PAGE EIGH_’I‘ IIIIIAQ He'll Meet Again 1' ..‘:1-..1<-1l 1111111 h1g1- 2 11. 111. 111‘. 1111- \\“.‘1-1'..1-1-l111-<l l0 mzllm 11 11- :1.1.11 ‘.1.\'.1.\.111.. . . .1 :' llltwlll 111,- l11-1- nun 1 a1 1111» ;,"..1l.1:l- 111-r H111- \ 1'1 1111- and 111111 .\1.l1' 11.11;,‘ '1‘ l llll l >ll\‘ i-- ..h.-1l 111-11-1‘ have 1o 11. .11;-.1:1 .-:111L' l.» , \\u11.1l lle ~' u~ J 111-r. 1.1 11.1: ltmlé ill-loud lolncht a ..111.- .11.11 'l‘1) hr 111111 Q ~ .11 111- 111 111.‘ 111-111, 1111-. 111 b1: a .111; w. llvlllllls; 111111 1-111111- 1111-1-11- ll‘ hr 111-n.- 111.-1rr1c<i to Evcly .~=1-11t l1. (lay, away: .‘~(J1ll(?ll(lW sh.- tnalrt .11» hark and pick up the 11L. 11! 111-r 1111- ln-lter for 11-11 111111 .1::11n A1 least 1 .~;1_\-, “l ln-111-11_\'011r song. I .1-..<~,-11 111111‘ tlnlllu; gr, Chills. In 1h.- v1.11 111.'.,,-.~ _\,'11I1 1.11111 1111-." l 11111 11-111- 10 you and the 5111-1 111.1 notice thr- other .1111. -.-1.1_ on tln- plana- 11nd sht- 11.1. 11.1w» c1111. l1.'1l.\ <11‘ the runrlng 111111111- .. ‘r11 (lay each .t11r sht- p11» 1 d 11101143111 her 0105.01’ to (J w, 0.11.1 ‘111- 111111111111 path o» 1111- sen sl-enu-d to 111111111 her " 1.1 hun. 3111- thought. "In Iii knmv, and that 1 111111 1s an cit-may will 11-1- 101' mo. A111 I l1... 11114- or 11m I 15111111: New York nlonc! I've 11-11. v 1111-11 niruu- sun-1- l11- lt‘ll.. W111,- 111! l 1-11’ :- "t ' '- ~ 11.111 in 1111- beglnnlng? Alon? I've .'~ 1. . .111. l 11a... r 1. 1' " 1111111111111. " 1- 11:: tnntnrs spun lens , .1 111111 1111- |1.11~.\1-11g1-1's be- mnc 0111- nllld, "Well, whin- nilllililln‘ on -1-11 11111111111. lnckr-d 11.11: .1 vaazigu- (,'-.:. l'111i.<-r1-." . . . . - r l.~ " ‘.1113- uarm and .. 1112-7111111- of !.11.\1-:_. The sl-a. is (lN-l) 511W‘! by .| 1 ' .10 11;, 11.1 uxviix 1110.. 1111 v |--. I 1'- und nlllllPtl i tropical 1 EkCLusn/E lsrvtlis '16.; 1115151111533 DRESSERS You will not only enjoy the delicwul tlnvor of Lipton’: Tel. bu: by saving the coupons from everyllb. and Vzlh. packagcyou can get —p0si1ivr|y [no hcauriful piece: 11f \\"m. Rogers 8: Snn Sllverpln: Send i111 prenuumlrsl w. 11.1) 1110s.] Lipton 1411111111, ~13 Prom Street l-L, Toronto. night. Natlu-s stroll leisurely l 11111-111111 1111- narrow whaling street», thin-king at their 111111101110, and lhuw 11nd thcn a low voice. singing lflvlillllillllllll song, prnrks the warm ‘ ml.t'll1'('. T" (‘-11.12 walking 111111111 the street, , B \\1i~ >lvrluluir and l)|‘\\.l(l£'l'lllg 11ml _?.~iu- lr-lt as 1i l11-v\'1.1-l1ec1, when sht- looked up, 1111- heavens. dotted ‘M111 cllhlNKs 111' kiln-s, never seemed rum-r, 111111 bi‘_\'()ll(l thc island was 1111- val enchullng 'i'l11.-r1- wa no filrll, no madness helc. In cafes and restaurants she saw sunburncd inc-n 11nd girls talking and laughing: over their loud 11nd drmks. People brushgd ‘ll’ 1W1‘ but they did not notice her. From somewhere she heard an orchestra playing. Now that she was hcre. she had no idea where to look for him. When 1t white man come down the street. shr- a kcd, "Do you by any clulnce, know Chris Mallory-P l-lc l1\'1~s here but I don't know his addl e He said. “Sorry, I don't," nnd 111-111 1111. ‘sht- walked on. hr-r thoughts tilvldr-d between Chris and the 111-hilly 0i the island. Whcn she c11111o 10 the (lock. shc kncw she could go 1111 1111-1111-1- and turned back. The bat; was heavy in her hand now. Win-n she cattle to a cigarctorc. she went 111 and a pleasant faced lllinghsh boy greeted her. l "I'm locking fora mun named Chris lvlnllory. I thought perhap1 ' he nught buy his tobacco hcrc ‘and 1.011 might know him." “wlallory A big chill)? Dark?" . “Yc-s," said Guy and smiled. ,' And I c1111 11-11 you the kind oi’ ptpe 11111111-1-11 11c runckcs." ‘ lie ant-r- hz-r 1111 addres and ‘ said. “When he's busy, we send his , 1-1qa1c1s and tobacco around to , 111111. That's how l know where he arr-s." Gay said. "rlnmk you." She hurrlvd 1o the addrcm he had girl-n her 11nd 111111111 iu-l-s-r-li’ in a na1-r11u- nplnll 11111-1 looking at n qaulnt uhltc 111-111»:- \\i'.l1 steps lead- ing 1o a l111l1-1111_\- on the sccond floor. A vine. ln-nvy Wllll red l bl1>~~-o111.<. gn-u- ovcr the balcony. 11111- 111d. 1- found you. Chris," 1 plCkPfl up thr- but: again and ' up 1110 steps, On the - .i11- 111‘: -11‘-1i. Inoking 1 .1. 111111 and thnlking of Chris living , 111-1-1- 111.111)’ 11111111h.~.. u-rltiun. "I had 1111-11.’. 1111:. so bcalztilnl," she 'l'h1- dnrn- W115 0111-11. It “'11s like ‘C1111 11111 111 lurk hi.» 11001‘. Whcn ‘slu- u-alkwl 11110 thc r-ooln, Gay lclt THE (‘HA RL()TTE'I‘( ' WN G U '1 A MQI-ningSmIIeI | CHRISTIAN ATTITUDE ‘-\V.ll:e.' said the Sunday-school t1-11:11c1-, "you shouldn't talk llkc . that to your playmate. It's no use ' losing 3-0111" temper. Have you tra-d heaping cdzlls o! fire 0n his head?" "No. mis<. Willie; "but lids a jolly good idea. I haven't," replied ‘ 1111:1111 shr- called "Peel-chants." "What a svncular name lur your ‘ lx-ltntiftll pet." said a visitor. “and 1 would llkf‘ i0 ask how you came 11» ehocse it." “Oh.' she drawled languldlv, "it was 1111111011 alter Lord Byron‘,- dog. You 1-1-1111-111111-1- what he speaks o1‘ 1t and says. ‘Perchance my dog will 1 l A lady had a favorite pct dog l I as it she had come home and her ejvcs, tukmg 1n the worn divan, the desk wuh his typewriter‘ on 11,1111 pipe, lou-d ouch object lJGL-QUSC it had been 1:10.10 to hlm. ‘You loved mu 2110111111 to write a play," she thought. but that was months ago. Elelyn has been with you and 1 you were probably lonely alter Mac leit. .," She pulled oft her hat and her hun- tumbled about her face. It I 11.1.. 1111-11 shc saw. Evelyn Ewing's picture. Evelyn ln a white tennis drr»...~_ s1n1ln1g. . . . . . . Eu-lyn loved Chris. What right 111.111 sue, Gay, to intrude upon 1t 111111 1o thrust tier-sell between them? ‘ And ulnle Brondwny lmllcd his play 111111 the world had the song .1111 its hps. pclhnps he was falling 1n 1011- u-lth Evelyn. The thoughts j 111-adr- the room seem cold and un- ‘tru-ndly t.o her. She thought, -‘I ishoilltl never have come. I didn't , think that perhaps he doesn't love me any , more. When he went iaway. I lost hlm to a girl who has bet-n his frlend all these months .. 1 She nut on her hat again. ‘I'll stay only a little longer." she thought. ‘I'll no to 11 hotel and set a plane to Miami in the morn- ing. 'I won't. soc Gregg and his mother. I'll go back to New York. Gin-is will never know I've been l1erc~th1tt 1 was 111 the room where he wrote his play. He'll never ‘know that thi~ picture of Evelyn lscnt 1111- atvay." l‘ Picking up the bag, she walked 1 out onto the balcony and down the steep steps. A woman, stepping out of the darkness, surprised her. 1 Gay said, ‘I'm looking {or Mr. ‘Mallory. He isn't at home." l ‘He hasn't been home 1m‘ several l days." the woman said. I'll tell him you were here." ‘I don't want him to know I've been here." Shc asked about a hotel. ‘Why don't you any hcrc tonight? Mr. Mallory isn't 1101c. Hz- went away three days ago with Miss Ewing." _ Gay-ls hcart seemed to stop 1 beating. Chris and Erelynfigune away? 0n their hohcymoon, oi’ lcoursel Should shc stay here to- lnlght? At least for a fcw hours lshc could be ill a room whore he f had been before a plane and :1 fast ltrain 100k hm- bnck to ‘I imust. not think of New York. lThcreZs nothing for me there. . No one will “rant. to sec mc except ‘Penny and Mac. And I've _ . . very little ntoney!“ To the woman she said. ‘I think I'll ..111_v. B111 I-I'm rather hungry and I think I'll g0 to a restaurant ' 1'11" i ..” But she could not. cat and her tclnplc.» lhrobbcd. Chils and Evelyn were married and were on thch- 110111-3-1110011 while she had bot-n say-lug to Cit-rug, ‘I'm going l to hnn" and flying to him as soon ns she “'11s frcn. Why hadn't. nhe rculizcd that Chris hz-d wrfitcn his play ntcnlhs ago. "I'm ncvcr spar- cd anything.“ she thought. “b11t I'm not. orry about Grr-gg. I couldn't have married him." 1T0 be Continued) .-\ 1t1~t-1.;'1~l\1 young flared “twn- 11.11111“ 01-11111 w1'.1;1-111-ou11d 11101-11- 11 1; k 11,111 ric 1111-. it may 111 o l bl- \\'(1lll '.I\ 11 "cover-all" i01- your , '11." .1." ll'1l1"r(. ‘ You 1-1111 slip 11110 it and adjust 1hr 11.111. -.\11.»1lln1- 1n n lnanltc ‘Fhunks in the smart sash arrange- lnr-rll. that loaves l panel It the front. lronl 111-ck to hr-m to givr- you hcnrln. Tlu- porkcts are 11sc-, 111i i(1r"r11!<la and r-tlds." You'll‘ especially 11k:- thc- comfortable flar- ed sir-eves They cut in one with the shoulders 1 811-011 11 _v11u‘r1~ an amateur at. sou-lug, you'll 1111-111 thia attmctlvt- lllilt‘ 0110-1111-1-1- morning {rook ln a hlfv A dr-tazlcd Sewing Chart is lm-lnrlt-d. 1 Biylc No. 71422 la designed (~1- sin-s l6. 1R. 20 yearn. 3|. 36. 38. 40.» 42. 64 nnd 46-‘1m-hcs bust. Size 3R rcquircs 4 i-R yards of 30-inch mm tex-‘al with 4 l-4 yards of rlc mo. Prim of pattern lll Mntl II 51.5mm or coin (coin preferred! wrap coin carefully addrfiu tn Charlottetown Guardian giving- Btyla Nn. 34-22 Size Name Strut. Addflll c111 W" T R A l’ TBESPAII DIPRCOIJBAGEII r-mnm. B.C.-1OPl-I‘lrlt con- viction ands-r a new law caused c100 fine m be imposed upon John " ORRY, but the flour must bc REGAL. It may ucem funny, when flour: all look no much alike, to inaiut on one particular brand; but REGAL in reliable, ul- Wlyl the lame, and if you lpcnt an much time baking bread u l do, Mr. Grocer, I think you'd insist on REGAL, too . . . . You'll get it for me? That will be fine." REGAL FLOUR RDIAN .Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- APRIL. 29, 1937 Fashions -:- Literature l Dorothy out Letter Box A Budgeted Household is the Only Way t0 Save Yourself From Worry, Financial Ruin and Later the Poorhouse 01' Dependence on Others Dear Miss Dix—I am a travelling man with :1 wie and t-Wolchlldfen- My salary 1s $30110 a year with an expense allowance which brings Q11!‘ income zlbove $3000, which seems 1o bl‘ antple 101- 11 slllfill iamlly l0 1W9 on and save something, especlfllly as I am Bvldvm at home. Nevertheless, last. year 0111‘ 6X96!!!" ran $350 more than our income. My pay check 30¢! ulrcet to my \\‘ll1' and she has the handling 0f Ill the money, Three 01- tour times each year I hut/B- t1- ed to get her lo adopt a budget and stick to 1t. but, her respnusl 1s a way.» 1.110 same-ct rebellious cry lhnt we c11111l01 possibly live on any less than we are doing. T.) me the way we are living spells nolhlng but 1-11111, and so I am tlllrlklng 0! 8W1"! ‘ her an allowance 01 $200 it 111011111 l0 1'11" m9 “ml” on. kccplng $511 011.11 month {or inysclt to pay of! our- debts-we owe about Sllllllflmld ‘Qblllllg’ my "l" QIQLhQJ, I] sugglstlon unreasona e‘ _ my A HARASSLD HUSBAND. Answer: Perfectly reasonable and 1t will gel you out of the red, domestically as well as financially, if you have 1111- courage 1o slit-k lo .t. A lamLy 0i 1our can live in colniort c1111 even luxury 011 1.200 a 111011111. To spend more than y-ou make. 1o l1\1- beyond your means and go 1n debt. for things that you cannot chord 1s- bound to end In nllscly for all concerned. You are only being kind to your 1111c when you curb her ex- travagance. For there 1s bound to br- 11 rlaiday, and when she finds her- self engulfed 1n utter ruin she '\\-1ll 11-11111111- uhy you did not have sense enough and Ih-lntless enough 01' charlu-a-r to sluc her from her lolly. There are a lot oi u-mncn, like your u-ue, who have no sense about handing money. When they say llu~_\"\¢- gut to have a new dress, or’ they've got to give a pally, or the 01111111111 lune gut to go t0 dancing school, they sec-111 to think that sulluns 1111- lllitltiil‘ and they g0 on and do 1t regardless of whether or 1101. they r1111 111111111 1t. lhey run up bills thut they know 1111~_\~ have no tray o! paying and do not apparently appreciate that 111111 is as much stealing from the mer- chunt as 1i they hut. purlolned tin.- glhlllr» 110111 the counter. What they want they tnust have, 11o nulttel- 11 11 uulks their tins-bands to death to try to get l1. tor them; no mutter how 11inch it jcoparuizeg their 11.1mm 11nd their ch ldrelfs. N0 problem that a man can 111cc ls more dlllicult 1o solve than thlt cf dealing with a spcndthrilt wile. because she anulys makes his lite l hell on earth with her tear,- and rlglil-uaclll-s and unurums, but a WOTBO hcll alt-alts him it he does not atop her extravagance and lets her bank- rupt hln‘ I think a man is foolish and weak ll h1- lcts lllS wile spend ll tha. he nlakes and who, alter earn ng a guucl salary,- 101- years, has nothing t0 show for it but piles of bills and who has notinng to 100k IOPWB-rd. to 1n old age but; the Poor House or dependence on lns clnldren. Don't be one o! these unlortunatl-s. Your 1x111: has shown that she docs not know how to handle money. Collect your salary yoursell, Stop her charge accounts everywhere and force her to hve on the allowanm that you are able to give her. She will thank you ior .t later on and l0 trill your children. You are doing your family no kindness by helping them along the road to ruin. 1 Dear Miss Dllh-Wllal. questions should be gagcd couple beiorc they get married‘) Answer: About everything on earth, and thcn some, because no matter what pmblems they sette bciore marriage new 0116s that they never dreamed o1 tvill crop up every duy. _ But here are some 111' the Llllllgs they should tulk over in the mtorvalb of telling each other how much they love and how they are never, never going to argue or d shgrec on any subject as other married people do: When and where and how they are gmng t0 live and whether 0r n01- thcrc are 1o be any 111-laws on the premises? Neither one has any right to ring in any o! his or her relatives without the other’: lull ooneent. Whether the girl is to continue on with her 10b after marriage. and 1f no, is she expected to fill a two-tune Job alone or docs husband covenant to help with 1l1e dshes and do the vltcuunl cleaning? The money l)l‘Ob.L'lll. The husband's views on this are all important. Does he agree 10 give the wile an allowance and. i! so, how much? Or is she supposed to work lur her boald and clothes and panhandle him for cal-lure. Does the wile zlgree to give the husband an evening 01f once a week? Or is he exprctcd never to stir out o1 his own cloor without her? What. about. lmiuselncntsi‘ Does tile husband think that the Wile should emulate the snail and carry her house on her back all the time? Or does he think that she needs to step out two or three tmes a. week and occasionally e111 something she didn't cook herself? _ What about religion and politics? U0 they agree on these two vttal questions? 01' are they to be the lighting yrurd for the next thirty 0r lorty yours? And how about golf? And women's clubs? And old lrlends? And, above all. how about lJflblPS? Dues one think they are lttt e angels that heaven sands to bless a home and the other regard, them as brats that are best avoided? Many a marriage is wrecked on the baby proposition. and no man and woman should mtu-ry unless they are -n lu- cord on it. _ _ Y 0h, there is plenty lo talk oi before marriage besides: 00se- duokla is ‘o0? - Dear Dorothy Dix-I have done something wrong. I don't know why ldld 1t. Just on the impulse of the moment. And I shall spend my 1116 repc1ni11g 11.. I hnvc the dearest. mother 1n the world. So understanding. I have always told her everything, but not this, yet I think she some! 1t- though shc- never says a word. I think I could stand it. better it I told her. Shall I ? A BROKEN-HEARTED ONLY CHILD. Answer: settled between an on- X. Y. Z. that. vitamins or diet have some-l thing to do with premature grin‘- ness. The vitamin vitamin B ‘complex,’ the relies 0. stlll-mystllying substances scientists have recently Sound in vitamin B. Agnel Fay Morgan. head o! thc Laboratory 0i Hm‘ ‘ . University o! Oalllomla. and two assist-ante. Helen G. Davtson. became. their hair turned black when the missing vitamin was re- vitamln B “complex? It is a sub- stance lefl‘. over when all the other vitamins in this “oomplex" have been extracted. The cess is to treat extracts of wheat germ or o! rice hulls with miller-s llhrth ed," all except the substance which turned the rats’ hair gray. 'I‘hat washed of! 1n water. larder, alitoed onion inside a bird or u rab- i more days. The onion 1a . lbaforc stuffing. yourself. iorteth." and WORRY ‘ Don't worry. Do the best you can And let hope conquer cure; Nu more is asked u! any man Than he has sumigtll to bear. The buck is fitted for thc load, Your burdens all WCIL‘ planned, And i1 you sing along the road, Kind talc will 101111 a hand. Author Unknown. . FAULTS Do not think or ynur faults; still less o! others’ Iaului; in every per- son who comes near you, look tor what is good and strong; honor that; rejoice in it; and. as you can. try t0 imitate it; and your faults, like dead loaves, will drop ofl when their time comes-Ruskin. LIFE l1 we love llie only lor the plea.- sure we get out or it, we have not experienced half that lite has to offer. when we learn to value it for what we can put into it, we begin to know its fullness. GOOD WORKS Men are not to be judged by their looks. habits. and appear- anccs. but by the character of their lives and conversations. and by their works. ‘Tls better that a man's own works than that an- other manb words should praise him-Sir R. Illlatrnnge. HELPING OTHERS 111 I can put some touches o1 n may sunset into the lite oi’ any Yes, tcll hcr. Shc will undcrstand and forgive and help YOU find Rcnieluber what the Bible says, "as one whom a mother 00m- Therc is no other such healing in the world. The HOUSliWlFE HER ACTIVITIES man or woman. then I feel that 1 have walked with God. Hlmpton here. charged with tres- puung on another man's infill”- i —-0eorge MacDonald. l ‘It-um l 11»... l-al’ TIIE RESTFUL SIDE You will succeed best- Wllon you put the rditlcss, anxloul lldfi 01 ullnirs out of mind, and allow the restful 111110 to livc in your thcughtl. —Margarct $1.0M. FORGETFIILNESB There is a noble lorgetiltlmap- that which does not remember Lu- jurics. -c Sllnmonl. FLYING A HAG When arranging Coronation de- corations. to keep n. flag ltmdy when flown trom the bottom o! n. window place the polo through the open window. shut the window down tightly on the pole. place the pole undcmcath the seat oi a chill‘ which is arranged in stand baokin the window. Tie the pole securely to either slda o! the chair, keeping it in the centre. To keep the chair staid! and tirml placed. pile up heavy books or xes on the seat. unlll tho chair 111 too heavy for the wind to affect it as it blows the fill. GRAY HAIR. VITAMIN IS NEW DISCOVERY Discovery of a gray hair vitamin, lack of which turns block rat: gray. has been announced to the American Institute 0i’ Nutrition. Experiments have been perform- ed only on rah. But they an the list ardent-Kb evident» lfleltlnl Sheisi/ul/ oM/t/reig t/tat Shredded Wheat o I KEEN and merr eyed, strong and firm of limb, full of ll c-there are the children who are healthy. See that your children enjoy vital health by serving Shredded Wheat regularly. It’: cram- med with Nature‘: precious whole when: goodness and gives the system everything required to keep It: nou rlshed and vital- Izcd. Start them off every morning with Shredded Wheat: and ha: or cold mllk. It‘; the ldeal natural food for everybody. ‘I'M! CANADIAN SHRIDDID WNIAT COMPANY, LTD, Niagara hi o Canada I2 blg biscuit! In ovary bu _ =1..‘5'.7.'.1'1‘11“l.5'."l'.’:7‘,',,,, MADE m CANADA - or CANADIAN WHEAT a» 1s one o. th Today's Short Wave “h” Radio Program The discovery was made by Dr. (AlThn ll lantern llflhlll auown scumt (rooknzs. Two and a hall cups flour, 1 tggflflfln soda (slightly rounded), .1 1-2 cups brown sugar, 1-2 cup mutter, l~2 cup hot water. I l-i teaspoon vanilla. 1.1.1 THURSDAY, APRIL i’ TOKYO 4. p.m.—~B1 " t Bessie B. C001! and The black rats used tn the QX- to eastern pertinent never naturally turn section or U. s. A. JV... 23.14 1n. , 1 _ gray. even in old age. They be- 10.66 11183.; JZJ. 25.42 m., 11.5’ maélam’ éléluiubdagfemurlalyru; came my when deprived n! this meg. e ta. Melt the butt»! 1n i110 vitamin in their 100d. consume-ram not wan“ m, m. Wm, we vwn, No matter how gray the rats 5 pm —6panlsh Prozrun. W2- x“. ,1 ‘ m a u meg mu. the dry ingredients: dwp an ammu- rwelloiled tins. 11mm Wit-h 14-111)“- Jetted sugar; bake in a quick m9"- stored to their diet. :00 pain. — Karl Heinrich The vitamin ls what. Dr. Morn-n Wwgerl. DJDrEA m.. 11.7’! meg. calls the “filtrate factor" of the LONDON “W49” 7m‘ P's‘ Om and a halt pounds ilourJ-l mound lard and butter and rather lea. than I-fl DIM milk and watel. Boll lard, butter and milk wsemer. stir info flour l-Yld add l. little salt. Knead well until smooth. Allow w mot. Begin to raise (with the handc), keep bun broader than top. press meat 1n. owe:- wlth lid 0f poetry and allow \o stand mitt! quite firm. Hallie in lalrlv quid! oven lat first) for 1 1-2 knurl- Whw Mail-la. 191m. Md Jim's 7:15 pJrL-Jltmous Regimental Mnrchel. 0B1", 1.9.8 m., 15.14 meg; GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; 08B. 311.5 m-. 0.51 M02. CAll-ACAI 8 p.m.-’l‘he Theatre oi the Air. YV5RlC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg. BOSTON 8:15 p.m.--Boswn Civic lym- phon! Orchestra. WIJLAL. 25.4 m., 11.79 meg. B usual pro- The. vitamins than are "absorb- t 8:45 p.m.--Ger~man " uc- tlon (English). DJD, 25.4 m., 11.7‘! meg. LONDON 9:56 p.m.--"'C1‘0W'nlng tho King" —-4I. l. tnlik. G157‘. 19.8 m., l5. 4 mes-z 06D. 26.6 m.._1I.'I5 mop; When extra. poultry is Ln the alter tzruaslng place a. GK}. 31.3 m., 9.58 m0!- PARIS 11:45 p.m.~waltz Dream (0. Strauss). res-c. in 1111.. 1-1-‘19 meg. 'I‘hls will keep it trash for many oved ABY specialist: who prescribe Carnation Mllk haw good reaaom. ClrnationbmpadigcadblquQunvu-yingand "cu-rid an extra nwuurcolthe “nmdalnflvltnnlinb. Clmliionblllltbfoodvaltaedtllcbutwholemllk. Carnation also add: earn cremains, nmoothnen and flflvmI tocookcddhhqwhcremllklllmdlandideliclmuuwelll economical for crcamlng 008cc and cereals. Write for Carnation books. “The Ounucnted Baby” i bee. The Carnlfim (‘not Book with full-page, flail-colour illustration h 10c. Addru Gal-action Company uncut-momma». ‘III DII TED “IMM CQUENTEDCOWS“ “mgmrnation PRODUCT