ice pro bject semâ€" his mself justâ€" on varâ€" be carâ€" ing" st. able on ha H 10 That Mr His anc DT ze And it these unusual cakes are inâ€" expensive as well as deliciousâ€"just Popular, tooâ€"and enviedâ€"is the hostess who can make unusual cakes. She has not followed the beaten path. She has stepped asicde and discovered new delights while exâ€" ploring the byâ€"ways. Bake in greased muffin tins in a moderate oven (400 degrees F.) for 20â€"25 minutes. Yield: 16 small or 8 large muflins. CAKE FOR COMPANY Cake for dinner. Cake for a bridge lunch treat, Cake and coffee at night before the guests say "au revoir." Cake is surely popular, _ Cream shortening and sugar; add egg, milk and bran and let stand while measuring remainder of inâ€" gredients, Sift flour with soda, salt and baking powder. Cut banana in small pieces and add to sifted dry ingredients. Add to first mixture and stir only until flour disappears, Yield: 12 mutlins. Bran Banana Muffins. 2 tablespoons shortening, !, cup sugar, 1 egg (well beaten), 1 cup sour milk, 1 cup allâ€"bran, 1 cup flour, 4Â¥ teaspoon soda, !, teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon baking powder, * cup chopped banana. me In respect to hot our breakfast habits changed, We still â€" scones, toast or a of corn bread help table feeling well f food for the day‘s w many varieties of choose from there to continue to give ant blace thev dass °o contumue to give ant place they dese Bran corn meal the breakfast appot family, and in addit tent will help to p that all normal n Ts e o un will have a delicious main course for Sunday night supper, Jellied S@imon Loaf. 1 package lemonâ€"flavored gelatin, 1 pint warm water, 2 tablespoons vinegar, %% teaspcons salt . %eup mayonnaise, 2 cups flaked canned salmon, 1 cup diced celery, Dissolve gelatin in warm water, Add vinegar and sailt. Chill until slightly thickened. Foli in mayon. naise, salmon, and celery. Turn into loat pan. Chill untii tirm, Unmold on erisp lettuce. Serves 8. HOT BREADS Fror BREAK FPAST Our breakfast menus have underâ€" gone a radical change since the days when our fathers and mothers set up housekeeping. The crisp, readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereals have lightened the task of the homemaker. Eges in one form or another have generaily replaced the array of meat dishes that used to be considered indispensable. _ Fruit has become an almost invariable Jeature of the mennu for the first meal of the day. Here‘s a case where a good recipe and culinary ingenuity will turn canâ€" ned salmon into a dish you will be proud to bring to the table, and diners, like Jack Spratt, "lick the platter clean," Serve it with cold sliced beet and bolrto chins ank wan _ We still feet toast or »a pipi bread help us ling well fortific the day‘s work; arieties of hot rom there is ¢ _ _ THE WONDERLAND OF OZ No. 1. In the country of the Cillikens, which is in the Tip and old Membi lived in one of the dome north of the land of Oz, lived a youth called Tip Mlnbuwlhhmmflnlo‘ou ‘There was more to his name than that, for old Mombi, of Oz. Ouormdran nearby, but as with whom he lived, often declared that his whole there were no childrenm for many miles, Tip had ne nmowu'l'w‘ohtnmmuhm W'fl“ml‘b“nfl“lflon to say all that when just Tip would do. Old as you might suppose. Like most young boys, it must be confessed, was not very kind to Tip. She he managed to steal time from his tasks to go walking made him perform many hard tasks sug ofien beet in the woods, to chase pahhits, and to gatheq hickesy wtified with g ‘ork; and with hot â€" breads ve it with cold ato chips and you vreads, hnowever, have not greatly el that muffins, piping hot slice us to leave the ‘tified with good e m @ sugar, Add ra meal, Sift tking powder re. Stir only TV reason importâ€" to Here‘s first aid for the leaking faucet in the form of a little oil poured into the top of the faucet. This causes the washer to swell and so prevents the leak, When loose creâ€" HOMELY HINTS Here are some hints for the home, none of them related except in the work of making things easier for the home worker. Blend sweetened condensed milk witht hot water and pour gradually over slightly beaten eggs. Add salt. Place halves of peaches in buttered baking disb. Pour sweetened â€"conâ€" densed milk mixture over top of peaches; sprinkle with nutmeg, Place in a pan of hot water and bake in a slow oven (325 degrees F.) about 40 minutes or until custard is set. Serves 8. Inserted will . custard is done is especially good with a foundation of sweetened condensed milk. Careful cooking is essential to a good baked custard. ‘The best way is to place the dish containing it in a pan filled with hot waier to the depth of the custard and bake in a Baked cu enough for adult taste simple eno sert, if it flavor is va Mint Cream Filling % cup sugar, 4 tablespoons cornâ€" starch, & teaspoon salt, 1 cup water, 2 egg yolks, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 teaspoon mint extract, Green food coloring. Mix sugar (cxcept 2# tablespoons), cornstarch and salt, Add water slowâ€" Iy and cook over boiling water until very thick, stirring constantly. Add eagz yolks mixed with 2 tablespoons sugar; cook 3 minutes longer. Beat until smooth, Add butter; cool, Add mint extract and color a delicatc‘ green. Separate eggs; beat yolks until thick and lemon color. Add 1 cup of the sugar gradually, beating constâ€" antly. Add boiling water very slowly. then vanilla extract, Sift flour and baking powder together 3 times, Fold into first mixture. Beat egg whites until stiff; add remaining ong cup sugar gradually, beating constantly. Fold into mixture. Bake in a very large ungreased tube pan in moderâ€" ate oven at 350 Aegrees F., for 1%4 hours. Invert ané l@t cool in pan, When cold, split into three layers; spread with Mint Cream Filling. Cover top and sides thickly with marshmallow frosting. Makes 1 tenâ€" inch cake. so much more surely has the hostâ€" ess scored. Here is a recipe for such a cake: Magnolia C@ke 6 eggs, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup boiling water, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 2% cups pastry flour, 3 teaspoons bakâ€" ing powder. s bak encugh it is and pre irs someé TARD I‘l the an 5 insures a firm, even revents the separating netimes when the custâ€" too fast. A knife blade come out clean when rd fron for TO SUIT ALL can be sophisti i( m ad d ophisticated criminating same time child‘s desâ€" and if the to thne. It foundation y 13 By Mary Charlotte Billings. When days are full of discord, And every moment brings Its share of strife and worry, I think of quiet thingsâ€" Quiet things and calm thingsâ€" Lovely things like these: Dim woods at nightfall, Snow on hemlock trees. A cherry tree in blossom, Cobwebs hung with dew, Yellow leaves drifting down, With sunlight slanting through, Behind closed lids I see themâ€" Again and yet againâ€" Curling wisps of wood smoke, Violets in the rain. New kid gloves are sometimes quite difficult to put on for the first time and so often strech and split, Take a damp towel, place the gloves beâ€" tween the folds and leave them there for a few hours before wearing. The damp will stretch the skins and the gloves will be easy to handle. Lime placed in a damp closet will dry it and take away the musty smell A teaspoon of ammonia added to a bowl of warm water will remove fruit stains from the hands, and a cup of pure malt vinegar added to a warm bath will remove muscular stiffness, Linen can be whitered by the use of turpentine, Make a lather of soap flakes and warm water, add a small cup of turpentine and steep the soil. ed linen in the mixture, Leave for two hours or all night, then wash as usual. Spots on waxed floors can be removed by rubbing with a cloth dipâ€" ped in turpentine and then polished with a piece of soft fabric, such as flannel. Borax is a most useful agent in the home, as we have pointed out before, and egg stains will come out of linen very quickly if the article is soaked in cold water to which a little borax has been added. tonne chair covers are soiled but not encugh to send to the cleaners or launder oneself, rub soiled parts such as arms and seats, with a clean rag soaked in special cleaning turpenâ€" tine, The dirt will be removed inâ€" stantly. 4 Miss Julia Clarissa MacBrien, daughter of the Chief of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Major General J. H. MacBrien and Mrs. MacBrien, of Ottawa, whose engagement to Mr. George Arnold Murphy, son of Colonel and Mrs. George P. Murphy, of Ottawa, has just beea announced, the marriage to take place in June. Miss Macâ€" Brien is well known in Canada for her dramatic work. QUIET THINGS To Be Married In June but as pride. Early in the morning, before sunrise, he would ad ne out to the stable to brush and milk the cow. After ife so Lhwnlde.ryw“dlnï¬oln.fddlhm. boys, â€" and finally, after breakfast wash the dishes, Then, old ilking _ Mombi would set him to work in the fields. But Tip ckesy would often slip away from his task to play. Conse * * _ qmently he grow to be a stronc and healthy boy, . 12 Obrol‘l'lp’--onhpomduh.wu-flk e fourâ€"horned cow which was Mombi‘s especial Here is a dress that will appeal to amateur and expert sewer alike. It‘s so easily made, being a oneâ€" piece affair, which means practiâ€" cally only side and shoulder seams Oneâ€"Piece from Shoulders to Hem Ilustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern "Hill and valley, seas and constelâ€" lations, are but stereotypes of divâ€" ine ideas . . .‘"â€"Chapin. Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 15c in stamps or coin (coin preferâ€" redâ€"wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 _ West Adelaide .St., Toronto. "Nature is a revelation of God."â€" Longfellow. Nature is but a name for an efâ€" fect, whose cause is God."â€"Cowper, Style No. 2747 is designed â€" for sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 388 yards of, 39â€"inch material with 5â€"® yard of 89â€"inch contrasting. A gay print in rough crepe silk is another smart spring idea, so fresh and young for immediate wear ‘neath your dark coat. The material used for the origiâ€" nal was a lovely woolen mixture in almond green, which by the way, is going to be very smart for spring. The scearf tie is brown crinâ€" kly crepe silk. to join. Pin inverted tucks give an easy fit through the waistline. Then you may get some grey or other colored paper (not too dark). Now you may try out creating deâ€" signs in various colors and what a delightful occupation this is for amateur designers. If you prefer it, you can rule the paper yourself, using a hard lead pencil and keoping the lines very light, so that they will be easily rubbed out. Make a rhythmical arâ€" rangement for a border, using only straight lines and dots, somewhat similar to the borders shown in the lower section of FIG. 163. Usze your own judgment as to the width of If you get some faintly ruled paper used in designing, known as "squared" paper, you will save much of your time, and also find that the squared paper will tend to assist you in creating new motifs, easily and quickly. FIG. 163. Wustrates 15 examples which may be used as a basis for innumerable designs. Take some of these suggestions and change to modern touches and you will be surâ€" prised how easy it is to adapt any given form and with a few new touches here and there bring an old or used design motif right upâ€"toâ€" date. Remember in adapting an old or used design, you should always try to improve upon the source of data to which you are using as the basis for creating a new design. You will have a lot of fun and pleasant surprises await the result of your own ingenuity along these lines of creative design. Requests have been made by our students for suggestions on Rythmâ€" ical Arrangements cf Tomes, Measâ€" ures and Shapes, and Borders of Straight Lines and Dots. . HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS 220 asCARLA® uon â€" mm â€" e â€" w { 4 o*Ske etch Cl Club @ But despite the fact that life was not as unpleasant for Tip as it might have been, the boy frankly hated old Mombi. His dislike for her was shared by others, too, for the old woman did not enjoy the best of | reputations. Her neighbors, the Gilliken people, had reason to suspect her of indulging in magic arts, and therefore both feared her and hesitated to associate NATURE Based on the stories by L. Frank Baum Copyrighted 1932, The Rellly & Lee Co. All rights reserved. D@n@m z222 Hard workers are usually honest; indus‘ry lifts them above temptaâ€" tion.â€"Bower. Necessity is the argument of ty rants; it is the creed of slaves.â€" William Pitt. "Every acquisition of knowledge is a frontier from which a new venâ€" try» sets out." â€"Harry Emerson T osdick. *‘Trade restrictions are an inâ€" fluence _ provocative toward war rather than peace." â€" Bernard M. Baruch, "America, with all its present disâ€" tressing symptoms, is still regarded in Europe as the land of hope snd resourcefulness."â€"Gabriel Wells, "There is no real road to happiâ€" nessâ€"you may be happy with nothâ€" ing and unhappy with everything." â€"Luigi Pirandello. e "Civilization has come to be a k‘nd of generic term to cover up a multitude of our sins."â€"Sir Gerald Campbell. "People do not go to the theatre to be surprised so much as they go to be satisfied." â€"â€" George Jean Nathan, "Nature and truth are one, and immutable, and inseparable as beauty and djove."â€"Mrs. Jameson. Questions will be answered in this department. Anyone wishing to receive a personal reply may have same if a 3¢ stamped _ addressed envelope is enclosed with the reâ€" quest. The Art Director, Our Sketch Club, 73 Adelaide Sireet West, Toâ€" ronto. think would look well in white. FIGS. 164â€"5â€"6 of LESSON NO. 48, gives you some suggestions as to arrangements. The light lines inâ€" dicate the pencil lines or lines of the ruled paper. In making these drawings use the brush wherever possible, as you will develop more freedom in that way, and bear in mind the principle of design which you are trying to express, viz., Rhythm, which is related action and movement throughout the dezign. EX. NO. 51. Get some grey or other colored paper (not too dark), similar to that used in small photo albums. Make some designs for surâ€" face patterns, using straight lines and dots. Trace your designs on tracing paper. Get a piece of the carbon paper used in typewriters, place it face downwards under your tracing and transfer your tracing to the tinted paper. Press just firmly enough to give you a legible line. Finis\ in drawing ink,. Make two of these drawings alike. Then on one of them paint with Chinese white any parts of the design which you border and relative size of its parts. Make several arrangements, finishâ€" ing with light, medium and heavy lines, noting the different efiect a light medium or heavy treatment gives the same design. This is your problem for EX. NO. 50. ~000 impa iz t 008. 0 0e uy iguing ships and on tonnage alone es | for "exempt" ships, _ Trinity House and ; appoints a special official with title uty "Ruler of Pilots" to deal with | doubts or â€"disagreements if such ] arise among Channel and river pilots, j Trinity Mouse exercises no jurisâ€" atre | diction above London Bridge, _ The go l big 200â€"feet coiliers for Battersea ean and Wandsworth and Fulbam come under the head of "coastwise," and ‘tbeir masters need not take a Trinâ€" c ity House pilot. _ Men with special j | knowledge take charge of the colâ€" P * ) liers through the bridges to and mld‘; from the berths. The problem is the musical parallel of that encountered in fitting all the radio stations of Europe into the available waveâ€"band, as in each case they cannot be given wave.â€"lengths too close together. The musical tone system is used in a simpler form between manuval and automatic exchanges already, and telex, teleprinter and picture transmission . services all demand their own frequencies. One trouble has, therefore, been to find room to fit in the extra frequencies required for this service. The utmost ingenuity has had to be exercised to make this "Interâ€" zone" dialing possible, ‘The signal given by dialling is converted into a combination of musical tones, which is tranamitted over the wires and made to select the number at the other end, s Its introduction will mean a great speedingâ€"up in obtaining calls, and the saving of an incalulable amount of time and money. An invention that will enable a subscriber to get a trunk (long disâ€" tanae) number by dialing without buman intervention is being perfectâ€" ed by British post office engineers. The first service under the new sysâ€" tem will be installed this year, Did you ever look over The side of a crib And see two little eyes of blue? And two little hands, So chubby and white, That wiggle and reach for you, Two cute little ears, So tiny a nose, And a mouth puckered up to say goo What is more precious In all this wide world Than a baby ...... unless it is two? OBTAIN OWN Should occasion â€" arise, the pilot may be overruled by the master of a ship if the latter is of opinion that the pilot‘s judgment is at fault. Eventual responsibility for a ship‘s safety rests with the masior. end waitin navigate incoming or depart sels belonging to an individu: pany or companies, There are rather more th licensed pilots for London ships, Their rates of pay are on tonnage and draught for pilot navi Examinations for a pilot‘s "ticket" are carried out by Elder Brethren of Trinity House. Evidence has to be Â¥urnished by candidates for sea pilot that not only have they a Board of Trade certificate as mater oi a forâ€" eignâ€"going ship, but that taey have done a year (at least a second mate) in squareâ€"rigged sail and have seryvâ€" ed as mate or master for one year in a steam vessel trading largely to the district, River pilots have to have a master‘s "ticket" in steam and a year‘s experience as mate or master in a ship trading to London, When a man reseves h« Vsease he joins his colleagues ‘at Gravesâ€" Dock pilots take the ships from entrance lock to dock berth and vice versa; this last class is comâ€" posed of licensed watermen . who are controlled by the Company of Waterman and Lightermen of the River Thames. and not by Trinity House. River _ pilots _ accompany â€" ships from Gravesend to inside the dock entrance locks or the wharl or tideâ€" way tier and vice versa. All ships coming to or leaving London, save those classed as "exâ€" empt" (under 3,500 tons and in the home or coastwise trades, not hayâ€" ing passengers on board have to carry a pilot licensed by ‘Trinity House. Sea pilots are in charge up to or from Gravesend, ljleaving or boardâ€" ing ships at Dungeness or Dover or the Sunk Light Vesse!l (Harâ€" wich). The only trouble is that of late there has not been enough pilotage to go round, and the Port of Lonâ€" don _ Authority has been making oxtra exertions to prevent a drift in the direction of the Mersey, Now everybody is happy, for two motor liners are to start this Spring a transatlantic service from London. From Thamesâ€"Mouth to London Docks is one of the most difficult passages in the world, and the pilots who take vessels through it form an organization, the skill and experience of the members of which are commensurate with their job. Pilots Of The Thames a ship. that of Tl oUR BABY t DLs _ Tor _ LonGon _ piv rates of pay are bas and draught for occa and on tonnage alo: \ships, _ Trinity How pecial official with tit TRUNK CALLS Have Difficult Jobs eir tuirn to 1 goal of the psofession icice" pilet, "Choice" ned by ship owners to ing or departing vesâ€" to an individual com |_mate or master _London, e ves hos Vsease gues ‘at Gravesâ€" ‘m to take charske of the psofession _ pilet. "Choice" M river based }00 n M B }