PAGE EIGHT __ rm: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARWA A v _V______ i MAy1,1933 3 - -W<212¢a'2 Talleqlm 1-1: _. w"!!! -“"4 .82 §Qrz9l.__-=-.--.¢§hi<>n@ .-_-':-. Literature i i i . a WWW“ viii SBAlllElll "h" Kl“ o I m“ m" ' i I ulc u o Dorothy Dlx ‘fi EEHFDER P a I n10‘ | Vie 303p GARDENING hwshcgfifbfiirinsur ' i i now at lowest price in history ""35 71' rTs.-fi‘.‘§.'..:"” {The Man Who Wishes to Avoid Marrying a Nagger, a Spendthrift or a Whiner Has Only to Take Enough Time off From Looking at Her Pretty Face to Give Her the Once-Over for Signs of Temperament A forward-looking youth asks: "ls inure any way in which a man can of will: a girl will make?" tell before marriage what sort Not absolutelyfson, because when a girl is try- ing to get her man she naturally puts her best foot foremost. when young lvlr. Romeo comes s- coiirtlng liliss Juliet puts on her swankicst frock and her best complexion, and butter wouldn't melt in her mouth, but no woman can go through the wear and tear of matrimony and cooking dinners and walking babies and keep up that degree of good looks and amiabllity. can't always tell beforehand just how sort of a disposition you Sometimes at 4o t. So yon much pulchrltude or what are drawing in tho big lottery. i man finds that he has twice as much wife as he married or that Patient Griselda has tumed into o feminist who rules the 800st. Also. sometlnies marriage does work miracles in s. woman's character that changes her from what she was into an entirely different personality. We have all seen it turn frivolous little flapper: into the most sedsto of wives and mothers. We have seen glrLs who wctsicdgtheir fathers’ money in riotous extravagance pinch every penny of their husbands’ salary. And we have secngirls who would ncver lllt a finger to help mother with the housework become the most orderly and eiiitiont of housckeeivcrs when they set up their own homes. But these MIC the exceptions that prove tho rule and, generally speaking, every girl gives enough indications of the kind of a. wife she will make to who up a yiouiii: Illilll if only he will look out for these signs of temperament, instead of concentrating his attention upon her pretty face and willowy figure. The calamity for instance. that every man prays all of his gods to . deliver him from is a nagging wife. when one oi these torments befalls a man he chnrgvs it up to bid luck, but, in reality, it was because he was tn stupid to read aright the warnings that his good angel fairly screamed at him, for the nagger can no more conceal her urge to nag than the leopard can hide its spots. 1f, then, you wish a line on whether a girl will henpeck hcr husband to deaili, or not, observe if she runs the show wherever she is. Take note n-hcilivr she back-scat chauffeurs when you go out, for a joyrlde to- Observe 1f she is always bound to have her way about every- get it by one method of approach i1 she takes back and hammers on the same old ob- down and they give in to her, 0L‘ gotlier. Lhing, and if she cannot another tack, but always comes jective until slic wears everybody who scatzercd their belongings all over the place and - A PABTHWG GUEST ,_____ What delightful hosts are they- Life and love! Llngeringly I turn away. ‘Phelr high hospitality. So, with face lit with delight And all gratitude. I stay night." hot iron. The stiffening will re- hsndles, nails, etc. Try putting the pocket in the center of the apron. The pocket can be reached by either hand and can not catch on anything and tear. orrsr QUEEN or xsivir FORETELLS own pas-m Gipsy Lee, Queen of the English 81W“. died exactly as she had foretold, in her caravan near Fam- ‘borough, Kent. She woo in her eighty-third year. .She had been ill for some weeks, and when relatives gathered round her bed a. few days before her death she told them:- "On the third day from now I shall die. and on“ that day it will rain." ‘ When her son awoke on me third day it was raining heavily for the first time for weeks. Her relatives hurried to her cad-vim, within a fe-w minutes she died. Famous Patrons 01w of her sons, who is afamlllat NOtt: wcll whether she can say a. thing once and let it rest or whether Panama canal lastyfll- i This late hour, yet glad enough! a new Pam‘ spray mm weighs “fly They have not withhold from me Yet to press their hands and soy: ‘Thanks. S0 fine a. time! Good -James Whitoomb Riley. when pressing black ribbon, put it in cold ivater. then straighten it out and press immediately with a main almost as if the ribbon were new. The pockets of kitchen aprons are continually catching on door thousand strings. know a nugget. she plays upon the same old grievance or mistake as upon For these are the infallible signs by which you shall If you want a. wife who wil proprlatc finery it shows she rircsscti far beyond her and s spender nndthat her husband wll slaving to pay her bills at the If you want to know whether a. girl is sweet and to live xvii-ii, observe her in her own If she is just as pleasant at home helper and if shc pets and lollies sisters adore her, she will make the his imees thanking Heaven for its mercy to him. means it is s sure specialty stores. amiable as she is abroad; father, and. if her younger ahsrpwitha l be thrifty and economical and o good manager, give u. girls clothes the once-over. If she is dolled up in inap- lacks judgment in spending money. If she is indication that she is o. waster 1 spend the balance of his life home and in relation to her family. if she is mother's little kind of wife who keeps a husband on figure on Blackheath with his don- keys and is known as the Donkey King, said that his mother 11nd, worried herself to death ovor the KN"! illness of her favorite daugh- ter Norah. Glpsy Me's real name was Mrs. M" Boswell. and she was the daughter of the equally fgmou; 01W! Lee of Brighton. She was o. noted palmigt, mo, claimed many famous people among her patrons, among them King m- ward and Mr. Vanderbilt. the Am. erican millionaire, who, she said, and pleasant brothers and Commercial vesels of twenty- two nationalities nmdepso of the Constructed of aluminum all”. ‘a pound and s. quarter. 12-1- . A chair invented by a. man al- though mods entirely of wood has the moillency of steel fumitun. _._..___ Ihrly vegetable crops are. being irsised under glass on more than 3000 acres of farm land in 2mg- land. .____ , With 11,000,000 nci-cs under cul- itlvstion, agriculture supports ‘[5 per cent of the population of Burma. ' than 80 per cent of the‘ world's manganese More comes from Russia, India. the Gold Coast and l An electric socket is included-in. the support of a new ironing board to keep flstiron cords out of the way. ~ ' More ___._. Germans have invented an im- itation leather, made from kraft paper that closely resembles s Jap- anese Product. Bysubjecting it to a. simple im- pregnation process wood has been made bullet-prof. wind-proof and water-proof in Bavaria. DIVINING ROD REVEAL ILLS, IS . CLAIR! When doctors disagree. try the divining rod. A new branchof medical science, which firmly believes in the pow- MT- 0f divining rodl. is wringing up 1n Europe. It is called radio phy- sics, and its practitioners claim the ability to diagnose hidden ailments with imerrlng exactness. Not only do they tell you that you are suflerlng from indigestion instead of appendlcltlsfBy con- sulting the divining rod, they ascer- tain that it was tho caviar that did not sgreo, instead of the red cabbage, u you suspected. Every living (gesture is s. wire- leu not, according to the, new theory. Hiuno-n beings, plants, ani- mals And many inanimate objects radish on certain wove lengths, which the divining rod is supposed to detect. A patient! reaction to disease genius, to various foods and to other human beings can be dgtgf- some size . . . some quoiiiy ,1 some QGTIGFOUS Clive Qil Content PALMOUVE Soap la now so low in _ price that every woman can to use it. The same size cake . . . some quality .. .wirh the same generous olive content . . . nothing price. Start the Palmolive way to beauty tonight and-with its price so low- Palmolive’: rich, youth-giving enjoy lather, for all beau cleansing . . A face, hands, hair an bath. Remember, over 20,000 beauty pens advise Palmolive because contains olive and palm oils . . . essential to beauty. Buy 3 cakes today and prove to your own satisfaction how Palmolive makes and kee s skin lovely. . . youthful . . . desirable. afford is altered but the oil for ex_ it KELLTS CROSS SCHOOL Following is the honor roll for the month of April: Grade X-l Mary Alice Mona- ghan. Grade rx-i Mary McKenzie, z William Weddell, 8 Lloyd Waddell and Mary Bradley. Grade VIII-l Leo Campbell, 2 Perrerza Weddell, 8 Peter Bradley and Marguerite Duffy. Grade VH—-1- Mildred Oarrsgher, 2 Richard Monaghan, 8 Francis Kelly. Grade VI-l ‘Phonics Trolnor, 2 Annie Weddell and nemadotts Carrsgher, 8 Francis McDonald. Grade V--1 Kevin McKenno, 2 Genevieve Omscher. a Rita. Brod- 1w. Grade IlI—l Gavin Woods. Grade II-d Mabel Monoghon, 2 Lawrence Bradley, 8 Francis Corro- ghei‘. Grade I-.-l Charles Gauthier, 2 Justin Kelly. PLEASANT VALLEY SCHOOL Honor roll for month of April: Grads X-—~l Melbunie MacDow- ell, 2 Donald Maokay, Bins. Wig- AMorningSmile The young bride had not come out very well in" hor first encounter with cook book and gas stove. She ran to the phone and called mama. “Mother-P sbo sobbcd, "1 cant understand it. The recipe said: ‘Brlngtooboilon o brisk fire, stirring for two minutes. Then best it for ten minutes. I did, and when I come back it was burned to a cinder." Magistrate: “The traffic police- man says you got sarcastic with him." Mr. Nogger: "But I didn't in- tend to be. He talked to me like my wife does, and I forgot myself and answered. ‘You, my door!" -_. SOURIS HIGH SCHOOL Honor roll for April: Grads x-l Jessie Bushcy, I Ai- ba-n Paquet, 3 Harold Hockln. Grads IX-l John Beamish, i Jack Matthew, 8 Thomas Holland. Grads VHI-l James Mclnnls, 2 Leo MacDonald, 8 Blanche Green __.._-_. ‘more the fascination about o perennial border thlt are not found in other forms of gardening. and. the chief of these is vmtch-lng for and fleeting vrlth delight lost year's treasures as they spring up one by one atm- tbo snow and frost ore gone. Home hardy ones even push up their tips through the melting snow and send out their .. .....’-" .":.=.=- are GI I m buns no mid? lanes OH-olill ooldaoll vain-ca, 15¢ ( THE COOK/S CORNER flowerbudsonthsnrstmilddoy. Tberoismuchiotnicrostmob- servo-pt gardener in noting the dif- ferences in habit o! growth and color of foliage of the plants as the young growth appears early in the spring. ‘the bronze ‘color of the peony, the bluish leaves of the Virginian blue-bell. and the sword- liks leaves of the iris illustrates this, but indeed each species has its own habit and can be recog- nized as soon as‘ it pushes through the ground. In a well planned por- ennial border there should be bloom from early spring until late foil. This needs care and thought but, like everything else. the pleasure, derived from successful achievement more than compensates for the work done. In a small garden there is fre- quently no choice or position and following the lino of tho fence ls tho obvious place. A position in the open, sway from the roots of ' t . recs. is best, though shade dur_lleaves_ in: pert of thoydsy is beneficial in some plants. The width of the bed depends on the length and 9,130 an the sine of the garden. From live to ten feet is generally rewm. mended. The edge should be straight if the lot is small and rectangular, but o curved edge frequently is n. foctlvo in o large-i- space. »If the ground is o! different levels, or if there are any special permanent features, note should be mode of them and the border P1511116’ $0 Qmnhodae these points .0! interest. When the position is selected, the soil must be consider- ed. As the border is expected m remain for some years tho n11 mull. be well prepared, The bug n! to do this is by trenching in the following manner. Mark off o 55119 across the bed. about one and one-half feet wide. dig out m; soil about the same depth and y}. movo this soil to the end of the bed. Break up the soil at the bot- tom of the trench, then put in g, Wok 1mi- or weu rotted manure. Oowmanuroisbestforlighcgojlg Ind horse manure for heavy loud, Mark of! the next strip of ground Ii Ginger Punch 1 quarto: water 1 cup sugar 1.4 cup chopped preserved sinner ‘A cup lemon juice ‘it cup orange juico IA cup pineapple juloo. _ Boll water, sugar and gingo slowly for 15 minutes. Add frui. juices and chill. Tiny pieces an orange and pineapple may be added. Dilute as desired. Servings. 12. Grape Punch 10 cups grape juice Juice of 4 oranges and ‘A rind of ono, grated 1 cup sugar 4. whole cloves A few leaves of mint or lemon extract 3 on whites 2 cups water Mlxslxcupsofkfwfi iuioowii-h orange Juice. sugar, cloves and mint Bring to a boil. cool and than let stand. to ripen for three hours. When ready to use servo oold with the egg whites boots: at!!! and folded in, and the other four cups of juice added with the two cups of » water. Servings, as. _ Cnrrontodo 1% cups sugar 2 cups hot water’ 1 pint cooked current juice l’; cup lemon juice 8 quarts cold water , Dissolve sugar in hot watt, odd current juice, lemon juice and cold waver. Chill. A few pineapple cubes, may be added, if liked. Seal in quorf 80. Ginger Crush 1 tablespoon crushed ginger root 1 quart water 1 0B9 Ill!" v, sup lemon juice Boll ginger not in water twenty minutes. Add sugar and lemon juice. Whentcold, remove ginger, and chill, adding more water is de- sired. One tablespoon of grated pineapple added to each serving is a delicious addition. Servings, l0. bottles and keep on ice. Servings. ’ Q "-"<5!JF5.F?53YT55"6IT pi-Fiiit‘ alarm:- l But if s. girl takes tho best of everything; if she wears Paris frocks whue the 1mm“ o, the 18mm, are Shabby. u she uses ma c“ while me ignored her warning not to sail in mined. the radio Dhyfiicians aver, more (equal) 3 Marion Stevenson. 2 ma“ VHF!‘ Franklyn mwefle’ and m, the we“ h w! x others walk; ii she corrects mothers grammar and won't let father come u“ ‘limited “hm”- ind Went b! the bchflvloilr 0f their imple- Glad‘? 1x—1 5116315 501118". I Jack Menu“ “d Shh-l” Gm ML 9,1,7?“ e m” c mt u“ m“ t Wm ha”, = ln the living room in his house slippers, and if brother and sister scuttle dwm Wm‘ the $1111 . merits. Besides the divining rod, , Ad“ 5WVWW1- 3 CCU! 5591611800. his; 261$“ Richards‘! and o! “w bed l‘ " m: :11 me ‘on 1m mush so x t i m v to safely when she comes around, be sure she is mean and tyrannical and mm“? berm‘ K133 G°°Y8Vl n1 "ma! Wm“ 111131111113’ when the 4 Mm" W99“. 5911M‘ 3113111 a e _1 Danny alone’ a mu that “a ’ m m. u much u’ mambo from e i selfish, nnd she will make one of the glrnrne-gimme-gimms wives who have n“! n“ 55 "m 9° h!" Written. wove-lengths d0 not harmonise, (eilllm- Mum“ Poole’ 3 ma“ PO01“ m,“ and?“ r?“ ‘mm m‘ M u” “n” ‘awn m m‘ no use for ahusband exceptosa cash register. i "mint him that W6 Wllld b0 ill, $110 Prwtlflmcr has what looks like Grade ‘Tm-l 511mm Mwlflii. Grade V“! Paul cmucher’ a 1m a to m up u“ “m” ha" nu‘ “mud be a"! It you want to know whether a girl will make s. wife who will stand but that he would recover and be o wooden egg. 1t has a. metal 2 Mu1a€° mime“. 3 Inwis Weeks, “m” Maura!“ “d wan“ M” w“ We‘ Many p°°p1° may n” b‘ 9' “"51”! °1 2753M “u” ‘u by you through thick and thin or merely be s. fair-weather wife, watch able i0 go shooting again. oenm and is suspended, pendulum. 4 Jessie MacSwain, Bu“ 3 R°bm 1’°°1°- m m“ 5° “mm ‘mum in the“ @118 and “"395 ‘"11 9° B“ her play games. Observe her sportsmanship. If she is unduly elated “k0. from I. thread. [1 you a" 1n Grade VI-l Gerald Murphy. 2 Grade W“! ow!“ Paqmit- 7 pmmrmg m“ bat m which ca" l u" m!!!“ m“ 8°°d “indium when sho wins or too much cast clown when she loses; u sho chests; if Home and Motor-coi- health, the wooden egg will move Ruth Smith. 3 Olive we“, 4 J09 Harris. 8 Alonzo Gallant, 4 helvy covering of ‘the manure for planting. The limo tend! N Ihe throws down her hand and quits when the cards run against her. bo- in clockwise circles when held Everett Bomers. Eswld Poole. should be spread over the surface lighten l-hc B011. Limb 511M111! I110 b1 ware. she will make one of the wives who go back to mother when he! She had o. house at lwargaflg, and sibove your hand. If not it. W111 GYM!!! V—-1 Isobel Manx“, g G359 m-l Mlrlflm Matthew, 2 M w‘ Fmmd 5nd 4“! 1"- wmal‘ ‘mined w 5°“! m“ "9 mam“ husband losts his job, or who find out. that their real affinities are men ovmcd a. large saloon motor-car, in 310W counter-clockwise or more] Helen 5°39". 3 1V8n Bomers, m. chime” Gamnb 3 ma?“ UM" W” “mm” 15 °h°5en ‘ u" W071i '0 b0 Mid Hid t!!! $114800 WW1!“ with more moiiov tha tithe men to whom they arc married. which she was driven about, u... so and m. ' y vvlla Stevenson (equal), 4 meme "ill" “*1 Pfliilllle Richards. 4 Joe “"14 l" 4°“ in the fell and the up and levelled befm pic-min!- If you want to know whether a. woman will make a wife who will be xuntry_ weelm v MacDonald. ‘ Q“ n real pol and companion i0 you, find out how much intelligence she has. Mm Jaoswen w" a Walkman Grade Ill-l John Mncxsy, g Qfldo II-l Nhiriei Rt ” ‘ , I _ Find out if you have anything to say to her after you quit telling her how V151,‘), to London hotels’ and h” ’ Mme“ wqeks’ a Dammy ween’ Marlon McKenzie. 8 Arlene Yea, 4 , , o much will love licr and mist wonderful eyes she has. Ascertain how much quemly attended society ‘uncuom. Beaut, ‘s, Adelaide sumo" (equal) 4r may Ruth Poole. DGIIItUIGSB brain she. has under her permanent wave.» Find out what things you she leaves three sons and ‘ ‘y Mme Steve son‘ Gradg 11 (b)__1 Mew“, Gallant, . have. in common. Dullness, lack of culture, uncongeniality are defects daughwxx . Grade __1 Harold Murphl 3 Richard Delaney, 3 Jss Rooney ILLUSTRATED 9355331531“; 13530". Iunmsmm that no woman can hide. So 1f a. man marries s. woman who bores him H" mwbmd the H“ u! m‘ Grade m4 Eileen we“, a my 4 Gilbert Smith. W1‘!!! “B! 11511111 I "4 to Mars it is h s: own error. ’ ' ("we _ __________ And finally ii you want to know whether a gdrl will make a reasonable Zia‘; med m 1924' and his ‘metal 812th,’ Ii! J Poole, 3 bilalllire-dliiaaemegzvlgaaz I! “"5531! WQUTIINWIOI wife ivlio will take the tips and downs of matrimony on the chin instead M “nnbowugh w“ in the tmdi- 8mg; e i m“ mmen- 3 GW- crouch“ ' of howling and winning ovr-r them, observe how much common sense she m“ Y grand “Lyle °1 Bill-W fihlcfs. ' . m exact mm. o; m, mm,“ has mic how keen a sense of humor. The hearse w“ Preceded by Dofliiil- _E‘ H’ Mifluman’ nmher‘ QTQLEN GOLD c“ mode. ‘ And if slic has these virtues tile balance do not greatly matter. 11°"- “d “flowed by a crest crowd _-*"-—--—— “an °5s I, m mmoned u, . “ma, m” 13°30'11" D11 °r “M” wh° h“ "WM f"!!! “Mum R Gm!’ AGED BY m" in navy blue and white. "STOLEN" m n“ Tho tailored blouse chooses with v11 ports of Britain. 347M357. May lit-Pietro, Cardinal ,___ " F‘, ..__.._ - spasmodic colic in horses ls often Weascls are usually attracted to I‘ mum ca“ d Dish cotmn bmgdcmh caused by change of feed, coldrdwelllng houses in search of mice, P5315 NIGHTSHIRTS LEG?AI $32k" M“ “L-‘mlml o’ maxlussianoghurchoadazloséi: The 0mm" Imymg ‘km “c”, wptgy in quantities, or exposure to but if meat is left in on exposed p0 ce ave en asked by Mm l golden pectoral cm” 9,11 I g sarlly attracts much attention with Mary Doo tie. past '10 years. of - ° “P” l‘ the growing who m h". “ ‘ mill, . 81ft of the Pope. When Bishop Blosksn was receiv- ed in audience several days ago, tho kWh eye of His Holiness noticed that he wore a cross of cheap ms- tel. Th0 Pope later mode discreet inquiries and discovered that the 3181101?! golden cross had been stolen by ‘Bolshevlsts during his im- prisonment in Russia. Will Paris bring the night-nun back into fashion? ~ It 811 45191361158 upon whether the Americans take their fashions from _ Montmarto or Versailles. If this continent follows bhg ‘mmph "f "I diflllnflllibhod visitor, former premier Blown-Q 3.9mm‘, it will sleep in old-fashioned prom}, nlxhtsbirts and will scorn pyjama; Mound even wears I. nightcap, place the weasel may attack it. feel important in clothes of Ins-ii sophistication. Style No. 187 is designed for sills B, 8. 10 and lzyem. Btu 0 roquiroo 2% yards o! 89-inch motorist fol dross Ind hat. with 1% yards of 30- inch material for blouse and l! yards of blndlnl- _ It's outo curried out in grey linen with a short-sleeved gulmps of yel- low linon. Hamilton. t.. l-o locate Mary Evelyn Doc ttle who may be using the name Edith Wilson. Mrs. Doo ttio claims tho girl, who was bom iovember 22, 1908, was “sto1en" fnini Hamilton in April. 1924, whonoho was about l5 yours old. The girl is described u g blonds and - ay have been working in Regina. u a stenographer accord- ing to Mrs. Doolittle! letter. droughts when heated. Beautiful women of 54 countries praise the new Pompcinn for it: subtle fragrance and clinging tex- ture. Thirty years ofexperi- merit-endless tents with living Inodels—creatcd this higher quality, smoother powder. You will love the natural way in which it enhances your beauty-its extra iiThe Only Medicine My Children Have Ever Had" 1 purchased the out "f-‘rom the day . ‘three babies. My little girl who wu For twenty years his house-keeper box for my first baby until the present troubled for I long time wltb stubborn qesadn mediums-d wnyic my: _* __ _ _ Y. BABY'S OWN TABLETS have costivenefl. derived the greatest bene- e’ h“ watched W" M. Her- omOnecfthefliarmonious 50001.5 ' ouszzaggmn “u”, “Q way t0 StOP lump“: Ogtwfirzlolin “Bazaar-refit”. u‘ t g riot/s luggage ll he 40111506 for oludeawillenctlyauizyom w“ w“ “mm”, ‘p . ca the only medidne my four chll- fit.‘ CONSTIPATION en have ever had," writes Mrs. Ha Give yoUR d,“ BABTS OWN Vlfloil! Mp! about tho world, NW complcxio m-ilgree icariaziirsiiz-sivii=ir.rr h" "W" u“ ~h~ m Z2?.'..'~.‘2‘l'.‘.'3‘li.'2il'.il’ im "M M» =~-— ..... . i ------------- WN TABLETS, by correcting slight mm,’ canning“ Qleeplgsmssggor, h“ “nuns” when h. M‘ f" Am‘ refund your money y sanmmn" My “WW "c9998!" n‘ u. widen very cflldenflv M the brslv- when”... h, g cm”: m“, m, m- "Wk ' ,__ trail." on d method of "m; "il-I-Hvu m. in. sin $seiogifzfyt m“ "W" "bu!" m.‘ ghlldrcndntoks n.5,. swmhlltglg "silk shirts, dlnnor 1mg, o, ‘WNW funds. not .- the ma. 4.1m foot o1 qmhnmm . . . e urea yuan y-ln tyre wurse, 1nd nighmppg ‘n4 good om copper-g, qmunun‘ go "mam ‘with ~.............-.u..-.......-... . mN rm Langille New Germany be l tel SAFE (See I t’ - ,, . N Swsagmtzbhavcused imsvs owii 3.8.3 trims zs-wie a‘ munch mam“, ‘he “m. "But O m” ‘° " W" "m "m" m“ ?‘-"oii'€.iw"‘"' - _ ‘m . I ABLETS ezclioivzly in rearing my o I n "a H . i”, 11° Dvismas. No, indeed. No py- cmmm‘! l" ° “will”! thflnlorgo ones. Mmlzvinlhuo- . __ _, ' on ,2 .000 no: m m . “m” m, “m3. White lines were painted on two, u lnqnsnqy | s, m A“, ’ DR'W"'L'AMS m ' s» --~i and he occult» placed their: -v"!.‘i’§.‘1"'l.‘..'3 t u‘ 9m You ‘Now m“, sferzstxn; thin. Shove’: we: . .. ....'................ an“. -~ m up o o on Oval lndood, our“; Cl i A new Lypg 0f m“ "m" f of the day. l ere were 58.496 small i?§:i§:tw.$°|“'w “Kai: . l8 w °' ‘ I! you wish o beautiful shoot oi one: and 15.13 large ones. woighinv s total of vi .06 pounds. ram were hub I -- - of doubtful value. lig-xlmdn-Dhé-n-nu ndythlsnbws. Fndl-l-NIQI o o - Ill l us"; trmsfor embroidery containing ovei U dooilfll. 08nd 1B cents additional lit potion lot no M17 little miss would odors this BABY'S own TA roll-n lruildinlfl ll locked in place by mu IBM mnrooomo nwvout coupon innperdross. nimifllflhilbhfiflflll