m JUNE 16. 1949- Budget Dress Stars Imagine finding so much fashi- ion appeal in these budget-Filth ad dresses! Your summer ward~ robe will look dollars more when you wear them. Refreshing prints, GYGIQI’ lmhii hi!!!“ I°"' “y, linens, shantungs, one and two piece styles — also beau- tiiul selection of two piece sllll dfesses. ' .95 "P. Just arrived a shipments of Lee Parker Suits. $ 5o All pastel shades. We still have a wonderful selection of coats, all color! 6M1 sizes. Gohardines, twills, worsted $ ~50. materials 19” h' t of pastel siiorties of gabardine 5 35 .:.::r..r,':::."..~... 14.. S .95 1 up ...._--»---...--- You still have a wide variety of suits to choose from s-s-is-dseav-pg-sses- AIIli BIISEATIIT $1 M) MEN'S STANFIIELIYS or ATLANTIC JOCKEY SHORTS and TOPS. Each FORSYTH SROADCLOT - SHORTS RAYON JERSEY sums m SHORTS, each s_r_ceeeee_e4_-e.-_'_-.---- 150 to 2.00 89c SMART SPORT SHIRTS ., For liasual Wear fili-ELMSIZFT 2.50 to 6.95 Boys‘ Fancy Design Sport Shirts SIZES I TO i6. 2.95 Priced ska-s...-“y”.us-us-d-eeguas-ee- BUYS’ SLACK SIIITS I 6.95 to 9.95 Use our lay-away plan - a small deposit will hold any garment. TIIE GREENIIIIL 00. LTII. LADIES’ WENR MEN'S AND IOYY WEAR 99 Queen Street I44 Gt. George St.- For Vocation time. All sizes. Priced .._._.. IT'S E6‘? 1'0 PM!!! Will!" e. FOUR HOUR ENAMEL u I There's nothing finer than Flo-glaze for "doing over” porch furniture, chairs, bookcases, toys, etc. It flows on smoothly, dries quickly, and is famous for its durable china-like gloss and wesbabiiity. Smart, bright colors that are a joy‘ to work with. Z. loylazé PHAV pl N1‘ 5 (f /,'//'./.'.//.//_’/ - l 347F Fer Sale ly: FEIIIIELI. s tlillllilllt, iieeee Si. JllST Anmvto and tr. c. n. Store New Army Scots and ‘Airforoe Oxford Shoes selling at ' I $7.75 Also other work and dress Boots and Shoes, some with crepesolee S2.75toS6.78 pr. l VAIOOISIIIISIOCIKOIPBIHSQ-e-GBI. ........88-00t0$4-50 ........s4.oo| nawuduedoil-cn; ssso 4 olinon an» savn noun! than Richmond Street _ u. o. KELLY Africa Flight B! vu Gieigud "You've forgotten to be a gea- tleman twice in the last ten min- utes. She smiled at him. “Oh, I didn't mind at ail. But don't do it again!" "I apologize." said Sothorn. stiff as any poker. "That's all right, Antony." He took a step forward. “Won't you reconsider. Carol, please? It's not going to be much fun on this trip if we leave things as they are nowi" She shook her shining head. “I'm afraid it‘s no good, Antony. Ancl I don't believe in leaving things in a muddle. Besides, we're not going on this trip just for fun. either of us. are we," ' "I don't know about you," burst out Antony Sothern, "but I'm not! And you might remember iti" The door slammed behind him. But the theatrical gesture was wasted as far as Carol Manson was concerned. Antony had al- ready slid into the farthest "beck- ground of her mind. She walked up slowly to her bedroom. and sat down in front of her triple mirror on the dressing-table with its bat- tery of silver and ivory. Reflected in the right-hand panel of the mirror was the wall to the right of the big photograph of Rupert Larrimore. He leaned against the ‘plane in which he had landed at Valparaiso alter his Pacific flight in the grirniest of overalls, his face greasy and un- shaven. his eyes hallowed. his fly- ing-heimet pushed on to the back of his head. His hair was wind- tosscd, and there was a desperate sort of self-conscious grin show- ing his teeth _.. Carol slipped out of her frock and stood up. her hands clasped behind her head. "I'm so glad that I'm really rather exceptionally good-looking." she said to her reflection. And then she realized with a certain fear, that she felt quite wildly, quite ddreasoningiy happy. CHAPTER VIII CAR-OHS DECISION Sir George Manson had his faults. but when he set his heart on a scheme. that scheme was automatically halfway to being carried out. "The Star of the East," its four great engines duly tested. its huge metal wing-span glittering. its silver star gleaming symbolically on the nncelle, its luxurious inside fittings complete to the last cushion and cocktail- glass. was duly delivered on sche- ue. Hubert Manson's personal and surveying kit was listed and secur- ed by the combined labours of his wife and Antony Sothern, in the intervals of getting their own. Otto Fiesch. the camera-man, who had worked for so many years at the studios near Berlin, made a daily pilgrimage into the depths of Soho to get genuine sauerkraut and gherkins, revealed himself as the most agreeable type of intelligent Jew. Cynthia Wright practically toolr down telephone messages in her sleep. Sothern tried to prac- tise the old theory that hard work alone can stifle a hopeless love- and failed dismally. While Lorri- more, and Garol, and Nigel Kerr. the reserve pilot-s young man with a broken nose, who had play- ed Rugger for Fettes and Cam- bridge. and regarded Larrimore as a dcmi-god—proceeded to the fly- ing trials of the machine. .Sir George began by objecting to his daughter's going up on those early trial fllfints. But the Press. needless to say, got wind of what was happening. and were even more anxious to photograph Carol Manson in flying kit than the “Star of the East." And when Sir George realized just how much publicity he would lose ii he put his foot down, he took care to keep it up. Bo day after day Carol was not only in close physical proximity to this man who fascinated her so quecrly, but also in a position to see him at his best. - She soon learned. however much of a fluke that big flight had been. that he was of the stuff of the really great pilots. She learned his un- canny quickness of hand and eye and Judgment: hi: "feel" for the idiosyncrasies of a. plane. as a good rider feels for his horse's mouth. It was almost as if in the air he could cast off a skin. He seem- ed younger. and the harsh lines went out of his face. Larrlmore had for winds and clouds and the blue spaces of the sky, that feel- ing which the mountaineer has for crag. and snow-slope, and glacier; a feeling which has about it some- thing next door to the mystical; an instinct which in some men comes very close to religion She wondered whet he thought about her-if indeed he thought about her at all. He spoke to her THE GUARDIAN, UHAIQUIIEIUWN PAGE I THIRTEEN iiiIS lllllliiRI e wfi/fes/ Vl/Qj/y jl/l/[Li OU/L Al‘ e,lt's amazing! New i950 Ri Solium gets out more dirt-jaster-make! washing easier than ever befo tuds-ricber suds- give lots more clean- Ing power! Washes white clothes whiter fban new . . . washable colors brigbter than new . . . gives you the wbilerf, brighter! wash you've ever seen! it's the greatest soap ever produced by world-famous Lever Laboratories! Get New 1950 RIHSO with Solium today! lllWwl950 GIVES ‘I'll! JNIIITESTJIASII Mill/I nso with SO SAFE FOR CLOTHES SO KIND TO HANDS re! More \\\\II//'/ with‘ foéium 3 5° lltflg that she was forced to the conclusion that either ho was in love with her or else profoundly uninterested in her. Only one day. when she gave him no peace~untii for a few moments he let her han- dle the controls. was she certain that after all he was not indif- ierent. The hands which had clos- ed over hers at three critical mo- ments had not been those of a professional pilot. And when they landed, he had walked away with hardly a word. And so the days went by, and the headlines increased in number and inches; and Sir George gave interviews. and luncheons, and made speeches; and Liarrlmore grew gsyer. and Antony Sothern grew more silent and morosc: and Hubert " mlslald one thin8 after another for his wife to iind. Carol began to find difficulty in getting to sleep from sheer excite- ment. Just as thought she were still a little girl who knew that Santa Claus would never come until she did sleep. And at last she made up her mind that she must push the matter to an issue. She felt she must know—one way or the other. And if it was the other- well. there was still time. she could hack out. And back out she would. unless she and Larrimora could start on the trip as acknow- ledged lovers before the world. (To be continued) GLOBE TROTTER Sir Francis Drake was the first Englishmen to circumnavigate the earth. - CHOCOLATE PYRAMIDS (UNCOOKED) 20 marshmallow; i cup nut meats 4 squares chocolate icing sugar and beat. and chocolate which has been melt- ed together and Beat up and add a. pinch of "salt. ' t Add nuts and marshmallows that E y have been cut into small pieces. t -" Blend well. Shape into small pyra» _ i fi e mids and set on wax paper. Storl ‘ in oool place. 1 cup icing sugar I level teaspoon butler 2 egg! Beat eggs until very 118i“. Edd Add butter slightly cooled. )UT OUR WAY WITH Hl W11 .;‘e__.tss~gs:l~_"j__@ ‘ _ . 0H. You HAFTA "f BAT UPWARDS Hi5 CURVES GO UF’ AND COME (374%- .- 4/ ,i’»///, £21,1-; ': -—By l. R. William ~ ., 1 5EE--AND - . THERE'S ANOTHER v ' ADDED ADVANTAEJE g OF BATTiN' uP-;r p/ou DON'T Hrr, I "re-v PITCHER 5 PiTCl-iiN -- | .7,