Use Royal Yeast Cakes and you‘ll be sure of perfect leavening. That‘s beâ€" eause each cake comes individually "rotech:e;! by its owg::iflght wrapper,. o ot. yeast su rotection. You can ::Ke with Royal feat Cakes the day you buy themâ€"or weeks later â€"and count on the same fine results each time, " ,:;-Jâ€"â€"-a-.-lnw Ont. Please sead me the free Royal Yeast Wha ies Thicis Royal Yeast Cakes and Royal Sponge Recipes make perfect ROYAL YEAsT cakEs keep Full Strength four years like a threatening hand over her life. Free! Free! Free; She stopped singing suddenly, to whirl at the sound of a footstep. Mrs. Piper came into the kitchen. "Land sakes," said Lola‘s employer pleasantly. "You‘re gay as a spring breeze, child! I should think you‘d feel kind of sad, graduating from school, leaving your friends and all!" Lola flung her arms around Mn.‘ Piper. In the four years she had four years lik over her life. She stopped whirl at the so Piper came int. "Land sakes, pleasantly. "YÂ¥. breeze, child! feel kind of ner crown of shining honeyâ€"colored hair gleamed in bright contrast to the blue walls of the service pantry. Why shouldn‘t she be happy * Toâ€" night was graduation, the goal she ence thought unattainable. Next week she would start to business college. By fall she would have a job and be‘ free of the shadow that had hung for ference," 4he Post recalls Disraeli‘s saying on the creation of Ottawa as the capt ulo!C.mdathatonodayltwonld m elpit‘al of &ho British Empire. 7 L120 0 s e en oVe _ That prophecy, however fantastic," the Post comments, "was rememberâ€" ed 70 years later when the Empire statesmen went to the Ottawa conâ€" _ LONDON, â€" "Nothing, it seems, can prevent Canada becoming a first class power before the end of the next quarterâ€"century," declares the Yorkshire Post in commenting on the Empire tour of Right Hon, R. B. Benâ€" nett, former Premier. "The educated person must be able to adjust himself to whatever condiâ€" tions he finds around him." â€"Henry Ford. Canada Pictured as LeaTin; Power in Next 25 Years "Monism is the philosopt intellect, dualism of the m sciousness, pluralism of the sense." _ "But Pa!" Lola felt her knees givâ€" ing way under her. For four years she had lived in the shadow of this moment, haunted by the fear the shanty might reach out and drag her back to its smells and squalor. (To be continued) "Why, yes. Is anything wrong? Is Ma all right ?" "No. Yer Ma ain‘t all right. She‘s sick. She ain‘t got no business tryin‘ to take keer of the shanty. That‘s what brought me here. I‘ve come to take you home." "Pa!" she gasped. "What do you want ?" The man ran a blunt hand through his yellowâ€"gray hair, curling his lip in a grin that showed broken, tobacâ€" coâ€"stained teeth, "Surprised to see me, ain‘t you?" he asked. Lola ran down the s‘t“e});.a;;";ï¬en- ed the door. She stepped back, the co!pr draining from her face. "You talk to the man, Lola," Mrs. Pipex.- hnrrie_d out of the kitchen. "I suppose you‘re right," Mrs. Piper sighed. ‘"Mercy me! Who‘s that pounding on the back door?" Lola looked down the flight of steps and through the back door window. A man in dirty overalls was partially visible. Neither his feet nor his head appeared, but his huge, knotted hands fumbled aimlessly with a bedâ€" l raggled horsewhip. ‘ "Just because I sang the lead in a high school operetta!" Lola laughed. "It takes years of study and lots of money to be an accomplished musiâ€" cian." "They wouldn‘t want him to marry a shantyâ€"town girl like me," she whispered. She squared her shouldâ€" ers. "Forgive me. I‘m being silly. Jerry‘s just out of college. He isn‘t ready to marry anyone yet. Any more than I am!" "Of course not," comforted Mrs. Piper. "And when you make a fine success, everyone will forget your beâ€" ginnings. I only wish, Lola, it was music instead of business you were going to follow." Lola‘s blue eyes misted. She looked away from Mrs. Piper. Of course, they want him to c-;!:x:;o;l both, and they hope he‘ll choose the proper sort of helpmeet." Lola regarded her soberly. "I have to make good," she said, quietly. "I have to prove I‘m worthwhile. I can‘t imagine Jerry‘s family being friendly to a girl who wasn‘t just right." "That‘s only natural," Mrs. Piper returned. "Jerry‘s their only â€"son. They‘ve built up a splendid business reputation and a substantial fortune. see why you shouldn"tsfll;ée-p “1-1-1'; friendship." ""You mean the one who really counts," she chided. "The Hughes boy. Well, Jerry‘s a lovely young man, and if you become a business girl, I don‘t cheek. count." Lola‘s willingness to see this happy arrangement end. _ "Sure you‘re not a little sad, Lola ?" The girl hugged her again. "How could I be, Mrs. Piper? After all, I‘m not giving up the people I love best. I‘ll stay with you and Doctor until I finish business school. Of course, I‘ll probably lose sight of friends, but not the ones that really to certain Empire diverâ€" . Piper pinched Lola‘s glowing philosophy of the Piper seemed puzzled at â€"Dean Inge the moral conâ€" acsthetic TORONTO cludes, "is bound to benefit by Mr. Bennett‘s tour. Students of lmpenl affairs can only regret his example is not more widely followed,." > pingapore base is completed, 't-lâ€"nov Grand Fleet cannot operate in the gencies in the outlook on external affairs, the Post remarks concerning Australia‘s attitude to Imperial deâ€" fence that her situation in the Paâ€" cific raises certain problems which perhaps Ottawa has not yet fully apâ€" preciated, "Australia, for instance," the Post adds, "knows that unless the se Oe on ce F T MOutiie h d 2 â€" B us t er until thoroughly mixed. Place ’ over rapidly boiling water, beat conâ€" stantly with rotary egg beater, and cook seven minutes, or until frostâ€" ing will stand in peaks. Remove from boiling water; add vaniliz and beat until thick enough to spread. Makes enough frosting to cover tops and sides of two nineâ€"inch layers, or‘ top and sides of 8 x 8 x twoâ€"inch 1 teaspoons light corn syrup 1 teaspoon vanilla. Combine egg whites, sugar, waâ€" ter and corn syrup in top of double boiler, beating with rotary egg beatâ€" e S es oegen Mn g e d dn s & 8 squares unsweetened chocolate, melted 1 cup milk f 1 teaspoon vanilla Sift flour once, measure, add the soda, and sift together three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each; then add chocolate and blend. Add flour alternately with milk, a small amâ€". ount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla,. Bake in two greased deep nineâ€"inch layer pans or three greased eight. inch layer pans in moderate oven (350 deg.) 30 minutes. Spread Sevenâ€"Minute Frosting between the layers and on top and sides of the cake. Double recipe for three tenâ€" inch layers for large party cake, as pictured. Sevenâ€"Minute Frosting 2 egg whites, unbeaten 1% cups sugar 5 tablespoons water ' Devil‘s Food Cake 2 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon soda % cup butter or other shortening 1% cups brown sugar, firmly packed Here is the recipe for the cake, the filling and the icing, but do you know how that little decorative wreath around the top of the cake is achieved? Just take a sharp knife and scrape unsweetened chocolate from the sold cake. It will go in little curls and tiny feathers of rich brown which taste good too. | ’ With late summer come the asâ€" ters, marigo!lds and sosmos and a table set with pale russet asters, bright yellow marigolda and white cosmos, just needs a big Devil‘s Food Cake to make a perfect combination of color and something good to eat. For luncheon dessert, an afternoon or evening bridge game, it is one of the most popular cakes one can serve. Try it just once and you‘ll have a reputation for serving the "grandest eats ever" in the way of cake. eggs or 3 egg yolks, unbeaten j Woman‘s @ â€"World The Institute of Practiéz;i and Applied Psychology 910 Confederation Building Write for particulars of C e battle to f._."mâ€"";_.';:‘: a‘nm."â€â€œm‘l’ol’oto the menâ€" !Ol,u.l t and efficient. _ _ _ _ _ Flood lighting to be used in the new exhibition building at Earl‘s Court, London, will produce any color scheme or sky effect from sunny summer to starlit night, on demand. ATTENTION! Send in your favorite recipe for pie, cake, mainâ€"course dish or preâ€" serves. We are offering $1.00 for each recipe printed. How to Enter Contest Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it together with mname and address to: 1 Household Science, Room 421, 173 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Have You an A; in Life? 18 ripe tomatoes 1 cup chopped celery % cup chopped onions 3 sweet green peppers 1 sweet red pepper 2 tablespoons salt _2 tablespoons vinegar 4 cup sugar. Wash and cut tomatoes, but do not peel. Chop the peppers finely. Mix tomatoes, celery, onfons, pepâ€" pers and salt together, Boil for halt an hour. Strain through a coarse sieve. Add the vinegar and sugar. Boil three minutes. Seal in sterilized Jars. â€" Ruby H. Church, Box 292, ‘ Zurich, Ontario. By Mair M. Morgan Issue No. 36 â€" ‘36 crisp greens. _ "% cup mayonnaise i French dressing, if desired. Crisp salad greens. Grind the raw carrots through the fine knife of the food chopper. Add the honey or jelly and then enough mayonnaise to moisten the carrots. slowly until they are puffed, Drain slowly untilthey are puffed. Drain and wipe dry. Scatter through the carrot mixture. Mold and serve on 2 tablespoons honey or currant jelly cake (generousyl), or about two dozen cup cakes. 1â€"8 to % cup raisins 6 carrots THIS WEEK‘S WINNER _ Tomato Cocktail pt. 986 Toronto Ont. ‘"Too fat, overfed by wife," is, acâ€" cording to the expert writing on this subject, unfortunately too often the explanation. When a patient with abâ€" normal blood pressure has some sympâ€" ‘tomofurly{:flureofthg:uht. ory system, it is an entirely different matter. It is advised that a period in bdhu-nï¬d,iollvndbyeuuul curtailing of all his activities. ‘ advisable. Certainly, every patient who combines excessive weight with a raised blood pressure is adding an unnecessary load to an glready overâ€" m:‘rmked Iieart,†th‘e correspondent says. The medical correspondent of The London Morning Post believes many men are overfed by their wives when they have very high blood pressure. _"A word to the wife about diet is High Blood Pressure â€" Sufferers Often Overeat l Recognizing that with Toscanni the Salzburg festival would be a fop, the Austrians are said to have explained to Berlin that, due to circumstances _over which they had no control, the radio deal was off. Does that appear like an abject surâ€" render? Couldn‘t Chancellor Schuschâ€" nigg have appealed to Mussolini? Peérâ€" haps he did. But I!1 Duce is canny. He took on Haile Selassie, he was not afraid to defy Grgat Britain and the League of Nations, but Toscanini? The boss of Italy knows his limitaâ€" tions, 1 Now the principal figure at Salzâ€" burg is Maestro Toscanini, When he heard of this plan, he informed Viâ€" enna that if a single note of the music conducted by him was to be transmitted to Germany, that note would not be played, the more important concerts of the music festival at Salzburg. In return, Germany was to broadcast some Wagâ€" nerian performances from Bayreuth. A great many people have paid homage to Arturo Toscanini because of his magic as a conductor of opera and symphony. Even more must now bow to him as a political giant who has dared to defy two Governments, and apparently has won his point, It seems that in recognition of its new pact of friendship with Germany, the Austrian Government offered to transmit by radio to German ears When the child begins to feel at home with the apparatus, the speechâ€" therapists begins work. Toy animals, picture books and dolls are used in conjunction with the records to fix impressions in the child‘s mind and to enable it to recogâ€" nize the objects when encountered in real life. The apparatus can also be connectâ€" ed to gramophone records, which reâ€" produce nursery rhymesâ€"to induce a sense of rhythm and tune â€" street noises, animal noises, and other sounds. _ The child begins to differentiate beâ€" tween the sounds uttered by the inâ€" structor, and when it begins to utter sounds itself, to notice the immediate reaction on the diaphragms, just as the normal person hears himself speak,. This is known as the telefactor. It consists of a vibrating diaphragm on which the child places its finger tips, highly _ amplified "earphones," _ a microphone for the child, and a microâ€" phone through which the instructor speaks. Sound vibrations are picked up by tke bodyâ€"chiefly the fingertips and the headâ€"and passed on to the brain. Since, however, this medium is only one hundredâ€"thousandth part as sensiâ€" tive as the ear mechanism of a normâ€" al person, a special instrument is necessary. ‘ oscanini Defies Nations Will Not Play For Germany The basis of the treatment is that children are taught to hear through the sense of touch and then encourâ€" aged to repeat the sounds and words they hear. LONDON.â€"A treatment for teachâ€" ing deafâ€"mute children normal speech was demonstrated to members of the Otological section of the Royal Soâ€" ciety of Medicine by Philip Franklin in his clinic at the Infant hospital at Westminster. With Children Show Machine Capable of Good Work Sound Travels Through Finger Tips to Brain; Experiments New Instrument Teaches Deaf Mutes to Converse A biend of the world‘s most fragrant green teas GREEN TEA Toronto Rosco Rib Roofing gives you more value for your money in every way, [t is the original sevenâ€"rib roofing the *xtra ribs giving â€" you Increased strengti and greater ease in laying, A genuine economy, too, for our sheets lay 32 inches to the weather, Available in Counci] Standard ang ordivary quality. pure. C1 _ 0 0. 0002 CCeqecnt IrOM ’which I suffered nearly every mornâ€" ing on wakening. I vas also troublâ€" ed with rheumatism in both shouldâ€" ers. Kruschen turred the trick. The headache disapperred and so did the rheumatism, 1 have continued taking Kruschen ancd intend to keep it up."â€"(Mrs.) P.B.W. Kruschen is a combination of mineral salts which assist in stimulatâ€" ing your liver, kidneys and direstive tract to healthy, rcgu‘ar activity. They ensure internal cleanliness, and thus help to keen tha n1 ..3 1 NS Old A bucksaw, let us expiain, is a oneâ€"man affair. It is (or used to be) a oneâ€"legged affair too. The left leg used to go up so the knee would rest on the stick of wood to hold it in place, and then it would seem strange and queer to run a bucksaw with two feet on the ground. ‘ RCOFERS SUPPLY co LIMITED j On these stones are curved columns of Negroes doing intricate ceremonial dancing steps, which when closely studied prove to be nothing more than jazz as we dance it today. When you do the rumba and the carioca you think you are being bang up to date. But you‘re not. You are probably imitating a ceremonial dance invented by Negroes more than 3,300 years ago, so the members of the Robert Mond Expedition of the Egypt Exploring Society tell us At Armant they have excavated and brought to light huge slabs of stone which once formed the entrance to the Temple of Thotmes III, one of the best of the Pharaohs. ‘ary quality Write us or DOES HIGHLAND FLING AT 72 Ottawa Not So Modern now for and prices London , _ "ai cleanliness, and keep the bloodâ€"stream Montreal Quebec literature ; ____~ ‘""=uy aon‘t think' Don- Il'&t’“ï¬l“tllymmn Donald:"Oh, yes, 1 can, moo ::.‘“M“kt-ymm industry than the £,,15f XCWards of rm' uo.,ï¬"'.l the social ‘flbrmenht;, of half a m and home life mast_y _""""b, Darn raisâ€" ings and in social activities, "Changes are coming very fast th;:: days," the speaker continued. i yym‘womoltod.y have quite different ideals from those of their grandmothers, The question they should study more carefully is, whether movies, card playing, cocktail ‘lnxï¬: and dancing are more conducâ€" ve e _ Fovd health, happy homes and ___Montreal.â€"Serious living and interâ€" est in public as well as domestic afâ€" fairs on the part of women were urged by Mrs. D. C, McDonald addressing the Montreal Sisterhood Federation. Mrs. McDonald believed women should be so well trained and instructed they could step in and carry on successfully if war or anything else took men out of the country‘g everyday activities. Recalling pioneer days of English settlement in Canada, Mrs, McDonald pointed out that then women helped their husbands in the work of seedâ€" ing, lurvectinc. threshing, barn raisâ€" ings and in immnful nuktcery Noted Speaker Urges More Serious Living and Inâ€" terest in Affairs â€"â€"Miss â€"â€" is a boy and arrow enâ€" thmiutmdhope-tomkenmark for herself in the sport.â€"Blackfoot (Idaho) paper.â€"The Literary Digest, Pioneer Women Could Carry On The motorist ran into a live wife which blew the lights of his car, and then he sped away.â€"Atlanta (Ga.) nanew | Every vital area, from petrol tank , and pipes to passenger‘s cabin and fuselage, is protected. Each extinâ€" ‘gnilher also has a robot spring conâ€" !m'- It is set to withstand narmal o h on C lgrt o , ie .. eR ~ Aeiiiianil felicitated on the girth of a son at the Good Samaritan Hospital.â€"Portâ€" land (Ore.) paper. The annual Christmas party at the Ashley Street school was hell yesterâ€" day afternoon.â€"Springfield (Mass.) nanaw trol. it is set to withstand normal travel jolts, but releases the jetâ€"shootâ€" ing nozzle on the instant a heavy bump occurs Even when ‘ll ‘plane a-nhu,iuextinguhheuwi,it is dmbrth. destroy any potential blaze at bi Montreal. ated by thermostats, sally into action immediately the temperature exceeds a specified degree; no time is allowed for the fames to spraed before jets of liquid ovrwhelm them. pipes, fused electric leads, and other sources of fire. For, thanks to British engineering skill, an automobile fireâ€" extinguishing plant is now available for air cheerful i "Furniture and household applianâ€" ces came next, and included such artiâ€" cles as small refrigerators and radâ€" ios; and third in the list was boots and shoes. Miscellaneous articles were high in the list, while automobile accessories played an important role, | _ "In May, the first month in which | the exemption was in force, the total amount of goods brought in by tourâ€" ists free of duty was $118,898, of which $107,172 was from the United © States. In June, when the tourist trafâ€" fic was nearing its peak, the total was $349,896, of which $316,484 was from the United States, and in July, a heavy tourist traffic month, the total was $369,485, of which $328,229 was from the United States. "Clothing headed the list of comâ€" modities brought in under the headâ€" ing of ‘travellers‘ baggage‘ in each of the three months, this commodity acâ€" counting for about oneâ€"half of the posal was before the House last sesâ€" sion, some member of the opposition expressed the fear that this exempâ€" tion would result in a flood of goods from the United States reaching, posâ€" sibly, as high as $50,000,000 a year. Soo.n_d} u_r travellers may fiy in gage, or an average of a little more than $250,000 each of the three months. "When this particular customs proâ€" l Since the $100 customs exemption ‘to returning Canadian tourists beâ€" came operative and up to the end of July, or three full months, a tota‘ of $751,885 worth of goods has been brought into this country freé of duty and in the form of travellers‘ bagâ€" $250,000 Worth of Goods Mr. ard Mrs, â€"â€" ‘Toronto.â€"The Globe says in a deâ€" :l frre agroA ?" think, Donâ€" .. is uns By Tourists to burst petrol s recently, The m haven is situated right on and walk lame mar 8 : 8). "And w Paul had voice, sa) onia, The "The sc who, fast« The same Acts 13 : he had fai man‘s hea and the S cognized t made by men of Ly ""And at Ly man, impoten from his mot had walked." ‘ condition are interest as a ed condition . cribes. Place.â€"Ant one hundred cated near t district â€" of Iconium was east of Ant mbout thirty | of Iconium, a miles still fu THE LES: Time,â€"The Antioch in | AD,, while ¢ at Lystra oc« A.D, 49. The was written Ron GOLDEN TE a light of | shouldest be uttermost pa 47. i Ror Printed Tex TURNING Aots 18 . LES8