Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 29 Apr 1926, p. 7

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ling betwen coats OPEN TART I.l...I_A. ___.4____ 11,, -RICE CAKE I_._AL_.. 4-, ,, -ma Anaiuuz txgmuan _ THERE are a,.few women in Paris who pos- ` sess the power of making all other women hate` every stitch they own.-' One cf these women, chic, exquisite and hot- ribly disturbi_ng, lunched recently at the Ritz Wearing the new,collarless. coat. 1 " t was made of black broadcloth` and worn with a~-small blacl-:`hat and very perfect hlaclr. patent-leather strap pumps. The onlv relief was in the metallic braid "that ` edged the trimming bands and the nude . color of the stockings and suede gloves. Taffeta also being used5in Paris in l~ .'e aied and collarless coats. pmms or outtereu toast at either end. This for your main dish-the pieces of celery piled on the lettuce leaves mixed with French dressing to which has been added the chow-chow for a. salad, your pudding, and some coffee)` _j: zum won`: me Iamuy love it? | Now, take your ham and scrape it from the bone. cut into bits, the cold boiled rice put with it. Then buy one sweet red pepper and one small bunch of celery. Cut your` ce1ery--the White tender portions--in inch lengths and set aside. Chop the green leaves and tougher portions, and the pepper, add to the ham and rice. moisten. shape into croq_uets and fry. Pile on a. plat- ter with the heated lima beans.and points of buttered toast at vour main din'h__fhn mann- `av:-I10 lIll"|I\= A LUNUH When you take stock" in the morn- l ing and you find in your kitchen. egg ; yolks left over from yesterday's angel ; cake, some dry bread and pa.rtof a v package of cocoanut. a tablespoon of chow-chow. some cold boiled rice. 8. cup of cooked lima beans. some lettuce _ leaves and a ham `bone with bits of meat clinging to it. do you let the egg yolks dry up and eat the other things with much distaste fas is." or do you buy the right things to blend with them. to make an interesting meal? We will take the eggyolks first and begin at the end of the meal with the dessert. "Put your dry bread through your grinder, mix it with the cocoanut. `beat. your egg yolks. add three cups of milk and blend. sweeten the com- ploted mixture to taste. add a. grat- ing of nutmeg and bake slowly thirty minutes. If you have a morsel of jom nf nnn'bh\.-I "4. .:..I__ -5 1. - ...i, u. uuuuug ana cake slowly thirty jam of any kind, put dabs of it on each in- dividual service. Isn't this harmonious and won't the family love Now take vnnr hnrn mm m------- M- ` Board. svn unc 51 C.LUSC IIUIUDGP. Mrs. Edith C. Myers, Oshawa, who (headed the delegation, presented ,a lengthy address asking that no reduc- tion in the tariff be put into effect until the whole question of the auto- mobile industry in Canada had been investigated by the new Tariff Ad- visory Board. The industrial life of the province was being threatened. As the only woman member in the House. the petition requested that Miss Macphail `should use her influence to have the proposed tariff changes eliminated -from the budget until an investigation had been conducted by the Tariff baking hopping , it was a dis- The Latest Omissiqn of Good Taste is the Coat Collar ..........._y aa u is." Miss Macphail had great sympathy for the workers; but the workers`them- selves had not enjoyed the benefits of the protective tariff of thirty-five per cent. The people of Canada since 1904 had paid two hundred million dollars under this protective tariff in order that the automobile industry might be protected." She thought the indus- try was now quite able to stand the reduction. T e decrease in the tariff would mean he sale of a larger num- ber of cars, and a. resultant increase in work for the employees engaged in the industry. The reduction would af- fect 10.000,000 people, and the national unity must be based on what was good _or the greatest number. Nina Yraau. n an-__,..a A -- - o-.vum:. including the Canadian work- 'eI`S. through the reduction in the tariff on. automobiles. Miss Macphaii de- clared. replying to an interruption, that she would be glad to favor a reduction i in the tariff onmotor parts. if this were necessary so as `to assemble in Canada. I think you can leave 0t- ` tawa." she said. with the belief that the budget in its essentials will stay exactly as it is." - ' `Ills... 1|1..__.-(nu - - LEFT ovens" MAKE A LUNCH fhpn vnn I>nb1: go.-...1.u x... n'._ _, __.,, H. B awa. . Myers, fornier 1! speaker for a women" who \ n.-at nnun- ...---_:_'( `A- .` _ ` - -,- - _-I j-`_'n`,'A` _FRc')V1sf;:_.R BABRIEl.`.l-`Ev HEA"DEDb __ . -AWA LADIES TO OTTAWA form'ex-Aly of Barrie. at speaker for a denutatinn cuy 01: narne. ' a deputation want fn n+.. It you wish your apple paring to be made easier and do not want your hands, soiled. pour scalding water over the apples. Allow thefn to stand in the water a minute orvtwo; The skins can then be pared as thin as paper. . When baking a pie with an upper blue black and M y dear, `I thouht this was your wushday. Yes, but the luuudress has been through A A f0rhours- we use Riuso at our house. an-so Made by the. T . _. _-......... u-wun uulpc ill 59].. ._ Mad_e 3f re silk, for the "sheen "1 imootlmess `wo- men love-tcinforced with GI-urn 9}": C... 1...- -A----`AA --our. ulul. auilft IICVCT snow -the Green Stripe, or the second \stop run a few inches below, stops them. Double safety. IIJCIJ. AS an example of the 9- valueaof Monarch-Knit ~ Hosiery presents at every price -from 75 to $2.00, take .._.Monat-ch Green Stripe at $1. Made nllrnh :3": `no: 5'... uuvu |vvFl.`I:ll.Ul.'CCCI Wltn bre silk, ._ for - long service. `Every. newest color. And runs. that start never show .__fl'|n C-A-.. A.-3~- Gloriously white, sweet- smelling clothes are the re- sult-"--and you ll save time and temper. V Washaday now means simply soaking the clothes for a couple of hours in Rinsb suds, or overnight, then just ' ave a couple of ady to walk on after Saturday N o mo:e hard b.ar./soaps to" cutup orrub on the clothes. ,No more rubbing. ` Rinso has fairly revolution- ized wash-da'y. Rinso changes the hard work `of washing go djust rinsing. Headolco sum: t0getn8l` aurmg the baking. Pieces cutxrrom large fish should it tied in cheesecloth to prevent Benn from settlgng on it. crust moisten the edges of the and lower crust and than mm- crust. moisten me edges or the npp crust and then area the- edgea together. This will make that stick together during the baking. cutxfrom large fish should In. keks. A floor :1 more than you up some MELS are for in the home. ith Flo-glaze y be continu- ' phunp. & ,co.' . G. Shnnnhan Hanna & Co. Stanton Bros. A, w----- I-IURSDAY. Aphin 29. . rry OPS make it give over Engllsh-sp'e.k- attempt to collect Shakespeare Mem- Strattord-on-Avon. we. show birth rate provinces but Que- 25.8 in` October 1921. coated lino- Pr times the earance and Ely favorable .o.adwayA Bron. W. 0 J . McLean ck & Drinldo Louis Doyle ' Minutes T Scrymgeour. Dun; lhts within each vs. 61.1 .II.'I.j,ll. `G: i"tVres,sV TOR FIVE YIARC M"gM1;g1`r:J.-=n11 -.'I..`I....- ... _ The Big F umiture Hops; Phone szw. i3AR_1uE *t spare the kit- nclination wasn t conveniences al- Buy Adv.vert1sed' Things. 9. Q3 slvnm & co.# Cor. Colliei anl'\B/ayeld s`c.. If certain muscles of the body re- main tense for lack of resting support. no amount of sleep will renew/their energy.: For instance--_-pif the muscles` enclosing the vital "abdominal organs are allowed to sag and assume unnat- ural positions due to improper _mattress support, they are under a strain, and" cannot relax./r Sleep therefore, doesn't rest this part of the body as well or healthfully as it would if proper support ` relieved` the` strain and; allowed the V tense muscles to relax. _;. V-tuunsmv`. Ann. :9. tags.` _.-,., _...., nun: use IDBEIIIZO Of all cracks and crevico.-a-- and mark the low price-- only one dollar. Equip your dairy throughout with now style. -See them the stores. Token look at the . big car, note the absence of 1 cracks and .---v---- ` kitchen and bath- - FOR SALE BY A C E:1'_.? agate % fohjil I-% 8 % .l,el1|Q q|thh .. at en. '!s~. ~.. sq .\.. us nuz ~.. .,` vital "abdominal .sag assume to II HI {U IIIECU_9 are strain, `Sleep ; body it ' I . The Marshall Spring ~l\'/Iattress, built with many ,hundr'e,ds of highly resilient, independ- antly workirig'sp'rings, fits the natural contour of the body,.giVing even, gentle support to every 3 muscle. " This kind of body support ensures true muscular relaxation and `health-building sleep. It is this Marshall principal of new sleeping comfort that is-changing the sleeping habits of `generations. ` A a ~ 2` ` Sand for our free--booklet, "Perfect Sleep" YFNTILATED MATTRESS oo. LIMITED. 'roRoN'ro .`0NT': mo ll g more up your the hardware 175 1'uL:_u.|vu1g Lne payment. The. wages take still another form, `worse still than `remorse. It is that of being so hardened In sin that a man can no longer repent. This is the worst punishment of all. So long as the con- science stings, so long is there h_ope oft repentance and salvation. When con"- sclencegceases to stirr, hope dles. It is the curse whlohrfalls upon any human soul who persists in any sln.`After a` 4 -aw... E. vuuvv uucu. nuuunzu - UFO]!- _ The wages of sin take another, and perhaps more haunting, form.-It is the sting` of remorse, -the spectre of una- vailing regrets. Many atime the-old man allowed his mind to turn back to the days which once were. He thought! -Q: his home, of his wife, of his child- r n, of the comforts and the influence` he once possessed. He tried to put on a brave front, and said that There is no, use crying over spilt milk. But he knew that thexnilk had not been ac- . cidentally spilled. It was he, the stupid, senseless beast of the field, who would heed no warnings, listen to no plead- ings. who had wilfully kicked it over and spilled all his riches and destroyed all his happiness. The memory of it was forever eating into his soul.gHe had earned these wages, and now was i receiving" the payment. 4 -The. warren take nfill nnnfhnr fnnlm . ....su. unlv wagon us. nut 15 ueacn. This is.a truth written on the life- story of every man who has sold him- self to be the servant of sin. It is writ- ten on' the record of the inmates of our penal and reformatory institutions. It is written on the face of many a man who may still try to hold a high head "among his fellows, but has nevertheless lost their respect. Whatsoever as man soweth, that shall he also reap." There is~-nothing necessarily miraculous a- bout` it; Sin brings its consequences and appropriate fruit as naturally as goodclean wheat or pestiferous wild oats produce their natural crop. The wntrna nf uin I-n-Ira .-n.n+|..... ......s ' H.l'Il'|l8SS." - No, not quite harmless. He had not been harmless to his wife. He had not been harmless to his children. He had not been harmless to what was once a. happy home. He ad not been harm- less to many. ano her who had learned, to walk with him the way of the.stag- .gerer. At last homeless, -almost friend- less and often foodless, he had learned thattthe wages of sin is death. I VI`!-an I. I5 5-... ..._nu.-_. `__; . ,, un- man In setter days. many years before. He had 8. wie.A She had died a good while ago, but his body was not laid to rest beside hers. He had children, now grown to manhood and woman- hood. but not one of them was at his funeral: ,He had money, but now was dependent on charity. He had houses} ,nnd lands, but now had not even` enough of the earth's surface to pro-V evide him with a grave. Tho` in-knin Jh`1\'In-I 1.. -a._I.a` 1.. ," - town`: gnuu vvnuu II. 5l.'a.vv::. The whole story is`told` in one word -booze. People said, Podr old John! He was his` own worst enemy. Otherwise quite harmless." ` Mn nnf nnltn lnn.......I....... TY- L, . ,, A Lurgouen. ' The minister had known that "old. man in better days. wife. She bad man 1: annd e for interior room in your Enamel and it in an hour or nce of waiting From time to time -a man of vast seventy years or age used to ome to a minister of the gospel in` iinnipeg to get a little help. He was crippled by- various infirmities and shabbily. in- sufficiently clad. Then one day word came -to the minister that the old man was dead, and he was asked to con- duct the funeral. It was a dreary tun- eral on'a dreary, snowy day. Any fun- eral, no matter what its sad pomp and circumstance, is dreary enough. This one was specially so. There were no mourners. ust kindly neighbors show- ing the fitting respect.to-death. There were "no"flowers save the fast-falling, flakes of snow. There were no seemiy trappings of woe. save such as the undertaker supplied out of considera- .tion, without expectation of pay. There was no` well-kept plot, with lasting granite memorial to others of the fam- -ily who had passed away. I-Ilsa frail old body was laid in a pauper's grave, temporarily marked, but soon to bet forgotten. Thn rniniufnn hop! l.......... LI._4 `.I: .5 may nuv. .ur. 'rn_uuow Fraser-A is -1014 >10!010I0I0I<>I `av1oX0X<>I< `1_'|-us. WAGES or am` I time `seventy Venn: nr mam n....| 4... ......... `- By Rev. Dr. A Thfurlow Fraser "1&&&& ma. .'v..v..v..v-.-`J reacnes a. state that he prides himself in his sin, and calls evil good and good e,vI1, his day! of grace has just about reached its .close, and in the long night of whatever lies beyond. he will r-nn- ruuuneu us close, and 1n the long beyond, he will con- tinue to do the work and reap the wages of sin, even death. time the moral sense with regard to that sin dies, and the. man is no longer able to distinguish between good and evil. When that happehs, when a, man reaches a. state that he prides sin. and calls evil znn nna-I .m...a Ur IIIIIQI 91.19! For a new soup which holds the very essence of spring take two medium- `slzed carrots. a. medium-sized white two tablespoonsful of butter, white pepper, two medium-sized potatoes, a lcupful of small green peas, a pint of `white stock, either veal or chicken. and salt. Cut the carrots and potatoes `into very thin strips. Slice the onion [and fry in butter until yellow. Cook carrots -. and potatoes and onions in boiling water. Cook peas in another ' vessel. uncovered. `Combine `the vege- tables _and add hot sauce and white ` stock. Salt and pepper to taste. Garn- ish~with spoonfuls of whipped cream decorated with . chopped parsley. onion, a~cup of medium white sauce. ` Hasit, the V. local pm-up or nreproor glass dish with it.tand bake with dry rice or something of the k1n'd to keep the bottom crust in place. Open a tin of apricots, draw off the syrup, and reduce it to half its bulk bybolling. Cut the apricot hal- ves in two, and spread on the crust, pour over the syrup, and put the whole in the oven untfl hot. Serve with cream or custard. Any tinned fruit may be used in the same way. wv I-I1 Il'|l'IlD I "Make a, H ht pa.stry,- line a shallow pie-tin or ireproot glass dish with it.'and bk With drv ring (I nnrnnfhlna I|Iv- \Ir\l\I- V One cup of butter, two cups of sugar, two and one-quarter cups of rice flour, six eggs. juice and rind of a lemon. Beat the butter to a. cream. then grad- ually beat In the. eugar_and add the lemon. Beat the yolks and whites se- ` parately and add them to the beaten sugar and butter. Add also the rice flour. Pour into a. shallow} pan to the depth of about two inches. Bake from - thirty-five to forty-flve minutes in a i moderate oven. , / ueen peeleu ana cnmea. mp eacn suce in heavy mayonnaise, then in finely chopped salted peanuts and lay each slice between lightly buttered whole wheat bread rounds. Smear the tops with mayonnaise and dusbwlth a. little `paprika. `These `are hearty and very M i . good. - Buy Advertised Thin gs. --_ ...-.-.- w-u--v--wu--v Slice firm tomatoes after they have been peeled and chilled. Dip each slice heavy mavonnaise. than in finelv Iuuuvbrilll-I lI'\I'IVUI'| lb\Jl'l` Bring one quart well Asweetened stewed or baked rhubarb to boiling point, thicken with three-fourths cup quick cooking tapioca. add a. little ground cinnamon, chill and serve with soft custard. syn: rt VllrlII\I& It you have no maple syrup on hand for the morning pancakes. don't de- spair, use preserves, honey or even powdered` sugar and the family will relish them Just the same. `Speed on. you iron horse of might! . You cannot reach the goal too soon. Speed on, through darkness of the . night. . T ' - . And pause not till the earth is run. Until among the faces strange A dear familiar one I see. And. 9 fhn innrnAvin'a- nnfnlv n'nr \ n We whirl aleng ahd whirl along. And leave the streams and Vales behind. ' ' `Tm daylight dies beyond the hills And night comes Iswiftly on H the ' . _ , ' . I . Then out Lfrom manyza farm and tqwh The lllome lights twinkle. flash an 7 g ow, - They smile a. benediction sweet And gleam upon me as I go. . .. . edema `HOME ~ Between the hills`. between the hills. Acrcgss the wide fields Just turning .. rown. `With here and there avpurling streain - Andghere and there a quiet. town. . We rush alongwband rush along And never pause to wait and sleep. VWit_h one strong hand to guide us on| And one calm mm in wxrtnh tn keen. .:%%%*%%%%i&%i%***$$$%&%% 3; IN woMAN s REALM E &%$*&*%%i*%$%$%%%****;*** \ rsnnun Aunna ` 1u_-nan..- _ A 088.!` I&lTllll8.l` ORB 1 888. had all, the journeying safely o'er. .My own home light shall _shlne_ for I219. !V.l.L_[l une strong nana I0 gume US on And one calmeye `a..wa.'tch to keep. * . . ' \I RI-IUBARB A TAPIOCA FLUFF )'..a..... _.._ ____ ._L ._ -4L__ SOUTHERN SANDWICHES Tspmnc. soup FOR A CHANGE |.-_.- ._.- _____u UTE hat your

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