l PAG F. TWO l v~‘ ‘¢vv¢¢“‘_;_ j vvvwvvv - A A - - I - AA L l YvYvVvvwvvWvvvYYVYv1v1117711771771vvwwvvvvvwvv: - ALLA ‘AA A gg‘ v vYvv v v , ,, BY ROBERT “Daughter Of Yenus” TERRY SHANNON CHAYIER XXX know iii .< .1 ip. t to Wilkt‘ you.’ lit .~,i;ti Kittie ‘n: ' ' -. i ‘vevsk bciore i L . - '. lid .1.» turd package 1'-1 -11~i.». He flew to rd buck iii u day . . ted from sheep's ‘v ' \\ i.ii ii tentative coli- . lllHlU of tile Avocado I ilioli. . recently; had become ‘HP West ns st base for r 11.14118 to iitBl) pure WWW-LY." he assured ' cveijvlliiiig it) n19," l k<p: stretching and, l not eqiiul his ‘ “ain't , for storing facts . ‘Jilieii ho iiiid crziniiul-d ' lie slmlrt- eighteen ii. sLlIiSKIFIHII reducing 1W1 Yu charts mid tnbl wk off iii nu airplane . Willi brief raises _bu1g-. is so till; we mity cs~ -i .. ' r1106 sill over Elirope," h" 3 '51‘- IWr nt vile ii-irjxm, 1 comnrii-ncl of the :- tzmvii Janet's en- every‘ llVDL . =ntmtliy' imglied‘ h3g1 "' T1‘.\' Iluffll-‘t flitvt 113d to t-(l-ilwlc that so man-y > could c: ch influenza, rimr» that ‘J-lii ii hii- Q\'(‘}1;]\g “q-dp dunciiig slippers gathered dust and i.l\.i-\.'OlUl'§(l gown. Also ' ware that Katie ‘ily liefiirti drum ii~iit ilii- evening t‘\\l.\ll\:l(JXl wits g Qlllvfgfid 2t vivid orange. » mmd went on u but. for three days and my, couldn't be HM . told lier ' ' l~> sxsy home much . 111""; Juliet by ' ' now he was ton-l r114 by the lull. Jul-l "Ii ' klreani?" Hei- eyes widened and there was ~11. little aching sensation in _l'i£‘r , temples, for Juliet wits continu- iously restless and short on sleep lnuticcd she ute less than usuul. . and Janitors do the wrong thing licitr you conic in last when they were paid to do the Fight thing. hleanvtiiiile Julittis row of little tarnish in their newt rack. The third assistant bookkeeper abswnded with two hundred iiiid forty-live dolliirs; the fatty ctili of i it li.iuglity' iiiiitroii was bitten by ti Pekinese in the steam room; a jbieiichcd licutl being died auburn O'Hara round. The money lwurcd ui uilti the money poured out. 41S McSpiit i1» wife crcutctl a _ stciit- u l:--r spouse in the base. M111 (jucrdoii begun sciiilziig Jlillvl. 0l'1‘lli(lS duiiy. ('41 Hit.‘ tit-i; liis tyre. "Sick rigour!" "No. Just worthless, 1 gut-gs, Sci-in.» 1o be iii the blood. Sorry,I let you dot" siiid Jtilivt. "You it‘. _vi.iii'.~. 1i. tioivii." It wits L’llil)l\ll".i> i:g Ygrowii llldll gulp g . ' ~ - _ ' "1111 a dog, JiiLtt." lic suid unne- I ' it ll siwiigei~ cliurue~ te b..tini-tl iiiiu ._t, Lli-rc \\'l'.l1 iiitit. ,HllSI3i'Ll.l.)lt: look on his iuce lie did lsoiiieiiiiiig to lit-r lit-lira. she could ‘have Rlxsetl iniii, caressed him, and though; nothing‘ of it. This kind oi d1. icd teiitlu" " wus not u’. ‘till tips. olillg. | "Youll be till ,.siiid brightly. right, Pal," she‘ "Everybociys iooti slips sometimes. I'd go oii a binge , myself if I dared." "But you deli‘: understinid—" ' conic ' ‘I'll scrctiiii,’ ' that liziirsliirt oil lll‘i(l go buck to your omi office." "I thought I'd be washed up when I got buck. Seve iiie riuln if you liutl fired inc.‘ , "Forget, it. Iiii wtirrieti about Gottiieb, not, you. Ho lldS been deadlocked with those New York- ers for two weeks. His lust letters weren't too optiiiistic. You don't tthink the dent could possibly fall through, do you?‘ O'Hairu got his iiiiiid off himself. "Not o. t'lllili\.'\', Juliet. ‘Those birds tire tough, but Goitlieb will oome away with their tuil feathers." Juliet. was getting so she could not thin-k about the deui without shivering. Oiie huiitirtd thousand idUllkLl}, licr sliitre, uluiost. niiide her dizzy. , "IV-s not the money I worry wbout," she told O'Hara. “It's me ides. that, we may buugle it after till. I'm ufriiid oi losing something l haven't, got. Dot-s it ever sci-iii to you thut this whole thing is Just ii d-hese days. Under pressiu-e, she whole place has always ‘been like o. nightmare to me," Oiiilirii said morosely- “I'd like W be married to you and live on an Iowa. term. Or doing huln dances ‘in the South Seas. But don't worry i»-1'ii'i not 1111190511115. I'm going down to my office iind plunge up to my neck in work." Such ivus his siiiceie intention, inn, nn tippiiriiiou prevented him. An eerie iiiid unetirihly Madame Hubcit cpeiictl the door and \\".i.lk- vd into Jiilicrs office. But it was iiot lll(: Mtitiiimc Hu- bt-rt they knew: It was someone else. u. parody, it stranger, zni opti- cztl illusion . . . An actuiil ghost could huvc been no more stiirtliiig to Jlllifil- 11nd O'Hara. "Good Lotti!" he gasped. "What have you done to yourself, Mad- zinic?" Juliet got up from her desk but did iiot tipproucli the bewildering spectacle. "Why, Madame, you look - you look—_" Something miraculous had hap- pened to hltidzime Hubertis face. It was no longer brown and withered, liii’. litid a smooth mid ivzixy texture like painted itrtlficial fruit. The folds and hollows and crenses and wrinkles had disappeared. Around the eyes the skin had a. tight, drawn-back look; a small and perfect nose stood where the hnwl-fs beak had been, The scrawny throat was now n. slender column of alabaster arising On llit‘ .' nag i oi the brilliant 21111-11‘ l "l J. t;iii-coloi‘-' Jt. fur 1iti.i uiitl begun 5. lo lJllllLl it house with at into her office t "Don't worry: y-otirseli about. inc," u" VVYVV ‘AAA Q “‘ Vvwvvvvv “~4 e _. Ivv rim CHARLOTTMUWN GUARDIAN vhf... ».... vv A LL IA '- '\ vvvvvVYVYv vvvv wwwwvwwv i. .'W0mdn’s Realm .i:-" Social and Personali-aF s His Excclientgv, Lord Thvccdsmuir, governor-general of Calnnda, is shown on the step; iii‘ the jiziriiiiziicni Luiitlincs tit Viciorizi, B.C., as he took the general salute on his first \'i~i‘, lo the ezipiftti ciffv On the gover. ' nor-generals left is (‘tintiiiuntler C. T. 150.111], l(.('.\‘., senior naval officer at Esquiinall. naval barracks. Licut. stands on the right. Lady Tw iroin u yllliltlr . . iiiugcntii. Aii u " l.it l ' rakislily upon lltlil‘ as \\i\\'L‘Ll ziiid plstinuiucti as Kittie Schmidt's. Julictls cy s flew to the hands. They were tziill like cliiws. but smooth and whitc mid gl. .. . icr- niiiiatiiig in i'uby"-l:icqtierc<l iitnls. l Very slowly Mcitlzune l-Iiibt-rt rc- volvcd before their eyes like ri mun- nequin exhibiting u gown, and they saw her back was iriilitzny straight as though shc were held lrzut by iii- Visible stecl wires. l "Now you witness inc us I rctilly zlm, my dent's." she sitid in u voice that plastic surgery had not been able to improve. “The butterfly is‘ out of the clnys. lis." Juliet struggled to find something l in say. “It's-it's like being born znievigl isrfit it?" _ The Mtidameb cruelly rougcd lips g-rimaced. "It's better than that,” she crooked. "It's like rising frnni the l tomb." , "Good Lord," blurted O'Hara,‘ "it's ghastly!" She pivoted swiftly towards liim on her high jeweled heels. _ "Pardon!" "I mean it's uncanny,” uiuttcrcrl O'Hara. "I've never scen tniytliiin, like it in my life." It was impossible to tell whether Matinme Hubert flushed under tlii enamel of her fact‘, but her cyan blazed and the marcellcci head llcw erect. "ltiizst you say such hcrrilili" things! I've the right to mzilte the Intist of myself. Bounty is woman's birthright and I decided to calm it. Am I to be met with snot-rs?" "The change is so sensational!" cried Juliet. “You're perfectly uiiirvcloiis.“ "Bill. of course I am!" slim, liflCk the Madame, "I w velous, but I neglected myself for the business. It made other women fccl beautiful just to look zit me) That was my success secret. Butt such‘ days have passed." y “Of course they have." staid Ju-i liftt. moved by the strangest pity‘ tlint ever disturbed her heart. "How old would you say I ap- pear?" Juliet considered her ully. 2 J 1 thought- ' "A very young thirty-tit the out- side." Madame Hubert _ O'Hara. "And you?" A trace of his old, grin crime bu]; to O'Harn's lips. "You've goi- me so groggy. Nizid- ainc, I could hardly siiy. About thirty I guess. But you can't CXpNEI ' to dawn on people like this all of ll 1 sudden and not bowl them over. ' You're certainly gorgeous flll rlghtl ---n regular knock-out." - His words. carelessly spoken. I fell like gentle rnin on her thirsty soul. She went to him and gTHSDCKl the lapel of his coat. turned to ill‘. i l v Q J \ ‘¢vv'¢vvv€v‘ vv vv Vvvvvvvvv l. ‘ AA Vvv Vvvvvvv vvvvvvw VV_Y‘H'H."_.‘:;;_€=vvw¢-¢¢;V:¢##%¢=:- w _ — A As Tweedsmuir Received at Victoria (Dis... out Letter Box , The Girl Who Can Add to a Man’s Self-Enter- tainment is the Girl Who Will be _Most = Popular — And Here is Some Advice on How to do the Trick Dear Miss DiX-—What must it girl have to attract the rishl- 5°11’, 0i men? Does she have to smoke and drink mid be it wild woman? I a; almost 23 and have never had a real boy friend. I itm4111°111lPd 1° moody and have an inferiority 001111116X "5 times. Most of the boys I meet bore me to gems, yet. my girl friends think H1850 Sfllflfi boys wonderful. Somehow, I can't mike myself gusii over a boy who doesn't Intel's“ me in the least just so he will take me out somewhere. There is nothnig in the “T1111! that Iidesire more titan a home and l1 11106 husband, but I realize I may never have out? unless iily attitude toward the strousfir SEX changes, LONELY GIRL. Answer: » _ _' There is no specific line of feminine qualities or attractions that are a, sure-lire hit with iuen because men differ in 111011‘ tastes in girls just as they do in then~ taste r ' in food and clothes. There are men who more}. me domestic gm Just, 3,5 more are men who always 0mg,- iotfist bccf and mashed potatoes for dinner, and there are other men who prc er more sophisticated girls and uihose fancy runs to cMilu. ‘ _ Generally speaking, of course, the charms that ii girl needs to conllllfi with are a pretty face, smart clothes, D. lflllgh lllflt 15 1111M; 911 1J- mm‘ trigger, dancing feet and the ability and willingness to toil like avcoal- heiivcr to keep a min entertained and amused. Few men are altruistic enough to bake a girl out for the sivke of giving her a good time. It is their own good times they are thinking of inicl unless she can add to the pleasure of the occasion by her looks and her society she gets left 11b home. As I have said, there are inuuy men of many minds and. each has a different mind about women. But one taste all men have in common and that is, they do not like morbid, self-centered, literlmose women, Men want woinenio be gay and light-hearted. They want them to wear the smile that won't come off. They like to tell their troubles to women and have ‘WOIIIBH sympathize with them. But ivoe betide the women who tries to tell her troubles to a mun. She has seen the last 0f him. And as for the wcepcr, men avoid her as they would the plague. So, if you are Gloomy Gussie, you need seek no further in your inquiry as to why you are unpopular with the boys. Your morbitlness is the T885011. Another reason why you are not popular with the boys is because you are not working-hard enough at your job of trying to please them. You arc not really putting your heart into it. The miiiii attraction for men that any woman has is her will to attract, and you lizwent that. You don't suffer fools gladly. You don't wear a thrilled expression tvlicn lis- tening to bores as if an oracle were speaking. You don't make every (i. Rivers-Smith, aldc-de-camp, uir is behind His “Oh, absolutely," he assured her‘ [§('ll(‘l'tllisl_\'. "Myheart; is smashed‘ lo switlierceiis tilrczidy" and heaven wlitit you will do to Von (‘iui-ititm." The nitiqtititetl shoulders shrug- ged iiiy. tut Guardian knows all about my rcjuveiiiiiioii. I inn his greatest tri- 11mph. The man is f1. great artist. Ii: your licitrt rcnllyi in siiiitlicrceiis, O'Hara?" iTPliHfl, over Madame Hubert/s ll\'.l(l, grimticcd helplessly at Juliet. ilvrr- than i\‘.l_\'lllll!l1 cm- hc .'"\'l".l_ to cscnpc out of '1» 1' "c, I'm in a. state of total col \ we you l'('_]ll\'\‘ll.‘.lL‘(l like this. But I suppose you unlit Juhc! to tell you how the business is tznltig.” ' “Business. pouf! I have decided to to qiet business for the present. Build it up sky-high. my children, illKl pilc money‘ for the firm in the lJtiiik. lSui. by the wiiy, Juliet dar- lllflwllllhllltKs is good. is it. not?" 1T0 Iie Continued.) ‘Today's Short Wave Radio Program (AI m. a mum sauna TTYESDAY, SEPTER UIER 1 Paris 2:30 p m. ‘-F‘cderal Broadcast Concert. TPA-3, 25 2 m», l1 88 meg, Schenectady 5:35 p m —Short Wave Mali. 13:11:. V/2XAF, 31.4 m., 9 53 meg- Madrid 7 p m —Llglit Music; Spanish Lemon. EAQ.. 30 5 m., 9 87 meg. London 7:25 p_ in - "World Affairs." ll V Hcdtiii. GSP, 19.6 m., l5 31 IIIPIL, GSD. 25 4 m., 1175 meg ; GSC, 31.3 m., 9 5B meg. Berlin 7:45 p. m —“Sp:m:lsh Music in l-htr time of Charles V." DJD. 25 4 m., ll 7'7 m‘?! Berlin 8:30 p m —"A generation ciiiiiiszcs Gzrmziny _tlic new time of Gcrmim cities ~—Nurnbe'rg." DJD, 254 m.. 11 '77 meg. nrzvr-lly pro cc music, l5 1'1in':g.,GSC, 313 m., 9 58 meg. illonfrenl 10:30 p m. —Luilaby Iiagvnrr CJRO Winnipeg, 46 '1 m., 6:1‘. meg, CJRX, Winnipeg, 25.6 m., ll 72 m1: Tokyo l2 midnight ~“Ovcrseas Pro- gram." JVH, Namkl, 20.5 m., 14.6 m . eggs, 3 tab‘ " book. , be happy with hcr husband and docs not show liai- feelings to the other little pipsqueak feel that you regard him as a Fairy Prince and. the 11115- wer to a maidens prayer. And that is fatal. Men are like sheep in so far as women are con- ;erncd. They follow the leader. The more other men run after a. girl, the more they chase her. That is why one girl has dates t0 burn and another equally attractive and good-looking, sits at home reading an improving A man may pick and choose among girls and cut out. those who are dull and tiresome and who dance on his feet, but a girl has no such pri- vilcgc. She has to pet, csjole and feed the whole herd sugar in the hope tliut somewhere in it she will ilncl the little lamb she wants. Otherwise she will get the reputation of being snooty or choosy 0r dumb and not a. single mutton young or old, will wander into her fold. And there you are, my clear. There ls nothing for nothing in this world. It takes n. lot of work and. worry and self-sacrifice to be popular with boys. Maybe it is worth the price. Maybe it isn't. But whether she takes it or leaves it, every girl has to decide the question for herself. Dcir Miss Dix-—What should a man do when he falls in love with his best friend's wife? The husband thinks the sun rises and sets in his wife, and, of course, kuonys nothing of this affair. The wife appears t0 lilllll, but any one can see that they are eating their hearts out for 981th Jlllfil‘. The only reason they are hiding their love is because they don't want to hurt the husband. What do yo undfise? E. S. Answer: ' That they should go on hiding their love and acting like the 1101101‘- able people they seem to be. I have nevcr been able to see why the rules of common honesty do not apply Just as much to matters of sentiment as they do to material things. We all want things that other people have. A woman wants an- other womarrs jewels. A man wants another" man's fine automobile. But neither the mini nor the woman think that gives tiicm the right to steal them, They suppress their desire for the diamond pendant and the imported car and do without rather than be degraded iii their own eyes and be branded as thieves. The same inhibition should apply to steal- ing your neighbor's wife or husband who are perhaps their owner's one priceless possession. Those who cannot have love hOXIBSBiy Sllflllld 110E take it, by theft, It. is an nxim in police circles that thieves seldom profit much from their loot. The sinne holds good of stolen love. You can't build u. house of happiness that will last on the home ‘you have wrecked. Dear Miss Dix—My husband is always telling me that I am not worth killing, that he is going to trade me off for a dog and then kill the clog. He also tells me he would be glad lf I would leave him so he can marry a rich woman because he is tired of working. Do you think he is tired of me and wants me to go? E. P. F. Answer: I should gather as much from his remarks. He certainly gives no ear- marks of being a, kind and loving husband, and it scents to me that the best thing you can do is to “talk out on him. No employici- would work you so hard or speak to you as lnsultlngly BS he does and you would get a. piiy envelope for your labor. You have nothing to lose by going. DOROTHY DIX. THE COOK ’S CORNER GRIDDLE CAKES sr, 2 tablespoons melted butter. Bent yolks of eggs until light and iidd to milk, pineupple juice and pineapple. Add with melted butter lo dry ingredients which have been mixed and sifted several times. Mix ' lightly. Fold in whites of eggs beat- eii until stiff. Bake on a hot griddle and serve with maple syrup or ping- aptlle sauce. vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvYYVYVvvvVVVVv hions -:- Literature vwvvvvvv “ -.-'2““¢€¢\ 00000 17w Housswrrs and HER ACTIVITIES QEPTEMBER 1, m6 M‘, c ¢-'.W,,,~ *H¢¢o~ ooon nssns But uie good deed iiimush the ages Living 1n historic P98", Brighter grows and gleam-s 1m- mortal, Uiiconsuined by moth 0r rust. i -Longfellow. AFFLICTION Affliction is the wholesome soil of virtues. where patients honor, sweet hunfrinityx calm fortitude, take root nucl strongly flotirish. —Mallet THE COUNTENANCE The countenance is the portrait of the mind, the eyes are its 1n- formers -Clcc»ro. THOUGHT Thought means life, since those who do not think do not live in any high’ or real sense. Thinking makes the man A. B. Alcott. EXCELLENCE One that desires to excel should endeavor it in those things that are in themselves most excellent. -Epictetu.s. FELLOWSHIP The secret of power lies in fel- lowmlp with Him who is a11- powerful. GOODNESS There is a. greatness of real goodness‘ and a goodnes of real greatness. Should gelatin mixture become too stiff too early in the game place the dish in hot water and let the mixture melt. O O I Always place the loaf or cake near the centre of the oven. Iii’ placed too near firebox ,0ne side may burn. O O O To remove stains from pewter, use strong hot sozipsuds. O l O If the cookie dough becomes too dry to handle. add an extra egg instead of milk or water. t t I Adhesive tape may be quickly and painlessly removed from the skin if s. sponge is saturated with benzine and applied to-the tape until it is wet. O O l Did you ever try adding half a cup of cream to the soup Just be- fore serving. It will make it creamy and delicious. ‘ O I I lvtayonnaisc that has separated may be again emulsified by adding it slowly to s whole egg. beating lightly as at first AMomingSmile SILENT DREAD “Every time my wife hears a. noise at night she thinks there's a. burg- lar in the house and wakes mo." "But burglars don't make ii noise." “So I told her. And now she wakes me up when she doesn't hear any- thing." i CIRDUMSTANTIAL . EVIDENCE Counsel, to the police witness: “But if a man is on his hands and knees in the middle of the road, that does not prove he was drunk?" Policeman: "No sir, it does not. But this one was trying to roll up the white line.’ ' .ment 01' summer $})Ill'l:;1\\"fll‘. ln The cut surface of a lemon “q reimovve marks miide by mm _ on a. painted wall. I O I A ball o! twine on the sink the and a pair of scissors llllllglnq on nail beside it! is .1 grout (‘ollven fence. VITAMIN n MAKES ciiirmn; GROW quicktv ' Children of today llrow I faster but not larger, This is revealed by Dr g w Koch, an eminent Lripzig mainyl, physician, writing “Reichsgesundheitiblnit " that girls now reach in! 17 and boys at 20. c the 23 and 25 of prr- itttributes this to the in Vitamin D. in modern di , But says Dr. Koch lilt- iuiimn statistics show that pveplc : growing any larger time ll. spite the faster rate of uni lGer in t‘. He say THE SUCCESSFUL WHITE.‘ IN SUMMER SPORSTW - 1 Whit/i fabrics. which lizive novelty aspect. have hem Oil‘ stanclingly successful in the more eluding more than the usuul mim bei- of myons and silks. 111mm portimce of rnyon fab cs 1n n, merchandising of driid Wlllf sportswear continues to crow eve. year; these fabrics are -nc.w com peting actively with linens and (*0 ions. Individual white stilt- fabri which have stood out in pnptilnrlt thus far are: White shtirkskin in two weigh -very heiwy for stilts, coins an jackets. lighter-weight for drcs culottes, slacks, millliiery, pki suits. White jersey in plain weave f all kinds of spectator sports clothe shirtwatst frocks tennis (lrcsr smart this year is while leis printed with multicolorcd floral do signs, used for birthing stills BI‘. sports dresses. White rayon pique in both plai and fancy versions. White shziritungs —llll.'<. fniiiili" o fabrics includes nuiiiy liizcii-lik wea/ves as well, develnpetl Ill sll In silk and rayon mixtures, in spit rayon, and in cotton mixed wit rayon- Spring Fashions Home Dress-Making For An interesting feature of this roomy sports coat is the flared hem. You can run it up on the sew- ing machine and finish it the same day. Only three major parts to the Perfect griddle cakes should be tender, light, and it tempting gold- cn-brown. Butter lavishly. add syrup to float and eat rapturously. Numerous preparations, iill ready for baking except for the addition of liquid are on the market. One needs only to follow the directions on the package and griddle cakes are made like magic. However, if you prefer to stir up your own, the following recipe is excellent. ~47 _ _.____________.__a WAS HER TROUBLE Ointment | was raliaved." This ll typical of the wonderful relief were w» vine-pee 111w’ 3i"'ll'l'i?iiff'il.f2f“.iiillL".33“.,€f2l“§l‘22 i 1-3 cups sour milk 1 cup crushed troubles due m on. 1 pineapple, 2% cups 'flour, 1% tBB- frugal; lrcntmentmtoda): iiillililgnliilkf; spoons soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 mfofiaLlélz lillsnple. write cutieim, Dept. Ba, granulated sug- u um‘ ' PINEAPPLE GBIDDLE CAKES W.. Honing]. 'l‘ til’ Denmark (above) Luifpoltl zu (‘ask-Il- l .: . . i- ill. has further nur- | I'll‘ Ii tl of eligihlcs in the h i-i- .'\ bride for King Ed- win! Yul. i —. >- _ . .11 ;-'~'l‘ unis -By Ad Carter . p *% CAN YOU DIRECT ME TO A NICE QUIET BOARDING“ ““~ How's we THINKING » WORKING ou-r- YOUNGSTEDP “Ill some wiTi-fiiiils-Mis-i-éli- I KNOW J55’ ‘rue PLACE! “t. rrs NICE... AN‘ Jinttcrn! After you've Joined the side mid shoulder seams the coat is ready to set the sleeves into the srmholes. The front edges of tho cost are undei-faced- and rolled with the notched collar. You'll pat yourself on the back many times for the smart result gained and for the enormous sav- ing: 1n cost. excellent choice. It answers your needs for town country or travel. College girls will especially like this model in the shorter swagger length in a. soft plaided woolen. style No. 1754 is designed for sizes 14, 16 J8 years, 36, 38 and 40-lnches bust. Size 10 requires 8% yards of 54-inch material with 3% yards of 39-inch lining. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps oi- coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. i754. Bin ............-....... Name Street Address 01W State 1mm» oLovfis' sn/irs After washing giovest, clip them w the 111w wslry by the up of . uimi tlneer- ‘They will keep s soot: A soft monotone woolen is an l shape and no nasty min-g; no ands-I; hum-us.