Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 23 Oct 1924, p. 2

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The exquisite flavor indicates the perfect blending of choice teas. Ask for a pacKage today FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "SALADA," TORONTO " ne oN ATT BA "keep the doctor away, we are only : Lifebuoy Protects aa oe b Apples are a food necessity--not a luxury, and if we consume even more than the proverbial one each day to eating for better health. "The ever popular baked apples as a dessert is always inviting, but there are any number of ways to entice the family to eat more apples. Here are some which perhaps may be new to you: Delicious Apple Filling for Cake.-- 2 medium apples, 1 lemon, 2-8 cup sugar, 1 egg. Pare and core apples, and grate. Add juice of lemon and grated rind, the sugar and egg. Stir over fire until jellied. Spread when cool. Apple Coffee Cake.--1 cup yeast, 1 egg, 2 tbsp. brown sugar, salt, flour to make thin batter. Let raise until light. Arrange apples on top sliced, sprinkle with powdered sugar and cinnamon and bake half an hour. Grated Apple Pudding.--7 apples, % cup sugar, 1 dozen lady fingers, 7 eggs, % cup chopped almonds. Beat yolks of eggs with sugar until very light, adding the crumbled lady fin- gers, grated apples and grated rind of a lemon. Then fold in the beaten whites and sprinkle top with the al- monds. Bake three-quarters of an hour. Always use as many eggs as apples. Serve with whipped cream. Steamed Apple Suet Pudding.--% cup ground suet, 1 cup sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup sour milk, 1 cup dried apples, 1 tsp. baking soda dissolved in 1 tbsp. hot water. Use any other candied or dried fruit you wish. % tsp. cinnamon and cloves, graham flour to make stiff batter. Steam three hours. Apple Fritters~-Slice apples 'and dip. into batter made of two table- spoonfuls of sour milk, two table- spoonfuls of sugar and half egg yolk end pinch of soda. Add flour to make a batter a trifle stiffer than pancake batter. Bake In hot deep fat. Apple Oream Tarts--2 tbsp. sifted four, 4 tbsp. confectioners' sugar, 1 rge tbep. butter, 1 cup rich milk. Rub flour, sugar and butter to a gmooth paste, add milk, heat slowly d then bring to a boil, stirring the hile, Pare and core and quarter one large apple. - Bake until very tender and rub through the sieve. Beat into cream filling and fill tart shells, Add whipped cream. : Apple Muffins--2 cup sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 1 cup thinly sliced apples, 1 pint flour, % tep. salt, 2 taps. baking wder, % cup butter. Bake in muf- n pans in quick oven. Apple Rel 8 lbs. apples, 8 Ibs. sugar, 1 lb. raisins, 1 Ib. pecans, 2 Coll 4 48 3 rb Dusty hands are germ-carriers Adar hk Band B Pg 4 Tha Sp Ad t is a source of in- La M Du aid oranges. Pare and dice apples. Re- move peeling of oranges and put through meat grinder, and cut oranges into small pieces. Cook for one hour, adding nuts five minutes Defore remov- ing from the fire. WATCH YOUR STEPS! How many times one needlessly goes back and forth while performing the daily tasks. Not long ago--before I realized I was using my legs instead of my head while I worked--when I tidied and cleaned each room I made a separate trip to the hall with a boy's cap left on the couch, to the bathroom with a bottle of salve found on the mantel, to the basement with the old newspapers, and to the same rooms again and again with other articles out of their places. Now I carry a large basket when I go to the first room to be straightened or cleaned. Into it go the small things belonging elsewhere, ahd when the room is in order I carry the basket to the next room, leaving anything be- longing there and placing it in the articles to be taken elsewhere. By the time I have returned to the first room after making the one round of all the rooms, the basket is empty and I have been spared the twenty or thirty go- ings and comings that the task would otherwise have required--Mrs. F. E. A COMFORTABLE "SLEEPING GARMENT." 4911. This is a good model for cold days, and especially for little ones who "glip" their bed covering. Donnet or outing flannel, crepe, cambric or long cloth may be used for this design. The Pattern fs cut in 6 Bizes: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 . A @-year size uires 2% yards of 86-inch material. en mailed to any address on receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Adelaide Bt., Toronto. Bend 16¢ in silver for our up-to-date Il and Winter 1024-1925 Book of 'ashions. WHAT CAN I DO? believe we a} stud) our dren, watch closely and o gs they are oplarly infer talent for, s line. For ested in or Sow a amuse bint i BE os vib w to use them. How ga t my boy obt m a bie; pt lB Cr than e would from the same amount of '| she was when he {et has proved a big help to many a housewife. - 25 was not a bit purtier than away, though -taller-and had she had grown a li filled out considerably. : But somehow the two years made all the difference in the world to them. When Jeff went away, Mary Mac- Morrow was just out. of shoe-top dresses, and was so shy and bashful the neck of her dress'if a feller spoke to her, sparkin' days, when a gal's face and the neck of her dress was not so far apart as they are now. Think of a gal these days blushin' from her face to her nearest clothes! The blush would have to get ite second wind to go that distance. As Jeff had last seen Mary, before leavin', she was just an ordinary chunk of a gal with brown hair and big brown eyes, and a few freckles sprinkled about over her face, and she' was not purty and she was mot ugly; but the first time he saw her after he was back he had a feelin' that give him a start, like somebody had called him sharp and quick when he was not expectin' it. He met Mary in the road a little way from her home. It was early in But that was back in my wij) four-gallon pal home with Mary, carryin' it; then on he hung around Morrow place like he had was done for Mary. X : Now, Mary's pap--"Doc Mae," they fences back on Sunday. Another time theré was a heavy hail in July, and when Doc saw it was beatin' his corn and wheat all to pieces he was 86 mad that he went out into the yard and stood there bareheaded, defyin' the "Almighty, and hollerin' up at the sky: "Peck away, now, just peck away! I ain't afraid of you!" while the big and bounced off of his forehead. Of course, Doc was a mighty misery to Mary and her mother; and on ac- count of his doin's they never went to meetin' and 'did not belong to any church. But. Jeff soon found out that Mary stuck up for her pap. June. She was walkin' and he was walkin', He just stopped square in his tracks right in front of her, "Good mornin', Jeff," Mary said. "I} ain't seen you for a long time." She held out her hand to shake. Her: fingers were slim and white, dnd she! {had on black half-handers, ich' made her fingers look all the slimmer { and whiter. Her hand squeezed up' | soft and warm in his, and it come to him like a fi that he was gazin'| on the purtiest thing, to him, in all) creation, Jeff was mystified at the way she] had changed. He saw that she had not only got taller, but she was trim and round, and her lips were red, and her eyebrows was high and bowed, and her ears was small, and her neck was full and round and white as milk, and her voice was as sweet as the songs of a whole flock of medder larks in spring. Jeff told me all this, more than once; I'm tryin' to tell it just as I heard it| from him. "Where are you goin', Mary " Jeff asked her, and something must have happened to his voice all of a sudden, too, for she looked at him quick, and then looked down. A becomes work and the interest in it soon departs.--Mrs. L. M. D. WAYS TO USE CABBAGE. Red cabbage is very adaptable to salad. To one small head, use one onion, two small carrots, one green pepper. Put the onion and carrots through a food <happer with the green pepper, red the cabbage and mix all with a salad dressing made of half cup of cream, half cup of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of mus- tard, two tablespoonfuls of hot water, one teaspoonful of salt. Stuffed Oabbage.--Select a medium- oughly. Separate the leaves and re- move the centre. Fasten into sha or tle ip a plece of cheesecloth and or simmer until tender. Fill the centre with cooked hamburg balls and sur- round with tomato sauce, HOMOGRAMS. i shoes and worry are the two foes to a woman's beauty. Oy: be e by tying up the foot ine the same for darning, and stitching down BE This, say dental experts, gives the right idea on how to use a toothbrush. A box top given roller skate wheels and tugging around of the scrub buck- BRIGHT COLORS. h choppin' wood and breakin' our backs | Mary was plenty good enougV; for him. | meetin' as they called it, and ina sized head of cabbage and wash thor-|-Sunday mornin' when Jeff went to see Tell the kids to "comb" their teeth. | * and used to save that eternal lifting, ©*®® "He's good to me and Ma, anyhow," she broke 'out to him one day, when she was worked up about somethin some girl had told her when she ha been to town to get the newspaper and the letters. "You never see us workin' round the place, feedin' the stock and hoein', like some wimmen I could men- tion who have mighty pious hug- bands." But" Doe's reputation was not troublin' Jeff, Anybody any kin to And then right in the midst of his good luck, just when him and Mary was thinkin' of breakin' the news to her folks, what do you reckon hap- peried? Doc fined the church! That ought not have caused Jeff "any trouble, but it did. i A preacher, named Maltby, from Baltimore, I think he. was, come to preach a week at the association c Yew days everybody was talkin' so about what a greit and powerful exhorter he was that Doc sneaked off one night without sayin' anything to anybody about it, and went to hear him. . I never heard him, because at the time I was laid up' with a spell of ague. But he must have been a great preacher. ; At the end of the sermon that night the preacher called on all who felt convicted of their sins to rise and confess it. And Doc got up. It was like techin' off a stick of dynamite in a rock quarry. The meetin' blowed up with joy. The vilest sinner had re- turned. hod : Then Jeff's troubles begun right away. Doc was no different from what I have noticed lots of people are when they firet get religion; he got it so hard he could make no allowance at all for pore, weak, sinful mortals, and was a stickler for makin' every- body toe the scratch. . The very next Mary, as usual, Doc took him out to the barn and told him he was an un- godly man, lost in sin, and that, 8§ her father, his duty to his Maker would not let him allow. Mary to bein 4 company. Doe told Jeff he won' 1 to repent of his sins. . Jeff said he almost got mad at that.| But he loved Mary teo much to get mad at anybody, oeciiny her pap, | 80 he told Doe he was not aimin' to do, wrong, but he did not feel any just pd ine the church. And that she would blush clean down into| tare pom because he was a horse doc. £ bail stones .spatted him in the face|sttatmment hdd given him the right to this seeming- ly primitive process a wonder of har my friend had put him in his picture, at the edge of his canvas, looking out toward the edge and away from the' group of studio buildings. * Presently came by a third member of the colony--one whose ability and might butter, comment upon the work of others, and and whose criticism was valued as that of, the 'seeing eye and the understanding | heart. : re He stood for a moment watching the' palette knife as it spread the" color, strengthening a high light, deepening or subduing a shadow; and then he spoke: "Bo you are trying to do what can't be done!" he said. It was said half- humorously, but with a kindly posi-| tiveness. "But I think it can!" answered m friend. . "Yes," continued the critic. "We had a student at the Art Institute last far who thought it could. He took]. three months to learn he was mis- taken." A My uninitiated mind became curious to know what was' the 'impossible which my friend had undertaken to prove possible. 1 walted eagerly for the argument to disclose the cause of the controversy, unnamed as yet, but evidently understood by both. =~ "You cannot put a figure In your pic tuie, on the 'edge of your canvas and looking' out of it, and preserve fits centre of interest. You are dissipating interest," sald the critic. " "But this and this and: this," réplied my friend, indicating with his thumb the sweep of line, the Massing of lght and shadow in the composition of tlie picture, "all contribute to the interest centre, and I'will"tone down the figure a bit" His defense was In reality an admis- sion, and 'being a very wise man the Fo ry it so he spent no words in further argument. . "Very well," he concluded, "go on with your experiment; but it can't be done," and wandered off to speak words of wisdom to soma other adven- turer In the enclianted Mqalm of Art. Now being no artist myself, all of |} this might have meant little or nothing | to me were it not for my habit of look- ing for the life lesson in such things. But the making of a life fs in many ways like the making of a ploture; and in this way as much as In-any other-- if life is to be effective it must have a centr® of interest, and everything must contribute to it. No life can be really beautiful without such a centre, and its uty can never 'appeal and satisfy as it should if there be in it rivalling elements which divert and distraot--figures looking out of the | canvas as if there lay elsewhere an equally or more important interest. i Many. lives are marred in both | beguty and usefulness by failure to ob- serve this fundamental principle, It}: is not that there may be only one beautiful thing, one worth while thing in life, but that there must be one| thing which predominates, and to which all else that is lovely and worth while contributes interest and value; from which, in truth, all else in the ESN ~~ "efoss, 'when"do I get my vaca Yong?" TT : "Vacations? How many vacations do you get, huh?" : "Well I get one when I-go off and another when you go." and ---- ren. ' True hall falls only in. summer e hotter the wi - the | hailstones. ag ' a hav | those | five feet from the entrance itself. gE ij; g 8 Es ) iL i of Jerusalem about A.D. 135. Outside the Garden Tom are dis: tinct traces of a large building, but de- finite proot of what the bullding was ag boon lacking. : Writing of the discovery of the stone in. the Times, the Rev. C. C. Dobson 'fsays that those who view the tomb as 2 'scene of the Resurrection e always regarded the traces as the Temple of Venus erected by Hadrian, but it was felt that fur ther proofs of identification were need: ol: 3 ~ The shrine-stone Is a< small one, | mefisuring ten Inches by seven inches, It lay buried in the soil in front of the rock-face ¢ontaining the entrance to the Garden Tomb, and about thirty- -The Garden Tomb lies in the slope - of "the Skull Hill," just outside the Damascus Gate. Attention was first drawn. to it by the late General Gor- don a few years after its discovery in 1867. He had become convinced that the so-called Skull Hill was no other than the Hill of Calvary, and this con- viction led to his seeking for and re- unearthing this tomb, Owing to the publicity thus given to it at the time, the tomb and surrounding ground were obtained by a Géfman as a mat ter of speculation, and He offered it for sale for £2000. A strong commit. it. i _ Britain Preserves Tomb. Ever since the tomb has been pre- served together with the garden * We GUARANTEN thom for 8. week shesd. P. POULIN & CO, LIMITED 1 36<39 Bonsecours Market, . sloshae. Mala 7107 ruins of the tomb two tombstones "were un- earthed bearing inscriptions to "Non. | nus and Onesimus, deacons of the Church of the Resurrection," ¢ tee was formed in England to purchase . od w of an early church. In a vault adjoining = Bt

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