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7 _Telephone 71.
• `VIIIIII:SDAY, AUGUST gad,
•
REVOLUTION' 'IN BRITAIN?
k, • ,,,,,.4....0:.,.... ' •
.•,,,, p . , ,, ,
. Titough,'CitttadiartS''itere prepared to
' i•earn - o„g A „ sleelde14ecrease in '‘ bon-
serteatiVe,Streigth In ilie tritisk *Ouse
Of' Ooll/Moni, very few 01.i.l4 have ex.-
' •
it can easily be, removed. In fact,
44ted that his elevatilkm: to the
peerage is eipeeted—
' • • '11 *
, Again Warning' iLgiven of a Seri/milli;
'coal 'shortage next .winter. Production
in the United States, froni which On-
lainio gets nearly 'all its eoal, is away
below the usual level, and the peeple
Q f this. Province may b.ave to find
peeted tile great turnover represented
• bi the electim reaults made known..
'last week'. For„the first time Labor is
given an ever -ail maJOrity of seats,
and a majority so large that there can other fuelsuppties to maintain' their
be AO sniestioning of the intention.- of bonie In- comfort during the winter
the electors. inonths.
To obServers in this country British *
politics revolved around the Person of - A Single,TaX candidate is contesting
Churchill, .and it seemed 'ineQn.,. a Provincial by-election in Alberta
'eeivable that after air. Churchill:1'S
y
againAt a Social Credit candidate. The
..• ,-4.$ •
Single Tax man will. no doubt be del
megailicent prvices to the Brith3h
be
. nation, to the Empire and. to the World' feated, bit his camaign may useful
-2in the way of education. there are
" should be voted. out of office. But
otae ,t,cv pitssi thousands of advocates Of the Single
° the ineenceivable has
and with an emphasis that Inothing TaX in Canada, but they, are scattered
. s
short of amazingIt is arevolution over the country•amongst the multitude
. ' .
to whom "it' prevents. only the appeal
We are beginning to realise 'hew much
Mr. Churchill: was handicapped by theof reason and common sense..
deed wood which made so large a pro- "
portion of is support IA the last House .The United StateS Senate has rati-
of Comm.ons, and, judging ' from elee- fled the United Nations' Charter by a
tion results, even in his Cabluet. It vote of 89' to 2, This is in striking
is proverbial that Britain does not reversal of its action twenty -,five years
like coalitions. It is traditional alSo ago in refusing participation iu the
that war Governments aret not popular: League of 7,%tatiens. The world does
• (That ,Mr. King came out of move. ,The adverse vote would have
the .; recent elections in this been larger by •one if Senator Hiram
country- So:- 4ohnston of California, • a confirmed
to his Political sagacity in contrast to isolatiouist, had not been .unable to
the ineptness of his opponents.) There record his opposition owiiig to illness.
was the •further circtunstance that the With the support of tbe United 'States
last Parliament had .a record , that the .prospects of success for , the new
would have earned disraissal five or eace •organization are immeasurably
' Six years ago had the electors been, advanced. The p*le ofthe great Re-
. " given an opportunity • to turn it out public now iealIz that they cannot
It was the Parliament that supporter.' stand .aloof 2 rom the affairs of the
the Chamberlain Government throuill rest of the world, and that fact alone
4'. ail the humiliations of -the ,Munich era. is one 'of the strongest guaranteesof
When the Crisis. of 1940 brought a lasting peace.
Cldirchilll to the fore and a coalition - *
Goveinment was brought into being,aliscrapers may be irsign of inater-
-
- that same Parliament became sub- ial proSperity, but they are a feature
•servient to the new order and; in feet; of this modern world that is about
•-• could do nothing else: Mr. Churchill as rational US were the cave dwellings
was the 'splendid fig-tirehead°, of the .of .earlier days. The 'startling ac-
coalitiOn, but it included as some of., cident in New York 'on Saturday, wheli
its foremost members 34r. *Attlee, an army bomber crashed into the
'Who now. succeeds Mr.chtirchill, as EmPire, State building, must' have
.• prime Minister, .a:nd others, clf the made maty city dwellers apprehensive
Labor party ;who helped • greatly in of some much more frightful:calamity
banging, Britain triumphintLY through to the thousands of work.ers who isliencl
the War80 we must. realize that a their days in these towering struetures.
victory for ),Mr. Churchill in the It has been said ' that all the people
electoral contest would have been a in the world could find room in the'
'defeat for men who shared with- him 'State of Texas; yet fthe .cities are so
11 P.IIIL OSWER OF MY MEADOWS
'‘ ty vitam ..r. 43 Qtdo
A JOB or PAINTING
It's - a., quiet Sunday after oa voreek,
Of. mixed weatherWe hacl two Or
three ScoreherS taad, tiledinst When
everything, seemed to be well *under
..
way it rained. Today WS threatening
again. The air IS humid. MS. .Phil
. .
Is busy trying to and SOMe Old pack-
age S of seeds in the hope „that by
Putting the in noW she Inghe Intake
•uw for some of these that 'haven't
falie,vdsoit)ewenoillybioeicaatusinea otflitel.:wroebaatth4er..0, -7
painting the trent - Poreli tleorr. ' '' I
should say repainting it, because that
porch :floor is rapidly Jiecoming the
MCA painted thing id the whole coin-
munity. It was, drizzling rain one day
last week and Mrs. Phil wasbusy'
doing down eh.errieS. She Suggested
that it might not be a bad idea, if
I wanted to help, to paint the front
porch ,tfloor. We bought the paint in
the spring, and never seemed to "get
around to doing, it. _ r ' • ,
I don't in1i4 painting if the area
isn't too big, •so. I went at the porch
floor with a vengeance. It looked
pretty •goOd. ... .. all shiny greyillue
. . . . and so I'went'looking for some-
thing to put across the front steps
which would keep the folks from
tramping on ' I was only away
-about. -five minutes and when I cable
back a big old rooster was standing
square in the centre of it; having foot -
printed it plenty.
I had to leave 4t„ that way, figuring
on finishing up when it wasn't raining
and the front steps' could be done.
013. Friday evening it started to rain
a bit, so I painted the porch Boor again.
This, time there was no fooling; the
gate to the front lawn was tightly
latched and I put the stepladder across
the front steps. I was just going out
the- little gate whenthe front door
opened and Patricia Ann walked out
into the entre of the floor followed
1
in the good work of the last five years.
What,. ,of the future'? • The new
GoVernment will of course prosecnte
th,e, War with Japan to a conclusion
'anotF in• foreign .poliey generally may
not make any great new departure.
At home there will ,be changes more
or less 'drastic.. The railways vvill be
crowded that buildings like -the 1,250 -
foot structure that was hit on Satur-
day =St be erected. A law to restrict
the height of buildings would be as
sensible as are fire protection regula-
tions—and what city ;would be with-
out afire department?
. * *
-
by the dog.
- Kneeling- on the front" doorstep, I
reached away out with the brush to
nationalized, alsothemines. probably .The demands upon the Government
the banking system and perhaps others frOM cities that want more -honks
of the principal 'incluseries* .of ,the .1,
_ , btuit are ,beconiiiig. tiresoine. There
country. , Canada already has -a naT
tional railway system.; its banks are
pretty Much under Government. con.:
tiol; So the innovations in British There are :not ,so mapy more people
alfairSmay not be 'So very, 5ing
after • all. There., are men of Many
minds'• in the British -Labor' party.
- Some 'are extreme in their views,
some are moderate, and, a pompromise
Courte May be the reault, The One
• greatest change indicated by the Labor
platform,is the nationalliation.of land.
This i VirtnallY a revival of Lloyd
George's proposals wb.en he was
:Member. of the Asquith Government
'before the 'first World. 'War. Lloyd
are scarcities of Juillding material and
shortages of labor, and these cannot
be overcome by any sleight-of-hand.
in Canada than there were five years
ago, and if the cities cannot .provide
accoMmodation for all the people who.
:want to erOwd into them the people
of the country,. districts that are
'being •,genuded- of population shduld
not be liSked to pay through Govern-
ment taxation to help provide that
accommodation. We believe, the people
as a whole Would welcome a deelar!
ation from the Government that thef
problem is one for the Cities themselves.
George proposed to take ,a large part The cities vote against putting business
of the rental value ofthe land for in the hafids Of the - GoVdrnment, as
public' purposes; the Labor party's in- proposed by the C.C.F., but they declare
tention may be to take , over the land a lack of faith in private enterprise'
itself. At any. rate, Britain's land is when they call • uptin the Government
to be held•for the use of all the people, to do' this and do that instead of
10. AND NIS PEO.PL
Clead:enaed„ from King ropi
KitlegGeeer.ge',11 and
•
-PIIILIP wiNETu
_King George VL, IS a almost
'Shy 'person., who 'does not Make friends
'ellickly, but is steadfast in his*friend-
ship with those' *ho have WO.n his
eenlidenee; weighingjaiS veer& Care-
fully before they are uttered; giVeir to
thorough deliberation before a decision
is made, Siniple, unaffected and very
kind in manner, but not without dignity
when it is appropriate. . A • serious
reader, ,W110 does 'net give himself in-
tellectual "airs." Of* practical, rather
than a theoretical; turn of Mind,
especially interested in all things
'mechanical. Soberly devoted' 'to the
duties of'.his office," but by no means
develd- of a lively sense of tun. Very
fond. of sports and games. Ins hob-
bles: gardening and raeehatileal models.
Above all, a MCA affectionate husband
mad a loving father, who feels happiest
In .the all ftoo few delicious hours he
't,as.familynSpentl:undisturbed in ,the circle of
When the'events 0 our days can be
seen intheir proper perspective, when
archives are opened and private sources
'of Information can be tapped freely, it
will be possible to give a -more thorough
analysis of his personality. For the
moment, however, it' is sufficient to
know that this is a true-to-life, though
certainly not a %complete, . portrait of
the King's person..
A,Tportrait • of the King—but at the
same time the Portrait of that oft-,
quoted b,eing, the .Aserage English
Gentleman. The description I have
given—one :which is universally ac-
cepted- aS . titie--,-might, with .slight
qualifications; fit millions, of well-bred
gentleihen •so • often to be met with
on their daily jOurney from their sub-
urban or country„ home to the city
office.It is the type of _British 'man-
hood- *accepted and looked up to by
English women. To become such, boys.
are admenished by their parents. This
'Ma -of man, just this, the lihiglish
people want their King to be.
cover up the damage. Somebody A. ruler• -of former ages would have
opened the kitchen. door and the made a Wry face had he been told that
draught brought the front doer Slam- he resembled to perfection • the ideal
ming against my feet and I went off
balance . . . sprawling, out across the
floor hnor ruining the front of mY
coveralls . : well, Teething thena up
anyho*.
This morning I decided to undo
what had been done. The front door
Was locked 'apd I put' the key up be-
hind the clock. I examined the fence
around the front lawn and secured the
gate -with a piece of wire. Theft • I
went to work, keeping a watchfel eye
out ..,. . and it almost: happened. Just.
whenj finished one of the cats slunk
in--dilder the fence. I put the. boots
to her . . . in a hurry.
The porch floor is finished and -Pia -
maintaining a guard over it teday•until
if sets.
A TIME' FOR RETRENCHMENT.
‚(Ottawa Journal)'
Mr. Ilsley, we fear, will be able to
give reasons • for higher Federal
revenues ' (and taxes) so long as this
The With* Woman 'Of toda$' taleeS
her -place beside -the Man, in worit and
war. SiiPerfleiallyr 'these sttirdY YOUng
Woreen who work the plough in their
green.Land Girls' uniform or -mail the
Mins of, anti-aireraft batteries. bear
littleresemblance to the dainty ladies,
of former tinies4 but in, a ankle way
the old ideal is preServed in the mental-
ity .of British 'Mee, YoO.4 and old
(thdugh. many would be enaba.rrassed
t. ndrnth the fact).
4 4,V4. British: id.ea, of liberty; atlively
sense of moral VailleS; Intimate spirit,
nab COntaet Witli the laws or nature;
these are,' 'I believe, 'the lratlee.roliOg
from which.. the impoSing power of
national strength .j deriVecl. This
three -fold 'inspiration pe-rvades the
daily lives Of the British peOple, and it
also determineS the character of their
social and Politieal histitutions. It has
always seemed senseless to me to in-
quire whether monarchical prbielples
are 'generally. the best iniaginable,
whether the British Empire SyStelll
shouldobe copied in Other parts of the'
globe,' The Britisb have succeeded in
evolVing a system of government which
conforms with the fundareenta.1 aline
that are alive 4n the soul of the people.
That is -tile secret of its sticeess, and
in that reapect—only in that respect—
it is MI 'example from which all the
nations of the earth can learn with
*benefit. . •
type of his l'conunon" subjects;°now
th.ere. ean be. no higher praise for the
democratic monarch of mb'dern
Prom the Cockney' to, the colle-ge-bred,
aristocrat, .from the true-blue TorY to
the "reddest" lobos man, there is a
profound conviction that, this King, as
they know and like him, is "real."
•True, the British have learnedto be
extremely fond of their ruling dynasty.
They are, --I flrinly believe; quite ready
to credit :a new king of the House of
Windsor with all tbe good (Jualities
which the members of that family' h'ave.
displayed. , But, at the same time, they
are neither subservient nor mieritical,
and...their sense Of humor is easily
tickled'. The Duke of. York was pop-
ular 'enough' to have the nation' S con -r
fidence when he was proclaimed King;
bilt if they had Mad .J a mistake, if
King George TI lind not proved himself
•b
to e the Man they 'believed him to
be, h
they • would not have hesitated to
proclaim the .;fact, In, spite of their
country goes . in for expensive social 'loyalty to the monarchy. The King
Security policies, the while seemipgly would still have enjoyedthe respeet
lost to the idea that expenditure any-
where can be cut.•
At the risk of seeming terribly old-
fashioned, we suggest, that the tine has
come to cut down on much. of our
wartime expenditure, certainly to re-
view a lot of it. Do we, today, really
need all. ef those boards and bureaus
• and committees which we set up while
,We were at war with Germany, and all
or most of which -are costing a deal
of money? D9 we still require big
public relations staffs for the Army,
Air Force .and Navy? Are all those
'Officials one finds travelling here, there'
and. everywhere at mablic expense still
required to travel?' Are we, in a
wen}, seeing to it that a great deal
of the money being put up in loaps and
high taxes isn't diverted. from its
proper channelsq •• '
There are public officials Who seem
te think that waste is. uniMportant;
that Small lOthes here and there are
but trifles, unworthy the -bother of a
great intellect engaged with weightier
matters. .
It might be Well, too, if more among
, longing for relief frOna taxes, tried
to understand that; lower taxes and
higher 'expenditures -just don't mix. •
insocial sectrity, all., the state cati
do is to force A to provide for B.
This is not to argue against social
security; certainlY net toargneagainst
the ilif3t1e of the state tieing its ut-
most to help the aged or the infirm'
Qr to care for children. But it is
important to rottlie, we think, that
sueh things, even the wisest and most
necesSary of them, • cost , wino-, and
that the ,money must come from us.„
'IOW TO REFORM THE SENATE
(Toronto Star)
An Ottawa dispatch credits to "a
Senator prominent in Liberal councils"
a'-propOstil-that,the Sentte be -reformed
by. letting each Previncial Government
name, half the Senators from its Pre-
vince, and by substituting.a six or ten-
year term for the present life, terra.
This would give the Union Nationale,
and Social Credit' parties repre-
sentation in an tipper House which has
now sixty-six Liberal members mit Of
the total •ninety-six,„ *and which; will
nennally-treeome still more.overivhelm,
ingly Liberal as the King Governinent
fills the Vacancies which will occur.
Ent the best way to reform •the,TSenate
is to, Wont it Ont of existence, A
House of Commons directly responsible
to the people can, Meet Canada's gov-
ernmental requirements withOdtthe
assistance of' an Upper Chamber. .
not for the landlords., The war of
1914 put a stop to the Lloyd;brge
land tax campaign, now it is being
- -Made effective; tinder different ityiSPreefil
'wad in sontewihat different form.
•
The new Government win have
•
' a difileiiit task en its hands. The war
has drained Britaifl of cattital. • It
has disruptted • the Ofport trade. on.
'Which''Britain,'s prosperity 'so largely
.• depended. The. country have to
bear a heavy burden of taxation, with
•retsourees sadly, diminished. , But
nritain wi1,1 pull through, The people
Who Met the dangers,- of .,Vvite',with
dogged courage wil/' not fail—in the
tasks of pettee.
looking to private enterprise.
, • ..*
' .
DiScusf3ing po11tiaipropects In
-Canada in -the light of the turnover
in Britain, The Toronto Star forecasts
the gradual drawing of lines between
parties representing respectively. the,
Sociallaf system and .a progressive
policy of social. 'reform and security
measures. The former would be the
C.C.F. rind the latter the Liberal party,
The Star holding the opinion that
92 only twb • parties are again to
occupy the field in 'Canada the one
nast likely to' disappear is the Con-
servativeparty." At* some point in
the future, it ;says, Mei issue or Social-
ism will have to be definitely faced, and
It continnes;
The chances are that this date
will not be' reached very early
here- because North America, and
particularly. till 'United States, Is
clingingtt to private enterprise
longer and more firmly than has
been the eendeney in Britain for a
,.• number. of yeare, Culminating noW
in a Socialist government there.„.
If the Liberal party, at; is probable, '
&utilities° on its present •prOgres-
sive. eourse, it is likely to remain
'in power for ,ft considerable peri -i;:'
,especialtyvsince it is a truly nation
-
Sprrgitt.iLik NOTES .
AprileS are a 'very short trop thiS,
year. People will have to ilnd
• thing -else, to keep the doctor away.
* * . ,
.Churchill has reftised the Order
of the. Garter'. rentains a inan Of
the. People; with a nape tob. , whlo
lordlY .tftle Could add nothing.
*. -
Announceinerit is made froiii.Ottawa
Of the appointment -of Yield Trarshal
re
Sir Ifitrold AlexanderAs Canada's nertt
pitilyi with large , presentation
G•oVerner-General. i'llere both in Ontario' and Quebec and
had been a
good deal of discusalon .regarditig the
th
Oleo, but e appointment is not a
departure fropi 'custom. Sir Harold
with good, strength olso, in,PrInce
Edward 'Ulan& Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, and Manitoba.' If, on
the other hand, it should under
the control of less liberal elements,
la,* cosakasper, but if that la any bar the d -Ay of deeision, betvgeen it stud
,
due' to his station, but his personal
;popularity would not be as great as,
in fact, it now is.
Here is more than loyalty, more than
the natural esteem for theman owhor.
is a living symbol' of so many good and
truly. British qualities. All which has
been said does not 'fully account for the
depth of affection' which is felt for the
King by untold millions of lais sub-
jects; not only by• the roinantic and
simple -hearted, but by all .classes and
• conditionsof his people. °
-I remember an evening, some years
-ago, when I was staying at the house
of English friends. _A, speech, •by.- the -
King was being hroadcast ' c '
NUTRITION NEWS
(Contributed by, the Red Crosi)
Cheese
Now that Jolinn_y IS- drinking his
_milk, we want to make sure he 4s
eating, his cheese, It too is one 'Of"
our most valuable foods and should
have a .promineVt. place -in meals Of
both, adults and children, for the best
. an re -
Call neither, the odcasibn nor the con. -
gents of the ifieech.; it was -a short and.
simple talk., given in a simple and.un-
.assuming way; very plea'sant, in fact,
but nothing- toarouse my,•particular
interest as an outsider, apart from the
person of the speaker. My host and
hostess were people of the world, in-
tellectuai and cosmopolitan in outlook;
surely, they had heard the King's voice
Often( before, and I did not expect them
to pay very great attention to the
broadcast. 13ut when I looked at theni,
saw' their' eyes were fixed upon the
wireless set, and that they followed the
Xittg's words with an intentness and
a pleasure, as if the most intimate rela-
tionship had existed between the Royal
Speaker and themselves.
•• A reat King! And let 'm add what
an Englishman himself would be very
reluctant to say=a great people!
The Englishman doe S not, like to
speak of himself, which makes it still
more difficult for the foreigner..4le
does not feel an urge for s.elf-exprds.
sion. ,He has riot the temperament' Of
the Latin races who want to share
the,ir joys and sorrows with the out-
side 'world. 'Unlike the Russian, he is
nut fond -of probing Into the depth of
his own Tdul, and still leis of talking
about it to strangers. The British,
with their proud and happy history,
.have not. the national inferiority Com-
plex of the Gernian people, who, all too
conscious of their failures in history,
'ar t •
paediatriciaes now state , that .even
young children can be given a smaq
amount of • cheese.- in „their diet...
Like milk, besi-s--an alinost perfect
food and Contains many of the price-
less food values found in milk, in a
comptict, highly delicio.us form. •If
desired; it can take the place of part
of the daily milk requirement, -.and"
a cone -inch cube of -cheese is reughlYr
equivalent in nutrition inaportance to
one glass of Junk:
KINCARDINE'S CLEVER
SQUIRREL
• (Kincardine New')
Spiriting away Of caps off milk
bottles at cottages at the betteh hAs
been a source of mystery and -airtime:.
moat to Wall' the cottage residents and
to Murray Bretliers. Finally; a black
.squirrel ViS.K digeovered in the aet of
removing the cap8 frOm the bottles
lind-the perplexing puzzle was solved,
-a Sotialist party • would
, .
hastened.
'fills, is interesting speculation, but
,niuch may happen te divert 'the eourse
of 'events. Intb 'ineantimeettnadians
Will Wateli the development of the,
l'Iritisbt 'tabor: party's policies with
'keen interest.
be
,
,.•
Apart from its sales -value for nutri-
tion alone, cheese IS an ageless favorite
for flavor in its own right., It not
only, a.• tidbit, an enhancer of other
foods', but it is an integral part •of
many dishes. • Because of., its high
protein ,content it ,rates in the same
class of food as meal, fish, poultry and
eggs, and to gain the full, valve. of it
in the diet we should giVe it, its rightful
place the well-balanced meal, rather
than as.' a condiment for Raver only.
, Considered. from the standpoint of
food value, flavor,' easy assimilation
(for cheese is not hard to idgest)
and economy, cheese is an eaccellent
food to use in lunch or dinner dishes.
As cheese has already been subject
to heat in manufacture, always add it
to sauces, etc., at the last Min-ute so
further heat treatment *on't toughen
it.
When you really want a "cheesy?'
treat instead of meat for .a change,
you can't beat this one for appetite -
appeal, for cheese has a hap,py faculty
for blending deliciouSly • with other
roods: '
einclinedo give uncalled-for ex-
Dlanations and excuses.
No! the English are not demon-
strative, neither as individuals nor as
a nation: They have never seen' the
necessity to spread propaganda on be-
half or themselves and ,their 'achieve-
ments, though sometimes they issue very
excellent propaganda for the causes
they may be fighting for.
Chivalry, scholasticism,' the crusad
ing'inovenient, Gothic art and architec-
ture: all these belonged to English
life as they belong to the life of all
medieval Europe. This traditkon, too,
lingers. It is to be .found in the
quiet atmosphere Of the cathedral
towns; in the Inns of Court, which
form, strange Islands in the buzzing
traffic of London's City; in,the eloister,
like colleges of the ancient universIties.
You will ilud It, too, in the attitude
of. the Englishman towards his women-,
folk.
Yes, his ideal of the English 'lady,
to which there Is ,no equivalent hi any
other country; this tender, graeiong
being, put on a. pedestal, to be rever-
enced, a little unearthly, fragrant,
easily offended by a rude word uttered
iu Iter presence.
• Eggs Florentine
tablespoons butter or mild
- flavored fat
tablespoons flour
cups milk
cups grated medium cheese
Salt and pepper
Spinach, cooked, chopped, sea-
•soned
Egga
Make cream.- sauce with the butter,
flour and milk. Then 'add one cup
grated cheese, stir until cheese is
melted; season to taste.
Place a . generous amount • of
thoroughly ,drained -spinach 41e each
shirred egg- dish : Make a deRession
in the centre of each, and break a raw
egg into it. Pour three tablespoons of
cheese .sauce around each egg and...on
arairmiimimaiimmeri
Stubborn Cases
of Constipation
Those who kee a BMWS Of
impurity pent up-, in their 4 itbodies,
day, after day', instead -Of having
removed as nature intended, at least .
once in 'every twenty-four hours, in-
variably suffer from constipation.
The use of cheap, harsh purgativie
will never get you any where as they'
- only aggravate the trouble and •in-
jure the delitate mucous lining of the
- bowels, and are ,very, liable to cause •
If constipated .tike .3tilburnlo
• Issio.Liver Pills and hors s. natural,
"ssoireMent of the bowels. They do
--
bat gripe, weaken and Nickel. am •
piny lautives do.
11. ¥Ilbun 014. • 1.4d. Om* O.
She has been painted by the greatest
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/Ter praise has been sung in the verses
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th& spinach, sprinkle with remaiping
cheese over the eggs,_and bake in- a
moderate oven, 350 degrees, until the
eggs are done.
(Any enquirieS en food and nutrition
may be directed to the Nutrition De-
partment, Ontario Ditision, Canadian
Red' tross Society, 621 Jarvis street,
Toronto 5.)
An 'English paper publishes this
advertisement.: ••
For' sale: .Baker's ,business;. good n
trade; large on 'present, owner been
fir -it for seven years; good reason for
leaving." - ,.
of thista,ean, FamiEyNewspaper-
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