Be = Eas \ } 2 3 NS 15: { Srdelakhattstdaation A BE i nestic Job. Held Serious Women's Institutes of Canada Are Urged Not To Forget the Needs of Our Own Country Canadian women have a serious job:to dG in war time -- putting food supplies to. the best use pos- sible, Mrs, Alfred Watt, O.B.E,, the president ofthe: Associated Coun- try Women, of the World, said in a recent address at Ottawa to the Eastern Ontario Women's [nstit- utes, © ol : Mus. Watt said she had been told. that; the best thing Canada could da was to make its war efforts sup- plenientary ta its normal economy. Don't Forget Normal Responsibilities The normal responsibilities. and work of the' Institutes should not be submerged in wartime efforts, she urged, It was no act of pat- _ rlotism to forget the neads of one's own country in eagerness to save civilization somewhere else. | GREY. WoOL SUIT in a woman's wardrobe than her sults and Norma Shearer chooses this classic two-plece in grey wool. T) e Jacket has wide lapels, double-button] astening and tiny pockets with cres- cent flaps. The 'crossed vest is of sey. The skirt has - cular fullness. Miss Shearer wea gai cotored Jewelled flower in ' - i greater satisfaction Is to be found | 1 : Girl Athletes: - i Pe Lady-like : Physical, Emotional and Chars. ; "acter Strains Are Danjers to wh w=" ohien of Commercialized Sport Substitution of lady-like_grace "in amateur, play for the emphasis on sex in 'commercialized girls' --athleti¢s is defnded by two wa- men. recreation leaders, "We want to make girls nore, attractive, more feminine," -de- clared Miss' Dora Dodge, director of the Worcester Girls' Club, at a forum conducted by the 24th-Uni. ted. States recreation congress. "We prefer to see 7ilds in archery, tennis. and badmintey=costumes, rather than in flannel baseball cits with catch V'samit and mask." ting young gifs in "skin-tight, red-satin" couraging theri 'to © play 'high. pressure," commercialized - sport, 'Miss Ethel Bowers of New: York _déetared in an i werview that torm of sport "might not harm a hard- boiled," husky factory girl." Deplores "High-Pressure" Play "But," she added, 'we feel-- . and, J speak for hundreds of wo- men all over the country--that that "girl is an exceptional girl that ccan't be hurt by commer- ciglized athletics, and that a re. creation program should be sub- stituted to en oursgé all girls and women to "health," i iss Bowers listed, physical, e- mo ional and -gharacter strain as ! hg' the 'dangers" of commer seinlized, feminine sport. : -- s Tae On a $10 bet, a Kitchener citi- ven offered to measure the dis- + tance from there to Shand Dam-- -81 milesi--with a yardstick. At the end of 280 yards he decided it wasn't worth it, and he lost the "tA. ; "himself carefully upon a narrow ~ la utter a stentorian "Hel-io«o - "Here 1 am," said the: voice i Get uniforms and of en. - play. for fun and for amoud or ({ " SYNOPSIS Charles . Edward Chipping had been a master at the Brookfield School for boys for twenty years. ©fa shy and diffident nature he had got in wrong with the boys at the start of his career as a "school teacher, and had never won the friendship of his pupils. He Lad unforutnately, detained the class- on the afternoon of an im- portant cricket game in which one of -his pupils was to have been a star player. The game had been lost, and with that bit of discipkin. ° ary measure, the first possibility of winning the friendship of the boys. And then Max Staefel, the Viennes¢ German masfdr, asked him to go along on a walking tour of the Tyrolean mouhtins. Out alone one day in the 'mountains, * Chipping is caught in a fog and "hears a woman's "hello" far above hmi.. He starts to scramble up. ward. CHAPTER V The Girl In The Mist ns Aftér an hour of climbing: in . the fog, fecling every step of hig" way, often loosening stones that bounded and rumbled #nto some hiaden abyss below, Chipping drew ledge. Mist floated thickly past. Above his head was one of those mouatain monuments begging the traveller to pray for the soul of one who had perished there. Giv- ing it a grim, sidelong glance, «Chipping continued on the slight- ly ascending ledge, often obstruct- ed by outjutting vocks. } At one of the bends he haited "Hello!" answered a girl's volco 50" Cgg by that Chipping gave a stared jump. "Why, well--er--I don't see you," he said, stepping around the bend. : p quite close to him. He saw noth- ing but mist at first, but as he advanced slowly, -the form of a fair, beautiful girl, wearing suit, scarf and a feathered hat, took shape. She was sitting on a low rock, a sandwich in her hand. "Hellorthere! I thought I heard -a-voice." - ee (VEY) % A (\IT1g Hardware dealers are authorized to allow you $1.00 on any old fron towatd the purchass of a new Coleman. Jy makes and burns own 'gas. No cords, -- wires. Lishts Instantly, i SEE YOUR DRALER of write to ne for detsils! THE COLEMAN LANP & STOVE CO.; Lid, Dept. WO-I2T, Totonto, Unt. i BS (9327) _ danger," she said ¢ontritely. leg on each side of the saddle?" CH ABAPYED ROM THE METRO $0/. MAYER PICTURE LEBBEUS MITCHELL "Are you all right?" he asked anxiously, g "Yes, quite, thanks?" he asked a nuisance, isn't it?" "You're not in any danger?" There was unconscious indignation in Chipping's voice, . ) "No." Her eyes twinkled. "Do you mind?" ) "No -- no, of course not." "You shouldn't be-moving about, you know, It's awfully foolish of you." ! The Rescue "Foolish!" Chipping all but choked. "I---I heard you call. I thought you wore in some diffi- culty." "Don't tell me you climbed up hére to rescue me!" "As a matter of fact, I. did," he responded huflily. "Now "really I should be very angry with you. Suppose you had - fallen?' "I must say [--" "lI never heard of such utter stupidity! Where were you?" "On the Gamsteig." » i "And you climbed up in that mist--to rescue me -- when I'm probably a better climber - than you are!" a "Then what were you scream- ing about?" he demanded. "I wasn't screaming. I just let out a shout at random, So that was why?" She pointed down- wards, and shuddered. "When I - think that road might have been paved with your good intentions! Really, it was idiotic of you--and rather wonderful!" She gave him a sudden smile. - "Not at all," he began uncom. fortably. "Anyhow, I'm awfully glad you came. It was going to be very lonely. Won't you sit down?" "Er--thanks. E---my hame is Chipping---Charles Edward Chip- ping." > ~ "Mine's Eilis--Katherine Ellis," She withdrew her hand from the pocket of the jacket. "Won't you havo a sandwich? I've got loads." "Well, thanks. I ate mine early, 1 am hungry." . > "And Pn 'sorry I wasn't in any - "I'm not usually alone. [ have a friend at the inn," - "Sp hayg I. We're on a walking tour¥ 7 : " "Really? We're bicycling." Two Ladies Bicycling "Bicycling? Through Austria?" He was incredulous. "Good heay- ens, I didn't know that ladies rode those awful things! With--er--sa "You den't imagine I'd ride side saddle do you?" 4 "But what happens to . . . your dress?" = "Oh, they breed female bicycles now." Didn't you know?" - "I don't like all this rushing about on wheels. Human beings were never intended to go at-such a speed! I suppose you think I'm old-fashioned?" ~~~, "I like men to be old-fashipaed. Have another sandwich. We'll re- serve the rest for emergencies. It's chilly, isn't it?! She turnéd up her collar. ! h, I say --- I should have AIRTIGHT - BRAT dd thought of it. Here, take my coat. I'm rather too warm." "I wouldn't think of it! back on at once!" "No; really, ypu must take it. I insist , . , please." "Louk here, why: don't we share it? 1's big enough for both of us.' She started to put it about him, "Good heavens no! were to see you!" "On this mountain? And what: if they did? . I insist. Look--like this.' Catch fold of it." . She put half of the jacket about Chipping. He accepted, stiff. and 'shy and' dazzled. * ¥ Put it d If someone the mist, now talking, now silent, until it grew dark, hoping. the fog would litt, But it still "drifted* about the marooned pair, giving them a spectral-air, = Chipping was sunk in reverie, "A penny for your thoughts," said Kathie 'Ellis at length. "Er--"' he said, startled. "As a matter of fact, I was thinking about you, I see very little of ladies at Brookfield. realizing what I had missed." "If I*'may say so, Mr. Chipping, I think the ladies have missed a great deal, too." : "That's very kind of you, but I'm not really a ladies' man." "Afraid of them?" "Terrified!" he replied half-hu- morously, 2 "Not of me, 1 hope?" "Not up here "in the clouds-- perhaps the altitude has gone to my head. But if I'd met you at the inn--" "Because I'm a strong-minded female who rides a bicycle and wants the vote?" "No, on 'the contrary--because" --because you are so very nice looking, I think--and charming." "And so are you, Mr. Chipping, frankly." Faith In The Future "Good heavens!" he cried ag- hast. "No_one has ever called me that!" At her gay laugh, he pond- ered a moment, tickled at being called charming. "What extraord- inary ideas come into one's. head up here! Do you experience a sort of exhilaration?" "Definitely, It's the altitude." "Is as though we owned the mountains. - We're pretty superior persons," "We're gods." "Up here there's no time," he .said, gravely now, 'no growing old--nothing lost.". "We're" young," said Kathie softly. Foova "We believe in ourscives," he said. ~ "We've faith in the future" It was a sort of antiphonal chant, "It must be the future," said Chipping with a shy laugh. He - dug his Jick into the' ground, and continued, without looking at her: "Do you suppose un person----in mid- dle age---could start life over again--and make a go of it?" "I am sure of it--quile sure," she sald with sudden warmth and understanding. "It must be tre- mendously interesting to "be 'a school master." "I thought so once." "To watch boys grow up and help them along, seg their char- acters develop, and what. they be- ~ come when they leave school and ° _the world 'gets hold of them. - I don't see how -you can ever get old in" a world that's always young." is : "I never really thought ef it in that way. When you talk about it, you make it sound. exciting and heroic." 3 : "It is." - L] "And the schoolmaster--is he exciting and "herofc, too?" ; "I've. met only one==a reckless person who climbed thé Glockner inh a mist to--" His intense gaze stopped her. "Is my nose shiny?" "There's a light on ybur face--. a strange light--" ¢ The-moonlight had fallen on her face and gave it a striking beauty. "Look at the lights in the val- ley. The mist has lifted!" £ They stood up. - "Yes" he said; and paused. "We can: go down now." ! ; "Yes... I'm almost sorry. It was an adventure, wasnt it? I wender if we're not leaving it be- hind ue." - } © "Will you--er--take my hand? It's rather tricky just here." She took his hand and they started to descend the mountain. (To Be Continued . Why You Prefer. - A Certain Color ARI rol Colors Have Meaning Emotionally Each of us has a preference for some particular color, but not all of ug kibw hy. A slight know- ledge of the: -eaning 'of color will help us analyze our likes and dis. likes, It is wise lo. consider the chat- acteristic properties of fndividual colors before we proceed to change the color combinations in our own homes, Red, for ihstance; symbol. izes vitality, energy, power. It . lis highly stimulatiug. Blue: siznities tranqillity, Psychologioally its fn- | w fluence is quleting. Yellow symbol: izes light, cheerfulness, (Green does soothe, ye! exhilarates, . " They continued to' sit there in - I was rather { i nerve 0 strual period, "Tot Di m=» ' % bs "By SADIE B. CHAMBERS i EGG RECIPES AND REMARKS : gs form a typical food, con. taining all the elements proporti- ..opately. for {he support of the body, No doubt the price of eggs will! rise along with the prices of. other foodstuffs due to war condi-. tions and profiteering, but remem- ber one way in' which wé may do- our part in this war is to see that our | families and ourselves have balanced 'diets. These cannot be properly; balanced if we neglect the 'daily. 'egg. We are told that nine eggs. (total weight, one . pound) is equivalent in nutritive value to a pound of beef steak. The, highly concentrated nutritive value of eggs renders it necessary to use them in combination with other foods rich in starch: : Here are a few general rules about eggs, which are well to re- member: Eggs are fresh, if rough and 'dull in appearance. They should be washed as soon as they are brought in from the store and * kept in a<cool place. The un. broKen yolk bf an egg may be kept from hardening by cuvering it with cold water. If not used in a cou- _ ple of days, change the water, Keep white of an egg covered in Maternity Dress Or Smock PATTERN 4271 By ANNE ADAMS "Ladies In Waiting" -- here's just the style you've been. waiting . for! A maternity, frock. that's smart and young! Best of all, Anne Adams' Pattern 4271 is 50, practical, for it makes a separate. around skirt has adjustable but- tons at the waistband, The top is yoked straight across in back and curves becomingly in front, with concealing gathered fullness below. Wouldr't the collar and - cuffs be fresh in light contrast' "with lace edging? ( _sleeves long and full. Pattern 4271 is available in misses' and women's sizes 16, 18, 20, 34, 86, 38, 40, 42, 44 ana 46. Size 36, dress, takes 5% yards 39 inch fabric, 3% yard contrast and 23 yards lace edging; smock, 3% yards 3b inch fabric. Send Twenty. Cents (20¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accept- ed) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly Size, Name, Address and Style Number. Send your order to. Anne Ad- ams, Room 425, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, SE ry Or make the BACKAGHE, HAMILTON, =~ Mrs. Earl Johnston of 15014 Locké 'St. N. says: "I suffered from headaches and pain across my back and through my side: periodically, and I was, 80 weak and § nervous, Dr. Piéree, } Favorite Prescription hel, those awful palge and me up #0 that T felt Preseriptfod Is th Pierce's . ods phy. of scription from your draggiet today. nie - a few grains of cayenne. 'tle ch ar cool (place, | Forsresults, never cook eggs at a Ligh temperature, for they:will rebel. There is a wide and delightful variety of cooking eggs. + Eggs need not al. ways be boiled or scrambled for 'breakfast, FOAMY OMELET 4 eggs (allow 1 egg for each © adult). 1% teaspoon of<salt and pepper. 3! tablespoon of butter 1 tablespoon of water for each } egg.' Beat the. yolks and whites of the eggs separately. Beat the yolks until creamy and add the salt and pépper 'and water, Beat the whites until dry; cut and-fold:into the first mixture. Butter sides and bottom of a skillet and turn in the mixture smooth, evenly. - Cook slowly until well puffed up." With a thin silver knife, keep loosening the omelet from the pan. When the omelet is a delicate brown uns derneath, set'in oven until it feels firm to the touch. The tempera. ture of the oven should be medi. um, This can be varied by serv- ing with a white sauce. If you want something different add some mushrooms fresh, if pos. sible, but canned will do, to the white sauce. Sonfe grated cheese added to the white sauce also is a welcome, addition for variety and palatibility: Sots CREAMED EGGS AND MUSHROOMS - To serve six people. Have ready six hard cooked eggs. Slice the eggs or run them through the food chopper. To the eggs add 2 cups of cooked mushrooms. Make a white sauce of 2 cups of cream or rich milk, 2 tablespoons. of corn- starch. "tablespoon of butter. -and mushroom mixture and serve on slices of toast, the toast to be browned delicately and evenly SPANISH OMELET 4 eggs i Pe 4 tablespoons milk ~-34 teaspoon salt 35 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons butter : Beat eggs slightly, just enough to blend yokes and whites; add the milk and seasonings. Put butter in hot omelet pan and when melt. ed and hot turn in the mixture. As it cooks, prick and pick up with a fork, until the whole is of a creamy consistency, _ When the omelet is an even brown on the bottom, fold and turn on hot platter, pouring tomato sauce (which has been ready and kept hot) around the edges. "TOMATO_ SAUCE Cook two tabléspoons of butter " with one, tablespoon of chopped onign until-yellow. Add 13% cups of tomatoes and cpok ten minutes; adda quarter teaspoon .salt and Te¢ im- prove this tomato sauce, ddd a lit- spped green pepper to the onion and butter when cooking. Or- for a different flavor. add a tablespoon of sliced mushrooms + and one tablespoon of capers. But peppers, mushrooms "and capers are all optional and tomato sauce may be used plain, YOUR HOUSEHOLD " PROBLEMS. SS |Have jou lussy eaters fn your family? - Do you have trouble: providing a varied and interest: ng menu? No your cakes fall? Then write; enclosing a stamp- ed, 'self:addressed envelope-to iss Sadie B. Chambers, care of this paper, and she will endea. vour to solve vour problems, the Plans New .Hunt : ~~ For Miss Earhart longer smock "too, The "wrap: |. A new search:for Amelia Ear. hart is announced by Eric Hanner, who , left Honolulu last week in the 65-foot schooner Walkyrie. Hanner said he would spend a year in the South Seas searching -for Miss Earhart and Edward Noo- "npn, who were lost July 2, 1937, while on a flight around the world. Hannor said he was convinced thai Miss Earhart still is alive, prob- ably marooned on some island. MENTHOLATUM COMFORT Daily Gives iy Issue No. 44 -- "33 oy © If milk is ysed, 'add 1° Add the egg - i *'Habvidgtou." FH EER RS THR i a i 'onsider Before! Donning Jewelry | Styles For Sports Girl, "Fluffy Ruffles" And Older Woman 2 St Some people can wear jewels and -some_ cannot, or it they do; « spoll the jewels and themselves by choosing, the) wrong, ones ito wear < at the wrong, time, The simply dressed' sportsloving girl should ehooss, a string. of quiet 'beads, a {oh wateh or a leather fob, or tibboned = one; a plain gold of sllver bar brooch,' 2 The woman who, looks her best "in olderimore exclusive styles of dressing' should choose fairly heavy jewelry. Twisted chains and . strings of beads, plaquerhracelets, madeé of small plagues, threaded to. gether, or the more handsome real stone necklaces and bracelets to {match it ghe Is able, The "little" woman who can pro- perly carry off the "fluffy ruffles" type of garments may wear sever- al bracelets, pecandants, glittering necklaces, hair. bands, clasps or jeweled bows, "She can, In fact, . wear becomingly many things not permitted to hér more serlous sis- ters. RaAY Rings should be worn carefully, : One pretty ring (leaving out the wedding ring, ot course), will look far better on most hands than .a dozen better ones whose make-up 'and coloring make them war with one another. Dr. Bernardo's Boys Are Enlisting Again Sirice£ 1882; thousands of boys | of Dr. Barnardo's Homes havé left the Motherland for Canada and other parts of the Empire. These lads, who received their start in life through the homes, have made good in the overseas dominions. In the dark days of 1014-1918 _ no less than 6,211 Barnardo boys enlisted in the Canadian Expedi- tionary Force; 531 of them did not return. "Canada in Flanders" re- cords that one of these Barnardo lads was recommended for the V. C. before he died. Once again they have heard the - call of the Motherland, and many of them are enlisting to aid her in this dark hour, just as they did in 1914. 3 The management of the Homes, 638 Jarvis- Street, Toronto, - are particulatly anxious to compile a complete honor roll of those who have enlisted for-the present war, and. shall be glad to have their names and regimental addresses. Happiness ' "Happiness Is the natural flower of duty." Phillips Brooks. PER "Experience should be thd school 'of virtue, and human happiness should proceed from man's highest nature." Mary Baker Eddy, "Happiness is reflective, like the light of heaven." Washington Iry- ing. hire "There is no man but may make his paradise." Beaumont and Flet- ~~ cher. - - 5 "He who Is good Ig happy." =~ "True wisdom is the price of: > happiness." -- Young, £ Outside Closets banish offensive outhouse, - A odors . . . just sprinkle half a contents . . . Gillett's does it . for you. Gillett's 'Lye, will save. your time. ..save your energy in heavy cleaning, It scours dirty pots and pans... clears clogged drains. . . fie through grease. Keep a tin FREE BOOKLET -- The Qillett's Lye . : T [ *Never dissolve lye in hot Swater. The : gérion of the Iye itself heats the woter. \ " this EASYway a tin of Gillett's Pure Flake Lye --over-contents of the closet--once ~a week. No need to r e the LR --