1:251 iiii wi cl‘ 5U sul n, cm _ chi ow W1 yo PAGE TWO suiruiro n tvliv uourii ENI was twelve years old my mother wanted ma to take Lydia E. Pinkham’: Veg- etable Compound, but l wouldn't.‘ If l had I might have been a well girl now. I lnvc suffered terribly every month. “The girls where I work used the Vegetable Compound and urged me to try it. It helped my nerves. I intend to keep on until l am wcll and strong." Miss Rose Lama, o Brighton Avenue, ‘foronto, Ontario. VEGETABLE COMPOUND Gas In The Stomach ls Truly Dangerous Gas, Pain, Bloating and a feeling pf fullness after eating are almost certain evidence of excessive hydro- chloric acicl iii the stomach. 'l‘o much acid irritates the deli- cate stomach lining, frequently pausing chronic Gastritis and dan- gerous Ulcers. Food ferments and Worn an Dorothy Diir Letter Boxl Isa Man of 30 Foolish to Step Out With a Woman Who is Separated From Her Husband? - Distracted Husband of Bridge-Playing Wife — Warn- ing to Hopeless Lover Dear Miss Dix-A pal of mine, a likable young fi-llow of 30 i1; slep- plng out with a woman ten years his senior-s. married woman who has not lived with her husband for three years. I maiiitalii it is not the a. c- correct thing to do. l-fe can sre no harm in it and asks my reasons for objtcilirr. I don't >< iui to be able to find words to explain lll_\' ar ' i only know that it is against my \\'.i;" of tli .g. ’I'(lI\1I\'lY. Answer: If the woman wrrc living with liar h iulniiiil i‘ would certainly be very wrong for your friend i» pay her any attentions trhich might tciirl to um her heart away from her lawful male and fill lilm with Jealousy. It. has alulays seemed to nic that there weic no more tlil*ili‘.l'(ll_\' ..‘l(‘l\ and women than the home-wrecking crew whose fiendish work we arc called upon so often to behold. For all of us know iiicn aiid women who were perhaps not ideally suited to each other, whose family l.fe iras not as peaceful and harmonious as it might have been, bu: who would have kept together and made a home for their children, if it llild lint been for some tiiird party who deliberately put the 'l‘l\"l‘ tinder their doorstep and blew it into smlthereens. We have all seen a. woman, who, for the sake of gratifying llm- own vanity and for the cruel delight she had iii torturing a i-ism- whiting’ flutters and cajoles a married man until she makes l....i fa" iii lovi- \\llll her. And we have all seen pliilaiidering men, whose specialty “as UNDERSTANDING dissatisfied wives, feed them on the romance and sentiment their husbands did not give them until they made the little rift between them and their mates widen into an impassable gulf. And we have all thought that murderers and thieves were no worse than these men and women who alienated husbands and \\'l\CS from CUUll other and broke up homes and half-orphaned little children. It is this prejudice that you, along with all other honorable and right-thinking people, have against those who are first aid to divorce that makes you feel that there is something wrong in your friend going out with a. woman who is still married although sue tices 1.0L live with her husband. And your sentiments do you credit. But when a woman has been separated from her husband for three years she automatically takes on the status of a divorcee and there is pours, forming a gas that distends the stomach and often seriously af- fects the Heart. It is genuine folly to neglect such p. condition or to treat with artificial digestive aids that cannot neutralize the stomach acid. A better way is to get from your druggist some Bis- uratcd Magnesia (powder or tablets) nd take a little after each meal. is famous but simple and inex- pensive stomach sweetner and antl- acid can be depended upon to prove ts value in less than five minutes. n most inst: es, relief comes in- stantlyi Pie. ant and perfectly armless to use _ Bis rated Mag- no reason vl/hy any man should. not pay her attentions if he wishes to. He is in no way responsible for the bicak between her and licr hus- band, and he does nothing to augment the trouble between them. But I think, just to keep the record clean, that if the woman wishes to have dates with other men and go about with them with the freedom of a single woman, she should get a divorce. 'I‘iiat will prevent her from .4 s-Qi. true CHARI-OTTETQWN GUABQlAN Social and Personal -:- What the Fashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington a jolt hi ziiittiiiiluii; as the one Who ma girl, who ‘has always been alert and interested in everything, and who finds when he gets her lioiiie that lie has got n sloven who doesn't think it worth while to lace-p herself or he: house neat, and who is a Quilter and a slacker who jiut simply lies down on iici- part of the matrimonial partnership and refuses to carry hcr share of the load. Certainly there can be nothing more disillusionmg to a man who has always been used to a clean, orderly home and well-prepared food than -:- Literature his“? ‘ ""-—-~1--. s. JANUARY 21,1932 s} ‘m Delightfully young and smart in this new slim-line model. Since crepe silk both plain and print is so charming ‘neath the fur wrap, it was chosen for this fas- cinating model. It is sapphire blue spotted in l. deeper tone. The soft crushed scarf collar gave it much distinction in plain white crepe. ' Another ideal suggestion is plain brown crepe with chartreuse green. Black with white is always chic. You'll find it very simple to fash- ion, and the cost unbelievably small. Style No. 890 ls designed in sizes l6, l6, :10 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 iiiclics bust. Size l6 requires 4% yards 35-inch wllli ‘.5: yard 35-inch contrasting. Be sure to fill in the slac of the pattern. send stamps or coin (coin preferred.) Price of pattern 15 cents. No. 899. Size ...................... u-----.---..........-.nun-nonna- Name ............ Street Address Quick Quaker Oat: helps children at play and 5,, school because it . . . Snow and Cold entice the Healthy Child keeps than vigorous and wall Q5: \\l g r/lw'%y <§Y i.all»ienusevooeIlnIoIlovo-eullllela City State "So 30in‘ son is going to be an ‘JYUSL? Wliiit are you going to do to help 111m?" Sandy: “I'm letting his grow; the rest is up to hint." hair ‘ a. pretty splc-und-span young COLD winter days make big demands on children's health and strength. ' While no weather is better for the normal, healthy cliild, iii win- tcr time children must have re- serves of energ. Health authori- ties therefore advise Quaker Oats. It is nature’s best balanced cereal . . . the greatest stamina and energy food. Quaker Oats is the fastest cook- ing cereal. . Jeady to serve in ‘.515 minutes after the water boils. The exclusive Quaker Oats pro- cess roasts the choice whole oats through many different ovens and rolls them to tender, deli- cious flakcs. ' 1”» 'p;Lilliii4iiasiisiarijsiii;ii...lid-I; - - You will note, too, how Quaker Oats cuts food "costs. You serve it for less than a. cent a dish. Buy Quaker Oats today. But remember you cannot get the Quaker Oats flavour or nourish- ment unless you see that our packages bear the name rm the picture of the Quaker. ENGLISH CHINA OF NEW DESIGN in Quick Quaker Oats gmrkeddrchinn ware." Every a age cont ‘ iece ollgenuine imiliillleil‘ 6“E"s'ii‘i'§"ii'.'"i't1;“‘“" . va a em on. ivory tone. A fine selection of large handsome pieces. being the subject of gossip. Your friend's age, too, should make a difference in your attitude to- ward the subject. If he were a young and inexperienced boy, you would have reason to think that it was a foolish thing, and one likely to get to come back to a house that is as dirty as a plgpcn and to sit down to food that would kill an ostrich. Certainly nothing could take the heart out of a man than to come home tired and have to do the work that, his trifling wife has left undone, and if anything could deepen the gloom he must feel it would be to realize that. his baby was neglected and un- Mada Th0 Quaker Oats Cam any, QUICK Q UAKER 0Ars Pderborough and Saskatoon, largest cereal miller: in the Empire. Makers also of Quaker oekcla, Com Flakes, Mufieta, and other highest qualify cereal: him into trouble, for him to be running around with a woman who was ‘ still legally bound to another man, and especially one who was ten years , esia does give wonder ul relief in nine out of ten cases. As’: your oetor or Druggist. I I A MornzngSmtle Client (making whit-And if my wife marries again, I want the be- quest to be doubled. Launch-What's the idea? Client-I want to soften her dis- hppolntment when she compares her second husband with me. i enough to live comfortably on if only my wife, who is a big. stron big medicine as you require. O I O I O Dear Dorothy Dix-I am a young man, married, and with a darling i baby. Our home should be a happy one, but it is miserable because my wife's only aim in life is to go from one bridge party to another, discontented, hates housework and the care of the baby. tVlieii 1 conic home from work I have to clean up the house, do all the cooking and the ‘to baby's washing, as I cannot nflord a servant on my salary. Yet I make g- an healthy young woman, would do her part. my problem? UISILLUSIONED. Answer: No. When a woman is lazy and pleasure-mad, nothing short of a miracle will change her and I have no magic by which I can work such I often wonder if there is any other man in the “'Ol'l(l‘\\‘llO gets such ". aha Three 'Plai:kages' of OLD DUTCH" Old Dulch Cleanser-the modern perfect clecnserl Keep it handy at Cleans Sufely-becouteltconloln! ‘would lose it as ii stciiographer 5110 l5 ‘faction, she would brace Cfill .\'0‘~1 1191i! m“ l" 501W‘ would do it, rather thel ling a typewriter. {their jobs and dead ienough and little enough to do it. and if women kncw this a lot cared for. d if they had to give Failure to support is a ground for a divorce for women. My own idea is that if the husband would stage a rebellion, and not only tell his wife but make her realize he meant it, that unless she did her work satisfactorily she was going to lose her Job as n wife, just as she or n. saleswoman unless she gave satis- up and do better. . Because very few women want to give up their homes and to have lhusbanlt You would want her to m; mm alone. go out into the world and support themselves instead of having a 1 husband do it. They know that they are better or! married than single, their husbands good food and a clean hearth, they ii go back to standing behind a counter or pound- But as long as they can get away with loafirig on’ -iicatiiig their way through life, they are just mean be good housekeepers should be an equal ground for divorce for men, of them would take to sweeping under drainiriiniisLa-iii-iout 2060 the bed and spending more time over the eookstove and less over the bridge table. DOIFOTHY DIX‘ I Dear Miss Dix—I am in love with a married man with one child- wiiiit shall 1 do? IQUISE- Answer: i Do as you would want some other woman to do if she loved your You would want her lm refuse to see him or m think about him or to have anythlns to =9 [with hlm. Try that. mommy DIX. cote l‘ "i? cup of sugar, i egg beaten liahl l without separating, v.- cup of milk- . F01‘ 7718 COO/Q 115 cupgqf sifted flour, sifted again l} _ . with a teaspoons of baking powder- pauure to BUramtzsovacia snvitiuhnns and, lastly, l teaspoon of vanilla ex- tract. Bake in paper baking 011F5- Serve with WITH CREAM Cream ‘A: cup of butter; beat in 1 Butterscotch Sauce Turn 1 cup of cream, 1 cull 01 sugar and 1 cup of dark com syrup into a. double boiler. Mix thoroughly 1. and let cook over boiling water for one hour; then beat in i dessert- spoonful of butter and ‘A tell-RPM" of vanilla extract. Garnish the dish with whipped cream. The eanvamer was concluding liei 3 talk. “Well, Mrs. Jones. I hope I‘- can count on your husband's fillll poring me?" she said. ._ "SupportIIlE you," replied M11 _ Jones, "why 'e ain't even supported I me for the last five years!" John By Concordia iContiuui-it; "Oh, Lucy, I was racked withi jealously, I admit it, I had though-Ll lic was so absoiuicly; niiiic. Rcincin-l bar, that eiily an hour before lic: -had been . well, lctiing iiic_'h think that not-hhig could Nor take} him front nie. . . And then t.ri' scc him, apparently lY)\\'li‘il over lrvl you. . . . Clf course. if I had known the truth of his rcasori for makhg love to you, I should have loJ | eyes er because he has been absolutely - faithful to m0 in his heart. . . . Oh, it seems so appalling to be sit- ting here calmly talking liko this to his wife. . . . God! if you knew how that words hurts. . . . Jocelyn bowed hei- head into her hands. "It's so awfully hard on us both," came her muffled voice. "So \ not u Ironic with 1'iitlli"l' clabora‘ ~ llCSSllvfili, but J:>'cl_\.'1'.s snuff, duik Gresham ’s Girl u‘ Mei-rel what has linppciieil to-tiay. I must think. But. I pronise you, I'll try liei- arm. “She'll g9 to her room be- lleiit a moment; then site said: "'I'hcn you ’ll'(‘ not gniiigvto speak .ni about it?" The tiucstinii CCIYC- were alcrily wrfcliiiig Lucy's “You are right," put in Jocelyn, instantly. "Mitch better to leave it for a while I . . . I will be brave. . If I sec him . . . I'll . say anything, I prc-iirsc that, Litcy." ‘Ihere was a silence; oil times in the bathroom, kitchen and laundry. There's nothing else like it; you don‘t need several styles and kinds of cleaners. Think oi this added convenience In Old Dutch; lfsollyou need forullyoorcleoning. Cleans Quicken-quicker than ony- Ihing else you can use. Help your- self to more time with Old Dutch. MADE IN no harsh, chunky grit and doesn't scratch. Old Dutch protects the surface. Keeps lovely things love- ly. And it's kind to the hands. Healthful Cleanliness-is brought to yourhome byOld Dutch because It removes the invisible impurities with the visible dirt. lt is economi- eol because u little Old Dutch goes c long wcy. CANADA Old Dutch Holders, In Colorsl Send for some today, using coupon below. mail us 10c and the windmill directions, from an Old Dutch l "-21.4.- imam; For each holder, panel, appearing above the abel. awfully hard, Lucy. To miss the only thing in lifi- that is svorth while. . - . It's so . . . so (htrnczl hard on us, Lucy. . . ." It was rather hard on Lucy, too; but that aspect of it didn‘? seem to have struck Jocelyn. And Lucy had determined to think only of Jim, and so she didn't let it strike her either. “Jocelyn,” the said slowly. "will you leave things as they are foi- a while? Perhaps only for a day or two. . . . Just to give me time to think and get this clean. It isn't t CW8” 50¢! WW1". 64 Macaulay AVIQ EQDmOI Ontario Home Ind oneluld . . JOIN and . . . label: for which ma! um. . 01a Dumb Holden. Colon wanted- IVOCYU GlliCN l] ILUE D NIIIII_____ Mm °7-—-________Pvovlnco.___.__ e“ “ easy to straighten things out, all in a moment. . . ." she drew a breath, and stopped rather abruptly. Jocelyn looked up sharply. "What do you moan by leaving things?" she asked. "We'l, don't try to see Jim. . . . 0r if you do, don't say anything of jsound of Lady Oordellak voice from the hail made Lucy start for the door. "Your mother." she said quickly "I can't, see anyone . . _. 1 . . ." I-lci- lips trembled badly. all I know, to wake things ca-sicrHpn-a Cyndi; hcrc. . . . Wait a . . l0 bc fair ‘.0 you-Jo, h." l-Icr second to give her time- . . - ,voicc shook .. h.ly. Jocelyn was There, she's going upstairs. I'll see you out . . .“ she said in a rapid whisper. Tllc sound of Lady Cor- ililziils sniiimi-liat manly step irpoii the stairs having faded, Jocelyn took Lucy to the door. 'I'liere Lucy hestaied; then tum- _ lface. ed swiftly, caught Jocelyrfs arm lmm“ that his heart “l” Sun’; "I'm not sure," answered Lucy. 11nd said quickly: with m’: l“ 5p 1° Cr °"°l'~"ll‘in3- IWProlialilv not‘ at lciis’ at l)l'("t'ill. "Jt‘)’l"“ll you have told me the know now that he isn't a philiiiidcr- .. ' i i l ' truth? You wouldn't . . . you couldn't say such things if they were not», true?" Jocelynis queer, perky little face took on a hurt almost martyred look. "You . . . Lucy, I think you then the might know 1 couldn't," she said, iii I'll go. l, i Jocelyn started up and caught- S-he turned hamewa-id saying half aloud: "Heavens, what an unearthly .muddle life is! And where's the truth to be found?" It was n cry from the depths of her poor, puz- zled heart, and she felt the sting of tears in her eyes. On reaching the flat, she found at last. PREVENT Coughs - Coltlis Scott's Emulsion» l a. fresh and UIIQXpEHrBO mrplexlty awaiting her; Oliver Amos. He was just going up to the dwr. and turned as he saw her approach- ing. Her heart qulckened, and slit forced back the tears that had bcvll fighting to mast/er her. But tlit necessity for quick thinking stead- fed her. (To Be Continued) a low, indescrbiibly pained voice- Lucy said no more; she nodded her head, but the adieux she tried 1o speak would make no sound. She gamed away, and went out into the street. holding her head high and proudly. . . . But once She was out of sight 0f the house hei- anew-re 0f pwud carriage crumpled somewhat. she felt shaky and wretched as if she 115d been actually physically beaten. She tried to think and didn't know when w begin. That Jocelyn “hi4 b, m, gm Jim loved! mo: he should have talked everythlnz out with hei- so freelil - - - Told her even the reason of his mar- rlqg with herself. . . . ‘Phat, more than anything, convinced her of the truth of what Jocelyn had said. Besides, no woman could say such thins! if they were not the truth. Hei- own utter honesty sup- plied this argwneiw. Vague, threat- rical vapour-lugs, yes; she knew that Jocelyn was capable of that. But such perjury as this No. It was not possible. No one could lic to such g, ghastly extent about anythinl 4o terribly important. Be- sides, it had sounded like truth. all the last par‘. of it. Joctlyifs breakdown had held the pognaney of i genuine torture. . Ques- tions revolved so dizzlly in her brain that she felt she would go mad with them. She walked and walked. trying to compose herself, feeling lost and alone. Not knowing where to turn for ndvu or comfort. ‘Iheri; was no one she could turn to, For she could not tell a cart of hei- trouble with- NOTED‘ baby specialists venient and rronomital. Carnation Co" Lim "from _ Contented Cows out tdlin: All. in ihe Kitchen (pure, unsweetened, evaporated) is easier_t0_ ' _ raw, boiled or pasteurized milk; that it is rich in (its; mins and other necessary food elements.‘ Alf-fl! sealing keeps out: all contamination._ BHIIB h°m?3°3; ized Carnation does better _c00_kll18»_ "Zmkcs (‘gm smoother and richer. Carnation is satis actory, Write In In: Baby Book and Cool 3W5 Carnation Milk ' c," inn-W “II-K FROM CANADIAN COWS. PACKED IN CANADA 1N A” CANS AND CASES and Magic find that Carnation Milk digest than ited, Aylmlfi 0“- {i