116GB 7W9 W 0i11an’s Tying s Leisure f-Tllte ,Woman’s Realm I'D CANADA [Jand {if our birth, our faith, our deed colors. males bright. Bright- colored plumage would attract en- emies to the nest where the fe- male lncubates the eggs. l pl e For dtyhlose dear sake our fathers ie ; 0 luotherland, we pledge to thee Mend. lit-art and hand through the yours to be. —Rudyard Kipling. PAINTING CRACKS dfnny householders are under the DUI-L, MIDDLE-AGED" HOME CAN USE A FACE-LIFTING Hctlses, just like the wsmen who run thtm, can take on a drab, mid- dle-aged lock. They do w-‘lenever the woman of the house stops growing and keep- ing up with the times and trying or: ILCOIIS impression that pa nt , \~.'.ll cover cracks in woodwork. W" new. young ‘Qeas- C C, (leprebsyons m NHL Walk into the house of a woman ivhose daughters a.e grown and away lrcm home and you Jten find that, although all the furn shings are in IIICOIISPICULUS good taste and the quality of the linen, silver and china is the best, the spirit of the hcme is drab. w l; (Iilltllbl be covered or filled ' i tsnlnt. Those must be filled care-fully with putty or plastic wood bctiore the paint is applied, INSULATE ATTIC If nil a lc is not used, and there The m5!“ 0f the “Vman, °f the; b m, m. u. for keep Hg we house jellcd at about the time she - .0 a; a clmgjyabye “H9513. was most IIIIIEPJSICG in hcme-mak-f ing-tlhat is_ when her family werel all around her and she enterta ned Fat the drop of a hat. NO NEIV IDEAS the heat should be kept. for “or purt of tile h use by r instilnttng board above or l floor j.ists of the attic t,)iI/'C between the joists, m ‘l. Her house, still a Ixlndon auction, the sliver At . dlJi n tr-hich sireetmeats were 15 W378 Elli). 100M 119m I0 he? W- e. .l Cliltrlcs 1 was Sold for $225 day-because she hasn't kept up n, Qmwel with new ideas. She doesn't realize that every one of her deccizit on ideas is de- finitely middle-aged - so lnllCh so that it is rather dcpres ing to a stranger to vultlk into the living rozm. The extravagant and light that all makers are goirg in missing. So are tiny touches that shcw that a wcuiali, is still thinking ab.ut her house as. a. part of the present - nct just‘ something left to her out of the past. CAN BE UP-TO-DATE t It might be a gsod idea for every woman who admits to her- self that. is middle-aged to go~ through her house rccm by room and compare it. with houses of younger, more active women. If it inspires her to get szrne color into its dmbness, and srme life irttc its quietness, it. will be flme well spent. For there is no reason why the house of a woman of 50 shculdn't t RAIN!‘ DAY PLAY ' ...<rc's an idea for the mothers of s-ttinll boys who want some fro-h llcctlputloli 0i‘ amusement on a wet tiny. Little Jchn “'21s very bole-J (lnc "stay-at-hcme" day and there were neither pennies nor shops available Y0 bu)’ 8 119W WY‘ So ie collected some used match- stlzks, neatly chopped off their bends, and spent a happy and un- naturally quiet morning painting thorn bright colors. _ N"w hc has a new toy with end- s DQasLDilitics _ costing s straight-line animals vv-lth tltrtn-elrnffes can have necks as 1on2 as you llke_ and an elephantks trunk can reach a “mile". He learns letters and numbers, makes houses and gardens. use of color young hcme- for today is GREEKS HAD WORD Longest word in any language 1e lopadotemachoselachoguleoicra- ailolelrxsaitzdrim mupotrimmutosil- I hiokaratbcmelitokata kechumeno- reflect the taste of the times a? irhlepikossuphophlltt operlsteral- ink-restlnuly as the house cf a nktruonornlakoplialllokigklopetei o- wmnflfl 0f 25 lagggsliraflobgpfxglfzlg anoptefllgon. It's easier for a wcman to feel This Greek word is found in Arls- young if the rooms she lives in, toplmnes’ " cleslazusae", a play as well as the clothes she wears. are her own expression of what is considered beautiful and in gcod taste today. enacted at Athens in 398 8.0. l Female birds usually wear sub- : {The Modern, Easy Way to Make i. e. l.uscius Jams and Jellies ' l RT m :5 dWor/r utrs . . a 1 . 4 ' I" d!) Tfiliiblfitr l l J Sllflfl‘ Boil J J J More Jam or Jelly l . , , l Nuiurul Taste untl Colour No Uncertainty CIRTO Gives You Eefior Taste-Perfect 50f SUCH A SHORT IOll-To make jam with Certo you need only a one-minute to two-minute full, rolling boil-for jellies only a half- mlnute to a minute. MORE JAM OR JEIIY- Very little juice can boil away in this short time, so you get u to one half more jam or jelly rom an equal amount of fruit. {ymkll 7;; xsrrs NATURAL TASTI AND 1311,,” ,.__ C0l.OUR—-The Geno boil it so d," "n.1,, short it cannot uflect the natural, the label n] fresh fruit taste or darken the col- "’"b7o“a"'° our ll long boiling does. IND! OUISSWORK- With Cerlo‘ ,you get tested, easy-to-lollow ro- cipu. Follow them exactly and you'll never have failures. I evf of 4 Champions use CIRTO Wrltec Mn. Ollve M. Wallace of Ienncxvllle, Guer-Prllewlmtev at Slllrbvoolie Exhibition: "l Inc Ceflu hr perfect mulls, In melting all any pvllvwlnnlvtg 1cm and leliln." IS FRUIT PECTIN EXTRACTED FROM FRUIT I'll CERIO u nuturnl substnnu- l ’- Dorothy Dix Realm '1. Social and Pe Says- It is a strange the that makes the machinery of the . wish the tha it. su ‘gal scents to go about it They to . way irllsrtgad the best and most profitable wa of of cajolery. In a word, they wil Suzy refuse to swallow them. CHILDREN, LIKE PARENTS, LIVE UP TO REPUTATIONS Generous Use Of Tact Rather Than Constantl Carping Will Bring Desired Results In Child Discipline whom they come in contact with gloves. know that it isn't so much who matters: which is only effective for a of persuasion. which coerce their children into doing of selling them the idea. that it T-hlllfl Ll} l elgn dl - lomacy in dealing with theirtcllilllgrem w u dom d m m’ my p n. They know that it Ls soft soap adult world go round and that if they be popular they must handle those with Also, t they say it is how and when and where But with their children they use no They don't waste any tactfulncss go at Ltittle Bobby. and Suzy and tongs without regard to the ungsters’ sensibilities or whether their admoni- ions are likely to fluence or just raise the _ then they complain that they cant do a thing with their wayward sons and daughters. It never. occur e Bar n they cannot control the children is have a reetraininll moral m- children's dander. And the reason‘ because theyl y. They use force short time, insteadl is good for the long $111M earl toth ets that ngwa doing things. Tnev abuse instead not sugarcoat. their plus and Bobby and; Half of the time when children are disobedlent it is because they have 1 ~ 1;; d 1 been arbitrarily ordered to do a thing manner gm; ,,pp_.,,.c§‘.“o A; n? o: to do it; or forbidden to do something they want to do. without any sym- instead of being courteously asked pathetic explanation made by the parents of why they are sorry to deny them any pleasure they crave. When children are impertinent to their parents, it is oftener than not Just because t-hey have never been treated with any politeness themselves.‘ And when they do not admire their parents and respect them, it is invar- iably because the parents have not thought it worth while to use any cf . the charm technique on little Bobby and Suzy that they would have used to make themselves attractive to a stranger. When to Use Flattery Why parents do not see that; children are almost morbidly susceptibfe gay, happy y to flattery and that you can work more reformation in them with a wci'd of praise than they can with a perpetual lecture course passes compre- hension. But it is true lion times. You can talk your tongue off telliruz him to stand enters a room and not mumble when he is spo But once let him ovterhear being the same uncouth little boy. of his beautiful manners and it will field On the other hand. many a boy will end tip in jail. Perhaps. however, the worst treat their adolescent daulzhtlers. ations that can arise in life. Diplomacy With Daughters It is the moment that/calls for girl without her knowing it; who is ertce between liberty and license, feel that Mother trusts her; th straight because Mother expec But only too brings about the her daughter safe she refuses to let Don't Be Tactics: Mothers Other mothers do not hesitate have no faith in their discretion or them and open their le met with such a barrage of they had as well have t-he game. pity so many women never good rand, for a mother who is subtle eno or to indulge in any of the pleasures of you at‘? picks up boys on the streets and goes about with the ere. improprieties they have never thought of commlttl 'I'he tastless mother drives many a girl away from find out th You can correct Bobby's table manners a mil- up when a lady ken tn and he will go on ou speak turn him into a Lit le In Chester- is develcpd into u gangster by nfs parents calling him names. berating his badness and prophesylng that he _ For children, like grown-ups, urge to live up to their blue china and be what people expect them to IJG-l I V phase of th lack of tact parents show in dealing with their children is to be fcund in have an instinctive the way so many mothe‘: Here is one of the most delicate sittt~ A little woman. avid for pleasure, anxious for at entlons from orant creature, alf child, half boys. the diplomacy of a feminine Tallq. h to protect and guide her little w se enough to teach her the differ- and who. abo ll, k h d ' at she is on her liecrlor 211186319 lites atoudldlk ts her to do so. often we have the mother whose heavy, tragedy she dreads. eti blunderlng hand Sorn her have dates at home, or to dance, th. and the result is that the m God kno/vzs to show their daughters that they their morals. ‘They accuse them of ng. They y upon 3P tt d sd th i tel h with boys. and when thegrgoliitine hetgrllila arlfitle elarte ftggmoge cgllvyettllations abuse and suspicions as sears ' and makes them feel that if they are going to have the name ey are e girls‘ souls o-f being bad ho at a HORO For ‘F-‘cdnesdu , July 80 MARCH 2i to APRIL 20 (Aries) —-Protect your income frcm unwise schemes and schemers; be tactful in choice o1 cornpanisns during free time. Don't permit jealousies (which often tempt in unsuspecting ways) to lead you astray. Be thoughtfully on guard all day. APRIL 21 to MAY 20 (Taurus)- You should be able to increase vour chances for future profits now. Handling and wsrking for matters concerning metals and ther allyys especially favored. Don't fret or be overanxicus. MAY 2i to JUNE I1 (Gemlnib- Initiative and ambition (of which you have plenty» are good‘ dxtors AMomimSmllc FORCE 0F HABIT On to the parade-ground march- ed the C0l0ncl. He gave a look at the paraded men, rubbed his mono- cle, and had another look. "Hang it all", he barked 1t the captain, ‘what's the idea of parad- ing all the bis men in front of the smaller men?" “Sorry sir", explained me esp- taln. ‘It seems that the sergeant was running s fruit shop before he enlisted". A KIND DEED In the gmokerootn of the big hotel the Scot had been boring everyone with tales of the great deeds he had done. "Well, now"_ said an ltnglishman at last, “suppose you tell us acme- thing you can't do, and, b Jove. I'll undertake to do it myse ". “Thank ye", replied the Scot, "I canna pay me bill here". _________._ HAD OPPOSITE EFFECT IDNDON — (C?) —- German pro. Wlflndu leaflets drop in the smith of England hel swell Br!‘- ...~-....e. 4 Lin-Lag; Inn's Spitfire Fund. A cottafier found Your Individual l———-By Frances Drake SCOPE fbr today, which may tend at 1n- tervals to bog down. Work to clear away small details that can hinder pects are particularly favorable tor action. ‘ JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)- Guard personal interests; spend with foresight; dmft exaggerate; avoid being too exacting regardlng loved ones’ chtuacteristtc; nnd ac- tions. Keep a close watch on YOU tau tricky period. T HE CHARLOTTETOWN__ GUARDIAN “Y v - 000030703703 300037000000-60370370330-6070 eooooo-ovo-ooovoew c- - v Vi": -. Qf “ MY! WERE THE NEIGHBORS ENVIOUS WHEN THEY sAw MY SUNLIGI-IT wAsl-llas! vvv v Vvvv w l 4. MRS. SMITH DECLARED MY I l mes in her anxiety to keep_ me. Wh t , tl-i 't and wise and prudent! It has t: blTti-ctfilltcbifclltilvil “m, bang w m progress tomorrow when star as-I nor use SUNLIOIITJOOTI WASI-IED TOWELS AND PILLOW CASES MADE HER GIIEEN WITH ENVY. "WHY Suuueur- oouumr SUGGESTED MY BEAUTIFUL, FRESH LINEN £400 O-OO-OOO-O-O GQGO OOOOO-O’ Was It Montelli? B)’ LESLIE GABGILL ++o¢++o+o<<+° I A hoarse cry disturbed his reflec- ti ns o . “Sir, they've gone!" "They-who?" he yelled back. dashing to investigate. "The young lady h'and the h‘ein- l t» eralos "Not the lady," trilled Mrs. Mon- t.el1i‘s voice from the ba-throom. “What are you doing in there?" "Can't a dame take a bath with- out letting loose earthquakes. What's a bath for in this country. I'd like to know!" "Somebodys made of! with the emeralds." "Guess they know that down the other end of the street by the way you're broadcasting. I saw your safe door sittin open half an hour ago.” "They y didn't. you raise the alarm? ’ "Why shoruld I?" Jerry cursed with a fluency newly cultivated. The no oi.’ rushing water provided a ttlng accompani- ment to the flow. "It's a sure thin Tony came buck in the night to ft the sparklers." she sheathed, placing her mouth close e oct- "You expected taut‘: what he would doi" “Nobody knows how Tony will work. ‘That's the beauty of his meth- ods. Always a card or two up his sleeve." “ will have to be reported to thodaolice." " ope! Can't be done. You mould have s Illed it albout e ahiners when t e police came." "Will you come out of that bat-h- room and discuss the matter Dro- perly?‘ he pleaded. "Oh boy, oh boyl Not tmfli I mop the moisture of! my graceful ‘Twouldn’ For 20 minutes they listened to her splashing in the bath, followed by another quarter of an hour spent in drying, during which interval Jerry and Mfntey stood watching the door like a. pair of 6M4 Outside a mousehole. CHAPTER XIII RIVAL ADVENTURERS Slim Annie's read of the noc- TIUIBI events seemed be about right. Evidently Ton Montelll had JULY 24 t0 AUGUST 22 (Lew-d Note advice to Cancer natyes-you! can get into cllfficuhles .f ycu can't heed the same advice, which is meant for your own good. Be recs-l imabltenewitltifllitfeurlm ons. s c yourself re- garding habits. l (Virgo) - Look fcr new ways and methods for pepping mp this day. Dre") inspiration from other days that have offered ycu more scope or opportunity. Don't spend too much time on trivial matters and not have sufficient rzcm for the important issues. SEPIEMBF, 2,4 to OCTOBER 2T (UITNL- (my new angles afloat ere y unexpected gains can be made. Particularly roved; Deals in finances and invtlzgtnents building, agriculture and funn pm.‘ duoe. OCTOBER. 24 to NOVEMBER 22 (Swmto) _. 1f ycu start out being agreeable and enthusiastic this oming, or whenever your work- dly Nilfllteyfllfll be sure: of auc- ceas, more fi-stent stars warn against drastic changes that may interfere with urea-ms. NOVEMBER 28 to DECEMBER 22 (Sagittarius) — Take advantage of some minor favorable vibrations , ' lly ausflolmis fcr maritime interests, shipping, dealing in bever- agelehllquors, chemicals. Whole day a s asulmt unpremediated changes an decivms IIDOIIMBIIIR. 28 to JANUARY 2i (Cnprlcom) - Art, music, liter- ature, all varieties of sane enter- l te, also compen-jhe had accepted the carryingtkie ,house. su being searched AUGUST 23 to 51111113415133 23 ' would conclude that he could safely be been left at the flat to confuse the issue a plan that had worked very satisfactorily. Of ur Tony foieseg til: visit of S lilfllsnd Id (than the metal tnlrllrient and’ llfnln for hummi- l _ up man Infinite actised his profe onal DTOWPM. lfhre flimsy safe being mere child's ay u» one of his peculiar flbili Asirhigwife said, "he'd. do it with ttllmlic t» taken IOI‘ ‘that? thrill from the gtur ed that after onte y the police they .y. B alone. Mrs. Montelli had could not nave ntcndent Clewthers, but even I he had it would make no difference. By luck itfbencflcient rays. The sound bul- iness issues need extra effort and judgment. JANUARY 22 to FIERUARY 2:) (Aquarius) -- Your planet, Uranus is in unfriendly aspect ln the s.m.. also in the pm. ‘These ocnfigura- tions warn against fiauntng the conventional or consorting with anyone or anything unwsrthy of God's Divine assistance and grace. Be true to the REAL YOU. FEBRUARY 2i to MARSH 20 (Pisces) - Neither particularly henefioent nor uruavmable. You m t stint by lvinz knowledce ganed from pas ewes-fences, by pausing to atu , receiving and ac- Iug courageous y. A CHILD BORN 0N THIS DAY Gay, enthusiastic, brilliant. But this enthusismi may nave ‘co mnriyoug: and dawns. ‘mach the child more even In temperament. ’I‘hou h e. brlfllt individual, w'll tend to lazy at times regarding studies. mo clan‘:- rt-tev sort-t luvs ABOUT NOTHING LIKE suutlcwr FOR SWIET-IM tune wast-test a s -TI-I ears a “gt-u, ROB, v vvVVvvvvvv.vw vv A0 FOR MY cotoasn rumos. Mltaawowu scucve may wsaewr "THAT'S BECAUSE THEY'RE suuucuv- WASHED" t rota area. ulna no harmful udu-ltennu. whiter, naturally brl hte smelling washes. Get uuu cnuttcultt. "alml we will linillt the [o6 ” In the cause of victory, metal must be caved for vital war purposes an no more of tlie pattern lllvcrvvnre heretofore available to uan of Sunlight Son rsonal '1. Fashions '1. Literatu ' ' Soap fl Ill ,. It gives naturally “ sweeter- h unl-Ight today: u! the ml: " d no, until victory in beautlful "Allure" p. will be made. p Jerry had not felt In a position to confess that he had the emeralds in possession, so all the circum- layed into the hands of l m . Consideredléiispassionutc; e ng man cou now see tha ill, wcttillgu have been advisable to have taken the detective into his confidence, trusting that the ex- planation would have satisfied that soe tlcal officer. in the flurry he had taken an opposite course, with the vague notion of restoring the valuables in such a way as to occasion as little trouble as possible to all concerned. “You ain't Hot nothing to kick at." Mrs. Monte l observed. “They weren't your sparklers." “That Isn't the olnt. Unwittingly I held them and twas my d y to ensure they didn't get back into the wrong hands." "Say, listen. they're as much Tony's as an 's." "How do yo-u make that out?" h Worked hard, too. Don't forget takes a lot of time and trouble bring off a stunt like that." As an inst ht Into criminal men- D‘ 5F‘ to ful. "I'm going to acquaint me p_qlice v1i_th the whole of the facts." You Can Acquire Curves on a High-Calorie Die: tality it was nteresting but unhe1o-'-l'° Sh)" -lts all PURE Soap he announced arrlmly "Oh yeahl" "Yes. and that's good plain Eng- lisl-i which I hope you ce-n under- stand. They may not believe ttte, out it will salve my conscience." "You got one of them th s? teaspoons combination n powder, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 I -- ~~»;~;-JTJLY 30, 1941 WW rel ( ( 1 F ntnuamuum.‘ I “F "EJ612730 CORNER FOUR-LAYER. c.4143 Two mm sifted cake bikllfti 3 cu; cup cup 1 lquarc butter or other shortening, 1 unbeaten; 3.4 illa, add grad; yell. flour. allcrlxllglgl amcuiz: a, a after each Rddlllbn Add vanilla. Com. butt slightly ienerous one into grased a-m _Add chocolate mi remaining batter, ‘gtlyr- t thoroughly blended; up}, greased 8-inch layer pan, in moderate oven (35 25 t0 30 min Slprend r frcsVng beilween layer and sides of cake, ltiye:s on dark lnlye RICH CHOCOLATE FROSTING Four tablespoons buttey cups sifted confectionery 5f e53. unbeaten; 1 (any (about), dash of salt, 2 unsweetened fillicOldtu. teaspoon ganglia, ream u‘ r: 211d . and beat well. Add e-glttltlltp tllgfff Add remaining mg _ ay)e..,,‘.,.,;!' with milk, beating well. Adkfldr," Clwf-‘f-‘lfltl’. and vanilla, until smooth, =_ he's here. the next he’ reading me when it stsiitlshlattrl: pose and collecting me when in wants to. Like a blame fool I e1 him. It's sure tough beinl: .1 dame" ' me If I'm wrung, 5K“ in love with your m“. gill tell! bhgd world." se re ax Natural nu lci aaainswerry faded aulnr nmlplttg“: Brod scout. she wanted to good deed. _ Iid on top ‘Iyll-lllflllglll‘; 115m’ 2 1-: 189i‘. 1 9W1 tllilk l—2 squares Sllfiltfill, 1 Dill" I118 Say. you got everything, alnt’ you?" ‘Except freedom from you folk. and, by heavens, I'm goi What's that?" | That was the bell, prelude to Elise Dallas, still in riding kit from an, early canter in the park. - Dear me." she 581d coolly, "what an ocd breakfast party. Am I Iri- trudlng?" “Only we ain't ate yet," Slim Annie exclaimed. "Your bo friend is no great shakes as a hos ." “Yet he appears to have provided you with his dressing gown. At least I take that to be the case. It doesnt fit very well." "I ain't arousing. Guess this looks screwy to you. but I can explain everytih " “Haven't 1 heard that phrase be forefdNever mind, thouah. I think wou “i I ii prefer to hear what Jerry has "It was Tony again." he said mla-l erably. "Passing himself off as me while we were at the reception. His wife was parked here when I got m .. e. "And you looked after her most hosoitctbly. I see!" "No you don't see. At least I don't think you do. because I can't under- stand’ it myself. It isn't what you're thinking." “Please refrain from vulgarity, "There you are. Because thls~this person stayed here overnight you're ready to expect the worst." Elise smi ed softly. "As a matter of fact you're far too ingenuotis,’ she rved. "Without knowing what it all means I absolve you from blame. For all that, I suggest Mrs. Montelli finds something more suit- able to weer in mixed company. n: to get that as well before I'm much older. 1x11 breakA ftil“tilltt°ltlvitnaiffi‘éé“lt ill} diest " ' it lilflllgd onipage iltolg: NOW under-am Cream Deodorant 14¢’! Stops Perspiralion 1. Does no: rotdrcsscs or men‘! shirts. Docs not irritate skin. 2- N0 waiting to dry Can be usecl xi ht after shaving. _ 3. Instant y stops PCISPIIJIIOII for 1 to 5 clays. Removes trdot from perspiration. l. A pure, white, grcasclcss stainless vanishing cream- 5- Arrid has been lwardedfhe ApprovulSenioftheAmetlrin Institute of Laundering f0! being harmless to fabrics. Anld is the muses‘: ssttmo DEODORANT. Try a jar foliaYl "I only ot evening dress. Tony said he’ ave my things tent round later " “How inconvenient! What time do you expect the luilcaae?" "Never, You folks gotter know I'm used to that_ ygllpi peril. One timi- tot: IIIIGEII tat cunt. atsw ALE ma» mum 50w 66cm 2520i: Mun Too-Thin Glrl at Disadvantage It's miserable to be thin when your friend's swim suit reveals such luscious. appealing curves! And most likely she eats like a bird while you pack away ions. "Tons of food" can fool you. though, for it's not how much you eat but WHAT that decides your weight. It's the difference between low-calory (stay-thin) and high- calrrry (get-plump) foods. Do you watch your calories care- fully? Or do you order cole slaw (50 calories) and ginger ale (06) when you might have egg nlad (282), and chocolate malted milk (700)? And fresh apricots (60 for three) ‘ ‘ " of stewed apricots (200 for three)? And plain-asparagus on toast (75) instead of creamed aspar- agus (250)? Those are the little culory mis- take: that keep you thlnl Go on a high-calory diet for a while. By adding a little more than L000 calories a day you can gain two pound! e week. And remember you won't have to "stuff." especially if you include foods with the cp- petite vitamin-Bl. You'll put on all the lovely weight you want! Our Sit-page booklet has 42 menus for gaining, n cslory chart, weight chart, vita- min guide. Slimming menus. ton. Bend 30c in coins for your copy of The New Way ‘lb A Youthful Figure to The Guardian Home Be :3‘: t0 Vista‘ plfifnly your time, less nu e a of booklet m Every girl wants to be sure the has the right clothes for each oc- casion. Here is a pretty frock that keeps her looking fresh and dainty. for those more important dress up times. Soft bodice fullness and al lnooth waistband top the ful.: flar- ing skirt. The pattern also includes evening length so that this popular style can be made of or organdie for moonlit Stimmer nig ts at the country club or for graduation. Style No. 3318 is designed for sius 11,3613. l5, l’! and i9 years; l9, 151W yards of ill-inch fabric for daytime length; 8 8-4 Yards of 89-inch for evening length Send Twenty (loci coin is pn- ferred, for Pattern. Write plainly your Name. Address and the at 1e number. Be sure to state the slre you wish. 81-910 N0. 83138189 ....----.u-» Name It-reet Mum- city Province ---.___._. LONG WALK SASKATOON — (OP) King of Saskatoon, Sask walk to the Oka and back-LOW ation. t“"‘.'3 an Vallepfél (3., lee-for 15 y”. I10 .__, _. ltrcet Aurel Oould proficient In nth- lolvl. . l RAISE RECORD BUM - (OP - Manitoba raised 565,400,450 in her recent Vic- tory Inan drivtihfiteat effort in luv --....‘s_.u _....~'t P7973“ Needlecraft- —~F'or The Home I r 0U ' 39¢ - l" Alllllflflllllll-l 1-3511?!» 33I3 slzzs ll-tl . M ‘e quote, was _. w}