. known. ..,.~E,k;.<s ~=.~ qr-g-ZYL’ . . . .. i, . l. l z r i4 l ;»av;§ 1 o Woman's Re alm '1 Social and Personal r Fashions "1 Literature ‘rt .- 1v =€- geéiéeijii Story of a World Dictator y ll. C. WELLS Copyright, 1988- by The American Newspaper Alllanc sTItIKES AND MUTINIBS been the least aware of the essential ‘ the idea of a mutiny against bel- Qllgerent governments, against. all North e, [no divergent movements that connection of a. hundred apparently mined the superficial orderliiness of 90-0 VQQ THE cook's _ CORNER N OUGAT CAKE . of loin rm - ' mmumfl 1 88's; l OI. 5%.: $7.‘; 55°" Quantities are ‘for the pqstry, F??? Y-l1¢?_fllllngI—i‘our tablespoon; ° $118111’. 4 tablespoons of cocoa- 1""- 1-3 lawman of cinnamon‘ i m. 1411c a sandwich tin with in» Putfyufleat the sugar nod egg w- 8691101‘. then gradually add m; . - t. Bake in a m er te lexistng zovernmms, seeped izifec- life. Whenever for example there fgffltf‘? Oq a oven t - m: - m. “Bef 'a~ tut mum y n urflanized 1' Y "nut-BS- N<>te-—Any mix- uouély thwugu N“ ore gillitisary suploressleon a socolal ad- m"? 00117411111113 nuts should be fthere can b: -ment." said Rxld in_one of [phases 0t ViVld convlction, "men .must rcalize that all their govern- ‘rments are wrong No existing gov- ernment can become a world gov- ernment. and o world government ~cannot be a, large-scale imitation of fiany existing government. It must be a new thmg embodying a. univer- j sill mutiny." There had alreedy been a fore- taste of this mutnous reaction to- twards the end o. the Great War of 3914-18. All the European fighting vforces then were drifting w mutiny. ‘The esscnfal Russnn Revolution ,,w.is a mutiny. and the sit-down strikes of the early twenties in Italy and eLsewhei-e. \‘.‘liCll immobilized faciorrics and the mecnhiacal plant iof civlllzntcn. not by the withdraw- al of labor but by its cessation, were jplaiiily experiments of the common .man in his revolt against servitude anchhe exploitation of his necessi- Ities These earlier efforts had faked because they had been local and any world govsrn- is jusrment. there w describe compact a ‘Shoot the Officers" movement N dismayed the the old German armies, was clear evidence as early as 1 that the leaders did‘ too severe an obedience upon the s put their own tempts to moderate their behavior esdisloyalty to their esprit de corps. The Japanese staffs and officers again were often too manifestly filled and terrified men. 85 Q18 pllne of the huHBTY and ill- fid hordes of Ja nese peasants r still swarmed china, relax- ed By 1939 Japan for instance in ‘greglcnal. They had been premature. . ‘They had anticipated the necesary China. and Italy in 31111111. 119-6 "111- There was the shabby spring approximations and coalescences les that the governmentdared not: E laundmg m 3199p on Lngfggq of me ham "lhey had (XCUFTEH in a world which bring home. ford. was the party dress that would was still in a patchwork of dissimi- There wiu, a. consta-ntre titlon of mp9» And gm my; may; men’; been 4m- phass_ the same cycle of phases the ex- ma‘ woum have been 5mm perience of the varioiu demorallzed army fragments. great and small. which were now scattered over half the land surface of the globe. First came insubordlziatlon, “shoot the oflitcers" and “lead us. Caesar. where went want to go’; a $11-0- cesful lawlessness. a phase of rap- lnc; than a feeling of isolation and fear and a great desire to link up again to some greater order. Bod- isham and his staff. watching the world from their headquarters, had great maps flagged to mark down "contrite" troops. Most of these troops had heard vaguely of Rim. As apprehension grrew in minds they would usually claim that they were new revolutionaries. Bud's I men. And the countries subjected to lawless brlgandage and fliemselves forced towards counter-brlgandage, found their only h of restoring control in the ant a World Common Law. too ing. claimed to be port of the great re- " Those who were most concerned construction. Every region too was ‘with what still passed for govern- now infested with de-natiomllzed exiles. Their d0minmfftldea. was to Illggpétfloseigiaysgseemjlplaye T0day’s Popular Design By Carol Aimes i. It was only now with the aboli- tion of remoteness. that the entire world was coming into step as one community. Now it was no longer D0$llbl& to crush revoit in one neg- jion before another became aware of the general‘ significance of the etru gle. Bcdisham and Norvel were art cularl energetic and efficient 5 n develop rig what Rud called this “Simultaneous Awareness" throng out the world. By 194-4 there was not l. country or region in the world virhere the “Common Man's Party" was not known. where End's beetling forehead had not become the fami- _lzir symbol fora vaguely a rehend- .ed_ vast organization of reease. and vwhere the essential conditions of] any conflict against limited, impat- ient and outworn authority were un- All over the world f. grew up a solidarity of expectation. b sense of a new order not simply jlreamt of, but prepared and ap- preach » 4-»--_-, muisonmrrr DESIGN NO Miss Aimee receives ciepted for this column. es s. gar Readers: ‘This demure little Miss. so elegantly dressed. is the design, we have prepared in answer todyour letters asking us for "A Sun- girl to embroider on lovely be spreads.” qued or merely embroidered. Real lace bonnet. Everyone in the studio has fallen in love with the ady. The pattern includes transfer complete directions for stamping and keys, diagrams of stitches and material requirements. Bend 20 cents. coins preferred. lsrzri it nhiL/JPKEAD 610 at least 200 voice for each design before it is itc- ~ Pattern Order FomNié-To be used when ordering Patterns and Voting hi‘ POPULAR DESIG To The Charlottetown Guardian Needlework Dept. ‘Liiilhlon no 01o as. what one may ly and brutally. as ‘This was more apparent in what were then called the authoritarian azis for example had never internal discipline of and there 939 not dare impose looting and roping with which the rank and file repaldthemselves for the fatigues of warfare. The men interpretation upon their duties and treated any at- their Bend us your votes. We print all the popular Sunbonnet Betty may frills finish the edge of ftile of-the designs for spread and bolster. and making. stitch and color guides carefully watched durin tn 221"...“ “mm iifvs '11-? ca lk , their Bppeflflgllf: 1y um‘ 5mm“ ' GINGER-DIEM; our: Take 2 lbs flour. Mix in . sPoonful of carbonate of stunting‘! lbs. of treaole. 1-2 oz. of allspfce. 4 ozs. carraway seeds; 3 o“ o’; Wimdad elnser: 1 oz. of pounded cinnamon. Beat up four eggs with :84 brown sugar. Melt 3.4 1b u ter and mix all tcgemer amongst the treacle. stir in the fit";- "1111 1t =11 together. and let 5 and for some hours. Roll it up and Put in a buttered tin. Put, l; an a slow oven. It will require {Our W"- YW may add six ozs. of~ "B1189 Deel cut small if wished. l RIIEIIMATISM be legltimsted as some new t of citizen. Tnere comes a phase 311,206 ial dislocation when the deJr-e 1m- order and security. for peaceful 11v- 111s overpower: partisanship. °l1fi¥iewflgssivenaess. . . . 1‘ area naval losses in the first year of the War of the [deo- 1°81% 811d 1-119 development of the "Hillary deadlock in Central Amer- ica. and the Old Worrld. the strike method assumed formldahe dung“- sions both in the air forces andl _ These r latterabjist they realized their indie-l ~ ens began g! to refuse delligenrgi planes overhead no longer ve the‘ statesmen and politicians “l... the Bround below. e sense of unqualified Wwer. 'lhey an tc worry about e air forces, to ur- ganize esplonage systems among these yo The opeganda organizations of tegrating national govern- ments did an immense amount of work in the spread of the idea. of Rud. Each assailed the prestige of its formal antagonists. and found an authority in his phrases. each in ermining the enmny morale so. . appealed Common- sensc of Mankind against its rival. In France and Britain Rud's activi- ties were largely sustained by Ger- man money, Ln Germany his s mg fiutsttion was flnan abet by Russl Bflt-hh DION-guide. Russia. paved his way in China and Jo an, Ger- ahd uss 1n . The SE55 ambiguous. He was vaguely to be revolutionary and "creative," 0n b l- lmlnation u mblelfiififillfié. THE SECOND WAR TO END WAR. The Last War on Earth. the Sec- ftnd War to End War. when at last could be env as a whole was a. huge, ill-mane tangle of conflicts wh ch began informally and did not so much end peter , difficult to imagine how it could have followed any other course. It was incoherent from start to finish. The name it still carries. “The Ideolcgeal War". was first de- vised for it y that interesting, rhe dntellectual. the Ital tawr. Benito Mussolini. He his time. with his b! ht phases and his long. heavy in r- ludes. was something of a minor Ho] Terror. an opera-tenor Rod.“ A e are forg t usso.lni's role in them t4- meni of human life. He is followf Napoleon into oblivion as a mere en tic personality of no funda- of lay around with a belby ' o 1t Reds Mmvicio Dorothy ‘ Dix’ s Letter Box S Don_ in Your Attic; _Worthy People t Hoard Discarde Dear meld and lives by herself shabby as a beggar . Bhe has city and the most shoa and W0 IWBY. are so oun8 Klrls .l that any one ed th abo taut are d u one allied "llllie gleam of tihc Attic" in led, as she thought, an exem fore the Judgment r. "Does Judas the contents of bifi"w“' “i913”. y Ill women shivering with cold. and rotten, while , and men to the woman's her attic. the overcoat-s, ths. while by through all the things that hoe through her dxllvidlei whtutkwe have, t l on no eep a. single garmen . that could add to the comfort and . actually need ourselves. And do it now. useless and the f y. Den: Doroth for it is that my weeks before the "blessed and tracks." And, a yDlx-Ohristmas husbandhwild and our 14-year-old son ca.ii the “hoo thedoor therelsaslgu reading . " once i this sign you see llfihls flashing. whistles blowing. - "XUU PUT YOUR. . pas tcm all set and ready to go, with nals chang | worth say about it goes, except about my wy trains. Don't youltzhlnk it is my husband cut out that lncr ne or son is the blgg wer: Wh , lady instead of objecting wt his boy rnonkeying with on your knees thanking thedon hobby takes Ana. if he can fin _vx You!‘ W88 8P0 all ings or silver or old china. or butterflies-I knew one man w rent beca he would spend tn might get peeved. But, anyway, 111B (10988 11908-1161: he wants to play with toy tml he H?“ we know have thehsame mania. derfulthingltisthatheconbeaboywitiliolxisown. wmlawm lish a. bond between them that. will enable him always to be his son's Nmm-lflyboysevergowrongif be trusted to pay the a butterfly-why, you your humond is in l-Lali 0% And w en you deplore your best friend and counselor. father who glayjed with them. Dear for women rather than be an old clde. Don't you think that suicide and concentrate on some 0th mmfinifid 01-’ Pe°Ple with a lot 1m to rled sis 1n . ters. cause lust around Anyw 5Y- d0 't the n be corner Mr. l... that of his Corsican precursor, ran habitually to obvious and often very attractive headlines. He was men- t table and as his tempera- t his heodlinq flushed. I-Is Wl-"WdwflmueasaGreetMatiin hlswry. and he was foresee the uuroman Henegigea th if a ti T ~ l 01‘ 8.11)‘ O Q! V6 in wa-rf imist be two and not more sides, but he failed to grasp the further fact that warfare may and without effective victory. He ot his an s wrong. The slresses and confusions of the world were more manifestly the ouwome of the st le of all the diverse forces for a common-sense world state. against the obsoleecent poli- tical. economic. and edu. cational institutions, endlemly vm». led in origin and character. that ob- structed them. But he thought the rationalist forms of history were mmanent. ‘the prima reality of age was a world-w e conflict of urea. pharatlel all over the world. hlch e new order hadstill to ts definite formulae. To this essions blinded him completel ("0 be Continued) 4:] tin-st. rrilrl. irirl h. i\lll>'|llll|.\l1ttl ‘lit’ l‘4]l1llf1||1\l Chase's Nerve Food (UNTAINS VlYAMlu ill D There Are Plenty» of Who Need it_ Badly and Will Welcome the Gift ' MfmDii-Iknowawcmonfl lsverywe 0 cloaks of the most elegant have never been worn more This old woman. who ca self, never gives so has rooms full packed. Don't you many aven't the money Idrzldoiilatlftlierelscuyworseain less to oneself and that are so A ion pla.ry Christian life, any one accuse this women of any crime?" asked the Great horror there rose up befor and they chalcnged her right There were the piles shoeless reet trod There was the old stuffed disir falling to pieces have mode some invalid much more mattress that would. bed the. yec a Joy to children who never had a. that they did not contrive out of a tin can and a string An filled the attic and that the woman had lifetime The moral of that story still holds good. I believe that we should right rwwand here, with the needy that we Don't wait until the clothes are old-fashioned urnltlure ls ready to near about , and out from a tunnel comes a s around 00. W mldd ndirig a my railroad. you ought: to be down God the isso his of d amusement, m plgy luck. for that is Just about the least experts! fir-I am one of thoee accursed traction for men. and as I think marriage 1s the Qmy happmm 1n me mild. I am thinking of commltt sul Answer: - Not at all. The world ll full 0f a.‘ number marriage and, if you will just give up husband-hunt. 91' ‘Fwllmtlmi. y01i will PM» nigfaaéaiiugements left. n] . - e women are o unha 1° marry. Cmce they give it. up “EEK, .1‘. "$1.23,?" m; R181“ may be 001% your wag.“ d Clothes and Furniture ..........-..'*:..': .2" °“ , l! rich rgllattives who ll_ve in a dlsfilt ...°°“.'.i.““l“ ““'.....““...%LP“..§E. a’ °° kind that; than once or twice. wear the dotbea her- muclras even a piece of ribbon stores them in her home. where she of bones that have never been un- think this wicked when there °‘°".'°‘.1...."““ rilumultéi p51’ Y E. -V. H. - poor needing ust dying for a. to buy. cancouunltthuitchoardcws bad l wrote an article that-i tured a woman who had dying and going up be- gtlmeago whlchlplc e her all of to admission mu clothes, the dresses eaten th mm of e s day went men and her door every How Can I ‘I ‘I (By ANNE ssuum o-oocoooo Q. How can I stop hlecoughs? A. One method is to sit erect and inflate the lungs full ; then. still retaining the breath bend forward until the chest meets the knees. and then after slowly rising again to an erect position, slowly exhale the breath. After repeating this exercise a. second time. the nerves will be found to have re- ceiveded an excess of ener . which will thus allow tfnem of shoes mlldewed th icy cavemen t5. now, but that would comfortable for so many years. have been soft for her t was all she could af- have made some girl so with for twenty» years plaything d so it went nor a stick of NLfll-ltlll‘: nor anything well being of ouhers that we do not and fall to pieces from Do it ly runs me crew, and the reason mechanical toys. For about six neglect. season" all I hear is about trains and switches Christmas. come with me to what my husband room." Immediately on open- WATCH WHERE a roalroad sya-t treamlmed train out t ‘hus- to your hudiand ope his even- tnnocently employed instead at some night club. Every ma-n mind off m his business and gives something else except the drive of trig-with mechanical‘ w or etch- couldn't “i5 e money on . don't conclude m. ofhiamcneyonsmm boyendfliuseetab- theyhuda wornenwhohaverioot- would be justifiable in cas ? 15in...’ 0f t-hirtcsalzeflgtes men and It Y0“! Q8319 d that there are . over than most of their about ecmmltlrig suicide, be- Household Scrapbook (a; nonmrs ma» Skin Treatment A treatment to use once s w for the skin is as follows: Mix with the yolk of an egg one tablespoon of skin tonic, applying to the face and allowing to . Then apply the beaten white of the egg over this. Allow to dry and rinse off. ‘this will eradicate the small wrinkles and refine the tex- ture of the akin. Oil on Wall Paper Oil marks on wall paper can be removed by applying a paste made of cold water and pipe clay, leav- ing it on over night. and brushing it off in the morning. When Making Cocos To prevent cocoa from lumping. when making, mix a little a ar "t." “Sill.” “till. ‘If? fir? m wa or . A p - ded greetb improves the flavor. DIES AT HAMILTON l HMIILTON out. Jan. a-(om —Lieut.-Ool. Drgvvalter o. ‘lhomp- son. Oonlda as aeol- dferdentlatand sportsman méymncspieu. where t...“ ‘wconfhed for lodeysliewas function properly. Q. How can I stick on whitewashed A. whitewashed walls should be washed thoroughly with strong vinegar before at mpting to ap- ply pacer m them. After this treatment the paper will stick to the surface. Q. How can I preserve cut lunons? A. Smear the cut surface with either the yolk or the white of an egg, then set it aside to dry. D-OQO-O-O-FQ O Modern Etiquette (By ROBERTA LEI) cameos-o» Q. when dining in a friend's hom , should a guest take a help- lngofeachdishJhefirsttlmelt is offered? A. 1t is the most gracious thing in do. even ff one is not partial to some partlc dish. . What are the hours for for- ma calling? A. Between three-fihlr and four-thirty, except when ca on a woman who announces a day at home during other hours. Qlsitgoodusagetosaylno in advance for this. etcl’? A. No. ‘rhis phrase implies one‘; effort to force compliance. (Zhanning Conversation Wine Succeaa for You Spruce Up Your Vocabulary What a gs charmer Jo in! A good share o her Iuccese e e owes to her bright. amusing-awn,- cor- rect-conversatiou. to be a timid talker She used until rho learned to choose s - kiln] words. She IENJOY L! ‘arty C house. RE- i-aaéirmo dessert. nacommo dress. where a or talker fella back on overwor ed NICE to de- scribe all of them. She doesn't mu”‘ her meaning by saying credible (believable) for creditable i rnlseworthy): or eminent (dia- tllagu ed) for imminent (threat- enln ). Her pronunclatlo ls a dell t. She never says fen-you- W E for genuine. She known it’! JEN- ou-ln. And she doesn't turn LEN TH into LENTI-l. Make the right words come to mi at the right time. Our 82-1210 klet tells how to enlarge your renounce correctly. rraulng speech er- use word: vocabularly, get rid of em rom Train yourself to aliye with personality. Send 20c in coins for your cvy of How To Improve Your o- cabulary to The Guardian Home‘ Service. Address. Be lure to write Elalnly your Nune, Atldreal, and e Name of booklet. NOBODY KNIW I IIAD Ivebooks thitfdvllt ouibotable Ilbraeholaran ugetolee" \ I've books um. fhe critics lauded“ And books that were given me. But none of them nuns as thril- lint Today, when loufh has fled. Asthe books tha a c And nobody knew‘! read. _ The windows were mall and dusty ' And dimly the light shone in. Abeedronedu lntlierafferl den loved to min. M£seat was a broken camp-choir, ut bravely I fo land bled With the books tha found lo the attic And n I've learned and forgotten clas- slca. 1‘ve studied but know no more The fine and the doathlesa pages. The tombs of the seer: of yore. “ti? it": ma“ . i I) q 0\l O my OI , But not the books m the attic ' That nobody knew I read. I —-Lulia Mitchell Ihornton. , There is a revival of the flchu and also of the oapelet. Quilted cotton Jackets look new- est in slide fastening hug-me-tlght waist-length basque, and an ef- fectlve blouse ls done in gs bri ht tiny pattern, out very ful. wl e of neckline with loosely , bloused sleeves. 1 Printed surah is mart in old- faahioned , ' ‘ designs. Honeycomb dots are very new in prints. Orlsp cheers allied with taffeta are good for resort evening frocks. Twin dreu fo match thdte on your mare a new ea. Colored gloves matdi hats. learfs or bags. fiousecoafs and lounging pyja- mas are shown with matching slippers. flower: ~01: Bkunk ls being ahown deal for bow short coats. ‘Black velvet finds expression in day-time suit with perky pep- lum. It has silver fox collar and rovers with matching muff. The at has blue ostrich tips and the gloves match the hat. NEW PRINTS some of the newest prints shown are huge patterns of florals. such Weak? Thin? OMEN wlio are weak, thin. nan voila, hove no a pe- t i t e , a e e d r . Pierce‘: Favorite Prescription. la tonic stimulates the appetite. improve: nutrition, ea nervea, tones tlie fo- male o Mn. ' C. Par ins, 292 ma- ln.. Slralloll. 01s.. urn "l m u agreat b‘ Are you la alwayn wu ‘on edge‘ and was ae woakm pa I waa fan about nkla and beau. Dr. i u...“ n..."- Prseerlptloa hi,“ u. was u. i up. aaa- re qulu my um: aad nail: la feel betur la every way. Ily uppamc facrouel. l gradually pfaad l. ny urinal urngti returned. and l |lll ll a a nw wanna. la liq-Id at inblm n your drug nere relay. ‘ tant color combinations wear blending tone sweaters or contrasting onu with the aklrt. The‘ buttcned-to-the-ueck Jacket blouse may be worn wlfli a ffllldhe |kirt....over as a ltreet Adlren Town Wlgh l! kets On intact pa . e a with our hurt aha e and tel ed collar. with- out pocketsmxsho an thatll up the fronttcaahirt collar. oe variety! Isn't it? Tweed wool mixtures and - men importance at all. The ten- """=-~- - --- - -* -- --- --- -~ ~ as: "lr““°.i'.'“.:"$tF“.‘.‘£ ~ in. u lIIeet-Addrw — — — — — --—-——-—-————-——— mcgngegf . msetlanwuab- _....___.._..-.--- _...._...___._._-mcm _ no w» ‘"1" “.2...‘§3%'r‘3"“‘1l.? 2.129% , "1 aug est the followlngas a "gum? “Fulfill” "m8, m“ . ________________ ___________ poru-ywtrovng men had ‘deumg DESIGN ‘ *- hnd early experiences of discussion Allreproductfon rlghtstothlsDeeian reaerveu. emf edit and his mind. like OH IT'S FLAT-FOOTEDfiCATTER-BRNNED TITTER- LOVELY BUG~THAT'S A FINE THING FOR RAZZOLA TO SAY AEOUT M! ON THlS CARD HE SENT TH OWERS WW" E F MAYBE IQHOULDWT ' HAVE SHOWN l1’ TO LINEIT fickle m: rotten -- “DANCE” is Tim wonm MR. RAZ ZOLA,THANKS_ F0 FLOWERS YOU HAD ANDY HlNK HE “ANTS TO "IN. R THOS BRlNG UP TO MI~YES,HE'S HERE-MOLD THE V K TQYOU u " nor on rn wan NOW... cues w: wen: cur OFF By \Vestover vouize A cor Auov; so"? i: A '. ma: YOU en 81W ' tics]. Interesting microf- ectlnmonotnnewoollnlasblaek‘ u‘ t with enduntinlly love- ourple nines ll. l4. l0. ll, I0 yearn, I0, n, d gll-lnghll g. for Jacket and v a r rad-quin- , 54-inch material lam , Mina. en..." i": '- urofvll ' finer-idly flwln.g_ _ arm m. soot sin 1-mi- l0 _ Ihfill11Vv_ aIaQaO-w—q nwauelqvvnwnnw-e-I n-e . » -.».... founiln the ground being p . l l obody knew 1 read. F ly. .. . Style N6. IIYI’ l! dealpied f0! j with-i l-l/yflds of D-liboh l ale s10 on_ . ‘The Housewife —AND- Her . Activities as are seen in r b“ sometimes in 31...»; Egg" ones are enormous‘ popplgg Wm, I and aslorm] leavem. or t big mum..." massed at in rvnls. These a, Printed classy on while and PM‘, ds. 0st of them are done by hand, even the color of m b led ln. e Mk‘ 1 "u-‘u-n-M. AMofningSmile l NEXT TO GODIJNESS The reporter was interviewing g prosperous sea manufacturer. "It is a we -known fact," h, said, “that you made your lur- tune out of soap. Mr. Lather. Now, to whbt do you attribute your success?" "To clean living, my friend; m clean living," was the reply. Today's Short Wave Radio Program (All ‘flme fa lantern Standard) TUESDAY, JANUARY l0 NEW YO 3:30 .m.—Oincinnati Symp- hony. . 25.8 m., 11.83 meg. MOSCOW 4:00 p.m.—Broadca.st in Dill- lisb. RAN. 81 m., 9.6 meg. BOSTON 6:46 pun-Scientific Date. WI- XAL. 25.4 m., 11.79 meg. BCHINBCTADY [:16 1p.m.—Muslcal Newsy. W1.- XAD, 9.5 m., 15.31;‘ meg. 8:20 F..m.—"1'he Royal Air Force," lk by Captain Harold H Balfour. G80, 19.7 m., 15.18 meg.; 06D, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg; , 818 m., 9.58 meg.; GSB, m.,'9.b1 meg.; G81... 491m. meg. ROME 7:30 p.m.—Tilesday Gym .4’rgia., 11.81 m , ., . m . OM30!!! - 1:80 palm-Viennese Orchestra YWRD, 51.’! m., 5.0 meg. TOK 8'15 Y0 pum-Ormestra Selection: phonics. . ' 1R1‘ - .m.-.Happy Program. . m., 9.59 meg. BERLIN cp.m.—"f‘he Village With- ock." 111E254 m., ll.'l‘l Concert. 4 1119K -l 9:20 p.m.—"Arctlc lihrercusion.‘ by E. A. Harding. 06C, 31.3 mu 9.58 meg.: G88. .5 rn.. 9.51 meg; 06L 49.1 m., 6.11 meg. ORR W3XAl-s Tl .-lM‘uslcs Classics. 5 m.. 6.06 meB~ PARIS on French TPB . 25.0 m., 11.11 me m. 12:46 mun-Radio varlety- 5Z5- 25 4 m., 11.80 11103. ‘i TIMELY TIPS e- FOR THE — HOME SEWER ._.._...__._ s A smart little two- ece 60l- tume that fits perfect under your win r coat.... a your t....liugs oii tight at your hi ....swirls out below in skater- rt silhouette. Iibr im-