Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 23 Apr 1936, p. 2

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A + Woman's World "By Mai M. Morgan » Velvet ice cream, without a tpace ot jee crystal is one of the cleverest.ach- fevements of. the modern took. Most ice creams made in mechanical re- frigevators, have horrid little -bits of ice in them. If the creams are made. almost entirely of cream, they have no crystals but are too rich to be ap- petizing. The recipe given here uses only 1 cup of cream to 2 cups of milk and the mixture can be frozen in a mechanical refrigerator, or even if you haven't a mechanical refrigerat- or you can get a velvet smodih jce cream without turning the freezer. Put this mixture of equal parts of galt and ice. Let them stand threc to four hours. : In- using this recipe. unsweetened minute tapioca that cooks in five min- utes after it is heated is the one re- quired for this ice cream, 3 tablespoons five-minute tapioca, 2 cups milk, 1-3 cup sugar, 1-4 tea- apoon-vanilla, 3 tablespoons light corn syrup; 2 egg whites, 1 cup of cream, whipped, 2 tablespoons sugar, Add minute tapioca to milk in top of double heiler. Place over rapidly boiling water, bring to scalding point (allow 3 to 5 minutes) and cook for hb minutes, stirring frequently. Strain hot mixture, stirring (not rubbing but gently stirring) through very fine sieve onto 1-3 cups sugar, salt and corp syrup. Stir until sugar is dissoly- ed. Chill. Add 2 tablespoons sugar-to egg whites and beat until stiff; fold into cold tapioca mixture. Fold in cream and vanilla, 'Turn into freezing {ray of automatic refrigerator and treeze as rapidly as: possible -- 3 to 4 hours is usually required, or packed in containers as suggested by the dietitian. Makes one quart of ice cream, te ant A perfect accompaniment for this fee cream is a light Cocanut Layer Cake. 2 cups sifted cake flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 14 teaspoon salt, 2-3 cup butter or other shortening, 1 cup sugar, 3 egg yolks, well beaten, 1-3 cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 3 egg whites, stiffly heaten. hc TT Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder and salt, and sift together fhree times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually, and cream to- gether until light and fluffy. Add the egg yolks; then four, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, Beat after each addition until smooth.~Add in 2 greased Y-inch laygr payg in mod- erate oven (375 degrees 1.) 25 to 30 minuts. Double recipe to make three 10-inch layers. Spread with Minute Frosting. 2 egg whites, unbeaten, 112 cups of sugdtr, 136 teaspoons light corn syrup 5 tablespoons water, 1 teaspoon ot vanilla. . Put egg whites, sugar, water, and corn syrup in upper part of the double boiler. Beat with rotary egg beater until thoroughly mixed. Piace over rapidly boiling water, beat constantly with rotary egg beater, and cook for seven minutes, or until. frosting will stand in peaks. Remove from the fire, add vanilla, and beat until thick en- ough to spread. Spread on cake and sprinkle with 11% cups coconut, sou- thern shred style. Makes enough frost- ing to cover tops and sides of two 9-inch layers. This Week's Winners Below appear the two "Main-Course recipes" chosen this week, together with the winners' names and addres- ses: 1 cup bread crumbs, !, cup canned tomatoes, 2 tablespoons of mustard pickle, 2 tablespoons molasses, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 teaspoon salt, ba- con, 2 or 3 slices, 1 egg. Make a paste of flour and salt with some of the tomatoes. Fry bacon until crisp and cut in pleces. | sometimes add 1 tablespoon of dripping Instead of bacon. Mix all ingredients togeth- er except egg which is beaten and is added last. The molasses may be omitted and 1 tablespoon of brown sugar used instead. Bake one hour in moderate oven. Serve hot with to- mato sauce or cold in sfices. -- Mrs. Stewart Nelson, Box 338, Campbell- ford Ontario. > POTATO-MEAT. CAKES -- Left. over meat scraps, 1 medium sized on- jon, 1 well-beaten egg, 1 cup of left- over mashed potatoes, 1 teaspoon of ground sage, 1-4 teaspoon' salt, .and flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder. ...... Put meat and onions through food grinder, enough to fill 1 cup. Add all other ingredients, flour and baking powder being sifted together. Mix thoroughly and form into round thin cakes. Have frying pan heated with small portions of melted lard. Put vanilla and told in egg whites, Bake Seven BEAN LOAF: .2 cups mashed beans sprinkling of pepper, 4 tablespoons of | Return to School After Zeremony "Romance Agreement" Per- mits Young Students to + Continue: at College, dents have heen married here. under a unique. "romance agreement" that permits them to return to college without facing ihe necessity of majn: taining a home. + Ellen Jane Wakefield, 18, lecame the bride of Donald D. Hyland, also 18, at a wedding in the Rectory of St. Paul't Cathedral. Both are membe:'s of prominent families. By the terms of the agreement they separated af ter the. ceremony. The bride returns to the Maryland ('ollege for Women today and the groom will go back to his classes at Duquesne University. Their parents made possible so that the students could be pledged to one another without ending their college careers. "I'm very happy," the. bride said, "I think our parents have been very understanding. I'll be glad» wait for Don, and he for me, and I'm going to learn to cook so when we do start up housekeeping, I'll be all prepared." Young Mrs. Hyland is the daughter of Dr. Clark Wakefield and Mrs, Wakefield. The groom is the son of Mr, and Mrs, Idwin C. Hyland of Schenley Jarms, "They were very much in love and did not want to be separated," suid Mrs. Edwin Hyland. "Don would have been willing to leave college and go to work and maintain a home. But as parents, we are anxious that both of them should have a sound education." the marriage brance's Envoy of Good Will [a Bernard Main de Boissiere, 15- year-old French Boy Scout, pic- tured as he arrived in New York on S. S. Paris as guest of Madison Square Boys' Club. Bernard, who speaks English fluently, -was se- lected from 25,000 French boys for the "good will" mission. in cakes and fry until both sides are nicely browned. This is my original recipe and we as a family find the cakes very tasty. --Mrs, W. M. Burwell, Thamesville, R. R. 1, Ontario, - HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the in- gredients and method of your favor. ite main-course dish and send it to- gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide "Street, Toronto. PITTSBURGH, « Two young stu-{- 'When the violet buds and the bird's When you're not "all dressed up and some place to go" there's. no reason in the world wny you shouldn't: look equally attractive. Home "and porch clothes arg so" adorable these days. Jo Take this one-picce cotton print ~dress for instance. 1c favors smart shirtwaist lines. 'The main dress is such an uncomplicated affair. See small 'view! The wee sleevd frills and jabot stitched on © afterwards, do the trick. It's particularly likable for home wear, because it slips over the-head, and has only onc belt fastening. Style No. 2589 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42-inches bust. Size 36 re- quires 31% yards of 35-inch mate- rial with 2 yard of 35-inch con- trasting. - HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write -your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15¢c in stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it. carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. : The Hyacinth Boy By Audrey Alexandra Brown, in the Winnipeg Free Press The hyecainth boy comes round each] 'Spring, : a-wing, ile. When the pricking spears grass are seen . Edging the silver road with gréen, And 'all the trees on the boulevard With tiny emerald buds are starred. We watch him swinging down the of the street, . Merry and Drown, with slioeless feet -- Under the - broad horse-chestnut leaves, Under the bird's nest in the eaves-- And his ery is blown to us, sweet . and far: "Hyacinths! Hyacinths! are!" Over his arm a tray is slung Filled with greenery fresh young, Pols of delicate bloom for you, Of weaven-rose or of porcelain-blue; Over the lawn and up the stairs He carries his fairly-fragrant wares. Like Spring he comes, and like Spring he goes; Under his feet the crocus blows Yellow as flame; he passes through Clad in a garment of faded blue, And his ery winds back to us, faint and far-- . "Hyacinths! Hyacinths! Tlere they are!" . : Here they and 8 J 39 -- Victoria, B.C. 3 LESSON IV. -- April 26 JESUS LOOKS. AT WEALTH AND. POVERTY. -- Luke 16. °° Luke 16: 19-31. > GOLDEN TEXT. ~: The rich and the poor meet together: The Lord is the maker of them all. -- Pro- verbs 22:2. " 4 THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME -- January, A.D. 30, PLACE -- Peraea. "Now there was a. certain rich man." The word rich in the Latin version is dives, and many assign the) name Dives to this rich man. "And he was clothed in purple and fine linen." Pliny says that the par- ticular linen here referred to was ex- changed for its weight in gold. "Far- ing sumptuously every day." It has been suggested that sumptuously might aptly be changed to flamboy- antly. No dark vice is here referred to; yet selfishness and extravagance are certainly to be understood. - "And a certain beggar named Lazarus." The word Lazarus means, whom God helps, and was a very common one - among the Jews of Christ's time. "Was laid at his gate." The reference here is to a large gateway or portico of the rich man's palace. "Full of soves." The verb, among medical writers, had reference principally to, ulcers. : > "And desiring to be fed with the crumbs that fell from the rich man't table," It is not said that the rich man made provision for Lazarus or that he even knew that Lazarus: was being fed from 'what was left from his sumptuous meals. "Yea, even the dogs came and licked his sores." It is not to be understood as an alle-' viation, but as an aggravation of his ills, that he was left to the dogs, which, in Seripture, are always re- presented as unclean animals. "And it came to pass, that the beg-. gar died, ,and that he was carried away by the angels into Abraham's bosom." To repose - on Abraham's bosom is to be in Paradise for Ab- raham is there. "And the rich man also died, and was buried." Nothing is said about any burial of Lazarus; it has been thought by some that he was simply thrown into a ditch. "And in Hades." Hades is simply the unseen world, the place of de- parted spirits between death and resurfection, and is equivalent to the Old Testament word Sheol, so often translated grave (in the New Testa- ment it occurs in Matt. 11:23; 16: 18; Igyike 10:15; Acts 2:27; Rev. 1: 18; 6:8; 20:13, 14). his eyes, being in torments, and seeth Abraham afar off, and Laz- arus in his boosom." Here our Lord would teach us that the soul is con- scious after death; that the unsaved, after death, consciously suffer; and that the wicked dead are aware of the condition of the blessed dead. "And he cried and said, Father Abraham." It is strange to note that § this prayer is not made to God. The great evangelist, Charles G. rinney, says that the rich man knew ana he most deeply felt that he had cast off God and God, in turn, has cast off 'him;~ He could not think of speak= ing to God. "Have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water." The ex- pression denotes water falling, drop by drop, from the finger whi¢h has been immersed in it. "And cool my tongue; for I am in"anguish in this flame." We need to remember that it was a disembodied spirit who was speaking, so that the flame of very necessity- could not be any more lib- qral than the physical terms which he uses when he speaks of finger and tongue. > "But Abraham said, Son, remem- ber that thou in thy lifetime receiv- edst thy good things. The whole tone of Abraham's reply is certainly gen- tle, though firm. "And Lazarus in like. manner~evi] things." That is, poverty, friendlessness, suffering, ne- glect. "But now here he is comfort- ed, and thou art in anguish," He has sown only to the flesh, ana, wnere- fore, when the order of things has commenced in which the flesh has no "He lifted up| pait, he can only reap in misery and emptiness, in the hungry longing and 'unsatisfied desire of the soul, (Gal. 6:8). seh Fy § "And besides Ju this, between us, and you there is a great gulf fixed, that they would pass from hénce to you may not be able, apd"that none may cross over. ffom thence to us." "The great teaching of this terrible verse is that there "is absolutely no hope for the lost in the next lifé ever being brought out of hell into hea- ven. _ "And he said, 1 pray thee there- fore, father, that thou wouldest send him to my. father's house." "For I have five brethren; that they may testify unto them, lest they also come into this Jace of torment." The argument whieh Abraham gives the rich man knows is unanswerable, and he now makes an altozether dif- ferent request, namely, that he should send Lazarus to his five brethren, still living on 'earth, that he might tell them of their brother's anguish, and, from this, that they might not so live that they aslo would come to 'the same terrible end. : . . "But Abraham saith, They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them." How many homes are like this home of the rich man, where the Bible is known. and probably be- lieved, but never followed in its teachings, where wealth and self- indulgence" have made the Word of God of none effect! "And he said, Nay, father Abra- ham: but if one to go to them from the dead, they will repent. "And he said unto him, If 'they hear not Moses-and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded; if one rise from the dead." No miracle would convince one who closes his heart against the voice of conscience, which ic _the pleading of the Holy Spirit. The Village Gossip The following poetry appeared not long ago in an Ottawa newspaper. It "could very appropriately be en- titled "The Village Gossip" instead of "At the Side of the Road." At the Side of the Road She sits by her house at the side of the road Where the race of men go by, - And none that are good, and none that are bad Escape from her watchful eye. For she scans the landscape far and _ +wide - Where the highways ever ran, As she sits by her house, at the side of the road, pr And gathers the news from man. The children. pass on wen way to school; = She smiles at them, every one, She nows what goes on in all their "homes From the morn till the day is done. For she questions them closaly. one fand all, "The woman of idle hands. Who sits by her' house, at the side of the road, ---- -- And gathers the news from map." - Her sight is good and her hearing keen, wir : They must lower their tones as they talk on the porch, } ' Or she'll have more news to tell, If you give her a bone, she 'cun make a whole fish, For she has great talent to plan All her neighbours' affairs, as she sits by her house And gathers the news from man. Oh, would she could find some useful toil To fill up her idle hours, Or books she. could vead. full of help- ful thoughts : To strengthen her mental powers, But books, nor work, make any ap- peal i To this woman of idle hands, Who sits by her house, at the side of the road, And gathers the news from man, By Sax Rohmer I. -- Eltham's Warning FU MANCHU os a I "That i or Morey at Redmoat, m 0 hn 5 EM . to : land Smith's -- A Tn saply fo Ney or "How tong has he been howhng?"' Smith asked. next question. « The clergyman hesitated for a Looking out of the window, Smith asked casually: "Have you had any sort of waming--a letter, say? And . Pn, from whom?" long time over Smith's | Chinato Nan | am contemplating an immediat come plage, fool sure of your hostile criticism," taid Mr. 1 % an i Modan orm er 1) when decided to return wormed you to aban- Sun-Yat is one of THE SEVEN!" E- to "Now | seel'_interrupted Smith. "Your troubles beg. to China. Yon-Sun-Yat Mining Areas ~~~ Attracting Women he GOLDFIELDS, Sask. --Saskatche- wan's newiy-opened miling areas of- fer opportunities to women willing to- face hardship and dispense with Jux- uries of civilization. Young women of" the west, fired with ambition, already establishing homes 1n are the vast territory spreading from paral lel 53to the Arctic coast. Already the north boasts of pioneer women who trap and hunt and prospect in company with their husbands. Fore- runners of- later settlement, "hardy school teachers and nurses have es- tablished schools and missions hun- dreds of miles beyond the end of steel, Women also are operating cafes, lunch counters and laundries in new centres. : A Pioneer Spirit - Mrs. Steve Yanik, the®first white woman in the -Athabaska goldiields, stepped from a big transport plane in Nyman's Bay more than ten months ago to join her husband. Since then more than a score of women have arrived in the area, liv- ing in tents and aiding in erecting wooden homes. Mrs. -Yanik ,besides assisting her husband in looking after the mall, operates a lunch counter with her sister-in-law, Mary Yanik. Another woman operates an up-to- date news stand. Goldfield's ice-cream is produced in a _hhnd {freezer turned by Mrs: Joe.. Gerhardt, another first . settler. Parkas and other clothing for the northland are turned out on Miss Eva Lonergrin's sewing machine, the first in the area, brought in by plane. Mrs. S. Hargrave operates the. first northland laundry, powered by a gaso- line engine. Another vaman conducts a well-patronized bakery, while Mrs. K. Hansen is the town's first barber and hairdresser, What a Life women, facing life without modern conveniences as: furni- The such ture or electric power, have little en- tertainment and few luxuries. . Most of them find male attire best suited to their work. The north, considered a land of opportunity for adventurous men, car- ried promise for women as well. But to achieve success women must be able to cook, teach, nurse, sew, be resourceful, and : 4villing to endure hardship and privation. In addition, there are almost 1,000 shy and elu- sive young bachelors north of. '53. Good Housekeeper "| She always kept everything perfectly clean, ; {| From the cellar up to the top: For neatness and order she surely-== was keen, And no one could get her to stop. Her hucband could never find comfort. at home, IPor fear he would muss up the place Where his wife with a broom and a duster would roam : With a stern 'sort of look on her face. She never had time lo be reading a book, . : : She never had time for a eall, Instead she was serubbing some corn- er or nook. Or sweeping the stairs in the hall. She: swept all her beauty and glad- ness away, ' She swept all the joy out of life. Until she became an automaton grey, A cleaning machine---not a wife. She scrubbed all the love from the heart of her spouse, Her children-were playless-and glum; She had her reward--an immaculate house, Where nobody ever would come. She swept and she dusted and scyub- bed Till she swept herself into the tomb, And the monument now at the head of her grave 'Is a duster, a brush_and-a broom. - Bags and: Gloves Should Match Your Costumes i. Yo A cording to Paris, fashionable bags. are a comfortable size, and you can really 'get something besides your powder puff into them. The newest ones have handles, too, large enough for you to be able to slip your bag on to your arm. Gloves should match, and a cor- responding contrast, note is often shown in the narrow band and bow of suede at the wrist.' Large initials in the corner of a handbag keep people guessing as to * the owner's name, Gloves are either short, of the slip-on variety, or come well up the arm to meet the elbow or three-quarter length sleeves that are being worn. Stitched diamond-shaped pieces of matching suede are a decorative note above the wrist, or an open-work de- Jim gives the appearance of Taggot- ng. ie Colors are principally black, navy, grey, beige or various shades of brown, Suede will be - a favorite leather for the new season's gloves. . yw } ' re J

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