"I: ‘ ' -~;.N¢,~....- - - ._. _ --w'-ala~ QO<¢Q§f-¢>_ ." 1 v».- I "1111 ' PAGE TWO t, . -__\,_ I000 OOQVO O1 0-0-OO-OO-O'OO'O-O-O9OOQQOOQQ9Q . Woman's R18 Him‘ Y-Social and Perso tO-Ovfi-viO-O-O-Ofi-OifOffi VO-O4QGVOOQOKO VfffffOQ-1 m‘: 1 Today's Slim! “have Radio Progiuiii ~\l| Time is Eastern Siuiiilurill ‘YIIDXEIHUAY. .\l'(il'.\"l' l0 ‘ . ..i l1 til $411111‘! (foinpositiotis 11111111. \1-1'~. " , £1.55 nit-g. 1i;1l Pltlgflilll RAN. lil. i-:1i\111l..,'1.\. xi.11...1.i..'1.\-i>\ '1" 1111 5- .-: .1111 irii‘ llil‘ We 1 l1-tt..~,111111~ PCJ_ 31 1,- iii i l i £111., 1 i lI\I‘l-'.\"l‘ 7.1111 p 1n ‘(>111 litinguriati 1:1 1- l:-.11..11:1-t Cililtfil’! Oi'- ‘ iifili. .128 111.. ‘.112. Airs JZK, _ f'11ii1i111-11'.:1l1-s. - l) 1111-9. I\ '.2:1.-1111..11."17 Pi-tiui-um, 1° 2" r1 m f . ir-pliune R119. 0rd. Tl"! 1'. >< ‘J111 11 111-i 1111-11.. 'll_i’1\~~-i. "T 11.72 nit-g. I I '>;1\ 10'5" P . S1111‘ 1111s‘ Sonrzs Tlir- llrlt" . - (;S‘[_ 1r) 1- n- 1'1 "' ' ('- 3.“, 71 n. 111 ""1 _ 119-‘? .11 :1 111. 9.521 meg 3 31 15 iii .951 meg. Yiibii mi 0211mm, A TOOTH o YOFR iHiiY nut-t "st-t .1 11111111". llut ht 1.11 111114 :11 t‘\\’l1illi. 11111111 i l-11 11.11-11i-_-|11'~ii--f .1 1.1111.11-1i~1-|11j1'-1!1i ~ 111111 'i'.1l1l1-1»~. 1111.111 111 b11111." .~ '.1-1(}111I|1li, 11-. . 1111.11.11‘: u 1-1-l 11.111-"-1-.1-.11 111' 1-1 ‘t 1-1-1111, and 111111 11~1111 -11-;. 111111-11 1.11 iluiing lei-ii 'n1! " (i - i111 1- lz-ilv 1.1ii1i< :it the 1.1-1 1-1'111t111|1. l 1. 11 $111 1111i ["11 - .‘i1I.:11-..- ~11 11111-11 .. 1 11. T‘ I11‘, $111111’- 1 ,..1, \4| ili'il.1-= in 1111 Your hit-111". if results don't ; '-11111\-11urdrut-ei-t l1; ycu. ;‘"""' "' UJL). 20.4 .11111i1.1! V-‘r- ~ 1111111 the T ill 15:11 1111-34.; ‘ 1111-11 . U51). (i813 31.3 .\lll~l1‘lli Suni- i 111-y , g 0111111101111] Spread n11 11111101111 ruuntls o. white 3 :5 t~.-111s. .01 parsley: Makes 10 sandwiches. O§Q4O~4A4 v-v-vvvrvrvwvv w THEiI-IARLOTTETOWQL GUARDIAN AA A A eie C vvvéévv vvvvvvvwvwvvv-1 vvvvwvvvvv vv vvviwvvvV I THE COOK 'S CORNER i CillJ-Ilti’ .-\.\'I) OLIVE f S.-\Ni)\\'l(‘l|l-I.~‘ l 1 cup lill(‘i_\'-(lik‘4'ii ci-lt _\' l-l 111p ehoppi-il, stuffed olives. ltlzii-onntiisi- 1 k111i wliuleivlietit lJi'(‘il(i 311x chipped celery anti \\'ll 5111111111 between slit-vs oi buttered olivt-s uiinli-u-lieiit bread. Ciu into squur- - 11-5 iiiui garnish each suiidwi 1 with ii slice of 5111111-11 011W’. Makes l8 51111111 s:\1itl\\'it-l1i-5. 1 _ .\I()(‘K l'.-\’l'l-l Ill-I l-‘OIS (ERAS S.~\Nl)\\‘l(‘|ll-I§. 1 l-4 lb. ll\'L‘l"\\’ill‘.\l i l-4 cup 1111111-1-(1 parsley- 1 2 1111111-511011115 niaiuiiiiuise . l lmif \\'l1ll(‘l)l'(’1'l(l ‘I parsley- , ir1>ni Watercress or Remove e 115111;; li\1'l‘l'\\'ill'Si , ‘ililfi 11121511. Add pursli-j: ant‘ inur- onntiisc anti tnix well. Spread be- ltwt-en slices 0i buttered white l)l‘f‘ilt’i. Cut into diainoiit.-sliuped :~(‘.i‘i(i\\‘lCllt‘.\. Cwiirtiisli plate with 11111-511‘; or watercress. Makes 18 small sandwiches. 11.111111.‘ ssspiviciiizs 1 3-112. pkg cream cheese 2 tablespoon leinnn Juli-e l-4 pound salted almonds ‘.1 loaves \\il1)ll'\\tll.1 1.11.41. Mash the Cl'(“.llll chi-est. 11nd mix thoroughly witli 1111- 1111.111 Jlllli‘ 111 a spreading cons‘ 1~n1-_\-. Chop suited iillll(1ll(i.\ anal .1011 Spread l)(‘i\\'(‘i.‘ll win-at bread. Cut 111 "iiiigel-s.‘ Makes .30 sinall suiitlwit-lies. (‘IIIFKI-I ' ._\:\‘|) -l’i.\'l-I iPPliE .\'.\Ni)\\'l('lll-I.\‘ 1 t-up mimic-ti ri-uslu-ti 111111-- apple l t-up i-iiuppt-tl 1-r111k1-<l' or UiliiilPfl (’ll1(i'.l‘ll ‘.3 l1111\1~~ wlii 111-nail 1-1! 1111111111 v.11! 1| iiit-uts l-2 t-up 111:1_\u111111i51-. I llr.-11i 1ii1i1-uppl1-. 111111 11115‘ with , 1111- (‘ii(i]I1}l'(l L'iil1'i((‘il and 111111011- Jllillit‘. eipriuid b1-t\\1-<~11 bullet-ed 5111-1-5 r11 white br1-111l. (jut. 19:11-11’ 1 suiitluu-li into (|ll.ll‘lf‘l\ tlizigoii: y, 1 11111111111.- li'ii'ii“i1'\ This 1'(‘.(‘l])l3 1 niuki-s .31.! saiunvit-lu-s. LflltVfl-Ilf S.\.\'l)\\'l('Ill~IS ~ / 1-1111 11111511-1‘. tiiiiit-L-tl L‘ iiilili-spurn lClllilli Juli-e 3 t:1hlr-.~;i1111i1- lilll_\i‘ll1ill1>(‘ 3 ilii)lU.\})ilOll> F11 (-11 tirr-ssiiig ‘.3 inurt-s Willi!‘ iii Conibiiii- all 111:1 s<-.151-i1111g 111-rs- 1 r- 1 ‘ll1.\ adding ,1 to taste.’ b1'1-:1 . (lariir-li eiicii with l'\ sprig . / 7 '11 "Smocking" For The Younger Sei *7‘? To (lress ialilili- lmly 11s she very sw-eetlv deserves. her w-arilrobe must include i1 1-11 > 4 lnd she wears flu-111 for 11'.\l‘il 276A 1:1 ava-lunie 111 l‘. . . 1 .. 1 .. . . - f ti dress. transit-r for the smnc ‘n2. pattern o m 2.11111 n! N11‘ i615 smcckiniz and i111.-11 111-- lO and 12 YFRYR- 41nd smacking ls The p.i".eri1 int-Itirir-s l'()f‘"'\ Sllf‘ W-“ITS tlir-m for pin!’ so c to d0. No. 111- l)l111‘1'-i 1". ‘tries n tissue complete lnsatrticilons foi- is tiva llbif‘ in 5120s B. the dress. 11 fissile pattern 11f iLlllllii lililv\'(lllli‘1\l\l' [U .§}}i'i."t!(i. ‘ I buttt-i-r-tl 51101-5 of wlicle- .- "llil-nns death w-as advanced at an How (ran I 7 7 (By ANNE i ¢OOOOOOOOQ§O~O+OO404OVVW Q 0 6 | g ASHLEY) Q. How can I prevent when. ll‘0l1illl.', linen suits? A. Iron the inner pockets and the heavy seams first. when pres- sing linen stilts. This will do away with creases when the garments lure giveii the final touches. CIPRSES Q. How can i renew old Mason ' iitis? A. Sometime before canning sea- son. collect all these Jlillififlllllli. Leave them for a day or twn and they will appear prac- tically new. Q. How can l 51111115- froin linen? A. First soak the stains: apply t-rezim oi tartar, and put in the sun to dry. After it is dry, wiish thoroughly. OQWOOQOOvOVOOOQOOOOOQ-Ol I O Q Household Scrapbook y Q I 111v ROBERTA 1.12111 1 1' remove peach then 1 w u, ' _, 1111111111 ‘itttliiiti i Dorothy Dix “Q1113? ‘ Artist ' iThe Bride Who Decides to Remain as She Was Before Marriage is Due for a Cry- Husbands Want Different 'l‘ypes of Wives From the Girl They -. Courted ’ .. A bride-and a Holly-wood bride at that~announces that she has found the secret that her sister women have been seeking thrflfililholiiitghi 1 ages with tears and prayers and with little success 1c boast 0 . 11nd B , _ » isn£olw to hold a husband and keep him m 1°“ 1 W ET. She asserts she is going to tum the trick by simply being herself. "My husbandjell in love with me Just as I am." she says. “so evidently I possess the qualities he admires most in women and de- sires in a wife- Therefore. it I am SGTASTBCWTY if} him now, why shOilld I try to change in any way? Why, indeed. except that men change their feminine ideals as often as they d0 their shirts- The charms and graces that intrigue them today will get on their nerves tomorrow. 11nd the 01113’ thing to which they are really constant is change. . _ Besides. sweethearts are one thing and wlyes are The very thingthat a man married it girl for he doesnt Wont He has an entirely different standard of That is wha_i She doesnt .1, anothe . _ tier to do or be after marriage. virtues and conduct for before end after the wedding. makes citing married such a risky undertaking for a iZirl. know w ere she stands, nor what is expected of her. ' In the days of courtship a man puts ti llifi 11D 0h 8 Dedesiai ii“? burns incense before llfll‘. He lavislies flowersand iliiis iiiflt he will» afford upon her. He tclls hei- that her lily-white tinnds shall 1181/01” d0 ltlilyiliilig_bii_t soothe his fevered brow. He thinks it cute that She i5 jsuch a nitwit that she thinks the Boulder Dam is 501116 50ft 01 8 new . curse word. He compliments her new clothes and tclls her what a dream lids, place 5111c is in floating cliitfons. the-in in a vessel and cover with i ‘ Naturally, the girl thinks thnt he has fallen in love with her because 1 she is a glrinioui- girl. and that all she has to do‘ to keep him kneeling at 1 her feet. holding hei- hand and making impassioned love to her is Just l to go on being glamorous and floating around in pink chiffons and talk- iing baby talk. Then. to her amazement and consternation. she finds that the very qualities he picked her out for are Just the qualities he doesn't want in a wife. He blames her for not being something else than what she is, 1 which is just as unreasonable as for a man to order omfileite svuifif? in 8- i-estaunant and then be peeved because it isn't roast beef. Most of the men who go around weeping on our shoulders because they are unhappily married and disappointed in their wives have only themselves to blame. The wives are just exactly what they were when their husbands chose them. Their only fault is that they were not magicians who could met- amorphose themselves into entirely different kinds of women after they ‘o e0 +000 00 0 orooo owowv-o? were married‘ Washing Velveteen you can wash uflveteen W“, mat it is a merciful Providences mysterious way of providing lll('l‘1| 11 you squeeze the ' gently through a mild suds. Do .1111 wring. but. place on hanger (tripping Jilit-ii iliuiougliiy uiy, it may be pressed lightly on the wrung siclc 1t necessary . Do not 1110151011. Mildew- on Shoes Mildew often forms on shoes that have not been worn for a. dung time. This can be removed ‘by nilitiing the spots with petrol- ti-uin ointment. After a little rub- bing. the marks w-ill disappear. 1 Clogging Dun nspnuts , Clogged downspouts mav often be opened by dropping a few gen- crcus handfuls of ordinary rock suit into them where they con- nect with the eaves. WXFCI-IA CHAIN colTflg-T LONDON-NCP) —- Theory that ll l'1lll\\'ll_\'lll8i'l's w-atch chain mi nt 11111-1» slipped out of his vest poc et 4i i Innrie contact with a live rail iiifliit-stiirifCe-cii Alf_i;c_-gi_Smith. .21.???» 51.1,. Brush Up on Etiquette for lm- portant Dates garment 1' ' to death. Why otherwise intelligent men marry 11, woman for one thins and ex- ct her to be something else can only be explained on the assiuinptiltgg g r s w husbands. Be that as it may, it is an indisputable fact that they do. All of us know highly educated. cultivated men to whom ks are Just as necessary as food who are married to Dumb Doras who never read anything but the society items in the news-pa ers, and who bore them Yet these girls were just as illttera at 20 as they are at 40 and just as incapable of carrying on an interesting conversation. We know poor men who married girls because they always looked like the last word in smartness and fashion. but who howl to Heaven over their wives’ extravagance. We know men who married idle. useless little mammas pets because they were so soft and kittenish and who complain because they have lazy slOVens for wives who poison them on bad food. And we know men who fell in love with wild girls because ihelflwefc $0 gay 11nd vivacious and the life _of the party. and who later consider themselves ill-used because their wives drag them out to night clubs and don't know how to make a home. It is terribly discouraging, but it is true, that while a man's fancy be- fore marriage may run to the parlor ornament sort of woman, after mar- riage he expects her to be a combined kitchen utensil and savings bark 11nd entertainment committee. Hence the bride who thinks she can hold her husband by Just being herself and staying as 511g was when he married her has another guess coming to her. The wife who keeps her husband has t0 be a lightning-change artist. DOROTHY IX, 3 STRANGE MEN By c. T.’ PODMORE CHAPTER XXI EGRESS "So do I,” said George short laugh; “but I'll manage. D0 It was newly fln-ee 1n the mom- Jlust as 1 tell you, Sophie. Get be- ing. Rumely 11110110118 Men E0119- ind these bushes, and leave the 1t would probably be daviicht be- rest to me." He put one hand in fore he came back to carry out his 11115 puke; urpose. Sophie thus sheltered, he stood There had been little t0 disturb by a. tree-trunk and waited for the Gwrse Pflrmltber meflnwhlle. At inevitable. Better here than in the one time he heard the soft whist- ling of a. few bars of a tune by a man who strolled past the closed casement, but occasional patrol of this sort had come to an end. At another moment during his cauti- ous operations he had been ar- rested by omlnous sounds of move- do wish Mr. Barling were here m»! pen. It came almost at once. There were four men -one being rhiips the cook-caretaker of the .arm -- iill converging on him with a sort of strategy. Nearer they came, gnc not a word from any until, three or 1 '1 ment, but nothing had come of it; and he went on silently using his finger ends until they were sore. and the time was nearly at hand for the outer breach in the brick- work to be made. The scrap of candle he had saved came in useful for examining the flooring of Sophia-s room. He came to a small cross-cut section which four ynrds away, one of them ex- claimed, "Wait a minute -—we've *o4v-Q-OQ-9- vvv v v pal /. Fashions f A ‘an.:¢="-¢.¢.:-..."v---..- Their beauty secret will lei you iauqli at summer sun anti winds! itfiraturei 1 PALMOLIVE SOAP MADE WITII GENTLE OLIVE ,OII. KEEPS TIIEIR SKIN FREE FROM SUMMER DRYNESS. .. Aufigsillii- 1938 --.a v "woo" , -O'§'§§§-§-O-§-§O‘ O'Q§§O Modern Etiquette I 1m ROBERTA 1.11m t 000-040 “+0 o-owvoww-o-ow- Q. Is ii mun supposed to make cans of inquiry, condolence, and congratulation, among ins ciicle ct‘ friends? A. Yes; this is his duty. H1111 it is expected of him to do so. " VlhiC-h form is preferable to write on a place card for dinner, _. . nmtidi‘ i-iuil, Dl‘ merely Mrs. Hall. A. Mrs. Hall is sufficient unless one knows there is to be more than one Mrs. Hall present. Q. Is it necessaiy for a woman to keep her hat on at a bridge party? A. No; if she wishes, she may re- move it. WAKE UP, MAllYu-TI-IE LET IT ‘RING! ALARM I CAN SLEEP. . CLOCK'$ ANOTHER HALF RINGING i-iouiLwn-ii‘ K! 1.1.0663 FOR BREAKFAST! THINK of it- an extra half- liour of sleep! You can stay in bed longer and still have breakfast on time if you let Kellogg's do your cook- ing. Kellogg's Corn Flakes are cooked and toasted, ready to eat with milk or cream. Crisp and re- freshing as morning sunshine! At all grocers, oven-fresh in the patented WAXTITE inner bag. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. MADE BETTER ' PACKED BETTER TASTE IETTER got.him easier than Lhl-sl" And he whipped out the little and pointed it deliberately George “I'm a dirty ‘ound and a hughly brute that's what I am." he was saying. when it was cut short. In an instant, George Par- and had launched a missile. revolver , at 1 What about a Good-night Kiss? One of the big evenings 111 your life. Why spoil it all tit the last moment by puzzling about a good- night kiss? Show you've really grown-up poise. Refuse him with a laughing "Not tonight, Jim." And don't fear he won't ask you for another date. He will-if you've practised the smooth, friendly manners that make men proud to be seen with you. Little things are important. Be feminine. Let your escort open doors. hail taxicabs. get punch for youat a dance, give the order to the waiter in a restaurant. At the movies, wait in the lobby while your date buys tickets. instead of barging up to the ticket window with him. At a dance, suppose your old friend Bill pops up and asks you for a turn. introduce him to your 1 escort. say "Do you mind?" before you sail away. Know the simple rules of eti- quette that bring popularity. Fol- low our ZiZ-page booklet on good form for dances, movies, clubs. restaurants, automobiles, travel had been used as a man-hole; but the timber w-as sound. He put his shoulder under the boards. and one of th-emgavebut a warning squeal. After a while he citme to the con‘ cliision that he would have to force the man-hole. He whispered w Sophie through the crevice: “Help .me all you can when I lift the board again. It must be short The axe-head. It crashed into the middle of the man's face; and the fellow staggered. drop ed the re- volver, and fell wit a horrid sound of pain. Almost as the thing had hit nim. George follow-ed and picked up the revolver. Without hesitation, he fired it low at the nearest man. who fell as if his legs had been cut from under him. Close by was tightly under your door, in case the bolt gives way." Then. after some moments of sil- ence. George Pnrmittei- took the chances in his hand. His shoulder to the flooring he heaved with a slow energy until the wood seemed to snap. Sophie tore it out. The next. much to his surprise. almost flew out, and the third also had been as lightly secured. A challeng- ing call arose in some place near by. George sent another iece of boarding out of place. Sop ie said calmly, "I can come now," and get down beside him. The handle of the door behind her rattled. And the door shook George said, "Take no notice — keep cool." He lay on his back and set both ‘ feet into the middle of the air-grid. Two or three more kicks, and bricks and grating fell away. George went first. He had barely helped Sophie to her feet when he knew trey were sent a shot at him Again low. and he too, with an oath of surprise. went down. The fourth man, con- spicuous in moonlight a. moment before. had turned and was runn- ing off, along the shadowed farm- house wall. ' "Nice way to let a feller down. Pannitter, aftcr what I've done for you," came Boxwithls suffering voice. "Wish I'd have took that little revolver off that fool; but he wanted it to play with -see?—- "Shut u l" said George, coldly brutal as e debated whether to follow the fourth man or not. But here was Sophie at his elbow. "What have you done?" she ask- ed fern-fully. He put an arm about her, "These fellows are little better than mur- deters," he answered. "Come a- longf’ T ey made their way pact the broken hay-cart to the front gate. and looked over the low-l ing haze . for guidance. It was all 0o f‘at and sharp. There's moonlight. you Boxwlth. coming through a little‘ know. He passed to her ‘a wooden patch or shadow Wm, a long V6689 he hid fwnd- ‘Plli lhifi drawn sound of disgust. George mittei-‘s hand was our, of the pocket - AMomingSmile An elderly married couple in Scotland iwho were (‘hildlpsql much to the surprise of their friends adopted a young boy, "DEBT me. Mrs. MacGi-egor," said one of her neighbors, "I hear you've adopted a laddie. Why did e no‘ have a girl? She would ave been more useful about the And Her PRAYER FOR. A LITTLE GARDEN apart. Or rob the pcplar- of her regency! Blow carefully. wind, lest in your ruthless whirr You wrench the petals from the silver pear, Or bend the stalks of my sweet lavender- Oh swiftly cleaving wind. take care, take care. Lcstjin your gusty way, your gipsy- n8. You break the bough where Robin comes to singl - —Paullnel-1ow1ird. In The Chatelaine. GRILLING RULES You can't always blame it on the knife when steak is tough. Most often the _ For there are rules for grilling, Just as there are rules for baking, boiling and frying. They are worth following care- fully, for it is very disappointing to sit down to a meal which looks and smells appetising, only to find the meat tough and tasteless One of the chief things to re- member is to have a hot fire at first, or a fully turned-on 811s Jet, so that the meat hardens on the outside and the Juices are sealed in. Then reduce the heat. A well- greased and hot. gridiron is also es- sential. Frequent turning is necessar , but there must be no holes or cu s made in them as to see if it iii cooked. A fork can be run into the fat. Some grills should not be turned. A mushroom, for instance is grilled stalk upwards. Grilling is not an economical method of cooking, for, though quickly done, it takes a great deal of fuel or gas; also the meat loses more weight than in other forms of cooking. But grilled food iilwny! tastes better, and no nourishment cooking is at fault, The Housewife Activities It is especially suited m1 tendei Juicy meats, such as steaks an j chops. Blow, wind, across my gardens —Trliletttetui'lcig;rh'iarigolds the sway- Dirndls are favorite costume mg greg- ' for young spectators at this sea. But do riot blow the fragile phlox son's race meets. Crinklecl seersucker makes 1 one-piece suit, which rolls into ball the size of a kerchief when it not being worn. J _ A two-piece play suit is of wliit rayon with tailored 186k“ b19115 worn outside the shorts. There are some large hats th summer but more small in wiiv m- gay light colors with ‘frivolnu veil, flower oi- feather trimming. including considerable ostrich. Fashionable footwear _accrn high-heeled sandals designs-ti 1 cover most of the toe and vil- vanip but open at the sides, \\1t straps joining vamp to heel. Stiebel reports success with fui skirted black chiffon dresses; als with full-skirted printed crt-P dresses, the lust under fittc matching Jacket. Natural, in linen, is another i-iv a1 (besides prints and P1151951 ° white for spectator sports style Short woollen Jackets — bOiPT waistlength box, and fitted hill length-are worn instead of separ ate coutswith printed or mom tone frocks. The vogue for flowered toque continues, establishing accepttmt of formal fashions for summer. Peasant styles replace nautical themes for informal sportsw-r-at- Full-gathered iindpleated skit in vivid colored cottons. prliilc or pliiin seen in garden and beat‘ wear. < FALL SPORTS WEAR Two-piece dresses with shor sleeves and convertible high 0i‘ lo necklines and, novelty mettil but tons are underscored in velveteci In suits companion tweeds routli sometimes hnndwoven, in 51.11179 and plaids with plains are accented very lightweigu. woollens. mos]: and plain or in monotone chef are also featured. is? lost. FASHION GUIDES FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER‘ A perfect cotton morning dress, paneled at the front to give you a tall figurc.....with B. side to side belt arrangement to slim your w-aist. It has a simple shirt collar to keep you young and smart ric rac trim. It's the type of morning . dress ou'll en o wearing for hqllieethan 1) ‘my’ surely? ,, gardemylocal shjogping and the wax-é’ a?’ 906,101“? gcht" ans’ beach. Bright solid colored cot- --but e see we beg L ‘mghuuny- tons as aqua, dusty rose, lilac y ‘ a 9‘ w“ laddw‘ lettuce green, etc., are smart wit‘ l_i_o_rgiia_t__in__the _hoose." N 6W Under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Porspiration I. Does not rot dresses - does not irrime skin. 2- N0 wilting to dry. Can be used right Afici- shaving. 3. lnsnntly stops erspimion for l to 3 days. emoves odor crisp white bins piping down eith- er side of the front panel. The white binds also edge the collar and the patch pockets. It's B. one-‘ piece affair and quickly run up on the sewing mach ne. The easy to follow pattern includes an illiis- trated instruction guide. Style No. 2053 is designed for sizes 14. i8, l8. 20 years, 32, 84, 36. 38, 40 and fl-inches bust. Size 38 requires 3 l-2 yards of 39-inch ma- terial with 1-2 yard of 39-inch contrasting. send iiiiccn zents ilbc) in stain or coin tcoin preferred) wrap con carefully. address to Charlottetown own-p style‘ N0. 2053 size..." oon one NMIII street Addi-eu - 1- ,< k. -, 111111l--te 1 110.1011; for sni-xckiu; 11nd 11n- not yet free, - ._ h d. lsmiilstkiilit...§§1-.1i"7"1-1T1511T5: 111. euini. TO STATE SIZE ‘ Send 20c in coins for ycur copy _"f‘wo of the men. whom Box- i Q's fvgrgkigfi- 1mg éofhazigfg ca’: a from Dei-spirltion. _ J For i-ompleie ram-111 111:1! 1ii.~1:11e111n:. for all r11 lilPsc designs. 1,1 l-Jtiqllt-iie F01‘ YW"! Modems -with had called the twins, had is- short distance ahead. They could 4- Apuie whiiogreaselesgmin- ',_ pmvinq send 20 cents in slumps or 111111 1min me erred» to The Cliailottcttiwn ,,, H". gunman Home Sg1i/‘J(;]c_ sued by the from (109,. and we“. not afford m. get ammy m this h" vmkhinx “um Cl y - - ~- . 1 - -~ . ~11 1 . . :1 . ‘ - . ' ——— 9e.-:-.--:-.."""'°“Pi'f - ---------~-- ,“.€-.i‘.¥°-“i<.l?.°.. "‘.'~'.1.1‘&.;‘.' €ni"".l.¥ 1°..°.',“."5...'“.‘.'3.§'.‘1,‘i.£1‘FLi.%{.ll‘:,'?"i§‘, 13123-3, 31-11;; ;-;-,--,,,-g:-,-,-,,‘-,-,,=;",1:-_- 1 A-1-dh-=b=-1--w-~1=-1.-1~= 1 minister 1111» 11111 1101b»- - Nwme of booklet. other pal-red observing the fugi-1 d‘; " f; d h d APP.'°"IS"IohiwAmcimn 1071K Rppllimed i" i‘ church in 1 Gonna" Print v11ur hum!‘ and address nlcumy - m“ H i-t m gh d y dnig world serme ar c .a.n a lnsmme of hundfling_ ‘o: 860mm“ asked one Old mdy how 1759"“ 1 -- Ye r" “ ° i’ "f" °i i‘ lct no andmaiks behind. < - .. . qo-uyow-n Gunrzliati "‘-"—' “'”' " “wivied ‘lrcha-Td 5min‘? 1 “Stand in the shadow here" bemg Hmmi", i“ Flbm" me “kw b“ pmachmg‘ 1 qlnna To The giémreb, ‘ i Mime As he helped Sop‘ l» through a1 Gauge 551d __~1-]| get m,“ gaps“; TEN MILLION 1m of Anid like ii li- "3" Elie “ii-‘wered- And Necmflv” ,.. i gaiflvimjqifiviird” ti" “i; out." He went toward the house illvlbnn I0id~Tf7Iilli°dIYi prfi-‘llcvgrykiiloiéile hfirgsklsgce.. she DmIGN NO‘ 2” ‘ ____---__-i through tie-s, bearer- sraoili detail-tit gwigfm “dsiigndlggtifigmpnhslcgi answered, "ye read yer sermon; 1 _ _ - - — — - - - - - — - -- - r - - ' ' " - 81w Mews be "infer-ed. There's going to be my 1,111” ,w,,“ “n ‘ an‘ in the men-i Pa“ Ye didn't "m" “ _ i 1 l mm for u." . 5 ‘i - Y i" mm- ‘ n _ M“ n n p“ 1 read it w-eel; an’ in t e c1111 pint;- f ddfesg - — — — — — ~ - — ~ - - - — - — ’ ’ ’ “ . "I'm not frightened, with you," . - ' ' ' ""' " "' " ' 1 I dinna mnglyier that it an wor .1 y; ‘ Street A iTown Province sopme answered. “bu, I “m __I To Be Continued n- llnohlM-dllh m ‘ “Hum? 1 _~,A-_ _ , . m”__________.__--- Pi-oiinca --———-*-——""'