i i i z ..i-L<>.J".k-.<- ' i us...» l;-.. __ 1-7-74,"- eisirr [PAGE U. HOME FOB CHIIHTMAB .| y‘ ii‘. - ,. frln cool crisp road with. snow s- . p , _ ' . %e music of the bells, - Tho hurry and the bustle that this anxious moment tells, in another hour we shall all . climb out and see .”I‘he Home Fblks, and be tasting all ."..‘2 the luxuries that be. It's there on Christmas morning that the wind blows flesh and bold, And the fir: are bowing welcome glee: ‘neath the snow they o . CUPS FOR CAPS Purchase a package of crinkle edged paper cake cups and use them as caps for milk bottles and various other containers you use in, the refrigerator. They are handy and easily held in place by a rubber band. VARNISH SCRATCl-[ES If furniture has become sodntch- ed, try working a thin coat of varnish into the scratches with a fine camel's hair brush. If neces- sary, repeat the process. The scratches should disappear if the are not too deep. ' SPICED CIDER. To one gallon sweet olden-add one pound of brown sugar, six two- inch. sticks cinnamon. one-halfwa- spoon salt, one tablespoon whole cloves, one tablespoon whole all- spice and one piece mace. Add sugar to cider, tie spices in a bag, ' allowing plenty of room for them to circulate freely. simmer gently twenty minutes, remove spices and serve piping hot. TO MEASURE SHORTENIN G A correct and easy way to measure shortening is by the water displacement method. In measuring one-half cup of shorten- ing, measure one-half cup of cold water in a measuring cup. Place the cup on the table; then press into it enough shortening so the 1min will rise in one cup. Drain off the water, slip a blunt knife around the shortening. It will drop out, leaving the cup clean and the shortening accurately measured. I When knitting children's vests cast off at the shoulders. When they outgrow them, -they,can be lengthened and the armhole nmde bigger by knitting a piece into the ehouldbr seam. | SDIPLE TREATMENT KEEPS ELBOWS WHITE, SMOOTH Elbows stick out beyond all others es an overlooked beauty detail. Look at yours. Does the akin-re- r-lnd you of a. very old and plucked parrot, and rather gray oven when you're fresh from s. bath? Then all you have to lay in is a lemon. While you are bathing scrub » the elbows vigorously. and after drying put on a. goodly coat oi nourishing cream and leave it on while you are doing your face. Wipe it off, out lemon in half and rub the juicy surface on to each elbow. After this treatment and it hasn't ‘taken up much time. has it?) all ‘the fowl-flesh look wil lhave disaj- peared and your elbows will be soft" white and well rounded. Do this once of twice a week. NARROW enmity’ Bchiaparefllis silhouette ' teiest accentuates height and slenderness and in many cases evening dresses approach the hobble width. ‘ _ ICE-AGE TUSKS FOR UMBRELLA HANDLES . Twenty tons of ivory-elephant .tusk.s, rhinoceros horns. and ‘ithe long sabre-like tilsirs of the pre- ihlstoric inhuman-chem“ n {briskly in Mincing-lane recently. 3‘ London is the world's centre for ithe selling and buying otlvcr-y, and "supplies from East Africa, the Con- vgo, and Siberia. lie stored on a floor fin the docks for months l until gcleared by one bf the uncle's quart- your eyes will be reiieshed, you'll ecu uilm clearly. Green, also restful (nature's oqlor, acitiacalled), issobecause as a color it is composed of fairly long light waves; the short waves, the shrill-waves, as they are called by people vdio find musical counter- fot colors. are reds yellows, and, finally, whites (ivmcil arcno color); they arrest Will- at- tention quickly (hence the use_of levies a dance: signal. yellow for .caution..wcn-_-or mien-Flor all clear); but for that, very; reason they fatigue you quickly. . . . CHICKEN EN CABSEDOLE . ‘ -_-—1F-. > ‘ _ Th8 is an excellent way of cook- ilng a boiling fowl, as it is rendered both tender and tasty. 000k three strips of fat bacon in a Irvine-pan unifd the fat comes out. Divide the fowl into joints, and blown these in the bacon. fat. Remove the joints to a casserole. Fry in the rest of the fat a. quarter oi s. pound of sliced onions, a quarter of a pound of peeled mushrooms, and half a pound of peeled and sliced toma- toes. when goldenbrown. arrange the vegetables over the fowl. Season with pepper. salt, and paprika, add a little parsley and a few Definer- corns, then cover the top with one or two layers of sliced potatoes. Fill with enough water or stock almost to cover the potatoes, and simmer slowly for about 2 hours. For Bad Cough, Mix This Splendid Reme_d_y,_ at Home Nlodl NO Cooking! Big Saving! You'll be pleasantly surprised when you make up this easily prepared mix- ture and try it for a distressing cough. It is no trouble to mix, and costs but A trifle, yet it can be depended upon to give uick relief. Ma e a syrup by stirring 2 cups of rnnulated sugar and one cup of water or a few momenta until dissolved. No cooking needed. Get u 2% ounce bottle of Pine: from anydrligfilst, put it into a 18 ounce bottle and up with your sugar Iyrup. The 16 ounces thut made giveeyou foul‘ "times as much ‘cough remedy for your money, and is a very effective remedy for coughs. Keeps perfectlysild tastes fine. {This splendid remedy soothes the irritated membranes, loosens the phlegm and helps to clear the air passe s. Thus it makes breathing easy, and eta you get restful sleep. Pine: is a compound containing Nor- way Pine in concentrated form, well known as a soothing agent for winter coughs. Money refunded if it dool not please you in every way. ‘m; tage as well as his personal talents and charm . . . Two European. BOOVKIMKARTY; 1 ‘MUSIC ‘ i Q I. B. l‘ This woek'I have been xudlnl two autobiographies of two lo-cell- ed average people. As a matter of fact they ale far above the aver- age-one, outstanding by reason of her independent and forceful por- sonallty, the other interesting be- cause of his environment and heri- t books . . . ‘Restless Days’ by IAio Ilinke, and "If Memory serves" by Sacha Gultry. pby written to give the would, or in particular “those who have only a superficial knowledge of German life since thq war," l. true picture of her generation. Lilo Linke writes with vigour. directness and frankness, first showing herself as most disagree- able but often pitiful small girl with a decided piopensity for lead- ership. As a gm m girl we soon come to respect and admire her for her foresight and freshness. At the age of si teen she first became associated with one of the numerous German youth groups, but in a very short time she out- grew it and involved herself in politics, soon as a leadertwith the Young Democrats. She tells of hel- feelings as-she followed the flag of the Republic for the first time. "I wanted to fight for it although I knew that this meant a challenge w my parents and my whole fam- ily who all lived with their eyes turned toward the past." Born about 1907, Lilo Linke and her generation had scarcely known the old mi. perinl Germany, they were gtflvlng for “the state of tomorrow with work and freedom and happiness for all." But the attempt to create a dem. ocratic Germany ended in failure with the ascendancy of Hitler as Chancellor 01' Germany in 198s. The Berlin of the Republic was an ideal place to Lilo Llnke who always seized every chance to ex- Dfirlence something new. But the Nazi Berlin made her feel an out- "vflst; the old longing to move for. ward into e unknown misused her so shqwent-foflincland to live. Freedom, or rather 'no~ restraint, to her meant everything even. though it brought dlsappointmentflmd lonliness-"Ib travel, to explom, fp 1°"? “Kain and to leave, to feel new delights and shed tours of rc- Bfet. to stand in thé storni of emo- tions and to move throu h life absorbing sunshine and ra , wind and snow _ " Binolwflestleu Days" took up so much space Sachs Guiitry’; mem- oirs will have to be postponed until next week. , The Prince Edward Island Art THE COOK ’S Imclous lnmon Froltlnl a teaspoonsgratcd oranie rind. dash of salt. imcblespoqns butt"- i cups sifted oonfectioners sugar, 2 tgblegpgofifn lemon Juice, l table- spoon o g wa er. . Add orange rind and salt to but- m, cream well. Add Dal-t of euzflf gradually, Combine lemon juice and water, add to creamed mixture, al- ternately with remaining sugar. White nnflrlolns i V K Beat whites of 2 e888 very at!!! and add l lb. of loin! B11891‘. 3 “b16- spoons melted butter and vanilla, add a little cream of tartar or bak- ing powder. Beat until liiht 511d fluffy then spread on the cake. Quick Icing brown sugar, 1 teaspoon ’ i c butter‘; teaspoons hot coffee. ‘A tea- spoon vanilla. Mix to a smooth puts and spread on the cake while warm. This is an excellent icing for p, loaf cake. Sour Cream Frosting 1 cup sour cream, 1 cup brown :eriy sales. , 1 _ i, Four or five day! before the jsale ivory merchants and workers, gwho come to London fiom all over gthe Continent fol‘ the 1111mm zcxamine the tusks, make cryptic :IIOIZCS in their catalogues. investi- gate the ivory points with calllllfiffi gum-l electric torches, and decide what they will bid. ' _ 1, In an auction room for all the -worid like -a ding-y echoolroom, this ‘wealth of ivory, foprelentifig many §thousands of pounds, is ‘sold ~by gauction at unbelievable pace in a flauildlng where not so much as the tip of a boars tusk is ‘to be seen. - Mammoth ivory, those long, cruel time that have lulu 1iul1ed1nnd¢ Siberian glaciers since thrice Age,‘ rare. ' ' In spite 0f its lntiqulty it fe ‘ l lower price than sdod whitoégalzs hent ivory, for thnnmmmcth Théyylm generally curved up into brella handles and small ivory The finest white i . whielrietelied tfic- - per ans-is used for piano kql cocoa, 1/; cup flour. 1 tBbIHDOOn of butter. Mix wtil and moisten with sweet cream? Bent until smooth. milk, l cup, v tolcreamrreadydor use sugar. Boil until it forms a soft ball when triedin cold water. set in pan of cold- water until cool. Beat until creamy. Add l, teaspoon vanilla, add 5i cup walnuts if desired. Chocolute Icing i cup brown sugar, 1 tablespoon of No. V Butter Icing Butter, w. bs., icing sugar. 5 1M. mm l icuilccnllnx cal-emu ' Iroiilnl’ white etchings, soft ground etchings, zotints, grouped together because plate press. practised as early as the 15th cen- afid all sorts of metals. ol- etchings as we now call them, Gemany. France, above- nll the Netherlands have achieved the gmntebt tial in an etching. Ragged edges Ind broken continuity are undesir- ‘ able,‘ but whether lines should be ._ 2°11 g than hkeavy or fine, straight, curved, ir- ad . . . """_'_' $6 tgepocn baking powder, 1 tea- spoon ‘vanilla and but until and‘ stiff. ‘Delicious. ..s ’ exhibition which Opens next week in the Harris Art Gallery is "an exhibition of prints- etchinss and div-points, aquatints, lithographs and woodcuts, from _CZ€0h0S1DVukll. . The advent of this rather unusual cxl ibltlon has used, at least among the society members, a con- " rable increase in interest in the country itself. Czechoslovakia, it seeml. is not an entirely new state that came into existence only after the World War. As a nation it had adopted ChIi-Btlflflity as early as the ‘It-b century, but its long record of in- dependent existence was tempor- arily suspended in the 17th century by its forcible incorporation info the Ilapsburg realm. The culmina- tion of its struggle to regain inde- pendelioe came with the war, the outcome of which was the estab- lishment of the Czechoslovakian Republic. - ecause of its old historical traditions and deep roots when Czechoslovakia became once mom a free country it was at once mark- ed with a set o1 characteristics un- mistalmbly its own and was re- markably clear of uncertainty and experiment so necessary to a new state. ‘ . Of its, progress in art we am privileged to have a glimpse of one phase, in the present exhibition. The exhibition consists of many etchings and "some lithographs and woodcuts. The term etchings includes line aquatint prints, drypoinis uld mez- v they are all printed on a copper- Etching was invented in Europe, probably north of the Alps, and was tury, but then, almost exclusively as a means of decorating Armour A U _ irupgcililnuo-rrilro. K lwivzzouililnln F ’s‘-Realm -:- Social and Person Hours WIFE and HER Acnvzmas ‘Restless Days" is a German girl's - autobic all -:- Fashions -:- Literature Smart Clothes For The Home Dorothy Diaz's Letter Box . - . . _ ' Their hold and Contrary to Mr. Shakespeare, Love Does glfbythc ccmfitfihstihi Change, and Frequently the New is #3,“, ‘QQFQ gum“; ' Stronger Than the Old Dear Dorothy Dix-Our English class has been given flu following quotation to comment upon. It is taken fmm Shakespeare's Bonnet No. Ill: "Love is not love which alters when it tltention finds." ‘There was a difference ‘of opinion about this. What are your views? C. M. M. er: - Quite thmcontrory from Mr. Blinker ponds. for 1 think that love is a gown of Alice blue and silver lace, with a diamond tiara in her hair. Miss B. Spencer-Smith, her lady- ln-wultins. was in a picture frock of black Ind white taffeta offset with red flowers it the neckline, and I130 won l wreath of the lame flowers in her fair hill‘. At supper Their Bxcelicnzics left im- mediately after the boll on their n- bWM '° turn to Government House Ottawa plunge if itsobicct changes, and that one ' ' - would have tcbc blind, doll. and dumb and ‘m’ "ma" m‘ a" m “‘°“"" i.$°'°".'.fi'°°“‘°.§£”“°“‘°“%.°l'£°'.i.‘? me- 0V6 . 00BX10 I ~ poets hold to optimistic 'thcory {bout numfiunz. finmmwu“ m‘ ulc lndestructlbility of love, but a. glut - mm" many everyday m: of people also pin their faith to it and exploit it for all it is worth. They feel that once they have captured our fancies and won their affections that we will 80 0n fleeing them as glamorous, no matter how they deteriorate and what scarecrow: matter how they treat us we will continue to III One of the most enjoyed func- tions of thg week was the bridge and tea given by Mrs. Raoul Raymond and Madam Nicholle at the Can- adian National Hotel yesterday afternoon. Bridge was played dur- ing till afternoon and at the ten hour other guests arrived. Madam Nicholle was cordially welcomed home after her sojourn on the Continent. . ' I I I ma. I. B. Conrad entertained on two occasions this week, asking friends in for bridge on Tuesday and Friday afternoons. I I I they become, and that no adore them. - This artless belief that the heart is a rpetual-motion machine that once set going can't be stopped flnds its ullest illustration ln marriage and explains why husbands and wives take so little trouble to make them- selves attractive to each other. Tiiey don't try to hold the love they have won because they think they can't lose it, a mistaken idea which is sufficiently disproved by the number of divorces. Indeed, it is s matter of common knoweldge that the reason for pric- ticaliy every divorce is that assigned by the colored lady for leaving her husband, that she “just done lost her taste for Bo say we all. The fires of passion burndown into ashes. The living picture that we tliousht we could gaze upon forever with rapture tums into a chronic that gels upon our nerves. The little tricks and mannerisms that. we found so ravishing grow silly and tiresome. The conversation we found so en- trancing bores us to tears. And why, we do. not know. We have just lost our taste for the once beloved one. Yet, in spite of all evidence to the contrary, people go on believing that love is change-p of and fool-proof. Look at the women who don't uhink it is worth while to dress up for a mere husband and who slop around homo in soiled kimonoc and with cold cream on their faces and their hair in curlers! Not much like ladyloves, huh? Nor does any man sitting around in his stocking feet, minus a collar and needing a, shave, iilspue romantic ideas in his wife's breast. And listen in on tne average married couple. Irritable and fault-finding with each other. Nagging ouch other. Quarreling over trifles. Rowing over bills. Saying bitter" mean things to each other that they would not say to any other human being. Ami yet expecting love to survive such manha-ndiing. Each com- plaining of the others indifference. Each outraged when the other trans- fers his or her affections to another. Mrs. (Dix) R. J. udwell wu among the bridge hostess dispens- ing hospitality on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, chasing mauve and yellow chrysa themuml for her flower; and carrying out the same lovely shades in her tallies and prises. I I I Lest evening Mrs. J. A. B. Beyer was hostess at a very much enjoy- cdbridge at her pietty home. 8 Euston Stre . ' ' Mrs. Elmer R. Bovyer received Thursday afternoon at her home 202 Prince street for the first time since her marriaife and was assisted by her mother, Mrs. E. H. Nortonln a smart black flowered geolgettc with oorsago of cal-nations, and Mrs. Bruce l-Iuggan, whose gown was of black lace and Reorg- ettc with darkred roses as a cor- sage. The bride wore hei- lovely wedding dress of ashes-of roses lace _ over pink satin with pink loses The rooms softly lighted and 88!’ with roses and cut flowers. Wm pleasantly filled all afternoon, lip- wal-ds of 800 calling to offer their congratulations. Th, plessalt duty of ushering was well looked after by Mrs. (Din) Picksrd while little Miss Katherine Bethune in pink v Maybe it isn't love. from the poets’ standpoint, that can't survive dis- illusion and ill-treatment and the decadence of an ideal, but it is the only kind of love of which the common or garden variety of man and woman is capable. They can't go on kissing the unkissabc and being romantic about the commonplace. They know we can fall out of love as easily as we can fall in love, and that if we retain the affection of any one we have towork to keep it. . The-only love in the world that is proof against all change, that will survive neglect luld abuse and ingratitude ls mother love. That "docs not altar when it alteration finds." and it takes the bedraggled woman of the street and the blear-eyed dfunkard to its breast with the same devotion it gave them when they were innocent babes. . ' , DOROTHY DIX. I I I ' I I I DeorDorotlLvDlx-Myhllsbandisagoodlnanineverylcnscodthe word. He is tender, kind, generous, everything that any wife could want “"9151 W‘ 0K1 1°11! 01d iuhlim“ in a husband, and we have three lovely children to whom I an devoted. lines 919ml! lmlldei’! "19 5°“? m But I am in iovc with another man and he with me and he, to, has l u" u" “m” l” “b” good wife and children to whom he is devoted. I There is no question of with an 014N181“ 0mm’ 01 1°“ divorce because too many people would be hurt, but it is our duty to bcshaded mu ‘ elnums and trail- llonest and confess our unfaltllfulness to our mates? ing fern was plesid * over by M". ' H. L Bethune I-fld Mrs. (Dlfl) A. Answer: _ N. erson who were assisted in No. A thousand times no. You would only make, a bad matter serving by Mrs. Preston Beck, Mrs. wom. Certainly you have clone these others harm enough without add- C. N. Biscett, Miss Mary Connolly, 11m to it by destroying their faith in you and filling them with torturing Mrs. Harry Norton, of Crapaud, usy. Mm. Parker Ritchie, Miss Rhett. mum u; Bov r Mn. Agrcatmanyeinnenfeclthatoonfcslionls aaortofimmuniwbath 3" W’ and that once they have plunged in 1t they come out cleansed of their c iniquities. Somehow they feel that it eases their oonslences to make a confession of their wrong-doing, and in order to get this mental relief for themsclgles they are callous to the sufferings they may inflict upon innoc- en peo c Thus goeded by a sense of guilt men and women will frequently fl- vcai to their wives and husbands some dark episode in their pasts that will blast their happiness forever and which they would never have known if their mates had not told them. This is the height of selfishness and cowardice. for it is wilting the burden of their sins onto their wives’ and s I I v m‘. (D12) l». B. MoKenna cnty- . tained at a two table lunclfi bridge on Thursday.‘ Min. Tom Davies and Mrs. Nor- ' man Lowthc: motored over to Mono- ton on l. few'da_ys ‘visit this week. One of the koloidosoopic memor- * ' shoulders and making them help m: their burdens. 1r a i" of the mvsl weddlna. writes an , wrong can be rlghted by confessing it, there is some justlfcation in doing English oorALeBpQHdOIIF. l! I116 @11- so, but when what has been done has been done and ‘b’ b ” " “ °l "m" Pun‘ oess Margaret Rose, who left her elder sister as soon as the weddini was over and attached herself to ha: royal “GrI-nny." Queen Marv. it, then the guilty could keep their secrets to the end. It- of their Punislim DORUrI-IY can lsa ent., D IIIIII Dear Miss Dix-What would you do if you were married to a man who . ' A. Iflfely 18118118? I». B. refusing to leave be: for the rest of the afternoon. Both the little prin- Answcl": "ceases are taking 1690118 110w. I should regret his lack of a sense of humm‘. because life 1| so much um fldg gtfldg 1; m; approved easier to bear if you get a slant on - the funny side of things. But 1f all that was the matter with him was that he didn't guifaw over everything, I shouldn't let that worry me. If ho was a Gloomy Gus who always looked on the dark side of things and was a perpetual crepe hanger, well, that would be something else at again, and I shouldn't blame you for wishing that you had a c on who at some time let out whoops of Joy. But laughter isn't always a sign of a gay heart, nor is it an indication of good nature as is generally sup- III Ml‘. and Mn. S. A. MBIAod have as their guest this week Miss Dor- othy Wyltt ofisumnlerxide. Mrs.‘ c. a. a. mnzwonll invited the Thursday afternoon bridge club to Hillliurst for their limo this week. I I I Miss Laura Hcdgson of Ottawa, who spear/tile weer-elm at the Canadian National Hotel with her brothel- m. Harry Hodgson. left Wednesday on a visit to HalLcx and will return lam to Charlotte- town. "A man may smile and smile and be a villain still," may laugh and laugh with the laughter that is like the under a pot. 0r he may make loud laughter the camouflage for his cruelty. Haven't you heard men roar with laughter over ‘practical jokes that were as cruel as any torture of the Inquisition? Haven’; you seen g mm u: aw? ‘lid. "i."°‘°“§.;‘. l: “calm” “l?” m rs e ' you mem ‘g, q only uninlal m» laughs? m’ w’ Believe me. my dear, you know. 0r he crackling of thorns Mil Edith Roger: luv! fivc tables of bridle ‘Thursday evening and completes hel- social ‘ ligations this afternoon when she will be hostess st I similar. enjoyable psrtébwél: there are worse things than being man-led to a man who doemw laugh. You might be married to one who laugh; mo ""1131 °l‘ l"!!! Bl "i! W"!!! thinas. 0r you might be married to a vil- lage cut-up, and then you would have something really to ory about. DOROTHY DIX. -m the procels of etched ,' England. and . WWW Clear cut beauty of line is essen- xegular, long, short, or cross-hat- ohod ‘is a matter of individual in- terpfetltion. of the 20th century are becoming recognise amplu in the history of etching. additional guests in for _ hour. success of int summer's salabul-g festival, the committee has ai- mdy begun to plan for the 1m festival. _ The advisability of lengthening the period is being considered. Wagner's opera "tum ' The interpretations and mulls d u very lmportmt ex- AMomingSmile I-low You May Get Rld of a ' Those Palnf F! lillili |\ — A mum under. the direction of-‘Ilcecenini is ‘mentioned as the chic; event. 1M- canini is also expected to repeat "hlitlff"'lnd "Iidcllaf his un- III!- pbnnyconocris. Manet’ uo"will be - fol-mndiiifwsnmdecvcnlxjw ' uctiomwilibeal-rangcd. lincolmged by the tremendous “N "What; does the prisoner My?" Q l “n: ll irtoially Innocent," repliedw coin-t interpreter The Knish-uh lflmted. . "wlgtgnguuc don the prilmcr ‘nu interpreter thnlund his should: "z couldn't u. Ywr'1fmw." he replied. "It's the lint time I've evol- "F" W‘ evei-"ivi-W- ...'i".=.":":i.:'.:.i noun“. ‘ » can of Viclp VapoRub the Lady Iweedmluir stabbed the 3 Mills. atBfldlOoh€hl-l:55.l!"‘3ml<_ incl-side, byjdge on Tuesday evening, on the occasion of their twenty-seventh wedding anniversary. @1107 10°01"! many congrI-tulltlwt- Silmmcnidl. sails from Halifax Sunday morn!!! for London, mill-lid. 011 l l“ months visit to hi!‘ and Mrs. C. Th!!!" service is in white and Bold. with I- design of loses and thistlcs. She insisted that the number of thistle! and roses should be equal. Then are several large cups for the Duh. who prefers 1.121s Olw- “ is spending the winter ill char- lottetown the guest of Dr. and Mh. Pethick, the latter being her aunt. I I I visit w friends in Boston. Will Garry Dining provide glectel- comfort and con- venience for passengers difllll! 0M‘! are now operated through between Halifax and Montreal on the Ocean limited and Maritime Rimmed stated B. J. superintendent of sleeping and dining cal-s, Candaian National Railways. Wendell Mayhew. Lawson Cakes; 3 Edward Wilson. » Morey MacVittie. v Dressmaker may mmecouppcl I I I . During the week cud time have been many BMW" m" Plm" for Mixs Catherine Darby, 8t. Ei- canors, who left on Tuesday to spend til. winter in Si" Y"!- Miss Mull-head and Mill Hodl‘ son who have been lblndznl t!" II“ 0D ummcr in Binnmemldl Wednesday for New York 1nd Florida. . . ‘ um ma mmlm min-hone .mdws.l.cellomc,lln- m enicrtaimdat dinner Mrs. Annie mm. parents, Ni’. ' . The Duchess Gloucester‘: tel Miss Gertrude Howatt oi Victoria Miss Helen Grant has gone on a You'll want this new street 1 cocktail dress’ the mm‘ moment- you see s’? Gar Entire Trip MObIOTON, u. a. Dec. 8-To It's glamorous in rich Dubonnet color velvet with Dubonnet lame’ collar, bow and cuffs that give it an air of youth. The buttons are self. covered velvet. Or make it of Dubonnet lame‘ with short sleeves, if you pleggg] They're very young and smart. sec back view! I black crepe t mnmm “mun Another scheml silk with silver and black metal cloth for its contrast. n’! l0 Bimllle to sow am remark- . ably inexpensive to make it. Style No. 946 is designed for sisal I4, l6 ,lB years, 86, 38 and 40-inchu bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards o! 39-inch material with 1% yards of 89-inch contrasting. Price of PATTERN-II cents iii stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Whp coin carefully. -._._._._-_-___,_____, no. w. am WESTMOBELAND school. Honor Roll for November: Grade VIII: l Wrixon Moon; 2 2 m; a Willie Crude 1'1‘! ‘Br: l Morey Mncvlttie’. Grade III Jr: l Pearl French. Grade 2 5r: 1 Boyd Wilson. Grade 2 Jr: l Frank Munroe. Grade VI: 1 Lois Macvittie; -_ Grade V: l Helen Grade 1 (a) Keith Macvittie. Name ‘Grade 1 (b) Leroy Wilson. ‘Grade 1 (c) Rankine lflollltttg, ..........--..... ...,,,,,,,_,,,,, Prise for spelling awarded to Itrcet Address -Dorothy Mayne, ‘Beecher sou0o||IouI‘Ien|-qonsoeo-cc-qnu-veoq Elsie "I've only been licrc a Fcwpmonilu-bui | think I'm going Io like ii" T number-MW» I: Clltorll f In: Andzlimit: mféia-Q ma». i * iui m "“""""'“"°‘ +4 _- Afillilfmlmpfltlnfl Ierlfn M. Whenever!!!" "'4" Inltivr-humbn w!!!” Inokfvfl“ cmubsavcmol¢1 bottle. l h be t-formlnd- loplcnanttestciconleftla: pcnaatrcucuin Calorie HQHnntivIM ' i)” rcAsrokl/i Hnrfinoiflm . dqiwchndma,‘ Lindy. Q__IBI_UIMW°4'°“Y\"“