n \ f? II EIGHT id" __ __.,_,_ ‘wvvvv vvvv vvv vvvvvvv I V I VYYYW . w": n" w“. . . r ... THE CHARLOTTETOWN . -l.l.., . ,.. Q a ' 1 v u a‘ v vvvvrvw vv ,Woman’s R alm -:- Social an Lv%v‘¢ v v¢¢ “Happenings of the Week I ..“.t i1‘ ~\ ' or- 11 .\l .1. ;-:-..:..~,. and §Iflé_ ' return- (‘.11. l M15 Irene lust iabc I.i\\' 05H. \ I ,T't‘<‘ .., 21110 llflf; sixrei‘. Miss lee $tlllllll(.’l‘ to to; ' "n return l. ‘ w ‘,1 (‘Apt Aircs . ‘Weitniouiit, t or. return i ‘ ‘ t. w": Iii!’ ."imn.cr in h . t ~ . I ti \,\'~-li~'.t'i* lilTl little '~ ur.» ‘e from . Wt-b t-rs fath- Qlt c1. .\l.11"y er Mr, Jolui A. Websitr .1141 .\ir.~. ‘YVJBJYY, are being eortiiuily- wel- comed, ‘ o u t ltqgretfu; iJi'C\\L'il5 wt-tc suic- this '-\'Lt‘i\' to .\lis Eva bkléihih, uiiu lcl‘. i.i..i.~il.1_\' tor her 31o c Auck- .1.iu, .\‘c\v Zeaunid, 11st friends ,ii Aiotitreal and Vance. ct‘ en .\-..e, .\i:.\> liucnull, ‘who ha.» been .1; Cunuttu itu- two )LAZ'D, .w}i\llitiili,‘, .1‘. s. o: iier iiilh‘ in h; . stop- , . .1 .\ii.‘_5 \ ~ \\'.i hills. has .1 \\.ue circle oi .~. uiic- and tru-titls ainoiitt wlioni she WAS a deightlul \i>lt0l. - a 0 lt.1.;th .\Iui:.1y o1 the ltoyul 1d in Airs‘. .\illl‘l‘1i,\' x ,3 ‘Jelliflléti Alonday "i-ir ho itiuys in New Glas- .\l;' tea hcsc-se. at the Clliir- » i. l'ci;' ,, Ctlllflb this ailer- . be .\ ‘urzih Forces and liortcii . - . R/say, left this .litil'l trip to Moni- silt will bc the re . J. Wziterstotl, Met- ‘alllUtllil. >4 - I in A A, I1oii1eroy' is uniting .\l*irilot'li Aleliinnoii. . - t t? W. .\It'i"hrc, All‘. 21nd ‘l, Airlliiee. oi Yorktoh, 5.1.<k., .1 Llliitlil up I‘(‘5i(l(‘i‘<:< at ‘.313 ,~ 1.1 dlullllt‘, Ottawa. for the .‘. er months. - . o Fflulltis and rclutrrc= of Mrs, J. 1.. Alucluvsotl. wlitist- 120th illness .\.lit‘\; curly iii .\i:1y has cruised Jicni much ‘anxiety, are very glad Lo know that her eonditioi; has greatly llli§>t'O\'t‘tl, She is conval- g tinder the rare o1 Ali's, Al- ixoii .\lac_\ill;lan 11L Fziirvicu". can Prior 1o leaving for her new, Lwiiie an Saint John Mr». A. F, Ffetlvirlclflil, was honored 't t1 tnceting of the Girls‘ ll c1‘ the W.A. o1 Christ Parish Church ‘held iit tin: triie of iile honorary DTCnlliPllL .\I;'.s W. Holland Boone, ltfr». bloul Cummings presented Mrs. Bate an amlrcsc, accompanied by :1 drcssing: 511k umbrella, 1t aisu iTth ‘.llllll\'(_‘l'$f\i'}' of the Archdeacon and Mrs. oiiie verse. made up for the n were also read. t ¢ - The 10.1 hostesses at the Golf tiinks this HlICFIIOOIl wil‘. be Mrs. t‘, H, B. Lmigtvtirtli. NIIS> Mary is‘. Hwztird. Mrs, A. W. l-lyiicimaiti, .\1‘ii¢ Mary E Brown, Miss Norah B. Longtvorth. , 0 o o Miss Jeanette Macphail of Saint Jfitlil is visiting her sister, Mrs, F. L. Lawton, Hcuthcrdale. . - - Miss Dorothy Gordon. R,N., who ' vvvvvv Yvvvv <w+o+oooooooo+ovorvovvo~ to00Ks,AnT¢ MUSIC (BY I. R. H $+o+¢0+0+0+vow+oo++o+o flcamana‘. "B01701" by Igor Schwezoff, won zhe $5.000 prize oiflcrccl in at coin- pctitioii held in Landon in i934 for iic bust autobiojraphy written in I-Juuhsh. It was chosen out of five llllll(llt‘(i iuaiiust-ripis and was first litlbilnllvtl in August, 19.35, "Borzoi" is one of the most cl1i1riii1iig1y' writ- ten 41nd one of the iuos". interesting books about RUSMJ that I have ever read. Igor Schwezoff. who was thirteen .it zhe time of the October Revol- ution, 11'1" many memories of the dd Ru 1, but with the clear-i ,- of youth he realized MgillCflili .li L the old order was gone for- ever. and without too many regrets‘ he adept/ed the hardships of Soviet life and aticiiipwtl 1o earn his liv- zit: 11nd foljow his chosen career of linllc; dancer and choreographer. As he is bub a talented and an adven- iurozus young man his ambition was ‘rcalizrtl and he became an excellent <l:iz"..~ci~ anti it valuatile choreograph- li i‘. bccziusc of his <20 us) par- 1 _\ sane and non-political po .. o. view and his belief in art ‘or ni s sake, rather than for Com- iuuiizsurs sake, he “'11s looked upon .\\' un eziciny to Communism andj t‘Oli-'1ll':§' watched, This sense of iii ‘. the lurk 0f freedom and (‘ullZHllOIl that it was not cn- 4 in the new Russia, R1 1n, led him to seek escape ziimuuti Siberia to Shanghai, and then to Europe. ‘Faro glimpses that. Igor Schwezofl’ us are unforgettable: the aimosphlcre of slio‘. "zioni iint it was to sit in the dusk \\'ith .t gili-"vS of tea before the Tights were lit, lisiening w that titty song of the sainoviir and watching the‘ glowing charcoal sending out little‘ rubies of light. like eyes in the‘ dark! And that typical samovar ncvcr bub-bled so chccriy as in 1904, when 1 was born. 1t bubble-ch onl llTJOlUZh all the years, cvcn through- ihe war years, until the Rcvolu-l llllll—~é(.‘(‘llilllgly for aluays-exting-f tnshcd its bright enbers and itsl 1:111’ plumes tr steam, and left the} llil‘lll(ll'_\’ of its shining sides to ta - . lllvl]. ihouch never quitc to fade in CfllilllilCmfi Rus~iaii minds," and, a contrasting picture-his thoughts as he looked in the windows of a city of the free. after his escape from 'hc Soncts-JAticl I thought of the \v;1_v tVflpii‘ had to live in the Rllshlll I hxtd jus; left; sometimes three or four. perhaps more, hud- dled toccther in one smttil room,i tirmiitivclv, without comfort. or that , supreme luxury-privacy! Arid as I; tvziichcd and wondcretl and envied, I; rc.tIi/,cd tliit; ticoplc there no long-y or felt ic neccssiuv of this coin-‘ fort and luxury that I now saw tobea‘ 11m in tiiei ‘old R ssirt of his childhood symbol- _ ircd by the snii10var~"How pleas- -‘ 4A4 A‘; A AAAAAQQQQAAAA A v 1v vvvvyyy- l ‘Li; AAAAAAAA a A as‘ 1w v vvvrvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv v GUARDIAN Personal -:- B ETTY, r11: ‘PAJEMENTIIATE Foshvions -:- L l_ SEPIEMBER 12, 19,39 v vvvvv vv vvvuv “OQOO-OQ itera ture 99. tom. onem wasuon Aunosr ‘tor us: nowtfiunfl/ ‘F0000 i YS 0000 sctzua, scnua! on one. now 1 ware "runs DARK ow BASEMENT~AND ‘mess CLOTHES JUST woMr‘ come wurri I LOOK, as-r-rvl HEP-E's 1a: cares? rams m ‘tuo-sctzua" = LAUNDRY soap-- OXYDOL. I1‘ ACTUALLY ‘- SOAKS our uuzr nv I5 MINUTIS-I IT'S A MIRACLE l BUT AREN'T THOSI “no-sews” GRANULATED sows 12:21am IIARSIIP 1112150 one oucamo rr. HURT MY NANDSAND raven fumes TERRIBLY- _ .so,sue HATES rue BASEMENT, uEH ? HO! HOI w1:'1.1. KEEP us: oowu ustzs ALL DAY! AND YOU SAY IT atrrrtus 1s A Ivlwkmb -—MADE Ev "m: IVORY 50A? PEOPLE. rr‘$ S0 SAFE --vs1' rr WORKS Even FASTIR rum muzsu ones! airs ctornas 41o s c SHADES WHITER,TOO P 1cm’? BELIEVE vr! coon! e Mona sues-rs» 1 MORI suizrs I she's, NOT - Evan MAI-F ‘rutzoueu l YOUR FAULT, a»: so»! suEb a5 nous ALREADY IF You winner so urzr! illlllllllll ' \\\\\\\\\\\\\t\ or! AMA-zine! ouw 15 MINUTES‘ soisxma f AND 1 maven saw "mesa fumes 5o warm l Q ‘so g“ 3 °~~o_ I130 THAT AFTERNOON - JUST rrumx -- eomo TO PLAY BRIDGE on WASHDAY AFTERNOON --1su'r rr GREAT ? Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Airtime is Eastern Qtenbrd) SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER l2 Paris 5: 5 p n1. —Ctiticcrt from Radio- Paris. TPA-B, 25 i.‘ iii, ll 88 meg Geneva. 5:30 p. m. —Nc\vs from the Lea- has been visiting her mother, Airs. ‘everywhere round me. ‘Those a‘ the‘ we of Nmlons hcadqunrwrs_ BBL, Isnbcll Gordon. returned to Mont- new generation had never known, 31 2 m 965 mm real yesterday after a dcT-ightful tioltday o a t Paris eostzuniers bought heavily in scotch tweeds, and are using them for every kind of garments‘ from tweed coats 101‘ evening tvearl to bloomers. The French stay-in‘ strikes affemcd the textile industry, . twecds harl to replace thc usual woven materiai; for autumn and winter. For street wear, the usual roitume has a. longer jacket, is "uihtcr at, the waist and flared in-r '11 a basque. For country or sports ‘A-ill‘. the cont. is three-quarter or lull lellith over very full or (livid-l ed skirts, One notcd fashion house shows a Scotch tweed dress on, acvr-rs.» lint», Wllh, instead of a ,~ rt, wvl cut bloomers. The long, t . is of trwced to match. The crcninr; coats are in unusual shades , o‘, rcd. llitlt’) and crcen, otith thel, . tutored rcvcrs faced with brilliant‘ have mud: u study of the Child-l ,cmbroidcry' in varied colors. | . The HOUSEWIFE and HER A C TI VI TTES lOl If l-l.\l'l'l lure! ._.,,,,,. ’l " it. , your littirt, '3 r ", t - lllfiflf‘ ‘,', r- f1 :,,wi'f. F t t 1k" "‘ ‘l1 l‘ \‘. ~ t . "cu" heart ' t‘ ‘ 11:: tour fut-c, .. » =- . It. _ ily amusing iluuiortiit], ‘sluggish ivcrfniicziitiiftilactniihyoiiuliiniiizttai iii/traits!‘ of consiipzitiou utul chronic tivhggslion. You can clcticnti on .l11~; tinie-proveti trcutmcnt, DR. CIIJIWI ink“? - Liver Any man who can make money can borrow plentr I t l It is easier to p.ck a sinner than it is a winner. _ I I I I i l-I~ sleeps well who is not laware that he has slept badly U I I il ..A pretty woman without is like a flower without DPFHIMP t O O I like a of the when a woman looks scarrcrow, a lark is out qucrtion l I I Flvcry man is a hit in his own hcmc - tintil after the company leaves ‘ ' i I O I The girl who can neither ‘nor play and knows it, it always a favorite 4 9 9 I Q , Many a mun ivho loses coniid-l cnce bccomc so cynical he can't. even trust himself l 9 9 O Sonic pcnplc who havc to be hundlrtl with kid glows could‘ b“ handled better with silovcs. v‘: a a , Th" most brilliant conversa- toiuilist, is the mrin who sits bv and 1c“ hi‘: hcitzhhoi‘ do all the ‘Mk-inc Dior“ grain’: rive-n“. always b: , certain that it is firm. Use a rotat- ‘ int! motion. il~ and those of the old had been for so long ‘ithout any contact with the realty of it all that they had ccuscd to realize it as a factor of 1ife_ "Ihcy ncvci" thought about i: except in :1 dun and abstract way --if at all. I invsclf had ncverl thought about u. and “only now,‘ now Ihat I could see, touch, smell it all, I realized with a vivid pang, how infinitely desirable—-not only desirable, but I10CC5SEii'_\'!—-\\'fl5 this state of not being cold. not being ill-tiotirishetl. not living in surround inus of txivcrty and squalor-this‘ state of lildiflfillili comfort in which all the people I saw around me seemed to be living." One brunch of dramatic art that flilS nourished in Russia since the Revolution is the Cliildreirs Then- Schenectady 6130 p m --Seicncc Forum. W2XAF, 31 4 m., 9 53 tncg. London 7 26 p. m --A Recital of Shake- spearean Songs. GSP, 19.6 m-,‘15 31 meg" GSD, 25 5 m3, i1 '75 meg-Z GSC, 3t 3 m,. 9 59 meg Berlin 7:30 p. m -G'ala Dance Even- ing DJD, 25 5 m., 1i '77 meg. ' (‘aracas 8:30 p ire-Native Songs YVZRC, 5i 7 111.. 5 8 meg. London 911; p m -The BBO Dance Orchestra, directed by Henry Hflli GSF, 19 a m- 15 i4 meg-i 05C» 31.3 m; 9 58 meg, fiethbridge 1i p. m. The Sport week Henry- to. 'I‘wo members oi the stuff of the Toronto Public Library who rcn's Theatres of Europe report that since the cstabhshmetit of the first modern Russian theatre in ‘Lciiingrzttl in 1918 the number has t, increased tintii there are one hund- l red theatres playing daily for child- ‘rcn throuchout the Soviet Union. , And these theatres arc not model- ,lcd on the same pttttem as the regular adul theatre. They strive in ; various ways to meet, a childs de- llllflllfiS, on his own terms and to makc the close contact winch is es- sential if the child is to experlcrim and purticipaw in what is going on before him. The many Houses of Art Educa- tion in schools and recreation rooms carry on n great deal of in-, formal dramatic work with the children themselves by means of gTnlipS tiirectctl by trained leaders “"159 t who help the ehiidien make their own tilays out o, well kuown stor- ies or topical happenings. In the dramttiic presentation of literature to children Russia. has made the most progress and achiev- ed the most outstanding and artls- 7 tie theatres for children in Europe. During the years of its develop-l‘ ment the Russian Chiidrens Them; tint! trc. has naturally aroused interest, f-ovc." in other Etiropean countries. , In France it has influenced the] xvni-k of 1h‘. actor Monsieur Chun- ccrc‘, who has organized a groupl of scouts culled "Comcdiens Rout-l icrs.“ They have been working to-i gather for several years and have 110mm,; practically professional actors of a unique sort. They tnkcl proviso both ac‘lon and dinlogtie.‘ Only flftcr it has been thought out‘ and acted is it ivrittcn down. This‘ tzroitp yicrforms once a wcck for chi‘ ‘rcii in Paris dining the win- icr uiirl in summer goes on tour, throuvfi the-provinces. i In Poitind the ‘free iorm of dra-l rmtio wmkk “fill-D- Vincy, sports commentator, CJRO. Winnipeg, 48 7 m., 615 T1191; CPRX, Winnipeg 25.6 m., 11 72 meg. Tokyo i2 mlduighw "Overseas Pro- gram.“ JVI-I, Nazaki, 20.5 m. 14 6 l meg I SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13th Budapest 10 a m. -"News from Hungary." HAS-S, i0 5 m., 15 37 m 0Q. Rome 1:20 p n1 -~Varicrl pffiillflm from Italian stations 2R0, 31 1 m,. I 9:63 meg. Paris 2:30 p. m. “Love Cures (L‘An1out" Medeclni, Opera in 3 Acts, from Molienrs Comedy. TPA-S, 25 2 m., l 1i 88 mcg l Moscow ' 4 p. m. ~A Visit to a Shipyard in Leningrad, ENE. l, m., 12 mec- Soviet, 25 London 6 p m. ~Brcthovcn2< Crmaiirs Y for Violin and Plnnoforte, No. 5 ‘GsP. 1o s m., l5 :11 mm», cs1). 12s s m., 11.15 mean; osc. :11 a m». 9.58 met: Eindhnvcn. Netherlands 7- Musical Program from Lon- don. EAQ. 30 5 m., 9 87 mcg Berlin --"The Declaration of Blume. 8:45 p m A Skcieh hv Paul 17.10.25 4 m. 11.77 meg - London 915i p m, ~-Thr~ Vnneouvcr Boy's ‘Band GSP, i9 7i 111.. 15.14 mctz; GSC. 3i 3 m, 9.58 meg vival of ancient dances. songs, cus- toms and ceremonies. The children tirixlnrz a thcme or it short fable and lm- l in the schools form troupes which somctlmcs travel around showint: fhcir local traditions to children of other districts. Hungary and Czechoslovakia have also been influenced to mnt by Russian institutions, To purify a sink ,mix a limp charcoal with clear water and pour Lt down tho drain. some ex‘: ‘ HERE'S THE rr's Miuzvetous! NO MORE DREARY AFTERNOONS IN THATOLD aA§EmENTl oxvoon. CERTAINLY DOES WORK wouoens! Y waste time and strength scrubbing and boiling clothes? When simply by changing your laundry soap you'll get a snowy white wash absolutely without. that back- breaking drudgery! And in far less time! OXYDOL is the latest amazing discovery of the Ivory soap people. A soap that soaks clothes white in record time! Yet so safe that every washable color stays sparkling, brilliant, fresh! Combining ispeed and safety in a way no single soap has done before—OxYi>o1. does these 3 amazing things. (i) Soaks out dirt in l5 minutes, without scrubbing or boiling. Even the grimiest spots come snowy white Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box The Question of Whether a WifoShali Work Outside Her Home Must be Given Indi- vidual Consideration as Each Case Comes up for Discussion Dear Miss Dix-J am married to a tine young man who is wus- trious, energetic and ambitious, but at present his work brings in only B small amount of money. We can just live on it by Dirwhl-HB every Denny and doing without all the comforts and lux- uries to which both of us have been accus- tomed; Before we matried I had a. fine posi- tion in an office and my olci emirlwer is very anxious to have me back at a good sal- ary. We’ve only been married two Years and both of us are in our 20s. I should like very much to go back to my old Job because I like the work and we need the money, but, I hesitate to do so because of the effect it might have on our marriage. Many people tell me that when the wife works it breaks down the morale of the husband, and that nothing braces up a. man to do his best, like feeling that his wifeis dependent upon him. Other people tell me that it belittles a man for his wife to work outside of the home and that people think less of him if she does. What is your advice in the matter? SARAH, Answer: _ No question is more complex than this. None to which u, 15 more y impossible to give u direct answer, because in every ease whether or not the wile should follow some gainful occupation depends upon me jndiyj. dual circumstances, I do not think that any woman who has youngcliildrcn should work outside of the home unless it is a ease of dire necessity, Very often it is because the meager earnings of the husband are not, (‘llmlgh to give thu- children the food and environment they need, but, with u“; mother's salary added they can be given advantages that more than CiJmpensatg my the loss of her persoal services. Whether the wife should work outside of the home depends upon the husband's attitude toward it. If he objects strongly 11nd if it hurts ins pirde for her to do so, she should resticct his feelings in the mutter unless it is d case of actual starvation. If she humiliates him by taking it 10D, it will develop an inferiority complex in him that, “"111 wrgck mm bgcfluse 1t Will. break down his belief in his ability to succeed. A wife can do more to help such a man by bucking liuii up and keeping up hi5 COUfflgg than she can by any money that she couid make. The clinging vine 1mm; up many it tottering oak thEi. would fall but for the brace it, gives gt, f take little stock inthe theory that when 9, wire bQQQn-les B, money- earner her husband becomes a, parasite, because that, kind 0f a mg“ ,5 mg lazy and trifling to work any way, and 1f he hadn't that excuse he would have hunted up another alibi. Any iiiuu who has any IllfliliiliC35 about y him and a single intestine 1n his anatomy is spured on to do me very beg-y, that is 1n him, and make every effort when he has a, wire m, m5 Side who is pulling her share oi the load and trying to help him. I The idea that 1s any reflection on n. man for his Wife to work outside , of the home after they are married is so antiquated that, n, seems m have come out of the him-trunk 1n the attic. The modem view is that it is an , indieatio that the man is broad and liberal and just 11nd Willing lo give 1 his wile a fair deal. For the sake of hi5 pride he is not willing to force his wife to go shabby and half-starved and be deprived of every pleasure and amusement rather than let her earn the money that. W111 make per comfortable. He isnot a. dog in the manger. If he cant give her what. she “rants, he doesn t stand in the way 0t hei- getting it for herself, A poor man expects his wife, and rightly, to help him. 1f she can do it better by earning money than by cooking and washing and scrubbing why should she not do so? And in many c3595 me wig; working w,- B few’ years after marriage enables the husband to get on his feet 11nd for them to lutvc the home and children they crave, As for what people say, let them be saying it. As long as we are doing the thing that we think is right and that our own judgment, commends, the comments of the neighbors should go in one etlr and out of the other, Denr Miss Dix-What would you do it you were in my slices? 1 love my husband, but he apparently loves the whfllg feminine 5cm M any SECRET. . . How Oxydol Works So Fast . . . Yet Is So Safe! with a gentle rub. (2) Gets white clothes 4 to 5 shades whiter than old-type soaps. by scientific Tintometer tests. (3) So safe on colors that even sheer cotton prints, soaked showed through 100 oonsccutivqwashinga. no perceptible sign of fading! And hands stay soft and lovely. too. N0 wonder women everywhere are quitting bars. flakes, chips. and old-type harsh “no-scrub" soaps for this remarkable new discovery! Oxvnot is economical. One package often >- does twice the work-gives twice the suda- 6 ' lasts twice as long as less modern soaps. Get OXYDOL from your dealer today! man: IN cAuAnA AMorningSmile ‘iiic argument htid been all on Mrs. I-Ienpecks side throughout the evening, and poor old Mr. Henpeck was absolutely fed up. "You seeiii to think a 601d in Q19 head means nothing to a woman." stormed Mrs, Henpeck. "I don't know of anything more annoying!" Mr. Henpeck peered over the newspaper he had been endeavoring to read. "No?" he countered, with a rare flush of spirit. "How about lock- jaw?" The two tourists had climbed the hill, and gazed. down at. the beauti- ful panorama of scenery which stretch for miles. “Ah? one of them sighed soul- fully, "what a view! So magnificent ~ao grand! Really, to stand like this before a scene like that makes a man feel like a little grub." "Good idea." his practical-minded friend replied. "Come on. I could just. do a good sandwich." "nus PRINT muss tors . on rimus m oxvnogmsm. rr mesa mo auteur 7 1 LAUNDRY SOAP man's '_j TQM‘; I‘ gamut-ts (1)14 suns ‘i? on '4->"" 1’: ma" cooics CORNER OOCOAN UT ALMON l) (‘RFNCH One cup granulated SUE-if. 1 0111i oonfectionerb sugar, =5. cup heavy cream, 1 tablespoon butter, i uitile- spoon molasses, ‘m teaspoon suit, i cup oocoanut, 2 cups almonds, toaist- ed and chopped, Combine the M188“ “m1 ‘m’ cream. Then cook. Slllrfmll W‘ quently over a medium flame of B4 degrees Fahrenheit, or 1111111 mt!" ture Just clings together when test- ed in oold water. Add butter, mol- asses, salt and coconnut. Continue cooking, over a WW l" flame’ stirring constantly until a firm tested u; grainy ball results when cold water, or the thermometer reti- isters 240 degrees Fahrenheit. At the last minute, stir in the almcmifi Drop by spoonfuls on a buttered pan. (These crisp 1M0 8105M‘ m" at; once.) This recipe makes flbfl“! 7 dozen pieces. Autumn Fashions . For Chic Dressers Here's a new smart “looker" in a. complete coverall for home, office or college. ~ Its easily slipped into and fastens at the back. An artists bow tie ac- cents the mtnhtture sfifrt collar. The round yoke creates young wide shoulders and makes it simple to fashion. The sleeves are quickly gathered tn the yoke. You'll find the patch pockets useful. Dark ground cotton percale as nnvy or wine printed in white is most attractive as originally plan- ned. The cost is so moderate. Style No. 1862 is designed for sizes 12, 14, i6, 18 and 20 years. Size 16 requires 4 yards of 36-inch material. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. i862. Bize .................... Name Street Addreu State NEIJIIITIS City lbq rule there is Just one woman after another in his life mid “w, he “and, me to go away ‘and leave him alone. Would you carry your pride like a. banner and quietly leave the field to the enemy? 0r would you track down the enemy and take her scalp or, at least, a handful of hair? Or would you sit tight like a frightened rabbit and wuit for further do. rvinpmcuts? These are the questions I have been struggling with for a _\'('Zli‘ or so and I am no nearer a solution. My husband has n. very good position as a manager in a factory and the present love is one of the girls , who works for him. She has no education, is coarse and vulgar- in her ‘ speech, no morals and is not even pretty, but she is 1T Just now and I am nothing. I have a fine job and can support myself, but I love my hu5_ band and dontwaiit to give him up. What shall I d0? Shall I go away. i“ he WiBhNi °T "l" B" u he W213“ 9D: her? 01- shall I make i-Z-‘il-E“ lift