ow â€"UOwn e . Tof * t ie a pipe. ns the face, it should be lightened with foundation cream until it matches the face. High necklines and beautiful knotted scarfs are very much in order, of course. per'c;;t';'f tâ€"]â€"l;!V_zl.pp.l; crop used to be exported. * cent of the dried apoles and 10 The lines that started around the eyes and now extend down over the cheekbone area cannot be concealed by a heavy coating of face powder. The best that can be done to make them less conâ€" spicuous is to use a thin, creamy foundation lotion, then dust a bit of powder over the film of foundâ€" ation. paid to grooming the neck. is one or two shades darker age. Under no cireumstances should a grandmother wear scariet nail polish. All it does is draw atâ€" tention to the fact that her hands Anyone past fiftyâ€"five shouid think of powder in terms of a light dusting, rouge as something with which to tint the cheeks ever so faintly, lipstick as color to be rubbed in and then brushed off the lips with only a faint tinge of red remaining. Older Woman‘s Subdued Makeâ€"up The less makeup the older woâ€" man uses the better. and strawberries. Serves $. handat nendinond Wt un 1nd 14 for the month â€" "Luscious Fresh Strawberry Roll," Froesh Strawberry Sponge Roll T4 cup sifted eake flour; 1 teaâ€" spoon doubleâ€"acting baking powder; * teaspoon sait; 4 eggs, unbeaten:; 4. cup sifted sugar; 1 teaspoon vanilla; 14 cup powdered sugar; 14 terspcon vanilla; 1 ecup cream, whipped; 214 cups thinly sliced strawberries. Sift flour once; measure. Comâ€" bine baking powder, salt, and eggs in bowl. Place over smaller bow! of hot water and beat with rotary egg beater, sdding sugar gradually until mixture becomes thick and lightâ€"colored. Remove bowl from hot water. Fold in flour and vanilla. Turn into 15x1l0â€"inch par which paper to within %% inch of edge, and again greased. Bake in hot over (400°F.) 13 minutes. Quickly cut off crisp edges of cake. Turn out on damp cloth to coo!; remove paper. Fold powdered sugar and vanilla into whipped cream. When cake is cold, spread with whipped cream, then with strawberries, and roll as for jelly roll. Sprinkle lightly with powdered sugar. Serve with additional whipped cream Apple growers in the U. GET PLENTY OF SLEEP One shouid have all the fun that goes with youth, but, still be clever enough to get plenty of rest and eat the foods that keep the comâ€" plexion clear and glowing â€" the rightful heritage of all young loveâ€" ties. Lâ€"â€"By Frances Lee Bartonâ€"4 TRAWBERRIES ripe and strawâ€" berries red! Luscious with sugar and cream! Buy ‘em and A WELLâ€"GROOMED NECK Nearly all heaithy young persons can keep this up for a while, but without sufficient rest and susâ€" taining food they wili sson begin to look jaded. These restless ones are always the last to think of going home at & party, They can get along with only a few hours‘ sleep so they say. While this practice may insure a slender figure, it will be quite likeâ€" ly to leave the skin and muscles undernourished and the result will be lines and wrinkles. Young persons of the nervous type may have these circles as the result of lack of rest and an insufâ€" ficiency of nonrishing foods. Usâ€" wally they are the girls who are acâ€" tive and slender, who rever take time for a good wellâ€"balanced meal. UNDERNOURISHED MUSCLES Those circles some women have under the eyes are rot always due to age, writes Donna Grace, beauty editor. In most instances we belâ€" jeve the trouble may be traced to eye strain or lack of rest. When there is any physical disturbance one should see a physician and let him do something to relieve the <ause before lines become fixed grooves. They will know what the eause is, and if one needs an eye examination they will advise it. Skin Suffers Without Rest, after all, real teilâ€"tales of Her Cosmetics Must "Whisâ€" per" Rather Than Shriek Good Food Necessary, Too, For Lovely Compiexion Strawberries s Ripe! attention â€" should are Corey had told himself before that it was only because Sally felt responsible for Dan‘s accident. But now he had to admit that things had changed. Dan had changed, cerâ€" tainly. He had got used to the new world he was living in. He seemed to fit in, to belong. "You might as well make up your mind to it, my sweet," Corey said. But he knew now it was not going to be so easy as he thought. He knew that Sally really believed she toved Dan Reynolds. Corey still treated Sally with that attitude. He told her, as he had before, that he expected to marry her "one of these days." life that would be made easy for Corey® Porter, whose father was a rich man, who felt it, if he wanted anything badly enough, hbe surely would get it eventually. In the weeks of the happy, careâ€" free summer that followed Sally was much too happy to wonder what the future would hold or to question it or her happiness. It was enough that she and Dan were good friends, that they could share so many hours together, that Dan was growing more and more like his old self again. HE‘S CHANGED It was Corey, surprisingly, who pointed out just how much Dan had changed to Saliy one day. Corey, home now, was working in his faâ€" ther‘s office â€" or at least putting up a good bluif at working. Sally bad gone up to Dartmouth for the graduation exercises as she bad promised him she would. It bad been an impressive sight, so many fine young men, in cap and gown, ‘stepping from the threshold of ore life into a new onre. A new Afterwards she covuld see that that was what she should have done. It had hbeen such a perfect day. they had been such friends, Sally ard Dan. If Sally had been the one to tell him she could have made Dan understand. _ But how could she expect him to know. when he heard it from someonre else, her reasons for not telling him, for reâ€" maining silent that day by the brook? How could she know that this would make him lose his faith, his belief fn her again? But Dan had told Sally that day that be believed in her. She hat not had the courage to risk telling him that she had, in a way, deceivâ€" ed him again. That her father was the man who had kelped him, be canse she had asked him to; that Dan owed his position and his chance to make good in this new world to them. Mary, many times she was to wonder why she had not spoken up then, when Dan had told her about his benefactor and all that he feit he owed him. If only she had! How much heartache might have been spared. CHAPTER XV Long afterward Sally was to reâ€" member that lovely day by the brook anrd the things they had talked about and how happy they had been. Last week: Dan asks Sally if she is engaged. Then he tells her that he is determined to stage a comeâ€" back, to ski again, and to repay his mysterious benefactor. COREY POR»ER was kirg o% the social whir!. So . .. But go on with the story. DAN REYNOLDS â€" hero. He might have had Saily but while he was king on skis CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIR â€" heroine. She had everything that popularity could win her, except n o o o o o Te TV Tâ€"6 & Infuse 6 heaping teaspoons of Salada Black Tea in a pint of fresh, boiling water: After 6 mimn:ss strain liquid.into 2â€"quart container; while hot, add 1 to 1 34 cups of sugar and juice of 2 lemons, strained; stir until sugar is dissolved; fill container with cold water. Do not allow tea to cool before adding cold water or liquid will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ice. The above makes 7 tall glasses. TRY IT THE "SALADA" way SKI‘S THE LIMIT SERIAL STORY BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES She said, "Dan can get the betâ€" ter of anything. Without holp from anyone, either, except himself. That is the remarkable part.". "Are you sure, Sally, my sweet," Corey asked, his blue eyes narrowâ€" ing, "that Reyno!lds hasn‘t had any help at all*" "Yes, he has," Sally said, watchâ€" ing Dan pull himself out of the pool, climb agilely back onto the slippery ledge, walk with firm, sure stride back toward them. Saliy had known that Dan had made wonderâ€" ful progress this summer. But not until Corey called ber attention to it bad she realized that his long battie was almost won. GRUDGING ADMIRATION "He‘s certainly got the best of that limp he had!" Corey added, not without & shade of gruding adâ€" miration, from himself, that was genuine. Why! Reynolds walked as well as anyone. It was only when he was tired that he betrayed even 2 suggestion of a limp. There had been so much more than admiration revealed, not only in her eyes, but in her tone, that Corey had decided it was about time there was a "showdown." And that was why he had remarked that Dan had made a remarkable comeâ€" back. f "I say," Corey said to Sally, "there‘s no getting around it, Reyâ€" nolds has made a remarkable comeâ€" back." This was one late afternoon when "the gang" as they still stylâ€" ed themselves, had gathered at the fashionable club swimming pool which they had frequented all sumâ€" mer long. Dan had just executed a perfect backâ€"flip from the highest springboard. Sally had exclaimed, "Wasn‘t that a honey!" and her dark eyes had become bright with admiration, Corey happened to know that Salâ€" ly‘s father was the chief stockâ€"ho!â€" der of the firm that had employed Dan Reynolds! Corey had wonderâ€" ed, casually at first, if there was anything more to that than met the eye. He resolved to keep his own eyes open, just in case there might Round and round goes your crochet hook to make these lovely crocheted doilies that look like a fullâ€"blown rose when done. Lovely and practical in @asiest crochet! Pattern 2565 contains directions for making doilies; illustrations of them and stitches; materials required. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. It was not just that he had made good at Devon and Devons. And now that Corey was an upâ€"andâ€"comâ€" ing young stockbroker himself, thanks to his own effort and abilâ€" ity, had made good all right, but it went even deoper than that, Dan was now a rival whom any man might well have to outsmart in some way. HE WOULD OUTSMART HIM Well, if necessary, Corey told himself a bit smugly, he would outâ€" smart him in whatever way came to hand. Even if it was a bit underâ€" handed. â€"For if Corey‘s principles were not as high as they might have been, as Sally‘s father bhad marked, it was not altogether Corâ€" ey‘s fault. He simply felt he had to win, since he always had; he pridâ€" ed himself on being a good sport, but he was a poor loser. It was most unfortunate that CROCHETED DOILIES ~â€"~ LAURA WHEELER DESIGNS THREE PRACTICAL SIZES IN DOILIES COPYRIGHT, 1938 NEA SERVICE, INC COPR. 1320, NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, INC. Banning of permanent waves by the Tokyo gvoernment has led to a type of bootlegging at the beauty parlors. Womenâ€" are obâ€" taining permanent waves through loopholes in the law and the letâ€" down in enforcement. The ban is a part of the restriction on clectrical cansumption, Sally gave a little sigh of relief. She was glad she had thought to warn Corey. She would not want Dan to learn who his benefactor had been from anyone except herâ€" self. Yet, for some unknown reason, she still had a nervous, worried feeling. She made up her mind she would tell Dan the whole truth at the very first opportunity â€" in fact she would tell him tonight. (To Be Continued) "You know I won‘t if you ask me not to," Corey. returned. "I see," Corey said. He thought he saw plenty, He thought he saw a way to bring things to a showâ€" down, to outsmart Dan. "You won‘t tell him, will you?" Sally said agâ€" ain, half under her breath, for Dan was almost within hearing distance. *"No, he doesn‘t," Sally admitted. "I‘ve been meaning to tell him; and some day I shall." She had been meaning to tell Dan too long, she realized now. Somehow something always had kept her from it. "Doesn‘t Dan know that?" It was Corey who glanced sidewiso at Salâ€" ly now. Sally glanced at him sidewise, There was something in Corey‘s tone she did not quite understand. She knew, of course, that Corey knew that her father was the head of the firm that had employed Dan. She said quickly, impulsively â€" for in another minute Dan would have joined them â€" "I didn‘t mean the kind of help you apparently are thinking of, Corey." She had reâ€" ferred to Dan‘s own high courage and faith. "And by the way, I‘ve been wanting to ask you something â€" please don‘t mention to Dan that my father has stock in Devon and Devons." Canada‘s geographical proximâ€" ity to the British Isles means that the refugee movement will be alâ€" most exclusively to this Dominion. At the moment transportation difficulties make it virtually imâ€" possible to move the homeless to Australia and New Zealand. ASKED TO OPEN HXOMES An appeal is being made to the Canadian people to open their homes to the child refugees so that they can be given the best of care in the Dominion. The whole force of welfare organizaâ€" tions will be mobilized® to look after them. To cut through hampering rules, the children and any other refugees who may come will be admitted to Canada as nonâ€"immiâ€" grants. After the war they will The movement to Canada will be limited only by the Canadian ability to absorbh the refugees, the British restrictions regarding classes living in the United Kingâ€" dom and the matter of providing transportation, it was stated. Child Refugees Will Come Here By Thousands Thousands of child refugees from Britain, France and Allicd countries will be brought to Canâ€" ada just as soon as transportaâ€" tion can be arranged, the Govâ€" ernment announced at Ottawa folâ€" lowing a conference of immigraâ€" tion, health, welfare and Provinâ€" cial authorities. Bootleg Beauty Only Limitation to Be Canadâ€" ian Capacity and Organizing Their Transport to Dominion From Warâ€"Torn Europe PATTERN 2568 Dept. WOâ€"272 â€" TORONTO, OXT. l teaspoon vanilla Oneâ€"eighth teaspoon soda Oneâ€"eighth teaspoon salt 1% sups flour 4 cup sour cream 2 teaspoons baking powder 14 cup raisins % cup chopped nuts , _ Cream butter well, adding sugâ€" ar gradually; add wellâ€"beaten egg, also flavoring. Mix and ‘sift the flour, ‘sait, baking powder and soda. Add alternately with the sour cream to butter and sugar mixture. Add raisins and chopped Now for the accompaniment to the beverage, which may be just as simple as you wish, such as the plain cookie, or may run the whole gamut of small cakes to the elaborate frosted one. Always remember, when you wish the very simplest kind of beverages, that the simple orangeâ€" ade and lemonade are always reâ€" freshing. In making orangeade, for a single glass allow % orange and 1 tablespoon of lemon juice sweetened to taste. Then to add variation to this you may serve plain grape juice or again a comâ€" bination of orange, lemon or grapefruit. Ginger ale added to any of the abqve does give them zest. mbnvineind uen inl . it eronithilatnal eeelraiadsa insd ) (clilld a cold place, preferably longer. Strain, add the ginger ale. Pour into glasses l4 full of cracked ice. Garnish each glass with mint sprigs. Flavor iced milk with mapiec sugar, with brown sugar, with melted _ chocolate peppermints. Heat large chocolate mints in the upper part of the double boiler. When meited stir into milk. Mint Punch There has been a request for the mint punch of last year,â€" 1 cup chopped fresh mint leaves 1 cup powdered sugar % cup lemon juice 4 cups orange juice 1 quart ginger ale Crushed ice and mint sprigs Rub the mint leaves and sugar together until well mixed. Add lemon and orange juice. Allow to stand for at least 15 minutes, in with * * / na1g TS OWn GAS _ Or try this: place a large spoon of vanilla ice cream in an iced coffee glass, add %% cup of milk, then pour in ginger ale to fill the glass, stirring all the while. Drink at once. Sour Cream Drop Cookies 34 cup butter t& cup sugar In these days we are thinking and are told much about nutriâ€" tion and the low cost of meals, and as milk always holds an honâ€" ored place on menu lists we can do no better than start our sugâ€" gestions with these few hints. Iced Chocolate Milk Mix equal parts of chilled milk and prepared cocoa as for drinkâ€" ing; add a spoon of maple syrup or caramel syrup. Shake thorâ€" oughly. Add a spoon of Maple ice cream in an iced tea or coffee glass. Serve with a spoon. What a privilege for us to be able to have an afternoon or eveâ€" ning snack on the lawn or outâ€"ofâ€" doors somewhere or just on the porch, enjoying it in safety in comparison with our friends over seas. No doubt our visits and conâ€" versations this year will be of a very serious and anxious nature and knitting and Red Cross sewâ€" ing will be spareâ€"time occupation, but let us be truly thankful as we visit and work for our privâ€" ileges. SMALL CAKES As summer is arriving most of us are making an inventory of our recipes and ideas for bevâ€" erages and the small cake and cookie, that we may be ready for the caller or visitor. with the Stove that SUMMER BEVERAGES AND By SADIE B. CHAMBERS ISSUE 26â€"‘40 NOTE: i cup grated cheese may be. sprinkled over top of Branburger before the last ten minutes of cooking. SPANISH SAUCE 1 cups sliced onion 3 tablespoons fat :4 cup chopped green pepper 2 cups canned tomatoes 1}%% teaspoons salt 44 teaspoon pepper 1% cups milk 1 cup Allâ€"Bran 1 lb. ground round steak 2 tablespoons finely chopped onion 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 10 slices bacon Beat egg and add salt, pepper, milk and allâ€"bran. Combine meat with onion and parsley. Add the soaked bran and mix well. Form into cakes about two inches in diameter and one inch thick. Wrap slice of bacon around each cake and ~fasten with skewer. Bake in hot oven (450 degrees F.) for thirty minutes or broil for twenty minutes. Serve with That jar in the lunch basket contains the Spanish Sauce. It wlil add a continental flavor to your branburgers. Both recipes are on this pare. ers" take first place in appetite satisfaction after a day‘s outing â€"and the bran content sets a new high in taste delight and economy. Everything done but the cookâ€" ing â€" and what better place to do that than right "on the spot"! Cooked over the open fire, "Burgâ€" Like a guard of honor, these trusty branburgers are ready to do their duty at the picnic lunch. Each one is bound in its own strip of bacon, skewered and wrapped in gay wax paper. Oatmeal Macaroons Mix thoroughly together 1 tablespoon melted butter, 1 cup granulated sugar, 2 well beaten eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, a little grated nutmeg, and 2% cups oatâ€" meal (into which has been stirred 2% teaspoons baking powder). Have the batter quite stiff and drop by the teaspoon on a butter ed baking sheet, having them about an inch apart. Bake in a moderate oven until crisp and brown on the edges. in cornflakes and drop by teaâ€" spoonfuls cn greasy cooky sheet and bake in hot oven until light brown in color. Frosted Drop Cakes Cream % cup butter, gradually add 1 cup sugar, yolks of 2 eges, Y cup milk, 1% cups flour (mixâ€" ed and sifted with 2 teaspoons baking powder). Fold in the stiffâ€" ly beaten whites of 2 eggs, and add % teaspoon vanilla. Bake 40 minutes in a moderate oven. Covâ€" er with white frosting. Beat egg whites till quite stiff. Add sugar slowly, then vanilia, coconut and ‘wainut meats. Stir 2 cups pastry flour 12 teaspoon vanilla Cream together rolled oats, shortening and sugar. Add. mitk gradually and continue beating until creamy. Sift dry ingredients together and add to first mixture. Add vanilla. Chill and roll thin. Cut in desired shape and bake in moderate oven for 10 minutes. Corn Flake Cookies personal letters from interestâ€" ed readers. She is plcased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even nuts. Drop by spoonful on & bu* tered baking dish. Bake in modâ€" erate oven about 12 minutes. 2 teaspoon vanilla 2 eups corn flakes 1 cup sugar 1 cup shredded coconut l@ cup walnut meats 2 cups rolled oats 1 cup sugar % cup shortening % cup milk l%4 teaspoon soda 4 teaspoon nutmeg READERS, WRITE IJIN: Aiss _ Chambers welcomes BRANBURGERS Bran and Hamburger: Make it "Branburger" ONTARIO ARCHIVES s ' TORONTO h euriess 22 o ed COs Z2OPl 220. 49 Wellington St. E., Toronto. 52 tested recipes for meats, hot breads, cookiles, ctc. by Mrs. H. M. Aitken, famous cooking expert. Write enclosing a label from avy, Canada Starch product to the Can. rda Starch Home Service, Dept. DU. sauce 1 cup stuffed whole olives Brown onions lightly in the iac. AJd green pepper, tcmatoes and seasonings. Simmer untii misture th‘ckens, stir in olives and heat thoroughly. 1% teaspoons salt 4 teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons â€" Worcesiershire E. A. K. Sheppard, Vancouver, last week reached Caron, 20 miles west of Moose Jaw, Sask., on an allâ€"Canadan horseback ride from Vancouver to Halifax. He star‘â€" ed the trip last June 1 and on his arrival in Halifax intends to sell his mare, "Rose," ard sall for his native England. He spent some months st a home in Alberta after troveling ever the old treeâ€"strewn Princo ton trail. While travelling he a~ Horseman Riding Yield: 3 cups sauce. every meal! spearmint flavor. Healthful, delicious, refreshing! Get the good habit of enjoying itafter â€"â€" Wrighoy‘s Spearmint Gusn is the favorite! Millions enjoy its longâ€"lasting, genuine ||