GY VVOODS CTON PLACE ICN, ay M ° approximate. oneâ€"half mile e. It has been ation â€" woodlot y Branch. The Branch, and removed for PO pen and n places wsed off ed _ and > years. £ sugar 10 _ and s â€" seed s _ have he fine may be vodland and Â¥ng. in plant 1at anc hat had the the adâ€" centage vith are was rovement reforest. roduction ock were ire has ers ‘utting, tion of trees 1931, were the er ree. ecuring Branch perâ€" the is all 50 me Depart. n :ace &# Many wonderful dishes may be prepared by combining various fruits with meats. These are the kind of balanced unusual dishes that are ideal for guest service, Baked Ham Entree "Place six slices canned pineapple inâ€"a buttered ~pudding dish. Cut 3 sweet potatoes lengthwise and cover pineapple. Add a third layer of 3 gliced apples, topped with 2. ham glices. Pour over layers either pineâ€" apple juice or 4& cup of water, deâ€" pending on sweetness desired, Cook in a slow oven in a covered dish for 2 hours, or until tonder.‘ Dredge the top with browna sugar, dot with bits 4 to % cup mayonnaise or cooked salad dressing. Mix lightly together, cabbege, piâ€" miento and pickles, Add enough mayâ€" onnaise to moisten the ~mixture. Serve cold. DELICIOUS SIDE DisiiEs An attractive side dish or two will change a drab meal into an attractive one. Try either or both of these reâ€" cipes and see how true this is; ® Stuffed Eggs. Shell hard cooked eggs and cut in halves lengthwise. Remove yolks and mash well. Add to mashed yolk a small amount of soft butter, finely chopped mustard cucumber _ pickle, sufficient of the mustard dressing from the pickle to moisten the egg yolks, and salt to taste. Fill egg whites with prepared _ mixture. Spriukle lightly with paprika, . Cole Slaw & small cabbage, shredded %, pimento, chopped 1 cup homeâ€"made style pickles, chopped & to %%â€"inca thick. Chill until jelâ€" ly is solid. Cut in cubes. Half fill tomato shells with shrimps and celâ€" ery blended with mayonnaise, Then pile shells as full as possible with lemon jelly cubes. Garnish with mayâ€" onnaise, which may be colored green with spinach juice or vegetable colâ€" oring, if desired. Decorate with mint sprigs, stuffed olive slices or pimento. Serve very cold in lettuce cups, 1 cup cooked ham, finely chopped. 144 cups ‘ctelery, finely chopped 1 tablespoon onion, scraped _ or finely minced. «_2 sweet pickles, finely chopped. Dissolve gelatin in warm â€" water. Add vinegar and salt. Chill, When slightly thickened fold in ham, celery, onion and pickles. Turn into loat pan. Chill until firm. Unmold. Serve in slices. Garnish with crisp water cress. Serves 10, f 4 Stuffed Tomato Surprise : (Serves 6) 6 medium size tomatoes 1 tablespoon gelatine 2 tablespoons cold ‘water ‘ 14 cup lemon juice Bra. > "~ 14 cup boiling water R 4 cup orange juice & cup sbrimps s 1, cup diced celery Mayonnaise . Mint sprigs (or stuffed olives or pimento) Lettuce, Peel tomatoes and remove centre. Invert and chill Soak gelatine in cold water 5 minutes. Add boiling water. Stir well. Add lemon and orâ€" ange juice. Pour into a pan of the right size to make a gelatine layer new lease of life, FOR FLAGGING APPETiITES Spring is here, and appetities have become rather bored with . winter fare. Food with a savory, refreshing tang is the order of the day, Introâ€" duce the family to this ham and cel. ery loat for Sunday night supper â€" eyes will sparkle: with: â€" anticipation and flagging appetites will take on a Ham and Celery Loaf. 1 package limeâ€"flavored gelatin 1% cups warm water 14 cup vinegar 14 teaspoon salt ware | i‘ 1 NC TL k. L. }’ \\‘:\\ 1VI % k \\\' ¢ ",\\ ) ‘ FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer @ 1951 By Sax Ronme: wad The Ball Byadicae. Inc. If the iron seems rough and dirty, just when the clothes are all ready for ironing, sprinkle some salt on a newspaper and rub the hot iron over it. It will be like new, When washâ€" Baths may be cleaned in halft the usual time if dry salt is used &s a rub before washing. This alse apâ€" plies ty washstands, lavatories #ndg, polished stone or slate surfaces, ~ . Shampoo the scalp weekly with dry salt, sprinkling it liberally on the haizr and massaging thoroughly for 5 to 10 minutes,. All salt _ should then be removed, This stimulates circulati®n, â€"removes dang’ufl and gives the bair a natural l@stre, Household Uses For Sale Moths can be driven out of rugs or carpets with greater speed and more certainty if salt is sprinkled over the surface before sweeping, making certain, however, that alfJ salt is removed in the cleaning. On smaller divisions of plate, arâ€" range a mound of potato salad, garâ€" nished with olives and a slice of hard cooked egg, and two small peaâ€" nut butter jelly sandwiches, Accompany with a beverage, pref. erably orange juice. This is an excellent midâ€"meal drink for children who are undernourished. It is also a good beverage accompaniâ€" ment for meals. Evaporated _ milk makes the drink very economical, Club Plate Salad (Serves 1) On the large section of an ordin. ary grill plate, arrange bed of crisp lettuce and centre with a scoop of cottage cheese. Circle cheese with segments of orange, making a double row of segments, (Segments should have all enveloping membrane reâ€" moved.) Garnish with a maraschino cherry. Serve with a sweet French dressing,. 6 tablespoons orange juice 6 tablespcons evaporated milk 6 tablespoons cold water 1 teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon grated orange rind Beat or shake thoroughly, Serve at once in a large gla s, chilling with ice if desired, Fresh milk may be used in place of evaporated milk. «» ... Baked Prunes Cover 1 pound of prunes with cold water and let stand for 4 hours. Drain prunes and reserve the liquid; add 4 cup sugar to the liquor and boil until the sugar is diâ€"solved, skimâ€" ming if necessary. Place the drained prunesâ€"in a covered casserole, cover with hot liquor and bake in moderate over (425 degrees F.) 40 minutes, CalHornia Prune Betty € 2 cups cooked prunes 2 apples + 3 cups soft bread crumb; 1/3 cup granulated sugar _ M â€"cup butter Cinnamon 1/3 cup prune juice. Pit prunes and slice. Pare, core and slice apples. Arrange oneâ€"third the bread crumbs in baking dish, cover with half the prunes, sugar, apples and butter, Sprinkle lightly witW‘cinnamon. Add halft of remainâ€" ing crumbs, then remaining prunes, sugar, apples, butter and more cinâ€" namon. Cover with crumbs and add prune juice. Cover dish and bake about 1 hour in a moderate over (375 degrees F.), of butter, and return to the hot oven or broiler for browning. Sprinkle with parsley before serving. ECONOMICAL DAINTIES. Delicious desserts need not be pensive. Here, for «instance, some recipes for dithes that are cidedly â€" economicalâ€"andâ€" just as cidedly ~delicious: Orange Milk Foam (Serves 1) exâ€" are de. daâ€" *â€"When the oven seems to be ,too Aot ahd ‘ote fears the contents~ of tWe casserole may cook tooâ€"quickly, place a sheet of wax paper under the casserole cover and it will slow the proe;e_s's,pl}.coqklng,’ 6 y When flakes of soot blow onto: a light feltâ€"hat, do not try to rub. them off, nor. wet the spots. Merely: coyâ€" er‘the spots with some dry salt, then remove‘with & stiff brush. x Sométimes a broom will wear shor. ter on one:side than the other. . If this is the case, dip it in hot water and trim evenly. The broom will be as ‘serviceable as a new one. ing, too, â€"if you discover clothes or sheets with ironrust â€"or, ink stains, the:e may be easity© removed by a mixture of salt and lemon juice, There will be no smoke nor odor when making pancakes if the griddle is TUbbed with a little bag of sait instead of gréase, K % The» actions and behavior of such motorists, seem to indicate that the safety of themselves and others is of small consequence in"* comparison with the possibility of saving a few minutes, or even a few seconds. The statisties of accidents alsq point toâ€"this lack of a proper judgâ€" ment of values. . < ,= :â€" As an example of this, we ‘find that «. Decemberâ€"about the _ least favorable . month for _ pedestrian travelâ€"is the second ‘worst â€" month. from the standpoint of pedestrian, accidents. _ Also, the â€" nonâ€"collision type, which includes mishaps in which vehicles run off the roadway oc overturn, might be expected to be most frequent during <~the Winter when road surface conditions and poor visibility make proper: control difficult. Yet, actually, the peak in‘ July during the past four years was 142 per cent. greater than the totall for December. (By Hon. T. B. McQuesten, Ontario Minister of Highways.) Even the most casual observer as he travels along the highways may see plenty of evidence of the errors in judgment and hasty decisions on the cpart of driveérs which are the fundamental causes of the majority of accidents. "TRUST YOUR OWN JUDGMENT ; NOT WITH THE WHIM OF A CHILD" A recent studio portrait of Hon. ‘"Mrs. Peter Aitken, daughter» inâ€"law of Lord Beaverbrook, and daughter of Pofessor and Mrs. Murray Macneill, of Halifax, Nova Scotia, to whom a daughter was recently born. Her marriage to the Hon. Peter Aitken took place in England in theâ€" early part of 1984. Mother of Baby Daughter 420 § Pespite the falling off in employâ€" ment on April 1, the index showed a gain of, more than.two points comâ€" pared with April 1, 1934, when it stoodâ€"at 96.4 against 91.3. tion, the ~l6gging" program being tompleted~ before "Any ~considerable nuthiber of .workers ~were absorbed in theâ€"outdoor industriés. Ottawa. â€" There weres. 874,556 persons at work on April 1,;accordâ€" ing to reports rceived from 9,066 employers by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. «On .March 1 the numâ€" ber employed was .902,138, _ The slight curtailment as compared with last .month, the report states, was due to abetwéem seasons‘ contracâ€" "Trust your own good judgment, not the whim of a child," is an exâ€" cellent rule at all times and especialâ€" ly during the gunny days of Spring and Summer ‘when the ~â€"number of children on thestreet is much larger than at. other times.. The great increase in accidents inâ€" volving . children during the late Spring and Summer months, an inâ€" crease which is to be observed in accident statistics year after year, is conclusive evidence that â€" drivers still place too much reliance on the judgment of the child in such cirâ€" cumstances. & This is especially true when chilâ€" dren are at play. Apparently many drivers assume that tne child on the sidewalk will stay there until the car has passed. Thus, all through the Spring and Summer months acâ€" cidents are reported in which the driver states, "The child darted from the sidewalk into my path. I didn‘t have a chance to stop". In almost every case this is the truth, but what such drivers fail to realize is that the child on the sidewalk is a danger signal which must be passed with caution‘ and reduced speed if safety is to be assured. * ‘ In other words, allowance is usualâ€" ly made for obvious dangers but a clear road breeds a false sense of security which tooâ€"often leads to accidents. The explanation would. seem to be that drivers generally will reduce their speed on roads that are obviâ€" ously unsafe, but cannot resist the temptation to travel at speeds beâ€" yond reasonable control when road conditions ‘are good. Show Slight Decline It only means to Angelo That, armorâ€"clad and grim, A redâ€"haired Roman Jong ago Set out a task for him. Perhap; that horseman on his way Stopped at a Tuscan farm That has been tilled, a later day, By this lad‘s father‘s arm. When Caesar was in Hither Gaul, A horseman, racing free, Bore this page to the Senate Hall To tell of victory. (Gerald. Raftery in the New York Times) . "When Caesar was in Hither Gaul," Says boring Angelo Translating in a careful drawl The way the words should go. "Fme ° did hot" even understand that; 1 don‘t know why, but she didn‘t, and she lost her temper be. sides. Somebody in the rear called out, ‘Qui est done la?" or words to that effect. She said, ‘c‘est un fou,‘ and shut the door <n me. Penhaps he was right; but how did she ever find that out? For she had never seen me before till that moment." "I had hoped th>t mere French construction â€" with English wordsâ€" would answer but this is not the case. I tried it at the door of a gentleman‘s mouse in Quebec, and it would not work. The maidâ€"serâ€" vant asked, ‘what would Monsieur? I said, ‘Monsieur Soâ€"andâ€"So, is he with himself?" _ She did not underâ€" stand. I said, ‘is it that he is still not returned of his house of merohan. dise?" She did not understand that e‘ther. I said; t‘he will. desolate himâ€" self when he learns that Ahis friend Amer‘ican was arrived, and he not with himselt to shake him at the hand.‘ A "Where so many ‘of> the guests present are French,â€" the propriety will be recognized. to , my making a portiot of ‘ my ; speech in that beautiful language, in ordér that I may be partly nnderstood. ~I speak French with timidity, and not flowâ€" inglyâ€"ékcept,. when excited. _ When using that Janguage I have often no. ticed that I have hardly ever been mistaken for a â€" Frenchman, except perhaps, by horses; never, 1 believe, by people. , _ "I have meddled nowhere except in the election. _ But I am used to voting, for I live in a town where, if you may judge by. the local prints, there are only two conspicuous inâ€" dustries; committing burglaries and holding electionsâ€"and 1 like to keep my hand in; so I voted aâ€"good deal here in Quebec. k _ "My sojourn has been to my moral and intellectual profit; I have behayâ€" ed wflh propriety and discretion. "Yes, I have seen all the historical places; the localities have been pointed out to ~me where the s¢en. ery is warehoused for the geason. "I have seen the calashe which Champlain employed when he ar. rived overland at Quebec. I have seen the horse which Jacques Carâ€" tier rode when he discovered Monâ€" treal. I have used them both; I will never do it again. And despite the lapse of time t.e picture he drew in 1881 still holds good of the Ancient Capital, with some nonâ€"essential modifications, He sald (in part): In dealing with his Quebec visit he injected a quizzical touch unâ€" mistakably his own to the accomâ€" paniment of irresistible laughter and loud applause. Prof. Stephen Leacock, who has recently written a book, analyzing the humorist‘s characteristics, who is interesting in the centenary doâ€" ings connected with Clemens‘ natal celebration, now in progress, has unearthed the speech Mark made in Montreal from the files of a local newspaper, "In 1881 Mark Twain visited Monâ€" treal and Quebec. In the former city he was given a dinner by leading citizens" writes the Winnipeg Tri. bune. WHEN MARK TWAIN SPOKE IN QUEBEC THE ZYAT KISSâ€"Deadly Perfume. â€" Song of the Island in the correct name for this striped lawn exening gown worn by Kathâ€" leen Burke, film actress. The fineâ€" ly plea‘ted collar is modelled after the famous Hawaiian "Lei." Gown is of red, white and navy. Dear, brave little lady, thought I, as I left, Of all who had loved you so swiftâ€" bereft. Yet smiling and cheerful and hiding your woe ‘Neath a manner so gentle that no one may know, Should I be the last of my circle to say, God grant me such faith as l've! seen you display. ] And I couldn‘t say thanks for the big lump in my throat. She patted my arm and she said to me there: "Remember we all have some burâ€" dens to bear." To She ’0ne morning as downcast I wonderâ€" ‘ ed along, Because some little plan of my own had gone wrong, She noticed my frown as I came to her gate And asked me my burden of trouble to state. \ "Oh I know how you feel," she uid] with a smile, "But don‘t bear a grudge, for it iln’tl worth while!" rows say. She has bur‘ed her husband, her children and friends, * Still bravely her gay little garden she tends, And bravely she smiles as if never Or the anguish of sorrows had sil vered her hair. There‘s a little old lady who lives down the way thought of her sorrows and stood there, ashamed ) think that my own petty troubles I‘d named. e passed me a rose bud to pin on my coat, Hearts Courageous . Children Must Hawaiian Influence never a word of her sorâ€" When we stood by the gocker, wy sister and I, And we listened to the stories our . grandma would tell duster or broom, Ch, how I remember, in days long With naught to disturb it but the its back to the wall, The old wooden rocker so stately and There it stands in the corner with Perhaps the reason why the r0bin holds so strong a place in our afâ€" fections is that we too hope to acquire from him some ay that same ability to meet life constantly with a song in the heart.â€"Calgary Herald. And through the Spring and early Summer this same thought is carâ€" ried on. Listen, as the last glowing bars of sunset linger in the Woest. There, silhouetted against the afâ€" terglow, perched atop the tallest tree, is a robin, pouring out his song long after other birds have gon: to rest. The heart of the robin is too full to allow the day to die in silence, If one reads his story aright, it has been a wonderful day, and he is grateful for it. Recall then, that the first music to greet the dawn tomorrow will be the notes of this same bird in an anthem of anticipâ€" ation, for no matter how ordinary his place is in socicty, life to the robin is something to sing about from rosy dawn to dusk. Why the never failing popularity of this feathered visitor? Is it not that this red breasted gentlieman brings a new message of hope after the long Winter? The average man may not diagnose his feelings thus, but surely this is the reason. The 700 midwives practicing in New York City last year took care of 5,000. confinements, earning an mverage of $40 a case. _ They thus deprived licensed doctors, who averâ€" age 825 a delivery, of work and money Recently Dr. â€" Sigismund Commissioner of Hospitals, set about remedying that situation by ordering the Bellevue School for Midwives closed. That school was founded in 1911 to put midwifery on a scientific basis, has trained 731 midwives, has 21 in its present training class. called Associated Hospital Sertfte. Thke same fccilities now cost $49 a week. New York and 38 other UAS. cities copied this idea from Dallas, which in turn copied London. Seventyâ€"eight hospitals agreed to give annually three week‘s medical care in a semiâ€"private room to wageâ€"earners who pay $10 a year to a new hospitalization organization Proposed was a plan to charge poor people who are too proud to take charity doctoring $1 an office call, $2 a house visit. The standard rates now are $2 at the office, $3 at home Specialists now charge $25 for a cone sultation in the office, $50 outside. They propose to charge the oroud poor $5 and $10 respectively. If a doctor‘s clients are on relief, the city pays him $2 an office call. New York City doctors recently ceased talking idly about the difâ€" ficulties of keeping themselves and their patients alive in the loca! econâ€" omic swamp, started the following reconstructive measures: Mrs, Longworthy delivered . a strong plea for teaching of the prinâ€" ciples of friendship and peace among children, to avert avarice in ma. turity, iNustrating that governments rise and fall on early training of citizens. 'lu. B. F. Langworthy, Winnetka, Il!., national president, told the 39th congress of parents and teachers. l Foundations of nations rest in the , home, she said, and in the training | of children lies the greatest oppor. 'tunlty to prevent wars, "With war c‘ouds looming â€" in Europe, y‘hat are we doing in our homes to avert the next war"" she asked. "Bo convinced were we of the righteousness of keeping the world safe for democracy that we felt somoewhat disloyal in believing the tales about the industrial urge beâ€" hind the war and only now our govâ€" ernment is giving us the facts about the selling of munitions and who sells them." country and our boys. "We were totally blind to the fact taat behind much of the war stimuâ€" lation was the greed of manufactur. ers who were accumulating vast for. tunes from munitions and supplies, "Few of us had any wish for our country to enter the World War, but, having entered it, we worked furiousâ€" ly for an outcome favorable to our THE OLD WOODEN ROCKER loved so well, Miami, Fla. â€" The place to begin campaigns against war among na~ tions is at the fireside in the hama â€" _ Economics Of Living The Place To Begin To Avert Bloodshed Is At Fireside At Home The Robin Returns Be Trained Against® War the fireside in the home, (Time (%