~ ~l$OO>P§rv$w '\‘1vvvvv Woman ’s 6o 6O O4O~QQO§+OO+§FOOOQ4OOOQQ§QOO§OQOO U0 ~ Gui-u ARABIAN NIGHTS Hliffzlh. let us rake tlie leaves that azc dead, Anti build a big bcnfire all yeiow lilld red, .1 bonfre is full Nights, lrhdiriils ‘with ljlllpb wcndeifiil rights~ 3- ii i. S nb. cis and ill.c\'t‘S in [he flick ring. firing and flam- lllg of lrnves: “P For of Arabian and rod. l'.\‘ EA RTHLY PALLOR ff is cxtrmrely 1i inpltltc. ‘l til :2? who kn cw cosmetic : A grew-n powder lotion is to be 'l'.f‘ f0 nlliliion ‘ XllllC a urcen p wder to ione will u" used on th- face. Doesn't it ‘Lvlllld unlfezlsant? New clezillsi: g provided—:lte itllOW. cram. are also in pink. another FXQHINNS NEH? F.-\.\'CZ'ES Hand-p find ivashilbc- lingerie - miles a ncwlii: fislllbllfid in .l:. acorgeilc alid (‘l' pe-de- ‘El 1.0. Cilp s z "c ""lllll‘.‘_,' frm-ks. Wick fr. to b‘ .s\:i1.iii<l_i' rlvalled '91" iiru- cnloill" lrlillllph, lees of .\i e or ziilri bhlckberry. - ywpi 1r choice ill null var- . llifly. a shwdg ‘with a bz-vivii. P: e l‘ c-n llncerr is very much h. 11:0 in thc shops. J a fvaturc ‘of many i... 'l‘i*(\f THE NEW HANDBAGS! the fashion experts nro to be veiy d curative l. t-r. The favorite material . nidit"... l< antelope, though .-.~ Ill; ziiizi rich ottoman silks will lI-n l)‘ lllll"ll seen. l» 21ml Ibl 11gb iozm the new. "ll s Sonic may ‘u: quite brcazi: others are lln l‘(ll).lZ$. ti. - l!) lw found on both and most Bubas and do 5c..- Cllflliillivd and callphs and h" was. Now she sells them la 1mm, fast as she can hook. More than blugltlfilli and filllv!" miraculous that, she has booked orders which things. wil keep her deft fingers busy all "lllffilll. ‘cl ll< zal-ie iip the leaves Wllllfilf- 036 0N6!‘ Y9!‘ llllle 1N8? rim: .i'u dead. rugs came from a csmmercia‘. firm and llllil t. 1...; bonfire ali yellow in Halifax. unpieasing to fie urvaithly pallor cl= i<ru pwmisng for the win- of thc make-up, cou'd not more be sold? People needed mats. . She finally decided to take up rug-making as a business- She disposed of few at frst, but grad- ual y her sales increased as knowl- edge of hcr skill widened. One rug she, sold for $125; others brought proport onately smaller prices. Soon the mortgage had been paid off. Other debts went too. And Mrs. Withers found that she was deriv- ing a comfortable mcome. She de- cided to keep hcckng and selling WELL-SHAPED NAILS FOR BEAUTIFUL HANDS l, well-shaped nails are b requisites of bautiful at Blirst place, dcrrt bite them. elti-eln is a habit. try to r Gettng an occasional profes~i nal manicue will hclp. Ask the operator to file them smooth, trim off the rough edges of cuticl: and put on a polish. You'll take pride in their appear- ance. Nails that break and mack easily should m treated to a warm olive oil bath. Massage a bit of the oil into the cutide and leave it on all lllsht if’ you can. Wear old gloves while you slrep. Smoo the firs hands. 111th! If bltin brook i Realm DQ§OOQFOOOOO§O -:- Social an Catch Wards 7 “m” l v5.1’; l Dorothy Dzx .52; Homes I Mfsuscd l Love, Duty, Sacrifice - Fine Words to Denote Fine Attributes, But Which Women Use as Whips to Drive all Joy and Happi- ness From the Family Circle , "There are three words that are taboo in my house." said a woman the other day. “They are ‘love.’ ‘duty,’ ‘sacrifice.’ All splendid words connoting fine and beautiful things, but they have all been so misused and manhandled and generally abused in dom- estlc life that they have unconsciously set us against all for which they stand. “Duke love, for instance. To be loved fl the passionate desire of every human heart. Husbands want their wives to love them. Wives yearn for their husbands to love them. Parents are greedy for their children's love. We all want to be assured, in season and out of sea- son, that we are loved, and we talk so much about love that we cheapen it. We hack the thought of it around until we take all of the romance and sentiment out of it. "Imagine a woman stopping a man hurrying to a train to ask him if he loves her. Yet I have seen them do it. 'I‘l1lnk of a woman burstini; into floods of tears and wailing out that her husband no longer loves her because he doesn't swear by yonder moon that she is the light of his life when he comes home tired and hungry, and the only’ ‘milk in the W011i! he desires with all his soul at the minute is a hot bath and a good dinner. Yet all of us know plenty of women who are continually putting their husbands through a sentimental third degree trying to arrive at the state of their affections, no matter how inopportune the time and place. “And look at the mothers that we all know who simply badger their children about loving them. A hundred times a day they will say: "Does Johnny love his darling mother?‘ ‘Who does Susie love best in all the world?‘ ‘Come here, Frankie, and tell mother how much you love her.’ And Ie poor little wretches, snatched away from their play. come and do as they are hidden, and they are bored stiff with a performance that doesn't mean a thing on earth to them, except that it gives them a dis- taste for loving mother that they never get over. “Why haven't we women got sense enough to see that love is some- thing tc be felt and not to be talked about. and that its only value is when it expresses itself spontaneously and is the overflow of some long pent-up emotion that fills the heart? One single expression of affection voluntarily givan is worth all the high-jacked protestations of devotion If your nails continue to crack and break. it may be that there i5 something lacking in your diet or something wrong with your 411895. tive tract The best thing to dopof course, is to see a reliable physi. Clflfl. Keep the cuticle pushed back, This can be done with the vary towel on which you dry your hands. Alwflyi Push it back while your hands are wot and the cuticle is soft. ' in the world. Anyway, if you have to make people tell you that they love you, it isn't very hot stufl. V‘ "'f'hen there is ‘dutyf another word that I loathe and that has clone much as any other one thing to take all the gilt of! the gingerbread of’ the family relationship. We are always taltking about its being the duty of a mun to be faithful to his wife, and of its being a woman's duty to make a happy home, and of its being children's duty to honor their par- ents, and so on. We turn the whole of marriage and parenthood, which should be the happiest and most joyous thing in the world, into nothing but a cold, hard, stern duty. “And that is why so many people never get any fun out of having a husband or wife or children. They don't see them as an annex to their Don't dig unmr your nails with a too-sharp nail file- In most in- stances an orange stick. wrapped in cotton, is better for cleaning purposis. TOAD-m-TIIE-RING Pl" 1'3 lb< PO-k sausage meat in- to a saucepan with suffcieiit wa- ter to cover the bottom of the pun, happiness, but as a hateful chore that interferes with their pleasure and freedom, and, human nature being what it is, that gives them a distaste for domesticity that ruins the show for them. "Now I don't consider it my husband's duty to love me just because he is married to me. I want him to love me because he can't help it. I don't want him to be faithful to me because it is'hls duty to be. I want him to feel that I am the only woman in the world as far as he is coil- cerned. and all the balance may go roll their hoops. I don't want him tn spend his evenings at home because it is his duty to. I want him to sit by his own fireside because it is the most. comfortable and interesting and amusing place he knows. "And it is the same way with my children. I never mention their duty to me to them because, in the first place, I don't want them to feel rut; CHAKLOTTETOWIY GUARDIAN 471% We. Despaired of Her Life! R8. A. HAGAN, S Moll Park‘ Place, Toronto, Ont, writes: “We dflPllnd “l h“ lift. She was losing WllBhb cried continually and alept v¢l'Y poorly. At the advice of a friend I fried Baglo Brand and r585‘ from tho first aha nnod to gain ‘night, alept wall and improved gaunt-ally. Now at the age of fiftoen months sh: isthe happiest and healthint baby that on: could expect to soc. Sh: won first prise at the baby allow in Mont- rul, at the age of six mouths." ll you an unublu lo nuns your oun baby, julluw ut- advfca o] ail-rand. o] Ilia-mounds a] molllon and Ivy Elgll Brand- ihl uullpnll llllml all“ bring pun In“ h-[onnallu lllarlfun. Eagle Brand CONDENSED . Th: Borden Co. Llrnllld Tluro, . Pluaaa and mo no: sdftha o! qhpy‘ ollaro. Nuns dddnu. |'rII>- A Mo mingSmilcb Wake Up, Bill The plumber was a. mild sort of man, but he could not get away from the fact that his- assistant WBS constitutionally lazy. For a. 1098 time he said nothing but at last he could contain his exasperation no longer. "Lummle, Bill," he complained, "you bother me, standin‘ there with both ‘ands in your pocket-s! For goodness’ sake take one of them out!" Include All Street Orator-We must get rid of Radicalisni. Socialism, Bolshevism, Communism, and Anarchism. Voice—-And while we're about it. guvhor, why not throw in rheuma- rsonal -: THE COOK ’S CORNER Oak Cookies Data.- l'.= cups flour _ if teaspon salt 2 teaspoons baking pctucr l cup rolled oats l’: cup shortening ‘r4 cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons milk smftiie flour. salt and baking powder together. Add thc oats. Cream the shortening and sugar and gradually add the dry mixture and the milk. Mix well and chill while preparing this filling: 1 cup chopped dates it cup water 2 tablespoons lemon juice Cook the dates and water together in saucepan, stirring, until a. paste is formed. Add the lemon Juice. mu the chilled dough on] flour- ed board to one-fourth inch thick- nessfcut in round or other cookie shapes. place a teaspoonful of the date filling on one round, cover with another and- preas the edges together. Bake ten to twelve minu- tes in a hot (400 degrees) oven. Use a cookie sheet or inverted pan, rub- bed with shortenlng. Makes about three dozen cookies. Chocolate Fruit Cookloa 2% cups flour i; teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder it teaspoon cinnamon 1 cup chopped dates lit cuP Shortening 1 cup brown sugar 1 988 2 squares or oun melted over hot water i’: cup milk Sift the flour, salt, baking powder and cinnamon together, then work in the dates. Cream the alwrteninl. udd the sugar and blend well, then add the beaten egg and melted cnoc- olate. Mix well and gradually add the dry ingredients alternately with the milk. Drop the mixture from a teaspoon, on a baking sheet rubbed with shortening. Have the cookies about two inches apart, for they spread out in baking. Bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees) from ten toflfteen minutes. Bakes about 50 cookies. of chocolate. During the past year mosquito coniilol according to the directions of the Dominion Entomological Branch, was conducted in various localities, including Vhnoouver, Agassiz, Veznon, Jasper, Iiethbridgc Winnipeg, Orllia, ‘Toronto, Alon- qu n Park, FLWIdCFlCWIIp etc. tism? “What a lot of bunkl When a girl gets married she does it because Fashions -s.- QQOQUOOOOQOQOQQQCQOQQOOOIOOGOOO-OO-O-OOQOQOOOOII O§OO4O \QO-O-QQQQ~Q§Q§.§.. .§.. . ‘..( oQaQoQO-aIOIlO O-Ofi.QQ'.'.'..iQ§§Q'§QQ.Q.§'§§§§'.+QQ-OfiOw-O§OOOibbOflbfi-boa a ‘&m“ l. . AOVEMBER s. m; ' 'te ra ta rewl l I maven RISK oouarrut a/fmus POWDER. I KNOW mom EXPERIENCE rum MAGICVKLWAYS GIVES DEPENDABLE BAKING RESULTS QAYZOMMAQAME l. bkgolxummazp Dlnctor a; MAGIC —coats not quits ‘,4 f t 5.31,, than the cheapest Lag‘; Why not um this fins-quality baking povvdgr and be sure of satisfactory tcsulta? "@NTAIN8 N0 ALIJI." statement on ovary fill II vow sacrum that ma: noun; n". lllffllfillllllmmaunaarmruimuoaing, I ‘magma, I minim». ma. A on. sol» muons: "qi L... I_ dm|| i Today's pattcrn offers many now ldaaa to clung! your last year's frock. It includes four different typo col- lars and four sleeve models. M you already know, whim ban- gallnc and white satin collar: an ultra-smart this season. Bportay woolsns 1n chacks or stripes are ox- ceodfngly voguiah too in scarf col- lars as in style 3. Your alscvs decidedly dates the newness of the frock. And why not be ..,. t. the-minute? style No. 640 will help you look 193d. It comes in sllss 14.18.18, 20 years, 36, 38 audio inches. -Prlcs of rarnmu 1i mm u: stamps or coin (coin h preforrad.) Wrap coin carefully. N0. 549. Si! ...t..-.n..u--uuu Name Street Address City etm such parties! Hts acquaintance among the‘ socially-elect seemed boundless. At his dinners, always perfectly appointed. Jeanne met the people whose names and faces were familiar to the pages of the society periodicals. ‘Ifhe dinner favors ware énlhvtici The {Monte simmer it for ten minutes, the“ ,,.-,. hymn’ mp green and 9mm" 1W8)’ the wrter. Season the meat with pepper, 531V ""1 l1 Dlnch of powdered sage, tiien form hto bills. Brush over wml B8B Blid breadcrumbs, and fry in hot fat until Drain on soft piper. clllPCfl slv“ edgings are intro- dii: d on txe flaps of some black rrcps- or .ntel'tc pcchelt s. Po ‘r15 a e show-n on many of the lfir- iiocn bags at a Piccadilly shop. a go‘den brown. “DINA-Y RUG-MAKER PAYS OFF MORTGAGE Hcrc l9 the story of a woman w.o inc‘. adversity with a smile and fined it ‘nto good forlune by courage and industry. F0111‘ yv Ya at-o Mrs. Esfela Wi- tlmr. of Gr ilville Centre. N. S., u"; faced \vit.i a mortgge that {h eznrn d her with the loss of her Lore. She had no mznry. and it srcmcd t e home must g) for lack of if» PJlllZipS it would have, too, had not nfrs. Withers been out of the run o’ ordinary lndlV-dllfllfl. Sllf‘ cast about for ways of’ rais- fnz cwh. Snc was an 5x99119111; litnkr. o.’ rugs. llcr handcraft had bccn commented upon oftcn- She had. besides. made some sales , of hcr designs infrequent. it was true, but when same had been sold. why cls Checked By modern vaponzr‘ '11‘ -; ointment-Just rubon W‘; Annual Meeting Annual meeting of the United Black and Silver Fox Company will he hold In the Tryon Blpllgl ‘fill lvadueadar. Nov. ‘ilth, at 1.30 J. W. BOULTER. Sec)‘. Peel and core two large apples, s‘ioe into rings, coat th"m with bat- l" "ml ‘W Drain. and pace the iallfilkfi bails on the amfe rings. Garnish with a slice of hard-boiled egg. (Copyright) CHAPTER 1 THE BIRD 0F PARADISE The maid thrust a hairpin into -'°"m= DIN’! completed colffure, Rave ft a final flufi‘ with deft fing- ers and stepped back to view her- handiwork. Jeanne Dare-she was Jane Dare in the family Bible buck in Inwg,_ surveyed her. . fiectlon. critically with the aid of a hand mirror. "The contour isn't graceful," aha decided a trifle petulantly. "'13-;- bmlllml my hair further over my forehead and raising the coil to the °l'°°"l 0i my head in the back." The maid murmured something ""1 lwsan patiently u: remove the Pins. It was the third time that M“l"l= hid requested tn-t n" “"1"” l" chimed. Madame was difficult to please. . . , "Madame wears hcr hair like the Countess de Vase," she observod, busy with comb and brush. "she too stop hers at u ham," Miss Dare raised her brows but made no reply. She would have lik- ed to ask more about the counfcu Annual Jlcrting of 1h; Mlflflmg ll 171ml; lllll] Silver For Company VI u ll lm- hclil in the Tryon Baptist y; ll-ill \bldlll“llil)‘, Nov. 8th, at 2.30 p.m. Dare‘: bed was om entitled: "What and other notables who were dwell. ins at the huge fashionable hotel where she had elected to make her Wmporary home. But amonl’ the books that littered U" Pfldilll table beside Jeanne I. w. BOULTE s . \ In” B. my l Ia Proper On All Dllflllma" auf ms "And finally there is thc word band and the children. of its early precepts was: "Always discourage familiarity or gossip in servants. It is thc invari- able sign of a woman of culture." There were other books of similar ilk there. One told how to modulate and use the voice. Another was de- voted to graceful carriage. How to write social notes; the proper pm. cedure for hostess and for guest; how to dress on all occasions, filled another volume. Besides this, there were copies of Vanity Fair, Town "l"! COUMPY. Town Topics and other aoclety periodicals showing signs of careful and frequent per- usal. "Voila!" The maid stepped back once more from the completed coff- furs, her eyes seeking Jenna‘; m the mirror. The coiffure was a work of art. Jeanne was secretly delighted with hcr reflection. She was almost start- led at her own beauty. But she only said languidly; “That will do, I think. Now 1 want you to hook my frock before you go." PLAYING A GAME Hooking Jeannew frock consisted of adjusting a single snap that heiq the Jet girdle of her black dinner that I am an Old Woman of the Sea always on their backs and that they can't shake off and in the second place. because I know that if they have got ally duty to rne. which I sometimes doubt they will repay it without knowing it is a duty because we are such good friends and good pals and there is such good feeling between us that they ivill never let me down. They will have too many memories oi’ tenderness and affection not to make them tender and affectionate to me. many tvonlen. and which they use like a club ovcr their families. have listened to them groan a thousand times about the sacrifices a woman makes when she gets married, and how she sacrifices herself for hcr hus- To hear them talk, you would think that they were the nanny-goats that were always being offered up on thc domestic altar. ‘sacrifice which is on the lips of so You shc is crazy to and because she thinks she is bettering her condition, and she certainly pays hcr husband a. poor compliment when she adopts the martyr 1205c and talks about what a sacrifice she made in marrying him. A mun Willll-S his wife to think that she drew the capital prize in the matrimonial lottery when she got him and to be happy and joyous about it. same way with children. They didn't ask to be born and it certainly ls depressing to them to have mother regard them as so many afflictions and to begrudge everything she does for them and prate continually to them about thc sacrifices she makes for them. "Stevenson once said that the world was ruled by catch words. believe that is true, and that a lot of largely responsible for the prevalent that ls why I have cut out all of the old slogans about love and duty and sacrifice. And it works fine with us.‘ I these old feminine stock phrases are idea that domesticity is a bore. and ' DOROTHY DIX. bare and even in the front of hcr scant bodice, Modesty yielded to‘ Fashion. i "You lllfly go." Jcaniic surveyed her reflection critically in thc mir- ror. "I shall wailt you again at this time tomorrow, and cum day thc-rc- after until my own maid can leave hcr sick family." It was a crud: little prevaricadon —thi.= fiction of 'he aissclit maid— but the hotel maids of Manhattan are not paid by the management to call a bluff. whatever inward smil- ing they may do. “Madame is ravishing!" murmur- ed the girl and there was no irony in her compliment. It ivas easy to speak the truth in admiration of Jeanne Dare. it? LIVER THAT MAKES YUUFEEL so WRETBHED Wake Up Your Liver Bile and Get A New Lease of Life. No Calomel Is Necessary. Ioryoutafaolboalfbyaad ha Jonlfvi m t pouuds fli on“ an,» amduy of you?!’ m1 . Without that bile. trouble starts prom“ Your food fun won't dfpat ‘be way it ah and your bamnlaaroalugglah. cod dscayaiuldo {wand your ntln aymlu is undermined by his poisonous wane matte. You have lndfgaa- tisn-fbo discomfort of 3n, blood , In and aournan. You an pray war-Tm... vs a to like tau-wool, a nasty tam mom , and uglydagu. You ha aaytbfn I O I I Wfi I bava. lrffaot you manually Howoan you expect to also! a condition gown. The rest of the gown depend. ed for its allowance to Jeanne‘; slim figure upon a frail strand of m. across one white shoulder. The whale of ha: perfect shoulders m liks fhlsoomplctel bytakin III\ lih nl mini-alum, Hana!“ candy or roughage? I! can't uh up ..tri.t-.w-i.<... juzggliitrn vr g g, ' u’ iuiY¢s5ii§"§?'?:'::."M~ a“ ls Don't wash your mung on nbvfltuhs. l: .- Tull, sliln as a willcw, ‘ulciide. and gixicciul, slic was Fashion's idol for the moincnt. She had more than beauty oi iucc and figure. Thcrc was DUOUt hcr that indcfinablc charm known as personality. Moreover there was u touch of aristocracy, the ni-rogailcc that comes of race, in her bearing. She might have been a young princess, masquerading us a simple American girl. She WAS a simple Amcricnn girl masquerading as n. princess. when the maid had gonc. Jeanne went into her tiny sitting room on the fifteenth floor of the great hotel overlooking Central Park. It was twilight. there and before she press- cd ilie button of the wall switch she went to the windows and stood looking down into the fairyland of lights. Over in the West, the sun had set in a blaze of crimson and saffron and traces of the afterglow still lin- gered In the chill winter rky. The bare branches of the para trees were starkly outlined in the fading light. Millions of arc lights like tiny bril- liant Jewels marked the confineg 0f the Park and these were mingling with myriad other lights in umber, and green and orange that bespoke hordes of home-going motors. Large numbers of these flashed from the headlights of limousines, Jeanne knew. She had been in New York long enough to picture their occupants. Well-fed, sleek men in fur-collared great coats. heavy of 10M and fishy of eye! Women as obvious as mechanical dolls, swath- ed in lustrous furs with diaphanous hose above frivolous pumpg with buckles of brilliantsl Poms and Petr. mltmhkhrOanIb nanaalil" lot Qrhg‘ Ihld nun-KW °' 11. fnesc with gold collars. yapping frstfullyi To such a limousine Joanna asplg. '~ ~ '"*-'m@iv"!thftlwfliwmr ed. She yearned for the warmth of sable against her white shoulders and the weight of velvet trailing against her slim ankles. She wanted to be able to say "You maylcall for me at five, James" to a chauffeur in an irrcprouchable uniform and to order an $800 imported gown at Madame Julietteh without swift problems in mental arithmetic. Jeanne had no use for romance. She had seen too many girls back in Iowa whose beauty outrlvalled any of these artificial women in the llmoiisines, turn into drudgss after an encounter with Cupid. To Jeanne's mind, Ilove invariably keeps company with Poverty. A husband, well camouflaged as a checkbook, was the sum total of Je- anneh ambitions. Whether he be young or old, dark or fair, fat or lean, stupid or intelligent, did not enter into her requirements. The one indispensable qualification was his ability to amass the elusive dollar. . . . Wcarylng of the endless stream of Avenue traffic. Jeanne turned away from the window and switched on the lights under their rose silk shades. She drew a chaise longuo under the tall fioor lamp so that its roseate glow would fall on‘ hcr head when she had fiung herself into its dew cushions. Richard Canby, mpresenting thc cream of her wealthy acquaintance would be coming soon to take her to dine. Canby was inclined to corpulenco‘ there were grayish bags under his heavy eyes. and fine purple veins in his “ell-massaged cheeks. But he wore a fur coat that brought ,a thrill to the heart of Jeanne when aha thought of the dollars ft rep- exquislte and costly. Jewelled flower pins, vanity bags. gold cigarette cases. . . . From one of these latter. acquired at the last dinner, Jeanne extracted a gold-tipped, scented. cigarsttc and lighted it. She did it adroltly with- out singeing hcr eyebrows, extin-l gulshfng the match with a single; graceful gesture. That little trick had cost her three days of concen- trated effort. She lay back on the cushion, in- haling the scented smoke delfcatcly. Her eyes. half veiled in revery, wan- dered about the tiny but perfectly- appointed apartment. It was a aet- ting» for a. woman of fashion, even to the Dresden perfume burner on the taboret by the window. Ber sv- enfng wrap of velvet and fur lay across the foot of the couch and be- side ft were her longriwhfte gloves, a feather fan, and a vanity bag-one of Oanby’; trophies. Presently Canby would come and assist her into that wrap with thick fingers which would grace her throat as if by accident. Together they would desc ’ to his limousine where a uniformed servant would sat rigid behind the wheel. be standing beside the open door. a. fur rug over his arm, while another economy beauae t it is home, always use Squibb‘; resented. _ And he gave wonderful parties- more: and protects on! health in these cfliegively and we an u . 5. ’ ts u}? way-byykecpinszuidiedfpltieevalesby. 4. Squibb’: use i: true F49 1 Tin footman would tuck the rug about them when they were seated and move tho electric heater closer in Jeannck satin-shod fest. The scent of.’ lilies of thc valley in ths out- glass flower holder would be stifiinl in the artificial heat. Jeanne leaned her_ head luxur- iously back ' the cushion of her chaise longue. ‘Ihrough fir! smoke of her cigarette, curling bl- fore her half-closed eyes, sho looked into the Past with something akin to triumph in the little smile that curved her lips. Like s. flashback in a film, II lights of the Park, visible thmlllb the partially curtained windows, vanished. In their places were the flickering ~ gasllghts of an unpaved street in I small Iowa town. . . . She was walking quickly through the twi- light, hcr Jacket buttoned closely against the cold, her skirts fiappinl in the wind against her thick muddy boots. . . . She turned in at I frame house. . . . (To be Continued.) Oral Health demands this 5-Way protection Give your teeth and gum the ail-round can of a pleasant, refreshing toothpaste which pro- 5 eEecdve ways. u y. 2. uibb’: lirhel balleedingsgf the gm the m greatest ronecti so teeth d gums. S. Squibb‘: ocmbmsgferm adds this’: cauaeotlboth dear i You can ma: Squibb Dental Cream. Like all Squibb product! pure, efiective and rufi. For scientific tooth protection Ir Atnllpollvugfrflhflrlllllittill- SQUIBB DENTAL CREAICi: