|1essness of the modern mc | on air, nob on the tire walls. ury to either tread or tube is required. odically, and each injury. Inner liners should be used only in emergencies or to prolong the life a worn-out tire. Never apply them as a permanent repair, as they are utterly destructive to a new tire. Where chgins are used adjust them | carefully. If they are too loose they will cut and loosen the tread--if too tight they cut and bruise where they: are lapphi over casing. take care at once of {ing them slightly and placing on the | broiler over hot coals a few minutes will loosen the skin. : Great care should be taken in handl | '|ing fruits and vegetables. Where they have a natural, protective cov- Long Trips Becoming Popular. Owners of automobiles have gain- ed so much confidence in their ma- Faulty wheel adignment does much | chines in the last few years that the injury to tires. It subjects them to | merest novice is no longer afraid to a grinding they cannot withstand. A istart out on a long trip in his car. slightly bent axle will do the damage. | A few years ago a man would not ab- It is important bo cleanse tires daily | tempt an automobile trip= of several if possible. Scrape off mud and soil | hundral miles unless he was an ex- and wash the tires with water and a [pert at the wheel himself or had with little soap ofsgood quality, applied him a chauffeur who he knew was with a nob too wet sponge. Keep the | dependable. Mrs. Joseph Chamberlain Becomes Bride of Westininster Abbey's Rector. ering, it should not be broken. Then, The Reverend Canon Carnegie and his bride, formerly Mrs. Jogeph to secure the best result, all vege- Chamberlain, photographed as they left Westminster Abbey, London, just tables, except dried peas and beans, after their marriage in King Henry VII's Chapel in the historic structure. should be put on to cook in boiling Mrs. Chamberlain was the second wife of the late great British statesman, water, and the water made to boil whom she married in 1888. Prior to her marriage she was Miss Mary Endi- again as soon as possible after vege- cott, of New York, daughter of Judge Endicott, of the United States' Sup- tables have been added. = Careful | Teme Court, and Secretary of War in President Cleveland's first Cabinet. washing of all vegétables"is another The Reverend William Hartley Carnegie was born in County Dublin in 1860. important item. And all green He has been rector of St. Margaret's and Canon of Westminster since 1913. veg es ;roots and tubers should be THE SUNDAY SCHOOL ¢risp and firm when put on to cook. INTERNATIONAL LESSON SEPTEMBER 17. ren Lesson XII. A Prisoner in The Castle. --Aects 22. Golden Text. --Psa, 91. 2. Verse 17. Trance--Connected with prayer as in Acts 10. 10 in the case of Peter. The Greek word (borrowed in our ecstasy) implies a . complete loss of consciousness. = Communion was so absorbing that the oater world vanished. It was an experience such as Paul describes in 2 Cor. 12. 2-4. "18. Saw him--The pronoun goes back to the Righteous One in verse 14. Of thee--Unemphatic: the stress lies on concerning me. . 19. How vividly these words recall the man who could "pray tobe cut off "General, 1 thank you, but I cannot, from Christ for his brothers' sake"! acoept your offer. 1 am waiting for|To leave Jerusalem with his tale uns orders-from my Government." told was the heaviest trial, Surely "A good many things have happened they must hear a man who had prov: singe you Started on TO oe ed his Jewsih fanaticism so welll » b - Thus Knowling: "Paul seems at ib pened, France, who'is not in the habit: : . 'of abandoning her officers, will vend were to plead with his Lord that men me 0! " cannot Bu ive testimony from "I must holst the Egyptian flag Ne who previously been an en- here," Kitchener next sald. emy of Jesus of Nazareth; the words "Why, 1 myself will help you to too are directed to his hearers, so Bolst It over the yllage" that they may impress them with the a 5 strength of the testimony thus given ets that hall yemist, by one who had imprisoned the Chris- "Do you kiiow, Major, that this at.| tians" Myers has capght the sob fair may: Set France and England at with which Paul recalls those perse- war 1" cuting days: -- Saints, did Isay? with your remem- bered faces, ~ stantly x. little boiling water until the fish is thoroughly cooked. Then beat upthe Ee 5 of two eggs and cook for afew minutes more. Squeeze on some ~ iemon juice, and serve. : 2 If you never biked any peaches, try Wash some fine ripe ) but do not pare them. - Place in a baking THE BETRAYER OF MISS CAVELL STORY OF THE MAN WHO PUT HIM TO DEATH. Marck went to the home of de Rode's father and told of his deed: "I announced my name, but they did not know my name. Then I told * them, 'I killed your son.' I was ex. cited, otherwise I would not have announced it so brutally. of to-day. The profound insight of the book of Jonah pilloried that un- lovely characteristic in the prophet who stands for the.people, back from Exile, bat no better for their discip- ' |line, Jesus himself draws their por- trait in the Elder Brother of his greatest parable. * 23, Threw off--Read tossed about. The looze outer robe, was pulled off and furiously waved about, This was in manifestation of excitement and rage. Travelers in Palestine in modern times occasionally see an ex- hibition of the sudden excitability of an Oriental crowd. Cast dust--Like Shimei (2 Sam. 16. 13.) 24, Examined by 'scourging--Legal in the case of slaves and men without political rights, but not as the first act of an inquiry. Augustus had expres- sly forbidden it, and Lysias's remorse for his illegal action centers upon this (verse 29). ~ 25, Tied him up--Literally, for- ward: his hands were tied with leather straps =o as to bend hig back over a stone scourging-pillar to re- ceive the blows. Paul waits till they have committed themselves to the il- legality. A Roman, and uncondemn- ed--As in 6.87. Had he been no Roman, the second count of Paul's in- dictment held. But Lysias ignores it in his interrogation fo Paul, in view of the greater matter. 'It is a mis- demeanour to pub a Roman citizen in irons, a felony to scourge him," says Cicero. 96. Is a Roman--It was death to claim citizenship falsely, and both the sergeant and his chief take Pauls word without seeking evidence. 27. Thou--Emphatic, like Pilate's still' more contemptuous question, "Art thou a king?" : Sim WHEN "K. of K" MET MARCHAND. Report of the Conversation Between : the Officers. It was a dramatic moment when news reached England that Colonel Marchand had forestalled the British occupation of took a flotilla of ten steamers with 4,000 men up the Nile before Fashoda |and invited Colonel Marchand on "I board. The latter thus reports the conversation : "I have come to re- sume ~ possession of the Khedive's dominions," Kitchener began. "Well, General, I, Capt. Marchand (as he then was) am here by orders of the French Government. I thank you for your offer of conveyance to Hurope, but I must wait here for in- structions," was the reply. . time since you had any 2 Ya No Sorrow for Traitor. ip oven scones rub 1 oz : 'or m oz. of butter or lard into % 1b. of flour, * add two tablespoonfuls of soft sugar, , one teas , and one teaspoon with a little bubter, . mosit. Bake in amoderate oven 16 "minutes. They are lovely when kept day or twoin a. ho pt apoantbla butter, 30d * Brown two tablespoonfuls butter, three tablespoonfuls flour mixed with one-fourth teaspoonful salt and one- eighth teaspoonful paprika. When ~ well browned pour on gradually one gupful currant jelly and six slices of gold cooked mutton.- When meat is . heated add a little more sald and pep- gs a la Creole--Cook three table- | ; oonfuls butter with one tablespoon- "ful finely chopped onion for three min- utes. Add one and three-fourths cupfuls tomatoes drained from the mor. . Cook eight minutes, . Put in one tablespoonful capers, one-fourth nful salt; a few grains of cay- enne and five eggs beaten slightly. Gook until 'of & creamery consistency. Stir constantly and scrape from bot- tom of the plan. 'Lemon Cocoanut Pie.--~One cup milk "I must have been fully insane, or why should I have visited my vie- tim's aged parents? &lI would not have done such a thing in my sober mind. "However, I had not visited the house for the purpose of boasting of The International News Bureau my act of murder. Forgetting the publishes what purports to be a verb- | gravity of my act, 1 had visited Major al report of the story of Roger de la | de Rode's house to apologize to him Marck, the man who killed the spy,|in person for having suspected him Nels de Rode, who betrayed Miss | of being a traitor like his son. He Cavell to the Huns. The news of was nota traitor, and I told him so. dé Rode's death was' published long | "To my utter gurprise it was the ago, but the details of the affair [aged woman who spoke first. She have never been given to the public | told me that it was not the death of before. The story bears the charac- their son that caused their tears; it ter of veracity. De la"Marck was al was the death of the soul of their member of a Belgian secret society | only child that moved their hearts. organized for the purpose of punish- 'What shame for the dead. What ing spies and traitors, and, when it |shame for the living ones!' she wept, became known that de Rode wis & and the aged Major joined. \ traitor and guilty of Miss Cavell"s' "I left them abruptly and awkward. death, he was selected to carry out|ly. I found myself speechless." the work of vengeance, He tells how! As is well known, the father of de he waited at night near the residence | Rode refused to recognize or give of de Rode's parents and at length | burial to his dead son who had saw the traitor approaching: proven such a traitor to his country. "In two minutes I was face to face {Three or four others who were con- with the unfortunate object of my ! nected with the Cavell affair also night vigilance suffered death at the hands of the "Standing within three or four. feet | Secret Society to which de la Marck of him I informed him of what I "was belonged. about to do. I told him if he kept i and silent I would give . him as many . minutes as he wished during which SON TAKES FATHER'S PLACE, to make his peace with his Maker. 1 told him that so long as no one ap- proached us from either direction, so Roger de la Marck Was Selected by a Belgian Secret Society. milk, not too "It i8 a long news from France ?" "Some months, General ; orders are to wait here." "Major, I will place my boats at your dishosal to return to Europe by the le." but my was the Gen. Cadorna Conducts Campaign as _ Colonel Marchand bowed without Elder Cadorna Did replying. General Kitchener rose. He wag very pale. The Colonel also rose. Kitchener gazed at his 2,000 ; then at the fort, on the ramparts of which the bayonets gleamed. °* % "We are the stronger," Kitchener remarked after his leisurely survey. "Only a fight can settle that," was Marchand's reply. ; . "Right you are," was Kitchener's reply, "come along, let's have a whis- key and soda." 3 The required instructions, as the story of the expedition has told, were pi, YOUR WALK TELLS. Character Shown In Every Step You gi : Take. walk slowly, taking lo heir bodies on the tiv taking short steps, forthcoming from Paris in due course, | sought and slew! O when we mingle in the heavenly places How will I weep to Stephen and to you! verses. : Beat in every, synagogue-- | Thus fulfilling the Lord's prediction (Mark 13. 9). law of Moses were tried and punish- ed in the synagogue, the fit place for a "holy inquisition"! 20.. Was shed--Imperfect tense; Saul's fanatical conviction nerved him lo look on scene, The more it tortured his | sensitive feelings, and the louder a voice within told him of the face that was like an angel's, the "ritual service" he rendered to | God (John 16. 2)--he would not offer. | what cost Rim nothing! The must. (so read): of Acts 26. 9 is the key. Consenting--Acts 8. 1. The memory "to Rom. 1. 82, where. | 28, The name Lysias is Greek, and Dear men and women whom I the tribune was probably a freedman of the emperor Claudius, or the son of Roman emperors often sold the { franchise, as a means of revenue. : } inherited i franchise by going back to the settle- 1--In the emphatic form each time it ment of Tarsus, when leading Jews occurs in this and the two following were enrolled in-a special tribe. One one. Ramsay explains Paul's of these was Paul's ancestor, 29. Bound--With the "two chains" Offenses against the first, and then, far worse, with the "thongs" for scourging. ------------ PASSING OF HANSOM CABS. throughout the horrid ; London's Once Popular Vehicle Was Patented in 1834. The hanson cab Jas had but a short says ndon Chronicle, the greater was Wighty-one years ago--on Deo. 23, life, 1834--Joseph Aloysius Hansom, well-known architect, designer of the and the founder of the Builder newspaper, took out the patent for the cab to Birmingham Town Hall which his name was gnven. He v after rights for $10,000, but 'never paid. In 1881-- 's death-- of | body of prayers. © Screamed for Help. the top of his voice for help. "Even then, holding my revolver a and I again urged him. "Now, from this distance, act of mine seems to me rather reck less. timidity, or perhaps nervousness. that hor; years, yet he looked just at rible moment like a mere know its mechanism "All that F knew, necessary for me to know, pull the trigger while I muzzle until its death-dealing tents had been emptied. "1 pulled it. "He fell and died instantly. "I Killed Your Son." long would I permit him to offer his "But 1 had scarcely finished my, proposal when he began to scream at his breast, I informed him that an entire army could not save his life, this | I can ascribe this apparently foolhardy act of mine to my utter child. I had never taken the life of a fellow man; at the outbreak of the war I was even under military age. Fur- ther I had never in all my life held a revolver in my hand. 1 did rot even and all that was "was to, aimed its | con- ' "1 remember it ps one remembers a horrible dream, I lifted the dead my victim clean from the , threw it over my shoulder, POWeTS | hore it some distance, and stood him against the door of his father's The slayer was taken br the Bd Gen. Luigi Cadorna, chief of the general staff of the Italian army, ia the Hindenburg of the Isonzo. front. He knows every foot of the land, mountain or valley, . every path through the rocks, every fortress on the Austrian or on the Italian side. He spent many years in the district planning for the inevitable day of war with Austria and the best military stategy for meeting it. Cadorna's campaign to capture for Italy the great commercial seaport of _ | Trieste, whose population is 77 per cent. Italian, was the goal toward t which his father, Gen. Raffaele Cador- na, led the army of Italy fifty years vou I ago. The son, then a boy of eighteen, was: younger than my victim by five learning the military game at Milan and Bologna, was not permitted to ac- company his father, who' did not in- tend to give favors to anybody, even to thosé nearest to him. -------- i, cme. Human Sacrifice in India. A dispatch from Calcutta says that a case of human sacrifice is repo! from a Hindu temple at Jaffna. It ap- pears that certain' Hindus of Parnar- ponnal were strongly tempted by a dream regarding : Yieving that by the sacrifice of an in- nocent youth to the goddess they led a youth of 20 at dead of night to was drugged and his throat was cut. A ee fe. Loaded by Magnets. For the first time Great Lakes navi docks into the steamer Cicoa by the People who own cub glass | treasure trove, Be- LS the temple of the goddess, where ho the history of & gation, iron: ore is being loaded at the Ashland (Wis)