it- dishes s to one cupful fine- rincd corn add one egg jiith onefourth cupful ind pepper drop by i in a hot wellgreased n on one side turn and other the fritters lut the size of a large tomatoes wash a cup oil it take seven or ed tomatoes boil and ason with a little salt ake a baking dish and j layers of tomato and off with a layer of toma to with grated bread- ened with melted butter jxlerate oven for a good i omelette butter a bak- in the bottom slices of brown bread is better it dipped in milk put on lthin slices of bruyere ike two eggs beat up to a jilt and pepper pour in- a baking dish on top and cheese put into a itil it is browned on top fith egg sauce take one jilt- codfish boil and re- jin and bones fry light- adding choppedup pars- i pepper stir about con- add from time to time a ig water until the fish is icooked then beat upthe jo eggs and cook for a few lore squeeze on some and serve fcver baked any peaches try h some fine ripe peaches pare them place in a jig dish sprinkle generous- iht brown sugar nearly cov- rd water and bake in a slow tender baste frequently the water if necessary and cream either plain or basses oven scones rub 1 oz for lard into lb of flour tablespoonfuls of soft sugar foonful of ground ginger and half a teaspoonf ul of cream one teaspoonful of baking one teaspoonful of treacle j a little batter milk not too bake in a moderate oven 15 they are lovely when kept f two in a tin i with currant jelly sauce o tablespoonfuls butter add espoonfuls flour mixed with teaspoonful salt and one- kaspoonful paprika when ined pour on gradually one irant jelly arid six slices of ll muttog when meat is a littltvve salt and pep- a wild housecleaning every little while to wash china silk waists use luke warm soap suds then rinse in two cool waters and roll in a turkish towel for two hours before ironing for a dinty unfermented punch take the juice of three lemons juice of one orange one pint of grape juice one quart of water one cjp of sugar if you are mixing a pudding or cake with a wooden spoon beat the mixture with the back of the spoon it is far carier and becomes beautifully light in half the time in winter time when apples have lost much of their acidity if a little salf it sprinkled over the apples be fore the crust is put on it will great ly improve the flavor of the pie graham gems are made with two cups of graham flour one tablespoon- ful of lard two tablespoonfuls of su gar two teaspoorfuls of baking pow der and salt mix stiff with milk if you desire to remove the skin of peppers drop them into boiling water and simmer for five minutes or scour ing them slightly and placing on the broiler over hot coals a few minutes will loosen the skin great care should be taken in handl ing fruits and vegetables where they have a natural protective cov ering it should not be broken then to secure the best result all vege tables except dried peas and beans should be put on to cook in boiling water and the water made to boil again as soon as possible after vege tables have been added careful washing of all vegetables is another important item and all green vegetables roots and tubers should be crisp and firm when put on to cook when k of k met marchand w ibm 5 v- v- a i r- v tt- it- m t s vr ni care of tires en tour inside of the casings always well just ed with soapstone or talc the proper care of tres is a most important item in a cars upkeep the i driver should examine them carefully after every trip and promptly take care of an injury no matter m 5 r slight a trouble small at first may grade of rubber used in a tire the less reformatory led up quickly to a bad blowout and time does it take to vulcanize or cure j j k ara j then a new tire in order to give it to the point of greatest serviceabil- you good mileage tires should be ity after leaving the building ma- watched constantly and kept clean j chines and in these quick cure underinflation is the most prevalent tires the adhesion of each layer of why blowouts occur among tire manufacturers it is ai how j recognize 1 fact that the lower the and the most expensive piece of care lessness of the modern motorist ride on air not on the tire walls an injury to either tread or tube should not be neglected conditions are aggravated with great rapidity and before you know it either a very from old sh notes of interest fi1 banks and bra what la going on in the nd lowlands of au scotia representatives of the government visited shipyj munition works in the gla trict the scottish office st and school boys are now on i vice secondlieutenant n i gordon highlanders younl j mrs mcneill glasgowj killed in action the death occurred of mr george johnstone fabric to the other and of the tread to the tire carcass is likely to be much less perfect than in slow cure tires consequently under the intense heat j j of the sun and of road friction separ ation of these units is likely to occur thereby weakening the entire struc- expensive repair or a whole new tire hire of the tire and causing heat is required go over your tires peri- j blowouts in the higher grades of odically and take care each injury at once of i rubber their natural toughness and j elastricity seem to resist or take inner liners should be used only in emergencies or to prolong the life of a wornout tire never apply them as a permanent repair as they are utterly destructive to a new tire where chains are used adjust them carefully if they are too loose they will cut and loosen the tread if too tight they cut and bruise where they are lapphl over casing faulty wheel adignment doe3 much injury to tires it subjects them to a grinding they cannot withstand a longer to absorb the vulcanizing or hardening properties of the high tem perature steam use- in this operation therefore requiring a longer cure and resulting in a much tougher and more serviceable tire in all respects mrs joseph chamberlain becomes bride of westminster abbeys rector the reverend canon carnegie and his bride formerly mrs joseph chamberlain photographed as they left westminster abbey london just after their marriage in king henry vils chapel in the historic structure j slightly bent axle will do the damage mrs chamberlain was the second wife of the late great british statesman j it is important to cleanse tires daily whom she married in 1888 prior to her marriage she was miss mary endiif possible scrape off mud andjsoil cott of new york daughter of judge endicott of the united states supnnd wash the tires with water and a remo court and secretary of war in president clevelands first cabinet little soap of good quality applied the reverend william hartley carnegie was born in county dublin in 1s60 with a not too wet sponge he has been rector of st margarets and canon of westminster since 1913 bination poorhouse during a fog off lunl balvenie of glasgow f collision with the ssl two lives were lost slain castle estate belonging to lord erro tends along the coast fcj has been sold to sir kirkcaldy tramwajl have decided to reed town council to dispeij one cent fare except j cars lifeboat saturday greenock and port ed to 102320 being long trips becoming popular owners of automobiles have gain ed so much confidence in their ma- chines in the last few years that the j as compared wit merest novice is no longer afraid to jar start out on a long trip in his car a few years ago a man would not at tempt an automobile trip of several hundred miles unless he was an ex pert at the wheel himself or had with him a chauffeur who he knew was keep the j dependable creole cook three tablc- ltter with one tablespoon- ppped onion for three min- one and threefourths atoes drained from the eight minutes put in bnful capers ojiefourth alt a few grains of cay- eggs beaten slightly a creamery consistency and scrape from bot- i hnut pie one cup milk iblespoonful cornstarch leup sugar juice and ion onehalf cup cocoa- ik in double boiler add lllved in cold water and 1 1 then add yolks beat- id lemen add cocoa- lve minutes and pour decrust beat whites two tablespoons su- l top of filling and r hints mel furniture with yill keep the gloss re tould be hung out i often as possible nge cakes in pat- pven is very hot with chili sauce alad for a relish cold water after skin easily ded to tomato jelightful flavor ting needles rub sh with pumice small bag of ure keep the damp report of the conversation between the officers it was a dramatic moment when news reached england that colonel marchand had forestalled the british occupation of fashoda kitchener took a flotilla of ten steamers with 4000 men up the nile before fashoda and invited colonel marchand on board the latter thus reports the conversation i have come to re sume possession of the khedives dominions kitchener began well general i capt marchand as he then was am here by orders of the french government i thank you for your offer of conveyance to europe but i must wait here for in structions was the reply it is a long time since you had any news from france some months general but my orders are to wait here major i will place my boats at your disposal to return to europe by the nile international lesson september 17 lesson xii a prisoner in the castle acts 22 golden text psa 91 2 verse 17 trance connected with prayer as in acts 10 10 in the case of peter the greek word borrowed in our ecstasy implies a complete loss of consciousness communion was so absorbing that the outer world vanished it was an experience such as paul describes in 2 cor 12 24 18 saw him the pronoun goes back to the righteous one in verse 14 of thee unemphatic the stress lies on concerning me 19 how vividly these words recall he man who could pray to be cut off general i thank you but i cannot from christ for his brothers sake accept your offer i am waiting for to leave jerusalem with his tale un orders from my government a good many things have happened since you started on your journey general whatever may have hap pened france who is not in the habit of abandoning her officers will send me orders i must hoist the egyptian flag here kitchener next said why i myself will help you to hoist it over the village over our fort no that i shall resist was the french officers reply do you know major that this af fair may sot france and england at war colonel marchand bowed without replying general kitchener rose he was very pale the colonel also rose kitchener gazed at his 2000 then at the fort on the ramparts of which the i bayonets gleamed wo are the stronger kitchener remarked after his leisurely survey only a fight can settle that was marchands reply right you are was kitcheners reply come along lets have a whis- koy and soda the required instructions as the story of the expedition has told were forthcoming from paris in due course your walk tells character shown in every step you take told was jhe heaviest trial surely they must hear a man who had prov ed his jewsih fanaticism so well thus knowling paul seems at it were to plead with his lord that men cannot but receive testimony from one who had previously been an en emy of jesus of nazareth the words too are directed to his hearers so that they may impress them with the strength of the testimony thus given j by one who had imprisoned the chris tians myers has caught the sob with which paul recalls those perse cuting days saints did i say with your remem bered faces dear men and women whom i sought and slew o when we mingle in the heavenly places how will i weep to stephen and to you i in the emphatic form each time it occurs in this and the two following verses beat in every synagogue thus fulfilling the lords prediction mark 13 9 offenses against the law of moses were tried and punish ed in the synagogue the fit place for a holy inquisition 20 was shed imperfect tense sauls fanatical conviction nerved him lo look on throughout the horrid of today the profound insight of the book of jonah pilloried that un lovely characteristic in the prophet who stands for the people back from exile bt no better for their discip line jesus himself draws their por trait in the elder brother of his greatest parable 23 threw off read tossed about the loose outer robe was pulled off and furiously waved about this was in manifestation of excitement and rage travelers in palestine in modern times occasionally see an ex hibition of the sudden excitability of an oriental crowd cast dust like shimei 2 sam 16 13 24 examined by scourging legal in the case of slaves and men without political rights but not as the first act of an inquiry augustus had expres sly forbidden it and lysiass remorse for his illegal action centers upon this verse 29 25 tied him up literally for ward his hands were tied with leather straps so as to bend his back over a stone scourgingpillar to re ceive the blows paul waits till they have committed themselves to the il legality a roman and uncondemn- cd as in 6 37 had he been no roman the second count of pauls in dictment held but lysias ignores it in his interrogation fo paul in view of the greater matter it is a mis demeanour to put a roman citizen in iron a felony to scourge him says cicero 2g is a roman it was death to claim citizenship falsely and both the sergeant and his chief take pauls word without seeking evidence 27 thou emphatic like pilates still more contemptuous question art thou a king 28 the name lysias is greek and the tribune was probably a frcedman of the emperor claudius or the son of i one roman emperors often sold the franchise as a means of revenue ramsay explains pauls inherited franchise by going back to the settle ment of tarsus when leading jews were enrolled in a special tribe ono of these was pauls ancestor 29 bound with the two chains first and then far worse with tho for scourging of miss cavell story of the man who him to death put roger de la marck was selected by a belgian secret society the international news bureau publishes what purports to be a verb al report of the story of roger de la marck the man who killed the spy nels de rode who betrayed miss cavell to the huns the news of de rodes death was published long ago but the details of the affair have never been given to the public before the story bears the charac ter of veracity de la marck was a marck went to the home of de rodes i father and told of his deed i i announced my name but they j did not know my name then i told i them i killed your son i was ex cited otherwise i would not have announced it so brutally no sorrow for traitor i must have been fully insane or why should i have visited my vic tims aged parents i would not have done such a thing in my sober mind however i had not visited the house for the purpose of boasting of my act of murder forgetting the gravity of my act i had visited major de rodes house to apologize to him in person for having suspected him of being a traitor like his son he was not a traitor and i told him so j to my utter surprise it was the in the course of tions at blackford barclay edinburgh killed and thomas i edinburgh seriously a letter of burnsj pondent mrs dunl at a london auction it has been acquired for a glasgow collecf it is announced constables doing dull ing the war emerg resigned in a body action of some men council the local goverj intimated to the thorities that thej agreed to give a grl the cost of the add son sanitarium mrs stirling gi elected to fill the gargunnock schocj the resignation connal rowan wl prisoner in germ edinburgh univ to hold a special to decide finally of admitting women classes at the uni aged woman who spoke first she told me that it was not the death of j qualify for the me their son that caused their tears it was the death of the soul of their member of a belgian secret society j only child that moved their hearts people who walk slowly taking long scene the more it tortured his strides raising their bodies on the tips i sensitive feelings and the louder a nels ell sunned and battsirs should bo j woodwork it is eblen wa jltti f it js try iit has been g ft wi in fvliil o- th soap and promih win thcn i 1 phc fill a large jio brush or knd on this pcrmost the one ifect con- tn all oaunti- hivin mar w4 unf great of their toes and taking short steps voice within told him of the face that have volatllo and irresolute nature thcy are lacking in selfconfidence they veer from ono point to another and yet are incapable of a decided opinion they lack tho charm of poise too walking with toes turned in indi cates a selfopinionated naturo and a stubborn one you give tho impres sion by this walk that right or wrong if you make up your mind you cant bo nduccd to niter it walking with the toes pointed straight ahead indi cates an open and generous naturo it shows selfconfidenco and independence people who walk with a free air and swinging stride and with the head thrown well back have fearless and courageous natures this walk de notes force command and productive energy people who walk with a slow and undulating movement are artistic nnd imaginative they are dreamy nnd indolent and capricious in their likes and dislikes they aro incapablo of exertion and still leas of persoverance nolco your friends walks and see if you cannot tell their characters and tako your observation as a bit of caution for your own walk thongs was like an angels the greater was the ritual service ho rendered to god john ig 2 he would not offer what cost him nothing the must so read of acts 20- 9 is the key consenting acts 8 1 the memory lends its sting to rom 1 32 where paul makes the coldblooded approval of an onlooker an even worse sin than tho sinners evil deed itself keeping the outer garments see acts 7 58 21 send thee forth in the greek is the last and emphatic word as tho i is the first equally stressed the climax is not unto the gentiles as in the english though this was what the mob fastened on what the lords word left burning in pauls soul was the commission and its giver that he tho persecutor was charged with an apsotlcship so the greek by jesus whom he persecuted by comparison with this tho rest was a detail 22 privilege always beeds a sel fish lust of monopoly in this respect the jews were as bad as any brahman passing of hansom cabs londons once popular vehicle was patented in 1834 tho hansom cab has had nut a short life says tho london chronicle eightyone years ago on dec 23 1831 joseph aloyslus hansom a wellknown architect designer of tho birmingham town hall and tho founder of tho builder newspaper took out tho patent for tho cab to which his name was gnven he after ward sold his rights for 10000 but tho money was never paid in 1881 tho year preceding hansoms death tliero were no fewer than 9652 licen sed hansoms in london and today tho vehicle is seldom seen thftro is ono spot in london on which by the provisions of a special act of parliament a cabstand may not bo nppointed under tho act of goorgo hi o 134 s 35 tho inhabitants of njoomsbury squro obtained powers to prevent any such stand being erect ed near their dwellings enlistments stop spindles cioso on half a million spindles aro now stopped in manchester england and adjoining towns of southoast lancashire through enlistments tho situation is becoming moro nnd moro serious nnd it is impossible to got women to fill many of tho positions organized for the purpose of punish ing spies and traitors and when became known that de rode was traitor and guilty of miss cavells death he was selected to carry out the work of vengeance he tells how he waited at night near the residence of de rodes parents and at length saw the traitor approaching in two minutes i was face to face with the unfortunate object of my night vigilance standing within three or four feet of him i informed him of what i was about to do i told him if he kept silent i would give him as many minutes as he wished during which to make his peace with his maker i told him that so long as no one ap proached us from either direction so long would i permit him to offer his prayers screamed for help but i had scarcely finished my proposal when he began to scream at the top of his voice for help j even then holding my revolver at his breast i informed him that an entire army could not save his life and i again urged him now from this distance this act of mine seems to me rather reck less i can nscribe this apparently foolhardy act of mine to my utter timidity or perhaps nervousness i was younger than my victim by five years yet he looked just at that hor rible moment like n mere child i had never taken the life of a fellow man af the outbreak of the war i was even under military age fur ther i had never in all my life held a revolver in my hand i did not even know its mechanism all that i knew and all that was necessary for me to know was to pull the trigger while i aimed its muzzle until its deaihdealing con tents had been emptied i pulled it he fell nnd died instantly i killed your son i remember it as one remembers a horrible dream i lifted the dead body of my victim clean from the ground threw it over my shoulder bore it some distance and stood him against the door of his fathers house tho slayer was taken by tho bel gian civil police and handed over to the germans but no evidence being found against him ho was allowed to go free tho german officer making tho significant comment timo will obscure tho deeds of both good and bad men but the deed of a traitor is never forgotten afterwards de la what shame for the dead what it shame for the living ones she wept and the aged major joined i left them abruptly and awkward ly i found myself speechless as is well known the father of de rode refused to recognize or give burial to his dead son who had proven such a traitor to his country three or four others who were con nected with the cavell affair also suffered death at the hands of the secret society to which de la marck belonged son takes fathers place gen cadorna conducts campaign as elder cadorna did gen luigi cadorna chief of the general staff of the italian army is tho hindenburg of the isonzo front he knows every foot of the land mountain or valley every path through the rocks every fortress on the austrian or on the italian side official intimatio ceived in glasgow ers have definitely of the amalgamate gineers for an adval per hour to meet tl of living a motor ambulance of the council of ambulance associatiol ed at the annual mcctfl to the belgian army for use in hospital ira hind the lines in one of the blacksri the neighborhood of wickshire a woman seen swinging the sledj her services have been sary owing to the imposj taining either a man or an interesting coremon in rosyth dockyard sir frederick tower k who has succeeded admirl ert lowry as commander rosyth was presented wl by the corporation of dull a deputation from the gl he spent many years in the district west of scotland licensed planning for the inevitable day of war with austria and the best military stategy for meeting it cadornas campaign to capture for italy the great commercial seaport of trieste whose population is 77 per cent italian was the goal toward which his father gen raffaelo cador na led the army of italy fifty years ago the son then a boy of eighteen learning the military game at milan and bologna was not permitted to ac company his father who did not in tend to give favors to anybody even to those nearest to him human sacrifice in india a dispatch from calcutta says that a case of human sacrifice is reported from a hindu temple at jaffna it ap pears that certain hindus of parnar- ponnal were strongly tempted by a dream regarding treasure trove be- j licving that by the sacrifice of an in- noccnt youth to the goddess they led a youth of 20 at dead of night to the temple of the goddess where he was drugged and his throat was cut loaded by magnets for tho first time in the history of great lakes navigation iron ore is being loaded at the ashland wis docks into the steamer clcoa by tho aid of giant magnets thus doing away wholly with the use of longshoremens labor fence association attended i meeting of the glasgow i court and asked owing tol of laborers permission tol female assistants in licenf mises not enough wom people who own cut glass shouldnt throw stones honor compels us to tell a man his faulta to his face but safety first use the telephone demand for help in england than supply there aro 11000 women clerl stenographers now employed i british government ofllccs in hall a fact which gives some ij the way the women havo fllle gaps left by the men who have i tho army and still the cry is for more women which lends tj i belief that the demand has outstri tho supply even the government dopartnif aro finding difficulty in securing clerical assistance they require one time whitehall officials could if and choose their clerks and majority of those engaged were of i adaptable age from 20 to 30 but intelligent girl of 17 without cxpfl enco can now find a place and midd aged women need no longer feel they are not wanted to meet extensions of the actlvltlj of such busy piaccs as the war oiiu and the ministry of munitions it estimated that some 200 women can bo absorbed every week into official machinery tho pay is not high th moro than what was regar satisfactory starting sala girls before the war it far below the salary paid work in this coutitrj