fi-..._. 4. . _ _»/ .> _ _ ` ~ v- ._-_-__ i -. PAGE TWO THE CHARLOTT ET OWN GUARDlAN__ i ' ,APRIL 4, 1933 r , i 1 -1 _.,,.... I l l Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature , ’ 'vqh i ` l i __ - |-- " W'thW'f H C Sl tM . . . . . . _ ,,}’°3;'f,’,§;0p'C0nv;r‘;;io,‘;‘i S:1'}_S't§'§,e,.-_,an Fzrst Prize $250, Second Prize $100, Thzrd Przze $50, 60 Prizes of $10 each . . . . ' Dear Miss Dix-ln the Eternal Triangle the sympathy alwayl B00-1 ' f t I th r wi-on cd wife, but there's never anything but contempt (Mo ou o e poo 8 (or the Other Woman. But it isn`t the wife who suffers the most and ,.1 who goes through the tortures of hell. It is the » tl Other Woman. I knew from experience. And ."“ ' " ' `- " the more you love the man, the more you suffer. He \vill promise no matter what happens to always love and protect you, but when the time comes when he is tired of you or he wants to save him- Contest Rules Read Carefully self from divorce he will betray you and the things that have been sacred to you. He will take every- thing you have to give, your love, your honor, your self-respect and happiness, and leave you with a broken home and a broken heart. Oh, if there was only some way to reach the hundreds of women and girls and save them in some day from becom- ing entangled with married men. But there lsn't. , ,~_v-s i » . _._ ng-.» .if IW your own use is always "different," and the married man you are in love with is always ‘going to be Doroth_v Dix, isnt there some word you can send out that \vill save true to you] seine girl from the \\'reck 1 liave made of my life? Aiiswcr: None are so deaf as those who will not hear. None are so blind ns those \vlio will not see. Why, it seems to me that I spend half my time iii broudcusting \varnings iluough this column to girls about the danger they run in having ailairs with married men and the disaster that is certain to come to them if they do . But my voice is that of one crying in the wildernem and I fear that few heed it. For, ns you say, each girl believes her case to be different from all others, and that for once n liason is going to last and be endur- ing, and that the nian she loves is not only different from all other men but is going to be different from what he himself has been in the past. One can understand how the simple village maiden or the unsophis- ticatecl country lassie of the past could have befooled herself with this optimistic belief, but it is incredible that the worldly wise. liard-boiled girl of today, and especially the business girl who has seen lio\v ii. dozen auch office intrigues worked themselves out, should be able to delude her- celf wit.h even the hope that an affair with 9, married mari can bring her nny good. But, they do, which proves anew that we can believe unyiiiing tliut we want to believe. They still fall for the old line about ilu! \\'ifLf \\'UU does not understand, about the unhappy home, about the heart starving for affection, about how they could not live except for the sympathy and* THE OTHER WOMAN. tenderness some pretty young woman gives them. And the very girl who knows that a man lies and cheats his wife nnfl is dlsloyal to her; the girl who has telephoned dozens of times to his wife , that he is engaged in conference and wouldn`t be able to come home to i 1 dinner when he was taking her out to dinner and a night club, still be- ` lievec that he will be faithful to her. Incredible. But true. Of course, it is easy enough for girls to fall in love with married men. They are often far more fascinating than any of the young men they know. They are older, more intelligent, have seen more of the world I Contest is for residents of Canada and Nexvfoundlnnd only. 2 All you do is mime :lie mystery cake. Only uri: name from cach person. 3 PRINT allhe lop o/your paper in inh (or typewrite) "Miss McFarlane's Mystery Ca ke." Under this, prim your suggestion * for a name. Then, in the lou-rr rig/whand renin, print your own name and ad- dress) clearly and neatly. Do not lu: pfuri . 4 Do not send the calm itself-just the name and your nwn name and address. Ir is not essential to bake the cake to cuter the contest. _ 5 .\li-nibers of our nwn 0r|;:iniL:itio|\ or their rclnzivcs are not eligible to take pair in this contest. *lo ho°'L¢¢B` “ sf0th£'V'x,;a3; Rf5\l_'sxa f>`00E'Ch€';‘ce inoggnfl i' 0 o a o MAGIC MYSTERY CAKE il' "lnsaandnenmnulul llqielcllngrowdclnuuulknowlcln pon nad fun from harmful lndrodlenhf' layl Mlm M. McFarlane, Dladtlan of St. Mlchul'n Hospital. Toronto ticulnrly Interesting, for Min Mclfulnnic . Hur statement In par- oplnion In based on n nlmmllth knowledge ol food chemistry-la well no an practical ooollnlewlrlmoo. _ Here’s Miss M. McFarlane’s Recipe . . . can you name it? 55 cup butter ' I cup sugar (granulated) 2 cups pastry flour (or 13( cups bread flour) 3 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder £4 teaspoon salt 3( cup chopped walnuts M cup strong coffee (strained and cold) 3 egg whites Cream butter thoroughly; add gradu- ally sugar creamlng well with butter. (Note:-It in the thorough beating and blending of these first ingredients that gradients are evenly blended. Add chop- ped walnuts. ‘Fold in atlilly beaten egg whites. Pour batter into greased pans -lllllng only two-thirds full. Bake in oven 350° F. for 25'rninutee. FROSTlNGa Have ready I cup icing sugar (or more). Cream 3 tablespoons butter with 2 tablespoons of this sugar; add 2 tablespoons strong coffee. Sift remaining sugar with 1 tablespoon cocoa (dry). Add to butter. Bent till light and fluily. (Note: To have icing with a smooth glaze-use liquid hot.) 6 (.`f../ilu/ rloffr .f/l’RlL 30, 1933. No en< triis voiisidi-rcil ifpostinsirkeil later than _/\>|~_x rl 50 niidiiielin No entries considered ii iorwnrded with insufficient postage. 7 jitdgri: Winning names will be selected hy :| committee ofthree impartial judges. 'I hc decision ofthcsc judges will be final. 8 l’ri/_c winners will hc iinnounccil to all uiiixiiiis 'within one month after con- ii-st closes. 9 lnAcnse of a tic, thc full amount ofthe print- muniy will be paid io each tying \"illl\_f-l.'ll`ll'. 10 II wr; I » .f/1:il.'/tlf:'z;.` .\ililrcss your en- , ities to Contest liditor, 'Jillctt Products, i l rascr Avenue, Toronto 1. . . . Get busy. . . Join the thousands of Canadian women taking part in these fascinating contests HOW about putting an extra $250 in your pocketbook? Name this l\’lagic Mystery Cake. Perhaps you’ll win that Erst prizel Miss M. McFarlane worked out the recipe for this nionth’s mystery cake. It’s simple and economical. You’ll like its delicious , Havor, tool Read the recipe through. Then try to think ofthe very best name you can lay the foundation of the final texture lane advises-use Magic Baking Powder. Other well-known Canadian food experts share Miss McFarlane’s high opinion of Magic. In fact, the majority of them use and recommend Magic cxcliuivfly because it gives consistently better results. Make up your mind to enter this Magic Mystery Cake contest right now. Try to win one of the 63 cash prizes. of your cake.) Measure dry ingredients -sift together twice. Add dry ingredi- ents alternately with the strnlned cold coffee. Beat thoroughly until all ln- Madam (honda CONTAINS N0 Al-UM.‘Th| a unta- mt on every tin ll your Buanntoo (lint Mnglc Blk- lng Powder ll lrso from alum or any harmful Ingredi- ldl. ` this newspaper. N0'l"l'_i0ther Magic lllyivlcryiiakcscom- lu.‘.! ‘Nutrli for chem in lan-.r Issues of to describe it. ,Better still-make the cake yourself, if ou like. And be sure to doa M' M F .._i___.__l,_ y ' s iss c ar- Gi|ionProduou,Fnser Avenue,Torou¢o 2. tnvo across narrow way of fruit. Cut . and have a technique in dealing with women that is highly developed For me Cook slices m 1,a1\.e5_ Armngc alierxmw tnrou h much riwtloe But every BUYS illllfdlan 811861 E-lives her 11 slices of orange, grapefruit segments iz p - wanting more me nnaliy and ii-retrievabiy fails hopelessly in love with ` _ _ and pear siioes. serve with a married man, and then when she feels herself slipping and,her emo- Lilltllb Pl-Alt SALAD tions beginning to get beyond lier control she does well to sit down and try to figure out what she will get out of giving her heart and her lilo to him ` ls she willing to take another woman's husband from her? Has she no compurictions of conscience about breaking up a home and half-orph- anlng little children? Does she believe that she can build her house of lmppiiicss out of the Wreck of another \\'oman's happiness? If not, what then? Does she want to spend her life on the outskirts of the lift: of U10 man she loves? Does she want always to have to keep secret rendezvous with him, or else openly join the ranks of those women who are cleclasse? Does she trunk that si-ie can and any happiness in knowing that amfhef woman bears the name of the man she loves, that she occupies the place in society his position gives her, that the wife spends the money that sho helps the husband earn? his mistress when he grows tired of ' ii never does a man's business stan So the girl who is in love with ii. married man is up against all of these obstacles and she generally finds that when it comes to a showdown be- tween her and the wife, she loses out. And these are things that every ' girl doe# well to bear in mind when she embarks on' a love affair with a married Romeo. can any vanity or any sophistry blind her to the fact that the man who has not been faithful to one woman is not likely to be faithful to another, and that he who breaks his marriage vows when he wearies of his wife will not hesitate to rend nsiiiider the flimsy tics that bind him to her? A man may not love his wife. He may 1105 be UH-PD! Wil/11 mf- But that does not mean he is going to get a divorce. Often a philanderer clings to his wife because she is I. protection against the Other Woman. Often a man does not want to give up his children. Often a. wife has ` money or powerful family connections that are useful to the man. And ding any good to get a divorce. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a middle-aged, successful business man. wisoiy ti-avtieii, weii read, fond or sports. the theatre and everything interesting and educational, yet so poor a conversationalist, that I am at fa loss for anything to say when I should be able to talk and to entertain ~ any one in whose company I chance to be thrown. I am in the habit of meeting people and am not bashful. I have just got nothing to say. Probabl man others suffer from the same embarrassment. Can you Y Y suggest ways and means to make dumb P60916 S€1f'5'/9-“H97 (Continued on JOHN THE SILENT. Page 8) Lettuce. 4 oranges 2 grapefruit 4 pears . ` Arrange beds of shredded lettuce on individual salad plates. Peel and slice oranges. Cut each slice in half. Peel and segment grapefruit free from membrzinc. Peel and slice cul- Amazedllllfisulls From First Bottle Nervous Wreck Until She Began Taking Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound "I was a complete wreck. Nervous, no appetite and could not do half m work. My mother suggested Lydia Pinkham s Vegetable Compound and I was nmnzcd iit the results from the first bottle. I took eight bottles in all. I am well now and fit to do all m work and look afterliive children, which keeps me quite busy." MRS. AVILA DUPAS Box 213, Pilot Mound, Manitoba French Dreslng De Luxe Makes ‘li Pint 1 cup salad oil ‘.6 cup lemon julco it cup orange Juice 1 teaspoon Worchestershlre sauce 1 teaspoon dry mustard ‘Xi teaspoon salt 6 tablespoons powdered sugur ‘.5 small clove garlic (or ’,-'.- ica- spoon chopped sweet onion.) ‘.6 teaspoon paprika. Put all into a bottle and shake well before using. __nm-___ A MorningSmile Mother was trying to arrange a marriage between her daughter and the wealthy young bachelor. “if Harold asks you tonight to be his wife, tell him to speak to me." Helen nodded and then asked: "And if he doesri‘t ask me?“ "In that case." said the mother, "I shall speak to him." Teacher: "Who can tell me what the former ruler of Russia was coiled?" Class (ln unison): "Tsar." Teacher: "Correct: and what was his wife called?" Class: "Tsaritsn." ' children called?" Tsardines l" T LIFE T.. the preacher life's sennon, To the joker life‘s a jest; To the miser 1`fe is money, To the loafer life is rest. To the lawyer life is trial, T0 the poet llfe's 3. song; To the doctor lii’e's a patient Who needs treatment right along. To the soldier ]ife`s a battle, '1‘o the teacher llfe's a school: Life’s a great thing to the think- er But a failure to the 1:01, Life is just a long vacation To the man who loves his work,_ But lt‘s a constant dodging duty To the fellow who’s a shlrk. I To the faithful. earnfst woziker Life’s a. story, ever new. Life is what we try to inrke it, Brzther, what is life to you? -Selected. There are 213 legal holidays, nn- niversaries, religious holidays and special “vi/'eeks" and "days" Sfrhe- dulcd for 1933 in the United States. Class I railroads of the Uhited States installed fewer freight carr in 1932 than in any year since 1933. the first year for which records are kept. "Helen," she said to the daughter, Teacher: "What were the Tsar's There was ii pause, and then a timid voice in the rear piped up: .-\\ ""! m/ff.-f.e."'z5'i3' CASTORIA /tif t constipation in children laxatlve espe ' ered from babylihlillllzgrilllpyean a~ "L_ ~; ¢\"' \_ , ";=§*’°’ ‘;§'iiT:`§;f§§n When you bake at homei!.'iI.'i17:..‘fif.’f’.§`fZf.iZ.§.`2°.iE$’.22’f‘s`1`I.’I.'lf.‘1'.If".i’.?.§ZSC What the Fashionables are Wearing By Annabelle If budding daughter is aching to -try her skill as dressrnaker, let her launch into sewing this jaunty jum- per dress. It is such'a simple little affair to tackle and just as smart and fresh as paint when finished. The Jumper skirt is straight with an inverted plait at the center-front to give it ample fulness. It is at- tached i/o the simple bodice with its darling suspender straps. As for the guimpe, it is the popular tailor- ed type. Being smart, no doubt, she'll make the jumper of grey woolen mixture an dtho guimpe of plain crepe silk in yellow. Style No. 974 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 10, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 incheubust. Size 16 requires 2% yards of 85-inch material for ,lump- er with 2 yards of 35-inch material for blouse. Price of Pattem 15 cents ln stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. N0- 974. Size ....».......»........ 's.»...........~~»¢...... ..-...» ~ Name 'omit ian... ` ` ' ` 9 74 llnnrdk Llnlment for Stomach \ ern-mln. Worthington , ‘--~- _“__ ----v Y -~- -~ ' -, f- _- _ I _ to meet this individual, who 1134 had suoh an influence over you. nance or sin: SWEETVANI »» ~» -M --»~ 1- 1'"-=~ °i»»~-'--1»f~»»» -1 defence of Peter Cavendish. | l\¥\!\0Y8I1C€ When she reviewed the by But she laughed, bitterly, as she .matter next (UW- -nljlogtélcnginc, lobster traps and RICHARD GOYNE ripped me lem, into shreds and' But other disturbing things were B, ,,|-du of qu, Jud" of me flung it into the empty grate of her t° happen- M15 Marland WM GWHY County Court I will at tm; p, m, on room. on business and had not, therefore, Thursday, April 6l.n next, at W. A. CHAPTER vii "Defending Peter is the lm thing heard of the scandal. When Cyn- M°Q""“" 'h°'° l" w°‘?d I’|““d°~ I should do. I wouldnt even warn this went into the town shopping, ;f)|;‘“1l;n{’i“l;|!:‘;ln:"‘§::)‘;:'" 31:25 Ctynihliirlil/farltarligiz :gs nitrite tg: about B thing 'like t.his_ but if and for lunch, people she met and the Mlllllmlvn 1391111- TUB 0110106 of “wg ,md three anchors, B" “uMh_ S01' 0 E 0 ll 11 if s person thinks Im going to keep who knew her cut her dead. I on in mu, of nu.; Mlm" ,,¢,¢|,,¢ BUY Slwh Offer Hb the letter Cvnifain- any such nppointment_.." That rather amused her, but the' Wlllllm Smith. absent debtor. ed. lt aroused only 500111 in her Nevertheless, the latter began a incident inthe town's excl ive cafe Cl““'l°"¢¢°Wl\- MN'¢\\ 31. 1933. heart but, reading it asain, she train of thought in her mind that Durrantley‘s, did n0t."§hell:'as seat-. shJ£iIf"Nof'q:;';?IéE§;lt’_ found it had a certain significance; she could not out oil. It had placed ed at “ “W9 lable behind SOIDB 9679_4_1_5t_2i_ It suggested that somebody knev. a haze of mystery abou; this 5m.,ng_ palms. Three influential women in [written such a letter. something about Peter lhni: was not purposed mnii who loved her nnd`Midl0y Came to an ad_l0lU1|'l8 0nc FARM FUR SALE _ IN CANAVOY The undersigned offers for sale his farm of 105 acres with house and barn, 50 acres now ploughndl and In good sinlc of cullivnilnml balance lumber :ind hard wood. Near lrliool and churches and rallvrny llallnn. Apply to W. F. .lA|tDlNl-J, llesd Hillsboro. R. B. No. I. l’. E. Island. . ...___ and Creamery. Apply to _ ifl7i~:.‘!_"`s1'mv.\i:1', TQ; ~ lllarsliflalrl. » /v‘ M :I7-349-01. 1 ‘_ ,wif _ _ lpleasant, and her first emotion- revealed that love in such strange, “'m10Ulf 509318 1101* arid. Of COUISQ. which she crushed at once-was one offending ways. And mystci~y was had one topic of conversation over of indignation that the suggestion perhaps the one thing that ¢°u|u` their coffee. had been made to her. And an urge soIten`Cynthia‘s heart, could melt "Whether Peter Cavendish had ________1____i__ her bitieriicss at the ummmbcmd any part in that awful limit- or ways in which, by his very kindness, )1\°l<»" UW Wealthy W0m8h Said. heat- Peicr so humiliated her, edly, “he is to be held responsible lt was not plenum; 1,0 fee; that for the behaviour of his fiancee." any nian whom you rlid not want “Of course he had a part in it. He must have known." - I fuller for sale my fzirm of |00 - _ _. _ ,_ _ acre'-1 only slv miles from l'||i\r|ull4'- a .S C U Dcsljllcl l‘_(4"` |'"l‘l»- €».‘“lhl