Are Basily Peeled Off I you are bothered with any cutane- ous blemish, it's a peor plan to use paint, powder or anything else to cover Too often this only emphasizes ic up. the Rotoet, Besides, it's much easler tc remove the disfigurement with ordin ary mercoliged wax. Applied nightly the wax will gradually remove Kies, pimples, moth patches, liver spots satowness, red blotches or any surface ° fon, i sorbed, a little each day, until the clear, soft, youthful and beautiful skir beneath is brought wholly to view frec- The affected cuticle is ab- (Continued from page 7.) 3 Miss Jean McClelland, spending the holidays in Kingston, will return to Whitby on Tuesday. Miss into Toronto for the past week; re- turned to Belleville to-day. England. Mrs, nied her as far - Bidwell as New York. . . * Miss Marion sington Place," is the guest of Mrs. 'Wright, Delora. Miss Maud Stuart, in town for the Alumnae meetings at Queen's, returned to her home in Ottawa. Miss Edna Booth, spending the aiome to-day. a few days in town, the Lieut.-Col. and Mrs. street. Miss Agnes Johnston, guest Low, whe } { has | Easter holidays with Easter holidays in Toronto, returned : real. has | street, been with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | bridge on Tuesday evening. om Johnston, Gananoque, for the holi- days, will return to Kingston to-mor- row. } Mrs. N. Wheeler came up from Ot- Gladys Burton, who has been | tawa this week, and is en pension at! the "Avonmore," William street, The marriage was solemnized at Miss Mollie Bidwell left on Wed- | the Church of the Redeemer, Toron- nesday for New York, where she will | to, on April 25th of Janet Cotting- & 1998 sail to-day on the 8S. St. Louis for | ham, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. accompa- James Morris, and Olaf Pihl Hertz-| berg, lieutenant 5th Canadian Battal-: ion, 1st C. E. F., third son of Mr. and Kirkpatrick, "Ken-| Mrs. Hertzberg, Evelyn avenue. . 4 8 9 Mrs. A. C. Johnston, spending the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Baillie, Barrie street, has returned to her home in Mont- Mrs. Alexander Mackie is moving Dr. Trevelyan, who has two sons i this week into her new home on Cler- in training here, has been spending | gv street. of | West | spending a few days in Toronto. Mrs, Charles Smith, Bagot street, is Mrs. Havelock entertained Price, Sydenham informally at ) Ask the druggist for one ounce of mer- Bacon, colized wax and use this lke you use cold cream Remove in morning with soap and water. Many 'who have trie this si astonishing results If troubled with wrinkles or 1 .0z, pewdered saxolite witeh hazel, will prove effective, in '% SPRING HOUSE CLEANING is an anpual event in every well regulated home. The Winter's aec- eumalmtion of dust and dirt must be removed. The question is: How «van this be done in the quickest and easiest way ? ar : (Made in Canada) Wil do the' work better than ever before and with less work It will remove the dirt and scum from furniture, floors, and wood- work, and leave them bright and clean apd new looking. So sure are we that you will be delighted with results, that every bottle is wuaranteed. It ot delighted, money refunded. From your dealer, 25¢ to $3.00, CHANNELL CHEMICAL CO, LTD. 860° Serauren Ave, Toronto, \ Pr. Ugly Spots Theye's no longer the need of feeling ashamed of remove these homely spots, Simply get an ounce of othine -- le, harmless treatment réport far- rows, & wash lotion made by Qiesviving plot wonderfully FRECKLES Now is the Time to Get Rid of These slightest your freckles, as the prescription othine ----double strength--is guaranteed to Directions--Dress and clean 1| truss an old fowl; tie it in a cloth, pour around it enough boiling water to half cover the bird. Turn the fowl over occasionally, that it may be evenly cooked, and never allow during the cooking process, Season when the bird is partly cooked; it will take at least two hours to be- come tender, If preferred, the fowl may be cook- ed in the fireless cooker, in which oven it must be started early in the morning. At serving time cover the bird completely with parsley sauce. A savory accompaniment -to- boiled fowl] is a small piece of boiled bacon which may be cooked in the same pan with the bird. Parsley Sauce. Materials Two tablespoonfuls butter, 2 tablespoonfuls flour, 1 cup- salt and pepper, chopped parsley. Divections--Put the flour together in a saucepan and blend thoroughly without coloring. Add the milk, a little at a time, stir- ring constantly till the sauce boils. Cook five minutes; add the salt, pep- per and lemon juice and, just before serving, the chopped parsley. 2 "Mince Pie Filling. Materials=-One pound seeded rais- ins,, 1 pound currants, 1 pound finely chopped beef suet, the grated rind of 2 lemons, % pound candied orange peel and citron chopped fine, one pound sugar, 2 pounds peeled, cored and chopped apples, 1% teaspoonfuls spoonful salt. peel through a meat chopper or chop ft very fine with a knife, and mix all together with the sugar, spices, grat- ed lemon rind, apples, salt and brandy. Keep at leas! a week before using, stirrin occasionally. This quantity will bake about eight good- sized pies, and will Keep all winter. Com Bread, Materials--Two eggs, 2 teaspoon- ful salt, 2°cupfuls milk, 3 tablespoon- fuls sugar,'3 heaping tablespoonfuls flour, yellow corn meal to form a batter, 2 heaping teaspoonfuls bak- ing powder. Directions--Beat the eggs well, Boiled Fowl With Paisley Sauce And | around the gclden syn place on a rack in a saucepan, and | the water to boil fast] fulmilk, 1 teaspoonful lemon juice, | washing or wiping the family dishes, tablespoonfuls for if 'by chance she should happen : tto break a bit of china, it would be butter and|an exceedingly evil oméf'" | tears, no matter how much she look-| mixed spices, 1 cup brandy, 1 table-! Directions--Prepdre the fruits by| seeding the raisins, washing and dry-| ing both these and the cdrrants; add | the suet very finely chopped. Run the | other way. Fancy weaves many pretty ideas APRIL 291916 ~~ Sleepytime Tales THE THREE E CHILDREN'S KITE Once upon a time the Three E. children asked their father if they could not buy a kite, but their fa- ther said it was much better fun to make one and Uikat Saturday he would help them to make one as large as they wished, The children got some bright col- ored paper and Ethel and Edna cut it into strips and tied it in bows on string for the tail of the Kite, When Saturday came the ¢hildren could hardly wait for their father to get ready to make the kite and even Eric, the dog, and Eve, the pet rabbit seemed to know something unusual was going on and kept run- aing back and forth in the yard un- til everyone thought they must be crazy. Their mother had made a big dish of flotir paste and cleaned off the kit- chon table so they would have & place to work. First their father took four sticks and tied them to- gether go as to make a shaped frame ike a diamond, only with the upper | sticks about half as long as the low ¥ bol that the | happy lover places upon the finger and | of his beloved on the day of days! Nearly every one has adage of be- lief in fate and all treasure wedding rings sayings in their hearts: If the ring should be taken off af-| ter the wedding ring service has been performed, misfortune will follow. Probably the foundation of this belief fact that the ring, lowed, should not the finger for any having be reason It is said that if the day a maiden | i choses for her wedding proves to be! rainy, her life will be more sorrow than joy. filled with If .the earriage containing the bri- dal pair should meet a cession, either going or the church, the driver should be in- structed to turn around and go some To avoid the possibility of any ill luck on her wedding day, the bride elect should not offer to assist in Gray for the going away gown is supposed to insure good luck. Fate was certainly kind when she decreed that for a bride to shed tears on her wedding day was a good omen for it would take a pretty stoical young woman to go through break- ing home ties without at least a few ed forward to the alluring new home. Snow falling on a wedding day au- gurs well for the happy couple, be- ing a prophecy of great happiness. As for the de in the week, the following jingle is almost as old as time: Monday for health, Tuesday for wealth. Wednesday the Best day of all; Thursday for losses, Friday for crosses, Saturday no luck at Go to the altar verbial; Something old, something Something borrowed, blue And a gold dollar in your shoe. all. wearing the pro new, something Mrs. Charles B. Alexander has thrown open her palatial home in New York city in the interest of the hospital work * being done in this country by the allies. -- A A A ANNAN is declared that dire) lies in the, been hal-| removed from Menu for Sunday | BREAKFAST { Sliced Bananas | Broiled Lamb Chops ] Creamed Potatoes | Rice Muffins Coffee i NNER i Cocktail ! Impahda Boiled Hominy Liman Beans Orange and Nut Salad Grapefruit Sherbet SUPPER Toasted Crackers Nut Balls Chocolate with Cream ey , J BREAKFAST. Hot W hipped al pro-| coming from Rice Muflins--Mix one cup of flaked rice, one of milk, one of flour, one two tablespoons of sugar, and two teaspoons of baking powder. Bake in a quick oven. DINNER. Oyster Cocktails--Mix a table- goon of chili sauce, a teaspoon of [fr ---- Menu for Monday BREAKFAST Oranges Ontmen! with ¢ream Baked Muflins Coffee LUNCHEON Steamed Chicken Warmed up Potatoes Cake Coffee DINNER Merxichn Hean Soup ¥ Roast Fotat Spinach Orange Salad Floating Island BREAKFAST. Baked Muflins--Mix a cup and a half of flour with half a eup of chop sed dates, a.teaspoon of baking pow der, one egg and a cup of milk, Bake in gew pans in a moderate oven LUNCHEON. Steamed Chicken--Place in a steamer pieces of the chicken Jeft from Sunday When hot, pour over a sauce made by melting a table- ¢poon of butter and when hot stirr- ing in a tablespoon of flour. To this add a cup of milk slowly and boil until it thickens. lower, Then he put a stick across where the side sticks cage together, and another stick down the centre and tied them tight with strong string, The the children helped paste the colored paper all over the surface of the kite and then fastened ou the long tail the girls had made. When it was all finished they all started out to try it and their mother was so interested shewent out too. , They went to the top of a hill near the house and father ran with: the kite until the air caught it and then he let it soar up, up to a great height, holding it by a long string which he unwound from a big ball of wine, Eric thought it was some game in- vented for his fun and began to chase the kite until it was up and out of his retch, The children said it was the best Fite they had ever seen and enjoyed it much better than one from the store because they had helped to make it themselves. Now father is making little Ethel a little I'ite all of her own. A AAI AA A A * "Low Cost of Living" Menu é lemon juice, the same of Wordester- shire, a little grated horseradish, and a dozen oysters Serve very cold. Chicken Impanda -- Joint and dredge with flour. Line a baking dish with slices of raw sweet potato, white potato, some of the chicken, a| ring of onion, three slices of bacon, and cover with tomatoes, until the dish is full then add a ta- blespoon of vinegar, having the layer of tomatoes. Cover and bake lowly four hours Hominy--So0ak a cup of hominy four hours Drain and boil four hours in milk or half water and milk, It should be rather dry when teady for serving Girapejuice Sherbet--Boil two cup» of water and one cup of sugar for fifteen minutes, Cool, add a cup of grapejuice and the juice of one le- mon, SUPPER. Nut Balls--Chop fine a quarter of cup of nuts, two dozen dates, six figs, and a teaspoon of lemon juice. Form into small balls and roll in powdered sugar, DINNER. Mexican Bean Soup--Socak over- night two cups of Mexican beans Cover with cold water and boil five minutes, Drain and pour over two quarts of boiling water. Add one chopped onion and allow to simmer for three hours. Mash through a coarse sieve, reheal and season. Pot Roast--Fry two slices of fat salt pork Rub a lean piece of heef on hoth sides with flour, pepper and salt Put in with the fat and brown on both sides, Turn into a pot and half cover with hot water Cook slowly until tender, adding more wa ter if necessary, .When done thickon the gravy with a little dissolved flour and pour over the meat Orange Salad--Siice very thin and rve with made by boiling together a cup of water and a quarter of a cup of su gar for five minutes and the juice of half a lemon. Floating Island--Scald of milk in a double boiler. a dressing Cool two cup Stir in Continue | last | Possibly you are one of those who have been serving Mec- Cormick"s Jersey Crearh Sodas only at meal times. There are, however, any number of occa- sions when they may be con- veniently and. appropriately eaten. For the bedtime light lunch with a glass of milk; with the afternoon cup of tea; or simply spread with jam, honey, cheese, marmalade or butter, and given to the children after school. THE McCORMICK MANUFACTURING CO, LIMITED General Offices and Factory: London, Canada. appetizingly crisp, so light, and so easily digested that they may be eaten at times when heavier, coarser foods perhaps would, cause discom- fort, They come by their whole- someness naturally, since they are made in a new model mil- lion-dollar snow-white bakery where purity and cleanliness form a part of every step of the baking process. So good that butter seems! unnecessary. 56A Branch Warehouses: Montreal, Ottawa, Hamilton, Kingston, Winnipeg, Calgary, Port Arthur, St. John, N.B. Makers also of McCormick's Fancy Biscwils Salt. the ordinary. cesses of proven superiority. For my "best" I know I am safe in recommending Century Its superior cleanliness, and its gleam- ing whiteness--all proclainr purity far beyond Let us send you a bag. * « th¥Salt ofthe Century '" is made by vacuum pro: For Table, Dairy and Farm use--always ask for Century Salt. v DOMINION SALT CO. Limited, - trade Sarnia -ary &Pr the oranges | actical | | Home Dress Making | Lerrons | Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review E An Interesting Linen Frock. add | to it two eggs into which half a cup! Stir in Strain garnish with Jolly just sugar hag been beaten it forms a creamy coating spoon, Flavor with vanilla into a serving dish and a meringue, Dot with fore serving. of a at th th rh eth eh et th heii heeitiond German waiters, were allowed until | the | be- | to! Considerable interest in linens is manifested by the leading -dress- makers of New York and Paris in their summer collections. A morn- ing frock fn blotting pad blué linen is shown here, made attractive by touches of white introduced on the collar and tiny straps finishing the lower part of the sleeves. If desired, the peplum may be omitted, leaving a trim waist finish, with the front extending below the belt. In medium size the dress requires 43; yards 44. double strength--from Mahood Drug Co., Limited or any druggist; and ap- ply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to dis- appear, while the lighter ones have inch or 63f yards 36-inch linen. The material is folded in' half n the cutting table, then each section The material is folded in half on the guide, before any attempt is made to cut the dress. If the skirt or sleeves are desired shorter than shown, cut off the pattern on the lines of small "0" perforations. The plecings for the gores are latd along the selrage edge of the mate. rial, so that when the front and back kores are lald on the linen. on a lengthwise fold, nearly every avail able inch of space is taken. The cutting guide shows the var fous small sections to be placed into add the salt, milk and sugar, and | beat in the flour and baking powder with enough corn meal to form a soft batter; bake in shallow, well greased | - pans in a moderate oven about half | which the orange-growing industry | an hour. The exact guantity of corn | Many Canadian farms are being | was developed. "| vanished entirely. It is seldom that | meal cannot be given--usually about | worked by women, {| Dr. Katherine Bement Davis, head more than an ounce is needed to com-| 2 cups will be sufficient. There are 9,000,000 unmarried |of the department of corrections in | pletely clear the skin and gain a { women in the United States. New York city, has charge of over| Fifty per cent of the silk workers | 5,600 prisoners beautiful clear complexion. i we -\ Be sure to ask for the double ! in Pennsylvania are womsn, --.~ i Mme, Cheruit, one of the leading strength wthine as this is sold under The lise of Utensils. } Over 75.000 women are #mployed | dressmakers of Paris, has been hon- guarantee of money back if it fails { in the metal trades in England. | ored with the Legion of Honor me- | to remove freckles. | Nearly all the theaters in England | dal by the French Government. Fine cooking depends much on the | now employ women as stagehands In the state hospitals and health] judicieus use of utensils. One cele-| brated chef was devoted to the use| of sieves, and vis'tors admitted to his | 'work, are now being invaded by wo men, o A woman travelling in Brazil sent | cuttings to the United States from | ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN | a . TT -- The best sugar for the sugar bowl is Lantic Sugar Nearly all the industrial work in | departments in Russia the women France is now being done by women. | have the same chance as the men in| Philadelphia has over 1,900 girls | the appointment of positions. eT -- Why $1800 for vyour Spring Shit when we will make : le Skirts made to meas- made to measure in kitchen gazed awestruck at the num- ber of sieves of every imaginable shape and every possible degree of fineness. ed as "fads" but they 'prove at all events an attention to detail without which thére can be no good cooking. It is very little additional expense to a kitchen outfit to have proper suring cups, funnels and yet they make a great difference in the accur- acy of the work. All these imple- ments are now made in enameled ware, which much simplifies the care they need to be kept in good order. the 'cooking as these spoons, ladles and skimmers can be used with per- fect safety in acids and will not dar- ken any sauce, however, delicate, Woman workers in the San Fran- cisco French laundries have been '{ asked to join the Steam Laundry 'Werkers' Union in that eity. in five-of the eleven suffrage states ~~Washington, , California, Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. Such ideas may be ridicul- | It also insures the best results for| Women have eight-hour workdays } : i | i | i skinmmmers, ladles, long spoons, mea- | i | Its purity and "fine" granulation give it the highly sweeten. ing power. It dis- solves instantly in your teacup or on. yourbreakfast eereal. 2 and 5-1b Cartons registered in its continuation schools. Kansas has 813,231 females, which is only 11,448 less than the total number of males. : Mme, Curie, co-discover with her husband of radium, manages all her own affairs. 3 Mrs. Edith Hatfield of Portland, Ore., owns and operates a large ranch near Eden, Idaho. Women have been nurses and mid- wives since early times. In 1886 there were 29 training schools for nurses. The suffragists and anti-suffra- gists now work side by side in Eng- land in the interest of the country. Two thirds of the women employed wre paid less than $6 per week. The, first Young Women's Chris tian association is said to have been formed in England in 1884. Mrs. Fred A. Busse, wife of the late mayor of Chicago, is now work- ing for that city as a collector at a salary of $30 a week. The sacred' precipets of the fash- fonable restaurants of England, in the silk industry in Pennsylvania i $s said to have accumulated a tune from investments made in Min- nesota lumber and wheat fields. The leading women of France, headed by suffragists, society wom- en and writers, have embarked oni an energetic anti-aleoholie campaign. Women of Massachusétts have an eight-hour day in a few trades only-- iypographical, telephone, bindery,! compositors and cigar strippers. Two women doctors from Shanghai, China, hospital are now in! this counpry studying hospital meth-| the woman lawyers Mis-| rut seems to have practiced | itimore in 1647. After her the first woman lawyer in the United States was Arabella A. Mansfield of, Mount Pleasant, Ia., who was admitt- ed to the bar in 1864, To gain first-hand information garding relief work being done in Europe by America and to sce for themselves the conditions of women and children in the warring ecoun- tries, two women, Mrs, J. W. Crum- packer and Mrs. F. A. Harper of Cle- { re- where formerly none but French veland, O., are now in Paris. x Olive Fremstad, the opera singer, | for- One of the most attractive shades this season is named after the hum- ble blotting pad and appeaf§ to ad- vantage, trimmed with white linen, in this morning frock. the | Above Patterns can be chained from position to avoid waste of linen. The jumper [rout and back and back of the underblouse are laid on a Jength- wise fold, as is also the lar. On the upper row place the un louse front, sleeve, peplum and round col lar, if this is used instead of the straight one, on a leng. wise thread, in the order named. : The outerblouse is perforated for two different neck outlines, round or V-shapes, allowing for the introduc tion of a vest, if desired. 2h A Pictorial Review Costume No. 8653. Sizes, 16 to » yours. Price, 15e. & RR NEWNAN & SHAW,