I o,“ ,_,.,....~. ~ .....- —-§~..-@ —-e¢-'*' -QPY@.*14’ enfnffifn gfll. p .: t b1 Pact; TWO ‘GE-none 1 ,Woman’s Realm -:- Sc cial on t._»,_-ti~s~p-tt>arsm\uoo~ouu~tonooo on nnoonnouo-‘Ioonu-crd-rrmmooce on rrflnhhroflo‘ The Housewife And Her Activities PERSONAL GOODS ing isn't a bother. and it is more sensible to pay a mite of atten- tion to your figure now while you are young and lovely than to wait until there are noticeable defects itvfiich i‘\‘f;11ll'(‘ .\i!‘(‘1lll(111\ l!t.‘.\l111l‘1’1l. C1e11nli1;es~ is pat"! o: the busi- ness o1 being healthy. Bathe every t" lzuid oi" tree flay. and wash face and neck fre- ‘ave known and named. quently between times. See that ,‘ your hair is always fresh and clean and fracrtizit. Also that clothes are 110a i’ pres-ed and ahsoltiteli" spoilt. Even though you are iii a giris school where clothes do not Search through the leafy boughs of thought To find ‘ brightly pluniaged bird ‘ rely. 1111011 she is - 1111: \\".1s 11C\f‘l' htartl 1 siutiitltizic. Blane . Cnllli grew 011 the matter much during the week, backs of r rep ui Nebrtr-ka dur- keep the casual ones you do wear i ‘.14 .\1(l1'111n. The immaculate. Habits set so early 1 wiili top soil in life st ck So \\l1"." 1"11"1\'ate . v0.11. liventztal slovenly ones" Whrv 11111 "e1 out rat . . .. . . of the into the world \\li l‘ t" you sheep 1.11 ti: turn to sprout. choose a career n1 h" "ruch- -.. -v-- ing or marriage. neitue-s will BRISIIING UP THE count. Learn to be trtmly uroomed now. than you wort have ‘ to be hmhrred ttwiiic in chance you habits later on. (‘OWPLEXION si ll~.\;.on —--- h! »'= 101')‘ iWID- All women who are making their 9.1.. own jams and jellies w-il‘. be inter- 1 Select a brush that is easy w ested in the new way to cover E. one with mgir open jars. Circles of trans- - 11111111 anti .1~ _\\!:.t c. liriii. I‘. elastic jmren‘. paper. togetht-t" \\"'.tl1 hands lino ' ll‘. \\.tl111 \\'.ilL'1' B Today's Short Wave Radio Program (Alihailallflilirl) ’ TUESDAY. 0010mm 5 JOHANNESBURG ".1 pm —An Offenbach Annivers- ary Program. ZTJ, 49.2 m., 6.09 1110K. TOKYO 4:45 p.m —Ballad JZK. 19.7 m.. 15 16 25.4 m.. 11.81 meg. Recitation . meg. ; JZJ. BERLIN 6 p m —"Ga.votte. Hornpipe. Lundler." DJD, 25 4 m., 11.77 meat. SCHENECTADY 6:35 p.m.-—Short_ Wave Mall Bag. W2XAD.19.5 m , 15.85 meg: Wihlizti“. 31 4 m.. 9.53 meg. LONDON 6: 3 p.1n,-"The Alpha-H pl i1: on songs. GSP. 19-6 m.. 15.31 men: GSO, 197 m., 15.18 1ueg.; GSF. 19.8 m.. 1514 meg; ($517.25 3111..11.75 meg. MOSCOW 7 11.111.—News and Program foi Engfish Listeners. RAN. 31 m.. 9.6 meg. BERLIN 7:30 pm -So1o Concert, Richard Lanes. DJD 25.4 m..11 7'7 meg. BOSTON 8.15 p.n1.-~Tl1e" Work Before . v.1 .1111 ' F , _ v V. _ v V ,_ . _y "m , . 111u11"e.\s. WIhAL. 49.6 m.. 6.04 311110‘ oi i “tiidkticilii: iliflhdbtti Mtthhkii a i‘ '- mom rubbed .1 ‘ti-die nice and neck Do ltiiteTasrsixooth lt/ljllgyc‘ over the 1 _ SANTIAGO’ CHILE not scrub :0 iiuorously." ant.’ do not jar and slip on 1hr» 9 .0 band. i his‘??? ancdpegnfl: use the b When dry this tnuttul. contracts. wmntjolnl Mugic C3960 31 2 i i thlLs tnaking a touch .1 i-tight-pro- m q 6o ‘meg ‘ ' ' ' f \0n bru l1 orj Lemar. - LONDON v k ‘ m“ “ , “fwi ,. , 9 p.n1 —"Wor1d Affairs,” a 11.1.1 wt...:e.;.:1 st M-wim mem- m». ' Hut with your" __ cso. 16.8 m.. 11:10 meg; 0st, palms Alwa": rinse carefulli" f'rs' To hear some petvfe talk everv W's m" 1526 meg‘: GSD‘ 25} ‘vi ' _ u’ lit 'wtl1 ' " "(t1 ‘ ' 'k l. 1- i. i them m" 11"”, meg" GSB’ 3L5 m" 1].‘. I‘ . t 11 Y. 1 10111110? 110% ‘rinse : l] 51 n10!‘ Ell . “'i’..“;‘ ‘£1.13 ’l‘1§'.§'}.".“..1 .‘§."‘.’I‘Ji‘.‘. 1122-313" “"'”—-"°* “m “WENTWE QttTtJY-J "1111111" Drv and ‘dor 181‘ N“ t ut i?" ‘t1 1 d n p nL-“Dance Music’ LRX‘ A .1 .1 \A"1 w“ O 1"i d! inc tithes 1131 o btéeii ieyth 0v n: 1 3106 m‘ 9'66 meg’ 1.. .:..f..“'§.il'i. 1 $2111.. 2112;"... “a f“, ‘ ‘y. _" ‘ f _ “ 1Q‘ 1- ‘ 12.30 a.111-O1d Time Frolic - .1 3.00.. insd totet Say that. you ate 111 for a 1on1: t CJRQ 483, m‘ 615 meg . CJRX . iright. journey by ilfllll. In the, 35H; m’ 11.72 ‘meg " ' THF cottt- ;‘?:1R1xs nesri ’7t‘,°"“tli’tiavmtl twl’ dam tm clear“; TOKYO . .C. ‘ . 1 . y ur e . 11 you o no cure o 13.45 am _A Talk on Art tisMETICS , use the water on the train. Now . fresh ulr sunshine. a " hfficient sleep })1'('pl\1'll'.1011$ Good health ‘ 1 .1111 o‘. truly r-adiant . ‘s a mistake indeed. to try to subsist on the night before provide yourself with a. small bottle of soda water. Soda. water combznes v - well with tooth paste. and leaves the month, feeling refreshed and clean. A pair of soft leather sltppers is 1 a comfort on a long journey where ' no sleeping accommodation is ob- for the ("o/ti hours afw-r study periods are fin- khed. of attired-and conversation is wet‘ is‘ ' ".' one tivho makes ft lea‘ 1* all too few Many people do not care to use train water on their faces. So they carry cleansing lotions and creams 1 in their dressing es. Be sure to? . find that her wash your face \v;tl1 the lotion bc- l t to rztenwon her alter- , lore using the cream and then (us- sui. ‘ ing cotton wool which may be dis- Ewn thou 1 you are not the carded) use more lotion to get rid active spvr‘<u"aman type. do go in of superfluous cream before apply- a""1'e sport uthiie itig powder and make-up. A fold- ehocfivr- s"'.a and fad diets. or taiiiablo and the traveller mustl to ;'1‘t,1 irrttrwhi" sleeping perforce rest in her otittloir gar- 11511‘ , 1's ~"~ 1‘ fun to sit up in the ' ‘HING WITHOUT \\'.»\TER dornt . a"... 111k for hours and 1 .e. If routine i114: mirror in :1 leather case is a "filtiilllfikim bore ‘ great boon and permits inspection up golf tennis. . in cramped quarter without the niori 0r fencing necessity of dragging a heavy dressing-bag from the rack to the l discomfort of younelf and tho an- t-rt-ist- that way. ‘.11 the sunshine will . ." n: trim and iioyancc of other fil1.-.<('112Cl'$. : it '. tionv. No college Loose gloves of trash-leather" vtxll l g in 11¢ iwtjrerrtl with . tirotect your hands from the dirt in‘: e beauty rotittnes, but walk- i which seems insermrable fiom pad- I ded upholstery. and at the same Crochet Initials with Cutwork for Pillow Slips or Towels kfw? Mayfair Needle-art. Drslm, N“ 3n Crochet initalsromblned wth-cuttrork-mne of the most popular nrw vogues in the needlework world. These motifs have been charmingly and delicately designed for guest or hand towels, pillow slips or scarfs. Smple to work and a pleasant pastine indeed. for your leisuer hours, The pattern includes transfers for two Dali" of pillow slips or tawe‘... complete sets of crochet. alphabets, working instructions and stitch diag- rams. For complete pattern and instructions for all of these designs, pend 20 cents 1n stamps or coin (coin preferred; to The Charlottetown (‘ruardian Needlework Department. ‘Use this coupon. "In The (Yharlottv-town Guardian Hcedlewnrk Dept. DEHGN NO. 3X7 Print your name and address plainly. Name — — - - _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, Street Address - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (Hy - - - _ _ _ ._ _. —--Pmv|||¢¢___________ Each 25¢. , UTICUBAJQtJ... JZK, 19.7 m . 15.16 meg. LYNDHURST. AUSTRALIA 4 a .111 . fllwednesdayl-National _'I'.i'|‘1 vxatn. 31.3" m, 9.5a meg. time do not cramp the fingers. A length of tulle loosely twisted twound the neck obviates the "'jour- ney mark" too often visible after the treating of travelling coats and ivraps for a. couple or days in the train or m1 1on1: journeys by car. THE BEST HEADS-EAR A smart Frenchwoman never keeps her travelling hat on during the train journey, but, on the other hand :he never makes the mistake of enveloping her head 1'11 the often- advised chiffon scarf. which invari- ably ruins the appearance of any outfit, crushes the wearer's hair. tindis" unplcasantly" suggestjvg Q1 negligee. Instead. she substitutes for her smart travelling toque a little pull. . 0n hat, equally smart, but soft , enough to permit of true rest for the head against the cusions of the compartment or motor and yet huht enough to obviate t-he risk of headache. _ Ivearn to relax on a journey. "m" 1011s’ 01' short. It makes such a difference to comfort and absence of fatigue. and when you finally! arrive at your destination you will be as fresh and dainty as when you i started. THE GIRL EVERYONE LOVES In these days one hears a great‘ deal about. popularity and how to achieve 1t. as though it held greatest good obtainable. Beloved is a so much better word than popular, and here is a description of a. girl whom everybody loves. She quite evidently doesn't even try to be popular and she isn't. thinking about herself. but about, others; therefore. she lacks consciouness and gains other things. Here she "f. Ii- i‘- lh" girl with the int: eyes and honest heart. It is the girl who is natural. It is the girl who has common M31189. It is the girl without "nerves." It ls the girl with tact. It ls the pzlrl who doesn't ask questions you do not like to ansvier. If you have made a blimder. she does not drag it to 118M by inquiring how you made out in such an such an affair. It is the girl who is sympgthe. tic. She shows a. kindly inter. est in your plans when you con- fide them to her and gives readily her advice and help. It 1| the girl who 1| not cynical. It is the girl who does not think many money 1.! the sourse of’ all happl- j 11085. 1t is the girl who has other am- j brtions in life than to resemble the latest fwhlor; platg, It is the girl who is oharitab‘: 1n thousht as well as in deed. It is after all. the girl whose - marines of character are ‘I '1 ‘I11 rlf SEUIPR. "El P‘ P”! VENT BlAlI m: rare: an arm: DIEM/fl!!! n’ uuticura’: ‘amazing ' l tncdtcinal action helm l ‘ d k trims". cJ€l';;'.".“.-?SZ$ externally can,“ soothes irritation. eo-ebfl - CHARWN GAR” d Personal -:- Dorothy Dix’: Letter Box . "Man-m. ..~ _,_,_‘__ _ . WQQIQPER 5’ 1937 -_.-_-a-_-_._-._____-_; oau-oouou-uou-zooczt-cézwauuuuuonoo - 1. t. :1»: sq s ~.~, Fashions -:- Literature D§BDUfl §Gfi§U <KWIJ6 ltfliifldftfiflfl j A Bitter Tongue is a Far More Deadly Weapon l Than a Gun or Poison, for it Causes Last- ing Torture for its Victim I husband with a gun 1n a fit of l 111m t Dear Miss Dire-Which is the greatest sinner, the woman who kills her anger or the one who poisons her bua- - or two younger I'd be along Bide . band so that she may get his insurance money and be free of him. or the one who make: his life a hell on earth for Answer: I think it is a far greater crime to kill the soul than it is to kill the body, and that the , woman who takes away from her husband everything that makes life worth living oom- mlts a. greater sin than if she took his life. At its worst dying is a short agony, and surely those men who have been the victims of nagging and shrews will kl THE s|u< Eaton/x ly J. a, vvimor ' " (Continued) I ma sorry I can't Ml Y0“ 31°" 11515 Wt- Ijustlskyoutotrilltmfl- I'll trust you all right, young sh". i And what's more, if 1 were a year I o’ you; specially if there's a chance my young days sir. 11.3.0. .‘ Philip thanked him and depart.- ed The blanket of dusk had drawn itself around the house. and the _ night was incredibly still. He bad i previously marked a point when i he felt it. would be my to 31in ,‘ access to the grounds over the wall i with the aid of an elm whose receive [he]! ’ branches tipped the top of the ‘ofaacrap. I didabltoftbatin: they self- ~ laugh- 1 I l t 2 teaspoons almond extract l l l martyr crowns when they pass from the scene of their torturing into the Great Peace. But for a man to have to live, year , after year, with a wife who makes his; home a place of continual conflict, and who takes a. sadistic pleasure in tormenting him ‘ in every way that her cruel and devilish feminine ingenuity can suggest, is for him to endure a long-drawn out suffering whose bitterness it not to be told. I Yet we all see this done every day. We all know women who con- I sider themselves models of virtue and lights in the church who have 1 murdered their hiubands just as surely by their coldness, their neglect l‘ and their tempers as if they had slain them with some lethal weapon. We have known husbands who have been stabbed to death by a million wounds from a venomous tongue. We have known husbands who have starved to death for affection and appreciation. We have known many slave husbands who were worked to death to supply a wife's greed for luxuries. No one knows how many of the men who drop dead in their offices of what the doctors diagnose as heart failure die because their wives have broken their hearts. The wife who meets her husband with a snarl when he comes home after a hard day's work, and who never says a. kind or pleasant word to him, but insults and abuses him; the wife who is whining and complain- ing and who reproaches her husband with not being able to make as much money as some other man does; the wife who belittles her husband in the presence of others and who throws cold water on all of his hopes and plans; the wife who teaches her children to ‘treat their father with contempt. does not think of herself as a murderess. But she is one never the less. because she killed all the joy, all the peace and contentment, all the hopes and ambitions and dreams in her husband's life. Nor are women the only spiritual murderers. Husbands are just as often guilty of the crime. and many a man who esteems himself a good husband. because he feeds and clothes his wife, would have done a less cruel thing to her if he had shot her down at. the alter than he did w take her to a home where he would kill her by slow degrees by his grinding tyranny and coldness and neglect. There are plenty of men who ever show their wives any tenderness or affection or do anything to make them happy. Plenty of men who never speak to their wives except to find fault with them. Plenty of men who make ‘domestic slaves of their wives and never give them l penny of the money they earn by doing the work of half a dozen servants. Plenty of men who make marriage so hard and joylcss to their WW5 i that they are glad to lie down and die . I I It is a terrible thing for men and women to take the lives of others into their hands. as they do when they marry. and if they fail to do all they can to make those lives happy they have committed the unpardon- able sin. They have taken something from their husbands and wives far more precious than life itself. Dear Miss Dix-I am a girl of 16 and have a very strict mother. She will not permit me to play any games or take part‘ in any sports- She objects to a‘1 of my company and forbids my going out with my 8m friends without her. She won't let me read books that she considers trash. She doesn't want me to go to the public high school for fear of t l I wa.1l-. He climbed the tne without difficulty. and the next moment he had jumped lightly down into the grounds of The Beeches. Not a light was showing, but the " house itself loomed blacker than the night ahead of him. He had noted a window on the ground level almost opposite the elm tree, and he felt that it ought not to be difficult to force this open. The window, however, needed no forcing. It was obligingly un- latched. Silently Philip pushed up the lower half of the sash frame and scrambled over the sill- The torch he had picked up in Oxton's the previous night was still in his pocket. Cautiously he switched it. on, and in the light. saw that he was looking into a small atone-flagged room whose floor was below ground level. It had probably been used at one time as a flour store, for there were several empty sacks in the far corner. He lowered himself Into the room and closed the window behind him. The door stood ajar. and opening it wider he found himself con- fronted by a narrow fight of stone steps. ‘Ihat same peculiar sense of fear swept him again, but. he fought down the emotion and stole silently up the stairs. having rc- moved his shoes and left them be- side thgwindow of the room he had just left. The door at the head of the flight of steps was also obligingly open and he found 1f in a second but shorter corridor leading to the hall and the staircase, A small bluish-green light burned from a. stand-lamp providing the sole illumination. The place was as silent as a vault, and the young man was about to step forward towards the staircase when‘ the bloodblood seemed to freeze in his veins. From somewhere at the top or the house a woman scream- ed- It was no ordinary scream; it was the scream of n soul in tor- danger. I can't even look at a boy. She doesn't trust me alone and watches me like a cat. She says the sooner I get married the better off ' the will be. I have a girl friend who is in the same boat. and everything we do is done by sneaking. DE5PERATE- Answer: I wish I knew some way to make mothers like yours see that in being overstrlct with their daughters they are taking the surest way to brinE I about the disaster they fear. , Perhaps in medieval times, vithen they had dungeons cells. it was pos- 1 sible to lcck a girl 11p in one and keep her from ever seeing a boy or golfli! i to a parts" or playing a game or readinc a book or having any touch with l the world. But these are modem days. in which we live mostly in flats. ,1 1n which we have not even a closet that we can spare to lock our daugh- i ters up in. When boys and girls go to school together and play together - from the time they arc born. and 1n which there are so many books and magazines that no mothers could censor them all even though she read twenty-four hours a day. and in which youth has emancipated itself, the heavy mother and father stuff ls as extinct as the dodo. So it is worse than folly for any mother to think that she can keep her girls from taking part in the life that goes on all about. them. It simply can't be done. Girls are not only going to be girls. bili- l they also are going to do more or less the things that all the other girls are doing. Wl-ien Mother refuses to let them have their company at home and no to night parties and have a reasonable amount of liberty. they simply bootleg their pleasures instead of having them openly 811d honestly under Mother's eye. i You can't keep a girl good by watching her, because the strictest ehaperon will nod at times and. besides, every child is foxy enmigh m outwit its parents. Lock a girl in and she will climb out of a window 90 meet. pick-tips on the street corner. Forbid her to go to parties and shows that other girls go to with their dates. and she will lie about spending the night with a girl friend and go away no one knows where or with ment. Pbr a moment he stood there horrified. He remembered the woman's face he had seen at the window. The time for action had come. _ Dtscarding caution as if it had been a cumbersome coat Philip dashed towards the stairs and raced upwards. He had not the smallest idea. where he was going or onto what danger. Reachlngj the first landing he patised.‘ lttening. The scream had not been repeated. He found himself faced with four doors. He placed hBQl-HhQl¢h.b1IChAGIflIIOf-h-| ing. Onthe second landing he_ fared better. The landing was in darkness and from beneath one of sound of another heart-rendina scream and there was no mistak- ing the direction. It came from the door opposite him. Philip flung the door open with- out hesitati and stood staring at a strange sight. A wot-nan was lying fully clothed on what appeared to be a small wire mattress on the floor. Beside the whom. i The surest way in the world to make a girl boy-crazy is to forbid her j asking lads to the house. That way you give her the lure of forbidden ' fruit that every woman's mouth has watered for from Eve on down. The , utay to make a girl run off and get married in her teens is to make home a prison that she will break out of at any price. And a mothers simpt’ puts a premium on deceit when she is s0 stern that her daughter has t0 lie to her to save herself from punishment. The only chaperon that any mother can provide for her girl now is to make her her own chapercn. Teach her from her cradle up good principles. Teach her modesty and self-respect. and you won't have to watch her. She will take care of herself. DOROTHY DIX ---_ THE COOK'S ipple, candied cherries and al- monds. Mix n11 the fruits and nuts l together. 51ft and measure flour lwurythe lpounds orraiaitu sliver finely the lemon and orange ;cels (or buy m3 commercially out feel) and the candied citron. Chop coarsely the dates, candied pine- WEDDING CAKE. and lift three times with the soda. 3 pounds dark seeded raisins 610115111011. BIWQI- B1009. "-11-. NY- 3 pounds dark sultana raisins enne pepper and nutmeg. Cream 1 pound mixed lemons and butter and brown sugar with your orange peel. hands, add the slightly-beaten eggs, 1-2 pound candied cztron mixing thoroughly. Take 1-2 the . 1 pound pitted dates sifted dry ingredients and mix 1-2 pound candied pineapple thoroughly with the fruit and nuts. mixed colors Add alternately to the creamed 1 pound candied cherries mixture the remaining flotir mix- 1 pound blanched almond; ture and the molasses (mixed with wasted and ghopped the flavorlngs, orange juice and a cups sifted cake or pastry rind.) Bo sure to add a. little of flour the flour mixtun first. ‘rhea oom- 1 fgflgpoon ma; bins the fruit and nuta with this 2 teaspoons cinnamon mlXI-llfé- M18 "1070118911? Wit-h "l9 1 teaspoon cloves hands to a stiff consistency. F111 1 teaspoon mace toil-finches from top. cake pans 1 fgggpoon “p, lined with three layers of heavy 1-4 teaspoon cayenne pepper 11W"?! Plpfl- 111811917 truce the a teaspoon; nubmgg pan and the top layer of the brown a tab] 1110155395 paper. Bake in a very slow oven (210-300 P.) for 4 1-2 hours for large cake: 3 hours for medium- ailied cake and 2 to 2 1-2 hours for small cakes. Place a small pan of boiling water in the oven during the baking of the cakes. This recipe makes a largo three-story cake-approximately f9 pumfl, 10 drops oil of lemon 3 cups brown sugar 1 pound butter 10 eggs Juice and grated rind of 2 on "CH Out with sctuon. wash drain mattress stood an evil-visage Chinaman while beside the oppos- ite wall one hand controlling a umber electric switch. transformer and rhcostat stood the man who had answered his inquiry at the door that moming. Philip under- stood the significance of the THE CHILDREN LOVE KELLOGG‘! ‘The children ask for Kol- lojg‘: all tho time. l aarva 21hr hreakfan, for a mack bodttm ‘lhqalwaylekcp aolndly"aflorabodtlnaaap- per of Kellogg's." Kellogg's are wholesome and aatislying in milk or cream. Easy to prepare. Then are rmny erilp, do- iicioul servings in tho big white, red and green package for only a few canto. Madcby Kellogg in Lon- domOntai-io. andmudmitonadullowpm lo p, ,1». r-ampnuattmrm lutnn um. ' days ago, i. lhIIll modQ-nfcmof but milht electricity and the wounm on the win frame was being nibjectcd to viu-ioiu forms o! electric shocks- You swine, cried Philip launch- ing himself into the room like an arrow from a bow. ‘I110 man bonding ovc the woman had turned at the sound of thadoorbeixigflungopenbuthis face during those seconds remain- ed inscrutable. Vvhetber he had been anticipating Philip's attack it was impossible to tell but he was not quick enough to prevent the young man's fiat crashing against his unprotected jaw. sen Yat 80h spun sideways like a top, but the fact that. there had been little resistance to the blow was fatal for Philip who. unable to control his momentum found himself falling on to the electric torture frame on the floor. Ling IFoo at. the wall switch saw his opportunity. He swung the rheostat handle sharply over. The woman on the frame uttered another piercing scream before she passed into unconsciousness. Philip felt as if a dozen mules had kicked him in the head simultaneously. He felt utterly incapable of move- inent and looked up into Ben Yat Bob's eveil face without hope. CHAPTER. XXIII MORNING 0F MANY MOODS Peter Oxton sat in his office frowning across at Supt. Beck. I think, superintendent, he an- nounced, ‘that I'm growing some- what weary of this business. I had imagined that the whole affair would have been cleared up but what have you done nothing. First a valuable member of my staff is murdered; then another equally valuable employee disappears, and now, this morning. I hear that young Slater is missing. If affairs continue like this I shall have no staff left. I'm afraid I must ask you for some assurance in this matter. Mr. Beck. » ‘Ihe Superintendent had every reason to be irritable, and on this occasion it was not due to a cut chin or to cold bacon. He had been informed by ten o'clock that Philip Slater had not turned in to work; that an inquiry at‘ the address where he had a. room had elicited the lnfonnation that Slater arrived home late last night and had left again very early without giving his landlady any explanation for his early rising. Now h, was being rated by Orton because, it appeared. he had done nothing about it. What did the fellow expect him to do? He'd done everything he possibly could regarding the girl's disappearance, and be oouldnt reasonably be ex- pected to do anything more. But that Oxton should—more or less- charge him with neglect of duty.. . well, he certainly liked that! Of course, he realized that it must be disconcerting for Oxton. but if it: was disconcerting for Oxton, how much more disconcerting was it for himself. Oxton wasn't an- swerable to a superior authority. He was a private citizen, not. e. public servant. Bock leaned forward. I can understand how you feel, Mr. Ox- ton. he began, but let me first of all point out to you that. at your own request. I withdrew police protection from these premises. the doors came a faint ribbon of , By doing so I broke one of our light. He waited for a moment- regulations and laid myself open to how to act. Hts mind reprimand and, possibly, dismissal. was immediately made up 11y the I did that because the safety of your daughter had been threaten- . .- JnJC -3{r5CrQ-¢‘ t} Ml (1 uoc-oboauuouuaav-mvvere-wmoeeaaco-aci‘ I Ing. lhlp nalun pron | Pdbolou pounulon by: cyleozhm: 100M115 and relaxing ygqy u" “m '5' 4'"Y v10 o! Murine. Healthy ‘y. onboautifuloywlorovnrltlyuqqpa - , In hind in: I700 minim ...; .11’: ed. Very well I think I can say._ and with some certainty-that hat, I been allowed to go about flu; 10b in my own way. neither Min Varley nor m. Slater would be, at this moment, missing. Notch“, too, would some unauthorized per- son have entered these premises last night and taken away a quantity oi’ your Chinese m, You have to admit, Mr. Oxton, that under the circumstances you have only yourself to blame- You speak of talking plainly. So do I. No other course is left open to me, but whether you like it or not. I'm going to proceed with this case along my own lines. What happens as a result of that. I, and I alone, will assume re- sponslblllty. Peter Oxtoifs face, that a mo- ment ago had been outrageously red, poled somewhat. But what about the threat?" he demanded, nervously. You know what the threat was. If anything should happen.... Nothing will happen if I'm left to do the job in my own way. l was a fool to take any notice of you before. But then I've alway: had an absurdly soft heart and I've realized before to-day that it would be my undoing before very long. Now about the affair last night. What quantity of silk was taken? Peter Oxton consulted s report that lay on his deck in front/of him. Three rolls of Suchow silk, he announced. It's value was in the neighbourhood of fifteen pounds. I suppose the rolls would have been fairly substantial? No, not very. One man could have taken them out without much trouble. 0f course, he might have been noticed walkin; through the streets. (To be Continued) Allomhgflanfh FANCY Visitor to Oldest Inhabttant - "Well. sir, I must say you an look- ing remarkably well." - Oldest Inhabltant-"Ay, ay. lad. one hundred and two years old 1 be, and every tooth in my head the same as when I was born." Caught a Cold “ 1 elp end it quicker-rub throat, chest and back with 3 _ ' I 3 : PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS l FASHION ouioes FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER A soft black satin sash hugs the slender tucked waistline of this charming black velvet dress. Shir- " ring heath the pointed shoulder Yokes add nice fulneas over the ‘ bustline. Short or long sleeves. Goren at the front of the flared skirt give graceful height to your figure. So easy to sew you'll want tn make another version in run, and INCH lightweight flecked wooi wit-h plain green ueot scarf and leather belt or in rayon crepe 311k or satin. Style No. 34.36 is designed for sizes 14. i6. 18. 20 years. 32, 34. 36. 38. 40 and fl-inches Mist. Sine 3t! requires 4 1-0 yards of 39-inch ma. tutu! with 8-0 yard of 36-inch eon- rig. Bend fifteen cents (150) in ‘ll-mill 0r will (coin preferred) '78P 00in carefully adds-q; g4 Charlottetown Guardian giving- BMQ 110-800 ..... ... .___.._ Name summon; -_-__._____ A GARDEN HINT The inquisitive woman In war- ryina the gardener. She asked a lot of silly questions. "What ltopa do you teike with the caterpillars?" she asked next. "Well. mum." said the exasperat- ed lfldener. “I takes half dour. steps into our nearest field an.‘ turns the caterpillars round three time no that they gota giddy and don't know their n! back.’ t- Jai§\5i.5‘~'d‘.\“ l .-