Show THE OGDEN Dr Crane's Mother and Daughter Classmate: Case Records BY MARGUERITE GAHAGAN 'V- Silt- ' - " - Lee F aged 58 is CASE a dynamic and brilliant head of a great financial house "Fifteen years ago we offered a promotion to one of our accountants" he began "The man was then making $65 per week "But he turned us down for he said he didn't want to carry any business worries over into the eve- - 'S i4- - i:Vn'-- y 5 5: i '- -' " is 1 it v ning "When he quit at five o'clock in the afternoon he didn't want to feel impelled to think and plan for the next day as the majority of good executives are often forced to do "Besides he said he'd rather keep on digging up financial data and statistical matter as of yore but refrain from having to offer any recommendations based there-- " on He said he didn't want to make any ye3 or no' decisions It was too much of a nervous strain to stick his neck out Big Wages Go for Worry "As a consequence we gave the promotion to another accountant who Is now a vice president on a good salary "Many of the "office workers however wondered why the former accountant never advanced although he continued doing his routine work efficiently and without any complaint "But last month we needed another executive so we thought we'd ask him again And this time he gladly accepted saying he now had two children in college and could use more money so he'd like to give the new job a try "Dr Crane this man is eminently capable of performing the duties and should have taken the promotion 15 years ago but he was afraid of worry Two Types of Worker Workers can be divided Into two general types The first is eager to attain the topmost goal because of his inherent ambition He is pulled along from in front by the attraction of his destination The other and far more numerous class of worker must be goaded on from behind If he makes $20 per week when he is 21 years of age and has enough residue after paying board and room to take his girl to the movies or buy gasoline for an old jallopy he is contented He doesn't want to worry about business matters after the quitting whistle blows He will not voluntarily seek a better job which imposes more obligations and nervous strain upon himself even though it pays him extra In a few years however he wishes" to marry Driven on by the need for a higher wage to finance his little apartment or cottage he now is spurred on from behind to seek a better job Having finally located one which nets him the added income he coasts again for awhile-Ththe advent of babies may drive him to seek another wage increase Later their wish to attend college may again prod him into actively seeking further advancement How to Pick Executives This goaded type of worker may ultimately develop the "executive" or "employer" mental outlook and even relish responsibility But the ambitious type will take on these habitual characteristics much more rapidly In choosing workers at j the outset therefore we need a convenient yardstick by which to measure the ambitious in contrast to the Check Into the personal background 0 your prospective employes therefore to find whether they have been leaders in school or social and athletic activities Have they been patrol leaders in Boy Scout work? Finally see if they have been the oldest of their families for the oldest youngster tends to be educated as an executive throughout childhood He has been accustomed to having responsibilities thrown upon him He has made "yes and "'decisions for his younger brothers and has had to look after them He has bossed them around and settled their quarrels! He is less y by temperament (Always write to Dr Crane in care of this newspaper enclosing a long stamped envelope and a dime to cover typing high-neck- mm 'ft ?i'V - Mrs Irene Franks left 32 looks as young and 3IAJORETTES as her daughter Wanda Mae 14 as they practice drum pretty majorette maneuvers for Georges Township Pa high school band Both entered school as freshmen this fall and mother hopes to study medicine ° Dorothy Dix Talks AGE IS IMPORTANT THING TO CONSIDER IN 3IARRIAGE Best Years Are for Girls to Be in Twenties and Men in Thirties — Avoid Wide Differences to Prevent Future Trouble There is no probleem connected with marriage which seems to bulk so large in the public mind as the matter or age C o are r r espondents 'V-J!-- r en ky happy-go-luck- self-address- ed Relief At Las For Your Cough trim fCr i w Bopcorn Motif for Spread most never fights with her husband and in whose home peace reigns would tell the fall bride who Is just settling down to marriage that getting along with a man is easy It s easy that is if a woman doesn't mind: Letting him decide whether to stay home or go to a movie Letting him keep his things "where he can find them" — which is never out of sight in a drawer Restraining the impulse to light 5107 en 7tii ed T if iM t j T" 1 ' ' V matrimony they throw up their nanas ana quit The difference in aere between a husband and wife does not matter unless It Is too great A few years either wav Is of no conseauence Age cannot always be computed Dy tne calendar it is a matter or soul of spirit of temperament and this makes it safe for a quiet sedate thoughtful girl to marry a man 25 or 30 years older than she is especially if he Is one of the kind of men who is boyish and enthusiastic But this rule does not work both ways and it is a disastrous thing for a woman to marry a man who is much younger than she Is Perhaps this is because men are less adaptable than women are Perhaps it is because they are less g and less willing to be fireside companions Perhaps it is because men demand arore in the way of personal appearance of their wives than women do of their husbands Perhaps It Is because women are older at the same age than men are Perhaps it Is because old women cannot befool themselves so easily into believing that they can Inspire 5ve in a youthful breast as men do Anyway such marriages never turn out successfully No matter how many times she has her face lifted nor what color she dyes her hair nor how religiously she counts her calories the old wife of a young hifcband knows that she looks like his mother instead of his bride and that he is ashamed of her No matter how she strives against it she cannot help being eaten up with jealousy every time she sees him with a girl or own I home-makin- nis age Kissing and Telling Dear Miss Dix—I am 28 years old Since ray husband's death three years ago I have supported myself and my little girl I am happier now than when my husband was living for he was a drunkard and he made mv lifs miserable with his eternal nagging g and But a year ago I met Bill who wants to marry tne He Is kind generous sober and he and my little girl adore each other So far so good But still there is a lem He is always talking ofprobnu merous affairs ho finH nHft HLX mm IYUJUBU " "" before he met me many of them iar irom respectable Don't you think that if he wants "me to have complete faith in him that he snouid stop reminding me of his yicviuus love anairs? I am very much in love with Bill but I won- aer ir be will tire of by the fireside with m© flnrlsitting Inner tni rr back to the old life? What do you j fault-findin- — -- FAITHFUL READER forCcugfjj "Get dressed Jeanie and I'll tell you about it after we' get out of here" My one desire was to get as far away from that house as I could She was too terrified to areue because by then she had begun Don't Take My Word For It— NAMES IN THE NEWS I a by giving ies business Loving his hobby —even when it takes up most of his spare time Never asking him to spend an facts when we got to the inn evening with people who bore and phoned the state police We him could have phoned from Jeanie's Putting herself out for his fam house but I'll admit I was pan but never expecting him to put icky I- had to get away from ily out for hers himself there and I think Jeanie was glad Sure men are easy to get along I had done it that way once you get the hang of with The hotel phone was in a little always them have their writing room off the lobby and own wayletting when I hung up after talking to Officer John Antler in as coherent a way as I could with my teeth Fuel Checker Runs chattering and my knees going wobbly Chris Gordon was standGas Himself Out ing in the doorway I suppose the two of us (must have had fear written across our white faces beCAMP CLARK Mo Nov 10 cause he looked and then spoke (AP)— Maj James P Hall stayed "Anything I can do for you — ?" up most of the night checking Jeanie started to cry and I said gasoline supplies in all the trucks "Yes get us some hot coffee of his 110th engineers first bat We're about at the end of our talion convoy That is all but his strength Liza Holmes" is up there own jeep It ran out of gas a few miles out of Camp Robinson Ark at the house —' dead — He opened his mouth like a fish and took out his handker- and went back to the house We chief to mop his head He didn't sat there in the kitchen and Jeanie ask any questions but turned and got some milk for a big yellow went away The coffee came be- cat that came meowing at the fore Officer Antler arrived but he door made good time Dr Orway was The girl started to cry "He with him was Liza's pet He was the only "You got a monopoly on finding thing I ever saw her make a fuss dead people?" ho asked over I used to come out here and I said I'd be more than willing find them sitting by the stove to sell him my concession and He'd be on her lap purring and then I attempted to tell them pushing her apron into balls with about finding Liza his paws "She thought a lot of Miss Mil-HDr Orway came In at last and he said "That's probably she looked up at him "Why did what preyed on her mind Well she do it Doctor? To go up there we'll go on over You girls won't alone —" He patted her on the head and mind waiting downstairs will you? You won't have to come up looked at me I saw something in his eyes that made me blurt out with us" the question "But was it suicide? Jeanie said she was all right ' now and so we got in their car (To Be Continued) - of e" JL HOLLYWOOD—Two weeks ago George Brent and Ann Sheridan were so interested in each other George had a special telephone line strung two miles so he could talk to her nightly Ann was on location working o roues iroia xrum uaxK tu uawn Warner Brothers and two miles from the nearest telephone George had the line strung to the center of the 300-actruck farm where Ann is making "Juke Girl" with Ronald Reagan But now Ann and George aren't even interested enough to put a nickle in a telephone to call each other They wouldn't even dial their respective numbers — "for free" For their romance is over Red Skelton was telling us he moved into his new home out Brentwood way "I don't have to bother to install an air cooling system" he reports "I got so many relatives running in and out that the swinging front door keeps the house well aired" Any spectacular rise to fam- eM m H 1 " re brings relatives friends and hang-er-o- ns in Hollywood Bob Burns ViQo anforta Inert na ViierVi a 3ft month — as house guests Some of them are permanent —or would be if Bob didn't take a vacation and lock up his house But then he's cousin to everyone in Arkansas You'll be seeing Red Skelton in "Panama Hattie" soon Bob Burns meanwhile is the "Arkansas Traveler" on the radio Over at Edward Small Studios to see Joan Bennett and George Brent In "Twin Beds" The script calls for Joan to turn down a meal cooked by her screen husband George In real life Joan wouldn't do that — for Ann Sheridan once told us— when she was dating George that Mr Brent was a super-dup- er cook His speciality Is sirloin cooked with spices country gravy and onions — which he calls southern diced steak On the next sound stage It was Christmas Brian Donlevy was giving a big Christmas party for the born to his screen wife Miriam Hopkins-- ' week-old-daugh- ter Just about everything from a toy store was grouped around the big Christmas tree It looked so inviting that Miss Hopkins asked Mr Small if she could buy some of the toys afterwards for her son Michael Preston Foster who has a three year old daughter made the same proposal Donlevy and Philip Reed bought some of the toys too— in anticipation of being Santa's helpers When the set was broken down there wasn't a toy left unsold and the Christmas party which Mr Small the producer had figured tJ l cusL ami wuuiu severalt mouaana dollars had turned out to be practically a gift to him Christmas is getting close— for already Irene Rich announces that she will mount a white horse — and head the parade for the opening of famed Santa Claus Lane Abbott and Costello Judy Garland and A Mickey Jeanette Rooney J! 1 - Z Mac-Dona- SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT my PRO NOUNCING TEST NO 4 In re sponse to hundreds of requests If you (missed Test No 4 when it was previously offered be sure to send for your copy today and test your pronouncing L Q and that of your family and friends This test con tains separate tests for men worn en and children Send a stamped (3c) envelope to care of this pain Frank Colby Ask free for per Pronouncing Test No 4 Requests cannot be filled unless envelope bears correct amount of postage (Released by The Bell Syndicate Inc) - And that's Hollywood! D T'S COME TO LIFE PORTLAND Ore Nov 10 (AP) D T's hold no terrors for this gentleman Police arrestee a man on a drunkenness charge In his pocket they found a snake I have reprinted self-address- ed self-address- ed : Why Thousands of Doctors Ordered This For action loosens Improves ciliary makes It easier to stlcfey phlegm and raise Also mighty effective for adults Inexpensive! Any drugstore PERTUSSIN ror : r Dramatize Your Everyday Dishes With The Unusual Zest And Sparkle Of Rich Old-Fashion- ed Heinz Tomato Ketchup! Pi i - YOU'LL find that women who have a knack for foods taste different know the art of This aromatic using Heinz Tomato Ketchup crimson condiment imparts exciting tang to stews For it's the most marvelous gravies egg dishes of ever flavors tasted I Glorious "aristoyou medley crat" tomatoes Heinz Vinegar and delicate spices are blended together with painstaking care Place a bottle on the table— keep it handy when you're You'll have scores of tempting new cooking right at your finger tips! Tp:Ti it w f i fr f t flavor-combinatio- ns c-s- 1 HI c' u r'fS1 flit) v II ld and many more stars will ride with Santa and feel the windblown jmow on their faces— as the reindeer and sleigh drives down Movieland's famous street Nightly until Christmas the stars ride with Santa An event which brings everyone out- to see —and feel Christmasy! Worditorial first caution is do not rely "My too far on British dictionaries in these days It is of interest to consult them but they are no longer to be cited as authoritative for American English" — Dr Louise Pound University of Nebraska i through the head when he inserted It in a rifle belonging to his mother piece of crochet Make a block now block This handsome "popcorn" and then with no hurry or worry has 49 fat little popcorns clustered and you'll be surprised how your together inside a fascinating open- blocks grow in number YouH have work border Each block is 614x6 a lovely bedspread in no time! inches To obtain crocheting instructions Blocks are set together diagonally to form a single or a double bed- for the "popcorn" blocks (Pattern spread This diagonal setting forms No 5197) amounts of material spea very handsome and tailored look- cified directions on how to set blocks together for bedspread iling edge to your bedspread Blocks this size are convenient to lustrations of stitches send 10c in carry about in your purse so that coin your name and address and you can work on them at odd mo- the pattern number to Anne Cabot ments They provide a pleasant The News 149 New Montgomery-s- t change too from working on a laree San Francisco to suspect I had found something horrible It wasn't until we were walking down the road to the Inn that I managed to describe' it and the way she wilted I won dered if we'd ever onake our des tination "But suicide she kept repeat ing "Why should she hang herself Mary? Why? Was it because she missed Aunt Millie so much? Still Liza wouldn't forget me She couldn't just leave me alone" "Maybe your aunt's death did something to her mind" I sug gested "They'd been together for a long time They were both women who never made anany friends easily never talked much Their lives were pretty cut and house-keeplngwdut- away the old clothes he no longer wears getting rid of the back issues of his favorite magazines and throwing away all the mail that is at least three months old Saying nothing when he leaves empty glasses in the living room scatters ashes on the coffee table and throws scattered sheets of newspaper on the floor — but instead convincing herself that such touches give a room the "lived-i- n look decorators are always harp ing on Let Hubby Be the Domestic King Giving up the idea of taking care of his health Which means she mustn't say "You haven't touched your salad dear" remind him to wear his rubbers attempt to get him to bed at a reasonable hour or try to get him to take his sports in a manner that will do more toward getting rid of his bay window than settling down in his favorite chair to listen to a sports announcer Leaving him with all the bad habits he had —'but she never sus pected he had — when they were married Never asking him to run any errands for her no matter how much she helps him 'with his BY MRS ANNE CABOT VIDKUN QUISLING was the head of Norway's national unity party before the country was occupied by Germany in April 1940 Unbeknown to the Norwegians Quisling was a fifth columnist in the pay of Hitler When the Germans invaded Norway Quisling was established as the leader of the nazi regime Hence the name dried" "I can't understand it Aunt Quisling has become an epithet of extreme contempt meaning Millie left her money you know And Liza — well she never talked traitor" In the United States the name much but she did mention some Is commonly heard as "KWIZ-ling- " things she was going to do with but says the Royal Norwe her money She was going to have of Washington a new black dress made And a gian legation " the 'u' In this most hated new hat And she asked one to of names has the subscribe to a garden magazine sound of V and the V should be and a little missionary paper she hissed — with apology to other used to read "She told me that by the next snakes! time I went to town she'd have a Correct pronunciations: list of things made out for me Vidkun VEET-koo- n to buy: things she was going to Quisling: KVISS-lin- g (Capitals indicate syllables to be send to her niece's little girl She liked to sew for her and she was accented) going to make some school dresses She wasn't thinking of dying How Did It Start? Salt Lake: The English are often Mary I know she wasn't!" What we both were thinking referred to as "LIMEYS" Why?— but not saying was that this n g Answer Limey is short for might be onurder and not suicide "Lime Juicer" a term properly A third murder — that was too applied to English ships and sail- much to put into words We were careful to state only ors For centuries the serving of daily rations of lime juice aboard British ships has been compulsory Lime juice is rich in Vitamin C and prevents scurvy Answer—Evidently Bill does not iuow tnac a gentleman Is not supposed to kiss and telL A unan whn boasts of his affairs with women 13 a cad at heart and so vain that he will have to have his ego continually nourished by philandering In order to prove that he is still a devil among the ladies If you waiK to xne aitar witn him it will (CAUSED BY CCLDS) be at' your own risk Mothers are simply overjoyed about DOROTHY DDC Pertussin because often the first Bpoonfula help bring PROMPT relief Ledger Syndicate Irom bronchial and eroupy coughs due to colds And Pertussin is so tafce! Idaho Youth Killed pleasant and safe tor kiddies tostomto sicken delicate little Nothing — it's entirely free from dope While Loading Rifle achs chloroform and coal tar products la scientifically prepared IDAHO FALLS Nov 10 (AP— toPertussin act at once to relieve your ehild'a George Bromley son of coughing spasm It Increases natural Mrs Ethel Bromley was killed secretions in the respiratory tract to instantly when a 22 calibre rifle soothe dry irritated membranes It Creomulslon relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw tender inflamed bronchial mucous membranes Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un- discharged accidentally Coroner derstanding you must like the way it Fred Porter said the cough or you are V Porter said the bov had found a quickly to have allays your money back H22 cartridge on a rifle range early Saturday and was accidentally shot CREOMULSION Chest Colds Crcnchitis We got downstairs and into her room ex BY RUTH MIT LETT Any wife of five years who al long-sleeve- continually asking me: What is the ideal age 'A to marry? What difference in age should there be between a husband and wife? Should a woman a man marry much older than herself? Is the marriage of an old man to a f tea young girl likely to turn out happily? Of course no one can answer these questions definitely for one of the things about marriage that makes it such a gamble is that for every rule about It there are a thousand exceptions and no one can foretell whether a wedding cake is going to be angel's food or produce a case of chronic indigestion Speaking broadly however and with a due appreciation that my guess may be wrong I should say that the ideal time for a couple to marry as nearly as it can be reduced to figures is anywhere in the twenties for women and in the thirties for men That gives them time to be grown-u- p and for their characters to have jelled into the kind of (men and women they are going to be and yet"catches them before their tastes and habits have hardened into solid concrete that makes it impossible for them to adapt themselves to any one else Also it is when love and romance are in flower Boys and girls are too immature to experience the grand passion Old maids and old bachelors concentrate their affections on themselves-But men and women in their prime are capable of the love that lasts through alj the ups and downs of matrimony Children's Fancies Fleeting That the very young should not marry is amply proven by statistics that show that the divorce courts are cluttered up with the domestic woes of the boys and girls whose marriages did not last as long as their trousseaux did Children's fancies are proverbially fleeting The thing they are crazy about one day bores them to tears p rprinting costs when you seek the next and this holds good of personal advice or one of his psy- husbands and wives as well as mochological charts) torcycles and new hairdos (Copyright by The Hopkins It takes a lot of things beside Syndicate Inc) sentiment to make a go of marriage It takes tact and steadfastness of purpose and the ability to take punishment and money and so it Is no wonder when two kids who have none of these qualifications face the stern realities of happy-go-luc- NCA SERVICE INC - happy-go-luck- V-18- CHAPTER XXI There was a window open so that nice musty odor that all good attics posses wasn't so noticeable but it still had a faint suggestion of camphor and mothballs and dried herbs I could see strings of herbs hanging from a rafter and as my eyes got used to the darkness I could see funny old trunks sitting around and furniture that made my mouth water with envy I stood patting an old spool day-be-d that was piled high with comforters and back under the eaves was a walnut chest with darling drawer pulls I was still feasting my eyes and roaming around for I knew this was a real treasure house A little footstool was lying on its side a few feet farther back and I moved over toward it when I made out a white object back In the gloom Well why go Into details? It was horrible enough That white object was poor Liza Holmes hanging from one of the rafters She still wore her d house dress and her white apron and her poor head hung slightly to one side above the ' cord I think I moaned but Jeanie who was sitting on a trunk in the center of the attic probably thought I was just going into maore ecstacies because she said something about being glad I had found something I could enjoy up there I backed up slowly nearly falling over the footstool What she saw in my face froze her She started to get up but slumped down again with terror of the unknown dawning In her own eyes "Just come out of here" I insisted "Right away and don't look" COPYRIGHT 194t ' WAT App An Old Story To Wise Wives 725 (711 O SERIAL STORY MURDER IN PARADISE Here is an employe who refused a promotion with a big salary increase He said he didn't want to have the responsibility of making decisions or "sticking his neck out" But the big salaries are paid to those who will take on added worries Save this Case Record for your scrapbook if you wish to learn how to' select ambitious workers in cony sort trast to the who must always be prodded from the rear NOVEMBER' 10 MONDAY EVENING STANDARD-EXAMINE- R I i |