. l l ARDIAN NOVEMBERl , " em‘: C"A-5___________._____-i'l3-T-‘3‘l'J-'l— 24 L’ gl pace TWO l Wamank Realm -:- Social ad Pesonal -:- ofiions -:- Literature‘ l T l . For-The Cool: l a mflzrggm Dorothy Dzx Letter Box A ‘ - y i "ll.'l'll.'.'.'.'l'.'.'.l.°lli.'if" wise. Y-ohng wife“ stays at home Rathe. 70¢“) 06‘. sixhnuomsluzulpwnfex: Than go to Rowdy Parties -— M8)’ 8 Girl " ' can Bervo o no. t crisp nus u g go to a Young Man's ADartment?- 8 /00 can new "=4 I W"Zf°.“°" - , _ ' w c t e some How Can Mother Keel) Bad _ ,,',I,','1,,§"£ m Ln“, sola- iu-sv will" WW- 4 1°“ sined potatoes, 1-: tampon white pepper, 1 teaspoon It“. 1 6V9 mm’ g eggs, 4 tablespoons melted butter or bacon fnt. ‘ an onions and pm wtlwfl- coop together in boiling water until both are noft. Out onions in thick slices in order that they ml! 0W3 l" the same 1611891 0! “m! “rm” 9°‘ tatocs. let water cook nwny u 'mucbar possible. Drdn and rnnnb vegetables. Md nit and 9W?"- nyflygrrd 4gp well beaten, Bent gtnorousifly and turn into a buttered “gm; dish, Your melted m or but- Iter over top and bake tbirt! M1111 é‘? Literature From Her a Children? - . . r am I looney o": uiza‘. is wrong Dear, .11.» Dlx-i-lalvne Infinioesiisvlsisan‘ Before I married I worked lmh lmdc chill‘ labdoangactive, clean life; My husband is a domestic n a mg ' man, loves his home, and we are very happy W" . “an”. Regardless o! ‘what party we are invited to it consists mainly of husbands and wives hav- ing petting parties with somebody elseis Wife Cr husband, drinking moonshin whisky that is like carbolic acid, telling vulgar stories, yelling and gjnging. I am no prude, but all of this fs repul- sive to me and I would much rather stay nt home with a book or listen to the radio. I The result of all this is that the crowd we meet think we are highhat and rarely come near us because we are too slow for them, and we really l £00k your jest . . . How you thrill as his eyes adore you. How comfort.- lng to‘ be sure that your slzln will retain its smooth l l l l . beauty ihanl<s to the clinging, velvet texture ol No ANING TAx m..........._.........a._......................-....4-v . ' odor-ate oven. have few friends. What's the matter wgth u; - _ l m " m- Pompcian Beauty Powder. - were we born a generation too late? MR8. . M. . ‘ s _~ ‘ _ that's whY Old Dutch Cleanser has always Answer: flealsatnr/actlonl - In n‘! .0, "m." . N°WI '5 “WW5: Y9" been the housewives’ choice. Old Dutch doesn't l I uuuid 5a!’ 11"“ “KY5 the mail" Wm‘ W“ l‘ m“ Y“ “e l°° I , The “M” “pa” o’ mm‘ w" . may pay more ior beauty at modest cost,‘ $5.4m" POU/l/D '37LUm75/l/57y’O-w5’6 a; KING co: ‘decent and self-respecting for the rowdy crowd that you have fallen in Jlvith, and my advice to you is to beat them to the dropliinl Dmllilllliiifl and do it first. Don't worry about their laughing at you and calling you slow. Just wait ten years and see which one of you has got along best in the world. preparations but you can. not buy better than The NEW valued 0t 807.23! compared with $466,009 in Bepiornbor and I678.- aiilinOctober nyenrngmme chief purchaser inst month was the United Kingdom with $361,872. ' ploce o tux on their energy because it cleans quicker and easier. N0 lax on surfaces because l it doesn't scratch, it keeps lovely things lovely. _ | l . I . .' . s-ln u... iflLXxn-npale-s . No lax on their pockelbooks f9‘, two reasons It is dollars to doughnuts that you and your husband will be a contented, . l,’ —firs" cosls '65s '0 use because n goes furlher happy, prosperous pair, permanently located on E85? Street. While 111° .The l2 month! “Dirt was $5.731.- —second, it's the only cleanser they need in ‘crowd will, for the most part, have been through the divorce mill and But in the end it wasn't too funny. after all. For thesescem to be 594, compared with 84,091,512 in their hgmes; fhefefgfe, they do ngf have m buy lhave degenerated into a lot of boozey, disgruntled HlESdBQd lvtztomen who geitninbfundiamiexngag rgles nature and oggjirztkfhfltixyvecslaxnggttiiallae the previous 12 months. severol styles and kinds of cleaners and this is ‘are “""“"s g"°“°"'“g “m” we" bad "w" “"1 ‘m’ l’ 9° - eng roa -m' e 08s,, i: yfuha d i u ' i n a ‘ BLOOM . i, h H ' . You are confronting one or the greatest dangers that menaces every outraged by mean liquor. ea ac e an sra ered nerves o ow a| Insurance Agent: “would you POWDER a convenience o l em as We 95 a suvmg- . young married coupic, and that lS getting into the wrong crowd. Prob- debauch, and petting parties between an assorted group of husbands and mind “ma: me u the" 1, my 1n- CREAMS lably no other one thing wrecks more marriages, because it is one of the wives, whose caresses belong by right to their mates, doesn't promote “m” m you, “may mid‘mf' LIPST|Q< Use Old Dutch Cleanser-ovoid cleaning fox on your chmning mslm lsunken rocks in the matrimonial sea and the water above it looks l0 family pence and harmony. It leads to fights and squabbles and divorce.‘ w", y; pout-y leek"); "wen, no lplacid and safe that the young mariners do not even suspect its exist- And so, my dear Mrs. M., if you have got into that sort of crowd, get Mo; exmfly only my hugbmd cnce until they have gone smash upon it. out while the getting is good and you still have your husband. There are thinks h“ has; M; hgmgjgqqum- You sec, all yOlLllg people naturally crave companionship and amuse- plenty of nice crowds of nice young people. Find one of them. ma, mmbum They want to flock together and dance and have good times, y DOROTHY DIX. They need human contacts and friends, Dear Dorothy Dix-We are three office girls who would appreciate LONDON PARIS NEW YORK TOIQITfi Sold lscnh: Harold F. Ritchie l Co. LH. 10-18 McCoul Sh, Toronto 15.3 This IS the Old Dutch Rubber Cleaning $pong¢ 2 Convenient and pvoriicul. A lillleOlrl Duichundthir lflfllifl! Z do u quirk, "IOIDUQD cleaning ieb. All attractive bfllhlofllfl g accessory. 500d fer n today. Moil IO: Glifl m. vfindmill g flflhll from Gil Old Dutch Cleanse! lnboi Iorncclr ass-lac. Cuddly loll Willie, l4 Mncnulny Arm, Tonnlo, Unl- ‘Doesrft merit . Scratch land this is natural and right. with a man who in already married and who can't inarry her, but who somebody to play with and exchange confidence with, and it is natural your advice on the following: _ l keeps away the men who would like to marry her‘ and give he!‘ I I006 Num IN {may they ghould gravitate toward other young couples, who are 1ike- First. When on a date is it necessary and proper to be home at 1a hum Addrcu gfizio‘ minded. o'clock? Bewud- What about dating your employer or others you work Third. Going to young men's apartments is something n. decent girl m,” c,” ,M,_m___ g And hcrc is where the danger comes in. Sometimes they get with with? Third. What about going to young men's apartments? do” not 3Q A 8m no; only h” go be good’ but 51m h“ to 190k good a set oi the nicest sort of newlyweds, but who are better of! than they SALLY, MARY, FLOSBIE, lyqu mgghg gpgnd you: time in the young man's apartment holding n are. They have more money to spend. Finer cars. Better clothes, Answer: prayer meeting but you would never be able to convince the world of it I They entertain more lavishly. And before they know it Tom and Betty l First. As you are a business girl and your advancement depends in wguldjjwgy’; bgllevg the wont of you. so stay away, and keep your " l , are head over heels in debt trgving to keep up with the young Mllllon- Iupon your efficiency and keeping your good health and being always wide 5km; c195,»; DOROTHY Dix, A Marni] l8 Z ‘bucks, awake, you should be at home by 12 o'clock on most nights in order that ' e a a u a a . l | They don't want to seem pikers. They want to pay their part when Y0“ mfly Eel? l/Olll‘ FY0991‘ amt-WM 0f 519819. pa,“ M135 D1x_whdt are we to do gbout the immoral stories brought into our homes from the neighborhood lending libraries Our children have access to the worst form of literature and we feel that they have n right to beprotecied from the mercenary thought which would distribute they go out with the bunch. They are ashamed to say they can't aflford No girl who is out until 2 or 3 o'clock night after night can do good to go to an expensive night club, or to play for high stakes in n bridge work or he of enough value to her employer ever to be worth much to They haven't the courage to ask the people to a plain dinner who him. But, of course, every now and then a girl ls entitled to a big party The invisible Old Lady (on train plaiforml-l m lie modem contrivanccs m we all , game. Which platform for ihc London ' l it?‘ y m any,“ vi- set them down to feats, and only too often the end of such a couple is lwhere she villi naturally be kept out later than 12 uuluvk- I think it such nlth.‘ A DIBTRACTED MOTHER. pain? . bankruptcy or dishonesty and shame or suicide. All the result of a. fine is a great pity for both girls and boys that they do not have their dates Answer; poner_-1—um to the 1m and young‘ couple with limited means trying to runwith a rich crowd. earlier so that they can get home in time to get a good night's rest. 1g 1g a p1ty thgt chum“ ghomd hdvg megs; to books that were not you.“ be right The thought made the doctor's Equgily dlgggtfoug 151s for a clean young couple who arc in love with Second. If your employer is a single man, or the men you work mtmdeq go;- : m" mind; but g0;- gdultg’ but 1 do not know m.” “no,” be immrtinent young blood run 001d. what it he had each other and who honestly intend to make a success of their marriage ,with are sinsifl m9". it is all right to date them. but if they 8Y8 muffled reading can be censored except by their mothers. And even they cannot “any, ' ' made a mistake? what if Dwyer was to get m“, ,1 rowdy, lggge-llvlng crowd, like the one you hat-e been drawn men, hands ofl’. They bode you no good, as they used to say in the old do 1t gflgctuglly, Pfobgbly they, 15 m grown person who can-g; mmem. innocent as he had declared himself into. I have wretched many of these groups of hail-fellow-well-met be, 500k; ma; he o,- she read under the cover at nights, or behmd m; “All right ihc-n. turn i0 your right tfld you'll be ieit." The, new maid was fascinated by yver the house, but the ieclcss rc- kigerotor seemed to impress hcr post. "My Ewdiieifi." she told her mis- Iess yesterday, "I just marvel at lie way they can cut ice to such lttlc pieces and fiit them into that hay! The next time the ice man lomes I'm going to watch him and to be? It was devastating. this un- certainty. And now here he was rushing off to Dover to see h's man Hooker because he had been sent fora-whereas his place should have been in London trying as hard as he could to convince himself that in Dwyer they had the personification of this mysteries individual who was [undoubtedly connected in some way ‘ with the queer death of the diamond merchant. It was a fg-saw with the pieces put into the wrong box. and again, ‘we how hedoes it." even supposing Dwyer was tliilty. netting could compel him to divulge young married people who considered themselves very broad-minded be- cause they indulged in drinking bouts of poisonous liquor and regaled each other with obscene stories and swapped partners. .me, no. They were far too liberal for that. merry ha, ha! i melodramas. , l The married man who asks a girl for dates is cheating his wife and he is making the girl break the Golden Rule, which is to treat every m; prunes and prisms‘ woman's husband as you would like some woman to treat yours. You about them. No cut and dried ideas of morality. No jealousy. 0h, dear ‘Wouldn't like to think that some pretty young lgirl was going out with Everything was to the yum’ husband and have him spend the money on her that was needed for the baby's shoes. Also, try to figure out what a. girl gets out of going barn, and that were all the more entrancing because they were forbidden. Fbrtimntely, as n general thing, there is much in snlacious books that passes over children's heads and that they do not understand. Probably the one thing that parents can do to protect their children flsln bad books is to cultivate their taste in good literature. ' " ' T" . . ' ' DOROTHY DIX. him into touch with Sonia Gaynor; Blnyneb brain was in n fever. it hadshown him love for the first Hooker with n bullet wound and him of what he felt was to be ajlincolnl wonderful dream. It was curious You dent know how he came to how much could happen in a few be injured, I suppose?" short weeks. L'fe—death-love—and “Thai/g what 13 wflffylng us, 30¢ t'me 1n is life, and it had, by the Inear to death! How could that be! 'was in Kent." merest flick of Fate's fingers. rohbedqioolrer. who was supposed to be in A smile fluttered across Hooker-‘s your geogrnphyfis worse than mine fif you really thought that Lincoln eyes. . "I'm sorry, sir," he said, and then: "Could I speak to you, sir-alone?" “Why oi course, Hooker, of course" lWhen Babies owe their livesl perhaps, despair! tor. He won't tell us a tlrng, and and Blayne nodded to Dr. ‘R/dley. and the means whereby Montgomery Gaynor had gone to his death, and The export of eggs m ocgoberiBlayne had to admit that this fact, has 240,442 dozen, an increase over-perhaps more than the purely per- lhe very low export oi‘ 10,442 dozenfional elcmelll 9i the c559» w” mo" h; soptmjbm- but; L-gpgidcratfly bqaimportant to him. He remembered tow 11m 97,537 dozen of Qctgbgfllsllah hard ash he had found in the i931. The expozt of eggs recentlyidead man's fire grate: the strange has been falling off, the llmountreaction in the blood test he had lor the twelve months ending OctJmMiP-ihc- Teacilofi that had comm‘ ober bring 34917‘! (lfrzon ccmpsrcrl c-d him more than any other thing} with 54l.3."i4 in lhc ]l7‘i‘\'lOiL$ l2 that Montgvmfiy GBYTKWS denim! Inonths. iwas not a natural one, It was im- ----i> portlmt that he should know some- BUTTER EXPORTS thing conclusive about this. ----4-- The trzrn stopped for a few m lilies at Canterbury and Blane felt The export of butler was agnlniiirlgaaticirt. Ho vranicd to get i0 Very law in October and none at Dover to Dover. find out what had all went to the United Kingdomlhappened to Hooker, and then get Newfoundland urns the largestlback to London with all possible purchaser with 51.400 pounds vnlu- .'.1'>('('d. yd at $11,707. The total oxpor: in; T1135 case, he told himself had October was 112,700 pounds conribocn a perfect pot-pourri 0i‘ events pared with 102,400 in Scptmmbernnd thcr consequent efiects upon! ind 1,835,300 in October 193i. EXPORT 0F E(SGS LOW LO“! h? er as he recoilc-‘ctcd her face-the liacc of an innocent child robbed of in. surprise. vaguely ' his own emotions It had brought -°“ m” hm b THE VOGUE Specials for Double Dollar Days $2.98 Dresses worth from ’l‘cr1 to 'l‘\vcni_\' Dollars clearing . . . . . . . .. Other lots io clear at FIVE and TEN DOLLARS All other dresses in stock clearing at wholesale prices Special prices 0n all lllisscs and Ladies’ Coats on DOLLAR DAYS i MILLINERY One lot of Jersey Dresses in all shades and sizestoclearat............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ANOTHER REAL BA RGAIN One 'l'ablc oi" Huh-a i0 clear ni One Dollar. All others at special discounts. lwere unfit to continue the Journey _cd his identity and the ‘witch he had received, and hewasl l lstsnd, It had been a Whirligig 0f doubt the woman who brought him in is the matron who were standing him. playlus with doubt; fact cheating silent too. She seems distressed, but and they withdrew to the other s'de fact, and now—p€rhaps nothing. Then there was last night. Some- ‘thing more than melodrama. had her lips nre apparently seafed." "Can -I see him now," Natalie Morrison. He could see lwtlwayd when; Hodge;- 13y, A; they eyes now as she looked at him in ;went along she paused, and indicat- c that room expecting to find in the ‘ed n door on- her left. "The woman's in there," she -whis- pered. "Do you want to see her?" "Thanks! Not yetl"' responded Blay-ne. There were two screens about the bed as Blayne traversed the ward, and the white-coated surgeon_ was standing nearby with the ward sister and n nurse. Seeing Blayne ap- proaching he came to meet him, and the twomen shook hands. "He's rather far gone," explained Dr. Ridley. "It's only a queston of hours, you know. But there's some- thing I don't like, and as he kept asking. for you almost from the minute he was admitted, and I think, realised how far he was, I considered it wise to get into touch with you immediately. He had your telephone number ofl pat. Extra- ,ordmary fellow!" "Quite!" murmured Blaync ab~ the map she had rescued one for whom she quite obviously had a great and a passionate regard. And she had been disappointed. Blayne felt his heart beating fast- he wondered just how far Natalie Morrison had really affected his tacitumity. Per- haps more than at that moment he cared to admit. , Dover at last. Blaync hurried out of the station and took a taxi to the hospital up eside the Castle. He knew the hospital well enough, for he had spent a fcw weeks there at the. end or the War looking alter some of the more serious cases which coming over by bout from Calais, for some days. In the entrance hall he expiuin-Isently, as he moved towards messagcdmd, v ‘There lay Hooker, a ghostly pal- conducted to the man-en's room, 1101- on m; f“; and with hi, eyes where that lady was awaiting him. dosed, Blgyng drew up the may, “I'm siari you managed to gfi"and sat down idfeel the pulse. Just down s0 quickly. Df- Biflyflfl" Shflas he was releasing the wrist the told him. "Our patients been rather mg“ Qpgngd 1115 eyes’ and they came troublesome, and Dr. Rldley, the lto rest upon Blayne. Then a new PT-‘idtni "Y5 he's 80% wmeiiiifli; 011 expression seemed to leap into them his mind." -a light shone there, a light of "But what's the matter with hm?‘ eagerness and gladness. °5k°d 3103""- "I'm glad you got down, sir" he "l" “'35 admitted 11°11! 8t W0 said with surprising vigour. “I o'clock this morning with a. bufet wanted yam 51L" V-‘Oill-Id '11 the stomarh. The bullet "Qulge rum’ Hwkfl-y- snfd Blame had passed light through, but it ¢h(|gfl]y_ "And now what‘; (he had caught the spine. You under- gmub] 7 1 though; you were 1n 1,1“. of course. dociorl" y The matron led the way along a been enacted last night. There wafifsione-flagged corridor towards the‘ coin! You hrovnltookonoldrnnlalhsn of the ward. "Now, Hooker-out with it." “I hardly know how to begin, sir," said Hooker, almost reminiscently. ""I'here's so much I must tell you before-J’ l “Begn wherever you feel you lought to begin," Blayne told him stretching out his hand again to hofd the feeble wrist. "Well sir, it's about Zora!" I "Really!" A note of surpr'se had crept into the doctor's voice. "And what do you know about Zora, Hook- er, except that he's the little fellow on my mantleshelf eh?" “Something more than that. sir," said the man. "I am Zorn." (To be Continued) BACON AND HAM EXPORTS The prices obtained for bacon and hams in October appear to have been little higher for the ex- port of 2,850,500 pounds was valued t $322,458, whereas the September export oi’ 2,883,100 pounds was val- ued at $314,078. Whilst the export 0g 333793900 pounds of bacon and hams for the l i2 months ending October was a luus way in advance oi’ the 9.2121,- 600 pounds in the previous twelve months, the exports of September and October last were considerably below those of the summer months when the figures were: May 4,431,- 200 pounds, June 3,539,000, July 4,870,500. August 3,857,600. The United Kingdom is the hea- vy puxchaser. During the first se- ven months of the present fiscal Your th- amount sent there was 21,720,700 pounds as ngaintt 5,040,- 100 pounds in the same period of io Carnation ilellwd TIME and again a grateful, enthusiastic mother writes us how Carnation has saved hcr baby's ‘life. _ Do you know that famous specialists recommend it rnsidenlforthctiniest baby? Theyurgcltsusn because rigid sanitary supervision makes it so pure, "uniform and safe-because it is easier to digest than raw, boiled or pasteurized milk. Carnation is Imu- Irentrdnndthntformsveryfinqnoft curdnin the baby's stomach, almost ernctly like mother's milk . Super-Smooth for Cooking Carnation is the safeguarded milk from selected, in- spected herds of "contented cows". Homogcnizcd butter-fat in Carnation makes it super-smooth. That works magic in cooking-makes foods smoother, richer, tastier. Carnation timproves cream soups, sauces, cocoa, custards, candy. Splendid when crcnrning coffee and for use with coEoe, fruits nnd cereals. And economical because double-rich. Write for Two Fm Booklets Learn more about this modern milk. Write for "Contented Babies" and the Carnation Cook Book, packed with glorious recipes. Address Carnation Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont. MILK FROM ‘CANADIAN OOWS, PACKED IN CANADA IN CANADIAN-MADE CANS AND CA5“ Rrlivirtn .<