i t t \ i t b t. it i ‘§nvmnI___-__.._ g11~y_____.. 4i‘ ‘ Dorothy Dix Says- STUDY OWN QUALIFICATIONS IN CONTEMPLATING MARRIAGE Ask Yourself If You Will Make A Good Hus- band Or Wife And Make The Correction Judging from the innume rif-catlons on the subject that I Nceive, when the average man and woman contemplate matrimony they lo not take into consideration their own qualifications for the holy M estate. but are concerned only with those of the s!‘ vviivvfivvvvv 'I'hey_do not ask; Will make a good husband or wife? But only: Will Mary or John suit ME and make happy? They entirely ignore what is the most important factor in making marriage a success, and that is the lntiivitluafs fitness for it, for there are many men and women who should never marry simply because marriage 1s not their vocation. You have to have a talent tor mat- rimony as for anything else, to make a go of it, and they make their wives and husbands miser- able even though they were wed to pin-feathered angels. No philanderer, would be dissatisfied and unhappy and foi' instance, should ever marry. because he was born with an irresistible tendency tli t he cannot control to flirt ivitli every pre woman he sees. Every fluttering petticoat will always be a signal to him to_get ‘ ‘ up and follow. Neither age, nor rheumatism, nor m rrlage, nor breach of promise suits, nor alimony, iior a_i1_y other afil iion will halt him in the love chase. ‘ He will always be truthful to the feminine sex as a whole as long as it is under tllll‘l_\', but no one woman can hold hiin for he will always love. not wisely, but too mony. party of the other part. No man who has a wandering foot should marryi. There are men who can never be house-broken. They w'1_ll always hear the cull o_f the wild and answer it. No matter ho\v the wife of such a one pcts him _or leads him, or how comfortable she makes hiin, she can neier turn him info a iireside companion. He will always think of his home as a dog house and his wife as his keeper. And as soon as he has gobbled his dinner he will put oii his hat and go downtown to spend the evening with the boys, leaving her to her lonesome, wutli no more exciting diversion than ivatcliing the baby sleep. TIGHTWADS SHOULD BE SHUNNED No lightwad should ever marry, for his pocketbook will always be closer to his heart than his family. He will illWfl" figure the cost of inai"ri-.1gt\ in dollars and cents and decide it isn't wot i the price. He will always feel that his wife gypped him by not growing hcr own fine feathers instead of buying them. and that if she was any account at all she would be able to conjure good meals out of the air instead of run- ning up bills with the srocer and the butcher. He will begrudge his babies their certified milk. and the first oi the month when the bills come in will be as awful as the Day of Judgment to his family. 'I'lie only woman whom the tightwad ever really loves and cherishes and gets any pleasure out. of is the ladv 011 the dollar, and he makes a mistake when he divorces himself from her, as he is bound to do if he marries. No man who was reared Mama's pet should ever marry, because mar- rlage is bound to be a bitter disappointment and disillusion to‘ him. By no possible chance would he get a wife who has either the desire or abil- ity to cater to his every whim, or who possesses Mama's technique as a spoi er. WON'T PLAY SECOND FIDDLE The man who is married to his business commits bigamy when he takes on a flesh and blood wife and is punished for his crime by spend- ing the balance of his life trying to appease a green-eyed woman who is as jealous of his “old office“ as he is of his blonde stenographer. For no wife likes to run second to a law book or a green grocery and know that the first place in her husband's heart is occupied by canned goods and thatknéithing really gives him a. thrill but the rise and fall of the stock mar e . An egotlst should nevvr marry, because nothing so deflates one's van- ity as matrimony. No man has any idea ‘of what a poor, weak, miserable creature he is until his wife begins to criticise his faults. No matter how much a man may strut abroad, he walks humbly on his own hearthstone. Nor in there any place in marriage in which the head of the house can indulge himself in selfishness, for even if his wife is willin to sac- rifice herself for him the children are not. and by the time he as paid for having their adenoicis out, and their sport cars, and a college educa- tion, and gotten them out of scrapes. and listened to them tell him how old-fashioned all of his ideas are, he is so humble he is ready to call a worm of the dust Mister when he meets him in the road. Bo, these things being true, it behooves every man to study his own Qualifications for marriage before he asks a. girl the fatal question. THREE THVIES MARRIED ENOUGH Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a woman 52 years old, have been married three times and had no success with any of them. I have a married daughter with a family. Should I go to live with her? 0r should I make another marriage and establish my own home? Or should I still travel and work u I go? I am of an independent nature. I. M. ANSWER-If you made three bad picks of husbands, it doesn't look as if you were good matrimonial guesser, so I should think you would hesitate to try a fourth venture. However. maybe your luck would turn, but do be careful and look the candidate over well before you decide. A4 you are of an independent nature, I do not think on would be hapéay lving in your daughter’ shome, for in-laws and gran children are hair to live with and do not take kindly to bossing. My guess ll that of the three choices you will find more happiness In traveling and working as you go. That will give you independence, your own money and variety. And none of these are to be despised at You!‘ l6!- DOROTHY KNITTED BED SOCKS AND ILIPPERB ,1: ti; ‘i’ i ' DESIGN N0. 998 Bed socks and slippers are easy to knit and qulckl made. The liug- aie-tlght slippers are a popular favorite. Pattern o. 998 contains list I materials needed, illustration of stitches and complete instructions. To order pattern: write or send above picture with your name and address with 15 cents in coin oi- stamps to Needlework Bureau. Charlotte- town Guardian. To Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Department DesignNoWl NAMI——-——-——---------———--- BTREIHAD SORE THROAT? R nus nu 5L5: 1111f»: To get pleasant relief from sore throat, dissolve two Alka-Seltzer tablets in water, and gargle with the solution (preferably warm) cvery two hours. Take Alkri-Seltzer when you feel a cold coming on. Itspain-relieving ingredients help to ease the discomfort ofa cold. It also contains alkalizing agents which help to neutralize excess acid in the system. Let Alka-Seltzefls two-way ac- tion help you as it: helps others. For free sample write Miles Laboratories, Ltd“ DEIW 17-11. 167 Dufferin St.. Toronto. 'O-O 9 I Happy Landing BY BASIL IIAYE rv-Q-vc-o-o-o WlTl-l LIGHTS FULL 0N Bond. a quarter of an hour be- fore his time to see Gregorescu, oc- cupied on iiiobtrusivc scat iii a cor- ner of the immense lounge. But the scat. he had chosen was in such a position that he could slip up the broad. carpeted stairwav ivitliout being noticed. Which was one rea- son why he had arrived so early. He was making sure that he had not been followed. Watching the scethe of hotel guests and visitors wit-ii a practised eye, he was convinced that no such idea need worry him. Everything, in fact. seemed to be working his way, he told himself. Looking back on recent. months indeed. matters had moved easily for him. almost as if the mechanism of life had been well oiled to his advantage. This meeting with Gregorescu to- day was a case in point. he hadn't run across Delma Vivian, and been taken at her suggestion to the Toreador Restaurant, he might not have known Gregordescu was in London. It was helpful that. he had known at this particular moment. Gregorescu was able to give him certain information he badly want- ed. and which nobody else could ive in time for his needs. Bond ad indeed only known that fact within the last day or so. so the fact of meeting him this unexpeccd way was an almost miraculous gift. Bond. with the thrum of orch- estral music and the talk of the crowd disturbing his thoughts. glanced once again impatiently at the face of the clock which he could see up the centre of the fan-shaped hotel-bureau. He was surprised to find that the hands of it. still inted to a quar- ter to eight o‘cloc , just as thev had pointed when he had entered the vast sweep of the palm-foyer. It needed nothing to tell him that, while he was sitting here waiting, the clock must have stopped, He glanced at the wrist-watch he was tvcaring. The hands of this in- dicated precisely eleven minutes past eight. That brou ht Bond to his feet. with an lnvo untary little exclamation of annoyance. He wasted not an instant in as- cending the broad stairway with its crimson carpeting and magnificent sweep round the gilt-caged lifts. He came. in the curve of a corridor. outside Suite No. 5. He moved on. finding Suite No. 7, and proceeded that way-so it seemed--for miles. He ltd met no one at all when at last he stood outside the cream-en- ammelled door on which were the metal figures 1'1. He was about to press the bell-push. when he was I11!‘ lsed to find the door ajar. ill. he pressed the electric but- b011, and the bell jnngled noisily within. Then. after long waiting, he could hear no signs of anyone ans- wering the ring. He pushed the door still further open. He could see that the lights were on at full in the little entrance-foyer, with door: open from this straight ahead and to the right of him. He began to wonder if by chance he had misunderstood the number Gregoresou had given him. for this cult/e seemed — so far as he could see-unoccupied. However. to make lure, he thrust into the foyer and on into the room on tho right. ‘The Illrlltdflwll still occupied But-with W a 0+0‘ CHAPTER Y N0 TALK WITH GREGOIESCU th The electric light was burning brillisntg as Bond ate ped into the room. o the right sl e of the on- trance-foyei- of the suite. u seen from the door. The room was spar- sely furnished, in the modem way. for the reception of guests. with div- ans. chairs and an odd small table or two. 'I‘hei-c Ill n ndio t on one of the tablel. and-as n stepped over the threshold-the voice of an announcer said:- "We re ret that. owing to some slight tec nlcal fault, transmission has been impossible on this wave- length for ten minutes." Passln round towards the other side of t e table, he bent over what he had seen. Gregnresmu was quite dead. The back of his head had been struck violently. Bond was as quick to decide his course of action. for [his w“ not the first time in his life he had tumbizirl on a .<'milnr sltiwion '9 fzlerwd rrund tn:- rarin rrgisferirll Wftlv fir" T°l"“1‘i“""v m his mind i1“ llePils "i rt~ "m1 n» "Orv- thing ht- P"l‘lfl i» '1"... mid hart-s hi!!! around The '~ll"f‘ll garment which lomeono hut rnvlmllv in”; THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Men filing to Superstitions of Diamonds Strange Power The ancients believed that neith- er the forces of nature nor dis- ease had the power to thwart the wearer of n diamond. ‘I110 Evil Eye shall have no power to harm Him that shall wear the diamond as a charm, No monarch shall thwart his will, And e'en the Gods his wishes shall fulfill. attempt to According to a wide supersti- tion. the tallsmanic power of a dia- mond was lost if the stone were acquired by purchase; only when received as a gift. could its virtues be depended on. The same belief is noted regarding the turquoise. Many tales of the diamond an fantastic and wildly improbable. but all magic lore seems to boi down to belief in tite wonderful magic virtues of the diamond. The most brilliant and hardest of all stones, it is evolved in one of nature's crucibles and subjected to intense heat and pressure. It fin- ally crystnlizes and becomes a stone of incredible brilliance. in- credible hardness and incredible beauty. _ The ancient Hindu gem-treatise 0i’ Buddabatta asserts that the diamond of the Brahmin thighest cult.) should have the ‘vvhiteuefis of a shell or of rock-crystal; that of the Kshatriya. the brown color of the eye of hare; that of the Vaisy, a lovely shade of a Petal of the kudall flower: that of the Sudra, the sheen of a polished blade. To kings alone the sages as- signed two ckasses of colored dia- monds-nainely. those red as cor- al and those yellow as saffron. but diamonds of all other shades could be set in royal Jewels. 'I‘hese were exclusively royal gems. The effect exercised by Hindu superstition on even the most en- lightened Europeans of our day 9W TREATMENT PREVENTS WASTE OF VICTORY GARDEN SEED _A point which defense authori- ties are stressing in the Victory Garden campaign, ls that seed. especially vegetable seed, must not be westcd. One of the mcst im- portant measures to prevent this is the treatment of seed by disinfect- ants which destroy the bacteria and fungi which often kill man) seedling plants. Because of these pests aimateui and even professional florsts ant. market gardeners have many fall- ures with flowers and vcgeiabies. They cause seeds to decay in the giant bed and young seedlings to le n. few days after emergence. Science has (proved that many forms of see decay. . seedling damping-off, and other plant all- merits are due to infections by fungi (nioldsi and bacteria (germs) ‘Itiese microscopic organisms liv- mg on the seed and in the soil at- tack the germinating seeds and seedlings; the result is a poor stand of weak plants. which is often 1:1- oorrect-ly attribuuted to poor seed Investigations reveal that over 500 different kinds of disease organ- isms or germs are ccmmonly car- ried by flower, vegetable and faitn 0WD Seeds. Seed treatment is the only suc- oessfuul method of combating most -b0me diseases. After infec- tion of the seedling plants has occurred, there is little that can be done to check the disease. As these parasitic oiganisms are car- ried on nearly all seeds and bulbs, disinfection provides an econom- ioal and effective means of pvt-e- "11111118 mlliiy 01f the diseases caus- ed by them. m itwd thread in it. loosely hung on Billie edgie of I. divan. The decanter con- ta in: brandy. the untouched siphon tmd two unused glass goblets on a tray. A partly-o n door from one end of the room ed. 30nd discovered. to a bedroom. 1t was empty. There was another door leading from this 100m. ‘but thdlbgnwarglclosled. 1 n. round t... bedrogm hifiill. stiff}. the body. He walked but it. and out into the carpeted corridor beyond the front door. I-Ie left this. as he had found it. just all htly ajar. and began walking rapid towards the staircase, Atthohoadoftholtolrlluccl- lidec with o zed-haired , wear- lns he smart truce-colour uniform of the hotel. The boy. doubtless Kink himself to blame, apologiz- ed. Bond forced a laugh. and-so u to ex lain his presence on this 1100f d he had lost his way. He as looki for Suite No. 0i . (Continued on page d, Col 2) lFr1r'Ilhis‘(Ihd 5 may be recognized in the fact that the Slfied prima donna. Mme. Maeterllnck, the wife of the fore- most living European poet. con- fessed that sue wore a dlmond sus- pended on her forehead because her husband believes that this 5111180 good fortune to the wearer. This forehead jewel is character- istically Hindu ancl enjoys in In- dia the reputation of being espe- cially auspicious. It is said that the first large diamonds discovered by Europeans in South Africa were found in tl.ie leather bag of a sorcerer. Although large stones or fragments of rock are usually the objects of adoration as fetiches in Africa, any small stone that is wrapped in colored rags and worn on the neck. A curious fancy. prevalent in re- gard to many stories. attributed sex to the diamond, and it is there- fore notsurprisirig that these stones were also supposed to possess re- productive powers. In this con- nection Sir Jolin Manderville wrote: They grow together, male and female, and are nourished by the dew of Heaven; and they engender commonly. and bring forfh small children that multiply and grow all the your. I have oftentimes tried the experiment that if a man keep them with a little of the rock, and water them with May dew often. they shall grow every year and the small will grow great. Because of the tradition that dia- monds offered as a P191189 01 19W or friendship preserved the spirit be within the stone. which might be outraged by its sale, the diamond became the engagement ring and so continues to this day. _ With its quality of 618ml’. bril- liance and great endurance, it was thought to be of talismanic and symbolic nnportance above all ouier stones, and so it symbolizes to us today as to the ancient peo- ples of the earth who gave us all our magic lore the qualities of love and an enduring marriage. EARDENFVICTURY LE/zmfiom/ o ‘l’ *¢-*'- ‘k Iihere are o number of effective seed disinfectants for controlling surface seed-carried plant diseases some of these products are applied as a. dust to" the seed. Others ore made Into solutions and the seeds are soaked in them. There is no danger to the seed 1T1 8114118 this treatment, provided SEED DISINFECTANTS MAY BE APPLIED AS A DUST TO THE SEED 0Q MADE INTO SOLUTIONS AND THE SEED SOAKED IN THEM. _.__.J the simple directions are 101,... No amateur need have any fear of undertaking it. Infozmation about the best disinfectans may be oil- tained from seedsinen, from state experiment stations, from the Buieau of Information of the De- partment. of Agriculture in Wash- mkton or from the many garden centers and information bureaus W111Ch W111 he established to pro- mote the lctory Garden cam. paign. Alonuinlsnnllo ‘ It: . aged fplur. Cfllébiuglfllllhm n Bhibork om . ful of cookies. e ‘ “Have you been begwl cookl from Mrs. Jones again?" ls futile er asked eternity. "No," said B l y. "I didn't beg for maul Just;- "sald: house as we: oooki but what's that to me?" es PLAYING SAFE 'I‘hree fredinien visited a bar, "I'll have o Coca-Cola," said the first. "I'll have an oi-an code," gold the "And I'll Just ave a am to gt mm!- "Igm driving; r said the Home-Mixed Cough Relief. Surprising! on; C“ 1h]; If, centnitod tom. wail known for prompt No Coo ing. Big Saving. You may not know it. but. in your 0W1! kitchen. and in Just a moment, you can easily prepare a really aur- prising relief for coughs due to colds. It’! old-fashloned-your mother prob- ably uscd lt-but for real resulu, It l: hard to beat. First. make n. syrup by stirring I cups granulated augar and one cupof water o. few moments. untll dissolved. No cooking needed. No trouble at nll. Then B!!! 2i ounces of Pint-x from any flfllrrgist. This is a Fpvclnl com- pound of proved ingredients. in cou- action In tltlonl. Put the Pines: into a 1d ounce bot- tle. and add your syrup. Thus you make ounces of really splen- dld wush B71111). and you get about four tunes u much for your money. It never spolll, and children love its pleasant taste. And for quick relief, it's splendid. It loosens the phlegm, soothes the lr- ritated membranes. canes the norenesa, makes breathing easy. and lets you get restful sleep. Just try It. nrui If not pleased. your money will b0 refunded. throat and bronchial irri- WOIHBIYS RE 61m f Social and Pervsonali/ Fashions 1 Literature -.IF_EBRUARY ..,., all in cold water 12 _ de up. Drain and wi-pe dry. Brush with melted fat. Broil on greased broiler, skin side down. 15 minutes. basting occa- sionally with incited fat. Remove to hot platter. Pour over medium mite sauce. lnklo with chopped paisley. Or b may be served with melted butter instead white sauce. Allow 1-3 to 1-2 pound o! fish per person. HERRINGS WITH TOMATO SAUCE i large herring, 1 dessertepootn- ful of flour, salt and $11961‘, fat for frying. 1 cup cenn tomatoes, l oz. but/ter. Fillet the herring -- or have it done where you buy the fish — wash and dry the fillets. Mix I good sprinkling of salt and pepper with the flour-and flour the fil- lets with it. Fry thern in boiling fat for 5 minutes, drain well, pour the tomato sauce cwr them d1‘ serve separately as Aeferred. SUPPER IIERRINGS 1 large lieri"ing_,_salt and PQDPQT- a. little lemon Juice, oatmeal, fat for frying. Open the herring and remove the bones. then out it into four_fil- lets. Score the skin 0:1 each fillet across with a knife t0 lbrevent them curling up. spunk-e them with lemon juice, salt and pepper. Anu let them stand for half an hour or unt-il you are ready to cook them. Then dip each fillet in oatmeal, pressing it. 0:1 gently and fry them in boiling fat Drain well and serve. If preferred they may fried in egg and breadcrumbs, but the oatmeal makes a very nourishing dish, HONEY LAYER CAKE 1-3 cup butter 1-2 cup honey 1-2 cup sugar 2 eggs, separated _ 1-2 cup milk _ ‘ 1-2 teaspoon vanilla. , 2 cum sifted cure finur 3 teaspoons baking powder 1-4 teaspoon salt. Method: Cream the bitttcr, add the sugar gradually, dud then cream in the honey. Beat. the yolks and add to the creamed mixture sift the flour. then measure and sift again with the baking \*.‘:\vt‘"i' :i'~d stilt Add the vanilla to the milk. Now e/id the sittrd dry ii~_'.:tliuii.s to the creamed mixture alternately with the milk. Fold izi the egg whites that have been beaten until stiff but not dry. Pour into greased layer cake pans and bake in a mod- erate oven (375 deg. F‘ i for about 25 minutes Remove ircm the pans and ice with orange but/ter icing, which is like plain butter icing with orange _ii‘i"e u=~d in place of milk or other liquids, and the grated rind of 1-2 crnge ad- ded to it. Relieves distress from MilNTlllY FEMALE WEAKNESS Lydia E. Plnkhiim's Vegetable Compound not onl helps relieve month] pnin but ti a0 weak. nerv- 011s fee Inga-duo to monthly func- tional disturbances.“ helps build up resistance against distress of “diffi- cult days." Mndo in Canada. ’iano Learned by Short-Cut Method h. white “w” ell\“ed ‘j’... win! n0 v q. 1'1‘ Eye e011 and’ xllan for “:1: o er "L: n eve we! ° alnfl Q g in “ h; Ill“ ‘own- t ‘m: U t u on IADI 1n cnului IN Or Double Your Money Bad. THE busier, livelier Sill/S of lb.» New w i water-lexcept stains, of unusua pieces. Yet 1h N Q - milder! Safe for Waillgbltielzglbflfitllnlé rayons, too! Ifyou don't agree it's (he whitest wish pack! with OXY OL, _Mont_real, and purchnseyrice will be refunded. hi; offer expires December 3i, 19.1; 11111111 0p; You'll Agree Its The IIITEST WASH EVER OXYDOL d _ t, _ , t: without bloeaxclgirifg, 2.1K“ course, o; r, simply return unused portion of name and address to twice the STORES NOW-SAME PACKAGE Living is. Leisur The Woman's Realm THE OLD BACK STAIRS M treds thin Yscaaed "0 my risers rr , My paint worn thin. my walls all marred, I'll not give place nor put on M“, For I envy not the grand front mink st-tius. With varnished step: and ncwel post 0f wagered oak, the front stairs ‘rlioush I. be plain and frousey, mo, My ‘back stair spruce they 0ft re- fl 9W. The toddling of baby ‘flm I waltckllied withgznire, deu- God bless MY boards resound to boyish bump, Fflur steps at Once as d0wn they clump. I'd gfflli-Ill the stride of blusterlng Who-e tramp I'd missEd for n1ci1tl1s——until T1\£.v sent him home 1:1 box of pine, The war claimed hiin-the test sublime. They brought staircase. ‘Itien pressed my treads with tear stained face I'd stcp to front {or jugt one day To sense his weight ‘ere borne atwav. him up the Brand I 10W lhe tracks of week day shoes I ream the feel of Father's tliewii, A“ llltmy stairs each weary night I'd ‘rag! his palm, his steps I'd I Comes now the dark. with silent veep- .r , 'I1ie bottom stems begin to creak. 'Tl= Mother's fomi these walls caress, My ‘numbered treads I'd Iain make ess. They mufit ivve me. the family all. For each employ the old back hall, And I ken well. where'ere they fare Thai/angles: forget the old b8 TIME IS THIEF QF LOVELINES When you do o w. cial cleansing, all; uryofi’°lfffel.y” more ot your nightgown m 04' your throat? If s0, you 5141p 0118M important beauty point ‘Ikiut oes no serious damage limo ‘Wen-We girls whose skin is V18°P0us as their spirits. But l even 20, is none too soon to remcm w; 115811113’ $111M one of the ve aces ere e nia 103° isu-in the neck,“ y u you mean to o . "Ki feeling young. ‘Clfgrllliloo; throat and neck regularly. It tak 01111‘ a minute to remove tli Cream and protect your nightgown 51111 168m l0 carry your head cor recily with chin up and iii, u; ’ of your neck straight. R8 l 800d thlnB to use a cam 1919x1011 brush on your throat oii g week, and scrub it ivuli a do as often as you wash your lace there's a yellowish cast to the ski‘ inquire about circulation Fine lines which look like tin at first can became titan", sagg‘ , folds quite suddenly. One of th most important means of iraniln them off is correct pc ire ln or a dni. Improve Posturi- Stand with feet Sllgllil‘ hands stretched toward .1‘ ceiling R6187! the neck, letting head to backward Now bend elbow, lcwe arms and force shoulders back trying to toutli elbows together and at the sarre time raise head Relax and repeat. Now sit in a straight chair. RA lax neck, letting head fall back ward and allowing mcutli to 0P9 slightly. Slowly close tnmith. tlien make the muscles at. the $l(l(’$ of 119d! Dull head to upriiht 110M110"- Plaoe hands bctiind etirs and pul head even farther upward Repea 10 timed Afterwards. try to ice! {rui- head ln the upped position kes in the pulling and siivifhl" routine. Ilnnht h Appreciated Today Gay piano music certainly helpl in these tense times! “The girl who played so well that iilght—" isn't forgotten. If you've wanted for you! to learn tho piano, do it nowl You can quickly tench yourself. You stand n chart of the piano keyboard behind the real keyboard and, at your very first glance, you can sea which piano keys corres- pond to which notel. How? The paper keyboard bu a ltaff of written notes with it-A with an arrow polntinl 1° i1" A key, and no onl In this way you quickly learn to read music and you can qulckl! learn n lot of popular pieces, too, l short-cut waY- Play the melody with your right hand. limplo chord! with your left. In learning the» chordl. your chart help: again. It: kGYI l1" numbered and you're shown b)’ number which keyl t0 P187 1°!‘ each chord. Sec our dlnirflll- Our ll-pnge instruction book hu life-size, numbered keybfilfd @115" with only ltep-by-step piano lel- uons. Explain! elements of music. given table of chords. 1hr” 91"" for practise. Bend 20: ln 'coins for your copy of "Quick Course in Piano Play- ing" to The Guardian Home Serv- loe. Be sure to write plainly your hime, Address and the Name of booklet. - Naire .- St-teel. Address _ cm Province l l SH T bl .‘ Needlecraft/ For The You owe it to yourself to have at. least one dress witih the new 10:13 torso sllhouettexiliis or‘: is riolétl for 11M’ X1811" YW- e W" iiiiea mound the htpe make won n broad figure look slim; the judlcloiu soft-nun in tho bodice and the careful fit thm the mid- lfr you bea ul PNNr- {iozisfllvlille the full skirt is ll ul an you could ask for. ou can have the some fill!"- flcl/tnim deal-in 1:1 evening length, too. for both regulation and foo! tenet-ha m included in the pu- Bt-yle Nb. 39G 1| declined for sizes io, i2 14. i0, so. an, 4o n and dtblaefldr ubeolyonisolllfl- then mam. at No. 500s u dc- slgned for one nine, 1e to any hendaiae, and 1o a leper-Ma pump. lend twenty cent: (20) coin“??- ferred for pattern. Write p l1 your Nuns. Addnu Ind ltyio numbfl‘. Bo lure to stoic lilo 7w will Style No. 88M Bile ..... Name Eu LARGEST OBIHNIY What is claimed m be lhl w_;.rId's l t chimney is , that waicii was finished in 19W It the w ks of the Boston and Montana er and silver <3 mines, near Great Falls. Mont. hilh. 1t ls 506 feti- \1.Jl1\1~3 Home