Daily British Whig (1850), 16 May 1923, p. 9

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG £7 WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1938. In the Realm of Women~--Some Interesting Features 1f- TR 1 'the ingredients printed on the label of your bak- ing powder tin include Cream of Tartar--your cakes, biscuits and other foods willbemorehealth- ful and have a finer tex- ture and taste. That is one of the rea- sons why thoughtful women insist on 'ROYAL Baking Powder HIS" STAR ame: 'By Juanita Hamel A Wise Purchase 'is st Economy TX A no 'is the wisest purchase you can make. rif rs a Other household favorites : Shirtiffs Vanilla Essence, Shimff's Jelly Powders, The Old bd Becut iy Soap Sweet-scented Peerless Erasmic--dear to the women of London and Paris--brings with it something of the romance of the courts of Europe, much of the Old World"s skill, and the wildflower beauty of the English complexions. . Peerless Erasmic is the Old World beauty soap that will bring new life to your natural complexion and coloring -- soften the gow of your complexion--euhance the beauty of your face. Too, Peerless Erasmic is the perfume of good taste--a delightful, lasting, bouquet 'odor, with the charm and haunting mystery of Old World gardens, 25¢ a cake st all good stores, where you can also obtain Erasmic Shaving Stick, Solidified Brilliantine, Bath 'Crystals Perfumed), Shampoo Powder, Concentrated Pérfames and de Riz. and act of his life. A Feet eh - hii FRE 2 ectsapes Fite Savi. fas ~ \ Goat Britain nights res When_ the night- time sky is a-glitter with its myriad points of light, somewhere--maybe ri ht next door--there's someone who is looking at one star which he imagines is his alone. ere, he dreams, hovers a face--the face of her he loves the best--serenely smiling, lovely Fate, herself, luring him to higher things and aflesting for the better, every t ought like THE HOME KITCHEN By Jeannette Young Nortom Author of "Mrs." Norton's Cook Book." New Ways of Serving Two Early. Spring Delicacies Asparagus and rhubarb are per- haps the two most important spring foods that engage the housewife's attention. The prices these foods bring put them into the luxury class for the first few weeks after they appear in the early spring. by the time the markets are well- stocked prices begin tO drop. The young and tender rhubarb fis mostly used as a sauce, or for the But' , | of fresh taintier pastries that cannot be mado | sugar and a half-cupful of water. with it after it grows old when the When done a the juice of half fibre is coarse and 'the flavor acid.|a lemon and a. tablespoonful of the The pink and tender stalks need not rhubarb juice. be peeled, but should be out into y pieces with a sharp kuife, stainless, Rhubarb Pls ; steél knife or silver knife, : which | Prepare rhubarb enough to fill a keeps it from turning black. When | pie plate full. Then plunge it into it gets iold the stalks should be peel- [the boiling water for ten minutes ed and trimmed, then the cut pleces |and drain. Line the greased ple- plunged into boiling water to stand [plate with a good short crust, put ten minutes, which draws off the [in the rhubarb, sprinkle with two ackd gn they should be rained jcupfuls of sugar in which a dessert- and us apoonful of cornstarch is mixed and In fireparing the young aspara- |a half-cupffil of water Put on the gus, trim the stalks back to the ten- [Crust and e in a medium oven der part. Then divide into as about forty minutes. as portions. Place them in an as-| paragus boiler and prunge into hot | TO.DAY'S FASHION in a small pot upright so that the || By Vers Winston. 3 tops steam while the stalks cook. put into soup stock or used for a| cream soup. many bundles as are needed to serve | : ant I on water > boil until tender, or stand | The stalks that are cut off may be | A -- a Aspargus Vegetable Soup Wash and cut in small pieces the | ends trimmed from a large bunch s, and tie them up | in 4 Mttle square of cheesecloth. To ons quart of water add a can of tomatoes, a cupful of finely minced | celery, a whole carrot, scraped, a large potato; a little chopped par- sley, a large but thinly sliced onioH, and the asparagus. Cover closely and boll gently for three-quarters of | Then add a quarter-cup- | Now for the cream soup. use the asparagus, celery, onion. water and a whole carrot. Cook until the vegetables are done. Then strain, add a pint of hot milk, thick- Made from Cream of Tartar derived from grapes Contains No Alum--Leaves No Bitter Taste MADE IN CANADA ian inspiration with a simple pat- tern. It combines gray and silver: | white, and repeats the border treat- ment on the blouse. The hat is of dark green felt em- broidered in gray and silver-white wool. A Little Garden. A little garden walking dream Of winter's silver to the green ot spring, To hear the breasted robin sing y Above brown beds where white nar- cissi gleam; By it gray wall the blue eyed vio- lets smile from ° its crimson formed to flowers And woven of the breath of sun and showers The jonquil lanterns linger vet a while. XA little garden tended with greal care By gentle hands end watched with loving eyes When flames the scarlet finger of the dawn. A glad yet wistful where Blossoms of love and hope {iike visions rise Amid old dreams of days that now. are gone. ~+Elizabeth Secollard. little garden Mrs. Caroline E. Bmith, new man- ager of the Los Angeles Philharm- onic Orchestra, is believed to be the pnly woman in America to control the activities of such an organiza- tion. All babies have blue eyes when they are born. * Like fragments of the sky trrans- MOTHERS DECIDE HISTORY Interesting Time at Services Held in Harrowsmith and Hartington. ° Harrowsmith, May 15.--The ser vices on Harrowsmith. Methodist circuit last Sunday were fitting ob- servance of Mothers' Day. At 11 a.m. in Hartington church the 'Moth- ers' Day service prepared by the Sunday school department in Tore onto, was rendered. Over forty children occupied the platform. Re- citations were given by Master Lloyd Babcock and Miss Ketta Moore. A solo was rendered by Miss Salome Goslin. An address was given to the young people by the pastor, Ref. R. W. Armstrong, on. "Out Debt And Duty to Mother." church was literally packed and sng expressions of appreciation were heard, At 7.30 o'clock, the service in Hare rowsmith' was a record one as af as attendance is concerned. Many expressed the opinion that 'it was the largest congregation ever seen in the church. Some fifty mothers filled the choir loft rostrum and side seats. Rev. R. W. Armstrong spoke. on the text: "Blessed Art Thou Among Women." Luke 1:42. He li- lustrated the exhanited place and. extensive influence of Motherhood by brief sketches of the Mothers of the following men: Shakespeare, Line colin, Napoleon, Beethhoven; St. Aug ustine, Wesley, Jesus. "The Mothers dt men," he sald, "have determined the current of the world's history.' You should not live one way fn private and another m pubdlle. | c--

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