IDEAL HOUSE m Of Mil veather out ts of snugâ€" to do with ry looks papers added so ts that d winâ€" in obâ€" that vember winter, ere is, ute to ialities really rd im« an inâ€" grandâ€" s more n deâ€" i white om the matic the idows. eat et so ather what deâ€" the ving _ Wi fort And Health ire re will have and arrangeâ€" ‘or _ interior an _ exterior cent. more yearâ€"round ic lighting pink ‘ine the and ere the ade nen hree 2 w y house lece rect ne and the the iint les lot °e living ‘om the r much itioning he winâ€" . This Doors of the living of furnâ€" comfort, doesn‘t s really ing and re Rockeâ€" ind the 180 high picâ€" ught the With ite ng of '. Apple Sauce A method for making apple sauce quickly and satisfactorily is as folâ€" lows: If apples are to be used often we should have variety in their preparâ€" ation, some change from apple sauce and apple pie however toothsome these may be. Carrot Ketchup 4 cups chopped carrots 1 green pepper chopped finely 1 onion chopped fincly 1 cup chopped celery Two cups vinegar, cup sugar, 2 teaspoons salt, 4 teaspoon paprika. Cook until thick, press through a fruit press or coarse sieve, reheat and bottle hot. Apples in Cranberry Juice Peel and quarter apples which will not break down in cooking (snow apâ€" ples are excellent). pack in jars. To each pint jar allow 1 ecup cranberâ€" ries, 1 cup water and 1 cup sugar. Add water to cranberries and sinks and cores of apples, cook slowly ten minutes, drain, add sugar and bring to a boil, pour over apples. Sterilize ten minutes in a hot water bath, or fifteen minutes in the oven at 275 degrees F. Jewel Jam 4 cups chopped quinces 4 cups chopped apples 2 cups cranberries 2 cups water Cook â€"cranberries with water an skins and cores of apples. â€" Drair through a jelly bag and to the Jjuice add chopped apples and quinces. Cook five minutes, add five cups â€" sugar Cook until thick and clear, 10 cups coarsel 4 cups sugar 14 cup chopped with syrup Boil all togeth clear. 6 heads celery, 2 onions, put throâ€" ugh the mincer. Addâ€"1 cup brown sugar. 4 1b. mustard, 2 tablespoons salt, 1 tableâ€" spoon pepper, 2 quarts vinegar, % teaspoon tumeric. Mix and simmer slowly 1%4 hours. Bottle while hot. Pear Jam J 1 small cabbage 6 large onions 1 head celery 1 large cauliflower 12 green tomatoes 3 green peppers 3 red peppers 12 apples Put all through the mincer. add 2 cups sugar, 2 quarts vinegar, 1 tablespoon tumeric, 4 1b. mustard, 1 teaspoon curry powder, 2 tablespoons salt, 2 tablespoons white pepper, 2 tablespoons celery seed. Mix â€"well and cook ten minutes, bottle while hot. Wash beets. Cut off tops leaving about one inch of stems to prevent bleeding. Cook until tender. Remove skins and if beets are small leave whole, but if large, cut in slices. Pack in a crock or in jars and in each jar put one tablespoon of horseâ€" radish. Pour over them a pickle mixâ€" ture using one cup vinegar, 14 cup water, % cup sugar, one teaspoonful salt, boil together and pour over beets. innatiotcadtedtiantsdids MB a i 7414 Some recipes are so good that no thought is given to changing them and each year they taste better â€" Pickled Beets, Mustard Relish, Celâ€" ery Pickle, and Pear Jaum all come from Grandmother‘s cookâ€"book, while Jewel Jam, Carrot Ketchup, and Apples in Cranberry Juice are quite new and unusual. The following reâ€" cipes were prepared and tested by Miss Edith L. Elliot, Fruit Branch, Romintor â€":â€" Nunartmank * «¢"~ ie culture sOMETHING OLDâ€" «Cw year they taste better â€" d Beets, Mustard Relish, Celâ€" ‘ickle, and Pear Jam all come Grandmother‘s cookâ€"book, while S e V’)â€lbhhnï¬ï¬‚mâ€"mh Mustard Relish cabbage onions celery cauliflower tomatoes peppers FU MANCHU elery Pickle sely chopped pears 14 EiMot, Fruit Branch Depariment _ of Agri ickled Beets with water and ‘ apples. Drain and to the juice and quinces. Cook sOMETHING NEw preserved _ ginger until th ar Creamy Rice Pudding Two cups milk, 3 tablespoons rice, * teaspoon salt, 4 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon vanilla, 1 tableâ€" spoon butter. If you want to sprinkle a cup of grated cheese over the whole thing about ten minutes before sending to the tableâ€"just long enough to melt the cheeseâ€"you have something else again. ‘ _ Of course you may use any comâ€" bination of vegetables you _ prefer, but don‘t forget the onions because they add so much to the savoriness of the dish. A can of tomatoes pourâ€" ed over the steak when it‘s put in the oven is anothor way to vary the‘ connection. 1| It isn‘t necessary to serve expenâ€" sive, cutâ€"ofâ€"season foods. The good root vegetables such as carrots and turnips are savory and appetizing and the finest chefs appreciate and make full use of the fullâ€"flavored onion. ‘ by Surprise the family by potatoes and serve a cre pudding for dessert. If food that is usually served on a platter comes to the table in a bakâ€" ing dish interest is immediately aroused. Meat baked with clever seaâ€" soning has an entirely different flavor than the same meat fried or even broiled. il SPICE YOUR MEAL wWITH THESE SURPRISES Do you try to give your family food variety. or do you stick to the same old way of cooking day in and day out? It is not as hard as you think to make your meals a little different. and lemon colored 3 egg whites stifly beaten ! cup grated raw apple, or drained cooked apple pulp . Add minute tapioca and salt ‘to milk, and cook in double boiler 15 minutes, or until tapioca is â€" clear, stirring frequently. Add sugar. Cool. Add egg yolks, lemon juice, _ and apples. Fold in egg whites. Bake in greased baking dish, placed in pan of hot water, in moderate oven (325 degrees F.) 1 hour. Serve hot with sweetened whipped cream. Serves 8. If desired, the whipped cream may be forced through a pastry tube inâ€" to rosettes on waxed paper, â€" and frozen in the freezing tray of an automatic refrigerator. 0 eggs 3 tablespoons sugar 1 grated apple Beat eggs, add sugar, then milk. Strain. Add grated apple and bake in one crust. Wash the apples; cut in eighths, add sufficient water to prevent burnâ€" ing. Cook until tender in. covered saucepan, press through a strainer, sweeten to taste. This method reâ€" tains full food value and gives minâ€" imum waste. Baked Apples and Peaches 1 pint milk 414 Apple Souffle tablespoons minute tapioca teaspoon salt cup milk scalded cup sugar tablespoon lemon juice eggs yolks beaten until thick y by omitting a creamy _ rice Much less sugar will be required to sweeten applesauce if the sugar is added to it just before it is removâ€" ed from the range. Place a piece of bread in the pot in which cabbage or cauliflower is cooking and it will eliminate much of the unpleasant odor. Rub the griddle of salt instead of the cakes will be smoke or odor. Stockings should not be gartered so tightly that when seated there is an unnecessary strain that will cause a runner. When necessary to make icing quickly for cup cakes, place a marshâ€" mallow on each cake and toast slightâ€" ly. When buying a winter coat, do not think that the weight of the coat determines its warmth. A lightâ€" weight, fluffy material is oftentimes warmer than a much heavier garâ€" ment. Wash rice. Mix ingredients and pour into a buttered baking dish. Bake three hours in a low oven (352 degrees F.) Stir three times during the first hour to prevent rice from settling. Serve either hot or cold. "And there went up some of the children of Israel, and of the priests, _ "And the king granted him all his request, according to the hand of Jeâ€" hovah his God upon him." What Ezra‘s request was of Artaxerxes, we are not told, but we can probably de. termine it by considering the letter given by Artaxerxes, which is copied into this chapter. \ "This Ezra went up from Babylon." The actual journey from Babylon to Jerusalem is not recorded until 8:31. "And he was a ready scribe in the law of Moses, which Jehovah, the God of Israel, had given." The scribe in the days of Monarchy was the king‘s State Secretary or Chancellor ( 2 Sam. 8:17; 20:25; 1 Chron. 18:16; 2 Kings 18:18; 22:3, etc.). GENERALâ€" MacDONALDâ€"NOV 14 LESSON 1X â€" December 1 EZRA‘S MISSION To JERUSALEM. Ezra 7:6.10; 8:21.23, 31, 32 GOLDEN TEXT. â€" The hand of God is upon all them that seek him, for Good. Ezra 8:22. _ THE LESSON IN its sETTiNG TIME â€" 458 B.C. PLACE â€" The cities of Babylon and Jerusalem, and on the banks of the river Ahava, which cannot now be determined, though many con. jectures have been made. tion, is its kind HOME HINTS This 190â€"pound sailfish, caught by President Roosevelt after being prepared for display by the Smithsoni an Institute. Mo | on display at the Institute and the cnly on e caught by a U. with a small bag using grease and cooked _ without UND A Y CHOOI 39 sake him to turn aside on account of robbers or enemies, and a level road, free from great difficulties (cf. Isa. 43). "For I was ashamed to ask of the king a band of soldiers and horse. men to help us against the enemy in the way, because we had spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God is upon all of them that seey him, for good; but his power and his wrath is against all tham thas a._2 | ‘"Then I proclaimed a fast there, at the river Abava, that we might humble ourselves before our God." The fast is not proclaimed with any special confession of sin. Ezra ap. points the fast: (a) as the symbol of submission before God‘s will and of repentence from sin; (b) as the means of intensifying religious fevor in prayer through the restraint laid upon physical appetite; (€) as the testimony that ‘man lives not by bread alone.‘ ‘To seek of him a straight way for us, and for our little ones, and for all our substance. A straight way means a true road, from which they would not be compelled ‘For Ezra had set his heart to seek the law of Jehovah." This verse is probably the greatest single descripâ€" tive picture of the true teacher and student of the World of God to be found in the entire Old Testament. "And to do it". He did not attempt to preach what he had not tried to live. He would test the effect of his doctrine on himself before venturing to prescribe it for others. "And to teach Israel statutes and ordinances." These two words are frequently found together (e.g., Lev. 26:46; Deut. 4:1, 5, 8, 14; 2 Chron. T:17; 19:10; Mal. 4:4). "For upon the first day of the first ’month began he to go up from Baby. lon; and on the first day of the fifth month came he to Jerusalem, accord. ing to the good hand of his God upon him." The journey lasted through the eighteenth day of the first monta, that is, Nisan, and the three months: Iyar, Sivan, Tammuz; in all about‘ one hundred and eight days. "And he came to Jerusalem in the fifth month, which was in the seventh year of the king." The fifth month was the month Ab, corresponding, approximately to our August. and the Levites, and the singers." The Levitical order of singers was ’lnstituted during the reign of David (1 Chron. 15:17â€"24), of whom there appear to have been twenty.â€"four classes (1 Chron. 25:9â€".31). "And the porters." These â€" were deorkeepers from among the Leirtes. "And the Nethinim." A class subordinate to the Levites, but ranking before the ser. vants of Solomon in the services of the temple (Ezra 2:43). Théir origin is hid in great obscurity. "Unto Je. rusalem, in the seventh year of Ar. taxerxes the king." That is, 458 B.C. LEsson against all them -th;t for. ‘ _ "So we fasted and be. Angle For Posterity on e caught by a U.S. President | sought our God for this: and he was 1 entreated of us." We must not con. ‘| found this â€" state of selfâ€"humilation ‘| before God with the totally different | condition of abject fear which shrinks |from danger in contemptible cowar. | dice. The very opposite to that is the attitude of these humble pilgrims. "Then we departed from the river Ahava on the twelfth day of the first month, to go unto Jerusalem: and the hand of our God was upon us, and he delivered us from the Jand of the enemy and the lierâ€"inâ€"wait by the way." The ventures of faith are ever rewarded. We cannot set our ex. pectations from God too high. What we dare scarcely hope now, we shall one day remember, "And we came to Jerusalem, and abode of three days." The entire journey took about four months, at an average rate of approximately eight miles a day. ter a fierce battle during recent Mounted, it will be the birgest f Uttawa.â€"LElectric soil heating for propagation of seeds and promoting growth of plants to be set out in fields, is making headway in Canada. The Dominion Department â€" of Agriculture reports installations in Ontario greenhouses have proven satisfactory. _ Also in hotbeds and cold frames for propagating seeds cold tomatoes, cabbage, cauliflower, egg plant peppers, cucumbers, melâ€" ons certain flowers, and sweet poâ€" tatoes, the use of electric soil heatâ€" ing has proven valuable THE SEVERED FINGERSâ€" Ottawa.â€"Electric propagation of seeds growth of plants to fields, is making head Heat It is reported that an Irish baker, 76, has not slept for years, hunting during the day and baking at night. On hot summer nights wa s‘eep and bake too. â€" Woodstock Sentinâ€" elâ€"Review The absence of Hiram Johnson from the vicinity of the ring reservâ€" ed for Presidential aspirants makes one wonder whether he really â€" has given up at last. â€" Detroit Free Press. Are too many pictures of wild tackles published on the sport pages? St. Thomas sends word of a deer that jumped on a passing car, forcâ€" ing it into the ditch.â€"Toronto Teleâ€" gram. If you worry about what people think of you, you have more conâ€" fidence in their opinion than you have in your own.â€"Quebec â€" Chronâ€" icleâ€"Telegram. It is always encouraging to note the advance of civilization,. â€" Arabs in Palestine are now planning | a general strike. â€" Buffalo Courierâ€" Express. _ "*7j not make it a point this _year to spell it Christmas and lasso the chap that shortens it up â€" to Xmas ?â€"Guelph Mercury, The test of King George‘s influâ€" ence lies in peace and sanity with which the British people have lived through the years since the war. â€"‘ Hector Bolitho. Why not make it a point year to spell it Christmas and the chap that shortens it u Xmas ?â€"Guelph Mercury, More men can stand ad than can stand prosperity. At more men do.â€"Brandon Sun. it peppers, cucumbers, melâ€" ain flowers, and sweet poâ€" he use of electric soil heatâ€" proven valuable. Soil In Order Speed Up Growth ithy Paragraphs uring recent vacaâ€" the biggest fish of stand _ adversity least, The Disguised P nUW TO ORDER rPaTTERNs, Write your name and address Pplainly, giving number and size n rquan ts c c s ie o It‘s ’"mplclt‘t') .sew that are cut in one ¢¢ 3 _j67¢ trepe silk with long cuffed sleeves, as in lower sketch, you might wear with your tweed suit or for more formal occasâ€" ions, The aboveâ€"theâ€"elbow puffed sleeved version in satin crepe or in shimmering metal cloth is stunâ€" ning for afternoon part»»s and for late afternoons for cocktail, for dinner and informal thaaics 2. °0 e e eg‘e In bright crepe silk cuffed sleeves, as in lo you might wear with ) suit or for more for: ions. A fascinating | | youthfully becoming patterned for today, Fo k e oqil ltas, 1 2505‘ t( ~.S $7 Or“ ’:\\ t /‘ rp‘k 1 i s T F «4 'dh '{ : | tb s A 'é f 4 gl? & l4( )/o > â€" 2% Manners are the happy ways of doing things; each one a stroke of genius or of love, now repeated and hardened into usage, they form at last a rich varnish, with which the routine of life is wnshed. and its de-‘ tails adorned. If they are superâ€". ficial, so are the dewâ€"drops whichl' give such a depth to the morning meadows.â€"Emerson, | A safety éoa}.-'ivl gen balloons fast is another feature ONTARIO ARCHIVES ie has completed an aluminum suit with metal wings and a series of springs, operated on the prinâ€" ciple of the gramophone. _ Kropocz calls his invention the "metal man." The suit is designed for attaching to. the shoulders and around the waist.? The wings are attached to a tube . containing the power springs. | Once started, the machine may be pedalled by treading a device for‘ that purpose. A ground level surt.;' however, is not possible. The wear.‘ er would have to jump from a height to get it into the air. 1 Kropocz, a native who quit his job in devote his whole tin suit said he had cor which, in tests, has ficiency. It has yet by man, Banff, Alu.â€"Development "flying suit" making flight I without the aid of airplanes is ed by John Kropocz, 65â€"yearâ€" ventor. Inventor Proclaims __‘Flying Suit Success uts He has Fascinating Blouse c."/"; * "*%2 "al theatre wear, sew with sleeves one with shouldâ€" 8i at inflated with hydro-i; fastened to the lining, | ture of the flying suit. I ursuers. blouse _ with neckline is native of Yugoslavia â€"Development of , loronto. p h in a hotel here to time to the flying completed a model has proven its efâ€" ‘et to be tried out flight possible nes is claimâ€" â€"yearâ€"old inâ€" larger size in shoes. rarely asked for in «days, while size sove in popwlarity, at rest; Till every {fireâ€"filled wWaye is rune That stirs Caribbean‘s softly 1 ing breast. Parrots and shells and music to sea,â€" These are the things time ms thieve from me. Music through palms _ Indian moon Strewn by the pirate waves in sudâ€" den flight; And here is seaweed roseâ€"flushed ay the skies And fragile shells transparcent as the light. And on High on a lies Across the cevening sky tI stream, A green procession like br on high; Their raucous voices cut t dream That quils in gold the hills the sky. womankind Beats with his blood, an all things high Comes easy to him, and, trip and fall, He sha‘l not blind his soul Une not learned, save household ways; Not perfect nay, but fu) wants, _ No angel, but a dearer dipt In angels instincts, breat dise; Interpreter between the man, Who looked all native to and yet On tiptoe seemed to tou sphere Too gross to tread, and minds perforce Swayed to her from their they moved And girdled her with mus; He with such a mother ; uimen are One As we lay And this, ] With the 1 Our job That the With e We do not know what the message is; It may mean death or life, It may mean a fortune lost or won In the business hustle and strife; It might be a faint, sad wavering voice Of sorrowing husband or wife. (By K. Moreau, Repairman, Belle ville, in The Blue Bell.) This is a song of the toll lines, Strung up high in the air; The humming strands of copper wire, And the men who keep them clear, That carry your voice from coast to R coast, Ninkine thonsonds w# smilus L0... + | Thanks be to God for the bo‘Danclng among the leaves |t.l Making the little sparkles °/ In the web the spider wos ’Thlnks to God for His p B', It shines over al 1 see, 'l" Over the hills and valleys t | Over the land and sea, Jamaica, B. W .1. Thanks Thanks Thanks Shining Thanks for the 4 A‘gleam in the F Thanks for the â€" Their anthems, as Thanks for the 1i the harbour swell our _ every turn ,\ rNns be to God for His love For music of Love Divine, Thanks be to God for the sky Where the stars so brightly shine Thanks be to God for the peace, z Which these things in nature bring For them seem to me a glory Dropped down from ah Aniale zin« Thanks be Thanks be to God for And the whispering of Thanks be to God for My innermost soul pe; Thanks be to God for And breezes that come Bringing to me a messa F"‘Om OUl Of tha Innw a n shoes. Size th love 1 for in these atnmlotic size sovens are growing By â€"Clara Maude Garret e coral beach rich bounty 18 y Alfred learned, y our line I think, w help of G said thousand Call "LNCMs, As we pass; for the light of morning for the evening sky, for the lovely rainbow, serene on high, to sion like brown mos tread, and all Toll Lines keep the wire clear, " will sure go through; twist on the joint we and music blown the drops of dew the glistening grass the birdâ€"choir‘s singing to °s inat come and o me a message of the long ago. % J0Y or pain; God for the harvest God for the rain, God for His merey. Gratitude sod midâ€"dusk and 1enny save be worwring out true ‘ can saf d, thou soul perceives God for the su full of miles seem Juch upon an safely say we do. the is but a , the sea, eos ave with clay son in thing breathâ€" Mn an angel‘s wing of tender pa for the trees sunset Happy rith in gracious Ust boat not piM the leaves the beauty 0 wer light Ara ves nd n all sun RO