- .. ,,,;,m-.. -vgus.ixr~ -.’.=’3‘.~ - Arre- "f~<."=i,\.="~—-ir_-i=o_ ifl‘1'vufi‘l"‘l'hl g-n- ,, .. A _ _ _ _, .- u‘. -n.- -.E:‘58, I L I‘1O»A“iI=!~“"T.""Z-...a'..s‘gw_~ "Hflitfflxiai-h i- -“E\t‘ -s---rqu.r-a~"'u CII-A‘ u re =u wwiwcrwz-err "m? a PM - appenings Of The Week “This is peaceful. I am kiwi?‘ to be backin oitaiva’, Queen i ei- mina said, when she stepped out of her plane from Montreal at Up- lands Airport. Her daughter Prin- cess Juliana, and her two grand- children the Princesses Beatrix and Irene. were the first three to greet the Queen. The Princes kissed her moth-er. and then the eager child- ren were tiugged and kised by their grandmother. who spoke a fciv words of greeting in their na- Elli: tongue. tvhilc the official welcoming l ivnited impatienziyi for the " " l plane. de- tiff? tly by i er. the link Princesses danced up and down the concrete runway i; iv “ruining the sky for the é a i! .. F9 c r - yellow planes v-xcre going to i their grandmother. n the silver plane first glcnmsd in rhe sun to the east, iii: little P." ccsscs were the very f" to s; t it. and hurried with Pr. .05; Juliana to the aircraft. The children were dressed in mauve Summer dresses. and Prin- ccss Julisna wcre a blue frock with white flower design. She wore sun goggles while waiting for her moth- er Queen Wilhelmina shook hflflds with every one in the welcoming party. and greeted each Wit-h B few well chosen words. She told her daughter that she had stood the trip well and was not tiled. Th; Queen wore a smart fur neck- picce. EL c:rii block heavy coat. and (:05, we some clothes she .lv> lctt England to fly across the Ahnntic. Quecn Wilhelmina of The Neth- erlands has not decided how 1on5 slip will stay irith thcr daughter. Pl .. ~5s Juliana, and her grand- , .. .. cliffs, Ottawa. “TUTTI Mrs. Blake, wife of Grout! Captain EA. Bloke. left Wednesday m0?!“ ing on a two-weeks visit to 'I‘ruro and Windsor, NS. She will be ac- companies home bv her daughter Ami. who is a student at Edge- hiil School for (airls. I Mr. and Mrs. H. A. C. Scarth are being welcomed home from Sher- brooks, P.Q-. where they spent the winter months. _ Rev. A. LvDrew Gardner and Mrs. Gardner have gone on a holi- day visit to Saint John. NB. and other points. ' ‘ _ Mrs. F. Walter I-Iyndman and children have gone to Halifax to spend the summer with her hus- t) d, Mrs. Edward and dgiligllters will occuipy MYS- Hyfld‘ man's home during‘ her absence. Nursing Sister Phyllis M- Refl- ;;_C,N,_ was home for a. brief visit from Halifax this week. the was’; of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jo n Y. Reay, Watfl‘ ‘Stffeli- . .W.H d left WedneS- ~ dsldfiniinng 0K“... to her father h? iMr. Yculd in Kentville. "-5-. W110 .1,“ w"; w"; um M“, the w“ m ts in London fromybe expecting her. for he drew her is in indifferent ‘health. Mrs G. D. DeBlois joint hostesses Wednesday after- noon at Mrs. DeBlois‘ 89861008 home entertaining at a mlwellfl-heous shower in honor of Miss Doris- I-Iowatt, whose marriage 15 “k111i lace today to Constable N. A. fiiacbellan, RCMP. Many emulslw gifts were showered on the You"! ibride-to-be accompanied by ham- piest good Wi-ghes _ Mrs, J’, A. Lawson left Thursday morning to Join her husband P0. g. A. Lawson in Halifax for a few weeks. I I I _ th ' Be tley of Montreal, 15 Dlfeirgo Illivn welcomed home on a. holiday visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ‘W13. ‘Emile!’- Mrs. CH. Beer was hostess at . retty afternoon tea on ‘Tuesday i gonor of two recent brides. MfS-J-A Lawson of Toronto and Mrs. J.C Sutherland. ‘ Mrs. JP. Hood has arrived in summerside from Toronto to visit lher sister Mrs. JS. Hunter. Her daughter. Mrs. Ernest Beer met her in Monet-on.‘ . Queen Eli/slaeth received this ex- zplanation from the 28-year-old commands-r of a U. S. fighter base. Arman POIQPOH c’ Flagstaff. A711. when she asked where most Amer- ican fliers come from. “Why. minim." sail! Peterson, “they come tfrom all over: ‘ . Mrs. Marcus Calder has return- ed from a visit. to Montreal and is accompanied bv her son. R-alilh. {home from McGill on a brief holi- day a o a Quite a number of city families have already moved out to their summer homes, anxious to make the most. of the all too mort sum- mer months. I I I Mrs. FLP. Hennessey with her wee daughter Johanne Patricia, leaves this morning for her home in Dartmouth, having spent the p656 two weeks with her parent-l M!‘ and Mrs. L. W. Saunders. I I I On ‘Tuesday aftcmoon the staff of Prince Street School entertained Miss Nellie Brenton at. an attract- ively arranged Pyrex shower with Miss Jacqueline Macdonald presid- ing over the tea cups. Miss Brenton has been a valued member of Prince Street School for the past. few ars and her absence will he keen- y felt. As a. token of their affection and esteem the staff presented her with a lovely silver waber J18. Her D.P.. is one of the happy event! 0f exile l Peter i Jugoslavia. and herithe principalsln the royal romance daughter, Mrs. Andrew Likely were the“ I Miss Gibbs of Boston, is being welcomed for the summer months and will be JOlJlOd here shortly by her friend. Miss Mary I-Ioule. I I I Miss Anne MacDonald, 3.11.. left on Saturday morning for Baltimore Where she will vim her sister Kath- erine who is a district nurse there and Chris who is on leave in the United States from Queens Military Hospital, Honolulu. where she has been for the past eight months. Miss MacDonald will go from Balt- imore to Staten Island, where she is to serve as a Lieutenant at Hal- icran Military Hospital she is a. daughter of Mrs. J N. MacDonald and the late Capt. John N. Donald, Kilmufr. I I I Home friends will be much terested to know that Mrs W W Owen has received a letter from her daughter Lieut. Selma Owen. RN . of the US. Arm telling of her safe arrival in North Africa Lieut Owen remarked on the beauty 0f t-hefilty she is stationed . the magnificence or the flowers. date Faiths. etc. and how interest- ing tie worigshe was doing. I A cabled message has brought word of the safe arrival in 'I‘rini- dad of Miss Phyllis Haslam, dgugh- ter of Rev. Canon and Mrs R H A. I-Iaslam of Saint John. whose old home is Stone Cottage. Springfield, P.E.I. Miss I-Iaslam had spentgey. en Weefs in Saint John with her parents and left on ‘Tuesday last to take up oversight of social ac- tivities for some 500 censors, Brit- ish, American and Canadian, who are stationed at Trinidad. Miss Ha=lnm for the past three years had been Y‘ W C A secretary at Cvrnivf-U. Ont, serving as hostess the recreational arid social events for the active forces. She fulfilled those duties so acceptably that she was selected by the Amer- ican and Canadian Young Women's christian Associations to serve un- der their Joint auspices cn loan to the government of ‘Trinidad for her Present duties. Miss Hasiam made her trip to Trinidad in less than a week travelling by train to Miami and from there by plane. a journey of 1.802 miles by air. 0n Thursdgy evening Miss Eli- ncre Williams gave a misceyneous shower for Miss Inis Holman, whose marriage takes place in the near u ure. Miss Mary White of St John's, Newfoundland is a guest at the home of her sister, Mrs AR. Kend_ all, 183 Euston St. Miss Villiite has visited the Island on several pre- vious occasions and has made many friends in the. City I Q The romance that blossomed in between 19-year-old King of Jugoslavia, and pretty Princess Alexandra of Greece has been approved by their royal fam- ilies. Reliable sources saythaiiboth King George of Greece, the Prin- icess’ uncle. and Queen Marie of Peter's mother, have u, given their hey are two young people happily love." said a Greek spokesman, blessing to the marriage_ marry. statemen osed Tuesday. Alexandra's mo- the Princess Aspasia, In whose Mayfair apartment the young couple were interviewed. said they had been enraged "unofficially" for over a year. discl _._.___;.________ BUNNY SLTPPERS _'JTF" Woman's Re alm ' Mac- I iii- l‘ "' 7‘“‘ w‘ TJvT-‘ZI I vooobvooooooovovv vv vvv v- E Girl of the Turf l: Mary imam nmuu i. OI-ry ltmd doorway Ind tried to hold her ‘futures im- mobile as possible, for she ow that a false move now would be trous- But, she thought, this in the worst possible thing that. could happen to us. The horses don't matter now. Nothing matters ex- cept that Lucretia is-going tn marry Jim and I've got to do something to sto her. waited until she could kee P Cary her voice steadymeven-a bit. casua . and said, "Are you sure, Lou, that this is what you want?" Lucretia caieiesslv folded a white evening dress and wrapped it in tissue paper before she spoke. "Of course. darling. Have I ever done i anything that I didn't want to?" was too true. cal-y thought bitterly. Lucretia had never done anything she didn't want to unless. it was to bear Cary. i “We'll be married in Tecate and then fly to Mexico City. Jim's making arrangements about the plane now. Mexico ought to be pretty keen about this time of year. Darling. will you pack those extra dresses after I leave? You can give Sarah what you think I can't use." Defintely Lucretia was uneasy and a bit frightened, beneath her brightness, and Cary wanted to put he rarnis about. her fra ile should- ers and comfort her. nstead, she went back into the living ‘room and sat down and waited-waited while her thoughts ran in small circles. hammering against her aching skull, seeking a way out. She sat there while Lucretia finished her packing and lay down on the bed to rest and wait too. Then suddenly Cary remembered something. She remembered it so accurately that it made her knees fe ike tissue paper, as she stood up-Tony had said he could stop Lucretia. from marrying Jim. He had mode that statement a good many nights ago and. at the time, she did not believe it. Now she wante d to believe it more than any- thing in the world. Cary drove at dangerously high speed through traffic. More ihan once she jumped a red light, but she knew that every minute was almost, as precious as lite itself, for Lucretia might not be there when she got back. A frantic call to the stables at Santa Anita and Englewood told her that Tony was not at either place. She was putting all her pray- ers into the slender hope that sne would find him at the small apart- ment which Joe and he had taken only last week in Arcadia, in order to be neaner the track. "We're too poor to have a tele- hone, Cary," he iaughingly told er. “So if you want to reach us in a hurry, I guess you'll have to send us a telegram." Although it was already dark, luck was with Cary and she had no trouble in finding the building that housed the apartment. She parked the car near the entrance and climbed the steps o1‘ a not too well lighted stairway to a third floor corridor. sne went along that until she came to the number that matched the one on the piece gt‘ paper which she held in her an . Tony opened the door in answer her knock. I-Ie was in his shirt sleeves and his crisp hair was rumpled, as if he had been run- ning his fingers nervously through it. To her surprise he seemed to into the room and closed the door and said. “I'm glad you came. What has been going on in here concerns you as mucn as it cioes ma» She looked beyond him at Joe who already was drawing up a. chair for her. Then her gaze went to another man, small and pecul- iarly red-faced, who sprawled in a halt-sitting position on the day couch. The room was heavy with smoke. C arette stubs overflowed their tra s and lay upon the table, some stii sending out thin curls of whitish gray smoke. Cary sat down on the chair which Joe held for her, while the small man eyed her suspiciously and said, "Who's ame- What's she got to do- ing in the world, Half- Pint," any said. "You see she owns Red Roamer." He sat down near Cary and rest- ed one hand carelessly on the back of her chair. "Yeah?" the small man drawled. "1 suppose she'll want to know all about. Jim and Bob giving me the buzzer to plant on Benson?" Tony's smile was tired but his eyes were triumphant, as he said to Cary) who was looking at Half-Pint in wide-eyed sur rise. "And that, my dear girl, is t e whole story in wind tails. Pat ‘tains oomfiilete ch instructions for dron‘: sizes 6, 8, l0 Ind To order til-tum: Write. or lend above picture with your name and its?" “it” ibffmfii“ i?“ °' ow r uroou Charigttewwn Oiurdinn. Ohariottewwn Guard!“ marriage to Mr. Horace A. Brown the nee; future. _ ' Miss Doreen A . niar member of e ‘lans to take her Am course at lhousie ngxt yhear was pleasantly lunprised m er presented ‘laiefwith a Chin m!“ u an so revolt gift. Needlework Department, Ch ‘ N . 1M1 "as: ti; m"- <- fellow-teacher! STRII‘ ADDREO — - - - — qpn...__.__.-_...-.__- l I l a nutshell-thanks to Joe here, who knows that a hundred dollar bill talks, Right at this moment the stewards are holding a little session with Bob Graves, but Jim has disappeared. He has probably cleared out. "But Tony! He hasn't! My mother is getting ready to elo e with Jim. When I left the apar - merit. she was waiting for him to . Social-r MOTHER'S" chills "IPOINTS COURSE Manners, ‘Habits, Health, Social Standing Result Of Izoving Wafclifulness Through ', Years A mothe children n right w expect o! me?" Well, practically avei-ythink, dammit. is the mother's lurid tlut. ship" the clay and makes of it some beautiful and strong and useful. n01‘ else a warped and misshapen vesae that. is flt only 101' the lcfilb Perhaps once Ln-a. thousand times a child is born with some an! ty I enables him to be the architect o! his own fate, but the b once of us are what our mothers made us. r uh: "Whati- have Children. then. have I 118M t0 9X- tto be well born. of good stock, free 58°... hysicai oi- mental taints. Th9 strulge of life is hard enough even for those who have sound minds and sound bodies. It is a martyrdom for those who are handicap d by Phi!- sical infirmities. So chi dren have a right to ex ct their mothers to watch over their ealth; to provide them with wholesome food; to see that they take proper rest and exercise; to give them adequate medical care, and in every way to try to build them up into being strong men and women. DOCTORS PREVENT DEFECTS NOW It is the children who are allowed to o to bed when they please and stuff emselves on candy and cake who develop into the neurotic invalids who enrich doctors and fill the sanitariums. In these days cf miracle-working sur- geons and free clinics there is no ex- cuse folmoters to let. the children grow up with diseased adenoids tonsils and crooked legs and bucked teeth. e Chiidrenihave a right. to expect to have a quiet and peaceful home in which to grow up. To develop properly they must have love and ten- derness and a sense of securit , just as a flower must have sunshine and warmth to make a perfect b com. If they have a mother who is too busy with her clubsor her bridge or her career to bother with them. they grow up like untended weeds and strike no deep roots down into the eter- nal principles that should guide us in life- Of course, it takes a lot of time and atience and hard work to et acquainted with one's children and est. lish confidential relationsh ps with them, but it is the only way in which you can help them shape their lives into a pattern of success. Of course. to make a. peaceful home re- quires that you refrain from the daily fights with your husband that you enjoy so much. and that you bite back the hot. retorts that you would like to make to his criticisms, but when you look at your children's faces and see them calm and smiling. instead of being scared and horrified as they are when you and their father vituperate each other, you will think it is worth the price. .- CHILDREN HAVE RIGHT TO EXPECT MOTHER'S CARE Children have a ri ht to expect their mother to bring them up pro- perly. They have a r ght to expect her to make their rearing her own personal job. instead of turning it over to servants. or leaving them to do it themselves. children know they are ignorant of life and they want somebody in authorit over them who is wise and kind and who loves them and who will te them what, to do. They want a atrOng and tender hand to cling to. , There is hardly a drunkard who could not say that if my mother had taught me to control my appetite, I would not be what I am today. There is hardly a girl who goes astray who could not say that she strayed off of the straight and narrow path because she had never been taught any- to teach them gocd Children have a right to expect their mothers tdoors r manners. which are the magic key that opens more to young people than any other one thing. It gold may beat under a soiled shirt, but few of us are ever tempted to gxcavatehfor it. A‘ geknius may; eat. pea-s withuliiisslirlnife d yor emanwo ow wa mon , h oesn‘t act like a bull in a china sshop in aydli-awiriz rogm. vet an w o d It takes many a man and woman half a lifetime of frustration and struggle and heartburnings and mortifications to overcome the lack of social graces that their mother should have taught them when they were in the cradle. A suave mariner, the ability to say the right thing in the right way at the ri ht time have been the ladder on which many a man and woman of medziocre talents have climbed to success. and the lack of which has kept many a good man and woman down. These are s m f th thi th t. hildr h i ht of their motheroansi (which thenplgor mother asnwelxivigs ahlegrichwoifgegri be-SWW “D011 he!‘ Youngsters. Are you giving yours a fair deal? was cold and fog-laden. She said dully. "TOBY. don't you think you better get your coat?" He answered almost bruaquely, “Ls that important. now?" She was surprised to think that at. this moment when haste was paramount, she had been thinking about Tony's comfort rather than that Lucretia was probably walk- ing out of the apartment with Jim-a too-gay, and f... frightened little woman, near forty, on he! way to be ntarried for the fourth time. mummies and um the muff,‘ You Can D0 A Job Qnly Prloe Control Qucltionl And Anlwcn‘ - Questions and Answer; on Price Control will appear In The Guardian u a regular feature each day. The "We'll take your car." Tony-saidf "'7°° Pmlmbll’ "l" need "11"" wiwraiilomwntpafio ‘gas “hi: H“ held "m d“? ‘men 1°‘ h" Trade Board from hoiuowlv i and then went around to his side. ‘M, "mm Th. mum.‘ ‘n°'um'_'_ abgjf?! W" me "hi" "111 ""8 1* vided by the Board. en who have intelligent question to ask on "when I got back from the track this afternoon," Cary said hunted- iy, “Lucretia was packing. Jim must nave telephoned or gone to see her while I was away. I'm sure she has not seen him or heard from him ior over a) week and I was be- $111111“: to believe it was all over- ‘ihey are flying to iecaw u, be married and then" to Mexico City." Her voice was becoming unsteady, rice control are invited to send em ln writing to the Women‘: Regional Advisory Committee of the Wartime Price: and Trade Board Q. Is wool by the skein rationed? A. No. but it is supplied on a quota basis to merchants, who in turn may restrict quantity sales to their customers. . o a so she waited a few seconds before he id. "It ust, 't n , Q- Two weeks ago I id BB much abnyfult just oath’: " can appen for a chicken live W618 t as I could have purchased it dressed. Should have paid so much? Isn't there a price ceiling on live chickens? i n A. Yea. there is. but it Just went her glance up at. him. saw that his lean jaw was hard-set. and cnuhyvmLFoLiownvuFE. PASTE. BOUQUET OAII ate for home than this cake. i; sugar in ti‘; which the frosting pretty bouquet, the gum drops. 2 1-2 cups once-sifted cake flour. 3 teaspoons linking powder 1-2 teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons shortening. 1 cup and 2 tablespoons 11M Iran ulated 2-3 cup milk. i teaspoon pure vanilla ‘ baking powder and salt. add the eggs with additions of milk. vanilla with the last liq id YILLIE THE TOILER - JUST WHATLL-BE NEEDED. rather slow oven, 325 degrees, abou 70 minutes when cold. cover with Sugar-loss (or. if preferred. Pastel Frosting with a tinted butter-type icing) Centre with s. nosegav made of col- abort -use a paper ored gumdrops impaled on lengths of fine wire doylev as “fri11." SUGARLESS PASTEL FROSTING In upper pan of dou le boiler Notbinl could be more norm covering of auglrloll (though. o! course. Jelly from is ma o) and it? . .. o which are made from many-huod Measure flour and sift twice with Cream butter with shortening and gradually blend in sugar. Beat and Sift in dry ingredients alternately combining after each addition and adding the amount of u . Turn bat-ter into greased and floured tube pan and bake in a Clodliluckodiarou all dripping With awry do nu nail-and cool Wit-h oveningzlnsmw-mldn Moon Asleep within a-forelt i Hslnidthomoatbl um foot- And-aonw one called it Juno. IMO?! lxma Imsrlmn FASHIONS III-ADI! “active way of decorating a An small mom in hon on house ewnomlenuv u u: I11 accessories out of a bedspread. Buy two identi- cal spreads. Use one on the bed and make the other into draperies. if the windows are small. Other accessories such u a diesur scarf '0: cushion cover can also be made. If the material is chenille, you can eally make a small matching rug with some stiff backing. Accessories such as these, made out of bad- spiead material. should all be wash- able. and can be rinsed out fre- buently. SOFTENS ~PAINT anvsn t A paint brush on which "paint hla dried can be made beaut ully zoft again by gimme in; it. for a few minutes in vinegar. Then pop it into soapy-rid: suds, am.‘ give it n. thor- ' W31: washing. It's quick and it's easy ' Living £6 Leisur The vWoman's Realm m? c men i u. _ ' i?» "roll ohlym civil. | , lat-forth! out when um m N. for initur, ornlwtgh a the ' ng l? tiikemto ' h“ ‘mmlétllifl by haw ma. 1n color -c boon to iszriogy 025:1?“ woman. You can be as sopiiisnc", 0d 0|’ I8 SIHDIQ u your taste ‘mm I'M. but. these stockings pl-Qve q,” U18)’ lntfinf.‘ to have their fun“; roar-wan amt-fies ro , - ~ LONGER w” Wartime research is do trebltni the life of n.....“"‘.'.','§,,,1,'," articles, While we may havg to pun up with a little less elastic in our girdles for the duration. we can loo]; forward to the time iviu-n, 3;“. one war, girdles and garters Wm 1m WW9 l8 10118. because synthm rubber can be made impfifltiuu; u: the body oils that cut short ilie me of pre-wai- eiiistl . p ' still need clally dipping fine-fabric suds. but the the tops won't give few weeks and leave after hanging halleluialii we won't breaking our brassiers and slip straps l" ‘kentle elastic in 'W"l' after a BUY COAT T0 SUIT DRESS WARDROBE ff you are buying a coat for your “m” 2'3 “up °! “ “Mn” Jelly w“ trousaeau. consider the dresses that a. pinch of salt and I unbeaten enz- white. Beat over hot water "mtil the jelly melts - t-hen remove from the heat and beat with rotary beat- er until the mixture stands up in peaks. If deeper color is desired. tint with pure food coloring. Swirl Cakes using this frosting should be used the day lightly on cold cake they are made. LENGTI-IEN‘ SEASON Make successive plantings. about peas. carrots. lettuce. spinach and‘ sweet com that vou may enjoy a longer season of these every two weeks. of beans. radishes. beets. favourites - 436mm QrV/Gé __.-;_ _ seam the Art of Weaving m Your Home s». . . . Weaving in Fun In wartime there are shortages, especially in the manufacture of good yarns, so why don't you learn how to weave and make your own materials. You'll also be helping the war effort faction out of wearing a suit or a coat or maybe a dress made from wool weaved by your own hands. You'll also be helping the war effort by not using manufactured materials which need plenty of valuable man- power as well as material. Weaving is really not difficult to learn. either. In fact. it is quite enjoyable ‘ecauiie it is rhythmic handwork. It is soothing to taut nerves. It also brings pleasure be- cause it gives the creative urge a whirl. Human weaving can be as intri- cate and delicate as a spider's or "s simple and sturdy as a beavers. ‘ou can use equipment as com- ‘ex as a textile mills’ or as simple 1 a kindergartenk. Our SZ-page booklet gives you all ~.e necessary information for saving various materials from rugl purses and what materials to buy ' each. - Bend‘ l5 cents in coins for your will be worn under it. Did you ever try to put. B/tillfit-BIGCVGG coat over a dress with loose sleeves? Unless your budget has no stop signs, avoid all but the full-length coat. It. need not be dark but it should not be bright unless you wish to enforce limitations on all your other clothes. Select a hamly medium between the "too country" wort and the "defin- itely di-esav." “SOAPLESS SOAP" Quick-acting and effective “soap- less soaps" have been developed for the use of the aimed forces who may be called on to wash clothing. or faces, in ocean water or rain water, soft water or hard USE THAT HOE! Hiequent but shallow cultivation or hceing should be given atoseven to 10-day intervals from the time seedlings appear above the ground‘ in the Victory garden until the plants become so image that one cannot move through the rows wit - out injuring foliage. PRBCAUTION Currant bushes can be sprayed early in the season with arsename of lead to kill the current worms. Later. after the fruits have started to form. onlv pyrethrum or ro- tenone should be used. since both of these insecticides are non-poison- Oils to human be FUNCTIONAL ‘me functional furniture in war worker dormitories is likely to in- fluenoe post-war home decoration. Card‘ tables that can be extended into dinin8 taibles, chairs that can be used in dinink room. for desk or lounge. and chiffonier with built-in writing compartments are some of these streamlined item. “Easy-to- lugs. clean" is a consideration in de- sign. POLKA DOTS. BUDS INPRINTED BOSE NEW YORK, —Printed siockinrw come in three patterns on white - poiim dot; in blue or brown. tiny THE SUIT DRESS "GOW FEMININE" It's a two-piece. a. frankly fem . Young. too. in its idea of little pleat- inga around the scalloped out! . This version is especially good or wonderful pattern. however, for summer washables. if you use the straight» ed front clocin and wear it co arlesa with turne buck rovers -:ill of which makes it. look so neat and trim. style No. 271i is designed for siz- es 1o to a0. so to 4o. Size i8 requir- ea 8 1-2 yds. 39-in. fabric with l-I yd. contrasting mu a 1-3 yds. pleat.- in - I. 5on4 t. ts for pattern. Write yogigfitzmtnnddreu and style come for her." l Tony wi\= on his feet instantly. m“ m‘ m“ w“ a. whm‘ immobue 111w “u” Mmdu- M” 3 ' copy of How to Weave Useful Novel- nmnber. Be sure to state ails You His facenlgiigd and hi; voicfi was muk_not m, Tony ‘he m", ‘t Q__ I u" F0 mu" 1mm my ties to the Giariottctown Guardian . gr”: ams figdevmy “"11? 12g all. work anq 1i would "h w buy i Home Service Address. Be sure to hgytgwaid the i003.“ M e (T0 b‘ mmmu“) bicycle. May I get one? "mmpmnly 7°“ “m” H IIDO "Tell me more about this l5 We wn_____'—__ Fm‘ 3m“ "-11 W" Wm mum‘ l 4°01" ‘m Q mm‘ o: boonn‘ drive Hlgggh ‘We're’ c2111: hack w n" ‘mg "Ygtffgfyyom" .....___..__..__._______ your a en as -—““— . - s” “£83. "5 “ w‘ “n Maternity care for their wivel. 1g you can prove you really need “u” *3 “gy- The)’ wgnt doyvizo the ate s to- ‘£5 Egg": :::fin°1:f%- ‘the bicycle - that you ‘are i: user’: er an out n ih d Cary ‘ ' “ tego - gn- ggaiized um Tony we: rtaui in his WWW"! 8W1" mm l-hmlllhwt-lmny sell ,6”. ' e e Sh“ u a "l! U- 3- “Gib Pmvinu not if manufacturers use the new flyflh. developed as tire fabric u; withstand the impact of 20W, ” ‘ acominginwandatgo miles and hour on temporary time; A transcontinental bus oompam} used rayon-cord tircs experimentally before the W" c" ‘ drove them g5 much as 125.000 mils, i“ STILL BETTER The girl: “I ou should fed as happy as a king w en you are in the air." The Aviator: "Happier. I'm an we." iixmmrsn jii I-Ie-In Africa many of the na- tives wear almost not-hing at all she -M . my! It's a good thin] Afz-‘ca is t e Dark continent. ' o snail’:- o. 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