F Frosting 2 squares t:!ssweeetened chocolate cut in pieces Dash of salt 2â€"3 cup mik 2 cups sugar 1 teaspoon vanilia 2 tablespoons light corn syrup 2 tablespoons butter Add chocolate to milk and place over low flame. Cook until mixture is smooth and blended, stirring constantâ€" ly. Add sugar, salt, and corn syrup, and stir until sugar is dissolved nd‘ 2 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 1 cup butter or other shortening % cup milk 1 cup sugar 2 squares unsweetened chocolate 1 egg, well beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder and salt and sift together three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream to gether until light and fluffy. Add cho eolate and blend, then add egg and vanilla. Add flour alternately with milk, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition until smooth. Bake in a greased pan 8 x 8 x 2 inches in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) 1 hr. Cover top and sides with fudge frostâ€" ing. Sifted cake flour and unsweetened ehocolate are the basis of success for such a cake as this â€" and it makes such a moist rich cake that it will be lovely for several days â€" only it is so good you may have trouble keenpning the family from eating it all at once. f Chocolate Fudge Cake spelis perâ€" fection for the lone dessert. It has all the elements of sweetness, flavour and nourishment and it can be made as decorative as you please. Serve it on a crystal plate or platter, add chop ped walnuts or chopped white almonds put the fudge icing on in swirles as shown in the illustration and the Ahigh light of the meal is ready. Mow often has a perfect dinner or luncheon been almost too much beâ€" cause a luscious cake has been served along with a fruit or cream dessert? The cake in itself was so good, so nourishing and such a perfect endâ€" ing to the meal that it would have been quite enough and one could have appreciated its flavour more than mixâ€" ing it with other foods. w Woman‘s & World 39 The average Harvard â€" student spends $5,000 to get his degree; 125 years ago the average cost was less than $3,000. In 1985 coffee drinkers in the United States consumed ar average of 60.5 cups of coffee each. Most of Canada‘s exports of canned vegetables went to the United Kingâ€" dom during June. The total was 4,â€" 324,895 lb. valued at $182,119 and the amount to the United Kingdom 3,â€" 959,957 at $163,512. Pickles, sauces and catsups exported were valued at $328,119, of which the United Kingâ€" dom took $322,747. There were 177,677 lb. of canned vegetables imported in June valued at $20,284 compared with 174,048 at $16,074 in the same month last year. The amount from the United States was 88,994 lb. and from other counâ€" tries 88,683 lb. Pickles and sauces wers imported to the value of $31,301, of which $20,409 came from the Unitâ€" ed Kingdom and $7,547 from the United States. \ 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. Make a pot of cocoa in the usual way only with half the amount of suâ€" gar, adding % cup of strong coffee to one quart of cocoa. Pour while hot into tall glasses, each containing 2 cubes of ice and one marshmallow. Sent in by Mrs. C. B. Crawford R. R. No. 3, Lakefield, Ont. Line a glass dish with crisp lettuce leaves, slices of ripe tomato, then fill dish with bananas sliced very thin over which pour a mild salad dressâ€" ing, then sprinkle with chopped walâ€" nuts and chill. ® mixture boils. Continue cooking, withâ€" out stirring, until a small amount of mixture forms a very soft ball in cold water (232 deg. F.). Remove from fire. Add butter and vanilla. Cool to lukeâ€" warm (110 deg. F.). Beat until of right consistency to spread. Makes enough frosting to cover tops and sides of two 9â€"inch layers. THIS WEEK‘S WINNER HOW TO ENTER CONTEST | Preserved Vegetables Summer Drink TORONTO FU MANCHU "And the hand of the Lord was with them: and a great number that beâ€" lieved turned unto the Lord". No one person is mentioned in this accoupt of early missionary activity. _ These men were not sent out under the ausâ€" pices of the Jerusalem church. They went everywhere preaching the Lord Jesus because he was precious to ' "But there were some of them, men of Cyprus and Cyrene". Cyrene was a city of Libya in northern Africa, west of Egypt. (See Acts 2:10; 13:1).‘ Who, when they were come. to Antioch, spake unto the Greeks also, preaching the Lord Jesus". Those to whom the Christians preached were Gentiles, who were probably worshipping in the Jewish synagogue in Antioch, though they were not proselytes, i.e., they were not Greekâ€"Jews. | ‘"They therefore that were scattered abroad upon the tribulation that arose about Stephen." This refers back to the persecution and scatterâ€" ing of the Christians from Jerusalem mentioned in Acts 8.4. "Travelled as far as Phoenicia". _ The country imâ€" mediately north of Palestine on the Mediterranean coast, part of the Roâ€" man province of Syria, in which were the great cities of Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, and Tripolis. "And Cyrus". An island sixty miles from the Syrian coast, and fortyâ€"five miles from the coast of Asia Minor, approximately thirtyâ€"five hunâ€" dred square miles in area, about three times the size of the State of Rthode Island. _ "And Antioch, speaking the word to none save only to Jews". These missionaries were Jews themâ€" selves, and felt more confidence in confining their efforts to fellow Genâ€" tiles. PLACE. â€" Antioch was situated in the nerthern part of Syria about 20 miles from the seacoast, on Orontes River. Cyprus was an island located in the Mediterranean Sea oppesite to and about sixty miles from Syria. Salamis was a seaport located at the eastern end of the island, while Pa phos was a seaport located at the western extremity of the same island. "They therefore that were scattered abroad upon the tribulation that ’ LESSON IV. â€" August 30. BEGINNING THE wWoORLD Mmissions Acts 11:19â€"26; 13: 1â€"12. GOLDEN TEXT â€" And he said unto them. Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to the whole creaâ€" tion. Mark 16:15. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME. â€" The church at Antioch was founded in 42 A.D. The missionâ€" ary journey of Paul and Barnabas was in 47 A.D. . Going back to his home town, Independence, Kan Alfred M. Landon is enthusiastically greeted by his wor UNDA Y CHQOO|J "So they, being sent forth by the Holy Spirit". Every work for Christ is a partnership with God. We work together with God (2 Cor. 6:1). A missionary not sent forth by the Holy Spirit is doomed to the deepest disâ€" appointment, and perhaps tragedy. ‘"Went down to Seleucia". The seaâ€" port of Antioch, at the mouth ot.the Orontes River, mentioned only here in the New Testament. "And from hence they sailed to Cyprus". Probably the missionasy apostles were induced to take this route because Cyprus was the birthplace of one of them. _ ‘"‘Then, when they had. fasted and prayed and laid their hands on them, they sent them away". Barnabas and Saul were not here ordained to be apostles, they were apostles before this, It was, however, a service of solems dedication, in which these men received the blessing of fellowâ€" Christians in the church at Antioch. ‘And they ministered to the Lord, ’and fasted, the Holy Spirit said, Se parate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them. It may be that the church was now assembled together with the express purpose of talking and praying about the great task of carrying the gospel to the heathen. Barnabas had already been called of the Lord to labor among the Gentiles. By Sax Rohmer "Now there were at Antioch, in the church that was there, prophets and teachers". Prophets were men inspirâ€" ed by the Holy Spirit with a direct message from God (Acts 2:17; 1 Cor. 12:28; 14: 1â€"415). They must have been present in most of the apostolic conâ€" gregations (1 Cor. 12:28, Eph. 4:11; Acts 11:27; 15:32), and apparently ranked next to the apostles in anâ€" thority. ‘ Barnabes, and Symeon that was called Niger®. Nothing is known of this man except that he was of Jewish origin, as his first name indiâ€" cates. "And Lucius of Cyrene." This is a Latin name, though his birthplace or home may indicate that he was of the Jews who zbounded in Cyrene and the other parts of northern Atâ€" rica. "And Manaen the foster brother of Herod the tetrarch, and Saul. The Herod mentioned here must have been Herod Antipas. It should be especialâ€" ly noticed that the name of Saul apâ€" pears last. He is not given first place,] even after his first Wissionary jourâ€" ney, by the officers of the church (15:25). Officialism is slow to recogâ€" nize work not done in its own way. LEsson them, because love for him filled their hearts, because Christ had changed them and given them new life. Welcomed Back Home n., for first time since his nomination, Governor omen neighbors at luncheon in his honor. "But Saul, who is also called Paul." This is the first time that we meet the name Paul. Why he should take this name in preference to the name Saul is not known, but we do know that here the great apostle is enterâ€" ing upon a new period of life, and a new name could not be taken at a more appropriate time than this. "Filled with the Holy Spirit, fastenâ€" ‘But Elymas the sorcerer (for so is his name by interpretation) withstood them, seeking to turn aside the proâ€" consul from the faith." The word bere translated withstood is used later by Paul (2 Eim. 3:8; 4:15). The word here translated to turn away means to turn aside from the right path, to perâ€" vert, to corrupt. l "Who was with the proconsul, Serâ€" gius, a man of understanding." Cyprus was a province which had become so thoroughty Roman as not to need the presence of troops, and was governed by a civil magistrate under the rule of the Senate. An inscription was disâ€" covered at So‘oi on the north coast of this island, dated in the proconsulship of Paulus, and probably refers to this very person. A person like the proâ€" consul, keenly interested in nature and philosophy. would enjoy the soâ€" ciety of Barâ€"Jesus. "The same called unto them Barnabas and Saul, and sought to hear the word of God." Cerâ€" tainly this man bad heard of the Jewâ€" ish faith andâ€"of the doctrine of one supreme holy God. He, like great mulâ€" titudes of other intellectual men of his time, was dissatisfied with the idolatrous and â€" sensualistic religions of the Mediterranean world. "And when they had gone through the whole island". The phrase would seem to indicate that they had preachâ€" ed the gospel in all the important places throughout Cyprus. "Unto Paâ€" phos". A seaport near the western extremity of the is:and. the modern '.city of Buffo, and the seat of the proâ€" consul, the administrative centre of the island since its annexation by the Romans in 58 B.C. ‘"They found a cerâ€" tain sorcerer, a false prophet, a Jew, whose name was Barâ€"Jesus." Cf. the record of Simon the sorcerer (Acts 8: 9â€"25) and of Sceva (Acts 19: 11â€"16). The word here translated sorcerer simply means wise man. He represâ€". ented in his single personality both the modern fortuneâ€"teller and the modâ€" ern man of science. "And when they were at Satamis." This was the nearest port of Cyprus for voyagers from Seleucia located at th eastern end of the island, and menâ€" tioned only here in the New Testaâ€" ment. ‘They proclaimed the word of God in the synagogres of the Jews: and they had also John as their attenâ€" dant." This is not John the apostle, the author of the fourth Gospel, but John Mark, the author of the second Gospel, the cousin of Barnabas. The word here translated altendant is used elsewhere by Luke to designate an ofâ€" ficer or servant of the synagogue in Nazareth (Luke 4:20) laide W., Toronto. of strain. The blouse is gathered to the yoke in front and back giving a flattering fullness and smooth appearance. _ Try your hand at this tailored model in polâ€" ka dotted silk, printed crepe, cotton or light flannel. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1918â€" B is available for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. â€" Size 16 reâ€" quires 4% yards of 39 inch maâ€" terial. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin erred) ; wrap it carefully and u:?‘ml â€-l.' ?r:l'er _to Enluu Bell, 73 Adeâ€" The pajama illustrated has a coo!, trim neckline with a u«inty pointed collar and tricky yoke that extends into a panel tor the bodice closing. It is exceedingly appropriate for gardening or to do your morning work in as the dropped shoulder line, instead of sifeves removes every possibility Sleeping pajamas are so pretty these days,. And this model holds true with today‘s model not only for slim young 14‘s, but also for their sisters in the 42‘s. ‘ _""Then the proconsul, when he saw !wbat was done, believed, being as tonished at the teaching of the Lord." So remarkable is the conversion of a Roman proconsul, thus early in the history of the Christian church, that some, including Renan, regard the statement as absolutely incredible. But the narrative, aside from our beâ€" lief in inspiration, is utterly free from any details that would indicate the narrative to be one written out of the imagination of later gemeration. ] "And now, bebold, the hand of the Lord is upon thee, and thou shalt be blind, not seeing the sun for a seaâ€" son,. And immediately there fell on lim a mist and a darkness; and he went about seeking some to lead him by the hand." For the expression the hand of the Lord, see Ex. 9.3; Judges 2:15; 1 Kings 18:46. aside. ©u Ts EDCS M Et NOC 1 all guile and all villainy." The first word has reference to deceit, and the second to innate wickedness, "Thou son of the devil, thou enemy of all righteousness." (Cr. John 8:44) There is hardly a more terrible indictment of one man by another in all the Bible than this fierce denunciation proceedâ€" ing from the lips of the apostle Paul. "Wilt thou not cease to pervert the right ways of the Lora?" The word here translated to pervert is the same word translated in verse eight to tur®m ed his eyes on him, and said, O full of WS c12,_. b9. wihaâ€" Rask Sophisticated Air 913â€"B irind c llth ... +9, in i!'Otltil:y. is not a minor problem; it 8 one of extreme rtance, and yet is one of extreme importa proves. B sc & .. yearly, allowing it to dry, it is thoroughly greased d ud s CR e P L oz 2 ", "CC P*VTIGC &# speâ€" cial room for his harness, separated from the main part of the horse stable. Most harness rooms, soâ€"callâ€" ed, are immodiahely behind the ani~ mals or at some Pplace in the barn where they absorb a large portion of the ammonia fumes which arise, It would be difficult to estimate the loss in harness leather due to the conditions just described, The amâ€" monia fumes eat the life out of the lenther, causing it to crack, break, and eventually go to pieces. Over. come this condition by al means, and supplement it with the practice of thoroughly washing the harness twice early,. llh'il. it to after which f,t hl'fllnm-I-'- L d"‘. Extremely lEortam Yet Very Often Sadly Neglected Keeping Haâ€"mm j Out of the Stable 2ency. It is only aatural, therefore, that more communities are taking up this modern method of feeding which has been proven most economical by the leaders of the industry, ind G/ olsn s 1 been considered a necessity. â€" These dairymen have spent years producing and marketing milk and butterfat. They know from actual experience the practices that are most profitable for them to follow. Likewise, in cattle feeding sections the use of pure can molasses has become more and more important. These actual feed lot tests, carâ€" ried on by the most successful class of live stock men, pave the way for others who have not developed their industry to that high degree of effiâ€" ciency. It is only aatural, therefore, that more communities are taking up this modinen nmuddied Je ooo ul DWP In the h tions pure That livestock feeders and poulâ€" try raisers are using an increased amount of sweet feeds is an estabâ€" lished fact. In periods of low prices feed costs must be carefully watched. Practices that are not economical must be discarded and true values must be established. The feed that produces the most meat, milk or eggs, for the money expended is the most practical and econamiaal Every farmer should provide a speâ€" ul samm" Fnw t l 9c Neither Ingle nor Banta cares to â€"draw any analogy between water fleas and humans. Still, they ‘do perâ€" mit themselves to say that "if human life could be prolonged to a proporâ€" tionate extent, the average expectaâ€" tion of life at birth would be closanto 100 years and humans would be growâ€" ing and reproducing at 80 and 90 years of age," Sale of Sweet Feed Is On The Increase Evidently we are confronted here with a modification of the metabolic process whereby food is converted into tissue and energy, a process that obviously put a mechanical and chemiâ€" cal strain on the organism. If the strain is great, as when large quantiâ€" ties of food are devoured, the wear and tear also are great. Meals that are heartier than the organism needs mean a burning up of youth. Give the body what it wants â€" no moreâ€" and life is prolonged. at least a generation it has been known that either by lowering the body tempefature or by reducing the food supply it is possible to prolong the life of very low organisms. ’ Apparently the most favorable period of the abundant life is not early youth, but maturity, when posâ€" sibly the body is better able to withâ€" stand the effects of a fairly rapid dissipation of energy. This is not exactly a revolutionary discovery. For At Brown University Dr_ Lester Ingle and Professor Arthur M. Banta are studying the mystery of life und especially the process of growing old. The objects of their critical study are cladocera, â€" soâ€"called water fleas, which are not insects at all, but minâ€" ute animals related to the lobster. Ingle and Banta cut down the food supply in the younger stages of the "fleas," then increased it after maâ€" turity. Result: The duration of vigor was increased by 50 per cent. In four years nearly 2,000 cladoâ€" cera were tested at Brown. Animals that were normally fed at all stages of growth lad an averaze lite of only z6 days. Their t""lows on half raâ€" tions for fourteen days and full raâ€" tions thereafter lived to the hale and hearty age of 42 days. Similar exâ€" periments with partial diets until the cladocera were 20 and 28 days old resulted in life spans of 44 and 51 days. Restricted Diâ€"eï¬n Youth Leads to Old Age â€" With Water Fleas us Process of Metabolism hithly‘:i-ev'e?oped dairy cane molasses has: l;;;g Â¥6 whizzes by just window and ways NÂ¥ou will be surp: ef your action. Th return your cheery thusiagm, a broad is time that s afforded them. Just try it 3 On the next proach to a : train is in si plenty of time trackâ€"and . th ences hav. merves of readily un before the the thiot If the warning, jam on + eyes and crash, wh more disa: for anyon« seat in t often wal to their ¢< iron horse all the tir avoid the Few pec an engine bile spee which he i whistle s} outâ€"and ( do. He ca: he cannot might if + wheel of : You wiil almost im say to himselt, d courteous motor Bo why not "try « lations with the r seldom the ne: and tra import: sengers try, prc wise so 0 appe little Amon, their su campaig the Ont are the Chathan The Man several & Â¥inces sh game ani able, ope: of camp etc., supp tion for ¢ and Alb Maunitob ers inte: show a The Canoe ‘Plentif; Is Y decided addition particul ‘deer aw also‘ ap; deer in province chewan. tory adj: Alberta, ters this fitters a being ay From V dndicate i ply of m« , _ Report: vinces i: plentiful of moose ported i: The . prov bec, New Waterfow proved o vide exce sire to â€"£ and shore They There in the of tically th this year except c meet loci ity to ; marshes In a l ing seas of Canad been taiki: mer dong w Gener and the The bla« 11 th