Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1936-08-20, Page 2Wonl.afl'S: rlr By Mair ItiiL Morgan Just Too Heavenly -.-. „a' A ''heavenly" print of deep azure -blue chintz, glazed and marked with white stylized clouds, suns and .stars in • giddy patterns is used in this original sun and beach suit pleasingly displayed by lovely Helen Wood, movie actress. UNDAY JcHoo1-EssoN Veranda Bridges Call For Little Homemade Cakes Several varieties of little cakes very different in appearance and taste, canbe made at the same time and they are so popular for bridge teas, or in fact at any time, that they are apt to be eaten up before the special occasion has come about, Little cakes made with un- sweetened chocolate are the best yet for summer bridge parties. They may be arranged on plates while the hos- tess is "dummy" and need no special cutlery or china. And now that fresh fruit desserts are popular, these little cakes are the perfect complement at dinner. When you make three differ- ent -kinds at one baking you can have a change each night with desserts. Here are some recipes that you will find not only satisfactory but inter- esting to work on, and the results will be so delicious you are going to have trouble keeping the family from eating them all up out of hours! Old -Time Brownies 13'4 cups sifted cake flour, 3'4 tea- spoon soda, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 1-3 cup sugar, 5 egg yolks beaten until thick and lemon colored, 21,4 squares un- sweetened chocolate (melted), 1 cup sour cream, 1 cup walnut meats (broken), 1 teaspoon vanilla. Sift flour once, measure, add salt and soda and sift together three times. Add sugar to egg yolks, cream- ing well. Add chocolate and blend. Add flour alternately with cream, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition until smooth. Add nuts and vanilla. Pour into deep greased cup -cake pans, filling them about 2-3 full. Bake in hot oven (400 F.) 15 minutes. Makes 3 dozen Brownies. Chocolate Macaroon 2 egg whites, 1 cup sugar, 1/4 tea- spoon salt, 3 teaspoon vanilla, 1%t% squares unsweetened chocolate (melt- ed), 1L cups coconut southern style shred. Beat egg whites until foamy throughout; add sugar, 2 tablespoons at a time, beating after each addition until sugar is blended. Then continue beating until mixture will stand in peaks. Add salt and vanilla. Fold in chocolate; then coconut. Drop from teaspoon on ungreased, heavy paper. Bake in slow oven (325 F.) 20 minutes or until done. Cool 5 minutes before removing from paper. Makes 2 dozen 144 inch macaroons. Chocolate Nut Tea Cakes 11/z cups sifted cake flour, 134 tea- spoons baking powder, 34 teaspoon salt, 34 cup butter or other shorten- ing, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs well beaten, 3 squares unsweetened chocolate, 3/4. cup broken nut meats, 3 cup milk, 3 teaspoon vanilla. Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder and salt and sift together 3 times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream to- gether until light and fluffy. Adi eggs and beat thoroughly, add choco- late and blend, then nuts and raisins and beat well. Add flour alternately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla. Drop from teaspoon into greased small cup cake pans. Bake in moderate oven (350 F.) 20 to 25 minutes, or until done. Makes 2% dozen small cakes. THIS WEEK'S WINNER The following letter came to our desk this morning. The recipes are interesting, and too, it shows the in- terest displayed in the hone town paper. "No doubt you will be surprised to hear from a Los Angeles girl, but my mother is a weekly reader of her home town paper, "The Erin Advo- cate," I also am quite interested, and want to send my favorite luncheon salad recipe." Tuna Fish Salad in Cucumber Boats Cut 3 or 4 cucumbers in half lengthwise, and hollow out the cen- tres to hold the tuna fish. Place cu- cumbers in ice water until needed. Marinate tuna fish in Frenchdress- ing, and Iet stand in the refrigera- tor for several hours. Before serving mix with 2 cups of tuna fish 1 cup diced celery, and 3 chopped hard- boiled eggs. Place , in the cucumber boats. Then pour over it a ravigote dressing. Ravigote Dressing Mash the yolks of 3 hard-boiled. eggs until they are smooth,, Then mix in 4 tabsp. of salad oil, 3 tbsp. cream, 1 tbsp. vinegar, 1 tsp. salt, 34 tsp. pepper and a little paprika, 2 tbsp. chopped green onion, and 2 tbsp, finely chopped hard-boiled egg whites may be added. — Leota E. Wright, 3336 Folsom St., Los Angeles, Cal. LESSON VI11.—August 23. THE GOSPEL FOR ALL MEN,— Acts 10 :1-11 :18; Romans 1 :13-17. GOLDEN TEXT. For God so 1 oved the wogld that at he .gave ,hie .only begotten Son, that whosoever believ- eth on him should not perish, but have eternal life. John 3 16. THE LESSON AND ITS SETTING Time.—The conversion of Cornelius and the defense of Peter before the church at Jerusalemof his, activities at this time all occurred in A.D. 41. The Epistle to the Romans was writ- ten A.D. 57. Place.—The Conversion of Corneli- us took place in Caesarea about seventy miles from Jerusalem, the de- fense of Peter took place in Jeru- salem. The Epistle to the Romans was written by Paul from Corinth,• while on his third missionary journey. "I was in the city of Joppa 'pray- ing: and in a trance I saw a vision,;a certain vessel descending, as it' were a great sheet let down from heaven by four . corners; and it came; even unto me: Upon which when I had fastened mine eyes, I considered,:tnd. saw the fourfooted beast of the earth; and wild beast and creeping .1tltt lgs and birds ief the heaven. And I M, also a. voice saying unto me, Rise, Peter; kill and eat. But I said, Not so, Lord: for nothing common or un- clean hath ever entered into my mouth. But a voice answered the second time out of heaven, What God hath cleansed, make not thou com- mon. And this was done thric: and ell were drawn up again into heaven." These verses have been fully com- mented upon in the preceding sec- tions. "And behold, forthwith three men stood before the house in which we were, having been sent from Caesarea unto me. And the Spirit bade me go with them, snaking no distinction. An_ these six brethren also accom- panied me; and we entered into the man's house. And he told us how he had seen the angel standing,in his house, and saying, Send to Joppa, and fetch Simon, whose surname is Peter; Attention 1 We will pay $1.00 on publication for the best salad dish or refreshing drink recipe received. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the in- gredients and method and send it to- gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. 3 who shall speak unto thee words, whereby thou shalt be saved, thou and all thy house." There is a re- markable difference between verse 14 here and the account of the angel's message to Cornelius in 10 : 5, and in the account Cornelius gives to Peter in 10 : 31, 32. The significant pease that is added here is, "where- by thou shalt be saved, thou and all thy house." , "And as I began to speak, the Holy Spirit fell on them, even as or us at the beginning." "It is remarkable that Peter here gives no account whatever of his own discourse at Cae- sarea because it was not one of the facts on which he chose to rest his vindication. It was not what he said, but what God did that furnished his apology." "And I remembered the word of the Lord, how he said, John indeed bap- tized With water; but ye shall be bap- tized in the Holy Spirit." The refer- ence here is no doubt to Acts 1 : 5, which will remind us at once of the. promise of John the Baptist in Matt. 3:11. "If then God gave unto them the like, gift as he did also unto us, when we believed - on the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I, that I could withstand God?" The facts that Peter repre- sented to this more or less antagon- istic asembly, proving that what he had done was surely in the will of God, are these: (1) his experience of the vision and the voice; (2) the coming of men from Caesarea at ex- actly the same time; (3) the com- mand of the Holy Spirit to go; (4) 'the vision given simultaneously to Cornelius; (5) the descent of the Holy Spirit; (0) the promise of the Lord Jesus. "And when they heard these things, they held their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then to the Gentiles also hath God granted repentance unto life."' There was nothing more to be said on the part of the men who had been insisting upon circumcision. God had certainly done something, and they did not dare contradict it. •"So, as much as in me is." Every- thing Paul had he devoted to the pr"eaching of th. gospel: his physical strength, his mental powers, the com- passion of his heart, lit]] the talents which God had conferred upon Nen. "I ani ready to preach to you also that are in Rome. For I ani not ashamed of the gospel." The word "gospel," a.; the margin reveals, means simply "good tidings" or "good news." It is good news from God; it is good news to men, `Tor it is the power of God unto salvation." Rome in that time knew what power FU MANCHU "All Tke hick" Canadian Countess Finds Li- quid Treasure In Old Walls LONDON. — Sonie people have all the luck, says The Rambler in the Daily Mirror. At Mellerstain, the' Earl and Countess of Haddington's lovely Berwickshire home, they've been polling down some old walls. What did they find? A valuable skeleton? A secret passage? A chest of doubloons? A family of rabbits? None of these things. They found an ancient wine -cellar containing five dozen -bottles of old port and brandy. As it has been bricked up nearly a century ago, one cannot help feeling anxious about the port. But the brandy should be grand. Lord Haddington is going to offer it to his guests during the holidays. Lady Haddington, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Cook, of Mont- real, is enormously popular, and one of the most beautiful women in Scot- land. was. Normally speaking, a man would be ashamed. of such a message in a city like. Rome,' where the triumphal processions of the Caesars had re- vealed to men what human power,, could do, but here was the power of God. Yet all the pomp, glory, and magnificence of Rome, its military power, its power to rule, could never save then. "To every one that be- lieveth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek." This power was avail- able to men, not if they should be able to attain a certain righteousness, if they were born of a certain race, or had reached a certain degree of prominence, or were worthy of it, but simply if they would believe, i.e., ac- cept the Lord Jesus Christ in his person, his death, his resurrection, as their Saviour. "For therein is revealed a righteous- ness of God." Righteousness is simply a condition of being right, of being found blameless, completely conforming to the law, and, in the Biblical sense, "is a condition of righteness, the standard of which is God." "From faith unto faith." "Faith has absolutely nothing to do with earning the gift of God, the water and bread of God; it has all to do with taking it." "As it is written, But the righteous shall .live by faith." (The quotation is from Hab. 2 : 4.) The life spoken of here is the life which Christ give, spiritt.al life, ever- lasting life, and this life is obtain- able only through the channel of faith in Jesus Christ (Rom, 5 : 17; 8 : 13; 10 : 3). By Sax Rohmer Telephoning to Canada The ,British Post °liiee, which con- trols the telephone service or tite whole United Kingdom, some time ago inaugurating 0 populat sorviee of telephoning to any part of the Bri- tish Isles for one stilling t25 cents) after 7 p.nr, D dunces .a"e short there by comparison with Canada, but even that is an excellent btirgain as the maXimuttt distance would run to tear iy 1,000 miles, .writes the a_ratord Beacon -Nereid. Recently a London man reeeived his tele,;hone bill for the quarter amounting to nearly $160 Some mis- take, he thought, so be sent it back asking adjustment. But the lost or. rice returned it to frim with dctui's showing four trans-Atlantic sails to Canada. Then the truth came out, His house- maid had telephoned to ter boy friend over here, and proferred four shill- ings—about one dollar—to pay for the calls, Site thought a tel"pltr.ne call .cost' only one shi;ling to any part 'of the British t+.mpire. Our gueas is that the maid has one year's wort: ahead of her for noth- ing. Shirtwait Frock for Informal Day Wear 1908-B Have you been looking for a frock really simple to make and flattering to wear? Then here is your pattern. You,°,11 want it too, because it promises easy free- dom and carefree action whether you are hiking, playing golf, ten- nis, or merely watching from the side lines. You can run it up in no time, for the step-by-step sew- ing instructions will direct you to short cuts in easy sewing. The frock has a simple yoke with set-in sleeves and a turn- down boyish collar that is both dashing and youthful. The skirt is notched for two additional pockets and yon have a choice of either long or short sleeves. This sports, or generally utility frock is ideal in linen, gay prints, seer- sucker or gingham. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1903= 13 is available for sizes: 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 12 re- quires 23/4 yards of 54 inch ma- terial. 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 order to Barbara Bell, 73 Ade- laide W., Toronto. At the margin of the shrubbery where we had passed only a few minutes be- fore, Smith tripped and almost fell ... _ over the body of Vernon Denbyl— e 2 Nayland Smith and I preceded'theothers back to the house. Never have I seen him so haggard, beaten. "What on earth can we do. Petrie?"' he muttered. "What dogs it mean?" gave him no answer. There was none. Denby's disap- pearance was utferly mystifying. .: "Search! Everywherel'Eltham cried. He ran into the. rose garden and began 'beating among the flowers like a madman. Grebe Elfham joined the hunt. For an hour we searched, and le was a group terrified and awe strtaken that came together again on the terrace. ahem sank upon a bench and buried his head in his hands. Mayland Smith, who had been pacing up and dowh, suddenly snatched a lantern and strode off to the shrubbery once more. I followed him quickly.. h� '01931 Ay Sox Rohmor'An1 Tho Yton ayp.41,c Q, Pao. -CO