FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer Write your name and address and number of pattern wanted. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it careâ€" fully and address your order to Barbara Bell, 73 Adelaide W., This smock dress is perfectly good for afternoons at home as well as mornings. Even if unexâ€" pected visitors â€" arrive you will have the comfortable inowledge that you are attractively dressed. Note especially the sleeve treatâ€" ment. The wide eyelets and bow knots are smart and new A perky sash ‘round the waist can be tied in a bow or buttoned as shown. The front pane! aiso buttons at the shoulders. It‘s comfortable for any householid duty and when the warm days come you‘ll find it eool and lovely for the beach, garden, porch or even marketing. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1853â€" B is available for sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 reâ€" quires 4 7â€"8 yards of 35â€"inch fabric. Now Mammy‘s magic cooking has been modernized for everyone so that the newest bride can make biscuits that suggest Southern hospitality. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS oronto. Many people believed that Ofd Mammy never measured the ingrediâ€" ents but carelessly threw them toâ€" gether and, by some magic. got reâ€" sults. But they were wrong. Mamâ€" my was an experienced cookâ€"â€"she alâ€" ways measured but she used her hand instead of a measuring cup and she was never careless about ingredients. She knew that flour was the basis of good quick breads and cakes and she always insisted on the most finely milled flour she could get. ‘ The old mammyâ€"cooks inspired the legend of Southern hospitality by alâ€" why= serving the finest food. They were famous for their quick breadsâ€" timler, flaky biscuits and deiicious rclls All Day Wear Favorite Biscuits Smock Dress for Australia‘s "Wandering Jew," Mr. Philip Lewis, during his thirtyâ€"seven years of evangelism has travelled 276,000 miles, walked 75,000 miles, worn out 200 pairs of boots, read the bible fifty one times. ground, This is Spring weather, Remembering, enraptured There‘s an old moonbeam At the top landing And there, like a child‘s dream, An old clock still standing, Telling forever one moment forever captured. We will make no sound Moving there together. Though dead leaves rustle on There‘s a bottle of old wine And a broken rafter, And a ball of red twine, And a sound of laughter, Echoing, enigmatic. (Garett Oppenheim in the New York Sun) Let us go by the kitchen door And the back stairs Lightly to the top floor Where the dim years Lie stored in the attic. Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method of your favorâ€" ite mainâ€"course dish and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Arrange lettuce leaves on indiviâ€" dual saucers. Slice bananas on the leaves. Sprinkle with chopped nut meats. Then pour mayonnaise dressâ€" ing on the whole. This is a simply made salad for hot days.â€"Anna Ella Milligan, R.R. 4, Tottenham, Ontario. Peach Surprise Mix chopped nuts and mayonnaise with Chateau Cheese, place a spoonâ€" ful of cheese in oneâ€"half of a peach. Cover with other half and serve on lettuce. This may be served with mayonnaise or French dressing. as desired. This is very good. â€" Mrs. Henry Metcalfe, RR. 1, Alvinston, Ontario. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder and salt, and sift again. Cut in shortening. Combine egg, milk and marmalade, or ginger; add to flour gradually and mix to a soft dough. Turn on floured board. Knead lightly 2 to 3 minutes, roll % inch thick, and cut with 2â€"inch foured cutâ€" ter. Butter 4 of each circle, fold, place on wellâ€"greased pan, and brush tops with melted butter. Let rise in warm place 15 minutes. Bake in hot oven (425 F.) 15 minutes. Brush tops: with melted butter and finish baking‘{ Makes 18 rolls. 2 cups sifted cake flour, 3 teaspoons baking powder, 4 teaspoon sait, 4 tablespoons butter or other shortenâ€" ing, 4 tablespoons milk, 1 egg well beaten, 1â€"3 cup orange marmalade or preserved ginger. finely cut. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, soda, and salt, and sift again. Cut in shortening. Add milk gradually until soft dough is formed. Turn on floured board and knead lightly 2 minutes. Roll 4 inch thick; cut with small floured cutter. Bake in shallow pan in hot oven (450 F.) 12 minutes. Makes 2% dozen biscuits. Orange Marmalade Rolls Ginger Rolls HOW TO ENTER CONTEST 4 cups sifted cake flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 14 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt, % cup lard, % cup butâ€" termilk or sour milk. THIS WEEK‘S WINNERS Homecoming Downâ€"South Biscuits the "The only liquid which I can honâ€" estly say ever impaired me is bath water, applied externally."â€"J. B. S. Haldane. And the only concessions â€" if they may be called thatâ€"to the oneâ€" time spirit of the age are made in behalf of Masefield, whose poetry ranks fourth after Arnold, and "Anâ€" thony Adverse," which takes secondâ€" place among the novels, and "Ah Wilderness," a favorite play which is, by the by, full of nostalgia for dear days of ‘08,. Could One ask, in this year of 1936, for a more astonishng comâ€" ment upon the tasies and mental habits of the und>rgraduates of rather a gay college. By John O‘Ren in Baltimore Sunâ€" Those who are anxious over some "new trend" in the colleges and unâ€" dergraduate thought ought to look at the results of the Princeton poll of the senior class. The favorite poems, in oneâ€"twoâ€"three order, are Kipling‘s "If" (of course!), Gray‘s "Elegy" and Matthew Arnold‘s "Dover Beach." The favorite novelist is Dickens; the favorite dramatist is Shakespeare; the favorite book is "A Tale of Two Cities." Now there are many road hogs on the highway I am told But they will never speed their cars where streets are paved with gold. Then where will earthly road hogs go when they no longer dwell, There is no room for such in Heaven, they have a place in........Well? (Your gvess is as good as mine) â€"M.R.B., Walla Walla, Wash. Keep a sharp lookout for road hogs when out upon a trek You can always recognize one by the bristles on his neck, If speeding down the highway by chance one you should spy Drive your car clear off the pavement and let the bru‘te go by. You are safer in the jungle where the lions prowl and roar Than you are upon the pavement that runs smoothly by your door, With all the road hog nuisance that endangers life and limb Lt would be a public kindness to rid this world of him. The road hog never looks around and hard}y bats an eye, He‘s thinking only of himselt, he don‘t care if you die. He will not stop to help you nor his assistance lend, But steps still harder on the gas and hides around a bend. When scarce three lengths in front of you he swings to miss your car His car which is a heavy one will bardly feel the jar, But when he hits your running board your car will give a hitch * In spite of all that you can do you land into the ditch. He hits the middle of the road then swings upon your side, Just aâ€"burning up the pavement with the throttle open wide, For a road hog‘s speed is seventy, nothing less will satisfy, You have a moment for to act or perbaps you all will die. When with your wife you‘re chatting and it seems so good to live, And have the little pleasure your car to you can give, But just around the corner and hardâ€" ly yet in sight A road hog speeds along your lane and hugs the shoulder tight. When with your wife and family on a little pieasure bent, And you hear the children laughing, with their glee the air is rent, While you roll along at twenty and you all enjoy the trip, And you think there is no danger but from me you take a tip. Just Around Need We Fear The Comner 39 Improving the home surroundings on the farm need not be an expensive undertaking, _ necessarily. A little paint, some work, and a few cents worth of flower seeds will do wonders. Farmers who cater to the tourist trade find that tourists choose _ the cleanest and most attractiveâ€"looking farm for their overnight stop. In this case a clean goodâ€"looking farmhouse pays golden dividends. But any farâ€" mer and his wife will find a pretty garden plot around the house will reâ€" compense them many times over in the way it will lift their spirits and the pride it will give them in their own home. But in spite of these very plausible excuses, the Whigâ€"Standard believes that a great deal could be done by the farmers of the district to beautiâ€" fy their home surroundings. _ Little wonder if the children want to leave home and try their luck in the city when the home is a dingy unattract ive place, If the home were pretty they would be more likely to remain on the land There are mitigating circumstancâ€" es for the unlovely appearance of the terms, and they are very strong, and chief among them being lack of cash to expend on what is considered a luxury rather than a necessity, Then, too, the farmer works long, weary hours at work which is very like garâ€" dening, and _ he finds no recreation in digging flower beds and mowing lawns. His wife and children also work hard and as a result, only _ in the odd case does the farm home and its surroundings receive the care and attention which they merit. As one motors through _ Ontario, and especially Eastern and Central Ontario, one is often struck with the forlorn and even dismal appearance of many farms, observes the Kingston Whigâ€"Standard. The house and barns are unpainted, the barnyard is a quagmire and no attempt has been made to have a lawn or flower garden The exceptional farm where an atâ€" tempt has been made to beautify the home surroundings stands out as a bright spot and makes the others look even worse by contrast Urges More Beauty in Farm Premises on vean batten ,New Zealand, shown at the Royal Aero Club in London with the Britannia Trophy for 1985 after she was preâ€" sented with it at the club in recognition of her flight across the Southern Atlantic last year in her Perifval Gull plane. The Britannia Trophy is awarded annually by the Royal Aero Club to the British aviator making the most meritorious air performance each year. Miss Batten has already been awarded the Harmon International Afvia;Itrix Trophy for 1935 and the decoration of the French Legion 0 onor. ‘ Miss Jea_r!_Bz_litterL,_New Zealand, shown at the New Zealand Avitrix Wins Trophy TORONTO Home beautification should not be the job of any one individual _ a}â€" It is the spirit of not being satisâ€" fied with things as they are that does make the world progress and if all of the farmers of the Kingston district become so dissatisfied with their own home surroundings that they set to work to improve them, they will be greatly enriched at the expense of a little bit of energy which perhaps is expended now on a less useful enterâ€" prise. of ownership; son and daughter will feel that they and their home are every bit as good as their city friends and their home. Mothers will feel more like enterâ€" taining the Women‘s Institute; Dad will eye the place with a new pride Apart from the physical improvement the planning and the awakening _ of the spirit of improvement will do much for the souls and minds of the inmates of those farm homes which will try the experiment. ‘0 Kurusu, Janane«a a y _"NIUSU, 10.â€"yearâ€"old daughter of Saburo Kurusu, Japanese Ambassador to Belgium, have a great time together in Hollywood as Teru presents a Japanese doll to the young movie star. The Kurusu family stopped off in Hollywood while en route to Belgium so that Keru could visit Shirley Shirley Temple and Shirley Entertains An Overseas Visitor TerE Kurusu, 10â€"yearâ€"old daughter of d ant n en ol ie + 4o ol l : though it is good to have a leader); it should be a family job, for all will benefit from the ultimate result, And home beautification is not a job that can be worked at a few days and then left. It must be worked at intensively at first and then regularly during the Summer every year. Underwriters sit in Lloyd‘s buildâ€" ing, Leadenhall Street, London, in seats resembling those of the original coffee house kept by Edward Lloyd in 1796, from which the present corâ€" poration developed. "You clean men as you clean milk pails, by scalding them." â€" George Bernard Shaw. stead If ever you chance to go fled, But trouble, grief and woe, And sorrow and care you‘ll meet inâ€" From Gossip Town peace long since Just back of the park is Slander‘s Row, ‘T‘was there Good Name died, Pierced by a dart from Jealousy‘s bow, In the hands of Envious Pride Remark, Who lives on the street Don‘t Care. Park You‘re never quite safe while there, For its owner is Madam Suspicious The principal street is called Theyâ€" Say And I‘ve heard is the public well, And the breezes that blow from In the midst of the town is Telltale Falschood Bay Are laden with Don‘tâ€"Youâ€"Tell You glide through the valley of Viciâ€" ous Folh, And into the tunnel of Hate, Then crossing the Addâ€"To bridge, you walk Right into the city gate route, And most folks start that way. But it‘s steep down grade; if you don‘t look out, You‘ll land in False hood Bay The Thoughtless road is a popular It isn‘t far to Gossip Town, For people who want to go. The Idleness train will take you down, In just an hour or so. * (Author Unknown) Have you ever heard of Gossip Town On the shore of Falsehood Bay, Where old Dame Rumor, with rustlâ€" ing gown, Is going the livelong day? Gossip Town "What would happen if you smo}~ in Italian to a dog that had bee raised in Ethiopia?"â€"Prof. Mauric« Langhorne, Psycholozy Emory Univ Ga, I think everyone vught â€" keep bottle of nail polish at home, usi: it between weekly visits to the may eurist. ‘The minute polish on one n: starts to peel, remove the old m apply a fresh coat of lacquer." "Few women neglect their han these days, but many do go arou with chipped and cracked nail polis x REW _ She advises meticulous scrubbins and frequent creaming for the hee!s, too. She spoke also of eyebrows, Ismenting the fact that many girls allow hair to grow on lids and beâ€" tween brows,. We all know thai brows should not be tweezed into thin pencilâ€"thin lines, of course. Bu neither should they be allowed (» spread beyond the edges of the non!, normal eyebrow line. Untidy . polish draws nation. a brush, but massaged with ric} cream several times a week." "Of course, there are certain often overlooked or neglected features that should be given regular attention by every woman. Elbows, for example. Not only should they be scrubbed with "The basis of modern beauty is daintiness," says a girl who is always immaculately groomed. "And I think daintiness is achieved only by thinking of, and caring for, all the details of one‘s appearance. To blend her makeup, hairdress and clothes into a completed picture of loveliness, a woâ€" man must analyze herself and her looks and learn the little tricks that she alone needs. to such o stage that they will have an enthusiasm for their work and not simply go to school to put in time and it is to gain the proper approach to this end that modern educationists are now putting in their time. "Teacher training is a big factor in putting across this idea. The teacher must be trained how to be an inspirer and an inducer of proâ€" jects of the minds of pupils. _ The wills of the children must be broupht ‘"The most favorable cireumstances possible under which knowledge or skill may be acquired is when the thing being learned comes about in the form of a project which the puâ€" pils themselves have come to regard as their own. If the pupil does a thing as a project of his own he is getting an education several tmes greater than if he did it because he was told to do so. _ *"The modern education group feels that is the key to the whole question and that upon the attitude of the will depends greatly the qualâ€" ity of education that goes on. Just as industry is strong on efficiency so it should be with education. "Two important processes depend on the degree of intensity and the other being the degree in the oppoâ€" site direction, ind it is the aim of modern educationists to make more of what is registered register inâ€" tensely, It should be figured out how much is retained and how much is not, or rather how much waste there is in education. "Educationists have found that the will of pupi‘s fall into three chief categories. There is one group with a more or less passive will and on either side two contrastâ€" ing attitudes, one group having an active and keen desire to learn and the other group that goes to school with an adverse attitude toward it. "The ideas involved are not parâ€" ticularly new and have as a basis the achievement of a new and more widespread grasp on the attitude and will of the pupil and scholar. For the past thirty years experiâ€" mental work has been going on in isolated centres, particularly in Enpâ€" land and in the Scandinavian counâ€" tries on this new type of education. I1 Canada it was known as th "Progressive Educational Movement" and in the Qld Land as "The New Educational Movement." Education, the speaker pointed out was like almost every other branch of modern life in that it was passiny through substantial changes. The more important changes had not yet appeared on the surface, or rather had not yet appeared in the curricuâ€" lum of our system of education, but were most decidedly coming. STRATFORD. â€" Declaring that the first business of the teacher should be to win the will of the child, and that this was the basis upon which modern â€" educationists were working, Rev. Charles A. Bishop, M.A., D.D.,, delivered a most inforâ€" mative address here recently. His subject was "New Developments in Education." Is the Basis of All Beaut for a Woman Dr. C. A. Bishop of Fergus Delivers Interesting Address At Rotary Luncheon Wining Will of Child Important Daintiness her AI AJ W t UT 1} t} Death eogrg