West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Jul 1935, p. 4

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Baked Veal Loaf 4 cups post toastie:, 2 pounds veal, ground, *4 pounds salt pork, ground, 1 egg, unbeaten, 2 teaspoons salt, 4 medium onion, chopped, , teaspcon sage, 1 tablespoon chopped celery leaves, 1 cup diced celery, 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, % teaspoon pepper, % cup tomato ketolup, it desired. ~ Crumble post toasties Add reâ€" maining ingredients and mix well. Pack firm!ly into greased loat pan. Here is a novel meat dish that calls for the use of your favorite breakfast food. Try it and you will be delighted. Household Uses For Sait. When preparing whipped cream or beating eggs for desserts, the busy housewite will find a pinch of sait a useful aid. Sprinkle a little sait in the cream or in the egg{ before startâ€" ting to wh.p or beat them and the process will be much simpler and much quicker, As soon a; mixture boils, add pecâ€" tin, stirring constantly. Then bring to & full boil over hottest fire and boil hard % minute. Remove from fire; remove mint leaves and stems. Skim, pour quickly. To remove all traces of mint leaves, hot jelly must be poured quickly tirough a fine sieve before it is poured into glasses. Paraâ€" fiin hot jelly at once. Makes about 5 8â€"ounce jars. Measure sugar and pineapple syrup into saucepan aand mix with mint. Bring to a boil, add coloring to give desired shade. Use coloring that fruit acids do not fade. 1 cup mint leaves, %&, M cup bottled fruit pectin, Green coloring. Drain syrup from canned pine. apple. Wash mint leave. Do not re. move stems. Place leaves in large wsaucepan and press with wooden poâ€" tato masher. in 1% cups freshly boiled water; atrain. Add juice of 1 lemon if tart ness is desired. Tint a delicate pink with small amount of coloring. using @ coloring that fruit acids wiil not fade. Measure suzar and prepared tea into large saucepan and mix. Bring to a boil over hottest fire, and at once add pectin, stirring constantâ€" ly. Then bring to a full rolling boil and boil bard %, minute. Remove from fire, skim, pour quickly. Seal at once with hot paraffin. Makes about & slxâ€"ounce jars. Pincapple and Fresh Mint Jelly _ 2 cups (1 Ib.) syrup from canned pineapple., ‘ 3%4 cups (1% Ibs.) sugar. Rose Geranium Jelly 1% cups geranium tea, 3%4 (1 Ib. 7 oz.) granulated sugar, M cu» bottled" fruit pectin, Pink coloring. Yo prepare geranium tea _ steep about % dozen clean geranium leaves i8 t Tea will keep much better in a glass jar with a closeâ€"fitting top than in a tin receptacle. HINTS FOR THE HOME Pastry Dough. Add a few drops of lemon juice to the pastry dough and it will make it enore digestible. Pepper Rolish 2 cups (14 oz.) prepared peppers. 7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar. 1% cups apple vinegar, 1 bottle fruit pectin. To . prepare peppers, cut. open bout 1 dozen medium peppers and discard seeds. For best color, use equal amounts green and red isweet peppers. Put through food chopper twice, using finest knife. Drain pulp ’ln sieve. Measure sugar, vinegar and preparâ€" ed peppers into large kettle, packing each cup solidly until juice comes to top. Mix well and bring to a full rollâ€" ing boil over hottest fire. Stir con. tantly before and while boiling. Boil hard 2 minutes. Remove from fire and stir in bottled fruit pectin. Then stir and skim by turns for just 5 minâ€" utes to cool slightly, to prevent floatâ€" ing fruit. Pour quickly. Parafftin hot relish at once. . Makes about 10 g‘asâ€"es (6 fluid ounces each). Tomato Relish 4 3 cups (1% lbs.) prepared tomatoes 6% cups (2% lbs.) sugar, 1 bottle fruit pectin. To prepare tomatoes, scald, peel and crush about 2% pounds ripe toâ€" matoe:, or use canned tomatoes. Boil 4 cups crushed tomatoes 10 minutes, uncovered, stirring occasionally. Add 4 cup lomon juice and grated rind of 1 lemon. (For vse witi meats,; add V teaspoon each ground cloves, ab spice, and cinnamon, or Worce:terâ€" shire sauce to taste.) Measure sugar into large kettle, Add prepared tomaâ€" to, filling up last cup with water it necessary. Mix we‘l and bring to a full rolling boil over hottest fire. Stir conmstantly before and while boiling. Boil hard 2 minute:, Remove kettle from fire and stir in bott‘ed fruit pecâ€" tin. Skim; pour quickly, Paraffin at once. Makes about 9 glasses. (6 fluid ounces each). . DAINTIES MADE NOW WILL BE WELCOME IN WINTER During the jellyâ€"making and pre serving season your bottle of fruit pectin is used regularly with fruits and berries. Remember that it lends itself to use in delicious vegetable reâ€" lishes as well Here aro two that should be upon the shelves of every preserve closet: ; A scheme to regulate the mark: 'ing of cheese produced in the P: vince of Ontario has been review and redrafted by the Domini Marketing Board. The scheme is st subject to amendment. Representations with respect the scheme and requests for a pointments with the board must received by the secretary befo May lith next as it is nedessary f the board to take further action scon as possible. Any who requ« an appointment to meet the boa will be notified of the exact date hearings. Copies of ~the proposed sche are available for distribution a may be obtained from the Secretai Dominion Marketing Board, Ottaw Cleaning House Try using a large new pairt bru for dusting around baseboards, cor ers, window sil‘s and such plac« and see if it isn‘t a big improveme over the ordinary du‘t cloth. stain has gone Iron Rust. To remove iron rust from linen, u lemon juice and salt. Cover with s1 and mo‘sten wis1 lemon juice, the place in the sun. Repeat until t Storing Packages. When storing things for the su mer or winter, mark each package to its contents and there will be ; trouble to find certain articles wh: they are needed. °* Scorched Dishes If dishes have been scorched burn}, let thom stand for a day in solution of borax water, then wa with soap and water, and e brov stains will disappear, Room Fragrance. Try burning an orange peel on shovel or tin pan, and see how sweetens tie atmosphere of the roc and the pleacant fragrance it pt duces, Cleaning Drain Pipe. Some authorities claim that not ing is better to clean a clogged dra pipe, or one that is slow in runni than common hovseho!d lye, Ink Stains. A . cloth dampened with househc ammonia will usually remove i stains from the fingers. Then wa the hands with soap and water. Marketing Of Chee: rergado t scheme is st respect iests for a oard must etary â€" befo nedessary f her action wl "For thus Amos saith Jeroboam shall die by the sword, and Israel shall surely be led away captive out of his land." See 6 : 7. How pitifui on the part of Amaziah the priest to think that driving Amos out of Ishael would have any effect upon the doom which God had pronounced through his prophet! "Also Amaziah said unto Amos, 0O thou seer." The word seer is here used in a contemptuous sense and has therefore to be translated by some such word as visionary. "Go, flee thou away into the land of Judah, and there eat bread, and prophesy there." Amaziah implies that proâ€" phecy was a trade or profession, and insinuates that Amos is one of those prophets who lived upon popâ€" ularity. PDF DHTTERUUE TEERC UHELUY, "Then Amaziath the priest of Bethel." This man was the leading ecclesiastic of his day, a sort of Archbishop of Canterbury, if we may permit ourselves a modern comparisâ€" on, and responsible for the worship in the royal sanctuary. "Sent to Jeroboam king of Israel, saying, Amos." Note how the mere mention ‘of the name without description proves that the prophet was already known in Isracl, perhaps was one on whom the authorities had long kept their eye. "Hath conspired against thee in the midst of the house of Israel: the land is not able to bear all his words." Amaziah does not mean to charge Amos with having a secret understanding with others to dethrone the king, but, as the next shows, with using language that was calculated to produce such a conâ€" "And the high places of Isaac shall be desolate, and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste; and I will rise against the house of Jeroâ€" boam with the sword." The high places were the local sanctuaries, usually situated on eminences, a litâ€" lle‘ outside the towns to which they belonged, where the people were acâ€" customed to worship, where an altar and generally a shrine were erected, anq where sacrifices were offered. JUSTICE).â€"Chapters 4 and 7: OLDEN TEXT â€" Let justice roll down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream. Amos 5 : 24. ‘HE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timeâ€"The prophecy of. Amos was ven between 775 B.C. and 760 B. fabcrua "I am not ‘only a pacifist, but a militant pacifist. am willing to fight for peace.‘"â€"Albert Einstein. ‘The three boys‘ and girls‘ farm clubs in Prince Edward Island have secured their baby chicks from apâ€" proved flocks. This will do much to increase the practice of improved poultry husbandry in the respective districts, for it goes without saying that the elders take a deep interest in the efforts of the younger folk. a fatal one than the administration of purgatives." i He caid: "The great majority of abdominal pains in children are not due to some single indiscretion in diet at all, and the routine use of an aperient in such cases, kills hunâ€" dreds of children every year in this country. Nothing is more calcuiated to convert a mild appendiciti; into A grave warning against the danâ€" ger of giving a child with abdominal pain an aperient on the assumption thaat something it has eaten has disâ€" agreed with it is uttered by Prof. A. Rendle Short, Professor of Surgery ‘n Bristol University, in a lecture reâ€" cently. Surgeon Warns Against Use Of Aperients ners. Many Canadian colors were depoâ€"ited in it .when battalions . left England for the front. Twentyâ€"one Knights of the Grand Cross were installed by the Duke of Connaught in a picturesque ceremony in the chapel last week. With its wonderful fan tracery. ceiling, the chapel is regarded as the best exâ€" ample of late Tudor architecture in the kingdom. On both sides are the stalls for the Kmights of the Bath, over which hang the knight‘s banâ€" The marriage takes pace July 30 and His Majesty granted permission a month ago for the marriage to be solemnized in the chapel. London.â€"The first girl outside the royal family to be married in Henry VII‘s Chapel at Wostminster Abbey will be Catherine Keyes, second daughter of Admiral Sir Roger Keyes. Her engagement to Peter W. W. Powlett, son of Major William Powlett, was announced recently. Commoners To B¢ Married In Chapel Of Henry Seventh . "Now therefore hear thou the word of Jehovah: Thou sayest, Proâ€" phesy not against Isracl, and drop not they word against the house of Isaac;" 17. "Therefore thus saith Jehovah: Thyâ€" wife shall be a harlot in the city, and thy sons and . thy daughters shall fall â€"by the sword, and thy land shall be divided by line; and. thou thyself shalt die in a land that is unclean, and Israel shall sureâ€" ly be led away captive out of his land." As a matter of fact, it was about twentyâ€"five years later when Tiglathâ€"pileser III invaded Israel, and ten years later when . Samaria was finally attacked by Shalmanezer IV. "And Jehovah took me from folâ€" lowing the flock, and ‘Jchovah said unto me, Go, prophesy unto my peoâ€" ple Israel." See the first paragraph of this lesson. _ was I > â€"prophet‘s son." Amos disâ€" claims being a prophet by trade or profession, who might, for instance, have attempted his vocation without any special fitness. "But I was a herdsman, and a dresser of sycomore S0 THEY SAY ESS ON mmporue I Reâ€"marriage Of | Divorced Fersons "When two persons are not satisâ€" . fied with their marriage, one, the wife, can‘ say to her husband, ‘Let l“ have my liberty, I appeal to ._ | your chivairy.‘ ‘The husband, through * d“'ln real or mistaken sense of chivairy, ":: °" says that he will give her her liberty, ;&‘:’:t";::m .g"ocn through â€" the proscribed Sheik â€" I‘ll say she has! Last ai:htshuhdn‘wlflnond., + The Silent Facts _ Jellybean ~â€"â€" Old man, I underâ€" stand you are courting a widow, Has she given you any â€"encourageâ€" ment ? k Officials who went over the course included Dr. W. J. Bell,, deputy minâ€" ister of health, G. M. Galumbert, repâ€" resenting the province, and E. P. Jost, of Ottawa, representing the Dominion Government â€" are reportâ€" ed to have found immense stretches‘ of the canal filled with wood fibre from paper mills. â€" In other spots, sounding rods penetrated 11 feet of muck before striking bottom. The inspection marked another step in the â€"efforts of Provincial, Federal and municipal authorities to find some adequate solution to the health and nuisance problem arising out of the polluted canal. Several conferences have _ been held at Queen‘s Park and at St. Catharines, and engineering studies are now in the course of completion. Estimates of the cost of the projected disposal scheme are reported to run well inâ€" to the millions. In order to mermit this insg>â€" tion, the canal was drained on June St. Catharines. â€" Following a reâ€" cent inspection of the old Welland Canal, from Thorold to Port Dailâ€" housie, by Government and municiâ€" pal officials and â€" reproventatives of the industries concerned, fear wi ~\ expressed that in order to deal satisâ€" factorily with the sewage problem presented by the prosent condition of the waterway, not only will a sewâ€" age disposal plant have to be conâ€" structed, but the channel will have to be widened and deepened as well. See Big Expense In Cleaning Canal In Canada the situation is likeâ€" ly to follow aliong somewhat simâ€" ilar lines. _ Already as a result of the rapid rise in the price of heof _across Canada and the firm condiâ€" tion cf the hog market duse to heavy _exports of bacon to Great Britain and lower hog deliveries as comparâ€" ed with a year aco, the position in regard to the consumntion cf lamb is becoming increas ‘ng‘y favorable. Lamb in both Canada and the United States is, at the moment. a bargain counter meat. _ In the Unâ€" ited States shee» flocks have withâ€" stoo. drought conditions much better than other live stock while in Canaâ€" da, as a result of a definite and conâ€" structive shee» nolicv, lamb in Canâ€" ~da has been great‘y im»=oved and is available the year round as early spring lamb, as grassâ€"*"ed lamb or as finished feedâ€"pot lamb. As a result of drought conditions in the United States there is now a real shortage of beef and pork. The rapid diminution of sunplics cf cattle and hogs at all leading Uniâ€" tod States stock yards indicates that our god ne‘ghbors in the south will be forced to readjust their meat eating to include a larger proportion of ‘lamb. Increasing Prices _ of _ Boef . Firmness in Hog Prices Will Lead to Popularity For Lambs Consumption Ot Lamb Wil: Another resolution maintained principle that the Church should allow the marriage service in case of anyone who had a for partner still living. One resolution, which was passed with two dissentients, affirmed the belief of the House that in no cirâ€" cumstances could Christian men and women reâ€"marry during the lifetime of a wife or husband without a breach of the principles by which the institution of marriage was govâ€" erned according to Christ‘s teaching. "That makes it still more difficult to make definitions as regards those for whom the marriage service in church is right and proper." "It is, therefore, very evident." added Dr, Lang, "that at the inâ€" stigation of the wife, or because of the conduct of the wife, the actual technical misconduct by the husband has occurred. Bo said the Archbishop of Canterâ€" bury (Dr. Lang) during further disâ€" cussion recently in the Upper House of the Convocation of Canterbury, of the attitude of the Anglican Church towards divorce. 5 Be Increased and the not the

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