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Durham Review (1897), 16 Jul 1936, p. 6

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FU MANCHU Write your name and address of pattern wanted. Enclose 20¢ in staumps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it carefully and address your order to Barbara Bell, 73 Adclaide W., Toronto. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 187# B is available in sizes 32, 34, 36, 88, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 requires 4* yards of 35â€"inch material. The model cuts quickly and easily, with only seams to join at the sides, panel and waistline. No troublesome armholes to discourâ€" age amateur dressmakers, as the sleeves and shoulder line belong to "one family," and a slim waistline is assured the minute you insert the back darts. This is a perfect utility frock for a mulâ€" titude of daytime needs. You ean make it as a house frock tooâ€" it‘s so simple and quick to launâ€" der, and being collarless, ever easier to iron Checks in crepe, silk, pique, linen or cotton lead the way to ehic in this easy, casual, day dress. While the design emphaâ€" sizes smooth slim lines, comfortâ€" able fullness for the skirt is proâ€" vided by a wide insert at the front. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS For some reason or other we alâ€" most invariably associate shortcake with strawberries, but all the fruits in their seasons may be served in shorteake. Sometimes I think red raspberries are even better than strawberries and when we have a fresh peach shorteake 1 wonder if maybe it isn‘t best of all. Oldâ€"fashioned shortcake is almost a full meal in itself, served with plenty of fruit and lots of rich cream. So plan to use a shortcake dessert Way back in the sixteenth century some doctor in England said of the strawberry: "Doubtless Godcould have made a better berry, but doubtâ€" less God never did." Simple Lines Mark This 7 1 **tzm z4 e e44 o a a 4 4 6640 0 0 416 4 C400 0 e e e e e ae n t n e e n e e e e Exclusive Model 1873B Chop beats, carrots, potatoes and beans and add to cabbage and celery. Mix all together with dressing and serve on lettuce leaves.â€"Mrs. W. Burâ€" well, RR. 1, Thamesvilie, Ont. Attention We will pay $1.00 on publication 1 cup of finely cut red cabbage, 1 cup of cold boiled red beets, 1 cup of col. boiled carrots, 1 cup of cold boiled potatoes. 1 cup of cold boiled green peas, 1 cup of finely cut celery, C e laint aniints slitc l ces Pirtai® acial P 4 1 head of lettuce, 1 cup of mayonâ€" naise dressing. Mash 1 cup raspberries, place in a jug with 4 tablespoons sugar and the finely pecled rind and juice of 2 lemons. Pour on 2 pints boiling water. Strain carefully when cold. Serves 6.â€"Mrs. Stewart Nelson, Box 338, Campbe‘!lford, Ont. Mix well together and set in a loaf mold (or individual molds}). To serve, cut in slices and place on crisp lettuce leaves. (Gireen peas ase very nice in this salad, too. Add less ingredients if not so large a salad is required. 1 tin tomato soup or juice, 1 lemon jelly powder; heat soup and dissolve jelly powder in it; add 14 cups chopped celery, 1 green pepper (chopped), 1 small onion, %% cup blanched almonds, % 1b. plain white cheese (diced), 1 cup salad dressing. _ The shortcake made with sponge cake is far more suitable to serve after a hearty dinner than the oldâ€" fashioned variety. Bake a light sponge cake in a thin sheet, much as you would for a jelly roll. Pile up in layers with crushed and sweetened berries between. Mask with whipped cream and top with a fine large berry. If you like you can cover the top layer of the cake with a thick coatâ€" ing of whipped cream and press fine large berries up. Of course, this makes a very handsome dish to serve at the table. Soak Berries In Sugar To prepare berries, wash and hull. Cut in quarters or crush with a poâ€" tato masher. Sprinkle % cup of sugar over a quart of berries and let stand in a warm place while mixing and baking the cake. M‘x and sift flour, baking powder, salt and soda. Cut in shortening with pastry blender or tips of fingers. Cut in buttermilk with a knife. Divide in two equal parts and put one part on a lightly floured molding board. Pull together with tips of fingers dipped in flour and roll with a floured rolling pin into a sheet about % of an inch thick. Put on a greased baking pan and brush with softened butter. Roll remaining dough to fit the lower seeâ€" tion and put on top of dough pan. Bake in a hot oven (375 degrees F. for twentyâ€"five minutes. When ready to serve split sections apart. Spread lower cake with butter and cover with a thick layer of crushed berries. Add top layer and cover with more berries. Cut in wedges and serve with sugar and cream. By Sax Rohmer One cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, *4 teaspoon soda, 2 tableâ€" spoons butter or other shortening, 1 cup buttermilk, %4& teaspoon salt. An aside to the bride: oneâ€"half cup flour and the other ingredients in proporticn will make a shortcake for two. That is, just half the recipe will be plenty for two. If you have a guest, use threeâ€"fourths the recipe. A quart of berries will be needed for three persons. C Buttermilk Shortcake For Four Lately I‘ve been using a lot of butâ€" termilk in baking and it certainly does make a crust of melting tenderâ€" ness. after a very fight meal unless you serve very small portions. THIS WEEK‘S WINNERS Combination Salad Vegetable Salad Raspberryade Plainly write or print out the inâ€" gredients and method and send it toâ€" gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adclaide Street, Toronto. for the best salad dish or refreshâ€" ing drink recipe received. "And with great power gave the apostles their witness of the resurrecâ€" tion of the Lord Jesus." The resurrecâ€" tion of Christ was the fundamental theme of apostolic preaching, but inâ€" cluded in it was, of course, the person and life and death of Jesus Christ. "And great grace was upon them all." (Cf. Luke2 : 52; Acts 2 : 47). The phrase probably means that the grace of God was mightily upon them, enabling them to live a truly Christian life. \ "And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and soul." (See 1 Chron. 12 : 38; Jer. 32 : 39; Phil. > 1 <: 27; 2 ; 2. 20).‘~ Avristole ascribes to Diogenes Laertius the following definition of friendship â€" "one soul residing in two bodies." "And not one of them said that aught of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things comâ€" mon." The statement will be comâ€" mented upon when we come to verse‘ 34. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST LESSON IIâ€"July 19. SOCIAL _ERVICE IN THE EARLY CHURCHâ€" Acts 4 : 32â€"35; 6 : 3â€"7; 36â€"39; 2 Corinthians 8 : 1â€"9; I John 3 : 13â€"18. GOLDEN TEXT.â€"He himself said, 1# is more blessed to give than to reâ€" ceive. Acts 20 : 35. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.â€"The events described in Acts 4 : 32â€"35 occurred in the sumâ€" mer of A.D. 30; the appointment of the deacons occurred five years later, A.D. 35; the raising of Dorcas ocâ€" curred five years later still, A.D. 40. The Second Epistle to the Corinthians was written approximately A.D. 57. The first Epistle of John was written many years later, some time after A.D. 90. ‘ Place.â€"The distribution of proâ€" perty in the early church and the appointment of deacons took place in the city of Jerusalem; the raising of Dorcas occurred at Joppa, thirtyâ€"five mile from Jerusalem, on the Mediâ€" terranean coast. "For neither was there among them All of a twirl about forthcoming Willits Fron tier will twirl ropes at rodeo. Alice Good, Ester Simon sen UND A Y CHQOQOI 39 PÂ¥ P B 4 » t \}T‘ y 74 4 1 |A h I } / "f‘ f ’/ !'It‘ CA 0 & ~/"J // NNE t\ i# / i Ub E2 23 t f â€" Nee\ â€" y C 00 ~ "\ue »A NE â€" > «d 56 iss \\\ //i w l‘ â€" 7,\ \\ :‘ $ f S GycP 0 "We must find out "For according to their power, I bear witness, yea and beyond their power, they gave of their own accord." It should be especially noted "How that in much proof of afflicâ€" tion." "Tribulation has brought out the genuine Christian qualities of the Macedonian churches." "The abundâ€" ance of their joy." A strange clause to be found in a sentence describing trouble and poverty. Their joy really exceeded their "distress, so that the distress became insignificant in comâ€" parison." "And their deep poverty." The word "deep" mean "down to the depth," and indicates that their poâ€" verty had already reached the lowest possible stage. The Romans had been especially hard on them. "Abounded unto the riches of their liberality." The clause would seem to mean that there was a simplicity of purpose*in the hearts of these people which atâ€" tracted them toward relieving the necessities of others. The apostle is speaking of the largeness, not of their gifts, but of their minds. "Moreover, brethren, we make known to you the grace of God which hath been given in the churches of Macedonia." The churches of Maceâ€" donia are those at Philippi, Thessaâ€" lonica, and Beroea. .. belt e cutidatatin .B hnd Atadedesi s Lc A number of things mst be rememâ€" bered: in the first place, it was strictâ€" ly a voluntary matter. There was no law about this in the early church, and no believer was compelled to sell his possessions if he was not led to ‘do so by his own conscience. This condition prevailed only among beâ€" lievers. Where love is absent, to enâ€" force such a condition is disastrous. Furthermore, it does not appear that every man in the church sold all of his property, nor that even those who «id so sold all that they had. Moreâ€" over, when the fresh warmth of Pentecostal life departed, this pracâ€" tice was given up. It is never reâ€" ferred to @gain in the New Testaâ€" ment, and never seems to have been practised outside the city of Jeruâ€" salem. â€" LEsson This Should Rope In Plenty of Visitors any that lacked: for as many as tere possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold. And laid them at the apostles‘ feet: and distribution was made unto each, according as any une had need." This common possesâ€" sion of goods in the early church has often been used as an argument for socialism and even communism, but this is misinterpreting the passage. Nee op â€" iWeaires. © 1931 By Saz Robmer and The Beli Syadicale, lnc. TORONTO Days are these three Willits, Cal and Grace Larkin (left to right). "So‘s they‘ll come again, or stay away." "Can you serve company?" asked ~e housewife, when she was bhiring he servant. "What do you mean?" asked the puzzled one. | _ "For ye know the grace of our Lord _Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might become rich." Dr. A. C. Gaebeâ€" lein, in his remarkable message on this verse, reminds us that Christ was rich in possessions (Ps. 19 : 1; 24 : 1); in love (John 17 : 24); in glory John 17: 5 ; all these would the Lord Jesus, for our sakes, give up. He faced voluntary impoverishment that we might be made rich. ‘ "I speak not by way of commandâ€" ment, but as proving through the earnestness of others the sincerity also of your love." A Christian who claims to love other believers and the Lord Jesus can show the sincerity of such devotion in no greater way than by relieving those whom he loves when they are in distress. "But as ye abound in everything, in faith, and uttcrance, and knowledge, and in all earnestness, and in your love to us, see that ye abound in this grace also." Here, for the third time, is liberality in giving called a "grace." Without the presence of liberality in the life of Christians, there is a deâ€" cided incompleteness in their Chrisâ€" tian experience and activity. "Insomuch that we exhorted Titus, that as he had made a beginning beâ€" fore, so he would also complete in you this grace also." "It seems clear from the words ‘as he had begun‘ that Titus went a second time to Corinth before the apostle arrived there. His first visit began, his secâ€" ond completed, the collections for the saints." "And this, not as we had hoped, but first they gave their own selves to the Lord, and to us through the will of God." (Cf. Ex. 14 : 31). "They placed themselves at the apostle‘s disâ€" posal for the service of Christ." 1 Cor. 16 : 3); "fell 15 : 26); and, finall ing" (2 Cor. 9 : 1, 12} "Beseeching us with much enâ€" treaty." Probably the apostle had been reluctant to take money from these people who were so extremely poor, which led them to beg him to receive what they could give for the poor in Jerusalem. "In regard of this grace and the fellowship in the minâ€" istering to the saints." Three beauâ€" tiful words are here used in describâ€" ing their gifts to othersâ€""grace" (see that they gave "of their own ie., "not of necessity" (see 2 7). ts to othersâ€""grace" (see : 8); "fellowship" (Rom. and, finally, "administerâ€" of their own accord," Way lassies who 2 Cor. 9 : Saved London Sunday Dispatch writes: Nothing succeeds like success. The confidence already engineered by our progress since 19838 should not be allowed to wane. Vigorous enterâ€" prise in a time of cheap money, ard courageous spending and investment, can keep the wheels of commerce turning with increasing speed. Nobody® would advocate rashness in these things, but courage and caution are not conmentary. With a protected home market, with cheap money to finance exportable goods, and with wages already rising above the cost of living, Britain can be cheerfully confident about her affairs at home, gowever gloomy affairs abroad may e. Cheerfulness Begins at Home Glasgow Herald writes: School chilâ€" drenm have a death rate which is lowâ€" er than that of any other age, but they suffer from a great variety of ailâ€" ments and defects, many of which in terfere with their proper physical deâ€" velopment, or retard their education The medical records indicate that disâ€" ability and deformity due to such cauâ€" ses as rickets, tuberculosis, and the respiratory diseases of childhood are much less frequently met with and are less grave than formerly. it is pointed out however, that at the rouâ€" tine inspections about 5 per cent of children have a physical defect of one kind or another to which the term "irremediable" can be properly apâ€" plied. Some of these are congenital, but most are the aftermath of disease. By far the commonest defect is dental caries, which is presnt in over 80 per cent of the children. If you chop the vegetable finely it will be necessary to reheat it beâ€" fore service. Careless serving â€" has done more to make spinach unpopuâ€" lar than the taste of the green itâ€" self. Be sure it is very hot and well seasoned. Some men like a bit of korseradish for seasoning, or tomaâ€" t.es. til tender and almost dry.‘ Season with salt just before removing from the fire. After throughly washing spinach, let it drain in a colander for a few minutes to remove â€" excess water, then cook it covered about five minâ€" utes. Remove cover and toss lightly with a fork. Cook, uncovered, unâ€" I always cut the leaves from the stems, discarding both the root and stems. In washing, always lift the leaves from one water bath to the other. In this way the sand settles to the bottom and is not disturbed. If you pour the water off without removing the leaves the sand is distributed back through them and they‘re very little cleaner afterâ€"several baths. Let Excess Water Drain Off Spinach which is very sandy or dirty is difficult to clean, for the dirt seems to defy all washing. I never did blame the little girl who said she didn‘t like spinach because the v.tamirs got in her teeth. She was served gritty spinach,. â€" If the leaves are light colored, of a yellowish tinge and tightly curled, tiny insects are apt to be present and I‘d look further for my dinner vegetable. Health of British Children Nowadays it‘s seldom that a shipâ€" ping of spinach is weedy. However, weedy spinach means loss of weight as well as time in sorting out the weeds. When you market for spinach look for plants with plenty of good healthy leaves. The condition of the leaves is of prime importance. Mediâ€" umâ€"sized plants of good, dark green color, leaves fresh and crisp, free from sand or dirt, are desirable and mean that the vegetable will be tendâ€" er and an attractive vivid green. Sinée mothers have learned of this vegetable, spinach, the demand has increased and so stimulated its culture that you can buy the vegeâ€" table at markets the year around. However, the carly spring harvest is the heaviest and of the finest quality. T aking the Curse Of Spinachâ€"*"So Sand Won‘t Drain Off Good For in . 4 _ "NCTS was a wise choice, beâ€" ing far warmer than a blue one of the same material. Many people are unable to wear red next to the skin, as it acts as a powerful irritant, grandmothers ing far warm CC mW 20 _ AMIS nranch of science, says that a yedâ€" papered bedroom is liable to produce insomnia, and that men working conâ€" tinuously under red light become ir. ritable and violent. He insist, too, that the red flannel petticoat of our Frandmathau. . _ I It is only within recent times that seientists have begun to associate colours with health, They know, for instance, that blue is a soothing co!â€" ourâ€"so soothing, in fact, that too much blue in the colour scheme is liable to cause melancholia. Dr. Rop.â€" ald Laird, of Colgate Univmity, who has experimented widely in this branch of sctemes Sunlls 1 CCC Aes ok ~YELcts, The boys has been learning things. Now we know that he doesn‘t spend all his time at the microphone. He has a receiving set, too. Mr. Vallee, however, t ideas about the law. He get a degree from the S school in Boston. And af ing to a few juries he expe for offien mm se u. ETEE 13 P*CCCHUON worth a pound of cure, and a go knowledge of the law should help lot in answering "mash" letters if one must cultivate fan mail by a swering them, " O Oner CEmmy NEWEL Rudy Valle is studying law. That is probably a good idea for all young men who crave a career as crooners or picture stars. The overhead cost of alimony and breach of promise suits might be greatly reduced for them. _ It may be true, as the old saw says that a lawyer who pleads his own case has a fool for a client. In any RV@NL, _ B . OLNEG _ DJ .mmsms _ on Ru There will, of course, be brightly colored bags to make gay splashes against light costumes, but the white bag will undoubtedly be the favorite. *o do with it. When they are not actually wearing white suits or dressâ€" es they top off their colored prints, seft pastel, or even sheer navy blues with crisp white accessoriesâ€"hat, belt, gloves and handbag. ine arts that help create this charmâ€" ‘ng effect, but one suspects that *areful choice of color and texture in their outfits has more than a little To appear fresh and cool and dainty when the thermometer hovers around ninety in the shade is far from easy, but some women contrive to 4 it. They Icok cool and they are ~ool. There are a number of feminâ€" Colours New and stunning colors make their appearance every season. This spring they boast such cleverly desâ€" criptive names as British Tan, Potâ€" tery Rust, Geranium and Woodland Green. It is rather fun to watch the latest fashions, to toy with thoughts of Chinese, Spanish, Russian influâ€" ences, but in summer clothes are cool and simple. No matter what the current color trend may be, white will always be in style. No color can tzke its place for coolness. The As for makeup, the trend is ever more definitely toward naturalness than it was a year ago. Seldom does one see an attractive woman wearing too much rouge, a heavy coating of powder or lipstick that is positively caked on in layers. ’ Speaking of the vogue for natural effects several smart business women we know, are letting their eyebrows grow again. After years of plucking thinning out and changing the natural line of the eyebrow arch, they have now put the tweezers back on the shelf to stay there until eyebrows are luxuriant again. Then, of course, they‘ll tweeze â€" but only the hairs across the bridge of the nose and those who grow down too far on the lids. Writes the Chic_Ago Daily News When you dec‘de to stop bleachâ€" ing you ought to go directly to a good hair expert and have him dye every strand the same shade as the roots. This way, you won‘t have a coiffure that is light at the ends and dark across the top. Continue with the darker dye until the bleached hairs have grown out and been cut away. to a Tew juries he exp;c'tâ€"s tto run office and croon to the voters. w 4 ut on " Within the last year, a good many of Hollywood‘s blondes have dyed their hair its former, natural shade. Jean Harlow, the original platinum b‘one, now has dark brown locks. Joan Blondell, whose hair was almost platiâ€" num, had it dyed light brown, its naâ€" tural color. Ann Sothern recently bid farowell to bleaches. It‘s smart to look natural these days. Even screen stars are putting less stress on exotic effects and are trying to look as nature intended they should. Smart Rudy Is Learning For art Women Everywhere Are Avoiding Exotic Effects A Natural Note and Health the Suffolk law lient. In any prevention is "If a com before it is Ing that the shouider." â€" the eugenic was not coni tures of rac fitness. But that racial : the fact tha man race in that the Ger grels. n t! n 11 wi th W Ho: lief abs n myth Ra Ral tin M« #Ou sktr but gosp "Ra ha v Al H n n d Na H W1 W n pp m

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