PAGE craves; NQVEMBER 29. 1949 (d. Miracle Furnace B, F.1d. MacArthur “Lonely Parade 23W i. "I do. Since it had to be this way, I'm glad it's over and done with I wish them well, No grudge. I wouldn't have them any other way than happy. They wili be, over in Europe, with what they have to live on." "You must put them out of your mind now, as if they had never been." "Yes, what is done is done. No brooding. I valued what I had when I had it. Lost it. I'm a taker-of- liIe-as-it-comes." The words had no vitality. They seemed to crumble as he spoke them. "It's the decree coming today-does something to the very heart o! u. man, Kittyz" "My dear friend.‘ "You three gals have missed a lot, but your kind is spared a lot, even if you miss a lot." "There are things, John, s wo- man doesn't want to be spared." He sighed and turned his Iace toward the wlnoow oLt of’ which the prairie dog stared into the West. "I never owned her," he said ir- _ relevantly, "so I guess a man can't be said to lose what he never had. The half a loaf she gave me should have been gall from the start. In a way it was, but I kept hoping." He struck the table a loud bang, as if his thoughts hurt him. "ll-‘s better this way. The only thing to do was to let it go on happening-J’ “My poor,poor John," she said. and patted his hand until all oI a sudden he jumped back from it. {as if her cigarette end had touched m ears gt-om now we may our homes with the miracle furnace which neiltlgf have been working Oil i118“ . ‘or some time. m gVEfYdflY Twenty y Fannie Hurst m heating lingo, the new méaclti- "heat umP" a" 1*‘ u" l’. califdtoaextract Iheat from bo- llwflwn surface of the earth and the 1t to the home. One such hmflgryurnuce may be seen in tne t < r It! oi ‘Pgsffixtfnaxtgevhtiiiitgcrle Sjtgtcess m opera w; have now learned how Mme; the earth's heat so to “WWI, be made to heat homcs, thlln 01,15 and warm water to Mk 1113;“; temperature. Below a In dc level the earth never free:- cmuhzi n; we go down deeper in- me fiound the earth's heat 9° < in frigid zones (58? at ‘nuoascmiytvotir the surface) ti“: l“ Iutbtdfi?‘ is around 32 degrees. “mpemlht latitudes it wrrld be In warno, (Wurst Fm can, m]. fisher} ((1 icct of dcplh, one de- dmom; heat is picked UD- G01!!! ‘m? 0t a ‘dcpih of 50ml! W h“- grgua, can heul. a modern home ,0 70 degrees. ’ s small enough Th',,glfi,1t?ed"frf1§n1y attic or cellar, “We rouclilv speaking, here's how vtrhworkwfl ‘Atlllidlfiil ti) the Dllml) ,5 , 10,301 q" pi-‘c into which has wen pluccil ll solution culled "r8- 11ml" Non", when this refriger- is lorccd down the pipe ('31P is at first, cold) it begins to i hr-nt. The mrthcr ll()\\'ll it more heat it picks hCJlZ int liquid pick at _ m“ is ‘gimme rtturii trip this ‘ilypn-ctztiin-ll because thf‘ Dlllfl‘ l5 "i, insulfllvli. Once inside the ‘n um heated liquid 15 6"‘- mrmn; Results: temperature is lurthcr s‘i(‘l)nysd up, 'I_‘ho lint lrlgcrdlli is now forced oy m? D,l1‘I‘~l1 m; other mils, which in turn farm the nir passing over them. 1t i5 this warm air which heats the homo. When the refrigerant bc- in! to cool. the pump one"! IOYPES Wdown through the pipe and the urocess i» rcpcntcrl nil over azillfl- But hero's another sumYl-‘flni! thing, namely: In hot weather the iwner can pull a switch and, presto! lhs direction of the liquid is re- versed. causing the refrigerant to [Kflk the hcnt from th» 1101156 llilfi trsnsier it to the earth. "I liked herl I liked her so much that I stooped to make myself sat-- isficxi with what was left. And so we went on cheating each other. I could have gone on stopping to take what was left, but the sick- ness in her blood for the squirt got to be too much for her. She was a sweet woman." "You're the one to be concerned about in this situation. John, b’:- csuse you matter most." “A man at the end oi’ a road doesn't matter. Since it happened the days Just pass, and me with them. Getting toward the end, l guess." Chapter XXXIII Kitty had her hand on his again. pressing it down against the table. “Don't say that, John. Life is too good to be thrown aside as if it were an old rag-you're too 800d." "Mine is-an old rag. I've had my day. It's been a good day. But love Ior life is running out o! me like sand, I've had my shave, though. More up than downs. Mamie in her beginnings. What a woman! Children that have turr-ecl out well. A daughter in Sierra that doesn't happen to many men. Tragedies have crushed me down, but I won't leave life feeling cheat- ed. And, except for Sierra, I won't leave it feeling regretlul." "Don't say that, John." “When all is said and done, al- lowing for three fortunes, losing two, and fearing God as much as the run o1 the-m, my country and Sierra are as much as I've go» to show for my life's work. And that's n very great deal. America gave me life and I would give mine back for her. There's millions like Flor- ence, but women like Sierra don't happen along every day, any more than saints do. Her mother, thank NEW PAKISTAN INDUSTRY KARACHI. Potlsian — (GP) — lelristsn‘: first W001 factory WW1“! it Gujrarisvala. in West Punlflb province, in Novoznlber. The factory will produce 30,000 yards of yarn u! month. KITTEN GT1‘ TOWELS God, lived long enough to know that." "You're right, John. Not oven you, her father, know what I know about her. There are hundreds who would rise up and call her blessed, ii they only knew her name or address. She works like that." "Don't tool yourself. I know. She thinks she's done with her inherit- ance, the way her sister Florence is. But there's another million I have cached away for her." "I‘hot's grand of you, John. She'll spend it the way one of the saints would have spent it, if you could imagine 5 saint having q cool million to spend." "I wish the wasn't quite so iono- some seeming. Even with friends like you-it sticks out all over her." "You don't mean lonesome, John. Ii’ anything, there are too mnny people around Sierra. You mean lonely. That starts in the heart and has not to do with lonesomaness." "Call it what you will. Stone's that." "When it comes to that, you can't tell any of us in Twenty-one East anything about that state of’ being known as loneliness. Has it ever occurred to you, John, that a mfin like you and a woman like me, ooth a bit dusty from the long road. might find themselves a bit lone- some for each other, without quite realizing it?" "Can't Say it has. Kitty, but it's something to think about." "You see. I've figured it out. You're the newly divorced husband of a woman who didn't sutifciciitly value the qualities I respect and value." ..I_.. "On top of all this. you happen to be the father o! o. woman who means more to me than almost anything in the world. John, there's still time! Let me make the re- mainder of lile over foo- you. For us both. I'm a good maker-over. I'm not a Sierra, who apparently was sent to brood over the woes o: the world and do something about them. I'm just a smart girl from Kerry Patch. I'll do with your life what I can do with s room. Brighten it. Cratonne it. Flood it with l'ght. Let me re- furnlsh and refurbish your spirit. I'm ambitious, John. You know that. I know that. But your happi- ness will come first, and i! my ambitions becomes a nuisance. the ambitions will have to go. But they won't. I'm smart like that, John. And one of my ambitions will be never to clutter up your life with what you don't want. I want to be all things, John, to you-to the lather of my Sierra. It's what gave me the courage and the-impud- once-to come here tonight and take this chance of being thrown out of the house of the father of the woman I love best in the wurlzi. Johhl" To be continued _ motifs about 3 bv 7 Txoxgfh Pflllllllvtc instructions. o Nomi‘; 59nd 20 cents in coin l liwrk Burcziu, Charlotte- PTOVlXICC cans/u, TREAT EVERY on m -,----'/I' III/ York Highlights Mrs. Vernon Hughes and Mrs. C. Phillips ot Harrington were vis- itors to York last week The many irlends ofMr. Frank Watts who is a patient in the Prince Edward Island Hospital, wish him a speedy recovery and hope to see him home again soon. Mrs. John Jay of Pisquld who has been vacationing in York for the past two weeks, the guests of her sister, Mrs. Harry Swan and Mr. Swan, motored to Stanhope and is now the guest ot Mrs. Jaimes MucLauchlan. A school meeting of York trus- tees and ratepayers met in Ves- sey’s store on Thursday evening nt 3 O'clock for the purpose of decid- "18 011 Iilans for a new school one GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN an.“ noun AMERICAN ms l.. S. STEVENSON Dorothy lllx Says — Continued from page 2 SAVE YOUR DOLLARS Iraneh Manager Q Yet I cannot bear to live him up and the worry over it is killing me. - 14° R|CHMQND 57- What. shall I do? ' All Pmfin x- hr Pdicyhdd.“ ~ ANSWER: Marry the man and forgot the past. Be a real mother fine women. Don't be afraid their heredity. Environment works wonders, and, if you bring 1h se little girls up in a clean home that is full of love and happiness and instill ideals o! purity and honor in their minds, there will be no danger of their following in their mother's footsteps. And think what a great missionary work you will be doing. What greater good could you do in the world than to lake this poor dis- traught man, with his helpless little children, and give them a wife's and a mother's love and care and comfort? And I um sure you will get your reward in having your old romance come true at last after so many trials and tribulations. to these poor little rgtherless children and rear them up into being and to start preparations prepar- atory toward constructing the nevi modern two room school. The plans are according to those pre- scribed by the Department of i-Jll- ucation, Charlottetown. Mr. Howard Watts, employee of the Canadian National Railroad, P.E.I. division, left recently for Melville where he is now employ- ed. Mrs. Howard Watts intends to leave shortly to join her husband there. PATTERSOWS JEWELLERY STORE i i l this coat very badly. Should I accept it? mham§mmmmm FRANZ ANSWER: Certainly not, Girls should not take expensive giftl from men to whom they are not engaged. One good rcnson for ihil is that the man always expects to be paid for his gift. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally i0 renders, but will answfl problems of general Interest through her column. DEAR MISS DIX: I am n young girl working in a department. store and love prclly things. One of my many admirers wants in give me a coat, My mother objects. We are not engaged. I want NEW -§—.-- POWER for the aily Was New Lux is blown from high power job Into high-powered concentrated soap grains} BRAND NEW illX |1as j power only LIIX, famous for lho best in soups, oldwg o give you a cleaner wasli than ever before Q It really is wonderful. No washday soap gets clothes cleaner, whiter, brighter. And no washday soap is more eco- nomical. New Lux is blown from high-power jets into high- , powered concentrated soap grains that wash everything with the greatest of ease! With this new method you actually get 40"’, more soap power in each package at no more cost! 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