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Zurich Herald, 1935-03-21, Page 7• HOT CAKES These are the days when griddle cakes and such like are in demand a the breakfast table. Here are 'duo new recipes 1 cup sifted flour 9 teaspoon double-acting • powder 24 teaspoon soda 1/2 teaspoon salt % tablespoon sugar 1 cup boiling water 24. cup yellow corn -meal 2-3 cup thick sour milk or 1 egg, well beaten 1 thblespoon melted butter or other shortening. Sift flour once, measure, add bak Ing powder, soda, • salt, and sugar and sift again. Pour boiling water over corn meal and stir unti smooth. Let stand. 15 minutes. Add milk and egg. Combine with flour Stir only until smooth. Add ,short- ening, Bake on hot, well -greased griddle,. Serve hot with maple - flavored syrup. Makes 18 cakes. Cheese Waffles 2 cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons double-acting baking powder 3 teaspoon salt 8 eggs yolks, well beaten 14 cups milk 5 tablespoons melted butter or other shortening 1 cup grated American cheese 3 eggs whites, stiffly beaten Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder and salt, and sift again. Combine egg yolks and milk; add gradually to flour, beating only .until smooth. Add . shortening and cheese. Forld in egg whites. Bake in hot waffle iron. Serve with butter. Makes four 4 -section waffles. • Griddle Cakes In$Nveet milk) • 1 ''enp sifted flour 1 teaspoon, double-acting baking powder % teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg, well beaten % cup milk 2 tablespoons melted other shortening .Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt, and sugar, and sift again Combine egg and milk; add gradually to flour,- beating only until smootine Add shortening. Bake on hot, greased griddle. Serve hot with maple -flavored syrup, or blue- berry sauce. Makes 12 to 15 grid- dle cakes. FLAVOROUS DISHES Most of us have a"sweet tooth" but you must remember that we also have a decided liking for pleasing flavors of all' kinds. Use your dif- ferent bottles of flavoring extract to prepare desserts—when company is present or when the family dines alone. Baked Caramel Custard 4 cups scalded milk 1 cup sugar 5 eggs • % teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla Melt sugar (to prevent burning, Ilse a heavy pan and stir constantly) until a light brown. Add hot milk and cook until free from lumps. Add to slightly beaten eggs, salt and flavoring. Strain into a buttered mold and set in pan of hot water. Bake in moderate oven until knife will come out clean. Vanilla Tapioca Junket 1 tablet for making junket 1 pint milk 8 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon cold water 1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring 3' cup tapioca pudding (or left over pudding) Put 2 tablespoons tapioca 'pudding in the bettom of five dessert dishes. Dissolve tablet for making junket in 1 tablespoon cold water, Add sugar t e baking butter- - butter or to milk, flavored with vanilla flavor ing, 'Warm to lukewarm—not hot Add dissolved tablet for junket. Stir a few seconds and pour immediate- ly over the tapioca. Let set, and then chill in refrigerator. SMALL BUT DELICIOUS Some of the most delicious cookies, cakes and hermits are brought to the table in tiny pieces, For . a light bite at night or for a bridge lun- cheon you will find these tiny test - les particularly pleasing. Here is one I feel sure will appeal. English, Yums 1% cups sugar 1 cup evaporated milk % teaspoon cream of tartar % cup oleomargarine % pound pecans, chopped Combine sugar, evaporated milk and cream of tartar. Coek, stirring constantly, until the soft -ball stage is reached (288 degrees F.), Add oleomargarine and cook until the mixture again comes to the soft -ball stage (238 degrees F.). Add nuts and beat until the mixture becoMes dull—pour into a shallow pan which has been spread with oleomargarine. Allow to set and cut into inch squar- es. Makes 30 1 -inch pieces. SPICY PUDDING IN MODERN MANNER Nowadays there's no need for spicy desserts to be a chore. Housewives used to chop and shave pounds of fruit peel and beef, apples, raisins and citron for mince pies and pud- dings. Here is a modern recipe for a delicious pudding, made at , a minimum of time and labor. Spicy Peach Pie 1 (9oz.) package dry mince meat. 1% cups peach juice and water 1 cup fresh or canned sliced peaches, drained 14 cup lemon juice Pie crust Break mince moat into pieces. Add peach juice. Place over heat and stir until all lumps are thoroughly broken up. Bring to brisk boil; con- tinue boiling for one minute. Allow to cool. Line a 9 -inch pie plate with pastry and fill with mince meat mix- ture. I?lace drained sliced peaches over top. Place upper crust on fill- ed lowereone-and,press edges -firmly together. Trim off surplus pastry. Bake 35 minutes in a hot oven (400 degrees F.). NOTE One cup peaches is • suf- ficient for this recipe; however, 2 cups may be used, making a large pie, serving eight. The 1 lb. 14 oz. can furnishes 2 cups fruit. Steamed Fruit Pudding 1 (9 oz. package dry mince meat and IA cup water boiled al- most dry 1 egg, slightly beaten % cup nut meats, finely chopped 24 cup orange juice 1 teaspoon grated orange rind 1% cups dry cake crumbs Break mince meat into pieces. Add cold water. Place over heat and stir until all lumps are thoroughly broken up. Bring to brisk boil; continue boiling for three minutes or until mixture is practically dry. Allow to cool. Add slightly beaten egg, nut meats, orange juice and grated rind to cake crumbs. Blend thoroughly. Fold in cooled mince meat. Pour in- to greased pudding mold, eight in- dividual molds, or baking powder can, filling two-thirds full. Cover tightly and steam one hour, having boiling water half way up on molds. If additional water is needed during steaming, it must be boiling when added. Serve warm with hard sauce or whipped cream. Serves eight. CARE KEEPS PERMANENT . Within ' the past few weeks a Kood many women have wanted to know how to care for the permanents they got during the holidays. The majority complain of dryness and a • FAallION'S FASCINATING NEW NECKLINE .eeerx-erekerateep.ere CI Crawford here displays three of the, season's latest gowns, • chief feature of which is the • new -heck treatrnent. few say that their hair is unman- ageable now. All want to have healthy. scalps and smooth coiffures. A dry condition is fairly easy to remedy. You need hot oil shall -moons, of course, and, since, you don't want to brush out your flingervaves, you. should massage your scalp with your fingertips every night before you go: to bed. Sit beside a fairly low table, put- ting your elbows on it and resting your head in your hands. Place fingertips flat against the scalp ancl try to move it backward and for- ward as well as in :tiny circles. Re- member that your scalp — not fin- gers — should move. If you are a little careful, this simply treatment won't disturb your wave. However, it will stimulate circulation and cause the oil glands to function properly. • If your hair is frizzy and never seems to look sleek and well-groom- ed ask the operator who gives you a finger wave to apply a little bril- liantine before she puts on wave set lotion. Between shampoos, use a bit of it yourself. Simply pour a few drops on your hair brush and then lightly draw your hair across the bristles before you start to arrange your coiffure. Newfoundlanders Help Clothe Island's Needy As winter closes down •on New- foundland's scattered outports, the Service League of Newfoundland is making a final drive to provide clothing for impoverished residents 'Who might otherwiseo scantily --elresse& through the cold =Was. •• One garment from everyone who can afford to give — this is the League's objective. The appeal is being directed particularly toward Newfoundland's women, who are urged—if need be—to knit or sew at least one warm piece of cloth- ing for some needy person. Lady Anderson, wife of Governor Sir David Murray Anderson and head of the League, is behind the move. She had ordered the League's sewing rooms thrown open to the public, urging women to use their facilities inmaking up their contributions. About 2o0 frogs took part in a jumping contest at Angels Camp, California, and 20,000 spectators watched them jump. The contest, in- spired by Mark Twain's story, "The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County," is held annually to revive memoziei of Cluifornites gold rush days, •whon frog -jumping was a popular pastiml among the miners and prospectors. The record jump of 13ft. lin. was made by a frog named' "Budweiser" some years ago. Tooth troubles afflict monkeys and apes as well as human beings, it. is rev e aled by Dr. Adolph IL Schultz, of JohnHopkins Uni- versity. Dr. Schultz found that teeth lost through disease are more common among some ape species than in some human races. 13 - MUTT AND JEFF— SA%D, 3 ABSOLUTELY REFUSE To ttieAR "DtvIN6 Sum' oRPLAY rtiE TART taF A DEEP-SEADIVER IN yoUR MoVIN6Plcru'RE! lit Too DANGERoOSI UNDAY CHOO r , MON LESSON V11.—February 17.—Peter Teaches Good Citizenship (Temper. ance Lesson).—I. Peter 2: 11.17; 4: 1-5. Golden Text --Love worketh no ill to his neighbor: love therefore Is the fulfillment• of the law. --Ro- mans 13: 10. The Lesson in its Setting Time. — The date of the Epistles of Peter cannot be absolutely deter- mined, It is commonly understood that his first Epistle was written, probably, in 60 A.D. Place. — Some believe that the reference to Babylon on the Euph- rates River, but it is more generally believed that it refers too the City of Rome. "Beloved, I beseech you," He is not addressing all men, or even all so- called religious men, but those -whom he describes in the preceding pas - 1 sage as "an elect race, a royal priest- hood, a holy nation, a people for God's own possession." "As sojourn- ers and pilgrims," The A. V; trans- lates the first word as "stranger." It means, more literally, "one who lives in a place without the right of , citizenship, a foreigner." "Having your behavior seemly ,atmong the Gentiles." They were pil- grims among the Gentiles, citizens • T.1" 'another cotittti74-17X-61-e—Ortre , asons y they were to abstain '.q ,fln these things was that their lives //Alit bear true testimony to God whe h d made em a holy priest- hood. The words indicate the growth of a -idespread feeling of dislike show- ing itself in calumny. So in Acts 28: 22 the disc-ples of Christ are des- cribed as 'a sect everywhere spoken against.' "Be subject to every ordinance of man." The word translated "ordin- ance" is -‘d ordinarily in many senses, e.g., of peopling a country, of founding a city, of setting up games, feasts, alta, etc. Here it apparently selected as the most comprehensive word available. It refe,s to all hu- man institutions which man set up , with the object of maintaining the World which God created" "For the Lord's sake," "Not because the Lord orLains ‘ Caeser, but because the Lord's life was o -e 'of obedience, be- cause he himself showed respect to Pilate, and because he commanded his people to obey (Matt, 22 : 21)."— Charles Bigg. Also, no doubt, so as not to bring dishonor on the name of Chris' "Whether to the king, as supreme," The Roman Emperor. 'Or Unto governors, as sent by him' "St. Paul calls the magistrate a' 'min- ister of God' (Rom. 13 : 4) St. Peter does not go so far as this. What he says is that the .gistrate is to be ciheyed because Caeser sends him; and that Caeser, through" a. human in- stitution, is to be obeyed,because order is God's will."—For vengeance ou evil -doers." Punishment of those who break the law and violate rights of tilers was never int.naded to be Wori'r BE A DEEP- -A SEA 1.21.Velk: JuSTMENTioti otiCE maize -TiiiNT YOU ReFOseTo E3E TfiE TEEP-SEADIvER AND I'LL HOC( YOUR sLocK °FP: measured and inflicted by mere in- dividuals, each acting im.ependently, but by the state as a unit, and through prope,'-- appointed officers. "And praise to them that dc well." "For so is the will of God." "They might demand why they should go on in patient well -doing amid the de- traction and ignorant opposition of foolish men; but he forecloses every objection, by saying, "So is the will of God." "That by well -doing ye she ild put to silence the ignorance of foolish men." When men act as though they knew the truth concern- ing that of which, in reality, they are ignorant, they are then fools. "As fres, and not using your free- dom," Believers are free (by redemp- tion in ChC)t) from: (1) the power of sin (John 8 : 36); Rom. 6 : 18-22) (2) the law of sin and death (Rom. 8 ; 2); (3) the law (Gal. 5 : 12). "For a cloak of wickedness." Simi- larly, the Apostle Paul: "use not your freedom for living in iniquity. "But as bondservants of God." On the one hand, ,tliey were freedraen, in Christ; hut that very relationship made them the slaves of.God: "Honor all men." "The fact that there were in every man traces of the image of God after which he had been created, and infinite undevelop- edeeepacitieserafghte-fesae -.4nethearest. oration of that image to its original brightness, was in itself a reason for treating all, even the vilest and most degraded, with some measure of res- pect. "Love the brotherhood." "There is, as far as it appears, no case where a fellow -man, as man, is called 'a brother' in the New Testament. "Fear God." (0f. 1 : 17). "Love persuades a man purely for the good- ness and loveliness of God, to fear to offend him, though there were no interest at all in it of a man's own personal misery or happiness." "Honor the king." These last two admonitions are found in close rela- tion, though with a slightly varying emphasis, in Prov. 24 21. - "Forasmuch then as Christ suffer- ed in the flesh." The phrase, of course refers to Christ's death on the cross. "Arm ye yourselves with the same mind," "Since Christ suffered ac- cording to the flesh." "For he that bath suffered in the flesh." When ease opposes duty, the putting down of the fascinating enemy necessi- tates suffering," "Hath ceased from sin." The flash may have it desires; but the cleansed heart will refuse to yield to them." "That ye no longer should live the rest of your time in the flesh to the lusts of met." "Don't let the flesh constituta the entire circle of your movenients "For the time past may suffice to have wrought the desire of the Gen- tiles," "The language is that of grave irony. Enough time, and more than enough, had been already given to the world. Was it not well to give some time now to God? 1...C. ,, "And to have Walked in laaciviona., nese," To what perniitted vviekedness this word directly refer e appears as it is defined by the Greek scholar, the late J, H. Thayer — "wanton i (aCts or) manners, as filthy Words, indecent bodily movements," ete "Luaus," Same word as above (2 : ,0 11), "Winabiddings." Only, here in the New Testament. but fe Greek translation at Deut. 21 ; 20, and Isue, 56 : 12. "Gontmonly it is used for a debauch, an extravagant indulgence in potations long drawn out, such as' I may induce permanent mischiefs on the body." -"Revelling." Here and, Roin. 13 : 12; Gal. 5 : 21, "In the. Greek writers properly a nocturnal and riotous procession of half -drunk- en and frolicsome fellows," "Carpus, ings," Drinking bouts, banquets, "not of necessity excessive (Gen. 19 ; 3; 2 Samuel 3 ; 20; Esther 6 : 14).• "And abominable idolatries," The word translated "abominable" mesnel forbidden by law, "the natural law of reason and conscience,". "Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them." The verb here translated "run" expresses the blind baste of the wicked man who rushes headlong on his pleasure," ' "Into the swine excess of riot," It is the word used to describe the life of the prodigal son, who wasted his substance in "riotous" living (Luke 15 : 13), "Speaking evil of you." lit- erally blaspheming you. "Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the living and the dead." The Judge is the Lord Jesus Ohrist. The judgment of men shrivels into insignificance in the light of a judgment to come when our actions will be weighed by the holy Son of man himself, and a *verdict rendered that will abide for all etern- ity, Worth Knowi ALL OVER THE WORLD strange finds are being Made almost 'daily. For many centuries people ,believed that Egypt vas the oldest country in the world. Now we know that Egypt 'Th, com- paratively speaking, a new country in spite of the fact that evidence proves that it was a civilized place ten thousand years ago. CHINA'S HISTORY is so old and so important that the Japanese, al- ways enemies of the Chinese, even the Japanese have many books de- voted to Chinese history. A great Japanese historian said only recently that he had spent twenty-five years studying Chinese history and had found it to be the most wonderful of all histories. ANCIENT INDIA counts as new anything that is not ten or twenty thousand years of age. -Thousands• of years amount to very little among the Hindus. Their history goes back hundreds of thousands of years, back and back until it becomes so diin that histori- ans can not trace it, SOME DAY SOME MAN will make a long study of those and other books and the people of this earth will learn something new to them. Now it is almost impossible to make a complete study beoapse as the translator goes further. 'into the past he comes upon changed 'words of which he knows nothing. The language has passed with the passing of ages and what was once simple to read is now almost like a thousand sets of lettered 'blocks dumped into barrels. Black Lingerie Paris. — Black lingerie spells "it" in undergarments for spring, 1935 fashion showings indicate. Newest night dresses, slips and chemises are fashioned of filmy black georgette bordered with black lace. Other new lingerie colors are dove grey, baby blue and white as alter- natives for the traditional pink. Helene Yrande displayed glamor- ous night dressesof blue, green, grey and flesh satin fashioned with high empire waistlines • and cape shoulder lines. Some have wrap- around satin skirts and jackets to convert nein into cocktail frocks. By BUD FISHER T. STILL SAY, REFUSE To BE T4- ? -SA DIVER 1i iitas 561110111 Mirk MI I " 111"1111110111111101111 0,, ~1 *4",ropper-)Ata$14'; fthlta ar.“ Itiervect ma& gut tr. eitnat •