Woman is ReaIm.. mp rwo THE GUARDIAN AUGUST 25, 1950 Ovlrfowvw EI.LElI'S I IIIMIY By An Island Fai1ner'a Wife! tee-300-3er&eo-in And still the spirit of this week of the Fair obtains at Alderlea. with-certain members of its family in attendance this afternoon there. But not James nor were we. having then assumed the care of the small ones in the house across the lane. with the two into their napping. James sat on a verandah a minute to observe: "It's very quiet about, isn't it Ellen?" The breeze of day, warm and sunny dipped happily along the waters of the mill-pond and came up then to stir the leaves of the lawn trees in a gentle cai-us. And August was spreading a new carpet along fields and roadside. Weaving it before our eyes, working into the fading green warp of it a bright design of goldenrod and as- ter, of orange-frulted rowan tree, iontinuing the web which spring iad set up. adding to the pattern )f earlier Summer and changing it subtly. Spring had commenced it 11 touches of silver like the furry '.atkins Jamie had gathered. . and the brown of the Alder tassels. ind continued her length of it in ihades of green for the hill- xides and the shy fern unfolding. I) 0 U . . Bravely shown in the threads of .1 Springs weaving was caught the -- gold of the cowsllp. the mayflower, the violet and bultcrcup. We had teen as well the virgin white of the vild cherry, the pink of the orch- trds. And somewhere in its delicate strands was the sky's azure blue. 'he sheen of the stream, the glim- ner of stars. the glow of the moon. i X ' and worked there with a touch in- ' rorn the busy teams on the red of -he fields. And uhat had Summer lone as her share? She had taken ip the threads to weave into it '.angle of blue vetch. creamy white Zzueen Anne's Lace, clover too, and :he golden-hearted daisies of the neadows. Like damask was her .ength of weaving. satiny as bil- lowy cloud was in her stint of hand- work . . above a green-clad spire- :iPDed hill. upon which the more '.ndolent of us might climb and sail away to some magical indolent shore. To remain until grand- iaughter at a doorway called in :he sweetest accents: "I'm here now!" Or James with "l!.'llen-what are we going to do about that there. . .?Well. where in thundere- Eion is that woman gone to any- vay?” e 0 O 0 And today August was continu- ing Summer's design in a. bright pattern of golden-rod and aster, of irange-fruited rowan tree. The rosy aurple of Firewood too and above :11: hilltop the sunny harvut glints of a grain-field. "That could be cut any time" James nodded. Then finding his idleness boring he shouldered an axe and set off. i industrious man that he is, for I far line of the farm. There it has been that the farmers take spells of clearing the length of it -- lop- pi.ng off low hanging branches and altogether tidying it, in an endea- vor to erect a new fence there. And ' i the afternoon slipped away from .4 us to join the river of the past as 2,, easily as the pond-waters in their i ' musical flow run and are lost in the itream below. Exhibition of the long ago? of the fruits of orchard, the flowers of the garden. the vegetables and roots and grains and the miscellany of ltcns which contribute their share to make these affairs 3 success. We recall . . . but then how could we jot down anything of this in mem- ory's pages when all the while in the words of Byron "Soft eyes look- ad love to eyes which spake again?" When our thoughts return to dwell , on the Races run that day, we fin we are inclined to be M " o'- lng to current fans like Jock and Jeanie when they exclalm: "Well, that was I good race - and Just look at the time they made . . .low- ered the recordi” should we be pri- vileged one day to attend The Woodbine or maybe the famed As- cot in all its glory. we befrllled and befurred and elegantly hatted and James in conventional dress: tail- ed coat, striped trousers, tall hat, cane and monocle. we know we shall be somewhat bored with it all. And turning to him we shall whis- per: "It's marvelous, isn't it? It must be or else why this crowd?" And then reaching out to touch a hand that has plowed and sown and reaped on our behalf we shall say with it nostalgic chord: "It's good . . .but it's not nearly so fine as that meet we attended by horse I-nd buggy at the Exhibition at home in the long ago!” Bond-night. . . . , . ; Modern Eflqueffe ll: Ioborta bee Q. If a sales person has been uceptionally courteous and pat- ientl about sh in 33.... ..-..:.:: ?..”1i.”.l.:i -..'.t.'...?"”.;.f-"i'. l.”.2.l.."'I.l. 't..”"”'.': '2.” should cut the din; A. In ma is a... ....'.. ..'..”"...t”..”'..'.t:"::. by one of hag gttendantl. . l , E. -.w'::: w:;i'lo gs, s' mimic a on - . u h” ill! I'IlI1'l.III tr-i And what of the exhibits of that th 3! VIOLITII IIIIBALL DUNN Continued "D16 you ever hear of a desert island? I mean, a real one?" Vai- erie asked Lucy in the middle of A lesson on French history the next morning. Lucy put down her book and stared. "I once had an old nurse who said I had a Tluttering mlnd.' " she answered. ”I hope you haven't caught it. How did you get on a desert island from France in the Middle Ages?" "Sometimes my thoughts stay Where I put 'em, and sometimes they don't," said Valerie. "Maybe the history made me think of des- ert islands. 1 don't know." Lucy laughed. "well, anyhow. let's give France a rest and settle the thing. Now then." Valerie tossed her bock on the table and propped her elbows be. side it. "I don't understand why i always seem to think rude things. Like wishing people would stay at home, or anyway that they'd stop coming here. if yc-u had a nice desert island and nobody knew about it, you wouldn't have ecmp- any. Why do you suppose people want to come to see other people? I don't. I'd be happy for years and years with just you and father. And of course Chiltern - oh. and Alice." Lucy tried to think of tactful phrases. She had a desperate long- ing to say what she really thought. Just for once. About attractive men with the added danger of money. And women who twlttered over them like a. flock of birds. They re- minded her of the commotion in the honeysuckle cvcr the old sum- mer house down in the back gar- den. "You must admit there's some- thing funny about how many peo- ple get caught in storms in front of our gates," insisted Valerie. "specially at dinner time." Her wide gray eyes in their fringe of black looked straight at Lucy, and Lucy forced herself to lock back and stifle a dreadful desire to shriek with laughter. "There is. rather,” she agreed. She picked up Valerle's French history and handed it to her. "Don't you think you'd like a vacatlcn?" she asked the next day. "Girls don't go in for school so much in summer, you know. Of course we study only in the morn- ing, but you could out it all, say for a month." Valerie began her protest before Lucy had finished. "Besides," she ended. "what would you do?" Lucy had ben thinking about that for some time. "Leave you for a month. Of course I mean not be paid. I have an aunt up in Maine-" Valerie jumped up and ran to her. "Are you tired of me? I can really study a lot harder it I try.” Lucy had a pang at the sight of the small anxious face. "Dear heart. no!" she cried. She caught the girl to her. "I was thinking only cf vou, Truly. It must be a dull life some- times, that's all." "But it's fun! I'd hardly know I was being educated. It's not a bit like Miss Weat.herbee's. It's more like a play or agstory, the way you do it. Even algebra, And I nevle'r expected to be cairn over A Lucy sighed with relief. More than one straw showed her that the kindly wind which had blown her to Wide Acres would change at last. she wanted to put it off as long as she could. It was so heavenly not to think about tomorrow, "Do you want to go away?" Vai- erie asked. -She caught Lucy's hand in hers, Lucy was horrified to feel tears rising far back in her eyes. "No." she said honestly. "It's the very -. Ln... H. i Sponging Relatives Husbands, Wives. Should Not Enslevo Meier To Own Kind . DEAR. Miss Dix: I am one of the old fool: who want a divorce. Am 57 year old. married to the same wife thirty years and love today than ever. There is no woman in the case. it is my wife's good-for-nothing brother who was a minor irritat- ion for the first twenty-six years of our married life and who has been a major nuisance and expense for the last four. years. He is now a man of 40 years old. He has been a whining Iupplicant for aims - c " from my wife all of his life, and she seems unable to her better about twice a week we get a letter -and every lime the postman comes my blood pressure goes up and up for I know it is just another touch. My wife will not listen to any. argument that I advance. Says she can't let her brother starve, but I loaned an uncle sic and she wants me to sue him. Aren't wo- men wonderful? T. M. N. ANSWER. They certainly are. Mr. T. M. N., and so are the men, and about the most wonderful problem of matrimony is how much I husband and a wife have a right to burden the party of the other part with their dependent relatives. For there is so much to be said on both sides of the question. To begin with. a htlsband and wife who work together, shoulder to shoul- der. building up the family fortune are equally responsible to the suc- cess orlfailure of the firm. Also it is undeniable that both the husband and the wife have an equal right to some of the money that they mutually earn to spend as they so desire; without reference to what the other thinks about it. .SHOULD NOT BE HARDSHIP The right of each to give to their families, however, is just only so long as it does not work a hardship on the other. But often both hus- bands and wives are ruthless in the way they enslave their mates to their own people. I think that husbands and wives should deal more justly with each other than they do in this matter of the dependent relatives. For many of these relatives are dependent simply because they are gold-diggers. At any rate the husband and wife have the first claim on the family urse. p As far as you are concerned, Mr. T. M. N., the only thing you can do is realize that your wife is worth more to you than the money she gives her brother, and just try to forget about it. You cant change her. nor can'you keep him from holding her up and getting all he can out of her. DEAR MISS DIX: He is 24. I'm 21. We love each other very much. but becaus-e he drinks too much I am afraid to march down the aisle with him. He has promised me to stop, but he breaks his promises. He is very good to me when he is sober, but when he is drunk he is very ugly. Shall I take the risk? Your advice will mean a lot. ANXIOUS ANSWER: If you will listen to my advice, you will break off your engagement and never. never marry a man who drinks too much. Have a little sense. Just face the fact that if your sweetheart won't stop drinking in order to get you. he will certainly not stop drinking after he has got you. if he doesnot keep his promises to you to lei liquor alone now, he won't even try to keep them after you are mar- ried. if he is ugly to you now, just think how he will beat you when you are in his power and he is half-crazed with drink. And face this other fact that drunkness gets to bee disease so that its poor victims can't stop drinking even if they want to. The craving for liquor is stronger than their desire for any woman and they ruth- lessly sacrifice their mothers and their wives to the whisky bottle. Some of the most lovable men in the world. some of the sweetest. gentlest, ienderest. most generous of men have this fatal habit, but no matter what their other virtues they are not fit for any woman to marry. They bring sorrow and shame and poverty to their wives. They break their hearts. - DEAR MISS DIX. I am a young girl of if. I was married at 13 under an auumed name and have kept the secret for a year and a half. I still love the young man, who is now l9. 1 am afraid if I tell my mother she will have the marriage annulled or make trouble. PEG ANSWER: Tell your mother at once and let her do something to- ward straightening out the mess you have got yourself into. The chances are that your marriage at the age of 13 and under an assum- ed name is not valid. A secret marriage is always touched with scand- al. Wash your skirts of it. DORITIIY DIX cannot answer personal mall. she takes up the problem of the uversusplclou: husband or wife in leaflet D-5. "Jeal- ousy." To obtain a copy. send 5 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Miss Dix. cyo this newspaper. P. 0. Box 98, Times square, Station New York is N. Y. say "no" to him. This pest lives soo milu away, but last thing in the world I want to do." . Mark came out of his office one hot day in early August to find Elise, sitting parked at the factory gates. He crossed to her car just as her chauffeur got out and cpeno-Id him vaguely uncomfortable. This was his frequent reaction to Elise these days. If he had formulated his thought, it would have been that he was being drawn some- where against his will. she laid her hand on his arm. .-.m:ors'1vme-zau.aesrs-xvck1ra:-e- f .MR'!'l'qraI'V tl.e Jfarsw'5:y - P How Can Ill! g Cook's Corner ' .. I: An: A-no ceuesooaanoanuaaneou wa nwbw H.” " .!Iow can 1 union your -NM nu” . an-'1'. !'eesaterd;r.A.InsHe Till forecast is for a busy day in which 't.ho wards ifor merit. diligence and verlatility may clllill dennlto recognition with affairs moving at .high tempo into con- " II. II XIII! Blrthdby Those whose birthday it is. may anticipate I year of advancement promotion. chemo, with renewed contracts or enhanced value to olzi plans and efforts. Moving at high tempo, new ideas. intelligent and novel plans and projects may pay dividends,.both commercial and-in personal contacts. It is a good time to branch out into new fields or to launch fresh programs with initiative. A child born on this day Is quick. eager. and versatile, ready to make changes. tackle new prob- lems. and .engineer constructive programs. A pleasant career is ahead. V i'iV'KiW ? Household Scrapbboltgg I II: eosem Lee xxmamC Dress Shields The best method to wash dress shields is to wet them in lukewarm suds. and then place them flat on the side of the bathroom bowl and scrub well with the nail brush Rinse in lukewarm water and dry in a shady airy place. Stained Marble A half-lemon dipped into salt and rubbed on the marble stains will remove them without tmulble. bet the lemon juice remain for an hour and then wash off with clear water. C0lGAl'!'S NEW DEODOIIANI gives you Il0IIlE PROTECTION! Checks Perspiretiol Quickly - Effectively , Stops Offending Odor instantly - Safely Rubs In ooslly, quickly. Mild, gentle for normal skin, - Info for clothes. . III 39! I96 HAY! MOIIY Q and dirt from the gel range? A. After sheet of newspaper and the us slightly watln. All thegr dirt will rub off and the stove will always have a clean and polished atructive gmov it is possible that I . am new fields of ;ix'ldGIVOtl' my fill”: ”3I"33.'m I restore the iustei Mix dry. ingredients. add mil: ””""'" diuppeeredfxo matador. . i ' prom-lole--e ;'.,h,3,fR..,';',' I" Put fr: greased bread pin. us A. Try win a flannel elem. Three cl-ID! Plug, flour. it NIP brown Ittler or white, 1 teaspoon salt. 4 teaspoon: baking powder. .oup sweet milk. 1 egg. 1 on no meets. for extra. add bu-at amount of red and green iha.-aaeh- ino cherries, also Juice from see each meal. crumble I range w e a ..u ..'"l: "iii use and 5 stand It ininutoa. Bake in meder-" hot linseed ll -wmnt 0 I” OVCH I! to prove that worms think." ttonal cue. darling. ltilife: "Berra I - scientist frying Husband: "I think-" Wife: "Your! say be an en”. "Who settled when you um wife will go for your holidoyn!-GE; do; of course. ea: says where am like to and .1 luv. 'R1tht: rum settled ." MAKE we no A . sive1me,iii7RKM0NeY A eou1aaItc'lltMbTwo- WITH CERTO 1. Mrs. A. makes jam the short-boil way with CERTO. She has 2 pounds of fruit prepared. ready to start at 9 o'clock. 2. The dotted line shows E level of the prepared fruit in Mrs. A's saucepan. 3. Mrs. A. adds 3 pounds of sugar. A pound of jam made with CERTO contains no more sugar than a pound made the old long-boil way. 4. Mrs. A. brings the mix- ture to a full rolling boil; boils hard ONE MINUTE only; removes from stove and add: !A bottle (4 on.) Certo. CEIITO is the natural 3- she 4. COB jeuyin: wbsmncein fungi" carrier of!” much of the concentrated form. umnl f"'h"'l-lit "W07 in 5. Mrs. A. is able to pour mum and paraffin about 5 pound: W ? 3. Mn. 3. pours and paraf- (lo glasses), of jam from her 2 pounds of fruit. She gets sure results because she follows the CERTO recipe fins 3-?37a7'&i em 15 minutes. E?(ACTLV- : not tell for sure how well her e. Mrs. Am 10 glasses of jam I ism will turn out were made in jut E C. Mrs. B. took 45 minutes I Under the label of every bottle of cllfoilabookof 7l besudreclpae for June and Jellies. Different fruits need dideront handling. so CIIYO gives you a separate recipe for tech fruit. Be sure to follow the simple directions EXACTLY. old-fashioned long-boil way. She, too, in ready to start her jam making at 9 o'clock. 2. Mrs. B. starts off with the some amount of prepared fruit in her saucepan. "pound of Iugarper pound of fruit" standard recipe. So about 30 minutes before the jam thickens to the desired about pg the weight of the fruit, darken: the color and glasses) of jam from the same amount of fniit. Until it in finished she can- to make her 6 glasses of jam. Gem we Mrv.A.suro results... much more Jam I saved timework and monoq. THE OLD WAY Mrs. 3. makes jam the Mrs. B. uses the old adds 2 pounds of sugar. Mrs. B. boil: the mixture sistency. Thisevaporatea bout 3 pounds (6 CIIITO -M lIIll'l' rum: "(III " In I Yrode-mark owned by Ovneul foods, ltd. Alredvnofdenenlhodn the door. Elise emerged. cool in pastel chil- fons. under a huge hat. Her dark. rather heavy eyes were veiled in they rested on him. They made and lcoked up reproachfully at him. "Don't go LUHVCIIUOXIII, darling," she said. To be continued Until tomorrow - -Diu-y .. .'. A THIS FAST-ACTING YIAST KIIPI WITHOUT IIPIIOIIATIONI Thousands of Maritime women have found the perfect eeawer to your problem in hot weather. in the new l'lelschmane'c Royal Put Rising Dry Your! This modern form of feuiouyfliehch. men's You: keep: full-nmagth and fut-acting in your cup. ref:-lgeradoai If Y M x . . aewlloledaianah out. I -at-Adv Inkin:-ndrnadguniuin" Maud” we like It homo. gotta needn'- Q . u Aouiononiui untsizc A Avoid offending ONLY, l.l.l-'.EBl.l0V GIVES Y0ll All-IIVEIII I'IIOTECTl0II! ' -a 'Ixct.uewI lGlINl'IlIG,lNOlIDllNIj -re IIIIIYIIIO IAIIIII. o IANIOIIIC PQIPllA'l'IONl.OIIOI. o'III8ll'Gl.ldN.bcItn 4. mn vou Imrbiuo. tonon Depend oollfebnoy for been ell-over-body proucdomlu special purifying lather nope "l.O." like nothing also one. Get;h:.blg. new. ., Y- - "WlIA'I'A8lIOCK...IiearlngImI whllpo 'I.O.'eboul Incl IIQMIIOII I decided never to be earolou ebout oiendhg again. I'd gel Llfebuoy-use it regularly In my built to safeguard dolntInau." NOT AFTER at f o . ..