PAGE TWO‘ - - ~ l Woman's Realm .-:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- “f; . , “m” y, ,1 . " THE cooks - - Dome-yes figgmm CORNER ‘lfjljjjfjfjk Hie Old Pioneer Spirit, Still Prompting us to é Throw ofi Galling Fetters and M_ove on, 1s " a Potent Cause of Divorce 1n This - Country, but the Chief Reason é Still Lies in the Sentimental- 5 ity of the American Peo- * ple, Who Expect Fal- lible Human Beings to be Angels .~7 i Wonderment ls often expressed as to why divorce should be so much flora common in the United States than in any other civilized country. “m; as how all humanity is cut off the same bolt of cloth and the Yeti‘) 1.3mm‘, umper, ‘ ‘ass and iickleness ‘ and wivesisthe samahawul over. . ‘The jdeel marriage is just as much a myth in Paris as it is in Bird Center, Ia. “They married and lived happily ever afterward" is the fairy-tale end’ of a romance that ls as Pure 116N011 1n N01‘- way as it is in Florida. Women who are Patient Grlseldas and men who arc domestic Darbys are produced by no particular race. Taking it by and large. American men and American women are just as good, kind, faithful husbands and wives as ex- ist anywhere. Yet foreigners for some reason seem to make a go of marriage oftencr than we do. Or perhaps they endure it with more fortitude. Anyway, they have no local Renos, and there are not so many broken homes and half-orphaned little ahildren among them as there are with us. _ Now it seems to me that there are several good explanations of why we lead the world in the number of our divorces. The basic one is racial. We are an adventurous people, sprung from forbears who were hot-headed and hot-blooded, impatient of restraint and who, when they found old bonds gelling, had the courage to break them and fare forth in search of aomething more to their liking. They had none of the martyr com- plat that suffers and is strum. Theirs was no patient endurance of long- drawn-out misery. They were all for quick and drastic action that would give at least a chance for better things. Undoubtedly, we have brought much cf this pioneer spirit into mar- riage, and it is what prompts us to move on, so to speak, and hunt for a. more congenial mate when We have made a mistake in the selection of our lift partners, instead of settling down into the dull acceptance of an un- happy union as more disciplined people do. You hear this ideal cf mar- riage expressed every day in the phrase, "Well, I'll try anything once," which is the gambling attitude that many mcn and women take toward the holy estate, and oftener than not whenyoungsters discuss marriage they will frankly declare that if they don't like it, they won't stick it.‘ Furthermore, they feel themselves just as much justified in this atti- tude toward marriage as their parents were in emigrating to America in the first place, or for answering the call to go west, young man, in early days, or for giving up some uncongcnial job and striking out to seek their fortunes. But, of course, the chief reason why divorce is so common among us h because we Americans are the most sentimental people on earth and demand the most of marriage and more of our husbands and wives than any one else does. In rctttlit , wedemand the impossible bccause we ex- pect marriage to be a pcrfcct institution, and for our husbands and wives to be godlings and angels, and when we find out that the marriage re- lationship has a thousand faults and weaknesses, and that it is full of trials and tribulations and calls for endless sacrifices, and that we are married to mere human men and women, with human weaknesses and in- consistencies and cantankcroushesses, we are all too prone to throw up our hands and quit. We are not content to accept marriage as the best method yet devised for the perpetuation of the family, and to keep it a going concern as long as the two partners work together for the prosperity of their home and children. We demand that in addition. it bc a. paradise on earth, a never- ending romance in which the husband and wife just bill and coo and thrill at each others footsteps for forty years at a stretch. And when this miracle doesn't nappen and marriage settles down into being humdrum domesticity, filled with the darning cf socks and the cook- ing of dinners and the bringing home of the pay envelope. and kisses that are flavored with ham and eggs, we call it a failure, and only too often break up the home for no better reason than because it doesn't come up to our adolesc ‘ dreams. The American man is celebrated as the world's blue-ribbon husband. 'l‘hat is true. but he is a shrewd bargafner and for all he gives he gets his money's worth. No other hilsbnxid gives as much to his wife, but no other man demands as much of hcr. The men of other countries are satisfied if their wives have one out- Qanding virtue-if they are beautiful, or fashion-plates, or brilliant, or _ MURTGAGE SALE To be sold by PUlJlIC auction in lront of the Law Courts Building in Charlottetown on Tuesday the cle- veulb duy of July 191114, at tin; ln-ur of twelve ocloi-k n um. nll that mug piece or parcel o1 lilllll ruiua|lc_ Lying and being on lml ur 'l‘1.|\\'n.-n.p Amn- ben ‘llwenly-tnvi; iu Queen's Fnnnly in Prince Edward island, bounded and described as follows, that is to say: Commencing at a llakc fixed in the West aide of tiuinl Mary's ltond and in the luutlmust angle of land former- ly in 1iosnessiuu of Viv-tor uullunt new owned by Fldv-lle Piuealr, thence Ilnnln] wast along saill Fldellc l'l- mmmm Th‘? INITHOR FIRST INSTALMENT ROWENA RI iflfilillliilv ~ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ground. should finally beehme Oin- ,‘ Mia's moat dlstincuiahed Minter o! flowers, and the QNI-tfilt 115ml" l" America of wild flowers in their native setting. um firewood. icon Mo» awhil- lhdian pipe in Holmes‘ water 00l- oraaroneverIti-flffill" Wtfl‘ waysseemtobelwwi-"Bmthe woodland haunts where he found them. He alone secned to have the powegwputthisnbivtlesense of life into what are usually "Bl-NH! as ‘still-life’ pictures. Yet it 000k weeks of work to picture that spirit that made you smell the Perfume and feel the breeze as he did- Owhcwlllwnlkamilewii-h m0 Along life's merry way? A comrade bllthe and full of Klee Who dares to laugh out loud and free, And let his frolic runny r110. Like a happy child, through the flowers gay. That fill the field and fringe the WI»! Wherehewallrsamilawithme. And who will walk a mile with me Along life's weary way? A friend whose heart has eyes to Where he walks a mile with me. to his wish is buried in a little plot besides the woods where he =c often wandered as a boy. With such a comrade. such a friend. I fain would walk till journeys end, Through summer sunshine, winter rain. And them-Farewell. we shell meet again Henry van Dyke FACIAL TREATMENT ll I Ll. SHORT BIOGRAPHY 0F ROBT. HOLMES, PrUNTER OF WILD FLOWERS ‘Three years ago R/zlaert Holmes, 51,131,, evenmg; lrlct. Kaye 11D trimming bonnet-i Hid You'll need the following equip- of the painter of wild flowers immem; Cleansing cream or oil, skin The Challenger. a religious nublica- ionic, nourishing or massage cream. Hoar "One day in 1859 a some mll- a little face patter, some cotton, a. liner of the Kawartha Lakes dis- 111115 eybow ma“ md gbout ten trict, gave up trimmlns bvnnetswd minutes. Fifteen minutes would be settled down to housekeeping with hen”, but 1H, “.111 do, her young husband in Cunnngtan. pug a _ gowe] about your head, She planted seeds and bulbs and her» P11111111; 311 your 115,11- baok and begin. garden became the best in the vil- 513p onto your tired, dirty face a lags. Not much wonder that wee 891139115 Demon o: cleansing Robert imbibed love of beauty. It was therefore not so strangothat when he drew pictures for the first number of the Art Students‘ League Calendar, he should choose as his subject the back doorway to that house, his mother inside wash- ing dishes! and qtsidendirectly in her line of vision, the grapevine, in the tall lilies and poppies mass- ed agalnst the walls. this. You will begin to feel "Not even remarkble that the alrehdyl lad, brought up with such a back- Now apply the nourishing cream domestic, or devoted wives and mothers. But the American man expects his wife to combine all of these qualities-to cock with one hand and. en- tertain company with the other, and to remain perpetually young besides, And when she falls to come up to his demands he feels defrauded, and that he has a right to trade off an old wife for a new one. Nor are American wives any more reasonable in their demans upon their husbands. They expect their husbands to be combination gogetters and gigolps, and they feel themselves mistreated and neglected when the men toywhom they are married do not supply them with every luxury and yct keep up an ardent line of fi y lovemaking. In no other country in th. d would a sane woman give up a kind and generous husband, who was u good provider, because he expected her to take his affections for granted and failed to keep up an lm ssioned wooing. Yet thousands of American women break up their homes for no other renson than that they are married to dumb Romeos. So it is because we are adventurous, because we get a kick out of the love chase, because we are always expecting to find that rara avls, the perfect husband or wife, and because we are not reasonable, or patient, or long-suffering that We get so many divorces. DOROTHY DIX. you are looking evenings, "how fresh and blooming.” start slvlns yourself a wake-up facial every and water first, and dry them thor- oughly. With the tips of your fing- into your skin with upword strokes. better ~11, w s student of the Toronto see The stars shine out o'er the dark- Art soglety and of the Royal Col- ening lea, lege of Art in London. He taught And the quiet rest at the end of artlnFergusElorafitratfordJ-lam- the day- flton and Tpronto. He chose Can- A friend who knows, and 45"‘ "° sdlan wood flowers for his design- say, . lng classes as a peculiarly hell" The brave, sweet ucrds that me" Canadian motif on which to base the way their work. With the words “flowers/f on his lips he died, and ‘aocordingg MAKE YOU LOVELY‘. If your heart yearns to have- everyone tell you how glamorous, crearm. Wash your hands will soap ers‘ smooth this cleansing cream Do your neck and behind your ears too. Wipe it all off, then dip some cotton pads into bracing skin tonzc and sxvop up your face, neck and across your forehead and chin with Rhubarb Jelly l Two tablespoons gelatin. l6 e119 0| cold water, 4 cups hot stewed sweet- ened rhubarb, 1 tableIPWH lama juice, grated rind of 1 lemon. Soak the gelatin in the cold water and dissolve it in the hot sweetened stewed rhubarb. Add the lemon juice and put in cold place to chill. Dandelion Salad Procure a quanmyor yvuns dan- delion leaves from yell!‘ be“ ""1 or nearby vicinity. Wash well. 41'! and cover with raw or cocked salad dressing. Raw Salad Dressinl One cup sour cream, 1 e88. 1 tablespoon sure-r. 1 tel-Sheen 11-1115‘ tard, 1 tablespoon vinegar, 1 Pinch of salt. a dash of cayenne. Mix all together well with ess beater and . pour over greens. Raisin (heam Ple A cream pie every day 01‘ 5° 15 likely to become monotonous. I have varied it the following ways: Three esss. 1.4 can flour. 1 Pint ‘milk, at cub susar. ‘A can rel-vina- flour, milk and sugar, add e58 yolks. put on stove to thicken, add washed raisins and vanilla. Pour into all ready baked shells and crown with lllfilfiligllfi Pastry For Plc One cup shortening, 2 cups flour. a uttn water or milk, a pinch vi salt. Cut or rub lard into flour then add sufficient water to allow 1t- 1° 'stlck together. Mix lightly and roll 11g11t1y, Any pastry not used may be kept for another day as it im- proves by keeping it in a cool place- and‘ get out your little patter. usins it very gently but briskly B11 m/ér your cheeks and underneath your chin. Massage llshtly. by hand- alboutyoureyefllindsee “You don't b13818 818111118 Y”!!! P195511" and relaxed nerves. Wipe all of! which doesn't sink in. Now sis/p your [face with icy-cold water, or apply strips of gauze dipped into water and just rest for a couple of min- utes. You're ready now for founda- tion cream and make-up. CONVERTED RIGllT-HANDER OMEN BECOMES STAMMIIRER. Kettering Education‘ Committee London, Eng. has forbidden its tea- chers to stop left-handed children from using the left hand for writing and other manual work. This has been done in consequence of a re- port by Dr. c. B. Hogg, the meidcal ofllcer, whose attention has been directed to certain cases of stam- merlng. The inquiries revealed that a number of these cases were left- handed children who had been con- verted to writing with their right hands. Dr. Hogg cited facts showing that of 41 left-handed children who were compelled to use the right hand 24 became stammerers. In a further case 12. right-handed children were trained to use the left hand, and within flve months all developed a stammer. 1 teaspoon vanilla, a pinch salt. Mix ' A lcotchman who landed in Om- ada enquired of a coal-black new m direction. n manned that the black man had been born in the Scottish Highlandsnmd had lived in Scotland most of his life. “Hey. mmnie," said u» aw. "can n tell me waur I'll iind the Uri?" The dgkoy pointed With hi! arm. “G0 richt up to yon wee house." he 881d. ‘um’ turnto yer rlcht and 88118 "l? m, 11111." The visiting Boot looked at hlni in horror. "An' m ye 1m d, mon?" he asked. "I am m," said tho darkey; "Aberdeen! ma. hame." "An' hoo lang have ye been here?" further asked the Scot. "Aboot two years." replied the m" of color. "Bless us and preserve usl" ejaculated the new arrival. “Whar- can I get the boat to Glesca?" 395-": got a real kick out of klmlng Jane last nllhh" qog-"Any more than visual?" Bog-“Yea, the old man cauBht me." Cottage Cheese Simple to Make Cottage cheese h at its belt in the early summer and is a delisht- ful addition to the summer menu. There are so many attractive Ways to serve it and it combines so read- ily with appetizing food accesso use that it is a favorite standby with many clever housewives. Cottage cheese may be made at home and it's an excellent way t° use milk when it sours. U yo“ 301' low the rules carefully you can't help but have successful results and the cheese will be- most delectable- Because it is the protein part of the milk, cottage cheese will take the place of meat or eggs for luncheon or supper or the picnic meal. Simple Directions ‘Thick curdled milk that has sour- ed quickly is the best foundation for a good quality of cottage cheese and while there are several ways of mak- ing the cheese, perhaps the follow- ing is the easiest: Place the bowl containing the thick sour milk into a large pan of not water. Never let the milk be- come more than "blood" heat. T00 high a temperature toughens and hardens the curd. Let stand until thorough separation takes place- Then pour into a large square of double cheese-cloth placed over a colander. Gather up the four cor- ners of the cheesecloth and hang up to drain. Let it drain until the curd is firm and all the whey is drained out. Remove from cheese- cloth to a bowl and beat with a. fork, adding cream, either sweet or sour. to make the mixture of the right consistency. Add salt to “taste" us- ually about ta teaspoon to two cups cheese. Serve a big dish of cottage cheese ron UNBURN non’? TAKE CHANCES - use noxzeMA i F v 7 years we've used ‘It e clusively at First Aid Hbspiiols of Coney lelflfit-‘l says John McMom9|° ' dl l l siczsftstziisgz. itssowonrlerffllllymdm ‘°° -. kin. The?! wh I zohccsocrcbedflsnlmdflqsp,‘ Atlantic City. u Cong Island. M. L a Grceselesl. "Wt-Wm n“ ‘m’ Y up ly_ Noxzema not ool at ' ‘m "m" "‘° “‘" “S. ‘t? Vtiflfifi” “if .... l wififnitn your vacation. $100k gny point, nor be so loose as bl t1 clcthin vuld not cause a blister. ‘Heel! should bl sacfrlilildevhhlnflcét and? ‘tlth for broad and not too bish- H1811 11°“ stylp, although there i n good throw the weight of the body 1W" ward on the toes and ofl DION! balance. This may "$1113 m but‘ ache and other symptom X91110" from the feet. Books and stockings mould. ll oqurse, be changed and washed W“ during the summer months. Tllhi garters which cause a rinb arfllmd the leg just above the knee tend tn cause varicose veins. By blocking the upward flow of blood with $181!! gainers the veins become dilated reason why they canno‘ f Wm‘ bined to good advanta ' D1111!!! the heat of the day. I “an” that are light in both eht and color. Cotton and line re I118‘ geated. Avoid getting Jcllled at nightancl have a swea lmdy 101‘ use after vigorous exerc ,ir in the evening. Where and h ou 59nd your vacation will larflell deter- mine the kind of clotbegt wear- Clothing may set we 1m "in or perspiration, and in. #11118 011 the body'lt draws heat ‘$0111 the body itself. Cotton. linepwd 811K dry more rapidly. ""1 . 0N °°°l the body more quickly]?! wool. except during Very 31°‘ People who take colds e vshould. when Y0“ m" b° m“? hm change their undercloth prompt direct rays 01 the Blm- 1“ ens” ma‘ ly 1r at gets wet. on the 8W9 m" mm “Y” 1111 garment; should he or even sunstroke. A straw‘ hat or loosely and not be tigh mywhe 0. other 1181" h.“ °°v°flni l‘ ‘ 3°“ especially aroundthe neck r w ,f€0&\ltl0l1. It should flxt my Suspenders are preferabhto its enoiISh W Fem“ m” ‘r for men, and woman shold ‘Re- culate around the scalP- wise carry the weight? rf elr This is the sixth of a eerie! 0! 1i clothes onthelr shoulders. In my articles on Vacations and Heelt-h- respects, modern women ‘a- nere The seventh. W 3*°l'°l'° m‘ m“ sensible than men in the '- v! l" will answer the question-l- not so likely to wear ti vwllara. 1- How 1011s 8mm“ e Wm or bands around the abd a. sleep’! z. How much exercise II Proper footwear is endlugly advisable? 8. When may 01"‘ M903“; 1g ,q11 “poet lo much also dangerous? any people go bare-head uoli of the time on their vacatlc p-gotiee is quite Permissible. plain, or sprinkle with k , ’ chives, or mix it with ' ‘ onion. olives or cucumber dice, or use shredded green pepper or pimento. Two or three of these additions may be used in combination. 8 l‘ QUM mind of America. So Peter advertised for a copy- of those thrice unfortunates with a 5°01 f0!" art. a talent for paint and her silk coat shone from countless neau'a south boundary line lo Saint Patrick's Road, thence south along laid Saint Patrick's Road to a road leading from said Saint Patrick's Road to Balnt Mary's Road, thence east along the said r-ond leading from Saint Patrick's Rum] to Saint Mary's Road aforesaid, thcncu north along lald Saint Mary's Rodd ti. the place of commencement containing thirty- lbree acres of land a little more or The abcv-a sale la made under a ower of sale contained in an inden- un of mortgage datml December 12th "l9. manic between Gyms Gallant of New Glasgow, Fnrnv-r. and llnry Gallant his wife, of the first part, and George B. McLeod of Fredericton, Merchant, of the second part, and "Milli mlmllle has by divers mosnc llllfliments, been vestcd in the un- delrsignod. I ‘or bnrtcnhw arms‘ to llr-Ymml bnd Bentley, Solicitors, (fhnrlotlctnwn, Dated this 1M1. us; of Jum- 111m. WILLIAM 1c. BENTLEY 1m! I t ALBfERT I. D. MABTlNé teen ore o the last wl . erine llclnnd, Deceased. H o’ "h 101'! 12 lion ll AIIBTIUN SALE I vm sell by Public Auction on "why. July 41h. my farm con- victing of 96 acres. GEORGE DOVER, t East Suffolk, P. E. l. The whole trouble lay with Peter. —-Peter Blandes-l-le was the fly in the ointment, the blot on the es- wtehwa. the carbon knock in the motor. Things just couldn't possibly have worked out more to Rowena‘; fancy. except for the persistent Drescncc of Peter. And there was emluielv no hope of getting rid b! him-he was too deeply mixed up in everything. To tell the truth, it was Peter's Project in the first place. Rowena herself only got into it at the last minute in answer to an advertise- ment in the morning paper. It was Peter who put the ad in. Peter was a commercial artist, one NOTICE The Annual Convention of the Prince Edward Island Women's In- stitutes will be held on July 7th and 8th In the Prince of Wales College Assembly flail. "iii-ll. /1 _ im-a-zo-rm-n B ahead for more ready money. 1-19 ‘Dent hi8 deys painting trees, rocks and nmning brooks, dotted here and there with pretty girls, Alggnqujn lihslcrs and Broadway golfers, as c, background for the Rackruff Road. ster, 193i model, cOmprlsing ruuy half the picture. It was Peter who conceived the exquisite ides of a Rackruff motor tour across country with the well- known iiftlst, Peter Blande, at the Wheel. He fiKurcd-and converted ML Rack. President, and Mr. Ruff, Beefetefy and ‘Treasurer, to m; 113.. urns-that it would be the pinnacle 01' Publicity to conduct such a tour, with pauses at all points o1 prune interest for him to palm u pmme of the Rackruff roadste poised on the brink o! a precipice, pulling its Wily 11111011111’ out of a. volcano, skid- dlns securely oil’ 8 racing glacier, o.- defyinz the sands of the desert. Peter said-and Messrs. Rack and Ruff agreed with him—lt would be 800d business to take a copy-writer along in the car to feature the high lights of the trip and apply the proper adjectives both to landscape and motor, in this way insuring a mellmum of newspaper publicity that would establish the new road- ster once and for allin the motor writer. "Wanted? read the advertisement in the morning papers. "A pretty woman who can write. One who has had some experience and met with . ble success. Must be free to leave the city. Expense; paid “d moderate salary. Must be good- lwklna- apply Rackrui‘! Bales- rocms tc-day." Rowena Rostand was one cf many women who read the advertisement over her breakfast that morning. It wasn't much of a breakfast in Ro- wena! case, for she was extremeLv hflrd 11D. She had gven up a news- peper position in Ohio in order to be in New York. It was at eight-thirty that she saw the advertisement. By nine o'clock she was ready to act out for the Rackruif salesrooms. Survey- ing herself in the minor she was obliged to admit fairly that in spite 0f the little thinning o! her face, in Shite of the dark circles with which Bhllety had shadowed her eyes, she was still undeniably good-looking. Her black and white ensemble was freshly spcnged and pressed -_ m. wena herself had seen to that-her ruffled white blouse was smarv 41' spite of the‘ worn spots hervjbnd there. Her black and whit! shoes / - “I'm Rowena Rostand," she said, were spotless, the fingers of her gloves neatly mended. The collar of pressings. “Pick out the best-looking one," Mr. Rack began when the secretary announced the applicants were out- side. "Don't you think," interposed Pater neatly, in his mild, ingratiat- ing drawl, "that you had better look them over yourself? After all, no- body can visualize a lovely face and flours behind the wheel of a Reck- ruf! roadster as you can. you know." V Mr. Rack thought that was a par- ticularly good idea. He called in Mr. Ruff to assist, allowing Peter also to sit by,a.nd had the secretary usher them in, one at a time. And he and Mr. Ruff frowned over them, and asked about their literary ef- forts, and noticed their eyes and ankles and bomplexions, jotting down indecipherable comments on their memorandum pads. The secretary, having seine notion of dramatic sequence, saved Row- ena for the last. Rowena was so lovely that at flrstthey would not believe she was a writer at all, and she had to show them a copy of her book and some of her signed stories in magazines. Rowena’; hair was a curious chamele r shimmer of gold and bronze and brown Her eyes Were llmhid pools of liant mitt swam now blue, now green, and in gentle moments softened to hazel. looking at them straightforwardly. "I am twenty-five years old. 1 have had one book published and it was so good that practically nobody read it. I worked on s newspaper 101' three years and I've had eleven stories published in first-class magg- zinea. And you may not think I'm dered, everybody had blundered, if so very good-looking, but lots of people do." Rackrufl Motors, Inc., in the per- sons of Messrs. Rack and Ruff, thought so, too. Even Peter nodded his approval. And so Rackruf! Motors, Inc., bound itself by written agreement to finance a motor tour for a party consisting solely of a beautiful young writer twenty-five years old and a commercial artist cf thirty years and the opposite sex. Rowena and Peter were called in for a conference early the next morning, and Mr. Rock, ably sec- onded by Mr. Rufl, put it up to them squarely. Somebody had blun- it came to that. An insurmountable difliculty had been encountered. ‘There are no insurmountable dif- ficulties," Rowena said sweetly. The whole enterprise was dead- locked, plans were checkmated, con- tracts were cancelled. The way Mr. Rack put it, with the full accord of m. Rufl, it seemed pretty hope- less. Peter quite wilted under the deadly finality of it all. (To be Continued.) nnr scum The Stores of the undersigned Merchants, Victoria, will be closed each Wednesday at l8 o'clock noon, commencing June $81.11, continuing until September 13th. mica rm: woon COMPANY. wmonr nnos, rxrn. MORRISON a co, n. v. morn-on, Daintineln, Chic Styles rtbusnaa-lrq uuxnto n weurarmn _ Ivan! rs n n murmur wonrnmdmn It carries out the black and white scheme in linen that will be wu-u so much this summe . The blmk linen skirt has a centre-front paml to give the figure a tall appearance. The low platted flcunco flutters b gracefully when in motion. The white linen blouse, repeat the black in its trim. And it's the most fascinating out- fit to make. And thmk of the sav- ins Style No. so: is dllllfled for sins 14, l6, 18, 20 yea-n, 80, 8G ahd 40 inches bust. Another scheme, equally attrac- tive is to carry it out in one mater- ial as in yellow tub silk. Printed crepe silks in dots or stripes are very affective. Bias 1c - requires 2% yards 36-inch with 196 yards 85-inch for blouse. Price of PAHERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. .-_.-____-._._-__._.._-_.-_ No- e01 Sin Name . Street Address .¢-. City uaenesseelanelqasv . . . . . . . .. State Palms of new gloves are covered with twisted strips cf copper to re- move skins from potatoes by rolling them between the hands, -------___ MRS. B558 IIOWATT. G. P. DUNS RD. 1810-54641. dome herd. Oorne Wisdom, Love rlml Power, open our can to noun- Flile Alexander. .. should neither pinch the foot ai. later enlarged and unslshfly- . "G Nothing really valuable in tho 1-: la I """"""' """""""m A f innnnaaanaq ' Pl L‘