Show Daughters Daughter's Allowance Allo A MOTHER worries c considerably A f during the tho first year car when her young daughter has bas a dross R al al- al lowance JO But the tho worry Is solely on tho part of or the parent the daughter la is completely and delightfully satisfied Never before has hns sho she had bad In Her charge nn any amount of ot mon money never ne more than thana a few tew dollars at a tame me In most instances her mother has purchased all her hm clothes paid her bills and looked after atter all tho little details of her life lire Then she aho was given a small weekly woolly sum flum for chocolates and the tho theatre theatre the the- atre and such other trivialities of or the tun schoolgirl When she simo receives her first real allowance she fools tools that she Ahe is 19 really a Il grown woman that she he has at last attained Independence HAWING HAVING IIER OWN WAY AY I Such a mother naturally nan has had all tho the direction of or hor hop daughters daughter's course lip uh to the time the allowance is decided upon then thon tho the father tather is really the head of or the household Parents havo discovered that there thoro Is an nn age when tho the young young- girl should have havo her own way in certain things that thoro thore is a Il time when she sho should be bo given money lOoney and taught how to uso use it So the sum Rum is named and the tho young young- lady I is is told that such an amount neither of or her parents over ever spent In lit their young days and awful I threats are arc hinted at if It she should exceed it by a J single lo dollar Tho The allowance usually usual usual- ly lr seems a great deal of or money to tho the unsophisticated girl and sho she promises that is to desired every everything thinS thinS' and anything of her Wh When n she sho gathers up tho the first months month's allowance l in her hand han sho she I Ilal la l laughs hs to hoar tho the crisp bank notes crackle Then she usually rushes to her her own room Toom and nd decides lJ how she hc will spend pend the money The matter ml is soon loon accomplished 1 if she is loft left to her own devices The bargain sales thrive on tho the first allowances of the inexperienced spend spend- cr er but thoro there Is no doubting that the allowance Is a n good thing for tho the young oung girl Irl It usually takes take but a n few months for her to become wise in mone money malert maters maters mat mal ers ert tho the money is placed in a no bank and it Is drawn out na fiS it Is absolutely needed The Tho girl with her first allowance allowance allow allow- ance anco often hopes hope to save money by b buying bu things for lor which sho she afterward has no conceivable able use but this habit is one that lasts only onh a short time S. SAVING A PORTION PORTIO It is Quito pinto within the time rights of ot th the father or mother to expect tho the girl Just lust l freed treed from the schoolroom to save Rave a 0 portion of or her money given her each ench month but it is Js a 0 great rent mistake to exp expect ct these accounts to bo ho too strictly ron rendered ored All big bills should bo be l putdown put putdown ut down accurately and tho the girl taught to keep a a. strict account of or smaller sums and then to turn a fl rou rough h estimate of or these In the official account book hool A par parent nt will m discover er that it Is ctr extreme ex ox- tr lne folly roily to expect an any young youn girl to explain where every oro penny has gone Iono It tales takes away all the tho grace and nn pleasure pleas ideas ure uro of or the allowance Some Somo mothers reserve a certain proportion of ot their daughters daughter's allowance to spend themselves themselves themselves them them- selves for tho the unseen and too often otten Ig Ignored ignored Ig- Ig nored necessities of or tho the latter's lattore dress In the case of ot man many young girls this Is no doubt a wise course torno forno for no sensible sensible sensIble sen sen- sible woman can cae either cither expect or desire desiree I an old head hend on young shoulders andall andall and all y younk folk prefer preter tho the ornamental I to the tho useful I |