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Durham Review (1897), 21 Nov 1935, p. 7

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Aimed e Movie eviewers appropri. d Expedition xt m with W Ad 10 per. But while the soup that has ‘cen salted with too heavy a hand often seems like a tragedy, the tasteless dish is even more so. Desâ€" rts, candies and sweets of all kinds gain in flavor if a few grains o salt are added. Any combination containing milk or cream â€" requires SEASONING WORKS Of course, you must use gumpâ€" n in choosing seasoning. Don‘t 1 the fiavor of your food with ir cinnamon or all spice or pepâ€" ~. But while the soup that has n salted with too heavy a hand en seems like a tragedy, the tecless dish is even more so. Desâ€" serve () ©..s0Ni~NG WORKS WONDERS )n days when you are bored with : and three meals a day, go out ) the kitchen and experiment with soning. Many opportunities for k‘s amusement and family pleasâ€" lie in your condiment pots and 2 tablespoon butter 2 tablesncon flour f 1 cup milk * cup grated cheese 1‘ cups cooked spinach, chopped 6 eags Salt and pepper Melt butter, blend in flour _ and seasoninges and gradually add milk. Stir until mixture thickens. Add rrated cheese. place 14 cup spinach n each ramekin. Drop raw ee@ on op of spinach. Season with salt and epner. Ovenâ€"poach at 350 degrees ‘. for 15 minutes or until eggs are ot. Cover with cheese sauce and â€" @ggs 4 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon pepper 1 tablespoon minced onion Butter bread and cut into cubes; t cheese into cubes and put bread d cheese in baking dish in alterâ€" to layers. Beat eggs slightly, add mato juice, salt, pepper and onion. ir over bread and cheese and bake moderate oven at 350 degrees F. about 40 minutes. in cet Ov de Navour is rightfully taken into le’- count and this healthful food is one of the ingredients used in making an unlimited number of nourishing main courses. The following recipes are a few examples of how cheese may be combined with cereals â€" or bulky vegetables to make a satisfy. ing dish. Although in some cases the amount of cheese called for in the recipe seems small in comparison to that of other ingred‘ents, the cheese may contribute the most food value due to the fact that it is such a concentrated food. Cheese Ring With Vegetables 1 cup milk 1 eup soft bread crumbs 1 egg 1%% cups cooked macaroni 1 cunp Canadian cheess Alsad urn out Ramek CHEESE As Â¥You LIKE Few foods are so distineti cheese for fow foods can be i such a variety of ways in the eon, supper or dinner menu, was a time when cheese was 1 served as a final tidbit to a stantial meal, but today its hig value in addition to its os: Baked Tomato and Cheese slices bread cup cheese cups tomato juice 1 cup mi 1 eup so 1 egg 1%4 eups c 1 cup Ca 1 tablesp 1 tablesp 1 teaspoo 3 tablesni cup Sali Filling cup medium cream sauce cups cooked vegetables such as eup cooked peas FU MANCHTU _ Ccups cooked macaroni . _cup Canadian cheese, diced tablespoon minced parsley _ tablespoon chopped pimiento _teaspoon minced onion tablespoons melted butter Salt and pepper Id milk. Add to bread. Add well 1 egg and other ingredients. into greased ring mould and oach in a moderate oven (350 s F.) for about 50 minutes. out on hot platter. Pour filling tre and garnish with parsiey. ind nepper of Egg and Spinach carrots re so distinctive as foods can be used in f ways in the luncehâ€" LIKE I‘T high food savoury into acâ€" TANGY DISHES As every housewife knows, â€" the brisk, chill winds of fall are natural appetite stimulants. The pungent odor of woodâ€"smoke, the wineâ€"like scent of apples fresh from orchards, , | the rime that mists the meadows at 1| early mornâ€"these are tokens that . | Jack Frost will soon be calling. The | | keen hunger roused by these signs , | of autumn is not appeased with comâ€" | mon dishes. It needs something in | accord with the season; something as tantalizing and stimulating as the fall itself. You and your family will appreciate these recipes at any time â€"but especially right now. Alpine Steak 2 pounds round steak, ground 1 can tomato soup 2 cups cracker crumbs 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper V teaspoon poultry dressings 1 tablespoon minced onion 1 cup sweet pickles, thinly sliced Combine _ meat, soup, _ cracker crumbs, and seasonings. Mix thorâ€" ¢ oughly. Fold in pickles. Press into a r greased loaf tin and bake in a | a moderate oven (325 degrees F.) for in one hour or until done. This loaf is c excellent hot or cold and will keep | w several days in a refrigerator. Makes | â€" an excellent filling for sandwiches. + There usually : subâ€" squares and olives. Trasted Cheese Squares Ten slices of bread cut 1â€"3 _ inch thick, 1% cups cream cheese, 3 tablespoons chopped pimento, _ 4 tablespocns butter. The packaged cheese â€" works up easily and smoothly. Mash cheese, add butter and pimento and mix until blended. Place five slices of bread. one on top of the other with cheese filling between. Repeat with remainâ€" ing slices of bread. Put in refrigerâ€" ator until firm, about % hour. Slice each mound of bread into 4 slices. Bake in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.) until brown. Serve hot. In this case the toasting develops flavor quite as much as the season-, ings. In soups, sauces and salads or with fish, meats and vegetables paprika‘s milk flavor is an â€" addiâ€" tion. Itts vivid color makes it an excellent garnish, too. Remember, though, there are two kinds â€" the Hungarian which is pungent â€" and the Spanish which is very mild. Cream of lima bean soup made faintly pink with paprika is nice served with toasted pimento cheese‘ o ty Cayenne pepper is sométhing else again and must be used very sparâ€" ingly, but a deft use of it lends zest to many a dish. PEEITHOD EMCY 4001 strength of the pepper berry is found ’in the outer shells of which black pepper is made. You need two pepâ€" per mills in your house, a wooden one for the kitchen and a pewter one, say, for the dining table. This insures freshly ground pepper for all seasoning purposes. Use Cayenne With Care 1 weu. , Both sugar and salt are helpful in blending _ several flavors into a smooth combination. Highly spiced sauces and bakedâ€"stuffs are very deâ€" pendent on skilfal seasoning with salt and sugar. As a seasoning for meat and dark sauces, black pepper is more effectâ€" ive than white because the real ShwamseL _# i1 ’ salt. Even coffee is more delicious if a bit of salt goes into the fusion, Sugar Helps Vegetables Sugar is another everyday seasonâ€" ing that works wonders when judiâ€" ciously used. Unless vegetables are fresh from the garden a little sugar is needed to heighten their natural sweetness. _ Tomatoes must â€" always have a dash of sugar. Roasts deâ€" velop a riches flavor when a bit of sugar is rubbed into the surface. All dressings â€" and sauces â€" containing Th en Ves t o oi c t us F salt. 1â€"3 inch Slice until 1 egg, well beaten 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper 1 cup soft bread crumbs Compine ingredients and turn into a buttered bread pan. Bake in a moderate oven (360 degrees F.) about 25 minutes. To serve, unmold in center of platter, place strips of crisp bacon over the top and garnish with slices of fried tomatoes. some Here are two unusual dishes made from cooked, dried lima beans. Limas With Sausage & pound sausage 1 mediumâ€"sized onion 1 cup cooked, dried limas 1 cup tomatoes V teaspoon chili VÂ¥ teaspoon salt Fry onion and sausage until well done. Add other ingredients and simâ€" mer for 30 minutes. Lima Loaf 2 cups cooked, dried limas 2 tablespoons minced onion 2 tablespoons tomato catsup 3 tablegpoons melted butter UNUSUAL DISHES The good cook, who has learned the effect of new and unusual dishâ€" es upon her gfily and guests is in an envious position. Her meals are praised and eagerly sought after. She becomes the local "grood cook." Chicken Salad 4 cups cooked chicken, diced 14 cup small sweet pickles, chopâ€" ped 2 cups celery, sliced fine hardâ€"cooked eggs 2 pickeled beets Salt and pepper Mayonnaise Mix chicken, pickles and celery,. Add mayonnaise to moisten. Add salt and pepper if needed. Arrange on lettuce. Garnish with sliced eggs and sliced beets and more mayonâ€" naise. â€" _ THE LESSON IN ITs SETTING Timeâ€"Events recorded in that part of the book of Ezra which is found in this lesson occurred between the years 536 B.C. and 516 B.C. Psalm 84 was written during the days of the monarchy. Haggai prophesied during the second year of Darius, 520 B.C., and Zechariah, a contemâ€". GOLDEN TEXTâ€"I was they said unto me, Let the house of Jehovah. LESSON VIHM. â€" November 24 THE MESSAGE OoF HAGGAI AN ZECHARIAH Haggai 1 : 2â€"8; 2 : 8, 9; Zechariah 4 : 6â€"10. , Beatrice, or maybe i as she and her twin siste greeted by their proud 1 turned film actor. UND A Y CHQOQOI â€"Psalm 122 : 1 was glad when us go unto be it is Barbara, yawns at sister arrive in Hollywood 39 Byc it oo it oi er arrive in Hollywood from East father, Edward Burns, former te seve 6 . * R\ ‘ 2 B M cAz VY * 7 (DVIAF /E 3Â¥ CS 43 / u,i..?\ ‘[’I’;\‘\ //.-; [ ‘»,Y‘ { Il'-‘v:'x TX Sor e n Tw L , l '\, !!‘Ll T :J!li ’/f ’; ’1‘4:-'1 ,;": ’dfl’ ' t M ”‘i:;[}% “\‘ (AF B ‘(l“ ’/ M\ “,. 4 | Foster came with a suj ter. . . . Recollection of how 1 had let the slave girl frick me made my heart heav». .: : = man‘s rig, and | watched the fumiomufior; of Smith into a sinister waterfront characâ€" 42. nâ€"_.tâ€".c_ _‘ VaRra L lcus . © 1931 By Sax Rohmer and The Beil Syndicate, Inc. wiil 1 give peace, saith Jehovah of hosts." It cannot be said that the glory of Zerubbabel‘s temple _ or even that of Herod surpassed â€" the temple of Solomon in costliness, splendor, and glory. If this passage is to be a literal fulfillment, it must be in a temple yet to be built. If, however, one wishes to confine the AND j "Thus saith Jehovah of hosts: Consider your ways. Go up to the mountain, and bring wood, and build the house; and I will take pleasure in it, and I will be glorified, â€" said Jehovah.‘" No one mountain is here thought of. The reference is simply to those high lands where the most suitable timber for building purposâ€" es could be found. God himself makâ€" es this command, and, with the command, extends a precious promise that, if they will do what he asks them to do, he will not only _ take pleasure in it, but will be glorified in their work. "The silver is mine, and the gold is mine, saith Jehovah of hosts. The latter glory of this house shall be | greater than the former, said Jeâ€" | hovah of hosts; and in this place || Willâ€" I wive neass ‘enlth Pni L *4 to "Thus speaketh Jehovah of hosts, saying, This people say, It is not the 1| time for us to come, the time for Jehovah‘s house to be built." It is not stated on what grounds the peoâ€" t | ple based this assumption; but pro. d | bably they palliated their indifference e | to religion by a pretended dread of a | Persian hostility. f "Then came the word of Jehovah 1] by Haggai the prophet, saying, Is , | it a time for you yourselves to dwell â€" | in your ceiled houses, while this â€" | house lieth waste?" Their own comâ€" forts were their condemnation. If they had found means, leisure, and security to furnish such houses for themselves, it could scarcely be the times which prevented them _ from building God‘s house. "Now therefore thus saith Jeâ€" hovah of hosts: Consider your ways. Ye have sown much,and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; | ye drink, but ye are not fAilled with | drink; ye clothe you, but there is | 1 none warm; and he that earneth | wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes." Nothing had prosâ€" | ~ pered with these people. Their harâ€" | n vest were bad. The food they ate | v did not satisfy. The money _ they | t made vanished. So thousands of | t people can testify today that, having | C been u fair with God whom they | t worshipped and claimed to love, God | f: has somehow made life barren in its | te permanent situations for them. o LEsson porary of his, prophesied during this and the succeeding years. Placeâ€"Practically all the passagâ€" es in this lesson record events takâ€" ing place in the city of Jerusalem. tions for them. Jehovah of hosts: 1 from Last and are , former tennis star this posing business mt 6i k B t t c agt ns 0 THE SEVERED F INGERSâ€"Petrie Left Out 200 en o dn‘ o nc en e ie "Moreover the word of Jehovah came unto me, saying, The hands of Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this house; his hands shall also finish it; and thou shalt know that Jehovah of hosts hath sent me unto you." This promise was fulfilled about four years later (Ezra 6 : 14, 15). acuon that reflects glory upon God. "Who art thou, O great mountain ? before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain; and he shall bring forth the top stone with shoutings of Grace, grace, unto it." The great mountain represents colossal difficulties and hindrances, which, relying upon God‘s Spirit, would be levelled to a plain. Oc ie cce ie 1 ‘ J meaning of this passage to the true | worship of God, which is known through and made possible through | the Son of God, the Lord _ Jesus Chr‘ist, then, of course, the glory of the worship which Christ receives from his Church today. also the true temple of God, is far greater â€" in glory, and truthfulness, and reality, than any glory which rested upon a material temple such as Solomon‘s. "Then he answered and spake unâ€" to me, saying, This is the word of Jehovah unto Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit saith Jehovah of hosts." You have taken your own measure; you feel your weakness to cope with your cireumstances, but you are to understand that it is God‘s Spirit who is the source of every enlightening action that reflects glory upon God. dim Eyes look anxiously at him. Kind, familiarized with deathâ€" As wert Thou of Nazareth, Now a little child to christen, Now a patient hour to listen To a burdened father‘s woes, Up and down the street he goes, Sharing every smile and tear, Counting not his own life dear, Walk beside him all the days In our small town‘s devious ways; Rest him, Lord, with birds and bees And the whispering of the trees. He whose days are one long givingâ€"â€" Keep in him the joy of living. Counselling the sad and weak; Hastening words of cheer to speak To the lowly and the least; Smiling at a wedding feast; Helping blind, relentless youth Into patience, vision and truth. Teaching downcast hearts to hope; Clasping feeble hands that grope When the earth srenne Fuda‘ as C i44 TY DLE feurs in highâ€"powered _ cars who know the road is slippery, while in 1914 they were like chauffeurs who did not know what skidding was." "Whien the British Empire puts 150 war vessels into the Mediterranâ€" ean there is something more than a rehearsal of Gilbert and Sullivan in prospect."â€"Dr. William J. Elliott of Havard University. "The only paimists I will allow to read my hand are travelling sypsies, whose vision of the future becomes rosier and rosier as your payment increases."â€"Robert Lynd. ( ‘‘No recent reform has delighted me so much as that just announceâ€" ed in Poland, where election meet. ings and addresses are now made criminal offences."â€"Bernard Shaw. â€" Sir Arthur Willert. "Recent events have that there is one man 1 tie President. His nan D. Roosevelt." â€" Wal "Statesmen today Ufganization is the most deli. cate and difficult of all arts, always liable to perversion in the hands of those who practise it."â€"Beni Prasad. "The darkness and indigence in the life of the masses has so far been the most glaring drawback of civili. zation." â€" Beni Prasad. ‘ ""Ihe conspiracy of two and two to make four is bound to be, in the long run, successful." â€" Rzra Pound. *I am an incorrigible optimist about the twenty.third century." â€" Robert Laud. | cauce of that girll" _ * * _ "*_ @ r"":;'\fl( h. t m 3 PME \ k P it 7P lop) |\A s lE "Organization The Village Minister "The ""I am an fi“ "Y e nm,“' h (Potf ie buian, en ie it ,, bobbyform" "YWM""’MMMW,J,W”“ a*,, causce of that girl!" ise Declare ave made it plain an who can defeat name is Franklin Waliter Lippman, are like chaut. and Di e te t ht i Risccmicts Tt 1. 2s bas just completed a 1,200â€"mile in Czechoslovakia, It was ridde a one.legged exâ€"so‘dier. And we, impressed by what you say, Forbear to combat your contentions In which "the one that got away" Attaings phenomena} dimensions, That was indeed a fish of worth â€" We are not rude enough to doubtl it; But, since it gains in weight and , girth Each time you tell us a)1 about it, We sometimes feel (and are we right?) A wonder whether your narrations Have been exposed to heat and light Experimental applications. Theta in "Humoriet»|. Using a better salve than t} And more traditionally pro You tell of the narrow miss You had, of pulling out a per; And We imnkabend w ca Llst A bamboo bicycle, thirty s gucae on d L +*°0 I was the , James, when your angling elom, nobody sha, fail, __ No shamefaced mien of yours an. Rats from hy nounces ‘Guarded on e A catch that fails to tip the scate| From every c) At more than halfâ€"aâ€"dozen ounces.| they were You do not seem the least put out,] band, You waste no time in useless sigh, | Guarded close ing. obeying the Nor rail at Fate, nor even doubt Whether the worm was really try.| Marching into ‘n‘. AlntiGicss ucll. ONTARIO (It is claimed that e applications of light and caused fish to develop times faster than in nat tions.) For The School Miss i@ht and heat havye The man on the right was a murderer develop twenty.â€"five The man on the left was a thief, n in natural condi. The man across was a gangster boss and wicked beyond beliof, And I was there in a cell between ang four angling efforts| nobody shareq my grief, 4,200.mile tour was ridden by Humorist® years old Horses pour out t} at the new barracks near Berlin. In every the horse has only to make fresh water f trough., reall .|] Marching into the t Getting our soup an Down the aisle in i this, was at the head. roper, And all around wer s8 that the sinks of was at | and vive "Billy game hair. & whop. Mack, gr Athleties One . chuckle His first career was in baseball. He played with presenting Chicago, Pitts Philadelphia in the Natic between 1883 and 1830 Sunday, born in Ames, Ta2., Novem. ber 19, 1863, finished high school in Nevada, Ia., before continuing his education at Northwestern Universt. ty in Evanston, 111. Generally beginning his discourses lln quiet tone, he usually shed his coat and vest at the height of his ’plen, thundering his exhortations to sinners to repent. Words and terms rarely heard in revival meetings slipped from his tongue at his perora. tions as he impelled thousands to rise and "be saved" and "hit the saw. dust trail" that was sprinkled to his altar. In As late as October 27, hoy Bunday conducted on of his turesque _ revival meetings in diana and was elated that some score of his audience had con the altar, He had been a compelling f on North American revival trums since 1896~â€"thunderlnx v tangy piraseology, vehement gesture. game his The discases first years ago and ha preaching since. Sundayâ€""he just slipy pillow and closed his Quit Major Leagu Sunday, who quit baseball at the height to become the leading the United Statee h. addition the evan ‘ CHICAGO,-“BHIU"' Sunday, _ the internationally famous evangelist who caused thovsands to "hit the sawdust trail" to his pulpit and renounce the devil and Tum, died suddenly last week of angina pectoris, As described by the wife of Rov. Wlllum tu Sunilnkslinmnirtnm . ssm clbrng cas Once Professional Basebalt Player, Became Internatâ€" ionally Famous for His Religious Work " stole four â€" and had Conn "Billy" Sunday Dies in Chicago ddition to "Ma e evangelist‘s imeetings, twe illiam Jr., of L4 2s oCC e e goes echoing al} around, And sitting alone in my cell of stone the depths of despair I found. â€"Maurice L. Kilgrove, of Listowet in Listowel Banner. grey The feet of the guard in the « Mak® a dismal sort of sound The brazen dong of the pris: My college course I For a job with a da; I travelled wide but for there wasn‘t a So they locked me vj and made me a ja of One of an army of A victim of modern When a man must at home to follow And society‘s only for thirty days. Down on the books as a vagrant, Guilty of being a bum, Pulled by a cop from a box car t herded along with a gun, Shut like a rat in a narrow cell â€" my thirty days is done. { the about for T like one of . And this is the . I couldn‘t find Stifling a broken sob Dl}'ect from Yale t« And I was a 883 and 1890. the feats Sund bout was when r Pittsburgh 1 Â¥ master of | catching for )le four bases had Connie pu} t was elated thltisom;‘ t;o his audience had come to played with teams re. )ed by the wife of Rov. Sundayâ€"known as ‘"Ma" just slipped back on his with a dago crew twosons ‘ Los Ar their own drinks s at Neustrelits, Y stall is a disc; to tread on it to flow into the their , Pittsburgh ana : National League rst seized him three had _ curtailed his Sunday moarh my ol unemployed, odern days, must roam with nerve follow the hobo‘s ways, thundering voice, + vehement â€" in ‘ Bunday first assi compelling figure humanity‘s se _ every hand clime and for e numbered pulling to the dining room soup and bread, ale to a dismal a gangster mob, e crime I was guilt nd a job, but in vain 1 tried I‘t a thing to do. 1e Up in a prison celt A jailâ€"bird too. minister‘s only Angeles i he was in with Connie Philadelphia Washington, during the in the walls of stone law‘s command, assistant Paul P ere the kind of men of iniquity bred. profesional remedy js i, â€" however, of his pic. would lay aside a single file liked out his prison gong who sewers corridor rog. every crime among the In. guilty of, car top, prison son and I till jail s \1

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