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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1933-04-13, Page 3• Flower Name Sake Woman' s World By MAR M. MORGAN " A Woman's Place 1s In the Home.' Canned Meals We all have our moments of hurry and more often than not bless the rows of tinned vegetables and meats when. called for a quick meal. One good thing to remember is that prac- tically all the air was expelled from the can during the canning process. This naturally results in a "fiat" taste sot uncommon in canned goods. As soon as a can of vegetables is opened It should be turned into a shallow bowl and allowed to stand uncovered for 10 to 15 minutes. In this way the vegetables come in contact with the air and regain what they lost during the canning. The second rule is that vegetables should be reheated in the water in which they are canned. This water contains •valuable nutrition and flavour and if the vegetables are drained before reheating both of these properties ere lost. An excellent plan in the case of vegetables of delicate flavor is to heat them in a shallow sauce pan, keeping the pan uncovered and allowing the water to evaporate completely. In this way the flavor and nutritive value are retained. Seasoning Note Always season vegetables well and do not depend solely on salt and. pep- per and butter Lemon juice, vinegar and tomato juice improve the flavor of such vegetables as spinach, beets, and green beans. Corn and succotash are given zest by the addition of red and green sweet peppers. Grated cheese may be added to the white sauce for creamed and scalloped vegetables. Onion, celery and horseradish, pars- ley, chives and mint are vegetable flavoring well worth keeping in mind. Butter and bacon fat add flavor to vege- tables that probably no amount of other condiments can give. A more pronounced flavor is obtained. if the butter is melted and slightly browned before the hot vegetable is added. Recipes To illustrate the above advice here are a number of interesting dishes concocted from tinned goods: Corn Chowder One cau corn, 4 cups potatoes, cut in ea inch slicee. 14 inch cube fat salt pork, -1 sliced onion, 4 cups scalded milk, 8 crackers, 3 tablespoons butte; salt and pepper. Cut pork in small pieces and try out; add onion and cook five minutes, stirring often so that onion may not burn; strain fat into stewpan. Par- boil potatoes five minutes in boiling water to cover; drain, and add pota- toes to fat; then add two cups boiling Water. Cook until potatoes are soft, add corn and milk, then heat to boil- ing point. Season with salt and pep- per, add butter and crackers split and soaked in 'enough cold milk to moisten. Renfove cackers, turn chowder into serving dish and put crackers on top. Corn Pudding One can corn, 2 eggs, % teaspoon salt, IA teaspoon pepper and. 1 Th. sausages. To the corn, add the slightly beaten eggs and the season- ings, Turn into a greased baking dish. Prick the sausages and cook in boiling water for 6 minutes to remove the excess fat, then cover the top of the corn mixtures with. the sausages. Bake In a moderate oven (350 deg. F.) for about 20 minutes. Green Pea Salad Drain through a colander a can of peas. Chop two apples, fine with one medium sized cucumber, Mix lightly with peas and half a cup coarsely chopped pecan ,or walnut meats. Serve erips lettuce with mayonnaise. Pea Timbales. Drain and rinse one can pease and rub through a sieve. To one cup pea pulp, add 2 beaten eggs, .2 table- spoons melted initter, 2-3 teaspoon salt, 1-3 teaspoon pepper, few grains eayerine aud few drops onion juice. Turn into buttered moulcle, set in pan ef hot water, cover with buttered paper aud bake until firm. Serve with ordinary white sauce, or an egg sauce. Creamed peas and salmon (canned) served on toast is a tasty luncheon dish, in fact, peas are most useful for creamed dishes or any kind and eombines splendidly with lobster, crab meat, time fish or ebrimpse not to mention their popularity in creamed chicken and meat dishes. Indian Tomatoes. One cup boiled rice, 1 teaspoon curry powder, salt to taste,. 1 quart tan of tomatoes, buttered bread - crumbs. Add curry powder and salt to tomatoes, mix well. Put layer of to- matoes in bottom of baking dish, then a layer of rice, then a layer of to- matoes, and so 011 until all is used, having the last layer of tomatoes. Sprinkle top with breaderumbs and bake in moderate oven half an hour, serve in baking dish. Tomato Custards. Four cups canned tomatoes, 1 sliced 'onion, 1 teaspoon salt, 3/ tea- spoon pepper, 3 eggs. Boil all ingredients together ex- cept eggs for 20 minutes. Put through coarse sieve. Ad water to make 2 cups puree. Add beaten eggs, pour into greased custard cups standing in shallow pan of water. Bake till firm, about 20 minutes In moderate oven; Turn out and serve with. cream sauce to which you may add peas or grated cheese. Organdie Blouses. Like spring flowers are the new gay crisp organdie blouses that have invaded fashion's eealm. Some of the very newest ones are of crinkly or- gandie with strikes like seersucker. Others are blistered organdies. Still others are of the eheer starched or- gandies. Aside from their inviting freshness, their new and distinctive styling, the colors have strong draw- ing powers. There is a new deep pink, an array of blues, golden yellows, all the pas- tels as well as rich browns, reds, even black. And, of course, there is white. The styles are clever and differ- ent. They may be pert and young with double ruffles around the neck and puffed up sleeves, or they may be sophisticated with trine tailored lines. One outstar.ding style had puffed sleeves and an Ascot collar— s, new spring note. The majority have high necklines. One of fashion's dictate's this spring is cola/. contrast —and the blouse is one way to intro- duce it into the costume. Tailored Suit Popular. The suit holds the centre of the fashion stage when the smart set gathers for lunch these days. First spring costumes appearing in Paris at the Ritz and La Cremaillere are made around the smart tailleur ac- cented by bright scarves and hats. Jackets are the most interesting part of the costume. They vary from hip -bone length to knee length and may match or contrast with the ma- terial used for the slender fitted skirt. Many are designed with the broaden- ed, accented shoulders which Mark the 1933 silhouette. When Kindness Like a Planet Sets When kindness like a planet sets, .And bitter thoughts infect the mind, When love her phantasy, forgets, When blind, suspicion leads the blind, Imagination fainting liee,.. With fallen stars her ways are strewn, And fancy, once her firebird, flies To the cold caverns of the Moon. —Eric Clough Taylor. "She says she wouldn't marry the beat man on earth. Plenty of girls say that, Idle talk, oh?" "Oh, 1 don't know, Some girls mean It. Some of them are looking tor wealth: MUTT AND, JEFF— By BUD FISHER I . • . " Mrs. Roosevelt flew from Wash- ington to New York to attend the international flower show. She is holding a bouquet of Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt roses. Ruffles and Puffs For New Blousss By HELEN WILLIAMS, Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur- nished With Every Pattern 1. j 164 A. charming new blouse that will place you in the "know" of fashion. Don't you think it adorable? The high beruffled collar is so en- tirely in spirit with the Victorian age. At the same time, it ie easy end becoming to wear. • White crinkly crepe satin made the original blouse. It woulel. also be very effective in black crinkly crepe silk showing a decided eontrast with the ruffle of white crepe. It's the most simple thing to fash- ion. .Just a few seams to jean, And it will cost you next to nothing. Style No. 3364 is designed for sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bast. Size 36 requires 21.4 yards 85 -inch or 39 -inch. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 15e in ta -peps or win. (ooin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Turkish Diplomats Must Wed, Angora.—New Turkish government rules minim> all future appointees to the diplomatic service, from third secretaries to ambassadors, to be married. A dull man is so near a dead luau that he is hardly to be ranked in the list of the living; and as he is not to be buried whilst he is half - alive, so lie is as little to be employ- ed whilst be is haledead.--Saville. ,r 6or eldeFF ufebade. OBSeRUATIONI At,L DOES 15Cur our P LLSDO IN ND ReeeePata Stea.lecr`. •••••.•••••••••••••,,,..••••••••••.•••••••• Sunday School Lesson eree-e-eleeeeemeseeesee-e-e-e-e-aeacaelea-ea-e- April 16 Leeson III—Jesus Trams- figureci---Ivlark a: 2-8, 17, 18, 25-29. Golden Text—And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.— John 1: 14. ANALYSIS, 1. THE etomer OF VISION, Mark 9 :2-13. THE VALLEY OF SERVICE, Mask 9: 14-29. INTRODUCTION — Jesus' unexpected and startling announcement of his ap- proaching death seemed to be the de- nial and destruction of every Mes- sianie hope. The perplexed and pad- dle/led disciples needed a glimpse of the divinity that was hidden in their Master—sorne assurance that the way of the cross was the way of triumph. This assurance they were soon to re- ceive, 1. THE MOUNT OF VISION, Mark 9:2-13. The Gospels tell us nothing of that wonderful week which Jesus and his men spent together. One day toward its close, taking the three who were closest to him, he went up the moun- tain, v. 2. After their evening pray- ers, the three men, Oriental fashion wrapped themselves in their outer cloaks and went to sleep. Their Mas- ter remained praying. Then sudden- ly they woke, or perhaps Peter did, and his cry woke the others. Vividly, as if they were flesh and blood, he saw two figures there with Jesus. Some- thing told him that they were Moses and Elijah. Half asleep, half awake, frightened, confused, not knowing what he was saying, he began to call out to Jesus about building three "tabernacles"—rude shelters of brush- wood and rushes quickly woven to- gether to form a windbreak on the bleaa ve. 5, 6. "No word came back from Jesus: but the disciples looked, and they never forgot what they beheld. There lees a light upon his face that made it seem transfigur- ed. It shone there in the darkness as when the moon is risen, and the cloak about him seemed to glisten like white flame. Then a cloud drifted over the peak of the mountain. For a moment they seemed alcne, and they said that it was as though the voice of God himself spoke to them out of the dim- ness: 'This is my beloved san.' The mist blew by, and there again was Jesus—Jesus with something tremen- dous in his eyes." Dr. J. 31 Jones, speaking of this light upon the face of Jesus after hours of prayer, says, "Prayer leaves its mark on the character, on the very face. The look of care relaxes into peace; lines of anguish change into those of joy. Dr. J. G. Paton men- tioaus the rapt look on his old father's face when he came out of the thiy room where he held corn.nunion with God. It was almost the very filet thing that impressed him with the reality of religion, And the transformation goes deeper than the face. It reaches down to the very heart. I know of nothing that so effectually removes all hateful things from the. eoul, and begets love and hope and faith in it, as prayer. As we behold Christ, and meditate upon bine we are changed into his image, from glory to glory." Experiences like this are being scientifically. studied today. The form they take is usually determined by the beliefs, conscious or sub -conscious, and the expectations of those who have them. Saint Anthony, for ex- aniple, wrestling' with temptation, saw visions of the devil. The disciples were perplexed, but gradually comiwe to believe that perhaps the astound- ing declarations' of their Master were • right. We may be sure that the prayers on Mount Hermon on that night were prayers for assurance and guidance. This vision was their an- swer. Moses and Elijah, talking with Jesus. would convince them that he was in the •true succession of the Old Testament preohete. Law and pro- phecy were finding their fulfilment in him. The voice in the mist (v. 7) would assize them that their Master was all that he claimed to be. It was God's "Amen" to Peter's confession. They were not to tell what they had seen—not yet, v. 9. Their duller com- Panions, and still more, the people would notemdeastand. Events proved that they,' themselves, did not fully grasp its Meaning. Elias (vs. 11-13) had indeed come in the person of John the Baptist. a I.I. THE :VALLEY OF SERVICE, Mark 9: 14-29. Peter's confused talk (v. 5) was foolish because he argued, "It is good to be here, therefore let lie stay here." God is best served in helping needy people. Jesus led his enraptured men from the Mount of Vision to the Val- ley of Service. The purpose of pub- lic. and private. worship is not spiritual enjoyment, but preparation for action. Thos who cultivate the inner life without corresponding expreseien hi active serve become pietistic, and think more of their Mini words than oX .other' needs. Awaiting there upon their return was the "multitude" and the seribes— friend and foe. The look or. Jesee face filled them with .we. Instinctive- ly they did him reverence, vs. 14, 15. Once mare the troubled heart found its way to him, v. 17. His exclama- tion as he set about healing the loal (v. 19) suggests his lonelineso—his kmging to be set free from the appar- ent failure of his teaching in Galilee. When they were alone, the nine dis- ciples asked Jesus, "Why could not we cast him out?" Well they knew. It was evident that while the Master and the three were away, the nine were bickering among themselves who should be the greatest in the new kingdom. See vs. 33, 34; Luke 6: 46. Their personal influenee and power was in proportion to their self -forget- fulness. "A lot of work waits to be done in the world by people who do not care who gets the credit for it." Jesus, remembering his awn nights and days in the solitudes wrestling in prayer, committing himself continu- ally to the sacrificial every for the sake ta his brethren, replied: "This kind can. come out by nothing but by pray- er and fasting." Who can set- limits to the power of a thoroughly consee crated life? One remembers that Ghandi last October by his determined refusal to live, brought about an agreement between the caste Hindus and the Outcastee—a hitherto un- dreamed-of accomplisl:ment. The dis- ciples lacked Jesus' power because they lacked his utter consecration. Springtime Real spring has come, not shifty windy rain, But violets growing down a quiet lane, Not sudden, gusts of cold from off the sea, But quivering wings in every bud- diug tree. Real spring, witb. days like jewels set apart, And all its age-old hunger in your heart. An aching need for sun against your face, And all the old sweet freedom of the race, Real spring, with wide brown fur - furrows wet and bare, A new young greenness showing every- where, New lambs and colts in pastures warm and clean, Old orchard trees with daisies 111 between. A mother -hen at shilling dusk of day, Finds a warm .corner up against the hay, And makes of her own body safe and Wide fields of wheat whose petals, A kindly shelter for her tiny brood. :,12:ued; one, Push small green fingers up to find the sun, Whose roots lie deep below the fur- rowed plain, Seeking their substance from tho sun and rain. . Real spring, with all the fragrant, lovely earth, Pulsing with. gracious life and joy . and birth, A quickening in the hidden heart of things. Acrossthe starry dark, the beat ot wings. —By Edna Jacques in The National Home Monthly, The 150th Anniversary of a Newspaper The Glasgow Herald celebrated its 1.60th anniversary by issuing a very handsome special supplement describ- ing the progress of that well-known journal and also the growth of the city. It was established by John Men - lions, under the name Glasgow Adver- tiser, in 1783. That Mennons was au enterprising man is shown by the announcement to the public that he had, M a very considerable expense, engaged an eminent correspondent in London. The first issue, a !ac -simile of which accompanies the supplement, contains the news th t a messenger had just arrived from Paris in Lon- don with the preliminary articles of the Peace treaty between Great Bra tein and France and Great Britain and pain signed at Versailles. The Glasgow Herald antedate.% the London Times by IIVO yeare,—Toronto Mail & Empire. In great straits and when hope is mall„the boldest. counsels are safest. Livy. Attractive Lawyer Mits Again we find beauty and brains in a fIrst-class combination. Sylvia Dean, at 25, is the youngest -yeo- man to be admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court. •••••••••••••••••••••.101•10, Nonagenarian Says Yong People Today Meet Too Frequently Stratford, Ont. — Young people' courting today see too much of each'. other, is the. opinion of Mrs. Willie -0i Smith of St. Ma.ry's. Mrs. Sm'eth and her husband recently celebrated theii 70th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Smith said she had no par- ticular desire to criticize young people of today but she things the custonai of the "good old. days" are just .alitj tle better. "When we were courting the boy friend came only once he twia, weeks," said Mrs. Smith. Mrs, Smith is 89. She Still doee her own darning and mending and SWIMS the use of glasses for this workil She ()MIS a pair which she says eh& wears when she can find them. Cheeke4, ers is her favorite game. Her husband is 94 and his favorite recreation is to get out in the garded, Mr. and MTS. Smith were married iu St. Mary's and had six children, fivii, of whom are still living. 4t, Young London Dancer • Takes Paris by StOrtral A eineteenth-year-old London dan4 cer has taken France by storm.. S4. is.already known as "the girl wide the perfect legs," end has been engagal ed to lead the corps of ballet deacon at a fashionable Paris theatre. She is Miss Mary Horner. Since she was first able to toddle about Mimi Horner tried to deuce when she heard a piano played. On leaving scbool, against th wishes of her /nether, she went on thq stage. • "It is perhaps not eurprisirg that Mary is so successful as a dancer, foti, she loves all &lacing, from classical to modern jazz," her mother said, "When she was 14 she excelled all Greek dancing, and a year later wag engaged as a dancer in 'Rose Marie# Since then she has appeared in cabala els in several London hotels, and demo: eel at the London Hippodrome." Miss Horner's first interest has al; ways been dancing, but she is alse/ a very keen flier, an excellent swimal ner and fond of tennis. Fat A man may smile and jolly yon, And treat you mighty kind! But you will find before he.'s through He has an ax to grind. Extreme Compliment Ilas baby an angelic smile? The family shout, "Well. ratherl° And then they shout in -solema style "It looks just like his father." Rational, --• e- ere, ( teALt jaeliTteatarNna6Stil!eleer, 'PROSPC7reiTY.' 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