Ifé o .\`.`Z` Qs /‘N //Amo -_ equal for breaking up obstinate coughs. » 2 ~ . ir-.. -i. . ~ . V _ M, -f¢-~_~- ...._. --;.._,“ m ~ ` Tris cuAal.or'rsrowN cuannian if _ _ _ NOVEMBER 23,1932 PAGE TWO _ - . -- . _ -. _ \ me _ _ nb* __ __ __A _v_. |.___lT_----- 7 - ' ' '"7 7'-7:' "-' _ _ Y * .i Y _Z --_. _ _ nd Personal - -Fashions - - Liter _ ¢ M Woman’s Realm .° Social a : .° ' atare il - i What the Fashlonahles are Wearing For The éook I . w°____ _ s_M___;,`| Every Pattern c __ _ .. _ 1- nu-u-v Who Are _ ‘ Crimes Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With m______, I All _ In Name ‘ . llggrf, 0( LQVO i Two cups scaldgd milk, 1 lflbl The sieve: start to puff at the f teaspoons salt, 2 tablespoons AWN- B A bll W th't . .2‘-‘= . - ” ""“ ” " "' ""’ "" -‘°°°“"“"°" ‘ ‘“"‘°"’°°° ‘“"’ A woruorfs Devotion, Thor should Bless i lrmholes and then sink into slim- ness below the elbow. It is given an empire waistline ef- lect although the belt ls placed at normal. It's stunning in black, wine-red or rhum brown crinkly crepe satin. lt`s the most simple model to fashion. Style No. 916 is designed in sizes l4, 16, I8, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 Inches bust. Size 18 requires 3-“rl yards 39-inch. with 'ru yard 35-inch contrasting. .Gray rough crepe silk with the belt of self-fabric and the collar ol White crepe is quaintly smart. Rustic green crepe marocnin or loninto-red wool crepe is youthful and wearable. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). \.Vrap coin carefully. ' No. 916. Size Na me Street Address City State “This is 11 time to get tout :incl do lllings-and keep doing them." Walter P. Chrysler. To End a Cough ' In a Hlu°ry. Mix Thisgt Home i Saves $2. No Cooking! So Euyl Millions_o_f housewives have found that, by mixing their own cough medi- CIDG. the&_ Est a purer. more effective remedy. hey use a recipe which costs about one-foilrtli as much ns rciuly- made medicine, but which really has no From any druggist, get 2% ounces of Pinex. Pour this into s 16 oz. bottle :nd add granulated sugar syrup to fill his big bottle. The syrup is easily made with 2 cups sugar und one cup water, tirred a few moments until dissolved. 'o cooking needed. It's no trouble at ll, and makes the most effective emedy that money could buy. Keeps ' perfectly, and children love its taste. Its quick action in loosening the Rink-gm, clearing the air passa es, and ootliing away the iiiilanimatlgon. has caused it to be used in more homes than any other cough remedy. Pinex is s highly concentrated com- l ounrl of Norway ine, famous for its s guaranteed to give prompt relief or Si - gg {. V iifi' .<.:: -.~ <-:t ~.’--5*---.».~., .. ._ _ . /\i _ _ i .Z "(5 1', ‘ ~ 9li /f. _~ i 2 cakes oomDr¢S-Wd l’¢”¢» 54 °“p lukewarm water, 6 CUP-5 n°‘“`- _ Put butter, lard, sugar end SM into a large mixing bowl. Add scald- cd milk and cool to lukewarm tem- perature. In the meantime 501|-H1 yeast cake in water which has D69!! foiled and cooled to lukewarm fem- prraiuro, adding 1 to-siioon wear ff’ water. When mill: is lukewarm. add dissolved yeast Cake- Add “lf” cups of flour and DPM “nm 5m°°m' Add two more cups of iiour, cutting it in with a knife uliul thoroughly mixed. Add remaining flour slowly, using just enough to make the dough of such consistency that it CBD be kueuderl without silt-inns t0 the board, Knead until the dough is smooth and spriilgy. Put into an oiled mixing bowl, cover with a eieuu oioih and lurse slate Of ¢°"°f- Put iii ii warm place and leave it. until it is double in bulk. It will take about one hour. Then cut through and througll with a case knife and knead into a smooth ball. Let rise again to double its bulk. Make into two loaves and let these rise in ri warm place until double ill bulk. Put into it hot oven for 15 minutes. Then reduce the heat and bake in a moderate oven for 45 min- utes longer. The tenlpcraturc of the dough rising should be carefully watched. ' t Z. " m ‘ 1;- .- _ _ ".>i-»_: 1 has i Villnymlilf N\B =j5¢ Nair# nw" FIIOUR ` Best For All t MILLVALE INSTITUTE Womens Institute was held at the home of Mrs. John Hogan with an a _i___i____l;___ t The annual meeting of Millvale 2 Those on Whom She Bestows it, Only too Often Turns Into a Curse - For Women Feel That if They Love tt Person They Have a Right to Enslave Him Do you ever think how often love is a Woman’s undoing? How often ie thing that is her greatest strength is the fatal weakness that wrecks i h r? How often the devotion that should be a blessing to those on E whom she bestows it turns into a curse instead? Most of the wrongs that women do in the world are committed by those who are ALL HEAR.'I`. They are sinners who are so befuddled by love that they have lost all sense of perspective and all realization of consequences. And this sp- plies not only to silly, weak girls who sell their souls for a few kisses, but to wives and mothers who wreck their husbands' and ehildren's lives with their affection. » For women feel that love is an excuse for any crime, and that it stones for any selfishness or ck of consideration on their part. They feel that if they love a person la they have a right to enslave him, to monopolize him, to'thwart his ambl_ ions and blight his career. The symbol of oppression and tyranny should not be a military figure, with naked sword in his hand, standing on a You” geoplis’ neck, but a loving wife and mother clasplng her family to her reas . Look at he loving wives who made themselves millstones aroiuid heir husbands’ necks and from whom their husbands can never free hemselves for an hour, for even when the poor unfortunate victims of onnublal affection go to work they are pursued by telephone calls! Look t the husbands whose loving wives never even give them as much Between 75 and 80 degrees Fahren- ireedom as a dog on a leash. mek at the wives who never permit their ¢ AMornt°ngSm|'l¢ I A high-handicapped golfer sat dlsconsolately in the club house. The secretary went across to him and tried to cheer him up. “I think, after all, Ill give up golf,” said the member after a while. “Swlmmlng's more in my line." “But you can't compare the two," said the secretary. “Perhaps not," said .the golfer; ‘but you can take as many strokes as you like when you're swimming and you've no need to lie about it." "I have a feeling that, following ts sojourn in Gethsemane; thc world is going to emerge a pleas- anter place to live in." Elealing effect on throat membranes. It oney refunded. -Peter B. Kyne. - -_-, -L MORTGAGE SALE l 6' --_ q Suddenly someone fired-someone 1_0 “__ mlm _W uhm mn y _ _ . sitting close behind me, I think- from ui' the l.n\\' `i‘--Tirls ‘llill\lillu;»` ill' nred Bt’ Zora’ just as he had nn' |'hurioii~-iou~n, oueons <‘..uni_v on ‘islied speaking. Then Zora rnust '|`uest|n>'. ihe ti\'i~ni_\' seventh tiny of i BY have med and I get it in the “nm December A. D. 193;: at the hour of il - _ |_ B_ W|LM0T !,?;{l‘,?T ,,",`§;’,“;.“ "°°§- Alf- ,Till-*E _-l_..._i__ “There was a mad. frenzied Panic. ~ - '. an parce o an ,|,,,,,, mug and Wing on Township _ but I got clear through a door I ,,,,,,,y,,, ,-,I ,,, k,,,,,», Pouniy in “I want to explain about but always used on these occasions- ]‘rl|icr\ Eflivairil lslnuil boiiniicil niiil :ir-serilreillris ri-liou-.~r, iii.-it is to .-.-ry; - night," Dwyer began. “I had had an 0110 H5310 f°0l¢ Uf the this and the ‘iniiiic ~ I Ll r . _ 1 ;...':‘..';.f. ‘.'.'.‘i...:.£ no for wma um- the -0---=-1---= Wm” 2°” h'“-“lf -"°‘°°‘-Y i-ouruury or ii.ur..r-ri iron .run may wsu going on dovm at 'ned Used. AS I passed the dal-s Several fticncs south along .\inhsr'l| land and Gables, I knew’ too’ that it was dgrk figures were hovering gbqut, llong land new or fnrinriy i - ' -salon .rf philip .sin-tonal olifirrgolo niy Smeg Mrs, Morrison and her U10 C0l1HDS@d figure Of ZONI. and heit should be maintained through- out the whole process. After the dough has risen the first time to double its bulk it can be "cut down’ and kept in the re- frigerator for a day or longer. Re- member that it will take the chi‘led :lougli longer to rise whey made into loaves, so allow about two hours for this rising before baking. For CCLDS ed. the meeting open'ng with the son. The mnutes of the previous moetlrg and also the last annual meeting were read approved and signed. Roll call was answered by members paying annual fee. Next' meeting to be held at the home of Mrs. Michael Murphy, when roll call will be answered by how to lm- prove the Institute. The election of officers are as follows: President, M‘rS. John Parsons; vlce. pres. Mss Mildred McDonald: secy. trees. Mrs. “I» always use BABY’S OWN TAB- LETS to break up my baby’s colds," writes Mis. Wilbert Colquhoun, Stur- geon Fails, Ont. “When I sec-:i cold coming on, it is to BABWS OWN TABLETS that I turn,” writes Mrs. Robert Grccnhom, Philipsviiie, Ont. Mothers everywhere report in like vein of the safe, sure results that follow the use of BABY’S OWN TABLETS in treating children’s colds, teething troubles, simple fevers, disordered stomach, colic, constipation. 25 cents. 246 I Dr. Williams' BABY'S OWN TABLETS L. Murphy; auditors Mrs. Alfred Par- sons; ?l'rs. John Hogan; directors. Mrs. Kenneth Mcinnis Mrs, Meli- ael Murphy, Mrs, Alfred Murphy. A .social hour was then spent which included instrumental and grama- horie selections, Lunch was serv- Ed by the hostess. Meeting closed' twith National Anthem. attendance of eleven members and h four visitors, The President presld- W » h Ode followed by the Creed in uni- m usbands to belong to a. club, or to have an evening off with other men' ho have to be dragged along on every business trip, and who trail their us bands on the golf links! Couldn’t you weep tears of sympathy for a an when you hear his wife boast that they have never been separated I for a. single day since they were married? And look at the mothers who are so devoted to their children that they never permit any life of their own. The infatuated mothers who jealously keep their children separated from youngsters of their own age and are always telling how they chum with Tommy and Mamie and are Tommy’s and Mamle's best friend and confldante. Look at the mothers who shut the door of opportunity in their' children's faces because they love them so much they can't bear to be separated from theml Look at the mothers who keep their children from marrying because they can't endure the thought of their caring more for some one else than they do for them. ' . ' Now these women, whose lives are practically one continuous heart throb for their families, feel that they should be paid back in the same coin, and that their husbands and children should be as devoted to them as they are to their husbands and children. But this does not happen once in a blue moon. Love doesn’t necessarily beget love. It is oftener the parent of indifference. After al!,_iove is the spice of life, not the whole meal, and there is 110311118 N011 Can Bet fed UP on quicker. To be continually caressed and petted and made love to is as nauseatlng as living on a. diet of chocolate creams. No natural person can stand li: fbr long. And this explains why the man who has a perfectly devoted wife flees rom her to a gold-digger or a. vamp or some other hard-boiled lady. He f "Confidence, not suspicion, is the has been loved to death. He has been smothered in affection. He has attitude of liberals." been s01`8€d Oh 101YP0iJS iultil he is sick of love and sweets and craves _.Owen D_ Y°ung_ roast beef and potatoes. -this direct treatment isbost Used at first largely for chi] dren a colds, experience in millions of homes has proved Vicks equally eB’ective for adults. Now it is the family standby for all cold troubles, in America and more than sixty countries abroad Just rubbed on, Vicks acts direct throughthe slnnhke a plaster, it also gives on’ heal ing vapors which are inhaled direct to affected parts. This method of treating colds originated with Vicks.Today, the whole trend of modem medical practice is away from needless "dosing" And if the overloving wife is more likely than any other woman ti lose her husband, so is the overloving mothei more sure than any other mother to have cold andungrateful and unappreciativa children. For her love makes her spoil them and cultivate egotism in them. Her love makes her so weak that she cannot bear to discipline them or control them. She ihdulges them in everything that it tis possible to give them. She makes of herselfa. doormat for them to trample on. She never sees a fault in them. She lets them talk back to her and say insulting things to her. | whenever you see children who are fmpudent and lmappreeiotlve of their mother, you always find that they have one of those devoted moth- ers who ca.n’t understand why her children treat her as they do, for she ihas sacrificed her entire life to them and has never done anything but pamper them since they were born. ' Every one agrees that woman’s greatest fault is naging. It is the thing that does more to alienate husbands from their wives than all the sirens in the world. It is the thing that drives children away from home as soon`as they can stand on their own feet. They want in get away from wife`s and mother’s never-ending ques- tionnaire. Where have you been? Where are you going? How long will you be gone? Whom did you see? What Grd they say? And so on and on and on. They want to escape wife's and inothci"s never-end- ing adjuration. Putoii your overcoat. Wrap tlpyour throat. Watcli out crossing the street. Don't eat this. Don't do that. And so on and on; And the pitiful part of it is that the wife's and mothers naging that runs her family crazy is just the expression of her love. She has no thoughtt, but for them. No interests save in them. Her life is so centered in them that she tries tothink for them, to protect them, to be a Providence to them and she can't understand why they resent his and crave a little personal liberty and privacy. i V It is because women love not wisely but to well that love so often be- comes a boomerang that annihilates them. DOR9_THY*DiX._ ; me. But evidently I was not in- tended to be the one to do that. slr "US 0856. and I’m-grateful Just then the telephone bell link led on the Inspectors desk and he Success Women's Institute met at Picked up the receiver. ` the homo of Mrs. nay Macleod on _ "Yes. Dr. Blayne's in here with me now? What’s that-Dover? Im- mediately? Right, I’ll tell him. p Who’s that ringing? Royal Military ° turned to Blayne. Y0u’re wanted at Dover, immed- 0 eady done the 1ion's share of SUCCESS WOMENS INSTITUTE , .. Tu 1* """ '* A ing. Other committees are as fol- lows: Mrs. J. M. Campbell to sendi U10 1”¢D01‘l- to the paper. Misses Mamie Campbell, Mae M‘aeGi-egor., Jennie McKinnon 'and Robins; The eighteenth annual meeting oi esday evening, Nov. 15th, Tne Her remains were laid to rest in the Roman Catholic Cemetery. The nov. rather Murphy. CSS-R. 051°- lated at the grave. The ailbearers were' Clarence Betrothai 0f -_ Heiresses Expected } p . MoGuigan, James Proctor; Peter LONDON. Eos-. N°\'~ 22- Tl" Hospital, Dover. Thank you." 1°w°d by the weed md sixteen mem' web be I -bers answered roll call with a Pat- S r-rep "ed the receive’ and rlotic selection. There were also ,_ » seven visitors present. The minutes },°'st.fr1g;nr;°b°°ld' Zn" °““°“° °°“°- meeting were read and adopted. Re- een 8 med mere 5"' ports of committees were heard and resident presided and the meeting pened with the Institute ode, fol- flprevious meeting and last annual Whitehead, to take charge of a play. The Secretary was also asked to send for the Institute news for another year. Th's brought the meeting to a close. Next meeting to be held at the home of Mrs. J, M. Campbell. Roll call to be answered with a Christmas thought. 0 the rr-:ir l>r»|inil:ii-_r or farms fr ii' lui Si. .\l:lr,\"s lloilil tliclivc cnst nnlirmg daughter came there and were vis' sum r.-nr li..~ :ii f-hninr iiionro north- fied by Indians, that Gaynor began f°F the iml>05l€‘I` I WHS. I SliDl1€d \\‘f\r'Il.\' i-.uruilol u-uh im- snail oririoin lino ni’ innii fnriilcrly in piis=.°“H°. ’ ““ B‘°Y“° had °~ very definite thot he know nothing ut on about °1d home. John. or churlonotown. ho their ww with the ohsurd re-_ od through the female line to u Dover." mused Elayne. oryptiouliy, t as he snatched up his hat and hur- L ried from the room. "I wonder what A it can mean?" M thelgispeegoqr. pe f Li I $113.31 and expenditure $101.40, The and sorrow that the many friends rom il S noon to oglirzlerithe ensligirig i,;i;’r large and acquaintaiicgss of Mss Annie both in me South Amen md the - - PWS- - ' McAleer, Chai-lo tetown learned of Eu - t b ' ropean wars-in the la.ter e eod re~elected: vice. pres. Mrs. J. her death which took p’aee on Sept. _ Whitehead; sec. trees. Miss Mae- 22nd at the home of her brother acGregor; directors Mrs. Francis James. St. Patrick's Road. Goodman; Emmett MoGu'gan Pai!- rick Mc!-Kenna, Alben; Murphy. May her soul rest in PCBCC- Dally Express reported today that Miss Barbara Hutton, Woolwortll _heh-ess, wore a blood ruby fins 0" ' ____ her engagement finger at her 215° . . birthday party. She has been 1‘<‘~ British POBI`3.g6S Ported encased to a titled English- man and to various members Of foreign royalty. London letter says: By the death The Daily Sketch said the cn- soon between Margaret Whlgmail. 20, one of the most beautiful 0( recent debutantes in London, and Charles Sweeney, 22, Ame’ican slu- dent at Oxford and well-known amateur golfer. Sw-:cney and his brother, Robert. have golfed with the Prince of Wales and played in the most important British tour-_ his rétlrémént he d9V0t£d hlmS€lf npmghfs for sgvgfgl yg5r5_ _ mainly to the management of his _ Find $60,000 In Old Table BENSON, Ill., NOV. 22- T719” was money in the old wooden in-ble Charles Lauensteln used to use. ` He died a year ago, but his 10°" tune was not found until the other day when a carpenter, going owl the table which had been sold ni suction, found 960.000 in newlllble the Earl of Mar two of our best known peerages have ehansed hands. Though the bearers of fa- mous names neither fizured much in the public eye. The Duke had a good record in the Army, serviI18 was severely wounded-and after securities secreted inside- 1-mr, in Germany will benefit. earldoms. The title has now vmmm M"-rphr Mg gwmwn H' 'VMI' -- - said websmr' “How about setting relationship' But what WHS W0l‘l’y- `Z°r9,,5nd that he hgd ggng there predeceased her lfw° Y9°'r-5 913°- gulh Q1-nf we how hgyg two » Mui' gqugjn, Lionel Waller YCUDQ. " -F ’“`~"_""_ U aside sn d ard did not seem, in If this course was decided upon, of her brother to the church of the ' ' ' ‘ " h°\"» Blayner mind at least to et th h”__"m_' at "___ mt Wm "ml ww __HUu_m§ more I cm d _-___ kj any nm . Th . 8 em young Dwyer would be Publicly Must Holy Redeemer where a Re. mont or amihgu lt. Bggguliirrn d _ I L l N I M E N T Blawg' -i c as ~ possmmr?-thu [<;:y;a.u aiwayskthe liiloi-led and Perhaps hanged for a quiem High Mass was celebrated by ' " -- --------- ‘”‘“ 5”’ “K murder he nrvvf wmmltted he t R .1 h Moo i _ Webster shook his head "You'v| the tnith when he 'had told them (To be Continued) c.x;§l;5 or' ev' wen me ' ll: ons as all uusu S-:;~ri£»|rl;_n'_--in-Fur:-;;_-1-j_n1_;\ }»n-_§;-mtl;-_f__:;\_; S A | -_-1 don-'i think 1 should do thaw- wus not at Loneoln with his mother. ing info.-mguon ,S yy, ,his ,|,,_.,,v,, und letters of sympathy were re- hcrclur los Mlm;-. i., pm” h saicl_Bluyne, not uni-_ <; the pr-05. It was certainly very bewildering. persona; identity_ 11 this were So, ceived from her ‘numerous friends. _‘ND “.,,,.,,m_¢ ,,,,_ _nm .,-,PWM ploloosfrr "fo lipumu. °°“"°" ll\5lSi- 011 lt. Ye _'vc no evi- H0W0\'cr, he would soon know. maybe 1-obliged that they were as many of which were received from il. .1»ui<