r~e A:'-.:.z".:,.:-..;.";.:\_.;7;,, a . ~= . _» v r 4 1W ‘nan x ohm violins, nun n n’s _R5¢ Tron rur i_________ HOUSEHOLD HINTS I11’. hen cooking such vegetables as i'a"'lrots, spinach, turnips and cauli- ‘ twice the Ibex- half .3111 selecting fruits for making fllies always procure those which ‘g somewhat underripe. Fruit! 1n qder to make good jelly must con- gin pectin. I.f fruit is overripe pec- not found in it. ll $511.... hardwood fioora are worn e them a good coat of white llac the day before waxing. floors will then be more easily P01- lobed. Fwben making mustard add a tiny $1: of salad oil to it while it is be- ing mined. The flavor will be great- improved yo»: dresses liberally with tissue 1- when packing in a trunk and y will keep in good condition. A little swan oil applied to 5Y0!!- aee after they are dusted. followed by a brisk rubbin with a chamois lkin will king out their rich tones. __-?.___-__. SIMMERING AND BRAISING g: you have ever eaten a taittlolfi ‘m, 49m, blame the stew. Instead of being simmered, it was Pfvblbl! some and robbed of all its flavor. when you simmer meats You keel! aha water below the boiling 901M‘ 13a right temperature is about 185 fires » Fahrenheit TM "l"? ‘one not bubble; indeed there is qlnost no perceptible disturbance its surface. Yet this patient sim- " g imparts a new tenderness gar-icky rewards you for the ex- eooking time it takes. " _-1|. even a more attrac- “ ygy o! cooking the less tender a pnmure cooker; vomei with a tight bralsing. The cover must be tight to keep in the moisture and flavor. GIVI YOUISILI‘ A FACIAL II- IOBI DIBIZNII “DAT!” The business woman's homo fa- tuna cover for . oial treatment must show maxi~ mum rosuh with a minimum amount of time involved. when you dash home from the office looking tired and worn, yet knowing full well thlt you have a, dinner date in an hour or two, at rested, 11D facial is exactly wbac. you need. I'll-It. and twenty minutes complete relaxation. And complete relaxation doesn't mean sitting up mum“- ing your nails. It moans lying flat on the bed with your eyes closed. F"! 0! Ill. tborouollly cleanse your face and neck. Remove the duly-sins mam and apply a thick Rollins 0! anti-wrinkle cream. Pot "- in around m: eves. the 111168 on your forehead and the corners or your mouth. Leave it on while you take 7°11: bath. f1! Fllr nails and rest for twenty minutes. move on a lklélh toning lotion. surprise o face will look. w mud your When that is don t your foundation lotion and wthg: you: cosmetics. leave the towel wrapped "W114 Your head until your (m. mdice have been appli¢¢ N“ “n, tlldymisrereadytccombynurhm 511 "T3118? W ociffur the towel be taklgii orr. e would A EGG! BAKED WITH CB5!!! Butter some rounds of toast large Pnough w m“ '- POUCIIQ egg. Now separate the yolks from the whites 0f II mwv eras u you will need. WlllP "P the whme with a 11m, salt. Cover each round o! wag with some of the beaten whites, and make a hole in the middle a °"h- In“ this drw. vary carefully. °“° °' ll" w! WM Bnrinne each flneLv with srated cheese. bake Qlllolil! in the oven and send them to the table without delay. fir. Bmisina is lonely r"- fll" the reputation the French enjoy as fine chefs: and it is one cf our own best methods of cooking meats. It is true that bruising, like sim- mering, takes time (unless you use g praure cooker) because the tern- perature must be kept below the boiling point. But the results in mflcy tlmdemess and rich flavor Qouipensaia you. If you are a bride of recent date. or s home-maker to whom braisirig always has seem- ed a rather mysterious 9mm. D"- jmpg you'll welcome our simple hint my, when you cook a pot mast. s ricasse, or s Swiss steak, you are ‘bruising?’ y First you brown the meat in a mall amount of fat to give flavor, then cook it slowly in its own Juices Ir in a Ineli amount of added li- . AMomingSmile u. Wall For The Show The "Uncle Tom's Cabin" troupe Iias giving it rioondsy parade. A ‘gee was startled. at the sight and an to hiss loudly. "Stop yo‘ hiesin‘, goose," said a o, “Why yo’ hiss so quick? Yu’ ‘t seen de show yet!" reports between 1d returned vacationist hearing this conversation 3m farmers: "How's the crops, Bill?" "first rate." "v “Piga doing well?" ~_- "That puny colt come around all fight?" _"I~le sure did.“ . ‘Glad to hear everythings goin‘ bell, Bill. How's the wife?‘ “Ill-Bill Will MWAYS BE l PART 0F MY DIET" Delicious Cereal Corrected - His Consflpation If you suffer from constipation, read this fine letter: “I have been troubled for years with constipation. During this time, I have almost every known remedy. Than some one recommended eating Kellogg’: Aw Bum, and the ropcr results fol- lowed immediate y. “Since as Icflcgfs AH.- Baax each , than has been a general improvement in m baathwitbont hofllafleetotbat formerly ex ienood when taking laxatives. ereafter Kellogg's ALL-BIAN will aiwa a a of my dietP-lfr. E. . Hlmas (ad- drool f upon soonest). Research shows Kelley's Au» Brian provides "bulk" to ncrdsa the intestines, and vitamin B to aid elimination. Ant-Bani also sup- plies iron for the blood. ...“.'.'.'i"i“i...,“ “m... " ‘Pl I II I» thin “cereal wIy’ “than rTh- ing patent medicines! Two tablespoonfuls daily ‘are usually mfliciont ténrilelieva ordi- nary con potion. each mall in serious cases. not relieved this way, ace your doctor. Be aura to ask for Kellogg's Aim-Bum. It contains mushroom needed “bulk” than part-bran prod- ucts. In the red-and-graon pack- age. Mada by Kellogg in Inndon, Ontario. l... —:I A vvv~ vw r,‘ Slllllllli TIIIIMES; III Ihhhl . It's b“. 000. II: GI! i0 udyiagandt ‘hm besast N! hrmany years. ltis Braadfltoniach odor. ANorwuib. nwomanaltwtall- lqafbeaedt "vedbwaell. on aom inaletur: Nowfvc vadl of our Sunday school bad very bad Indigestion. l gave her a 2 days trialfrom my bottle. the pain. She's got a now. Maolean Brand Stomach Powder h oust-ant use by Ffilish _h0 tab treatment o! l igcstiol. YI- ' .Au'dity.bad Stomach. (‘nstrith ace and Heartburn. turo, " . C. ked h d d ‘ml; l)“ Si: ' , ' tt es, , phvlvltlleyrmg: table‘; yuSlglc Canadian Slmributars. Rho Agencies, Toronto. THE COOK ’S CORNER Solgl t} some: P a vwv I DorothyDis '3 Letter Box!‘ Will Spinster or Widow With Children Make Better Wife for Widower 2 - Loving Mothers’ Exaggerated m Makes Failures of Their (lhildren DcarMissDlx-Woulditbewiaefwawidowwrofmodorarpnlana. wboisinhiseariyflltlosandhasgsownchildronatbommtcwodapoor youngwldouwithssvorallnallchildroni Orwotildalgl-natsrinher thirtiumakcbimhapplerf SERIOUS. Answer: Generally speaking widows and widowcrs are a preferred risk in matrimony, especially fr: the huddle-aged. ‘Iharc an many roa- soos why this should be the case. ‘they are professionals, so to speak, instead of ama- teurs, and know how to play the matrimonial game instead of bungling it. It la not very often that you hear of an ear-widow or ex- widower figuring in the divorce courts. Those who have been married know what to expect of marriage and when they rowed they do not look for glamorous iinpossibilitics. They do not eiqaeoi. it to be an earthly Paradise nor a. perpetual petting party nor for their mates to be sprouting angel wings. They arc perfectly aware that even the happiest marriage calla for a lot of work and self- saoriiloe and is full of tacks, and that their new husbands and wivca will be Just poor, weak, cantankerous human beings oven as their first ones were. But just because they do know what marrlaze is, and how it can be made a success. they are more apt u» make a go of it than those who arc Modern Mined hsddhsndnv IrnltAnyTlma l cup mined fruits Indy fingers l cup sweeten ‘ condensed milk 1 oup hot water I esss I tablespoons melted butter ‘A teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla. Butter mold or top part of double boiler. Place layer of finely-cut fruit in bottom. cover with layar of lady fingers. Repeat until fruit is used and mold-three-fourtha full. (wrinkle cinamon or utmeg be- tween iayers if desired.) Blend together sweetened con- densed milk, water. beaten eggs. melted butter, salt and vanilla. Pour over‘ fruit and lady fingers in mold. Lot stand one hour or longer. Steam over hot water 1% hour; If double boiler is used to keep bottom part two-thirds full of boiling wat- er. Serve hot with sauce or whip- ped cream. Serve eight. Peach Cake ‘A cup shortening l cup brown sugar 2 H85 1% cups flour $6 cup milk 1A teaspoon cinnamon I teaspoons baking powder 1 cup ripe, peeled peaches out flnc 1 cup raisins l teaspon vanilla i6 teaspoon salt Oresm the shortening and sugar. add the well beaten yolks of tho eggs, then some o! the fruit and mix well. Put the flour, baking Powder, salt and cinnamon in the sifter, mix well and aift info the mixture a little at a time. Add th- milk a little at a time, and lalt, the well beaten egg whites. Add vanilla, fold in rest of peaches. Bake in a round pan rubbed with shortening, for one lpur, in a moderate (350 ‘levees in which finely minced peach is mined. In gross value of product the slaughtering and meat-packing in- dustry, which is dependent chiefly on animal husbandry for its mater- ials, has during recent years, been one cf the most important single circumstances. ) oven. Ice with boiled icing Answer tarp-H with it for the first time. Just because they have learned about women and man from their first wives and husbands tho! know how to handle their second ones. Hence, everything else being equal, the widow c: widower is a better matrimonial bet than the spinster or bachelor. But In your particular case the widow Ls so heavily huflicapped by herlnall children thstrit makes her a very bad risk for a man of your age and in your financial Youliavc already one familytosupportmdthst lsaboutas heavy a burden as a huddle-aged man can bear without breaking under it. Nor need you delude yourself with the idea that because your children are grown they will be of! your hands. How many young people in these days are able to ct along without a little help from rather when they lose their iobs or ave sickness or some misfortune befall: them. Alsqasyougrowolderyouhavcarighttofasitsiatyouwouldliks totake things easic, tohavoa littieinore ofwbst you maketospemf upon ,y “ and w indulge wurself in some of the luxuries and pleas- ures you havelalways craved but have had to deny yourself while you were bringing up a family. And you would like peace and quiet in your home. But you can have none of these things if you assume the support of afamilyolyotmgohildrm whowiilhavetobaled andclotbedsndh-axs their tonsils and their adenoids out, and be educated and have cars be paid out of scrapes Just as your own children were. And it will be harder to sacrifice yourself for these children than it was for your own because you will not have the love for them that you have for your own boys and girls. ‘Ihat is the practical side o! the picture. very much in love with the widow and have a port other people's children and if the noise of youngsters-s your nerves. why, mat is something else yet again that may justify you in But, of course, if you are Don't forget, however, that the old maid is the true husband-spoiler. upaflcotionofhcrheart. Bhohassolonosdforsolneaieofhervcry ownwhom she couidministsrtmandwhoaewoll-bainglay in her hands, that she nearly always makes a wife who keeps her husband as his knees thanking Heaven for his luck in getting has‘. 1f you consider your own individual good, marry a woman without encumbrance». But i! you desire to do one of the finest and most altru- istic things that any man can do, marry a widow with alive branches andbearcalfathertohcrcbildrsh. DIX. s - - . - 0 Dear Dorothy Dix-Jior the love of goodness please say something to mothers about tho way they discourage their children. I have one of the best mothers in the world, but she takes all of the ambition out of me by her perpetual criticisms of everything I try to do. I am "slow" and "awkward" and "dumb" and a "bunsier" and so on. I am natur- ally shy and timid and because she is always 110111111513! short-comings up before me it has given me an inferiority complex “ me want togooflsomewhereanddie. I-know my mothe thinksshoislselplng me by telling me of my faults, but she is intensifying them. Why can't mothers see what they arc doing to their children by always batting them? . G. B. Idrartknomunlomitisihatmotharsarssoanatousfortbafrcbild- andfoelthatflieymustspendtheir timahammcflngonthem. Perhaps that is the reason that mother novvr ceases harping on her children's faults and criticises everything they do. They cannot rise up or sit down without her telling theni for pity's sake not to louch or not to stumble over the chairs. Thoy cannot eat without her calling their at- tention to how to hold their forks or not to gobble their food. They cannot speak without her correcting their grammar or pronuncia" s . a n .3,- marrying UB1’. '\ Shehasbeenwaitingsolongforsoineoueonwhomtolavishthepent-. _Fas[riorg's_ was»: itfi thegllreyatest i Husband-pleaser’ B11116 AWOTIGA. . GIVE that husband of item t. a4 a QAAA re fvvvoeeq, WHAT A F LAVAQUR yours plenty of Heinz Tomato Ketchup and watch his boyhood appetite comeback. Horeistliericlzurcrljuico of sun-ripened tomatoes -—grown from Heinz own pedigreed vines-picked. cooked and bottled all in a day. Blended with rare apiocwseloctodbyfleinsbnyers inthcorienntogive MADE BY H. LHEINZ COMPANY, ESTAIUSl-QID Al’ LEAMINGTON, CANADA, VSINCIII it the matchlecs Heinz flavour. And what a flavour! Treat the family often to this world- famom aauoc- Your grocer is featuring Heine Tomato Ketchup now. Get a bottle or two with your next order. IIEINZ - tomato KETCIIUP makes them more awkwar an um makes thorn self-conscious. Worse still, she kills in them not beaten before we even start to tight. from all contact with society. Many his mother took away from him all of pressing on him that he was slow other children. Many a mother has guiius by beeping before a gifted boy forfority. Great is the power of suggesttrn. aswellaacure. Itcantakeev can inspire them w do great things. her children believe that she aspects the worst for them. In olden times ft ussd children how ugly and dull manufacturing indust IC§ in Can- ade, And she does not see that when she tells Johnny how awkward he is and Mary how dumb she is and Tommy how stupid he u, she simply ply the money that I need desper- IORTGAGEII WIFE BY IMLDRED BAR-HOUR QAPTII 1O FACING Tlll MUSIC Jeanne stared dully at Adele Parkinson. lhe had been through so much that evening that one more shook scarcely registered in bu’ numbed consciousness. Adele waited, looking her surprise at Jeanne! silence. seeing this. I09 haven't any way of getting it." Adele stared at her in amass- ment. "You promiaodf-shs began. Joanne made a hopelcw little gas- you've got to look at - ed the sentence for her. "And he thlnp while be was about lt-why friend, and I want to continue to you married him, admitting that you Aa be, but when I loaned you that money, you told me that you would need it for only a few weeks, while your own was tied up in acme stock deal. It has been months now, and I've come a financial copper. so I've got to stop being nice and be h- your own." nil!!!" Jeans had buried her face in her Jeane looked at her quostioningly. handl- “You mcui?" what a donlceblo creature I Adela nodded. am!" aha "All my life is “lillthlt...lfyoilil7fl'talljsflt unior Ilsaliogliullnsedto . 1 iikadtoplay-aot. I foundathrlllinmafohfngmywits agdnat other people's. Now I hate itallllwimlhadnovcaocnliew Yoitlwiflilhadnovartriadte bo-—-" Vic Barstowe for the money, I will go to him myself. I think he'll not hesitate about settling his wife's Just debts." "Iut Adele." in 1 mar-Hod Vic. He wouldn't under- stand. He thought I had money of "Never III Own naturally. and if he though I dldifl have. he would wonder-' dbobrobeoflwithsgestureci dcflair. norms ECONOMICS suonr course the w...» MI!- lane new John-w rum-u, ma: u an Dspsllwsat a us" £22.... dun Ileana mightwondoraboistalotofoflier aged instead of discouraged. achieve things. For we can only do what we balicvo we can do, and we lose faith in ourselves we have lflt tho power to succeed. Manvagirifsilsiomarrybscausebcrniother byteilingherwhenshewssachildbowhnnalyaha keep themfrorn beingvain. butnowweknowthat we conceit to get us through the world, and the mun onlyambitfonbistthepow UM 5'52; amanhas hisoooflden ’ 6F- The two words left out in tuba the following sentences are i" bounced the some, but spelt ti!!!‘ ently. Do you know what um avi The of the will‘ bit is brown. The-——oid man strode tbml calH gets wet ini-l In case you cannot make till out, hero they are: Hair. hart; l" hail; piece, Peace; rein, rain. Illa Secret “Willi! A little min like W“ lion tamer?" "Ifiiatb my secret, guvnor - ill the lions is waiting for me t0 ll" a little larger." much already. dho believed in Adele's friendship, but she know thaudriventothawallbyhsrhn- ancial straits, she might make use of some of her knowledge. "Well?" said Adele, after a while, "do I get the money or don't l?" Jeanne hesitated. There was a chance in a million she remember- ed, that her pearls come Daintinesa With Chic Styles Illustrated Drcaswsoklng Lesson Furnished with ‘I001 Pattern I! IIAIIIIK1IIIGTUN might home from the jewelers the follow- ing day. If they did, there was a chance that aha could pawn them, and come to Adele's rescue. "Ifyouwiligivemauntil tomor- row afternoon before you go to Vie. Iamconfldcntthatlcan gctyou the money," shc said finally. Adele rose, and going over to tin table, picked up the pow~ dsr , and drew it across her nose. "Vary will, until tomorrow at three o'clock, not a second larger . . I am sorry Jeanne. truly l am." "Oh, that's all right. It isn't your fault. It was good of you to loud me the money when you did." l. NOITI GI!‘ l1 IAUII "Lot's no down stairs now." sug- Adele. “If you stay away