DECEMBER 2. 1549 cozy winter ROBES HllCEll mom $12.95 to $17.95 Relax at homo in snug comfort . wearing your new-fashion warm robe! All wool flannels, and quilt- ed satins . . . priced for budgets! Sizes l4 to 42. The GLORIA 179 GRAFTON STRPJET Vail. Beverly IifacPherson, Inger 'l‘ngga rt. Arsenault. rcn, Edith Phillips. n"n'n'n'u‘u"u'hr'ufio'u'u'n'u'h'u'n'n'iu'a'n'n'n‘ ‘ Lonely Parallel Fannie llurst I € __ __._ Seated on the side of the hsd, the Charlottcnburg cloned intermittent- ly into it, her jerking knee beginn- ing, as :Il\\'ay.‘;_ to intensify its pain PEANUT BUTTER AND APPLE‘ Add chopped apple. Spread on SPREAD , whole wheat bread. Yield: 1 cup. - ~—— . Sufficient for 8 sandwiches. Orange Pekoe Tea Bags , i RED ROSE 5 TEA is good tea- JB r-l up" , V“ l Nail l 01 1 BOARDING HOUSE EGAD, MARTHA, MV DEAR.’ COULD You use Tl-lIS FlFTV FOR vouecumsr- Mae suomue Z. ‘I. HAPPEN 1o Be (u FUNDS é 305T NOW-WHAFZ-IZUMPH! i, sou: MY srA-rue TOA f r WAiT TiLL '1'. G g ‘p,’ _ FAMOuQ ART “w; cotcgcrolz! ; §l -'" \ ‘ t ‘ // "b t r l ‘ / \'\ /\\ c l" l?‘ t‘ - \ ( v- F Aa~WHE\A|!-oov AND I'LL SAY V55 -~_Auo 1' HAMKeJ-WAMD 6AlD THERE'S NOTl-llNC-I» comm?“ R E LA c You've (SHONN UP T0 MOW wAs ml THE 612E 0F as the night wore illnnq. Presently came Sierras usual three knocks on the door, hcr invariable ritual before turning out hcr own lights. “You in bed, Charlnttciiburg?" 1~2 Np peanut butter . "Yes? I tablespoons salad dressing "-5 NOT NEW “All right?" , 94 fill! Chopped raw apple l "YES" m! Pei-nut butter with salad The game of craps. played with "Want “nymmgln Irwin: to l lmooth consistency. dice, was once called "chance bone" llgo'_l,l.. y and was Invented about 12-14 B.C. Mm.“ "Good night." “It's past three. Gct yourself some ' v " " ' sleep. Good night," Knock. Knock. Knock. l. l)‘: _ 4g "Yes?" "Sure you're all right?" “Right as ruin." "Good night." - . t The showman 1n the Charlotten- burg would have approved her funeral. Detailed police, most of whom had been known to her personally, (lctoured pedestrians from the side- walk before Dr. Camden's pictures- que church, set in its precious patch of city lawn, and held back the liar-k Row (left to righU-Lauretta Small, Elizabeth Haywood, Albert Kathryn Macbeod. Diane Bennett Second Row (left to rIghtJ-Joan Cudmore, Sandra Sweeney, Archie MacDonald, Billy Ward. JIlchar-l. (Yolin IlIacAusland, Donald Currie. John Townshend. Front llow (left to right)-—Errol Andrews. Betty Larter, Sandra Ash, Geraldine Sentner. David Rodd, Alvin MacAusland. John Laue, Donnie Carlene Janet Mingo, Andria Lavera. Llewellyn. Janet Diamond. rade 2, Prince Stre etiéchool A up (left to ril.'l1\)—(le0rge»llamsay, Billy Murley, Kenneth Duncan, Billy Giggey, Leroy second Row (left to rlghtl-Vema Ford, Billy liambly, Shirley Savidant, llorace Ford, Glen New- som, Basil MacKinnon, Lyall Somerl, Allan MacD ougall, Billy Cudmorc, Johnny Wright, 3rd. Row (left to rightl-Dale Stokoe. Claudia Mac Donald. George Garnhum, Joan MacDonald, Flor- ence Gauthier. Beverley Mathesou, Johnny MacCai lum, Sandra Sutherland, Ward, Violet Kennedy, Judy MacDonald, Gloria MacKenzic, Carol Reid, Barbara Ford, Leah War- w lllost of the detailed pollcememlall around the Sound." whom she had called by first or nickname, referred to her sorrow- fully as a. “good egg", or a “great dame". and swapped anecdotes of this figure so colorful in civic life. Many of the police now forming a cordon about her bier had at one time or another sat in her office-living room in Twenty-one East, enlisting hcr aid or advice. not only in matters pertaining t» the force, either. Here was a funeral that touchrd a. city to its quick. The list of honorary pallbearers, drawn up hy Kitty, included a governor, a mayor. present and past, the socially im- portant, at least one outstanding: name in cvcry major industry and and profession, as well as prelntcs. rabbis, doctors, lawyers. merchants, chiefs and an ex-convlct, Char- lottenburgs chlropodlst and fflfiflll. It was what Charlottenburg, upon returning from the obscquics of a public person, had so often dc- scrlbed as a. “pomposity funeral". Eaten and corroded by hcr priv- ate pain, which slit: had guarded as jealously as the undertones o! hcr own vast heart, the Charlnttca- burg had died in the kind of alone- ness that, with all its going hearth fires, its good foods, its streams of visitors, characterized Twenty-one East. Eaten and corroded by her private pain, the Charlottcnburz had died in‘the kind of aloneness that had never been penetrated, by those whose lives she had so deeply penetrated. crowds who gathered at the curb. It was one of those diamond- brizht vrlnter dnyg that give bril- liant kind of glitter to the air. The quick flowing stream of the city ‘sccmerl to slow and coagulate around the Gothic pile 0f the Little Park Church. Onc of its very meaning- ful figures “as lying dead in state. inside thc na\~e,~ The impersonal melroprllifi was being personal. MKJIFTITQFIIM er m! wimp BACK ' WHO New (u / SANTA CLAUS THE s-romncl-l! uulwouosa HOW MUCH E WE DOhiT \ N KNGW , HOW MUCl-P sauce; - MARTHA= Chapte XXXV In a yellow garden, so bright with Long Island sunshine that it looked floodllghted, Mrs. John Baldwin, in lavender, with an im- mense lavender garden hat lyln! staglly on a stone bench beside her. , turned the spigot of nn electric percolator and let Qlllcklo Coffer run into a cup the size of a cereal bowl. In the yellow garden that Kitty had (planned to excutcd down to the last canary in the aviary of them that sang by throaty dozens. lt was a half-hour earlier than cocktail time. Beneath a wide awn- ing stretching over three sets of French doors that led to the terr- ace from the dining room, a pal!‘ of maidservants in yellow and while uniforms moved about, outflttlny: a table with the equipment ul hlghball glasses, cocktail shakers. Scotch, clu-b soda, plates of fancy and fanciful hora rfoeuvres (ycllowl, omnte sandwiches and great sllvci- bowls $1 celery, olives and strips of raw yellow carrot. Stretched in a wicker chair, John Baldwin leaned ronvnrd to take, the large cup from his wife's hands. -"By gad," he said, tasting and lick- ing his lips, "It would take an expert. to tell the difference be- tween this and real coffee, and then I doubt if he could." Rog: Acorn, llarr) ' Berrlgan, Lloyd Wakelln, Alma ldo 1t anywrcv, John. and give the lprofits to Sierra for indigent this- woflce on the market. Shall we take ‘Georgian manor house was the last MacKlnnon, Donald Tomilsor Burnett. Lomer Shirley Bolsner. Anita '—‘l'l'\\ IN OllR LINEN DEPT. TNRIO FLOOR LACE CLOTHES Au exquisite Kilt w be prized hy the house- wife! Largo dinner luble size. Beautiful de- signs. $6.25 and up LUNCH CLOTHES . Hand - blocked put- ° terns in a wide 7i,‘ qcholco of lrnart color ooeaauoaaooooanaaanoauno ALL-WOOL BLAANKETS Luxurious qualify with a 50ft, dnep ull-wool nap, \\'llll' rayon taffeta binding. Pastel shades. 8.50 PASTEL TOWEL Practical luxuries in new sculptur- ed designs, extra lhiek and ab- rorbent. $1.45 and up fycombinatinns. Popu- ' lar sizes. $2.50 and up S. Ii. McDONALD fashionable ' l 1t is making them l "It's a good measure of what I uirslarc lS as good cup of coffee as l used to buy for a nickel, with sinkcrs." "Here come your doughnuts now, John." 2. t "Good Imd. woman. how did you P\'r'1‘ think up letting me have Grade v1 _ 1. Hilda Jdi-es. David Wood. 3. Darrell Jenkins. 2. Gerald McMillan. Grade V - l. Donnie Acorn. Perfect attendance: Grade IV — 1. Linda Smith, 2. Grade III _- 1. Pearl Hermann, David Smith 3. Darrell Jenkins. Grade II ~ 1. Marilyn Smith. Grade I — 1. Gordon Hermann, McMillan. Leod. Jenkins, Pearl Hermann, Darrel Jenkins, David Smith, Marilyn Smith, Gordon Hermann, Gerald Teacher -- M. Kathleen Mac- nrcn 11v LIMESTONE , UCCUTS in f Pennlfle Renae in Elncland. is fro Richard Limestone, which 2,000 to 4,000 feet thick. True orloles are found only Europe-American Orioles. or hangd neste- belons to a Separate family. n.v sinkcrs?" "Dunk ‘em, honey. Here, let Ivlummic dunk for you." "By rmrl, I havent dunked a sinker in forty years. Silver City sinkcrs had nothing on these Ros- lyn. Long Island babies." "Johnnie, if I weren't an out- rageously pampered wific, I'd take over this Quickie Coffee in a big way and buy out my partners. Let's or-thattns. (It beats any substitute a chance on another ten thousand, and I'll (lo some lobbying around our swank neighbors and get some- pone like Terry Baker or old lady Burbank to put up a matching ten thousand? Kitty never backs the wrong horse, Johnnie.» There's gold ln this here substitute coffee. But now or never is the time to buy out my partners." In the pause, while he stirred his coffee and a distant lawn mower bummed over grass that already looked slick enough to be painted there, she repeated softly, "Johnnie? Johnnie, ls it yes?" I-Ie glanced up with pale eyes that ln the fifteen months of their marriage had also grown absolutely llmphl with something more than contentment. With even defter touch than Leonora at her best, Kitty had mended his spirit. . - A twelvemonth previous tn this. John Baldwin would have told you that the perfection of the two- hunrlrcrl-acre Long Island estate of (hing on oarth he would want to acquire, absorbed as he was ln simplifying. rather than elaborat- ing, his existence. 'I‘oday, his delight in it, his inter- est in its gladiolus bulbs, topsoil. bathing beach, backgammon courts, timber, svrinimlnzz pool oil burners. boat and plane lizidlr-gxa \-.',\s that. of a man ln the midst rather than ln the late glow of his life. S0 was his interest in the new Park Avenuo apartment, which harl replaced the house in Murray lllll after it had been sold to the city for a Medical school. Parncloxirally. by taking on ballast, Baldwin seemed to have thrown over the ballast of those years of his life which had weighed him down. To be continued POWNAL SCHOOL Grade X - l. Kenneth Judson. 2. James Smith, 3. Norma Jones. Grade VIII -— l. Barry Inga, 2. Leo McMillan, 3, Kenneth Weath- "Your nerves will kno\v the clif- ference, darling. And how do Wu like Mummle's large size enffcc cups? Mummie. in her quiet little erbic. I Grade VII -— l. Donald Smith. l2. Dorothy Judson, 3. Florence Mc- lMlllan. V‘!!! I 0830 or qnmnoa . FLOUR Th‘ delightful taste of Cannnglf Chocolates is an traditional a part of a Merry (Ihrislmzis a! the sight of ll()ll_\' aml llu- fresh scent of evergreen. Greet family aml friends this year wllll (lannngls line cliocnlalcs . . . I/u- gill n] ‘JJIHYII’ IlfXf" . .. in three famous assorirnenh: ‘Clllfll nllrarlhrl)‘ |l;l<’l\il;1(‘<‘l in gay (Ilirisliuais u rapping. The Finest in the Land lleleelo, Romance anti linanpolizu- —< Chocolates 4t1<fl1‘74w .~s-'.:-.-¢»..\<.-rm-r '~o~1‘»-a-' s..._i,__a~_»..a_.q.s,~.. ._ . _- , - A -