l ~ \ n11..iT A _,i-,...'-.V UP-_IL f1‘\?llN . ’. . tho road Wild lip-hill all tho HMB way? - - _ ~ Vto the end ‘ Ziv by Mirabeall. ibn very Wllzdhe dav's Journey take the m.-whle ions dar?- morn to night, my Blend. louis there for the Ilisht a rest-lol .4-wpllce? - - ' _ _ _.¢,..;oof for whm thaslow _dark fv`a.~,l&|l'5 hbgih. ' ~ ' iihgunot the darkneeshide ltkom g iiliiylfalce? .§..roll_.¢».nnor. mln time um. ,_~....'.3c - V _:_ 'V ’ 1 *OO-Q-9-O-OO-O-O-O-0094-O-O-O-Q-00-0 no-Q-fy-Q-4 -Q-5504 at Westlnlnisi/sr, some very white Chippendale, portraits by ey and Reynolds and a por- t miniature of Marie Antoinette, en to an ancestor of the family. TULIPS 1 __,_ IN sUN_0ll SHADE 'milpa an moss ss y do equally well planted- in sun shade. There is some advantage .planting the late varieties in the as the color is better and does , _ ` _ fade as it often does in the f\iil_ ot 53534; meg; qihgf. wgyfggn up suo,.~The -bloom-will be a.-little later V _ n v.-mean V V Those who have gone-before. ~ Ziiknrxnust I knock. orcell when '*""!¢iat in Sisht? ' m 115*-full sim but it Will 1515; eral days longer. An ideal situ- on is one where the bulbs have oming sun for s little while and . 7 bwho seek - V ~ "’!ea',‘ beds for alll who come. _evening ouésts da`nEed"5'ri1ft `e"`i§,i`n, ;b fell - vissd to Bah . 5$"¥.¥'fr‘“€l‘1'.. §?~§?'l..¢’l.§ §'Iheywil1n0tk»0f]D\ltllilQ , inthe shade fortherestofthe 7'- “fthe door. ' ' Gly- Uhail I find comfort, travel-sore and _..'..7wéi%~ to oh -* no. %g.fi.ll.¢Y,Wll IOUP- » ..... nthn. old he ‘wu very ill With ;'_;%iz_u_¢-ion and wmtiuliion- My _ I B » » ,__ if bor-" Moors* liiitlrsbild, ..-- » 7%. . {2¥g°:°o”$-9°¥¢bl:'¢'fi"Eb~ w" 9 if #I V The delicate pinks and lavender shades are best in shady situations where the mull beauty and delicacy .of their coloring is best displayed lt hleaches to considerable extent in full exposure to tiles un all day. There are many beautiful tulips :ul the delicate color tones; One olf the finest of these is John Ruskin in rose and cream. In pale lilac and yllow is Fatrie Queen and in fawn pink is the Fawn. The three plant- ed together lnake a beautiful group in pastel shades. The lighter-hlled tulips mhke the fbest display in the garden as the color carries farther than the rich, dark shades which are finer for close inspection. There is a vari- ation of a week in the season of bloom betwen the early and late varieties in full sun and more than than in the shade where they de- velop more slowly. Tulip bulbs may be planted in long as the ground can be worked, even as late as Tlianksgiving excel- lenr, results. Sometimes it is neces- sary to break the frozen crust of the soil with a pickax to put in the bulbs in an unseasonable fell, but the bulbs dont seem to mind in the least and give their full quota of bloom the following spring. The one cultural requisite is drain- age. Tulips stand almost anything UW' 80895’ mound and 1! water stands on the bed during the heavy winter thews there is likely w be a loss ot bulbs from rotting. The best cultural methods call for a raised bed to be certain of drainage but in ordinarily well-drained soi1*it is. not necessary. _'Prune-brown. wine, purple, dark Breen. and violet-these are the grandmother-ly 'colours to be worn his Bel-S011. and the sillgs and satins are so thick that they can stand alone. Complexion colors follow the prune and wine colour catergol-y- meuvish powder and purplish rouge. Hats have been compared to candle-snuffers, and suggest very trying creations, except when ‘the 'wearers are vely young. Pointed none-shaped models there are, too, with flexible brim; ruffled under- negth like the brown part of a I coin Velvet is used a great in the creation of these hats. , v 'ii-l-_lvT LAVENDER WATER ,§a`ve h`s1£ a pint or spirits of Wine. 1-4 of an ounce of oil of lavender. one drachm and a. half of essence of bergamot, one drachm of 9593” 01 Bmb€1’8`l8- Mix all Well t0- gdllier. ' ~ BQILEY VYATEB IDR. INVALIDB Wash two ounces of pearl barley' well. Place in o, clean pan on a low gas with two quarts offoold water, and boil it until it is reduced to a barley can be added to soups or a _ y ter Drinking. Bhvs 'two ounces of barley, one ounce sugar, strained lemon Juice. Place the barley in s jug. Pour on to it one pint of boiling water. Cover the Jus with s clean nulslin and leave till barley is cold. _ _*___* Note.-Barley water has valuable properties, and is larly useful where there ed. During recent years water, with either lemon or Juice. has become a drink in man clubs &nuJi: may mké Real violet and dyed-in-the-wool purple one Paris auizumn shades Cedar browns, and cstdar reds, and “ill” ¥1¥°;\`\l GN 311111118 “W shodm. Bridi% fudliiss llid caf- ei; 2. lll m iF.T ' ‘BTS VN BB. .. oi dw. - - . ,_,g{»;;,-_ig-g-_§;‘;~;,,~I,,~,,,°““,,~ -'Tax 2° 1” i'L't'f`i}.lT1‘L$-ii`§.§f ,......lm¢¢lm. » ;~_ -o 1_1#-nv. beeuwul, salty blue. name - ' ' S eddkhdred greens al-call over the i_»1_se»¢nurloll.a¢l1<.f»lll¢yrea,m¢ dim. ana amethyst loom lemon tgotylsciiorchsrt. , P' D f -ii 5 one 5.1: ` *#17 r li Q .V ""`_'*"` Don t Expect Your Marriage to Become a Suc- k cess All by Itself -‘- It Takes. Work and Plenty, of it to Make Two Persons With Different Backgrounds and ' Interests Th(i)nk _and Act as _ ne V V 1 , Ay9unggirlsaidratherwistfuliyioanelde|‘lyWman:` " V _"Oh, ‘Mrs. X., your marriage is such sn ideal me.-~~~You and your mobsndgewwrivotlvwnzemuamywresswoqwaenlermbeau- tihllly- . Ihopethatmymarnegewulbeaa hlwy as your-av _ . ~ ` _'.3 .. "Welt Qyokdeu.” Nlwudea- _older "°ml_°»»‘|V _ me fifty volts of hard ‘work to make Ia sucossro! marrlaso. A happy mu- rlhaoilnt theresultcf'chsnce,nq;-5||¢¢ sift of the gods. It is the reward of patience md labor emi struggle and striving and sen- sacriiice. For every good thing V we get we~ mil-vt Pl-Y the Price. God doeurt put any- ttglung worth while having on the bargain e. “Nom when I not marries I thought, as _ all other silly brides do, that marriage was . isolns to be a sort of Perpetual Petting party in which husband la ' spend his time telling me how beautiful and wonderful xluwas, how ngfi. greg! me, and that his chief occupation would be burning incense at my ee _ » ' V' "And I never doubted that I would go li bend young godling and the answer to a maidén's°;r:;eei:¢a:dyth: our :art rinse would be a srand sweet unmsrrecl by s single discordant nm. 011? .W°ddlH8 bells wouldn't get out of tune as soon estlie honeymoonywas over, as so many o ' 'people's,d0. ‘ V ' "Well, it wasn’t long before our marriage also drifted into the 1- wonder-what-made~me-do-it stage, and John and I began to look at each other slantwise and speculate on whether we wouldn‘t have been happier with some other girl or man, or none at all. John criticized me and I §€hi!;¢¢\\"" in 9 -/fr " lf-jg /" ,/ *an .Yo »f 7// _ \`”" L- * \\\\\».\-- ~ ~; \ “X \“;"E`\\ `\ ` \\ \ s».i».‘}".'}.'§lffl’f.5..ilk.. l \ I? There must be something better lm the kind of woman who likes / about s soap, when 20,000 beauty to know whyanylhhlg 1| berzef experrs recommend ir. I expect a than something che . . . and Pm beauty expert to know about skin, iecdy satisfied that Palmolive l the way a doctor knows about menu, because l've learned iw health! And I tried Palmolive made from a scientific blend of 6rn¢,jusc for that reason alone! olive and palm oils. 1 J\- 6/li ;,_l AMomzngSmzle velvety lather well into my pores, rinse with warm water, then cold. You can'|: imagine how that pene- trating lnrhel- will helpyour akin! Tllloo ln One The hotel billiards table looked the worse for wear after a game more 5533; . 'i e make a orackerjack secretary of yo als pinned on your breast as an A-1 8'I'l1mDY and unreasonable bosses. 1°ma<=y in menacing s husband? talk back when fault was found with answer that turns away wrath who brealgfsst if the hot cakes are supposed me _ - f , _. _ - _ cant Bet a few med- §_E § a design for rubber “No reason at all. Men t mm r °f the wife and wmona w°trl:s,su:m:h°t¢;h“l;°qu¢. l;0°nl',; yes-yesed. 'I'hey all want to be regarded as orecles. They resent being remmded of.-a mistake. They all wangiq 5, my-l,_°°m;°¢;,,b1e ,md s _ I Bn' ‘V `ss`abiii!e1' betwcen“them and the complications and unplossantnesses of life. band as they are to please their e ploy . Time many wives who have lost their Job: I:-i‘:in't Want tllibrgarli-3; bg band could go to. There was always in wind B Good dinner waiting for him of the ghinngglgthe liuitzd oookzdngiemsayagg liked ‘hem ' ‘Fwd the brute’ is _the beat' advice that has ever yet been given for domesticating a man. It is the half-starved husbands Wm, no I re lieved or all me lime wel-nes mstlmy want al wom to act " ' “ “Very fav women uv willlne to take is much trouble to please li mu- it th _ a. e unemployed mmed women' V” I hw-tu mm' 7° mah 3°°d °11 mme- feminine, _nature are essentially differnt. I wanted to step out with my Bald CB-Will 40.0!-BIVCIM "You’re to 80 l :ook the advice of those beauty experts, as to merlwd of using Pl mollve. too. I manage its E _ band - h ,. . _ ..I commenced by mmm my ,wma the mon pleumt wwe my huk aiusband instead of`bei.ng le!t at home. I wanted to be a pai instead of a homey . and °°mf°1'fFb1° °h'?i1' in Wh1°11 t0 Spend the evening who are the roamers but it 3 Wm I 0* nine parts mother, and the bigger and the stronger and the more in- "those three holes in the cloth will preme Court who tell for baby talk and ate it up Bo I told my hus The Boot yollmtcered to interview he was the boofulsst itty bitty Eng in the world and brewed him a the manager and collected lbs. from rand of home nattery that mode other womenis fist and tasteless. hil- friend. Then. lrvdlwi-lil G knife. ¢ »..__-..-_. ' he rapidly transformed the three “And I waited on"`him"hand and foot. People marvel that he never 11010! H190 011° 381110 Oile- goes anywhere without me. One reason is that I have made myself good "Mon," hs said, slipping five of the company to lllm, but mother is that he couldnt one s handkerchief or 15|. in his b°°ket."1t’s verve fortun- elean collar ir 1 mo not along to hula it out. __ _ IM they abuse for quantity and not "And, lf we are so congenial that it ts a matter of public comment. is because I have adapted myself to him and cultivated a taste for the “Where's Mr. Ketlar, Mr. Clarke?" hings he likes. The two souls with but a single thought, in which all 831° Und- lovers believe, is a myth. Congeniality between men and women is only "At central station. You can't ree surface affair. It doesnt go under the skin, because masculine, and him. if you so there. He's locked UP." all and chain And so I have learned to play golf and est cox-ned beef V 'Yes." slid Joan Daisy. "Mrs, Hos- cabbage and go to muscila comedies and keep up yith the stock wick .told me. My bill here lb Bild?" market, and like it. “Yes. How are you going home?" ----- Calvin suddenly inquired. work and sacrifice to make marriage a success, "Elevated" . d before, God puts no good things on the ber- “You can take a cab." he told her sin table." ‘ D,ORiUI'HY DDI. and he struck spirit in her. "oil, it s re Zo 3; "2 gn $ I babied UW husband. O ui ‘ CHAPTER. 23 JUAN IS FBEED thins on Ketlsr‘s wall. o to Oalivn, when she s , that she had come in defense of Joan Royle. “Bhe's nothing in Pred's life," Miss Neilson asserted loftily. "You come on him with her because she lives in hold him, prosecute him, and put hisb`\\ildin¢`-she moved in after Thu's was Calvin warned that he must look for another interpretation of was Nesson's purpose, but he was slow to discern it. "She certainly kids herself,” Miss Nessou charged. with disgust. “so you’re boarding her as his big friend! '.l’hat’l what she told you!" "Who is hiswbig friend?" Calvin asked. wont to “What 1: guilt?" find out what you know or Hoberg threatened, of- exactly ten o'clock to- I’d smoke a Judge As lt cor- you will think!" hotly. remained cool but the heat man amu- persistence t0 me. that Fred her." Calvin. un. this child- to the kill- Nes n to assert peculiar | Over she pos- | (Nor. 8. thi ' young person, .. Royle had push- enviable position arrested as the was who liill Wit. SLEEPLESS _ him as helpless and depend- 8 perhaps develop new evidence|B°f°°3°~" 'mm DM” an - ,nm mm ,wp _ d°°‘d°‘ ’° ”°° mr ‘nd °°° wh” °h°' 'rim tillbonnnr “nous ‘ Su' ngltgen °°§::’n to her in me W°‘-gd 4°- “mn at her wmduwl ’ hotel room, and e had not wanted V . > f “,0foourseIcen;butIdon'tcare “Throughi" cried Ziulm Daisy. t0-" '-' ` - --_‘__ . ,elm me building. he made his way ,oh where., Km., .1 mm.. md Wm .Tn md to the hoete-I. as yet undiscovexesh by Downstairs I suppose But mey._,,e you hmm ., . _ ` ' the repor rs, where ixetlar and le H ' ..' "Y 7.. 'sh cm” ed 1,, , t R rl hkgyaie girl were held. Ketlar: he lDotNthm1lg.hou whvgtilmliiiin. wmltsulnw gm eyzlnim h°i1:1.¢¥B-lilw By Edwin Balmgr m' ~ ' - ' ' - _ » lr _u_l In cw he could continue to hold to- cam" “Y mum crown I&iU:nu8{infmm&n¢0;lcY