«o P uP Aentnintiaialitisis uce‘ bovas ioi To prepare juice, stem and crush about 3 pounds of fully ripe cherries. Do not pit. Add cup water, bring to & boil, cover, and simmer 10 minutes. (Any kind oxcep( Wil'd':r,Chohborry) 64 cups (23â€"4 1bs.) sugar; 3 cups (1% lbs.) juice; 1 bottle fruit pectin. You can make your jam â€" or jelty some morning before breakfast with this shortâ€"boil method and see it all in jJars ready for the fruit cupboard before the heat of the day settles in. Get your supply of cherriegs _ now while they are still on the market and even if these days are very hot this shortâ€"boil method of making jam or pelly is not the old way of having your kitchen blazing hot with a fire or heat kept on for a long time cookâ€" Ing away the fresh flavour of the fruit. Then too, you can use cherties at their very best if you missed the earliest ones. 1 Cherry jam is an asset indeed this particular year â€" how often you will thank your lucky stars that you did know about bottled truit pectin when you survey your rows of cherry jam or jelly. Oldâ€"fashioned methods would have given you so much less and with an inferior flavour. perhaps there are fewer cherries and the price a bit higher but in Canada we are lucky in finding them bright and flavoursome as ever on the marâ€" ket and since we can use the bottled fruit pectin method in making them into jam or jelly we are Just as far ahead because the shortâ€"boiling takes so much less fruit than the oldâ€"fashâ€" toned way did. Then think of the extra flavour that is held in them because it is not all stewed out as it often is by longâ€"boil methods. Don‘t let people depress you with tragic tales of a dearth of jJams o° jellies for cold weather on account of the recent heat wave. The cherry erop has come through bravely ~â€" Can‘t you just imagine fresh, ripe cherry flavour that will be caught and imprisoned in these jars when they are filled with cherry jelly? it this picture doesn‘t make you almost taste that flavor, you are indeed imâ€" pervious to good things! Black cherâ€" ries or red cherries â€"~ that lovely tang and color will be preserved by modern shortâ€"boil methods of jam and jelly making and how you will apprecâ€" late it on the cold days of fall and winter Cherry Jelly lazing hot with a fire i for a long time cookâ€" fresh flavour of the . you can use cherties Little roads that wind and t Haphazardly about, Narrow here, wider there, Running in and out Like a network of old lace, Or a gay festoon. Leading out from nowhere, And ending all too soon. Little roads are stretching Far beyond the sky, Highâ€"way and byâ€"ways Arnd the paths we trave! by; Winding on forever Until all teails shall meet In a perfect ending ? At God‘s feet. Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. We will pay $1.00 on publication for the best salad salad dish or reâ€" freshing drink recipe received. To Serve â€"â€" Add about two tableâ€" spoons of this syrup to a glass of cold milk and serve with a straw or glassâ€" ip. Ideal for children who don‘t like milk. â€" Mrs. J. Faulkner, Jarvis, Ontario. Method â€"â€" Mix cocoa, sugar and w ter. Boil three minutes, stirring to smooth paste. Bottle and chill. 14 cup of cocoa; 14 cup of granulatâ€" ed sugar; 1 cup of water; Pinch of Salt; 4 teaspoon of vanilla. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST _ (For stronger cherry flavour, add 1â€"4 teaspoon almond extract before pourâ€" ing). Place fruit in jelly cloth or bag and squeeze out juice. Measure sugar and juice into large saucepan and mix. Bring to a boil over hottest fire and at once add fruit pectin, stirring constantly. ‘@hen bring to a full rolâ€" ling boil and boil hard 14 minute. Reâ€" move from fire, skim, pour quickly,. Paraffin and cover at once. Makes about 9 eightâ€"ounce, glasses. THIS WEEK‘S WINNER Chocolate Drink Rilly B. Cooper, in the New York Sun. Roadways Attention ! wind and twist ONTARIO ARCH TOROoNTO \ \(\.\\ S ;\\\\\ ‘\. w -‘-‘ NCE ‘\\\\\» & mss ,»3‘ 5 » K AkE x â€" _’ _,: N# t L ul > JA t s e en s S i%fv .";"" ;}‘ yA J bnit, 68 .-}'; e A*y o .2 :t’ï¬â€˜ ::‘-' '- . > S Hlsy 5 :..' Câ€"fe 2t *\ &4 |~ p h: ce ks w N 3. t _’)1) g g "')’k CV *li~ > o h‘ y 2C Bs W > Ca J$ io‘ a P h 4 _ t O *« s s oft= s oi 22 °J ‘A' U t, "< I SSape l kellles<â€"ANLE KT in se o 2 5 ds â€"â€" ï¬.g ‘ y d\ "vigitA Te ‘\“_‘Gt,é % w a ;: : sj @\‘ .: :v: igf; V $; As ;‘f \, :: P by. . PP ,1..‘1 .‘;a\\\‘ é 5&‘ n A t !;'\;’» Â¥ .I‘":}ï¬. :M&; e s %v. w f s ‘ e s € '; w‘ ‘} C § 5 aai (‘b 6 £ M y e in ypP%e P 5 R â€" * Â¥ * i Sorte â€" *\\' m “?‘ 2 4\7;-' es Â¥ â€" f M lb C* % s e Â¥ * go * "_ > s ~& . "ad . > ~1_ . *A ? With gxt ~WDE._sé ez * P ud . "|â€" ~ ...‘?.""".’c"'i::f- ies _ s *.: Runaing in opposite direction, [ PS . aster | way through We stood qui moment, bewildered M‘oï¬udM&’*fl. â€-7 e .. “;...MIMH str s udx.govngl;oau. Ah‘.'bf.mby':: ho-nchodl.:d-dm::d&. yo Py 00 [Â¥ * cyer titham at the foot of the beech tree. ,.3'*::.&.1..?& 1 cannot remember who pur the *"'h suround \c' * pp d around a rhododendron. 'm“ words. | was dazed 6 FU MANCHU South Africa will spend $55,000,â€" 000 in building 5,000 miles of roads in the next five years. Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Gay cottons are quite the smartest thing to choose. Buy the colorful bias trim already folded. They‘re inexpensive and so easily adjusted. Or if you prefer, linens or tub silks could be selected. Style No. 3130 is designed for sizes 11 18, 15, 17 and 19 years. Size 15 requires 2 3.4 yards of 39â€"inch material for dress with 7â€"8 yard of 39â€"inch materal for jacket, with six yards of binding. too. Such a simple dress to sew. Perky bows accent the low square cut of the neck at the front that feel so grand and cool. Bias seamâ€" ings assuro a slender waist. The skirt has two action pleats. You couldn‘t ask for anything more simple to put together than the collarless bolero jacket with kiâ€" mono sleeves. You can use the jacket pattern for other frocks HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS The nice thing about this little summer ensemble is that you can shed the jacket and you‘re ready fox:‘ sp‘orts or fqr sun bathing. The Duke is King Edward‘s younges throther. _ He married the former Princess Marina of Grecece, November 29, 1984. The Duchess is expected to cancel all engagements towards the end of the Summer. The Duke and Duchess of Kent have one son, Prince Edward, born October 8, 1985. LONDON. â€" It was learned on reliable authority last week that the Duchess of Kent was expecting the birth of a second child. Report The people are now "extremely pleasant," and talked with pride of the new times. Women, no longer suffering exâ€" clusion, were demanding education similar to that of men. Indian Women Seek A Man‘s Education Lord Meston, speaking of modern India at Oxford recéntly, said: For Summer Days t Duchess of Kent Is Expecting the Stork "And he fell upon the earth, and heard a voice saying unto him." In 22 : 9 it is said that Paul‘s companâ€" ons heard the utterance, but they did not hear distinct words, or unâ€" derstand who it was that spoke. "Baul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" This announcement must have "And as he journeyed, it came to pass that he drew nigh unto Damasâ€" cus." It is not known just how far out of the city the miracle about to be described took place. "And suddenly there shone round about him a light out of heaven." In Acts 22 : 6 and 26 13 â€"we are told that the time of day was about noon, and that the light which he saw was "above the brightâ€" ‘ ness of the sun. h hoiï¬ sitsstin lt 22200 c itcA ds 1A "Whether men or women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem." Paul‘s purpose was quite to put out the name of Christ by destroying all the godly cruelly. "But Saul, yet breathing, threatenâ€" ing and slaughter against the discip les of the Lord." This refers back to the preceding Act of Saul‘s persecuâ€" tions in Acts 8 : 1â€"3. "Went unto the high priest," and asked of him letters to Damascus unto the synagogues," Damascus was one of the most ancâ€" ient cities of the world (Gen. 14 : 15), and had been, from its earliest period, identified with the history of _ the Jews, a great number of whom were living there at the time of Saul. That if he found any that were of the Way." This deeply significant title for the Christian faith and life is common in the book of Acts (see e.g. 19 :9, 23; 22 : 4; 24 :14, 22); more fully given by the apostle Peter as "the way of the truth" (2 Pet. 2 d 4 P ably in 57 A.D. The Epistle to the Gaâ€" latians was written probably about A. D. 57. Paul‘s First Epistle to Timâ€" othy was written about 66 A.D. Place â€" The conversion of Saul took place just outside the city _ of Damascus, his arrest and defence that followed, recordsd in Acts 22, occurâ€" red in Jerusalem. The Epistle to the Galatians was written from Corinth to the churches in the Roman provâ€" ince of Galatia. The First Epistle to Timothy was written â€" from Rome, where Paul was a prisoner,. edient unto the heavenly vision." Acts 26â€"19, THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time â€" The conversion of Saul ocâ€" curred A.D. 36. His sojourn in Arabia and events immediately â€" connected therewith occurred in A.D. 36â€"38. And Paul‘s arrest in Jerusalem was probâ€" ably in 57 A.D. The Epistle to the Gaâ€" latians was written nrobablv sahant SAUL CONVERTED AND CcoMMISâ€" IONED â€" Acts 9~ : 1â€"31; 22 :0 3â€"21; Galatians 1 : 1117; 1 Timothy 1 : 12 GOLDEN TEXT 17 e s COEOW P ROIC OPT CCC NHORWV Pndme nECRen, HEUVCBEC pointed a gun at her head in their Beverly Hills, Cal., home and threatened to blow her brains out. She‘s going to seek a divorce. Polly Moran, screen comedienne, and her husband, Martin Mqlong. 82, shown‘ in happy pose before says Miss Moran, Malone LESSON VI â€" August 9 Their Romance Is Shot After Gun Threat UNDA Y CHQOQOI crashed up to join us. . . . was not disobâ€" "I thank him that enabled me, even Christ Jesus our Lord, for that he "And straightway there fell from his eyes as it were scales, and he reâ€" ceived his sight; and he arose and was baptized." By this baptism Saul was visibly made a member of the body of Christ, ’ "The Lord, even Jesus, who appearâ€" ed unto thee in the way which thou camest, hath sent me, that thou mayâ€" est receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Spirit.‘" Saul received the Holy Ghost through an ordinary disciple. Usually the gift of the spirit was conferred only by apostolic hands but Soul was not to be dependent on he twelve, and he whom the Lord had himself called in peculiar fashion reâ€" ceived the gift of the Spirit in quite a different way from that in which it came to ordinary believers. ( on him said, Brother Saul." The very address that Ananias uses in beginâ€" ning to speak to this former persecuâ€" tor must have melted the heart of Saul. "And Ananias departed nndr ;htered into the house; and laying his hands "And he was three days without sight, and did neither eat nor drink," Undoubtedly Paul, during these days, prevented from beholding the physiâ€" cal and material objects about him, held precious communion with God. "And Saul arose from the earth; and when his eyes were opened, he saw nothing; and they led him by the hand, and brought him into Damasâ€" cus." This blindness was certainly unâ€" answerable evidence that the appearâ€" ance given to him had been a reality. "But rise, and enter into the city, and it shall be told thee what thou must do. And the men that journeyed with him stood speechless, hearing the voice, but beholding no man." A long journey, in the days of Saul, was not made by one alone, but in company with others, for the sake of protection as well as companionship. "And he said, Who art thou, Lord?" The title, Lord, is here used in revâ€" erence and awe struck response to the question of a speaker in whose voice accompanied as it was by the superâ€" natural light, Saul recognized a diâ€" vine utterance. "And he said, 1 am Jesus whom thou persecutest." This was the name that Paul so much hatâ€" ed. He knew this person actually had lived upon the earth. It was Jesus who had been crucified in Jerusalem. 1t was the same Jesus who was now speaking to him from heaven. The conclusion that he was the Son of God was inevitable for Paul and arrived at instantaneously, LEsson struck Paul with astonishment. Jeâ€" sus, he thought was dead and buried, and the followers of Jesus, in his mind, were enthusiasts of a false Messiah, tho enemies of the true faith. sirange certainiy growing upon us. A faint bre P‘z'wflnlum 1 cannot remember wt question into words. 1 was too dazed to notice. ‘‘Where is he?" A colony of bats in San Antonia, Tex., dey mately 600 tons of liv nually, There were over 2,000,000 horses in the British Isles in 1900. This number fell to 1,567,597 in 1932 and in 1934 nearly 50,000 of these had disappeared. Persons extremely reserved like old enamelled watches . wh had painted covers that hinde; your seeing what o‘clock it was Walpole. I know my Island waits for me Where warm the tides for azure run, Gowned in her glimmery greenery; And I shall strive till life be done To feel upon my breast, again The silver sari of her rain, The golden serape of sun, â€"Clara Maude Garrett Etna, NH., U.S.A, snotw,â€" My Carib Island far away In dawns that allamanda glow. And every wind that murmur swells Brings music of pomegranate bells And pipes that stephanotis blow. A vision haunts : Through â€" seanty A similar weird custom preva‘ls in the neighboring villages of Madâ€" jourk and in the Turkish villages of Murssovo and Kosti on the opposite side beyond the Turkish frontier. Although the embers are red hot and the nestinarki fall down exâ€" hausted from the heat, their feet show not the slightest trace of burnâ€" ing. > Then all the villagers gather round the mass of burning logs, and the nestinarki, barefooted, dance for several minutes on the reddened emâ€" bers, keeping the same rhythmic 7â€" 16 beat. near Malko Tirnovo, in the bosom 0f| _ after the flowers have been cut, the Stranja Mountains, southeast BUIâ€" | poyy thing to do is to immediately garia, the Bulgarian "Nestinark""| soay them for several hours in deep, dance on redâ€"hot embers. cool water. Their prolongation of life The nestinarki a*ss old womenâ€"| ;s helped by quick action the moment They are devout Christians, ‘@nd| ghoy are gathered. Thickâ€"Jeaved their patron saints are St. Konstanâ€" flowers, such as stocks, snapdragons, tine and St. Elena. zinnias, and petunias need at least 10 On June 4, St. Konstantine‘s Day.!;p 12 hours soaking before they are the peasants make a huge bonfire Of| arranged in the vase. In the case of wood logs in the village #@UATC:. ; ljlacs, spirea, honeysuckle, and wother While the fire blazes the nestinarki|floral decorations of the woody sort, begin the fire dance ceremony. satisfactory results have been obtainâ€" Headed by villagers bearing ikons ed by splitting, or pounding and scrapâ€" of St. Helene and St. Konstantine ing the stems before soaking. Howâ€" and to the drone of bagpipes, the ever, with reference to dipping stem old _ women make a procession in boiling water before being soaked through the village, dancing all the in cold, there is still some doubt, alâ€" time to a strange rhythmic melody though on occasions such flowers as until they fall into a trance and poppies, hollyhock, mignonette, and the"i.r;‘ bodies tremble. dahlias have benefited by this method. mm o lli> Alia s afte c d e The nestinarki a*> old women. They are devout Christians, ‘and their patron saints are St. Konstanâ€" tine and St. Elena. The London Observes comments: Every year at the village of Vulgari, near Malko Tirnovo, in the bosom of Stranja Mountains, southeast Bulâ€" garia, the Bulgarian "Nestinarla" dance on redâ€"hot embers. "And the grace of our Lord aboundâ€" ed exceedingly with faith and love which is in Christ Jesus." The word here ‘translated ‘abound‘ means ‘to overflow its channels.! "Howbeit I obtained merey, because I did it ignorantly in unbelief." St. Paul _does not say that his sin comâ€" mitted in ignorance was not sin, but that, because it was committed in ignorance, it was more readily parâ€" doned than ‘presuimptuous sins‘ â€" sins committed against the light of conscience. Both as a Jew and a Christian Paul had lived before God in all good conscience. ‘ PSsi P CCC "Though I was before & blasphemâ€" er, and a persecutor, and injurious." This last word might more accurate ly be translated "bully" â€" it means "one who not only illtreats others, but does so with the insolence of supreme strength." UEO PRPEIECC CCC PDC L ing me to his service." The noun here translated service is from the same Greek words that the words "minis tration" and "serve" are derived from in Luke‘s account of the APâ€" pointment of the first deacons (Acts 6,.: 1, 2). i tounted me faithfw." _ FXIOETM!!*" is the supreme virtue of the servant of Christ, singlieâ€"NC& the interests of the Caribbean Lure Dance on Embers si n‘]eljm];td de votion me night and day _ sun and solemn devours approxiâ€" live insects an. a cave murmuring ved are 8. which hindered Wipe Fan , burn‘ over i iflrmatedits .. ..l [ J Tue-day afternor , 8.30, a sudden outburst of fire in the grass Just north of the Grang Trunk trac«s gave the boy* a rup, An area one hundred yards song by fifty vards widAa ... Ininean d AbC 0i 0 o _ ons O P crures predict, Op the other | there are those who say that proscribed Quebec children are ing denied an advanh:eous op tunity fop educative stimulation 2200 aPSEBISTS of keeping youth out shows, the result wi}] as a study in the eff. ment. Quebec childre? 16 are debarred from ture shows. In other Dowmion thikn ts .. CC Recently a brewing company sponsored a plan to give the proâ€" scribed youngsters a treat by preâ€" senting moving pictures on a screen in one of the parks. The commission controlling the parks does not favor the idea and it has submitted that to permit children to wander in the darkness would be dangerous, There are sinister characters abroad in Montreal parks at night. It might be possible for individual aldermen to arrange for open air picture shows in their own wards, but the proposal for a general opening of the public playgrounds for evening entertainâ€" ment is in disfavor With tha angir._s was amended, prohibitiny children uttfnding theatres, ""C6, PCHITEe Until 16 years of age, There was a fire in a theatre in Montreal nine years ago when 66 children perished. The Quebec law Observes the Woodstock Sentinelâ€" Reviewâ€"There is growing up in Montreal a generation of young people who have never seen a morâ€" ing picture until 16 vears of awe Pansies in particular find it diffiâ€" rcult to draw water through their stems, so these flowers, and also nasâ€" turtiums, are benefited by being plunged up to their blossoms in cool water for half an hour at eightâ€"hour intervals Warm and hot draughts cause immediate wilting in cut flowâ€" ers, dahlias in particular being quickâ€" ly affected. With regard to containâ€" ers, one floriculturist has discovered that cut flowers last longer in copper vessels than in any other type of vase. | _ Nearly everyone knows that cutting the stems of arranged flowers once a day helps to prolong their freshness, but in this regard one common misâ€" take is made: the cutting must be doneBunder water. This prevents air bubbles from forming in the stems and preventing the free flow of water, Adding oneâ€"quarter to oneâ€"half teaâ€" spoon of charcoal or permanganate of potash, obtainable from any drugâ€" store, prevents the growth of bacteria on the cut end, and the use of one or two drops of creolin or similar disinâ€" fectant tends to prolong the life of the flower, but aspirin has not proved efttive. If Quebec Children and Movies Fire Dept. Had Run , The method of cutting is also imâ€" portant. Slanting cuts with a sharp lknife are the best. Shears crush or bruise the stem and thus the free rise of water through the stalks to the leaves and blossoms is impeded. One great advantage of the slnt:’z cut is that the stem§g are preven from resting flat on the bottom of the vase and thereby checking the upward flow of water. ence. He PME O Ruabd sential facts of the art, both from their own horticulturalists and from other authorities. Most flowers must be cut either early in the morning when the dew is still on them, or in the cool of the evening. Roses, peonies, dahlias, and gladioli respond best when cut in the evening but it is to be remembered that dahlias must be cut in full bloom, iris, poppies and pinks in half bloom, and peonies when they show a good color. The "tip" about the bloom makes all the differâ€" To Prolons Life Veact I Of Cut Flowers i Yf:?z: ! Inkoepiuthehomebeutiful.nv information is more appreciated than authoritative advice on how to keep cut flowers fresh. With this end in view, the Lethbridge Experimental Station ,of the Dominion Department of Agriculture has assembled the esâ€" L s L ¥° aMS & â€"uT h persists in Its ea one hundred yerds wide was with the authoriâ€" db 8 attitude A new low, narrow covered in the Timo ‘The island is one mi located npproxim-tï¬ miles northwest of In 1907 he marric Lewis of Chattano have four daughters quiet, modest mar, h Mary to his home po any bows. Ott has been « tain. In 1919 ate of John B managing dir He gives Col for his succes England. "It to utes to said Myr 1908 y s rccessf In the England bine for nothing when it talent, a have dis technica! Fupin se Charlos Engine C 1880, gradua signer ment. at the Stephen ate, has ‘ma hay s in The Mary ro cludes b sloops, s eargo x ©cean 1i tor of t} ing work He Desis "QOuee With the liquid fron mills, till bodies of : make mor bakers th» pire. H By mean: cesses seed the Fermen are made t the liquid v Eileven poun into 16 tons ties of clea are used in ; free from p< eohol. The; yeast cells h out of them., conventiona | or was chos the supa is a mi sugar Cher expens quid m App It has long entists to uti in wood. Aft of making p is left a sms in the blackis! & tree. This | into rivers a why fishing â€" pulp mills. The Li of three i OI:bia no ing near later at Va plants the supplied w sulphite lig Canada yeast a 000,060 first plan liquid of output of cessful op a plant to left after trees. artic‘e process« ing mo lumber trees u paper, W na n tame ~f n