-.,.. ‘.1 X’ l PAGE ‘TVTO - -AAl)_,,. . . - . A ..'.,z,;,......... u... ‘V . . . .. A‘. ‘I! 1“HE GUARDIAN .4].-l.L.. .. ...... n... 1-‘. --#1.- Woman v vv vvvvvrvwvv k--- A LA - 1\' yvvvv %’si Realm -:-V Social and an --_k kxkmk- A----.----- - vvwv v ‘ . , 77zeHOUSEWI'FE and HER ACTIVITIES '1‘:-usty, dusty. vivid, true, With eyes of gold and bram- ble-dew, Steel-true and blade-straight, "line great artificer Made my mate. _Honor. anger, valour, fire: ;A love that life could _ tire, -Death quench or evil stir -"rhe mighty master _Gave to her. never "Teacher. tender. ccmrade wife. A fellow-farer true through life, Heart-whole and soul-free The august father Gave to run. I Ilcbcrt Louis Stevenson Ill-JLPERS However weak the hand I ex- tend to help my needy brother, it becomes stronger when he grasps it However meagre the love and concern which I bring to his need. when he receives it from me a warming my of light is reflected upon myself. However uncertain my trust in God and things eter- nal. however imperfect my inward self-discipline, however. burdened I may be in thought and feeling rotated to "on" on the switch Is- sumes I position whereby the mer- cury can flow through the hole and make contact with the other compartment. When rotated back I;-sin. the mercury flows book. MEMORIES A comer of the Mhrlborough House gardens, which by Queen Mary's mecial orders has been left entirely untouched, is the ceme- tery of the Royal pets (says the Daily (Telegraph.) Here. in the shade of lofty tress. Caesar. King Edward VII's fam- ous dog. Billy, Queen Alexandra's pet. and ha‘f a dozen other dogs who were the faithful companions of King Edward and his Queen lie buried. Over each little grave there is a headstone inscribed with the name of the pet. COLOURED SHEETS Most women prefer white sheets ._probably more because of custom than for any other reason. They shrug their shoulders when one mentions coloured sheets as though to say. "Never!—as far as I am concemed!“ Nevertheless. they may change their minds if they look at the dis- is I try to help others all ma be play at present being shown in 3 purified. and my faith in God will grow —Atlolf Hamack. THE SILENT SWITCH The wizard of the wall may soon be silent. An electric light switch has been invented which has no snap. More important still ,it cannot wear out. , It consists of two shallow chrome steel cups about tluee-quarters of an inch in diameter sealed together with lead glass. A disc of ceramic material, in which there is a hole near the edge, separates the cups. In the centre of one of the cups is another small hole into which mercury is inserted. In the "off” position the hole in the insulating disc is above the line of the enclosed mercury. When ‘ ‘ ‘ - n=.. room! Why not coloured next! Princess Street widow. Edinburgh. The pink sheets. blue sheets, yellow sheets. look particularly attractive. We have already secured colour- ed blankets—how well they fit in with the colour scheme of the bed- sheets NAJWES FOR PARENTS By what names shall we call our: parents? The point. is raised by Dr. R. W. c'hampms.n in “'I‘mct." It has frequently exercis- his new ed the mind of not a. few people. "1='ather' and “mother" are Vic- torian and therefore considered as. perhaps, too correct. “Papa" and “ ," Io fashionable once, have long since departed: in any case they were too babyish. "Pater" and "mate," the designations of schooldays are easily dismissed, for whst. foreign language, could ever give us the requisite degree of intimacy? "Daddy" and "Mummy." on the other hand. are perhaps too intimate and childish for general use. It is extremely difficult to find names that are at once not too Dorothy Dix 3 Letter Box Marriage Always Takes a, Slump After the Honeymoon 'Has Set, But Then Most Couples Find There is Something Deeper Than Billing and Cooing ‘ Dear Miss Dix——I have been married a year. 5011199111108 I think 1 love him. other times I regret that I married him and wish that I was single again. He has a. queer disposition, becomes moody and pessimistic when things don't go exactly to suit. him. 11, 13 almost, unbelievable how upset he gets over a. little incident that any one else would pas over without a. thouaht. Somehow 1 can't, make myself cater to his moods and try to make him snap out of them. I am I-00, disgusted with his chlldlshnesa. He is very 1 intelligent and has a position with a prom- ising future. I work in an office. We have a nicely furnished apartment. But there seems to be something lacking, compatibility and understanding. Or, perhaps, 11, 1.»; real love. What shall I do? Shall I bide my time for another year and see how things are going? My husband says I am spoiled, so no doubt I am D3-Nly to blame for N11083- N. Answer: Your case is not unusual. Along toward the end of the first year v vvvvvvvvvvvv Pe $0:‘3‘2 AA rs9:'a1.r=- 1'' vvvvvv vvv V ' " "" “Daughter Of .Venus” 3! ROBERT ‘III-I-Y SHANNON CHAPTER II Juliet nsllned that in I minute or two more she would see the last of the oomradely m‘dd1°"3‘d man who had drifted so informally into this her first evening out here- Bhc had always heard the Wet was criendlier and fran-ker than the mat. It was true. Denton Tel-hune— obviously t man of character —hud l'E'V¢fi1°d hjmgglf go naturally to her that he seemed like an old n'iend—in less than an hour. Yet Juliet herself had told him scarcely more than her name. He had taken her at face value as a worthwhile person and had ‘ done a little philosophical guessins about her future. No attempt to date her up. It wouldn't be diffi- cult, Juliet decided. to get along in a town like this. But the local amiabllity that Juliet sensed cer- tainly was not operating at Madame Hubert's table . . . O'Hara. had ceased ZT0W11Il8 find had barricaded himself behind a stony silence while the bent little woman kept up a low and moum— ful croaking. of marrlaeg most young husbands and wives go through a reaction that makes them regret their marriages and wish they were single again. The honeymoon has set. They are fed up on billing and moms and surfelted with kisses. The novelty of being together and in their own home has worn off and they begin to figure on whether marriage is worth all it cost and to look at their lost freedom with longing and to wonder if they really do care enough about those they are tied to to stand them and their faults and little ways for a. lifetime. If divorces grew on trees and were to be had for the taking, there wouldn't be many second wedding anniversaries celebrated, but luckily they do not. Most divorces are expensive and messy luxuries in which only the rich and the cinema stars can indulge freely. 30, more or less. the married have to stick it. Also, pride comes to their aid and a sense of duty and obligation and good sportsmanship, so after a few quarrels over nothing and a few tears, most. brides and grooms get, their second winds and settle down to making a go of their niai-ridges. And their reward is generally in finding out that if their romantic love has flown out of the window, an affection far deeper and more sat- isfying has taken its place and they are not out of love after all, but really in love for the first time, and they are not sorry they married, they are glad of it. So take for your comfort t.he fact that you are just paming through the usual after-marriage slump. You will recover from the depression. but you can expedlate the happy day by performing the act generally known as pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. Every wife has to do that. Every woman who makes a. success of her marriage has to manufacture the sunshine of her home and she has to get along with her husband by dealing with his disposition “as is" and not as it should be. She has to cater to his moods, buck him up when he is down in the mouth, smooth his fur the right way when it is stand- ing on end and humor his childishness, for no man ever quite ZTOWS out of being a little boy, no matter if he lives to be a hundred. And it is wars: folly for a woman to say she wont do these things. It is su cl . You and your husband have youth, love, intelligence, 5. good start ui the world, all the raw materials for making a happy and prosperous mar- rlage. but it is up to you whether you make a failure or a. success. why don't you put as much thought and effort. in trying to make a. go of your marriage as you do of your busines? Why doesn't your husband try as hard to sell himself to you as he does to his customers? Why don’t you use as much tact in getting along with your husband as you do with your boss? Why don't you try to understand each other? Why don't you try to correct the faults that each knows gets on the others nerves? Believe me, nothing pays such dividends in happiness as a succesiul student at the agricultural college hind the times?" effusive and not too formal. some children get out of the difficulty by addressing their parents by their Christian names—a practcie by no means approved by parents in general. AGREED —_I——— “Do you know," said the young to an old farmer, “your methods of cultivation are a hundred years be- 1100508 d be remarked: "Why. I'd be if you made 310 out of the oats in that field." "So would I." smiled the farmer, "it's barley." Spring Fuslriions ' Horn ‘, For e Dyress-Making stomp! twrsp coin carefully. i——-—————————~ The saddle shoulders and sleeves ,all in one make this shirt blouse easy to sew. The waistline is fitted by in- verted pin tucks. It adds two breast pockets. The attached pantie will snugyourhipoinu-‘ ‘oi islimnesa It is quite brief with com- fortable flared legs. _ Smart young things will call this a. "find" for their summer suits. Slip into your skirt and you're dressed! It is Just grand to wear with _your culottes or slacks. Good in linen and linen weaves, tub silks, batiste, crinkled lawn, percale, voile, dlmity, etc. ' style No. 1804 is designed for sizes 14, 18, 18 years, 38, 38 and 40- inoheo bust. Size 18 requires 2% yards of 39-inch material. Price of PA'I'I'ERN 15 cents in or com (coin is preferred.) N0. 100. k .................... NURSES’ CHURCH tcN’DON—QIltI:i[ Mary vi.|i‘cd Gail rcoczntly. whoa a. room » «curved for London nun- fin Olmrch of St. Lawrence Jewry,‘ mm! , asst roam. Kmosor '- yield again under provocation. I wantsto marry me. marriage. Don‘t let yours go into bankruptcy before you have really honestly tried to make it go. DOROPHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix—should- a girl give herself to a boy under any cir- cumstances before marlage? If she dam, would he mlsjudge her? When 9. boy and girl marry should they dastmy all letters, pictures and souven- irs from former sweethearts? MARIE. Answer: God thundered down His answer to this question on Mount Sinai. The law and society set their faces against it and tens of housands 0! forsaken women, who have sinned through love aria. who are left WW1 their hearts broken, their names disgraced, their families ashamed of them, teach the folly of it. There are such things as self-respect and principle and honor, and when 9. girl throws these away she has not only robbed herself at her most priceless -, ion, but she has lost something that every Worm- while man wants his wife and the mother of his children to have. He wants her to have the strength of character to resist temptation and the courage, the stamina, tho something within herself that will make her hold to the right. I get many letcrs from men who have married their mistresses and they always say that even though their wives have been devoted to them and true and loyal, so far as they know, they never tmst them. They are always suspicious of them because they believe that the woman who did not have the rock-ribbed virtue to stand by her colors one time would certainly when people marry they should destroy all letters, pictures and souvenirs of former sweethearts, and they should quit talking about their former loves. DOROTHY mx. Dear Miss lIMx—I am a widow in my seventies. A man in his thirties Would it be wise for me to consider matrimony with a man so much younger than myself? I am financially independent and healthy mough to be able to go out when I please, but I am still lonely. PUZZIED WIDOW. Answer: Don't be puzzled about that any longer. You know perfectly well that no man in his thirties wants to marry a. woman in her seventies for anything else but her money. You are certainly going out of your way to hunt for trouble if you marry this lad. DOl‘U0'l'l-‘IY DIX. DURING BABY'S TEETHING TIME AMomingSmile ’ The Bcwcls Become Loou Dior-rl: dyueniory, colic, cram .- V manifest ‘ ernselves;tho gums come swollen and conkers form in YOU'RE VVELCOME the mouth. This is the time when the mother should use ‘ho girls were strolling round?-he chop. Presently they stopped bosids 3 large tray filled with samples of a popular brand of tooth pasta. “Tooth pastel" exclaimed one. "Just. what. I was looking fori" Holding up one of the samples, she exclaimed to the c.hemist's assist- ant: "How much are these, plans?" The assistant smiled pleasantly. “They are gratis, madam." he ro- ed. “Yes, I know that," the girl re- torted. irnpaticntly. "but how much Ire they?" "I'l1 absolutely not have Mrs Gotxtlicb removed to the hospital" she was insisting for the hundredth time. Her voice was corroded With the rust of a French accent. a relic of her legendary youth in Paris. If she dies on our hands—we must rid: that. You're a fool. O'Hara. suppose we go now to her husband with I confession—what them? We stir up alarm, excitement. He pre- pares a damage suit. It's inviting calamity. Perhaps——immediateiy — we are amstedi" O'Hara granted. "on, Mrs. Gott- lieb'll die, all right. Probably kick- ing off tonight while we sit here." Madame Hubert‘s brisk bind: eyes fixed themsclvs upon a short rotund man whose face consisted principally of a virlle but wander- ing nose. His name was Herman Gottlieb and he was, at the mo- ment, laboriously foxtrotting his stenographer. a curving brunette with a painted rosebud mouth. "Look at him!” rasped Madame Hubert. “Men! His poor wife try- ing to make herself beautiful to hold a hudmnd like him!" Her eyes snapped back to O’I{ara as though she blamed him for the whole thing. "Why dldnt someone find out her heart was weak before Von Cluerdon gave her ether?" Madame Hubert consumed a spoonful of sherbet. "oh well, maybe she'll ro- oover after all." "Dont kid you.rsoli'," mlked O'Hara. she's going to die and when she does it's goodby to repu- tation and buslns. 1. a will dodge the Institue like it was a. house. Malpractice! Man- slaughter! I can see the headlines. For the last time—I tell you I'm going to spring the bad news on Gottlieb and make him take his wife home before she dies. We can threaten to expose him as a philan- demr rmlers he gives us I. break. But we've go to hurry." There was a trace of blusten in O'Hara words but Madame Hu- bert's pointed chin stubbornly closed above her over-hanging nose. giving her the cxprcmiorn of a dt.~ termined witch . "No, no. no!" It was as though I crow had ca/wed thrice. Before O'Hara could reply, which he had no intention of doing, they were aware of Demon 'Ivrhune ac- acirmipanied by Juliet, standing over em Five minutes later Tea-hune had gone. but Juliet remained and was seated between Madame Hubert, who welcomed her presence. and the general manager, who distinct- ly did not. The Madame, her eyes flashing. had discovered I professional joy in the face and perfect figure of Juliet. The withered creature was an artist, an appreciator of subtle and interesting beauty. Juliet in an instant, fulfilled her exacting standards as did no other woman who ever had come before those hard and ahrewed little eyes. It would be honest to say were such a thing possible, that Madame Hubert’: heart warmed and expand- ed It the sight of Juliet's harmonic symmetry. - onaofherhandsbrownsss claw, slipped across the table and rested lightly on the back of Juliet's wrist. "My dear," said Madame Hubert, "I can find I use for you. How would you like to work with me?" Juliet smiled. "I never wanted psrticulsnly to be I manicurist." “I don't mean anything like Chit.” returned Madame Hubert 8El10llDl'y- ‘'1 OI“ “-90 you in lots of wIya—impol-tsnt ways. Is is not so, O'Hara?" A sudden glow burned in Ufl’g,r|,'g eyes. For no reason that disllha her mdllfly and htwnloly quietly Ind mysuricusxzv. was be-' ginning to feel umooountsblo trem- or: of attraction towards him. "I'm fed up." O'Hara. said imbi- tiently. "We've got enough “'°“b‘° on hand without any more compli- cations. I don't want or need Miss Rankin in our organization and I am not going to hire her! I'm s0l'_- f ry—nothing personsl—but thatsi the way I feel." Juliet started to laugh but sud- i dnely I stringing heat got into her . cheeks. something in O'Hara‘-5: personality kept knocking at the ‘. back of her mind, worrying her. Sorne-whem in the depth of her being a metallic and deslsive mechanism clicked into place. "I'm sorry Mr. O'Hara feels that way about me." she said turning her hendoompletclyaway fromhim —ignoring him—and smiling sweet- ly at Madame I-fubert. "I'll be awfully glad to join your organiza- tion. Miadanrel" O'Hara pushed, back his chair and got to his feet rudely. It was to be a. battle btween the Madame and O'Hara. He was hard but she was harder. Juliet noticed a wart on the woman's face, I brownish an autumn leaf. The old black eyes gllstened but there was never the ghost in them of compromise or surrender. “Don't be I fbol. O'Hara," said Madame Hubert icily. “You'll re- gret it." There was the psllor of Inger under 0'Ha.ra‘a fine clear skin. He did not delgn to look at Juliet. "We're in a spot and I can't get things straightened up if I am to be interfered with," he said in a compressed voice. “Arta all this hard work I've done to build up the business you're asking me to stand byandseeitgomnashllkeatoy balloon because of your stupidity." He was about to leave abruptly when Madame Hubariis hand touched his sleeve and skittered up it like I tiny dun-colored squirrel. “Bebe, Monsieur Bebe!" crooned Madame (Hubert with a. new note of wheedle. "If he can't have his own little way he won't play, eh? He will abandon the poor old woman to her fate—to say nothing of his impolitenem to the young lady." Her words made O'Hara feel ridi- culous and his handsome face showed it. For an instant he stood irrcsolutcly and in that instance he was lost, for Madame Hubert seine his sleeve and pulled him back into his chair. "These temperamental people!" she exclaimed to Juliet. 0'1-‘fara’s only half business man-—-the other half is pure artiste." Juliet smiled subtly. "I under- stand perfectly. A man in the beauty business—naturs.1ly!" For O'Hara it was a. drop of acid on tho ralw and his face darkened. “oh. he's a. nice enough animal!" said Madame Hubert placently, now that O'Hara was again seated. "I'd be lost without him. Handling the beauty work—the won1en—is not in his department. From a business standpoint we're an indus- trial concern Just like a factory where they make shoes or automo- biles or straw hats. But I'm the Utllllld one—so he says tonight. I who conceived the whole institute! Do you wonder I called him an animal?" "Is he?" asked Juliet in amaze- ment and amusement. "Observe for yourself!" cried Madame Hubert. “This is a. mo- ment historic, yet he seizes the op- portunity to stir a quarrel." “Well. it's historic all right," tfowled O'Hara. "Wait till Mrs Gottlleb dies. The grand collapse of the famous Madame Hubert! Next week it will be the notorious Madame Hubert!" The Madame affected not to casion is historic because you and I have met here at this little table, my dear. You—the most beautiful woman in I./so Angeles and I~the most ugly. lit’: superb- it'a dramatio—it‘.s sheer coliisioni Think what Balzac would have made of it——yet this man here, this O'Hara with the soul of a tenth-rate pawnbroker, sits and iluclllfli-ll'l8 aboutmfllthy ‘dollars and es He revotin fa. “ugh” a- uah. O'Hara glued at his employer, but remotely some light was be- Klnninl to twinkle in his eye. "Only a malicious and wicked woman would say ‘faugh,' 'faugh' like you do!" he declared openly. "You know you're 1 sinful old mic. er and Ill this talk about drama. and moments historic is the worst kind of bunk! If the headwaiter 4131" _'|W| you'd carry off ' ,~::.c'r~".=rl7;\;=«".r~.-Tr . .".."»r . .UL‘.? our, .5730 O hions -.--"Lite ra tu re .sw..n.~.s. 1 . vvv. _rhia Medicated Cna-I that it so wonderful for Red Chopped Honda, Largo Pans, Bloch- hcads, Plmpla, ck. DAY over 12,000,000 ‘In of Tgoncm Ire used yesrly. ocron firsf prescribed it-—buz nurses discov- ered how it soothed, quickly helped lml up Chopped HIfld3..P“[1P1¢3l-Dd many other ugly Skin lmuuons. If you want I softer, clesrer, lovelier complcxio . use Noxzcmn for 10 days Ind see what I big difference it makes. Apply Noxzems Ir night, Ind dunng the day Is I powder bue. Nllfll8E'S MAIIE IT FAMOUS! FREE SOAP OFFER‘ I For I limited time. I cake of Noxuon Mnliuld Cram Sosp FREE with I MI in of Nonems Cream-pzrfecr partner: for I perfect completion! 6:: bod: u this nuns: dmx or deyuunenr note. and mottled countenance, dry like E‘ Today's Short Wave Radio Program up in. is Ethan fiat!!! THURSDAY. JULY 30 Paris 2245 . m. —Relay from Radio- Paris: I’ Italian Concert, The National Orchestra. TPA3. 26.2 ma 1l.B8 mA58« Ba-lln Jun" I . , _ _.“Don . syfmlghgniom Poem by mchud Strauss. ND. 25.4. m.. 11.77 mes. Tokyo 5 p. rn.—“Ovarseas Pro¢1'I-UL rvm, Nazaki, 30.5 m., 14.6 mes- London a,oo p. m. —"l.iadies Night." 01' "Hex-9'3 m the Maiden.’ use. 19 8 m., 15.31 meg. as1='.19.8 m.. 16-14 meg, 06D, 25 5 m..11.'!5 mes- London 3;“ p. m. —-The Castle of Du.rn- button. A xvminisoence of day! 10318 30.6 m., 9.8‘! mag. Berlin 7:30 p. m. -—The Radiating Race of Aeroplanes and Motor cars to the City of the olymplc Games- DJD. 25.4 magi-7'7 me!- Ir-Ion 8:30 p. m.—Populaa' Orchestrlu YVIRC. 51.7 m.. 5.3 1M8. London 9:50 p_ m.—-"Ancient Monu- by the Rt. Hon. W. G. A. Ormsby-Gore. 060, 26.6 m.. 11-75 meg, GSC, 31.3 m.. 9 58 11198- .___—-——————————-— BOXEUB LUNIMUM BATES 140ND0N—lNationa1 Union oi’ Boxers has asked the Boxing Board of control for minimum rates filed by the board for preliminary 0011‘ tstsn-ta in various London halls. .——-——--:————‘j"“ harmlessly on Madame Hubert who lowered her voice and 317030 0005' damtially to Juliet. . i will “Regard noumlg he says as aeri- oug, "For years he represented In American company in China until the typhus got him. He cannot 80 back because a second attack is fa- tal. The fever—you know—" and um tapped her temple allfnincanf-ly with a skinny finger and rolled her eyes. What, in heaven‘: name, Juliet wondered, kind of NOD19 W9" these? Everything about them was touched with & childish mod- nus. ~ It was fantastic that between them. somehow they had built up I great business. Yet there was no question as to that fact. Denton Terhune had vouched for it and Madame Hubert‘: diamond dug- eollnt alone was worth a fortune. But any enterprise manned by than two, Juliet decided, would unquestionably be a continuous combat, and any association with 0'HA.l‘I was bound to be di£&¢l'9¢- sble. Juliet could see that already It occurred to her that possibly he resented her because-lthia was only I guess—he was swindling Msdkmo Hubert. O'Hara drank a glass of water and looked Juliet straight in the eye. "ran my Idvice and keep out of it," he said decisively. "I don't. like you and you don't like mo-—wo would never got on w¢6th9|'- Y0“ would only be in the way and then is no future with us anyhow!" (to no continued.) lpoflll. vmmununuixpuaanuigq _ G51’, 19.6 m., 15.31 mes-., g, 19.3 m.. 15.14 meg. GED. $.8 m., 11.75 meg. Madrid 7:09 p_ m. —(xxlldren's Pro- gram; music; time-signal. E-‘IQ. -. M SPICED CHERRIES 8 lbs. pitted red cherries 6 lbs. granulated sugar 1 pint vinegar 2 tablespoons ground cinnamon 1 tablespoon ground cloves 1 teaspoon mace. Method: Weigh the cherries after they have been pitted. Tie all an spice in a small cheesecloth bag to prevent their discolorlng the mix- true. Place all togetlaer in 2 PN- serving kettle and cook for 20 min- utes. Remove the spice bag and drain out the fruit. Cook the syrup down until it is thick, add the fruit and reheat to the boiling point. Turn into hot. sterile Jars and seal at. once. There is I good deal of juiu on the cherries and unless the syrup is cooked down, the mixture is pretty thin. But if you cook the fruit thug long. it would be strong and dark. That is why I like to strain it out and cook the syrup alone, DEVILED EGGS IN ASPIO 1 chicken bouillon cube 1 cup boiling water Plnch celery salt 8 hard cooked eggs Dash of cayenne pepper Pinch of salt 1 tablespoon softened butter I. tablespoon gelatin 1 tablespoons cold water 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon onion juice it teaspoon dry mustard 3 tablespoons mayonnaise Dash of pepper Dissolve gelatin in cold water and pour boiling water over bouillon cube add seasonings and dlsolve gel- atin. Chill. Cut six hard cooked 983! in half, mash yolks and add mus- tard, cayenne, mayonnaise and but- ter. Pack yolk mixture into ear whites. Pour a little asplc in bot- tom of ring mold then carefully place six halves of eggs in this, yolk side dawn. Add I little more M910 and chill again. When stiff add a layer of stuffed pimlento olives and a few whole small gherkln pickles. Add a. little more aspic and chill- Thcn carefully lay in the balance of eggs and pour over the remain- ing aspio and chill thoroughly- When ready to serve remove from mold and fill centre with a criflll vegetable salad. MONEY FOB ATHIETES .... PAlR41B—!I’ho trench Ohamber Oi Deputies will suot £85,000 for French athletes in the Berlin oly'ml>1C~'- Entrants in the Barcelona slim“ have been given 840.000 for penses. ex« I” . Thousands tortured b thli distressing akin Iffl ction oioc today because of com- fort-giving CUTICURA-4 tho Soto that elssrum Ind the UN‘ not that Iootbsl. retina Ind helvi "a‘..“'c':.'.'i....'“"€.‘:§‘;’.“‘a... as-. oimmm Ila. rm mu: umnle 4’: nab. wrlu “Cn¢i¢IrI." Done. 1. as II. Pal am-9. w.. Rom-L 44 JUST KIDS 'l'hinwIsqussI\,too,beoInsoJuliot. ., , 4" I ‘,3-.‘ 1*‘ . ...— W cacao V I. WAS J36” ‘I1-\|NKN'-M3. —By Ad Carter