West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Nov 1935, p. 3

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, writing in 'GUCH >lumnist l al of New We very namely pin. to “has. to but at no erves: “Hill 3‘ Pancho: Tone up I the other in, I and who] am, thing the Now asked the. II. going to b. lu- you always at tat, or whether divorced. In the ‘omestic "airs d and actresses In the public's trust. rork of Congress. to the question. narry Min Craw- " Th Miss New Style ew York. t gives you e custom 'rent civili- for publi. 'tare, Mu. sine to her f the pub. alone for know all new! a bat is in. ssion. her H United , 'u United M " Pr " "rm Pleas. Ilmost ', her Tr, k Writes That, quest. I ll] Ib- was and be the In ate " the Joan he To set your own hair, you ought. to have a really good waveset lotion and a comb with tine teeth. After a thorough shampoo. followed by sev- eral careful rinsings. part your hair, comb it until not a tangle remains aml, using a cotton pad, saturate it lightly with wave-set lotion that has been mixed with a dash of plain waicr or your favorite hair tonic. Vow, grasping the comb firmly, pu I the hair forward just above the spot where you want- the first wave to be. Hold this ridge with the left hand. forcing the hair below it backward with the comb. held in the right hand. 1 This makes one wave which should be ‘Iinned securely before you go on to the next. Incidentally. hold it in oface while you form the neat one. Repeat to the ends and finish there either with a backward swirl or ringlet curls. "‘nglet curls are no trouble at all an whether you master the finger waving procedure or not, may be used between visits to the hairdress- " to freshen up the eoiffure he ar- ranged and to give your head a neat. well-groomed look. FI'NGER WAVING NOT AS DIFFICULT AS IT SEEMS If she has the right equipment and a good deal of patience, it is possible for any woman to care for hcr hair at home. She can very easily give her scalp a hot oil treat- ment once a week. Nightly brushing is simple. It she wants to take the time and trouble to learn the tech- nique. even finger waving is pos- vantage to sauce, and patties wrahléliv;ith bacon and broiled are still other Ways to use ground lamb to ad, If you use patented curlers, follow may also be boned and rolled or stuffed. Then there are the lamb chops, loin, rib, and shoulder, which are quickly and easily prepared by 'broiling. The neck of lamb-is a nirely ftavored cut to choose for stewing or bruising and is very economical. The lamb shanks or breast are " so very often out for stew, and what a tasty dish they make.' The flavor of lamb combines well with practi- cally all vegetables. so stews made with lamb need never lack variety. Ground lamb makes an excellent meat loaf, one which has a fUvor a little out of the ordinary. Season- inzs such as onion, tomato juice. ketchup. a bit of bay-leaf, or mint may all be used in making a tasty lamb loaf. Ground lamb balls cooked in toma- Lamb is available " all times of the year, but is more plentiful and more economical " this time of year than at any other season; and there are enough cuts that can be included in the family menu without danger of monotony. The leg of lamb is the beat known lamb roast, usually weighing about six or seven pounds. It is the ideal roast for the company dinner or for the good-sized family dinner. A small roast, and still a very ehoiee; one, is the shoulder which may be roasted as is, or it may be boned and stuffed. A still smaller roast, suitable for the family or two or three, is the breast of lamb, which may also be boned and rolled or "What shall we have for dinner tonight?” is the question houtrewiv. es must ask themselves every day of the year. Sometimes the answer is quite simple, but often the point is reached where there seems noth- ing left to choose. For Just such times " that, there is no meat that offers such a range of delectable variations as fresh lamb. VARYING THE MENU er " mm EI L% si:i:i,qitii) 717’! mg tit' ('iiij,i,,ir,!iiiil! il lite (tiii! E RE: I My! , fu" L‘é ' is, I , a5iJ, - -I 'attic/I J , -_-- tNo Codby': room. 77 V77" ”m -e._' "9.003001 is o dope slant: - Road," said tho Impede. " 'Singoporo 's,' “I it. " -krchi-oei_ tr.':'.,!'"' ' . NM Smith and I nor. in Inspector Woymouih's Tome' .fetteuod Yard Mu I Ind Mod from tutee. WITH LAMB DISHES 'N, I MANCHU it is best to plant roses of the hardy climbing and hybrid perpetual types in the fall, also the hybrid teas, where the winters are not too severe. They can be planted from October to December. depending on the location, but they should be placed in the ground before freezing weather. There are times when we have a long, warm fall, in which the newly-planted roses begin to grow PLANT ROSES NOW In the past, too often when select- ing roses for our gardens, we have considered only the beauty of the flower. But those of us who have struggled with black-spot, canker: and other rose ills. will demand of our nurserymen: "Which are your most vigorous and strong-growing bushes?" "Which have the healthiest foliage?" "Which mid their flower color best, ete?" constantly. and boil three" minute; Serve in a separate sauce boat. Cut chicken in pieces for serving and put in kettle with cold water to more than cover. Bring to the boil- ing point and cook slowly from two to three hours. adding salt and pep- per when half done. Remove from stock to hot platter and drop noodl- es into boiling broth. Cook twenty minutes. Drain from broth and ar. range in a border around chicken. Stir flour in a smooth paste with a little cold water and stir into broth from which noodles were drained Bring to the boiling point, stirring Chicken Frieassee One four pound fowl, cold water, 2 teaspoons salt, lh teaspoon pep- per, 4 tablespoons flour, 2 cups noodles. Stuffed tcmaVes, stuffed peppers, glaced and buttered onions, beet marbles and grilled tomatoes add beauty to any hot main dish. Macaroni. spaghetti and noodles make rice borders, too. Fricasseed chicken in a border of noodles with a garnish of candied sweet potatoes is inviting. Greens, cabbage and sauerkraut, present a more inviting appearance when served either in a molded form or in the form of a border. Arrange in a ring and fill the centre with fluffy mashed potato piled high in irregular contour. Surround the bord- er with brown sausage cakes or crisp link sausage. This saves dish- washing, too, because one serving dish does the work of three. Preparing Mashed Potatoes To make a mashed potato border,, rice or thoroughly mash potatoes. Then for each two cups of mashed potato add 4 tablespoons milk or cream, bi., teaspoon salt and 2 table- spoons melted butter. More milk may be needed to make the potatoes (the right consistency and, of course, ‘the more milk you can beat into the potatoes the more nourishing they are. Beat with a slotted spoon until light. Butter a deep pan or bowl on the outside and place it in the centre cf a hot platter or chop plate. Press a mound of prepared potatoes around the bowl. Then remove bowl and fill depression with meat cr fish or a creamed vegetable. The border may be mode of Irish or sweet potatoes, mashed squash or well cooked rice. ATTRACTIVE MEALS The plainer and more inexpensive your meal is, the more pains you ought to take to make it look pretty. One of the easiest way to improve the appearance of the ordinary meat- and-potato meal is to arrange the potatoes or their substitute in the form of a border with the meat in the centre and the other vegetables as a garnish on the outside. directions. If you use a pencil, Just wind small strands around it, pull the pencil out and pin the earl in place. By Sax Rohmer A local statistician estimated that Jones' we] consumption, spread two inches thick, would cover a five-acre urea. It has been the piece de resistance of his breakfast for 40 years. He figures he consumes 91 pounds a year. Berlin, Wis.-There's a new one for the record books. Irving Jones, 49-year-old farmer, ate his 3,652nd pound of porridge tht other morning. Tons of Borridge If you are making a bread and butter pudding add a little ground rice to the milk before pouring it over. It's much more tasty. The kiddies love it. h When whitewashing a ceiling, push the handle of the brush through a piece of cardboard. then the white- wash won't run down the brush and up your arm. TABLE OF OVEN Very hot oven 450 degrees. Hot oven, 400 to 450 degrees. Moderately hot oven, 375 to 400 degrees. Moderate oven, 250 to 375 degrees. Moderately slow oven 325 to 350 degrees. Slow oven, 300 to 325 degrees. Very slow oven, 275 to 800 de- grees. before winter really sets in and then they are frozen back considerably. In case this should happen this year, protect your roses from damage by a light covering of straw. Make an effort to purchase your roses from a nurseryman who has clean stock. Certainly you do not want to start your rose bed with diseased roses.' V Style No. 2525 is designed for sizes 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 8 requires 1% yards of 39-inch material with lh yard of 39-inch contrasting foe bodice. Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15e in stamps or coin (coin prefers red: wrap it carefullv) and ad- dress your order to Wilson Pat- tern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street. Toronto. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Daughter will love this! It's so new looking in green woolen. The Scotch plaided bodice in green and brown that gives the effect of a jacket, is really sewed to the skirt. The blouse is,sep- ante. Bee small view! Another idea with jumper all in one material anti, syith_contrwiting _blouse. ScotchJumperDreu Eaten" by Farmer HINTS "So thou, son of man, I have set thee a watchman unto the house of Israel; therefore hear the word at my mouth, and give them warning from me." The trouble with many who ought to be true watchmen in that they are not close enough to the Lord to hear his word or their ears are not sensitive to his voice, and, consequently, they have nothing to give. i Place-Ezekiel was settled, with other exiles at Tel-abib, by the .River Chebar, a stream or canal in Babylonia. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time-Ezekiel began to prophesy five years after the capture of Jehoiakim, i.e., in 592 B.C., and it is during this year, probably, that the instructions contained in chapter eighteen were given. The message of chapter thirty-three was uttered a few years lat-er, probably in58§ B.C. EZEKIEL TEACHES PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY Ezekiel 33 t 7-16. GOLDEN TEXT - Each one of us shall give account of himself to God. --Romans 14 ' 12. -"No One Beyond the "ramity" Miss P. Clynes, of Holt Villas, Put- ney, shop assistant, says: "When I say unto the wicked. o Miss Thelma Kirk, mannequin at Wltittceyhs, takes another point of view: "The words my husband whispers will be enough." "I want a quiet wedding, friends and relatives only. A church. a white wedding gown, and a happy but short reception, and NO jazz band or special wedding song. The Daily Sketch showed the pie- tures ot Harry Roy's wedding to ty.. pleal working girls and asked them to answer these questions. Here are their answers: "And No Jazz Band-" Miss Vera Greenwood, a reception- ist, ot St. Mark's crescent, Regent's Park - "I wouldn't have a public wedding it they 'oftered me West- minster Abbey - and all its choir. at the weddings of social or stage eelebrlties, and special cordon: ot police have to be hired to keep the enthusiastic crowds from tearing the couple apart. Free fights on the steps ot church. ea or register omces are Inevitable It Is the penalty of fame that every year dozens of engaged cou- ples are compelled to bring the de., tails of their marriage and even honeymoon into the searchlight ot public attention. The wedding of Harry Roy to Elizabeth Brooke has brought one new: that dimcult question, sdered by every bridtr--a public quiet wedding? Would you like 5,000 women hav. ing hysteries on the doorstep ot the register Mice just because you hare said "I will" to the man you love? Would you like 50 policemen to hold back the crowds rom gaping at your blushes? London. rlage with ment , Are Preference of British Girls - Only One Asks For "Grand Slam." Y Quiet Weddings - Would you like mar. u Jazz band tutCotttpttni- UNDAY f1.iif?.flLEssoN THE SEVERED F INGER--A Flight and A Promise. Miss into con- or a _ "And thou, son of man, say unto the house of Israel: Thus ye speak, saying, Our transgressions and our sins are upon us, and we pine away in them; how then can we live f" The calamities of their country were un- paralleled and equally unparalleled musthave been their guilt (Lam. l t 9-14; 2 t1S;4 t 18; 5 t 7). And their calamities seemed final, their sin was expiable only by their com- plete destruction. l "Nevertheless, if thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it, and he turn not from his way; he shall die in his iniquity, but thou hast delivered thy soul." It is clear that God never promises that all the wicked faithfully warned by his messengers will actually turn from their sins. wicked man, thou shalt surely die, and thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his way; that wicked man shall die in his iniquity, but his blood will I require at thy hand." How many ministers today are real. ly warning wicked men of the ter- rible punishment in store for those who refuse obedience to God and re- ject his son, the Lord Jesus Christ? The only way in which God can speak to the wicked and warn him is through a yielded prophet who will hear the Word of God, and be- lieve the Word of God, and will com- municate the Word of God. "I think it is a very heavy pen- alty to have to pay tor tame, these scrambling weddings. It is a great pity, and must be a terrible ordeal for the bride." Min, B.illie Barber, Eynham road, seeretary to a general manager in a. his store: "I am not a famous person - so no one will be interested beyond my re'atlves and friends. Miss Joan Wilkitr, of Medina Horse, St. Ethans road, is a wait- regs: "Beyond the family I cannot see who else is concerned." "I want no policemen on my wed- ding day. This is a peaceful attair be- tween my young man and myselt. Love's all right in its place, but this: kind is all we; to Patricia O'Brien. "Boston Beans" may be a prize winner in his class, but when it comes to pleasing the ladies, he takes the pnze for lack of finesse. "None of his aim that he hath committed shall be remembered against him: he hath done that which is lawful and right; he shall lure- ly live," The bad pot may be for- “ken. The trace of Christ will help us to break loose from the tyranny at habit. The bad put may be for. given. Again, when I say unto the wick- ed, Thou shalt surely die; if he turn from his sin, and do that which is lawful and right. If the wicked restore the pledge, give again that which he had taken by robbery, walk in the statutes of life, committing no iniquity; he shnll surely live, he shall not die." Cf. 3 '. 18; 18 '. 27. For instance: of I return to right- eousneu on the part of the wicked. itee18t7,rEx.22:t,4;Numi.t'/, [ "And thou, son of man, say unto the children of thy people, The righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression; and as for the wick- [ edness of the wicked, he shall not fall thereby in the day that he, turneth from his wickedness; neither shall he that is righteous be able to live thereby in the day that he sinneth." It is too true that the evil of man's past prolongs itself into the future, and that sin cannot at once be done with. Yet we be- ,licve in the forgiveness of sin; and this is the truth which the prophet desires to teach his children over-! whelmed with the thought of their own evil past. I "When I say to the righteous, that) he shall surely live; if he trust to his righteousness, and commit in- iquity, none of his righteous deeds shall be remembered; but in his in- iquity that he hath committed, therein shall he die." Cf. , ' 20; 18 t,' 24. It was a wide-spread delusion among the Jews that they possessed an hereditary righteousness that, whatever they might be themselves, yet the righteousness, of their right- eous fathers, from Abraham down, would avail them, and, if they ex- perienced the contrary in their mis- fortunes, they held themselves justi- fied in murmuring against God. I of israel?" A yearning tenderness here manifests itself, still seeking, notwithstanding all that has taken place, the return of those who sur- vived in the way of peace. "Say unto them, As I live, said the Lord Jehovah, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that. the wicked turn from his way and live: turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, o house of Israel?" A yearning tenderness " ,. T, 'N .5; if. The bound running. The I!!!" Ire, On the new bill. Mortal, gallant. " a cockerel'l err. To this child. To ntl um children, " out than To In! with “It“ m” To drink clear - .. tMrittlr, oh My To swell " bubble, The Btattett red Boqrer Hardy and norm. The bright In; Stephen Vintyutt Benet, in the Atlantlc Monthly. Like I tlower, like a tulip, Bo fresh, so hardy, so alien, Io hating. The nose tip-tttted, The month her mother’s. The eye. brighter Than nbblt'a or squirrel“: Suddenly m From bond: or burrow; All this in motion. Motion and "mring. Al " all life Were n yin of ocean. " it ul llto Won the an. out '.rttaet.q way. My Dr. Fyfe Is one of Cannda'n most distinguished educationms. He was born In London, England. July 9. 1878, and was educltod u Fettes College, Edinburgh. Odor-d University, Ind Queen's. Dalton-1e and Western 0n. urlo Culver-Men. " George bu lectured In many par“ of the world u an edttctttiottiBt And has published 3 - many re. llgloul “lulle- and eatutrte. He In " year: old. Very Rev. Sir George Adam Smith resigned last June after " yen. In the past. He In: Also been chaplain to the King In Scotland since 1933. London. Eng. - William Hamilton Fyfe, principli Ind viceuetuutretlor ot Queen's University. Kingston. since 1930. has been appointed princimi ot the University of Aberdeen in succox. nion of Six- G. A. Smith. Ontario apple growers are well or- “mud and well equipped tor "port ahipmenu. but more in apparently no organization, no eo-operation and no coherence that will nopularlzo Mcin. togh Roda on the home markrl. The old.time barrel and bulk methods of the past are altogether out of date when applied to the merchandising of Ontario's large production of a choice deucrt variety. The growers would wake up! Boy Scout ormintionu in the ration: cities have the: is called " Apple Day when they o'er Apple. tor ale on the streets. Naturally they prefer to sell the choicest npplel grown in Ontario. (relied. well-coior. ed end sound. With can organize. tions the leinto-h Red is preferred,. for that uriety in at its beat when the Apple Day is held 'tttout the mid.. die ot October. AI .n imnwdiaie market tor a urge quottity of apple: " may not be attractive. but its pd, vertising posnibilitiee are tremen- docs. The sale ll ulullly given free window display space. generous news- paper publicity and often hw- radio announcements. in what hotter way could Ontario-grown McIntosh [twin be introduced to Ontario consunwrx? Bo ttr . who! has been found tor the product ot these on-comlng orchardl. but me time to here when Ontario growers will have to realize that the whole Ontario market Itt needed for the production of Snows. lclntooh Bed- nnd Dellcloun. Ontario In. been he. the begin- ulna. n barrqiUd Apple province. in contrast with arm-u Columbia where only the amt trait (no: into boxea tor ion; dUtanee marketing. Ontario he no" not den-er! lpplea. but utility VIrieNm trttrot n Snya. Raid- wins. Greening, Burk. Ben Davis and many others suitable tor all. round may use. During these last ten or ittteett year: the litultion ha- been (nanny yet ourer changing. Thou-nan of new freer, are coming into bearing end the» new trees are producing the tinegrt dessert Ipplel in the world - Delicious 1nd Mcln- to“: Reds. Apple mm In no Province of Ontario should I“. u. to the tact “In they have tre-rt varieties at Apple- to all and have competition to meet. Asleep at Switch? Girl Child Important Post

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