_ 290 hsten a moment, He‘s in hospital nowâ€"be lucky if he gots out in a month, He‘ll be luckier still if he ever drives again. You know the sharp bend in the road just east of Jonesville? That‘s He was a good driver all right, so far as driving goes, but he seemed to think the whole road belonged to him. You know what I meanâ€"could not keep to his own side, and thought he had as much right to drive on the leftâ€"hand side of the road as on the right. I don‘t suppose he thought anything about the danger of it, and I‘m doggone sure he never paid much attention to the rule of the road. What happened? I‘m telling you K you‘ll listen a moment, He‘s in hospital nowâ€"be lucky if he gots out t & wiouth Ho‘H ho Iaklex L6M 5 What about him? Well, I‘m telling you. 1 had warned that man at least a souple of times before. He used to drive pretty regularly along No. 2 Highway. Sort of salesman, 1 should Jjudge. But after a close and anxiouns dis. eusston he altered the proposed plan to capture Glynn on the way out to the palace. It was possible extra ears might be sent with him carryâ€" ing more troopers; that an unknown devious route might be taken: even possible that the picture might. be shown in Hydrapore cinema before being brought to the palace, It would be more easy and as effective to waylay and capture the cars driving in to Hydrapore, since there would be less caution and watch for pos. aible attack as there would be with the Courier and his package in the car. The details were arranged, and "There is need of the other plan after all," he said. "At what hour was the car to leave the palace to bring the courier?" a fresh tirade against the foo'l; who had not wa!ted the right moment to do their work, but broke off sudden. ly. The Vulture grunted. "When we tearn it has failed will be time en ough to consider further," he said, and dismissed his man. But ten minâ€" utes later he had him back again, and Abdul shivered apprehensively as he entered and heard the bitter raving and reviling of his master. "It has failed," he screeched, "The train is safe past the chosen spot. And report comes from Hydrapore that it was delayed because the line was found broken before the train 1 reached the spot." He raved off into «o many plans have failed that l“â€"‘ that it might be better to have an other in hand " The Vulture glared at him. "What do you meanâ€"if the train should ar. rive?" he demanded savagely, Abdul Ali cowered abjectly â€" and atuttered. "It is onlyâ€"it ds I':ecause "I have word of the hour this af. ternoon the Secretary is to leave the Palace," said Abdul Ali bhumbly. "It would be possible to make a plan to «top the cars coming from Hydraâ€" pore and seize the flying courier it it should happen the train does ar-J rive. 2 "No, not yet," said The Vulture, amiling complacently again. "And see you make no mention of such acciâ€" dent being possible until after the news of it. Have you more to re-‘ port?" Abdul Ali still waited as if he had not yet finished, and when The Vulâ€" ture noticed this and demanded was there anything more, the man cring. ed and asked it any news had been heard yet of any sad accident to thel train, "It is well," said The Vulture comâ€" placently. "Reward the man for the information he obtained and sent you. He has done well, and it is no matâ€" ter of his the arrangements he re. ports will not now have any use for w#." ‘ . y °_ , 0 _I0@D, pHot of Impertal Airâ€" way, 'h travelling by Air Mail to India, carrying two Nrn of a talking film of the Prince o Napalta. who. is too 111 to travel himself. The ulklnf flms &re sent as a last resort to foil his balfâ€"brother in India. to usurp this throne. On the same Mail liner travels Norah Beaman, who becomes interested _ in Glynn. Several attempts are made by the Vulture‘s envoys and one film is stolen. Gilynn has the other film secured round his waist by a steel chain. At Karachi, Glynn is met by a supâ€" posed envoy of the Prince. who reâ€" quests him to accompany him to a theatre. Jlmm(y Doyle and Norah Sea. man fo with Glynn. They are follow ed. The Prince‘s envoys in the meantinme have become alarmed at the nonâ€"ap pearance of Glynn and institute a search. Glynn accepts a drink in the theatre restaurant. which has a «trong nleeping draught. The lights suddenly Ko out. Glynn is reseued by the police. The Vulture plans revenge, Giynn tllll_n_g_n. pilot of The Flying Courier by Boyd Cabie A PAGE FROM Y DIARY Say! people are funny; risk their lives, cars, and everything for the sake of a second of time. Yes, you‘ve said it. That‘s my side. See what I mean? A big hospital bill, and a big lawsuit for heavy damâ€" ages to face when he gets outâ€"just because he would not keep to his own where it happened. Our friend swings over to the leftâ€"hand side of the road â€"probably figured he could save a second in rounding the bend. Didn‘t figure there might be cars coming the other way. Well, there happened to be two of them. The first managed to pull over, but the secornd hadn‘t a shance in the world. Just sideswiped . him like nobody‘s business. Tossed his car clean over into the ditch with him underneath it. I came along just after it happenâ€" ed and helped to get him out,.â€" Sure he was unconsciousâ€"I wondered if he‘d get into hospital alive, to the official who had gone to Karâ€" achi to meet Glynn, and had accomâ€" panied him in the train. It read â€" "Come with Captain Elliman and Hasim in the closed car sent for you, The escorting car and two troopers will follow you closely. The officer of the mounted escort will ride with‘ you to the outskirts of the city where you will leave him and drive off as | fast as you can. In case of any disâ€" turbance in the city, change the arâ€" ranged route as Hasim directs. â€" by P.C.2 The Secretary carried a letter and this was deftly opened with the great. est care and read. It was signed and sealed by the Vizier and addressed l The whole thing was over in a minute; all those who had been in the cars lay like trussed chickens behind a dense clump of bamboo by the roadside with their captors busâ€" ily engaged clearing the road, while a couple searched the Secretary, Then one by one, the troopers and others were stripped, and those who had captured them dressed carefully. in their clothes. At the same instant as the first blow was struck on the foremost car‘s troopers, the two men in the car behind heard a harsh command from behind them, warning them not to move, and at the same time sinâ€" ewy hands reached in over the back‘ of the open car to seize a coat colâ€" lar and thrust a pistol under the' nose of each man, Their driver, with & pistol staring at him from both sides, meekly obeyed orders and climbed down. of his head. At the same instant, Iwhfle other men _ leaped from the ditch, the driver was seized and takâ€" en completely unawares, jerked out into the road, while the bewildered Secretary, before he could grasp what was happening, found the car doors flung open andtwo men hurling in onl top of him, bundling him out with a, cloth over his head and rope about | his arms. | The trooper who had jumped down to kick and curse the men into movâ€" ing their carts, dropped like a stone under a cudgel‘s blow on the back ’ The following car with the two troopers in it had pulled up a dozen yards behind the Secretary‘s a mo. ment before the vocifefating carters reached the foremost car, Then in the twinkling of an eye, the stupid' villagers‘ squabbles diverged to very different and sinister lines. , |lock wagons were seen to be almost|"*!!¢d to stop, and | blocking the road. Apparently they | 482!" after a numbe | had collided or become Wcked in | °4 it and a light ; passing each other, because they were| °B @head, And a slewed across the road with a wheel Slowed down again off one and its load spilled out so as | tiOusly out on to a } to block what little passage was left,| to0 come to a stop w Three or four almost« naked men|P"@kes and squeal o stood wrangling and screaming and| Wh®" & little grou; threatening to come to blows with the| f"O®m the side of the ] cudgels they brandished at each| 4 & little further or other, To the angry hooting of the| The group moved a. car‘s horn they paid no attention and | and Glynn, looking « when it drove to within a dozen yards|ing what was wrong and the trooper swung down the men were police and carters, still screaming at each other,| with them a couple of hurried to the car and began to cla.|lenâ€"looking prisoners, mor to the Secretary for justice, for Glynn would have 1 the punishment of the fool who had enquiries when he sa driven so badly, for the rogue who|engine with a van had upset a cart and its load. SIADP HOWakHG Whal un When mending the gaping holes in boys‘ stockings try tacking a piece of net of similar color over the hole, _ Darn in and out througii the mesh. es, stitching firmly into the sides each time of crossing, and ou will have a good, firm darn. 1 This will save you the trouble and expense of having to have your mirâ€" ror resilvered, As Jong as you can keep the damp out the brown patches will not come. If you think your walls have the slightest suggestion of dampness you can preserve your mirror by gumâ€" ming a piece of rough surfaced paper on the back. Then take a candle and rub it thoroughly all over the paper. S The chief cause of mirror disease is damp, The makers put an oxide backing on the mirror to keep out dampness aand protect the silvering, but when this begins to wear damp finds its way in. s If there is no deflection then it is the fatal kind, which means that the silvering inside the mirror is affect. ed. In that case the only thing you can do is to call in professional aid and have the mirror resilvered. To determine which it is you have to look at the brown patch to see whether it is reflected. The reflection means you can remove it with methy. lated spirit because it is on the surâ€" face, You have probably stayed in‘ a house where the mirror in your bed. room had that strange disease which only mirrors get, and found _ your dressing sadly hampered by having |to dodge the brown patches whenâ€" ever you wanted to see your reflec-‘ !tion. There are two kinds of mirror dis. ease. One is fatal and the other is not. Worse stillâ€"one of your own mirâ€" rors may have contracted the comâ€" plaint, ARE YOUR MmIRRoR REFLECTIONS As Goop AS THEY sHOULD BE? When the line was repaired, . the train went on, with the pilot engine racing quarter of a mile ahead, and the police with the prisoners â€" on board, ,l The police, acting in concert with | the railway officials, telegraphed cerâ€" ; ; tain urgent orders to the station where the train had been flagged to _’a stop, and sent off a light engine |and van with police, a working gang, |lengths of rail and equipment, This |little train ran to within a mile of: the embankment dropped the police there and waited while they skirâ€" mished along to either side of the ’line under cover. A few minutes be. ]tore the Karachi train was due, they saw two men run scrambling down the steep embankment, closed in and seized them just as a dynamite or blasting powder charge exploded on the line above. They found that a section of rail had been broken and twisted into such a‘ shape that the Karachi train travelling at any speed, | must inevitably have " been derailed | , and sent hurtling down to utter wreck. TORONTO ‘| Glynn would have got off to make \|enquiries when he saw another light ‘| engine with a van attached creep along towards them from the other |end of the embankment and halt to disgorge a gang of workmen, who set busily to work about the line. But when he went to dismount, he found police stationed at the door and a.long‘ all the train, and was told that no. Ibody was allowed to alight. But he' soon learned why. & The police at Hydrapore had been telephoned the night before by an unâ€" known informant who told them a rail was to be removed and the train de. railed and wrecked at a spot exactly named and described. The informant gave an urgent warning that no reâ€" port of this fact should be allowed | to leak out because this might mean & renewed attempt at another spot of which no warning could be given,| , . The group moved along to the train, and Glynn, looking out and wonderâ€" ing what was wrong, saw that the men were police and that they had with them a couple of handcuffed sul. lenâ€"looking prisoners, ‘ ’on anead, _ And an hour later it slowed down again and crept cauâ€" tiously out on to a high embankment to come to a stop with a grinding of brakes and squeal of locked wheels, when a little group waved signals from the side of the light engine halt.! ed a little further on., | Telephone me from the station as soon as you arrive." The letter was rather upsetting t> the plotters‘ plans, since it mentionâ€" ed Hasim as being with the car, but although it was at first proposed to suppress it and give a verhal mes_ (To Be Continued.) it and give ead, the two discussion â€" . "", wUneu garages, it is not generally suspected that gas accumulating in moving cars may be the cause â€" of many hitherto unexplained traffic acâ€" cidents. ' Feel dull while driving? _ Stop and get a breath of fresh air. Reâ€" cent tests made prove that most autoâ€" mobiles after being driven for some distance accumulate _ a sufficient quantity of carbon monoxide to efâ€" }tect seriously the mental alertness and muscular correlation of the driver, Insurance compani¢s and various authorities are calling attention to the fact that while it is commonly known that many motorist are sufâ€" focated by gas from motors running in closed garages, it is not generally suspected that gas accumulating in gm! mkeepo mouth sanitary, tâ€"the best powder you ean buy yet cost is smailâ€"any druggists a qulgc uk2 C EB PATST PW ribed by leading dentists: it holds teeth so ï¬mfyâ€"they fit so comfortably «â€"â€"that all day long {:: forget you ever had false plates. Leaves no colored, ®.Â¥mawaw wa se lc d 2 There must be a reason Dr. Wernet‘s Powder is the world‘s largest seller and MAKES FALSE TEETH FEEL LIKE NATURAL T pese l s t uy PCEVCe Every day $250 worth of the gold, which ‘comes from South Africa, is applied to the clock, and the appliâ€" cations are expected to last for a month. *~ With every smack goes a threeâ€" inch square of gold leaf, guaranteed "double fine" 24 carat and without alloy, to brighten the dial of the parliamentary timeâ€"piece. Twenty brawny workmen, _ standâ€" ing 300 feet above the street, _ are slapping the faces . of the famous clock ensconed in the tower of the Houses of Parliamentâ€"and they are slapping it with gold. \ Almost any one would turn _ the other cheek to receive one of the slaps that are daily being smacked on the face of "Big Ben," London‘s famous timeâ€"teller. L@NDON‘S BIG BEN GIVEN NEW GOLD FACE Dirds, take me with you when wander through Those labyrinths and Jlattice ‘ leaves, While Summer stays; before the due Is only Autumn _and the cind sheaves s Are gathered sm »king on the gro and all That‘s left of this is some s whitethroat‘s call. 6 KEEP THE WINDOWS OPEN Detroit News. mes. Birds, take 1 FT TT "* W Cvl trees, The ground beneath them was A different world ; The sky above them yet another; these, Green; flaming, and aerially unfur. 1p23 Issue No. 31â€"‘ In a few years, the Prince stated, between $10,000,000 and $15,000,000 a year, in London alone, had come from voluntary gifts. grants, together witï¬"ié'o,ooo the special pensions reserve. made; bright illusion, _ like words ; Above the sun. beneath shade, PC Eq TES Aio t C ennecs + AVE 1933 have been better than ever." The income of the King‘s Fund available for distribution, after deâ€" ducting expenses, came to $1,540,000. Out of this $1,500,000 was used for the ordinary distribution. The other _ There are fewer British hospitals with deficits and more with surpluses | than at any time since the war, ac. ‘cording to a statement made by the | President and General Council â€" of King Edward‘s Hospital Fund of ‘ ’London. has led; n tora ie continent discovered by 1 most ephamera] land that "In the long fight with the results of the depression," His Royal Highâ€" ness said, "voluntary hacwiba} &..~.. Hospital F. inancing I Scheme Succeeds came Nee said, "voluntary hospital finance once more achiéved success. In _ ways, indeed, the results for upon a place of Bowering e Unvarying Quality SALADA Summer stribution. The other in _ pension â€" scheme beneath the broken ; before the resi and Jlattices of some stray the ground, the poet‘s the birds. . Summer cindered you from The haemoglobin of the blood unites in the lungs with Oxygen, which is carried by the blood stream to the tissues, If the red coloring matterâ€" haemoglobinâ€"is poor in quality or quantity, the patient suffers from an. aemia, and the heart, in common with other organs, is deprived of its Ooxy. gen There is no reason however to forbid _ gthletics. Anaemia â€" can be treated and the child reassured that _ If exercise is too strenuous for a person, the heart soon lets it be known, Fainting, rapid pulse, breath. lessness, or exertion are danger sig. nals, What do such symptoms mean? Either that the heart is being over. taxed, or that the blood is lacking in iron. E When Care Is Needed, I should like to emphasize two ~| points, however. The child with a rheumatic heartâ€"that is when the | valves are damaged by inflammation due to the poison of rheumatism â€" | should have his life unobtrusively su. pervised by the family physician, Hé should not, of course, be deprived of exercise, but exercise must be modâ€" erate and regulated, that is, suited to the child‘s condition, 'Secondly, after any acute febrile disease, such as pneumonia, scarlet fever, influenza, measles, the beart like other tissues and organs, takes some time to recover tone, A child is not fit for strenuous mental and physical activity for at least a year after a serious febrile disease, Keach. ers and parents, here again, . must work in coâ€"operation with the physi. cian, Diphtheria has a partlcularly’ evil influence on the heart muscle, | ; so that during and after diphtheria, | . there must be special care to avoid 4 injury to the heart by exercise or a even rapid movemante Are You Artistically I nclined? We offer you practical instruction and criticism on ings, Lahdscapes and Flowers in Water Colours, . three cent stamped envelope for full informatiny i _ { _5 (no4 Authors, Amateur or Professional _are invited to send us saleable Bketches , Illustrations , Designs, Short Stories and Articles, shout Canaga . ~WOm Operating 1 throughout Canada, now baving the m« limited number of these machines with centage basis, Ex(raordlnary earnings ent income without work or worry. Sir for information, H. D. GOL B Y 550 wrs inasted c ce T Artists and Authors to send us saleable @ This Canadian So that a child who possesses a ’normal healthy heart is quite fit for the ordinary school games and comâ€" petitions in sport, But & parent is always well advised to have the heart examined by the family doctor. _ If passed as a "normal" he or she can then cease to worry about "strained heart," A child is happier and heal. thier if he does the same things in the same way as the rest of his world. $ The young generation are keen on s | physical culture and games of every , | sort, which is all to the good, writes p| Dr. Elizabeth _ Sloan Chesser, But parents are sometimes worried as to || whether their child is fit for strenu. Jout games, One hears a lot of talk |about ‘"strained heart," and I have |known about a child being too deliâ€" cate for violent games. The Normal Heart, If a child‘s heart is "normal" â€" that is, undamaged by rheumatism, which is a common cause of valvular disease of the heart, or weakened, temporarily perhaps, by the toxins Oor poisons of diphtheria or influenza, for exampleâ€"it is not very easy to "overstrain." The heart is hollow, a pump with living contracting museuâ€" lar walls, a dardâ€"working organ, cap. able indeed of work to the point of what we may call violent exertion,| ; It works night and day, resting only | , for a fraction of time between its : beats, which send the blood along | ; the arteries to every organ and tissue| , of the body. rapid movements. â€" Danger Signals TEA Athletics Versus A Child‘s Heart ord of Advice to Ove:â€"Anxâ€" ious Parents â€" Normail ~ Heart Not Easily Strained BUSINESS Corporation operating ndin CRumes o23 " ‘s, here again, must ration with the physiâ€" a has a particularly on the heart muscle, and after diphtheria, special care to avo(d‘ heart by exercise or Ideas Wanted it Bb sach a d 0 "*7°"M ANC Very rjch man dies; ‘leg. _ _ _‘ *4Uustrations, Designs, Short ||| No one dares to write these words ‘les. Jn his tombstone where he lies," ou Artistically Inclined? ' ki nCt se e c 4 ‘C PP } Y earnings. $300 Wworry. Strictest , 229 YONCGE sT OPPORTUNITY most legitimate j _\ _ 0V Mace ite symbo! or em. blem of tobaceo, The cigar store symbol was popuâ€" larized by Joseph Zimmerman, â€" of Pittsburgh, mase than 70 years ago. ‘He graced the front of his little stall, where he founrded what later became a great cigar business, with a secondâ€"hand wooden India, As he“ sold the cigars which he made to firms outside the city and the state, he sponsored the sizgn of the wooden Indian.â€"Toronto Telegram, stute ie .. 1 d 2 ic CiSdT store Indian" wys toa be seen in Toâ€" ,ronto, too, Tkhoe "tribe" was far from numerous; now je may be extinet, A variance irom this, the come.â€"to.be. accepted tobacconist sign, was a huge wooden Highlander soldier, What was itte origin and signific ance of the redskin with outstretchâ€" ed arm that used to stand in front of so many cigar stores in Canada and the United Etates? *So far as is known, tobacco was naive to the new world, ani its use was adopted from the India. It was natural, there. fore, that the sboriginal American should be made ‘he symbol or em. blem of tobaceo. Silimate coin vending st scientific device of concession rights offe. Disney is taking virtually the same step Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lioyd did when they wont from short reels to features. f10"ywood, _ Czlif.â€"Walt Disney, ’creator of Mickey Mouse and film color cartoonist of "The Three Little Pigs," soon will embark on his first feature length cartoon movie. He will do "Snow White," one of the most popular of fairy tales, it was announced today, The film will be done in eolo~ and will bring to the screen an entirely new set of cartoon characters, ‘ DISNEY TO MAKE FULL LENGTH FEATURE FiLM L rogee c dn on n Coies Aone ol ’of 14, 15 or 16 years, but in recent years it is the height of girls aged 12 and 13 years that is surprising." Dy. Grieg, who is imspector for the Edâ€" ucation Department, referred to statâ€" istics of averages taken out on two groups over an interval of ten years. These showed that the Victorian child in 1922 was taller and heavier at every age than in 1912. Freedom from serious diseases was one of the causes to which she attributed these symptoms of good health. Time was So steady is the increase in the height and weight of the average Australian that Dr. Janet Greig of Victoria visualises the time when it will be a serious inconvenience, lc-l‘ cording to information reaching an: official of the Canadian Nationall Steamship. "Already," she says, "doorways in trains and trams are too low for many men, and soon, the average bed and ship‘s berth will be too short. For a long time I have been astonished at the amazing height of our adolescents at the age Holly wood suq222 29 CCC Cred investment secures investigation invited "heart neurosis." When we are well we should not be aware of our bodies at all, Digestion should be as easy as breathing. The heart ought to be able to do its work without any fretting or worrying about "strain" on our part, Our organs, like ourâ€" selves, are all the better for plenty of work and physical exercise like thinkingâ€"that is brain exercise â€" should have its due place in our lives. M | AUSTRALIANS SAID To BE GROWING TOO TALL VANISHER CIGaARâ€"sToRre IND:AN, There are too many adults living a lazy and anxious life because parents & generation ago talked them into he is not suffering from "heart disâ€" «, TORONTO Aas tb B :i rlxht‘s offered Fresh from the Gardens when the odd "cigar is to be seen in Toâ€" ‘o "tribe" was far from w he may be extinet, A ar slores in Canada Etates? *So far as o was naive to the its use was adopted It was natural, there. sLoriginal American " APT Wintxtnicia .. of the age. A BRLc_% machines, on perâ€" perman« Write Language the most forcible proâ€" ceeds from the man who is most sinâ€" cere. The way to speak with power, or to write words that pierce manâ€" kindtotthnick,i:tolpe.kaM write honestly.â€"E, L. Magoon. _ , _ 3 0_USYy ©chool work. He did so, and accomplished wonderful work for Christ. When the other brother died, all he left was seven million dollars. ""Worth his millions," cries the press When the very rich man dies: ky o se o | â€" This is a question frequently asked | when a man has died. Sometimes it springs from a spirit of philanthropy, as when a widow and small children |are left behind. Often it is merely a question of curiosity, and asked reâ€" garding those who counted their own wealth by dollars. It is remarkable that it is rarely asked how much he was worth when Dr. Crown died, or whether James Robertson had acâ€" cumulated a fortune in the Canadian West. When Abraham Lincoln, and Gladstone, and Thomas Arnold, and Frances Willard, passed away, no one ever thought of enquiring how many dollars they had left behind. A recent paragraph relates that two brothers were New York bankâ€" ers. One promised God to retire when he had made $100,000, and give his life to Sunday School work. He did rare and core apples, Made a syrup of sugar and water in a shalâ€" low sauce pan with a close fitting cover. Add apples, lemon slices and sprinkle over cinnamon candies, Simâ€" mer closely covered, basting frequentâ€" ly with the syrup, until apples are tender. Soften gelatine in cold water for five minutes, Put apples into inâ€" dividual molds. Measure syrup and add enough boiling water to make two cups. Remove lemon slices and add softened gelatine. Stir until disâ€" solved and pour over apples, comâ€" pletely covering the fruit. Let stand several hours to chill and become firm. Unmold and serve with a garnâ€" ish of whipped cream., JELLIED APPLES Four tart apples, 1% cups granuâ€" lated sugar, 1 cup water, 2 tableâ€" spoons tiny cinnamon candles, 1 lemon cut in slices, . 1 tablespoon granulated gelatine, 4 tablespoons cold water, The lamb is left over Sunday roast. Use the b a broth in which to cook rehcat the meat in a w cream sauce. | without water until tender. Rub through a sieve to remove seeds and Ilkilll. Cook 1 cup cclery leaves and stems in % cup water for ten minâ€" utes. Strain off liquid and add to tomato puree, Add sugar, salt and onion juice and bring just to the boiling point. Add gelatine which has been softened in cold water and stir until dissolved. When cold add lemon juice and tabasco sauce. Turn > into tray of refrigerator and freeze to a mush. This can be frozen in a freezer without stirring if packed in 4 parta ice to 1 part ice cream_ salt, tabasco sauce. puree, 4 cup celery stock, 1 tableâ€" spoon lemon juice, few drops onion juice, teaspoons sugar, *4 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon granulated gelaâ€" tine, 2 tablespoons cold water, dash WHAT HE was WORTH Milk Coffee There is one hot course in the dinâ€" n°r, the main course, and the coffes may be iced or hot as you prefer. Tomato frappe is not quite ordinary so here‘s the recipe for it MONDAY LUNCHEON Hashed Lamb in Rice Border Grilled Tomatoes® Jellied Apples with Whipped Cream Tomato Frappe Boned Shoulder of Lamb Stuffed and Milk ! Summer menus always have plenty of cold foods in them, crisp cool salâ€" ads, fresh fruits and refreshing bev. erages. But it‘s advisable to have one hot dish at each meal whether it be a soup, a main dish, a drink or a dessert. The menus are planned with this in mind and recipes arg given for special dishes. Potato Marbles Creamed Carrots Julienne Salad of Fresh Pears and Cream Cheese in Mint Jelly Charlotte Russe One Hot Course l At Summer Meals % P Recipes and core V is JCIt over from the ist. Use the bone to make which to cook the rice and meat in a well seasoned TOMATO FRAPPE SUNDAY DINNER Iced Tea cups tomato im SJ