"9 na oer If --has-been added, "iga8] Woke: Pines What d each star has a favorite dish or two, Janet Gaynor of Fox Film renown, epends 'much of her time on bright} sunny days on the beach near Venice, || California. thought of too. The petite Janet has | thought! of too, rhe-pettie Janet has many. fayorite dishes+--most of them} « light dishes that help her retain that] perfect form. Here is a spring recipe-- & salad made of California fruits--| that pleases her--and will please you, . too, Orange Gherry Salad Cut a small head of crisp lettuce in two, sgoop centerdyom one half and line lettuce shell with 5 or Georange segments. Fill 'center of cup with ston. ed cherries and serve with: Mineral Oil Mayonnaise Beat 1 egg yolk until thick. Beat in gradually. 1 cup mineral oil, alternat-|. ing with 2 tablespoons of lemon juice, | added drop by drop. Add 34 teaspoon}: dry mustard and 14 teaspoon red pep-} per, . This salad dressing has practically no food value and may be used llber- ally with a simple (rult sadad such as the above by those who do not wish to}. : gain weight. "Soma other weight control sugges- tions that help maintain 'that "'Holly- wood", figure and which women every _ where may practice, "are: To serve orange juice in place of cream, with fruits such as: Sliced: bananas, berries, peaches, pears, when; these fruits are served for breakfast first course or. for dessert. Cream has almost five {imes ak. many. calories as . orange juice. Orange juice is also good over melon balls in these courses. To gatnish meats, especially broiled chops and steaks, "with lemon, using the lemon juice with'the meat in place -of rich gravies and sauces; To use lemon with tea in-place of cream und 'sugar. _Orangss. There are certain foods which wel. are constantly urged to edt. Somet{Tes, . we laugh and say, "That is all:foolish- | ness. Liook-at my grandparents: They ate whatever they felt like eating and lived to. be ninety, What was g ough for them is good enough for me. | I need mo'advice from experts." But did you ever stop to realize that youcareunot eating. what your grand- parents;ata? They had. their cows and drank liberal quantities of milk. They: had {hejr gardens and ate plenty. ot vegetables." They 'had tlieir orchards, ate. cherries, iDlums, pears, = peaches, oranges and- other frults--according: "to the section of the country in' which: they, Hved. In other words were abundantly supplied with the: three great alkaline-reaction. foods--~: milk, vegetables and fruit: Thus they! balanced' the .acid-reaction ~ foods-- bread, fish, meat and eggs -- without} knowing; anything about:balanced diet, vitamins or carbohydrates. In addition to this they had fresh air, plenty of work in the. open and sufficient sleep, No wonder they lived to be ninety If the thedical men of the day had béen| as efficient as they are today, our 'grandparents should have lived to be ong hundred:at least." Among the foods which are being advocated "strongly today is the orange. Fortunately it may be pur: chased all the year round. It is filled with vitamin C which is so necestary in the body--the only ingredient, by - the way, that cannot be stored:in the body but must be secured daily, Two 8-ounce glasses or orange juice.to each of which the juice of one-half lemon "contains sufficient vitamin 'C for a day. ; orange is. a rich source of calcium which 18°80 needed if lealthy bones and teeth are o be buble The morning glass of*orange juice habit has been popular-for years, But this fruit may be used in many forms. It fits into the salad dich exceptional 1y well. It is very popular. in fruit cups. In fact the orange may be used for al most any course from appetizer to dessert. Here are three short recipes through "which you may secure liberal quanti ; the stars eat to retain}: those perfect figures and those spark: | ling teeth? Many foods, no doubt--but |: our grandparents], In addition the: Aa oo > (tex: of. this healthful: fruit: ~ Economy. Frult Cup ' (Serves 6-8)" 1 cup orange segments %. cup, orange juice. * 1 cup long, slender, red-skinned apple pieces, (unpeeled) 34cup shredded dates 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons sugar * Combine, Serve very cold, Orange Chrysanthemum Salad (Serves 6) 6 small oranges Lettuce 2 Apples: Cut. through the skin of oranges Ahree-quarters of way down in very fine strips, being careful not to break strips apart, Remove orange pulp and cut in pieces. Place each orange skin on a bed of lettuce: Fill center with orange pieces and long slender pieces of app! e. Pass mayonnaise. Orange Ambrosia = (Serves 6) 6 oranges 14 cup powdered sugar 15 cup grated coconut Peel and slice oranges. Cut slices into halves or: quacters, Arrange in serving dish, sprinkle with sugar and coconut, Spring Dishes N Spring: is here--at last, The lighter 'dishes are the orde. of the day. Serve plenty<ot vegetables, remembering to use a dash; of fuga: to restore.the na. tural sweetness they tend to lose on the journey: from: garden to kitchen. Give a light touch to the meat dish by serving with it a fruit garnish or com- pote. Savory String 'Beans. Shred iwo 'meditm-sized onions and two tablespoons, of butter, Mix the on- ions with a pint'lof strained stewed tomatoes. Season with one teaspoon pepper, a& dash of cayenne, two tea: spoons sugar, and two cloves, Bring to a boil and add >=e quart of freshly cooked string beans. Simmer for ff: and: serve, (with the roast) %:bananag a '1 cup. flour. Yr aT 2 teaspoons. baking powder . 'Salt 2 tablespoons sugar Y%-cup milk ~~ © = legg 1 tablespoon lemon juice: Mix andsift dry ingredients. Beat egg light. Stir, milk into it. Combine mixtures. Peel bayanas, mash, and add lemon. juce. Stir'linto batter. Drop by spoonfulg into kettle of hot fat. Do not fry too many at a&\ time, When nicely browned on both:gtdes drain on brown' paper. Sprinkle liberally with powder: ed sugar. L} Good Taste : Many women waste thelr good taste by listening to others, by being too self-conscious to wear the things that suit them bett, by being too impatient when buying, - If you have good taste, glve it a .chance. Don't wear green (or any oth- er color) just because®*someone Says it suitg you. Stick to brown (or any other color) when your mirror tells you it is your setting. .. Try to have the courage of your convictions. If. exaggerated sleeves suit you, wear them, even though you have seen other people looking sights in them. Let your good-taste, not Dame 'Fashion, dictate.lo you. Know exactly the kind of dress you want, keep your eyes wide open until you see it. Don't be put off with something *just as good." Go without, look dowdy far a while. if necessary, but do lot turn a blind eye to the mental picture Paint ed by your jood taste. Tn your home It is well to leave new chalr-covers for a month or to ratfier than get material that will not "go" with the room. - The same applies to curtains, counterplanes, carpets and furniture. Don't waste your good taste by being too hurried In your choice. Long Man's Blankets It a person is tall, blankets and bed- ding '.ave a way of pulling out at the feet during the night. One excellent way to avoid this is to stitch a strip ot unbleached muslin, a foot deep and as wide as the blanket's width, across saute them until they are; tender in|; teen minutes, add a teaspoon of butter, cities. re Mile. Andree Vavon, French soprano, pictured on Fer arrival in New York last week aboard the S.S. Champlain, She will visit Canadian \ ee __ a ------------ the bottom: of either single or double blankets. This muslin tucks under the mattress, does not show, 'but. gives that extra length, which insures cozy feet, no matter how much you toss and 'throw your covers, Tomorrow's Beauty 'Minus "Rats" In Her Hair But Curves: Flowing Along Nat:ral Lines Néw York.--The international con- vention of beauty shop owners began a four-day. sessjon herve recently with hair dressers and beauty culturists from all over the country in attend: ance. - Home cultivation of beauty, the return to natural lines in the feminine ' body, . the . elimination of the artificlal particularly in such prac. tices as coloring the hair to a platinum shade were stressed at the opening meetings. allowed to drag: with the introduction of such. novelties as 'Frederick: The Great," a: llon-sized dog who gener- ates a natural sort of electricity which the beauty experts hope to be able to introduce for the benefit of their customers, and an exhibition ot "horrible examples." Ten "volunteers" took part in the 'latter exhibition one of the aims of the show being to prove that women have to pay constant attenion to their bodies rather than "lip service to beauty' if they wish to remain beau- titul. Just how "Frederick The Great," the great dame, might bring new . beauty to the teininine world was explained by the dogn's owner, Frank G. Kerk, at a matinee session. The dog had been used as a radio transmitter for several months and appears to like it as it makes him relax. Beauty par- lor:operators are not allowed to treat their customers with electricity, but 'Mr. Kerk callg his discovery "rotonic waves" and feels that they may' be legally pasted through any customer's body as there is no electrical hook. up to the device, just a cabinet with gadgets and three small milk bottles filled with something or other.. He felt that it might make seekers after beauty relax as it has "Frederick The Great." Ivan, creator of colffares, coutributs ed the first style to the convention 'and set the keynote for his associates; The keynote or crystallized reaction of the convention was deacribed as Gibsonia--that is, a return to the Gib son girl type without the "rats" in Eorem------ Po The Gibson Girl! The time of the delegates was not | Ty ---------- her hair; but with every curve flowing along its natural lines. Tomorrow's beauty; as:one operator expressed it, is going to be 'every inch a Gibson girl." Lecturers, including doctors ag well as non-medical beauty experts, were of the opinion that next season's bathing beauty would be at least ten pounds: heavier, 'Her hips will be a bit more prominent, her hair natural and done high;on her head, and her beauty mostly all her own, Ontario Doctors Add to Allowances for Treatment of Indigent Patients Toronto--Increased . allowances to physicians for treatment of indigent patients have been ordered by Hon. J. M. Robb Ontario Minister of Health. On Dr. Robb's instructions: a circu: lar has. been iscuedito all physiclans in Ontario notifying them .that they would. receive extra: allowances for "mileage" and drugs; as well as ball the usual fees, Previously donors received halt fess from the province for treatment of patients on relief, with a.$100 max- {mum. Out of this sum, the doctors were also required to pay their own mileage, and. especially in rural dis- tricts, were required to use their own drugs. Australian Dishes For Prince George What If He Asked for Kan- garoo Soup. or Wallaby - Stew "What Prince George likes for din- ner has become a topic of the day in Melbourne, Australia," writes "The. Rouseabout," columnist of The Melbourne Herald. _ "Perhaps he .would vote for the menu presented to: his. grand-uncle, the Duke of Edinburgh, on; his visit to Melbourne --in+--1867. Fifty-two dishes, in six courses, formed the 'Royal tepast, washed down by 14 varieties of 'wihe and sweetened with 18 different kinds. of dessert: "Kangaroo soup and wallaby were among the entress, and it is said that the Duke sampled. this: typically Australian fare with relish, But where fn the city. now can we obtain kan: garoo soup and wallaby stew? "Aud, mark you; Prince George may ask for it!" To Get Increase] deservedly. children." Every' sin we commit in- "volves our dear ones in its 'Sunday, School Lesson Lesspn 111. (16) ~April 15, Jesus Teacher Forgiyeness--~Matt, 18: 21.35, Golden Text~~Forgive us our debt, as we also. have forgiven our debtors~--Matt, 6: 12, THE LESSON. IN ITS SETTING TIME=-Summer, off A.D, 29, the third year of Christ's ministry. PLACE--Capernaum, - PARALLEL PASSAGE--This pas- sage is found only in Matthew. "Then; came. Peter and said. to him." "Peter has not been listening, for his mind is busy with the repeat. ed offences of a particaiar brother against himself; Perhaps Judas, jeal- ous of the favor shown to the Gali- iean, who had been promised the re version of his office--'l will give unto thee.the keys:.of the kingdom'---~has been revenging himself upon his suc- cessor behind his Master's back, and Peter's . patience. is exhausted,"~-- "Lord, how oft-shall any brother sin against: me, and: I forgive him? until seven times?" "His question showed how far he was from possessing the truly for giving spirit, By thus thinking it pos- sible to measure and reckon up of- fences~--s0 many. offences, so . much pardon: meted out--he showed that he did; not even: understand. wherein the forgiving spirit consists." "Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven 'times; but, Until seventy times sevem™ Four hundred and ninety times! "Jesus says, Forgive times without number. "Therefore is the kingdom of heav- en likened unto a certain king, who would make a reckoning with his ser- ants." This. is the first of the par: ables in which God is: presented to us as.a king, we being servants or officers 'responsible to him. "This, as is plain, is not: the final reckoning, 'not therefore identical with the reck- oning of Matt. 256: 10; Cor. 6: i but rather such as that of Luke 16 : To this he brings us by the pent of the law, by the setting of our sins before our face, by awakening and alarming our conscience (hat was asleep before, by bringing us into ad- versities, so that there is not a step between us and it (I Sam, 20 : 8); he (takes account with us, when he mak. 'es us feel that we could not answer him one thing in a thousand, that our trespasses are more than the hairs of our head; when by one means or another he.brings our careless carnal security to an end (Ps. 60: 21). *And when he had begun to reckon, one was brought unto him, that owed him ten thousand talents." This vast 'sum pictures, the vastness of our sins; we can never hope to repay them and make ourselves right with God unless Christ pays our debt, "Bot forasmuch as he had wherewith to pay." What have we with which to make amends for our sins? We owe God the well doing of to- day, and so we can not accumulate goodness to pay for Lhe sins of yester day. "His lord, commanded him to be sold." From a proud lord, he was to be reduced to a wretched slave and "And his wife, and! not misery and penality; that is perhaps the chief sorrow of evil doing. "And al that he had, and payment to be made." His palaces and rich estates, fraudulently rurchased, were all to be forfeited. "The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him," This does aol mean honoring him as God, but pro-1 strating him before him as Orientals fall down before their superiors. Probably neither the servant nor the king expected payment of the great sum. Matters had gone too far for that. And certainly we could never hope, however patient God might be to store up sufficient merit to repay our.debt to God though some religions seek to do it by penances, self-torture, and charitable deeds. ' "And the lord of that servant, "be- ing moved with compassion." How often in the Gospels it is said that Jesus "had compassion" on the multi tude! "Released him." Perhaps he had been put into chains. At any rate, he would be under guard. "And forgave him the debt," Thus Christ pictures 'his Father's readiness to forgive, as- surance of which he came to earth to give mankind, "But the servant went out, and found one of his fellow-servants, who owed him a hundred shillings." It represents the slight offences of man I'brary's $40,030 budget for this year, "he stated had suffered greatly were to man, so small when compared with the many and serious sins wherewith men have offended their heavenly Father. "And he laid hold on him, passion: here, only violence and crueltys "Saying, Pay What thou owest." That man could never have prayed the Lord's prayer in sincerity, for it asks God to forgive us as we have forgiven those who have wronged us. "So his fellow-servant fell down and besought him, saying, Have patience with me, and 1 will pay thee," The forgiven servant's own act and words, that should have re nigiled him instantly of his own bit- experience; hut his heart was hardened by selfishness. . "And he would not: but went and cast him into prison, till he should pay that which was due" Imprisons ment for debt has only recently been abolished in English-speaking lands, It is both cruel and foolish. "So when his fellow-servants saw what was done, they were exceeding sorry." They were sorry for their fel low-servant who had ben so abomin- ably treated. "And came and told unto their lord all what was done." This was in no revengeful spirit, no spirit of tale-bearing. They wanted justice to be done. "Then his lord called him (the un- forgiving servant) unto him, and saith to him, Thou wicked servant." The. first servant also, perhaps, had been wicked in misappropriating the king's money; but though the money loss was great in his case, the spirit: ual iniquity was far greater in his harsh treatment of his own debtor, "I forgave thee all that debt, because thou, besoughtest me." For no other reason, just as the wicked servant's debtor had. besought him. 'Shouldest not thou also have had mercy on thy fellow-servant, even as I had mercy on thee? His grasping after that small sum showed that miserliness and selfishness = had brought about his great defalcation. "And his lord was wroth,"" The Bible has much to say about the love of God, but much. also to say about the wrath of God; and the one is as just and 'rue as the other. "And de- livered him to the tormentors," "The bashibazouks (referred to under verse 80) prod them along with their spears till the blood runs down their backs. "Till he should pay all that was due." The king suspected now that the wicked servant had great hoards of! money which he had stolen, and pro- posed to: force disclosure of where they were hidden. "So shall also my heavenly ('ather do unto you, if ye forgive not every one his brother from your hearts." "This is where the teaching of the parable culminates. The recipient of mercy is bound to be merciful," London Library | fast of porridge. Returns Service To Devoted Teacher Helen Keller Now Teaching Benefactor. of Youth Murray, Rosshire, Scotland.--Se-- cluded ina lonely highland farmhouse- Helen Keller is teaching the woman who. taught her to read, talk and play, « It was Anne Sullivan. Macy who - took Miss Keller in hand when she was a child, and blind, deaf and mute, Mrs. Macy has been Miss Kel- ler's : companion constantly since then, -and' now she, herself, is prac- tically blind. Miss Keller is patient- ly teaching her to read Braille, Mist and Wind, «Their farm cottage is near the vil lage of Muir-of-Ord, in the shadows of Rosshire's towering peaks, The snow lies four feet deep in the lane leading up to the house. Sleet, hail and rain pelts the rooftop, Miss Keller and Mrs. Macy are living on - one of the most remote and inacces- sible spots in the British Isles. Their only neighbors in an area if 100 square miles are six families of deer hunters. In the nearby village of Muir-of-Ord, the population is less than a score. The people of Muir: of-Ord purtue the task of blending whisky, and their business has pick- ed up noticeably since the Ameri: can prohibition law was repealed. - "They are the mighty laboratoes of rain, mist and wind," Miss Keller said, in speaking of the mountains, She cannot see them, but she con- stantly senses thelr presence. The Reek of Peat. Blue peat smoke whirls from the little chimney of the cottage, and it tells the tale of another sense. which Miss Keller retains, Peat Is the only fuel used in the farmhouse: Mics Keller, who can neither see nor talk nor hear, loves the sweet aroma of the burning moss, The kitchen floor is of stoné, Thera is a crude wooden table and several comfortable, hand-hewn chairs. A small wooden clock, with a long chain pendulum, hangs on the wall, There are five rooms in the house. Miss Keller is constantly busy, She, occupies herself with all manner of work, from housekeeping to writing. Her correspondence Ig voluminous. | She is np. at 7 a.m., and has a break- Then she launches into her day's work, which would tax the energy of many stronger persons. She Teaches Teacher. "yYe:," Miss Keller wrote in-auswer to a question' "It ig true. My teacher is now practically blind. [ read in 'her every day, and.l -maké notes for her in Braille. "She knew Braille when she was at school, and when she taught me. was written with Secures'Books 10,200 Volumes -- lL.ondon Collection Suffers Rav- ages of Wear London, Out.--Because the eity council saw fit to ratify the public li- tlepy are being taken immediately to 'replace approximately $10,200 volumes. that were withdrawn during the past year, me Oth r additions will he made-to the library shelves gradually, R. E. Crouch chief librarian advised, pointing . to the necessity for the replacement of technical works which have been, da- maged beyond repair through constant use in the past few years, Among the otlier departments which those of literate, economics science and the fine arts, and their supply of i- texts would -b replenished through this year's budget. At the present time library repair workers aretloctoring 1,900 dilapidated volumes back to good condition which are in their workshop. Liverpool--Air traffic "cops" are al- ready in the making here. Batches of Liverpool police are un- dergoing instructions at the Liverpool Alrport at Speke In how to. detect dangerous flying, They are being taught how to distinguish between ligi- timate air maneuvers and stunt flying, and, in addition, are being trained to judge heights and distances in speed. A feature of the lessons is the gend. ing up of machines giving practical demonstrations of safe flying com- pared with aerobatics, MUTT AND JEFF -- - ------- Aw. -- By BUD FISHER : THE HAY STORE ANDBUY | L} A. $A : ME. A- DERBY | a bt 4. in. 4. A vEREY.? WELL - WHAT H I) SIZE? a "ru ( 17 a 1 Hid "Sizer Nor Color Make No Difference - ANY SIZE? WHAT COLOR ? "BLACK, BROWN ? "NEVER MIND {WHAT COLOR, 3 Dor K 807s, Now, ore uk PF But the Brallle many letters, She 'would punch them out for me on Braille tablets. Bul since then the system has undergone a great change. About halt the let: ters are different. But it has not been dificult for me to teach Mrs. Macy the new letters. She will never read Braille rapidly. She never did. But it passes the time for her to puzzle out the words under the new 'system. It passes the time for her while she waits in the dark for day 'to dawn and for the shadows to flee. She may, you know, recover her eight." Miss Keller and Mrs. Macy have been insep arable companions since Miss Keller was seven years old, Mis. Macy was her nurse, and taught her things that brought her a world ot dhmension:. Miss Keller is 063 Macy 67. many and Mrs. English Village Wins Gold Trophy at Flower Show in N.Y. British Horticultural Society's Prize Given to Best Exhibit Reminiscent of England New York.--The chief prize of the International Flower show at Grand Central Palace, the gold trophy of the Royal Horticultural Society "of England, offered for the first time this year for the best exhibit remin- the oh England, was awarded to the Garden Club of America for its disp! of an Knglish village, with spring gardens in bloom, built around a village green. kight clubs had competitive exhibits in the ensemble. was a centre of interest and, with the announcement that fit had been . awarded tlie principal trophy of the show, throngs filled the exhibit from morning until night. Surrounding the green on a semi circular streets were reproductions of three brick and thatched roof cot- tages, a post office housed in acurl- osity shop and an ancient inn, with its sign "The Crowing Cock, Since 1761," and signs announcing "teas" and."snacks at the bar." In the little gardens in front of the houses are many varieties of flowers, including primroses, rhododendrons, tulips, cro- , cus, llacs and spireax. Roses bloom in window boxes and in other windows are potted geraniums. On the peaceful green, ducks idle in a small pond and a hand-hewn wooden bench surrounding an anciet tree invites repose, The exhibit is geparaled from the rest of the \oor by a green-bordered stone wall. ev 24 HAS preoers) Sed NN ee NL ST Cres ro ~ tor hg a