BIIC . _. fsCiZ‘F..-‘:.1?;'1;~a._<,.ar a-aai-assh- - ,. 9mm‘ I w . ,- c. aiwx_.stifl4‘.lhlutairlrsf;fai- s. ' : ‘irtxltéfi-t. .3."f¢1‘.-i| ___PAGE TWO l ,Woman ’sReal m -:- Social and.Personall-aFas/iions»-:- Literature. 1 Ham ln Hades, is trulfi economical, il you to sonings. oat each slice oi ham with mixture. delicate shade 0n either side. A lot depends on that teaspoon ol mustard. and be equally sure the mustard is Colman s Hades" will have a tasty llavour and the savo that rightly belongs to it. ‘ AiDS "Ta/liq Flavour eppetizing. Easy to prepare too and so very l ow this simple recipe. Tal<e 6 slices oi cooked ham, 1 teaspoon 1 tablespoon each ol vinegar, salt and paprika sauce, 2 tablespoons ol lat. Mix the mustard and when smoking hot put in the ham slices. . Then your "H lmarrs n‘ 5' F‘ lvlustard DIGESTION ‘Fl-IE cnAmnrrc-rown GUARDIAN‘ ~ . Shall Foster-Child beTold That it is Adopted? I Hurrying Man Into Marriage Won’t lent Girl Beware Dear Miss Dix-We are adopting a little boy and girl, both under 5. years of age. These children are not related to one another and were both born out of wedlock. Now is it vital that these children shall be told the truth about their parents as they grow older? Will it make them bitter about their birth? Why should they not grow up believing us to be their own father and mother? They love us and we. love them as dearly as if they were our own, but we want to do what is best for them to build their lives into happy ones. That ls why we are‘ worrying over this problem. P. E. W. Answer: I do not think that any man and omen eln do a finer‘ or a nobior thing than to take nameless and homeless and loveless little children and give I oi Colman's Mustard, l , 1 teaspoon Worcester ' , vinegar, salt and sea- i Place lat in lr ing pan Brown quiclily to a I Be sure to include it | am in ‘ ury, appetizing appeal , Canadian Cookery For Canadian Women By Illtrri Moore.Specially contributed to The Giltlfdian ror Guardian Readers. Cheese Sauce add salt and vuicgar. Allow this to Soc recipe for Casserole or rim and macaroni for method o: map. in? fl-‘lecse sauce. It may be enbel- licked for serving over fish, or cro- vsctte or on flCnl! tomzltots on toast by adding; .2 little (‘hopped parsuy chopnei olives, etc. Cheese Salar- Mould 'I‘Wo teaspoons manna, i-a cup eoiil water, l-i’ rug; boiling warrior, l-4 cup dilifcd vinegar, t2 table. spoons vinegar, 2 tablespoons wat- er,) 1-3 teaspoon salt, 1 l-2 cups cheese, 1-2 cup finely chopper! cel- ery, 1-2 cup chopped olives, 1--1 cup chopped grccn pcppcr, 1-3 cup cream, whipped cool and. begin to congcul when beat it with a rotary beater until Irothy. Then fold in remaining in- gredients adding the whipped cream last, and lct chill in fancy mould or individual moulds ‘Furn out on bed of lettuce, and serve with crisp crackers and mayon- naise. Scotch Woodcock Cl'(‘1\!!l together 1-4 pound of cream chccsc, 1-2 tablespoon Wot- ‘cestershire Sauce, and 2 tablespoons mashed anchovies or sardines. Add a little paprika and one egg slight- ly beaten. Mix thoroughly and ‘spread generously on l-2 inch slices 505K Eelatine in of white bread. Cover the top of cold water for 5 minutes. than dis- gun slice with a. slice of back “l” ll? 1Y1 the boiling WBV-‘r. and bacon and brown in hot oven for about 10 minutes. Serve very hot. A delicious and quick luncheon dish. I have not mentioned cheesc bis- cuits, puffs, macaroni and cheese, cheese omclette and, souffle, no; .thc various uses to which foreign cheeses may be put, but you know. they H"! yours for the asking. Sec Economical Supper Menu for Cheese Roast. nwuoums liiTtl wouurrroon TIIE y 0 u n g woman who suf- fers from monthly pains, or weakening drains and nervous- ness, or the woman of middle age who is distressed with heat flashes, should take Dr. Pierce's Favor- Prcscriptlon. Mrs. H. Surgent of ornas, Ont, says: “When I it: Steele Se, St. Th was a young glrl developing into womanhood I was rundown, and awfully nervous, I had no appetite and lost several pounds in wel t. hequcnt headaches also rnade me miscra le. l used about three bottles of Dr. entire system, I gained weight, the hes disappeared, my appetite returned." Eagle Brand saved her Y baby daughter did not progress on the toorl we were giving her," writes Mrs. George Morrill, Asbestos, Qua. "My b recommend- ed Eagle Brand and ‘from the first we noticed an improvement‘. She would sleep between feed- in s, which iilie could not do bellore. Now she is fouftecn and The Double Act A Romance of the Theatre BY MARION TOMLINSON "When did you learn that the necklace was missing?" asked An- thony. "I heard excited voices in the next room, and Francoise saying, "But it was here, Madame, in the folds of your cloak. I only leave it for one second when you call me." "You are certain it was there all right when the boy came to call you?" asked Miss Monclair. ‘Je vous assure, Madame. Je le jure!’ and Francoise began to weep and say it should never have been brought to the theatre. ‘We'll have the boy's dressing room searched,’ said Miss Monclair, then, and so I decided to forestall her and do a little searching on my own. It was in u perfectly obvious place-the bottom of his make-up box, with a lot of powder puffs and grease sticks thrown in on top of !t." Rosemary suddenly sagged against Anthony's arm. He put his other arm about licr, and curried hcr over to a chair in which he 0 half months old, walks and talks, and weighs twenty-four pounds-all due to Eagle Brand Condensed Milk." rarra» u» ndvlro o] llrorulrula a) marlin: mid fry Eagle Brand. ml In coupon below In [n4 flung", placed her gently. "It's all right, old man," he mur- murcd. "There's something rotten here, but you're not mixed up in it. We'll discover who is, before we're [wants-ma .;;.?.1;t;"n.i;t;?.. and 1 were talking in the corridor, we both saw Leslie go into his room for a second. ;It was a. moment after- ward that we heard Francoise go upstairs. A couple of minutes later we were surprised to see Miss Mon- clair slip into Leslie's door after cautiously looking through to see that no one was there. She stayed inside perhaps half 3 minute, and then came out. We both saw her, but she is not likely to have seen us, since the corridor makes an abrupt bend there and we were al- most out of her sight." Everyone looked at Dolores Mon- cloir. She showed no signs of per- turbation, save fn a slight harden- ing about the mouth and a narrow- ing of her eyes. "This iaall nonsense," she said hardily. "Is the word of a couple of old women to be taken against mine? But I've no time to discuss the matter further. I shall be late to dinner as it is and the Countess will be furious. But I grant there may be some mistake in the matter, and I withdraw my accusation." Anthony looked at her contemp- tuousiy. “You'll apoliglse before the en- tire company who heard your ac- cusation?" he said. “I only wish I could ask you to leave the cast, but it is too into to got anyone to take your place, and the postponement of the opening night would mean hardship for everyone." Dolores looked about at the hos- tile faces that surrounded her and them the blessings that Fate has so cruelly denied them. 'For nothing is more tragic or more pitiful than these hapeless little creatures who must pay the price of their parents’ sin. It is a great thing for an illegitimate child when it is adopted because, for one thing, it throws a veil, to a largo extent, over the shame of its birth. People may know vaguely that it was born out of wedlock, but it takes on the name and status of its foster-parents, and it is not the object of scorn that it is when it grows up in the shadow of its unmarried mother. Of course, all of this is terribly cruel and unjust. An innocent - child should not be punished for the wrong that those who brought it into the world committed. But all the same, it happens. It is life. Another reason that such a child is fortunate in being adopted is that its foster-parents can nearly always give it better living conditions than its mother could, for it is virtually impossible for a poor girl to sup- port herself and the child. Also, the child is likely to be better loved, because only a woman with a strong maternal complex and a deep heart |hunger for children would burden herself with the care of a child. And certainly the child adopted by such a. woman would stand a. chance of being better reared than it would be by its weak and unstable mother. And very often these adopted children repay their foster-parents in love and tenderness for all they have done for them. Sometimes, of course, they tum out badly, but so do often one's own children, so the risk is worth taking. But whenever people adopt children the one thing they should surely | do without fall is to tell them that they are adopted as soon as they are old enough to understand, and before they are old enough to get a. shock ' from the revelation. . l It is not necessary to tell them the circumstances of their birth, but if the mothrr is still alive the child should be told that she gave it to the foster mother and father. And I think the foster-mother is wise if, when she does this, she impresses on the child's mind that its own mother didn't love it and didn't want it and that she loved it and wanted it. The reason for this is that the child tends to build up a romantic idea about its mother, and especially to think whenever it is denied anything or corrected that its own mother would have indulged it in everything. and nothing will do more to dissipate this illusion than for it to grow up thinking that its foster-mother is its one best friend. Sooner or later every adopted child is bound to find out the truth about itself, and if this revelation comes to it after it is KIWI! ll? Seems 3° shatter it. It makes it feel that it has been tricked, deceived, and it can't forgive the foster-parents for lying to it. Somehow, it appear to wipe out all the love it has felt for its parents, all the gratitude for years of kindness it has received. Perhaps this is because children trust their parents as they do God and when they discover that those they believed were their fathers and mothers ure not their fathers and mothers it takes _Dorothy Letter Box Make for Happiness, so Let Impat- l lpicking flaws in it and thinking what a fool you were to let yourself be As YOU ggsrne ma" fto insure the youth of A yr. ur skln Uu Palmolive . . . tba w soap rirb in OLIVE OIL“ ‘Ii-IOSE] fine lines . . . that dry, drawn look . . . they betray age! You g keep cheeks firm, forehead smooth, chin free of disfiguring! blackheads. Beauty experts re ou how to de the years by a ail methodo skin care based on e use of olive oil. Ollvo oll booufllln Olive oil enriches, tones, con- ditions che skin. It is a com- piexion “cor-receive," he1oty\ l s ' ts say. And over 20,000 specialists recommend Palmolive because it is the one leadingsoop rich in olive oiL Use Palmolive faithfully for ten days. Work its fine lather well into the skin—of face and body. Feel that fresh, youthful] skin texture. See how your mirror reflects that charm, that something which makes you, keeps you desirable. Kat xtaralamW yflllflg man. I have given up good times and have scrlmped and save so that we could be married, and now when we are all set and have l good start and our wedding day announced the Boy Friend says that n. 1:181? vgunt to take upon himself the responsibility of marriage for -. p e o years yet. He has a good job and we could easily get, arm and I want a home of my own. He won't save and 1 gm tired o; “rating Isnt there anything I can do to encourage those wedding bells a little ANXIOUS. Anxious: Well, daughter, I think that unless a. man is enthusiastic about r1113. ing the wedding bells, a girl is mighty wise to leave them silent. Men get tired enough of marriage even when they go into it all pepped up and bubbling over with enthusiasm, so it is a poor lookout for one making a good husband when he is dragged into it against his will and is tired of it before he ever starts in. You know how it is when one of these super-salesmen just simply forces you into buying something against your will. It doesn't appeal to you. It doesn't hit your fancy. It doesn't suit your taste and you don't Want it. mrwey. and are not ready to- buy, anyhow, but he or she talks you into taking it, and you hate it ever afterward and spend your time outsmarted. Well, that is just about what happens to a girl when she forces a man into marrying her before he is ready to settle down and before he wants to marry. A lot of girls do it. They cry and they wheedle and they blug and they jockey a chap into the place where it takes more courage and nerve than he has to call the wedding off. So he is led to the altar like a lamb to the slaughter, but once he gets past the altar he is a lamb no longer. He ls a snapping. snarling dog that tugs at the H For 172a Cook a Introducing S. Short Cake A 5""? Bhortcake is a treat pm "$00M has not met. Mug m, “W! dough as for the more (m. flier fruit shortcake, but omit in, 8118». Bake the same way, Bblit the baked cakes, epmd/ with butter, and add generously g 11111118 such as creamed chicken o, chicken a la king; tuna fish, m. mon, or lobster, treated the same way: or use a niniw Welsh rarebit mixture; or a Newburg that; i, a favorite with you. Try a, curry, wk it's good. s ' Or instead of a hot mixturg m“ any of these make your shun-team . smaller and fill with a good salad mixture well moistened with may. onnaisc. They are then a little Stig- gestive of the ehoux paste salad bouchee. Bull-Elly Hers d‘0eurres On a salad plate arrange 2 m“, leaves from a lettuce heart to m. present the wings of the butterfly and fashion the body from finely sliced celery moistened with may. onnalse. Outline the body with sardines rubbed gto a paste. on, the body sprinkle, egg yolk pm, through a. sieve, and make a. band of the yellow on each wing, with ~l similar bands of mayonnaise and chopped white of egg. Sprinkle the edges of the wings with finely chop- , ped parsley. €lzrilledl . . How you thrilled in the certainty oi your lasting |oveliness—heightened by the. clinging, velvet- texture ol Pompeian Beauty Powder. ' l As his eyes caressed you, how thrilling to know that a touch ol Pom- peian Rouge had ltept lor _ Plucdl Favorite Prescription and it strengthened my daohu away their faith in everything. I get many letters from perfectly denly found out that they were adopts ing is one of great bitterness against the in one breath of how devoted their foster "of all they have to leave "these people" and find my own mot which Ls perhaps o. natural reaction of s childish mind smerting under the blow of a. biighting revelation that has shaken its little world to its foundations. But, however it is, the child should be told the truth while it is young ' enough to accept the situation as perfectly normal. ed the ingenue, to the elderly actor. "She has been in worse situations than this and come through with flying colours." returned the old man. "She's one of the people who never lose front for long. She'll be more brazen than ever to-morrow, you'll see." ' Rosemary, badly shaken, went down to her dressing room, passing Dolores‘ closed door with a. shud- der. Nell, who had become once again the affectionate friend, insisted on tucking her up on the couch and giving her a hot drink. "Wit hall these interruptions the rehearsal is likely to go on till morning, I should think," she re- marked. "Better get some rest while you can." “Neil," said Rosemary in an undertone, “Why didn't you say at once that you saw Dolores bring the necklace in here’: I thought I should die when you seemed to bear out the accusation. "r11 tell you, darling," said Neil, ssitling down on the couch and tak- ing the girl's hand, "though you'll DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-For the last four years I have been enslstd t0 I TIRED AND IRRITABLE Take Lydia E. Plnkhamfi . vegetable Compound It studies th ma; , t" build you up? gnu Wlfinegthale: fish-wiser betteru-Jook m. I fer. Lil: will mm “m5 11mm ' lllin- emember that 9a o“; 0| h“ "mu"! l3?‘ "It helps mo" I Let it help you too. Liquid q- “i. ‘ l0! (Olin, l; yr)“ "d"; probably hate me for having had any doubts. You sec, I've never been ublo to forgive young Carson for turning against you, because of your appearance in Grenoble’: shows. I decided he must be a prlg and overwilling to think the worst of people. I was afraid for you if that should be the case." "But he didn't think the worst of me," cried Rosemary. "He only hated what he saw for himself. I hate it too, when I remember how I peacocked about the stage!" “‘Be that as it may," returned Dainty FIRST I_N QUALITY- FIRST IN FAVOUR! Crlapneas 0nd quality sealed in the package. Good uluemountfiblaculu In shape for guest and table. frantic youngsters who have sud- d children and their resultant feel- ir foster-parents. They will speak -parents havebeen to them and done for them, and in the next they will say: "I am coins her, I don't care what she is," ' ing, and I'm . sure you'll be very to the package. Breaks snappy and rope his wife has tied him with until he breaks it and then he runs away. So, if you are so anxious to marry that you cantwait my longer, hunt up a youth who is more marrying-minded than the one you are engaged to. DOROTHY DIX. 000000 Dear Miss Dix-One boy left me because I wouldn't let him kiss me and pet me and paw me. Another boy has left me because I did. What thing and another gives her the air for doing it? ELLEN. Answer: , Adapt your techinque to the man, I suppose is the answer. But a better way is to live up to your own ideals and force the boys to meet them instead of lowering yourself to suit the taste of every Tom, Dick and Harry. ' DOROTHY DIX. Nell, "1 haven't got the same man-l falutin‘ notions of art as you and he seems to be agreed on. But of one thing I was sure, if Anthony Carson was the sort that keeps himself pure by letting down his friends the moment they are blown upon, then the sooner you knew it, the better. 5o when I saw you in this difficulty, I just thought I'd wait and see how he behaved." "And you saw him stand by me in the face of t hewhole company!" cried Rosemary. "Not even knowing who I m, but just because he was sure I was honest!" "Yes, I'm sure of him now, darl- harry!’ Rosemary's face fell. "How shall I ever tell him?" "Oh, en opportunity will come," said Nell wisely. "Go to sleep for a little, if you can, before you have to go back to rehearsal." cm“ u‘ xxx Doctors recommend a body rub with ‘Vaseline’ Petroleum jelly after the daily bath, to keep the tender skin smooth, free from dr,........, chafing and chopping, Use it, too, when you change hi; diaper, to soothe inflamed but. rocks; on his scalp to correct “cradle cap"; in his nostrils to ward 0E cold weather suiillea. ll lllll YOU OII‘ fill OINIJINI LOOK roe ‘I'll! ‘IIADIMAIK VAIILINI WIIIN YOU luv. TIIE FIRST NIGHT In-her dressing room on the first night Rosemary put on herfamiliar make-up with trembling fingers. She had known stage fright before, but never such paralysis as now. Anthony looked in at her dress- ing room door- and grinned at her cheerfully, though his own hands were not quite steady as they pull- ed at his tic. "How do you feel, old man?" he queried jomilnrly. "Going to knock hm?" can o girl do when one fellow gives her the air for not doing some- l Ba/yi BM ' rimm war l! The Bunion Co. Llnlml, ‘Prune, ' Pl o unrl no new odlllon of ' “Bnbfl Walton.“ .4 through." Noll, who had Pushed forward to Rosemary, overheard Anthony's words. into hcr grim facc came a new expression of triumph. She drcwhcrscil up and faced the com- pany. . "Now that I've proved a little matter I was doubtful about," she said, "I'll just tell you a few points I missed out of my story just now. saw she was trapped. She had dug a pit and had fallen into it. she shrugged her shoulders. "Framoise, ‘go and gct my things} ready," she ordered, and when the maid had gone she added, "Natur ally I'm extremely sorry u 1 mis- judged the boy, and offer him my apologies." She turned abruptly rind went off. ' I "How dreadful of her." murmur- ii ra-o-b-uqmq-tao-awr-vn-iq-a-arm clean without crumbling. lilillilllt enema sons m- answer Rosemary hummad a bar or two from the _"0ld Kent Road," but said nothing, only giv- ing him a twisted grin over her shoulder. Nell, for hex-part, tapped surreptitiously on wood, "Oh, Mr. Carson," she reman- strsted, "It's bad luck to beso eon- fldent." (To be Continued.) If you don’: see it you are no; getting the genuine product of Chesebrough Mfg. Co” Cons'd., 5520 Chabot Avenue, Montreal, Vaseline TIAOwAIK you the girlish llush he loved. Be sure always! Use Pompeian. You may pay more lor beauty pre- parations but you cannot buy better than : : : l The NEW O BLOOM vowosrz creams LIPSTICK LONDON PARS NEW YORK TORONTO Sales agents: Harold F. Ritchie I Co. Ltd. 10-18 MeCaul 5L, Termite m; l7 Soprano-“Did you notice bow my voice filled the hall last night?’ Contraitow-“Yes, dear; in fact, l noticed several people left to mnkc room for it." MorningSmileJ Me-ow! Head Librarian-Young man, WI are about to close the desk; is therl anything you would like to take out? ‘ , Shiek-Well, yes; how about thfl tall one in the tan dress? CNEURITIS tlalllnl lalo ‘h. w I\l rgtnlbfla- OUR THREE SPECIALTIES WATCHES. INGS EYE GLAS as Established 187i} E. w. TAYLOR Ill flchmond Street