5111-11 .-._-...,-r-\ m-znmnpm I‘\ (Author of "Pirate Cruise”, By CAPTAIN PATRICK CLIFFORD. “Men Without Fear”, etc.) Immediately they NMhI-‘d if Ind were aboard, the gangway W55 few minutes hauled 1.1 and 1n a the r111-:t1't~_\vr 111011111: C011- 111111: V“ in _v abczud, and gpup-y 1111111111 111m Ill 111v chart room I15 u hcll of a business. said the I naval 1111111, when he and Clancy i out, S11ll_\', Helena kc 1x115 captured. time sigllltl- 1111K! Eve ‘em 111 :1 ‘.\l\.\ over i." 1111' Samciiil . u 111"‘ 1111111-11 111111 1l1c111.— 1 "10 hostages. i '1 Clancy surprise. 1.1m some 0i I '11-, "God hclpi ..1 1 ought of ,1 '11'~‘1:111d.\'. 01' "f to .0111!‘ l 111v s. A i 11th 11 such a‘, _ 1 f 111 ‘)' 1" 1' 11 "H111 1.1‘ (1 1 .1. ‘ill l 1111; "i 111w 111m in. Con- ‘ I"? take 11>" 111-il!(1l‘l‘O\\' to '1 101' ufi 1° come l I’ PS early 1 scan- | 113:1 ' ;11p: at 1 1 . drail- orlly before ‘ 11p to him. j he yelled. i 'I'l1c\- reached i and COIPlCIZs pro- writtcn mess-age 1 11-..- ;~.-.»11, from g_ s ‘Pal-Wail i 11 C-"mirzoclorc, Connors ex-l r‘ and Caner scanned the r ' ionic-ti by pir- 11. scar f: hon aboard advise fresh details could dw 1101111111; but \\'.'1ii 11c 11mm‘ r1111 race 111111111 was‘ i1r111r in coming Chaney. n11:1 ‘Tracy. the destroyer s11 1pcr. rr-a! i’, together Gigantic r1anris attached by pir- ‘ afes from Tang-Wu. it read. short- . 1v after R p p.m ‘ast night Cap- fain. nnv" p11==~11~1~s and crow killed P111 311 .=‘olrr1 and hnstazes takrn b1: pirates who cscipcri and ficwnnrd rcasriuarrls. Wildcar has lrrlvcd and standing by. Can you haw this sent to the m1¢11~111~~~11v ("ancy a'l.:"1l the de- atrnvofs skipper, and Tracy nod- ded. Advise mo flame: of Gigantic hosiavcs. (‘iaucv had written. Also ascertain whether Captain Madi- son. Dfl""!‘.'*r‘1‘ 1.: alive and request h"r1 to FPllfI mc the fullest (i0- tafifs. fr.“ than half-nu-hour latcr the _1 .~ mite began. Clancy had . taken up a post in the. wireleas room. m1" watched the man as he wrote. S1~<Y"~n‘v his face nalcd and a lock of agony entered the steel- bluc o1 111' i i "1 Giganzic hostages Sally Revel. Helena Grauby, Apollo Hubbard. he read with a great effort pulled himself together and awaited the rest, of the text. It was a long mel- is: ,<_ He mcduced a . " j anticfs departure from I-Ionu Kong. _ d_ H ran 1 the Sergeant wa\ later than usual f mg" “a” propeller and clock when he crossed the dark- ‘ opened a heavy , sage and he took it anxiously when it was completed. Captain Madison wounded and, aboard sends following Clancy. the_ opeiatoi- had scrlbbfed. Bomb; inf propeller shaft and wireless cabin,‘ exploded during dinner. Tung-Wo with dynamite during dinner caus- ing heavy casualties. Self and ‘ r0o111 upcucrl and bullion ‘advising; American Zliinister com- municate wi1l1 British ~ lake full charge lll\\'-' Numcrom olhcr 1110s use DAV-rill” through all day it was rwssiblc for l, CHINE the detective and Connors to gain R fairly good idea of how the Gig- antic 1vas captured, We might find the Tum-Wu be- fore she has a cluuicc of (itunpiug her 1>.1.»-c11_.crs, you know, said Connors 11111011 they dj .1-115_\ed [he matter and Clancy scanned every‘ 7mm nlefiflge. hoping for -sucl1 news. It did not come, however. 11nd at last. weary» and dept . 111- 111111111 to 1111111: A 111:1 1110s. ire took it God inI-Icavcnhe roard. ’I‘hey'1'e “vim "Mk" found l1er~1l1e Tung-Wo. Ilave they, b1; God? cried Con- 1101's, Who's aboard? Two (lead scounclrcis, snapped Clancy INSTALDIENT V Sergeant M'Gurk occupied n. sinall cabin 01f H10 large gymiia- i $111111, and as a pririicuecl member of the ship's company, 1111s per- mitted to promenade when off- riuty on a section of the boat- , fleck Elven over to junior engin- eers on the liner. lifGui-k was popular “"1111 these officers-none of which had any idea of hi; real status 011 board -a11d itsually spent several hours up til mid- came alongside, pirates attacked‘ MG . 3-,, l, . _ l. , and the beaten egg. Add the dry ,, wk Mk“ I “alluded stgigg‘ ingredients mixed and sifted, then ' and Hubbard; the nut. and the fruit. Drop from ,| n1u'e paxengcr, also taken, 111mg- a teaspoon to a buttered baking immedlnfell’ 1 wo ML a1, 944 approxnnmge1y_ Am sheet, one inch apart. l from a spoon to a greased baking . .;-.1,, - . , . ., ' ' sheet. When sli"h1.ly brown take .1 med 111 the 1:11.111 11.0111 and lie 1mm] from the 3V0“, bmh them ‘and have t-he batter quite stiff or Iligllf, over a pipe and a bottle ln their company . On the night following the Gig- i 1 1 1 l'£3lll'l1l',‘.1alld it was nearly one o‘- ‘ ened gymnasium and entered iarivate sanctum Bohbiers his of lugs in a coleclion-box, and the l 2011010115 quantity of spirit he had ‘ absorbed that. evening, did not iu _a11y way‘ impair his mental alert-- ness. On entering the room M'Gurk oak box with a spring lock and removed therefrom a big black 45 automatic Having carefully removed and examined the magazine, he replaced itinfhc butt, drew back the bedclothes and placed it. where his hand could easily reach it in the night, Next. the Sergeant inspected the lock on his door, and began to undress. A Dorthole by the side of his bunk looked out to sea. 5o that (he Sec- ret Service man anticipated no danger from that quarter. He was in pyjamas when his keen car caught. the sound of soft footsteps crossing the gymnihium towards hLs door. Noislessly, M’Gurk stepped to the bed and got the automatic in his hand. The footsteps halted-outside his door. then three knocks, two short ones and one longer, rapped on the pan- els. Mac relaxed slightly and step- ped forward, but kept his gun in his hand. That 1/011. Captain? he asked softly. and hearing an affirmative 1 FASHION FOR THE HOME DRE | i 1 GUIDES i SSMAKER‘ ,you11g countryman. wearing even‘ 1smiled, indicating the pISKOI. 811d zthe Sergeant grinned back as he ‘ fastened the door and laid the Bull whisky to M'Gurk were like iarzh- ‘on the bed‘ 'I'H'E CHARLUITETDWN GUARDIAN 1D ' I Dorothy Dix ‘s Letter Box THE COOK'S CORNER FRUIT COOKIES. Customs and Tradition Have Made Women the Custodians of the Morals of the Race, Hence They Cannot Afford to Betray Their Trust Dear Miss Dix-We have been hearing healed discussions , between men and women on whether it is worse for a wife to be unfaithful to her husband than it is for him to be unfaithful to her. Also, the question is under debate as to whether a. woman who has s. phfanderlng husband should fight to keep him and win h‘m back. I, personally, feel that a wife should never degrade her- self by continuing to live with a husband who is such a. contemptibel cad as to have affairs with other women, and I don't see how any decent woman can do so. Will you please give us your honest. personal views on these questions. " 1-3 cup of butter 1-2 cup of 5113B!‘ i 08K 1 cup of flour l teaspoon of baking powder 18 teaspoon salt l 2 1 -' teaspoon cinnamon -3 cup chopped nuts 1-4 cup currents 1-4 cup sccdluss raisins Cream the butter; add the sugar Bake in a slow oven twelve to fifteen minutes COCO UT BUNS. Answer: from a strictly ethical standpoint a .1311 is just as much bound to keep 11's mar- 1 1'3 “"95 3°“ -' 38c vows and is as blamable when he breaks 4 iablcelwvons of lard and buffer 111cm 11.; is 11 11111111111, 1.111 1m is 10011511 m con- i 1-2 lLhleflOOlls o1‘ biking powder feud that mcn 21nd women stand 011 the 1-4 1011-2110011 of salt ' same 11111111: 111 matters of sex. God did not 4 tablespoon.» of wllitc sugar create them 111211. v. 11y. HE orziaiuced that “omen should bear the heaviest L2 cup o; coconut responsibilities and pay the highest price in all matters pertaining to it. 1 beaten egg And enough milk to mix into a fairly firm batter. Drop the mixture It is a criminal thing for either a husband or wife to betray the other, .but I think i1 is worse for ihB woman to do so than for the man, for these reasons: <11 Because custom and tradition have made woman the custod- ian of the morals and ideals of the race. We expect more of her than , we do of man, and when she lowers her standard she let-s us all down. No , one will deny that when a woman sinks into the pit. she goes deeper than sprinkle bheai with a ma“ (1065, coconut, and return them to the _i____ oven to brown a little 111016- t2) A 111111125 affairs with women are often just casual gallantries, with no fueling in them besides a desire for excitement and amusement. Many 11 man is unfaithful to his wife he still loves; but a woman rarely, if ever, has affairs 1111111 men until she has ceased to love her husband and let go 1111 hold on her principles. COKNFLAKE COOKIES 1-2 cup of butter 1 cup of brown sugar 1 1-2 cups of flour 2 teaspoons of baking powder 1-1! teaspoon of suit 1 teaspoon oi vanilla 2 eggs 3 cups of cornflakes added lust. Mix the ingredients together and drop the batter on a buttered bak- ing sheet. quite far apart. Be sure (3) An immortal mother's influence on her children is far worse than that of an immoral father. Social workers tell us that when children flnd out that their mother is not 11 virtuous woman they go all to pieces and lose their belief in everything that is good. On the other hand, a good mother can generally keep her children from even being smirchcd by their father's conduct, even if it is reprehensible, Whether a. man should forgive an erring wife and take her back de- pends altogether on. whether he loves her enough to forgive her and for- get. and believes that she has repented of her sin and is going to run straight in the future. Many 111011 do this, and the reunited couple lives happily ever after. We have gotten broad enough and tolerant enough in these day to realize that woman are human, even as men are. with the same passions that they are not always strong enough to control. and so we do not stone the Magdalene, but give her another chance. the biscuits. will npread. 7 I ‘I 7 I -<4ur. I in B111 Madison's wellknown voice. he slipped back ‘the lock. and hi5 As to the contention that every woman who has grounds for divorce should get one. I lake the purely practical position that when she does so, in nine times out of ten she merely jumps from the fiying pan into the flre and makesa bad matter worse. Of course, when the husband is des- perately in love with some other woman, the wife has little choice in the matter except to give him up. stepped into the room. Taking no chances, M80. hi‘ . ,- , She cannot ho e for ha. iness with a man who hates her because mTolgly-vollhggdsliifi 32th guts she is standing betlzvcen hirnpgnd the woman he loves. Neither can she Shanghai‘ captain expect. to win him back, because his heart is with another. And so her Em nodded‘ took a sup of paper fgntigyrlaidngifiggiegpeilegrdemand that she not hold on to one who is try- ; ocked and handed it ' ggthtlg 3.11.05.11.11»... Just arrived from Major Clancy, he said. I've decided the last half—the first W85 in English, What do you make 0i But. the great majority of phillmderers are just women-abusers. They are incapable of any deep feeling and probably love their wives as well as they could any one else. All they want. to do is to amuse themselves and show that they are devils among the ladies. In such o. case the wife is foolish to break up her home and half-orphan her children just because her husband is flirting with some platinum blonde. She gives up all the perquisites of marriage that even an indifferent husband provides, and often luxurious living is a consolation prize worth having in a case where the marriage is a. failure. And in the end, the poor wandering prodigal nearly always comes baok to home and mother. t Mac took the paper- a 001W 0f I radiogram from H0111; K15118- Sincere apologies w you all. he read, Delayed 11'1 day urgent 611W stop please tender deep rOEPEI-‘l Misc Reva] stop Advise Bracken look out for steamer Tung-WO particulars Lloyd 31981596111“ disregard distress-signals slop. Be- My summing up of the divome matter is this: If a woman has a for- tune of her own, she doesn't have to stand a phllariderlng husband un- less she wants. If she has no way to support herself and her children, ileve vessel controlled by pirates she doesn't have to stand a philandering husband either, but she is a wise who may aitement w board you if woman, 11s a general thing, lash; does. . ' i U you slop for signals stop From in- formation received Honk Kong ad- vlsg you report regularly by wire- legs Royal Naval Office Hon! Kong-Clancy. M‘Gurk'.= face betrayed no sur- prise as he handed the radio to Madison. The Male musia been working fast, Captain, he com- merited Guess we'd better keep our eyas peeled for this blessed Tung- wo, You seen Bracken. I suppose? Madison nodded. l-Ie had a. prior wire, he murmured. A general warning from Honk Kong asking all vessel; to YEDOTt the 518M 0f anything like the 'I‘1.1n8-W°1 OI course. he's promised to keep his eyes skinned, but he ridiculed the idea of pirates taking his ship. I'm not feeling quite so certain my- self, Mac. What's your opinion? To Be Continued Dear Dorothy Dix—Why is it that so many girls from 17 to 20 yearl of age are so restless and changeable and never seem to know what they want? I am engaged to a girl of 20 who in just. this way. She doesn't know what she wants, and her ma'n uncertainty is about whether she wants 0o get married or not. Ls there anything I can do to help hei- know her own mind and settle down and cease to be so emotional? How can I know that she would be satisfied if we were married? A WORRLED BOYFRIEND. Answer: ' Give her time, son, give her time. All that ails her is her age. She 1.1 still a child. and her ideas and desires haven't coagulated. They are like the jelly your mother used to make, they have to "self 'awh‘le before they harden and take form and shape. That is why I am always urging boys and girls not to marry until they are mature. All of themtare emotional swayed by the passion of the moment. None of them know what they want. They are crazy about a thing this moment and tired of it the next. The thing they are wild about today bores them to tears tomorrow. When they marry during this liobbleclchoy stage they nearly always find themselves in a. terrible mess 11nd discover they don't like the husband sand w'ves they picked out; they don't like housekeeping; they don't like being tied clown to one person. and would give their eye tooth just to be single again. It is that-away with your girl. One minute she thinks she wants to A slim black crepe moulded dress with smart effect of slilrring that flatiers your figure. Divinely young are the short sleeves and the miniature shirt collar. It's the sort. of dress you put on in the ,1 morning and go shopping and then on to keep 1111 important luncheon or bridge “da1c". Crulis rcsi»1an11 velvet lends itself beautifully w the simple lines of this alluring shirred dress, You'll welcome it in your “Yardrobe for all 1l10=e affer- uoon and evening lmliday parties Youll sew this one-piece dress quick as a flash with practically. only seams to join. A sewing in- struction chart included. Style No: 202B is designed for. sizes i4. i6. l8. 20 years. 3'2. 34. 36. _ Z18. 40 auri 42-inchcs bust. Size 36, requires 4 7-8 yards of 39-inch ma- i terinl, made of one material. send fifteen cents (i5c1 1n stamps or coin (coin preferredl wrap coin carefully, address to Charlottetown Guardian giving:- Style No. 2028 Size... .. Name street Address ii City Province I 1 ' tween the hotel and the railroad 1 11ml members- A questionnaire on 1 friends said you would gel. n1e com- . "u 3° be answered by I‘ Natlmml A non-abrasive toothpaste IDPII- 1 ed with a soft toothbrush is an effective jewelry cleaner. Be sutet to rinse well with clear wit-er- marry you and the next minute shc doesn't. And if you have any gump- Von you wiil lei the don't have it. I11 a. year o1- two her ideas will clarify, and if she wants to marry you then it will be for keeps. DOROTHY DIX. A MorningSmile Guesfp-Do you operate a bus be- mas and to send cards to two dis- BRITISH LIVE LONGER. (By The Canadian Press) LONDON-Britain is breeding a ‘xealthier race and the people are sing longer. According to the Event. Meeting closed by singing xagistrar-generaib review for i986 The King, after which a dainty the mortality rate from infectious lunch was served by the hostess. and parasitic diseases was the low- est on record. station? Public Ilcalih was filled out The! Manager o; Rilzy HQLC1_..NQ'bif'1 next meeting is to be held at the | GuesL-Jfhatfs strange. All my, home 9f M‘? 757mm‘ Crosby- You ' lng 11nd going. | "Can you take me to the sta-tion?" the old lady asked the taxi driver. "Sorry, mrVa-m I'm engaged,“ was lire reply. "Then I'm sure I wish you every lmppiness. but you mucn't let love interfere with your work." Victoria Keen Contest MmWilbru-KlclncmWonlSetllennen N.B., wins brand baking counsel at W clock Exhibition. Laud: Quaker Flour. II hkol no] bokin IHII to defeat the mu excellent homo nkan that competes spinal Mn. Wilbur Kidney. And it taken even more. Absolutely necessary In the linen of high quality flour: . . . Quaker Flour. Here‘: what MrnW. Kidney nlyu: "My aduicnto wayuomanillhauaautan: f lu Ivory ma»; la u.» 512112‘. W31... m mu a v1.13‘ ‘M15.’ ‘£11..l1’°2'§.‘..“'.$‘....fi....'l..”.‘i.'i'.““.'.i“' . It? U" Qvahr union’ Brad —BON_SIIAW W. I. The regular monthly meeting of the Bonshaw W. I. met at the home of Mrs. Dan Dmach. The meeting opened by singing the In-, stliuie Ode and repeating the‘ Creed in unison The Roll Call was re-ponclcd to by nine members Two new members joined. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved, 0on1 respoadence was read by the secm- | tary. The following new commit- tees were appointed: Sick. Mrs George Mrs Elmer Crosby. mowoglaflu tfllodol la an ...- o; rnzanuiua Inrn how to bake "prlu-winnin " brad. u Carson and sch l, M“ 5_ Benton “d Mm n‘ lmwriieioTheQunkermuco. e 1. 000, -"""'»-::"a' 111:*;.':1:.11.::1:.:111:;1n%.1~n.,1 Some discuslon took place con- cerning getting the hall organ tuned but the decision was left over until next meeting. It was decided to give the teach- er $3.00 to buy a. Christmas treat for the children. It wu also decid- od m remember the m: at christ- .Worlnan’s Realm f Social and Personal f Fashions Ifl-Li .¢-~-.------.-.-----¢|-.--..----....-..--....--¢- Pirates In Fact And Fiction“ Waters Where N0 Vessel ls Safe Today's Short“ Wave‘ Radio Program Iii] (Alike! TUESDAY. DECEMBER 14 PARIS 9:30 a m-"Summer." a play by Jacques Nwtanson TPA—2. 19-6 m., 1-024 meg. JOHANNESBURG 1:30 p.m.—-The Great Prophet. a tribute to Beethoven. ZTJ. 49-2 m., 6.09 mcS LONDON 6120 p,m.-The Birthday of H15 Majesty K1118 580118 VT- 55D 25.5 m.. 11.15 mBG-Z GSC. 31-3 m., 9.58 meg; GSB, 31.5 m.. 9.51 meg. SCIIENECTADY 6:35 p.m.&hort wave Mafl Bag. W2XAD19.5 m.. 15.33 meg; wzxAF, 31.4 m., 9.53 mrg. BERLIN » 6:45 p.111.-Solo Concert; Hans Martin Theopold. DJD, 25.4 m.. ‘1l.77 meg. 1 MOSCOW 7:00 p.n1.-News and Program for English Listeners RAN, 31 m-. 9.6 meg. ROME 7:35 p.m. -—S5'n11;l1onies; Carlo Chinaglia: "Monte Talerlo, an old mine rediscovered"; Choral Con- cert. 2R0, 31.1 m., 9.63 meg. ~ LONDON 8:20 p.m.—-“I.ri.sl1 Music,’ short pianoforte recital by Hetty Bolton. GSD, 25.5 m.. 11.75 meg.; GSC. 31.3 m , 9.58 meg; GSB, 31.5 m.. 9.51 meg. CARACAS _ 8:30 p.m.-Vaudevllle ‘Imeatre. YV5RC. 51.7 m., 5.8 meg PARIS 10:00 p.m.-—Conoert or Record- ings. TPA-4. 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. LONDON 10:30 p.n1.—"Wl1ces,‘ a feature program. GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; ‘GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg; GSB, 31.5 m., 9 51 meg. SCl-IENECTAZ _ 11:00 p.m.—Science vs. Crime. W2XAF, 31.4 m.. 9.53 meg. SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA 1:15 shun-Talk on Australia. VKZME, 31.28 m., 8.59 meg IIII; AND HER 392T L SIZ"‘-’.‘C'€'ZW te ra ta re J uuuolf. VYllfL ACTIVITIES .D\E_CEMBER 14 1937 __ _,7 i 0N B ROAD “Joseph, the sun has fallen low, I; it far we yet must go " "Nay, dear Mary, soon we'll see, No farther than yon towering tree. "The welcoming lights of Bethlehem In clusters. like a dladun." “Tic well, for I am weary, I shall be glad to rest this quite: night. a hill touch “To dream of shepherds on Guarding their flocks from of ill "The angel spoke such wondrous things— Deep in my heart sings: his message “The Son of GodL-my little O11e—- Denr Jonph. let us hurry on." -Anne M Robinson CHILI) DESERVE COMMON- SENS-E REPLY T0 IIIS QUESTIONS Every child at one time or a11- other develops a. passion for asking questions. In most cases all that the child wants is a common- sense reply. but some parents either think the matter is tco un- important to give more than a non-committal answer or they simply dismiss the child with the words. ‘Don't keep asking quas- tlons." B0111 these attitudes are very hard on the ohild, who is. after all, only trying to cope with things he doesn't quite understand. In smne cases this phase of con- tinual questioning lndlcaies a. real thirst after knowledge of a speci- fio kind. The observant parent, used to treating the matter with understanding and thought, can make this a very good way of dis- covering a. child's particular bent. SODA IIUTTERMILK BISCUIT ARE GOOD Two cups flour, 1-2 teaspoon soda 2-3 teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons fat, buttermilk to make soft dough (approximately 3-4 cup). Sift flour, soda and salt together. Add fat and cut or rub it into flour. Add buttermilk to make soft dough. Knead lightly and roll 1-2 Inch thick. Cut out and bake in hot oven (450 deggrees F.) until del- icately browned. 11.1.» 11111111111 SIIIITIIEII. IIIMFIIIITEIMM Use Favorite Greenery in Win- ter Window Box YOU!’ Green things growing in window will banish winter from your thoughta. A north window? Fine-If there is no radiator under Horton fern like: a strong light without direct sunlight. It show! it: independence by demanding elbow room. Give it some slim Sansevieria-or snake plant-for it: neighbor. Add ueveral glossy grape- h-uit plants, easy to raise from seed! in n pot of earth. None of then regime eoddlin| or lunllg/ht. lton fern need: a tern en - around 00 degrees; a week y wak- ing by placing the pot in l pail of water; also spraying with loopy water often enough to discourage putl. The reliable make plant stlndl almost any treatment and kee l sloe u it: nnmelake. oulo pant: need special cure thll time of winter. Our SZ-pago booklet gives information on fer- tilizer; pflI-l, watering, repotting. Advice on dish nrdonn. potted bulb!“ flowering plants. . Send 20c 1n coins for your copy of Making Plants And Flowers Grow Indoors to The Guardian Home Service, Address. B; sure to write plainly your Name, Ad- dram. and the Name of booklet. Name l!!!“ Andrea Gitv Pnninco PROTECTING NECK AGAINST TVINTER. COAT COLLARS Don't forget that furs and high- collared coats may leave their mark on your neck. But any dark smudges will come off easily if you give your neck a coat of powder when you are dreslng. DRESS UP CLOSET WITH WALL PAPER. If you have an extra roll or two of wallpaper left after redecoratlng this fall, why not brighten up the .15.}. m. ~ Inner walls of your c1011, And then why not. go tlier and do soincthiilg "y gm“: 1311111; for this most ncgltcuu of the house? A few cxta shelves t0 fit your particular uccds. a, couple of good sized shoe rack‘ transparent boxes for 11.11. ané sundries, a couple of drawer rall- inets, ohlntz-covered or 11111111“; m harmonize with the otlwr 1111111115. YOU can be BS elaborate or a; severe as you like, but reiuarkalm flue effects can be obtained 11-11)’, a surprisingly small 01111111". COIllEI‘ RIGHT-SIZED RUG m“ _ BETTER. BALANCE, A rug that is too small lessen; the spaciousness of your room m; thrmvs your eiiilrc (IFCJlflllllZ scheme off balance. (Imam-nu. speaking, the viral-gin of 11111191.}, floor about ilie Edges of 111s rug should be about twelve inches o1- a little less. The Inargiu need m» be exactly the same all. 1110111111 111.1 rug. but fhe distances at 11111-11 c1111 should be the 1111110 111111 [he margins at the sides shtuid c 111-15- pond. A rug cushion will greatly lengthem the life of your rug, a; well as give it a more 1:~.:r1..r.o-.1; tread TABLE PROIILLAI If you need an extra table iu your living room, yet feel that the roam would per-harps appear O1‘O\\'(l€(l. 1xl1y not consider a tilt top table? They are excellent for games, puzzies, cards, and some may be med inr 11 fire screen, and when not 111 use, fold back neatly ugainat the 111111. A beautifully grained and polishrd wood is handsome, but. if you like a bright dash of color, look at table with tops showing palm-vi r111-1l mcnes or bouquets of spaJ-"lu- 11011- ers. FUR SMART TRIMMING Touches of fine flll‘ on wool dress- es are important as 111111111111; now. One smart form-fitting ensemble seen in a. Paris collection is o1 swit deep green wool with 1:111; slide 111.1- tener closing at the front. slightly accentuated shoulders and bows of leopard at throat and belt fasten- ing. It is worn with boxy lcvparcl jaoket and matching green turban, leopard trimmed. It 1.x "=110ru“ enough to cheer your favoriic foot- ball team in to victory and simm enough for any afternoon f1111c- tlon. ANTS IN YOUR P.-\N'I'IIY If your house becomrs 111'c;~1"d with ants, it i1 said 111211 <"111'r'11B. salt where they congrfiIFlC will cause 111cm to (IIHIWI 0n a cold night, wl1<~11 111w 1-1-1114 drops in. late for scmeihiu: lo e111, don't become alarmed. Ogfll a fill of chicken and cream it. then make corn pancakes and apPYflWl -"°'-" guest; with a Mona Lisa .~1111lc of lnserutability. N0 one wuilTli 11"" dreamed or such on an111r11: WI at midnight. ILYIII!‘ Noodle-an Gunrdim Needlework Department. Una this coupon. . To ‘Ibo l" lotutown Gnu-dim Needlework Dept. DESIGN NO. 806 Cross Stitch Scottie Cushion and Runner. Pethnpo mu- Scottie and 1:11.11 Terrier ace 11 saucy 111111111. or W111!" they are nqpalg m1- . 1.01.... Whatever their mood may 1..., they w 1°‘ by young and oldand are an ideal decoration for a lovely cushion mid rull- ne. set for living room. sun room or den. d cross stitch of silk or cotton threads, and are particularly effective Wfk" in anion yl-rn and brushed to make thorn fruffy. The pattern includes transfers of three deligns 7 by ‘i M‘ of dogs facing right and l set of dogs facing left, complete instruc for embroiderlng and finishing. as well u color sHBQestlons. lbr complete bottom and instructions roi- all o: these def-l!" and 30 contain clamps or coin (coin preferred) to The Charlotwwfl IgmQ.-----q-—---_ _ _ . - _- gmqgung.._-___.._______----—"." mcnunzanzu—_innua—maun$¢t1__ -6 Design Nv- 5"- They are worked in slmplfi inches. ‘l 5*“ Print your name and address 9mm‘ ____-n ——d