'di lit ve m G re W Hi in l m. ed th :ir sc pe qi or M bi Oi cc !’.?..‘l°'€5U N be as cl R C. _.AGE Two » Tggcnaaborrarown GUARDIAN _ g g _ _ _ h....uMBi:a 6 L1 _ - - 1 - ...__-' .& r _ 7 ____. .L_. _.. _ _ _ - ----__- --~-- 2;- - ' __. - -_ ' - - W Woman s Realm - - Social and Personal -- Fashions -- Literature _"E _ E 9!! _|11 x_.u. - Havinga Career has iviade Une woman Dorothy Dlx Letter Box j a Better Wife and Mother-How Can Child ` _ Become Credit to Parents if Father - Undoes Mother’s Good Work? di Dear Dorothy Dix~! think you make n mistake when Y0\1_8fl\'i5¢ women to stick to the home and not try to mix careers with matrlmony. Outside activities, such as clubs, whose plc&S111'€5 DFG Vl¢81‘i0\lS. or hitting from a. lecture on politics to ri game of bridge, will not do the trick of emancipating the spirit of women. We younger women who have had tc concentrate on one absorbing occupation to earn ii living before our marriages are the onlyieally iai- dcpcndent women in this country, whether we stil! earn money or not. Never \vill a home, husband and children be our whole world, though our love and consideration for them is not lessoned there- by. When our children leave us we will not be bankrupt. The world has changed, living coii- ditions are diliercnt, and there is nothing the: would solve all oi’ \\'omeii's problems better than regular eilort along one line, something they can build week anti from year to year. A WIFE AND MOTHER, Answer: I agree with youthat a woman makes ii mistake when she put.; all ho is left spirit- ol hcl' wealth in one coin, as Mrs. Browning says, and w ually destitute if she loses that. N0 women coniniit a greater folly tha - . . UNSC ‘V110 80 Hbsollllsll' domestic as soon as they are i their homes. 'rhey grow diillaiid stale and narrow, and their very l1ld0mtZ b~’C-"USG in thc end they become nothing but pieces of donicsti ‘m‘°h’“°"5'- Tlmil' V‘~‘1`Y love becomes burdensome to the husbands and tliildrn on ivhoni they lavish their devotion. Al! of us kiiow plenty of women like these. Women c-y_ y o 'Jwn wliatever, and when their lilisbaands die or their chi ‘.l`.cy are utterly lonely and forlorn. Like Othello, thei s. No frieiids_ They are helpless and bewildered as lost children in the dark. There are thousands of middle-aged women who money to live on independently, who might have their know they _iiiciiaec their cliildreirs homes, because th throiigli their cliildren. They have no interest in the w P\¢¢’Dt John and Mary. I believe -that every woman should be sufficiently to provide herself against this rainy day wlien she may 1 liusbarid and when she will surely lose licr children, 1 bel keep up hcl' fricndsliips, her social connections, her accon keep her interests as wicle and her enthusiasm as fresh leve she should ipiishments and as she possibly on from week to __ _ V iinrricd and \vho nclci tlieieaftci liaie a thought or an interest that isn`t bounded by viriucs are their _ V who have lived to much iii the lives of their familie s that th ha. en lives left of their lciren leave thcni have p‘enty of own homes and travel, but who have to go and livc with their ehiltlrcii, althoiigli they ey have to live urid in anything, forward -looking Jossibly lose her Tl ll wc are aiivays qilai'i'eliiig about him. My husband never corrects him, E 1;? MRS. M. J. S. i Answer: , _ . ' I don't know, unless you could have your husbnnd's head operated City State on and a few brains inserted in ii, for it certainly does seem as if a. mlm with any intelligence whatever would have sense enough to realize that 'ents think ¢_ha|; when 3, gl,-1 is 15 gpg should leave school and go to wo,-|¢_l ymncum he is ruini.._, the child. . Fon oaowitio cH:loREN | Gaownve children need a rich supply of vitami11S.I0 “Sure present health and to develop sound bodi¢S lhlf Wm be resistant to disease throughout a lifetime. N nvsnsr rtaicas is specinuy rich in vitamins _ _ .fora _ is the world’.¢ ricbe.ft_yea.rt (brewers’yeast), dried and flaked. As a natural laxative and a health- builder, it is valuable to both child- I ren and adults. Give it to your fam- ily regularly every day- It k¢¢P§ ill.-' , definitely. At gi-ocers’and druggists . YEAST FLAKES SPICIII. PUII CULTUII ` (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) CONCINTRATED IREWIRS' YEAST T_HE_NATIONAL BRBWBRIBS LIMITED. MONTRBAL_ sales .\n~n¢_~i; ii_\ito|.n if. iirrcilu-2 .v (u.\ii'.\:~i, LIMITED. T°f°"\“ Dear Ml.-s Dix-My husband and I have one child, n. boy ol' 6 and i4, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40- i stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. 3?. .13 ' What the Faslilonables are Wearing SMALL CAKEs*made with Mag,-ci W Illustrated Dressmaklng Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern _ By Annabelle Worthington -____l Heres a chic two-piece dress that 5 ' will give interesting change to the wardrobe. It is bottle green over- plaided in mustard-yellow tone. The scarf tie is bottle green rough crepe Vg suit. 'rho bone buttons are in muon- Q _ ‘~ ,_ x ing green shade. The leather belt _ repeats the green tone. .~ 'if '_ ,_‘.;:‘\¥i9a ~' '-'">""'/ It has loads of dash. ` You‘li like it to wear to the foot- ball games. _.~ _ :».= 7 .._f.¥? 'Q . ' ' 1,,-.-a rg € Grey tweed mixture with black contrasting is delightfully new and smart. _ Cashmere wool jersey, w0.ol crepe /____ ,iv P; \_ and rough crepe silk are other nice mediums. G- __-ff _ 5: -- ‘ts-` i~ .'*;\ v Style No. 929 is designed for sizes | -2.-_:‘="_..» nches bust. _ ,_,1f';_‘<;,; Q _l " Size 16 requires 2%. yards 54-inch with 1,4 yard 39-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern 15 cents iii ..:__"_~: " _V A; _ ," volunteers Nlrf- J°=M° M°° Kenzic,ofI`oronoo, is ,in winneroftlireelirtt prizes at the 1931 "" Canadian National Exhibition. "In l`a¢¢» I W0'-\ld_l1'¢ think of using any °tl1°l’ 5511118 nn. .ii my nt.. with Macie- lt' I didn't, I am quite sure] never would have won so many pnzez. Magic given all baked foodsan extra line quality of flavor and_text'ure that lift them out of the ordinary clans." Magic Baking Powder is used ex- ¢n.».°~1y by an nnyonry °f ¢°°l§¢ry experts, dietitians, and housewives oliroughout Canada. In fact, Magic oursells all other baking powders No. 929. Size ..................... '___ a ywzz ives hini everilliing he wants, never makes him obey and thinks that I _ . ‘ \ ~ ' “ ' “ “ "" m fussy when 1 try to ieucli him regular habits and good manners. My Name ~,` ,g y ~-con-mins No liusbiind also ridlcules ine in front of the boy. These arguments over i __ (I 'rg §_»» ,, h A‘l..l::¢‘;l'°n':‘l1°l; 1' °°°"'P“U°“ is rearing the boy are making nie a nervous wreck. What can I do about " ` ` ' ` ` ` ' ` ` ` ` ` " ‘ ` "` < gone. 'fhcy have no interests of their own. No contact i t 0 Ol' I O N from nlumovnn *l|ro. lAoKenzIe's Prize Recipe DELIGATE CAKE M cup butter 2 teaspoons Magi; 2 cupuv fruit sugar Baking Powder K 'cup milk Whites of 6 egg; 3 cupl paltry flour 1 teaspoon almond ` _ extract Crain butter and add augur. Sift flour und baking powder together “vu-gl times. Add Hour and milk niiernnicly in the butter and lugu. Then add eq whites beaten very nuff. Add ah-bona extract. Bake hull' ol' batter in lmnil fancy cake moulds in moderate oven at - 375' F. for about 20 minutes. Pour otha- .»= halfln layer caketim and bake in mort. ernte oven at 375' F. 35 to 40 minuin; when cool, cut in fancy shape; win, cookie cutters. Deconte no illustrated with icing, chopped nutl, candied ornngi peel, jelly, uiclwuc, muuchino cher- ries, etc. , __ only tln to your 2 ,__ ,_ §;'::f§';;;{';; runs coox Book-Winn in mtv _gv ll’ Wd I lr Y ¢ bake at home, tnlte advantage of the ar- iractive recipes in the Magic Cook Book. 1 dump °' Write to Standard Brands Ltd., Fraser Ave. bt Liberty Sz., Toronto, Ontario. I For The Cook *Z -\:` Mom1'ngSmilc_1 It :ri :rr _ e'._ df” . ..- ,i » 1, .2 fl /. '/` Y. . 1-,f,_g,t can so that she will have resources within herself that she can call upon in her need. But all of this is different from liei' following sonic career iii the out- side world that will take her away froin her home and h er children. I do not sec how any woinan can be both it successful wife and mether 'uid _ . a successful business woman or lect urer or doctor any mo can be both a successful carpenter and lawyer. Either o all l.he.tllne and intelligence and energy that one indiv Of course, there may be here and therc a superwoman w piish this feat., but iii orclcr to do so she needs to have th re than a man ccupation takes idual possesses. ho can accom- c luck to get ii In the cases in which I have seen it tried out the husbands got tired siiperiiilsbaiid and have supcrchildren. of having wives who were always oft` speech-making or sin giiig or decor- Htlluf Some iw'-ISC -1 111011-wid "H105 ulvay. and sought the society of inches who were Sal‘y-cii-i`lie-.spot and ilie children brought up b es and iii boarding schools developed into warped little Flueci' ideas and no affection for anybody. y trained nurs- crcatures with Of Course. when a woman needs to make money to feed and clothe her children and give them decent living conditions il; 15 for her to work outside of the home, but I believe that nocessity should drive her to doing it. I believe ina; by-in -'PH by hand is ilie biggest and best paying business iii whi --tan be engaged. DORO O `0 O O 0 O the right thing only finanacial glng up child- ch any mother THY DIX. B\'|ln Pla young hoodlums whose parents also reared children on the theory that nm (mb, yum chances of getting 8' Job but the pay you get Wm depend they would be all right when they were grown and change from little E devils to big angels. Good manners and good principles and a consider- ation for the rights of others have to be “proned” into children, as our old nurses used to say, when they are little, or else they never learn them. pon your answer. Many occupations are barred entirely to girls who ave quit school at 16. Perhaps when they realize that you can capital- ize an education in dollars and cents _your parents will not deny you one. DOROTHY DIX. The child psychologists tell us that the patterns of our lives are ilxed V in the cradle, and that by the time we are 6 years old our characters are formed. How important then that a youngster should get the right start ` and form the habits that will make for its success in life, instead of hav- ing faults flxed upon it that wiii be a handicap to it to the day of its ` death! “ ” When parents quarrel over the rearing of a child they forget that they , are lowering their prestige in his eyes and teaching lt_a contempt for ‘ _ them. A‘so, they forget that a ehiid takes its opinion of its parentst ' from what they think of eachother, ~ C S Y Some day you will want his fathers opinion to have wel ht; with 8 _ little Johnny, but how can it when he has heard you deride !ather‘s ` A T f judgment iz thousand times? Some day your husband will expect hh r ~ -fan 1./'F 'I- _ 1.. mother to influence Johnny, but how can mother‘s views have any lnfiu- i I' 3 w 0 8 “ml lf- eneeRwitl1i him ig fzthertltilas aisvaysiridichled lherdto ljiiiitg? d it d | _ an Excellenf Fooi _ ear ng a c i in ese ays s a. \vo- ian ed o , an nee s a ~ 11-~ ° mother and father doing teamwork to pull it off. cmmdiirgcnw' 1%, GROWING CHILDREN T%.’¢;g I I cup light bmw? mga* _ noaornv mx. _ _naw _ _ -f £4- - ‘I _ 1-3 cup water _ Dear Miss Dix-What value has an education for a girl? My par- Pu’ °°'° and h°l"° the ° ‘es h _ PP 2 cups seeded raisins 1 1-2 cups boiling water 1-2 cup suv' 1 tablespoon grated orange rind 2 tablespoons cornstarch 2 tablespoons lemon ,luloo 1 tablespoon grated lemon 'ind Juice 0! one orange i cup chopped walnuts Cook raisins in boiling water for five minutes: pour into it sugar and comstuaich which have been mixed. Cook until thick; -remove from fire and add other ingred- ients. 'Bake between two crusts. Walnuts may be omitted if desired. Caramel Raisin Plc 1-2 cup seeded raisins 8 Tart apples 2 Tablespoons butter The young hopeful was display- ing the beautiful Bible he had wo! for regular attendance at Sunday School. » » A friend of his mother, whom you and I would call il. decidedly young- ish woman, spoke up: “I remember that I won a. Bible for the saml thing, when I was your age." The youngster looked her critically. "H'mm," he commented at length. "That must have been the Old Testament." and arrange in 9. broad saucepal or aluminum frying pan. Cover with the raisins, then suslr: adl the butter, cut into bits. add wail and stew gently until apples in tender and the butter and sugar _have formed 9. rich caramel. Mn: _ be served hot or cold, with or with- out cream. or as 'an accompari ment to plain boiled rice. gcr department just at present, Mr. Geoffrey. Mr. Errans will look after .-z_ 1-, ,_ it l 0-nlo'0lhnn no~o»n»vq“ ,_ , 1|. »,», AsnEs»fnosEs‘ A Romance of Today By Joanna Cannan _ Geoffrey could not remember ever having penetrated into the ledger department. It depressed him even more than the main oflicc had done. In the inaln office there was at least a sense of movement; one felt that people came in and made unbusinesslike enquiries, and that occasionally into the mind of the ‘ . dark, merry girl there would steal as frivolous thought of a spring hat. ,All the clerks in the ledger depart- BY ;inent. were men. A deathly silence. believed only by the scratching of line nibs forming figures, brooded RADIO BATTERIES RECHARGED RIGHT tV. C. Smallwood Radio Service 122 North River Road E717-ll-24-lst-tf. >_-__ .___ Twenty-livn :ir-res Z.uwe:' Rall; Day, Kings Co., l'. Ii. I., eirwciilei-ii pores under cultivation, balance woodland. ell 12 x 15, barn 21| x 1:6, loan to Ill x 36, granary 220 x 24, hen- house I0 x 15. Watered by well. Nearest railpoint Souris 3 miles- tchoai ',§ mll~_~. Terms of sale are 10%; of pur- umount to be $100.00, the balance ln 5 to 25 equal annual instalments num. When the outstanding hal- uncc of sale price is less than $1090 payment must be complete within a correspondingly shorter period and you." He faded away. "I’ve got some card indexing that him bringing an open cardbonrdl box. Here are some cards for the of bud 9, mn," h umm, index, Mr. Geoffrey. When you have benefited by tho upon of- not now have exchanged it for the I want rather urgent, Mr. Geoffrey," vous smile. “Miss Bennetts at work on it, but shes just stepped in to Miss Harrison for some inform- frey sat down he face acr th desk where the two girls were still been prepared for him, for it was' provided with a clean iukpot, fresh] finished them, you must go to Mr. U ¢ Tumer, and he wil! give you out V said Errans with his kindly, ner- t some more. Ah, here is Miss Ben nett. Come along and we will e ' t » : 'ngle yarn 23 Fiiy looked away from Geoffrey an in'l.ial deposit oi’ $lrl0.0(l is rc- _*_ __ _ _ Filing thc carbon poplar, gf - F. cents, d bl ' quired. Each lender must be ac- companied hy an accepted chi-r|u|~` ‘ " `~" " " " " for $100.00. Tenders will be opened f 4 ` 7 "' nz me onlne or un- soldier settle- ' " ,- ; ," ` _,VJ ‘l_ _, -.,-f_. ff .rbi _ '_+ N F .' ' -I , :A lj.-if _ _ - ' " ' "Nu " i ”"~i fi ment of Canada on December 19th, N132. Tenders should be marked on 1S’Pli“Lriruu‘iiit-:'sir_’i_ 2 Fw* _Blume envelope "Tenders for the purchase nl Melvin Dongle Fnrm and add- ‘csacd tn ‘the Sofdler Settlement ol Fanarie, Box H18, Saint John, N. B. Occ. 5-21. ou cd 2b cents per pound. lllunkvu $2.00 and ll unlaundered ;lI.85,k It tvavkes five lbs. of wool per not really pretty, the fair one hav- e¢|a:n:|Lni| h|:ur':':" ing protruding teeth and the dark out. The size of single yarn is med. one being rnr too rat, saw by the '“"\ and doublfd nm ane._medicm big office clock above the doorway 223°' 7'? ’Mp°"’ “"‘" °” ‘hal “G11 How It was ony half-Past om: ¢na'\::iru, 3,.. ..., Vg, _,_ i .`.- A >.V_5L.KL . ,L ‘_'l_'.»._:~<. -.4 ‘_ "gr-rtf.¢,.Aié.l¢t.»a§&.» then. "Thats right," she said rather quickly. "I‘li tnke it over to him. He can have the first lot now. I'vc In a sort of dream, Geoffrey took the list that Errans held out and listened to his instructions. Then he went across the oflicc to his table and sat down there. .He looked at his work. It was quite easy. Perhaps, he thought, the ol- fiee was not going to be such a bad 13 Enix £50! done with it." `. -greenest lawns and the deepest shadows and the coolest river in the world _ (To be Continued.) 8 t ann" t .oust be p esedted within fourteen the lists from ner." __________ -___. ---i MARGATE SCHOOL -“WS H»I~f=f 111° °°mm¢l\°°m°“¢ °f ` A gi;-i had mme in through the 'Umm B ohm that added shyness Honor RD11_‘f Navemben tlhéenzeuion exclusive of |d,,ourn. ation. »She'll be back in a minute. door at the end of the office, but and something of the Woodlnnd £0 G Bde X_1 Gerald Major . Just take a seat over here." ;Geoffrey had been looking at the ;her charm. Her colourlnil WHS "Off Gr d IX_1 vwan Mgrks 2 59, N0 Private Bill |hn|| bs He indicated a small table in the ‘ index cards and wondering how on fplnk and white. but warmer. UW Geo:_;e°H0wm_d ‘ ' H ‘ t d t I “un _ ~ ~ ' ' f 1 ch, - pe . ion urs presen e ruy 1 g lseeondlbay. It stood outside the file ‘earth you made a card index and Dale. flushed sold o a rpe tie; 1 Grade vn_l Ralph Howard' the msc at me mm at tho “non tcabinets, the back of the chair was what happened if you made it In repose, her face WHS _WS U - 2 Eve] n Johnson 3 Inn Henderson ‘or “ch Bm and “ch “mum mm against the b`i1I'lk wall; when Geof- wrong; and he had not noticed her. childish, innocent, but in anime- 5’ VI I Oiive W ide 2 be aimed by me sud “rum d, oss e Now, as he followed Errans into the ,tion would brighten instantly to a ($315 d” n 3 ch r°°d5le Dénms V tt ha" b space kept clear for walking up and third bay, she was standing beside 'roguish galety. Her body was small E"Grad§UviF;01;emy Feamfnd wigkéiatotmhmle cexnnfenuemelrt ala' down the oflicc, the end ot’ the her typewriter with a list in hex- and slender, and her movements » eve" session Commun' M nw hand: and she looked up at him. ‘were eloquent. She looked fragile. Dem” Howard' 3 Daisy M”-l°r‘ mgmhu., of whom gm-ge |11." 5, 5 checking figures in the same under- An;l the offices of Gilmour and not e weak, but dc`ic&l2ly WTOUSM- Grade Iv_1 Ewen clark quorum, to he denominated, T110 tone. The table had evidently Legnio Limited faded. Ana me A Dresden china azure waso sus- Grade IH-1 Phvllfl W°°