. . .- ..--... _.., .. .. -—-¢-.'-"“""'"""'. "y" r PAGE TWO FREEDOM FOR Two i By MARGARET WATSON ‘- AFTER. X JEWEL. ROBBERY Rica lay awake most 0f the night, ll min to o0llecl; her though .» some sort of order. She ti 1. itt shc hoped. the most guliible (l; \\'t\!llt‘ll. She would not. for the .~ of one person's opin- ion, rtt her “hole system of ideas rib t. ii iiiuli she valued more that W“ ~‘ in ilic world. ' that Jon's '. e of lies, u wkwu rd ‘ ‘lit-d utvait. Jon kiiti .1. ftbtnit the early hustralinu .ltl\'\'llllll't‘, and about the Crntral Antt-ricun one-ship line; >0 llldcll W115 plftiii; but whose lllf‘ r veix-itili oi things wits thr- .= of COIUKH‘! But iibotit it‘? Slit- would stick to . were a criminal: wet-pied her state- ttin. Why, *0, terms? rue way, and cotiid be as- nct. often so '11 is wretched t , . in ilint dangerous 1'» ms n. risk in the i‘ ‘l Azitl-uliisptii" |)l‘(‘flll.\(‘ its 011-. \\0ti'tl ll, with his l1:.\ tiftriiig. and sc tlie law» 0f pro- f‘ be so very e in hi. fc out. 1.10) l. me with Jon Wlilttll of course. In the "i l tivli at. he!" --i- n mu- nf silcli tis-t: not see him he hinted thut must show him on or take the consequences of . Did lic ( - . . A “'33. soni thing which of course there wasn't- did he kno - 1".‘ Could he prove anythilr; ‘ I‘- he cntiltlirt. to prove. 'f‘n.~.~fng and ttmiiii: vrretchedfy, she fell asleep ill. last. through sheer exhattst-ltwn, . She awoke in the lute moming. for the moment iizioonsclou: of any dlsturbctive of her mental peace. She oven niiifw-rivl oily to Mar- tinis empty but tlm was a love- ly lliflffllllli. Then slic remembered, and it was no longer lovejv; but more by rea- son of bfartinli abscnse than be- cause riiij: sitar had been cast on him. She knew itli the calm con- fidence of (5.1) , that, Jon had told a pack of i s to bewilder her. Nfartin was perfect: ig he did was right. dressed, so that a 111g in the street. be- wiii-iozv glanced up :1 comes back t/s-day. . mirror, combing her brown hnir before it. It had grown rather lonu: she thought she would OQCHD" :12 and a_s1ir11iipoo. , dame Bjorlison and lier daughters. . {of action, and wounded one police- lhe morning with l course, he could not, tell her, trust. ing to mad. while her hair was out. It's useless 0o mo, said mica smiling. I litive the English papers, too. No thanks. You tell me the lo- cal iictvs instead" The girl told. Madame was the ftfadziuie who sang was she not? Tlicre had been a performance at. the opera on which the critics were lyrical. No doubt the English critics ucre also lyrical when Madame sane. And even slie, who knew very little about. music, had thoughts how bCflLllllUl when Madame sang in her room. 'l‘l1ere was a big headline in this nioriiiniis paper. There had been ti. robbery here ili Stockholm. and lllt‘ iliicf lincl got uwny with jewels worth tliottsaiitls- and thousands of krcnen. It had happened on one of the islands beyond the harbour: and the robbers had got away in a lust motor bout, although the ])Dl('l.‘ had been watching. And one of the policemen _in the pursuing bout had been shot and wounded, and tlie boat put out. of action. She thought it. must have been thrilling. Of c0ti1'.~e,shc expected the jewel; had been heavily in- stiied; but. they were very old, and veiy famous, ttnd she did not sup- pose the nioticy would console Ma- It. was a. shame, was it not, that the properly of private individuals should not be better protected‘? Everyone was talking about it. Eiicii silt quite still. It had all come back, the horror, the four, iii redoubieti measure; for now the doubt. all in a moment, looked like certainty. She Wit.» astonished at the calm of her own voice as it. ZLXKOCIZ when did this happen? Tcll me all it. says. Soon after midnight lust night. It says that the police had wind of a plan to break into the house, and were watching for the thieves all along one shore of the island, ‘where they had zuzrced to land. lltit lll“,\' tliliik the grim: must have ibccri wariit-tl llirit they were ex- 'pct-tcd. for tlir-y 1lp]il‘0f1"llt>.(l from ,the other shore. Ilnagiiie, it. i; al- lmcxst l1 cliff! You would say im- ipotssible to land there. but they did ‘it. One man climbed, it: says, but lthey do not know how he effected Icntraiice to the house. He must have bcen \'El"_\‘. very daring nud jclcver. The police knew nothing until they saw the boat, withdraw- ing. They gave chase, and then the |baiidlts~ imagine it!— opened fire ‘on them, and put their cnzine out; Iiii i1. I it not. n tcii-ible thing that. it" ns should be nllotverl to shoot people, and stcal from them, like 1 that? Erica was silent, it was all too ltcrrlble to be true, and yet. there -\t'ere the facts of it in black and ivhite, for everyone to read. Martin stole jewels worth thousands and thousands of krohen from the ‘summer residence of Mr. Bjornson. Martin shot at and wounded a policeman. The analogy was far too perfect now to nclmlt, of any mistake, or to be explained away by any theory of coincidence. The messenger ivho spoke secret; in German, the great. white house on the distant islet, Martin‘; eyes seeking it. out: specu- latlvely, contcntcdly. excitedly, from the bower of St. Nicholas, his change of plans, his story of sudden urgent business on Norrholm, his mention of the Pjm-ii-niis and their wealth, his refusal to confide in her, evcry’ detail iitted into piace like a. piece of Jig sawpuzzle. Of her as deeply as he might. It had MAYFAIR NO- 323 to All the splendor nnd magnificence of a statelv zrnpe arbor is brought the banquet or luncheon table by wcneted in squares ghed. tune" 1:501:31: l» 2:151:59“- no right and wrmifi The bord bkicd with , -to- ride .tund The patmmaiiégghlddeetjiilegligrt o? desgn and stitches used. i u; péttern nnd instructions for all of these designs, F“ compeqtnmps or coin (coin preferred) to The Charlottetown without abbrevl sttigrfitlafrllileqcltirlcwork Devflflmml- Uoe this will!!!" To rm Charlottetown Guardiw Needlework Drill- DESIGN N0. 1Z8 Name - — Street Address - — ~ - " “ T " _..- Province ——— — ———-———- Clly_--__._._- — ~ h d. d .1 n. cannot imagine a mowlilohnnrggrlloelnegqtigethcr, Vtfhcn the center is fin- rnade and crocheted to the completed cutter section. so designed that. the motif repeats itself correctlv frOm ti?“ if“ n19 up and dotiwl‘ nit/gs tiliiilétctfiinn‘ r1511 _ unc es o grapes 1m e - orslfivlcigitigiidriig to give grace and beauty. ,- u-\_..- ——— __.-._- ——— upur nun-unmask; this easy-to-make fllet cloth You The center cf the cloth l5 crochetlniz instructions Print your name and address plnluly. The hairdnaser offered s morn- . ..-..-.¢.--.- . ' I - Need Buildin -U ‘I u WHEN you feel out-of-aorts, when_ you've no flPDettte, or stom- ach gives trouble, yvitl: gas or acid indigestion, why n _o t t r y D r. Pierce’: Golden Medial Discov- .' erg. Read what Mn. Chan. Manning, l4 Welland Ave, St. Catharina, Orin, said: "Some time ago l was very pale and thin, and I felt tired and worn-out most of the time. I never cared l ealjnrl sleep didn't seem to refresh me. decided to tr Dr. Pierre’: Golden Medical Discover an’ my appetite was much better, 1am weight Ind ulrength, had more color in my cheeks nnd felt perfectly fine m every respect." Sold by druggists. New size, tablets 50c, liquid $1 and $1.35. , m been the gang's secret, 5nd i, unless he was prime mover in “in? affair. had it been necessary to summon liim at all? Slie could guess, now, what that message in German had been. We have the boat, ready, and the time-table worked out according to W111‘ Orders: but we think there's been a. leakage. What, shall we do? And the reply: r11 001110 myself. If the whole of the secret police are camped Iround NOlTllOllll, were striking tic-night. She said in a voice whose de- tached calm she could still admire: I dont think I'll have the manp DOO after all. I've Just remembered an appointment I must keep. She rushed back to her room, It was trite that she had remem- bered wmelhlllg. but it was not an appointment; it tvizs a folded news sheet. still crammed into the big handbag which had hoiieymooned with her in Dzilgtiiio. Kneeling up- on the rug,__shc pulled it out with tremulotis iiiigtirs, and spread ii; before her. sJlllElllillg round and shining slipped unnoticed from the folds, and feil silently upon mg thick rug. There itwas, the confirmation of her certainty; the account of B, jewel robbery which had taken place in Dalgano on the night; she had supposed Martin to be away i upon Koraxibo. How well she remembered. now, what she had said to him then in Jest: Just. fancy. Martin! While I was sleeping, and you were sticking to the side of Koranto like a fly, some indudrious person was break- ing and entering. 11nd getting away with a haul wort-h no end of money. And’. Martin had replled~how significantly she saw now for the first time: Serve tliem right! Good luckI to the enterprising Raffles, say . - 1S MARTIN A MURDERER. Erica felt suddenly feeble, and rather sick; conscious, too, that this was the first real crisis of her life, and that if .-lic cou'd face up to it. she had not altogether failed herself. What. were the mere thrills of a risky ski run, what. were the tenuous moments of fear in snow- storms on Koranto, compared with this deep and unexpected problem? She went to the telephone and rang up Jon. Hci- hands were quite steady; so was the voice in which she asked: May I speak to Mr. Bernstorn. please? The c001 voice of the girl Dagmar began to sny: I‘m afraid that's 1m- possible; he—, ’I‘lien there was a secuid of silence: and after it, the voice cf Jon himself. pitched rather lower than usual: (To be continued) _——'l era/ice] Tap Dancez_gdd to Your Popularity "Fun to watch Kit tap dance," you say from the side-lines. But whet about you‘! Why don't you share the spotlight-learn to tap dance by teaching yourself at home? Those rhythms Kit tnps out so gaily call for only a fcw fundamen- tnl steps that yo can easily learn. To make the ta sounds you use your feet in these four ways: (l) you strike the floor with the ball of the foot only; (2) you strike with the heel only; (3) with the tip of the mo; (4) with the whole foot. Simple, and fun to fit. these tap suunds to your favorite dance tune. Add-u you go along much lively steps an the "strut." Push the ball of the left foot against the floor, swing the right arm forward, the left arm backward; do the opposite with the right foot. Our‘ 32-page booklet clearly ex- plains and diagrams tap steps; gives easy practise routines; full length waltz. military, and buck routines for; entertaining. _ Send 20c in coins for your copy of Tap Dam-e to Add to Your Pop- ularity to The Guardian Home Service. Be sum Gigi write plainly vOUI Name and A dress, and thel Name of booklet. Name Street Address City Province f-ial “izd Pe Wlul cs5" you“; You Wed? lDorothy Dixl a Girl May Have There is An Offsetting Point, So You Trust to Luck When You Marry One of Them A yo g maxi asks me if I will list. for him the advantages and dis- “dmeii? t" "c. :li.:i.i.£.::;= "i... ¥€§.".....w1§“.sé’.‘i'éat"‘%i...‘€ 1) l . always a fly m e am r is no such animal as an ideal wife, d when you m arty you will have w take the bud in the good of your wife and thank Heaven it is no worse. Of course. there are exceptions to all rules, but, taking girls by and large, if you marry a beauty she will be easy 0n the eyes but hard on the Pocketbook. I01‘ “V1118 D10- tures must have frames that set: them off to the best advantage. Also, the beauty i; 5c- customed to adulation and she expects her husband to pinch-hit; for all the other men she gave u p when she married. Aimost a1. wvflys she is Spoiled and selfish. Also. the outside of her head- is generally better fur. nished t han the inside. But: her worst de- fectris that. her 200d looks don't last, and . when they are zone. what have you? ‘If you marry a rich girl, you will be saved a. lot of hard grubblng and having to worry over where the rent money is coming from and iiow you fire w trey the sroceéiiébill. but the hand that holds the purse rules the, ioost, and you will g mighty small Ln your own house, because it will be your wiles house and she won t. let. you forget it. You will always be Mr. Sally Smith and you willend up by being either your wife's pet poodle, who fetches and carries for her and does his little tricks to amuse her, or else by being t he dog in the manger that keeps her from doing the things she wants to do and that bites the hand that. feeds him. I! you marry a highbrow, you will have an inellectual companion with whom you can spend evenings in improving coiwersatiion, discussing art, and music and the literary trend, but she will know more about; the Einstein theory than she does about cooking. While she will feed your mind, your stomach wl.l be empty. _ If you marry a business woman, you are pietty sure to get. a wife who W111 be prompt and efficient and run her house on a budget; and save your money. She knows that. a business man can't; always control his time and she will not. throw a. fit, of hysterlcs if you do not punch the home time-clock on the dot. And you will have a wife to whom you can talk shop instead of one who yawns in your face when you try to tell her about; what happened at. the OlTlCB today. But you can't put; anything over on a. business wife, or get by with the alibi about the buyer from Cshkosh when you want. to stay down town and play poker with the boys. She has telephoned too many excuses to her bosses‘ wives. If you marry a. domestic girl who loves to cook and sew. clean and scrub, you will have a comfortable home and dinners that. are fell-S. but it is dollars to doughnuts that. your _wife will always smell of bread and butter instead of having perfume behind her e ar-i. and her cOnVHSM-lonlil repertoire will run from the price of butchers‘ meat to green 55005185» Also, you will have to wipe your feet on the mat before you enter your door and be careful when you drop your cigarette Bthes. If u marry s fashion-pgte girl, you will be proud to be seen out with he? but you will sell yourself into slavery to the dress shops and the milllners. Ii’ you marry a thrifty girl, she will pinch every penny and you will die rich, but you will never have any fun while you live. because she will count the cost of every pleasure and decide you can t; afford it. If you marry a girl with a maternal complex. YOU W111 hi"? 8 l" e family of children, but your wife will always treat you as a. moron be Y who has '00 be tofd what to e at, to put on is rubbers when it rains and not to cross a street. when there is an automobile coming. If you marry a. girl who is so much in love with you she cant bear You out of her sight. an will é» rrieatatggea flag]: gtmrigetrfiélirridgsbggegomtgefig in the end. So ere Y0 a . - DOROTHY mx thslrledmes- _ IeBgv9uiLt11<=lw~ With Every Advantage or Qualification That PllM Oll- lncl lovely. of the Orient. And today, with Flnl only Ollvo Ol|...Now, only Palmolive keeps the Qulm‘ skim lovely Palmolive i: 1'0 good, so nfe so mild, ll was selected exclusively by Dr. Dnfoejor ab: famnug Dionne Quinn. And you kif€ziréi , The Housewife " And Hei Activities mom and her own Pink dishfi- Louise would not, could not, 51W? anywhere but in her own Mother A SMILING FACE mrftroublec. despises a stnlllng ce a Goose bed: refused to eat fm And feeds on flurry and scurry anything but her Jack-and Just bury your grlefs for a little P191“?- Her cousin Frances was one of six. There were often visitors com- 111g m staiy all rtlght — aunts. uncles, and various choppers-tn. Beds were switched. frequently. The children had to triple-up and on occasion sleep on the sofa in the dining room. One evening at sup- per time Frances appeared in her pajamas and said soberly, "Murp- my, where will I s1 tonight. "Goodness," laugh her mother. space And look straight ahead-don't worryt-tHtexilry Edward War- ner. FRUIT AND CHEESE CONGENIAL FOODS Fruit for dessert ts not only good food. it ls also now ‘highly fashionable." Ekspecialiy when serv- ed wlth cheese. such as Oka. wtittyw; 4 "tweet Rioquefort or Camembert. Ii’ you are not in the habit of serving a cheese and fruit dessert, begin this pleasant custom alt your next Sun- day night. supper. Preserved fruits as well as fresh fruits make tasty alliances with cheese. Preserved figs drained and stuffed with a mixture of cnealm cheese and a dash of salt: and cay- enne are tasty novelties. Roque- font makes a plquant stuffing for large prunes. Large black grapes chilled. and seeded, are delicious stuffed with plmentc cheese._ PREPARE CHILD FOR DISCOM- ‘FORTS LIFE GENERALLY HOLDS We lmow that. children develop well in a. contented atmosphere. But we also know they must de- velop a certain immunity to the pricks of life. There are countless ways of lizirmless-ly shaking the child out of hés groove that won't hurt him a bl Contrast. for instance. these two children. Louise had her own blue ‘In your own bed, dear, of course.’ Last a few tears are dropped over poor little Frances, may we warn you that latter in life she will be happier than Louise, who in all likelihood will go to the hospital with broken nerves if she has to give up her c/um oar and ride in a b us. There is advantage in children expecting the regular and the fa- miliar. But it. can also be carried too for. small substitutions now and then in childhood prepare the waiy for easier acceptance in ma- turity Who envles the old lady who didn't know who she was when she lost her pettlcoat? Who feels pity f0 rthe clamelson that blew up when he found himself on a plaid ribbon. A DAY IN THE LIFE 0F A PRINCE A gentleman was motoring alone ‘ I THE COOK'S a country road with his aide-de- comp when he sa/w flames lssuinz from the roof of a. farmstead. He draw the situation. A ntimiber of pg: HERE'S WHAT COLD GATCIIERS SHOULD KNOW WHATARELIEEI mitts‘ l GREATQFOR A Inn con CERTAINLY is specialized medica- tlon-Vlcks Vu-trtrnol— ls upreuly design-ted for the mound upper throat, where moat colds begin-and grow. Used in time-at the first sneeze or snlfilc or irritation ln the none-it helps to pre- vml many colds, or to throw ofl‘ head colds ln their early saga. Even when your head ll all up from a cold, Va-tro-m brings comforting relief-Jets you breathe again! Vicxsfig} VA-TRO-NOI. Kldllllaldy-“Unilflfl up to the house and. jumn- . ing out of the car, took stock of ‘ but; there was not one amOllllg them who could direct operations. So this gentleman, seeing how things were, took charge. It lbecalme at once apparent that. it was too late to save the house. so he concentrated his efforts on the goods and chattels. Forming a chain of the bystanders. he him- self went inside and began handing but furniture. ‘time and again he appeared in the smoke-filled door- way carrying chairs and tables, pic- hires and china, Only to vanish again the minute after. Even when the human chain broke because some were unalble to endure the host. he presistled in his labor, so that finally he had to be fetched out. by force, and o. few minutes mftlerwards the roof flell in with a crash. The gentleman proved to be Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden. He was covered with soot and his clothes were ruined. But what did he care for that? He liad had a chance of doing the work of a man, and he was happy. BOLEROS AME FEATURED IN STYLES FOR- SPRING New Youth-Winter or no winter. those fortunate-people whtraro heading South for vtwwtlfitls Me dashing around nssemlbling warm- weather wardrobes, and those who are headed North are rushing albcut equipping themselves for ice and snow sports. Looking southward and towards spring here's the opinion of a group of stylists and importers when their returned from Paris. Everything for spring has a touch of color somewhere. and the boero CORNER urn ..~;~1\'..r' PUDDING 2 088-‘ 3-4 cup white sugar l teaspoon baking powder 1 oup chopped nuts i cup chopped dates. Method: Beat the eggs and add the stgar gradually, continuing to beat until the sugar ls dissolved. Sift the flour and baking powder over the dots and n-uts which have n . Mix well and add to the beaten egg mixture. Turn into a. well-greased pan and bake in a moderate, 325 deg. F. oven for about. 35 min-uses. Cut in squares and serve, to with whi ped czrearn. Or cru le the pudd , mix with the whipped cream and serve in sherbet glasses. CRANBERRY PUFFS 1 cup cranberries 2 tablespoons sugar 1-2 cup melted butter 1-2 cup fine fruit sugar 5:4 cop milk 68¢ 3-4 Otlp sifted flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1-4 teaspoon salt. wathod: Roll the ci-snbebbrta in 2 espoons sugar; you can OD them lf vou like, w make tthnn stick better. Beat. the and add the milk. sift the dryqggredienta, thou add the mft and q; slim-- k . More flllfl 3,000 years ego, slave: blended the tropical ace oil: of Olive sud Palm. This costly mixture, crude though it wua, played n mos: important par: in the toilet of beautiful women. They knew it soothed their ukiu, kept it soft, clean “Jmoozh For 5,000 years nothing has been dis- covered that is finer, gender, more sooth- ing for your skin than these wonderful oils the mos: careful scientific methods, rhese same precious, l... d Soup. toilet soap. ifivle nacunl oils us blended into Palmolive i now, becuigsirhey were “n?” Pmu‘. h premature u mu, eit- h.‘ d‘ ad.‘ t...‘.‘.i‘1‘.'.t'.lt'.l‘..'i§§2..‘.‘.: <1 P '“" ~"'.~»-»2’- rive. Surel ifPulmoliv: ‘m’ ‘h’ 9:‘ "nmwui he,” d“ "h". ‘kl-m in Pllmqllve u reullyu thrill, ‘moo Md pert-ecu, especial] since the new health condition ircm “Km” "°l°"|7' P" keep lllyour skidlovcly ggldced mo; m" 9 “w ' mo. Geuomsxoday. "mn" ' ma“ 5° 01w: 0|; Palmolive’; purity; its safe, gentle, pane. crating lather; nnd its natural, delicate colouring, are due only no the secret blend. in; of these two age-old beauty lid!- So, knowing what Palmolive is made widu, you can use if safely, without fear, for your own delicne skin. Truly, Palmolive Wm keep in your complexion that loft, lovely youthfulness. In 72 countries of the world, more women use Palmolive than any other "I'm thrilled with Ibo New Improved Palmolive,” My! MRS. C. BIAIRSTO, Indy Villipq naili- ..0 d I Palmolifgfbmn, but not . Prom new on iflthrifiy to use." is one of the newest. looking and ungest fashions. They comment- ed on the variety of boleros, pick- i out three definite types:-—the bo ero that is part 01f’ a suit and may be attached to the jacket. the bolero over a dress, and the bolero with sash attached. Evening gowns that are built up were singled out as another fashion that looks promising. Seveffll d8- signers were favorably impressed with the ‘fleas undressed effect" for evening wean. Again, the wide- skirted gown of tulle, with bold contrasting bands of color worked vertically or horizontally, was dis- cussed as one of the most. exciting evening fashions. In daytime dresses the "top treat- men " that distinguished rnode‘s for afternoon was singled out. Design- ers thought; that the daytime sli- houette was heater and more re- vealing. but at the same time more = wearable than last season. The growing popularity of sheer-s be- cause they dralpe so effevtively. was A MorningSmil ‘ Hotel Manager; “Here are somf photographs which ive very 800i views of the hotel you'd lltkotd you, lir." 118 I‘vo got my_ which I'm going to take away will me.” First Tall Sim-v 'I‘eller: "Yea. sk. I actually saw a man swim the Atlantic. Second ‘It! Story ‘relic: ‘l sureamglad tiohearyousuyn. I couldn't get people b0 believe it. but now I have u. witnes. I wits the i_'n_an that did it." The evening gown that is built up to right under the chin. and sometimes has covered shoulders. . llghtful dress with rever iieck..... ‘ belted waistline and long sleeves of is a type that one importer pich for the less formal spring _s_c1§0_n_ l FASHION GUIDES... ' FOR THE l HOME DRESSMAKER A two color deringote type dress plays double duty.....for winter wardrobenmand for spring town without a coat. It has a flattering soft. draped bodice and slim corse- let waistline... ..brtef short sleeves. Lovely as can be, too, in plain and print crepe. With the same pat- tern. you can make another de- an interesting falbris comment. plete stop lay-step instruction chart included. Style No. 3423 is designed for sizes l4. 16. l8. 20 years. 32. 34. 36. 3a 40 and 42-inohes bust. Size 36 requires 2 1-3 yards of 39-inch mn- terlal with 2 3-8 yards of 30-inch contrasting. Send fifteen cents (150) in stem s or coin (coin preferred) wrap con carefully, address to mmrlottetown Guardian giving:- Btyle No. 3423 Sizem. Name Street Address Olty ' "" natlely with the butter. Fold in the atigaied cranberries. Fill small buttered custard cups 3-4 full. Ttl: atbgaieudoi med iiper over e an se a h... oontqtning enough hot water to come half way upthe c .‘ Bake in a moderate. 3'15 deg. . oven for 30 minutes. Unrnould and serve with o. thick custard sauce.