% Fashions in Fish. British; Columbia - salmon' provides one four most important food fishes. Pe The of this fish are utilized Py the = canners, namely, sockeye, sand. chums. The sockeye is wha (ig known as the red salmon and 8.in demand; 8% a result of the™heav) demand, the species! is thréate with: ultiniate extinction. Prices have risen to the point where sockeye salmon may be considered al- most a luxury. h "anomalous condition . existed os the 'recent salmon fi 2 seas son on the British Columbia coast, when the Alaska fisheries were ship- ping their red salmon to British Co- Tumbia, while British' Columbia fish- eries were shipping their pinks and chums to United States canneries. This wés due to the lack of a market in Canada for' pinks and chums; whereas there was a demand for them in the United States. Red salmon is in demand only be- cause: Jt-has been accepted by fash- fon or 'usage as its choice. Dr. Ed- ward Prince, chairman of the Bio- logigal Board of Canada, in address- ing, | the, Commission of Congervation, adyantage; or at all o your: credit, that you 'put up day after day with inconveniences in your house, and| that you sehool yourself not to be: come irritated by these things. The sensitive, thinking housewife becomes irnitated 'at having to put' up with the caprices of a wood stove for cook- ing. 'And her irrita sends her to the point where she sees to'it that}: her house is equipped with an up-to- date gas stove or a new fashioned . oil stove. - It becomes' irritating to thé house- 'wife to have to use the old-fashioned scouring brick to scour knives andj: other 'metals; she looks about her for a remedy and discovers one of the many scouring powders that save time and do away with the irritating seotiving brick." The housewife who is. irritated by an inconvenient kitchen takes steps to make her kitchen more convenient. The housewife who is irritated over a house that is always in confusion and disorder is the house- wife who keeps her house shipshape, Diet for the Aged. The evening tide of life needs & carefully selected and conservative diet, if the old folk are to be kept in Intestinal' dis- | From Southern Cross to Polar 'Star, Nor bow they there' alone, : The noblest' nations at - In that most crucial hour; Regarding duty as dlyine, "To crush. 'the tyra ho is this warrior unknown. Who hcre in glory sleeps, While Royl'mgurned from th . With Empire round him weeps' Their tears are mingled. with the That Liberty 'still lives; ; In virtue of the noble boy "That "mother" freely" gives, , In him there stands a contttess Of Britain's valiant sons, hi Of whom the Empire makes her boast | IS + Wile x aoghe ' While course.of Empire runs, =» rgd Siete ar ol Te From north and south, from east and west, They came from regions far; The noblest, at thelr own behest, When blared the trump of' war. on among: P make way to Anyway, the world. had 'took Td Showime a an interest in the 4s business of the soul, which ain't com: oung" men with their nded the "revival btn en was in Canada, ing and i course, § Finer Turtle and. chapel, > : ied. A 80] - ay con mn ar also, and being in of un i She. , have come to, and lower, '&xpeditions t 2 the crust of Around 'the girdled world; J Eeetings Ywith His. pacents, and Susan England immediate and They came in millions from afar; "Neath Britain's flag unfurled, came. But much to always sat beside 'em when they: most before the full vad oy to the amazement came to be 'He wanted «+ |of his family after th courses 2 The world's dread tyrant there*they he third Svening, 3 en Sep 2, So paisom, deli eve; ut his Canada instea met ught the: holy. fire rose. és who Jad ea Da y to Joanna and her motes sever ley tify, om didn't ri also had the 'light or On France and Flanders fleld;: Nor shall that tyrant e'er forget, For Britons never yield. years, there di if young thing against him, t As. he'd 'might, "twas though That is: the cdnelusion sele and. the 4 1 1 3 TT ---------- FY a mat MA Home-made Cheese. aid? "When I say that the value of | ES fd converted canned Salmon rests more on the (hid a healthy condition. of the theat of the fish than upon its! turbances that are due to diet are Seell 10 reason on why he should fy ut Joana, However, desiod that the ge Stised for mechank flavor, you see how important it is| prone to make grandma and grandpa] Till Truth and Liberty, unchafred such Sning, and 1. believe his father] bitter: truth, She new, re a "to know to what the color: is due. The| very uncomfortable, From fétters, shall be free, hii 13:37 Br 036d Rith im, im, for the eng ond that 'the. man best. flavored salmon on. the Pacific| As to the actual diet, keep firmly| And Righteousness, that God ordained, |p" FE Ho Ean we tn; £0 up; deat 3, coast 1s: Jeast in'demand on the market! in mind that the body requires just| Shall dwell from sea to sea. was set at' pet, for he doubted not wind told because the color is pale. The in-| sufficient food to maintain life and Now. rest, ve brave, iw glory. Here youth had business elsewhere" 'that Seen hr s ng or ferior salmon, of a rich red color,| for this reason ' the 'heavy protein] With HEA, Sets oS ©. called him. 2 oid against h brings the best price, and takes the foods are usually taboo, Free fron) the haughty tyrants fear, If he'd known, however, what that ) lead, because of its color, this having| Well-cooked = cereals with 'cream While' 1adflé: crown ows Your head business was, Mr. Turtle. might have 1io relation to excellence of flavor or; and some stewed fruit far breakfast. : been a good bit surprised; and indecd ar offered ay and edible superiority." Milk is much better than tea of coffee; he was. go before the night had ended: | take hin, 1 must ni th, pink salmon priced at one-| Tt is the wisest plan. to 'eat the Pioposls by | by Hai. Ina word, the heart of the amas-! ub ablect, or pame the man's'n hal¥ that of 'the red, we seem to be] heaviest meal in- the middle of the COTTeSPO! t *who. recently ri ing young mar was smpte at last.io enor and faifness to hi A correspondent + wh ently re. Hed gone to the police stati #5 paying a high price for a preference) day. Remember that a diet of bread, turned from Japan says it is leap-year | fitter lace: for Bin in tation, ashi and whatever. father of color only, while at the same time| meat and potatoes will surely produce ai} the time in that country. than th nitent's bench; ook mtd 10 Ta 1 always did da, nd "wh we're neglecting a food supply which | uric acid conditions, try to avoid. this Japanese women have certaif ways |he'd told his story as far as the de- at Was: Tea EEA ¢ ; i} is available at a very moderate price.| and use plenty of the fresh vege:|of arranging théir hai: to fndicate foils was concerned, though all the|ernment only said:sheiwas' yveale % Git a | tables, fire and agony and horror behind it q : ; 2 their feelings and do mot wear hats, h ith her ch it PH: Why You Are Irritable, For the evening meal ceres! and| Girls' who wish to wel arrange the ® Teves told. It was left for under- § ed a penny: ! i ie 1. oht Fi i Ma _. Did it ever occur to you that there i milk and light puddings, milk toast, hair in front in the fora of a fan or is heh aid Some, $0°5¢ e'd heen called to en Tn Sal % # SF 4 fa not alwhys a disadvantage, but/cup custards will be sufficient. butterfly and ado it with silver of | sufferings nal He madness thro hs ments never got mo aise : sometimes quite the reverse, in being ; colored ornaments. the veil darkly. Gas fons Sl Th a pic bl irnitable2 In fact, sometimes the wo- A Widows who are looking for second | Yor oung To had fallen into a frantic bie nation's a thoveht J Anan who is by temperament iv ritable | husbands fasten their hair at the back | passion for Joanna from th is a far more agréeable helpmate than! the wife who is lacking in irritability. | man, 50 successfully makes a brick j cream cheese that she has a market But, mind you, being {irritable 'does! { for all she can make right in her own not mean that you show that you are neighborhood. She "hh onl irritated, or that you actually are iirri- 8 SMO. JY taught many other women how to tated often. It means that you are ké it 'but. 'h d itive ~enough to. your surround. make i u as given emonstra- sens | tions of her method as well. ings so that you are constantly try- This ch fen finished Fools. lik ing to improve. them or to keep them! 13 cheese when an 0gits, Ake up to a high standard, If there factory-made Canadian cheese, but is never had been any irritable house.|® little lighter in color. The follow- wives doubtless we should all be do-|'"% '® her recipe: ; : ing housework in the mode of our 25 quarts whole milk. grandmothers. We would still be dip- | 1 tablespoonful salt. ping candles and cooking over open % rennet tablet. fireplaces -and-séwing by hand instead) Heat milk in porcelain container to of by machines and keeping warm by| 86 degrees, and while keeping it -at! stoves instead of by the heat from: a] this temperature for five minutes, stir : central furnace. into it one-half melted rennet tablet. It isn't 'always an advantage to be| Rémove from stove and let stand two entirely long suffering. It isn't an hours. With a knife, cut into fine Poni hardin How Faces aces Fit Oceu It seems to be pretty well agreed among those in a position to' speak authoritatively that associated with the various occupdtions in life there is undoubtedly a type of face which more or less betrays the. calling of its owner, : Medical men, especially in_ hospital practice, find acquaintance with these types valuable. They may not be able, with 'the shrewdness of Sherlock Holmes or of other acute persons, to read a man's past, present and future by a glance at him in' the street, but Occupations. It is thought that the fame of these medical men as rough and ready de- tectives has been largely manufactur- ed for thenf by enthusiastic friends. But that many medical men do 'pos- Sess great Insight into the occupations of those that come before them is true, The question is often debated whether physiognomy is a growth of vocation or whether it shows that the vocation chosén is in accordance with the par Mrs, Stewart, an Ontario farm wo! oo to head by means. of fortoigeshell (she set foot in Four Way: pins, and widows who are determined [made love to her fierce to remain faithful to their departed from the first, and Shed 16 : from t spouses cut. thiér hair short. {be and Lad Make Believe. round face and such rosy id said | little four-year-old Dorothy. ' 3 "Oh, that makes her look stron; healthy," said her mother. "Yes, that' s the trouble," Dorothy, land fi she's sick and almost dying she looks | life Pr ditfioclt hes 89 awfully fat-and Healthy I just can't [but he hid: his heart from teel one bit sorry for her." Child Marriages to End. Child marriages in China must stop for the Minister of the' Interior has didn't see' hat he 'w: Just issued an edict that any pers will be punished. PRL ETSES" Sn) Canada has"a very heavy annual fire loss that is. steadil 3 : amounting. in 1919 to § ed to have been preventable. WATERY ay He Minard's L-In'ment For Burns, Ee ticular capacity and ability of the per-| son to whom it belongs." In other words, if the lawyer does nat show | the "legal face," the aspiring minis | the "oclerastly ce," the student the "physiclanly ace, soldier the "military face," and | the question aris they have 1 HOG vey overnment, thank Oi and jo deur ing 1 her: Fv pd : 2 she had at Ashburton as itan~the blace of "done. eredit : aij dustanstbe made her ) : i Joly ror? To the island a Perse va lB | des situated off the joast : : ri pean 'somewhere i [Jatitude? But. ds this Robinson Orusos's' nd? it is Alexander Selkirk's x "that famous Scottish sallorman, | Statio the subject of an essay by Addison, | ever had. Send' for {and of a poem--*1 'am monarch of all |