(l ‘- aans-esss-e e-agars-rn-enrs-nur-t is" "nu dnilhp . W. t . ln Moncton, NJ, Miss Martha Poole is very well hows as a cook o! extre- ordiaary ability. 4 Her Hank and ao- quaintances never raise an opportunity to enjoyherbakingandsheyanlotidin their praise of her skill. Like many other clever cooks, Miss Poole follows one rigldrulezsbewillusenothingbuttbe finest ingredients and places great inr- pottenre on flour. She says, "l use Robin Hood Flour for everything." No flour is finer or smoother for cakes and pastry and due to its lively quality it makes excellent bread. Miss Poole has another practical reuon for always using Robin Hood. She declares, “lt saves me at least one quar- ter of a cup of flour on every cake." So besides having superior quality, Robin Hood Flour is also dependable and economical. lsn't that just what you want in flour? Why not give Robin Hood a trial? Why not bake bread, cakes, pies and pastry with the same satisfaction that Miss Poole does? Have your family and friends praise you! One ol the many rea- sonswhyyotiwllllikellobinl-loodlllotu is its absolute ' ’ from contamina- tiott with dirt or dustt The wheat from which it is milled is all water-washed! Let us send you our new recipe book, “Baking Made Easy’. Mail nine cents in stamps so Robin Hood Flour Mills Lim- ited, MonntomNJ. I } mofi Sevee a Quarter Gtsp o! Ilene oss Every Qafilte! Mir: M Poole o] Mormon, N.B. Al.l. 5 AWARDS IOR WHITE BREAD AT CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION GO TO ROBIN HOOD USERS The Canadian National lahlbl- tion, Toronto, ls the largest of lta kind In the world. At the baklnl contest this year many of Canada's finest home bakers tempted, and naturall many diflereaat brands of flour were used. But, when the judges a “ their decisions it was found that users of Robin Hood Flotir had won all in awards lor White Bread. This sweeping victory for Robin Hood furnishes iurt one more proof that the flour milled from washed wheat has no equal for producing homemade bread of the inert quality. Why notrnake a harsh of bread with Robin Hood and let it demonstrate its superiority to you? The Housewife And Her‘ 3 'Aclivi ties i spoons sugar. Bake in n slow oven Xwel. Bake In a flat tin. -_-_-__- ~~-- NEARING T!!! JOURNEY‘! IND A little more love for the friends of youth, A little more zeal for established truth; A little more charity in all my views, A lltvtle less thirst for, the daily news; And so l om folding my tent, away, Andd passing in silence at close of ay. ' _J. P. LUCAS. BED OF MOSS FOR. ILOWIIJNG BULBS If hyscinhhs, deffodlll, m‘ tulips growing in bowls become rather too tall. their stnllry appearance may be softened by a thick layer of moss. The moss should be packed loosely round the stems and piled well up. between them. It dimin- ishes the disproportionel length of the stalks and leaves and en- hances the beauty of the flowers. Porcelain dishes absorb fnt tastes and often give s rancid taint to sny food stored in the dish after the fat is used. Paper cups or small covered paper cartons. avail- nble in any dime store, are ccn- vcnlent and lllfiXpillilve containers for storing cooking fut Opium planting in the Jehcl provinces of China has been increased. The Japanese regard opium as a profitable crop and en- courage its cultivation by cutting the production tax in half. It Is sold that 54 per cent of tho road troubles of motorists h caused by tire snd ignition troubles. HOW T0 BE WELL-GROOMET) WHILE TRAVELLING On careful preparation depends a large port of the success of l"? if!!!» Any beauty-minded woman knows that this means etting the right clothes, the right “Hallo and the right cosmetics, as well “reservations, well In nd- VGIICC. travel The proper clothes, l whether you go by n11‘. bolt 0! on one of the swift. streamlined trains, are those ‘which do not wrinkle or show dirt easily. A suit remains the best type of travel costume, of course, but there are suits and suite. And the fussy little model of a fabric that crum lee and stays crumpled dur- ing first, wearing is all Incidentally, much us you love sLl blouses with your suit, be sure to take at least one jersey or knit sweater blouse -- something that doesn't have to be packed any too carefully and which never seems to show soil. About the moat unhnndy item to have along is s fitted case in which the fittings do not stay In place. To find jars, bottles and odds and ends In a huddle in the middle of the case every time V011 open it. is s little disconcerting. Before you buy a fitted once, .turn it. upside down. this way and that, to make sure that each item will stay where it is supposed to, no mutter how energetically por- ters tnes the bog about. Everyone will advise you to travel light. Not s. baa-l idoa, of course. but don't take such advice too seriously and take so few nlghtgcrwns and slips that you have to worry about laundry at. every hotel. Really put some time and thought into striking a baggy medium in your travel wardro . Don't take too many clothes, but don't let anyone persuade you take fewer costumes than you actually will need. With the exception of a. couple of gowns that have skirts widened by a. sort of shelf around the hips, lgirni silhouettes are retained in s.r s. Schiapurelli shows much unre- lieved black, either cut In deep s flare decolletc or high necked th short sleeves. Evening wrnps stress short flare- bock coats or capes in Vivid red or green faille. Black taffeta and fnilles are im- portant for afternoon. Aamaamnaaaa‘ A-mmaa ‘AAAA Woman's Re alm w Social and Personal i Th1: a ' *' .- .. w?“ ARLOFNWPOWN, GUARDIAN ms cook's I comm i 300R. CREAM DATE TABTB Yolka otielll. I-l Olllillne tt tine wi flm dTmt-ry pas will {-4 cup full with the date mix- ture. e in an oven of 3'15 de- untfl firm. Cover with the meringue made from the stlffly ten egg-whites and 2 table- nbout 15 minutes. CHOCOLATE CAKE One cup granulated sugar, l 1-2 pupa flour, l teaspoon bs ing pow- der and a pinclr of salt. All the above are sifted together. Mix 1 teas soda In l cu of sour milk. Stir into first mix ure, then odd l 8B8. unbeaten. and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Then ndd 4 tea- spoons cocon which has been melt- ed with piece of butter size of an cg . Pour into mixture and beat I HARD SAUCE Work one-half rupful butter until creamy nnd add one and one- fourth cunfuls brown sugnr grad- ually, while beating constantly. When mixture is very creamy odd very gradually two tsbleaoootfnls cream: then add. drop by drop (to prevent s. separation), on» table- spoonful of vanilla. one-half ta- blespoonful of lemon extract and two teespoonfule of salt. FORGET INSIPID TEAS! 1W / IIITIIS TIIE HIGHER. MORE SATISFYING TEA lIIITIIIS Fill iii-HM. llllllfi ‘Llitl l/lSH lAllH l v OO-O#O-Q-O-O ~ Modern Etiquette i (B! ROBERTA LII) Q. Should a woman, after the death of her husband, be address- aa "Mrs. Mary Blank" or as "Mrs. to James Blank?" A. The death of the husband of a woman in no way affects the name by which she is known. Bhe continues to be "Mrs. James Blank." Qlsltnooeeeary foramanto rice when dining, and another man stops at his table? A. It is not necessary when there ts no great difference An»;‘gqa| 11.. the man who stops is elderly, it is courteous for a young men to rise. one has not mot the first member of a receiving line? A. Yes, if this should happen, one should say, "I am Mrs. ..Smlth." GET INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESE HXINGS FROM YOUR DEALER s I , now. . lunar m rrgnrngrssl ywymg; prove... SWIFTS PREM ‘lath tbllnto forests, ’ amdwomeuvotedlwifvarresiilomtheovisrwlsslm- UM HAM aiaoratedlf, ‘so hllfluvottrwlnner. ab? g y tenderssenllxolualve 8w ft expat-intern ‘a successfully eolwm elstekentntfgood t.-_ ’I Plfilllfl", m , It: n pmp" w mmdm” m" iwstcr affords s rich fertilizer for Dorothy Dix's Letter Box Women Who Complain About the-Hard L011 ofvlerfimtlzsltitlztityrtllp got Realiaye Thiat first! o e e Own ly ll World Have to Bear a Much Greater Bordon 0f Responsibility -..?“§::“="...”".§; can moat mgr-tent Job in the universe because she mskea happiness and well-being of h why catrtahe feel] that. ahe 1s fur better of! than the uslnoas or pro osaloual because she wor nome, with be: own inn. B!“ shot, the head exocu yo, the hub o! the wh around which her world turns‘: Must greater sat- isfaction can a woman have than in knowini AM keeps her husband well-nourished, healthy, com- fortable and happy: that she is helping him to make his fortune and that he turns to home as a place of and rest? Wh. 1 clpfflg bg: aense of beauty in the adornment 0 her home? Ann isn't every perfectly served men an artistic triumph of which she may be WWI-Id‘ ~ who: greater joy can life one: than children? Ant what more thrill can a mother flntl than m watching her little fines de- velop? 1 am thankful that. I chose the happy vocation othomemnker and l wouldn't trade Jobs with any one. CONTEPVFED WIFE- Atlewer: Your letter ls like kdraught of sweet water after too many cube o! Wormwood and gall. r so many other women are continually weeping on my shoulder and telling me how dull and monotonous housework 1s and how fed up they are with it. How they are tied down by their children and how they wish they huc chosen any other occupltlliln 011 earth than domesticity. They an eaten up with env of eve woman who has what they call a "career." They view all smarty clad girls they are trooplnk downtown of a. morning to work with green was. There's life for you! they think. There's gnyet-y and adventure. There's treeclorn and excite- ment. They don't. have to walk around the daily treadmill of getting breakfast and hurrying husbands of! to wonk and the children of‘! to school. Fixing the baby's bottle, and ordering the day's food. Do all the thousand dull tasks that. have to be done over and over an over again to keep n house running and a family fed and comfortable. No one will deny that. domestic work is hard. That it. is routine. But so ls all the other work In the world by which we earn our daily nrend. The saleswomnn, the typlst, the tranche . even zhe glamorous movie star all no over the some work the some way until it becomes a. chore instead of an adventure. Every woman who works outside of her nome has to put up with a. boss who takes her stood work for granted and ructlono over her , who is grouchy and surly at times lust as the domestic woman has to put up with these faults m her husband. Taking it by and large, the domestic woman has the adventure over the business woman 1n that. she has a, lob from which she cannot be nrecl unless for good and sufficient. reason. and which she is not liable to lose when she grows old and fat. 1f she aces. she can collect alimony. Bio has an equity in her husband's estate, whereas a woman em- ploys has none 1n her boss. While the wife gets no pny envelope on rinturdny nights and feels that she works for her clothes and board, the average working woman fares no better. For aha has nouung left alter paying for her living. Furthermore, the wife does not have to punch the tlmeclock on the dot, as the working woman does. Nor is die so hard-driven, for she can tau a little time out of her day to gossip over the telephone or snatch s little nap. The business woman could not dream of so doing. when nll ts said. there are no e asy snaps in life for most of us. whether our work ia hard and dull or a thrilling adventure ue arcs . We get. out of it what we put in it. I ow or notnmg sander t.nn.n that. so mom’ women get no 10y. no kick out of the work they do for their families. Tney are doing the most important work on earth and that which should bring them the richest. rewards, and they get. our. of ir. nothing but boredom and vain regrets and ropin- mg. l-'lty,isntit7 _ . ‘ . _ ' Dear Dorothy Dix-l em a man of 30 years of see. with a wife who f; 26. We have two children. Bhe nus put n. direction up to me 1 do not know how to answer. says that. she wants her rrcedom m go where and when ann with whom sbe pleases. A very good friend of | mine who also is married and baa two children, has asked my wife to go out with him and tells her what tlmeethey could have together. l i love wife and l am afraid that she runs around with him it. may menu e breaking up of our home. I don't. think it fair to the children. Please advise me whet to do? DON. When a wife wants to step out. with another nun. sho has already left her husband sfielrltuully and there la probably no use in his tryinlyintic he!‘ body. r feet. will follow her llllthty heart. down the p - Evidently your wife is fed up on domesticity, 51m Ls tired or you, tired of the children and she wants to have her fling. But it cannot be done without her losing her Own good name and wrecking the family. You cannot consent to her proposition which is an utterly selfish one on her port, for she pmpoeu to run around with other men. yet £375‘. ‘*‘°s¥.'.°°5§.‘.?n2’.l%“§.é““‘... ti; l2“ “i.°".°§i.‘“° “l; “‘“"°'..‘.’.‘ °“' - ve w a ons er a n , to be unfettered even by the children, while pone gocupy tshe linen able_ position of the complacent husband and stay at home nights with the |\_ N married woman be . fortune pnhgol her duties w: them $1.2M‘ l.°.'l.€°'°‘l§.°f 13.9mm of a =- her madschemeyouahouldtrytotnnkeherroalisethla. Lfshccanbebro httoseetht tdioosebstw and the children or her des for a. will?» Jltmniiy nun her fieiiiimss. *_'--_::_-. —-—i— -——~: -—~- DOW—_DIX.~——~I___ a ALL ¥HowCenl?‘l 6 u” u“ ‘sum .AMomingSmile o-ow-oe-eoaae-o-e-o-e-e-eo-oo-o-ok ,, ‘ 1.. t un‘ h“ " 55's....‘ ‘.;7.;.'"i".;.‘.i£;";“£.ii;.‘.‘ fulfil.“ and»: ma" when we met in the revolving door It t u. b k?" A. a little ammonia added m the l‘ ..su§e,y"“,h,q m, m, m, n", u. lentil-nu lso lllllll -‘“,'."'"m?." .. hw- , ‘ j ,,, Q" ....°*:.-...::' .22.: "cetrzllz; . ow cs-n rev cad . .. “.2?” mwlndmupwo°k 1y on . around together. wasnt. it? se m e A. gm a email we, of rut en "QPQ “W” the smndle under e spoo and scam-h moon m‘ '1 "m t “nwmd ‘c’ “Pmlyt guests and members of his stalking tlgh ten. nor ak m,“ __Q"T@_Eh£_E°JJLlBLQQYJQE_ Q. Ia the eating of honey con- sidered healthful? A. Yes, very. It is claimed to be a. good remedy for infiltration, kidney trouble, and cons patlon. Another an ‘ Ia that honey is not fattening. and can be en- lfiyfld by those overweight. ;4§O ¢§§O-O-O-O HousehoIrlScrophook m aosaaea can: * . “was... Afeesugeaatlcnaforenewhbw‘ fromtlied nerves " m. eetlge, latsbuhoure: In- l/ 0 Andree Leads, hair pinned up, ready to use the complex- ion can aha knows ie refs. "l advise awn rl to use Luz Toilet p." else says. nested him to take Jock. a mo: met. hill pony. across “to an obtaining moor and there wait for e meln DUTY l0 30111 them. "Jock won't. [lye any trouble,” he assured them. "so long as you k the rein off his tall." eating them an hour or two later, the laird inquired how they hed fared with Jock. "Very well, indeed," replied one of the youths. “When the rain came on we tookturna holding a meckintods over his tail." uovely Hand-Woven Set You Will Enioy Making lacy le Weave Puree and Belt lm rted? Homespun? The; look all t and more-the soft lovely things you make so easily by band weaving! ‘ Cantyou lust see the smart belt and-purse in the picture, woven of ‘yarn In nut brown, beige and leafy If!!! Wvlng’ alml darn thedlllrattlrshoevdgorthdngir; llld v eludealosagtralkeverynlesday.» tF..t.¢.. > L:. an. women waur LOVE! a cwut, sort COMPLEXION as venv aweatmc to men so pour msx Gamma Sstlt I costume stee Rums a smus cmmces or romance! mo lrS so EASY 10.60am aoamsr IT wma w: ‘letter Sean Aenvs tamer — EUR THE =- “l’°‘°“ F“. ‘.f.'""‘3.‘£...e. on.“ pque n 0v cy shade. The b uttona to the skirt the waietllnmmia mnoved for laundering her spin and span. We ntoeto have extrs blouses in dlffetmtw colors as yellow cotton broadcloth, sh so ' with the blouse of lawn or dknity Seobeother version Included in the pet rn. Style No 2077 Is designed for Zines 6, 8.10.12 and l4 years. Ilse ss- mt for bolero and skit"! t-s mo: of 85-inch neural wills yards zutflitil. v w tooin erred fielgnllll-loll we (M: In Illa carefully. address to “"""' en rlvlnlf- dilute Dip the stalks of diluted egg and then is » . erature ‘\md" w. tn kQQp ‘kin ' esnoollt —'.-l'd against Inelsroellwe Cosmetic Skin," soy tvstv screen stm U Rochelle Hudson never riaka the flanked pone that eauee Gosmetie sih—dllllll llflfll Toilet Soap," she says. TIMELY TIPS - tisy blemishes, ma i r\e._ “ alweys remove stab. sbeeeegbb with Lux f