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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1935-09-19, Page 3• ease-4-e-e-S-e-44-‘44-4,4444444.040.10404eeeeleeli-e-eseevess. By Maio. M. Morgan •ist . IMPORTANT MEAL TOO OFTEN OVERLOOKED Thinking up variations year in and year out for three square meals a day—it's a career all by itself, even if the census makers and other statisticians do persist in putting ,.14ffeeWs' the housewife down as one with no occupation. Breakfasts are particularly diffi- cult, if we are to judge by the let- ters that come to this desk voicing 1j• plaintive calls for help. Kinds of Breakfast The very light breakfast includes fruit, some sort of bread --such as toast or rolls, and a beverage—milk, cocoa or coffee. This type of meal is suitable for adults whose habits are sedentary and who eat adequate noon meals. lightThe brsel iagkhftalys t haedadvsi elesertehal ugtoh s.tthi lel above. This meal is convenient be- cause it provides the essentials of the children's breakfast and takes care of adults who are moderately *... active physically. •- The medium breakfast consists of •sa ". fruit, cereal, eggs or their equivalent, • bread and beverage. It is suitable for school children, adults who are active physically and those who take very little luncheon at noon. The heavy breakfast adds an extra hot dish to the medium breakfast menu. Persons who are engaged in strenuous muscular work and those whose total food requirements for the day are high need this kind of meal. For Inactive Persons Keeping these classifications in mind, it is simple to plan one break- fast menu which will meet the needs of all members ef a family no mat- ter how diversified their interests. The inactive person may merely re- fuse the extra dishes and concentrate on the light or medium items. The child's breakfast should fur- nish every necessary element for proper nourishment. His stomach has been without food for the long- est period during the twenty-four hours, and is ready for a meal which will supply food for energy since an active child uses up a vast amount of nervous and muscular energy dur- ing the day. F,ruit or fruit jiiiee hot or. cold cereal with cream or top milk, milk or• Cocpapna e with milk,. ing * VALUABLE USES or . • ICE AND ICE AVATER Toa great ninny people, ice has become simply a means of making summer drinks refreshingly cold. We're apt to overlook the many valuable uses of ice and ice water, as well as cold, in the household, laundry and sickroom. Hera are a few suggestions: A chilled knife will cut meringues, cakes and piee' in neat, even slices, without sticking. Simply dip the knife in cold water each time before cutting a slice in a meringue -covered pie, and you will have evenly cut slices. Iced water is used to thaw out frozen fish before it is cooked. Several minutes' standing in cold or ice water stakes hard -cooked eggs easy to shell. Ice water washes the salt from butter that is to be used in making pastry. Cold makes cream whip better and easier. Place cream, bowl, and whipper in the refrigerator a while before whipping cream. Ice water and chilled utensils make pastry marc tender and flaky. Cold makes bread that is too fresh, "firm" for sandwich cutting. Place bread in electric refrigerator an hour and it will resemble day-old bread when .cut. Angel -food cake also cuts easier after placing a while in the refrigerator. Cold sets the flavor in dishes such as soups and stews. Store these dishes in the refrigerator and re- heat for second serving. Chilling makes cookie dough easier to roll, and permits using less flour. Ice cubes folded into a dampened soft muslin or cheese cloth make an excellent face pack to stimulate the skin. Cold storage in the refrigerator makes facial cold cream go farther. Ice water applied to face and hands is first aid in fainting. Ice water compresses are the best bandage for an eye which. has been injured or cut by a foreign particle. until the doctor comes. Ice water baths and ice packs are used to reduce the patient's ternpeea- ture in case of sunstroke. Soaking a new toothbrush in cold water overnight will prevent the bristles from loosening until the. brush is ready to be discarded. Cold or ice water helps remove grass stains. Moisten stain with cold water and cover it with soda, let stand for two „hours, and then rinse out in warm water. Cold water removes egg stains on dishes or cloths. Dishes which have contained eggs should always be rinsed in cold water before putting in hot soap suds. Cold water loosens the dirt in clothes. Make a suds of cold water to soak clothes before laundering. Cold water poured over frozen plants may save them. Cover the plants with newspapers and set in a dark place several days. Chilled air sometimes offers quick acute condition, temporary relief may be had by putting the head inside a refrigerator which holds relief to hay -fever sufferers. In an temperatures well below 50 degrees. * * EGGS IN MANY GUISES ENRICH VEGETABLE MEALS Eggs are always good as a substi- tute for .meat. Only, when you feature eggs in the meal proper, be careful no to serve an egg -y dessert such as a custard or souffle. All vegetables combine deliciously with eggs, and scrambled or poached eggs'. and 'a". cisitslieteasiteci make a fine 1.1111, clinlie•aCkelisek" ,a04five.;'43 ter - .On, a toasted feundatien. • Eggs, Chilean style, are piquant and appetizing. Try them for dinner some evening. Eggs Chilean Style Two cups chopped fresh tomatoes, Y2 cup grated cheese, cup chipped dried beef, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 2 tablespoons shredded green pepper, 1 teaspoon paprika, 1 tablespoon but- ter, 4 eggs, 4 squares hot buttered toast, fresh cresa. Press tomatoes through a coarse sieve to remove seeds. Add cheese, dried beef, finely chopped, onion, pepper and paprika. Cook over a slow fire until cheese is melted. Add butter and eggs slightly beaten. Stir and cook until eggs are just set. Serve on hot buttered toast and sur- round with water cress. The tang of the cress is perfect with the egg and cheese combination. Egg and ham timbales are econ- omical but are so ';.dressy" in ap- pearance that you could serve them at a guest luncheon. Egg and Ham Timbales Four eggs, 4, teaspoon salt, few grains pepper, 14 teaspoon onion juice, 1 cup finely chopped ham, 1 cup milk, six rounds of toast. Beat eggs until light. Add re- maining ingredients and niix thor- oughly. Turn into individual, well buttered timbale molds and place on many thicknesses of paper in a pan of hot water. Bake in a moderate les FU MANCI- U 111, ' A Little Joke The Right Hon. Davide., eHseorge, famous British statesman, and his wife and daughter, Miss Megan Lloyd George, who retViii initiated as a bard, attended the National Eisteddford, Wales' age-old annual festival of p rid music, which was held this year at Caernarvon, This photo shows a bit of Bardic good humor. .to right: David Lloyd George, Dame Margaret Lloyd George, Miss Megan Lloyd George and 3 al Assheton Smith, Mayor of Caernarvon. oven for 45 minutes or until to the touch. Turn each timbale to a round of buttered toast and round with cremated peas. Gar with tiny sprigs of parsley and s at once. Peach Fritters Three or four peaches, 1 cup 11, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 3 ta'i spoons sugar,S.S. teaspoon salt, cup milk, 1 egg. Pare peaches and cut in thin sliS Mix and sift flour,- salt, sugar *1 baking powder. Beat egg until with milk. Stir in dry ingredie and when well blended and smo" add sliced peaches. Drop from sp in deep hot fat heated to 370 grees F. on a fat thermometer hot enough to brown an inch bread in sixty seconds. Drain crumpled paper and serve with ra berries crushed and sweetened. * * * MAKING CURTAINS FOR A FRENCH WINDO The French window which is rea ly a long narrow glass door, Wi no small casement windows on eitl side of it, needs only a simple pair floor length curtains, and a fini across the top. This finish can be a flat pel co Sunday School L sson LESSON XII — September 22 JAMES (A GREAT CHRISTIAN LEADER).—Acts 15 : 1-21; James 1 : 1-17. GOLDEN TEXT—Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he hath been approved, lie shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord promised to them that love him. James 1 : 12. * sensual pleasure. Adversity and per -d secution expose man to the evil soli-‘ citation of his lower nature. In both, desire tempts the will to depart' from what it knows to be the will.; of God. ) "Then the lust, when it hath eoneeived, bearath sin : and the shit} when it is full-grown, bringeth. forth! death." Desires never remain dor-', matt, They are alive and perwerfule's they grow; they lead on to other things. "13e not deceived, my beloved! brethren." Cf. Gal, 6 :' 7. Satan is liable to deceive men into believing; that those truths and laws which have just stated are non-existent, "Every good gift and every pe - feet gift is from above." The two nouns are different in the Greek;i the first expressing the abstract act of givingthe second, the gift actually bestowed. The perfection afl ; as the one flows from the goodness of the other, "Coming down from the; Father of lights." James would have) us to know that God. is the father; of all forms of light, moral, intellect -a ual and spiritual. "With whom can: be no variation, neither shadow that) is east by turning," The best mostand! perfect of all gifts has come; from above—the unspeakable gift+ of God's clear Son, and, with the' gift of his own Son, he gives you the gift of the Holy Spirit. -- --- "What made you a multi -million- aire ?" a reporter asked of a big razor blade magnate. "My wife," answered the man of sharp practices. "Ah, her tactful help and advice' in times of great need, I suppose?" "Nothing of the sort. I was just' curious to see if there was any iu come my wife couldn't live beyond.' the wind and tossed." Lack of faith is virtually snaking God a liar. "For let not that man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord." Whether the word Lord here refers to the Father or to the Som is difficult to determine. Possibly, however, the word was used without the thought of a distinction between the divine persons. "A doubleminded man, unstable in all his ways," Doubleminded is a most expressive word, as if the man had two souls; one trusting, the other doubting; one for and the other against. The double -minded nian whom St. James has in mind is the man whose moral nature is enfeebled' by the vacillation and double -hearted condition of his own soul. "But let the brother of low degree glory in his high estate." The brother of low estate is, of course, the one who is either exceedingly poor, or without prominent place in a community or in the life -of the Church. He is a child of God through Christ, heir of eternal blessedness; instead of resenting his poverty and being discontented with his ob- scurity, let him remember that he is • a prince and glory in it. trasting one, repeating sornethin :tilis city also. "And the rich, in that he is made of the curtain material, or a else in the room; or a painted. ply' : "James, a servant of God and of low : because as the flower of the wood one—enchanting if. well done the Lord Jesus Christ." It is sign- grass he shall pass away." How ninny rich men have, M the last four years, or mirror glass. *os * . ificant that the author does not speak since the terrible depression which The French door with casemen f himself athe brother of the windows on either side, in Subtle. Lord. It was more to be bond -servant has come upon our land, known Nvhat other story. • ban or country houses, is quite a sef God .and of the Lord Jesus Christ . it is to be made low! In this one is also to rejoice, because it compels : the flesh. "To the twelve tribes which him to see that he may lose every- ticated curtains of chintz, cretonnn his needs unsophis :than to be brother of the Lord after folkweave, slob repp, or linen, an ;.are of the Dispersion." "Greeting." thing, and that he is just as "de- -FLOOR IS DANGEROUS.' .. ,* brothei would address to other mem- amazing how many truths the writer ts-941.11eleseee7iteeeemia_me4,11, pendent upon God* as the poorest of door and sill length at , the side Vrine '"''ci ' should be floor length at the FrenchThe literal meaning of the word is his children. *C7iiligirrIiiitritiarertii';Wtaiii mi..;;10 ., r i a form of approach*to a sefl, stYri Y. 4gpereeeh, wieerT, asea eewithereth the. "Poi: the sun arja„eth -with and the grace of'the,fashion a it „dows. A box -pleated 'meta:dn. r g. ---sTr-'.' .2-ene brethren." -n i ' . Meseesesese-seeeesteelee set. se Siiihe • i a strictly defined society perisheth : so also shall the rich man LOOSE MAT ON POLISHED ' ' 'Si:eh as the Jewish or the Christian fade away in his goings." It is * * * * are certainly 'hers whom he recognizes as equals. of this Epistle illustrates from the Polished floors a guarantee of cleanliness in the"When ye fall into manifold tempt- scenes of nature. The love of nature ations.". It should be noticed that the which runs through them was, no house. And polished floors, provided Word temptations in the margin is doubt, remembered .and cherished in we know them to be polished, are translated trials. It is a word used, the village home at Nazareth, and it not exactly a .direct source of don- . in Et'general sense, of proving and forms another link between St. ger, for like, Agag, we can go deli - eatery over them. But the polished testing, and thus also of adversity, James and his divine Brother. floor when its polish is con of affliction sent to prove or test a "Blessed is the man that endureth cealecl Man's character. temptation; for when he hath been may be very ,dangerous. A loose ' "Knowing that the proving of your approved." Approved here means mat on a polished floor is a thing efaith worketh patience." Patience tested and found genuine, as metals to be avoided, for it is xtremely liable to slip away from the feet . here implies not only' mere passive are tested to prove their worth. "He of the unwary person, causing him to submission, but the perseverance shall receive the crown of life, which fall heavily. whieh does not falter under suffer- the Lord promised to them that love It is the suddenness with which a ing,' in the midst of the trials and him." A crown is given to the victor, temptations of which James is here and, in many cases, is worn by those mat on a polished floor will slip from who are truly kings. Thus a crown under a person that is disconcerting. polished. A person is so liable to ' A:peaking. entire, lacking in nothing." The form "Let no man say when he is dangerous is a mat "And let patience lave its perfect speaks of both triumph and sov- Particularlyplaced just at the foot of a stair- work, that ye may be perfect and ereignty. case if the floor of the hall is highly of the counsel•implies that the work tempted, I am tempted of God." Thus might be hindered unless the will of did Adam insinuate that he fell be - run clown stairs and step on to the those„who were called to suffer co_ cause of God's gift to him Of Eve mat which flies from under him, so that he falls heavily on his back operate with the divine purpose. (Gen. 3 : 12); cf. Prov. 19 : 3; 30 : and strikes his head on the stairs l3ut if any of you lacketh wisdom, 8, 9. "For God cannot be tempted ' let him ask of God, who giveth to with evil, and be himself tempteth all liberally and upbraideth not; and no man.” He who was absolutely it shall be given him." Wisdom 15 righteous could not be the originator more than knowledge and is better. of sin. He tries men, but does not Man may have extensive and ac- tempt them. Curate knowledge, and, at the saine "But each man is tempted, when time, be anything but wise. he is drawn away by his own lust, "But let him 'ask in faith, nothing and enticed." Lust, or rather, desire, 3 doubting : for he that doubteth is in its widest sense, includes desire , :like the surge of the sea driven by for safety, riches, ease, as well as i THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time—The council at Jerusalem -took place at some time between A. D. 47 and A.D. 52, the date being de- termined by the particular chron- ological scheme the student chooses to follow. It fell between the first md second missionary journeys. The :date of the Epistle of James cannot definitely be determined. It was no doubt -written before the council at Jerusalem. Some place it as early as 45 A.D. Place—The council of ,Jerusalem took place in the Holy City. No .doubt James wrote his Epistle froni y Sax Roh ,,),W 1 th tho remorseless ItOlcories "of Fu Manchu's murders harrowing my mind, 'A-maw:1411e house of his hitest victim. The shadow of that giant evil seemed to lie upon it like a palpable cloud. I ran up the steps and rang the bell • . '0140r ft Rohm and hd. 01111YindkaN9 • . , . , • Whenever you commend, add your leeeens for doing so; it is this whieh distinguishes the aprobation of a man of sense from the flattery of sycophants and the admiration of fools.—Steele. Darling School Wear er S; For wear in school, here is a darling dress of warm rust novel- ty woolen. If, however, it is not school wear which is required, other materials will render the model suitable for various occasions. For instance, black wool-like silk with gay accent in velveteen bow and buttons, would be most at- tractive. Style No. 3256 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19 years. Size 15 requires 3% yards of 39 - inch material. HOW TO ORDER PATTgRNS Write your name and addrese. plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15e in stamps or coin (corn prefer- • red; wrap it carefully), and ad- dress your order to Wilsert tern Service, 73 West Adelaidk.,', Street, Toronto. . THE SEVERED FINGER—Cadby's Visitor. - Cd hVes-tan'ailady h '9;aietOci ,rne with a queer inixtu're 'a fear and 7311°. aEvet:*biiitlgritneir''I saaTboDur. tPyeofruie"1 s4 r ledgt"and Mr. fho'pol—r, bray °lid!" she murmured. 'There wsa terrible waling at the back of the house last night," the woman told me ex. i3 citedly as we entered the hail, "And 1 heerd it a g alp tongh+, a Is ec o ,kofere you .t rang Fu Manchu l A da. coif had wailed in the lane whon Sir Crichton reavey died, • . I cold the' o I d d y what I con- sidered necessary about Cadby's 'cl a a th, and pre. to my astonishment; her grief was lost in embar- rassment. Then the truth came outir She prated shakily up the stairs, and stammered: 'here's a—young lady —rn his robins., sirl"