ment of the dairy cow state of perfection ig ment for many yeary teiligent endeavor. It »d the cow, which or« quired to produce only to support her young, ylelding enough milk amall community of resent day highâ€"produc artificial animal pro» yond all natural bounds a gro y of mi pub Lugustino Sandino, guan rebel leader:; he day‘s work, isn‘s nean to slight him. prals who should be odern Cow Ise they are supplied of the animal body, ‘onsequently be select d with a view to proe eral state of nutrition the continuous drain ody is subjected. Inâ€" e shown that sube known . composition, es, ave essential to and growth, and that have a definite relaâ€" milation of nutritiony : further been demon= imals fed upoo im d rations with insufftâ€" ties and Flowers in Canada Ifâ€"Respecting a Timesâ€"Journal calls act that no Chinaman 1 to the local reliet ity for financial aid depression. Chinese ies in that city today ds than they reasonâ€" ~rder to assist their n. As our contem= Chinese are a very : one of them is out ipatriots combine to 0 pass him on to some ay find work. Cases ere a Chinaman has I by his own people id feed which suficed he more natural state quite inadequate. Ex« own that, in order to , the materials deriv» isues of the body to &, milk and butterfat, irly replaced in the eering ass lome Is to New Site any where eiSse OX« y of Greensboro, tle organizations, ters of the Amert« Daughters of 1812 t the Republic of »~1 thomselves to ies to be installed Gems fr highly credit» ithin Canada‘s ependent, well y a marvelous n ever get into ey congregate ngage in someé And, after all, us crime on & ges in horse« is speculative oronto Mail & t develop de erinary Direc» aver to Haliâ€" 1 shrine to 13 afpreciqe ling ground between {2= we‘fare."â€"= ie to which de and in neymoon 1% ark at the property of airchased it to save it ms for the were order= ecent meet» lon and Or» mmittee of al Council; lnm, "Prog» ae He is do= e United sociation, ‘. apples, ho follow» ation witl ‘Adumis", "Bulllof» R Bernard Zealand, Porter‘®# e applit« ie tullp ed with . Speci« Leggat"® people n incik to 10 Cabbage has been the most maâ€" igned and poorly cooked of any of our wintor vegetables. The ever popular rorned beef and cabbage is hardly ft lo eat as many people serve it. % cup rice, 1% cups evaporated milk, 2% cups water, 2 tablespoons butter, 114 cups brown sugar, 2 eggs, separated, 14 teaspoon salt, 4 teaâ€" spoon vanilla. Wash rice thoroughly. Blend evaporated milk with water . Add three cups of milk and water mixâ€" ture to rice and cook in double boiler antil rice is tender (about 40 minutes). Melt butter in heavy saucepan. Add one cup brown sugar and stir until it boils but do not let it burn. Add reâ€" maining cup of milk and water, stirâ€" ring â€"until sugar is dissolved. Pour glowly over wellâ€"beaten egg yolks. Add salt. Combine with hot rice in double boiler. Cook about five minâ€" utes. _ Remove from fire and add vanilla. Pour into a buttered baking flish. Cover with meringue made by beating egg whites until stiff and addâ€" Ing remaining 44 cup brown sugar gradually. Bake 15 minutes in a slow »ven (300 degrees F.) or until merâ€" Ingue is golden Lrown. Serves eight. Laplanders are more trouble to make but are very delicate and crisp. Two cups of milk and 2 teaspoons melted butter are used and the whites and yolks of the eggs are beaten sepâ€" arately. The whites are folded in last. Mix and sift flour and salt. Add milk gradually, beating to make smooth. Beat eggs until light and add to first mixture, Beat with the dover beater for two or three minutes. Heat muffin pans until hissing hot and grease thoroughly. Fill each pan halt full with popover batter and place at once in the hot oven. Bake for 20 minutes at this temperature, then lowâ€" er the heat to 350 degrees F. and conâ€" tinue baking for 20 minutes longer. Turn off heat and let stand in the oven for five minutes. Serve at once. Preâ€" heat the oven to 450 degrees F. One average portion of boiled cabâ€" The following rule will make twelve popovers of twoâ€"inch iron gen pan size. Two eggs, 1 cup bread iour,. lfls;;n_t- cup milk, 1â€"3 teaspoon salt, 14 teaâ€" spoon melted butter. You will find popovers an unusually versatile breadstuff. They can be used as a case for creamed chicken or fAish in place of the usual timbale shell or patty case. Creamed dried beet served in popovers is a bit more fesâ€" tive than plain dried beet. Used for a dessert with a filling or with a sauce poured over them they reduce the amount of sugar in the menu to an Appreciable degree. Popovers piping hot from the oven served with fresh maple syrup make a deliciously lea-l sonal early spring dessert. When the physical change that takes place during the baking of popâ€" overs is understood the mystery of their "popping" becomes clear, Milk contains a large percentage of water and the sudden application of intense heat to the popover batter causes the water rapidly to change to steam. Steam is, of course, many times the volume of water and stretches the gluten wals of the flour to their utâ€" most. This with the help of the egg forms the hollow skell of the popover, This explains the necessity of pre bheating both the pans and the oven. Iron or cast aluminum gem pans and glass or earthenware custard cups aAro suitable for popover bhaking. The lighter weight gem pans can be used, but the popovers do not always "pop" as they should. goul 100 ooemy Iomeuk T ber menus. Yet the secret of delicate popovers lies in the simple and easily controlled factorâ€"temperature. & The materialsâ€"milk, flour, eggs and saltâ€"required to make popovers are always at hand. If an emergency arises, it‘s an easy matter to stir up a dozon of these fascinating shells and they are sure to be liked. ropovers are a hapoy change from the muftins and rolls usually served at luncheons and breakfasts. Strangely enough, however, they bespeak an unâ€" known realm to many a housewife and she hesitates to include them in reiptnifinemedinacnirrerc‘s Butterscotch Rice Pudding The Lowly Cabbage Popovers are "Popping" Explained wUTT AND }EFF â€" By BUD FISHER Popovers °s to incinde them in the secret of delicate the simple and easily â€"temperature. K Sauerkraut Savuerkraut is simply fermented cabâ€" bage. All the vitamins and minerals of cabbage are preserved in the form Prepare a thin white sauce of one tablespoon butter, one tablespoon flour, one cup milk. Add half a cup grated cheese and salt and pepper to taste. Shred a medium sized head of cabbage and arrange in a baking dish in alternate layers with three hard cooked eggs which have been sliced. Cover with the cheese seasoned white sauce and bake in a moderate oven about one hour. Shred white cabbage in thin ribbons, pack it into a sauce pan tightly, Just cover it with whole fresh milk, using about three cups of it, and boil till tender, about 15 or 20 minutes. Stir occasionally to prevent scorching of the milk. Shake about 3 tablespoons of flour over each 1%4 quarts cabbage, let it boil up; add salt and pepper, two tablespoons butter and two tableâ€" spoons thick rich cream. Serve hot. This will be slightly creamy and thickâ€" ened. ‘ Lift onions and cabbage out of the liquid and place them together in a baking disb. (Onions may be left whole if preferred). Add salt and pepper and enough of the cabbage liquor to make them quite moist. Dot the butter over them. Dust half teaâ€" spoon chili powder over the vege tables, cover the pan and bake one half hour in moderate 400 degrees oven. Serve very hot with meat as the vegetable course. | Cut cabbage in quarters and cook till just tender in boiling water with the hot peppers. Boil the onions, sliced thick, for five minutes, then drain the water off. Pour fresh boiling water on them and cook few minutes till tenâ€" der. 1 poundâ€" head cabbage, 6 large dry onions, 2 tiny hot red peppers, 4% cup butter, 14 teaspoon chili powder, salt and black pepper. Cabbage With Parsley Chop 1 head cabbage fine as for cole slaw. Cook in rapidly boiling salted water for 7 minutes (because shredded it cooks more quickly). Drain, season with salt, pepper, 1â€"3 cup butter and 13 cup finely minced parsley, Before cooking the cabbage, cut it in eighths or in inch thick slices or wedges. This makes it easier to serve. Young or new cabbags should be cooked for seven minutes only. Red cabbage requires about 20 mirtutes for proper cooking. Cabbage thus cooked will be appeâ€" tizing. Make it more so by seasonâ€" ing with butter or cream, salt and pepâ€" per, and some finely mince parsley or finely chopped raw carrots. One of the main reasons people say they do not like, or cannot digest cabâ€" bage is because of improper cooking. It is often cooked until it turns pink or dark in color, and if that is the way your cabbage looks when you serve It, you are overcooking it. Properly cooked cabbage should be white or slightly green in color. It should be covered and cooked in plenty of rapidâ€" ly boiling, saited water, for not more than 12 minutes by the clock. Cabâ€" bage cooked in this way is still crisp and fresh looking and will not injure anyone‘s digestion, provided the perâ€" son is well and normal. Loss of appetite in children often yields to the added vitamin B proâ€" vided by the introduction of cabbage dishes in the menu, raw preferably, but cabbage at any rate. bage or cole slaw will provide® as much vitamin B as a good sized potaâ€" to or four large carrots or four largeâ€" sized onions. And then nothing has been mentioned about its valuable mineral contribution to the diet. Cabâ€" bage provides plenty of phosphorus and fron as well as sulphur and modâ€" erate amounts of other minerals. Raw cabbage is rich in vitamin C, but cooked cabbage loses part of its poâ€" tency in this particular antiâ€"scorbutic vitamin. This is one reason for servâ€" iIng raw cabbage frequently in salads, cole slaw and similar dishes. ‘ Cabbage Au Gratin How to Cook Cabbage Milton Cabbage Spanish Cabbage Radios in India Each of the 600,000 villages in India is "to have a commercial radio receivâ€" irg set, the villagers paying a small fee toward the cost and upkeep. It is expected that further study of land grants, of which there have been over 7,000, will result in the reâ€" turn to the government of other large areas. The land recovered will be granteu to colonists who will make use of it, A great part of the land in question is on highways und/ near large centres of consumption. [ Appruximately 7530,000 acres of the land had been granted to the owners by government concession while the remainder was government land on which squatters hud settled and for which no legal title was held. Bogota.â€"Over 1,000,000 acres of idle land in the hands of private ownâ€" ers has been returned to the governâ€" ment as a result of action by Minister of Industries Francisco J. Chaux, acâ€" cording to El Espectador. 1,000,000 Idle Acres Reclaimed by Colombia To keep lid on a boiling pot, drop a teaspoonful of butter into the water when boiling dry beans or other starchy vegetables to stop annoyance of the lid of the pot jumping off, as it will otherwise do. The butter acts the same as oil on troubled waters and keeps it calm and ‘manageable. MK@he edges of the saucepan are well butâ€" tered, it also helps. Roughen the soles and heels of a small child‘s new shoes with a nutmeg grater, and many a fall will be avoidâ€" Dampness Should your store cupboard be inâ€" clined to dampness, use blotting paper instead of ordinary paper for lining the shelves. This will collect a cerâ€" tain amount of the moisture. When necessary, take the blotting paper out, dry it, and replace. For fancy service, shredded cabbage makes beautiful salads. Shred the cabbage very fine, place it on plates in form of nests, and use whatever other food is desired inside the "nests." The cabbage may be quickly marinated with plain French dressing before being formed into the nests, and should be very cold before using. Prunes stuffed with chopped or grated raw carrots! whole hardâ€"cooked eggs; cream cheese balls dipped in minced parsley or sieved hardâ€"cooked egg yolks; tiny potato balls; Freuchâ€"fried croquettes in form of tiny ballsâ€"all of these foods make interesting fillers for the cabbage nests. Sanuerkraut juice has a refreshing and pleasing taste, which stimulates appetite. of sauerkraut, and in addition it conâ€" tains the added value of slight acidity which increases the flow of gatric Juice. The fermentation which the cabbage undergoes when becoming savuerkraut produces lactic acid which is one of the most valuable of cleanâ€" serg. Dorothy Clinton and Doris Cribley see packs of ice jammed against their Passaic they survey the scene from their porch, Streets Oof the town were blocked after a si water swept through them C Raw "Nest" Salads Stumbling Feet The Pot Lid Ottawa Journal has completed a year as leader of Canadian daily newsâ€" papers in the matter of quotation by contemporaries, . Editorial or other matter from The Journal‘s morning and evening editions was reproduced and duly credited by other newspapers 1,746 times in the last quarter of 1933. The Globe holds second place, and the Mail and Empire has regainâ€" ed third. _ As in th« previous three months, the twentyâ€"five newspapers standing highest in this compilation made by the Dominion Press Clipping Bureau, Toronto, include seven smaillâ€" city dailies published in Western Onâ€" tario. _ All of the first ten are Onâ€" tario newspapers. There are 101 tabulated and a number of dailies published in provincial capitals and other large cities from coast to coast are found midway. down the list, while many small Ontario newspapers of local circulation and small exâ€" change lists achieve much higher standing. _ (The Sentinelâ€"Review, an excellent paper published in the umail city of Woodstock, is high up in the list.) Most Quoted No Half Measure If all children were alike the answer might be to take a safe middle course, and to do both, encouraging obedience, at the same time being careful not to break spirit. Usually a keen parent So what is to be done? Shall she give in to Bob or Mary when they want to do things she doesn‘t approve of and enlist her husband to do the same thing, or shall she take a chance and continue to dominate and dictate and see to it that they obey unquesâ€" tionably? Handling the Strongâ€"Willed The chances are that almost eÂ¥ery time he wants his own way he isn‘t allowed to have it. This time it isn‘t a free and equal fight with other caunâ€" didates of his own ability and age, but an unfair balance where his opponents are his parents, older, wiser, stronger, and with the sceptre of authority on their side. But this is a terribly hard thing to get into a child, for it must be encourâ€" aged in childhood if it is to be real, and at the same time make him obediâ€" ent. It she is an observing person she knows that few people succeed through lucky break@. Also she knows that few get there altogether by brains. It takes fortitude, perseverâ€" ance and above all "will" to make a place in the world. Something asserâ€" tive, shove, push and the determinaâ€" tion to get what one wants. We want our children to be ambit!â€" ous, Nothing is dearer to a mother‘s heart than to dream of the day when her boy or girl will set up his will against the world and beat it. Strongâ€"Willed Children arents of Such Boys or Girls Must Agree On a Course to Follow and Work It Out Ice â€"Bound! Newspapers ‘"/0°G Against their Passaic, N, J. home as town were blocked after a sixâ€"foot wall of icy Present a Real Problem Faith Hillman, Hope Kinsey and Charity Haseltine granted power of attorney to L. C. Joy for purpose of perfecting a corn loan, The sisters are married now and live in Nebraska, lowa and Wisconsin, respectively. The county recorder‘s office in Jefferson, lowa, recently brought to light the fact that there are thrae siuters who are named after the three virtues, Faith, Hope and Charity, Sisters Named After Three Virtues The interested srtists have formed an organizationâ€"its purpose not to sell the pictures but to get them into cireulation. â€" By the former plan, persons enterâ€" taining guests muy rent the works of Baltimore ainters for a day, week or monthâ€"at a rate agreeable to the artist. Baltimore.â€"The artists of Baltiâ€" more have hung a "for rent" sign on their works and have inaugurated an installment pla for selling their picâ€" tures, * Baltimore Artists Will Rent Pictures Nurse will and you have ambition backed by real force; break it and you kill both. Parents should agree on a course and work it out together. To thwart the independent boy or girl is absolutely necessary only when undesirable traits have got a start. What we must guard against in this, however, is in jumping to the concluâ€" sion that they are no good because they refuse to obey us every minute. Try to se the good in them and bring: it out. Be chary of negative orders to avoid argument. And blaze a trail that parent and child may follow toâ€" gether rather than against each other. Character growth that includes symâ€" pathy, generosity, truth and service is to be made much of in such a child. The stronger the will the more of the virtues will he need to carry that will to a great end. Usually the strongâ€"willed child is a pretty smart child, He is quick to see justice even as he is quick to resent injustice, It sems then as though there is just one solution. Let him be his own master, but try to instill in him a strong sense of right and wrong. Let him be controlled, but controlled by himself. Let him be judged, but judged by himself. can and does work this out pretty well. But the truth is that the very strongâ€"willed child presents a problem and baffies the best of us. He seems to know no halfâ€"measure but wants his own way all the time. He doesn‘t want to compromise or listen to reaâ€" son. It Had a Nick in the Mud Guard All Right! Bring Out Best Loudspeakers may be divided roughâ€" ly into two parts, Many of them ought to be. A pat on the back is just as easy to give as a dig in the ribs. And in those wasted years 1 saw No sail above the tea, For grocery shops were grocery shops Not hemispheres, to me. To think I never dreamed of how Bananas sway in rain, And often looked at oranges, And never thought of Spain. To think I once saw grocery shops With but a casual eye, And fingered figs and apricots, As one who came to bay. "The flat roof fits in ideally with modern architecture and materials. Concrete homes have, been designed and built to strike a new note in home beauty. _ Simple straight walls with tricky frills eliminated cut down reâ€" pairs and construction costs." "The modern home with a flat roof offers an oportunity to take advantage of space that formerly was entirely wasted or did little good. It is easily possible to install roof gardens at a low cost and to provide space where the family may gather at its pleasure. iutaitnininetiiinied Rectaristataicn Rrstsartkcmmtards is L Th is "Pitched roofs had a place in home ! proposed eastâ€"west railway projecte architecture in the days when builders | from Yushan to Pinghsiang. knew less about construction and ®4*! ‘The new line has cost only *about terials, but with toâ€"day‘s knowledgel $35,000 Chinese money per mile they are n6 more necessary than A"*| whereas m line built to American of pitched roofs on skyscrapers," said European specifications would have Mr. Afieck. "Among the objaclions) cost approximately $100,000 a mile., to flat roofs in the northern states 1sl l the question of snow. But by building o e e««« the roof with a watertich. slab and!Rome To Opn proper drainage the need for the slopâ€" ing roof ha> been eliminated. l Tiw" Mouth "There is now a definite trend toâ€" ward what we call the modern home, y Â¥ which owes its beauty to its simpticâ€"| Breakwater and Quay Will ity. _ At the World‘s Fair in (,‘!:k'u'u( Allow Ship. to Reach nearly all of the model homes were of : > flat roof design. ’ Clty Gate‘ New York.â€"Pitched roofs have no place in the new order of home conâ€" struction, and flat roofs, which serve as an evening gathering place for the families, will supercede them, it was predicted recently. So my weekâ€"end in bed not without its compensation, slbeit the judgment was given long before the change in the divorce laws of our Mother Counâ€" try. Modern Homes Call For Flat Roofs had to spend about a thousand or twelve hundred pounds. You will probâ€" ably tell me that you never had a thousand farthings of your own in the world; but, prisoner, that makes no differerce. Sitting here as a Britâ€" ish judge, it is my duty to tell you that this is not a country in which there is one law for the rich and anâ€" other for the poor." ; tor to sue in the ecclesiastical courts for a divorce ‘a mensa et thoro.‘ That would have cost you two or three hunâ€" dred pounds more. When you had obâ€" tained a divorce ‘a mensa et thoro‘ you would have had to appear by counsel before the House of Lords for a divorce ‘@a vinsulo matrimonii) The bill might have been opposed in all its stages by both Houses of Parlh-{ ment; and, altogether, you would have have instructed your attorney to bring an action against the hawker Zor damâ€" ages. That would have cost you about £100,. Whken you had recovered subâ€" stantial damages against the hlwkfl“ you should have instructed your procâ€" But the learned /udge was not conâ€" tent with this explanation and adminâ€" istered a pretty homily on law. "I will tell you what you ought to have done," he sa‘d. "You ought to a man conviected of bigamy who had defended himself on the ground that his wife had run away five years beâ€" fore and had married a hawker, since when ie had not heard from her and so had married again. British Justice So I do fall back on an old, old book of wit and humor I did once have the good fortune to win at school. And I came on this old story told of Justice Maule to illustrate the axiom that justice in England is imâ€" partial, He was passing sentence on â€"â€"â€"A weary weekâ€"end spent in bed recovering from a vile attack of disâ€" "An Awakening" ~â€"â€"Melibourne Wilson Is Impartial ONTARIO ARC TORONTO Two Egg Mail Delivered Two Egg, Florida.â€"It doesn‘t make ABy difference to J,. L, Bevis that Two Egg has no postoflice, he gets his mail just the same. Someone in New York addressed a Jleiter to "J. L. Bevis, Two Egg"â€"and it was deliverâ€" ed without a hitch. Motors may ruin our ~yo: but there are youngstéers : "It was a priceless show," s: man who had been given {ree t« The decision to build Rome‘s port is virtually certain, especially because Premier Berito Musolini approves the idea, The plan is now under examinaâ€" tion and its adoption is regarded as a foregome conclusion, & Luiggi‘s plan has the advantage that it will not imply a considerable expense, and the voork will not take long. As the m.posed breskwater will be only 200 meters long and the quays alorg the barks of the river measure only 400 meters, civil enginâ€" eers have estimated the entire cost of the port 2t about 5,000,000 lire. The zone of the lower valley of new port is the same as that of Claudian port which was in use eight centuries. ol the Tiber reaches the sea and where it is deep since sandbanks are formei in the oppusite direction, it is proposea to baild a breakwauter and quays, Communications with the Tiber will thus be opened and the river will be navigable to steamers of average umm;e as far as St. Paul‘s Gate in Rome, To the right of the present village of Fiumicio, where the artificial arm is two miles listant from where it was when Claudius lived. The plan for the Port 0° Rome is that drawn by the late Professor Luigi Luiggi, a hydraulic engineer, and completed by his pupil engineer, Gine Coari, The mouth of the Tiber will be utilized as a harbor and mill be conâ€" nected with the bathing resort, Ostia. Ronwe.â€"Modern Rome will, like anâ€" cient Rome, have its port on the same gite where Claudius and Trajan built theirs. Rome‘s port will flourish on the right branch of the Tiber. The sea Fas continuously receded and owing to th» extensive deposits of sand and marl, the present mouth of the river The new line has cost only »about $35,000 Chinese money per mile, whereas a line built to American or European specifications would have cost approximately $100,000 a mile., Shanghai.â€"Foreign engineers are watching with interest the Chinese exâ€" periment of a new standard gauge railway built upon a roadbed three feet narvower than is usual, and with thirtyâ€"eightâ€"pound rails. This new line runs 355 miles from Hangchow to Kiangshan, in Chekiang Province. Evetually it is to be exâ€" tended to Yushan, and there jojn the proposed eastâ€"west railway projected from Yushan to Pinghsiang. "Such suggestions are utterly ridiâ€" culous, The defendants offer the most complete withdrawal and their sincerâ€" est apologies." He added that they would pay the costs of the action and publish an apology in newspapers. The Duke withdrew the suit on those terms "Lady Sibell‘s article implied that the Duke was unpatriotic and wholly indifferent to his responsibilities to the country," said the defendants‘ lawyer, "I# this setting a good example?" The Duke is known naotionally as A most generous landlord to the tenâ€" ants on his great estate and in the Westminster district in the heart of London, of which he owns acres. On the occasion of his last and third marâ€" riageâ€"the others ended in court fights and divorces to the wives on statutory groundsâ€"he remitted many thousands of pounds in ren‘ts as a reverse Eng lish wedding gift. P London. â€" The battling Duke of Westminster, who loves a fight in war or peace, scored a complete victory in his latest oneâ€"a oneâ€"round court dispute with his niece, the literary Lady Sibell Lygon, daughter of the Earl of Beauchamp, Duke Wins Apology Libellous Article appearing in Fashionable Magazine Cause of Action Rail Experiment From Titled Niece wio 1 the the for