k - Woman*s World By MAIR M. MORGAN "A Woman'* Place It In th« Home.' v:;; Salad Dressings The menus of the summer season conuisteiitly call for salads and with the many greens offered it is a simple matter to throw a delicious appetiz- ing salad concoction together. The dressing, however, calls forth the crea- tiso powers of the cook. The follow- ing recipes have been tried and found simple and easy to make, at the same time, offering the right amount of flavor to appeal to jaded palates: Boiled Salad Dressing Mix together, dry, one teaspoon salt, OEe tablespoon mustard, one heaping teaspoon flour, one tablespoon sugar, a speck of cayenne pepper. Beat the yolks of three eggs and stir into the dry ingredients until smooth. Add butter the size of two eggs, two-thirds of a cup of milk and two-thirds cup of vinegar. Cook until thick. This dress- lag is improved by adding cream plain or whipped just before serving. French Dressing Take one-half teaspoon salt, one- Huarter teaspoon pepper, two table- spoons vinegar and four tablespoons olive oil. Combine by stirring to- gether in a bowl, or put into a bottle »nd shake well. Mayonnaise Dressing Mix together one teaspoon mustard, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon pow- dered sugar, a tew grains of cayenne, two well-beaten eggyolks, and when well blended add one-half teaspoon of vinegar. Add one cup olive oil gradual- ly, drop by drop, stirring constantly. As the mixture thickens thin with vinegar or lemon juice alternately un- til all is used, stirring or beating con- stantly. A Dover egg-beater may be used. It is well to have the bowl sit- ting in a dish of cracked ice or ice â- water. Cream Dressing, Uncooked Into onehalf cup of sweet cream, Btlr three tablespoons of vinegar, one- quarter teasiKjon salt and a few grains of cayenne pepper. The cream may be whipped and the seasonings added. Stuffed Tomatoes To stuff tomatoes choose large, firm ones, remove the skin by plunging them into hot water for a few seconds, cut a slice off the stalk end. and scoop out" the pulp from the inside. Mix the pulp with a little pepper and salt, a little chopped, onion and cucumber, or, for a change, some minced ham. Add a dash of vinegar, then fill the centre of the tomatoes with the mixture. Place one tomato on each plae. surround ivith slices of cucumber and decorate with slices of hard-boiled egg. Cool Drinks 1 cup cantaloupe balls or cubes, 1 cup ar»ed orange pulp, % cup diced pear, i| cup orange juice, 2 table- spoons lemon juice. Cut balls from melgn with potato cutter or scoop out - with small spoon. Combine with the orange pulp and diced pear. Pour over fruit juices, chill thoroughly and serve. Serves 2. Bridge Party "Pick Up" 9 cups orange juice, fi tablespoons lemon juice, 1 cup sugar, 9 cups ice water, crushed ice, orange slices. Com- bine and serve over crushed ice in tall glasses. Place a half slice of orange over rim of glass. Serves 18. Ginger Sorbet Ml pound candied ginger, 2 quarts â- water, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup lemon juice, juice of 4 oranges. Crushed ice or ce water. Chop the ginger fine, add it to the -water and sugar and boil for fif- teen minutes. .Cool, and add water to make ten cups of liquid. Add the fruit Juices and serve in glasses half filled with crushed ice, or diluted with ice water. Summer Hints A few slices of cucumber and a lit- tle stewed fruit, added to the fresh fruit of your fruit salad, will give it an added piquancy which everyone will appreciate. Chopped nasturtium leaves between thin bread-and-butter makes a sand- wich for those who like something rather spicy and hot in flavor. A fourpenny brick of ice-cream jerved wth stewed fruit or fresh straw- berries or raspberries makes a party iweet for two. Cream cheese and chopped olives be- tween brown bread-and-butter make a ta.sty and nourishing luncheon sand- wich. For a quick last minute sweet cut a banana down the middle and spread with jam, then serve with whipped cream on the top. If you are hot and tired and not in- clined to eat anything, try tliia as a nourishing pick-me-up. A fresh un- cooked egg, with the white and yolk beaten separately. Put a teaspoonful of sugar and the juice of halt a lemon into a glass with a little of the beaten white of the egg, then a squirt of soda water, then more white and more soda until all the white is used up. Then put in the beaten yolk in the same way witb more soda water. Drink this while it is still fizzy, and see how much better you will feel. Have you ever tried stewing dates in just the same way as you stew prunes, with a little lemon rind? Cold and served with custard they make a sweet which is very refreshing. Flo\ver3 gathered at a picnic are often found to be withered when they arrive home. Don't throw them away before you have tried placing them in a cool I lace in a jug of fairly hot, steam- ing water. Most flowers will respond to this treatment within an hour, but if it fails and you happen to have any gum camphor in the house, drop a tiny piece in the jug. It greatly helps to increase the absorption of water. A Fashion Note Satin is being hailed as the new popular fabric of the moment. For daytime and street wear it is styled into suits or dress and jacket ensem- bles. Black, of course, is the leading color. However, one shop is showing a sleek, trim jacket outfit in cool lem- on yellow. Another leading store is displaying a white shadow-check or- gandie frock with which is worn a black satin jacket, a little longer than finger-tip length. Satin shines in even- ing dresses. It is being developed in cool pastels, as well as black or white. Looking crisp and cool and very sleek was a black satin evening go^wn with which was shown an organdie jacket, cut mess-jacket style. Evening gloves in satin, palmed in kid, have appeared. And stepping jauntily along was a •spectator sports frock of white satin. Aid to Coolness One or two electric fans, placed in the rooms you use most, w^ill do much to make your home more comfortable in the summer. The kinds which os- cillate are, of course, best. Point them up toward the ceiling so the air can circulate and yet will not blow direct- ly on anyone. Never sleep with a fan blowing on the bed. July Fair was the morn today, the blos- som's scent .. .. Floated across the fresh graas, and the bees With low vexed song from rose a'nd' lily went, A gentle wind was in the heavy trees. The earth no longer labored; shaded lay The .sweet-breathed kine, across the sunny vale. From hill to hill the wandering rook did sail. Lazily croaking midst. his dreams of spring, Xor more awake the pink-toot dove did clinjj Unto the beecli-bough, murmuring now and them; All rested but the restless sons of meu. .\ud the great sun, that â- wrought this happiness .\nd all the vale with fruitful hopes did bless. â€" William ilorris. Poems. »»• SOCIETY NOTE While svalking on the street today I met Miss Peach in plumage gay. And as in n-aidenly dismay Her swec. .nee fell, The rest of her just followed suit And hit the walk â€" It was a beaut Of a banana peeU Professor i]rnest Janecke says the earth is shrinking. His calculations show that its diameter Is reduced by five inches every thousand years. LESSON IV.â€" JULY 23. ISAIAH DENOUNCES DRUNKEN- NESS AND OTHER SINSâ€" Isaiah 5: 1-30. Golden Textâ€" Righteous- ness exalteth a nation; but sin is a reproach to any people. â€" Prov. 14: 34. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.â€" Isaiah began to prophesy (Beecher) in B.C. 766, and died about B.C. 070. Place â€" Jerusalem. 1.â€" DESOLATE HOMES.â€" Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field. Ceaseless wars had so impoverished the small proprietors that they were obliged to borrow money at ruinous rates of interest, sometimes as high as twenty per cent., which they were unable to pay. This led to forecloseures, to evictions, and the rich greedily added lauds and houses to their already vast posses- sions. Isaiah noted this as one of the major evils of hi.-5 day. Till there be no room. No land to be bought, even it there were money with which to buy it. And ye be made to dwell alone in the midst of the landl The selfish rich dwelt in solitary grandeur, each surrounded by his enormous unpopu- lated territory. God has made the land, not to teed the pride of the few, but the natural hunger of the many, and it is his will that the most be got out of a counry's soil for the people of the country. In mine ears, said Jehovah of hosts. God the commander ot the Armies of heaven! He had condescended to give a message to his prophet, as he will speak to any attentive and obedient lis- tener. Ot a truth many houses shall be desolate, even great and fair, with- out inhabitant. The greed of the rich defeats its own end. A nation is pros- perous as all are prosperous, great and humble, learned and unlearned, em- ployer and employed, ruler and ruled. Laws must be advantageous to all. For ten acres of vineyard shall yield one bath. A bath was a measure of between eight and nine gallons â€" a mis- erably small yield for an acre of vine- yard. And a homer ot seed shall yield but an ephah. Probably an "acre" Is not an adequate rendering of the Heb- rew term. 2. WOES OF DRUNKENNESS.â€" Woe unto them that rise up early In the morning, that they may follow strong drink. Drinking in the morning was very unusual and specially dis- graceful. That tarry late into the night, till wine inflame them! Isaiah represents the drunkards ot his time as so eager for liquor that they not only spend the entire day in its pur- suit, perhaps going from one convivial gathering to another, but tarry in the evening. And the harp. Such a stringed in- strument as David played, having a sounding-board. And the lute. Another stringed instrument, but lacking the sounding-board; the psaltery. The tab- ret. A percussion instrument, a drum. And the pipe. A wind instrument, a flute. And wine, are in their feasts. Music played a large part in their revels, as they sought thereby to drown the voice of conscience. But they regard not the work of Jehovah, neither have they considered the oper- ation of his hands. They take no heed, in their drunken orgies, to "the crown- ing work of judgment whch God is about to execute, and of which there were many ominous warning-s tor those who could discern the signs of the times. 3. REJECTING THE LAW. Woe unto them that draw iniquity with cords ot falsehood, and sin as it were with a cart rope. These men are represented as tugging away at a heavy load of sin by means far too weak for the task, as if one were to pull a great weight with a frail and treacherous cord, or tug at a lumber- ing, high-piled cart with a mere rope sure to be frayed and to part in a few minutes. That say, let him make speed, let him hasten his work, that we may see it. Instead of trembling at the soming judgment of God. which Isaiah has an- nounced, they pretend to desire its immediate arrival; they want to "see it. " They walk, not by faith, but by sight. And let the counsel of the Holy One uf Israel draw nigh and come, that we may know it! "The Holy One of Israel, " a precious name of God, is not said with reverence but with a sneer. Woe unto them, that call evil good, and good evil. This is the fifth Woe, directed against false reasoners, men who twist arguments, sophistical, plea- ders for evil, skilled to make it ap- pear as good. That put darkness for light, and light for darkness. These speakers and writers set forth moral midnight as it it were the dawn of righteousness, they can turn even the night to day. That put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! These words are a denunciation ot presumptuous rebel- lion against recognized law. Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight! This, the si.\th Woe, is directed against blind self-conceit. Macon At Mooring A splendid photograph ot tlie new dirigible, llacou, .in;ii)p.--a :rom the top of the hangar at Lakehurst, N.J. After a early dawn flight from Akron, Ohio, the huge ship was offlciaily turned over to the Uni- ted States government, then hauled into its garage. Woe unto them that are mighty to drink wine, and men of strength to mingle strong drink. This the sev- enth and culminating Woe, directed against the bold and violent drinkers. Intoxication is never tto be associat- ed with strength, but only with the weakness it invariably produces. It is never heroic, always craven. And take away the righteousness ot the righteous from him! The law courts ot Isaiah's time not only acquitted wrongdoers, but condemned those who were in the right. Therefore as the tongue of fire de- voureth the stubble, and as the dry grass sinketh down in the flame. A metaphor peculiarly suited to a pas- toral country: the ruin ot these evil men shall come swiftly and irresistibly as fire sweeps over a dry meadow. So their root shall be as rottenness. N'ot only shall the top ot their life-plant dry up, but the very root shall rot away. And their blossom shall go up as dust. Their blossom shall produce no real fruit, but shall turn into powder. Girl To Practice Law in Ceylon Avadai MeKta, Nineteen, Will Not Be Called to Ceylon Bar for Two Years If you look at the list â- which has just been published of the people who have passed the examination for call to the English Bar you â- will hnd the name of Miss Avadai Mehta, of Colombo, Ceylon. Miss ."Vlehta is only 19 years old. She is a slim attractive Parsee girl from Ceylon v,-lios« appearaiice would give the impression that her school days were hardly over yet. She was a brilliant ."-.cholar at the Maria Grey Training College, London, and after she matriculated she read for the Bar in Lincoln's Inn. I saw her today at her home in Hampstead, where she is li-ving with her motherâ€" writes an Evening: News representative. She was wearing a native dress of blue and gold. "I shall be the first woman bar- rister in Ceylon," she said. "There are, of course, a number of women lawyers in India, but up to now there have t>een none in my own country.' "I am eager to begin work at the Bar in Ceylon, but I have to wait some time yet before I can do that. I cannot be called until I am '21, and I have to eat my dinner for three more terms. "I may go to "India first and prac- tice there for a time before going to Colombo." Miss Mehta said there was no branch of the la^w in which she took especial interest and her practice would be a general one. "In my country," she explained, ''English law has been super-imposed on the old native laws. There is di- vorce law there as here. SIX YEARS IN LONDON. "I have not considered taking up divoi-ce practice. I can only wait to see what briefs may come to me." Miss Mehta said her father was a marinesuperintendent at Colombo and was one of the few Parsees in Ceylon. "There are only 200 there," she said, â- 'but tliere are 100,000 in India." Every dog has his day â€" but the cat has a monopoly of the nights. July Jottings The London Telephone Exchanges employ 6,000 girls, some of whom speak three or four languages. The average rate of pay tor both men and women in the cigar-makiug industry in Gt. Britain is $1.25. Screen stars have, on the average, a shorter -'life" than actors and actresses who succeed on the stage. Among normal children the dinner should amount to not less than two- thirds of the total daily requirements. Policewomen have been appointed in Kanaker, Illinois, to arrest and escort to their homes girls found spooning with boy friends after 9 p.m. London (Eng.) dogs are said to be developing a road sense, even to the extent of looking both ways hefore crossing a thoroughfare. Monkeys are kept in Siamese banks to bite coins to test their genuineness. Potato plants from six to ten feet In length are grown at the special plant nursery of the London County Council, situated at Avery Hill, near Woolwich. The present strength of the Royal Air Force is 2,600 officers, including 2,200 pilots, and 22,000 other ranks. The aeroplane strength is 884 "first line " machines and 1,200 of other types. Roads made from cast-iron mould- ings, which have recently passed se- vere tests with success, are said to be antiskid, ice-free, and guaranteed to last twenty years without repairs. Hitherto fire brigades have had to go to Germany for steel turntable fire escape.?, but now a Greenwich firm has produced an all-British model. Louring the pigeon-racing; season, which lasts from May to the end ot August, the London, Midland & Scot- tish Railway will use some 2,260 spe- cial vans to carry 2,000,000 birds. Although the annual influx of Ameri- can visitors to Gt. Britain is smaller this year than usual, the loss is more than made up by the increased number ot Continentals, particularly Germans. who are coming to London. Outbreaks of fire in Great Britain and Ireland caused a direct loss of £45.0005 a day during a recent month, the total loss during the first four months amounting to more than £3,- 500,000. Millions of bees invaded a shed on the quay at Freniantle, Australia, wliere thirtysix cases of honey, one of which was leaking, were stored. The fire brigade had to repel the invaders with iKiison gas. Training telephone operators at the London (Eng.) school takes from seven to thirteen weeks, according to the aptitude of the pupil. Candidates must have good sight and hearing, and no trace ot accent iu speaking. Readers on holiday who purchase Answers at kiosks and from beach sellers will receive bars ot Cadbury's Dairy Milk Chocolate, while one-pound boxes of Cadbury's mixed chocolate w^ill figure among the prizes at concert party and cinema gala nights. Among the diseases for which treat- ment is available at one or another of British spas are affections of the skin and kidneys, arthritis, rheumatism, gout, catarrh, dyspepsia, nerves, de- bility, and anaemia. In fact, practically any form ot "spa" treatment la avail- able In our country. News in 1832 Same As To-day Superabundance of La'wyers Doctors â€" Bachelors Called "Blockheads' la these day^ a. plethora ot law. vera and doctors seems to exist li many districts, but according to th« Herald, jiuahisUed weekly in SainI Jolm, N.B., a century ago, the situ* tioa then waa the same as today. "The three black grac».', law, physic and divinity, are weary ol their innumerable worshippers ani yearly ientenca crowds of them t< perish of the aching sense ot fall urB," juid Iha Herald warningly "J2very profession iu England is over stocked." .... The pages of this weekly wen ailed with puug;ent comment. Undoi the heading 'Evils of intemperance" waa the followlnf? item: "It wag r» ceutly proved that in the town oi Hartford, Conn., among a. populatioi of 10,000 persons, within the last U years 156 persons have died ot d« lirium tremens." Bachelors of a century ago wen "blockheads." Attacking gentlemei who, at the age of 40, were still un attached, the Hei^ld sternly remark, ed: "These consummate blockheads thp bachelors, they, too, must Joti the hue and cry to deface and da fame the most beautiful part of crea tion. Conscious that they are run ning contrary to all laws, (humai and divine, they come forth witl hard words in the place ot arguments; thpy say they are uuabib to support a wife; why. It costs you mora In sli months to pay for the soda watei you drink and the cigars you smok« and give away (two articles that yo« can well dispense with and articlei that our fathers never saw) thaa It would to support a sensible wo man for 12 months." Another article deplored the tend ency of thoughtless ladies who, rid ing on a steamboat, dropped broad and successful hints for seats amoni tired, labor-wearied workmen. The paper related an amusim anecdote ot Lessing, the German aui thor, "who, in hlg old age, was sub ject to extraordinary fits ot abstraa tion. On his return home one even ing, after he had knocked at hli door, the servant looked out of th< window to see who was there; nol recognizing his master in the dark and mistaking him for a st'ranger, he called out, 'The Professor Is not at home.' Lessing replied. 'Oh, very well. No matter, I will call anothai time.' and very composedly walked away." A true story also was told ot i lady who welcomed her friends hj saying: "Do mats yourselves a( home. I'm not at home myself and wish you all were." Libyan Desert Believed Once Fertile Territorj Florence. â€" Belief that figures o( animals found carved on rocks in th( interior of the Libyan Desert dat< back to a time when the desert wa< fertile apparently is supported bj the report of a University of Flor euce expedition recently returnel from Africa Professor Lidio Cipriani, headini an earlier expedition for the unives sity, believes that the figures wen lens ot thousands of years old. H« found them several portrayals at what he took to be the Mauretaniaa bull, an animal mentioned in the mosl ancient human records as even thea extinct. The same figures, together witl representations ot elephants an^ giraffes, were examined by Dr. PaoM Graziosi, head of the second exped* tion. He, like Professor Cipriani Is of the opinion that at the tim^ they were placed there tlie dese; supported such animal life. He thinl the figures were inscribed on tl rocks as part ot these people's li iigious rights. A prehistoric village, consisting a a group of natural caves protusel decorated witli the carvings, w« found by the second expedition. ! recovered hundreds of stone spel| and arrow heads from the caves. A Cupar (BMfel man has given bride a sewing-machine, a cook book, and a kit ot scrubbing brushi as a wedding present. ,} A man bought a bundle ot old boo! at an auction at Wicktord for ghilling. Between the leaves of ot them lie found ten £1 notQS. % MUTT AND JEFFâ€" By BUD FISHER Paging Annie Laurie