Show - ' - ' - — 4r't:aarrr' - I : 1 Sunday Morning ::- Old Changes Into New - :: : " " -- By Jack M need some"Something old new something borthing rowed something blue" That marriage tradition carefully adhered to by many did not end romantic brides at the altar for Mr and Mrs ' - - t - ' 'VI1 - A " ':' 4 in ii ' "''' i ' - ' ''' ' : '''' ' 1 ii t - I -- 1 r: ( - ' ' 4 ' ' - i - I r--- ' '4 i 1 '':''' ' 1 -- - ' '- -' ' drawn by the Daltons 'and "' ''r1:4 '' 4 06i' : k tr?1 1 1 ' ' : 6 0 - ' t f I ' ' : I ! a f i ' ? 1 - li ' 'A - ri - e build- ing of which was supervised by them ' -- g:44 :11 - lz ri :: 1 'f- '1i'' c' ' " ' - 07 ' ' ' - ':- ' ':' t :: '! ' ' i - i - ''' ' i pleceeusghosfewlogidrIlsoubaneldl particles ' ' ' - 1 ' ' - -- :1 - f : : v gave them ing !0 cents each the idea to make pedestals for busts of George and Martha Washington All that was necessary was to saw off the tops and put on blocks of wood to hold the statuary The Daltons found a chair that fitted in with their plans and paid $150 for it Now they discover that it is an antique It was put together with pegs evidently before nails were used) and the back was carved An from one piece of wood them that the authority told came from Turchair probably key and is at least 100 years old And today the Daltons have a cleverly furnished home The theme is the Eighteenth century but the atmosphere Is as modern as tomorrow nt ' ' s:::- ::i--- :' :: - : - ' ' i - :i5 : 's ::::: " - - '' :: :' ' x ' - ''' s ': i - ': - i ' t ' ' I - -- ' 46 ' - '' 4 4- : j- s - i 4 w cku ' at : kt' s- ::: ' -? otr-t- "- ‘: "''' 'tZ5voto 77-- - fir ::t -- oi i Z i' t t- 1 -- 41-- I ' t : '''': ---'i ' : iz ' ! I ' 4 :v - - '' -- i)1 - - t ''1 4 A t - i - c r - Nit ! 1 ' 1 I it I t I '''''''' il'''''-''- 03 '' ' V ' ' ' '':'' '- -' ''' '' t- - :' ' 'tN 21 ': 7$ i ' ' As 1 f' ' - 0 lk ' - -- - '- -' ' el- ' ' ' - ' ' '' 1 '' - ' Si s '''r" ' ' '' ' ' - t k ' - ' - - ' - I 1 -- '''''''' 4' m" -- - : ' : ---- - '''- :- ' : - ! '' e - ! k ( ' - "- - ' 4' ? 1 ''' :' j :le I Mrs W B D Mt Pleasant writes: "This summer I had some fine double hollyhock plants They were beautiful except that the leaves were riddled with tiny dots of brown on the under sides like pimples I saved seed but wonder what this condition was and if the seed will be any good" Answer — The trouble was what we call hollyhock rust It is a fungus disease and could have been cured by spraying the affected parts with bordeaux mixture Seeds may carry the virus However I must warn you that the hollyhocks from the seeds of double varieties seldom give double flowered seedlings but revert to the single type Less than half will come double va:A I1 I 1 '! ' i ' 11 1 t 1 !i '' " - liol c) I4:4 there's nothing like white to make you stand out from the crowd! Completely feminine thoroughly white is sure to prove the beguiling In this colorful season '':' irr- - ) - ) ' 4 ' '''''S'"tir--g'' pi ''5Nt "- V IN ' -- 1 ' -- """-''k S1A Sizes 12 to 20 98 '''' 4S-4k-- it ilt - Ai:e '' - ' - ''"Vr---- ' 31-:"1 -- 'a 27- ! '141tiftere:— '''' — —te'41 '14 141144 s AN— - - : ' ' o Or I 1 f 1 1- - tie f - I - :- - ' ' 0 1 63 South '4''''' - 4 1 : 1 t e e ! :: Main St I ' s t lir i I - ' - I t I - t t I - - F 1 ' 1 i I i t g 1 41 t'' r z ? ---- I : v 4-- 4? 5 : 4 I - I A v r t i ge g g07 S 'y' - 7 :' ' s 14' 1I Note to Mrs G and V W M: Names where chrysanthemums can be purchased cannot be given here but local nurseries either have them or can get them for you ' - - i 1 men— ttt I Use Colgate Dental Cream— IN 7 Or DENTAL cx5E5coLVITE - cgttA - IØvs - l' s: - r- t ks i i -- ' nt -- :)t ''''''' 4 ' ' s sCenrni t : if il 1044'40 LX 1 ':''''''-:- yOcl XIS SI" :ff: fz) CLEANS $' 0 41 '' - 4 1 L6 - -- t 4f 4:it'11 ' WHILE IT CLEANS YOUR TEETH 0' - I - ' A 1 - t t - I - : - -- 7- t ' 1 - i size 'USE 41 t t : 1 - : i ' --- '' ': i i r--- -- - 3 t : 1 v:i Tout MATH -- coral-salmo- be 14 ''44-- - 1 handsome shade of - ' ‘ - i -- - Pi Issilv DENTAL Co t& cA grEEAM s - - bright sparkling! Besides Colgate's tie licious wake-u- p flavor makes it a favor-it- s with children and grownups alike ' lie''''-10- - I t I r gi d c7-- - - t -- 4111111ipi— I q Pra loll ir4t' '111 I - i 1 4 A ' : I 1 ! t-- :1 I': 1L-t-" i i 4 - i 2 - 1 1 ( :::: - :- - - - 7 - -- ' - --" -- - -- - - - - -- -- - - -- ---- -- - - - -- - — pe100"----leA4 VAAgeg it a"110-- '04460 04021411 a4 IeM140iF - - eg: 9 4- - AroNomig t r4---l- r - —KP-11Vi-- - ! stk L - -- - yet gently—makes teeth niturally '"" N :Hl i 'llekr ' '' 1 - --- l BREArt eAo :: ofzia s 1 you see foam an has active that -i penetrating crevices the hidden betweet into gets teeth—helps dean out decaying focsit particles and stop the stagnant saliva odors that cause much bad breath- And Colgate's has a soft safe polibhing agent that deans enamel thoroughly YESSCIENTIFIC!7ESTS - I x- plEgs01vE ' t CIOLGATE DENTAL CREAM - v - -- s : - - - - t 1 1 the toothpaste that cleans your breath while it cleans your teeth! k : 4 1 1 - 1 ':'' -- on what told° - :4 4 t - I here's a tip So -- - v i t' : ? and she may mean YOU! - At 4 0 '2Ii'' E 4 ''' i' f 4!: z' sm" Mars right '' ” i s i 1 l'r ai"' g t - v- s f- '''' - r - ": $ :'- '''T-- : 0 - - :7 - - - s ' of - 4 V - ! - - '" ' t : - 1 - -: 4 Nlatt t t r 4 2 - : - z 2' : : ' I $ ''' 5 - ! A ' i E:on Elavo 2LT Llroath Too k 4 - lij 'A :I i - 1' 1 N al ' 1 - i : 1 1 1Zp--'-- I : i :1' L 1 1!” 4f ! f f r - 1 : a- - :: : ut -- i- I - P i ' ' i- I 1 b ( - i l 1 !' 2 ok ' : - i - I r I 1 ' :' - '-- - " r u t ' i t I ! - ' '1 'IP! : i 1 '1 :11 - Murray writes: "I have a house plant that I don't know the name of It has thick leaves Could you tell me how to care for it as it seems to be wilting?" Answer—I am sorry but from such a meager description I could not name your plant The thick-leave- d plants need very little water and your trouble most likely is over watering Send a leaf or two better still a and I can slip or cutting give more information Your Charge Account Inrited t" I ' ! ' ' : ‘ "—: '''s : - - ( 4 - - -1- -- -N - ' -- : 't ' ' c -: s - - : - a bought for almost nothing—since then the Daltons have discovered that it is a rare antique The picture below Is a 'view of one bedroom Mrs Dalton's mother often rocked her to sleep in the rocker t : - : 1 ':- :: t '' A ---' it''-- f' ' 4 - Ai ' - C B up ' tr - ' ""-- ' — - favorite of your uniformed beau 1 - - - 1 t 1 '‘ The amaryllis is a native of South Africa so in the warmer parts of this country it may be grown outdoors But in the intermountai n states it must be regarded as a house plant The true amaryllis is often confused with oth er tender bulbous specimens belonging to the family amaryllidacae—such as the hippeastru m the crinum and the bephyranthes In fact there is so litile difference: be- tween the amaryllis Proper and the hippeastrum that the former t'' 04f ' name has become the accepted ' e 1 one for the latter The amarylN r is however grows only during i '''''-while the fall and winter :'' hippeast rum will grow at any time or all year if properly ' cared for ''' ' 1 '': The bulb of either the amaryl- us or hippeastrum should be 'N planted in as small a pot as will ::' t accommodate it for it is when are these that potbound they 't soil The bloom best ':: ' specimens s 4 ri most suitable to the needs of :fr t " :-: ' :' :k i' " e-this South African native is ' - :::''' '? ::‘ t 'i leafof of composed equal parts ft ‘' '' mold sand and fibrous loam 4 '' 4 '5 '1 I The amaryllis bates to be dis- -: ''' 1 ) :' ' ' ' :ii' ::'i-Isi 1' so a bulb once plant- I: turbed i ' fr: 4 -t 1-0ed should not be interfered with '1 tit 7I 'k:3 ' 0 f !: le : several Instead i for ' years again 11 ': i :”' of repotting give top dressings ' p i ' of pulverized fertilizer to the soil i' '' ' li i I 1 ':: 4 and apply liquid manure when V t ''5A the flowers are forming :11 1 ' ' t"' V The flowers and leaves of the Al f" $ i 9' ' ''''" e ' l' true amaryllis are not produced ii t0k t i' 41 v ' It In- i f'i ' 'trI together in ever instance I1 1"' 0e' f"-4- ' ' ' 1t ' ' ' stead the naked thick stem ap- )1 0 4 s' pears bearing its cluster I ii-li t ' of three four or five lovely large ! ' ''" ::'? flowers in white pink red or 4i '''''''ll j 'kt i striped The leaves are at their ': 'I ' I1 best all through winter Then I i1 t '''''''1 ve IF die and and shrivel the '' I they I stem with arises flower 1 again It Jt 1 t its crown of blooms about June f lei 1 1 ' The hippeastrum produces 1 i flowers at the same time as its i tf ' z''' ' 11 The leaves are flourishing el 1 ' f 4 ' '4 dr A blooms are often smaller but ': '' fI i ''''''"s4shi1 3'e greater in quantity The most i 'common form is a particularly o140P-'"'n 1 i i1 - 1 ( ‘16 k t1 1 ' 1f 6 Readers ars limited to three each questions 2 Letters mast be typewritten or -in ink replica will be sent only in cases of necessitycannnt un4 This department dertake to landscape individual A landproperty for subscribers scape architect should Ins consulted for such work 1 ' I top member The architrave lower portion of the entablature is a plain surface above which is the frieze decorated with triglyphs which are evenly spaced rectangular projecting blocks with grooves on the face The cornice is of horizontal moldings projecting beyond the face of the building to throw water that falls front the rool a certain distance from ' the foot of the edifice The pediment is decorated with carved figures typifying an event or commemorating an achievement Different examples of the Doric style of architecture vary in their exact proportions but fundamentally they are so similar that only the thorough student can distinguish the variance Simplicity stability a n d are the keynotes of 5thtuerdGirnee:I sc Doric style ' J if It! 1 z: By Maud Chegwidden ito of all houseplants the amateur may grow the amaryllis is that which calls for patience blooms but which amply repays any care and troubl e with exquisite lily-lik- e There are plant lovers who have never been able to grow an amaryllis well there are others who have success year after year If t he bulb is a poor one that has been allowed to dry out good results can't be expected no matter how well it is cared for Rules for Questions :' - lf - 1414""'''4 : : it t'i ''''''i'-- ' -- r r''' Nei5 - i 1 : t t ' : ' ' ' -r i i- - - - ! A narrowing flutings slightly at the top as do the columns The height of the column shaft is five and one-ha- lf times the diameter of the base The capital of the column is one-hathe diameter in height and is composed of circular horizontal moldings with a square ' - 1 ' Patience Brings Lovely Blooms - :' - is baaed upon the unit dimension of the diameter of the column shaft at its base The baseless columns rest immediately upon the stylobate The shafts slightly pyramiding have20 shallow vertical grores ' ""'-'-4-44"'-'- ‘45 Expert Tells What to Do !flf LLIf ' - e 1 --- : 1 : J i ti ' 1 '''' 1 These views show the wonderful changes brought about by Mr and Mrs Ross F Dalton 1930 Laird drive by merely using their ingenuity time and a few dollars The top photo pictures the living room The chair on the left was t?))11 -- -:4)' ! STYLOSATE - ' 'z 4p 7 L 4' F -- ' 1)! t 1 ''''' - 5 it-vit'- : " --- i f - I' 1 s-- '' 1 -- k ' 11 I I i : i1 ''''') :114 ' --- -- - - -- '" t4 ' — f4Itt ' 11) i'l7 - — - i11 ) 1 ' A'kt''' lAi&o - v114 V 1‘ - ?-:' —-- N '' ' '‘''ktd:' 41 - Ai j-- - - (- 17 IN t 11 : :on - ( z iP - I J 0 t 41 4 -- r ' - 4 -- SHAFT I- i : -- (7: ft::---'- '7: 4 0 V I - 4 : I ' -- - t I tr---- iim1111 P Ii TOL iI 4'"?: 4- - 7 ve 7 11 i : Ill i COLUMN I - — '1 :1 CA I L !!' or gable forms pediment the end of the roof Each of the parts of the Parthenon bears a relation in dslzreectt emtahteicr each and all are f ::- ' " - 'W 1 --- t ir kl - : ' 7 I 0 i e - : 1 ft : ' - ' c:- 0 1u i 4 t - - ft ' - : I - ' s ": ?::::: '7': ? :: : - '''e'''''''f'''''''17'-''''''''''::'''''''- vt---- ' e logtReswifeey“o 2 i ' tAt' 55745 Look Snowed Under in f 14 ' 1- ling - the Parthenon at Athens the highest type of ancient Greek architecture The Parthenon is the most widely known of this Doric style The blailding s set upon a platform of three steps named the stylobate The columns rising directly front the stylobate are composed ofl the shaft and the capital Superimposed on the columns is the entablature divided into three parts: architrave frieze and cornice The 4 ' cost- Two old floor lampg i 1 ----' The actual construction of a building is physical but the desire to build or create is inspiraretional As a co'nsequence ligion has been the incentive to create the ultimate In design and the ancient temples are the only examples of their civilization now standing in any state of preservation the The Greek temples first buildings to assume definite were las a rule the forms simplest buanilddingnsc:stA elemental kind of rectangle longer than Its width with two roof planes leaning upori each other and forming a ridge at the center and with a gable at each end and the roof planes supported by walls or posts The Greek columned temples passed through many stages of development until they reached ' :34 ' z - - :: ' : '' - - - 1 A : i "" - -- - soil - -- ' essele a--gm —'-- - ' This is the second in a series of articles telling simply the highlights in the history of architecture killed by the frost and the elements will mellow and break up the :k - e tleearl ' A ' ' 't ' - 'r-- ' s i ''''''- 1: '4 '''"' ' :k :: F4k '3:"'11742"2 - 4- - '" t ‘ ''' '' - : 4 '' t'5 ? t '' a sf 4 '4 ' : - - 2metno'gl 4s : ' '' '' ' i ti3 t " : ::- 'm"'4 1 '' ' : 1"a' ineees 4:coo 7- -9 —7- Iglit r i!1- ' r- —sunny or shady—from wanIt grows in dering- Jew alone water and will be cheerful and healthy for months even in completely sunless comers Dig up all the unplanted or unused and : t T-- :‘ 4::--: - ''' ' '13 ti 'i' it - r ' - I f 7 I You can have lovely green - t S x4s -- - c ' t 1 : - ' " 07-7- c7: ' - '' ''' memories they didn't ories want to leave behind So for exaMple they have in theirhouse the old rocker Mrs Da1tons mother used to rock her to sleep many many years ago And that's why they didn't go Into huge debt to furnish their new house into which they moved on their first anniversary They took their parents' unwanted furniture and literally made It like new Then they found other old furniture in second-hand and made it shops Lke new too With painstaking work they fixed up the old furnishings Mrs Dalton made all the bedand drapes in spreads curtains work the house Needle-poiput new seats on old chairs Carpentry modernized other objects And then the "new" furniture took its place in the new house plans for which were I i s' --- 1 - ' 1 i'' ( J 'III 1 WpristioNLIZEIff fora '! I J ):7'i''''--- I Id!! ery in any window of the house ' I -- - ': ' 1:-- ? ! tst t ' ' t 3t ' " f r 'i t- 1 -- ' I g ENTABLATURE tilitIONfitillitil$1011111 amir Ages— II: mmeliktildt wait for spring Dig cannas when tops are frosted and store the bulbs with earth adhering in a cool cellar 1 $ '1 4 I ' i 1P - - 61p -- $ - - PEDIMENT ' - - I s's 4 1 1 1' I 4" ' - 'S ( - i 4 ' - i ! t 'N '" ' 't -- r 11 ' il t 3 Noir7 i"'''' I I ' - 1 r) I' i' - i et -- -- 1 IVell the Datton'n have mem- pI I handful of bone meal into the soil around rose bushes now Do not prune roses at this time ' tft '1 It's a wise plan to scratch a - 1 ' t :' ' 1 - : '' ' '' AS - - - 1 ' k: "' i -4 A z - ' - ----- I a it e —Architecture Through the They should immediately have been in the ground weeks ago for best results v i ''' i ' : that ri ? 4 4-:'- 1 ' - 7- i : 1 '- ' - t? k 4 - tt '2- 's i - tf ' -1 ''''' 4 i 'I - 7's fr -- t 4 3 — - ''' 1 1 v f2 a - 1 - Y :' k ':- '' ' '' - t I 4 - v phonograph record the the first time vase was chipped when baby knocked it from the table the while learning to walk chair where father has all his dreams Memories are priceless beeieuse they are rare Not rare In that there are few of them but rare because there are no Memories are the duplicates rubjects for volumes of books Memories are the inspirations for countless effort I ' I 1 The Parthenon at Athens Plant all the tulip bulbs you can get—at once Stocks are not too plentiful Daffodil or narcissus bulbs must be plant- ' i ' 4 z i ' t t ' '4 t f that was playing when they kissed a ' - A - in complete- a ' - ' A i' I - f' ' ' a The 'i '' t Anything that has been used ness !' ' I - and memories that chines money cannot buy with the new Is irreplaceable ' - 1- ' ' ' Furthermore their yrn bolizes rare experiences and adventures that ccme from use sentiment that cannot be 'created by maa - ': ' furniture ?Urn itur a I ed Loss F Dalton of 1930 Laird drive but was carried right on over tho threshold of their attractive home These young people have used genius common serlAf and their handiwork abilities to fashion for ' themselvea a delightful home without incurring any of the worries and hardships of bezinning married life burdened with debt from the purchase of furniture - ' I -- Fall Duties In Garden ' 13 C 1 :: : : 1 e November 22 19 12! 5alt akt Zritinne TIjc - 4' SP 4- '''- - - - 1 |