‘ZZIZITSU-Z‘! TO’ ‘I 0'5 s rrzmvimorrm w" u: w... n n II i omlan’s Realm -:- §§§U§ 5@*w' THE GREEN HUSSAR By HENRY VON RHAN CHAPTER xxx eight. - Anne grave the King one last kiss‘ Right, cried the King, eight-one and, ciri herself away, brush- and one-fourth of the sixteenth, 9.1 fl, 1i chief acioss her eyes j Try the eight book, the first n5 5 knui .. uii the door was rcpcut- ‘ cliupfcr, ionki-ti at hcr. Lhfil) jlutllliqll quickly. Shc 3 upt at a smile, ‘ ‘ bIXICPIIIlI V9258. Collie ill, culled the King. Ho- ; tcenth verse: hcii. i - (iitcrrii, 'i'!l"il to ilicin. .5 ine here. om lcav. hc-r hand t felt WT)’ cold I1! .. Air crcil, if 1 haic i.<-.d _\.,.l I u: m; ciiough t0 ll‘ pc- .irc(l the King To hope, Ill!‘ i v u~cil to bc. iiiiir-illj.‘ our hopes! zive eyes- nf courage. The words l iiguiiii and iii-ii, darling, she bow cloaked the "\‘l‘. or. -d to voii LZTZIYE. l-lc v older. .ii;z, he asked out of his i.u.\ soon can wc v-ty is ready. the perfect TIOHEDIDIIL‘ >2 Baron von Lxiiiz, (ricd rcciitercd Count. Arc Majesty, an- boivinc. ' The Juinis .5 wait- ruling’. My hat and ill ii kiiolk at the door. t.t . an cn- ii a ilt‘~l.ll'l‘ l\.i;g ripped 1L ll folded piecc ourth of the l5 in every ZKIPPKE lllls? cricd the ‘c the mess- itcd from the Lariz to the ' wait. ho '\ m‘, no’. thc kcy ‘i ' hotel bed- , o. course! I have it. a Bible. Quick. iit on eagerly, look Eit-ciglit must Iicyiticus, unfamiliar fingers. ., Deuteronomy, Joshua- slx-Jiidrics, seven, Ruth ‘BEAUTIFUL KNIT Itftiyfriir Nccdlc-nrt Mini -rol0rcd squares. bright as n, uli.1..ii i. dark or pa. ii- rrochetcd l(i".1"ilf‘l' uitii contrasting knitting iiiiii vi-ochwfiig instructions ‘ f0!‘ nsscmblinz’. iviuiigiiiitc pattern and instructions for all For Guardian Ni-eillcwork Department. Use thls coupon. To The (‘harloflclou-n Guardian Needlework llr-pt. folcrvcd by vonl flolicnlohe. not to fry to mand was barked, a... Annc, are nut no inuscd, , 0i his face as out of tiic :~v i .1‘. .0usl_v means ' turning the f ii Wlillks- illlliliiilil.’ ("L i , i1 bl-tlroom or even a garden swing. ., \‘.lli(‘ll("~(‘l‘ you prcfer. lend 20 cents in stumps or coin (coin preferred) , Zuppkc. A car rocketed down Gcriiiz. A siicn sl~ steel and fur and snow’. parade ground o; the \\'L‘ll0[l a huge iri-nioiorcd plane. over Saxe-Radig. then over the beautiful Zl\_’1flll,\\'lIlllln' neat furnis arid buzzing litilc towns, to land w; c lawns behind thc ancient. urcy stone walls of thc Palace of Zagau in Konigsburg. Four men strode across an emerald lawn. A voice cricd from the guard lifilLsfi tioor: His Afajcsty the King! The scntrys pace came to a precise ha t. Hczivy" hint-heel» criickvd together. A rifle snapped lto a smart pre cut. The voice again, compclling, sharp, command- ‘ing: Turn out the Guard. Thc ‘ King! l‘ A confusion of sounds, of rlilcs being snatched. of liurricd. stumb ‘l ling fcet. Light footsteps fell on an iaiiczent flagstone courtyard. A Jclcar command rang out through thc air. Never mind the Guard! The grcat iron gates of the east wing of the Palace swung back sil- cntly. Two footincn King cntcrcd. The smoothly and quickly. The wa: home. Heavy curtains were drawn in a. criicious. plea ant. room. The King rcse from a deep easy-chair of Prussian-blue damask that faced the fireplace as Jonas entered. i presenting a. velvet cushion covered King .i with jcwclled orders. Slowly the lKinc pinned on the house-hold (iOCOH l()ll$, and Jonas ilislcried a golden sash iviih ihc Orilcr of thc Black Iiiglc ovcr his grccn velvet tunic, thcn dcftlyi snapped a catch behind the King's back, and the Pour le Merite glittered at his throat. . Slowly the King worked thc lfingeia. of his lcft hand into a t white kid glove. At a. nod fiom the i Dukc. von dcr Lariz waved a signal 1i from the window. An instant later Fark and lighting up the balcony. 1 came thc Nstant canncnadfng of thc l't*_\'lll salute-boom, boom. boom. boom. l The room within was. silent, as .' Jonas offered him a tiny white en- l velope upon a. silver tray. l Boom, Boom. Brcathlessly he I ripped the envelope: l I love you, I love you imnicasur- zibfv; I think I only litre through i you: I love you blindly, madly, be- cause you have such gentle hands l and flld, brown eyes. Boom, boom. Quickl he slipped the letter into AFGHAN a cusuiou .1»; "- is: a rainbow after a shower, 1 no g is, in. An idi-iii sct for a chaise lounge, Thc colors may be Each square s knit scpiirateiy and chains. The pattern includes com- jilete insfruc ions for knitting the blocks in the various sizes, a chart showing you how to assemble the blocks. The pflttcm also includes fuii without abbreviatmns, and directions of these dcsiflhs. to The Charlottetown Print your name and nldren plainly DEFIGN NO. 1'1‘! Namc—-———————--—--———-- -—-— itiroclmlilrcss——- ———- --v—— --— ---——- -- (‘iv ~ — — — --—-—--—-V—>Prt1vitI£e————--—-- and one-fourth of the That's it, your Majesty, interrupt- ed Hohcnlohe eagerly. Here it is, i U15 first one-fourth of the six- Wliithe: thou goest I will 30- deserted i ‘IYGPLGZ ovcr cobblestone. and down I broad avenues, across she held out the town of Gorlitz where Ulm Allee runs into the Fricdrichsplatz, along Prince Hcinrich Strasse to blip carrison of "cu, a com- the pomcr- aii:an Gri-nudicrs picsciitcd arms, a line of mcn who gave a sense of The motor raced acro»s the wide cavalry Black Dragoons, at thc fur cnd of which Propeller; wliirrcd, motors roar- cd, the plane took off. Ii: sped bummed countryside of 0n it‘? __—_ i i SPARKLING ORANGE COCKTAIL Combine l. cup o! fresh orange juice with one IZ-ounce bottle of sparkling lime beverage. Chi'l thoroughly and serve, KENTUCKY CUP ° I cup orange juice 1 cup lemon juice 6 cups water 1 cup grated pineapple 3 tablespoons mint jclly 3-4 cup sugar Boil the water and sugar till i dissolved. Cool, add the other in- l gl€dl8flbi, and chill. serve with a. twist of lcmon peel and sprig of mint in each glass. CHHO(‘0l.\'l‘l-: SYRUP FOR BEVERAGES 1 cup sugar 1-2 cup gocd quality cocoa. 3-4 cup hot watcr 1 iiich of stick cinnamon 2 lilblCSjlDOlls strong cof cc 1 teaspoon va.i.lla i-a teaspoon salt Blend the sugar and cocoa tn- gcther, Add the liot water and cinnamon and simmer for l0 min- utes. Cool. rcmove the cinnamon. his pcckct and put out hi. hand for the lJlllCk-YlsOPfli cap of the Circcn Hus ars. l-Ioiiciiloiics hand was on tiie door leading to the balcony. Through ihc night and through thc caiiiiioiiiidiiig floated the Tc Deiiin of criiicdral boils. Silver-iiiroiiicci crime the song: God prcsrve our good King Alex. The King heard the ivords. He felt humbled at the people's faith cxprcsscd in song and nlEldHlCd at lllc poriciii, of iis meaning; Ho- iiciilohc. glancing swiftly at the King, noted thc drooping shoulders. Smiling, the Count hummed a, frivolous obligaito to the anthem the King's own favorite composit- ion. A smile flittcrcd across the King's face. l-lc squared his bowcm The j shoulders. He glanced at the Duke doors CIOSNL ‘of Brandtcnburg. - Will you come with me. your Grace? he asked softly. Brandtenburg shook his head. You should appcrir as my Picmier and-tho Lion of Zagnu. The Duke smreri. They (ioirt want moth-eaten lions-—they want young eagles with peacocks plumes. Then come with mc. he said. as a. fiiciid of the pcoplc. A. a fricnci of thc people. he re- plird, t uniru tiic King's shoulder ivitha huizr. tiiiherly hand, I brought you back. ‘The King .~i.l..,ieci aglove on his right wrist. Silently I10 nodded Von dcr Iriiiz ignalcd again from the wincloiv. Instantly thc Konigsplatz was ablaze with light, white flares bunsting through the Ready, nodded the King. He crossed thc room, past the grim statue-like figure of Captain von dcr Lanz. Thanks, Ulric. 'I'hauks, Joachim, he whispered. H0hen‘ohe bowed. i The door opened. ' . The King stopped upon the ‘balcony in thc blinding glare of light and lookcd down upon a sea o.’ upturcnd faces and eager eyes. The crowd saw the glamorous, ‘igraceful figure. A roar went. up ‘ that seemed to shake the castle wall". A shout came from ten in wild acclaim, into a. benediction auzl a prayer: Long live the King! The King waved gnily again and again. His smiling lips framed words that no one heard: Damn this business of being a. King! t THE END) t UINTMENT "0 has thousand throats. a cry that Frill’? . then drifted off ‘ r-hscrvcrs. Madame H. H. Kung (l), is one. One of hcr sisters <2) married the late famous Dr. Sun Yat Ben. rrcdilcd with being Chris's greatest leader of modern times. His widow remained active in helping build the new China which he Vlsugllled i fiflfifififihfi f‘ nfinylygmwpiq-lnuouu __ Vjgfi.‘ Today's Short Wave Radio Program MONDAY, AUGUST w MOSCOW 4 p.m.-A Visit to a Collective Farm. RNE. 25 meters. i TOKYO 4:45 p.m. —Eziflertainment by Japanese Jugglers; Fiolk Songs and Orchestra. JZJ. 25.4 m., 11.80 . meg; JZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 meg. ROME 6 p.m.-—News in English: Opera, one act: Interview with Italo- , American Boys l Summer Camps. LONDON .m.—Summer in Wales 6 m., 15.31 meg; GSO. 15.18 meg: GSF, 19.8 meg: HCIZEN. NETHERLANDS 7 p.in. ~ Netherlands World Broadcast for Central and South America. PCJ. 31,2 m., 9-59 X1198- PRAGUE. CZEUHOSLOVAKIA 7:05 D-Tfl.—-Mllllal‘y Band. OLR- 4A. 25.34 m., 11.80 meg. BERLIN 7:30 p.ll1.-—S\\‘3.bl8n People, a ialk. DJD, 25 4 m., 11.77 meg. PARIS 8 p,m.—Talk by Mme. tin English). ll.72 meg. Toluoi oanacas g 8:30 p.m.—Orquesta. Capiiolio YtéRlC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg. LiERLlN 8:45 p iii.-—Gcrnlan Pilgrmage. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. BERLIN 9:15 p.m.—J0lly Broadcast for Old and Young, JD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. TOKYO 12:45 a.m.—A Nagauta. Bailad Recitation. JZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 meg" GRANDMA xxows HER “SMOKE? “Grandma Joe" LeBleu still can “roll her own" with the best, but lately she has decided that it's casicr to smoke Iltitfljf-lllafit.‘ cigar- cties. This 97-year-old pioneer Acadian woman of southeast Lausiana, who once declined to accept money (AITIIQBBIGIIIHIQII) ' Visiting Italian ‘I cs0, 25.5 m.. \ ‘ ostrich, And, Lovie Dovie, TPA~L 25.6 in... from Jesse James 1n payment for , a mcai she prepared or the notorious outlaw, refuses to accept the passage of the years. No one but “Grandma Joe", whose real name is Lanoise, can handle her business affairs, and she is pretty good at that. too. Only one thing can take hcr away from the worries and cares which she finds in running her plantation, five miles east of here. i 'I‘hat is when she receives a letter from one of her 28 children and foster-children. who are scatlrrcd all over the world. YOUNG BRIDE “Grandma Joe" came to‘ this section as a. bride of 25. Shc sfart- rd houseikccping in thc LcBleu home which not many years before often provided a night's rest for Jean Lafitte. when the famous New Orleans pirate would make. one n!’ his many tflps to Texas. It was at this house that she had her experience with the James brothers. "I was alone at the time," she i recalled, "when a couple of men came up on horseback. Something like vci‘s was tied Ono's iicarl. Onc o. thcm said, ‘I watnt you to fix us something to ca ," . REFUSED $50 "Grandma Joe" prepared them a incal. rind wlicn thcy iiarl fin- islrtd. China's Most‘ P owerful Women wife of China's mnister of finance, around each ' ‘£12232 L3» .. Social and A ‘Pe u acmrvnv." new: Soc»: rrcil-Dfl-G-nr" fJQrUU-QGGU THE l “Dorothy Dix HOUSEWIFE AND ‘Husbands and Wives Have the Number of Each Other and Only T00 Often lflay it t0 the Detriment of Their Happiness A cynical wit once said that we missed the best Joke in the world be- cause we can't see how funny we are ourselves, and how amusing our 1n- consistencles are. The same thing is true of marriage. which W°llld be crammed chockful of laughs instead 0f tears if we could only get a slant on what ridicul- given me a fine house and ous cut-ups we are in the holy estate. Could anything, for instance. be more sidesplitting than a. spat in which husbands and wives call each other by the pet names they used in courtship while hurling every insult they can think of at each other? Haven't you heard a. woman scream 8t her ‘husband: "Darling, I know you are the meanest. stingiest, most pig-headed double- crosser in the world and you Wculd pinch pennies ofI of n. blind man. ‘icll me you didn't. lake that blondc stenci- graplzci" of yours out to dinner while I was sitiing up at home waiting all alone. And sweetheart, why I married you instead of that rich old Mr. Jones, who would have pearls and everything, and not treated me You needn't. like a warm of the dust, I dontknow. I must have been crazy." Haven't you heard husband retort: “Angel Face, you are the dumbest thing that ever happened. You haven't the brains Nature promised an angle worm, and I'm sick and tired of being naggcd. of your lazlness and extravagance, and of having to eat food that would poison an you've got to change your ways. or else you will find yoursei.‘ divorced, with no alimony, either." Isn't. it queer that married coupes never sccm able i0 discuss any silbjtit qii which they differ on its own mrits, without draggngin extraneous matters which have nothing to do with it all? They may start off on an innocuous a topic as whether or not little Janey shall take music lessons, and before you can say time the husband wcnt to a lodge banquet and came home all lit up like a Christmas trce. The husband is ten years ago in her teeth. Each thrown the $30 hat the is telling just exactly what- hc or she wife bought thinks of the others family and they have forgotten all about Janey and the music lessons. Isn't it amusing that people who are homely and du‘l and have bad , dispositions want their children Haven't you felt it was a crucl and tactless ihin: to tcll some wimfi“. who was ugly enough to stop a clock that her baby was just like her. or to say to some fat-her that his hoodlum son was certainly a chip off tfhe old block? But instead of the parents slaying you on the spot for your rudeness t-hcy beamed and gurglei-l with delight and felt that you had ccmyillmcntcd them and their unfortunate I-n't it unaccountable that husbands to be rubber stamps of themselves? offspring. and wivcs arc always com- plaining that they have noting in common when they have more in common than any other two people in the world can possiby have? . Isn't it to laugh when a middle-aged man thinks he has more in oom- mon with some little flapper who will go out on wild parties with him than lic has with the wife who worked and pinched pennies helping him make ii is fortune: who has borne him chtldrc ; with whom he has walched by sick bcds and wept over l'tt‘e coffins, and with whom he has shared the joys and sorrows of thirty or foriy years? And isn't it queerer still that a woman can think that she has more in common with a gigolo or a long-haired poet than she has with the husband whose name she bears. whose every taste and thought she knows and to whose kindness and generosity she owes all the softncss of her life? Isn't is funny that each i-hiriks that he or she gcts thc hot end of ‘ it in marriage. The husband knows that it would bore him to tears to have to stay shut up in a house all clay working by himself, with nobody to talk to but the baby. and he finds that taking care of the children for a single Sunday afternoon reduccs him to a state of ncrvous pres- trat"on. But hc can't. scc for the llfc of him ivliy his wifc finds house- work dull and monotonous and wants to step out of an cvcning. nor why he should want. any livelier amusement than just staying home with i the kiddies. He is always telling her how easy she has it and how he erivies her. The wlfc grows equally grccn-eycd when she thinks of her husband [icing downtown every morning and spending his time at leisurely ‘imclicw and listening to and swapping stories at conferences, which is her idea of business. And queerest of all the vagaries of marriage is that all husbands and wives have each others numbers and know how to work them and they don't do it. and that all know what terrible and mcssv things divorces arc and don't try tn keep out of them. Funny trinket. marriage. JPFYRQTEX P“? -. as Jesse, offered her $50. But she refused. Only when they were 1 rom- did she fnd a note, which she later lost. thanking her for the mrnl and hcr hospitality. With all her smoking. the l‘ti.lc licadian woman disapprc-vcs of thc i Hriitking and smoking of the pre- i tlir~_ nur- shr latcr identified '_h_us s; Noytlthcrcs a good Behind China's drive to withstand Japanese oppression, the collective l in organizing the republic. hand o three of the mo-t powerful women in the wz. srnt. yroungcr generation, ‘Hut. b»,- causc she nevcr "lcnrncri to rflad nr write." sha thinks a1‘ children WWW llll“i" an education "Y smoke." she admu- “bin nothing but dgarctts-s. It used to be as a girl. that I would roll m," own out. of twist tobacco and corn m; w” s.“ by Kai-Shel: <3), wife of the Chinese dictator, smoke l ' Most powerful of all HANDY SUGAR SYRUP For a simple syrup. boil to- gether 1 run of sugar and 2 cups of “rate-r. Cook for 10 minutes. cool. pour info jars rind seal. For a medium syrup. use equal quantities of inignr and water. and for a heavy syrup, use 1 1-2 to 2 cups of sugar to l cup of water. This latter mixturi- is used when it. is not desirable to dilute the bs-varagc to any extent. Only a vcrv small amount is required. Following are suggestions for beverages that will keep you cool in spite of mounting mercuric: and tempers. is Madame Ohiang She is in her own right- i commander-ln-chief of the air forces, an honor which came to her after she had organized the air corps o." 550 aeropwmea and 15 bases scattered over the country. The three are members of the powerful Soong family whim Gave rfillublican China its first finance minister asidtopcneasranclnmuwellunnmuqflmgy, scat the wife has dragged in the , rsonal -:- Fashions -:- i i i l i its head over the night horizon 1n i milk ri-rru-n-Gfi» HER ACTIVITIES — WIIN I WAS ONE-AND- TWENTY When I was one-and-twenty I heard a. wise man say, “Give crow-us and pounds and g-uineas, But not your heart. away; Glvepearis away and rubies. But keep your fancy free." But I was one-and-twenty, No use to talk to me. when 1 was one-nnd-twcnty I heard him say again, "The heart out of the bosom Was never given 1n vain; ‘Tis paid with sighs aplenty And sold for endless rue." And I am two-and-t/wenty, And 0h, ’tis true. ‘tis true. —A. E. Houseman. "DOG DAYS” ERRONEOUSLY GIVE PETS A BAD NAME Dog days worry so many parents that it is perhaps wise to do a little explaining, The way the days of July got their reputation in olden times was not. on account of dogs, but from the Dog Star. the largest Ln the constellation known as Canls Major, or Greater Dog. writes Olive Roberts Barton. Many constellations are named after animals. We have the Lion iLeo) and the two Bears, Ursus Major and Ursus Minor. Then there is the Goat. the Fish, the Crab. and so on. I am no astronomerlbut I have always been interested in the ' charm of the stars, and their various stories. Now Sirius, the Dog Star, pokes our north temperate zone, 68¢?! year in July. And as Juiywas al- ways a month of heat and low water. when both people and ani- mals got sick, it was natural that. illness and disaster became asso- ciated with the Dog Star, and the July‘ days were known as "D08 Days," or "Canicular Days.” The poor doggies have paid B price through all the centuries. 35 being extra. dangerous at this time. What. a pity! They are in the same fix as ourselves because thcy get sick from many of the same causes. Just as we take extra precau- tions about our children's health in hot weather we should pay more attention to our pets. They suffer from heat and get aich on contam- inated food. dirty water and turned Rabies i; the dread word. yet there is comparatively little hydro- phObIB. among dogs. Frothing at the mouth goes with worml. BP- proaiching dill/Emmi‘. 01‘. 5-5 Wm‘ one dog we had, an infection foi- lowing an operation. Them are t/wo kinds of fits, “if frothing kind and "runninB fit-l.’ the latter usually caused by 0W1‘- exemise and excitement. Frothinfl fits are caused illnesl- Rabies is um r matter. All dogs with rabies do not froth at the mouth. Usually they are strangely quiet, may roll their ey" and loll their tongues. An owner will recognize that something in radically wrong and take Pfwlll" tions. Them is no cum for rnbiw in a. dog but Pasteur treatment may be given a bitten dog, as b0 I bitten child, to obviate danger. GIVE LOTS 0F WATER Long haired _ci_i_>ga suffer k2 y§g AUG_II_S_T__23. 19;, wczauiciuubwqw Literature g _ swan-nauseous)... them - 91w" W sleep and live. Gucci? dogs clean food, and plenty o; rm, hoot and ‘get-sfckfldive water. Change water oiuii m. wash out i111 dishes each (lay, “ so-called dog P0l50llliig L; 195 common than thought Bad m, and offal ikflls dogs, and the of». left to scavenge for his fOOfl “.7, probably die sooner or later froir poison. Nurse your pct if he is Sig,’ Q0, a. veterinarian to identify m, malady. 515M010“, confine him carefully until yQu hear the verdict. "Dog days" merely nicaiis imi dflys. Heat is hard on (lfius, can and canaries. Help them and don't worry too much. All blWS or scratches should have quick atten- tion-just in case. “Wor-m" dogs, even big ones, eveiy so grim Many a fine animal has bar-n 51,01 for rabies, when a good iicsp or germifuge was all he needed. Tm;- get the eills from the ground, from other infected dogs. DYEING STRAW HATs‘ Old straw hats take on new life when they are dyed, 5ll_\'S Mrs, Gladys Butt of the New York state college of home economics. A dyed hat may retain its original shape and have its color rcncwicd. or ii may be given an entirely different appearance. Mrs. Butt gives the following directions for dying and blocking straw hats: First, rip off thc trim- ming and remove with soap ant‘ hot water, Make a hot (lye bath ol enough liquid to covcr the hat completely; one package of cotioi cires dye is usually sufficient foi one hat. Leave the hat in the dyt bath until the desired coini- is ob rained, usually about 30 minutes The mixture should be stirred fret quently. Rinse the hat in clear wa- ter and stretch it, while dripping wet, over a hat block. When the straw is almost dry, pies: the crown with n. hot iron. and without removing the hat from the block. press the brim on a pad or on the edge of the ironing board. For a glomy new finish, the surface oi the straw may be brushed lightly with a. hat lacquer. Ol' with ii mix- ture of one-half white shcllne and one-half denatured alchol. Allowing SOME LVLAGINATION “Bambo, you are very law N114 morning. Any reason?" "Well, saih, it was like dis. Whéll ah looked into dc glass dis morninl I couldn't see maself there. so Bit though ah must nab gone to work It was two hours fl-IWT dat ah dis- wvmd de glans ma dropped wt of do frame." AT LEAST WELL MEANT The minister was oontcmill-"ln! the new baby. "Well, now that you liflvf m‘ iiim." ma the xoiiiéilfigtier. "M" do you think he - ’ The guest looked ‘fli- ‘ifhe “m? for a. moment, and snldi ‘Vflli °, course, intelligence had not ‘v5: dawned in his face. but 11g i5 “° derfully like both of Y0“- FASHION GUIDES l FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER Weari a cunning draw utrinil neck amlgak like this over a. uwim suit. will be lots of fun for 4 to 14. Best of all ...u~iis any lime cotton print smock is just the thing lai- school dB-YS w breflkffl-ii in, and to slip on over school frocks w help mummy dry dishfl- 51"" diagram shows the minimum Pam‘ even a child could make it. style No. 3322 is designed for sizes 4. 6. 8. 10. l2 and 14 8'95“- slze 8 requires 2 yards of 39-inch material with 1-4 yard o.‘ 18-inch contrasting. Send fifteen cents (lilo) In stamps or ooln (coin DPQYQYP") wrap coin carefully addnss to Charlottetown Guardian 81ml- Btylo N0. 3822 8188.... our: "n" l!!!“ Addlifi SCIATICA as well. All us‘