HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1935-08-29, Page 3•
seeees-semeseeeee-seee-a-e-i-e;44.44-4;44 ---40,0eleeeleeeeeeeeeee-e-e-e
oma
ort
STRING BEANS
String beans are now plentiful
and they should be properly cooked
to retain full flavour and colour and
thus appeal to the appetite and
give complete food value.
String beans of either green or
wax varieties are a delight to the
palate when well cooked. The method
recommended by the Fruit Branch,
Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture is as follows:
Wash, remove strings and ends,and
either leave whole or cut in one inch
lengths. Allow a very small amount
of salted water and cook beans in a
closely covered saucepan for thirty
minutes. Place over a low fire at
first until some juice is extracted,
then raise the temperature. All
liquid should be absorbed when
beans are cooked.
The use of different sauces
for variety.
By Mair Mown
.31.30.0•414,
Beans with Tomato
3 cups beans
2 tablespoons butter
1 cup tomato juice
2 tablespoons flour
Salt and pepper
Cook beans in a little water so
that practically all liquid is absorb-
ed when they are tender. Then add
butter, and when melted and well
mixed through the beans, sprinkle
the flour over, and stir over the fire.
Then slowly add tomato jeice, stir-
ring well. Cook five minutes.
Bean Pickle
Prepare and cook beans as dir-
ected above. Make a pickle mixture
using:
3 lbs. sugar
3 pints vinegar
2 tablespoons celery seed
2 teaspoons tumeric
1 cup mustard
1 cup flour
Heat vinegar, mix mustard, flour
and spice in a little cold vinegar, add
hot vinegar gradually; cook, stirring
constantly until thick as cream; add
beans, cook five minutes taking care
that they do no,t stick to the ket-
tle, or burn. Bottle and seal at once.
BREAKFAST SETS THE PACE
The food you give your family at
breakfast will set the pace for the
whole day—for we must never lose
sight of the fact that a long time
"bas •elapsed since the evening meal
the night before. .Appetites will
awaken at ,the sight of an icy cold
'half melon, filled to overflowing with
golden, crisp corn flakes. This is de-
licious eating and a dish to give the
family" quick energy for work or
play..
Toasties Melon Cup
Chill small ripe cantaloupe. Cut in
halves, allowing one half to each
serving. Remove seeds. Cut thin
slice from bottom of each half so
that cantaloupe will Test firmly on
plate. Fill center with corn flakes.
Serve with light cream and powder-
ed sugar.
THE HUMBLE PICKLE
6,000,000 bushels cucumbers are
required by pickle manufacturers
annually to supply the normal de-
mand.
The British Army and Navy rec-
ognize pickles as an essential part
cif a well-balanced ration.
The sugar content of sweet pickl-
es has much food value.
The lactic acid contained in dill
pickles is recognized by dietitians as
an aid to digestion.
Sour pickles eaten by sailors on
long sea voyages prevent scurvy.
Commander Byrd in his requisit-
ion for supplies for the Antarctic
Expedition provided for a large sup-
ply of pickles.
.A. pickle added to a dry sandwich
luncheon converts it into a palatable
meal,
The aromatic aroma and flavor of
pickles when eaten excite the gastric
makes
Sauce
juices, which greatly aid digestien.
Dr. Woods Hutchison, the eele-
brated physician and dietitian, stat-
ed in the public press recently that
pickles are loaded with vitamins,
hence have pronounced food value.
The Hollanders consume large
quantities of pi c k l e s an d the
Frauleins set great store by them
for beauty's sake, as they improve
the complexion.
Pickles are recommended by the
eminent physicians of England, Hol-
land and Germany, who recommend
them as a remedy for dizziness and
heartburn.
French physicians for many years
have recommended pickles as a pre-
ventative of freckles and for clear-
ing and heightening the complexion
through their corrective action on
digestion and the cleansing of the
blood.
The further south you go, the
more popular sour pickles are, due to
the natural craving for the cooling
and. healthful action of the acid.
The calory value of sour spiced
pickles is greater than that of ap-
ples, oranges, peaches, pears and
three times the fuel value of bean
soup, nearly double the value of
spinach, asparagus, onions and
other vegetables, also codfish and
black bass.
(The above 14 points are based
upon the very best -medical auth-
orities and statistics.)
...***.nrrnmonn.nratr'"74*.nrrnnnrrn
A Scoulth
eeeee,eeeee
Sir Percy Everett (left), Deputy Boy Scout Cammisioner of
England, greets Walter Head, Chief Scout of the •United States, as
he arrives in England en route to Scout eonference in Sweden.
or the emergency shelf will be upe-
less.
EMERGENCY SHELF
Do you have an emergency shelf
in your pantry? It's first aid to
hospitality when some friend hap-
pens in unexpectedly, providing that
extra company touch for a pot -luck
meal. And when the man of the
family telephones at the last minute
that he's bringing someone home to
dinner, it saves the terrors of being
unprepared.
In stocking the emergency shelf
choose only the best canned meats
and vegetables, fruits and condi-
ments. They require less time dress-
ing up.
Plan definitely, too, just how each
article will be used in the emerg-
ency. You may have a miniature
grocery store at your elbow, but
-without a variety that will prove
adequate for a well-balanced and ap-
petizing meal, the emeegency shelf
won't be of the help litalw uld be.
The shelf should contain the mak-
ings of a full meal—soup, meat, veg-
tables, salad and dessert. Though
•all need not be used for the same
meal.
Keep a can of nut meats ready to
use, a tin box of marshmallows, a
tin •of extra fine salad wafeas, a
bottle of olives, a jar of mayonnaise
and a package of long -keeping va-
riety of cheese.
Home-made catsup or chilli sauce
added to the mayonnaise will make
a Russian dressing to serve with
head lettuce for a dinner salad that
nearly everybody likes. Or nuts and
olives finely chopped may be com-
bined with cheese and made into tiny
balls served on lettuce leaves. The
salad wafers lightly buttered and
toasted add much to any salad and
are particularly acceptable if the
portions are small.
Salmon, tuna fish, crab meat,
shrimp, boned chicken, hani or corn-
ed beef will solve the luncheon salad,
or may be made into delicious hot
dishes.
Canned soups, of course, are in-
valuable. Some need only to be re-
heated while others must be diluted
with milk or water.
Macaroons keep almost indefinitely
in tightly closed cans. Many varie-
ties of canned puddings and quickly
mixed packages of dessert that axe
delicious and easy to use and quickly
prepared.
Last, but not least, replace each
item from the shelf as you use it—
WHEN A MAN LAYS THE TABLE
It is very seldom that a man tells
us what he really thinks about the
way the table at which he takes his
meals is arranged. Usually he am -
Gospels.
"Rejoice in Alio Lord atiltaYS:
again 1 will say, Rejoice." To rejoice
in the Lord does not mean that a man
is to be insensible to sorrow and ells -
trees, to suffering or to sin, either in
his owe. life or in the livor about him;
but it does mean that these dark
realities will not be allowed to
master bim, nor to blind him from
the radiance which streams from the
face of his living Lord.
"Let your forbearance be known
unto all men." The word here trans.-
lated forbearance means that dispo-
sition which is opposed to a spirit
of contention and self-seeking. "Tile
Lord is at hand." The lesson for ail
of us is not that the Lord is corning,
which is true, but because the Lord
is nigh, his presence is with us.
guard. Black suits in velvet are
brightened by flat collars of gilet or
ermine and flowing fullness at front
is an. interesting quality of black
afternoon dresses.
Breaking into the clever parade
of smart blacks are tweeds which
tend to such off shades as bois de
rose, a light prune, grayed to the
cepts his wife's taste in the matter fur trimming, a wisteria shade in.
unquestioningly. •novelty woollen and black and white
But does he like it? I wondered mixtures -which give various tones
that as I walked round an exhibition of gray.
of table -setting at which men arch- In trimming and combinations
itects and designers were responsible there are brighter tones, velveteen
for one or two tables each.
Two well-known architects flatly
refused from the first to allow any
cloth or mats to be used. The were
Wells Coates and Frederick Gibberd,
the latter only 27, and therefore very'
modern in his ideas.
His choice was a set of cream yel-
low china with a pale grey flower
and a dull red circle. It stands on
blouses and scarfs with tweed suits,
velvet trimmings on black frocks in
such bright hues as ruby red and
sapphire. Deep gold bracelets are an-
other bright trimming which offsets
the somberness of a black frock,
sometimes with the response of a
golden brooch. One black frock
opens coatwise over an underdress
of bright satin and the little suit
Little Man You'll
Have A Dizzy Day,
One black morning you waken with.
a woolly brain and limbs that ache.:
Some mysterious force pulls your
head back every time you try tice
raise it from the pillow,
Dizzily you go through your ab.i
lations, and at the breakfast labia'
you 'are oblivious of the shining
morning faces, the novispapers, the,
letters, or the friendly little wag of'
the dog's tail,
The bacon and eggs, the coffee'
the toast, what are they to •yoll,
Black spots fly across your eyee,
cold shivers play scales on your
spine, and sweat pours into your
palms.
The Mirror will tell you why
was wrong to eat mayonnaise
midnight.
Those eyeballs, tinged with yellow,
that sallow cheek, that tongue that;
looks as if it had been out all night;
in the frost—all these indicate that'
the liver is literally fed up with you',
and. your silly ways of fatty nede.
ing.
The sooner you realize that you
must swear repentance the better.
Begin by taking a large dose oi
salts, and follow this up by pints
and pints of pure cold water at re-
gular intervals. Refifie every forlik
of food, even milk, and go away tO
some epot where you can be like the
great Garbo, alone.
By evening you will feel less like
a man under sentence of death and.
more affable towards a pork chop.
But touch neither crumb nor crust
until next morning, when you will
realize the good that has been done
by salts, starvation and solitude.
"In nothing be anxious." The word
here translated anxious comes from
a word meaning to divide, to sepa-
rate, to pull apart. An anxious heart
is one which is divided and torn in
its division. "But in everything by
prayer and supplication." The first
word refers to the general offering
up of the wishes and desires to God;
the second implies special petition
for the supply of wants. "With
thanksgiving," No greater barrier to
progress in prayer can be set up
than ingratitude to God. "Let your
reuests bo made 'known unto God."
This is the only abiding, permanent
cure for anxiety. Tell it to the Lord
in prayer.
"And the peace of God, which pass..
eth all understanding." The inner-
most tranquillity caused by contact
with him. blended by his Spirit into
ours, the peace which transcends all.
mind, for no reasoning can explain
its nature and its consciousness.
"Shall guard your hearts and your
thoughts in Christ Jesus." The word
here translated guard means to pro-
tect by a military guard, i.e., to post
sentries at the gates to protect a
city from invasion.
"Finally, brethren, whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things
are honorable, whatsoever things
are just, whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things are lovely, what-
soever things are of good report; if
there be any virtue, and if there be
any praise, think on these things."
The last phrase, if there be any
praise, does not mean only the cam-
mendation of others, but it describes
moral approbation, whether of kings
or of men, or even of God. Such
thigh thinking cannot fail to result in
nobility of character and worthy
deeds.
a walnut tabe edged with sycamoreie costumes introduce the pipings of
the latter wood, like the tweed-cov
e •chairs harmonising with the
color of the china.
Wells Coates chose "curves"
Round plates and oval dishes with
concentric circles of green and silereel
stand on a -walnut table with refoe;
ed edges and curved legs _4,,
One of the most intdresting tir
was arranged by Oliver
lovas the architect of five sections o
velvet which are a feature of this
season.
•"'Sunday School
Lesson
_PULH (WORKER WITHAND AND
3RAIN). — Acts 20:33-35; Phillip.
plans 4:4.13. GOLDEN TEXT.—
the British Art in Industry Exhibee , In all things I gave you an example,
tion at Burlington House. .. that so laboring ye ought to help
Its motif was diagonal lines, its the weak. Acts 20:35.
color green and silver. The corners. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
of the table were cut diagonally to TIME and. PLACE. — The actual
correspond with the position of the deteg for the various events in the
oblong glass asherays, while the cerie life of the Apostle Paul have proved
trepiece was a set of four oblong,
glass dishes, filled with the heads • of
white flowers and ingeniously placed
side to side.
As on other masculine tables, an
ashtray was placed at each. corner.
Hostesses, please note!
Most men, apparently, like low
centrepieces and tall candles. Mr. J.
Emberton, architect of the new
Olympia, is an exception. On a wal-
nut table, again without mats, he
sets jasmine china with orange and
gold bands, two very tall candles,
and a large centrepiece of china
flowers, standing on mirror glass.
COSTUMES FOR AUTUMN SHOW
MUCH BLACK
Although there are incidental colors
which attract the attention, the big
story for autumn is black, in simple
little school girl dresses which are
smart for daytime wear, in chic
little suits of lightweight woollen
which are of the type every women
could wear, in soft afternoon frocks
which contrast dull and lustrous
sides of a novelty pin point jac,
3
FU
ANCHU
t S X
ohmer
a. subject of wide disagreement. Har -
hack places the conversion of Paul
ip. 30 A.D., and his death in 64 A.D.
Ramsay makes the two dates, respec-
' tively, 32 A.D. and 67 A.D. Probably
his death occurred 66 or 67 A.D. Paul
was born possibly three or four years
after the Lord Jesus was born. The
places of his labor are too numerous
to enumerate here. '
"I coveted. no mint silver, or gold
'or apparel." Thus was Paul free
from all suspicion or false accuse-
' tion concerning money matters in all
the collections which were taken tor
the poor, and in the matter of his
own support.
"Ye yourselves know that these
hands ministerd unto necessities,
and to them that were with me."
Cf. 1 Con 4:12. As he held his hands
up, they saw a tongue of truth in
every seam that marked them.
"In all things I gave you an ex-
ample, that so laboring ye ought to
help the weak, and to remember the
words of the Lord Jesus, that he him-
self said, It is more blessed to give
than to receive." This is the only
raying. of Jesus recorded in the New
Testament not to be found in the
"The things which ye both learned
and received and heard and saw in
me, these thinks do." Here, as often,
Paul. commends his own life and prac-
tice to his converts as an example
which they are to follow, and, when
every minister and teacher can sup-
port his words and writings by an
acknowledged sincerity of lite, the
power of his teaching is tremendous-
ly multiplied.. "And the God of peace
shall- c NAV). you." Wherever you go,
whatever you do, down deep below
the surface.
"But I rejoice in the Lord greatly,
that now at length ye have revived
your thought for me." Literally, you
shot forth (as a branch) thought in
my behalf. "Wherein ye did indeed
take thought, but ye lacked oppor-
tunity." Lightfoot translates it "in
which ye did indeed interest your-
selves. Paul's purpose in writing the
Philippians really was to thank them
for their kindness to him, but many
other things were so much on his
heart that he postpones this nutter-
ial matter to the end of the Epistle.
"Not that I speak in respect of
want: for I have learned, in whatso-
ever state I am, thereifl to be con-
tent". "I know how to be abased." In
classical Greek this verb is used of
the failing of a river in drought, "And
I know also how to abound: in every-
thing and in all things have I learn-
ed the secret of both to be filled and
to be hungry, both to abound and to
be in want." He is able to be ealm
and confident in the midst of the
most disturbing circumstances.
"I can do all things in him that
strengtheneth me." This is only one
of the many phrases found in Paul's
letters which reveal him as one
mastered by Christ.
A scientist discovers that the glow -
est thinkers live longest. That the
kind of proposition that cannot be
proved on a busy highway.
Fits Everyday Needs
For Juniors
It's time to be considering
smart little dress of wooly novel-
ty crepe so new looking and SO
lovely for first fall days.
The model pictured in weep,
with yellow tinge, is especially
smart with effective soft fulneel
through the bodice. The "Boy"
collar and buttons are satin crepe.
Nothing could be simpler to
sew !
Style No. 2971 is designed for
sizes 11, 13, 15 and 17 years,
Size 15 requires 3% yards of 39 -
inch material with ee yard of 35 -
inch contrasting.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address
plainly, giving number and size
of such patterns as you Want.
Enclose 20e in stamps or coin
(coin preferred; wrap it caree
fully) for each number, and ade
dress your order to Wilson Pat-
tern Service, 78 West Adelaide
Smith strode up and down the neat little roorn. 1 turned
to the array of objects found in Detective Cadby's cloth.
ing. None of them was noteworthy except +hat which had
been found thrust into the loose neck of the shirt—and
had led the police to send for Nayland Smith because the
clue pointed to Fu
Manchu ...
THE SEVERED FINGER—A Strange Find.
./1
"You noticed the fingers?"
asked +he inspector. "If was ae
most the same with Detective
Mason. He went off a week ago
on some business of his own. Next
night the ten-o'cloek boat gof the
grapnel on him off Hanover Hole.
His first two fingers on the right
li!r1d were coreftellofe:*1
I looked out at the
whispering The.
which held so many secrets, and now was burdened W1.0
another. Behind me 1 heard the Inspector say:
"And that lascar we founeteeis morning •
"You mean ?u Mancini's deceit," interjected Smith,
"Ho Med to kill Petrie and me."
,"He was minus half his fingers, too,
/)
o 1131' fty 010, Rohnier And The Cnfl tavyi.tlestn.
"Smith," Ceded, "what do
you make of this?"
It was a Chinese pigtail. That
was remarkable enough; but the
plaited queue was a fate) brie,
attached to a most ingenious e
bald wigl