I \ PAGE TWO rm: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ____ ‘ FEBRUARY 16. 1933 {F} Dorothy Dix’ Letter Box Shall Boy of 22 Carry Out Pledgfilto Marry Girl of 17?—H0w Can Grandmother Overcome . Selfish Indifference of Her Grand- children? Dear Miss Dix-I am n. boy of 22. Before coming to this city I was She lives 500 miles away and I keep thinking it is far to bring her from her home, as Do you‘think she is too young to going with a girl of 1'1 and we spoke of getting married. she is so young. really be in love? I am not sure that I ain really in love with her. Just fond of her because she is too young to really be in love? I am not sure that I am really in love with her. Just fond of her because she is such a nice swcct girl. I ani the oldest of a large family. 'l‘liere an: some very small children. Do you think i should help my folks or look out for myself? The girl does not go with any other boys and that keeps me (mm going \‘.'ltll any other girls. What shall I do‘! - MR. X. Answer: l My earnest advice to you is to wait a while. Marriage lasts a long‘ long tlme-—or, at any rate, it should last a long, long timc—and there is no sense in being in a rush about it. Don't let this girl, or any other girl, rusliyou into marriage against your inclination and your better judgment and before you are ready for it. Girls have a sort of marrying mania that keeps them from regarding the lllflttCi“Wll.l1 any int/clligcnce whatever. ‘Ihey think it will be so thrilling to have a wedding and that; thcy will look so pretty in a white veil and it will just be tou exciting to go to housekeeping and have their own kitchens with blue gingham clutuins at the windows and they zievei" ' stop to think of how they are to get the iood to cook on their installment- plan gas ranges or that it takes a lot oi work to keep house or that they can't run around with the boys and girls ziiici" marriage as they did before. And that is one of the reasons why thcrc are so many unhappy mur- riugcs and so many divorces among young people, who find out after two or three years of matrimony that they have fallen out of love with each other and do nothing but quarrel. The girl literally forced the boy into marriage before he was able to support a family, and when he ran into debt and wa hounded by bill collectors and torn with anxiety, he got nervous and. cross and irritable. And ihe girl-\viie found out that marriage wasn't just having a steady date and not having to piuicli the zinie clock in an ofiice er store, but. was hard work and sliabblncss and naybe a. crying baby. So she took the baby and went back home, and mother home W115 broken up and two more young lives scarred and it- " w/N/v/NE f wau/ of EVERYWHERE 555N512 POUND For Canadian Women ‘ By Mari Moore. Specially contributed to The Guardian for Guardian Readers. i Snowy White Linen-Gleaming Crystalwai-e-Correet Table Appoint- ment! are the Delight of Every Hostess By Mary Moore We have struck a subject that you will warmly endorse if you are Mrs. Aiveijage CltlZ9ll-—lflbl(3 linen and ciystalivare. Times without number we have received notes from our faithful readers that desire detail directions for setting the table on which on Tbhaveaperfectly appoint“; gable for the entertainment oi’ your guests is one of the greatest sources or satisfaction to s considerate hostess If a little forethought is git/g“ u; DHUhB-ses of linen and glassware, this iostidiousness of appointment need cost no more than the medley Bmy. of water tumblers that do not match the dessert shot-beta, or Mb lumber-lanes as cluny table- Nuff said—y0u all know it is tar tllis good food we Clifilflbf! from week to week is to be served. better t” have ‘me 51mph but Most folks who have a servant or matching s” M crysmlwal“ and linen than to try to extend yourself by buying various lots or tumblers and odd linen pieces because they take your fancy or are bargains. servants make itiheirbuslness tot know how tables mun be set and how food must be served so that 51L 7'6’ g Crown flea‘ METAL PACKAGE .740»: {Ac Jon/ac ¢ KING COLE VERB/Z/Gl-IT I/ they may instruct; the servants or correct any mistakes. But Mrs Av- eragc Citizen, who has no maid mak- es up the greatest number oi host- Nearly every house-wife has a large white damask tablecloth of which she ls proud-kept on the bot- esscs and, lamentable as a may tom of the pile for special company seem. it is she who carries on with ; Occasion-s Never lament the fact uncertainty, setting her table from thal- YW d0 11% 0W1! lace liable‘ Q week to week without knowing all is vlvlhs or dainty linen with lace 1n- (ormh sertions for the damask cloth is al- l just a matter of indiilcrtiu-c. It was sensitive and childish. I am n Aiiswci" as long as your grandchildren ignore and show them as little attention as saddened. Many and many a marriage goes on the reeks that ivould be a suc- cess if only the young people had the patience to wait until they got in i. position to marry safely. For marriage, likclevcry other lllldtZll/Zllilllg. ties to have an adequate financial backing to be a success. ' I think a, girl of 1'1 is too young to marry. AL that age every‘ girl is .n love with love and just sloshing O\'L‘l' with romance and she imagines the cherishes a cieathlcss passion for (wary youth who coincs ailong. But give her six months and she gets over it and scis her affection on some one else. Besides. at that age a girl hasn't had her playtime and if she mar- ries and settles down she soon gels tired of humdrum domesticity and .vzint.,-the 1ilcusuies that belong to her time of life and either grows peev- .41. and fretful or else rims wild. In a. long observation of my sex I have Iouncl that Llic flirtatious middle-aged ivomcn and the young wives who JZWC affairs with other men- are almost invariably women who married in ;heir terns. 1t is the women who have had all the lovemaking “my wanlrd in tlici" youlli who arc satisfied with their husbands. ln your case tlicrc is every reason for not making a foolish young znurriage because you arc not in love with the girl. There might be some iustilication of your taking the risk ii you were the victim of an over- whelming passion, but none whatever when your feelings are merely platonic toward the girl, So break oil the ziilair. Write licr that you arc not yet able to marry and that you want to wait until she is at. least 20, as that will give you time to know your own heart and for you to make a home for her. Both of you go around with other girls and boys because in that way only can you test your own feelings and get some standards of comparison so that you can tell whether you really suit (‘H011 0th?!‘ 01' 110l- As. fur your duty to your family and to yourself, I think you should help them some, but it is not your duty to sacrifice yourself entirely W mam DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-Would it be better for .me to try to teach my Brand‘ children they should show seine attention to me or to ignore their attitude? I tilways remember their anniversaries. Christmas and Valen- tine Day with gifts, but I am wondering if it would not be better for me to adopt the same attitude toward them that they have toward me. They never come to see me. Even when I meet them in public places they do not give me a ClllillCe to speak to them. ‘They are entirely taken up with fact that she is alive and that some their young friends and llli‘li' own affairs. children about the behavior of the granzicliildrezi. There is no ill feeling. It is \\ uuld be oi‘ no use to speak to my I They would say I early 70 years old, but reasonably in- tercsting to iny zicquaintances and not exactly irumpish in appearance. P U Z ZLED GRANDMOTHER. You liaic lo light lire with lire and selfishness with selfishness. Hence you yoiu‘ best play is to ignore them they show you. Perhaps ivhcii they iliid out that grandmother's gifts have ceased they will ivakc up to the attention is due licr. 4 But it, is your own sons and daughters who are to ppm“, in 1,1115 matter, not the youngsters. All children are little savages, intent on their own pleasures and having their own way and absorbed in their own affairs and they have to be taught consideration for other people and to show cbilrtcsy and deference to their elements of ClYlllZJtlOlI, and certainly a great mistake in rearing up children who have not been taught any of the amenities of life. . For there is nothing that a young person can do that so prejudices other people against him or her as to show rudeness to any old man or ivonmn, and especially to a grandmother, and this ill will that they en- gender follows them through life. and woman fail to succeed is because ren that. we do not want to have anything to do with them even after they are grown. And, on the other hand, nothing laiit and courteous attitude toward ti push the fortunes of the young so ii iation of what we do for them. Certainly the mother who fails to teach her children good manners and deference to the old not only fails in her duty to them, but puts upon them a handicap that is hard for them to overcome. DOROTHY DIX. we: Dear Miss Dix-—What is a fellow to do with his old girl whom he courted for ten long years and who has ivaited all those long years to marry him when he finds out that he has lost his affection for her and is wildly in love with another‘ vxomiiii? but how? Answer: The only honorable thing to do is to tell your old sweetheart of your. change in feelings and that you cannot possibly marry her. it will be rather hard on her, but it won't be so hard as it would be to bc married to a man who had ceased to care for her and was in love with another woman. Your case is a tragic illustration elders. These are the rudimentary your sons and daughters arc making The reason that many a young man we recall them as such boorish child- so attracts us to the young as a gal- ie old and nothing makes as ivant to ltlCll as for them to display apprec- oc- ways correct, and whatever looks more striking and of better taste than a snowy cloth with the crease straight as a dye the whole length of the centre? For The Cook I recently visited a Canadian plant where some of our best crystanrare Burgoo v cloths with damask dinner napkins. ' l2 BIG BISCUITS IN EVERY PACKAGE ll Niagara Falls, Canada is manufactured everything was so glitterlngly beautiful and such terms as lend glass versus lime glass "well- annealed," tankard jugs, Waterford, Marlboro, Colonial, had me all a- twitter un-til I could get back to One lb. of lean beef, chopped, II cupbf chopped potatoes, 1 cup of onion, chopped, 1 cup of tomatoes 1 cup of chopped cabbage, 1 cup of turnip chopped, 1 cap of beans or peas (if dried, these must be soak- ed over-night), 1 cup of chopped carrots, some chopped green pep- per—-if convenient, some hot dried red pepper pods, i5 lb. of chopped salt pork. Cover with water and let simmer-it must not boil—not less than 6 hours. The longer it cooks the better. It needs no salt, as the poi-k salts it. Stir occasionally to keep from sticking. (Continued on Page 8) it "CANDIED CRITICISM" "Dear IVIr. Editor: Will you please read the enclosed short story care- fully and return it to me with your candid criticism as soon as possible as I have other irons in the fire." “Dear Sir: Remove irons and in- sert short story." Baked Soup ‘This soup is excellent when pud- dings are being made in the oven as the heat can further be utilized. To make it: take 3 pints of cold water, ‘A lb. of lean beef or mutton 1 cup of split peas, 1 tablespoonful of rice, 1 small carrot, sliced, and 1 small onion sliced. Wash the rice and peas and put them in the pot with the old ingredients (the meat should DECEIVED "Our economics prof. talks to himself. Does yours?" “Yes, but he doesn't realize ltf-hE m so unbelievably easy to fashion it. out in a crinkly crepe silk in orangy- red. Matching tone novelty braid trimming gave smart emphasis to the deep armholes. bow and tied sash were of self-fab- ric with the edges rolled by-hand, which gives a soft pretty finish. to copy it exactly, For more ordinary wear, it can be _ prints. 5 minutes to mole fir; STEAMJNG HOT PORRIDGE b‘. . . ' 1&7},- . . t l’; /, I wl/ . "IE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY, IJII. SH REDUEI] MADE IN CANADA v BY CANADIANS Woman’s Realm -:-Social and Personal -;- Fats/lions -:- Literature ' lCancfiian Cookery I - A ‘i; < C, Ifiquiclr! it’: thrifty! And it’; that your family will beg f0,- rhis better-inning Shredded Wheat. Give l: to them often! For this nqmgg ing hot breakfast brings you all d” body-builders, all the energy-may“, all the winter-fighters Nature prqyjd" in he: richest cereal food, whole whm l2 big biscuits in every money-avg” pagkage. Delicious when crisper! in it, oven and served with hocmilk. And extra good when you take the m," quick step: that (urn them into gm royal breakfast, HOT SHREDDED WHEAT PORRIDGE! $0 g more y; porridge mods o; WHEAT v OF CANADIAN V/HEAI She'll love this darling dress with- s smart puffed sleeves. And mother will love it too. It's The original model was carried The neckline It will cost you such a small sum ode of wool crepe or novelty rayon be cut into small pieces) add salt and pepper and cover the pot close- ly. Cook in a slow oven for 4 hours. If the water boils out, add more. thinks we"re listening." STUMAGH BUMPLAINT DlSEASEwliich starts with indi- fiestion, gassy, sour WEAK WOMEN . . . ~ stomach, dizzy I want to do the honorable thing, Take Lydia E- Pmkhamk l’ spcllg or gcnc; a] nonnoau BACHELOR. Vegetable Compound lassitude nia y bc s . mnmflmtmtmu ‘mm, helped by Dr. Qhlkoodollwthlng-s-thlt mm PM?“ Gfllde" not m. m munch co a your work?) _ Medical Discovery- Womonwlionnwnkmdrua-down _ Thin blood and: Naturally should ah n oonlc ma. no Lydia u- run-down system also respond quickly. of the unwlsdom of long engage- ments, and I hope it will be a warning to other young people thinking of '° ‘F l7 '5'" “"7 i" b°mll°il l’! "i" entering into such a dangerous arrangement. DOROTHY DIX. Plnkhlnfo Vqetnhlo (iormpounrl. Bald- nchnl nndbneknchcothnt Indus-omit gof n tired, run-down audition often Illld to this | medicine. Bw u bottle from your drug. {end what Mrs W. Benton of 445 Slmcoe .11., London, Ont., says: "Some years ago 1 uicd Dr. Picrccb Golden Medical Discovery when I was rundown and awfully nervous, helclicd gas freaucntly and the gas would ‘ares: up uoun my hca and the ‘Dis- toned up and nrengt med my system I felt 100%; better." Write lo Dr. Pierce‘: Clinic, Bill-lo, N. Y» for free medical udvlec. ‘ -mdkine. 9O out of way IIO women who report m1”, 50 (hi! QlotoodoyU-nndwntchdioiuulto. warm weather wean dimity prints, batistc prints, linen, ete., are dainty and practical. with 11-’.- yords lit-inch braid. stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. No. 507. Size . If you are planning ahead for Style No. 507. is designed for sizes 10, 12 and l4 years. Size 8 requires 2% yards 30-inch, Price oi’ Pattern 15 cents l~i . . . . . . Name ‘Illoolloeas.-lvnnecvovloeloolll o Street Address PVhaf the Fashionables are Wearing By Annabelle Worthington City noiiisiox 01-" CAXJDA I-Rovi PRINCE icmvziiin 1<i..\.\‘n The Double Act n‘ Tim rnnimrn corny A Romance of the Theatre ‘l! l mil-go Y. A. ll. 1953-’!- In 1:. ' nl‘ John \\'. .\l:icl‘l|en BY .- l l" " i‘ l.‘ . . teat»: l mo» TOM-aw»: oi’ Eastern Fnunrrles Limited, de- ceased (estate. "y n". jhllllillffllll“ llnrnlil lmnnord T‘.iliuer_ Qiirriqzntn Judge of Pruhrile, Cl ' "How could I?" cried the girl. "I really believe I've everything in the world I want, and it's all come to me since that dreadful night when Layton sacked me and you asked me to come to sec you at your of- flcc." Grenoble moved l0t\'2ll.‘(l the door after glancing at his wrist watch; "1' won't keep you," he said. "It is . ten minutes to four and you can't go out into the garden in that _, t. '1'» up» sin-tut .-.r nu.- mnnrv hr King's Pniipty or any Huh-table v.1’ Ute-into person \\'lllillt snirl Con“?! GREETING wnmir. I t-u upon reading ‘he Poll- nf livliynrvl ll. ‘Mullah-n an lliar, lu-lli of twirl!"- mwii uf<vrcs:iltl_ 1hr- fixer-atom of the "pom 113mm] l-Istzite pray-in: that a citation inny be iseur-tl f"; 1h».- pur- pose hereinafter set furtli: You ale therefore her-flu" required to eitc all persons interested 'n lli.- mill Estate to he and appear before llll‘ at. a Pro- A5 1e hate (‘curt tn Im held ili tli: (‘mil-t flimsy pink thing. “Ltractllw D5 ll? l5- Ifnusn la ('lifli'lflllf'lu\\‘ii, in Quinn's It 15 too thin for this weather and Foamy, in the snlvl Provinwg mi ’ Monday the Uliirteevilh day of .\llli'l'll ymxt_ coming nt llm lmnr oi’ Eleven ltfirlnrk foreimnn of Ill" same clay to ' lheiv i-nuse lf any Hwy van why the Accounts of the Ffllll ' ite should not lm pnsnctl lllill Hu- l~ ate closed n: prayed for iii said pet lion and on motlnn of Norman \\’. Lnwtlir-r. l-Isry, Proctor fnr said Petitioner. Anrl lllli hereby order that a true copy hereof he ffifllflFflll published In some newspaper puhllslicrl iii (‘hni-lnttl-lnvi-n Iiforesrilil once in rarli \\'I'l‘l{ for n! least full!‘ consecutive weeks from the, date hereof mu] that n triu- myty hereof be fnriliivltli posleil In the following public plat-ca respectively, namely, in the bull of Hm (‘hurt Ifouno. In Georgetown nforcanlul, at the 'l‘n\vn Tlnll and at the Post nrfict» both In flenryrv-tnirii i-fnrrsnlvl. Ami l do hereby further older that n true copy hereof be. forthwith sen-ml on the Alffifllll)‘ (lent-ml m‘ this Pr» vim-1- m that all nI-rsmis lnlerl- ll the llllll Fistula as aforesaid nve due nollv-o then-oi‘. Given under my Mimi nml tied for fear he might lose the star, he climbed into his waiting car lllttl was driven away. “She's only seen the fellow once, the night he push- ed himself uninvited into her dress- ing room. Anything he may have to say about her appearance in the show is not likely to make much impression. I wish I hadn't told him he could see her, though. He might put unsettling ideas into her head. The girl is perfectly modest. I don't want her made self-conscious. But_ luckily-he's a stranger to licr. he tries to give her any advice she'll be irlc the colour would be hide- ous nmong the yellow flowers." Ever the showman, Grenoble paused at the door to give other directions to Mrs. Forrest. "Put hei- into that white wool frock and the Jacket of white fur I laid sent over from Paris last week'" he directed. “Don't for heaven's sake let her take cold. A fairy princess with a cold in licr head would be the last word!" The producer laughed and took |his leave, having judged, in the face iof Rosemary's evident contentment, that it would be unwise to speak or altercation with Anthony that ornlng. For a few moments, aftci- Anthony had left, he had been wor- who, thanks to his adroit showman- shlp and her own beauty, had adu- ed so much to his prestige in the theatrical world, to say nothing of the money her drawing power had brought him._ “After all," he said to himself as If the Heal i-f flu: fsnl-ifl‘ iii-t undoubtedly Ofdel‘ llllil from thz; ll Nth , v v : v , (|,_,<,;' ‘X, n_ iiuilivantknt n": Mr house. and so clear the air or him _vr:|l' of Ills .\ln.|“nl_\".-4 reign. ($34.) n. 1.. mmmn. ' Judge of Probate. MM 8 I thug Ii , l. -, i more finally than I could do." ..,_ So thought Grenoble, ivho lind self that he had forgotten that young love meets always with the words on its lips "I feel I have known you always," and that strangeness is lost in the instantan- eous illumination of love. Meanwhile Anthony looked down through the gold bars in the tower window at the departing car and half ivlshed he had faced Grenoble in the drawing room downstairs and had it out with him with Rosemary to choose. "But why should I distress her un- necessarily?" he asked himself. “It is a thing she must illlnk over quietly, and make her decision without being unduly- influenced." Rosemary ran up the stairs and “Rosemary, I want you to marry me-now, at once, and let me take you away from all this. It's too de- grading I can't bear it for you," he said. ' Rosemary turned white, and shrank back against the wall, her hand pressed to her heart that ousy in his heart. » "Grenoble, always Grenoble!‘ he thought, "And what right has Gre- noble to order her every move- ment!" In spite of _hiinself the words of Dolores Monclair, on that night of the dinner in New York, came back BIIOVOIII-ll I have taken and seized to him seemed to have stopped beating. Impossme! He paced the mom “But—-I can't-we don't—you 195515, trying to shake from his don't know anything about me!" ‘ she stammered. mind the "Ely thing Dolores had suggested. A cheer from below drew him to the window. Down in the garden Rosemary and Nell Fan-mt were walking among the orange and yellow flowers, a black figure and n. white one. There were gaping fag. es all about the paling; o: the "I know that you mean more to me than anything in the world,’ said Anthony, "and I think you care for me." “I do," said Rosemary. “Then let me take you away, . N down to my people in Kent. It wonft looked in the door at him breath. 105813’ for a moment. “I've got to go out for my daily promenade before the populace," “Please don't go. I shall only have to be outside for half an hour, then I can come back'to talk with you, Do you mind waiting?" Anthony wished she weren't going to be stared at. He felt, in his pres. ent mood of uncertainty jealgug 0g everybody, of Grenoble especially who was allowed to sec her as oi’ Plllht. and of every one who gaped through the iron pallngs and com. mented on the beauty that Anthony wanted, in that moment, for him. self alone. "Have you got to go out?" he ask. ed. "Couldn't you, Just for once, miss a day?" Rosemary shook her head regret. fully. "I'm afraid I must go. Mr. Gre. noble asks it of me." Anthony watched her hurry on g0 ft so fu- behind him his simpler M >1, ~ 18108. watching their every move. merit. "l" “11- said Anthony to mime, what did he know about the girl down there, more than those gap. 1118 Pwhle knew? He reproached himself. Oi’ course he knew mm, about her. His love had shown him whet she was. in spite of Grenoble "d hi! Blllloitatlon of her. When mlemflry came in, breathless and N9?» 110 filmed to her eagerly. be long ‘till we are all right. I've a play going well in America, that I think will soon be put on over here. I don't care what Grenoble has been l0 you. or what he has done for You. Only leave it all behind you now, and come away with me." "I can't." answered Rosemary mdlv. "You don't understand. I can't leave Grenoble now." of tn ac of of (T0 be Ointinued.) lleafaclie: all A Pain: ll Slolmh Mr. W. G. 8' - writos:—' ‘For ‘lllgzonycilllui om lmgbled with severe headaclm, In pains m my stomach. M’ gliflgfiiat told me to take Bardoe M00 Bitters, and since than I Elam-fig? tiiiuglcid Wigllfilhdf, ' B n a o t e of all"? l" 1m the thing to clean the oo of the poisons gathered in the 17mm during the winter months." URDOCI — LOOD. i BITTER-S B dress with block rebellion and ps1. u§u'hn‘-iu'uni'ik‘iflfi‘ n-uhmiuwhrullpnub and William Roberts, Defendant. to me Magistrate's Court at the Town of Montague, in King's County, in the an the Property or the auove named Defendant William ltonerts the foi- lowing articles, viz:- Danicl lteiilys, Commencing at a post 100 feet. from Saekvlllo Street; thence running East along land owned by Frank Murphy; thence South 50 feet to land in possession of John Poole; thence West. along the said John Poole‘: land 100 feet to rear oi Daniel Reilly's, thence feet to the place of commencement. that I will on Wednesday the fifth day of April, A. 1)., 1933, It Twelve o'clock noon, in front of the Bunk satisfy the levy marked on said Writ forest, besides Sheriff's Fees and all legal Incidental" expenses. NEIL McDONALD. Sheriff's Office, SHERIFF'S SALE ! The Town of Montague, Plaintiff v virtue of directed By an out execution oi the One Lot of Land at the rear of orth along Daniel Reilly's land 50 And l do hereby give pnblle notice Nova Seollu building at Mon- guo in the said County set up and ll by Public Auction the said Lot Land or no much thereof as will Execution, being $36.00 and in- DONAQD F. KEAYS, Sheriff. Town Clerk. Sollrll, P. E. L, Feb. 5th, AJ). 1988. BT-Z-II-SBt-il. OUR. THREE SPECIALTIES WATCHES, RINGS F EYE GLASSES ambiance [i870 E, W. TA [LOR ‘ m minimum mm m. sinxnuncv?" In the matter of the Estate o! Benedict MoKinnon, Authorlml Asnignor. Sealed Tenders will be received b! ‘the Undersigncd up to noon, Wed- nesday, 25th oi’ February, 1933. l" the Farm Property, belonging to thll Estate, containing 89 acres of lanll and situated on the Point Refill Grand Tracndle, Prince Edward Is- land. Dated at 150 Richmond Strut: I“ ‘ “ town, Prince Edward il- hnd, this seventh day oi’ February- 1933. c. M. WILLIAMS. Trustee Estate- BENADICT Mcniivuos. Bnnlirlllll- 8108-2-14-16-l8-30-22~5l. zvo r15 To make n success of fruit Ulla" lug, you require v ' " Iilmlll” ' oni- climate, 1nd well grown m“ from a reliable nursery. Order new for lprllll d°llfl7 fruit and ornamental trees. Ill J bery, etc. Hardy field m" n specialty. P. L. BMALLWODD W Charlottetown . Ben. n. n. smrrn a soNS Wrlio or phone appointment! or eve ng. up".