pb ERR RL LXE TH BSE NR RTH eta £5 GREEN TEA 4 . PRXHIIOOXHHH HH IHX HHH IOOOOOOOOCHH XXX XX IKK RXXXXXRIXXH XO : i & KXXX RX Eo oo xX When the United League season opens the gamhlers are offering 200 to 1 that Pop Clark's New York Blues will not win the pennant. Terry Burke is the only sports writer to give them a chance. He bets $10 at Tony Murallo's restaurant in the Broadway district. In the Blués' first game Whitper, the Philadelphia pitcher, is killed with a bullet through tha heart after smashing out a home run. Both Burke and Larry Doyle, the Blues' rookie shortstop, for whom Clark's pretty daughter, Frances, had shown her preference over Whit- per, are suspected at first by Detec- tive Kelly. It is Burke who discov- esr it was Sid Stream, notorious gun- man, who wrecked a taxi with a bul- let through-a tire and injured four Boston players as the Blues are to open a series. Then Dirkin, Chicago star; drops dead, after hitting a hom- er, from poison on a phonograph needle fixed in the handle of his bat. Pietro, Chicago's bat boy, disap- pears. Clark sends Doyle to Newark but 'he is soon sold to Boston. When the 'Blues go to St. Louis, Scotter, the Rubes' star pitcher, is found dead from a gas given off by a mys- terious powder in the box with a Jigsaw puzzle sent to him. Each time Burke has a beat on these sensa- tional happenings and masked gun. men truss him up, question him and warn him he knows too much, Rawl- ins, the manager, is sick when the Blues go to Chicago, and New York wins the first game. Burke bets Mull- ins, another sports writer, $5 the Blues will wn the second game if Rawlins is still ill. He is absent again, Goofy Gaston was wild at the start, and walked the first two New York batters. Shorty Dugan, who was now playing short-stop in place of Doyle, lined a hot single through Crawford on first and drove a run in. Crawford was injured in the play. The ball nearly tore his thumb off and he gave way to Steve Hig- gins, a rookie infielder from the Butchers' farm in Decatur. Rosy Moore was just pitching along, taking his time. Moore had the theory that his outfeld, and in- field, too, for thet matter, should do ninety per cent. of his work for him. Unerring control and a moist spit- ter had the batters all popping up and hitting into the dirt. There were no strikes in Moore's bag of tricks. He had control and an accurate " knowledge of each batter's weakness- €s. * Gaston seemed to settle down af- ter the third. The 'Blues nicked him for :another run in the second, but that was all. He set six men down on strikes in a row. The Butchers collected a run from Moore In the gixth, % - Gaston was living ug to his repu- tat'on. He razzed each-New Yorker as he stepped.up to tue plate and had Benslfy yous Jim and oll! VIN ; Domne a0 --k MEMBA-SEAL NO WAX the fans back of the screen in stitches at his antics, At the same time he was pouring that deadly submarine bell of his up to the plate. In the eighth Gaston himself got a hit. The crowd was wild. It was the eccentric one's first hit of the season, The next man up was Joe Morris, the Butchers' new second baseman bought to replace poor Dir- kn. Rosy Moore was pitching more slewly than ever. Morris was un un- known quantity to him and he look- ed him over carefully. The ball flcuted up to the plate and Morris swung. He topped it' and the bali went down to Dugan at short Dugan came in fast, hesitated and made a scoop off the dirt. - He came up .wit nothing, The ball went clean throtgh his legs out to Buck Hausen in cen- tre an Gaston crossed the plat: with. the tyirg run and the game took on an cutively new complexion. Moore held the rest of the inning scoreless by dint of two infield outs and # pop foul to Dick Tfioran. "It was swell pitching in the face of o terrible break. Ce . . The two tears battled in a twe- two deadlock antit the thateenth: Pop Clark noticed that the rookie, Higg'ns, on first, was hugging the bag too much, Morris on second was. a uscful player, but lacked Dirkin's great skill at going over to his left and firing the ball to first with that graceful motion which nad made Kirkin the best in baseball. Pop or- dered little Joie Brown to nurse Gas- ton for a walk. Brown got his t'cket 'to first, and perhaps Gaston didn't. squawk on the play! Dutch Schatz was next up. The signal for.the. hit and run play was on and it worked like a charm. Huette, the assistant manager, coaching at third, - was caught napping. Both Higgins and Morris started late and Schatz" hit rolled between them for a perfect single. Brown scampered around to third. The stands were glum. One run at this stage of the game looked as large as a dinosaur ez. Horan laced the first ball pitched to him far out into right field. Smith ran back and caught it up near the flagpole. Brown waited for the catch and crossed the plate with the third run. Three to two and Rosy Moore pitching like a well-oiled piston-rod. The press boys were unanimous in critcizing Huette on the play. Raw- lins would never have let the Blues get away with it. Terry was gleeful as he tapped out his running account of the game. 'That was all the Blues managed to get. Both Dugan and Moore went down swinging. The Butchers came up to the plate with murder in their hearts. Huette, smarting under the play juse pulled on him, ordered all the Butchers to hit the first pitch. Smith rammed a double down the third base Ine. Hig- gins was next up and Moore got him thrown out at first, Smith advancing on the play. Horitz, the catcher, waited Moore out carefully. The count was two and two when he lash- ed out at a slow curve. The ball rose higl, in the air back of third base; Reynolds ran for it and Joie Brown held the third base bag, hoping for a play on Smith, Huefte watched PHILIP MORRIS Fir-37 her models that are adaptable for the' 'figure. The lines of these gowns ap- Woman Is Expert In "High Style" New York Dressmaker, French, Is Boon To the Stout Germaine Montell, New York dress- maker, is French, of course, and she: makes clothes for the "world's best dressed women." Her clientele is composed of women who wear what is known as "high style" clothes. They appreciate the value of art in classic simplicity. Mme, Montell strives to create the clothes that enhance personality, the type. that make for glamour and ro- mance. . > But there are a certain number of larger women -- the;'stylish stout" "eesBories. na. tance, according to Germaine Monteil and they must be selected far enough in advance so that the textile mills can weave them, as in many cases they are woven specially for her, And such materials come from weavers in all parts of the world. : France still holds its prestige for lovely fabrics and many of the fam- ous weaves are found there, The great Rodier originated the kashas that were favourites for many seas- ong, The house of Bianchini makes brocades, metal cloths and other love- ly fabrics, Mme. Monteil believes colour jz a matter of seasonal importance and that colours are interesting if used correctly. She uses blgck a great deal, as it is classic and practical, lending itself to combination with colored ac- Germaine Montell loves to travel, and she freuently visits her native VEKY Mr ici rc KX XXX XXX XX XXII IRIHXXIKR XIX IH IIARRHX RII IRD man wearing them. They are known as "specials" and ghe gives th m sec- materials, etc, to give smoothness and those so slenderizing lines. Materials are of the greatest impor- parently cut off pounds from the wo: ret ingenious darts, manipulation of Paris to consult and to work up new ideas with fabric designers, and also to arrange for novel trimmings, that she has made especially for her. She also goes to attend the famous Paris openings and the races and the thea. tre. HOW TO SEW--BY RUTH WYETH SPEARS Peasant Embroidery for a Luncheon Set - 0 ) J\) £5 on cither white or natural linen. hand method, that is, with no sta however, line, and to make evenly spaced .row of "stitches. This method o "border. stitche®, Remember that you are hems at the sides. done in black. bundles. with step-by-step instructions. of 14c (10c plus 4c postage). The embroidered borders used for the heavy linen set sho here arc done in the typical red and black peasant embro dery colQp-s-heme These. borders are done by the free to draw straight lines with a ruler to guide you in keeping the rows of stitches straight at the outs'de edges of the border in 'shown here at A. 'The djagrams given here show the exact size of the .. ~The 'ends of both mats and napkins ere fringed, fringe is whipped with the red thread to keep'it from Use mercerized strand embroidery cotton for this and the border Pe: inty effect, so use all six strands of the cotton. [ the mats and napkins are fringed, turn and baste three-cighths inch The hems are held in place by the blanket stitch- ing that makes the outside row of the border pattern, as shown in diagram. A. The blanket stitchin + The red stitches that make the center of the border are called To make them, take three vertical stitches, thread through in the center, as at B in making the last Make a stitch over the three vertical stitches, and bringing the needle out ready for the next } NOfE:--Mrs. Spears' new book, "Sewing For The Interior De- corator," contains 47 other fascinating things to make tor the home - Now ready for mailing upon receipt Address: Mrs. Ruth Wyeth Spears, 73 West Adéla'de Street, Toronto. ' mping pattern. It is a food plan, dots inthe .center for the middle f outlining the: border pattern is the top of the raveling more. working for a bold rather than a After the ends of g of both edges of the border is bringing the of the three. b'nding them together, bundle, as at C. Reynolds running. If seemed to be the only chance to tie the score and the moment the ball fell in the left fielder's glove he screamed at Smith to dash for the plate. Smith ran and when he got about ten feet away from the plate he saw the ball sail over his shoulder into the outstretch- td glove of 'Horan. In vain he pulled up and tried to scramble back to third. A: short peg to Brown and he way trapped. Swift little Joie pounc- ed on him and the Blues had won another close one. : "Terry, my boy, here is your dough." Craven handed over Mull- ing' money 'with a laugh. "You sure get "all the breaks, young fellow." "Or maybe I know my baseball," Terry said with a sly look in the direction of Mullins. "Maybe some day you - fellows will realize' that these Blues can play ball." TO BE CONTINUED Jan EE INSTANT GAS New Stethoscope : : Able to Warn "Dad - ATLANTIC CITY. -- Expectant fathers can be warned in the future to prepare themselves for 'one, two or five children, two university of California physicians said this week by 'use of a new instrument similar to the sound detectors used by the army to locate enemy airplanes, } The instrument is a new steth- oscope, called a "symballophone" by its inventors, Dr. William: J. Kerr and Dr. 'A, M. Basset. With it the physician for the first time can de- termine the exact location of sounds inside the human body and pick up- the pre-birth broadcasts of infants long before they come into full voice. They demonstrated the device before the American Médical Asso- ciation. g * The physician can also use the in- strument to make more specific stud- ies of heart troubles, including the timing and pitch of heart sounds; of diseases of thejlungs and. the res piratory. tract and friction within the Jungs; of troubles in the vocal cords of opera and other singers; and the various "engine knocks" of the hu-- man body. FX £ oe ' . $n } - ' Ladies Send us your name, and receive absolutely FREE, sample of our Highest Quality, Hospital 'Sani- tary Napkins. Hygeia - Products, London, Ontario. Issue No. 26--'37 Cc--2 "Add boiling water to egg yolks, stir _ Toronto where girls attending school 8 'Home A Summer Snack What is more delicately appetizing for a summer snack than golden sponge cake, fresh strawberries and cold, creamy milk® We can't think of anything that would taste bettef and 80 we give you this recipe for sponge cake, It seems, somehow, a particu: 1 larly suitable cake for summer be- cause it is light, golden and very tasty. True sponge cakes never call for baking powder 1: the recipe, they are made light, solely by the air that fs beaten into the eggs. But there {s an- other kind of sponge cake that can be made with baking powder and which calls for fower eggs. That {s the one we have chosen because it is econo mical and is quite as good as the more expensive kind. 3 There is one thing you must re- member, however," in making this cake and that {3 to vse finely milled flour. If yeu epccify the finest flour on the marke! when you buy from deur grocer, you need have no fear that this cake won't be a success. Clarplicn Sponge Cake 134 cuns sifted cale flour, 14 tea- spoons baking powder, 14 teaspoon salt, 4 c33 yolis; 1% cups sugar, 4 cz whites, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 tea- stoon grated lemon rind, 23 cup boil- inz water. Sift 'leur once, measure, add bak- ing powder and sal, and sift to gether three times. Beat egg yolks until thick and lizat. Add 14 cup su- cor - gradually, beating constantly. Beat €3z whites. with flat wire whisk until light and foamy throughout; add remaining 3-4 cup sugar very gradual ly and continue beating until stiff en- ough to hold ud 'in definite, satiny peaks. Add vanilla and lemon rind. ring. well; thea add flour all at once and beat with spcon until smooth. Fold quickly into cgg whites. Turn into ungreased tube pan and bake in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) 1 hour and 5 minutes, or until~done. Invert pan 1 hour, or until cold. Be Tender with Strawberries . - Strawberries need affectionate handling. They don't take kindly to shower baths. Keep them away from By LAURA KNIGHT XXX RIHXIX HHI XXXXXX XID KKK Hints Laying a. Re. on Jargon With a Trowel" This newspaper's mild protests ag- ainst the laying on of pargon with a trowel have received warm and wel-* come support in Canada's Capital -- notes the New York Sun. The Ottawa Journal comments with approval on a recent editorial article in which the Sun drew attention to a fondness for pretentious words, revealed in reports <2 a sociological conference in Pitts. burgh. It says: "It is a sound general rule, we do think, that, except in the realm of the - * thing is worth the saying which x ~ ., > scientific and technical matters, a : re not be said in words the ordinary der or listener is capable of under. standing. Almost invariably the great mind thinks and expresseg itself along the faucet. Instead, put them in a bowl of water and lift them out with the fingers somewhat apart to serve as a strainer. The sand and soil from the berries will settle to the bottom. For that regson, don't pour the water off the berples. Unless berries are un. usually difty, two such washings will be enolgh. Place them in a colander to drain. Then remove caps. Rinse again after removing caps if neces- sary. Never allow berries to stand in wa- ter to losa color and flavor, To sweeten strawberries before serving, -cut in halves or chop rather than crush them in order to keep them as attractive as possible, Fresh Strawberry Tarts (9 tarts) One quart hulled strawberries, 1 cup sugar, 1 package strawberry- fla- vored gelatin, 1 cup hot water, 1 cup cream whipped, 9 baked 314 inch tart shells. Combine strawberries and sugar and let stand 10 minutes. Dissolve strawberry-flavored gelatin in hot water. Pour over strawberries. Chill until gelatin .begins to thicken. Fold 4 tablespoons' thickened gelatin into whipped cream. Chill. Place layer cf whipped cream in bottom of each tart shell. Chill about 10 minutes. Cover with layer of jellied strawberries, pressing hull end of each strawberry lightly into cream. Add thickened gelatin to fill a tart. Chill a few min. utes longer and serve. Heat [8s the enemy of color and fla- vor, so use preserving methods re- quiring minimum of heat. The Bureau of Home Economics suggests this as one of three good processes. It is for 8 pounds of prepared fruit -- the maximum for best results. Processing according to this meth. od you would use a pound of sugar for each pound of berries, and com- bine the two in alternate layers, then let them stand 8 to 10 hours before cooking. No water should be added, as the sugar draws enough liquid out of the fruit. As soon as they are ready boil them rapidly 15 or 20 minutes or until the syrup is rather thick. You'll need to stir it occasionally but carefully so as not to break the berries. Few Girls Remain In School When Marivied TORONTO.--Unlike a case re- cently reported from Britain, To- ronto collegiate girls who marry do not stay in school after they under- tale to be wives and homemakers. There have been a few cases in have been wed, but principals say that they know of no cases in which a young married woman remained as a student. ) "It is not surprising that a few of them get married so early--we have some remarkably good-looking girls among our students, and nowa- days they are taught something of domestic science," said Principal F. H. Clarke, of Jarvis Collegiate. "There is no law against a girl student being married, other than the requirements as to parental con- sent," said Dr' C. C. Goldring, sup- erintendent of-schools. W. E. Dunlop, issuer of marriage licenses, said that if a girl were un- der 18 the consent of her father, or in certain circumstances her mother, would be necessary. " At, the university, say the auth- orities, it is quite a raré thing for married men to be in atteridance, and 'almost unknown for married women to be regular day students, Secret of Longevity It is pleasing to find a variation in the prescriptions for good health at great age. Too much they have been limited to long walks, total ab- stinence, regular drinking and the like. Brigadier-General Samuel E. Tillman, who will be 90 in October, astonished the ship netvs reporters the other day by attributing his fine physical condition' to the fact that he has never supported his trousers with 'a belt. Suspenders-are his sec- ret, now revealed by a man who has gained distinction as soldier, astron- omer, chemist and geologist. There is much to say for the Till ugly, while belts are aesthetic, but the old galluses put the weight of the breeches on the shoulders and not on the hips. Put a pelt on a man and he will automatically thrust his paunch out to keep the leather from slipping. Give him suspenders and he can put his chest out and his tummy in without fear and social disaster. There is also the element of congestion of the abdominal capill- aries under pressure of the belt. Suspenders went out when the vogue for country lfe made men try to be beautiful sans coat and waistcoat. They are coming back now and General Tillman's certifi cate will give them another fillip, If a man cannot have two cars in his garage he can express prosperity by having suspenders for each and every pair of trousers, -- "Half of the world's. philosophers are pessimists who tell us that pro- gress is impossible and'that there is no escape. -- Nicholas Murray Butler, WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-- And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to go The liver should Rour out two of liquid bile into your bowels daily, It this bile is not flowing your food doesn't It just d in the bowels, Gas bloats u your stomach. You Senstipated, Harmf poisons £ to the , you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk, A mere bowel movement doesn't always get at the cause, You need something that works on the liver as well. It takes those , old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two unds of bile flowing freely and make you eel "up and up", Harmless and tle, the, make the bile flow freely, They do the wor of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in them, Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by name! Stubbornly refuse anything else, 25¢, man theory, Suspenders may be BLACKHEADS Get two ounces of peroxine powder from your druggist. Sprinkle on a hot, wet cloth and rub the face gently. Every blackhead will be dissolved. The one safe, sure and simple way to remove blackheads, Have a Holly» wood complexion, TH RR straight lines and in simple words. ale As a_model of the kind of expres. sion it has in wind, The Journal sites Stanley Baldwin's pithy remark: "The fruits of the free spirit of men do not grow in the garden of tyranny." This tells its own story, especially if it be placed alongside a sentence quoted by the Sun as a horrible example of the other kind of expression: "Crim. inal or delinquent manifestations are understood, as symptomatic expres. gions of an action tendency that ex. tends throughout the behaviour strucs¥ ture of the community." That is in. deed comparing Hyperion to a satyr! No doubt a good deal of jargon comes from a deire to emulate the precision of true science, Often a word in general use will be impres- sed into service to represent a fixed % and particular idea, This sometimes / leads to such monstrosities as the "automatic behavior pattern" of the sociologists, In addition, there are scandalous distortions of such good words as "concept," "fixation," ¢ob» jective" and the like, to say nothing ¢! abominations like the incredible word "behaviorism." - "The old scientific practice of using Greek and Latin for such purposes was far more commendable. It sup- . plied fixity of definition, enlightened 5 the knowing and bewildered 'the ig- norant. It is hard enough on the un. learned to send them to the diction ary to ascertain the meanings of the x px strange words without imposing on ¢ p them the additional indignity of hav- ' ing to learn new definitions of fam- iliar ones which have been put to the rack and thumb-screw of pseudo-scien. tific usage. There is, as our contemporary sug- gests, a modicum of reason for using highly technical and scientific terms in highly technical and sclentific writings, Even there, however, tho practice is justifiable in articles in- tended for the general reader only to the extent that scientific précision d will no permit the use of more famil- | far phrases, A surgeon speaking "to _ } surgeons may appropriately refer to a basilar fracture, when if he were speaking to laymen he might far bet- ter speak of a fracture at the base of the skull. » I's 2 ' "- «| > on 4 J Approve Collective Bargaining System > TORONTO.--The: Social Service Board of 'the Ontario and Quebec Baptist Church convention reported in favor of collective bargaining. In deliberations between capital and labor, each should be represented by leaders of its own choosing, the board's report said. ; 7 "Your board believes and recom- mends that Baptists should recog- nize and adhere. to the proposition that labor and capital should both be entitled to demand and 'obtain the right to collective bargaining = with each other and the right to be represented in such deliberations + | >» by leaders of their own choosing," "said the report. "Recognition is needed of the fact that labor and capital are both in- tegral parts of industry and only in their mutual co-operation can indus- i trial peace be maintained. i « 'At the present time your buard, in conjunction with other churches, is engaged in preparing a Labor . Day message co indicate the churck's attitude oo such iraportant questions as collsctive bargaining and trade unionism, topics which have aroused much concern in this country during the past few months." The report also urged closing of women's beverage roonie., » No Cause For Amazement More than one person can play at this game of turning a blind eye on the achievements of the past. The reactionaries can do it as well as the forward lookers. Mussolini is lauded to the skies for cleaning up thd rail- ways and reclaiming marshes, as though nobody before him in Italy had ever built a railroad or reclaim- - ed a swamp Hitler pats hiraself onl) the back for building roads and cut- tinng down unemployment, as though the despised Weimar républic had not { built roads and hundreds of thous- ands of new houses for the G.rman people, and, until the 1929 hurricane struck, had not kLeld unemployment in check. People used to come back starry-eyed from the Dnieper power dam in Russia as though capitalists had never built a dom or a trans mission line.--New York Times. > L pl ~ i