regs "jrvgo LITTLE LULU FURRIER Pour. ms. c-mu- calmn- hudnei on. us Wuldl for Paramount's lam! w T.M. Reg. Con. Pit (M. A special process kueps Kln-unl-x LIIXURIUUSI. SOFT- DEPENDABLY STRONG Only Kleonefi‘ hos Hie SerwcPTrssi/e‘ Box that serves up [usi one cloub/eeiissuc- n! n time‘ UTTLE LULU cartoon in lodnlsolor oi your hvoorlto linulu ~=m..__ ~~\;~ ,j\r 7\’)~'> "-$' i iiuso m: mu- Mr. o . "Mr. Cohen told you about his littio nephew, was all his classes. Mr. Oohen was ter- ribly proud of -" "0! B9 was worried properly or help him bring up is own—-" "Little daughter. Little Rachel." "Little daughter, Rachel. So he» asked your advice about the chil- advioe about the clothes. You and he taked a long while and the next time you went to St. Johns- buTY- You found you needed—" “Some more stockings." . "some more stockings. So you went into Mr. Cohen's store again, hoping that perhaps this time you might see Benny too, bemuse it was Saturday. And sure enough there was Benny, and you risked him if he wouldn't like i0 o to the movies because you h no one to go with you—" “Yes Yes. Yes That was just the way it started, Alix But. it didn't stop there. And now I don't know what to do." CHAPTER 47 Rhoda bent her head and her tears began to flow again. Alix went on in her quiet way- "What do you want to do,‘ Rhoda? Whatever you want to do i, grobobly the thing you ought to o " "I want to bring Benny home with me when I come back next time I want to have him with me at t-he Abbott Homestead I want to keep him there. I-I love him. I don't see how I could love him anymore if he were my own child." "Prihiavps you chuldnlt. Doant his uncle want him to come to the Abbott homestead with you, Rhoda?" "Yes, he'd be glad in have Ben- ny comg home with me. But—" "Is there any other reason, "Maybe you didn't understand. Alix. You seemed w, but maybe “Of Benny, but Just the some he h because th , without anyone to bu“ dren. Just as you had asked his 1 ,dsyn in [disinclination to meet Judith?" figs, why you couldn't bring] she." n "rm: cnsacprrslowut cusnoum Aiilyns. .ondW houseiookinsior-Alk He! dhrorithedoorrook ougver e ll . "What's pectinl sh "we a reasonable ox- pflttfltz. it? Why should you be upset about that?" "It might be a reason-able ex- pectation if we weren't harvestinfl’ oats Just now. trying i0 "F1131 b1- fore the weather breaks. It looks u if it were going to rain tonight. and i! it does, thavll do enough dmtage. without inviting anv more through unecessary delay." "And are the oats and the wea- ther, the only your factors "You must know that they're not. You must know I don't want‘ to see her anyway." "But you've got lo see her. She's going to be here for a number o! days. She's made a great effort to get leave so she‘ oould be home st a time when I needed her." "She's made s. grelt effort to be here at a time when you'd be in bed, so that she can say and do ifnmtse pleases without interfer- enoe.’ "Without interference? Do you feel that I have interfisoed with anything or anybody on Farman Hill Dexter?" its salvation. But Judith likes manage in her own way. She likes to criticise and lecture. 518's al- ways been ungracious and now be disagreeable. use "bio. of course not. You've bee‘: ' she'll be jealous." "Jealous?" Unjlst From Belgrade-d); ¢,|,|e__. a" °"“-"."‘.‘Y'? insole» with 6 61m, 5"‘ "u"! I"! ‘fill-and g m4", ‘I h hip. " ' m u d h: h‘ Yufllvl- ihndavd xii-n»- Knish-o typical Jiffy’; 3'3"" You'll m | vlvld ma”... ,; m, d,‘ . n?” "i ' "Will-ll llilllcluaivo interview fan's “d. ‘ HII: week in The Slsndlrd Mlgulno. n our ARMY-Standard w u l u- Ilorlous nrionu hofluby Gondlln ":2": loolsnowrllvlllolpllllh“flor‘ - ' MIIIIlM Inhm. . Am," n "I u“ “h IUILD YOUR OWN HOMI! The Shade ‘ ' t |IOI a nun and Ills wild lull! this u" y“ 0pm limo-n an onimnoly in: Qofl, n m“ ADULT SCHOOLq-Conodlu; i, w Ilul adult school: lo Incl: In lsialoln”. 17m“ education, m" ply dlvldlndg l. "MIG," “n” Lin" ullh, KAT! Arrxlws mum 1., "gfi M, M,“ n "m, H‘ rind MIIIINOI, lulled oral: alien, hi“ ‘u, ‘m, m. u‘ nuns cmln pie. I.C.N. IAIIIS lo Hello: Indlul choir-up, sq] "m" un. ll Ibo lhlihx Woll-lsiy Cllnh. h.‘ Q5. '1...“ val: In The Standard nlouum. m‘ GheStandard m: FASTISI-Slllllld wmmu lmvsrsm m III suunnm MATCII scan! T0 an 1 w. A l t ’ .___ m v8 ve or velveteen m“ you didn't. Benny-Benny's a “Y3, Because she might have cut on the bias gives warmm and we” a matching w“ 3311:?! 01' lllilury to the costume 511d dlvves to match your cont or‘ of tlhefilfatmegrlaoltwiywh“ the color done and been so much like what you've done and been, Alix. A comfort and a help to her parents. A partner end an l to me. A leader and a creator in the v neighborhood . And she wouldn't. be didn't think than role was big enough foa- her." little Jew boy." "Why of course I understood. He wouldn't have been a refugee _ from Germany unless he had been a little Jew boy. would he?" “But Alix, there—there‘s newer beeeaii a’ Jew at the Abbott Home- “SL1- JOE PAL A _ K‘ w By nan rrsasn Out Our, Way ENGINES FOR SALE We ofier for solo: 1 STUDEBAKER PRESIDENT-B CYL- INDER. V 1 PEERLESS-S CYLINDER. 1 MASTER BUICK—6 CYLINDER. These engines are mounted as stationary eng- ines on frames, complete with Clutch and Drive Pulleyy all 'recently"ov'erhaiiied and in good running order. May be seen at Lumber Yard. L. M. Poolerd ilompany CHARLOTTETOWN-BOX 392 By J. gliillVilliams I'M HAVlHG . -- _ QUWE A arr- ‘Q ~ 1151b 3Q???’ * D" TKQUBl-E ». oven "n-v PHONE véifiifii ~1 we» AN . '. COME OVER. AN‘ HEiLP WITH "rooua ‘l .. ,_ LIKE you .\\\ YQLI so i: Due UP I, FELLOW$I i ' William/h . take time to go to "Nov, I suppose not And there's never been a Catholic on Farman country what it is-the Fannans, and the Abotts and the St. Gym, and the Cohens—and ifhe times coming when we're going to make it a greater country than it ever was before because we're all going to work for it together! There's only one thing you need to tell me. one thing that I'm not sure I have straight, thouszli I believe I have. Was it your idea that Ben- nv should come to the Abbott homestead alone. Rhoda? Or was it your idea that Mr. (Johen and Raohed would come too?" Annoy Little by little, Dexter had come to resent any intrusion on the time which he shared with Alix. When Serena rem‘ ' ’- him that Judith's arrival was immin- ent. with the obvious assumption that he would meet the express at the iunction, his reaction to her inoffensive remarks was one of acute if unreasonable annoyance. "Gosh Mother Human, I can't the Juncti Our Boarding House L‘ any Public "part "I think, Dexter, that you are very unjust. I must ask you not talk in the way that you are doing now. It is moat unbecoming. "I am not‘ ca. able or taking n the war or o! qusliylng for an important pro- fession," Alix went on wiiih her customary calm. “I was not even a success B4 a salesgirl working in a Jewelry store. _If I had been, possibly I should not have been so delighted to leave it ‘Hie only sort of thing I can do is the simple sort you sec me doing here, which you praise far too hlrhly. by the "It is the only sort of thing I want to do. I am very rhapgwy here. I was contented at the con- vent with the nuns, and my rel- atives were always very kind to me when I visited them. But I a1- hlmv going to have I baby. I a/m not dreading the tkn is so near now. I understand that I shall suffer, but that seems to me incidental. s mean to an end. ‘Ihere an not mony things worth having that are easy to get, Dex- (Continled Tomorrow) With Major Hoople aortas: coAs-relz! SEEN ‘M BEFORE < m, SAC “- _ OH-ITQ JJST A COLO- HE MUBT ETAY IN THE HOUUE ‘TONIGHT- -I'M GURE HELL E OK»! BY TDNORROW- HJT ' HE MUST NOT’ 6O OUT WHRI’ DID SAMMVS UNCLE ACC "us: a UNCLE or EY mew wow 31am ao-m as LL11:- I‘ AN’ I'M GOIN’ ‘TO LI¢0<9AMMY TDO-JCAN r pu-rou MY NEW surr 1o snow ETHEL .<.-ni£-i\§‘\