Synthetic Philosophy Alffetotle's conception of a synthetic philosophy--marking one of the grand- Mt epochs In the whole Intellectual Story of man--was for a while neglected and even Jost until recovered by Mural mans and Jews from Bagdad and Spain and handed to to® medieval schoolmen. Lights of New York by L. L. STEVENSON 'H. : - v.,v CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "God" was the subject of the Lesson- Sermon In all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday. July 2. The Golden Text was, "The Lord- •hall reign for ever and ever" (Exodus 15:18). Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: "O Lord, there is none like thee, neither is there any God beside thee, according to all that we have heard with oar ears'" (I Chron. 17: 20). The Lesson-Sermon also. Included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook. "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "To grnsp th& reality ..and order of being in its Science, you must begin by reckoning God' as the divine Principle of all that really is. Spirit Life. Triith. Love, combine as one, •£• --and are the Scriptural names for % God. All substance, intelligence, wisdoni. being, immortality, cause, t 3.,, • and effect belong to G04. These art ' His attributes, the eternal maul* testations of the Infinite divine Principle, Love" (p. 275). Windham Bonham - ATTORNEY AT LAW . Stilling Building, Riverside DrWt . • McHenry, Illinois .Saturday and Sunday Afternoons *A11 Day Mondays _ Chicago Office--19 So. LaSalls St, Suite 1206 Phone State 8680 N. 7. KYE, X. B. W. A* NYE, M. D. X-fc&y, Laboratory and Physio Therapy * ( m f OFFICE HOUN : MH-it; i-- Pbsus U-B CONNKL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNEY - AT-LAW to 11 a. m.; 1M tol|.a Brodiii, 7 to • PIMM 25I McHcary, BL It f Dr. JOHN DUCKY YBTERIN ASIAN ' TB ^ad Blood Testing •KHMOXD. ILLINOIS X' KENT * COMPACT All Kinds «f IM8UBANCB T7- Na. 1M-B Stoffel * MhBaspcrgW property la tho MeHKNIY ILLINOIS Dr. C. Keller Drive, SUNDAYS AND MONDAlt An Work Guaranteed 211-B Many curious characters bide themselves In the hotels of New York. That is especially true of the older taverns of the town. Whenever an old Inn succumbs to the pressure of time many such tales are revealed. Occasionally they come out through other agencies. „ There was the case of Mrs. Ida May Wood whose story was revealed when her nephew brought proceedings to have her declared incompetent For many years, though once the belle of New York, she wed alone in a room in a modest mld'town hotel seeing only an occasional chambermaid or bell btfy and existing on food she carried in paper bags. Investigation disclosed the fact that she had on her person and hid den in the room more than a million dollars In cash and securities. She died" not so long after her case became known and her estate is now awaiting settlement in Surrogate's court," a number of claimants having appeared. I '*• •• V" *•> • • \ Id a mid-town hotel, which has considerable ftritfaT -prestige,. a little old getitiewHmsrt took a room 17 years^ nro. She has occupied that same room ever since. She always refused" to admit any hotel help on the pled that she. wanted nothing disturbed. Attempts to prevail on her to have the room, redecorated fell on deaf ears. Changes in management made no difference* Finally, along came a young and alert manager who determined to have the entire hotel renovated. The gentlewoman objected strenuously. The manager was firm. The guest was equally so. Finally he informed bet1 thjit unless she would consent to have her room done, she would have to move out on a certain date. If she gave her consent, he promised, everything would be put back exactly as It had been. On that condition the guest took up temporary quarters in another room. • • • When the decorator* tad finished, the manager took the guest back to her room. She made a careful inspection, then turned on him indignantly. One of the pictures had been put on the wrong- wall. A couple of minutes* work satisfied her and she has settled down apparently secure in the thought that she won't be disturbed again for at least 17 years. • • • In another hotel, also one with social prestige, is a man guest who has occupied the same room for five years. When he came be bad a suitcase, and that is still all his baggage. Every morning, looking splc and span, he goes out, evidently to business. Yet in all those five years a suit of clothes has never hung in his closet and nothing has been found on the dresser or in the drawers. Nor have the clean towels, supplied each morning, ever been used. • • • The recent shooting of * chow by • count in sn apartment house corridor. with subsequent court proceed* lugs, brings to mind ths fact that daily elevator trouble occurs In a fashionable residential hotel where guests are allowed to keep dogs. Generally a couple of women battle, tat sometimes the sexes" are dfter«{$6d.-Tbe cause Is always the same. Dogs go for each other In the elevator and their owners take up the fuss. • • • Back to the land note: One moving van owner at Garden Otty, L, L-- where many of The Seven MllHoa sleep--has moved fifteen families to Connecticut farms within the last few f hack to tt there's that shack colony In the J«r cey meadows across from the Newark airport The meadows are thsse haws stretches of salt marsh which are stm aa-reclalmed despite the many plans that have been advanced to them aoefeL So far as this knows, nothing has ever been raised In the Jersey meadows. But the shack dwellers have laid out neat little farms and the early Indications are that tbey will bring forth crops. * Uta. M Sjrmdlc*** --WXU Snlw Hoarded Gold Uacevered Idaho Falls, Idaho.--Hoarded gold totaling H65 waa brought Into dragby a county tax anticipation of the coins were seventyold and were in denominations of «2JBO, fS and $10L A. P. Fretrad iTrttog Contract* Hydraulic and Crane Building T#L 204-M McHenry, HI S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS «127-B McHenry experience if at Tour Service in building 4-Year Old Child Plays a Bass Vipl Pittsburgh.--Pittsburgh bas given the world its youngest double bass violinist, who is much smaller than the instrument he plays. He is Robert (Jackie) Toung, Jr., four-year-old son of Robert Toung, grandson of the late F. H. Young, who taught music for years in Pittsburgh and Sewlckley until his death last October. With his parents, "Jackie" is temporarily making his home in Atlantic City, where he recently appeared in u fashion show. With two other New Jersey children be played in a concert with the New York Children's orchestra. His New York appearance waa the direction of Karl Molthe country's outstanding of child musicians and orof the famous Hollywood Baby orchestra. Fint Pmuarat Teeth four six-year molars are ths ermanent teeth to come in. Ttmy in immediately behind the temporary teeth when the child is about si* years old. Since tbey displace no teeth, they are often mistaken for temporary teeth. mt Wwisl chemically put solely of the element car LIFE'S LITTLE JESTS NO GRILLER, PLEASE list said, flto mistress was giving th< maid, fresh from the country, of the household requirements. "There you are, Alice," she "and don't forget we shall want a griller for the kitchen, too." Alice stared vacantly. "Don't you know what a griller is?" asked the other sharply. "I should think I do,", replied the maid. "It's a big hairy monkey the size a man. And if you want one of those In your kitchen Fin leaving at once."--'Montreal Herald. TO MOST OF ^ 'CS-, y*-:. .; r.-"-- V '•"..V"* r.' Tommy--Pa, what does money do when It talks? Pa--It says good-by. - In Church, of AU Places I Guide, in Boston--On your right you see the tablet marking the spot where Paul Revere stood, waiting for the signal to be hung in the Old North church. Sweet Toung Thing--Oh, dear, what a shame! And why did tbey pick the Old North church to hang him in?-- Pathfinder Magazine. Unpleasant Task y Mrs. Newlywed--Ah, dear Mrs. Toiriklnson- Ffollit! So sorry I didn't write to thank you for your delightful wedding present But you know how It is, don't you? I mean to say, If I thanked one I should have to thank them all--London Humorist A Wash Sal* Parker (dropping In)--Hallo 1 Got a dog, I see. 1 thought you didn't like dogs. Peck--I don't But my Wife picked up a lot of dog soap at a bargain sale --Boston Transcript Hard to Keep His Sister--Do, you know that your wife Is going abroad telling everybody that you can't keep her in clothes? The Husband--That's nothing I bought her s home and can't keep her In that either. Jm* the PIm* First 8hopwa lk$r-vPoor old Perkins has completely io'st his hearing. I'm afraid he'll lose his job. Second Shopwalker--Nonsense. Bo's to be transferred to the complaint department-- Guelph Mercury. CLAUDIE IS WILLING Claude love you?" "He tries to, awfully." Plata Talk Two men were arguing, 1 think," cried one of them, "that there la only one thing that saves yon Cram being a bare-faced liar." "What's that?" asked ths other. "Your mustache," was ths reply. Frieads? "Ho* do you know all this scandal about her if yon're not on ipeaking terms?" asked Maisie. "We have mutual friends," replied Phyllis.--Montreal Gazette. A little girl, on seeing sawdust plentifully sprinkled on the floor of a meat store, remarked to her mother: "Mummy, the man must have broken a lot of dolls!"--Los Angeles Times. Oachl And tt*s our opinion that banking In this country will never be ssfe until somebody invents a burglar alarm that will ring every time the directors are la session.--Judge. Cosd Evidanss "Did yonr little boy enjoy the party T asked Mrs. Brown. "I think so," sighed the little boy's stother. "He wasn't hungry till halfpast five the next afternoon." Old Stoadivarias Vieiias It Is estimated that Stradirartus saade 1,116 instruments between the years 1666 and 1737. Of these, up to recently, 540 violins, 12 violas and 00 violoncellos were actually known, while there are traces of about 160 to Oaard Wa#ii!/':'v" Ifee man who speaks well of everybody is generally well spoken of by vr.-* FIND REMAINS OF V ANCIENT AQUEDUCT Tumiel Built by Sennacherib About 705 a C | Chicago.--News of recent dtweoverl< fc of a great aqueduct, temples, and ancient records were brought home to Chicago by Dr. James Henry Breasted, who has just returned after spending several months in the Near Bast visiting the twelve expeditions of the Oriental institute of the University of Chicago. The trip was the first that Doctor Breasted, director of the Oriental institute, had made to the Near East in three years and a half. 1 One of the most important of the recent discoveries was that of a section of a 30-mile aqueduct built by Sennacherib, king of Assyria about 705 B. C. Dr. Thorkiid Jacobsen, who came to the institute on a Swedish fellowship, and is now with Dr. Henri Frankfort, field director of the Iraq expedition, made the discovery. "Doctor Jacobsen was out in • the couhtry when he noticed a native'Sitting on a row of blocks, some of which bore the inscription of Sennacherib," Doctor Breasted said. "On inquiry, he found that the blocks had come from nearby, and Doctor Jacobsen, following the clew, found what he reported to bfe a bridge over a. river. We received concession to investigate, and found that the 'bridge' was a section of a great stone aqueduct. This section, 1,000 feet long, and 80 feet wide, magnificently built, carried, the water over a river. It is supported on pointed arches, and their use in this fashion is tho earliest known. Earliest in Existonca. "This aqueduct is the earliest in existence, and undoubtedly influenced the Romans in their construction. Twenty-five to thirty miles long, It carried water froip the Kurdish mountains to Nineveh, and among other nses watered that city's famous gardens. Each pier contains a building Inscription of Sennacherib, and when" translated, it was found that he called the aqueduct 'Sen^cherlb's channel." "The annals of Sennacherib give an account of this 'chnnnel,' which hitherto hsd not been identified, and also give the names of §. whole series of villages past which it went In one of the villages near the route of the aqueduct, Doctor Frankfort found a purely oral tradition that these ruins had brought water for the gardens of Nineveh. The tradition has the names' of the villages as Sennacherib listed them, although the names have long since chanced. That tradition hsd been passed down by word of month for 2,600 years." Another discovery to which Doctor Breasted referred as representative of the mora Important recent finds was that of Gordon Loud who has charge of the architectural survey of Khorsabad under Doctor Frankfort Mr. Loud found in the palace a temple previously unknown, sacred to Nabu, who is referred to in the Old Testament as Nebo. "One of Nsbu's functions was that of god of writing," Doctor Breasted observed, "and we have hopes of finding In the temple various Important records. Mr. Loud also found at Kborsabad a largo clay tablet which lists 98 Assycjsa kings, reaching far behind our earliest known chroep^gy of the Assyrian line. The earliest we knew was s king Ushpla, who hong in the air, so to speak. This tablet has eight kings preceding Ushpia, and all the succession after htm. It covers a period of thirteen or fourteen hundred years, from aboat 2200 ft. 01 to TOO B. C Important Tablets. "The reliefs at PorsopsUs were tremeadoasly impressive, souoodlag my npectatfoas. They nearly double La balk the art of the old Persian period. Shortly after I had loft Persepolis I received word from Dr. B. & Hers> fold. Arid director of the Persepolis expedition, that In shifting his field railroad he had rat through a ride* and discovered hundreds of SHamltt cuneiform tablets. "SUamito was ths pre-Perslaa laar guage, aad the records are very impor* tant They apparently relate to the building of the palaces at ithorsabad, but because Doctor Hersfeld Is the only member of the expedition who. did not come down with malaria and had to leave, they have not been carefully examined as yet "At the present time wo have only the Greek accounts of th£ great bat* ties of Marathon and Salamis, but It Is not Improbable that we shall find the Persian accoimtp of these battle# in the records at FarecpoMs." Doctor Breasted flew 5.000 miles by plane in the Near Bast in visiting the expeditions, covering In five minutes distances that on earlier trips had required a day by cameL On this recent visit be saw for the first time tho expeditions and work being-carried on at Persepolis, and by the Syrian and Iraq field forces. Since his last trip, new headquarters buildings have bee* erected by the Institute - st Luxor, Persepolis, and Tel Asxnar. JOHNSBURQ Mr. and M!rs. Jimmie Chamberlin and daughter, Bernice, motored out from Chicago Saturday to spend Sunday with John Pitzert. \ Mrs. Nick Bertrang and daughters of Aurora are visiting a few days at the home of Mrs. Jacob Schmitt. Mrs. Steve May, Mrs. Joe King and daughters, Eleanor and Sally Mae, Mrs. Peter Freund, Mrs. John A. Miller motored to Zenda to visit with their brother, Jacob Miller, recently. Mrs. Delbert Smith of Fox Lake spent Wednesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben P. Schaefer. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund and daughter, Lois, of Chicago spent Sunday with! Mk\ and! Mrs. Stephen Smith. Mr. and Mrs. George Obenauf of Gfayslake visited with John Pitzen Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers and daughter, Annabelle, and son, Leroy, were Woodstock callers Saturday afternoon. , Miss Oliva Hettermann of Qrystal Lake visited with Mr. and 'Mrs. Joe B. Hettermann Monday. Miss Martha Hetterrjj&nn and Miss Isahelle Freund motored jto Wo'odatock Wednesday. Mrs. John M. Schmitt and Mrs. John Hiller attended the convention at Chicago a few days this week and also visited with Mr. andi Mrs. Frank Kempfer. - Jacob Miller of Zenda, Wis., was a caller in the home of Mr. and Mrs. JoO King Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs, John Rauen. Mr. and Mrs. Math Rauen of Spring Grove were visitors in the home of John H. Freund Sunday. Mi. and Mrs. Ray Horick of Woodstock visited with Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Smith Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schaefer motored to Milwaukee Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony 0*1 res of Honolulu, Hawaii and Thomas Caires of California visited with Miss Florence Smith over tho week-end. Guests at the home of Mir. and Mrs. John J. Smith, Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schutz of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Smith and daughter, Elaine, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Caires of Honolulu, Thomas Caires of California and Jeo J. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Caires of Honolulu, Thomas Caires of California, Leo J. Smith and Miss Florence A. Smith visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Smith Sunday 450 Degrees Below Zer* New Laboratory R6eor<f Pasadena, Oallf.--After he hag juggled with the coldest temperature thus far attained in a laboratory, Dj*. Alexander Goetz of the staff of Gall* fornia Institute of Technology such reeded in converting helium gas into s liquid. A temperature of 480 degrees be* low sero was required to make tha change. Aivolkiptt Aa aviator says that the action «f: the chickens in a district over which an airship is passing tells st one# when a ship is off a regular coursew Those to which airships are familiaf pay no attention to them. Others run for thair houses as when a hawk at* peara. R1NGWOOD The fivp hundred dub was entertained in the home of Mr. and Mrs Ciyde Bell at Solon Mills, Thursday evening. Prizes were awarded to f Jetera ««d F. A. Hitchens and Mrs. GeOrge Young and George Shepard. The Sunshine 4-H club girls held their regular meeting at the home of Helen Harrison- At tho business meeting they picked their demonstration team. They have all got their dresses about finished. At the close of the meeting they all went down to Wonder Lake and! ate their supper and at 6:30 the girls went horse back riding around the lake. Leonard Franzen who formerly had a barber shop in Ringwood has again opened a shop in tho residence next to Pearson's garage. Wayne Foss was a visitor in Chicago Thursday, Mrs, F. A. Hitcheiyt and Mrs. B. F. Butler and children were visitors in Hi VIM tttm* boras latitades f* _ to tho bolt of calsas in the North Atlantic ocsan betwosn tho region of westerly winds of the higher latltvdes and the region of trade winds of tha torrid sooe. Authorities differ In regard to tho origin of tha same, some claiming that it waa derived ft©as tho fact that vsasels with a cargo of Worses were often so delsyed on account of the calms that tho animals perished from lack of wate«» „ •. ftmsJajr The old-fashioned 8unday waa, In tho only institution that has over made the entire American people, from top to bottom, realise tha obitgatloas and feel tho benefits of Wsss lug deliberately and appropriately for a given eryit % say* a writer in $f Magaslne. dld W t actly what a uniform dees for a soi* dior. They Induced aad malatslasfl a complete mental attitada. T. reei It takes aboet 8,000^000 dead tides to form tho avsrage died (C, Chicago Thursday. Mrs. Leon Dodge and children attended the fortieth wedding anniversary of her parents ,Mr. and Mrs. Edward Howard at Woodstock, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. L; E. Hawley and children and E. C. Hawley were visiters at Woodstock Thursday. Mi-s. James Conway and Helen Laurence of Libertyville were callers here Thursday. Mrs. Harvey Bumgardner and son, Harvey, jr., and Billy and Leon Dodge, Jr., visited the Fair, Friday. Mr. and! Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family were visitors in the home of Mrs. Thomas' sister at Broadhead, Wie., Friday. Mrs. Ernest Schurch of Redfield, S. D., and Mrs. Clay Rager and family spent Thursday and Friday in Chicago. They attended the Fair on Thursday. Quite a few from here attended the dedication services of the new bridge at Solon Mills, Friday evening. Ray Shafer of Cincinatti arrived here Saturday morning. His wife and daughter, who have spent the past two months with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge, returned home with him, Tuesday. Harvey Bumgardner of Detroit, Mich-, came Friday night for a visit over the Fourth in the W. A. Dodge home. His wife and son who have bcien here for two weeks will return hdme with Mm. Harold Hvtson of Woodstock was a caller hero Wednesday evening. Mrs. Dix and son, Gordon, of Salem Wis., spe&t Thursday evening in the Frank Dix home. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and children of McHenry spent Sunday In the Nick Yoong homo. Frank Dix and son, Donald, visited his parents at Salem, Wis^ Wednesday afternoon and Thursday. Frank Hawley of Chicago spent Sunday in tho homie of his father, EL C. Hawley. Mr. and Mm. Charles Frcy and family of Deerfleld and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Jackson and family of Solon Mills spent Sunday In tho 43k H. Beatty homo. Helen Laurence of Llbertgnrille Is spending the week with bar' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Lanrssee. Mr. aad Mrs. FranX Block aad family of Kenosha spent Sunday with Dr. Mrs. Wm- Hfptmni. - -• r-JggjeneJRi^laa of Chicago la visitlng hfe cons<ns, Howard and Gladys Shepard. Frances Helms of Woodstock spent the weak snd at her homo hare. Mr. aad Mrs. Harvey Bumgardner and son spent Sunday In this George at Anttoch. May and Kay Wiedrich wepro callers •t * -* -- ' * Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carlson wu#. visitors at Woodstock Thursday afternoon. Jean Rusael of Now London, Wis., is visiting in the home of her sirfter, Mrs. Leonard Carlson . Mrs. Brownley oi Chicago and Mrs. George Whiston and granddaughterof Crystal Lake were callers in tho Mrs. Cora Flander's home Sunday. Mrs. Paul Meyers and 'Mrs. Georga Worts of McHenry and Louise Meyers of Chicago spent Sunaay afternoon in the Ed Thompson home. Mrs. Howard Buckland and Mrs. SS " Vooi - Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Miller and Miss Mildred Flanders of Crystal Lake spent Saturday in the Mrs. Cora Flanders home. The body of Roy Colby of Geneva was brought her© for burial Monday. Dr. and Mrs. Graham, Mrs. F, P. Hartigan and daughter, Nell Daley, and Mrs. Harold Whiting of Chicago spent Sunday in the Louis Schrooder home. -- Mrs. Nick Young spent Monday with her daughter, Mrs. Joe Webejr/ at McHenry. wm A person who reads much doesn't - many fool questions. A ' 4 "iv1-p tft •AFETY FOR FINK DRAPER!E» £K>NTKARY to popular haMoC, fc:' Is possible to wash ina draped ies, hangings and furniture slljp ©overs without danger of lajuty to tha fabric or of fading, by exerotg* Ing rsaasnahls oars and by foUa# lag tha snggsstlsns Mated below: 1. Shake «uat ant thoroughly B. M*w* tepid mm. pars, wfetta AtoM bailing and hart rahMag. S. Laaa curtains may he aals|| aaakod. |Ter calersd fhhrios aso (hsecond cuds If dirt is atabbora. "4. Wash by gently swlrilii tha aatMa. If washed by >un anly a suds, and ?ua S. Vie out wringing. C. Hang •maothly on Hne towrinkles and streaks. Osl> » hung la>. to allow natural silk to< , ooaapleto)r'b4iitovn Itcnlng. *<•-. .» * * *' '----- & - '*• A booklet, "Ftwo Fahrloe,* la detail the of deltaato matoHattt WlNlMt -0M| IMI|aiM• 4^ nfca Hatlaaat tsrvlss, M lad Ma Irast, No# Yarit V. '^5 GET YOUR IODINE ft If ysu last, you he aMotod with that lac amrillag of tho Tha Mrth of chlldfan traeed to i of Iodine la the diet of their parents. Thsta Is plsaty of danger, too, at such a hMmmj. when morld waa yoang some omnpeunds of iodine were probably distributed qaita anlfonaly throughout its jaass. But they have beer, and are being gradually waahed away Into the sea, and in some tlslilula. known as the "goiter ;|pll*a* little or none rwaslaa. Haw to Set It ' plttM bftIV ^nn V0Ml to supply Iodine to these people ^ha live Ja ^saeh^pUoaa. One la aantslalag A third to the cMe* hut none of have prated wholly Any mm of them amy he ruptod by the individual, or the . aad tho datty need for beet way to ast It Is dootton af the ^sopls living whnrs prsvalsat eaa heat frotad their fiaaallles by eating plenty of ssa food, particularly oysters aad shrimps, aad by ragalar daily consumption of vegetables and aUlk from gogter-Cree regloaa. Iodine Rich Recipes fortunately, sach vegetables and flah are available to everyone in canned form. The eating of flab from the sea once a week, at least, has medical as well as religious teaching In its favor. Aad it is Important to remember that neither vegetables DOT. ssa food saffar any loss of iodine In siewly sup white stock, or one haatfloa cabs, aad thrao toarthc. cup cream, or evaporated miUt. stirring until smooth aad thiek. Basaea to taste with salt and Pepper, pear over ash snd eovur with battered crumbs. Browa ttfc> oven. 8ervss six. As sss food Is so important la order to secure your fall quota of iodine, we are giving here a Mackerel Maitre d* BtM oae large oval one-pound eaa at mackerel, and remove coatentf carefully without bncklng to the shallow, greased baking dish from which It is to be served. Sprinkla with salt and pepper and minced parsley, and boat in oven or u* dor broiler. Make Maitre dHotgl butter by thoroughly creaming" one-third cap butter and one taM*1* spoon choppsd parsley, addiag alowly one tsbleepooa Ismap iaioa. and asssonlng to taste with salt and popper. Jaat betert cervtag the Ash. spread this bat j ever tha top. A