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Durham Review (1897), 1 Nov 1934, p. 3

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NOMEN SATISFIED _Â¥ ANO soOcIacLy E JUST IRONING 0o NCQOUALITIES e Closely usin es s ried ole wedding alotg with n lubs Must 38 rFeminism as Macde Goal me one e‘singer Frances & tan. bition tage ple NDF nity of nan ‘enâ€" less khurst al of _ was Pank, with franâ€" than The i the W NA and ling re. and hay val lima the many ghts io d most \m' ‘. DP 4 minâ€" «ust ng ind ts , and Eng. ‘eign verne are men Brit. the nade ‘nter w the has ‘ of P ouT to t zht In the same house there hangs over the mantel in the living room, a really lovely flower piece. Only close scrutiny reveals that this too is only wall paper, for at a short distance it looks like a fine old painting. The panel has been framed in a wide gold' A certain bathroom owes its fesâ€" tive air to a colorful border close to its ceiling line. The bathroom itself is painted a soft lettuce green, dark at the base and growing lighter toâ€" ward the ceiling. The border is in a design of graceful swans. At first glance the border looks like a nice bit of hand painting, but on examiâ€" ation, proves to be only wall paper, bought at a few pennies a foot and pasted and shellacked. And from this sumptuous looking and altogether successful dish comes an inspiration for leftovers. Just think of it, any kind of meat may be handled this way! Veal, pork, lamb. beef and all varieties of poultry that have been left from Sunday â€" feast may make their second appearance in this thoroughly inviting {nshion‘ To be sure, the leftover dish will be! more turnover and less meat, but it‘s an idea worth remembering anyway. Chicken Roll Another excellent way to serve chicken with biscuits is to make this same dough, which is much richer than the usual biscuit dough, roll it in a sheet and spread with chicken mixture. _ Then roll up like a jelly roll and bake. Cut in six inch squares. Place the chicken on the dough and fold diagâ€" onally, forming a triangle filled with chicken. Bake fifteen minutes in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) and surâ€" round with buttered peas, diced new carrots, asparagus stalks and potato marbles. 1 Make the dough by mixing â€" and sifting flour, salt and baking powder. Rub in shortening and cut in cold water. Roll on a floured board into a sheet not more than half inch thick Wash and disjoint chicken. Boil until tender with vegetables which have been cut in small pieces. When done remove and discard vegetables which were used to make the chicken deliciously savory. â€" Remove skin and bones from chicken and cut in neat dice. Melt butter and sauted mushâ€" rooms, which have been cut in slices for five minutes. Reserve six fine mushroom caps for garnishing. Sift flour over mushrooms and add diced chicken. Mix well and remove at once from fire. Chickens, biscuits and gravy â€" are combined to provide the chicken turnâ€" over. So, with no extra effort the enterprising cook can give the family a dish that will draw forth enthusiâ€" astic smacking of lips; and the proâ€" blem of equable serving of white meat and drumâ€"sticks is eliminated. Chicker Turnovers This is how a hotel chef prepares the chicken turnovers: One three pound fowl, four or five carrots, two medium sized onions, one head celery, two tablespoons _ salt, half pound mushrooms, one tableâ€" spoon butter, one tablespoon â€"flour. Dough: â€" Four cups flour, half cup butter, half cup lard or other shortâ€" ening, teaspoon salt, one and a half cups water. I Not that the fried and roasted versions will be scorned, but the cook who takes pride in her art wants more compensation for her efforts than to see food disappear. The proâ€" blem is to contrive new combinations of familiar materials that will win the unstinted applause of those hardâ€" boiled tableside critics â€" and that's] something very worth doing. NEW CHICKEN DISH So long as sister and brother lick their chops at the thought of chicken for dinner and argue for white meat drumâ€"sticks, the woman who â€" must plan meals is on the lookout for new ways to prepare this favorite dish. IT°S ONLY PAPER MUTI AND JEFF An Unusual Drink An unusual and refreshing drink can be made by adding the juice of two limes to a pint size bottle of grapejuice. Add enough sugar to taste, and enough ice water to make two quarts in all. Keeping Egg Yolks Fresh ‘ If the white only of an egg is If you have a vase or flower jar that is porous enough to let water seep through and mar the table, make it waterproof by setting â€" the bowl in the warming oven until you melt some paraffin. Then pour the melted paraffin into the warmed vase and roll or tip about until the inside is thoroughly coated. Then , when entirely cool, you may safely use this pottery container without fear of table mars. 4 cup fine bread crumbs, 1 tableâ€" spoon melted butter, % cup ground cornflakes, 1 cup golden syrup. Bake in fairly quick oven. Make pastry fairly stiff, roll out and place in pie pan. While still unâ€" cooked, put in the following filling: Pastry shell: % cup shortening, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon corn starch, 4 teaspoon baking powder, cold water to mix. This can bs kept in waxed paper in refrigerator till needed. Lemon Banana Pie 1 cup boiling water, juice of a lemon, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 beaten °gsg,. bananas, 2 tablespoons corn starch, 1 cup sugar. Add 2 tablespoons corn starch to 1 cup sugar and stir into 1 cup of boiling water. Cook in double boiler J for tem minutes, then add the juice of a large lemon and the butter.' Beat in the egg and spread â€" good ‘ layer in baked pie shell. Cover with| sliced bananas, then add more lemon filling and top with bananas. Cover with _ slightly sweetened whipped cream. Add shortening to flour and salt and work together until well mixed, then add enough ice water to hold together and roll at once on floured board. Pre Crust 2 cups sifted pastry flour, % shortening, 1â€"8 teaspoon salt, 14 ice water. Blend the shortening and water in a mixing bow!, then add to the flour sifted with the salt and the ,baking powder. The crust is ready to use as soon as mixed. . PIE LORE Housewives are always on the lookâ€" out for new pie tricks. Here are some excellent recipes. Excellent Pie Crust 4 cup shortening, % teaspoon Salt, 2% cups pastry flour, % cup boiling water, % teaspoon baking powder. \ When the paper was thoroughly dry, the whole chest was shellacked with waterâ€"proof shellac. Old wooden knobs were replaced with smart green Chinese tassels. Instead of the usual paint beâ€" stowed on poorâ€"relation furniture, this chest has been papered in Chiâ€" nese teaâ€"paperâ€"gold, with a soft weblike design of green. The paper was carefully pasted, and to overâ€" come any tendency to peel, the chest was carefully sized with wallâ€"paper sizing, according to expert advice. A chest of drawers in this same house looks like something very rare and very lovely. But in truth it is only an old chest of drawers, which had almost outworn its good looks, It has been treated in so simple | a way that you will say, "Why didn‘t I think of that?" 4 frame, and shellacked with orange shellac, with a deft touch of sienna to give the aged look. KITCHEN KINKS Boy‘s Favourite Pie four, % cup salt, 4 cup The procrastinator is not Only in. dolent and weak but commonly false, too; most of the weak are false.â€"Laâ€" vater. We are apt to mistake our vocation by looking out of the way for occaâ€" sions to exercise great and rare virâ€" tues, and by stepping over the ordinâ€" ary one that lie directly in the road before us.â€"Hannah More. 13 Rec ooo Eoys â€" Tt !| taking a small piece of electric tape "| and placing it over the end of the | rung with the sticky side out. Then I gently hammer the rungâ€"tape and allâ€"back into place. Canning Baked Apples Most familys like baked apples | and here is a way of meeting the deâ€" mand: Remove the cores and fill the oven with big pans of apples and syrup, just as one prepares baked apples for immediate eating. When done, put them in wideâ€"mouthed jars, cover with the boiling syrup and seal. They keep well. When ready to use place them in a baking dish and reheat thoroughly. Serve them with whipped cream â€" and & candied cherry. Guests think they are freshly baked. Drying Clothes Indoors When it is necessary to dry clothes indoors, place the clothes on a rack | | and turn on the electric fan. The| breeze both airs and dries the clothâ€" ; es. A Colorfrl Frosting ’ In making frosting for cake, I l have discovered that by moistening a pound of sugar, mixed well with two }tablespoons of butter, and with strawberry _ preserves, instead of milk, that I have not only a frostâ€" ing that tastes delicious, but one that has a lovely color. Arresting Chair Rungs I find that rungs of chairs keep coming loose in steamâ€"heated apartâ€" ments. I make them stav in nlara hy licious When removing bacon from â€" the killet, place it for a minute on â€" a piece of clean wrapping paper, which will absorb the surplus grease. The bacon will be daintier and more deâ€" needed, puncture the shell and let the white drain out. Then seal the shell with a piece of tissue paper, If kept in a cool place the yolk will stay fresh and moist for several days. Cooking Buttered Vegetables When cooking â€" buttered string beans, lima beans, asparagus, artiâ€" choke or cauliflower, add butter to a small quantity of boiling water (to which salt has been added) beâ€" fore immersing the vegetables. By this method the butter is boiled into the vegetables, thus making â€" them richer and more tasty than when dressed with drawn butter after they are cooked. A new â€"wireless some and heavy wires plied from a machina similar to Improving Bacon them stay in plac‘efiijry lag . , , ; 0S Apparatus that supplies eavy wires being attached to her he a machine, without having any wires tuning in a radio set. 14 ed a sort of university extension course, carrying on the instruction given in the local synagogues and the schools, "And it came to pass after three days.‘ One of these days‘ was spent in the journey back toward Nazareth, a second in the return to Jerusalem, and the third in a fruitless search through the streets of Jerusalem, "At last they found him in the temple," It was strange that they knew so litâ€" tle of the lad that they did not look in the temple first of all. "Sitting in the midst of the teachers." During the feasts the great Jewish rabbis taught in the porches and courts of the tem. ple. ‘Both hearing them and asking them questions." These classes form. "And all that heard him were amazed "And when they found him not, they returned to Jerusalem, seeking for him." How anxious were they as to what might have become of the dear boy in the great city, â€" ~*"But supposing him to be in the company," Parties were made up from the same village or from nearby vilâ€" lages. _ These, including relatives, would make a considerable number, and Mary may easily have thought that her boy was with some eighbor or friend. "They went a day‘s journey. From ten to fifteen miles, the entire company probably walking. "And they sought for him among their kinsfolk and acquaintance," The child Jesus was evidently a sociable being and no recluse, ’lem," He did not mean to cause anxie. ty to his parents of course but he was completely absorbed in what was going on in the temple. "And his par. ents knew it not." Nor did he know that his parents had left the city. The freedom of life in home and school, so notable a feature in modern times, is by no means a recent discovery. l "And when they had fulfilled the days." The passover feast lasted eight days. "As they were returning â€" the boy Jesus tarried behind in Jerusaâ€" "And when he was twelve years old‘ The growth of the child Jesus under the loving care of Joseph and Mary in Nazareth is summarized in three par. ticulars; physical growth, as the baâ€" sis, then mental progress and increase in spiritual knowledge and grace, "‘They went up after the custom of the feast," He went up a year sooner than the law required, perhaps beâ€" cause his older cousin John, who was to become the Baptist, that year made his first attendance at the feast. TIMEâ€"Christ‘s first visit to Jerusal. em, at the age of twelve, April A.D. 8. Peter was written about A.D. 68. PLACEâ€"The temple in Jerusalem. Joâ€" seph‘s home in Nazareth. Peter laborâ€" ed in Jerusalem and Rome. LESSON V. â€" November 4. Christian Growth â€"Luke 2:42.52; 2 Peter 1:5â€"8. Golden Textâ€""But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saâ€" vior Jesus Christ." SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON - supplies milady with her E Miiianinier t Seinl ~uousc > tunhilits ich ts h c 11 401 T head is being used in London, England. The es l‘tt’IChed to the head and is controlled he ims ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO permanent wave _ _"And in your virtue â€" knowledge." Undernundlng, implying insight, cir. cumspection, discretion, discernment., "And in your knowledge self control Know more of Christ, and you will know more of yourself and be better able to guide yourself . ‘Yea, and this very cause." Because (verse 4) the Christians to whom Pe. ter is writing have escaped from heaâ€" then foulness and have entered into the divine life, they are now to go forward in it with hearty zeal, Adding On your part all diligence." Sloth has no place in the Christian life, "In your faith supply virtue." The figure in the apostle‘s mind may be that of a chain, each virtue being linked to its predecessor and successor, the whole forming & united set of cha;â€" acteristics. came to Nazareth," The village of Mary and Joseph, about sixty miles north of Jerusalem among the hills overlooking the great historic plain of Esdraelon, with Mt Carmel on the west. And he was subje@t unto them," How could the sanctification of comâ€" mon life be effected if not by those eighteen years during which the Lord ‘ of all dwelt at Nazareth in obscure obâ€" edience? "And his mother kept all these sayings in her heart." Nothing connected with the life of Jesus but was noted by Mary‘s motherâ€"love, "And Jesus advanced in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and men," Our Lord grew in body (stat. ure), mind, (wisdom)}, and soul, in spiritual graces, in favor with God and man, "And they understood not the say. ing which he spake unto them." Forâ€" tunately for Jesus, he had parents, who while not understanding him, were yet ttender and patient with him. "And he said unto them, How is it that ye sought me? Could it be that they were not interested in the things of the Father, and so did not underâ€" stand his being so? There is almost a sort of shudder in Jesus‘ reply. "Knew ye not that I must be in my Father‘s house?" The translation of the King James Bible, "about my Father‘s busâ€" iness," is equally possible, for the Greek is only "in the (things) of my Father," "the" being the indefinite nr.‘ ticle in the neuter plural, "And when they saw him, they were astonished." Dr, van Dyke represents Jesus as listening enraptured to the great Rabbi Hillel, whose spirit was so close to his own. "And his mother said unto him, Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us?" We know that Jesus had never grieved his parents before, in his eagerness to learn, he let them go their way home without him. "Behold thy father and I sought thee sorrowing." Mary‘s deep love for her Son is here shown, and it must have been answered by Christ‘s deep love for her. at his understanding and his answers* Because Jesus asked questions he grew. The mind grows by feeding on the material which questions gather and bring in, q And he went on, Engiand. The heat is supâ€" is controlled by turning a knon, w_it.hogt the cumberâ€" down with them, and Not the least astonishing of family records is that of M. Gourdon, who died in Paris at the age of 101, M. Gourdon‘s father was born in 1731; married in 1752; and in 1753 became father of a boy who died in the same year, He married for the second time in 1820 and at the age of ninety.one became the father of a second boy, the late M. Gourdon who at the close of his long life was able to say "ly‘ brother died 171 years ago." 8y BUD vObptinintatisisn Brssstcin sls i Th 25 a settler named Webb in the Cumberâ€" ’lnd district â€" of Kentucky, among them bhave lived to see 1651 of their progeny. The eldest brother, Jason, has 444 descendants; Miles takes seâ€" cond place with 402; then follow three sisters, with contributions of 230, 208, and 201 respectively; and the roll endi with the youngest brother, whose totâ€" al is a modest 166. | LOw CCC CCC CHoup _er, the homes of her descendants, who numbered â€" 310 in four generations ; and Mrs. Sarah Ann Woolf, of Utah, when she died at the age of ninetyâ€" one, left 303 living descendants, inâ€" cluding 189 greatâ€"grandchildren and twenty.â€"three great great grandchild. ren, [ When Mrs. Ursula Lightfoot, of Ayâ€" ton, in Yorkshire died in her ninety. fourth year, she left nine chlldren, seventyâ€"nine grandchildren, seventyâ€" three greatâ€"grandchildren, and twi greatâ€"greatâ€"grandchildren. In Couth. ern Georgia, a Mrs, Shiver spent her last years in visiting one after anothâ€" @r. the Romuss nf has ut L l on & 1 | Compnhcmive Exa Not long ago, three parents called ‘ +p,, curriculum at O} upon the registrar for Whittelsey, Isle conducted by the C of Ely to register the birthsâ€"one, of church, has been so revi his twentyâ€"first child; the second, his ing the first two years o nneteenth; and the third of number junior college division seventeenâ€"the three families thus 85° will devote themselves gregating fiftyâ€"seven children. | a general and unified ) From Antwerp came the story of a physical â€" biological and Mme, Carlier who had given birth lfl‘ceu, arts and literature six sons in one yearâ€"the first set “'lnd religion, and a readir tripets in January and the second in‘ pf one foreign language, the following December. No formal examination, Packed Nurseries cific subject will be held In a Chicago divorce case in 1920 period, At the end of hi it came out in evidence that the plun-‘ lege work and before ad tiff, Mrs Josephine Ormsby â€" though | the senior college, or at she had been married only seven | years of college, the stu: years, had in that time been the mo.|required to pass a compr ther of one set of triplets, two pairs / Amination both oral and , three single children, and one set of| COYVers all the different s quadrupletsâ€" an average of two chil.| Student may take this exs drea a year, any time without waiting When Mrs. Ursula Lightfoot, of Ay.! ©Nd Of the two vears Six brothers and |_ Rnmony Clark, a book canvasser, acknowledged in the Clerkenwell County Court the paternity of 82 chil. dren; Mrs, Mary Jonas, of Chester, increased the population of England by 33; and Mrs Emma Hare conficed to a neighbor that she bad nursed 27 children. Anthony Clark, acknowledged in County Court the dren; Mrs, Mary increased the poj by 33; and Mrs F His first wife was responsible for six of them; his second added two dozen more; and his third completed the list with a contribution of eleven, At sixtyâ€"nine, Mr Braskaw has 29 married sons and daughters; and his living descendants number just under two hundred. ‘ Quintuplets born recently have oused worldâ€"wide interest, but tt is no modern parallel to the rec of the Scottish weaver who, in seventeenth century, was father sixtyâ€"two children by one wife â€" left fortyâ€"six of them to mourn | although he has no mean rival in I Braskow, a Canadian with forty. children., Records Few Couples Would Care To Break SIX CHILDREN s weet _ "For it these things are yours and abound." These things avre the Christ. ian graces named and the consequent right understanding of divine things, "They make you to be not idle nor un. fruitful unto the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ, We become the best and the most active and _ _the most efficient citizens when we conâ€" tribute to the comman 306 h) e sam oo "And in your godliness brotherly kindness.," Our attitude toward God our love of God, soon reaches out toâ€" wards our brother Christians. "Angq in your brotherly kindness love." This is affection that reaches out beyond our Christian brothers and takes in all mankind. *"And in your selfâ€"control patience," in the margin "stedfastness." "And in . your patience godliness." Godliness is both the test and the outâ€" come of patience, CJC* : to the common life the and perfected disposition of her dencendniu_._vho sisters, children of IN A YEAR aver who, in the y, was father of by one wife and mourn him , but there il in Levi forty.one The splendour grows in esserce, while there die, Attendant hopes that led the arduous wine a eC Of hyacinth and créemsonâ€"amber To sweep through firâ€"ciad slope and woodland shade, All aws of color blending to combines Immortal _ symphoniesâ€"â€"a sOonk â€"& gift of A flame uploin Where sacrifice was Dead Summer not in vain her blood Lights little fires of bronze and vivid Now Autumn in each intermediate 4( Again there wi}] be no examination | until the end of his last year when he | comes up for his degree, An Individualized Program In discussing the new program at | Olivet College, President Brewer says "Each student‘s work must be perâ€" ceived as an organic whole, built upon bis needs and adapted to his abilit. ies, This cannot be achieved by any methods which smack of bits and of pieces and which tend to obscure the relation of the parts to the whole, "Moreover learning js a process which requires time and leisure for connected reading and meditation . The life of the college must be Organ . ized to make these things possible. 1t is inevitable therefore that the lock. step of courses, time schedules, hours, points, credits, quizzes grades course examinations all the elaborate machâ€" inery by which we conceal ignorance should be broken up." 10. CCC Ce mE Te ‘end of the two years, In the senfor college the student is to have even greater freedom from acadmic routine, Here he must study intensively in one of _ seven fields, which include natural and physical science, social science language and literature, phllouophy, oducu.lon, fine arts and music. The student will purâ€" sue his work in his 0wn way during this period. Ar silent Glory triumphs over Life. Tbrooke. M, H. Powen The curriculum at conducted by | the church, has been so ing the first two yea junior college divisi will devote themse} | bers of the fac quired to join q cises. In the eve will spend their debates, dramati in which art m esthetic developr uated. ‘ _ Instead of the old elaborate academ ic machinery, each student wil} _ be _ permitted to pursue his studies indiv. ,Idlully much in his own way under the direction of a faculty tutor, _ in the morning the time of the student will be occupied with private study attendance at group discussions ar. ranged by the different professors or at general lectures wiven now â€"and | then for the benefit of the whole stu. dent body, and individua! conferences with his tutor regarding the partiou! ar work being followed, At the group discussions short papers will be pre sented on the topics being studied, after which there will be a general | discussion and debate by the stu. dents, The afternoons will be devoted to a program of athletics and sports of various â€" kinds, Arrangements have been made so that every student will participate in some sort of physical PeCreatiOn OF INHTRMD®SI cuum o a. _ ______ 4NCor 1ieâ€" new educationa; program being inaugurated this Fall, at Olivet Mich, writes John H. McNeeâ€" ly in the N.Y, Times. The plan puts an end to the old system of daily asâ€" signment of textbook lessons, steroâ€" typed recitations in the classroom, oral quizzing to see if the student has memorized the assiged work; to grad. ing and marking of the students, reg. wlar course examinations at the end DF »8hch â€" inbiminthak e ca l o C Classes Are Abolished Allow Individual Study At Olivet oi C, hC 10 Hemmeres #y #by _ which smack of bits and of nd which tend to obscure the of the parts to the whole, over learning is a process equires time and leisure for d reading and meditation . of the college must be organ . ‘"!5l iwo years of work college division the 81 | _ 200 PC Ne during this t the end of his junior colâ€" c _and before advancing into ° college, or at the last two college, the student will be o pass a comprehensive exâ€" both oral and written, that the different subjects, _ A ay take this examination at without waiting until the development "~ ®O ‘NaAl every student will te in some sort of physical n or intramural sport, Mem . the faculty also will he aa join these afternoon the evenings the St1 examinations in | the elaborate machâ€" we conceal ignorance i up." K themselves to ob;;ining id unified knowledge of ‘Cs and social affairs music intellectual and the old elaborate academ . each student wil} _ be pursue his studies indivâ€" in his own way under of a faculty tutor, _ Ip the time Of the studeni be held during IS SET FREE le time of the student ed with private study group discussions ar. different professors or time taking par , growth and ‘ and social scien. Fature, philosophy, reading knowledge "VCL, a college Congregational revised that durâ€" Qiive xaminations will he will be )Tk in the students obtaining ANy on exer. students accent ed To spe re

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