l > n _i '7 HGTM llW E!2a2::R8Z ‘= .....e....~._ - waovorozvvrwznrz-Tlfifliwztl u______..._... ..-e....m-.-.s-me..-er-zv mama-mauve -~»-<**- -' Q-m‘. __»_~ -_ rig,’- r I " ' PAQZIW“)- ‘FDOQGOOQD Ilriirfififififififlr! \ time13:01:1- faint): wm-t sets Mort OLD DUTCH OFFERS YOU THIS l-IANDSOME WM. A. ROGERS KNIFE AND FORK ;;; For only and the windmill panels from three Old Dutch labels. Value. . . $1.40. This A-1 Plus Quality Silverware is made by Oneida, Ltd. Don't Miss This Big Bargain. This oiier, good only in Canada, expires December 31,1937. ' ‘rm: CI-IARLOTTETOWN qpARoIAN "‘“'W'”‘_'""“T"' ' oououauunaauuannwonuncoaaooanqaunoamaanneawwwwfiwwww hions "f. Literature T E‘ an a mo“. the only cleanser youineed in your home Mudo in Canada * Nnnm Add OLD DUTCH CLEANHERI DBDL 11100 M Macaulay Avenue. Tomato lam lntloflna___iwindmlll panels from Old Dutch label: (or complalb Iabolr) sin-rm _ "Nd matheWm. AJioaarl Kltllfi aria Fem and rlvculartllllllfl new I (an ant other pious a1 a complete not of thu A-l Fllll quality silverware. union-i- r for which nloaoa l tuft DESIGNS -£ ._l p llllltt. nlllll i mtlllilifi 3w ~ M»,- \7-> 3013i ' l- iii n Sbcrinn Wall- . what cnuiri hc .1'!hi colored quilt in (luring the long win- til" ~--" i: vcrv easy and ~. 1'."vn\.'»i1t‘.£! of two . luv, the thing for ht Will-ill Charis. l TIltlilS mvi color ‘ :' Igawh of the two dc- wllvru and instruc- may designs, send r" f‘(ll‘,1_ ‘"0111 1! r w-town ‘Willi-i ilcuhrtmcnt. .~_ \.. t w. this ruupun. Print your vmmo and address plainly l i ’ 4:45 p.m.—T0Dl°5 i i l l l I j EQnp gasping, wlleelin vy<gy1p;__31,'2v§ m.. i? 59 meg Today's Short Wave Radio Program (All Time h Eaten: Standard) Fawn. OCTOBER 22 JOHANNESBURG p00 p m_—“Campbt‘ll van K11- ,,,,,,,,_-- a play. ZTJ, 49.2 m.. 6.09 mes. TOKYO of the Mo- 1937 m., 1516 meg; 11.80 mpg. ROME 5;00 p.m -News in ED811535 Concert; "Rome's Midnight Voice." 23,0, 25.4 m., 11.81 mei- LONDON 545 p_m.—EXC8Ypl5 from 0pc!- ettas; The BBC Empire Orchestra. GSP, 191a m.. 15.141 meg-z G50- ment. JZK. JZJ. 25 4 m.. 19.7 m., 15.13 meg; GsF- 19' m" 15,14 meg; GSD. 25.5 111-. 11.75 meg. MOSCOW 1:00 p.m.—-News and Program rm- English Ltuxrners. RAN. 31 m» 9.6 meg. , BOSTON p m.—-Musicai Period. WI- 4o.6 m., 6.04 meg. CARACAS 8:15 moo p m.—Dance Music. VX5- RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg. BERLIN 935 p_m -Military Concert. DJD. 25.4 m.. 11.17 meS- LONDON 9:40 p.m.—"The Talking Horse.’ a musical fantztsy. GSG, 16.8 m.. 11.79 mp2,: cs1, 19.6 m.. 15-26 meg; GSD. 25 5 m., 11.75 meg 2 GSB. 31.5 n1.,9.5i mefr. VANCOUVER 11:00 p.m.—VOCal Ensemble CJIRO. 4a."! m.. 6.15 res»; CJRX. 25.5 m. 11.72 meg. PITTSBURG 11;,'=,n p nf-DX Club. WBXK. 4B 3 m.. 6.14 mot: TOKYO 12:45 a.m.-Koto selections. , 19.7 m.. 15.16 meg. SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA 1:15 a.m —Tnlk on Australia. f a. , coughing, chakifll- r0 o.» ('i\:|riuilv'lI)vvn Guardian , u, Ili-uttiafrrciy steep-pound!!! Tel" ‘Ir-l 4"‘ '.\ -' i, 171 pt, lRrZ-hl-U-l- “ALMA” h" F“? "g: ' - we; - W:‘,,'..°,'."‘i.‘.'.“°.';..i“ t. ......... , , , , l0 t ‘ llr- L,i‘. Au. Jlllii 1x5?“ Relicf-nryourmonn liundcd. AI l dmuilta 50a and s1. Also n»: ti!‘ "'1' Nnm, . _ A _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ‘Dd-m pmulhmulh n! Chronic bronchitic. q . ' . Templeton‘: Fill-MAM Caillllfl . gl“‘lI‘ll jdflfpgg _ _ _ _ _ - - 1 . . _ _ . -___?__-_- i (‘My __ -- _ - —- Province —-— — ' ffloiltersi Trent Children's Colds This Proved Woy mothers use VapoRub than any gm medication of its kind-they have proved it. by use in their own homes. It was lur- - iii-vapor rclinn _sl.arts "m1, relieve irrita- fiitllt, hfllp break local VECKS t/APORUI THE COOK'S CORNER M... I KLJJSH l cup choppcd mint t 2 lbs. apples 3-4 cup raisins 6 small onions 1 large sweet red pepper l lb. granulated sugar a oz. mustard seed i l l-2 cups mild vinegar Salt to taste Method: wipe and Pore the apples but do not per-l them. Put them, through the fond chopper with the miut. raisins, onions and pepper. Mix tiu- Fliiifll”, vizincnr and spices. Boil for 2 nr 3 minutes, then add the chopped ingredients. Mix thoroxmhlx" anti turn into amlll gloss jars. when it is cold. 00V", with paraffin. HQUSEWIFI: AND'HER ACT|VlT|E§ NOT DESPDNDENT. Black bugs in my garden patch, And speckled bugs and red; A funny little striped bug With whiskers on his head; And green bugs, purple bugs, And bugs of salmon hue. And all of them seem happy. For none of them are blue. Anon. SYNTHETIC GASOLINE Through the subjection of coal to high pressure and the chemical combination of gases formerly consumed as raw fuel, two new processes of producing synthetic gasoline, have been discovered according to Prof. Florus H. Bax- t:." of the American Chemical Society. He adds the comforting assurance that if the prices of motor gasoline go much higher, more than 200000.000 barrels of the new synthetic gasoline will be available annually for motorists. [IFFLE GIRLRS AOCESSORIES SMART AS MUMMY’S Accmsories for children are more interesting than they were when you and I were young. There are cute little belts ana neckerchiefs with which a little‘ girl can change the appearance of an old sweater just as big sister does and ankle socks to match Hires... caioto that hold curls tn place. Also perfectly beautiful shoes which keep feet comfortable as well as pretty to look at. Modern footgear for children encourages little toes to grow straight and lovely and discourages corns, cal- louses and weak arches. SPORTSY THINGS There just isn't s. schoolgirl who doesn't know that her closet should be loaded down with sportsy things. jacket She should‘ have a plaid sport jacket styled just like her brother's; and there l-zust be a variety of skirts to wear with both jackets. STANDARDS OF BEAUTY CHANGE FREQUENTLY Standards of beauty, like clothes and manners change sometimes quite radically every few years. One has only to compare Canadian ideas of beauty with those of 100. 50, 20, even 10 years ago, to realize this fully. The carefully made up, more feminine looking, understanding woman replaced the fiat-chested little flapper with friggled hair and too much rouge. During depression years, the standard bf beauty changed considerably. Now it has changed somewhat againuthis lsa fall of elegance. of suave grooming. sumptuous furs, more elaborate makeup. Of Indian Summer lBy Lyle. Daye in the Maritime Farmer) Yesterday I walked along an old I logging road. 'I't_1era was no wind. The air was fresh and sweet with just a hint of the mellow warmth of summer. Above, the sky smiled a clear blue that melted away to hazy. purple distances. Beside me marched the ovcr- greeno, sombre sontinels guarding the forest realm against the subtle approach of winter. The grasses and ferns by the side of that corduroy road had long ago wither- ed and died. A birch stretched slim, naked arms in graceful silhouette ,against the darkness of a. barren hill. My feet were ankle deep tn leaves, sere and yellow. Yet here and there a. maple proudly lifted a. single scarlet wreath to the dis- tant heavens. A farewell w sum- mer! . Like a breathing space the beautiful Indian summer beguiles us into forgetfulness of the long. cold months to oorne. Just as it- be- gulled the red man long ago into thinking that summer would never pas; away. The mdlana have a rather fanci- ful legend about this season of the year-a tale which has been hand- ed down from generation to gen- eration. Onec upon a time, ‘so runs the story. game became so plentiful that the Indians grew very fat and lazy "Fat-because the moose meat and deer meat was so tender and julcy—lazy, because 1t, required very little skill to secure the ani- mals that roamed the forest lands in such vast numbers. Indeed. the warriors became o0 lazy they wouldn't even perform the dances which kept. their muscles in trim. And when the hoary frosts touched the maple into crimson and the leaves dropped one by one, the season when they should have been busy from aun- rise to sunset they sat and smoked. talked and ate. and grew fatter than ever. In its ordained time in the month 0i’ NOl/lrmbel‘. the I-Iifnterfls Moon rode high into the heavens. But it did not shine on plentiful stores of smoked venisor hanging, full and fat, in the tepees-for there ‘ were none. Even the underground ‘ cranaries were empty-empty when they should have been overflowing with the fruit of the earth, with corn. with beans and squash. Yet the dusky warriors continu- nrl to sit before their fires boasting of the battles they had fought, of ‘he victories which had been theirs. No thought of the marrow dis- turbed their minds as they watch- ed the smoke drift skyward in the still night air. COULDN'T EAT COULDN'T SLEEP Now Free of Bad Liver and Kidney Trouble and Feeling Fina ' “l ltlfl if n"! ozlmdiny he u.» -lmvol| irregular, with ' g-a: nltflpeaagl." l triad Fruit-rtivuand my bulth greatly improved." Tlllll llllfll | ‘t ‘uje , lmb and tonic tablet: chum fill Aniline ti» livor, help munch. IM- noyn, intestinal. Troubles p. Health III inpwvo. 25c. and 50c. All Quill!“ And worse than all this sloth, they neglected the ceremonial dances in onor of the Great Spirit. A few there were, wise with the weight of their years, who realized the danger the tribes would cu- counter when the Season of Snow and ice came upon them. But. the warning was not heeded by thc lazy braves. Time enough, they said, to worry when the Winter’: moon hung heavy in the sky: Be- sides the Great spirit would never let his children starve. Yet suddenly, without warning, winter was upon them. The North p wind, fierce and cruel, and aided by his allies. Snow and Ice, swept 1n all his fury across the land. All the tepees were clothed in ice Snow blocked the chimney holes. Fires were extinguished. The cold was intense. Then the lazy braves and their fat squaws ohlvered and walled and bemoaned their lot. For three long days and longer nights the storm raged in all l6 violence. Finally, after what seem- ed days of endless waiting the North Wind ceased to blow and the sun pooped forth agun. What o. sight now met the eyes of those slothful Indians. Plains, white and trackless, stretched t0 s dazzling distance. No mark of moose or deer showed 1n the cut stillness of the forests. The only way they could travel about in the heavy snow was by wearing snow- shoes. But, alas! Those left from last winter were worn out and they had no more with which to re- place them. l-furiedly now they set about to make new ones. First, the finews of hide had to be carefully treated and the brain of the deer and the fat from the entrails rubbed 1n until they were soft and pliable. S0 the Tribw labored. braves and squaws alike, until their very fingers weoried. Meanwhile their small store of food was soon exhausted. Hunger and starvation stalked the land. And death trod in their wake. Then were lamentation and wailing heard in all the lodges. At last the Wise Ones of the tribes held a secret council for seven days, praying all the while to the Great Spirit. They acknow- ledged their sin in neglecting the dances of the hunt and asked help and forgiveness. l-Ilgh above the sun on his ghostly mountain top, the Great Spirit heard their plea. At first he was very angry with the siothful Indiana. Yet, should he punish the in- nocent with the guilty? The Great spirit was just. 8o, after deep thought, he finally lifted his magic tornahawk and com- manded Thunderer, his sevant, to bind on his magic headdress and go forth to do battle against the ovfl spirit, the North Wind. Then he brought back the South Wind from her cave of sleep and directed Sun to let his face‘ smile upon the land. Beneath their combined efforts North Wind was soon vanished. 'I‘no mow melted. brooks ran again and many animals roamed the forest. Buds grew fat, the grass lush and sweet. Birds fluttered from twig to twig. It was summer again for a space-the Indians’ "Summer." No longer were the brave: lazy and slothful. cautiously they stalked the deer as he came to drink. They hunted the moose. They fished and. garnered their grain. Boon the lodges were filled to overflowing with venison, smoked and dried fish. All was peace and plenty. Thea the Great lpirit looked i l I SUN By " LIDA LARRIMORE TRUE BY Tm: r (Continued) Here is your horse's lost shoe, he said extending the symbol ot good fortune. I found it at the .lde of the drive. She took the horse-shoe from him. For a moment their fingers ltouched. The rain was falling fas- er- Drops of moisture gilttered on her lashes and in her short curling heir. Her features were exquisite. Her skin was the tawny pink and gold of an apricot in the sun. Thank you, she said disdain- fuily. Her hand, a slender hand with coral tipped nails, emerge. from o. pocket in her blouse. A coin spun through the air, fell on the drive at his feet. She glanced at him mockingly and flicked the leather tip of her crop. If you care to know, she said, I'd just discov- ered Lady had lost a shoe, and turned and went on up the road. Jim picked up the coin at his feet. It was a quarter, the form and substance of her retaliation. She had meant to be insulting. He deserved it, of course. She had spirit and she rode superbly. ‘Those facts, we, he was obliged to admit. Hts rage softened, dis-solved, was gone. I-Ie realized, then, how very angry he'd been. It was stimulat- ing to let go. I-Ie ran up the drive delighting in the breaking fury of the storm, in the feeling of being alive again, He'd been a vegetable for so long. Why must he return to Long Island? Why couldn't he stay? The idea was exciting. He burst into the cottage. MacPherson glanced up from a newspaper. You've been in the storm, lad, he said I'll wager you're wet to the skin. ' Jim proceeded directly to matter nearest his heart. W111 you let me have o try at the job? he demanded. He flipped the quarter into the oi: and lcaught 1t as 1r. fell. | MacRl-ferson shot him a quizzical glance from under his shaggy brows. ‘ What made you change your mind? he asked. The boy had .been up to something he thought. Could ft. have been that —I-Ie'd heard Miss Cecily's horse cluttering up the drive a few ntlnutes ago- I-Iis pipe moved in an upward dir- leotion. paused returned to the arm of the chair. | The job Ls yours, he said. Go [up and change into some of my the cloths. Supper is just about ready. Meadowbrook, during the first two weeks of Jim's servitude, was ruled by an invisible master- ‘rhom- ss Huntley Vaughn, senior, conva- lesclng from o. nervous breakdown, was confined to his room. All that Jim knew of his employer was an impatient voice calling from the lsecond floor, a boll inces- santly, the irritated promptness with whichthe trained nurse an- swered any summons from the in- vaildts room, Miss Parker's nerv- ous anxiety and repeated requests for silence. ‘ Jim's duties were varied and, at times, confusing. He swept the ter- race and the verandas in the mom- ing and brought up the mall from the rural delivery box at the end of the drive. I-Ie drove to the village with marketing lists and washed the cars and picked vegetables in the garden. He. assisted MacPher- son about the grounds, learned to trim a hedge and spray for beet- fea and make neat edges along the borders of the lawn. He enjoyed working out of doors. though he was frequently humili- ated by his lack of skill and amaz- ed at the intricacies involved in achieving apparently simple re- sults. There was. he learned, a right. and l. wrong way to train a vino against o. wall, to roll a ten- nis court. to thin and transplant o. bed of tulips. MacPheraon tn- sisted. I-Io was a kindly but ox- actlng superior and showed Jim no favoritism beyond a sympa- thetic patience with his blunders and an occasional word of ogement. You're learning, lad, he sold one afternoon, impacting with ap- proval the transplanted tulips. But there were countless difficul- ties. MacPhersonb authority, un- fortunately, otopped short at the house and it was with the domlstic arrangements that Jim was largely concerned. Life in the rambling atone house presented a marked contrast to the ordered routine of the farm. Miss Parker, he learned was down from on high. Stacks of snowshoes leaned against the Lodges. He ow piles of moccasins neatly and carefully made. 1111a measured beat of the music of the Hunt Dance rose to his lhtening urn. And ho lmiled l and woo well pleased. technically, Susan's governess. she was, at the moment, acting as housekeeper as well. She did her best to keep things running smoothly but her best was fa.r from adequate. Tommy was diffi- cult. Susan was o. grubby little sav- age. Nora, the cook, disliked the country. Rose, the maid, agirl from the village engaged for the sum- mer, was involved in a flirtation with one of the farmer's assistants and carelus about her work. Miss Jones, the trained nurse, was su- percilious and sensitive and de- manded a great deal of service. »It was into this maelstrom of conflicting personalities that Mac- QQQBER Z2. 1931 -_.,_._\____, iu‘. °tliooitl° c“? . l" cur. Dorothy Dfx blot‘ What Should a Woman Who is 75 But Feels Like She Was 17 Do? Keep Her Youthful Spirit But Remember Her Age, Dress and Act Accordingly - "What u a woman w do when lhe a to and feels like '11?" ,5 m, bomb that a woman t-hnw into l. feminine party the other day. win, indeed? It is o. problem that makes unriddllng the riddle of the spam), a: easy as a childo guessing game, hut, m, / soothsayer has arisen to solve this moclen: ‘ mystery of how a. woman should u; when she is a flapper at heart and grandmother in reality. her fig. a Efcat This wu not one of the worries o; 1,, women of the good old tunes, when life m a. simpler affair than it ls now_ "mm woman who was seventyish was sevenmhh and that was all there was about. it. S110 m.. gan getting old in her thirties. A, 40 W, crawled up on the shelf and began pfcpgtymg for her latter end. so by the time she had reached her threescore and ten page Sh, was fitted to be the subject for a funeral, but not the life of a party. But times have changed and women with them. While we still have many estimable ladies in our midst, who are content to wear fiat-heeled shoes that are big enough for them and to knit baby socks and Blljgy m. placid pleasures and perquisites of age, there are thousands upon mum. sands of others who feel like debutantes and want to dress like debulanirg and do debutantish things. The question i5 how to reconcile a Splfil that is so young with a body that is so old. Many try to flnd their lost girlhood in the beauty shops and the lvllfl". fatty stores, but, alas, it is a. vain quest. What they find is only a grotesque caricature of l'f, never 17 itself. ‘they can dye gray hair golden, but they can't put the young face under it. They can paint roses on a faded cheek, but they am as artificial as a paper flower. They can lift old fa re; until all the sagging chins and telltale wrinkles are gone, but no surgeon can take out of old eyes the look of one who has gazed for n half century and more on life. The beautlclans have done much to make the world a more beautiful place by improving feminine looks, but they can't undo the work of time. Pherson delivered Jim. Nora sum- med up his dilemma the first time he entered the kitchen with a bas- ket of vegetable from the garden- So you're the new man, she said, her bright blue eyes regard- ing him with Interest and a sort of acid compassion. Well, the 10rd have mercy on you! He soon discovered that Nora, with reason, had invoked Divine as- sistance ln his behalf. ~ Nice people! he remarked, talk- ing over his first day on the job with the MocPhersons at supper. I feel as though I've been in anlgbt- mare most of the afternoon Miss Parker gave me the marketing list so late that when I got back from the village the cook hadn't time to do tho roast and was obliged to re- sort to salmon salad which, accord- ing to her own sworn statement, gives the nurse indigestion. I should think so! Mrs. Mac- Pherson remarked. serving stewed chicken and dumplings with an alr of mplaoenoy not unmixed with scorn. Salmon out of o. can! The cook threatened to leave, of course- Jim continued, and was pacified only when Miss Park- er made me promise to drive her In to the movies tonight. Susan fell off the roof of the barn, Jim continued between soothing attacks on the dumplings. Tommy ‘and an accident with the station-wagon last night. Are such things daily occurrences or were they arranged especially w make me feel at home? They want taking in hand, Mrs. MacPherson said crisply obviously referring to the Vaughns Discl- plinel That Miss Parker ls no more than l. fly in a hall-storm! MacPherson made no attempt to deny the statement. The oonvcr- ‘oation veered, momentarily, from the Vaughns- Half way through the cherry cobbler, however, Jim asked a question, Isn't there another Vaughn? he inquired casually. I thought you mentioned on older daughter. MacPherson glanced at him quickly but Jim, with a bland and innocent expression, was pouring cream on the cobbler. Cecily, Mrs. MacPhez-son re- plied. She's visiting friends. You see! MacPherson appealed to Jim. Sees all; knows all. Where is Miss Cecily, Bessie? Cape May, Mrs MacPherson snapped, justifying her husband's humorously expressed opinion of his wife. It's a house-party, she added. The house-party at Cape May extended well into Jim's second week at Meadowbrook. The girl he had mot in the drive was Cecily. Ho was sure of that. There were photographs of her scattered about " the lower floor of the house. The painting above the fireplace was more vivid. The artist had captured a suggestion of her color- ing, the apricot bloom of her akin, her sherry colored eyu, her bright curling hair. But the artist had given her a gentle dreamy expres- sion. Gentle expressions were charming, no doubt, and indicated a pleasant disposition, but Jim. when ho glanced at the portrait recalled the ooomfifl glint in the red brown eyes, the arrogant tilt of the round- ed chin. The house-party was a break for him, Jim reflected. If Cecily had discovered him filling wood-boxes A MorningSmile A SCOTCH STORY The Scotsman couldn't find his ticket. In the conductors ‘ round it was still missing. ‘Whotb that. in your mouth?’ the conduc- tor asked. Bun enough, there was the miss- ing ticket. The conductor punched it and want on his way. "Ah, wall," skid Sandy, when several of the passengers laughed. "I'm nae so aboentmlnded. It was a very ltlld ticket and I Wu just puoktn’ m the data." And when the elderly woman. who still loves gay colors and fluff; ruffles and saucy hats, decks herself out in flapper 010M165 she comes | still greater cropper. She is old mutton masquerading as Spring lami- and she fools nobody but herself. All that she accomplishes is to umph asize her age and give us almost a fatal shock when she ttims the face o1 '15 to what we thought was the back of 17. l Stilt more appalling and pathetic is the problem of 75 that has a skit- tish ooul coupled with fat. Sneez- rnt you maidens with struts-bean fig- ure; ma, boys cutting your dances into udncemeat, for the curse may b: I coming to you some day, but it is a. terrible thing to have feet that ache to t dance and no man willing to offer himself up as a mart-W by hatums You . around on a ballroom floor because you are stiff and heavy and old. I And u. is a. terrible thins to have been youns and vwttv. CO1}! ted ant tattered and had men crazy about you, and to be starved for a ew com- pitmmh or a lttlo lentimenttlnd novéer to set NW blgrg-he bile! ‘me °1 ha obeau ouwereasa . mv1?n§t"il-.m<ie§§§'i'ill=i>°in'el situation fgry75 m hire a 111x010 to dame- with her, or tn kid herself that young men hand around her fcrkartisvthlilc my cepl‘, free drinks and dinners and automobiles and theatre tc e . s c fifty makes herself a laughfngstock when she talks about boys WW8 "W8 l" be her grandsons being her best beaux or her boy friends,’ I dam kn q But what, then, la seventy-five that feels like 17 to do f r do: except m me it, and try to like 1t. xeeplns you-nu 1e the M; 1a Plan and the pmpaganddsts of the Eternal Youth movement “flare Z wnfsiin‘ wmr u; “m, wpue we recogniw that our bodies must growuo bean e r1 ms and age we canlkeetpéur tazarts and minds young and s l m e B boys in spir t a or . _ 1 often doubt the desirability of this even itxhiec ggfixrlfledblzifigngllalg m; surely there can be no greater torture than m bodies NWM ‘m’ mv° "l" “lemma o! youth’ which mm “shite: o ‘rlt and hi)» bee? them from enjoying. Far better. it seems to me. gggamy DIX u; grow old wkether. 5.; , BETHLEHEM. South Africa - (OFF-A. D. Iocke won the Oraugt Free State amateur golf champ- ymshlp with rounds of 68. ‘i0. 61 and so. Hi5 same-sate of 2" strokes ls a record for a Scull! African championshiP- the day after the encounter in the drive she would, no doubt, have or- dered him off the place. BY the time she returned he reasoned. she would have forgotten the incident. (To Be Continued) _.__.. . For Real Economy - BetterFlaz/ozzl" PURITH FIIOUR Best for 9L! your Baking’ PFTW FASHION curves l ' FOR THE HOME DRE§§MAKFR _ A very slim and simple black crepe dress, hugged through the wont and with a very vows awk- It is o. perfect foil for colorful accessories that add spice and variety to your wardrobe..at little extra coat. It's very individual in bind: wool with fabric contrast of block satin in the coroelet-waist- lino section. Satin bows marchlnl down the front. are effective trim. Short or long sleeves! Bus)‘ as fall- ing off a log to new it with the aid of the step-by-step picture chart included. Style No. 800B h designed for oizea 12. l4. 16. 18. I0 years. 90. 32. 34. ao and Sit-inches bust. Bias l6 requires 3 3-8 yards of 39-inch ma- ierlat. Bend fifteen cents (150) in stamps or coin (coin preferred) Wflp coin carefully, address to Charlottetown Guardian giving:- Btyte m. aooo Size...“ Nome Skeet Address city Pravinao 2-‘- ‘”‘% I00! IONI! Jones bed hoard what he thought ‘ was a good conundrum, and when he reached homo ho tried it on his wife. l "Do you know why I am like a ‘, mule?" he naked. "No," sold his wife, "but. I've often been Icing to oak you.’