I l I ` iii I 1, i . ‘M ir; _,__ g.. /_"1, ez i' 'J “t v . .1 ». i." rj' 1: gs ~". i in ,v » ,i i f' _ ,-1 Ao ii 35." .‘~.~f7*~7`f? ._ ..;»,;___$ .i if . i; E . 'I it S ti V ' J . Q5 .. tif ijt to gtf it If lr. di fi -...~‘?{~`5* v ‘iii fit > . 2-12*-fl ru- s .. ffl .iii _._ 1 4.(~ ‘.»,~ F .f 'xt' 'i ‘:1_i@. “l» .-1, ‘ -";;.’.' it ., . - l ~ » . » » s. ` if# ' :ki 71 ,_ _eil L . f *_ .__, »- I .xii H, ‘iii . 2;' 1 , .ri -o > .’> e. 1 \ THE M0'l`liEB_ JOB I* N9-1715' i-Sift hh-rd to be a mother. The; really isn't very much to The ‘ISYS 8-To Just exactly like each _ other- 'YW Slmlill' shut your eyes and wander through. Ihr 6 o‘clock is time enough for rising, 'And getting all the children washed and dressed, And breakfast cooked-it really is ` surprising. But mothers never seem to need ‘ B. rest. The lunches must be packed and ` jackets rounded, ‘And everybody soothed and sent ' to school. To say that mother rushes is un- founded- She’s nothing more to manage, __ as a rule. Unless it is to finish piles of sew- ing, And cook and wash and iron and scrub and sweep. To oi-ddr food and keep the furnace going- And then, perhaps, to hide her- self and weep! And when at last shela tucked - them under covers, And seen to door that dad’s for- got to lock, friumphantly, at midnight, she discovers She’s nothing more to do till 6 e'clock. -Jane Burr. TAKING ALL PRECAUTIONS Thrifty Abordonian-No. Mrs. Gordon, I‘ve never been to the pictures. You see, I’ve always felt that if I dldn't like them, they wouldnt give me my money back -and if I did like them I would want to go again." At the Council Meeting Chairman: “What this town needs is a. supply of clean, fresh milk. and the Council should take Xie' bull by the horns and demand HISTORIC TREASURE IS WELL PRESERVED 'A _lub manufactured in 1830, bearing a. portrait of King George IV, is one of the historic treasures preserved by Mrs. H. Walker' of Metchosin. B. C. Turned out in the year of King George IV’s death in 1830, it is in- scribed -“in memory of His Late Majesty King George IV, born August 12, 1762; ascended the throne January 29, 1820; publicly proclaimed January 31, 1820. Died June 26, 1830, aged sixty-eight years" It is of cream china and stands six inches high, Patterned in royal purple, the portrait is life~llke. FOR, DANCING seen on New York dance floors were a soft white chiffon dress, ahined from neck to the hem, and fitted at the waist with a soft silk girdle. With the dress was worn a quaint shoulder cape. also allover ahirred. the only ornamentatloh be- ing a big brilliant buckle at the waist and a clip to correspond at the throat. Another effective dress was of gray mauve net and lace in the same shade, trimmed with a. big bunch of yellow flowers worn far down on the left side, and ac- companied by a demure shoulder cape of matching materal. vnitv wma aaifrs The position of the walstline is unchanged in the Vionncnt collec- tion shown in Paris, but there is a slightly higher waisted silhouette suggested because the belts are three or four iches wide. some are striped, others ale draped and knotted sashes. showing beneath boleros For daytime, other belts wider suede belts. beautifully en- crusted with colored leathers and metal in Chinese designs on black afternoon or evening gowns. SILVER LEAVES . 'Iwo wedding gowns are shown with sliver leaves forming a cluster across the top of the head, and no veil- 'l`EKiS é°°d .bf The standard for ' vb-do __ , -»--_-, ._ . - _ _ ._ , , _ _ _ _ __ _ _ The HOUSE WIFI' ond ~ ' . Dorothy D1x’= Letter B<»x.| ' . , _ ~ Don’t Worry if Your Husband is Not a ‘fTa1k- ~ e ._ _ ~ ative” Man-He is Never 0verintere_sted Quality wnnuirrrns Fnnnzn ANI: 'rua rtuivmnn c.\N”r,a_n naacnnn Do not wait for a severe frost be- fore protecting your outside pipes and cistern.; next winter. The old countryman_'s method is very satisfactory. First cover the entire surface with straw, keeping it se- cure with strlps of pipe binding, a. .form of hessian sold for the pur- pose. An outside cistern can be protected to some extent by wrap- ping it in felt or sacking. Prevention being better than cure, never forget on frostly nights to turn off the water at the main, and to empty the pipes of water. If the pipes are frozen do not light the kitchen fire, or a. burst boiler may result. - If the sink pipes are frozen pour boiling water down the sink at in- tervals. Put a. bucket of boiling water near to the plpw so that the steam plays on them .Pour boiling water on the pipes ‘ outside. A lighted gasrlng or a small electric fire placed near to the pipes helps to disperse the ice. should a burst occur and a plumber not be at hand (they rarely are in these circumstances), first turn off the stop-tap, then empty the cylinder of writer. To check the flow temporarily bind a towel thickly round the pipe. Press a piece of putty into posi- tion round the burst, and, if it is still oozing, apply a wide piece of adhesive tape. See that all water pipes are ln good condition at the beginning of the winter. A thin pipe, or one that is patchy from repeated rc- pairs, is likely to collect ice. Steps attract lee less readily lf treated to one or two coats of dis- temper paint. Its surface assists the water to run of before lt has had time to form loc. In any case, add a large handful of common salt to the water in which the steps are cleaned. GREENS Green runs an interesting-gamut this spring with the strong hard emerald tone probably leading numerically in woollen costumes shown. The shades most used are emerald, Chinese green (dark and light), apple green. ROUGE TROUBLES The woman who has trouble put- ting her makeup on smoothly and evenly so she will look the same day after day (not blushingly red one and too pale the next) should experiment with different kinds of rouge and spend a good deal of time learning how to put them on correctly. Rouge should never be blended below the imaginary line from the end oi’ the nose to the tip of the ear. Keep it well up on your cheek bones where pink would show if you had a naturally high color. Don't put it on your ears, hollow in your throat, eyelids or under your chin. Pick a shade that makes you look naturally healthy. Cream or liquid rouge ought to be _applied after foudation and be- fore powder. Dry varieties (best for oily skins) should be put on after powder Powder, of course. stays on lon_;e~ and looks smoother if you use a cotton pad to press it firmly against face, forehead and throat. whisking off the surplus several minutes later. It always should match exactly your complexion, whether you're suutanned of lily- white. Lipstick must be put on from cor- ner to corner and along the inside edges which show when you laugh are in bright colored suede worn on dark costumes, also these are and talk. Eye makeup if used at all, should be_\ised sparingly. If secret-A famous medicated skin cream every you are one who touches your up- per lids with a bit of white vase- line, remember that this,-too, de- pends on subtletly for flattering effect. Vaseline that runs down at I the corners_and makes lids look greasy instead of shiny is an ugly sight indeed. . REDS ARE VARIED Red shades this season centre around the brilliant’ yellow-cast Chinese reds generally, although there is it wide range of red shown, including Nanking red, carrotty red, rouge originale (like Pom- pelan), rose led, fire, maroon, ras- berry, mulberry. ___.__.__ b POWER PRAYERS. m olined to reply: “The Lord's Experts are agreed, however, that many times as the sacred mantra Mani Padma Hum," which, trans- _ lated. means: "O God? The`Lotus- W throhghout Tibet and over a large at part of Northern India to an ex- so lent that almost defies calculation. ca Every devout _ Lama throughout Tibet has his little prayer-wheel, which he turns by hand as he walks along, and the prayer in that wheel is that quoted above. In the “gompas" or worshipping prayer-wheels which the devout may turn on the payment of a small fee. A prayer-wheel eight feet high may contain the same mantra about a hundred million in upon which the paryer is p A few turns means that ~the in prayer has been "uttered" a billion Di times or more. _ near every Tibetan temple and slninc may be seen flags fluttering in the breeze, all adorned with this mystic phrase. It is also carved endlessly on the rocks and on slabs of stone to form long walls, many yards in length, near sacred buildings and moun- tain passes. Its words are the first words taught to babies, and it is the last paryer murmured by the dying. Kew Gardens. Kew Gardens, London's famous horticultural park, covers 280 acres. SPUN-METAL FROCK SHOWN IN DONDON All-metal frocks made of a new fabric woven from spim metal are to make their appearance in Ion- don shortly. They will be one of the novelties of the British Industries Fair at the White City from Feb. 17 to 28. The material glistcns with many- hued rainbow colors when high strikes it. Another novelty will be all-bend evening coates. These arc to be made from fine woollen material into which tiny crystal, black or vividly colored beads have been woven. TANTRUM MAY BE PBOTEST AGAINST ANY FR,U>STRATION Poslbly no problem in child- muragement has been more dis- cussed than the tantrum. Many parents, however. continue to re- gard it as something abnormal. The tantrum is not abnormal. It is merely anger generated by frus- tration. If this is abnormal. then all of us are queer. What day pas- ses without some form oi rage besettlng us? We may not tum blue, hold our breath or lie screcch- i ing on the floor, but we lose our ap- ` petites, or get it headache or swear, according to our pattern. The tantrum is rage expressed. in the child’s pattern. Maybe he has been over-indulged or hli natural instincts to play for acquire) have been too persistently thwarted, but there is a cause, be sure. In some children he is set in his habit. At any rate. he explodes. He cannot talk himself into getting his way, so he stages it. Tiny children, like many older ones too. are not lawyers. They are not "articulate," which means lack of power to put your case. They have no silver- tongued terms to iustlfy what they deem their rights. ANGEII. SOMITIMES DELIGHTS Mothers today knpw pretty well how to deal with the tantnim child, for the moment. They let him alone. deny the prius he is* working for, ond even resort. to the "faint" cure, cold water suddenly llipliea. But usually the breath- holder comes to very rtiooly when he tina himself neglected. » ltistruo thatmany totanover. avi over the tantrum habit. Long after they cease' tobo toddlers they continue to stan outrageous sooner. . » ft is also a fact-that many of those who “a " aobe ound are muon- not cond a`mrll,“bni hav|,aioroiy_ It islam _` tolepooulste on tisuits which have been finely cr If you were asked what partl- yolks and the halibut which has cular prayer is said more than any 119611 Put throuzh the food chopper other, you would probably be ln. 3 times Add remaining ingredients. an Prayer " 218 whites. Tum into a well greas- there is no petition uttered so 5'* SP P P - ing l inch of hot water, and bake of th Buddi ists f T`b t. "Om in 0 I ° ‘ C nrm . . . about 35 minutes. Serve ith a cream sauce. Jewel. Hail!" It is repeated daily you md” I new _kind of BWI” times, so compact is the thin npaper ings. Sprinkle with salt and pepper r ted. a placespof Tibet there are huge 1% cups tomato Juice nd dredge with flour. Brown well wi Then we have prayer-wheels of dill pickle on each. mold the driven by wind and water, while bacon ends back over the steak and ' i THE COOK ’S i CORNER " t ll.~\L|BU1‘ MOLD . 16 salted soda biscuits 1’/I cups milk 3 egg yolks, well beaten ~ ` 1 lb. halibut 1 tablespoon grated onion 1 teaspoon _salt Dash pepper 'il tablespoons parsley, minced 3 egg whites. beaten stil! Method: Pour the milk over the shed and allow to stand I inute. Add the well,-beaten egg ri lastly told in the stiiflybeaten mold, place on several thickness. of new a er in a an contain a moderate 350 deg. F. oven until And I have one more recipe for eak, which is easy to prepare gnd easy to serve since it requires no rving. INDIVIDUAL SWISS STEAKS ist lbs. sirloin Steak . 6 slices side bacon 3 small dill pickles 1 tablespoon Worcestershire' sauce 3 tablespoons minced onion Flour Method: Have the steak. out ‘A- ch thick. Cut into 6 equal serv- hot fat. Remove and lay each ece on a strip of bacon, Sprinkle th grated onion and lay a half around the pickle and (ggtcn wm, tooth picks. AITBIIKO in a greased casssemle, P°ur over them the tomato ,iuioe and Worcestershire sauce. Add more seasoning to the tomato juice lf necessary, and bake in a. moder- ate 375 deg. F. oven for about 1% hours or until tender. You can substitute round steak if you wish, but this is nicer made from the slrloin. naturally. the number of people in the world who are entirely governed by mee,-_ Anger is a perfectly delightful emo. tion. whether we_ think so or not. W* "We W be Hood and mad at everything and everybody. som- time; we are justified become rlizhteous race has a place. But the "habits" of hat/2. Jealousy chin-csr- rvlng, all blood brothers oi’ rage are different. We could discud them. so we hang on, Any Divvholozlst can nu us that. LIFE NEEDS REVAMPING . Mig? aJ°t¥ ar anim content, ra o mise broken health. thin nerves" . °fh€:_` thing-S. It never pays. Belf- V con ol does not mean merely held ing`in. That does not remove the 1 g _ emotion itself. Real'self.e°;m-or gg I 1011K. hard business to acquire °°D-Si-was of uuiok substitution or mother rthousht as quietly ut W.. sible and a new outlook that will gl/eegltuiuy weaken the anger com. The tantrum child should not 1 bo merely neglected when he hu his spasms. Hia whole routine of liie may need revamping. Perhaps lf he is kept busier he will sweeten \1D~ Perhaps he needs to be put out more] Regularity of hours may chlflle the picture, Maybe there is a teaser in the house. But ln some manner or other, studied out by the mother, he needs to have his F316-habit undermined. The real °“1’¢ depends on discovering the cause. if possible, THE OLD COAT The best pieces or an om fur €.°.“.f..2’3.‘.‘. ".‘3.{‘l'“l° ’..“.“l. ‘ ‘é°°“°‘°“ comm U urnover W ggi! SCARF f ear a sem 1 1 knotted round the negffymuwfi the knot round to the bel; go thnt you _look as if you were wearing a baby: bib-but 'fn some bright ailloured materiel that won't mat. > I O-0600-O-0094-O9 '1 i - in all the Little Unnecessary Details of the Home and People You Have _ Met-_-The Less He Talks the ' Fewer Arguments You Have _ near Miss nix-will. you explain to men at large, and to my amd husband in particular, that to talk things over from all au8l€a'iB ¥\0t t»° ment. I am of a temD¢l'l\' argue. He has a natural distaste for argu ment that finds ease of soul and comfort 0! position only in oonflding in and clearing my mind to my heipmate. Should I then respect his dislike of arguing and suppress my nat- ural impulses to ask his advice, to seek his opinion and to live my own? Cannot he ali' preciatc this and be glad of a v_v\f2`s onlin confidence? Why can’t he Nalin that this is my safety 'valve and mlkes !0r my C001 wntment in his home? Can he Ywt 588 ethically that there must be something one- sided about an issue that will hear 11° °“‘ cusslon? I OUGHT T0 KNOW. Because men are men and women BTG women, it is not possible for them always. tv see things nom the same point of view~ And they differ most is talk. h are enamored ofthe sound of their ovmgoiggadhgbiiglfiydiogfendii ?°rever and ever. but the ¥f°~`~° H33' 3-_ity of men consider conversation simply B-S U m°““3 1°: °;“‘l‘r’_?g‘;f§:n;" B . se B is Answer one of the things about which d htth hadtoeaythev PS ~ peeed vhhil fhgdogiaat/2 isemwraiher than a pleasure In particular, they e no profit in threshing over old straw out of) which tél1e_y_::a_lni;0tt:;I;\°?: single new idea or suggestion. When a Su Jwt 15 I1 9 0 » finished, and they forget it. A th ni talk just for tuik-S sake is the chief Joy and excitement in life. They never g - th b ect until it is threadbarv weary of it. They can discuss e gamma Su iostmortem over wmemmg invalid DY H8 B tl _ It assuages the .sormw of a Woman gvlidl ‘tjilxénileidg and dgxnto her to be able to talk D/b0’llt X101' grief. ; Th n, wh doeslft like lc talk. and t\'\¢ W°m““» whosgidsitextealkograbiow nina;/:th spgntaneous combustion. All V-hit I W" suggest is that you and your husband try to make some 801'! 01 I °°“:°1" sstlonai compromise. Inasmuch as it makes YOU NDP! £0 WU mm ° "Y single thing you have done arid thought during the dill, U-ld W 8I>€l\l`| hours discussing whether you will have the library done over in brown 01' green or speculating about whether the miikmln is in love with the 000* or not. why, let him lend you his ears, It is a small Sacrifice to make to ' d he should be thankful that he has Une Wh0 . ;°tVoman’s Realm -.°- Social and Personali -.°- Fashionsi-:-Litefatfure A -- ._ **L°_***‘2'_*°°;**‘**;‘t* be ry IJRNING Ol lCiBMA| *M7 B nrmwaa blamed with eczema. Itvva|arouada§:;bi:|uadollar anditchedancl . Nothing did enygoodllll Iuaed Cutlcura Soap and Ointment." Min A.. Goveulock.8aak. BADRASl'b“Myhmdwauwol» lea with rub, makin( the akin aoreandred.Aft|.r\|||n|onlyoae lin of Cur.imn0inunemmd part of A cake of the Soap, I was relieved." MislC.,Riven.lhn. 'iléfmuiiiii Mi rin: »e¥<‘ iii. ° - . . i . . ‘"°"T ` THE CHARL0rrEr0unf_§9A§Dyu!,;,_gg,M;w_,wWl, ._ ,i .....!uBavaKgg;ion .é.fif.»J ._ _ , . al'Ialfw|u,, “Ulf lkmllf *lla Bl|l'll|Il‘i| » ; 5' h rif¢yii§'ifo'i°{3 ::i‘i'sdi`f im” 'll Iofenulalgda w "--~°,v§;._°_fe..v.:.:.i.-:~,.f.,=»;,-,,i 'Mo - of Cutlnin . ts » Mhgfhlglal I wg; 7? "0 °l'°ll10. 0ntario¥ml B' 0!-“im of mln by the u.ouu,,¢,_ written out ol 1299,' lincere gra¢i¢|,¢°_ prove beyond doubt the wonderful rellov. lvl www# Mm Sw and oini.n.,,,_ Not one cent lin ever' been paid 1°, Cuiicurl teotimoniaia. They are written by wah like YOU-people who in., known the shame and misery of ,un blemishes and were determined g., M ` real relief! If you aularfrom pimples, rasi1eo,,»°,,¢h, nw. ¢hlll=la\. the burning ood itching ,g eczema or other-akin irrimdonofengym origin, than tbere'| one thing to do-ge; Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and M BUF!-I-today! Sold at your dealers. it hi to est in n z u r tIii;etyn‘;a:p;:e§ yiaxituggo gs if it had just °°¢\1rf°¢- Talk is ‘heir °5°°P“ 2 valve in which they blow of! their emotions It is their compensation for W whatever ills boron them in life. it makes up to a. woman for beinenm ,, bei me to tail: about her symptvms and tell #11 the de , Not so with women. T0 2 can et enough of it They never _ ' th ao and . . . Ovar T Soap 2.5¢. Ointment 25c. IIINIMENIM/Sill enlury ofuccns la controlling nd hall" :Hn :neun Y$ W. SIE - lrial alien of Cu Wmmcml "ffl 51:' " .n|scrouist.w..u ‘§..'l‘ I taut _ p 0,* wonderful they were. em instead of wives that they have to look up to That is why the uperior woman is so often an old maid. That is why we see the common pectacle of so many brilliant man who are marriod_to dull, stupid women ho don’t know what they are tliklnz about when they get oi! the subtest f bills and babies. That ia why women who have achieved success in ny line outside of the homo almost invariably lose their husbands to me little addle-pated girl who alt at their feet and told them how big at seeing them honored They bask in the reflected glory of being s Wives glory in their husbands' achievements. They burst with prlso 1 ' - . amous man’s wife. But husbands almost always resent their wives sue cess. The adulation paid their wives ia wormwood and gall to them, and the deadlien insult you can DAY a mln is to call him Mr. Mamie Jones and mention that ho is the husband of the great flyer, or the greater writer. About the only compliment it is safe to pay a woman in hor husbands presence is to say she is a good cake-maker. DURUPHY DIX. seep a wife contented, an _O tha mst babbling along “ke B I W t E requires no more expensive divers n n brook. And on your part realize that when you have one of these Great S2- ent Men, as the movies say, that you have to take him even as God mane him and furnish whatever conversation there ls around the house Y°“\’B¢ ' I’ll not deny that a husband who sits around like a dummy Bild Only grunts when he is spoken to is aggravating enoughto live With. You never know what he is thinking, and that keeps my WUBS °“f\°-my 5* the boiling point. But the silver lining to the cloud is that the man who won't discuss things with his wife leaves her free to do as she pleases- The man who is short on conversation never mms md MVN’ Sli/BS 9-“Y back talk. __ 0 a e o o Dear Miss pix-I am a widower in my late 30s, with two children. I have met a very attractive woman, but the trouble is she is too l!UH»¢Y»iV€- I don’t have any comfort when I take her out in a CNWS, as she is the type that attracts attention, yet I must oonfem that .she oos nothing to do so. She is well educated. has traveled a. great deal, knows how W dress. is very interesting to talk to. Because she is always the center 01 every crowd she goes in I have asked her to dress very plainly and lc wear blaok when she goes out, but it makes no difference. Peop.e notice M children adore this woman and will be terribly her lust the same. y disappointed if I do not marry her. I love her deeply, but I fear that 1 would not be happy with her. What do you think? AN Uuonoinnn MAN. .1.._____ Answer: . I think you would be unhappy with her because you are .1¢B10U-1 0! har attractiveness. You want the spotlight turned on youall the time and you simply couldn't stand it if your wife had the center of the stale. YW would eat, your heart out with envy if people were always making a fuss over her and nobody paid you any particular notice. The sort of a wife you need is a drab frumpy little woman who has not more personality than an Irish potato, who will 'seep your house and rear your children and follow meekiy along about two yards behind YOU- Bhe won't distract attention from you, and while you may be bored your self-love will never be injured. A lot of men feel as you do. They want wives who will look up to Eu 1and’s “Dionnes” Gain Weight trio; 5%; sgigr I f 3, iv serif.; iight gifiiii s§;i;§;§ ` _,S iiriiiii A MorningSmile Big O_le_applied_for_ it fob, and the farmer asked him where no had been working- “I bane work for chris Johnson," said Ole. "Why, old 011118 Johnlon il I good farmer. Why did . you quit him?" asked the farmer. Ole pondered a moment. "Veil," he said, "Like I told you. I bane vork for Chris Johnson 2-3 veek, an' vun of his sheep he die, an' Chris say, ‘Ole, you skin dat sheep: Bo I skin date sheep _,and ve est him. Den in 2-3 veek a calf die, and Chris, he say, ‘Ole. you akin dat calf.' An' I skin dat calf, and we have meat for long time. And den, las' night’-and hero Ole‘s voioo sank to a whisper-'last night his mudder-in-law die. so I kvit.' ” IAN DOM SHOTS 35; I shot an arrow into the air fell in the distance I know where, ‘til a neighbor said the killedhiscalhandihsdtoply 6 and I ti. Ibought some poloontoslaylomo rats, and a neighbor swore it killed his eats. And rather than argue across the fence I paid him 4 dollars and 50 cents. Ona night I set. sailing a toy bal- loon and hoped it would soar 'til it reached the moon. But the candle felI_on a farmer‘s straw, and he said I must settle or go to low. And that is the way with the ran- dom shot-it never hits the mcper spot. And the fokzryou spring. that you think ao am , may leave | wound in some fellavrs heart. A good tabloid reporter' covert a multitude of sins. Money talks but sometimes with its fingers croled. The best-`* way. to keep our friends is not to give them away. Love letters should aiweyl arouao I. corresponding interest- Ideallsm consists in having a higher ambition than a full sto- mach. The only man who does not al- ways reap what he lows is the amateur gardener. A wise man buys nothing he oun- not pay for, nor pays for somo- thing ha cannot buy. ' The man who dislikes prison menus should not qualify as I guest of such an institution Theron evidently no end to I woman’s mind, when she KWH het hudand a piece of it ever! day. It isn't ovary man who has I burglar proof safe. but almost en! ‘fallow can afford a chest nrot/e=~ ’ --2- '-‘¢\ Spring Fashions gui For ‘ Home Dress-Making' How gloriously refreshint il this gay little crepe print dress for mid- season wear. It has the beloved loft flattering neck, that is ao completely comfortable 'heath your winter coat. You couldn’t ask for anything easier or quicker to fashion. And if you choose this model, you‘ll com- bine smartness with economy. The io year size takes only 3% yards of 30-inch material with ‘A yard of 89- inch contrasting. , Plain crepe sllkl, woi crepe, ba- sides ahoer cotton or linen prlntl, make up equally lovely in this model. Or mn it out in pastel tub silk: in ah sleeve version. » style No. lm is dilated for sins I4, I0, it years, I0, Sl and 40- inches bust. Price of PA'I'I'lRN ll cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap ooin carefully. N0. 1698. Sl!! Nlml ltlllt Addr# City , ‘ auto ggéieii; .xg E ileuttii 55, lei; btl , And ti? ii’ 'S .li it it . 55 i i = W . A ` . I I » I ‘ .z \ » ' I \ '° ‘. 1,' li f‘°."; ¢ ._ o e » * o ° o ’ iftffiil _ _|693 . » . ” o '.'_`f . I ._ ,p » ~,,,__F_,,'~,`,|‘?. ¢`, . ~,, Al. ...ni ,'-":.~..~i‘.'. ,= .r ._ ' »\,..: ‘ . ’ " ' ' ' u..s.ta.J..._;s._'n..a..-`i ` ' ~ i.