*zm’flMM'wfwfl-h: .luuuimmmhnm' potential alr bases. % cup sugar i:m-h Add chocolate to milk in double beiler and heat. When chocolate is melted beat with rotary egg beater wntil blended. Combine sugar, cornâ€" starch and salt. Add a small amount served on individua! glass plates and taken out to the veranda with the afterâ€"dinner coffee. t CHOCOLATE PUDDING 3 squares unsweetened chocolate ped into the cream with candied cherries. Preserved ginger and walâ€" muts cut fine may be sprinkled over the whipped cream instead of the little chocolate tips shown in the wors of chirin or glass and .then irther decorated with a mound af â€"_When chocolate pudding has been turned out of l:nq moulds _ and to a meal on a hot day, is a special family. To ‘the bousewife especialâ€" ly, a dessert that can be made in the morning, put in the refrigâ€" erator and forgotten. until dinner lh-.h.mhu-lulh‘ family a coo! yet nourishing finish For Hot Days _ _ While have been enjoying all the M“M desserts during the A Change: in Cool Desserts 3 cups milk to Trecs for Beautification of Pacific Isles $ Household Science corn starch and the HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it toâ€" Home Hints, Reom 421, 73 West Adclaide Street, Toront. water and add to the tea with the jJuice of 2 lemons. . Now Ail up the n‘hr-lhodlm.fl while tea is still hot. Serve chipped ice or let stand in coldest place available till thoroughly chillâ€" ed. Drink while still quite fresh if We will $1,00 on publication for ‘ the h:’-hl“unï¬nt ing drink recipe received. made into syrup or at least disâ€" make any beverage in a hurry. â€" P yA i a m Tea for Refreshment There is no better drink than tea for hot days or cold. Mildly stimulâ€" lating, it helps. us to endure the ills of temperature and has a coolâ€" ing effect that makes it one of the most popular of drinks. leed tea tops the list of summer favourites. To make this tea put six heaping cook until thickened, stirring conâ€" stantly. Then cook 20 to 25 minâ€" utes longer, stirring . oceaslonally. Add vanilia. Chill and serve with of chocolate mixture stirring vig This Week‘s Winner it betvern Cataiins inakd ons as she practices for cross channel _ Audrey Norman finds that the main thing that counté is balance EDMONTONâ€"Young people deâ€" Sutherland, only woman member of -l.:.'h 'vl«loi-v-l--tlumh1 sa Mmmlp.l'hm‘ of rellef is not the picture of unâ€" -m-ho-uud.hrm-‘ employed most cager to work are getting work. ® \ Survey Indicates Work Available for Seckers Alred of Union City, XJ,, wâ€"mber of umflmuzwflnm eam ‘‘st John J. Bennett, Jr.. (left) presents Alfred G. Vanderbilt with "Good Gamble" won American Legion a A Lady with Poise Will Carry Old Glory in Olympic Parade Benedict A 12, getting a nnhth--iflâ€"m done in 39 3.4 to win eontest and free for 100 m'umath Cal., l".\'c. N: anniversary ealls strike on And 100 More Await maâ€";‘...."‘;..,...... country, their _ cars . alongside the farmers‘ property, break . down N-l-:'-dl-b.:.hutl-:: tramp over erops as h-.n-nihviut:‘n..u flowers, injure . trees bushes, hold pjenies and leave garbage beâ€" hind, set fire to the dried grass or htuulhï¬hrhuln‘llna lhchlnd.-uh-tnwmlnn thought as to who owns the proâ€" Goodâ€"Natured Farmer Farmers must be the bestâ€"natured people in the world, comments the 8t T se Om OO hlhhmubnp-tl-olb country, their _ cars . alongside the farmers‘ property, break . down his fences climbing into the field, tramp all over the crops as they As it is, about all I can say is that, given normal physical development and unimpaired mentality, there is no reason why anyone should not be able to look forward to the future with m-.; After all, life is for everyone of us largely what we make it, and we are all capable of developâ€" somthing about the nature of the acâ€" cldent and how it affeeted *e lnd, if it had said something about kis habits and genera h--.nnullhn‘ l'h-u.flhmb.n -‘llkhllnhnulhbdnl better advice. with some real not because of my correspondents me 80 details about their problem, that 1 have to do a good deal of guess work. All.dn-.'l-:hlhm. then, unfortunately, are not getâ€" ting the beat advice J can give. Readâ€" ers writing to me about their probâ€" ll-llnllllnndn-..h-‘ detail as possible, Everything is conâ€" fidential and no one sees the letters which come to me but myself. This week 1 have a letter from a mother who asks me if her son "will ever be able to look forward to the future with confidence," and all the information she gives me is his age, that be is in poor health and very nervous, that he met with an nccident when he was a child, and that he has a fair education. eauy by Row, Mirthepe (en) asa‘ Peg Mumphaty ®‘ss "Ie Centers C niooten 0)A ts ic aranatathhe sacmmmms n remnnmmn nsc s.. Ira Henning, 68, Louisville O., farmer, *PROBLEMS OF EVERY DAY LIFE By Dr. M. M. Lappin A Backward Son _ "Wool" made from a milk product wmay be the newest material for men‘s waits, if experiments now being made are despoiling. -‘.Lhfllflflio their _ cars naunu-“ u.:u.:\ -n-uh---.'-nunl such a dust that the farmer has to shut the doors of his home and sees “'l\-nh:hhn.u. and bears it. But some day the "worm" my turn. The farmer may assert himself. And who could blame him? sheald L. .442,"229°,__PAY _EWUEiment for her family, All this means id sn " 31â€" t Iâ€" wlewe West, Toroento, Ontaric, Enelese a;, Th# conference was opened by the ’-.:b- * :u‘lul-mo-n-u-wg/ â€"a“‘mmmumu: '.A‘L':,-:"m POMINE. _ _â€"____| social work throughout the world. . NOTE: The writer of this eslome To a0 ~nn o and Arograms Tor lar trained am -,:“ By intelligent reading of film, Terdexh) w pouy probiom eup diet [ shenire mad aranophene efiticiens mne to deal with problem you the benefit of his wide Whether this young man will be able to make good or not depends enâ€" tirely on himself, but J am sure that, with a little perhaps, and the mlï¬mhfl-ï¬â€œ :::hnlollnll-'l:l-l,. 1 hope correspondent write to me again ard give some fuller informaâ€" tion so that I might be of more real lean on others for support. ’-dn-tu' rdred things, but even at that, .d“ -‘::.fl .-1 a come back‘. On the other hand, hnh:dhhï¬bm‘ Tal is of, then I may wiagky be a ease of having failed llbwll.ll sense of responsibility and, like all ‘ Of course it is possible that some happening in the past has taken all lh:nondh:‘"-s It Pn n tarnriin he suffered, or a reverse at work or in business, perhaps a shock, or any 7 | prove successful, Ing to something greater than we governmental intimidation and hesâ€" tility. 'oâ€"tbh:ï¬--,. taxation. We must be freed from NM‘uMfl‘- through a vigorous enforcement ,'fl:_-mnnh-..-o-um Onte these things are done, the "-'lh'lélhhm:n-_-: system remedy ravages depression and restore fall acti 'I‘M'-:bn-t. ty ald‘s cat walked a mile and a half to has not yet appeared. Few new venâ€" tures have been started. Why? Beâ€" enuse the small business man, the working man who would like to beâ€" come his own bors â€" the average Americanâ€"has hesitated to start out for himself. He lacks confidence in the soundness of federal policy; he is afraid of what may come next. We must dispel his fear restore his confidence and place our reliance ence more in the initistive, intelli~ gence and courage of these makers "Hl'tdmnm-. ‘l'h:.: why 1 say, earnestness, the time has come to unshackle iniâ€" tistive and free the spirit of Ameriâ€" can enterprise. We must be freed from incessant 49. Mons: J. Masaryk, Interviewed, she sald: "Even in the smallest and most * laborâ€"saving of fats there is a full "*| day‘s creative work for any‘ woman." >| Duties of the woman flatâ€"dweller acâ€" "*\cording to Mile. Masaryk are: To *4 keep in good physical condition by an *\ hour‘s walking or physical culture; *\ to keep herself attractive; to make fresh flowers; to plan out the eveâ€" for expansion. The total of this deâ€" "“-.hh‘llmh.l‘nm prises, in our homes on our farmsâ€"amounts to billions of dolâ€" Jars. Once all this consumer demand is released, the problem will be not where to find work for the workers, but where to find workers for the One of the signs of the ending of past depressions was the launching of lt'i:‘-ln-mmhhuulu most of them were small. Altogether, -unl.fl:’dmb In the for M presâ€" ent depression this demand for work ‘Time Has Come To ‘Stop th e Fumbling ‘WH‘“T:‘hm come to stop this fumbling with reâ€" covery. American initiative is not a commedity to be delivered in pound packages through a governmental bureau. It is a vital force in the life d:-flun:l":n:"bnï¬l country recovery. We are far behind in expenditures Brisbols woke next morning | laborâ€"saving of fats there is a full |day‘s creative work for any‘ woman." |Duties of the woman flatâ€"dweller acâ€" eording to Mile. Masaryk are: To keep in good physical condition by an hour‘s walking or physical culture; to keep herself attractive; to make to choose the right type of entertainâ€" Alice Masaryk, daughter of the reâ€" cently retired president of Czecheâ€" Slovakia and sister of the present We aamictrins Mss drentt_ 16 ... B .. ......] with "nothing to do" a social menace? She was discussed as such by 1,000 experts from 40 countrics at the Inâ€" ternational Congress of social workâ€" ers, held here recently. m vd Social Service Congress Deleâ€" gates Give Hints to The * Inactive Turn Spotlight On The Idle Women ter of the present minister in London,