Ma et RE A ie Le Shi Loy of molass me cup of rais- 4 Toe, tw tablespconfuls pr ard, chu + white bread." When light place, in "pant and raise to double iba balk ; - Serve on crisp lettuce leaves. toge hour's rising. Bake in a steady oven. Send to tahle hot and break, not cut, apart. / : . Bran Bread.--Set a soft sponge at : * 'night as for white hread; in "the ke oo cups 'of bran, rning : th old water, and for twenty minutes. When | . rm add this to two cups of thew] sponge ; also add one-half unless the white sponge has al- been sal Mix stiff with ur and knead as vou would one hour. This will make four one' "pound - leaves. Is. nice . for lunches, sandwiches, etc., besides being' -healthful. 5 op RE Oar oy Salad One can salmon: ur sour pickles fine 5 three hard hoiled eggs. one. level teaspoon mustard, one tablespoon sugar, one tablespoon butter, two tablespoons cream or milk, six ta- bléspoons vinegar, one raw esg, pinch of salt and pepper. Remove all skin and bone from the salmon I flake it fine, then add chopped: pickles and boiled eggs. . Stir the mustard and sugar. together, : theu add the butter and cream or milk, | the raw egg and vinegar. Cook uf- il guite smooth, stifring all the time. Pour this cooked -mixture over the salmon just before serving. A A a Yd Na | | will assist in the irrigation of the fore use, in the case of bottled fruits, etc., can be easily pressed in, and then make perfectly air- tight stoppers. we When boiling cabbages try plac- ing a small vessel of vnegar on the back of the stove. The odor of the cabbage will not be so unpleasant. 'Sheets that are wearing out should have their gelvidie sides dewn' together, then cut down the middle and have the new sides hem- med. , In making a fruit cake, pour half the batter in the pan before add.ng the fruit, then the fruit will not be found at the bottom of The cake. { When' preparing. chicken or. tur- iy for roasting, try rubbng it in- side with a piece of lemon. It will whiten the flesh and make it more tender. bl J The most convenient and cheap- est of disinfectants to. use in the cel- lar is quicklime. It may be placed in dishes; in bins or cupboards or scattered loose in dark, damp cor- ners. Potato Salad--Two medium ='zed potatoes, one-half cup of chopped lettuce, 5 cents' worth of celery, | :Ngwo hard boiled eggs. The above above Then tatoos; ddy be- 8, 8 uld all be chopped fine. _ medium sized - relted, Just before bottle of eal-: 18 been thin- wm. over the ghly. -Take one night. In at before ké one Jur even rts bean | lo), put Jb to just .« put one __op,of these, and oriheins and two table- o a wear, and 80 on until the 5% 4ull{ Then lay the other piece tk 6h the top; bake in a hot 2' about" twenty minutes. turn: down the fire and 'day. Baste, with sweeten- J&fter filling the pots put | ' the liquor tthe be + 1 in 'to come to the top. 'sweetened water and "nd keep the pots full of <.which you can ae | Can 'a small pastry. brush Many housewives have hemoaned the fact that their tarts and pies do Hot hate, the delicioss brown Jeeit i ways Pin your cupboard rush your s and pies over with milk, just before putting them in the oven. E wi 18 A aati of map. quito netting. Phe edges are fiinsh- ed by crocheting a scallop in pink or blue. A cut or wound should be thor- oughly cleansed from dirt, bits of glass, stone, etc., by washing it with clean water in which a tabls- spoon of salt has been dissolved to every pint of water. ° "If a cork is too large for a bottle in which you wish to use it, lay on lits side and with a little board or ruler roll it under all the pressure you can put on it. It will be elong- ated to fit in a very few minutes. Velveteen is successfully washed by making a lather of soap and warm water, then soaking the vel- veteen in it, but not rubbing. When this is finished, rinse in plenty of clear water and hang out to dry. There are two leaks in the house- hold which will bear watching: First, the cooking of too much each meal, having a little to throw out; gerand, the dessert habit--rich cakes and pies and puddings are ex- peusive and indigestible. To renovate navy blue serge, put vo handfuls of bran into a basin, "aver it boiling water and let %.the garment free from "ae of Trough serge tar and rub well NW up for an «article on iron. "tants, ar f . * Erected at a Cost of "This is the second largest engineering feat in America, 0 I dry belt in Southern Alberta. itn Ee - SUNDAY SCJOLLESSDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JANUARY 11. Lesson II. Mission of the Seventy. Luke 10. 1-24. Golden Text, Matt. 10.20. : Verses 1:3. Leaving Galilee be- hind him, Jesus prepared to make his last journey southward one of helpful ministration and preachiog. To this end he '"'sent messengers' ahead to prepare the way for his coming. In one village of Samaria these messengers were rejected on the ground of narrow prejudice (9. 52-56); but. other towns receiv them gladly. Appointed seventy others in ad- dition to the twelve , disciples to assist in the work of preparing the way for his coming into the vil- lages and towns which it was his purpose to visit. His appeintment ores Jaren Bn he (explains 'by pon out th "magnitude of the' harvest and 'the scarcity. of laborers, exhorting those whom he 8 sending out that they pray the Lord of the harvest for an even greater increase -of workers, but Jesus is careful to make it very plain that the task to which he is appointing them is not one that will bring to them popular ap- plause, but one rather fraught with disappointment, 'hardship, and per- secution. They will go forth as lambs into the midst of wolves, some of them perhaps to share the fate of martyrs to the cause in which they have enlisted. 4-7. Despite the danger involved in their mission the seventy go forth empty-handed, without purse and wallet, and free from every unnecessary encumbrance, Salute no man--The customary wayside salutation of the East was a long-drawn-out affair, and the many salutations that would be necessary on a much frequented public highway would 'seriously ds- lay anyone whose message or er- ance, custom excused from the necessity of making these formal salutations. When, however, the disciples en- tered .a home, they were not to omit 'the usual and appropriate greeting, Peace be to this house. Son of peace--One peacefully i clined--a Hebrew idiom. ° Turn to you:again--The 1 refused by . the: inmates of the housé shall gtill- be "yours, in Xu possession for hestowal upon 80 other more appreciative hon king second only to the | Sédom--1In the day of "final" : ma Ca al TS j ; 'ment the inhabitants of ancient So-| pe dom, destroyed because of its in- iquity, shall still receive more leni- ent treatment than th of the towns and villages who rejected the disciples of Jesus. ; 13-16. (Compare Matt. 11. 21-24, where the denunciation of the cities mentio occurs -in quite a different connection.) Responsibil- 4 is equal to opportpaity and pun- ishment equal fo r bility. Woe unto thee--The thought of the cities which will reject his mes- Ol sengers and himself leads Jesus to' vices of 'a are not 'merely a nuisance physical- ly. They have an effect on the mind . They give you gloomy views, and take away your self-con temper. A lost temper often means lost honey. An unreasonable piece ential clerk ation of those other cities in which will be very glad to pick. i 'he had already labored, but w! h| It isn't really economy . to do had rejected him. . _ ~~ without substantial and regular of Chora-| meals. The standing breakfast and yi fle i mention 2 : zin, which is thought to be identical hurried 1 i - with Kerazeh, about two miles ear, od lunch ay cosh Jou id portheash of moles Tell Hum, the | You should steersoterr< suppo site o pernaum. Tt i i Bethsaida, also called Bethsaidalioc: his and r meals work wonders of Julias, was a small city on. northern shore of the Sea of 3 themselves, even in chronic cases. A bad cold dulls the brain gener- _stry-in Galilee. It was the rand wae one of haste and import- | Such messengers were by Jee cast o the Jordan River, 5 e mighty works whi esus a had performed in these cities are ally, but particularly as regards not all recorded for us in gor figurts. It has been found in banks pel narratives, in which proba ni that the man who is very subject only a small portion of the actu | to colds makes-many more errors teaching and works of Jesus are, than the man who only gets, say, mentioned. ; one a year. 3 Tyre and Sidon--Two -ancient| Harriman, = the late American Phoenician cities on the eastern! railway ing, refused tohave in any shore = of the ~ Mediterranean, of his offices anyone who was a fre- against which several of the Old-quent victim'to colds. He said he Testament prophets hi uttered 'could not afford it. So, if figuring words of denunciation (compare 'ig your work it will pay you to Tsa. 23; Jer. 25, and Ezek. 26 10 keep colds off. Cures are no good. Bn). The Master's last words of-con-| = Again, it does not pay to spin out emnation are spoken . against Ainge. Oot, the | city which had your evenings: too long, for one been the centre of his entire mini- place is to affect the power of concentra- to 'which Be churned getia gud on, Jou can't fix your mind on again and i which he had often * x preached to the multitudes and Aud. femember that, as any doc- performed miracles of healing. | tor, Will tell you, illness ages you, "The words of verse 16 are again | nd. some of the spring and addressed: directly to the sevens |alertness out of your mind. and are intended to emphasize | month s illness, too, adds more to the ~ representative character of their mission. They are to be>am- bassadors 'of . Christ. = To reject | to yourself, them will be equivalent to rejecting 2 he him, Lae PAPER ARTILLERY. ------ ay ! When Edison Wagered. = Betting is usually foolish, but it}. was a wager that set Thomas Alva Edison, the great inventor, on the | road: to fame and fortune. - When | pal 'a telegraph-ope much e a +o pester cocks roaches gettin cans in - Kind of Cannon. the gestion, 4 3 Now inuigestion and dyspepsia|- that a sprained wrist or aakle have * Another effect of dyspepsia is bad | + "| A Substitute for. Steel in Certain been db The root of the effectio \ ] at the top of the nose of sarcasm may lose you "the eer-| tone co : confiden: ory utter words of sorrowful condemn- | typist, whose brains a 'rival firm : op young King will pull th Four Dukes In D The late Duke of in G. uis, two ear rong, centuries after it was laid [this eq: is still and Ee a ers and seve the wealthiest ndon. Capt. Scott's Ship Foster Stackhouse, lea ish Antarctic Expedition quired Capt. Scott's 0 covery, from the Hudwon purposes of 1 1903. od Sugar, acco: the EB dustrics shea horse-power can drive her half k the D: for tne e. Her timbers ure. she has a speciallyfrong iro thed forefoot, while hegiues of 50 . It will be rdbéred i800V was frozen | three years, and that ual relieved th nin n pure well-known effect of too short hours | if hi Shoe Blacking rding to many tions which have rolé foun hi able as an ailn dation your apparent age than a "year's| made ordinary living. So be very good wl been found to conta quantities of eugar. | 'Where Mayfair C The extent to which paper to-day of a a of iron and wood and Bpecial