En x $ Victorians Liked Luxurious Eating They Made a Cult of Good Foodâ€"Diners Were Critical Good eating was a cult in the Victorian days, writes M. E. Durâ€" ham in the Manchester Guardian. I remember those big dinners and the days of thought required to preâ€" pare the menu. Twentyâ€"four guests perhaps and a dinner to be arrangâ€" ed that gave a wide choice of dishes for all. And diners were critical and particular. Certain houses were noted for their cooks,. Epicures who thought they had not been well fed would not accept a dinner again at the house. Carving Fine Art In preparing a dinner there was not only the menu to consider and discuss but the serving of the sepâ€" arate items. Do not forget that the master of the house carved at the head of the table and that caryâ€" ing was a fine art, ar expert job. Certain dishes entailed a‘ spectal ceremony. The Victorians talked about food and made a cult of it. They ate well, but, judging by the large amount of food left over and on which the family lunched for days aiterwards, I do not think they ate more than a reasonable amount. Run The Family On 50â€"50 Basis You‘ll Be Happiest That Way â€"Director Institute of Famâ€" ily Relations Says Husband His conclusion, therefore, is that those families in which the husâ€" band and wife are on a 50â€"50 basis in dominating the family life have a much greater chance of happiâ€" ness than those in which the family is either dominated by the husband or by the wife. Have Better Chance The statistics were based upon a survey of thousands of families that had remained intact for a period of five or more years, and was conâ€" ducted among the normal, educatâ€" ed section of the population. Families in which the wife is the manager are happy in 47 per cent. of the cases: families where the man is dominant are happy in 61 por cent. of the cases, and families where both husband and wife share the managership are happy in 87 per cent. of the cases, according to Dr. Paul Popenoe, director of the Los Angeles Institute of Family Reâ€" While the 50â€"50 basis of running the family is the best one, Dr. Popeâ€" noe said that "it there must be ouly one head to the family, it is obviously safer for the husband to be the head than the wife." Children‘s Teeth Inferior Today Children of the present day "have poorer mouth conditions than their grandâ€"parents in spite of a much better diet and today it is common to find inflammatory guem conditiâ€" ons in patients of ‘teen age which formerly was regarded as a disease of middle age." Dr. C. H. Barr, preâ€" gident of the Montreal Dental Club, stated before the 14th annual fall €linic there last week. Research Funds Needed Dr. Barr thought the best soluâ€" tion could be found by increased endowments to the "research deâ€" partments of our universities." He suggested that general practitionâ€" ers "should raise our voices and put increaging pressure on our uniâ€" versities to find the funds for fur. ther research work so that this plague of tooth decay may be conâ€" trolled." "When we know the incident age of dental decay has been lowered," he said, "and that inflammatory conditions for the gum tissue occur at an earlier age than formerly, it seems logical to ask if there is not something more to be done than adâ€" vocating the incréased dosage of the vitamins, calcium, etc., and the soâ€"called balanced diet. and Wife Should Share Manâ€" agership n h10 Ccase is don cent. of ‘e both manage PERSONAL RIGHTS AND WHERE THEY END (International Temperance Sunâ€" day).â€"Ecclesiastes 2: 1â€"3, 10, 11; Romans 6: 17â€"23; 14: 21. GOLDEN TEXT THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING we are not under law, but under grace? God forbid. Romans 6: 15. Time.â€"The book of Ecclesiastes was written sometime late in Solomon‘s life, perhaps between 985 and 995 B.C.; the epistle of Paul to the Romans was written in A.D. 60. Place.â€"We do not know where Solomon wrote the book of Ecâ€" clesiastes, probably in the city of Jerusalem. The epistle of Paul to the Romans was written from Corinth, that great city of Greece, to the Christians in Rome, the capital of the world in Paul‘s day. In the first chapter of this book Solomon has recorded the failure of his search for contentment and abounding joy in the pursuit of wisdom. He now turns from the pursuit of wisdom to the pursuit of pleasure. I. I said in my heart, Come now, I will prove thee with mirth; therefore enjoy pleasure: and, beâ€" hold, th:s also was vanity. Soloâ€" mon here records a monologue, the result of talking with his own heart. The pursuit of this search led him to the same conclusion as the previous search after wisdom, namely, that it was all in vain. 2. I said of laughter, It is mad; and of mirth, What doetb it? Heartâ€"Searching 3. I searched in my heart. The language implies a most intense study, as well as effort, to solve a difficult problem. How to cheer my flesh with wine. My heart yet guiding me with wisdom, and how to lay hold on folly, till I might see what it was good for the sons of men that they should do under heaven all the days of their life. Solomon says that, while he exâ€" pects to give himself to the pleasâ€" ure of wine, yet he is going to do so under the restraining influence of the wisdom which he had purâ€" sued in the preceding chapter. In other words, he was going to be both wise and foolish. 10. And whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept not from them; I withheld not my heart from any joy; for my heart rejoiced because of all my labor; and this was my portion from all my iabor. And Found Empty 11. Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on the labor that I had labâ€" ored to do. And, behold, all was vanity and _ striving after wind, and there was no profit under the sun. Agzain Solomon is foreea to confess that sll this vast activity, these great successive undertakâ€" ings turned out to be emptiness and turned out to be emptiness and vanity, as the pursuit of wisdom and the pursuit of wine had done before. In the verse immediately preâ€" ceding the section in this chapter assigned to our lesson, Paul anâ€" nounces the principle that we are the slaves of that ‘principle to which we yield obedience. 17. But thanks be to God, that, whereas ye were servants of sin. All men by nature, by habit, by act, by the yielding of their wills, are sl.ves to sin; but, when a man accepts the Lord Jesus Christ, who is the deliverer from sin, he can praise God that this enslavement to sin was in the past, and does not continue into the present. Ye became obedient from the heart. To that form of teaching whereâ€" unto ye were delivered. The guidâ€" ing principles learnt from the preaching of the gospel. Servant of Righteousness 18. And being made free from sin, ye became servants of rightâ€" cousness. There is no intermedâ€" iate moral condition between the one service and the other. Only as slaves of righteousness can we cease to be slaves of sin. 19. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh. Nearly all sin ulâ€" POP â€" How Could Pop Know Ma‘s Ideas In Makeâ€"Up Sunday School LCSSOI‘I New Tribe of Aborigines, Noted For Beauty, Is Discovered By Australian Explorer Fred Blakeley, noted Australian author and explorer, has returned from the interior with the anâ€" nouncement that he has discovâ€" ered a new tribe of aborigines that represent "the purest desâ€" cendants of the earth‘s original inâ€" habitants." He advocates the establishment of the tribal territory into a reâ€" serve that would be kept free from missionaries, _ prospectors _ and mounted police, in order that the tribe may retain its purity and continue to develop in a natural manner. He declared the women are beautiful and the men of magnifiâ€" cent physique. The skins of the tribe are so light that they use charcoal for marking their bodies. "The girls have lithe bodies and tiny feet," he said, "and if some of them were to walk along the city beaches they would cause a sensation." Blakeley declared it is probably the last chance the world will ever have to see a native tribe develop normally, without taking on any of th "bad characteristiecs of modâ€" ern civilization" if it can just be kept on its own preserve free from outside influences. A number of cows in the Voroâ€" shilovgrad district of Russia are now eating their food aided by false tecth. timately is achieved by the action of soxe part of the body. As serâ€" vants to uncleanness and to inâ€" iquity unto iniquity. The first word means moral defilement of the man within himself and the second word refers to the violaâ€" tion of the divine law without a man. Even so now present your membeis as servants to righteousâ€" ness rnto sanctification. â€" Here Paul commends a defirite yieldâ€" ing of all the members of the Christian‘s body to obedience to righteausness, i.e., to the rightâ€" cous law of God. 20. For when ye were servants of sin, ye were free in regard of righteousness. When we were unâ€" redcemed, living under the power of sin. we paid no attention to vighteousness. 21. What fruit then had ye at that time in the things whereot ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things is death. The probable meaning here will thus be, ) d you find any happiness ct profit resulting? The "Wages" of Sin 22. But now being made free from sin and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto sanctification, and the end eternal life as today. 23. For the wages of sin is death; but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus cur Lord. The word "wages" str.ctly denotes pay for military service. Death in its most awful sense is no more than the reward and the result of sin; and sin is nothing less than a conflict against o. Hom. 14: 21. It is good not to eat fiesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby thy brotner stumbleth. For a full presertation of this principle see I Cor. 8: 12%; 9: 20â€"23. Paul says, we are to live so that our brother will not judge ill of us, or see us do anything which raises a scruple in his own heart. There was never a time when such a lofty ideal for guiding the tife of a Christian was so needed Don‘t let love and romance pass you by. Men like girls with lots of pep and energy. So start taking timeâ€"proven Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Coné)mmd and note the difference. Pinkham‘s omro\md. made espccially for women from wholesome herbs and roots, helps Nature tone up your system and thus calms irritable nerves and gives you more pep to really enjoy life. For over 60 years one woman has told an« other how to go “-nllinms thru‘" distress from female functional lers_with Pinkbham‘s Compound. Let it help YOU! HOW YOU CAN ATTRACT MEN World‘s First Inhabitants Cow Dentifrice . ‘ &b Hotel Telephone Operator Introducing Duane _ Thompson, the "Hollywood . Hotel" telephone operator whose voice has launched four years of these programs each Friday over the Columbia network (WABCâ€"CBS, 9:00 to 10.00 p.m., EST.). Duane is a native of Red omm rigmemâ€"â€"me Oak, Iowa, and was | s * _ j raised in San Frarâ€" e m . 4 cisco Although 60 . 0 ie she studied to be a $ _ 3 dancer, she found herself in pictures ? in an entirely difâ€" ut . 2 ferent role, that of ‘ tompe TE a comedienne. Radâ€" . To * 3 io claimed her just i. _ _ _____| about this time and / g ; she has served at € ( _ . __] the switchboard of val _ _ . § this famdbis hostelâ€" g?‘ * «*3 ry since, annountâ€" Su k. ... u2Y) ing the weekly feaâ€" Duane ture in the "Orchâ€" id Room" and the yhompson stars from the moâ€" tion picture world who are featured in the dramatizations. y ay es . Eo6 fdbadt® > F > x | C s i _ s M . s Good Shortâ€"Wave Reception Shortâ€"wave radio reception is bound to be more appreciated than ever before, this season, as owners of the three Canadian made radios, Majestic, Deforest Crosley and Roâ€" gers will get the advantages of the new extended Gâ€"channel tuning dial. Five individuat channels, each exâ€" tended to 9% inches long are Ceâ€" voted to each shortâ€"wave band so that instead of only having % of an inch, as on old radios to try ind tune in all of the foreign stations on the 31 motre band, these new Maijority Of Fires Can Be Prevented Survey Shows 80% of Blazes Could Have Been Avoided A careful study of fire records shows that at least 80 per cent. of fires are preventable. The followâ€" ing examples are given from among the thousands of known causes to show how easy fires can start and the fatal results that may follow. A man dropped a cigarette in a rubbish pile in a rooming house and burned to death eleven people. A mother in one of our leading cities, for the fivxe hundredth time perhaps, started a fire with coal oil. The dire she started burned to death thrce children besides herâ€" self. Man attempted to sleep and smoke at the same timeâ€"results he set bed afive, was overcome with smoke, and removed in an uncounâ€" scious state. Only the timely arâ€" rival of the fire department saved him from being cremated alive. Do you always think about the safety and welfare of those about you when you discard your match and cigaretté stub? Are you mindâ€" ful of the safcty of the children in your home to the extent of providing safety matches, and keeping them out of their reach? Do you have proper respect for the dangerous properties of gasoline and always handle it with care? bring relief. It takes a "counterâ€" irritant" like good old Musterole â€"soothing, warming, penetrating and ggygal in quickly overcoming the 1 congestion and pain when rubbed on the aching spots. Muscular lumbago, soreness and Moiih® PAINSâ€"ACHES It takes more than "just a salve" to Better than the oldâ€"fashioned musâ€" tard plaster, Musterole has ‘been used by millions for 30 years. Recomâ€" mended by many doctors and nurses. mended bg many doctors and nurses. Made in Canada, in three ntre?ths: Regular, Children‘s (mild), and Exâ€" tra Strong. All druggists, 40¢ each. Are You Listening? _ .(Gepyright, 1936, by The Bell Syndicate, Ine.) . ! h extended bands make shortâ€"wave reception ten times easier to tune! "Hit Parade" Maestro Although the continent stretched between them, Al Goodman, conâ€" ductor of the CBS "Your Hit Parâ€" ade" programs who is heard from a Columbia playhouse in New York, comuomcemes . held a "mike" reâ€" lp,. union with W. C. A Fields . when the P M pulbousâ€"nosed comâ€" ._.__ OSR edian who is heard \ _ _ _SMR trom _ Hollywood joined the _ "Hit \ s es Parade" for a serâ€" i _A : ies of appearances ah wl B which started Satâ€" Te £ arday, October 15. bis...â€"cil Goodman, pictured % here used to direct the orchestra in the majority . of $A Fields‘ productions A1 on Broadway. A Goodman musical â€" headliner for the past fifteen years, the "Hit Parade" maestro has the unique record of having diâ€" rected the scores of 165 musical comedies before turning to radio. A musical child prodigy and a gradâ€" uate of the Peabody Institute, Goodman is equally at home conâ€" ducting opera or modern dance music. He is reputed to have one of the most complete musical libâ€" raries in existence in this country to.day. "Your Hit Parade" is heard over the WABCâ€"Columbia network every Saturday from 10:00 to 10:45 pm., EST. Radio Goes To Shakespcare The Canadian Broadcasiing Corâ€" poration have really "got someâ€" thing" in the presentation of the elâ€" even plays by William Shakesâ€" peare. This is one of the few big "scoops" to be originated and broadcast right across Canada by a Canadian station. If you haven‘t lisâ€" tened to these, I recommend you listen in at 9:00 o‘clock Sunday nights to any CBC station. Because she couldn‘t tell her husband from his twin brother, a woman in France has applied for a divorce. ROYAL Winter Fair How long would it take, how much would it cost, to see the pick of Canada‘s pick in liveâ€" stock on farms? 2,000 horses, 2,000 cattfe, 1,000 sheep, 1,000 swine 6,000 head of poultry? A tour of 20,000 miles â€" months of expense. Yet that is what you see UNDER ONE ROOF at. the Royal Winter Fair. And 35¢ admits ! Where else can so much be seen for so little trouble and expense? Then there are Foxes, Minks, Fruit, Flowers, Seeds, Grains, a unique industrial Poultry di:flay, and a marvellously fine orse Show nightly. Nov. 15â€" 23 Surely all this is worth while. Come this year. All information from Manager: W. A. Dryden, 217 Bay St., (Eight full days) At the Royal Coliseum, Plant Bulbs â€" Some Can Be Left in Ground â€" and Will Multiply No matter on how small a scale bulbs are naturalized, they must be planted in an irregular fashion. An old Dutch bulb planter advoâ€" cates a simple system: "Take a handful of bulbs and drop them on the ground about where you wish to plant them. Let them roll, and then plant each one just where it lies." There are, of course, the daffoâ€" dils that should be planted to get the best results before October is well under way. Nothing brings out their beauty like deon ‘"a grass, but the shortâ€"cupped sn e ties are best kept separate from the ‘":rumpots" if the former are to s‘"ox to full advantage. Then ther> ‘s the more colorful picture provided by the crocuses â€" the pave«t messengers of spring. They too can be left undisturbed for Some of these spring flowering bulbs may be left in the ground and will multiply, thus building the initial purchase into an inâ€" creasing investment of beauty and enjoyment. yor:s, and there is the whole month of October in which to plart them. Other spring flowering bulbs for naturalizing are Gloryâ€"ofâ€"theâ€" Snow (Chionodoxa); the snowâ€" drops and grape hyacinths; and By J. MILLAR WATT area. 50 Lava. altain. 27 Baking dish. 52 Form of "be." 3 Breeding ma 28 Grief. 53 Aluminum, fish. 29 Moreover. iron, etc. 4 To mention. 32 By. 56 To rub 5 Form of "a." 33 Ministers. harshly. 6 Market. 35 Less common. 58 He was a 7 Epoch. 37 Over, leading 8 Price. 38 Evil. statesman in â€" 9 Bone. 39 Scythe handle. â€" Great â€"â€". 19 To doze. 41 Unprofessional 59 His highest 11 Greedy. 42 Spï¬llin‘ book. _ office was __-lg An easy gait 44 Self. 13 Doctor. 47 Preposition. VERTICAL | jg Ringworm. 48 Therefore. 1 Sun god. 19 One who 49 Eye tumor. 2 To seek to plants. Daffodils and Crocuses English Statesman ONTARIO ARCHIVEs 50 Lava. attain. 52 Form of "be." 3 Breeding m 53 Aluminum, fish. iron, etc. 4 To mention. 56 To rub 5 Form of "a." harshly. 6 Market. 44 scillas and fritillarias, Martensias, also called bluebelis, and lilyâ€"ofâ€" theâ€"valley can be placed in shadâ€" ed spots to lend variety and inâ€" From Hand to Mouth "From hand to mouth," he gaily said, And pressed her dainty fingerâ€"tips, Which salutation quickly led To one upon her perfect lips, As fair as roses in the South; "From hand to mouth." Although which one I hardly know, So she was won, and so was he, ‘T‘was something like a year ago, And now they both are one, you They‘re living somewhere in the South, CET Quick RELIEF co Lns FROM i ) _A . At the first sign of a cold, rub a little Mentholatum in the nostrils. See how this healing balm quickly penetrates to the nasal passages . . . fights germs . . . 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Spread on an absorbent towel, pinned to measure, or on a drying frame. board), rinse in clear water the Women of Russia are offering to pilot military planes in time of war. "From hand to mouth. E 5) vapor. mr’a‘ 31 Barley cakes. D 4 32 Saucily. , g 34 His last years were marred Eï¬ by 111 â€"â€"â€"â€", mm 36 One that 2IP] abates. 39 Spain. male 49 Masculine pronoun. n. 41 Young sheep. * 42 East Indian LV plant. 43 Contest of 45 To yawn. 46 Sheaf. 48 Perched. 51 Branch. 54 Note in scale. 55 Tone B. 56 Senior. §7 Sloth. {never rub on a as the suds