a CL Mas RE a ns AAS RATS IRS RS RAR ---- Bh Sn a nb on db oad "By Mair M. Morgen RARE te Se sae oa of 8 J The Children's Hour "The. Children's" riow" brings up visions of Longfellow's happy circle or an ultra-modern New- York theat- rical success, but to some lucky chil dren it brings visions of the hour dren it brings visions of the hour when they get home from school --= hungry as little bears and supper time not for hours yet! It is then that speclal snacks taste so good and what js more popular than bread and but- ter spread with home-made jam or Jeliy? Doctors agree that jams and jellies made in the modern way with bottled fruit pectin are very whole- some and healthful, The fruits have pot lost their natural goodness by a jong boiling, and lovely flavors have been captured to be enjoyed at any season. The tang of fresh and ripe strawberries can be carried through from June to January. Just imagine! Shirtmaker 1936 320 Bright contrasting bias binds enliven this young shirtmaker - frock. It is as cool to look at as it is to wear with its brief and smartly cuffed sleeves. Particularly sport- we are the two tricky mp pockets . and a single breast pocket. Pleas- ing, too, are the soft gathers that peep so cunningly 'neatn the shoulder yoke. A, front skirt plait allows perfect freedom for active gports. Most washable silks, linens and cottons are suifable for tkis mod- el. The belt is self-materiat with bias binds for its trim. . This fascinating model is white linen-like cotton with nautical blue binds. Choose now! You can make it jt moderate cost and in a jiffy, oo. _ Style No. 3201 is designed for sizes 11, 13. 16, 17 and '9 years. Size 15 requires 3 yards of 39- inch material _with 5% yards of binding. , HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted, Enclose. 16¢ in etamps or coin (coin preferred) wrap it carefully, and address or- (der to Wilson Pattern Service, 78 " West Adelaide Street, Toronto. EE oe Be Ea ea 2 Sl a £0 i dh hd Sd flor of these berries can be' preserved J Roll. glass- to spread paraffin on the "I morning boil for five minutes briskly. < When you are making strawberry- or raspberry jelly or jam during the next fdw weeks, the lovely flavour and co- by modern short-beiling methods and the use of bottled fruit pectin, to be enjoyed on a frosty grey afternoon in January. Bottled fruit pectin makes it possible to have many lovely fruits and fruit combinations in jams and jellies and to bring joy and happiness to the children's hour. Strawberry or Raspberry Jelly 4-cupd-(2 1bs.) juice;-T% cups (3% lbs.) sugar; 1 bottle fruit pectin. Use _ only fully ripened berries. Crush thoroughly and drip through jelly bag. Do mot drip overfiight as uncooked juice ferments quickly. Measure juice and sugar into large gaucepan, stir, and bring to a hoil. At once add pectin, stirring constantly, and then bring again to a full rolling boil and boil 3% minute. Remove from fire, let stand 1 minute, skim,- pour: quickly. Cover hot jelly with a filo] of hot paraffin; when jelly is cold, cover with 1-8 inch of hot paraffin. sides. Black raspberry Jelly sets very slowly. Requires abéut 3 quarts ber- ries. Makes about 11 eight-ounce glas- Bes. THIS WEEK'S WINNERS Tripe And Onions Three stocks tripe, one curly and two plain. Cut in two-inch oblong squares, four large onions, one pint milk, pepper and salt to taste. Cook tripe in as little water as possible for thirty minutes with onions. Add milk, bring to boil and thicken with two dessertspoonsful corn starch. Serve on mashed potatoes, Serves Strawberry Jam Two quarts berries, seven cups of sugar, juice of one lemon. Hull and wash the berries. Mash every. berry: Add sugar. Let stand overnight. In Put in sterilized glasses and seal with wax. Do not try to double this recipe as jam is much nicer made in small Streetsville, Ontario. Mixed Fruit Salad - Take 8 oranges, 1 bananas, % 1b. of candied cherries, 14 can peaches, 34 can pears, 1-6 can pineapple. Cut all quantities. Mrs. D. V, Reed, Box 840, } moved the skin and the white pulp from the oranges. Have a dressing of 14 cup of mayonnaise made with the yolks of 2 eggs only and enough oil to complete the half a cup, Just be- fore the salad is wanted whip pint of cream and mix with the mayonnaise, pour over the salad and gently mix just before serving. The quantity gi- ven here is sufficient for 8 persons, -- Verna Harvey, R.R. 3, Stayner, Ont. : * Attention We will pay $1.00 on publication for the best salad dish or refresh- ing drink récipe received, HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the in- gredients and method and send /it to- gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Ministers' Wives Told They Needn't Be Saints WESTMINSTER, Md. -- Minister's wives needn't try to be saints, Dr. Walter G. Monroe told a group of them recently, because churchgoers are 'not ready for such companijon- ship." This was one of seven requisites Dr, Monroe, a Washington layman, named in addressing the Ministers' Wives Association of the Maryland annual conference of the Methodist Protestant Church. His subject was "What I Expert of a Minister's Wife." He said he thought she should: 1. Be a womanly woman. 2. Marry the minister ag well as the man. } 3. Not marry him if she car't enter wholeheartedly into his work. 4. Be a leader, but let him lead, and help in an executive way. b. Be a good homekeeper, and have the personality of the open lLeart. 6. Be religious and possessed of genuine piety. as the congregation is not ready for such companionship. Learn to Swim Now In twenty-two days of last July there were ts twenty-two' drownings in the Montreal district alone. Throughout the country, during the summer, bathing fatalities -veached a new high, : Most of the victimg would have been alive today had they Been able to swim As the warm weather 'aiid the ac- companying lure of lake and river ap- proach, think of last season's tragic headlines. * See to it that your child is taught the fruit into cubes, having first re- to swim.--Maclean's Magazine. SHEFFIELD, Eng.--British medi- cal circles heard the astounding story Mary Davenport's seven-minute in- terlude of "death" in a dental chair, how she lost 24 teeth and how she went back to work in a steel-factory. "The case poses in question for those who believe the soul leaves the body on the instant of death" remark-' ed Dr. Alfred A. Masser of Sheffield. He described the case for the British Medical Journal. "She remembers nothing about her strange experience," the doctor assert- ed. "There were no dreams under the chloroform, Her brain registered no reaction to what death is like, be- cause the brain cells still were under the effect of the anaesthétic during the seven minutes of lifelessness." ~ Dr. Masser reported the 20-year- old girl's heart stopped beating short- ly after chloroform had been admin- istered preliminary to having her teeth extracted by a dentist. "The patient went suddenly white, breathing stopped and the pupils dilated widely. The pulse and heart gounds could not be detected. Girl Whose Heart Ceased T o Beat Does Not Know What Death Like British Physician Who Studied Astounding Experience of Mary Davonport-Says Anaesthetic Affected Her Braim Cells "The head was immediately low- ered, artificial respiration' Started, and strychnine was given hypodermi- cally. "While this was being carried on, I massaged her "through the dia- phragm from beneath the costal mar- gin. No response of any sort oc- curred, so I decided to try an intra- cardiac injection of 'icoral', plunging a long needle into the left ventricle about the level of the fourth space, and slowly injected the 'icoral'. "Immediately after this, the mas- sage through the diaphragm was con- tinued, and in about one minute I could sce a flaint flicker of pulsation in the external jugular vein of the neck : "After another 10 minutes of arti- ficial respiration the breathing re- commenced and the pulse at the wrist gradually returned. "Her condition gradually improved so' much that I decided to continue the 'anaesthetic with open ether, and the dentist proceeded to-remove about 24 teeth." The report addded the girl made an uneventful recovery. She went back to work two days later. 7. Be truly human and not a saint, || '| come together, asked- him, Plavers gather - for rest period. This Hollywood garden looks Ii : Foden as junior movie stock ris y, eVoe, Dorothy Dearing, Marion Weldon, Margaret Cotter. Esther" Brodelét, Theo LESSON I. -- JULY 5th THE COMING OF THE HOLY SPIRIT * IN POWER ! Acts 1:6-14; 2:1.47 GOLDEN TEXT: |Ye,shall receive power, when the "Holy Spirit Is come upon you; and ye shall be my witnesses both' in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea and Samaria, and un- to the uttermost part of the earth. --Acts 1.8, : SE SET THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING "TIME -- THe ascension of Christ occurred on Thursday, May 18th, 30 A.D. as far as we. are able to judge, -and - Pentecost occurred ten- days- la- ter, May 28. The first and fecond chapters of Acts, therefore, are sep- arated by a ten-day period. PLACE -- The city of Jerusalem. "They therefore, when they were saying, Lord, dost thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" The disciples are here assembled together not far from Béthany, on the Mount of Olives from which point the Lord was short ly to ascend. TIE, oa "And he said unto them, It is not for you to ~know times or seasons, which the Father hath set within his own authority." The Lord does not re- buke their supposed fghorance, wor does he tell them that they are iis taken, - Ea on "But ye shall receive power." (CI Luke 24 : 49.) The pre-eminent task of these apostles was to witness to the facts concerning the Lord Jesus Christ, that, through this witnessing, men might be convicted of sin 'and brought to a recognition of Christ as their Savious. "When the Holy Spirit is come upon you." The book of Acts of the Holy Spirit." "And ye shall be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea apd Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of. the earth." Here is an actual outline of the book of Acts: Jerusalem is the center of the events recorded in 1:1 to 8:3; Ju. daea and Samaria witness the evénts recorded from 8:4 to 11 : 18; while the events occurring In the rest of the book of Acts may be described as tak- ing place in "the uttermost part of the earth." "And when-he had said these things as they were looking, he was taken has frequently been called "the-Acts| up; and a cloud received him out of their sight." This id the last time the disciples were to &ée the Lord Jesus an earth, "4"They were all togethef in - one place.""" Probably the rdom in Which the disciplés were previously assemb- led (see 1:13). - = "And suddenly there came fiom heaven a sound as of the rushing of a mighty wind, and {t_filled™all the house where they: Were sitting." This sound came from 'heaven, which may refer both to the Sensible inipréssion of a sound descending from + above and-to its real supernatural origin as caused 'by God himself, Su "And there. dppéared uito them. the tonngues parting, asunder, like as of fire." Fire like wind was symbolic. of the divine présence (Ex. 3:2), and of the Spirit who purities and sanctifies (Ezek. 1:13; Mal. 3:2). "And it sat upon 'each one .of them." That fs, éne tonngue like as of fire sat upon' each one of those assembled in this room. "And they were all filled with the. Holy Spirit' Being filled with | the Holy Spirit is simply having ofle's entire nature yielded to the sway and power of the Spirit of God. "And be- gan to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance. These disciples probably knew Hebrew, Al- amaic, ad Greek. : ' Now thefe were dwelling at Jérus- alem Jews, devout men, from 'every nation udder heaven." From ga ténsus taken-in the time of Nero, we Know that more than '2,700,000 Jews 'Were gathered "at the passover feast, and still greater numbers came to Pente- cost. 3 "And when this sound was heard, the multitude came together, and were confounded, because that every man heard them speaking in his own language. 7. And they were all'amaz- ed and marvelled, saying, Behold, are not all these that speak Galileans? 8. And how hear ye, every man in our own language wherein we were horn?" It is interesting to notice that the list of countriés mentioned {includes all the lands to which the Israelites had been banished and where they had been settled for 'centuries, as well as those countries _to which they had comie voluntarily. ! "Parthians," Parthia, . 'méntioned here only in the New Testament, is placed first, not only because of the vast extent of its empire from India to the Tigris, but because it theh was the only power which had tried issues with Rome and had not been defeat- ed, "And Medes," Included in the great Parthian Empire, with their territory east of the Tigris, and to the north of Elam. A map should be consulted for these various countries. "And Flamites." Elam lay north of the Persian Gudf, and south of Media. | "And the dwellers in Mesopotamia." "| The great country between the Tigris and the Euphrates tivers, where the kingdoms of Assyrid and Babylonia once held sway. "In Judaea." The appearance, of different words indicat ing the territory in the southern part of Palestine in which Jerusalem was located 1s difficult to explain, but fs| found in the oldest manuscripts. "And Cappadocia, in Pontus and Asia. In Phrygia and Pamphylia," All these were provinces in the territory that was known as Asia Minor. The word Asia does not mean the vast contin- 'ent that we call by that name today but the Roman provincé of Asia, on the western shore of Asia Minor, with Ephesus for its capital. "In Egypt and the parts of Libys around Cyrene." These areas were located in northern Africa. "And sojourners from Rome, both Jews 'and proselytes." Pompey the Great had carried large numbers of Jews as slaves to Rome in 63 B.C, and descendants -- became freedmen (Acts 6:9) and had many synagogues in Rone, "Crétatis." Inhabitants of the large island of Crete in the Mediterranéan Sea. (S¢e Abts 27:7; Titds 1:6, 12). "And Arabians." Arabia, of course, is || that huge area. south and southeast of Palestine between the Red Sea and thé Pergidn Cull. "We héar them speaking In otr tongues the mighty works 'of 'Gdd."' Ot course amazement and wonder 'tell 'upon these people, as, for the first time in their lives, they heard Galfl- eans in Jerusalem speaking in their various native tongues, "This Jesus did God raise up, where of we all are witnesses." The fact that God raised Christ up is a proof that God was satisfied with Christ. "Being therefore by the right hand of God exalted, and haviig received 'of thie Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he hath-poured forth this, that ye sée and hear." The. apostle Peter now comes back to the subject with (which he opened his sermon, the out- pouring 'of the Holy 'Spirit. "For David ascended not into heavens, but he saith himself, The Lord said unto my. Lord, Sit-thou on my right hand." "Till I make thine, enemies the footstool of thy . feet." Having shown the resurrection of the Christ to be the subject of an ancient prophecy, he now proves the same of his- exaltation. ] Let all the house of Israel therefore know absuredly, that God hath ade him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom 'ye drucified." The conclusion of Peter's sermon is the inevitable termination of the argument he, has been building -up, provided all of his previous statements are based dn fact as they are. ng ; "Now when théy 'Hédrd this, they 'were prickéd in their 'Meart." The Holy' Spirit Had used the meskage of Peter as a two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing of soul and spirit. "And said unto Peter and the rest of the apostles, Bréthern, what shall we do?" Helen is the Giftérence between' the Word ot Qod"dild other 'so-called sacted books, and especially philoso: phical Wdrks. 'THéy . 'appeal to the mind, 'whetéas the Word of God goes furthér 'And 'demands action. "And-Peter said unto them, Repent ye." The apostles began, as the Bap- tist began (Matt. 3:2) as the Christ hiniself began (Matt. 4:17; Mdrk 1: 14), with the exhoftatfon to répént. ance to a change of heart dnd life, not to a 'niere Yegret for the pst. "And be baptized évaryone of you in the name of Jésus Christ." First the inward change, and then submission to the external rite. Baptism is a sign and a symbol of the washing away of our sins, 3 ; "Unto the remission of our Bins." This is the word sed by the Lord Jesus in réferring to the power of hid blood 'to- wash 'away our sins. "And ye Shall recéive the gift of the Holy Spirit." Luke refers to the gift of the Holy Spirit four times in this book, here and fn 8:20; 10:45; 11:17; it is spoken of by no other evangelist, FU MANCHU \ og Redrtr aby By Sax Rohmer 'A Question of Exit| 3 * WW AR RE Bit ! - the | If Your Child Is Upset About Trivialities, He Needs Help i - A mother wants to know what, to do about a littlé boy who 'nefrly goes wild" when he breaks anything, no -matter how she tries to soothe - and. comfgrt him and tell him it's elt ght. LE He is three, and bis sister is five: Sister is not as sensitive and regards any damage.she has done with a cal- loused eye. : . It seems that she has +'tried every. thing" and has met with no success. Ted, let us call the little three-year- old, must be an unusual pattern for a child his age. It isn't often we hear of a youngster being. over-burdened with conscience, There are two ways of looking at the problem, one by taking Ted as an individual, the othér by taking his as half of a unit, his older sister being the other half, The latter best. : . Wrong Mark No doubt Sally has had to be handl- ed rather heroically for her misdeam- ors. As she lacks sentiment in regard to destruction, it is very likély- her parents have tried to - explain the seriousness of her acts. When she tears up books or throws water on the cat, sermons on values and feel- ings ensue. She probably has let the whole business in 'one ear 'and out the other. But there was Teddy, sen- sitive to every word, listening -in. The punishment and talkiig directed at Sally may haye missed its mark and found a victim it was: not Intended for, the nervous and vulnerable boy, too young to reason but not too young to worry. It this is the dase the remedy is simple; To catechige Sally out of ear- shot, LE It would be difficult to say just what crisis brought about the baby's fright in the first place, for it is ° fright that promotes such spells, Per- haps Sally herself has been subtly at work, She may have said, for in- stance, when Teddy got' mud on his coat, "You'd better not let" Mama:see that or she will'whip you" Or, "Aren't you ashanied' of yourself! " Needs Special Handling This. 'may 'not be the way of: it exactly, 'but we have kiown "children to put mortal fear in gisterssor bro- thers, when parents were mild and easy going. Neighbors will accomplish the same. "You're golng to catch it 'when _you-go home," says 'busy-body John, who likég to 'scare 'babies. Ted may have a. slight téndency to hysteria, which means that he is too easily upset by trifles. In such a case he needs special and careful hand- -1ing. First of all-he should never be teased, Second 'he should have more sleep than average. It pldying with other child excites him -too much, he 'should ply alone a good part of the tine. ; Too much sympathy will only. make him" wofse, Wetause children @ who crave it unduly will be quick to take spells of one kind or another in order to get it. Small accidents need not be discissed at 'all; If 'both re- primand and sympathy are reduced and attention of any kind is not forth- 'coming; hte may develop a- surprising indifférénce to putting on an act. Ag these two: grow- older much of the difficulty will- fron itself out. It is: probably a. phase that will pass. ee 3 The Duchess of Kent Sets New Hair Style LONDON -- The Duchess of Kent," by appearing at her first public fune- tion of King Edward's reign with her curls arranged in a different way, has set a new style in coiffure. : When the Duchess opened the exhi- b.tion 'of 'British-made silk stockings she had her 'Hair 'arranged at the sides in two rows of curls, which curved upwards. from the ¢heek; ex- posing the ears, and meeting four rows of curls at the back, She wore pearl stud earrings. 8 The style, planned especially 'to go with her new hat, a diminutive oval-. shaped pill-box perched. over the fight eye, is finding wide favor. I want to be a helpful man and render service true, ih | T cheer some pilgrint-out of luck and 'show him what to do If I'give but a cheering smile "Twill make another life worth while, I want to be a useful man engaged in useful work, To 1ill 'the Hours with honest toil, and never giridge hor shirk, o~ | For if Ifook with willing mind some ugeful work I'm sure to find. I want to:be a kindly man with sym-_ 'pathetic heart, + | Po those in dorrow of distress PI play a brother's part; For, 'after "hall, 'it's 'What "you 'give 'that 'Wakes you 'good to be alive. But most of all I want tobe a man of sterling worth, a That I may prove myself worthy of Ty birth; to t. fall For, thotigh I fill 'a humble place, I then can Walk with happy face. \ ~iGrenville'Kleiser. A » Ww