womans world by mair m morgan around this time of the year hot dishes full of spice and tang are al ways very well received by most mem bers of the family here is a new re cipe for those who like their curry the ingredients 2 tablespoons chut ney 1 tablespoon curry powder 2 onions 1 apple 1 tablespoon golden syrup 1 teaspoon salt cup sultana raisins 2 cups stock salad oil and cold cooked meat such as rabbit or chicken cut into dice slice the onions thinly and cook until brown in the salad oil add tho chopped apple and the other ingredients simmer gently for hours then serve with boiled rice chinese onion omelet this is a tasty variation of the ever popular omelet ingredients 3 cups chopped raw onion u cup salad oil 1s teaspoon pepper i teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons golden syrup 3 table spoons corn starch 4 eggs cook tho onion with the salad oil and syrup un til yellow and tender stirring often add the pepper the salt and the corn starch pour the onion mixture- iuto the wellbeaten eggs and fry by spoon ful like pancakes in a slightly oiled pan use salad oil for the fryingpan or griddle white fruit cake the proof of a good cake is in the eating and the rapidity with which it disappears try the following in gredients 1 pound white sultana rais ins vs pound candied or preserved pineapple 1 cup salad oil a cup corn syrup i teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon salt cup shredded citron peel 1 cup chopped blanched almonds 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice cups flour 1 teaspoon cream of tartar 7 egg whites cream the salad oil and sugar and add syrup with lemon juice sift flour with salt soda and cream of tartar alternate sifted dry in gredients with the stiffly beaten whites of eggs and then stir in the fruits and nuts which have been wash ed dried and rolled in flour steam the cake for 4 hours and then bake in a slow oven for half an hour many cooks add the prepared fruit to the mixed dry ingredients in the sifter and simply sift the flour into the bat ter adding the fruit at the end winter salads although winter time brings us a wealth of fruits and vegetables with which to compose salads we nre prone to drop into a rut and serve head lettuce with a dressing for meal after meal a crisp salad accompanying a meal composed of hearty winter foods brings with it more than just its ap peal of color and taste it also brings in such a pleasant way the healthgiv ing minerals aud vitamins which we nre constantly striving to get iuto our meals the following salads are very inex pensive but are inviting and easy to make ter luncheons en famine is found in lima bean and celery salad two cups lima beans canned or carefully cooked dried ones 1 cup diced celery l tablespoon minced onion 2 tablespoons shredded green pepper 2 tablespoons grated cheese french dressing tho green pepper of course may be omitted but it gives a pleasing touch of color a vivid yellow cheese is attractive too if available mix beans celery onion and pep per tossing lightly to avoid crushing beans pour on french dressing and arrange on crisp romaine garnish with grated cheese and serve more french dressing in a separate sauce boat a good raw vegetable salad uses equal parts of minced green pepper finely shredded cabbage and grated raw carrot each vegetable is mixed with enough mayonnaise to bind and they are then arranged in layers on a lettuce leaf making the last layer of pepper serve with a french dress ing to which 4 tablespoons catsup have been added j sunday school j lesson lesson viii february 25 the twelve sent forth matt 935 108 1032 33 golden text the harvest indeed is n plenteous but the laborers are few pray ye therefore the lord of the harvest that he send forth laborers into his harvest matt 937 38 cabbage and raisin salad two cups finely shredded cabbage 2 red apples v cup seedless raisins 1 teaspoon sugar teaspoon salt 1s teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons leon juice 4 tablespoons salad oil mix sugar salt and pepper with lemon juice slowly add oil beating it in with a fork or a beater beat until smooth wash apples cut into quarters and remove cores cut in dice without peeling and drop at once into the dressing to prevent discolora tion add cahbago and raisins and loss lightly with a fork until thorough ly blended serves four to six per sons baked beans and bacon this makes a hearty dish for a family luncheon two cups baked beans 4 thin slices of bacon 4 tablespoons minced sour pickle 13 cup tomato catsup french jrossing if beans are not dry drain thorough ly cook bacon until crisp and cut in small dice comblno beans bacon und pickle with catsup and serve on a bed of crisp curly endive pass french dressing serves four lima beans and celery another nourishing salad for win- parsnip patty cakes six parsnips teaspoon salt 1s teaspoon white pepper 1 teaspoon sugar 3 tablespoons butter cracker crumbs 1 egg boil parsnips in slightly salted boil ing water when tender drain and plunge into cold water slip skins mash and season with salt pepper sugar and butter make into small flat cakes and roll in cracker crumbs dip in egg slightly beaten with 1 tablespoon cob water and roll again in crumbs saute in butter and bacon fat until a delicate brown squash croquettes this is an excellent way to serve squash when the cook has spent an afternoon away from the house all the preparation except the deep fat frying may be done earlier in the day one medium sized squash 1 cup nut meats 2 tablespoons butter 2 table spoons cream teaspoon salt 1s teaspoon pepper 1 egg dried bread crumbs cut squash in halves and scrape out seeds bake until tender scrape from shell and rub pulp through a ricer mix with butter salt pepper nuts aud cream to make moist enough to handle form into small balls and let stand until cold and firm roll in crumbs dip in egg slightly beaten with 1 tablespoon cold water and roll again in crumbs fry three minutes in deep hot fat and drain on crumbled paper the fat should be hot enough to brown an inch cube of bread in 40 seconds or 385 degrees f meat in cabbage leaves take some cabbage leaves and boil them for five minutes iu salted water then take them out and drain them now make a mixture of minced cold meat chopped onion two tablespoons chopped suet salt pepper and a pinch of allspice shape the mixture moist ening it if necessary with a little stock or gravy into pieces about the size of an egg and wrap each in a cahbago leaf tie these up and ar range them as closely as possible in a long fireproof dish cover them with stock or gravy and with a piece of buttered paper and cook them in the oven for half an hour or so if preferred they could be braised on a bed of vegetables hut in this case it would be better to use raw meat years taxes omitted by village in virginia hamilton va cities having trou ble with their municipal financing might take a few lessons from the village of hamilton last year citizens paid no town taxes costs of sidewalks electric lights and other nunicipal expenses were paid out of a surplus built up by tho council for that purose if theres any destitution among the 500 resi dents of the community its kept quiet no help has been asked from any relief agency town taxes will be collected this year but the rate is only 35c per 100 valuation of pro perty time winter of ad 29 the be ginning of the third year of christs ministry place galilee parallel passages mark c 13 luke 9 1s and jesus went about all the cities and the villages galilee was a very- populous province crowded with cities and villages teaching in their syn agogues all of which would be open to him the synagogue rulers or committee of lay managers gladly in viting the distinguished visitor to speak his message and preaching the gospel of the kingdom the good news that the reign of god had been set up on the earth and healing all manner of disease and all manner of sickness our lord was io special ist confining himself to one form of human misery all bodily wretched ness met his ready sympathy and his allpowerful healing but when he saw the multitudes he was always attended by a crowd he was moved with compassion for them compassion is a confyiinticn of sorrow sympathy and love be cause they were distressed and scat tered as sheep not having a shep herd the jews of christs time were led by religious teachers whose only gospel was dead formalism the good shepherd grieved when he saw his sheep left to the wolves then saith he unto his disciples the harvest indeed is plenteous but the laborers are few it is the love of christ and the love of men that alone can send us out to garner souls for him pray ye therefore the lord of the harvest that he send forth laborers into his harvest it is only in the spirit of prayer the spirit of commun ion with christ that we can really join in this work and get others to join in it and he called urto him his twelve disciples twelve in thought of the twelve tribes of israel disciples means learners apostles as they were called when evangelizing means men sent forth and gave them author ity over unclean spirits to cast them out named first among their pow ers of miracleworking as dealing with the mysterious agencies of satan then especially violent and prevalent in the world and to heal all man ner of disease and all manner of sick ness we have in the gospels only glimpses of this healing power of the twelve for the four evangelists were wholly occupied with setting forth the supremo character and life of the savloui we sej more of it in the acts after the lord had left them to work alone nov the names of the twelve apostles are these the first simon who is called peter he was a fish erman of bethsaida then living in capernaum and andrew his bro ther both andrew and peter were sons of a john or jonah probably dead at this time andrew had one specialty he was an expert in the gentle art of bringing other people to jesus james the son of zebedee also a fisherman as were all of the first four named for christ found his helpers among the poor and lowly being poor and humble himself and john his brother the writer of the greatest book in the world the fourth gospel he referred to himself in hie gospel only s the disciple whom jesus loved tradition says that john was the youngest of the twelve philip this apostle is seldom mentioned but he was the one who found nathanael and led him to jesus and bartholomew tiie son of tol- mai he was manifestly a devout jew student of the written word a man thoughtful disposition and prayer ful habits thomas he does no deserve to be called doubting thomas in the usual sense of the phrase he was desponding slow to believe what he ardently desired as he had been ready to believe the worst john 11 16 but when tonvinced uttering the noblest confession in the gospels john 20 28 and matthew the publican levi the taxgatherer for the romans th writer of the gosei we are study ing whose conversion and great feast we have already discussed this quar ter james the son of alphams james the less as he is often called and thaddams probably the same as the lebbaus jnd jude of the other lists and probably the writer of the epistle of jude simon the catnnajan the can- umsaris or zealot were a party of fierre jewish nationalists bitterly hating the romans and striving to throw off their yoke and judas iscariot who also betrayed him judas of kerioth in judah the only disciple probably who was not a galilean jesus said of him the most terrible thing that could be said of any man it had been good for that man if he had not been born these twelve jesus sent forth they were promoted by that act from discipleship to apostleship and charged them saying go not into any ay of the gentiles they were not for instance to turn northward to syria preaching i tyre and sidoa the time was jot ripe for it and they were not experienced enough and enter not into any city of the samar itans not because christ shared the common jewish antipathy to the hliforegn people who inhabited cvn- tral palestine or we know he was far from this and samaria was expressly included in the apostolic field by christs final instructions acts 18 but galilee would be all they could manage at the time but go rather to the lost sheep of tho house of israel though lost they could most easily be reclaimed and as we go preach saying the kingdom of heaven is at hand by the kingdom f heaven our lord meant the reign of universal right eousness love and peace which he cami- to earth to establish heal the sick raise the dead chnnse the lepers cast out demons christ gave them his own superna tural power which they were to use as prcof thav they were from the messiah freely ye received freely give this joes not mean that any of the twelve had been miraculously healed it means that the power to heal was given them for nothing and that they must not take payment for healing every one therefore who shall con fess me before men discipleship in the service and kingdom of jesus christ asks a man to profess nothing about himself but it does ask him to confess a great deal about the name the law and senice of his mas ter him will i also confess before my father who is in heaven what aii eternal joy if one can hear christ say on the great day of judgment iis soul is mine forever but whosoever shall deny me be fore men by repudiating christs spiritual authority by denying his di vine sonship by refusing to accept the atonement he made for sin by living a life contrary to his teachings him will i also deny before my father who is in heaven this is no threat no angry condemnation it is the sorrowful assertion of an inevit able consequence alloccasions dress tjy helen williams illustrated dressmaking lesson i ttished with every pattern husband not forced to pay rent to wife did any male judge ever frown on a wifes generosity new york justice henry g wen- zel jr denied in the supreme court queens an application by alvin m dunham receiver of rents for a dwel ling for an order directing ralph ri- cardi whoso wifeowns the property to pay 150 a month rent for the house the house in which a man and wife live said justice wenzel is in addition to being a dwelling home the house may belong to either but as long as love and amity pre vail the house belongs to both i am quite aware that a similar motion has been granted by one of my learned brothers whose opinions are worthy of the deepest considera tion his determination of the matter rested upon the duty of the husband to provide food and shelter for his wife this has beer a natural law since the cave man seized a wife and carried her to his cave in these en lightened days many wives furnish shelter for their husbands and where tjiey have the means and inclination to do so the law does not frown upon their generosity grouchiness in families ontario plowmen tohold34ivktcii frank oconnor farm to he scene 1 00 years aftcr first one toronto york county on the 100th anniversary of its tlrst plowing match and the centennial celebration of its biggest municipality will be tha sceue of the 1934 competitions of the ontario plowmens association it was unanimously agreed at the an nual meeting of the association here the watch will be held on the 550- acre farm maryvale of frank p oconnor following submission tt tho meeting of mr oconnor offer delegates from east york north york and kingvaughan associations united iu presenting the invitation and received the support of dele gates from ilalldmand who volunt arily withdrew their invitation to aid iu making yorks and torontos an niversaries a greater success hundreds ot entrio including plowmen with international reputa tions will participate in the contests c ass of in addl- its an exceedingly simple little model a moulded bodice with draped neck and a straight skirt inverted plaits at the front lend ample freedom to the hem the panel effect will give you that smart height you want so much and arent the sleeves interest ing todays pattern is generally becom ing it is equally lovely carried out in silk or lightweight woolen huckleberry blue rough crepe silk inspired the original model style no 3271 is designed for sizes 14 16 18 20 years so 38 and 40 inches bust size 16 requires 3 yards of 39- inch material how to order patterns write your name and address plain ly giving number and size of such patterns as you want enclose 15c in stamps or coin coin preferred wrap it carefully for each number and address your order to wilson pattern service 73west adelaide st toronto blind niece of truro woman in movies mrs a s murphy of truro ns has received word that her niece pretty mary flinri aged 23 of pres- cott arizona blind since she was two years of age has gone to pasadena california where she has an import ant role in a theatrical production now being rehearsed in which the en tire cast of seven is sightless her selection as a member of the unique cast followed a reply to a newspaper advertisement for the prettiest blind girl in california who does not wear glasses call the members of your household together for a council and discuss the state of affairs members of the average family arent always nice to each other so often it happens that father mother and children seem to be waiting for someones hat to drop or the chip to fall off a shoulder or the fat to jump into the fire this habit of grouchiuess in fami lies grows so subtly and so swiftly that no one suspects it if their friends relatives or neighbors were to hint that all was not serene iu their dally life tbey would be hurt and re sentful family irritability growing yet if one appeared unexpectedly on the threshold at any minute of almost any day when this family is together the chances are ther would be a ruckus going on about some thing or someone yelling or someone quietly sulking to himself if the family in question disdains such ple- bian tactics and considers verbal fencing a higher form of conbatiye j which will include every art than the cleaver or the broad team and tractor plowing sword of noisy quarreling things may b quite as uncomfortable wealth culture or social position makes little difference the family in which the habit of quarreling has taken root will go about it in its own way one may go into a house as quietly serene seemingly as a dewy dell on a may morning yet fee in stantly the brittle strain of unfriend liness in every word aud gesture this irritability and impatience is growing rapidly in a number of homes it was almost inevitable for this to happen as individual interests have drifted apart with tile yours more over there are too few- common ties each on conies in tired aud the fam ily meets at a time when nerves are not at their best and there is plenty today to unnerve the best of us talk the matter over what would be wrong with calling she family together for a council passing the pip of peace and dis cussing the state of affairs a mother might say children and you too dad and 1 niyelf have be come careless of each others feelings we are short temperd and fly off without reason at the slightest thing we offend where we dont really mean to we accuse or get suspicious where we should know better we are disobliging selfish and sour in fact we often treat each other far less courteously than we would treat complete strangers let us all try to be kinder to help each other we might try to smile and bo merry instead of look ing like thunder clouds halt the time and any family that is worth its salt will give three cheers and agree to adopt new rules for the home team in the future best i was worrying about you last night dear dick ther was no use bess i know but i always worry over trifles goods motor car was not so good williamsport pa a tire went flat on edwin j goods automobile during the wee sma hours while he was inflating the tire his lights went out as he cranked the car the engine kicked and almost bowled nim over when he closed the door the glass broke finally on the way again a wheel blithily rolled off into a vacant lot good called a taxicab modern women are not pioneer type secretary of settlement com mittee complains of diffi culty in placing fami lies on land peterboro ort w magladery secretary on the ontario land settle ment committee says women have been the committees greatest diffi culty in placing families on the land in northern ontario we found he says that less than 15 per cent of the women could sew knit or bake their own bread they were not the type for pioneers we have learned our lesson and now we make certain that the woman is properly fitted to do her part before the family is permitted to go into the land in northern ontario tion it is expected the executive of the association may inaugurate a new plan in certain classes in which straight plowing will be required and handling of th furrow barred this feature in which a ployman is permitted to return over his fur rows and build or mould into shape any sections of them which have col lapsed was a subject of much dis- cussion at the meeting a norfolk delegate took the stand that all handling should be barred pointing to- recent matches in this county where younger local plowmen inexperiecced in match work lost to professional tourists who knew the tricks ol handling on the other hand a strong fac tion supported the attitude taken by j lockie wilson who pointed out that when he showed- cattle in com petition their horns werestvaped hoofs scraped hides washed and all kinds of preparations made to hc them look their best because city people contributed largely to tlw gate of plowing matches he argued furrows shoud be made to look their best and all plowmen learn to pro duce the best furrow as an experi ment he recommended trying twc classes in which no handling should be permittedv f c fuller of london out was elected president of the association hon thomas l kennedy minister of agriculture and a j h eckardt of toronto were made honorary presi dents other officers chosen incud- ed geo waldie of suratford first vicepresident j w mcrae lochiel second vicepresident j iockie wil son toronto secretary and manag ing director clark young miliken treasurer jr herrington richmond hill auditor wiliam doherty to ronto honorary treasurer and a slate of executive officers composed of james mclean w c barrie j j duffus d d gray j j tlerney and e moses the election of directors resuted in the following being appointed to the board w c barrie waterloo j 1 duffus peterboro n calder grey h a cormack wellington d d gray carleton j b henderson frontenac w b lindsay haldi- mand g b little york james mc lean york d a mclntyrc lamp- ton h goltz muskoka j w mc- rae glengarry j j tlerney leeds j webster victoria f g fuler middlesex and george waldie perth men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains upon their own appe tites burke railways handle 125000 grain cars fort willian ont according to figures announced by the canadian national and canadian pacific rail ways enough grain poured into lake- head railway and elevator terminals bizarre effects in evening clothes paris buyers are hurriedly com pleting orders at the final showing ol 1934 spring fashion decrees most ot them wishing to start their return home as soon as possible figures remain figures and th evening silhouette which is mostly de signed along formfitting lines feat ures long trains high front and low back decolletes and slit skirts some times worn over ruffled petticoat foundations numerous bizarre effects are dis played in evening clothes some of in 1933 to make up a grain train whose engine would be in montreal and whose caboose would be in west vhich are designed as bird silhouettes fort william grain cars numbering having fabric wings standing out over 125000 were unloaded and by rough j t shoulder blades or back of the calculation they would stretch nearly p the dav silhouettes are more 1000 miles mutt and jeff by bud fisher mrs spivis is such a good shot that jeff had to hold still or be hit straightened with smooth fitted shoul ders and long sleeves having a full ness in tho upper arm natural waists nre accented by fancy belts skirts are longer from six to ten inches from the ground many of them arc slit six inches on each side necklines arc fairly high and there is a tendency to accent the front of the day clothes witl- rovers jutting out on coats which in some cases hang open jabots frills and chin bows of organdy and taffetn accent the frocks many of tho hats worn both during the day and in the evening arc wide or medium brimmed there aro also some halo hats among the many smart accessories day colors nre genoiallysober such as navy beige grey and black lighten ed with whito or other bright touches lvcning colors are light blue pinks greens yellows brilliant emeralds purples flames white and black the fabrics are wools alpacas taf fetas pebbled crepes satin and print3