JULY s,jo 2s UVUF. When cleaning clothes with gasoline. if a. small household plunger is used it will help force outethe dirt and will make unnecessary putting the hands in the gasoline. This method will be found not only to leave your clothes cleaner but will save the wear and tear on your hands. - Saucpans should _beTkept clean out-! side and inside and special attention given` .to lids. .QinL' nn nnfain y-nin uhnnl kn ' SIVCII LU nun. Sink and outside drain should be flushed with at least a gallon of boiling water and soda every day. A _1_-|. -5 4.1; g__ LL- _-np.- W-` V A pinch of s'a:lt- JinW't'I'1e coffee-pot! brings out the rich flavor of the coffee gnd removes any bitter taste there may e. TX7In.vun -nnlpinu O-uu8& -.8.-so. J`n\U|A-\t\u\ Iv`-.;. Us When making fruit pies dampen the! edge`-of the pastry with milk in- stead of with water-it holds better and the juice is not so liable to [boil over. `lifhnn nlnnnlnno nl:-nil.`-nu uyibk n-nan]!-an v.- JV..- ...... u. The simplst way to take off dark stains on aluminum is to cook apple- sauce or tomato .in -the dish. The acid of the food will brighten the aluminum and it has absolutely no effect which is in any way harmful upon the food, nor does it in any way change the nu- tritive value of the food. RICE COOKED IN MILK `rips TO HOUSEWIVES To be pure, soap must be absolutely free from any substance that could possibly harm fabrics. p Sunlight Soap is made only of pure washv ing ingredients that quickly do their work, but scientically, instead of by the sheer force of strong, harsh ingredients, which break up fabric textures. ' father of a know- hich, like e of the Sunlight Soap will save you money because it will save the fabrics washed in its pure- cleansing suds. . Sunlight; by a natural `scientic renews the "bloom and safeguards the texture of all linens,.cottons and woollens. What is Soap Purity ? How Pure Soap Saves I Drink S as _.u.10&l1%l}t . Brothers V Toronto The Larqest -Se11inq,. Laundry Soap in the T world Whon 1 warm bath with Cuticura Soup and don of Cuticura Oin not willaffordlmmodiaterollefand pointtopormnnontaklnhoalth inmootouuwhenallehohih. vgn, sag; jvna; Ithzng Rashes Delicious and Refreshing 2'-`C eedol er can motor. Iyou. do ye es /em tmnou tlmes a widow, Kansas. chargo her latest hus- 1 cuisine; ntiful rcsi.- M4 when greatly n the oil. and the some oil. Clean to handle. Said bybull nlnmnuialm n--..__ g...` ITher='s 9.91! u Irv IIIIIIIIIVO DUI I! I vrugglsts, Grocers an General Stores T 2 T MAGIC BAKING POWDER aha am` the highest THURSDAY, JULY 8. 1926 M .5 am; e.w. emu-:-r1' co. Lro. 70RONTOo CAN o [in }2}k' N3 35553! FLIES breed in lth, `feed on lth and bring lth- into your home. A ` - ~ an-nu wavy... -- ---_-, , I` ate your hor-ne-. Flit spray clears, your home in _a few miputs bf disease-bearing ies and mosquxtoes. It :5 clean, safe and easy to use. . ' ` ' ' Kills All Iiojgs eholdlnsects A ---A|-A- ` Q1 ogists and chemiets..- It is l: Flit is the result of exhsusnve reseuuu u, ,e..,.... ., ....-- armless to mankind. F111: ha placed the old methods because it kills all the insects- does it quickly. Get` a` _lf`lit can and sprayer today-V . Flit spray also destroys `bed bugs,_roaches and ants. It `searches out the cracks and crevices wher7e they hide and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Spray _Flit.on your garments. I}`lit kills moths and their larvae which eat holes; Extensive tests showed that nit spray did not stun the most delicate 1abrics.- Flit of exhaustive research by expert entomol- um- -_.u -u.-....:-.. .1: in harmless hssre: Fly - Flop ! `I-`Ewan. JUNE muons. There- were less than half as many June brides in Barrie this year as there were in June, 1925, according to the records in the office of the Clerk-Treasurer. Last year fteen marriages . were registered in Mr. Sm-1th s office, and in the month `just ended there were only six. During the -first half of 192.6 there have been twenty-one, marriages, ten _ less than in the same period of 1925. Births in June numbered thirteen, one more than in the corresponding month a year ago, and there have been eleven deaths as against nine last June. In the period from Jan. 1-to June 30 there- have been .1103 birthsand 64`! deaths as compared with 88 births and 58 deaths registered. during the first six months of 1925. ' `qualied e use of ruuxrvt ru-wt run - u--. - w--- Grate enough-apple to make a cu-p- 1111. Add two cups soft white bread crumbs. one-halt cup sugar, a. beaten egg. one-fourth teaspoon salt, one-third teaspoon nutmeg. and three cups` milk. Turn "into" a buttered pudding dish and bake in a moderate oven until firm-about forty minutes. Serveyhotn or cold with top milk, whipped cream` nun nlnln hut-far canon,- Season with salt, pepper and pa-p- rika, adding tiny specks of garlic. Brown meat on both. sides in close pot (iron preferred.) Add two sliced onions, one can tomato paste and one- tourth cup water. Close lid tight and let meat simmer slowly three totour hours. Remove fat from gravy and thicken with flour. Housewives should` `ask the butcher to remove the fat and bones. which cause most people to neg- lect the juicy. well flavored cut. l'VlrII\' vuu---u .. Beat three eggs till very light. add a teaspoon onion Juice, one-half table- spoon minced parsley, it convenient,' and three cups of hot mashed potato. Beat tillrfluffy, transfer to a. medium- sized frying pan in which three table- spoons of vegetable fat have been meit- I ed. and cook. gently till brown` on the bottom. Fold over like an ordinary omelet and serve plain,` or with any kind of creamed,` cooked or salt meat or creamed fish. ','.l`is hard to know the path of right, But clearly marked is wrong; . And so I make thisprayer at night: Lord, help me to be strong. 13:... CL,, ._, . ~A PLEA FOR 81'RENG'_l"i-l- . I `am not certain of the right, : But. clearly. marked is wrong`: And so I inake this prayer at night: "LO!'d`. help me to be strong." .I'gro pe for truth and seek to.tin_d -~ orne. fact amid the doubt, But it with sin I stay behind, . `All hope mustiliclger out. To dare to be the thing I dream! ' How easy 'tis to say! Yet. I might tight for it, and seem ~ Still miles and miles away. And none can tell me shall it end In victory or despa V. . ' Shall I this way my spirit send? _ If so what waits me there? Yet it, when tempted, I am weak And into shame descend, It only pleasure here I seek, I know howthat will end. That `wayiwill lead me to despair,- To tolly s tragic goal; ` And so of that I.must beware If I would save my soul. uuvrvwiv xril E To make spinach loaf, corribine '3 cups chopped cooked spinach with I 3 tablespoonsfui butter, % cup fine dry bread crumbs, $4 cup milk. 1 teaspoon- .ful salt, 1/`teaspoon pepper and 2- well` meg and 1A, cup grated cheese. Bu`tter~ beaten eggs. Add-a few...gra.ins]of nut-3; a. medium-sized brea_d pan. dust' thickly withebread crumbs. put in- the] spinach mixture and bake until firm in a moderate oven- 350-875 degrees_F.. about thirty` five minutes. Unmould and serve plain or with cream sauce. Ul` UUIU wuu buy uuuy I or plain b_utter sauce.- :%%$%i%%$$*ww%*%$&*$&w*&%: 1N' woMANs REALM % %xi I I, \ BREAD AND APPLE l5UDDiNG door rs? \BONELE88 BEE?-msKa1' :osches 0115- ;_ __|. -.."."'LL..- Idol; and PQTATO `OMELET I1_.I. SPINACH LOAF oi, Tdronto. V -:E:;1gar. A. Guest. llUl'BUi"" . "I was called to a home one morn- ing, and at noon I had a patient come into the Outpost from . For two `days I_ was very busy looking after this person: The next day I had to go after another patient to admit him too. He had been to a dance and had drunk too much swamp whiskey and then eat- en leeks. -It caused a perforation and. peritonitis set in. The boy only lived until, nine at night in spite of every effort to save him. He was only nine- teen and was a son of a man who shot himself two months before. The other patient was pretty bad that day, too, and I was afraid he would die that same night. However, he left here af- ter staying six days and went home. |Then he only lived a week. THE nnvf manly T vlalfn anhnnlu and Built on the Slimmest GUTHRIE WOMEN'S INSTIXTUTE The regular monthly meeting of the Women's Institute will be held on July 8, at the home of Mrs. Ernest Love. A_paper will he given by Mrs. Ewen Caldwell The Duty of Being Pleas- ant"; A reading b'v Miss Jean Gilchrist; roll cal1,~a_Scotch or Irish joke. at the ign of 3 ankcase _ nce in Lul: UJHSLUIIUB LlI1I'81lCClIlg. Yet to>these far-off districts go our nurses to serve the sick and teach the art of nursing to the uninstructed. It is not alone work they face, but often over-work; discomfort, anxiety and loneliness. Pioneers of health and well- being. they share the hardships of the land pioneer.'They earn their living through this labour; but no mere re- compense of money could pay for the I heroism these women display. The fnllnwina nvfr-nnf fv-nrn 1: IAH-or an-Jruwux ulese wumen ulsplay. The following extract from a. letter written by the nurse in charge of one of Ontario's Outpost Hospitals, brings a. slight comprehension of the duties which fall to the lot.of the Outpost ' nurse:-- |'I' tvvnn-n A.-.n...1 4... A I.-..-- A... _. -_-.. ! day. Then on Saturday we had a dental clinic here. The children came from `two schools. .The `dentist. working `from nine to five, was able to treat ,thirty-six children. He didn't waste ; any time. He is the one who comes here every month from-----and has an office `in the hotel. He liked the Outpost much better. The local Red Cross paid him ten dollars and his expenses. They are so pleased with the result of the day that they want to have two or three more days this month. Then they want to get the trustees to give them ten dollars a year from each school, and try to do them all every year. Everyone is quite enthusiastic about it,. as very few of the children have ever been to a dentist before. Last Wednes- day I examined the children in three schools, and at night was called to a. ' case where. twins were born. I stayed there four days and just returned yes- i terday. Are you one of those thoroughly lazy persons who revel -in doing absolutely nothing. and find that an effort? Or are you the kind who refuses ever to be_utterly idle and turns every odd moment of relaxation to some`excel- leg: use? V nun Al I-Inn Intinn RA`-` cu ... Hsaomas or THE ouTPos`I's ` It is doubttulif a. handful of people in the Province of Ontario realize t e self-abnegation of the Red Cross nur _who undertakes the `work of an Out- post Hospital. 0utpos_t".-the very name. has a. lonely and isolated vibra- tion, suggesting the fringes of civiliza- tion where life is hard and the struggle for existence unremitting. o vhf fn fhnI:o'fnI-_nf f" iufnini-a an runs Luau ue uxuy uveu a weex. The next week I visited schools and was on one obstetrical case at---for a day. The next day I went to-'--to nurse an eclamptic case. I was afraid this` patient was going to die, too. but she did well after two days. I stayed there ` lfiour days, and arrived home on Thurs- QV IUUI. USES I If you are of the latter sort, you might ask the Ontario Red Cross to glet you have some wool from their Work Room -with instructions about making sleeveles sweaters. etc.,4and take it `away with you on your vaca- tion. The soldiers in hospital and their families on farms are always needing warm sweaters, and if you would help ,to fill the supply cupboards in the Work Room with instructions about idle moments through the summer months. you would be providing a. wel- lcome item for some soldier's Christ- mas `box. I` I. F day. I 'l` Add one or two tablespoonsful bf sugar _to beets or turnips when they are cooking. liners. Sm1>LEas'it looks,:severely as it is cut, . practical as it is in its dun colors and durable materials, the tailored suit is nev- ertheless one of the_ great aristocrats of dress. One always nds it in the ward- . robes ofthe smartest women and sees it in the highest places. This "Spring its\ ' jacket is short in the new nger length.\ The great tailors of Paris are making it of shepherd's checks, wool coverts, tweeds, cheviots and mannish suitingsin diamond. V chevron and herring-bone weaves- V 1-261, the rd lubri- e of oil. [smooth- eration. The Classic TTaiIleur Is Well-cast tailored suits are seen in the best streets, in the smartest shops alndh on the _decks dc luxe of -the Sufnmer Knitting-Som Are Not! A... son.` A`... J`. Liana..- sI........--...I.1-- 1.... and Briefest Lines ma muuuzj zxulluu You can save clothes. taking spots out of them without leaving a ring, as a rule. if a bath towel or some other absorbent material is placed under the spot; The liquid or cleansing agent should be applied with a circular mo- tion, rubbing from the outside of the spot toward the center. When the spot is removed, the absorbent material under the garment should be turned so that the surface underneath isdry. Then the spot sh Id` be rubbed until dry. A circular mo ion from the outside toward the center should always be used. ' ' ` Scrape and quarter a bunch of new carrots, cut the tops from a. bunch of young onions and trim off the roots, I and cut a small cabbage in sixths. Put the onions and carrots on to boil in_a quart and a half of salted -water and .after fifteen minutes cooking add the cabbage. Season with a.- tablespoon of bacon drippings or butter, and con- tinue boiling till the vegetables are tender--about thirty-five minutes in all Th-nln and any-vn `I Tun I-ha vnarntnl-sin Do not repeat the same form of pre- paration too obviously. If, for example, you "have white or; cream soup do not! LU atyau. .- I .serve white or boiled flsh., serve it grilled or fried; do not serve a steamed pudding after boiled meat: fritters or a `baked souffle or 3. fruit salad would be`. suitable. - I LUIlllUl."".UUUL Lllllity `LEVI! IIIIIIULUH 111 all. Drain and serve. Use the vegetable water tqward a. soup. 1 cup d;I;;,' `c_l1:);_>pe' walnuts, 1 cup sugar, % cup flour,, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 eggs, V; teaspoon salt. , `Illa all Ann Inn-oapihsntn nAA Anton. mages was giv- er. of VVesfield.. or speech, suf- crash. Insist on the top of the stove being rubbed with a. newspaper every time it is used. Any spot of grease left for next time will make its presence felt as soon as it is heated. ` pcI.1acra. . b ` _ Do notrepeat the same` avor in differenfcourses; if. for example, you serve `tomato soup do not have a. toma- to salad. `ha ....-.4 ...-......-. 41.... ...........'c......_ _n _._- SEAL. - gs Mix all dry ingredients, add dates and nuts. Bea_t eggs Iightly`a.nd stir in. -Bake in big tin in moderate oven. Cut in squares while hot, fold into balls and roll in granulated sugar. -. -._.- ...-...... I \ Meat mafbe twice cooked withouf destroying itsprotein value, which is] in the fibres. It may -also be cooked Very slowly. 1:-non vnivnfnhlnu nhnnl nan-.. ' I... very swwzy." - Green vegetables should never be twice-cooked, should be cooked` quick- ly and without soda. and should as often as possible be eaten uncooked] in" the forms of salad. Cooked peas. beans, potatoes` can be re-served as salads. ..\ V `l74-.n8A6u- t\v\'p: .-..u.......I..... _.-...;. L- _-....:_s seuuuu. _ ~.\ Variety and urprlse must be consid- ered in arranging menus--unexpected- ness and pleasure are excellent ap- petisers. `nn nnf rnnnaf fhn any-nan` okynn :3-. WH EN CLEANlN(SPOTS WHEN MAKING MENUS VEGETABLE` RE eof satis- ve landed tminster! CHIN ESE OI-`VIEWS 1 `because 1 ; is safe-the mly pure launary sozip made in Canada. The purity of this labournsaving, fabrioprotecting soap is backed by a $5,000 guarantee. e '71:` ;}}:' Ky`: ixousehold` / linens and does beautiful I!` Only Pure S 0 ap is Safe! % Only Sunlight is Pure! t s the height of economy to use Sunlight Soap, hecouso_ it is_ only laundry soap "For me ` the days of L experiments have passe _. _ I have `every condence in the urity and eicijency of Sun ight Soap. . g/`Ir: etience safyyx V -- vvw---- ..- -nu--n I Into -a double boiler measure three cupshmielk. Add one cup of washed rice, put over hot water and cook without stirring forty-five -minutes longer. The kernels will separate and the rice `will absorb the milk. Poets}