cw Wall c vexing Y Banish Ipital PtmkU-t mix"... l “MIMI cod no: creatures.†uliy: "Ott you as. live on '" tt - INK y comm mid. pail capital riod a. " up v- H. at. " advan- sthe ed in I tho This " abom- 5-1" Iq is So- te ri- I: the Me- Mt, 1t. 3:1: Hist-7.7“! In looking for r p} tir ms tAon." ' 2G7iiGGn Pop's Day otr.--meratt--"Yot' men to say you were not at your on daughter's weddinl? Where I.†--- .--._._.. ._ _ west, And beauty bums and lovelineu blast. And growth is everywhere! And mum, and mere are eager - or crispy Hume growing in In“... The buddctl walnut trees-- And each and every one of the†_ Seems to declare: I Winter comes-in mis, the tar South‘ With ba Huge pass. New gram? In binding in deep emerald vein. you"; violets break in purple with the dun. And freesiu m: w Yet up and down each hillside, through " The sidewalk. on the garden path, Everywhere the gallant breeu an And then a restless tension take. the air, . The dry soil quickens, and Into In the night, The first raln falls, And in the morning there in ,rtrtd-- Leaves seek the earth. and every- where gb The trem, stand bare, Etched clear uninat a as of all: ing blue; tr-,' ground, The hills and “Hey: float Within an amber glue And a sweet and pungent odor is around; ', Pomegranates open scarlet helm In I Hm. ot golden light, Plowing slowly. thickly, near the Shorter grown the days, While the peach trees ntuner, And persimmon: burn behind their thinning waves, anvines amolder darkly. com: and maroon, The " ts fruity, with n melhw haze: "That sounds in'v-.'H+.in:.:. but ian't n funny how dim-rwtly they teach things now tram what they did just t for years ago, even when we were in college?" “Live and Learn?†"Yes, old as it is, that seems to to an sound advice as ever."--Issued by the National Kindergarten Associa- tion, 3 West 40th Street, New York City. These articles are Appearing weekly In our columns. tice. But that the tra there will t terested in ing to pram him to ma) them to mil, create mus? tend ltart came thing tice. loan to play until he can move in other ways to I prelim; the music by ph, Dent.‘ I think she calls it "But will he learn to do (amp: to Kindergarten ?" _ "Oh, yes. Thny teach a sort ot thin: alone with that “Is that necessm " Play the piano? '33 picked up, may " to play." Mrs. Nartlxi thing. She, " wu- may up to‘lrs.;lmh's “to this Morning to uh her to the It. vino lessons, end what do you “no" she suggested?†In. Knowles end her sister-inlet, Ire. Sawyer, were will: things over a was their daily custom. “Did she think Billy too young?" “N00: returned Billy’s mother, "t don't think she did. In fact. she said . child's musical education should be started when he is very young indeed ~even while he is in his Infancy." “How is that possible?" 1 "Wen, she said that the early‘ munding or hitting that the child does with his spoon. on the chair, table or dish is the beginning ot a sense ot rhythm Which means so much in musir. She ihinks one should help the child by [naming him 'pat-a cake' Ind all ~'m~h movement Jingles." "Want did she sag-gen especial†tbr Billy T' . “You'll bo surpxixwl. She told me to send him to kimlvrgarion for at Ivan! halt a war b: tore I started biml tn the study ot piano tor-haim-n†"She says 1 “Hum there tton songs. barn to -rnsm, id develop his sense l we". we told me. "What for?" Peter A. Lear-1n “Tho Chris":- Scicnce Mommy === "=='"ara=tr==ra-a,au-ra,, green m sun The ctyild and His :rr7T'7?"l"eSNE' r ii i is Winter "a i'." tat I. yes. They tench 1 M thlng along with 3 really tMe. I wan anyway. but I had him in muslc first, t so much interests , that he wouldn’t w id. too, but you should Just hear Martin talk about that very She Won't let a pupil begin to to play until he can march and in other ways to music 'inter. tack am, up , or hitting that the child tioes spoon. on the chair. table or the beginning or tt sense ot which means " much In She thinks one should help l by teaching him “mu-n “h" y, SUCIHH wants the " M did Lennon M. Rule, Southwest Tlmy teach a lot of that 1: along with much more y t1ne. I want Billy to at. r, but I had thought I'd music first, before he be. Iuch interested in other he wouldn't want to prac- Mrs. Martin assured me ning she wants him to get nd to make him more In- , .his body to music will use ot rhythm unusually me." m- muy too young?†urned Billy’s mother. "t to did. In tact, she said Ical education should be be is very young Indeed he is In his infancy.†at he will learn a L and will also learn The tact that he uni-prised. She told me to kindergarten tor at ar before I started him r! piano technique." naturally sary before he begins o? I thought all that I bite with cotton, want You to do that We he can march and Is to music 'inter. by physical move kc him more In. ' and more will- " Lining to teach v5 mugs and put .. -teaeh him to tr , little mo." er,1.ag, but Isn’t "tly they teach faces to the do all as one ieara, tat by " ot will will Resolved: To get outer-doors for w walk every day, even if for only ten minutes. 'N walk briskly, breathe deeply and “and correctly while I an taking thle exercise. Resolved: To to to my dentist once . your to have my teeth exam- Resolved: To get enough hours' sleep every night, in a wellmmtir Resolved: To “he a quick but thorough bath every day I can. Resolved: To watch my temper, and my tongue and govern my Resolved: To brush my hair raro- 'l.til?'it'?:'i"-' _rr'r7l':ii:%aFilliEe..?2i%F,!M,gt KWEiWg"rk?Mfi'a- 'rtErri'ir'isr.)i'f?rg9. .25.“ 2'a%ihtfiffkrfrfiij. El, IIN 'rKi' fully each day. To shampoo it a I .,""~â€~£W , iii.:)!,,.,,',')".'" 33â€,. $,,ip!3.'l'at.:','t'l'tft1'iliilllt? regular intern): ot days or weeks. /-~_ "'s-7.'t 'arei:RW: Tim†"Mit 32%“, man; to it. needs. _ _ ., . ' . m .. - :""' 'eSicE.%r8MMlM8 t T. a P, «human , .mng; M, my. H mm a. Pt 'ttr'" my a! an!“ nu I! MI - -tittqutttirtarortturrrxtcat """'tQ -- l . Resolved: To eat my muals regu- larly, and to select the most whole- some and nutritious foods. To eat slowly, and as sparingly " my ttoitrth and strength permit. l--and they are always the women who command attention for their charming looks. One ot these women is about seventy, anu I assure you she looks younger than many a woman young enough to be her dau, ghter. “I don't do much, my dear," she says simply when I tell her how wonderful she is: "I just keep clean inside and outside, think as nice thoughts " I can about my fellow men, do I good deed here and there, end add a little powder and the slightest tinge of rouge to my cheeks tor good measure.†Then she smiles " you with her wonderful smile, and you see the lovely dimple in the faint pink of her cheeks, and decide you will certainly "keep your beauty resolutions on the rest ot your life." The following resolutions are the first and simplest ot Beauty Rules. I know many women who follow them Let me see. in France they begin with their girl babies, keeping their little bodies supple and sound. When they grow Into little girlhood they are taught small duties. such as sit- ting erect in their chairs. learning to piece their feet correctly in walking, and so on. in Canada, all too fre- quently, girls are not taught those things till they begin to teach them, selves. Often Canadian women feel elf-conscious about paying attention to their looks, as though it were . shameful thing to be careful of the bodies that wore given to them by the same Divine Law that makes flowers beautiful. We owe much more to our personal beauty than we do to the beauty of our flower gar- dens, but as a matter of progress we should not neglect either ot them. I want to give you a little New Year‘s present. I want to give you a list of beauty resonuuons that I have made out for you-an simple things that will not take much time. I want you to make wine beauty resolutions this bright New Year. I don't care how at! you are or how young you are; lt you begin right now to form a single beauty habit, and adhere to it throughout all this year, t promise you, this time next year you will admit that you have been repaid for your attention. These are the girls and women who know the value of keeping their beauty resolutions. It mast be " everyday wan-live to build up more beauty. It yml. H'[ a kw rules tor young-1f to tye/r'" nth. and make them an mmxncric trpy'. of every day", duties, ym 1.21] soon see However, she who hath both beauty and brains has a definite ad- nntage over the girl who cultivates either asset " the expense of the other. This is why we find the high- school graduate, the coiiege woman, the progressive wire and mother giv- lng a Certain amount of time each day to the duty ot improving their looks. Beauty can be acquired. Not per- haps the kind ot beauty that will add your name to the list of immortal beauties. but certainly the kind of beauty that will improve your own looks many times. No woman today cares to be placed in the category of beautiful but dumb: neither men nor women tolerate in their society a dumb or stupid person. The old days when mere doll-like prettiness was an advantage have passed. We must have some cleverness, some mental advantages to go along with our appearance. Beauty “on more in clear. we]!- cued-(or skins, well-brushed hair, Chan sparkling teeth, and all evi- dence: ot health, eleanlinesu and im telligence than in mere doll-like prettinesa. Yet there are always 'a few resolu- tions we do keep. And women who realize the importance of retaining their youth, and gaining more beauty with each year should count among their resolutions the vow to follow the laws ot beauty wily throughout the entire year. Now,Nore Than Ever, Fem- inine loveliness Looms High in the Social Whirl It everyone kept every New Year's resolution made in the bright hopeful hours of the young Fear-what a wonderful world this would be! . Make These Beauty Resolves For 1831 Age Doesn't Count RSI Lasting Rewards Ardent Proposals.---' "rrp bean asked to get married lots ot times." Ho--.") asked you?†frtMy---"Mother and Father." --"Lire" lightly om Go soft then, saying naught; but, hark ye! kneel . When the evil hour would ttwe,- Kneel and bend bow and draw And loose your ammo in a whistling sleet ot Iteel! Mlnard’a Llnlment for all Pain. Now, lift me; I would see my forest walls nudged with colors, yea, tin Time be done. ' Where this last arrows (all: Sod me with turf the an; treads ride Whenever, by God in Heaven, They gather to make odds event. Our souls with them they Shall not tall that tide. Merry men all, God spare you to the hunt; Through time it stretches, down the centuries. Outlawed, we bore the brunt Of the hour’s distavor, and its penalties; Freeman, forever we with tree men ground For refuge, knew who Mood A at!!! yew hedge in the wood Around its bole, when that horn was wound. and be As once in Sherwood, tall As truth, and honor'a ever-living tree! The hunted and tha hounded knew its bow, And king and clergy How sure Its clothys To right the pror an low. There grows our great oak, our gir- thed oak; over all The Shires ot England may it brunch By William Rose Benet There hangs the long bow, the stung bow, once was bent To cleave the clout, to split the wil- low wand; _ Till the quiver's shafts were spent The bow that wrought wild justice in this land. The red deer, the roe Resolved: To -':u3t'v.lte the fine- ness and health ot my complexion. To spend at least ten' minutes - night In removing the so" ot the day with . good cleansing cream. ... .. n night and morning, and at midday ff "Is He DOWI'led? NO! I can conveniently do so. I V, o.†,. Rasolved: To care for my finger- nails. 'i - Mii 'tMel' Bi ttmllt - . » " '" Ths Dead of Robin Hood clergy knew clothyards 1 Adams. s-iou "Perhaps the most striking feature of the composition of the whole earth is that our globe is made up almost entirely of four elements: iron, maz- nesium, silicon and oxygen; the re- maining eighty-eight possible elements are eonfined to the thin film called the crust.†Subways for pedestrians are becom- ing popular, according to a report by the Department of Commerce. Hidden forces seem to be at wort, in one way or another, to place the pedestrian un- Mr ground.' "Negleeting the relatively thin film of sedimentary rocks at the surface," according to Dr. Adams, "there is a first layer of granite ten mpes thick: below that a layer of basaltic rocks twenty miles thick; then 2,000 miles. of peridctite, a ruck rat': at the sur- face, consisting of iron magnesium silicate, and finally a central core 4,000 miles in diameter of metal‘ic iron with a little nickel. The core of the earth is composed of iron, Dr. Lesson H. Adams, phys- ieal chemist of the Geophysical Lab- oratory, Carnegie Institution. of Washington, any: in a research nat- rative issued by the Engineering Foundation. (July just turned bur and spouklng only Polish, little Roman Semezmzyn, traveller by Canadian Pacific from Lemberg in Poland to Drumheller, Al- berta, is here shown photographed at Winnipeg when his 'i',000-mile trip was nearly completed. Laughing heartily, little Roman appears to be delighted with his new country and the Mend- on the C.P.R. who looked after him so pleasantly durlng his long but appar- ently delightful Journey. w: Canadian Winter Lovers Welcome First Snow Hen Robot '. Of Iroit "and Nickel ' "if Mamma: 'Uohnny, we that you give Bobby the lion's share of that orange." Johnny: "Yes, ma." Bobby: "Mam- ma, he hasn't given me any." Johnny: "Well, that's all right. Lions don't eat oranges."' A kangaroo in German is "beutel- ratten," meaning a rat with a bag. A cage is a "kotter," so a kangaroo cage is a "beutelrattenkotter." Grating of a cage is called "latten" and the roof "gitter," hence o kangaroo cage with a roof and grating would be “beutel- rattenlattengitterkotter." Going a step further, bad weather in German is "tmwetter." So a kangaroo cage with a roof of grating to protect it from bad weather would consequently be "beutelrattenlattengitteru n w e t t e r. Kotter." _ Another example: A Hottentot mother in German 1.: "Hottentottenmuttcr." Children who stammer are called "straetertrottel," so a Hottentot mother of such children would be “Hottentottenstraetertrottel- mutter. To add a little, an assassin is on "attentater." Accordingly, the as- sassin of the mother just described would be "HottentottensrtraetertrotteV rmitterattetrcater." A Frenchman calling attention to the fact that in some languages words are made up as in a game of dominoes 1y adding new pieces proceeded to have fun in the following way in showing how it was done in German, says "The Pathfinder." Words in German Often Made Up Like Dominoes igloo dweller---she cm her husband cornered ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Gabby Gertie pin is no good to an ---,ette can never get Nothing oudly as tack ot ca The word wame reminds ttr-have you heard ot the absenbmlnded pm lessor who played a wane on the phonograph and ate the record? Newlywed (Absentn you make these with darting hands?" Bride (hetritatingly)- Newlywed (mental "Who lifted them out you?" BrMe--"How cults?" Some day science will story while it's brewing. Minard's Liniment tor Frost Bite Somebody told old Ragson Tamers that playing the stock market was a dangerous game in which one was like. ly to win one day and lose the next, so Ragson evolved a new system. He “is: "rm going to try playing mo market every other day and get rich." Pretty Waitretrs-"Oh, I'm all right How are you, sir?" Die-Hard Member (trrowliug)-"How is the duck to-day?" A certain club had replaced its far miliar black-coated servitors with young. and sometimes pretty, wait, teases. One ot the old die-bud mem- berg who had itmngly opposed the Idea dropped In for unch one day. Bell still tt stand.’ Atrrahattru-"How 1: . business t" Bttttttgtott-"Awttgl'. I have so many liahonent rivals! Atrrtttta,m--"ReaW'.'" Boiomon--"Yep. ' They insist on selling at reasonable prices." Gertrude-"Agneg has swell marriages. but div husbands." When the g hotel to hurry Heed that he thing. He said Guest-Mun _ mteiet---"Run up quickly to room 456 and just see it my umbrella In there. I think it's to the left ot the rub stand. But hurry up!" A minute later the buy r stunned, and panting, said: His Friem marry her. bent but bro Love soon burns to ashes man makes a fuel ot himself, ' There would be fewer divorces it gnu-o we" more laughter and less censure in homes. T When a nun becomes a crab mm going backwud. Always be reasonably sure before you become unreasonably positive. What's good for high blonde pres sure? According to Will Rogers the first Installment is the worst. "What a whale of a differs letters make." Sweet Young Mr. Paderewski. ot that selection ls indeed woude Paderewski-' Sweet Young l dertul! Is he (a Pakerewsh decomposing You aren't really to comfort , aqua! choking it. Clariee-"Yer, triangles, so to Motttreal, If you would B Ya Whenever U C Bs, U will mind your ls And never, never Ts H Young Thittg--'Nay areweki. who is the ty :elchon you played I _ wonderful." . wski--"Beethoven." Young 'rltitup--"Att, 3'1 Is he composing now rwtsei----"No, madam tor he nest was leaving " to' the station. he no had forgotten Ion.- to the bell boy: she mow speak." old " b he -"May I ask, the composer trod last? It made t reed all bsent) I stove own I you wish instead of nthebc when a e a few " W Did hreel In than soon no that success is in pro- mion to their belief of our bend in them. Dru-mom. INFLUENCE You mill find, it you think to; n noment. thet the people who inn;- ence you are people who “new .1: you. In an atmosphere of ntplham thrive) up: but In that unaware they expend. and titrd cum-Items": end educative fellow"! tr. To be trusted in to be saved. And it we my to intittegtee or elm othem we The area so far cleared for grazing is 170 acres, and as the land in the locality is particularly good for vege- tables, the men are growing large eup- plies for the Adelaide market. The organizing eommitrs'mer, Mr. Forsyth, say: that although the colony has been established primarily to re- lleve the prevailing unemployed, it is hoped to make it a pumanent hem!" I lav-g nearly Iru ber Btuttut vices t and fi places. have bt you-pk strict c' Only a dense men when they operations, but nucleus of a big been etstnbiished felled for agrieu m being made erection of mor than the huts w' cupy. Eventually electric light, u amenities of a .r happy scrub. IN This org appeal by sion under Samuel M to the rais The Governm( ally an unlimiu is anxious to "ns: owned by t men, who h iale in the objective in pleased “or surrounding in loveliness the bush In the Scrub Land Changes to Big Happy Farm W", CAN summv ANY mum published with I ':'get"'g'ig'gltg: Enqumn m-umw-v annual-d in - tion. "new! for ll Canadian. "I“... and American uuhnvnlmnn av Wm prices» Wurldl tiuOcriptia, AR!†(Rowdy 1‘31 Queen St “Wat. l‘umnto. gunman For Neuritis E 64 page text- ultry and Shine “Mario. I CAN MAKE YOUR AUTOMOBILE an" euF.Y m-culdvhl “rum-r L. K. Gqu. Guelph, Ontario. Good Used Sift-be Oe‘s Priced . up " up. Write Jor Price List. B FtFliu'-NItbTF cr, 'T_dTeme'_ L.-.--.-- unite _ Tulimu-a Sun " DANFORT'H RADIO CO. LTO. 2086 Dttntttrth Ave., ToroMo Gum: the rtgutl lair of dandml and dug and unit! in the 11mm dhu't You wilt be delighted with that mm and Ma. Send for an] outfit Soup and 0:an to 'CIdculu.‘ Beta 2616. loam-L - ISSUE No. "--'30 Radio Bargains filassified Advertising tttbe - Va 000 ATgNTS Ire R. a THE nun! co.. Dun I. 873 In“ Bt.. Ottl't. on. 40 ttttt If Sly a 1311.90}: w _A'9‘_ "_-_.-.... eted on modern “M! on There will than}: he 'irds on the colony. , fer cloned for grazing and u the land in this rticulnrly good for wre- porn I: he f 26,01 Ad 'or( vott ntr " ful To O ttttted lnvenlhml" u-muohm tient l-‘rl. DAY FOR OUR on “meal-OI at ed. lt swab mobbing and ( relieved. t. Gul Adelaide'n ry m W thin V. " L2"