West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Dec 1935, p. 3

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t a True id to Beauty i race Renorted LUUIrX<Xs ive nole mere will rds that ie rigors ig under ly crea. :land to mints a% } ‘" ® could were tae Mr. uth the port. the 100 10 Impor. ning all ry that care start shoe ‘tion nake ound 4@ 1) M ) it pâ€" ma, but a k m the C# &4 & Sift flour once, measure, add bak. Ing powder, soda and salt, and sift together three times. Sift one cup flour mixture over fruits and nuts: mix thorougily. Cream shortening thoroughly, add sugar gradually, and cream together until light and Auffy. Add remaining flour mixture to. creamed mixture, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition fntil smooth. Add lemon juice, fruits, and nuts. Fold in egg whites. Pour into paper.â€"lined tube pan or small bread pans, 2 x % x 4% inches. Bake in slow oven (250 deg. F.) 2% hours, then increase to 300 deg. F. for 15 minutes. Makes 6 pounds fruit cake. Oldâ€"Time Brownies is a splendid 4 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon soda 4 teaspoon salt 1 1b. sultana raising & Ib. citron, finely cut 4 lb. each crystalled _ orange peel, lemon â€" peel, pineapple and red cherries. finely cut 10 ogg whites, stiffly beaten 1 ib. blanched almonds, finely cut 1 cup butter or other shortening 1%% cups sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice White Fruit creasngly pop tested recipe batter for the of frute > _ / _ _ °9 IHto pPans which have been greased, lined with heary paper, and again greaged. Bake in slow oven (250 deg. F.y until thoroughly done. Cool in pans. For large loaves bake in 8 x 4 x 3 inch pans about 4 hours, For small loaves bake in 6 x 3 x 24%4 inch pans about 2% to 3 hours. Makes 10 pounds fruit cake. To store, brush lightly with port or brandy, wrap in waxed paper, and keep in airâ€"tight container, Or brush wlthl grape juice, wrap and store. * % teaspoon cinnamon 4 teaspoon mace 1 I1b. butter or other shor 1 1b. brown sugar 10 eggs, well beaten 4 Ib. candied cherries M 1b. candied pineapple 1 I1b. dates seeded and slic 1 Ib. raisins 1 1b. currants 4 lb. citron, thinly sliced 14 Ib. candied orange and le; 4 Ib. nut meats, chopped 1 cup honey 1 cup molasses % cup cider Sift flovr once, measure, a ing powder and spices, and gether three times. Cream sh thoroughly, add sugar gradua cream together until light an Add eggs, fruits, peel, nuts, molasses and cider. Add flour ally. Turn into pans which ha greased, lined with heary pap again greaged. Bake in slo (250 deg. F.y until thorought Cool in pans. For large loave in & K & % ® Hanls senll n oys on y Tw PC it is not carefully followe curate measurements made course, the fruit, flour and not just thrown together come to hand â€" they must as specified in the recipe dark fruit cake, the fruit directly after the sugar; in is floured and added when ; is well mixed, The recipe for â€" Christn Cake here has been carefu and gives a perfect cake. J IS. CEHE xumet ks o un i. MGweiipcedictd ic‘ and gives a perfect cake. 1 Ib. (4% cups) sifted cake 1 teaspocn baking powder 4 teaspoon cloves MAKE xXmas CAKES Now Eggs are lky-rocketng just as 10â€"egg cake season," that of x baking, opens. _ While "use only tested recipes the first rule of a successful ¢ nowhere is it more important t in making Xmas cakes, crammed of the finest fruits and spices, | in a delicate, smoo@ batter m with the finest cake flour obt; able, wWHITE FRUIT cake * EFruit Cake is bec 1y popular and ths recipe gives a feat] for the deli¢inne . good true recipe is of no use it not carefully followed and ac. e measurements made. And, of e, the fruit, flour and eggs are just thrown together â€" ag they tn haw 4 ue & you may appear next in the river with half your fingers e h L Four shabby fellows saluted when we entered the Wapping River Police Station. We were to go to Shen Yan‘s in the police launch, which would await an alarm from us. "But don‘t wait too long," Weyâ€" mouth warned Smith, when plans were completed, "or FU MANCHU lemon juice, fruits, and °gg whites. Pour into ibe pan or small bread x 4% inches. Bake in " "mes. Cream short add sugar gradually, ther until light and f fruits, peel, nuts, hq id cider. Add flour g1 and spices, and ';l'rt #° and ths carefully ves a feathery light delicious combinaton been carerull; tested nge and lemon pee! chopped Aly tested recipes" jg of a successful Cook, more important than s cakes, crammed full ns about 4 hours e in 6 x 3 x 214 2% to 3 hours. it cake. To store, port or brandy, er, and keep in Or brush with 1 store. * is becoming in. isure, add bak Christmas Fruit am shortening nuts, honey idually, and t and fluify. sliced spices, held batter made flour obtain. rtening . be added for, in a is added a light, it the batter radu. been flour 1 small onion, finely chopped 3 _ tablespoons quick.cooking tapio. ca (1% cups tomatoes, _ strained and heated M cup grated cheese buttered crumbs 1 _ tablespoon butter 4 teaspoon sugar % teaspoon salt 1â€"8 teaspoon paprika 18 ripe or stuffed olives, coarsely chopped Saute onion in butter. Add quick. cooking tapioca, salt, sugar, onion, and paprika to tomato juice, and cook in double boiler 5 minutes or until tapioca is clear, stirring frequentiy. Place layer of tapioca mixture in | greased baking dish, cover with |, cheese, add Inyer of Aolivee Ihow «. to. Escalloped cheese and olives is a ’flavorsomo and smartly new supper dish â€" the very thing for late Sunday supper or "high tea" as many Can. adians still call it. And it‘s excellent for luncheons, too, with rye bread or bran muffins. ESCALLOPED CHEESE aAND OLIVEs peat until all ingredients are topping with cocoanut. Cover bake in moderate oven (350 deg 35 minutes. Uncover and bake 1 15 minutes longer, or until apples soft. Serves 6. sprinkle with ; cinnamon, and Ccocoanur appie BETTY 1 _ tart app‘es, pared _ and thinly sliced 1 _ cup soft bread crumbs 1 _ cup shredded cocoanut % cup firmly packed brown sugar 4 teaspoon cinnamon 4 _ tablespoons butter Arrange the layer â€" of apples in greased baking dish. Cover with bread crumbs and COCOANNt â€" than new dress sing wives first serv Ple Betty is a yet easily made I APPLE CiDErR ANG 1 _ package quick setting _ lemon | jelly powder 1_ cup warm water 1 eup sweet cider 1%4 cups red apples, cut in matohn. stick pieces Dissolve jelly powder in warm water; add cider. Chill. When slight. ly thickened, fold in apples. Turn into indivdual moulds. Chill until firm. Unmould. Serves 6. Poor "Apple Betty" hasn‘t had a new dress since Canadian â€" house. nndesa c "a. 1 7 To add pep and interest or dinner menu, the cle maker can turn out Apple ( in a short time and at a Apples, rosy and full Canada‘s pride at this keep the doctor away supply valuable mineral and lemonâ€"colored 2% squares uns weelened chocolate, meited 1 _ cup sour cream 1 _ cup walnut meats, broken 1 _ teaspoon vanilla Sift flour once, measure, add soda and salt, and sift together â€"three times. Add sugar to egg yolks, cream. ing well. Add chocolate and blend. Add flour, a‘ternately with cream, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition until smooth. Add nuts and vanilla. Pour into deep, greased cupâ€"cake pans, filling them about 1.3 full. Bake in hot oven (400 deg. F.) 15 minutes. Makes 3 dozen Brown. ines. 4 ‘"°5 UIS1, cover with layer of olives, then re. a cheese and olives is a and smartly new supper very thing for late Sunday on oal . 8 served her. Cocoanut :Ap- s a "company" dish and CS Qist. Cover with $ and cocoanut then a mixture of sugar and | dot with butter. De. ingredients are used, By Sax Rohmer " (530 deg. FP.) and bake 10 to until apples are ineral salts, interest to a lunch the clever home. Apple Cider Tang full flavored, are this season. They way because they over and very low svgar thinly Or vases and place them upsid-é'c'l'(-)wn in a pudding dish. Half fill the basin with water, so that the flower deads water supply should place the ing up bowl full of cold wa the kitohen range. It will be ; ready for use. | HOME HINTS _ When paper hanging, u starch instead of flour for It sticks better, is also nomical, and makes the cleaner. With the Christmas season coming on apace, it is well to keep this sug. gestion in mind. The novelty of the gift will surprise and please the re. ceiver,. thick j All gifts, however, do not bespeak Ithls wish so well as they might. Household gifts lack the desirable personal touch â€" yet purely personal presents often wear out or change style so quickly that the giving seems an illâ€".chosen waste. The perâ€" fect gift not only gives instant pleasure, but lingers on to charm the receiver many, many times, Pets make excellent gifts. Can. aries, particularly, touch a respon. sive chord _ in any woman‘s heart. They need little care: a& bit of water, some bird.food and â€" such tiny lux. uries as will make life more pleasant for them. And in return they bring their owners the gift of song from morning till dusk, Each night take volets from their Housewives â€" who A CHRISTMAS GIFT For ALL , THE YEAR There is no such thing as a poor Christmas present. Some are just better than others. Any gift offered out of a spirit of love and friendship carries a sentiment not to be dis. carded lightly. _|mainder of tapioca mixture. _ Cover | with crumbs. Bake in moderate oven | (350 deg. F.) 20 minutes. Serves 4. , Tomato Rabbit is one of those odd. ly named dishes, because a rabbit never came near it. Perhaps it de. scended from the old Welsh and To. mato Rarebits that were the pride of the chafing dish expert. But this To. mato Rabbit hasn‘t the tendency to get stringy and tough as the rare. bits did because minute tapioca, not corn starch, is used to bind it. TOMATO RABBIT 2 tablespoons quickâ€"cooking _ ta. pioca 1 cup milk, scalded 1 cup canned tomato soup 4 teaspoon salt dash of paprika 1 _ cup grated cheese Add quickâ€"cooking tapioca, _ salt, and paprika to milk. and cook in double boiler 5 minutes or until tapioca is clear, stirring frequently. Add tomato soup and cheese. _ Cook until cheese is melted. Serve on crackers or toast. Serves 4. C Sm CC p Spmedt A tered the flowerâ€"banked Royal attend a commuand narfarman, bers of Ki r King George and Queen Mary of _ command performfifibeâ€"ix‘éli vt] the Royal Family also attended flour for the paste. Mahogany woodwork can be wash. is also more eco. ed with cold tea, or with a weak es the job much mixture of vinegar and water. cold water on will be getting have no hot , use common do not bespeak as they might. the desirable purely personal wash. Royal Performance Keep a small bottle of ammonia on the desk. A dip of the pen in the ammonia will make it as clean as new. cheesecloth oiik and woollens can be ironed safely on the right side if they are covered with a slightly dampened A wet chamois, wrung dry, will re. move all lint from the upholstered furniture. sew a small cachet bag inside the hat. Linseed oil is excellent for remov. ing rust from the range. are well covered, while the stalks are left exposed to the air. â€"In the morning gently shake the water from the petals and rearrange in vases. Silk and woollens can He commutes from Jamaica to what he calls "his port of missing men." Oppie sees relatives enter the morgue, and sit on a long bench waitâ€" ing their turn. He leads their grim search through the corridors. The bodies are photographed, wrapâ€" ped in sheets, tagged and listed â€" in the book of unidentified dead. Then they are taken to the basement and placed in long cases. _ Here are men and women who met death suddenly and alone. Some are from other cities; they dropped out of sight without causing a ripple on New York‘s surface. Relatives back home wait and wonâ€" der why they do not write. To Oppie‘s care are entrusted Manâ€" hattan‘s unidentified dead: Suicides, derelicts and failures tossed aside by the city‘s rush. Across the street, tenement childâ€" ren play, unmindful of the morgue, and the life of the city whirls by. Oppie is custodian of the place. Officially it is known as the city morgue; but to him it is "tragedy terrace". He advanced his claim to the title at a gloomy brick building surroundâ€" ed by a high iron fence at 29th Street and First avenue. NEW YORWâ€"Louis Oppie believâ€" es he has the saddest job in the naâ€" tio_q’s largest city. novel way to scent the hair is to SAYS HIS IS t‘here recent] yl' â€"Other _mer;; SADDEST JOB 39 "And I said unto the nobles, and to the rulers and to the rest of the people, The work is great and large, and we are separated upon the wall, one far from another." "In what place soever ye hear the sound of the trumpet, resort ye thither unto us; our God will fight for us." "So we wrought in the work: and half of them held the spears from the rising of the morning till the stars appear. ed." Even though Nehemiah had made elaborate plans for the defence i C Es PC emeey WTP MRRTTY PIPC Ithe rulers were behind all the house of Judah." _ We should gather from this verse that only in the case of Nehemiah‘s personal attendants was there still an insistence upon arms being carried while the work of building went on. "Laded themselves; every one with one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other held Ais weapon. And the builders, every one has his sword girded by hi% side, and so builded. _ And he that sounded the trumpet was by me." Nehemiah had kept oversight of the entire under. taking. THE SEVERED F INGERSâ€"Setting The T "And it came to pass, when our enemies heard that it was known unâ€" to us, and God had brought their counsel to nought, that we returned all of us to the wall, every one unto his work." God has brought the counsel of the enemy to nought through the precautionary measures now taken by Nehemiah, and the enemy apparently abandoned their in tention of making immediate attack. "And it came to pass from that time forth, that half of my servants wrought in the work, and half of them held the spears, the shields, and the bows, and the coats of mail; and "But we made our prayer unto our God." Note here the plural pronouns. Hitherto there had been a melancholy solitariness about the earnest devo. tion of Nehemiah. The success of his misson began to show itself when the citizens began to participate in the same spirit of devotion. "And set a watch against them day and night, because of them." Certainly prayer did not make â€" these people carelss. Men who â€" first speak to God and manifest dependence upon him are generally found to be those who make the wisest use of every available and honorable source for bringing about those things concerning which God has revealed his will. } "And they conspired all of them to. gether to come and fight against Jerusalem, and to â€" cause confusion therein." The sudden arrival of hes. tile forces outside Jerusalem did cer. tainly cause confusion. ‘But it came to pass that, when Sanballat, and ‘Tobiazh, and the Ar. abians, and the Ammonites, and the Ashdodites, heard that the repairing of the walls of Jerusalem went for. ward, and that the breaches began to be stopped, then they were very wroth." In most editions of the He. brew Bible, this is the first verse of the fourth chapter. Here we have a complete list of the foes of Jerusa. lem. Here we find the anger of bhese{ opponents reaching its highest pitch. can almost be called a piece of quiet humor. _ Nothing could stop these people. God was there. The king‘s de. cree was in their midst, "And all the wall was joined together unto half the height thereof: for the people had a mind to work. LESSON X â€" December 8 NEHEMIAH REBUILDING THE WALL OF JERUSALEM Nehemiah 4:6.9, 15.21. GOLDEN TEXT â€" The people had a mind to work. â€" Nehemiah 4:6. THE LESSON IN iTs sETTiNG TIME. â€" All the events recorded in the first seven chapters of the book of Nehemiah took place within a period of one year, 445.444 B.C. PLACE. â€" Susa, the ancient capiâ€" tay of Persia, the winter residence of Artaxerxes, _ about eightly _ miles east of the Tigris River; and the city of Jerusalem. "So we built the wa‘l C UNDAY ~â€"â€"â€" 2CHOOl Esson This phrase Style No. 2799 is designed for sizes 11, 13‘ 15, 17 and 19 years. Size 15 requires 8% yards of 39. inch material with 14 yards of 39â€" inch contrasting. HOW TO ORDER PATTERXS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted.. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferâ€" red; wrap it carefully) and adâ€" dress your order to Wilson Patâ€" tern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Simple â€" to ";'ewâ€"inexpcmive, :nd what a remarkably chic efâ€" fect Wool jersey, rabbits wool, velâ€" veteen, novelty crepe silks, velvet, »tc., are very attractive materials for this dress. The shirt collar ind double row of buttons are ‘harmingly young. ONTARIO ARCHIVES Here‘s a very smart basque model with a very modern look, that will interest bright young ‘hings and the young business woâ€" man, th Custom may errors; but | Fielding. That ; cording : heights â€" from the _ The sevenâ€"year height is not in. fallible, but it is better for predicting than her height at the age of 11, Dr. Edwin B. Wilson, of the Harvard School of Public Hea‘th told the National Academy of Sciences. That is the way girls grow, ac. cording to a study of 275, whose heights were measured each year from the ages of seven to 16. If she is tall, then she is likely to be tall at 16, when her growth is about complete. If medium at seven, she may always be so. If short then you need not expect a tall daughter, To tell how tall likely to grow, take age of seven. of the city while its walls were being built, nevertheless, he had confidence that his God would fight for his people. (See also Ex. 15:3â€"6; 14:14; Deut. 1:30; 3:22; 20:4; 28:7). Your Daughter‘s Basque Model how tall small daughter is _lead a man into many it justifiese none. â€" her height at the [ "All this talk of wa» in Evrope will vanish like a Bummer shower. The nations of the world w.l© pe embracing each other inside of i6 months.â€"Sir Gerald Campbell, Productive farming, he claimed, is farming for the communityâ€"ecoâ€" nomic farming by scientific methods. To the school is left instruction to that end. Children of the farms should be taught farm management, economics, boukkceping and how to employ hours of labor, to give time to resding and the study of f{farm orgarization, Vocational training in the 70 technical schools in Canada should help the younz farmer but, unfortunately, he said, only three of them are in rural places. Owing to the fact that Canada is essentially an agricultural couniry, Mr. Edâ€" wards‘ observations are well worthy of consideration by thore who +ave charge of our educational system, ed for fifty years, despite the fact that conditions are vastly different than a halfâ€"century ago, requiring different means of trainingy . the minds of pupils, whose lives will be spent on the farms. The necessity io: a new deal for the rural high schools in Ontario was advocated the other day before the Chatham Rotary Club by Mr. J. H. Edwards, principal of the Agriculâ€" tural High School of Ridgetown, obâ€" serves the Toronto Mail and Empire. The high schools of the rural disâ€" tricts, he declared, are lagging and are entitled to more publicc interest than they are receiving. The curriâ€" culum has been practically unchangâ€" Ridgetown Principal Declares More Interest Should Be Taken In Rural High Schools one of of the istence CC% °C WOV "ee sasonne jJOr cleanâ€" ing, do it in the open air away from lights and do not use too much "elbow grease" if you want to be sure of coming out with a whole skin. When pouring it from one vessel to another, keep the edges of the two vessels together. Keep open lights away from it. Do not turn the switch of an electric light in a gasâ€" olinedâ€"filled room; the switch may spark and start a fire, Keep it away from amy Hinp In thand decng ul cge n Albris: Advdcsilti s 2s d s1c ud Too much care cannot be used _ in handling gasoline. Have you â€" ever noticed the chains trailing under the big gasoline trucks and wondered why the driver did not tie them up out of the way? Those chains are there to carry off any static electricity that may be generated by friction in any part of the truckâ€"they are there to save the truck from going up in a burst of flames. You may have noticâ€" ed too, that your service station atâ€" tendant, when he is filling your tank, holds the hoze nozzle against the side of the tank. That is to take up any static electricity that may â€" be generated by friction between the gas and the hose. He knows what is liable to happen., Gasoline is a very handy article for several purposes, but, like fire, it is a good servast but a bad master, | Judging by the way some of its | users treat it, especially for cleaning purposes, the wonder is that it has not caused many more deaths and injuries than it has. One very common practice is to use it for removing spots from clothing or rugs, by the simple process of rubbing the spot until it disappears. The worse the spot, the harder the rub, never, apparently, knowing or caring that friction caused by the rubbing is liable to strike a spark that will ignite the gasoline â€" and cause an explosion and fire. Anâ€" other risky practice is to do cleaning with gasoline in a closed room with a light burning. If the light is a coal oil lamp the user is looking for trouble, for fumes will carry several feet, so that a lamp at apparently safe distance may explode the gas. lt ic hta ib A m any fire. In short, treat gasoline h all the care and respect due to : of the most dangerousâ€"while one the most usefulâ€"articles in exâ€" ‘GOOD SERVANT BAD MASTER eral warning ngai;ut the use line for cleaning purposes. Following several fires in named garage the Ontario Fi shal‘s Depnrtment has issued A New Deal? ‘ire Depariment W arns Against Danger of Gasoline you use ° 2C6Y CApI00GE The fas. _care cannot be used in soline. Have you ever chains trailing under the strike a spark gasoline and and fire. Anâ€" s to do cleaning né fires in an unâ€" 1 a gen»â€" of gasoâ€" ire Marâ€"

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