Finesra! Lime Punch 1 cap currant jfelly, 1 cup beiling water, 1 cup pincapple julce, 4 cap Vezciable Salsd 3 ana Noi manes ‘om celery, 2 cans small green peas. 1 cup chopped green and red peppers. Mix salt, mayonnaise and vinegar to taste. ‘ Cole Sinw Take finely shredded cabbage, soak 1 bour in cold water and drain. Mix shredded cabage with salad dressing. Berve lettuce leaves, finely chopped green pepper and onlons may be addâ€" Salad Days After the heavy winter dict, salads ave the order of the day. Mere are n few tested recipes: Dressingâ€"9 tablespoons vinegar, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspeon musâ€" tard, yoiks of 2 eggs, % cup cream or rich milk, 1 tablespoon butter, Mix and boil. Add to the other when cold. 1 cup mixed nutmeats, 1 cup dates eut fine, 3% cups tart apples cut fine, 2 teaspoons lemon juice, 1% tableâ€" speons sugar, %» teaspoon salt. Mix well nutmeats, dates, apples, lemon juice, sugar and sait with mayonâ€" maite dressing. Chill in ice box. Serve on lettuce then gurnish with balance of dressing and nutmeats. i K‘Hsye:-&ld can kidney ‘4) chopped «elery, 1. cap c:â€d“c'm-hn pickles, % cup chopped oenlons. s «ap chopped nuts. 1 package lemon jelly powder, 1% «ups water (boiling), 1 dessert speon vinegar, 1 small can vegetable soup. Berve with mayonnaise or oll dressing en lettuce leaf. 2 green peppers, 1 head romaine, pulp 1 large grapefruit, 3 tematoes. Cook peppers in boiling water, cool and shred. Shred the rommine. Reâ€" move pup from grapefrult. Peel toâ€" matoes and cut in quarters lengthâ€" wise. Arrange in a salad bow! and peur over French dressing. THIS WEEK‘S WINNERS Nut, Apple and Date Salad In the above pleture is the party of English public schoolboys who arrived in Montreal. Y.ey will tour Canadoe from coast to comst. Capt. W. H. Steverson, history master at Marrow, is in charge of the party, Left to right are: R. Straker, G. M. 8.Toller, Capt. Stevenson, R. D. Carver, J. H. Kuscoe mm H. J. Budd. Behind are Â¥F. E. W; Tetley, M. H. Porsse, D. C. Keen, G. P. Yarrow, N. M, Gardiner and E. R. Yates Jellied Vegetable Salad $ Household Science Mrs. Thomas "Keen On It" â€"byâ€"Sem, Sussex, seen above, the house homas ty Alfred Bates, who was a wit» " inquiry was built by Haymond Marsey, ictor. It stands in six seres of beautiful There are ten bedrooms and three recepâ€" s its own entrance lodge. The house is in rom where the king, when be was Prince British School Eoys Touring Canada ‘ Mow To Enter Contest ‘ Plainly write or print out the neâ€" cessary ingredients and method of your favorite salad and sammer drink and send together with name and address to Home Hints, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide St.. Toronto. We are offering one doliar for «»ch recipe printed giving the most interesting variation of a salad dish yeat. _ Take the cocca, sugar and water and cook for 5 minates. Add the beaten yolks of exgs, fold the benten whites in and add salt. Keep in a ceol place. 1 teaspoon of this in 1 eun of cold milk is Ideal for summer. â€"Miss Evelyn Athinson, Mer‘in, Ont., 1 cup cocea, 1 eup granulated 1u gar, 1 cup water, 2 eggs, salt. lnuh-d:oâ€"-b.l'ln.lnu-t beiling water, 1 cup pineapple, 1 tablkspoon of vinegar, % teaspeon of sait, 1 cup of pineapple (diced), 1 cap grated carrots, % cup nut meats, 1 cup of dicsed celery. zmm.lbn.lnpm Dissoive currant= jelly in boiling water, chill and add fruit juices. When ready to serve, add ginger ale and pour into glasses over crushed ice This makes 10 servings. Combine boiling water, pineapple juie«, vinegar and salt, bring to boilâ€" ing point and pour over lemon jello, when jello is quite firm, mix in other ingredients and let setâ€"Katherine I Take 6 new potatoes, fairly large, eeok these until tender. Cool and cut into cubes or slices. Add to this salt and pepper to taste. Siice into amall pleces 5 red radishes and mix throughout the potatoes. Mix 1 cup of salad dressing thoroughly with the ingredients. Place in a salad bow! that Is lined with «risp lettuce leaves. Decerste with slices of boiled ez WEFKLY CASH PRIZES 402, â€"r Cocoa Drink ling drink for this time of OTTAWA â€"â€" The oidest existing manuscript on Canadian Botany will be published by the University of Montreal in the near future, Brother Marieâ€"Victorin of the University told the Royal Society recently when he gave a brief history of the document. U. of M. Will Publish Oldest Paper on Canadian Botany Janet Soostsmith, beautiful 16â€" nw-ou.“l'bnhd. Ore., l.: Portland‘s 'n‘lun:l.llonl'b tival, |“rh- on _ her nw'-"‘m -Hhm-hn. } Keeping the Darlingtonia, n meatâ€"cating #’ satisfied, Miss Mickey nunku feeds it a string of mt San Diegn Fuir, where it is on exhibit. The mmm is 18 inches high and has a folding hood, making it look like a cobra. it exudes honeyâ€"like substance attracting insects. Once inside, tiny spikes in EP t m Li mss d ... & ... d EPTCEY B hollow tube hold insects while plant digests them, Mest satisfies it also, Crowning Her Beauty And It‘s No Boloney the combined work authors â€"of . about Michael Sarrazin, of Queber, and his Vaillant of Paris, great t To Jardin des tes. ed ra ‘he sent to Ne information. Feund more than 17 years ago among the papers of the library of Finally it has 1 Captain James Maizlip‘s speedy plane, its wings removed, being hoisted aboard the Leppelin Hinden burg st Lak«hurst for shipment to Europe. Maizlip, his wife and his son were passengers. of two betanist 1707 to 1744, King‘s physician friend Sebastion successor of the urnefort . at m‘ Serrazin collectâ€" and notes which who in torn sent Polish Liner Sets Record on Maiden Trip }'.-uhmmmumm-l ship in the manuscript itself. The numbers of specimens recorded in the part sent from Canada to France correspond with those of the same specimens in Vaillant‘s notes which credited the specimens to Sarrazin. "I still hope to see India free from the domination of the fereigner."~â€" Mahatma Gandbi. in France, sometimes as if written in Canada. It is remarkable how the problem of one individual will bring to light the problem of another. An extract from a letter which 1 have just reâ€" celved iMustrates this. "I have just finished reading your article on Selfâ€" Expression", writes this correspon» dent, "and 1 think you can heip me, 1 am a member of a debating society and take part in the discussions quite often, but every time 1 speak 1 get an attack of nerves and someâ€" times 1 even feel sick. 1 have tried to overcome this, but it seemse imposâ€" alble. Yet 1 like public speaking Of course my nerves have never been good, for 1 vsed to be troubled the The two sets of notes had evidently been compiled by one of the carly Jesait priests teaching botany in a college in Quebec, for his own inforâ€" mation. He did not bother to rephrase the notes as he copied them and sometimes they read as if written same way over examinations when 1 was in college. Do you think 1 should give up trying to speak in public or is there any way to overcome this condition 1* 1 would not give up trying to speak in public, 1 would continue to take my place in the debating society and make a determined effort to overcome this nervous condition. It can be done! My correspondent is suffering from what is commonly known as "Stage Fright", and this may be due to any one or more of a number of different things, He may be too anxious to make a good impression and win the commendation of others, That very anxiety would tend to make him overâ€" tense and produce exactly the condiâ€" tion which be deseribes. If he would concentrate simply on making a worthy contribution to the discussion and never mind the kind of impres wion be makes, I am sure that would help to eliminate that nervy fceling which comes over him. On the other hand, he says he was troubled the same way over examinaâ€" tions when be was in college, and Brother Marieâ€"Victorin eventuaily Plane Flies Oceanâ€"as Cargo PROBLEMS OF EVERY DAY LIFE Stage Fright ‘ OTTAWA, â€"â€" The national revenue department recently announced that Canada‘s April exports showed an inâ€" crease in value of more than $10,000â€" 000 over those of April, 1935. Exports of Canadian produce in April were valued at $57,422.847 comâ€" pared with $47.313.562 in the same month last year, while total imports for consumption were worth §42,320â€" 632 compared with $36.636,702 in the month of April, .1933 The excess vaiue of exporis over that of imports was $15.102,M15. $15,102,815 Excess Over Imâ€" ports, States Revenue that almost indicates the presence of another kind of fear, He is afraid of being put to the ‘test. Me feels he ought to make a contribution to the discussion, but he fears lest he shall fall to rise to the occasionâ€" Well, of course, whatever les beâ€" hind his condition, it is undoubtediy due to an inferiority feeling which he ought to get rid of once and for of EVERYDAY LIVING should be all. Men who are equal to the deâ€" mands whch life makes vpon them are not usually afflicted as this young man is. They have confidence in themselves and in their ability to rise to the demands of the occasion. My advice would be to try and deâ€" velop a little more confidence in yourâ€" self. Read up on the*subjects to be debated. Store your mind with facts. Prepare yourself beforehand so that you will know you will be able to speak with confidence when the time comes. If you do that, then you will be able to tell yourself it is foolish to get all worked up before the time, One word more, Don‘t think about the discussion unti! it begins. When it begins, !sten carefully to what others have to say. Compate what they say with what you have gatherâ€" «d and frame your contribation acâ€" cordingly. And, above all, forget yourâ€" self and thirk only of what you are saying. | NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained peychologist and an au» thor of several works. He is willing to deal with your problem and give you the benefit of his wide experi« reom 421, 73 Adclaide Street West, Torento AOntarie .Enclose a 3 cent stamped, addressed envelope for reâ€" Exports In April Up Ten Dept. Report hauss o‘ amovation cud 1.200 mew bere from various parts of the prov Ince attended. Dr, Fred Engichardt, college of «d ueation, University of Minnesota, was the guest speaker at the meeting. "In meeting the modern trend in educa» tion," he said, "there was tendency in the United States to become too radical in changing the curriculum. The danger in this lay in the inctiua atlons to throw everything old over> board without finding a solution first for nresent day problems" be seld In its last report the laboratory does not specifically include clog dancing in its list of noises, but it does discuss what are euphomistically called "sounds which are caused by direct impact to the structure" and which, we wholeâ€"heartedly agree, are transmitted much more readily than others that must go through air. . Concentrating on these, the laborâ€" atory shows what can be done about suppressing them instead of their originators. The solution is found in a floating flcor which rests on the structural fleor. a When the tenants on the floor above dance and make the chandeliers rattle, what can be done about it beâ€" y-lu-‘lu-'m-'llrl-' or may not be polite or effective? Build so that sound will not be readily transmitted is the answer given by the National Physica! Laboratery (London). _ This is not a bright new idea of the British researchers, as they conâ€" fess themselves. Their contribution The modern trend in edccation, the speakers pointed out. was to suit the :mn*-dlwucueflt rather than to the child into the groove of a righ! school program. This required drastlc changes in the old methods, such as the discarding of many subjects now considered roâ€" periluous. is found in a certain small rubber pads on which the floating floor restâ€"not just any pads placed any» where, but pads of experimentally deâ€" termined size in the proper locations. All this sounds expensive. But the laboratory thinks the people on the floor above can be muffled at a cost that can be met even in lowâ€"rental Noise From Above WINNIPEG, â€"â€" ‘The oulstanding problem in education today, how to Hit the child for present day life, proâ€" vided the predominant tople of . dis« eussion at the anngal convention . of the Manitoba School Teacheis‘ Assoâ€" clation in Winnipeg. who had passed through the first hideous pangs of doing without their narcoties looked and talked like normal people. Only a recent arrival, tossing on his cot in an agony of deâ€" sire lived up to my picture of what a dope fiend should look and behave like, No one, after 4 glance at bim, would ever feol with drugs. Fitting Children For Life Is Real Problem Floating Floors as a Solution To an Apartment Problem fragile blonde who had put half a dozen bullets into the body of her husband, sie looked tired and not well. The matron said it was the nightâ€"club life, she had led. A few weeks of jail would pat her on her feet agnin. _ In one cell block most of the inâ€" mates were classed by the guard as "movens", They leoked the part no more and no less than does any aver> 1 talked, too, to a ladâ€"only 19â€" who was just beginning a sentence dlllchm'n&'tlh a particularly bratal slaying. had confessed to carrying the gun. He was a mildâ€"mannered boy, with a gentle volce and a winning smile. _ Later, I had a few words with a 1 talked, for example, to a man who within the hour had been senâ€" tenced to the electric chair for murâ€" der and the debauchery of a little girl. He was nervous, his lips twitehed and tears came to bis eyes as he spoke softly, in a foreign acâ€" cent, of what, with magnificent unâ€" derstatement,.he called his "trouble". Otherwise, there was no brand of Cain upon him. This is a de luxe jail, administered by an able and humane man, But no jail can be anything but a terriblo One who clings to the antique noâ€" tion that there is such a thing as a 'nl-lulup"ullvhhl:l-. The faces he will see there will be like the faces on any crowded streetâ€"inâ€" deed, like the faces he will see in any drawing room or in any college camâ€" _ A visit to a jail is disconcerting. It shukes one‘s faith in one‘s ability to judge by appearances. An Afternoon In The meeting was the 3ist of the A Chicago Jail the