n a tuft of soil as he pled a treasured mar. ght to the Stu-face. success. but with the still fresh in our :er slowly crept upon 9 room for ortly. ...... $1.29 30 f 01' $1.25 :ular price. Igular It. to 1211' at e and again. A few 5 from his teeth, as all the resistance our attentions. :ondition were these they were not nor- at greatly Ll 15-inch yershies hers. 'e. Ten days.†,tâ€""Here again -.ir. single.†.rried?†{)I‘ICG nk strongest phase (f :1 ‘ S taking ’5 trade in ï¬ffmmml‘. Intâ€"“Mighty SELF 3% N: l policy of he steady ‘lear mm. P??? o u v 9???? if '0.Poov’.r.fv' .! P .Poourfrf .rP'VPPfP-vPPP .fP'P'P'PPfPPP _!4_’.,.PDPDI. '0’. Ibr'u'. P. réPrvopfovnPoP_ 'IIIlaII yard nce .. LVIanagzr rham l7, 1.00 .89 bake half an hour. Use left-over mashed potatoes and add grated cheese, 3 little milk, salt and pepper. Roll into balls’ and put into a hot oven twenty minutes before Core three or four tart, perfect ap- ples, and cut them into slices barely a quarter of an inch in thickness, leav- ing on the edge of each slice the rim. of skin. Fry these rings in hot bacon fat, salting the slices generous~ ly as you turn them. They will be soft and brown when ready to take up and will add something new to tempt the appetite. One can of corn, 1 egg, 2% cups milk, pinch of salt and dash of pepper one tablespoon butter, eighb soda. Add salt Here are a few recipes for dishes) on cold nights and received it. This time I would like some suggestions for hot dishes for supper. We do 111: a warm dish for ï¬mf Ania-AA .“ “ 931' Ruth Raeburn: Come in Chat Awhile â€"Ruth Raehnrn. Potato and Cheese Balls Med Apples Mix all together and i4: PAULINE “This use of the X-ray has brought to light the fact that numerous per- sons carry in their mouths teeth that never came through the surface of the gums. Such teeth may be borne in the mouth for years without one‘s ever suspecting their presence, or through infection or through pressure they may make trouble. A common cause of disturbance is in unerupted wisdom teeth. Such teeth often cause severe pains in the head, and may even affect the eyesight. Lying as they do in a remote corner of the mouth where the brush does not reach‘ them, and where the cleansing effect“ of masticating food is lost. the pock- ets which enfold these teeth are often a source of infection. The damage that may be done to the entire system by buried teeth is comparable to that caused by infected teeth or by pyorrhea, and when there is infection of long standing, it is no less poison-1 Among the many services that. X- rays have performed in medicine, the examination of teeth is one of the most. important, says Dr. M. S. Strock in “Hygia†(Chicag)o. He says, in substance: Potato and vegetable soups, hot veg- etables, macaroni with tomato, or egg custard, or left over chopped meat, and well boiled rice with chopped meat and gravy all make dishes that tempt the appetite. Cream of Tomato Soup Two cups of canned tomatoes boiled for ï¬ve minutes, one cup milk heated to boiling point and into which stir one tablespoon flour, on-eighth teaspoon soda and one-eighth teaspoon mustard mixed with a little milk. Add season- ing to taste, pepper, salt and celery leaves. Then pour the milk into the tomatoes, stir, and serve immediately. :spoons butter, 2 eggs, 11%.: cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1 cup peeled and ï¬nely chopped apples, pinch salt. a sprinkle of cinnamon or nutmeg. milk. Cream the butter and sugar, add the eggs, which have been well beaten. and the flour, salt and cinnamon. Add the chopped apples and then gradually add enough milk to make a medium batter. Bake on a. griddle and serve at once with crisp bacon. BURIED TEETH HARM HEALTH mix with two cups of milk and pour over the bread. Sprinkle grated cheese on top and put in oven one-half hour.‘ pinch of One table-spoon butter, 1 CPD ï¬ne bread crumbs 1 ‘lnv Pry or peach ms- fk A“ Apple Pan Cakes at Put butter over An Appreciated Service We have heard some comment as to whether it was just the proper thing to invite travelling entertainers to as- sist in a Sunday service in a church. ISome would hold up their hands in 'holy horror and protest. But why? There are men and women on the stage that live just as Christian and conscientious lives as those who follow other occupations. In the United Church. on Sunday evening. Messrs. Ross Ham- ilton, Jack Chains and Sid Jackson- of ' the Dumbells, contributed :of their talent. Who are these men? They Legal Slaughter Bonused _ Our neighboring nation to the south .seems to be wandering in a bloody wilderness of crime from which there is no escape. Things are getting worse, in spite of all efforts. It has now been announced by Police Com- missioner Rutledge, of Detroit, that every policeman who slays a criminal {caught in the commission of a crime will promptly receive a bonus of $10. It is almost unbelievable that in this day and age these should be such re- trogression to medieval barbarism. Such an offer of “blood money†is merely an invitation to policemen to shoot on the slightest pretense; it of - fers excellent camouflage for officers to settle old scores; it provides cover under which legally to commit a multitude of sins, and it has been dew monstrated in court recently that law enforcement in Detroit is shot through with graft and corruption and rotten- ness.â€"London Free Press. Paid to Kill About the year 1500 B. C. Moses is- sued a command, “Thou Shalt Not .Kill,†but in this twentieth century things have changed and we were startled to read a report from Detroit that the Police Commissioner had an- nounced that policemen would be paid $10 as a bonus for every criminal they killed in the act of committing a crime. The ï¬rst two men to claim the $10 were policemen Undermen and McAuley. Probably the negro these patrolmen killed might have been res- ponsible for several deaths if he had not been dispatched, so there may be arguments in favor of this killing, but we cannot get over this commandment, Thou Shalt Not Kill .â€"-Teeswater News. . kind. The only way to make this country unpopular with criminals is to impose sentences with maximum sev- erity whenever they are found guilty. It is not a time for maudlin sentiment. When American criminals are caught and found guilty, the occasion is offer- ed to show the world that Canadian justice is a thorough-going aï¬air. It will serve to keep outside criminals away.â€"Calgary Herald. U. S. Criminals in Canada Recent mail and bank robberies in Ontario and major crimes of other kinds in Ontario and Quebec have been traced to American gangsters. Canada cannot afford to be regarded as a safe refuge for gentry of this in that. city. Apparently neither their convictions now their religion are of the sort that is going to stand in the ways of their revenue growing from the dance hall receipts, no matter how rotten conditions may be there.â€" Stratford Beacon Herald. seemstohavebeentheturnlngpoint inallowingadanoehalltostayopen in Hamilton after it had been proved to the hilt that the place was a bowel of corruption. The reports from Ham- ilton also say that several of those The old plea of “one more chance†One More Chance? _ â€"â€"_v Mail Order houses are still a factor, but a diminishing factor in mer- chandising in this counthy. They are by no means the force they were ï¬f- teen years ago. As a matter of fact most of the mail order houses of to- day are doing a lot more worrying about business than the average inde- pendent retail merchant. One large mail-order concern is only issuing one catalogue this year, where in previous years they have issued at least two catalogues. Their expenditures and operations in connection with thesei catalOgues are being cut down to a very considerable extent. Mail Order Business vvâ€"v' '- Una life and success. May she Agricultur- al and Experimental Union long con- tinue.â€"Farmers’ Advocate. is a lesson here for organizations ev- erywhere. Service is the secret of long â€"vâ€"â€"â€" w-- vâ€"v '1 v-‘v- that would be; Saw the heavens filled with commerce, argosies of magic sails, Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bales;†first airplane to take off on the regular daily express service between Toronto, Montreal and New York, T. E. McDonnell, president and general man- ager of the Canadian Paciï¬c Express Company thought that in these lines, Tennyson had envisioned the present age, when “winged messengers of peace and commerce cross the imaginary line unchalleng- ed". T.‘ E. McDonnell himself has a vision of the: future when the travelling and shipping public will ' have a greater “air mindedness" and the service which his Company has pioneered will have devel- oped into an economic factor of tremendous propor- tions. To just what proportions the air express service will be developed immediately Mr. McDon- nell would not commit himself, but “air transporta- tion must be seriously taken into account if one would keep abreast of the times†he said. At present regular air express service is maintained by the Canadian Pacific between Rimouski, Que- bec, Mortireal, New York, Ottawa and Toronto in the east. and Winnipeg and Calgary in the west. and these routes are very much appreciated and patron- ‘OAA “For I dipt into the future, far‘a-s human eye could see, Saw tpe_visiox_1_ot the world, and all the wonder The views of the president of the Canadian Pacific Is on Decline are still a' factor, she is going to wear from actual stock rather than pictures in a mail-order catalogue, and she does not want her friends .to know just what she paid 'for her articles of apparel. With ar- ticles of clothing and everyday nec- essities .such as groceries eliminated from the ï¬eld the mail-order com- pany’s prospects for business have: seem to take pride in going to some store with a reputation in the nearby village or town rather than to have their friends and neighbors say that their clothes, etc., have ,been purchas~ ed by mail, Very few of the women but what like to pick and choose what stigrna connected with mail-order house goods. His point was that the average farmer’s wife and daughter does not want her friends to know that she bought her hat, shoes, clothes, etc., from the 'mail-order \house. They 1 Argosies of Magic Sails to shop in the towns more frequently, the mail-order houses with their many disadvantages are feeling much keener competition. This is not alone the case in Canada, but in the United States. good roads which enable the farm- ers to get into smaller towns and cit- ies more often; with the more general Air transport is, of course. faster than any other and although the dare deviltry of some reckless. stunting pilot resulting in injury and loss of life has earned front page prominence on occasion, it is safer than automobile transport. portation has arrived and henceforth must be reckoned with on that basis" LMr. Beatty recently stated. “We have watched its deveIOpment with “keen interest, and while it is not possible clearly to see just in what direction or how far progress may be effected in the near future, it has already taken its place as one of the major transport agen- cies Whatever may happen in the distant future. it seems to me that at the present time there is little or no prospect of aviation assuming a serious- ly competitive attitude towards present day modes of trans-port. It is rather as an auxiliary service to railroads and st'eamships that it is dikely' to func- tion :fo: some time to come. The Canadian Pacific. he added, has alreadywrecognised this fact .by the establishment in conjunction with the Government Mail service, of an air expzess service and upon the success of this service will hang future develop- ments as far as this Company is concerned. In ti is connection. as throughout-its history. the Canadian Pacific is doing a pioneer work in Canada. We are closely watching the development of aviation in the belief that Canada with «its widely scattered centres of population offers a particularly promising fieli for its employment." “Argosi es of magic sails†is not a distant vision. when air events and features are ï¬lling _._ A1! 4L- 3 The aged negro clergyman announc- ed solemnly from the pulpit: “Next Sabbath, dar will be a bap- tism in dis chu’ ch, at half-pas} ten in de mownin’. Dis baptism will be of two adults an’ six adulteresses.†PAGE 8.