l:^7a Woman's World By MAIR M. MORGAN "A Woman'* PUco It In th« Home.' V;--: Try Raisins For Flavor You will tinci rai.siiis of infiiiito value as a moans toward economy and variety in your daily menus. They are especially easy to use because they require no preliminary soaking as do most of the other dried fruits. An excellent source ot natural sugai', tl;e sweetness of raisins decreases the amount of sugar usually called for in a recipe. They arid much to the diet In other ways, increasing the palat\l)illty of many plain dishes and furnishing Iron to a high degree. Their caloric value, being almost 100 calories per ounce, is also important. One-fourth cup of raisins weighs 1.1 ounces and supplies 3 calories of protein, a of fat and 88 of carbohydrates. Most of us use rai.sins in puddings and cake mi.\tures, but do you know that hot boiled beets gain interest and provide extra nourishment it served with a sauce to which raisins have been added? The small seedless rais- ins are delicious in either a lemon or â- an orange sauce. The flavor of Hamburg steak is greatly improved by the addition of a tew raisins. Chop raisins flnely and work well with meat. Although the protein content of raisins is vastly lower than that of beef, their iron con- tent compares favorably and they are inexpensive and highly nutritious. Other meats beside beef are made more appetizing it combined with rais- ins. Raisin sauce with ham is tra- ditonal, but seeded or seedless raisins can be sprinkled over the ham while baking with excellent effect. Hot boiled tongue with raisin sauce, baked stuffed heart with raisin sauce, and braised beef liver with raisin sauce are ine.xpensive and worth-while meat dishes that owe much of their popular- ity to the sauce. Bread puddings and rice puddings become the means of adding iron to the diet when raisins are included in their composition. The next time you serve rice in place ot potatoes try the following raisin sauce: • Raisin Sauce ^ One cup white sauce. 1.3 cup grated â€" ' cheese, i- cup seeded and steamed raisins. Wash raisins and steam until plump. Add cheese to hot white sauce and when melted add raisins. Keep hot over hot water if not served at once. Ham As Usual Ham is a good old favorite and lits nicely into the menu at this time of year. But don't be content with fried ham and boiled ham. Try other sav- ory dishes with this as the main in- gredient. Incidentally, you will be surprised at the result when a dash of sugar is added to accentuate the flavor of this flavorous food. Ham Mousse 2 cups boiled ham, put through meal grinder, 1 teaspoon mixed mustard, Vi teaspoon sugar, 1-S teaspoon paprika, i tablespoon gelatin, 2 tablespoons cold water, 'i cup hot water, 1,5 cup heavy cream, whipped. Add season- ings to finely chopped ham. Stir in gelatin which has been soaked in cold water and dis.solved in hot. Combine mixture lightly with whipped cream. Turn into a mold that has been dipped In cold water. Leave on ice until well set. Serve on lettuce. Ham Loaf « hard boiled eggs. 2 cups cooked ham. chopped fine. 1 cup milk, 1 ti^ble- spoon flour, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tea- spoon Worcestershire sauce, 1 tea- spoon sugar. 1 teaspoon mixed mus- tard, salt and pepper. Make a white sauce of the flour, butter and milk. Add seasonings. Arrange a layer ot the sliced, hard boiled eggs in the bot- tom of a baking pan. Pour on a little ot the sauce. Add a layer of the ham. Cover with sauce. Continue alteriiat- iiig layers until all is used. Cover top with well bullered bread crumbs. Bake thiily minutes in a moderate oven. Bread and Butter Rolls l-'or something a bit different to ,, serve at bridge parties these bread and butter rolls are quite intriguing. All you need is % pound package cream cheese. % cup butter, 1 small loaf fresh bread. Allow cheese to stand at room teninernture until softeni'd Cream with butler. Remove the crust from a small loaf of fresh bread and cut bread into thin slices. Wrap tlKht- ly in a dampened cloth to moisten bread slightly. Let stand tor an hour in a cool place. Spread each slice with creamed cheese and butler mix- ture and roll up. Fasten each roll with a toothpick. Cover with a damp cloth and let stand in a cold place until the initter has hardened so that the bread will not unroll when toothpick is re- moved, before sersMng. Save Bacon Fat There are many little ways of gel- ling all the valuable parts of food when it is being cooked, careful at- tention to which will in time cut gro- cery and meal bills. Bacon fat. If properly cooked. Is good to use for browning foods, for seasoning and for adding flavor to soups and stews. When cooking bacon pour oft the (at as soon as it melts. With every pound ot bacon you will find nearly a cup ot fat. The Best of a Scramble Few people make the best of scram- bled eggs, and that is a pity. This dish can be very delicious indeed, and broken eggs can be used up this way. Scrambled eggs are made more nour- ishing and more savoury still by the addition of some grated cheese. Or a skinned and thinly sliced tomato may be scrambled with them, or some Wor- cester or tomato sauce added either just before serving or while the eggs are being scrambled. A little parsley is also an improvement. Eggs properly scrambled should be creamy and not too dry. Remove them from the heat before any suspicion ot dryness occurs. A little butter rubbed round the saucepan beforehand, as well as the piece added for cooking purposes, will prevent the egg from sticking to the saucepan and make the cleaning ot it afterwards a ittscii sijnp- ler matter. Household Hints Milk will not burn if the sauiiepan is rinsed in cold water before boiling. A small piece ot butter added to the water in which vegetables are to be cooked will prevent them from boiling over. A hot cloth wrapped round a jelly mould will enable the contents to be turned out whole. Glass will have a brighter appear- ance if it is washed in cold water in preference to hot. Corks may be rendered watertight and airtight if they are soaked in oil for a few minutes before using. The inside ot a vacuum flask sliould be washed out with a solution of salt and vinegar. Discolored bone knife handles will quickly regain their natural whiteness if rubbed with a doth dipped iu a solution of peroxide. Woollens will not shrink if two tea- spoonfuls of glycerine are added to the washing water â€" provided, ot course, that the ordinary rules for wasliing woollies are not flagrantly disregard- ed. Bath waterlines may be cleansed away by rubbing with a cloth soaked in paraffin and then dipped into a tin containing salt. Rinse the bath well with cold (not hot) water afterwards until no trace of oil remains. Kitchen windows will not become steamed it rubbed over inside with a cloth sprinkled with glycerine. An excellent brightener for pewter â€" (or those who prefer a Hparkling ef- fect â€" is made by dissolving a little potash in hot water. Soak the pewter in this and then rub it with a soft cloth slightly moistened with olive oil. Now rub lightly with a leather, and watch the "shine" appear. Sunday School Lesson i » « » I "What good luck for all ot us that the Creation took place in the crude old days before there were any econo- mists, chart-makers, fact-flnders or constitutional lawyers." â€" Rruce Bar- ton. "1 know of no kingdom nor empir<' where the worshipping of titles, blue !)loi)d and glorified ancestors ever achieved the importance it enjoys in the I'nited States." â€" Grand Duke .\lex- andcr. July 2. Lesson I. â€" Joshua â€" Josh. 1: 1-9; 23: 1, 2, 14. Golden Textâ€" Be strong and of good courage; , . . for Jehovah thy God is w/ith thee whithersoever thou goest. â€" Josh. 1.9. r. josih.a's commussio.n'. Josh. 1: 1-4. The Book of Joshua. Wc begin with a lesson thai takes in an entire Book of the Bible, the sixth, completing what is called the Hexateuch, or Six Books. It c()nipri.ses the story of that heroic soul, Joshua, who was culled to take up the work of the greatest 0!' the Old Testament leaders, Moses, and who carried it to so large a measure of success. 1. "Now it came to pass after the death of Mo.ses the servant of Je- r.ovah." The great leader had diet! in the land of Moab, and was j^ivcn burial by Jehovah, so that n.) one knew his grave. The Israelites mourn- ed for him through thirty days. "Tha: Jehovah spake unto Joshua the son of Nun, Moses' minister." Not the ser vant of Moses in a menial sense, but the deputy of Moses, his prime min- ister. "Saying," 2. "Moses my servant is dead; row therefore ari.-e.'' The fall of a <;rea'„ leader is ,1 summons to lead<-^r.iiiip. E!i^ha must fo'low Elijah, Timothy and Luke and Mark and a multi'iide â- A ethers mu.'-,: follow Pajl. Cliu^t left his apostles to can'v on hi." work. (Josli. 24: 29). "Go over this Jordan, thou, and all this people. Unto the lan'l which I do give to them, even to the cii'ldren ot l^raei." Tha; was the hope and confidence hidden in the peril. The land to the west of the Jordan was God's gift to tiie Israel- ites, therefore God would make a way for them to it. The whole land of Canaan was Lsrael'a by deed of gift. But though this was so, each square mile of it had to be claimed from the hand of the peoples that possessed it. The cities were theirs, but they niu.st enter them; the houses which they had not built were theivs, but they must inhabit them; the corniieldB in the rich vales and the vineyards on the terraced slopes were theirs, but they must possess tliem. 3. "Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, to you have I given it." Here is a great promise with a sharp limitation. Every place is yours â€" but every place only as you tread upon it, occapv, subd'ie, j-sia^ess it. 4. "From the wilderness." The des ert of Arabia, in which the Israelies were encamped, lying to the south of Palestine. "And this Lebanon." The mountain region of Lebanon visible to the north, to be seen from all parts of Palestine. "Even unto the great river, the river Euphrates." So great that it was' called "the River." "All the land of the Hittites." The Hit- tite empire lay to the north of Syria but Canaan was subordinate to it. "And unto the great sea toward the going down of the sun." The Medi- tierraneaii on the west. "Shall be your border." 11. JOSHl.',\'S STRENGTH, Josll. 1: 5-9. God's Promise. Joshua had a vast work to do, given liim by God; but God also gave him vast aids for doing that work. The fii-st aid that God gave Joshua was a niagnifieent prom- ise. 5. Theie shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life." What a promise was that, for a general who was to lead an un- tried host again.st many tribes of sea- soned warriors! ".\s I was with Moses, so I will be with thee." This is fhe second mighty help that God gave Joshua in the promi.se of his all- powerful presence. (i. "Be strong and of good courage." On such a faith as Joshua's naturally follows the next quality in Joshua':; character â€" the quality of courage. Christ puts the connection between these two things with great clearness â€" "Why are ye .so fearful, O ye of little faith?" Faith is always the best ground of courage. "l'"or thou shall cause this people to inherit the land which I swarc unto their fathers to give them." Here is the unselfish ground of true strength and courage, and there is no .seliish ground. Joshua was not to fight for land for himself, but for his people. God's Law. 7. "Only be strong and very courageous, to observe to do ac- cording to all the law." I.aw-observ ance requires strength and courage. No flabby weakling. Strictness in ad- hering to the precepts of God's Word is often condemned or ridiculed as de- noting narrowness of character. 8. "This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth." The law was therefore embodied in a written document when the Book of Joshua «as written. "T^ut thou shalt medi- tate, thereon day and night." Too much of our Bible-reading is hasty. "That thou niayest observe to do according to !ill that is written therein." C)ur l-:l>le-rt'adiiig should be practical, have a goal, .seek results. "For then thou shalt make thy way prosi)eroug, a.d then thou shalt have good suc- cess." The word "success" occurs only once in the King James version of the Bible, and then it is qualifled by the adjective "good." i). "Be strong and of ginnl courage; bo not aflfrighted, neither be thou dis- mayed." "Let not thy heart be troubl- ed," Christ comniai:ds us. III. JOSHUA'S SUCCKSS, Josh. 1: 10; 24: 33. The Charge to the People, Josh. 1 : 10-18. It as not enough for Joshua to receive the divine commands, accom- panie<l by the divine encouragement. He must pass both along to the people, and this he did by sending officers among I hem to proclaim G</d's words. The Help of Rahab, Josh. 2. The stronghold of Canaan nearer.t to where the Israelites must ci'oss the Jordan was thii important walled city of Per- idio, and two young men wore chosen to swim the river, swollen and swift .vith the spring freshets, and recon- noiter Jericho. They brought back a report which greatly encouraged Jo shua and the Israelites. "They had been in great danger, but l.ad l)een saved by the fidelity of Rahab, a wo- man of Jericho, to whose house they had gone, repaying her by the prom- ise, of protection to herself and her family when the city should be taken. The Passage of the Jordan, Josh. ". Without a miracle, it was absolutely impossible to take the great host of the Israelites over the deep, rushing Jordan into the promised land ; but the miracle was granted them, the down-flowing waters being held back. The Twelve Stones, Josh. 4. God's children should set up memorials of God's mercies. Thus Joshua had twelve stones, one for each tribe, made into a cairn on the river bed where the priests had stood while the waters were staye<i. The Fall of Jericho, Josh. 6. God conducted Joshua across the Jordan at the point where the strongest forti- fication in the country stood directly in his way; the point where the sole alternatives before him were victory that seemed impossible or defeat that would be ruin. In conquering Jericho the Israelites virtually subdued the promised land. The Conquest of Canaan, Josh. 7- 22. The conquest of Ai gave Joshua a foothold from which he made him- self master of central Canaan, thus cutting the forces of his enemies in two. 'Theji in southern Canaan a for- midable alliance of five kings was formed against him. But Joshua fell upon them unexpectedly by a night march from Gilgal, defeated them, and rtien had all of southern Canaan in his hands. Next in northern Canaan, the Galilee district, another powerful un- ion of native tribes was formed, head- e»i by Jabin, king of Razor. Joshua fought them at the waters of Meroni, defeated then, and then made a de- tailed conquest of their towns. Joshua's Final Charge. Josh. 23, 21. Josh. 2o : 1. ".4.nd it came to pass after many days." The time occupied by Joshua's conquests is variously reckoned at live to seven years. "When Jehovah had given rest unto Israel from all their enemies round about. .A.nd Joshua was old and well stricken in years." He was 110 years old when he died, so that this nal charge took place long after the conquest of Can- aan. 2. "That Joshua call for all Israel. For their elders and for their heads, and for their judges and for their officers." These terms are for the most part synonymous, though the elders were the heads of the variou'^ families or clans, and the judges had judicial rather than administrative functions. ".'Vnd said unto them, I am old and well stricken in years." Jo- shua was wise enough to know when his powers were failing, and when it was best for him to hand over his authority to younger and stronger hands. 14. "And behold, this day I am goimc the way of all the earth." "It is ap pointed imlo men once to die" ( Heb. i):27). "And ye know in all your hearts and in all .vour souls." Joshua could appeal confidently to each one of them. "That not one thing hath failed of all the good things which Jehovah your God spake concerning you." That is, the promises made to Joshua in the opening cha|)ters oX this Book. "All are come to pass unto yon. not one thing hath failed thereof." « Plain Smartness By HELEN WILLIAMS. UUisti-ated DreHnmalung I.caaon Fur- nished With Ecffu I'attern, Lobsters in Demand More than 1,600. UUO pounds of live lobsters were shipped to the United States market in lfl.'!2 by Kastcrn Nova Scotia tishcrmen by means of ihe lob- ster irunsportalion service arranged by the Dominion Uepartnienl of Fish- erii's. Trade in live lobsters from dif- ferenl parts of the Maritime I'rovinces has become ot increasing importance of late years. "I am (^.^seiitiHlly a home man. Out- siile of publii' dinners. I hav(! not dined away from my home in flfteeii years. ' â€" Charles M. Schwab. Sophisticated and youthful! The yoked bodice with sleeves tliat widen and puff above the elbow cre- ates a charming effect. The skirt lines are clever with snug hips and a deep pointed section at the front that gives elegant height to your figure. For it you may choose a discreetly patterned crinkly crepe silk (such as made the original) in your favorite scheme. Mediinn blue, carrot-red and grreen tones are delightfully chic. Plain crepe in many summer shades you'll like equally well. Style No. 3333 is designed for siijes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 3G, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards of 39- inch material with % yard of 3i)-inch contrasting and % yard of 35-inch lining. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such pattei^ns 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, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. California Business Women To Demand Equal Rights San Jo.se, Calif. â€" Equal rights for men and women in all walks of life was strongly adv<x'ated by the Cali- fornia Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs at its state coTiveniion recently held at the Scottish Rite Temple. Resolutions indorsing the Copeland- Di.skstein nationality bill, and the equal rights .imendment now before Congress, wei-e passed. The World Court was also indorsed, providing that its code of law contains no in- equalities based' on sex. It was de- clared that the mininnun wags laws for women in industry were not being observed, and that man and women should be subject to the same law in industry as in all human relations. Women are in business to stay, de- clared Mrs. Eudora Ramsay Richard- .son field representative of the Na- tional Federation of Bu.siness and Professional Women's Clubs, who ad- dressed a gathering of over 750 wo- men. She pointed out .several laws of a di.scriminator.v source in national, state and local affairs, and urged their elimination. "The real lack to-day Is not so much Ihe ability to trade and create a.-» the desire." â€" Roger W. Bnbsoii. "From the beginning ot time to the present day there has never been a great woman symphonic composer, nor a great woman architect." â€" Benito .Mussolini. Snap Shots London's 'ICng.i telcpiioni- servlc< lost 511 girl operalurs lust yegi through marriage. Stainless steel buttons made in Shet field. Knglaiul. are lu be used on tb« summer uiilformH of the police of thai city. Sun-bathing should only be dout Willi groat I'aulion in the case of peu pie with red hair or who freckle easily. The best patients for surgical work are the lower-class Chinese, who ar» said to be less liable to shuck that oilier races. A slice of Chrjsimus pudding sent from Gt. Britain to an ICnglish girl r^ sldenl in Paris was subject to duly ua der seven headings, apart from the actual postage fee. In a piano, which had been standing for some years in an unoccupied house, a New York dealer found a squirrel'^ nest well slocked with mils. Artificial sunshine and u bettei knowledge of feeding are two ot tha principal reasons for a lower death- laii- among the animals at the London, iilngland, Zoo. Sugar from sawdust and the trans- tormalion of ordinary flsh oil into per- lumed toilet soaps are two possibili- ties engaging the attention of scien- lista. Out of the .';o,00o divorced persons in JCngland and Wales, twenty-five per cent, live iu London. Mnnii 3, SOU mar- riages are now dissolved each year. Two out of every three families in London. England, have only part of a house to live in; 60,000 families have only one room, while 135,000 families have two rooms. So high is the standard set for girl operators iu the London (Kng.) Tele- phone Service thai out of every hun- dred candidates for posts only about fourteen are finally accepted. Taxpayers who do not pay up in Turkey are to have a bad time, 11 a novel suggestion, whereby six drum- mer.s will perform outside their housei for one hour a day. becomes law. Air travel is becoming more popu. lar. Travellers between London and Paris for the first three months of thii year showed an increase of sixty pet cent, on the number for the same period last year. The total world mileage of niotorins roads is B.tifi.SOO, ot which 1,225.700 are in Europe. Gt. Britain ranks third among European countries in this re- spect. Tho figures are: France, 392,. 500 miles; Germany, 217,935, and Great Britain. 179.730. , Because of the declining birth-rate and other factors, it is estimated that the number ot children of five and over iu English Elementary schools during the next fifteen years will de- crease by over one million. i Out of ,'ilI.S47 marriages registered in England and Wales in a recent year,' twenty-two bridegrooms and 779 brides were sixteen years of age. In three' cases both bride and bridegroom were sixteen only. , Losses due to fires during the first quarter of this year show a remnrkabia decrease. In the first three months of 192!l damage worth ,e4,(!91.0iMi wai done; in the same period this year tha figure had dropped £2,035,200. The peculiar heavy leather hats worn by the fish-porters in Billings^ gate .Market. London, weigh between five and six pounds each and cost 3Us. It takes fourteen hours' work to iffeW a hat, as each one contains liundredi of nail.s. Bit of Wood Shows America of Aeons Ag« Berkeley, Calif. -From a tiny frag nient of wood found in the bills neat Peiping, a picture of .Vmerica tent of millions of years ago is expected to be drawn by Ur. Ralph \v. Clianey, licad of the department of paleon tology, University ot California. Dr. (•lianey, in a .statement mad« just before he left hero tor a trip ol several months in northern Asia, Ueclurcd: "This fragment of wood not only demonstrated the fact thai tlie earliest known human inhabi- tant of .-Xsia knew ibe use of fire, but also tolls something of the nature of country which he occupied. "At varioii.-; other points in north. ea.stern China there are deposiU which contain fossil plants. One oi tha most interesting is a fossil ol redw-oods much like the modern red- wood ot California. The relation- ship of the forests of Nortli .\nioric»' ami .-\3ia may ba traced by a study ol these fossils, and since animals at ways have depended on plant., fo( food. We may conclude Unit If plauti have migrated between these con- UneuLs, aniniiils and men have alHO." ML i T AND JEFFâ€" By BUD FISHER Not Mentioning Any Names â€" Butl