A ‘no-r and scor lzus a s \vr - 1 l'.'ll v two tlrur tievcr out and txvo asylum, t BUODS th reudczvoi tcleurhpll Li you‘ Ian. like uf a hi! .‘§\l]’7l"l‘('lli\l iijtulittg l. Railvi business lifanchesi hoallh r1’ (he Loud elm areas frnins. , Befwccr 13 expres- PAGE EIGHT Woman ’s {n} In these trying times every worker, every house- wife, and every child should take SCOTTS EMULSION regularly." The strength- maker that maintains vital- ity, ensures health and saves costly illness. When economy is essential it is better to buy one bottle of SCOTT’S EMULSION of known quality and proved worth than two of some cheaper imitation which cannot possibly have the same strengthening, nour- ishing, protective value as the genuine EMULSION of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil "' Ricb in Vitamin: A and D | arold P. Ritchie Co. Ltd, I! Tnwnu .- .- l. min Arno.- AMomingSmilojli For The Cook 1 Apple Uingcrcttes Angler husband: ‘What do you think of these beauties?" Anglers wife (laughing): “You needn't try to deceive me, hfrs. Sznith saw you at the fish dealers.‘ Angler luzcbalid: "I know she did. 1 t-aegalt so many I simply had to sell some. We couldrrt possibly ‘have vised them all." wmiivua AT EASE -ELEPHANT 1s DEAD Select six snial! apples, pare, core and cut in quarters. Make a. syrup of four cups 0i sugar, 1 cup water, 1 teaspoon ground ginger, cooking the mixture until it hairs. Place apaes in mixture und cook until transparent. . Retrieve care- fully from syrup and place in sew. lng dish. Boll syrup until quite thlck and pour it over the apples. Five servings. s - Stullcd Apples BRIDGEWATER, N. S., Oct. 3.- Alonzo is dead. A telegram convey- ing that news lifted a big weight ofl’ the mind of David McKean, who had been advised by a Toronto firm that his good salesmanship had won him the baby elephant. McKean had been worried. The elephant was to have been shipped ,to him without delay. He didn't know anything about elephants- cxcept that. they were big animals with big appcmles and requiring big quarters. Frantic telegrams to circus men all over the continent had failed to bring response, So he had resigned himself to his fate and selected a ,l0 by 12 foot garage as a tentative. place of keeping. The elephant had been seized by g m" appmg the firm to satisfy an arwvv" "Th Mix and 5m the dry jngredjents_ a circus that went broke in Toron- ‘Add graduzrly the milk dilutgd with 9°. $0 MCKPHH bvllevfid 1t “'11s c-m- water, then egg. Pare and cut the U"; all Ilgllt- apples in small bits, stir into the Today he was relieved when ‘a batter. Drop by spoonfuls into deep telegram lnforntcd him the animal fat and fry to a delicate brown. had been sold to rmoiher circus. Drain, sprinkle with powdered sugar Tluvllll‘! But "t and some tnuucdlaxly with the stated the sale had been cancelled. AOlXIUn sauce. Shuci-zs i Still RIiOlllEI lL.L,’5f6ill--~ Alnnm was dead. Well, well! Incidentally, the firm had assured McKrnn {hat he will receive anoth- er prizc, ulihotlgit not quite so big. tum nil Cll\l'._‘,‘ \\li.]| a olkuule 0i; CQUHJ q.;.u.~;...cs seeded ruusuls and cnoppcu nuts. Place in sauce pan l with enough wllicl" to preterit burn- ing, add sugar m proportion of 1 cup for ii apples, and a few whole ,olives and a stick or cumamon. Let simmer slowly 2o nunutes or untiit apples are tender and serve with or i wLhout whipped cream and chop- ped nuts. Apple Iii-liters 1 1-3 cups flour. l‘... teaspoons baking powder. ‘u teaspoon salt. 1-8 cup evaporated milk. 1-3 cup water. l egg, well beaten. :\v".~i~.:--- w" Apple Pudding Six medium sized appes cut in clghths and cooked whole. Drain juice from ihr-m, place in granite baklng dish and sweeten with sugar. F ’ m Strald two cups of milk in the double boiler. Mix ta cup granu- istnrclt, 2 tablespoons cocoa, and a "ER little satlt and butter. Mix smooth .wttn a llt.le cold muk and add to c365 yolks slightly beaten. Let cook thoroughly. Remove from fire and add 1 teaspoon vanilla. Pour over l ‘of eggs and pile lightly on top. Brown in oven. Serve Wli-ll cream. Apple Float 2 cups thick apple sauce. 4 egg whites. whlfc hot. add u little salt, and set away to cool. Beat the egg whites very stiff, and fold the cold apple or 3 teaspoons of lemon Juice, or sprinkle a little nutmeg or mm“. mon on top, or add a spoonful of lftted sugar, 2 tablespoons corn- T D H E R ‘ the hot milk. Cook thick. Add two ' l apples in baking dish. Beat white sweeten the apple sauce to taste sauce into them. If desired, add 2 whipped cream to each serving. _ EVER Y month it was the same story. Headaches and backaches. jumpy nerves. Always tired out by mid-day. She hated to talk about her trouble. She tried to hide it. Bu: you can't hide things like that from a mother. So her mother told her-what every mother should tell her daughter. Lydia B. Plnkham‘: Vegetable Com- pound was made for iusr such trying timer. Taken regularly it ends fatigue and irritability. Maker life worth liv- ing . . . every week . . . every month. Wodtyougive ire chance to help you? {(4%}. m2 Apple Tapioca 1.5 cup quick-cooking tapioca. 2 cups boiling water. ‘A cup sugar. l‘: teaspoon cinnamon. ‘.5 teaspoon salt. Juice of 1 lemon. 3 pints sliced tart lpplel. Add the boiling water to the tapioca and cook in n double boiler for 15 minutes, or until the tapioca is clear. Add the sugar, cinnamon. salt and lemon Juice. Arrange the By Annabelle It has the faaluonable deep round yoked shoulder. The pattern also provides for the mugly fitted bonnet. style No. 702 is designed for sizes 2, 4 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 2 yards of 89-inch material with 1% yard: of. 39-inch lining. For the two year old, e pale pink or blue lightweight woolen ls ador- able. For the bonnet, make the tle- strlngs of matching crepe de chine. The buttons may be self-covered or i of novelty bone type. For the f or 6 year old, French , blue, beige-tan, resedu green .or golden brown woolen is smart. ' Price of Pattern I5 cent! in stamps or coin (com preferred.) wrap coin carefully. ____-_._.____._._-__. No. 702. Size n“... ..-- - Name Street ‘Address dune-uneven... City State i ‘What the Fashionable: are Wearing Worthington Illustrator! Dresemaking Lesson Furnished vvllii Every Pattern .._1.__. .-»~~~~—<—— Personal _-:- Fashions i Dorothy Letter Box Is Working Wife Wnose husband Pays‘ Household Expenses Entitled to Ailow- I ance Besides? -- Man Who Has Seen Many Girls Best Qualified to Tell a Good One Dear lvfiss Dix-Here is n. problem which my wife and I have agreed to let you settle for us. We both teach and I think that we should ‘; have a Joint bank account, and that our earnings should go into‘ a. co fund accessible to both. My wife will not agree to this. She wants to keep all of her money for herself and thinks that I should glv her an allowance out of my salary and pay f0 ’ her clothes besides. I have been using my ealar to pay of! our debts and for the grocery bill, etc and do not feel that under the conditions I an. obligated to make her an allowance or pay fol her clothes. l She feels that I am treating he: badly and says that other men give their wives an allowance buy them pretty area-see and eo on, but that eh- never experiences the thrill of having part of he. which one of us is right? . PUZZLED. HUSBAND. husband's money. Answer: I think you are, and that your wife is takfng a very unreasonabPe and selfish attitude toward you. Also she is showing herself very grasp-rag. There are wives as well as vampe who are gold-diggers, and who want to take everything and give nothing in return. It seems to me that a woman lovel money better than she does her husband if she is not willing to share what she earns with him when dish and pour the tapioca mixture over them. Bake m a moderate oven until the apples are tender and the cream. Apples Creole 6 apples. 11.5 cups sugar. 1% cups boiling water. 2 cloves. ill cup brown sugar. ll cup water. la cup pecan nuts, chopped. ' Custard sauce or cream sauce. Mix sugar and boiling water and boll five minutes. Peel and core ‘apples and cook in the sugar syrup Serve with thick whipped ctcaln. um“ [enden Dram and COOL B911 _ brown sugar and water together un- til a little of the mixture forms a firm ball in cold water. Remove Wash and core large, firm a, plus , “Dm fire and be“ “mu creamy‘ add nuts and fill apple cavities with a fudge mixture. Pour syrup over the apples. Serve cold with custard or cream sauce. HOOPING COUGH No “cure"-but help! to ro- duco paroxyeme of coughing. KS D001 a: 131B Here Are Exercises For Your Feet You may think that your feet re- Vceive enough exercise because you ‘walk on them. They don't, though. All the time that you are making strides in on, direction and anoth- er, your feet, are encased in shoes.| top is slightly browned. Serve hot, _ , or cold with plain or Whipped ‘All it really needs u nourishlnent. owned by those to whom he owes money. Gare 0f Skin Now and theh-azce is too dry. |Dry faces wrinkle easily. Every [passslng event makes a line that ‘gm-gorg- and goes deeper and deep- lcr unul after a while a wrinkle comes. If you tvany, to avoid the net- work o! lines that tell a sagging sort of svoly when they are read by 5h! general public, get busy with Wk" creams. Nobody has to look old. Clcansmg creams wth oily bases shoud be your choice. Apply "18 cleansing cream generously. Mas- sage it into the skin with light, deft’ fingers. But before you use it wash your face with soap and water. Your want the cream to have access to‘ every pore, and dust and dirt will retard ths action, if they are pres- ent in too large proportion. NOURISHING CREAM ' When your face has been cleans- ed use a good nourishing cream. Keep .1; on while you sleep. 1t will ooze deeper and deeper into your pores, supplying the nourishment that is lacking. Use nourishing cream as a powder base, rather than e. vanishing cream. Vanishing cream may make your face dry. . Be sure to see that cream mois- ens the places under your eyes and also your eyelds. Crow's feet won't be encouraged lf you take this pre- caution. Besides, eyelids should have a dewy appearance anyway. Paste rouge and eyearow shadow should be used. If you have always been partial t l They cant move freely. may teeth map and wage,- cmanynw, 5x. confined or imprisoned exactly as. ammo the so“, that you n, mm‘ your hands would feel l! W1" slov- Make sure that it does not have a 65' Stayed 0n Ill dfllf- tendency to make your skin dry. Choose a soap that agrees with your akin. Hard water isn't a. facial lux- u ury, either. Whenever pouible use Walking doesn't necessar y exer- m" “ma. on you, “h, else lvvlcllr =31: lvfil- "£000 Home people like to use the t1»; P°°l> ° °ll' °W °W w“ ~ _of their fingers for massaging nour- vfl" WW t0 PM l! svrlnl! "W" W" brunt; cream into the skin. Othora step so everyone will think o w.ngs [pmm specmly designed pawn when W“ P8“- mstem ‘l’ chain” Some choose the palms of their "Y l l" ‘W919 elierclses- Y”! hands. Whatever you do, be careful I Walking Not Enough feet will become llmber and useful. They will no longer be heavy and tired. Pretend that you are walking on sand. Push your toee against it. hard. u you have seen children do. Close your eyes and imagine that the sand la clinging to your feet, that you are dlilfll 1t lib H you come. In this way you will exercise your toes. Of course, if you are neat a lake which has a sandy beach, and it'| warm enough you will be able to really practice this exercise the next tine you put on a bath- ing suit. Instead of spending all your time in the water or Just alt- ting along the beach, strengthen the muscles of your feet by digging lu the sand. The next enercse is Just u simple but it promotes grace. Place some marbles on the floor. Pick them u? with your toes. Practice for n. little that you do not use too much pm- he is s uggling to pay off debts and to get on his feet again, as you are. he should feel that ft ls a privilege to help him and be proud that she is self-sustaining and able to pay her own way and that ehe ' does not have to take from him a single dollar of the money with which he is emanclpnting himself. For every man in debt is a slave. He is The idea of a man giving his wife an allowance la based upon th uuppositlon that she is not gainfully employed outside the home, and that. ‘she devotes her time and labor toward making her husbanad a home. iHer allowance is the salary her husbanad pays for her services in the ‘house, and in Justice she has no right to an allowance if she does not perform these services. or if her husband does as much of the housework n.e she does. The ’ mestic omen andthe wage-earning business and professional women stand upon entirely dlflerent platforms. It is unfair to expect n man to give his wife an allowance if she name its mucz. as he does, es is often the case. How much money he gives her _. hen and how much of the support of the family he pays is a matter o: generosity, not of Juetiee. And certainly it seems to me that the wife who gets n‘. salary envelope should at least buy her own clothes. All women are in favor of the Joint checking account when the man furnishes all the money. They don't view it with such). favorable e18 when they have to put in their quota. and this is easily explained by the feet that it. has been such a short time since women have had any ,monoy of their own that they are still Jealous of it, and can't bear to u... _ ... suntan‘...- . -< ~ OCTOBER 4. 1932 kite to tu re‘ miss Ethel Chapman makes this novel with Magic. u Baking Powdoi- ."My advice to all housewives, both lkilled and inexperienced, in: Una Magic Baking Powder. Thenthere i"! no uncertainty about your bak- ing," says Miss Ethel Chapman, Editor of the Home Section in the Ontario Farmer. l ____, Titis unqualified statement ia pal:- ticularly impressive because thrifty Canadian home makers have learned that Miss Chapman's advice il in- variably practical.‘ Other well-known food expem and cookery tea ‘ in the Dominion share Mite Chapman's high opinion of Magic. In fact, the maiority of them-dud ivel, too-pure Magic cxrluriwly. No wonder Magic ouuella all other bah] in; powders combined! "OONTAIIQI N0 AI-UM." Thfa ornament on ovary tin la your lulruntoo thlt Malle Baking Powder lo free fromalumerany harmful Inflo- Ilene. umtocanada Illa Chapman's roolpo for; ‘l-UXOR CAKE leupfleepanulaeeduloar Addflaveredeuarandbeazliftah E i E t ti- ‘F! f-II’ moderate oven at 850W‘. ll minutes. Invert pan and letaemd uke ia cold, what, with the lid lpatula, itiwill llip from pan. R all mambo and moirt nruat from 5st Cook Book-coffin: 0BR bllflb) FREE-Send for the Magic Cook Book to use when you bake athmul- Address: Standard Brande Fraser Ave. and Liberty Street.‘ Toronto, Ont. Iilady Rodney Loses One Of Her Crew HAMILTON, Bermuda, Oct. 3.- A tale of tragedy and heroism was uncovered here recentliy with the arrival of the Canadian National liner "Lady Rodney ', enrouteto Montreal from Jamaica. , While ‘in dock at Jamaica the “Lady Rodney." which puea from Halifax during the closed season on the St. Lawrence. had a member of her crew Maurice William. able bodied seamen and a native of Wales. accidentally fall overboard ‘think of anybody else having access to it. Also, while men feel free to spend what they please without telling what they do with it, they nearly always require their wives to accoun. for every penny, and generally there are ructiom if the wife has not upent it wisely. Hence, the average woman above everything else re- gards having money that she can spend or give or waste without having to tell anybody or ask anybody or account to anybody as the greatest privilege that she can possibly enjoy. Bo my advice to you and your wife ie this: Pool your finances till you pay ofl your debts, than decide on l. certain amount for your living expenses to which you both contribute according to your salaries. ihen leach keep your individual private bank account and you can make your wife such presents u you see fit and can afford. I'm with your wife this far, in feeling that an individual bank account is as necessary to a woman's lelf-respect as an individual toothbrush. DOROTHY DIX. I l Dear Mia Dix-Because I have been around a bit and have met many women in various parts of the world I find 1 am not considered n» iously by girls. They think I can't tell an up-and-up girl when I meet her, but I think I am more qualified to know areal girl than most young men of my age who have never been outside the city limits, but I Just can’ t convey tint thought to the gtrla. MARINE ENGINEER. Anawer: ~. I Probably the girls are Just spoofing you. To affect unbellef in what a man lays and alk how could he like poor little me when he has seen so many other wond ‘ul girla in other placer and to make him swear that never before haa he met any one no beautiful and enchanting is Just a line with a lot of the sweet llttlo thlflll- And it la a. line that moat men swallow, hook, bolt and sinker, so sure. After all. you don't went to break down the tisauel. You merely went to rub out the lines and be beautiful. while every day until you are abIe to perfor mthls trick easily. The exercise sounds ridiculous, of course, but you will be surprised at the added buoyancy that will come into your step when your muscles are working instead of noting ll cords to pull you back. , Another exercise consist; in ro- tating your feet from your anklel. To do this lie flat on the bed. For- get you have legs. They play no part in this exercise. Move you: feet in a circle, inward, outward, and back again, so your toes point first one way, then another. Thil exercise will help your anitlel, too. the Ointment J (on. NJ \ urn-u some. r- . / l/v VlllllAHll IIHMPllHNll ‘mm m l‘ “u” m“ Tho Soap thoroughly eleenaee and at the name time grotecu the akin, peered pimple, rash or akin on. Canadlanbepot: ‘zoo 'raui'°'iifv'v','“‘ eala that unex- be wary, Mr. Marine Engines, or you will find that you are another poor nah who has been yanked out of the lea of bachelorhood to the dry land of matrimony. ‘ \ But, of eourao, the man who haa seen a let of girls la fu- better able to Judge them and to know what's what and who'a who among them than it the man who bu only known one or two. In Mr. Kipling‘: famous wen: about the man of many lovea the hero lava: "And 1 learned about women from her" of each new dalliaueo. And that in true. livery girl has something lotewltaman, andhe paueeon tothenext oneallttle wiser and a little better Judie of the fair eex. - not iawbvfthhkitiaaofoollabforboyeand nfrlatoatartfieep? in: company." ae the pbraao goes, in their teens. It keeps them from getting acquainted wit); many other llrll and boys and turning a lot about the opposite mt that would enable them to make much wiser choices of hulbanda and wives. They are as restricted in their choice aa if they bought the first automobile they ever saw or the only hat or dresa that was offered to them. ft is the men and women who ahop around for their matea before they flnplly plek them out. who know every sort and type of man and woman, who an likely to get the kind of husbands and wives of whom they will never tire. ’ The boy whohaaalwayl gone with Sally ainee he waalnknee troun- err think-a thatall atria areJurt like Bally, with the some peculiarities and prejudices. the lama tutor and babltl. but the boy who baboon about a lot knows that no two girls are dill. and be knows which are theonuwerthbavlngandwhioharetboonoatbatltfegooduiotalone. DORUHIYDIX. _ I O I I i 0 ) DearDombyDfn-Wbatdoyoutltfnkofthemodem Ivmm of courting? uutetuienrumreadvtebenueavdanaieauememn tlmeamantakeetltamoumbut!givekileerporingigetneexraelum theyareatakeootloveandnetameropeatfmmdmfbrudentoralovrt Alnomhenfteeltbatarlrlfaaozioiuformvoomwnrffouinter-min lntflolldfie. u». Jathilwantmorftumaenettmf‘ ' ‘votmr iqeQ-i between the ship and the dock. The qunrtermaster on duty sounded an alarm which brought Chief Steward Maxwell and Chief wireless operator Harold Turner to the scene. Maxwell dived and struggled val- iantLv to disentangle the victim from beneath some loge which float- ed between the liner and the dock. Once he succeeded in ‘ ing the half drowned seamen, but only to nnd himself caught against beneath After several attempts the Ohil lsteward was forced to give up and wee- himself draggedfrom the UNI ‘only in time to save liisown lift Turner then dived several tfml and it is understood he finally n- covered the body. Capt. W .8. Armit, Commando! of the "Lady Rodney" ‘upwind that Maxwell had indeed risked NI life and deserved great credit. The victim's only relatives on eaidftoboMxuaud NfrmH. , of Notre Dame de Grace, Montreal,’ uncle and aunt. An appeal has bee}: made for O0.- 75010 restore the eplre of What 23-year-old Church, St. Dunstan- ln-the-Eeat. Charged’ with theft, a poet I Paris recently spoke in his own 60' fence in blank verse. Gift. packs containing three Ifi of toe-nail vanish have been h- tmodueod irfmndon. beumu-kmaoemoaioemaeu the loge. it: Import-restriction system. speed love-making and Job-lot eweeti To each ego ita own custom. foumoee, which I fear would put you in the slow elaae in this day of high- Oottrting. as now conducted. fl Zb x . rfed on in the hard-boiled manner without‘ any retlcence or romance. Killer are no longer sacred to love. Or saved la a sacrament for It! One and Only. Girls" lips aredreo to every Tom, Dick and Harry _ a kiee doesn't mean any more than a hand shake and there is no t to it. ‘ - Thereaomthatyouloeefntorelthegirl whenlhobeoomoaiuhflv eetod in you fa because man fl by nature a hunter and the excitement of the game is the pursuit. Most mm feel the same way. ' DOROTHY DIX. | . GIVE the children a Bowl o! Kelloufi and milk- Jllal the nourlahment they need. Delicious. Heahllfnl. lo llovfmueh halter than hot, heavy food. No trouble to prepare. ‘h’; Kollojfa your‘ ‘f for afternoon relreahmnl. Quality recanted. Iouiareerfonfialerltenyndifluaanlhave I - flaw