4. 4'.’ nvmc so)‘ 1 banal-Hand Coolibefry For Canadian Women 3y um mo“. specially contributed to the Guardian for Guardian Benders. Sh“ ‘m ma,‘ w]; [blend together welt. Add the beat- ay M"; Mom en egg yolks and bee tesain- Md ‘more were any number of new the fruit and flour mixture ulter- Christmas recipes to be tried in our natcly with ‘the cider to the butter new“, go (mg o: them has been mixture. Beat the czsuyhafsh med “fly d“ (u;- gome time. We stiff and dry an; oomvzue nu m“ are ready new to tell you "w" l!!!" W"- Tm-f m '° won u,“ greatest {awn bread pane, 4 1-2 by 8 1-3 inches. 1 h“, the gdvarltagg over the They should be lined with ungiaucd 0th,,‘ ma“; 1 am doing the writ- I paper. Grease the paper and M165 m‘ ma cm m, you my own per- of the pails and rill the pans about serial preferences first ‘They are: 3-4 full. Place the puns on tho rfloli liinooin (or citron) cake and the in the steamer or roaster (m note “gm Germ“ Popper Nuts (Pfeffer below on steaming) and fill to depth Nusse.) One of a fresh batch of the of 3-4 lnch with boillnK WEWT- CW‘ pepper m,“ h“ just Dome go mo er and steam for 2 1-2 hours. If mm m, we,“ They are rather steaming 1n cveri, oven bhEfiOBIgET hard, heme the“. name’ bu; after should register 2'75 deg. Fa r. - hem‘ swred ‘m. a week o; 59 m a, move from steamer and bake f?‘ “shyly covered m, box “my mel- 1-2 hour longer at same tempera luw qongiderably, 0n g tray of as- lire. Tlis will make about l0 pounds 501194 gmau cakes, they look very oi rich fruit cake. Jmracuvm ‘no prove that 1 too cannot for- m dram on m; houggkegphjg get thercis a. Depress-w. here i5 budge; i, no; fell», so keenly l! prc- ‘o. cheaper fruit cake: visions for Christmas cakes, pud- dings and cookies are ordered W91‘ two or three weeks. The time I0! making them should "be budstiflfi too. Wednesday afternoons arc “open _ house" in our kitchens. Everyone is LlipS fiour, 1 teaspoon baking DOW" “nmwd w experiment i: ‘mywziy i izfigggi: jigérgg: tffilf,‘ beholder and is Just as often a chiffon scar! as a peaches-and-cream colu- m may dwlrt ‘MY °- H‘ n‘ 1_ 0;“ chves H, teaspoon’ ample, plcxion. 1 should see to it that in childhood she acq * the reading thing gammy fimotteftlg; 1:1 firs: llpcup nut meats 1 2 cup oil-on habit so that she would carry an interesting line oi conversation and 5m" new 5-5 the °“ °m° ° e “ ' ' ' never be a Dumb Dora. ' Citron cake was the result of one ‘eggs. Wash the raisins and 600k them such spree. I am very fond of cit- with tthe zaxrhwg tigfial; gorse: Then I should drill her from her infancy up in graciousuess and good‘ W11- It 15 5W“ 9- dwca-t‘ glee“ m n“ e5‘ A d e" u n km mariners. I should teach her how to smile, how to be cordial, how to and tends to keep m°i5i this “l” “Si” l“ °°°1- 5-" ‘m "W" ""1 g miike the little gestures that make friends at sizh\ bow to be aplireciaiivc. wvhirh bee?! I msmblml“ t° iimwde‘ “d Sam 5°“ “d 8p “s to show people the little attentions that they value so much beyond their l F01’ The 000k lpfluwl cake. It will keep for v.'ecks.‘togethcr. chop uie mic meats an-ilwmh L cut the citrcn peel into flue shav-' PLUM irmmma l inst The“ W‘ ‘hem '~'° "i; m" Then 1 should begin lathe kindergarten to teach her how to be tact- h d I] e ay - "WW"- Be" m‘? 93$‘ ‘ml ‘my -fui To think before she spoke and never suy the blundering things s a 0W5 e nw . y . . - r - v ' . 1m. "T!!! v h"?! 59W r Cream one cup butter with 1 l-Jillglll’, and flui.y, and add the ra claim“ wound vanity m. tum the searcmmht on 01d shamm I should 31811299“! naval?’ i " hBezldes hter mnowilig b93111: cups sugar until it is so creamy it is uuixture, then the flour mixture, and ‘tench he, how to walk around a 5mm w,“ mmead o! bum“ he, bu,“ s a eaves o mourn wo ro era, . , i Diirili h illtl/‘ss she was visit- , _ nearly white; add 6 eggs one at a str for at least i0 minutes. Pour out against it, I shoud teach her 110W W 51465"? “rgpments” How to ed by gar 285ml‘ Rev. Mr. Glbi0fllayviwzzztlidlllhfillglrlbvliixlllfit Bu: '9, , in Jon. Marie Debut/i makes lie-r delicio Apple Dumplings v with Magic a Baking Powder 7* What the Fashionable: are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern i By Annabelle Worthington i Here's one of the smartest ideal of the moment. It is a grey tweed mixture, fav- ored by youth and youthful women types. It aflects jumper styling, which is one of the reasons for its popular- ity. The high neckline is another smart. feature. And still another is the brief peplum, given prominence by the black leather belt. Black ap- pears again in the buttons of the plain toning grey woolen sleeves. Style No. 922 is designed for sizes 14. l6, 18, 20 years, 3B and 38 inch- cs bust. Cashmere will Jersey, wool crepe. novelty wool and silk crepe mix- tures and rough crepe silk ure ulao suitable. I Size l8 requires 2'4 yards 54-inch l with Ill yards 39-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern 1.’: cents ill stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. A DorotliyDir l o... Should Kilo! " nlnayouilg housewife uku me what bak- v . ing powder lllc eliculd use,” u] Mill Mothers, Teach Your Daughters Charm, Graciousness and Tact, for _These_Will be Her Best Weapons Against Life- Keep Her Innocent, But Not Ignorant, and Teach Her to Make Her Own Living “If you had a little daughter, what would you teach her?" Nil i mother. Well, I think I should b68111 by trying f0 teach her the fine lrt of being a woman. This is a. most MBMM Bil-Ml! of study and one that ls not taught in any of our institutions of higher learning. Most girls one l0 busy trying to dress like boys and talk like boys and smoke and drink like boys and play and work like boys and generally make imitation men of themselves that they overlook the fact. that the only women who really succeed are the feminine ' shoemilkers who atick to their lasts and turn out a really‘ first-class iob of woman. Apple Dumplings lqunrtlcur lKflIpIflllk Ihnmncuu Hugu- Home Makers’ Cooking Schools, "this ll {by advice’: Use the bert- oue that ll pure, uniform and invari- ably dependable. You can’: use second-rate baking powder siul u. pee: first-rate results." - ‘My erpelience with Magic 1m been particularly happy. I find that i: nevervariea-zhar i: is connin- ently reliable. And I know it is pure, and frcc from ‘ ‘ul ingredients." Statements by other well-known cookery authorities give whole- lieaned support to Miss Dc Beth's , judgment. . In fact, the muicrlty of dietitians an cookery ‘ throughout Canada use and recommend Magic txtlarively. fllfiluooubowllmr, uuduinkubiutbebu .Addccld nallktomukcuclkdcumTul-nmgoq tuuflaurcdbourdundrdlinoouehcer. CutlauqunrnPcelendcerctbeupU plemllluccnuupplccneach square of dcuginlllltblcurcwltbuumlllpieco penned puuaBnkelu at 400° F. about 40 withcumrburd minutes. Serve IIXIAI- 5o I Wilda try to pus into my dauchters hands a. woman's weapons with which she can best fight ilie battle of life. These are Charm, l‘ acio as and Tact. Ishould ‘teach her from the cradle that no woman can afford to be ugly or un- iizouth or have bad manners. I should teach licr to develop her body until it was lithe and strong, to take care of her heir and oomllwdm m“ W. make the most oi such good locks as God bed seen tit to bestow upon her. I should teach her how to dress, because beauty is in the eyc of the Depression Christmas lfi-ult Cake One pollfld seeded rasiins, 12-1. cups “vafflf, 11-’; cups sugar l; cup butter 2 ‘n’; Street Address "OONTAINI no ALUII This utlteaostmo‘: . "' wh "m FREE COOK BOOK- en you “:3: $3.13 bake at home, tllencw Magic Cook Book Pom!" ll If" will give you dozens of recipes for dell- {{g§_','_';;",*;‘fl doua baked foods. Write to seine-iii M, i ‘ Brands Lia, Fraser Ave. a Liberty s... Toronto, Our. AMomingSmila When the plumber called tllc ilocr Citron Gokc The molds for the pudding must be well greased so that the pud- dings Wll] slip out easily. Serve rt. o3! 6-5.2.! 4e .¥.§9."1_i.' . i l .-',9_¥.@='"‘ i‘ . was opened by a. trim young maid. Inside the hull stood the master and mistress of the house. "Arc you the plumber?" asked the dignified-looking old gentle- xliail. “Yes, sir." "Very well, than; allow me to ac- quaint you wllh lllc trouble in this hollnc." Tlic plumbcl" turncrl to the mis- frv of llie house and extended a. g y lllilid. ‘ Pleased to meet you, mzflam," he said cordially, ' MORE WllEXl‘ AND MORE PER _ ACRE Tllc latest official estimate oi the tlvrc-ilgc likely to be stripped for n-llcxlt is 3.320.000. The Director of Agriculture (Mr. G. L. Sutton) slums that, owing to the copious liiills in August, which l! one of the critical months, he would not bc surprised if the wheat yield nvcrngcd l5 bushels per acre, which would bc a. record, and return 49,- 300,000 bushels. The record ie 13.6 bushels per acre, established in 1903-4, when the area under wheat was small. The next best average has 13.5 in 1930-31. OLh/gr factors, contributing to the expected rec. 0rd average are a bigger percent- 882 of fallow and lrzttcr fallow than fonnerly, the use of the right ver- ictics of wheat, and planting at the period most sultcd to each variety; The last harvest was 41,360,696 bushels. Land here is cheap. Fibula Best F or All while very hot. The cover of the steamer should not be flat, but rounded, so that moisture does not collect and drop into the puddings. Do riot lift the cover until the end of the steaming period, as the pud- dings may fall and become soggy. Plum Pudding-Mix together 1 cup soft bread crumbs, l. cup each finely chopped suet and apples, if cup brown sugar, 1 cup raisins, 1/2 cup each chopped dates and figs, ‘a cup chopped walnuts, and it ‘M! sliced cltrons. Mix and sift l6 cup flour, ll teaspoon ‘each nutmeg, cinnamon and salt, and two tea- spoons baking powder. Combine the fruit and flour mixtures; add. to this 2 eggs well beaten and 1 cup of milk. Pour into a well-greased mold and steam three hours. Serve with Hard or Supreme Sauce. Supreme Sauce-Boil l cup sugar with 1-3 cup water to 23B degrees F. or until the syrup spins a. thread. Beat 2 egg-yolks until thick, add syrup gradually while hot, and beat until creamy; add 1 tablespoon van- illa. Just before serving, fold in 1 cup stiiily-beaten cream. Another Plum Pudding-Tc one cup finely chopped apples add 1 cup brown sugar, l cup flue, soft bread crumbs, l»; cup seedless raisins and l; cup finely chopped citron. Mix ‘.5 teaspon soda, l’. teaspoon each grated nutmeg, cloves, salt and 1 teaspoon cinnamon. Add to the first mixture with 1-3 cup cider and 1 tablespoon melted fat. Last, fold in 3 stitIly-beaten egg whites. Pour into a well-greased mold and sham 3 hours. Serve with Lemon Sauce. Lemon Sauce-Cream 1. cup but- ter with is cup coufectioners‘ sugar. Add 2 egg yolks and beat until very light. Add altcmimly, a drop at u. time. two tablespoons lemon juice and 1-3 cup cream. Set the bowl over not water and stir until smooth and creamy. Do not have the water boiling in the lower part oi the’ double-boiler. NEARLY ROUND THE CORNER. The Treasurer (Sir James Mit- chell), in his Budget speech, estim- ated that the revenue for 1032-33 would be £8,417,577 and the expend- iture £9,181,243, leaving a deficit oi £763,866, which is slightly below the man Council's allowance. The deficit last year was £1557,896. An unemployment relief tax oi 4 1-2d in the £1 which will be levied on all income. is estimated to raise £300,000. Due to increased employ- ment relief works, it is hoped to reduce the dole by £342,257. Apart from the special tax, taxation re- ceipts are expected to be 530,256 less than last your. due in some measuro to an anticipated fall of £80,258 in income tax. State trad- ins concerns may be dllpogofl oi; the losses on them are £1,039,030. Despits blackness of the pest, the State can look for better things, and there are evidences of grum- confldence on all aides, lcyl the each addition. Sift in one cup flouflbalre at s25 dcs. Fahr for 1 1-2 and tho grated rind oi 2 lemons hours. This will yield a 3 pound time beatins thoroughly beiwefihlinto wcil-zreascd tulle Pa" and apply soft soapiristead cf wielding the hainmer with gloves. And when I had taught my daughter to be charming and sweet und and how w haymue people and by the different clergyman of Chmlottetown while in the hospi- tal. ton, who was homo for the funeral. also one sister Florence. The pallbearcres were moetb tlioroughfy again. Cut iu 2-3 cu? muk alternately with l 1-2 cups more o! flour which has been sited with 1 teaspoon baking powder. when all is well beaten and blended and creamy add 1 1-2 cup; finely sliced ell-roll peel which has been v81’? lightly cred loaf pan in a slow oven. It will take at least 2 hours to bake" l; slowly, The top of the cake may be flattened with a. spatula. and it is‘ put in the oven. You can icadfiy imagine this cake cut lnto lady iingerstrps and Pin-d on a dainty cake plate ready W 5"“ during the Clifstmas season with ginger ale, grape 511106. Dumb W9- or coffee to the unexpected caller, or for a. company supp“- Nuw for my little German prim" nuts. Pepper Nule Two Qups gugu, 4 cups flour, Sift- cd, grated rind from 1 lemon, 1-2 011p eitrcn peel. 5 esss- 1 Wbkslm" cinnamon, 1-2 tablespoon cloves, 1-2 tablespoon mare. 2 tofl-‘IPOOR balm‘! powder, 1-2 cup chopped and blanch ed almonds. Sift together the flour. sugar spces and baking powder. Add . the grated lemon rind citicn and nuts. Beat the ears slightly and m4 u; m, dry mixture. Cover and lei; gtumi over-right. In the morning thin slices of cltron lad on.‘ before- and add the iu re of I lemon-beat cake. I have often been iiskcd ii a. rich white fruit cake could not be made‘ to remain as mo st as some of the dark ones. It certainly can if steamed and inst stuffed full ‘ of moist pale colored fruit such as floured. Bake in buttered and pap- lsultana raisins, candied pineapple, cherries, citron peel ginger, etc. Moist While Knit Cake One pound each flour, butter and sugar, l0 eggs, l pound nuts, 1-2 pound pale silltana raisins, 1-2 pound candied pineapple, 1-4 pound thinly shaved citron, 1-4 pound finely chopped preserved gnger, 1-4 pound drained mareschina. cherries, 1 teaspoon baklfg powder, 1 grated nutmeg, 1-2 cup cider. Re- serve 2 cups sifted flour and use it for dredging the fruit and nuts which have been thinly sliced and chopped. Cream together the butter and sugar and add the well beaten eggs. Add the remaining flour with which has been eiften the beklni powder and nutmeg, and the dredg- ed fruit, and cider and. mix thor- oughly, ' Th1; amount will fill 2 pans 4~1~2 by 8 1-2 by 8 inches. lined with un- glazed paper and greased. Steam and bake same as Christmas Dark Fruit Cake above. This amount will make six pounds. (To Be Continued) work into the dough just enough iloilr that it may be made into‘ rolls one inch in diameter and 2' feet long. Cut. these rolls into pieces l inch long. Roll these into balls in the palms oi the hands and brush each one with white of ear. and bake on floured sheets in moderate oven of 350 deg. Iihhr. until they become a delicate yellow- Btm It least n. week before Mins- Such innovations us the above in our Christmas baking will be tried and welcomed. by many o! you. W" whatever else w.» make evdfywé wants a dark fruit cake too and i! I do not publish the recipe I wrill, be boezegeii for it "by return ma", Mr. C. O. Seeligson, financier, of Perth, who died in June at the age of 39 years, a. martyr to asthma, left £5000 the income oi which is to accumulate until such time as a school of medicine is founded at the University of Western Australia, "to provide for research work in medical science, in particulanfor work directed towards’ the dlscov. B?! 0f u cure for asthma. RHEUMATI SM You'd never think gracious and tactful I would know that I had given her a magic that . would work wherever shc went and that: nothing could prevail against it. Then I would teach her some way of making u living, because I would The funeral which was lufieli’ attended was held on Friday at 2.30. After sinBlnz "Abide with Me," prayer and the reading of Erie's favorite psulm the 46th, It all school pals ‘oi Hale's, vlls: Ila-Vi. Herbert end Charles McDonald. Lcith Bcrlmgeour, Norman Mc- Kenzie, Percy Sullivan and Cyflli know that that was the best way in which I could safeguard-her future. Informer days mothers only prepared their daughters for marriage, but l now there ‘a no certainty that a girl will get a. husband, or if she does, that he will be able to support her. Nor even is there any assurance that he will not grow tired oi her and leave her. l So I should see to lt that my daughter had the protection that be ng I able to stand on her own feet and make her own way in the world gives a woman. For thereby I should save her from the black despair that a. . woman feels when her husband dies or is taken sick or deserts her and she hears the wolf at the door and has no way of fighting it oil. Also, I should want to save my daughter from the degradation of having to live with a. brute who mistreated her and abused her, because hc was her only meal ticket. Anri I should want also to insure to my daughter the unending Joy a woman has in knowing that she is free and independent and able to support herself. ‘ v I should teach my little girl what we call “the truths of lifd’ and the sort of place the world is and make her wise to its dangers and temp- tations. I would see to it. that she read the daily papers with their sor- did stories of vice and crime so that she might know what is actually happening around her every day and what might befall her if she did not watch her step. Ignorance is not innocence, and we dc not make u road safe for inexperienced drivers by refusing to hung red lanterns at its hairpin tunic where it is easy to skid and go over the precipice. No girl of mine would wander by accident down the primrose path. I would have shown her too often how many and how long and Tebcrp are the thorns among its flowers and the feet of the women who have been crucified on them. And, above all, I should teach my little girl that the greatest temp- tations she will ever have to resist will come from within, and that the one person who will be the most dangerous to her and whom she must be most on her guard against is herself. /' I should teach my daughter to be n. Rood snort. 1 should teach her MW to Win Without brawn: and to lose without whining. 1 should tucii her how to play cricket and to give as well- as take. I should teach her how to carry on with a smile when things ure going against her, and that the harder the fight the more elie must put her buck in it. I should teach her that it is Just as contemptible for u woman to be l. quitter u it is for a man, and that this goes for marriage Jlllt ll minh us it docs for business or a. profession. And I should try to teach my daughter to be u. good women. Olun in life. Brosd-mirmlcd and generous and charitable in tlioilglli. and deed. Sweet and gentle. loving and sympathetic. ‘llbztbut is the kind o! women the world necdl. b03011“ m; IN MEMORIAM ELSIE JEAN MONEILL had been in mluidld hcdl-h until February last whoa she contracted the "flu" which coined other com- plications. Several local doctors treated her but without results: she then enteied tho P. B. Island Hospital where different doctors "Budded on erth, to bloom in bloom in Heaven." on September 7th, the Angel of Death visited the please" in a week or so, j he'd ever h d ' Chrlltmu Durk Fruit Cale a It. One pound ciiron rval- 1 1i <”>‘..’a.f’;.'.l3§°=“’~‘i' pounds candied cherries, 1 pound candied pineapple, 3 pounds seeded‘ raimis, 1 pound currents, 1-3 pound blanched almonds. 1-2 pound sifted ilcur, 1 teaspoon each baking pow- der, cinnamon Ind nutmeg. 1-2 teaspoon cloves, 1-2 pound butter. 1-2 pound brown aunt. 0 cue. 1 1-? cups cider. Slice the first three fruits to veiy ilne shavings. Wash‘ and dry currents and raisins. chop the ‘ ‘ almonds or leave whole ls desired. Mix all together. Sift the flour, baking powder and spices to- gether, afld mix the fruit and flour rheumatism, stiff- nessbeadachesand bad stomach. I _. ’ could scarcel ' work. Finally tried Frult-a-tlves. In a short time all my pains and ache! were gone. I cull myself a new man." The superiority of Fruit-n-tlves over Pfdlflflfy remedies rests oh the fact that it psllllllllbfii FIVE vital organs to work naturally. It iii a _‘ , mguni remedy, the discovery of a brlllianz doctor. Al. all druggisls‘, 25c and 50c. Your Baking ‘lnlltlror. Fruit-a-tives mixtures together thoroughly. Cream the bustier and udd the eugur and "Mil. N!” BIB? YQU WILL but home oi Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mc- Neill, Cardigan, and claimed for its own their youngest daughter Elsie Jean. Not three years have passed '- since their eldest son Wndsor was taken thus piercing again the . |W0l1l1d which Time had scarcely healed. Elsie wag the baby of tho family and her deal-h at lhc lender age oi nineteen is especially sad and hard to understand. Th, de- ceased was born at New Perth but when only a few years old the family moved w Cardigan when she attended school, gnu mo: spent two years in Prince oi Wales Colitis but did not live to practice her chosen profession God having celled her to a higher field of aer- vice. Elsie had never been very robust for the past couple of years tended her but ull medical treat- ment and curefui nursing were of no avail. After spending eight weeks in the hospital she return- ed home to prepare‘ for a trip to Montreal for further treatment but she was home only n. few days when it was learned with deep sor- row thst her gallant fitht Wu nearly over and in 1m than two weeks she had pulcfl boymd m; veil. male although rcservedirimanner hld s very sweet and gentle dispos- itioii. one whom to know woe to love. one poisonous may of the qualities which constitute u fsi - fill friend. But ubon all lb ever a sincere and devoted tleri and during never known to complain but lined her suffering III Dirt of Shaw drove the hearse. the home, the remains were re- moved to the PrcsbytBYiB-n church where service was conducted by Rev. Mk‘. Gibson and Dr. G818?- Tlie service oraened with the hymn "Jesus Lover of My Sol-ll". 10110"- cd by prayer and Smith!" r9114‘ ing by Mr. Gibson. After singlfl! "Nearer My-God to Thee." Dr. Gouge, in his usual capable man- ner delivered u very imDW-BQVB 11d" dress taking as his text: "Blessed are the dead, who die in the Lord." The Service closed with the Hymn- "Safe in the Arms of Jesus,” and the Benediction. Ag the close of the service the casket covered with beautiful flowers was taken to tht rear of the church where the large congregation took jlts last fond look at our dear departed ulster. The remains were thente- ken to the cemetery adioininc thl church where her body was oom- mitted to the keeping of Mother Earth until the day break and the still living and smart at the mi variced age of B9 years. Both haw the same birthday Oct. 31st. rol- lowlrig are floral tributes: Wrcaithsz: The Douglas Pam-lb; The McDonald Family; May-rid Mrs Archie McPherson; Mr. anti Mrs. Sam McPherson: Annie and Minnie McPherson; Belle. Rdaert» son: ‘Mr. and lvlfrc. C. H. Mellow? Emma Lamont and Mrs. McFad- yen; Mr and Mrs. Colin Mcllcch- ern. Sprays: The Brother's Famllyi Mr. and Mrs. W Agnew and fam- ily; Mir. and mo. W. Buchanan and family: Mr. and Mrs. Artful! McNeiil; Grace Lewis: Mrs. J. M McKenzie and Mrs. A. R. McKen- zie. . Crescent: The family; Mil‘, IN Mrs. H. Gilrnfly. i Pillow: Tens Hume and Hattie Donald; also several bouquets and ‘messages of sympathy- Get Rid of That SURE TllROIlTlf Any little soreness in the throat grows rapidly worse if neglected. Crush some tablets o! Aspirin in some water. and gargle at. once. This gives you instant relief, and reducer danger from infection. One good gurgle and yo" can feel ufe. If all soreness is not. gone promptly. MP6"- There‘: usually a cold with theaore tbmet, so take two . teblete to throw 0B your cold, headache, lliflncss or other cold dnptoml. Alpirln relieves neurulgll. neuritis. too- Unlthoelyzltrloeeuotliurttbebeurt. ASPIRIN A YIlXllAIKlK-IINIIIA "swivuiivhlvessivqahwflm-mivuam - - .. .,- wsooiuoao~—~ ~ Elsie‘: grandmother McNeill, i '