HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1934-11-29, Page 3•
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Woman's
World
13y Mair M. Morgan
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milk, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-8 tea-
spoon pepper, 2 eggs.
Remove skin and bones from sal-
mon rub fish fine with potato mash-
er.
mon,
butter in milk and add
bread crumbs and seasonings. Com-
bine with fish. Last add well beaten
,eggs. Put into buttered deep -bak-
ing 'dish and bake. Serve with a thin
white sauce.
Tuna fish may ,be substituted for
salmon, 'adding to recipe 1-2 tea-
spoon each chopped parsley and
green pepper and a teaspoon lemon
juice. Bake in moderate oven 1-2
hour. Tuna fishis also good cream-
ed and mixed with green peas. Serve
it on toast.
Fish Cake
1 cup cold boiled fish, salt and
pepper, 1 cup cold mashed potatoes,
celery salt, 1 egg, beaten.
Equal quantities of cold mashed
potatoes, and shredded cold fish
(dried codfish is good for this pur-
pose: follow directions for prepar-
ing on package.) Mix, season to
taste, add beaten egg, shape in
rounds and cook in spider with 2
tablespoons hot butter till nicely
browned.
Loaf
cup mashed pota-
beaten, 1 onion,
pepper, cracker
A friend of ours tells us she has
difficulty in planning her luncheon
menus. She wants to maks them as
meatless as possible and asks for
suggestions.
'We think a thick, substantial soup
followed by a salad and dessert of
stewed or fresh fruit, with tea,
cof-
fee or milk, is sufficient for lunch-
eon when dinner is being served at
night. Main courses of fish and cas-
serole dishes with macaroni, spag-
hetti and noodles are always good
for the mid-day meal.
Cheese and Onion Soup
2 large onions, Cut fine, 4 table-
spoons shortening., 2 tablespoons
flour, 1 -quart hot milk, 2 egg yolks
slightly beaten, salt and pepper, 1-2
cup grated cheese, 6 silces bread.
Cook onions in shortening until
transparent; mix in the flour then
add milk add stir well, cooking for
20 minutes in a double boiler. Strain
and pour milk slowly onto beaten
eggs. Season to taste. Toast bread,
sprinkle with cheese and put one
piece into each plate. Pour baiting
soup over and serve at once.
Potato Soup
3 potatoes, 1 qt. milk, 2 slices on-
ion, 1-4 teaspoon celery salt, or piece
of celery stalk, 2 tablespoons snort -
ening, I tablespoon flour, 1 tea-
spoon salt, few grains pepper, few
grains sayenne, 1 teaspoon parsley,
minced.
Cook potatoes in boiling salted
water until soft; drain, rub through
pure strainer. Scald milk with on-
ion and celery salt. Remove onion
and add milk slowly to potatoes,
stirring constantly. _Melt shortening
add dry ingredients, stir until weld
mixed, then add to hot soup. Ado
also minced parsley and cook 1 min-
ute before serving. Serves e.
Split Pea Soup
1 *pt. split peas, 4 qts. water, %
lb. salt pork, 1 large onion silced, 2
tablespoons celery, diced, 1 table-
spoon flour, 1 tableepOon shorten-
ing, 1 teaspoon pepper, 1 sprig par-
sley.
Pick peas over that there may be
no blemished ones among them,
then wash and soak in cold water
over night. In morning drain off
water and put thein into the soup
pot with cold water and salt pork,
onion and celery. Simmer 3 or 4
hours. When nearly cooked, add
seasonings. Strain through sieve.
Beat flour and shortening together
till creamy and stir into soup; sim-
mer 30 minutes longer. If salt pork
has not. seasoned the soup suffic-
iently, add a tittle salt.
Vegetable Soup
1 1-2 qts. boiling water, 1-3 cup
carrots, diced, 1-3 cup cabbages, cut
1 1-2 cups potato dices, 1-2 cup on-
ion, sliced, 1 cup strained tomatoes,
4 tablespoons butter or other fat, 1
teaspoon sugar, 2 teaspoons salt
1 1-2 teatpoons chopped parsley.
Use all or any, and as many var-
ieties of vegetables .as you wish, us-
ing half as much vegetables as !l-
eper. Wash, pare, scrape and cut
vegetables fine. Then measure. Mix
vegetables' all but: potatoes and to-
matoes. Heat fat in spider, add veg-
etables, cook 10 minues stirring con-
stantly. Add potatoes and cook 2
minutes longer, then add the boil-
ing water and tomatoes and boil 1
hour or longer or until all vegetables
are tender. Add parsley, .season to
taste and serve hot. Any cold boiled
vegetables (leftovers) may be add-
ed to this soup.
Casserole of Fish
2 lbs. fish, 3 tablespoons flour, 3
tablespoons shortening, salt and
pepper to taste, 1 small carrot dic-
ed, 1 onion sliced, 1 cup canned to-
mato.
• Cut fish into cubes and dredge
with flour. Heat shortening in cas-
serole and brown fish. Add season-
ings and vegetables and cook tight-
ly covered until both vegetables
and fish are thoroughly cooked. If
juices evaporate while fish is cooking
add few tablespoons hbt water as
needed. Serves 4.
Salmon Pudding
1 can salmon, 1 tablespoon but-
ter, 1 cup bread crumbs, 1 cup hot
Bean
1 can beans, 1
toes, 1 egg well
minced, salt and
crumbs.
add potatoes, well beaten egg and
Mash beans and rub through sieve
onions. Season to taste. Form into
loaf, dust with cracker crumbs and
bake till nicely browned. Slice and
serve either hot or cold. If hot with
tomato sauce, if cold with salad
dressing..
Peanut Butter Macaroni
'2 cups elbow macaroni, 2 cups
milk, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 4 table-
spoons peanut butter.
Boil macaroni in boiling salted
water till tender. Drain and put in
casserole Scald milk, add salt and
peanut butter, boil till it thickens
slightly. Pour over macaroni anti
bake in moderate oven for 15 min-
utes.
Noodles With Cheese
Cook noodles in boiling salt water
till soft. Drain through strainer
and pour cold water over them to
prevent pieces from adhering. Make
1 1-2 cups white sauce as foilows:
2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons
flour, % teaspoon salt, l% cups
hot milk. Dissolve a speck of soda
in a little hot water and add to milk.
Heat butter, add flour and season-
ing and then gradually hot milk. Put
a layer of boiled noodles in butter-
ed baking dish, sprinkle with grat-
ed cheese, repeat, pour over white
sauce, cover with buttered crumbs
and bake till crumbs are brown.
'Tomato sauce may be substituted
for white sauce. Take 2 teaspoons
butter, 1-4 teaspoon onion juice, 2
tablespoons flour, 1-2 cup water, 1
cup strained tomato, 1 teaspoon salt
and speck of pepper. Heat butter,
remove from fire and stir in flour.
Add water, stir well, add tomato,
onion juice, salt and pepper, boil 5
minutes.
Macaroni or spaghetti may be us-
ed instead of noodles for this re-
cipe.
Cheese Souffle
Two tablpespoons butter, 3 table-
spoons flour, 1-2 cup scalded milk,
1-2 .teaspoon salt, few grains cayen-
ne, 1-4 cup strong cheesee, grated,
yolks 3 eggs, whites 3 eggs.
1V1elt butter, add flour and ween
well mixed add gradually scalded
milk. Then add salt, cayenne and
cheese. Remove from fire; add yolks
of eggs beaten until lemon colored.
Cool mixture and cut and fold in
whites of eggs beaten until stiff
and dry. Pour into buttered baking
dish and bake 20 minutes in slow
oven. Serve at once.
As to the salad we suggested at
the beginning of this .discourse on
meatless recipes, fresh tomatoes are
always good, raw shredded cabbage
is tasty and almost any leftover cold
vegetables marinated with salad
Third Divorce?
. ... . . ....
ttiNAIP.:", Z.&
The single state is again desired by Jean Harlow (above), ac-
cording to rumours from the coast which say she will soon file suit
for divorce from Hal Rosson, cameraman, who is now in Europe.
dressing and served on crisp lettuce
leaves will-Ippeal to the family.
DELICIOUS BREAD PUDDING
Soak the bread in cold water un-
til soft and squeeze as dry as pos-
sible.
Thickly butter a dish and cover
with a layer of jam—apricot is ex-
cellent. Mix the bread with brown
sugar, the grated rind of a lemon,
one egg, and sufficient milk tu
make a thin batter. Bake a golden
brown in a slow oven. The butter
gives it a delicious toffee flavor.
MAN OP THE HOUSE
Often the man of the family has
fewer hours of enjoyment of his
home than any other member. There
has been an accepted theory that a
man's work must all be donc out-
side and so this condition of affairs
seems unavoidable.
The woman who aims to make her
borne as useful and pleasant and
happy as possible may do well to
consider that her husband may have
no place of his own that he ran call
private and into which he can go
when he wants to be alone. Even
though he may use it for only a
short time after dinner, a room of
his own may mean a real chance for
quiet relaxation to him.
One woman, on. waking to the
fact that her husband bad no place
of his own hi the house, calmly
turned her own guest room into e
study for her husband, "For," said
she, "niy guests cannot possibly need
this room as much as my husband
does." And what was her rtward?
Her husband had been a rather gift-
ed amateur scribbler. He had en-
joyed writing now and then, but he
seemed never to find a quiet place
to write when the mood was upon
hini
13ut now, with a room and a desk
and an inviting typewriter, all for
himself, he began to do a little writ-
ing every ' evening. In the end, he
did some very creditable work and
the reward was hours of happy
work and many unexpected dollars.
The cost of this venture was next
to nothing. The articles purchasea
were a huge red leather chair (it is
said that all men love huge red
leather chairs , three pairs of cur-
tains, a roomy desk and some
frames for herehusband's cherished
college pictures.
There is hardly a home which
Could not be squeezed a bit to pro-
vide a room for -the lord of the
manor. And there is hardly an in-
vestment of time and loving thought
which will reward the homemaker
more richly,
YOU KNOW HIM
He's always down and out, and he
Blames others for every error;
But he could see his enemy
If he looked in a mirror.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON
THE CHRISTIAN AS WITNESS
GOLDEN TEXT— But ye shall re-
ceive power, when the Holy Spirit
is come unto you; and ye shall be
my witnesses both in Jerusalem,
•and in all Judea and Samaria, and
unto the uttermost parts of the
earth.—Acts 1:8.
The Lesson in its Setting
PLACE—First Thessalonians was
written in Corinth.
TIME—It was written during Paul's
second missionary journey. probably
in AD., 52.
"Paul and Silvanus." Sulvanus is
the latin form of Silas (Greek) Paul's
travelling companion who took the
place of Barnabas, Paul's compan-
ion on his first missionary journey -
"And Timothy'". Timothy was a
young man of Lystra, in Asia Minor,
whom Paul probably met on his first
missionary journey when the apostle
Was stoned in Lystra. "Unto the
church of the Thessalonians in God
die Rather and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Chu,:lh is "ekklesia' in Greek whence
our "ecclesiasItic." It means called
c‘-gt,". separated, a congregation that
ti bound together by one purpose.
'Grace to you and peace." Grace is
tie sum of all blessings that God be -
Lows through Christ. Peace is the
sum of all spiritual blessing that man
receives and experiences
"We give thanks to God always for
you all," Good counsel can only be
iven effectively in a good spirit,
1 When we truly pray for our corres-
1 (indents we can write to them with
edification. "Making mention of you
n our prayers." Paul's prayers were
pra.yers of thanksgiving and praise.
All of his letters except one (Galat-
inns) begin with expressions of
thanksgiving.
"Remembering without ceasing
your work of faith" That was the
only faith that was genuine; that was
the only faith Paul believed in—the
faith that worked. "And labor of
love." Paul unites these three, faith
hope and love as the chief Christian
graces in his incomparable hymn of
love, the thirteenth chapter of First
Corinthians, ending with the famous
estimate "the greatest of these is
love." "And patience of hope." Pat-
ience is the very heart of hope.
"In our Lord Jesus Christ, before
our God and Father." A hope in our
Lord Jesus Christ so different from
every other hope. Before our God and
Father—all that Is affirmed in the
entire sentence being in the pres-
ence of our God and Father securing
his approval, and taking place with
the utmost sincerity and earnestness.
"Knowing brethren beloved of God
ybier election." God does not permit
us to climb a' ladder and go into his
LADY GAME WARDEN URGES
FIELD SPORTS FOR HER SEX
Instead of Favorite Feminine Quarry—Man, She Suggests
Shooting and Hunting Animals
secret archives and turn the pages
and see if a man's name is written
in the Lamb's Book of Life. But he
does permit us to know wbether we
are elect or whether anybody else is
elect.
"How that our gospel." (Paul's
preaching that the "good tidings of
God's free love in Christ Jesus) came
not unto you in word only but also in
power, The Love on the Cross was not
merely a historic fact hut a spirit-
ual face and the living presence that
we And,in nature and in the human
heart has a definite character which
is the character of Jesus Christ,
"And in the Holy Spirit," This is
a most necessary addition for no one
can obey Christ perfectly in his own
strength. He must have the aid of
the Holy Spirit, or he will fail in his
best endeavors. "And in much assur-
ance,' This gives us to understand
that the man that is renewed through
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ
knows it and has no doubt of it in his
heart. "Even as ye know what man-
ner of men we showed ourselves to-
ward you for your sake." Paul, Silas
and Timothy are joyfully able to
point the Thessalonians to them-
selves as showing the kind of Chris-
tians Christ wants.
"And ye became imitators of us."
Paul challenged his friends in Thes-
salonics. in. Corinh and elsewhere, to
take his life as a pattern. He was an
'example to them as they were to be
an example to others and as the Lord
Jesus Christ was to be an example
to him and the standard for him.
"And of the Lord." Our Lord has told
his disciples that he would dwell in
them as they in them. "Having re-
ceived the word in much affiction,
with joy of the H,oly Spirit." Afflic-
tion with joy! The phrase describes
the life of Jesus who was the greata
est sufferer the world has known, and
who yet had the greatest joy in the
world victory who for the joy that
was set before him endured the cross
despising the shame,
"So that ye became an example to
all that believe in Macedonia and in
Achaia." The Thessalonians had so
far advanced that they who were for-
merly imitators had now become a
model and an example to others.
"For from you hath sounded forth
the word of the Lord." The sentence
1 as a martial ring; the Thessalonian
es:ample was a trumpet like summons
to Christ.
"Not only in Macedonia and Achaia
but in every place your faith to God -
ward is gone forth." By the time the
members of the Thessalonian church
had listened to the reading of the
letter thus far they would probably
have conceived a rather more than,
fair opinion of themselves; but as it
proceeds they would be likely to dis-
cover plenty of room for improvement
"So that we need not to speak any-
thing." The Macedonian Christians
and their godly manner of life were
the best evangelistic address possible
"For they themselves." That is the
people to whom Paul went in Mace-
donia and Aohaia, "'Report concern-
ing us what manner of entering in
we had unto you." Entering here re-
fers not merely to the outward en-
trance, the mere preaching of the
gospel among the Thessalonians; but
to the access, the internal entrance
which the gospel found in their
hearts.
"And how ye turned unto God from
idols." This turning was their con-
version for conversion means a turn-
ing about." "To serve a living and a
true God." Living because idols are
•••••••••••,,,,,,••
"Hunting! There's a' truly thrilling
sporting experience for women!" It
is Edith Stoeher of South Wethere-
field, Connecticut, talking—the only
woman game warden In the •United
States, with the five -mile fishing pre-
serve on the Branford River and the
300 -acre hunting grounds Modally
set aside for fair nimrode as her spe-
cial pravinces.
"Hunting's a thrill most women
still can look forward. to. Here be
Connecticut, for instance, in spite of
the preserve where they can hunt
far from the critical masculine eye,
only about 50 women turn out for
the six-week quail, woodcock, pheas-
ant and partridge season. Those who
came are overjoyed that they can
hunt in privacy,
ACTS AS INSTRUCTOR
"They don't resent men's presence
but knowing the hunting district is
theirs alone is pleasant knowledge.
Most of the women are already ex-
perienced bantam, but occazdonalpy
one turns up who must be taught
how to handle a gun and look for
game. I have even loaned my dog
to several."
Miss Stoeher is proud of her war-
den's uniform.
"There is something very intrigu-
ing about the brass buttons and gold
badge," she laughs. "The breeches
and high boots all lend dignity to
the attire. Of course, I SOW, but
my clothes are mostly of the simple
tailored deigns. Antler wearing a
uniform all day, I suppose I should
lean toward fluffy -ruffle dresses, but
I don't."
WARDEN'S DUTIES FUN,
When Miss Stoeher departs for the
Branford or Farmington preserves,
she leaves her family home in South
Wethersfield about 4 in the morning,
"It's fun and I wouldn't exchange
my job for anything", she says.
This woman game warden is versa -
He. She rides a horse with perfect
ease and enjoys sports. Golf and
tennis she finds are relaxing and
pleasant, but there is little time for ,
them during her busy seasons. "Mu-
slc"— her eyes sparkle when she dis-
cusses her favorite art—"has fascin-
ated me for years." She has studied
voice and devotes much time to sing-
ing.
She is 28, cooks, bakes and sews
a fine seam.
"And I have a. hobby, too," she
confesses. "It's raising setters and
pointers."
She insists that with a little prac-
tice, under a. competent instructor,
the average woman can soon master
the art of angling as well'as hunting.
Last season 315 young and old wo-
men fished under her careful eye.
Many of tbe number were taught
how to cast their flies and hold a.
reel properly,
The Man Who Wins
The test
makes
The grit that he daily shows
The way he stands on his feet and
takes
Fate's numerous bumps and blows,
A coward can smile when there's
nought to fear,
When nothing his progress bars
But it takes a man to stand up and
cheer
While some other fellow stars.
It isn't -ehe victory after all,
But the fight that a brother makes;
The man, who driven against the
wall,
stands up erect and takes
The blows of fate with his head held
dead; and true ,because idols are so high,
false and empty, : the man who will win in the by
"And to wait for his Son from and by hen.
of a man is the fight he
ven." To await iu eager expectation
the return of his Son from Heaven.
"Whom he raised from the dead,"
Paul could never be long without
'wondering mention of Christ's resur-
rection the great truth which meant
so much to him. "Even Jesus who
delivereth us from the wrath to come
Our Lord is very emphaiically spoken
of as The Deliverer and this ever pro
sent deliverance implies a past. He
redeemed us once for all; he is ever
delivering us.
'elhe isn't afraid to fail.
t's the bumps you get and the jolt
you get,
And the shocks that
stands
The hours of sorrow and vain regret
The prize that escapes your hands.
That test your mettle and prove your
worth;
It isn't the blows you deal,
But the blows that you. take on thld
good old earth.
That shows if your stuff is real,
your courage
MUT1 AND ,JEFF—
i-rElis is visri-NG DAY AT THE
VAR....LILL Go UP -ro ses MUTT
AND mem DROP -Re -CHARGES
-- I MATE To WEARTHIS BUT
IV I DONT MUTT WILLTHINK
IM Nal -PRACTISING
MY PART IN "THE GIRL
OF THE GAY NINETIES:I
I-kELLO,MUTTI - SORRY
VoRW4kAl HAPPENED, BUT TO
MAKE VP fort iT PRACTISING
REAL. HARD -FOR OUR PI TruizE,
t s RIGHT NOW YOU'RE
GLADTo SEE .r4E WEARING
THIS cosivisS!
..rn71./A1
-rme's up! \
EVERYBoDY OUT!
WELL-, CoME OPT' see
SoMeTIME, DARK AN'
some!
/
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