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Durham Review (1897), 23 Jan 1936, p. 6

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ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO EowE uis PERCE S shelf well stocked" Ioeo-mondafio-u 1. Canned Vegetnbles-Corn, toâ€" matoes, peas and baked beans, baby limas, green beans, asparagus, beets, 2. Canned Seaâ€"Food â€" Salmon, tuna, shrimp, crabmeat, lobster, 3, Canned Fruits â€" Grapefruit, peaches, pears, cherries, biueberries, aliced and crushed pineapple. stock h i P ribnidhcaitn Bsns +.A shelves is running low, _ write it down on the pad and keep it in plain sight until next market time. Write your shopping list below it, and you simply cannot overlook it. Economy _ almost demands â€" that you buy your canned goods in quanâ€" titiesâ€"they do not lose food _ value on your shelves, and by watching the market prices you can buy at times and rates that also keep the eanned goods from losing money value. _ Furthermore, a good assortâ€" ment tends to give more variety to your daily menus, and also prepares you to meet the emergencies of ex.â€" tra guests or lack of time, with ease and comfort of mind and soul. It is a good idea to keep a little "stock list" hanging on a hook or fastened with a thumb tack handyv to your | stock of canned awanitls unck muaâ€"t. â€" us ry 12 to 15 minutes longer, or until biscuits are browned. Serves 8. A GOOD RESOLUTION One of the reasons why good reâ€" solutions are so frequently broken is that they are not adopted _ on practical subjectsâ€"or do not make the same allowance for human nature that an engineer makes as ‘ as a ANew Year Resolution im going to keep the pm biscuits, rolled & inch thick Saute mushrooms, celery, _ and onion in butter until tender. Comâ€" bine with remaining ingredients in order given. Turn into greased casâ€" serole and bake in hot oven (425 degrees F.) 25 minutes, stirring mixâ€" ture twice during first 10 minutes of baking. Place biscuits on top of fish mixture after it has baked 10 minutes; return to oven, and bake as a New Ye 1â€"3 cup diced celery 1 medium onion finely chopped 4 tablespoons butter + 3 tablespoons quickâ€"cooking tapioca 1% teaspoon saly; 4 teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons sugar family has to be coaxed to eat fish. Here is a choice Ruropean fish recipe with a modern touch..â€" Casserole of Fish 14 pound (1 cuplzbmmhroouu, washed and"sliced item A NEW FISH DISH Ift there‘s one thing the average housewife will give three cheers for, it‘s a new recipe for cooking fishâ€" especially if some .member of the 3 eupsâ€"canned tomatoes % 8 to 10 unbaked baking powder cups flaked cooked haddock or inned goods and murl: off as you take it out of a handy record in many looked like a lescar. s-u. N -A ‘ e ll" |- ' £ p here to report and take orgers, Potrie. Fu curtained doorv!y and conâ€" d u c t e d man went to impassive Chinam an came downâ€" st airs and left as the litile b ent FU MANCHU S»on the é} Woman‘s P @ â€"World / MWM TB 1 > â€" [ t r,;,;' ;» J "Wait. We must iry to rush the stairs. When ) l MAE ATIY ZB | mer se Ves s s i io ie h the stairt. When | | it\ i4 hedfll l (1 P man I‘ll give the word. f 69 e3 C I > You‘re nearer, and will | £ gj i t a R 4 l\.vod 91;%5*1'3:"!::’..! ‘ / cagl i 4 § can deal wi <" » We ,| _ bak ui dten* EJ } \ 6 PÂ¥X N(’»\- hy _ \,‘g!?:\s\&%; U 94. ds o â€" â€"‘(tay) ie â€" atbEF l J F $ ‘_â€"«* % P‘ / w# M eewi in l #~ Y £Lel s .. ‘lig.>3] F 5s B23 f _« 4 , j »® ~Cp e o ,.\§ f\\.‘_ , a 3 uid mt _ t > i < 'me "moycomo sc ne e ~[ l d n enenionii l .”fl.-uflfi-mh mark off pantry Mane the dessert Saturday mornâ€" ing. Here is the recipe: Pineapple Marshmallow Charlotte Oneâ€"half cup whipping cream, 14 l Sunday night supper is a fine ocâ€" casion to start with. And there‘s a menu thats appetizing and within a beginner‘s ability to prepare : Spaghetti with mushrooms, pineâ€" apple marshmallow charlotte, â€" milk, tea. CHILDREN AS COOKs Can your son and daughter cook? They‘d get lots of fun out of preâ€" paring and serving â€" simpie â€" meals even before they‘ve reached their teens. Method: Melt butter, blend bour, add tomato soup and cook until thickened. Add olives, onion and cheese and stir over low heat until cheese is melted. Serve on toast. Lay strips of bacon over the top and put under a broiler, cooking the bacon on both sides. Tomato Rarebit Two tablespoons butter, 1 table spoon flour, 1 can tomato soup, 6 stuffed olives, chopped, 1 tablespoon minced onion, %4 cup grated cheese.\ _ Method: Make a salad of flaked crabmeat, celery, pimiento, â€" nut meats, seasonings and salad dressâ€" ings. Spread between slices of white or cracked wheat bread. a "devilled" egg in the centre of each of the 4 salkads. Sprinkle the yolk with paprika, Lastâ€"Minute Sandwiches Mix contents of one can Devilled Ham with an equal amount of chopâ€" ped sweet pickle. Season with a little prepared mustard. Use â€" for closed or openâ€"faced sandwiches. Broiled Crabmeat Sandwiches One can crabmeat, % cup celery, finely chopped, 1 pimiento, chopped, & cup chopped nut meats, salt, pepper, parsley, bread, bacon slices. With the electric refrigertor beâ€" coming ever and ever more popuâ€" lar, it is now possible to have fresh, crisp salad greens on hand the year ‘round. They are a great asset for the salad or sandwich that must be made in a hurry. And a recipe or two may also be helpful when that unexpeccted guest pops in. Kidney Bean Salad Eight hard cooked eggs, 2 cups kidney beans, 4 sweet pickles, 1 teaâ€" spoon chopped onion, %4 cup celery, salad dessing to moisten. _ Method: Cut eggs in half crossâ€" wise, chop up 4 of them. _ "Devil" the remaining ones â€" take out the yolks and season with salt, pepper, vinegar and mustard; refill the whitâ€" es and flute the edges, Toss togethâ€" er all the other ingredients includâ€" ing the chopped eggs. Arrange â€" in mounds on crisp lettuce and place By Mair M. Morgan 12. Shortenings â€" Butter, lards, salad oil and your pet kind of subâ€" stitute. 11. Baking Supplies â€" Bread and cake flour, baking powder, _ soda, cornstarch, cornmeal, extracts and spices, 10. Staples â€" Canned milk, gelaâ€" tineâ€"plain and flavored, syrup, moâ€" lasses, sugars â€" granulated, brown, icing. _ 8, Crackers â€" Salted and unsaitâ€" ed, graham wafers, cheese or whole wafers for soups. 9. Fresh Fruits â€" Depending, â€" of course, upon the season, bananas, oranges, apples, grapefruit, cranberâ€" ries. 7. Cereals â€" Rice, macaroni, spaâ€" ghkettii. noodles, tapioca. 6. Dried Fruits â€" Apriocts, figs, dates, raisins, currants. 4. Canned Garnishes â€" Pickles, stuffed and ripe olives, pimientoes, cranberry jelly, maraschino cherries, Jellies. 5. Canned Soups â€" Tomato, vegeâ€" table, chicken, pea, consomme. Within the deep â€"recesses of â€" my heart, There blooms a little .garden, rare and sweet, x And in that sanctuary set apart I tend a lilied shrineâ€"an office meet ‘ For one who gave me life and faith and love. And when I thither go, as oft I do, To tell my rosary of thanks to you, I feel your smile upon me from above For deathâ€"enduring agonies of birth, For patient understanding through the years, For virtue, honour, fortitude from fears, I am a debtor, I, of little worth . But on that altar, builded just for you, The flowers are always fresh with | heaven‘s dew. ¢ For the sauce: Melt butter, â€" add onion cut in thin slices and cook slowly five miutes. Add chopped meat and cook twenty minutes, stirâ€" ring to prevent sticking and burning. Add salt and pepper and tomatoes and cook fifteen minutes longer. Add %4& cup boiling water and mushrooms which have been cleaned and cut in thin slices. Cook twenty minutes‘ longer, stirring occasionally. ' Cook spaghetti in boiling â€" salted water _ for _ twentyâ€"five minutes, breaking it in pieces or cooking , it whole as you prefer. Drain and put on a heatâ€"proof platter. Pour over sauce, sprinkle with grated cheese and slide under the broiler long enough to melt the cheese, "|fire and add sugar ‘and lemon juice. |Place the sauce pan contaimng this | mixture in a larger pan of ice water and chill, stirring constantly. When it begins to thicken add the whipped cream and _ marshmallows, folding them into the gelatine mixture, Line paper cups with lady fingers which have been split, putting the split side in. Pile charlotte mixture lightâ€" ly in the cups, cover with waxed paper and chill in the refrigerator until wanted to serve. This recipe makes four servings. Spaghetti and Mushrooms To make the spaghetti with mushâ€" rooms you will need one 8â€"ounce package of spaghetti, .2 tablespoons butter, 1 pound round steak ground, 1 medium sized onion, 4 pound mushrooms, 2 cups canned tomatoes, 4 teaspoon pepper, 1% teaspoons salt, 14 cup grated cheese. : beat cup cut marshmallows ihe camera caught these ances in the snow on the roof . Mother Winter Sports Seems To Have Gone To The Hfi& Of The Chorus » 1 e tableâ€" _ 1y Nushing The Staijirs ty â€" E2 <=............. ~~HP 4 â€"= *’SJ PB é?i m .J.‘.".«':“.’.:Z..“'.';".:‘.."‘:m"r?‘?‘“ , F1A _ Hanped to my fest and made Sor these chorus girls off bala nce as roof of the Radio City Music Hall ‘‘During forty days." Forty is the signature of penalty, of affiiction, of the confession or the punishment of sin. _ ‘"Being tempted of the devil." It is assumed everywhere in the Scriptures that Satan is a real perâ€" son. Here we have the story of hell‘s attempt tp thwart heaven‘s purpose. ‘This is not so much Satan attacking the person of our Lord as attacking the purpose of God Almighty as it was to be realized by our Lord. He was the Anointed One of high heaven, confronting the whole empire of evil and of darkness in the person of its over.â€"lord, Satan. "And he did eat "And Jesus, i;full of the Holy Spirit." Here Luke shows you God‘s Man, his adult Izan, thirty years of age, his mature Man, anointed of the Spirit for Messianic work, but in the perfection of his humanity, going into the wilderness, full of the Holy Spirit. "Returned from the Jordan, and was led in the Spirit in the wilderness." The waste and desâ€" ert places of the earth are, so to speak, the characters which sin has visibly employed on the outward crea. tion; the echoes in the outward world of the desolation and wasreness which sin has wrought in the inner life of men, ’ "And the Holy Spirit â€" descended in a bodily form, as a dove, upon him, and a voice came out of heaven, Thou art my beloved Son; in thee I am well pleased." The descent of the Holy Spirit, in the form of a dove, is veiled wtih mystery, yet with beauty. , PLACE. â€" The ministry of J<hn the Baptist, for the most part, was in the wilderness of Judea. The bapâ€" tism of Jesus took place probably not far from the City of Jericho on the Jordan River, It was near this part of Palestine that Jesus was tempted in the wilderness. | "Now it came to pass, waen all the people were baptized, that, Jesus also having been baptized, and prayâ€" ing, the heaven was opened." _ The question will naturally arise as to why Jesus allowed himself to be bapâ€" tized, and his own reason, thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousâ€" ness. (Matt. 3:15), is the only satisâ€" fying explanation. "LESSON III. â€" January 19. JESUS â€"PREPARES FOR HIs WORK. â€" Luke 3:1â€"4:15, PRINTED TEXT Luke 3:21, 22; 4: 1â€"13. GOLDEN TEXT,. _ Thou shalt worâ€" ship the Lord thy God, and Him only thou shalt serve. Luke 4:8. THE LESSON IN ITs SETTING TIME.â€"The ministry of John the Baptist has been thought to have been confined, or the most part, to the summer of A.D. 26, while the baptism and temptation of Jesus ocâ€" curred in January or February, A.D 27. UND A Y CHOOI they enjoyed themselves between , New York City, e & not] HIS | wer fast 22; 4: | grea ed b worâ€" | peci; Him | New 4:8. 1880, ING | creqj l the portt have this t, to| perie the | quen, 8 OCâ€" | died A'D gevean 29 o9 omome THed are two thing ‘ about which the devil had said nothing. He had said noth. ing about God and he had said noth. ing about serving, _ "And Jesus answered and sai to him, It is written, Thou shalt ship the Lord thy God, and him shalt â€"thou serve." Again the quotes from the book of Deteroj (6:13). _ Observe at once that Ar0 iWo thin®‘ mhaut urkink a% . ag o33 _ 5 _o CCC CG s0r the:â€"promotion }ot the Messianic Kingdom and that all bodily shame and suffering which otherwise lay before the Saviour of the world might be evaded, "If thou therefore wilt worship beâ€" fore me, it shall @ll be thine." Notice the awful price the Lord would have to pay for unlawfully pos lessing the kingdoms of the world nathins 322. _ C "~‘t‘ price the Lord would have to pay for unlawfully pos lessing the kingdoms of the world, nothing less than the worship of the devil. THE SEVERED FINGERSâ€"r of the Messianic Kingdom all bodily shame and sufferi otherwise lay before the & the WONld MmIFhE ha muenscs l "And the devil said unto him thee will J give all this authority, the glory of them: for it hath | delivered unto me; and to whom ever I will I give it." Satan intim that the enormous influence whic} possesses over human affairg _ have been obtained for the promo Ohg uc o d 0o eoiny s EOF the result of philosophical arzument, ,but simply the Word of God, which is the sword of the Spirit (Eph. 6:17). "And he led him up, and showed him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time." 1t has often been remarked â€"that Christ himself un. doubtedly saw more of the kingdoms of the world at this moment than even Satan saw, as he offered them J to the Saviour. ‘"And Jesus answered unto is written, Man shall not 1 bread alone." Note the weapor Jesus uses in defeating Satan one forged by his own genui "And the devil said unto him, If thou art the Son of God." This is doubtless an allusion to the divine voice in his immediately preceding baptism â€" (Luke 3:22), "Command this stone that it become bread." If Jesus could be persuaded to minister to dis physical need by the super. natural power which he possessed, and thereby place himself outside of the will of God, he would be making & personal choice against the choice of God and thereby committing a pro-‘ found sin. nothing in those days: and when they were completed, he hungered." _ A fast of forty days, while a test of the greatest severity, has been experienc. ed by a few men in modern times, es pecially by Dr. Henry 8, Tanner, in New York City, in the ‘ummer of 1880, under the supervision of an acâ€" credited college, and without any op.â€" portunity for deception appearing in this case. No evil results were ex. perienced by Dr. Tanner as a conse. quence of this extreme ordeal, â€" He died in 1919, at the age of eighty. seven. LEsson _4 Bive all this authority, and Â¥ of them: for it hath been | unto me; and to whom soâ€" 11 I give it." Satan intimates enormous influence which he human | affairs may immediately preceding e 3:22), "Command it become bread." If persuaded to minister 1 need by the super. which he possessed, ace himself outside of Again the LOl‘!.i of De ‘teronomy _unto him, It nOt live by weapon which shalt wor. genuity, nor il argument, that here said un performâ€" N‘MSmiflivuclouwd me .‘lf.c.d .bflg. covered passageway in purer air, and he va:“smybuk\dm.lcruhgd open a door at the end and almost foll only is not To ushing The Stairs. Cey 00 ie PE w Style No. 2553 is d es 14, 16, 18 years, :; inches bust. Size 16 yards of 89â€"inch mat HOW TO ORDER Write your name plainly, giving nun of pattern wanted.. in)stamps or coin See small view with Dep_'!]m ..nd If B ied stt tss 0 5. 22. 7 Today‘s charming crepe silk dress with soft bodice treatment, aceents its â€" interesting pointed â€" yoke by jeweled clips, because modern jewâ€" elry plays such a fascinating part these days, Although frocks are aamittediy more elaborate these days, they can still be simple, if you know what I mean. Elaboration can be a matter of suggestion rather than fact Street, Toronto. ; _ j _ your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted.. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin prefer. red; wrap it carefully) and ad. dress your order +o Wwiu.""".,"3 LONDON, â€" The beauty of a leg depends much on the shade of the stocking in which it is displayed, acâ€" cording to British theatrical produc-‘ er Charles B. Cochan, Revealing plans for a "Cavalcade of Stockings" in his next show he said: "In Dlack stockings you have the secret of lovely legs. They make the most | uncomely ankle look trim." | Beauty of a Leg Depends on Stockings It is part of a campaign to overâ€" come the Reich‘s raw material shortâ€" BERLIN, â€"â€" A marriage reâ€" mains on a gold hasis in Germany, but the weight of wedding rings will be strictly regulated henceforth. A decree published in the Governâ€" ment Gazette specifies the maximum weight in fineness permissible for wedding rings, and also restricts the trade in old gold. y o f. °70â€" #G+ your order to Wilson Pat. Sgll:vice, 78 West Adelaide n nvranta mall view other version plum and open neck, _ No.: 2553 is designed for ;6, 18 years, 36, 38 and "And when the devil had completâ€" ’ed every temptation, he departed from him for a season." ‘ine Lord Jesus was gloriously, in every point, victorious over Satan in this and all his other temptations, both Christ and the apostles later declare, (See John 14:80; 16:38; Meb. 2:18; 4:15; Rev. 3:21.) ( Weight of Wedding Rings Restricted "And Jesu answering said unto him, It is said, Thou shalt not make trial of the Lord thy God." _ Once again the Lord Jesus overcame this temptation by the use of the Word of God, and, for the third time, quotes from the book of Deuteronomy (6: 16). + 10 years, 36, 38 ami 40â€" st. Size 16 requires 8% 89â€"inch material, ORDER PATTERx T _ " NEer/rekeM | For this reason, it affords us an P ooonh § | enormous amount of pleasure to intro. t A marmage _ Yeâ€" | quee our congratulations to The Ot. _ hasis in Germany) |tawa Journal upon completion of its { wedding rings will first half century with the statement ited l!encelol'tho | that we find ourselves in relatively sl}ed in the G""’"“' | consistent agreement with its editor. cifies the maximum ia1 point of view, in fact, we might ss permissible for agq that The journal has a faculty for id also restricts the irritating us not possessed by any t other newspaper which comes to this campaign 4o overâ€"| office. It ifritates us because we have raw material shortâ€" | to read it and sometimes feel a‘most convinced that in our own policies Canenmmmscarn. we have erred and strayed like lost a Leg sheep. In fact somelimes, to avert a s kc sudden conversion of ourselves to the n tOC ml’l Conservative point of view, we hasten s ’to dip into the editorial inanities of he beauty of a leg | some other Canadian publications the shade of the ‘ which uphold that point of view. Then lf“lfi .dl’lpl‘lyed,ch- I we realize that we haven‘t erred. sizâ€" The Man (British), ( Ame::i;a-:; ; ’ing the year were: _ Mutiny on the Bounty . Escape Me Never (Brij The New Gulliver (Rus The Tunnel (British), Lives of a Bengal Lan ican), David Copperfield (Am Marie Chapdelaine (Fre in 1984, released 1985), Top Hat (American), 4 A Midsummer Night‘s Aemmutil i | _ SS rurai and urban Ontario hom es chanctcristicllly include _ si> rooms, the outstanding exception be ing Ottawa, where seven room hous es are most numerous. Over 60 per cent. of Prairie rura homes contain four rooms or fewer while the number of such homes in Ontario is less than 23 per cent. In Alberta and Saskatchewan there are more rural households occupying homes of two rooms than any other. Prairie urban areas also contain proâ€" portionately more small homes and a lower percentage of large homes than is found in Eastern Canada, although the typical size is five rooms. Rura) and urban home distributions in Briâ€" tish Columbia are more similar than in any other province. Four room homes predominate in both areas _ _ Clear cut regional differences exâ€" ist. In the Maritimes, urban homes such as in Halifax and St. John, centre around six rooms, while the rural homes are larger on the aver age than in any other part of Canâ€" ada. Five room houses are the leas: numerous in urban Quebec but in rural Quebec there is no definite faver for any special size. Both rural .nd urban Ontaria haw. Among ! (Bureau of Statistics) The six room house is more comâ€" mon in Canada than homes of an y other size, but it is not typical in all parts of the country. Nearly 60 per cent. of Canadian households ocâ€" cupy from four to seven rooms and almost 20 per cent. live in â€" three rooms or fewer. Only 3% per cent Iive.in homes of more than ten rooms. _ There may be some thing a litt}e aloof about ‘The Journal, but so is there about Ottawa. And that is perâ€" haps partly the secret of its particuâ€" lar charm. Looking at this record of civic ad. vancement, we feel we can appreciat the particular flavor of The Journs! the characteristic quality which se it apart. It is peculiarly the product of Ottawa. It could not have deve‘on ed as it has developed in Montreal or Toronto or a city like Hamilton It is bright, but it is dignified; it is serene, but it is dynamic; it is sufâ€" ficiently removed from the dust of the market place to provide it with more repose than is reflected in the pages of the big metropolitan dailies, yet it is by no means a small news. paper. Much could be written about th« excellence of ‘The Journal‘s news columns, but it is perhaps unneces. sary. The special anniversary edition lies before us and it presents the story of Ottawa‘s growth between December 10, 1885, when The Journal came into existence under the wing of Mr. A. S. Woodburn, to the pre. sent when it is published by Mr. P D. Ross. The Canadian Home [ Yet prejudices fasten upon one in. ’sldlously. One finds that after a time one reads the newspaper with which one is in political agreement, and igâ€" nores that to which one is politically opposed. But one reads The Ottawa Journal. And that, surely, is the es sence of good journalism, ng the best films show e year were: ny on the Bounty (Ame pe Me Never (British). New Gulliver (Russian) Tunnel (British), of a Bengal Lancer ¢ Best F ims be written and almost invariably it is written, that the newspaper whose anniversary is being celebrated is a better, larger and more influential ‘jJournal than when it first started, that it has maintained a high standard of journalism; that it has retained its editorial integrity, that it should be congratulated and no doubt will keep up the good work. Such formal tribâ€" utes are naturally written selfâ€"conâ€" sciously . From the Hamilton Heraids SOME BACK . HANDED PRaAISE Usvally there is little of an intelli. gent nature that one newspaper can say of another‘s anniversary, Jt may _ more small homes and a itage of large homes than Eastern Canada, although size is five rooms. Rura) ome distributions in Briâ€" ia are more similar than r province. Four room minate in both areas Wivmeimomeeiiimemeitrrmenes,, ‘askatchewan there are households occupying rooms than any other. areas also contain proâ€" Knew Kind Words (British). (Russian) » Of Prairie rural _rooms or fewer, f such homes in n 23 per cent. In (American) (Frenchâ€"; Lancer shown D rea m (Am rican) Muca made throat, influenza, that follow or beg **Children losing dustry, at least colds an twe Jori and com by vers €ine un win 000 wiite Swin &n H, nir H Ir sure erfi S1Y D ty w1 ed O; ity Dr “M)‘ time the HJ« ed his and and how D in Pr $100 ooo his « he a the much ed @J hty Oc n Q H ki we? "When young hi good all ¢ ‘n( ce crocodile did the ; «d billio n elf W | eustoms . I‘ll tell Sun, t Ibi“ ‘. tb¢ cats getables shipped The Sun, fll. moo wi oT W e try a lo Nile wh Bpring. ed prics ned pri when o ""Ancier "The *Memes fte th AND 1 HER t« co

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