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Zurich Herald, 1936-02-13, Page 2By Mair M. Morsan -.-4000:04014.004.00=00. 400-...00:4.0...040002.0.0.,...0.000104.10.00monto.074 v':r.: There tees e.t.eta in-tee:et, in eatnel- ree.'e dae as -tee -‘ zIt,47.):11,•,r1L ,;.t.1 mz•t!. but. wiee all cite:eel go.ele veleade. i L ue pridateni to: Van winter intrettie with taizetelei yoga.. nahlee. te ane retipes that make ase of canned vegetables; LI? BEAN CROQUETTES • Teal cues coeltied lima beans, 1 tablesponn minced onion, 2 table- e peons melted butter or bacon fat, ea cup canned tomato. 1-1 teaspoon tabasco sauce, flour, ege, dried bread crumb,• salt and pepper. • Canned or cooked dried limas may be used. Put beans through food chop- per, Melt fat or butttr an] tern the onion. Add beaus, tomato and season- ings.. Cook over a low fire, stirring to prevent sticking, .until nick. It will take about ten minutee. Cepreatl on a platter to cool and become firm Form into croquettes, roll in flour, dip in egg slightly beaten with 1 tablespoon water. Roll in crumbs and fry in deep hot fat The at should be ht enough tee brown an inch cube of breaO in forty seconds. or 385 degrees: F. on a fat thermometer. JELLIED SAUERKRAUT SALAD T -his is an unusual salad that is in- viting on a cold January night when pork in .some fashion is served. One and one-half cups sauerkraut juice, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatine, 4 tablespoons cold water, 3 tablespoons sugar, ede cup diced celery, M cull of carrot straws, ,4 Cup diced cooked beets, 2 drops tabasco juice. mayon- naise, lettuce.. .Soften gelatine in cold water for five minutes. Bring sauerkraut juice to boiling point and add softened ge- latine, Add sugar and stir until sugar and gelatine are dissolved. Let cool a few minutes and add lemon juice and tabasco sauce. When rnixtu•re be- gins to thicken, add vegetable:4. Turn lnto a mold and let stand on ice to chill and become firm, Unmoid on a bed of lettuce and serve with mayon- naiee. If a ring mold is used, fin the centre with, hearts of lettuce garnish- ed With snips <:if pimento. BAKED EGGS • This dish is really a triumph. be - cease the staunchest spinach dissen- ter will eat and forget he's eating .apinach., One 'cup cheese sauce, 13.12 cups of, cooked spinach (it will take about 2 pounds fresh .spinach to make this amount cooked) % teaspoon horse- radish, 4 eggs, 4 thin slices of bacon. Mix horseradish thoroughly with spinach,. Put 4 tablespoons cheese sauce in the bottom of each of four ramekins. Add a lae•er of spinach and 'break an egg into this. Sprinkle with pepper and cover with bacon cut to fit ramekin. Bake in a moderate oven until eggs are set and bacon is -crisp. SPLIT PEAS A split pea and ham loaf looks fes- tive and will use up the iast crumbs of a baked bam. Serve the loaf with -creamed celery or other creamed ve- getablee reel eelad made of apples, •;eins and cream cheese bells or c jellied fruit ee ad with cheese cups. PEA, AND ILeal LOAF One cup split peas, 2 cups 'Seater, 1 small onion, 2 cups chopped cooked ham, 1 egg, ed teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons minced parley, cracker e rumbe. Wash and pick over peas, Put in saucepan with -cold water and let it stand over night. Cook until very tender in water in whici they were soaked, adding onion peeled but not silted. It will take about an hour. Rub through. a sieve. The puree sbould be quite dry and thick, about like mashed potato. Add ham, pepper, parsley and egg. Beat well and shape in a loaf and roll in crumbs. Bake 3 thirty minetes in a moderetely welt Odd dee:retie Fe. SPLIT PEA. 01.71.1 lt you have teled etaft pee seup etel Tain't lila: it yeti uneoubteiny deme' %eve it scaeoned rieht. 'Phis Scandal. tyviun recipe =Ian a truly delicious soup that is Beaty enough fir zero weather, Two cups split peas, 1 gine] sized pork chop, 1 onion, 4 clove, 1 sweet Ted pepper, 2 teaspoons salt 1 tea- spoon sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, 1 tablespoon butter. Pick over and wash peas, Soak over night in plenty of cold water. Add an anion, doves, pepper, pork chop and stilt and simmer until teneer. Keep plenty of water over peas while cook. Inge Add sugar when nearly tendo.'. Rub through a (entree sieve and re. turn to sauce pan. Rub butter and flour together and stir into soup. lhing to the boiling point and serve. with toast sticks. One of our favorite desserts with a hearty soup is jellied plum Imailirte. JELLIED mum PUDDING`, One package orange flavored gela- tine, 3-4 cup sugar, 2 cups boiling wa- ter, 1 cup seeded raisins, 1 cup of stoned dates, let) eup seeded raisins, 1 cup stoned dates, ee, cup candied cherries, 1-4 :cup candied pineapple, 1-4 -cup shredded citron, 1 cup nut meats, few grains salt, 1 teaspoon of cinnamon. Add sugar to gelatine and pour over boiling water. Stir until dissolved and set aside to cool. Pour boiling; water over raisins to plump them. Drain and add. with chopped dates, cherries cut hi Quarters and pineapple cut in thin slices,- citron, nuts and salt and cin- namon to gelatine. Pour the mixture into a mold and put in the refriger- ator until firm and chilled. Servo with whipped cream. A good and less expensive pudding is made by substituting 3-4 cup eur. rants for the candied eherries and phleapple. TASTY MEAT DISH It seems to me that when I was a girl, writes a correspondent. wash- day always was soup meat day. We'd have a rich beef soup, with vege- tables or rice or maybe noodlee for luncheon, then the soup meat. what boiled vegetables and a .tasty dessert for supper_ Now, I'm not recommending soup "meat for washday. The point is, wash day emphasized the theaper cuts of meat, taught us how good they could be when they were left to cook as long as necessary. And in these days when economy is SG unfortunately imperative,. the lesson comes home opportunely, for cheaper cuts of meat are always more available than the dearer. CHEAPER CUTS It you have never tried a flank eteax do so. Some morning, when the oven is hot for baking put in this rolled flank of beef. Then at dinner time re- heat the oven for an hour and bake the extra vegetable and pudding while the meat is finishing. The meat will cook some in 4.4 own heat, and the heat of cooling oven in the morning so an hour at dinner time is plenty of time to.. thoroughly cook the dish. You see there is no waste In bone and fat in flank steak although the fibers of the meat are quite tough. For this reason have the butcher score it well on both sides when you order it. APPLE RING SALAD Two good sized apples, 4 table- spoons chopped dates, lemon juice, 1 Package cream cheese, 4 tablespoons finely chopped nut meats. Pare apples and cut each in font slices across. Remove cores and let stand in lemon juice for half an hour. Moisten dates with lemon juice. Allow 2 slices of apple for each salad and Naval Air Squadron Awarded Schiff Trophy For Safety Record Secretary of the Navy Claude Swanson (center) and William Schiff (behind President) smile their approval as President Roosevelt presents the Schiff Trophy, awarded each year to air squadron having safest record, to Squadron Commander Lt. Phillip Haynes, of training squad 2, Pensacola, Pla. Presenta- tion was in White House. put them together sandwich fashion with date mixture - for the filling. Make balls of cream cheese and roll in nuts. Put apple rings on crisp let - Wee, top with cheese balls and serve with mayonnaise. . . CORN STICKS One cue cornmeal, 1 teaspoon salts 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 cup boiling water, ee cup flour, 3 teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1-3 cup Milk, 1 egg, 5 'tablespoons melted butter or other shortening. • Mix cornmeal salt and sugar • and stir in boiling water. Let stand until cool. Mix and sift, flour and baking powder. Add milk, melted shortening and well beaten •egg to corn meal mixture. Mix well and add dry ingre- dients, mixing just eough to dampen all the Donn Turn into •a dripping pan and bake in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) for twenty-five minutes. Gut itt sticks and place on a baking sheet about 1/e inch apart. Increase heat in oven to 500 degrees P. and put corn sticks iu Oven long enough to brown the edges slightly, ROLLED PLANK STEAK - One flank steak, 1 teaspoon must- ard, 2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon of sugar, 2 tablespoons vinegar, 2 cups coarse stale crumbs, 4 tablespoons melted butter or meat drippings, tablespdon Minced onion, ad, teadapoou Pepper, 2 tablespoons hot water, Make a paste of mustard, 1 tea- spoon salt, sugar, and vinegar. Spread meat with this paste, Orel. with the stuffing and roll like a jelly roll. DO not roll too tight to have room -to ex: pand. Bina securely with a soft cord, dredge with flour and bake two hours in 9. moderate oven. To make the stuffing, mix 1 tea- spoon salt, onions and pepper with bread crumbs, melt the fat in the hot water and pour over cilimbs. Cover and let stand five or' ten minutes. Mix lightly with a fork, keeping the stuff- ing light. The mixture should be just moist enough to hold together but not sticky or pasty. Instead of using the stuffings •speed the meat with the paste as in. the pre- ceding recipe. Cut meat to fit casser- ole. Oil casserole well with bacon. fat. If the steak is cut in three pieces, put one-third of a mixture of vegetables in the casserole. then a layer of meet and so on until all is used. Add ball- ing water. about one cup to five cups of vegetables, cover closely and 'oake an hour and one-half in the morning and one hour at dinner •time. Serve from casserole. The long croting anti the vinegar break down the tough tiesues of -the meat and leave it very palatable and. and nouriehing. A gone combination of vegetables is 1 to 2 erps diced carrots, 2 cups diced .potatoee. 1 cup dined turnip and one large onion. These make a veva' sav- ory dish with the meat. UNDAY' 4I0CHOOLEssoN LESSON VI — February 9th JESUS INSISTS ON RIGHTEOUS- NESS Golden. Text -- "Why call ye me, Lord Lord, and do not the things which I say? — Luke 6:46, THE LESSON IN ITS 'SETTING Time — All the events of this chap- ter occurred in the early summer of A.D. 23. Place — The plueking of the corn occurred near Capernum. The heal- ing of the man with the withered head occurred In Galilee. The choice of the Twelve and the- Sermon on the Mount beta) Occurred near Capernum. "And he snake also a. parable man them, Can the blind guide the blind? Shall they not both fall into a pit?" The connection with what precedes perhaps, is that,. before judging others we Must judge Ourselves; otherwise we shall be blind leaders of the. blind. "The disciple is not above his tea- cher: but everyone when h0. is per- fected ball he as his teacher." l8. otter words, the pupils of thnc eon- sorio s, ev it -judging, tin rr w-ut: €'d, bitter men will grow up—ns, they be- come perfected in this leaching -'in their turn equally narrow.mbillee and bitter as their masters. "And why beholdest thou 'the mote." The Greek word hero Irate:dated "mote" means anything small and :dry; in Classical Greek, usually in the plural, it Means twigs. bits of wooa, etc. "That is in tby brother's ,ye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?" The word hero tran- slated "beam" is one which indicates the main beam of a house. that whicb 'receives tem other beams in a ItC:Of floor, and. theretere, sometiiing (0x. cieelingly large, a' comp:tree vd mote. th "Or how eam“ fbou zi.y to viz bro. •ther, Brother, let me cast out the mote that is in thine eye. when then beholdest not the bruin that ie thine own eye?" in verso f.)rt.:.'-otao, the reference is to eimp:y beholding another's fault, but in verse toter -two there is an advance made when the one referred to avinaily epteae, to his brother and, suggests that 00, the speaker, be allowed to remove tram his accused brother ainit fault which [ho speaker has obseeved. "Thcit hy- pocrite, cast out fires the beam oet thine awn eye, and then Alan- time see elearly to cast our the unne that is in thy brothrre Pyo." The hypo- crisy to which l•he Lord Jesus here refers, consists in the pretensions of one to being exceedingly mete:War about a speck ofevil in the life of another, When Itis own life IS infin- itely more seriously spotted or inter- penetrated with evil, ofwhich ite ei- thee is not conscious, or, being con- scious, he is attempting to hide, "For there is no good tree that bringeth forth corrupt fruit; nor again a corrupt tree that bringeth forth good fruit." Corrupt fruit might be that which is, in itself, diseased, that which, if eaten, would possibly communicate sickness, even death. Good fruit is that -which not only de- lights, but imparts health. The tree, .no doubt, refers. to a man's life and character and the fruit, to the pro- ducts of that life and character. "For each tree is known by its own fruit." Thus we are not truly known by our ancestry, bY the school at which we are educ,ated, by the clothes that we wear, by the money we have in the bank, but we are know'', to others by the ripoued products of our lives. "For of thong men donot ga- ther Eigs. nor of a bramble bush ga- ther they grapes." The unreformed can no more reform others titan the thorns and briers cart produce figs and grapes (ef. James 3:11., 12, pro- bably echoes ot C'hrist' s teaching as vemembered by the Lord's brother)." "The good man out of the good reasure of his heart bringeth forth that which 18 good; and the evil mar. out o•f the •evil treasure bringeth forth ihat which is evil." We can bring, forth noth•ing but what we have in our hearts, If our hearts are good, the things brotight forth are good, and, if coir hearts ave evil. then we can only, bring forth evil things, "For out (11 the abundance of the heart his month. speeketh." Speech is the heart in the act and process of • expression, it it is out of the abund- ance of the heart that the, mouth Wel:eat. we must. begin the trans- form:ohm from 1111 evil heart to a goodbeen by changing, the abuorl- :Mee. '‘ 1 1 C11 '(.:1171111:'1.11,Lc1. and not t1{131gs;` 21say The wora r,r God continually warns men reteinst thi.‘ eonnnen sin of pro- fe,tsion without premier, 1See espec- ially Teeple ainal; Jas. 1:22e "Everyone that comet h tone in". and hearted' illy Wrin1S. allt! (100th rhem, 1 1111 you lo wliMn he is FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer "Ile is like o man building hotese." livery man maY truly bo Saki to be a Mahler of life, VW point whic,h oar Lord here makes, howavol is that every man has the opportna4 ity end an Inescapable respernithility of 'building, "wbo Jigged end werit dadP," To go deep means to go to the very fundamental thinks of life. "Am( laid a, foundation upon the rock.' There is rock to be eeachcd if only we diligently seared for it. "And when. a flood nro341, the stream brake age alnst that howeed The Lord did net tell men that if they built apon :the truth, they would cisme tbe stornvf.' or tempeels 01' life, But, as the Lord. cora 111tt 8, .17(•11 S'140.11441M.4 could not shake it: Leri'us? 14 ba (4 beim well intilcleiV"n, true Chili -dine may bare (,00-Anot18 1.11n,tn1ti01, bet tltey imver 1)1(11 111 '10; '('(1, even though his 'fortune Is sw,•pt away, and Ns loved ones 81'0 taken away, and las health may be lost, yet his character is not broken. his life is not a rnin, if he has built upon a rock, "I3ut he that heareth, and float)). not, is like a mao that built a house upon ebe earth without a foundation: against which the stream brake, and straightway it fell in; and the ruin of that house was great," The differ- ence between the two men here spo- ken of is fundamentally that, which both heard the Word of God, one did it, and the other disobeyed it One called 'Jesus, Lord, but did what others said. Both gave Christ their worship, but the latter gave the world his heart, Hard -Working Bees (Science Service) A pound of honey represents 40,. 000 round trips by bees from hive to the fields. Chic Two - Piece Jf/331 Today's smart little model has dual personality. 11; can eithort be developed as a. complete frock cr as a blouse and skirt. While it's stunning in fresh spring-like 'crepe silk print., it also looks lovely in plain crepe. As a, two-pieee—gold crepe silk blouse 00 0 deep brown crepe 81;131, 18 new looking and charming. Style No. 3333 is designed for A7.1.8 14, 10, 18 years, 36, 33 end 40 invites bust. Size 16 requires 4 yards or :11-ainch material with 1 ttiard cif dd-inet lining for bodite, IIOW TO ORDER, PATTERNS Write pier name and addrees Nattily, giving number and sine of Pattern wanted. lenciose 15e In to 441118 011i11 froth 411.0rerreti1: w:np it impel:elle% end address your wad- ia Wilson Pattern Service, 73 \Vivi .Aele4zillei Street, Toronto. Petrie And The iieam rirrr;t1 Tztt3,. The glow of the • flames grew brighter and Acewod MO fhe decaying piles upholding -tTe ;ding, the slime -coated walls --showed me that there was no escape!' Cy some subterranean duct my body would past oto the Thames, fn the wake of Cadby, MatOti, end many enoeher vctim.. . p 11), • ; t#4,0X, t't fs" ) z`Idee, e -see - 'tt Swimming toward the - ther wall of the pit I made out rusty iron rungs affixed to f o the walls, and leading upward to another trap door than the one through which I had fallen, Hope thrilled me. But the three bottom rungs of the ladder were missing! Then the awesome Cglit of the flames That should be my funeral pyre shot,ved my despairing eyes something e 1 e—a projecting b e e rn a few feet above fhe water—and directly beneath file iron lad- der. , . "Mertiful Heaven!" I breathed. i "Have I fila strength'?" . • , 70. :Pt:A. St: X, r'eXer • • , . "e --eteeedeneet-e-.. Aide 4'11▪ , If I could grasp the beam! My garments weighed upon me like 4 suit of moil, A remote uproar came to my ears, . reached for the beam. "Petrie! Petrie!" came Smith's voice, Vora the bentni" o 0 88 :16X nolitttor oil tli. 148) eleod10444.