‘i I l we!‘ -‘-.->~.~ a -,_-.q-.,--..---_>_,...__,.,~ r . , _ 1 _ »,-. .._ W PAGEmElQiiflL k THE uuAkLurrrriuwN GUARDIAN _ APRIL 14.1937 ’Rl s-r dP lF'h° L‘ .Woman s ea m -:- ocza an ersona -:- as tons -:- zterature w blfllncs s A,“ PAlMOLIVES SlllPlE BEAUTY CAR -'_ $232“ D , ghlfi; ' ‘~ l‘ 5P5 YOU ' -. orothy Dzx car... $672M wed/All. oven . "l. i Youneed u a» no Con! oily-oust” oPnhnolive ;_ Women Judge Other Women Almost Entirely fir: .111, t£ilfigéé§zérii°gfl i1¥§g1;':$.:1]:g§§;2;3fig:g s b Th w w “_ syn 1 ‘v’ _‘ j-the outlpurlitiea... erlaIrhezhr-vevazlie ' yDresSZd Wrfrfian ‘iilgually slgesallmeakfi ‘fizhég 5"'°'='Y,:>‘°""fi'§: gfmmzhfltwkaf»"isiig&°sggé' mjjjj" IOQ I a l 0 QIVGI l g Her Husband’s Success an». ‘ici- Pgmgilmnéliior‘. baa-r g4 141-9» “*"‘““-'" ‘S C“ wifilrfifiuuiiiliffiili. Jr? ruuuii “.°‘c.°t"'.'Z§i'Z2,“Z°.i‘i‘,Z 5f i ‘i 1nd A lilf .1 0!ii\‘l‘ l0 keg: NUT .\ ll .( OILYTIUN the bi~zid~ j mane obsidi- TUPICS .~\ .\ i ...b.er [Milli in ihillily to fir,» \. u. l»: L opt-ii u‘. Lin; u>l.-.L It‘ pi. int; Lw in.) co..l.i.ii.ii.'. Liiiiur- A ‘ , to" .\u llhit the}. Mi _ iilt‘ stole. in HlipUhniUle m li. ti pOJibilrfi ..le mace nf one two puris iiiiserd kfll tirztil thick. lI['\l.\.\' PlX ('l RLLH} l(ll'\‘ A Buiuiesi- Siirthil uliri rvcciWy - "'11 fll .1 ."(‘1rtl<)ll5 fflsllYlli ‘ . lian oon uore .r llilillt‘ iiirouuh ‘ ii liKi vinrc rim-tiles pmrccd li.s of rcliuious (ievotees .- "-"- tli-r il-ll)‘ man to ol- " li.in loud. ‘Allis; t... , SHIFFLE Quick! Use this specialized Vicks aid for nose and upper throat. where most colds start. Hclpspreventcolds. ygcirs VA-TRO-NOL i butchers as rabbit. ‘ blue blown-s Ting with their speciul Poml (‘ls- i tioniil colors. . form the blue and white floivers. Hundreds ul‘ WJlllQll hi the . \ ivii of clung; -.i Ctlfllpitlllllfd to the police ot the dhitppcaixiriec of LilClX 0L cuts. so Lilv Clllllllllnriill‘ of POI-re hun- Scif rlecitietl to lllYCoLlgLllt". and soon he roundlrl up u. band o1 loiir 1 cutwailttiers who in l5 (lifla liiid caught lll.i.i‘ tliaii 1,000 carts dur- nig night ra.ds. The lurs hard been quickly trans- .Dl‘l'll€(i into "otter" and "sable" while the merit luiri been sold to Now the indlunrint wWllSWOmBIl are rleniiiiidriu heavy puncshmenr to!‘ \lic four men. 'l\ir-c0i.0n GARDENS The problem of red. white and is exert‘ rig the riiinds or multitudes of gardeners W110 111W thought, of incorporat- lllfll’! 10 mflfk the Coroni tzon Ycir some piirtiiriilur Ufect. uxth the na- Laie in the 3M1" there is no doubt that. iie sluiilvee a revival of the old coiiiblrnition of red gumn- I ‘Innis. white lll&ll‘,'l'llCl'.\(-§ and blip i ‘ iobelia used in lmls as" p.11 as wln_ iioivboxr-s and hxiiiuiiiii Miskels. In a. scheme of red. up.“ nlld blue contrived with half-lung,- an- HHHiS srilvili, might be used wtli the white verbcna and briizlit blue tuber-iii. bierping to the SlliViil one cnkid vary t-he white with atitlrrlrnumi white petunia white or blue phloxd or vcrbena or make the petunias\‘. blue. As to asters. scarlet. whit». and dark blue varieties are offered bv the seedsriien. and wherever a re- putable firm lists asters of those colors and you know by experience that. the blooms come true to ric- serlption, esters might form the scheme. ‘ . “"111 regard to hardy annuals‘. which can be sown direct where they are to (lover-r. there are a nunibcr of combinatbns that should sntis y. For irisirnce. swer-tzilvssum and blue lnrksgiur or delohrium might Ask your seedsninn to suggest varieties suitable for your ground. PARENTS OFTEN FORCE CHILD INTO GROVE “flint riccs a lady's life consist of usually? Home. school. sports and study. He is mldcrn asked to step out of his grove. One days is like another. Girls have more chance to (lrversify if they help rit home. but our girls’ lives rim pretty much in grooves. zii=o. Parent's riiscoiirawze nlilflii <1liil~ (lien from helping in the wank of Mayfair Ncerllwart. A do rity iiltic lady helps a gallon you place your own liiitirils. ‘This is dgsign for a chali- set. one that is formal enough for any living room and llllRtl to meet n I requirements. I ttir- film. (ics gn. It. is easy to follow, goes amazingly fast and practical cii simplicity o in belutliully lricy mid artistic when Design No. 3M i cavalier to hold a shield on which indeed anlmusual and inierflllml Another consideration is the finished. The pattern includes a i more the luige braid from the end complete nlpliiilx-i so that. you can reproduce your own initials easily. The pattern also includes casy-todmderstand crochet, inebnwtform with- out. abbreviations, detail chart of (‘resigns and stitches. For complete patiems and instructions for all or lend 20 cents tn stumps or coin worn prefunodi) to The Guardian Needlework Department. ma: ‘delimi- chum-town u» mu coupon Prim your use ml nan- rlllllv To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. DESIGN NU. 327 Nlmc--~--_ _-_- -- _ _-_._-___--- ‘.f‘\@' Add|f@_v—__uuntxugxtxv¢xxqpxnnxnnxt CQ-——— o———n—nr—olr-lflfi1l——————__i PITTED and UNPITTED JONES- SCHOFIELWNATHEWAiLLTD. (DRIED nun DIVISION! SAINT JONNJIJ. the house. mitlatlvc ts strangled Probably to all men, emxcept dress designers, the keepers of depart- ment. stores fllld specialty sh0ps,.thc why and whatncss and how many OI wuriieirs clothes forever reriiiiiris one of the sealed nryswries of life, No husband can ever understand why, with closets bu glng with frocks, his wife never has a thins to wear. Wliy she would rather have her character aspersed than her taste 1n dress. Why she would runlier- break all the Ten Command- ments than the convention about what to wear at a tennis match and a dinner party. Why she con- iinually has to have clothes whether she needs at. a psychological age. If children were allowed plenty them or not. why hei- self-respect depends on having her skirt hem exactly the same number o! of latitude in trying out work interests, anld even marioeunred into them. they would be more ad— justabie to the unexpected turns of fate later. 'I‘liey would learn to "swing" from one work interest D0 another". It is tinlortiruale for anyone to, got the idea tluit he, or she. can‘ and will do only one kind of job‘ right. The height of happiness lies in being able to ince necessity, do] wliiit is at. hand, and like it. Too often stubbornness is culled aiirbi- tion. CAN-RUBBER HANDLES Smiill rliilrlren irsuiilly lilire sev- eral buys with pull-strings. Re- of the string on each toy and re- plaice it with a cuii rubber. This ‘ rubber" makes riii excellent handle for the youngster: to hold on to, and also makes the toys riiucli siifer. There is iio longer the (linger of them swaiilowlrig the beiuis. should they loosen tlieni from the strings nor turning their ikles on them when the toys are l t, in the middle of the room. "SENTUVIENTAL STYLES Ribbqns. wide. and draped. or til'i5i€di‘~or' iippfqucri with larg: bow-blots. like nothing so much as a vimby box decoration. and somctimfs with a sprig of flow- 1 crs to make ~t even more so, are all in the spiri of sentimental fnsli- ions which rie so prominent for cwllilli-l- ADD ring as n border just above a. de hemlinc the e feet is the lfl word iii the 1937 desire to look ct and girlislm; Applied iillii on lU-shccy slfrt, this‘ trimming has a dcrn effect. l I IODES AS SHOWNi luXULi ‘D EVENING it IN For the Coronation eymifng, red velvet with rm herald l gold braid appllqucd. One spring LQliLCXLOH f: pllcity as a background 1m- clig sequin, and stericillinz. which . decorate mixny of the fiibric. Empire Luvs. Greek (tr. and full picturesque skirts a1‘ of the putt/em or the evening The Greek key pattern in s1 ‘or kid looks adorable, appliqucd n whitc chiffon with white ehlffq, wings reaching to the ankles. Stencillcrl white organza. re vealing a feather dcsgn in icaf- grecn and rose-pink. is one of the loveliest though simplest of gtwvris._, It has a high tliroatlinc. short i elbow s‘ccvc.=. is slziwrri for IHiTlPSR brick and front, and carries a jciviled bolt in rose fliifl given. The Coronation blouse has i1 blaolc ground with n. crown woiiiaerl xrerl flc-ivrrs over its front, Arid nlentiric" has indrcd a pink horirt in quitcd sntin. solo cit-cors- tion on the breast of a marl-pink satin gown. gics i 21-1 L c Yl-IARNS FOR. GOTHAM NEW YORK-_ (CPM-Rcturnini! from Iraq. vrlierc they painted the portrait of young King Ghazi. the Hoffman twin sister artists report , the King will rcailiwe a long-stariri- ‘ lug amhiton if he can v‘sit the United S“ trs next your and attend i a cnrklnil p rty in New Y. rk. THE “IVER OF HENRY V WAR NOT “SLIMMIN(I" A wink-r once was something more than the name connotes today. judging by a record of the court of claims for the coronation of Henry V. The recipe for the service of providing wafers for the King's iirble. according to a book railed “Royal Westministxrr and the Com- natlon" ooiitnlried these indnedi- enta: A pipe of flour. Thirty loaves of sugar Twenty mirnds of almonds Two pounds of ginger Half a pound of saffron A pipe- of osey Theree gallons of oil. LL women at ll A Base of " ‘L’ - v some period of their lives need l strengthening tonic like Dr. Pierce‘: Favorite. Prescrip- tion. The young woman who su ffcrs from monthly pains, the expect- ant mother who h“ nniun Ind other dlunmuhlo nymp. tnml, or the mid-Hanged women who u- prrlcncr-n "hut flnuhrl" rind ncrvoimimi, ' nliuuld try thin "l’irlcrititimi,“ Mn, l Iliikrr of llmue 6, Colmiirg. Ont, said: "l used Dr. l'lr-rce‘n Flvnrlte Pirmiptlon 10' h the than]: ol llic aml felt no well. at (ale it ncculonnlly to keep me w; Ill mnlu- ma hove n good night's mu. find if wumkrliil fur n r-nr: of ‘vierveifl’ Buy nowl. New Jill. hbleu S0 an. liquid ILM. Nerves" inches from the ground that every other woman's 1s. H01‘ why 511B run spend liei- lire, from the cradle to the gram. in thinking and talking about clothes. problems without finding these things: "When is a woman weL-dressed? tier to have so iiiariy types of clothing, such as sport. dresses, street. dress- A rrian. who lins been wrestling with many the answer to them. asks me if 1 will tell him Why is it necessary for e8. afternoon dresses. etc? How many of each kind of dresses should she have‘? How nllllly pairs of slices? How many hats? Why can't a sport coat be worn with a formal dress? Why cant a. dress be wom for besttlie second year. Why do dresses differ from season to season? i Why is n. woman selhconscious ll she wears a. dress that she doesn't think i looks good on her"? "‘Do other women judge women by their clothes to 1| large gxfgnt. e5- pee-rally ii they lime not rriet before? Is a woman more self-confident if slic has Just lnirl u. fresh finger‘ WRWC turd liason a. new outfit? Wlw does my wile resent. it iviieir. rifler she has asked for a new dress, I ask her whirl. k lid slic wants, if il. can be worn anywhere, how long will 1g last, will it. be good for more than one year mid is it for Slmlmer or Winter‘! Should a proicssioiiiil man's wife be dressed better than any other wornnri?" Arid so on and so on. 1 could answer Lirese questions by saying that. a woman is well-dressed when she is appropriately dressed for the occasion. Thin, involves he: having sport things for vrearing, say, to football games, 5nd evening s-Qwns .or a dinner party. This leads on to her having a varied assortment n: shoes. hats, flowers arid hair ornaments. Hence the size of a woman's wardrobe depends on how much she goes out and the strata. of society m which she moves. - . . . The perplexed husband's other questions can be answered more de- finitely. Clothes do have a psychological effect. upon women that is as great as it is inexplicable. As the current phrase goes, “they do some. thing to her. They give her poise or an inferloraty cgmplex_ The“ 15 more moral support, in n swanky outfit, than there is in a Ph.. D degree. Not. one woman hi a thousand can rise above her hat. If thaws s11 right she can look the world in the face and tell it where to go, but if it. is a last year's bird's nest any worm can trample on her. gwomcn do judge other women by their clothes and for a perfectly valid reason. It is the outward and vsible sign iii ninety-nine cases out; (‘If a hundred of ivhiit the women really is. Most women get their politics ‘LOIXH their fathers and husbands, their religion from their preachers, but. e r clothes are their own and represent, their taste and judg1nent_ So Vvhtrli a woman meets a strange woman, she gives her the once- zvrir ainld says herself: She is sloppy. 1 would m, ashgnjed u, be seen alllw wit i ier. She) has no sense of fitness or appi-oppluwngsg She would ays be a _biili lll a china shop. She ‘s .umh or she would know no- body is wearing that. length this season, Q;- she would say; Th,“ new "Wm" is 5mm- rli bet she is interesting and She is up to the minute. worth knowing. That it pays a. man to give his wife as good clothes as he can afford i; bxeyonlci nrguling. It keeps lier happy, for one thing, and, for another, e y w e s ior husbands show ivlnduw to n grcut extent and people Judge his success by her appearance. ' I once heard a dOOBOr plead with " ll liilisswirehtowgfdt some new clothes. You are ruining me by the way you mar. ma". t" the b“ I w r rac ce, v ~ " wue decent moLhes-H D or else s0 stingy that. I begrudge my BM" i“ I smd- n? mm can llflderslflnd the importance women attach The best that a husband can do is just to accept the faot and as generous a dress allowance 35 he can, DOROTHY DIX. to clothes. Rive his wife Funny-F BET SENDS ‘.5 l fed as when given too rich a fare NEW R CE m, MAMGOLDS they make too heavy leaf growth, and the blooming season may be ilrvlziygd. Seedling marigolds spiii up . . c Ne“ o; me , to a ud at, once and then proceed itiiiltiiivielriltvirbfliil gnlgw grace of rnari- i L“ branch 011i and 1115-1“? 809d bl15h- golds. which (iii r from all others; °5~ m having fuliai; corripleiely tree: The sccd should not be sown in troiii the charac rlstlc marlgold’ l-lw Open ground until after dl-XIEBI‘ odor. which many ‘ like of frost is over. Do not. let this dis- Sced of the wild (‘ibeuiii flowers‘ "my you. however, for the best. supplied by the musionary were mvliwd 0f handling them. B-nd the taken in hand by an xiiier can ex- One which Will 856MB l/Ou the earl- pert, plant. breeder, and a hybrid 105$ flowers. is b0 start them vnrieiy. much larger uiid 11101-0 indoors iii flats, transplanting co beautiful than the wi d type, but their places in the garden later- with equally odorless foli e and a when the weather ceases to be a really fragrant. flower, l been danvfleli Many gardeners start. a few awarded the All America g rried- VIIYWUPS Of mariizolds indoors, and Ili, as the best. flower seed in "oduc- the“ blunt. others outdoors later on tlon roi- 1937. '\ 1n l-hegieason. The story of the deve‘ r ,ii. of this new flower ls It ($24M; m ,._. A Tbetiin issiciiui-y is credited romantic proves that there is still 9- ficl for plant» explorers. 'I'he marlgold f rid in Tibet. had escaped discove thy botanists, apparently. When its skid - was sown in Cnlifornia, it. produ d week-like flowers. Their only cli- tlnction was the lack of marlgo odor. murmtely grin merlttaK/ii Y O U N I I b recoini and s pa were en I to improve. the flowers. Grosses were mode by the hundreds, with other marigolds; and among all the \ 5 p 5 c | ‘ L plants which resulted. one was C l! i A M Y found which had the promise MOLLIENT; sought. ‘r 1-: cups flour. 1 teaspoon wt- ‘ -wfth salt, popper ond 0079MB. 0M It bore u flower of n new form; more like a chrynnthemum than a marlgold, with the central petals surrounded by l. collar of broad petals. In color, if. was golden: height 2 feet; it. flowered early and bloomed all summer. Ooliarette Marigold Orown of Gold fl the official title of this new flow- er, which is not only lovely in it- self, but holds forth bright promise for further advuncemen‘ in mari- golds. and n revived interest in fragrant flowers. One of the reasons marlgolds mould have a place in every gnr- den, il their easy cirlture and con- ‘lnuous flowering. They want. plenty of room ho develop. Wh‘le they like fa-flhmlihoysbmrldnotboover- skin smart! Ind rougher?‘ min’! look: more than any o or perlinpl. But no creamy, In loft aboorblblo ll the lightly modi- Ointment 25c. or FREE Sample, write “Cuti n" Dept. 25, \\| \ ma: So e?»- "AQQCIIIIIIOIIBQ . In Quin n: §fi@&§m udul on famous Buy, ha’: is? Yet there i: no ruru way m red, nil-over akin beauq. C III. IIIFOI SIYS M: ‘ifi;.u:.‘3‘.°i..c"' Olin Oil Palm- >551» THE COOK'S CORNER VEG STABLE MELANGE 1-2 lb. ground beef 3 onions, chopped 1 cup diced celery 2 tablespoons butter 1-2 pkg. spaghetti 5 meddim sized carrot.» 1 can oorn 1 can peas. drained 2 cans tomato soup Method: Put USE OhOPjped b691, the onions and celery into a pen with the butter and cook aentlv until the meat l; tender. Stir tre- quantly, but do not let; it. brown. Put; the carrots through the food chopper and cook with the spaghntt-l in boiling, salted water until the spaghetti is tender. Drain well, Mix with the meat, corn and peas. Season WiirILBE-lli and PQPPQI‘ and turn into a. well-buttered casserole. Pour the tomato soup over the vegetables and bake in a moderate, 376 deg. F. oven for 46 minutes. Grated cheese sprinkled Over iihll mp mdds to the flavor and appear- ance of this also. steamed Pudding! For Spring Dfll steamed puddinlfl always seem to me more like winter dessertl. but; recently we have had several calls for more of them. So 1f v0 feel that way. we‘ll try to see t-hflfi you get them and i-ry i0 Bil/e W11 those that are not verY heavy- althought, any steamed pudding i8 rather a rich finish to a. dlnllfl? I! you plan to serve one. make the dinner preeeedlng a little lighter than u5ual....soup and salad for example, or a. vesewblé m“! 9nd. the dessert won't seem too much. STEAMED one PUDDING 2-3 cup soft. bread crumbs 2-3 cup flour a teaspoons baiklns Wwdfl’ 2-3 cup “"811? 2-8 cup suet, chopped fine i @888. beaten 2-3 cup dates. chopped fine 1-2 teaspoon salt l teaspoon vanilla- 2-3 cup milk Method: Measure the brew crumbs packed down into the cup- Mix wwii the flour, mini; powder and sugar. Add the suet, well beat;- en egg and the chopped dim!‘ M“ all these ingredients toflWQT- 9"" add the salt. vanilla and milk. Tum into a well greased tube rim H"! steam for about. 2 hour-a. Turn Wt and serve not with lemon or 100m! sauce. OLD FASHIONED POTATO CAKES ' Three cup finely mashed WWW‘ duh of pepper. Method: Biff flour. pepper and salt together and ml! with mashed potatoes. Knead well and roll out to 14-inch flfllilmfi- cuiuimuudrunari-yinbuttwln a hggvy frying pin until Roldan brown. Servo hot. A NEW WAY T0 QIRVI TURN]?! Tirrnips can be mid! into Mill cakes if they an nnlhed l!!!“ ougriry drained. and than calmed bound with beaten III-Wli- Whon the mixture bu U09 Gil!" oold. divide ft int» lnoll bllil. our these with mural-breadcrumbs. ry than tin I golbn brown in deep fat. larva With wuurcrou ‘than nailing n and Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Allfimohllfldlllilllllll) WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14 Baotou 4:30 p. m.-- Harvard fact/um series. WIXAL, 84 m.. 11-79 Rome , m. -—Naws in English. Rnyql Carablnerl Baud. "imam! mum Picture Actlvi Folk songs. 2RD, 81.1 1a., 9.88 mes- 5D 8:39 p. raw-Soldier 1on8!- 93D. 25.4 m.. 11.71 mBE- llullom Netherllnrh '1 p. m-I-Ialppy Program. PCJ, 31.2 m, 959 1M8- Molcvw ‘I p m, --'I‘hQ Arctic in 191T and u. m1. Soviet SNIQS. 81.2 111., 31.2 m.. 9 0 meg. h London m. —“The First Days of G81". 19.8 m.. 15.14 mos. G88, 7:15 p. Steam." GED, 25.5 m.. 11.75 meg, 31.5 m.. 9.51 meg. Berlin 8 p. m.-—Br00klyn Bridge. DJD, MA m.. 11.7’! meg. Landon fo-p. m. —8oenes from "King Henry V1111." GSU, 10.8 m., 1614 Boon your okiirwill become younggr, fresher, lovnlier, all over. Lat/m: per tl in lvgfrigr wf: water. AMomingrSmIIc THAT SETTLED 1T. Old Lady-The mlnlstp doesrfl bring his little girl to church IWW. Verges-No; the one Sunday he! mother brought her she said right out. loud: “Why mama, you nave! let papa. do all the talking at home!" ‘Ibwher-“Now. can any boy s!“ me a, sentence using the word ‘diadeln'i" Pupib-"Peopie who drive cum. lmsly moan raflvny tracks dim-lam sight quicker than those who $09,; - look Ind listen.” I Q80, $1.3 m. 9.58 meg" " Vancouver _ ' . 1B miidnightf-Yo 01418 Hedi‘ Bhowe. CJiRO, 48.1 m.. 6.15 meg» cmx, 25.5 m.. 11.72 meg. ' LIBERTIES ALLOWED i 11161101116 decorator may hill,’- llbeztles with the dining zoom. ~ when this room does not 0pm db’ reetly from the living room, orig- inal and daring combinations may beused. Because itisaroomln which a comparatively short time i, spent. an unusual eiflfect in not. so likely to become tiresome. ‘- when n. dining room opens from i another room with double doors, Ii ’ should follow the some SW10 and color scheme. if y. harmonious ef- foot in desired. _ The person who wishes to hul-H n new house should study the do‘ u... meg, CltSD, U 5 m., 1L’!!! meg, 07¢ 3% uififil PEERLESS The Bplnfdi influence inspires thin young may romantic lpririg bolero dress of splashy dark ground print. lit/l wearable right into summer. You'll cherish the separate bolero fluid: mode of kaolin-Ilka wool 1n creamy-beige. aqua. mu. blue-green etirniioweuovornblackortnuvy A rwvy blue sheer with freeh- wmu pique bind: edrinl the 11¢‘: and maven in young and Mdnduhotoolormnmdluth- chit. The elem illustrated strep-by- atop inmuolfaru included make it n joy to new. Qtylo Nb. 3m la designed for aim N. l6. 18. l0 your, s2. M, Id. 3d Ind {ti-inches bunt. Bin. 1d re- quires I 5-0 yards of N-inol-i mn- wrlnfwithll-An-rlnofodgixig. Priced Dl-Nlfll 1300118 h ALTERNATE SNAP! Ball and socket snapper: mid better if, instead of putting all ball! on one aide of the opening and sockets on the other, you alternate n ball nu! a socket on each oldc idthoqnnlnq. "iii.ouii;.iiiis..r;i Nervous, Irritable, Peevlshl Thilmnybodueiolankofpmperreat, bellman, ,flmk oflm KQLUSWE ISTYLES tails carefully. tho IQ‘ t-lrotootreoulooft-eqeofloooi- oeprng o! late hours, the never endin. usawork, but whatever the cause yoq‘ have bum putting too heavy strain on the nerve‘ m tired listless i m hie distressed, ' h: min-lulu 11's: N? Pair. a "may": nah the wank nerveo utrorig, the shaky nerves firm, amedfdaathntwillhalpputyononyonled ___:___' '*"'—i FOR DRESSERS n