CHERRY JELLY (Any kind except wild or choke, omm ie‘ ) sugar, )ixfl’uï¬. To prepare juice, stem and erush three pounds fully ripe cherries. Do mot pit. Add half cup water, bring bes no terrors for the housewife who wants n shelf full of gleaming rabyâ€" colored cherry jellyâ€"it is so easy to make it with bottled frait pectin much as you would getting ready for a picale, How proud you will be of the rows of jelly in your cupboard a nd how grateful you will be tor the rest of the year for the flaver and decoration cherry jelly brings as it used to be not many years ago. Making cherry jam and jelly ts noew something of a jolly pastimeâ€" an artistic achievement of economic value that the modern homemaker does not just want to "leave to the ,-;I! 'lh.b:uhl f:h mu: shortâ€"boil method is simple and sure What fruit eatches the light with such gleam and g‘ossiness as cberâ€" vies?" Thit lovely jewelâ€"like sparkle and color can be caught and transâ€" ferred to jars of jelly and jJam that will bring joy to many a meal for the rest of the year. Here we are in the midst of c fine cherry season and nowndays that does not not apâ€" pall or overwhelm the housewife with the sense of a heavy task abead of her as it used to be in the old days before bottled fruit pectin was discovered and perfected. Now the making of cherry jam and jelly is An Arab entering the city of Jerusalem is haited by road patrol of British soldiers and is closely wtuunvm*ull-nlnmhfll-mumu-ulhn'fll Jewish rioting. h Becuuse he was so busy with screen work, John Loder, British hone HRetinter Office, London: to" 16â€"pearcald Micheline Cheinel: The flmm“‘hnnï¬ï¬ufloufl groom are pletured here after the ceremony. A basket of cherries nowndays as to the resuh, British Screen Actor Weds Household Science An Arab Suspect Getse a Thorough Going Over We will pay $1.00 on publication for the best salad dish ’ |M†or refreshing _ $ cups carrots (grated). Mix with salad dressing, some sour cream, l:b salt -l'.r. Mix cream and chopped -n-,'m R. C. Drynan, R.R. 4, Cobden, Ont. Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method of your faverâ€" ite mainâ€"course dish and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to MHome Hints, Reom 421. 73 West Adelaide Strcet, Toronto. a gizss of water makes the nips, together for ten minutes, add juice of lemons and when cold seal in bottles. Two tablespcons added to to a boil, cover and simmer ten min« utes, (For stronger cherry Mavor, add % teaspoon almond extract be? fore pouring.) Place fruit in jelly eloth or bag and squeeze out juice, lnnn-t-l::hhhm saucepan and mix. to a beil over hottest fire and at once add bottled fruit pectin, stirring conâ€" stantly. Then bring to a full rolling boil and boil hard balf a minute, Remove from fire, skim, pour quick ly. Paraffin hot jelly at once. Makes about nine elghtâ€"ounce glasses, 8 cups spples (grated). 1 pineapple, grated. Juice of 12 lemons. Grated rind of half a lemon, 4 pounds granulated sugar. 2 cups cold water. 7 executing a neat dive during the workouts for Olymple diving finâ€" als at Astoria Pool, Queens, N.Y. is : of wwmmm Â¥. perfect grace as they g“-:‘ni‘-*‘:flmmmm“mv ing through the air in a halfâ€"guiner Vire Minis In spirits deprived of his , Prince Starhemburg (right), former Austrian ie s on oi Paoanaoh ro calt nonieg, irebiaiee aurtntoin,adptiny pelp The Height of Form was writing when his contemporaries Included Robert Louls Stevenson, 8. R. Crockett and Tan MacLaren. This means that he "took his pen in hand" both our hearts. almost before he was man, Let me thing it over." _ 'v-‘ Two days later he called me up carly in the morning and said: "Come to lunch at my house today and meet the man J shall propose for Director of Propagands." In this way 1 met Buchan. He was the man Northcliffe TI for ab head of the burcau at the "F. O.," as they call the Foreign Office. ut P mm mss vesulted in my book, "The Business of War")â€"and together we fought many battles in behalf of the Angloâ€" in America was wrong. 1 told Lord Northcliffe that unless a change were made in its direction, the Germans would succeed in their determined atâ€" tempt to poison the American mind against Britain. He agreed with me thoroughly and added: "The problem is to get the. right returned to Engh the whole British p -"hl u'“‘l mirhih 7“7 man, roldier, statesman and pubâ€" Hsher." _ "With Buchen I had the usual unâ€" conventional introduction. In 1916 1 Mr. Marcosson, bimself long an outstanding United States author, ediâ€" tor and colorfal viewer of world afâ€" fairs, continues that Lord Tweedsâ€" muir‘s career "has been as varied and adventurous as that of any of the herocs in his ‘shockers.‘ At the time Mr. Marcosson writes he had been by Isase F. Marcosson, in ventures in Interviewing." ‘Traces Career Author Praises Tweedsmuir. Milk for Babics of Canada, i-’.'i.'-‘f-“i.iT-?‘ more different things well than alâ€" most any man I ever met," is paid m-l..cl:-â€"uubv--‘, l--.r': cosson States in Volume. * £ | Buchan is as completely Scotch in It‘s Sporting of Him Likened to Barrie cause dear to whose 17 volumes comprise what will probably stand for some time as the nuthoratative account of the great conflict. This monumental work was mnnl under every conceivable of handicap. It was partly writ ten at Maig‘s headquarters; a portion oo propaqanie: 10 wan ‘Tike | was a vast Tok Inamin ues manth performance is that it is a consecuâ€" un.un.humu.uml literature of the war. the Frove he Joimed Maige aaiy us jo"| with_ dificalty. 8o the problem "re M%E?.#E duces itself to controlling the ctrds. ) Souldilgpes, d Battle Types of Feeders Sopmid ond it snabled him to WrH¢| 1 turns out that the mere bui‘¢ râ€" engagement. It is a part of :'..' babr """".‘ :Im.l.l. A -‘f!-..-u'A“h.'-f!{'l- -:-.- e l-.:u-t ..:‘q': Tok Triueind ue ecstont t arivage was on account A little thing like this did not deter him. HMe was one of Kitchener‘s most active:cids in the first British reâ€" annotated edition of Bacon‘s Essays;. man race," the late Oliver Herford .-..-.u.,..-.,u‘-.-um.-.-m- several novels. After a bril.| have Jong known that cow‘s milk is m..,......mbun.m-un-u 'uhh.--...hw.'“ludï¬nm dï¬h‘n‘hflhhm;m‘.m‘m baby called to the English This was too Wilks on the market. slow for him, he went to South Africa} _ At the Rockester*meeting of the as private seeretary to Lord Milner,‘ Society of Experimental Bâ€"ology and C TTeing 2 a '“pl:;&:.m:"l Being Scotch, Buchan has a canny : of ork, rese m-a hnflh-nuu-'b:l_::fl: ï¬-:_:m -l: the famous publishing house | ©0* * "There of Nelson‘s, The average untraveled| ho substitute for breast milk," he inâ€" American does not realize perhaps|#isted, "and there can be no single the great service to humanity formula for the universal feeding of this staid old concernâ€"has mnu"vlnhmdm'- No matter where you happen to find If It is chemically adspted to m-lun-dvn-l-u.hu the individual baby. Petrograd or Pekin, if you need| Since he is a chemist as well as reading diversion sll you have to do, a physician, Dr. Kugelmars proceed: is go to the nearest book store andied to tell how ond why cow‘s milk :'llflc-cflbluh-"fl- should be modificd to sult individust shockers." The world is meeds. He is all for ‘adapting the with these useful books. I once told| formula to the infant, and not the Buchen that the real Order of Merit| infant to the formula," which is bis for conspicuous service to the tired subtle way of saying that he does tourist should be bestowed on his! not approve of. just looking a baby house. _ > Miye . | over ald then deciding which of the trousers. At 16 he had published an Over Ago for War Describes Him. His A New Approach to Finding After serving as to find| mik if it is chemically adspted to d, be 11| the individal baby, ou need| Sinco be is a chemist as well as e to do, a physician, Dr. Kugelmars proceed: pre andied to tell how snd why cow‘s milk n "shilâ€"| should be modificd to sult individust meeds. He is all for ‘adapting the me told| formula to the infant, and not the ( Merit| infant to the formula," which is bis ance by literary highbrows, has been en him by Yale Univers‘ty, his alma mater, of the degrce cf Doctor of When the allergics are given goat‘s evaporated or veretable milk, the neuropathics thickâ€"feeding, acld feed Ing or evaporated mi‘k, and the hydroâ€" labiles acid or evaporated milk. all is well. And it is just as easy to toil to which of these types a baby belongs as to determine its body bulld. ; l:.ll:;uhh. in presenting Sinâ€" novelist and nup::u'l\::. an m in conferring the degree, Presidént Ange!!, of Yale, spoke as follows: Author of perilous books that ence opened, cast a fatal spe!l and may not be closec ere the M in ie mead e us , the mean, 4 interpreter of a bewildered 'nlh--mui.-ulua in a world adrift from its old time moorings, your alma mater, justly proud of your preâ€"eminâ€" masa‘s 500 bables 65 per cent were aligerie (could not to‘erate milk with» out getting I!1), 30 per cent neurops» thic and 5 per cont Iymphatie (paie and Incking in emergy) and hydroâ€" of two to one. But whatever thp concentration. there must also be car> bo bydrate (10 per cont) and the viiaâ€" Apart jrom bedy bulld there may be tendencies to diseace for which allowâ€" If You Faint at the ear and it runs into somebody on the road, the "injured party" cannot claim damages from you. This was in effcct the desision of Judge Beasley at Southbend County Court recently. 52â€" than the laterals and are subject to fewer digestive disturbances. Hence the Iaterals must be given dilated or ncldified cow‘s milk. A study of £09 infants showed that the lnears need cow‘s milk dilated three to one cnd the laterals one to one. In between are the medials, who need dilutions read, Canning Town, London, was standing on a roadside with other eyclists whe a car struck him. The driver of the car Mr. Arthur Cheek, a surveyor, of Peckham Rye, 8E., said he remembered nothing of the necident. He fainted before it Sr, MeDermott maintained that Mr, Cheek fuinted after the crash. Judge Bentley held that the driv« er was not negligent, and dismissed !hrhll.fhm?“mh"w The gestric julce of the stomach eurdics milk. Soft curds swel! in the stomach and are easjly digested. Hard feeding problem of its own to him. which it digests must be determined. many prepared milks on the market Dr. Sinclair Lewis Writes the ‘Edmenton Journal â€" you the degree of doctor of letâ€" If you faint at the wheel of your "Corulferous wet nurse of the hu man race," the late Oliver Merford the Right Formula for Wheel of Your Car