- _ ‘$4,; .. . “his "1 PAGE EIGHT Woman's Rlm -: Social and Personal -Fqshions -:.- Literature Doro-thy Dix Letter Box l How to Make a Contrary Man Do Your Way. Strong Measures Needed to Quell Quar- reling Wife and Mother Who Make lilan’s Life Miserable Dear Miss Dir-I am married to the most stubborn, contrary man on earth. How can you get along with a husband with that kind o! disposition? I have tried gentleness, patience, fighting, being mean my- self, but nothing does any good, so I send out an SOS to you. v PATIENT GHIBELDApInd. Answeri 0f course, one would like to say that the best way to treat a. contrary man is to bat him over the head with a cofiee pot, but unfortunately women lack the physical strength to enforce such an argument against contrariness. Besides which our efiete civilization discourages such wholesome means of family discipline. All that is left, then, for the woman who is married to a man with a mulishvdisposition is to treat him as she would any other donkey who hasn't sense enough to do what is right and proper because it is right and proper, but who has to be cajoled along the way he should go. Begin by letting the silly ass think that he has" suggested everything that you want to do. If you want to have the parlor papered in green instead oi purple, don't rashly say that you are going to have green or your donkej: will put his foot down and declare for purple. On the con- trary, gently and insidlously suggest the idea. oi gicen paper and when you perceive that the time is right, ask him what color he would prefer to have the parlor papered and he will say green and berate you for not" having thought of it yourself before. In the next place, remember that the law of controrincss always works backward, so that you can work a mulish husband by it. Never abow that you are keen Ito do anything or go any place that you have set your heart on, but affect a supreme indifference to it. If you havedctermined on spending the summer at the shore, send off and get a lot of advertisements of mountain resorts. Mr. Mule wlll lznniedlately be filled with a mad enthusiast for the sea and refuse to consider anything else, and Lo the seashore you will go, just to show who is boss in the family. Avoid all arguments as you would the pestilence. An argument with a. contrary man is like a. mordant‘ that hets a dye and make it indelible. If he says black is white, let it go at that and he may forget what opinion he expressed and recognize white for the color it is. But lf he once commits himself that black is white, he will stick to it to the end oi time. A wise man changes his opinion with the diilerent light that he gets on the subject, but a donkey, having no mind to change, can't possibly alter it. Therefore, no matter how circumstances alter or how big a fool view hemny take in the first Iiluce, he feels that he must be what he calls consisicnt and stick to it. Of course, the less sense a man has the more amenable to flattery he is and the easier he is to work, so there is nothing for the woman who is married to a contrary man to do but to get busy with the salvo and plas- ter him over daily with fulsome compliments. 1i she tells him how big and wise and strong and wonderful he is and how she defers to his judgment in every particular, he. wlll eat out o! her hand and she may do with him as she wlll. Some women can do this seine can't. Some do not think it worth while and, as a. matter of fact, it isnm worth any scnsiblo woman's trouble to humor such childish weak- ness, for such a. man makes her very, very tired. DOROTHY DIX. I I I l O 0 Dear Miss Dix-I am a young man with a wife and three small children whom I love dearly, as I do also my father and mother who live in the same town that I do. My trouble is that my mother and wife (Zklllllill. got along together. Both are high-tcmplcred and sensitive, es- pecially zoward each other. They arc always getting their feelings hurt and coming to me with their tales against each other and wanting me to take sides. This makes me perfectly miserable. What shall I do? Shall I lIlVB up the good practice I have and go to some other town? Can you olle-r any silggesliun to a MAN IN TROUBLE. Aziswer: The strangest thing in the world is that the two women who loves man most in the world are Willing to make every sacrifice on earth to him eigoept to sacrifice their jealousy of each other. When a. man's wife and his mother fight over him like dogs over a bone, they never seem to realize that he is the sufferer, and that they are literally tearing him to pieces between them and devouring his happi- ness. There is no other such exhibition oi feminine selfishness. Yct the very mother who is willing to wrcck her son's home, divorce him iron: his wiic and tear his child out oi his arms, talks about her love for him; and the wife who would separate him from the mother who bore him, prates of her devotion to him. Both of them know that when they go to him with their tales and complaints and criticisms of each other, they drive him to desperation and make him utterly wretched, yet neither me is willing to forego the pleasure oi’ indulging her own spleen to secure his peace and happiness. Self-centered, hide-bound egctlsm can go no further. When a. mother-in-law and daughter-ln-law who dislike each other are compelled to live in the same house, it is understandable that they would get unendurably on each others nerves. But any town or city is big enough to hold even enemies and any two women, no matter how discordant, should certainly be ladies enough and have enough knowl- edge of the world to be able to preserve an outward appearance of har- mony when they are occasionally thrown together. ‘Iheieiore, I should Acquaint Cook if she . forgets- Beehn Brie; ‘ or mrmsr 1o womm -w. are “m... for . limited a... only, the olfer of a British-made, I 3" aluminum cooking spoon {or shaman: oioaiy s0 Om Cubelled Wrappers: OX0 Hmiaadsehearlcooglloaneal , ,, M4. smar- =2“ an» ea seleis_. -___.._ 4.. _._-_..-_..___._¢ Recllnose Tea Blown LABEL 20in». Red Label, 25%|». Grange Pekoe, 38in». l For 77w Cook i i. Christmas Clio 1. Use good fresh butter and c885- 2. Use fresh moist fruit. 3. If the currents are dry. WV" with boiling water. Drain. “"3 dfi’ out in a. very slow oven. 4. Leave the nuts v as whole as possible. 6. Line pans with greased 119W)’ wrapping paper. 6. Bake at a slowoven heat. '1. A pan of water is not neces- sary in a gas oven or any 9V9" where the heat can be controlled. B. Ii’ the cakes are browning too readily, place a sheet of brown paper over the top. 9. For storage, leave the brown paper in which the cakes are bak- ed, around the cakes. covered crock with an apple cut in half in the crock. These two cake recipes are a lit- tie unusual due to the fact that one recipe uses all egg yolks and the other recipe all egg whites. They are both very rich in flavor and one gives a dark cake and the other rather a light cake. White Fruit Cake 1% cups butter. 2 cups fine granulated sugar. 1V. cups egg whites (10 egg whites.) 4% cups sifted pastry flour. 1 teaspoon baking powder. l. teaspoon vanilla or flavoring. $5 cup light raisins. E4. cup chopped figs. 1A cup whole pecan nuts. l5 cup candied cherries, halved. 1A cup crushed canned pineapple, well drained. 1 cup moist cocoanut. v Cream butter well, add sugar gradually, keeping the mixture light and fiufly. Add the unbeaten egg whites, one or two,at a time, beat- ing in each addition until the mix- ture is completely bended. Add van- illa and all but 1 cup flour sifted with baking powder. Mix well. Add fruit dredged with remaining flour. and cocoanut. Pour batter into a large square pan and bake at 275 deg. F. for 2% hours. Line pan with heavy greased paper. almond Christmas Cake 2 cups butter. 2 cups brown sugar. - 10 egg yolks (about 1.cup.) V: cup liquid honey. 4 cups sifted pastry flour. 1 teaspoon baking soda. 1 teaspoon salt. 1% teaspoons ground cinnamon. ‘b teaspoon ground cloves. Store in a ‘ y, teaspoon ground ailsplce. 3 cups seeded raisins. 2 cups chopped dates. 3 cups currents. 1 cup flea. clwaved. 2 cups mixed nutmeats, broken. 1 cup candied cherries. 1 cup candied peel or pineapple. ‘.5 cup grape or cherry juice. ‘A cup cider vinegar. Cream butter, add sugar and cream well. Beat in egg yolks thor- oughly. Combine fruit with dry in- gredlents, add to above mixture al- ternately with the mblne’ juice and vinegar. Brake in a pan lined with heavy greased paper. Large cake, 8 x 8 x 3H, bake at 2'75 deg. F. for 8% hours._ Smaller cake, 51,-‘.- x fill x 3%. bake at 2'15 deg. F. for 3 hours. A MomingSmilo “I'm glad to find you as iou are," said the old friend. "Your great wealth hasn't changed you." "Well," replied the candid mil- lionaire, “it has changed me in one thing. I'm now ‘eccentric’ where I used to be impolite, and ‘delight- fully witty’ where I used to be rudc." Maroons Sell Jack Gallagher MONTREAL, D60. 11—(CP.)>- Sale oi Johnny Gallagher, defence- man of the Montreal Maroons of the National Hockey League, to the Detrot Red Wings of the same lee.- gue for an unreveacd amount 01 cash, was announced at Maroon headquarters here today. Gallagher first attracted hockey attention when defence oi the last team which brought the Allan 011D to Montreal, a few years ago. He was signed by Maroons the follow- ing whiter but has Plllyed "W55 °l his hockey with wmdsor of the International League. Maroons have not yet found I- place for Hack sane-am. fvmcrlv of the wnnipeg Olympic-i- Lord Reading-Nothing could be worse for the economic litultm than that the disarmament con- ference should be a 111111111- EAD COLDS Melt in boiling water and labia vapors: also snuff up noes. fix MILLION JARS USED 1Q certainly advise you not to sacrifice from your home town. Vtmli... your good practice by moving away Furthermore, have one grand row with your mother and your wife l What the Fashionable: are Wearing Illustrated Dreesmaklng Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington It is a. dress that is well liked by girls and y _, women as well as by the matron. Carry it out as its inspirator in; novelty silk and wool crepe mixturel in rich wine-red tones. It's sol charmingly flattering and wearable. You'll be surprised to learn how easily it is made. It is a one-piece affair. All you've to do is to jo the sides and shoulder. seams an stitch the slightly circular side sec tlons to the dress. The sleeves ar then set into armholes and th waitstline caught with shirring a either side.‘ Velvet, crlnkly crepe satin and rough crepe silk are nice mediums. Style No. 759 is designed for sizes 1i, 16, 1B, 20 yearl, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. Size 38 re- quires 336 yards of 89-inch material with 1% yards of ribbon for bow. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. Street Addr s.......--.-..n.-e..-....... Olty BEMINISCENCE ure by portraying the reactions of those who believe and disbelieve in Him, with s. leavenlng of tolerant agnosticlsm. Except for a bad gap between the first and second acts this has been done with rare skill and keen dramatic ‘ “. " "The real aim of the play-its claim to originality-is not how- ever, ln portraying what might happen if the Messiah came, but in showing how I-Ils Word is after- wards spread by an ordinary Glas- gow tax-collectcr living an ordin- ary humdrum life in a Glasgow middle-class flat. As Matthew An- derson reflects when his unpopu- laxity has made his children emi- grate, the work he means to do is to be done not by a. beautiful fig- ure in a. stained-glass window but by such an insignificant man, made great only by his faith. "James Woodburn, as Matthew, and Miss Elliot Mason, as his wife, gave performances of splendid sin- cerity. Both are members of the Scottish National Players, as, in- deed, were many others in the cast. "Tyrone Guthrie ls a. young dramatist who has something to say, and he says it not only with seriousness but with humor as well." I've wandered round old Cornwall, Bill, Renewing chlldhod scenes; I saw the church, the store, the mill, Which brought back pleasant dreams. Gay fields of flowers smile with luv. ‘ And tell ‘of “Auld Lang Sync," When you were Just a. little boy, ‘And-I was only nine. The same proud- stream still threads its way ‘ Thro’ hillside, dale and fallow; And flows beneath the towering 1111M’ We knew as Kellowks Hollow. Each bird still warbics to its mate High in some leafy tree- A merry band-what cruel fate Has parted you and me? I saw the little country school That stiinds beside the way; Where we were taught "the Golden Rule" When not engaged in play. "rls old and scarred by many o. storm, As we two are today; For we were then in youth's bright morn when life was free and gay. Monkeys Revenge I visited the graveyard near, - - The tombstone in the square, Is Thrlce And read the names oi playmates clear, ' Now gone from earthly care. Some died upon the field of fame And sleep where “poppies blow;" Death musters many a cherished name, We loved long, long ago. NEW YORK, Deo. 12.-1A quiet little struggle which has been going on for some time up in the Bronx Zoo between three inmates of the monkey house and Junior Keeper O. J. Buehler was disclosed today by Dr. Raymond L. Ditmars, the curator. Y , Bill, it t u gave me soy o we It seems the feud started one day The dear old place again; hang. He showed Dyak how to pull the new screws out with his teeth. separately, and lay down the law to each. Tell each one how miserable she is making you and that you are not going to have your peace of mind shattered by their petty quarrels. And forbid either one to mention the others name to you again. And the next time either one starts talc-bearing, shut her up by pulling all the cave-man stufl that you can. DOROTHY D13. I O O Dear Dorothy Dix-Don't you think parents who have sacrificed everything for their children have a right to a say-so about whom their sons and daughters marry. The parents happiness and well being are involved as well as the children's. FATHER. Answer: Because parents have reared their children well and have given them good clothes, good food, a. good education and a good start in life, does not give them any right to pick out their children's husbands and their wives for them. They have done nothing more than their duty in their children. They thrust life upon themgand they were under every ob- ligation to do everything in their power to make that life worth having. On tho other hand, having had tender and loving and generous par- ent, it is a debt of honor for the children to repay the kindness they have received and the sacrifices that have been made for them by meet- ing their mothers’ and their fathers‘ wishes as far as they can and by not bllghtlng the hopes and wounding the hearts of those who have loved and cherished them all their lives, if they can possibly avoid doing so. But, lathe last analysis, marriage is the most personal thing on earth and the one thing in which no human being can judge for another. Tho‘ years have cilanged both you and me, Each scene looks just the same. But younger feet now climb the hill, 0r tread the vale below, And paddle in the stream. Bill Where we played long ago. —F. H. McArthur, Lorne Valley. Play Is Staged On Pius Theme At Westminster (Canadian Press) LONDON. Dec. m-"Follow Mb"; being played at w ‘ ' , when an electrician was sent around to install wires in the cage coupled by three ‘lo-pound orang-outans named respectively, Gabong, Do- hong and Dyak. Gabong, a playful sort of fellow when left alone, seized some of ‘the wiring and was promptly slapped by Junior Keeper Buehler. It took some deep thinking, but Gabong finally who go around slapping orang-out- reached the conclusion that people, thy organ-goutan was still scratch- _ with Magic Baking Powder "My advice co all housewives, both skilled and inexperienced, is: Use Magic Baking Powder. Then there, is n3 uncertainty about your bak- ing. says Mm Ethel Ch: man, Editor oi‘ the Home Section Ill the Ontario Farmer. This unqualified statement is pan- zicularly impressive because thrifty Canadian home makers have learned that Miss Chapman's advice is in». variably practical. Other well-known food experts and milk"? teach in the Dominion share Miss Chapman's high opinion of Magic. la fact. the majority of them-and housewives, too-use Magic zxclwivrlya No wonder Magic outsells all other bah’ ing powders combined! guarantee that Malia Baking Powder is free m alum or any harmful lag". G138. DECEMBER '13. 1932 ~€| Mill Chapman's recipe ‘lop ‘LUXOR CAKE I cup Ins granulated sugar l teaspoon vanilla extract $5 cup egg yolks V; cup lukewarm water fifittlspoon Magic Soda . cups pastry flour (or 3 cablapnqg less of bread flour) ' 2 oeaepoona Magic Baking Purdu- ti teaspoon salt Sift sugar. Measure out 2 tablespoons; pour on vanilla extract and set ulde. Add water and soda to egg yolks; bu: with egg boner until foamy. Add lugar a liule at: a time, beating in well. Add flavored sugar and beat. fill’! eo- gether flour, baking powder and lllL Fold usefully into mixture: pour la ungreased angel cake pan. Bake In moderate oven at 350W‘. for 40 to l! minutes. Invert pan and let stand until cake is oaid, when, with the aid of q Ipamin. it will allp from pan. Ramon all crumbs and moist crust from our. lea top and aldea with Seven Minute Frosting. (Recipes for filling and frosting are in the Made " p; ~ Arum." ‘rim CookBook-aeefreeaflerbclnw.) nnemenc ea j - nan do your FREE-Send for the Magic Cool Book to use when you bake at home Address: Standard Brands Ltd.‘ Fraser Ave. and Liberty Street, Toronto, Ont. ans ought to be taught some man- ners. Bo the next time Mr. Buehlcr came near the cage. Gabong shot his hairy arm through the bars and divested the junior keep of his trou- sers in one deft stroke. After that Mr. Buehler kept pretty much away from the cage, but Ga- bong still wasn't satisfied. At this point his two cage mates entered the story, as Dr. Ditmars related it. Dyak was strong, and Donang was shrewd. Together they decided that some mode of egress could be arranged so that Gabong could go out in search of the junior keeper. Dohong turned his cunning eyes upon the skylight over the cage. Finally Dohong pointed out to Dyak that by a process of rocking and jiggling the screws in the frame- work oould be loosened. Dyak rocked and jiggled, the screws dropped to the floor of the cage and so did the entire frame- work. "We wers afraid," said Dr. Dit- mars, "that one of the orange-out- ans might have been hurt in the crash. But they showed no signs or injury. Bo the senior keeper had the framework mfastened with four-inch square-hem screws." The new arrangement merely challenged the ingenuity oi Do- But again Gabong's departure from the cage on a mission of vengeance was delayed. The screws were replaced by six- inch spikes, driven deep by members of a husky repair crew, and Mr. Buehler breather easily again-un- til today, when the third attempt was made. Dyak, under the skllful guidance of hismentor, succeeded in pulling out one of the spikes and, using this as a jimmy. broke open the door. But luckily for Mr. Buehler a chain had been placed outside the door and it wouldn't open more than a few inches. Once more Ga- bong went back to his corner and sulked: while the powerful Dyak looked at Dohong questloningly. At a iabe hour tonight that wor- Has Now I00‘ Descendants (Associated Press) SYDNEY, Australia. Dec. iii-M English sailor, William Marstesu migrated to Palmerston Island fl 1562, taking with him three na-tln wives. Now there are 100 descend of isolation, they still sing “God save the Queen" for Queen Vlctorll was regning when they got theli instructions in foreign attain. » Sl-IE FOUND m; WllY RflGULARLY-oncc a month-ml! a girl decides to do aomethial sbouc it. Surely there mun be some: thing to help such pain, such weak non . . . some way m gee “lief, Then the period passes. She forgets. Bu: next month she suffers again. NOW—(0llily—iSfl1¢Ilm2fOdOIOIIII thing. Buy a bottle of this Vegetable Com pound. Keep i: ready. h has bees a godsend l0 thousands. 98 out of 10d women who try is report beaefll Through its tonic action it built thcil up and relieved the pain They do pend on it. You can depend on il toil $4.. 5.’ 0m ing his head. VEEETABLE COMPOUND ‘Theatre, has for its theme “If| Christ Came to London," the autb-, or being Tyrno Guthrie, a. young dramatist. Ho has approached his subject from an unusual angle, ac- cording to E. A. Baughan, drama critic of the News-Chronicle, who says: "Tyrone Guthrie's Messiah is ‘ ‘*‘ the " '“ He This makes it ling. ibis for parents to pick out their children's ‘ ‘ ’ and wives for them, because tastes differ, and the very qualities that the father and mother find distasteful in a man or woman lire the fancies of Mary and John. 1t ls Mary and John who have in llve with the one they marry- noi. father and mother. Hence, it is more important that they should be blessed with their mates than that their mother and father should. . DORCYIKY DIX. performs miracles and preaches in Hyde Park until his teachin is hold to be treasonable Communism. He is tried, found guilty, executed and rises from the dead. "We do not see Him in the play, but with great dramatic skill the necessary to good health» N B FLAKES is is pure yeasa At groceries 81M! IIIII GIIIJUII CQNGINTIAYID IIIVIII author makes Bim the central M- BANISH CONSIIPATION Take N B YEAST FLAKES regularly and keep your entire system toned u .- It promotes the natural activity ofthc intes- lines, rids the body of poisonous wastes, md supplies the system with vitamins YEAST pure, brewers’ past, dried and flaked-the. richest of all yeasts in the vitamins thathave made yeast famous as a health builder. It keeps indefinitely, because all moisture S» has been removed from it. Every particle "rua NATIONAL aalwlllls Lnurlmjloiirllal. Ila: span. anon» I. nnoinl e oosnun, Inn-run, d dmggilts’: 0' fuss .....mum»-we..- k. W r xii‘ .. RICH BREWERS Total _ ants on the Island. 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