_TF“E_.C_".A“LQITETBWN imtkmm‘ _M_AY 1a. 194v trTHE WOMAN'S REALM/ A NOBLER TEMPLE Build thee more stately mansions. O my soul. A: the swift seasons rolll Leave thy low-vaulted pastl Let each new temple. noble: than the last, Shut thee from heaven dome more vast. Till thou at length are free. Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's unresting sea. Oliver Wendell Holmes. with a RHODES’ SCHOLARS Announcing recently that for the ‘first time he had received. two nominations from India for Rhodla This store unlike other! in the district, has fairly good potatoes and the old lady has only a frost- bitten supply in her pantry. Other women compia bitterly of the shortages of but er. The legal ration until a couple of months go was a quarter of a pound a month. Recently. it was raised to half a pound a month, which still isn't sufficient for table needs. Yet if you visit a French home. you will eat a. cake that makes your motitii water. "Made with litiltci", of course." the lady of the house explains, and she spreads a thin coating of margarine on lltl’ bread with evident pride. Cooking an Art Scholarships, Lord Elton. Seer.‘- tary of thc Rhotits Trust, spoke of how Rhodes scholars of lhc past have llVUii tip to lll(‘ idcal of Rhodes ~that they should make public Service their special aim. Of thc 2,196 Rhodes scholar.» lic~ fore 1940, between 600 Llllfi 650 have taken some part in cdticationai a1- tl-vitics, ninctccn former Rhodes scholars have become judges, and twenty King's Councilsyand some have become the most distinguish- ed lawyers in the United States. The two best. brain specialists to- rluy and also Sir Edward Flnrcy, the co-discovcrcr of penicillin, arc among the 150 in the medical pro- fession. Four Rhodes scholars bo- came Fellows of the Roi) al Society. 0f nineteen German Rhodes scholars who came to Oxford after 1929. eight managed to gct out of Germany and. served against that country in the war. Some even u on decorations for bravery. FRENCH WOMEN BUY WITH CARE PARIS—D&pite the war. short- gges and high prices. French wont- en have stuck to their domestic fads. Though food remains tightly ra- tioned and. hard to got toff the black market). the French house- wife still is guided bY PTQil-l ' e5 rather than comfort in deciding where to market. At the moment, potatoes are scarce, and those you get are n1- ferior in quality, often irostbitlen. An old French lady who for years has lived in the same dis- trict has always boycotted a local vegetable store. THE SfQRS SAY- By GENEVIEVE KEMIBLE For Wednesday, Ma-y 1G ALTHOUGH affairs generally are under a benign and expansive rule astrologically. With muoll l-lfwllisc o1 growth, lucrative and productive f:.~.;e and opportunity, yet a. degree of acumen. proper evaluation of fundamentals. and keen appraisal of assets. influence and human gigs-is, would not be aimiss. The latter may prove of greater coin- sequence than more material fac- tors. with friendship. sentiment and romance having constructive force. Birthday Forecast Those whose birthday it is may and their greatest expansion and production in collaboration with others. in which iolnt assets may be merged. Fnictidly interests may bring most lucrative operations. even though the affiliation be based upon social. affectlonal, profession- al or human relations rather than crass materialistic or monetary ones. Such associations may be based upon optimistic or idealistic foundation; it built upon sound and reasonable promises. Partnership and family inte-rtsts flourish. A dbl-id lborn on this day has much ambition and expansive or optimistic aims and ideals based on finer values, rat-her than the sordid and materialistic. Care should be used in choosing asscciatcs. Hero's sweelerrttastiinbroad \ with The explanation is that ruukillg is an art here. Uiilces a cake is perfect-which the French don't think possible without buttcrwit is a reflection on the housewife. This loyalty lo customs and "haunts" has its zidvuittagcs too Because she has always traded at a certain store. the housewife kiwi-Vs she can expect friendliness and consideration there. She greeted smllingiy, and askcd about hcr own health, and that of her husband, children, cousins and aunts. If she i; short of bread. the halter will “lend hcr" a loaf until the next month's ration tickets arc issued. If Sh!‘ has an llIlIZKlECUiCKi gms‘. for supper, she can knock on tne butcher's doc-r after hours, and get served. t From this close relationship be- tween house-keepers and shopkeep- ‘er have also developed many use- lful commercial customs, including ltho "cooking" custom. i in Franco, iiilmy houscivivcs have stoves too small to cook a thc chicken. stuffed and pre- But all they have to do is take ‘the the chi-rkcti, stuffed and pre- pared: or thc pie, ready mixui, to their nearest baker. for 20 cents, he will do all the roasting or bak- ing ricedcd. INK TRAINS if you dip your pcn into the juite of a lemon and write with it, the writing will become visible when the paper is heated. If you put starch in the bottom of a, cup, add cold water. stir un- til you have a milky-looking llq- uid, then add a few drops of iodine to the mixture, you will find -that. after using thLs liquid as an ink, the writing when dry may be rubbed from the paper w.th a _cloth. l rosriirjaariiit-ao YEARS i OTTAWA. — (OP) - The pQSt loiffice department has announced ‘retirement of \V.N.H. Bowers as postmaster of lvlasscy, 0st. after rcla-‘more than a half-century of serv- W" 5199i“ vice. He was appointed in 1895. . How Can I! ! W’, é By Anne Ashley $ WWO l l Q. How can I treat clothing to , make it fireproof? i A. Pour one ounce of sal aim- moniac or alum in the last rinsing water for m-uslin or oottoin goods. and the goods will not bum, or will burn without flame. Q. What kind of potatoes should "be served with baked fish’! A. With baked fish, serve mash- ed. cr swcet ‘potofocs. cooked in southern style. Plain boiled pota- itocs should be served only when ‘ they are new. . Hciw can I mond scratches on laid pumps? I A. Apply liquid court plaster to the scratch and lt will be hardly visible. FLEISCHMANWS l IT'S FUll. STRENGTH so it goes right u; work, No waiting. No extra steps. Fleischmamy; 5",], active Yeast makes bread that's more deiicioul and tender, swletttsgaujng “my ,5“. n‘ YOU mt! A1‘ llOMl-Get Fleischmano’: 4th” flrggh Ya,‘ with the familiar yellow hbgl- ‘Dependablo-it‘: been Canada’; fivorite for more than 70 years, That Body of Yours B: W. Barton M. D. LIVLNS} AITEB. AN ATTACK OF LOBONARY THROMBOBIS 5°11" "M11115 $80. 1n a leading mew“ Journal. a physician advis- ed those who had reached the ago 1X01: LivingSieisurei {of 50 that they should not lift a. ‘little finger unnecessarily. H-ia I thought was that so man-y puddle- laged men and women, as they ac- quired excess weight, qn-degvored [to reduce their weight by vigorous Iexercise and could thereby damage heart and blood vessels. The sug- ‘gestion was that at and after mild- dle age. thc only safe way lo reduce weight was to reduce the amount of food eaten daily, l As a. matter of fact. the average well individual. at and past middle age. who has always been used b exercise. cam continue to exercise |datly, gradually decreasing thc i amount of cxcrcisc as hc grows old- cr. .f the stops taking exercise, hc will weaken his muscles. and lose some of tihe elasticity in the muscic tiss-u: of heart and blood vessels. Another idea that is generally ac- cepted by the laity, but not by phy- sician... is that once you have had an attack of coronary sclerosis or thrombosis, your life hamgs by a thread and that you should rest practically all iihe time. That pai- icnts after their first attack may live many years is known to "ll fgsiciatis, but just how much ex- crclse they can take safely requires close supervision on the part of the physician. in onc series of 1.000 cases of coronary thrombosis reported in thc "British Lancet," 225 occurred- unknown to the patients them- selves because the typical pain l under the breast bone did not occur ' before the attack In tihls some ser- 1 ies, the discnsc persisted more than ~20 years in pflHGiliS. more than .".0 'in L’ patients, and one pzilicnt had had her first attack of coronary thrombosis at l.‘ir.- age of 3D and was loading a busy lilc at thc age of Although tlic above facts prov: that nicn and wcizncn who have had coronary attacks may 1W0 DYBCUC" all!’ a normal life for many years. that is because they are under the 5upgrvlsi0n of a physician. i-le tests lilo strength of thc heart by a mrasurcd zimount. of exercise with- in a certain period of time, notes the. length of time Vthe heart rc- quircs to return lo its 110M181 1'5"! after exercise. and uses a fluorecope and electrocardiograms- fid filvl©i€ it" - - é Mommg Smzle ‘r/(WWQWQOWCWQW? FALSE ALARM Customer: "l. don't think I'll buy any more of your crackers. They teliime thc mice are always running over them." Grocer: “Tlhat can't be. why. the iifl the barrel cve-ry night." GENEROUS Judge ihandh-ig down deem‘- it‘- divorce casel: "I've decided i0 Si"! your wife $50 a "Wilm- Defendant: "Thatfis finc iudgv- I.“ ‘n, am; slip hcr a couple of guoks myself once in a While- SWEATER ATTRACTIVE DESIGN N0. This good looking sweater is crocheted in an interest- ing shell stitch and finished with gay peasant embroidery. Pattern Ne. 109'! cwvtains complete instruc- tions ln a medium size. Needlework Book 20 cents. To order: Send 20 cents in ooln to Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- town Guardian. Design No. 1007 1097 Nh-ime Add real sleeveless , so i, DOROTHY DIX SA YS- Obied OiOOEWQWOVQDOOG-Qbififi ‘ Pride - - Blessing Or Curse Characteristic May Io An Asset 0r Llalilllty To People i Pride can be either the greatest asset or the worst handicap that any human being can have. It depends upon the particular variety of itthat one possesses that makes it. a blessing, or a curse. It is like a potent drug that stimulates one to put forth every effort to make the best of oneself and one's opportunities. or else it deadena every energy and turns even those who had the ability to suc- ceed into failures. ‘ No other one thing is such an indication of character as pride is. If you will judge a man by what he is proud of, you will not go wrong in your estmatc one tme out o! a hundred. You can use even so small a thing as his collar as a yard- stick to measure him by. If. he has on a dirty collar and there is a. stubble of beard on his un- shaved face and his coat looks as if he had slept in it. yott don't need any other evidence to tell you that he is a slacker who has no pride in him- self or his work, and that he will never amount to a row of pins. On the other hand. a man's clothes may be threadbare, but they will be clean; his shoes may have holes in them. but they will be. blacked, if he has pride in himself. And you can bet your money on him, for he is going places. He is too proud to sit at the foot of the ladder. He is bound to climb it, however steep and hard it is. Humble pie is not his dish, so f: works and struggles until he turns it into cakes and ale. PRIDE STIMULATES The right sort of pride is also one of the greatestimoral builders in the world. A man may be too proud to lic, or steal. or do any llhdfifhilflded and dirty trick to make money. Pride may keep a sorely tempted girl from dragging hcrisklrts through thc mud of a sordid love affair. Once I covered, as we newspaper people say, a case in which two o.d women nearly starved to death, and their niece did starve to death. because they were too proud to iisk the help of friends who would gladly have given it to them. Wrong and foolish of them. of course. but there wasn't a reporter among us who didn't take off our hats, as we wrote the story. to those old women who would rather have died than beg. But if the right kind of pride is a sword with which to fight the battle of life. the wrong sort of pride is a tinsel toy that breaks in the hands of those who use it. And. oh. they are so pitifully numerous! Tho men who are too proud to work. but not too proud to sponge on their friends and borrow money that they know they can never repay. or to lct their wives or their mothers support them. The mcn who would he good mechanics. but who arc too proud to follow an honest trade. but not too proud to become bums and loafers. And still more pathetic are the hordes of women whose false pride makes them starve keeping up a pretense of prosperity that they do not possess. They are the women who take "paying guests." instead of running the kind of boarding houses that would make them rich. They are the women whose false pride will not let them become dressmakcrs. caterers or housekeepers, or do any other work that isn't "elegant." but; which pays good money. because Great-Grandfather was in the Legis- lature. Great is the power of pride. Pity that. we don't devote more time and effort to cultivating the more profitable varieties. >eo§ooQ>¢o~§eoQooQ>o Better English D. L‘. 'Williama 3i‘@0<4?>€®i€ f Household g Scrapbook If? 3 Qbi Ls. By Roberta Lee 1. What Ls Wrong with this scn- A tcncc? "Bctnvccn ear-h row of trees there was a gravel walk." 2. What is the correct pronunc- iation 0f “maniac”! 3. Which one of these words is Removing Varnish if you wish to clean off layers of misspelled? Inlayed. lXIYIOVBflOH, varnish from furniture before r8- inolfcnslvc. g novating or repainting. use ordin- 4. What docs thc word "indis- ary wood alcohol, which is a mild agent suitable for mahogany. wal~ nut, and other tropical woods. crcet" mean? 5. Wthat is a word beginning with cr that imans “belief”! Keeping Conley ANSWERS l. Say. "Between cvcry two rows of irc9s t.‘.icrc was a gravel walls." 2. Pronounce ma-nl-ak, first a as in may. i as in it. second a as in at. Put tihe parsley into an air-tight glass jar and place ‘in the refriger- ator amd it will stay green and frzzh for a long time. It is ‘much accent first syllable, and not more successful than trying to keep man-ya‘. 3. Inlaid. 4. Lacking in it in water. correct judgment; imprudent. "Your behavior was vcry indis- llair Care creet." 5. Credence It is ii. good idea. after brushing your hair, to wash off its surface with g, dgmp tui-klsh towel-this doing wonders in removing surface soil and dust. g Cook ’s Corner 0o i®oo§,oo §co '§-or§oo@ ting a coarse blade. Press sausage from their casings; combine iihe sausage meat with the liver. Add the bread crumbs: sprinkle with onion. salt. pepper and sage; combine lightly. Beat the egg slightly and stir in .- the ketchup or chili sauce; add to meat mixture and combine thor- oughly. Tum info a greased loaf pan: <10! top witfh the shortening or ddppins- Bake in a moderate oven. 350 de- rees - about u oure. a Tum out and slice for serving. Servings. 6 oi- 7. LIVER LOAF 1 pound beef liver pound pork sausages 21,5 cup. soft bread crumbs ‘,5. cup finely chopped onion 1% teaspoon salt ‘.6 teaspotm DWI)!’- 14. teaspoon powdered sale 1 egg h‘ cup ketchup or chili sauce l tablespoon shortening or fine- flavored dripping Cover liver with boiling water and let stand for s minutes: drain- Put through fihe food chOPPEY- W" New Socipless VEL Keeps Woolens Softer by Frances Thompson noted homernaking authority Yes it's a fact-the unusual miidneee of aoaglese VEL makes it an ideal cleanser for all ‘nds of Woolens. Aayou know, many soaps contain alkolis which can be very unkind to woolen fibres and toad to caueo "mattiag”. But eoaplase VEL is a neutral product containing no alkali-tints why it leave: wool soft and fluffy and helps give woolen Qarmen longer life. NEVER WRING WOOLENS Woolens should shag be washed with cai-e—qulck was ‘ng, gentle squeezing and lukow u. waver are “musta". Never rub or twist wool- cna. VEL dissolves instantly in lukewarm water making if. act as nft as ram water." N0 BUDS NEEDED Using a alightl lesser amount than soap. try V ll. for your fav- ourite lvreater, Dad's loch, or baby's blankets and wooiens. Put the VEL into basin first then add lukewarm water. But remember- ualikeeoap VELneodanooudai It; quick-foetal don't be ' and. need tn add more VEL u the lack of nude has no elect on the cleaning [Banger of the almoot ludien water. aim VEL in not a soap and doesn't act like a soap it leaves no soap no easier and quicker. BoVEIIuGmo-nvortool - . VIN-Q “Ill.” it I Ikll If ll WHITE-P RUM. lfl. I and Personal f Fashions f Literature O%O i.’ Masters 0f The Parachute Mail B: Peter Benedict They Plan n» Duth A "Now our direct part of it il to make arrangements with Barker a- bout planting the uarchiights. We'll got army lorries wedged into every corpse on the moor that's big enough to iii-dc them. We'll have men surrounding the arena wher- ever the bushes will conceal them. After that, well, it's Superinten- dent Barkers worry; he can eith- er pick up Graham and his as- sistant with the stuff on them. or clse escort them back to Mere Cod- bri with a fast car, and pick up thc Whole boiling. The difficulty is they may deliver the goods lil- rect to the Green Scorpion, and not touch the Cowles on the way. I expeflt ho‘ll elect to take in tD collectors on the spot and fight thO Cowle lssuc on outside cvidcnm —-largcly yours and initic. Why not? you can say he has tlicni in the bag, once that cargo and its collectors are In his hands." "L suppose you'll want to be tn at tho C-Balh?" asked Peggy. “Naturally! Don't you get a tecl- ing that ivltho-ut us the whole a - fair would crumple up?" He mct her eyes. and laughed. "I shall come with you. I sup- pose wc don't go until next Tucs- clay? We have to stay here, and play innocent to the Cowles. you know, and keep them haiPPy about us. But I'm certainly coming with you on Tuesday." "You're not going to be in the he told hcr fZ-rmly. "I should be as safe as you. at any rate. But I didn't want to take a hand, particularly. Have you forgotten that my home is there?" Peter said. softly and cxullant- ly: "Didn't l tell you that we'd burst this case wid-c open bet teen us?" There was no onc to care but the sentimental taxi-driver and hcr flushed smiling face. cveii if i-t was still Eileanofs face. and not Peggy's, was irresistibly at- tractive. l-Ie kissed hcr again It was then that the taxi-driver oc- gan to whistle. CHAPTER xi!‘ "Get Her!" if thc new play nt thc Iicniiil‘: had not, after onc crowded week, slumped into surprlsinB ilhlurc. nothing need ever have gone wrong with the plans of Peter Sherwood Milne. But from a cascade of fa- votirablo opening criticisms to an empty house ten nights later is no far cry in the "modern theaLe world, and that was the fate of this particular play, as of many another. It so happened that the desis- l-an lo tn-ke lt off and cut all losses had been arrived at on Tuesday. September the fifth. Lady Cowlc had one of her inimitable infor- mal evening receptions that night, and one of her guests was the celebrated actor who had been fighting the best of the losing battle against lukewarm i-nicrest ln the London audiences. No’. un- naturaily he was depressed; again not unnaturally, he talked to this most shrewd and quccniy of great ladies, one who herself knew the trials and. successes of artistry. n- bout the failure. She was sympa- thetic. She said some clever but unkind things about modern audi- ence-reactlon which went straight to his wounded heart. “All very well." he said good- humouredly. "and I won't deny that I've said worse things in f.tr worse words about ‘cm. But does that help to pay the small-put actors‘ wages? No, Lady Cowle; what you should do. if you want to show your sympathy in g rually practical way, i-s to write us a play yourself. With your gift for writing invective, and mine fo": delivering it. we might get sinie- where. The trouble ls, dirt has tong since become commonplace, and I'm hanged if the authors know where to turn for something even more stimulating and not yet over- exploited." He added. looking moodlly into the smoke of his cigar: "Mind you, this was good stuff. You didn't see it? I'm sorryl You won't have-the chance for very much longer. ut could it ar use any interest among West End udieneee. Not on you life! We had about three fashion- able nights; not that they're any use to us, as you know for your- self, unless intelligence comes with the wealth. and it didn't." "You sold the boxes out pretty well. I understood." said Lady Cowle, watching hlm with her glittering old eyes, but not giving lawny the source of hcr understand- ng. "You're misinformed. There has been g certain amount of bumnesa in that peculiarly snobbiah and uncomfortable line of audience- accommodation, but by no means a full sale. Many nights there hasn't been one box filled." "Some friends/of mine," she ex- plained. carefully casual. "express- ed an intention of getting a box for lest Thursday's show. There was some suggestion of our going with them, but we couldn't man- age it. I don't know if they went." “They dimft." sighed tho actor, "I can tall you that. One of the worst audiences of tho run. I u- aure you. and not a box filled." The painted old face smiled upon hlm lndulgenlly but very alertly. "You're imagining things. I don't believe you'd lee a good audience .1! you had one: your had luck has affected your brain. limen." “For a fortnight," he said tol- 'emnly. "I've been trying to con- vince myoelf that this ploy would evntuallrle a unease. be m WOVWOW For better-tasting bran hkes, look for Kellogg's oidea-gellow package. ry the ig economy size. As you know, some of the Bcoplc need Kellogg's ran Flakes all thc time . . . all the scople need Kellogg's ran Flakes some of the time . . . so isn't it lucky they mresosood! THE 02541551 NAME nvvcekzats’ sisuffle on thc moor. at any rate." ‘paths aglow and when presently wc came lo hotn- the thorns in the vicinity of home. the mill pom] ‘and stream wcre also m_v-tlu and lovely in i-is light. Jamie hzii ‘icaiid it too. After his walk uloiig the fields in company with his grand. QO%C0%¢ O'Q>¢O: Ellen's Diary lg i ( By an Island Farmer's Wife Filifwéfimymvmfifatliei‘ when together they lllfifi! l ' ' ' ‘ ‘ a ‘. I saw a leggy heron-bird fly ..§'“S’If,p,',21. Mix“: above lilu house across the lane “ their own doorstep. "Do you limit what l: hear?" he uSkt-d J1l!|l'§. “Ycs" he continued with §Lli"l' , as though he could scarcely c ctlll. the nice sound “thc frogs are buck to the water again!" 0 o e this evening, and leaving the rich beauty of thc sunset colors behind him, home down towards the river into which the mill stream empties. It was the same bird. James and I had seen this morning \\.'|L’ll “arcoly pas‘ “muse he 5mm“ ‘is lt was to a new curlli u.‘ \‘tll'8 “in afmwg" l"*m'~°d' m Li“? today-with gllllliilillf! licgiinii. shallous of thc pond below the “ca. qmcny new“ [he Um sidc and tlic pond meadow pitta» ing. Because of the lack of [HOW and thc t-.'Vl‘l‘.'li icy spells diixnii; Winter James had glcspriircd of zlia latter. But there it was. Lately lihlil and lifeless, today alivc and soil- ly green, Pleasant I find it now in these warmer days to conic wmi front tncadow, I suspect he was waitdiiiig fcr tiuwary trout ur other pond creatures for i)l'C3k[GSl—- a plump frog iniiyhc. I fancy at this moment there arc odd voices miss- ing from last evening's chorus. ti deep and substantial bass or a throaly contralto. For our Spring musicians have returned to their Jan,“ w [he "Ionlmz nlnkmm °ld hmmis a‘ m5‘- mdem “WY when animals rise and cililil ha‘! mkcn lmfiscswui‘ slmnhmv lariily as if not tiulle clinic ultli and wcrc there licfore we knew it. And now from ponds and slit-am sides; from dimpllng singing brooks in well remembered Island pkces. the frogs‘ music is to be heard a- gain. We were aware of it for the first time this season, in the calm and peace of last Sunday n-ght. Jock and I were returning llten, driving behind the Nell-mare. from service in the old Kirk. O I I their rest. Our approach, uo imi- tcr how nobclcssly is a signal {iii the thirce cats to converge on tn: same place. They come mysterious- ly fro-m the reaches of the 111cm!- sea-Tubliy from hcr kit-r . - -up on thc straw loft, 5.. ino-ment late. Slic. of ihl‘ manners, age lending hcr_ il. and added charm. She is untrot ‘tiled by formulae and such in hcr tliild rearing. iC0ntinll€d on Page l'.‘\ As we approached Kristy's Pond. | there it was. rising soft and clear. ' Even. I thought, as thc ivorship- _ pet's in the old ciurch had done in the singing of thc Psalms n‘ David so these lowly creatures of the "wild" praised i; Maker. who when l-lc had regarded the ivorld and all hc had fashioned for thc sons of mcn had found lt good. Thu beauty of the earth. part of which was the same chorus of voices which comes as surely as the seed time in Spring. At the time o: our passing the moonlight set silvtry seriously think I should miss any opportunity of making one little point in its favour?” She did not. He was a. man with a cold and iudlclal mind which would be sure of what it said Therefore no box had been taken for last Thursday's performance. Therefore the American girl -and her cavalier into the bargain-had ficd. Therefore there was a reason for their lying; they had probed for some information-debt! did not know what nor how the lies had helped them; but she knew that it was approaching midnight. BB4 that thyrun on Abbott's Ferry Moor was timed for one o'clock. (To be continued) vNeedlecraft/ LIFOR THE HOMEI. "Our Family. Regulator is KIDNEY LIVER / H APPILY WA BHABLB Start the day bright in this wash- able wulth action-minded cap sleeves and button-all-tlte-lway-down front. |With its gathered skirt and frisky i-uftlhig, you'll feel dreesease to . case coonpany calls. t , . No. 3081 is out in sizes 12. 14. i6. 13.20.35.138. 40. 42, 44 and 46. Bite 36 requires 3% yards 35-inch, 2% r yards. _ Send 20 cents for PATTERN, wihioh includes complete sawing guide. Print your Name. Address and Style Number plainly. Be sure to state the size you widi. Imhsde postal unit or acne number ln your address. Em 39.2.’ , n.“ Es Address Pattern Department. The Charlottetown Guardian. , , Pattern No. 3007 "IMO f?)