l This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has corypltte_illyyI1tet_i_i1stngLt'yti, (stamps cannot be accepted; use postal note for safety) for this 99!??? hiatgeirly your, MZE, NAME. ADDRESS. _ aim sum-i NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toron- to, Ont. Thrilling Christmas gift-TEN garment wardrobe for your lit- tle one's fpvorite dolly! Each Hem is sew-easy-tun to make! Party Dress! School Dress! Sus- Pender Jumper! Blouse! Coat'. oixie Hat! Nightie! Robe: Slip! Panties! Pattern 4526: in Doll Sizes IA, 16, 18, 20. 22 inches tall. You can use scraps for many of these garments, See pattern for yard- Mes. "l am Wracking my brain tof fivd where I've failed. The only:- lhmg I can see is that her bus." hand and his sister are keeping) her away trom me. But isn't that; . really up to her? She's only 20,} though, and doesn't really know . my better. . "I've gotten over the elope- ment What really hurts is that [he wouldn't live with me nor near me -- but she " living in the same house with her hur band's sister. She prefers his family to her own! Before all this (six months ago), she and I were close and -she always was Bftetxtionute Now she ignores me, doesn't. even telephone or care it she ever sees me. N bought my daughter every- thing she wanted. She had nice jewelry and clothes. At 16 I made her go to driving school and get the license tor her own car. I'd give my life to make her happy. "Deal Anne Hirst: My problem la breaking my heart and mak. Ing me ill with loneliness. My only daughter went with I boy two years and then ELOPE0- utter I had scrimped and saved tor a beautiful and honorable wedding. I feel I In I terrible failure! . . . I hive never worked or belonged to clubs; I've lived just for my children, and the only repayment I've asked _ is love and consideration. Christmas Delight sénd THIRTY-FIVE CENTS "What can I do to have her C"li,"?? t,.tfc,'",ii'illill""'!?i"i,i,'"it',r] ‘IVEINIA ‘SAXOMA IVEINIA C AIN'MA IVEINIA SCHMA SAXONA To IRIYISM PORTS, First Clan from $210 Tova Clan from $155 ("HARD TO “EUROPE "f-tttttf-ff-, "At, your Ind qt-tf-- ono can an. m â€a ii'),rlllrrs cu you - "ttfee "Gael" “no llll 1rvs'ltltd'e/, - _--- ..., ttatldiii'i'c'd m - I. FALL AND WINTER SAILINGS In. mil Sat. NOV. " um. NOV. " In. mun: Sat em. on a Wampum In. "moo om m: In". "a; " " Thrift-Season no!“ To FRENCH vows: Iowan rm Fort " um! " Hm Clan horn â€v.50 "" Tm a... can also "Dear Anne Hirst: I am 17, and last spring I met a tine boy through friends in another city. I visited there, and we were to- gether most of the time. We ihnve been writing each other frequently since. “I cannot forget him, and am so lonesome! Can't I write and tell him so? . MARGY" A I hope you will not. You . two agreed that letters were I not very satisfactory until you " could see each other again. . The arrangement satisfied him, . or he would have broken his . silence. "He moved to I distant city two months ago, and said that when he could arrange to come u see me he would let me know. Meantime, we agreed not to write regularly. It you and your daughter do not get along welt, tell Anne airat about it. She has been Ille- cessfnl in explaining one gener- ation to another, and can be helpful. Write her at not l, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, UP TO HIM "CWO, we: minty) Gnu-(t. [1"va Cobh, than"! â€uncanny! (than! saai'M-a [ova main? Should I visit her, (I 51.] away! Be smart. If you take the initiative, he may think you are forward. He knows where to reach you, and the next move is his. Have fun with your friends at home. And the time will pass more quickly. Associating with them will make you more interesting to any boy, so make the most of the chance. You sa' all you wanted was her happiness. Well, she has it now. Can't you understand that and leave her alone? One day she will pop in to see you and before you know it, you two will be close again. Spoiling a child is no guar- antee she will love you for it. Your daughter has taken your attention as her due; until she matures, she will not feel properly grateful. . When they returned it was natural tor, you to show your distress. When she saw how she had hurt you, she escaped from your complaints and went to her husband's family. There she is living - and thinks you dre still angry. I do not be. lieve she has stopped loving you, but she is relieved to be away from your laments. She is self-centered in her new happiness. and believes that should satisfy you, too. I Don't blame her hugband's family. She is free: when she wants to see you, they will not object. In your place I should drop in on her some day - and be careful to act as a dear friend, not as a hurt mother. Forget all you have done for her and only show how glad you are to see her. If she re. sents your coming, accept this. She" will come around when she sees you are no longer hurt or resentful. _ SAD i,",t".",,','.") Many a girl balk: " a tor- mal wedding than dn'ys, she had rather use the money prac- tically. Try to realize that I girl in love wants Nat on. thing - to belong to her man Is soon as possible. I an: am your daughter listened patient- ly, time utter time ,to your elaborate plans, but all the while she was growing more restless. Suddenly she thought, "Why wait? We'll be just " much married if we run off, and w" can start our honey- moon tomorrow!" She did not know how much this wedding meant to fou; she thought only of herself, and persuaded her fiance that an elopernent would) be fun. So they left. S In -bdtuiihv mum Imam NAROMA .QUKN MA" mum MINA mm mm mm cum mum um cum Mn 9yfP' mm Aimk Gum WINK PAHMIA mm Urn-HIV“! After I got my boots " I bored a hole in the bootjack and hung it on a peg in the shed, where a visiting transient saw it the next summer and offered me a dollar for it, a sum I accepted with Ilacrity, and he took it home to be I doorstop in New Jersey, leaving me in the boot- jack business. Pve made dozens of them since then, and now I get $2.50 for them. It is plea- sant to reflect that I have made so many happy. and that all over the East people are pride- ful of their antique bootjacks I wore them one day aréund: the farm, and at night. T couldn't l get them oft. Cowhide boots were like that. Friends and I'e- latives gathered to straddle my, foot, while I pushed with the other from behind, but nothing} happened. I had to make I bootjack In order to go to bed. We used to have a bootiaek on the farm here years ago and I remembered what it 1 oked like, a writes John Gould in ghe Chris- I tian Science Monitor. I l I've made tt good many of 'thenv in my time, and still am let really good at it. But the ismall things I have done satisfy ly sufficiently so I feel qualified ito speak. I got my start through a bargain in boots. I was in a country store up state and the man showed me a pair of cow- hide hoots pegged in his grand- ;father's time. They were in jeasonable condition. needing some neatsfoot oil, and I made him a smail offer which he ac- cepted. This should be deplored. it is not as easy as that to make ant- iques. To postulate that every Tom, Dick and Harry can turn out top-grade early artifacts the same as he'd glue airplanes and 'stage coaches together is absurd. It 'would glut the market with "spurious items. the work oi amateurs. easily detected at a glance, and have an effect on (the value of true antiques tur- lned out lovingly by a master of the craft. A gentleman with mercenary motives and a lack ot finer dis- cernment is advertising a make- your-own antiques kit, complete with printed instructions and nail holes indicated. It takes love of line and de- sign, an understanding of art and artistry, and a fine sense of balance to make a really good antique. ALL-OUT "" WAR CAN IMPEIIL WEST'S Ott-Hundreds of millions of dollars invested by American, British, French and Dutch interests in the Middle East's oil fields, shown on large Newsmap above, would be endangered by the spread of the'lraeli-Egyptian war throughout the Arab world. Egypt has already seized the Shell, Anglo-Egyptian and French-Egyptian com- panies’,properties in Egypt itself. Two largest oil firms in Egypt are America's Socony and the International American-Egyptian Company (in set mop) and with widespread prospecting operations elsewhere in Egypt. Making 'Antiques' Not So Easy 53:13:.va Quin-f0. m to Father went up one day and handed them down to her. The upholstery was faded, clear (Gee to the woodwork. but the woodwork was black walnut, 'scrolled and filligreed to a turn, 1and they decided to have the ",set redone. But after they came Pack with their new upholstery, ;we found they were anything {but comfortable.) would rather Isit on a nail keg. I think it will be better in the long run to leave the making of antiques to those who spec- ialize in it. Let people cut their own hair. paper their own homes. and make: model ships. The great popularity of how-to- do-it and do-it-yourself postul- ate a need for nine, Ind I , One thing I know to be true, ,that modern-made antiques are ioften better than real ones. The ,truth is that a lot of come-down furniture has only age to show 'tor it. I learned that as a boy. iMother had a parlor set that was "handed down" to her--a ‘love seat and two chairs. They were up in the pigeon loft of the barn and had been there for years accumulating antiquity. I made a lovely baroque, or Restoration, table once, using a hackmatack stump. I cut is off so the roots formed the pedestal, and the trunk supported the ornately carved top. I don't carve too well, but with a shah) axe I can make anything Aook as if a lot of work was lavished on it. This table has attracted a lot of attention as an antique, and may be seen at the Reuben Brainerd homestead, where it sits in the shed. They got burned out and all the neighbors con- tributed furniture, and I took the table over with my load. The rings on the tree trunk prove it is over 150 years old. Now, I didn't just buy a 'tettdr-tttade kit and start in. I had to learn the'buirines, step by step, trial and error, until I mastered the intricacies. It took years of patient application. It ign't a matter of hitting I board with a hammer-you have to know where to hit it, and which hammer to use. Many a good antique has been spoiled in the making by injudicious enthu- siasm. It takes restraint to be authentic. Too much pickle juice, and poof! You‘ve lost the spirit of the thing. Ever since then this lovely set has adorned Mother's parlor, and everybody fights for the straight chairs. Some antiques, of course, had comfort as well " art and age. but I find almost anything really old has some drawbacks, and the antiques I make are adapted accordingly. found on a peg in an old Maine farmhouse. . This man tells his customers how to "age" antiques. He ad- vocates rubbing with a chain, and letting the children bang them around. This is the basest of frauds. and will never be an authentic job. A real antique, made by a sensitive workman, is more artfully aged, and there is no short cut to perfection. The best way is to dip in ammonia ‘and rub with wet hardwood ashes, molasses, pickle juice, and ibutter. You can add a small (quantity of red ochre and get a finish which will not come off: . "etrorrrb-tetemer-td$2He "IWWWN w Ttte Haul M SPIRITUAL “INTI POI TODAY by I. lord-y Worm . "Alright," said Jacques. "The money was half yours and half mine. The book is the same." He tore it in two and gave her half. Some days later as he sat by his charcoal fires in the for- est, he felt lonely. He thought of the book. Taking it out of his blouse he read from the be- ginning. It began, "And will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven and be- tore thee, and am no more worthy to be called thy son." He read to the em of the story. Then he wondered: what had the poor lost son done? Where had he been? The questions haunted him. “I wish I had the beginning of the story," he sighed. Meanwhile Jeanne had read tl.e fast portion of the New Testament and came to the point where the son said "I will rise and go to my father." She wondered what happened. the father welcome him? That night he asked Jeanne for her half of the torn book. Together they read the .vhole of the beautiful parable and the Spirit of God, who had been working in both their hearts, caused its meaning to dawn on them. Both yielded their hearts and lives to the Lord Jesus Christ. don't mean to belittle such hobbies as such. But we need a circumspect appraisal of just where hobbies leave off and special talent begins. "The word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged piercing even to the dividing asunder of mu) and spirit. and of the joints and marrow. and is I diacerner a! the thoughts and intent: of tho heart." Hebrew 4: 12: We should study God's Word etch any. World Conquest tells or a col- porteur selling a New Testament to a French woman named Jeanne. Her husband, Jacques, reproved her tor spending her money in that fashion and de- manded the book. "But," she said, "the money is not all yours. I brought my dowry when we married." The story of the Prodigal Son has been called the heart ot the Gospel, That is because it teaches that God forgives sin- ners. How thrilled the publicans and sinners must have been when they learned how the boy who had wasted his substance on riotous living was joyfully welcomed by his father. There was hope tor them too. A woman posed for? snapshot in front ot the fallen pillars of an ancient temple in Greece. "Don't get the car in the picture," she said, "or my husband will think I ran into the place." _ The Prodigal Son _ Lake 15: 11-24 Memory Selection: lie hath not dealt with us after our sins; nor rewarded us according to our iniquities. For as the hea- ven is high above the earth, so great is his mercy toward them that fear him. Psalm 103: to-n. no; - In. " m. tE on. BY REV R BARCLAY WARREN, BA. 8.0 LADY DRIVER time. the Pond. thaette has unearthed the shocking story. The official Irish -sweepataee omees in Dublin are fully awn-e ot the widespread counterfeiting Three times a year sweep- ntake drawings Ire held in Dublin bleed on the famous English turf clmiu, the Grand National. the Derby and tuCambridgeshire. anrpapers throughout Canada and the [1.5 "nsatiorutily publish Hits of Irish Sweepstakes winners and splalh the photos of the jubi- lant winners over their front pages. This is the opium which feeds the dreams of millions of Americans who believe that their pot-of-gold lies at the end of the Irish rainbow. ". . . . In one Instance an An- erican mketeer had his agents deliver envelopes purported to be tron lrelund. but to which he hid amxed In llnpreuton of of I lnndelent mum-rt. Fraud» tstent tickets were known to have been printed In Inge quantities In Montreal end New York, where evidence was also obtained of the printing of Here's an excerpt trom g con- ildentia1 Postal Inspector's re- port that sums up the rack- eteering behind the distribution of the Sweepstakes tick 'ts in the United States: “The fraud that is perpetrated on the American public indir- ectly as a resu't of this lottery is caused try the dishonesty on the part of man: oi its distri- butors, agents and gambling syndicates. Genuine tickets are countedeited in Canada and the United states. The racketeen so so far In to send agents to Eng- land and lrelaud to mail to the American public fraudulent re- ceipts. Those Americans who can least afford it pour over $100 million dollars a year into the pockets of agents peddling tick- ets to forutne. Nineteen out at evcry hunt! Irish Sweepstako tickets sold In America are counterfelt and distributed by highly organiledl gambling syndicates. One mid-l west ring sold " million roun- terielt tickets during a " year period. Another defrauded the pnhlic of more thin " mil- lion dollars in a single yen nndi pockets of agents peddling tick-I Now let's say you buy a tic- eta to forutne. iket from one of these agents, But the tragic story is ma'lhere's what can happen to the the dreams and hopes of mil- 3135 you ptty tor it. . lions of Americans are the‘ The agent. whose commission toundation upon which the big-HS two tickets trom each book gest racket in the world hasihe sells. may pocket the pro- been, built, a racket that has , ceeds, or he may turn over the mulcted 1 billion doll-rs trom money with the stubs contain- the American public in the tastling the names and addre..ses of ten years. the buyers to his distributor In its efforts to circumvent‘The distributor frequently poc- the Federal laws in the United I kets the money from the sale of States, which prohibit 1otterieserty id the books and only from using the mails, or engag- transmits a small portion of the ing in inter-state commerce, the Nnds to Ireland Ssitepstake distribution of Irish Sweep- oitieuls have no war of check- Make tickets in the United"mg whether their distributors States is in the hands of shadyigavr. them an honest count distributors. dishonest agents Crooked distributors, in cahoots and petty swindlers who pocket l with accomplices in Ireland. a lion’s share of the money col- [ then mail phoney receipts to the lected. ourchturers postmarked from Nlneteen out at every twenty Dublin. In its efforts to circumvent', the Federal laws in the Unitedl States, which prohibit lotteries, from using the mails, or engag- ing in inter-state commerce, the distribution of Irish Sweep- Make tickets in the United' States is in the hands of shady: distributors. dishonest agents and petty swindiers who pocketi a lion’s share of the money col- [ lected. This is merely part of the in- side story of the Irish Sweep- stake which has becn uncover- ed by the Inspectors of the US. Post Office Department. who made concerted drives to stamp out the evils of the Irish Sweep- stake. Their files are replete with cases covering the opera- tions of rings prddling counter- feit lottery tickets and the dis- honest activities of the distri- butors of genuine Irish Sweep- stake ducats as well. a Ihlnl distributor and his Agents peddled more than 51.- 500,000 in hung tieketd In a single month. Che House of Seagram .. 71/1571 W50 4rvnCicatte.-riyi Milan in "$7 I Even if purchasers aren't vie- "imired by the lottery rings 'selling counterfeit tickets. I the've got little chance that their lgenuine ticket will ever end up lin the drawing wheel in Dublin. l Genuine tickets are smuggled linto the United States to I central distribution depot. From 'here, they Ire sent to local dis- , tributors throughout the country fwho pass them on to their .agents to sell. of their tickets to the American public. But there is viking much they can do They print a warning on the ticket ukin; purchaser: to be certain that the agent selling the ticket in "trust. worthy" and explain the: an camel receipt will be sent from Dublin. But the counterfeit lottery ring also print bogus re- eeipts and have them sent to their cuetomerl from Ireland. Itt recent yams local distri- butors have come up with an "honest" way of robbing you. They've acquired mailing lists of individuals in their territories and have mailed them books with instructions to remit the money directly to a certain name and address in Ireland “ecause of the constant surveil- lance of postal inspectors, hun, dreds of different names and addresses in Ireland are used as "drops." Let's say a person gets a book of Irish Sweepstakes tic- kets in the mail with a letter asking him to sell the tickets (he'll get two tree out of each book as commission) and then remit the money to a certain "drop" in Ireland. He's asked to get a ettshier's check or Am- erican Express money order made payable to himselt, and endorse it similarly on the back He sélls the tickets to his friends, follows instructions and sends the money to the "drop" in Ireland. Do you helium Wu possibln to pm dict the Mum? Would it wrpriu you tet Item that 5,000,000 Canadian woman an "rnput.ly devoted to thin "may. an and in myttie pow- on? In the Dounbov liberty. Frank [only Much the rawh- of his maflomwldo Knvuolgu'ion into the uu'huntid'y of Canadian Aurolog-rl on. of whom hm prtdidod Dwight D 'u.nhow., will suffer (I heart and " Doc, 16 of thit "or. ARE CANADIAN ASTROLOGERS FAKES? Don't miss this stealing chick in the it mmaha, LIBERTY New On Sale! DECEMBER hon out“ I, “I d " Hoopla] Trust h It“: Viol-sly tor M m ! In many cu.- m ‘tors get the drop on the " _ and immediately lane (a dec: which you to 'tte . clerks, in the New Yuck “ othee sorting mail W " ’lrelaad. When the cleft -. lacross I letter being In! D, “drop" it is intercem ped fraudulent-and m ,to the under. MM!“ ' 'the sender is liable M when for using the math . partir'ipate in I lottery, if Ch ‘letter contains lottery stub. I 'remittance from the Ill. ad a Sweapstake tickets. 2 ceivu the M I receipts an an! to SAVE MON" ON wm MAKE YOUR OWN At It 7‘1 â€flat" tr To an ., may! a unload um: Mo “and: d -. eoumrv tar-ac style m In ' w MOL Evan am " nut, ~ Ingrodlunn (available at no! If“! "a :11de all! mlkl ' m = Mr “rut Send $t.0tt hill " order Cor min. You III" luv. u "mu "I. doll-v vou DIV "r mm. Martins m... tto. who I... Avon“ Edmonton. Alb"... "Wa time he Ieameditid tur- "tting busineu it, ' (we-way urea!" ll