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Zurich Herald, 1933-05-18, Page 3Wom a1i 's World By MAUI M. MORGAN "A Woman's Place Is In the Home.' Manly Dishes. Few men claim to be good all around cooks. Many, however•, have special .dishes which they feel they have, mastered thoroughly, Here are two typical male recipes. Inca dentally, the addition of a little su• gar to the meat of fowl adds quick. energy and accentuates the flavor of outer ingredients. .. Derbyshire Sandwiches, Run through the meat grinder enough finely sliced boiled hani to make one cup of it when minced. Add one-half teaspoon mixed mus- tard, a few drops tobasco sauce, ono teaspoon :sugar, salt and pepper to taste, and enough Chili sauce to make a smooth paste. Spread on thin slices of buttered bread. Chicken San Luis Cut a frying -size chicken i,n quar- ters and fry in olive oil with one- half cup finely chopped onion and raw white potatoes. cut in dice. Cook until the meat of the chicken ins white. Add one-half teaspoon sugar, one-half teaspoon chopped parsley, one tablespoon chopped green pep per and one-quarter cup hot water Beason with salt and pepper to taste and cook very gently until the chick- en and potatoed are thoroughly done. Tasty in Spaghetti. A few mushrooms added to .a dish of macaroni or spaghetti make this a regular "party" concoction. You may serve a well -cooked dish of spaghetti in tomato sauce with mushrooms at your next bridge -club luncheon and be assured that it will meet with approval. The flavor of mushrooms ie etn- phasized if they are sauted in a lit. tie butter before adding to any dish. Be sure to use all the butter and mushroom liquor in the pan because this is rich and flavorsome, Mushrooms and Eggs. One-half pound mu:,hrooms, 4 eggs, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon minced parsley, few drops onion Juice, 2 tablespoons flour, half tea- spoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon white pep- per, 2 cups, rich milk or thin cream, 4 teaspoons grated hard cheese, Melt butter in sauce pan. Add peel- ed and sliced mushrooms. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and .simmer over a low fire for. five minutes. Sift over flour and stir until perfectly blended. Add milk or cream; stir- • ring constantly, Add onion juice and parsley and bring to the boiling point, stirring constantly. Pour into a shallow baking dish. Break eggs into sauce, Spacing them evenly. Sprinkle each egg with 1 teaspoon grated cheese and dot with butter. Bake in a moderate oven for eight minutes, until the whites are firm. Serve from baking dish. Stewed Mushrooms. • Wash one-half pound mushrooms. Remove stems, • scrape and cut in pieces. Peel caps and break in pieces, Melt three tablespoons 'but- ter, add mushrooms, cook two min- utes. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with filiur and acid one-half cup hot water. Cook slowly five minutes. Stewed mushrooms in cream are made roy addingthree-fourths cup cream instead of using water, Serve on toast. A "Spring" Cake. These spring days our diets should be increasingly light yet should con- tain sufficient roughage. For those who insist ori cake the following re- cipe offers sweetness and yet is not .-too rich for touchy complexions. Bran Ginger Cake, • One-quarter ,cup shortening, 1-2 cup sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup bran, 1 1-2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 tea- spoon ginger, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, L-2 •cup sour milk, 1-2 cup molasses, 1-2 teaspoon salt. Cream shortening and sugar to- gether. Add the egg; beat well. Add the bran. Mix and sift the dry in- gredients and acid them to the first mixture, alternately with the - sour milk and molasses, Pour into greas- ed pans and bake in a moderate over (370 degrees' F.) from 30 to 40 minutes - A Reducing Dish. For those whose training diets are confined to removing over -plump :curves, the suggestion is made that orange juice replace cream as an ac- conr,pahiment for berries and other fruits, such as peaches, Table cream has 39 calories per tablespoon, it is pointed out, while orange juice has but 5 1-2 calories. A dessert of or- ange juice and fruit is much to be preferred on warm days to a heavy pastry, One Very delicious combination is to cover strawberries with orange juice, add a brit of powdered sugar and serve very cold. In small por- tions• this 'makes a delightful appe- tizer course; in larger portions it is a delectable dessert, Mushrooms Add Interest, For an ideal dish piquant and tasty, appealing' to a jaded palate, mushrooms are ideal and they are so sheep this year that we can use them more often to add interest to everyday dishes, .. Better If Not Washed. Unless mushrooms are very sandy and dirty, they should not be wash- ed. They are very delicate and water tends to destroy their flavor as well as make thorn tough. Separ- ate the caps from the stems. Scrape tl1e stems and peel the caps if the spin is tough. The steers are often tougher than the •caps and require longer cooking. If mushrooms must be washed, do -1t very gently, taking care that the gills do not become water soaked. Dry them on a soft cloth and turn Gap, gills downward to dry. s The peelings may be covered wielx a cold water, brought to the boiling, point and simmered over aelow fire e for fifteen minutes, Strain through . l cheesecloth and use the stock for flavoring soups and sauces. You will be amazed at the change a few 1 tablespoonfuls of this mushroom 1 stock will make in the flavor of a t cream of spinach or carrot soup. a Broiled Mushrooms. Remove stems and place caps in buttered broiler and broil five min- utes having cap side down first half of broiling, Serve on buttered toast. Put small piece of butter in each cap, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Care must be taken in removing from broiler to keep mushrooms cap side up to prevent loss of juices. Ham and Mushrooms. Cue and one-half cups medium thick white sauce, 1 1-2 cups diced cooked ham, 1 1-4 cups cooked mushrooms, seasoning. Make white sauce first, then add other ingredients to it in order. Serve in. fancy cut croustades, garn- ished with chopped parsley. Croustades are made by cutting Olives of bread about 2 inches thick, removing soft centre and toasting on all sides. With Saeurkraut, Quarter pound mushrooms, cold water, 1 pound saeurkraut, 1 table- spoon flour, 1 tablespoon shortening; 1-2 cup thick sour cream. Stew mushrooms in 2 cups cold salted water. Drain canned saeur- kraut and pour over it the liquor in which mushrooms have been cook- ed, then add mushrooms, minced and simmer till thick, about 1 hour. Brown flour, add shortening. Add this and sour cream to saeurkraut and simmer 10 minittes betore serv- ing, Cream of Mushroom Soup, Half a pound mushrooms, 4 cups white stock, 1 slice onion, 1-4 cup butter, 1-4 cup flour. 1 cup cream, salt and pepper. Chop mushrooms, add to white took with onion, cook 20 minutes nd rub through sieve. Reheat, bind with 'butter and flour cooked togeth- r, then add cream anti salt and pep- ler to taste. : • An economical way of making mushroom soup is to boil the stalks n water for 20 minutes or so. Strain iquid and add to a rich white sauce hat has been seasoned with salt nd pepper. • MUTT AND JEFF— By BUD FISHER aGFF's t)N'CCiZ' Q@se.kunilo)ANT) e.tarI G 6,.. OUT 't5 $f2AtN SRSAP«SO I21�cICS I 11%AatA.S.USI MAW tl`Ht3CSs wa 601.iNM dHdcfR 'Atm up: Sunday School Lesson 4.411.4e4111-9.4-0, May 21. Lesson VIII—Jesus Answers His Adversaries—Mark. 12: 28.40, Golden Text— Never man spake dike this man.—John 7: 46. ANALYSTS. I. 'Facing the Main Issue, Mark 12: 13-34, 11, Removing Misunderstandings,. Mark 12: 35-37, 111, Exposing Insincerity, Mark 12s. 38-40. Introduction, --The cleansing of the Temple was another milepost along the Costly Way. Froin now on events crowd upon each other, "They have arrested him!" These last days be- long to the sublimest memories of the human race. All powers of the Man of Nazareth seem to be completely mobilized, "Raised up to his full height, he faces his opponents and easily frustrates their plots -and their insinuations. With amazing vigor and power, when his enemies attack him, he instantly transforms himself into. the aggressor, and when it is all over, he is left master of the situation." I. Facing the Main Issue, Mark 12: 13-34. After expelling the profiteers, Jesus spent the rest of the day speaking to the crowds that were gathered around him. His enemies left hint unmolest- ed, but all the time they were in an- xious consultation. The „fallowing morning when he returned •ice the city, they were ready for him. First they challenged his authority. He countered with a question which placed them in a dilemma. Rather than aswer it, they left him alone, Mark 11: 27-33. Then, taking the offensive, Jesus turned in denuncia tion on them. His parable of the wicked husbandmen (Mark 12: 1-12), with its reference to the well-known Song of the Vineyard in Isaiah, chap- ter 6, would be taken as a direct con- demnation of themselves. Indignant, but helpless in the midst of Jesus' admiring crowds, his questioners left him, v.42. For the next attempt to trap him, the Pharisees, and their political en- emies, the Herodians, joined forces. What about this tribute money, vs, 13-15? It was a clever question. "Yes," or "no" would get Jetus into trouble. "Bring ine a penny." It was a Roman penny. They were ac- cepting the benefits of Roman gov- ernment. Therefore let there use their own cornmoneese, both, with -re- gard to what was Caesar's and what was God's, vs. 16, 17. The Saciducees now eama forward with an absurd story about a woman who had had seven husbands. Whose wife would she be in the resurrec- tion? But Jesus turned the tables on them. From their own scriptures (Deut. 25: 5-10) he proved to them that marriage, on its physical s'ide, was designed to continue the race. Ir the resurrection, with death abolished marriage was unnecessaree Again from their own scriptures (Exod. 3: 6) he pointed out that generations after their death, God was still the Gad of the patriarchs. Therefore they, and all those who are in vital con- tact ontact with God, are untouched by phy- sical death. A scribe, impressed by Jesus' ability and knowledge, came to him with the question, "Which is the first (that is, the most important) command ment?" According to the scribes there were three hundred and sixty- five prohibitions and two hundred and forty-eight commandments in the five books of the Law. Jesus brushed aside all questions about the rela- tive importance of these regulations, nd faced the main issue. Let a man have the right attitude, he said, to- tivard his God and his fellows (vs. 9-31) ; then his conduct will take are •of itself. If I love my children,, need not worry about the penalties imposed for non-support of one's amily. Greek has two words for "love"; English only one. Hence the .diffi- ulty in understanding bow one can love" God as one loves, say, one's child. "Love" he the New Testament leans "good will." To "love" God ith heart, soul, mind and strength, s simply to put him first in every- ing. To "love" my neighbor is to mat him as I would be treated my- self. My neighbor is any one who needs me. It is possible to have to - and any one the attitude which will espond instantly and gladly to his eed. "The noblest love can forget b one,. :for it is built on the needs man, not on his qualities." Removing Misunderstandings, Mark 12: 35-37. Jesus now became more aggressive. first, he attacked the mechanical way which the Biblical scholars inter- reted Scripture. "How say the ribes?" That is, "What do the, ribes mean when they say that hrist is the Son of David?" v. 35.' hey had been taking Psalm 110 to can that the Messiah would be of Something Different In Tunic Treatment By HELEN i'VILLIAMS, Illustrated Dress na c Lesson Fur- nished With Every Pattern, Mode has all manner of whims con- cerning jumper effects this season. And here's a model you'll love for its distinctly individual. :While of the spectator sports type, y.t it is dressy enough for afternoons. It has tremendous chic carried out i:: soft crinkly crepe silk •n carrot - red, The deep armholed sleeves are citron -yellow crepe. Two tones of dark hyacinth -blue c:epe would be lovely too. It's as simple as A, B, C, to fa- shion it. Style No. 3398 is design: for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards of 39- inch dark with 1% yards of 36 inch light material. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- t. ler, giving number .and size of such a 2 0 f 0 n w i th t w n n of 11 F ir. p sc se C T nr patterns as you want. Enclose 15c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. the House of David, a political, na floral leader. But David himself, said Jesus, spoke of Meseiah as "Lord. Therefore, even if Messiah be of Da- vid's line, he must bo a great de more. The Master thus boldly and publicly removed the misunderstand- ings regarding himself that a -wrong method of Scriptural interpretation had produced. Then as now, mater- ialistic, literalist explanations of Bi- ble texts conceal or distort its real message. Exposing insincerity, Mark 12:. The Annual Meeting of the Cana - (Han General Connell of the Boy Scouts Association was held at Ottawa on April 27th last, and the following business was transacted and reports were received. His Excellency the Governor -Gen - oral, the Rt. Hon. the Earl of Bes- borough, presided, as Chlef Scout for Canada, Upon nomination of the Chief Scout, Mr, D. W. Beatty, of the Canadian Pa- ciflo Railway, was re-eleeted President. It was announced that the Bon. •Vin. cent Massey, former Canadian Minis- ter to Washington, would represent the Canadian Scout Association at the annual meeting of the Boy Scouts of America at Kansas City, in June, and address that gathering. The Scout census for 1932 showed 23,140 Wolf Cubs, 31,599 Scouts, 1,836 Rovers, 707 Lone Scouts, 321 Sea Scouts, 4,651 adult leaders—total, 62,- 254, a gain of 6% over 1931. There was an increase in the num- ber of French-Canadian Scout troops in Quebec, under the patronage of His Eminence Cardinal Villeneuve. A substantial gain an River Scouts and Sea Scouts was noted, also 3n the Lone Scout Branch, for boys on farms or small groups in country villages. There was a marked increase of Scouting units in children's hospitals and sanitariums, with groups now operating hi Quebec, Ontario, Mani- toba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Bri- tish Columba. A total of 3,786 proficiency badges were awarded Scouts for passing tests qualifying for public service hi first- aid, water rescue and the carrying out of health and safety measures, Appointments during the year in- cluded His Hon. Dr. H. A. Bruce, Lt.- Gov. t:Gov. of Ontario, to be Provincial Pat- ron; Lord Colville to be Commissioner of Lone Scouts of British Columbia; Dr. W. W. White to be Provincial Pre- sident and Mr. Alan G. MCOvity to be Provincial Commissioner respectively of New Brunswick; Mr. J. R. Burnett, of the Charlottetown Guardian, to be Provincial President of Prince Edward Island. Scout units participated widely in local relief measures. The annual Christmas toy shop chain operated in 156 towns and cities across the Dominion and provided gifts for over ?5,000 children, including 5,900 in the prairie provinces largely reached by mail, During 1932 over 13,000 boys attend- ed 511 camps, of which 384 were regise tared as being operated to a definite standard of health and safety regte latioxs. Not a serious camp accident was reg corded. A 122 -acre camp site was presented to the Scouts of Alberta by Provincial Commissioner Col. J. H, Woode of Cal- gary, and a 118 -acre camp site on the South Saskatchewan river was given on long lease to the Scout troops of the Saskatoon district by Proviur'el Order -in -Council. The Dominion Medal Board cited 16 Scouts for rescues from drowning at eerious personal risk, 11 for reserves at less risk, 15 for water rescues and other good Work in serious emerges• cies, without great personal risk, We believe that anyone reading the above extracts from this annual re• port will realize how excellent is the work and how far reaching are the re• sults of the Boy Scout organization Serious minded people all over thl world are supporting this movement more to -day than at any other time, because it is work of this kind among international youth that Is needed most. There never has been a "de pression" in Scouting, and we doubt 11 there ever will be, Lots of Room - There is plenty of room in the ranks of the Boy Scouts for keen, red-blood- ed boys, who are anxious to obtain the most out of life and to increase their chances of success in future life. There are many Lone Scouts in this province, more, in fact, in Ontaric than in any of the other provinccs, and this branch of Scouting is organ• ized especially to provide a program for boys who live in places where there is no Scout Troop for them to link up with. If you come under this Leading, and if you are not already a "Louie," wire not find out more about us? Now is the time to start your Scout Program, Full particulars can be obtained, with out obligation, from The Boy Smite Association, Lone Scout Department, 330 Bay Street, Toronto 2.—"Lone On May Day Often I loved, upon the first of May, To follow .a known path beyond the town. . Where by the pale blue reaches of the sea Spring had put on her flower-kirtled gown. Under the leafage of trees the new-deckt _ The sturdy saxifrage blossomed in d white,— " Ethereal violets, like a purple mist, Covered a bank with amethystine al light. . 38.40, The Master then exposed the in- sincerity and self-importance of the religious leaders. They .used their education and special opportunities, not for more effective service to their fellows, but in order to secure pres- tige and position for themselves. Dressed like millionaires, they always insisted on having a seat on the plat- form. Some of them were mean enough to influence sentimental and easily -moved women to hand over their property to them, v. 40. Their long prayers covered many a greedy and covetous nature. It had been a day of singular tri- umph. Jesus had successfully re- pulsed every attack of his enemies. He had denounced hypocrisy. But the crowds who had cheered saw their dreams of an earthier kingdsm fading. An Englishman was travelling in a tramcar in New York. Opposite him sat a woman nursing the ugliest baby he had' ever seen. The baby was so ugly that the Englishman could not take his eyes off it. In desperation the mother leaned over and said: "Rubber" (a term meaning t0 stare,) "Thank heaven," said the English- man. "I thought it was ureal " Upon the greensward like a fairy ring, On threadlike stems, rose -tinged ane- mones --- Those high-born ladies, delicately clad— Bent like May Queens to the spring - scented breeze, --Clara L. Baxter in the Christian Science Monitor, Woman is Injured In Unusual Accident Indianapolis, Ind.—An uarusual ac- cident •occurred here when Mrs, Geo. S. Kinney, Greenfield, hurried from a safety zone behind an automobile, to discover that it was toiaaing another car. •• She suffered a fractured hip when she tripped on the toiwebar connecting, the two vehicles and fell beneath the wheels of the rear machine, Another woman with her managed to jump over the tow -bar and escape. An elegantly dressed man stood on the pavement outside his club. After glancing •up and dcwn the street for a taxi, he hockaled to a boy wheeling' a dilapidated barrow. "1 say, my lad," he said, "just run to the top of the street and fetch me a taxi." "No fear," said the boy. "1 know your sort. When my back's turned you'll nip off with my barren" sioIet. r eF' CCOtaoMICS 1 x Pt •'atc'r 'MAT USS, flea. MA; to sci,I:tntG„�Ar SRR .8Y cliRISTMA3 THS T+bC's' N '�CuCZN D •$ 1Alti6AT VS GOING TO 'TWO t3ti 1(S A uM.1(.P THE, MIO,S, ARC GONNA (2V1..1 MGM- Mb Dl1YwT'o t; --ILL ORtiere . we. GoTr, FIAMt tr •'t~0 out, CONGReSSMcIU AOR 'rhe cotaSTleucTIUG woRk 'T1iGYUC, Dot:1G Afela Star One Night—Plays Maid's Part the .Next New York.: The sigh of relief Rutit Weston breathed was very short-lived, The New York society girl is the un- derstudy of Inra 'Claire in a curreni Broadway production, Miss Claire seat i11 and missed a peformance for the first time in her career. Miss Weston, too, was ill—severe burns resulting from an accident—but she jumped in to the stellar role and few in the nude mice knew the difference. She arrived at the theatre to beam that Miss Claire was back. That'd where the sigh of relief came. Thea she was informed Helen Salinger, maid in the play, was 311, so Miss Wes ton, despite painful burns, doublet again. "Star one night; maid the next; yoe never know what the morrow will bring," she said. London Pianist Gives Recital at Seventy London, Eng.—Morin Rasenthal, noted pianist at tate a•ge of 70 years. giving recitals in London with a tee • nique and command which me younger pianists might envy. It is years since Rosenthal first played it ' public, and at 14 he was Court Vaal to the Icing of Rumania. He is the la remaining pupil of Miluki, who we himself a pupil of Chopin, and he w also one of .Liszt's show pupils as lou ago as 1877. He resides in Vienna, • Trappers Report Muskrat Season Po Sarnia, Ont.—Trappers at Mitobel± Bay and other places along Lake Clair shores report the poorest .ruin, rat season of recent years. It was a9 timated less than 2,000 skins were ; cured in the Nbrth Kent eeetit With the close of the season trate have been taken in. 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