d [¢ [¢+ ies .Ihe â€" seeing thos which give mor to the compared which the f t} wile Ripe red Canadian cherries are the . most decorative of our small fruit, and in Canada we also progauce those dark red English cherries or "black" cherries as we sometimes eall them and the "white" or Queen Anne cherries. All three kinds reâ€" tain their lovely Aavor and colorâ€" ing when made into jams or jellies by the modern bottled fruit pectic meâ€" thod. Great baskets of tnese jusciâ€" ous fruits are now on the market. No wonder the robins and blackâ€" birds put up such a fight for them, but here they are and every houseâ€" 1 bottle fruit pect To prepare juice, s Why should jam cupboards be hidden in a dark corner when rows of sparkling jellies are so lovely to look upen? The modern housewife or hostess throws open her jam cup board with a flourish to show you the beauty of that shelf ranged with the cherry jam sh made with guch ease. There is imprisoned a bit of the July sunshine and all the ripe cherry flavor that makes our Canaâ€" dian cherries so popular for jJams and jellies. their row re Juice, stem and crush : and so sure of sucâ€" â€"boil method would h a nineteenth cenâ€" with its easy way of and jelly that hold vor of the ripe cherâ€" s a ve ?& Woman‘s P WOTld In W ruby ich g: 11 jam cupâ€" jelly from from the avor into And don‘t 1et from to im NC Because they obstruct the proper fitting and removing of gas masks, hornâ€"glasses have been banned in the British Army, and a new patâ€" tern with steel frames will be comâ€" pulsory. Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Household Sciece, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. celery, pimento and green pepper. Turn into individual molds Chill until firm. Unmold on crisp letthce. Garnish with mayonnaise. Serves six. â€"Mrs. Raymod Bonter, Marmora. Pick up footnote from last week. . Attention ! We will pay $1.00 on publication for the best salad salad dish or reâ€" freshing drink recipe received. J Dissolve Jellâ€"o in boiling water. Add vinegar and salt. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in cabbage, Perfection Salad 1 package lemon or lime Jellâ€"o 1 pint boiling water. 2 tablespoons vinegar. ‘!2 teaspoon salt. J cup cabbage, finely shredded. 1 cup celery, finely cut. 1 pimento, finely cut. 1 tablespoon green pepper, fin chopped. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST By Mair M. Morgan three pounds fully ripe cherries. Do ’not pit. Add half cup water, nring to a boil, cover and simmer ten minâ€" utes. (For stronger cherry flavor, add *4 teaspoon almond extract beâ€" fore pouring). Place fruit in jelly cloth or bag and squeeze out jJuice. Measure sugar and juice into large saucepan and mix. Bring to a boil over hottest fire and at once add the bottled fruit pectin, stirring conâ€" stantly. Then bring to a full rolling boil and boil hard half a minute. Remove from fire, skim, and pow quickly. Paraffin hot jelly at once. Makes about 9 eightâ€"ounce glasses. THIS WEEK‘S WINNERS ONTARIO ARCH TOROoNTO finely FU MANCHU 39 "And he arose and went." No doubt Philip wondered why God should at *his time take him away from a work which was being so abundantly blessed, and ask him to go down into this hot southern country where there could not possibly be as important a center for preaching as the city of Samaria. Nevertheless, he instantly obeyed. "And behold, a man of Ethiopia." The géneral name given to the country south of Egypt, now called Nubia and Abyssinia. "A eunuch of great authority under Canâ€" dace, queen of the Ethiopians." The name "Candace" was the name of a series of queens of Meroe, just as "Pharoah," at an earlier per‘od, and ‘Ptolemy," later, were general names for the kings of Egypt. "Who was over all her treasure." Certainly a man of great importance, and one, no doubt, of sterling character, who could be entrusted with e treasury of this great kingdom. "Who had These three shooting stars may not be making bull‘sâ€"eyes with their air rifles, but they are certainly making a hit otherwise. Betty Furness (sitting), Eleanor Stewart (kneeling) and Jean Chatburn are trying to make their marks. "Arise, and go toward the south unto the way that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza." "Gaza was the southermost of the five great cities which the Philistines nad forâ€" merly occupied, and was on the route which a traveller from Jerusalem to Egypt would follow (Josh. 10 1~41; 15 : 47; Judges 1 : 18; 16 =1, 211. "The same is desert." "There were at least two roads, probably three, from Jerusalem to Gaza; Philip is said to take ‘the desert road,‘ probâ€" ably the one by Hebron, which went through the desert hills of southern Judaea." GOLDEN TEXT. â€"They therefore that were scattered abroad went about preaching the word. Acts 8 : 4. THE LESSON IN ITs SETTING Time.â€"A.D. 36. Place.â€"Samaria, the region in Palestine between Judaca and Galiâ€" lee; Gaza, an old city of the Philisâ€" tines fifty miles southwest of Jeruâ€" stlem; Azotus, thirty miles north of Gaza; and Caesarea, a coastal city, midway between Joppa and Tyre. LESSON V.â€"August 2. PHILIP‘S MISSIONARY LABORSâ€" o s Acts 8 : 5â€"40. SUNDAY CHOOp CHOOl Esson A Target for Eyes By Sax Rohmer "Now the passage of the scripture which he was reading was this, "He was led as a sheep to the slaughter; And as a lamb before his shearer is dumb, So he openeth not his mouth: In his humiliation his judgeâ€" ment was taken away: His generation "And the Spirit said unto Phillip." "For the first time in the book of Acts, we see the Holy Spirit no longer moving upon the multitude, but corâ€" descending to become the personal guide of one believer." . "Go near, and join thyself to this chariot." _ The phrase "join thyself" expresses "the act of sticking to the chariot," "not losing sight of it or leaving it until the divine purpose was accomplished." "And Philip ran to him, and heard‘ him reading Isaiah the prophet, and said, Understandest thou what thou readest?" Aside from the definite direction of the Holy Spirit in Philip‘s asking this question, two things are to be understood here: Philip had a real concern for the spiritual welfare of those whom he met by the way, a virtue which Christian believers toâ€" day do most especially need: Both are needed by all of usâ€"a love for sou‘s and a knowledge of the Word of God, by which we can bring souls to the Lord Jesus Christ. "And he sa‘d, How can I, except some one shall guide me? And he besought Philip to come up and sit with him." The word here translatâ€" ed "guide" is exactly the same word | used by the Lord Jesus when he proâ€" mised the disciples that the Holy' Spirit would "guide you into all |« truth" (John 16 : 13). l it may easily be that he chased a copy of Isa‘ah when in Jerusalem. sth e en o Oe Rerin‘e â€" + ied brie* clause is exceptionally rich in suggéestiveness. This man of authorâ€" ity had travelled twelve hundred milles from his native country to worâ€" ship in the capital cits of the Jews. "Ard he was returning and sitting in his chariot, and was reading the prophet Isaiah." He was probably reading this book in a Gresk version; it may easily be that he had purâ€" WV e d e OSC n come to Jeruszlem to worship." This Lutoe.s w02 . . in Greek This Enoch Ardenâ€"Joseph Eugene Mongeauâ€"came back after 12 years away from his wife to find her marâ€" ried to another and the mother of a threeâ€"yearâ€"old daughter, And his reâ€" turn brought on a series of incidents that finally led to an appeal by Mrs. Russell Baker for permission to apply for annulment of the marriage she contracted in her first husband‘s absence. MONTREAL â€"â€" A 20th century Enoch Arden story with a new ending was recounted in a Montreal court recently. Ending Different, Wife Seeks Annulment to Rejoin First Mate "Enoch Arden‘ Tale Unfolded tertaining Paul and Luke "But Philip was found t Azotus." This is another name for Ashdod, one of the old cities of the Philistines, about thirty miles from Gaza, midâ€" way between it and Joppa. "And passing through he preached the gosâ€" pel to all the cities till he came to Caesarea." Among these would cerâ€" tainly be Joppa, Lydda, and the nuâ€" merous villagesâ€"in the fertile plain. between Ashdod and Caesarea. The latter was the chief city of Palestine under Roman rule at the extreme north of the plain of Sharon (see Acts 10 : 1; 21 : 8). Here we find Philip again, twenty years later, enâ€" [ "And when they came up out of lthe water, the Spirit o. the Lord caught away Philip; and the eunuch saw him no more, for he went on his way rejoicing." "As far as we can poss‘bly tell, the new convert went on his first journey homeward with nothing but hi Isaiah and his bapâ€" tism to help him, bereft, we underâ€" stard, of all Christian surroundingsâ€" no Christian public worship, no Chrisâ€" tion New Testament. Aye, but he had the supreme secret He had found the Lord. "And he commanded the chariot to stand still: and they both went down into the water, both Philip and the eunuch; and he baptized him. Cerâ€" tainly this verse would at least indiâ€" cate tha« Philip and the eunuch were standing in the water, though the phrase cannot be made to necessarily imply submersion. Into the question of the mode of baptism, we do not choose to enter. God is equally honâ€" oving those great sections of the Christian church which practise bapâ€" tism by sprinkling, pouring or imâ€" mersion, and the reality of the Chrisâ€" tian experience in all of these comâ€" munions must be acknowledged. "And as they went on che way, they came unto a certain water; and the eunuch saith, Behold here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?" Undoubtedly Philip must have been talking to this Ethiopian about bapâ€" tism, after he had explained to him the life and death of Jesus, for bapâ€" tism was not a rite common‘y pracâ€" ticed among the Jews. "And Philip opened his mouth, and begiuning from this scripture, preachâ€" ed unt» him Jesus.". How the heart of this African must have been moved os he discovered all the phrases of Isaiah‘s prophecy to be, as it were, the very lines of a portrait that deâ€" picted perfectly and humiliation and death of the Messiah! "And the eunuch answerec Philip, and said, I pray thee, of whom speakâ€" eth the prophet this? of himself, or of some other?" Perhaps the idea that this chapter in Isaiah might reâ€" fer, not to the Messiah, but to Isaiah hiraself, had been expounded at Jeruâ€" salem in the hearing of the Ethiopian, and, in the confus‘ion of Jewish interâ€" pretations, he did not know which rea.ly to believe. The quotation is from the Septuaâ€" gint or Greek version of Isaiah 58 : 7, 8. Of course the entire fiftyâ€"third chapter of Isaiah refers to the Mesâ€" sizh who was to come, and would suffer under the hand of God for the sins of man. who shall declare? For his life is taken from the earth." Spalding, England, shipped large boxes of flowers to Lor a recent month. New sources of indium, a m so extremely rare that its price approximately 10 | times that platinum, have _ been found America. Mr. Justice Fortier, permission to seek the dered also she shou} child. Ir. April of this year, she told the judge, the taxi driver took away her daughter on the pretext of taking her for a drive. He has kept her ever since. The woman asked His Honor for the return of her child. Earning her own living as a housekeeper, she said, she was able to give Norah a good home. ter, Norah, was born. Then, in Mongeau turned up. Immediate wife said, Baker became sulle soon put her and the girl out house. 1 Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred) ; wrap it carefully and address your order to Barbara Bell, 73 West Adeclaide St., Toronto. .._____ Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1846â€" B is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponamg bust measurements 30, 32, #4, 36 and 38. Size 14 (82) requires 4% yds. of 35â€"inch material plus 3â€"8 yard for contrasting neck band ‘and cuffs. Lovely shirred sleeves finished off with wide contrasting cufts and a jaunty neckline are enchanting features of this dress. «arry it out in a becoming polka dot of crepe, silk, lawn, or a smooth rayâ€" on. By the way, it‘s easily made, because the dress is all one piece with two pleats and stitchings in the front skirt, and a nawering blouse that‘s trimmed with square buttons. It‘s accentea at the wats. with either a selfâ€"tabric or purâ€" chased belt. HC-VY TO ORDER PATTERNS Smart Shirred Sleeves 1846â€"B ruer, granting her c the annulment, orâ€" should regain the born. Ihen, in 1935, up. Immediately, the hipped 48,337 to London in l Beter Kitchen is 3â€"~ | | Homemaker‘s Goal sullen and out of the a metal 18 of in For Nor Her Her h Who Her trs Affirm composed of equal ,‘;',‘".‘.t.m“ of drogen and oxygen, for bieac purposes, C> COvRle vHd "This hairdresser was change the color of my cli â€"normally brown, "To obtain the desired s hairdresser at first dyed it using powerfu) ‘metal sal then treated the hair with composed of eqaual nuantlut _ With these words the judge in a Paris civil court ordered a womna hairdresser, proprietress of one of the most fashionable salons in Paris, to pay $4.500 to Mile. Â¥vonne Leâ€" roy, aged 23, the lyric writer and authoress of many ~songs sung by Tino Rossi, the film and radio star. Mile, Leroy appeared in court wearing a wig consisting of a mass of blonde curls, "This case is of vital importance to all women," exclaimed her counâ€" ul:‘.rl:?itt: ‘J?a Louis Aujol. A girl who is suddenly deprived of her hair, even though it grows again is faced with at least six months of mental torture. . . ." A warded $500 For Loss of Hair French Song Writer Wanted to Be Blonde; Became Bald Instead But, row I do oethink me, you‘re the one That cats the bugs and vile worms by the score. Come when you like until the day is done, And eat your fil; I will complain I, too, like cherries, and besides, they‘re mine; I‘ve watched this tree for yoars with jealous care. As cherry pie to top the other fare. You saucy robin perched upon a twig, Why do you rob my little cherry tree? The rmby fruit, so luscious, ripe and bx. Why do you peck and eat so greedily? Robin in the "The thing is to gain their interâ€" est and good will and encourage them to make a beginning. Don‘t worry after that. They will be back for more help and more upâ€"toâ€"date equipâ€" ment " "You who are ‘nterested in sellâ€" ing kitchen equipment will find prosâ€" pective purchasers eager to change their kitchens. But do not make them feel that the kitchen must be transâ€" formed all at once. "And they want better kitchensâ€" betterâ€"equipped and more convenient. We have proof of this in the letters we receive anc in the questions visiâ€" tors ask us. "Women are hearing more and more about, and seeing, many conâ€" venient kitchens actually installed," she asserted, "and they are reading about them in magazine editoria‘s, in advertisements, and in manufacturâ€" ers‘ catalogues. A girl who One of the speakers was Miss Katharine A. Fisher of "Good Houseâ€" keeping" Magazine, New York, forâ€" merly of Perth County. According to the "Advertising Age" Miss Fisher declared that the inconvenient kitchen is doomed. At the recent convention at Bosâ€" ton, Mass., of the Advertising Fedâ€" eration of America a symposium was conducted on "Kitchen Modernizaâ€" tion." This sectional meeting of the Federation was attended by repreâ€" sentatives of public »tilities and of manufacturers of kitchen equipment, Miss Katharine A. Fisher Deâ€" clares Women Ready to Seâ€" cure Better Equipment no more bald." E. R. PERRY Rose the desired shade, the * Gyed it black, by ".ne_t.l salts.‘ _ She was asked to my client‘s hair and the other es of hy. bieaching chemica} e Leroy ho a liquid to speak o° you ing is advanced not belp sxspec abuse themsclv angling for a than men need the> wil matter o command kittenish simple ar t te Yu UC bet Mac W rC Out Apnez on th t} PrC in or gotis W the 0 were 1 o? the B re hot wonde intern: dropsy infusic of the put in mon 3 to t past of a they nort N €2 lia In east name y ing wa Paeon, ed the Trojan 108 the ACl of r7 Or 19 AFb m h pC OT 5A