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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1935-09-26, Page 3Wedding In Newfoundland IBJ EMERGENCY TASTIES Here' are two receipts for deligh ful dishes which require only a re leftovers and the ordinary staples o the pantry, ice box and emergenc alien!. Try them when unexpeete company arrives, or when you desir Seinething "different": Roast Boston 1 tablespoon onion, minced 2 tablespoons fat 2 cups baked beans, mashed 1 egg slightly beaten Salt, pepper, paprika 2 cups cracker or dry bread crumb Vs cup cooked tomatoes 3-4 cup mustard• pickle, finely chop ped Cook onion in fat until tender. Ad remaining ingredients. Season t taste. Blend thoroughly. Turn int greased loaf .pan. . Bake in moderat oven (350 degrees F.) 40 'minutes. Corned Beef Hash Puffs 2 cups co.nedybeei hash 2 eggs 2 tablespoons ohopped dill pickles 1,4 cup water Parsley 1-3 cup catsup Add well -beaten egg yolks to corned beef leash and mix thoroughly. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites and drop hash mixture by spoonfuls onto but- tered baking sheet. Place under broil- er and brown. Combine catsup, chop- ped pickles and water, and heat to make a sauce. Top puffs with hot sauce, garnish with parsley and serve immediately. AUTUMN BANANA DiSHES Now that bananas are plentiful and inexpensive. you may enjoy these dee lightfiltl Pasties as often as you wish. Try them and you will immediately place both recipes in your permanent file. t. w �1 d e s. d 0 0 e Bananas en Casserole 6 small bananas 1 glas.; currant or grape jelly 1 cup boiling water 1 lemon. Peel the bananas. Remove the coarse threads and divide in quarters, cutting first crosswise and "then lengthwise, Place in a greased cas- serole and pour over thein -a sauce made by melting the currant or grape( jelly r the boiling- Water and, mii;-i ,g. •ritil i' the :Wee o a, 1enlmn°.'C„ ov�"„,- ,e1, lie • ease+:'ii'f'e ',dirt laff ln'i1� the banana•, are tender. The: 'coyer may. be'-. oniored at the last anomeel,eand, the bananas sprinkled with' gi tula- ted sugar and allowed to brown slightly. Serve as an entree with game, mutton or beef. Banana Fritters 6 bananas 2 tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons orange juice Fritter batter Peel bananas, cut each in two and Spilt each half, Place the ,kiieces in a bawl with eugnr and orange juice and le; there stand for one hour. Drain the fruit, clip in batter and fry in deep fat. STILL MORE WAYS TO USE TOMATOES When tormxtoef are big and meaty and rich red, serve them every day . plain raw, in salads or cooked. A grand combination is veal cut- lets with grilled tomatoes. Of course, whan you serve evoked tomatoes. you can't serve there as a salad, but cab- bage is gond now and then, and a cabbage salad with sour cream dress- ing adds ju.t the right touch to this menu. Grilled Tomatoes s *a Wash tonfates and cut in slices about % inch thick. Sprinkle lightly with sugar, sat and pepper and dip in fine cracker crumbs. Brown quick_ ly in la t cr in a frying pan on one sine and then on the other. Serve at • once, Veal Cutlets Veal' steak cut %, inch thick, 1 egg. 2 teaspoons melted butter, mine dried bread crumbs. 1 teaspoon salt, 1/4 tea- spocn popper, 1 cup water. Cu'. the eteak in neat pieces about the size .of a silver dollar. Season with salt and pepper and clip in melt- ed butter. Roll in crumbs, dip in egg slightly beaten and roll again in crumbs. Saute until well browned on both sides, Adda water, cover closely and simmer slowly for forty-five minutes. It the oven is going for bake ing, cook the cutlets,_ closely covered in, the oven. Serve with the gravy in the pan. Baked Tomatoes and Cheese This is a splendid luncheon dish. serve it with toasted rolls `and a fresh ;fruit salad. Iced chocolate or iced tea may accompany it. Fotir firm large tomatoes, 1 cup soft bread crumbs, ir/, pound Canadian or Swiss cheese, % teaspoon salt, lj.c . tea:poon pepper, % teaspoon mus.:l tard, 1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, 4 thin slices bacon. atash tomatoes and :scoop out seeds, Season bread crumbs with salt, pepper. mustard and Worcestershire i sauce. Slice cheese in thin slivers, Put alternate layers of cheese and crumbs in scooped out tomatoes un- til filled to the top. Put a strip of bacon across each tomato. Put in a shallow 'pan with a little water in • the bottom and bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven ('75 degrees F.) Another good tomato and cheese dish is'in the form of a scallop, Scalloped Tomatoes and Cheese Four firm tomatoes, i/e cup bread crumbs, 4 tablespoons grated cheese butter, salt and pepper, sugar. Wash tomatoes and out out stens end. Cut in thick slices and fry slowly in butter. Put them ' carefully in a shallow baking dish, sprinkle with salt, pepper and sugar and cover with cheese mixed with bread crumbs. Dot generously with butter and bake in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) until brown on. top. Serve from baking dish. This tomato dish is especially good with baked fish. It's also an ex. eellent lent vegetable dish for when you plan to be out in the afternoon. You see the tomato slices can be cooked and arranged iu the baking dish all ready to slip in the oven for browning the last few Minutes while you are setting the table. . CANDY FOR LUNCH? "-aaea.uc r xta - tr-:re .n'y-`Valtel,ble place in the school lunch. For sugar is quickly turned to energy and two or three pieces of candy for dessert are not only tempting but invigorating. Bei'e are Some new candy receipes that need no cooking. The work is al- most (hone bef„re you start because the sweetened condensed milk is a blend of ;agar and whole milk which has been cooked down until it is as rich and thick as cream. in five minutes' kitchen duty, you can turn out a batch of dainties that will de- light the youngsters' sweet tooth. Walnut Fruit Loaf 2 cups raisins 1 cup walnut meats 1,/,, cup sweetened condensed milk Put raisins and nut meats through food chopper. Add sweetened conden- sed milk, blending tsoreeghly. Scrape Mixture into buttered lean which Las been sprinkled with confectioners' sugar, snaootliing out. Sprinkle top with confectioners' sugar. Chili. Cut into squares for serving. Orange Cocoanut Bails 21/2 cups. confectioner' sugar • 1J4 cup sweetened condensed milk 2 teaspoons orange juice 2 teaspoons grated orange rind 1 cup shredded cocoanut Measure sugar after silting; blend with sweetened condensed milk, orange juice and orange rind. Drop from teaspoon into shredded cocoa- nut; roll in small balls. Place in re- frigerator or cool place for several Flours. TOOTHSOME I With fresh peaches on the market, n good recipe for a dessert -cake dish is a boom to every honsewile --• and eaaaseeeseeasteasel Photographed during the wedding reception in the garden at "Fontenay,” Topsail, the summer home in Newfoundland of the Hon. P. C. Alder•ice, former premier of the Island; the group is composed of Mr, and Mrs. Cyril Henry Carrington Harmer and the attendants at their wedding, which took place in St., Andrew's Presbyterian Church, St. John's, Nfld., recently.. The bride, formerly Miss Elizabeth Boyd Baird, is daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. John Boyd Baird, of St. John's, and Mr. Harmer is a son of Mr, and Mrs. H. R. Harmer, of Surbiton, Surrey, England., In the group with the bride and groom are the bride's sister, Miss Phyllis Boyd Baird, and her .cousins, Miss Kathleen Ayre, Miss Frances Aird, Miss l3etty Ross and Miss Margaret Baird; Mr. Gordon A. Winter, who was best man,, and Messrs. Stewart Ayre, Harold Alderice, Lewis Ayre and James McNab, ushers, Mr, and Mrs. Harmer sailed from Montreal for England. UNDAY SHOO 1 JOHN (THE MINISTER AND HiS PEOPLE). — 3 John. GOLDEN TEXT -- Beloved, imitate not that which is evil, but that which is good. He that doeth good is of God: he that doeth evil hath not seen God. 3 John 11. THE LESSON IN TTS SETTING TIME — The Apostle John was born probably about the time of. the Lord Jesus, 3 or 4 B.B., and lived un- til ainfo:t the close of the century, at leant to 90 a.D. PLACE — The Third Epistle of Jchn does not tell from what city: John was writing. It was probably from Ephesus, "The elder unto Gains the beloved, whom I love. in truth." There are three men in the New Testament by the came of Gaius in addition to the one mentioned here — Gaius of Ma- cedonia (Acts 19;29); Gaius of Corinth (Ro20;e m 1,6:23 , Gahm of De4i leActs w „ .., "Beloved" This Word the :Apostle uses ten times in his three Epistles, but it is not found once in his Gos- pel. "I pray that in an things thou mayest prosper and be in health." This verse is. good authority for pray - it's made with one egg. Peach Upside Down Cake 1% cup sifted cake flour ii/ teaspoons baking powder zj teaspoon salt 3%, cup granulated sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 tablespoons butter 2 cups :sliced peaches 4 tablespoons softened ,butter of. or other shortening 1 egg, well beaten JJs cup milk aa cup brown sugar, firmly packed Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt and sugar 'and sift together three times. Acid butter. Combine egg, milk and vanilla. Add to flour mixture, stirring until- alt Belli* is dampened; then beat vigor- ously 1 minute. Melt 4 tablespoons buster in SxSx2 inch pan or 8 -inch skillet, over low name. Add brown •sugar (1/b teaspoon nutmeg may be mixed with brown sugar, if desired); stir until melted. On this arrange peaeh slices. Turn batter over contents of pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 50 minutes, or until done. Loosencake from sides o:f pan with spatula. Serve upside down wi:li peaches on top. Garnishwith whipped cream. 3 FU MANCHU ing 'for temporal blessings for our `friends. "Even as thy soul prosper- eth." The one thing which makes a man's soul Healthy is to get Jesus Christ into it. "For I rejoiced greatly, when brethren came and bare witness un- to thy truth, even as thou walkest in truth." Truth covers every sphere of lite, moral, intellectual, spiritual. • "Greater joy have I none than this, to hear of my children walking in the truth." The children here are those Christians committed to John, mem- bers of the churches confided to his care and placed under his direction. "Beloved, thou Joest a faithful work in whatsoever thou doe:t toward thein that are brethren and strangers withal". See Mat. 25:35. Gaius was, no doubt, famous for his hospitality 'to Christians who were travelling through. the city of his residence. ' "Who bare witness to thy' love be- -,..w well to get forward on their journ-ey. worthily of God." The word here translated 'send on' "is the term for the provident dismissal of a guest whom we provide with what is need- ful for his •further' journey (itus 3 : 13, Rom. 15 : 24; I Car. 16 : 6, II-. 'YBecause that for the salsa of the Nance they went forth." Neither the War 'Christ' or 'Jesus' appears in this Epistle, but certainly 'ehe Name' here refers to the Lord Jesus Christ. "Taking nothing of the Gentiles." They carried out as their rule of mis- sion work the Pauline custom of re- fusing support from those amongst hwom they were working as' mission- eries. They had, therefore, a special claim on the hospitality and help of the churches in places through which :they kad to pass. "We therefore ought to welcome .such, that we may be fellow -work- ers - for the truth." He who has al- nost no enthusiastic regard for raise aeons has not the spirit of primitive Christianity within hs breast. "1 wrote somewhat unto tite church" The most natural interpretation of the words is that the elder wrote to the Church a letter of similar content to the private letter Giau::, but, know- ing' the power of Diotrephes to op- pose his wishes, he wrote a private letter to Gaius, a member of the Church on whose loyalty he could thoroughly depend. "But Diotrepbes, who loveth to have the pre! xinence among them, reeeiveth us nett" Cf. Matt. 20 : 28, Diotrephes was one who had ob- tained great power in the Church to which John was addressing this third Epistle. "Therefore, if I conte, I will bring to rememberance his works which he doeth, prating against us with wicked words: and not content there- with, neither doth he himself receive the brethren. and them that would he forbiddeth and easteth them out of the church." An elaboration of the charge made against this man in the preceding verse. "Beloved, imitate not that which is evil, but that which is good." The real danger to the Church lay, not in this man's despotic ways, but in the infectious nature of ,his tyranny. "He that doeth good is of God: he that doeth evil hath not seen God." He has God as the source of his mor- al and spiritual life; he is a child of God. In its highest sense, this is true only of him who 'went about doing good,' but it is true 111 a lower sense of every earnest Christian, "Demetrius hath the witness of all men, and of the truth itself: yea, we also bear witness; and thou knowest that our witness is true." The truth of God, the divine rule for the walk of all believers, "was the mirror in which the walk of' Denie- tries was reflected, so that the mir- ror seemed to place in a clear light his Christian virtue and uprightness, and thus to bear witness to him: ftry Jae cZ-„AxLu i1Srik'S ,' t�o thee, but I am unwilling o wnl e rem to thee with ink and pen: But f hope shortly to see thee, and we shall speak face to face. Peace be onto thee. The friends salute thee. Salute the friends by name,” The phrase 'by name' occurs only once again in the New Testament, 'he calleth his own sheep by name' (John 10 : 3). St. John as shepherd of the churches of Asia would imitate the Good Shep- herd and know all his sheep by, name. Potato Standards To Be Improved Fredericton, N. B. --- Improved methods of gathering, packing and shipping New Brunswick's potato crop with the purpose of fnaking a stronger appeal to outside markets is the object of an educational cam- paign launched by the Provincial Department of Agriculture under Hon. A. C. Taylor. The department believes that New Brunswick potatoes have suffered needless deterioration before reach- ing the consumer. Pull time duty of a department of agriculture offi- cial will be to promote educational work among growers and shippers, and to seek additional outlets for the disposal of table and seed stocks, "Through the use of better meth- ods of handling and shipping I and confident we can interest bigger and better markets in New Brunswick potatoes," said Mr. Taylor. Milk Diet For Obesity G. A. Harrop describes in the; Journal of the American Medical As- I sociation two methods of using ban- anas and milk as a reducing diet. In' the first, one or two ripe bananas? with one glass of whole milk con-' stitute the entire breakfast and lunch" means fir an indefinite period. With this the evening meal is more or less restricted, consisting of clear soup, a slice of lean meat (alter- atively fish or fowl), vegetables, a slice of bread and butter, and a por-' tion of uncooked fruit. She'll Love This Delightful for those charmed years between 8 to 14, is this adorable little dress with smock- ing and pretty new cut. The sriginal was carried out in deep warm red wool crepe. Again you can make it in a noveI- ty woolen in checks or plaid, and it looks darling. Style No. 3258 is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 12 requires 3 yards of 39 - inch material with 1% yards of 4 - inch ribbon for belt. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15c in stamps or coin (corn prefer- red; wrap it carefully), and ad- dress your order to Wilson Pat- tern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, By Sax Roluner ,eo girl came and waited for Mr. Cadby Iasi night," 111 l adlady said as .1 t;) t t 'airs. !naming she came again, and the third time an hour ago. Not the kind of girl I'd want a son of mine fo take up with . gut those dark eyes..'." THE SEVERED FINGER -The Girl Againl' r:4 :6 �,r �r, - gill rtrall tY A j. r� ��++ 1 ,1 ip5 :r snoi Rniuner and 'ri,q 001 S'5 nciib, enc.. . }, �'p.. Gould 1 forgo! +h5'dtirk t�,. ,, o ,,..:.�ror, eyes of the strange girl who had give°�i'tne a deadlyimos. sage that night of the Layaf kiss --and told me to beware? .,Was that lure of man oven now in the house,. completing her evil work? The wailing of Mo dacoit-it was surely a warning of a stranger's approach .. ) akasoft e rut kinig the head '.'of the stairs. The girl ilas stealing _Pet lab of Me -she fled 1 !eyed, and bounded hee" rom into t'"aba'e' al. most at her heels. She cowered against the desk, a slim figure in a clinging silk gown tr, t111) kt, t \Al tips' rearenhance if it�, startling beauty and 04 to even more dealing . brile Bence the wonderful eyes of this modern Aelilsh:r , t ,`.'So I tame inIfirne," I I said grimly,'cnd turned the",, koy in Thekick ' iv eeee