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Show py BfTH WYETH SPEARS LT VVS&SN Rosu,,s eoun tut so does L V frWt "-V,.-t cost Save, when you buy VArV WK Clabber Girl; save by using no tut 'Vi5J:.'Jy T"' moro c,abber Girl 'han your Y',:fe, JJM .Ci favorite recipe directs. (cftss -litk loinCZsHi KNOWS j EVERY kind of cotton goods from dainty chintz to bold plaid gingham is being used for bedspreads. Most of these materials ma-terials are about 36 inches wide and you will need 11 yards for a bed 54 inches wide. See diagrams for cutting dimensions. . Cut the center portions first; then the 18-inch side sections for the pillow cover; then the 10-inch strips for the pillow cover and spread. This leaves a 26-inch-wide strip for the side ruffles of the spread. If you make your own seam welting, cover cord with bias strips basted, as at A, and stitched with the cording foot, as at B. NOTE: This bedspread is from BOOK 1 of the series of booklets which Mrs. Spears has prepared for our readers. This book also gives step-by-step directions for making slip covers, dressing table skirts and 12 different styles of curtains including a simple rigging for draw curtains. cur-tains. To get a copy of Book 1, send your order to: MRS. RUTH WIEIH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer 10 Enclose 10 cents for Book 1. Name Address il zXx amer,ca's favorite ll jflU READY"T0"EAT CEREALI Get several packages today and enjoy THE "SELF-STARTER BREAKFAST" A big bowlful of Kellogg's Corn Flakes with some fruit and lots of milk. yj IjKSUOU' (VITAMINS! PR0TEINS1 ytq1" 7 (MINERALSI FOOD ENERGY! i - . i ' .,,ifj ', 1 ' ' ' ' v "' L. , ''' i i 'I" , " -' ' ' " '!'''" ' , t, ,,,." j Tiii phou taktn in aaan in Bauan h V. S. Ami SivulW The War isn't fought in Fox Holes alone IT'S fought in the mind. It's fought with a will to possessions from Alaska to the Caribbean. a nTfof f0Uht with a beIief m a cause worth Today :ts work is far reater than ia aKi for funds to carry on more than doubled. That will, that belief, is known as morale. , Tbf VSQ youf Mp mo tha Uod . Our enemies have had years of indoctrination. They High government and military officials-including have been conditioned to believe themselves part of Ge(leral MacArthur-have praised the work dons by "new order" ... to which the contribution of their US0 and recognized its importance in the W lives is small but all-important They believe them- efforL lelves cogs in a vast machine. ..-. -m But it needs recognition from j.0-recognition Our soldiers do not fight that way-because they the way of dollars and cents. For the six national do not live that way. Theirs is the belief in the sane- agencies which comprise the USO are publicly W .tity of the individual portei To maintain their morale in the American way, the Now above all times, to make your dollars count, USO has devoted all its time and energy since prac- give to the USO! tically the beginning of conscription. , ., . . tjSO Coo- v Send your contribution to your local usu .( It has done this by staffing and maintaining club mittee or to National Headquarters, USO, EP houses near all training camps and in our outlying State Building, New York, N. Y. Give to the USO |