T, .7 outsider to say. hPAGhTZIGHjl _., . / THE (IHARLUTTETTJWN (IYYQRUl/Xl? ,Won1an’s Redlm -: - .S'ocial “ and ‘Personal W" 1 Fashion Hints :2 I v B)‘ FRANCES PAGET (Copyright, 103i, by Style Sources) NEW YORK, Feb. 28.-<U. PJ-An idea advanced for spring C‘! fashions is black or gray and ivory, and navy or light navy with ivory combined with a single bright color-chartreuse, jade, salmon, melon pink, sapphire, tangerine, lime, golden yellow. pa}: rose. sky blue, mauve, comflower, turquoise or bright red. Of these. 11ml. - chartreuse, sapphire, melon pink, red and jade are generally con- ‘ sidered the best "bets! a "Incidentally, thereis no rule about the combinatkms of col- ors. Any one in a trl-color or bi-color scheme may be used l-s the basis for the costume and the other one or two, employed for , trimming. 1 ' Bright yellow greens with brown, brown with yellow and white . or brown and white alone are also considered promising subjects. "" ' The deep pastels and light bright colors which are seen in ' such multiplicity are now having success introduced as "fruit" shades. These were first exploited for evening but almost simul- taneously appeared in shantungs and rough silli for summer sports ‘ ' wear and are now being offered in dresses suitable to wear under ~ dark coats inthe afternoon. In this group many oi the bright ' shades remarked above are repeated. The most prominent are lime, lemon, citron, apple grccn, watermelon pink and raspberry. A lark green called “nvocado" is included in the list also and is none other than the old “spinach green," which takes us out of w, fruit into vegetables. ' snapping Trip 1.. Egypt Just Great Big Tea Party ,. i ‘They say that the way to a man's Iflilieart is through his stomach, but whether the old Egyptian custom “f3? serving refreshments when you go into a shop has its foundation on -~ this deep-rooted belief or whether it is merely an expression of the hca- __ pitality of the race L; hard for an Nevertheless, it is I. custom that I, for one, heartily endorse, says Mary T. Shapiro in the New York Sun. Everything Shown No surly clerks mar the fun of shopping either. In fact, their ex- treme patience in showing you every- thing in and out of sight is one of the greatest incentives you have to purchase. Nothing is too small or too worthless for them to take the greatest pains, and whether you buy something for l0 piastres or i000 piastres you are treated the same way. 1 The only things that spoil shop- ping in the bazaars are the guides who insist on showing you around and thc shopkeepers who try to pull you into their shops. But a trip to the stores in the native quarter is, nevertheless fascinating. As you'ciiter_ the bazaars you pass down a street lined on both sides with jewelry shops, all filled with cases of gold jewels. Don't make the In Cairo. whether you shop in a .\ ‘beautiful store on the main street or .__..in thc native bazaars, you meet the c-HQZHTIG treatment. All_of the shop- keepers are extremely ccurtcous, al- v- ~though a trifle too insistent that you ..i:ok at their wares, for "you don't - have to buy," and you ore made to '~~Ieel that thev arc actually iakin! "pleasure in‘:=h0v.'ing you everything " ' in the shop. You are always asked to sit clown .D0cl I "EDP? Find! Marrlaiie . t , ~ Golden Depend on D h Mean Most Money’! o y q Satisfactory ins 11P- that they have never made before, habit, they feel that it is not worth will find work and worry no burden them. thick steaks and mushrooms. like they used to do. Dcd into the domestic coop Marriage on a Gold Cable is Just as Hazardous as Marriage on a Shoestring-Elie Best Prayer for the Couple Contemplating Matrimony is: “Give Me Neither Poverty Nor Riches” Is happiness in matrimony a ma tter of money or not? There is no question that I am asked oftener by prospective brides and bride-grooms than how much income it takes to marry on. - sordid consideration should obtrude itself on glamor- ous romance, but, alas, in real life even love's young dream has to be adequately financed to keep thaEn- chanted Prince and the Sleeping Princess from wak- Bad, indced,_that such a "I'll ‘N0. ‘ill P11?!‘ and D11)’ Wis. ‘tis true that the old adage that loves flies out of the window when poverty enters in at the door is more or less a said statement of fact. Occasionally you find a man and ‘ g ' woman whose passion for each, other is great enough to stand the strain of a lower scale of living than that . ‘ to which they have been accustomed. B1918 01 $1118 50ft Of devotion are few and far between and mostly when young husbands and wives realize that marriage has forced upon But those cap- them sacrifices and the crucifixion of every taste and tha price, and they give Cupid the air. Of course, every young couple in lope believes that love is enough, and that all they ask of Fate is the privilege of having each other for their own and being together. ‘They think that they will desire no other substance than bread and chese and kisses; that they will ask no other than just listening to each other's vows of devotion; beautiful to each other, no matter how shabblly they are dressed; that they amusement that they will look because they will share it between Therefore many starry-eyed Illll and boys get married on this plat- form only to ascertain to their amazement that marriage has worked no miracle in them and that comforts and luxuries are just them after marriage as they were before. cheese and kisses soon lose their flavor, and that they crave caviar and good as necessary to They find out that bread and Tney find that they get fed up on each others society and want to go out and dance and play golf and play around with the other young people They find out that the new fashions look Just as al- luring to them as they ever did, and it is when they have to hurry by the milliners’ and haberdashers‘ windows without daring to look in, that the klrl bvgins to regret ifhc job she gave up to gct married, and thc man to rc- flect that it is the wise birds that fly high and ncvcr let themselves be trap- ~__._____- That the lack of money is at the bottom of the discontent and the quarrels that drive so many young couples apart is not to be denied. They 1nd have a cup of their delicious) Turkish coffee and, if you refuse, cl-lemonade or some other substitute is "generally offered, though how any- '-"one could refusc such coflcc is a “mystery to mo. While you nro sip- ii-Jplng your coffee he shows you his mistake of thinking any 0i this is cheap or costume jewelry, for it ll the real thing and it is here that Egyptian women but their best orna- menu. Perfume T eases As you branch off this street, the ""warcs. 11-11.". you all about iiicm, and road becomes narrower and more of amusements and the never-ending and frctful and complaining because scrubbing and baby-tending. are on edge with anxiety about how he is to pay the grocers’ bills that matrimony has precipitated simply cannot stand the gaff. They cannot endure shabblncss and the lack penny-pinching. The wife is peevish she i: overworked at cooking and upon him. always his honest desire to serve you crooked, and shops more varied, the And the man looks at the worn woman in a cheap bungalow apron, with whether he loses msncy or not. “'As'in all Eastern countries. in the native stores haggling L part of the 1‘ "fun of buying and a shspkccjicr "would be deeply disappointed if you ‘Mbaid his first price and dirl not give "him u chance to be eloquent‘ on how ‘mlmuch it cost him. In Idnia you will find sporty shopkeepers who offer “to throw the dice to see whether you 1 Jpay their price or thc cnc you of7or, _ "but not so in Egypt, “here the price "ha... finally pay is always 10x; than the avowed cost. um. ‘ii-AAA word to the pputdoor girl =2 it merchandise more colorful, and. the interest keencr. An odor of Christ- mas night perfume assails you. You turn to see from where it comes and thcre you find one perfume shop ai- ter another, all carrying the most delicate scents. And they all tell you too that you dent have to worry about tho duty for it has no alcohol in lt and is only the oil of the per- fume which you mix when you get home. ' If you can tear yourself away from these shops and progress a little fur- ther, you'll sec natives making imit- ation ambcr beads, carpets, tapes- tries. You'll see shops with odd brass and copper and silver and pew- ter. You'll find draperies and old | Turkish slippers and harem costumes that \\‘ll] make you yearn to spend , c-xery" cent you have. And thc cos- fume jewclryh»vou'll see all kinds, all ‘prices, all you ever dreamt of, in i profusion. I Everything imaginable is found in these bazaars, from the most expen- sive to the cheapest articles. Whole streets are devoted to each particu- lar product and the walls and ceil- 1 ings are lined with displayed mater- work-roughened hands and stingy hair and thinkshow changed she is from the dainty, manicured, permanent-waved girl in trailing chiffons that he 3005 A modish peplum dress of fiat crepe silk, garcious and lovely in every detail. - i-Féléih .. .-_.__-¢u_.. -... .10 ‘I What the Fashionable are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By ‘Annabelle Worthington It fewors the‘ youthful plaits across the front of the skirt. Th0? 8J9 stitched to a depth just above the knees so as to keen the silhouette slender. _ The cowl drape of the bodice is soft and pretty. The long sleeves are also given a soft touch through a frlll below the elbow. \ A light navy blue fiat crepe silk made the original model. , style No. 3005 may be had in sizes 16, l8 years, 38, 30,40 and 42 inches bust, Printed flat crepe witu the sleeve irlll of plain crepe in blending tone is attractive. ( crepy woolans may also ha Iod- ior its development. ' You will see one attractive style after another as you turn ovar the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss. the matron, the stuns-and a series of dressmaking articles. It is a boo that will save you money. ' Be sure to fill in the/size of the pattern. Send stamps m‘ coin (coin preferred). ‘ , Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern l5 cents. No. 3005. Size “sun-nu...” ~nuaaaaoiloi Innoc- Name tlellealllau|oonuaooaocnolaaaascalars: v . u".- u...- . . . . . . . . nun-n..."- Street Address “H”u."u".....--~----n.--u..-- City State LIPS FOR WOMEN _ (British United Pres!) BRIAZZAVILLE, Africa, Feb. 38-—A new law which seeks to prohibit the women on Frenohfkiuaioriai Africa from "beautifying" themselves by mutillating their lips is being applied The husband is irritable because his nerves by French colonial administrators» where the rent money is to come from and bills and the doctors’ bills and all the other These “plate-lipped" women start as young girls to force their lips to expand by inserting round wooden blocks. As the skin grows loos they change the blocks for large ones and eventually have an over- hanging lower lip often measuring ten inches across. NO MORE PLATE I Efiqrrette Bylnberhllh Q. When walking with two men. what position should the woman take? A. She should walk between them. Q. How much water should there be in each water glass? 1 A. Each glass should be -two- thirds full, never more. Q. How long should a bride wait before returning calls? .. .. ._....._.-- ..,‘.......... .. ices. élavtllwlk- c. 1' Hanna-av. au4zaufra-i-sa i.‘ . M.‘ . ' r n ‘ Dressmg 1' aue . Bond Street jewelnm; a.a i... ,, that have been specially designed for l-._,-. ._ . , , ,, losers there is a new jewelled plaque in-tlc £:.;.i _ J‘ L a K. gold lattieed window an inch square with a solo any.“ “S; dye _' orated with an intitial in seed pearls and brilliantc Th; mic- ‘ pane llftspp to reveal theramc and 11:13.; slcf ' a I - - 1 l m. ‘ - :1 ...'.._~;,, ‘ ts of thc ! The gold circles are baIked by oblcng identlfl" :4 plgqfiezvzsn. which the owner's name and acklrcss is c1131 that. ' , v Scarves and coat collars of th 9, p dashing, and it is probable that t? :5 as p: méitaseiffitrgfnfw Spring. However, it should be l‘l__..._,l.._id ;.::.t it i; a [Qfiionl “f: is at its best orll wh .th “l f a short. Y en, c IICuK o thc we-rer is long rather than \ And combing back to the sub ject o! jewels 1 Beach fashionablcs are weaiung their most boiiuvtgulagznfghmrpum resort, and that the fad of wearing a bracelet above th l!“ w“ followed by several smart women. The use of diamond llaiarbow h‘ men“. Slmletlllrlg which has grown to some proportions th arm‘ son at Palm Beach, is favored also. Small combs o; main“ - frequently worn at the side front of the coifrure; mum,“ b". are so worn at one or both sides. Einstein can not undo. ‘ * why Amenwm m“ '- tion to insult, offered ‘him big ilnoney to indorselbtnngsm " " heard of. Iti laid that there are only six peoplg 1n m? “w” who can conga-wan‘. ihls.—The New Yorloer, ‘ ‘ W!“ ' ----- i Mildred Bennett € Morning Smile: mousse! mo; At Canadian Club Tells of Ride in Lord Mayor's Coach Through London. Tho Woman: “Here's a won“ thing. I've Just been reads; q». without learning how to m“ . write. He met a woman am f," j. sake he made a scholar of himsdf h two years." , g __; The Men: "Ihatb nothing. rig a man who was a pnfound ma“; 11$ TBFW- Then he met a MQ; ‘TORONZIU Fob. Fir-Cinderella, golden-halred and milling, riding to the fairy ball in the golden coach, could not have been happier than Miss Mildred Bennett when she rude through the storied streets oflpon- don f Town, seated in the Lord Mgygy‘; 093Gb, drawn by ‘our and for her sake he make a fool Q 110mg‘; by the “d, o; the Lord] himself-in two days." _ f Mayor himself, in his robes of offieel ' "——--—-——- In Speaking to members and guests bemmful Fmliens-‘ven B‘ Vi‘ ‘s: the Women's Canadian Club at “me °f u“ Y°"-" m“ ‘Bennett M! mnoheon m the bamroom of we her quiet listeners. Royal‘ ork Hotel‘ yesterday, the m” "W! 3““1G“°"S_Wh°“ "11 emrmmg ,3“, o; _ Prim? Mm_ ‘heard We were from Canada‘. lsterjof- Canada, Rgglit Hon. it. 13.. plenpd" M m”? m“ l" the! his manwlso_reaohedtheagqrjg|'-. Bennett, described -thia magic ride ‘taking 3°“ ca“ ‘*5 the 051154159" ‘from the Guildhall _ House’ an" hm. brothel. had been feel that they wereliviiig." said given the freedom of London. and ‘Bmmm 1 she confessed that it was one of the | "Had 0m most thrilling of her experiences Empire’ ‘me wmnd hm“ ‘cmmfi? during her last eventful trlp abroad. ldurmg “w” daysi" Sh" 551d’ 1'1 wit‘ With a wealth of unusual and im- mild“! h“ "mllliwellws" "i ‘iv pressive experiences during the Im- Imperial Cmferenw- l ‘ ‘ to the Mansion "It W115 beautiful, and made P"! lacked faith la »fl perial Conference, Miss Bennett was “It I “mm w km“ “"5552; {Qrced t9 ch00” Just a few to sham -kh0ll Chllfldll," boasted Mill IQ- A. Usually two weeks wit); m, hundreds o; women seated neit, with a proud smile, at on ml- " at the tables in the ballroom, and We‘ °1 h" “ddlllw when “he Mn" fell in love with. and wonders how shc evcr provide for her. the world. selves for, whom we really lovc. And the woman looks at thc weary, shabby, grumpy man saw in him a hero, and they both think that if they had it to do over again they would ncvcr, never marry. But ii marriage on a shoestring is a hazardous experiment, marriage on a gold cable is an equally clangcrons adventure,’ and it is at the doors of the divorce court that the poor mcn and the Croesuscs mcct. For, strangely enough, Just as not having enough money cstranges the poor husband and wife. having too much money cstrangcs the rich husband and wife. It keeps them from ever really being dependent upon each other. The woman with money of her own docs mt have to look to her man to The man who can hire dozens of servants does not have his comfort depend on his wife's mlnistrations. Nor do they ever have to sacrifice for each other. and somehow giving personal service with our own hands and doing without things ourselves that another may have them, brings us closer to them than anything clsc in It is those that we have suffered for, thosewe have clcnlcd our. Great wealth is also a first aid to matrimonial lnfclicity because it gives people too much time to think about their emotions anrl because having nothing e‘se to do but amuse themselves they are forever seeking new un- sations. The woman who has to get up and cook the breakfast and get her husband off to work and the children of! to school, and do a day's washing afterward isn't worrying over whether she is really married to her soul mate or not. The man who has to hump himself to provide for a family is chas- ing dollars, not skirts. The happiest Congo maiden is she who. while talking. can clap the wooden blocks in her lips like cast- ansts. But doctors have /deolded that the distortion seriously affects health. The women are unable to chew theirfood,» they breathe through their mouths instead of through the nose and the rubbing of the wooden blocks frequently causes cancer. lBURNlNG WITH ENTHUSIASM! (British United Press) MOSCOW, Feb. 28-A great num- ber of Soviet citizens whose letters are never delivered, now know why. For at Magnltogorsk an "efficiency squad", recently found‘20,0?0 undeliv- ered letters. The local postmaster was in the habit of staging a weekly bon- fire at which great heaps of letters first-class high quality vegetables ls one of the most satisfying feats of gardening. attractive gate and good boundaries, the making of an ornamental vege- With a good approach, Common Table Salt Helps Stomach When you got up, drink water with a pinch of salt. This washes out the stomach. If you have gas. add a. spoon of simple glyccrlne, buckthorn bark, saline compound (known, as Adlerika.) Adlerika washes out BOTH stom- ach and bowels. removing poisons which caused gas, nervousness. bad sleep. It is harmless. Get Adlerika today; by tomorrow you feel the wonderful effect. Hughes Drug Co, L . td FREE alleged to have been wrongly address- ed, were burned with revolutionary zeal. Many comnrznist youths partic- ipated in these bonfire parties under the impression that they were giv- ing the Government a helping hand. For free sample sand 2c stump i0 ADLIEIRIKA CO" Dept. BB, St. Poul, .\llnu. in the qdjommg reception monm ‘on the work of the Canadian (hi. She recalled the wann reception Sh‘? “m 511° h“ “mmlmd h l. accorded all the delegates by the tl-"l"! 0f the 001111017. 119d 1W1 W‘! British Government, and remarked ‘he 5m“ “ndemufl Pm?“ a w‘ that 9,11 were made to he] that they Canadian Glubato be the aafeguall- had a valuable contribution to make i"? M “'9 ‘mm’ “we Dmmm‘ to the Empire. She thrilled and “°°"1° ""1" b’ ‘i M’ ‘W’ marvelled at that great historic p°t°m m “Mm” m“ “u” 1. nascent. the ermine or “the Mother WWW?" "i" M" mm‘- of Parliaments," and was lost in‘ “mil a R" G"'°"‘“7- ‘h. "d7 admiration of some of Britain's men dem- m 159mm!“ a” w“ d and women leaders. Margaret hmwr- Tmwked m“ w‘ 3am” Bondfield, she mt, had a man's W" m ‘he "Wm" WWT‘ d” mind "which cuts deeply info any :5"°°““°" d muflm u“ problem," and Mrs, Philip Bnowdon Mm H- P- P111919“! mo?“ l fl‘ d was to be admired for her great and “"1"” m M455 Bmmth “hm n‘ utter devotion to her husband in her ,5°°°nded by Mm’ mum“ busy social andpolltlcal life. {and at the close of the luncheol But the laughter went out of her B- MW"? ""8 "1 1"°°"""! eyes, and her voice grew ‘deep and Emu!" 01' 5°"B‘» "W “P”! l b’ 1 and as-‘she recalled her visit to the 5975"!“ T'h°mP5°"- M4“ m.’ war graves of France, "where many slltheflnnd» a’ V1994’ 7954mm‘ w.‘ of our loved ones lie." They worc escorted to the cemeteries by sir Fabian Ware, who introduced them to the "head gardener" of ,each. At Sverdlovsk a clothing factory received 20,000 ncwsplipers from the local postal authorities for use in cutttlng patterns. ivhen opane d it was found that they were all fresh newspapers, among them being 1,500 "Pravda." The v sentcd Miss Bennett with a, sheaf-Q varl-colorved‘ roses. ' v ma” 1m»; is mu of fun nu “And that is true: they are just like 111$ 11 511511? °‘~""~"‘» 5 HANDS callouaed from golf . .- ' lips chapped by the wind ... necks and noses sunburned and freckled . . . here's how to repair this damage. I Lay in a stock of "Vaseline" Petroleum f Jelly. At home on the dressing table. 1 At the club in your locker. And 3 apply it freely. For example: If the hands are calloused or rough and Zeliapped, or too dry,_ or sunbumed, ' For the cuticle is inclined to form , manage them with u gen- teroua amount oi "Vaseline" Jelly be- Zfore retiring. and wear soft gloves Pto bed. - t ‘ ll! lips are chapped, apply “Vaseline”. _ ' (Jelly every time you think of it. It is H jobtalnable everywhere, in tubes and fjars. IThese are simple, easy things to do. i -Do try them. Your looks will benefit A H ,~ ‘ pnonnoualy."VasalinWJeHyilaprod- ‘ , w luct of the Cheaebrough Manufactur- ' l Qing Company, Consolidated, 5520 5 Ehabgt Avenue, Montreal, Canada. :1 I 1 ' _ I | ial. It takes a strong person to come out without his arms loaded to capa- city. 1 For The Cook CHICKEN VICTORY One chicken, two tablespoons salad ium-sized onions, parsley, thyme, one-half bay leaf. three large toma- ‘toes, one cup stock, one-half pound ‘mushrooms. Prepare chicken for roasting. While roasting heat oil in frying pan. add three of the onions, lflnely chopped, and cook until light fbrown. Add half of bacon, cut in lsmall pieces, parslop, thyme, and bay Ileai. When browned, add tomatoes cut in slices and the stock. when all is cooked press through a sieve. In another pan brown lightly the other half of bacon, cut in strips, mush- rooms and six onions, chopped. Cook until all is tender. then add the above sauce, and gravy from roast chicken, and thicken, i: necessary. Cut up chicken. arrange pieces in centre of platter, pour sauce with bacon, mushrooms and onion around it] Cut bread in diamond shapes, fry oil. one-half pound bacon, nine med- ' have. Especially men are. may well put up the . neither poverty nor riches." __».1. OVIB THE GARDEN GATE The vegetable garden on the home grounds holds out the beautiful promise of viands o! rare quality for the table during the hot period of the year when it is most difficult to tempt the palate. Only in the gar- den at home, freshly picked and cooked, can the real and wonderful quality of fresh vegetables be realis- ed. The garden should be placed as advantageously as possible with re- gard to sun and good drainage. Oi- ten as a matter of necessity it is at the rear of the lot or in one corner. It should have an approach fitting the promise of the goedthingl it is to yield. A neat pathway either 6f well-trimmed lawn, flag stones or crazy paving will make an excellent approach. The garden should have in bacon fat, and “place these around _ .B!rrs.st_@g,,-_~q»,,~y_ a distinctive boundary oi some kind ansnnnemsusuammd n And, of course, the rich are subjected to temptations that the poor never As soon as a man acquires enough money to be worth the attention of a gold-digger he is never safe until he is tucked away in ‘his coffin, and his wife has to be on the job all the time to hold him. So the young couzle contemplating marriage and asking what it costs rayer of the wisest man who ever lived: “Give me DOROTHY DIX. attraction in the rear portion of. the premises, . There are all manner of ornamen- tal gates both in wood and metal to be purchased ready to hang. A home owner with a little skill at handling carpenter's tools can make a hand- some gate himself. An arched gate with clinging vines or shrubs train- ed over it is one of the most attrac- tive devices. If this can be made into a. small arbor with a bench on either side shaded by vines or shrub- bcry, furnishing a place where the housewife, after gathering vege- tables, may sit down and shell peas or snap beans, it is an added at- , traction. - But whatever form of gate is uaad, it need not be a rickety, unsightly affair such as are too often seen. A pathway from the kitchen door bordered with flowering plants and terminating in an attractive gate will add pinch to‘ tbs joy of vegetable Ii‘ undue madam u, table garden is half done. The next point ls the design of the garden. This lends itself to as great a variety of treatments as the flower garden on formal lines, for the vegetable garden is naturally u. formal garden. It is planted in straight rows. Can Eat Anything. Mr. Frank Chatbum of Blackburn, wrlun-"I have suffered long from acid stomach and aonstipationpbut since bein advised to try your wondcrfu Carter's Little Liver Pills l be to feel the benefit after able after offsets. ' brick and J. W. 5,. Douglas»? 0l1/11,‘ copies of that day's postal clsrek had ihrought it easier to dispose of the papirs in one place than to deliver them to 25,000 ad- dresses. IIEAD OF IIILLSBORIO SCHOOL The following is the honor roll c the Head of Hlilsboro School for th month of Februny‘ ending:— GRADE fX-i Ernest C. Camerc GRADE VIII (l) 1 Oarl W. Bir _ ‘Viola n. Birt Batrice a. Cameron (b) Coffin G. Douglass 2 H. Francis Bambrick. I GRADE GI (a) l Reta Pearl Birt (b) Inla M. B01181"- GRADE IV-l Margaret}. Bam- erina Baird. ' -' armor: II-Elizabeth M. Douglas. ‘oaans: 1 (n 1 Patricia. u. Bam-l brick. ammo I (b) 1 Bertram Baird I Oliver w. Dou81M- 1 (mam: 1 (c) 1 Doris a. ooualas a William F. B01181"- John T. Valley. Teacher OIIAILINOI . we, the North Bedequs Hockey nun, challenge the Central Be- rn» Carter's mo» Liver run for sick headache; bilioulnall and constipation. ‘H!!! act 18;‘ tonic. deque . married men to a frlendl, gameofhockeyinnedequaflink. , lMMWUIlb-Qlflimz I -f . _' d generaiuse. M0 as coméaqr (wk m’ - pressed) a thinner. vgtcqiwllv diced" f“ "w" ' - dress occasions aodspecisl-W- -~4-,- - . .4.» ~ __ .. . .. .,.~.-»-".-‘.... -.