West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Feb 1936, p. 6

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t' is Lt _ DOV d m " ._‘..-.w -H "we, we meat, remove the fat. cut into 1 inch pieces. Cour coarser pieces and bone with cold water. let soak om- huur. then heat to honing. Seven remainder of the meat. roll in "our. Pry out the tat In frying pan. brown the meat and the onion in the tat. Add meat and on- Inn m the stow. cook below the boil. in: point tor "to hours. At the end on tho first hour add carrot and tur. nip. add potatoes 15 minutes later. lb mow honor, thikan Mock with the {may and '"'it.'tottfttz,,t mixed to a paste Mm poht waver. mmk until thick. th all. 1.8 flour ttttd Method the fat. m coarser p water. My! " and Brisket. Mutton or Nmrk, Plate Ramembm II”W HWHH lured but a staw is a 'lish which the moot savoury and meat dishes. and hero in shown! plane the hon or cut: ot meat may be advantage in this art cookery. Below art a ft Which are numb D m SI Nrrs Be. hair can. hing “daddy's. . . V V - "MU". m 9"" bent to PM! by thong. Hie-5n. 90 Smith. a cloud of hair cam. king etrenst u..- .t_ " t A Head Cheese r the ith th ttred 1 TORONTO Peked Ham .' Woman' s g teu World at " Id " th " hot " t 1xater. Cook until uu-r pnough to co. 'ortt the liquid. re. and separate the "I!" in a mould. AL " ttttte longw. and 'vor t2ar. meat and! Lamb Stew Pork nith and h “an?! " m an ‘INNIH Beef Stew _ Stew no ti.n "t tttt 'nwlinm tttttrt lp 5. tttt " h billo 'II' sun h which than be one of "T' and dniicioua ot , here is a point which will whit I'D bo tted via [minim vim salt ith boiling: piling troin “I dil'w'ilr m tltr hm 'tttm" " bread "f pepper, "mil W6" tew TOW "(w-pa It ' put rmaxhviy into hour ifter amount ot reputation 'oro, care- the mom Hnnts ti " it . I pint u. zed (man add p0 r k ther f strain. Ito-[than some th as new and tlt, int-hos and to he t 33. ttver & It one half add re- fat. th P v9. of on. able- The first newspaper 1 in England was nublishe, ms worded thus: I "Help the poore, hy I ily made, for the most In and casualties with a di: In; it sate to let blood i pox. Also a treatise of diseases of the head. By “m, _L__7, . .. " - “a," 5mm cue "our. 2 teaspoons baking powder. , egg yolks. well bee- ten. , egg whites, guilty beaten, % 'easpoon salt. 4 tablespoons melted butter, 1 cup milk, 1 cup grated cheese. . Sift flour. once. measure, add bait: In: powder and salt and sift again. ‘r'nmbine egg yolks. milk and butter. Add to flour, beating until smooth Fold in egg whites and cheese. Bake in hot walrle iro'n. Place a slice or wrmm tomato on each section. Makes tour Lsection wattles. Bleed 1meooy, Ml bacon mar be sprinkled over bat. tee before closing iron and it is de, “done. 1M Tomatoes 2 cups sifted cake tlout, baking powder. 3 egg yol ten. , egg whites. mum Cake tlour is 27 "in"? flour so 'o lemming an airy batter that mWhining. T-"""".', pu- nulm- in Canada, therix are more and more late uki suppers. T'ttrvrte quick breads fresh from the wattlo iron, are "any to make and simple to _-serve, They can be made light as.dowp with "he use ot cake Hour In an mu“ W Cheese l Wafnea, Griddles I SkiJng is an invigorating sport tor 103.. brave souls who can take it. And it's often difficult to know ex- actly what food is enjoyed by most ;kiers as they chat ot 'rellemark and f'hritrtianiu for hours after a long "nu. Ot roars» skiers will eat practi- raiiy anything, but plain waffles with ~‘H'lip, hot sausages. and coffee. seems in fir into their "shi-ey" world per- iv. And they like those new cheese AJIKII‘S .ouwed with grilled tomattres. As ski-ine becomes iitereiosiri,n,, nn h Meir M. Morgan 1 Into your casserole. pl: moments in layers, on the 't layer or meat; follow I no"). then some okra. R " is used. Pour in the to mixture. Cover and bake in of 400 degrees P. tor 2 hop [mama Serves 6 or 8. of flour, 2 tttblespoorts "alt, 1-8 tea.. , spoon pepper,i clove garlic. finely , cut. ' tablespoons fat. 1 cup canned tomatoes. 1 cup water, 1% tablespoons chili powder, 1 tablespoon cold water 2 cups canned corn (1 No. 2 can) and 2 cups canned okrn fl No. , can) or 2 cups Cooked kidney beans. ."ethod: - For the lean pork. use vither a loin mast or fresh ham ghoul- 'ler. Cut the meat into inch cubes, tak- ing care to m'iminate all fat. Roll the pieces in the flour which has been mixed with 1 teaspoon salt and the Pepper. Saute (searing in hot fat) with the garlic in the fat until golden 'own; remove the trarlir..Comtrine the tomatoes with water and 1 tea- salt, and brine to a boil. To this, add the chili powder mixrd to a smooth paste with ttte cold water. 'irst Newspaper-Ad Feather Light Waffles mating until smooth. Fold In as. Bake in hot wrath iron. h Maple syrup. Makes four waitles. Waffles with Grilled 'spaper advertisement Dublished in 1850 and cake’ flour in the batter. is 271mm as tine as or- ' so it responds quickly ' and gives that light that mnkns waltles, so p, by medicins car. most usuall diseases h a discourse prov- blood in the small ise of the internal! ead. By Robert Pe- I layors, on the bottom put meat; follow with some .-'- -"'.\. 1_ltt.eaio,-eaid, 19"tqtttm-l b-sttuthsiiiii and [ mewm..z‘m and bake in a hot oven P. tor 2 hours, or until 6 or 8. ‘11} okra. Repeat until n the tomato sauce gr‘med toummes. ' increasingly p0. ris are more and ace the in "Who apnea of his decease accompugh at heve translat- “And behold two men, who l Moses had rem it to the neon}. i "And as he was not doubt that tin ho drew near" to tl approaching death his countenance w for some reason " by Matthew and M "And his raimeut dazzling." The radi ied with Christ is n tin-lion tram a. gt upon him, but the 1 such a condition ot within him as to b through the Very f his body. SO - -t. ........v\nuug uayt 'That he took with him Peter an John and James." His three mo: intimate disciples. whom he allowe: to accompany him in some ot _th< most sacred, intimate, and epocha hours ot his ministry. "And. went in into the mountain to pray." The mountain lime referred my Mount Mormon. ten thousand feet high, and easily within six days' reach of Cae- sarea Philippi, where we find the Lord with his disciples in the verses preceding this paragrafih. _ _ "And as he was paying." We can- nnt flay-LL c%_. .. I in Caperuaum: the Seediu thousand vs. 101).]? in Be contessiou.ot Peter and t that followed In Caesar: the transfiguralion on l Samaria: and the conclm or the chapter is to be lo 50:: of Galileo. I "The transfiguration," I. M. 28 "And it came to eight days after these sayi is no record in any of the to what Jesus and his dis doing during thesé inter'w beat. or December LE 29. Place - The wants in curred in Galilee; those red In the winter of A The eontesuiion of P transtigurtition took pl: umn ot A.D. 29, And C throuiti Samaria occur} ( LESSON M - MARCH 1st GOLDEN TEXT - "He that abide”! in me, and t In him, the same bear. eth much fruit." - John 15:5b. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time - The last six verses of our rhupter fall m th" late autumn of A.D. 28; the events in the first sev-‘ cnh'en verses of tho. chamnr Mm... N that the sitbJect on Which neaf to the Father was his ting death. "The fashion cot itenance was altered." Luke,. reason avoids the word used Iew and Mark, 'transfigured.’ i raimeut became white and] ' The radiance here identif-l (‘th,. . Mary Lee Parker (left) nnd Mary El to the eye, taking their case on the dock as 1 Lion ot purity and glory a to be seen breaking very flesh and form ot Is not the result of i.i.. t. great light shining the manifestation of Isngm'atiun," Luke " '. 28- it came to pass about ,fter these sayings." There f, in any of the Gospels as us and his disciplen were g thesé intervening days. took with him Peter and 3mm." His three most] tlt en- “we; muse in vs. 'Moa I; the feeding of the ttve 10b.17 in Bethsalda; the Peter and the teabhin'gs In Caesarae Ph'illppi. ration on Mt. Hermon; the concluding portion vents in the first sev. of the. chapter. occur. tor of Al). 28 and " of Peter. and the took place in the nut. , ind Christ', Journey it occurred in Novem- talked with him UNDAY CHOOI to be lmatleat the His three moat whom he allowed In some o? 1119 md epochal md. went " pray." The his Mount Ft high, and Vs. 1.6 qe- "And whiieiu- said thes" things. there came a. cloud. and overshadow. ed them." A cloud is the constant symbol, or, if not always this. the accompaniment. of the divine prm- ence (Ex. 11:19, 19:16; 33:9: 40:34; 1 Kings 8:10; Psalm 104:3; Isa 19:1; Dan. 7:13). "And they feared as they; entered into the cloud.” Fear is the natural emotion when one is in the presence of thu mysterious. awful, and the divine. ' "And while there came a ed them." A Symbol, or, if "Now Peter and they that were with him were heavy with sleep." That heavy sleep was probably the ur reaction from the. six days of mental of strain and poxsihly induced by the " long climb up the mountain that day J- or the preceding day. "But when they I). were fully awake." Literally sudden- te ly starting into full wakefulness. t, "They saw his glory and the two men ' that stoodwlth him." We miss unde- " tented and unimagined things because we are not awake. 2 "And it came to pass, as they were e parting from him." it was because P. Peter realized that the visit of these , two great old Testament characters K was about to be terminated in their it departure that he made the following i request. “Peter said unto Jesus, Mas., tei. it is good for us to be here; and I let us make three tabernacles." These wore little booths or huts made out of I F branches of trees or bushes, such as '. were constructed for the feast of ta- , bernaeies. "One for thee. and one for Moses, and one (or Elijah." There is certainly nothing darkly selfish in C this request as some have claimed. It T is a time of joy. Worship. and exalta. V tion, and Peter longs for this exper- d tence to continue and for him to be- tt hold the Lord Jesus and these two 'tl great men of old. Ot course Peter h, knew what words-he said, but he did lit not know their significance, nor the at wrong in the request which they ex- D" pressed. _‘ LESSON Greek word English word ing away." I: at the beginning of his ' the time of his baptism ; at the chief crisis of his of public ministry. when suffering begins to over. preaching, here at the on: before his final (ii) crucifixion in the temple ce came out of tho.- cloud is my Son, my chosen; , Three times in the ml- Lord is a voice heard Elsie Weems, two of the beauties who I they watch yatchs drift into Hiscnyl nxodos, similar. dwx-ast- meaning to our "And as he was yet a coming, the I (lemon dashed him down, and tare ) him treievoutsly." The word here trail. , slated "dashed him down" is from a Greek word used by boxers knocking one another down, and of wrestlers throwing an opponent. "But Jesus rec buked the unclean spirit. and healed the boy, and gave him back to his father." When Christ redeems young men from the bondage of sin, he gives these men back again to their par. ants in more ways than one. "And they were all astonished at the majesty of God." Majesty here means the visible splendor ot God's glory and is the word Peter uses three years later, in referring to this same experience (2 Pet. 1:16). a go. "And Jesus answered and said. O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you, and bear with you? bring hither thy son." It is the contrast, not between one man and another, but between this entire humanity alienated from God, in the midst ot which he finds him- self, and the inhabitants of heaven, whom he has just left, which wring!!! from him this mourniui exclamation. "And as he was yet a coming. the demon dashed him down. and tare ug., - ' _ "And I besought thy disciplvs to cast it out; and they could not." There in nothing more tragic in the world than tor one who has a won. derful reputation for helping others to come face to face with a situation 'n which that one finds himself or herself utterly helpless, especially if he or she knows that there would be ability to do what has been found im- possible to do, if the now helpless one were living near enough to God, in the preceding lessons. but this par. ticular verse is especially vivid in its description of the awful condition re- suiting from such possession. "And he. suddenly crieth out." The adverb - tranalated 'suddenly' is used by medical writers of sudden attacks of diseases such as epilepsy. "And it teareth him." Or it convulsed him. V‘That he foameth." "And it hardly departeth from him. bruising him sorely." The verb here translated bruising means literally "lo tread down under toot" or "to break in pie. res." "to shiver" (Matt. 12:20: Rom. 16:20i and. in its passive form "to , crushed.” mnpoverished and lost humanity. "And behold a man from the multi- trde cried, saying, Teacher, I beseech thee to look upon my son; tor he is mine only child." Here alone are we informed that thin was the only child ot this man, reminding us ot two similar pathetie touches in preceding passages in the Gospel (7:12; 8:42). "Aml behold, a spirit taken: him." We have quite thoroughly considoved the subject ot clemoniacal possession are not of great bane! impoverished and lost "And " came to pass. on the next day. when they were came down from the mountain, a great multitude met him." Those who permanently remain in the mount of religious exaltation ism-e to themselves until after the resurrection (Mark 9:9; Matt. 17:9). because they probably did not realize the tull significance of that which "hey had seen and heard at this time. es who make Miami attractive Biscayne Bay. an!) out." The adverb 'sttddenl.v' is wed by of sudden attacks of ' epilepsy. "And it . It convulst him. :11." "And it hardly him, bruising him rb here translated benefit to broken, Style No] 2697 is sizes 86, M, 40, 42, 48-inches bust. Size 4% yards of 39-in with Ii yard of 89-ir ine for short damn-J -. r-..“ '" autumn and copen made the collar and jabot. it ap- pears again in the pocket trim. Or perhaps, you'd like it in black or in beige woolen. This alenderizing model also adapts itself perfectly to plain or printed ggepe silks. A stunning sprj of tailored lines. your mid-season w wool crepe. Gay lively print in fue made the collar an pear, "ttin in tho "A lofty mind always thinks nony . . . Ind clears away from its own thought u" thnt is useless and disagreeable."-..-" Rochefoucauld. Where I have toiled to make a home, content With cleanliness and order, warm and bright With all that speaks . the tired heart's delight. [The simple tasks grow greater. So r l live Within my walls, and think how I mny give Some good to any soul who entem here, And fail not to notice in friendli- ness and cheer. Print in nicuifiimi cL, - I. - Some And went on days before. In young- H er years I thought on this with sudden mam . teary, And now my sight. is clearer. and I Wri i see repul- How much, how much the world has genius need of me, who d; That I may make a quiet, calm re- author treat prose l Where those I love may come and sit was (In and eat runny l The bread of kindness. drink the pin/it of ready cup [great 1; Of hope and faith, and going, may! in 19 look up lithe 8801 Spring Model Disguise: [r: Overweight T -- t Each day brings back ita simple task. the same As yesterday, and like the one that season wardrobe in , whit "he higher for the mom- ment spent spring jagket dress Homemaking --Author Unknown -7, __-..- v. mun“, uUIIIl Ill uu to notice in friendli- clung tttreet-.. cheer. t wonder " the Mimosa of learn __ tunnu. Tr.,"--., it. -w.iu {ugh}; Gene silk dttirned for if 4616:] nay t in (OT Economic Fibre Experimental Fm thown that Cana tux-seed has given fibre but a low» acre than 'And though I Crt In other scenes I P rom other walla Mind and “New The scenes of th; Tho years may ttt Or the years may But memory will The farm whom I I remember, I " The farm where And through the ,, -..‘ van 'rt 'Where smiles with tears And then the woods , mass in dnpnled sunshine in: Twas there I often wet m in Jumping logs " pity; The golden uheuvea of R And corn in great Drona The memories my mind Would fill a ham " u.”- A three The little church besidu I Where first I learned my And opposite, the old no limbs Gambolled. and trial The clumps of cedar: Where iey waters, m And ran fences whe ‘To dream in days of The sculptured holes Br passing glacier ml And the green bowl t, Where oft' I idlv ma “WU! blue The giant elm where quiet Lay down beneath its shade The block of bouldcr- "4 _ slide Along their course, at ho: The wealth of manual“ Them winding rtih: of gold And violets sweet that w Innk- The ttoak of frogs from distant mural: On evenings cool and still; And every spring, the mournlul cries Ot loan and whimpoonwlll The trickle of the little creeks That wound through gnu and stone How oft, as child, I watched them and“ wings --"e_9t "-9 walls Stood firm through wildest storm; The shady lain with maple trees; The lilacs and the flowers.. The lazy droning of the beers Through sunm. summer hours; The peaceful lanlclpe all around or stream, and hilt, and dell; And still, at twilight, I can hear That (inkling clear cowbell. I remember. I remember The tarm where I was born The old stone house whose rune mnIln After a long career of school teach- ing she retired in 1921 and then acu- ieved something which hu been eat. led unique among living American poets. She earned her livelihood from that time on by her writings. This was corroborated by members of her funny. Her writings and her lite wer- examples of Ftetortantsm in pristine clarity and beaattr--tatthttn to tradi- mm, Hammad with unfailing human: ntal Farms, In Canadian hm, liven a h " lower yield imported treed, Ye old. old dead, and ye of P'stetu I night, . Chlofuna and bards and keepers of the sheep. Br aiusrr cup ot sorrow that you had, Loose me from team. and make no we “might Row each huh bark what once ho stayed to weep: Homer, his sight. David " mu. 1.: of fears; The gusts that pass a "darkening shore do beat The hum. of music down an unnat. ll genlul of Llsette Woodworth Res-se. "rho died recently. mu Reese, tho " guano: of may volume- of poetry and - ot whlch the mum-t "Tenn" t Wu the best known, was regarded by my crltlcu u the foremost woman , Vogt of the United Status and also a {great lyricist. " In 1931. um Reese .wus awarded /e 8800 Shelley lemorlal Fond mail.- established by the Mary P. {liars [Trust and administered by the on! Colony Trust Company, In Boston. [The sonnet. "Tenn" follows: ‘When I consider Lite and its row y "ttN--. A wiso of fog betwixt us and the sun; A an to battle And the battle done In the In! echo dies within our urn A rose choked in the grass: an hour ' of that old ski,' may has with Hm ee. f tudy by Den" perhaps as r walls of "one "faction at!" M (rriiete Paid to Writers and scholars of reputation paid tribune to I glacier made; ‘en howl beside I ldly ma. Lizette Woodworth Reese in Her Latter Years Earned . Living by Writing a my mind recani,' host of books. I remember ere I was tr the years m and (risked, and I of cedar- and the waters nowed; mena- ot grain la (all: are“ bronze nooks: In days of old 3" Where I perched days of old; with tears were mixed; woods where velvet 'eet the , 0m with an ever Mesa I wan hem. Lmia I higher yield of . Proéqction of boulders, thot my feet mango!“ that sight. David his little lad Woman Lyricist that sprinkled the Branch? -- c, !tottte-rro 4m born ; Speed the Division morn In wining le the road I!!! tens; tttttttey when! mashing homo y kid of (all I tree when the [Illeel' (may per 'ttt the " red ; spring. on rock made , nullnnnl the poetic termed "rrot lu a Tlu, p Nisan t hunched Mick ft Tb, Sam-y little If " If If " " " If If If " If If " If If If If If How Different It ( Would In: t If he: b b " migh lurwh dim this " tr rut th fin de li you you you yo u ha um in: hul you Wil palm nboul ll S'0t '" ther you " You ha you In you (in " ot' " the In lulu ty a INN or wood lumber . plated a her. In In low prim " " N" Bum-e ttc (mes " - with however. The 0‘0“ -tasg d; Mien) L the mark lion or tn Mtlvely I not Germ A recent can mu" cram "t " the reltr - ot Cum and that It l with of timbe ”(on As ardvn “nation poll tut A direct rel tqro things nun; the Atttrrican LL Buttered from ioo ducts Naturally Saving n. ll n tl Th1 h (hr 'Ot m ll " Fo,

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