SA aaa a a aid Y: : iS a «0 eT er eeee >, CHILDREN'S HEALTH ~~ DESSERTS : . Some children will not drifk milk, Why not feed this healthful food to them through the medium of de- licious. desserts--something all child- Ten crave? = { Chocolate Marshmallow Surprise 1spackage chocolate Junket pow- Sr der 1 pint milk 1 cup confectioners' sugar 14 pound marshmallows 2 enh Sup boiling water Prepare chocolate Junket accord- -1g to directions on package. Chill in refrigerator. Cut marshmallows in pieces and melt in double boiler. Dis- solve sugar in boiling water, add to marshmallows, and" stir until thor- oughly blended. Turn into a bowl and cool, Just before serving, put topping on cold raspberry Junket, Lemon Junket with Baked Apples 1 Junket tablet : 1 tablespoon cold water 1 pint milk 3 tablespoons sugar 6 apples ~ Maraschino cherries 1 teaspoon lemon flavoring 1 cup sugar 1-3 cup water % teaspoon red food color Cinnamon, if desired Make a syrup of 1 cup sugar, 1.8 cup water, cinnamon, and red food color by boiling 65 minutes. Put the apples, which have been peeled and cored, in a pan and pour the syrup over them. Bake until tender, bast- ing frequently, Place apples in in- dividual dishes, filling center of each apple with syrup. When cooled and > top of stew table, Have a flank stea and scored; that is, cut all over the sur- face in criss-cross lines, Mix together one cup bread crumbs; one small onion, chopped; one-half cup grated raw carrot; one-half cup finely diced celery; one tablespoon minced par- sley; one teaspoon sugar; salt and pepper to taste, and one-third 'cup hot water or enough to moisten, Spread this mixture over the flank steak. Roll up as tightly as possible. Tie firmly and sprinkle with flour, pepper and salt, Brown quickly in hot fat. Then place in a covered pan and bake in a moderate oven for one and one-half hours. Baste two or three times during the cooking with two tablespoons butter melted in one-thid cup boiling water, When done, remove the strings, Serve with brown gravy made from the fat in the pan, : ; FRUIT PUNCH FOR A CROWD (Makes about 4 gallons--60 large glasses, 120 small) 2 quarts sugar 1 quart water 2 quarts tea infusion 1 quart lemon juice 1 quart orange juice 1 quart grape juice 1 quart grated: pineapple 2% gallons iced water 1 cup strawberry slices 2 cups fancy orange slices Make syrup of sugar and 1 quart 2 quarts (8 cups). boiling water over b tablespoons tea. Cool. Combine water. Make tea infusion by pouring | | ustug enormous gold 3, y+) =x page « Melville Jack (left) younger brother of Richard Jack, R.A., fame ous painter of British nobility and eminent Canadians; and David Miller put finishing touches to Dionne crucifix sculptured to inters pret birth of quintuplets as Divine suallenge to birth control expons ents. - The crucifix is to be erected at the serve apple sauce: or canned fruit: for dessert on the day when her husband brings home an' important business acqudintance on = short notice can: produce an interesting and irthplace of the Dionne Diet F od Creates Potato Surplus A A elngle silver star. f' the newest buttons are ped and one big fur house is star . ars studs to fashion in place the fin.ike revers for a black afternoon coat, Stil, with all this encouragement we hope none of us will go so far as a recent .vici- | tor to Paris who permitted her coifs teur to place a golden star on each of her eyelids, : P Rusticus, in Herald, : --Do animals think? We are re- minded of this question by the action of a sow pig that has found a way of getting out of the yard in which she is supposed to stay. There is a small gate in this yard, and in all prehab. ility it was at some time left open so that the sow could get out, Well, she was soon put back and the gate c'os- .ed, but, having tasted freedom she was bound to go exploring again, She walks up to that gate, It is shut and a gentle push will not open it. She ficoky her snout under the offending pece of steel and wire and lifts it right oft the hinges. Once more the whole farm is hers to wander over as she pleases : i the. Stratford Beacon: tree and this year there was a good crop of acorns, These have long since fallen'to the ground. In her wander ing about the place the sow found the! oak tree with the acorns under "it. She liked these nuts very well and for a day or two was quite content to feed. on acorns; and sleep under the shed, but the acorns on even a large tree won't satisfy the hunger of a fairly large sow for many days. She must have a new and generous supply of feed. The strong snout had been useful in opening tlie gate. So perhaps the same trick would work In the yard there is. a glant oak |" 746 Potential Kicks Are Shipped to India = i ------ : 1 Ef go. of 746 kicks is a séa aboard the S.8. City of Auckland. These are PO- shipped by Frank F, Simpson; of Omaha, Neb, Simpson raid to be the leading shipper of mules in the Unit. | ed States, since 1921 has been under |Do Animals Think? contract to supply the Imperial Gov- ernment with animals for Indian mo. bile forces, t- Vmods, "The veteran mule driver who sall- ed from St. John with the ihipment, sitld the hardy western mule wag in- dispensable for rigorous army. trans. port work in the torrid regions of In- dia, Results of British attempts to breed: the animals there had failed to equal' the United States product 'in sirength and stamina. "It's all a matter of breod mares," Simpson re- marked, - Plough Ocean Device Culs Furrow In Bottom for Laying tential in the hind legs of 373 mules, \ 0 who's C-relirin Cable a -- but just the same they've been doing a bit of ploughing out there on the Atlantie, And it's not the ploughing of the waves that the poets like to write about either. { No, this is real honest-to-goodness into real earth and turning up a clean! straight furrow that would dehlght a farmer's heart, To tell the truh, it goes the farmer one better, because our plough-gdees the-glanting too and covers 'up the furrow again when it~ is through, The planting has been going on far below the surface on the Atlante's ' Halfiax -- It's hardly sprog vet, ploughing, with a real plough, digging , From 1JS.A. vf Tag FAET, Salut Joh, N.B,~ Destined for hdl SE XY British army service in India, uw car.' Manchester, En speech day of Hro the 'head mistrecs, Miss D, tiring shortly, when ghe looked back at her own ed ucation she saw much that had changed, ; vii pid ("But there are' two great chang that bave taken place," she = sald "One is that the older girls at schog now have a serious conseiusness of the world around them and of their own future. Girls may. come in L touch with the community as a whel than: we did, hence their ready sym: pashiy and eagernesi to help. When ministers: of - all denominations say x thé minds of young people are now. opening more and more to the things of the spirit, I hearti'y and with Joy agree with them." Professor J, _F. Dull one of the gova: ernors of the scheal, raid it was only about 60 years since the first ats tempt was made to give girls and wo- men.at the great schools and univer. sities the seme opportunities as their brothers had had for centuries, Thoso attempts were at liral tegarded ag something comic, but in spite of rid- fcule, it was shown that girls: could go through the same sort of course as boys, and pass the same examin. ations, The case for higher educa. tion for girls had been preved, and with the exception of Cambridge his own university equal facilities wee now given for girls at schools and universities, as for boys. % Digestibility Of Cheese Cheeze is 'made easier of digestion by combining it with other foods. When caten with bread, or other starchy food, such as potatoes or mn pri So, nt 3 a A po SR i a Says the Toronto Mail and Em.!, another. pire: "Statistics" show that there has | In the shed there was a Ikely look- been 2 ovis Dex kath the Wi o door. We thought it was securely ipen ain A oan: i fastened, but a few good yanks from Tice, 08 it Ladin part cared: Com | that pig's snout made the hooks give ow ih Naren age De of ihers way. And cn the inside she found a : peck of rolled oats very much to her ATU T0000 busking Byer liking, Of course, a stronger hook had sold two trick loads of Grade. 1 was put on that door hut there were \ other doors that must be tried, There Potatoes at his farm for 16 cents por | "1 door about the barn.that that ve BT sans, NS slay sow has i tried to dislodge with search Council, under whose auspi- Be power 4s mon, ces a conference. .of agricultural ex. perts, chemists and marketing auth- orities was convened, 'A' committee will be named to canvass the situa- tion and suggest means of remedying the condition obtaining to which un- doubtedly the unemployment situa- tion as well as dieting on the part of thousands of people, has contributed. As a large list of foodstuffs, including confectioners' glucose, grape sugar, St. John's Nfld. -- Reporting a fa. DA meh on as frm, vorable trade balance and a general Sty. ox poet from the commit. | improvement in business, Newfound. PUA yD unilor the 'ne land's commission government has gis of the Research Coun, 200 Polina orion i the fis- : cal year ended June 30, A ly Sugoi 5 Nile The returns showed {hat the is- up." land's total trade for the year am- * ounted to $43,097,065 compared with ! $39,641,800 in the previous twelve months, unusual substitute in a few mom- ents, By combining the sauce or canned fruit with sweetened con- densed milk she can make a really distinctive dessert that will lift the simple home dinner into the realm of meals to be remembered. Suppose 'she has 'chosen apricots, Here's her solution; Apricot Cream % cup apricot juice 1% cups aprioct pulp 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1.1-3 cups (1 can) sweetened condensed milk Lady fingers, if desired Force apriocots through a coarse strainer, Add lemon juice to sweet- end condensed milk, Stir until mix- ture thickens. Add 'aprioct juice and pulp, mixing thoroughly, Pour into sherbet glasses and place in refrig- erator to chill. Sherbet glasses may be lined with lady fingers if desired. Serves six. Dried apricots may be us- ed in this dessert. They should be soaked and cooked in the usual way, but no sugar should be used. Here's the apple sauce dessert: Apple Sauce Whip 1 can apple sauce (2 cups) Juice of % lemon % cup sweetened condensed' milk Nutmeg (optional) Add the juice of half a lemon to the apple sauce. Add mixture to sweetened condensed milk and blend thoroughly. Nutmeg may be added if desired. Chill thoroughly before serving. Serves six, KITCHEN KINKS . Taken.in a glassful of water be- fore breakfast, the juice of a lemon will help to purify the blood and cleanse the system, A sponge can be cleaned by wash- ing it in warm water to which lemon juice has been added. : New cake and meat tins will not syrup, tea, fruit juices and water. Add strawberry slices and orange 'slices, which may be cut in fancy $iazes or simply halved or quarter- e rough bottom, Submarine cable is : macaroni, it forms one «ff the most what they've been planting--or lay- ! ay : satisfactory food combinations and ing--100 miles to the southwest of y 3 'hice a1 a) ie Ireland and already 20 milo: of it ea ih At bs Wi oo have been laid 'down. | (.gestion for most people, eaten syrup has jellied chill in refrigerator. Dissolve Junket _tahlet 'tn 1: table: spoon cold water, Add 3 tablespoons sugar and lemon flavoring to milk, and warm to lukewarm--not hot. Add dissolved Junket' tablet, stir a few seconds, and pour over apples. Let stand until firm; then chill in refrigerator, Place cherry én top of apple when ready to serve. at the end of a heavy meal as is common custom it may tax the di- gestive orgons, but if eaten as the main dish at a meal which is finigh- ed with light dessert, it is not likely = to .cause any digestive distuibance. 3 When used in cooking, care should be taken that the cheese is not heated to too high a 'temperature, as heat will make the protein foods ™™ ° Windsor," N.S--A seam of coal, tough and they will be harder to ° located at I'all Brook, near here, | digest. It is all, or nearly all, used which burns with a blue flame and by the body to build new tissue and leaves only a small white ash, has! to provide energy for the body to - been the source of Thomas Swin.- | do 'its work, an! for older boys and mer's winter heat during the past girls, as well as adults, it is one of few years and he has expressed the the best muscle builders, . opinion that the vein might be worth working and: would provide jobs for many of the unemployed men in this vicinity, Swinamer is a working man and he said: "I took out lots of coal and burned it in the stove all winter, but I don't have time to fool with it. Two men with picks and shovels can't do anything with a seam like that." Swinamer showed the seam to Imports were valued at $16,305,000 | William -Deuchard, a Scotsman who and exports at $26,791,503, Imports! was a student of geology at a school exceeded the previous year's by |in Perthshire, and he -said -it - was more than $1,000,000 and exports in- | his opinion that the coal basin creased by more than $2,000,000, could be profitably mined. From the Newfoundland was shown to be a | rock and the way in which is burn- good customer of Canada, having im- | ed, Deuchard judged it was 'gemi- ported $6,600,000 worth of goods from | anthracite or possibly anthracite of the Dominfon, Imports from United | the middle or lower carboniferous States amounted to more than $4,500. formation. 000 and from the United Kingdom : $3,833,000. The United Kingdom was New- foundland's best customer, having ac- counted for $11,992,000 of the island's exports, of which paper represented approximately $7,000,000. Punch may be strained before add- ing strawberry and orange slices but this will lessen quantity made. Less water may be used and punch poured over block of ice in punch bowl, 5 When "strawbérries are out of sea- son: the 'strawberry slices may be re- placed by another cup -of® orange slices. Recipe may- be "halved or quartered to serve a smaller group, |. canned Personal Mine Nova Scotia "Man Has Own Supply of Coal MARIE 'EST MALAD Tor a long: time we have 'been ac- custonied to having toast and orange: marmalade -$ervéd - to those recover- . ing from a fit of illness. Somehow or other the marmalade seems to touch that proverbial spot so that even if it were not a healthful bal- ancing' tasty, it would still "be a "favorite with convalescents. Prcbably few of us realize where the word "marmalade" originated. According to the Pathfinder Maga- zine "Mary, Queen of Scots, brought over from France the preserves she loved so' well. Mary. loved it to such an extent that every time she was: ill she would call for it until it be- came known as 'Marie est malade' by her French court, and thraugh the years it has degenerated ints 'mar malade'." ECONOMY MEAT DISHES High-priced cuts of meat are de- licious, but those of ug who have to watch the pennies these days may, with a little care, prepare wonder: ful 'meat dishes from the cheaper cuts. A dash of sugar in meat dishé es, brings out the flavor and fur: nishes the body with some quick: 3 eggs (beaten well) energy fuel--just what we need on 2 cups flour cold: days. ¥ 2 teaspoons baking powder Connecticut Stew 1 teaspoon soda 1% pounds fresh, lean pork 1 teaspoon salt 3 pounds. fresh, lean pork 'Put all-bran; to soak in the sour 3 cups diced, parsnip ~~: | milk, Cream the shortening and 1 tablespoon - finely chopped par: | sugar, Add eggs; sour milk and all- - -- [3] > : Business Improves Newfoundland Reports Favorable Trade Balance FOR SHARPENED WINTER APPETITES - With cold weather at:-hand to sharpen appetites, this is the season of the year: when all the family will give 'a rousing welcome to the ap- pearance of the muffins, wafflés and 'griddle cakes on the breakfast menu. Below is a convenient "three-in- one. (for bran, muffins, waffles and griddle cakes) redipe: that will be as Welcome to the: busy housewife as the results of her efforts will be to father and the children, Since the recipe calls for bran, there will be tie satisfaction of knowing that it will provide a real contribution to the 'health' of the family, for the bran: provides the "bulk" every normal person needs to keep his system in good working order, Three-In-One Recipe 1% cups all-bran 12-8 cups sour milk 14 cup sugar: The Mirror Like a black opal, luminous With glowing inner fire, A little pool lies sheltered by a rock, Often in spring, whertthe capricious winds ' ' : That sing and make twisted pines, Have 'called me out. I follow down the stone + Po And on the ok; "enierald "with moss and fern, No or I sit and watch the pool. - Here have I sat when amber Dawn, Preluded by an awakening breeze, Stirred golden ripples on the water. Here have I seen the potent sun Pour molten gold on to the rock Yet leave the pool in dark blue riys- tery. Often I've clouds At sunet pale the dark pool ethyst harps of the little ledge of = Stars in' Hair Duchess of Kent Favors These Ornaments For Eveinng Wear The fact that the Duchess of Kent wears a little star of brilliants In her hair fn the evening will doubtless mean that brilliant stars in the hair, will' be popular this winter. (Has it occurred to you that with the com- ing 'of the' Duchess ag the newest bride to Court we are golng to have a leader of feminine fashions in the Royal family in the same way as the watched = the carmine Poultry Grades Most of the poultry being offered toam- sley on the market this year is being 1 cup sliced onion 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon sugar Salt and pepper ~ Cut the pork into small pieces. Brown in a' frying pan. Add the water and 'simmer until the-meat is nearly 'tender, - Add the 'vegetables . 'bran and mix thoroughly, Sift flour with baking powder, soda and salt and add to first mixture--stirring only until flour disappears. Bake in greased muffin tins in a moderate oven (425 degrees F.) for 20 to 25 minutes or in a hot waffle iron, Some of the mixture may be thinned with water or milk and used for griddle rust or burn if, before they are us- ed, they are rubbed over with lard and then left in a rather warm oven for some time. See that corners and crevices are well coated with the lard, Afterwards wipe off the grease and wash in the ordinary way. Prince of Wales is arbiter and leader of 'men's fashion? What the Prince Exports to the United States total. Ted $5,194,000 of which paper repre- wears on the golf links today men all , sented more than $3,800,000. Belgium over Britain are wearing to-morrow, was the third largest customer, tak- and what the Princess wears today ,ing mainly products valued at $2,085, gociety women will surely -be wearing 000 consisting of lead and other con- tomorrow). Worn In The Halr centrates from Buchans Mine, Newsprint continued to be one of graded in accordance: with govern- ment standards, with the class and grade marked by tags affixed to the breast of the bird, There are two classes of poultry, "Milk-fed." distinguished white fat, and "select- ed," distinguished by yellow fat. Within these classes are the grades "Milk-fed A," Milk-fed B," and And silver pink. But the full sorcery of water lies When all about's enfolded in the ve! vet cloak Of darkness. Only the pool Is powdered with dust of stars That gleam and quiver in its depths Here I gaze, spellbound by beauty, These halr stars worn just back Newfoundland's greatest sources of from the temple, put in a tentative wealth, production for the year hav. appearance sonie time back, but it [ing totalled $11,650,345, Fisheries hds needed the approval of the Duch. | were valued at $7,663,660 and min- ess of Kent to launch the idea ser-|erals at $4,708,699. A sense of humor is that which makes you laugh at something that Till the Dawn penetrated the night's dusky labyrinth, : And the moon fades in growing light The pool knows all my secrets; All my moods have beén reflected on Its ripples . By BUD FISHER ~--Robert TLonis 45: <1 "Dawn Wind." and seasonings, cook for fteen or | cakes. Provides 16 small muffins, 8 twenty minutes. Mix the flour with | waffles or 8 griddle 'cakes, , a small quantity of cold water, Add Happens to somebody which would to the meat and vegetables. Cook DINNER DESSERTS make you angry if it happened to until thickened. Sprinkle parsley on | The housewife who has planned to | you. MUTT AND JEFF-- | i ([BUTMUTT, \F YOURE GONNAT DONT WORRY 5; T7-AND ALL THE JEWELS )| LIVE IN THE HOLLYWOOD 4 ABOUT THAT JEFF 'Ar scien : : 1\ SHE WORE = = = I| HOTEL YOU CAN'T TAKE ££ TLL ARRANGE ¥ oo phe ; | = : a / ole 4 vi { fa. "Selected C." Grading of the birds in this manner enables the house- holder to choose good dressed poultry with great ease, Smith-Walker, in MRS, MUTT) ME WITH YOU IN THE = THAT! Home Grown Poultry Ration , SAME SUITE LIKE 7: NS J : " Home grown grains ave available on most farms where poultry are kept. In such cages the raw grains may b ground and used to good ad- vantage in a laying mash. Mix the ingredients in the following proport- fons: 2 parts finely ground wheat; finely ground barley and oats cach 1 part; 1:2 part animal feed mix- ture which is made up of equal parts : $ gh me rn AN ground meat scraps, fish m al tively Ct 1 milk powder; 2 per cent. bone- and 1 per cent. salt, Whew available, the mille.» eliminated an? falfa ber ono PN