Fo Fargas = Pop a Keir Po, ~ aa Bl a v Fes SN 3 Ir Ws wn Wn | To TR Pad eC SN A Te yp -- AEN Sa - et ENE e- er. Ta my Ee ee Te SL EE TE 2X " Sw-- TO ¢ " : A 5F Jed HO Ae hat ali aes inti satu hou sdbbuliodi tus Lm daa bid divs Sasi bi badiesd nb 4673 J SIZES e202 Pattern 4673, with real enough Big rag doll, complete wardrobe , . to make any child happy! Movable arms and legs, yarn hair, cute clothes, will warm the heart of any tot! Pattern 4673, doll and clothes, sizes 18, 20 and 22 inches tall. For yardages, see pattern, Send TWENTY CENTS (20c¢.) in coins (stamps cannot be accept- ed) for this pattern to Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER, TABLE TALKS.. Meat Matters Are you trying to budget your meat coupons to allow for a spec- ial occasion? Have 'guests upset your meat calculations =~ for the week? Don't worry, say the home economists of the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture, serve un- rationed meats such as kidney, ox- tails, tongue or heart, Here are some excellent ways to use them, Braised Oxtails 2 Ibs. oxtails, cut in pieces v4 cup flour 34 cup fat 1% cups hot water 1% cups canned tomatoes 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper: 1 teaspoon celery salt 4 whole cloves Piece of bay leaf medium carrots, diced small onions, chopped Wipe meat, trim off fat and roll pieces of oxtail in flour, Saute in the hot fat until well browned. Add water, tomatoes and season- ings. Cook 5 minutes, stirring well. Pour into a casserole, cover and bake in a slow oven, 325°F, for 114 hours. Add vegetables and continue baking, covered, for % hour longer. Uncover and cook an additional % hour or until meat and vegetables are tender. Six ger- vings. NS Kidney Creole 1 beef kidney 2 tablespoons flour ¥4 teaspoon salt Pepper 34 cup fat 1 large onion, minced 1 medium carrot, diced 1 medium potato, diced 134 cups tomatoes 2 cups boiling water 1% teaspoon Worcliestershire or other spicy sauce 6 slices toast g Remove fat, tubes and mem- brane from kidney. Slice and dredge with seasoned flour. Brown in hot fat. Add tomatoes and water and allow to cook slowly for about %% hour, Add diced veget- ables and more water if necessary, and continue cooking fill veget- ables are tender. Serve on toast. Six servings. Boiled Heart Heart (see note below) Water to cover 1% teaspoons salt to each quart of water used 1 Carrot 1 large sprig of parsely 1 bay leaf 3 black peppercorns 3 cloves Remove veins and arteries from heart, using scissdrs, and wash out thoroughly. Cover with water and simmer with seasoning for 2 to J hours, or until meat is tender. Serve hot with Raisin = Sauce. NOTE: Allow one lamb or small pork heart per person; one aver- age calf"s or large pork heart to serve two; one average beef heart 10 serve six. Raisin Sauce 2 tabléspoons vinegar "1 teaspoon onion juice or a little onion salt 134 cups boiled heart 3 tablespoons flour seasoned stock from '3 cup brown sugar Y4 cup raising Add vinegar and onion juice to 14 cups stock and heat. Mix flour and Sugér' ard 'blend in re- maining 14 cup stocks 'Add grad- wally to heated stock and cook, stirring constantly until thickened, Add raisins and siriimer 5 minutes. Makes approximately 1% cups sauce. The Quality Tea "SALADA TEA DARK LIGHTNING By HELEN TOPPING MILLER CHAPTER VII At least, Gary told himself in the morning, he had this day. The sun was golden; the. prairie blazed with bloom. Adelaide sang softly as she drove, and scolded every vagrant dog and jalopy driver that slowed down her skimming speed. Gary sat back and held his hap- piness close, keeping silence lest it burst before his eyes like the rain- bow bubblé that it was. No mat- ter what came--he had this day. They had lunch at a little road- side place before they reached the city. Gary had some money. He insisted on paying for the lunch. "You hunt the map, Gary, I'm going to buy some hats," Adelaide announced, when they had left the car in a parking lot. "Remember, you haven't struck oll yet," warned Gary. "Oh, but we will." She was cool- ly confident. "I'll wait in the car if I finish first." Adelaide hurried away. She felt exhilarated and made over new, Adelaide 'was feeling sober when she went back to the car and found Gary sitting there, studying the map that was spread across his knees. LIE I , "Put that away," she said abrup- tly. "Somehow I don't enthuse about oil, this minute." : "What happened? Did you get 'an extortion note?" "Gary, there will be tiiigs like that--if we strike oil, won't there?" "One oil well won't "make you rich. Are all these things yours?" he asked as a boy stumbled" up with an armful of bundles. "Have him put them in the rum- ble. I didn't buy so very much, Just a few things I needed--three' "hats and a couple of dresses. She saw Gary's face close up in a queer, withdrawn way. Men, she thought wearily, were so touchy. Just because she had bought three #Ahats was no reason why Gary should be remote and silent for fifty miles. She grew a little snap- pish about it, "You're not terribly entertain- How hard children are on mit- tens! Get out left-over yarns and knit| these for wintry days. Done in a jiffy on only two needles. Knit these for favorite kiddies. using wool odds and ends. Tuck into Christmas stockings. Pattern 579 has directions in sizé 4, 6, 8, 10. - Send TWENTY CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St, West, Toronto. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. ground, ing, are you? I could have brought a wooden Indian along--after all, it's spring and all the little flowers are blooming." "I know it's spring," said Gary, not looking at her. "And in Mex- ico it's summer." "I think," she said, grimly, "that "you arc being very obstinate to talking about Mexico, Gary Tallman. You know what a big innocent Dad is. If he sects his head about this oil business he's going to need--somebody." +e keep "He can hire oil men. The bushes are full of them." "Do you have to be nasty?" de- manded Adelaide, red spots riding up into her cheeks. "You could have talked all day and not said a thing like that," "I'm sorry. I'm not being nasty. I'm simply facing things--as they are, Adelaide. fluence with your father at all, I'll use it to try to persuade him not to wildcat a well down, if it turns out that there is ofl land. He can lease and keep his royalties--and let somebody else take all the grief." EE) "He won't do it. He'll be ex- cited and want to go after the oil himself --and then just anything can happen, Don't you like us, Gary? Don't you want to stay?" "Great Scott, Adelaide-- don't you know I like you-- too much? And do you know how much money I've got at this moment?" "I can't see what difference that makes." "It makes a difference to me. I have éxactly forty-one "dollars. If I paid cven a tenth of what I owe your family now--" -- "Oh, my heavens, 'are you still thinking about that?" Adelaide de- manded. E * 4 . "Certainly, I'm thinking about it. I'd be a heel if I didn't think about' It. And as for thinking about-any- thing else--" "What for instance?" "A lot of things." straight ahead, with his face set and a little pale. "Things I can't talk about--and can't even dream about!" The geophysic crew arrived on Friday, and Mona Lee thought them a particularly grim. and un- friendly lot. They said nothing ex- cept polite cvasions; they treated Gary Tallman with condescenion and Harvey they ignored till. he took to stamping around the bed- i room at night and barking. "I can't get a thing out of 'em. I don't count. They go out there and monkey around and get into their car and drive off, and never even look back. I'm just the guy who owns the land. I'm the fel- low who pays their bills. I've got a notion to hire some riggers and put me a well down anyway. Those guys can't sée through the They've got to guess-- same as I have." (To 'be continued) Wartime Rations For UK. Christmas British. troops spending Christ- mas overseas this year will get the same Yuletide dinner as last year, because of world food and trans- port shortages, The menu: Four ounces of canned chicken, four ounces of Christmas pudding, one ounce of mincemeat, "nuts and fresh fruit according to local sup- plies, and an extra ration of Cho- colate. Beer prospects were said to be good, however, The most densely populated political unit in the world is the province of Kiangsu, in China, with a population of 36,469,321 in 41,818 square miles, Ws dita Vat Ey 'of Tad bln. If I have any in- under his . .ing supplication for He looked CHINESE RARITY Eggs, which have been scarce in most war areas, come into their . own in outdoor market of Tsingtao, a a port of North China. The Chinese have been without this type. of food for so long, it_is - considered 'a delicacy. Sunday School Lesson November 25 Christians Working Together in the Community. Jolin 17: 20-23; Acts 15: 82:29, Golden Text We aré laborers together with God. 1 Corinthians 3:9, Christ's Prayer for His Own John 17:20. ~Our Saviour in His ® beautiful 'intercessory prayer, on the eve of Calvary, has made lov those 'who have believed His Word and re- ceived Him as the Son of God. Those who believe give the Word of God 'to'the world, and in so do- ing summon: the world to- believe _on the Father and! the. Son. The Power of 'Love 21-22--Here, 'we have the Savi- our's prayer and ideal for -all 'who should believe on Him. As there is unity in the Godhead so our Lord prayed that there might be a simi- lar unity and oneness among the body of unbelievers. 23--It is by the indwelling of God the Father and God the Son who are one, and. who dwell within the obedient heart, that believers will learn to dwell in oneness and love. When God, who is love, dwells within us we cannot but shed forth the spirit of love toward "all men. First Church Document AIRFORCE SUIT Bunnie Hayiland sports an airforce WD uniformy changed smartly in- to a trim little civilian number of soft gray-blue. New buttons and discarding of a WD belt makes this a civvy sports suit any girl would love to wear. The belt was cut to make a wide band from shoulder to shoulder at the back and the remaining belt pieces stitched vertically to the two breast pockets. POULTRY WANTED Send us your dhickens, fowl, ducks, geese and turkeys, dressed.) "Highest prices pafd" QUALITY MEAT PACKERS 203 First Ave) Toronto sll " (Must be Acts 15: 22-20.--Here we have the first mention of 'writing in the history of the Church. The letter contains (1) kindly greetings to Gentile brethern; (2) a strong repu- diation of 'the Pharisaical Jews who had gone from Jerusalem to Anti oth and interfered with Gentile liberties there, and the statement that a deputation who really repre- sent the views of the Jerusalem Church are sent; (3) a full recogni- tion 'of the authority of Barnabas a) and Paul by the apostles 'of the - circumcision; (4) a declaration that . circumcision is not necessary to-sal- vation;-and (5) prohibitiéns which "enjoin abstinerice from certain practices in which heathens indulg- ed. These .prohibitions were con: " cessions demanded from the Geén- tile Christians for the purpose of preserving peace, unity, and sor clal "intercourse between Jews and Gentilés, and also of protecting 'converts from 'the 'results of hea- "then associations and habits, Blood was forbidden to the Jews by Levitical law, therefore in churches composed of both Jews and Gentiles social and brotherly intercourse would be impossible, unless the latter abstained from it also. "Meats offered to idols" means the flesh of animals offer- ed in sacrifice, a portion of which was eaten in sacrificial feasts, and other parts were sometimes sold in open markets. How Can I? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I remove perspir-" ation stains from garments? A. By mixing one part of oxalic acid to twenty parts of water and applying with a small brush, Q. How can I clean light furs? A. Rub thoroughly into the furs .a mixture of 1 pint of flour, 1 tablespoonful of fullers' earth, and 1 pint of bran. Shake well and "rub again with' the bran alone, Then shake and brush 'with a soft cléan 'cloth, Q. How can I prévent ices and jellies from 'sticking to the mold? A. Wrap a hot cloth around the jelly 'mold to make the iges and jelfies conte out 'without sticking. 'A. Water in which onions have been boiled is said to make 'an excellent cleaner for white paint. €). How can I loosen the: dirt in clothes, and 'also 'make them 'whiter? A. Pour a few drops of turpen- tine into the 'wash boiler and it will help loosen the dirt. A spoonful of borax in hot water and then added to the last rinse water tends to whiten clothes. Also remember that clothes dried slowly will be "whiter than those dried quickly. Wallpapering Made Easy for Housewives Wallpaper rolls, recently patent- ed, with adhesive gn one side and a water-resistant finish on the"dec- orated side, can 'easily be applied by the housewife, Science Service reports. The pre-pasted roll is cut in proper lengths, re-rolled loose- "ly with the decorated side out, dunked in water, and wnroffed in place on the wall. ECC 1] Buins Noles Ouls Ele . How can "easily clean white 'pine? . 4 .ing water to your chickens, or the. 'CHRONICLES household has been reduced to three again. With Our immediate Partner able to get around once more to help with the chores and milking it was hardly necessary to have: thrée mén at home to run a hundred acres. There is still a dearth of farm help so it was cer- tainly mo trouble for young John to gettanother job -- and right in our own neighborhood too, which suited him fine. Son Bob has also been working -- that is from nine until five each day -- tractor- ploughing for one of our neigh- bours. And Partner and I have been right into the chicken busi- ness, killing and dressing a few each day so as fipt to make it too tiring for Partner. Even at that it was tiring enough. Personally, 1 don't mind being tired just so long as we 'get those noisy strutting roosters off _ the farm. "The fe- male of the species" may be "more deadly than the male" but at least she ig not so insufferably preten- tious and vain. To hear the cock- sure crowing that emanates from our rooster pen you would think the crazy things were telling the world they were our main: source of income, They help, of course, but I'm telling you we earn every cent we get for our dressed chick- ens. And that, by the way, is the only ! time I like roosters -- when their feathers are off and in place of birds we have dollar bills, And I am also pleased when they tip the scales at anywhere from six to eight pounds with firm, white flesh one knows" will make 'good eating. You know, it is possible to ..get a lot of satisfaction from the knowledge that one has turned out a-good product » » » Rather a funny thing happened on one of, oiir chicken'picking days. We had: juét finished" weighing and pricing five birds for a'private sale when in came' a truck with = our order of potatoes." There were five " bags' of the murphiés: and the price for the five bags wads a little less than our price for our five chickens. I said to Partner -- "Now, which line of produce do you suppose brings in the best returns?" Well, sir, we thought and we talked, but we haven't got the an- swer yet. Partner thinks there are too- many 'angles to consider for a definite "conclusion to be possible, There are so many "ifs", If it is a poor season then potato crops are light; if disease attacks young chickens then losses are heavy. If ... if ... so many ifs! : » * But I do know one thing -- at least potatoes can't crow, and they don't scratch in the flower beds or sneak around to roost on the front doorstep to the embarrassment of the owner. But then potatoes have bugs -- and they have to be hoed and hilled -- the potatoes I mean, not the bugs. They must be "dropped" in the spring, "picked" in the fall, sprayed or dustéd, sorted and bagged and looked over carefully for signs of dry rot, ring rot,-wet rot and scab. Figures can't supply' the answer to my question, Figures can only go so far. You can't estimate in dollars and cents the value of carry- \ difference in hoeing. potatoes in . wet or dry seasons, So there you are, friends, and if you would like to start an argument in your family . circle, or among your neighbours, try that one, And I would just love to know the result, » * "W. G" -- thank you very much for your kind letter -- it was just about the nicest piece of "fan hail" that has come my way. Your encouraging comhiehts 'were °cer- tainly appreciated and it will -give me much pleasure to answer your letter personally in the very near future. I shall also be happy to send you the information you fe- quested. 'You WII} Enjoy Staying At The St. Regis Hotel TORONTO @® Every Room wiih 'Bain, Shower and Telephone, © Single, 82.50 9 -- Double, $350 u Good Faod, Dining and Dane Ing Nightly. ; ; Sherbourne at Carlton 1 e Tel. RA, 4135 Ta By Gwendoline P. Clarke of GINGER FARM - * * * ° =F = = ---- Here is a thought that is worth considering. 1 was listening to an address by Mr. Walter S. Woods given to the Canadian Club, Toron- to. His subject was tion", He 'spoke of the idea 'that seems to be pretty general" these days of the need for readjustment to living by returned men, "But" he #afd, "it may 'be tHat féadjust ments are necessary on our side." There is something in that, = isn't "there? There is surely room for reddjustment when our 'sons who went away 'as 'boys come' back: to us grown men, with a knowledge and experience of life -- and death -- far beyond their years and of a nature that. we, in our time, will never know. 2 Liners Ordered From British Firm Two ocean liners, each costing 2,000,000 pounds ($8,000,000) have Been ordered from Vickers Arm- strong, Ltd. The 29,000-ton liners ordered by P.' & O. Company and Orient Company will be the largest and fastest ships in each company's fleet, with top speeds of twenty- three knots. Construction was estiniated to employ 2,300 men for the next two yeafs at 'the firms' yards "at "Bar- stow-in-Futrness, Lancashire, Adopting Germans From Dublin comes the repoft that '90 'mien 4nd woénien 'of 'that city are adopting German children to save them from death by star vation, says the Ottawa Journal. The act is tribute to their charity, but we haven't forgotten" what be- came of the starving German children who "were adoptéd™ by Norway after the last war. Housekeeper: Wanted GIRL OR WOMAN FOR RE- fined home. Pleasant wotKihg' conditions. Good Wages, Fare Paid. Write stating "full parti- culars to -- 'MRS. SAIR, 44 Ridge Hill Drive, 10, Ontario. Toronto Relieve Headache Take ASPIRIN It's ready to ayer," cross on each tablét is (rl youriguitantée thas ivd @ Aspirin, NOW=New Low Prices! Pocketbox of 12s, + 4 . only 18¢ 'Economy bottle of 24 , , only 29¢ 'Family §lzé 6100 "oe + Ohly 79a' i NUE! Sls tlways (14 | a TRIE Dr.CHASE'S (Paradol FOR QUICK RELIEF Or { HEADACHE & Other Pains "Rehabilita-,