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{ If you can sew, or paint, or string / beads; if you can embroider, or dress a doll; if you can stencil, or make a lampshade, or use hammerand saw; if you can make a pie or bake a cake —then the December Home Journal will help you to a joyous and inex- pensive Christmas. Listen to a few of the gift-filled titles: ;, j Nineteen Christmas Gifts from Paris a Bs ab tas © a@ Gifts to: Tee ete to Vanity Easy to Make and Nice to Have Homemade Christmas Cards The New Girdle Makes a Smart Gift Dainty Gifts for her Own Room Christmas Bags for Work and Play Made-at-home Dolls and Other Things for the Christmas Stocking _ Gifts to Gladden the Housewife’s Heart As Practical as They are Pretty Gifts of Things to Wear—for the children "#0 ° See footnote at bottom of this page _ There are 101 suggestions—and every present can: be made at home. | . Make your own Christmas cards | _ from the dongs on page 58. 176 Pages—at Pre-War Prices—in the Big Christmas Issue of Ct A DPD Tt: He-2 Sing a song of Christmas, A Journal full of cheer: One and fifty features— The finest of the year! \ Ye Greate Astonishments, by Eleanor — Hallowell Abbott, is the best Christmas story I have ever read. , Wane, Cintas: race, 1 0 § damn It is a novelette—the story of a want-ad guest and the quest for a Christmas crinkle. “Christmas Light,” by Ethel Cal- vert Phillips, is a beautiful story of the first miracle asit was performed by the Baby Jesus in the manger. And “There was a Boy who Lived on Pudding Lane, . dington, is the true account—if only you believe it—of the life and ways of Santa, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Claus. Grown-ups and youngsters will love this biography. Also Zane Grey’s serial, “The Call of the Cafion,” stories by Albert Payson Terhune and Herbert Quick, and three beautiful Christ- mas pictures in full color. animals, and Santa himself with hig © ” by Sarah Ad- | On page 118 there are the jolliest Christmas cakes you ever saw— gingerbread postcards, snowballs, a jack-in-the-box, funny Noah’s ark reindeer on a glassy lake. ‘ Did you ever think of giving little pies? Then page 124 will suggest something new to you. ° « Everybody wants lots and lots of candy for Christmas—to eat and, to giveaway. The recipes on page 127 are unusual because they make really enough, And nuts prepared as described on page 121 will give varicty to the holiday table. The women’s club or ladies’ aid’ society that wants to raise money for Christmas charities will find a splendid bazaar in Claire Wallis’ “Brite and Fair,’ and the money may be happily spent as described by Edith Barnard Delano’s “Christ- mas in our Town.” E -&/ HOME JOURNAL ‘~ From Any News- 15¢. the Copy dealer eg g News. *Why'* ‘worry about shopping for Christmas gifts for friends? As a monthly reminder of your friendship, what could be more worth while and welcome than THE HOME JOURNAL for 1922? “ - For delivery. on no Christmas morning, to each friend for whom you order a subscription today, a full-color, cost-free Christmas-gift announcement will be mailed in your name by THE Lapizs’ Home JOURNAL, Philadelphia, Pa, ~w 2 By Pree ar from Philadelphia, Pa., $1.50 the Years