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Durham Review (1897), 27 Jun 1935, p. 3

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mpa n ping WIHLL claim â€" for ! lost her job hich she had tenographer. ORD $ RICHER ald â€" Of thi ‘ Service 100u PA widow, said k in a room a chimney she claimed, meant for that of Nations 0 as comâ€" men workâ€" bald while pal asserted that STREETS n rarticularly i following uel outside ircles for ¢ wreatest aling with h instal. no objecâ€" al advice her grant erections On sevâ€" ne & counâ€" will be eventing ion will tuation, reached nditions ild be archiâ€" ady in _ repair purpose council, protest "y 18 the arry of the at the usimng 10 by. giving j .n’ d byâ€" slaâ€" fall () nas this rvey seeâ€" SsAUCE FOR BEETS Make a sauce of butter, flour, some of the water in which the beets were cooked, vinegar and sugar to Spanish Sausage 1 pound pork sausage 6 small green peppers 1 eup bread crumbs 1 cup tomatoes 1 onion, grated 1 cup diced celery Mix sausage, bread erumbs, grated onion, and diced celery. Moisten with tomatocs. Cut tops off green peppers, remove sreds and parboil for five minutes. Stuff with sausage mixture and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for thirty minutes. Sausage Stuffed Baked Apples 1 pound pork sausage 4 cooking apples 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon butter Pare the apples and remove the centers. Stuff with pork . sausage. Place in .a baking dish. Sprinkle with sugar and dot with butter. Add‘ 1 cup water, cover, and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.). THE SAVORY SAUSAGE Too many cooks neglect the humâ€" ble sausageâ€"failing to realize that it lends itself to exceptionally atâ€" tractive dishkes. Here are two sample recipes : four or five times. Add other ingrediâ€" ents and mix very thoroughly. Add milk to make the right consistency to mold into small cakes about 3â€"4 inch thick. Fry in hot fat until well browned. (Bacon or ham gives a good flavor.) Remove the meat cakes and make a gravy by adding flour to the fat remaining in the pan and stir until the flour is well browned. Use enough flour to make a cream sauce of mediam consistency (1 cup. milk, 2 tapblespoons flour). _ Add milk until desired consistency. _ Reâ€" turn browned meat cakes to cream sauce and finish cooking cakes over a low fire, This serves about eight persons. UNEXPECTED GUESTS When you got to your door And guests stand there, Don‘t turn them away with sighs With a welcoming smile And never a care Prepare a hasty surprise, Emergency Special 1% lbs. round steak % cup fine dry bread crumbs 1 egg well beaten * teaspoon salt Pepper Milk to moisten Put round steak or some other eut of beef through the meat chopper Oe o reinliisasais irdiite 48020 flour to melted butter then ad milk, oneâ€"third at a time, sti to prevent lumping. Repeat and a layer of buttered crumbs on Bake in a moderate oven until br You will find this the most delic salmon loaf you ever tasted 1 large can salmon 1 teaspoon salt | %% teaspoon pepper 1 cup buttered crumbs a 3 tablespoons butter 1% tablespoons flour 1% cups milk Salt and pepper In a buttered casserole or baking dish put alayer of buttered crumbs, then a layer of oneâ€"half the fish broken into flakes with a fork. Salt and pepper to taste. Pour in oneâ€" half of white sauce made by adding flour to melted butter then adding mulll â€" i.c. k‘ t us EASY To PREPARE Just a can of salmon, Salt and pepper, too, Bread crumbs, butter. flo Milkâ€"oh, that will do. Nothing else is needed. Not a cook should wish For a tastier morsel Than this delicious dish Here it is: wing, and a number of large split shot, nipped on the sitk in the manner usual on a fishing line:.... _ * Smith “ not i . 4 l a " ‘%:â€" answer my quastion about Fu A Manchu‘s sitister pet, but said: "I found this strange gcontrivance on Sir C";.icfi:u's mn:: the chimney of his study fireplace." ow . his et a tangled length of silk thread, mixed up with Im&\v,'. a brass you ever tasted FU MANCHU _ By Sax Rohmer umbs on top. n uniil brown. most delicious time, stirring + flour, put Once bright sunshine makes your face and neck yellowish, then beige and finally brown, you have to be particularly careful. The old ruleâ€"to be wellâ€"powdered you shouldn‘t look powdered at allâ€" is especially hard to stick to in the summertime. In winter, when your complexion is a light, creamy shade, it‘s easy enough to choose a face powder which blends perfectly with your skin tones, leaving no harsh edges and no spots that look coated. When cutting marshmallows for desserts, try dipping the shears into lukewarm water between snips and see how easily it‘s done. is overcome if permitted to stand over hot water for fifteen or twenty minutes. This will keep them soft, too, while frosting the cake. Someâ€" times merely dipping the spatula into hot water makes the frosting spread easily. To Make Rolls Rise You can hasten the rising of your bread or rolls by placing them in a cupboard near a pan of steaming water and closing the door tightly. The moist warmth penetrates the dough. Try it with iceâ€"box rolls. Molded gelatin desserts and salads as well as those frozen in molds, are easily removed from the molds for serving if they are plunged into a pan of hot water just long enough to melt the mixture against the mold. Always put fresh vegetables exâ€" cepting spinach which should be cooked in water that clings to leaves, and asparagus, from which cold water brought to boil helps extract minerals to cook in boiling water. There is less loss of food value, and the color is preserved. Scalding or boiling water removes fruit stains from â€" tablecloths and napkins. If you use very hot water to sprinkle clothes, they will be ready for ironing within fifteen or twenty minutes. A garment or piece . of linen dampened with hot water and rolled tight is of the same dampness all over and irons as easily as the one which was dampened with cold waler and allowed to stand over night. Try it some time when you are in a hurry. For mahogany furniture, use chaâ€" mois in place of cloth â€" one for the washing and another for the rinsing. Finish With Polish For finished natural woods, comâ€" plete the cleaning with a rubbing with furniture polish or liquid wax. SUMMER POWDER PROBLEM For the weâ€"hing of painted woodâ€" work and furniture, warm â€" not hot â€" â€"soapsuds is used. A heavy lather first, then a cloth wrung â€" out in warm, clear water and a â€"final polish with a soft cloth. All finger marks and smudges disappear â€"like magic. The raw taste of uncooked Warm water should i;ewmt;sed to spray house plants to remove dusi from the leaves. w# l oT watEr: i Temperature of water seems | a small point to emphasize but it really is one of the most important items in the successful housekeepâ€" ers‘ book of knowledge. Among the more obvious facts is that vegetables must be crisped in very cold waterâ€"but for the first wasking, to remove the sand and grit, you will find that tepid water does the trick in half the time. Spinâ€" ach, leaf lettuce, broccoli, all the root vegetables, asparagus and beans are more easily washed in lukeâ€" warm or even warmer water. pepper. _ Reâ€"heat the |licodâ€" -l;;ets this, and serve. taste, with‘ a duiting of ‘This explains how the thing got into Sir Crichton‘s study," Smith explainsd. ‘"The shot were to weight the line and prevont the croature from clinging to the side of the chimney. Whon it hadâ€"dropped in the grate, the weighted line wasâ€"withdrawn, and the thing was hald only by one single thread, which sufficed to draw it back when ithad done its fatal work .. . icings stand twenty salt and Of all the loveliness you have conâ€" ferred I thank you most, Lord, for each livâ€" ing word! For healing ‘words, so tender they caress, And tranquil ones that breathe a quietness, For every gay and laughing word that sings, And all the gallant shining words with wings! Cut fruit in small pieces. Cut marshmallows in quarters. _ Whip cream until firm, add sugar which has been sifted and vanilla. Fold in prepared marshmallows, fruit and nuts. Turn into a mold and let stand in the refrigerator for several hours to chill and become firm. Springtime Dessert Oneâ€"half pound marshmallows, 1 cup whipping cream, 4 cup candied cherries, % cup candied pineapple, Â¥4 cup chopped nut meats, 4 tableâ€" spoons powdered sugar, % teaspoon vanilla, few grains salt. Some of the tedium of preparing spinach and green beans vanishes if you use scissors. A pair of small scissors are a great help to snipping the leaves from the stems of the spinach. Cut the strings from both sides of green beans before cutting across the bean slantâ€"wise. This is hard on the fleshy part of the thumb if a paring knife is used but the scissors trim and snip neatly. The shears will help make this springâ€" time dessert, too. After using shears they should be washed, scalded and lightly rubbed with sweet salad oil before putting away. Keep in a drawer safely away from small members of the family. Candied fruits and marshmallows are prepared for desserts by snipâ€" ping with the shears. Dip the shears in water while cutting to prevent sticking. Pesling With Shears An easy way to prepare fresh pineâ€" apple is to slice it across with a large knife and then "peel" each slice with the shears. Eggplant may be done that way, too. In trimming round steak and cutâ€" ting the rinds off of bacon the shears work twice as fast as a knife and with less danger of cutting the finâ€" gers. Thus you save yourself many _ an unsightly scar on your thumb â€" but you‘ll have them all the time if you use knives. You use your shears nearly every time you cook a meal, to cut celery and peppers for salads, shred lettuce, cut tops from beets, trim green onions and fix grape fruit. 81 Fill your compact with the same powder you use at home. Keep a bit of clean cotton in this,‘ too. If it won‘t close with cotton in it, get little powder puffs that are washâ€" able and use a fresh one each day. You must be careful about appliâ€" cation, too. Dark powders are more apt to show streaks and lines. Use a large piece of clean cotton, press the powder against your skin, let it set and, finally, dust it off with the reverse side of the cottor. This is the time of year to buy one box of dark suntan powder. Wher you notice that your regular supply no longer matches your skin, mix a bit of it with darker shade until you have a combination which does. As you get darker, add more suntan powder to the mixture. Nothing is worse than light rachel powder over a suntanned skin. Unâ€" less it is dark suntan powder â€" over a complexion that hasn‘t tanned enough to warrant it. You never should use powder to take the place of a coat of tan. Winter or summer, face powder must match your skin tomes. KITCHEN SCISSORS A Prayer â€"Wendy Marsh. "‘They reckoned that the creaâ€" _ // %woddmohdrcwuphbgd&oh&.hvfi. prepared envelope. . ." ‘‘What is your theory about the creatureâ€"what shape, . what color?" E _R "It is somothing that moves rapidly.â€" it works in the dcr.lâ€"fln study was dark except for the light on the "Overthrow not for meat‘s sake the work of God." To overthrow means "So then let us follow after things which make for peace," "And things whereby we may edify one another." Fram the verb to edify comes our word edifice. The verb means simply to build up, to make strong. "For he that herein serveth Christ is wellâ€"pleasing to God (I. Cor, 8:3). One may serve Christ whether eating or abstaining, but no one can serve him whose conduct exhibits. inâ€" difference to righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. "And approvâ€" ed of men." They will be standing the test of sincerity and reality. The disciple who thus «erves Christ may or may not be popular with men arâ€" ound him; but he is quite sure on the whole and in the long run to be recognized as real, _ _"For the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking." In other words Christ does~ not claim a throne in your soul, and in your society, mereâ€" ly to enlarge your bill of fare, to make it your sacred privilege, as an end in itself, to take what you please at table. "But righteousness and peace and jJoy in the Holy Spirit. Inâ€" asmuch as the principles of the King. dom of God are assumed to dominate in every believer‘s life, so will every true Christian seek to live in accordâ€" ance with sucoh principles, which have nothing to do with material and external things as eating and drinkâ€" ing, but with an internal, spiritual and moral condition. | "Let not then your good be evil spoken of." Christian liberty, the freedom of conscience which has been won by Christ, will inevitably get a bad name if it is exercised in an unconscious. loveless fashion, "For if because of meat thy broâ€" ther is grieved, thou walkest no lonâ€" ger in love." ‘That is, if, because of something the strong Christian does, without any rebuke of conscience, knowing that he is not offending the Lord, a weaker brother suffers in beâ€" holding in a fellowâ€"Christian that which he considers to be sin, or sufâ€" fers because conflicts are now arisâ€" ing in his own life, and this is known to the stronger Christian, he cannot be said to love the weaker one if he continues in this particular practice. ‘"Destroy not with thy meat him for whom Christ died." If Christ is our pattern, any sacrifice of tastes and liberties for our brother‘s sake is plain duty, "I know, and am persuaded in the Lord Jesus." As one who is in unâ€" ion and communion with him, seeing truth and life from that viewpoint. "‘That nothing is unclean of itself." That is, it does not have, in itself, qualities making it unclean, but is only so declared by ceremonial laws. "Save that to him who accounteth anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean." Here St.; Paul appeals to the fact that individual conscience, however misguided, must never be violated by its possessor. _ "Let us not therefore judge one an. other any more; but judge ye this rather, that no man put a stumblingâ€" block in his brother‘s way. What a remarkable contrast there is between the true Christian‘s use of the power of judgment and that of the worldlyâ€" wise! "Or an occasion of falling." This word, from which comes our word scandal, indicates a trap â€" or snare, something placed in the way of another, caucing one to fall, gnd then it is made to refer to those who cause others to be thrown into sin, THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. TIME and PLACE.â€"The Epistle to the Romans was written by the Apâ€" ostle Paul approximately A.D. 60, and the First Epistle to the Corinth‘ans about a year earlier, A.D. 59, LIBERTY UNDER LAW _ (Temperâ€" ance Lesson).â€"Romars 14; 13.21; 1. Corinthians 8: 9â€"13. GOLDEN TEXT.â€"It is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby thy brother stumblcth. Romans 14: 21. LESSON XIl!.â€"June C ons _ _ __ 2CHOOl Ess5soN © 1931 Ry Sax Rohmer and Tho Bell Syndickte, Inc The carly part of May, 1895, was marked by exceptionally hot weather, the thermometer registering over 90 degrees on several days, and many horses died while working in the fields. This extreme heat was followâ€" ed by a frost which played havoc with vegetation. It is better to have the kind of weather we are getting this year, even if the progress of the season does seem very slow. ] "Wherefore, it meat causeth my brother to stumble, I will eat no flesh for evermore, that I cause not my brother to stumble." The declaraâ€" tion is conditional If the Apostle knows of definite cases in which his eating food will lead to others‘ being encouraged to violate the dictates of conscience, then certainly he will never eat meat so long as there is real danger of this (10: 28, 29). But if he knows of no such danger, he will use his Christian freedom and eat without scruple (10: 25â€"27), "And thus, sinning against the breâ€" thren, and wounding their conscience when it is weak, ye sin against Christ," It is a manifestaton _ of want of love to Christ, an insult and injury to him to injure his people, and, moreover, heâ€" and they are so united that, whatever of good or evil is done to them is done also to him. "For through thy knowledge he that is weak perisheth, the brother for whose sake Christ died." It is not a stranger against whom the stronger one sins, but a brother in Christ, for who Christ offered himâ€" se‘f as a sacrifice that he might not perish, "For if a man see thee who hast knowledge sitting at meat in an idâ€" ol‘s temple, will not his conscience, if he be weak, be emboldened to eat things sacrificed to idols? The weak brother still thinks such practices are wrong, but, seeing one in whom he has great confidence, engaging in such practices, he alsop is led to do the same, though his conscience tells him that he is doing wrong, and "if the weak brother does a right thing, while his concclence tells him it is a wrong thing, to him it is a wrong thing." _ "But take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours," The word lib erty here means lawful power or right and has reference to the freedom which belongs to every Christian in his contempt of ceremonial law, and of h‘s walking wholly in the grace wherewith Christ hath made him free. "Become a stumbling block to the weak," A stumbling block is that against which the man with weak sight stumbles; it is no obstacle to the man who sees his way. Grant of the strong Christian that he may pass unscathed through the festive parties of the ungodly, and perhaps even leave the savor of what is good in the midst of them; or grant that without injury to his own spirit, he may lend his occasional preâ€" sence to certain of the haunts of public or fashionable entertainmentâ€" it must not be forgotten that many are the weak Christians, who, if led to the premature imitation of his exâ€" ample, would inevitably perish amâ€" ong the surrounding contaminations of an atmosphere which they could not breatie in and yet live, ‘ "It is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereâ€" by thy brbther stumbleth." Most verâ€" sions add "or is offended or is weak." ’und is in direct contrast to the word _edify in the preceding verse, The work of God is the salvation which he has brought about in the heart of all Caristians, and thus in the heart of the weak brother, and, ultimately, the entire Church, which is his builâ€" ding. "All things indeed are clean; howbeit it is evil for that man who eateth with offence (Mark 7: 10; Acts‘ 10: 28). To eat with offence is simâ€" ply to be persuaded to eat by the exâ€" ample of another, while one‘s conâ€" science either condemns such eating or is in doubt about the righteousness of it. to loo:en, to dissolve, to pull down THE ZYAT KISSâ€"Sir Crichton Davey‘s Fate "Sr Crithton saw the thingâ€"1 j I reciived" the ZAYAT KISSI". _ _ % o "From the tableâ€"leg to the hand of Sir Crichtonâ€"* which, having touched the envelope, was scented with the perfumeâ€"was a certain move for the creature . . . A judicious use of flowers is urged by Quebec Tourist Bureau to make rural hotels even more attractive, since there is nothing, so restful as beds of flowers in front of and aâ€" round buildings in both town and country. The same applies everyâ€" where. * TORONTO,â€"Oflicers and members of the Dominion board of the Woâ€" men‘s m‘ssionary society of the Unitâ€" ed Church in Canada must retire when they reach the age of 68, the ninth annual meeting has _ decided. Elected officers of conference branches are exempt, Was this, then, just & jest to break my heart? For you, My Dear, are somehow, not the same . . . Though pretended, I knew, from the start . . , There‘d be a poignant ending to our little game., Officer Of W.M.S. You will forget the young dawns and the rain . . , The roads we walked and may not things . . . Love most of all . . . Vowing our love would glow, m With everâ€"burning, steady flame? walk again . , . The candlelight in quiet studio . . . Where we discussed so many vital .....And you will go away Without one last word of farewell Or deep regret . . . knowing this day Of bitter gricl may break the magic spell Of hours gether? Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 15c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefulâ€" ly) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Serâ€" vice, 73 West Adclaide St., Toâ€" ronto. Style No. 3173 is designe! for sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40â€"inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 yards of 39â€"inch material. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Here‘s a smart dress, just the sort of thing you meed for hot days in town. It is made so easily and is pressed in a jiffyâ€"see wee sketchlet! Choose plain or cotton prints, linen, tub silk, etc. Smart and Simple 3173 Little Game Francis Smith, Toronto To Retire At 68 intimately lived to "Religion is among the most powerâ€" fulâ€"causes of enthusiasm, . â€"â€"Berke A Toronto judge recommends that a wife and her hubby should spend their vacation apart, as an aid to domestic harmony, _ Perhaps His Honour is correct, but after th( "Missus" has had her holiday it is doubtful if there would be sufficient money left to permit the husband to even take a fishing trip. Madrid â€" Authorities have in vestigated reports that quintuplets were born to a mother in the Lavaâ€" pies section, one of the poorest neighborhoods of the Capital. Curâ€" rent reports said the five children came into the world without medical assistance and are thriving. ’ Hiram Maxim‘s new room silencer, a boxâ€"like device which muffiecs ofâ€" ‘fensive city noises such as rivetting machines and auto horns, is now ready for commercial use. The 62â€" yearâ€"old inventor, who spent a sleepless night in a noisy hotel room 12 years ago and decided to devote his genius to the problem, referred to the device as "the culmination of my life work." He demonstrated a model in New York. It consists of a metal box about 12 inches high and 10 inches deep, which muffies sound, ventilates the room, and filters the air. The device costs about $85 and is run by electricity. Her (Mrs. Sicfried Sassoon‘s) loveliness has a lyric quality, which is fitting considering that her husâ€" band is one of our most distinâ€" guished poets.â€"Vogue. Many people, he said, lived in the slums solely that their children might be enabled to attend church schools.â€"Alan* Chorlton, MP., reâ€" ported in Manchester Evening News. "It is idle . . . to talk of the wickedness of killing, because if and when the next war comes men will think only of the mobleness of dyâ€" ing," said the Lord Chief Justice (Lord Hewart) opening a Territorial Drillâ€"hall at Radcliffe (Lancs.) on Saturday.â€"Western Mail. Mead Kenncls, Haslemere. _ Come and pay a visit to this little World of Boarding Show, and For Sale Dogs!â€"Advt. in Times. What could be a more LOYAL REMINDER of this year than a puppy ? Years of devoted love will be given you by the Special Jubilee Pups, waiting to be chosen at Bell . . . the mational mind is nearâ€" ing the conviction that Nature was never intended to tolerate the interâ€" polation of nonâ€"natural features such as metal railings and other products of the foundry and factory â€"in her scheme of things. â€" From review cf The Beauty of Britain, in Sunday Times. Curiously enough, they obscured their radiance .with the termination of the Jubilee illuminations beneath them on Sunday night.â€"Daily Teleâ€" graph. I wonder how many people apâ€" preciated the beauty of London‘s night sky during Jubilee week?*" The unumial beauty and brilliance of the three planetsâ€"Venus setting in the West, Mars overhead, and Jupiter mounting from the Eastâ€"seemingly contributed their share, with the nation‘s beacons, to the tribute to our King. The Scout movement teaches you to be good citizens, and not know anything â€" about politics. â€" Rover Scout explaining the aims of the movement. Indication of the high honor imâ€" plied by the Order of Merit is the fact that it is the only distinction which Lioyd George accepted for his war services, It was also held by the late Lord Curzon, and by Sir Rdward Grey. â€"Ottawa Journal Of all the titular d‘stinctions and honors conferred by His â€" Majesty, one of the very greatest went to John Ma~efield, the poet laureate, It was the Order of Merit, Founded by King Edward VII on the Occasion of his coronation, the Order of Merit includes those who have won extraâ€" ordinary d‘stinction in the military or naval services of the Empire, as well as such as have made them ’uelvet a great name in the fie‘ds of science, art and literature, The numâ€" ber of British members is limited to 24, with the addition of such foreignâ€" ers as the King may appoint. The badge of the Order of Merit is a cross of red and blue enamel surmounted by an Imperial crown; the central blue medallion bears the inscription "For Merit" in gold, and is surrounded by a wreath of laurel. The badge of the military and naval members bears two crossed swords in the angles of the cross. The New Statesman and Nation (London) Quints Have Rivals John Massfield, O.M., Room Silencer and Jupiter â€"secmingly with _ the tribute to 39 +

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