Irv" In h-ffltbm ._-._-¢—-1 mrp-aw-Qhv“... was»: wmw- u- -- - -- ~ “i PAQ5..-TYY_E.N1‘Y;TWD _ §Q Woman ’s Realm f Social and Person ‘uémmooct on-vnaooouodau k renal“ v . i tag} ‘T Wu i ' a? 1*» 11/ -_ f v ., M \§ riYcti l':i~ lllt““-b‘ l?» H". Rut . ulill Queen A at cue I F I Til" Rl.‘ l: l!‘ H‘ B Beiinetl. -, . ...-iiu- on Sutur- was hostess .- niuli bridge \"\/e~l;~ c-ave a mail party of five ~ . tll Hotel 0h , ...'.i.; and iirsitetl atl- driminl lYIPildS in for slim)?!‘ 11M I socia. hour O was among entertaining Miss Hum aril ivlrs Miissen of murmh. ,. i .- ‘he guests of their si.~..r. .. L B Hunt D1115 week . O U O ‘.=.< Fannie saw-ens. of Trui-o ‘l\‘llQ Nluii .i\ lllilli to spend .l.\ wall 1W!" .~i.\l€l'. Mrs. H. Brown of the c. L; )‘.\"\ nzid l\lr. Queen Hotel I iivort-h enter- ,.. n .d tea on Wed- ll l I filinmses o.‘ thc nilrmry life at I. Bl‘lfll'lil\I'—.¢1llll‘l'U, were itivcn by the Dur-hv-s of Kent. to sales- lvomc-ii at a ohiiiw bazaar. when the Duchess was buying produce and gror ics for use in her house- nold. Apple jelly was chosen t-spcci- lily for the fllli'.\ifl‘_\' tea-"mle. as it I an especial favorite with Prince Edward. “He. iiril covers his face with it." tlit- D ’ll(=.\_ told Pamela Redni-i" ".0. ir of S11" Richard l-nd Lady R. tie Happiest congn-atiilritions are mt- aesday after-i.- lenxiczi lo Ivfz: and lVIl-w Harry Tidmarsh. the announcement 0f Iciiose mnrriivc came to their hicnrls Hi = ' After visiting in Bnnff they will spend the Qhrist- $53155???‘ c"... .1 rbnaou. un""'. . Design M: . .8 Crass .=- "h llllliélli~ are new and ‘Popular T":- Z2} HAPPENINGS I OF THE ‘ ..WEEK.. mus scapn in Hich River. Alberta. ‘ With Mr. Fred Blake. I t I Mfrs lVliiinic Wright. ut West» mount. P Q left last week fol‘ St Petcrsbiirp. Florida, to spendi the winter nionth‘ Elias Beryl DeBlois. who has been zit-feuding Nalherwood school a: ROHICHIM‘, N l3 ha- returned I huine to spend licr Christmas holi- (l‘."i".\ with livr parents, Mr. and Hr.- Novl D-"Rinis. " - t - i Ur . A. H. Mould is being wel- i-oiiti-d llfllllf‘ from a holiday visit to Nfaunc. Nexis York. - a - Mrs Pl-"W-r‘ and i101’ sister. Mixsi 1 '1 - Hooper ciilz- aiiicd dz», ul‘y at a smart bridge-tea atl the Canadian National Hole! on Ikuistlayi afternoon i t i The early departure of Prof. and i\fr.<. Louis D Thompson tor Corn- wall. Ont, is regretted by their _ numerous friends and they will be followed to their new liomc with mPDV good wishes for continued , health and success i a a a l Mrs. W. T. Parker was the guest .nf honour at several delightful ,social gatherings prior to her dc- ‘ nurture in the Now Year for Soiirls. Mrs. Benjamin Rogers Jr. gave a ‘bridge for Mrs. Parker on Friday ‘land on Saturday Mr. and Mrs. ,0. A. Beer entertained at a. mixed bridge. Mrs. James E. Harris had a tea onwednaday for Mrs. Par- l ker and Mrs. H. R. Large a bridge party on Thursday. O O Miss Alice Compton. of George- town has left on an extended visit ; to Boston and New York a a o ‘ Miss Helen Holman entertained V91’)? charmingly last Friday at Bridge for a number of her friends. ‘ o - - Mrs. Ben]. Tanton (nee Georgie Campbell) has been spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E Campbeil, Sum- . merside, o a e The Earl of Bessborough. former '. Governor-General of Canada and Lady Bessborough. were among the guests at, the recent week-end house party given by the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire at Chats- wortli. The other guests included the Earl and Countess of Cromer, Field-Marshal the Earl and the Countess of Cavan Lady Des- borough, Lord Richard Cavendish, the Duke of Northnunberland, Col- onel Bradshew. Brigandier-General the Earl and the Countess of Lu- ran. Lord and Lady Balniel. Miss Pamela. Cobboid, Mr. Phillimore. Mr. Knoblook. and the lvfrirquess and Marchionfsflof Hartington. O NM‘. and Mus. Melville Bradshaw, Summereide. gave a dinner party on Thursday EWQIIIIIQ, m; qwasiqn being Ml: Bradshaw's birthdlly. I U I Q Miss Dorothy Ellis. Winsome little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. n. 1:. Ellis, Binnmerside ga/ve a jolly birthdw mm on Wedncsdoy . WIXAL. 25.4 iii. s- w: \l-\'-“1I- 556-506066- i-Oc Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Alifilnillflclllhlflrfl 5A | c. than; , ilnUlilMBElf. 1B PARIS 9:30 a m.-"Parls Sights," bl’ Mr. Desforets. 'I‘PA-—2, 19.6 m , 15.24 meg. ‘LOKYO 4:45 p.m.--Nati0iial Program. JZK. 19.7 m.. 15.16 meg ; JZK. 19.7 m . 15J16 meg; JZJ, 25.4 m., 11.80 meg. BOSTON 51m p m_--W0l'l(l Youth Speaks. 11.79 meg. BUDAPEST. HUNGARY 6:00 p.lXl.—"Sll'.gl\l';; uuiigarj.’ HAT-A, 32.8 in.. 9 l2 meg. MOSCOW 7:00 p.m.—News and Program for English Listeners. RAN, 31. m,. 9.6 meg v 0MB 7135 p,l‘l"l.—l_,_\nl_.ll ti_\' Concert. ‘The ‘37-‘38 winiri" Siwrw So"- son. a survey; Folk Songs 2R0 31.1 m-. 9.6311192- LONDON 7:45 p m.{Quarter1i Talk-l, by Sir Noel Ashbridgc. Chief Engineer of thc British Broadcastinf Corporation. G511 25.5 ni., 11.75 meg; GSC, 313 l Trchnrul ‘ THE__ CHAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN__ | Dorothy no’. Letter Box We Pay a Heavy Price for Our Weakness and Folly When in Love, But the Results of That Folly Can Make the Best 0f it if Nerves Are Steeled LhP-i Ufi§flfill§flflflfl§I§fi§£ "U - - Dear Doi'otliji Dix-I am a young man 23 years old. I graduated from , high school with honors and was in my first year in college when I found out that I was an illegitimate child. Disgraced, humiliated and brokcn- hearted. I lost. ititerest in everything. Sacri- flccd my schooling and left for a distant city without even writing to my mother. i got .. lifl-‘illifln and have worked bard lor two Yelli- l-lave had two good promotions and am mak- ing a fairly good income. Laborlng hard at the office during the day and spending 10115 sleepless n ghts has been my daily routine. How I envy every boy and girl with a motlii. to whom they may look up, a mother honoi able and of whom they may be proud. Three weeks ago I decided to go home and persuade Mother to come back with inc. It “'41s we latte. There was no mother to ask. A Kin , elderly neighbor handed me a small box, in which was a note which said, in part: “Darl- ing Son, 1 can't blame you for what you hihc " done. Life has been so cruel to me tliu with death. even by poison. I will find peace." To think that I ani rca l_\ the cause of her death is almost driving me nsane. l am weakening under thc strain of the load-and have almost made myself believe that, like her, - with death I shall find peace, X. X. m.. 9.58 meg; ($513,315 m., 9.51 i meg. PARIS 8:00 mp-Talk by Mr. Archiu-"lrd (in English) TPA-‘I, 25.6 m” 11.72 meg. CARACAS 8:30 p.m.-Popular Music 5R6, 51.7 m.. 5.8 nicfl- BERLIN 8145 p m.-Diet in the Tropics. DJD.~ 25.4 m., 1177 meg. LONDON 9:30 p.m. -~ “Stradivarius? by Joan Adeiiey Easdale to commem- orate the bicentenary of the death of Antonio Stradivarius. GSD. 25.5 m.. 11.75 meg; GSC. 31.3 m., 9.58 meg; GSB, 31.5 m , 9.51 meg. YV- TOKYO 12146 a.m.—Natioiial Program- JZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 meg. SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA 4:30 am, (Sunday)—- Chimes from o. P. o. Sydney VKWE. 31.28 tn., 9.59 mcfi. AMorningSmile “Please. sir. 1 iinnk you're want- ed on the phone." “You think! What's the good of thinking?“ "Well. sir. the voice at the other end said. "Hello, is that you. W“ Old idiot!" aTftHncon on the occasion of her eighth birthday. The tea table was daintily trimmed with seasonal decorations and eight tiny candles illuminated a lovely frosted birth- dny cake. Party games ivere play- ed after tea and the litt‘c guests had a most enjoyable time. wish- ing their young hostess many happy returns as they took their o Q/‘WCQ You, Too. ‘Cjnhgecome a Suc- cessful Writer arc gaining in popularity day by day. The thrill of seeing your very own atoriec in print! The welcome cheques! You need not neglect your home. A famous woman novelist wrote her first stories whilc rocking her soil‘: cradle. She wrote of mother, BlSlEIl, home. Write about people you know. Young Dick Wilson eloping with pretty, penniless Joan, living on an allowance from his family. 1n choosing the right words to Ihow the conflict of their char- acters, assemble lists of synonyms: Joan in "selfish, pampered. ego- lltic or calf-centred." She "plans, schemes m- conti-lves." She hope: to "surpass, rival, uiitshine (I outvie" her friends. Dick is "im;~il' c, headstrong, IlSh or excitab v. ' He il "tactless, unfeeling or dscourteous." H0 ‘fliey arc colorful and ga-y when worked in colors yet they can be very i tries to "thwart. oppose, prevent forival vfli~ n ivonrwl in one color or white. Oroea stitch, o! course, is the fer for "11:.’ but conipliet" Iemt 20 r-eni’: in stamps or coin (com pocketed) to he Guardian Nccdlvivnrk Depart/meat. Use this coupon. To The (‘liarlnftr-iowl Bunion Needlework Dept. DINIGN NO. S178 HYPDISi of nll embroidery attches. For your linens wri could not fiiii a more popu-lar or pretty decoration. JIClIIllES transfers for complete alphabets in three sizes l Th‘ styles-J‘. lII-'VIIOS—~I'| inches, and M: inches, also trans- ' flllll "her" motifs i-n two sizes. > vialtcrn and lnmructluhl 811d Willi Milli PHICIOIIIIIDQIIQIQIIUIW; *m’______—__———¢-_-__—-——II lira-r! Address - - — — — — — - "__-__--_---I|Q1hQ—-——OO———§- ~ or check" Joan. Our 32-pagc booklet helps begin- ning writers. Hints on dialogue, style, plot, choice of words. Dil- Cllliélillllgfl story, article, novel. Bendmchiooliuioryom-oopy of Learn ‘Io write In: rwliomon to The Guardian. Borne Service, Addroaa. Be sum in wvite plainly your Nan-n, Address. and the Name of booklet. Answer: No one can read this pathetic letter without realizing how inexorable is life and how heavy a price we have to pay for our weaknesses and our blunders. Ncr can any one read it without choking up with sympathy for this poor, heart-broken, despairing boy and long to lielp and comfort him. However", what he needs right now is not patliy, but a brace. Something to put courage into his sou. and stle l into his backbone and make him realize that everything is not over for him; that. he is not a hopeless victim of a maligln fate; that he may yet do anything and be- conic anything that .t is in him to d0, and have many years of honor, prosperity and happiness before him. I urge him, in the first place, to quit brooding ovcr his birth. It is folly to deity that it is a handicap, but it is not one whose weight will keep liim from winn log out in the race of life if he has the courage to do so. Read the list of famous men who were “love children." Criiey did not let their origin crush them. Tlie yrose above it. And you do that, too, it you will. Never speak of your birth. Don't let yourself think of it. Forget it and other people will forget it, too. If you lived to be 21 without know- ing it yourself, realize how few people knew about it. All of us are of so much importance to ourselves that. we do not. appreciate of how little im- portance we ate to the outside world and how little interested they are in our affairs. You think that every one who knows you is discussing you and pointing the finger of scorn at. you and rehashing a scandal that is nearly a quarter of a century old. The truth is that not one of the peo- ple in the c.ty in which you are now living ever heard of it, and they are judging you by wliat you are and do yourself, not by an error of your mother's youth. Don't judge your mother too harsh.y. Her sin was to love not wisely, but too well, and for that she paid with p, lifetime of repentance and suf- fering that must. have awned for the wrong she did. ' Don't blame yourself too much that you were cruel to her when you learned the wrong she had done you. she understood that your very love for her and the honor in which you had always held her made your re- vulsion of feeling merciless. And she also understood that youth, that knows so little of life and its temptations, can never be just. A5 51,9 for- Eat/Bayou. S0 Y0“ should mrgive her and put her back in her shrine in your iear . Quit brooding over the past, son. Go out among people and take your part in the pleasures of youngsters of your own age. Work hard and make thc sort, of a man your mother wanted you to be. That will be your atone- ment to her. I O I l I O Dear Miss Dix—-I am the only child of a doting mot-her. several months ago I was married and I took an apartment in my mother's house. Since we returned from our bridal tour she has not left. us alone long enough to change our clothes. She wen brings orange juice to my bed- side in the mornings, but for me alone, thus hurting the feelings of my w.fe. I do not wish to be unkind to my mother, as I love her and slie has been good to me, but she is wrecking our marriage. Some of my friends call me a jellyfish; other sadvise me to have her head examined. Will you tell me what tp do‘? H. H. 'A.nswcr: | Any woman who does not realize that no matter how much her child- , ren love her, iior how much they appreciate her kindness to them, nor how grateful they are to her, they do not always want, her under foot when they are married and set up their own homes certainly does need the at- tention of a psychiatrist, or something. But there is nothing the matter with your mother's mind. She is just so obsessed by her devotion to you that. she has lost her perspective. She doesn't see you as a grown man with a. wife, but as a little baby in the cradle, who has to have his orange juice brought to him. She would da die you on her knees and rock you to sleep and never let. you take a Big Without holdinfl Y0" by the hand if you would permit it. Mothers like that—aiid there are millions of them-are among the most. pit able people in the world. because when their children marry they lose every- thing tliat makes life worth while to them. ch- But these possessive mothers. who are defcmuiieo never to let their children get out of their clutches, even when they marry, head the list of trouble-makers and are responsible for more broken homes and more divorces than any other one thing. The prejudiue against mothcrs-in-law is not ill-founded. The presence of one in a household is about as dan- gerous as a. stick of TNT ulnder the doorstep. Why any woman with ordinary commonsense can't realize that, her children want to be lcf i. alone sometimes with their husbands and wives; why she can't. understand that they have things that they want to say to cach other that tlicy do not want her to hear; why she can't appreciate |that her presence make sthem suppress the little caresses mid endear- mcnts that arc the sweetness of married life; why she doesn't suspect that. they want to talk about the things they are interested ln-cf which she knows amthing~nnd that they arc bored to extinction by her reminisc- ences of thc time John had weeping cough, and what. she said and the doctor said and the neighbors said, passes comprehension. It is nothing but selfldmcss that makes Moi-her impose herself on her children, and thcrc is, nothing the children can do about lt unless they make her read this article. Perhaps that, will make hcr stay in her own house more and give the children a bleak. DOROTHY DIX. I a SPECIAL ’ PRICES for the holiday lesson, on all IEBMANENTS ' GIVE BEAUTY THIS CHRISTMAS i~<j§3€4 s A REALLY PERSONAL GIFT I-ler hair styled by our thorough- ly experienced operators. -GIFT CARDS SUPPLIED- Try our FINGER-WAVES FACIALS and maulcuiuiis Yiiiltosc ‘Midi’ HAIRDRESSING PARLOR B. WALLIZR. PHONE I24! BOOK$ I ART! MUSIC KILL) aAAk mcgime-c cereal: One of the most popular cur- rent books in England is "F0!- bidden Journey" by Ella K. Mail- lart, the story of that great and perilous trek from Peking to Kash- , mir which she made in company , with Peter Fleming, London Times i correspondent. | Fleming's splendid book “Newsi from Tartary" appeared last year dill‘! it is extraordinarily interest- ig to be able now to read “Kini‘s" ncount of the same journey. Per- siiially I prefer her version. Anti ilic "difference in the books ls the difference in their attitudes to ..\e journey. Fleming's driving de- .' are was ever to push on, to accom- plish the journey—"Petei' seemed, to be less afraid of finishing up -.ii the depths of an Urumchi prison than of 3e. ig home too late to sli00t grouse in Scotland.” Kini "would have liked thc journey to cantinue for the rest of her life. I-‘lie was in the fabulous country of her dreams where “the caravan trails that were as old as the world, still wound." She takes time out for living, for thought. for assimilation. And from her one can understand the joy of the journeying. Some cf her descrip- tive phrases are siiperb—"...And at the time of year when watch dogs are no more than balls of hear-frost crystallized round a warm sleep, I spent nights in felt tents..." After they reached India Kini travelled back to Rance by air- plane nnd in conclusion marks the astouiidipg contrast from going fif- teen miles a day to fifteen hun- dred! -— "I had so got into the habit of moving at the same rate as people did a thousand years ago, with the camels, that now I found it difficult to realize I was every day flying over new coun- tries inhabited by different races. Centuries of history! Cradles of religions! They seemed tn be hud- dled into a little space, whereas from Peking to India, Asia had. seemed endless. But though Eu- rope was so small, misunderstand- ing was more rife than ever amongst its occupants. Yet they all have fresh water and grass growing on their lands...Night was falling when the vast swarm of lights that was Paris appear- ed in the north. Suddenly I un- def-stood something. I felt now, with all the strength of my senses and intelligence. that Paris. France Europe. the White Race. were noth- ing-The something that counted in and against all paiticularisms was the magnificent scheme of things that we call the world." Today. December 18th, marks the two hundredth anniversary of the death of Antonio Stradivari. most celebrated of the masters of the art of violin making. Born in Crcmuna in the plains of Lom- bardy, Italy. Stradlvari lived for ninety-three years and spent seven- ty of them making violins. Cremona was the home of many famous old families cf fiddle mak- ers — the Amati, the Guarnierl, and the Stradivari families. An- tonio who had learned his craft in the workshop of Nicolo Amati had two sons who were also violin makers. Hendrik Wlllcm Van Loon in "The Arts" gives his opinion that the climate of Crcmona, may have had something to do with the suc- ccss and establishment of the great. fiddle making dynasties in that dull little city-"The air in Cremona is both hot and dry and this allowed a man like Antonio Stradivari to do all his work in an open workshop on the top of his house. Furthermore, Cremona was situated on an old trade route from cast to west which made it easy to import the right sort of wood from the other side of the Adriatic. Good violin making. Van Loon goes on to say. is mostly a matter of time. The old craftsmen could afford to let their wood hang in thc sun, they could let their varn- ish siiik in. When a customer was in a hurry. Stradivarl told him to wait half a year or go elsewhere. This tremendous improvement in violins and the violin family play- ed an important role in the de- velopment of music as composers did not bcgln seriously to write music for orchestras until after this perfect state of violin pro- duction had been attained. The biccntenary of Stradlvarl’; death ls being celebrated in New York by a special concert in Car- negie Hall on December 20th. It is being given by the Stradivarius Memorial Association, an organ- ization which was recently incor- porated on a national basis for the purpose of “encouraging, aiding and developing talent among music students of unusual ability by making available to them. by loan or gift, fine musical instru- mcnts of recognized masters." Efrem Zlmbalist, who owns one of the finest Stradivarius violins in existence. accompanied by an orchestra under the direction of Dr. Walter Damroach, opens the concert with the Bach E Maior concerto for violin. All the string musicians ln thc orchestra are to be equipped with Stradivarius in- struments. Sascha. Jacobson, the Musical nrriquartet. inn the Stradivarius Quartet. appearing later on the programme, will also on Stradivarius instruments. Among those on the nonm- nhlp committee m. Towenlnl. Kreisler, ltnlwllki, Zimbflbt. Pulvio Buvich the ‘Italian Airbu- sador. Jaacha Ifelfetz. 8H1!!! 301W unit, londrt Willem Von been. IHI: AND HER HOUStWIFE DECEMBER 13,1991 "we -=:>'o'-:io'o1a CHRISTMAS clirlstmas is a time of secrets So I'll whisper one to you, Grandpa says that all who try it. Find that every word is true; : 'would you have a happy day? “Give some happiness away." Grandpa. says this little secret V Should be carried thro’ the year. And if all would try to heed it, Earth would soon be full of cheer. "would you have a. happy day? "Give some happiness away." (By H A. Lynan) DEEDS Very slight deeds and words may have a sacramental efficacy if we can cast our self-love behind us in order to do and say them.- Georgc Eliot. PROCRASTINATION Procrastination is the thief of time. Defer not tilt tomorrow what may be done today. He has three hands, right, left, and a little be- hind llihld. ETERNAL THINGS Nothing is eternal but that which L; done for God and others. That which is done for self dles-Aughey SILENCE To silence another, first be sil- ent yourself-Seneca. SACRIFICE You cannot win without sacri- ficc-Charles Bwdon. PEACE Peace of mind is worth more than all things else. TRUST Trust not him that hat/h once broken faith.-s_hakeepeare. THE MIND The mind is the only force in nature that doesn't wear out with use. Your mind makes your work and your work makes your mind. The more your mind is exercised the greater it grows. Therefore, the business in which you would succeed is unimportant. The one thing to realize is that your mind is a machine which once set in motion 510mg the right lines, will make success a cer- talnty. You want success. It will be yours if you are willing to pay the price for it. And the price is hard work and the sacrifice of all your other wants. All your habits have been formed ACTIVITIES by your mind. Most of those liabiu are waste habits which WA“ never carry you anywhere. Your hat-q job will be to scrap them and form new habits. It will be a task of severe (liSCl- pline to get your mind to "iicik! But if you will have thc gm w tackle the job you will in a vi-iy short time be conscious o1 :1 sump of efficiency which will niukc l'i'.\\ the doing of the hardest things, h USE PLENTY 0F PINS Use pienty of clothes ])lll.s u; hanging the laundry on the Lin, Careful pinning will saie mum ironing and pressing. BLUE MIRROR!!!) 'l.'AliI.E Blue mirrored jilate g‘a a llllliiwg a satisfactory and very lowly n.1,. ner table top. FOR WEAK EYEs. One housewife, wliosc eye.» are none too strong, has a (1111311) pii.r of dark glasses which slic kflip; in with her clotliespiiis. 'l‘licii wlrii hanging out the white clollug. in the bright sun the glare docs not bother her and the change from the subdued light of the base. ment laundry is not annoying. A very smart shoe for early fall wear is the flve-eye‘ct oxford iii black suede, with cutout lattice workings in moccasin outline oii the vamip and black calf toes. THE coorcs f comm ’ 14.. ... ell-4dtulu One cup juice, 7 cups sugar. 21-2 cups water, green coloring, 1 cuii bottled fruit pectin. Add juice 'of 8 to 12 limes to grated rinds of lialf the limes and let stand l0 minutes. Press juice through small clcili. Measure sugar and Jul-cc added to water into large saucepan and mix. Bring to boll over hottest fire. and at once add pectin, stirring emi- stantly. While mixture is coining to a. boil, add coloring to glvc ric- sired shade. Use coloring \\‘l1lL‘l1 fruit acids do not fade. Then brim: to a full rolling boll, and boil llllffl 1-2 minute. Rlemove from fire, skim pour quickly. Cover at once iiitli - hot paraffin. This makes about 10 six-ounce jars of jelly. ' For Bad Winter Cough i Mix This Remedy at Home’ s,‘ Quick Relief. Big Saving. So Easy. No Cooking. This well known rccipq is used by many thouiiands of housewives, because they have found that it gives them a much more dependable remedy for die- trcaaing winter coughs. It's so easy to mix-a child could do it. ‘ From any druggist, gct_21/, ounces of ‘Pluex, a compound containing Norway Pine, in concentrated form, well known for its eficct on throat membranes. Then make a syrup by stirring two cups of granulated sugar and one cup FOR of water a few moments, until ¢li>~--l\ ul- It‘s no trouble at nll, mid illkvs luit i: moment. N0 cooking nccdéll. Put the Pint-x into n lli oz. butt!" Burl add your syrup. 'l‘liis girt-s you IU ounces of cough rcmctly, uiur-uiilly quick-acting and dcpt-iulnhlc. llllilrlfnsl got four times as tum-ii cough lllflfllPlll" or your moncy. lt llt‘\'l.‘l' spoils, lilltl 1:4 very pleasant .hilrlrcu inw- it. You’ll be surprised by thc wny il ltllilllf. 1 llll VI hold of severe coughs, giving satisfying relief. It loosens ill" it soothes the irritatvd nu-niliriiuv. helps (Elfllf the nir pnsflngvs. Bil-m funded if it docsirt pleusc III <‘\'t'l‘_ msmou ouioes l THE HOME DRESSMAKER Little schoolgirlts who ‘ike to look attractive in their leisure will be delighted with a houseboat for Xmas gift. It may zip right up to the neck or button-riglit-down- the-front. It may have a Peter- Pan collar or a perky i-ever collar for those who prefer a vee neck. A warm flannel housoooat in l0 comfy in breakfast “in" and comfy to don after dinner to write hcme school lessons. It's such an inex- pensive gift and so easy to sew. You've practically only shaped gorse to join. 'l‘he pattern and ma- terial in a guy Xmas box will be a. moat acceptable gift to your little niece. Style No. 3421 ls designed for sizes 8. 10, 12 and 14 years. Size fl requires S 1-8 yards of 35-inch ma- terial with 2 1-2 yards of 3-inch ribbon. Send fifteen cents (150 In stamps or coin (coin preferred) Imp coin awfully. address to F‘ “lottatown Guardian giving:- Btylc N0. M91 Silo...“ -~¢ 000000 Name Shunt Addrell Qley - Plwinoe