.-...-............. ..... n IHE CHARLOTTETOWN ‘GUARDIAN v ‘fmillfililulat I tainank Rte alm '1 Social arid Personal I Fashions f’ Literature Tfiiéfwotsiasrs REALM jvingfiiLelsure Our tree horse is ready For anything. t syphilis and gonorrhoea. It was not |an easy task, for "nice people" didn't talk about such things. It ‘would have been very easy for women's ‘groups to ignore the plea lfor support. Some, of course, did. But most realized that the scourge that was casting its ugly shadow across thousands of- Canadian homes could not be wiped out by a horrified shrug of the shoulders. ‘In British Columbia, where vigorous campaign of education was started in 1938, women ral- lied to the support of the provincial health department. They attended lectures. saw the first of the mod- crn movies 0n the subject, visited We jump on our horse ' And it's "Yippee" and “Whoa', A- over the range Aftar cattle we go. He's a fine. splendid horse For everyday play. l-Ie doesn't need oats. And he can't run away. For Frankie and John Anti Susan and mt‘. The host linr-r‘ uc know Is a limb in our tree. fafirizttit Ltioxtroll Monitor. manor raunchy ix can't‘ name treatment hours and learned first hand what, the health department was doing and what they, as good citizens could do to hep out From that tlm - the Dominion have more and more taken a. leading role in the fight against V.D. They have urged premarital and prenatal blood tests to protect innocent marital partners. They have supported the health authorities’ demands that commercialized prostitution abolished. By their common-sense attitude. the essential facts about VD. are now being made available to help protect the youth of our nation against needless, hurtful experi- ences. IHCS Behind the >11. .~..~ public health auzhtiritics are h. z in their cf-i farts It) eliminate venereal diseawt i5 the story of the (icterminationi '0! manv Canadian tvtnnrn. A few short _v5ars n90 the North Ameri- ran continent ' ... lltlrulth Service. ill one of the most xvhirh appcarcci widely read may :1 , item" ‘ American hen renewed {FIFTY i l: “I h vc conic band.‘ id I\I L1 Ambergris has been called by the Chinese "dragon's saliva." departments to battle Eggs in storage quickly absorb odours ulch as those of onions, cabbage, decaying potatoes, fruit or kerosene. High-quality lamb has largely superseded mutton on the Anteri- cau market because it is more pro- fitable to the producer and is pre- ferred by consumers. ".....t..§.i?....;. WHIRLING _’“ Min mt- nus-t .h, arr ving a: ft is important in curing hay to save the leaves. as they contain more feeding value than the stems; alfalfa leaves, for example, have twice as much protein. calcium and phosphorus as the stems. FEWER WOMEN EMPLOYED *7 \0u. manm." WVlllli W115 Your ‘Joseph $lllllll.' ‘ 'm -tfraid that will‘ not _be suf- ficzcni for us tn identify ham. ‘fort. we, we have quite a loi of Joseph‘ ‘~ s uu ltere. Arc there (my ' ins l>v which I can iden- Is the migration of women from industry back to the home getting underway? It would seem 50. ' _ , judging from a report recently ls- 'rll bfore he died h" m“ m“ sued by the Dominion Bureau cf 1f I vvvr Kiffli imfihe‘? m1“ Statistics. The report indicates his filme- that in the last six months the PIP he” number of women employees in - recorded employment has been re- duced by 25,500 or almost five per cent. The greatest reduction is taking place in the types of jobs in which women originally replac- ed men. Eggs keep fresher if they are stood with the smaller ends down. COLLAKLIKE NECKLACES NEW YORK -- Gold collar-like necklaces are worn over the co;- lar of a high-necked dress. or at the edge of s. high neckline. Some are stone-set, others combine pearls and gold beads. SMALL THINGS “Small things make base men proudfl-Shakespeare. bleocllecrldlft f. FUR THE HUME GAY PINAFOBEB (it chap. Jre ~. id's lttive l 100k Bl ~ < ue Sa" Ah-h-h. ‘olilviotttlgltl-ott. doctor! Do vou B9B H . t my rrntztie? anlsjhlgixdfif§o, miram YOU WV" pypbfl to find tzti=s tzroxvittg on a race trar~k.__ vvttttmii. time pinafores, heatweves. Dlrn skirts ing features. 18. 18, 20 and 40. 3% yards 5-inch. 8. Size 4 dequires inch. Send 20 cents for which guide. PATTERN includes complete Print your Name, Address to state silo Wu wish. Charlottetown Guardian. Name Street Address Q hwhll NORTH SEA MONSTER ICNOARDINE, Scotland —(0IP) -Claims to have seen a sea mon- the mouth of the Tyne River were lnfldg by Skipper Ilowrio and two crew members of a salvage ahlp They said its back was eight to l0 feet across. You Mothers Know The health Value of Irradiated Evaporated Milk. Ge: Silverwoofr-It in uneurpuled for babies and the whole fcmily—i! in pure whole mill: in concen- [ruled form with ell the goodnui left in-ét’: SAFE -—Thou who un it prefer it. “Good Milk Makes Good Meals” EVAPOIIATED MILE: 3 \ r a i the Vancouver clinic during non- Here’; a darling team of play- gay for summer, an fies over the shoulders aye flatter- No. ‘fies u out. m elves 1o. i2, l4. Sin 16 requlres| No. 3781 is out. in aims 2. 4. O and 1% yards fi- aewing ' has and Style Number plainly. Be sure address Pattern Department Th. star‘ in the North Sea a mile off, ELLEIPS llllllY v By An Inland Farmer's Wlle ._._____________.,,_ ,_, _ q A great many delightful things occur in holiday time, new inter- ests and enjoyments to be remem-| bered and stored away in the Iathomless depths in the treasure |house of memory, laid carefully, Ithere. to become lavender scented. ‘through the years. So I found‘ .every waking minute of vacation ,daya at Alder-lea full of new de- tiights ‘till each one was “pressed ‘down and running over"; and all for mv pleasure. There were sun-, lit. days when James came in; sweat-stained from the haying to, say apologetically: "Ellen, if you could come to do that after-raking it would be a considerable help. ,That cloud over there above the woods is heading for the west. ,1 wouldn't trust thunder out cf this heat." And willingly I left the "James" of my story to fol- ;low the flesh and blood one on a‘ ‘pleasant vagrant trail to the open spaces. And the_ cloud was only a flcecy Wllltq lavyzpuff-of-ti-oiic lwithout svill or purpose floating taimlessly on a turquoise sky. But ‘a robin on a. fence-rail trillcd t"Could you presume to write at ;better tale than this?" The sheen ,of the mill-stream was through the, ltrees and the beauty of hay-time was all about me. And no rain‘ came, until every last bit of the _hay here and at Rob's was safely .gathered to stack and loft and mow. On Saturday evening it was completed and Rob and Jamie lwent in the road home-ward tivith horses and hay-wagon. I had .drivcn "the young mare" in the vlift for the last load and it was . James who unhitched hcr from the ‘swing and I saw him tenderly; smooth her mane before she set off briskly to follow the others home. Ours were let to WillEl‘. I saw them canter eagerly to drink at the stream. And their. harness was hung in the stable and the hay-wagons wheeled to their ac- customed laces. Weary ivorkers; smiled, an went easily to the. chores. After a week of work thatl had been tiresome yet good, the prospect of a day of rest straight-l cried weary shoulders. I stood in< the yard in the afterglow. when the west was still alight with the shades of the dying day. James.‘ was beside me. We watched at car leave a cloud of dust behind it as it passed on this Alderlea road of ours. The particles hung i together like a veil above the fields land road, caught and held tiaere |for a time in the coolness of the evening. James’ gaze shifted from there to the potato patch below the lane, and the turnips beside. begging now for the dcws of heaven. “Ellen? he said, turning to me, with a ghost of a smile, “a dajfs rain now wouldn't do a mite of harm!” 1 I ' a l. The Nell mare was excused from all work at the haying. For her, this year, there were no lengthy clays at the raking. No sweat- stalned coat nor mark of harness. The satin of her chestnut coat. remained dappled and pretty. Nell has been favored among females- being now the mother of a son. He came to Aldcrlea James says tbut things happening as they did, outside his usually infallible rec- koning of such matters, leave room for doubt) about dawning on Aug- ust; 3. That was the windless lovely morning when the sky above the barns was rose and amber tinted. Early that, morning when I was yet in my deepest slumber, James nudged me to say: "Ellen, have you forgotten? The fat cattle are to go today," and at once he fairly sprang from the old bed to the floor. Judy, in the look-out room, where the sound of the over- florw at the waste gates on the dam below, now is an enchanting lullaby, took the tumult of his risinfil for her cue and presently all derlea was astir. The cows were herded to the milking and with each milker to her or his favorite, the work was soon neatly done. It was while the cream- separator was humming and the women-folk had the Calf-pails set in orderly rows to receive their ra- tion, that Jock came from the -rise leading to the pasture at the rear of the buildings. He had gone there to fetch the horses for their morning grain, in preparation for the work at the having. “r1011 her foal", he said to me, then the only one in sight "It's up on its feet; and the other horses might hurt it." I know now that Jock must have been rather excited for he added quietly but suggcstivc-ly "you couldn't hurry your step a little?" I jumped to rellevc James at the separating- Jeanie and James tore away to the field to greet and protect the new-comer, but not. before I had answered Jock with equal sarcasm and in a voice that carried to its mark: "We've had foals before lhis at Alderlca". I sometimes vary similar infrequ- ent statements to "before ou were born.” Age will have its nings! However it's as Pat would say "a very foine foal." I found that out when the last bit, of cream had dribbled from the separator to the pail and I hoisted this cash crop to a nail out of reach of the cats and Para and I went w 10in the procession bringing the mother t and son from the pasture. Perhaps. |now that I think of it, I walked too sedately, unbefitting so joyous an occasion. Jack's words still rankled. But_ mothcred by the Nell mare-and there never was n kinder dam-and although perhaps of only commonplace origin as re- gards any or all of his forbears, this white-starred horse, that may one day be a bay or a red or a brown, come to us "out of the everywhere" has ageady won his way into our hear . I O I ‘Phat. was the very same mom- ing. only Karolyn and Jamie, of all of us. missed the round-up, the cutting-out and the loading to the truck, of the fat cattle that. have been pasturln on the other Ire-nt- ed) farm. So d, one day in spring when I was in town and farmet-s were sowing the first their grain. To a popular dealer from ‘up the country" to go "off the gram." The animals were to br- cut-out from the rest of the hrrri and driven to a pen convenient to the loading. At a signal (loud) I was to open the connecting gates and also tprnvided I hnd the wit, strength and cunning» to "keep them out cf that there oats" to the l IIQ Dorothy Dix DECEMBER - MAY MARRIAGES Girl FindfitlTHappiness As Wife Of Older Man ' 13min M155 DIX: Sixteen years 88° W39" I w" m- 1 mm“ a man 3O years my senior and ever since I hwe been peillflevily able. I have been bored to death. 101' h! mid‘ m9 Bl" "Pb" my f; _ and associate only with women who were old enollsh W“ e mytflm 9:0- I-Ie is jealous of the very air I breathe. He never perm s me o so . dances or parties or do any of the things that women of my 118B 911103’- 1 am mu young and he is a tired old man and all I can dois sit and wait, and for what? For no doubt he \\ A outlive me as my health has given a/way under the strain I have tn endure. If any young girl thinks she can find happiness Wvlth an old man. she i5 making the mistake of her life. t J. C. H. AGE IS CHASM ANSWER: Your experience is the inevitable one of all girls who marry men old enough t0 b0 their fathers. for age is the chasm that 110i 1°"- , nor good intentions. nor duty. nor even gratitude can ever bridtlfl- 0" one side of it stands youth, eager for life, avid in!’ Dlfiflsll"? and m1“? , with energy. On the other sidei sitat ttiredbeolgi F1185 ‘Seven its fmollfms ‘ - v s ur e . _ _ , atroglllgi“: lsmrlignitlttlgrlypfiterliinthalto ha?! so little truth in it as the? Iownil Y0" dilllmg- I "ml i075“ one about its being better for a girl to be an old man's darling than a young man's slave. It is the other way about, for the old are almost invariably tyrannical. And especially do they think that 'h<-’.\’ have 111i‘ right to dominate the young. They are so sure that their way is the right way, that they know best about everything and that it is their: d privilege to enforce their views and habits on their families. So the young girl who marries an old man isn't pelted and strolled. She has to sit at home and nurse his rheumatism, while he tries to make her as old and stuffy as he is. It is a sad life and foolish is tho girl who lets herself in for it. _ DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My mother is trying to force me to marry a man whom I do not love because he belongs to a wealthy family‘ Since I have a good job and am self-supporting, do you not think that I am free to leave home? I am afraid if I do not go that my nmthri will nag me into marrying this man to whom I could never be a good wife because I actually dislike him. What should I do? LEANORE. I ANSWER: Obedience to ones parents doesn't include marrying‘ the man that Mama picks out for a husband because he has some: money. It takes love. congeniality and the joy and comfort of being] together to make any marriage a success and these are things that came by nature and are not bought over the counter. t Anyway, a husband is a matter of personal taste and every girl has the right to pick out her own. Because Mother fancies a man is. no sign that you would care for him. for you are the one who is going‘ to have to live with him—not Mother. ; I have known many cases where mothers forced their daughters to marry rich young men, even when they were in love with poor boysf Then the rich young men, who had never done a. hand's turn of workg in their lives. lost their money and the poor girls had nothing left-- neither love nor money. t DEAR. MISS DIX: What do you think of a husband who will not! let his uiie drive their car, but who thinks that it is perfectly all right ~ for a young woman to pick him up and take him to and from work, on the sly, in her car? BLUE EYES. your husband is trying to economize ori gas with the girl instead of having a love affair. ANSWER: Perhaps and is bumming a ride with her. I right It was after the cattle were l tied on the truck and someone ask- ed: “Ellen, what were you going to do with that stake in your hand?” I looked down to find that I had hurriedly broken a. small switch from a wild cherry when I caught a fat; steer "making eyes at me." l ETIllllETTE By Roberta Lee .._. ,, , There were other things hap- pened that very day. These must walit their turn for; Monday ‘is go ng away coo an s ar-li . Jean e _ Mm- the knt; a ye-opcncd a book when I left her w out», a him e h 5 be a few minutes ago in the house he done with across the lane. Jock is helping the food to the tummy; Mr. C returned well and hflDfiY A. Place the knife across tilt‘ from the hospital-omit a grist for. edge of the plate. but lteve: with a down-the-river farmer. This is! the handle resting on the table- one who changing blocks near the] cloth. Sometimes the knife is held inner peak of the new. high barn. closely to the plate with the right had the misfortune to have . ladder break beneath his wei Q. Should the mun m" thv; and he came doom and down or- woman alight first when they are tunately with no broken bones. And leaving a taxi or streetcar? I said: “What did YOu think about when you were falling?" "Think, woman " he replied, "there was no time to think." Writers of fic- tion then as James will have it, must all have the wrong idea. Judy is typing a letter to her own folk, another fine art she has acquired, as well as learning to milk the Kelly cow. since she came to the Island. And James is opening the porch door this very minute. Where has he been? Ill tell you. Near dusk, when all other work for the day was over, he led the calf, now grown to join the adult class.. once the care and pride afsl joy of “COOK'S CORNER ._ ..._ suoan COOKIES This recipe about 7 dozen rather ihin c..sp cookies of medium size. 2% cups once-sifted pastry tum; 0r 2 cups once-Jilted hard- wheat flour a c en used of food. what sl 1r it Wlllli‘ ronvctiit; tum and assist his companion i: alight. . What. part of the EXDOlRSO should a. man pav for when Rltlll; a golfing party? A. The host should pa? for tn~ cadules, the balls. and the re- freshments. the women folk (and James says their only exercise) through lit-t winter's days, in the road to th other farm. James comes slow“ in the door-a dfiic :11. tnourli. t neglected expression on his farc- a signal that lunch-time has come again to Alderlea. Until tomorrow — Diary -§0011— night. may“ AND ‘l1 ld "l ‘ . b o“ “ed "W" warn no n42 THE HO5PITAL n ON 7H5 ' LA5T BU$ I SUPPO V: teaspoon salt ‘o, teaspwn ground ginger 1a teaspoons ground cinnamon 1 WP quick-cooking rolled oats 2/8 cup shortening will Dlus 2 tablespoons fine granulawd sugar l6 cup brown sugar. lightly packed 1 egg-well beaten ‘A cup milk teaspoon vanilla ‘A teaspoon vanilla flavoring i teaspoon ground cinnamon. ' nrss r wouldn't clmngp illf‘ farts. he 581d A. The man should go first. then - :- ..¢A.>.-' ‘QGET BACK FROM IR‘! t‘ A BUSY LINE! i , l '”"“°3.17°§~1s.v.v l-Ie never played a game with that hope. l-ie either gave him. sell; to it wholeheartedly, a: hap- polled when he bad received one] of Eve’; bright. chronicles of life! abroad, or he revolted from it. moodily, as a delusion. In lbosel somber times he would say harsh-g iy, "Nothing will ever change for us I ought to make you love me or make you go.” Kay had many answers. 131W l-ll meant “Wait." Once she said des. perately, "I can bear what people may say so long as it isn't so." u . . l i t When Kay was with Richard it -was a paradise The magic thing I about love was that you never had enough of the other person; you .wei'e never ready to say $006 -niglit evch when vou knew you were to moot rhcitext day. June. ‘July, and August ran by in a brightness llkg quicksilver. Dick tvus away on his vacation for only the last two weeks of that ‘September "That's the curse of WIRES CROSSED . . . signals mixed . . . there isn’t trouble Bill can't fix. He really knows his connections . . . know: Corn Flakes, too. Just like 4 out of 5 Canadians, Bill votes Kelio first for flavour. "For a quick, appetizmg snack, give me Kelio Corn Flakes every time. They're l0 easy to digest, I like 5h any time of day." A big, heaping bowlful oi these crisp, to" flakes are ready in 30 seconds! They're economical to buy, too“ coat less than a cent a serving. Pick up a couple of packages at; grocers tomorrow . . i. either of two convenient sizes. Made . "l pit you. oven for fish" And then his mood with one of its swift changes, turned to darkness, and he caught her to him tightly. “C11,; myfigirl, what are we going to, o_ . Kellogg's in London, Canada. It ivas not long after his re-l turn from til,» north that the let- SAVE TIME . . . SAVE WORK . . . SAVE FUI zcr cnmv it. came to the apartment. not to the tiffice, and Kay knew 0f, j it only at the end of the day when; Dick laid it on the desk before her —-he had asked her to stay on.( "Read tlhat,” he told her Hiis voice was changed and Kagl quick y rcmoinbcrcd that he ha seemed prcoccupicci all clay". ' She read it swiftly. then shel read it again slowly over and overi By Roberta Lee w give herself time, yet she could‘ not. believe it She knew how fhatl ‘-—I~————~ ,_ —~———. she never believed that it. would» happmt She felt a strange uh-I 1,11“ Bush“ Drrnarcditcss Confuscdly‘ 511B] Lilac bushes should be trans- wondercri if Dick felt this She planted any time between lite fall! wondered if he had any credence! and spring, and they thrive best, in in those quiet words: Since life a rich and moderately moist soil- abroad hem is so pleasant I The bushes should be pruned after should like to continue it indefin- they are through flowering. itcly. Under these conditions it is - _ Extracting Onion Juice only fair to suggest that you _ might like a divorce An easv wav to extract onion, Iiay thought. “I've done this to 111166 55 W W‘ B 5M9 {mm the '09‘ licr~can I do this m her?" and end. draw the skin. and the‘? mess tllcn she thought, "on, thank God the Omon- Wlth 1* "WY m° °“- °" -ihank God!" a coarse gm-ter. lvifrs Richard Kendall. Dick's wife at. last She could sit at, his table and sleep under his roof. And aftri- a time this feeling a_ bout Eve would Cllg down. iii‘. _ -7. .V___ _-_45\-v " uotlstanotn Q. How can I test the fui part of mulhmoms? A. Bv stinixig while ‘ silver spoon. If there ls my to substance in the ltlllfiliftlfllm, silver will turn. Q. How can I prolong m; of trouser cuffs? A. Sew soft strips of leatiu; the inside of the cuffs. Th‘; not be noticeable. citHQT-iiifi tiHiliil l Lit" c. fiijiititi Til suit Irttnv rare for w." :5; " " l. Preventing Dandruff It is claimed that dandruff can be prevented by applylmra solu- tion of one parl- Rlplile Julie l0‘ three parts of water. about twice a week. f‘. i ' It-"I sl-ttitttri ha”. ...F|.l::,E_- I!" a. an an . I ititiipti" _ rriiav 'i't-sit.,i.tt-_: y.‘ rout. To Tti .1 I i’ I Eiiiiiiii i..ii.ii='i rut, fiTi-iiiiil iliiiS, v "re-e l. a other: i". - I.=.it=t'i-'.'-;. 793 DESIGN N0. 79! An attractive tanner b‘ child's room is worked in ~ t stitch. ‘This inexilfill§ll'f_ l", to make, Hot iron nuns er Di, No. 793 measures when! (‘ll finches with complete 1:: I To order pattern: W t t (‘IIAPTER XVIII Dick said. “lrs our way out, Kay" '" in a sobrv voice and instantly 5116 frit- in him the forcp of his decisive- anti her own fluttering of fear scented silly l-Ie was more moved than he admitted-she saw that in a flash of feminine insight ~but all the regret in the world t m? I n‘ C. Williams ~ I . .. _ > ._ l. What is wrong with this sen- tence? “Shc never said a wordl about that." 2. What is the correct pronunc-i iatlon of "heyday"? 3. Which one of these words i8 misspelled? Longevity. lovallsm- lomyette. lollipop. bluntly It was the only possible sttltttiriti to their three lives. It. Wilg what he had hoped for. what Eve had half indicated mizht occur Hp was grateful that the life abroad had mrétnt as much to llI‘l' as she cxncctc Kay gave him an oblique lookttrgyergglméegfis ‘he whcn ll10lSTlld thgti. Didnéti he9h§vc| 5 what 1s ‘ a word begmntng n stispcon of »v¢"s mo vcs. er‘ ' u :stu]‘") own penetration. her feeling of Wm‘ animal’ means at rest _ ‘mowing complicity. brought the ANSWERS i hrizht blood to hcr fncc. and when llp said. "I've worried about you. L say. “she did not s“. a word Kay" slto flashed "Don't think you nbou, that" g_ pronounce hay-day.’ nwp m" ntrvtltinsz." disarming her accent first syttgtble, 3, Lprgne[tg_. own scPv-"l ntllCfY :4. T0 I10 0f‘ act contrary W- (Continued on Page B) "Nature is always consistent» ——.-_—+ though she feign‘ w Contg-gvgne her own lawa."—Emerson. 5. QulB-S- l cent. t l . How can I make a substitute cedar closet} A y; thgfg l5 no cedar closet in ithe house, wipe the shelves and the iwoodwork of the clothes close with. lcedar oil when cleaning. This PTO] icess should be repeated from time C“ to time. ._.__Y ‘l word “ecu-é WIIW Oillil! By Anne Ashley -I.I..c...._;-_-:=-nw i v I i Do you suiier _ from MONTHIY . llllllllUS IEISI will: its wulr, lived feelings? If functional periodic disturbances make you feel nervous. lirod, restless-at such limes-try Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vege- lahlc Com nund to relieve such syn‘?- lnms. Pinkllamki Compound is one of e tnost ellcci tvo medicines for this purPosc. uy Ioday mt vow‘ W" ggodlfsuphlillltrlf Y5 cents in Postal Scrip w Necgilm" 3. Charlottetown Guardian- Deflgfl NO. 793 ‘.__\ I i I t Name Street Addreu lTOllUW label directions. B gym 6'. téfifviitiiii Slruiias W I Pro i By Edwina I mom! now-climates W5 GONE! 0-1210 czar ‘m’ - HOSPJTAL" r HOPE ‘HEY FouND I , CHAR E$ MUCH IMPROVED. cAw SAY r bl-AME 01.0 mucosa, THQUGl-lg m: seine Mxiot-is A OUT, ueAsv-As-ree. MAPJIHA s LONE VIGIL. FOR ‘rt-ts ABSENT ALBERT-- intent-o B: A Prrv iP us»: uses THE SAME wus- 5E! Measure and aift together twice, the flmir, baking powder. salt, gin- Ber and it; teaspoon of the cinno- mon: mix in the rolled oats. u: -_—— Tll m; Tnaqroipali- ofiious Cream the shortening and “Tiju- ally blend in the ii cup grantiiated sugar and ‘A cup brown sugar; mix in well-beaten egg. a little at. a time. beating well after each addi. on. Combine the milk. vanilla and lemon flavoring. Add the dr' inilredienta. alter- nately with t e flavored milk, to the creamed mixture. combining well after each addition. Wrap dough in a niece of waxed paper and chill thoroughly. Roll out to ‘vi-inch thickness on u lightly flourfd canvas or baking board; cut wth n floured cutter and arrange the eookim on a light- lv buttered cookie pen. Sprinkle with a mixture of 2 tablespoons qranulatrri swzar and i teaspoon ground cinnamon Bake in a moderate oven, 360 le- I Q I 1k I ‘it glut“ OFF THE LAW 5UIT BY SEEING