.- " t’ <2 “l PAGE TWO . i Woman ’s R Why Magic Baking Powder is used exclusively at this Montreal School of Domestic W- Science “We teach pur students only the rurm methods," says Madame R. Lacroix, Assist- ant Director of the Provincial School of Do- mestic Science, Montreal. “That’s why I always use and recommend Magic Baking Powder. its high leavening quality is always uniform. You get the same satisfactory re- sults every time you use it." And Magic Baking Powder is the unquestioned choice in the major- ity of cooking schools throughout tile Dominion. Cookery teachers- and housewives, too-prefer Magic because of its consistently better result (‘Pr-xx Madame Laerolx’: dolloloui cuoeoi-Afi LAYER GAKI l! cup butter 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 cup milk I 2.‘; cups pastry flour (or2 cups and 3 tablespoons of bread flour) 3 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder ll teaspoon salt Cream butter; add sugar, a little at a time, beating until light; add beaten yolks and flavoring; add flour, sifted with salt and baking powder, alternately with milk. Fold in stiilly beaten egg whites. Bake ln 3 greased layer cake pans in moderate oven at 375° F. about 20 minutes. Recipe for Chocolate Icing and Filling is in the Magic Cook Book. Free Cock Boak-Villlen you bake at home, the new Magic Cook Book will give you dozens of recipes for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd., Fraser Ave. 81 Liberty Se, Toronto, Ont. and then cook over hot water for i i l For 771a Cook fifteen minutes. In the meantime, lmelt. two tablespoons butter In a h pan, add one cup brown sugar, and stir until it melts, and is very slightly browned. Stir this into. the ‘JCONTAINS N0 ALUMflThlsststo- ment on every tin Is our flunrnntus that Magic Bolling Powder l! "M! from nlumor any harm. ful lnlrodfent. Ned: in Canada BIJTTEIISCOTCH BLANC MANGE ealm -:- Social m.4#¢entt@lSQ5T:§:-°<a Alfalfa o. blnnc mange from LWO cups scolded milk, speck salt, foul‘ level tablespoons cornstarch und vanilla. Mix together the cornstarch and salt, mix with a little cold milk, and then add a little hot milk. Add this to the hot milk, cook over a low heat. until it begins to thicken, .. , SIMPLY Wllllll MIT?! Take Lydia E. Pinlrhnm’! Vegetable Compound ‘ ' b. mm snoring for figs-on ‘illlnfldlmthe exclude round d honeebnltLdutlen? You have no time w bl elick...you Ire tIred...nI|.in¢ . . . yet cannot stop. There coins n time when something snaps and you lad yourself simply worn out. ** Lydia B. Plnkhnrrfl Vegotnble Corn- will give you renewed otr you’ inch noun enlist 807ml- 9! out of every I00 women who tn in nay that they are (1.! httlfmynurdrm- i“i.i‘“...3§, . ‘i’. 1...? “Selim. rennin. help you. Ito tonic nctfon will ' ‘bfanc mango and, If desired, the yolks of two eggs may be added. Cook p. few minutes longer, add vanilla, and. pour into wet, indivi- dual moulds. When cold and set, un- mould and serve with whipped cream, topped with red current jelly, LEMON PIE FILLING I cup sugar. 5 tablespoons flour. 1-3 cup lemon juice. 1-3 cup water. 3 egg yolks. 3 egg whites, beaten. ‘.6 teaspoon salt. Blend sugar and flour. Add fruit juices and water. Mix well. Add in moderate oven. Cool and serve. yolks. Cook In double boiler until math. nnowlumnko,thiek and creamy. Stir frequently. Fold in whites and salt. Pour Into her-elm! l1! fllll baked pie shell. Bnlte ten minutes Dorgflly Dix Letter iiBiox The Girl Who Wants to Hold Her Husband Must Keep Up With Him Mentally - Sad Result of too Early Marriage — Are All Men Faithless? Dear Miss Dlx-Any worth-while mun has ambitions town-d which he Is constantly working. As success and advancement come his wife must keep step with his progress unless she In o. handicap to him. A v wife who simply‘: o. housekeep" Wm} 1191' mind entirely filled with family and household matters cannot have any share in her husband's mental life if he has gone on broadening his In- terests and improving himself. Bhs Is more or less In the position of a servant, through her In- ability to longer be s. companion to her husband. This is at the bottom of much of the domestic unhappiness we see about us and explains, if It does not Justify, much of the phllunderlng of hus- bands who seek abroad from other women the understanding their wives cannot give them. I wish you would impress on girls the necessiiyof A MAN. trying to keep up with their husbands intellectually. Arlswer: There is food for thought roi- all youns wives 1n this man's letter. for it is only too true that the reason that many wives lose their husbands is because they did not keep up with the procession and the men marcbfd on and left them behind. A great many women feel that. marriage gives them the privilege of slumping intellectually as well as physically. and eswclsfly that they have a right to do so after the children come. Before marriage they read the new books and the papers and magazines and kept up with what the world was doing and were interesting companions. After Junior is born they never read anything but the baby book and their conversation from then on the balance of their lives Is confined to feeding formulas and the cute thing Janey said and what Mary and Bally and Tom end Bob are doing. Many women also regard marriage as a reason for burying their talents in a. napkin. They may have a pretty gift for music or ari. and have spent years of time and thousands of dollars developing it, but as soon as they get married they put away their oosels and clamp the lid idown on their pianos and tell you with an sir of self-righteousness that ‘they never paint or practice now. Many other women think that their whole duty as wives consists In being model housewives and feeding their husbands. There is never a. speck of dust on their floors. Their dinners are cooked to perfection. Their husbands’ socks always darned and their buttons on, and they feel that having mode a man comfortable he has no right to expect. anything else of them. Still other women think that because their husbands found them pretty and attractive and companlonable at 20 they will still find them that way at 40, even If they have not added another Idea to their reper- wuo in ‘s11 that time. ' I All of which is a. grievous mistake. Perhaps in the old days when women had few opportunities of education and were kept more or less in the background, anyhow, men did not expect much of their wives except to be good cooks and rearers of children. Perhaps then It didn't matter so much whether n man's wife was dull or brilliant provincial or up to the minute, whether she was diplomatic or brusque. But it does now. A man's wife is an active factor In his success or failure. Many a. clever woman who knows how to make friends for her husband and who is popular herself is his biggest asset. And many a ' man of talent and ability never gets anywhere because he is pulled down by a boresome frumpy wife who is tedious and tiresome to talk to and whom other women will not. have at any price. There are no sadder tragedies than those In which the husband out- grows his wife and foolish is the woman who lets this happen. Every wife who Is married to an intelligent, ambitious man should realize that this danger threatens her and she should bend every energy and eflort to warding It off by taking time to read and study even If she has to put less hand-work cu the baby's clothes and cut out u little bridge. ' DOROTHY DIX. O Dear Dcrotily Dix-At 1'1 I married a man ten years older than my- self. He is a good man and treats ms kindly, but I have come to loathe him. His very touch makes me shiver. We haven't. an ides or thought In common. We quarrel constantly. I have one child. Must I go on What the Fashion: Bu Annabella i Illustrated Dressmalrlng Every Pattern l suitable for this youthful model. THE CHARLOTFETOWN___Q_III_\II_QIQI§_ anal Personal -:- Fashions-y:- hles are filming. i Lesson Furnished Willi Worthington The light. bodice gives a trimly broad-shouldered effect. without. ‘being top-heavy In this youthful model. Its simplicity makes It n flvour- its for general daytime oecasfonm. The original combined strew- berry-red with black rough crepe silk. . It will also make up attractively In the two surfaces of crepe satin. Rhum- brown or wine-red is an ex- cellent choice. Wool crepe and novelty wool and silk crepe mixtures are smartly Style No. 912 is designed for lines 14, I6, 18, 20 years, 36, 88 and 40 Inches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards 39-inch wiih 1% yards 39-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern If cents In lstamps or coin (coin preferred.) l Wrap coin carefully. No. 912. Size .... .....-.~... Name 4 Street Address .--....n....--.-.-so.~..~n...... Olty State The vacuum tube used in a new Instrument to measure non-t sc- tfon is sensitive enough to detnet one millionth of n. volt of elec- trlcity. this way to the end of my life? away and make a. new beginning? time be better than this fighting for childhood In such a home? the child. It is such a mess. Answer: It generally does end in o. mess 1 guppose you will say stay for the sake of Why can't. I take my child end go Would not having my boy half the him? What of his “‘ of hi: C. when l. girl of 17 get married, be- _..- IMVEMBER 1,_ 1332" Literature FOR“ENERGY-¢- N B YEAST FLAKBS creates n feeling of buoyancy end energy, because it keeps the system healthy. It supplies the body with vitamins necessary to perfect heslth, end it promotes the natural activity of the intestines, so that there is no slug. gishness in ridding the system of pqi. oonoul wastes: NB YEAST FLAKES is best for you, _ beceuse it is pure, brewers’ yeast-the . richest of all yeasts in the famous yeast vitamins. Keeps indefinitely. At BREWERS _ grocers’ and druggists’: YEASTN FBLAKES SIICLAI. runs outrun, (Saecharomyeos eonvlaloi) couemrnnno IIIWIIS’ THE NATIONAL BRRWBRIBS ILIMITBD, MONTREAL Bnlel AgenIIrIIAIIOLD 1:‘. IIITCIIIE a UUIIIPANY, LIMITED, Tnrontq YIAII‘ for the children to have one parent or no parent at. all than two who fight like cots and dogs. Better for the children to have no home than one that. is n. place of strife. Psychologists tell u.s that. the children who are brought up In homer where the parents squabble all the time carry the ill effects of their en- vironment through life. They are mentally and spiritually warped and are for more subject to nervous breakdowns than are the children who have fathers end mothers who live amfabl and peacefully together and who are brought up In e h... onlous home. It seemsfo see that any woman who loves her children should be willing to forcgo making snappy comebacks at her husband for the nlre of their whole future welfare. DOROTHY DIX. o Deu- Misn Dix-J em 28 yuan old and my husband is 27. We were ",, married In I‘ ‘ I have learned that he Is r _ around with women of bad character. Ho justifies himself In this by saying that ft Is his right. I have been raised In n Puritan home with very rigid Ideal about nun-Iago and divorce and find it difficult to believe that all men are untrue w their wives, as my husband says they are. I om thInk- fnl of gottln‘ e divorce, u there Is no home or children for us to break l cause at that age she doesn't know what she wants In n husbend nor what sort of woman she is going to be when she grows up and she hasn't the strength and courage and self-control to meet the Inevitable trials of matrimony. Nearly every girl who marries at 17 has lost her taste for her huabnnd by the time she Is 25 and resents being tied down by husband and homo and children and having missed all the fun of girlhood. But there is no real remedy for such a mistake. So far as leaving your husband is concerned, that is a step that nine women out. of ten regret after they have mode It. Generally It Is Jllmliin! 011i; 01 U18 1W- ing pan Into the fire, for they find themselves confronted with nffficulties that. are worse than an unoongonlal husband. You have never tried making your living. You are trained to n trade or profession and If you take your child and go away from yoi husband and home you will half starve, for you could not. get any bi the most menial job, and what little you could earn would not go It. toward supporting the two of you. Food and clothes and shelter ma; not. seem much to you now when you are letting your mind dwell upon , your sentimental grievances, but when you had no roof to cover you and were hungry you would wonder why you ever bothered about such a little thing as whether your husband understood you or not. No one now advocates n quarreling wife ’and husband staying to- gether for the sake of the children. Unless they are willing to sink their differences and control their tongues and tempers and make n peaceful and quiet home for their children, it 1s for better for them to part. Better APACHh DANCE 0N SKATES The Follies Bergere, in Paris, is featuring an Apache dance on skates. The manner In which the TENDERS Sealed fenders will bereceived by the undersigned up unfll noon, Nov. 3rd, 1932, for the restaurant Ind eheckingconeessinn, 1932 and French brigand hurls his vlctiml. across the Imitation Ics makes the audience gasp, and the dimes is praised by critics as a full-blooded healthy exhibition of strength and skill. IN THE MATTER. OF THE VOLUNTARY “IINDING UP ACT l5 George V., Cap. 9. NOTICE OF SPECIAL GENERAL MEETING ll “As near as I can tell you it wn" about three-thirty, but It mlgl have been Inter." l ' “And Miss Gaynor came down t. see you yesterday afternoon," pur- sued Blaync. "She ha; been a fre- quent visitor of late?" "Phat in l0," he owned. “Yester- day she came to wom me that the ZORA 71.. Invisible B! . I. B. WILMOT [knew that he must think the prob- lem out carefully. He realised the noiieiims At bqdum. m], m. man,“ eriousnue of his position-that he °h""h°'°\18l1l7\'l!h— virtually held n. man's life in the ‘ J-loliow of his hand. It was no wond- er that. he felt that such a matter l a could not be decided during u. cl!- ‘ual walk through the city streets. Ion o. Monhnn rlllrosd differ as to . oslim Dwyer sat clutching-Ere I933 hockey and skating season. Highest or any fender not neces- sarily accepted. For further- par- of R. J. MMNEILL BLACK AND SILVER FOX COMPANY, LTD. “If you've come to rne about Sonia,‘ he said. ‘I can bell you that I've had no occasion to change my mind. When Sonia marries she will d0 better for herself than e city clerk.’ That got me on the raw, sir, and perhaps I forgot myself and police had been down to see her, arms o; his chm. as Blame. m and that she had an idea that they wk“), calculating tones’ strung w_ “m” “me "l" me» -gei;hel‘ the damning evidence-evid- '5° Ml” awn" h" "l i593 m" l ence that was in Itself, apart from I-Ie decided, too, that If. would be unwse of hIm b0 go down in Scotland Yard and eommuneete the result of his morning's conversation to Inspector Webster. No, he must up. I em making my own living. Please advise me. ' DISAPPOINTED. Answer: It is not true that all men am unfaithful to their wives. There are plenty of hulbmds who are Just u true to their wives as their wfvesors to them. Porblps every man who really loves his wife Is loyal to her. Certainly n husband of a few months’ standing cares very little for his wife If he hos already begun to ronm. You have little chance of happiness married to such a man. iMnrvtingSmilc I The conductor 1nd a brnlreman the proper "prdnuneintion of the name "Mullen-Passengers are often a startled upon arrival at urn station l to hour the conductor yoll, "You're n liar! You're b liar!" Then from the brakeman" at the other endi comes the cry, “You really arel You really us!" ‘Feeling Terrible” mo. McKenzie c‘ __' locum-i mflldl‘ Dr. Wlllllml’ Pink Pllll for Worn-out Women @lirilleJ! . . How you thrilled in the i certainty oi your lsstin night and day," writes Mrs. James McKenzie, Glenboro, Man. “I be- a ,~ . "if" °°m' loveliness-heighten: “nun”, gut “You, 32f: by the clinging, velvet- - Sfinn.“ in; an" a. texturzolPompeion -- Very "088 bib! Beauty Powder. As his eyes caressed ered her father?" "Good God, sir, not that! Surely you m'ght conceivably have murd- m ch-cumstantla] nature. sumcleml take the risk of Webster beInB Mill‘; ' ed over the coals by his superiors lo form a ve lea a d co i ry c r n mp“ rather than commit himself with- jaflSro-i; 21-f- novn l .. liculars apply to W. (i. GILLESPIE, Mgr. Charlottetown Forum Ltd. 5778-10-31-31 Spinrihig and Weaving Send me your wool lo be spun Inf-o yarn and wove Into Blankets. The charges are: Single yarn 23 cents, doubled 26 cents per pound, Blankets $2.00 and if unlaundered 51.85. If hires flve lbs. of wool per Blanket. Wool must be well wash- td Mid Ill dlrl and burrs plclrgd out. The size of single yarn is med. him and doubled yarn fine, medium NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN l that a Special General Meeting of the shareholders of the B. J. lunc- Neill Black and Silver Fox Company Limited will be held in the oliice oi Ellis Stewart at Nortnam in Prince County in Prince Edward Island on , Thursday the twenty-fourth day of ; November A. D., I932, at the hour‘ of two o'clock P. M. for the purpose of passing 5 r ' ' requiring the said Company to be wound up under the provisions of "The Vol- untary Winding up Act, "and for the purpose of appointing a liqui- dntor or liquidators for the said winding up, and for the giving of consequential. directions. nnd. for the transaction of such other busi- ness, as may be Incidental thereto. said things I shouldn't have said. care for Scotland Yard to lay be- out serious thought and consider‘ you, how thrilling to l<now that s touch oi Pom- peisn Rouge had kept lor you the girlish flush he lenme very thinsnd had several bad ‘ mpells nf ‘dizziness. My legs and back sched, and I was feeling just . terrible when I started taking Dr.i Williams‘ Pink PIDs. I soon reclined . r , i she City of Charlottetown any uncured meal»: or fresh fish or pouLIry, i, pxcept in the public portion of the Market. Building and Square, and - ' i lhcrcin on market days only (which exception shell In the ease of meat l I nnd coarse. Put lhlpperg name on new“! and when name. ad- of October, A. 1)., 1932. s and lnllrncllons inside. Send BY ORDER 0F THE DIRECT- by mnII or freight. Freight will be 03s, pnld on 100 lb. lots. . Dated this twenty-seventh day WILLIAM H. ELLIS, I fold him of my promotion and what salary I was getiisli. but he only laughed and fold me to clear out. ‘If Sonia will marry me she will,’ I flung at him, ‘whether you give your consent or not.’ With that, and feeling pretty 5019 about the whole thing. I siomled out of the office. ‘ "when I heard that he was deed and that. there nus Qrmefhlng mysterious about It, I didn't. know what to think. I thousht that Der- haps my exciting him held affected h's heart, and that I might be held’ morally responsible. Bo I sent word down to the office th¢ next 11101111118 that I was laid up with o. bad cold, and I haven't been out- side the door since. That's the President. Wm. LANDRIGAN. J. ELLIS STEWART, 65 Queen Street. Secretory. Chlrlolletown. 5760-10-3l-l2i. llptice re Meat, Fish and Food Products fer at retail in No person shall sell or keep or offer for sale or h Glyhor In his office?" asked Blsyne. truth sir." "What time was it when you left Shq couldn't believe that?" he cried emotionally. "You had n Perfectly good motive" went on Bloyne, i-elenbiosszy, "Mont- Bomery Gaynor stood between you and the gratification of your de- sire. You must admit that things might be mode to look very black lgafnst you. So far as we know you were the last person to see him before In, died. 'I'hnt. you had harsh words with him u borne out by the ‘testimony of the clerks in the outer ‘office. That you 61's supper. to i ‘high temper I have myself recently observed. What could be more nat- ural f-hm that, finding yourself thwarted by him. yvll oeluelly killed him on a sudden Impulse. How you klled him Is quite another mutter. Prom the police point of view you had sufficient reason for wishing him deed, more reason Apparently ihln myone all. 1n uio vol-lo." or poultry extend only to that. upon which market foil shall be paid] l|ni:.".s he shall have n license so to do, which shall be issued by the Olly , Clerk on application of the licensee and certificate of the Food Inspectir ‘ ‘l ‘for said City that he hus examined the premises and equipment intended A‘ f - fa be used by the applicant therefore, Ind npproves thereoLSuch llrenzo '. nhnll expire on the 31st day of December following the date of Issue or " ‘ lest renewal and shall be renewable unless objected in by the Food In- aspector within Thirty days thereafter. on. r. l. CIOKEN, Arm Inspector. ' 5785-11 l n-tts-Si. From childhood the , J skin bu been thoroughly and regular- ly cleansed byspnre lolpurld one that contains medicinal proper- ties which soothe, heel nnd pro- feet lglinlt slrln troubles. More than ihreegeuerutlons luvs lnnp meotsjtuttlleeeroqnircmenucnd luvo been using it to keep the skin in healthy condition. Pelee 35¢. ClnlrfianDlmt I. - ynlu Apache. Hamil. 296 8t. Paul llontrcll. If». W~ fore the Public Prosecutor. He felt] “on that. m selling the mo. he new“ - committed himself to the scaffoldl 5° Bu?“ decided l” 1mm ‘l’ But whe h 5 ke th i“Tile Clplbl" on 11.5 Wly and lrlltfl n e p0 e Wunglnfln go around and fake out his car. It It l . will; lingual. wll want. to arreatiwfls an ideal day for a brisk run mo’ docwn" -far away from the petrol-flung no». of Inndon. non: London Bridge he mode his way to Milford and thence n10!!! the main road b0 Hind Heed Hill land Llpbrook. Here he turned of! ‘ to the left. towards Hollycombe, and ran the car Into a sequestered glide at the side of the road. Where It y to the wooded Blnvno smiled it whet might, by some, have been considered o corn- plment. ‘The law has not yet invested me Wm! Powers of arrest." he admitted. "But there is one thing I am going lo do before I go, and that is leave you a prescription for a. particularly. good tunic. I have an Idea that youl dlwgd dwm 39ml 1n eed at bf ‘Md- w n e ore many more days The birds were “M,” lusvlrm“ have passed." thrush, the meadow werblor and CRANE-n xv, occasionally the block-bird's shrill notes came floating up from the TEMPTATION hm“- Blsyne left Mr. Osbert Dwyer gaz- Ing into the glowing filaments of the electric fire with eyes that scarcely seemed to be conscious of outward things: v He swung along Gloster Road as ff u great load had been suddenly token from his mind. He felt that of. last. he had achieved something in this strange case. He had got the truth-or If. may be the u? truth, he had yet. to deride-Git ‘he, Mum of {he one man who, in Bloynfl Deter! ‘wenly-flffh Oofobt, 1N8. mud, nt that moment, really mst- l|~ lull?» feted 5 (To Be Continued) osxscurons none: ._._.___. I have placer! the books end eo- oounil of the Iota I. Bnnwiok Matheaon, M. D., In the hands of Miss Lillian Matheeon, Springfield for collection. Immedfeto peylnenf h required to be mule to her n! . “In % fill other P652!‘ Bieyne 5Q94_10_37_tc_“_4|_ {I was getting much stronger. I igefned In weight, and felt. like u‘ new person. I strongly recommend 1m. Willfems‘ Pink Pills." ' Mrs. McKenzie is but one of thou- sands of women who have been wonderfully helped by Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills and who have written In to tell how the rich new blood created by these Pills rebuilt ox- Iiluseed nervous systems and re- ‘stored these sufferers to vigorous iheelth. Give Dr. Williams’ Pink éPIIIs o feir trial for run-down or nervous conditions. 50c o. package of your dfllllilfls. A rock containing twenty-seven foot of elothesllno has been in- loved. Be sure olwsysl , Use Pompelsn. You may psy more for beauty pre- parations but you cannot buy better than . . ; The NEW V ' I B LOOM POWDER CREAMS Ll PSTICK Lonoovi runs new YORK T°R°W° Sela elm: l Harold F. Rlnhls A Co. LN!- 1o.1s MtCcui so. Tomi» 1"‘ TENDERS FDR FIRE IIUSE -o-.—. , - . , Tenders will be received at the office 0f the undersigned up to noon on Wednesday. November 9th, for supplying the City W!“ 1,000 feet of 2% inch regulation fire hose with couplings attached. Samples to accompany tender. _ ,1 ' Thelowest or any tender not neeessarl I’ ‘wilted’ o. P. NICHOLSON. .. City Clerk- vented tint can be fitted over the bop of e both tub for drying cloth- . m‘. lllrlO-Il-fl-ll. "will ‘ I *1