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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1945-03-08, Page 7This 2O -page booklet every woman will want.,, The new Kellogg's'"Weight Con- ' tfrol Plan" gives you vital facts on menu planning and holding your "`ideal" weight, Scientifically prepared weight -control menus (at three caloric levels) for every day in the week. Pre - red by competent authorities, this booklet can help you and your husband look your best, feel your best. You will find the new Kellogg's e<"lWeiglit Control Plan" packed Inside the top of every package of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN—the delicious food that aids natural regularity. Get your copy at your grocer's now. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON N • December 17 CHRISTIAN LIVING AT ITS BEST Galatians 5:22-6:10. GOLDEN TEXT—If we live by the Spirit, by the Spirit let us also walk. Galatians 5:25. Fruit of the Spirit "By their fruit ye shall know 11hem" were the words of Jesus, Ind in the lesson today We find, .!Paul writing to the Galatians about the fruit of the spirit -filled life. A fruit tree to bear true fruit must be a graft from a particular type of tree, and if we are to bear true fruit, we too must have grafted into us the 'life of Christ. This takes place on our acceptance of Jeeps as Lord and Saviour. The transformation which takes place on the inside when we are born again, is soon quite notice- able on the outside by the fruit we bear. The fruit of the spirit is the great need of the world today. Love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meek- ness, temperance: against such there Is no law." If we all were believers in the Lord Jesus, and bearing the fruit of the new life in Christ, there would be no need for laws. Victory Over The Flesh Those who are in Christ no long- er desire the temporal satisfaction of the flesh, for the sinful nature and old desires were crucified with Christ. The believer. lives in the spirit, and is to walk in the spirit. The law which required obedience for life and righteousness, brought about much pride and vain glory, Faith in Christ humbles and pro- motes a spirit of lowliness and tol- erance. Paul calls upon the Galatians to love their brothers and if one coat - mit an offence, to forgive him in love, bearing in mind that they too might be tempted and fail. Jesus said to love our neighbor as our- self, and if we have this love shed abroad in otir hearts we would gladly bear one another's burdens. As God Sees Us How easy it is for us to become puffed up when prosperity comes our way. "Ve may feel that we are better than our poor neighbor. Paul writes that we deceive our- selves thinking that we are some- thing when we are nothing. Let ass consider ourselves as God sees ass, rather than according to our own thoughts; prove every word and deed with God's standard, for some day we must stand before the ,,ludgnent seat of Christ. We cannot fool God, so let us not deceive ourselves by thinking so. "Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap." There is no exception, regardless of what we may think or hope. If we sow to the flesh, yielding to the desires of She natural man, we will reap cor- ruption. However, if we sow to the spirit, walking in the light of God's word, we shall reap eternal life. Harvest time seems a long way off from spring plowing, but in tine time it arrives. May we not grow weary in well doing, know - kg that if we faint not, a time of reaping will conte. Take advan- tage of every opportunity of doing good, and especially to our broth- ers and sisters in Christ. Own ISSUE 51-1944 °°k P4rdd>'rifis nd Spice And All Things Nice "You know well enough that chicken, turkey, goose or some other favoritie "main course" will appear on your table at Christmas. You know how to prepare this. Why should I offer suggestions? But here are some suggestions for a salad, a dessert and cup calces that may appeal to you. Carotene Salad Toss together lightly with 2 forks: 1% cups orange pieces V% cups finely cut carrot cup raisins Add desired salad dressing to moisten. Serve on lettuce or shredded cabbage and garnish with 34 cup chopped peanuts. Cranberry Sauce Upside Down Cake 1V4 cups sifted cake flour . 1% teaspoons double-acting baking powder x. teaspoon salt cup sugar 4 tablespoons butter or other shortening egg, well beaten cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 cups cranberry sauce Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder salt, and sugar, and sift together three times. Cream shortening. Add ley ingredients, egg, milk, and vanilla and stir until ail flour is dampened; then' teat vigorously 1 minute. Spread cranberry sauce in bot - torn of greased 8x8x2-inch pan. Cover witih cake batter. Bake in moderate oven (350 F,)- 50 min- utes, or until done. Loosen cake from sides of pan with knife or spatula. Turn upside down on dish with cranberrysauce on top. Gar- nish with whipped cream, if de- sired. Note: For best results, have all ingredients at room temperature before mixing. Christmas Candle Cakes 1% cups sifted cake flour 14 teaspoons double-acting baking powder IA cup butter or other shortening 1 cup sugar - 2 eggs, well beaten cup milk 1 teaspoon. lemon or vanilla extract. Sift flour once, measure, add . baking powder and sift together three tines. • Cream butter thor- oughly, add sugar gradually, and cream together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, then flour, alter- nately with milk, a small amount at a time, beating after each addi- tion until smooth. Add flavoring. Turn. into. greased cup -cake pans, filling them % full, Bake in moder- ate oven (375 F.) 20 minutes, or until done. Cool. Cover each cake with a seven minute frosting. Ar- range on large "platter and insert candle holder with tiny red candle in ' each calve. Light candles just 'before serving. Makes 2 dozen cakes. 1 Women As Good Workers .• As Men In Britain's war industry one woman's effort has equaled that of one man, writes Melita Spraggs .in the Christian Science Monitor. This now has Leen stated cate- gorically for the first time by the Minister of Labor Mr. Ernest Bevin, after careful study of the output figures for Britain's 7,500,000 mobilized women. When conscription of women was being considered, Mr. Bevin said he estimated it would take three women to do the work of two men. With the co-operation of every- one along the line, the production engineers and the men who have trained the women, Mr. Bevin re- • ported that "women have been equal to one per one". When Mr. Bevin took office in 1940, it was hoped that 5,000,[)00 women could be transferred from domestic and peacetime industry. Actually, orderly conscription of women resulted in the mobiliza- tion of 7,500,000. Nylon rope, used to pick up and tow gliders behind airplanes, can stretch nearly a third without breaking. Helps Check C You can often cheek a cold quickly if you follow these instructions. Just as soon as you feel the cold com- ing on and experience headache, pains in the back or limbs, soreness through the body, take a Paradol tablet, a good frig drink of hot lemonade or ginger tea and go to bed. The Paradol affords almost immed- iate relief from the pains and aches and helps you to get off to sleep. The dose may be repeated, if necessary, accord- ing to the directions. If there is sore- iaeas of the throat, garde with two Paradol tablets dissolved to water. Just try Paradol the next time you have a told and we believe that you will be well pleased. Paradol does not disap- point. uickly Mr- GECRa By iwendoline P, Clarke w Partner and I have gone south for the winter—or maybe indefin- itely. We find the bright warm sun very welcome after the cold northern air. What part of the south, did you ask? Oh dear, I am afraid I have been misleading you. " You see, we are still in Ontario, still at Ginger Farin—I only mean that we moved our bedroom from the north end of the house to the south—and honest -to -goodness, it is almost like going to another country. * • * The room that was formerly our bedroom was sandwiched between the living -room and the dining - room. It had its advantages and its disadvantages, among them. the fact that we half froze in winter and sweltered in summer. That was before the advent of the furnace. Wit: the furnace we sweltered both summer and winter. It was impossible, because of its location, to keep the room cool enough- for. sleeping and yet have the rest of the house comfortably warm. Knowing this prompted Daughter to suggest one time when she was home, that we use the big south room as a bedroom. The idea had been at the back of my mind for some time but I had lacked cour- age to mention it—to ask a man to . move from one room to another is like trying to tear an oak tree up by its roots. But I finally got around to it—and you know the result. The south room ie twenty by twenty, and in addition to bed- room furniture it also contains an old square piano, a large table, my sewing machine and in one corner . a large stack of folding chairs which belong to .the Women's In- stitute and are left with us for storage. * * * Then there was our erstwhile bedroom to deal with. "What do you think you will do with this room?" asked Partner. The answer to that was more furniture to move! The room is long and narrow. One end ac- comodates spy typewriter table, a few shelves, two chairs,,, and the furnace smoke pipe. The other end holds a comfortable old studio couch a small table and a wicker chair, There is linoleum on the floor. The xoom is always warin and since there is nothing to spoil Partner knows he can sit in it any time --even in his overalls. And that is how I want it, I hope I never have a ho se so irnpeccalele that the only pla-:a a man feels comfortable is in the kitchen, As to that there is not much need for alarm. I ant very far from being the world's best housekeepper. T s lel II s Vistas Grave And Gay By T. B. Gleave In Vistas Grave and Gay we have a collection of poems to de- light the ear, to warm the heart, and to stir the imagination. T. B. Gleave is a people's poet. He has a way of putting his deep, human sympathy, his fine, mature emotion and his delightful humor into verses that sing, Indeed the volume is a book of songs of, the sort the people love—songs of love and home and patriotism; sheer, bubbling non- sense; again a song with tears in the under tones; and at least one hymn—or two. Wherever it goes we believe this book will carry a message of cheer and comfort and _inspiration. Vistas Grave and Gay . . . By T. B. Gleave .... Price 80c, post- age paid. A Poor Excuse Poor sermons may furnish the excuse for many (who do not go to church), but a poor one is bet- ter than none at all, says "the Guelph Mercury. There are many attractions in this modern age that lure folks away from worship. This is one of the problems of the mo- dern church,. and the cause may prove to be mote closely identified with the pew than with the put- pit. r-e•amoesec eams� m l fixes by DOROTHY TROWBRIDGE CHAPTER XVI However, it seemed unnecessary to run away. Evidently he was not coming to the rose garden. She heard hurried footsteps on the other side of the hedge, then she heard low voices near the corner back of the summer house. Stanley had probably come out to meet Maxine. They could not be seen from the house, here at the end. Even she could not see them, nor could she catch what they were saying. But she realized suddenly that it was not Maxine to whom, Stan- ley was talking. Both voices be- longed to men. She started for- ward in dismay. Harry! He had come back and Stanley had seed him and taken hint around the end of the hedge out of • sight of everyone to explain to him that she wanted to break the engagement, and would he come back" next week for the ring, and Harry was telling him there never had been an engagement and — oh, dear! What should she do? Would it be worse to go to therh and make her owh explanations or to slip out of c. the garden aiad be out of sight if they should glance in here. * * * Before she could decide Nancy rushed out of the front door ,and standing on the step looked about her anxiously, "Pidgel" she called "Pidge! Where are you?" She hurried down the steps aend into the garden. Peggy breathed again. Maybe after all it was only Pidge to whom Stanley was talking. "Isn't he here?" Nancy contin- ued, starting up the Oath towards Peggy. "I saw hint from the house coming up the drive, but he didn't conte in." As Peggy started to reply site heard the sound of running feet behind the hedge and an eager voice cried, "Here I am." Peggy's mouth remained open, and she stood as if petrified• with astonishment. Here ,lie was indeed. Harry—Harry and Nancy rushing tcwards each - other. Harry was • Pidge. Harry's ring ha ; been Nan- cy's. And sl a oh,--- good grief! "Gosh, honey, I was thrilled when you called me last night," he was saying to Nancy who in- terrupted him quickly, "Where is niy ring?" she asked, She was watching 'him intently and did not hear Peggy's "Oh" breathed in a woebegone whisper. Harry was the only one who seethed at ease. Taking the jeweler's bolt from his pocket he opened it and slipped the ring on the finger of his evidently surprised fiancee. "Where did you supppose it was?" he asked. "Ohl" both girls exclaimed. It would have been hard to tell which of them sounded the more aston- ished. "It's just like yours, isn't it, Peg- gy?" Nancy asked sweetly. Too sweetly. Harry had not noticed Peggy in the entrance of the sumer house and turned towards her now in em- barrassment. "I believe it is," Stanley, enter- ing the garden from the opposite side, answered for Peggy. • ' -. Nancy gave him a quick suspi- cious glance. "It's too bad you can't find yours," she continued, still watching Peggy. "But Peggy's has been found," Stanley explained. "I was just., bringing it to her." He drew a ring from his pocket and stood holding' it in his hand. It was an exact dupiiciate of Nancy's. "The one from Carver's, of course!" Peggy cried to herself. "He was there when Mr. Carver talked about making i.. It was he who bought it this afternoon." "You see they ate exactly alike. Strange, isn't it?" Stanley was say- ing. "But where?" Peggy exclaimed, glancing from one ring to the other. Stanley laughed. "Don't give me the credit, Mrs. Horton is the real detective. You didn't know, did you," addressing Peggy, "that for the past ten years she has been reading all of the best detective 1 books that she could buy? Some one I gave her one on her seventieth birthday and since sten she had read them regularly She thought you and Maxine were too young for them, so I think your grand- mother leas been reading them on the sly. She told nt, about them this afternoon." "The Monday express packages!" Peggy thought with an inward chuckle, * * * Stanley caught the twinkle in her eye, and- smiled at her, "I had a hard - time convincing her that a motion picture director could have half the brains of a good detective, but I think I finally put it over ' after I told her T, too, had a Weak— ness for detective stories. How- ever, she told me that even an amateur should have been able to find the ring, According to her, girls have always hidden their jewclery in the same place. So when she decided I had been given plet.ty of time to find itwithout any 'success, she dug it up herself, -'21N ;.!4;"i y,f; t f4�� 1 .�t��i�i: Y,�•.:l gt Po& bate maim a kkk of To I ccO Ch t,. ; ilk Helps Wire Hangers "Dolled Up" Garment Hang- ers Make Inexpensive and Attractive Gifts Wire garment hangers can easily be rnade both attractive and prac- tical for use. Buy, at a ten -cent store, a skein of chenille in any desired color and wind into a ball for conven- ient handling. Beginning - at the • tip of the hook, wind the chenille closely over and over the wire, leaving an end of about y4 inch where you start. Cover the hook Guess where? In the toe of one of Miss Nar.cy's evening slippers" That young lady had the grace to blush, "But who is the man you are going to marry, Peggy?" she de- manded. Stanley looked at Peggy. Peggy looked at Stanley. If there was a question in his eyes the answer in hers must have been the right one for he was smiling when he slipped the ring on her finger, "Whoni do you think?" he asked happily. (THE END) completely, being careful to wind the chenille very tight so that no wire shows. Continue in this man- ner until the entire hanger is cov- ered. As you proceed, push the wound portion back every few inches to insure complete cover- ing of the wire. It will be neces- sary to pass the ball of chenille over and under the wire as you work, but by keeping the ball wound tightly, allowing just en- ough play to work with comfort- ably, this won't be too bother- some. * * * When you have covered the en- tire surface and are back at the junction of hook and hanger, fas- ten securely and finish with a bow- knot of the chenille, 'With thread or silk of matching shade, sew the end of chenille, left where you :started, over and • through the tip - of the hook (this is usually of double wire). If the stitches are drawn tightly, they will scarcely show. * * * Two skeins of chenille; which comes in many delightful colors, will be sufficient to cover five hangers; and the work is very quickly done. No longer a nuisance the hangers will stay quietly i place and help to make the close attractive, B nk President Voices Nee' F C. urageous9 ' eahhstic Thinking h 'Transition From War to Peace George W. Spinney Sees Canada With Great Post -War Advantages, But Warns Against View That Economic Millennium Can Materialize Through Order -in -Council . B. C. Gardner, General Manager, Reviews Bank Act Revision — Announces Post -War Rehabilitation Programme For Bank's Personnel — Pays High Tribute To Staff Stressing the magnitude of the economic and social problems facing Canada in the post-war era, George W. Spinney, C,M,G., presi- dent of the Bank of Montreal, recently voiced the need for a full appreciation of Canada's national advantages and for courageous, realistic thinking in the transitional period from war to peace. Mr. Spinney was speaking before shareholders of the bank at their lath annual meeting. "I take second place io no man favourable periods when Ioans in my earnest desire that our hopes might unexpectedly become bad and expectations shall be achiev- and the value of assets might ed," Mr, Spinney declared. "But I shrink, was .the only safe policy sometimes wonder whether all the to protect the interests of deposi- brave pians for the future are ac- tors, companied by a full realization of GENERAL MANAGER'S what has to be accomplished if ADDRESS these plans are to materialize. In- highlights of a rehabilitation deed, it would seem that many plan for Bank of Montreal person- people are assuming today that a nel now in the Armed Forces were post-war economic millennium, in a feature of the address by B. C, which everybody will be more se- Gardner, general manager of the cure, richer and presumably hap- institution. The question of absorb - pier, can materialize by Order -in- mg the bank's sten in the services Council, had, he said, beer the subject of "But to take an honestly real- a great deal of study and the istic look at the post-war prospect bank's plans had been prepared is to recognize that the reconver- well in advance. son of, industry to civilian produc• "It seemed to us," he continued, tion, the re-employment in peace- "that many of them would be in - time pursuits of those now in the terested in knowing what our policy Armed Forces and in war work is. With this in nand we prepared and the restoration of our external an outline of the present arrange - trade on a satisfactory basis will meats and the procedure we ex - involve problems of tremendous pest to follow and sent it, with a. magnitude." covering letter, to our men serving SECURITY THROUGH RISK with the forces, Briefly, it is our Declaring himself no pessimist intention to place these officers on. in regard to this country's post- the salary, and, within a reason - war possibilities and enumerating able time, in the position, which some of the great advantages with they would normally have expected which. Canada would start out into to attain had they been in the con - the new era after the war, Mr. tinuous service of the bank. Our Spinney said that, to his mind, the object is to see that they have not true objectives of post-war plan- lost ground through their service ning roust include full employment to their country." arising out of productive activity BANK ACT REVISION and operating under conditions of The general manager, in dealing individual liberty to produce a high with the recent revision of the act standard of living in real terms of under which the chartered hanks goods and services. operate, enumerated the more "I know of no other objectives," portant amendments made by Par - he declared, "that will satisfy the liament, The bank, tie said, wel- requirements of a progressive and corned such of the amendments as freedom -loving people, nor do I gave it extended powers to meet know of any way in which these the sound credit needs of its ends can be achieved except customers and would co-operate to through production on the broad- the fullest possible extent with the est possible scale and the freest new governmental agencies in possible exchange of the resultant making credit of a specified nature products within our own borders available for domestic and export and beyond them." proposes. CONTINGENT RESERVES TRIBUTE TO STAFF The subject of inner or contin- In concluding his remarks, Mr. gent reserves was discussed at Gardner paid high tribute to the length by Mr. Spinney during the fine work and loyal co-operation course of his address. Declaring of the staff, saying: "I wish to that discussions of the matter record our sincere appreciation of during the recent decennial revi- the continued efficient service and siort of the Bank Act at Ottawa loyal co-operation of each member had revealed many basic miscon- of the staff throughout another ceptions, Ile said the test of expe- difficult year. They,have .coped rience in all countries hack proven cheerfully with an ' ever -i creasing that the practice of adding to such volume of work and have main - 'reserves when it \.apossible le to faille(' a high standing 'of servicd do so, in' order to "cushion" les.. to the public."