.1 _.-,._ as“. O v *“¢‘ THE COOK 'S CGRNER LAMB PATTIEB Method: G Jwulder, neck or breast. shape into patties. wfgfth strip of bacon. fasten a tooth- pick. Broil. If! or bake, "'10 BROIL: Piece on hot broiler Kn, set the broiler in place allow- g Just enough distance from the heat that only one turning will be necessary to cook the patties to the doneness desired- TO PANBaR/OIL: Slowly preheat the frying pan before putting the patties in. Cook uncovered and as K10 rift cooks out of the meat, pour o . TO BAKE: Arrange the patties in a shallow pan. Bake in a mod- erate oven 375 deg. FR. 30 to 45 utes. lt is not necesary to cover them. If desired, the patties be covered with vegetables the baking. CASSEROLE OF LAMB 2 lbs. breast of lamb, cut small, flour. bacon drippings, 1 finely minced onion, l cup canned toma- toes, 1 cup hot water, 2 cups dired {aw carrots, 2 cups diced raw pota- oes. Method: Roll lamb pieces in sea- Ioned flour brown well in hot drip- pings with the onion. Turn into a greased casserole, and tomatoes and water, cover and bake 2 hours in moderate oven, 350 deg. F. Add carrots and potatoes and bake 45 minutes more or until all are len- der. Add more water as needed and thicken the gravy if necessary. ______________ ‘AAA ' k k k gr?‘ g Household Scrapbook; I (By aoaanra tczii ‘ FO-O-O+OQOO-O-+O-QOOOQQOO—QQ4O Perapirlng Hands When troubled with perspiring,‘ aannds. try applying two or three l as a day, or at least nightl , an . astringent lotion consisting ofy one,‘ part boracic acid to twenty parts’ of water ,and then dust them with l talcum powder. l Removing nun | ‘Ihorcisnotlunglikeatouchofl kerosene to remove the rust. from iron or steal when applied with powdered bath brisk to give it the proper roughage. pen warm ore If the lane ed bef th adamant of a pie is put into lg crust will no become soft and copy when it is baking. +~++++o++w How Can l ‘I ‘I l (Q ANII AIILIY) i 40-004-04-94 Q. How can I make a water filter? A. Cut a hole in a shelf so that inverting an ordinary lamp mney, it will pass about half- way throup the hole. Fasten securely to the lower end of the chimney about three thickness of eheesec 0th; then stuff in absor- bent cotton to the depth of three or four inches. Renew the cheesecloth and cotton as often as necessary- Q. How can I destroy plant lice? A. Spray the plants with a. syringe and a luds of na htha soap. tablespoon ul of smoking tobacco soaked in a quart of water for twelve hours or more makes a solution that will destroy insects and promote plant growth. Pour on the soil about every two months. f, Woman's Rte al vvv w vvwwvwwwvwwwwwwwiwwww l‘ his own volition. i 1.. Q4440 Modern Etiquette g (B1 ROBERTA LEI) Q. When the ceremony is fin- ed, at a church wedding, ahouldn't the members of the fam- ilies be allowed to leave first, be- fore the other people? A. Yes,- this ls proper. Q. Shouldn't the word “dear" be capitalized in the salutation of a letter, as, My Dear Mrs. Adams? A. No; it should be written, My dear Mrs. Adams. . W131i?» is the real definition of 1. vv A. Webster says a dinner is “the princi l meal of the day. eaten abou midday or in the ev- enign; also, a formal feast in honor of some person or event." NABTUBITUM FOR ACCENT Nasturlum is a new and excit- ing accent color for s ring. It adds zest to costumes of sate and navy blue is ideally suited to brown or blai. M resorts it has been worn for Omtrlst with soft blue —blue links and nasturtium blouse, with hoes and emails done in the same nasturt um shade. The derlner Z I'll“ ..,‘v _ Ten ' a Ia“ ‘Dorothy D|x fling?! Here You Are, Ladies and Gentlemen; Maybe a Perusal and Some Self-Introspection Will Make You Over or Keep You From Being Guilty of These The ten greatest faults of husbands are: First. Being imperfectly mon amous. No matter how much the average man loves and admires his w fe, nor how superior he considers her to all other women. he still has an eve out for a pretty iflfl- ‘FY1976 15 never a place between the cradle and the grave where a wife can sit. down and I836 marriage easy and feel that she is absolutely sa e. Second. They slump. They get seedy- Sometiow marriage generally seems to take the starch out o a man and make him feel that everythng ls over ‘now and he 1109511! have to bother about. hi5 Defsimal 3P9?"- ance. He forgets that a wife is no mtre allured by a three day's stubble of beard on his face than he is by cold cream on hem- Third. They ressnt having lost their personal liberty and they blame it all on their wives. Every husbands favorite story is about how has wiie enticed h.m into the matrimonial fold. No man ever married OI 1r l l _ _v;-t :3 l; ud the money it takes to Bulllwrt a family- spiztle allfltlfe Tiling? bile-hounded married men they knew. they cliershed the illuscn that their wives could run a nous: on a.r. uence when this miracle fails to materialize and all of their hard-earned money ‘ goes for groceries, rent, sterilized mill: for the baby and having little Johnny's adcnctds out. instead of -0r flShJlK t1‘ D5 and new 590M 081F5- 1'- turns them sour nnd (grumpy. _ g Filth. Tnry t-isnv their wives any financial independence. They make their wives ccme to them like bzggors for every penny. and eMDBCi them to say "thank you" for the msney they have earned ten tlmfi 0W1‘ by their work in the home. Sixth They think that a home is a place where a_man can dump all the temper, nerves _and irritation that he dare not snow the outside world, and be ust as disagreeable as he pleases. Many a man who sets everybody clses dinner table in a roar wlah his wit never Sliefllw at i115 own except to grumble over the food or correct the children. Many a man who is notcdjor his chivalry to other women doesnt treat his own wife with even orcnnary politeness. Seventh. They take their w.ves for granted. They never pay lbw‘! a compliment, or show them any affection, or display any appreciation of all their wives do for them. or indicate in any manner that. they regard their wives as anythng hut household conveniences, El hth. They do nothin to make their wives happy. They seem to thin that lust being marr ed to them is all the amusement and divers- ion that any woman could crave. Ninth. They are unmindful of all the little things on which women set so much stone. Tenth. They make no effort to keep their wives in love with them. They think themselves so fasclnat that their wives gliding. possibly lose their taste for them, no mater how they are a ‘The ten great faults o.’ wives are: First. They are - ve. When they marry a man they think he belongs to them. body and soul. and has no right to any life or liberty of his own. V Second. They are jealous of every one whom he likes and every- thin he enjoys doing. A young wife's first act is to separate her hus- iban from his famil and friend and stop him from play ng golf or ten- nlis or going to his c ub. v Th d. ‘Ihey nag. 'I'hey isn't say a thing once and let it go at that. Fourth. ‘They are lazy. Keep dirty houses. And poison their families on bad food. Fifth. They are extravagant and wasteful. Sixth. They are hlgh-tem red and ahrewiii. Seventh. They are dull and stupid and boring. Eigh . They go sloudi around the house. Ninth. They are more interes ed in clubs and soc ty than they are in their homm. Tmth. They make no effort to entertain their hmbcnds and make them ha“? anftccoT-aollltagflewhldl arri a till good H1111! if d t h RD 0 m In s a you on’ weaken. DORLYPHY DIX. SECOND CHANCE By HOLLOWAY HORN Sfioial. a AMonringSmflc new, however, even in a town like Mossford, and. most of the zecriiits 1o the office staff came. in these modem days from one or other of them-Se ny d ma cu an posseme awom. ilshments uziknown hi3 when fifty Wars before, he office boy. winery Donovan, perhaps, was typi- She to the and for- three Mumfonfs was a rather striking girl in appear- anoe. with fair. hair. Her clothes Cl‘. of house half a mile away from the of. fice. Mr. Mumford had come to m. 1y VB ters-excsipting of course, important them. They were never. however. q_ulte as he dictated them. Mia l-mwvfln W115 far too good a secre- tary fcr that. At lcoiisd e-Vei and flllhvlleh several mer. had indeed. in lowed the even tenor B. were more important than individ- ual men. Mr. Mumford sometimes wondered how long 0f excellent secre reached the any lctnd worried "I Saturda morning was us l a uaracunrly busy time. Most d: ythe ed naked Wu wor his lesson?" "lb lessen younater. rible mums .’3l.‘§°§'v‘in‘i‘m‘§‘.% hi?” ‘h’ m“ able peel-yon, Kw everybody else, knew all about they lived and Ioudon $§a$°§eu d parame . an ac to ammo or their-to different Wat's? 93' lives other hand. there was a tolerant friend- liness. Many of tlheworkiers in the factory had been to the as Mr. Mumford, for example, and all of them knew that his mother had originally kept shop in Ckmlever Street. And, ggnbiilly thwem. the more of lum _ mouse went she had no though-t outside the J02. She lived with hear mother, the widow of the travellers were in and the le mistakes had to be , Mr. TTCVOWe hlmee y spent the mgtnwma; (znhaone of thess Saturday Mumlfords room and s "He hasn't been in fill. first “A new clerk. you 10rd asked in obvious “YB. Iiiingal Moulds. ming " sold a. Vlad: sriurfy. A school , h vln kind assist. anofliefin : cfifficulry, wu the teacher: “ did his work," replied flu Friend "I hear you had a tl~ other week." Pat: "Well. it wasn't ac mud: that London office, Rood-bye at the end of the know little of eaoh others . In Trevowefls on the sameschool a. little drafiers n - ‘Fheolderordergitvesplacetothe ‘fhcy had to Mr. Miun- entered the firm as a Junior was eighteen when she came firm some six years before, YER had been Iivfl‘. persmal secretary. She carefully “permed" were always well csen and as far as a/ppe mm rofone B89 the big mutlple shops, in 3, little 0n her: it was an enormous ad- ntage to be alble to sign one’; 1st. the very ops-without reading twenty-four, Mary Donovan out on life with level blue in love with her-were still, love with her-she fol- of her way in world in which 'I‘revowe's shoes this happy sin-he affairs would last, m, she we; an and he had w change agehen of AM SENDING A NEW CLERK." u-al he came into Mr. om" office u W,‘ I youu find he's a say air?" Mum- ail-prise. rleag-usmzlshismmeflrqrm Ferguson wliébe km flrminlmidonorin its various substdhry com to lsecpwd’ lthhiat: r ‘with: pace w amous It has one theatre, five cinemas. and innumerable pubs. Recently it has scra-padsits rtdramsniznd a rollev, se we. pop" on stead! increased d has an it ha‘; spread out. into the pleasant CHNPTEB I TREVOWE AND %. ‘gtlhie hand-made arltgclertas mu er comanod-i y) . o course. better, but a. rt from that. shoes which bore t e name of Trevowea were in a class of their own. They are expensive, which in thme mod- ern days is a serious drawback, but their quality had never been sacri- ficed It was the considered policy of the firm. and its wisdom-or otherwise-ls outside the scope of this record. 1n recent ears the factory had been modern and the new of- fices seemed out of place in Moss- fcrd. Chromium plated fittings and mahogany desks took one rather a long way from the ideas of that William Allan Trevowe who found- ed the firm in the days of the Fran- co-German war. The William Tre- vowe who controls the destiny of the firm today, however, is a man of ideas, a broad-minded. tolerant business man. He is nearer fl‘ than forty and his hair is at the temples; in a noe he B more like a lawyer an a provin- of his coun- tnyaide in a sprawling and rather arrogant manner. Trevowcs’ offiices were in Bridge Street and the office staff. without counting the travellers, numbered nearly forty. Usually the man in charge there was Henry Mumford, of the company. He had been -th the firm since he was a boy and when Mr. Trevowe was in London. Mumford was re- sponsible. When thlngs were going well he was a good fellow to work with, but in moments of difficulty he lacked the uribanity of his chief. Mr. Driscoll, who bore the title of Chief Accountant, was not, in fact, an acountant at all. He was a very shrewd, kindly provincial. Indeed, un-iltillxthemanwhowagmknegwnée o Ferguson n e firm. the mtire staff in the offices and stores consisted of Mosford people born and bled at? bunch of nasturtlums in the i To a great merit this differenti- cial manufacturer and most ated the staff from that b. as time is spent at the office of the ofacorm: fen-d asked in s Mr. Mumford cleared Ms throat uprising. sir. ‘I fancied 1t would be. You'd w.- " we iak his m! nus 12135 that beenedlclrge " Mungifflrd an: a a View for him?" he'll be a very useful man. He's had we. as youknow, to talce a youth and train him," Mumford who own. A little new blood will advantage n this office." “Quite. I'll have a talk with him. PM? ll" __<.Q° )__'___ _ ______________ *0 Mbndlv. sir?" Mum. still more obvious ‘Prevuwe. rather lhort- ‘il-ws a man of thirty-five or so." he usually did when he was - 1“'I‘h-is"... this ls a lfitetfie iéevgpflg-n eye on him, too Miss “Certainly. sir," Mary Donovan "'1 did it perzonoly. Mumford.” eyes of the “Had you any particular work in "NO- The“ your lob. I'm certain wide business experience in one and another." I "t has been our usual practice, "But, this time we've got‘ l man will probably luavc ideas a his an uscn. you said, sir Orchards and dark, green Was a bird;a.nd the son toward somethln once can do the ; yet many who make no progress be- cause they think they must either do much 0r nothing. If tod_a_Y_W_° rsonail . <‘ kkkkkkkkkkk k .,,,,‘ _vv. vvvvvvvwlvitv V ' u.w - \ n- fie flow/z‘ flizlj Th} 1401431319 1/ [ae/ PYREX fr’ MEASURING CUP —and label from a tin of Magic Baking Powder - any size. We pay all shipping costs . . . Z-YEAR G Transparent — You tlon or corrosion. , a tel“ haul“ tow ‘all MADE IN CANADA The Housewife And Her Activities EVERY ONE SANG Sonic one suddenly burst out sing- n8. A-flldhl was filled with such dc- t As prisoned birds must find in freedom, Wlnging wildly across the white fields; on, on, and out of sight. Every one's voice was suddenly lfted. And beauty came like the setting su My heart was shaken with tears, and horror Drifted away—-Oh, but every one was word- less-the singing wll never be done. —Siegfried Sassoon. . their" in f0 mp l lflOV on are“ ybetter. lgvery- there are vouneom MY oa/mo- ' ‘s nasty? u: " IS A HUNDRED AND TEN YEARS OLD 7 tO-Wi ING BECAUSE GRAND" MIX” HADATEMPER- ATURE Q A HUNDRED o .- A +15!’ '1 Qféke if; run was EASY- »: JUST are me can: wmte m: cmotss wraa snu. ouamuol WELL WATS NICE I AND I SUPPOSE HE ruauro mro WRONG. GEORGE/NEXT MORNING HE TURNED INTO THE DINING-ROOM \ -FOR HIS USUAL CRISP, CRUNCNY GRAPE-NUTS AND HE WAS SINGINGA SONG HE CCMPOSED ALL BY HIMSELF/ 0H 1T5 JUST DUCKY GEORGE I1‘ ooss us: nus‘ BIRTHDAYS SURE pom VIORRY ME, not CANDLES auan MY ronoui! or GRAN-NUTS rm A osvorss - run MAKE ME rm. so cos» DARN vouuo I 5m i’M SORRY I MISSED n! L_ QLLAGIEEWITHOIAND-DADOXNI-KS - CAUSE “AI-IUD Alli PDT ONLY moeangillitv psljlclous our ALSO LY ISHINO two TAILESPOON- nuoFcuAIl-nam wnu wubu ll 1'0 IIOMI It! AID ' Nlltfl _ Q71 If this PYREX Meaaurlng Cup should break from hot: liquid within two years, It will he replaced absolutely free by any Pyrex dealer In exchange for the broken pieces. quarters, thirds and halves. Accurate two-way 3nd read with cup held in either hand. They read for either cupc or ouncel. Smooth lmldc- Graduation mark: an outside. Easy to keep clean and sanitary. Cool handle — No burnt fingers, no matter how hot the liquid in the cup. Alwlys bright and new — Resists fruit juice acids and vlncgarc. No discolora- UARANTEE CIIIIODCOIIIQIIII. nations-Canine venlent-a joy to own! less than its actual value. I can better yesterday's record by ever so little, we have pro ; and a persistent, daily progress of that sort is going to brin results that are wor h while. Mos of the achievements of history were wrought out in Just that way. while other men were sitting idly by wishing that they could do something "big." 8o in ones own character-building, and in bring- ing a blessing to others; these works do not call for perfection. ‘The blessing of helping the world forward." has been well said, ' Oes not wait for perfect men), WRONG-DOING Not one wrong-door in a hund- red intends to in urc any one by his wrong-doing. ct every act of wrong doing since the world be- gan has injured not onl the guilty gerson himself, but ot ers wi im. How weak a defence is it. therefore, to plead that a guilty man did not mean to hurt any- bodyl The devil would rather have persons of good intentions in his service than any other kind. The wrecks that he can work through them are the moat complete. Whether we mean to harm any- one to-da is not the real ques- tion at a l. Rather let us r - nine that unless we take the h - est possible ground someone is lure to get hurt. A8 YOU IIDN As you iron, stock your clothes into gilas lecordinfto the rooms inwichtheywi beputowl. Then when you are finished e cloths aremorted and need not be handled twice. s 8c many handgun $373k‘: °.“..'..'“s‘:k..k"°"‘ti.. u mm.’ Boiled mm You've wished for it a thousand times! A measuring cup you can ace through—that you can use with hot liquid without fear of breakage. Clean,‘ sparkling glass that cannot dent or 00t- rode. Always looks new-through a life-time of service. Accurate,‘ con- And hero is your opportunity to get this measuring cup for only 25¢—far CONTAINS NO ALUM (Iomplbta lm of Ingredient: on ovary tin. Magic Baking Powder la Iron hom alum or any harmful Ingredient. (Alum ll aodlnm aluminum sulphate and ll , never need in Magic Baking Powder.) {III ill! NDOCIIIOTI UI this c0180! 25 Our cofc reason for mafia‘ this vala- able olcr lo this: We want ovary woman in Canada to try Magic, and lad out for herself what delicious results she can got with this finer baking dor. All you do in get a tin of Magic from your grocer, and send the label with 25¢ and the order blank below. But and your order right away. This ole! la good only while the supply of cups Into. ORDER ILANK “"'.-.....€.E:':.""..'.’.°.‘i‘“k.,...' "°'°."'.‘.” " ‘."‘"i;'.?;§:.... w‘. via l-ynr ha!“ from bet ll cuclocc 25c and a wrapper from a tin of Magic 1 Powder, any flu. ukmk AJJ m I , ‘Y TM! 0d hill PYREX P In! . n4 M03935“ bribe of Canadacgslgv. J a 11am with a match, it is wise u, iieal entirely with safety . matches kxtiotgse hlguslfusymrenlhltglde Qouafime n cause a fire by. nibbling at her sulphur matches. If the kitchen is not modern one. naturally the sill . matches are mom convenient. U they should be kept in a tin N with a. lid when not in 115i‘- _ 2| I SUN HAT and sun‘ J Nu’ r _il1B|‘tlY '1 luiémwiiti 1m all‘. ‘$.11 .£r&gé§,;gi3ieechi:°r;flfl akin: m m- m little rm f" mum ewy hm Yo?“ l“: ‘rm plttcm include: transfer t the deli; wmwY-W“ "“ kimsfititf"thth’ii'fi’ Title?- ti" u-‘ol ~~,,,,~",,..."$2u"v'- lend emu in atam or catatonia preferred) to ‘I'M Print nu um Ind cldnll WW" £'.2;-‘.’2’£‘-t'“" °“""‘- nuroumm _, Ime-———qn@un@—— ¢ F" "- _ camuan---A--,-,.-~---*“"" _,,.- “Ia-nauncun-nnnhfl II P" "Q" F i ___-— 1