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The Huron Expositor, 1932-02-19, Page 2:ry iy ti ,h "i. tr 4CI r rg '1'" YET 30 nth...' Rheurn.atis . �tl tetiireofthe deforming e0,!"eta, of acute rheu- ,i lad lady's letter. She erkzlookte 'at KrleaeIien advertise- P$ni 'ltaughedd-=,ljttle decanting ,she herself would soon be ,joining •he csltinas of praise ler " the little idldose," `4lC"ymattered agonies with -Rheumatism. , . + dodter• said:he l .c1 never koesten a n4PRnitatl .Ander. 80 to get Rheunietis rt e I had it X Was so bad I colak1: Qnt«�" get ;upstairs by •.sitting on each stair, •'silt;'* j'ha4 plink enoughae pull myself \ukr, teethe, text one, AI ' ,t re >�, ay¢.g7leii that they lo. a ked ' un ewnny, ,and neighbours used to watch rue•diobble round and say how awful I looked. I had often Iaughed at the Kruschen advertisements, but thought, ias1 had given almost everything .else a , f`lai'r I might as well give Kruscl#en a trial I did so, and:will always say I.. o er; Item wonderful • I take lea 1 c: d of Kruschen every mgrning. Now I can run upstairs. Yet 1 have ' taken Kruschen Salts for two ifionths only:'—Mrs. E. F. *The system of the rheumatic subject is . a producer of that daggerous; body Inlicastrr, sr AFR poison ,known as uric acid, which is composed of knife -edged crystals. It• -is : ;bred 'in accumulated waste matter ;whish the organs of elimination have foiled to expel. Kruschen is a powerful eelveiit of these flint -hard crystals. I. swiftly dulls their sharp edges, then.. flushesthem out of the system. your pains'ease ; swellings subside ; knotted joints become loose. :Better still, Kruschen eliminates the • root,.eause of the evil. Taken regularly, it' keeps your liver and kidneys in per- fect time, so that these eliminating organs flee your inside from all poison- breeding. waste products. Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all. Drug Stores at 45c. and 75c. per.bottle., TRiAL OFFER OF KRUSCHEN *�1ryy 'r.rnych now at our expeese,Y We have distributed , great many special 'GIANT" packages which make it easy for you to prove our claims for yourself.,Ask your druggist for -the new "GIANT" Sc.7'package. This consists of our regular 75c. bottle together with a separate trial bottle—sufficient for about one. week. Open the trial bottle first. pat it to the test. and then, if not entirely convinced that'•Kruschen does everything we claim it to do. the regular bottle is still as good as new. Take it back. Your druggist is authorized to return youtc'75c. immediately and without question. You havetried Kruschen free at our expense. What could be fairer? Manufactured b3 E. GR FFITHS HUGHES. Ltd., Manchester, England. (Established 1756). drawn from what `night be; den any riverning in ralestone. A " i;;g .t the §hee'g a e driven into an ;onelosure with a strongly. barred doox';. 'Fleea the'.sheep,-•jest all night, guhrded by a,wate4a6a •or porter. In the morn - 40 the; shepherds came, aid at the rgeognfzed signal lir'-1 noole are admit- ted by the porter, and each .man calls his own sheep. The sheep, knowing his voice, follow him,' whereas a stranger's voice they' do not heed. Besides, not only do the sheep disre• geed a stranger's voice but the porter also would do • so, so that no robber thinks of appealing to ther'porter; but climbs the wall and lays held of the sheep he wants.' The Good Shepherd is identified and distinguished from .thehireling by this. object 'and this spirit of devo- tion. These two characteristics are considered' in verses 10-13. The hire- ling taketh up this business of shep- herding for his own sake. It is not the work nor `the sheep be has any interest in, bust the pay. Necessarily he flees at the approach* of . danger. On the contrary," the object of the good shepherd is to find for the sheep better pasture and to this end he de- votes himself, apd, at the risk of his life, sa ",es them from harm,' The ,ap- plication of this to the attitude the blind man had assumed towards the Pharisees and towards Jesus was suf- ficiently' "obvious. He had • disowned the Pharisees; he had acknowledged Jesus. 1'-t; -was.. plain therefore that Jesus ,*as( :the ;Shepherd and it was also l:plain that the Pharisees were not among Christ's sheep; they might be in the fold, but as they did not recognize and follow Christ they showed that they did not belong to His flock. This encounter with the Pharisees over the man born blind, contriibuted materially to their determination to put Him to death. The whole experience of Christ as our Shepherd gives Him an increas- ing knowledge _ of us. We have thought much „of Him; we have again and again pondered His life, His death, His words. We have endeav- ored to understand what He requires of us and day by day He has some- how been in our thoughts. Not less but for more constantly have we been in His thoughts. This growth in mut- ual understanding must advance till that perfect sympathy is attained which Christ indicates in the' words: "I know my sheep and am known of mine, as the Father kiioweth Me and T know the Father." The mutual understanding between the Eternal Father -and the San is the only par- allel to the mutual understanding of Christ and His people.—Condensed from the Expositor's Bible. SUNDAY AFTERNOON • (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, ,Ont.). The King of leve' my Shepherd is; Whose goodness' 'faileth never; I. nothing lack if T am His, • And He is mine for ever. Perverse and foolish oft I strayed; 'But yet, inn- love He'" sought -me, And on His shoulder gently laid, And home rejoicing brought nte,. H. W. Baker. PRAYER,. We thank Thee, our Father, for the open,door. Grant that we may strive to enter in. 'Grant us grace that our lives may be given to Thee a living and loving sacrifice. And we shall praise Thee for evermore. Amen. E. S. LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 21st Lesson Topic—Jesus. the Good Shepherd. ' Lesson Passage—John 10:1.16. Golden Text—Psalm' 23:1. The statements in to -day's lesson are a continuation of the conversation with the Pharisees after the excom- munication '•of , the man born blind. • He had dared to argue with those in authority at the temple and bad pre- sumed to „think for himself :and ack- noavledge Christ as one superior to themselves. Brought up as he had , been to consider the ecclesiastical au- thorities of Jerusalem as represent- ing the Divine voice, he would natur- ally feel that his excommunication cut him off from fellowship with all good men and from the sources of a hopeful and godly life. Then it was that Jesus spoke thewords about the Good Shepherd. In insiignation : at those' who assumed authority. to ad- mit or debar men Jesus declares: "I am the door." He claimed for Hien: self the sole right of admission or re • jection from the true fold of God's people. By this claim to be the Door,. Jesus claims to be the Founder of the one permanent society of men. Througn- Him alone have men access toa position of -security; to association with all that is worthiest among men; to a never -failing life and a boundless freedom. He gathers ;nen routed His person, and assures us that He -bolds the key to life;. that if He admits us, words . of exclusion pronounced ,by others are but the breath; that if He excludes us, the ap- proval and applause of a world will not waft us in. No charm could pos- sibly be greater. Jesus also claims., to be the Good Shepherd, and sets Himself in con- trast to hirelings and robbers. .And He proves this claim by first using the legitimate means of access • to the sheep. He enters by the door. The general description of the rela- tion between sheep and shepherd was Cooks in 234 mins. after the Water boils 2069 Not a new coal but your old favorite D. L. & W. Scranton Anthracite. 'YOUR FAVORITE ANTHRACITE DEHNITELY trade mored FOR YOUR PROTECTION • Mr - "induced,' Or Prost red, ' or,-ehiic il.---sem-' persi}aded'1' to leave her husband, "in any; 'way, .4)10)PQ pr f9r444 Judge NIloO,ardie....jaad ill adarosstn a jury, tibego a,g r @ wee' hn illivatration of one of the- leiw remaining deVadations being ti ''ka'd'd who • the ear that went by w't'a/a whiz and a 'honk is, stopped Hersh ,, hex :traffic' light --,-•Ill #tla 7.1.5*._ power now ruling the. I a e i Kn• and, "'Uni 'States as the purchasing ppw- -��M�, that xesd up�pn, �,, n gl ted a a;.._. ,• �,, because the was `atilt an the, same•.ea',1 ont Lee. `down and unable to'ootin�g, whatever her positin in life,- "• • rdo my work for a as was'wbhe (boot boy or the kitchen ' Fiction tells us about 'people and family of seven, ' RUII ranatd Just as a man could bring an makes 'them live, History is vfooden, s w;lites Mrs. W. 'P: action for enticing away his laborer merely the march' 'of dates,—(Sinclair U�stalt$. Fi zpatr[ck Marquis, or his maidservant so he could if Lewis. Soo re iv as told I' the facts justified it,'bring an action had. anaemia, earl I took treatment, buL for enticingaway his wife. There While some have nothing to do but with very little improvement. Finally,. my sister, who had Bad the same disease, was no suggestion of adultery in the sit down and waste away and wish advised me M. try Dr. \firilliams' Pink ease. Neither was it comparable with for work, for the rest of us the labor - Pins, es:theyhed` done her so much good. as "action for alienation of affections, ing hours are still too longs -Dr. 'Co able to de my own,work; no more that Place ,,led his wife's affections. 1 have taken,:eeven boxes. l'Rday 'I'm Since there -was no evidence 'to show C. Furnas, Yale professor. well; tiied4ieeling or weak spells. I can run It appears that Dr. ;Searle, ,who 1 have seldom experienced -greater u tairs witbeut putfing..I sleep and eat is a well.'known. and even distin-. torment during an hour of 'recreat'ipn• well. My frieiids are astonished at my guished citizen of Cambridge, was the than when playing bridge with a part - changed appearance and never fail to medical adviser 'of M•rs. Place, who ner whose bids . were even moa pry= ask what I'm taking. M.Y. reply 'Dr.seemes to he a woman whose charms chin'tt an 'nay owns-'B•obert k id• Williams' Pink PiUs'." - were perhaps • wasted on a green- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually create- grocer's assistant. She had one child. ' The two things that a healthy per an abundance of new red blood, which is Dr. Searle is married, but- apprently son hates most between heaven and the reason why they have given new childless; His • friendship with the hell -are.. a woman who is not digni- vitality and strepgth to thousands of Place family, or -with part of it, con fied and a •man who is.—G. K. Ches- such nervously exhausted and" overtired tinued after his medical services had tenon. women. Equally helpful for 'growing been discontinued. He and Mrs. Place girls. Try them. At your druggist's in-thewould meet £requeritly. Later Dr. • new glass. container. 50c a package. 272Searle's two nephews went to • lodge with the Places and the doctor used Noble Earl Has Seen to visit them ther"e.. He took fre- quent .presents of fruit and game to the house, 'and this may have been On account of Mrs. Place or on ac- count 'of his nephews. The .doctor and (Mrs. 'Place drove about in his e'er three. or four afternoons a week They would' tea or dine at various places 'in the neighborhood. He aleso bought ,her a shotgun .• and together they wb'ald go hunting. They rode together and everything between extremely' happy and above board,oaevea+ebody in Cambridge who knew them • being aware of their platonic --or, as a friend of ours calls ,it, ,Plutonic=relations. But .Place; -the greengrocer's as- sistant, was less happy. He objected to his wife's companionship";Kith Dr. Searle, and ,protested in the ruf- fianly manner of jealous husbands. She ignored him, and refused to break off with the ocioctor. There was •evidence to the effect that Place drank, and plenty -of evidence that he was a household bully, refusing •to speak to anyone for considerable periods of time. At other times he would get, abusive. 1Mrs. Place testi • fied that 'for a long time she had been contemplating separation r from Place. She said that she had dis- cussed it with Dr. Searle who had advised her ta, remain and, if pos- sible, patch up their differences for the salte of the child On cross-ex- amination `Mrs. Place said that she would have left her husband even if there had been no Dr. Searle at all. But she hesitated for an an- swer when asked if ...she would be willing to go any place where she could not see Dr. Searle- again. In fact, she made only a couple of bones about the fact that Dr. Searle wa's the ;beloved •physician, although the 'word 'Qbeloved" was carefully 4 - voided all through the trial except by the exasperated lawyer for • the plaintiff. Matters came to a climax in the Place household at 11.30 p.m. on July. lith.. Dr. Searle says that at. that moment he was snoring -in con- nubial' rapture beside his wife when the telephone ;bell rang, and the voice of Place demanded an imrmedi- ate interview. He told him he would see him in the morning and rang off. Presently Place rang again and was told to go to hell. A little later Mrs. Place rang up and said she had left her husband because he ' had threatened to stab her. Would the doctor please Coale all her rescue? So the doctor got up staid went to the house"'of a friend of Mrs. ,Place's where she had taken refuge. She was dressed' in a gown over her night clothes, slippers and a man's coat in which attire, presunmibly, she had fled fr;o';,.,,her 'husband. "Where can I go?" she asked, and Dr: Searle said that he would take her back to. her husband. She was frightened but, was induced or pro- cured or enticed or persuaded to go with him in some way, manner; shape or form whatever. On arriv- ing at the Place home the outraged proprietor was not present, but a friend deputized for him' and vented some impeccable moral platitudes, upon Dr. Searle and Mrs. Place. -Then Place returned and the language became rowdy. Place ac- cused the doctor of having commit- ^ .,k16P Well.. '.II becapne • nvbre . amazing, ;between 12,000 and 13,000 baby bees • are. being fed every minute throughout the twenty=four hours. ' Where -one is biologically" inclined the drama of life going on within' the cubicule is fascirating. in the extreme. The queen, while -so desig- nated by name, is in fact the best worker of them all. Day in and day out she is laying eggs, often at the rate of 3,000 or more during the 24 hours. She lays two kinds of eggs, one that produces the worker bee and one that produces the drone or male. Even stranger- in fact is that the young larvae hatched from the egg which ;produces the worker bee will when placed `under certain conditions and given certain food, become a queen. In reality, all worker bees are undeveloped females, and despite this handicap the physiologist is amazed to find that the bee colony is the best organized community in - the world. — WORLD MISSIONS The Contagion of Personality All unheralded, and so quietly and unobtrusively that it is difficult even to 'write of it, the 'contagion of a personal experience with Christ is spreading today in diverse ways. Sometimes we hear of it in an item in a newspaper or.a thoughtful edi- torial. Some of the modern books re- flect the light of the new revelation and none of these more strikingly than in Hjigh Redwood's God in the Slums. No book since -Harold Beg- 'bie's "Broken Earthenware °hag- '" so moved us. There is a passionate sine cerity in the plain, unadorned recital and one longs for a like abandonment in Christian living in one's own life and in the lives of church members everywhere. • To those who have not read this book . we would say it is the ; true story of a London newspaper man who, out for news, scooped a big story about, the rise of the Thames in the 'Westminster slum area. But Mr: Redwood not only scooped a story for his, paper; he had an amazing spiri- tual experience, and it is this experi- ence.he shares with an everinereas- ing host of readers. But there is another channel for contagion more powerful than any other—personality. Many thought- ful - people have been struck by the occasional accounts of the "group" movements in Oxford and Cambridge. One hesitates to use the word move- nnent. ,iit..originated under Dr. Frank Buchman and Harold iBegbiie was deeply interested in its beginnings. Just as, in. God in the 'Slums, the Sal- vationists are God's instruments for changing the lives of the poor and 'debased,: so Dr. Buchman" has releas- ed a transforming power among the cultured and educated fraternity. There are no services ,in the ordinary sense of the 'word; men and women mingle in informal meetings house parties they might be called — and spontaneously express their gratitude and love to Jesus Christ. It is a fel- lowship widerliren any sect, any de- nomination and organization, a spir- itual oneness which, if it grows un- hindered, we shall hear more about. Ginger Pudding With Sauce. 1/4 cup shortening - 1/4 cup sugar 1 beaten egg _,.•1/4 cup milk as, cup flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt • 1 teaspoon ground ginger. Cream shortening and sugar and beat in the egg. Sift the dry "in gradients and add alternately- to the first mixture with the milk. Turn into a greased mould and steam 2.1/2 hours. Serve with: The Garden 'Bee -Hive Is a Queer Little Box (When the average- person sees a colony of bees tusked away in the corner of same garden it is usually just another reminder that bees and their stings are best avoided. In re- ality it embraces one of nature's =Oat fascinating wonders, as C. B. Good= erham, Apiarist of the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture, points out. While iii:sigrli:flcant ill a'pp'earance this•. little box during the summer' months has an advtlt population of approXtrttately11/0,000, individual bees and it is rattier diffiietnit to realize . that between ZOO and 8,000' new bees will em'erge fre% their eel's ev- ery tvienty4oap sours; anti What is Bladder Troubles Bother Many . Past 40 Seven Out of Ten Are ,Victims But Writer Tell's How '"Uratabs" Bring Swift, Amazing Relief With Renewed Vital Force. "No one knows better than I, the horror of joyless days and sleepless nights. There have been times.. when I felt hopeless and helpless — and when . my weakness caused me the most intense humiliation. Only those who have gone through such tortures can possibly realize my great satis- faction when Dr,. Southworth's U'RA- TA(BS brought me quick relief. URA - TABS are truly wonderful, and I give them full praise." Such amazing evi- dence serves as corrivincing . proof of the power of URATABS to relieve those distressing aliments so often a handicap to those in middle life. Overworked, sluggish Kidneys, and Bladder Weakness, bring on so many distressing ailments which so often lead to serious, diseases that every L sufferer from ameness, .':Pains in back and down through groins, scanty bat frequent urination, "Getting -up - Nights," Nervous Irritability and Lack of Force—should try the amaz- ing value of Dr...Southworth's URA - TABS at once! Any good druggist; will supply you on a guarantee of satisfaction or money Back. Husb lnd Says Doctor Enticed Wife Away One of the most curious lawsuits of recent years has ended in an un- satisfactory disagreement of a jury before IMr. Justice 'McCardie in the Cambridge Assizes. The charge was an unusual one. It was that of a man named John Dover Place,a grocer's assistant, against Dr. Chas. 4Frederick Searle,whom he accused of braving enticed his wife away. Again and'• again Dr. Searle and Mrs. Place levied specifically that she had: beer. .g EVERY WOMAN faces this question "How do 1 look to other people?" If yepihave a lovely skin, attractive eyes, • and plenty' of enthusiasm, you need not worry. So many women, though, risk their beauty by neglect of constipa- tion. It often causes loss of pap,' sallow skins, dull eyes, pimples. Yet constipation can be overcome. by eating Kellogg's ALL -BRAN'. This cereal provides "bulk" to exercise the intestines, and Vitamin B which tones the intestinal tract. ALL-BRA>g also supplies iron for the blood. The "bulk" in ALL -BRAN is much like that of lettuce. Special cooking processes .make it finer, more pal- atable. It is 'not habit -form f g: • . Surely this is safer than abusiirg- the system with pills and drugs— so often habit-forming. Two tablespoonfuls daily ' will correct most types of constipation. If�your intestiiia i"- trojible is not re- d�LAr�es lieee��ed this wadi, see your doctor. At all grocers. In the red-aMi-greets package,. Made by l[i ellog"g"` in London, - chte ;'ria. HfEl»P$ KEEP YOU IT.. Even -if there had'been no war the present generation and the present state of society would be much differ- ent from what they were in the mid- dle of •the last century, because the changes had already been at work and made much headway before the early, days of the nineteenth century. It is thus - that the eighteenth 'century was different from the seventeenth and the ,sixteenth from. the fifteenth. As regards the great English political and social worlds the changes may be said to have .lbegun fifty years. age, and they are recalled by the Earl of Middleton,: who --writes-in the New York Times IMagazine. He does, not bewail the present or weep for the older order which he has seen change. With the departed things some that were silly went with same that were worth holding, and with the new have come good things side by side with bad. But these, too, shall pass away and the smart young thing of 1932 who shocks her parentr will live to find herself, regarded ttey her chil- dren or 'her grandchildren at a frump and a poisonous old Georgian,' which will seem to them- to be just as oat of date as a Victorian, Apart from industrial development there was not much in the half -cen- tury following the Napoleonic wars to compare with the excitement of the past twenty years. Commercial men were making great fortunes, butt: new ideas of politics were stirring, and the country growing gradually ripe faf,the casting off"'of old tradi- tions. " bid reliigiou's and political controversies were drawing to an end and the new scientific discoveries of Darwin and his associates had not yet rent the world with new doubts. Sixty years ago 'Disraeli remarked, "All the great gde'stions of trade and navigation, of the incidence of taxa- tion and of public economy might be regarded'as settled." Of this we can only say'that they were. settled then better than they are settled at the moment of going to press. So far. as society in those days was concern- ed, the old cult of France which oc- cupied the thoughts and.... -memoirs of the preceding generation ended with the 'Franco-Prussian War. One of the first signs ofthe change was the lost authority of the head of the house. Sons •of 'all ages addressed their fathers;as,'iSir," though the son him- self might be the head of his own family.. Wivescalled their titled husband's, "Lords," except in their most tonjua+al moments when they would call him "Oh, My" Lord." One host of great personality and many acres who frequently had 20 or 30 guests staying 'with him would not be visible until dinner in the even- ing: But ;the time he thus saved for himself permitted him to become one of the best -read men in England. Fathers would think it quite natural to reprimand their grown-up sons in public, thus following the dis- tinguished fashion of Queen Victoria with Albert Edward. One head of a family, before a tableful of guests, rebuked his 40 -year-old son, himself a distinguished figure in the House of ,Patliament, for complaining that the wi b e was corked. Another hear- ing his son ask a neighbor to pass the wine remarked bluntly: "Wait till you are master here." Arthur Balfour, who never rose before elev- en aan., found himself imperiously hurried from his bed at 9 a.m.-by his host to ' join ' a formal procession to the breakfast room. tied adultery with his wife. The doc- tor denied it. There was . a scuffle, with Place as the aggressor. He kick- ed the doctors shins and poked him in the eye. Then the . doctor knock- ed him down. When Place got" to hisfeet he started 'upstairs, saying: 'There was a great lot of unne'ces- I will get my revolver and shoot sary drinking after dinner, when the you."At this Dr. Searle removed ladies were left to amuse themselves .1. rs. "Place from the Place roof and ae best they might. A change in she has been absent ever since. this custom was brought about large - Throughout the trial Dr. Searle and ly by the, influx of American brides. Mrs -Place birth asserted that what- It is true that they never were able ever happened they would continue to induce their English husbands to to be friends, that they saw nothing fetch and carry for theta but they wrong with it, and that nothing that did break up the long, tedious din - had passed [between them had had ners and the masculine guzzling that any effect whatever _upon the rola-' dons between Place and hiwife." aollotved it. thehey deananded to be',. full The "matter mightrlaave been settled amused, soudses sight of a `set em. privately, but itt''was •. Df;,„Searle and of noble souses didlnot amuse than. not Place, who insisted upon a pleb- the new ject of called The .S le, and Iic trial, ,because `he feared a private oi subject in much ridicule, was settlement would belopen to, mis'con- sbmething to break down for - settlement and give rise.to gossip. H"e' mal barriers. It welcomed interestl ing and important people from all sought vindication and while the jury walks of life, and showed itself hon - disagreed and there may be another estly bored by those who merely had trial, from the judges charge we important names but the -natives have very little doubt that he had were 'Without (human interest. This convinced the judge of not only the breaking of,'he .social ice affected propriety, (but the inevitability of his also politics. The coming of Joseph coni et. Chamberlain had something, to do. with it, although Mr. Chamberlain's first mingling with noble society was made somewhat embarrassing by the fact that he had so frequently • de - Colleges have decided to de -em- riouneed members of the Upper phasize football. Probably „want to House as idlers and parasites. He take the ,kick out of. it.—Guelph Mer- found in his social contaeta, however, tory. • , that some of them were among the hardest, working men in th'e United 'rhe man who said that •prosperity Kingdom. is ahead: is still quite right. -•.Wood- Changed rules in. Parliament have stock 'Sentinel 1tevie'tr, changed the complexion of the House and the tjuality of the members. The "Our capitalistie form of society change, the .Earl of (Midleton be - must be, flexible enough to adjust it= heves, has been for the worse. I le- sel'f to c'hang'es in World conditions." fore the introduction or elosutre, :W- Baker. ac'heill a '"vote Might be taken at ally H tao'tilent and an active opposition Hunan D. nature Will neVet get "over. would often..peep a debate going day W if y alhow the aii.'ments of middle age to steal from you the pleasures of a healthy, normal life? If you -suffer' from •Rheuritatisni, Backache,. ,Swollen Feet and Ankles, Bladder - Kidney Trouble, •Headaches or. In- flammation of the Urinary Tract—try KARAFlIN ' 1A]3LETS at otipe-... • . Many thousands of men and women past 40 have enjoyed relief from pah and suffering with the 'help. qf' '011,10- maderin-Canada •(non=sOeret) treat - Ment. •Any good druggist wrll supply, you with KA1 AFIN TAIBIJETS. The contents are clearly printed on the package; and you are•• assured satin.. faction—or your money back. and night, there was great ;;!cope for the younger - men to distineguish.. themselves. That opportunity ex- ists no longer. All attention is centred on 'half a dozen•of the front benchers. The others remain un- noticed and unheard, perhaps `-un amlbitious.. . But outside the House great men no longer attract the ate.• tendon that great 'men did 5Q years ago. Now, except for, the King and the Prince of Wales, a prize fighter', - or movie star - will eommand more at ,, , tention in the street than any public' figure in England. .This perhaps • is a. loss and shows a perverted Sense• of values. But in all probability - this attitude will also .pass away, even though there will be no swing- ing aback to the hypocrisies 'and pomposities which did so much to give the Victorian era the reputation which it did not wholly deserve, for it had its own especial merits. WIT AND WISDOM Devil's Food Layer Cake % cup butter 13£ cups sugar 3 eggs ., ... 1 cup milk 234 cups pastry ,hour (or 2 cups and 3 table- spoons of bread flour) • 3a teaspoon.salt 3 teaspoons Powder 1 teaspoon va- nilla extract 3 eq. unsweetened chocolate, melted Cream,butter thoroughly; add sugar slowly. Add beaten yolk,; mix thor- oughly.. Add flour sifffd with baking powder I and salt, • alternately with Milk; add vanilla and melted ,boa elate. Fold in stagy, beaten egg whites. Put into 3.greaaed layer cake tins and bake in moderate oven at 350' F. about 30 minutes. When. cool, put together and cover thickly with Chocolate or White. Icing (rec. ipes are in the Magic Cook Book). Miss Gertrude Dutton. tells why she makes her' - Devil's Food Layer Cake with Magic Baking Powder' o. "I know from experience," says` the cookery ex- pert of Western Home Monthly, "that Magic makes most baked dishes look and taste better. Its uniform leavening quality gives dependable °• baking results." And Miss !button's praise of Magic is seconded by the majority of dietitians and cookery experts throughout the Dominion. They heyknuse Magic exclusively because they- know ow it is pure; and always unt- foiiri. Canaiiian housewives, too, pre- fer Magic. In fact, Magic outsells all other baking powders combined. For luscious' layer cakes, light,. tender biscuits, delicious pastry -- follow Miss Dutton's advice. Use Magic Baking Powder. FREE COOK BOOK -When yon. bake at 'hoine, the new Magic Coolc Book will give you dozens of recipes' for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd., FraseraAve. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ontario., "Contains so. alum." This state, Merit on every t Is your guaranis* that Magic aikI t •Powder b fiat Bolas atuntor any NMMtu. fel ltlglbdieiai. 14, •