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e RN Health Hints -- AUDITORIUM A MOTTON PICTURYE CLINIC AND LEOTURE FOR WOMEN ONLY Statinees, 3 p. m. Wights, 8 and # p. m. Admission 85c. Boe \\ nnt Adi Boost Business. |e hnnx- was pald wel) for her services and >, EASTER LILIES An Extra Special Sale of Choice Beautiful Blooming EASTER LILIES| Extra Fancy Stock That Retails Regularly at 17V5¢c and 20c Per Bloom. ON SALE SATURDAY at I e 4 s f pain e e IN GROCERY DEPARTMENT HAYDEN @ For Men For Women i AN 1 \ "OMUND GRI \, For Men and W /! (45‘.. . @ @) O ————— e e Quality First oy TRADE MARK Made in America THIS SEAL o babtom of svasy pieon PROTECTS Y OU fook v 1 Look {8a with (ha rod Anched v vept »0 subatitutis St aut Whig aenl and Ne 80 Avecquart WM pure VR pluminum peakaryieg BONI0 A Bustrmtod v right GUARANTEED TO LAST 20 YEARS 6 1¥ DODGE & DOUGLAS STREETS ER" lurllul nhou USED 22 YEAR 1 have one of your ‘‘18- 'T'Tfl BEE: Fashwns (irl Workers {Who Win Out By JANK M'LEAN. late whiteness of the restaurant e nen with perhaps not a kin word from has it ups and downs. ach girl who walted in the big ex 9¢ S Correc /GrEASTER I{] %) EVERY NEW STYLE IN BOTH N MEN'S and WOMEN'S WALK-OVERS " ¥| Forthe EASTER STYLE YLE PARADE AW AITS YOU HERE | To be in absolute style Easter Bunday your footwear must necessarily be a pair of “Walk- Overs''-—the shoes that have set the style and quality pace in America for the last 40 years, ’3.50 to *10.00 Walk-Over Boot Shop 317 SOUTH 16TH STREET, that has been on the years more. I have not long ago at a local off and it is getting so a brass plate under it, through. day household service, ORIGINAL--OLDEST Guaranteed To Last 20 Years | Otter Only "87c Special Trial s‘ ,0 "rcnvo‘\lnu " b\vnl‘ tor Prave | en, Al 0 ponr doaler commal wupply you with “1OR2" Warn, write and toll wn My name aod wo Wil arvange 1o sepply pow waaly | ILLINOIS PURE ALUMINUM CO,, was n noice and bustis about the it keemed almost too glaringly white and clean—and the nolss aeemed to blur into Hitle definite sounds that were It wasn't all clewr ing U1l night. But places | were fow and, after all, every business times a day for 22 years, and looks good for 26 Pudding Pan of another make which I bought B. C. BELT, Granville, Ohio, Thousands of other pleces of '18-92"" Aluminum Ware have been in daily use throughout the country for more than twenty years. 20 Years’ Insurance Every piece of ‘‘18-92"" Aluminum Ware is in- sured by us to withstand twenty vem of every- Don't take chances, Aluminum Cooking Utensils that have provm test to last more than twenty with the ‘‘just as good substitutes, Ask for and insist upon getting "18-92" Pure Spun Aluminum «ooking Utensils had thres good meals a day of nourish ing food. Ruth hardly knew hbw she had happened to think of being a waitress She had read a great deal about suiting one's-nelf to one's walk in life, but some ow the stories wers always about people who invariably made good and did big things, weren't hundreds of girls in the Wig city who were struggling at smaller things &'rls who never made good in the sens of the word, but who were f{lling pla e that were uninteresting and filling then well a “There ought to be something encour aging for the girl who works, something to tell her how to make good,” Ruth re flocted u little somberly. I wonder if we workers never have gny words of en courngement at all, or It people just take us for granted and don't care anything about whether we succeed or not. I'm nure that if Just once I co someons understood, thing ousier. After all, I'm 1 well Ruth knew just wha great man other peopls did not know-that a kirh | wasn't niways looking for big tips, Ono uld know tha 14 be lot a wweot-faced woma 1 her & question or two s 1A hu red meal and Ruth iped hor for her interest ever wince What | want,” Ruth's busy thoughts went on | “In to know mo | | waitross Kood enough trade, It 1T am making good and 1 4 but | want to kn on't know liow to go about it.’ While she thought she ot steaming coffee down befe an ole | old gentleman and balanced a club sand- | dich deftly in the other hand Ho smiled wudenly and Ruth was wir- | a ike walllng?' he od, Kindly., Ruth knew h | deslgnate botween kindly interest and the other kind, und she smiled a little wist H Iy . | “You're m k00a waitress,” the man want | [on “Keep your mind on your work and | you'll win out. Always remember that | |1t'n dolng the thing we hnve (o do well ax we can that counts in the long run.'” Ani | Ruth winiited dazzlingly and said a litile | uhyly that sbe thought wo, too. Aftar nll, there were people who really under lld @K )h/ ‘ For Men ,’f F or Women " Looks Good for 28 Years More 92"’ Aluminum Kettles fire from one to four Ruth wondered sometimes 1t thers | 0\!’\][\ - Woman’s Work - SATURDAY, APRIL 22 1916. OW on Dan’s desk it's piling up—the ambitious Spring story— the tiny thin book of quaint cogceit; the thick, romantic novel; the shepherd verses that pipe silverly and are gone without | an echo—just so short and so rare are some 8pring love stories—the merry moonshine of fiction that lights a lonely path for a few hours; the ardent imagery of a rhapsody, with thin leaves gold-edged; the country story, with a daisy impressed upon the cover and a fragrance of warm milk and primroses and lush Spring meadows stealing from its uncut jeaves—all these and more pile up and up on the great re- viewer’s desk--since the snow was breathed upon by the gouth wind and we leaped dazed from a whirling blizzard to greening Jawns and a warm sunshine and Summer shadows under the trees: since the first robin hammered on his little bronze bell and flashed his ruddy | vestee at the edge of my bird fountain, The Skart Queatzon By THE JESTER, | My age for surprise at an a five-pint Aluminum [ nected with the adornmer woman has long since store that has all scaled P A A e i ERIDERAL TR O BUB I |10 o T e et to keep it from burning [ twen the only actual years, Don't be fooled MOST DURABLE A, BATARLINED ') Lemont, Cook Co., N, helght and 1 » n falls those who 1417 Iu;lu 8!. LAST CALL "FOR EASTER| E : MlLLlNERY | | BEDDEO - Household TOpZCS By Nell Brinkley The Same e Old Story . Copyright, 1016, Interr’] News Service s ) ((1‘” t “Spring literaturc's pouring in,” nodded Dan when 1 “esked” | him “'All the same old story—begins and middles and ends the same from the instant of touching hands to the finished nest. Some tales | are rubbish and twaddle, the plot {s vague and it ends agalnst a hedge. 1 don't even uul] beyond the caption of the first chapter. | These are the romances that brown at the petal edges before the bud | has unfurled They never live to see June and the bride of the cloudy vell. 1 don't read 'em or godfather 'em-—so don't blame all | Spring rmnm and moonshine onte me!” And saying thus and so, Dan dipped his bronzey head into a his toriette with a plae blue cover starred in silver, wherein a man and maid begun the old Spring story which youth repeats, the story iwhich is no more new than the baby you have at your house fs the very first NELL BRINKLEY. - T/ze Home = Wedding By BEATRICE FAIRFAX, e Wedding customs are ds (8]l In this one article s to be part ! Hats of the Latest Style in | Both Lace and Small Shapes | ek, T up w. (;l;ly -hhml Cr«m ’ R Onn a ctw.o Auoum Today . Onn hlm‘n . Night Until Mp e & & we.m, . very simple 8 but some of my readers are A Ittle worrled about the proprieties of the wedding day and wedding ceremon and [ am going to try to talk to them vedding fs always in rally glven In the rtoof the wedding expense so furnish th