ocascscsur-k. " -<JvPn|v.t;_¢v"\ . ._.. -..._..,~.- --._.. .....'._. ,_...,.._. .._.,,_,__,,_, _,lhencn wast nllnifl ‘mid r ~r~s PAGE TWO FOO-O-OQ-O-OO-O-QQ-Q-Om i I o“ w» o4 ao-oao-oooooooo-ooo-ooooooo» vw~¢v W man's Realm i-:- Social t. srmso GAME ronuf“ I know that Spring came today, I felt it in the west winds play. How is it that the Spring can collie So suddenly and sweetly to anyone? There were few signs ot it about; Home folks might shake their heads and doubt. But my heart sang a merry song, Because the Spring had come along. -Krxthi;\‘n NlllYIhlSOfl DIENDING HINTS An inekrserlenced housewife held up a. beautiful curtain, bewailing the fact that it was ruined—there Ila a fear in it and the tear, by careless ironing and starching had been worked into a. rather large hole. But a. visitor assured her that the curtain would be good for many moons if he would soak out the starch, press the curtain carefully, bringing the edges of the tear to- gether, and then clip an irregular piece of muslin Lke the curtain, in clear starch, lay it over the torn area. and press quickly. Something vf the same treatment can be given I. torn or soiled place on a papered wall. 'flear—-do not cut/Man irregular piece of the wallpaper (you always have a little left over from every DHPGFUIBJ making it. appreciably larger than the space to be covered then paste it over the spot, being careful to see that the. pattern mat- ches. Of course, we suppose that every housekeper knows about the wonders that can be accomplished with mending tissue, when silk of cloth needs repairing; and also, that in dflm-lng any materiabravellings of itself are the best. HERE ARE SOME HINTS . FOR. CAKE-MAKERS To be successful with home cake- malcing there are a few essential ‘points which must be remembered: The oven heat must be kept even —o. modrate heat is necessary for large cakes, while small cakes rc- quire a greater IIEEIIMTIIG tins should be carefully Efeased aha, u the mike is a large‘ rieh/ one, the tin __lhould be paporcd. Only the best inarcdietiis should be used and these should be care. fully measured and prepared. The fjruit should be cleaned in a little flour, as dampness will spoil the cake. Bfgill by .(‘.l'fZ\II!.IlI,’ the butter and sugar, and where there is no butter the eggs and sugar should be whisked together to a crown Large ricli cakes uid be Q1 a fairly still con. "to. _. to prevent the fruit fallirg. Small and plain 051K138 Med to be softer, otherwise they are too dry when baked. To test when ready. pierre the centre Girl to Woman VERY mother Izn ivslhosr aux- inus y rs when Iicr dnucliivr is lit-coming Kl \‘.'HII‘.'III. The wise mother gives her (lzu iiierDr. Picrce's I -rile Prescrip- lion. Read what Mrs. (l. F. Pence of 45 I . : I f- Cambrid {I0 Sh. Onii, says “When l w-n n. ri'| Iiinl. imo \ m. lnhood, I \\ iu r. nervous, run- down and wr . - ~. (Inn um l used Dr. Pizi-cch w I ion upon iny mother's n-h 'I| ‘It me up. itrenxlhcnui my s . _, ... ..~.-.-.\y that IRYVOI-lfl. Iircd romii |\ III l developed without any inhrc illiiiidi‘ " Write lo Dr. Pl-rrv-‘n Clinic. Buffalo, ~ I. Y», for lrca medical ndvleo. MORTGAGE SALE Tn In- snlil Ivy v-uillii- front of III!‘ I/iw 1'. land Minnie’ Ming nu Township .\unih L‘ F>\l.'I_\' in Hum-us Couniy nfurus-nid hi-uudml iind dos- cribcd no foiiowsg Hull. Isl In s:|_v, Commencing u: n shik- fixr-rl at the IOIJHNIIM! ankle of I-ind un-nud Iiy John .\lcI'I|(:rnnn fui-nu-rlv lmneull McLean nmi In lhn firth side oi‘ tho. flilultlnnd Road. then»: IIIITUI uiuug the eastern boundary Iliu- of John McPheroionfl-s Inml In Ill" division line between Townships Numbers Filly- eight and Sixty, HIPIIIW‘ rust iilont! Irlld divlslrnu line fur the distance of ' ll! chains and sixLv-six links, thence lfllllh by a lino [IZIYIIIIFI to John .\iv- I PherqoNs east Imiunl:|ry line tn the Illiltlnnd linud ufnrellnid, thorn-u west along mild Rond tn tho pliiu: of rom- mencemenh rcsirrvlut: lIu-rrnul and therefrom tho IIWPIIIHI! house and fur-don Mitcihor with tlirco INTI‘! of and, leaving nnd containing forty- l-vo norm- nf‘ Iillill n IIlIle IIIOII‘ or (lull, tokethor with n right of niiy on tho north Hide of flu; .\IIII IH-ml. ALSO nIl that purl-cl of laud Iilunle on lmt or Uhnvnwhip Number Hlxly In Queen: lfuunly hounded nml des- ' grilled l! follows: I>y a Ilnn- BUIIIIIIHIIIJ- lng nt n nrnke set in tho north aide l! the binliinnil Rond nud in the .. Southwest nnglo nf Inud in the 110l- _ union of John Ilcimmiid and runn- ing thence (by (he mngmtic men-ulna of um. your 11m) NONI! to the llivln- ton line Iietwvvn Mid Townshll- am! Township Nuunu-r i-‘ifty-ungld, dlrls-Iuu lim- II: chains nuvl nlri; six link»: or m .hlld In IIOSNIINIOII of John .\ft-i.r<:u|, [hence south to (he ltuml nfurr-unld nd thence us: along the some to a plus of commencement contain- B-con; 11-122 READER ~%Y-_I with c. worm skewer and it should 003W out PITY rooncioonosi THEY ARE n LUXURY no MORE IN DEMAND The bottom has dropped 011* °I the gigolo market in Paris. where until iecently the escort dance!‘ prospered Well in this 93mm“ ‘or Ixiied and ederly women. Like the demand. for other lux- uries, that for glgolos has almost vanished. Approximately 300 Selim?‘ men of this postwar vocation, who consider their labor has the dignity of a, profession, are finding it dif- nculttodayiokieepacmasolnfllfi any of the expensive midnight cab- arets or hotel tea. dances in the Opera. and, chums Elysee: quarterfi- and find a rich client after toying for half an hour with a cup of coffee. In those days a tip of 10o francs (about $4.50) for piloting an obsess dowagcr over the floor for one foxtrot was small pickings. A thousand francs (about $45,) skilfully obtained from half a. dozen women in the course of an evening, them repreented an average evening for a. good gigolo. ' Now all is changed. Though these gentry do not appear in French un- employment statistics, theyare cer- tainly on their frayed uppers. Most of their formerly profitable haunts no longer have elderly women clients. In the last few cafes where the unescorted, middle-aged are still susceptible, the gigolo tariff is very low. A. few weeks ago matters reach- cd the humiliating stage where a. few gigolos accepted 10 francs (45 cents) for a dance. When the news reached the delicate ears o! the few remaining solvent “esoorts-for-hire" an attempt was made to have these price-cutters boned from the choic- est hunting grounds, complaints being lodged with managers and other hotel officials who used to Irecelve shares from the gigolos‘ ‘ profits. Now even the complaining equis- itcs are cumming to regard 10 francs a. dance as manna in a cabaret ‘ wilderness. i Though gigolos may suffer. the EParis police will be glad w sec this ‘profession disappear, as, for ten wears past, they have constantly lbeen called upon to solve the mys- itefies or the disappearanoes of wo- lnieirs jewels and cash during an evening with an unidentified gig- olo. STAINS AND MARMALADE ~ Water in which potatoes have been cooked is excellent for remov- ing tea. or coffee stains from linen Quick boiling is essential for suc- cesslul marmalade or Jam making. Never allmv the fruit to simmer. Keep It on a quick boil all the time. This ensures a good set when the preserve is potted. DIES ON VOYAGE IIOME LONDON, May 20—-MrS. Emma Pickles, aged '16, who left Australia for England in the Orient liner Or- monde, as she wanted i0 see Eng- land again, died during the voyage » and was buried at sea. lug fufLV-FIIJIII. nr-rrs of Innd a little- inure or less ngreenhly in the plnn of the nine in the nuirein of tho con- v'-3 o from the (Junnuisiilnner of Puldu. Lands lo Jnnies Aivficiin dul- cd lilh (lrluher, 151%‘. ALSO illl ilmi other friirt nn ‘Town- ship Number Fixly aforesaid hound- r-Il illlll III‘.\'I'Y'IIIFII M foIIIHVF. that is hi any luiiniul-uuivig m. u siiiku. In the Ilrvflll side of ihr MIIIIIIIIHI liond nnd iu Hl1~ m-ulh east angli- of llm‘ unr- [hfufu pnrilnn nl‘ Inml formerly enn- vvy-cd tn John Xii-‘hlunou und running (hence. nnrlli along tho nnid houndnry line of snid Inmi to iIm division lino hrdivucu TIHVIIFIIHI! lidfiyelght and Svxli‘. lllvuvn MIMI, nlonir said division lino (on chains or to the west houn- dziry of land now or fIvFIIIPIII‘ fllrfiFfFfilull of Ilunriivi lvlvhenn, fluent-e along raid lint- aouth to the Iiond ' and‘ flu-nee nest [on oIinIus Id liolid to fIio “Inn-u of‘ coin- nn urea n! am nLv-lwo ncres n little more or .~<_ ext-owing fhorrnut rim-eighth nl-re Kraut-vi to IIu- ‘Prusiors of Svliunl IfsirI-zt No. 1'.'II on 1st IIMPFIII- imi- limo, nnd ivglslered i-‘cIii-unry 4th, Iilm. Tim nlmvn Iain in made under and I-y viriun u! n power of anlo contained In nu :- datwl liivii day |)1'I\\'l‘l'|l l-‘nvv-n ‘Fuwiishlp fir) In I'll-II‘.- n‘ Imwflel. ruunty, In IZ-ln-urd Island, I-‘nruior and imunluni Queen's Aliirgiirct l\ivl\'innun his wlfu, of the first ]\ r_ nnd (fniherino Mflmml u! .\lnni:|gu» In Ktnifs (Iounty In mild lidnn||_ Single Wolnnu, (since deer-lis- rd) of IIu- second Dart, default Inn-In: lie n mud". In puynu-nt of the moneys scoured I-y lIu- mid lunrlgngr. For, pnrlieulurs nliply tn Ali-Lend and Ilovith-y, SuIu-'tura_ (‘ImrIolh-loun. Ilaliell Hr! lilIi ill,‘ IIIZ \\'|l. .\I lulu ‘Catherine BICL-vnl. GARDENING THE OLD -TIME GARDEN There were hollyhocks and asters, Tiger lilies, dahllas, phlox, Geraniums and nasturiiums, 'I'ul‘ps, mignonette and box, Lilies, wallflowers, modest violets, Lady's slippers, marigold, Sweet William and verbena, In the garden plots of old. 'I‘here were lily-of-the-valley, Heiiotrope and adders tongue; White and crimson blushing roses, That about the trellis clung; Oandytuft, bright nodding poppies, Sweet alyssiun, rosemary, With herbs from Grandma's garden In the land across the sea. trousers. 511°“ 5mm” and M" There were sailors‘ buttons, snow- trimmed. balls, Only last autumn the more per- Blesding-heart and passion flow» suasive gigolo: could saunter into ers; Foxglove, lavender and sweet peas, And gay scarlet runner bowers, Pennies, petunlas, i With rare plants coasts And Jessamine and columbine On the old veranda posts. -—Katherine A. Clarke. from distant PLANT FOR SUN AND SHADE An experienced gardener plants his sweet corn and pole beans st the north and west side of his garden as a. matter of course. He does it by instinct after years of gardening because he knows that if planted at. the south or cast end of the garden they will cut off val- uable sunlight from the vegetables near them. This is point to be kept in mind in laying out plan for the vegeta- ble garden. The lower growing ve- getables should have full exposure to the south and east, placing the tall growing subjects, such as com, pole beans and tomatoes trained to single stems on stakes where they will interfere least with the supply of sunshine. Most gardeners will plan to run their rows of tomatoes north and south if the location of the garden at all pernfts it irrorder to get the most even distribution of sunshine to ripen the fruit evenlyand ra- pidly. i North and south rows are best for all vegetables because of this advantage, but in s. garden of small proportions it. is not so im- portant as in the larger gardens and need not be taken into account in laying cut. the plantings. A gar- den which is partly overhung by large trees will need an extra sup- ply of fertilizer in the neighbor- hood of the tree, as the roots have practically the same extent in the ground that the top has in the air, and they will compete for the food in the soil with the plants. Plant the earliest crops nearest to the kitchen door, so that there will need be as little as possible tramping over the cultivated soil when spring rains make the going muddy. The radislies, young onions ‘and lettuce should be the closest to solid ground. Plan this year to utilize the fen- ces nbout the garden for cucumbers small squashes, polo beans or for treliises for tomatoes. The fence will furnish much additional gar- den room properly handled and furnishes a ready made trellis. cu- cumbers, although grown on the ground as a rule, are climbers by nature and are always so grown in xkmkhmhxkk xx 4 rue cHARLoTTitTowN GUARIEAN ‘AA -------'.---.i AAAAAAAAAAAAA4lgAéAv ;-_~;;¢¢¢“‘¢¢;¢;,-“~ vvvvv vvvvv v vvvvv- v v vy-wwv and Personal -:- Fashions ‘... g4w§44¢ag44g+g4444§¢oyoa+oo+oooo+oooy c+o++o4+>+¢¢§+¢¢q goo¢o+o++¢v¢“¢‘¢‘¢ Smoother! Pompcian Beauty Powder in the glorious result of 3O ‘ years of research and experi- ments with ll2living models. This powder is smoother, it looks natural . o - and it nay: an. Pompcian is pre- ferred by beautiful women in 54 countries. It is the powder you have always wanted. One of the five harmonious shades will exactly suit your com- plexion . . . and agree with your skin. The NEW I (f BEAUTY POWDER PARIS TORONTO NEW YORK LONDON Sales agents: Harold I’. Ritchie k Co. Ltd. 1 0-1 B McCsuI SL, Toronto H! THE cook's CORNER l} CORN-CELERY SOUP 1 can celery soup l f _ i‘ Wm‘ h ' : ofiimifi... 0 h 0 - ; and”; y lx i PEN!!!“ l Enemy‘! i c"‘°"" There is no Other Handicap s0 Terrible to a "Child as the Unintelligent Fond Parent Who Allows it to Grow up Undiscip- lined, Over-Indulged and Know- ing no Law But its Own Will It is strange but true that, u a general thing, the more people 1°" their children the crueler they are to them, and that o. child can have no other such deadly enemy as an,‘ overly devoted mother. . If you will look about you at the men and ' women who have made failures of their lives, you will see that nine times out of ten the blame foi- it is to be laid at their fathers’ and mothers’ door. They were good material ruined in the making. Spoiled brats who never got. over their rearing. Nature started. them out with good bodies and good brains and thero was no reason _why they should not have been successes except that their parents unfitfed them for life. They weakened their ,oungsters by pampering them with every indulgence. They made them arrogant and over- , bearing by letting them run their little universe while still In the cradle. They never denied them a single wish nor made them feel that they had a. duty or responsibility to any other human being. They never even taught them to stand on their own feet. They brought them up to believe that they were going to live in I. sort of Fairy land 1n which everything would bu soft-padded for them; where they would always have plenty of money and never have to work or do anything they didn't want to, and. where they would be kings and queens and everybody would kowtow before them and remove every un- pleasizntness out of their paths. And when they came to grips with a. hard-boiled world in which the battle goes to the strong and the victory to the hard fighter, tho weaklings were simply trampled under foot and the egotists were crushed along with their pride. Their parents had not only not taught them to play the game. They had unfitted them so that they could never learn to play 1t. This may seem a hard indictment of parents, but I never see any little undisclpléd child being brought up to know no law but its own will, permitted to do as it pleases, overindulged, that I do not think that its parents are doing it a greater wrong than malice itself could invent. We dissolve in a perfect mush of pity over the poor parents whose children tum out badly. Isn't it Just terrible, we saygabout John A. haying killed a. man in some altercation, or about Tom B. turning out to be n. di-unkard or about Ben O. Just never being able to make s living and his poor old mother and father having to support him? And we can't understand It because the A's and B.‘s and 03s are such fine people, and they were such perfectly devoted parents and just made every sacrifice for their children. And John and Tom and Ben were such 1 cup milk 2 cups boiling water 1 ‘IUD com, canned or cut from cob 1 small onion 1 medium potato 2 tablespoons butter Salt and pepper Parsley Slice onion and fry brown in but- ter. Take out onion with o. fork and put. in the potato, boiled and sliced, also corn. Cover with hot water and simmer 25 minutes. _ ' Heat milk to scald in double boil- er, add celery soup and the corn and potatoes; Stir well and season to taste, then cook for ten minutes. Sprinkle each portion with mincel parsley. OXTAIL WITH VEGETABLES 1 Oxtail 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup diced carrots 2 cups diced potatoes 2 tablespoons fat 1 pint meat. stuck 1 teaspoon salt 1 pint tomatoes 1 bay leaf is teaspoon Definer 1 cup sliced onions 2 cloves Separate the oxtaii into pieces about 2 inches long. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Put fat in frying pan and brown oxtail in it slowly. Dredge with flour and cook 5 min- utes longer. ' Add meat stock, vegetables and seasonings. Cover, and cook In mo- dcrate oven 1%’.- hours. Add potatoes and cook 5'6. of an hour longer. Arrange meat and vegetables on n platter. Thickcn gravy and serve greenhouses for the winter trade. woman yBest Girl By KATHLEEN MORRIS mwwooocwoonoeoooocow But just of late, ever since, in fact, that terrible scene when his mother had called him o. "common- er, without one single gentlcmanly instinct in his mind or soul," and when he, lils father, had shouted at Joe that he was no better than s. plekpocket, there had seemed to be a queer change 1n the boy. "Tired, Joe?" "I beg pardon?" "Say you look tired, iny boy. Rie- scarch—-" said George Merrill, will a wink for his general manager. "Nope. Yes, I am a little tired. Not much," Joe said unsatisfactor- ily, falling upon his soup. . Then Joe said mildly, in a pause: "You say that It's the ruined stock that costs in the Mack Stores-mot the labour. I've thought of that. It seems to me that every day enough collars and writing paper and candy and toys and socks foil on the floor and are trampled to set up a separ- ate bronchi" "wnei-ad you get. this, Joe?" uk- with it. Temp. asor‘. splendid little boys, so Iiandsomo and sturdy and smart. Who could over have thought that they would have developed into s. murderer or a drunk- en sot or a. loafer. ' . All the parents‘ fault: John was never taught to control his temper. Mother didn't even call it temper. She called it high spirits’ and encour- aged it by giving in to his rages rather than go through a. scene with him. And so when he was grown, 1n a. moment of passion he killed. Tom was never taught to curb his appetite or deny himself any indulgence and he grew up with no strength to fight any temptation that assailed him. Ben was never held to any task or made to finish anything when he wearied of doing it and so_he grew up into one of the temperamental men who are only interested in any job while it is a novelty, and who throw up their hands and quit when it gets to be the steady grind of monotonous work. And we are so shocked and surprised when we hear that sally is get- ting a. divorce from her husband and has come back hon?! with her four children to live on her poor old father and mother who have a scant liv- ing for themselves. Too bad, we say, and we recall how they inched and pinched to buy her pretty clothes and send her through collegeand give her a debut party and a. sports car and all of the luxuries that rich girls have. Her parents denied themselves everything for her and now we did hope that they would be able to have o few luxuries for themselves in thir old age and take things a. little easier, but with Sally coming back on them and those children they will be worse of"! than ever. And we can't understand how it happened that Sally's marriage turn- ed out a failure because she married such a. fine, moral, upright young man and he was so much in love with her. It seemed Just one of tho matches made in heaven. But the explanation is simple enough. Mother and {other unfitted Sally for marriage by the way they brought her up. From the day of her birth the whole household had revelovcd about her. She had been given the best of everything. She had been taught never to consider anybody but herself. She had been made utterly selfish and self-centered. And when she found out that marriage is a givc-and-take proposition; when she discovered that she would have to pull her weight in the boat: that she wouldhave to sacrifice her own inclinations; that she would have to work to do; that her husband was not the slave to her that her parents had been and that marriage was a job at hard labor instead of a. picnic, why, she Just threw up her hands and quit" cold. She couldn't stand the gaff. John and Tom and Ben might have been honored, successful men. Sally might have been a. happy woman, with a. good husband and home and her children growing up in. the right atmosphere. But. they are all failures, as thousands like lhem are, because their parents wrecked their lives for them at he very beginning by spoiling them to death. DOROTHY DIX. I went into-Number Seven, I think it is," said Joe. ' “On Eighth?" "About there." “That's Number Seven. Good for you! 1 hope you got service," said Flint. “They have a great staff there," said Joe. "That's a good store. That's a good store." Flint agreed. "What occurred to me," Joe said leisurely, “was that you-we, I might say-could linndle all that small stuff very much better with an automat. "That's an idea, Joe, but unfortu- nately it's not practical," his father said genlally, comfotably. Then his eye and the eye of his general manager met. "Why isn't it. practical, Frank? It works all right on the food-they're opening those damn nIckcI-in-thc- slot places all over town." George Merrill said. “They're practical." “We-eIl—-—" Frank Flint Iicsltat. ed. Joe broke in: "Take the whole back wail of a store and handle the five-and the ten-cent stuff there. Let ‘cm drop pennies for their spools and soap and ink and pencils and can open- era and hairpins. You could have n "I'm not at all sure, Joe," said his "I'd like to we that dam show father explosively, "I'm not at all again," Joe said. sure that you haven't izivcn us an Fiften minutes later, they left the idea." house together. It was the first time "I could look into than ML Mer- Joe Merrill had gone to the theatre rill," Flint said. “It mlghli—cgtclj with his father since the day of his on, Mr. Merrill. It would be an ex- fourteenth birthday treat. elusive Mack feature, you know." "I 1185504 B10118 $11M W18 0! WW3. "Frank, the more I think of that, about having an automat for the the more I suspect thotfimgg-yk notions, to one of the heads," Joe somethinlp-in-it," George Merrill, told Maggie. "I took the credit for di-awiing his words portencomly, it, tool" "what made me feel rotten said slowly. "when could you sec was that I didn't say that you had Burke?" thought of it first." "See him to-morrow." "Oh, well, we sort of worked it out “Take that up with him, will you, together, that day we were at the Frank? Find out who makes that outomat," she said, anxious to re- maclilnei-y. .We might as well look assure him. into it, anyway." Joe wanted to keep that look In his father's eyes. that proud, vin- dicated lookthot said: “This boy of mine isn't-—such—a-dorn—iool, af- ter ‘all?’ An hour later, hc was reading In his room when his father came, (Continued on page 0) NOHCE his fothor, in girl than to chum their, rather shyly, rather awkwardly in. The boy had taken tho trouble to come upstairs, Joe reflected, grati- fied. _ "Joe, seen that girl who sings that ‘Mousc-trap‘ thing, in the Revue?" "Yes. sir. Saw it opening night." "I've got two seats." George Mer- rill displayed them deprecatingly. "I ylllflllllwhhliintflhclofd, Tho Annual Meeting of Char- lottetown Forum Ltd. will be hold Wednesday, Mny 24th at B pm. In Board of Trade Rooms, Charlotte- town. ll. S. HENDERSON, Secretary. NOTE-May 24th being a up! holiday the ecting will take place May 25th at tho some hour. ooiz-a-io-ai _ A AAAAY all-electric kitchen which will for correct illumination, and the kitchen of your dreams. getting an All-Electric Kitchen You, too, can achieve such a kitchen. Experts will help you with suggestions for the arrangement of your equipmmt; ' MAY 22. 1933 vvw-vfi Literature AAQAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA‘AAA v v vvvvvvvv v v vwv I‘ . I m; buying m electric refrigerator ma. spring. Nat I'm going to buy an electric range. Step by step Pm getting an be a dream of convenience.‘ for labor-saving appllanom to fit your needs. 'I'hcn, with a definite goal ahead of you, you can add units, as your budget permits, to complete Anykitdmlunlbolndauohauubngnldouwullaungflfla-ovn cl rmolloostlnlussfiggzsfcplanforyouwiihoutobligcflno. Phone. orcall azourqfiioooi-SEE YQUR ELECTRIC DEALER MARITIME ELECTRIC 00., Limited . Charlottetown, E. I. AMorningSmile I The caddies were overheard dIs-' cussing the quartotte for which they l had Just officiated. Two were non-g committal. One was lyrical. “A naval commandant 'e was. Ono of the blinkin’ bulldog breed. Wot sort of chap did you 'ave Bill?" PO00," said Bill, with colossal contempt, "I ‘ad a proper Cissy. Why, blimey, '0 never even swore till the seven- teent ." "Mother's out with a hunch of prize fighters," little Mary explained n! Amman.“ which are most slimming. ‘rho pointed hip yoke is a particularly helpful feature. One of tho joys ofthe new season are the attractive striped materials. And how snappy they are. Today's model-an exceptionally Individual affair is brown and white, Style No. 735 is designed for aim 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 4o, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. In ‘the miniature back view you'll notice another typo of sleeve, espe- cially nice if you are using cotton OI‘ washing silk for summer wear. Size 36 requires 3'56 yards 39-inch. Price of Pattern Is 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. nivu-ououooolool-Iollolvcoln City State. If you wish a beautiful sheet of transfer embroidery containing over 80 designs, send 1i! cents additional for pattern No. 2850. Government‘ and privilege steel plants in Japan may he merged soon, l It fails so gracefully In fluid lines . so modlsh. It has self-trim. 1 u; to the minister who had come a call. “What 1n the world do you mean?" the preacher inquired. "She's gone to a. bridge party,‘ the bright child explained. No Sleep, No Rest, Stomach Gas Is Cause Mrs. A. Cloud says: “For years I had a. bad stomach and kas. Wat nervous and could not sleep. Ad< lerika. rid me of all. stomach troubll and now I sleep fins.’ Hughes Dru! 00., Ltd. Advance spring fashion: W91! broadcast by television from In don recently. l - 44 m». .Daintiness With o... so... ILLUSTRATED DBESSMAKING LESSON FURNISHED WITH EVERY PATIIIN WOBTIIINGIUN