“QQQ-Fg. a- av-vleiivw-vnAi n.- , . . . r. """""‘ """ §Woman’s Realm -.1- Social . ugggggggyslgfssssni H11 H/hdt ‘the Fashio-ndblelslare i , 3* summon Drcesmaking 1mm amine-II _ ' Every PIN!!! ltflif Zllifi‘ orothy Dix LefterlBox I ,Must~ College Freshman Sow Wild Oats in "jOrder toMake theMost of Life?--Wluch ' “Aifltlakes Better Wife: Virtuous Shrew. 1 , , or Beloved Sinner? . r’ D ariMiss Dix-_—I am a freshman in college. All the boys that I [ go with drinisandgeuilile and only go with wild girls, and they tell m8 ithat 1 must do the same way. That that's the life. Personally I do not y ' ‘ . care for liquor or that type of girl. Must I d0 a5 the other boys do? I want to make the most of . BEN. n: yeunsnr worms and h lis- trons who fecltbgy can _ a_ m slimminl lines. do u IIXMVQIOIII. m interestiul cowl A, ice u eonplme with a _ The sleeves are liven a l eflect by circular frills. A novelty dotted pi1nt_ln_ the pop- ular blue and white colouring made u.» original. _ . . Style m. m is egiqisugor sins _ k _ , » is, is. so years, as. as, so, uisiiirgg Wiggins food‘ ‘f, 1 inches bust. Size as requires as’ ., other w.“ c011 ; i. yards of its-murmurs: with as By. she 1w. mbvvl yard of 85-inch contra _‘ . Kgivsci Rice K1152.“ ' ‘linen asaiu. you wish. _ I‘. a “J”“°°fl‘° . .. plain flat or s ainslo E Kelley's Rice" a ‘ whim [gqqufllylovqly/ _ actually crackle in l: as 5h“,- wwlem mum .149 be “us, cream. The very sound far . Be sure to nu in midis of n» chem ycunsswrl- iilwv , ‘ pattern. " " they love the flavor \ rriu of Pattern is cents in Serve for breakfast, f |tamps_ or coin (coin u purines.) " m” f“ u“ MZh-"fi Wrap coin carefully. . supper. So easy to digest, Rice Krispies invite restful sleep. How much better than many hot, heavy dished ' Sold by all grocers, All wsys oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Outer-lo, Quality guarantee‘ . ‘ bid- l” l i. 4 iii: y”. eaed ' 1. isi-Tsrifii Ygerpapu she ' \. J ‘fhelbcst way to answer your question, Ben, is to advise you to take s. look at the middle-aged men you‘ know and see which one of them ycu ‘_ would rather beiike when you are 45 or 50. Which, one hsimsde the most of his life? ‘and laughter and song and peace. She is generous, tactful, a. good sport, a gay companion, an angel of tenderness and sympathy to those in sick- ness or trouble, and she makes her husband sud children perfectly hBDDY. Which do you think is the better wiic sud woman — the Viiillvllfl shrew, or the beloved sinner? MARYBELLE. Answe . It doesn't appear from your account that your sinner has rel-ll! committed any sin. But, anyway, if I had to live with either woman, I would certainly choose as s. companion the one who occasionally stubs her toe because she is so busy helping others along the road that she doesn't watch her step as carefully as she should to the woman who walks thfl straight and narrow path without ever holding cut a hand to One in trouble. Chastity isn't the only virtue in a woman. Perhaps it isn't even the greatest virtue that one can possess. There are tenderness of heart and sympathy and pity and understanding and helpfulness and kindliness that make a. cloak that covers a multitude of sins. Of course, it is a. fine thing for s. woman to be a. good housekeeper, but it is not the most important virtue that a. wife and mother can p06- For 77w Cook RELIABLE CHOCOLATE CAKE Take the man who spent his time while he was at college making wlioopce instead of getting ‘an education. He drank. He sflmbled away the money that his par- fents sent. him and ‘iliéifperhapsjfliey made great sacrifices to send him ‘in order that he might go to college. He got in debt. He had affairs jvith wild ivomen and got into scrapes. All that he brought home with Jlilm from college was a college yell and a fraternity pin, bad habits and the iatuous belief that he could make a fortune without working for it. Ninety tunes out of a hundred at middle age he is s. failure, a down- and-cutter. Ho has tried a hundred things and succeed ‘ at none 0f them, and he hasfcome to the plilce where he lets his wife support him and bums his drinks and hangs around poolrooms and tells dirty stories ‘about what a wild one he was"when he was young. Every one looks upon him ivitli disgust and pity and he is s, seedy, shabby old figure sliambling to tho grave. do you think he has made out of life? Tllflllvtll€k6;l.§'ktl’l9_mUl,W£l:O, when he wa. ss. boy controlled his up. petites and lived ‘cleanly. When he went to college he studied and made One and three-fourths cup sugar. % cup melted butter, 2 eggs, 2% squares chocolate, 1 cup sweet t0}? milk, 2 cups flour, 3 teaspoons bak- ing powder, pinch salt. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Mix ingredients in the usual wgy, adding the melted bitter choc- olate last. Beat all with bcutcr until smooth. Bake in two layers in mod- erately hot oven. Put the layers t0- gether and cover cake with chocol- ate frosting. ‘ Chocolate Frosting: __--_—.-_~__--_--_-- N0. 888. B180 .............. "use" ulilll ~ .. -ri.roslllillelulalil mm \ Name Jilllliielslllseabsel nouns" nnaLndesussaness-snu "u." n. BMW .,_=...i¥;H-‘_1i'. the most. of hishpportunlties. He was no prlg. He Joined in all the svlialcsome college activities and had plenty of fun, but he leitywlne and women and pokergaines“ slonefibéccuse hehgd sense enough to know that it takes the Judgniefitflangknovvledge of life of a many; walk warily amid certain temptations and that a boy had best avoid imem altogether. At ageAyou ‘wlllnsarly always find‘ the men who made a suc- cess at collegeyrriakiliiigua. success at life. He irss prospered in his busi- ness or professionjsriggis honored andrespected and is the backbone of the,oommunityfinéviiiichghaj_livis. _ y,“ Which‘_o_r'ie_oflthese¥cwo'_sllen‘;vhls_shade the most of lllei one trough_with:tns,iionrogyifiiségifif§ztlp‘n is ma: they believe that because mallyh_t_lliflfif_g_ll}fl‘mgj. J _ edgtlzaiifiiuifs itself has changed and [that the oldgnaliriirrsfibyfwlllghjtli. {ffricfsirhers were guided along the yroad _t0:su£c_§_fs£[_1gl_l8er pgintltg yqyililieysinerrt. But in this ‘they aagjsadl-y BRQIL. The etesmi espever chimp. They are niwayelthe s e. . Youthwisiitili“ the time Ayvhen a haracter isjorsried and the kind of murfhelhrlilifklésYif-tfiiiselflfdtroo » the arid of tile’ chapter. Iffllelqbccoméis‘ d sprain in- in msmyloum. u.» ‘chhlnces areltliit he, ' " h“: becomes an or and a lwssteirwinlfmafs fields to happen-and miracles seldom oclc, fitofillniqilifigintoatefl “out gp-meer. Nobodylhlasdisiiibyersfiany‘ ‘ejhbrtcilts to ferns and fortune. ploiidfi-ig clung. Fortune you stiuieettifielfilialsfi ' __ _ still ‘smiles on; _ "to, them 5nd employers are ctili,llookirlg_iffor'dleaiw.t_ . who are more interested i... their, w t . ’ ' ' , "LU, and who have ambi- hions pbove kn - l - diflerggt vgicties of cock- tails.» DOROTHY mx. '~ - Desi- about two vles'vvs'zl:1!‘?8'v7. _ . , ‘digger, reitnrui _ the m ‘TdEi-es‘, b ~ . _ . and a. tongue like a two-edged waif filiemiiialjrdle wlthfiweighbors, fights with her in- laws, whiriesfizndjzorfimu” L andlis very dieuBl-‘ccflblc- The othgsnyz ipaqr ; Jsttrsctlvs to men and indulges inlmild’ "Ybut her-nu islfdll of cats and dogs N...» _...1a:r-*‘. .. ntfi't~fix' - we . liibition held in the S658. And I have been in other home But, fortunately, a woman "can ‘Jolly good fellow. Dear lvliss Dix-J am a. girl, 24 ,married main and he is with me. tion before my many friends so it Answer Ybu can't. The day has gone condemned. out. girl knows her way about andiis So my advice to you is to be a Your friends and acquaintances will will simply give them a. laugh if you they will if you leave the man to stand all the obloquy alone. Some of the most uncomfortable houses I have ever visited in were as clean as a pin and lmcl excellently prepared meals, but the women at the head of them were naggcrs and scoids and were such slaves to order that. no one dared move for iesr of disturbing things. s where everything was at sLves and sevens and the food enough to poison an ostrich, but where thelwivss and mothers diffused such gayciy and} good nature that they made their homes s. place of refuge to which the r children flew from the world. be both a. good housekeeper and a You don't have to choose between one or the other. DOROTHY DIX. O O O years old, madly infatuated with s Now the fact about. our relationship ‘has been discovered, even his wife knows it. How can I Justify my posi- _ will appear that! am the victim of his wiles, instead of being equally guilty with him in the matter? SAPPHIRA. by when s. girl could pose as,a vic- tim of the perfidy of man and be wept over and pitied instead of being The old ignorant, innocent, credulous Everybody now knows that the hard-boiled, sophisticated modern phrflstly has" that when s. man leads her into temptation it is ing for it and has given him the high sign that it is all 0. K. by her. racket has played f what she is doing and good sport and take your medicine. hsvenllot more respect for you than And you try to play the innocent. DOROTHY DIX. Montague Much interest was taken by the ladies of Montague and surround- ing districts in the Handicraft Ex- Eaton audi- torium at Toronto in the latter The experienced iucligmanf ‘ of thousands and of Canadian makers-JON Dliic Cleanser ls tho only delimit‘ they need In their homes. ,4, Why? '._ . l. Hero's the Reason! ' Old Dutch cleans mom filings than anything °|‘.sssThQy don't have to clutter their shelves with a variety of powders, pastes, bricks and inferior cleansers. Mn Edgar Simmonds oi Consecon, Ontario, tells of her [marbling experloncs with Old Dutch. _"My housekeeping experience proves Old Dutch jhrlser unsurpassed slnco Ii cleans more _ orcughl and economically more articles with less a on. _. gfquliliiy, oh Kitchen utensils of Iron, steel, agate, tin and aluminum, oven the dining-seem sliver readily brightens to lie scouring action. The bathroom requires Ii for the porcelain. and nickel fittings. (loaning ls not complete In the laundry unill Old Dutch I: applied to my washing machine, copper boiler and galvanized tubs. No scratches result from Ila ma. Surfaces are renewed and polished while the hands are never harmed. Time and one: ih saved mean youth and heart“ lor housewives." _ Get beiiar acquainted with Old Dutch. ii gives you greets: value In quolli , allel- '"= '.'°°'i£.'l'.’.;2".$'..i‘..'.""!.‘.'l.... ii‘.- fiss-Zli». us u. soluble cud; will convince you. ‘Buy Ii today. MADE IN CANADA A NIOII seem LYE“ OIINI CIOOOID DIAINI- s Kl!” MAIN. GIN Al‘ All. IIOCIII pip’, rib, part of April. 'I'he Eastern Pro- yisices were all Montague sent about forty mats, s. number of fancy bedspreads. cushions, home made flax portlcrs and a variety of other beautiful work. These articles are for sale as well as exhibition. The super- visor of the Women's Institute on Prince Edward Island, Miss Helen Haszard ‘of Charlottetown. wrote a letter congratulating the Wo- 'mcn's mstitute of Mdntague on their splendid success in this enter- prise. Friends will be sorry to learn that Mr. Ewen Houston is confin- ed to his home through illness. ...._._. .Mr. J. R. Brehsut is having great success with his poultry raising this year." He has seventy chick- ens hatched out by hens. which is quite a record in this day of incu- bators. ‘ Mr. Earl Grant, medical student at Dalhousie College, has return- ed to spend his vacation at Mon- [wague with his parents. Dr. and ‘Mrs. '1'. Grant. Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Goudgc mo- 3 tored in Montague on Wednesday accompanied by their children and Mrs. Gerald Prowse, Mrs. Simon Jordan and Miss Lucy Liimsdcn, all of Murray Harbor. Among the visitors to Montague Ilast week werdwcre Mr. W. H. firs. per, Haliflt, H. Duff, Halifax, B. Ygo, lourie, Mrs. Adams and Mr. Wolf. Liverpool, N. s. A meeting of the Women's Insti- tllh Ill held on Tuesday evening. u” 8rd. in the Montague Memor- gfl ghoul, Mrs. Martin MacKin- um and elected president and Mrs. Mons Wright vice-president. The subjects! the unnunl school con- ssre, gt the closing of the school yfljfdlllhfi up and plans were well represented.‘ idiscussed, also the annual Red [Cross collection. It was decided ithut the collecting would be done ‘this week. The following letter written to the Institute by Mr. J. Matthews. Principal’ of Memorial School, was read: Montague, P. s31. . » May I, 1932. Miss Edith Houston. u Baby Montague Women's Inst. Montague, P‘; m. I. Dear Mndamzi-On behalf of the teaching staff of this school I wish to extend our most sincere thanks to you and‘ to all members of your Institute who assisted in any way in the‘ obtsinment of the set of three maps so lately instglled for our use. You have not only partly reliev- ed us of the laborious and almost fruitless efforts of trying to instil in the pupils’ minds geographical ' New Wonderful because she is out look- 1Q sugar, 1 teaspoon‘ butter and ‘it cup water until it hairs. Pour this over the stiflly beaten whites of two eggs, to which has been added ‘A tea- spoon cream of tartar. Beat until Cook 2 cups Oity Physicians mustrelieve the sick. friends the afflicted. u____—q-i-__. thick, then add 4 squares of melted “ chocolate. Stir until stifl’ enough , , to spread. Add 1 teaspoon vanilla, A MflfnlngsfllllQ and. 1 cup of chopped pecans. , cnuriuus Jammie: I Minsiter. “There's one thing my deer ldrly that you really have to i be thankful for, you have ah cx- I iraordinurily good natured man. I i have never seen him cross nor peev- Face Powder Prevents Luge Pores- ltsyl on Longer _ Hoscwith the Two-Way Stretch! , For a youthful complexion, use new wonderful MmLO-GLO Fsco Powder. Hides tiny lines, wrinkles and pores." New French process makes it spread more smoothly and stay on longer. No more shiny noses. Puiest face powder known. Pre- vents large pores. Ask today for new, wonderful face powder, MEL- LO-GLO that suits every complex- isli. Is he Just us good natuied st home?" Guid wife: "Well, yes, Jamie has never said an ill tempered word toe me Alfli say that much for him." Minister: "He's an excellent man so considerate of your feelings. ~Guid wife: "Well I wmdns. say ‘l’ quite that considerate, no’ lust the rlcht word-but he's cautious." facts without visualization of place positions, but you have also partly removed the handicap under which the geography students of this school have been laboring for some time in attempting the study of this important subject without the most important. stimulating agent, the modern map. Bo once again I wish to assure you that we are all deeply grate- ful lo you. and hope ere long you will be able to augment the num- ber already donated. Very respectfully yours, John C. Matthews. ‘ Prin. Mont. Mem. School. Master (to new boy): What is a man o'war? New Boy: A cruiser. Master: What makes it go? New Boy: Its screw, airi Master: Who are on board? New Boy: Its crew. sir. Master: You're s very clever lad. Where were you born? New Boy: Crewe, siri The éharmo lleler —Quiekly, Easily Willi Magic Tisisx Gives m Fabric O In lleme er Wardrobe ANY Desired Dolor! All your faded dresses- "wsshed-ont” lingerie —_- drab drspcriq and other household fabrics. . Jetthemagietcsiclsof‘ Timex w-lllnsfonn them saith Indy new , . It’s so easy so restore all - their original color-charm or to give them new and diflerenf color, if you wish! _ . Gomthenesreetdrugnorc or notion counter today-ask co RECIPE FOR BABY FOOD Relieve Cbrirflfl wry line. "poor n» than noagb boiling mic-r ta ash s full; fbhslowl with will: up! may be dial If lea-ind. seetheSSsmArtcoIoi-sonthe Kaysefs ‘FIT-il-ALL-IOP‘ Stockings The twolviray stretch! Ksyscfs own ideal From knee totcimtheyhavcaspecialspringywcavetbatstrctchce up. downandarmmdi Aweavetbatabeorbe gsrtsr- f, strain; lessens danger ofruns; and “gives” with every‘ i movement. Such Such glorious freedom! v.5. v‘ To tbs plum "PivAll-lfops" give the width of an outsiraTor-aizdlnchcsofutralcngth. Toavcvy- bodr-the perfect fitting stccklngatrno. extra cost.» Only ems. cum-mm _8cml-Scrvice--218Xi O AT ALL T!!! BETTER ‘8HOPi_o Tintex Color Card. The rest is s mere matter ofmomentsanderupriseddeligirtl g-‘IHEATINTEX GROUP-s This: Ony Boa-Tints and dyn all materials. mm Blue Bes- ! I eo-ulnnsd silka~tinls the .51. lacs rulsaifi original color. I Flinn-A bl for roaming i nese to all xlllgiwadwbiu mead“: $9.58..“ 15¢ it _i menu»? l a A Uliiffon or Service. . the Hosiery Department-today." ' ‘f: