l < - » - V ls; i ra , _ .ro _. ._ _ r~ ‘ - i-Ai.; lin... . » ~` ll 3- - ._\e._; i _mi q gi ii '|` _-__... _ __,____ _ _ __ _ _ _ ____ Il _ l 'll`.l`U lAN __ _Y __ __ _‘_ ______A_`______V, v_4_v __,___,__ __“_____________ l _______.._.._,_______ l____lf@f1=an’s Realm Social and Personal -~f- ._feShf°cs._:€:____l1ii<<'ifi!sii~?i_i l . ‘ / ~ _ ' _ _ » - - 4 ' A I _ \ .\~_-fe . l 'Vllaf the Fashinnnlr . " A '-I-~ ~ » ' » Q5” r A Dorothy Dlx Letter Box A 1° “'° 'W°"'”"' » l"iii";”‘°* ii ease l ~ l r . H / l _ _ ' l _ yi What is There in fe for the Bored oung } ’ __ V k l’.0 H ld ` 0f20? Whyawlfe Must Wor 0 _ ‘». ,_A _._-~'_» .»‘ .- i.».,.e¢;.,.. . _ ‘\s;$_z,_;, I v`:., il =-` ./`.' >..._ / l 1, _ .._, flop” 1 5*' - 'iii E _ »_. _ if "~-“3’~_a‘.ie_$§ ‘ RE.ClP_E= in o buffered bolus dash, plooo alternate layers o sliced tomatoes (if '.»:’§, .2221 _ V ;°.» ~‘J';*'5§"1 ` §;>-’°,:e':',»_r."‘ ' ~`.\_ X arp, ' A _ ~ .x One ot the clofl. family j,~f_'_~f1\ ,. ; ../. g\~_ 1 f Clark's Pork and Beans, canned tomatoes are used, , drain of? liquid) and thinly sliced onions, pre- viously porboiled. Season with salt and pepper. Top with broad crumbs, dot with butter or bacon fat and heat in oven. ""1 lvl: '.l.illi.'f.'k.'.lll°lll'li.'f'l.l'.l.Tlf 1°' Powys Bflllll _ Cl.:-inlcs Polak ...tl asANs (With Tomato, Chili or Plain Sauce) sg . si , . ., W. C1. AR K.1.llul1alz. §i_'°..'.'l"I£.“>'.'_1'.f.‘T.Y1T§f.,'L‘lf.. ' Style Chats _ WITH ALMA ARCHER .it's a great break for the ladies (and 1 might add the taxis) that the attempted return of the bustle fashion has now folded up ' with nothing more than a tab, or a bow in lace or chiffon to in- dicate the tail of restoration. A revival. however, which looks as though it might moan busi- ness, is the Patou evening hemline showing a bit of ankle in front. _-_~;;__~; ____ _»_;-.T; ------ -------:;-~r- -~~ _ ._-_;~_:.--- -= _ , _ N This may be served with cream or whipped cream or with a chilled, For 7718 Cook boiled custard made with the yolks *' -" 't of the eggs. Combine the ingredients APRICOT WHIP in just the seine way, if you intend to make an uncooked whip; adding the hot apricot puree to the beaten I had ambition, but I have not. 'Ihe very thought What do you lullostt ‘ BORID. an-n--L-eannqi. Answer: _ petite on the piquant dishes that are spread beta him. stupid. Too dull to see things and understand them. Without imagination Without appreciation. Without intelligence. How else can one fail to be in- terested and thrilled by what is happening in this most wonderful age of all the world ' ’ _ -_-_-_..._ You say going to school bores you. Poor boy, how 1 pity you. Why. tc be blind is not a worse misfortune than to have books closed to you so that you get nothing out of them. Never to know anything about this swat universe of ours. Never to have history unroll its gorgeous scroll before your eyes. Never to mingle with that good oomptliy 0! wits ind Will!- ersckers, of poets and lovers and beautiful ladies that you wouki meet in fiction. Why, as long as there isa book left in the world no educated person can ever be bored. In reading he hes a resource that never fails him in times of loneliness or sickness or trouble. Your friends bore you. People bore you. Society bores you. 'that is because you have no knowledge of human nature, no insight into character, for every man and woman you meet is an liidividllal problem, with peculiari- ties and contradictions that would furnish you with a llfltilne of interesting study if you were capable of understanding them. ‘ And every man and woman has had romances and adventures and ox- periences stranger than those of any hero or heroine in any novel. Why, I can sit for hours and just watch the faces in a crowd drift by and have a perfectly gorgeous time speculating about thelvl ind lfyilll to fit stories to them. _ - > -_-nog,-, Dear Miss Dix-I am a young msn 20 years sid and constantly bored- Nothing interests me. I go to school and liste to study because it bores ms. I go out to parties, but they bore me terribly. My friends bore me. I take a girl out who I think is keen and she bores me. It has been ages since I have had a good time. I wish doing anything bores me. I hate to go on this way. - I My suggestion is to snap out of tho pose of being blsse. It is ridiculous for a boy of 20 to p`retend that he is fed up on life. Why, he haen't even sit down to the feast yet. Ile hssn’t begun to satisfy his sp- it l-iss slwsys seemed to ms that to be sores was to oonisss yourself 9 23 _ ,_-.__ ._ .~ _ -s-»-_.._T...._..._...I l | `l» oi l YO' ; 2548 xl.-W Clirls bore you. I will admit that scale of theli are pftety tinlolmbut _ wait until you fail in love. son. and then you won't be bond. You will be on your tiptoss trying to make a bit with some iludy_hesded little iiapper. As for business boring you and your being without ambition. that is because you are either lazy or wishy-wnshy or you are too young and im- mature to have -made up your mind about what you want to do in the world. Business isnt boring it ls lisir-rsisingly exciting. It is sitting in at the big- gest game in the world, where the stakes are so high it makes the tables at Monte Carlo look likes pil-lgpong set. Business is s great adventure. It is laying plans that reach across the world and far into tile future. It is fling- ing bridges across rivers and sending ships across the seas. It is matching wits against wits and thc best man wins out. ‘_ WHEN s child ls fretful and lfflflbllil seems distressed and un- comfortable, can't play, csn't sleep, it is a pretty sure sign that some- thing is wrong. Right hene is where Castoria tits into a cllild's scheme- the very purpose for which it was formulated years ago! A few dro _ and the condition which caused tg: trouble is righted; comfort quickly brings restfu sleep. Nothing can take the place of Cassoria for children; it's perfectly harmless, yet always effective. For the protection of your wee one- for your own peace of mind-'keep this old reliable preparation always on hand. But don’t keep it just for emerfencies; let it be an every-day aid. ts gentle action will ,ease and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. In more liberal doses it will A Etiquette V oyneoerss us" Q. At a reception for the intro, duction of a friend, who receives the guests? A. The hostess and the guest of honor.» ` ` Q. On wedding invitations, Mist kind of type should be used? A. Plain block, r_':ript, or old Eng lish. Q. Is it proper for a young couple to dance together so often as to be conspicuous? A. No, not unless they are en- gaged to be married, and even then _"T - '_-_'_-:~_:;.»;:_~*_*--€__.____,___ .___-_-___¢__`__V_ __ T __¢-»-..._ Illustrated Dressmaiung Lesson Furnished it l"1""l`l"l'll'l')"ll‘['l'l'§-ll! With Every Pattern ,A ,K Conf! ll l H Husband’s Love-Is Love Enough, ' By Annabelle Worthington I ‘ egifithout Congeniality of Tastes? _ ____ _“__ _ ~ canrt E S T , '"“W*'l=‘ thi Iii . 'M \~,' '- i_Q\1u";'_“_ f ‘ if-intussus- Clffamlasasllidavlfdi --child needs Csstoris \`». l"'l‘2ll-lllillmfw-"“:p'°u;`ll ’ L 1 l l l|*¢"Yl » ll, -1-.;‘ra~'-..i.-“-=-» W; iissgssa ill, affiffwi l ‘l i nw¢e¢lauaso.av\\.»\"'*‘“ .\|l.....,,,l»..--I-i S ._ at 'I Jens... .lou __ . "lil" eilectively help to l g - bowels in an oldernéillllfll. e sluggmh ' All dfysglsts have Castoria; it's g_enulne lf you see Chas. H. F le tcher's signature and this name-plate; llnllllllllllilulmllluuillllilllmlilllul-luniinlumlul||||||ul||||||||||lu||. 1; 2 3 ulllllinunlllliilllllulillilllllllliilllillulllrlillllllllllill||l||||i|||l|||||r|»||ll4 T1 A Moming Smile SINFUL PRIDE Jack-"Dad, what are ancestors?" Dad-"Well, my boy, l’m one of your ancestors and your grandfather is another." Jack--"’I'hen why do people brag about them." it implies jealousy. Q. What is the correct pronuncia- tion of “valet”? A. The preferred pronunciation is val-et. a as in "at," e as in “let", and accent on nrst syllable, -*___ Paris Styles wi 9 No. 3003-Paris finds chic in prints that reverse their colour scheme. Especially smart is this combination in today's snappy jacket dress in crepe silk in black and almond green tones. Designed for sizes lt, ll years, 36,, ,3,B. 40 and 42 inches bust. The 38-inch size requires 4% yards lb. dried apricots. _ 1 cup. cold water. €~i Cup sugar, li telispon salt. 6 egg. wilitcs. Thorguglily wssll the apricots then cover with the cupful of water and soak overnight. Ili the morning cook in same wlltcr until tender, then press thi'ou'»;'il a course sieve. There should lic a good cupilll of pulp. Stir the sugar into the fruit and put over slow heat. stirring until sugar is dissolved Bout egg whites ve stiff . . ry . I add salt. Gradually fold in the hot' St' George” Preparatory 5°h°°l "lm fruit niixturc. and turn .nto well- buiiered baking dish. Place in s. pan containing hot water and bake in very slow oven, about ‘.250 degrees F. egg whites will remove the raw-egg navor. Nut-Apple W'hip A | and one-half cup powdered sugar to ‘ one stlffiy-beaten egg white. Fold in ,or walnuts and one-half cup heavy cream, whipped. l SCHOOL T0 HAVE PRINT SHOP MDDDLETOWN, R.. I-. Mar. 1'l.- will operate its own printing estab- lishment. Started in a small way by two students in 1927, the school printing shop is to be taken over by tor about nn hour, which should seti dlc mixlllre ilrlnly enough to allow) \ to be cooled if rlcsired. .. `i ..'*‘ .fl 's...‘.g,“"%_\ 'Jai t ; ,1l":*.;,`,,‘¢ int., -u up _-_~f._'~fgp'§;.~_.s; -, -A. .tb re; JA. 1 ._ ..'._\ ., »._ _ ` \ om_Can(f/:mi Cowl .. . _~‘ ,,-u - ~ .. ~. :I I lf, \` I i __ ali) Q-7.7., '.\~ ` Eg* - Fi - i*<_'1_‘_!§ f / ~ ‘\. 51 . i -f r'~§ . 5*., qw. &_._...- »’;\>T_.<\‘-'¢. PRODUCED _ IN CANADA \__..../ l *'-f`“`, T 11 ina//CN the institution and will be used for printing all bulletins, chapel notices, form letters to students and parents. in ‘- r Add two cooking apples, grated, one-half cup finely chopped pecans For velvety soups and sauces, rich leo creams and candies, tins-textured cakes and puddinis and eus- tsrds, always use Carnation Milk-convon ent, econo- mical, always dependable. Clean housing of clean herds and clean handling of the milk safeguards Carnation Milk at the source and protects its purity. And this protection continues until Carnation reaches you in its hermetically sealed containers. Wrlle fer Cool leel and Heb! B005 PARNATION %., LINED, AYLIIH, ONT. sms I Csssdl cows. ncbi I & Canada: Gaudi: seas ad cess: Do you think any doctor can be bored when he holds human lives in his hands? Do you think any lawyer is bored when he is untengling the dark tm-odds oi trims and delving into the motives that sctuate men and women? Do you think any preacher is bored trying to save the souls of sinners and make the world a better place to live in? Get busy trying to do something and make a real man of yourself and you will not be bored. ` ' - ' lf you must cultivate a pose, try enthusiasm for a while. It is only the enthusiastic people, the people who are keen about things, who ever really live. The blase merely exist. ' DOROHIY DIZ. _ I If I O O O Dear Miss Dix--I-fore is what gots mer Why does a woman have to smile and be pleasant and do everything her husband likes to kelp his love, while a man doesn't have to do anything to keep his wlfe'| love? Of course. fi-ealizo it is a man't world and he gets the best of everything. A man talks about how much of a snap a woman has, but how many men are willing to be women? Don’t you think that nature or vlhoevsr divided things was un- , fair to the female of the world, Miss Dix? DOLLY. Answer: \ - Perhaps a msn hes to make just ss much effort, Dolly, to keep his wife's _ love as a wife has to keep her husband‘s love, but msn don’t do it for the I very practical reason that they don’t have to. A wlfs's love lsn't as nec- essary to her husband as a husband's is to a wife, because, for one thing, men are not so emotional ss women are and after they are married they are too busy making a living to think much about love anyway, whereas s woman never ceases to pine for love and be miserable without it, no matter how old she gets. home together than it is to s man, beeause 'her home is her profession and t her means of making a livelihood, and if this is taken from her sho is left ‘ destitute. I agree with you that this is a man's world in which men get all the breaks. Nature starts them out with stronger bodies, often with better brains, nts them better to endure hardships than women and custom gives them more independence and opens more doors of opportunity to them. , Men can go to places and do things that a woman ean’t do, they have ten `i times better chances for success than women have. and when alwoman does succeed it is because sho works hardsrthan a nian and has more ability. . When men talk about women hav ing a soft snap. it. is all hoosy. Nor man would be a woman on a bet nor would any one take her Jeb at. any' price. It is a great misfortune to be born a woman, but I don’t see what we src going to do about lt, Doswri-nr pix. I Q U O C O ‘ Dear Misa Dix-Ihr five years"I'have been going with a young man who is a very fine fellow. He is very charming and liked by every one, but hers is the trouble: I love books and have spent half my life making believe. My fiance has no imagination and never roads anything but the stock market and sport pages. Hs has never read a book in his life. I like music slid plays and bridge. He doesn‘t tnjoy any of thorn. The only taste we have in common is outdoor sports. It doesn’t worry him how we are going to spend all the long evenings the rest of our lives when we sro too tired to play golf or too old to skate, but those evenings scare me. What about it? L .V. B. _ Answer: _ I think you are very wise to consider those long evenings that you will U ‘¥iéhiioiJ‘s,_lfi§l,*coNT£NTE D cows ..» ~ - c ,_.... ."1 " ._ " ._ ‘I ` _ '.._,af-‘-_‘ ‘-.rv _»_»m>.._ A _ _ _ M ` have tospend tosstheraadinwisiehyouwillhavsnothingtcssytoeaob other because you do not speak the some lllilillll and have not the same interests. They will be very tedious and dull and unhappy. at least fer you. t Whether a husband or wife is a good husband or wife has nothing to dol ! f__; __ 0 r _"__ P .;;;.r;*_Ta.-‘:.- , C00k|ng~ Terms completely so that it cooks on all , And, for another thing, it is more important for a woman to keep the » ____ sm-fgoes gt tm game tim takin on G, I E _"Snuteelng»" s crisp, brown, crusty surface. Fat of 39-inch material with 1% yards of 35-inch contrasting. No. 2548-Here's a charming wearable frock of flat crepe silk. It will give young daughter a big thrill to make it, for it isrl't half as intricate as it appears. It is a straight one-piece affair lengthened with d cilicular flounce. The frill at the neckline and sleeves may be bought all pleated by the yard, if desired. Designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 15 and 20 years. The ld_yes.r size requires 3% yards of 39-inch material with lit yards of 8-inch Believe me, son`, it is only the idle, the dull, the stupid, who are bond. Wmlnl- ° No. 2835-Little Jane even at such an early age loves pretty clothes. It's a simple one-piece affair. The panties peeping 'neath the hem of the dress are so smart. Designed for sizes 1, 2, 4 and 6 years. The 4-year sise requires 2% yards of 39-inch material with it yard of 32-inch contrast- ing and 1‘,li yards of edging. _ All patterns 15 cents each in stamps or coin (coin preferred.) You will see one attractive style after another as you tum over the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss, the matron, the stout-and a series of dressmaking articles. It ls a book that will save you money. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of book 10 cents. I Price of pattern 15 cents. , . m __ _.___*i__1 _ band and wife. If s. man and woman like the ssms things and have the same tastes they will be happy and their homo will be a peaceful one, but if they have diametrically opposite tastes they will be miserable and unhappy slid their home will be s place of perpetual strife and bickering. with the success of a marriage. It depends altogether on whether he or she suits the party of the other art. DOROTHY DDL Cooking rapidly in s. greased pan, must be hot snoillh VJ 101111 $111! browning the product on one side protective shell immediately and so and turning it to brown tho otnsrlprevent abI°rl>ti°11- We like ¢° side. A companion method to have it 365 to 370 degrees F. for un- "Decp Frying" cooked foods and 386 to 390 degrees By which we lower thc product»F. for products that have been once into deep, very hot fat, immersing itcooked already- V l Always sresls - _ ‘ Always llavoury _ ~¢_ ‘ , .~ .r=».-~.v _ _ _ i A 1 _ 7, i 1 ‘ 0 . _,__ if Q i 215 i is ‘V »- , . A A V E In sealed metal pockets _ By MARY KNIGHT United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, March 14.-(U. P.)-Beige plaids for wool dresses with plain beige coats have a Scotch air about them but are Parlsianiy smart and have been selected by European, English and American buyers from the spring collections. that they can never fail to please or to blend beautifully with all necessary accessories. Many of-the frocks themselves are made with simple little round collars that just fit the neck and have a turnover piquecollar or, as Schiaparelli does it, a-necklace of wood- en beads that are cut so that they fit on over the dress and look just like a regular collar intended to be there all the time. By wearing different colored necklaces following the scheme of colors in the pialds, different effects may be achieved. This is true with blouses too, where there is a plaid skirt and plain beige coat. The blouse is attractive in plain beige satin, or in any oi' the colors included in the plaid used either with satin georgette-there is a new use for chiffon in blouses this year-or in beige and colored lace of a weight to correspond with that of the skirt and coat. _ The use of an enormous amount of pique. colored and plain gives rise to vests of pique, collars and culls, and even boleros and iiounces on woollen frocks. YOU can make delicious bread in halt' the time and with half the effort if you use Quaker Flour and follow the instructions given in our booklet “The Quaker Method of Easy Bread Baking.” No kneading . . . no setting the sponge . . . you'1l make bread more delicious than you’ve ever made before. But only Quaket Flour will give perfect results. Made from selected westem wheat which There is such an opportunity for artistic groupings of colors ,.__l -' never sold ln I put eongsaiaiity above every other aillllty lo the selection sf s bus- 1 . firms sms sas su-dm' " "‘ must pass our rigid requirements for food uality. Tested every hour dulflng the milling, and baked daily in our own kitchefh If you’re not satisfied, y0\-ll' dealer will refund your money. Write us, or ask your dealer. for the free booklet. The Q\1Bk¢f lm Oats Company, Peterborough- _