H »_urv-s<--..__.. a... ... \ t. RAGE TWO “A ,Wonian’.s Realm -:- Socialiarizi Piersonal -:- Fashion; yli-fl- a TIIM|ISMOFII|IIIO'I Favorite Recipe lcr BISCUITS )5 eaapooa aait l teaspoons Mallfl 2 Cup! pantry flour Baking Powde- (or 1H cupe I tablrcpwfll bread flour) shortening Qfcupmil-hdrblllmllk and halfwater Sift together flour. baking pends and aait. Cut in the chilled ahortening. Now add the chilled liquid to make aoit dough. Ton dough onto a floured hoard and do not handle more than ia hereu- acry. Roll or pat out with handa to about ii inch thickness. Cut out with a floured biacuit cutter. Place on slightly greased pan or baking sheet and bake in hot oven at4S0° F. l2 to l5 minutes. fiBiscults use Magic .-Baking Powder," .;says llliss Ill. lllcFarlane, dietitian of St. Michael's Hospital, ; l. Toronto + / "( ' - ,)"I RECOMMEND ' _ Magic be- cause I know it is pure, and free from harmful in- gradients." Miss l\IcFarlane's opinion is , ibased on a thorough knowledge of jfrwoil chemistry, and on close study ' ‘rif food clliects upon the body. On lpractical cooking experience, too. Most dietitians in public insti- itutions, like Miss McFarlane, use llklagic rxrliuiczly. Because it is ‘always uniiorm, dependable, and gives consistently better baking results. . And Magic is the favorite of Canadian housewives. It outsells allotherbaking powderscombincd. ‘ You'll find hlagicmakes ailyour baked foods unusually light and ‘tender . . . and gives you the same iperfect results every time. M8 Cflflk B00k~Whcn you bake \ t home, the new Magic Cook Book will ive you dozens of recipes for delicious Eaked foods. Write to Standard Brands td., Fraser Avenue and Liberty Street, lToronto, Ont. ‘ "Contains no alum." Thin statement on every tin la our Guar- antee that Maile Baklnl Powder la free NIIII IIITI 0f ID! __ “harmful Ingredient. Ina-racks:- I i Ambition: It is not. so much ambition to win as it is the fear of defeat and humiliation that. drives lifiéMorningSmile e__. ._ ._. ._..__. h: store. The only man in sight pre- sumably the proprietor, was enjoy- 1B8 his ease attbeback of the shop, chair tilted back and feet on the counter, and made no move to come forward- The prospective customer waited! a few minutes and then called: “Can't you serve me? I am in a hurry to get home." | The proprietor shifted his posit-l ion slightly and drcwled: "Couldn't you come 1n some time when I'm standing up?" l For The Cook q i L_____.____l BAKED .ll'l'l4l'a ULJJULINGS Apples. l cup of sour milk or 2 HIPS 05 buttermxlk. 1,5 teaspoon of soda. 1.‘. teaspoon of salt. Four enough to make 11 dough to roll out. Mix all well and roll out. like pic- crust dough and cut it as for larce- sized biscuits; have your apples quartered and steamed until tcnderi place them on the dough, add sugar‘ and a. little grated lemon rind or; spice, then gather the edges to- gether and press well and tuck i them in firmly; r011 in the hand to.‘ shape them a. little long. Lay them. smoothly side up in a bakcpau: brush over the top with a. little i milk and melted butter and a sprinkling of ' sugar and grated lemon. light Danger in Sore-Throat Breeding Place for I "Flu” Germs , If Chilly, Feverlsh, Sneezin_, Start Treatment. ai. Once Which your little c01d—bc\varc of everyone who is coughin: or snccz- Are you sneezing and snifiling, is your head stuffed up? No need for that. Just use Catarrhozone; it. is a quick relief. It seldom fail-s to end any Cough. cold, Bronchitis, or Cstarrh. Thousands have used li; with uniform success-that. ought to be proof enough of what it can do for you. Toe pleasant germ-killing medication is breathed from the in- halcr into the nasal passages, throat and lungs. Ii: kills the germs and heals the sore membranes; it. stops grippy colds quickly, Catarrhozonc, large size, lasts two months, price, $1.00; trial size, 50c. All dealers. CArAni2iuQO-iouiz= '*mw°““"‘°"m“u mun"?- Thc “Nice” Girl a Pearl of Price-Pitifui .s\veiit and save and plan to get. one of the shiny little stones that he ' good. Dorothy Dix Letter k Couple Whom Debt Has Kept From Happiness. Sage Advice to Girl Trying to Forget Lost Love Dull’ 3315s Dix-What is a,"nice" girl? I know a girl who 1.; good company and that I like very much. although she neither drinks, smokes, pets nor listens to questionable stories. She doesn't want in be kissed and 511s Won't 18¢ we out my arm around her-when we ride in a car. she thinks a “nlce" girl doesn't go in for these things. Her charm seems to lie in her evasiveness. “first ls your definition of a "nice" girl? O_ 1), Answer: It seems to me that your friend gives a pretty good living illustration of a "nice" girl and also that you furnish the almost invariable masculine reaction to the "nice" girl. . - - which is that herevaslveness charms you. It. is an allure that leads you on. The more she refuses to pet, the IIWTQ (1., you m1 that, it would be a triumph to win her. Ii: is the old story of the man being willing to break his neck to get the peach that; hnnKS highest on the tree, and dlsdninlng the one that. is so ripe it hlls into his mouth. I often think vrhal a pity it is that girls refuse to recognize this sim- ple fact in masculine psychology-that the harder o. thing is to gel ihB more men want, it. If diamonds were as common as pebbles on the beach no man would pick one up. It ls because he has to work 8nd values it. And it is the same way with women. Girls make a fatal mistake when they make themselves cheap to men. No man wants the girl who runs after him. No man even sets any store on the 10118 $11M W111i l5 have for the taking. No man even sets any store on the love thatjs offered him free, gratis, for nothing. The women who are valued are always ihc women who held themselves high and whom men had a hard lime winning. lies, TTETQEEFiiLP-liiiiél“ A lil/hatvthe Fashionables are Wearing. llluatraiedillreaamsking Lesson Furnished . '. Every Pattern 1.,‘ vi‘ .5...’ "" ' "nubeile Worthington Here's a perfect hum frock ram. lured of e ccfatco fabric that hll e woolen aspect. Don't you think it is unusually attractive? It's really very simple-e little moulded bodice with dropped shoul- ders that form capsleevee, and a. straight slim skirt. Inverted plaif-s at either ado of the front and at either side of the back, kick out prettly in motion. A wee mu finishes the smartly shaped collar- Ii.'s charming too for sports for resort wear. For town. make it with long sleev- es of rough crepe all-k. Style Ab. N64 may be hid In sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. _ size 36 requires 3 5-8 yards of 39 men material with $6 yard of 85- inch contrasting. Our new Spring Fashion Magaz- lne is out! Every page from cover to cover is in colour. Be sure to flll in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) No. 2665 Size ..._................. With ' NMIlO Price of pattern 15 cents. C"? State As I said, my idea. oi a “nice" girl is one very much like your friend. She has her maiclculy reserve. Shs doesn't. let every Tom, Dick and Harry paw her over. She doesn't pay for every courtesy a boy show! her with her caresses. She is saving he: kisses for the man abe loves. She IlOCLiXYi. drink bccause she knows that under the influence of liquor girls do things that they spend the balance of their lives repeniing. She (luesift ttll tllriy stories because her mind is clean. She doesn't pet in parked automobiles nor come home at night at; hours thatscandalize the neighbors because she knows that, it isn't enough for a girl to be She has to look good to other people, and that once her reputa- ilon is destroyed all the‘ king's horses and all the king's men cannot build it up again. The nice girl dresses as well as she can aflord, but. she wears con- servaiive clothes and not. such as make her conspicuous. And in public places she deitieans herself modestly. She ls never one of the boisterous one; that make whoopce. She aids nature where it. ls needed by arti- tlce, but she doesn't plaster on her make-up as if she were painting n barn door, nor put so much lipstick on that her mouth looks like a. clown's. v The nice girl ls nice to other girls. she never says catty things. She never tries to steal their dorm. She never envles their 300d fortune. She is nicc to older women, cvcn the ones who have not sons, and she is nice to her own family. She doesn't expect. her mother to be her slave and her father to be just. a money-earner for her. She doesn't grub all of the best of everything for herself and monopolize all the good clothes in the fam- ily and the automobile and the parlor. The nicc girl is nice t0 boys but she doesn't chase them dOWn. She shows that shc is pleased at their attentions, but she doesn't throw his of gratitude every time any little drugstore cowboy notices her. She never calls boys up and tries to make dates with them or telephones them dur- ing business hours. And when she corresponds with a. boy she writes the kind oi letters that she wouldn't object to his mother and sister and m ~soaaeoeaa aaaaeaeeeleeae Sheet Address treasure her. She is s. pearl of price. DOROTHY DIX. O O O DH!‘ 130N011. DIX-My husband and I have been married three years and have two very small children. My husband is a leached and makes a fairly decent salsa-y but we are in debt» and gel; farther in all of the time. Naturally my husband is worried and he is subject to sudden out- bursts of nerves and temper, and when things go wrong he tells me than he wishes he had his freedom back and what. a. fool he was to have mer- ried, and he has even told me. that he wished I would quit him. I love him and I believe he loves me and the children, although he does not show it. work hard. B111 11 800d manager and try to do everything pos- sible izo make a. peaceful and happy home. I want more than anything else a close, companionship with my husband, but somehow we have missed this. wherein have I railed? Anx10ug_ Answer: Do not blame yourself because your marriage has not; brought you 3nd your husband the happiness you hoped for. It is not you who have mum, It is human nature that has failed because it did. not have the strength to stand the grueling test that poverty and anxiety and worry over debts has put upon love. Thousands upon thousands of marriages fall that would have been 11111111)‘ l! Only they could have been adequately financed. ‘That is why 1 9111 10191191‘ 11181118 y0un8 people not to rush into matrimony until they have some way of making a living that. will enable them to exist in some sort of decent comfort, and not have their nerves torn to tailors by the howling of the wolf si; their doors. Q! will“. love should not have a price tag on it, but unfortunately chambcrmaids reading. 51cm G-riPPx fields‘ The House of lireams-Gome-True By Margaret Pedler (Continued) CHAPTER. X OTHER PEOPLE'S TROUBLES Jean woke to find the chill, win- try sunlight.‘ thrusting in long fingers through the space between the easements and the edges of the window-blinds. At first the un- familiar look of a stranze bedroom puzzled her, and she lay blinking drowslly at the wavering slits of light, wondering in vague, hall- awake fashion where she was. Gradually, however, recollection returned to her, and with it s. live- ly curiosity to view Staple by day- A mighty nice thing is the nice girl. It you have found one, son, light. She jumped out 0f bed and, rattling up the bknds on their rollers, peered out of the window. There was a hard frost. abroad, and the stillness which reigned over the ice-bound country-side remind- ed her of the big Alps silences. But here there was no snow-no dazzling‘ sheet of whfincss spread, with cold, greyblue shadows flung across it. Grerm and shaven the lawns sloped gently down from a. flagged terrace, running immediately beneath her window, to the very rim of the frozen lake that glcamcd in the valley below. Beyond the valley, scattered woods and copses climbed the hillside opposite, leafless and bare save where a cluster of tall pines bowercd in evergreen defame FOR COLDS o; Au rm imwiv well loved and tended by successive generations. And over all, nus and valleys, park and "and, lay that. faint, almost imperceptible humid veil wherewlth, be it in scorching summer sun-shine or in iron frost, the West Country ten- derly contrlves to soften every harsh uotllne into something 5a ' , and melting, and. alluring. To Jean's, famllarised from child it hfls- People who are harassed by the bill collector and who do not know where the next meal is coming from are nor; concerned with t)“, “I'm going to love your Emglsndfll _ she told Nick. They were making their way down to the lake-alone together, since Blaise had curtl-y refused to loin them-and as shs spoke, Nick stopped and regarded her consider- 111813’- "I rather imagne England will love you," he replied, adding, w't.h the whimsical lmpudence which was somehow always permitted Nick Brennan: “If it were not for a prior claim, I'm certain I should have loved you in about‘ five min- Raciring Coughs in Old Agrr-Take Scott's Emulsion Wflier several acres in air-rent, and ri-uuned about its banks with rum and alder. At the far end Jean could discern a boat house. "It must. b8 an ideal place for uteis." will"! 111 the summer" she said "I'm sorry I happened u» no," ' - “mm Jam.‘ taking in the size of the lake 8p- orwlallvely as mgeuiei- they circled it with 10118. sweeping gfmkgg, hands interlocked. Ii; was much "But. I can still be n. brother to you." he pursued, ignoring her in- man to continued elforts.-—Dr. Hu- bert Work. NOTICE! in hereby given um r will not be - IIBIPOIISIIIIQ for bills contracted in ‘ my name without rny personal con- lent. Trained Nurse Explains Iieatm ent _ for Colds ‘ G. c. GILLIS, ‘ Charlottetown. . 1867-3-24-tts3i. i‘. against the slate of the sky. In the farther distance, beyond the confines of the manor park ii:- sclf, Jcan could catchglimpses of culhvatcd ficlds—i,hc red Devon soil glowing jewel-like through filmy wisps of morning mist that still hung in the atmosphere, dis- persing slowly as though 10th to go. l-Ierc and there a. little spiral of denser, blue-grey smoke wreathed its way upwards from the chimney of some thatched cottage or farm- house. And back of it all, adum- bratcd in- a dim, mysterious purple, the great tors oi’ Dartmoor rose scnflnel upon the horizon. - Y‘ , i ., _Speakmg of valuable homo remo- dies that every mother should keep on hand, Nurso Carrington says: "1' _ _ havent met any prepsratiommoro, _ gldepelngabie than Nervgme. It 1s the‘ _ e_a imment—every rop rubs in_. M ACT 1i: 1s absorbed quickly, eases and m-‘ lheves congestion m_ a short time. For; chest colds, pain 1n tho side, stiffi Postmaster llcuvrul, will lu- rc- gleckl caracl‘? an}! toothache: I haw! m iii. (Hiiuvll uulil Ilonn, nu ru- 9111111 Ncljviimc invaluable. In treat-l thc 22ml Amu. ion: n» u.» m". mg the millfil‘ lllS that arise in everyl 3mm: of" Ills Blaine-Ly’! Mulls on n hqme, gugh as u-amps‘ sick stomach i > jirnpnsvui IWIIlFHPl. fur four warn for nausea and had H h. ,'- tho son-ion of‘ "Fbnrlniiiilnuil Poul . . colsv Hot mg l5 Ilffico nnd Sin-rt Lvlli-r Buses, cti- more effluent till"! Nfifvlllfle." l lrruu in» 1st August. in:--.'. For nearly fifty years Nerviline Q SEALED TENDERS lu- niliirnkscd in Printed notices containing ‘urllu-r has been a houqehgld ‘flicks in ‘h s r u l lti . r . ‘- ' 9"‘ '§,,§’,,',;"",.’,‘,',:,r'f:t ""lf,';“ ',”‘_""‘Rm_'v" 113:’, sands of Canadian homes. Get a 55c ilnnk forms of TPIIIlPP iuny I." (Ill bottle today- lninelflli tho Poul. (iifivn hi’ Plmrlv-Iir» town and nt vim nlrire of lim Pas. Office Iuspm-iur W’. W. IIIIIEILHTT lmsimnnii-r iPolt Office Dv-pnrlinmt. .\In" Kerrie:- l lib. March, 1031 _a:*c‘"r.t. sunlirl. - charm of places that have been the sloping sward in front of the house. It wns all just. as her father had pictured it‘ to her. On the left, a. giant cedar broke the velvet smoothness of mown grass, its gnarled arms rimed with hoar- frost, whilst to the right a tall yew hedge, clipped into huge, grotesque resemblances of birds and beast-l. div deti the lawns from a path which skirted a walled rose-garden. By craniug her neck nnd almost flaiicnfng her nose agsins the w'n- dcw-panc, she could just make out. a sunk lawn in the rosegrvdad. and in 1's crntrn the scrder pillar oi’ an It was all very English and old- fashioned. breathing the inalienable hood with the piercing clarity of Bimviphere. the brilliant. colouring and definiteness of silhouette of southern Europe and of Egypt, there was something inexpresslbly WYPOMiOII. "I ihhk" refleotively- “I shall like being a. brother to you." "I should expect. a lot-other to fetch and carry," cautioned Jean. |“And lo make himself generally Jean's glance narrowed down 10' restful and appealing in those blur- ,usef‘ul." m! hues o! are! wd violet. in the "1 haven't got the characler from w"?! "*1 01' $119 9"“ fifth. Wlih my last place about me at the mo- its tender over-tone of piurpleliks tbs snout, bug r11 "n, i; w; gm- m, bloom on a. mp9. and the rounded when we geii back. Meanwhile, I breasts of green-clad hills curving will perform the menial task of Bllflveiy one into the other till they fastening on your skates." merged into the ultimatic rock They had leached the lake by crowned olopesof fhebroodiugmoor. now. Ii: was a wide stretch of WEAK AH’ ER INFLUENZA- iiiililli NUT D0 liiiliSEWiiRK iioulil mi 3mm 00min! Back litor idling lir. Iiliilnls‘ Hi Pill: (Tonic) ‘f! took a severe attack cf lnilurnn," -iiia after-elects. Influmu veahar wnies Mrs. ohn Fraser, ZOIO-Sth A . the blood-naked rsicknm llksiy East Owen Ontario “aarlwbm 7 , I ‘Ibo-iron and other elements in Dr. wasahieiogetoulofbedlwasinurch WikianWPlnkPills (tonic) incruaelhe . no nun o cc . 33% will... . i...°°"l".;;i"“..‘.'..'.i.?’.:'“.i.'i"i.’i.2'2f 35.21’. "°"’""""i>.s°vliil‘t.;‘l'- ~ s me to try . u" w! Sim] as Em" Pink Pills, which I did, and aim taking a few am I could la! m strength coating beck. Al iy wi car's, overwork, worry or other muss, have been helped but to health, strength and You can getDr. Williams’ Pink Pill an ltron ‘urinal w” r ‘i illdbem and I haveii: attack cl genie at any druggism-m from r1 influenza since." . ' Mqu _ raheadillookcut..." ceaisabox. Doiflwail larger than it had ilippeared (mm he!‘ bedroom window, when it. hm been partially screened from her Vi" by T181118 Rround. "It's all rght for paddling about," answered Nick. “But there's really i01ly boating on our river. That's over on the west side of the pnrk"_ 31° minted in the direction in- dicated. "It divides Staple from will” Ferry-the Dmberiy of our next-door neighbours, sq u; we“, You'd like the boating here," he 8-5405. "“‘ .,‘ I'm afraid our Bu“!!! , ‘bllitles aren't likely to impress anyone coming srmigm (mm Switzerland." “I'm sure I shall like skating-o;- lnvlhins also here." said Jean Wlflnly. “It. is all so beautiful. I suppose Devonshlre is really quite the loveliest country in mghmap My father always declared it was." "We think so," replied 1mg 11104961!- “Though a Cornishman would probably want to block ma‘ flown for swing a0! But r love u," ho went on. "'I'here's nowhere else I would care w live." m; eye, ‘on- ened, seeming almost to caress the surrounding ffelds and WQQQL Jean nodded.‘ "I can understand that," 5h; "id- "Mihfllllh I've only been here a few hours, I'm beainning to m; it, mo. I don't, know why 1g up; can't! explain it-bur», 1 m! a; 1g hadtbeflnandcankgetbecktonm Inilaaauwrto tia in ‘Ihthih-duu-wnnuasmaanuam m a "l"; I'd come home." (‘Do Be Omtinued) g Yes‘. you ore in u ‘BEAUTY CONTEST oil, your life! When In says, "Isn't my mother pretty? "—_you'vg 0,, ' another Beauty Contest. Jivmbody Ioveslovely skin! ACH time anybody looks at you, you are in a Beauty Con- tesLAnd exquisitely cleamfresh skin helps you to win! Let Calay help you have it. Calay is the Soap of Beautiful W0. a men. It is a pure creamy-white. There's no coloring mattcr_. no "chalkiness” t/o dry out your skin. Luxurious Calay lather --warm water-then a cold rinse-and your skin ha; m“, charm, flower-petal softness. Use Calay, and the whole world will be drawn by your loveliness! CATKV iHE SOAP OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN c. stabs of their affections. “Ihey sromtbinklng only about the slats their pocketbooks. ‘lhose who are hungry are not yearning for they are longing for beefsteaks and onions. Even parenthood my be paid for and the coming of children, that. should be the greatest] that can come to a. home, becomes e. tragedy when there is no: u. enough to care for them. The thing mulls the matter with your husband is lack oi mon not lack of love for you or the children. Ii; ls the lack of money . makes domesticity a burden under which his courage withers and strength falls. If he were a better sport he would not take out. on y his folly of marrying before he was ready for ii; but you may well pi him as you do for the agony he is enduring in being crushed by his l of debt and his hopelessness when he looks to the future. The only remedy for your situation is for you to be parted from y husband for a. little while so that he may get a. perspective upon how ' and brave you are, and realize how much he loves you and the clilldr and that you and they are his only solace in his misfortune. DOROTHY DIX. O O I O O O Dear Miss Dlx—I was very much in love with a man to whom I engaged and was sure of his aflection. However, one day right out ol clear sky he told me that- he had fallen in love with another girl, a that he cared for me only as a. psi. 0f course, I told him that ii ‘- all right, that his happiness was all that I cared about. That happen rive years ago and I love him still. Is there any way I can 1011611 secure peace of mind? SUNSHINE. Answer: ' You can't reason with love, nor can you make your henrl. briiava self and bestow or withdraw its aiilections at your behest. our this is w be said; With women, at least, love is mainly - hypnotism. They create the man they love out. of their own i111“ and they nourish even o. hopeless passion by dwelling on it and ideal it, thinking of what. might have been. So the best cure for love ls to put it out of your mind. Keep b Have as many inte as ‘ble. and when you find YWY 31°“! turning toward your lost love, wrench them away. Use all of Your "' power and you can do it. DOROTHY DIX. n, isosceles sr. CHARLES in TEA OI corrsr HE next lime you drink ieo or eoiiee ivy it with Si. Charles Milk. You'll be surprised and delighted with the creamy richness that It gives. Yoifllbe us‘ nishecl that evoporoieclmilk could losie so much like Fresh, sweet cream. $9. Charles ll noi only good in coffee and lea but for all cooking purposes where you would nonnolly use fresh dairy milk. Si. Charles is handy lo use, economical - and invaluable in camping, picnicking or when you ore removed irom your rog- Z _ ulormilk supply. UIISWEITINID EVAP and! Th‘ lien Co. Llailcd 1...... 25:34:" . l N15 ' - | §bfih " he “fircll wscllzr‘ ""' " ‘°°’ °’ ’“' "" ‘°° ' a’ lib-Ale Naae........".-.-...-.-.. -" Md1ell......n...--......m..."