Woman^s ^ World By Mair M. Morsan Delicious Home Made Candy Here's a l,auli o£ honiemacle candy with a truly professional air. See how it conlrast In coldur and shapp and ll« dainty wrappings add to the at- Iractlvenecs of the box filled with chocolate caramels mii bonbons; and how the little paper cups set off the â- ngared pecans; how rich dark choc- olate nut fudge, lustrous, thin tream wafers an<l coconut cherry divinity ^1 enhance one another. Home-raa'le candles are a real treat particularly when they turn out per- fectly. You know, the fudge, the Just melt-In your month kind, and then, nippy mints. It really isn't difficult to make real good can'iy, but the recipes must be reliable and iiiKredlems of tho finest Quality. The reclpe.s given here have been rarofully tested and will give perfect canily, if they are followed ac- eurately. Chocolate Nut Fudge 2 squari"- un.^vvent' iiiil chocoliUe, cut In p'eci !i, 2-3 cup milk; 2 cup.s of augar; dash of salt; i laljlfspoons of butler. 1 Ica.spoon vanilla; 1 cup of broken nut meats Add chocolate to milk and place o»er low flame. Cook until miiture Is amooth an<i blended, gtlrring con- atantly. AiM sugar and salt, and stir until sugar Is dissolved and mixture bolls. Continue cooking, without Btlr- ring, utiiil u suinll amount of mixture forms a very soft hall In cold water (232 degrees F.). Remove from fire. Add butter and vanilla. Cool to luke- warm (11(» degiees F.); tht-n beat till affixture bigins to thicken and loses Its gloss. Add 1 cup broken walnut meals. Ami pour at once Into greased pan 8x4. When cold cut In squares. Makes IS large pieces. Coconut Cherry Divinity Is a new •nd delicious candy with Its fine com- bination of fruit flavours 2 cups sugar; 2 3 cup water; % cup light corn syrui>; 2 egg whites, stiffly keaten; Dash of salt; ',4 can coconut •outheru style shred, toasted and •rumbled. 1 teaspoon vanilla; 3-4 cup •andled cherries, thinly sliced. Cook % cup sugar and 1-3 cup of water together until a small amount of syrup forms a slightly firm ball In cold water (210 degrees F.). Cook remaining sugar, water and syrup to- gether until a small amount of syrup forms a hard ball In cold water (26U degrees V.i. Remove first sydup from fire, cool slightly, and pour slowly •»er egg whites, beating constantly entU mixturo loses Its gloss (IVi min- utes). Then add second syrup slowly as before. Fold In coconut, vanilla, cherries and salt, and turn immediate- ly into buttiMcd pan 8.x8 Inches. Cool until firm. Cut Into pieces lx'>^ Inch- es. Roll In additional toasted coconut If desired. Makes S'*, doz'ii pieces. This Week's Winners Here are this week's winners, together with recipes. In the Main Course Conte.st : Combinallon Meat Dish â€" 1'^ slic- ed round steak, 5 slices cooked ham; 1 lb. veal minced, 2 eggs, hard boiled, 1 tahle.spoon grated onion, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, salt, pepper, 2 cups of tomato soup. W'ipo round steak, cover with slices of ham, mix minced veal with onion, sauce, salt and pepper. Siirend evenly over ham. Along one cdfjs lay slices of egg. Roll as for jelly roll. Tie securely. Flare in greased pan. Pour over tomato Boup or 1 cup tomato and 1 cup of mushroom souii. Cover and simmer for two hours until tender. It served hot use remaining liquid as sauce. Is (juUe delicious and very attractive .sliced cold. - - Mrs. S. (!. Spray, I'ark- hlU, Ontario. I..lma Beans and Cheese Roast â€" 1 Vi cups of cooked lima beans,, 1 cup grated cheese, 1 cup soft bread crumbs »/2 cup milk, 1 teaspoon chopped green pepper, salt nnd pepijcr, 3 strips of bacon Put in a layer of beans In but- tered baking dish. Sprinkle with the cheese, a layer of bread crumlis, a few pieces of pepper. Continue this until all Is used. I'our over this the milk and lay on strips of bacon. Bake In moderate oven. â€" Mrs, Harry Matt- bow, caro of Mr. Charles Ij"ach, R.H. No. 4, Blenheim. Ontario. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the in- gredient! and method of your favor- ite main-courte diih and aend it to- gether with name and addrea* to Houtehold Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto "I have no definite policy for the settlement of diplomatic affairs other than the use of common sense." â€" I^pniicv Koki Herota. "Just as diRcstions arc beinu' ruin- ed by the soft foods we eat charac- ters remain undeveloped because of soft living."â€" Kmily Post. Not Brilliant AtAritliinetic I.ady Tweetisiiuiir Makes Confe.ssion About Childhood OTTAW.V - Lady Twced.smuir spoke recently at tlte opcniiiff ceremonies of National Kducation Week and ad- mitted that as a child she was poor at RrithnK!tic, a "oifficull and dis- tressful .science." Cites Advantages "In the ini.dcrn world where condi- tions are changing with such lightn- ing rapidity," she said, "it is vital that wc all set our minds to devising a system of education at once elastic enough to meet our needs and strong enough to stand the strain of the ever-changincr conditions of the 19;!0's." After' outlining her idea of educa- tion which included the three R's and a G., geography, Lady Twcedsmuir mentioned mechanical advantages ac- corded the modern child over those of his predecessors but added: "To stare stupidly at the movies and listen unintelligently to the radio is not going to help people to have minds that work for themselves. One of the curses of modern life is a tendency to smatter and never go deeply into anything. The mind may become boncle.«s and flabby because it has never used its mental muscles and its sinews." Bane of Childhood The govcriior-gencrars wife admit- ted that arithmetic was the banc of her childhood, but added: "None of us can survive without this diflicult and distressful science in a world where problems are becoming more those of economics every day that we live." Of geograjihy. Lady Twee<lsniuir said: "A comic poet has written: 'Geography is about map.s, biography about chap.s.' And an enlightened un- derstanding of maps and chaps should be the slogan of the worthy citizen." "There Is a grotesque contrast bc- tweeen the capabilities and achieve- ments that people have ascribed to me and what I really am and can do. ' â€"Albert Kinstein. "Men do not resent the intrusion of women in government affairs, hut they do resent hysterical women who have obse.'sions and lack an open mind."â€" Mrs. Franklin D. Koo.<ievelt. A New Version Here is something Just a little different from your nev\est shirt- maker dress with llattery <ind soft detail. There's femininity and charm in the shirt collar with bow pos- ed at one side. The wide shoulder- line, gives emphasis to a slim young wai.st. It's tremendously smart in rough-finished cottons, linens and tuh silks. The how will fal! more softly if picot edged or rolled by hand. Style No. 2il23 is designed for size.s 11, 13, 15 and 17 years. Size 15 requires 3?n yards of 3!i- inch material with \i yard of 3-5- inch contrasting. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and addreti plainly, giving numher and «izo of pattern wanted. Enclose 15c in • tamps or coin (coIt preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to WiU"n Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Ground's Not Safe I S WJi-. no.scoe Turner, famous flier, and his wife pictured in Los .\ngele.s court where Jack M. Holliday is suing for .$10,000 claiming Turner's car struck him and caused serious injury. Turner denied liability. CUNDAY ^chooiesson LESSON VL â€" May 10 KIFKCTUAI- PRAYKR. â€" Luke 18 I'rinted Text Luke 18 : 1-lJ G0LI)1;N RLLK â€" (Jod, be thou merciful to me a sinner. â€"Luke 18 : 13. THK LESSON IN ITS SETITNG Time â€" All that is recorded in this chapter took place during February and March, A.D. 30, shortly before Passion Week. Place â€" The events of this chapter took place in Pearaea with the single exception of the concluding miracle, the healing cf the blind man (vs. 35- 43) which occurrc<I near Jericho. "An he spake a parable unto them to the end that they ought always to pray, and not to faint." Of course Christ docs not mean to say that men must always be audibly praying to (Jod, but that our lives ought to be continually abiding in God, and that, on every occasion, for every problem, for every need, before every un lertaking, instantly after con- sciousness of any sin, our souls ought to go out to God in confession, ad- or:>tion, intercession, thanksgiving, or petition. "Saying, There was in a city a judge, who feared not God, and re- garded not man." A practical atheist who does not scruple to confcs.s him- self to be what he is; a man living in defiance of both tables of the de- calogue, placed in a position of power to play the tyrant and availing him- self of that position to the full. "And there was a widow In that city." The word widow in the East was a synonym for helplessness. "And she came oft unto him, say- ing, Avenge me of mine adversary." .Apparently some one was attempting to persecute her and to rob her of what possessions she had. "And he would not for a while: but afterv\'ard he said within him- self, Though I fear not God, nor re- gard man; yet because this widow troubleth me, I will avenge her, least she wear me out by her continual coming." The judge was afraid that the widow would, in a modern phrase, get on his nerves. •'And the Lord said. Hear what the unrighteous judge saith." The in- sertion indicates a pause during which the audience considers the parable, after which Jesus makes a comment and draws the moral of the narrative. ".And shall not God avenge his elect, that cry to him day and night. and yet ho is longsuffering over them?" If an unjust judge would yield to the importunity of an un- known widow who came and spoke to him at intervals, how much more w'll !. just God be ready to reward the perseverance of his own elect. who cry to him day and night? "I say unto you, that he will avenge them speedily." Speedily here prob- ably means suddenly. So taken, the exjiression conveys a truth which we find elsewhere taught in Scripture, viz: that, however long the critical action of divine provi<lence is delay- ed, it always comes suddenly at last. "Nevertheless, when the Son of man Cometh, shall be find faith on the earth?'' It is more accurate to trans- late faith as the margin has it, the faith. This was hardly a question which Jesus asked others, for others could not answer it, but rather an ejaculation, sometlting which he uttered to himself. Occurring where it occurs, it is like a sigh. "And he spake also this parable unto certain who trusted in them- selves that they were righteous, and set all others at nought." The ones to whom Christ is now speaking were self-righteous men who, super- ficially, were probably attempting to pose as his followers. "Two men went up into the temple to pray." On praying in the temple, see Acts 2 : 46; 5 : 12, 42; Luke 21 : 53. "The one a Pharisee." The Phar- isees were noted for their rigid ad- herence to the law, for thoir aloof- ne.is and their self-righteousness. Un- doubtedly, this man was, as far as the world could judge, a very moral person, indep<l, quite a religious per- son. ".And the other a publican." For the meaning of a publican, sec the lesson dealing with Luke 5 : 27. "The Pharisee stood and prayed, thus with himself." There is nothing' particularly wrong with this manner of praying, as some would seem to stale; to pray with himself was sim- ply to pray in his mind without ex- pressing his thoughts audibly. "CTi, I thank thee, that I am not as the rest of men, extortioners, unjust,' adulters, or even as this publican." Actually, this is not prayer at all. It. is an utterance of thanksgiving, but he is not thanking God for somctbing that God has done, but is actually' congratulating himself for what he' himself is. "I fast twice in the week; I give tithes of all that I get." His descript-' ion of his facts and tithe-giving is) doubtless quite correct. TTie man) says absolutely nothing about his! own sins. You can put it down that.' when a man does not confess sin to God, he has sins which he is afraid to speak to God about. "But the publican, standing afar off." He probably stood far ofT fromi men whom he knew to be mere' righteous than himself in a sense of true unworthiness. "Would not Mft' up so much as his eyes unto heaven."i (See Psalm 40 : 12; Ezra 9 : 6.)| "But smote his breast." An emblem of the stroke of death which the sin-j nor fee's that he has merited at the' hand of God. "Saying, God, be thouj merciful to me a sinner." The Phari-, see thought of others as sinners. The publican thinks of himself alone as the sinner, not of others at <i]\. â€" A. T. Robertson. "I say unto you, This man wont' down to his house justified rather, than the other." It was not so much thought himself to be justifleil, as' that actually in God's sight he hadi that the man, in his own heart,! been justified. Here is a clear il-l lustration of that great word justi-' fication, so continually used by the, apostle Paul in the years that fol-| lowed (Rom. 2 : 13; 3 : 4, 24, 28, 30; 5 : 1, 9; Gal. 2 : Ki; 3 : 11). "For' every one that exalteth himself shall I be humbled." The humbling of the' self-satisfied will consist in the dis-| covcry of self in the light of God's requirements. When a man comes to see what God meant him to be, and puts by the side of it the thing»| that have satisfied him, he comes to the most terrible humbling. "But he that humbleth himself shall be ex- alted." The man who humbles him- self in this life by placing himself under the atoning blood of the Lord Jesus, utterly devoid of all self- righteousness, knowing himself to be a sinner and nothing else, is the one whom God exalts into the far heavenly places sitting ogether with Christ Jcsus (Eph. 1 : 3; 2 : 6). Courage Courage i-s but u word, and yet, of words. The only sentinel r-" permanence; The ruddy watch-hre of cold winter, days, We steal its comfort, lift our weary, swords. And on. For faith, â€" without it - has no sense; And love to wind of doubt and tre- mor sways; And life for ever (]uaking marsh must tread. Laws give it not, before it grayer will blush, Hope has it not, nor pride of biing true. 'Tis the mysterious .soul which never yields, But hails us on and on to breast the rush Of all the fortunes we shall happen tlirough. And when Death calls acros.s his shadowy fields â€" DyiuLT. it answers: "Here! I am not dead !" â€" John Galsworthy. FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer "Parson Dan" Insists • t*>: a* su aaka.i •f*x»f»<a i n mt ^ t. m^ "You wotjid b« « d««d mm now H H wete net for fom tiMBd in Omim, " SmW^ icU K». EWkib amnalty. "CMna tod*-/ it not t(i« China of "91 it it • t>ii9a i»a»t aMchin*, niJjd by THE SEVEN. You nort not r««w» to OmmT ^^- .... cWfyman. inlil voice u itrang* wUhn of deep ifiiritual r**«ran«* aad tMtm m r«toUiiio«. 'I am colod to YangT' Haro »« «M Wt^ JH MbikMHtv. TarMn Dm' Ib9 ttroo^fc <k» mHom of Uto Ro». J. D. eMiaio. "Xan Y«>9 it • barrel ot gunpowder. You would b* ttie liqtited match," Smitli •tatod. "I insist tt»at you abandon your visit to the inferior of CUn*. T><e Yellow Peril today it a real and terribla TVa pooca of the world is at stake. . . "I w'»econjidor my deciiion." Mr. Eltham said. The storm h«J bkjwn over. Yet the very atmosphere of Redmoaf soemed impregnated with Eastern devilry . And then, through the sitonce. cut a throbbing scream! the scream of a woman In agonized fearl -^^'