PAGE EIGHT l DorotliyuDix’ Letter Box Tlioughtless Sister-in-Law Who Fans Bridds Natural Jealousy-Will a Sweet Girl With no Education Prove a Good Wife for a Lawyer? Should Poor Girl Accept Fur Coat Dear Miss Dix-I am a bride very much in love with my husband. A fe\v weeks ago his sister came to visit us. She is very crazy about him. us he is her only brothel", and he is devoted to her. He tells her thlnll5 ‘ that he iloesnt even mention to me, and while I tun ilolug the housework they are in another room talking. Now she has decided that she will stay \‘.llll us all winter and go to business school, my lzuirlrzind Jiaying for everything, ulthought she has a geod home and her father is able to support her. 'lllli hurts me very much, as I had hoped to get a good start in married life and have been trying very hard to I" lomething. What is your ug- qestion? '1 JEALOUS WIFE. AllbWOFI No other one thing has wrecked so muny niar- riages and broken up so many homes and caused such rivers of tears to be shed as family Jealousy. in especial there is no other jealousy so devastating as that which a. woman can feel for her son's wife or which u wife can feel for her husband's mother and sisters. Many a mother is so crazed with Jealousy at the thought of her son loving some other woman better than he does her, of his going to some other woman with his confldences and for advice, that she is urged on by the devil that possesses her into alienating him from hi5 wife by continu- ally pointing out her faults to him and fomcnting discord between them until she diives them to the divorce court. Many young wives go through the torments of the damned and have all oi‘ their married life embittered by their senseless Jealousy of their husbands mothers and sisters and their groundless belief that they are trying to take them from thcin. Indeed, a great many wives are always jealous of the part of their husbands‘ lives in which they had no part. This jealousy extends even to their husbands‘ boyhood friends, and the first thing the average yocuig wife does it to cold-shoulder her husbands chums out of his life. y It is a. strange thing that we do not more fully recognize what a power for evil family Jealousy is and take more precautions to guard against it. Tilt: young wife might, for instance, as in this case, try to realize that when a man marries he does not automatically break off all his old ties and cease to care for those whom he has loved all of his life. It l5 a strange thing that we do not more fully recognize what a power for evil family Jealousy is and take more precautions to guard against it. The young wife might, for instance, as in this case, try to .'l'LlllZl‘. lhzit when a man marries he does not automatically break oil all his old ties and cease to cure for those whom he has loved all of life. liic relationship between a brother and sister who are congenial and fond of each other, is very close. They have grown up together. They have a thousand memories in common, and it is natural when they come together that they should have endless things to tall: about and enjoy each others society. But if the wile will only look at this situation with clear eyes instead of Jaundiced ones she will see that this does not endanger her own posi- tion. It doesirt show that her husband prefers his sister to her or loves her better or respects her opinion moie. It is Just that the man and lllx‘ sistw are in the habit of talking things over and if the wife will lis- lcn-in she will discover that they are not discussing her faults, as she imagines. but chatting about some perfectly innocuous thing. Probably nothing more personal than somebodys new automobile or what station they get best over the radio. In a wupd, the bride should use some sense in trying to cure herself of i)“lll§ grccii-cvetl, but the husband and his family should not only heal themselves of the some affliction, but they should avoid provoking the young wife lo Jealousy. - Certainly every man deserves to be incarcerated in a home for the feeble-minded for the balance of his life who feeds his wife‘s Jealousy by always running home to mother with his troubles and problems and who i; always sighing for mother's pies and tolling his wife how mother does things and throwing up his sisters as models to her. Nor can any man be excused for sacrificing his wife to his family and taking the money that she has pinched pennies to save to indulge them ii. treasures and luxuries that she does not have. And mothers and sisters should realize that when a man marries he belongs to his wife and not to them, and that they should neither seek to monopolize his time nor his pocketbook. And when mothers and sisters perceive that their beloved son and brothers wife is jealous of them the least thing they can do is to remove themselves from the scene as quickly as possible and try to convince the Jealous wife that they mean her no harm. And that is what this particular cilse calls for. DOROTHY DIX. I l I I I I Dear Miss Dlx-Jfbr the last month of my summer vacation I went rather regularly with a beautiful girl in my home town. She has the kindest, sweetest, most amiable disposition. She is everything a. man could pray for, and more, except that she virtually has no education, while I love the higher things ol life-good literature, drama, etc, and some day I expect to be a. lawyer. I feel that unless my wife can understand me to a reasonable extent we won't be happy, yet I am crazy about this girl. Do you think I would be happy if I married her? ALBERT. Ansxvi-r: _ Many intelligent men marry Dumb Doras and are apparently happy and contented with them. They are satisfied with a wife who is a good housekeeper, a good cook, amiable and easy to get along with. v Their idea of a wife is a convenience and not a. companion. All they ask is a wife who will make them comfortable and they get all of the outside mental stimulus they want abroad. You must know dozens of lueh households in which the husband calls his wife "mother," where he only listens with one lobe of the brain when she tells him about the baby‘s new tooth and that the neighbors have real lace curtains at the windows and that Johnny needs shoes and to which he merely grunts by way of answer from behind his newspaper of an evening and where the silence is so thick you can cut it with a knife. But. that kind of marriage is dull as dishwater. The ideal marriage is one in which the wife can feed her husband's soul as well as his body, the marriage in which she can enter into all of his interests and hopes and DlHllS; n wife with whom he can discuss a new play or a new book, sure of finding something stimulating in her point of view, a. wife who can keep him entertained and amused, a wife whom he can be proud and who will be a help to him in realizing his ambitions. An uneducated woman can never be a satisfactory wife to an cdu cated man, no matter how amiable and good looking she may be. He attraction for him is only physical and as soon as that wanes they navi nothing ln common. You will find that most of the unfaithful husband: are clever men who married dull women. They ure driven to seek abroa the companionship they did not find at home. DOROTHY DIX. ' I I I I 0 I Dear Miss Dix-—I am a young girl working in the Ei-and-IO-cent store and love pretty things. One of my many admirers wants to give me n fur coat. My mother's objects. My father thinks he should give me an Alaskan seal. We are not engaged. I want this coat very badly. Should I accept it? ' FRANZ, Answer: Certainly not. Girls should not take expensive gifts from men to whom they are not engaged. There are two reasons for this. One is that the man always expects to be paiclfor his gift and the second is that a poor girl who wears fur coats is always under suspicion. No One believes she got it honestly. The old melodrama used to say of the noble heroine, "Rags are royal ralment. when worn for virtue}; sake." And that atiu goes even in this hard-boiled age. DORUIHY DIX. THE gqnaittojiflfi“ GHQRDIAN ‘ l , .Womart’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:-.'Fash ‘riiiviw JELEO =.4 Mocleriz7lzriller 1 ions "-:-_ Li té'rd"fufe l JANUARY .19. 1933 I Y j. Canadian Co By Mari Moore. Specially con . Guardian Spnuge Cakes-Plain and Film)" But All of Them Delicious By Mary More By purblshing this Sllflnge Cake, article at this time oi‘ year when eggs are certainly not at their cheap- est, I am exposing myself to censure. But I have lrwo reasons for doing it, and two reasons are enough ex- cuse for doing anything (even mur- der, as the negro Jaappy sold as he shot the nurse when she announced _ "i/w nsl") i My reasons are: I promised these recipes in January; and since the farmers have had such a large share of bad luck, let. us at. least help their cause by buying new laid eggs while they are getting a reasonable price for them. This is another ex- ample of “It is an ill wind that blows nobody good.‘ Even if the present high cost of eggs (and I have seen them twice as high at this time of year) is hard on ou: Iiocket books, it at least helps l u farmer to buy seed and other- iuncliiinen- talc for next summer's crop. Many of us will make sponge cakes anyway because they are so} perfe:t to seiye at afternoon teas, and other social functions. Angel‘ food cake recipes and variations have not been included becmfsi- they were discussed in dctnl a few months tack. Genoral Rules For suz- nsfel Sponge Cakes The treatment oi’ eggs in making spoge cakes is of paramount import- anoe. As most of you know there is no ieavcnutg agent. in sponge cakes except eggs. Consequently they must be beaten separately because more air can be incorporated in the whit/cs alone than when they are in combination with the yolks. Egg yolks contain fat and consequently cannot be beaten as stiff as whites Eggs for sponge cakes are more sat- isfactory if they are three or four days old. When the terms thick and lemon- oolorvd are used to describe the condition of yolks’ when they are beaten, it means that enough air has ibeen whipped to ‘make the yolks pnlcr, and also to thicken them as they would be in making mayonnaise. 1f the yolks are not whipped enough they may cause the cake to be tough. The whites must not be over whipped, on the other hand. If they are beaten until "dry" the cake will be dxy. Only whip them until they are still’ enough to stand up in peaks. Fold the flour into the never the eggs into the flour. eggs- Genulne sponge Cake (Tender and Fluffy) One oup cake flour, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 cup sugar, 4 teaslmns lemon Juice, grated rind 1-2 lemon, 4 eggs. 51ft the flour before meas- PERIOD WEAKNESS London, Ont.-— ‘u "W F. e n developing . into womanhood I ' became in a terribly run-down condition, a lost weight and energy. suffered from periodical weakness and felt miserable all over," said Mrs. John Good: of 248 ' Oltaway Ave; “But after taking Dr. Picrcds Favorite Prescription a short time I was relieved of this misery. _ "A few months ago I had pains in the center of my back, I also had ncrv- ens ircadaches and poor appetite. look two bottles of 1hr 'l‘rcsi~.ripfi0n' and have had no trouble since." okery For Canadian Women tributed to The Guardian f0!‘ Readers. uring add the salt and sift again three times. Separate the whites and yolks of the eggs and behi- the yolks until they are thfk and iiemon-colorcd. Add the sugar crad- nnlly to them and beat again. Add the lemon Juice and rind and beat all thoroughly._sift 1n the flour and shit mixture alternately with the stilfiy beaten egg whites. It is o: the utmost importance that the cake is not beaten at this stase—use a folding motion only. Bake in tube pan or square tin a slow oven of 300 deg. Pahr. for from 40 to 60 minutes. Invert tin after baking and let cake drop out when it ‘cools. Lenora‘: Sponge 'Cake Syrup method) One cup sifted cake flour, 1-4 tea- spoon sait‘, 1-2 teaspoon cream tar- tar, 1 1-4 clips sited granulated sugar, 1-3 cup water, 5 98cc, 1 ten.- spoon lemon or almond or vanilla flavoring. Add salt and cream of tartar to sifted flour and sift all four times. Make syrup of sugar and water and boil until syrup will be form a soft ball iff oold water. Pour syrup in fine stream over stiffly beaten egg writes beating eon-. stantly. continue beating as mixture cools, then fold in 109M011 (‘ZS F995 and flavoring. 'I‘hcn sift in flour, a small amount at a time. Bake in un- grcased tube pan in slow Oven 0f 325 deg. Fahr. for about one hour- Invert pan one hour or until cold to remove cake. Choeolale Sponge Coke S‘): eggs, separated, 1 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon vinegar; 1-’! teaspoon any prferred flavoring, 1 cup pastry flour less one tablespoon, 2 Equal“ melted oooklnc chocolate. 1-4 W!" spoon salt. Beat yolks until thick and lcman colored: add sugar Brilli- ually while beating constantly. Add vinegar, melted chocolate and flav- oring. Sift flour once before meas- uring. then slit it three limes with the salt. Fold into egg and Bu!“ mixlure. Then fold in stiflly beaten egg whites and bake in increased tube pfm in slow oven as directed in recipes above. ‘Tlfs chocolate sponge cake is at its best when served with 15th‘ van- illa ice cream. Potato-Flour sponge‘ (Puke ‘This is not a true sponge rake is it contains baking powder, but the potato 11mp- gives it an individual flavor that makes it interesting. Yolk: 4 eggs, 3-4 cup M1811‘; whites 4 egfs; 1-2 cup sifted potato; flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder: 1-4 i/caopoon salt; 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Whip yolks 0f eggs Until “lick and lemon-rolored and s'ft in sugar gradually while beating constantly. then combine them with the stlflly beaten whitfis. Mix and sift dry in- gredients and fold into e888. Add lemon ju ce, and pour into ungreas- ed cake tin, and pour in slow oven as directed in recipes above. Ilot Wafer Sponge Cake Nor is this a genuine sponge cake but as 1t resembles it lo 610501!’ find requires fewer eggs, it will be eagerly lied by many. One cup flour, 1 1-2 teaspoons baking powder. 1-4 WMDOOH salt. 2 eggs 1 cup sugar; 6 i-lblf-‘Bimm 110i water: 1-2 tsblmpoon lemon Juice. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together three tiimfi. Beat Yvlks and whites separately. ‘ID the yolks add the sugar gradually, then the lemon Juice. Then fold in PM “my beat- en whites. Sift in" the flour mixture alternately with the not water, fold- Sold by druggisu everywhere. in; lightly until the mixture ll smooth. Pour into answer-sled tube pan and bake in slow oven. Lady Fingers These belong to the sponge cake‘ family and are such delicate little morsels, their formula should be familiar to every cook. Five tablespoons powdered sugar. 3 egg whites, 2 egg yolks, 1-2 tea- spoon vanilla 1-3 cup sifted flour, 1-4 teaspoon salt. Add the powdered sugar to the egg whites which have been stiffiy beaten. Add to these the two well beaten egg yolks and the flavoring. Fold in the sifted flour and salt. cover or line a ban with brown or plain white paper but do not grease it. Press the batter through a. pastry bag on to the pap- cr forming strips 4 inches long by 1 inch wide. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and bake in slow oven for 10 minutes. If you are not equipped with a pastry bag and tube, a ‘ormmiad one will serve Just as well: using stiff brown paper, r011 it, into the shape or a comuoopia, pin the loose edges together and clip off enough of the punt to let‘ the batter through in a one inch stream. Home Mada Jelly Roll Three quarters cup sifted cake flour, 8-4 teaspoon baking powder. 1-4 teaspoon salt, 4 eggs (not sop-- arated.) 3-4 cup sifted sugar, 1 tea- spoon vanilla, Jelly for filling. Sift flour before measuring. In a separate bowl put baking powder, salt and eggs and place bowl over smaller bowl of hot water and beat with rotary beater, add sugar gradually imtil mixture thickens and turns lights in color. Remove bowl from hct wafer. Sift flour into mixture and fold in; add vanilla. ‘him 1M0 sheet pan lined with greased paper \ wurrevrn ELSE YOU usro THIS l_'_5' A CHANGE- MOTH“: mgvgl-‘fig fggglglég TODAY,MRS.GRANT.ID_OWANT YOU Tue onzscnous SAY lag‘??? A YES EA Gm THAT TASYED so GOOD, T0 TRY THE NEWJELEQ use HOTmer BOILlNG) .0 RJTHOU . ' . WATEQ THAT WED HAVE T0 WAIT Foil , . °"-T"EYVE Pl" MUST Kggp TH; iHEJELL-Q aur nus YES, ISN'T THE FLAVOUR ‘T l" A “Ew GE" VOUR won NFWJEU-‘il Vi“ 6° W0 THE sense THAN even? IT'S PACKAGE- IT'S 1 ~ F“ REFRlGERATOR on ACOOL PLACE AS m; N” JELkO - $TEAMW° AWAY- soon ASMADE mo muss ONLYA AND ,7 w, BE ~ s um: MORE THAN‘ " ' MADE so QUICKLY fiMorningSmile i 5 mini/fer affirmak/m A BiG iMDROVEMENT o/d-Ilas/rioned jP/ll/ powder ~ pen aldJflkdqoodas/twox/ i i i Still steam/VIM Flavour escapirt]! Settinq de/al/ed/ '5 second" ofiamak/hq NEW ELUQ Into t/ze refi/qemfa/ J-ll")! 4'~ or The Cook ._> 0N THE JOB One night a man in a car was run down at, the level crossing. Consequently the old signalman in charge had to appear in court. After a gruelling cross-examination he was still unshaken. He said he waved ‘his lantern frantically, but all to no avaiL The following day the Superin- tendent of the line called him to his office. "You did wonderfully well yes- terday, Tom," he said. “I was afraid at first that you might waver." l "No, sir," replied Tom, "not as long as that lawyer didn't ask me whether my lantern won-lit." TEflOliEl'—“HO\V many bones have you in your l y.‘ Willie-“Nine hundred." '.l‘eacher—"'i‘hat's a good many more than ‘I have." dines for lunch!“ a moderate oven. . Orange Daintieu Using genuine sponge cake mix- ture bake it in paper eases which may be purchased at the Five and ‘Pen Cent store by the dozen or 1 sharp knife cut a small portion from the top of each cake and fill the depression with Orange Filling (see below.) Replace top before serv- ing. Sprinkle all with mwdered sugar. Orange Filling Five tablespoons-flour, 1 cup n18- ar, grated rind 1 orange, 1-2 cup and bake in oven of 400 fled F1111‘- rm- about, 13 mnutes. Turn from pan at. once onto cloth sprinkled with eon-Iectioners’ sugar. Remove paper. Immediately out of! crisp edges of cake. spread with Jelly. and roll. Wrap in cloth and cool on cake rack. Sponge Drops Drop Lady Finger mixture (see above) from i/p of‘ spoon on unbut- tered paper. Sprinkle iwith powder- orange juice; atablespoons lemon Juice; ldaipwaferlieggnricgg yolks slightly beaten, 2 teaspoon butter. Combine ingredients in order given, stirring well. Cook over double boiler for about ten minutes ‘after it thckena. Stir constantly. cool before filling sponge cakes. If any of our readers desire more information regarding gponge cakes or making of any kinds of rakes Mrs. ivlbore will be glad to hear from ed sugar and bake eight minutes in them. By Annabelle It is carried out in black and white crinkly crepe silk. The high neckline that ties at the buck is one of the newest ideas which have "caught on" in Paris. It can be murle with long or with short sleeves. It is quite suitable for the woman of average build u well u for youth. It's easily made. And it will cost you a very small sum, you'll be surprised. ‘rho two surfaces of crlnkly crepe satin can be worked out marvel- ously in this model. You canmlso combine a light- weight woolen with crepe silk. Combining two colours in crepe silk a: brown and grey, is still on- othur scheme. Btylo No. 34B is designed for sizes 14, 18, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. ‘ Size i6 requires 2'56 yards 39-inch with 2% yards 39-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern 1b cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. --_'._-__n._.__.__..__-_ No. 348. Size ....._.....n...us.li / n~s-.-i.---.....-.... . . . . . Hi...“- Name nun-sun“..--4..-.¢-.'.-u-... 0 Street Address What the Fashioriables are Wearing Worthington / 348 nu-H.l--¢.--..¢.-.-.-~<n---...-- sity atm _ __. ... wlllltk-“YEB-h, but ' I had oar- _ hrndred. When they are baked. with i. MYSTEBIES 01-‘ BISCUITS To make n good biscuit founda- tion, use two cups cake flour, four level teaspoons baking powder, a teaspoon salt and four level table- spoons of butter or other shorten- ing. Mix and sift ._dry ingredients; cut shortening in with knife; add milk and mix to a soft, fluffy dough. Roll gently on a floured board to half-inch thickness. Out with small biscuit cutter and bake in quick oven (450 deg.) F.) ten to fifteen inutes. Orange Turnovers Roll biscuit dough to one-fourth lueh _ti"iicknesa. out and fold like a Parker-house roll. Dip quickly in melted butter, drain and nut in vacuum bottle of piping hot because it is a containing change in taste when kcp cocoa has y milk and into a smooth puts. fatal... poem ' wlull - . Odin FRY l‘ gradually two-thirds cup of ice-cold ' Healthy ‘and Happy with i FRYS Cocoa Give your breadwinner a. lunch kit treat tomorrow—-l lunch because of its pleasingfi chocolaty flavour, ' ' food. p9,“, Mix gugat and grated orangt peel in equal proportions, sprinkle over top of biscuits and force a lit- tle beneath folded edge. Bake un- til browned and serve at once. Cheese Biscuits , To the foundation recipe, Idi one-half cup grated cheese befon adding the milk. Roll to half incl thickness, cut in small rounds, ploc‘ a preserved strawberry centre o each biscuit and bake. rve hot. Nut Biscuit ‘Add a. half cup finely ground Dee ans to foundation recipe for biacui dough at the time the butter i: cw my; the dry ingredients. Roll to one-fourth inch thickness, out ii small rounds or crescent chapel. brush tops with butter and plm one on top of another. Bake doubler servo hot with stewed, canned. 0i ‘sliced fresh fruit. uses for, FRY O Hot Cocoa Drink _ 0 Children's Drinlfi o Cakes and Puddings O Cake Icing l O Chocolate Fudge Ilccd Cocoa Drinl: 0 Chocolate Sauce Men like Fry's f"? and a_l$0 nlike some other drinks which Fry's Cocoa. t in lrbotfle even for} short Wlillfi the some enticing fliuvour when he drinks it at new u when you made it in your kitchen. . _ _ k The nourishing food value of Fry's Cocoa provides quic warmth and ltrength in wintertime. 1'0 Mela Ono Cup of (one To Mala ‘filo! Clmoloh" with In’: . with m‘! _ . Mi: one lulfb l l of Take one heaped (“spoonful 1"‘ F’! ' f in“... “l” '" strut. .. ...r"'..,:".:l:'.‘.a."-.":::i:§il l I f f 'llt. Pour on hot milk ti; tlinixlaa. Put mixture ti“! obtained into a pan and briu| to boiling pain - ' ' 5g a cocoA hula a Iohfrlimviw“? uuemuaunaaasmltnflaulyruuumwifl-mi, m, _ >_. =1 '\.