JULY 6. 1950 A l THE GUARDIAN. Cl-lARL()T'l'ETOWN IPAGE NINE The Golden am ""”"" "" 3'" . . ' HOMES! '- 3, i c.,,,m,,,,d mm M, , l.lfR0'll.TC lags make EgF4:f1ausytm! p Cleaning up is saw! AGNEI LOUISE PIIOVOBT wants to be the pursuer and not the pursued, and that he is very apt df,i:"'i.',?:;, gs,-crffffrg g rigisifltgigtziflegflllavslo so In-h. you hear the-8-ku rustle out of the box! I-mason-3 men 5' (1 l4 43 Eight. T."t;”..'2.'.'if.i.'..' 5555'.” 1'33 '22.'.3f.i":"h':f i?.e'e.uii'.ii”l2iL' i'.."'al P ' Jforzdeinghitiicupsl aLsgybuJn'lL'y!" add boiling water! , YTl?"''' & & Oven-crisp -in miiki'Frea.hest of all oerealsl Delicious uiy time-morning, noon or night! Big flakes of sweet-toasted cornl Fresher, tastier! And nourishing . . . here's the "power" of corn for you. Delicious main dish of happy breakfasts! N, in qoodnessl For the biggest treat in cereals, get the freshest. Kellogg's Corn Flakes! So fresh, because people eat them as fast as we make 'eml For your bargain in goodness- , -., buy Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Mame: oiowsiigiwgesri Neighbors By George Clark Iq.v aM.Mi'."- ' Wmmiuauumrpmlincs ., , "Your bills for reducing Q; Q our budget. Why can't I spend something to get my hair back 7" The hnesf mills) suit won (on buy A Eu lllia ill-iiiilil: V cm ” in rut smnars continual XXI! Gloria arose, very quiet and cool- ly poised. 'In the circumstances, it will be impossible to have you remain with me any longer. Cecile will pack your trunks this evening." In that moment Gloria scored heavily. Frances raised her small head haughtlly. "You are quite right; it is en- tirely im-possible, Good afternoon- Mrs. Moreland." she half turned and then looked back with a. smile of cold hostility. carelessly tucked under one arm. yasif forgotten, she carried a fold- ied newspaper, an unusual thing for her. she dropped it on the table "I gather that you have not seen this?" Gloria's horrified eyes clung to the staring type. Buglilr Kills Miss Harriet Endi- cott Escapes with Booty victim's Nephew Pursues in fast car. Frances Payne's voice again. ”I fear you are not very well in- formed as to your husband's whereabouts. He took the road. alone and probably unarmed. at two o'clock in pursuit of a murder and has not been heard from since. strange that no one noti- fied you." Gloria's eyes raised only for a moment to rest on a. face white with its own anguish, but relent- less in hatred of her. "Get out!" she said sternly, and Francis went, beaten again in a moment of triumph. ' The door closed. Gloria had not seen that Frances while she was reading these headlines had quietly possessed herself once more of that incriminating envo- lope, but even if she had known she would scarcely have cared Just now. What happened between two o'clock in the morning and the hour when she and I-Zdson had found Jack? And where had be gone now? A few hours came back to the evening papers shrieking their news in hysterical headlines. Young Jack Moreland, nephew of the murdered woman, had caught up with the murderer in a lonely spot and had killed him. He had walked into a police station in town shortly before noon and had given himself up. Details were lack- ing because he had collapsed im- mediately and was delirious, but there had.evidently been a stiff fight. as Moreland had a bullet wound in the chest and another in his ann. Gloria pushed the paper aside with a shudder. she saw him again beside her in the car. with one hand creeping up to the shoulder that he had held so stiff- ly, his face pale and drawn. "Don't mention to anyone that you have seen me today. Promissl" And she had promised. "I want to go to him!" she chok- ed. But she could not go. she had no right. she had thrown away her right to be with him. CBVIIO later she knew. She hotel to find "Mademoiselle perhaps is ill? Cecile looked anxiously at the scarcely touched tray which Gloria. had pushed away from her. "But that so tender bit of little bird- if mademoiselle will but try him?" "Thank you, Cecile, you are very thoughtful." t "Ah, but it is the pleasure to serve 'lademoiselle! It is of a pleasantness to be alone with mademoiselle." Cecile discreetly vanished and Gloria sat soberly thinking. Three or four newspapers lay near her. she pulled one of them toward her to look over it again. Jack's pic- ture, very young and handsome, looked at her from the first page. with photographs of Beechwood and of that rough Ipnely spot where the second tragedy had tak- en place. Motor police, diligently scouring the country, had dis- covered it before nightfall on Fri- day, with the trampled weeds and the trail which led through the v strip of woods, up a rocky slope to i the rim where it dropped away ; suddenly, at the edge of an aband- I oned ilharry. At the bottom of the quarry they had found the body of a man. Parsonsl The no e haunted her. There was no doub of his ldentitr Miss Endlcott's secretary and the butler had both identified him as a man who had "done business with Miss Endlcott, although the business was not mentioned. Tim i proprietor of the garage where Parsons had hired his car had identified both car and man. The social prominence of the Endicott and Morelsnds only add- ed to the morbid interest in the cars, which flared again when word came from a bustling mid- western city that Jack Morelanti had been for several months on the payroll of a certain automo- bile factory. I cheerful worker in overalls. In the eyes of the public Jack Moreland was a hero, but in the eyes of the law he had killed a man. -'I'l-irough all the turmoil he lay weak and ill, sloylvllly coming out of delirium. Two in st , un- attended for hours, were taking their toll of him. Gloria pressed her hands over her aching eyeballs. To sit here in her rooms was maddening. she decided to order the car and so out somewh , anywhere, but ldson was t in be found. later in the afternoon Cecile ap- peared. more.than usually demure "Monsieur Edson had asked to speak with mademoiulle." ll. Oeeile. 1 will see uitted, Gerunds Jury. you Aged In woos for purity, strength Ind flovcrl Send in Ioday for 1 your FREE copy of our new RECIPE book to KENT VINEGARS Canning, NJ. KM-I of self-defense, and the District Attorney says he wIn't ask for an indictment." Gloria stood up. she had a. queerly intangible feeling, as if she were floating about the room. l0h-thank you. Edson, I am very glad.” I-Ier hand on the back of a chair steadied her. "I was afraid-there being no witnesses- only his own word-" - "Yes, miss. I was worried about it myself, being mixed up in it that way. I never in my life did so hate to drive away and leave a man!” To be continued he tried. will find that the most devoted wives never have the most devoted husbands. The wives who make slaves of themselves to their husbands are servants and not Lady Loves. the back of an ear or the top of a head presented to their lips. demand a lot of attentions from theirhusbands. the wives who make their caresses rare enough to he treats instead of daily chores who keep their husbands lovers. If you will look over the married women of your acquaintance, you The wives who do the kissing have It is the wives who keep their husbands guessing. the wives who All of which must mean something or other. DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am a most unhappy girl of 18 and my unhappiness is caused by the constant quarrcllng between my mother and father. There is never a day that there isn't a fight between them over the sllllest trlfles and the most unimportant things. Then they make up and all is forgotten by them, but not by me. Their quarrels have made me lose all interest in life. I have got so nervous that things fall from my hands and I am on the verge of a breakdown. I sometimes think of taking my own life to be out of it all. My parents say that their quarrels are between them and! have nothing to do with me, but they are ruining my life. What can I do? A DAUGHTER ANSWER: A great many parents besides yours think that their quarrels are their private affairs and that if they get any fun out of a cat-and-dog fight they have a right to take their pleasure as they find it. So they do not hesitate to stage the most disgraceful scenes 'before their children. Apparently they have no conception of the,autferlng they are in- fllctlng upon their children and the injury they are doing them. They do not seem to realize how it tears a child's heart to tatters to see the mother and father it loves hurting each other so cruelly. They do not seem to sense the shame and degradation that fills a child's soul at having the reverence it feels for its parents torn from it and having them degraded before it. But any neurologist will tell you that no misfortune can happen to a child worse than being brought up in a quarrelsome home. It wrecks them in body and mind and as long as they live they suffer from the shocks that their parents gave them when they were young. Inasmuch as children have to pay not only with their happiness but with their health and with the failure of their lives for their parents' quarrellng. it does seem that fathers and mothers might deny themselves the kick they get out of fighting for the sake of the help- less little creatures they have brought into the world. DEAR MISS DIX: What do you consider the obligations that SUDS Q prev Ci. I TOOK CLOTHES ITIIOUGHT WERE CLEAN...CLOTi-IES I . . MYSELF HAD WASHED WJTH A LEADING , suoar-cur ' NOW MY CLOTHES ARE EAN-mev LOOK so WHITE, an engaged couple owe to each. other? ENGAGED I WASHED moss CLOTHES OVER AGAlN...1'His TIME DEEP-CLEANING ' mTHEN... ,- FEEL so SOFT, SMELL so SWEET...THANK.S TO NOW! W.cn handy IJPTON TEA BAGS ery'oy lipions delicious My blend! ANSWER: I should say politeness and consideration of each otlier's feelings and such attentions as their hearts prompt. I do not think that an engaged couple have a right to enslave each other or pollce each other. An engagement should be an option rather than I. closed contract. DEAR DORUH-I! DIX: Should two children aged 10 and 7 be left alone at night while their parents go out to meetings, bridge par- ties. eic.? I say they are not old enough to be left alone. My hul- bzmd says they are. He goes out frequently. It is very seldom that I go out any other night except Thursday to my bridge club. A PERPLEXED MOTHER ANSWER: I think it is a terrible thing for a mother and father to ,go off and leave two small children alone in the house. A thou- sand catastrophes could happen for which you would be responsible if you left them alone when too little and ignorant to know how to take care of themselves. I I certainly think your husband should be willing to stay at home one night a week with the children. but if he isn't. your duty is plain. Sftayhwith them unless you can get some reliable person to take care o em. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, but will ans- wer problems or general interest through her column. 7, us! lllIElEl'Jn(lll.lElllililliliii5 nxvnnl ASHES our mm H llitlilliils Bi liiiiiiiili wlsnnivsuns 1 fl PROVED ll TO MYSEl.l",f'says Mrs. Guy C. Wallace warm I LOOKED AT THEWASH WATER,i was AMAZED To 555 THE sumac mar THAT OXYDOL GETS OU'I'v DIRT .”i V THAT moss suoirr-cur suns I.EF'I' IN! l s Prove it Yourself! clothes LQL CLEAN- Fgi-IEJ. CLEAN-SMELI. CLEAN- Because they CLEAN-with 0XYD0l! DEEFCLIANING OXYDOLE IiIIn actual washing demonstrations, women are seeing for themselves how much graying dirt deep-cleaning Oxydol can get out of clothes already washed with leading no rinse suds! And this is a fact more and more women are proving for themselves at home: when you use Osydol as di- rected, clothea wash deep clean . . ; sparkling clean! You can see clothes are clean . . . whites wash dazzling white. mlors brilliantly brightl You ' 591; can feel clothes are clean :; . so soft. to the touch and easy to iron! You can even smell clothes are clean ..3 wind-blown fresh and sweet! That's because Oxydol reaches deep down into fibres for dirt-cleans clothes all the way through! Yet. Oxydol is truly safe! Deep-clean clothes stay brighter and new-looking 101180" Try deep-cleaning Oxydol yourself-neat washday. At yourdegl. eels in the familiar Osydol package."