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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-12-05, Page 3
4 Siu ’n .A y2 1 *. IS 1 3 /gp'oOn cinnamon# Iespoons butter' pie yet 2 •'tablc-spQO.ns quick-cooking ta- Keep a small ' bottle of ammonia. A dip of the pen in the i as Mahogany woodwork can be wash ed with cold tea; or with a weak mixture of vinegar and water. Hpusewivea., who ..Aave - no hot water supply should plabe the wash-, ing'up bowl full of cold water on the kitchen- range, "it will be getting ready, for. use. King George and Queen Mary of - England pictured as 'they en tered the flower-banked Royal Box at the Palladium in London to attend a command performance held there recently. Other mem bers, of the Royal Family also attended. . 5 ’• A , on’the desk. -M. \i ip v/v vug F'-11 *« Each night take., volets1 .from their'' animouia wni make it as clean AdratA men." strained. , and God has brought the the enemy to" nought Silk and.woollens can be ironed "safely on" the r|ght "sideii" if, they are covered with a slightly dampened . cheesecloth. Royal Performance - By Mair M. Morgan .MAKE XMAS CAKES NOW Eggs'are sky-rocket ng just as the '“10-egg. cake season," that of Xmas' baking,-opens... , ’ ■. While- ‘‘use. .only'-tested recipes" is - the first -rule of a successful cook, _ nowhere, is it more important than ■ ■ in making. Xmas cakes, crammed fu.l?V of jthe finest, fruits..and spices;,.' held ■ in a delicate,'.smooth, batter? mad© with the finest' cake flout obtain able. , A A good true"recipe is of no use if it is not carefully followed and ac curate measurements made. And, of course., the fruit, flour, and eggs are. ‘ not. just thrown . together -zas ..they come to hand — they must as specified , in the recipe, dark fruit cake, the ■ fruit directly after the- sugar; in a ..light.,, i,t. . is ffbured and added when the batter - -is well mixed. ' '. - J / .Th.e; recipe for Christmas Fruit Cake here has "been carefully tested ■ and gives a perfect cake. : 1 lb.', (4 Ya 4 teaspoon baking .powder ” . V£> teaspoon cloves. '. '• y2 teaspoon cinnamon 1 '.» ■ i/2 teaspoon mace' 1 lb. ,butter or other shortening- . 1 lb. .brown sugar • .' 10 eggs». well beaten, ■ ■■ ■ • ■:% lb. "Candied cherries -' ,1b. candied, pineapple’ : 1 lb. .dates seeded and sliced.’ . 1 ®lb. .... ’ ’’ ■ 1 lb. % lb. % lb. be added for, in a is ..added raisins . . ' currants .citron, thinly sliced"' 'C candled'orange and lemon peef Vs lb.- nu.t meats, .chopped . ->1 'cup-honey’ ’ ... recipe to haye .when usirig* egg-whites in cakes because .it uses, five egg yolks to. make wonderfully flavor dome "cifp-cakes. . Q L p-T IM E B RO W NIES 1% cups• sifted^cake, flour ■ ■" % teaspoon . soda 1 'teaspoon., sa.lt 11-3 cu-ps sugar • I '5 egg yolks, beaten until thick and lemon-colored ~ . 2^4 squares unsweetened .chocolate,' melted. clip spur cream ' cup. walnut meats, broken teaspoon vanilla' •’ Sift.-, flour once, .measure, add soda and salt, sa.nd sift together three ■times. Add sugar to egg yolks, cream ing well. Add chocolate and, blend. Add flour, alternately with cream, a small, amount at a time. Beat'-after .each addition' until smooth. Add; nuts and vanilla. Pour into deep, gneased cup-cake pahs, filling them abdut 1-3 full. Bake in hot oven • (400. '‘deg. F.)_ 'TB^TJT'i^'nTrt~eTs - ‘ '"'Mal<es~^''” lloze'fiBto wn- ines.' ■ Apples-; rosy ah-d. full flavored, .are Canada’s pride at-this season.. They keep the doctor away because they supply- valuable mineral salt's. . To add pep and interest to h lunch Or dinner menu, the , clever home maker can turn out Apple Cider T.ang in a short time' and at a very low •cost. A . . , 1 1 1 - &■ AYsiI mainder of tapioca mixture. Cover with crumbs. Bake in moderate oven' (350 deg. F.) 20 minutes.' Serves 4. ... Tomato Rabbit is one of those odd-, ly named dishes, because .. a rabbit never scendfe.u, from the' old Welsh and To- 1 cup. molasses cup cider ' ' ■ I « Sift flour once, measure, acid bak ing powfler and spices," and sift tbfa' . /'gether three times. Cream.1 shortening thoroughly,'add sugar gradually, and. cream together until light, and fluffy. ; . Add ■ eggs, fruits, [peel, nuts, honey, molasses.■ and cider..Add flotir gradii-' ally. Turn into pans which have, been • greased, lined with heavy pa-ber, and. .again greased. ” Bake in slow oven' . (250 d?g. F.) until thoroughly done. Cool in.pans. For large loaves bake in 8 x 4 x* 3 inch pans'about .4 hours, | For spiall loaves bake in G x 3 x 2%/ I inch pans' about .2^4 to 3 hours. Makes 10'pounds fruit'cake. To store, brush lightly with port 'or brandy, wrap in waxed paper, and kq,ep in .air-tight container. Or' brush with grape, juice, wrap and stor.e. White -Fruit Cake is. becoming in- creasngly popular and ths carefully ■ -tested recipe gives a feathery, light ' batter ’’<)•' ‘be delicious combiiiaton ■of -f-y”. I / APPLE CIDER ANG ... IY package quick '. setting lemon jelly powder ■ . ■' ,1' ■ cup warm water , . X -• oup sweet eider- - -' ■ TV^bups 'red' a"pplfes? cut in match stick pieces ■ [j|. ’Dissolve jelly, powder in. Warm water; add cider.. Chill. When slight ly thickened, fold in ' apples'. .. Turn into.-indivdual moulds.. Chill until firm. Unmould. Serves 6, ... . , .. Poor “Apple Betty” hasn’t had a new dress, since, Canadian house wives first served her. Cocoanut Ap- Betty is a “company" dish and- easily made. ' ’ ' ' ■ COCOANUT APPLE BETTY tart ^apples, pared and thinly sliced . ' i ' cup. soft bread crumbs , 1 cup .‘hredded cocoanu't . •/ ■'.'. % cup .firmly packed brown-sugar te^s 4 talil !■ Arrange the layer of apples in greased baking dish. Cover with bread crumbs and cocoanut then sprinkle with a mixture of sugar and cinnamon, and dot with butter.; De peat; until' all ingredients ar§? usetLI: Tbalcedb.-^^mQ.deta.te^ liever We near it. Perhaps -it de-, scendfeu from the-old Welsh and To mato Rarebits- that were the ;pride of the-chafing dish expert. But this To- mat^d Rabbit hasn’i -the tendency to get 'stringy • and tough as- the rare bits did because minute tapioca, noC corn starch, is used to bind it-. TOMATO * RABBIT 'T>ioca '. 1: cup milk, scalded' '• ’ 1 cup canned tomato . soup Vi teaspoon, salt dash 'of. paprika . ' .1 cup grated cheese - Add quick-cooking, tapioca, - salt, and . paprika to. milk, and cook in double boilerT^S^nminutes or "until tapioca is' dear., • stirring freqUent-l-y-r- Add -tomato soup and cheese. ! Cook . until chees-e is7 melted. Serve dn f ^crackers or toast. Serves 4., : -T A CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR ALL ’ THE YEAR There is no such thing as £ poor Christmas present. Some are just better- than pthers. Any gift offered out of a spirit of love and friendship carries a sentiment not to be dis carded/ lightly. ■ All gifts, however, do not bespeak this wish so well as they might. Household gifts lack the desirable personal "touch — yet purely personal presents often wear out or changeisle;":sj£^..q.uidklyn.^t-h-aA-" -the /-.giving-: 1 NEW YOR-W—Louis Opp.ie believ-- es he- has the saddest job in ’the na tion’s largest city. ■ . • He advanced his claim’ to. the title at a gloom^ybrick building surround ed by a high iron fence . at 29th Street and /First avenue,........... ; Y Officially it is ./known as the city morgue; but to-him'it is "tragedy terrace”. .. . ... .. " ' ■ ■■ -Across' the street, tenement child ren" play, unmindful,, pf ' the. morgue,- •and the life of the',.city, whjrls by-. To Oppie’s.care'are entrusted Mani ha't.tan’s unidentified dead:Suicides, derelicts' and failures fosse'd-aside-by- the c'ity’s rush. A '" The bodies are photographed, wrap ped in ’ sheets,"'tagged and-listed in . the book of unidentified dead. 'Then they are taken, to The' basement and placed in long cases. Here are men and. Women who " met1 death suddenly and alone, Some- are from other cities; "they dropped out -of sight without causing a ripple on New York’s -surface. Relatives back home wait and won der why they do not write. . h Oppie sees relatives enter the morgue, and sit on a long bench wait-" ing their turn. "He leads their grim search’ through' the corridors’. ’ : A He—cohinrabe^^d^pp^^; ^Jamaica-: < to^: LESSON X — December 8 NEHEMIAH REBUILDING THE WALL OF JERUSALEM . Nehemiah 4:6-9-, 15-21. •GOLDEN TEXf __ The people Wad a. mfnd to- work. — Nehemlcih 4:6. THE LESSON liN ITS SETTING TIME. .— All the events Recorded in tiie first seven . chapters of the. book of Nehemiah tbok place within’ a period of one year,- 445-444 B.C;„ PLACE! — Susa,- the ancient .capi- tay of Persia, the winter residence of ' Artaxerxes, - about eightly miles east of the Tigris River'; and the city of Jerusalem. . - "So we built thq wall." This phrase can almost be called a.piece of quiet humor. Nothing could stop “these' people. God ,.was there. The ,king’s de-, cree was in th-pir midst, “And all the,' wall was. joined together unto half the height- thereof: for the people had a mind to work. “But It came to pass that, when Sanballat,. and Tobiah, and the Ar abians, and the Ammonites, and tiie Ashdoditgs,- heard that ..the repairing of the walls of. Jerusalem went for ward, and, that the breaches began to be*stopped, then they., .were very wroth." In most editions of the He brew. Bible, this is the first' verse of the fourth chapter. Here we have a- icomplete list of the fees of, Jerusa lem. Here we" find the anger of these opponents.- reaching its1 highest Ditch, ‘(And they, conspired all of them to;' gether .to come and fight against Jerusalem, and to cause confusion therein." ,Tho sudden arrival,of hos tile, forces outside’ Jerusalem did.<cer-, ■tainiy cause confusion^ ’ God?’ N^te here tiie- plural pronouns.-. Hitherto there had been a melancholy solitariness about the earnest devo tion of Nehemiah. The success of his 'mi(s6n began to show itself when the citizens began to. participate -in the- same spirit of- devotion. “And set a watch .against; them day and night, .because of them.” Certainly prayer did not make these’ people carelss. Men who first ' speak, to Gqd and manifest dependence upon him are generally found to be those who make the wisest use ' of every available and-honorable source for . bringing about those thingy concerning which God has revealed his will. t- ■ “And. It came to pass,, when our enemies .heard that it was knowq un to us, and . God had brohght their counse‘1 to no.ugli’t, that we returned all of us to thb wall, every one unto his work.” counsel of through the precautionary measures j how. takeh by Nehemiah, and the ! hnem^appaxm^Ly-ahamdoned-^thniN-ih- of the city while its wa/ls were .being" built, nevertheless, he had confidence that his God" would fight for--his people. (See also Ex. 15:3-6; 14:14; I Deut. 1:30'; 3:22; 20:4; 28:7). . Your Daughter’s Height To' tell how tall-.small daughter is ' -. likeiy to grow, take her height at the age pf seven. .' '-A J- , If she Is tall, .then<she is llkply to 1 /. be tall at 16f when her growth is about complete. If medium at seven, she /may always be so, If short then/ you need not: expect a tall daughter.) The seven-year height Is not In. j fallible, but it is better for predicting) than her .height at the age.of 11, Dni- Ed-wtn .rB-A^Wilson, of the Harvard! . School of Public Health told , the 1 National Academy of Sciences. , That is the way girls grow, ac cording to a study of -275, whose! heights were measured each year! from the ages of seven to 16. . vrrps sifted cake flour- ■ 1 teaspoon baking powder y2 teaspoon soda 4- y2 .teaspoon salt 1 lb. sultana raisins . . lb. citron, finely cut y ¥2 lb. icach ' ■ crystalled orange. Teel, lemon peel, pineapple and red . ... cherries, finely cut. .TO egg whites, stiffly beaten , 1 ' 1 ll4 cups sugar . lb. blanched almonds, finely cut cup''butter or ’ other shortening . 1 tablesppon lemon juice- . Sift, flour once, measure," add bak ing powder", soda, and salt, and. sift together three times. Sift one ‘cup flour mixture over fruits and nuts; mix'., thoroughly. Cream shortening thoroughly, .add Sugar gradually, and cre.am together until light and fluffy. Add remaining, , flour mixture 'to creamed mixture, a small amount at a tim(f.-Beajt lifter' each addition until .A&pypoth. Add" lemon juice,.-fruits, and nuts. Fold in*egg whites. Pour into ^aper-lined tube pan or small bread pans, 2'x % x 4’/^4nches. Bake in slow oven (250 deg. F.) 2yshours, thenGhicrease to 300 deg. F. for 15 - minutes. Makes 6 pounds fruit bake. Old-Time Brownies is a' splendid • \ ' i W’/miPUtesAuneover and bake 10 to 15/minutes longer, or until apples are soft. Serves 6. / •Escalloped cheese and tflives is a flavorsome* and smartly new- supper dibh -j- the, very thing for late Sunday yupper or “high tea” as many Can adians-st ill call it. And it’s excellent for luncheons, too, with -rya. bread or bran muffins; escalloped cheese and OLIVES small onion,.""finely chopped tablespoons quick-cooking tapio ca 1V2 cups tomatoes, heated cup grated cheese buttered crumbs tablespoon butter teaspoon sugar , teaspoon salt 1-8 teaspoon paprika IS ripe or stuffed olives, coarsely ’ -chopped , - • A Saute oniofi In butter. Add quickJ cooking tapioca, salt, sugar, onion, and paprika to tomato juice, and cook in double boiler 5 minutes/ or until tapioca is clear, stirripg (frequently. Place layer, of, tapioca mixture in greased " baking dish, cover with' cheese, add- layer, of o.lives, then re Wet^-^glf only ' givfes^ Instarit? pleasure, but lingers on' to charm the. recejyer many, many times.-• . Pets make excellent gifts. Can aries, particularly, touch a respon sive chord In any' woman’s heart; They need little care: a bit of water,0 some, bird-food and such tiny I lux uries as will make' life, more pleasant for them. And in return they bring their owners the gift Of song from morning till dusk. With the Christmas season coming on apace,'it- is well to keep this sugl. gestion in mind. The. novelty of the gift" will surprise., ari(( plea.se the re ceiver. ."’ .■ HOME HINTS When paper hanging, use common starch instead of flour, for the paste. It sticks better, is also more, eco-' ncwnical, and ,makes 'the job much cleaner. are well covered, while the stalks are left exposed to the air.* In the morning gently shake the water from' the petals and'rearrange in vases.- Lirisehd oil is excellent for remov ing .rust -from the range. , A noyel. way to scent the hair is. to sew, a small cachet bag inside the hat. • . ' A wet chamois, wrung dry, will re move all lint 'from the upholstered furniture, ' • • - * ■ vases and. place, them upside down in a pudding dish. ' Half fill the basin' _ with water, so that the flower’ heads 3 new. time forth,' that half of my servants ■wrought in the work, and half of >them held the spears, the'shields, and the boWs, and the coats of mail; and- the rulers were behind all the house of Judah." We should gather from, this verse that only In the case* of Nehemiah’s personal attendants whs there still an insistence upon arms being , carried while the work of building went on. | ■ “Laded themselves;' every, "one. with one of'his hands 'wrought in the work, .arid with- the other held his weapon. And' the builddrs, every one has his. .;word.-girded by his side, and'so btiilded. And . he that sounded the Trumpet .was' by me." Neheoniah had kept oversight of the entire under taking. “And T said unto the . nobles, and to the rulers and to the rest of tire people, The work is great and large, and "we’ ■ aW S"0p‘8rfffed”upofT the wall, one far: from another.” A’Tn what .place soever ye hear the sound of the trumpet, resort ye thither, unto ' us; our God will fight for us." “So we wrought in • the work; and half of them hel^d the spears from the rising of the morning till the stars appear- _ ed." Even though Nehemiah had made elaborate plans for tiie defence FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer LBWVI;T A Four shabby fellows saluted Wheh ^entered the Wipping River Police Station, We were j fo go to Shen Yan's in the police, launch^ which would .await an alarm from us. "But dort4 wati foo Ib'rig," Wey- ns were completed, "6r 6r with half your fingers Custom may lead a man into many, errors; but It justifies—none. " — 2fi’JLelilfng—fa.. .I-, — , Basque Model If you know How to spend lesai than you get, you have the philoso. i pher’s stone.,— Franklin. •A; - •*' . Here’s, a very smart basque model with a very modern,, look, . that will interest bright . young " filing's and the young business wo man. •Wool jersey, rabbits wool, vel veteen, novelty crepe silks, velvet, 2to», are very attractive materials for this dress. The shirt collar ind .double row of buttons .'are charmingly young. Simple to sew—inexpensive, and . What a - remarkably chic ef- feet. “ ; . Style No... 2799 is designed for sizes 11, 13’ 15, 17 and 19 years.' Size 15 requires 3% yards of 39- inch. material with *1 yards of 39- inch contrasting. -• HOW TO ’ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address , plainly, giving number- and size of pattern wanted..’ Enclose 15c in stamps or '‘coin (coin prefer- - red; wrap it carefully) and ad-/ dress your .order • to Wilson Pat-' ■ tern Service, .73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. THE SEVERED FINGERS—Setting The Trap.; 0 1931 By Sax Rohmer ud Th* Beh SyadlcaU, ttc. ■ The (Other . acting on their, orders, had broken .from the back into an empty shop opposite Shen Yan's'. ‘‘Be inside Shen Yan's, like lightning two sleuths, when you hear the signal," were Weymouth's parting Words to them. "The launch is ready, sir," nounced Inspector Ryman from the doorway, Jnd wo trooped puito the § little craft. The chill of the water pena.- * hated my thin garments.' i ; .. I thought of Fu Manchu ... the Severed Fingers ». . as we headed into the shadows