Zurich Herald, 1935-06-27, Page 3{
art's
orl.
By Mair M. Morgan
EASY TO PREPARE
aTi st a can of salmon,
Salt and pepper, too,
Bread crumbs, butter, flour,
Milk -oh, that will do,
Nothing else is needed.
Not a cook should wish
For tastier morsel
Than this delicious dish.
Here it is;
1 large San salmon'
1 teaspoon salt
3/,t, teaspoon pepper
1 cup . buttered crumbs
3 tablespoons butter
1% tablespoons flour
1i/z cups milk
Salt and pepper `
In a buttered casserole or baking
dish put a layer of buttered- crumbs,
then a layer of one-half the fish
broken into •flakes with a fork. Salt
and pepper to taste. Pour in one-
half of white sauce made by adding
flour to melted butter then adding
milk, one-third at a time, stirring
to :prevent Iumping, Repeat and put
a layer of buttered crumbs on top.
Bake in' a moderate oven until brown.
You will find this the most delicious
salmon loaf you ever tasted.
* *
UNEXPECTED GUESTS
When you got to your door
And guests stand there,
Don't turn them away with sighs.
With a welcoming smile
And never a care
Prepare a hasty surprise.
Emergency Special
1?, lbs. round steak
1/z cup fine dry bread crumbs
1 egg well beaten
3'2 teaspoon salt
Pepper
Milk to moisten
Put round steak or some other cut
of beef through the meat chopper
four or five times. Add other ingredi-
ents and mix very thoroughly. Add
milk to snake the right consistency
to mold into small cakes about 3-4
inch thick. Fry in hot fat until well
browned. (Bacon or hani gives a
good flavor,) Remove the pleat cakes
and make a gravy by adding flour
to the fat remaining in the pan and
stir until the flour is well browned.
Use enough flour to make a.creain
sauce of medium consistency '(1 cup
" ` ,;a flour). Add
turn browned meat cakes to cream
sauce and finish cooking cakes over
a low fire. This serves about eight
persons.
taste, with a dusting of salt and
pepper. Re -heat •the sliced beets in
this, and serve,
RO T WA TER;
Temperature of water seems a
small point to emphasize but it
really is elle of the most important
items in 'the successful housekeep-
ers' book of knowledge.
Among the more: obvious facts is
that vegetables must be crisped in
very cold water :but for the first
washing, to remove the sand and
grit, you will find that tepid water
does the trick in half the time. Spin•
ach, leaf lettuce, broccoli, all the
root vegetables, asparagus and beans
are more easily . washed in luke-
warm or even warmer water.
Warm water should be used to
spray house plants to remove dusk
from the leaves.
For the washing of painted wood-
work and furniture, waren — not
hot — —soapsuds is. used. A heavy
lather first, then a cloth wrung out
in warm, clear water and a final
polish with a soft cloth. All finger
marks and smudges disappear like
magic.
Finish With Polish
For finished natural woods, com-
plete the cleaning with a rubbing
with furniture polish or liquid wax.
For mahogany furniture, use cha-
mois in place of cloth — one for
the washing and another for the
rinsing.
If you use very hot water .,to
sprinkle clothes, they will be ready
for ironing within fifteen or twenty
minutes, A garment or piece of
linen dampened with hot water and
rolled tight is of the same dampness
all over and irons as easily as the
one which was dampened with cold
water and allowed to stand over
night. Try' it some time when you
are in a hurry.
Scalding or boiling water removes
fruit stains from tablecloths and
napkins.
Always put fresh vegetables ex-
cepting spinach which should be
cooked in water that clings to leaves,
and asparagus, from which cold
water brought to boil helps extract
minerals to cook in boiling water.
There, is .less lossof, food value„ and
* * *
THE SAVORY SAUSAGE
Too .many cooks neglect the hum-
ble sausage --failing to realize that
it lends itself to exceptionally at-
tractive dishes. Here are two sample
recipes:
Spanish Sausage
1 pound pork, sausage
6 small green peppers
1 cup bread crumbs
1 cup tomatoes
1 onion, grated
1 cup diced celery
Mix sausage, bread crumbs, grated
onion, and diced .celery. Moisten with
tomatoes, Cut,tops off green peppers,
remove :Weds and parboil for five
minutes. Stuff with sausage mixture
and bake in a moderate oven (350
degrees F.), for thirty minutes.
Sausage Muffed Baked Apples
1 pound pork sausage
4 cooking apples
1 eup sugar
1 tablespoon butter
Pare the apples and remove the
centers. Stuff with pork sausage.
Place in a baking dish. Sprinkle with
sugar and dot with butter. Add 1
cup water, cover, and bake in a
moderate oven (350 degrees F.),
* * s=
SAUCE FOR BEETS
Make a sauce of butter, flour,
some of the water in which the beets
Were cooked, vinegar and sugar to
Molded gelatin desserts and salads
as well as those frozen in molds, are
easily removed from the molds for
serving if they are plunged into a
pan of hot watei just long enough
to melt the mixture against the
mold.
To Make Rolls Rise
'You can. hasten the rising of your
bread or rolls by placing them in a
cupboard near a pan of steaming
'water and closing the door tightly.
The moist warmth penetrates the
dough. Try it with ice -box rolls.
The raw taste of uncooked icings
is overcome if permitted to stand
over hot water for fifteen or twenty
minutes. This will keep them soft,
too, while frosting the cake. Some-
times merely dipping the spatula
into hot water makes the frosting
spread easily.
When cutting marshmallows for
desserts, try dipping'the shears into
lukewarm water between snips and
see how easily it's done.
* * *
SUMMER POWDER PROBLEM
The old rule—to be well -powdered
you shouldn't look powdered at all—
is especially hard to stick to in the
summertime. In' winter, when your
complexion is a light, creamy shade,
it's easy enough to choose a face
powder which blends perfectly with
your skin tones, leaving no harsh
edges and no spots that look coated.
Once bright sunshine makes your
face and neck yellowish, then beige
and finally brown, you have to be
particularly careful.
Nothing is w.oese than light rae?
powder over a su.dtanned skin.
less it is .dark suntan powder gee
a 'complexion that hasn't tap;
enough to warrant it. You ne
should use powder to take the
of a coat of tan. Winter eased 04
face powder must match youx'....
tortes,
This is the time of year to hu
one box of dark suntan powder. Whe
UNDAY
HOOD
you notice that your regular supe
no longer matches your skin, mix
bit of it with darker shade until y
have a combination which does. A.
you get darker, add more smitei
powder to the inixttire, gOLDEN TEXT.—It is good not to
Youmust be careful about apple- eat flesh, nor to dr!nk wine, nor
cation, too. Dark powders are more to do anything whereby thy brother
apt to show streaks and lines, Use etumbloth, Romans 14; 21,
a .large piece of clean cotton, press
the powder against your skin, lei:!' THE LESSON IN ITS SETTINQ,
it set and, finally, dust it off with TIME and PLACE, --The :Epistle to
the reverse side of the cotton, the Romans was 'written by the Ala -
Fill your compact with - the same astir Paul approximately A.D. 60, a:nd
powder you use at home. Keep a' " the First Epistle to the Corinthians
bit of clean cotton in this, too, If about a year earlier, A.D. 59,
it won't close with cotton in it, get .
little powder puffs that are wash- "Let us not therefore judge one an_
able and use a fresh one each day. other any more; but judge ye this
* * rather, that no roan put a stumbling-
bloek in his brother's way. What a
remarkable contrast there is between
the true Christian's use of the power
of judgment and that of the worldly -
wisp! "Or an occasion of taping.''
d word, from which .comes our
iv' +d scandal, indicates a trap or
Slie •e, something placed in the way
of another, causing one to fall, and
ilr, made to refer to those who
ca4e others to be thrown into sin.
a',Sik know, and am persuaded in„tkie.
Lod Jesus.” , As one who is in nn
ionrand communion with him, seeing
tr li and life from that viewpoint,
"T at nothing is unclean of itself,"
'Ilt is, it does not have, in itself,
,qualities making it unclean, < but .is
;only so declared by ceremonial laws.
"Save that to him who accounteth
anything to be unclean, to him it is
unclean," Here St. Paul appeals to
the fact that individual conscience,
however misguided, must never be
violated by its possessor.
E
LESSON N111, --June 30,
RTY UNDER LAW (T.emper.
be Leosoii),,-•-F anians 14: 13,21;
Darinthlans 81 9.13.
KITCHEN SCISSORS
Have you a pair of good sharp
shears " i your kitchen? Whenever
you hear one of these complaining
housewives pitying herself • because
she can't have this electric gadget or
that, tell her that -if you have an ad-
equate pair of shears, you can ,.do
without a . lot of other things a,'nd
still be efficient and quick.
You use your shears nearly every -
time you cook a meal, to crit celery.
and peppers for salads,. shred -lettuce,,!
cut tops from beets, trim green
onions and fix grape fruit.
Thus you save yourself many an
unsightly scar on your thumb — but
you'll' have them all the time if you?
use knives.
In trimming round steak and cut-
ting the rinds off of bacon the shears
work twice as fast as a knife and
with less danger of cutting the fin-
gers.
Peeling With Shears "For if because of' meat thy bro-
An easy way to prepare fresh pine- ther is grieved, thou walkest no ion -
apple is to slice it across with a ger in love." That is, if, because of
large knife and then "peel" each something the strong Christian does,
-slice with the shears. Eggplant may without any rebukeof conscience,
be done that way, too. . knowing that he Is not offending the
Candied fruits and marshmallows Lord, a weaker brother suffers in be -
are prepared for desserts by snip- 'holding • in a fellow -Christian that
ping with the shears. Dip the shears which he considers' to be sin, or suf-
in water while cutting to prevent . fers because conflicts are now arise
sticking. Ing in his own life, and this is known
After using shears they should be to the stronger Christian, he cannot
washed, scalded and lightly rubbed be said to love the weaker one if he
with sweet salad oil before putting continues in this particular practice.
away. Keep in a drawer safely away "Destroy not with thy meat him for
from small members of the family, wlitfm Christ died." If Christ is our
Some of the tedium of preparingpattern, any sacrifice of tastes and
spinach and green beans vanishes :if libe#`'es for our brother's sake is
you use scissors. A pair bi ~.smalls plain 1 sty,
scissors are a great help keeemppistg "3, . r1ot then your good be evil
ofed- ; Christian liberty, the
the leaves from" the stems o, the �.
•easo K. ' e11ee which leas
i# 1 C'rut h5 .gig K frt4}
sv xi b s lie `'i a:
i m Sd..'^',., Q y'`� ll I Vf
sides of green beans before hi + Yk et'a bad natee if it is exercised in
across the bean slant=wase, Thi an nifrouscio'tts: loveless fashion,
hard on the fleshy part of the 'thumb '°It or""• the kingdom of God is not
if a paring knife is used but the eating and drinking." In other words
scissors trim and snip neatly. The ' Christ does not claim a throne in
your soul, and in your society, mere-
ly to enlarge your bill of fare, to
make it your sacred privilege, as an
end in itself, to take what you please
at table. 'But righteousness and
peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, In-
asmuch as the principles of the King-
dom of God are assumed to dominate
in every believer's life, so will every
true Christian seek to live in accord-
ance with such principles, which
have nothing to do with material and
external things as eating and drink-
ing, but with an internal, spiritual
and moral` condition.
"For he that herein serveth
Christ is well -pleasing to God (I,. Cor,
8:8). One may serve Christ whether
eating or abstaining, but no one can .
serve him whose conduct exhibits in -i
A Prayer difference to righteousness, peace and
joy in the Holy Spirit. "And approv-
ed of en." They will be standing
the test of sincerity and reality. The
disciple who thusserves Christ may
or may not be popular with men ar-
ound him.; but he is quite sure on
the whole and in the long run to be
recognized as real,
"So then Iet us follow after things
which make for peace," "And things
whereby we may edify one another."
Frdm the verb to edify comes our
word edifice. The verb means simply
to build up, to make strong.
"Overthr'oW not for meat's sake the
39 J work of God." To overthrow means
shears will help make this' spring-
time dessert, too.
Springtime Dessert
One-half pound marshmallows, 1
cup whipping cream, Si cup candied
cherries, 1/A cup candied pineapple,.
cup chopped nut meats, 4 table-
spoons powdered sugar, lie teaspoon
vanilla, few grains salt.
Cut fruit in small pieces. Cut
marshmallows in quarters. Whip
cream until firm, add sugar which
has been sifted and vanilla. Fold in
prepared marshmallows, fruit and
nuts. Turn into a mold and let stand
in the refrigerator for several hours
to chill and become firm.
Of all the loveliness you have con-
ferred
I thank you most, Lord, for each Iiv-
ing word!
For healing •'words, so tender they
caress,
And tranquil ones that breathe a
quietness,
For every gay and laughing word
that sings,
And all the gallant shining words
With wings!
—Wendy Marsh.
to iooesn, to disso;ve, to pull doe n,
and is in direct contrast to the word
edify in the preceding verse. The
work of God is the • salvation which
he bus brought about in the heart of
all Ohristiens, and tixus in the heart
of the weak brother, and, ultimately,
the entire Church, which is his buil-
ding: ",All things indeed .are clean;
howbeit it Is evil for that man who
eateth with offence (Mark7: 10; Aots
10: 28), To eat with offence is sim-
ply to he perouaded to eat by the ex-
ample of another, while one's con. -
science either condemns suck' eating
or, is in doubt about the righteousness
of it,
"It Is good not to eat flesh, nor to
drink wine, nor to do anything where- j
by thy brother stumbleth." Most ver-
sions add "or is offended or is weak."
Grant of the strong Christian that
he may pass' unscathed through the
festive parties of the ungodly, and
perhaps even leave the savor of what
is good in the midst of them; or
grant that without injury to his own
spirit, he may lend his occasional pre-
sence to certain of the haunts of
public or fashionable entertainment --
it must not be forgotten that many
are the weak Christians, who, if led
to the premature imitation of his ex-
ample, would inevitably perish am-
ong the surrounding contaminations
of an atmosphere which they could
not breathe in and yet live.
"But take heed lest by any means
this liberty of yours." The word lib-
erty here means lawful power or right
and has reference to the freedom
which belongs to every Christian in
his contempt of ceremonial law, and
of his walking wholly in the grace
wherewith Christ bath made him
free. • "Become a stumbling block to
the weak." A stumbling block is that
against which the man with weak
sight ,stumbles; it is no obstacle to
the 'man who sees his way.
"For if a man see thee who hast
knowledge sitting at meat in an id-
ol's temple, will not his conscience,
if he be weak, be emboldened to eat
things sacrificed to idols? The weak
brother still thinks ,such practices are
wrong, but, seeing one in whom he
has great confidence, engaging in
such practices, he also is led to do
the same, though his conscience tells
him that he is doing wrong, and "if
the weak brotrher does a right thing,
while his conscience tells him it is
a wrong thing, to him it is a wrong
thing."
"For through thy knowledge he
that ds weak, perisheth, the brother
l WlieS akte''M", riStgedied%" xt:° is
not a stranger against whom the
stronger one sins, but a brother in
Christ, for who Christ offered him-
self as a sacrifice that he might not
perish.
"And thus, sinning against the bre-
thren, and wounding, their conscience
when it is weak, f a sin against
Christ," It is a manifestation of
want of love to Christ, an insult and
injury to him to injure his `people,
and, moreover, he and they are so
united that, whatever of good or evil
is done to them is done also to him.
"Wherefore, if meat causeth my
brother to stumble, I will eat no
flesh for evermore, that I cause not
my brother to stumble." The declara-
tion is conditional. If the Apostle
knows of definite cases in which his
eating food will lead to others' being
encouraged to violate the dictates of
conscience, then certainly he will
never eat meat so long as there is
real danger of this (10: 28, 29). But
if he knows of no such danger, he
will Ilse hts Christian freedom and
eat without scruple (10: 25-27),
The early part of May, 1895, was
marked by exceptionally het weather,
the thermometer registering over 90
degrees on several days, and many
!horses died while working in the
fields. This extreme heat was follow-
ed by a frost which played havoc
with vegetation. It is better to have
the kind of weather we are getting
this year, even if the progress of
the season does seem very slow.
FU MANCHU
•
By Sax Rohmer
4th .111011
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Here's a smart dress, just the
sort of thing you need for hot
days in. town. It is made so easily
and is pressed in a jiffy—see-wee
sketchlet! Choose plain or cotton
prints, linen, tub silk, etc.
Style No. 3173 is designed for
sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and
40 -inches bust. Size 16 requires
3 yards of 39 inch material.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address
plainly, . giving number and size
of such patterns as you want.
Enclose 15c in stamps or coin
(coin preferred; wrap it careful-
ly) for each number, and address
your order to Wilson Pattern Ser-
vice,
exvice, 73 West Adelaide St., To-
ronto.
rpt
Little Game
And you will go away
Without one last word of farewell
Or 'deep regret , .. knowing this day
Of bitter grief may break the magic'
spell
Of hours, , . intimately lived to-
gether? ..
5
"`lir otic • will` forget" the young dawns' and
the rain.,,
The roads we walked and may not'
walk again • .
The candlelight in quiet studio . . ,.
Where we discussed so many vital
things .
Love most of all ,
Vowing our love would glow,
With ever -burning, steady flame?
Was this, then, just a jest to break
my heart?
For you, My Dear, are somehow, not
the same .
Though pretended, I knew, from the
start • , ,
There'd be a poignant ending to our,
little game.
Francis Smith, Toronto.
Officer Of W.M.S.
To Retire At 68
TORONTO,—Officers and members
of the Dominion board of the Wo)
men's missionary ,society of the 'Unl
od Ohurch in Canada must retiro
when they reach the age of 68, thtit
ninth annual (meeting has decided)
Elected officers 'of conferened
branches are exempt.
A judicious use of flowers is urn)
by Quebec Tourist Bureau to ritek
rural hotels even more attractive'
since there is nothing, so resig
beds of powers in front of a rd
round buildings in both town
country. The same applies eves:`.
where.
THE ZYAT KISS Sir Crichton Davey's Fate
tCs-�.� {(1
Fid
Soli* did not it emediotely:
answer my geestion rout Fti
Menthe's snnater pet, bait ;.,
said: "1 found this strange
onfrivance on Sir Gnchtan sroof near the
`ultimo./ aids .
turfy fireplace." He�'cltiiw frusq" ( "a }i .
ngth of silkiread, m11%2r!• tt►,ri'""r `ws7t1`v'si'
°ring, and a number of laesge z Ni.sho , ;yippee on flee
the rnermor u5,u apn,,a f$ Ip•
.q
'Ws explains how the thing got info Sir Crichtob`t
study,' SAM explained. "The shot were to weight the
line and ptevent the creature born dinging to the side' of
the chunttey. When if had dropped in the Vette, the
weighted line was withdrawn, and the thyng writ held only
by one single thread, which sufficed to draw if back when
if had done it., 5-1of ; '•.. ,
"Ditty reckonedthbf the area- �-
ture would make straight up the leg of the table, toward -•
',theprepared' envelope.
• "What is your theory about the creature --what shape,
!what color?"
"It it something that moves rapidly. 11 works in the
dark—the 'study was dark except for the fight on the
'; tel* • • • e Ixil i y 5,, so),n,,, e,f 'i, YSott Syndhdte, Tod.
ar.srrts.:Y '4"f L.1 n�2A�
"From the table -leg to the hand of Sir Crichton -n•
which, having touched the envelope, was scented efith tete
perfume—was a certain move for the creature .
"How horrible!"
' "Sir Crichton sew the thing --leaped up•—and received
the YAYAT
•