Woman ’s Realm - ' a g Madame Laerohfls delicious cnocc- M’: Lsvzn csxi 7 55 cup l l cup slip... Z ages l lcuspnml vanilla extract ] clip milk l‘. cups paslry‘ flour (or! cups and itililcspoons of bread flour) 3 teaspoons hlagic Baking Powder 3f teaspoon salt Crvam buncr; mid sllznr. a little at 2 time, licizint; unrli light; add llcslcn yolks and ilsvoring; add Hour, sifted with salt and baking powder, alternately with milk. Fold in stiflly beaten egg whites. Bake in 3 greased layer cake pans in nlmlcrure oven at 375" l’. about 2O minutes. Ricipc for Chocolate Icing and Filling is in the Magic Cook Book. vuyv g Dorothy Dix Letter ‘Bax l The Principals Get off Their Pedestals After Marriage and Stop Posing - Daughters- in-Law Sometimes a Big Help. Wives Must be Entertaining Dear Miss Dix—l am about to be married to a young man who comes up to any girl's desires for a loving, generous sweetheart. but I ha"? often been told that love is one thing and marriage is altogether differ- ent story. 1s that true? A PUZZLED WIFE-TO-BE. Answer: g If you mean that courtship and lllllfllllg.‘ are What the Foshionables are Wearing Illustrated Druslnnldng Lemon Furnished Willi Every Pattern Bu Hmulbello Worthington Im- instance. the one-sided softly falling rover cuts the bodice breadth. Still more helpful perhaps is the unbroken line, created by the psrtlal belt arrangement. , which gives height to the figure. The 1n- set panel st the centre-front, also does its bit toward slende u: -. Printed crepe silk is a lovely medium whether you want it for town or later for summer wear. The vestee is lsce. ' Style No. 438 is designed for sizes :- Social and Personal -:-i Fashions,-:_-_ L§iterofliture For The Cook FLORIDA PIE 1..- cupful sugar. 1 tablespoonfui cornstwh- Pinch of salt. 3 ggga-deplrllied. 1 cupful water. 1 cupful grapefruit juice. Grated rind of one-half grape- fruit. Mix the sugar, salt and corn- _ starch and add the well-beaten egg yolks. Heat the water, grapefruit Juice and the rind to boiling and ma slowly w the era mixture. stirring s11 the time. Cook in a double boiler for two or three minu- I different, yes. y that is up to the wife. ilc was uncertain of her. ilas won her. they are even as God made them. with beefsteaks and shoes. lovemaker. for granted. W lzy Jllagic Baking Powder is used exclusively at this Montreal School keep her husband fascinated. 1f you mean that s mall hues his I love for a woman as soon as he is married to her, A man's attitude toward his wife is ally different from what 1t was to his fiancee. Then he was on the anxious seat, so to Speak. putting forth every effort to fascinate her because After marriage he ls sitting pretty because he Before marriage he sees his wife a few hours a day or a few hours a week when they both have on their best clothes and best be- havior and both are doing their durlldcst to plcasc the other. After mar- riage they see each other continually in the close intimacy of the home, where all camouflage is swept aside and a. man and woman show what money on bringing a girl candy and flowers. Bcforc marriage a man is a high-pressure After marriage he is dumb and expects his Wilt? to take it No mun keeps up lifter marriage the tactics that he did before mar- riage, and no woman could stand him if he did, any more than she could llve on a. constant diet of chocolate eclalrs. No woman wants to be con- tinually caressed and told how beautiful she is when she is busy getting dinner or sweeping a room. Nor does she wnnt to have to always keep ‘herself dolled up to look like a Lady Love or break her neck trying to Marriage has brought her down to earth, too, and what she wants is a man who will manifest his affection by being a good provider and slaying in at nights and who will like her just as well with cold cream on her face and her hair up in crimpcrs as he would if she had her com- plexion on and perfume behind her ears and with whom she can pass a 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 48 inches bust. size 36 requires 4% yards of 39- inch, with % yard of 10-inch lace. Tub silks are splendid for hot weather wear in white, psie blue or dusty pink. Cottons may also be used 1n sheer hatlste or lacy novelty weaves. Sheer wolens are also suitable. natur- Be sure to till in the size o! the pattern. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) W in f ll . Before marriage a man spends his mp co one u y After marriage he says it Size ....-................ ...........-..-....-.-...¢-. Name Street Address ies, stirring constantly. Cover and cook fifteen minutes. Cool slightly and pour info a previously baked ple shell. Cover with meringue mule by gddlng four and one-half tablespoonfuls granulated sugar, a little at a time, to the stlffly beaten egg whites. Flavor with two tea- spconfuls of grapefruit Jlllce- P3369 in a slow oven (250 degrees) until the meringue is a. delicate brown. BARBARA ' . s. Ilnslll cm." Ylllpu III WHEN noon-limo comes, why not fix yourself a delicious lunch - and one that's no trouble at all to prepare? A bowl of crisp Kellogfs Corn Flakes, and milk with n hi! of fruit. Refresh- ing. Healthful. Convenient. Save time and ‘money at any meal with Kelloggfi. Qualify guaranteed. Doing good is the only certainly happy action of a. man's life. g‘ l éfw-Mdzrtw. concentration, persever- ta- 1 Energy, once are of more value than lent. says, mind their own. business and keep their fingers out of their son's matrimonial pies. And if they didn't exactly approve of their son's choice they would refiect that there is no accounting for taste and that Tom was going to have to live with Elia and it was more important for him A Mo rningSmils SW10 I to be pleased with her than it was for his mother to be. - DOROTHY DIX. \__.. Fishing in forbidden waters .. and let their children live their own Answer: Amen. Dear Miss Dix-When I arrive home in thecvenings, tired from my day's work and with my head full of ideas, anxious to relax, my wife is too busy to talk. In the mornings she is also too busy to give me any atten- on Sunday, an angler was s preached by the keeper. hastily . baited his hook with a carrot. “Didn't know I was trespass .. lives. A REGRETFUL MOTTHER. 1f they did they would save s. lot of unhsplpness in the world. But they can't. because it takes a mother of almost superhuman vision to see that her children ever grow up into being men and women and do not remain tiny tots that she has to hold by the hand, and she has to have a greater sense of Justice than most women possess to realize that they have a right to lead their own lives in their own way. One of the funny and inexplicable things about mothers is that while they are glad to have their daughters marry it nearly kills them to h~v~ the" 5°!“ mlffy. This was. perhaps, natural enough in the old days when girls had to be supported and every daughter that got married took just that much strain off of the family pocketbook. Also, then, a girl had no way of making a living for herself and so it lifted a load of! of mother's mind when Mary and Alice and Susan got settled in homes of their own with husbands to provide lfor them, ‘ ' ‘ But nowadays a girl is not a family liability but an asset, because 311g not only earns her own bread and butter but contributes to the family tion. At night after the children have gone to bed she is too tired to do anything but go to sleep. When we do speak of something, unfortunate- ly, she never agrees with me. What can a husband do to find in his hoyne the companionship he does not wish to seek elsewhere? LONELY HUSBAND. pleasant evening with both of them reading and listening in now an then on the radio and not saying half a dozen words. - So that is the difference bctlveell courtship and marriage/and, if you are expecting your future husband to continue to undel'study Romeo the remainder of his life you are in for a blighting disappointment. A lot of women do expect it and consider themselves grievously ill used when their husbands drop from the clouds to the earth, but they are the Sentiment- al Susans who have an abnormal appetite for gooey soft talk that would sicken any sensible human being. It is true that ill many cases marriage does secln to kill love, but it is because the husband and wife took no trouble to keep it alive, They thought because they were loved when they were married that they would go on being loved automatically to the end of the chapter, no matter how they treated the party of the other part. If husbands and wives would try to make themselves as attractive of Domestic Science "We teach our students only the mun methods," says hladnmc R. Lzlcroix, Assist- ‘a,’ l, ant Director of the Provincial School of Do- mestic Sciencef Montreal. “That's rvhy I always use and recommend hllgic Bdlilfli: Powder. its high he mid the keeper. "I'm only] amusing myself," and he hem draw in his line. Seeing the c _ the keeper laughed. "Oh," bs "you won't do much hann vi that," and walked away. Later in the afternoon he rs - - ed and saw the angler with s catch of trout. “You're not going to tell me ‘- caught all that lot with s c - he asked suspiciously. "No," was tho reply. "f caught you with that." Answer: Nothing, 1 fear. If your wife won't chum up with you, there is no way you can turn her into a pal. Congeniality has to be spontaneous. It can't be forced. Women are prone to beat upon their breasts and lament about their loneliness, but they do not often stop to think that husbands can be lonely, too, and that a man can want something more from his wife than for her to be a good housekeepe . It 1s the wives who never have time to sit down and entertain their husbands or step out with them who send them away fmm home for the companionship they do not find in it. It is the wives who will never tall: to their husbands or listen to them who deliver them into the hands of :_‘~-v~|lv— ~ ‘.- ;~_ sump-um ‘Jkdxr-iruw-tfi“ lcavcning quality is always uniform. You pct the same satisfactory re- suits every time you use it." ‘ |~- And Magic Baking Powder is the unquestioned choice in the major- itv of cooking schools throughout the Dominion. Cookery teachers- and housewives, too-prefer l\lagic because of its consistently better results. “- Free Cook Book-When you bake n: home, the new Alngic Cook Book will give you dozens of recipes for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd, Fraser Ave. and Liberty 5L, Toronto, Ontario.‘ 1""; gala-v“: my “CONTAINS NO ALUbI."Thlll!lIl~ ment on every tin ls our iusrnmes (hi! Milli: Blklnfl Powder is free from nlum or lny m“... Iul lnflrctlltnt. . =5’? r- ".“‘.'I'.’~--o~ I filflldl i .. , ,. -.. m. 11.3%? The annuabm eiingpf the Prince ldwéid 1 Island F's-ox” Eixhibitors‘ ss- asv. V.‘ M’ sociatiopill befihelgLinlkthe Agri- cul't"'ursl-l~rsl , omlottbgwni- stilfao p!’ m_., j on flluesdlayxJune‘ 28th, to traglsactflsuchlbllsincss as may reg- ularly ctlrfte before it. w. n. sllsw. Secretary "y? .. ,, ’ 40$ -“" - raw-vow- rf‘lflm O-§-§§§404'§-O-O i iii-ice List vi, _ si-sczsl. cssn PRICES -. ..,- MIZ-tues Iri, tiles fri. Fpsll ' El‘ CHEERS Per lb. 4'/4c EEI-‘il-IEAI-TS . . Per lb. (‘/40 Per lb. 3%c .. Per lb. 5c .. Per lb. 8o Pel- lb. 4M0 Per lb. 3'40 BEEP LIVEBW. . . HORSE MEAT . PORK LIVER. '. . TONGUE TRIMMI S Per lb. 31,60 WEASAND MEAT .. . . Perilb. 3K0 CREDIT REGULAR PRICES. Prices f.o.b. Charlottetown effective June flth. Island Gold Storage Company, Limited in person and manner to cach other as they do to strangers; if they would use as much tact in dealing with each other as they do to a casual ac- quaintance; if they were as polite to each other as they are to the people they meet at dinner and if they would try as hard to sell themselves to cnch other as they do a bill of goods to a customer, love would fiourish in that household like a green bay tree instead of withering up like a ros: that is taken from the tropical air of a greenhouse and put into a rooln where the temperature is down to the freeing point. . DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-l have a son that I adore and I could not bear to think of his marrying, so every time he fancied n girl I criticized her and made fun of ‘her and broke up the affair. Finally he became engaged to 4;: cake box. It is the wage-coming girls who are always buying things for the house and getting mother a new dress and who give for more in the home than the boys of the family do. Nevertheless, mother is Just as anxious as ever to get the girls married, and she turns a. very blind the vamps who lend them their ears. Lots and lots of wives are first aid to their husbands’ infidelity. ' nonormr mx. A pioneer Empire and a stay home Church go’ ill iogei —-Amery. eye ‘on the faults of the young who come a-courting. But when son wants to marry it is a different story. Let him but show an interest in a. girl and mother begins to pick her to plews until she doesn't leave a. hair of her head that hasn't something wrong with it. Anf if he finally does marry in spite of her she generally gives the bride such a chilly welcome that it frost-bites the good intentions that the young daughter-in-law may have had toward her, A lot of the trouble between mothers-ln-iaw and daughters-in-law is due to the fact that the bride knows that her husband's mother resented n girl without my knowing it and refused to give her up, although l said n11 I could against it and would have kept him from marrying her if I could. But now this daughter-in-law that I so opposed is an angel to me and I would give anything if I could take back all the thingsl said against her. I wish I could tell all mothers to mind their own affairs in The Plains 0i’ Meetirifii ‘ ...__ 0)» ulusr WOMEN I Over joyed by this unexpected windfall of fortune. Jeerns began to watch anxiously for the coming of his father snd Uncle Hepsibslz and for the appearance of the selgneur Tonteur and whoever might be with him. He placed himself where he could see down the road that came from the ‘ronteur selgneurie, and when st last he heard the auctioneers voice bellowing forth hLs announcement that the sale was about to begin. he felt" a sombre sinking of his hopes. ‘They livcned instantly when three figures on horseback appeared at the end of the half mile of road. The foremost rides was Tonbeul‘. the second Paul Tache, and in the uni-d saddle rode n slim wide-hat- ted little person who was none This Summer lnsurc YourHealth :=~|l wlwi; "llif/ Scotfs Elnuision {f ivlllliiFhil ‘4 o 0-00-04- slro-s-o-tc. 1 ~ other than Marie Antoinette Ton- teur herself. concealing himself behind the bole of s tree, Jeems watched them as they passed so near that a pebble flung by a hoof of one of the horses feel at his side. His courage almost failed him then, for while his hands clenched st the sight of Paul Tache, his heart fsltered in its bestng as his attention turned from his enemy f0 Tolnctte. She had become, all st once, s young lady whom he could easily believe he had never seen before, and the change in her held him for a few moments so forgetful of his own existence that he would have been discovered had one of the three happened to glance in his direction. Toineite was wearing her first r'din8 suit, s gorgeous ‘clue camlet trimmed with sliver, just arrived from Quebec. With this she wore s smartly cocked beaver hat which bore s rakish feaiher, and from his manvlns her. and she has w be wiser and more brosdminded than most young brides an to be able to forgive and forget m; cl-ltlclgm ma; mother-in-law has made of her. If mothers could realize that 1t is only rank selfishness that keeps them from wanting their sons to man-y they would, as my correspondent of the most thrilling events of‘ his forest-trimmed world, had his heart not been choked w.th the emotions of impending drama. Yet he dd not press his desires by undue haste, and it wss hslf an hour before. he found himself close to the (me who occupied his thoughts. This hap. pened in such a foruifous way that ‘Toinette, concealed by the ample forms of Lusssn's wife and daughter was within s foot of his shoulder before he knew it, she did not see him, and he stood with wildly beat- lng heart. breathing the faint per- fume from her person, his senses clued by the hes-moss of her splen- dor and his world of vision filled only with a great brosd-bl-lmmeq hut, an enravishfng mass of lust- Nlls eurll. s sunset of crimson rib- bons, n pa’: of slim slwulders- and than, his paradise broken by the ugliness of reality, he discover- ed Paul Tache. The young man was returning from n, journey m mg bsrnls and when he ssw Jeems, n contemptous smile ‘twisted his lips. It, was this look which turned Toinstte so that she found Jeems standing beside her, his cap and s package in h's hands, his fscc ten- Hly set as ha‘ fought himself into obviousness of his rivers presence, He held out his gift to her. "My Uncle Hepsihnh has jugt come from the English colonies, ‘Rd he brought ms this that I m'ght in turn give it to you. Will you 3008M. it, Whistler” ‘ (To Be Continued) Is i: their lo: so snfiercrsmpssnd bscksehes every month? Certsinl not. The tonic e - fees of Lydia E. Pinkhslrfs Vege- lsble Compound bu ended nll that for many thousands of women; . S b ' ' ' l. Sh "i"; wk?".’.;'°il.'.°‘-Fi.'.'.l'.’l:é°i£.l.a£ u ’.. w" f, o Nag: tell Qslil: muchrgdsser l miliksdsndngiorioynlllhouslse.‘ z .114... c? M1411... VECETLGLF COMPOUND figurs she msds, sud every inch of her body was st s dgnifled ten- sion as she rode post the place where Jeelns was hidden. After she hsd gone, Jeems felt an overwhelming sense 0f llttleness and unimportsnceslllor Tolnette was n0 longer Toinetie, but s real princess, grown up. And Psul Tachs riding close beside her, with hair powder- ed and tied and with n red velvet cont that could be seen p, mile sway, seemed now to be infinitely remov- ed 1mm the plottlngs which he hsd conceived ngsinst him. He stepped from behind the tree and stooped to pick up tho pebble which Toln- ettefis horse hsd flung st him. He could hssr the auctioneers voice, and others biddlnz for Lillian‘! propertes. ‘Ihcn came n burst of laughter which rose with unrestrsln It is not talent thst men lack ed nbsrndcn shove all other sound, I curls, partly bans mmfrhrd among them. She was superbly aware of the_ lovely under fh's hat hcr long dark hair a blast of mefflmfiflt fell in a cascade oi carLIuIly made would hsve recognized anywhere in rtsilalncd in their the world. Only his Uncle ‘Hepslbsh ‘freedom by two or three rtd rib- could laugh like mil. Th6 lldhl-l ‘but the will to lnbon-Bulwer Lyi. which he m“ \ t-tLrcilLa-‘motllnman Lrwu/ Has. use! . . . thriving . . . gaining by leaps and bounds! His back strong and fine as s little cham- PiOIlIS. His teeth developing perfectly. His legs straight and sturdy. His skin rosy, his flesh firm, his whole body a living promise of health-radiant, buoyant health — through the years to colnel Can any food except Nature's food build such a baby? Millions of mothers in the past 75 years have answered Yu to this question. And now more em- phatically still s world-famous clinic answers Yo. - Who! tbs scientist: discovered But newer still is the news from s world-fame“! baby clinic. Two physicians fed s group of’ 5° svcraglc babies on Eagle Brand over a period o several months- checking with closest care cvcfY detail of their health and growth. X-rsy pitiful" ofbones were taken regularly, to mslte sure of tlW way 211st bones were growing. Tooth <l=v¢l°P' meat was watched. Weight and height W6" periodically recorded. Strength and alertness Wm measured. Blood tests were made . . . And those $0 Eagle Brand babies, judged by every ltnowfl test, proved themselves ideally nourished- Liuing proof—in million: of bsalvtby ‘babies _ l FREE! Complete Booklet on Baby C!" Seventy-five years ago, Gail Borden-pioneer iii the movement for pure milk-gave Eagle Brsnd to the mothers of America. Today, Eagle brand — second only to mother's milk in easy digestibility —-ls known as an infant food theivvorld over. Eagle Brand has raised more healthy blbies than my other food on earth, excepting mother's milk. in practically every community in this lsnd are healthy, sturdy boys and girls, sud men and ‘I'll! DOIDEN 00. LIMITED Tun Bonnsn Co. Linn-m, Des-l SI . '1‘ n Trilfi-‘Nxai >4. l. a .l ."|hr'?lwgl‘llh"-"$—Q snow pogo s um Nun ' é} Nobody can i ccmmsnd- success. but all may try to , deserve it. --Addison. l. and exdtenlcnts of the scene about him would hsve made for him one \ lllm Cio women who got theirstart in life on Esgle P-md. Inquire in your own community and see h ' I ¢ E181: Bfgnd gx-bgbi“ compu“ ma... print nuns and Milan! Plaill!) _ 5""