This Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt was offered as a kit to purchase in 1933. I like the idea of swooning over hundreds of pre-cut hexagons. And the price can't be beaten!
If quilts have taken the country by storm, then the hexagon Flower Garden, or Grandmother’s Flower Garden, or the French Flower Garden – whatever your locality is calling it – well, it’s a whirlwind! It’s not so easy as a nine-patch to seam up, but it really is lovely enough when done to pay for all the stitches. And if you get it ready cut – all the hundreds and hundreds of little hexagons exactly alike and ready to sew, it is a pleasure!
The colors are exquisite, each flower, of is it a flower bed, starts with a yellow center around which is a circlet of six orchid hexagons. This has a row of 12 peach color pieces encircling it with light green to complete the block. These are set together with the garden paths of white into a thing of beauty. No. 326M is the assortment for all of these cut hexagons with white border to complete a large quilt, 60 by 96 inches. Materials are fine weave and fast color, and we always allow extra units for mistakes. An instruction sheet makes the placing of each hexagon a simple matter.
No. 326X is a pillow, one block to piece for the top with plain back about 15 ½ inches square.
If you want the design alone, this can be furnished in our quilt book, No. 631E. This book also contains cutting patterns for 11 other quilts.
326M Cut Materials for a Quilt, complete $3.48326X Cut materials for one Block or a Pillow 50¢
631E Patchwork Pattern Book with Grandmother’s
Flower Garden Pattern and others 15¢
Send or bring order to the Pattern department, Wisconsin State Journal, Madison. Allow a few days for delivery.
Wisconsin State Journal Madison, Wisconsin 10 August, 1933
From the same page in the Journal came this helpful article:
And these appealing dresses:
And does this parenting problem sound familiar?
Reasonable Control of Children By Parents Helps Solve Radio Problem
By Garry C. Myers, Ph.D.
The radio, like many other recent inventions, has great possibilities for effectual education and home recreation. Sometimes it educates in directions not desirable, and affords recreations of which we parents disapprove.
But always we have the privilege to turn the dial.
Nevertheless, in most homes children over six or eight either persuade their parents to allow them to listen to what these youngsters like most, or adjust the dial themselves, regardless of their parents’ wishes or forbiddings. Or, disallowed to tune in on certain programs at home, these children may go to hear them in a neighbor’s home – adding serious complications.
If your child or mine listens in to programs we are sure are harmful to him, we might as well admit that we have seriously failed in parental control somewhere along the line. For our own children’s sake I see no good reason why we should put the blame on the broadcasting station. But if we are socially minded and have regard for the children in homes in which parental control is not well established – that means most homes, I guess – we have a moral obligations to protest vigorously.
The more fundamental problem, however, is the one of parent education for reasonable parental control. Unfortunately, as I see it, most parental educators, in books and articles and lectures, not only have ignored restraints essential to control, but have condemned such control as dangerous to the child’s personality. Imagine the parents keeping a child of eight from listening to a blood-curdling program by appealing to his reason!
Where there are very young children, let there be on soft, quiet music of good quality; the same for the family at meals, preferably no radio at all then.
Worst harm from radio seems to come in homes where a station is dialed and allowed to run on loudly and continuously, willy nilly. Wise parents make it a rule to dial intelligently and never to have the radio on when conversation is likely or desirable. Think of the shrieking, ugly voices which attempt to rise above the raucous radio!
Within reason let each older member of the family have his own selections, no one member choosing all, but always with the rights and feelings of the other members taken into account.
We parents ought to be able to cultivate taste for good music in our children by beginning to expose them when very, very young to the best. And there is good music on the air.
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