700a Woman ’s Rea ‘ v ¢ ¢“¢‘O-OQOO4QOO~OQ§ A s. ‘AL zAAlAAAAAAQAA’ 1m ’_. W11! Marriage ca. ‘Dorothy Dix _t‘it'.mt.t' BECAUSE-Headache fre- l V: s More and More Men Are Dodging Matrimony Now Because They FearpLoss of Freedom, Dont Want to Share Their Incomes i and Refuse to be Nagged, ~ __.________ tvhat, do most men resent about malrllnoni‘? Well, there are plenty of paces where the domestic yoke galls a nlon and gives him a. pain in the neck. but. I think the iillflk! he (llshkes most about marriage h the SCUSC‘ (Jilllkt! is bJii who‘. lze lilies. . ne nus to l) woman wans to kilo pet-Jule ills soul llntntlng u lie wilt the atelagc lllilll llilllts just tll. lululn, til... ire ls ma.‘ us» upon ills lltl res. » ply tiling tllut lnell resell. about nlu Dortxtliiill‘ airlines illuLcJU of humid-Ur. lllvtl‘ mutiny med- Qwn pleasures. U. course, nlell lull rls nevcrtllciess. as is ltlllDlLV hroteu gfgut, niajilllty Oi husbands row over tile llollsciloll first oi tlle lnonth an ordeal alnlost as in so ult.ul.._lc that we leal y enjoy tllut it irks B. man luells all UVB-Ovflt. g trip .0 nave little mellt lJlly by tliCll‘ wives ‘fills is out ilature, ior few oi us zlie saurlllenlg ourselves for others, illluso it is ho llonoel‘ t2) have to buy his wile a. new evening UICQS ttlltn nt- ‘ that he turns sour when he has to L~\e uu u nod-ll Yohmlvs adenoids out. 1f onlv wiles and children LOtllU grow leathers and live on all" there wouldn't be so many thulhpy llltilflcq men making ed or single tiny spend most wisecracks about marrlalte. 11; may be said that whether men Somehow" ill lollfltl‘ llut break out al r how llzllmy a marriage i5. ii- bontlugc. No maturi- how beautiful a name ls, it ls stil d. cage. No matter how is. or how much her husban The mar- No inctle good a wlle _ _ loves her, she Ls still his keeper. rlcd luau has lol-lelled ills personal liberty. me and g0 as he pleases. lle cannot Cllotkt.‘ his iI‘l9liZiS. he cannot he cannot even eat 11L‘. (IBM H0 iOlllgdl‘ CO it“... .. w “not about t.‘ ~ ~ - wakes an olc _ m“! Mm ‘he Lon’ m ' that lllil get hi‘ \.ltll ms wile. to (i0 anything wild and outurtllylllg. 1t. uoulltl llalllu illlu lot». ullo can . Md as he lliteb nun-oily is iulvillg to sup- upon themselves and e and ltltn one voice deny by tlle liwt tnat the l ulhs and make the null to be UILLIUCU as the Judi-i- it gives him of being bound. _ .. ll.» pied“... . - . . .- i ~ little '* ~.. he lonlc tln.l. clock on ll.t dtt ol use the um X ‘ And ll ne stays downtown to play girl lrlelln out to llln.n he has to it isn't {L11} lllfl 9g me mgney they make on wonlell gill) lLYi. cl) ltllu. nlllclence does e to them Whether they spend it on _ or opening champagne for u chorus ell-l": nut it docs make a d1.- . Lots of It. Because in one eils d lllnll pols tllltt ne is getl-il " list goes for a DlB-n 611W as a gen- baby. hence The next thing that men resent in lllllYl'l‘t\i-{C is the ILZEKHIE 0f their wives. A grown-up man who has suillclcnt lnlc in; and win a. res octable place in the world, slm wile treat him as he were an imbecile child who had to know how to cross a. street without bcnlc told to watch out for the automobles. or ludgment enough to be able loplek out his own food. Also, ' fighting mad to have ills wife harp forever on the a thing once and let it rest it makes every man same old theme and never to be able to say at that. It is the never-ending fault-finding. the C persona. habits and tastes. the eternalflwvhy did you do that?” that turns marriage into purgatory for innumerable men. man is more afraid of his wife's tongue than he is of anything 1 nag he will forgive every other sin in A se on earth and if only she won't the category. And still another thing that men resent in [is monotony. Its lack of pep. That wasn't what when they took their wives on as make herself pleasant and entefla-lning to her husband ends at the tl-r- [t is being bored at home and resentful over little baby-faced girls having hooked them in the confidence game of mar the road that leadsmtowdlvorce. A MomingiSmile DOESN'T KNOW MUCH "What kind of people are those i who have just moved in next door to you?" asked Mrs. Gadder. "Oh. I never talk about my neighbours," replied Mrs. Knowalot. "All I know about them is their stuff came in one van, that only one of their bedsteads has any brass 0% it, most of the furniture oi . there's six in the family, 2h: children are all boys, they have two dogs, the man is about 20 years older thanlhe woman, they_l_l_ad_a look DOROTHY DIX. squabble with the driver of the van when they settled with him, and theiiLrlalneAis Smith." flow you llllte to sea lmlly suilcfing from cllafcd. itching skin and Enrollin- llpplicll uflcr the bath Dr. Chase's Ointment prevents ‘ and relieves thus dis- txcsslngalilncnta. Itlsa proved medicinal treat- ment which keep! the lkln , healthy. In hbe I bu: DnChcses Old gflshloned , liars-Am pastor: no. a2. A dainty little lady helps a all . you plaice yolégswn inlt is“ t l? or a l‘ set, o e a is 1 cal enough to mac? all sequlr§§l'§'§lf“°i§i$t§§r“§i§lii§inr§tigi1 ‘:1 B f city of ll beautifully lacy and artistic filet design. It is easy to fo ow. go l-‘ilet Chair Set- . l/ ant cavalier to no'd a shield on which is indeed an ainuaual and Intel-u Y es ampsinl an when finished. The pattern include: y. complete alphabet so that you can reproduce your own initial; gull v pattern also includes easy-to-foliow croc UNI. detail chart of designs and stitch unrdlun Needlework Department no this moon jjfl@anu_p§--_---___--_---- anneal-imbalanc- fiwlggg - —- l- __ -.--- -—ao i“! ..¢i- ='4 P¢r§ fivvvv/ queiitly disappear after I bright fresh cup of tea. The Housewife And Her A ctiviti-es ._____ e knowledge that he is no llce L.) ream alvakens the Wanderlust in the bosonl of the most DIOGQIHB. llnlidven‘ turous, sit-by-thc-llre man. the trlid that is all the more ailurlru; he KllUWo that he has locked himself up ln his‘ dcgnouse, limit and fast. and can- ld ruo with the pack again. lt is the call of be MARCHING FORWARD The time is short encug I push r ht onward while I may; a winds my breast, And walk the wail CHIP POTATOES potatoes can be cooked a saucepan with a lid easily and uickfy. the result being golden chips, perfectly cooked. Bring to boiling point enough fat cover the potatoes, put in the chips and covere with thle lid, eeping the fat well n3’. In 10 to 15 minutes. when the desired color is obtained. strain in the same way as boiled potatoes and serve immediately FOR YOUR NOTEBOOK In foggy weather eye< to become sore and tired bathe _ solution of borecic powder. Witch-hazel diluted warm water 1s another Ink Stains —Vihe,car and water wll remove. ink stains from polish- A teaspconful cf l ""1688! to a pint of warm water. Wash the furniture and ilry care- fully. then polish with ou ‘wash curtaln= or loose cupful of vinegar into the rinsing water. It brightiens the colours. “in; lor t.i'.lll.*.l lllllk for the l lgcllce l0 make a liv_- ply torches having his not. sense enough glassware often shed tiny ,. of fluff. To avoid this, they should the cr"‘lnary tray and n a very thin solution Qlwklngs -Add a teasnoonfui cf bthek rinsing‘ water ac silk stockings or Socks WPfiiiZ“ Ur prevent the stockings from turning eascless interference with didn't you do this?" "why To remove whitewash or distem- per from the wincgowalltitfl s, made- Y“ th dipped in vinegar.» a c 0 TURNED ONCE A WEEK There is a certain comfort bed when the mattress t each time clean sheets are put on it. It gives an alriness to the mat. tress that makes for sound sleep. whenAbN ElVEN BLIAIZE urn n stove. s“ mnflitflniso lamp or oil on an even surface. Only "my are perfectly level will give an even flame. It 0t ways the fault of the wick. NEGLECTED THINGS Bet the little od marriage is its dullness. they had bargained for life purl-tiers, They thought that the pretty little fishers of men who had hooked them would at least cont-lune . a‘ . rlage that; starts most. men on OI NTMENT 41.1115 Adjust Your "Nerves" to Mod- ed such as silver cleaning, win- dow washlgg, mirror nollshln , fur- nlture pol lng --and yet l is so much easier to kee ahead of these things if some of each one is done each week. Try it and see. THE LARGE FAMILY Where the large family is com- pelled to share one bath room, it is sometimes advisable for the older members to kee their towels and face cloths in eir own rooms. It will make the bathroom seem more tidy without so many towel racks and it is almost the onlv possible way to insure your towels against being used at some time by the smaller members. BOW TO BE A GOOD EVERYDAY COOK If you want to please your fam- ily with your cooking, you must i, resolve: - i. To be uctual with all cooking. ‘especially lshes like crispy fried fi=h and omelettet. 2. To taste early and often of ,every concoction. When the French connoisseur saw his English guest p'ie his salml with pepper he lmid, "I fcal- I must dismiss my furntllrc L03"! " 3. To make real friends with the Fade men. especially the butcher. Tiavllpc may sometimes save odd n"n'e but friendly and expert ad- vice nvcs dollars in the ions! run, “r“h "l wehht and cash 4. To be generous with eggs. but.- tdr. v~<!"twb‘e=. milk and cheese. '”"“*‘v "so" they pn twice as far 9'"? Fl" in"? good the" a larger q"~o‘l‘v of cheaper food. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Isn't it annoying when your iron sticks to the rtarched clothes? It ne~d'tl Add a teaspoon salt to your diluted starch and you will find ironing the smoothest pleasure imaglnab‘e. ‘ ‘ ‘Here's a simple way of cleaning upholstery: Dissolve a tablespoon borax in a bowl of warm water. Rub the furniture with a sponae in the direction of the weave with firm strokei. Rinse the sponge in clean water frequently. Your upholstery will keep clean much ‘longer and the colors will be rlghter. ' ‘ A grease. spot on the page of a valued book nan be removed bv placing several sheets of white paper under the offending spot and sprinklinq burnt magnesia on bop. A few hours later. wipe the spot zentlv with a cloth moistened with benzlne and your page will be spoiiesslv clean. Idea also useful for magazines which you may want bound. SUUR STUIMBI-l, GAS? IF you're troubled with utomlcll upsets, acid indi- gestion, gas, _or ave no appetite, there's nothing better than Dr. Pier-cat's Golden Medical Discov- cfiy. it stimulate; - t e ap etite an on. Mrlt H. ones, l 4 Glen Ava. . Cal annes, Ont, uld: ("V 8911,8837 was mo weak and eul- gercd lion‘; 21.6121 mdltgesluon anéilsgur stom- ‘ I mos away: cc |n . Dr. Pierce: Golden Medical Discovegy i?! helped me more than nnyillln elle I have used. It helped to relieve n-lc o the ltomncil 35‘J.§'lt‘-'-“’s§tt“t§‘ i‘.’.‘3%t"‘.‘.'lt°" ‘f’ “l.” ~ i t 50c. Liquid $1.0 lndzglfii. c" "a Q‘ " aidldlgestl Western Hill, St Illat a beautiful victory Connie bu won over he: "nervu"! Now that the’: learned that bud work and exciting play are two of the but outlets for nervous energy, she's plunged headlong into inferent- ing new activities and friendships. But she's careful to guard against the real caulu of nervous tension- wo and repression. Q ck u Ibo find: herself fretting, “Why huirt Ken called?" or "Do u suppose I've hurt Joan's feel- gl?" lilo. uiu herself. an thing I can do about it?" not. she deliberately crowd: anxiety out of her mind-goal to a movie or atirl up n batch of candy to lurprise the fa ly. ed how to let off lteam. If lhe’: dlspleue She dce|n't lat a lot o petty . riutionl pile up into hysteria: or a quam You, too, can banish the bugbenr Our 82- no booklet explain: nervous troub u, tolls how to overcome them, live radically and Bend 20¢ in coins for your copy Problems to the H Add Be urn to write ‘ loft... Ind u-Jhifi’. %‘i“’J"“° het instructions without ab- ell. compleu pattern and inuructlnnn for all of these GQIIIIII. d l0 cents in stamp: or coin (coin ol-eferfedi to The Charlottetown Print your name and address plainly. ,__v m1." cook's comwsze sltvnh-lvnNUTE ICING Two eg -whltea, unbeaten; 2 cups ranulut sugar, ‘b cup cold xvator, teaspoon cream of tartar l6 tea- s oon salt. Put all in double boiler a:e over rapidly boiling water and goat constarily for seven minutes. Remove from fire. add vanilla and heat. until stiff enough to spread or cake. ~ TABTY NUT CAKE: One pound dates. finely cut 1 I teaspoon soda. i. cup hot water poured over the above mixture and added to l cup white sugar. ‘A cup shortening or butter. 2 beaton gs. 1% cups flour. I teaspoon be ng powder, ‘Al cup walnuts. BREAD motto: 2A cups lukewarm water. cu bread flour. 1 e (well nlng. l yeast cake dissolved in a lit ‘e warm water (not hot). Mix stiff; let rise in a warm i when light, punch dawn: l rise again: form in rolil. I use a rollinlz- p . Out out like biscuits. Put in muffintinz; let rise till lent. Make 3 Douen lovely buns, like puff balls CINNAMOU DUNS: with this Meir. inltnd of mak- nll bum make cinnamon .miluutsggmutntmm . brown read with bu sun c nnon. Rolls a jeliv roll. a1 ce about an in thine-lot rite. t but. mm m nvonuu in the house. I make coffee cakes or a cumin loaf with this rectum-l:- change. Vvyv v w" w F “A3911 Z. 1938 q Iéévv v v ashions “‘“**“‘°2*9M000000+000. . . ’1-i¢arq¢"1@ t vFO-O'§O- Dlsplayinémudiiil-nlfestatlon of affection, Barnard Grafton stoo and kissed his wlfewho, by mo awe hu- head a little, con- pmval of demon- strations in u 1o. Allenby, left alone with Patricia his h , manufactured polite conversation until the tele- gllggne rang and Barbara Grafton peeled in answers to the but- lei-‘spsuulmons. Immediately Pa- trice. came over to sit besl e blm. mixture curious of doubt, uneasiness and curiosity. You no the famous Major Al- loniéy of the Inter-Ocean. aren't ou y Yes, said he in a. low voice. but p19“; ...there are very importer: reoiasonshwlg want any- v e e ow . lit-it's to do with Judy? How. big and frl htened Patriciws eyes mlligdulfillt e new risen moons Yea, We weren't satisfied. Nor am I, Patricia announced breathlwsl . I don't know what it is, but~I eel somethings queer a- bout her —her death. Even since I got here I've been trying to locate e suicide note without asking for it. I thought it might be better if I got hold of it without arousin! curiosity. You Sh‘, she learned so close a faint perfume in her hair reached his nostrils, there was a deck of cards in Judy's room. Cards? Yes. When we were kids we used m___ . A second floor window opened and Grsitoxrs powerful head and shoulders became silhouetted. Come on up, Major. We're all set. All right be right up. He turned to the girl for ampllficatio . but was further hampered because Barbara Grafton‘ shadow was pre- ceding her across the verandas bol- lshed tiles. He started upstairs, S0. Patricia hadn't yet seen the suicide note? How stupid of her not to ask for lt point-bunk. In all probability Grafton would have given it to her without further ore- amb‘e. All at once he stfffened for. fainf. and far away sounded a throbbing drum beat. He listened intently. interest sharpening ham:- ed if the distinct drums weren't sounding the familiar. one -iwo. two -one heat. he had always as- sociated with Haiti and West Africa. What could be going: on over there? Resuming his climb. he strode b" the door of Patrlcilvs room and entered his own. He. we: unstren- ping a brlehase-full of convincin" and very carefully selected material concening the Ecuadorian Province of Lnja and its gold field when Grafton came in. arms full of mans and blueprints It's cooler on this side ct the house, he expuflned with an apolo- getic rrlance. You don't mind our talklnrz in here? It. required all of Alienbyts self- oontrol to awe to his assent a who's-hearted ring . Well. Major I see vmfre lm on the subiect. (Fad of it. Grafton nodded at his West's bulging brief- case. , l-Iev. Barney. vl-hel-e are V011? Ward's voice hailed from down the "uvridor. Here. In Al‘evlbv’s room- A moment later ‘Fovmev Ward minus coat. nod necktie. came in all prepare" f"r a serious business ses- slop. Fr»- over an hour Barnard Graf- \ t k , with Ward only briefly ilial-i-Eoptig’ now u: dthen. mom: Grafton fared and explained a sheaf of y iuiderltandablo |grapha .of blueprints. etc. “ l- e UIIpIbQOIIIQ-Olall j 00-0000 As the evening A]. A. cX§TL he burriodity o nod the window on pretence o ittlng more fresh air, he uw not even a shadow, but he did note that all lights down- d. From the direction of the garden. Cora Bus‘: ea er brooky voice was bid- ding a lng good night to Terry James. CHAPTER VIII It was a stutter to twelve when for the first lmo the oonferencg ro- ceesed. ward raised a. quimicnl aye- brow at his host. “Where are those reasure Qutlmates for the im I d- . dam at Miigrosc Creek rafton repll that they werein 1611s office and hurried off to fetch Ward snapped his fingers and smiled. “What we need is a. drink.“ He arose. "Got some fine old Bour- bon ln my bag-if you'll con-ml some glance. we can wet. our whistles." Drawing after him a swirl of cigar smoke. Ward disappeared, leaving Allenby a bit: gasping and for the first time understanding the unique exhilaration which “big business" affords some men. No doubt now that these men were in this affair, heart and soul. He was wondering whether Sir George Pa-kenham would be cast in a. alm- ilar mould when a faint rap sound- ed on his door giving onto the veranda. v Alienby was up in a flash, closed the hail door and sped to his room's tail French. door. There. to his surprise, he discovered Patricia, clad only in a bathrobe and night- gown, anxiously awaiting him. “Thought they'd never go." she whispered. and the lace on the front oi her night dress stirred 311th some deep agitation. "I've got e_.. she broke off for. clearly audible. a man's footsteps were returning down the hall. "You'll have to get out." Ailenby warned in a. hurried undertone. “See you soon as I can." "All right." she said, and smiled in a strangely leased sort. of way. "I'll leave my Lght on. but try not to make it later than you can help." As she went out; Patricia turned. treated him to an enigmatic smile. then returned to her room. leaving Almost at once the door opened and to Allenby's surprise young James appeared with Ward and his brcther-in-law. The former sniffed once. levelled a searching- glance at Alienby and drawed. “Sweet-scented bower you have here. Major." —"You smell the flowers a lot on a night like this," Grafton explain- eill dropping hea-vily into an arm- c air. “Yes, but you've no jamine on this side of the house." Terry r- slsied and Grafton looked surpr ed. t "Why, that's sol Well, no mat- e .. 12- James. it. turned out. was h. be entrusted with some of the surveys and the lfscvsslon shifted to that subject. Grafton, ht"... l, seemed less able to concentrate than before and kept mopping his forehead. The strain, tco. seemed o be telling on Wrrrl and. after another hour's convtrsctfrrr, he suggested that the meetfng adjourn pro tern. It was rlmzrt half-past tlv: vhen Allenbv felt it safe to wander out onto the ion-g. second-story veranda Canon construction of what may limo happened when PATRICIA P031188 returned to bu‘ room as lf in search of a cooflng broom. To his disappointment no light shone in Patricia Fbftiel"! room. “Kept her waiting too long." be told himself. then very gently trzod Whether it. was stuck of | "IQ G00!- “ ‘Q locked he could no tell. because he was forced to abandon his effort-l when Terry James appeared in dueling gown and oapadriliei at the far and of the uremia. Signing deeply. the young fellow progressed - _ drc to d kohirmd lenbys relpect for inflow grad ‘m: y on a so a of the gnu us colonel Rod Ulloa. Miniatu- of the in of. Her and lbcin - ommu manta a titan ntndcauy. ‘to the auyforoi ‘ - corn flu eve: ~ me a: mm to tu§§ioi ma». om " a ltfilflo?‘ thought m‘ and’ m fiat.» IOTIK Of if ID*| M“ Ihfi ‘noon; ~ door he watched Barbara Grlftrnb other on the to '|_ sharp uutlmlntmiut. hJhlfl . h a crack of the French b: sit, staring flied moonlit water: of Ola ‘O ab: . ilc wall g. tho won to 0d be miqh. n will do a bit of thinking What u n: rc have happened to so chm up - Maia turf devil ti if‘ to thowdm.‘ fifium-tnt-llrai lvu without. cause...“ z |sLANi§ScAs£ (amt CANDID CAMERA CLUBS by HENRY CLAY olpsou behind a whiff of jasmine perfume. .‘ up mm m“ comlormble ma" 2 which hm mnlhiiftndg§btiehii of Frevoo er's ~ James was no o ‘- l. ‘ long veranda. so shivering a. little. 811155 W01 51111118111393“ desist‘: iuAs o nvrmcnl rowrnnvs mat ran crowd A1l=n1?1‘------- - ld . u W "owl “Y” “m” to: m" gnaw bed'!....1n the morning he‘?! ad rnlgvgevvenhfld totakealookatlkeagim e .. e- In the morning...In the“... fie m?‘ 59W"? Ma or Roger Allenby awoke with llllfikeli uuoritgirh and . ty start. It was still om; but swwlml; w“ cmedflm me- a singlg glance at the sk will him . t-lv. ayomw- I m; dawn could not be for o f. Smotn- "Jame. Quiet. Trlunpl-Jx q er an irritated curse, he sprang lllzlrlculatcly the grow stooped. Lilli giving a 818i! 01 MIMI traversed the spacious living roan: Allenby hunted outside. plow? ‘up wfls§ilzhllv 31*"- Q18!“ Ii l5 l‘) ii - gmuttaxlrgrm cilalr tgdbilelt? the: o At the fact of some dew-dreaded . He'd been gone a. long time. steps, n. toad as big as a mafia: U . d hi dis wiihtrdzvgutu were com and Sodde“ ‘elygestrangnély luminous in the At this hour the moon had moonlight, then hopped lWfly- M h foods were about swung over me mvelveiyavsilnlgdm m, wia fnalmyamuscahent. he ic- ‘ He quickly tried Pstriclfs door and called Patriclars almost; convulilvn l t k, bo motion of them. Allezby. I0- fiyllzeiilyulwc freswed and awakened by m”: d chill reeze oft 1.3! ocean. 61rd“! filhfiuilee ‘$1.. ltgblelmgourtidllesaly tan: giool in the esgatds forms-ll” a th eyes pro n-g every ‘mfdoilal be alarmed. Miss Fortler." shadow. Presently his search m1‘- he called in a soft undertone. "It's rled him through an arch. radi- ,;__A11enby I’ ' ant with nlaht-bloomiw W“! On receiving no response ‘ he towards the, old slave till-alibi! N“ aused just inside the Pnench wlp- of Freebooters mil. E9 B6816!” gow of her room aiocustoming his everywhere. even with 111111111 l" e es to the glooni Soon he saw it name, but had no luck and w I- rgally was not so dark in here. that turned to resume his rOV-lnl! WM he could even distinguish his own the stiacricus 8111f?“ w‘? m4’ fi o man c M65 smdow through indlstlnctly across first: mmgledywimwsle m“ n“ v e he ad- of oleanders. Ahead loom a ‘lfiloggl-iailatsigillg; 'the bed crowned with stately oedsre vnd lth a little pank of alarm saw had befllm l" 5m‘ under the h” ghatqt was empty although it had fluence of a dawn breeze. doubtodly been slept in. "Miss Fortier," he called “n50 dless on his c rubber "Are you lut here? Miss Poitier l “Roger Ailcnby r d a coat But h: only answer wast-hash?" 2i) 3% thrust hi8 heel? into lt betll- piping i: those little tress WWI o ' then fl i-ltlng down a rising are one of Bermuda's moot distlwl‘ room’! as ogned the hall door. lve creatures. Presently be MM ilpelfidn not n locked, either. his feet on steps leading down m” Where the devil could Patricia ‘a charming affallrl‘ wwflm: Fortier have betaken herself at such quarry garden. an e “W” "°“'$.;'.‘.’.“°‘"“‘t.“.’.'.‘. lih'~'lii"°~‘fi...iit°.li‘it‘llt°"““ Q enoe. t Fwd my l urn 1 total lilflied n the property - §§T§ml~i§t.h°r<i’ mgie wfifil? and practically every large estate M114 restless. jut. v-llgglgigyhet-=heh4qqritlniig<1J>rtggsio¢9Lg= FASHION curves FOR IHE , HOME DRESSMAKER‘_ 4 Something new and llloat w- tractivo for home wear. beads a double llfel Wear it as a. dress for breakfast or for home and also as n. complete cover-all over even your “boo " dress. Tasy to slip in and out of.....a.nd at- tach adjustable tie belt of the slim waistline with new coraelet to we’? o e x cl only new. cc eatun for odds and ends one i up about the house. Simple decorative mnbroid- m a urns o neck and th to. easily m llsh- ed... ed nfcttnafoemlnlue uch. an at. tive summer dress in print cotton ln the square pockets itbed 00st no wt min make till‘. doien t: them in different coloring. SW10 No. 200i is designed for or coin (coin preferrodl wra con awfully. addrua to dim-lot town- flunvvtlnn wlvlnve- Btyleho. 2061mm“... .. Sh’!!! lflfifell