a success 'eive every 11 open an f Toronto. cessfuls and .o be pros- T Rinso soaks,c]othes so clean that boiling isn't necessary. But if you like to boil your white cottons, pour enough Rinso solution into your boiler to give you the suds you like. when it's cooked by live steam in an SMP voy- Cooker is better for you and tastes better, The inner boiler is pierced with little holes around the top, through which the steam penetrates. The live steam does the . coo ing. oneed for stirring. No search- ing. No trouble to clean, as there is no burnt or dried mes! to scrape off. The % Savoy Cooker is pne of the most useful uu&.._-I_ ..- ' For all the regular family was]: T `Rjnso 1.1 made by the largest soap makers in thevworldu Get it today at your grocery and department stores. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED ' TORONTO EGGA-1 two coats of pearly Diamond Ware. three outside, white lining. three coats. pure white `inside and Blue edging. .. ....... .......c uuwu amuna tne top, through eam cooking. No need lsagrnt one of utensils made. Ask for SMPMWWARE LWING, '~-Saezr METAL Pnonucrs co.{.'.`."..$` `HONTRiAL Tnltnnrn nun . -`-- urlccl `mural. FROIJUCTS Co."u` Moutauu. TORONTO wmmpeo Ionomou wmcouvu cwunv 7/lam!//II!///////I7!//zm. Page Fifteen-I M 1 5 8 FRONTO THURSDAY,` APRIL 12, 1923.. I Opp. Wellington Hotel or we 0. K. CAFE T STAGE 1! BAA.` 25c-40 pm: 50c--90 pills INC. lllllmml I1'iii"" wst ventilation. Choicest food. Beat. ooking. Come and tryit. 51-26p ....,.ur.. mum ueaaerveu cremt tor the worki he was doing. Each was doubtless serving" wall his country and his fellow` men. The first received a `large mgasure of praise, and ,_,_., .`_-,,_-,,, soul and soul cultur to enter into sympathy .. uauu u nvul/ula I a Yes. Unit`: true. But it tnk: a man of] i with a foreign child. dying and all alone. : Each of these men was working along fhei i line of his`own rlevelnpmentv. of his own choice. Each deserved credit for the workl he was rlnina Wonk nynu A.,...I..n..-.. --_..:_~ H__ "-1 ~___ . .,.-`.-_...---. passed 0uf._A Z I This is one great source `of encourage-l `S *""" """ """` """ F 3":lE3 ? o1$ha'i?'o,"3`Jf,.lu$3$`o`33:l w}url mextxhwould ntit for gnxgxxnszll thnlnlk i Gail big things Even the gobd we tw to do; :,n, ;"8J:, wi?hS::n}i,5_1_"Eivj: 1(:mlul.:_.` `;,aE;: pitifully small. V Mogtl of us_ any busy.l :1 \vn'ngeri}t`1l efforl. Sfucfh lt oflhis-,:;8m:rr' bnt;s\:3s!iVt' W0flal;t:;'::;lg`gdtY liV:'I:lli1h;l:(\; .m'_v. ._uc a grasp o acs.`_..uc la cear-V _ _ ` ` , cut presm1tx\ti()n! Sitting by 21 dying girl? 5 f' `'3,'*'l`e3 `md '95 de_p`~"`det l, _"5-l why` any 01,; woman could do that` But ' Even mth the best Intentions there Is-little it `takes a man. a man of brain and lear.ning`ltlme_ `eff f`" dl,5tll'ily "3i"5 07 h`_ to give such a 1ectu,.e_ _ lmanxtanan sAex-`v1cg`save our Sab.baths. and `Y .1 ; THURSDAY, APRIL :2, 192:. 4> act as a splendid tonic to ans. They remove acidity. n and excess of bile from bowels and promote the gastric juices. In thus d conditions and stimulat- prucesses ~Beecham s Pills 11 excellent effect upon the If you have lost your ap- ffering from nausea, sick pation, or giddiness .. emu wuu Iuzcw; or carea. mm spoke some _ I English. ' He knew a few words of her lang- i` lungs, and cheered and cmnforrod her as she ! ` u y, u . . . men; and even to the generailypublic, from -. cu: .v- vvn-U IIHII-I1 I Two men who had. been in university to-' gather met years atterwards in a western country town. Both had been successful students in college and had won pretty near- ly equal shares of honors. scholarships and ., medals. After leav'in',z- college their paths lay apart.` One had become a somewhat ;. famous man, known to scholars and public` ocean to ocean. He was in government em- I ploy. and drew a large salary. The other. was minister of a church in the country town, on a very modest salary. The famous inanlectured thm evening with great abil-i it) on some national topic. He left on the 3 first train followed by a chixms of praisn5 from the admiring townspeople. The other? `saw him to the train. and then went to tho hospital to sit the rest of the night by air foreign girl who was dying. .She was just ; a child. some-body's little servant maid. `9 without one of her own people near her, or 1 a soul who knew, or cared. "She spoke :1 Ellllh. H9 ltnnw a four uuu-rl..v n` In. '1--- il Just A trace of sooth- ake ' Boracic--to m ' e perfect for mother, baby _ all the family. NFANT5 has (Avail Matcvln-I-e`sa Quality for 3170 V So Dc`l,icious!*" Just Try H. k If`. A 'cJF3r COLD wxren tor unvnrying my is the? GreateotLMnr o__Distiy1ction. The softer the leather the more comfortable the shoe. Frequent applications of .Nugget will keep the leither soft. . ` incest-:'r" Shoe Polish an}: to lend to young thrifty and Insist on ` ./Vugget Subscribe for The Barrie Examiner 5 iand get all the news. $2.00 a year E v -u- v----gv vuvvcv Illlull ll Place slices of pineapple on lettuce leaves. Place a ball or small mould of cottage cheese in the centre and garnish with chopped nuts I or olives. This is delicious served _ with I [sour cream salad. dressing. '- I un xuuuiuzaa uuu DI LOVE. _ l Returning to the incident at the first of I this article, it_ is `perhaps impossible to: compare their-values, because they belong! to different categories, But we eannot help! having our own thoughts. T The lecture was? I great. But the cup of cold water, the cheer- ing word, the touch of a strong, guiding. hand in the dark of the night and death.! {we `are inclined to think, was greater st:ill.!1 . ayynlcumy u we wings are 0! supreme va1- '1 ,;ue.' The two mites of the poor widow, theli ,fwz~.h'ng of His feet by a penitent woman, It rfthe gift of :1 cup of cold water:-~these'arelg .'the acts which Jesus glor-ifios . Measuredlc lgby any material standurrls of value theyre ; are negligible quantities. Therefore He must `Q 9 _have looked upon them from in totally dif-a , ferentstandvpoint. It is that of Jspiritual-e ,`perspective. He measured vvnlues by tbeirgt . effect on thatvunseen and spiritual world of lgwhich He is the great exponent. it? I rm.:. .- ..-- .._--L ----_-. e `..w.u.a ywuuu_y muuu. lV10.`TD'UI us. are DUE ;We ere busy every laboring day with the; primary necessity of earningTa livelihood; ; ourselx es those dependent upon us.` `Even intentions is little itime left distinctively religious hu- gmanitarian service save Sabbaths. and` isomeiewould take them away. Whatever wef give for the help of others means "a priva-u tion "to-ourselves. And after we have donef tour best, it all seems so little. We wonderf | if it is worth while. . . b ; Yet there are things we can do as we pass} Ealong the way. We can give some comfort; to Snl'I`h\lIlvI\U We nan K-:n- r----`A ---~- 1 llama monetuxy returns. The second got ,.- littleof either. Not because. the big world H wants to be unjust. But simply because it ,; s so accusomed to measure values b a . material standard, to weigh them in ` the 1` dead iron balances of profit and loss" that` {it cannot give right. value to the spiritual. g-`It glorifies ha seen. It disparages the un- glseen. Yet the seen is only temporal; while: , l "he unseen is eternal. ' ` . Here is where the method of Jesus stands` BLACK-'l`AN-TONEY RED DARK BROWN AND WHITE `eaithiest place in town. Absolutely I uc |IH\`UL'll is eternal. stands in sharpest contrast to that of the man on; the street. He estimates values om the; very oppos'te point of view. To Him the} Aapparentxiy li >t_le things are of supreme val-: iuej `Tim hvn Initba nf Hm nnnw ...:.i..... 41... Pin6apple.and Cottage cheese Salad DI--- ..I:_-_ -1 ._~~- ' mum in us-auiiuiuiy u. wu-(u'lnKlng C0lln7!')'. It is very interesting to visit one of the `big tea houses in London like 'l`wining s.l The tea comes to London in special tea ships can-_ving so many chests of different varie- tier. Theae cargoes are consigned to dif- Vforriit auction houses. Catalogues are print- nrl giving the number of chests and descrip- tion of quality and these are distributed among the tea-houses, while the tea is dis- !`.lHll`g.d into the warehouses. The tea. mer- ` "second chants are allowed to draw samples of the he lots for sale: for _whv;ch they pay by return- ~ Iy because ing an equivalent amount of an eqnal_ly_l` mes '5 good varieiy. . Then on the tea exchange in 3 hem Mincing Lane at the appointed hour the 1 vs [bidding starts. It is usually very brisk ar.-J ' 1 ad loss that . . . the spirituah generally passes the reserve bid. Quantities 1 ages W of fifty or one hundred chests arelcnockcd 1 ,po,-31.; whnezdown to (`llfft'elltl.v ho;:ea.B r ` asing is raw stands` Tea taxtiiig is also interesting. Experts Eh 3 are employed for this, One can see in the: I03 3 0:room rows of little teapots all of standarl thoisize. An old kettle -is kept on a gas raiigel niprenie val- ` and water is boiled. Enough tea is poured: the,-in :1 scale to balance asix-penny piece and 7 381? W0!I_l1m. i the brew is made from this. Usually If is 1':-ll1eSe are ~ allowed to stand six minutes to allow it to; Measured creuni. The faster. like a wine taster. nr-v-l l they yer swallows the tea. Then the pot is daain-l Dre (`d lld lill lnilf rncltlnn n\FOVY|:nn1l -'l`-`-... ....I i a spot win uc ul 8150!. To spread frosting smoothly, dip a knife in hot_ water and the icing will spread on the cake without sticking to the knife. * Keep a small bottle of half water and half household ammonia to clean your spec- tacles. A drop or two and a clean cloth will `make them shine. To remove grease stains from wallpapqi. crush, magnesia carbonate and place over grease spots for twenty-f_our hours and not a spot will be in sight. Tn n!-om-I iv-m+:n. am...-.n.1.. 4:... - u-_::- uvuuy, w,muxeu a manic Koop" in which their 3`-year-old infant was sleeping, burned a holein the floor near `the "hoop". but never mused the child from slumber. The parents -were severely shocked and were sur- prised to find their child aliv " ALLANDALE ELMVALE Lightdihvgvsgxfuck the -home of and Mrs. J. R. Herring at Gretna. Florida, re- cently, vgrecked a kiddie koop" in which 3-year-old infant was slmnino I........a uuucl was uugruut uowers -are used. The quality of the water used in infus- ing teas plays a big part. Distilled water is unsa.tis_factor_v. N Often when` disputes arise as to quaiity qf teas between parties living in different parts of the world it is found the differentwater used alters the state. 9- VVl`Io Two Look Alike There are scores of grades of tens, no two of which look alike when ranged together in he merchant's sample box. Roughly, In- `dinn black teas are divided into Pekow, the leaves -and smaller tips, and Souchangs. which are coarser. Pekoes are further di- vided into unbroken," the fine teas which `pass through the sieve, and broken." which must be passed through a breaking machine before they will go through the sieve. Oolong teas come from Formosa chiefly. For the ecenting of,Caper and other teas fragrant owers -are used. Thu nunliwr AC 61. .....c.... ..__J 3 S F -,y in uvvauuwa 1-uc IP21. Lnen Ellie P-`ll IS (Ii Sill]-l 9% ed and the leaf re.-'idue examined. The col-i f- 3 or and composition of the brewed leaves-` Ell - enter into the computation of the quality at; Ir-,3 the tea in well as the taste. { If; In 1864 practically all the tea drunk ini `the United Kingdom was Chinese. Now.` 3- over three-qiiarters of it is Ceylon and India ! ,_ lor Java. with the. other quarter divided he-,.I ll ! tween China and Japan. including Formosa. i oThe decline in the China tea is accountrll r, I for by the change in the British public taste, : e the ineffir- :~.c_'.' of Chinese me`hods and} d {their lack. of extensive advertisement, ` ' I I F-l . - All Small Cultivators China may still, however, be the greatest; itea producer, as their. own vast population: d is a great tea consumer and Russia alsoi gets practically all` her tea from China. But " `,figures are not available from China as there; ;are no- large estates, most of the holdings` ";being small ones worked by peasants andi ithere is no central organization or Govermt e1 siment statistics. In India there are 692,000 tgacres under cultivation. in Ceylon 404,000, ' {in Java 210,000 and in Sumatra 22.000. The "Indian plantations extend over Bengal and |:_iAssa_.m. the United Provinces in Northern 'India and Madras and Travancore in the 5 south. Tea requires a warm sub-tropical isclimate with abundant moisture. The best teadistricts in India have a rainfall of over '!90 inches per annum. A temperature of ; 75 to 85 degrees Fahrenheit is the best. i Black and Green Tea I I ,~ ' There are four processes in the manufac-` | ture of tea, withering, rolling, fermentation` ;'and firing. The difference -between black ; and green tea is entirely the difference of manufacture. With green tea oxidation is not allowed to take place, but fermentation is the central fact of manufacture of black tea. .Color is due to the fermentation ro- ` ducts of tannin. therefore black tea `has ,more color _than green tea. A common Cey- llon tea contains about 5.46 per cent`. of tan- `nin, `while -in a. high-priced Ceylon teadhere iis about 7.56 per cent. It fermentation is iexcessive the pungency will suffer, if noti icarried far enough the color will be unsat- Iisfactory. This is the delicate part of tea 1' manufacture. [ 3'ngla.nd- has the name of being a beer- drinking country, but it is also a great con- sumor of tea. Four hundred and fifteen ~. million pounds of tea were drunk in 1922 3n tlie Unified K`ngdom out of a total" of four hundred and eighteen million imported. Theother three million were exported. That works out at about nine munds per yea: per "head of the popiilation. Cocoa comes next at four -pounds, while the consumption of coffee is only one pound per head. Eng- l I land is essentially a tea-drinking country. It in vn- lntnrnntinc fn vial! nnn at H... The softly warbled 85... V ..mnes through the plenum woods. and col- nnnrl unau \.u-um: nun-ugu uu: pwzazuu WOOIIS. and ored wings Are` glancing in the golden sun, along The forest openings, I .....t. 'l`l~..1u:l; Tat-ricken to, the heart with wintef cold. ` The drooping tree revives. From the earth's loosened mould The sapling draws its sustenance, and thriv- DA9 ` APRIL 3 When theawarm sun, that brings _ and harvest, has returned again "Pia sweet to visit the still wood, where` nnl-inc: ` BAY ~wu_1_ Qkou SELL. ME THAT\_ _n TRUNK 9 . I love the season` we'll. -" When fote`sr glades are teeming with_bright_ forms, ` ' Nor dark and malty-folded clouds foretell . Thecoming-in of storms. \ W` s;)'x;i'1|'g's" mm "W "N The first ower of the plain. MODEL OF gABYHOOD THE cup W\H_l_cH cnaans IN WOMEN'S REALM TI-IE BARRIE EXAMINER ~ LL --Longfellow ic unhzippiness or whether public curiosity over the title is not told, but a recent wo- man visitor to New York says: That play ' is running to capacity houses because meui adore -having something on the women and Just love to take them to see themselves inj a looking-glass! How different has been! the Ditrichstein play, `The Fgrvat. 11$ failed because it shows the woman in tho; right and the man in the wrong 'and.a man; isn't. going to work hard all day and go to; the thea"re to be amused and pay goodg hard-earned money to see himself and his` fe!l9w~m.en made fun of. Men are just as. gvnin. if not more so. than the women." ..,~...., wu.uw w solve me problem or domest- ..._.. cow: vvvll I UIF\l`I-I IFIIQ I I New York reports that capacity audiences [are attending the play Why Men Leave 'H0me` in which the charming young Tor~ ontmactress.-V. Audrey Hart, is appearing. In- deed it has become so popular that it is to be filnwd shottl `. . Whether. New York really wa.nts to so ve the problem of domest-| llnhanninasa m- n-hum... .....1..|:- -.._u..:A-, u_y ucapuumuu: [NBC To those who interest In the wt unuy. ' There are several very nice children ready for adoption, both boys and girls. aged from two years upwards. These are just as cap- able of bringing joy to lonely hearts and` homes as other children, and may -be taken by respnnsible people on trial. . 1 Tn tlinan nrlnri lvnn-.`. bah-.. -----`L _lwMur:s. MaoKay, _3 jars fruit, 2 jars pickles, 53 lbs. butter; Mrs, Brereton, pkg. cookies; ;_ Mrs Seagram, 2 dozen eggs; Grassland W.I.. l 8 jars fruit. 2 lbs butter; Mrs. G, Brown, Holly, 4 lhs. butter, 2 doz. eggs; Burton \vc. choir. hnx cuke`and sandwiches; St. Andrew s S.S., box sandwiches; Mrs. Cald- erwood, 10 jars fruit, 2 do: eggs, box books and toys; E, `Bryson. box records; U.F.W. 0., Guthrie, 2 bags apples; Mrs Campbell (Hawkestone), quilt; Collier_St. Methodist Church, box sandwiches and pie; Mrs. Lally, 3 pairs roller skates, toys; -Mrs, C.'Devlin. cake; Mrs. Hurlhurt. cake; Masonic ban-' nuet. box fancy biscuits. 3 jars pickles. 11 glasses jelly. biscuits; Miss Cameron. roast .beef; Mrs. Jory, 2 cakes; Mrs. Seagram. oranges; Mrs, Cameron (Allandalel. boy s shirt, cap, -tie; Mrs. N. Dyrnent, pail milk daily. I -...-- vv I`! Vol`: UTIELIBN ; ` Th; Boar:-{gratefully acknowledges the following donations received during the !month of March, and which were 3 great =heIp in providing cheer, and food for the children :- 5 Mrs. MacKa3_',_ jars jars .9 IL- L,`- MEN JUST WON'T STAND TBIIS It gently soaks loose themost ground-in dirt without weaken- ing a single thread. ` Even the worst soiled spate need but a- light rubbing with Rinse. DONATIONS T0 C.A. "A new kind of eoap. Made of pure materials combined in such a way that it has more cleansing `power than soap has ever had` before. ' An eptirely. new kind of soap uulc ycupw yu anal. e who have taken such practical work we say THANK YOU. Y I vnmrnn n `Dissolve in boiling water Pour into tub of lukewarm water Use enough lo get Iriglasling sud: ..--.. . as-_v LLLIILVIX 1\IU. W. J,"JUSTICE, Secretary. SHELTER ORDER FROM YOUR You can use sweet milk, sour bttermnlk or water With L} I Try fheso dish: in this ne pot: t-I meal vorridge. shamed rice. steam- ed oysters, corn. cauliower. veal. chicken ragout. mushrooms. scram- blvd emu. and a \ host of others. `,_. I farmer