When cake is used with strawberries it should be angel food or sponge cake. Either one may be used for a desert which is sometimes known as strawâ€" berry surprise. A large round cake is msed and the top crust is carefully reâ€" When in Dev berries always c dariving through t ways were on t] teas." A huge b of sugar and 0o loaf of brown bread were brou;j "They that g: jJey of from Loi cream make o pronounced a p in criticizing strawberrics wit these height of their Recommending Buttered Bread and Strawberries Second as a Pudding In this country we usually take our strawberries with our meals. We like them just as well for breakfast as we do for desert at luncheon and dinner. For the latter time Ilike to save a piece of buttered bread which goes betâ€" ter with strawberries than does cake. One of the best desserts I know is the combination of crushed. strawberries and buttered bread made into the form of a pudding. ‘Berries differ so much in sweetness that sugar should be addâ€" edâ€"gradually, as it dissolves in the fruit juice. Honey may replace part of the sugar. Delicious Dessert Suggested by Old Country Custom of Serving Strawherries and Cream With Buttered Bread. Recipes for Strawherry Torte and Devonshire Shortcake National W ar Finance Comnuttee (By EDITH M. BARBER) } ‘M y NHUsBAND and the children say that now there‘s so much money coming in, I should have all the things I‘ve always wanted." Buy War Savings Stamps from banks, post offices, telephone offices, department stores, druggists, grocers, tobaceonists, book stores and other retail stores. "But I say no thank you ! My Freddie gave up his job willingly and lives in a tent. The least each of us at home can do is to go without this and that and buy W ar Savings Stanips every week so the boys over there will have everything they zsed for viectory." J11 he ead of 0 AaY hC ils, We like akfast as we and dinner. e to save a i July, the and while ide you alâ€" for "cream ies, a basin n, a whole of white I} Butter bread on loaf, slice oneâ€"quarâ€" ter inch thick, and remove crusts. Butter oneâ€"quart roundâ€"bottom bowl and line with bread, cutting one slice to fit small spaces. Mix sugar with berries. Pour in sweetened fruit, and cover with remaining buttered bread. Select plate to fit just inside the bowl and weight it down into the pudding. Chill twentyâ€"four hours. Turn out on serving plate and garnish with whipâ€" ped cream. Yield: Six servings Strawberry Torte ° 6 â€" egg whites.* Major Rufus Raymer, Divisional Comnfander for Northern Ontario for the Salvation Army, and Mrs. Raymer, will visit Timmins during the coming weekâ€"end. On Saturday afternoon, June 20th, at 2 o‘clock Mrs. Raymer will conduct a special service for woâ€" men. On Sunday there will be special service all day conducted by Major Raymer. (275 degrees Fahrenheit) about fifty to sixty minutes. Cool, loosen with spaâ€" tula, and carefully remove to serving plate. Fill center with sweetened whipâ€" ped cream mixed with fruit. Garnish with unhulled berries,. Yield: Six large servings. Divisional Commander S.A. to be Here This Weekâ€"end â€" teaspoon cream of tartar. 1 cup sugar. teaspoon vanilla, extract. 1% cups heavy cream, whipped and sweetened to taste. 1 pint strawberries, sliced. Beat egg whites until foamy, add cream of tartar, and beat until egg whites stand in peaks. Beat in sugar cneâ€"quarter cup at a time, and add vanilla extract. With a tablespoon arâ€" range in form of ring on ungreased baking sheet and bake in slow oven NOTE: Whole raspberries or any sliced fruit may replace the strawberâ€" ries. (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) moved. Some of the crumb is taken ut and mixed with the sweetened trawberries which are then placed in he cake shell. This is reâ€"covered with he top crust and the whole is spread vith whibpped cream or with frosting. [he latter is rich but very good. Devonshire Shortcake 4 _ or 5 slices of bread. 3 or four tablespoons butter. 1 quart berries, crushed and sweet With the hotter weather at our door we should invest in these aids which assure us freshness of body and feelâ€" ing. I want to include dress shields in that grounp too, for if you do not use an antiâ€"perspirant which actually stops underarm perspiration, you should see that every garment you wear is proâ€" tected by shields and these should be changed as frequently as necessary. A combination of underarm shields and a moisture proof back shield is a godsend in very hot weather, and such an aid pnrotects your gowns from disâ€" coloring of getting soiled with perspirâ€" atieocn which is a natural reaction of humid or hot weather. Follow Directions On each aid purchased with personal hygiene in mind, there comes full diâ€" rections for use. Follow these. Too often a girl buys a deodorant when she actually wanted an antiâ€"perspirant. The first â€"deodorizes the body‘s sweat; the second is used under arms and aâ€" cross back to nrevent the perspiration from coming out on those areas. But let it be understood that perspiration will some out elsewhere for the body should and must secrete so much waste to keep healthy. Charm is more than beauty, more than a lvrical voice, a gracious manner a heartâ€"warming smile. Rather it is a happy combination of many little things â€" characteristics and grooming points â€" the total of which is your charm auotient. And a girl is smart who keeps that rating high. We all know the basic part of charm is good grooming. All meticulous perâ€" sons eve with disfavor limp lingerie touches, spotted clothes, untidy hair, careless makeâ€"up; bitten or chipped fingernails, curable blemished skin, stained teeth, unlovely breath or an unfortunate body aroma. All those little groomings should be checked daily, and a lot more which I have not mentioned. It costs little to invest in charm asâ€" surance today. A few commercial aids but a lot of awareness! For instance there are very effective antiâ€"perspirâ€" ants and cream deodorants on the market, effective mouth solutions and tooth cleansers, and soap. Thank heavens priorities have not taken these vital aids from us yet. and a T godsend an aid coloring atiocn i humid ¢ L Noise Drives us Crazy "The modern machine age has inâ€" troduced a very serious relatively new element into our lives. This element is noise. People who must live in citâ€" ies seldom have a quiet place in which to work during the day or rest during the night. These noises bombard the nervous system and tend to increase nervous fatigue. I am quoting Dr. James L. McCart ney, New York, in Pennsylvania Med ica Journal, Harrisburg. While the outstanding damage done is apparently to the hearing, the real damage that is not so apparent, is the effect upon the nervous system» In fact, not only does noise affect behavâ€" for but noise may actually cause damâ€" age such as bleeding in the nervous tissues. While we might expect that the noise of the hammering in a boiler shop woeuld damage the ear drum and other hearing structures, as it aoes, even employees in a business offce can be affected by noise and lose some of their accuracy, speed, and production. In a business office, information was GINNY SIMMS servos charm and tea to appreciative navy men,. Her greoming is meticulous, her beauty enviable! Bu Jomes W . Barton, Beauty and You Personal Groomings Are Base of Charm by PATRICIA LINDSAY of Pour? Bouyp gathered before and after the offices were quieted. The amount or level of noise was reduced by about fifteen percent and the average efficiency of the office force was increased about 9 percent. Mistakes made by typists were reduced by 30 percent .(some report forty percent) while mistakes of machâ€" ine operators were reduced. 52 percent. This reduction of noise also had the effect of preventing less of employees who took up other employment and decreased the number who remained away from work by nearly 40 percent. A 42 percent reduction in errors in the telephone room of a telegraph company with a 3 percent drop in cost was brought about by a 50 percent reâ€" duction in noise. "Noise slackens and dulls our mental processes and clouds cour judgment. It makes us irritable, pessimistic and grumpy. We become unpleasant peoâ€" ple to live with when worried by noise and do not enjoy living with ourselves. Neurasthenia Many persons suffer these days with neurasthenia â€" _ mental and physical tiredness. Send today for Dr. Barton‘s new leaflet on this subject entitled ‘Neurasthenia‘. Just send a threeâ€" cent stamped, selfâ€"addressed envelope to Dr. Barton, Post Office Box 150, Times Saquare Station, New York, N.Y. and ask for this leaflet by name. I have svooken before of the effect of noise on the nervous system which afâ€" ter all is more imnortant than money or time lost. The nervous system conâ€" trols the higher faculties ‘of the indiâ€" vidualâ€"his ability to work, his mental capacities, and his personality â€" his behavior. * s Ottawa Journal:â€"German aircraft, in a soâ€"called "reprisal" raid, badly damaged the centuriesâ€"old cathedral at Exeter, Englandâ€"not accidentally, but with full deliberation. And that, to the barbarians, was an effective ansâ€" wer to RA.F. attacks on vital shipping centres and factories,. (Registered in accordance with the Copright Act) "THERE‘S REAL ECONOMY "Spend less time in the kitchenâ€"use less electricityâ€" by carefully planning your oven meals," says Reddy Kilowatt. "There are lots of complete meals you can prepare in your electric ovenâ€"just choose foods which cook at the same temperature and approximâ€" in PAANNED Electric Oven Meals" Kinette Member is Honoured at Meet of Organization Mrs R. W. Thompkins Will Leave at End of Month for Kirkland Lake. Mrs. R. Thompkins was honour at the meeting of the group held last week at the Mrs. Frank Filion, 21 Toke str the members of the club sa well" to this popuar mem}k leaves at the end of the mont up residence in Kirkland Lak A pleasant social time was Among those present were: Mrs Henry Hudson, Mrs. H. Bovd, Mrs Chas .Kerr, Mrs. J. Cartan, Mrs. Lo: Marshall, Mrs. Wm. Alexander, Mrs. R A. H. Taylor, Mrs. Frank â€"Robinson District Children‘s Aid Report for Month of M; rane Children‘s Aid society, as presâ€" ented by Mrs. A. G. Caron, local supâ€" erintendent:â€" Applications for children for adoption 1 Ofl‘ce Interviews s 125 Interviews out of office 172 Somplaints received 0 Investigations made 4 20 Children involved .......... ; 11 Mail received ......... 107 Mail sent out ids ic t M Cnfldren in Shelter .......................... : 4 Children boarding out . 60 Wards visited ......... a BPe / Court attendance ... . e Fis 2 Juvenile cases ... fge s 1+ Children on pr obation to couxt Wards placed in boarding homes... . 1 Wards placed in foster homes ... .. 1 Adoptions completed ............ io tÂ¥ 5 Official warnings given ................... 2 Mileage travelled *‘............................. 112"7 Meetings addressed ... 2 Persons prosecuted for ofl‘enses 'wamst COHIHARCOTâ€" 0.: sns 2 io ds s 1 Childrex} p]aced in foster homes (not WArCs) sE ks e d 2 'Children admitted to ~shelter (not (WALOS) : 2222510 id n en e e isnnd se e is 1 Children given hospital and medical s P iss i ns Mess s ) 2 Children returned to parents ... 7 Investigations for other societies... 4 Cases under the Unmarried Parents The following is the report month of May for the District Record Seventeen Births Here During Past Week BCRN â€" on June 5th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Joseph Kelly, of 11 John avenue, at St. Mary‘s Hospital â€" a son. BORN â€" on May 31st, 1942 and Mrs. Jacaques Guillemette, Tamarack street â€" a daughter BRORN â€" on May 27th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Luirer Cauchon, 70 Birch south, at St. Marys Hospital â€" a daughter. BORN â€" on May 26th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Lorica Dagennis, 46 5th aveâ€" ne â€" a daughter. y PORN â€" on May 14th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Clement Watson, 19 Preston street â€" a son. BORN â€" on May 27th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Donald McNabb, 261 Spruce street, north, at St. Marys Hospital â€" a daughter. BORN â€" on May 31 st, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Heari Mayrand, 60 Lake Shore â€" a daughter. BORN â€" on May 15th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. William Hitch, 37% Toke strâ€" eet at St. Mary‘s Hos_mtalâ€"a daughter. BORN â€" on May 22nd 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carlesso, 60 Birch street south, at St. Mary‘s Hospital â€" a son. BORN â€" on May 15th, 1942, to M REDDY SAYS : **Protect oven surfacesâ€"â€" wipe them with a damp cloth after use. Remove spilled food when the oven cools," 41 1¢€ 1t 91 ik silve 194© Â¥hen ‘O0châ€" presâ€" supâ€" 11 a kc 119 PV 16 PCRN and Mrs avenue, daughter and Mrs. Donald Lough, 19 James aveâ€" nue, at St. Mary‘s Hospital â€"â€" A son. PCRN â€" on May 15th, 1942, to Mr. POCRN and Mrs. eet south daughter. BORN â€" on May 28th, 1942, to. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Borthivick, 203 Birâ€" ch street, south, at St. Mary‘s Hospital â€" a daughter. BORN â€" on May 15th, 1942, to Mr. and Mrs. Lisle Wilson, at St. Mary‘s Hospital â€" a daughter. Salvation Army Home Front Drive in September The government has taken over the financing of the war service work of the Salvation Army, along with the other war services such as the Legion, K. of ately the same length of time. If the meat calls for longer cooking time, put it in first, then add vegetâ€" ables and dessert later. And speaking of meat . .. remember that roasts need no basting in your elecâ€" tric oven, so save yourself trouble and conserve oven heat by adding NO water." puT) â€" on May 30th Samue] Mew, 2 Adel id Manett . Mary‘s I Honour lmumi JEA, as you know, comes to us from Cevylon and India, and every man on every boat ch carries it to our land is riskâ€" I ng his life every day of the trip. (mask <@ We are honour bound to use only what our Government asks us to. Avoid waste and do not use more than your share. ԤALADA‘ TFA COMmPANY UuF CANADA, LIMITEFD [ay 30th, i1942 to Mew, 272 Cedar Mary‘s Hospital Hosnital son. to M Wi‘sor Reddy Kilowatt however, front W methods. â€" is that there can be no organization or successful effort for the war services unless the Home Front is fully mainâ€" tained. Accordingly the Salvation Army is planning a special drive to finance the Home Front. This special drive Officer: crack of dawn it? wWar and Private: "Sure, what my wife used to give me when I came homeat 4 a.m." â€"Sudbury Star. will be held in September of this e "home ervices. THURSDAY. JUNE 18TH, 1942 â€"dav d iditions t that Don‘t yvou know what the been left with its home to finance by. ordinary re are two special points in conngetion with this. at it is difficult to separâ€" > front"‘ work from the T anv event both are ich of the home front directlyvy arises from the is. The second point â€" the most important one ‘e can be no organization ffort for the war services 1ront I{n anv ich . of directly 8. TAE Salvation Amy