| Town STANDARD BRAXNDS LIMITED Fraser Ave. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ont. Please send me the free Royal Yeast ROYAL YEAST CAKES are always FULL STRENGTH '%â€4( Byi < The roller coaster gleamed like a skeleton in the night. She left the path and ran toward it. There was an empty car standirg in the shed, its high back casting a deep shadow on the seat, she crep. into it. . . . . Lola awoke shivering with cold. The night had been warm, but now, a cold rain was pouring down. i Lola climbed from the car, her teeth chattering. A figure in rain coat and helmet loomed out of the dark. !02t7¢:03'I-:':'1-Z’Z’I0:’:0:'f’f'Z0Z0:0Z‘If.0IOI0!‘:0:0:0:0:0:0:o:o:o:o:o:o:o70:0:0:0:0:0.".0:02:0:;#.0:&. Lola Brewster wins a high school| "Miss Brewster!" gasped the as education by working as a housemaid.| tonished night watchman. "What are but is dragged back into the sordid you doing here?" shanty life ‘of her family by her| Lola gestured toward the coaster mother‘s illness. Jerry Hughes, whom| car. _ "I fell asleep," she moaned. she loves, sees her there and she "Oh, Mr. Meggs, I‘m so cold!" . sends him away. She obtains a job| He looked at her sharply. “Conu‘ as singer with a smallâ€"time orchesâ€" along with me," he said abruptly. tra and makes good. She writes to|"I‘ll unlock the hospital. You‘d bct-‘ Jerty to call him back to her. ter get to bed before vou catch nnenâ€" & Relv eTeTeTeTelolo1o" ow tm tom en atar n en raPatararatinr a aPatabat t IAUAONOC r6"0%0"0"e%@"e"e%a" * ~ P00 0O OO OOOLCLOLOIOL0I0I0L00TeTeTereZere"eze; y TOO S0 0N A B R TD Eo By MARJORIE B. PEREGRINE CHAPTER VII *‘The Royal Yeast Bake Book" gives tested Royal Sponge Recipes for the breads picâ€" tured above and many others. FREE! Send couâ€" pon today! BUY MADEâ€"INâ€" CANADA GOODS FREE BOOKLET Aids You! a;(i a § "Jeffry Vincent!" exclaimed Lola, "Why he‘s the top. How does he happen to be playing here?" "Crossâ€"country tour," the mechanâ€" ic explained. Lola looked after his departing figâ€" ure. If only her voice would come back! If only she eould get an audâ€" ition with Jeffrey Vincent! | She sighed. The crowd was coming thicker. It was Thursday. _ Childâ€" ren‘s day. She scarcely realized she was taking money and making change. She was far away, singing for Jeffrey Vincent. 1 A voice brought her back to present. The chief mechanic of the Fun House, who kept the revolving bar rels and hidden wind pipes shipâ€" shape, came up and leaned against the cashier‘s booth. "How‘s your throat today ?" "It scarcely ever bothers me," Lola replied in the low, effortless speech‘ she had learned to employ. "I really think it‘s quite well." Well, except for her singing voice. She smiled bravely. "What‘s new today ?" ‘"Haven‘t you seen the posters ?" Lola shook her head. "Real news! Jeffrey Vincent‘s or chestra is going to play here a whole week during August!" for the Fun House. Sometimes she dreamed of Jerry and their rides toâ€" gether and the beautiful moments she had spent with him. Where was he now ? the park hospital any longer." Mrs. Harris patted her shoulder. "You can come and live witn me for a while, honey," she said fondly. "I‘m all alone and I‘d love to have you. Anyway, Mr. Meggs says the Fun House needs a cashier. I guess you could have the job if you want it." Lola found she liked being cashier‘ for the Fun House. Sometimes she _but I‘ve got to e Lola protested. "I can the park hospital any "Don‘t try even to talk," the doctor advised her. "If your throat is goâ€" ing to get well. If it isn‘t, your trying to sing will only make matters worse." Lola‘s first panic at being abanâ€" doned by Chase Wiley soon gave way to a feeling of reliet t being free of him. It was almost worth the loss of her precious singing voice. For the voice was gone. She spoke with difficulty, and an attempt to sing brought forth only harsh, raspâ€" ing sounds. 1 _ Mrs. Harris shook her head. "She can‘t even talk yet. She might never be able to sing again." Chase started out. "That settles it," he said, looking back at Lola. "You‘re no wife to me, and you can‘t sing. You‘re completely worthless to me. Well, that‘s your hard luck, lady. As far as I‘m concerned, you can shift for yourself." ’ "A fine mess you‘ve got yourself into," Chase announced unsympathetâ€" ically. "Laryngitis! I suppose you know we‘ve got another singer." Lola nodded affirmatively, Chase turned to Mrs. Han'is.‘ "How long is it going to be before she can sing?" , He stood in the doorway, teetering back and forth on his heels. Lola was resting in an easy chair, her blue wooly robe close about her throat. For three days, Lola was gravely ill. Then she began to mend. Memâ€" bers of the orchestra dropped in to inquire for her. Friends in the park sent in flowers and small gifts. But not until the last day of the orches: tra‘s engagement in the park, did Chase Wiley pay a call. _ When Mrs. Harris came on duty in the morning, she found Lola in bed, hot with fever, and calling for someone named Jerry. 42008 BCSCCICG wwn:’u tNC comer' MOOSEJAWâ€"Miu Lydia Grun:hv, car. "I fell asleep," she ?Oflflod- who probably will becoime Canada‘s "Oh, Mr. Meggs, I‘m so cold! # 'flm ordained woman minister, is He looked at her sharply. Come | thoroughly British, although born in along with me," he said abruptly: the suburbs of Paris, Her parents" "I‘ll unlock the hospital, You‘d bet ‘home was on the (sle of Jersey. ter get to bed before you catch pneuâ€" Pleasant, smiling, smart and fairâ€" monia." haired, she Tooks younger than her When Mrs. Harris came on duty| 42 years and was pleased, if not exâ€" in the morning, she found Lola in cited, when word came fron. Ottawa bed, hot with fever, and calling for| that the United Church was to be someone named Jerry. ’ï¬rtt in Canada to ordain women For three days, Lola was gravely ministers. But uhss d h i ho s.a.2.. 3 Toronto, _ Canada to earn a living. can‘t stay here in UV I MAMEUVIV the TORONTO 1 met a fellow named Green -who knew your sister." Jerry was talking happily. "I was frantic when I found you weren‘t at the shanty," he confessed. "I tore up the town, hunting for you. Then They had supper on a broad balâ€" cony overlooking the lake. Lola had persuaded a friend to take her place in the ticket booth for part of the evening. "Lola! Tell me it‘s really you!" She looked up, startled. "Jerry! Oh_._Jcrry darling!" BABY._KNOWS // Britain‘s largest airport at Croyâ€" do , England, will have a radio landâ€" in system. She received her normal Vsc;h’borl-. university and theological â€"training all in Saskatoon. _ Leaving Paris when 12 years old, she attended Seaford Ladies‘ Colloge, Sussex, England, for four years, then entered the British civil service as a clerk in London saving banks. In 191‘ she came to Canada with her father and four sisters, settling at Strasbourg, Sask. Her mother died while Miss Gruchy was still a child. After her ordination she will be permitted to perform marriages, adâ€" minister sacraments and officiate at baptisms â€" privileges not just now accorded her. buk OWWHLOO wmoage p. 0 ROCCCCZTCO} POF TNhis pattern to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. Friendship Medleyâ€"a quilt made mainly of scraps .Easy to piece â€"there are only five patch piecesâ€"you‘ll find the variety of the scraps makes your work as well as the resulting quilt more fascinâ€" ating. In olden times friends contributed scraps giving such quilts their name. The block measures 10 inches. Pattern 1312 comes to you with complete, simple instructions for cutting, sewing and finâ€" ishing, together with yardage chart, diagram of quilt to help arrange the blocks for single and double bed size, and a diagram of block which serves as a guide for placing the paches and suggests conâ€" trasting materials. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern ?ro N“dlecl"nï¬ Dept.'. Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St.. JPVE M w» +2 & a L0 > $ Issue No. 43 â€" _ She has conducted church services for years, principally among new Canadians in Saskatchewan settleâ€" ments such as Insinger, in the Yorkâ€" ton district, at Veregin, Kamsack and Wakaw. Doukhobors, Ukrainians and Hungarians have known her inâ€" fluence. ‘ "I‘ve hoped fur that for a long time," she said, recalling that she conplet_eg! her theological studies in Miss Lydia Gruchy Has Minâ€" istered to Foreigners for Yearsâ€"Overjoyed at News Prairie Teacher May Be =~ _ First Ordained Woman FRIENDSHIP MEDLEY (To be continued) Stunning Quilt May Be Pieced With Says Laura Wheeler knew it would come some "There seems to be nothing artifiâ€" clal about America‘s business upturn. I‘d say there were no pitfalls in sight." 74, Dies on Honeymoon MARGATE, England.â€"Married days and on his honeymoon, Fred Escott, St. Alban‘s lace paper I facturer, died while holidavin» A Russian named Alex Kerdziuk, age 30, killed his wifeâ€"his sixth wife â€"not long ago, and the Soviet court sentenced him to serve 10 years in prisonâ€"the same punishment now beâ€" ing meted out to petty speculators. Murder is no longer a capital offence in Russia, unless some interest of the State is involved. If this man had tried to kill Joseph Stalin, he would have faced a firing squad. But the killing of one‘s wife is only a comâ€" paratively minor offence.â€"San Franâ€" cisco Argonaut. Mother writes: "With family of children constantly eetuing soratches, cuts; or bruines, I have pmyedn “.oef- an mnllublo Irdï¬.:».d Mecca upstairs and mao-:.'&'i.- 6» One Mother writes: MOTHERS FEEL SAFER I turn, bewildered, knowing East nor Westâ€" For you are gone, gone from me like the sun Whirling acres the stretches of the earth + Leaving it dark and lonely, I the lonelier one ; (Daniel Whitehead Hickey in the N.Y. Times) Running beside your train and breathlessly Waving farewell and throwing a kiss to you Watching the lantern fading in the twilight Till you are lost and no lantern is in view. â€"From "You Have Been Warned," by Fougasse and McCullough. She‘s about due for an overhaul now. Anyway, the handâ€"brake‘s all right, 1 think. ( u9 On Killing Wives I love the‘early morningâ€"the roads are so empty. Thanks, I can light my ownâ€"this car steers itself, Quick, that‘s our corner. I‘ve ridden bikes for years and never had a light. He‘s gainingâ€"I can see him in the mirror. It‘s all right, she‘s not in gear. At last, darling. You really must look at that sunset. If you brake carefully, worn tires don‘t matter a bit. . , . every inch of this road. Look, here‘s the thousand just comâ€" ing up. In A Railway Station No one ever makes ME dim my headlights. As a matter of fact I drive better when I‘ve had a couple. Famous Last Words PATTERN 1312 +ngland.â€"Married nine s honeymoon, Frederick ban‘s lace paper manuâ€" while holidaying here. Scraps Combine egg whites, sugar and orâ€" ange and lemon juice, in top of double boiler, beating after with rotary egg beater until thoroughly mixed, Place over rapidly boiling water, beat conâ€" stantly with rotary egg beater, und‘ £00k 7 HeANHEGE P HIHF uecsmad l hal 2 egg whites, 1% cups sugar, 4% tablespoons orange juice, % tableâ€" spoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon grated orange rind. top and sides of cak;e-‘ n cak Party Devil‘s Food Cake 2 cups sifted cake flour, 2% teaâ€" spoons baking powder, 4 teaspoon salt, 1% cups sugar, 3 eges, well beaten, 3 squares unsweetened chocâ€" olate, melted, % cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla. a small amouni at a time, beating after each addition untii smooth,. Bake in greased pan, 8 x 8 x 2 inches, in moderate oven (350‘ F.) 50 minâ€" utes. Serve plain or with whipped cream flavored molasses. A Product of The CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limites Listen to " Syrup Symphouiuâ€emyuonay night from 8 to 8.30 E.S.T Ummnnnsiimmiitite....cotmes _ aiice â€" â€""TTEHS THERL JFO Sift flour once, add baking powder, soda, spices, and salt, and sift toâ€" gether three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually, and cream together until light and fuffy. Add egg and beat well; then molasâ€" ses. Add flour, alternately with milk, It Ginger Bread 2 cups sifted cake flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 14 teaspoon soda, 2 teaspoons ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnaâ€" mon, i4 teaspoon salt, 1â€"3 cup butter or other shortcning, %% cup sugar, 1 egg, unbeaten, 23 cups molasses, % cup sour milk or buttermilk. From among these recipes you can choose some goodies that will please even the most disgruntled guest â€" the guest who has come out worst in all the contests or have been the butt of many jokes. These cakes will put him in high, good humor. Tiny hot Cheese Biscuits, crisp golâ€" den doughnuts, a fine gingerbread, little spice cakes, chocolate and orâ€" ange layer cakes, all suit the Hallowâ€" e‘en _ tradition. Coconut â€" southern style in orange color is very effective and toothsome for cakes either large or small. tn EDVWARDSBURG Halowe‘en parties have to be gayâ€" the fun even goes to extremes and menus and table decorations may run into riotous contrasts. The more orâ€" iginal the food the better, and spirâ€" ited fun and romping gives real appeâ€" tites. Of course, the color schemes are yellow, orange, brown and black. Black can be worn by the paper witâ€" ches, coats and owls, but orange and brown should predominate in the‘ cakes and candies. THE GREAT ENERGY FOOD with the delicious Flavor Orange Mist Frosting Any Time is Tea Time cORN SYRUP i1 light and fluffly, well; then chocoâ€" smooth. Add flour lk, a small amâ€" *T 2A Woman‘s World ,' PHILLIPS$‘ Try this Phillips way ila'ou have any acid stomach upsels. Get either the liquid “Phillips' or the remarkâ€" able, new Phillig; Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Only 25¢ for a big box of tablets at drug stores. ALSO IN TABLET rorm: ‘ By Meir M. Morgen You take either two teaspoons of the liquid Philliï¬s' after meals; or two Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia Tabâ€" lets. Almost instantly "acid indigesâ€" tion" goes, gas from bhyperacidity, **acid â€" headaches"â€"from overâ€"inâ€" dulgence in food or smoking â€" and nausea are relieved. You feel made over; forget you have a stomach. The waY to gain almost incredibly quick relief, from stomach condition qrismï¬ from overaclgixï¬'. is to alkaâ€" lize the stomach quiekly with Philâ€" lips‘ Milk of Magnesia, on , The commission â€" on secondary i it 5 . | schools recommends that a small exâ€" toan::l dmtr':;‘:el:idai(:l' g::::e:: gg:,_' pert committee be formed in accordâ€" ies, pretty Jean Fenwick has landed | 2"°C with the Massey Founda}mn a Hollywood studio contract. Daugh-‘c°mmltte€ report to have oversight ter of an importer in the British | Of these institutions, The commission West Indies, the actress‘ real name urged.that th_ese schools be declared is Siegfreda Harriet Krauth ï¬}l:anc}:ally independent of the church. hn essera en h e ce s 2 se e h d is > People Everywhere Are Adopting This Remarkable "Phillips" Way How to Enter Contest Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it, together with name and address to: Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Send in your favorite recipe for pie, cake, mainâ€"course dish or preâ€" serves. We are offering $1.00 for each recipe printed. . Cook until thick. Cool and add 1 cup nuts, cut fine before spreading. Mrs. W. L. Matthews, Colborne, Ont, Filling: % 1b. dates, cut fine. 1 cup brown sugar, 1 cup water, scant. Cream, shortening and sugar, add eggs, well beaten, Then sifted flour, salt and soda. Divide in two parts and roll rectangular shape. Fill with date filling and roll like jelly role. Let stand over night. Slice in %â€" inch slices and bake in quick oven. 1 cup shortening, 2 cups brown suâ€" gar, 3 eggs, 4 teaspoon cinnamon, ‘% teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 5 cups flour. To Alkalize Acid Indigestion Away Fast THIS WEEK‘S WINNER ATTENTION! MILK oF MACNESIA It is very possible that February, 1936, will be the last one to have 29 days, Not that February is going to be deprived of this extra day, on the contrary it is probable that it will be given the same right as the other months to have 30 dave Another instance of Ginger‘s reâ€" markable vigilance comes to mind., She had recently given birth to a litâ€" ter of kittens and the latter liked to watch while I milked the cows. One evening two of the babies tried to cltmb up the pail to taste the warm beverage, But Ginger, always alert, cuffed them so vigorously that they never renewed the attempt. She knew that dinner time had not arrived unâ€" til I poured some of the milk into a pan for the cats and she took the only means she knew of informing the kitâ€" tens to that effect. P T redutatitiindlth i iescs h far, however, for Ginger would not let the other feline climb the robin tree, And for days after that Ginger staâ€" tioned herself near the boxâ€"elder to guard the feathered inhabitants. with anxiety and terror. Rushing to the cat I pulled her down and cuffed her away gently, It was enough. She never hbhad to be reprimanded twice. â€" But the real fruit of that mild chastisement came when another of our cats, ‘"‘Bessie," tried to carry out ideas similar to those of Ginger, Bessie did not get ue Area n on o tree that housed a family of robins. One day I caught Ginger eycing the nest longingly from the ground and the next thing I knew she had started to climb the tree. The parent birds, of course, were besides themselves with anxiety and tareaw Ginger was perfectly behaved. Even her kittenhood was marked by considâ€" eration for her little playmates and slll,: seldom got rough or unmanage able. Henry H. Grabham, in Our Dumb Animals writes:â€"When we lived on a farm in the Middle West many years ago we had a beautiful mother cat named "Ginger." She was soâ€"cal}â€" ed because of her pep that was maniâ€" fest on all occasions. A Remarkable Cat Queen‘s Theological College, of Kingston, is to seek coâ€"operation with Emmanuel College, Toronto, 'nccording to this report. It is recomâ€" mended that a counci}l on theological education be formed to have overâ€" sight of _ curricu‘ scholarships, postgraduate work and the qualifiâ€" cations of professors. In order that greater care be taken in the admis sion of young men as candidates for the ministry, the use of a questionâ€" naire for applicants is urged. A uniform age of retirement for proâ€" fessors is recommended. on In trhe yard there was Theological education in the church was the subject of a thorough going report by a commission of which Rev, Dr. R. P. Bowles is chairâ€" man. One report states that reducâ€" tion in the number of colleges and questions of curriculum and standards of examination have caused "much discussion and considerable dissatisâ€" ers, with St. Andrew‘s College, mends a temporary policy of merg faction." _ The commission recomâ€" Saskatoon, to serve as the one centre of theological education on the prairies. byteries were opposed, Xo result was available from eight presbyâ€" _ Since the last General Council the voting has taken place in the presby. teries on the following remit: "That the ministry shall be open to both men and women." It was disclosed today that 80 presbytcries voted in _!lvor of this legislation and 26 presâ€" _ Opening of the ministry to women on terms of equality with men has been agitated for years. . Tw» years ago the General Council adopted the principle and remitted the question to all the presbyteries of the United Church for coâ€"ordinate decision on enabling legislation. OTTAWAâ€"Reports of a commisâ€" sion on theological colleges and of a remit on the ordination of women were received recently by the Genâ€" eral Council of the United Church of Canada. Favor Women United Church Council Hears Result of Presbytery Voting nd of Leap Year extra holiday c New Year‘s In Ministry _ ~ [ _~ a boxâ€"elder Reform, day TH ANC Sund anyth Cecl Holl