1 FU MANCHU When opening bottles for _ using pour so much into a glass, then fill the remainder with ice water. This makes a very refreshing drink and it is lovely for picnics. Soak gelatine in cold water, vineâ€" gar. lemon juice for 20 minutes, add boiling water, sugar and salt. When mixture is cool add ingredients. Turn into mold first dipped in cold water. Remove to bed of lettuce. â€" Mary Crosier, RR. No. 3, Stouffville, Ont. ORANGE aDe 6 oranges chopped fine; 2 ounces of @itric acid; 2 quarts of boiling water, Let stand over night (12 hours). In the morning strain and add 314 lbs. of white sugar, and boil ten minutes. Bottle up. 1 tablespoon | sa shredded; 4 eu; eup cooked peas shredded carrots Soak grelatina If desired you may use This Week‘s Winners VITAMIN SALAD 2 tablespoons of gelatine; 4 cup of eold water; 4 cup mild vinegar; 2 tablespoons lemon juice; 2 cups _ of hob WAEGK® BB ADW Wz | cuemacss The color of your flowers, china or linen to be nsed for the particular ocâ€" eagsion may determine the kind â€"of quickâ€"setting jJely and fruit to be used and pretty colour contrasts add a deeâ€" wrative note to the attractiveness of such salads and desserts. gherkins may be used instead _ of eherries and introduced into lime or lemon jelly. Fies °_ 10 "~M6C WHewsetting cherry jelly powder; 1 pint warm water; 1 cup of white cherries, pitted and halved; 1 «up canned pineapple, diced. f Dissolve jelly in warm water. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in fruit. Turn into mold. Chill until firm, Unâ€" mold on criap lettuce or endive. Garâ€" »ish with mayonnaise. Serves 6. ‘ There are several varieties of this jelly salad that will give you different jdeas for several weeks. Water cress may be used as a nest for the quickâ€"setting jelly. Tiny balls of honey dew melon may be used in the jelly instead of cherâ€" fresh upon the market, but they alâ€" ways can be bought canned and their «o00! cream color with a blush of red on one cheek probably accounts for their romantic name. A summer salad that can‘t go wrong may be made by putting either fresh or cauned whole pitted cherries into molds of raspberry or cherry quickâ€" setting jelly and this set upon a bed of curly endive is irresistible as a «ool luncheon, bridge or supper dish. CHERRY SaLaD 1 package quickâ€"setting cherry jelly powder; 1 pint warm water® 1 enn af Suffed olives and round Quecn Annve Cherrie fresh upon the marke ways can be bought ea {{ff\| Woman‘s, > World I Good night." 1000 1 S OE TTE menm of Chinese | & * | w: .' 1’ j 'Q‘ ® /'7'/ P A/ U "J“‘ 4 / w \4,’/†i d4dm d A) Te ,;\ '/ S s ,' U /' BV cT. Wa s su “l o Ee W 2 \ï¬ -~“-"'.'E\"".. b truct o â€"""""""'l-’:llmuh.. f ions to . fanch killir NMMM.IJ..'&»-." "Quite so, Petrie. He M has J to be merciful. Miomhob'ï¬.ï¬d'll\d%‘ Good night." ud . se mercy! _ ‘1 have it," 1 told Nayland Smith. mmou juice; z2 cups _ of i 1â€"3 cup white sugar; salt; 2 cups cabbage, cup chopped celery; 34 bas (green); 34 cup of mons in will soon be the place of oranges thus Lo sc c _ I of sweet they al-,momide. â€"â€" ie it ment, as he had be cars for over 20 ye that the toll gate is considers that the pression "The law i inappropriate, The official refused, and told hin that unless he produced his permit as requested, he would have to submi to a test as to his ability to drive, So consequently he made an appointâ€" ment, and in due time went out with a department instructor. When he finâ€" ished he was informed that he was a fair driver and given his permit, the cost of which was double the regular price, as he bad to pay the instructor. The applicant resented this treat. Observes the Toront pire â€"â€" The Mail and P heard from a Toront« went to the Parliament get his driver‘s permit ing failed to take wit permit, he suggested t of the Motor Vehicle; whom be was dealing his records, as he had car for years. worst bridge hand, $5.00. Ely Culbertson. The contra maestro announced he wou! authentic information about oneâ€"suited hands, or hands ing nothing higher than a He wishes to calculate the of such holdings#® ‘The har be dealt in rubber bridge. 1 participating in the game â€" test before a notary as t} ine fature of the AuCMERELAn By Sax Rohmer Save: Freak Hands Says Culbertson 421, shol t cn6dh i sA A 4 40 Piainly write or print out the necâ€" essary ingredients and method _ of your favorite salad and summer drink and send together with name and adâ€" dress to Household Science. Room We are offering one dollar for each recipe printed, giving the most inâ€" teresting variation of a salad dish or refreshing drink for this time of the year. NEW YORKâ€" No. 3, Port P rying Out a Driver HOW TO ENTER CONTEST ‘Fu Manchu has ves the Toronto Mail and Emâ€" The Mail and Empire has now rom a Toronto motorist who the Parliament Buildings _ to driver‘s permit for 1936. Havâ€" ed to take with him his old he suggested that the official Motor Vehicles Branch withl © was dealing might look up uy 9 uis & w‘ C"V togetner with name and adâ€" to Household Science, Room 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Weekly Cash Prizes had been drivin; motor 20 years. He suggests e Is too active, _ and the timeâ€"honored exâ€" aw is an ass," is not refused, and told him produced his permit as would have to submit his ability to drive, So e made an appoint ue time went out with he had been drivi;g"a notary as the genuâ€" the exceptional hand. iss Clare M. Hardy, RR erry, Ontario, â€"For the best or nd, $5.00. Apply to The contract bridge ed he would pay for ation about genuine , or hands containâ€" er than a ï¬ve-spot.‘ lculate the chances W The hands must‘ ‘r bridge. Each one this treatâ€" making le "And the soldier also mocked Him, coming to Him, offering Him vinegar. And saying, If Thou art the king of the Jews, save Thyself." "By the word ‘mocked‘ seems to be meant that they lifted up to His lips the vessels containing their ordinary drink, sour wine, and then snatched them away." "And there was also a superscripâ€" tion over Him, ‘This is the King of the Jews.‘" This title was written in black letters on # board eniamundt O _ ihis was the first word from the cross. Jt is a prayer addressed to God as Father for the pardon of Christ‘s enemies. "And parting His garments among them, they cast lots." The Son of God atoning for the sins of the warht snnites 22ll oo THE LESsSON in ITS Time~l"1'iday. April 7, Placcâ€"JerUsalem and outside of the citv wa‘ls LESSON XLâ€"June 14. JESUS (‘RU(‘IFIEllâ€"Luke 23 Luke 23 ; 33â€"46 Golden TEXT _ God commendeth His own love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. .Romans 5 : 8, Franses Nalle believes in t before approving. We‘d sav it mong them, theyv c_a_st Son of God atoning for the world, whilst angels fo es " riday, April 7, A.D. 30 0rd, ~Calvary". "There | Him, and the malefacâ€" the right_hand and the board smeared y came unto the d The skull." The is a transiation ot "Golgotha," which and Calvary just S SETTING d "And he said, Jesus, remember me f | when Thou comest into Thy kingâ€" is | dom." _ He acknowledged that there t |was a life beyond death and knew r |that both were dying; that, in the s |future, there was to be a kingdom s |ever which the Lord Jesus would be t | king; that it would be possible\ for f | the Lord Jesus to remember him merâ€" â€" | cifully when He came into that kingâ€" > | dom, and that, if the Lord were merâ€" ciful, he himself would have a place | in that kingdom. f "And He said unto him, Verily I |say unto thee, Today shalt Thou be with me in Paradise." This is the second word from the cross. The word "Paradise" is used for the Garden of Eden (Gen. 2 : 8), and for that region | of Hades in which the spirits of the blessed await the general resurrecâ€"| tion (Acts 2 : 31), and then heaven 1 itself (2 Cor. 12 : 4). a "And it was now about the sixth hour." That is, noon. "And a darkâ€" 1 ness came over the whole land until | c the ninth hour.. The sun‘s light failâ€" | q; ing." The darkness lasted until three | t o‘clock in the afternoon. Vuring | p these three hours no incident is reâ€" | s, corded. (See Amos 8 : 9.) "All else|p is silent. No taunt or insult is flung | 0f Showmg OH wrong, "And we indeed justly; for we reâ€" ceive the due reward of our deeds: but this man hath done nothing amiss." Here is a most remarkable revelation of the heart of one of these criminals: he believed in God, he feared God, he acknowledged he was guilty, and deserved the punishment which had been inflicted upon him; ‘but, most of all, he confessed that the Lord Jesus, hanging near him, had done nothing wrong, literally, "nothâ€" ing out of place," which can only mean that he recognized the claims of Jesus to be just and Jesus Himself to be absolut.ely innocent of any . with white Eypsum, n conspicuous. "And one of the ms were hanged railed on Art not Thou the Chri self and us. But the o and rebuking him said, even fear God, seeing t] same _ condemnation ?" "malefactor" means sin worker", but the other answered, him said, Dost thou not , seeing thou art in the mation?" _ ‘The word means simply "an evil 4 on Him, say-i_r;g, Christ? save Thyâ€" 0 AT ustly; for we reâ€" d of our deeds: h done nothing most remarkable t of one of these malefgctors that TORONTO "And Jesus, crying with a loud voice, said, Father into Thy hands I commend my Spirit: and having said this, He gave up the ghost." This is the last word from the cross. Luke records only the first, second, and seventh words from the cross, and none of these are found in any of the other Gospel records. at Him now. The temple dis is at an end. God is now to every man through the s: the Lord Jesus Christ (Heb 20). Scenes of the arrival at Montreal of the Emden, first German warship to enter the port since Britain deâ€" clared war on Germany in 1914, were also shown as well as the af ! Still another corps of newsreel men were in Toronto to film the anâ€" nual garison parade and secure in sound the skirl of the bagpipes and the blare of bras and silver bands as the 6,000 members of Toronto‘s air force, naval and military units rarade in fullâ€"dress uniform under cloudless skies to the Exhibition grounds, where divine service was held in ront of a grandstand holding 15,000 spectators. it hoii steiih: bstsais is? Wc acs The four lovely campus coâ€"eds were also heard and seen as they met Dr. Allan R. Dafoe to discuss the health rules under which the five Dionnes are being brought up. l The Canadian newsreel reporters ,had a busy week of it recently, judgâ€" ing from the current sightâ€"andâ€"sound records of outstanding events of the Canadian scene. One corps of techâ€" nicians journeyed north to Callanâ€" der to where the famous Keys quadâ€" ruplets had come all the way from Texas to pay a visit to the much more famous Dionne quintuplets. Mn oo 2 en ts Newsreels Busy This Week â€"Emden at Montrealâ€" Parade in Toronto Quads Visit Quints said Biggest dl'zi\&l;a;gk--to life in the Arctic circle is a shortage of fresh food during the winter months, she T i uc dE on Mrs. Fraser, who before her marâ€" riage was employed in an Edmonton phot studio, has become an ardent amateur photographer, and brought back a firstâ€"class collection of prints taken and developed in the northland. The women _ wear long parkas reaching below the knees. They carry their babies on their backs, inside the parkas, supported by a cord around the mother‘s waist, "When our visitors started â€" to warm up," she added, "it was startâ€" ling to see two little Eskimos whom we did not know existed â€" guddenly produced. Cold winters hold little terrors for Mrs. Fraser and her family. A warmâ€" ly built and cosy eabin and a radio make the long winter nights pass comfortably and happily a# Â¥= â€" Accompanied by her young son she "flew out" from her home near Elâ€" dorado Mine, where her husband is employed as an engineer. The Eskimos make a fascinating study, she remarked, and their visits to the mine proved of interest to all white residents. "On one occasion a number of them came to our cabin," she said. "All wore very broad grins and seemed very interested. They were seated only a few minutes when they beâ€" came too warm and slipped out of their parkas. Then what an odor of seal oil!" _ _ EDMONTON .â€" Life within the Arctic circle has charms even for a woman, (Mrs. George Fraser, of Cameron Bay, Great Bear Lake, Northwest Territories, said here durâ€" ing her first visit to civilization in 18‘ months, ~ Cameron Bay Woman Visits Civilization First Time in 18 Months Life In Arctic Has Attractions The temple dispensation God is now accessible through the sacrifice of well as the ofâ€" & 10 ; 19, HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred) ; wrap it carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronta. Style No. 2936 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years, Size 16 requires 4», yards of 39. inch material for entire outfit, To wear to and from the court or beach, the buttone skirt I:S easy to don, t ctlt ccaacc d CI0J ane of the culotte type with double plaits. They give the efect of a skirt. The shirt with haiter strap back is delightfully cool and exâ€" ceedingly chic. For tennis or the beach, it is always useful to have a skirt to complete your shirt and shorts rig as this smart cotton print ensemâ€" ble, Those who go in for a serious game of tennis will especially like the comfortable shorts, They are WO . d ie( Poplen un en d â€"â€"Berne Cooper~ in the New â€" York Sun, And my sore thoughts be blest On a bare hill; Not by the woods and sea, They are too much with me; Give me a hill. Wwoods are too much with wJe, Woods and the sea, Give me a quiet hill There let my heart be still, There let my spirit rest, . ficial welcome given the awastikaâ€" emblemed officers and men by Monâ€" treal‘s city fathers. In the reahn of Canadian sport an unusual tournaâ€" ment in which archers vied with ‘|golfers on distance and accuracy in )|a number of mixed foursomes was also filmed by cameramen who jourâ€" neyed to the Rouge Hills Country Club, some 20 miles out of Toronto. With films being rushed across the sea, Premier Mussolini and Emperor Haile Selassie again were the headâ€" liners in the foreign news. In Rome I1 Duce read a telegram from Genâ€" eral Badoglio after the fall of Addis Ababa; in Ethiopia, the jubilant Roâ€" man legions were shown advancing in triumph across the land that once belonged to the Lion of Judah; at Geneva, Baron Aloisi, Italian spokesâ€" | man, walked out on the League de I liberations; and defeated Haile Selâ€" | assie, fleeing Italian might, arrived | * in Jerusalem. FOR SUMMER DAYS oo Much With Me the buttoned front tennis "Pecple laud but they always plumb down t fase." Cl CC CGWIe TasmoOn. The Navy also enters into the quosâ€" tion of the collar vogue, many styles for the younger generation having a truly nautical air. However, small medallions of f ers embroidered in bright Hunga colorings, in correct geometrical mation on the tops and euftfs of o dresses, convince one of the att tiveness of this decorative fashijon hk e t icl uds An odd flower or leaf embroidered haphazardly on the bodice or sleeve of a frock raises the question in one‘s mind as to whether it is there by acâ€" cident or design, 1 _ Collars, like Topsy, "just grew". They are almost as broad as they are long, and they go as they please. Softly feminine in crepe or chiffon, purely demure in pique or rather starchy linenâ€"your cuffs also should correspond. _ The Mary Stuart bonnet has proâ€" duced the ruffle neckline, one that is either gathered flatly and threadâ€" ed with a cord to tie at the side, or one which frames the face like a Toby frill, thus pushing up your chin just a trifle higher. Very good for double chins. Collars are Versatileâ€" Go as They Please e (T nearly every case the answer has been that two qualities in a secretary are important: first, that she should be able to meet any emergency and never be hindered by mechanical inâ€" efficiency, and second, that she should reduce the actual typing to completely automatic work so that she and the employer can forget about it. Many â€" business men, . politici worldâ€"famous authors, and ot have been asked how they assess typewriting ability of their se imries. But a reduction of oneâ€"sixth in wages due to "goods not being up to description" would be a blow to many typists. to the staff manager. It would be an interesting experiâ€" ment to find out the actual time lost by these delays. Sev. al big concerns cdo assess the time lost through errors and book it against the typist. A typing error takes at least fifteen seconds to alter, and if there are sevâ€" eral carbons a much longer time, Therefore if you tell an employer that you do sixty words a minute but make one error in every hundred words, this reduces your real speed to about fifty words a minute . ememnber that the most lenicnt employer has a limit to his patience. Every error in typing causes a big delay and reduces the effective rate of operation, so that speeds are cerâ€" tainly often not what they are quoted to the staff manawar Remember that the employer has a limit t Brantford The 1936 tour will include engageâ€" ments in England, France, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland, with radio broadcasts from London and Paris, and the itinerary will include Chester, Leamington, the Shakespeare Country, London, Brussels, Cologne, the Rhine Valley, Wiesbaden, Heidelberg, Badenâ€" Baden, Lucerne, Interlaken and Paris. The choir, and tourist party, travelâ€" ing at specially reduced rates, will sail from Montreal July 25th on the C.P.R. linee Montcalm, returning from Cherbourg August 18th aboard the $.S. Duchess of Richmond. Many reservations from different parts of the country have been made with the secretary of the Canadian Choir in Suggestions for the Stenoâ€" grapher Who Makes Mistakes The choir, which a few years ago underteok a trip to Blackpool, Engâ€" land, and acquitted itself with distincâ€" tion in the Music Festival in that city, completing with a concert in Rovyal Albert Hall. London, under.the paâ€" tronage of His Late Majesty King George V, has had a notable career. In the province of Ontario in particuâ€" lar, they have presented many conâ€" certs, as well as radio broadcasts over the Canadian Radio Commission‘s coastâ€"toâ€"coast network. They have also been heard over the Columbia network through Station WGR, Buffalo. â€" 200 you up .to heaven, always kinda hope you‘!l fa}] own toâ€"well, fiat on your Canadian singers will be heard this summer in some of the leading spas of Europe, and Canadian tourists to the number of several hundred will accompany them, according to plans now completed for a European tour of the famous Canadian Choir of Brantford, a unit of 60 trained voices, under the baton of its founderâ€"conâ€" ductor, Frederic Lord. Itinerary Includes England, France, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland To Tour Enrope mall medallions of flowâ€" red in bright Hungarian correct geometrical forâ€" : tops and cuffs of other Type Tips â€"Paul Whiteman. of the attracâ€" y assess the their secreâ€" and others politicians, Ww Golcondas are » ©® Venus, â€" Chicago is aim Lake Michigan, whe only articl by Ghandi is the s An omelet in & the neck in India, Fiction are book{ 0n the shelves and €an liner Woman is the a ®5 the greatest at In order to kee ing sour it should The single tax is _ The Moratorium The Au «@ecided 10 ervoirs. _ Jme prin the mote a The bard What they The c rlage, Bigotry time, tion or Age th. courage The artic ta.l both t} provisions o summarizes favorable fe is that "Ap term policy 'Ollcy. Th« clated with tribation. . A €osts and sp costs and c volumes â€" ey prices will â€" all around. Berve succes: I‘y grading a» as worthy feat aiming at i; calture in Can rom th On the othe the New Ze *"The activitie says, "include advertising in is tauker to av job has been demand abroa able consum r Britain for th product. . The Zealand schem Restriction not seem to « improving th muthor cites rubber, the for Brazilian United States as notable e this respect. says, "is incs ing and com production of tion to a con: any particula; Consequentiy Canada must the productic tive advantas the place of solute â€" advar foreign barri able at any ket. As a ba economic si must be re foreign cou towards a developing An anal keting sch ference to Marketing lum, N.B. issue of TH countants. critical of . schemes. F culture suf tention cor situation, a cides to ta situation t! given the lation. A «c facts wou‘ld price raisir muth legis| keting. It i ment in ma production . distribution needs. The fact most : cant legisla agriculture, criticism, th raising sche deal with th a marketing regulations with the gr this an exc criticism. SC’!O(.‘ produ Writer Failu: ardshiy Is n