Corn ins. Take one oup of =. corm eal, one-half oup of our, a y One nd & half teaspoons of | 1g POW - ry: oie, bepis beaten ei as ono and a half cups of sweet a generous pinch of salt. 'Bake in id greased gem pans front went. = Misty minutes.' pen tn 25 J o XZ uten flour, to ronapoontils fe 3 Shorizy of the present. The Board shall fave all Liqu & in Commissioners Keep ¢ © Sadisional ra powers, utes "shoud oy sufficient. 40 uytes. NEW. LICENSE BOARD. ; Promior | Hearst An Announces Names of New Provincial Board of © Iicense Comiissioners. 2 i 'Ding Seated. Vice- missioner. Bras T: Smith, Halleybury, Toronto, Com= begins, and Boards will be te issue. licenses fo She Sev X new ment. nage d she members dF vie the Bod follows : m | Chairman, 86,500; RA n, 0; Comm issioners: $4,000 each. liquor traffic as it may , but it cannot enlarge i 8 beyond what Ww ex Care has been taken in: the fram: Provincial Board to provide ma- ity. The law provides that two mem- to examine into local conditions. 1. To hear 2. To granting of any license. To boar representations of ure rege : License Law or forcement of it ocontain--- @ The mame of the applicant. (b) The hnzanter, of the license ; oF," sought to be di tavern and shop licenses in (ee) The LA number of Applica tions for tavern licenses. in each maicipaliy in the county. The extent and far- ing ef- fect of the new law and the advan- tages that will follow from. the ex- haustive powers conferred new Board will readily boy appre- ciated when it is understood tha the new Board-may-- 1. Bubdivide the Province 'into Cost or:| ninisf J the law. en-| 2 Fry form of resid o Li "such, as al special i beer!' Big in any Jovality. 3. May issue licenses at any time the Province, or in any por- iH {eral conditions in ing of the legislation creating the chinery that will enable the Board to administer the law in conformity with public sentiment in every + | bers of the Board will form a quo- rum. The. purpose of this is to en- able the members of the Board to visit every partiof fi Province and The Board must hold at least ome meeting each year in every county | town in the Province, such meeting : 4 shall be open to the pub lic-- applicants and con- sider applications for licenses, hear tions from |} any source in opposition to the The © en- of Novos of a meetings must be advertised locally for two weeks, and suoh notice must ; ap; (c) A a of the premises censed @) The total number of existing 2ach J isipaliy in the upon the ite ful , activity 4 dininidied vigor new Jioonse distticts in such manhGz as experioncs in- : show do be of She yoaz for ny Rovied of the 4. May Felon the hours within which liquor may be sc' | in taverns or shops throughout closed at seven i p.m. every ight, adds Labor Day to the ist. of dry days. EL | Industrial Conditions in Germany. The American Association of Commerce and Trade in Berlin has published regularly since November 7, 1014, a weekly report on the gen- ny during the European 'war. Its. contents may well serve to offset the exag- | erated tales of suffering and fam- orted at the beginning of the 4 Fig wig picture is in many Beards has full authority %o such further restrictions upon ways dark roby There are fig- ures showing the number of union (workers now at the front--from the metal trade 170,677 ; from the wood 4 workers 43,877; from the factory workers 51,168; from the brewery workers 14,066. The writers of the report are satisfied because unem- ployment has steadily and notice- bly . fiaior that the state of. the families of the enlisted men is even now precarious in the extreme, and that when the men return from the war unemployment stares them in the fave. The industrial world will be in no position to employ large forces of workers or to pay good salaries, and thousands of men will be idle. The condition of the wo- men ab the Present time is deplor- ;. the majority of the female i rs of the Lory workers union are said to be out of work. Econom in production is of course felt by the workingmen sooner. than by the: bs sen The amount paid for workmen's insurance has con- Faiderably. decreased and the de- creage is not entirely due to the fact that there are fewer workers. The Association is optimistic in its final statement. We can draw our own conclusions. The report says : "In summing up the situation it can be safely estimated that about Fone-third of the German industry is suffering under the war, one-third is able to shift along comfortably, while the remaining third is occu- pied to its fullest. capacity. The confines between these groups re- mained clearly outlined in the be- ginning, | but ave gradually growing distinct" as adaptation to the pero ngs progresses; and a 'more even distribution of work is pow taking place; and while the industries are not gaining in 'strength' they are in no' way losing any of their vitality. In conclusion one may say that Germanys indus- try after the war will undoub wit] --Tpal Indeed He Had. "Have you ever tholight. serious- a, marriage, sir 2% + "Indeed I ve; ever gince the 'ceremony.' When giving a sick person an al- | 'coholic bath, make a mitten for | your hand out of an old bath towel: It will hold more moisture and be better for rubbing purpose. . Moderate cold is a stimulant, be- cause it drives the blood from the surface of the body, and induces ex- -- in onder to restore circula- i They do not con- | Jf The' 'Teibuna f Rouie publishes n article from: its London ootm rre Sore spondent, Bignor tone entitled 'The Marvels of Brivith| Ddiriotion 'What the From vs: | young men to enlist without delay. A consciousness of the national and Imperial peril that seemed to be imminent was created in the masses. . . . Having thus received the first impulse, the great: .patriot- ic movement continued in wonder- ful fashion. One may"term it a pro- duct of the press, ite it was the press that aroused the youth of the country, apparently inert, and apa- thetic, or absorbed in its usual sporting pleasures; it was the press that cried silepce to the working classes .complaining of wages or. of excessive hours of work; it was the press that threatened the specula- tors and those in search of illicit gains; those who held up food sup- plies, the shippers who demanded exaggerated rates for freights, the mining companies which raised the price of coal without reason--the press which brought about the in- tervention of Parliament and of the state in their affairs. Watching, encouraging, warning, the daily press has not left the brain of the British citizen a mo- ment's rest. It has obliged him to think day and night of the war, of itg"fluctuations, of possible dangers, incumbent duties and necessary sacrifices. Thus from the bosom of a people eminently pacific, unused to arms, has arisen, as by magic, this first army of 'a million men now sailing towards France, while in these is- lands another million is growing and maturing ready to replace the first at the right moment. This is the contribution spontane- ously, freely, and patriotically giv- en bv the press to the country. Eng- land, perhaps, will never succeed in appreciating at its true value what she owes to her journalism and to her journalists. OCS A A Forth Bridge Fabrication. An officer tells of an interesting sidelight_ on the false dissemination of news in Germany afforded by an incident on a ship conveying pris- oners after the recent naval battle to Edinburgh. Steaming up the Forth, the bridge came in sight, and attracted the interest and at- tention of the rescued. German seamen, who inquired: "What great structure is that?' On being informed that it was the celebrated Forth bridge the men expressed their surprise 'and incredulity, and remarked that that was impossible, as the Forth bridge had been blown up by the Germans months ago. The Humorist's Daughter. The b-year-old 'daughter of a well-known humotous writer .ap- peared one morning at the break- fast table with suggestions of a cold beginning to manifest itself. "Why, Kathleen," said her fa- ther, 'you are a little hoarse." "Am 17" said Kathleen, resent- fully. 'You said I was a little pig yesterday ! id Discreet. "Have you a careful chauffeur?' 'Very. He never runs over any- one unjess he's sure he can make a getaway.' Nor is his heart less hard than what It used to be last season, but He saved his fees with foresight keen And now he owns a limousine. tion, but eamnot extend the | ties deported : sire just how mol of is Hath 2 i | desire to kill David would be | ried over to a calmer mood. So he tests him out in the morning. 2, In the morning -- Jonathan. gave his father a chance to seen. © outburst of wri over his wild against David. 3. In the field where thou art-- So much did Jonathan love Dayidi | that he.did not want to trust to hisl. own judgment the seriousness of! his father's intention to do away with David. 'David was to be pre-. : sent to hear what Saul had to say| and to study his attitude. II. Jonathan's Intercession for David (Verses 4-7). 4. To thee-ward very good --' Jonathan could have advised David to flee from Saul. But in so doing he 'would have deprived his father of the very best support on "the | battlefield w which he had. Jonathan was considerate of David. But he also was regardful of the interests of his father. 5. Put his life in his hand--A fre- quent Old Testament expression' (see Judg. 12. 3 and 1 Sam. 28. 21).! So alsb, Jehovah wrought a great victory [in Hebrew "salvation"] for all Israel--See Judg. 15. 18; 1 Sam. 11. 9, 13. 6. Saul sware--Under the influ- ence of Jonathan's appeal. But he' was not sincere in his expression of - desire not to kill David, as the events soon 'showed. 7. As beforetime -- For a long time, doubtless, David was safe in Saul's presence. III. Saul Overcome by an Evil Spirit (Verses 8-12). 8. A great slaughter -- David's reat victory which saved Saul rom 'destruction was the cause of the . new outburst of BSaul's umn- quenchable hatred of David. 9. .An evil spirit--See 1 Sam. 16. 14. The result of Saul's jealousy: was an unholy brooding which drove him to fits of madness, Saul's" jealousy did not have its origin in David. David, it will be remem- bered, was brought to Saul for the purpose of dispelling his distem- per. Had David not come across his. path, Saul"s jealous spirit would have been kindled to red- heat by some one else. With his spear in-his hand--The spear was the scepter of the king,' his symbol of royalty. In his coun- cil (1 Sam. 22. 6) and here in lvis house the spear in his hand; at table the spear was at his Sidl®. [¢] Sam. 20. 33); when he slept: in camp it was stuck by his pillow in the ground (1 Sam, 26. 7). Tris tram in his book Land of Israel, says: "We recognized the sheik's tent, among a group of twenty others . * the tall spear plant- ed against it."" The ancient Is- raelite custom lives in that of the modérn Arab. 10. David fled--This was the he- ginning of David's life as a fugi- tive (see Psa. 59. 3, 4). 11. In the morning -- Saul was not so-much crazed as to be bereft of all his wit. "He imagined that David woyld home to his wife. He knew that to seek him out there would rouse the townspeople, who would rally to the protection of their favorite hero. Saul, there- fore, would wait until the morning, when David happened to leave his house, before making any attack on him. As Psa. 59 shows, David was in danger not from Saul only, but from Ruffians in Saul's employ. 12. Through a window--See Josh. 9, 15; Acts' 9. 25; 2 Cor. I. 33. David's house, like Rahab's and the one from which Saint Paul es- caped, was probably on the town wall. While Faul"s men w the front door, David was being let down over the wall out of a win- dow. » The Wandering Jew. After voyaging 233,000 miles be- tween the United States and Bra- zil, both of which countries have denied him admission, Nathan Co- hen, appropriately termed the "wandering Jew," has just been doomed to another six weeks' trip back to Brazil. He originally came here from Brazil, but the authori- "him back to Brazil 'because it was reported he was mentally unsound. Our neighbor in the TSouthe: Hemisphere re- fused to allow him to land, and the steamship eompany of Lamport and . Holt'has been forced to furnish him with passage. back and forth: be tween the countries... He has ya- velled 133,000 miles for $45, th price of a single Steerage ticket, and there is little hope that Bis voyage will soon end Hebrew: Sheltering and Immi- ~