"WW"'- r-" ' " "FW!HT fiMllMMMiMiiraiiW,iliiirJ-""TT'u---j-' '-' l-.X."'-Aj, 'iil-. Vl'y,p" 4 A r , l . ..'. .Ji wwffwT ' " ''tW'WH'-iw'''' "'"'h-.PS'j.,-." b,1..'-: ' ' 'J'-'i ',y.ri v..1-1- m-'- t v, ',;.- , 1; uvmwGr tubuic ijaduer Philadelphia, wkjnesday, march io, 1919 iwT-tj'F T-o'T' TTj-T'iST They attract a man at and irritate it IT'S one of the ironies of fate that the very qualities for whin a man inarries a girl before twenty-five are the qualities tht irritate him at thirty." It was so with Roger Henderson who had loved Anne devotedly when they married in their .early twenties loved her for her beaity; loved her likewise, for her butterfly inconsequence, her carefree gayety and her ignorance of the hard, grim world. but, at thirty, Roger scolded because the bills were larr; and Anne pouted because the income was no larger; and thoughfRoger was foolish and seltish when he determined to go away. Nevertheless Roger went; leaving Anne, childless, gay, lutterfly Anne, to face the world alone. In every other issue of the Woman's Home Companion a new novel starts; a big, book-length novel, published in t.o install ments. No long waiting from one month to the next fr seven or eight months. Begin it this month; finish it next. ' It's a feature of the Woman's Home Companion fiat present day women particularly like. Start this month's noveltoday. The title is "His Wife's Job"; the author, Grace Sart well Mason; the place, page 7 in the April Woman's jume Compajjun. twenty-five thirty "The Things My Mother Did That I Won't Do" T'YKIIY woman keeps a kind uf secret T , , , , uoienoois hi tin- umiji 1 iff moUiir ''When I Look At Our Baby Git2, And Realize- II: ive vou such did which she won't do 11 seen1 1 record r See how much of il is revealed in '.M Mother's House" by Mary lleaton Yorsr. You'll (ind it on page !7. This is lint one of a scries of chronicler by Mrs. Yorse which might Ihj termed "intimate revelations of a woman's thoughts. '" They are new and dill'ercnt because lhe are so true and old. Will the Kaiserin . of Germany Now Be a Cook? NOW that their old jobs are gone what will the queens and duchesses of Kurope do? Well, the Kaiserin, for instance, might hire out as a cook, snys Princess Hadi will: she can rrjake apple-tarts with the best of them. And each of the former roval ladies has .some accomplishment, which Princess Kad.iwill reveals, out of her intimate ae quaintance with foreign courts. Page 12. 'IIF.N I look f.t our baby jirl, and ieaiieho sir- !i. loiuiuircu her bad start. I feel a gien1 gratitude to the 1 li-t t c ilabies Hureau of the Companion," writes i woman on pi'g'1 .'JO. Tliousands of babies are well and happ.i today, who might not. be alivt; at all, but for the I'-.pcrl he'p of thij Hureau. In ,i home w litre tlier.; 'v. a h.iby, the L'o.i'p .nion is the ir.'lispuisable magazine. The Difference Between Your Cooking and a Chefs TLAVOKINGS, probably; spices the little niceties of the culmerv art. The average pantry has a half doen on the shelves. Here's a list of 129; all are cheap; all will keep indefinitely. Jee pagi; !)T. Put them on vour shelves; use them and see how different the same old dishes taste. They're waitingVii page 3V ol the April Woman's Home Companion. VOU will marvel, as you read the April Com panion, how a magazine can present so much variety in its features from month to month,,, 'id yet maintain from year to year a character so conistent. The secret of its editing is in its editor; i is the foremost American magazine edited for wornn by a woman; having its foundation in the solid substance of women's interests and needs: built to give them what they want; not what someone thinks they ought to want. Buy it today and see for yourself how subtly and completely it responds to every phase of the modern woman's interests. Woman's Home Companion , v The Crowell Publishing Company .f WOMAFS HOME COMPANION THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE 1 FA1M AND FIRESIDE .i ,1 p - t .If 'a rcwal. il V' i :um "v ' ,' vf. , -M -m h MK ,.V .- 'il.Sv 4 .' iS."4&vi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers