Atwood Bee, 13 Nov 1914, p. 4

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fa 2 c ee eee: , 4 ) =F >HOME : ) » i $ 8 headlong. He did not convince his} @ Fashion Hints $ 'accusers that he.had not been one| @, a of Weetcsane s followers. His denials, 4 with cu and swearing, might | Qeeeeeees Selected Recipes. have acoured thom them that be had lett Fads and Fanci Baked Pork Chops With Dress- Jesusand now was not a disciple. nagar ies is: 'Ing.--Select six medium pork chops. Make a dressing as you would for hicken or any fowl. ace the pork chops one on top of the other ith dressing between. The fat on the ends of the chops makes snough rease for baki g: Simpler Cookie Baking..-- When baking cookies a great amount vi uel may be saved as well as time y having a large piece .f zine cut to fit your oven, raised slightly at the end, or one can have + handle put on for 5 cents. Put cookies oa be zine instead of pans and see ow quickly a hundred can be bak- No wasted room Che ete, bed in between The zine can be scrub Bread Souffle.--Soak two cups etal bread crumbs in hot milk. Add one cup grated cheese and beat roughly with an egg beater. \Beat three eggs till light and add one-half teaspoon salt -and one- fourth teaspoon paprika. Put a tablespoonful butter in sauce pan nd cook half-the mixture at a time, cooking more slowly than an ome- Jet. When it is set, fold over the edges and serve immediately. Potato Soup. -- Six 'potatoes, three pints of water, one pint milk, 'one egg, one ounce or more butter. (Pare and cut into small pieces the per, Put with the wat:r to boi When. the potatoes have 'cooked to pieces, add the milk, but- jter and well beaten eggs. The egg jafter beating should be mixed with a little of the soup:before it is add- | ed to it. Hot water should be add- 'ed from time to time to replace that lost by evaporation. Marshmallow Apples, -- Wash, wipe and core the apples. Place in pan and fill the holes with sugar, a small piece of butter on top of each und a sprinkle . of cinnamon if wanted. Sprinkle sugar in pan and add a little water. When ap- ples are cooked through, remove from oven, fill holes with nut meats, place a marshmallow on top of each apple and place in oven until the marshmallow is a dainty browa. he flavor is delicious and when ap- mk is placed on a lettuce leaf it is deed pleasing to look at For Scotch eggs boil six eggs 'hard, take them out of the water, crack them. and put in cold water; this will preserve their color and ke the sti sonte off easil : Dowod of matsag and ham, Se ike any Savoury mixture 'of cold meat ; season well with pep- 'per, salt, parsley, and a piach of nutmeg; divide the meat into six portions, envelop an egg in each, dip into beaten egg, cover with bread-crumbs, and fry in boiling fat, which must be deep enough to cover the eggs completely. Cut each egg in halves before serving. For Scotch broth put on your pot with less than two gallons of water, a teacupful of best barley and peas, let it boil, add 1% |b. of good, fresh beef or mutton off the flank, one carrot cut into very small slices, One quarter of turnip the same. Cut another carrot into thick slices and ahalf turnip {to eat with your meat), let all boil together for an hour, then add another carrot grated, and quarter of turnip also grated, three or four good thick leeks, two cr three potatoes cut into pieces. Let all boil for two hours before dishing. Let stand a few minutes, then skim off all the fat into a bowl, and put aside. This with potatoes, makes a good two davs' dinner for a family of six or eight. t Ways of Saving. Save badly cut pieces of bread, and slices left over from the table for a bread pudding or a Brown Betty. Save every scrap and crust to crumb.up for stuffings or to use for breading scallop dishes, cro- quets, etc. 2. Remove the sinew from the legs of a fowl when it is drawn and the meat of the leg will be as good as that of the second joint. 3. Cold rice should always be saved, it can be added to a soup, mashed into croquets, mixed with eggs, and fried like hominy or used in a scallop dish. 4. Left over vegetables when the amount is too small to be served again may be mixed in a soup sliced together -a&nd boiled with gravy fora ragout, or used separ- atelly or together for a salad. Cauliflower, potatoes, and cabbage are good broken in small! pieces covered with grated: cheese and baked in a. baking dish, "a la gratin." . 5. Small sorbtons 'of left over cereals may be .added to the pan- cake batter and will greatly im- rove the cakes. Or they may be 'rolled into balls and friend, or add- ed to the soup stock. 6 The tough ends of steak may be chopped very fine, seasoned well with pepper, salt, 'butter, and a little onion juice and formed into balls or cakes for sautes or broiled for luncheon. Scraps of white meat may be chopped, mixed with a white sauce -warmed.up and gar- pished with parsley and hard-boiled eggs. e carcasses of fowl and the bones of roasts should be used make'a nourishing soup. Beef tee Roll ¢ méat, cithor 8 ft Our illustration will help in giving one the reason for the protract Aisne and why the Germans have been able to offer so tenacious a tection, further, against enfilade fire. ; to look like ordinary clumps of bushes, between the stems of which € used materially aiding the concealment. by the two trenches towards the centre of-the picture, whiclt 'are shown vews. To conceal the trenches leafy The visual effect of the bush 6 men fired, the f cayer at a little way off, 60 screened. --Ilustrated. War the Aisne. d nature of the fighting in wh ance. way in shelter-trenches deep ® ground, anches were planted in ~ with emergency along the j they enotigh to pro- front so as eless powder is well fat and drippings and the fat from poultry should be,clarified and kept for. frying. Wings and legs o fowls that are left over are good grilled for' luncheon. 7. Shur milk may be used for corn bread, griddle cakes, ginger bread, and biscuits. It may 'be made into cream cheese or turned into a refreshing drink by icing it and whipping it for about five minutes with an egg beater. Household Hints. Economy in fuel must be con- sidered a very important factor in wise planning of meals. Scatter grated. white potato over the carpets if you wish to clean them and freshen their colors. Use a bicycle pump to clean such parts of the sewing machine as you cannot reach with a cloth. Before peeling onions let stand in water, then peel, and eyes will not smart so badly. Aleohol, ether, chloroform, car- bona, gasoline and naphtha soap them the Thi INTERNATIONAL, LESSON, 7} NOVEMBER 15. veson Vil. Jesus and Peter. Mark . 27-81, 58, 54, 66-72. Golden Text, 1 Cor. 10. 12. 27. All ye shall be offended--Af} the very time when Jesus it have turned all. his attention to himself he thinks of the disciples. They would suffer because of him that night. And he wanted ito res lieve their pain, It was inevitable thatthe shepherd must be taken and the sheep scatterer 28. Howbeit, a I am. -aised, up, I will go before you into: Galilee | --They would be united again and he would be with them. So the sorrow of Gethsemane and the * pain of Calvar be to be changed into the joy of Galilee 29. But Peter eaid unto him, Al- SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSOIsi his ° looked upon him--Doubtless ans ut other duties Jand would not have heen attracted man warming himself at the fire had there not been something unusual about this man. The air of the high priest's courtyard was elec- tric with the fact of the capture of So the eyes even of the servants would be keen and the alert to anything out of the Thou also wast with the Was concerned by a the prophet. ears ordinary. azarene, even Jesus--There are in the words th certainty and a taunt. She is in no doubt 68. ter hot the days may be the are cool and a fire is wel- Peter~tad not so far for- But he denied, saying He was caught and he knew it. 72. And Straightway the second time the cock crew. A Peter called to mind the word--He was s0 busy denying when the cock crew the first time and so afraid of bodily ger that he did net notice the 'ease iiie sound. Now he had gone as far as he could in denying Je- sus, and, doubtless, he also felt assured he was in no danger of bodily harm. He was meditating the awfulness of -his act when the cock crew the second time. Now when ha thought thereon, his better nature, his true self, came to the front. He could | upon his true other self, his evil side, which caused him to deny his Master. And what a' mean, 'small, shrunken self he caw! a ers The Biggest Room. A gentleman, seeing an adver- tisement in the paper, "A five- roomed house to let," went to have a look at it. It was just the size he wanted, but was sadly out of re- pair. He went to the agent's of- fice, and said he didn't want a six- roomed house. 'That isn't a six- roomed house," said the agent. "Oh, yes it is."' "But I say it is not," and the agent began count- ing--"There's the kitchen, the din- ing-room, the 'reception room, and two bedrooms--that's five, isn't it?"? "Yes, but there's the room for improvement," said the prospect- ive tenant, "and that's bigger thao any of the others." hn Goslings From One Egg. gos oslings have just been hatched rom & single egg on one of the farms of Messrs. Chivers and land. Such an event is almost un precedented, the birds from double- yolked eggs usually being deformed, if they hatch out at all, which is rarely the case. These twins are Sons, at Histon, Cambridge, Eng- or. now does what the coward S eae does; tries to evade the issue. I | neither know, nor understand what thou sayest--This maid spoke a dia- © well shaped Vand healthily develop- ed, and there is every indication that they are going to grow into fine lect different from that which Peter It would seem that Peter, |4¥ what she said, tried to make out he did not Hither this is the used. understanding plainly understand her. vigorous birds. The egg that pro- the twin birds was hatched out by a hen, who is devoted to her foster children. " , interpretation of Peter's words or : ot water are all good solvents for Shoah te See 6 aa a to show ignorance of eee ee Pq aoe Braising i: beat dor ange Piece . flects in some unfavorable way, Stet pen Ma goin Wren ye To which of your cronies did he re- nm meat. Sear shaniearas: Peter» not ight. mea pace herbs, -- * eook a self gic sai : eT ie The can panes eg iy a eRb..: eens ng and slowly in a cove pan. ravery, also 18 the Pr sai hurry, or she attached littl coriee- A woman can aieaye tell een a 'It makes sponge cake very light | other disciples qukies ihe presence 2% P | man is beginning to fall in love and spongy, if a tablespoonful of water, with the chill off, is put into the cake mixture directly after put- ting in the eggs. After washing quilts and while they are still on the line, but near- ly dry, beat them with a carpet beater and they will be wonderfully light. The annual coat of oil not only prolongs the life of willow and cane furniture, but it keeps it from be- coming so dry that tiny splinters stick out. Newly baked bread should be lightiy covered with a clean cloth while it is cooling, and if it is net aired when it is taken from the oven, it is apt to be soggy. oot from a stove or chimney where wood is burned, if put into a pitcher and boiling water poured over it, makes a healthy drink for house and garden plants. To remove perspiration stains from waists, sponge the place with a clean rag, wet in clear, cold wa- ter. Then cover with powdered chalk and brush off carefully with a soft brush. When beating the whites of eggs with a rotary egg beater, try hold- ing the beater at an angle instead of straight up and down in the bowl. his accomplishes the work much quicker. 30. Even this ni . thou shalt deny me thrice-- a knew Peter. He spoke poy ies him. It would; almost seem as though Jesus spoke | so quietly that ri Cchees did not overhear. 31. He spake exceeding vehe- | mently--A great many people take vehemence for much strength. --It is frequently the dissipation of what| little strength remains. no real bravery in Peter, bravery is as silent as the deep flowing stream. not be announced. If I must die with thee--His utterance gains in And in like manner also said they | all--Peter was so loud and decisive in his declarations that the other disciples felt they had to make sot protestation of fidelity and bravety. Then, too, they were safe in security of seclusion--and Jesus ism He had an opportunity to get oe We may well believe that he was | Row so warm up | weed the heat of a fire. And the cock crew--This was the first warn- There was still time to get 'away before the second denial be- | nig. came necessary. 69. The maid turned to those that There was stood by and said, pointing to Pe- for ter, This is one of them. She was 'One of them.' Its presence need Everybody in that courtyard knew referred to and who He could as little have emphasis as it loses in prudence. | | hidden himself by denial as the os- trich can by sticking. its head in the sand. sure and positive. who "them""' Peter was, 70. And after a little while--Pe- ter evidently stood by making as a front as possible, bold ing company with By keep- the enemies of Jesus he would be accounted an with her; but if she is sensible she will keep the news to herself until it begins to dawn on him. Fur is used to aie many of - the new broadcloth s Winged skirts with 'side plaits are one of the new styles Imitation porcelain flowers are seen on the new millinery. The military note' is evident many of the new fashions. Tricorne and continental shapes are in favor for winter hats lack enamel jewelry ~ with rhinestones is in high favo uits in large checks are trimmed with bone buttons and brai ng and short haired nibelines are among the favorite cloths. Sharkskin cheviot is one of the favorite cloths for the quiet suit. Fine | coats are made with military collars and artillery capes. The new net flouncings have won- derful designs of sparkling spangles. Some of the new dresses have their skirts cut full and no over- skir rabou and ostrich are fre- quently combined in the new neck- pieces Silk ratine, plaided or striped, is used for charming girdles and trim- mings Satin and chiffon is a favorite combination for the dark colored blouse. Corbeau blue with brown is 4 combination much prettier than it sounds. Red panne velvet and red tulle are occasionally used for evening dresses. Many of the new laces are broidered with gold "and colored threads. Long haired cream colored plush is used for evening wraps and lined ig brocaded crepe in vivid col- in a of the new jackets are made with belts showing in front, but hidden under the jacket in the back. After Waterloo. I came across an old couple ons night coming out of a moving picture show, writes "J.8." in the Glasgow News. I was ienmactintety behind them, and could not help héaring the wife inquirin' as to the reason of the old man's dissatisfied expres- sion. "What's rang noo? Did ye no like 'The Battle 0' Waterloo? "" 'Waterloo !" the husband grumb- led. "D'ye no' ken my grandfather fought in the battle,-and I have bever saan him ina'. the pictures.' , "Well, madam, is your husband out of danger?' '"'Is isn't quite sure; the doctor is coming again." "Everyone that heareth these words of mine, and doeth them, shall be likened unto a man who built his house upon the rock; and the rains descended, and the floods with them. enemy. At aeaat & so he thought. But| came, and the winds blew and beat Verses 53, 54. See Lesson Text they . said to Peter--Not once | upon that house; and it fell not, Studies for November 1, or twice, but sovenak times, was| for it was founded upon the rock."' 66. Beneath in the court--The| Peter confronted with the fact, He|--Matthew vii., 24-95: room, One of the maids of the priest--There was no rest, evident- ly, in the house of the high p during those hours of darkness. 67. Warming himself--The nights are cold in Palestine even at Easter time. The climate is similar to that trial was taking place in an set of some parts of California. Md not only but he spoke like one. company of the prophe 71. looked like a Galilaean What would a Galilaean be doing there that night when the renowned prophet of Galilee had been captured and was on trial if he were not of the t? But he began to curse and to swear, I know not this man of whom ee ieee Ae + ont This question is not new! It has been asked whenever a whole s80- ciety, like eighteenth century rance, has been rotten with cor- ruption ; whenever a barbarous in- stitution, like slavery, has been allowed to flourish; whenever, as in our own day, poverty, unemploy- ment, prison abominations, offer flagrant violation of the religion of the Nazarene. But never has this question been urged with such in- | sistence as to-day, when war is | Tavaging the world from end to jend. Does not the inability of the | Church to stay this conflict demon- | strate its failure as an agent of hu- 'man betterment? Is it not evident |that Christianity has done nothing | to destroy prejudice, soften enmity lor banish lust from the human | heart? Why not frankly admit its fall and turn to other and more {promising means of establishing | justice and peace upon the earth? | The usual answer to this question jis that nobody can say whether or } not Christianity is a failure since It Has Never Been Tried, just to the This answer is witty. @x- | tent that it is untrue! Christianity, interpreted as the simple law. of love to God and man, has been ltried,-at most times timidly and | half. heartedly, but even so.success- | fully: on same few occasions sind cerely and courageously, and al- ways thus triumphantly. Jesus tried - Christianity - in alestine, with results that shook the world. Artisis Form Brigades for Home Defenee in England. St. Francis tried it in Assisi, Da- ; vid Livingstone in Africa, Tolstoy The first genera! parade of the United Arts force at Earl Court, London. The ranks include painters, |jp Russia. Thousands of men and sculptors, actors, and journalists, who have banded together for the home defence of England. "The photo women, known and unknown, have shows a general.view of the parade with wee General Sir Afred Turner addressing the men. Included~ | ried it and are trying it, and never in the ranks are Mr. John AaNpys A.R.A., men of arts and letters. . R. Benson, the actor and manager, and other prominent once withont snoeess ! Nor is it only in privat te life and K ane '|Thousands Have Tried It and Ar It, and Never Once Without Success rying by separate individuals that Chris- tianity us been tested. Moro widely than we realize it has been applied to social life, and numer- ous institutions, such as the ¢am- ily and the echool, have been brought under its sway,, Nowhere, of course, has the application been complete. But just to the extent that the tria! has been made the result is in terms of happiness, prosperity and peace has been im- mediate and permanent. If anywhere in the hainging there are violence and misery, it is not because Christianity oa as failed, but on the contrary because something else, very different from Christian- ity, has failed. Take the Present War, for example! Hero, nlainly enough, isa failure of bat®. ships and standing armies to se guard inter- national peace; a failure of mili- tarism to train great peoples in the virtues of gentleness and honor; a failure of secret diplomacy to guide the nations in paths of amity and concord; a failure of commer- cial interests to bind mankind to- gether by the bonds of mutual! in- erest; a failure of a social order to prosper on the basis of force and hatred. But nowhere is there a failure of Christianity. For when has this religion had any part io the governance of people? What kings have ever ruled in the spirit of the Carpenter? What statesmen have ever deferred the aggrandize- ment of nations to the welfare of humanity? Failure is heret But it is the failure, not of Christianity but of barbarism, not of Christ but of Caesar, not,of love but of blood and iron! On some glad day in the future, "the tumult and the shouting' of this present horrot will die--' 'the captains and the kings depart." And then amid its blood and teats and wreckage shall the sad world see that "Still -- Thine ancient sacri- fice, A- humble --iey and a contrite ieart as . John Haynes Holmes. ° ém- -

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