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Port Perry Star, 28 Jun 1916, p. 3

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body if possible, to = preve Bradley in Farm and Dairy. Don't Travel on Defla "A tire agent says that mdr ists give so little care to th that the firet intimation of i proper condition: comes when fled sound or a jolt, caused one of the wheels coming in contact with some hard object on the road, dis- closes: the fact that the rim is touch- ing the ground. oe "The envelope is then patched, =a new tube fitted and a sleeve put on for the purpose of increased strength. The driver then proceeds to the near est garage, where a new casing is ob- | Core of Car Finish. : Carelessness 'in washing and polich- ing & car is. responsible for. a great 'many cars getting to look old and run down so soon. ii ah ; | In washing your ear Le sure first to use plenty of water and not much pressure. Don't rub the mud and dirt off, but washeit off "with water. Thoroughly soften it and allow it to soak soft before trying /to remove it at all. Do not allow anyone to rub ngers over a~surface covered with dirt as the small particles of dust will cut the finish. You should have two sets of pails, sponges and chamois for washing. It and | back to ache. r | crust = | the proper height. If it is a little too fourth Yellow to Orange. Mrs. - Henshaw, in addi. | tion to her botani. cal studies is one of the leading Daughters. of the Then making egg custard pies, al- "heat, the milk tothe boiling point before mixing it with the egls: this rule is followed the under- Canadian the distribution of Christmas gifts to at Lake Louise in the Canadian Pacific "Empire, and was sent last December by Sir Sam Bughes as a Captain in the Army on a special mission to England and France connected with tration shows the authoress in her mountain costume with |is a good plan never to use the same | sponge or chamois on the body and running gears. Grease makes a smeary appearance on the body and should be kept off as much as possible. Keep sponges and chamois clean and free from grit and dirt. Use a good body soap and luke warm water for the last wash for the body. If you can find a good body polish, it is good, but never use too much or put it on too heavy, be sure and rub * [it thoroughly and leave the body free from it; 'or after a while you will notice it making a coating over the body that is hard to remove. It is a good plan to go to the man who sold you the car and have him wash it up and show you how to care the troops at the Front. Our illus: her favorite: po: Rockies, Bn ( \ while you irons' the proper table, stretch' the ind wind it conveniently, _ Lean meat has nourishing and re- 'building qualities in diet, but we should not neglect fats in . our foods. |. The best and most easily digested way to take fat is in the form of olive ofl. Be sure distance 'apart, on| DIFFERENT KINDS OF FENCES. em ---- # If Proper Care Is Taken the Wire Fence Will Last Indefinitely. There are many kinds of fences, but they may be divitied roughly into four kinds; (1) stone fenees; (2) live fences or hedges; (3) wooden fences; and (4) wire fences. All these fences have' their good and bad points, but there is a growing tendency with up- to-date farmérs to go in for wire fences. Stone fences,are of greatest-use on hilly rough where the stones are plentiful and it is difficult to drive in fence posts. Where the stones are large and heayy they do not need much repairing or attending to, but if light small stones are used the cattle or sheep very often break through. Live fences or hedges are a charac- teristic feature of British an)! especi- that the kitchen table is little too high. the position stand to. accommodaje ou yourself to its-height will cause your Never put the sugar fiom lemon . It is likely to make fence served its purpose in its day, . 5 for it, if convenient. The nice ap- kinds of teas and Shrubs (iat make | pearance may be kept on a car for a | year or two wit % with hedges is that they require alot YO on gh ® hi of attention to keep up, and unless the for repair. tained, the damaged one being" left Nearly always it is found that the tread is the only part of the casing that has not been totally de- stroyed. The beads are found to ke broken or torn away. The walls of the casing are scored and scraped in- side and out. The canvas'is torn and frayed and has broken away from the rubber, The tire has lost its shape. entirely; its several parts are disintegrated. "The tube, replaced on the road, which was perhaps 'new or nearly new when the journey started, has been torn beyoryl all hope of repair, and scraped and scored all over, some of the incisions being almost: as: deep as the thickness of the rubber itself. "All this delay, trouble and ex- pense is the direct result of travelling on a deflated tire, whereas periodic = inspection of the air pressure would have entirely prevented the damage." they are pruned and the weeds and grass that accumulate around them are mowed constantly they becomea fertile breeding place for all kinds of, pests. Where, timber is cheap, wooden fences can be profitably used but the increase in the price of good lumber makes them almost prohibitive except in a few cases. The old zig-zag rail INTERNATIONAL LESSON ) JULY 2. Lesson I.--Paul At Thessalonica And BER@EA.--Acts 17. 1-15. At the present time, when anew Golden Text, Acts 5. 31 fence is being put up in nine cases| Verse 1. Passed through--The ori- out of ten it is a wire fence. There ginal verb suggests travel along the are many reasons for this. First of great Roman road from the west, the | all, a wire fence is a good deal cheap-) via Egnatia. Apollonia was about | er to put up than any of the other halfway to Thessalonica, thirty miles kinds. With. proper care it will last gouthwest of Amphipolis, which was | but wherever finances permit it should be ripped out and a modern fence put in its place. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL erous and too universal to be Killed 8. Troubled--As slsewhere (for ex- ample, John 14.1), this Ww rd is much too weak a rendering. 9. The actual accused being out of reach, they could only exact bail, pre- sumably for their being sent away. 10. Bercca--Some forty miles southwest. / 11. Readiness--A strong word, suggesting eager attention. 12. The influential position of the ladies of the upper class is character- tinctly suggests that among the Greek population the trend of public opinion depended largely on them. As so often happens, they were more sri ously disposed toward religion than _ the men. ally English farming. Nothing will beautify the landscape more than%to have the fields divided by hedges, and it is these more than anything: else that make the rural districts of the Old Country so attractive to Ameri, can visitors. For a variety of rea< sons, hedges, however, have found p 14. Throughout this narrative we | see the effect of the Master's com- {mand (Matt. 10, 28). To stay and | face the danger would have been: fool- hardy: Paul could do more for the istic of Macedonia." This verse dis- gospel at Bercea by leaving for anoth- 'a lifetime, and it is hog-proof and near the mouth of the Strymon River. p-proofy «ow wag od Thessalonica, still called -Saloniki, is, Although a wire feuce once it is put | of course, a very familiar place to- up needs practically no attention, it day. It seems to have been the only should be made a rile to «zo around | one of the three placs to possess a every six months or every year at| synagogue. Verse '10 shows how some definite time and tighten up the! oven after such terrible danger, Paul move skin and bone and chop. 'Mix with bread crumbs, butter (melted), Bisley. seasonin > ate Er 'one Hour. , with shrimps and serve hot for an hotir on a rack in a warm place and well covered with a cloth. It beaten | males it taste credmier. = ==To the 'of 4 boiled pudding te if it stands f nute or two be- with Dutch | tora being turned out. It makes' it The Hn 8 \ Casserole of Lamb.--Fry_one onion > in butter and while frying with a ey St : ~one. pint. of cold, tooked lamb, diced and frée from fat. Add this to the cooking onion. When well mixed and seasoned turn all into' casserole. Add one tabl ful butter to pan and fwo tablespoonfuls fous brown and_pdd enough water, amb broth or left over gravy 3 water J make sauce for meat. ou ison | wi one-fourth "teaspoonful thyme, one-fourth teaspoonful sweet marjoram, one-half teaspoonful celery salt, and pepper and salt to: suit. "Slice two good-sized ¢ one. ahd. one-half nid rs one. a 'hours, Add. one rained peas, cook fifteen mintites. p-Patdto Sa Cold meats and po- Tito salad make 'a typically delicates- sen dinner, and nothing tastes better : ad oil mixes a vl.| Foreign Affairs, has no quarrel with u sd carrosd over meat ixture, in casserole, pour in : lin the mix 1 fast moment 'before cooking. long Balle ea tal a" buking sompasstively litle favor with Can= --To. an n, a an erican farmers. The powder if ' is put into he Sven wh climate in America is mostly contins lightning speed after s © | ental, that is to.say, there are ex- powider begins to work as soon as jt| tremes of heat and cold, and this is touches the moisture, and the quicker | not favorable for the growth .of tHe the cooking begins the lighter the wires and do any other little repairs! ine} necessary. If this is done regularly, a Sune, to is Drinsiple of Sing Brat day in most cases will be all the time! cost find men prepared for the gospel taken up in making the repairs, and by loyalty to the Old Testament. Such | the fence will Tast twice as long and: when convineyd that Jesus fulfilled be| twice as useful.--Canadian Coun-|y,,ophecy, would be mature and zeal- tryman. ous, leaders for the infant church. p -or cake. ; "© ~=To &ny cheese dish if grated stale cheese is used rather than sliced fresh, no matter how thin the slices. Itis more digestible and more delicdfe. ~--To the success of an omelet if a little fat is 'melted in the pan until smoking, then poured out and the pan rubbed with soft paper before putting t makes the omelet legs likely to stick. 3 e let tween wold by C. W. Jakes, of the wm + [No.1] To the farmer who owns a gasoline engine, and never has had the time or opportunity to make much of a study of the troubles and trials of his will- ing helper, we hope to give some in- formation, gained from practical ex~ perience, that may enable him the better to understand the afflictions of his_almost -human servant; for .in many ways the gasoline engine has human tendencies--unless it is fed it canmot 'and will not work unless its health receives the careful atten- tion of its master and ills or.accidents to which gasolire engines are subject remedied, it is unable to give ffeicient | and satisfactory service In doing this we shall treat the ggesti matter in 'three short separate arti- rview, Lif, the eorely, cles, intimately connected, because one | "To all batters if they stand for at least an hour'betwe mixing and cooking. It makes Lit lighter. If there is to be stiffly/beat- en 'white of egg in the mixture, though, it must not be added until the British "Official 'Shows Germans Have Lost Vast Territory, ; 5 "Lord Newton, Under-Secretary for cellor. 'von |' Bethmann-Hollweg one, first of the series, let us then dis- | : war ! 'should be used as' thee basis sor. naturally follows the other. ln this : ; ; poe that' whieh each Operaloe ess] » gaid Baron Newton st become jar wi e prin- * aid : 8: Newton ples of se Tamils Perhaps the id judge most important thing of all is to'have | a thorough knowledge anil wunder- first place my 'war 2 oops of Jost what oo do to ster map the n 2 . By. § Re why 1] one, 0 that in Alsace, Turkey, Togo- any engine rs know what much surprised at the Ger- : | to t, because they have been 0 'expert at the, a thing was, nything goes the impulse, transmitted by test idea , ton The i Toei Bi the cat | valve, which ia mechanically opened, Greek; it is characteristic of the New § 'very vola- and air it{in 8 ix ] mi HOW TO OPERATE THE GASOLINE ENGINE | fumes get mixed with a certain pro- | thest removed. from the fly wheels.) yi 'wasn't ex- | sion of the gases ignited by the spark. 8. "The Messiah must suffer" was the one great doctrine which divided the Jews instantly into two camps. The royal Son of David was the na- tional ideal, and therecognition of Isa. 63 in such a connection was very bit- ter to the Jews. In preaching this doctrine the disciples were only en: forcing the Lord's own "must" (Luke 24. 26). Psa. 16 was mainly in mind as the proof of the resurrection. It was a true applications how could God i 'allow his Beloved One to see cor- Assuming that the piston is right uption?" And well might the apos- up to the cylinder head when the fly ties apply that first-to the Beloved, wheel of the engine iw revolved, the' and through him to all whom God pistes is drawn outward sud acting loves. ise? he: piston 8 pump, Craws air , phe large following of prosely- a otto Das the surface of, of through he tes it to be noticed everywhere. They Savrien the gasoline with it partly in! were of necessity people who greatly | nt a ao "puede ogee ie ¢ Ling Go fr Gasoline is vaporized and the mixture | tw ga very nd ape es of air and vig forms the charge which ni had to fill * Being without! Sheraies ne le return the Jews' great hindrance, their racial | the clearance'chamber in' the eylinder' pride, and' attracted by the universal- > ¥ < : | hea: tha : _|ity of the gospel, which stirred the] 3 on that, part. of the cylinder far Jew to "jealously," they naturally, The Thi | proved good soil for the seed of the e 'njture; canlioy escape because | gy Chief women--Compare verse the TES 49 esa sad held there) 12. In Macedonia women had a far Shem, and is. squesped ite & small | etieriscetal position san in Greece. volume. ust as iston almost; i reaches the end of its iin stroke! b. Jason--A well-known name in an electric spark, caused by the auto- | Greek mythology from the Thessalian matic breaking of the current from hero Jason (see William Morris's*tell- the cells is' produced right' in 'the'ing of his story). But sometimes | midst of this highly compressed gas. Jews named Joshua (Jesus) used this The result is a forceful explosion, 8s a Gentile substitute, and this Jason and the piston is shot outward-at ter- | may have been a case. rific. speed, due to the rapid expan-| 6. Rulers of the city--The Greek 3 r f politarch is a title almost cxclusively | Tt reaches the en of its stroke, and connected with Thessalonica, several the pis- | of whose inscriptions show it. Turn- rod to the crank shaft and fly ed . + . upside down--A colloquial nm back again. | verb, uted by Paul in Gal. 5. 12, and gh 'the Ontario Agricultural College. portion of air that/it becomes a pow- erful explosive, and this is the source of power in the gasoline engine. ses out, in vernacular document but appar- of the cylinder through 'the at ently beneath the dignity of classical | the refurn outward stroke draws | Testament, freedom from artificiality. {fresh charge of gas, the néxt in-| The World, es in Luke 2. 1, a term I' stroke compresses it, ignition. for the Roman cmpire; the rest of the! i d the > worl was hardly known. 7. Another king--These Jews are that sent the Master | If the on ls, Fal * "reviving the city er field and so saving his life. sea--At a place called Dium, probably. 15. Paul's decision to remain at Athens alone for a time is referred to in I. Thess. 3. 1, but this implies that Timothy had quickly responded . to Paul's reguest, Silas presumably stay- ing on at Bercea, unless the "we" in that passage is to be referred to Paul and Silas, instead of to Paul alone, which is perhaps more probable. Paul's craving for companionship is strongly marked throughout; there was something in his temperament, er his circumstances (of health, for in- stance), that made solitude peculiar- ly hard to bear. 3 LEECHES ARE "UP." They Are Expensive to Buy Just Now, Because of the War. The leech, the vampire of the worm tribe, is both scarce and dear. This is due in part to the vastly increased demand for them, but more to the fact that in the pre-war days nearly all the best medical leeches | came from Hamburg, and that source of supply is now, of course, entirely close(i. ; Turkey also used to send out oceca- sional consignments Smyrna pro- duced a large jet-black leech that was highly esteemed by the medical fra. ternity = Naturally, now, this supply has also ceased. The leech is a slow-growing crea- ture. At two years of age he does not average more than an inch in length, and it takes from three to five years before he is fit for attes- tation, as a fully qualified medicinal bloodsucker, y True, there is the British leech, still to be found in fair abundance in and around the Norfolk Broads, and in parts of Kent, Surrey and Sdssex. But he is practically useless from the doctor's point of view. of lB Pure Air Blue. Pure air is blue, because, as New- ton tells us, the molecules of the air. have the thickness necessary to re- flect blue rays. When the sky is not perfectly pure the atmosphere is blended with percéptible vapors, and the, diffused light is mixed with large proportion. of white. 5 Meerschaum. Meeérschaum, out of "which pi cigar and cigarette holders. ral. found in i

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