HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-11-08, Page 2Sunday School
Lesson
view Ways to Serve
an Old Friend;
11A14B /InG WITH ORANGE
Season a pound of hamburg with
salt and pepper and melee it into a
November 11, Lesson VI, --Peace and piece about en inert thick; dip this it
' Good Will Among Meni•-•Romans flour and plaee it in a greased case
12. 1, 2, 9.21. Golden Text—Be not serole; dot over with bits of butter and'
overcome, of evil, but overcome evil a few bits of bay leaf, Peel end quer-
with good.—Romans 12e 21*
ANALYSIS
L THE NATUttA of THE CIIRI5TIAN
Lips, 1, 2.
II. TIIE E?EaCISA QF THE PRINCIPLE QF
LovA, 9-21.
INTRonI:CTIeN--Th.. tt •,.;-..1 teeet,
ins of the apostle in this Epistle it
completed and now the writer turns
to the problem of -''.duct, It was is
CVst(nr to first lay down bis principles,
and then to show wont these must find
their fruit in a higher type of living.
See also Ephesiens, Colcreeans, Thes-
saloniaus, The general object of this
chapter is to cultivate peace and good
will among all members of the church.
L TUE NATURE OF THE CHRISTIAN
LIFE, :1, 2.
V. 1. The entire appear for Christi
tian service rises out of the infinite
love of God. Paul doer not rest his
ai reement on th power of God, but
he appeals to the wonderful confession
of the heavenly Father revealed in
ter two oranges and place these
around the steak, add a quarter•o£ a
ce:pful'of water and bake until there
oughly done, basting often. Serve on
a hot plate and'alternote oranges with
sprigs of parsley. Make a gravy with
the essence in the dish and serve over
ib.
BROILED WITH PINEAPPLE.
Hamburg broiled with pineapple
makes a particuls rly pleasing com-
bination. Formthe meet, after season..
ing. with. Balt, pepper and a dash of
cayenne, into fiat eakes and place'
them on a well-oiled broiler; cook until
partly done without turning. Turn.
each cake and cover with a slice of
canned pineapple and broil until cook-
ed through and serve on a hot plate.
STANLEY STYLE.
The hamburg calces are good, too,
pan-broiled with bananas. Put the
cakes into a hot greased frying pan
and cook quickly, turning then once
mention and redemption. The res- or twice. While they are cooking cat
pease of man to this confession should bananas lengthwise ,
then crosswise,
be complete, and this verse lays stress
upon the body which is add a few drops p,f lemon juice eto
a very essen- a
tial element inour Christian Iife. The them, and fry to a golden brown in
Greeks were inclined to speak slight- bacon fat; serve them armed the neat
'r cakes,
ingly of the body and some of thei
teachers;.aiivocated the crushing out
,of the instincts of the body since the
seat of sin lay in the flash But
Christianity does not condemn the
body, nor does it dis.arage its inbu-
enco. Rather it urges us to purify
and sanctify our ' ody, that we may
offer it as a sacrifice to God.
V. 2. But the mind rules the body,
and those thoughts which are most
often welcomed ere long find their ex-
pression in outward conduct. As a
man thinketh in his `•-art, so is he.
Therefore, Paul urges his readers
to
ponder increasingly nee will of God.
Let all learn to submit with full con-
sent to his divine will. The three
Adjectives which he uses in this re
,;gard should be carefull -noted, as they
set forth the apostl'e's conception of
the nature of God. (1) It is. good.
God will - what s -good for his crea-
tures. Ile is not lire mc who are so
often envious and malicious. All of
f rd's purposes are for the welfare of
his children. In Jesus, called "the
Good Shepherd," we have the iuear-
nate example of the divine goodness.
(2) 1;; is acce'Itable. It is well pleas-
ing to them who accept. it. They who
fall in with God's plan for their lives
may sometimes heeler: that it seemed
hard and forbit:dinr, ut in the end
they -will conte to rejoice in it, and
will have a joy suet: as nothing else
car. give. The Psalmist said, "I de-
1'"ht to de thy wilI," and Jesus said
that it was bis meat to do the will
of his Father. (3) It is perfect. This
adiective comes frotn word meaning
"end," and amy mean here that which
has reached its end, os goal and, there-
fore, is complete. God's will is in this
sense perfect or complete. It is final,
and we shall reach our goal or final
perfection only when we fully accept
ibis perfect will f God. "Be ye per-
fect even as your Father in heaven
perfect."
WITH OLIVES
Hamburg roast with olive sauce is
splendid. Have two pounds of round
steak ground fine and add to it three-
quarters of a cup of rolled oats, a
dozen olives, chopped, a teaspoon of
grated onion, two cars of tomatoes, a
quarter of a teaspoon of salt. Bake in
a greased bread pan about an hour
and serve with a sauce made by blend-
ing well two tablespoons each of melt-
ed butter and flour, to which add a
cup of good stock; stir until smooth
and thick. Add a scant tablespoon of
Worcestershire sauce •and eighteen
chopped olives, a little salt and pep-
per, and simmer -a few minutes.
Empire Capitol Thrills to Martial Music
Party Desserts The Vegetable
Alphabet
Glorified. GranberrY Cake _
Cream bale a Gip of butter and 050 Aapae"+tn.9. light, Aatear'aiYlla. melee,
and a half cups of light brown sager Aaperagssi fo, gaper Is lit for a
and blend neeith them the well beaten mthatoan•
yolks of three eggs, Sift together
two cups of flour, a teaspoon each et Beaus aro flowery and Deets,
einl that are eweet,
anion and nutmeg, tea �-o teen Are alWaYs to nice with line, juicy
spoon of cloevas and one teaspoon off meat
soda and add gradually to the eggs : Calory and Cauliflower, cool,' delicious
and sugar, mixture.. Have ready a Cuaumber,
oup and a half of cranberries that) re lovely, but neer to oat Just be
have been cooked. Put through, ththe A fere sbuntery
.11,E colander and slightly sweetened; foDandelion flawera, they may, make
i,. Into e cake and the }vhipped
el whites of the eggs. Bake In two lay-1
Dandogood ower
,when gathered quite fresh !u two
F., ere and ice with white icing colored early Sed quite
I' with the' strained juice of cramearly
Is nice when filed golden
me.
berries, brpwu,
Virginia Fruit Coke jp say that I like it, I really must
Mix one pound' of Currants, wile frown.
pound of chopped raisins. ad a half F, is for' harmer, who cultivates the
t 1, a Pound of shredded citron and land,
vs 6 sprinkle ever them the juice e+' one And for rill these vegetables tie gets
lemon, the grated rind of two lemons, great demand•
a good pinch of mace and. a grated Greens aro delightful, medicinal and
i
nutmeg' cover and set aside to hlend..
.y.
�,ii'{ Cream half a Pound of butter with 'Withinhepealtophle's moans, elle poor and
c; one and one-half, pounds>of auger, the wealthy.
gradually adding the beaten yolks of Horse -radish Sc,ur, fine pickle it la,
six eggs. 'Then alternately beat in
of flour„
"0, gee whizz!” for dutyat the and one pint of sour cream in which. I is for I, who vegetallos do eat,
Grenadiers leaving Waterloo Station on arrival from Aldershot to relieve the Coldstreams a level teaspoonful of soda has been You buy Them all the market and
Tower of London: • dissolved. When beaten until smooth,: they're sold an the street,
add the stiffly whipped whites of the J is for Judges; they're sure to be
eggs, then the prepared fruit. Bake there,'
in a paperdined pan two and one- To examine.
will pull a queer face and say,
one and three-quarters pounds
LONDON'S FAMOUS GUARDS ON THE MARCH
HAMBURG BISCUIT ROLLS
Hamburg surprise is an. interesting
dish for luncheon or supper. Roll the
hamburg into pieces about the size of
a sausage, partly cook in a hot Pan,
then wrap each little roll in baking -
powder biscuit dough and bake in a
hot oven.
II. THE EXERCISE OF THE PRINCIPLE OF
LOVE, 9-21.
V. 9. In the preceding verses, 3-8,
P:.ul has spoken of the different gifts
possessed by the members of the
church, and of the way in which these
are to be exercised. Now he passes on
to discuss the graces which they must
develop and the first and greatest of
these is love. This must be absolutely
sincere and based upon the highest
motives.
V. 10. Love of the brethren is a spe-
cial form of love which is to exist be-
tv.een members of the same church.
This will manifest itself in a fitting
modesty
The School Lunch
The great majority of ,school child-
ren,get their lunches away from home.
'Usually a good lunoh is obtainable at,
the school cafeteria, where the food
is well prepared. But a large number
of city children, either snatch ,a sand-
wich at a lunch counter and the
country children bring a box lunch
from home,
The home -prepared lunch Is the
safest way to insure the proper nour-
ishment. A box lunch should be as
carefully planned as the meals you 'Gee as a filling for white or whole
serve at home. There should he a hot bread sandwiches, making them thin
drink, some fruit and a few aPketlzing and dainty.
sandwiches. Nothing has ever been *Honey Nut Sandwiches
able to compete with the sandwich Shape and butter the bread and then
when it camel to putting; up :t packed npreacelightly with.honcy, taking caro Sr whites
lunch. And nowadays so much. at- ;not- to rpread it -Mtn -to the edge, There are small lunch -boxes now- oil e m bali.stage; have two .egg
-entiou Is' _being paid to -making sand- Sprinkle .with chopped ,nuts. Cover the market .which.are easy to keep in :wjiipped to a 'rota, and me above co
t 1
s that are .unusual tangy a toplayer, 'which has: • been :good condition, Each box contains a ;them , gi'aduuldy, .`)boating constantly.
fid 'nourishing
with l ay
ri that a. sandwich nerd buttered .and• rad vette honey, and thermos bottle ; just _large enough to them about l third,.' a n and color a
winod n ger ng Prs-pr
no longer .be prosaic and dry. press the'slices together, • hold .a -.glass of milk, hoc chocolate ;delicate pink and .add a .quarter of a
Apricot Paste When well blended, pour into a small
Wash and clean dried apricots thew mayonnaise jar and chill overnight in
°uglily. Soak for a few hours in a
the ice -box for the acbool lunch.
small amunt of water. Cook them Fruit Bread Pudding. •
in this same water until they are soft :Scald two cups of milk and pour
enough to mash and have little or no over one cup of fine, stale, dry bread
juice left on them. Add sugar if -neo• crumbs. Let stand until the crumbs
essary. ' This ' fliliui , when Gold, may are soft. Then add two beaten eggs,
also be spread between sugar cookies, one-half cup of sugar, one-half tea -
Fish and Celery spoon of salt, one -CUP of crushed fruit
Mix together chopped pimiento, (apricots, pineapple or apple sauce)
chopped celery, minced tuna' fish, and one teaspoon of grated lemon rind:
chopped sweet green Pepper and salt or the juice of half a lemon. Pour,
to taste. Moisten with mayonnaise., into a well greased pudding dish and
bake in a moderate oven (360 degrees)
for 40 minutes or until firm and brown.
Out in squares. Place one square in
a small jar and pour over it enough
fruit juice to moisten it thoroughly.
The Lunch ;Box
TAMALE PIE
Tamale pie calls for half a pound of
hamburg. Brown this; add one chop-
ped onion, one chopped green chili pep-
per, one cup of tomatoes, one cup of
chopped raisins and half a teaspoon of
salt and cook five minutes. There
should be ready to use three-quarters
of a cup of white cornmeal cooked
forty minutes in three cups of boiling
water; to this add a cup of ripe a lives,
chopped, and spread half of it over a
greased baking dish, thea add the
hamburg and pour over it the remain-
der of the cornmeal and bake half an
bour.
CROQUETTES WITH ONION
FRITTERS
V. 11. Joy was one of the gredt out-
star.ding qualities of the early church.
It was revealed in the teaching and
ling of Jesus, and then it was mani-
fest in his followeds. It has been
claimed that joy as a moral virtue
was the creation of the Christian re-
ligion. Paul shows that joy is quite
consistent with suffering. The perse-
caters of the early Christians did not
crtsh out their happiness. The words
of Matthew 5: 11, were abundantly
fuifi1ied,
V 13. Paul was himself very gener-
ous, and had spent much time in col-
lecting money for the poor saints in molds willtake of the following:
Je rsalent. Here lie urges the form i Soften one and a half teaspoons of
of •,enerosity which thews itself in eornstarch in a third of a cup of cold
hospitality—a grace very needful intmilk, add two egg yolks beaten slight-
-Lose days when travel was so corn- ly then a cup of milk, half a teaspoon
mea and inns so poor nd dangeroul.iof salt and fold in the beaten whites.
V. 10. This is a ve ..e on humility. • Cook the molds in a pan of hot water
It forbids all wrong ambition and de-1half an hour. Serve with tomato or
sire to lord it over others; while i:, a onion sauce.
specific case he urges an interest in,
the vegetables
that are at
half hours, keeping the top covered the Fair.
with buttered paper while baking. Kale is the Scotch word for Vegetable
Washington Anger Cake Soup,
Beat one cupful of egg whites until But after eating it don't loop the
foamy, then add one teaspoonful of !loop. '
cream of tartar; when stiff add grad*. Lettuce for Salads, and Leeks for
ally onecupful of -granulated sugar. good Plash,
Sift: one cupfulof flourwith ono- Both you can get for just a little
fourth of a teaspoonfdl of salt four' cash.
times. - 'Cut and fold into two egg M. • is for Market, the place where
mixture, add a teaspoonful of vanilla you buy, •
and bake in"two layers in ungreased All these for flue vegetables, to boil
pans in a moderate oven thirty-five . or to fry. .
to forty minutes. Make an ling by Nasturtiums are strong and -pungent,
cooking two and one-half cupfuls of but good,
sugar, eight tablespoonfuls of water And the flowers are so pretty In gar -
and the same amount of light corn nfshing food;
syrup together .until. the Sugar fa dis..- Onions: dear mei lenearly forgot,
solved, Stirling, .then cook ._until .the They're fine ;when boiled in a close -
covered pot.
losecovered:pot:
Potatoes, Parsnips and Peas, how de-
licious with larnh,.
And -Paisley, ort, yes, for decorating
the Liam,
Questions are asked now ieest to pre-
pare,
All Vegetables you see on the great
Bill of Fare.
Radishes piquant, ell' white and pink,
See how a dishful disappears is a
wink.
Squash, oh, how, funny, the shapes
that -they take,
Mash them up: well or put them to
bake.
Tomatoes and Turnips all red and
gold,
One you eat hot, the other quite cold.
U. is for tjnrestif you eat all to-
gether,
And you'll certainly die, if you don't
get better
Better food in the world .you realll
can't eat.
W is for Weeds .tl at grow up so
quickly,
They keep you at work till you really
feel sick.
X, is for Xantippi, wise Socrates'
A. good quality, elose.gtainei,bread cr whetever.Qrink you
shouldEgg and Cheese Mixture be used for sandwiches. end blue with the school lunch. These
it should be fresh if the sandwich is Spread one piece of bread with but boxes have separate metal compart-
to be moist. Nobody wants a dry ter, then soft, yellow cheese, and cover- meats for the sandwiches and fruit.
sandwich, not even a hungry young- with a piece ot lettuce. Spread the - .
second slice of bread with butter, a ,
Hamburg croc,uettes with fried on-
ion rings is a splendid dish. Take two
cups of highly seasoned cooked ham-
burg and add to it three-fourths of a
cup of thick tomato sauce, blend well,
spread on a plate and shape into fin-
ger rolls; chill well, then roll in
crumbs, egg and crumbs again and
cook quickly until a delicate brown in
hot fat. Dip rings of Bermuda on-
ions in butter and fry them; serve the
croquetes on the rings and garnish
with springs of parsley.
WITH SPAGHETTI
ster. The slices of bread should be
thin and the filling generous.
Sandwich Fittings
The number of ready-made sandwich
fillings available in almost every gro- slice or dice a had cooked egg. Put
eery store stimulate an interesting the sand this together. It makes a
variety in luncheon menus. Cheese delicious combination.
of all kinds is put up in smolt and Date and Cream Cheese Spread
large packages. It is cheaper to buy For a double deck sandwich which
the large size packages and, siwm they is delicious and filling try this one.
are so carefully packed, there is no Chop very fresh dates into a paste.-
waste. It's an economy of time and Add a little lemon juice to give them
thought, too, to have these cheeses a little tart taste and then mix with
always on .band. Cheese spreads and an equal portion of cream cheese.
other sandwich fillings are good as Butter three slices of bread and lay
they come from the package, but may on two generous layers ot this mix -
be varied a bit as suggested iu the ture. Cover with the third slice and
following recipes: wrap in waxed paper.
Cheese and Apple Butter Egg Salad Sandwich_
Mix equal portions of a cream/ yel- This one is very simple, Chop a
low cheese and apple butter. For hard cooked egg and mix with mayon-
variety you could add one or two naise and diced green Pepper. For
drops of lemon juice. Plane a gener- very young children use chopped let.
ous portion between two thin slices Luce or celery instead of the green
of bread. pepper. Place in a sandwich with leaf
Cut green peppers and pimuentos of lettuce.
into slender strips, being sure that the
pepper is not too strong and that all
of the seeds are washed away. Be-
tween thin slices of bread spread a
layer of a creamy cheese and lay
pimiento strips on this. Then add
another` slice of bread spread with
creamy cheese or a meat paste made
of finely chopped meat and mayon-
naise. Wrap in waxed paper, held in
place with rubber bands.
commercial sandwich spread, or one
You have made yourself with a little
mayonnaise, chopped lettuce and
icicle. On top of the sandwich spread
A good leftmer hamburg dish, if
you have as much as two eupfuls, is as
follows: Cook one and one-half cups
of spaghetti in boiling salted water
until tender; drain and pour cold
water through it and add a dash of
cayenne, a quarter of a teaspoon of
pepper and a teaspooi, of salt and line
buttered timbale molds with it. To the
hamburg add half a cup of finely
minced nutmeats, put the mixture into
the molds and cover the tops with
paghetti and add as much as the
poor people, a very wise and worthy
counsel.
V. 18. Pant renumbers the beatitude
of the peacemakers. If there must be
discord, then let it come from outside
the church.
Vs, 19-21. Revenge. These verses
take for granted that good men will
call forth the hostility of evil men, and
Paul -warns the Christians against
every act of retaliation. The only way
open to the Christian of showing his
feeling is by caring for the best inter-
ests of the enemy. In doing goad to
him he wzll heap coals, of fire on his
head, which probably means the burn-
ing pangs of shame, which will fill the half a cup of dry -uncooked rice, a
heart of the man who comes to see tablespon of minced' onion, half a
that good is being tuned for all the a
evil he is doing. jrHe will be so filled green pepper, chopped, andsalt and
nae of self-accusation pepper ,,,-.:,,,p s :: ss T. ,: ':wu�,.,/�' .'%�} s .i's<"i�" s,�er°c 3 �Fj �,. e•-7,
with a deep se to fasts; make into small balls
in salted water to cover for a "• v uN; i.. `,`, :flays , . t' Ai A d u„. �M a�:l
that he will repent. This great moral and bolt in ;"„d,41,1<� "z.� A
STUFFED PIMIENTOS
Hamburg stuffed pimientos will be
found very fine. A.range half a dozen
pimientos in greased ramekins. Have
blended a cup of hamburg, put
through the fine chopper, half a sup of
cooked rice, a teaspoon of pepper and
one well beaten egg. Put this mixture
into the Pimientos, soler with bread
crumbs, dot with bctte: and hake until
the egg has stiffened the pimientos,
HAMBURG DUMPLINGS
Hamburg dumplings are made by
mixing. a pound of ground meat with
The. Curse of Progress
Blackwcod's. (Edinburgh): We are
forgetting our ancient habits of tran-
quility and calm. We have set up
for our worship the twin idols of
done so much in receut years to retard
literature and the decent arts of life,
and put in their place the dangerous
results of science misapplied. We
have given to progress—always a
foolish thiug—a fresh interpretation.
According to the new meaning of the
word, progress consists of moving
with insane rapidity from one place
to another. •
•
cupful each of chopped candied pine-
apple and cherries, and half a cupful
of chopped pecans.
Mental Deficiency -
Spectator ((London): Segregatio.i
must for long remain an impossible
ideal.... Sterilization though the
ward frighten those who do not under-
stand it—is the only practical rem-
edy that has yet been proposed...'.
The problem must in any case
Apple Tapioca Whip be tackled promptly and effectively,
Heat one and one-half cups of water not only for tthe sake of the unhappy
beings who ought never to be born,
nor only on account of their cost to
us. Man has attained his place in
nature by his kind, andby mental
evolution he has created civilization.
The existence of the sub -human and
mentally defective Is a peril and an
affront to the dignity of man.
to boiling point, add one-third cup of
granulated sugar and one-half cup of
tapioca.- Stir constantly for five min-
utes. Cook in double boiler fifteen
or twenty minutes or until tapioca is
transparent. Remove from fire and
beat in one and one-half cr_ a of thick,
unsweetened whites of two egge.
The Kilt Will Ever Be Popular
lesson is summed up in the'famoes .hall an hour, then add a cup of to- w �•Y^ ” ' "" '' " "'
saying of verse 21 which teaches thst matoes and drop a tablespoon of
all revenge is wrong and that we must dumpling batter on top of each meat PROMINENT CANADIANS ON THE LINKS AT BANFF
seek to win over -one for wh
old col., Alex,
om we ball, cover well and steam twelve min- From
Connor, the author "(lieu G Nil Gordon) J, W. Jenkinson, She A. Maedou ,
of tree ales and serve -with the gravy rn om '
the only World conqueror. which cooked,
have a dislike "y a dlr. -lay
left:
Ralph
Christian love towards him. Love is Fraser, aide to the lieutenant:governor
of Ontario, and Hon. William "Egbert, lieutenant -governor of Alberta.
shrew,
But 'Im sure she ate all the vege-
tables he grew.
Y. is for Youth, the time Farmers-.
hoe.
To bring to high grade the vegetables
they grow.
Zea, grasses, Indian Maize, Indian
COPE,
We love it for dinner, supper and
early morn,
And you know I've not 'mentioned
Chard, Pimento and Corn.
And a great many others which do
our tables adorn.
So please think them out, its quite a
big task,
You'l' find some in books, and others,
some, friends you will ask.
—Grace Sorel:
SWAGGER SPORTS MODEL
You'll like its swagger cut;; its sim-
plicity and wearability. The skirt ef-
fects box -plaits across front that sway
so gracefully when one moves. The
bodice has most becoming 'neckline
with flattering pleated frill below tab
extension. It also shows new higher
waistline, a smart detail. Style No.
280, designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years,
36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, adapts
itself charmingly to black lustrous
crepe -satin, the seasons most popular
fabric for daytime wear. Myrtle
green flat silk crepe, sheer tweed in
grey tones, black rayon velvet, printed
rayon velvet in wine red coloring,
mauve -brown canton -faille crepe,
Autumn -leaf brown wobl jersey, pat-
terned jersey and black crepe E4iza-
beth'are new combinations for imine-
diato wear. Pattern price 20 cents in
Stamps or udin (coin preferred), Wrap
coin carefully.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your ::ame and address plain-
ly, giving number' and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps -or coin (coin preferred; wren)
it ' carefully) for each nuniber and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by return mail.
Co-education,
Alice Atherton in the Dalhousie Re-
view (Halifax): It is au undeniable
fact that college -bred women are much ,
harder to please in the matter of se-
lecting a husband than they would
otherwise be. The fact that a nisi is
a man does not overwhelm them with
awe. After working side by side with
men for four years, after competing
with them for medals and prizes, after
•being made to realize that men's
brains are not superior to those ot
members of their own sex, women
gradttates naturally consider a pros-
pective : husband's intellectual capa-
city and his • virtues and vices more
carefully and sensibly than if they
were Wept oft their feet by the mere
tact that he is a man. -
IT WAS REALLY ON HIM, TOO..
(slapping E etorner friend on shout -.
a
der) : Heavens, you sound like 1
boiler, Sam,
Chicagoan:" Well, well, that's one
on me. I forgot to remove my con:
coaled armor before I left home.