HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1933-06-01, Page 3New Urnted States .Minister Arrives
Woman'
rid
By MAIR M. MORGAN
Woman's Paco Is In the Home"
A PARTY NOTE.
Showers for rides, graduation par-
lies for youngsters, bridge parties and
teal for visitng guests all crowd May
and June with entertaining. Why not
try something new and exciting to
feed your guests?
The party sandwich loaf gives you
a palatable solution. Moreover, it is
so festive looking that it arouses in-
terest the ininute it puts in its drama-
tic appearance.
This is how you make it—the recipe
serves eight, so you can double it or
triple it, depending on the largeness
Df your heart in extending hospitality.
SANDWICH LOAF.
One loaf sandwich bread, • 1h cup
butter, creamed; 4 hard-boiled eggs;
B teaspoons stuffed olives finely cjlop-
ped; ' 1% cups mayonnaise; 1 cup sar-
dines, minced; 1-3 cup sweet pickles,
chopped; 1 tablespoon pickle juice;
dash of salt; watercress, chopped.
Remove the crusts from bread and
cut loaf lengthwise in four 3 -inch
slices. This needs a very sharp knife!
Spread the bottom slice with butter,
then spread evenly with mixture made
by combining mashed egg yolks, chop-
ped egg whites, olives and 3/4< cup
mayonnaise.
SARDINES AND PICKLES.
};over the second slice of bread, but-
tered on both„ sides,' with mixture
made by combining sardines, sweet
pickles, pickle juice and 3/4 cup may-
onnaise and salt.
Cover the third slice, buttered on
both sides, with the chopped water-
cress and a little mayonnaise. The
fourth slice of bread gets buttered
only on the under side and finishes
the top of the loaf.
When the loaf is done, ice it on
top and sides with mayonnaise, and
decorate the top with thin slices of
sweet pickle and stuffed olives.
Garnish and dish with radish roses
and pickle fans. When you slice the
combined loaf, use the sharpest knife
you have Serve a radish and a pickle
fan with each slice.
perfectly blendedslowly add milk,
stirring constantly, Cook and stir,
until mixture boils. Melt chocolate
over hot water, add sugar and hot
water and stil until thick and lemon
colored. Beat until cool, Add salt to
whites of eggs and beat until stiff.
Add vanilla to cooked mixture and
fold in whites of eggs. Turn into a
buttered baking dish and bake 45 min-
utes in a moderate oven. Serve with
whipped cream sweetened and flavor-
ed with vanilla or a drop of oil of
peppermint. .
1;'ISH SOUFFLE.
Fish souffle is delicious served with
a creamed vegetable or Holandaise
sauce.
One cup flaked fish, 3 eggs, 1 cup
soft stale breadcrumbs, 1I cup cream,
1� teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon minced
parsley, 1 teaspoon lemon juice, 1-8
teaspoon pepper.
Force. fish through a coarse seive or
ricer. Combine cream and crumbs
and cook, stirring constantly for five
minutes. Add salt, pepper and pars-.'
ley. Sprinkle lemon juice over fish
and ald to cooked crumbs. Add well
beaten yolks of eggs and fold in
whites beaten until stiff. Turn into
a buttered baking dish and bake 40
minutes in a moderate oven.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
•
ONION EGGS.
For a tasty luncheon the following
idea offers a different flavor—
Cut 2 or 3 onions in thin slices and
parboil for 5 minutes. Drain. Melt
some butter in 'a frying pan, put in
the .onions, and simmer very gently
for 15 minutes without browning.
Sprinkle with a little flour, add grad-
ually iia pint of hot milk-, season with
salt, pepper, and a sprig of parsley.
Bring to the boil and simmer for 10
minutes, stirring well. Slice a few
lard -boiled eggs, and cover with the
onions and sauce.
SOUFFLES.
The making of souffles is rarely
attempted except by the most exper-
ienced cook. However, if the follow-
ing rules are observed, anyone can
produce adelicious souffle and win the
admiration of family and guests. The
mixing of a souffle is of prime import-
ance. Whites and yolks.of eggs must
be beaten separately, the yolks with
a rotary beater until thick and lemon
colored, and the whites with a wire
whisk until stiff. Be sure to "fold"
the whites into yolk mixture carefully.
The fluffy consistency of the finished
souffle depends upon this "folding"
which prevents the breaking of the
air ,bubbles in the egg Whites.
Long slow baking is also one of the
secrets of souffle making. Forty' to
fifty minutes in an average baking
dish should be • allowed for baking at
a temperature of 350 degrees Fahren-
heit.
When firm to the touch or when a
sharp knife inserted in theecentre of
the souffle comes out clean, the souffle
is done.
CHOCOLATE SOUFFLE.
This dessert is i_istinctly "smart"
and •for that reason suitable for'com
deny occasions. However, it is so
nourishing that it makes a splendid
hive
eily dessert -when vegetables hav
beeii served in ply"ce of meat.
• Two tablespoons butter, 2 table-
epoons flour, 1 cup milk, 2 squares
b�1iter chocolate, 6 tablo5poons g
`" su� r 2 tables` eons h"ot water,
dated P
1'g tea" oft salt 1 teaspeon vanilla,
eggs,
e utter and stir tri flour. When
In mixing mustard stir with a knit-
ting needle, then the mustard can be
made in the vessel in which it is to be
served, and there is -no waste or un-
tidiness.
To boil milk without burning, be-
fore putting the milk into the sauce-
pan boil rapidly a few minutes a
couple of tablespoonfuls of water,
then pour out the water and put in
the milk. This is a trick well worth
trying. If, however, the saucepan is
a large one, add more than two table-
spoonfuls of water—add enough just
to cover the bottom.
When snaking a boiled pudding
grease the basin in the usual way,
then shake coarse brown sugar thick-
ly over the base and sides. This makes
a toffee -like crust, much beloved by
children.
Before cleaning copper kettles, fill
them with boiling water and let stand
a while. The copper will be found to
polish more quickly and the lustre will
remain longer than otherwise.
If brass of any •desccription has
become dirty or badly tarnished, take
a piece of cloth, damp it slightly, and
dip it into cement. Rdb the brass as
you would silver, then take another
cloth and rub the cement off. You will
find that the brass is like new.
If you are troubled by your copper
rusting in between washdays, rub the
copper over with soap while still hot,
and it will not rust. The soap that is.
deposited on the metal will serve to
'make suds for the next washing day.
Cotton wool will go almost twice as
far if it is slightly warmed before use.
If the edge of a saucepan is well
buttered, the contents will not boil
over.
Beeswax mixed with salt will make
a rusty flat -iron as smooth as glass.
Steel articles will polish quieldly
if they are rubbed with vinegar and
then polished with i soft duster.
To discourage flies and moths, keep
fresh cloves in small vases or in egg
cups.
Warren Delano Robbins, new .American minister to Canada, is.
met by Premier Bennett as he arrives at Ottawa station to take up
his duties. Mrs. Robbins is standing next to Canada's premier.
-se.,-o-4*-stie
Sunday School
Lesson
Banking 'Situation
In U.S. Is Improving
Washington.—The nation's banking
system is approaching normalty.
Authorities said last. week that
mare than 14,000 of the 18;000 banks
closed by the national holiday in
March have been re -opened on a nor-
mal basis.
As a result of the re -opening more
than $40,000;000;000 or the $43;000,-
000;000 in deposits frozen by Preis-
deint Roosevelt's emergency order Have
been. rreea.
The Iniprovement in the situation
was repo ted as the Senate pilepii'r"ad
to debate the Glass bill desig'iied to
prevent salt fiziancial crises in the
future. 71173 nieasiire, in addition to
glia anntee n deposits, ii iposes'irrict
er regulations throughout the whole
bankirlk structure.
June 4. Lesson X.—Jesus Faces Be
trayal and Denial.—Mark 14. 10-72.
Golden Text—He was despised, and
rejected of men; a man of sorrows,
and acquainted with grief.-Isa.
53: 3.
I. THS BETRAYAL OF
OUR SAVIOUR, VS.
10-21.
H. THE LAST SUPPER, vS. 22-26.
M. THE DENIAL OF OUR SAVIOUR, vS.
27-72.
I. Tile BETRAYAL OF OUR SAVIOUR, VS.
10-21.
The Plot of Judas. By many writ-
ers Judas has been called "the failure
of Jesus." When our Lord chose him
for one of his disciples he was, un-
doubtedly promising material. But the
lust of gold got hold of him. He was
the treasurer of the Twelve, and he
began to pilfer from their little hoard.
Judas went away and plotted with
the chief priests to deliver to them
the Son of God.
Preparation for the Passover. Jesus
was well 'aware of Judas's plotting
and his purposed betrayal. That is
why the preparation for the passover
supper was made so: mysteriously.
Keenly sensible of the spiritual fitness
of things, Christ would not eat his
last passover outside of Jerusalem,
even with the loving household at
Bethany; but the sacred meat must
not be interrupted by his foes, and
Judas must not know where it was
to be held.
The Prophecy of the Betrayal. 17.
And when it was evening he.,cometh
with the twelve. Judas, who after his
base interview with the chief priests
had had the effrontery to return to
Bethany and spend the day in the sac-
red company of his Lord.
18. And as they sat and were eat-
ing. Luke tells us of the strife for
precedence among the disciples, each
seeking the most honorable seat at
each table. John alone gives us the
account of Christ's washing the dis-
ciples' feet, an act necessary in that
hot and dusty land, where all wore
only sandals over ,their bare feet; but
in their angry struggle for the chief
seats no disciple would humble him-
self to perform a task usually pert
formed by slaves. What they in their
pride would not do, the Son of God
condescended to do for them. By this
great object lesson he taught the
apostles, and his disciples throughout
all time, that the noblest end of man's
endeavor is. loving, service. "One of
you shall betray me, even he that
eateth with me," Joining in a meal
with our Lord would imply the closest
friendship, it would bind the traitor
in a covenant with Jesus, a covenant
which even while eating he stiirended
tb break. Thus Paul said thy$ any
oils whe eats and.drinks at the Lord's
table in the coninrua ion service din;
'w i thily, his heart. bent on dishonor-
ing his Saviour, "eateth and drinketh
judginent unto himself" (I Cor, 11i
29) as did Judas.
t19. "They began to be sorrowful'.'..
They were horrified that dale of their
remainder of the chapter, pictures, in,
the first place, the awful :scene of
Gethsemane, "Never was man so
stark alone" as the ,Son of Man in
Gethsemane. .Aft length he prevailed
ad AS to be able to pray, 'Not my will,
but thine, be. clone'."
The Arrest and th'e Trials. Of
Christ's arrest in Gethsemane' the
three chief events are the shameless
kiss of Judas, pointing out his Lord
to the soldiers; Petrr's silly flourish of
his sword cutting off the ear of Mal-
thus, the high priest's servant, which
Christ at once miraculously healed;
and the desertion of the disciples, who
all ignominiously forsook Christ and
fled..
There were two trails of Jesus that
night, both illegal and inconclusive.
But a sentence of death could not be
voted before sunrise, so a second°sneet-
ing of the council was ealled for early
the next morning, so carefully were
these Jews to observe the letter of the
law while cruelly ignoring its spirit.
Compulsory Housework
Advocated in Germany
Hildesheim, Ger.—Introduction of
one year's compulsory housework
service for girls irrespective of social
number should be guilty of such base-
ness. "And to say unto him one by
one, Is it I?"
20. "And he said unto them, It is
one of the twelve, he that dippeth
with retie in the dish." Our Lord gave
them a token by which to mark the
traitor; "He it is to whom I shall give
a sop when I have dippend it." Then
Jesus offered Judas a morsel of food
clipped in a sort of broth, which the
ingrate accepted, thus turning the
symbol of friendship into a curse upon
his soul. "That thou doest, do quicic-
ly," said the Master under his breath;
and Judas went forth into the night
to finish his fell purpose.
21. "For the Son of man goeth,
even as it is written of him." Christ's
death was not accidental. It was fore-
told in the Old Testament (Ps. 22, Isa.
53, etc.), and it was part of God's
plan and foreknowledge from the be-
ginning of the world (Acts 2: 23).
"But woe unto that man through
whom the Son of man is betrayed1"
God's foreknowledge of his deed did
not compel Judas to perform it, arid
was no excuse for it. "Good were it
for that span if he had not been
These words of Jesus imply that life
is a blessed and glorious thing, .a
great gift which is also and therefore
a great responsibility. Here Judas is
stated as a great exception, a bre den
.of' guilt and misery so heavy as to
counteract the immense. value Jesus
p -..t upon a single life.
II. THE LAST -SUPPER, vs. 22.26.
"And as they were eating, he took
bread." To signify that his body
would be broken on the cross. The
Lord's supper is at every point a re-
minder of Christ's sacrificial and
atoning death. "And gave to them:
And said, Take ye." Participation in
the Lord's supper is not optional with
Christians, it is commanded. "This
is my body." The broken bread was
to the disciples a token, a symbol, of
the death on the cross which Christ
was to die. It is to us a symbol of the
crucifixion of Christ's body accom-
plished for our sakes.
The Meaning of the Cup. 23. "And
he took a cup. And when he had given
thanks." Christ knew that unmeasur-
ed benefit would come to mankind
from his death, so that he could give
thanks even over this symbol, of his
life -blood poured forth ff5M. the cross
of shame and agony. "He gave to
them: and they all drank of it.' As he
eommnanded, for he said (Matt. 2$:
27), "Drink ye all of it."
26. "And when they had sung a
hymn, they went out unto the Mount
of Olives.
M. THE DENIAL OF OUR SAVIOUR, vs.
MUTT .AND JEFF By BUD FISH
Woman Director
Was School Dunce
Seven Years Aga, Caroline
Haslett Decided Women
Knew 'too Little About
Electrical Devices
Miss Caroline Haslett, C.13.E., direct.
or of the British Women's Electrical
Association, confesses that she should
have been born a boy.
As a child she hated all the things
that girls usually adore, and was al'
ways more interested in machinery
and Wogs mechanical than in dolls
and toys.
Her father was an engineer, hut he
ridiculed the idea of a girl entering his
workshop. .
Miss Haslett, however, was deter,
mined on an engineering career, and
finally got a post in a boiler works,
Since then she has become the fore-
most woman electrician in Britain, if
tot in Europe. '
Seven years ago site decided that
status is advocated by executives of women knew too little about elec'
the Federal Union of Hausfrauen tricity—especially about the electrical
Vereine. devices in the hoose. So she started
All of the organizations making up
the union joined the Hitler movement,
Under the recommendation, the one
year of compulsory housework could
be served at home.
27-72.
The Prophecy of the Denial. 27,
"And Jesus saith unto th`tiis; All ye
shall be offended." Jesus hid done hid
best to prepare them for the terrible
events that were tyi come, but they
were yet unprepared, they would f 11
aver them, they v"vould. desert hid% and
flee at his arrest, as came to pail. So
We modern Christians are often un-
prepared for'tlie hardships that be
lying to the Christian life, and trails
i'iiid us unready for them.
28. "howbeit after I am raised ip,
I will go 'beige you into Galilee 1/ Our
kindly Sa},yiour in hid propl.eey" of
smiting and matter i nig, yet insetted i
note of Hope aid-d,•� cheer. they wer® to
sere him again., and in their fa liar
Galilee surroundings.
The Sol'r_o-w 'of Gethsemane. The.
Married Women Teachers
Requested to Resign
Auburn, N.Y. — Married teachers
whose husbands are gainfully em-
ployed have been asked to the Board
of Education to resign, effective at
the close of the present school year.
The board also said that a clause
would be inserted in the next con-
tracts, cancelling the contract of
any teacher who married during the
school year. In addition, teachers
having 40 years or more of service,
were asked to retire at the school
year's close.
Ideal For Spring
By HELEN WILLIAMS.
Illustrated Dressmaking
wished With Every Pattern
Lesson Fur -
out to teach them.
"I felt that women should know how
to mend fuses, use a screwdriver, and
not to be forced to call in a man when
ever anything went wrong," said Miss
Haslett.
"The Women's Electrical Associa.1
tion has been so successful in this aim
that there are now more than thirty
branches in different parts of England
with over 5,000 members. We give
lectures for women in all branches o! `
electricity affecting the home."
Miss Haslett talks mathematics with
people like Sir Arthur Eddington.
Yet she was a dunce at school.
"It is amusing to remember shy
school clays and recall that I was a
perfect idiot at mathematics and was
always at the bottom of the class." re-
marked Miss Haslett.
Junior Leagues Association.
Choose Toronto for Convytyii
Philadelphia.—The Association of
Junior Leagues of America have de,
cided to hold the 1934 convention in
Toronto, and have named Miss Max•;
garet C. Mitchell, of Montreal, as re
gional director of its first district, em'
bracing Canadian branches. A resp•
lution • adopted recommended that
leagues undertake "non-partisan civil
and legislative education" of member
In this connection the delegates wer�
urged to seek public office is neces
sary to achieve their goals.
Miss Gertrude S. Ely, of Bryij
Mawr, chairman of the Pennsyivani
League of Women Voters, lauded the
leagues for their decision to coinpaigd
for better working conditions.
With separate skirts and jacket
suits so exceedingly modish for
spn3ng, the blouse is enjoying much
popularity.
Today's model is precious.
siiiiple wearable type that is
dainty to a degree with its shirred
"shoulders and puffed sleeves. The
Boyish collar gives it a tailored feel-
irii 's made in a jiffy! The small cost
is amazia g.
Crepe silk prints, plain crepes,
plaided taffeta, organdie, etc., adapt
themselves perfectly to this cute
bleuse.
Style No. 25,24 is designed for sizes
12; 14, 1 , 18, 20 years, 86 and 38
inches bust.
Side 16 will require 13'a yards 35-
ineh�nie rsal and % yard for cellar.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERN.
Write your name and address plain-
ly,'giving mnnber and size of aitch
pa i iii as you want. Enclose 15c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; Wrap
it car"efully) for each nunuiier, and
address your Didier to Wflsori Past
,,Se '•'i e
'Service, 73 Welt AdeiaideSt.,Toro
Though familiiarity may not breed
con ginpt, it takes oft tiie edge of—a-
mlration.—Haz lit.
4
'Plie first direct telephone service
between flernzaiiy and Palestine has
just been opened.
She urged reading of nuinerotisl
newspapers to form independent opiul.
ions on important questions,
•
European Women Happier
Because OId Fashioned
New York. -- Mile. Andres Oolin,
one of the few women executives
on the League of Nations staff, • be»
lieves her European sisters aro bet-'
ter ol'f than American women bo-'
cause they are old fashioned. 1
"Because women in E Trope havo
kept so very much to the old !fish'
ioned women's way of life, they are'
'much less affected by current eco-.'
nomie conditions than your women
here," said Mlle. Colin, a native 01
Belgium, who is in New York for a
vacation.
"The younger wonsetr of Europa
are looking back to getting married
as a goal in life, not to finding jobs
and careers. I do not like young
mothers for office workers. Ona of
two things suffer, the limns or LitO
job.
..Two -Cent Duty
On Stra~rv'berrie
Ottawa.—Two cents per pound wilt
Ire added to the value for duty oti
strawberries imported into Canade,
from May 25 to July 31, inclusive,,
when entered under the intermediatmt
or general tariff, it was announced b
the Department of National Revenue.
Motor -Cycle Built
To Encircle Globs
Libson, Portugal.—A sea -going m
tor•oi*c1e has been built by two sailor
.Armindo Pereira and Jaime Silva, to
a trip around the world.
It consists of a motor cycle, aroua
which they built a watertight vesso
The travellers say it will take the
over land and water and round th
world in a year,
.+n
Broad'v�''ay Columnist Attacks Jeff..
g.rt.�
MEIZ
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