m,‘ . ‘ ‘ u _ 7"‘ -i'\::_"'3§?1lL\*\- fifiIirW1><tdr\n-nnw_. " - ..-~.~ ~ _..--.-___.....-»-- ....__.... _»-.._._.._ _~.-.->-n-<- -—¢"‘” Pirates In Fact And Fiction Waters Where No Vessel ls Sale By CAPTAIN PATRICK CLIFFORD. (Author of "Pirate Cruise", THE COOK 'S CORNER 1 111111 raurn FUDGE lS coon FOR YOU ‘Pwo squares unsweetened choco- Late, 3-4 cup milk, 2 cups sugar, “Men Without Fear”, ete.), (he chance in a hundred :01- us, he roared. but we may pull if off. 00d bless! iNith that the piano came low over the river. Less than two hundred feet from the water, B111 descended still lower, until he was less than the hiesrht of the steam- ers lllflsll» form the river. Then he \\‘€1it5f1‘1‘1i!1l1t for the vessel's stern, [mm .- ., , 1. l» m , , _ S.‘ 111:1! rm nliitutic that would Thus N5pped_ Clancy djyjdc a- £511‘;1:223;Q{.nti?l,ug'l,li.g“as s?‘ _: v . 1 v . _ _ ‘ . p. _ t‘ - “W” “m 9W1 Wm‘ "b? "PP" gain into the cabin refuse, and be- Solved and nnxlurc boils. Cm- do“ “f ‘he Sleflmfl» grin hauling out his weapons ‘rhcn t-nue bmpng without stirring u“ " ' 1 ' 1 1 ' . ‘A5 the plafie no“ ‘ qloser‘ {he . $19 beW-‘me aware that 3 Ywwerflfli til a small amount of mixture W0 mPn bfl-‘v U10 M1116 held" .1_<:htv1as burning fromgthe bridge forms a V0,... w“ Imp -n w“ amongst ihc Cl111lC5c on the circ‘ (lccl: and that the whole of 1h My... (1)141 1",‘. .. ' l l. f M111 1iivc1i for cover down haivli- ship ivcs 51111113131 111, 1n 3 flash 1 gig]; m "“Afl(l(°ijlrllt>tlllF':l'l Rdnilllm . 1 .. z 2-0.1 12111111.‘ (u; 211111 compuuionv. and on ihe bridge Clancy 11101111111 he saw a tall man leap lmrtily inio the chartroom. on old Snkum. yelled ‘P1111211 1 1» 111" whulc 11:1 ‘the Liangkoos funnel prtpollor. Clancy was ' RQWIPSt tho front 1111* : h her : f . .- _ 11nd he found him- . a 11's but very active, k1.» 1i. and thn\ he was safely the i.‘r1"1zkoc‘:1 dock, His first 1.‘. . 1111- .\i.1d:-1111. 111.111 v.11» hint: in 111 11. ,. .0 0f i110 front seat. H’? 11w very still and 11s head lolled one "- strnngcly. Clancy lean- e11 c1: f: '1 n .. then staggered back t fare Bill hfndison was 1 -1l cl‘ happened so quickIY ‘f1 t for n. 1110mm! no sign of 1:11 tile scion came from the pir- ‘uicm of l1... lTiOHd “'33 a the bnckaround 0f l1is n .1. 11>". 1v» reached for a njeapon. ivhrp, 11c leaped from the wreck- w c c-i the plane cabin, Clnncy cer- d w.» Xiills bombs with him. He . ‘1 1 .i on the deck between _ of two ship's bouts‘ x111 pldlif ‘s wings had datu- Ahow 111m there was only ‘ldqc and a". he looked up he a fleeting glimpse of B. 1 figure. The man dis- _ 1 1:11 and then the 1111.»111<~ aware of n yel- r1 iifitifS 101111 STDMACH? OU lose viiai nerve force 1i _\~1111 allow X11111‘ sir-much t0 d15- iress you. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov- cry is 11 depend- able tonic \\'l111:l1 will u-wcr- v- (be 1-i1te,.l1uu11aic .., 11111n11laie the rli- .. cLy gnzn utren iii. atdcn 467 _l\lain . -. aid 1 "br. Pierce’; Qolden was very beneficial to ' ive sy<tem,_r:l1c\'es »..._ *3 = _ a. 5-. by druggnt. .' 11 '. 1 w ‘111 p ' v "u: tablet! 50 can". lulmd "~99- ge ma. tablets or liquid $1.35. 1111111 111111011 for 1110 i ‘ world 5 111 1 1 about 111v machine. ' 1 moved the cargo at the Clint llo .\\' that the miracle 11nd ‘ c!’ the Llanzkoo. Then the; dash of salt, 2 tablespoons butter, I teaspoon vanilla, 4 tablespoons each candied cherries, cmdied pineapple, figs and raisins (rinsed, tiigroughly tirlcd. and fmcly cut», 4 iablcspooniuls blanched pistachio meats. Add chocolate to milk and place over low flame. Cook until mix- lure is smooth and blctldcrl, sill‘- JIIK mob racin: towards him from the well-deck below. Snapping out the pin, he held the bomb for the extreme limit of safety and hurled it into their midst. The crash of] the detonation and the screams of wounded victims, mingled. The pir- ates fell back, leaving mangled. bloody heaps on the deck behind reuilunticu came, The Black Pir- atc knew when he saw the plane 1 that she would signal the Liang-l koo's position to the Wildcat. Con- 1 .~cqucntl_v, within an hour or so the dcirovrr must discovcr tho pi 11c Cool tn lukcujzirm 1110 degrees F); then boat until mixture begins to thicken nnd loses its gloss. Add ' . Turn at. 011cc inifi- »-. 11111, 1N4 iliulirs‘. Wlicu r01‘ c111. in .s(]i1£1l'(‘_\. ship. It Wm. of 110 vnluc. they? .1‘. I _ 3141495 l’? l-iffi , for her to lit- without lights, which IWYCPS- It ilfli-Ffil- (IPCOW. e each j were ncedczi if the valuable caret) 141mm‘ “m 1' blllmhed P1531911“ was to bej seen 110W 121111;: i 1 alamrd thr- shiftcd. Clancy speedily thc Black Pirate's Liauglcoo had i110 cherry ring. HOT‘ MILK SPONGE (‘ARE 0111* cup siiitxi rake flour, 1 i011- rizooh baking ponder, 3 eggs. 1 cup silgar. 2 teaspoons femon juzcg, 5 iFilJlBSDOOIIG hot milk. Sift flour once, mca sure. add bak- 1 Eng psvvdcr, and sift together three ; timcs. IlCfil 0511.15 until very thick i‘ 11nd light and nrly white 110111111. 1 utcs). Add sugar gradually, beating - constantly. Add lemon juice, 111015 f 1n flour. a small amount atatime, Add milk. mixing: until batter is nuooth. T111-n at 011cc into 1lll£1‘(‘8~»- ed tubc pan and bake in mfdernie oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) 35 minutes, or until done. Remove c. 11y transfer it ashore before 1111' arrival of the Wiidear. Suddenly a shot rang out behind , him and hr- flung himself into the ishadoiv 0f the boars.‘ ‘They were ‘.‘=l1i])l11{_' him from ihc ln-idgc. j Aillfllllflllffilly ho rcached for 11 1 1 l 1 1 Icavcrn. and knew that they: cnuhi 1 i i i bomb. when the l1atcti tones of thc Black Pirate reached him. Don't flhrow any grenades up here. Clancy. unless you want io. hurt Miss Rcval, he calicd. I'm‘ keeping hcr hcrc, while my menl pot at you Clancy swore. He had no doubt that the Black Pirate meant what own and in rt l h he said. and in the meantime he "m" V9 D811 Our. ' was struck in the inenviable posi- l m’ fmlll flake l3 llwmllghll’ cold. 1111.11 n1‘ beintr 511m at, 111111111111 a] T1115 flu-virus may b!‘ ixikcd 111 11111 chance of rciurning the fire , "filmy zTensrd H.\'8x2-i11cl1 pans in sheltered bv the boat. he Wm; safe! ilwilcmte oven 1350 degrees enough, but how was he to get to Fahrenheit) 25 minutes, or in Sally, without banning her? 12x1ix3-inch loaf pan 30 minutes, ‘Ihcn he leaped for the gas-gun. Sally would have to forgive him a fcw tears. ‘fhcrc was a cartridge in tho irrcech and 11c aimr-ri ctraizht at. the bridge. It was difficult with his wounded arm. but the cartridge _ hissed toward the chart-room bulk- head in a dead line. As it ekploclcti. to Sally. A little of the gas got the 1151s oozed out. and the de- 1 into his eyes. and slum-tori 9X. icciire saw two n1c11 and a woman 1 cruciaiiiipli‘. but he caught her and leap up from bchind the bulwark". dragged hcr into the chart-room their fingers clawing at their Stay here. dear, 11c said hastily, faces. Hurling a bomb clown inio and raced bugk to the deck she the welldeck, just in case any pir- hear the sound of two shots, then mes contemplated 011 “track from Clancy appeared with the Black iihat quaricr. Clancy raced towards Pirate walking bPIOfC 111m The .1110 bridirc. He ran fillifkll’ 0T1 l0 man sill wore his mask and 1,2111,- [ihc bridsrc. 011 i111:- oppositc side of L1_]@§_ but he snffpfgd m? nun-v 1w- the chart-room to that which had cause oi‘ that. The deadly gas had ‘received the gas, and the wind was ggf; beneath the gnggms and “.85 . 8W!!!’ 7mm hlm- The 0111.1’ P931316 _ imprisoned there. Nmv the unknown ‘O11 the ("Ck WWO 1t Young Chlfl- '.'§COl!l1fl‘.'Cl was frnniicnlW icarlug esc. the Black Pirate. and Sflllfv- 111cm [r0111 his cycs. Hc 1111111: fhcm 1 l-Tflll“? "T191945" a 010ml "f if": midi‘. and clawed at 111:, mat-k. iwrme vapour. and Cloncvs M311 Yes, take 1t off. 11n- friend. said |smotc him. He carried with him Cpmcy 53.115911; Bu; you won-t two bombs. 1115 ens-sun 8nd Km" surprise me, when you do munition tlgéi fist 1:16 118d 1:111“: Sally's vision was better now. 011871108"? W"?! 9 m" 71° and she stored fascinated as the BRIT? it t0 UK‘ briilgfl- 991V" bf“ mask 1111s flunr! off. Vlith a cry 101v hr‘ fluid 5”!‘ Piffllf-i "HHOWL" she siagrzcrcd fornard 21nd Michael DPPTW! Hm“ l?" $7""l°“'5 camht her with hl sound arm. Waitinz w see which but no c1111 continued u» cover the white-faced, hlear-eyed figure of Hugh Carson -Lhe Black Pirate! Bit of a. shock, denr, smilcd the detective All right. I'll explain ii. Kocs. ihcn pinch the loot. ‘he grinned. Dumping his arms, with the exception of his revolver, in the clmrtrootn, Clancy rushed over way it Ccrson. lock that chart-room rloor and shutter the ports. I don't anticipate any further trouble from your lads, but we'd better be safe. Hugh Carson staggered round the room and obeyed. Clancy dropped onion scttcc, hisarse11nlbcsidcl1in1 and drew Sally close. Ycs Carson. wont on the officer grimly. The idea began when you started pirating your ships, for the insurance. didn't it’? That got you 1n inuch ivith Mndamc Lint: and because you wcrc a n1n='c1'-111.'1r— incr, you were nblc i0 1101p hcr qulic a lot. ‘Then you lost heavily on the silver-exchange and planned the Gicantic affair. You used the Tonrz-Wo. and thrn iransfcrrcri your prisoner,» and ihc fwd in iho Llmickco. 71111.1. 111.1.»- clcvcr. ‘You were the wealthy. unsuspected shipownar. and could smuggle 11 million pounds. about three hun- lulf inserted in centre of lliflT-‘Sfll- - lm f Social and o panacea-un- m€G ---~ Personal §lflfifi§a " l . I Tlflrfgs . 821i; 6.3%,. ‘Dorothy Du; 222th: 1 Heart-Hunger is Not an Exclusive Feminine Trait; Friendship, Partnership and the Willingness t0 Guard His Health Also Hold Husbands to Their Own Firesides a, sweetheart. Before marriage a never what SBIYIO Every wife should be six things to her husband. man does the courting. After mar- riage the wife must do the lovemaking. she must never let the fire 0i romance burn out on the heflfthfiwne Ii-“d she must keep her husband seeing her B8 8 Indy Love mstead of Just a 000k End the children's mother. Wives arc always complaining that their husbands take them for granted that, they pay them a, compliment, or 1109MB they have on, or give them an)’ mil‘ ward visible sign of Blfectlon- Bu! T111658 same women give their husbands precisely the sort or a frigid deal and then Wflfidfil‘ why said husbands “under oil after glamor- ous ludhes who tell them how handsome, b g, strong and wonderful they- are. ger is not an exclusively feminine complaint. V Mcn suffer from it, too. They a'so crave ap- Heart-hun- preciation and flattery and for their wives to l givc some indication that they regard them as men instead of cash reg- , isters. As long as a wife stays a lover is virtually siren-proof. a friend to whom he can boast of ged about. it ever afterward. ship between people who have not fort to be agreeable to him us she w charm and whom she wanted to bcr when 11c got her for a dinner partner. _ V woman to whom he is married as Friend Wife and means it, 1t is a 511t- edge certificate of domestic felicity. Third, a woman should be her husband's business partner. No woman has a right to take all and give nothing in marriage, and the parasitic wife is as contemptibie as any other grafter. woman's cud of it isin making her husband a comfortable home and keeping him well and happy, and it is just as much up to her to turn out "a good job as it is for him to do so. Of course, there are a few men who are such born go-getters that they will achieve their ambitions no matter what sort of women they many, but nine times out. of ten whether a man succeeds or fails depends Most of the big fortunes were founded on upon the side partner he has. the nickcls and dimes that thrifty little thinner and walking ten blocks to buy cheap cuts of meat that they turned into wholesome and nourishing dishes. The lazy wives, the bad cooks, the spenders, the whiners 11nd com- plainers and daggers are millstones about the necks of their husbands So ii: is up io every woman to be a real helpmeet to her To do hcr share of the work, i4) keep him fit by feeding him pro- perly. io brace him up when he is discouraged and keep his faith alive "n himself. to go with him where his fortune calls, to make friends for him that. sink them. mam. and to do it all under cover so that he owes to his partner. But more 11nd dresses l1erself up for her husband 11nd uses all the arts and wiles to hold hm that she did to catch 111m, he Second, o. wife should be her husbahds friend. one person in the \\'0rld to whom he can _ understanding. and whom he never bores because the slightest thing he does is more thrilling to her than world-shaking events abroad. She should be a friend to whom he can bare his soul and tell his sec- rets, with the certainty that his confidences w.ll be kept- 10014611 in he!‘ 1 heart instead of being passed on to Mother and the girls. She should be iittled and bewaii his failures without being told they are his own fault. She should be a friend to whom he can tell the truth wzthout beinl I118- ___.._.... _ A wife should be a friend whose society her husband finds more enter- I taming and interesting than that of any one else. ' cstcd in the things that. he is interested 11:1, read the same books, like the samopcoplc, enjoy the same motives, because there can be 11o real friend- good listener, willing to lend him her ears when he talks about his business or his golf score. She should laugh at his Jokes and make as great an ef- Shc should be the go, secure of sympathy and his triumphs without having them be- She should be inter- the same tastes. And she should be a. would to any other man she wanted think that he had drawn a lucky num- When a man speaks of the In the domestic partnership the wives saved by peeling the potatoes B- he himself, does not know how much of This Tuesday. DQRQHIIQDIX. _> the Chat Ho, through your secret tunnel i0 ihe rivcr. You've killed a few bodies. Car- son, went on Clancy fiercely, and you killed one woman's soul. For years you supplied Helena. Granby with the drugs that made her your slave Then you used her to place the bomb in the Gigantic}: wire- less-room. She took it in her hand- bag and asked the operator if he would mind it for her. As for the stokehold explosion, I'm not sure of the man you bribed io put the bomb in the shaft, but I'll soon know. Madame Burnlow, your discarded mistress, you arranged for Helena ito kill while 11nder the influence ioi’ drugs I saw that crime myself. .You made one mistake. though. 311121131110 81111110111". finger-prints 1wcre 011 the ransom-letter you lbrought mc. So were Hclentfs and son that bit of handbag-clasp I ‘found in the Giganticb wireless- ‘room. 1 Wcl‘. Carson Silfififftfl, whcn the ‘dctrctirc 11nd finished. What are you tzniuc: in do now? Admittedly 1 I'm under your gun. but you're still ‘aboard my ship, and no hefp in ‘sight. 1111K! Dlfflftfi, and W0 hostages 1M0 I I've already said that your fel- eiiyfair Design. No. 264 This 1111']: 11:1 ‘ S 011m" 11.11 of the 11m :00 (imam past (:11 m llllPl‘. ' tructlo-zms for finiszhi . c pnttcrr nud ins .' mp5 v1- c0111 'c11 ‘K '-11l1~."111'.: D:1:>11'!111"|1t F-u- tiiie 1 nupuu. T11 Th» I"~; 1-1i'1>1.11-.1n (itlnrdhan .\ 1i! -' 41'? 1111'. ~11 . ‘ 1 -1 T111110 — — — — -- — - - Sllcrl Mldrcs‘! — — — — — - - _‘- 11m sitting so primlv on her over-stuffed nest, 11115 i111.‘ is _]1l.\l. n1: prim and 01111121111; as 21111. llltl‘ 1111 prized modern 1114111: or 1\'nr\' li-icn wmkrtd in one color-deep rcri or blue. An ‘in: 1111:4111 also ior p llmvs. r111111ers or for a centerpiece. min; transfers of the (icsigns. i0 dcrovsatc a (hair set 111 a vcrj." mori- shc 1111s in (lrnnri- picccs, sht- s also vcry useful. The pat- cofor combinations, detail of em- ng. i1'11:‘.f)11.s' for n11 nf ihcsc ricrigus in preferred» 1o The CharloJt-torn j I"iut your name 11ml aridrcss plainly. 1111 . and were brougl ' l; u. 11s arc also t‘ t“ c1 "11- 011 i117 i. ':1 '12s. T111 l‘- -- ‘ F.i bcrt‘. 1' ' 11 i112 c __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ t .1 1'11 11 ‘.1111 L 011g. From 1.1. 1 .1,1,'1-.L they n... 101.11: Y ' /1111..11\. M11. Priersoii. v/hcse 1111s‘. 111:‘. is c11:,:g..1l on prnipectlawy .11 — — — — ~ — — — — - — — 1 10112.1 by snrms to spend the; winter M 1933.37 M NO“- uo and u ' W. 'I‘rc11ho'm<- in Montreal ‘a vlfionn; i‘ iuc (1011.- wvre mac‘; b; 1t back by Mrs. J.0. B Petcrren to the high red boots, while 111 r11 Elsiimo wo man at Narssaq in Greenland for the Dionne trimmings are cf seal fur. with some Fl b11111 and white store caiic‘. and ‘ " A MornirtgSmile RELIEF 1N SIGHT "Doctor, can you tell me how to stop my husband snoring?" . “Don't. worry. Your baby will soon be teething and you will not need to stop his snoring." A man sent a. couple of empty petrol tins, with a sarcastic note, to a firm of motor manufacturers. “Make me one of your famous cars with. these,” said the note. Next. day the car was delivered. An accompanying note said; “Virhat shall we do with the secnd tin?" lows will kee-p out of the way of my bombs. replied Clancy. so I lhink were safe here till the Wild- car combs. Meantime. I cxpcct your fcrows are hirsy taking the loot ashore. Too bad I can't do much io stop them, but the Wild- First, she should be f Fae ~’~ Act The Housewife ' And He1 ivities _ . UEIRPING lNTHlB-AIN The day was dreich; the min poor- ed doon; The clodus hung black an’ low; The. grey mists rolled across the ben; The trees shed were below: Eerie the soochin’ o’ the wind; The river was in spate; The mirk cam’ a’ aroon’ gey quick- The you‘ was gettin‘ late. The kye kept mooin’ for the byte; They shfvered in the lane, when suddenly I heard a sparra Chlrpin in the rain. ' It seemed tae say that all was weel; That noething could be wrong, an’ on that weet an’ dowle day Twas like an angel's sang. l stuid a while tae listen. As the wee bird played its pairi, An’ aye ii: kept on Clleepln‘ Like tae brak its wee bit heairt. It wantit jist tae tell the world The sun wad come again, An’ I thanked God for that wee sparra Chirpin’ in the rnin. —George Johnstone JUST FOR CHANGE Izf you cannot afford to buy any- thing new for the house and you are just a. little disinterested this fall, try changing" the position of the furniture and see if that bored feeling will not depart. GOODNESS Goodness does not more certain- ly make men hBPPY. than hap- piness makes them good. —Wa£ter Salvage Lrandor. EXPERIENCE To most‘ men experience is like the stern lights 01f a ship, which illumine only the track it has pass- cad-Coleridge. ACTIONS Only actions give life strength; only moderation gives it a charm. —Richter. ANGER. When anger rises, think of the consequences-Confucius. THE “SHOP" TOUCH FOR HOMEMADE ARTICLES Whether one is making a small round pincushion, or cover- ing a box, or making cases for telephone directories a layer of cheap wedding, cream or blank ac- cording to which is more suitable, makes all the dtfferenoe to thev look of the finished article. It is extraordinarily difficult a» make a taut cover without it and easy to get a real "shop" touch with it. Take the case of the little pin- cushlon. for instance. Cut out two circles of thinnish card about two to two and a half inches in dia- meter, smear 11 little paste or glue on one side of each and lay these sides face downward on a sheet of wadding. Press firmly and when the cotton wool has adhered cut carefully round the edges of the cards. Then cover‘ with silk or other material in the usual way- that is, cut out two circles of the material considerably larger than the cards and make secure by cries-crossing the backs with threads of cotton. Then oversew thevtwo covered cards together with a. strong matching thread. Sometimes a coupIe of layers of fiannelette mwy be better tilmn cotton wool. For instance, in covering a box with material the top should have a padding of wedding, while the sides look better if one or two layers of flan- nelette arc wed to soften the effect. MORAL COURAGE AND THE SMALL CHILD Lot us teach children 1111,1111 courage, writes 'O1ive' Roberts Barton. There is a sorry lack of girl effects m out, but so are masculine ones. Dark colors are enlivened by subtle touches of bright. You may wear a. man- tailored suit, but you add a hat. with an alluring veil and a peace or irwo of utterly feminine jewelry. You may even pick a bouffant evening gown of frothy tulle, but you do your hair and wear your flowers in such a way as to make yourself look like a lovely paint- ing rather than an lngehue. so-canuzn snowcoacn a“ msmvnnns-roon 01111.11 You know that child who is a‘.- ways late for meals, school and even play, asks a miter in the London Express. He begins a race when others are half down the course. and is still fumbling with his pen- cil box when the class are putting the answers to their sums. There are many dllatory little girls. But the siowcoach rm de- scribing is nearly always 8 ‘boy’ wandering about with a faraway expression, a. twisted tie, and one sock inside out. But he is not a slvwwafih BY- 1153M, H9 is probably quicker and a more vivid thinker than the punctual little boy beside him. He can do things more rapidly than most — when he tr’es. I-iv does occasionally ii some enthu- eiasm o1- sudden burst of energi’ bring! him to grips width life. Sometimes grown-ups realize this and think he is being delib- erately trying in his slowncs. But he isn't. He is impatient, as are most quick-natured people. Not with others, but with his own slow movement-s. Whlilh 5° not keep pace with his rapid mind. I-Ie is neither old nor reason- able enough io see that he has the chance or putting it right by 11a- tience and effort. So he goes off into the world where nothing hinders him. While his feet and hands drag behind, his brain is busy with a. thousand things and often solving brilliantly the problems he'll fail in next day at school. There is one thing that must. not be said to him. and that is “Hurry ups. ‘Phase words will only catch at the impatient part of him and put him at logerheads with -as well as behind- everybody else. He must be shown the satisfac- tion of making up that mirld of his, which he loves and taught. how to control his limbs, which 116 rather dislikes. Games help, but vcr, often the competitive spirit is lacking, or rather in abeyance because he knows he will always lose. though confident that 11c really ncedift loose. Give him things which have to be done slowly to be done well- Brushwork, paper folding and painstaking games. Dart-making and throwing is dear w boys of all 88%- In one school this was forbidden because exercise books. reporia. and blotting paper were used. At another school the headmas- ter offered a prize for the cham- pion dart maker and thrower out of school hours. A slowccach won. The teacher watched him and led him on to other handicrafts. Sc mfght thing about history and sums without bothering to do them, but in think about darts 4 Literatur Jl-LIN UAR! 1U, 19,35 ‘reams Tell You of Yo Hidden Wishes Barred by wires from climbing :1 winding stairway-a faceless man approaching! It's Just a dream- couldn't really happen! Yet it's a mistake to dismiss thil dream as meaningless. Especially if you know these facts. Thil dreamer. u widow, yearns for I husband's devotion. The evening before, she looked at pictures col- lected on her honeymoon in France. Her memory dwelt on the lov chateaux with winding staircase; beautifully carved. A dream-analyst tells her that the faceless man and the wires which thwarted her represent her unful- filled wish to remarry and visit the French chateaux again. You, too. see dream-dramas i your sleeping hours. ‘Our flit-peg: booklet tells what they mean. Fin hidden messages. discover you! secret wishes. Learn about dream symbols, and common types of dreams — wish-fulfillment. cosmiq levitating: and others. Send 20c in coins for your w“ of The Meaning Of Dreams g1 The Guardian Home Service, Ad. dre..s. Be sure to write ploinfi YOU!‘ Nmnc. Addrem, and the Name of booklet. ‘ Name 8a.‘... 11111111311; 9‘! and paper frogs and boxes with- out making them wnsn‘i; halt se amusing. By degrees the quick brain grasped that the slow flngen could obey, and that boy today h“ "BETTY Caught up the‘ place in lessons he should hold. Siowcoaches need everything. including be slowcoaches. time fou- cvasitig to Mfly every moxging seem to say: ‘Iheres something happy my the way, And God sends love to you." —Hen.ry van Dyke Get real relief fnstwiih this wonderful double remedy. Sooihcs itch, aids in removing dandruff, helps pro- mote lustrous hair growth. Buy NOW. For FREE sample, write to “Cutlcurfl, Dept. t3, 286 St. Paul St. W.. Montreal. FOR FASHION GUIDES HOME DRESSMAKE THE Won't she be happy io swing in- to clas-rcoin 111 this brand new cotton print ballerina dress? The little fitted bodice is “pulled-in" ear may. To Be Continued Montreal. The face." and hands 111111 1. ihc luit :11 of the Dionne 11:, Mane. y work in Gresniaaid. was nun visiting her mother, Mrs, C. it today. a tendency to weigh facts and eswpe consequences. when I 811i! “moral courage," I mean directness. The admission, "I did it, father." has mcrc in it than meets the eye. It is marching up to a situation without fear. Moral courage is taught in young children by a policy of hon- esty.—-being honest with self and acting to convictions. And this policy of honesty becomes deepy ingrained when the child learns in tell the truth and take the con- sequences. EWTY human being has a sense of right within himself. He can distinguish between right and wrong. The fear-ridden child is usually devious in his thinking; the spoil- ed child exvpeds perpetual (or- giveness. Somewhere between the irwo lies the answer summed up in two words-Moral Courage. MATURE BEAUTY l5 M09151] THIS SEASON If one were in paint a. composite portrait of Beauty Winter 1938 flyle it ndo ‘fl fay would turn out t0 be I picture of sophisticated mllllflty. The woman in the Pwifltlnz would wcbear w be so or thcreabouts; "with ‘ a‘ 5111i ‘ graceful flkvre. perfect posture, clear akin and a brushed-upward coiffure to Nvenl ears , brow, mpe of the neck. It's a. searon of ernartneaa, well cunningly at the wafst with e sash. The sleeves “puff-up" as much as they dnre. It may have ' her favorite Peter Pan 0011111» or [1 demure square ncck. Growing dnulhter can sew it her-salt. .., for it has few major parts..merely a two-niece skirt to be joined to a two-piece waist“... a picture in- struction chart included »...shows every step of the way. Style No, 2819 is designed for sizes 8. 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires I 1-4 yards of 39-inch ma- terial with a 1-2 yards of brait. Send fifteen cents (1501 in stamps or coin (coin preterm-ii wrap coin carefully, address to Charlottetown Guardian giving:- Styie No. 3819 size ..,, .., .. Name Street Kaela U!!! Province _ __ LIFTS BATTLE He who 500.; down Info the bat- tle of life giving a. smile for every frown, a cheery word for every cross one, and lending a helping hand to the unfortunate is, 111m seasoned with femininity. Litifie n11. the best of miulonariu. —"'-‘.‘1f',1*1‘fl‘#»"1-1IKUK£'-in£fl68*$""‘