aT ¢ Th oe hs a reviougly greased), and then an egg on the top as belore: ed Eggs With Fish--If you Bows cooked fish, of apple syrup, one s cupfuls of er ingredients, and bak cups for fifty minutes If you bake it in one dish, use Potato Turnovers.--This way to serve meat and pots and mash enough potatoes to fill a pint measure. Add one well besten ant 'the Epistles other ; The notab! discovery of an inference from Greek, obvious when once pointed out, incidentally shows us why Titus is not named.in 'the -Acts, We. must go to to see how important these two brothers were, modestly having suppressed their record where we should have expected it to figure largely. §. Make up beforehand -- Superin- such anrangements for collec (ton as Paul sketched in 1 Cor. Dressing... Wash a fresh caulifiower of as many heads as you need. Boil water in the kettle in which the vege- VeTY | tables is to be cooked, salt it well and add the caulifiower while the water is * | boiling, Cook it until it is tender. To prepare the dressing, heat one cup- rice, allowing half to each person. For] teacupf _ people allow two eggs, and cook them very lightly, adding the rice and stir- ring it well in with salt and pepper to season. ~ Serve very hot. Eggs With Fried Bread.--~This met- hod of serving eggs and bacon is economical; Cut some stale bread in- to cubes, allowing about half a cup- ful to each person, and to each sery- ing of bread about eight little pieces of bacon. Fry the bread and bacon in hot fat in a frying pan, and break the eggs. in, stir and cook until be- ginning to set. Dust with salt and "pepper, and serve very hot. Surprise Eggs.--Choose potatoes all . of asize and bake them. Cut off a piece. lengthwise, and scoop out as much potato as possible. Mash it smooth and very moist with some white sauce, salb and pepper. Line _ the potatoes' thickly with his : Brea an egg into each, cover with pota d bake until the potato" is 'lightly ful of sweet milk in a double boiler; thicken it with a level tablespoonful of cornstarch dissolved in a little cold { milk; séason it with salt, pepper and butter; add about. one-eighth of a pound of grated cheese. Pour the sgjuce over the cooked cauliflower at the last minute before you serve it, after draining the water from the vegetable, and serve it on hot buttered Household Hints. Lemons will keep fresh if stowed in dry sand separately. Tomato juice will remove ink stains from the hands. Never allow fresh meat to remain in paper; it absorbs the juice. A dish of cold water in the oven will prevent cake from burning. Dry flour applied with a newspaper is an excellent and easy way bo clean tinware. : : 'Salt will remove the stain from silvér caused .by egg when applied dry with a soft cloth. x To get cake out of pan whole when taken from the oven set it on a wet cloth for five minutes. : Never keep vinegar or yeast in "| stone crocks or jugs; their acid at- 2 | tacks the glazing, which is said to be poisonous. . Put a silvered spoon into the most delicate and boiling hot liquid . So be poured into it without breaking serve A delicious salad is made of boiled beets, scooped out, filled with sliced vegetables and served on lettuce leaves with French dressing. Don't 'go on the theory that the less you eat in the summer the cool- er Tia Be. Eat Doderately of rather. nourishing food. - "Corn should als from Bounty, here and in verse 6, is, literal: ly, blessing ; see note there. Hxtor- tlon--Th8 word usually rendered covetousness, Even though they had promised this gift to a good work, Paul was acutely sensitive to the pos- sibility that by postponement and hur- ried collection the.money might be got ultimately by methods unworthy of the high privilege of Christian giving. It might come as an irksome duty, and God would know those coins again, even if they did meet the need. Hence the wise provision of the weekly gift, a regular sacrifice hallowing the Lord's day. John Wesley was wise as usual when he ordained the penny a week ! 6. Bountiful -- Paul applies the thought of Gal, 6. 7 to one more of its many flelds. That large-handed bounty is a "blessing" (see above) may be il- lustrated by Shakespeare's great line about mercy : "It blesseth him that gives and him that takes." 7. Giving Is to be (1) calculated, not merely Impulsive; (2) an act of "cheerfulness," not of "grudging" (lit- erally pain) ; (3) - absolutely spon- taneous, not-enforced by any kind of pressure. God loveth--Quoted from the Greek version of Prov. 22. 8, where there is nothing resembling it in the ordinary Hebrew text. It is a good {illustration of Paul's regular use of the Greek Bible. He does not call it a quotation, and he knew the Hebrew may well have remembered it was a mistranslation, ! 8. The figure calls up a flood of divine bounty, which after satisfying every need flows over into the mani- fold activities of good men. Sufficien- cy--The everyday use of the word which in Phil. 4. 11 Paul has with the sense content, common 'in the philoso- phers. 9. Quoted from Psa. 112, 9, - which establishes the familiar Jewish idea that almggiying establishes son, verse 3, for New Testament quali- fications. He who told the young ruler that it would save him--for it meant the abandonment of his own besetting | sin--told also how Hmited was the *re-| ward" of almsgiving that was preceded ding brags" instead of love | to the sower and bread for yoted from Isa. 65. 10. Paul of spiritual hus- | 'single {aged weaklings that this form of death, that might. prevent the lights from : petual | merit. See note on last Sunday's les- | White bear which they have cornered | with bone-tipped arrows and spears, a i filament for trouble in, 00 often the driver "the bulb that does not light failing to notice the broken | a Lk = §8:8 or = g £ 0 one sille or the other ghout the system, when in | the trouble is in its calibration, bel is nothing but the lamp | is wel] to remember how mi ame, If you cannot see off, for futhre reference, in reading h I ng the dark bulb is how the instrument. 2 en or not, a wn, good one, as fast as it comes. It pours out upon |, too fails to light, it is time God's people, and it rises back to God that, fntrd in thankfulness for "his umspéakable 1a deive deeper into the wiring intrica- 2 g 5 E = EE Use Care in Starting. Most a of us have gone - along os i; same One of the first points to look is | street at some time or er, w ama ie dongs af at the light switch to see if there are | heard a motor churn and churn under in Rom. 11. 33. . Compare Eph, 3. 18,| any defective connections there. Then the power of an electric starter with- 19, Gift--"In the redemption of the' examine the wires going out of the |out any apparent results. world through our Lord Jesus Christ" | socket, for this is a very common| This is one of the most frequent It is the word of Eph. 2. 8, and is | point of open circuiting. causes of storage battery trouble ac- [found in the Master's saying, "Freely Watch the Battery. carding to a service representative 'yo have received, freely give." of the Willard Storage Battery Co. 3 : Shaking of the wire due to con-|He explained that very few motorists rr tinuous road work will often work the | seemed to realize the immense amount NO ARCTIC WARRIORS. wire end loose from the binding | of electrical power which is required ] screw; which is a none too perman- [to turn a motor, and what a consid- end connection, anyway, due to the!erable amount of driving ab charg- of Polar Regions, space limitations, ing speed is necessary to restore same Battle history halts at the "Arctic| So far, we have devoted our atten- | amount of current to the battery. Circle, Beyond that human life is so] tion entirely to those troubles thab| A little care in operating the self- difficult to sustain that its wiltul waste come to the lighting system when | starter will obviate this trouble. The is 'unthinkable. The Lapps and Ba- | the engine is running' Having | driver shouljl always make sure that Tioyeds of aretic Rusela, like the Ei-| jouched upon practically every pos- | the starting switch is thrown before Le 2 o aries ahd. Gieen. sibility that could cause this condi- | attempting to operate the self-starter. ,. are 80 often compelled in times p i of dearth and famine to sacrifice their, tion, we can now turn to the things Sometimmes the gasoline tank is em- pty and- under such conditions no amound of cranking would start the motor. The ignition button should 'always be pressed in firmly and all wire con- nections should be tight. Occasion- ally the gasoline mixture is too weak and on most cars this can be adjust- ed from the dash. The coil and dis- tributor should be kept perfectly cry in order for the current to reach the Armies Not Recruited From People {has become a vague religious and i social principle with them. The armies of the great white Czar, ing Bike thong 'of the. Klas Bneior. tvs The first thing to expect when they y t or get dim under these condi- Pearson's Weekly, are not recruited : 2° ous in such distant places; indeed, the| tions is that the battery has become men are of such meagre stature and discharged through some cause of intellect that a military training is | causes. Besides hort circuits, bat- next to impossible--certainly not a teries can become |discharged in a thing vid be petsevered with in days of number of other ways, the most com- a great. campa gn, mon of which are the result of over- The population of Arctic Rusaia, loading the starting or the lighting behaving properly when the engine is not running. both in Asia and in Europe, outside {the official and mercantile classes, | . ! contains few elements which are have not yet heard of the Russo-Jap- | truly Slavonic; but in tho minds of in-| anese War, and certainly have no | ular Britons the reputation of Arctic| knowledge of the present war. dwellers pretains to all the people liv-| They are frée from national duties CURIONS FACTS. Water rolls off cabbage-leaves be- iing in Siveria, which is always i taxation and their intercourse,|Cc2use they are covered with a very trayed as & land of ice and snow and | even with fur traders of blood alien |fine dust. | unhealthy marshes to their own, is meagre indeed. There| Dark clothes are the warmest be- The Siberian battalions, which have! are dialects spoken by those tribes' cause they attract more heat from the won 80 great a fame in the Russian| which have never been interpreted sun. | campaigns, and never reduced to writing, and| Dusty shoes are always the hottest their ideas of the great world outside : the tundras and steppes. are very | because polished shoes throw off the crude. heat. A generation may pass before the| A negro has black eyes because that story of the Grand Duke's great cam-| color defends them from the strong palgn filters north, and even then it! sunlight. wy be incomprehensible to persons 1 The bubbles in a teacup follow the whom a crow even a hundre boca : human beings would be a marvel, Now Bpoog ot ge }t attracts them just as and again a stray whaler or exploring I gn ee. ship comes within sight of the shore t is in the lungs that our blood be- camps and a lttle barter by means of) comes red. Before it gets there it is signs is earried on, but ne inland | of a dark purple color. dwellers ve not even: this com- Plant: munication with the oufside world. Heo Ret Ee Joicker _ bog: 0 produce dew, which is very goud tur ig plants. Housewife--"It seems to me that k "eines? : Sour pik of milk Is very smallr Milks yA ettle "sings" because the air in 1 e water escapes by fits and starts, man! My cows are of the small kind, | 5.4 <0 makes the "singing" noise. mum! Animals are covered with fur, hair, and feathers because those substances prevent the heat of the body from es- caping. Hawks can see such a long way be- cause they have a special eye muscle by which they can alter their sight to long distances. A black man's skin does not scorch or blister with the hot san because black absorbs the heat and takes it beneath the skin. : agi HEATED GLOVES. Electrically Heated for the Use of Aviators. Ti _ A British firm has recently intros ectrically-heated gloves for are drawn mainly from | territory as near the equator as Great { Britain. It is undeniable that their winters are terribly severe, but in the hot Summer crops of the utmost value can be sown, ripened and harvested. It 18 not possible to lead a robust life in the Siberia of military Russia. The real natives of the Arctic can endure hunger and fatigue--can march in their own fashion through hurricane and blizsard--but their value is rather to the explorer of the hospitable North than'to the soldier. As hunters they are wonderfully clever, yet they are curiously formal in administering the coup de grace. They. will apoligize to the fierce before advancing to a close attack duel in which the odds seem decisively on the bear destroying the man. They are therefore not cowards in any sense and few British sportsmen would risk their lives against bear and wolf and walrus protected only by futile weapons and their own personal dex- terity. \ How goes the news. of the war to these Aretic dwellers ? Most causual- ly and 'witho . There are In Great Britain there are 221 re- formatory and industrial schools, and the number of young persons and chil- dren in these schools is about 265,000. In one recent year 5267 boys and 1,- 126 girls were. ted to such in-