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Show THE BULLETIN Mature Lover Must Pro- - f tect the Girl Ilf II 'anj L ? to Marry. ' I By A I ant thirty-si- x years old amt am about to divorce my wife on the grounds of desertion. We are parting on amiable terms however and are both satisfied with the arrange- NJEW YORK. American magi-ciaaren't doing so welL ns my office work and also acts as in my home. She is the girl I want and when I proposed to her she told me that she couldn't marry me because of the difference in our ages. She likes her young boy friends, her parties, dates, ete. I agreed with her that she should have some fun before settling down. I know once she did settle down she would be a fine wife and a good mother. I look fairly young and am interested in many forms of enjoyment besides parties. The girl in question wont let me take her to a show or anything of the sort. Do you think I will overcome her objections to marriage? 1 know she is growing fonder of me daily. I am deeply In love and would make any sacrifice which would lead to her happiness. 11. K. ANSWER The man who is deeply and tenderly in love with a girl much younger than himself has a double difficulty to deal with. He must on the one hand follow the natural dictates of his heart, and propose to the lady; and he must not forget, on the other hand, to protect the girl he loves from making a mistake out of her inexperience and youth. It is perfectly human that a suitor should rejoice in the fact of seeing his affinity daily and welcome the signs of her greater love for him. -' ' ; ' E w It is no infrequent occurrence for a man to marry without aver haying given a serious thought to what marriage meant. He has simply decided that he is su bs love to want one particular girl around the house ell the time. Having achieved this he is literally amazed to discover that ell sorts of rules and regulations have come into effect since he murmured a few unconvincing words to a parson. heartbreaking a wife may find her husbands desertion he ean count herself lucky if she makes her discovery about his brand of devotion, early in marriage while there is yet time for her to free herself of a hopeless entanglement and begin life over again. If shes wise shell accept the fact once and for all that some men are not suited to marriage that they blunder into it with only the vaguest intentions of good and that unless they discover their mistake in time, they can ruin the lives ol their wives and children. If your husband, B. H., has told you the truth and you are convinced that he is simply unable to stand marriage, take his decision asto fina get and make up your mind satisfacmore life of out something tory than the Job of trying to make a weak irresponsible husband stick to a marriage contract. Ball Syndicate. WNU Servlet. By ALSON SECOR la Saecesshtl OLD Fazzsimg SASTA CLAUS - don't believe in him because lie makes them spend. They like to borrow, but never lend That Christmas cheer Which permeates this lime of year. GREENE sighed as she through the old for the Christmas decorations. Sighed, and also felt ashamed. For why should she be lonely, with two fine grown sons, successful enough to satisfy any mother? But Mrs. Greene missed her tousled-heade- d lads, and as she fingered the battered drum, the outgrown mittens, the books and souvenirs, she felt a deep pang that no one needed her any longer. She found the decorations and bustled down. Mary, the housekeeper the boys provided, had finished. There was really nothing left to be done. She thought of other tired Christmas eves, and could stand the oppression of memories no longer. "Im going out, she said, and with no other explanation set out into the night. It was crisp and starlit, and she walked far. The light and warmth of a cafe attracted her, and she stopped for tea. Over the rim of her teacup her eyes met those of a small boy just outside the window. He drew back shyly, leaving a moist spot where his nose had touched the pane. He looked very hungry, not just the healthy hunger which her sons had brought home from school, but as though he were really in need. Mrs. Greene smiled and beckoned. "Come in," she invited. The boy shook his head, started to go, but the temptation of warmth and food was too much. Thats better," Mrs. Greene approved, when he was seated opposite her, with a great bowl of soup. "I just needed someone to talk to. And before long she had heard tha no folks, boys whole story. Having he lived with an uncle, but he want- -' ed to get out on his own. There MRS. set- DORIS DENE: I was little ever a year, and my husband was good to me. Then suddenly one night he earns home to tell me that married life didnt suit him and that be wanted to be free. I pleaded with him not to leave me but be went. When he was sick In the hospital I went to see him and he treated me as a friend. Be has now filed suit for divorce. Sometimes I think his mother is responsible for this situation. I still love him. What ean I do? B. H. ANSWER Whether your mother-in-lawas somewhere in the background directing her sons movements or not, it seems obvious that the man you married was a bad matrimonial investment. For no man in the world could be weak enough to let his mother ruin h s marriage not if he loved his wife as he should. HARVEST g tled down urEARmarried a TL. CHRISTMAS I d if she isnt ready for the matrimonial undertaking she will be a disappointment to you and her married life will be a bitter disillusionment to herself. Cease trying to convince her that you are her best hope of happiness. Your more mature brain and your greater depth of experience may make it possible for you to sway the feelings of your lady entirely in your direction but if her mind and heart are not truly won over to marriage the result of your victory will be bitter defeat. ka non-illuso- ry Sometime s the girl in the ease knows her ohm mind so definitely that her much-eide- r sweetheart can rely on her judgment to make the right decision. If she is the sort of girl quiet, steady, who is honestly enxious far a home end for the responsibilities oj marriage she may marry the man twenty years older then herself end make e success of the job. But when a damsel indicates plainly that she is still interested in being popular when she knows her preference far young men end their ideas of a good time then her more mature admirer must lake his place in the background end wait for her to make up her mind without any persuasion from him. Because you are looking so eagerly for signs of the sort you want, H. K., you are able to discover indications that your sweetheart is going to make an excellent wife and However There arc leaks, lawsuits and lamentations. In California, there is a drive to oust en J. Froskauer, Are New York head of Plaguing of the Society Magiciant American Magicians, for spilling trade secrets. Mr. Proskaucr enters a vehement and vigorous denial. In the New York federal court, Horace Goldin charges that a tobacco company has let everybody in on his patented technique of sawing a woman in two and therefore made worthless the illusion out of which he used to get $2,000 a week. He brought the same suit for the same amount against Victor A. Per-e- y in 1923 and against a tobacco company in 1933. There is war on several fronts as the magicians fight to safeguard dollars. "Sacrifices wealth to marry pretty proofreader" was a headline when Julien J. Proskauer married Miss Cornelia Grant in 1915. The "wealth was a big family printing plant in New York city, but he didnt sacrifice it and is today vice president of the company. He was elected president of the magicians in 1935, as an amateur, and he still keeps his amateur stand- Protkauer fog. a leader in Leadg Fight the fight against on Fakerg frauds and fakers. "We dont want to deceive the public; we only want to fool them," he said when he was elected. He was the only amateur ever to do Houdini's underwater milk can escape. He broke a brace of riba doing it, something which Messrs. Edeu, Delbos and Ribbentrop will never do, and seems to think the price was well paid. A solid, stocky man of average stature, running a big business behind hexagonal glasses which give a keen glint to his eyes, Mr. Proskauer is apt to slip a visitor a couple of red spongea to hold tight in each hand and then make them jump from one hand to the other or disappear altogether, with the fists tightly, clenched. Meeting the depression, he got up "Stunts, Inc.," rigging magical adtricks. vertising Money RoUg and this year his turnover is some-in From $1 uStunt$, Inc. where around He in 000,000. stalled In the firm Dexter who doubles in psychology and philosophy. Mr. Sinsabough gives a proposed new trick the psyand gauges the chological once-ovpopular reaction with astonishing accuracy. The money rolls in. "Stunts, Inc." seems to have started the trouble. Mr. Proskauer Insisted that he has spilled nothing but "kid tricks, and never under any circumstance has or would release a professional secret. He doesnt like the word tricks," as applied to real magic. He says the illusions are rather "experiments in magic. He has a passion for such illusions, which, ha says have been "art and not trickery," ever since Moses threw the canes on the ground and turned them into serpents. That, by the way, still seems to be tops in magic. Juli-Lea- ment we have made. Now I have fallen in love w ith the girl aged nineteen, who helps with a perfect mother, once she has Lemuel F. Parlon lYVTTTTfTWTfTTTVTtTTTTff? FtEAR DORIS DENE: sober-minde- Catch Up on Chic WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... i He Sure Was Here cynics, these. They are tight-fisteThey never know how presents please Tha Hula kids, and others; Tha sisters and the brothers; The caresuom dads and weary mothers. They never learned to live Because they never learned to give. Youve got to plant before you reap. If all you get you keep Your soul gets barren, sterile, sour. It takes the power Of cheerful giving To give a test to living. were so many little ones, and after all, he didnt really belong. Hed get by. He knew where he could get a paper route right now, if he only had a bicycle. "I know where theres a bicycle standing useless In an attic corner," said Mrs. Greene. "It belonged to my sons. You shall have it. His shining eyes made the whole Sinsa-boug- h, er tha night seem brighter. They left together. There was more than the bicycle. It seemed a shame, Mrs. Greene said, for mittens not to be used, and these books, now, and well, why not? Mary would be scandalized, and her sons might not understand but there was their room, never opened now aha said. aIve "Listen, lad, been aching my heart out for a son. And you need a home. Couldnt we give ourselves to each other for a Christmas present? Wont you be my son? "Gee I cried the boy, voicing a wonder of love and gratitude. "You can sure have me, and Merry Christmas! Merry, Merry Christmas, Mother! C Wtitaro Newepeper Union. ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING HP HERE are those to whom Christmas dinner would not be Christmas dinner without ending with plum pudding. Scald 2 Vt cups stale breadcrumbs with 1 cup cream. Cream Ik pound beef suet and add to it Ik cup brown sugar, tk cup com syrup, S eggs, Ik pound chopped citron, Ik pound currants, 2 teaspoons baking powder and Ik cup brandy or rum. Turn into a buttered mold and steam for 24 hours, 12 hours one day and 12 hours the next. Turn into a tin and seal until ready for use, when it must be reheated for serving. Sorve with a sauce of choice. well-beate- n n, dart-fitte- d two-piec- Uncle Phil at the right This buffo model is different enough to delight you and simple enough to set you sewing at sight It is cut for comfort but with an ever watchful eye on that elusive little thing called chic. Crisp contrast may be had In the collar and cuffs and in that trim row of buttons that march down the line and then back again. Look fresh la your version in pretty percale. The Patterns. Pattern 1946 is designed for sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 44 bust). Size 16 requires 314 yards of 39 inch fabric. One yard of ribbon la required for shoulder straps. Pattern 1404 is designed for sizes 12 to 20 (30 to 38 bust). Size requires Vk yards of 89 inch materiaL Pattern 1390 la designed for 14 sizes 34 to 48. Size 36 4 requires yards of 35 inch materiaL The collar and cuffs in contrast require 114 yards materiaL Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. WNU Scrvica. C Bell Syndicate. Glass Curtain In the National theater of Mexico City, known as the Palacio da Bellas Artes, a huge glass curtain executed by Tiffany of New York, is one of its most striking features, and is perhaps the only one of its kind in the world. It la composed of thousands of pieces d of glass and tha novel lighting arrangement volcathe noes, Popocatepetl and Ixtaccihu-aU- , at sunrise, midday and sunset. vari-colore- ra-vea- ls snow-crowne- Saudi Respect Due Precedent Respect for precedent has a solid basis. Dont be contemptuous of precedent, but study its claims to authority. Gossip thrives less among men a particularly because it means a TX7HAT the iron man black eye if not worse. will wear: black knee pants, It is nonsense to say that no green flannel shirt, yellow belt, and one is interested in the troubles of a white arm band with a green others. Were not all Inhuman. swastika. Such is Men have had but one burst of Iron Guard tha latest fashion extravagance in clothing in the note on the cos- last SO years. It was when they Plant Coup turns of Coraeliu paid $8 for a silk shirt. in Rumania Zelea Codreanua Human conscience began to Iron Guard, which threatens to seize function thousands of years ago. Rumania. There is a lot of it in the Bible. M. Codreanu, most virulent It is hard to conceal contempt. in Europe, has made a puz- Something besides words gives you zling alliance with the democrati- away. cally inclined Dr. Julius Maniu. He is frank about his desire to help dear the way for Germanys march to Mosul oil and the Ukraine. LIKE "Within 48 hours of my partys achieving victory, Rumania will have concluded an alliance with Berlin and Rome, he says. He is thirty-seve- n years old. In 1924, when he was a student in Jassy university, he shot and killed the prefect of police who suppressed riots. He was acquitted, and later was tried and freed for alleged complicity in another assassination. For years he has been gunning for the Little Entente and has power enough to force a cabinet shake-u- p every once in a while. There's nothing trivial about his hatred of Carol's King Magda Lupescu, friend. Dressed as above, with a revolver in his belt, he leads his followers on a white horse. They ride the countryside, each with a little bag of the "sacred soil of Rumania" tucked in his shirt, fanning up the peasants and spoiling for a fight. Hia following has been mainly made up of university students, but they say his Iron Guard is now recruiting some powerful adult interests which may declare him in in a big way. Cantolid.ited New, Feature a. WMU Scrvica. but "That Icela better well-dresse- And Before Long She Beard Boys Whole Story. IF YOURE a bit behind in the 1 thrilling game of Milady, why not take advantage of the holiday season and catch up? Todays trio is especially right for "vacation sewing because It consists of simple practical pieces that require little time and trouble. Make all three and youll have gone a long way toward putting the old punch back in the game. Streamlined Styling. The slip at the left is all you could wish for from the standpoint of styling. It offers superb lines from the moderately low cut V waist neck, through the right down to tha very hem. The clever overlapping back is light proof and provides an action pleat so necessary for complete satisfaction. Important, too, is the fact that you may choose the material you wish in your own color. Better make it in duplicate for many meticulous months ahead. Pretty in Sheer Wool. e The in the center is, like the slip, heavy on style. The defined waist is effectively young as is the flowing skirt and little round collar. It la just the frock to give one lots of for the second semester, or "to break the ice" whenever one is anxious about ones apearance. It can be the height of chic in sheer wool very pretty in flat crepe. Modern nome Dress. When its home youre thinking of you naturally turn to a frock like the third member of the trio d d HELP KIDNEYS To Get Rid of Add and Poisonous Waste Tsar kidneys Ms to keep nsby eonian Uy liiicriag vuu an (ran Ui Mood. II yow kidacyn gab disordered ui Id lo fractionally i mpuritiea, Dm - pawning af tbp Body-wi-de domra ntyjj Bum lag, acaaty or tea Iterant miration icy be a waning af cam kidney ar fclidder dtawrbaara pirtioml kcadarira attacked dmira aweUiag. puffiram getting ap aighte. ado tha ayte - fad weak, Penan,- aS Ml, la auek cam It la katter to rely ra o medicine tkai kaa woo eorauy-wid- s acclaim tkaa ra aoawtklnt lorn ferae-ab- ly - kaocra. lira Dooms Nb. A multitude af grateful people rernmmead Daca'i. As pear wieblorf anti-Semi- te LIFES THAT By Fred Nehcr anti-Semit- ... it's stiff a little snug." |