Halton Hills Newspapers

Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), September 21, 1938, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

the georgetown henld wednesday evening september 21 at 1938 pe7 fr by betty barclay wrong bnt porhaps seems to mo that too many menus are car too elaborate for humble pftoptw llkn lriiwr nf ua wc lik nice meals unusual and tasty dishes and pleasant surprises but we do not waat our dishes to be eltbor elaborate or expenslvo so here s a menu that should appeal eliminate either the fruit cup or the soup if you wish sub stitute tor the vegetables or the eajad if you prefer you may even change your meat dish take this menu as a guide and you 11 have a meal worth white well balanced economical and delicious the rennetcustard dessert needs no eggs ho boiling and no baking just the kind of dessert to top off a wonderful meal i istrongly advocate no substituting for this course broiled steak wipe the steak carefully and re move any unsightly bits of meat or fat heat the broiler and place the meat in it sear one aide turn it and sear the other side reduce the heat and continue the cooking turning the meat as often as the juice begins to appear on the upper surface steaks one and onehalf inches thick require eight to ten minutes for a rare steak and twelve to fifteen minutes for one that is known as welldone re move the steak to a hot platter and baste it with melted butter season with pepper and salt asparagus salad 6- rings cut rrotn greentiolperoy asparagus lemon cold boiled fresh or canned xettuce leaves french dressing vi tablespoon tomato catsup cut rings about onethird inch wide if lemon is used remove the pulp leaving only the peet slip four stalks of cold asparagus through each ring and arrange on crisp lettuce leaves serve with french dressing to which tomato catsup has been added bread rennetcustard 1 package vanilla rennet powder 1 pint milk 4 slices bread butter nutmeg remove crusts from bread butter lightly and cut in smalt cubes divide the cubed bread among 6 dessert dlbhes and add a few seeded raisins warmthe milk to lukewarm not hot remove from stove add rennet powder stir immediately and briskly until dissolved pour over bread let set nntll firm about 10 minutes chill in refrigerator sprinkle with nutmeg before serving your eyes the long summer evenings are over you will be doing more reading and indoor work your eyes may need help for glasses of quality at new low prices oc o t walker ro optometrist eyesight specialist brampton who b at kobtvs dtjg stobe georgetown the wednesday of every monlfe or yom may t it o t walker at his office in rrasaytan natu played favorites jr she put most of the countrys anthracite in penn sylvania and she put the hardest anthracite of all in a small area known as panther valley only the old company has access to these depoaita only old companys anthracite is so compact so full of heat units thats why it produces more heat thats why it is more economical inqtiiiw how about mooekm anihkaotis j b mackenzie son coal and unwbeat phone st gbobgetown david triumphant faith golden text the lord is my shepherd i shall not want psalm lesson passage psalms 23 and 27 l 6 the table changes effective sunday sept 25 puu information from agents canadian national railways accident becoeo lowek an encouraging aspect of the value of safety work is noted id hist mon ths industrial accident prevention associations bulletin records show a decrease of more than ljooo in the accident totals reported to the work mens compensation board as com pared with the same period a year ago figures are down 1071 to 5728 for august 1938 as against 6799 in 1937 it- takes pluck for agfrt to n some of the new bathing salts tn fact she has to- show a lot of back bone to do it we thank thee for thejoy sublime of yefirs so radusht with thy power that alpthe best of endless time seems granted to the fleeting hour jnhnthth f writing onr thooghta a young- student began keeping books not ledgers but personal books in one large book he copied out by hand every thought gleaned in his reading which was worth having as a permanent mental possession once a week he reviews sections of this book the- other book preserves his own deepest thoughts and is a record of his own development for tlurty years needless to say this man has grown a soul we may admit that we may buy books fall of good thoughts but the highest good does not come thr letting others make btsetuclluu fur us wha we e for ourselves and what comes to us to our hours or silence is much more vital religion becomes a power in life when we make it intimate- and personal writing down what the in ner voice tells us and checking to see whether or not we are living out our convictions the book of psalms is made up largely of the experiences of saintly men who took the trouble to write down what they learned the reason why the psalms speak to us with living power is that they are the product of life and experience the shepherd lad for the purposes of this study let us assume that david wrote both the psalms which form our lesson and contrast his experiences as shepherd and king in both he won a victory over tear out alone with his flock of sheep david had to face darkness ward off wild animals experience hunger and thirst and sometimes stand up to human foes the work shepherd called forth heroism quite as great as going unarmed he t psalm breathes the utmost confidence in god even in the hard places of life david found that faith gave him victory over fear he believed that god cared tor him just as he a shepherd cared for the sheep dur ing his long hours of meditation he had reached the conviction that he was gods responsibility ood had given him life had protected him during infancy and through many dangers and he would trust god for the years remaining it was a faith forged out of experience not alone an inherited trust but a confidence vindicated tn daily life this convic tion is not the exclusive experience or a great soul such as david it may be the experience of the lowliest pacing reality each one of us can discern the leading of ood in our lives and dare to say the king of love my shepherd is the king in coart the picture changes in the twenty- seventh psalm to the kfhg in his court and the military leader in camp here again enemies have to be met op posing armies slander the fear of failure challenge him again ood is the answer the lord is my light and my salvation whom shall x fear the lord is the strength of my life of whom shall 1 be afraid we sometimes think that we could easily have trusted living the simple life of a shepherd but that it b different in our mechanical agewhen dally life in volves the risks of highway traffic elevators high power wires germs and bacteria yet our security remains the same god he is directing our lives amid the complex urban life as well as that of the shepherd on the hills but we niust reserve some por tion of the day in which to possess our souls with patience and hope we must give ood first place in our thoughts and actions if we are to know his strength and leading the psalmists had an anchor for their minds amid the stormy seas of ex perience the victories they won help us to win victories over self distrust and hard circumstances our conquest of pear two men who had not seen each other for years met and inquired or each others welfare one said that his lire was poisoned by fears about his health his home and his business the other replied that he was living without tear if he had one fear re maining it was fear of tear the other man refused to believe that it is possible to live without fear yet christ triumphed over fear and told his followers that they also could have complete victory over fear christ knew the psalms and his teach ing c the psalmists trust in ood christs cure for fear- was faith let not your heart toe troub led ydu believe in ood if we fear we do not trust no one can esti mate the amount of sneer human misery caused by fear fear of death fear of life fear of what others will think and say fear of failure yet cherishing such fears is the sorest way of bringing our fears to pass it when we place our lives in gods hands confident that we are oods responsibility and gods possibility that life rises to higher levels if we had to live oar lives alone we might wen be dismayed but the eternal god is our refuge and our strength that christ has been to any of followers he is ready to be to us there is grace available for us the love and wisdom of god are lnexhaus tlble if we are full of fears it is like ly because we are holding on to self and are unwilling to give ooa full control of our uvea the land of the living in these two psalms god is a pres ent possess oods power is being shown in the land of the living here and now these psalms teu of a present not a postponed heaven it is a fatal mental habit to think of the golden age as only in the future that here we must lire barren lives does your system make excess acid acm ksfpsdn cottk hmmbetas blious attarts constipation often start this way some people am what- are known as they cant help ttw 9tt9 tkty dowfi farin u the restdts of an enaii ol acid tnayj just utg ordinary wp4i trouble but tbey cant be pat right by ordinary s remedial excess add may be the reason why- you wake up fist sour bkaryeyed bilious and the reason why fierce purgatives only wave you in the grip of a weakening habit and the aune old symptoms but theres one thing that add eta face thats the beutralixiiig povcr of vange salts the alkaline remedy with the aolmral mineral spa action atea- apoonfol in warm water surges through your system just like the mcdici spring water far away in england vange salts come from excess f itillrf ilrfrly palpb ly your blood fa purified of poisons your ore stomach walls are soothed and that mass of bard poisonous waste natter lying in your intestines is softened gently notumtty and passed at of your body then do you fed good its marvellous i but the most marvellous thing is that vange salts ate only 60 cents a tin i at your drug gist now but if youre wise on your bathroom shelf tonight i cedrgetpwn fall fajst 218 trot or pace 10000 228 trot or pace 10000 entry fee 3 per cent of purse purse divided 40 30 20 10 per cent five to enter four to start race to terminate at the end of the third heat every heat a race two or more horses may start from the same stable entries close sept 28th at 9 pjn p w cleave secretary phone 263 the committee reserves the right to declare off or change theorder of programm o a no ai s tested recipes peach delicacies in view of the good crop of peaches or exceptionally excellent quality this season there has been a demand for all kinds of recipes in which peaches can be utilized the additional re cipes given below will be found use ful in preparing a supply of ijcach delicacies that may be used during the winter months vj peck peaches 1 quart small white onions pot through food chopper 1 tablespoon ground mace 1 tablespoon cloves 1 tablespoon cinnamon peck tomatoes b oz paprika oz black pepper 2 cups brown sugar 2 cups elder vinegar mix well let stand overnight in the momtng cook slowly stirring fre quently until it ls of the right con sistency sweet pickled peaches vs peck peaches 2 lb brown sugar 1 pint vinegar i oz stick cinnamon whole cloves boil sugar vinegar and cinnamon 20 minutes dip peaches quickly in boiling water then rub off the fur with a towel stick each peach wlh a cloves put into syrup and cook until soft using half the peaches at time uuifsc peach carrot and apple conserve 1 cup peaches 1 pint diced tart apples 1 pint diced carrots 3 cups sugar juice of 1 lemon mix the ingredients and simmer them until the mixture ls dear turn into jelly glasses and when cold cover with hot paraffin wax pickled peaches 4 quarts of peaches 2 cups vinegar 4 cups sugar 1 stick cinnamon- 2 tabelspoons whole cloves choose small perfect peaches re move skins by scalding boll vine gar sugar and spices for 20 minutes place a few pieces of the peaches at time in syrup and cook until ten der pack in sterilized jars and cover with boiling syrup seal while hot sweet pickled froit peaches pears sweet apples crab apples 1 peck prepared fruit 1 quart vinegar 1 cup water 2 oz stick cinnamon 1 oz cloves 4 lb sugar boll the sugar vinegar and spices 20 minutes dip peaches in boiling water and rub off fur but do not peel pare pears and apples the crab apples may be pickled with their skins on stick fruit with whole cloves put into syrup and cook until soft using a quarter or half of the fruit at a tune or in case of wet weather or any other cause 50 of prize money will be paid night of fair sept 29th and balance when treasurers books are closed dominion harness association rules to govern horses elegible september 1st 1938 flat raceo- mile best 2 out of 3 no entry fee 1st 1 500 2nd 1000 3rd 500 best high jumping horse 1st silver cup donated by oakville riding and polo club 2nd 400 3rd 200 no entry fee lifawatcbh iaiatitiim ki but that there ls a good time coming the ijord has visited h people d ls visiting his people every day this world may be redeemed from poverty strife and fear if only enough people will yield to oods control oods grace fa sufficient to remedy condi tions even in a world of economic de pression political uncertainty and worldwide rearmament christ lived in days of darkness for his nation under the roman yoke but he took long views and saw eternal truths and proce he spoke of a kingdom of heaven an eartbeacnday that we live in the spirit of christ and led by the will of ood we contribute moral and spiritual power for the rebirth of religion and the resurrection of hu manity questions for dtacnatkui do you keep a written record of your godgiven thoughts is it possible to live without any fears bow may we gain a conscious ness of god compare the twentythird psalm with the lords- prayer is our religion giving us joy you do 15 less shovelling in bkclas stcemmbbed firepot radiates 3 timet the heat of ordinary brepot extracts 15 to 17 more heat from every shovelful sara i ton in 7 it is the only firepot in canada witha 20year guar antee abo m of clare ah- coodmamoc new low prices due to lower material costs and elimination of tales tax instil- ledon the home improvement plan g r muck art phone 31w or j oeokcctown by a telephone call frwtxaaatty in vatecinary urrxaoas xuma- diata piaaanca and adrioa wlh atrra cattta and protect x farmara capital aaabxct taw fnroada of dtaaaas or ofbar amtr- gwacr quick halp is tha fazmara only datenae against th ihinga tn talophoow hatp immadkttaty whbonl a tela- r runa constant nax a tela- phdow is msur at low coat low rates for farm telephone service

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy