17 MOOSEHEART MAGAZINE A Big Doll For You D-L-Y D-M-L- What is the name of this Doll? Fill in the blank spaces above and complete the Doll’s name. This is easy, try it. Write Aunt Alice and tell her what the name of this Dolly is, and she wi'l tell you how you can get a beautiful Doll over 15 inches tall, jointed at the shoulders and hips. It is not a cloth doll to stuff, but a real doll wearing a beautiful gingham dress with a cute little cap, socks and buckled slippers. It is a Doll that any little girl would enjoy making dresses, coats and caps for, so be the first in your neighborhood to get one. It is yours for just a little easy work. Aunt Alice has a Doll for every little girl, so be sure and write and tell her your name and address TODAY and she will send you her big free Doll offer. Address your letters to AUNT ALICE 30 Capital Bldg, Topeka, Kansas. Want This Home THIS HOUSE GIVEN AWAY Yes, this dandy six-room house will be given away to some deserving person. I have been doing all I can to fight the rent profiteers and make the “landlord hog” take to cover. I have given away eight houses and I am going to give away many, yes, very many more. I gave a house to Mrs. Murphy of Illinois, Mrs. Melown of Pennsylvania, Mrs. Leadbetter of North Dakota, Mrs. Kilmer of West Virginia, Mrs. Hartley of Minnesota, and Mr. Rider of West Virginia. These people are all happy in the houses I gave them! They bless the day they answered my advertisement. AIR!!I’ ill»A Th'3 « your golden opportunity to • ‘ VC ■ Uliracs 4 B lSB'S? frce yourself from the clutches of a I i| ■3 | ■ ■ hard-hearted landlord. After many years of LacElfTCi lOPd S ^lUSCilOS Payins rent a11 you have is a bundle of old rent receipts. Get out of the rent payer’s rut and make yourself independent. I am offering you the opportunity to put a roof of your own over your head, a protection to your elf and your family for all the years to come. This is the chance of a lifetime—do not allow it to slip thru your finders. COSTS YOU NOTHISSSG TO INVESTIGATE I do not a~k you for any money. I do not ask you to send me one penny of your money. It costs you nothing to investigate my liberal offer. All I want you to do i> to ru h me your name and address. Use the coupon below or send a postcard. ■You are under no obligation— not the slightest. I Will Even Buy The Lot on which to build—it can be easily arranged. RUSH THE COUPON You Risk Nothing My offer holds good anywhere in the United States. If you do not own a lot Don't hold back just because you do not own a lot. Remember you do not risk even one cent I only ask you to 1send me your name and address and I will se-d you p'ctures. floor plans and my big free house oiler. Send today before some one else gets ahead of you. FREE HOME COUPON fl. E. MOORE, Pres't., Home Builders’ Club, Dept. 6MM Batavia, III. Send me your free home offer. It is understood that this does not obligate me in any way. I Name - I J Town .___ ! Street--- useful stitches and other things that go along the line of sewing. After we learned to baste everything, make different kinds of seams and such things as that, we were taught to make buttonholes and even went so far as to trim and line hats. We are taught how to lay the patterns and cut out our own clothes, besides, to make them and learn something new each day. I have made skirts, dresses, middies and last winter I knit a cap and scarf. I believe, now, through my experience at MOOSEHEART in sewing class, I could make all of my own clothes and some for the younger children• Student Life at Mooseheart Baby Nursery By Luena Ames, Denver (Colo.) Lodge No. 21. . Miss Savage is Matron of the Baby Nursery. She has been Matron ever since she has been at MOOSEHEART, which has been nearly four years. She has charge of the little tots ranging from the age of six days to three years. She now has charge of thirteen babies, and her work in the nursery is to see that these little ones receive the very best of care. This she is very capable of doing, because she knows the care that babies should be given. She is kind and good to them and loves them all dearly. No partiality is shown, they are all treated alike, what one gets they all get. If one is loved they are loved in turn. Because she is kind and good to them they love her, too. In the very best of care that she gives them, she sees that they are well clothed and kept clean. If any of them are ill she immediately calls for the doctor; if they need special care they are taken to the hospital; but if they just have an _ear-ache or any such thing she care’s for them herself. In the afternoon Miss Savage puts them to bed for a nap. The rooms are well ventilated. The little ones are covered up well so as not to catch cold. At night if they should awaken, Miss Savage doesn’t do all the work, of course it would be impossible, so she has three ladies to help her. The four ladies do all in their power to give these little tots the best of care and to make babyhood at MOOSEHEART a happy one. Because of Miss Savage’s good qualities and her excellent work she is making a success in the nursery. Her motto for the nursery is “Love and Cleanliness.” Protests in Assembly Evelyn R. Kuhns, Anollo (Pa.) Lodge No. 201. Every evening after the demerits have been taken and the regular business of the Assembly is finished Mr. Adams calls for Protests. Protesting at MOOSEHEART is the act of standing up and explaining why, when, and where your demerits were given and then giving reasons why you think you do not deserve them. For instance, not long ago one of the boys protested two demerits he had received from his Matron for walking on what was supposed to be grass. The reason he did it was to avoid being late for church, and he also stated that he walked on the pavement most of the way. Some of the view points were given by the students. They said that there never was much grass there and that the boy just did it so as not to get to church late. These suggestions were cleared away when Mr. Adams told him that if he violated the rule of not walking on the grass everyone at MOOSEHEART had a right to do it. His Matron also said that if he had hur-CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE ers for this Sunday School came from Batavia and were volunteers. About 1917 a new building was erected called Industry Hall. The first floor of this hall was used for Assembly and Sunday School purposes and later the Sunday School was moved to the third floor of this hall. Later, this hall was needed for other purposes so the Sunday School was moved to the second floor, where it remained until the very hot summer days of 1919, when it was held at the Arboretum. After Roosevelt Auditorium was completed the Sunday School was moVed there where it has been ever since. Dr. Rondthaler has charge of the church service and Mr. Drake, the superintendent of the Sunday School, who comes from Batavia, conducts the school services. Classes have been organized according to ages and teachers from Batavia, Aurora and North Aurora come to conduct them. There is a choir of girls consisting of the Mozart Singing Club and the Senior Girls’ Glee Club. Recently an orchestra of ten pieces was organized under the supervision of Professor Gullotta for the Sunday School. What I Like Best About Mooseheart By Frank McFate, Chester (Pa.) Lodge No. 285. (South Loyalty) There are many things I like about Mooseheart. Some of them are the clothes, the food, the care that is taken by the doctors toward us, the musical part, the money that is spent on us yearly, and many other things. I do not think that any of us will be able to repay MOOSEHEART for what it has done for us. We may be able to pay by joining and working for the Loyal Order but at that it will be impossible. Above all that MOOSEHEART is doing for me, I like the school education and a trade the best of all. We have some of the best teachers in the State of Illinois and I am sure we get a thorough education. MOOSEHEART gives us a chance to go on to an engineering school for the MOOSEHEART HIGH School was entered on• the accredited list by the University of Illinois■ My Training in Sewing By Evelyn Kuhns, Apollo (Pa.) Lodge No. 201, (Purity Hall.) Of course, I could make doll clothes and little things of that sort, but I never once realized that some day I could be making all of my own clothes. This I began to realize when in 1917 after I had been at MOOSEHEART about three months I was assigned to sewing class. I was taught every step in cloth making from the time the cotton grew until it was sold out as cloth. I was taught how to knit, how to use a machine properly, how to make many $6000 a Year is Your Profit from founales a day. No experience needed. Largest concern oi >.ts kind ׳־n the world. Davidson soiu 9b in one week. _.׳ lynn 72 in three weeks spare time. Boyce ¿5 in one evening. New Aladdin light is a sensation wherever introduced. Five times as bright as electric. Won Gold Medal. Approved and used ny U. S. Government. Endorsed by 35 leading Universities. Farm-,e״r™ the money, they need this light, and 9 out of ״״kT,1 u uyG A n° opportunity in small towns and A DT׳r^^feDemXTrP^^vtime and evening seller. REQUIRED. Sample on free trial. vvrite for agency proposition and exclusive territory. ---------pigh! COCC FRIENDSHIP RING Mitt Every ring warranted five years. To make friends and introduce our Magazine and Ring Bargains, send 20 cts. for a year’s subscription t and this King, your size, with yor.r initials engraved, will be sent FREE, postpaid. H׳\ McPhiilips. CIS W. 43d St.. 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