5N1} s. \ m. \\‘ .1- a var‘ ‘\\§\\ ‘ K4 "i . _\ rsvgt Q1 i ‘11T*~1~.+_ ~ . '~. ,.~- _~ gr‘ Pr“: 3Q,“ ‘ 1"? '51s. a» an» Hf‘ ' ‘ ‘i. , ~ . "1- §% 1 k bit: v“ i}. y: I'd . '1' ‘ h ,, ._ , v~_T\\ ,. l sax-la m‘: n, ‘ ,5, \ ,' c,‘ s‘! 1* "n.2,, 1 ad?“ ‘ . i’ nuplrhaio-‘u or s52 aqf-f: n: aeolian!!!» SHREDDE ‘=1!'illllH105!!!)pvsllvvllllslllll1on1:1 PAGE TWO omen ’s‘ v‘¢ ¢¢ v vv vvvv ‘rwvv‘ ‘v‘¢¢ eevvveee v _R¢a' AN YOU TAK I THE UPS AND DOWNS START each day with Shredded Wheat . . . end you won’: worry so much which way things go! l1’: the food elm furnishes the viral elemenu oulb in made of . . . proteins and minerals, carbo- ydraler and vitamins. They’ro all in whole wheat. And Shredded When i: whole wheat, with all the bran measured by Naiure. Nothing added, nothing taken away! Just crisp-baked biscuits . . . ready cooked. ready 1o eat. Serve them with milk or cream, with fresh or preserved fruit. Bu: serve (hem for a! lean ten days. Thm you'll know why Shredded Wheat is known to happy millions n the " MADE IN CANADA v BY CAN VITALLY DIFFERENT food. 11 AUIANS - OF CANADIAN WHEAT n? b51112!!!‘ A MamingSmile Not long ego a young lady from the West was engaged to a young man from Louisrllle_ It hupprnctl that she wont to iifllllllléy‘ l0 \lslt n: the young 11..111’s home. The young man “KL! wry much interest- ed in horse racing and he insisted upon taking 111s ilzmce to a horse race every ui111r11111111 oi 111-1‘ visit. lrle would lulu: her ll1rouul1 1111- pud~ dock and point out the various horses to her. "There is Heville Boy," he would say, "out of Late Date by Lowcr Ton. ‘There 1s Suprmno Sow-rt, 11111 of Rip Van Winkle by Pansy Walker. There is Storm, out of Night Vint- age by Action." It went on 11'" this for three W01 ‘is 11111.1 tho :11‘! s1o.-1i for 1; n5 long 11;; she could, 11.11 hcr patience wore out 11nd sl1e wont home. few days later thc young man rec< Bl\'€‘Cl the follunving telegram: "Tilis is 11111-111 c111 oi’ D.111L'1:1' by Goth . . .' ‘Faro Scots went to a variety show , in London. Being in funds that day they took l- 11 row nPlilé. During (the c1111j11rcrs turn, 0111: 0f 1.1111111 was asked to go on the slime to as- . sist in a trick. On their way home after the per- formance Jock, who had been on the gc, said; "Vvcll, Angus. laddlc, yon was a, .. grand conjurer." "Worst I've ever seen," said his friend. "Maybe. maybe," said Jock; "but I gave 111111 a rlucl ion-shilling note "and he gave 1111: 1i govt! 11111- 1n re- turn." 11111011111121.1112! 1111131111111" Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound Studied and Quloted Her Nerves , "I had a nervous breakdown. I could not slccp, worried all day and hardly knew what. l was doing. If any- vne asked mo how l was, I would burn '. out crying. I have taken aix bottles of tho Vegetable Compound and it ha: built me up so T can sleep at nightfl \m in good spirits and I am not hall’ n! uervous."-—i\lns. ll. Pnon, 17l7_Don- dd Sh, Fort William, Ontarlofl This must. be n good medicine when l8 out of 100 womon say, _"lt help! me." Get a bottle from your oinzggist today. Let it help you, too. N O TICE All (arcs in arrears for (‘ape Traverse School No. $42, not paid by September l.'>lh u-ill b1- 31111111011 to (he ('lf‘l‘l( of tho (‘ounty (‘curt for collection. Bv urdcr of 'l'r1|~.l"/rs. Slilifilllifl. UIRSC! ALP-HUI‘ 45,;- 1 A , l l THE COOK'S CORNER RHUBARB JAM 1 1 Use strawberry rhubarb, as it gives the best. colored 1on1. Out rhubarb in inch lengths, without peeling, and cut fine or put through course chopper. Have four level cups 11111.1 r1111! sort-n and one-half cups nllgrll’. Mix well. and use hottest fire 111111 stir constantly before and while boiling. Boll hard for three minutes, remove from fire, and stir in com- mercial pectin. Skim and pour quickly. Scal at once. COOOANUT COOKIES One-half cup butter creamed with 1-.» cup sugar. Add 1 egg (beaten), l‘..- cups cocoanut (dried). I tea- spoon baking powder sifted with 1% cups pastry flour. Break off pieces of dough the size of a walnut, place in pan two inch- cs apart, and flatter with the bot- tom of a glass dipped in flour. Bake in a hot oven for 8 to l0 minutes. 1 DOUGHNUTS Cream 2 tablespoons melted [shortmiizlg and 1 cup sugar, add 2 well-beaten eggs, and 1 cup milk; add V: teaspoon nutmeg, 3 teaspoons baking powder and ‘A teaspoon salt to 3% cups sifted flour. Add to first mixture to make a soft. dough. Roll into 1-3 inch thick- ness. Shape with cutter. Fry in deep fat for 3 minutes, turning often. HONEY MUFFINS Mix together 4 tablespoons honey, -‘. teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 lightly beaten egg. 1% cups sour mill, 2 tablespons melted but- ter. , Have ready blended together 5t cur: bran flour, ~71 cup white flour, l-ll cup shredded dates and stoned, chopped raisins: 3 tablespoons chopped nut meats. Beat well, Ind bake for 30 minutes in well-oiled l muffin ‘tins. GARDEN NG Garden makers who find it im- possible to grow good roses or good perennials may possibly discover that the difficulty lies in the com- petition of trees 11nd shrubs grow- ing nearby. The distance to which both trces and shmbs send their roots is amazing. This is also true of grape vines, the roots of which lsomctimcs reach a point 20 feet or more from the original vine. Small gardens can be protected by dig- glnga trench two feet deep or more around them and setting l 1 planks on edge ln these trenches. I, these planks first having been cov- cred with creosote or some other substance to make them last. needed. Kill Itch In ff you!‘ akin pw-la, or !f you Nuffwr from \1'1-:»111_ l-icz-ruu. lwluplov, llund-llch, .-\|l1l1-I1~'s Funf. 1-1‘ 1‘rl1~l1 111-11, shouldn't unslv :1 11111111111, 1111- .t1-l1 I11 ‘l0 llllllllllrl r1111! quickly 11 .1! your - g1»! lll‘. Nixon's Nixn. ul skin lrn!:|l|11u-<. v l\1':l l1‘: , . I11 . 1 |-|| 11-1» .|I'1lI!|\ urn,» hunk un rrfu n of empty 1111111 N. Au,- ‘y ur 111 g $111M‘ for liuuraulced Dr. Nixon’: hiaoderm today. 0f course the trenches are to be filled up and the planks hidden from sight. They will make it impossible for the roots of the trees and shrubs .to again make their way into the ‘flower beds. 'I‘hia will relieve the ‘flowers of the competition which l may have been robbing them of the moisture and plant food which they 30 Minutes llrl|¢~~§ burns, crnclcu, Ring- _\'f7ll To atop 1u .\ |1r1».<1\1-l|1t111|| 11:1.-1-1l ou ihc ovury of :1 firuuus l1 1.1111111 Skin in. 11111! 11111111: 11111- y for or- l;11:1ru11|1-1-1l 11> irnn cnmunrnoww ovxmmmu “ xx xxxxxxxxx ‘ vv vv vvvv v v -:- Socia xxxxx mmmpQ xxx v v wwv v x x¢¢xxx Q Dorothy Dix ’s Letter Box Career-Mad Wife Who Married Home-loving Man - Any Girl Can Get Her Man, Thinks Dorothy Dix — Jealous Wife Dear Miss Dire-several years ago I married a yfllwfl W0!!!“ W110 W88 a teacher. of wife who‘ was a. homemaker and who wanted children, but I flnd but. that the only thing she cares for is her profession. She hates to keep house. She will not have "child- ren nnd she is away from home now, studying so that she can teach next year. I am amply able to support her in comfort and give her everything she wants, and I wont a home and a family. What shall I do? A DISAPPOINTED HUSBAND. Answer: ‘The only thing you can do with a career- oraaed woman Ls to let her go and try it. Sometimes, when she finds out that the price she has to pay for a career is husband and home and babies, she realizes what a poor bargain she is making and turns back to the better worth- while things, ancl is thereafter a. contented wife and mother. 1 Sometimes the career really does mean more to her than anything else in life, and in that case the husband is wise if he just lets her go, for there is no happiness or peace for a man with a part-time wife whose real interest is given to her outside work and not to her home. The woman who loves her dear public better than she does her hus- band, who would rather get the glad hand from the audience than hold her baby's hand, and who is absorbed in schemes for regenerating the world instead of plans for making her own home happier, is not meant for domesticity, and it is hopeless to try to tie her to her own fireside. It is one of the tragedies of being a woman that a woman cannot amiex matrimony to a. career as a. mun can, and add the Joy and de- light of family life to the Joy and delight in doing her life work, as a. man does. . ~ Contrary to public opinion, not every woman la born with c. passion for cooking and sewing and sweeping and mending and baby-tending and doing all of the tasks that go to the making of a home any more than every man is born with an inner urge to be a carpenter and build his own home with his own hands. There are many women to whom Nature gave not the talents of dom- esticity, but talents for teaching or businm or executive work or singing or acting, and so on. These women often spend years of time and thou- sands of dollars fitting themselves for the work they were destined to do, and that they have a passionate delight in doing. Then they fall in love and get married and the jig la up. For they find that they cannot serve two masters. They cannot manage a career and a husband and children at the same time. They must sacrifice one or the other. It is a hard and cruel choice, but an honest woman should make it before marriage and then abide by her decision. She hasn't a right to sacrifice an innocent man and helpless little children to her ambition, or to her love of her profession or business. The woman who has espoused eoareor mould novor commit bigamy by marrying a man. DOROTHY DIX. undone Dear Miss D!x-Do you think that if I will be patient and try hard enough I can get the man I love, who doesn't love me? What can I do to make him care for mo? SUI. Answer: _ A man who is a patient wooer, and who aaslduo , a. girl in spite of all dlscouragemcnts, is very likely to win her in the end, but such tactics are not so successilu‘ when practiced by a woman. It flatten a woman for e men to run after her. but it fa very likely to disgust a man foregirltorunafforhim. Still there are exceptions to the rule, particularly if the mun in quee- tion happens to be either very timid end bashful or very conceited. The timid man always needs some one to help him over the fence, and he marries out. of sheer gratitude the girl who does most of the courting and because he hasn't the nerve to ray "no." The conceited man merrier the woman who lets him see that she loves him, because he thinks she shows her superior taste and intelligence in preferring hlrn. So there you are. Thackeray mid that any women who didn't 1111.. enuctualhumponherblckoouldmenynnymnnflseohoooqendoor- tcinly we have all seen marriages that confirmed this theory. Naturally, every hunter of men mlmt lay her own traps to suit her own game. You don't. catch llona and rabbits in the came snares. l0 the only advice I can give you as to methods in tn study your quarry and adopt the tncts but suited to the individual man. tenecl to. Some men must be appealed to through the eye. Others through the stomach. Some men can be floated into matrimony on a sea of tears. Others have to be dragged into it by the hair of their hcadl. But there is generally n way and the patient worker finds it. DOROTHY DIX. I I O O O U Dear Dorothy Dlx~My wife hates my mother ao that ahe goes into a violent rage even when I receive a letter from her. She abuses me and my mother, applying every sort of vile epithet to us, even going so far u" to strike me. My mother has done nothing to injure my wife in my way. On the contrary, it is my wife who has wronged my mother. Now I love my wife, but I also love my moths dearly. and I do not m! that 1 511011111 be u , " * to give up “ ‘. Just ‘ my wife hates hcr. I have a dear little child who ll worshiped by my parents. ‘They are anxious to see the child and I am anxious to take it to their home for u. short visit, but my wife absolutely refuses to lot the baby go and ls violently opposed even to my going. What rhould I do! PUZZLE) HUSBAND. Answer: You will certainly show that you are of e very weak character and l most unworthy son if you let your wile separate you from your mother, A Jealous woman is e crazy women. and you cannot reason with your wife any more than you could with any other lunltlo, but you would be u wrong to be bound by her limitations as you would be to let any other person who had lost her senses decide a question of right and wrong for you. What your wife thinks of your mother has nothinl whatever to do with your obligation to the woman who bore you, who nursed you, who tolled for you, who sacrificed for you, who has uunUU-Ddld you all the days of your life with n. tenderness and devotion that you can never repay. Because you are married has not mode your mother love you lees, It has not made her less interested in you, or made her pine less for a sight of your dear face and the sound of your voice. Indeed, just became you have the misfortune to be married to a bitter and revengeful woman makes hcr brood over you with that pity that only a mother can feel for her unhappy children. so write to your mother often, go to see her often, and by all means take your little child to see her grandparents. Your wife has no right to forbid you that. And you may be sure of this: that your wife will have more respect for you if you defy her and do what you know to be the right thing than she will have if you are coward enough to give in to and Personal 0f course, I naturally thought that aha would make tho kind! Some men should be iollled, some floutod, some talked to, some lia- ' x xxxxxxxxx x HEARTS AFIRE By MARY CHRISTIE a? UBAPIIB 10 I'll-In And Dhflluelonment "Girls like you will made love to, Jinnyl" A pong of agoily shot through the gentle heart of Frdence. Bertram . . .herBeri; . her-lover. . . he could speak words such as that . . . and to another woman! Worse than the phrase itself had been the tone in which it had been uttered! Low and entrancing, sweet with the strange begullemenl: that never once had failed to cast a spell upon herself. the murmured cad- ence of his voice brought to torture to the the little envesdropper who loved him sol ' Prudence, rigid with misery, crouched in the shadow of the hedge until the purring of the car died into silence. and she was alone again with the night, and the moon and the maddening fragrance of green, growing things and flowers that seemed to mock her solitude and pain. "Berti Bert!" With a smothered sob she buried her face against tho coolness of the grass. as though on the breast of Mother Nature she would seek oblivion. "How . . . how could you, Bert?" She loved him 11o. And loving meant possession, didn't it? Hadnt he often told her so? "You're mine, aren't you, Prudence darling?" he bod whispered, over and over again, u though he simply had to own her. "There isn't anybody in all your world-but me?" How generously she had reassured hlml How freely lbe had given of her love, thinking-hemmed little fool that she had beenl-that love such as hers beget love in yet. deeper measure, and that. the more devo- tion she heaped upon‘ him, the more he would return to her, in treble measure. ' Why, he had told her so. a thou- sand times! She had believed him, trusted him. How furious she had been at Janet Mercer's warning:- ' "Go any, Prudence, child, and don't belie your name! A man's passion is the most evanescent thing always be her and let her boas you. DOROTHY DIX. on out-h. Int him but think he has you. lfo and M11114. 611d W! I101’! of the obese la ended! - , o! all men, is the hunter type. If you would keep him-and heaven known why you want tnl-kcw him Illus- ing. Hove reserves. Hold beck a bit." The country maid. however, was too far gone in love to heed the warning. What did Janet Mercer really know of ‘la grands passion’? Hadrft Bertram pointed out that woman such as Janet-who wore plain and down-right and hard- worldng—never really stirred the hearts of men? "She has no sex-attraction, darling. She's a bit sour on men. and who could blame her? Unloved women always get that way." "Bub-she does know the world, Bert dearest! She's clever—" "Bunkuml Who wants a woman to be clever? Beauty and etiam are the drawing cards. The Mercer woman has neither, and she's sore that: you're so pretty and attrac- tive, and that I'm wild about you. and can't leave you alono-P-here the argument, would end in kisses, and Prudence would fly the flag of truth. Now her friend's candid words came back to her, with toe piercing light of truth upon them. "Your sentiments are very beau- tiful, Prudence. my child, and- though I may appreciate them-- more man does not! Camouflage your feelings! Hide your heart! Iovo this Traymoro all you want to, if you must-but. don't let, him be- lieve he's won your entire affection, for such a knowledge will be ab- solutely fetal! You will only loco him, deer." ‘ Prudence had stored at. her with indignant eyes. “How can you say such awful things? Bert has assured me. over and over, that love begets love . and he says that what makes a man ‘cool of!’ quicker than anything else. is uncertainty! He's begged me to give him all my heart-and as for me, I wouldn't cause him a single momenta pain or jealousy-no. not "for n11 the gold in Egypt!" Janet had groaned in spirit. Too well she knew that the Bert Tray- Try o T0 FEEL 000111-211 and lreop litter thoeo warm days, eat more erllp, light fOOllIa Enjoy a bowl of Kolloggfi at lunch and fool cooler. Splendid for tho children's evening meal. Extra delicious with fresh fruits or berries. Always oven-fresh in the “alga inside WAXTITE bag. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. “K°“°55" 6°" m“ °"° ll" "W" 0f 25 rem’ "Pfirlonco making ruklr l M1 ~1~--- xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx i-o xxxx 111w 11.111 ATTRACTIVE lnllorleebvianliblllllu penibalnrnlaolfinwdulh Ink- Rloluflapnlallonyauraeo- ‘lflmn ‘ " ’1rllm. ow ill! out that skinny, unattrac- tive figure so soon you'll be do- llghtfullv surprised! Everybody knows that doctormfor years yeast to build up health for run-down people. But now with this new diaoovay you can get far greater tonic results than with ordinary yeast-regain health. and also put on pounds of solid flesh-and in a surprisingly short time. Not only are hosts of people gain- ing beauty-brirlging pound-l. but also clear radiant skin. new pep. Concentrated 7 times This new product. Ironized Yeast. is made from specially cultured Brewer's Ala Ymsl imported from the British Isles. the richest yeast we know of, which by a new process l: concen- trated 7 times-made 7 limes more powerful. 1.32.1.1?‘ " "§2.:l".2"".'1'...'.“'l1'.;'l5l'1 with 2 ldndl o ltrongthanlng iron. Day after day. an you take Ironlzod Your, watch gawky angles nu out. flat chm daveln . lldnny lim round out. eb- rnctlvely, clear. indigestion 1nd con- lflpatfon gnu-you're a new pu-oon. “Title ‘AUGUST 10, 1933 2:: x AAA_AAA‘AAAAAA‘A ra tu re xxxxxxxxx vv-rO-O Vvfi WATPIITS ll FLESH-filly! oowrsi SKINNY! Results guaranteed N tto h ski ° m“ fialfintkhlfidflili Yeast lhould build ‘cu aw abort woelra as ltlmr hundreds. If not delighted with the ruu IA of the very first pack. egoa $011.!‘ money instantly ro- 0 l 'be euro ou t I 0D canno results. Insist on {he o sum‘ with "IY" stamped on each table Special FREE offer! To start ou building u our heal rluht away? we make tluap REE one? Pure a package of lronlzod Y a‘ once. cut nu coal on box and mail it to ua with e clipping of this offer. W you a fascinating now book on hoalth.‘ ‘New Facts About Your Bod ". Remem. bee. result; guaranteed wit the v first peclresaor money refunded. At a dnurgilu. anacllan Ironizod Yeast Co. Ueslc 220$. Box I323. Montreal. Que, gerluim mores of this world little aPDfWW-e such devotion. "531; ‘kidding’ himself as well u you. then," use 11m cried. dwwr- mgly. "Call me a cynic. call ms a sour old maid, but mark my words. and profit by them while thumb time. Man the conqueror is I “my different being from Man the Con- queredl 1101a back. Prudence. 011w! that cvernowlns hurt o! vovrk" But Prudence 11m swept 05 1"“ an outraged little goddess, leaving Janet to her dismal meditations. Now-too-loto-the cold while rays of truth were turned on what she's said. Bert ‘rraymore, oloyed with 11118 sweetness of her love for him. 11W turned foratimulltlon to the un- “mm 3nd eoquettiah ‘Jlnnyfl WM ‘played’ men oh! so cleverly! Ho had turned dram real love 1-0 31¢ false. from simple country beauty. unadornod and natural, to Jlnnyb artificial charms and bettnry of _.I‘l0bl0!d tricks. Dear heaven! it couldn't be . . . Prudenws pain and disillusion- Sho loved him . . . loved this fickle fascinating man with every fibre of hor being . . . and she couldn't shake the shackles ofl. A vision of his face rose up pe- fore her, debonnlr and handsome. A mocking light was in his eyes, thou (Continued on W80 6) Wholesale Fish Prices MONTREAL. aus- Pwlwlm-ll fiah prices: Haddock, 6 cents per 1b.; flounder-r. 8 cenu 1b.; cleaned cod, ‘l cents 1b.: live lobsters. 3t ‘outta each; oyster! P01‘ 80-110! measure, $2.25; fresh mackerel, i cents 1b.; fresh herrlnil. B cents 1b.] ghrimpl, $2.00; cleaned fillet of cod. 1o cents u». in so lb. box: dried w! in I00 1b pwkaces. B “n” “*1 "it cod, gnall, 4% cents 1b.; salt ood. 1.! 751K764??? Q7.‘ ‘iii! Kellogg's Corn Flakes are a refreshing ‘ /, "4 5' . - treatforbrealrfaumllichinonorgyandeo i‘! ' m‘ 1 , "only to digest they don't “hoot yonup." ’ a . , "* a ' ' . I QVQQQW A1 >115‘; v. -._ / 1 . ' CO R N "EMS." are \{\‘~ “i? \~§~‘~\‘~““>? ‘*1 s§\\ ‘sits ment were far too great for tear large, 5 cents 1b. .1“