Bo many reader* hare aaked for a simple diagram pattern for an evening Jacket that we have been looking here and everywhere to find a jacket that waa not too Intricate. Some of the simples in appearance proved to be too complicated when It came to making a diagram that could be eaally followed. Finally we Ahaneed to aee Just the thing ? easy to Indicate because all four pieces that go to make It up are perfectly straight, and therefore easy to cut once you have the right dimensions. To make the little jacket in the sketch you will need taffeta silk cut in strips, hemmed on both sides, then stitched together. On each side, extending over the i shoulder*, is a strip four inches wide and 28 inches long. In the back, con necting these two pieces, is a strip four Inches wide and twelve Inches long. The piece for the belt is three inches wide and long enough to gd around the waist and tie in a bow ? a yard and a half or more. Here are the measurements in the diagram: AB and HK, 4 Inches AC and KD, 28 Inches AB and KF, 16 inches FE and DC, 4 inches FD and EC, 12 inches CO, 8 inches. The points X and T are four Inches apart. B fastens at X, A fast ens at Y. To determine the exact lo cation of these points, try the gar ment on when it Is ready up to that ?tage. ?. REDOUBLE EFFORTS TO LIVE AT HOME At county-wide meetlncs of home demonstration club women In Jones, Onslow and Duplin counties last week, the women expressed a de termination to redouble their effort* for living at home next year. "We will *lt on the porch and rock before we will" help to grow cotton and tobacco for giving away next year," some of these women said. "We have put part of our own lives and those of our children Into these crops and must now sit by and see them given away. We will not do It again." At each of the county meetings the club women said they would try to persuade their ? husbands and friends to cut the acreage of cot ton and tobacco by 9. per cent In 19S2. For their part, the women ?aid they would practice more string ent living at home, would practice thrift and would endeavor to find some means of earning additional Income largely through the gale of material at curb markets and in oth er ways. Because of the success attending the operation of the 29 curb mark ets in North Carolina last year, the number baa been Increased by ten this season. Some of the new mar kets have had excellent success and though the price of produce has been | low, the women Have sold enough to provide a steady source of cash in come. An average of between 40 ?nd 50 producers have eoid on the average sales amounting to about (400 a week. The Rocky Mount market has continued to enjoy good itln. ? New markets at Morehead City knd White Lake have opened Income sources to farm women living about these popular vacation resorts and tke market at Ashevllle has also been successful, report State Col lege home demonstration workers. FOR FIRST CLASS JOB PRINTING PHONE NO. 283 1 'make land fertile DEAN M'HAUli ADVISES ) Now that North Carolina Is close ly approaching the production of | needed food and teed crops, little ex pansion In this direction may be ! made by farmers looking, for sub stitute crops for cotton and tobacco. The next step therefore is to fill the i land with humus and orgaplc matter so that It might be put Into a high j state of fertility looking to better , days In farming. i "We do not think that cotton I ! growers may turn successfully to | | the production of tobacco next sea- | . son," says I. O. Schaub, director of | i the agricultural extension service at State College, "We do think, how ! ever, there is a great need to build up the fertility of the soil : may produce more profitable acre yields In the future. There is lit tle cash to be obtained in producing cotton and tobacco anyway and the man who has grown all of his food and feedstuffs is In a good position to plant legumes so as to add to the fertility of his soil. The beginning should be made this fall." Dean Schaub believes the day when North Carolina, can be counted as a leader In cotton production is gone. The state should continue to produce this staple but devoting Its energies to growing only the highest quality which measures about an Inch or an inch and a sixteenth, leav ing to other areas the production of low grade lint. Cotton growers should not increase the acreage to tobacco next season. This means that the thing to do is This Woman Lost 64 Pounds of Fat Mr*. H. Price of Woodde, L. L write*: "A year ago I weighed 1?0 lb*. I started to take Kraaehea aa4 sow I weigh 121 and never felt bet ter in my life and what'* more, I look more like 20 yr*. old thaa the mother of 2 children, one It and the other 18. Every one of ay friend* Bay It'* marvelous the way I re* duced." To lose fat with *peed take a half teaspoonful of KrusChen in a giaaa of hot water before breakfaat every morning ? don't ml** a morning ? aa 85 cent bottle laat* 4 week*? get It at any drug store in America. It not Joyfully satisfied after the first bottle ? money back. to plant soil Improving crop* la ro tations that will continue to Improve the soil and will provide plenty of food and feed. With paatnrea add ed, the State may then turn to live stock and thus build out of the pres ent depression an agricultural sys tem which can easily be the peer of any In the Nation. Chaney Fork farmera In Jackion County sold three cars of beef cat tle to Pamlico farmers at five cents a pound last week. Six cars of feeder cattle have moved from Ja Ckr son County during the last few days. RESH in nature s way Camels are never parched or toasted t Freshness and flavor in a cigarette trace right back to natural moisture. j If you, overheat or process tobacco so harshly as to dry out all natural moisture you drive out fresh ness and flavor too. Camel never parches or toasts the fine Turkish and ' mild Domestic tobaccos it uses? they are naturally smooth, cool, mellow, with natural moisture retained. That's why the Camel Humidor Pack proves such a blessing to Camel smokers ? it brings them 1 fine cigarette freth to start with, and fresh to smoke. If you don't realize what natural moisture means in genuine/res /ine*s ancLflavor, switch to Camels and see. Try this mild, slow-burning, throat-friendly favorite for just one day? then leave it, if you can! R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, WimtonSalem, N. C, R. J. koynoldt Tobacco Company li Coat?-lo Coast Radio Programs CAMS. QUARTO HOUft, Mmm Dmmt. Tm7 Vim, mad CmmI Onhmw, ?fM Imri ?wry aflffcl ?mH PRINCE ALURT QUARTER HOUR, A1W? Jmy% "OU HwMk,** wmd Prise* Albert Onlnif. Umllw PhI V? Um, ?r?ry aigkt nift 8 mmdmj, N.I.CM N?Cw?rk Sm fecal LAMELS Mmdm FRESH ? Kept FRESH 0 Don't ra move tk* moisture-proof wrapping from your pmekmgtof tmmeU after you open U. The Camel Humidor Pack U protection against sweat, dust and gernu. In office* and home*, mean in ike dry atmosphere of artifi ' cisd heat, the Camel Humidor Pock delivers fresh CameU fMMl i^fpi lfc#in until the t our Wqm 5mvi iffiofcorf CAMEL *1 HUMIDOR PACK ^?2 ncJze * FRESH m & UX?