IIHARLUI IE l. OWN GUARDTKN’ BEFTEIVIBEK Z3, _1_95g PAGE gvgg fi ll oman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions l-i- Literature ‘ MYSTERY House 4”” |pomthy Dix '53.???" “I do almost everything for my- self. 11o even been taking my ovm b11121 ' Bill. sometimes I like -iiy hen ... be" she said. "I've Aufll i oui, or maybe she that . icy sort of YCFPll’. ~ _1'. . ‘. '1 2.1; l.t . ‘Nillllfll, . ..L.oii to his paper. , lLizeliyiiewdeiiiis 1),. . u'i>t .t tiuxin ‘i111: liiipty l’..inil Harwootl sill-kl impossible in 1 a. said in a. low . iI-ie room. attempt to cut‘ Page said lightly‘. tol .. e bad moment. ‘1l(l1’TI-’8.st's head came site turned narrowed with a sort of scorn- I tbs Preston,.eli? Rand. about you making love i115 head and look. 1g over at tlieni iimiably. "Here, I've got to get to “'0!'l<!l' l-L- said. “It's eleven now.; I may no: be tiown to lunch‘ Miss Hazeltyiue. toll ‘c111. will you. if Il tzolill. tome? Wlritls it to you if I make love to Babs or ailyone else. ‘l Duchess?" 1.11. old hand was holding M‘ Yllily.‘ the old woman g 11:1 at him with ador- ut. i1 "Only that I won't have 1t," she- said. "You mind what you're about now! Go along with you! CATCl-Il Ne: COLD? At the first warn- ing sneeze-quick —a few drops up each nostril. 1t; timely 1 use helps prevent many colds. 1\‘ YIKS VA-ragg-uot l There was nothing trying or re- . his niind, over led enthusiastically: l 1 want to talk to Page." l It was all oddly agreeable. Page had not had so much novelty in her life that this did not strongly appeal to her sense of adventure; nor had many plainly as Rand Harwood had al~ ready shown her that she was attractive, more attractive to hini than Babs. By the time Babs l brother called or her and the pair departed‘ just after luncheon. Page fell SlllllflPllllj‘ at home in her new position to be sorry for Babs, who had so excuse for remaining: to be ulad that she was t-hc girl who was staying-staying here to win. Florais confidence. Lynn's lii ’l~llill. the old lady's likine" and iysrliluis more than iill these iroiii Rind. been at Zflysteigy 1 Iioust; teii (lll_\',\ before she kiiewi _ a1‘. liked her. Anti Lynn sine her devoted seiwiint. 1 _- her itbziut. listening tol L\'el')' word she said, strtigglingl ltliiouuli the fogs that engulfed him. "Yotrrti done its all good, "Dr. llaiziood said to her Dl‘lt'lll.)'.. “But you have already done that poor i-hap untold good. As for the Duchess, she's talking of abandon- Pagt- hail not iiig Liystery House, tearing it down and Sfilllll‘; the place. and going abroad on a trip! She. wasn't talkzzxg like that a few months ago. I congratulate you!" 1 On a warm December day Page and Lynn wont out to Rock Island They had lxeii there before in the cat-boat. but only for a brief visit. Today they had packed a little lunch, and brought it out to his eyi-ic. to build a. fire and enjoy a gipsy nieal. ' By this time his adoration of her was matched by her own sincere and pitying affection for hlm. polling iu Lynn's infirmity. In al- most every WEI)" he was "like a. fine brown boy. a boy who loved the water and the hills, enjoyed his meals. and slept like a log for ten hours eveiy night. His joyous laugh ivzts over their little jaunts wlsetlier, his eager, intelligent interest in everything that pertained to the woods or the sea made it seem only the sadder to Page that there was a veil over his memory. She came to like the nearness of the lean long figure with the tumbled fair hair, and to nuss hlm if for fliiy cause he wrre absent. on lllls Diirticular stinshiny winter moriiiilg they were both in. high spirits. Lynn had said m herl shyly, "Would you like to go out to the Rock?" and Page had answer- "Oh, let's! And I'll tell you—we‘ll take our lunch!" So they had stepped into the rocking catboat, had put up the little sail, and had made the half- mile easily across a. placid sea. Autumn: Fashions For Chic Dressers men shown her as 1 Inverted plaits at the back of the‘ bodice are a youthful detail of this shirtmaker frock. The buttoned tab necklne is smart and trim looking. Twcerly mixture in rayon and W002 novelty- as the orginal ls a nice choice for autumn days 1m- towin or back-to-school. Velveteen promises to be very popular this season and especially iii wine shades. Usc nickel buttons for its trim. ‘ Crepe back satin would also be attractive with the lustrous our- face used for the collar, from, tab. cuffs and the pockets. Soutachel ALI. FLAVORS Q AT YOUR GROCERS JONES-SCNOFIELU MATH EWAY. LTD. SAINTJOHN, NJ. F IAVORING EXTRACT Page with a laugh of slicer delight _i springing out upon the big flat rock that formed the island's only , pier. “It's not (lCillg0l‘0ll5."Lyllll said, tyi El the boat to iui iron ring. "Oi1. btit I rather think I'd like it to be!" the girl gztily‘. "It would be in a big tide, ‘Lynn told her. "You'd have to cllinb up to the lop of the rock. And .3 i wliatd happen to yotu" bout! Upi , there where the oaks are you'd be i sale enough." “How ‘big would you say it is, Lynn?" “About an acre, I'd say. I've 1 got a kind of path around it. I'll show it to you." ‘"011 let's! To get starving for lllllCll. "They had put down their basket and coffee pot. Now she stretched an mger firm young hand to his. and Lynn guided her up the steep natural stairway of stones to the top of the big rock where they could look far off across the glittering blue Pacific. There was a charm about the freshness. t-he solitude and beauty of it that silenced both man and woman for awhile. Page was conscious of her own slender young, body, her fragrant tumbled hair, of her small sturdy brown boots planted on the turf of the big rock, of the brown hand that, l, to steady her against dizziness be- I tween the winds and the sky and l the sea. was gripping the gnarled low branch of an oak. “Lyuin, who are we, and what's it all about?“ she asked, speaking only to herself, and unthinking of the possible effect of hei- words ttpon him. "'I'hat's—~t-hat's what I want to know." the boy said in so troubled, so puzzled a tone that Page ln- stantly saw fit to change the tenor of the conversation. "None of us really know!" she said gaily. "Come on, let's go down and have lunch!" He obeyed her readily enough. But she saw, to her secret concern, that he was still puzzled he was still thinking, or trying to think. of an answer lo what she had so idly asked. answered I i l .sce girls who should still be playing with dolls playing with passion. overdose of it. commonplace and they will just be Johnny Jones and George Smith and JUST PLAIN OUT-or-SORTS 1 LIVER-STOMACH-KIDNEYS ALL UPSET YOUR SYSTEM NEEDS A THOROUGH CLEARANCE YOU NEED BEECHAM’S 'l‘liis purely vegetable remedy, safely and certainly removes those minor ml- ments that make you feel tired and out of sorts. They restore the inner cleanli- rtess which is the basis of ‘all good health: Start takln, Beccham a IODIFIII: they will apeedi y 1115116 Y0“ eel "zippy nnd bright; lisgnLw aqua: and Iamuy Slu ' ADDS! t 47 THE GREAT REGULATOR t lug. l a. moderate, 350 deg. F. oven for Young Girls Are a Problem for Any Mother, so the Utmost Care and Good Judgment is Needed in Seeing They Take Their Pla-ces in the World How to handle young girls ls such a. heart-breaking problem that it must make many parents sigh for the good old days when dauEhl-BTS “"9"? kept under lock and key from the time they shed pinafores until they put on their wedding gowns. The dlfliculty of solvlnll this quest-hm h“ l given rise to two opposite schools of 0101181" on the subject. One denies Young $1115 fill personal liberty and 111N995 them Vin-Ila» prisoners at; home. The other imposes no , restrictions upon them and lets them run‘. wild. And which system of brlnKlBB 11D a girl ls most disastrous, heaven alone knows- _ On the one hand, we have the sorry spectacle of girls scarcely in their teens, girls as ignorant of the world as the day they were born, whose irresponsible parents give them no guidance or PW- tcctioii and permit them to ruin their lives before they have fairly begun. Everywhere we see girls who are mere children who have been given auto- mobiles in which they tear around at breakneck speed to places of which their fathers and mothers have never even heard. We see girls, so babylsh that they look as if they should be drlnklnf; iiillk in the nursery, guzzlirigcocktails in bars until they are drunk. We We sec them through sheer ignorance blundering into the road that leads to hell, and it is a sight that strikes terror and pity to our souls and must make the angels weep, On lthe other hand, we see parents who, through fear o! their own little ewe lambs running into danger, as do so mimy others about them. keep them so closely confined in the home corral that the result; Qf being too much guarded are as bad. as not being guarded at all. The fathers and mothers who make their daughters wear little girls‘ clothes while all the other girls have sophisticated frocks; who won't let their daughters have their hair waved, or use lipstick or rouge when all the other girls are painted up like barn doors; who won't let their daugh- ters go to the school dances with boys when all the other girls have dates, think that they are protecting them. But, nine times out of ten, what they are really doing is to tum their girls into liars and. cheats and hurt them into the very temptation from which they are trying to keep mom safe, or else they isolate them. If a girl is naturally high-principled, or if she is mild and meek and timid, she obeys her parents and sits at home of an evening and reads an improving boo-k while the other girls are having good times and playlnl around with the boy's. But if she is high-spirited and full of life and avid for pleasure, as most girls are, she is only too likely to Climb out of the window when the door is shut, pick up boys on the street, go places and do things that she never would have dreamed of doing if she had been B-l- lowed to have the boys come to her home to see her and to have a rea- sonable nmount of liberty.- ‘ The overstrlct parellki who will not let their you-us dwshteis have any association whatever with boys forget a. number of important things. One is that girls in their early teens are always boy-crazy, and the rem- edy for that is not to deny them the society of boys, but to give them an Make boys forbidden fruit and girls will follow their Mother Eve's example and break their necks to get them. Make boys a of no interest whatever to them. Another thing parents forget: is that young people run in crowds, and that if they keep their daughters from being one of the bunch they simply shelve them. When they grow up they are aliens. They don't belong- They are left out of everything. They are wall-flowers at parties. ‘They can't break into that close corporation of the boys and girls who have played together‘ since their grammar school days. Many a girl i5 an old maid because her mother wouldn't let her go to the junior prom. . Still another thing that parents forget is that the girl who is neve allowed to have a ddte until she is 20 years olddoesnt know how to BIB-lie herself attractive to men. She ls awkivard. She is either too difficult or too easy. she lacks the technique that, a girl must begin acquiring almost in her cradle if she ever becomes one of the popular girls Who never lacks for dates and whose dances are cut into mincemeat. The moral of all of which ls that moderation ls the word l0!‘ PM?!“ ln dealing with their glrl children. Drive with a light reln, but see that they never get out of hgfld. ‘DOROTHY DIX. | LAZY DAISY ICING marshmallows cup icing sugar tablespoons cream :quare chocolate teaspoon butter 1-2 teaspoon vanilla Method. Melt the marshma-Ilvws over hot water until they are soft and spongy. Mix the cream and sugar and stir smooth, then add the a wblcsmolm buum 1 egg melted marshmallows and beat- hard. " Melt the chocolate and butter fo- l lellslxllln vlmllla gather and add to the first mixture. Mmwd- 5'“ ‘m’ mu" “s” and l Add the vanilla and beat until the baking powder into a bowl. Break‘ icing is smooth H it ,5 too ma” add the egg into a ineastiriiig cup and ‘lightly more “gmg Bus“ unm it is fill up with milk. Pour this lntolzmck enough m smmdl the dry ingredients and beat very-WHEN SENDING "DWERS "ml" mt PARCEL rosr Melt the chocolate and butter tc- when Sendmg flowers by pow gcther. Add this to the cake batik!‘ ; wrap m8 stems m sums of wet mg and beat again. then add the flavor- | men m“ them in one damp and one’ THE COOK ’S CORNER v-Hui-q; LAZY DAISY CAKE l ctip flour 1 cup fine fruit, sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder 2 muarrs chocolate Milk TFOR THEIR TINY BABY BATHS ....ONLY @Z;»e g2»? DR. ALLAN IOY DIFOI a 72071022 Five Huh Dianna after their Palmalim ball: . . ..pink n: tiny rawbudl, lliair skin Indus-smooth, gbwinglyfmh. Now llie lovely Dionne Quinluplels use only PALMQLIVE f/grw/o Why Palmolive was 01.0."; Because tbe Quins were born prematurely, their gkiu il unusually sensitive. So delicate lbnt itlbaa IlIWflyl! AII IIIIIBITIIIIOIII from EIIOIUR —— Co vftlulit tar News crvlce. MADE WITH OLIVE OII. required very special euro. Dr. Dafoc hIIIIIGIfCZPlGIII-IX _ “At the time of tbe birth oflhe Dionne Quintnpletii, IIItI for some limo afterward, they were bathed in Olive OiI...When Ibo limo arrived for soup Hull watorbalhqvve selected Palmolive Soap exclusively ior diulyuso u: bathing these world-famous babies. Think of itl Of all the oils known to sciencqonlyOlivo Oil was gentle enough for the Quinffint baths. And then, out of all the soaps available, only Palmolive, made with Olive Oil, was chosen for the Quins! What a Ieuon for every Mother . . . ffir every woman Mother! Should that precious baby ofyourl be balbotI with any soap lean gentle, less soothing than the one chosen for the little Dionncs? Why not decide right now that only Palmolive, made with Olive Oil, will ever touch-your baby's lender skin! And you too, Lovely Lady . . . you wbo want to keep your complexion soft, smooth, alluring lbi-ough the years! Wby not give your skin the miitcblcsis beauty care that only Palmoliveka secret blend of Olive and Palm Oils can give? Why not begin today to use Palmolive exclusively, for your own face and bath. The HOUSE WIFE and HER AO TI VI TIES MORE AND LESS. find ourselves paying close-r at- A little more kindness. a. little less tentlon to our friends and less t0 creed; our enemies. A little more giving, a little less _____ med: . now GREEN TOMATO A little more smile. a little less 113555347155 A)“; MADE film“; This recipe for green tomato 5 “m” :5‘ ldckmg a ma“ when hels preserves ls one of Jessie Marlo de ' own. Bath's: one quart sliced green tomatoes, one quart sugar. cne lemon, grated rind. pulp, juice, pile stick cinna- mon. A little more we, a. little less I; A little more laugh. a little 10s cry; Afew more flowers on the pathway l’ 11f ', And feviler o: graves at the end of ma“ In ‘ ken“ wgethu’ M‘ ~ the “ma stand several hours lo draw out the juice. Cook liri same loettle until the tomatoes are thick and clear. Ralslns and nuts may be added to this recipe to make a conserve l! desired. in which event the tomatoes btileve they believe. Should be clwmwd- ‘(D0 11°71 Feel A deserved kick helps us more the Wmfllwfil- than an undeserved pat. - Some people pray for rain and then cuss because the roof leaks. A man can get married once. and then get married once too often. ‘ Love d-rawa moreplans for air; “ml” "W" “ll °lll°f mlllmml "Ive just heard um there was a mmbmed‘ big smash-and-Qrab raid at Brlggss Tl“ haplmst 99°?“ l“ ml‘ ,the jewelers. yesterday," said Wilson. world are those who don't want‘ ms companion gfllnatmi “And Boys are always boys, but men are not all men. Few women believe all that men AMorningSmile Pour into a small loaf pan l d’ , y sheet of newspa r, k th llned Mm waxed paper and bake m closely in o. stout a and an outer wrapping of brown about‘ 35 w 4o mlnulles‘ paper. The rags will remain wet and When cool, l“ with the XOIlOWlHB t-he flowers should arrive beautifully ‘hm!’ "WY “m” Kel- did they get away with m" he asked. M“? P°°Pl° m’ "Mb m“ W’ Wilson shook nu head. "No." he tllobe ‘V1103’ Ihhflbli, BIIZIII/ly YIBI; M xqfllet “Awnanfly tm and!” the “m” were Boots. They wen untested The hardest thing about making when they came ma! m‘. the brick; a tool of yourself ls to keep other people from finding it out. An anxious patient once asked a l The older we get, the more we1 Today's Short Wave‘ Rudio Program (Alkoflllwnfim WESNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 53 i Purl: 2.46 p. m.—'I‘he Secret, PM h Three Acts. by Teni-l Benisteln. TBA-S, 25.2 m., 11.88 mefl. Moscow 4 p“ m-How Health Results IN Developed in the U. S. S. R. RNE. 25 m.,.l2 meg. Inndon e. 2'1 p. m.—A Short midi v! Hunting Songs by Wilfred F55“ (Bass-Baritone). GSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 meg; GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 mes: 65° 31.3 m., 9.58 meg. Madrid '1 p. m.-Llght, Orchestra Conefirl- Watch Tower Program. EAQ. 39-5 m., 9.87 meg. Elndhoven, Netherlands 7 p. m.—Happy Programs. P01!- 313 m., 9.59 meg, Berlin 8.30 p. nL-The "Shock TTOOP" " Kameradachalt. DJD, 26.4 m. 11-77 meg. Caracas 8.45 p. m.—D.1r.ce Music. YWW-ll- 5131 m., 5.8 meg. Regina 12.30 n. m.—Garden of M0553 OJRO, Winnipeg, 48.7 m., 0.15 meg-I CJRX, Winnipeg, 25.6 m., 11.12 mell- ———.—:Z physlcan: "Are you sure that t shflll recover? Doctors sometimes Kl“? u" wrong diagnosis and have twill“ patlen‘ for pneumonia. who 111"‘ ward died of typhoid fever.’ "Dent worry," replied the m¢<ll°°1 lndlgnantly. "n 1 treat a mu 1°: pneumonia, he dies of pneiimolllfi- braid ls being used quite ‘ ‘vely. and will add further decorative touch. Style No. 1844 is designed for slzx 12, 14, l6, 18 and 20 years. Sim 16 requires 4-1-8 yards of 39- lnch material. Price of PATTERN 15 cents ln stamps or coln (coln is preferred.) Wrap coln carefully. No 1844. Size Name Stress Address State City \\\\_\\\ AND? lclzig: fresh. JUST KIDS ‘ POP- 1 THINK watt-us . - New y. PASSED - = ARDER ME ON A5 A MEAN 11-15 DISPOSITION . watt-Muir's "mar watt-u: blow-r even A51’ ME —By Ad Cartel‘ n. *1