y; , p. '. s 1 l 4». 1. 1 4 1 4 1 4 I .4 .1 - .1 . 1 rl{\ a_aa_hhdaahifi"'hi'aagas momamnAmo an‘-.. ,3na!1 mo. a n. service while . it . ‘our hurnblmt mass. arishi ' creature, acorn not one: (The daisy W fire shadow thlt it ..o...°.‘.“u' the loses-inc dvwdrov from the sun. —Wordsworth. i. ____ The art of printing was discov- " ‘bred in Germany in the fif- . aeenth century, and introduced into szngland about 1411 by Wil- liam Caxton, who set up a. print.- in Westmlnlster. The first book printed in Britain was "The Game of Chess" which was inted by Caxton, in 1474. Oax- _.n translated orwrotc about . sixty different books. all o4 which ' went through his own press before ' his death in 149i. Caxton was born Th-near Hadlow, in Kent, about the year i421 “ IINMATGED EARRINGS ITARTIJ NEW YORK Both Mrs. Anthony Eden and , Gertrude Lawrence startled the New ' York fashionables by appearing with one black and one wh te sgearl . earring at the ti‘?! I their ell- ' like lobes. .‘ IMPROVED FLAVOR. r when making nincemeat, try adding one or two table spoon- Juls of marmalade. The flavor is uqgreatly improved if this is done. 4'4*x‘ LONDONERS LEARN LANGUAGES . 1 ' enrolment for the evening wfliucationai classes throumrout nndon shows a. remarkable interest foreign languages. we are told. e demand is ens the biggest . record. French. an, and NOW Underarm TCrecm Deodorant "f"! iiops Porspirctlon n. v. -r.-l'~ l. Does act so: daaaanr- not irritate akin. ' I. No waiting to drpCanbenscd right after shaving. H , I. instantly stops h’ b. " l to 3 days. odm from perspiration. 4. A pure white, greaseleas, stain- ‘ _ -- less vanishing cream. ' ' I. Anid has been awarded rho l, Approval Seal ot the America ' ~ lnsutute of laundering, to: being l-lanniess so Fabrics. TEN MILLION iara o! Anti have boonsoid. Try aiu todnyl "I Iallfloomwlfioollldlll s,’ -.alaahllo—dlDe i “iri v “Woman's The Housewife -AND- Her Activities lpauisirinthatorderzuafiethemcat popularsofaraaaot numbers go. The complaint is um!!! made, and with every {us tion. that the British are no a nationo! linguists, and, unlike the Con- qgnentals, have no special desire to learn. But the international crisis seems to have bro t young men and women in Lon on up against serious lems and the tlemand for knowledge of foreign languages the natural outcome. SLEEP 0N EITHER BID! rt was long held that right-handed people generally sleep on their right side, while left-handed people go to aleep on the left side. Oareiui e ts which have been carried out recently ‘how that this is not really the case. When 150 right-handed persons were ex- amined it was found that there was no great preference for sleellllll 0n one side or the other, although in the case of left-handed people the majority preferred the left side- When in the course of experi- ments, sleepers were asked to go to rest so many nights on their habit- iinJ side, and so many nights on the other side, 1t was found that they got to sleep more easily when on their normal side than when they were in the unusual position. The doctors, there ore, feel that peo le, whether they be grown-um or ys or girls, should make a. practice of sleeping on the side. which they usually favor. i THE COOK'S i comm CBULLEBS l nrgar 1 fllespoon butter 8 egg yolks 1 cup hot madred potato 1-2 cup milk 3 cups flour 8 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla Add sugar, butter, and H! you... to hot mashed potato, beat until light and smooth. Add milk, flour, baking-powder, salt. and vanilla.‘ The dough should be as soft as can -be handled. Cut in stri and twist for crullers. Fry in eep fat. Time in cooking, 3 minutes each. ‘Itemperattrre of fat, $80 degrees. mun: uauunsts I tablespoons shortening Cream. shortening and sugar, add well-beaten eggs, milk and sift dry ingredients. Roll out to one-quar- ter inch thicknms and cut with circular cutter. Place a tablespoon of marmalade on each half. wet edges, fold over and press togeth- er. Fry in deep fat. Time in cook- ing, 8 minutes each. Temperature of fat, 380 degrees. All of these recipes make about 8 donea ordinary sized doughnuts. I at Iwvotmforeadr ' monotonous. w.°'§G‘&‘$°&”Ja% .dnint!towo‘§ $11. tbs! r0 ...... mhlsis~tesm almYS Lnzaa vpp‘ ‘ ‘ an‘. vw v w I iDoroihy 0.1. i Many Married People Declare They Would Never Rush to the Altar a Second Time, Yet Statistics Show That They Lose Little Time in Getting New Mates If had to do it over would you r ,1! one an s.*.e.i¥w:*:a.r.¥=.s v in: -.::..,,,~5'".,s'=~3“,,,..,.'= - w» husbands and Alt... A11 of the dhgrlmtled wives would answer with a loud and em NO, and Wm the hsofiflf married would 1 doubt- ful. rm- the 0 y Estate never comes up to what it W86 IINIB-flflented tobe. anéikeven themmost devot- ' evemna t; play £§er withbtritv to iurohissoulbyteliingliesaboirta rfromOshkosh-whcnho di ‘t have a critic on the earth who kept reminded of all his faults and shorteomin , and when he could spend his money on fishing trips and What iihe ell-Dressed Gentleman is wearinlg instead o1 sterilized milk for the baby and having little Johnny's adeno ds out, and permanent "“°§..t.““ “till? lfikfim-t marri woman h... ,.,,,,, m, assur ere a ' cast envious eyes at a hsohelor girl ‘$0 had WM atcgeer instead °1 fl ma“? Wh° 111d he! WI! Pocketbook and her latohkey; who didn't have to ask any husband for a. new hat, or explain what; she 41d wm, the quarter he gave her week before last; who was tree to mun d731- ggiaatorrarowu GUARDIAN ‘i ‘if-m; -—~ —-- - . ‘ six. .,.__... ocial and Personal f the world instead of being tied down at home by babies dud who mum ggeriqglérerggggggrislkéran? if Yfuth because She didnthsve hobo: w n ou e ma or man- m” mm hearts that and. wguld neve¥ fnarry ..§§1n°'§“§§.$“w.m fig: they would, as is proved by the fact that nearly all widows and. widower-g mil-IT! B841!!! B5 50011 8S they decently can after the lose the former incumbents of their hearts and homes. Even the d vorced rush back into matrimony. thoush you would think they woufd be the burnt child- ren who would forever a terward he afraid of the fire For with all of its drawbacks, marriage does game hi“? to up]; ma; seems to make it impossible for them to live a‘0ne and ike Re it is because they find that the lost freedom for‘ which they plried means nothing but lonesomeness. ey can come and go as thev please be- cause nobody cares what they do. or whether they ever come book M; be it” is k the men who have resented their wives’ nagging hive or. mglfioare of themselves and are as bewildered as a lost dog a have lost thelr wfi°ii°fitisifififi 33%“ may fifj §h,§1',§f.“§:°¢§d‘wmtfl W“? “"95 Wlihlhe 0W6!‘ superfluous women with whom no one wants m Wm" memeli/"B- Mlllbe it is use a house without a rnan in it isnt a home. no matter how many tidles you hang on the ch31; and the“ is no sew 1n set-tins up a good dinner that vou've got to eat alone Maybe both men and women miss somebody to quarrel with when they igso their mates and so they rush back intomaniage. Anywn, , m do H- m, awralltow 11111111 they think that wild horses couldn't lira; idem Q BX‘. Furth . most mnrri peopl choice of il out a wife grdhusbaridflufigg wtfifiifihtgfl fie‘ “and 411mm"- wm e one they have. The men wlio has been msnfifi ‘Ki ‘éggllfimgflkeewf 18 vermin he would pick out a good cook. The one healthy hug; a shdocptgkrédblll is sure he would look out 1d;- g m“, Grimm ° w man lust knows he would seek Pat- fll mull!" lfiiéafllf g-jlfieanllietgcfusintlaisstlidan would look for a poet who was . m“ who could ‘cad h" mlrmrvie . “Th: wife of the poet would choose so on. But this isn't true ca“: taigti “M °x “we” “d ‘° °“ m‘ - gm cs show that the uaiities that n. ‘mi’ ‘*1’ in their first mw sacs still attract trusted men and women to them and that their second husbands and wives are more or less replicas of tlétgrmflrst. emwuu"mdwhymdh°wmmflfrywhbgngofflieoilestiam f-flwhloh no one knows the answer. 3mm, u, Tait.“ ‘r’ “my *° mm 1! we do and mu more likellvnto r “suiting DORUPHY 0n ‘ ‘ e ERROR! , Story of a World Dictator By H. C. WELLS i Copyright, 1988. by The North A Newspaper Alliance. Inc- "If I stand by you. 1f presengfi {at rind others standing by you. strings are in your hands. No- oen er of a spid eb. You were that preceded the readius ut or loyal to him. You believed in him. arose of it. Hence there must Believe in him st and keep this be a dictatorship. But no‘ dictator- new world united and at peace. We ship can g0 on indehni .y. This h you." isnt a new discovery-at least not "Wei. a very new one. They're teaching it, "Ihcro are competent men in the sub rosa. now, in the new universi- worid still. None of these aid-be ties. But nin. who was head and successors dare dark shoulders above his generation, saw move in e . Than a r lot. Not like those far beyond anyone else at that time, raw ctators of the twenties into these inevitable phases that . have toe follovgl a. revglutlgrfi wli-ltfi anguag was irmsy, e s e a strong Marxist accent, but he had the heart of the Power question clear. Tihis now is what Lenin was trying to foretell when he talked of the d sapgearance of the state. Hsre , it was." e hold out the flst he had clenched and opened it wide and wiped the palm With his other han . "Presto, it hag gone!" Olders asse ted silently. “Stalin reversed all that," Carstoli. “Stalin went back on Len did ngt understand this." ers. w over this paper, very light] . Fashio It’s ~ grand for our a skin-the N cw Improved Palmolive. There are three reasons why you'll like the new improved Palmolive too. It's new ‘in miidneas, has a new delightful perfume. And it's firmer, lasts longer, so it saves you money. Get three cakes of the new improved Palmolive to- morrow. Use it and you'll agree with thousands of Canadian women who aayPNow Palmolive is better than ever. It's so lovely and refreshing for all our akin." lt’s Palmolive‘: new, careful blending of gentle Olive Oil that makes it so fine and safe. You'll be thrilled when you see how soft and loveiyit keeps you. ~. . all over. ' ‘I must say l like the new Improved Palmolive. its lather seems oven gentle: than before. Yet i: cleanses myakin perfeetlynriabou: aha slightest irritation." Qwmaua, l3! Brahma: Avon Toronto, Ontario nos "I ‘a-ue v 8. 1939 mmmm} Mildor . . . New Perfume‘. . . lusts longerl .r > . ‘l, LUJJ,‘ New Improved Palmolive U-O-O-O-O-O-O-O Modern Etiquette (n; aosanra bu. . AMorningSmile Q. Whm hnvinl personal sta- tionery printed, should the return address e pieced on the front of the envelope or on the flap? A. It should be on the flap, tho it is omitted entirely on enae pea used for fwiupulrépgsuegs. . one ‘ring - ‘ilnessmtziepn ' without saying A. No; it is rude to leave the other party ignorant that you have rung off. Q. Is it correct to serve ades- serAt: vYvith the silver on the plate? es. iuowcanlvo i (By ANNE ASHLEY] Q. How can I separate stamps that have stuck together? . A. Place a thin piece of paper over them and then nm a hot iron i’ Q. How can 1 clean off grease that has sputtered over an un- painted floor? A. Pour kerosene. over the spots, then scrub thor with a scrubbing brush. After a few days. both the grease and the kerosene will disappear. . Q. How can I prevent the chip- of dishes, caused by strikin em against the kitchen sin .. faucet? A. This can be prevented if one- inoh lengths of garden hose are cut and one of these fastened to the end of each faucet. Lia-a. 9" fi .,_ ‘ . "‘m!-~.PIWH§~—'~‘»~-.--n_p»"~ ‘i... Mae-teem» -u-,a.._L..-_- ..._ aijiiliay-fia L...‘ ..' .. I H; a get man-i . What did 3.3m; hit’ e htful, susp ciously inie, “er-i Leave for 24 “Maura went to an astrolfli find out wales: was the best time to a social gathe _ hiswifeiftheoccasionhadbeen a leasant one. HIS LDVIUE erto he Bell her?" Betookonelook atherand told her to grab the first chance." The minister, just returned from asked b! ring, was i" exclaimed her ve an uslasm; "s. most a most ining enter-ta n ' "who talked?" queried his wife, “We-ll," jatafittwlodged the dom- White fur that has become dis- colored can be improved greatly by shaking French chalk into it. hours before thor- oughly beating the chalk out again. UIQ MIIIIHPI for Dllldfll“. 2st Fun to Sing These Cow- boy Songs ,.‘°'"‘.“' new‘??? man or nmrsaoao Honor-Rollie! tho month of ‘x-a. Vivian not Grade VIII-d. Catherine Doug- las; 2- Actress Braael; Snflelen ka- l. . ‘Grade VI-l. Marion Myers. Leslie Douglas; I Grade 1-1. “no Doiiinl. Perfect. attendance: Vivian Birt. Marion Myers, Leslie Douglas, Pearl Myers and Lane Douglas Phyllis M. Webster, teacher. So Easy. No Cooking. This ll k eclp is and by many thrash soanhduseéveaxecnnlo they have found that it gives them a 33...“..“'.‘t$i..i3¥°.'i.. t‘; ‘itfii. $21537. mix-a child could o it. "g F‘ d t2 p1 '°“‘.'.'tl...i.‘i‘..‘i'§.l€.u.. “iiif-i‘, Pine, n coacentra forrmwa known effect on throat membranes. Then make a s rap by stirring two eups of granola! sugar and one cup gri- ghe demo “for” riieilgtmpgtawer— either in e orm of money or as ,;,,,.,,fi,,§“‘,‘,‘,‘,w°°,, “dgfifl UCKLEY’ _ _ dlfwi 0° l0 hfl-VB 6V5 - tween ourselves thank God Thirp is . New longhook Ina 1| Ilia » orated. had it. and '1'hlr'p, dam-i ' s '»'~1>= ~ '. H w You are certain his own w» Wis we?!’ Oldera nodded t. ' wmir not". °""""‘“”" “m”, 35g l“ mm“ i" "l" L Bo checked himself on the verge “w.” 1, ma“, mm mm, u x that almost themselves 5132a; fashion to wear t now . of a "Bud." you Md “ma; and u‘ o; J ‘on ioin in aa the crowd warbies "mm; m- m, "It's the natural desire of a not ‘imply q; m»? ma,“ n“ m, _,___ IDIN‘ DOWN THAT OLD TEXAS gm jgggnfl m, - g 11mg bod- animal forced into a soc- mgddw o1 a Reedly sh an l TRAIL: ice" and tiny . To give l iety u» large roi- it and 1r toning ma, “pow,” mmmn “m 1, was anaemic and overstrained. New "Pi-my gals that are so sweet sound effect, cu can wear it Butntiwhdweaéreigetigllggafirt of £15; 10511;“ W; o; ti-fimdum wdmflélmmme warm awfiaamapgaffnhisgiegi“ a m» ism petgooat or ult ' ‘Th “m” “todralvlwm-and busy. "m- ‘1 mbhummflhm, tier “P hvoritas-and uiokiy can! to _a. You love to sinzorriaqona: ‘ brief sleeves. lee small vim 1m ‘madly little Prairie Mother » Mn your most Antimate friend, "rm, thinking, dear, tonight of won't em uncut m and the hgsayingtoo alflztpattsrn orbomdraasham. Hestaredathlmandfeitreasnrred. gy-nmu togdaleowboyaiyia 001i!’ x Nil thqrnatsncha “a dictator, Olden,” he said, m, m, m“, “wanna-shift Towns Pa? . M _ ra down a rodeo ' ' - - . “U” *1» w» w» "lhmgr" W M M" '9" mafifii" iti-stii? We? ‘it A“ rnflnmv "m _, I 8-4 ardl of m-inch ml- mm n p‘ -,_. . “hi-reek a {flu whirl-Tynan as p.19“; ilsdunaudnu * ~“""",H- ».-,."'-" lanolin“. ‘mucosa "m3 gr;',=g,§;,='v,,'=:,*-é£',:"g=,,. '..."P..'°°‘".......""""‘.. am...’- 04%. " . ’ k “sannilqa flfl"'.__ _ ( I 5g”. “m QUI- si” n: an use c nstlrvro m,,,,,,__ . _ " """ ovaamaur ‘flak m...‘ ‘“" 5'81"“ "lfltliltlflhml arias.» 9° m - - um he nous. lane Household Scrapbook (I! ROBERTA LEI) vo-eoo-o-eeo-o-e-e laugh lands when the hands begin to isui rough, rub plenty of almond cream into the skin just before retiring, and slip on a pair of old loose gloves. If this is not effective, b1 using enmphor ice instead of tlu reducing read nnall particles and introd into all the curves and hollow the Jewelry, while rubbing witin flannel. For Bad Winter Coughs, ' MixThis Remedy at Home Qllifik Saving. "IP30 trouble at all, a takes but I TIMELY TIPS HUME SEWER‘ of tor a few moments, udntil dissolved. D moment. No cooking needed. Put the Pine: into a 18 or. botili and add your syrup. This gives you ounces of cou h remedy; un quick-axing an depends is. and W" get four times as much eoughnedidnl or your money. It never spoils, and]! very pleasant-chi" love it- Y u'll be surprised by the way it tall hoi? of severe cou ha, givinl $1M aat- relief. 1t oosena the P soouhes t e irritated membranes, helps clear the air passages. M funded if it doesn't please in every vll- v — FOR THE - ‘Hnmw