i t ‘h’: In =1 .- . A _ L‘ s ‘i " ' FfRW-n-‘Qiudn i__v,1l_._',2.n“..°.2.l annexe Lannie s: an. 5 nv-QIU-fnkbvfl‘ a mad n rm: CHAR: ()'l"l‘E'l‘OWN= _(iUl\l_{l_)l§__l§! _ ' ' ‘ . . - " ‘_ , MARCH 21, - “For your family’s protection the bathroom should always be health- fuliy clean.” This is accomplished by cleaning the tub and washbowl after each using, because Old Dutch not only removes the visible dirt, but the often-dangerous impurities, as well.” For greater economy Old Dutch is unequalled. No cleaning preparation docs so muc l as Old Dutch and none can do if: so well. Mud¢lnC¢nld¢_ i i iA Morninggmilel AN Ab’). LS1‘ Etiquette By Roberta Lea .,. .........i one t... ‘gr, "much obliged," iomeone for a favor? , A. No; the correct phrase is Mrs. Wllks, whose husband had ‘thank You." suddenly become rich: “No, I've Just Q. ls it correct for one to refuse returned. I bought a nice Rubens this an invitation to a dinner when it has. morning, and I declare, when I call- been received a clay or two before ed at my husband's office, he told me the day set? he had bought a Rembrandt by the A. Yes: because the invitations same artist yesterday afternoon! should be issued at least ten days‘ ahead of the date set. i k Q- Whcn drinking tea or coffee. where should the spoon be placed? A. It should be placed in the, i Character Close-Ups A saucer; never leave it in the cup. Children’s (Troupy l - Qolds Quickly “i, uthlkllnb, i Mrs. Selby: "Good morning, Mrs. when thanking’ Wiiks! Going to London to do a little shopping?" ' Relieved _ ~\ \ ‘lake a saucepan or pitcher of wn-. q"; fer; place it on a spirit stove or lamp. i " i Add half a tcaspoonful n! (‘niarrlio-i lone to a pint nf water which 15g MM M0 lnrzirligltlheblaetstlebliiilil thelderlzogescftiiiiiii medicated air is breathed in by the phQsONfiLlTY rhild. The distressing cough is rc- ‘everl. ifllbillfiilllilllaiifill is rcduccd. OF ‘your! results are quickly noticeable‘ m using (latsrrhnzone in this mim- Fl ; Even m small infllnti this triatinént is ideal. Every good drug- Eiat sells Cnt-"hozone in 50c bot- les. -_-___....'..____.- ._ VALUABLE‘ T0 I (-3 SGLESMHN 14th ) ourselves. I DorothyiDix Letter Box Deny Her a Home of Her Own-Why Some Wives Lose Their Husbands — May a Promise be Broken? Dcar Miss Dix-When Bud and I were married two years ago we want to live with his family because we did not have enough money to set up for But now Bud has a steady Job and we have saved up some money, and I am determined to go to housekeeping. but Bud doesn't want to do it. l-lia mother is the lin- cst and most likable woman l know. If she hadn't been we would have been actually lighting long ago, but you know two women can't live together all of the time and get along well, and now his sister. who is a ' school teacher. is ’ g homo to llvepand I think it is time for us to get out. don't you? NORMA. Answer: It certainly is, Norma. If, ll llll hem said. no house has ever been built big enough to house two women in peace, be sure that three women would scrap like tie Kilkenny cats if they lived together in an apartment with 2000 rooms. ' Bo follow your hunch and go while the going is good, while you are still on amiable terms with your mother-in-law and you and your sister-in-law have had no words between you. Thus shall you always maintain a pleas- ant relationship with your husband's family. The reason most in-laws get on each others nerves is because they see each other too' often. distance to give them a perspective on each other": virtues. I am strong, as I have said a thousand times before, for ovary young married couple setting up their own home, no matter if it is just in one room and all the furniture is bought on the installment plan! think that it binds them together as nothing else does, that it enormously increases their I chances of making a success out of marriage. that it gives them a purpose in life and makes them a better man and woman and better citizens, and that it ls the one greatest single factor in their happiness. There are endless reasons why it is best that every young husband and wife should build their own nest. One is that if they are alone during the period of adjustment they are much more apt to hit it ofl together, and compromise differences. then they are "if there is an outsider around. Of ,1 course they are going to have their little quarrels because no two persons ofi idilferent sexes, with dlnerent characteristics and reared in a different en- vironment, are going to have the same tastes. habits and points of view on ‘lie same thing. But when they spat, if nobody is around they will kiss and make it up and no harm will be done. But far different is the situation if the family is ‘ “ around on the sideline cheering on the combatants ,and telling Mary not to be boned. and urging John to asert himself as the head of the house. Many a tiff that would have ended in i. burst of tears on Mary's part and John calling himself a brute grows into an cstrangement that ends in divorce-amply be- cause Mary and John quarrelecl in public and their pride forbids a public lmloav. Then a husband and wife who live alone are thrown on each other for society and amusement and grow, much closer together than those who li~ among other people and are always in a group All the little intimacy. t‘ talking of every-thing over is done away with when there are other peopi around. Then the home develops the wife as nothing else does. Unless a_ girl keeps on with her job alter she is married she has nothing to do unless she has l home, and Satan finds work for idle feminine hands to do cvan quicker than he does for men. It is the young wives who are living with their parents, or their husband's parents, who get pecvish and fretful and discontented be~ cause they have nothing with which to occupy their minds, and nothing to think about except how many things they would like to buy, and how many thrills they could get out of a flirtation with some other man. It is the homeless, idle young wives who spend their days pricing things in department stores and going to the movies, and who pick up strange men and go joyriding with them. A man who doesn't provide his wife with a home of her own that will keep her busy keeping it, adorning it, planning for it has taken the surest way of wrecking his marriage. And a home is a good financial investment because it makes a young couple save money to pay for their furniture, and that leads them to saving money to pay foi- the home itself. It is a common saying, and a. true one, that if you never go in housekeeping you never have anything, because the temp- tation to spend on foolishness ls greater than moat people can racist. They have in have a definite object for which to save. And furthermore, there is no greater fun than there is in establishing! lPROVE YOUTH \ MR8. "r. c. can»: ~ R. R. 4, Cobourg, Ontario MRS o. w. POSLFF i.‘ 263 Huron Sh. Stafford. Ontario ,.., .. ‘ home. family. she has always been undcmonstrativc toward mo, but she always finds time In love and pet the children, but she never shows ms any taller- i nus. The man who misses thathas missed the thrill that you [at but I once in a lifetime. pomyruy 91x, D1!" M!!! DlX—1B 1i» lOOIi-‘Ih to be Jealous of_one's own children? My wife and I have been married more than ten years and have quite a large I love her whether aha loves rue or not, but it hurts and worm: mo wondering whether she cares for me- Answer: Q The French have a saying that some woman m all will, while other: an all mother. Evidently your wife belongs to this lath: clue, and than an very many like her. There is a large class of women who never soon-i in think of their hul- bands as men, but only as their children's father. They ncvcr roalilo that their husbands crave love or tenderness or any attention. or ovoa companion- ship. ‘they are thQmSQllIcn so absorbed in their children that thly think their husbands are satisfied to see all of their kisses given to the baby. all of S‘ fLydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound is a good medicine. An one who is in poor health s ould not hesi- to fry it. When l was "ing the Compound l tried , " umpie Liver Pills l found . chepackage. l have taken 1- . gvery nigh: since and l c i ulrnyseifimprovi Jam .£lhlnkful for the no they dome that l have to d several "Years ago when l had a sick father and a nursing baby to care for, I or all rundown and l tbok Ly ia E. Pinkham’: Vegetable Compound to get strength to do my work. An- other time at Chai e of Life, l lied severe headac es and felt rii-ed all the time. l took seven bottles of the Vegetable Com- pound nnd felt like a new woman. l recommend it to any ca" about i ‘-M'&. G. woman who is at this age." ‘ .. .» ~ -—Mrs. T. E. Slceman. illii" ll. l)l§lli.ll§l|ll."\ ' ' if_nmgniiiiiri t!" .- <_- chlldrea lust with a servant. - maternal passion is so great it overwhelms everything clan in tliiworld. and they forgetthat they have any duty or oblilltlon w tbs men my hlvl married. or that their husbands may havl lull ll great need of their pottlag as their babies. -' muvouueomheuieruneiimmivnioftauamnby. rammin- illllliérllllp ‘cues. amiss the first mm. - their interest focused on little Johnny, all of their time devoted to the nursery. ’ They think thin. their husbands will not be dililiullonod by min; timn go about in sloppy clothes because they don't taro time in drcu up and d! their hair on account of the babies. They think their husbands won't mild staying at home, or going out aloha, became they don't lilac to in" the ‘male women have not ceased to rnily 1m their husboadl. but the And that is when Ifllilfifl mm their m» mu mum. um ooupll i Th: Romance of Your Name The Surest Way for a Man to Lose His Wife is toi " It takes ‘ qWomanb Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions '-:- l;1teirogturje_ Don't live to regret wao ARE YOU? .4 Baldwin? l; nun! menus anus i lHALF- C Baldwiniis a name of early N01‘- - man-French origin and the inoanin! 4 "bold in battle." Tho earliest bearer of the Mmfl was Baldwin l, Count of Flandflffl- H! was the chief forester of Hlivhbvwk» in Flanders, and was created Count by his father-in-iaw, to whose daillll- m, Judith, he was third husband- mchm-d Bgldwin, of Dunbrldge, England, in i552 married Ellen APO?"- His great-grandson. Nathaniel Bald- , win, immigrated to America in 16.19 and married Joanna Wcilwll- i widow. Their son, Samuel, born 1.1 Ialrlleld, Conn». married chimi- dsughter of John. 5h "d “all” Bruen Baldwin. lt is through Mari‘ Brueifs line that manv American de- scendants trace their ancestor)’ 3° 1200 connecting with manv royal - lines in Euro, . ll number of Enid- I wins are Barons o! ltunnymelde- Samuel Baldwin was deacon of Guilfoi-‘d, Gaahen and Litchfieldl Conn. and also served as 'i"9-\$l1\*‘\'| ‘ and representative of the Coirnv- _ fmm urges-opium where i Other early settlers were John Baldwin. who came over from Eng-i - land about 1M0 and settled ini ' Woburn, Mass, and Richard Baldvrinq i who ‘cams in ia-is in the "Minnow and rattled in Milford, Cone. i Among the Southern Baldwins of. the present day in James Mark; Baldwin, an eminent psychoioilli. 011 South Carolina. ! lvrandanlutprwo. For The Cook i ‘Household Hints DOUGINUTS IN RHYME TEETH! i Mere’ surface brushing isn't suflicim! protection-it takes Colgate’: grazing to wash away parnclaa ECONOMICAL! The 25c. tube of Colgatei contains more toothpaste than any other loading \ Here is Colgate: cldans LEAN decay clam. The real test of a toothpaste. say dentists, is "How well does it clean ?” For no dentifrice can do anything but clean. Claims to "curc” pyorrhea; acid mouth; eoit gums are all false and mis- leading, according to high dental authorities. ’ . Colgalds cleans best-because of the remarkable action of its unique pene- crating foam which sweeps down into the tiny crevices of teeth and gums where food particles collect and where ordinary pasty denti- frices can't reach. Don't risk half-clean teeth by leaving these crevices un- cleanscrl. Usc Colgateb which not only polishes the outer surfaces of teeth, but gets down into the ‘linrd-to-clean laces, cleansing and uri- Fying-giving your tcel an extra protection exactly where it is most needed. This ' ll! ' haw 6,1 ‘iflfiv-nf-‘nllhn iaglow suarllcozll-ollll") I r mum fiifs? dial. u u if‘ a ll a olrncnzcduilfvllvilsenrlbflni- N I Idiom .11 i-Z-{PIIII nn-LQW "man-wanker i fail: I» a ' it . I r ly . ‘n; not roaeb. ~ , g no "w-w-u-‘ww ‘D "bugs until the melons got a good in alfew pieces of charcoal wliar start. ' cooking to make lt sweet and PN- Talnted Meat vent cooking odors. When meat ls slightly tainted putl One cup of sugar, l cup of milk: By loborta in Two eggs, beaten fine as lllk: l Salt and nutmeg (lemon will do); ~ Of baking powder teaspoons two; i, N" Sh”, Slightly stir the flour in; Boll on plrbolrd not too thin: Out in diamonds, twists or rings, Drop with care the doughy things Into the fat that swiftly swells Evenly the spongy cells; Watch with can the time for turn- inl. Fry them brown, just lhort of burn- Inc: Roll in sugar, serve when eooi, This la the never failing rule. shill! to the foot. IJ-llllhol If radishes are planted ons they will claim tho attention of affectionate, flattering, but with the arrival of the baby husband's mac is put permanently out of joint. All the kllsu, all the atuatlona m baby's. ‘lhlihbl’ drcasu for baby. Mother spends her evenings watching baby sleep and in actually relieved when husband goes out of an evening so she can per- form hor acts of child worship undiat urbad. And only too often husband finds another lady who in willing to play around with him and pet him, and who holds his hand while mother is holding tbs baby's hand. And than wives wonder why they lose husbands. i DOROTHY DIX. I O I O I I I Door Min Dix--I am a woman II ynrl old and have two children, a boy landollrll. About two ysarsagoImarrladamanfl your: cld- Iam simply wild about him and he is abou t ma. When I married this man I promised to lend the little boy to a private school. Now I feel different about it and do not want to do-lt, but my husband insists upon it and so docs his mother. What should I do? I could go book to my first bulband. Ida not love him, but he lavcsmc and can give moo goodhoais. M. M. B. hi"... - _ Ifyoupromisodyourhulbaadioundyourboyolfiolchoolcndbe married you with that orpllnlt understanding. tnc only honorable thing‘ for yauiodolstoknpymirbargalnflrhsahildwiilesrtainlybamuciibottarof! u. b0 nu of hii-n. \ rm-pubiimingmuhumnemumimmrwysnrmnhuenm ulfnwsppiagliunbnndew" ulightamami-usmehanllnlmlagiiats. nu have so little loan o! obligations of matrimony. probaby one hus- muchbotmoflwith thclrowafathnr. DOROTHY DIX. Mr. John l‘. Gresnsiadeflblls How i Cuticun Hauler! p Trouble." , --_--- . u _ . V ,, a-n-a-i veer" To relieve the pinch of new shoes, wring a cloth from hot water and lay it serous the tight spot wblle the shoe ll on the foot, changing as it cools. This will make the leather _ mol- ln a school than with a liepfathcr who resents his prumcsand is aiulou; . btalllookl u good u nomi- t» you, llld tho children would umiaiy-bo ' What the Fashionable Are Wearing illustrated Dressmaking‘ Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebeile ii/orthington _— ‘Style No. am comes in mes 14 16, 1B, 20 years. It is very attractive la wool lcmv. flat silk crepe, nubbed or lacy "f" shantung and kasha. Pattern price 15 cents. he sure ti. fill in sin of pattern. Address Pat- tern Department. Our Fuhlvh Magazine is lb cents, but 7°“ m" order a pattern and a FINN"! uigazlna togethemor 25 cenfA turf): than ihciliusblnd nu bun opium concern to Na. am. Size ' ‘p-n,