L ho e o t rrog eemplit®~ureteteliie uniiiie P enigr~unialiionmte. Phs \\nrarvicined is ons Te uy teran facttat ie ie es nï¬ U wl fot t enls ce P e hi t oc Renai on o t terigier af ol Follow (‘.s directions carefully and you will have reason to be really conâ€" «vited over the amount of jam and jelly you can have this year in spite of high costs of fruits. culmuuu_.,_uu-ut-ul {repra ;;i mm,uru--.u-wulu-(u)m.. lrmâ€".-kl-unflcmuhuâ€"flh“nul M‘nunlhuuhuluhflhmm Seattle Wash. Stecle won. what have you! You will breathe little prayers of thankfuiness all winter each time you take down a jar of cherty jam during the winter to go with _ the breakfast toast or to put"on the top of the chilled rice pudding moulds, Mow glad you will be that botticd fruit pectin came to your rescue when fruit prices were soaring and that you were able to store away this lovely cherry jelly with so little work and so liitle extra heat in your kitâ€" Don‘t be depressed by all this taik of the high price of fruit because of the "Great Drought of 1936." _ Since the discovery of the use of bottlcd fruit pectin, fruit can be made to go so much further that we still have jams and jellics to giorify our meals for the coid months abead of us. Cherry jam can be made right now and we don‘t have to use frait a Httle underripe as in the old days because with bottled fruit pectin it will *set" when the cherrics are fully ripe and if you missed the early cherrics you can still lay in store rows of jams and jeliles made from this delicious fruit. The shortâ€"boil mothod takes less fruit because it is not "all cooked away" as in the old â€"way of jellyâ€" making â€"â€" it is also very economical or chokecherry) _ _ T cups (3 Ibs.) sugar; 4 cups (2 Iba» Doesn‘t a collandcr of gleaming red cherties make you anxious to ..-’ serve their richness ond color in the form of clear chorry jelly? You pro bably think promptly of that outturnâ€" «d mould of rubyâ€"colored goodness that will add such decoration to your table and such flavour to your meals during the winter, It is so casy now a«days to make cherry jJolly, it is reat Household Science Steele Cuts Down Interesting Visitors Arrive in Canada HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method of your favorâ€" ite mainâ€"course dish and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Home Hints, Reom 421, 13 West Adclaide Street, Torento. \ for the best salnd dish or refreshing drink recipe received. dissoive over hot water and add to the dreasing; fold in the chicken, ceâ€" lery and olives and odd seasoning to waste. Mold as desired and chill. Then unmould on crisp lettuce leaves and garnish with stuffed olives or radish reses. â€"â€" Mrs, Asa. Laughran, RR. 3 Shawrilie, P.Q., Quebec. _1 table‘ spcon gelatine; 14 cup ot ::. h‘nl‘:nn 1 nu.: 4 1 cup m:’am:u-. chopped stuffed olives. Salt and paprika to the taste. Soak the gelatine in cold water, glasses of hot clear syrup for jelly. Then fruit will not float. Pour quick> ly. Purafin and cover at once. Makes about 11 g‘asses, six fluid ounces each. To prepare freit, pit about 2% lbs. fully ripe cherries. Crush thoroughly or grind. Add 14 cup woter, bring to a beil, cover, and simmer 15 minutes. (Por stromger cherry flavour, . add enequarter teaspcon almond extract before pouring). Measure sugar into large kettle. Add prepared fruit, pack» Ing each cup solidly and filling up the last cup with water, if necessary. Mix well and bring to a full roiling boil over hottest fire, Stir constantly before and while boiling. Bofl hard 3 minutes. Remove from fire and stir in fruit pectin, Thenâ€"stir and skim by With whole cherries, ladle of a few prepared fruit; 1 bottle fruit pectin. We will pay $1.00 on publication THIS WEEK‘$ WINNER vi ts of of gn â€" otitaadt mustache fool your it really 18 u-uh-fl.'u........ wildered sereen comedian, who is finding something humgrous in thits on The Tiner Rermanaie‘ fet a vacation abroad. The British Cavaicade notes: For 60 years a bedâ€"ridden lifWle old woâ€" man, Mrs. Jane Ellen Hawhkins,â€"lived Some Comic Relief B.B.C. Building Old Troupers Are Just a Couple of Kide flees, but w at least one big stud‘o, né&! members of the DB.C. staff Bow: ocâ€"pying tempor -nau-ha:' Nortland street, Langham # tc the 1.1C.+ "The expansion will be consideâ€"ably below the 500,â€" :mmdhmm ».» « Being spread a: period of three years, it !.'=| tax the D.B.C.‘s resources unduly," ‘ The or {on will be built in the a like style as the present will be mostly of» . Gatas 1 @n t ouse, that . they e t grswslon during her Livestock graming in the driedâ€"up bed of m creck in the drought area of North Dakots. Creck mnmhamhwmvhhufln-h‘-h“l:w&hm ) Por Place, next to the month Hawkivs died; the | of Governors LC., with Siz Jobn Charles { _ dire« general, were ass p by 44â€"yearâ€"old B. y for d the size of im , making it the idlo ‘headquzsters in the The '_Mcu-.-u-gwu-um.mm-a“u m-.t'%m-wmhu-mummmnmah country for annual convention, corporation has :-ny c:n-h e .The only obâ€" Find Fodder in River Bottom Jackie, the playboy chimpansee of the London, England, mm&mm-(hflhï¬n: veflects sadly on the woes of the morning after. Gaudet, 41 years the New» h-wa-â€"hz;‘;m-“.*u In the centre is W. F. Swaffield, with 41 years. He was in the Mackentie basin. Mhlï¬n'l- F. C. lormerly of Moose Factory, vight. He aia in‘ alr $3 peeF, Sopaerty iof Meses Pectory, in on the Hudeows m‘l"u{ mï¬g ï¬i.u' P aroun mey in io ercke is ty t ooogiitt ever meeting each other. * Apes the Playboys on the Morning After Vetcrans of the North a week. This is â€"'Wh llllnh-hu"gm., slghtly and unsanitary cracks which ï¬lï¬rldmd sand, gra nlm-l-llkbnu‘uf.. dll-.llltlom-(b'.- tected carefully from cold until it is 2 ow °e TE too rap‘dly. Every new job of conâ€" ;‘""':E:’il:llh.:um 0 #un and wind, and thoroughâ€" iy Set done toue ioA ie days after mixing, and as this curing proces requires moisture, many a job | PRp en eb O uterrvucl duw s A.d w4 has been ruined by allowing it to dry The curing of concrete goe rapidly doring the first week or 10 ‘h,,,:, Ooum n e OW m -'-â€"‘ Tike Mle thor vhothes Gay e i use sets themselves or whether they disâ€" pose of them to other persons. As fime goes on many weaknesses are revealed in the trade‘ privileges which United States exporters. PREPI i+ comlthce~ c ts . 4t . risks involved in the purchase of subâ€" standerd receivers are far greater than the public realizes. With many of there sets the possibility of fire -lmohulnlnl-kh-hm present. What is more, should a fire vesult from the operation of one of these cheap radics the Insurance comâ€" panics may legally refuse all insurâ€" radio sets run the mt iniividest raiteit st Cmar io mss Pnaek mt ons io n t uin i ane The editer of Radio Tradeâ€"Bullder, gate, states that v lt ".i'-v of uht claes S Op, Jn‘ it may, ®f this class of merchandise is made by the better known, reputable manuâ€" facturers. By far the mort of it may hrll-d.mbmm as "Junk" in which the requirements olth&-‘n?.llndnl&hln fiagrartly violated, often constituting a menace to life and property. _ Radio Tradeâ€"Builder adds that the came collect." Radios That Menace â€l:ih-dfnpufy 1 cannot pass." Jeremiah v, 22, Sat shall pass." en "u-‘-râ€"m"’;'o“h'- paid the fare Wld"ll.'knll.l. Aluhrlhncohddnn,ph- in Texas, received a wire from his ::hvn-flnfl-u‘om "How do you suppose 1 know that is from my mother?" be said â€"to a .,:."“-"'-huh #ir," denied Colone! Green, ',','}:"‘!.“_ï¬â€"-h.â€"h The list was arranged as a calenâ€" g:-:t--uâ€"h-nmâ€' lun‘_(hMlh-*dlm, Green) : as the "richest woman in America" 72 m eaae line, and so consulted the mother lhs'u.--“t* who knew all about railroads, being a high official of the New York Cenâ€" tral, Depew gave her a list of Bibliâ€" cal quotations, which she promptly forwarded to her son. Comments The Mail and Empireâ€" ’ In the days when Colonel Edward M. R. Green, raliroad industriaiist u‘h-hrâ€"-hmu‘-hlh* Midland Railroad for his mother, the astute Hetty Greenâ€"known to fame neath which showed the frilling on some oldâ€"fashioned "undies." He was At a meeting of a society of which hlfl'z-dw'.:.- to be inâ€" was creased by fifty, When it came time hrc.l.c.uhl.h-mhllw having been absent several ::vhu.:l..nlmfl of filling the gop caused by his nonâ€" appearance. 1 shall never forget his comical appearance at a party where all the guests hcd to come dressed ns chilâ€" dren. He wore a huge pinafore, beâ€" lwâ€"' Vï¬'u_';'l“ a man to pass." Judges iil, 28. Wednesdayâ€""The wicked shall _ not pass." Mark xill, 30, * as those who knew him in the flesh or only by his writings well knowâ€" e L4 ï¬â€"hdn-fl' which Numbers xx, 18. of the Famous