PAGE TWO VOOOOvvvv¢Q¢¢ _ Woman ’s poobooooo moot; _..‘,’~A4Aa A "lviite ‘nwewwwuc- w“: - ~ - “WM-Jen - THE CHARLUFITTOWN GUARDIAN :- Social and Persona Q I C l I OO§O§OQQO0fi§40>OOO§O£OO400§o00bOO§O§OO£ Q v Dorothy Dix ’s Letter 30x1 Do Men or Women Make Greater Sacrifice in Marriage ‘I - Quitter Women Destroy Men's Morale by Fair - Weather Love-Why Boys Lack Manners Dear Miss Dix-Ws have been discussing two questions in which we ti‘! Ircatly interested. One is: Which is the more loyal, man or women? The other is: Which gives up most in marriage, man or woman? What . do you think about these subjects? B. I. kAAAAA-m v Recilrnv - _ ra tare Dalntiriees With Chic 3M“ ~. ‘Happenings of the Wee; e, Coincident, with im- p,-°¢1m,,atk,r_ loll-mil Thursday. January 25. as the jlate for the Opening o1 pulmmem fillies the announcement that the ate Drawlns Room will be held in gm Senate Chamber the evening of Yldal’. JWURTY ‘.16. A sate dinner will be lit-id at Government House Qhe erenizig before the Uptfllllg, on Wednesday, January 24. 'l‘hcse two t functions will be the phief social events connected with ‘he Opening. which both Their IIDKPCIlPHCiPS lift‘ Coin-lull" General Qnd thv CLlllllh i‘i l’! IollUTOllgh "iii amt-lid. lli. 'iii‘t‘iit'll'_v' will llolti 1dr: custolnnri t-iwv Year's levee in 311a Parliament Buildings at noon Q1 January l. Among other events Mr- Gilbert Houston and bride alt: spending the holiday season with Dr. and Mrs. Houston. O I O Miss Jacqueline Maedomald left 'I‘uesday morning to spend the holi- days with her aunt, Mrs. (Dr) C. W. Harrington in Boston. Miss Pearl Weeks. B. A, is spend. ing the holidays with her parents Rev. E. S. and Mrs. Weeks in Salis- bury. N. B. O I O Miss Kathlecn Logan. lliilifaxls" taunted young ilulinlsi. is spmidiiig the week with her grandfather Mr- James Paton and Mrs. Paton, Prince Street. Answer: I think that women are more loyal than men,and tbatwomengiveupiarmoreln 1111111180 than men do. lI¢!IlncI1¢Iunp-¢e--->-> You often see a one-man woman. but very rarely a one-woman man. Every community has in it some pathetic story oi a woman who ° has died of a broken heart because of a lost love that she could not forget. All cf us know charming old maids who might have married a dozen times who have remained single because they were faithful to a love that ended tragically for them. All of us know widows who have mourned inconsolably for their dead husbands for half a lifetime. It is women who wait outside penitentiary doors for released convicts and take back the husbands who have betrayed and disgraced tnem. Ami when it comes to marriage there are probably fifty times more Xlltii-iw i wives than there are faithiul husbands. ‘lherc are many men who are loyal friends and loyal employee, men who are loyal to their church and their political parties and their coun- tries. Perhaps in those relationship; they are even more loyal than women are, but when it, comes to loyalty between the sexes. then it is women who are the most faithful. Generally speaking, men are cfl with the old love and on with the new as casually as i! it were a hat instead of a crown of glory. They transfer their affections from olie woman to another and are wnimllfl-UY shitting to the newest thing in sight. Almost any vamp can take almost any nian away from the old wife who has stood loyally by his side and helped him make his gillliilélt’, big“? lildltk can alienates; vyioman Arvin r or or or ears. e oesn t. coo- h s right hand so that his hand Zildeerrltlligaixiifitsillfag‘: aha: got baid-hegded andyfift and bay-windowed any liidts the half eitrcl, n; he offers the 11-550“ g0;- ceasing w care for him_ specntor the top half of ih: six of seldom indeed’ m; you hem- 01 a husband standing by the will; who hm“- Dum“ w“ "mi l“ “P5 has been unfaithful to him and got herself in a mess of scandal, and the half card into his palm. When sfldom do you and a w“, 10mm“; he; husband when h, l; m trouble. the Sp“ at” 9 amims m‘ “mas-i Why, the very fact that there are so many more widows than widowers twfpnjumr s m‘ thehflr cud m‘ I pro.es haw much more falthlul a wife is to her niuoanirs memory till-ll ‘o ‘ pack t‘ tic is to hers. cOlltwiillalg your second question, which gives up more in marl-lose, a OUT man or a woman, I should say unquestionably that the woiriiul does. Li _ eliiicr one is a sacrificial goat which is laid on the marriage altar, the is Senator J. E. Sinclair, Emerald. celebrated his 54th birthday last Slitllfdliy When lic received the con- gratulations of his family and friends. l:..ir tiltizrv tire lite twii ‘illid Lin‘ (Jove-mol- i .i..g,' liE-ILCII. l0 be iii-id .. nut House, and the gala {aertcil-l-llnnce u! “Romeo and Juliet," 4n ' u~h Vat-om»: Duncannog will 9 yai/MS I v gap” a 8 . g“ 9% e4 ‘ i ha." 7711611385 0%? O I Miss Sue Nash is returning to Trtix-o today after a brief holiday nulollt; llel" relatives the guest oi her aster Mrs. Wood. o - t Price of PATTERN lb an. in stem?‘ or coin (eoin is preferygqy Wrap coin carefully. '. Hlill‘ not Ni-ti- __ . n: Goizrnment Iioiist- he re on Mondayz M}. Stephen Nellcs. McGill Medi- cal student, is spending the holl- duis with Mi". and Nlrs. E R. Brow. o a I Tlii- lit". lifllVlllllllrlll Oi liir. Cilarm ll. llrBLhs .i.. LLlli -(‘i0\'_ ETllJl‘ oi‘ PrlllCc Edward Island, is being pl. isiintlv dlscussed by the many ll ids of ;he new appointee and illfw DeBlois who both enjoy Wide pvpuiflriil’ throughout the gwrot -ll('C. Miss Grace Blliiilgsli-y‘ of Char- lottetown was tile guest for the Christmas holidays of Mrs. Morley M. Bell of Bummerside, . {P3P}. T} 'I@ illiiill lliiilllill i; Dr. and lifi-s S. K. Donald. lvlotlt-icil. N. l3 . wt iu- git. is. of Mrs. Geuzee RO‘)i!l\~ll\ of sillnlncriudc for the Christin-us HICHHOII. Mrs. Donald ls renlnining for a few days. o - . I O O The Mayor and Mrs. smuzirt had Is their Christina. gut-s: Mr. F. C. Jonvs of lifiinctiin. Mrs. S. G Pi ppill was among the H. in Bivifli! Badge hOS1tn~~ mitt-l-ininillg vary| dcllglltfully/ Ail. llvr lloine last tut-n- ing. "w" “R1110” 111B money after you are married so mm But I know the answer to that. I have seen it hap n t w“ be w oltenm tmldiziaykha ticket to Reno and hunt up 50mg m“; mm who m“ h“ It takes real love and a real mm ma; m‘! 1°" mm m9 111°" lust beoauzohe refiods her itgve. 331552;.‘ in her back of him when he l; nghting in m, w]; you, brother a m“ in Mvinii that it is the quitzei- women who have been the in. straw that- “Si? 88:13:11.1 ii mans morale and sent him to death during these um, or Idoubt thatanymsnbasoommlttedsuieldg pol-mg p) _ nu, couraleoua wife beside him to buck him up {nil nhl-wfifftii“. matter if you have lost your money as long as we are together y" won out once and you will win out again, and 1'in here to licip you," I'- ll the Women who have whines and complained and called his] failures; the women who were yellow and couldn't stand the gafl who an 2:1: “WWW for ma! a man putting a bullet through his m, w. - _ DOROTHY DIX. m} ‘l ‘Mill 913-“50119 7°" the bcysof today are gettinganm care ess o their manners’! I don t find any who treat women with the» chivalry that my father does. A MODERN EIGHTEEN Answer: ' Careleaslsamild wordtouseforthslack igood tha boys show. but you girls are w blame for it. gs long d-islalflilxilelisill let; Ti;- m-Ke data-v with you and break thvm. and lit in I car and honk tom to coins out and climb in by yourself, how do you expect them w y“ W“ Wm‘ ‘n? ‘WW3? 7°" mike Iwrlelvea cheap and tliev mu you a» your own valuation. DQRQff-{Y DIX Mas l»: ii Nltlriirvi l~ft Wt-dnipsz- day liilllZlfllfl for Toronto allot-e sllc ‘W111 be a guest at the Alexander Palace, Utiivelslty Avenue, prior to joining livr parents Mr. W. Chester S. lfvLiirta MP nntl !\l“< Aftlitre 1n Ol...‘.\'l. fiil- ‘he tvlxlzirlit of Pill‘- llllllltlll. Vlfix It'll-litre will lw- much mlswd ‘in .-t><~l:l1 and musli-zil til‘- rlPs in which she tool; a Prominent par‘. ng, in singing . “fill merry. In parents‘ .1 d" css and in child- ien’s liilrth, In dear rll in 1' rs of those have (l filed, In good com? iie ll p W170 ii i her . In k rd w. "i510," tlrosc uwitv, In patio t w iting, street content- ment pen rolls chesr, God bless 1' i‘ "v 0'1. this day, ulth ill" ill xii‘ 5,: of J 51-1.- —Hc~nr_\' hm Dykg Mrs. Arthur H. Duvnr entertain~ ed at a prettlv arranged Bridge for her friends la<t evening. o o who with those Mrs. tDrJ Kmr of Mrilpcque is visiting in Toronto the fZliPSt of Mr. and Mrs Clyde Auld, Crescent Av- enile. BEAUTY CONTESTS HEALTHY CHILDREN IN who are it. - To begin with, she gives up her name and her identity and hence- forth is known oniy as an adlunct to her husband Henceiortn sne ll Mrs. John Jones ins.e.i.l of lviary bmim. Not many men would be wilnii, to do that and alter marriage be known only as Mr. Dotty Perkins m- stcad of Adolphus uusiavus pi-own. Then a woman must almost always give up her career or hm- lob when she marries, no matter how much she loves it, or how successful she is in lt. She may have spent years of time and thousands oi dollars studying law or medicine 0r fitting herself to be a musician or an actress. or she may be a highly paid buyer or stylist or private secretary, but if she min-ties she soon finds out that you can't follow a career with one foot and park the other one by the home fire. Husbands want their wives‘ time and attention instead oi sharing them with the public. Babies have to be looked after and can't do will! a part-time mother. Houses won't run themselves, and so it ls generally either good-bye job or on to Reno. And nobody who hasn't, tried it knows what it means to a W0!!!“ W110 has earned her own money and had her own pocketbook to become finan- cially dependent on lier husband. How many men would like to hlveto go to even the most indulgent father and ask him for a dune to buy cigar- ettes, cr a quarter for street-car fare. And it is the wife who has to bear the children and go through the agoities oi torment to bring them into the world and be a have to them for years afterward. And it is the woman who has to get up an hour before the balance of the family of a morning and work an hour after the balance of them have gone to bed and who has no Siuidays or holidays oil. Oi course, marriage is no picnic to a man. He has to toil and Bill/c to support a family and do without the things he wants in order to give to Bcawy coflests will be co"s'der- ed u pii~ n fc ‘in Italy hereafter, says an offc filly fir 11rd wit. ment is ueri in crrnrrfion with a recent ccl bration of mothers‘ and infants‘ d‘y. They will be supplanted by child- ralslft.’ ronfiis s. in which the state 0!)£‘l't1i"d mothers‘ and c“ildren's ])l'"i‘(‘fi\‘f‘ ir-r-clzitlon will give Driz s to the lYl"'ll'!‘S w“o have b"flllllhl up ti" healthiest children. Children bctwiren six months and three years of age may be submit- ted by the conie=tants for exami- nafon. ller Plxrollrltry the Cnuntrss of Bl‘~.\b<]lOllR1l,TUKTZXIJY had a new phritnglilpll of horse-ll‘ taken by Mi.» Vlole; Keene, of Toronto. Tile pilo- tograph was taken at Government House, Ottawa. and shows Her Excellency in a fiill length peso Sit-i is gowned in white and wears It i\t‘.'i\\' iur clip unlit! holds a littlt- iiir mtilt’. The new photograph is 2i L-harlnlilg one. U O q- 3. In»: ‘l1....i' for lw- liimilfii» Miss Nlnrgzllti P . "-l'. Pffiu i uni‘ n ‘l|,\,]_'.' [l/Ilx ii ‘i l -il.l.:; mtvsv o o THE 13TH CARD Mrs. E. S. Blanchard was hostess Ior the ThilTVltiV {lll-IYIIOOII clilh a‘ he!‘ t- ll vlll" l‘. plullutlt. Thirteen may be a sim of i'l lilck to some p l“ ns. but to the ama- lt-ur inf," ' ..ti I'm l‘ill‘li)l' in tlio basis of n niys lly- i; thick with A deck of plnyi g c rds, The conjurcr shows his audience the bottom crird of the park which. [for example. is the lrtrc of clubs. . N xt he ll-vitrs :1 sprflator to place lit llOl‘ loll, Si MiiljVs Road East "its "i "’ U“ k1“: (‘f "i"b‘ School‘ Deocmbur. _'\v:tll his lilVZllil on 10p of [hp (ll-Cl; Grade IX.-l, Lawrence Daley; 2, 3N1 count m 30- _ Edmund Murphy; 3‘ Mary Mb As soon 9S the count ls conclud- Cmcn‘ ed the to" -r r ad's his fr end 1r Grad“ vnI__L “m, Daley. 2‘ h ‘ is sure lie ls howling t‘e knit of Gerald McCrirron; Ii, James McGee. chills‘ tmiu. vl_l_ (time. McCarmn; Tm? “Wk m“ , ., __ ‘ , stills as .‘.(‘ “Tl“ clan. "3§2§é°“v.‘l°i‘?“§ii3§i ivlcciee; T° h“ "Willis Slim-rise he finds 2. mggm Mccwon; 3' Marat“ M“ soother cal-d, the six of hearts, at n. ‘w. fwliilsitltir iirv . ' .- iii-oil Ill il.t'll' idr home in Slllllilit‘ a Mrs A IV lfvtltlzlllili entertained hi. '..~- i "l l". "i 'i‘lltll'~rl.ti, ST. MARY'S ROAD SCHOOL TAPIOFA Ml-TRINGUE Here is a wriv of cooking tapioca, so that \V“Rl is "good for the chil- dr""" w ll be liked. too. Soril: two tchlr-“rnvs of tanien. in rrld ntifer overnight. Next day. b ing ‘.0 He boil, swrvien to taste, end ndd silff cl nt milk to make thc mivtiire into s th‘ck cream Flavor with lemon r1“d, nutmeg or :;1i ‘~17? THE COOK CORNER uiapciruit Sim .- 4 grapefruit d oranges '1ll- ' ‘ . zilwltlciill Blldlzft‘ Club luv‘ the Liitlatliiin National fills utvk ft-l‘ ri iliflCll 0n bridge when was much enjoyed. S- ' u: ti KT ll Riiv lilillliill art ‘Pr hint" ‘.\. t my .\li' Burl Howard 0i Quebec, wlio l5 arriving That Explained It "Is this a healthy town?" asked the newly-arrived invalid. "I should say so." answered the 31"". :1‘. it," rill‘ Shcriil-iv <3, tonight f dddresa of Custodian. w i q a w o i ' (‘l-indium ll!‘ the Trustee when ap- l’? a RllYlllOllfl and Mrs. TF-KVIWHK? ll ill '1" l “rt ti’ Si. .Patll'.\ Il>""_i ‘L. (Ji-iii‘ m Montreal ill Menu Ill viholii Mrs. . Raymond enzcizaizictl ti‘. the tea hour yesterday - o Gm‘. Girtidi- IIL-i. Lois McCarron: D(‘rA>‘~ McCzirron; 3, Theodore Mc- Lilrgziin. Grade lI.-l. Agnes liicGce; Lillian McCarron; 3, John Mo» Carthy. Grade 1-1. Eugene McCarthy. Perfect nttcndancc—Mar_v Mc- Cnrron, IAHVFPIICC Daley. Eilward Mllfpily. James McGee, Mary Mc- Gee. Margaret McGee, Agnes Mc- Gee. Byron Grant, teacher. '7 Rrv ll 2 Mrs H. J. Gorilrin v. i. hflatjigs m, ‘ IHFIHCOH t/‘ii 3v l.‘ ',, hgnqying ,her riauglitz-r M. ». l" n (till-don wllo ls home from MtGill Univer- ;iity ior the holidays. o s e _ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ines (if Writ‘- _ ford who arc spondait! the \Vt't‘l\' ' Willi (Vi. lifilrl 5.111. li F ill). zilfl‘ _ béti; "til'(llfiill' xi-i-Hcrimt (l . s Silt" “Tilt-y Illllt-l- he Thais licr totirtll dantw this evening." Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Houston spent He: "that's no 8181i." the Christmas vreek-end at Mrs. She: "Isn't it? You don't blow jHnilstnlfs old home in Sourk. hmv he dances.“ oilrtiitzcd. with liim s o the boflrm of We peck fl. fciv dops oi \'il"1ll&, then leave "lrnk th (‘UNI the r’ "k nnd vnu Wil f"d tit‘ t iirt! 1:1 hr- vh» kill‘; oi will." lllli . tilt‘ U0"lli“(‘l‘. The Sp("‘ii’ll0l' divs so rind is amazed to find that this is cor- rOCt. Some s'rret now-rat on is neces- s rv f r the per!‘ rmwcc of this trick The inner .~i prflwailslv takes the king of c‘. lis from an old pack aid cuts the card in halves. He rfaces t"e king of clubs of a comlfrte pack tlrrtcen cards from the bottom a"ri the sir of hmrt: at the llfiiiiln] of the (lock oil!‘ hli‘f of the i. .\' t~i' h‘ l'l~. is m- tired liy tho top potion, or half ot the king of clubs. The rorflurer holds the pack be- iw - t ~ 4w‘ ltwen the thumb and forefinger of cl-ygp “d tasty." to mo‘ Add the _vo“>s of two eggs and p ill‘ info a pie dsh s"1t*'~rr'd w‘th a ltt'o j'~m. Whisk the whites 0f the eggs w‘th a teasmon of sugar, pie on top of the nildrlwg, then bnke in a s'ow o'en until slightly brow ‘ed. (Kr; Er srnw The winter relief committee com- pili'"g a “nnt‘o“al cook-book." has aslvd Geri-rim housewives to send in their best recipe: for the one- not stew com "'l=o'v in Germany one Sunday a mnrlh. "Paris" savs the lrpead patriot- lca‘ly, "has no finer mi-‘pes than ours. Bee to it that your dishes are Junior, but it is the woman who gets the hot. end of the barzaln. DORCIHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-For four years l have been engaged to a man who during the depression lost his position and has been unable to find work iii anything since. Two months ago I met. a man who is very successful and I began to go out with him. The first man told me that I would have to decide between them. I refused to give the second man up, as I have been starving for fun, so our engagement was broken cfl. My bro- ther. who is a stock broker and who has been mother and father to me, said to me, when he heard of it: “It's women like you who have made many a man in this time of distress blow his brains out. We who deal ~ in money know what it can buy. but we also know what it cannot him I never thought that my own sister would be a dirty little quitter." Hi now shows me no affection and this hurts me terribly, as he has IIWIYI been wonderful to me. Is he right? Or lshis just the gamblers out- native. "When I cams here I hadn't the strength to utter a word; 1 had scarcely a hair on my head; I couldn't walk across the room: and hadtobeliftedfrommyhed.” “You give me hope. Bow long have you been here?" "I was born here." Laatnem _ The kind-hearted man, bearing a dog howling mournfully. decided to investigate. He found the dog ait- ting calmly upon its haunchel but still _- agctnised lpa. "What ails your dog?" he asked look on life? I did love the first man, but having to wait so long to get married killed that love, Doesn't having to wait too long make one lose intsrest? Won't 1 in time be able to forget entirely the first man‘! A SISTER. Answer: But-e you will. If money and a good time are all you want, you will be happyiwflhksriy man whocan give _them_to_you‘_flut HUPPOGe i-hil _ CANAD ' PRAHIINCE OI" ~_PRIN(.'E EDWARD NLAND NOTICE TY) CREDITORS OP FIRST MEETING WHERE ASQIGNNIIBFI‘ MADE j In llll‘ mutter in‘ "'1' ltuiikriipiry of Jollii .\. .“l"'hl‘l'S0|l. _ Notice B hereby given that John - A. McPherson of Remington, in _ Prince Edward Isl'~n"_ mnile an as- signment Iifi ilio " i. "I" n! Dec- _~ unber, 1933. and tint :l.i» ilfw‘ mii t- ing of creditors will bi- held on the - Rh day of January i914 at the hour n! Two o'clock in the afternoon at i the I aw (‘curls Building in the (‘lly » of fhnrloiietown. ' To vote ihert-nl ptronis of claims . jJlO proxies must he filed with me ' prior thereto. Those having claims against ih ' inflate must file the same with the (‘NAPIER 49 A llMPLr; i-.‘xi'l..\:vA'I'IOI There was silence in the library after Barstowe had made his lauyh- lng statement: “All my millions? That's good! . . . I'm not Dad's heir at. all!" The firelight flickered on the handsome furnishings . . . A log broke and fell on the hearth with a little flurry of sparks . . . Some- where a ship's bell clock struck the hour musically. llilt Jeanne inns conscious of none of tllesc. She was whirling through black chaos lit by dancing tongues of flame. Though she started straight ahead with wide open eyes. it was as though she looked through her own closed lids after gazing too long at a brilliant object and was tormented by spots of crimson and yellow and green flashing there. Her hands were clenched in the draperies of her gown. but outward- ly she maintained that admirable poise which had carried her through so many calamitniu situations. poinfrd before the rlsitrihuiinn ls made, otherwise ilti- prorrrrls of the astute viill lie distributed among the pmriiea cniitlnl thereto, wlthoni. n- . It!!! lo such claims. Dated at Summeralde, 23rd day of December. i933. P. O. Bmi fill. Sammersiile, I’. E. I. FREDERICK J. E. WEIGHT. Custodian. INS. 111:.- -— —-- diilerencc to smut‘ people." Btu’- hLUWQ .i<il...‘...'... ‘But not ta any- one as fine as you. Forgive me for even the suspicion that-—" He paused. She ralsril her quiet eyes to hi8- "What suspicion?" "Oh nothing! I feel like a cad even to have had the momentary thought that perhaps-perhaps Dad's money had meant something to you when you promised to msrrry JEANNE IS "HURT" Avertmg her llcad. Jcaunc rose abruptly. "Where are you going?" he Asked. catching at her hand. "Please let me go!" she said In a choked voice. "I-I think I Hm l little )llll'lr—" "My darling!" He sprang up, gathered her in his arms, holding her clms. "Pbrglve mei l was a brute to lay such a thing. But I love You with every fibre of my belli- "CFY b!“ of my heart. and the thouilhi thlt FOR SALE Q note farm situate at Bedeqne. 1|] dog In], except about three l} BIIIOOI. Newly fenced In lflfi 1b odlivntiola New barn and lens in goal repair. I'll new as a Dal-nin- Anl! to IIAIOIJD JOIIsTGII. lode QR. i She thanked l-leiivc-n now ior ht inscrutable face, when she became conscious of the fact that her young husband was regarding her cur- lously. “I say. did you think I was hair to the Barstowc millions?" he Ill- Blie managed a shrug. "l never gave it much thought." she replied carelessly, "I dare ll! everyone thinks so . . . But what difference does it make?" maybe you could no!!!’ C81’! 10f m6 without by gilded baalrrovnd we! like a sword thrmt . I . T911 I'm you will CIIQ some " She lifted her mate his. "I think I almost do now." she id. "She w“ tit-um. planar n Part reekitms. ccnaciom she played her cards right. The awful nightmare of her un- paid bills spurred her on. She was scarcely conscious oi Barstowes kisses. She did not hear the endciirmcnts he was whispering, his lips against her hair. She did not resist when he brought her back to a comer of the divan and sealed himself beside her. keeping her within the circle of his arms. “Now I'll tell you all about it, sweetheart." he began. "I dare sa, we ought to have had this talk long ago, but I've been living in paradise for weeks and weeks. and such mun- dane meters hadn't a look-in. . . . "You see.” he went m, "Dad has always had a horror of the so called some pretty good stuff in me whe I was growing up, and he decla he didn't want to see me wasttn it along the primrose path lu thz way so many of his wealthy friends sons were doing. I respect Dad's op- inion enormously, so, when he gave mo a straight-fiom-the-shmilde talk, I agreed with everything ha said. The gist of the agreement wal this: on my twenty-mat birthday Dadwastogivemeagoodrount rum, enough to start a business a my own, to set me on my feet iln anclally in a handsome manner. Afterthahltwouidbsuptomsl l made a flivver. it was hadn't the right stuff in ma. If putitovenihadachaneetclnak pretty close to the fortune Dad hat andlhadthe added advantaflol darned good send-elf, whereas Dad began his career as an cflica ire made every cent of his l M‘, "Itfllilhllllolflnddolhd - 3Q, r-‘F-‘vi .1» rich man's son. He thought I had Jennie‘ was a splendid idea of your father. tcmakegocdfonsclcanbuyyou all the lovely thing: you deserve. It heart m more to got you extravaagnt thin]! "w" yet awhile." GHQ ED06601- were not sitting in the wreckage of her house of cards. "I think it's a very generous and novel arrangement," she said ev- enly, “Is your father satisfied with the progress you have made in your buoiiess?" "Dad professes to be delighted. He's the only encouragement I've had in many a dark moment. Oi course the war delayed me quite a bit in starting up, or I'd have been much farther ahead today. But I tell you. Jeanne." he declared en- thustlcally, “its great stuff, building up your own fortune. Dad knew what he was about all right." quite understand." nodded "and I agree with you it W. C. T. fiotes A NEW YEAR'S PRAYER Low at the th e hold of this white New Year I kilezl in prayer; Lord, may it be A tzmpe unto Thee: Whcreln each rounded day stand A coumn gra“d; Grant that thr- walls may be Of work for Thee, With faith for buttress firm; And for the shcdcwfrg arch above 0h, roof it with Th! l0". And on the sure 0i ma» The cross of courage set. lord, this were Y0! An gmp y terrpb llld b12191! YOU’. 0h, bzhlhou present on the altar ere. And may the lncsnse of annealing ml] Perhaps that is what makes you so dlflerent from the other rich men l have met. You're not spoiled, and there's a kind of wholesome strength about you that belongs more to the West than the East." “You darling!" he klued her en- thusiastieally, "You're my suidins atlt now! You're the loll for which rm making. You“ the use I want P7178! lake sweet the sir. no“, o Lord. the builder and in- mate n the blocks to H900. You?» m viola-homa- wm’: be many years. I promise n“ “u u” “m” ‘b loo smash Tbelastsparkofh inleanne’ n"7°"_"‘°‘°9 ' flickersdandvgtoiat. ‘ti’ "i" ‘"4 m“ the owner. "Oh, he's Just lazy." re," ’ the latter “Bur, Iaaineas wouldn't make a do: howl." unclaimed tbs other. "Yes. but that dog's sitting on a thistle," explained the owner. " “ "' 7 . _- Q5; smiled as bravely as though shc l ' °g“fif prince o; has become largefy a prevailing iarcethisnemclddateiapracti- cally in daily a d hourly use in a word-wide way. And not only do the calendars bear this d‘te but it is found on every legal d"cum'nt, great or sina‘l, be it the transference of millions or bil".ona of bullion, or a marriage certificate duly igned af- ter a eeremrny in the backwoods. or the grceryiraivs receipt fer payinrt of a porridge meal bill. These "Happy New Year“ greet- thil year‘! fulfill d ioy in largely manufairurd in lr-nrnitra daily s? h §§i"§§§§i§i “You mean we must eccnoiriiaa y. “Well no, not enctly. But I can’! "Yoarloln clothes and jewels and ‘I'll -qm accounts for i‘ 4E9 '9‘ I 3! ggdi .E=»'#§'§is’i ~¥i§ E E .11: iii i I lemons Bugs-r Cook the grapefruit lizii: the in anges separately in water to w! them until soft enough to be 10- lly pierced with a fork. lave ml night in the water in which M have been boiled. In the moi-illit- cut the grapefruit tn halves, m out the pulp and press thmilshl colander or itrult press to remit" resin and tough core. shred HM ilne with a sharp knife. Cut will inalices, saving the juice from boil fruits. To the shaved skins mi pulp. allow 2 quarts cold wit!- Now measure and add in timflm‘ quantity of sugar, having both W‘ ar and juice hot. Add stmlmd W“ M“, up; @003 gently until thltl roili- ma» sterilized also“. W‘ 4' not seal dawnior 1i‘ v:==_ Peace. A sertiollti the last Lambtth aiovrt "i " Church of lrgfa-"d Eshflvl “War as a method of settlins 11M‘ national dillflltes is IIICOMW“? with m cushion and sum" M our lord Jesus Christ. _ the Claret‘!!! Fnsrir-"ce M! fi demand inianfcide. shiver)’. - torture, it is now call d to oondflfll war.” h“ y“ when Prime will!" Ramsa MacDonald letui-ned U Dari tain after snendi": i" us“... P“; o? ‘ we l, in 02¢: conferring wit i lead Y‘! l" l‘ other eoirtriea. ha was rcwfmm, ‘m; that “the acid wit o’ World's Disarmament C ‘ was whoPo-r the Three-Power U!‘ could b! m“: o, ps-i-emeii. still r=="’ don Navl 1:?! t! into I If?‘ "93 In s-ilte 0i all difficulties l . lieve very s"b' t “workanbed- d1“ X1! 'Iv<-~ s.“ i: "&.'.°.'°""Ifi lflllln w-w hi... ~-~~ we urrd a ‘we rm _ busier-r P! “I; Tiff,“ Great aim , m . o, o“, from the ltfimfw" . If“! it refit!- '° m" m" I naval but"! ‘y . and in» aw" °' oat crush m ‘m; “gm” u.“ world d nema- h heaven! _________. 12m raw!" aoil sunburn Inland is ererwcihl ‘m ' and h-“Prl 0i "' Qilfll We