, gaudily pros- perous little establishment called "Ellafis Band Box," located in an outlying shopping district. There they introduced Ruth to Mrs. Jones with earnest recommendations of character, and ability. The girl was both amused and touched to find herself so extolled by people who knew her only as a wanderer who had ridden in their car and shared a breakdown with them. She secretly pledged herself then and there to justify their child-like con- fidence in her. Mrs. Jones, a large comely blond with n. brisk manner, interviewed Ruth in a little booth wherg she was marcelllng a customer's hair. As she talked she heated a curling iron over a gas burner and than waved it about in the air to cool it before applying it w the hair. Ruth, whose naturally curly hair had never been treated inside a beauty shop, was fascinated by these rites. It was all she could do to keep her mind on what ma. Jones was tell- ing her: "Maude and Gracie Iouise have to be at school by M0, and I've got to be hers even earlier. That means thegirlandlhavetogetupatll every morning." Ruth divlned that by "the girl," Mrs. Jones meant the maid or h- usekeepcr. Mrs. Jones further explained, "I send all the clothes to the wet wash and the girl's eimcctcd to iron them. I've got a good mangle in the basement. Ever run one?" Ruth said proudly, "Once a dean- cnstrnfor in a department store let me try one, just for fun. I alongveryweliwithitrdneed to practice a little with your ms- chine, of course." ‘ sci‘ urged to report for duty at once. Mrs. Bcswick aimed to take Ruth to the Jones homo, show her her room and. install her there before the children should arrive home from school. I U I O Ruth found that the ordeal oi meeting Maude and Gracie Iouise was a trivial one. The children were so accustomed to the coming and going of housekeepers that when they arrived home to find a perfectly strange young woman baking cookies for them they took it as a matter of course. "I'm Miss Woodson," Ruth told them. “I've come to keep house for you. Your mother told me to ask you if you'd rather have white bread or brown for supper," “White," they replied in concert, After staring at Ruth boldly for a few moments they went up to the small rear room of the box-like lit- tle house to inspect her possessions. No doubt the meagern of Ruth's wardrobe caused them to lose in- terest in her, for they soon went out to play with neighbor children next door, not even bothering to 3k the questions Ruth had dread- When she called them in to get ready for supper she asked, “Do you drink plain milk, or do you have cocoa in the evening?" “Neither one," answered Gracie Louise, the elder. "Tea." "That's a lie." stated Maude. “We're suposed to have milk.” Their voices rose to a shrill crescendo of argument which Ruth interrupted to call them to supper. When they sat down at the table she noticed that they slumped untldily and spilled their water as they drank. Ruth said, feeling her new re- sponsibilities keenly, "I'd like you to sit straight as I'm doing. First unfold your napkin this way, do you see. Then break your bread before you butter it. Your mother asked me to be careful about your manners." "Oh. rats!" remarked Gracie Inmse rudely. Ruth saw that she was wearing lipstick. It came on on her napkin. along with the but- ter on her bread. Ruth, remember- ing Gracle Louise's 12 tender years, was a little horrified. She asked mildly. “Does your mother know you wear lipstick, dear " "Sure," replied Gracie Louise. “That's a 11c." said Maude. “She stole~it out of Mom's box." Ruth sighed and fell silent. She was humbly grateful for this work, this shelter which had so unexpect- edly fallen to her lot. But she knew there was dullness and lilicongen. 18111‘? and loneliness ahead. (To Be Continued.) Today's Short Wave‘ Radio Program (AltimQi-IBIOBXIBMMILM) MUNDAY, MAME 2.8 Illulhoven, Netherlands 10 a. inn-Music of The Nether- lands. Pm, 25.5 m., 11.18 meg. Tokyo 4 p. nL-The Nihon-bsshi (Bridge o1’ Japan) from which all distances are measured (F , u]. JVM, Naaaki, 2'11 m., 10.74 meg. Moscow 4 p. m.—A Soviet artist tells how he is permitted to work and how he sells his pictures. R88, so m., 0 meg. Roma ‘ 6 p. m.—.News bulletin in Enllish. Opera from the Royal Opera House in Rome. Talk by H. I. Marshall De Bono on "Our advance in Abyssinla and the Ethiopian populations." 2R0, 81.1 m., 9.63 meg. W 6.16 p. m.—U. B. Army Band, WDXK. Plttwulth. 19.’! m., 16.21 meg. _ Berlin ‘L30 p. m-Wings over Wcstralla. A Radio play about the German non-stop flight flom Germany to Australia (in English.) DJC, D63 m., 6.02 meg. Landau 10 p. m.—“0arsva.nscrai." "A place where caravans meet." GSD, 35-5 m. 11- 5 H168» G80, 31.3 m., 0.66 meg. or 06L, 49.1 m., 6.11 meg. . p. m.- ews n ish. 1140 ‘Elm i lhgi HA, 16.6 m., 11.7! meg. Be indigestion. 1f"?! wvvv vwwvvwv rsona -:- shicns A AAA a n. a AA n; _A-:- L ~~~ w“..- v- -- iterc u. (V vYv %¢ v AAgAQAAm a AA n m ‘ ‘_‘ , vvv ‘ wv Money and Worry About His Safety, SheHis Falling for 1m A girl wants to know bow to toll whether the emotion that is agitat- ing her young breast is real love-the kind of love that makes a woman willing to pinch pennies, wear shabby clothes, cock, scrub and baby-tend for a men-or whether it is Just a pasting fancy for a lad with football shoulders and a keen line, Well. daughter, love is a curious malady and it affects different people so differently andlthere are such queer fluctuations in its temperature that u. is not mrprisln: that you 11nd it diflicuit to diagnose your symp- toms and find out what ails you. Sometimes we think we have it, as we have only s. common cold. Other times we have been fatally stricken with it Without even suspecting it. until it. is too late for my remedy to save us. Some men and women _ are immune to love. Others catch it Over! "‘ time they are exposed to a romantic situ- There are authentic instances of its victims never Bel-ting Over as from a mild spell of o atlcn. heart attacks, while others recover from them I Bo there you are, and i; is no wonder that when you begin to have chills and thrills and palpitations you ask yourself whether what you feel is real love, or just too much propinqulty mixed with moonlight and sen- timental music. You remember that there was a time ages 88o, well. six months ago, anyway, when you were sure you had a fatal case about Tom, Dick or Harry and it proved a false alarm. Now you curt 8411116 him and you shudder as you think how terrible it would have been if Y0“ had married one oi them while still sutlering from the hallucination that he was your Fairy Prince and you couldn't be happy without him. It is particularly hard for girls to distinguish between real love and the synthetic variety because they are just so sloshing over with senti- ment that they spill it all over the place. All of their lives they have been busy weaving a. gorgeous mantle out of their fancies and drill-ms- They clap it on the shoulders of any passing male, and they befool them- selves into thinking that they are in love with him when they are R8111’ only in love with love. I-low, then, is a girl to tell whether she is absolutely, unalterably. world-without-end in love with a boy? The answer is she can't, because the elements of growth and taste and change are beyond her power to control. She may outgrow the boy so that his mind and soul are still clods while hers are stardust. She may lose her taste for him as inc!- plicably as we come to loathe certain dishes and amusements c1 which we once could not get enough. Or the boy may change so that there is nothing left to him on which shecan hang aflectlon. There is no other promise so much beyond our power to keep as that we make at the lite!‘ to love the one we are marrying until death do us part, Still and all, there are certain signs by which a girl can inst he: I891- ings toward a boy and get a pretty good line on her emotional reactions toward him. I one of the acldwests she might apply to her “pash" is how much of his society she can stand when he isn't telling her how beautiful her eyes are; how he would die if he were parted from her; how different she is from all other women. Any girl who can stand a week in August of the steady unnpanlonshlp of a man, and still yearn for more, need ask no more questions of her heart. She has fmmd him. Btill another indication of love in a girl is whether it makes her Y“!!! to listen to him discourse about himself, or whether she ‘wards his per- sonal reminiscences of what the fellows said in the oflice and how he sold a bill of goods, as more thrillingly interesting than any novel or play. If Johnny makes you shed tears of boredom when he tolls about his new ca-r and how many miles he makes on a gallon of gasoline, pass him up. You haven't got this thing called love. ’ Another test of the state of your affections is Whether you would rather step out with him of an evening or stay at home. as long as a boy is just a date, a girl wants him to pay for her time and attention by taking her places and doing things, but when she begins m feel that she will die if he doesn't pop the question she wants to sequent with him to some quiet spot where the very atmosphere 1s s come on, Another test of love a girl may apply m herself is the financial one. Hos she become money conscious? Does she try to save his PWKQWIOK? Does she suggest going to cheap places of amusement instead of expensive ones If she does, it is because she has besun to think oi his Day en- velope as her own. Ii’ a girl discovers all of these symptoms of love in herself and if, in addition, she su" ly goes domestic, and particularly it she to worry over some husky six-footer being run over by an automobll on the sheet, she is in love and she can go on with the hops chest, . DOBAYITIY DIX, 11... HOUSEWIFE dnd HER ACTIVITIES Gunmetal is the correct shade to wear for stockings to go with l grey or pluple drcss- For weer with a black dress there is a shldfl celled "off-black." Sometimes IN! stockings have the seam and heel I orcement inytrue black. Even- ing stockings for wear with black dresses, have a lace insertion of finest black lace up the front of the 10¢. Pearls are very bowl“ moment. nous rmmass snwsrs rnz One heani rec of Ia house that had been mm‘ burgh is, unfortunately suffer-int from burglnmiwhen the N4! 159mb" of thefamlly wasnot the onowhb rovmrr ' Sorrows humanise our "M; ‘mars are the showers that feflllm this world. And memory of thins! preview kcepetb warm The heart that once did bold them They are poor That have lost nothing; they are poorer far Who, losing, have forgotten; they moot Door who lose and wish the? might forget. —Jcan lhgclow- attbl Q E _.._.._..___-- IABIIIONABLE STOCKINGS general becomingness of black, a fact well understood W been remark- :r l anwsna or unsurnonrsnn csntsas Jzccmoertain extent. but NWT‘ w ‘uma-vv W141"! lineal-weal“ ti‘ THE DIGBSTIBLE COD LIVER v traced m: lihfllulh the 3w"! B the maskschiapuellishowsseveral 0g these delightful fancies. The masks are btlumll-ll! WWW“ m“ have long, sweeping eyelash“ °1 silk. The owner's face is represent- ed, u. s, slightly futuristic wsv and each mask is fitted with a handle similar to that of a pair of losmtt- ice In the days oi James 1-. We!!! fashionable women carried a. mask. Conversation in mixed comp“? was so broad that feminine modesty demanded somethin! W hide a blush. and any amen W!" did not carry a mask was rightly termed "barefaced." In spite of the fact that qlliiifi 5 lot has been done to out an and W the "front door menace." whim until fairly recently was becoming almost overwhelming, there 8N still a great number of these so; called “door to door travellers who continue to terrorlse house- wives mm buvins thinBB whim they offer for sale. These thin!!- incidcntally ,ane often half as much again in price as the shoP purchased article. while at the same time, many of the art-MM they sell purporting to be made Vi’ well-known firms, prove on closer acquaintance, to be nothing mON than a sheer swindle. B! m” contain a ‘ ‘ rubbish. . The police can only 9mm‘ housewives from these lmPull-WM»- have the remedy in the!‘ 0W“ hands entirely ,and it is uP to themtbmakeusoofit andsowl?‘ tect th mselvee. I know from P91‘- sonal experience that it is not al- ways an easy problem to solve. more particularly 1f Wu b11799! 5° be sympathetically inclined. in which case your heart will 01W! rule your head. usulll! W W“ sorrow later. minus" protection oi coo LIVER on. ADDITIONAL sour. BUILDING MINERALS kninsAenadDmoncmrmredlnCodLlmOikbuud reserves of hernia-pioneering strength and SGYITS EMULSION of Cod flvuOilisridiindicseviraminsPLUSsddidonslbonc- Educ rmuislon FOR IALI I1’ YOUR DIUGGIIT ‘size, and the dastardly treatment Umcl-lldsods. PLUS: OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUES to buy. when a decently-dressed man, who is well spoken, tell; you a story of a. job, lost through n4 fault oi his own. and a yo (gully to provide for. You ‘i3 sorrow for him and you show t in the most practical way, by buy- ing something just to help hiu along, only to find out later that you have been very nicely “done,” That, however, would not al- ways matter so much, but there have been many cases where kindly housewives have been less fortun- they have received at the hands of the men they have wusht to be- friend, should serve as a lasting warning to others. The case which these salesmen usually carry, is imquentlv 01115’ I "blind" to their real mission. but it serves its purpose . in lwlnins them to e the unsuspecting housewife in conversation, while they glean all the information they can about the routine of the house, and the fact that the lady is alone in it. Later on this information helps them to make their plans accordingly. Still, the fact remains that we can get even with these people. and if we value our safety we must do so too. One of the first things to avoid is opening the door to them at all. It is quite unneces- 1 sery to do so. Beck doors should be fitted with chains, otherwise they are very easy of access to the prowling gglesman, on the_ look-out for trouble. 1t is quite sufficient to say "No, thank you" from a window, and fa.r far safer! One of “fliémgreatest dangers lies in gus- siping to these bogus salesmen, for jlthough you may not realise it at my” be seeking to find out all? irislrh know. There are of cmirap W111i! fido travellin¢ , 5: ewund but how to -_~ ~ twee" these and their bogus fe sales- men, is a task which the house- wflq 1; quite unequal to tackle. and her onlY hove 01 "l"? n" m excluding them all from her door!- It ls infect V01‘! hard YD N139 i‘ é firtlAl Jm/ fl§dlflerent from ordinary an... is cuaeun ma...‘ ."“":.r."s::l:lh:“°'....,"' l:-.:::::" o r — Mildly medics with valuable Balsamic Oils. ted with Cuti 9c gm‘: w“ lafisadw . “gating and imm- e Wonderful n. sdulil. m- s“- "°- A“ cuucu i centre . received the reward for his virtuo- He had all his colletced three- ponuy hitsa neatrtul; it'll-BIN in while another member who hsd her collection “Judi 1111M!" found h: little hoard intact. 1t 1450' § AMomingSnaile Mother: "Have you hem playing school, dear?" Ilve-year-old Dewhter: “Yel- and i! I've brains when I . "Ob, well. I'll have to be a mother, I space." -——uue Mflsvresatihe ‘Ollltllll-pvlll econ; spurohno. " ounce, hesa-fihbwifll this form) d1!" didnotquitesoemfair. IAIIIIJIAIIIONI lflfllfflhlfllthfl 6Q bl Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making Such a darling little variation: of shirt type dress. 1t is so fresh and youns with front buttoned bodice, shirt collar, scarf tie, so much beloved by youth. The sleeves that cut in one with shoulders, makes it very simple to fashion. You'll note, besides bolnl shaped, the skirt has a sash 11111 through slits at the waistline. Plain or printed crepe silks are nice for now and ID In plain tub pastel silks and in linen and cotton novelties, for sum- mer, this model is ravishing, too. Style No, 1m u designed for sins 1A, 16, 1 years. 86, 83 Ind 40- inches bust. Bile 16 requires 3% yards of 30-inch material with 5i yard of 86-inch contrasting. Price of PATTIZRN 1c cents in stamps or coin (coin ll Preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. IOU. Bil ._...........uu.... . . "IMO BtNQt Oil! PlMPl-ES asset: a Qyerfil