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Zurich Herald, 1950-09-14, Page 3M n NDAY KHOO By Rev, R. By�A,RCL�,•�Ary�Y WARREI 13-k D.D, Paul, World Evangelisf Acts 26: 4-2Il (golden Text: I determined not t know anyt 11,19 among you, sav Jesus Christ, and Him Crucified,- 1 Corinthians 2,2, Paul's experience is Proof of th fact that a person may be vert sincere in his religion and yet bi far from the truth. Paul thought hs was doing God's will in persecut:nn the Christians, Then ranee his not. able conversion. He met Jesus an.' heard the swords, "Saul, Saul, wh} persecutest thou Nle?" There h¢ surrendered and meekly asked, "Lord what wilt Thou have Ill(, to do?" Science cannot explain wbat happened, Some critics have made a laughing -stock of themselves by suggesting that Saul suffered a sunstroke. Well, read the record of this man's, carrying of the gospel throughout Asia Afinor and South Eastern Europe, and react . liis 13 letters in tile Drew testallicilt, If a sunstroke could produce such a changed man, then it was the most unusual sunstroke. No, Saul was changed by the Powerof God, Re was reborn as Jesus • said all of us must be; "Except a malt be born again, he cannot see the kingdom Of God," John 3;3, Saul was comimfssioned to carry The message of Jesus Christ to the People of the world other than the Jesus. Here was no mere social gos- pel, though its power leavens all society. This was no tslere social psychology, inviting men to try to do better, No, it was the message of "the power of God unto salvation, unto everyone that believeth," hear file commission "To open their eyes, and to turn thein from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive fssrgivness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith that is in hie." This is the message that is needed today. Unless there is a ]reeding of this truth, the nations gill soon be locked in the Most terrible con- flict this world has ever seen. Sin, whether exhibited as pride, greed, ambition, sensual. living, or hate, is fast leading men to destruction. Let its examine our osvn hearts, have We repented and turned to God? Do we, enjoy the forgiveness of sins avid inheritance among the saucitified. If so, let lis urge upon other; to Deed the Gospel. IFF YOU DON'T GET ANGRY YOU WON••"I' GET $IVES As in many another adage, there is truth in the homey warning: 'Don't let it get under your skin." In the Journal of the E,merican Medical .Association,. Drs, David I Graham and Stewart Wolf re- ported that there is a close relation- ship between an attitude of resent- ment and the development of hives. They studied thirty unselected pat- ients with long standing cases of hives, commonly called nettle rash. These patients were not, "allergic" to the usual factors. Drs. Graham and Wolf commented: "Attacks (of Lives) were highly correlated with emotional disturbances of I particu- lar kind, Traumatic life situations responsible for lesions were almost exclusively those in which the pati- s Cut felt resentment because he_saw himself as the victim of unjust i tteatuient about which lie could do a elathing. In brief, these patients considered themselves wronged or s injured (usually by someone in a f fairly close family relationship), and a they regarded the situation as one it which precluded any action on their C parts, They believed that they ti could neither retaliate nor run away. lit. Tu this setting they became intense- g II• resentfuI." So cause the rash se Visual Aid—Now you'll be able to make sure that Junior's ne-%V shoes don't cramp his tootsies, thanks to a new transparent "try - on" shoe, shown at right. It enables you to see how the shoe fits -while Junior walks in it, A red danger line across the?toe indicates point beyond which toes must not extend for the right amount of "grow room.." Today we're going to !lave what I believe the hunters call "a arely hot oven, 375 degrees, 20 to mixed bag"—meaning a little of almost 30 minutes, Put cakes together with everything, There's pie, pudding, cake and spoon bread—all halved or sliced peaches and whip - ped cream between and on top. of thein 1110r,lin8' or evening for several days will recipes I feel sure you'll find worth soon take care of a medium- trying, either now or at a later Now for a famous New England date, and also filling away for future delicacy that's really a lot more reference, teIllptng than its naIlle. First of all there's: SHOO -FLY PIE MERINGUE ORANGE PUDDING 5 cup molasses Grated rind % orange % teaspoon soda % teaspoon 6 large oranges 3/q cup sugar vinegar 1 cup chopped ed pitted dates Z cups milk 1 unbaked 9 -inch pastry shell 3 tablespoons BENSON'S 1 cup sifted flour 2/ cup brown sugar cornstarch V4 teaspoon salt % teaspoon salt 4 cup butter 3 eggs, separated 6 tablespoons confectioners' or margarine Method: Combine molasses, sugar cup boiling water,, soda and vine - Method: Cerate I' of the rind from gar; mix well and porn• into date. one orange and set aside. feel and section lined pastry shell. lli-x flour, sugar and salt; cu', in oranges: place in i l� quaff shortening•. Sprin'de casserole, sprinkle with cup over top of molasses mixture. Bake sugar. Scald lit/ cups milk in top ! later seeding it. If you have a lot, of double boiler. Mix remaining 1/ CUP sugar with cornstarch and salt: stir in remaining % cup milk. Add slightly beaten egg yolks, !poor slowly into scalded mill: and cool; until thickened, stirring constantly. Cool; pour over oranges. Malice mer- ingue by beat'ng saitecl egg whites until stiff but not dry, beat in confectioners' sugar and grated rind. Pile lightly On pudding. Pake in moderate oven, 350 degrees F., for 10 minutes or until delicately browned. Chill several hours before serving time. PEACH LAYER CARE 2% cups sifted cake flour 3 tsps. Magic Barring Powder tsp. salt 10 tb:ps. shortening (may be half butter) it/a cups granulated sugar 2 eggs, well beaten 3/4 cup milk- 15/2 ilk15/2 tsps. vanilla 3/2 tap. almond extract Method: Sift flour, baking pow - ter and salt together 3 times ;ream shortening; gradually blend a sugar. Add beaten eggs, part t a time, beating well after each ddition. Measure milk and add anilla and almond extracts. Add our mixture to creamed mixture hout a quarter at a time, alternat- ig with three additions of milk and )lnbining lightly after each addi- on. Turn into two 8" or V ,roused yer calve palls which have been -eased and lined oil the bottom ith greased paper, Bake ill ,node,- �N,ords and picture can onlyy hint at how becoming and useful you'll hied this) With fashion in every detail—it's casual or dressy accord- ing to the fabric! Pattern 4676: sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 20; 40. Size 16, 4/yds. 35 -in, This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit- Has Coll- Plete ilihrstrated instructions. Sent! TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (250) in coins (Stamps cannot be accepted) for this patter,,. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. • Send order to Box 1, 123 Eigh- teenth St., New Toronto, Ont, A"M . r __ I eek �i PORC F L Al N 1 NSUL ATOR$ PROVIDE 6000 NON-RUSTIN4 ' war HOOKS FOR CLOTH5S LINES 1,1 liot oven, 4,25 degrees I:',, for minutes; reduce beat to moder; 350 degrees 1,,, and 1lalce 30 minu longer. No matter how many of tile,!' Publish, I never feel the need apologizing for still another rec that makes use of our greatest all fruit "standbys." APPLI CAKE Afeasure into bowl, f cup fill warn, water, I tsp. granulated sugi stir until sugar is dissolved, Sp kle witli 1 envelope lZor, ! ; Rising Dry Yeast, Let stand minutes, THEN stir w(:ll. 5ca f cup milk and stir -11Y4 c, granulated sugar, % t$P, salt, 3 0 shortening; cool to lukewarm. Be in I -cup once -sifted bread flot Add yeast mixture and 1 beaten eg beat well, Work in 2/ cups one sifted bread flour" Knead lightl, place in greased bowl and bru.: top with melted butter or shortenin Cover and set in svartn place, fr from draught, Let rise uni doubled in bulk. Punch down dour and divide into 2 equal portion, form into smooth balls. Roll eac Piece into all oblong and lift int greased pans about 7" x 11". Greas tops, cover and let rise until double in bulls. Peel, core and cut 8 apple into thin wedges. Sprinkle rise dough with % cup granulated suga and lightly press apple wedges int, cake tops, sharp edges clown an, close together. Mix 1 cup granulates sugar and 134, . tsps, cinnamon sprinkle over apples. Cover and le rise about % hr, Bake in moderate oven, 350 degrees, about I hour Serve hot with butter. Ill his song "That's What I Likc About thffe South" Phil Harris rattles othe names of foods se fast that I'm not sure if Spoon Bread is among them. But it might, very Ivell be, as it's from that re- gion comes this recipe for.: CHEESE SPOON BREAD 1% cups boiling water 2 cups water -ground corn meal 3 cups buttermilk 11% teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon soda 3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted 2 eggs, slightly beaten cup grated nippy cheese Method: Add boiling seater to corn meal, stirring constantly. Coin. bine buttermilk, -sit, soda and mar- garine, mix well. Add to corn meal mixture; then add eggs and cheese" Pour into 4 buttered 1% cup baking dishes. Bake in moderate oven, 350 degrees F., for about 40 minutes, Serve hot. Bell Rings Non-stop For 1$ 0 Years 1'Iay back ill 1840, when elecric- ity seemed as youthfully new as today's atomic power, a whiskered scientist connected 2,500_ tiny bat- t, hitched them to the wor s first electric bell. When he r"ng the be11, Queen Victoria was still a young, unmarried girl, yet the bell has been ringing continu- ously ever since and still shows no signs orf stopping. Sealedin a glass case, in a cup- board of tele Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford, the bell has tinkled through five reigns and rung a knell for thole generations of the liliman 1•ace. Yet the scientists say it is probablygood for another two centuries and is the dearest -yet approach to perpetual ,notion. Though file chime sometimes slows down it soon picks up and can be heard two or three yards away, Each battery is in reality a sand- wich of paper thinly coated ori one side with copper and ori the other With zinc. Connected in two piles a foot high, each pile has a hell. Between the two bells a small brass clapper hangs by a silken thread, striking each bell twice a second. Alternately repelled and attracted, the clapper moves only an eighth of an inch between the bells but has so far produced 18,000,000,000 tinkles. With little indication of wearing out, it is good for another 30,000,- 000,000. When neatly all the Ivor - id's prese,lt -clay electric gadgets have been junked, this primitive Piece of apparatus will still be in working order! "Tile best tiling for you," said the doctor, "is to give up drinking and smoking and go to bed early and get tip early." "Doctor," said the patient, "I don't deserve the best. What's the second best?" 10 .tel les I of of , X'T`lt'ER 7I•1i57REE Wt4t, ',., ...�. '>i'l�Ti�RT Pointer �fl LOOK 19msR WITW 7?I6 DEAD umes TRIMMEDCPF, MRS, PUDDLE ... I'M 4�U)TnNis..,"t CAN -11 UT UP WITH ONE AtOWEY, BUT I DRAW THE LINE AT TWO/ d C d o trowel handy and dig up weeds I every tittle you get a chalice, A. few moments in the cool of early 1110r,lin8' or evening for several days will soon take care of a medium- Gordot, Smt,tIL' sized lawn, One of the worst lawn weeds is crabgrass, and from now on into, If your lawn is poor, now is the early Fall this interloper is ram, pant ill many a lawn. It is an time to begin working toward a better one. Autumn is the best an. nual with rather broad, tough blades that lie fiat in rosettes, lawn -making season, and will soon and it is a heavy seeder, be upon us, * a The lawnmower will usually clip Most Lassa, grasses are cool- l- only the top blades of it, leaving the weather crops, They Bron best mail; portion and the seed - bearing fall and spring. However, no parts close to the ground. grasses will do well if they have to complete with weeds, have to * s` If You have only a little, dig it survive in poor soil, have little up as fast - as it comes, Each plant leaves or no plant food, and must go a hole, for the roots are thick thirsty. and spreading" Fill file hole a, * with good soil and a little food, Watering the lawn is a present later seeding it. If you have a lot, activity for many of us, especially you nlay want to spade up the those of us who live where drought area, enrich the soil, and plant conditions are bad. The thing ro grass seed and perhaps clover seed. remember is "Soak; don't sprinkle." If you do this in Itot weather, pro - A weekly soaking of the lawn is tection will have to be provided. better than any number of nightly *, sprinklings. Sprinkling, wets Only It is important to reniemLer that the topmost soil and makes grass weeds will grow in a latsn when roots grow toward the surface, grass cannot thrive. In other words, With the summer heat, they then we need to look to the chief cause dry out and the grass turns brown. of steeds, and while eliminating A0 4° * the weeds also eliminate the trouble. There are many good watering In most cases this is lack of food, gadgets on the market. If you If you,• turf is frail, easily dis- have a large area a whirling one cguraged, the chances are that your is good; but in the smaller area. soil isn't deep enough, and contain w;th flower borders near, it is a starvation diet for grasses. better to use a steady spray of A. some sort, In either case, leave it A few days later, loosen the soli in the sante position until the on the 'thin and bare spots and ground it reaches is deeply soaked. plant seed. Large bare spots do If your lawn is level or slopes better if spaded before seeding. Roll only slightly the canvas hose at- or tamp these areas and keep them tachnleut with leaks in it called a well sprinkled with a fine soil soaker is good over a long spray, if it Proves hot and dry protect period of time, moved at wide them with burlap or other light - interval& weight covering, While you are not seeding the lawn until autumn, the time to Seed the lawn by sowing it first one way, get rid of weeds is now, during then at right angles the other stay, for evenness, Tali))) the summer, Several weed -killers, if or roll it andprotect it with brush used according to directions, have proved effective against many or other means. Keep it damp by of the broad-leaved ' Needs like sprinkling regularly with a fiae plantain and dandelion, spray. The fails n that goes into winp ter with a good start, has If your Awn, is badly infested this may be worth while. Other.. and soil for grass wise, keep a basket and narrow be a joy 11 xttspring. Ys OU will be glad you made the effort, , X'T`lt'ER 7I•1i57REE Wt4t, ',., ...�. '>i'l�Ti�RT Pointer �fl LOOK 19msR WITW 7?I6 DEAD umes TRIMMEDCPF, MRS, PUDDLE ... I'M 4�U)TnNis..,"t CAN -11 UT UP WITH ONE AtOWEY, BUT I DRAW THE LINE AT TWO/ d C d o