r , . T >119“??? 3 "in paggjwo f THE Cl-QRLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . ' AAAA a ‘ “ ’ wyvyywwvvviwvvvivvv-vvvvvv OQo-oo-oe-eo-Qoo-oooeefiroeo-eooeeoeo-oeoe-ce-evvvvevoveveec0evr0e+ee+o4c4ceo4ee0o¢ve+vv6+~§9446+Qo4+o+v+¢ev'¢v v v v——v ‘ """' "' ' ’ Woman ’s Redlm -:- Social and Personal-a Fashions -:- Literature v vvvv v7 w‘ "i mo“ u“ AL_AAL w wvWIJv ,< RED RUSE gT EKia gooelied’ MYSTERY HOUSE ‘ i I] lAImI-IN NOIIIS I‘ ‘JAI kkkkmh4kkka ‘kakkk '.=.k rx Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box Even if Marriage is a Failure, it is Better for a i Man and the “Other Girl” WhomHe Loves, ‘V T0 Break Their Relations and Not See Each Other "They never could prove aliv- thing," Page said, shaking her head. "Fraud they could Prove. and forgery, but not murder. In Page curled her um about a jutting bit o! mossy rock, put her tace down upon it. Her shoulders i ached with the Iirst approaching "Moving the body 01 M-Ts- P1911‘ dergast wasn't such Bi 800d 119W" Barnes suggested, and Page laugh- ed weakly at the siiiiiplo amm- oiogy. “Is it a crime?" _ _ n meant a clear day tomorrow. did not know ‘crusted. 501' m? “mmage “as l somewhere in the endless black been a failure lroni the fust and llfls brought , hours she saw m! silhouette “am” me nommg but mmen‘ But I ha” chm‘ l the mouth o! the cave. He was reii and my duty to them is obvious. I would i , , , l looking out. not ZXIIIJEIII their happiness to gain my own. ,‘ iii i rpm; om; ca” tn ere outside ' ' Dcar Dorothy Dix—I am an executive 3B years old and have an as- :5 But zasnfimes 3:2’ no “$22851; "Must _- u It‘ sociate oi 2i wlio has become very dear to me. We have found love, peace, i m t ., o understanding. happiness and contentment together such as I, at least, reminded h" “w: “mug, a than Today's‘ Short Way; THE COOK'S B P a Z e x 5i E 2"." r r ~ " - Tea Com ui-id and it did me lots of l rook three hordes and l (l0. motto, &.Icictu/ie. fi-alu ring BED COVERINGS, noose DECORATIONS and STYLE SHUW THURSDAY é? FRIDAY Nov. 5th and 6th 3 P. M. Wit/i living models ODDFELLOWS HALL Ycu zirc cordially invited to see and hear llll<< Sparling iii “Eibasso Cotton Co. ivilllhe Anti ll‘ 5 \\' .;.c woman who has ;' .o LYc conizor on, but hc 1 ...'.orcc btiiige upon {in “as ectii too ziiiiizy- iazliciicss ' as who lacked ihc cc iit men and ivoinazi. ‘l U ~‘A l/ (‘l12il"_"i.'. qwuw _.\ M _ A __ _ ‘ . Tiicrc alc- iii - i i i. i ii..mi~sion chaigc. ....Gct a ticket e.- can throw their ch 11-‘ You VIN?!’ the holder of the fortunate Icio no; behave that ticket win.- zi beautiful prize. Tune in to (‘FCY at l2 o'clock todav and hear M!» Spllfllnfi. ' N02 both of winch bring misery. 1s phi: 02' a '.\'Oll‘ ‘a o.» of her ITLPIIGS. — 3 The HOUSE WIFE and HER AC TI VITYES .\'( HOOL oi’ liflppllltfiQ- man she loves. HOME FRMAI I shall :10: hear and smile as now lx-itire, ii or. I .~.L i clown and lzsten vrith- ar Or sad " for the l - v- I (‘.00. Aim! or:- voicc crying 0:12., voices slamming of a. calls i‘. nil; kccp on tryuig to fix him up? ‘I: . iimmie here?" day Ho's" ininj." mother. in that distant - ‘Muller: place . Can finch-til‘. thcn—no solace in l “C g‘ Bu.‘ one mmg 15 sure" t " . ~ lllllr- God's fat-c? zviicn. day Evening Post. RARE TI)RTOI§E-SIIELLS l TIRED, WORN our, ' ., IVaiiciinvi r Pro‘. ‘iiicci H‘, [W _ . . l ' h y “L , - i arc now seven iorzoisc- ~01!“ I!‘ their d. . toiiicats in all England. the lILill who loves lizs chi ' ' "e is no ll.. . .'.‘ llll\'\\ll'1il§' his w _Li divorce no c». c. ioriii their cha. actors. o ma" iasiiion them according to her own pattern and incul- l '-' ' ouii ltlci ~., and ivlio w ;h poiscxi their minds against. him, ir 5e ac of duty" to your children for iorsaking them. > to :li\i‘.{l by ilicni iiiitil they" are grown. This is a bitter say- DLlL ‘i cre is 11o easy way out 01 your dilemma. as zhcrc any happy‘ cOlUUOn oi your problem with the girl. Hers, 11.0, is tragedy, ior it means either stolen love or the irustration of love, Ii a woman tiouts conventions and builds a loveliest ivztn a married man, she finds little happiness in it because it 11's Joy iii love that she boasts oi it and flaunts it in the Her happiness is iii snowing on her husband, her lace on the ocean. iiixikc our snap judgment on liini upon. Ii lie is neat; L‘ spotless and well P1'0$50d; it his lincn is clciin; li his shoes are rllllllffilj it he is w cll shavcii and slioni, we sci. him down as a man who has tor my own, so the question is what to Should she seek other employment? We have found separation a source of great siiiiermg to us. Should I sternly nuke a chain break oi‘ our association? ~incr myself, for I believe my Ll come ilrst and I want nothing but the l peued logs they Imam get help bis‘. iii lilc Ior this girl I love, regardless 0t l “They do!“ want us w land’ I p my pain may be in losing her. "in; and pray that we may settle this problem wisely. children We arc both clean-living and QUANDARY. --'c is 11o tragedy" decpcr and darker than that 0i a fine and noble cd to a woman who has brought him only niiseryt, who find; the - ayes and the happuics he may no". take in another woman. For zliere is no way out of it that 1s not tilled wiiii tears and suflering. c case oi iiic Ul““.i])l)ll_\' miirziml man ls particularly hard and l the ma‘ on irc ciultircn whom he not only atlores, but for whom He would gladly break the tie that binds him b0 i " ti him as a wife and to whom he is nothing but l .. meal licket and who would willingly exchange him tor enough alimony l ‘ '5 seen only too otien the disaster that ldien, who are the victims of it. He ltilrl. btlllg runicd by weak or silly or vic- iiiiii and pruiciple to rear them into reii and who has a strong sense ox ll. e but ior iiuii to slick to a mar- zs nor i.o.v miserable she makes his children and loses all chance He turns them o\'er to a cdii she Jllalll)‘ hcrseli. . .io have iio more paternal instinct than an alloy cat. ' cii to the wolves without a qualm of remorse, tie love of any woman would repay a man with So my advice to Dear lMiss Dix-I am the wile of the principal oi a rural high school. I do. . _ , _ _ “hwy Bu, (“n there Where I m1“: go It LS his one aiiibhion to get city school, but his one big drawback is his personal appearance, which is extremely sloveiily, He thinks that it l5 plat foolishness about. having on a clean shirt, or his clothes pressed, or tits hau" cut, or his shoes shined, 0r to have good manners. consider that these things count and when 1 try to make him be neat he mg and it makes him angry do I ivaiit to make him angry, so what must I do? Just let him go? WORRIED WIFE. I doubt if a sloven, either male or female, was ever cured oi slovenii- Unless your husband cures himself oi the iiiiix; o; limiting like something the cat brought in he will never in the l Mary Dwm whkvpr in the Sam“ l Wufltl gt". ii Jill) as principal of a city school. For neatness is one o1 the i things that iiieg; try io impress on children, and how can they do that i! ' is one oi the great unwashed‘! ' ho man can make a greater mistake than to undervalue the way he is ~ That is the first thing we IIOIlCC about any stranger and it is if his He doesn't I don't mean to nag, neither Or zzor am I ivilling t0 sacrifice this girl's liappi- l I do not! Won't you , ~ house and in taking her place among the respectable married women. i this denied her all the remainder is cuiders, ashes and dust. L‘ a woman is too tine and true to do lllis and ii she chooses honor aisle-lid 0i illzcit love, slic livi-s a bmrrcn hie that has in it only snatches Shc knoivs iviiat it is to have only the crusts that fall from atzoihcr woiiizizis table, to have only brici and stolen interviews with the , She knows me ironic bitterness 0t seeing a. woman wno 1S a. wnc lll name only have the honor; and the position and the money Lhat a man would gladly bestow on her. Far beztcr, 1t seems to mo, a Clean break between a married man and whom he cannot marry rather than subjecting lier to years oi tor- ~ and the weary waiting and the hope deterred that maketh the heart Ty». tame, 1n one of a gammy of ambition ziixii energy, who E willing to take trouble to achieve results, who ' ‘ch arrived at Balham Hill ‘ilit-i‘ is a p:i7.c tortoise- ART you ncryuiis and riintlown? Docs your ~.. l'k \L'(.‘l'll .i lsiir- -l','ll\L'l‘lI'l_lI nerves -- helps you l0 ca! hcticr—— xlecp tortoise-when tom kittens l)f‘(’ll born it‘. Britain. and of thcsc Mil" " ("Cl hfl- li xvi-re the proporzv of Sir Claiid 10"" ‘w’ LN“ w“ rfitxriiiilcr. the czit brcctlcr, oi 111i‘; 1° m‘ i‘ “Jlclumrlall- scum worth liv- k 5,,“ “Ky”, (,0, i Hor ham. Sussex who has iiiii. career? i...it...........,.f;;1;;§g,gqyjggy" ,'-<"§;,=j jff "f, 12"", ,, , , ~ ' t‘ f‘ 7 I‘ 58-518 emac "llllllllfflVfill M‘! lllltlllll" lkittcm are born. but, tor some and“ y‘ |i,,,kh‘,,,,-§ ycgtmble , raiicc reason. the male Cumpuuiiil is ii lllU saver {or run- ‘h’ Uilrllflllllrll’ 1'3"‘- NQDOQY down condition. My mother rec- [d1 w)“; ummendcd it and ii improved my licalih a lot. l have a good appe- mc, sleep well, and do my work c-icr) il.iy. lam sizrcytrur medicine will hclp (her wumcn iftbey give it u triii ' -- Mrs. Rescue Anderson Blair SL, New (r/axgair, Nam Scofia ' Mrs. H. \Vakeli'ng of Toronto be a professional singer. Answer: You are, Willard. "DON'T LET (‘Ill-ZAP PAINT MAKE A MONKEY OF YOU" ___.__ able place in the social scale. A Fort Wayne (Indiana) store- .», up on lib tzptoes and making the best oi himself. pi. sloiicliy and (lowii-at-the-hcel, we pass lilm up as a lazy loafer who I am the aian, and my side of it is that while I love Jean, I vane“. think it lS fair to her to ask me to give up my profession. I have studied m" hard and I like it and can make a good living at it, while I never could Which 0f Us is tight? have out o! ten a coat is a sure indication oi the kind oi a man who is in it. Dear Aiiss Dix-We have decided to ask you to help us with our prob- My >l(lC or it i.» that I ani in love with a young man who is study- lic has a nice voice, which he should cultivate. made ,1 i am socially" ambitious and I simply couldn't stand his being a. veterinar- Doiit you think that ii he lovcd me he would take up music as his JEAN WILLARD. J68" 18 B silly goose. You would probably starve as a singer, while you will succeed as a. veterinarian, and ifshe only had sense enough to know it veterinarians nowadays hold a high and respect- DOROTHY DIX. But ii he is un- don't keeper's pet monkey got into a window containing a dis-play paint andmvarnlsh... ,destroyed an electric sign, then limited by lzoooupwple iemmled w“ o‘, palm an over the years. It was bu t in i769. ind . One thin alone escaped ' ———— llamZeZ-a noticegreading “Don't ma!" 0N DARK let cheap paint make a monkey oi you," lays, "l was nervous and run- down.’ My mother told me to try Lydia 1i. Pinkham‘: Vegetable l like a new woman." lie You Suffer Periodically‘! Take Lydia E. Plnkhnm’; Tab. leis. They tease periodic pain and discomfort. AM your drnggiu. VHILTABLE COMPOUND White. thin cords or "The Old Manse" Mass, which was the home o! both ‘collars. 0i The animal Emerson and Hawthorn has been ' " in three soutaches -__-_ ,i’requent-ly appear on dark-colored LITERARY SHRINK POPULAR. ldresscs forming lace-like cmbroid-, oi Concord. erles which decorate pockets and} l ST ops COUGHS '|l"“-I',I-IH":E _ m., 13w 1M1,“- a by,“ W\r_ pziiik ciioiigli cvcii to kccp liiniseli clean. "-‘Li“c[;‘h|c ‘(_,‘,m_ 3mm 'I'licic lliatfil to be an old proverb that said don't judge a man by his pound. lr quiet; During the 135; 36 you“ only 21 (oat, but there is no beitci" way in the world to judge him. Nine times “Stars? he said triumphantly. And the morning, sure enough, was brighzly sunny, with s quieter sea. They must make a try tor lthe shore today, Barnes said. I! ‘anyone at Mystery House saw . them approaching on their pro- ‘ Barnes," Page said, dragging her- l sell about weakly in the first re- viviiylng rays o! the sun. "I think they're all gone.‘ I think the Japs or perhaps some one o! | the Chinese might be there." While they talked they had been standing on the western taco oi the little promontory they called Beacon Hill, where they 2p‘. their signal lire burning day and night. Now just as they turn- ed t/a return to the cave, Barnes in a strange hushed tone said the single syllable of Page's name. Hei- back was to the sea. She turned and stood beside him, and tor a long moment neither spoke. Page wavered a little against the mans shoulder, and he put his arm about her. "Yes, sir; that's it! Barnes pre- sently said. clearing his throat.‘ "We thought so before," Page reminded him, in a low voice that trembled. Neither moved his eyes from the blue sea that was flooded with morning sunshine. Steady, Barnes said, his own tone not steady. Page llllllhefl l- quick shaken laugh that had tears lri it. " ‘Iwo miles away toward the wes a big steamer had topped in her course; she was moving again now, but straight tor the shore. Her disturbed wake lay like an arc o! "Another week! When I ahutmy eyes I can ieel it all and see it all again-the tog and the rocks we sat on; I can hear the sea and the gulls and feel that weak- that hungry, tired reeling! Barnes, what did they say o! Lynn? with the last sudden question she had laid her ringers on his hand; he felt them press his own. “They don't know," he said, started to add something to it, checked him-sol! and was still. "They think he is very ill." “Oh, but we know that. Page!" "Yes, we know that. It'll be a fight now between the fever and his strength. Are they going to operate, Barnes?" "They're afraid-not." He had phrased it wrongly, and he saw color fluctuate. "He's too weak?" "I imagine they think so. I don't think they've decided." ‘They wouldn't let me see him?" I don't think so. They've three nurses on the case. Mrs. Hibbs, his cousin, was here." “Oh, that's eo-shek his cousin! Did she see him?" “She stood at the door and look- ed at him. She told me he was exactly like the picture o! Edward Lynn, her aunt's son by the tint marriage. She said that she had known oi’ his marriage-the mani- ‘age oi Lynn's rather, but she had never known there was a child." “You told hei- everthing?" “A good deal: about Trudy Mbskbeefia taking her aunt's place, and about you having the diamond sate. She says it's all clear now, clear why her aunt wouldn't see her-why there was so much secrecy. And ehe ieels, as I do, and I suppose as you do, that therell have to be an investigation about the two deaths-Mrs. Pren- dergastk and Mrs Roy's. WAKE lIP Y0l| LIVER BIL!- AnJYeuWIJumpOotofBdhIiO MornlngRuhftoGo The llvn llionld out two liquid hilo late your dll . h not llawinghooly. your load l0 in: in l “You bet your life it's a.‘ crime. on," Barns said. "Are they going to arrest them?" "Yes; police everywhere are on the lookout. They think Flora and the old woman are going to drive east, but it seems more likely now that they made straight for the Mexican border. Harwood lived there for awhile, it seems." “On his sabbatical year China he was in Mexico." "Smuggling dope, probably. they say there's a regular nest oi it in there." , “Poor Flora!" Page said thought- fully. "Well now about you. My mother wants to know i! you'll come to o perfectly simple home dinner at our house tonight. No- body but my college sister and my married sister." "I'm too much worried about Lynn tonight," Page said simply. - from two won't do you any harm, and we can stop in on the way. I've my car here, and we'll say ‘hello’ at your boarding-house to Nirs. Chaiyne. Do come, Page, it'll do you 800d to get out and see things! "I feel as i1 I had been dead, and had been brought back to lite." They stopped at Lynn's door on their way out. The nurse whisp- ered to them in the hall. No change! He was 1ust—resting. Had he had any nourishment? No; the doctors thought it better not. He had asked ior Miss Hazeltyne; he had been asking for “Page" right along, but Dr. Alloessar thought it better for him not to see anyone today. Barnes drove about the twilight- ed streets, and Page saw the movie signs flashing. and the little housewives oi Mission Street going into the delicatessen stores for sausages and chipped beet. She saw thewhite tog creeping down over Twin Peaks from the veiled sunset in the west, and thought of the Rock and that the logs would long before this have enveloped it in impenetrable whiteness. She touched her shoulder against Barnes with a sudden contiding movement that brought his eyes to her. "You and I will not be together tonight, Barnes. We'll never lor- get it, will we? Hours and hours and hours there in that dark, cold cave. Hours and hours and hours without meals, without anything to cook or to eat!" "I'll never forget you. standing it ill- climbing up to that accursed beacon, shouting at the shore!" Honors Shower On Writer 0f 0h, they've plenty to hold them t “But getting out for an hour or t Liberty Essay CORNER - CRANBERRY HARD SAUCE IS SOFT FOR. THE PUDDING Here is a rather seasonflblc version oi’ the hard sauce which when all the hot puddings come into their own. The cranberries impart a delightfully zestiul flavor- This sauce goes very well indeed eh a cottage pudding or on 11°” gingerbread. 6 tablespoons butter l 1-2 cups fruit 508a!‘ 1-2 cup stewed cranberries (well drained) Pres! (rranberriee (they lhould b0 unsweetened. i! possible) throulhfl- sieve, or cut very iine. Cream the butter well, and beat into it, very gradually, the iruit sugar. When butter and half the ‘then more sugar-alternating fruit and sugar untli iruit is all ‘Add sugar, ii neoessary to stiffen ‘the sauce. Chill thoroughly Dew" ;ser\1ng. I 1r desired. add a dash of almond lflavorlng. BACON ROLY-POLY A tasty and inexpensive change. Make o suet brush with 1-2 n». flour, a pinch oi salt and 3 oz. shredded suet. Mix to a stifi’ dough with a little oold water. Roll out on a floured board, place on some siioee o! bacon, cooked or uncooked. sprinkle with ‘parsley and. onion. edges, rool up and pinch the ends together. Rollin greased pflllfifiuema floured cloth, and boil for 2 hours. Turn out; serve with cabbage, potatoes and gmvy. “I'll never forget your saying oi'er and over again, ‘We'll get out 0i’ this. We'll laugh at this!’ Well, Page said. in a voice that had no laughter in it, “here we are. But not—exact1y laughing." ' (To be Continued) abys Cold Proved best by two generations of mothers. VAIIORUI makes its appearance on the scene ' sugar are well blended. add truit,i_ used. , chopped L Moisten the‘ Radio Program (All an. u nmeni ma... ‘TUESDAY, NOVEnmEB | BERLIN _ 5 p.Il1.—Mll5lC and Poetry | , 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. SCHENECTAuy 5:35 p.m.—Short \\':ive .\iai1 t, WYXALF. 81.4 m., 9.52 meg, ROME 6 pan-News in Eiigiili. -. 31.1 m., 9.63 meg. LONDON 6:30 DJII.—'FOI‘C1ED Altair-a," talk by Sir Ibiederick Whyte K, S. I., LLD. GSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 meg GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 nicg; w 313 m., 9.58 meg. BERLIN B pm-Songs tor Girls. lJ I i255 m.. 11.77 meg. WINNLPEG 9 pJrL-"At the Head Table" music and variety. CRUX. 49.2 .. 6.09 meg; CJRO, 48.7 m., 6.15 met. CJRX, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. LONDON 10:15 p.m.—Nc-w British Dan ‘runes. GSD, 2.5 m., 11.45 meg GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg. PARIS 10:20 p.m.-News ir. TPA-—4, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. _ TOKYO ‘i2 midnight - “Iverreas Pro gram." JVH. Nazalri, 205 m., i4 meg. English A Mo mingSmile Husband-The shares I paid so much Ior last week are 110W ‘"117 worth iive shillings each! Wife (trying to oonrole hum- Then isn't it a good thing W"! got so many o! them- Pat worked in a. factory "h?" they encouraged the eiaii to think o! ideas tor the smoother workki! oi the buriness. One morning he was shown into the oiiice oi’ the chairman and announced that he had theiisht o! a way o! insuring that none oi the hands would be late in tutu!!- “That sounds good," said the chairman. “How do you PWPW to do it?" "Sure, and that's am’. 90m" m‘ Pat. "The last man in blows "t" whistle." ' Fashions’ Latest For Chic Dressers A soft girdle attracts attention to the znug waistline of the basque- like bodice o! this black broadcloth dress. As you already know, black broadcloth is one of the smartest fabrics oi the season. The girdle is lustrous black satin .crepe. The black broadcloth ybuttons down the back o.‘ the ibodice have rims o! the satin crepe. l You'll like the below-tihe-eibow jiehgth ruii shoulder sleeves and ithe high draped neck. The slender mkirt has a young flared swing lhem. You couldn't ask for anything easier to sew. It requires but 3 1-2 [yards oi 99-inch material with 1-4 ;yard oi 39-inch contrasting ma- iteriai for belt for the i6 year sine. Other nice suggestions are nubby ;crepe silks, plain or plaid woolen, velvet, etc. Style No. 1N4 is designed for isms i4, i8, 18 and 20 years. No. i894Bize--__¢___ NIIIIO I . ’ -___..._¥ A trio to New York m: mo. dent Rooteveltk rededication oi’ the Statue ot Liberty, a gold mldfll. and a visit to France as a Illcot o! Hench World Wer vet- fllfll were awarded Edna Folk, above. 1'1. or Pueblo, 0010., mi- her may on "What the siatue or UWTW Means to the American People." Edna's essay was called the best oi Service. 135,000 _ii-i a contest. Sponsored by the Federal Park] B“; Street Addrfll City State . 's a#“' a °w 5°