HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1936-06-18, Page 21;Vontart's
World
.4 4 3 ft 4-3
By Mair M. Moran
LIMES FOR HOT WEATHER
Many people imagine that warmer
weather brings less zest to food—but
that is only when the food has no
novelty in its method of preparation
and presentation. There is no flavour
like lime to stimulate jaded appetites
and make other flavours more inter-
esting. Lim jelly combined with other
fruits makes a dessert that even the
most confirmed crank on diet won't
pass up.
Lime Igloo -Fruit Salad
1 package. .of quick -setting lime
jelly powder prepared as directed on
package and put in individual moulds
of conical or igloo -shape. Turn out
on glass plates and surround dish
withfresh fruit in garland effect.
Sliced fresh strawberries make a fine
eontrast both in calor and flavour.
Sliced (lunges may be contleiseed,40t1r4
this.
Canned pears may be cut into long
slices and arranged with the straw-
berries.
Fresh nectarines and slices of ripe
bananas or small halves of cooked
apricots and bananas make a tooth-
some combination.
Walnut halves or dabs of cream
cheese may be added at intervals into
the surrounding fresh fruits.
A creamy mayonnaise, slightly
sweetened, is best for this fruit salad.
This Week's Winners
Raspberry _Vinegar
eft
Take five quarts raspberries, cover
with vinegar and let stand forty-eight
hours. Strain through a sieve, add
one pound white sugar to one pint of
juice, boil half an hour, then bottle.
Salad Dish—Beet Salad
1 quart chopped boiled beets, 1 pint
chopped cabbage. 1 pint vinegar, 34.
eup sugar, 1 cup horse radish, celery
to taste.
Boil the cabbage in vinegar until
tender, add beets, sugar, salt and
pepper. Let all scald and when cold
add the horse radish.—Mrs. Alex. Ait-
ken, Box 191, Dundalk, Ont.
Asparagus Salad
Drain and rinse stalks of canned
or fresh asparagus, cut rings from
bright green peppers 1-3 in wide;
place 3 or 4 stalks in each ring, ar-
range on a crisp lettuce leaf and
eerve with French or mayonnaise
dressing. When the fresh asparagus
is used, cut off the tough ends of the
asparagus and boil the tips in slightly
FU MANCHU
salted water. Grated cheese or hard
boiled eggs can be sprinkled over the
salad.
Rhubarb Juice
Rhubarb juice combines well with
other fruit juices in lending tartness
to jellies. It is also good for jellied
desserts, pudding sauces and to nix
in drinks. It may be prepared from
the stalks which have become too
tough to use in other ways. Cut the
rhubarb into small pieces,. add just
enough water to cover and simmer
until soft. Strain the juice through
a jelly bag. To each qt. of juice add
1 eup sugar; heat the juice until the
sugar is dissolved thoroughly, skim
and bring to boiling point. Pour into
clean hat jars and seal.—Mrs. Frank
Moran, Teeswater, Ont., R.R. 2 .
Recipe for Iced Tea
For a cool refreshing drink with a
flavour that is deliciously different,
try Iced Tea. It is very easily made:
Infuse six heaping teaspoons of
Salada Black Tea in a pint of fresh
boiling water. After six minutes
strain liquid into two -quart contain-
er. While hot, add 114 cups of gran-
ulated sugar and the juice of 2
lemons. Stir well until sugar is dis-
solved: fill container with cold water,
Do not allow tea to cool before add-
ing the cold water; otherwise liquid
will become cloudy. Serve with
chipped ice. This will make 2 quarts
of Iced Tea or 7 tall glasses.
How to Enter Contest
Plainly write or print out the in-
gredients and method ef your favorite
main -course dish and send it together
with name and address to Household
Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide
Street, Toronto.
As the Years Pass
Evolution of a man's ambition:
To be a circus clown.
To be like dad.
To be a fireman.
To do something noble.
To get wealthy.
To make ends meet.
To get the old -age pension.
3
W.F.
By Sax Rohmer
Texas members of the:Senate and House witness some fancy rop-
ing on the steps of the House as Mise Mary Brossiet, champion warden
roper from Belle Fourche, N.D., tops off ten-gallon hat presentations
and invitations to Texas Centennial,
UNDAY
CHOO
LESSON XII — June 21.
JESUS EXALTED — Luke 24 : 36-53
Printed Text Luke 24 : 36-53
GOLDEN TEXT — Wherefore also
God highly exalted him, and gave
unto him the name which is above
every name. —Philippians 2 : 9.
* * *
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time—The appearance to the ten
disciples took place on the evening of
the resurrection, Sunday, April . 9,
A.D. 30. The exact day on which the
words recorded in vs. 42-49 welre
spoken we cannot say. The ascension
took place on Thursday, May 18, A.
30.
Place—The appearance, to the dis-
ciples was in an upper room
Jerusalem. The ascension took plaile
on a hill near Bethany on the Mount
cf Olives.
* * *
"Aund as they spake these thing's."
That is, as the two disciples, return-
ing from Emmaus, were giving an
account of their wonderful afternoon
experience with the risen Lord and,
as the disciples gathered together in
this Upper Room in Jerusalem (v.
33) were confessing to them that
Christ had actually risen from the
dead and had been seen by Simon
Peter. "He himself stood in the midst
of them." The Greek indicates a sud-
den appearance. John (20 : 19) tells
us that the doors were shut at this
time, and his appearance would be
cause for astonishment. "And saith
unto them, Peace be unto you." This
benediction was, and had been from
the time of the patriarchs, the char-
acteristic salutation of the Jews, be-
ing enshrined in the very name of
their capital city, Jerusalem, that is,
Habitation of peace.
"But they were terrified and af-
frighted. And supposed that they be-
held a spirit." They became cone
scions of a presence in their midst:
a form was seen standing before
them; a voice greeted them with the
customary salutation.
"And he said unto them, Why are
ye troubled?" This is a different
word from the two used in the pre-
ced:ng verse to describe the terror
possessing the hearts of the efisciples.
It is the same word used in the
beautiful admonition of Christ, Lee
not your heart be troubled (John 14 :
1, 27. "And wherefore do question-
ings arise in your heart?" The word
here translated questionings meal s,
literally, to bring together different
reasons, to resolve in one's mind, to
deliberate.
"See my hands and my feet, that
it is I myself: handle me, and see;
for a spirit hath not flesh and bones,
as ye behold me having." See the
significant passage in 1 John 1 : 1,
which seems to have a direct refer-
ence to this occasion. It would ap-
pear, from this verse, that the feet
of Jesus had been nailed to the cross
as well as his hanas; the disciples
would recognize in his body the
marks of his crucifixion on the Fri-
day preceding. One would like to
think that these sacred scars left in
his body by the cruel death which he
suffered for us will be ever visible in
his glorified body, as they were this
evening to the disciples.
"And when he had said this, he
showed thein his hands and his feet."
We should not fail to observe how
our Lord condescended to satisfy the
senses of his disciples when he show-
ed himself to them after his resur-
rection.
"And while they still disbelieved
for joy, and wondered, he said unto
thein, Have ye here anything to eat?
And they gave hem a piece of a
broiled fish. And he took it, and .ate
before them." The fact that Jesus
actually ate and drank with the dis-
ciples after he was raised from the
dead is one of the proofs appealed
to by the disciples (Acts 1 3, 4; 10 :
41); compare the action of our Lord
in a later post -resurrection appear-
ance (John 21 : 12, 13).
"And he said unto them." This
new introduction points to a break
of some kind between verses 43 and
44; but, whether of moments or of
days, we cannot be certain. This
section (vs. 44-49) seems to be a con-
densation of what was said by
Christ to the apostles between the
resurrection and the ascension, part-
ly on Easter Day and partly on other
occasions.
"These are my words which I
spake unto you, while I was yet with
you." This last. phrase refers to his
intercourse before his death, a mode
of intercourse which is entirely at an
end (ef. Acts 9 : 30), not that the
new intercourse will be less close et
continuous, but it will be of a dif-
ferent kind. "That all things must
needs be fulfilled, which are written
in the law of Moses, and the WO-
phets, and the psalms, concerning
me," No other person has ever lived
on this earth who wield ever trath-
fully say that he was the fulfillment
of the predictions of it great body of
writings circulated hundreds of years
before he was born!
• "Then opened be their mind, that
they might understand the scriptur-
es." (Cf. v. 32; Psalm 119 : 18.)
Without an understanding of the
Word, the apostles could never fulfill
the mission to which Jesus Chist had
called them. With a true insight in-
to the meaning of the Scriptures,
they would be equipped to convince
the Jews that Christ was the Mes-
siah and would have within them a
power adequate for each emergency.
(See, e,g,, Acts 18 : 28.)
"And he said unto. them, Thus it
is written, that the Christ should
suffer, and rise again from the dead
the third day." The fifty-third chapter
of Isaiah is brie of the great passag-
es of the Old Testament predicting
the suffering of the Lord Jesus.
"And that repentance and remis-
sion of sins should be preached in
his name unto all the nations, be-
ginning from Jerusalem." Here is
Luke's account of Christ's great
commission to evangelize the world.
(Cf. Matt. 28 : 18-20; Mark 16: 15-
18; Acts 1 : 8.)
"Ye are witnesses of these things."
4. witness is one who is convinced of
a certain truth, who has yielded his
life to that truth, who is transform-
ed by that truth, and who makes it
his business to proclaim that truth.
It does not take a great man to make
a good witness, and to be witnesses
of Cheistian facts was the main busi-
ness of the apostles.
"And behold, I send forth the pro-
mise of my Father upon you." It is
the gift of the Holy Spirit that is
particularly referred to hero. (Cf.
Isa. 44 : 3; Ezek. 36 : 27; Joel 2 : 28;
Zech. 12 : 10; John 14 : 1.6; 15 : 26;
16 : 7.) "But tarry ye in the city,
until ye be clothed with power from
on high." (Cf. Acts 1 : 4.) How
many days actually elapsed between
this command and the fulfillment of
this promise, we do not know. All
we do know is that Pentecost oc-
curred fifty days after the resurrect-
ion of Christ, and ten days after his
ascension into heaven.
"And he led them out." The verb
here is one of power: he did not ac-
company them out of Jerusalem, but
actually led them out. Christ is al-
ways leading us out of the bondage,
darkness, and habits of this world
into the light and liberty of the
world to come. "Until they were
over against Bethany." This lovely
village, just over the brow of, the
Mount of Olives, on the.eastera Side,.
the home of Martha,
Mary, and theirbrother Lazarus, and • also of Simon
the leper, was a town to which he
loved to retire, especially during the
last few days of his earthly sojourn.
"And he lifted up his hands, and
blessed them." In those hands were
arguments, scars of battle, stigmata
of pain, the insignia of loyalty. It
was the High Priestly act. He up-
lifted his hands upon men whom he
led out from all the forces that
seemed clearly in the world to -deny
to these men the protection of these
forces; and, as he did so, he gave
them fullness of life; he gave them
fellowship with God.
"And it came td pass, while he
blessed them, he parted from them."
The verb would indicate that Chrit
deliberately walked away from • the
disciples. "And was tarried up into
heaven"- His ascension wasthe in-
evitable consequence and climax of
his ministry on earth.
"And they worshipped him." If
man does not worship Christ, he re-
fuses to render him the homage
which is due his name (Rev. 4 : 10;
5 : 12-14; 7 : 11). "And returnee to
Jerusalem with great joy." The
disciples' rejoiced because they were
now convinced that Jesus Christ was
Lord of all; that the work he had
undertaken had been r.cconiplished
by God; that the promises he had
made were now being fulfilled.
"And were continually in the
temple, blessing God." Continually
is a popular expression Implying
great frequency in attendance both
at the services and at other times.
Beauty Secrets A 1 1
The Way From Paris
Eau de Cologne, which the leranch
use in lavish quantities after bathing-,
is valuable in a scalp treatment fax
excessively oily hair,
Qily hair must be washed 'Imo* a
week, with a greaseless, liquid sham.
poo. Then, every alight between sham.
pees, it should be brushed for five mi-
nutes, Afterwards, the hair ought to
be parted in sections and the 'scalp
rubbed briskly with cotton pads tbat
have been dipped In Cologne contain-
ing at ]east 70 per Cent alcohol.
For dry, brittle hair, ,a pomade pf
beef marrow ought to be rubbed light-
ly into the scalp every ether night,
Here ase the directions for making
the preparation.
Melt four ounces of beef marrow in
a double boiler, Then strain It through
a clean muslin cloth. Add oue
spoon olive oil and a few drops of
your favorite perfume. Pour into a
small jar and let cool.
Remember, of course, that every
head of hair needs to be brushed re-
gularly and correctly. 'Whether you
have an exceedingly dry or excessive-
ly oily scalp, never neglect this
bcd-
time routine. Place the brush flat
against th& scalp, pull it outward' to
the ends of your hair.' Wipe it after
each .stroke. Keep on until your scalp
tingles and each hair is clean. and
shining.
High -Waisted Frock
For a Small Girl
1852-R
When you were a little girl
wouldn't you just delight at the
thought of having this adorable
dress? Then why not sew this up
for daughter and see yourself as
others did when you were her
size.
There's nothing difficult about
-it at all, no panelled seams to,join
— just a high -waisted skirt and
a bit of a bodice which makes it
very qUickly fashioned. Send for
this pattern now and in thernean-
time take a trip 'down to Main
Street and buy a few yards of
either printed laWn, batiste, dim-
ity, or voile and a few yards of
velvet ribbon for the trimming.
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1852-
13 is available in sizes 2, 4, 6 and
8 years. Size 4 requires only 234
yards of 35 or 39 -inch material.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your -name and address of
pattern wanted. Enclose 20 cents
in stamps or coin (coin prefered);
wrap it carefully and address your
order to Barbara Bell, Roon-o 230,
73 Adelaide W., Toronto.
Iree-e-a-a-aea-a--ezet-
• Into The Shrubbery
0 nal By SaC Roamer and The 13611 Syndicate, Inc..
ee,
.4,1133
444.•
-• ee.....--
Caezar disappeared for a
moment from my view, and
there win, a guttural human
oryt but le dog shatinte sight again and cradled into
the shrubbery, wherein had fled whatever he pursued.
0.-
.0331
"Oh, Dr. Petrie!
He vein be killed!" If
was Grebe Eltharn's
voice from her win.
dow.
...X le "Did you see what
he was after?"
"No," she called back—then drew her breath
sharply. .
For a strange figure went
• racing across the grass. It
was that of man in a dress -
leg gown, who held a lan-
tern before him, and a re.
volver in his tight hand. . .
As the figure
plunged info the shrub.
bery in the wake of the
dog I saw Smith running
on the lawn below and
heard him shouting:
"Come back! Come back!"