Baked Icing Last week you had a recipe for broilâ€" »d icingâ€"this week we offer a deliciâ€" pus spice cake wth baked icing, which talls for 1 egg white, 4 cup brown Bugar, 4 cup broken nut meats. Beat egg whites until they hold a point when the beater is pulled out of them. Add brown sugar, beating itâ€"in. Spread top of cage batter, sprinkle on the nuts and bake in a moderate oven, 350 degrees F., until the cake is done, which will be in approximately 35 minutes if it is in a pan 8 inches Rquare. Make twice the recipe for a larger cake. The cake is made as follows: Cream % cup shortening and add 1 cup brown sugar gradually. Add to the creamed mixture 1 whole egg wid 1 egg yolk well beaten. Sift 1 1â€"3 cups cake flour once before measurâ€" Ing. ‘Then sift together flour, 4 teaâ€" spoon salt, % teaspoon soda, 14 teaâ€" spoon baking powder, % teaspoon cloves, 4 teaspoon cinnamon and add allernately with %4 cup sour milk. Pour Into greased and floured pan. Time, &5 minutes. Temperature, 350 deg. F. Moderate oven. Size of pan, 8 inches square. For a larger cake double the recipe. Another attractive way in which a baked icing may be used is on thin layers of cake, which are cut in strips after baking. These cakelets are a delicious accompaniment to ice cream and many desserts, and they are esâ€" pecially good with a cup of tea of cofâ€" fee. The batter is spread about 4 inch deep in the gr are sprinkled on coating . of icing surface. The cake thorough1y A Serving Tip When you are having a variety of greens in a salad it is an excellent idea to put all of them together in a large bowl. Mix them with the dressâ€" ing at the table and serve the salad from the bow!. You don‘t have to stay under long Just a onceâ€"over will do the trick. For women whose flesh is soft and whose face‘s contour is no longer quite as clear cut as it formerly was, this cold shower daily does something to make the flesh firm. Bottles and Bands Drugzists are generous, and shower attractive wrappings and packets and bottles upon us with our purchases. Tablets and lozengers are no longer weighed out by the ounce and handed over in a thin white paper packet with a blob of sealingâ€"wax at either end but are made up in neat little cartons, tubes or screwâ€"top bottle, often wrapâ€" ped up in a patmphlet or booklet brightâ€" ty showing forth the benefits of the remedies they enclose. Tooth paste and toilet creams, too, throw in a supâ€" ply of reading matter which is usualâ€" ly attached to the tube by a rubber band. Moreover, as a prevention of colds any doctor will tell you its real value. We are so much accustomed to these rccompaniments by now that they are generally thrown away at once; but ps y Id Cold Baths "A Woman‘s Place is in the Home.* 18 s is bak ased pans ind then Woman‘s World un By MAIR M. MORGAN M wn the nuts the thin ind th cake i AND JEFFâ€" _ By BUD FISHER even if put aside for a time they are apt to drift away, still unused, on the household tide of rubbish. Some, howâ€" ever, could easily be put to useful purâ€" poses. How to Use Them It is a good plan to put«up a small‘ screw hook somewhere in the kitchen and to keep it specially for rubber bands, which are hung there as soon as they are removed from the packets. It is surprising how rapidly a collecâ€" tion accumulates and how often and usefully the supply can be drawn upâ€" on. It is much easier, for instance, to use a rubber band to secure a small packet to be taken to the shops than to find (in a hurry) a suitable length and thickness of string. Rubber bands are also handy for fastening the covers on jam jars or potted meats pots, for )keeping a hasty bandage in place on & cut finger, for securing kitchen lists | and bills. Some of the little screwâ€"top bottles and pots should also be washed and saved. These will hold salt, tea, sugar, even an individual jam ration, for picâ€" nics. Made mustard can go into a litâ€" tle cream pot (safely marked). Small quantities of seasoning and spices may be stored in them in the kitchen cupâ€" board and save the untidiness of paper packages. Tin lozenge boxes are useâ€" ful for the same purpose or forâ€"the desk drawer, where they hold paper clips, drawing pins and so on. In the tool drawer they keep the different sizes of screws and nails neatly separâ€" atod. ness. _ Iron the curtains on several thicknesses of blanket to obtain the best effect with the spots. Kitchen Kinks In cooking very sour fruit much less sugar is required if a litle salt is addâ€" ed. The flavor will be improved. When ironing, keep beside you an old perfume spray containing water, to be applied to any part that has become too dry. This gives the even dampâ€" ness and perfect condition necessary for a pleasing finish. When pouring fat into a basin, add 1 tablespoon of boiling water,. This will make all pieces of meat sink to the bottom, and the dripping will be clear. Sheets often tear when pegged to the line by the corners, To prevent this, stitch a small length of tape at each corner, and peg these instead of the sheet. After washing ribbons, wind them evenly around a bottle. Fill the bottle with hot water and cork it. The ribâ€" bons will dry quickly and smoothly. A sliced banana added to apples when they are stewed improves the flavor. To prevent milk from boiling over, rub the edge of the saucepan with a little butter. Vaseline rubbed well into the at night will prevent them from ting and becoming brittle. JUDGING OTHERS. What is commonly wrong is to pass a judgment on our fellowâ€"creatures. Never let it be forgotten that there is scarcely a single moral action of a single man of which other men can have such a. knowledge, in its ultiâ€" mate grounds, its surrounding _ inciâ€" dents, and the real determining causes of its merits, as to warrant their pronouncing a conclusive judgâ€" ment upon it.â€"W. E. Gladstone. DEBT. Debt comes under the eighth comâ€" mandment. It hangs a millstone round the neck of the man or woman who incurs it. It corrodes honesty. Emerâ€" son was wise when he wrote his terse couplet : With thou seal up the avenues of ill? Pay every debt as if God wrote the bill. ha nails splitâ€" CALEB.â€"Numbers 13; Joshua, 14: 6â€"14. GOLDEN TEXTâ€"Blessed is the man that maketh Jehovah his trust.â€"Ps. SUBJECT:: Caleb‘s Confidence. I. Caleb‘s "We Can," Num. 13. II. Caleb‘s Conquest, Josh,. 14: 13, 14. 1. Caleb‘s "We Can," Num. 13. The Exploration of Canaan. We are not told much about Caleb, but what we are told is enough to give him & secure place among Bible immortals, and make him forever an inspiration to the world. For he was that glorious sight, a gallant and indomitable old man, fighting to the last in the most magnificent of causes. We meet him first at the close of the march across the desert from Sinai to the northern part of the wilderness of Paran, at Kadeshâ€"Barnea. They had reached the borders of Canaan, the promised land, the goal of their exodus from Egypt, the one great hope of the nation, But they were not to advance upon its hastily, in a foolhardy manner,. A dark picture was uppermost in their minds. They were terrified by the inhabitants of this rich territory. They were numerous and strong, the report was, and the spies enumerated their various tribes to indicate _ their strength. Their cities were fortified and very great. So went the doleful report, and down , went the hearts of the hearers. All their high hopes were crumbled in the dust. But there was a minority report,. the report of two, Caleb and Joshua; and Caleb, stilling the wailing of the people, bravely made it. "Let us g0 up at once," said he, "and possess the land, for we are well able to overcome it. If Jehovah delight in us, then he will bring us into this land, and give it to us. Only rebel not against Jcehovah, nor fear the people of the land. They are bread for us. We can eat them up. The Lord is with us, and they have no defence against us. Fear them not." Caleb Looks Backward. Forty years old was I when Moses, the servant of Jehovah, sent me from Kadeshâ€"Barnea to spy out the land. Note the honor paid to Moses: he was ‘the man of God"; he was "the servant of 5+ ’hovah." Nevertheless my brethren that went up with me. "Went up" from Kadesh to the north of Canaan. Made the heart of the people mglt. They weakâ€" ened their spirit by their portrayal of the glants to be met in Canaan and the walled cities to be conquered. But I wholly followed Jehovah my God. What a glorious thing to be able to say this with truth, as Caleb could! Caleb‘s name signifies "all heart," and he was a hearty, wholeâ€"souled man. And Moses sware on that day, Moses made that promise years before, but Caleb had kept his confidence in the word of the servant of God _ ever since. May our words be equally cherâ€" ished as immutable! Saying, Surely the land whereon thy foot hath trodâ€" den shall be an inheritance to thee and to thy children for ever. Caleb had trodden the land of Canaan in faith, and so he had made it his own. Because thou hast wholly followed Jehovah my God. This is a noble refrain and a true one. It is the secret of Caleb‘s and Joseph‘s sucâ€" cess and will be the secret of ours, if we adopt it. Caleb‘s Request. And now, behold, Jehovah hath kept me alive, as he spake, these forty and five years. Caleb attributed his longevity to the true cause. From the time that Jehovah spake this word unto Moses, while Israel walked in the wilderness. Caleb goes back of Moses to (God, for the promise given by Moses (verse 9) was really a promise made by the Lord through his servant. And now, lo, I am this day fourscore and five years old. It is a man‘s duty to grow old, if he can do so without being false to his duty. Men who wantonly "burn the candle at both ends," though in a cause that seems to them good, are spendthrifts of that which they can never replace. A wise and experienced old man has many times the value of a brilliant young man who cuts his life off in hs youth by his excesses of work, especially if it is labor to be ‘rlch or famous. THE PLAN OF THE LESSON. As my strength was thon, even so is my strength now, for war, and to go out and to come in. So also it was said of Moses, when he came to die at the far greater age of one hundred and twenty, that "his eye was not dim nor his natural force abated" (Deut. §4: 71. Now therefore give me this hillâ€" country. "The neighborhood of Hebâ€" ron, a region of hills and valleys." Whereot Jehovah spake in that day. We have no record in the Pentateuch of this special promise of Hebron to Caleb, though it must have been made. For thou heardest in that day how the Anakim were there. The race of giants, of which Samson was probably a descendant. And cities LESSON i!.â€"JULY 9. great and fortified. Giant cities as well as giant men, difficulty on difiâ€" culty. It may be that Jehovah will be with me. Note Caleb‘s modesty. He is sure that he has wholly followâ€" ed Jehovah in the past, but he knows man‘s tendency to weakness and error. 11. Caleb‘s Conquest. Josh. 14: 13, 14. The Blessing of Caleb. And Joshua blessed him. The general called down on the heroic old man the blessing of the Almighty; and we may be sure that Joshua‘s prayers were heard by God, remembering the long period when he dwelt in the tentâ€"sanctuary, never leaving it, day or night. And he gave Hebron unto Caleb the son of Jephunneh for an inheritance. _ Few facts are available for referâ€" ‘ence on the cost of living in rural farm homes in Canada says the Econâ€" omic Analist, published by the Dom-‘ inion Dept. of Agriculture, However, in a survey of 157 farms in the Red: River Valley of Manitoba in 1931 by the Dominion Economics Branch, data \ on family living were obtained from 129 of the records. Cash expenditures |\ per family averaged $658.32, while | facm furnished items amounted to $430.42, making a total of $1,088.74 for the average cost of living during . the year. Therefore Hebron became the inherâ€" itance of Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenizzite unto this day. The time when the Book of Joshua was written. Because that he wholly followed Jeâ€" hovah, the God of Israel. This is the refrain which runs through this little epic and here concludes it. There is something singularly touchâ€" ing in Caleb‘s asking as a favor what was really a most hazardous and imâ€" portant service to the nation. Rough though these Hebrew soldiers were, they were capable of the most gentleâ€" manly and chivalrous acts. There can beâ€"no higher act of courtesy than to treat as a favor to yourself what is really a great favor to another. Well done, Caleb! Rural Farm Family Expenses Cash expenditures were 60.47 per‘ cent. of the total, while farm furnâ€" ished items averaged 39.53 per cent. Fully 49.12 per cent.= of the total goods and servi=es was spent on food, the average expense for food being $534.84. Over half this amount was supplied from the farm in butter, eggs, milk, garden produce and meats. Clothing accounted for 9.58 per cent. of the total, or sn average of $104.32 per family. The average farm famâ€" ily spent $45.34 for health purposes; $37.70 on education; $44.29 on amuseâ€" ment, $20.01 on churches and charity, and $24.02, as half the amount spent on operating the automobile charged to family living. Y oung Britons Take To Open Road Wayside Hostels Now Dot Countryside Like Petrol Stations In Cities London. â€" With the approach of early summer, Young Britain is takâ€" ing to the open road. By couples, by groups, by partiés, by clubs they wander everywhere between the South Downs and the Grampians. _ Gone, largely, is the quaint equipment which, when the movement first openâ€" ed, gave hikers the air of Tartarin on the Alps. Occasionally one meets parties with portable tents. Usually they make for youth hostels or the wayside hounse which announces "bed and breakfast" within the modest means of the modern pilgrim. =] on mc LEVeL, IF T | | THAT BCWG me ) § soub T(S HounD CASE, oF courkse "| t mimk SsAc‘D Go we. caw‘t DO CRAZY!: _ Business! venemessseone e \\ es 108 J # c + Z7 ‘ N + /‘j 9. 4 ‘.\ ; / * w 4 e * ~<â€"< a = ng ts o c | o * ie _ e N «> . es * 74 * .\./ : ‘ SSyâ€") JP / n s s e \ oz / .~ t %a \ a* y k ‘ Pbip _ * â€"SIUOOANY/! * 1 FAi \3' o+ 7 * Nh\ t; .g _ neiefiecescent‘r Youth _ hostels usually charge‘ around 25 cents a night for accommoâ€" dation; and youth hostels now dot the countryside. A youth hostel welâ€" comes those who would again wanâ€" der in spirit with Chaucer to Canterâ€" bury. A youth hostel stands close by those romantic west country waters where John Ridd made strenuous love to Lorna Doone. From the mountains of Wales to the flats of East Anglia youth hostels await the wanderer. A youth hostel gives greeting in the wilds of Dartmoor. At Gretna a youth hostel recalls the days when irate parents pursued eloping couples intent on marrying in haste and reâ€" penting at leisure. . In Scotland, too, hostels are springâ€" ing up rapidly. Last year 4,000 names were added to the membership of the Scottish Youth Hostels‘ Association. Five hostels already span the magic triangle of Ben lomond, Ben Ledi and Ben More. And the "open road," be it underâ€" stood, is not the highway of the autoâ€" mobile and the motorcycle. To the hiker such things are anathema. Armed with a oneâ€"inch ordance map, he takes to the byâ€"road and fieldâ€"path, ever seeking fresh woods and pastures new. * ou THCE LEVEL, IF T soLub THS HounD T MNK SHECD G0 _ CRAZY! _â€"â€"** Kin of Shakespeare Imprisoned For Debt, Court Records Disclose A Useful Day Frock Warwick, England. â€"Shakespeare‘s uncle, Henry, knew what it was to be a farmer during hard times in England more than 300 years ago. Recently discovered Warwickshire court records disclose that farmer Shakespeare was detained in prison for debt. He owed one John Blyth six pounds, 13 shillings und four pence IWMustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furâ€" nished With Every Pattern. Here‘s a charming day frock followâ€" ing the newest lines mode is favoring. Its simple bodice with slimming V neckline has a becoming tieâ€"like trim. WPointed seaming slenderizes the hips. The lower skirt in panels gives decided height to the figure,. Materials such as rough crepe silks, crepe satin and thin woolens are smart and wearable to fashion it. Style No. 2863 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches _ Size 36 requires 3% yards of 39â€" inch meterial with % yard of 35â€"inch contrasting. e a bust. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterng as you want. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Human hairs are stated to have an average life of between four and five years each. Women to the number of 248 are working as deaconesses in the Church of England. Een o Wns Nearly half the fAying machines sold this year in Great Britain so far have been bought on the hireâ€"purchase sysâ€" tem. Motorâ€"cars and powerâ€"boats have even been accepted in part payment. year?" "Yes." "What do you intend to it?" "Turn it over to usual." By HELEN WILLIAMS. "Do you get vacation this my wife, as is Salesmanshipâ€"Or What? do with To add to the family troubles, a neighbor _ pretended, _ after _ Henry Shakespeare died, that the farmer was indebted to him. He went into the house of the dead man and "ransacked his coffers, took away corn and hay from his stables, and divers of his posâ€" session." for a yoke of oxen. Style Alphabet For Smart Women This Here are the ABC.‘s of style as seen in the new mode of 1933: A is for Ascot scarfs. B is for beige, one of the favorite col Q is R is Y is % is The renglallons regarding the markâ€" ing requirements for sizes of cucumâ€" bers are that the minimum length or the numerical count of the cucumbers in any package must be plainly labelâ€" led, stencilled or otherwise marked on‘ the package. The facts must be stated. in terms of whole or half inches, at 6 inches, 6% and so on in accordance with the size. In order to allow, for variations incidental to proper gradâ€" ing and bandling, not more than 10 per cent. by count of the cucumbers in any package may be below the miniâ€" mum length specified. In addition to grade requirements, any lot in grade 1 may be classified as small, medium or large if 90 per cent. by count of the cucumbers conform to the following lengthâ€"requirements for such sizes: small, under 6 inches; medium, 6 to 10 inches inclusive; and large, over 10 inches. Marking Cucumber Packages The gospel that nothing matters . .. a foolish theme, for if nothing matâ€" ters, what does it matter wheher it matters or not.â€"Father Ronald Knox. 18 is Season Invokes Many New Stylesâ€"The A.B.C. of Changing Mode 18 18 18 is 18 is 18 18 is 18 Ors. for capes, capeâ€"effects, and vivid color combinations. for deep blue, another of the leading colors. for "Eleanor Blue," named for Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, for that new fullness in back of formal and semiâ€"formal clothes, for gun metal shoes and new fabâ€" ric gloves of pique, printed silk Quills For Hats 1 for bright quills that trim some: of the new hats. ~ ‘ for rufflies on the shoulders, which are appearing on some of the new evening frocks. for shirtwaist blouses and swagâ€" ger coats. for tailored mannish suits, wide Tâ€"strap slippers and the hint of trains in some of the new evenâ€" ing frocks. for umbrellas _ with toeâ€"rubbers tucked into the handle. for Vâ€"shaped scarves. s for the new wide shoulders sil, houette. ; for the ‘xactly right way the smart woman will look whose shoulder line is broad and figure trim and slim. ; for the new yachting, or cruise jewelry, which is smart for sports wear. for zebra stripes in scarfs and frocks and zinnia shades. NOTHING MATTERS. ored ONTARIO ArRcHives TORONTO Increased Activities Noted in Industrice: Mining, Lumber, Pulp Mills Steel Plants Report Good Outlook Toronto.â€"Continental Carâ€"Naâ€"Va1 Corporation Limited, subsidiary of an Indiana concern, will open plant here to manufacture floor wax and soaps. Montrealâ€"Robert Mitchell Comâ€" pany Limited report 50 per cent. in crease in monthly production; first increase in two years. New â€" Westminster.â€"All the big shingle mills located on Fraser River are working double shifts. Halifax Sydney steel plant will opâ€" erate at 50 to 60 per cent. of capacity for balance of the year, the president announces. Trail â€"Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company announces a five per cent,. wage increase, effective July 1. Toronto. â€" Rochester _ Circulator Company of Rochester, N.Y., will es tablish a plant here to make electrical circulating pumps for heating sys tams. Thoroldâ€"Muratori Brothers, mac» aroni manufacturers, are installing a plant here and will begin business soon. vddebec.â€"\(ontmorency pulp peeling mill working six days a week with two night shifts. e d arigeny. Vancouver.â€"Several B.C. lumber companies, employing 1,500 men, an nounce wage increase of 10 per cent, for Jul,, permanency of increase to be determined later. _ Three Riversâ€"International Paper mill operating at 75 per cent. of norâ€" mal capacity. f Vancouverâ€"Mining activity has inâ€" creased express business on Pacific Great Eastern Railway to allâ€"time record volume. Paris To Have New Air Terminal Ground Broken at Le Bourge â€"To Cater to Travelâ€" ler‘s Every Need Paris. â€" A simple ceremony this week began a new era for Le Bour get, when ground was turned for a large and luxurious air station. The improvement was made possible re cently by an order of the Air Minis iry which, transferring the military units to Villacoublay and other bases, definitely gave over Le Bourget o civil aviation. g Europe‘s busiest air terminal in A few months will have a concrele station providing ~every _ imaginable luxury and comfort for the traveler, from a hotel to cinema house. The station will be remarkable also for a series of balconies on the roof cap able of accommodating 1,500 or more gpectators The first btlcony, or terrace, wilt be ouly a little more than twonly feet off the ground, being on the same level with the rastaurant, which in hot weather will have open abr service. â€" Three other . terraces w ild step up behind it, the fourth being fortyâ€"five feet off the ground. Travelers entering the station froum the Flanders Highway will gee first a huge cement esplanade with room for parking. An arcade will lead into the main hall through fAive great doors. Offices and other rooms widd ba on the ground floor along with @ film theatre, % Customs, information, propag anda and other bureaus will be in the ma in hall. _ An unusual feature will be the weather â€"room, . where passongen® may see, on electrically Allaminated signâ€"boards, just what kind of weath er they may expect on their jour nowe, Next to this room will be telegraph, telephone, mail and radie service. _ The work, costing $,000,008 francs, is to be completed next May. The evidence adduced in the enguiry into the marketing of milk in Eastora Nova Scotia, by the Economics Branch of the Department of Agriculture, sug gests that steps should be taken to pro tect not only consumers, but also those producers who are endeavouring 1e put on the marRet a product that will merit the confidence of buyers and meet â€" accepted standards â€" of quality and sanitation. Protection for Milk Producers A godson of Sir James Barrie, Pete Scott, the 22â€"yearâ€"old son of Scott, tht Antarctic explorer, has a pictur( "Pinkâ€"Footed Geese," in this year‘ Academy and has sold it for £20, _ "Oh, I‘l! do like my father does. I‘ll tell ‘em how good 1 was whem 1 was a kid." :fl’ [#] 24 "What will you say to your chillâ€" h, tolehbone, mail and radie The work, costing #,000,000 is to be completed next May.