West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 May 1936, p. 6

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Buifet suppers have increased in popularity because thoy‘re so friendâ€" ly and comfortable and easy on both hostess and guests. Men particularâ€" ly enjoy helping thomselves and its interesting to watch them dodge the "greenery" as they describe the »bits of parsley and cress that garnish the supper dishes,. But men seem to pre fer hot dishes â€" flaky hot biscuits and tender scones, and a gemnerous slice of delicious cake. With a hot casserole main dist or = caold nlate. cream sconmes are delicâ€" With a hot casseroie main dist OF a cold plate, cream scones are delicâ€" sous. They‘re a credit to any cook made from this carelully tested re «eipe 2 cups sifted cake flour; 2 teaspoom{ baking powder; % teaspoon salt; 2 teaspoons sugar: 1â€"3 cup light cream; 4 tablespoons butter or other shortenâ€" ing: 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind; 2 eggs; 3 tablespoons sugar; *4 tea spoon grated lemon rind. Sift flour once, add baking powâ€" der, salt, and sugar and sift again. Cut in shortening aud lemon rind. Reâ€" serve about !, egg white for glaze. BReat remaining eggs until all flour is dampened. Then stir vigorously wntil mixture forms a soft dough and follows spoon around bowl!l. Turn out on slightly floured board and knead 30 seconds. Roll !4 inch thick and cut in trlangles, Place in ungreased bakâ€" ing sheet. Brush tops lightly with reâ€" served egg white, slightly beaten; sprinkle with mixture of sugar and grated lemon rind. Bake in hot oven 1450 degrees F.) 1% minutes or until browned. Makes 18 scones. Ome or the nicest supper cake is Orange Layer Cake. apoons Dbakh salt; 1 teas; *4 eup butte tup sugar; : prange juice Sift flour once, measure add bakâ€" mg powder and salt, and sift together three times. Add orange rind to the butter and cream thoroughly, add suâ€" gar gradually, creaming until light and fuffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly after each. Add Hour, alternately with orange juice a mall amount at a time, beating afâ€" ter each addition until smooth. Bake FU MANCHU 1!4 cups sifted cake flour; 144 teaâ€" oons baking powder; 1â€"4 teaspoon It; 1 teaspoon grated orange rind; eup butter or other shortening; 1 ORANGE LAYER CAKE Woman‘s 2Â¥ . World CREAM SCONES esss, unbeaten; *4 cup Comfort Rules Home Parties By Mair M. Morgan n TW mode nutes Butte This Week‘s Winners EUREKA SCALLOP â€" If your faâ€" mily have any pet aversion, it is betâ€" ter to omit that from the "Eureka Scallop," but we like everything edâ€" ible here, (and plenty of it,) so I inâ€" clude the various vegetables that the larder happens to contain at the parâ€" ticular time which I wish to make a oneâ€"dish meal. The only exception I made is in omitting tomatoes, â€"â€" 1 jeave them to combine with other things some other time. The main feature is potatoes: the crumbs, (cracker crumbs are preferâ€" red, but bread crumbs will answer, and, if necessary, flour may be subâ€" stituted,) will be required to sprinkle between layers, salt, pepper, bits of butter, too, will be required between layers, while slices of meat may he placed over the top to reâ€"heat with the rest, though, if preferred, neat glices of cold meat may accompany this dish. To prepare the "Eureka Seallop," butter a baking dish, sprinkle the botâ€" tom with crumbs, placo a layer _ of potatoes, then crumbs and seasonings and next a layer of sliced carrots, and more crumbs and seasoning; then poâ€" tatoes again, crumbs and seasoning; next say cooked cabbage, and so on until the baking dish is nearly full â€" parsnips, diced turnip, beans, peas, just whatever the family will relish, Instead of cooked onions, we seem to like bits of raw onion clipped amongst the caooked vegetables; usually 1 have the potatoes at the top, then add the slices of meat arrauged neatly, and. fill the dish almost full of milk â€" to basten the process of cooking, hot milk may be utilized; another way to hasten the preparation is to place the disb in a steamer over hot water till well heated through, then finish by baking. This is frequently our Sunday dish, and is never placed in the oven at all but left in the steamer to reâ€" tain iis heat until our return from church. â€" Mrs. Louise Towriss, _ of Athens, Ontario. SPANISH RICE â€" 1â€"3 cup of rice, boil in salted water till dry. Heat one can Tomato Soup and put rice and ) greased Sâ€"inch layer pans in ite oven (375 degreesF.) 25 mtâ€" Spread generously with Orange Frosting. soup in casserole dish and bave one pound of sausage partly codked. Place sausage on top of rice and soup, and press them in a litte. Bake in oven about & an hour or till sausage is cooked. ifl;cj‘i\ave this dish quite often and it is very nice. â€" Miss G. Watman, Box 64, Uxbridge, Ontario. Lipstick Is Banned By English Rector Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method of your favorâ€" ite mainâ€"course dish and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West The Rector of Northolt, England, the Rev. G. S. Hoimes, will ban womâ€" en communicants who use lipstick, "I shall refuse the chalice to any woman with rouged lips," he said, "because it is practically impossible to avoid a little of the preparation adbering to it, and so being tasted, however slightly, by those who take Communion ofterwards. "Two such cases have occurred re cently." HOW TO ENTER CONTEST The French get all kinds of chic into the very simplest of things, when it comes to clothes, Here‘s the popular Princess Flizabeth model. It is full skirtâ€" ed with brief fitted bodica. Iis collar has soft gathersâ€"and what a cute effect. The puffed sleeves are such a darling fashion for chubby arms. This little frock (with its acâ€" companying knickers) is charmâ€" ing in cotton materials with mayâ€" be a contrasting bind or a tiny edging on collarless and sleeveless version, that adds a pocket. The knickers, by the way, are cus up at the sides type, so neat and wearable for small people. Style No. 2880 is designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 14 yards of 35â€"inch material with 7â€"8 yard of 35â€"inch material for panties and 5% yards of binding for sleeveless dress; dress with contrasting colâ€" lar requires 2 yards of 39â€"inch material with 34 yard of 35â€"inch contrasting. bola Science, Room 421, 73 Adelaide Street, Toronto. ...... HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred), wrap it carefully and address your â€" order . to Barbara _ Bell, Room 230, 73 West Adelaide St., 7 oronto. Simple To Sew Luke 19. GOLDEN TEXT â€" Thou shalt not THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timeâ€"The conversion of Zacchaeus and the teaching of the parable that follows, took place during the month of March, A.D. 30; the triumphal entry into Jeyusalem â€" occurred on Sunday, April 2, A.D. 30; and the second purification of the temple occurred on the next day, April 3. Placeâ€"The city of Jericho witâ€" nessed the conversion of Zacchaeus and the teaching of the parable of the ten pounds; the events occurring in the triumphal entry of Christ inâ€" to Jerusalem are to be located on the Mount of Olives and the road leading therefrom to the city of Jerusalem, near which Christ wept for its coming doom. The last four verses of the chapter describe events taking place in the temple in the city of Jerusalem. "And he entered and was passing through Jericho. And behold, a man called by name Zacchaeus." The name Zacchaeus means pure. "And he was a chief publican," This is, unâ€" doubtedly, an official title, and means that he was, in our language, a comâ€" missioner of taxes. "And he was vich." The age of Jesus was not the last age in which public officials grew wealthy as servants of the government, nor was the â€" ancient Roman Empire the only sphere in which such was possible. "And he sought to see Jesus who he was; and could not for the crowd, because he was little of stature." There is in the minds of people, generally, a very great â€" reverence for any eminent servant of God, and, when he makes his appearance in any place, men crowd to hear him, not out of curiosity altogether, but, with LESSON VIIL â€" May 17. JESUS INSPIRES HONESTY.â€" steal a sort of dim desire and hope that he whom God has so blessed to others, may also bring some mesâ€" sage to them. P 8 & ie * "And he ran on before, and climbâ€" ed up into a sycomore tree to se¢ him: for he was to pass that way." The tree is probably what is known as a figâ€"mulberry tree, whose fruit is like the fig and whose leaf is like the mulberry. It is something gimilar to the English oak, and its shade is most pleasing. "And when Jesus came to the mlace ha looked un. and said unto "And when Jesus came to the place, he looked up, and said unto him; Zacchaeus, make haste, and come down; for today I must abide Our picture, a group taken just prior to their mother‘s tra; Baby Prince Albert, Princess Josephine Charlotte, and Crown Prince yen who were threatened with kidnapping. The man responsible was Y DnSF _ ... 2CHOOl EssoN â€"Exodus 20 : 15. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Belgian â€"King‘s at thy house." Jesus invites himself to be Zacchaeus‘s guests with the same motive which had prompted him to beg water of the Samaritan woman (John 4 : 7), that he might win his way into the man‘s heart. "And he made haste, and came down, and received him joyfully." One can hardly exaggerate the asâ€" tonishment, joy, and wonder crowdâ€" ing the heart of Zacchaeus in this most epochal hour of hLis life, "And when they saw it, they all murmured, saying, He is gone in to lodge with a man that is a sinner." The all is very significant as showâ€" ing how deepâ€"seated was the national feeling, which, because it was unâ€" worthy, our Lord, at the very zenith of his earthly popularity, thus unâ€" flinchingly braved. "And Zacchaeus stood, and â€" said unto the Lord, Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor." By this, he meant, of course, that oneâ€" half of his income he would bestow upon the poor. "And if I have wrongâ€" fully exacted aught of any man, I restore fourfold."" The restoring of goods falsely obtained in this fourâ€" fold way, was almost the extreme penalty imposed by the law, when a man was compelled to make reparâ€" ation for a deliberate act of desâ€" tructive robbery (Ex. 22 : 1; 2 Sam. 12 : 6). "And Jesus said unto him, Today is salvation come to this house, forâ€" asmuch as he also is a son of Abraâ€" ham." How low Zacchaeus was in the moral scale and yet bow high he rose "For the Son of man." Inis 18 Chist‘s favorite title for himself, one which be uses about eighty times in the Gospels. It pointed him out as the representative man (1 Cor. 15 : 45, 47. "Came to seek and to save that which was lost." To be lost is to wander and to miss the true way. of human life; to go off the track and get where the true path is no more visible, the consequence being that the true end of human life is not reached. _ "And he entered into the temple." It is only from the record in Mark (11 : 12â€"17) that we discover that this second cleansing of the temple (for the first cleansing, see John 2 : 14â€"22) occurred, not on Sunday, as Luke‘s narrative would imply, but F 7 No t x IQURC 8 ANTERTTUC P TN does not assert, but, rather, on the following day, Monday. "And began to cast out them that gold." Inasâ€" much as every true Jew was expectâ€" ed to come up to Jerusalem at least Children Threatened was arrested. gic death, shows, left to > Baudoin, Belgium‘s Royal 39 once a year to ofer sactiIMUro "" ""°/ temple, most of which, being animal sacrifices, were purchased â€" within the temple precinets, or immediateâ€" ly near by, and, inasmuch as every Jew over twenty years of age was bound by the law to pay _A halfâ€" shekel into the treasury whenever the nation was numbered, a tribute that had to be paid in the exact halfâ€" shekel, demanding an exchange â€" of money when Jews came from other countries, one can imagine how unâ€" scrupulous men would take advantâ€" age of loyal Jews, and what an awful din and confusion must have prevailâ€" ed in the temple, waking it more like a marketâ€"place or an office for collecting government taxes than a place where God was to be worshipâ€" ped. "Saying unto them, It is written, And my house shall be a house of prayer." Every church, even more than the temple, should be considerâ€" ed as the house of God and a house of prayer. "But ye have made it A den of robbers." Literally, a brigâ€" ands‘ cave, of which our Lord had seen many. "And he was teaching daily in the temple. But the chief priests â€" and the scribes and the principal men of the people sought to destroy him." A principal man is a man who has great influence and is able to lead others to do what he thinks is right. "And they could not find what they might do; for the people . all hung upon him, listening." The chapter closes with a most remarkâ€" able statement, when it informs us that all the people, that is, the entire nation as a whole, actually hung upon the words of Jesus; hanged on him as the bee doth on the fower. There‘s something I would like to say, Or write down in a haok; Thet those who doa‘t th fine. Just don‘t know how to cook There isn‘t any reason wry The spinach should be sandy; Use lots of water, hot and coldâ€" And water‘s cheap and handy. Five minutes is quite long enough To steam it â€" maybe less; But if you boil the spinach long "Twill turn out just "a mess." Now chop it fine as fine can be And season well and then, Trim up the dish with bacon strips, That titbhit from "the pen." Take hardâ€"boiled eggs and grate them well; They make the dish look snappy; Add cream sauce, if you like it, andâ€" Eat spinach and be happy. The Two Green Eyes In Praise of Spinach year to offer sacrifices in the most of which, being animal s, were purchased within wle nvecincts, or immediateâ€" to right, val childâ€" thisas spinach The Water Way to Health and Beauty Eight glasses of water a dayâ€" eight hours sleep per nightâ€"fifteen minutes of exercises in the mornâ€" ingâ€"â€"a fifteen minute walk someâ€" time during the dayâ€"@ daily bath â€"these are simple routines that cost nothing, but which are the very fundamentals of true beauty. A woman who cannot find time for them is rare. One who refuses to do so obviously cares little about her health and good looks. ~ Before you try any fancy remeâ€" dies for spring fever or let anyone persuade you that you simply must take a cruise you can‘t afford, map out a health routine and stieck to it for three weeks. If, at the end of that period, you feel and look not a bit better, not only shou!d you start wonderings what is wrong, you had better see a doctor and find out. Eight Glasses Daily â€" Eight Hours‘ Slkepâ€"Daily Bath First of all, rearrange your daily schedule to allow for eight hours sleep. If you have to get up at eight, go to bed at elevenâ€"thirty and resolve to be asleep by twelve. ‘This may be a bore and seem like a hardship, but do it anyway, at least during the three weeks health test period. Although it means cutting short your lJunch hbour, vralk briskly for fifteen minutes a day. Bresthe deeply as you stride along. Improper breathing, by the way, is another fault a good many of us have. We sit with shoulders hunched forward, crowding our lungs and taking lazy, shallow breathes instead of healthy, energyâ€"giving, deep ones. See that some of the youtines in your morning‘s daily dozen include breathing exercises. Pickwick‘s Home American Tourists Rush To Collect Antiques The Pickwick Club met at the Adelphi Hotel just off the Strand. _ Sic transit gloria Dickens. The furniture was sold by auction the other day. * Dealers and hotel owners roamed through the premises, but one bedâ€" room was locked. Mrs, Moir, wife of the manager, was very ill in that room. Mr. Moir is dangerously ill in hospital. Former workers in the hotel, now out of a job sat at the back of the diningâ€"room, scene of many gatherâ€" ings in the days when the Adelphi had its Bohemians, and "Savages" spent the evenings between the hotel and their club in Adelphiâ€"terrace. NMr. W. H. Cork, the auctioneer, opened the sale: "No reserve on anything," he said. . This twoâ€"day sale was for the furâ€" niture and effects, antique and modâ€" ern, the restaurant equipment, picâ€" tures and so on. Is Sold as the Staf Watch Sadly Americans made a becâ€"line for the Adelphi. One woman wants Adam doors for her house in Caliâ€" fornia. There are about 60 original fireâ€" places. The ceilings could be taken d9wn but the job might be expenâ€" sive. The bar is being kept open for some time. Licenses are even more precious than Adam ceilings. I love that gladsome April dawn â€" when sheer joy lives anew Because sweet birds come winging home from out the south‘s far blue, And if 1 were in heaven 1‘d come _ back to earth again To hear a mating robin sing after I loveâ€" that shining April day when down the road I go Among the silver birches where the first wild flowers grow, And though I roamed Elysian fields I‘d have to steal away To walk again the good, green earth some lovely April day. I love the dusk of April days when, after still, grey rain, The skies clear to a cool, clean night and stars shine out again, And if 1 were in paradise l‘4 slip away to see A lowâ€"hung April crescent gleaming through my lilac tree. The tender heart of April may reâ€" member with her tears Dim, lovely things forgotten by the ever passing years, ;But-llthoéonofhunn and deâ€" l lights of paradise smiling April skies. CA Montreal, â€"K. A. Mackinnon. Earthling +4 Are W W\ U Th

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