.-:.- ~.. om Réidlm -:-‘,.ASfocial and . . ,"‘;_;----.-- ... Vv V7 vv . PE vvv vvvvv vvvvvvvvvvvvvyvvvvvvvvvvw -:-‘ Literature “JONES-SCHOFIELWHATHEWAV. LTD. if DRIED FRUIY DIVISION) sAIN‘I'JoIm.N.a THE COOK ’S CORNER lmmzlz MAKMALADE Ono‘ plllvappe peeled and chop- il(‘d llllx‘. l gr-.II‘clrIIlt, 1 orange 1 lcllloll, water, ;.ug;u~_ ' ‘mice ‘lemon, grapefruit and orange d.sL'fI.'(lIllg the seeds. Mix with pine- “Dine. To each cup of fruit add 3 cups wlllu illltl et sloild over. n';:llt. Next lnorlllu; boil 15 min. utcs, ullCi)\(‘l'\.‘Ll. 14-; stand for 24 hours, then to each cup of frlilt a<ld_ 1 cup sugar. Boil until mixture is c.c:\l'. JELLY PANCAKES Ollc and one-half clips cake flour, 1 1-2 teaspoons baking pow. 41-31‘. 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon Sugar. 2 0385. 1 cup milk. 2 table- spoons butter or oiher shortening. Separate wlliics from yolks or eggs and beat yolks with milk. Sift flour once, measure and add salt, Sugar and lxlking powder and sift 82521111. Add milk mixture gradually, lmtlng until smooth. Add shorten- lng. Fold in Whites of figs beaten until stiff. Bake on hot. greased griddle, browning first o'n one side and then on the other. spread with jelly and roll. srmwnnnuv-rmnarnn JAM 2 cups diced pineapple 4 cups strawberries 6 cups sugar. Method: Prepare the pineapple in the usual way. It may be shred- ded if you prefer a. thidker jam. ' Cook slowly in as little water as possible to prevent scorching for about 40 mllll1f9<. Add the crushed szravliberries and the sugar, and cook until the mixture is thick and clear. Pour into hot, sterile jlu-3 and seal at once. From an old English cookbook comes this recipe for rhubarb chutney. It is very good with cold meats, and you will perhaps Want‘ to start using it right away, but it is so easy to make since it requires no cooking, that you can repkm. ish the supply as often as it runs ow. RHUBARB Cl-l'U'l'N'EY 4 lbs. rhulaarb 1 lb. cul-rants 1 lb. raisins 1-2 teaspoon cayenne pepper: 1 teaspoon salt 1 lb. granulated sugar 1 talrlcspmn ground ginger I 1 tablespoon mustard 2 lbs. onions 1 pint cider vinegar. _ Method. Grind the rhubarb, cur- rants, raisins and onions. Mix the Today’: Short Wave Radio Program ul In. in Down Rubi) WEDNESDAY. JUNE 11 Moscow 11.25 a. m.—-Opera with commen- taries in English. ENE, 26 m., 12 meg. Mooow: 4 p. 1n.—TllKZ "A summer Even- ing in Moscow": Music and news followed by the weekly review, Sov- iet opinion and World Affairs. RNE, 25 m., 12 meg. Rome ‘ 6 p. m.—News bulletins in Eng- lish; folklore concert. Talk by Prof. A. De Masi on present events. Light music. 2110, 31.1 m. 9.63 meg. Berlin 6 p. xn.—“1=‘idelio" by Ludwig van Beethoven. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg. London 6.45 p. m.—London scenes, No. 3: The Law Courts, by St. John Hutch- inson. GSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 meg, GSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg. (380, 31.3 m., 9.58 meg, Elndhoven, Netherlands 7 p. m.-—-Happy Programs. PCJ, 31.2 m., 9.58 meg. London 9.45 p. m.—“TIll Tomorrow." A play in one act, GSD. 25.5 m., 11.75 Annknnnnkk AAA vv v v vvv . King e 77...» HOUSEWIFE .....l HER ACTIVITIES THE DAY “The day will bring some lovely thing," “Some guy, adventurous thing to hold I say it over each new dawn, And solrise andgotomeet The day with wings upon my feet. No day has ever failed me quite. Before the greyest day is done meg., GR}, 81.3 m., 9.58 meg. 'l'oron‘o 10.30 p. in. — Lullaby Lagoon. CJRO, Winnipeg, 48.1 m., 6.15 meg., CJRX, innipeg, 25.6 m., 11.72 meg. pour over the mixed fruits. Turn into a stone jar and let stand for about three days. stirring occasion- ally. some people like a very hot chutney, so you may wish to add more seasoning. This requires no cooking and will keep without sealing, bll't ll’ ll’. 3 more convenient, it may be poured into sterile jars and sealed. Rhubarb. being an acid fruit, may be canned without cooking, in cold water and will keep well for winier use. nhulmrla owned in Cold wim- Cut the rhubarb into stalks to fit the Jars. Be certain that jars are well sterilized. Pack the rhu- barb tighily into these and 1111 the jars to overflowing with cold water. Adjust the rubbers and caps and seal tightly and store as _usual in a cool, dry place. This is more suc- cessfully done if distilled water is used. BUTTONS AND BUCKLE I come upon some misty bloom Or 8. late line of crimson sun. Each night I pause, remembering. some gay. adventurous, lovely thing, ‘ —Greaoe Noll Crowell. CONTRASTS Color contrasts such as black with orchid pink! navy with pale blue, violet with oerlse, chmtnut browns, violets, navy. light blue are smart. FOR SPORTS xj_. Gingham shirts worn under tan overalls with big patch pockets on the back look practical for any active sports that doesn't demand dressing to form. Benzine will remove stains on marble. WEDDING TRIPS CALL FOR EXTRA DINNER. DRESSES An extra dinncr dress is always sure to prove a blessing on the wedding trip . . . so. even if You are rushed for time, try and pick out one to slip in your going away suitcase. We ran across one of a fine black crepe. sleeveless, sleek of line and easy to pack. A black and white lace jacket with 3. small but perky peplum and a. row of tiny crystal buttons parad- ing down the centre front com- pleted the outfit. A dinner dress or an evening dress . . . to suit your whim and the occasion. Crisp affcf/I1, chiffon, cool cotton or linen. all make up into delect- nblo concoctions for that extra dress! FOR GOLF A new suede golfing jacket that has n. knitted back under a sued: panel which is extended into belt Shut fastens at front, is gaining popularity. GOLD-EYES Eye-lids shadowed with gold are the newest feminine make-up tricks in Chicago. They're intended for daytime wear, for they're not iridescent like last winter's style. ' They become both blondes and brunettes and harmonize nicely with tan. Eyes will not be entirely on the gold standard during the hot months. however. Vivid colors will be on show—yellowlsh green for blondes. and deeper green for‘ brunettes and redheads. 'I‘here's also a. sharp new blue. Eye-brows are groomed of stray hairs, but left natural in line, for it is now suggested an artificially accented arch makes the eye ap- pear smaller-—-and eyes, like lips, are large. full and expressive this season. The newest buttons, ‘ ‘ and ornaments for autumn will be of metal or carved wood combined with jewels in unique manner. one stylist in this field feels that there seasonings with the vinegar and is a decided trend away from the large button to the small or me- dium sized one. There Are More Things (By I‘. A. M. WEBSTER) ‘TEEN’ AGE CHILDREN MUST HAVE IRON‘ Hull’/I Is impossible without It For their growing bodies, young people need more and more blood. But when the system is low in iron, it cannot make the extra. blood rich enough. This impairs their proper growth, brings on rundown health, weakness, loss of Ippetlte, inattention at school nnd may cause fainting. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, the time-tested iron tonic, will correct these conditions because they supply the system with iron. They promote normal growth, impart strength, im- prove appetite and sharpen intellectual faculties. Do not let my young person be handicapped through need of iron. Give them Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, this very day! Price 501:. Dn.W/LLIAM$'PlNK PILLS Spring Fashions For Home Dress-Making Here's the newest spots dress with "shirtwalsty" look. Being smart, you won't be satis- fled to make just one—you'll want two or even maybe three. The sleeves out in one with the should- ers, makes it very easily fashioned Burmese you make one-l.n cotton Shin?-“|1s'~ao vosulah for summer- il: will look adorable in gay yellow. tumuoise blue or shrimp pink. For another, how about I printed sheer muslin in white on wine ground. You'll and loads of ac- cnsians to wear it for mftm-noons, to town or for those week-end vam- tions. Cotton dnllfs print, plqm, fin. od drink, crash linen, bub um, etc. in uncut! nitublo fou- yolr choice. Mylo No. rm K designed for was 11, 13. 16, 1'lVn.nd 19 years. Bus 16 requfru 8% yuda of 30-inch Ina- Price of PA'l'I'l:R.N is com In stamp: or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. . N'o.1"l'II. BID ... Strut Addfefl Olly - mm _ I . . TIAOTOI KILLS FAIIIII - .-~ ' henna - cor.) — Arthur. 3 fammr. was killed » , ,Gtutor,ln wuaou-ulna. unusual- “The trouble with you, young fel- low," growled Colonel Onnond, "is that you talk too lnuc The men in the club smoking room sniggemd. Young Beverley Parker had started by giving us his views upon paclflsm, and had then proceeded to blaspheme Shakes- peare by informing us that, in this twentieth century, there is little it anything, in Heaven or earth that is unwotted of in man’: philosophy. The sudden, briefly continued roar- ing of 9. lion in the zoological Gar- dens on the other side of Rcgenvs Park had dammed the spate of his torrent of words. The same sound had served to arouse the Colonel from private cogitatlons in his favourite fire-side comer. Beverley Panker flushed crimson at the direct rePl‘°01. W‘ the Colonel grinned amiably. “Do any of you fellows remember ‘Bungo‘ Hilton?" he queried, and there was a. murmur of assent. Most of us, in fact, remembered the big. quiet fellow. At such rare occasions as he was in England, he used to divide his time between studyins the fauna. in the Zoological Gardens and poring over maps of the most God-forgotten comers of the earth in the club library. "For an explorer of his exper- ience." Colonel Onnond continued. "Bungo Hilton had me beat six days out of seven. He wa.sn‘t quite 50 cock-sure about all the things in Heaven and earth as our friend Parker seems to be. but he did be- lieve that every phenomenon. 110 matter how strange It might seem. was capable of at perfectly logical explanation, if only one could hit upon it. Needless to say he did not take my stock of the no-called supernatural. And yet I rather fmcy he knows better nowndaya." "What's the yarn, Colonel-anhib?" queried a captain of Indium cavalry. as Onnond fell silent and est 7 thoughtfully stuffing his pipe. “H In, wish to the devil I could give you the explanation," growled the Colonel, “story ltself’s nor, dif- flcult to tell." “Go on! Fire ahead, Colonel- sahlb," we chorused. "1-I'm; it was in Rules that 1 ran across Bungo about five years ago." he answered, settling himself more comfortably in his chair. “We lunched wgether at Simpson: after taking our aperltlfs, for he was full up with some fantastic yarn he'd got hold of and was mad keen to get hold of a man to go out with him to Central Africa. And that, Parker, my lad," he broke oil’, "is a land where you'll certainly find considerably more than is dreamed of in your present philosophy out of England. "’I'hI3.t’s neither here nor there, however," he went on. “As I was saying. Bungo Hilton wanted ‘ A partner for 3. Central African ex- pedltion he was planning, and, as I'm fond of a bit of big-game hunt- ing, 1 said I'd go along. Once I'd promised, he didn't give me a. ghost of a chance to change my mind, and a month later we found our- selves in Nairobi. '»‘Acco:-ding to the yarn Bungo told me, he had got hold of in- formation which would enable him to locate the fabulous Elephant’: Grave Yard, which every African explorer and big-game hunter for the last half-dorcn generations has been seeking. You know the legend, 1 ,pose. and how it is believed that elephants are granted 3 pres- clence of death and make for 9. cer- tain, secret place, which has become the ivory treasure house of the world, on nccolmt of the endless number of ‘ephanta that have gone them to die? "According to Bungo, there was su tobencorneroftllelado enclave into which no white men Man’s Selfishness and Recently I published in this ed herself the “Other Woman." they would utfcnd to She fectlons hold their husbands there lost, stmyed or stolen. Naturally enoush this “Vic pirate and n kldnapper has 81'°“5°'-1 a woman who k they demand to 110W- money to feed her family. and of cheap shdes has cooked and scru she is worn to a frazzl go places, and look And so on and so on. admit that she is in nor do any of them blame ‘j had. 3,5 yet, penetrated: 3nd. 9&3"- from the grave-yard buslnefil “*9 inhabitants were rumoured to be 3- retty queer race. P “Anyway, we made our way up to Cvondokoro and, from there, struck east gowm-as the Abyssinian border. What. sort. of 5 country was it. you want to know? Well. it as 5 hell of a country, whichever way you looked at it. What Bunso used to 819% 3-5 ‘Miles and miles and miles of ruddy Africa,’ every morning when he woke up. “We were having breakfast out- side our safari tent when one of these fellows put in an appearance. The Watu Wageni they called themselves, as we discovered later. Bungo's Boy, Hamesi All, spotted the fellow first, and it was his ex- clamation, half-fear, half-wonder, and his outstretched hand that dir- ected our attention to a sandy hum- mock perhaps it hundred yards away. standing on top of the mound was one of the queerest ob- jects I have ever clapped eyes on. couldn't have been much under n feet in height, was as thin as I rail and stood there on one leg with the sole of his right foot press- ed inwards against the knee of his left leg, for all the world like a. bles- sed, ruminating stork. His complex- ion was no darker than that of the average dago and his features were thlnandaqulline.Aswesioodup to get 3 better look at him, he shook his spear at us, in greeting or menace-—we couldn't tell which- and then vlmlshed behind the crest of the rise. looks as if there‘: something in those rumours I've heard," Jibed Bungo, who knew that I had felt pretty sceptical about the whole business up to that moment. "We seem to have struck an outpost of the lost tribe; why shouldn't we find the Elephants’ Grave Ylrd into the bargain?’ “why not.’ I agreed gr dging‘ ." “We marched steadily north y east throughout 9. day of appalling I heat, when the burning warmth of the sand seemed to strike clean through the soles of your boots and the refracted rays of the sun were flung back in your face like a blast from the mouth of the pit of Tophet. Towards evening we came in sight of a cluster of grass huts built round the base of a conical hill, which was surmountcd by I single tree of incredible might. Everything in that strange country seemed to be long or tall and ex- tremely attenuated. "No one took the slightest notice of our approach. and the reason was won Apparent, for everyone was staring at an incredibly old man perched up in the top-most branches of that very tall tree. We halted our safari, wondering what the devil we ought to do next. and then we heard what that Incicnt oracle was saying. With one hand cling-tug to the slender trunk of the tree and the other shading his eyes he peered out north and south Ind cut and west: flinging down, the while, instructions on to when dead ‘ ” ‘ michtbefound, uptonva days’ march distant. As his munc- u flanked down to them. little bnndaofnrmedwnl-riorautolltfn the direction: be indicated. ‘'1 my add. rich: way. that Ill thou poi-ties returned within I fortnight, heavily laden with tub AMorningSm1'le i I Mother (onotletlcllly scrubbing nu-ll Boy (botwuan llllvl)-1-uchl ain't your little boy-uchi no unto, do colored lid)‘; boy. DyIhndoI~—"Di6 you not tho number of that on that knocked you down, madam?" Victim-"No, tho hung that was driving it won I Ihrn-pun ti d ;}hew.&§);:nw¢2.$i 31, make 3, real molt to would 1,, mighty few married men who were be always beautifully wa ink ilk-and-la.ce negligee for btealdfi-st? in 8 p S bbed and patched 3“ “med be a K61! e and every nerve is n qulverms °“8“’-Sh 1 companion who is ready to and care ess like a million dollars way responsible for her my their husbands. It rsohdli -:.- Fashions Dorothy Dix .Vanity Cause Him to go Philandering More Often Than _Does the Unsettled Conditions in His Home I columnalotfcrfmuu olnnuwho5l8n- in which she n-surly told wives that *1 their knitting flat she ma the whole sisterhood 0! lady loves would null their occupation 0! consoling disco nsolnte husbands gone. and that the reason husbands $09111 is because their hmnea are not made 00m- fortabls and attractive and because me“ wives am too indolent, or too indifferent 01' too absorbed with the children to cater W them and make a fuls Over them. they go seeking women who will put Pemlme bgmnd meg; ears, yes-yea them, entertain and muse them, make when feel his and important and fasclnatini. the Other Woman asserted, the wife al- ways the first mortgage on her husbands af- Hence Furthermore. he: being his pick, imd b reason of y the children, and W3‘- ___.___. e from one whom they 1'98"“ 38 3 ’°“'°‘ dander of wives. and M 0'“ me her. What (1095 h I ns in itriol to answer woman they hsyse £lp£en<l1e}_:w:eI'c£:r krwvzlgzoggokeepms ,, home together. n B wo ow cv:ho has to save pennies even to buy 3 P3“ has to pinch the market yea and manicured and dolled :1! How can a. woman W 0 and baby-tended until step out with her husband and in 5, hand-me-doum? of these letters does a 531819 cut from the dead elephmts they had found, in accordance with the directions of their witch-doct«0r. 1” no good asking me how the old dev- 11 an it, because I simply cant tell you. He must hove been but P311 of a hundred years old and was hard of hearing; but, according to local report, he climbed that Very tall tree every any of his life. and he was never won! in his P!‘0im°8- tlcatlorns of when dead elephfl-113° were to be found. “The ivory was carefully sorted as it came in, the best tusks being set aside for what was known as the Dead Man‘: Acre. This was 3 large plot of ground in which the witch- doctor-mlers of the Wogani had been buried from time immemorial. It: was fenced nu round with three rows of the finest elephant tusks in all the world set crlss-cross. Good heavens, there must be enough first-grade ivory set round that bally bone-ylmd to pretty nearly pay on our National Debt. “Long before the ivory retrieving parties returned. of course, the old witch-doctor descended from his tree and made us welcome. w2>u'l‘E‘.".Xp.£* 300R <oMI>I.E%EuI_ ' rI"s ESPECIALLY . MADE 1o (lump AGAINST uerv COSMETIC SKIN‘ Usl cosulmcu Of course you do! But don't let them choke your pores—cauae ugly Cosmetic Skin! Luz Toilet Soap removes coomctlu thoroughly. Ito ACTIVE lather keeps lldn lovely! __: Other Woman, whom they paint as a siren with occult powers that no man could resist, who weaved her fatal spell over their slmp1e_ um unsophisticated husbands and lured them against their wills down an primrose path. This, of course, saves the wives’ faces, and is a, comfort none w I deny them, but one wonders ii‘, in reality, any forsaken Wile believe; the myth 01 the had little girl who made her husband bl-ealk ills marrln vows, which, but for her, he would have religiously kept? For experience shows that we virtually never meet UP ‘Irith L ... tion until we go out looking for it. We all know that as long as 3, really loves his wife he is as immune to the attractions of ouler -. as if he lived in a. monastery. It is only when his wife's charms have begun to fall, and the certa.i.nty of her love to pail upon him, that he begins to be attracted by every petticoat, that crosses his path. What makes the philanderlng husband is not, to be found in the wife's failure to be a. perpetual vamp nor in the superhuman charm the vamp. It is man's own weakness, his selfishness, his vanity. nu ruthless determination to gratify his own desire: at whatever cost to any one else. And. most of all, in the fact that, as Mr. Howells once said after thousands of years of clvllimtion man is still imperfectly monog. amous. Why men who are honorable in all the other relationships in mg in dishonorable in marriage; why men who boast that their word is their band and who would be incapable ofwelchlng on any financial bflrflhlq are unfaithful to their marriage vows; why men who would not lie 14 anybody else on earth lie to their wilfu, is 9. mystery of the IDLVIIJLIE psychology that women, at least, can never fathom. Nor can may under stand why men who are tender and kind and sympathetic to all the wol- will put their wives through the torture, as cruel as any the Inquisition ever devised, of knowing that they have affairs with other women. These things simply are, men being what they are, but the burden their sin rests on their own heads and they have no right to hide bell the skirts of either their wives or their mistresses. The philanderlng husband doesn't jump the bars because he is drivefi out of the home lot or enticed out of it; He does it because he known 11 law but his own desires. and because he has not the strength and Dicky bone to live up to the obligations he has assumed. of your ‘YOU ALSO WANT FR_E_SHNE$S 5 cm 5 PN ass Qu‘A'I<eIz ASSURES YOU or THAT Too!‘ tool Th they (Continued on Page 8) ‘ DORDYHY mx. BIETT [R rmvoun , l 02’; gm‘ "You WANT W 'm"'%?I"m" .="——5XJ5'3.z. :.:?“o'..°'o'.'..°ii§° E§'X.°’rll’l1‘§f VOU GET ‘T ‘N Iflhey are not better flavoured, R more delicious dun Iny corn flakes you ever tasted, we gugnn. tee to return moneyinfull..;t dltions other ch-n those exacted by yourgnlnze sud by the palate: mily. Quaker Corn Fluke: Ire ll! Quaker Com Pllkcurethe on! only com fluke: wu-WIIPPGH com duh: with a man on the outside and triple-ac-ler~ gum-Iteo better 7011! to their I:riIP“°'’ ““ printed on every puhgo. fxedxneu for you. 0, Quake: Corn Flakes are better value cost no more and in addition cotheex usive featuresmendoned show no the only Corn Flakes irradiated for henlth with Sunshine Vitunin “D". And every package contains a valuable coupon cxchnngenble for useful mer- chmdhe. Ask your grocer for Quake: Corn Fluke: in the yellow QIJAKER , CORN l=I.AI<es“ {our purchase ETC ‘[0 I10 COE-