I. ,.1 anassrf-i»;.»¢_u~..~.»-»-e-»¢~_. ._......_..._~:_._.._._7 ___ -7 ~\e~:\\ar§f`=/=< .°‘ ' l < ini W.; »_§_ rl eitlii’ . . .f'i`§-\i'.- réll' ri l E . ‘ ~.‘f`i`i‘f. _‘I »-Z&\44h`¢i4D§h-*1 ‘l .." wr-T it _ \ i -'do 4 as iz U I I I _ . 1 *E51 .;__~ »- I I 5 ar;-5.43 _i I 1** \ ii" i . j _f."`_‘ " .i_ “ »-~&»»,vu.~,i.».~..,,. \ _ _ _ _ __ ..;___~_'_____-_,;,;,*_,,,_,,.,,;_,_._,_. __.,___..'_-.l. ..¢.'...`;.,l...._-1...'-"~-" ~»- '-' ' V T . _. ,_ _ _ ‘ pl I I I ' ' . _ Y _ _ ,_ ' s _QGE EIGHT ____ _ rr-m_c}iAaLo'r'ra1~owN cuanniaiw _,E4 .__ 1_1 _ _U _ _ 1 U i sWoman’s Realm -.°- Social and Personal -rg 1_*_"a_.§_r_h'__z__o_p__§______g.__-»e Lrte_»_-_q_r_¢_,_,;,L_ w.u.Nu'r wan-:as 0 _' » 1 ____ ‘ ‘wr One cup light brown sugar, two _ cis* eggs one cup chopped walnut meats. ,_ pinch salt, about six or eight table- \v ' spoons pastry flour. Beat the eggs _ ' ' well, adding gradually the susan i . i E _' and beating after each addition. Add salt and flour, and then the walnuts. Bake in small well-greased muffin tins. or drop on a buttered baking sheet about two inches apart. Bake about ten minutes. _ QM ._i___.__--- _ _ i Mixing Bowl _ Equipment i 0 l % Mixing-blcnding- these are op- erations we do so often that they are apt to be taken mainly for grinited andno attempt made to im prove their methods. Yet it is the most done things that give the highest returns when a short cut or an improvement is introduced. Let us, then, check over our mixing equipment occasionally and see if Qflslzqour I :For The Cook ~ ‘V _ DOTOfhy LGUBI’ BOX ` ' ` _ ` _ _ ._ _ ..., “Sheltered” Girl Who Fears the World Into Which She is Being' Pushed - Is ‘a Clean House Worth More Than a Culti- ' vated Mind? - In-Laws Dear Miss Dix-I have been what is called a "sheltered" girl all my life. Never allowed to go anywhere without one of my family with me, never permitted to visit my girl friends or to go to places with them. - Now our family is going to separate and I am full of fear as to what the future will hold and don't know how to take care of myself. Don‘t you think that mothers make a. mistake in babying their children too mucfh? R. L. --#_ Answer: _ It is a distorted parental love and a colossal egotism that make parents keep their children tied to their apron strings. It flatters their vanity to have their children dependent upon them for everything and come to them for advice and coun- h sei and look up to them as the source of all sup they feel that they can keep their children longer with them if t ey never let them make any outside ties or have any outside interests. And in excuse for the parents one must remember that _they are so obsessed by their love for their children that they do not realize howl sel- flsh they are, nor how surely they are jeopardizing the child's future. For li is allright or if it might be for __ the particular' uses it is called upon lo fill. ‘ Of course the pinnacle of all joy is reached with a mechanical mix- my with its many adjustable paris that will beat and mix everything for you from a simple whipped rreuni to n complete butter of giruiuli. Whilst you still use hand mixing methods, however, there are simple little tools that will be Ui great assistaiiice. Grocer / beater set in the cover is quick and clean and efficient. Every kitch- en should have one heavy rotary beater that will whip up one egg ‘in a cup- One also needs a spoon shaped wire egg whisk. The creaming of batters is best Bowls of several sizes are of done with 9, slatted wooden spoon; d° course ii real necessity, and it ls‘ it is a great convenience to have well to select them with sides that two gr three sizes' at least and one slnnt quite sharply towards the bot _or two of them with the slits cut "f"“» t0 fnmitiifo mixing and bent- in the bowl of the spoon. For cut- infr. For cream, salad dressing, ting und folding, ir broad bladed uc.. ei covered jar with rt roiaryi limbcr spatula is most useful. 1 _ CLARKS PORK and BEANS i (With Tomato, Chiller Ploirl Sauce) '1 f I\ ' ° `”"' ' V ..i§`?'... C g g |¢ ¢ d c Ovens is:'i:_$:':".'§‘.'°';:i:.¢°Lf’.:‘:: NV __ I 'A camels" firm mssiiuile |e77 `W. C L A R K . lmrnzrz. rf.: Establishments of Montreal, P.Q., , ~ ' 'iv-f7l_`_*,‘ "N _ t ' ‘ I _ at P ii' ‘ S0. Rumi, P.Q., and Harrow, Onl . " C1 Ofll crib IUCCII .- OMC iollor ~l ' For Sala By PIIOWSE B808., LIMITED Charlottetown » the time must come when every boy and girl must stand alone on their own feet, when they must depend on their own Judgment, when they must live alone, and they are bound ‘to stumble and fall if they have always held on to fathers hand and been guided by his advice and had mother to comfort them. Even the birds have intelligence enough to thrust their young out of the nest when the time comes and make fledglings try their own wings. Certainly human beings should be as wise and prepare their young for life by teaching them to depend upon themselves and make their own way in the world. I believe that from their very infancy children should be taught to things for themselves, to rely on themselves and to decide minor matters for themselves. They will make blunders and mistakes, but they will leam from them and it will ht them for a life in which the race goes to the swift and the battle to the strong. I Too much home life is not good for children. They become too much obsessed with the family point of view, too self-centered and they need the contact with the outside world, the broadening influence of strangers with different points of view. And the mother love that absorbs the child often makes the en- forced separation that must come in a normal life a tragedy. I often think of a bride I met once in a hotel on the other side of the world who was enduring an agony of homesickness that was almost wrecking her reason and her young husbands happiness. This young lady told me that she worshiped her mother and that,in all her life she had never spent a single day or night away from her mother until she was married and started with her husband to the fine position he had been given with n. rubber firm in Ceylon. She said that she had never decided a thing for herself or bought a garment or even gone to town alone. Always mother had lived her life for her, domin- ated her. possessed her and when she was thrown out on her own she was frightened, bewildered, helpless, filled with despair. This young lady had made a. splendid marriage in every sense of the world. but she was ruining it because her mother had made her toe dependent upon her. And I thought that the cruelest mother alive could have done her daughter no greater injury. DOROTHY D1X_ constant Dear Miss Dix-I am a young married woman o fthe middle class and try to be a good housekeeper, but my in-laws are always criticizing me because I will not get down on my knces.to scrub a floor and they don't approve of a. mop. I like cleanliness, but I do not believe in making it a fetish, Don‘t you think that when people make a religion out of a utine job it is because they have nothing better to occupy their minds? I did things the way they expect me to do, I would never have time read even the newspapers. What do you think? MR/S. T. R. J. NJ If to Answer: I think you are right and that about the worst sort of idolatry is worship of the scrubbing brush. Cleanliness is next to godliness, but it is not above it. _ I have been in homes that were so neat and orderly that they were more uncomfortable than a pig sty would have been. My hostess looked at my feet to see if I had tracked in any dust instead of at my face to see if I was glad to be with her. Every time you moved a chair you were made to feel as If you had committed a sacrilege. It would have demanded superhuman courage to take a book down from a shelf, and to have made a spot on the tablecloth would have been regarded as a. crime on a par with murder. Such a house Is not a home. It is a prison. No man ever looked forward to Naming home to it at night. No child ever stays in in a moment longer than is absolutely necessary. Everybody flees from it to some other house where things are only moderately clean and never orderly, and where people can relax and enjoy themselves. Bo you are exactly right not to sacrinc yourself to your house. When it comes to a choice between scrubbing the wall behind the kitchen stove and reading a good book, read the book. Your husband won‘t know whether there is a pinch of dust beneath the icebox, but he will know whether you are an interesting companion or have nothing to talk about except how hard you have worked all day, i _ $ f&// '63' ‘;@ 31'? sy fl?/” / 7$ / _ I U ._ _ ,_ . _ . I _SCIUIIING CLOTHES. Ol’ COURSE. WHAT DO VCU wi-ev. M/mv...w|-mv 555 "°° °°'"°' 'ri-ur_m rn nomar How su.|.v nwas. JIM. wsanmo mvsear our evznwwasi-Inav. _ ws-iv nmso'soA»f>_\:.~ Tse. _ .\ i§\ _'_\`.\_ `| // than-ever prices. // W //I n/ thi I during fl wh:t;l:>§.el:vo formelllgr' f//5. 9'” 4 _ // / /,//1";-/Q;-_ ' , / _ '{§\;\ \ \ and cleaning. 2 ij =§ 2; E _ ._ IZ/ Dclightfully simple little jacket _ A l €e . g 1; _;__ RUG W” TODAY' f _ __~~ »;i _ I i _'___ ' .f-' _ _ wi'l‘tl1;°illrlglh:lvl:;ris model in brown l ~ ' l 'f " -2 T" ' i SIZE PRICE PRICE ~ ` . » '-f ~. _ “\‘ . .00 ~ diagonal twccd effect woolen, show- 3" __ _ . .__~~9~’ 3 ii 3! 2 hh' .150 Q/ striking contrast in its crepe silk . ' -'\ _ - ~ ‘_ _ x M ' ' 6 00 blouse in fuchsia shade. ' ' ‘T <» » 9 ‘ 6 fl' ‘ 9'0o ° Don‘t you love the skirt treatment Q/">§.:1\» “W .: '_ A 'l 9 3 7% ff- ' 11-25 750 its tn 1 :mes m one cms- ~`-"-"` 1*.. ' 9 x 9 ft. - 13.50 9-00 I . f _ __ _ i 'tn " ' _ 0 ° :<1 struilnllnéggtrut in all yerepe sua . I ` ` ._ , .f \ ' 9 2 10% ft - 15.75 10-50 ay _ _ __. I ' moulds the figure to well below the _ » 0 _,__ 9: B ‘L ° 1B'o0 12’oo E.. e :;:_~..;z‘::.,‘::.i“;‘._:.‘°°°“= 0 .. - ~ e - V . - -: -:-:-:-:-:-:»:~"~'~:'-:~:-:~:»:1:-:-11:1:-:¢:~:-:- " , ~, .7 '- ` DOROTHY ,Bw-_<1 Md* I' e-f=» we we in my ba me in uw V . -Cv _ _ fresh, cows milk, concentrated __ ~1:§;§§;f-: 14, i6, 18, 20 years, 30 and 3_8 inches | u . ‘ ‘sh .' and ne.:-iliz¢¢i._ Use in coffee, cocoa bust. size is requires 8% yards of _ "5 ' ` _ _ _ _ , or tel. Lise at on eakfut cereals. J __ 39-inch material for Jacket and skirt _ __ _ _ _ , ‘Q53 Dl|“°°d *'41 In “lull ¢l“"‘"*Y °f with 2 yards or as-men material for _ _ water, use ir for all cooking and for . blouse, ' _ ' W G6” dflflkinh- I* if 3 SAFE mukn md f_|1°'° _ Adorable too for more dressy wear ` _ - , _ Br curly digested because homogenized. _ _ _ _ is black crepe satin with eggshsll t:.¢3.2£l_‘aL Bum 15:... ' °’°"°°""“ "'°“"‘ _ _ ,_ 3.1!-'on-»-"" ' ' B' ""`° "° an ln th' 'W °' th' fdfv ' ' " ni.-.1-y.-rluli' M,” EyAp0“A1-ED Mlm §5:§;-;,5;;:§:5:;_;___ .::-:;:.:::;;;:;g;;_--, Pattern. Bend _stamps or cola _(coin concouuu mdilwbu hw no "L rm ,..||“" ay can-»». I ..._ __ ._ ‘ _ _ "~ “~ __,,pn1m-94.), ' ~ of '; ‘WV UWT” ' N" I Economy plus all the beauty and convenience of design . . . Freedom from tiresome sweeping . 7 ° f 1 I jg) _ _ I. -_:_/` E Congoleum Gold Seal Rug fa guaranteed by » 3 f ihvoezmous GOLD SEAL . . . New pattormfor the _ ' season showing unusual beauty in coloring and ,_ s °' ` Take advani e NOW of today’| low prion. Vial! _ l ur nearest :linker and make your selection. Here _ I -' c)eoouomy in in most striking and satisfactory ‘ 551 _.\ EE - r ii / / ,fe ! »*‘ X ‘w C Jo-day-Iionqoleum ll_uq_s all new _lowerli/zan-_ever pl'l€€$ Actual savings . . . auch as you cannot fall to I a reciaio w en brlghte u our home . . . - l$(l’W yours mth these he-\l'n4€Ole(!0LEUM lower- _ _ _ covering at a fraction of paid. ;_, \ ui. /4 2 yi” » a. / '4»’<' = fr <1! ‘ , /1. bf li it i' Q) ./ f , /:V ei ,iii 5;,-_,_ »> t _ is it z is 5 eg __ / ,u _ . ‘ 5 ‘~‘ \ Qi- c\ as i. 4 l