NIID Elli el sogood ` t what "I ill make you 15...! L..A.a...- vv I-rvvuvuvvv v u----u----v An old French lady who certainly had a way". of cookingivegeta.-bles, gave me these` directions: Steam your vegetables, instead of -boiling them whenever .youv can, she said. It takes a little longer-- about a quarter or half longer, maybe. `But they are so good--with not all their salts and goodness washed out in a kettle-,. ful of boiling water." Take green peas. Place them in a good dish--~one you can serve them in. Steam 3 half hour in your ordinary steamer. When done pour over them a cream sauce or drew them with melted butter. NA--- ----- --- --A--..._ A-..l ..L..2..- L-...... or |ll'E~ IJIIUIII Wll-ll Lll.Cl|/Cu Ulll:l.I.7l'o Corn you can steam. And string beans and young carrots. Even beets are better steamed than boiled . Nothing can be bet- ter than steamed-potato unless it is a baked pofato. Many other vegetables could be nu`:-`Isl. GA OLA Q5 PU ` CPU: HIGH Ul-I added to the lisf. Hrm__'._ .1____ ._ auueu up Inc um. Then there is the question of salt. I'll` tell you my rule for little girls who cannot " remember. If the vegetable is root keep the salt away until it is cooked. If it grew above ground sprinkle `a. little salt over, before you steam it." TIPS T0 HOUSEWIVES-V For cream cheese and Russian dressing` sandwiches mix cream cheese with enough Rtissian dressing to make of the right con- sistency to" `spread. having it soft but not running. Spread Between thin slices of bugered Graham bread. _ it __-.I l__2-__ -I..L _.-..L:_.. uuvcreu UKHHUIU 1116310 Sandwiches, if made before club meetmg, { `should be wrapped in dry cheesecloth and then in adamp cloth and put in a closely` covered receptacle. nuuvnnrn A: ahxnh-in oh-ac uyhn Hnvn COVCTCU l'f.'-C('-[)l:HClC- Owners of electric stoves who havei trouble with rust in the oven can easily avoid this by leaving the door open for 21` time aficr the oven has been used. i A Boston department store that has worked out a scientific budget plan for a woman s wardrobe advises women to think in terms of a three-year period; a $60 coat that wears three years is cheaper than a $45 coat that wears only two. The amount -1 ..... . . A - . n u u ..:l..L.l.. fnv nlnfkeun 2`-unnlt` kn! Q-'15) coat I/nut` wears only two. um uunuuuux of money available for clothing should be` divided on this basis: forty-three per cent- for dresses, coats and suits; twenty-four per cent. for bats, shoes and gloves; twenty per cent for underwear and hosiery; eight per cent for blouses. sweaters and skirts; and five per cent. for accessories. When hot dishes have 'ti1;'1;v;xed` top of the dining table, the surface may his mnauuu-I hv umttinn 9. cloth with wood MARCI} 1, 1923 EDP 0! BBC Clllllllg [-3056, but auuuvc .lua_y be renewed by. wetting a cloth with woodl alcohol; shake thecloth in the air and then rub the spot briskly. Afterwards rub with _a soft cloth and a furniture polish composed o_f one-third boiled linseed oil, two-thirds turpentine, and about a gill of vinegar. Quunnb in 117; Ilnrnnvn finonr rnsu-lrn from I turpentine, unu uvuuu a gut us vurugm. ' Sweet. oil will remove nger marks from varnished furniture. and kerosene will re- move all traces of such unsightly marks from oiled furniture. . vuI-vI v-----no--v vvw-.- When something has scorched in a kettle set the kettle into a pan of cold water and bring the water in the second vessel to a boil. ' When` this is done pour the water. out and yepeat. As a rule, unless the vegetables were very badly scorched they will not scorch after being treated in this first class cook. '1'-his advantage, however, would be more than offset `by the cockine.'s that his accomplishment would induce in the man. V Jvzir. Fo'ur sisters, all over._ 80, attended `a birth-_. ay celebration in Chanlon, 0. TAKING SPOTS OFF FURNITURE STEAMING VEGETABLES WHEN VEGETABLES SCORCH A THREE-YEAR auoczr unu mun: , Tl-|AN.LEGlSLATl0N g If your overi is slow to iieat you will find Egg-0 ust as slow to act-its double action insures afvening with a slow or hot oven. .__ 4. __ I Baking Powder ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER} 4 Mon=A'rs %'::;'3` vv -, -- *, THE CANADIAN MATCH CO" LlMITED...MONTREAL `5 HERE is a Moffat Electric . - Range for every home---big or small. And there are Moat Ranges for cl_ubs, h_otels, hospi- tals, cafes. Moffats of all sizes, to suit all purposes and purses. Once installed, 2 Moffat Electric Range saves the householder money in fuel bills. 28,000 Moat Electric Ranges are in daily use throughout the world. Write for free booklet to Moffats, Limited, Weston, Ontario. [iI'imi>" ;Z7 // EGG-0. Page Fi flees Wellworth x5 Qtixamfor ema "BIL nu-o-v J `ww- feel better, `ilta-vfv"Y'ork'OII;y Laotian by a noted In each puhce. Nb CANADA lar sent on mum. nard, Inc. lV-_ I1-_I_ Kl`. It is one of the boasts of British law`: that a guilty -man can never escape from it. ` No matter .how far he may go or how long ` he may stay away, the. law is watching and 1 waiting for `him and will some day get its 1 hand upon him. Nuurberless examples are 1 given. A man in a somewhat remote part. 1 of Ontario issued counterfeit money, and ' when he realized that he was suspected, fled from Canada. He stayed away eight years. 1 Then the longing for home and the mag- 1 netism of Christmas drew him back. He M slipped in -one December night. intending ` to spend Christmas with his family and get away again. `Before morninghe was under arrest. The law had not forgotten, and was not swayed from its purpose by senti- ment. It was thereto a.venge`the fraud perpetrated on the people and on the state, and it allowed no considerations of his family feelings nor the season`s amenities to soften its stern resolve. ' 111- J- ....L .u......-.JI-- nun` ....ml:o On A111- `I50 BOILER Ila! xswru rwulvc. We do not generally give credit to Am- erican law for being either swift or sure. We look upon it as slow in action and uncertain in result. Yet, here, too, may be seen the 'ruunsoA'v.V MARCH 1, 192.3 ....___ The Largest Sale in Amexjica % vw RELIGION .B.TN:low Flaw - 9 by Geo. Monkman. mg Store, W. Cross- liable druggists. ' j j H. I . o Ylessos the most exacting tastes. _ Quality - Economy - Purity - Flavor Always Assured. J /A Mms LXW AND cows LAW i2!!SF55 Prepnroufor a business career a L 12 School: in Toronto inlura individuul instruction in all business subjects. at our School: or by uni), Write for pron-` nnofnn tn . HAT was years ago when 56` A packed a terrib| 3V!'9uCh.*_3_ _, :_.`.:.-LI.. '.-M";-'uun'}~'|\A`a1\H"":| W33 yuan: glsv yvlepll any terrible" gx' _uch,>_a mighty irritable 'stbt'n'a'chand"f'a' liver that refused to do the things `that dl good livers should. `No wonder -his friends called him an $ old pill" and stayed away. THEY CALLED HIM AN Ow PILL Children and grown- ups . always agree on the pleasure of using` :t.uI to P. MclN'l'08ll. Chic! Principal .5`: WV ------ `lbum Sow s`-25 and 50c because -1- mercilessness of human -law. Eight or ten- . years ago in the state of Texas a man was elected mayor of his city. At the very time that he assumed office a charge was laid against him that he had committed ` murder in one of the New England s`ate more/ihthan twenty years before. Aft-er killing\a fellowman he hadescaped to the . South-West, had changed his name and set i to work to redeem the past. He lived a h ghly respectable and honorable life, fought his way u M from com-mon labor to an im- portant pace in "the business life of the ; community. and finally had been elected ; by his city as its civic head. But the past . hadnot been blotted out. When his pic- ture as mayor appeared in the public press, . it was recognized and he was arrested and . tried for the-crime he had committed so many years before. Hmnan law refused 1 to take his repentance and reformation into account. It had attached certain rigid. penalties to certain crimes. and it was going`. _ to see that those .penal'.ies were executed` , `regardless of the state of mind of the crim- inalor his effort to get away from his sin; --- 1 n , js_ 1 ___. _`I:t...... Cu-.1 -.v-.- __ . _ _ . -. llll U8 um Ullunl. I/U This is just where God`s Law differs from `Man's law. Human law disregards in a great `measure the attitude of mind of the sinner. God s law makes that of first im- portance. Human _lnw_ sends the peni- tent thiefto the pe`ni`t`en!`iary, the penitent bvv an on; ' murderer to the gallows, in practically the same manner as the iinpenitent. Its ob- ject is to protect society. and in so doing it insists on punishing the criminal. God s law atfonce takes` into consideration the penitence of the sinner, _and `makes that penitence theibasis of its pardon. Its" ob- ject is to save the sinner, and it saves by forgiving; ' Qknlznunnnr-4: amnh suized the truth of this forgiving. , A Shakespeare emphasized the truth when he wrote: In the course of justice none of us , should see salvation: we do pray for mercy. The very attitude of mind which makes us pray for mercy. is theneleinent which enables God to forgive and remit the pen alty attached to our sin. Thin in nvaxrnnen nrnnhet any armacneu to uur min. This IS expressed by the when he writes: ``I'-`-- ._..-. `l|l\IlA`lI n'IIA n} when ne writes: I For my thoughts are not your thoughts. - neither are your ways my -ways. saith the Lord; For as the heavens are higher than - the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts - than your thoughts." If God were no greater than men, no higher than men, then His law would be like man's law. It would keep in memory all _men's transgressions and would exact of men fullqnenaltien for all that they had done. But because He is so much greater and higher than men, He is able to forgive that men may be saved. "Flu. nnnlihv n` nun-(Iv .anv.a Shnlresneare. 1 1 1 that may rue savcu. The quality of mercy. says Shakespeare, is mightiest in the mightiest. The mg- gest minds, the noblest spirits. the loftiest characters among men are the readiest to forgive their fellowmen. And because God :. ...-....`+m- Hum the greatest and mizhtlet torgxve mexr Ieu()wxmuI. nuu ucuaucc uuu is greater than the greatest and mightier than the mightiest. He is able to pardon rm.:...:n ...... as-nnf rennnn between than me mlgnuestv. no-. Is nun: bu pcuuuu This `is one great distinction between Man s Law and God s Law. Man's law` aims to punish. God s law seeks to forgive. AMTRS. ERNEST MACDONALD Victoria Times-Mrs. Alice Christina Mao- ` donald, wife of`Ern_est Macdonald, of 1320 Bal-moral Road, died last evening, Jan. 29, in St. Joseph s Hospital at the age of thirty-seven years. She was born in Bar- rie. Ontario, coming to this city sixteen years -ago. The late Mrs. Macdonald is survived by her husband, one daughter, `Evelyn. and an infant child. also five I brothers and three sisters. Vietoria Harbor.` l;`eb.. 13:-'---likyglooin was ` least over Victoria Harbor on Tuesday when ` the news spread of the death of Annie Reid, widow of the late Samuel Reid. who passed - away at her late residence at 7.15 p.m. . Mrs. Reid` had .not been in the -`best of health for a few weeks, but was about until. oneweek ago, when she was ordered to bed, her illness -being due, to high blood pressure .and other trouble. Her death is a great `shock to the family, relatives and citizens I generally as many were unaware of her ser-i ious condition. The family left to mourn are Mrs. J. P. Sehissler, Eva Jane, Wil- `liam J. and Walter B. Reid. Mr. and Mrs. Reidand family came to Victoria Harbor twenty-seven years ago and founded the i firm of 8. Reid '8: Sons, general merchants. The Salada Tea Gompany,- the largest distributors or tea in Canada, recently announced an increase in l'"ll\IlI9nI\ I earn. ---v_,... .__-_ __ ,_, ,__ ` price on each of ..their blends. This course was forced upon them, accord- ing to information received about the situation, in order to maintain the quality` of SALADA Tea, when paying the highest prices ever re- ......,a...1 A1! Hm nrimarv markets for mcmnn TEA PRICES I-:x1-uAmsD\ ` ` .___- ALL. paying me lgllesb plxuca cvun .- corded on the primary A the nnblended leaf. The story V of riots on the tea plantations, dock strikes in Calcutta to delay shipping, and the _di`iculty to obtain coolie labor to pluck the tea from the bush- es, all bring home to us the fact that the social unrest that has been every- where apparent since the war has 5spread even to the remotest tea gar- dens of India. 90. mndurd skin rcmed_y-a *--mslunt relic! from Itch. desl of clezmsers--keep! always:-Ir.-anandhealthy. and ask us about both. Buy advertised tlinzs. It pays Shop _where you're Invited tojhop. inns. smuan. new OBITUARY ' makes` the ` elem ent prophet Isaiah ITh;e ;s`1t`~_trei;'leeve;7 5: six pm.` 1` or the land where the poppy blows, The mother is the engineer. 1.|...l 51... vunaanilllnr Iunah: and m-nws, `:*%i;**%%%*$*%*$*&**ai*: 3-x%_ IN WOMAN'S REALM` % %&&&&*%%%$**&%%&*&a%**&%*5 I ,. , _ {The palace cr_isT\tA1;_e mothelfs arms; i The whistle slow, sweet strain, "L --~------ --=-In -nu: -mac ma mi The wmsue 8 low, sweet uuzun, The [passenger and nods and blinks l` Axydgoee. to sleep on the-train. At eight pan. the next train starts, For the poppy land afar, The summons clear falls on the ear, All aboard for the sleeping car!" la: 15:) ` . But What is `the far ti) poppy-land? , I hope it is not too dear." -. ' The fare is this-a hug and a kiss And it`s paid to the engineer." So I ask, of,Him who children tool: A I On His kizee in kindness great; Take charge, I pray, of the trains each day That leave at six and eight. V `WOMEN LOSE MUCH OF THEIR `POWER .|F MEN LEARNED T0 COQK For 0 me `they are very dear; And special ward, O gracious Lord. O er the gentle engineer. ` G; `I -..2.. QL-.. Q... Dorothy Dix; t.he'we1l-known woman writ er. in a recent issue of the St. Thomas Times-Journal. says: l A .\Y..-Ll. l":.-nnu unufk I-no: fulrnn - I umes-Journal. says; A `North Carolina youth has taken all the cooking prizes in a, country fair. 1 I` u .1, ,,,..I ,_____ .....a.__.. 6.... L.-. ulu; vuunu-B |.;...n.v an -, v....----., Read them and weep. sisters. for, be- 1 lieve me. the danger to be apprehended ; fronrwomen taking up the occupations of ' nfmen invading our sacred sphere. The lady longshoreman, and the lady steeplejack, are but freaks who are long- shore and steeplejack long enough to gel, "heir names in the papers. They take the bread out of no honest dock la o'orer's or high climber's mouth. Nor is their example i one that any timid lady will follow, but when men learn to cook, they snatch not i only-our means of livelihood but our tools of conjuration from us, and leave us poor '|indeed. `men is as nothing compared to the menace I I Ii`..- ..J...o -unnn rnnIII:Aa nvnnnf in f_l`..'I ' M10690. ' For what man marries except in the fond, if often fatuous. belief that he is thereby securing a cook who cannot give notice and leave, no matter how tired she gets of -wrestling with the pots and pans, or how much the gas stove gets on her nerves? `And how shall a wife manage a husband whose physical comfort does not lie in her hand? Why, indeed, will men marry at all when every man becomes his own home-maker? `I ; .__ZII L- .... l\lI:' Anus 5'.-up un-urnnn ~11;-unn Keep watch of the passengers," thus nu-all ne momer us me eugxuccr, . End the passenger laughs and crows. OW" IIUIIII3`lll?lI\l7l '- i It will be an evil day for women wncn men begin read'ng the fireside department Mn Hm nawennner ingtaad nf the snortinz `men pegm rvau ug but`. uuzuu: utpal mucus. in the newspaper instead of the sporting page. When they find out that making bread is not an occult rite. andthat even ' an ordinary banker or brbker can learn how to make a lemon pie as well as to float a new -bond issue, or bull the market? Y alvn-v u noun -.v.... .....~...., I. For some inexplicable reason, a man s knowledge of cookery seems to swell his head morethan any other attainment. He may be a brilliant. lawyer, a world-famous doctor," a successful irailroad man, a` finan- cier whohas made millions, and be humble and deprecating about his achievements, but let him make a Welsh rarebit that isn't goo- ey or ropey and he brags about it in season and out of season. ll__L _-.-......_ Ln..- L...I a\IInnl\1|il'l`:V\lI av. aim UUL Ul. acuauu. Most women have had exasperating ex- 1 periences with husbands who tell how they I made coffee, orfried bacon whenvthey went ` camping, and so the idea of being united 1 to a man who really knows how to cook will not seem alluring to them.. As it is, one marriage in twelve in America ends in divorce, -but the ratio undoubtedly would be much greater if the wife `had to listen at every meal `while her husband told how light his cake always was, and just the way he -made a sauce Hollandaise, and I cooked a cheap cut of beef so it was Just like tenderloin_ _ I'l\L............. -urn:-`An alumni:-I Only: a firm UK8 IBIIGOHOHI _ . Therefore. women should take 8 firm stand at once on this mater of men learn- ing how to cook. It bodes no good to the feminine sex. M The kitchen is` woman's strongholdvand she should see that man is barred out of it. f!....A...:..I.. L--- .u3II tkn fauvnp u:-nah-no DKITCCI out OI Us Certainly there will be fewer wedding bells than now because the thing that drives the great majority of men into mat- rimony is the desire for 3 home. There comes a time when the man who lives in hotels and restaurants, reads the menus over from top to bottom, and crosswise, without seeing one single thing on it that he doesn't loathe. There comes a day when the handiwork of even the finest chef palls upon the appetite of the man who dwells in clubs, and when he thinks longingly of the corned beef and cabbage that. mother used to cook. VI"L-..'.. ........-..` .. v\nvo\Ll\I)\lr:l.|` cnnnunnf useu to cums. ` There comes` a psychological moment when he who boards feels that if he ever saw another plate of hash he would flavor it up with Rough-on-Rats and partake of it and end his sufferings at\once. and it Is in these crises that a man "matrix to get. a- home. ' AI.`..-..A. ...... .........'... unit`: In 4J\n";nn rnch Almost any woman with a chafing dish. and a pink shaded l'am p, and a comfortable chair, can -marry any -man who doesn't "live at home, but far otherwise would it be with her if the man were a domestic expert who could concoct his own favorite dishes, and not have to buy them at the price of a wedding ring. Just` as the woman who can make her own comfortable living, thank you, casts a cold eye on xnatriihony, sowith` the man who is his own cook. "1 - - - - -- 5`-nan 1II'|l\ Okdnb Okla} h} vniakf `rm: qvpv LAND EXPRESS `B0 Wltll me man Wm) 18 ms own cuuvs. . There are those who think that it might promote domestic felicity and harmony for men to` acquire the domestic arts; am} that fora husband and wife to be two souls with but a [single palate, two appetites that craved as one, would be an ideal union. f`..-6n:u-u o n:InaI"f_I! ;I \ f.fP ii 3 'Ev:'mEfNxss ISES. Simply rub 1| Ingri- CTIVCQ an (M16, wuuiu `tic an Iuccu uu-vu. Certainly, a similarity in taste is a strong bond of attraction between a man and woman. One can imagine no marriage more uncongenial than that of a health food faddist `united to an epicure, nor would any breakfast table be a dazkcr or more bloody battleground than that over which is. daily fought the question of hot bread or cold bread. and the effect of black coffee on the digestion and nervous ,_._A.__ Without a doubt. a husband who knew at 519 `Inst what he wm going to get for din- net. And one who could suggt . a new desert when one s own inventive faculty had [_iln_ved out, would be a pearl of "price. a matrimonial jewel of purest rays serene. that a woman would have even more dif I3-_-IA... 2- nu-ncnrvin from 1'18) . Dred3t0n that woum nave even Iuunc uu ficulty in preserving from her` predator} sisters than she would have in keeping a vllbflnwvn . -St, Louis Star-Sayings. THE auxin EXAMINER ! If they keep on resoluting at us, it will`I ieoon be that. you will have to keep a book 3 - under your pillow `to look at befnre you get ? "out of bed in the morning to_see if you re.! `doing it the right way," is the opinion of 1 one man. ` I I `I. `L- _-...I..I...... 3- Jnunh A` ant:n1r:ni - CHARACTER NEEDED Mom: I TIJAII IE1! one man. _ , Is the pendulum-in danger of swinging; until people are, going to be regulated en-I irely. not by something within. but by a] big stick outside? There `are those who are asking: Are women so" busy these days changing legislation that they have not enough time to mould -their family s char-l acter? ' I 17-..- 1. ._ _--__:..... t......... 41.... D:-l..n.. Ali ncrer: ; Here is a warning from the Bishop of Southwark: .What a difference` it would make to 1923 if only two or three out off every hundred of our population made a; delxlxerate resolution to live more thought? fully and unselfishly. V { ".\i'+m- 0 Hm .nrnm-an nf mankind H9.-! Iuuy anu unsemsxuy. ` "After all, the -progress of mankind de-; pends far more -on character than on legis- lation 0! economic changes; and -the world; still has to learn that only _by individuals, classes and nations sacricing personal or sectional interests to the common good can t-rue peace and -fellowship be attained. While each seeks his own interests, regard- less of the rights and wants of his neighbor, controversy, strife and insecurity are the inevitable results. Each of us. then, by wider vision and greater unselfishnes in daily `life. can make some-contribution to the realization of the hoc that 1923 may he 9 Happy New Year.