E'IE-FQ-I~QAQQ ' PAGE ElGll I é , u? THE CHARLOTTE TOWN GUARDIAN J AN UA RY 22. 1931 t: :3 cit WITH MESSY POULTICES AND PLASTERS Thermogene is as soft as down.’ Pin or bind it over that part that pains , : z ; Then ;: . comfort ; : ; 8856 from pain z ; z blessed relief. Thermogene induces a penetrating warmth that lasts. lt reaches the congestion that’s causing the pain.- lts healing power is so sure that l doctors and nurses urge you to use it. .They use it themselves. Ready for: instant use and easy to apply. Cleanly. Stays in place. Can be worn in most cases unnoticed whether at school, at business—or pviierever you may be. Thermogene is as easy to take off as it is to put on. Thermogene is the modern treat- giezgigfiztluig to all pains caused ,- rro ' (RELIEVE ‘CHILL ‘- CAUSED Your druggist has it. Salas Representatives [or North Americas Harald P. Ritchie St Co. Limited 10-18 McCsul Street - . - n Tuna", The word "Thcrrnngene" is thdregisrered trade mark I f a "l, or The Tiioi-mogei-ie Co. Lia, Hzsyivardsflezthi TllliRlllzaGENs 7:4" Put it where the Pain is A Morning Smile I i PROIWPTLY DIAGNOSED “I'm afraid, Doctor," said Jone‘; wife, "that my husband has some terrible affliction. Sometimes I talk to him for hours and thcn find he} hasn't heard a word." “That isn't an affliction, madam,” replied the doctor. “It's n gift." '———————-—~—--__ l For The Cook l, BANANA FUDGE '3 cups sugar. 1-3 cup water 1*.- cup evaporated milk I bananas, put through sieve. 2 tablespoons white corn syrup. 0 tablespoons butter. Stir sugar, water and corn symup. over low ‘flame till dissolved; add milk and bananas and boil to soft] ball stage- 235 degrees. Remove from F the fire and add butter. Cool quickly ‘my setting pan in cold "water and‘ when lukewarm-Mo r]ggrg@5_.b95f, hard. Pour one inzh thick in slightly; greased pan. Hark in squares. ‘in _._. . Modern Home li§htin§ DO friends admire your rooms ? Modern lighting offers scores of decorative possibilities to mo- dern home-makers. There are Edison Mazda inside- frosted Lamps for every socket and every purpose. Their restful, glare-free light lends charm that can - transform even the dullest room. and add wonder- ‘ fully to your comfort. l§EDISON MAziiA i g LAMPS CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC PRO r l.» DUCT Wo;¥r;i2an ’s Realm i that your friends and neighbors do not already know or guess. ‘saying, "Oh, well, John or Mary is a dandy dancing partner, or good fun on Dorothy Dix ' Letter Box Husband and Father Who Repents Having Left His Family for a. Gold-Digger - Does the Engaged Girl Owe it to Her Fiance Not to see Other Men? Dear Miss Dix-I am a married man, 65 years old. Some time ago I left my wife with the intention of getting a divorce and marrying a. girl scarcely out of her teens. Now I realize that her attraction for me was - only physical, and 1 am tired of her and want to re- turn to my family, but the girl threatens to expose our past relations if I give her up. I wLsh I could get down on my knees and acknowledge my wrong doings and return to my loved ones. What shall I do? WORRIED HUSBAND. Answerr My earnest advice to you is to hasten at onvc to your wife and grovel at her feet arid-beg her for- giveness and ask her to t-ake you back. Perhaps out of that divine compassion and understanding that so __ many women are able to show toward their erring husband . she will wash off the slate with her tears and start your score all over again. 'I‘hat will be your great good luck and not because you deserve it. Nor will things ever be quite the same again. By your conduct you have for- felted your wife's and children's trust and respect and nothing that you can do will ever regain it. There is no way for the prodigal husband and father to climb back on the pedestal that he has once kicked over. l Doift let your little gold-digging flapper keep you from going back and trying to make amends to your family. There is nothing that she can tell People who have illicit love affairs are like the traditional ostrich that buries its head Social‘ and Personal -:- Fashions_;_-_:- Literature Wli-czltlfe Fashionable are Wearing‘ mustfated D1’ eismflkillg Lesson Furnished l With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington ,1. i in the sand and thinks it is hidden. but they fool nobody but themselves. Everybody gossips about them and scandallzes them. Besides, paying blackmail ls a losing game because there is never an end to it. ' When we see, as we so often do, a middle-aged or elderly man forsaking his wife and breaking up his home because he has become fascinated with some mercenary little chit of a. girl young enough to be his daughter or his granddaughter, our sympathy always goes out to the poor deserted wife. Here's a darling dress for the school girl. It is an extremely simple type that youtli demands, The little buttoned bodice makes But, really, if we have tears to shod, the one to weep over is thc poor deluded man who is bringing upon himself far greater lnirscry tlitiii his wilc will ever know. For she, as least, has the sympathy of tlic community iiil which slie lives. She has lici" own self-respect and she has the consolation of her children, while the man, when his brief dream is over and thc cruel awakening comes, has nothing but the realization of his folly and the con- tempt of all who know him. When it is all over, the nian knows that he has bem worked like any sucker. and hat he has fallen for a. line so crude that even a blind man mould have seen that he was being worked. How he could have stood for all of the flattery about being so young and handsome and having more pep than any of the boys, he cannbt understand. How he let her wheedle dia- mond bracelets and fur coats out of him with baby talk and kisses, he doesn’t know. Why he should ever have believed, even for an instant, that a girl in her teens loved a man in his 50s or 80s for anything but his pocket- book, he can't comprehend. But he was a sap. He thought he preferred this pretty young heartless and brainless creature to the wife who had been his friend and comrade for twenty-five or thirty years. He thought he loved this little mercenary more than he did his own children. He thought that if he married a. mere child he would miraculously become a boy again himself. But nothing of the kind happened. He found out that no young girl loves an old man, and that the girl who was willing to sell herself for money collects the price every time. Ho fou rid that they had nothing in common, not a thought nor an idea, and that they bored each other to extinction. And he found out that no man knows how old he really is until he tries to dance attendance on a young wife who has married to get a good time and is bound to have it. Watch the old husbands with their weary eyes and sagging faces sitting meek and forlorn at tables at night clubs while their young wives are danc- lng with slick-haired boys of their own age. Listen to the young wife's taunting remarks about husband's old-fashioned ideas. Note the insolence with which she makes him realize that he is only good as a bill-payer. 'I‘hat is the answer to the problem of the old husband and the young second wife. It is a losing trade to swap old wives for new, and there is not one man in a thousand who does it who doesn't bitterly regret it, and who wouldn't crawl back to his old wife on his hands and knees if he could. ’ DOROTHY DIX. I I I i I O Dear Miss Dix-I am a man of 30 engaged to a young lady nine years my junior. Somehow or other-we differ in our views pertaining to our en- gagement. To me an engagement is Just as sacred as marriage and I never go with other girls. She works and on several occasions when she has been compelled to stay late at the office sne has been escorted home by one of her male associates. Recently she received an expensive piece of Jewelry from one of the men in her office in appreciation for her services. I ob- jected to this and spoke to her about it and she replied: "Remember I am not married yet." She feels that as long as she is not breaking any dates with me she is free to do as slic pleases on her of‘! nights, On account of my having lost my job it is indefinite when we can be married. What is your idea of the obligations of an engagement? TAD. Answer: I think that the difference between an engagement and a. marriage should be the difference between an option and a trade that is closed. I think the engagement tie should be so loose that either party can break it at will if for any reason he or she decides that the party of the other part docs not prove to be so desirable as he or she looked at it distance. and that ilierc should be no obloquy thrown on the one who breaks the engagement. An engagement should be merely a relationship in which a man and a iroman who are attracted to each other can have a chance to get really ac- qualiiled with earn other and take the measure of each others character and disposition better than they could in a cssushscqiisint ‘lip. For in the engagement they would have matrimony in mind and would not be a party. or nice enough to spend an evening or two with e. week." They would he saying: "See here, I'm thinking of tying up with John or Mary for the balance of my life and there isn't going to be much dancing 0r partying in it. but l lot of work and worry, so how about it? "Is John the sort of man a woman can lean on, or will he be s broken reed? 1s he generous and thoughtful. or selfish and overbearing? Is Mary the kind of woman who will meet the trials of wifehood and motherhood with her head up, or will she be a quitter? Will she nag me for my faults or laugh them off?" _ These are the kind of things that people have a chance to flnd out in an engagement and if John and Mary don't measure up to standard there should be no trouble in returning thorn to the bargain counter. If more en- gagements were broken, fewer marriages would end in divorce. Bmwlwlieveiastllnosumntliiaiuliosaosihismeuttaiu it smartly different. Pin tucks on tie-n- the shoulders provide a trimming note. Inverted plaits at each side of the front of the skirt give the necessary fulness and flare to the hem. For this cute sports dress, wool jersey ls exceedingly attractive in rust-red. French blue or scarlet red. with white pique collar and cuffs. Style No. 2901 may be had in sizes 8, 8, 10 and 12 years. ‘Iweed mixtures, covert cloth, wool crepe, rayon novelties and wool challis prints are sturdy suitable fabrics. Size 8 requires 2% yards 35-inch with ._' yard 35-inch contrasting. Our Large Fashion Magazine shows how to dress up to the minute at very little expense. tI contains most attractive Paris designs for adults and children, embroidery, etc. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) No. 2901. Size nuns-on...“- NIJIIQ noun-n. . . . - . ..-....--...-|un-ooi Street Address Using The Cellar- For Extrd Room Smart Color Scheme Can Be Most Effective— Splendid Room For Games Of All Kinds. Haven't you often wished for an extra room—a place to play or work or put the children? You can have it if your house is built with a. spa- cious cellar. The location is ideal- cool in sununer, warm as toast in winter. Why not turn this space into the room you've always wanted? If you like to entertain, your cellar may be turned into a. perfectly grand game room. Don't be afraid to let your imagatlon run riot in planning it. The more colorful and amusing the more fun it will be. Perhaps your crowd plays backgam- mon. Then let backgammon be the inspiration for your room. the color scheme. of course, would be cream, red and black. And your floor would be painted like a. huge backgammon board, an exact enlargement of the smaller real ones. It's just as pirac- tical to play on. too for you can make the men out of any round, low tin boxes, such as tea and candy come in, painting them cream and black. Enormous dice may be made of white oilcloth, stuffed, and painted with black markings. In this backgammon room your walls could be painted white with a footboard of black. Black window- seaits, built in around the waJl, not Piles Go lluick Without Salves or Cutting Thousands of Pile sufferers have learned that quick and permanent relief can only be accomplished with an internal medicine. Neither selves or cutting remove the cause. ' Bad circulation on the blood in the lower bowel causes piles. The veins are flabby, the bowel walls weak-the parts almost dead. To end Piles an internal medicine must be used to stimulate the circulation and strengthen "the affected parts. Dr. J_ B. Leonhnrdt was the first to discover a real internal Pile remedy. He called his prescription HEM- ROID, and prescribed it for 1000 pat- icnts with the marvelous record of success in 960 cases, and then declded every Pile sufferer should be able to get HEM-ROID from their own druggist with is rigid money-back guarantee. Dr. Leonhardt‘: prescription has a wonderful record of success right in this city and Hughes Drug 00., Ltd.. invites every Pile sufferer to try ftEM-ROIIJ and guarantees to re- fund thc purchase price if it does not end all Pile misery. only add extra sitting space but a place to put games away- Bright 115d curtains of glazed red chlntz would be piped in yellow rick-rack braid. ‘rhe surface, card tables, clialrs and smaller details could carry out the backgammon color scheme. We luwiv of one family who con- verted their cellar inito a ship room. The floor, representing a deck. was painted gray. On one white wall they painted portholes and life presevei-s. The other walls were minted sky blue with three white lines to look like the ship rail. Brightly striped deck chairs and deck Comes were featured. 0;- you could turn your cellar into an old tavern. The walls could be a. mellowed tan, the beams in the ceiling stained old English oak, with other woodwork matching. ‘more’: 5 linoleum made to look like wide- planked, old-fashioned floors that would make an ideal floor covering curtains if desired could be a do?!) scarlet. The furniture would consist mostly of rough benches. tables and a bar. Steins, jitgs, lan- terns and candles stuck in old bot- tles would ado to the atmosphere- Carry out these details in creams, dull reds and bottle greens. The man or woman who wants a quiet place to work at hot-he can fix up a den in the cellar, away from the family activities. We can't think of a more restful, simple type of | decoration for such a room than the old California Spanish mission style The walls could be fi-escocd white, the floors and woodwork stained dull oak. The fumiture could consist of an old Spanish chest, a deslccl-iair and dsybed covered with a hand- woven Mexican blanket. Copies of old religious masterpieces. such as Leon- anlo da Vince's Head of Christ and g, few pieces of Mexican pottery 0i‘ cactus plants would add lust the right note. The children would love a play- room in the cellar. Both ollclotha and wallpapers come in delightful children's designs for the wall corv- ering. We recommend an ollcloth with naive figures of cows, trees and other fu-m subjects in the gayest o! colors. A strip of wallboard seve- ral feet wide running all around the wall could be painted dark blue and used by the children as s. blackboard. -- . _.__.._.. ,..-...-._.--_ ---_- ll , ~. Qhve us more!" said JAMES and ANNE O aged 3 and 6 I Q Yes, it's true-children cic- fuolly like to lake cod - liver oil this emulsified way Scott's Emulsion has ’ “W118 “fishy "- taste. Itndoctslifil upset even delicate stomachs. 1L brings you purest, Norwegian cod-liver oil in a perfect emulsion Easier to take. Easier to digest. Assimilatiouis complete. You to." "w" 800d out of Scottfs Emiihioii and you feel the benefits quic/pi-r Scott's Emulsion contains no alcohol. It is rich in vitamin '.\ the growth-promoting Vlllllflllll ma} hf] 5_ Ella-I'd flEainst disease. It is ric in vitamin D. the sun. shine vitamin that prevents ricikets. It contains minerals that ai in for-min sound bone teeth. So Scots s Emulsion issghiilll for growin childreminfiinls, "M51118 Ill expectant mothers. Get Scott's Emulsion of Cod. Llver Oil to-day, Soc your youngsters gain weight and vigor, Al; your nearest druggist, in large home size and convenient small traveling size l)0ttlf>5_ SnlesAgents: Harold F. Ritchie 8: Coin. puny. LttL, Toronto. scorvs EMULSION °' COD-LIVER OIL virsrlim-nicn Pleausnfor lo take-Euler to digest Mommas! You’d certainly like your_ children to take cod-liver 011 Wllhflut putting up a, struggle -—wouldn’t you? ‘ \. Well, the Scott’s Emulsion re- porter recently called oii Mrs. Forbes of 2 I N jagara St., Toronto, to find out just liow James and Anne Forbes—-the two lovable children ictured above-stood on the codiliver oil question. “My youngsters simply can't stand plain cod-liver oil,” Mrs. Forbqg said. “I'd certainly like to see if they'll take Scott's Emulsion of Cod-Liver Oil with any less fuss." l SoJames tried a spoonful. And Anne took some, too . . . “I like it!” said James. “M-m-m-give me more!” smiled Anne. Pleuscinler to fake- but that isn't oll v Pfllf‘.lllllhfllll-dflwll(‘hllilffill need lcod-livvrnil . (l ivc them the pleas- uulest foriu —-Scott's Emulsion. Dark blue floors and woodivork. red e furniture and whiite curtains piped iii. Etiquette red and blue could complete the ooloi- B, but n“ scheme. . l The circus could inspire another. c111ld's room. It might have creamy yellow ivalls with built-in shelves cit light green all the way around in which to store the toys. Above the shelves you could paint or stencil a whole circus parade of green and blue animals, elephants. lions, giraf- fea and monkeys. Paint the furniture green and have yellow curtains with green and blue animals appllqued on them. Modern hostesses are leaving their parlors and all the parlor tricks of entertaining. Often nowadays a. vial tor is ushered down the back cellar stairs to enjoy an informal type of amusement. People are playing games again-not the ladyllke kind but robust ones ieqiiitdng keen minds and quick bodies. And as these games require space it seems wlset to play them in the cellar, where there's no danger of upsetting lamps or fumi- titre. Ping D0118 a table tennis, played by two or‘ four people. is lending iii-ic Q. What is the usual dliiner hour in American cities? A. Seven o'clock. Q. Where are introductions rarely made? ' A. On the street. Q. What kind of dress should a woman wear to church? A. A quiet, simple, street dress. that is inconspicuous. list of popular cellar games. They played a form of it during the nine- ties and it has been popular ni-n- since in Europe. American soldiers brought it here after the war and it grows in popularity each yea-i". Some people who don't ivant tn spend the price of a. ready-made inn: Pfing table imlproaive a top made from a large piece of wallboard, placing it on wooden horses or an old table. You can buy the net. ball and rat-last, to use 0n this for very ll/ttle. .__._. . ______ (Continued on Page 9i Because the cresin is broken up minutely, Csmation Milk gives to any dish s smooth, velvety texture which even the best of bottled milk cannot equal. Through the lei-vices of Carnation “field men", dairyrnen are encouraged to _build up their herds ‘and taught strict standards of cleanliness thus safeguarding Cer- nation Milk at the source. And this protection continues until Carnation Milk reaches you in its hermetically sealed containers. Write fnrCooli Boofi and Baby Boil CARNATION £20.. LIMITED Aylnu, Ont. a Milk from Canadian cows. Plclred in Canada in Canadian can: and cases. that girls and boys should keep up their social contacts with other youths and maidens. so that in the event the engagement is broken off the girl is not left stranded, with no other msn in sight. Many a man marries a girl of whom he tired because he has been engaged to her so long that she doesn't even know any other man and he feels that he has to make good because he is liar only chance u l. husband. The free engagement would not militate against the faithfulness of a couple who were rally in love with each other. ft ‘would only give the fickle-minded a chance to find out the state of their affections before mar- riage instead of llflflflo AM Blot would be for the good of all "FROM CONTENTED cows ;_. PRODUCED IN C " NADA u». . -..o.-..--._-....o.¢“ooo__..a-l-o.ooao.i.i-_..