Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 4 Jun 1936, p. 6

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Sn onl or, ie rl @ De : FE Sa HT | By Mair M. Morgan a Queen Anne Cherries will soon he fresh upon the market, but they al- ways can be bought canned and their -€00] cream ¢plor with a blush of red on one cheek probably accounts for their romantic name. A summer salad that can't go wrong may be made by putting either fresh or canned whole pitted cherries into molds of raspberry or. cherry quick- getting jelly and this set upon a bed of curly endive is irresistible as a cool luncheon, bridge or supper dish. ' CHERRY SALAD 1 package quick-setting cherry jelly powder; 1 pint warm water; 1 cup of nit ia, pitied and halved; 1 white cherries, pitied and halve 1 cup canned pincapple, diced. Dissolve jelly in warm water. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in fruit. Turn into mold. Chill until firm, Un- mold on crisp lettuce or endive, Gar- nish with mayonnaise. Serves 6. There are several varieties of this jelly salad that will give you different ideas for several weeks, Water cress may be used as a nest for the quick-setting jelly. Tiny balls of honey dew melon may be used in the jelly instead of cher- ries. oo . kN Suited olives and round of sweet --------gherkins- maybe used "instead ot cherries and introduced into lime or Jemon jelly. The color of your flowers, china. or linen to be used for the particular oc- casion may determine the kind of quick-setting jelly and fruit to be used and pretty colour contrasts add a dec- orative note to the attractiveness of "such salads and desserts. This Week's Winners VITAMIN SALAD 2 tablespoons of gelatine; 3 cup of coll water; 14 cup mild vinegar; 2 tablespoons lemon juice; 2 cups of boiling water; 1-3 cup white sugar; 1 tablesffoon salt; 2 cups cabbage, shredded; % cup chopped celery; 3-4 _c¢up cooked peas (green); 3-4 cup of shredded carrots. . Soak gelatine in >old walter, vine- gar, lemon juice for 20 minutes, add boiling water, sugar and salt. When 'mixture is cool add ingredients. Turn Into mold first dipped in cold water. Remove to bed of lettuce. -- Mary Crosier, R.R. No. 3, Stouffville, Ont, ORANGE ADE 6 oranges chopped fine; 2 ounces of citric acid; 2 quarts of boiling water, Let stand over night (12 hours). In the morning strain and add 314 bs. of white sugar, and boil ten minutes. Bottle up. When opening bottles for using pour so much Inte a glasg, then fill the remainder with ice water, This makes a very refreshing drink and it is lovely for picnics. Jt desired you may use lemons in the place of oranges thus making le- monade. -- Miss Clare M. lardy, R.R, No. 3, Port Perry, Ontario, Weekly Cash Prizes We are offering one dollar for cach recipe printed, giving the most In- teresting variation of a salad dish or refreshing drink for this time of the year, HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the nec- essary ingredients and method of your favorite salad and summer drink and send together with name and ad- dress to Household Science, Ré¢om 421, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Save Freak Hands NEW YORK--For the best. or worst bridge hand, $5.00, Apply to Ely Culbertson. The contract bridge J maestro announced he would pay for authentic information about genuine one-suited hands, or hands contain- ing nothing higher than a five-spot. He wishes to calculate the chances of such holdings. The hands must be dealt in rubber bridge. Each one participating in the game must at- test before a notary as the genu- ine nature of the exceptional hand. Trying Out a Driver Observes tho Toronto Mail and Em- pire -- The Mail and. Empire has now heard froni a Toronto motorist who went to the Parliament Buildings to get his driver's permit for 1936. Hav- ing failed to take with him his old permit, he suggested that the official of the Motor Vehicles Branch with whom he was dealing might look up. his records, as he had been driving a cai for years, The. official refused, and told him that unless he-produced his permit as requested, he would have to submit to a test as to his ability to drive, So consequently he made an appoint- ment, and In due time went out with a department instructor. When he fin- ished he was informed that he was a fair driver and given his permit, the cost of which was double the regular price, as he had to pay the instructor. The applicant resented this treat ment, as he had been driving motor cars for over 20 years. le suggests that the toll gate is too activd, and considers that the time-honored "ex- pression "The law is _an ass," is not inappropriate, Fran-es Nallé believes in trying out the latest in swimming suits before approving. We'd say it vias a success. - | HOOL esson i LESSON X. -- June 7 JESUS IN GETHSEMANE-- Luke 22 : 39--71 TEXT Luke 22 : 39-.53 GOLDEN TEXT.--Not my will, but thine, be done. Luke 22 : 42. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME. -- The agony in _the Garden and the arrest of Jesus took place on Thursday evening of Passion Week, April 6, A.D. 30; the trials before Annas, Caiaphus, and the Sanhedrin, together with the denial of Peter, took place from midnight Thursday to. 6 a.m., Friday, April 7. PLACE. -- The events recorded in vs. 39--53 ceecurred in the Garden' of -Gethsemane at the foot of the Mount of Olives to the east of the city of Jerusalem; the denial of Peter took place in the court of the. high priest's palace; the Sanhedrin undoubtedly met in the same place, the. palace of Caijaphus.. RE ER THE PLAN OF THE LESSON Subject -- The Contrast between the Perfect Obedience of Jesus Christ to the Will of God and the Awful Obedience of His Enemies to the Will of Satan. 39. "And he came out, and went, as his custom was." John tells us (18 : 2) that "Jesus oft-times resort- ed thither with His disciples". There is no privacy in Oriental homes. Jesus retired to the Mount of Olives for twedlr an omnipotent God and our own fainting hearts, and gives strength" with which we may success- fully contend against sin. ' 41. "And He was parted from them about a stone's cast." Literally this might mean, "He was drawn away," "by the violence of His emotion, which was too strong to tolerate the "And He kneeled down and prayed." Standing for prayer was the common attitude in the Gospels (Luke 18 : 11; Matt. 6 : 5; Mark 11 : 25). Kneel- ing the only attitude in prayer men- 'tioned in relation to the Lord Jesus, execpt in the parallel passage in Mat- thew, where it. says that Christ "fell on His face," as He prayed. .It is interesting to note how often the prayey (Acts 7 : 60; 9 : 40; 20 21 : b; Eph. 3:14). . 42. "Saying, Father if- Thou be willing, remove this cup from me." Jesus was not afraid of mere physical death as we know death. The mar- tyrs themselves were not afraid of death. It was the. particular death that He must die from which Christ shrank. He died as a sacrifice for sir. - "Nevertheless not my Will, but Thine, be done." here, the will of God, and the will of Christ, These two wills in Jesus 3 36; prayer, for meditation, for feollow- ship, to be away from the distracting, noises of the city, from the conflicts of men, from things visible and ma- terial. "Unto the mount of Olives." Luke does not tell us, but, from Mat- thew and Mark, we gather that the place was known as "Gethsemane," which means "oil-press". Near by were large presses for extracting oil from the olives which were grown am the olive groves on the mount that derives its name from this fact. "And the disciples also followed Him." - He took with Him to the garden probably the eleven disciples, but He allowed to go into the garden with Him only three, Peter, James, and John. 40. "And when He was at the place, He said unto them, Pray that ye enter not into temptation." Their present temptation was that they should fail the Lord Jesus at this critical hour, and so they did. Prayer keeps open were not in conflict, ~All sin- arises from our doing our own will, without consulting or being obedient to. the will of God. ~ = 43. "And there appeared unto Him an angel from heaven, strengthening Him." (Cf. Matt. 4 : 11. We are not told that the angel said anything, nor are we told in what particular way strength was communicated. At least we know that the presence of this heavenly -messénger was a divine re- frsching for His soul. 44. "And being in an agony." We such an experience as this. Christ was in conflict" with all the hideous horrors of the kingdom of darkness, and probably, though it is not so stat- eed, with the arch-enemy of God, Satan. fe) 5% ; 44. "He prayed more carnestly." Jesus knew _that victory was in prayer alone. "And His sweat became as it were great drops of blood fall- ing down upon the ground." Luke, the channels of communication be- as natural to a physician, is the only sympathy of even the closest friends." - later followers. of _Jesus_ knelt for. There are two wills. one to notice all this terrible experi- ence of our Lord's. Undoubtedly, the words would lead us to believe that His sweat was mixed with blool, and indeed, that such fell from Him in "great drops". : * 54. "And- when He rose up from His prayer, He came unto the dis- ciples, and found them sleeping for sorrow, And said unto them, Why sleep ye? rise and pray, that ye en- ter not inte temptation." Luka does not give the three petitions uttered hy Jesus whici; are found in the ac- counts of Matthew and Mark. "The conection between Gethsemane and the Garden of Eden, of which it is the + wful anti-type is unmistakable, - "While He yet spake." Judas in- truded upon Jesus in one 'of the most sacred hours of His life, while He was at prayer alone with God, on the night of the passover. "Behold, a multitude," The multitude consisted of the chief priests and elders (Luke 22 © 52); the officers and some of the temple guard of Jews under the com- mand of the Sanhedrin (Luke 22 : 52; John 18 : 12); a Roman cohort and its captain (John 18 : 12); servants, probably those armed with staves (Mark 14 : 43, 47). "And He that was called Judas, one of the twelve, went before them." "The evangelists seem not to be able to get rid of the horror in the fact that it was one of the twelve who brought this armed multitude to seize the Master." "And he drew near unto Jesus to kiss Him." The verb means "to kiss re- peatedly, with great affection." "But Jesus said unto him, Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?" Jesus does not say, "bé- trayest thou Me," but "betrayest thou the 'Son of Man?" He reminds Judas that it is the Messiah that he is treating with this amazing form -of treachery. g "And when they that were about Him saw what would follow, they said, Lord, shall we smite with the sword? And a certain one of them smote the servant of the high priest, and struck off his right car." It was not until many years later, when John comes to write his account of this night, that the names of Peter and Malchus are actually given as those involved 'in this act of violence, "for the years would teach them that Christ's cause is served by dying, not by killing." ~ Pre "But Jesus mmswered and said, Suffer ye -them thus far." This was probably addressed to the disciples and literally meant "Hold! Let it go 'no further!" "And He touched his ear, and healed him. "It was a typi- cal act of mercy to an enemy, but had also,- no" doubt, a practical bearing. Jesus did not allow his assailants jus ication for claiming that He was leader of an armed band." "And Jesus said _unto the chief priests, and captains of the temple, and clders, that were come against Him, Ave ye come out, as against a robber, with swords and staves?" The submission of Jesus to His great life purpose is nowhere more evident than-here; yet; though our Lord knew full well how He would be treated, He could not allow these men to so wickedly and unjustly seize Him without rebuking them. "When I was daily with you in the temple, ye stretched not forth your hands against me: but this js your hour, and the power of darkness." The Lord, in this last' phrase, revealed to this mob the deeper causes for that which was taking place -- that, first, it was an hour which had been allowed them by God, agd, secondly, that, though they did hot know it, power of darkness. Cowbird's Bad Habits: Writes the Calgary Herald -- "Use- ful as the Cowbird is as an insect des- troyer, its domestic; character is sad- ly lacking in morals. Like the English cuckoo, the Cowbird is polygamous, and totally careless of its offspring. The unnatural mother surreptitiously lays a single cgg in the nest of a smaller bird, leaving the hatching and 'rearing of the young Cowbird to it, Occasionally the bird thus imposed on deserts its nest. Sometimes -- as is often the case where the imposition is practised on the yellow warbler-- another nest is built on top of the old one, leaving the Cowbird egg in the in the lower structure. : 'as it can fend for itself, joins a flock There let my heart be still, 'they were acting in the grip of the} Usually, however the role of fos- Rai . ter parent is accepted and the young der rr Cowbird hatched, Once hatched ~-- Choir and Nature seems to contrive that it 2 precedes its foster brothers and -sis- ters by a fey hours -- the young Cow- | birds morals are no better than those of its parents. EF t ok ; Bigger and stronger than the right- ful occupants of the nest, it quickly hoists them out of their cradle" to perish miserably, while it monopoliz- Canadian Itinerary * Includes England, France, Belgium, Germany es the whole attention of -its foster and Switzerland - ; parents, o , : ; 4 : + Yetsfor all the care given it, the Cagadian singers will ba heaid this © Cowhird gives no gratitdde or evi- ¢ summer in some of the leading spas dence of filial affection, and as goon of Europe, and Canadian tourists to the. number. of several hundred. will. - atcompany them, according to plans now completed for a European tour of the famoys Canadian Choir. of Brantford; a unit of 60 trained voices, . under the baton of its founder-con- ductor, Frederic Lord, 3 The choir, which a few years ago undertook a trip to Blackpool, Eng- - land, and acquitted itself with distine- 'tion in the Music Festival in that city, completing with-a concert in Royal Albert Hall. London, under the pa- tronage of His Late Majesty King George V, has had a notable career, In the province of Ontario in part'cu- lar, they have presented mapy con- certs, as well as radio broadcasts over the Canadian Radio Commission's coast-to-coast - network; They have also been heard over the Columbia network through Station WGR, Buffalo. : ' : The 1936 tour will include engage- ments in England, France, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland, with radio broadcasts from London and Paris, and the itinerary will include Chester, Leamington, the Shakespeare Country, London, Brussels, Cologne, the Rhine Valley, Wiesbaden, Heidelberg, Baden- | - Baden, Lucerne, Interlaken and Paris, The choir, and tourist party, travel- ing at specially reduced rates, will sail from Montreal July 25th on the C.P.R. liner Montcalm, - returning from Cherbourg August 18th aboard the S.S. Duchess of Richmond. Many reservations from different parts of the country have been made with the secretary of the Canadian Choir in Brantford. Type Tins Suggestions for the Steno- : grapher Whip. Makes Mistakes oo Remember that the most lenient employer has a limit to his patience. Every error in typing causes a big delay and reduces the effective rate of operation, so that speeds are cer- tainly often not what they are quoted ° to the staff manager. It would be an interesting experi- ment to find out the actual tinie lost by these delays. Sev. al big concerns do assess the time lost through errors and book-it against the typist. - A typing error takes at least fifteen seconds to alter, and if there are sev- eral carbons a much longer time. ; Therefore if: you tell an employer that you do sixty words a minute but 'make one error in every" hundred words, this reduces your real speed to about fifty words a minute. But a reduction of one-sixth in wages due to "goods not. being up to description" would be a blow to many typists: ------ RE Many business men, politicians, world-famous authors, and others 'have been asked how they assess the. typewriting ability of their secre- taries. po. In nearly every.case thé answer has been that two qualities in a secretary are important: first, that she should be able to meet any emergency and never be hindered by mechanical in- efficiency, and second, that she should reduce the actual typing to completely automatic work so that she and the employer gan forget about it. of its own kind to-continue the irre- sponsible life of its ancestors, It is' one of the anomalies of the bird world. It destroys countless insects, yet 'every young - Cowbird raised means the sacrificing of four or.five fledglingg of some of our loveliest songsters equally valuable as pest destroyers, .. Too Much With Me Woods are too much with me, Woods and the sea, ~ Give me a quiet hill There let my spirit rest, And my sore thoughts be blest, On a bare hill; . Not by the woods and sea, They are too much with me; Give me a hill, ---Berne Cooper Sun, in the New York FOR SUMMER DAYS i RTE WW wenn ne For tennis or'the beach, it is always useful to have a skirt to complete your shirt and shorts rig as this smart cotton print ensem- "ble. EE Sa -- Those who go in for a serious game of tennis will especially like "the comfortable shorts. They are of the culotte type with double -plaits. They give the effect of a skirt. -The shirt with halter strap back is delightfully cool and ex- ceedingly chic. To wear to-and from the tennis court or beach, the buttoned front skirt is easy to don, Style No. 2936 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 16 requires 414 yards of 39- inch material for entire outfit. IR} Collars dre Versatile-- Go as They Please Collars, like Topsy, "just grew'. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size - of pattern wanted. Enclose 15c in |, stamps or coin (coin preferred); | wrap it carefully, and 'address your order to Wilson Pattern i + They are almost as broad as they are $orviee; 73 Went Adelaide Street, long, and they go as they please. / ~ Softly feminine in crepe or chiffon, purely demure in pique or rXther - . 39 starchy linen--your cuffs also sh utd correspond, FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer killing him, though "Quite so, Petrie. merciful. But heaven help Good night." "I have it," | told Nayland Smith. "Fu Manchu has instructions to keep Eltham from going to China without how, | don't know." He probably has orders to be 0 victim of Chinese mercy! 'awful Chinese doctor, scomed again to sea his face, with those strange green oyes, Porhaps at this moment he was near. The mastiff Caesar howled without ceasing. 1 | had looked once upon the and now, alone in my room, | ETT Te 1 gazed out at the moon- lit lawn: with the shrubbery showing like an island in a oon sea. MH was in that wo Denby's dog had been killed; into it vanished the stra creature seen by Miss ir Puig c secrot cl of bushes hold? a 'The Mary Stuart bonnet has pro- duced the ruffle neckline, one that is either gathered flatly and thiead- ed with a cord to tie at the side, or The Mastiff's_Escape "Suddenly the mastiff's howlings ceased, then broke out afresh, but now in a tone of sheer anger. 'He was alternately howling and snarling and crash- ing to the end of his chain. Suddenly the dog broke | / one which frames the face like a » Toby frill, thus pushing up your chin just a trifle higher. Very good for double chins, ' 3 An odd flower or leaf embroidered haphazardly on the bodice or slceve of a frock raises the question in one's mind as to whether. it is there by ac- cident or design. : However, small medallions of flow- ers embroidered in bright Hungarian colorings, in correct geometrical for- mation on the tops and cuffs of other dresses, convince one 'of the attrac- tiveness of this decorative fashion. The Navy also enters into the ques- tion "of the collar vogue, many styles for the younger generation having a truly nautical -air. . pn ' "People laud you up to heaven, but they always kinda hope you'll fall plumb down to--well, flat on your *® H face." --Paul Whiteman, 9 4 % atx To Tour Europe ° « we u

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