-- ary "and ice cream, ginger waflles _ salt, 1-3 teaspoon soda, 2 eggs, 1 cup sour: milk, 4 tablespoons rielted 35 powder. ~ stantly to keep smooth, Add yolks - splendid lodging place for dust and surface. +i EMERGENCY MEALS - Lucky is the bride who numbers a - waffle iron among her wedding gifts. Crisp, golden waffles delight one from breakfast to the after-theatre party and even have a place in. the main course or dessert. Rice waffles and creamed chicken or creamed fish, plain waffles and maple syrup or honey; waffles and crushed berries; chocolate waffles and whipped cream and later in the sea- son, green. corn waffles, are just a few of the luscious combinations pos- sible. And most important, waflles may always be made at the last minute, 80 they hold first rank of. emergency dishes. Because waffle batter is a pour batter, it's much more convenient to mix it in a pitcher and pour it on the waffle iron rather than dip it with a spoon from a mixing bowl. ' The lipped bowls are attractive and easier to beat-in thes a straight- sid- ed pitcher. WIPE, DON'T WASH Never wash a waffle: iron! - The metal must be seasoned before using, but after that, even this material should not be washed. After each ~baking wipe with soft paper and re-. move all crumbs with a stiff brush kept for the purpose. Plain waffles with creamed salon and fresh peas make a delicious hr for a summer noon when the weather suddenly turiis cool. PLAIN WAFFLES One and one-third cups flour, - teaspoon baking powder, 1% Eo butter. "Mix and sift flour, salt and baking Add milk, stirring = con- of eggs well beaten and = melted shortening. Mix thoroughly and beat in soda dissolved in a little . cold water: Fold in whites of eggs beat- en until stiff. Bake in a hot waffle iron. - The batter may be piads several hours in advance and kept on ice until needed, To make chocolate - waffles = meit two squares of baking chocolate and add % cup sugar. Decrease amount of butter 2 tablespoonfuls.* For ginger waffles add 1% cup molas8es, 1 teaspoon ginger and % cup sugar. Increase flour to 1% cups and soda of 2-3 teaspoon. _ Pineapples always may be relied upon to furnish the perfect finishing touch to menus, Before you use fresh pineapple in any way, be sure to give it a thor- ough seribbing with a stiff brush. 'The extremely rough skin makes a germs. - Pick Good Ones ~ It's easy to select fine fruit when marketing, 'because pineapples have few: imperfections. The size of the fruit really has little .to do with its quality. Pound for pound, one .pine- apple yields about the same percen- tage of edible material as another. An even golden. color denotes full ripening. Pull the leaves from the crown, too. They should pull easily and be,white some distance up from the base. Notice this whiteness par- ticularly, because unless you are the first person who has tried to pull out the leaf, several previous tweaks may have loosened it so that it does' come easily for you and you will be fooled. Notice the fragrance, too. Never choose fruit that is hard and green looking unless it is to be kept for several days before using. Over-ripe pineapples are. soft and frequently have black spots on 'their The vitamin content i considers good, comparing ~favorab oranges, - This is worth keeping tho mind, because as oranges become. scarce and high in "price, pineapples make a good substitute, ~~ To Prepare For Table' * There's one. precaution about get: ting fruit ready for the table. te sure that every. bit of the skin: an eyes. are ' removed. There's an astringent in the skin, and 'eyes that often makes the mouth sore. The easiest. way .to handle the fruit is to cut it in inch slices after washing. Then: pare off the skin and dig odt Remove the hard core in the centre and cut the flesh in. dice, or shred if preferred. * If you sprinkle the fruit with sugar at least an hour: before serving, the flavor will be more delicate and the sweetness. penetrates through the fruit. 'Another point to Keep in mind re- garding fresh 'pineapple is: the neces- sity. of scalding' both the jujce and the fruit before adding them to a gelatin mixture. Your jelly won't "jell". if you 'don't do: this.. Pineapple Pudding Use 3% cup of quick-cooking tapi- 'oca, add to 3 cupfuls of milk and cook in a double boiler until the tapioca: becomes - transparent. Add 2-3 cup sugar, a pinch of salt and 2 mixed, rand * continue. . cooking. until thickened. Serve .warm or cold with 1 | diced sweetened ;jpineapple as a sauce. : Pineapple Meringue Cake % cup butter; % cup sugar, 4 egg' yolks, 4 tablespoons 'milk, % cup cake flour, .1 teaspoon' baking - powder, sift in, last 2; tablespoons cake flour, and .} %. teaspoon salt. Mix as for cake; pour. into 2 eight inch layer pans and add Meringue. Topping: Meringue Topping 55 4 epg whites, 3-4 cup sugar, 1 tea- spoon vanilla, 3-4 cup Shoppe us nut meats. Beat epg whites to a froth, add sugar gradually, continuing beating until all sugar is added. Meringue should hold a point when beater iis removed -from it. Then add vanillp and spread the_mixture on top of eagh of the unbaked layers. Sprinkle the chopped nutmeats: on top of nieringue. Bake the layers for about 20 to-26 minutes at 325 deg. to 350 dég+ (moderate oven). Allow dayérs to "cool, remove from pans. and fill with Pineapple Filling. sa Pineapple Filling: - - 1 cup whipping cream, 114 table: spoons powdered sugar, , 1 qup crushed pineapple, drained Wi spoon vanilla. Whip cream, add othdh Biraliots, Place one of the vbaked layers, meringue side down, on a 'cake plate. Spread with the whipped cream pinfé: apple filling. Place the second layer on top, with meringue side up. "This cake is best. if eaten the day it is made. At any rate, the whip- ped cream filling. should not be added until shortly before serving. Fresh or capned pineapple may. be used for io recipes, SCISSORS IN KITCHEN. at © Scissors have many uses in 'the kitcheh, = Fruit such' as grapes amd strawberries will not be bruised and lose juice if they are" clipped instead of cut with a knife, Bacon strips for. casserole dishes, canapes and hors, d'oeuveres may. be anna with scissors, $90, = HOUSEHOLD HINTS = _»¢! » iF i ix * x "When. chopping' mint sprinkle first the eyes with a sharp-pointed knife. Loggs, slightly beaten. Stir until well |. , tea- | ; The Tne. children of the Ring a and Queén iu Belgium pictured on the sands at the Holland sea- 23 "side resort at Noorwijk with the children of the Burgomaster. Left to right are: Jan Mortel, Princess By Josephine Charlotte, Sabina Mortel and Prince Baudoin, . After peeling onions wash your bands, din' cold. watér ta rid them of thy, smell If washed in hot water, 8" penetratés the skin. * ® It your le is on fire, rake out fire in grate as much as pos- gible,. then. wring out an old dust sheet or piece of sacking in water, and stuff it up the chimney so that it fills "the opening. By stoppine the through (draught the fire will die down, wilh + STAINS Mang common stains remain in garmé ats and - household linens through several washings just be- cause the 'bit of knowledge required to take them 'olit is not available at the right moment. These simple remedies for: removing spots should be -kept in some handy place for suchieémergencies; ' i) Scerch Sh good way to remove scorch Friis white, goods is to wet the plac- es and hang it up exposed to the sunshihe to 'dry, or you could spread it thickly with paste made of com- mon starch and cold water, and lay in 'sun, If badly "discolored a second application may be necessary. Wash with soap and warm water, rhe Ink - the . 'To remove ink stains place article over a howl, and cover the stain with borax. Then wet the borax théroughly with peroxide, us- ing plenty of peroxide, and the stain will almost immediately disappear. *" Sonie 'prefer to use a thin mustard 'paste to :spread.over an ink spot and leave .it for 24 hours. This takes out "| the ink and does not injure the most defeats; fabric or color. i Mud Mud' stains can generally be re- moyed by rubbing the spot with a mixture of equal parts of flour and | fcomimon salt, ¥ : 7 Grease To remove auto grease or any dark; heavy grease from washable fabric apply a small piece of butter and rub in well, and then wash with soap and rinse. * Anothér way is to make a paste of Filler's "earth and turpentine, and rub it on the fabric until the tur- 'pentine has evaporated and a white powder produced. This can be brushed off and all grease will have disappgared.. . «Sunday Schon] Lesson JOSIAH (A RELIGIOUS REFORM- ER). -- 2 Kings 22:1 '-- 23:30. " GOLDEN TEXT. -- Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and * him only shalt thou serve. Mat- This blemish usualy starts | with sugar, and your work will sbe| . thew,4:10. . whose symbol was the trunk of a| Must show forth the song. at the base of the fruit." completed in half the time. wal THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING tree, or a cone of stone. "And for --Minnie Hallowell Bowen, ' 39 ---- i "i ' es are 'opened, and the juice TIME.--The revival under Josiah! all the host of heaven." 624; though 641 took place in B.C, Josiah's reign extended from B.C. to 610 B.C. PLACE.--Principally in the city of Jerusalem, and, particularly, in the temple. "And the king sent, and they gathered unto him &ll the elders of Judah and of Jerusalem." Although the king had received an answer which was favorable only in its bearing on himself, his first care was to bring together the entire people, to make them acquainted with the law-book, to lead them to repent, and so to avert, as far as possible, the threatened punish- ment." : "And the king went up to the house of Jehovah." The most appro- priate place for the reading of the law of God, and a place where great multitudes could easily be gathered together. "And all the men of Jud- ah 'and all the inhabitants of Jeru- salem with him, and the priests, and the prophets." And all the people, both small and great." That is, both high and low; cf, Ps, 49:2, "And he read in their ears all the words of the book of the covenant which was found in the house of Jehovah." For a similar occasion see Nehemiah 8. » "And the king stood by the pil- lar." Or, on a: raised platform (cf. 11:14; 2 Chron. 6:13). "And made a covenant before Jehovah, to walk after Jehovah, and to keep his com- mandments, and his testimonies, and his statutes." He did not make a new covenant, but he renewed his determination to keep 'the covenant which, long before, his forefathers had entered into with God. "With all his heart, and all his soul." See, especially, Deut. 4:29; Matt. 22:37. With all your heart, and with all your soul, means the bringing of yourself together resolutely, in your endeavor to seek after God. That is the condition of getting back, "To confirm the words of this covenant that were written in this book: and all the people stood to the coven- ant." They all took the same pledge as the king. "And the king commanaed Hil- kiah the high priest, and tne priests of the second order." The younger and subordinate priests. "And the keepers of tha threshold." The Lev- ites whose duty it was to guard the temple, "To bring forth out of the temple of Jehovah all the vessels that were made for Baal." The sun- god, to whom human sacrifices were offered to appease his anger in time of plague (2 Kings 16: 8; 21:6). Baal worship had been revived by Manasseh, 2 Kings 21:3. "And for the Asherah." The name of a goo- dess. whose worship was derived from Assyria, a goddess of fertility, The moon and tars, also objects of pagan wor- ship. "And he burned them without Jerusalem in the fields of the Kid- von, and carried the ashes of them unto Beth-el." While it need not be assumed that the king actually made the fire and burned them him- self, he was the one whose order was responsible for their destruction, and he no doubt personally super- vised such work. Nothing could have been more thorough than the reformation which Josiah undertook, especially as re- gards external matters. Only God himself, by his Spirit, can change the human heart, 'but a man with great power can bring about a vast change in the external conditions prevailing among those people over whom he has jurisdiction, "And the king commanded all the people, saying, Keep the passover unto Jehovah your God, as it is written in this book of the coven- ant." The ordinance of the passover is given in Deut. 16:1-8. "Surely there was not kept.such a passover from the days of the judges that judged Israel, nor in all the days of the kings of Israel, nor of the kings of Judah." Seripture records that the passover was kept the second year after the exodus (Numbers 9:1-5), and then nat again until the Israelites had entered the Promised Land (Josh. 5:10). After that, special celebrations of the pass- over are only mentioned once dur- ing the reign of Solomon (2 Chron. 8:13), again under that of Heze- kiah- (2 Chron. 30:15), at the time of Josiah Laggbere), and once more after<fit"rétirn from Babylon under Fzra (Ezra 6:19), "But in the cighteenth year of king Josiah was this passover kept to Jehovah in Jerusalem." It was in the eighteenth year that the temple and the land were cleansed from all symbols of idolatry, and that the great passover was held. The Divine Song stillness Little songs come from the To rest in the heart, Stillness that lies beneath living Serene and apart, Joy beyond rapture of Springtime, -- | The scent of the rose,-- Glorious fruitage, white magic The frost flower blows. Thus to take song 'out of silence,-- To feel in the <oul Exquisite echoes of beauty Surrounding life's who'e! Colors---with richness unworthy To mirror that sky; Voices--where music transcendent May falter or die; Sculpture--whose lines of perfection No sequence prolong, These, in the soul of the poet, Pauline Johnson Memorial Urged Wilson MacDonald, Devotee of Shadow River, Would Erect It There wi Wilson MacDonald, the eminent (Canadian poet, is spending a holl. day at Rosseau, revisiting the scenes wilich have served as the Inspira. tion for some of hi: best work. He Is particularly attracted to Shadow River, immorthlized by the late Pau. Hue Johnson /in the following lines: "A stream/of tender gladness Of filmy su nand opal. tinted" skies Of warm midsummer ly lies In mystic rings where softly swings The mu ic of a thousand wings That almost tones to sadness, The far fir trees that cover The brownish hills with green and gold. arching elms overhead, grown and old, Re.pictured are beneath me far Where not a ripple moves to mar Shadows underneath or over," needless The vine- Mr. MacDonald roturns year af. ter year to paddle in Shadow River. On one occasion he brought Sir Charles Roberts and the late Bliss (farman and on another the late Sir Gilbert Parker, all admirers of the work of the gifted Indian poetesss. Hae suggests this year that a tablet at the mouth of Shadow River be TSays Eyes Do All the Tricks Carole Lombard 1 Thinks They're Most Important of All Hollywood.--It's the eyes turn the trick, whether it be win. the movies. This is the contention of Carole Lombard, Hollywood star, : "The romance. a woman inspires, the passion she engeuders, the havoc of hearts she wrecks, is always ac complished chiefly with her eyes" Carole Insists, "Love'y aands, air that light. lovely looks, are important, but pret. ty eyes are most important, All the laws, not only of coquetry, but charm and sincerity, are dependent them, » y effective because of their have a di:tinguished voice, a fetch. ing accent, an adorable figure, but a beautiful pair of eyes will do more to get you a chance In motion pic. tures than any other attribute." Not only herself, she points out, but Marlene Dietrich, Claudette Col. bert, Rosalind Keith, Frances Drake, (Gail Patrick and countless others are larze and luminous eyes. "Kyven when you meet thom to face," she says, "it's thelr that impre 8 you most of all pity is that using the eyes [lor charm is something that can't be taught, If affected it is at once ar- face eyes The erected tgp the memory of Pauline Johnson in recognition of her us and contribution to Canadian lit- erature. In discu:sing the Canadian attitude towards men of letters, Mr, MacDon- ald expressed himself as delighted with the honoring of Charles G. D. Roberts with a knighthood. Such a gesture justified the whole system of title-giving, he said: "Ingland is England," in the opinion of the poet, "because of her writers. Canadian writers." he added, "not politicians, are creating Canada." Sun-Back Bolero Dress Here's a clever little jacket dress. It can be made with high neck. at the back or with halter- like sun-back. Delightful schemes in plain and novelty prints in cottons, linens, tub silk, ete.; can be worked out with most pleasing results in this casily made model. Style No. 3360 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 16 and 17 years. Size 15 requires 4 yards of 39- inch" material for sun-back dress and bolero. FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer pane vail Manchu's diabalical plot to brea hie snd $n Sith with one stra blow J) the golf club had dashed bia the Hing, poisonous B All - -- of Fu Ng N destroy us by means of the \ Foe iss | realized in one \ oss instant. In Aig : J RS Ni | hd om A Pe \ wasn | whew | NE my pistol, | leaned a on ihe window ledge, olbow. "re But we wore rk oe ves THE ZYAT KISS--A Blow in Time garden's trees... . Looking down the wall we could see the dacoit ei] ping with incredible agility from branch to branch of the ivy, Without offering a mark for a shot, Fu Manchu's servant of death melted into the shadows beneath the BE \ 7 geni.! tifical and of no use whatever. It has to be instinctive, and fortunate. ly, with most women it" is." The eyes of Lombard and Dietrich are china blue; Claudette Colbert's are a rich dark brown and Rosalind Keith's ave the same; Drake's are a hazel gray, while Gail Patrick's are dark brown. Miss Patrick won her first screen role as the Panther Woman in "Is. land of Lost Souls," because of tho odd slant of her eyes, aand Kather- ine De Mille succeeded in finding a place on the screen because of the slumbrous quality of her gaze. These are two know In tances. Just how large a part the eyes of the others have played in putting them on the screen and keeping them there is harder to estimate, but it's easy enough to agree with Car. ole that their eyes are and always have heen a tre mendous asset, Woman Head of Adult Education Project in Sov "York Is Run by Miriam Finn Scott Perhaps a good many fathers and mothers in ew York City have not yet Tearned that Father Knicker- bocker, through what is known the Adult Iducation Project, is ac- tually attempting to show them how to straighten out some of the vex- ing problems that arise when chil. "dren are not growing up to be tha good little boys and girls--or big girls and boys--parents want them to be. ' This means, in practical working out, that when mother is worried be- cause Susie tells fibs or Johnnie has spasms of temper or when she is at her wit's end to decide what best to do to cure Joseph of playing hoo- kie or to make him-stop teas ng the cat or even to break him of the shyness that maka; it a bother to take him anywhere away from home, New York City has set in motion a gort of clinic to which this perplex- ed parent may go for expert -- and free---advice. The expert who has 'been chosen for this seemingly stupendous task {s Miriam Finn Scott, who has heen gulding parents and children around New: York for a good many year, in three her who has shown her skill fashion by training unusual children and practical somewhat own, Women Won' ¢ State Their Aite: of Hundreds of fovin "Deiving Licenses Returned -- Montreal Has Trouble Too Des Moines. ----- The lowa motor vehicle department has returned hundreds of applications for drivers licenses of Iowa wo.sen because the . forms were improperly filed out. The women, as usual, refused to insert their ages. Inquiry -at one of the big aito-~ mobile association elicited the infor- mation that Montreal has its trou- bles too. "The young women give their ages readily," said an official, "but after middle age it becomes "increasingly difficult to get a definite reply. Some of the ladies seem to think we want to know for our own personal rea: sons and beeme quite indignant at our 'curiosity.' As a matter of fact; it Is, of course, the law that the age: must be given on application for both reg- istration and driving licenses, i "It sometimes requries not only patience and tact to drag the co age out of the reluctant applicant and even then we occasionally have to a little detective work among other members of the family if all our ef-' forts with the applicant hero meet; with a definite refusal," upon "And let me tell you that you way : that ning a man's heart or a place in I'rances Co Sr RS ND PAS