1 PAGE TWO 8:» ;.;,\I;. v‘w vv b Pi. (Continued) It was here that Mr, Larned showed that his unhappy experi- ence had not. gone for nothing. He was determined to leave nothuig to chance. He was determined that everything should contribute to- ward making the young people willing to niiirryi each other-al- though, ot‘ CullTrL‘. there was not the slightest reason why they should not b4. But he made his w-l‘ and it ‘Pills a niodel of iii 'li[,\'. in 1i he .\ll(l that. his gzxiiilliiiigiiti-i" Deborah sllOllld inherit tiic Jill-Ll‘ 11.111 oi his for- tune. llilitlllllllilll 10 SOHlUlllllXlQ 0V6!‘ a million do in government bonds, if and y if she married Stuart Graham on or before her tWelitfw-ilrsi. llifliltltl)’. On her tv.'e1it_v-lirst blfillil ' her grand- father fiic iicie alive. would be eigl1ty'-t'iie yi-urs 0i‘ age. It was not lil- .v lllill he would live long after that (lll'4_‘., so the oId uian Iiiceci the Sliiliiiltlll >qiinrel_\': if he should die before licr t‘ nty-first blftlltill)‘, she lliitl her urandinot.her were to inc on lill‘ iiiconic from a selected list of more profitable iecuriiie< chosen by him with great care; and ii iliinu Happened to prevent Di" ll from marrying younl.’ (‘vi-iiliiiiii. lilfll the fortune was to go io l-ii.iriiies. but she was to have the income from the se- curities for life. The latter was sufficient to make her comfortable and keep her from want or poverty: but it “as not SliifLClPIIlZ to attract the attention of a seoiindrelly fortune hunter such as her father had been. The will was carefully planned Ind executed, and Grandfather milled and nodded to himself whenever he thought of it. An absolute fool-proof and rogue-proof plan, he slid to ill? wife over and over. In her gentle way she agreed. Grandfather had died when De- borah was Just past fifteen; and things had gone quite smoothly for nearly three years longer, with Gary managing overytiiiiig. the house. the business letters. the money matters. But. then some- thing strange and unexpected had happened out in the world, and Gary began to go about with a worried frown. Finally,'--and De- borah ivas eighteen then-she had made him tell her the truth. There was something about a. crash in New York, something had toppled and fallen, and their care- ful list. of securities had collapsed Into a. carele-s heap which was bringing them scarcely enough to live on. Grandmother didn't know. pf course. Grandmother couldn't be told anything like that. Garyi had been most. relieved to tell Deborah. and it. had been good fun at first. to think of themselves as poor. Oi‘ course it would be only iXEEEYQu-r ? Alwayslifed~ ‘WHEN EXI-IAUSTEDlN MIND mo aonv, 711m fora ~r> m HAMILTONS PlllS You seldom sec a woman who is pale and utterly worn out, who doesn't suffer from headache and constipation. lilost women can have sparkling eyes and ruddy cheeks if they will but use Dr. Hamilton's Pills. To- night tuke two Dr. Hamilton's Pills and note how much fresher you feel tomorrow morning. Your face will be clearer, your appetite better, your spirits brighter. You'll quickly regain those happy Iltlilh looks you once were proud ‘to think about. No other medicine can do so much for you as Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. DR. HAMILTONS PILLS Woman ’s w-Mu- l ll-va cl- until Deborah was twenty-one, and then they would be wealthier than ever. Until Deborah was twenty- one—it had run like a. thread of song through everything they did, through all the little subterfuges to keep Grandmothe from knowing, through the hard work, the gar- dening, the building of the smoke house to cure venison and fish for the larder, the cutting down and making over of Grandmother's old clothes for Deborah, the enlarging or Grandfather's things for Gary. And then, suddenly, Deborah was twenty and s. halff Twenty and a half, and marriage was something unknown and frightening. What was marriage Why did a girl have to marry a man. a young man she had never seen, and . . - . well, when she did marry him, what happened? Grandmother wouldn't‘. explain. Shc said Stuart ‘was a gentleman, and anything Deborah didn't quite understand. he would explain to her. But it wasn't. enough. And, for the first time in her life, De- borah couldn't ask Gary. Gary knew she didn't know, and he knew she was beginning to feel terrified and cold inside about it. And his kind old face was lined and heavy, and his eyes followed her about Wltll misery and worry. They talked about love. Well, that was easy. Deborah loved Grand- mother dearly, her sweet, fragile old face, her. tender hands, her soft gentle smile. She would have done anything for Grandmother. But it wasn't like that; Grand- mother had said so herself, blush- ing furiously. She said the love a woman had for her hunband was something quite different. stronger, more wonderful. Stuart Graham was writing to her now. He had begun when she was twenty, and over the first letter Gary had shaken his head and said it sounded very sudden, some- how; and over the second he said the fellow seemed to want to know an awful loi. about what. kind of investments Grandfather had left his money in. Gary had gone so far as talk that over with Grand- mother, and she had raid quietly that of course the dear boy was in- terested, since he would so soon have control of the estate; and that the Grahams had far more money than themselves and always had. Gary couldn't suggest to her, of course, that the Grahams might not have their money any longer. He and Deborah talked it over, and Deborah had said, with those cold fingers at her heart and a smile on her lips, that it. didn't matter whether Stuart had any money or not, that surely she had enough for two, and the situation was that if she didn't nmi-ry him, poor or not poor, there wouldn't. be anything for any of them. The time was dowel-ate. Gary said miserably that. they wouldn't be able to pay the taxes on the only home they had, if’ they didn't get: some money soon. So of course there was noth- ing to do but g0 through with it. And then the very worst thing of all happened. For some reason that Grandmother couldn't unden- stand, except that since a Graham had done it there must. be a reason and a good one, Stuart had joined the navy two or three years ago. And now something had occurred, something he didn't quite explain. As a result, he was not going to be able to leave his ship by Deborah's twenty-first birthday. For a few days, Gary and Grandmother and Deborah were thrown into consternation; and al- though for a moment when his letter first came, Deborah had run out and hugged a tree for sheer joy, she had seen in no time that something had to be done. Stuart had a. plan. He had gone on to ex- plain that, fortunately enough. his shi-p would be with the rest of the Pacific fleet, anchored in Golden Gate harbor in San Francisco bay; and that it. would be quite simple after all. Deborah could come down and meet him in San Pran- cisco, and they could be married there. Quite simple for Stuart, perhaps. hut a most upsetting idea for De- borah and Grandmother and Gary. Obviously, if Deborah went, she must. go alone; since Grandmother could not possibly go, and Gary could not possibly leave her. And Deborah had been so little in the world; she had never traveled any- where alone. The world was a Tone thg§yatem huge noisy whirling place, and she THE WN GUARDIAN i Dorothy Dix’: Letter Box l The Best Way to Hold a Man_ After You_H8V¢ Attracted Him is to be Entirely _Fem11une, Observe His MooI-clils and Fall 1n With 1m Dear Miss Dix-We are three girls who have no trouble in attracting boys. but we don't. know how to hold them and keep them interested after we get them. MARY, BELE AND SITE. Answer: It is always easier to get a man than it. is to keep him.“ Perhaps because men are roamers by nature and are always seeking novelty, fresh faces and a different line of attractions even in women. Perhaps it is because so many girls put all of their charms in their show windows and after a man has looked these over he is on his way. They have no reserve stock with which to hold his interest. A girl may have a pretty face, but if she is dull and tiresome. a man gets tired of looking at her. She may have a keen line and be a. wisecracker, but if she monopolizes all of the conversation he gets tired of listening to her. She may be a. peach oi a dancer, but if she is never willing to stay put. of an evening he drops her because there are times when his feet hurt and he is tired and he doesn't want to be dragged around a dance floor. So you see, it takes more than one thing to hold a. man. You Just can't flag him down and call it a. day. You have to keep on the 10b. Of course, nobody can give you a. hard and fast rule for holding a boy after you have caught him, but I should say that aiways and under all circumstances with any man a woman's best bet is femininity. Look like a girl. Dress like a girl. Act like a girl. If you dress like a boy and tell dirty stories and drink and swear, plenty of boys will take you out a time or two when they go on rough parties. but they won't be the kind who will come back and some day ask you to share a white cottage with green blinds with them. Adaptability is another winning play for a girl to make. Men like girls who fall in with their moods. who are willing to step out if they want to go, or sit at home and turn on the radio. They like girls who are equally willing to talk or listen, who will lend an ear to the boy who is a monolog- ist, or who will chatter like a magpie to the boy who can never think of anything to say himself. Men like girls who are simple and natural and who don't put on any airs. No boy comes back a. second time to see a girl who makes him feel cheap and as if he was not in the society class to which she pretends to belong. Many a girl never has any dates because she is so overdressed hei- and wants to know why they haven't she makes a lad feel that he couldn't ask her to ride in his flivver or to have a ham sandwich and go to the movies with him. Men like girls who have mercy on their pocketbooks; girls who don't demand to be taken to the most expensive places to dance, who sUBBBBY- going on the street cars instead of taxicabs, who can eat enough befvfe they leave home to last until they get back and who dont have but 0116 birthday a year. Men like 811315 W110 "9 Pleased at their attentions, but who don't gush and gurgle with gratitude for being taken to the movies. It shows they are not. used to men's attention and men like other men's 0. K. on a girl. Men like girls who let them do the love-making. They want to be the hunter instead of the hunted. It scares them blue when a girl takes a. proprietary air and seems to think that she is engaged because she has been taken out to dinner. And, finally, men hate and loathe the girl who has the telephone habit and who calls them up 1n business hours, thereby risking their jobs. Nor can they stand the girl who hounds them over the phone to come and see been around. Dear Dorothy Dix-My husband add I adopted a little boy when he was two weeks old. We think the world of him and do afl in our power to bring him up right. and make him happy. Lately some of the other children have been making him miserable by taunting him about, u; ad. opted child. He came here from school crying and asked mo what being an adopted kid meant. I had intended telling him when he was old enough to understand it, but now I don't. know what m do, Please ten mg E, s_ Answer: It is a great mistake not to tell adoptel children that they are adopted before they are old enough to really understand what it. means. In that way they grow up accustomed to the idea and it is no schock to them tn be i.old that. their foster parents are not their, real father and mother. By telling the children the truth about their relationship to those who have adopted them you can provide them with a weapon to use against the other children. I know one adopted child who turns the table on his tormentors when they throw his parentage in his face by boasting of his adoption. "Your father and mother had to take you whether they liked you or not, because they bomed you," he hurls 1n the teeth of the other kids, “but MY father and mother shopped all around and loked over all the babies until they found just what. they wanted and that was m!’ The best you can do now is to put this same idea 1n your little boy's mind and do your best to make him feel that there is nothing to be ashamed of in being adopted and that you love him all the more because he was a gift to you. _ Dear Miss Dix-I fell in love with an ai-cheologist who came to ‘visit my father and we became engaged. ‘Then he went away on a. trip from which he has just returned. He seems like a. (ilfierent mm. His facial ap- pearance has not changed noticeably, but, he qcts almost inhuman, He sdys he loves me, but. I can see that he is more interested in unearthing ancient things than in me. He wants to many immediately and go back to Egypt, where I can help him as a sort of a secretary. We would be there until we died and I could not stand it. What shall I do? SAIJIIY- Answer: Mrs. Carlyle. after a like experience with Tanunas, advised girls not to marry a genius. I should say the some thing gow for most scientists. Such men are more interested in their work than they ever are in a. woman. They can't be dragged away from their books or their test. tubes or their digging to go to parties; or remember their wives‘ birthdays, be on time for dinner. or to do any of the little human everyday things that. makes a. hus- band easy to live with DOROTHY D had lived always in iihe quite and peace of the mountains. Still, it was only a matter of a trip to San Francisco; because, once there. she could go directly to the hotel Grandmother knew about, the hotel at which they had stayed flMorniragSlnile IN LIGIITE. VEIN years ago; and from the hotel she could go to Mr. Holworthys office where Stuart would meet her. Stuart was a Graham, and a gentleman, and as soon as she met him her troubles would be over, for he would tell her everything she needed to know. This was what Grandmother said and. outwardly Deborah asented: but to her he was really a man and a stranger‘, and in her heart was a deadly terror of marriage and ivhatever it. might mean, of meet- ing this strange man and being with him, being alone with him. (To be Continued) Cue Minn-d’! for Coldl. A bishop was invited to dinner. During the meal he was astonisher to hear the young daughter of the house state that. a person must. be 1m? brave these days to go to church. “Why do you say that?" asked said the child, "I the bishop. “Becausefl heard papa. tell mamma that last Sunday there was a big shOt in the pulpit, the canon was in the vestry, the choir murdered the anthem, and the organist drown the choir. A somewhat. pompous but inex‘ pert golfer was playing over strange course in Scotland. and continually asked the local caddie Today's Short Wave Radio Program (All ‘lb. on!!! lllllllfl TUESDAY. MAY '4 rams 9;30 a..m.—'I‘wo P18!!! "Chum!" and “The Pup-fin," TPA-I, 19.6 m., 15.31 DQ- TOKYO 4 pain-Broadcast. to 014M111 sections of U. S. A. JVN. U44 mq 10,63 meg; JZJ. 5A2 m., 11-3 meg. BERLIN 5:15 p.111. -- The harmonica yum-y m Tmgingen. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 11198- SCIIENECTADY 55x5 p.m.-Siho1-t Wave Mull Bag. waxlu‘, 31.4 m., 9.5a mes- ROME s park-News in 131811511- 3R0’ 31.1fm. 9.66 H108- LONDON 7140 p.m.—BransbY William-s» W’ character actor. GSF, 19-3 m» 15-1? meg; aem 25.5 m., 11.15 mew. G83. 31.5 m..-9.5l me!- BOSTON a para-Harvard Lecture Serm- WIXAiL, 49.6 meg. BERLIN 3A5 pJfL-Jilalmblflfl‘ American Line, 90 years old. DJD. fi-li my!‘ 11.77 meg. Lennon 955 p,m.—"B€Wfll'0 the Jabber- wook.” GSF‘, 19.8 m., 15.14 11108-1 cs1), 25.5 m., 11.75 mes-z G80. a1 a m., 9.5a mes. _ SASKATOON 11 p.m.—Old Time Frolic-The Farmer ‘Fiddlers. old time orchestra. cmio, 4a.’! m., m5 meg-z cmX. 25.6 m5. 11.72 meg. THE COOK'S CORNER 7 Rieaylnt _-:- Socfalwand Personal Fdshions “-:- L1 te raturek MAY 4. 1937 QQAQ ‘as ssh‘ and ‘lb make a happy fireside clime| To weans and wife, That's the true pathos and sublime Of human lites-Burns. ‘The tiny gathers to make the ' DUMPLING POT PIE (4 to 6 servinzs) Two cups veal broth, 2 table- spoons flour, 1-2 teaspoon salt. 1-3 teaspoon onion salt. 1-6 teaspoon pepper, 3-4 cup cooked veal. chopp- ed, 3-4 cu NIW powims. sliced very thin. Mis 2 tablespoons flour with a few tablespoons cold veal broth. Bring the remaining veal broth to boiling point, then add the flour mixture, stirring 0011317811133’ w avoid lumping. Use a 1 1-2-q1mrt heat resistant glass saucepan. Boil for 5 minutes until flour is well mixed with broth. Add salt, onion salt and pepper. Add potatoes. then chopped veal. Bring slowly back in boiling point. Dumpling Batter One cup. flour, 2 teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1-8 teaspoon salt. 2 taiblespons butter. 1-3 cup milk. Sift dry ingredients. cut in but.» ter. Add milk and mix well. Drop by roundlrig teaspoons into gently boiling broth. Cover tightly and continue to cook over very low flame for 20 minutes without re- moving cover. Serve at table in 35.1116 dish-and serve immediately- CIIFISE DUMPLINGS IN TOMATO SAUCE (4 to 6 servings) One can tcnmtc soup. 1 011D water. 1 bay leaif. 3 Whole 010w- Hewt ixwredlentn together in 1 1-2 quart glass saucepan . DUMPLING DOUGH One cup prepared biscuit flour. 1-2 cup grated American cheese. l tablespoon grated onioh. uibout 1-3 cup milk. Lightly mix together the pn- paned biscuit flour dheese, onion and enough milk to make a soft dough. Remove bay lealf and cloves from hot soup. Drop dumpling mixture into gently boiling soup by rounded teaspoons. Cover tightly and continue in cook over very law flame for 20 minutes. Do not r1- muve cover during ‘this time. Take from flame and serve immediately in the glass saiwapan. for advice. Approaching one hole where the screen was hidden, the player said to the boy, "What shall I take for thin hole?" "Hoots," mid the boy, "this is just a wee, short hole. A drfw l. putt will dale it." The player took up I‘ careful stance. swung. with all his might. topped the ball and sent it five yard u. "Otk, Sir." whispered the caddie replmchfully, "yo lhduld M70 taken the drive first." drape that is thought smart in men's suits at the mo- merit, are carried out in women's models. Three slashed pockets, two on the right. and one on the left, is the preferred arrangement. This restrains the hip width. A DISCARDED CARD TABLE The discarded card taible should be given to the children for their play room and what fun they will have with it. It is just the thin! for games. cutting out paper dolls, em, without the worry of whether they are spoiling it for Mother by spilling a bit of water or slipping with the scissors. NEW FUWNITURE When planning to buy newfur- niturie let the size of your rooms be your governing factor. You will be surprised how the choice nar- rows down when you realize haw much space you have and what type of mmiture will suit that space. If your rooms are small, don't let your love of heavy mas- sive pieces overrule the realiza- tion that the room will look crowd- ed and ugly with such big fumi- ture. ‘Hm PLEASURE OI‘ GIVING Most of us mothers an in some sort; of charity giroup which takes care of more unfortunate people than ourselves. It. is wise to take our adolescent boy or girl with us occasionally on our investigating trips to some of these poorer homes and let them realize their bless- ings as well as share in the pm- sure o! giving and making a. little more happy the lives of these peo- ple. Children of today hear very little about. giving. they are n busy getting. TABLOID Stains on tiniware or teacups can be removed by dipping a. dam? i. "FEELING "Iflfi VO 0U I U fooling gag. glHea cho lndklllilll ‘n 1°"? ' I1 iwfiea .1103? filllilii e11 anon ea ; ‘gig’: quack and never dinPWilm-5 can . - 91' F5 .- Oouar-i r1095 M . was. .$%~ 100w? Know u so LATE-F sue - A\_N‘_A\<E -i'\_1. i-ikve rot. DRINGING UP. FATHER -¢~< v P___ -By George McManus The HOUSEWIFE , HER ACTIVITIES i cloth in common soda and rubb- ing briskly. Wash and wipe dry. TEAPOT mwss. Fftltastic Paris prints will do their "bit to relieve the let-down feeling of coronation-goers. once they discard their velvet and er- mine. Butterflies and leaves flourish on numerous print. costumes chosen from Schiaparellrs collection by smart English women. Melvneux. too. has designed a number of gay prints. The Duchess of Kent will g0 to tea. parties in an afternoon ensem- ble from Molyneux, patterned with white teapots in various sizes. Another gown she has chosen displays an anchor design on brick red and ivory. Its full skirt has inset pleats. Yellow is one of the Duchess’ favorite colors. For morning wear she has chosen a. dress and jacket ensemble in lemon yellow crepe. polka-dotted in black. A note of yellow also appears in one of her garden party frocks of black and white crepe. A draped girdle of soft yellow wool marks the waistline. HEALTHY CHILDREN NEED SLEEP AND RECREATION Every school child in order that the food he takes be utllzed to the fullest extant, must have sufficient mat and xwreatlve interesfi. He should be in bed ten or eleven hours each night. Up totheage of6or7yea1-s, children med from twelve t0 thirteen hgurs in bed at night, and from one to one and one-half hours’ rest. in the day. SUMMER. CARE. Bathe the baby every day. In hot weather also give him a cool sponge bath once or twice a day. If he is suffering from prickly heat, with lukewarm balding CONVICTED or BLANDEB nvnaeasr. M847 ii-tvr-Hhvu) _An 1n rview he gaveseven Yell‘ ago 1,0 mechoslovaklm news- pgpgr today convicted former Pre- sident Michael Karolyl Offlllflllfgf ggajnsb the l-lungarion na on. o specific punlslnnent was stipulat- ed Count Karolyi, who has lived in foreign countries since Bela Kun‘: communist coup of i919, was tried in absentia. ' Vacatmn With Pay More than 300 B. I". 60061101’- Rubber 00., 0f Canada Ltd. factor: employees will be entitled to vaca tions with my thin yev-r- _ Workers with 1o yew WWW“ W11’ this year receive two weeks’ vlwa- tiou and vacation pay amountfm ‘A four per cent of the individual’: wtal earnings in 1936. Factory employees with five years of company service will take a week's vacation and will receive two per cent of their 1936 wages for vacation pay. Goodrich vacation prozmm W111 begin immediately and extend through the sununer months- Carnation Milk Coronation Program In commemoration of the coron- ation of Kins oeorce VI and We“ Elizabeth, the Carnation Contented ureter rii..ri.si.'“°“' t bu 9 l‘ ~ Dr. IPrmk Black. musical time"! of NBC and the Contented H011! gainer’, "Csoronation March" "John Peel” and selections from lVllm-flelll‘ To a background theme of L-On- - donderry Air, a narrator will recall an outstandirw event in Brlwlfls history — the story o! P107911" Nightingale and the outstmdlni contribution to humanity m" m‘ made in the Crimea. The Contented H0111’ il P99“ every Monday GVQMEB 6-15 1° °°1°°b Eastern Daylight Bavinfl ‘Hm °"°' the NBC Red Network includini Wefiielkeiatlqlli- soda solution (one _ ul to one pint oil water) several timu a day. EXCLUSIVE PEERLESS I STYLES FOR P431901. DRESSERS The soft. draped front makes this ch print crepe corsage dress delightfully lovely and femin- ine. The gathered fulnem at the but of the wide flaring skirt does slimming thing; to your waistline. Added to its smartnes the flatt- ering low vee neck offers infinite variety. It. gives you a chance in wear your multi-siirand pearl neck- lace. Again, you can wear s16"! clip at the base of the deep vec. i rm- another disguise, the pattern imludes a. cunning rolled collar. which is smart in snowy white pique. Sew a bias bind along the inner edge to make it detachable. Merely bum it to the dies. Frill! planted lace albout an inch wide. igdqintyagcatibetudked into the Vx . 111cm little Ftriaks’ make it a , grand basic dresa for the modest. budBBt. Style m. we is designed for sizes 14. l6. l0. 30 V0111. 33- 94- 35- as, 40. 42 and M-inchea bust. Size 3's requires 3 3-4 yards of 39-inch material. . Price of pattern 1B cents m utumpl or coin (coin preferred) mp coin carefully address to Charlottetown Guardian givlnl" style No. 3810 Size...“ ... "IMO emu. Mdnl city 9"" A woven JOB now. Reamer-Johnny, what d0 W"- oonrida- the _ teat aceanvlllh- ment of the ancient Romans? Wil-