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Zurich Herald, 1936-06-04, Page 2cman'S World By Mair M. Moran It's A Lucky Family That Gets This Salad A dignified salad with a dignified name, Manor House Salad, easily made with the fresh vegetables of early summer' and combined with jelly, is one which any homemaker can be proud of. No wonder a salad such as this comes by such dignified a name. And it has a real Canadian note in the words Manor House. One pictures a turreted French Canadian home, in the Laurentian or on the St. Lawrence, where meals were events of old world courtesy and pleasure. Manor House Salad is as decorative as its name and also as dependable for its health- fulness and good taste, as any seigneur might demand. For luncheon, after tennis, before a veranda bridge party, or for eve- ning supper on the lawn, everyone will like Manor House Salad. It is a salad that 'bombines fresh green vegetables with a cream cheese base and all in an attractive setting of transparent and cool -looking jelly. It is both light and yet nourishing. Manor House Salad 1 package lemon quick -setting jelly powder, 1 pint warm water, 1 tea- spoon salt, I/4 teaspoon paprika, teaspoon celery salt, 1/4 cup vinegar, ?4 ,cup mayonnaise, 2 3ereax cooked cauliflower, 2-3 cup cooked Feats, 2-3 cup cooked carrot~, sliced. Dissolve jelly powder in warm water. Add seasonings and vinegar. ChilI. When slightly thickened add % cup mixture to mayonnaise and beat with rotary egg beater to blend. Turn into ring mold. Chill until firm. Chill remaining jelly powder until slightly thickened. Arrange layer of vegetables in small groups on firm mayonnaise layer. cover with thickened jelly powder and chill. Add another layer of vegetables and cover with thickened jelly powder and chill. Add another layer of veget- ables and cover with thickened jelly powder. Chill until firm, Unmold on crisp lettuce. Serves 6. THIS WEEK'S WINNERS Ham and Beans Take a chunk of smoked haul. The bone will do if you have sliced of all you can for frying. 2 qts. water, 1 cup beans, 1 small onion, 2 medium sized potatoes (cut fine), parsley, beat the yolks of one egg. add 1/4 cup flour, and stir very rapidly with your hand, and add that, if not salty enough from the meat, add salt to -taste and add more water if too thick. Grated horse radish is very good to eat with the meat.—Mrs. J. Juergens, R.R. No. 4, Mildmay, Ont, Liver Menu 1 pound liver, 1% tablespoons bacon fat, 1 cup stock, 1 cup tomato juice, 1% tablespoons flour, 3's tea- spoon pepper, 1 small turnip (cubed), $ W.F. 2 carrots (sliced), 1 onion (sliced), 1 bay leaf, aa teaspoon salt, 1/4, cup celery (cubed). Cut liver into 2 -inch squares, roll in bacon fat. Remove from fat, add vegetables and brown slightly, Com- bine liver, vegetables and seasonings. Pour into casserole, cover and bake in .a moderate oven 11/a to 2 hours, un- cover during last half hour. If de- sired, liquid in casserole can be thickened to give a gravy. This re- cipe makes six servings.—Margaret A. Smith, Port Elgin, Ontario. HOW:TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the in- gredients and method and send it to- gether with name and address to Household Science, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. 6Vouei fAlt The ifi #. NationTo e e 1 In The Balkans International Council Sessions to Be Held in Yugoslavia in the Autumn Women from 40 different countries will attend a congress of the Inter- national Council of Women in Yugo- slavia next Autumn. The Council's full a s s e m b l y will take place at Dubrovnik from Sept- ember 28 to October 8 and has re- ceived a promise of patronage from Queen Maria of Yugoslavia and from Princess Olga, wife of the Prince ,Regent. , The main Congress which in- cludes women fr o m America and European countries, •w i 11 meet in Dubrovnik, after which the Board of Officers will go to Belgrade where a public meeting on the subject of "Modern Housing" will be held. It is expected that Prof. Patricia Aber- crombie, British town -planning authority, will address the meeting. Miss J. Taylor, Chief Woman In- spector of Factories attached to the Hoene Office, is also expected to come and to speak on "Woman in Industry." Ishbel Marchioness of Aberdeen and widow of a former Governor- General of Canada is President of the International Council of Women. Promisee ` Lon Society Steps Out Garrett Oppenheim in the New Times, "Behold," my guide said,. "This land you 'dreamed, At sunset or in golden, aftermaths Of work well done,' Up from that val- ley streamed, Grave, hurrying bands, latent on di. verse paths. And some were close—so close that I could feel , The wind of their great haste—thele faces, masks Carved with the awful quiet of their zeal, Their cold eyee luminous with holy tasks, With tasks that were not nine, whose work would fall To busier hands than mine would ever be Eternal sunset like a painted shawl, Was on that land far as eye could see ,And there, remembering vows I,,<ha4 not kept, I lowered, my gaze, and looked toward. home, and wept. With the arrival of summerlike weather in New York City, outdoor cafes are opening for the .seaeaa and cool breezes enhance food and drink, Miss Evalyn Sloan, Mrs..Jean Edwards and Mrs. Truntax Talley (left to right), social registerites, dining in the open. —211 UNDAY CHOOLESSON e. LESSON X. — June 7 JESUS IN GETHSEMANE— Luke 22 39-71 TEXT Luke 22 : 39-53 GOLDEN TEXT.—Not my will,but thine, be done. Luke 22 42. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME, — The agony in the Garden and the arrest of Jesus took place on Thursday evening of Passion Week, April 6, A.D. 30; the trials before Annas, Caiaphus, and the Sanhedrin, together with the denial of Peter, took place frons. midnight Thursday to 6 a.m., Friday, April 7. PLACE. — The events recorded hi vs. 39-53 occurred in the Garden of Gethsemane at the foot of the Mount of Olives to the east of the city of Jerusalem; the denial of Peter took place in the court of the high priest's palace; the Sanhedrin undoubtedly met in the same place, the palace of Caiaphus. THE PLAN OF THE LESSON !,. Subject — The Contrast between the Perfect Obedience of Jesus Christ to the Will of God and the Awful Obedience of His Enemies to the Will of Satan, 39. "And be came out, and went: ns his custom was." John tells u's' (18 : 2) that "Jesus oft -times resort- ed thither with His disciples". There is no privacy in Oriental homes. Jesus retired to the Mount . of Olives for prayer, for meditation, for fellow= ship, to be away from the distracting' noises of the city, from the conflicts of men, from things visible and ma terial, "Unto the mount of Olives." Luke does not tell us, but, from Mat- thew and Mark, we gather that the place was known as "Gethsemane," which means "oil -press". Near by were large presses for extracting oil from the olives which were grown on _the olive groves on the mount that derives its name from this fact. "And the disciples also followed Him." He took with Him to the garden probably the eleven disciples, but He allowed to go into the garden with Him only three, Peter, James, and John. 40. "And when He was at the place, He said unto them, Pay that ye enter not into temptation." Their present temptation was that they should fail the Lord Jesus at this critical hour, and so they did. Prayer keeps open the channels of communication be- tween an omnipotent God and our own fainting hearts, and gives strength with which we may success- fully contend against sin. 41. "And He was parted from then about a stone's cast." Literally this night mean, "He was drawn away," "by the violence of His emotion, which was too strong to tolerate the sympathy of even the closest friends." "And Ile kneeled clown and prayed." Standing for prayer was the common attitude in the Gospels (Luke 18 : 11; Matt. 6 : 5; Mark 11 : 25). Kneel- ing the only attitude in prayer men- tioned in relation to the Lord Jesus, execpt in the parallel passage in Mat- thew, where it says that Christ "fell on His face," as He prayed. It is interesting to note how often the later followers of Jesus knelt for prayer (Acts 7 : 60; 9 : 40; 20 : 36; 21 : 5; Eph. 3 : 14). 42. "Saying, Father if Thou be willing, remove this cup from me." Jesus was not afraid of mere physical death as we know death. The mar- tyrs themselves were not afraid of death. It was the particular death that He must die from which Christ shrank. He died as a sacrifice for sin. "Nevertheless not lily Will, but Thine, be done." There are two wills here, the will of God, and the will of Christ. These two wills in Jesus were not in conflict. All sin arises from our doing our own will, without consulting or being obedient to the will of God. 43. "And there appeared unto Him an angel from heaven, strengthening Him." (Cf. Matt. 4 : 11. We are not ?told that the angel said anything, nor are we told in what particular way strength was communicated. At least we know that the presence of this heavenly messenger was a divine re- frsehing for His soul. 44. "And being in an agony." We such an experience as this. Christ was in conflict with all the hideous horrors of the kingdom of darkness, and probably, though it is not so stat- eed, with the arch -enemy of God, Satan. 44. "He prayed more earnestly." Jesus knew that victory was in prayer alone. "And His sweat became as it were great drops of blood fall- ing down upon the ground" Luke, as natural to a physician, is the only one to notice all this terrible experi- ence of our Lord's. Undoubtedly, the -words would lead us to believe that His sweat was mixed with bloo 1, and indeed, that such fell from Him in "great drops". 54. "And when He rose up from His prayer, He cane unto the dis- ciples, and found them sleeping for sorrow. And said unto them, Why sleep ye? rise and pray, that ye en- ter not into temptation." Luke does not give the three petitions uttered by Jesus which are found in the ac- counts of Matthew and Meek. "The connection between Gethsemane and the Garden of Eden, of which it is the i,.wful anti -type is unmistakable. "While He yet spake." . Judas in- truded upon Jesus in one of the most sacred hours of His life, while He was at prayer alone with God, on the night of the passover. "Behold, a multitude." Tho multitude consisted of the chief priests and elders (Luke 22 : 52) ; the officers and some of the temple guard of Jews under the com- mand of the Sanhedrin (Luke 22 : 52; John 18 : 12); a Roman cohort and its captain (John 18 : 12); servants, probably those armed With staves (Mark 14 : 43, 47). "And He that was called Judas, one of the twelve, went before them." "The evangelists seem not to be able to get rid of the horror in the fact that it was one of the twelve who brought this armed multitude to seize the . Master.""And he drew near unto Jesus to kiss Him" The verb means "to kiss re- peatedly, with great affection." "But Jesus said unto him, Judas, betrayest thou the Son of pian with a kiss?"Jesus does not say, "be- trayest thou Me," but "betrayest thou the Son of Man?" He reminds Judas that it is the Messiah that he is treating with this amazing form of treachery. "And when they that were about Himsaw what would follow, they said, Lord, shall we smite with the sword? And a certain one of themsmote the servant of the high priest, and struck off his right ear." It was not until many years later, when John comes to write his account of this night, that the names of Peter and Malthus are actually given as those involved in this act of violence, "for the years would teach then that Christ's cause is served by dying, not by killing." ' "But Jesus answered and said, Suffer ye them thus far." This was probablyaddressed to the disciples and literally meant "Hold! Let it go, no further!" `And He touched his ear, and healed him. "It was a typi- cal act of mercy- to an enemy, but had also, no doubt, a practical bearing. Jesus did not allow his assailants justification for claiming that He was leader of an armed band." "And Jesus said unto the chief priests, and captains of the temple, and elders, that were come against Him, Are ye conte out, as against a robber, with swords and staves?" The submission of Jesus to His great life purpose is nowhere more evident than here; yet, though our Lord knew full well how He would be treated, He could not allow these mien to so wickedly and unjustly seize Him without rebuking them. "When I was daily with you in the temple, ye stretched not forth your hands against me: but this is your hour, and the power of darkness." The Lord, in this last phrase, revealed to this mob the deeper causes for that which was taking place — that, first, it was an hour which had been allowed them by God. and, secondly, that, though they did not know it, they were acting in the grip of the power of darkness. TOOK HIS ADVICE Doctor—did you take my advice and sleep with your windows open to cure your cold? Patient -Yes. Doctor --Did you lose your cold? Patient—No, but I lost my pants, pocketbook and all that was in them. First Steno: "Mr. Jones left his umbrella again. I do believe he mould lose his head if it were loose." Second Steno: "I dare say you axe. right. T heard him say only yester- day that he was going to Colorado for his lungs." Ideal for Tennis Here's something smart for ten- nis in a halter -back dress. 'Abe bodice buttoned up to a little shirt collar does flattering things to your appearance. The skirt adds two jaunty patch pockets. The 'removable cape makes this nodel so useful off the court for spectator sports wear. And it doesn't hide the smart collar of the dress, either. Almost ,any fairly firm cottons, linen weaves or tub silks are suit- able to carry out this quickly made ensemble. Style No. 3066 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18 and 2U years. Size 16 requires 3% 'yards of 39 -inch material with % yard of 11 -lath 'ribbon for neck bow, for dress and cape. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15c hs stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. FU MANCHU By Sax Rohmer "E !them has influential Chinese friends, but they dare not have him in Nan Yang at present," Nayland Smith +old me later that night as we puzzled matters aver in my room. "Eltham would see too much —end know its dire meaning. aza- "How are they going to get at him, Petrie? That's the question. There is no entrance nor exit except the gats. How was the collie lulled? That is significant. What Fate Threatens Elthaml S Y a.w v . "Fu Manchu has been baffled by Elthani's precautions at Redmoet,1 think," observed Smith, "but during Eltham's ebsence he pro. vided some mysterious means of getting at him here. Yet Eltham has accounted for every rat -hole. A tunpel'9s im- possible --all stone under house and grounds. '$lobody can get in, !? Iff1 n61'1 O idic*ia, Inc, "The men on the train with those instru- ments . . , the something Grebe heard. in her father's room .. , the green eyes at the window ... Fu Manchu stalks Eltham, Petrie --..but what does he want to do to him?