_..c.._.....l...._ _, §..;_.,_-__, >_, ,1 us" I v IIIIIAIIIIIIIII‘. PAGE "rwo 1r 0 Woman ’s Realm -:- - ALAAAAAA AAAALAAAAALALAA Agar‘ AA kkskkkk A AAAAALA AAA ‘ ‘ v v v-vW-vvvvvv v v v vv v vvv v , b.1112 BLUE 000:: by RACHEL MACK CRAP‘!!! XIII All immense stone building. 5 Iloss whose windows iron bars z; kept guard perpetually. ‘This was the man at the fiower- _ hated with a. consuming hat- Ied-his home. Along the graveled walks a party a! visitors was being conducted by I guard—merl and women carrying open notebooks and everpoised fountain pens or pencils. They ask- ed questions and wrote down the "" each other as they wrote, chatter- “ii: .. Nitamin B for keeping fit‘ do children , . I ing, looking alertly around, some- times laughing. Laughing! The man who bent - over the fiovrer-bed gritied his teeth in hatred of all the laughter on parth. - As the party went on its way and entered the jaws of the grim build- ing his hatred followed them. Yet the process did not ease his heart. There was more hatred there, and lo spare, for the man who had put him in this place. . They called him Mr. Smith. He was a trusty, and he was especially good with flowers. They said he had been a botanist in his day. Some- times John Smith's hatred hung suspended and. impotent in the dark chambers of his heart while he contemplated an opening flower, a budding plant, a struggling seed, but it never went away entirely. He kept it there, ready to use against life and the people who had mis- used him. For Mr. Smith felt that his sentence to this place wm a wrong and an unjust thing. That, however, was the way most of the inmates felt about their incarceration, so in this particular Mr. Smith was not outstanding. When he demanded justice no one listened. A plan was forming in Mr. Smith's head. As he worked the soil around a purple chrysanthe- mum he thought the thing out. He would leave with the vis- itors when they went away. In an hour, perhaps two hours- he could not be sure because of the tumult in his mind--he heard them coming. The same guard was with them, a man whom he did not know Joy name or sight. A man who perhaps did not know him. On this thread hung his first hope. As they circled the grounds, fol- lowing the graveled driveway and observing the "Keep 0f! the Grass" signs, they passed quite near the flower-beds. The visitors seemed in excellent spirits. Notebooks were still in evidence and fountain pens scratched spasrnodically. The guard was answering the questions of a pretty young lady who walked be- side him. He fingered the collar of his uniform as he did 3o, and preened himself. SPECIALISTS PICKS OUAKER OATS- lllilNNE OUINS World's hardest- tc-raise children No better proof exists that every growing child lfceds Quaker Oats. Its whole-grain nourishment, its precious Iuc_h a world of good. With all the foods under the sun to choose from, experts picked QUAKER OATS for the Dionne Quins. Get it for your own family at any Grocer'sl MORE GROWTH IN MII.K, WITN OIIAKER OATS! The ideal combination for growth, is l CEREAL that combines precious Vitamin B-l with the growth-Vitamin B-I in MILK. Quaker Oats and mill: are an ideal combination for everyone, because these three conditions prey on ire energy of thousands, young and EVERYONE NEEDS NOT OIIAKEII OATS, RION IN VITAMIN B FOR KEEPING FIT* Nervousnessi Conatipationl Lone of appetite! Did you know that a breakfast of Quaker Oats will fortify everyone, young and old, against these vicious drains on energy. due to lack of precious 3-pul-pcle Vitamin B in the diet! Doctors discover in Quaker Oats, an amazing a once of this protective food element. That's why it docs everyone, young and old, such a world of cod. ' With milk, a Quaker Outs brakfaet in wonderful food-energy for ‘all the family. Order Quaker Oats by name at your grocerk. Either 1% minute ., ‘ck-coo‘ ‘ ,- er Oats can also "Cup h Saucer" package. gnewben condition! dosh ‘h lack Vltnminl. ' Al] pawn World 00ml IIN They passed Mr. Smith without a glance, for there was nothing about his neat, thin body and quiet, shuttered face to attract attention. As the last of them went by he straightened himself and Joined them. In his hands he held a notebook and fountain pen. He was taking notes. They were approaching a high stone wall where the driveway led to an iron gate. Guards with guns paced the broad top of the wail. Other guards stood. at the gate. Mr. Smith moved into the thick- est of the crowd and continued with. his notes. He wrote down a description of the gate and its de- fense. No one was more absorbed than he. When the gate presently clangcd behind them his knees felt sudden- ly weak, and the breath of his body too light to support him. A few cars were parkedoutside, but most of the crowd-Jzhere were perhaps 50 in all-moved towards a street car which was waiting on a switch. The car bore the sign: ."OHARTERED. NORMAL SCHOOL." Mr. Smith, still midway of the crowd, boarded the street car. He sat down in a vacant seat beside a woman who looked a little tired and vague. Presently the lnotorman clanged his bell and they moved ofi. Mr. Smith looked over his notes . . The vague woman addressed him in a troubled way. "Did you get much out of it?" “Yes and no," replied Mr. Smith guardedly. The woman said, "I feel that way, too. I suppose a lot of these Pe°P1° feel as if they know all there is to know about the criminally insane, just from this one trip thrullllll mi’- institution." Mr. Smith frowned. “That is utter conceit," he answered. “No one understands the criminally insane, Not even the doctors. The greatest fools on earth are your good psychiatrists. And. when they're not good, but scheming quaoks, they're, devils instead of fools!" "would you cam if I'd Write thfll down?" asked the until little woman earnestly. “Not at all," Mr. Smith will“! her, and watched with satisfaction as she did it. She said then, "I'd appreciate any other conclusions you could 81W m9- This course in abnormal psycholoZY is difficult for me. Which type of insanity, roi- distance. d° you wu- sider most dangerozsl: ' Mr. Smith replied thoughtfully, "Not your dementia praecox case because his condition is usually very evident. He shows his mental disintegration. I'd say a certain type of paranoiac is most In b6 feared because he's often an intelllsflll person with a screw loose. He has a delusion. He nurses it and weaves his life around it, sometimes sec- retly. On the other hand, some peo- ple who seem inaane are not insane at all but merely neurotic. Their emotions get the upper hand. All of us," he added after a pause. "are potential, killers. We need only the right state of health and of e!- ternal conditions to bringnit out.’ "How cenjuu say thatl exclaim- ed the vague little woman in dis- tress, "Take yourself, for instance. A quiet, studious man who teachu the young and takes time to study psychology. How could a man lllls yoube a potential murderer m. Smith stalled with con- ltnlbt. "well." be nailed. ‘when! not myself. That would tax your mutilation too fan—" As his smile faded he was recalling the feel of his hands on o. certain hated throat . . . Hewanhdtolitdlllfitl! aodthink. Notofthahbutofthe eblnghemutdonextorblswny of escape when he should leave this “i... the earnest new sum teacher who was teklfli l- ocurle in psychology worlld not let him think. She lied, "Did W“ I9‘ .111 that lecture in t!!! Will-l"! 9T thliullotlflshikedlofsst! logdlfl take it down." didn't tshe it down either, I I remember it." slid AA A A s. ALA4AA_QAAQ an‘ g‘ vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv vvvvvvvvvvvrvrv Socia IN this new absolutely sir-light container King Cole Coffee now brings Into ypur home all lire delicate aroma and full fragrant flavor of the freshly ground coffee been. Ask yourgrocer for ‘vacuum - packed King Cole Coffee-the favorite coffee blend of lire Meriilmesl AMorningSmile "Hurry to 170 Cumberland Ave- nue,” said a voice over the phone to the Asheville, N. 0. fire depart- ment. The department hurried, to find on arrival a man standing on the sidewalk. “No fire" said the man, “I'm waiting for a. taxi." “What number did" you call?" ask- ed the fireman. “four thousand." “Huh? grunted the fireman as they chugged away. "You got one thou- sand-that's us." ~ MISUNDERSTOOD A Highlander went into a shop in Sauchienhall Street. Glasgow, to ask the price of a fine head of antlers. When he was told the price was 5 pounds, he remarked that that was awfu’ dear. “Off a. deer!" exclaimed the shop- keeper. “Did you think they were of! a rabbit?" the violent cases," he added. "Those I believe, are treated either as in- valids or hardened criminals. Pad- ded sells. Solitary confinement. That sort of thing-" The little woman shuddercd and thanked him. “I'm ever so grateful to you,” she said. Mr. Smith noticed that everyone was getting ready to get ofI the car which had stopped before an insti- tution, this one without walls or guards. It was the Normal School. Mr. Smith got of! with the crowd, paying his dilne as he did so. His hand touched a blllfold -in his poc- ket‘ gratefully. There would not be the dearth of money that most fugi- tlves had to face. . . . "Good old Tue cnanwrrarown cuaaoran “ 'v‘-2v‘ v-vv v v vv vvvvvvvvfivvvv “ , AAAAAAAAAAAATAMAAA VTvvv v vv Dorothy Diver's Letter Box Divorce is Not the Panacea for a Hurt Heart That Most Women Believe-Often it is Better to Put up With Shortcomings in a Mate and Suffer in Silence Dear Miss Dix—A young woman with whom my husband has bean having an aflalr thinks I should divorce him so that he and she might marry. I have offered him his freedom rupefliedll’. but h! 915ml $1155 he loves only me and that if I will be pat- ient this young woman will eventually give him up. Ha tells me that he would not marry her under any ‘ umstaucos. We both love our children and our home very milch, and aside from this trouble we are quite congen- ial, but our life together is'far from being peaceful. What would you advise me us do? , UNHAP Answer: Well, one of the things I would N01‘ do would be be turn over my husband to the impudent hussy who wants to marry him, although he deserves some such litfl-stic pull: ' “ ent for the way he has treated you. , e ' " For, believe me, nine- times out of ten a discarded wife could rlsk for no more bitter revenge upon he;- husband than the agony of disillusionment and loneliness he suffers when he finds that he has exchanged his faithful and devoted old wife for one whom he cannot trust, one who has no affection for him and whose only interest in him is centered in his pocketbook. Many and many g time g bad woman avenges the wrongs of a good woman. No outsider can tell you what w do in the complicated gituationin which you find yourself. Your own heart and conscience and common sense must be your guides. It ls folly even to advise you to take the course that will make you happy, because whichever road you elect to follow will be filled with thorns. l No woman married to a philanderer can ever know any real peace of mind because she is always smarting under the indignity he puts “P011 her. If she loves him, she is filled with jealousy. On the other hand, neither will she find peace of mind and happiness if she leaves him. Often a half loaf is better than no bread at all. Ar. least it keeps you from starving. And many a wife is happier keeping her husband's house, min- istering to him, seeing him everyday, even if mostrof his time and at- tention are given to other women, than she is if she puts film altogether out of hr life. Divorce isn't the panacea for a hurt heart that women L “ it to be. A decree absolute isn't some sort of a magic that changes love into indifference, that blots out torturing memories, that ‘ nges one into I- gay, carefree girl again. All that it does is to fill her with a sense or frustration and to break up her life, wreck her home and throw her out into the world to grapple with problems for which ‘she is untrained and t. . So I think a woman should think a long time before she gets a divorce even from a husband who is far from coming up to her ideal. rm» as a married woman she has at least many consolation prizes when thg div- orcee has few. Consider these in your own case. You have your good home, e. oom- fortable living, your place in society, your pleasant circle of friends, He is congenial and ccmpanionable; in fact, a. desirable husband, except for his one fault. If you leave mm, you leave all of those material com- IOVFB behind W" 111d you must accept a lower scale of living. Flor the money that supports one family comfortably will be a meager income for two families to live on; Of course, if you divorce your husband, he will marry again. Take it from me, my dear, that when you have to count your pennies and walk instead of ride in an automobile and eat poor food, and especially when you find how hard it is for a middle-aged domestic woman to get a 10b, you will wonder why you ever let your husband's flir- tatious drive you to Reno. And there are tho children who, after all, are most to be considered. Even if you could buy your own happiness by divorcing your husband, do you think wrecking their lives is worth that price? Their father is good to them. They love him. You can't break up that relationship. You cannot tear them up by the roots from their home without doing something terrible to them from which they never recover, What Shakespeare says about it being cotter to beer the 111a we have than to fly to those we know not of, is true of nothing so much as o! divorca DOR-UHIY DIX. O O O U I O Dear Dorothy Dixr-I am very much in love with a young man who is devoted to me, BUT I am of the hustler and go-getter type. He Belongs to the easy-going, whatls-the-use school of thought and I fear that if we marry we will be miserable. I think that if a boy really cares for a girl he will try to his utmost to make something of himself and to make her a comfortable living. His argument is that if I love him I won't care for anything else and we will live happily ever afterward, whether we have anything to live ‘on or not. I want a husband on whom I can depend and to whom I can look up and marvel at his doings, instead of one who is content to spend his life sitting on the do-nothing stool. Am I narrow- minded, or am I right? D. n. L, Answer: You are absolutely right. mants as you and your fiance should ever marry. very bedrock of marital happiness. Two people who have the same tastes and habits and pointg or View, who have the same ambitions and aspirations, and who like to do the same things can make a go of mauiage under any circumstances. They can be happy workTng or 12mm, wasting their money or saving it, climb- ing up the ladder of success together or sitting contendedly at the bottom, but if one who wants to save and the other to spend; if one is industrious and the other lazy; if one wants to stay put and the other wants t0 8o places. they are bound w quarrel because their desires clash at every turn. The fate of the Kllkenny cats will be yours if you marry my; pm. poseiess young man. Life will be one perpetual scrapping match becaugg you will want dlflerent things of life. He will want ease and y‘ou will want action. Yo! will soon cease to love each other because he will re- gard you as a slave-driver who is always lashing him on to greater ef- forts and disturbing the peace and cairn and mdolence in which he likes to steep himself. And you will come to have a contempt for him as a good-for-nothing idler who is to inert even to try to hold his own with No two people of as diflarent tempe u- ' Congeniality is the ning, Down to the, undiscovered end, There's nothing worth the wear o! wlnnins. Than laughter, and the love of friend. g WORK His heart was in his work, and the heart giveth grace unto every art-Longfellow. IUSPICION , He that lives in perpetual sus- picion lives the life of a sentinel. AA AJAAAAATA‘ Akkkkskkll‘ n A ¢;¢ v vvv vvvvvvvv v vvvvvvvvvv vvvv v andJVPer anal, -:- Fashions -:- L is A LAQAAAAA A- ~ vvxav-vwnz. v-nQl-LLY-Ltvxvwv 44.x‘: nsaa-I 18" / AAA ‘AAA / .1 of ugly Cosmetic Skin. W" . e ~- rapture D94" comes when you guard against COSMETIC SKIN Sweet, smooth akin is very hard to resist. So don't risk losing this cbanrll Use all the cosmetics you wish. But be sure to remove them thoroughly ‘as do 846 out of 857 English and Hollywood Stars-with gentle Lux Toilet Soap. This is the way to guard against the dangerous pore choking that results in tiny blemishes, enlarged pores, blackheads, perhapa—waming signals Cosmetics Harmless If removed this way RCH 5, 1935 Ofcourse I use cos- metics, but thanks 1o I-UXToiIGfSoI I never worry about Cosmetic Skin To protect your skin — use Lux Toilet Soap before you put on fresh make-up during the day—- ALWAYS before you go to bed at night. Its rich, active lather goes deep into the pores-re- moves ell trace of dust, dirt and - stale cosmetics-leaves the skin advance the claims of Army pipers 61.110511; "(ifgas-n: fresh, smooth and eoft. Expression of this pride will be given at a sathering of Scottish pipers in Lonodu this month. Oc- casion is likely to be taken, too, to Today's Short Wave Radio Program to higher rank in the Service. The Scottish Piping Society of London takes the view that on all social and ceremonial occasions players - of the bagpipes should not have their playing treated as inciden- ial music, but should be heard in the respectful silence usually given to practitioners of other musical instruments. (All timg ls Eastern Standard) THURSDAY, MARCH 5 Washington 1i a‘. m.—U. S. Navy Band. WSXK Pittsburgh, 19.7 m., and WIiXAL, New York, 16.8 m. rtyo 4 p. nn-Yoshis Fujiwara, f ous NEW ASHTIPAYS Japanese tenorim-lvdllloallaloki, 7.9 m 6.25 p. m-"The Miller and His Men.” A melodrama of old meiburg, in two acts. GSD, 25.5 m., G80, 31.8 Ashtrays are an essential in a modern home. For lovers of nove - ties there are new ashtrays in the sensible rmmd shape wlm m_ m., GBB, 31.5 m., or GSA, 49.5 m, diigizfim m’ tgfaiureclgtiigm 7.15 p. m-Yasteldoyb and To- w c a m - _ _ , signal standing erect at the back. songs-Mlle vmk" FYA The whole article ls of solid silver Berna N"! me "d- “mbm and green 9.15 p. m. — Orchestral Concert. "lights" are brightly enamelied. mo, m3 m’ These trays ,as well as being a novelty, being a gay new of M101" to a card table or writing desk. - est Colds . . . Yield quicker to the Ponltioe-Veporlction of rauru . 1t takes two to speak the truth __:me to speak, and another b0 hear-l! D. Thoreau. m5 Coors (IORNER OLD FASHIONED MOLASSES COOKIES 4 cups sifted flour 2 level teaspoons soda ‘A teaspoon gingér it ‘, cinnamon 1% cups molasses it cup lard, malted ‘A. cup butter, melted ‘A cup boiling water it teaspoon salt Method: Sift 2 cups of the no with the soda, salt and spices. -~ bine the molasses, melted short lng and boiling water and then VI this to the mixture of- flour » spices. Mix thoroughly. Silt in - remaining flour gradually. " well. Cover and let stand in a u place for i hour. Tum rile do l onto a lightly flavoured pastry e10 i r011 l4 inch thick, and (‘lit Wliil floured cookie cutter. lluku Ill medium. 350 degrees l". oven i about 20 mlnutcz. '.i‘heso cookies are better the lo er they stand. If kept in a covmi stone Jar,‘ they will soon 1W1!" soft and waxy. trim Spring Fashions Home Dress-Making For Don't leave your dressmaking un- til the days are too hot to bother about it. Do it now and be ready with something smart to don. Two-piece models are more popu- lar than ever this season. ‘Today's model is particularly lik- able and wearable suit-like type. Note the cunning little shirt collar. Buttons and panel at the centre- front of the skirt are smart features and slimming for fuller figures. Navy blue wool crepe combined with tomato-led crepe silk for its collar and composition buttons. B9111"! Gibbs!” he thouaht- "HOW other men. Besides, a strong W0mnn should never marry a weak man. 1°"! 51MB 5119 801d that mild 101' ' He can never forgive her for being a better man than he is me?" 3,71% I (To Be Continued.) Do Dix’ of unspeakable value a; the repre- sentative of s. whole etemity- _- Goethe. The HQUSE WIFE and more“ For Thou shalt light my candle, 0 Lord my God, Thou HER ACTIVITIES a dam»- s- ~ ~ For Thou art the true Light-St. _, _ Augustine. - ‘QUIET HOMES Whose business it is to look out Tn! QUEEN AND THE HIGH- rl-em quiet noble and dark becln- for and expect an enemy. which LAND! " is an evil not very fast short of perishing by hlnL-Young. MlSl-‘OBTUNEB After all, our worst misfortunes near happen, and most miseries lie in antlcipatlom-Blasac. BIL!!!‘ Men willingly believe what they wish/to be trum-Oesear. Till PBISINT Bold fast to the Druent. livery position. every moment of life, is figured so much in Highland life as did her predecessor. Queen VWOIIR» even before that mon- aroh'e widowhood. Queen Mary is but know in the Deeslde villages. She ms. not have visited Prince Charlie's monument‘ at Olenfinnan nor the haunting vicinitiee of Inch Duich or L001! Morse, but Deeside hu claimed much of her attention and she moved in and DUI; among the people 0n . "Q11 important occasion. Charitable functions found her ready to help, i2i‘..‘.".’..°°£ii. '.2“.£,°°i'-‘b“l..'°£.‘ iandhBi-rzéeoghe idol of tine Belioter 99°? 9179179110 e contact with the Royal rd u’ llnnyltel-lumwmerbel-rmsly deeds and W0 gympgtmg, Deeeide and the on goon-ally mourn with Eli‘ lhlqfl, fog never '" i gum" 11¢! more widely and l"! Moved by the common M0010. y M0101‘! 0f PIPING . ——i ~ lover‘: of the bagpipes in don, u well an time in loot- Ber Mnieaw Queen Mary has not ~ Hove You CINDERELLA HANDS 7 O CINbIlBLLAl-lANDMnu-lt work bydagburth mnulook lovely etnighe-euo ‘edgoughcrlticle nfiin ipa; no ooenqcrackcd knu ee to and: on cheer silk hole. Hinds Honey s: Almond Cream 1m been ying fairy godmotheno lust such hand: for ' over 60 your. 1t leave: heads elludngiy soft and young looking flea-firs mood: end white. His es In, not of- leaving " no: e trace of lddrlneu. HINDI; HONIY Iv ALMOND ‘CREAM Plain or printed crops silk will be very delightful carried out in this style. Style No. 16M is designed for silos l4, 1o, la years, as. is and fro-inches bust. Bile 16 requires 8% yards of 89-inch material with l6 yard of 86. inch contrasting. Price of iwnnm is cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. Nlllll Street Adfi _____..___._____ Olly . I state ‘IAIIITA IOI sun's» ‘reliefs is used to fashion some of the smartest tailored suite for ‘hllllllllilfllfilfi ymbéigzuw‘?! loud of the gamma Jia;""“"'““ r