Zurich Herald, 1935-05-30, Page 3s
Worlc
By Mair M ,Morgan
• Ail Lfle world loves a lover, par-
ticularly' in the merry month of
lune, and every bride-eleet looks
forward to the happy parties given
for her. Whether luncheon, tea,,din-
ner or evening buffet, the menu
should• include the daintiest of foods,
perfectly prepared and served.
This luncheon menu has a splendid
combination of flavours.
Cream of Watercress Soup
Fresh Asparagus ChickenrTimbales
Queen Tea Meffi.ns
Fresh Strawberry Ice Crean;
Swedish Cookies Coffee
Queen Tea Muffins
1% cups sifted cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
4 tablespoons sugar
% cup milk
4• tablespoons butter or other
shortening
3 teaspoon salt
1 egg, well beaten
Sift flour once, measure, add bak-.
• log powder and salt, and sift again.
Cream butter, add sugar, and cream
together "thoroughly. Add egg, then
fleas', 'alternately with milk, a small
ainennt, et a time. Beat after each
any ii oti.dintil•cntooth. Bake in grees-
dd etinf ti `pans in hot oven (450 de-
ee 0'.) 20 minutes. Makes 18 small
Ytiuiliiis.
Fresh Strawberry Ice Cream
.,Made at home with minute tapioca,
fs unusually smooth and creamy.
cup. sugar
1 pint fresh strawberries, bulled
3 tablespoons quick -cooking tapioca
e teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons light corn syrup
2 tablespoons sugar
2 egg whites
1 cup cream, whipped
Add 1/4 cup sugar to strawberries
and crush well. Let stand 30 minut-
es, Add quick -cooking tapioca to
Milk in top of double boiler. PIace
over rapidly' boiling water, and bring
to scalding point (allow 3 to 5 min-
utes), and cook 5 minutes, stirring'
frequently. Strain hot mixture, stir-
ring, (not rubbing) 'through very
fine sieve onto salt and corn syrup,
and ,nix thoroughly. Chill.. Add 2
tablespoons sugar to egg whites' and
beat .until:.stiff,• fold into. cold tapioca
mietur.e lar d+"ri=tream:and straw-
berrdes 4110 `", za/g,.;±Hxa3t•4r
.'ur
zutoatic re igera tildwi nd 'freeze as"
rapidl.y as possible --3 to 4 hours
usually required. Or turn mixture in-
to container, cover tightly, and pack
in equal parts ice and salt 2 to 3
hours.. Makes 1 quart ice cream.
Assorted sandwiches, cookies and
"cakelets" are splendid for afternoon
tea. They can be attractively ar-
ranged, too, and add - to the dainty
appearance of the table.
Coconut 'Vanities
2 cups sifted cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
la teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon grated orange rind
- 1 cup sugar
l; can southern style coconut
4 tablespoons butter or other short -
.ening
1 egg, unbeaten'
14 cup, milk
Ye cup -orange juice
1 egg white, stiffly beaten
4 tablespoons sugar
",girt flour once, measure, add bak-
g 'cyder and salt, and sift to-
eetl a ;three times. Add orange rind r bulb:,. and cream thoroughly. Add
,: ,stip. sugar gradually and cream to-
gether well. Adel egg and beat very
thoroughly, Acid flour, alternately
with mills Mid orange juice, a sninli
amount at a time, beating after eneh
'
tad won until smooth. urn into
greased pan, 15 x 10 inches. Cover
with thin layer of cnerin;'ue tmrde by
beating 4 tablespoonssugar into
beaten egg white. S?i,nk1e with
:meet. Bake lir moderate over,
(i5TO degrees P.) 25 'AdmitK. Col.
Cu( in diamond-shaped nes llal.-
es 2 dozen vr.nitie:i.
Chocolate Macaroons
2 egg whites
1 cup sugar
14 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon vanilla
11/4 squares unsweetened ehoeolate,
melted
11/4 cups premium shred coconut
Beat eggs whites until foamy
throughout; add sugar, 2 tablespoons
at a time, beating after each addition,
until sugar is blended. Then continue
boating until mixture will stand in
peaks. Add salt and vanilla. Fold in
chocolate; then coconut. Drop from
teaspoon on ungreased, heavy paper.
Bake in slow oven (325 degrees F.)
20 minutes, or until done. Cool 5
minutes before removing from paper.
Makes 2 dozen 11/4 inch macaroons.
UPSIDE DOWN CAKES
ARE PERFECT DESSERTS
These clever "upside down" cakes
make complete desserts because they
include both fine fruit and tender
cake in perfect combination. Of
course they can't be made from any
standard cake recipe because the
flour and shortening used would make
them too crumbly.
The recipe given here has been
carefully tested to give a perfect up-
side down cake. The flour specified is
the very finest winter wheat flour be-
cause its delicate gluten will give a
fine -textured, light cake.
Peach Upside Down Cake
114 cups sifted cake flour
11/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
cup granulated sugar
4 tablespoons butter
?/Z cup brown sugar, firmly packed
4 tablespoons soft butter or
other shortening
1 egg, well beaten
1/ cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups sliced peaches (fresh or
canned)
Sift flour once, measure, add bak-
ing powder, salt, and granulated
sugar, and sift together three times.
Add butter, Combine egg, milk, and
vanilla. Add to flour mixture stir-
ring until all flour.: is dampened; then-.
beat vigoewusl :- teektevte
McTt "tit ;lee'...
8;x 8 x 2 pan. or 8 -inch skillet, over
low flame. Add brown sugar (l,L.
teaspoon nutmeg may be mixed with
brown . sugar, if desired) ; stir until
melted. On this arrange peach slic-
es. Turn batter over contents of
pan. Bake in moderate oven (350
degrees F.) 50. minutes, or until
done. Loosen cake from sides of pan
with spatula or broad blade knife.
Serve cake upside down with peach-
es on top. Garnish with whipped
cream.
Canned pineapple, cooked apricots,
or sliced apples may be used instead
of peaches.
Extremely Methodical
"She's more useful to ane than any
paid man," said Mr, Anton, "She is
so methodical,
"Her husband lived to be ninety-:.
two. He died on the Gunatersbury
Park estate of the Rothschiide, just
outside London, a few months agog;
They were employed on the estate
for nearly thirty years.
Here's what Mrs, Chaney has `to'
say about gardening:
"Once I was a terrible sulferer;d
from coughs, colds and chills," she,;
confided.
"Since I took up gardening I have
never had a recurrence of thosse com-
plaints. My advice to those who
want to live long and be free from
ailments is not to coddle themselves;
but get out in the open air, stay in,
the open and garden,"
She has worked hard ever since she
can remember -since she was a little;
girl in Charlton, near Wantage.
NEW CURTAINS ADD
FRESH NOTE TO KITCHEI'1
For the kitchen, a fresh note may
be given by .introducing curtains of
oneof the dainty new voiles or mus-,
UNDAY_
CHOOLESSON
OUR DAY OF WORSHIP•.- -Genesis
2;2, 3; Exodus 20:.841; Psalm
100; John 4:20.24; Acts 20s7t
Colossians 3:15-17. Golden Text.
---God is a Spirit: and they that
worship him must worship in spirit
and truth. John 4:24.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
TIME AND PLACE.—The words
uttered in Genesis were, of course,
spoken in the garden of Eden, at the
time of man's creation. The first
giving of the law occurred on Mount
'Sinai in 1490 • B.C, The date of
Psalm 100 cannot be determined.
The discourse with the woman of
Samaria occurred in A.D. 27, at Sy..
char, in Samaria. Pau' visited Troas,
,a city on the coast of Mysia, in Asia
tMinor, about A.D. 59. The Epistle
lins which are both washable and;
i jto the Colossians was written while
fadeless. They are often sold as dressy -�;au1 was a ;lacier in Rome a
matehals, which means they are a; p . apt
yard wide. ,;•proximately A.D. 64.
They may be had with a single line; j,;' Make a joyful noise unto Jehov-
check in any one of many attract fell, all ye lands." Never will the
tive colors on a white or cream
ground, oryou may prefer a tarta
effect. Then there is; a great variety
of colored spots, also on a cream o
white ground. Any of these would
make a pleasant change from the:
usual kitchen curtains.
HINTS
Mix together three ounces of tin,
three ounces bismuth and six ounces
mercury, and warm in a small, clean
iron vessel or a large iron, ladle.
Paste the edge of the glass with a
strip of paper to prevent the mixture
from running off during the process.
of silvering. Thoroughly clean and
warm the glass, then pour a small
quantity of the hot (not boiling)
mixture on to it, tilting the glass
first one way and then the other
until the worn spots are well cover-
ed. Remove the paper, set the glass
aside to dry, and when quite hard
apply a protective coat of paint to
the back.
• *
Wrinkled Pattern
Do not try to use a wrinkled pat-
tern, or the new garment /nay be
ruined. A wrinkled paper pattern can
be pressed out smoothly with a warni
iron.
world be in its proper condition till
with one unanimous shout it adores
Ole only God.
"Serve. Jehovah with gladness."
nlythose who know and worship
Go4 can ever experience such
nbounding joy as is expressed in this
Psalm. "Come before his presence
with singing." The first song in the
Bible is that of Moses and the Is-
raelites (Exodus 15:1-21), celebrat-
ing their deliverance from Egypt.
"Know ye that Jehovah, the is
God." That is, the nations were to
wlearn from the works that he has
rought for Israel that Jehovah is
the only true God. "It is that he
that hath made us, and we are his."
This is the see.ond of seven things
the Psalmist reminds us we ought
to know. "We are his people, and
the sheep of his pasture." When we
realize the relationship into which
God has brought us, that his Son is
the Great Shepherd of all who trust
him, joy and thanksgiving spontan-
eously burst from our hearts.
"Enter into his gates with thanks-
giving." If every Sunday morning
each believer would begin to think
of those things for which he is most
thankful, how glorious a spirit
would prevail . over our services of
worship! "And into his courts with
praise." Into whatever court of the
Lord you may enter, let: your ad-
rea sign be the subject of praise..
WORK -OUT-OF-DOORS
CURE FOR ALL ILLS
Britain's oldest woman gardener,
Mrs. Elizabeth Chaney, aged ninety,
of Hambledean Nurseries, Botley
(Hants) , is chief assistant to her
grandson, J. C. Anton, who control
the nurseries.
Ninety Mrs. Chaney may be, but
she still spends a strenuous six hours
a day weeding, potting and watering
the greenhouse plants.
A merry little lady she is. When
next you feel that the garden is • :a
little too much for you at your time
of life, think of Mrs. Chaney's task
the other day. Let Mr. Anton tell
it: --
"We put in a late crop of pota-
toes," he said.
"It took us all day, but was grand-
mother tired? She was not! She
eat up late that night — reading a
thriller, She is enthralled by a mys-
tery story.
have been pats e. s• matt
they have become unsightly, ; piste
thin muslin over the surface ajr'd then
paint it.
* * *
Oil up and sharpen the lawn mow-
er,
* e e
Dig Deeply
Don't fail to dig deeply. The deep-
er the soil is turned the better the.
plants will. grow.
,r: :r
Fluffy Hair
A. vinegar rinse after shampooing
real blonde hair will help make it
light and fluffy.
* * *
Garden Production
Study early, late and niidseason
vegetables in your planting plans for
succession. '
* ,, a.
Have Garden Tools Handy
You need tape lines, stakes, plant
labels, etc., for garden operations.
Get them in and have them handy.
Don't Quit!
"When things go wrong as they
sometimes will
When the road you're treading seems
all up hill,
When the funds are low and the
debts are high,
And you want to smile, but you have
to .sigh,
\\Then care is pressing you down a
bit,
Rest, if yon must—but don't • you.
quit"
FU MANCHU
—Anon
n
I, ys, because of what God is, e=
halt we know him and are known
5Y hhn, and because he has made
us, and we are his.
"For Jehovah is good." The moral
duality of God is the essential char-
atteristic of Christianity. "His lov-
ing -kindness endureth for ever." A
phrase first used by David, 1 Chron.
16:34, 41; and often in the Psalms,
,especially Psalm 136. "And his
faithfulness unto all generations."
God is faithful to his promises.
"Our fathers." By this she prob-
ably referred only to the ancestors
of the Samaritan people. "Worship-
ped in this mountain." This would
be the one rising up from the very
place where the well was located,
.Ill'dunt Gerizim "And ye say, that
In Jerusalem in the the place where
men ought to worship." By making
this statement, she .merely meant
that those people, of whom he Was
one, namely, the Jews, held such a
belief.
"Jesus said unto her, Woman, be-
Iieve me, the hour cometh." There
is a divine order, in accordance with
which each part of the whole
scheme of salvation is duly fulfilled
(cf. 2:4; 5:25, 28; 16:2, 4, 25, 82.)
"When neither in this mountain."
Here a temple had been built in the
time of Nehemiah, but destroyed by
John Hyrcanus, 120 B,C., and never
rebuilt, although the Samaritans
have never ceased to worship and
offer sacrifices on .tha"e mountain,
from that time even, down to the
present day. "Nor in Jerusalem,
By Sax Rohmer
shall ye worship the Father." The
conception of God as Father is the
last and greatest revelation, Be-
yond such conception it is not pos-
sible to go if fatherhood means
love,
"Ye worship that which ye know
not." The Samaritans accepted only
the firat five books of the Bible,
namely, the Pentateuch. Their con-
ception of God was incomplete. "We
worship that which we know." The
Jews had developed themselves in
constant contact with the divine
manifestation; they remained in the
school of the God of revelation, and,
in this living revelation, they pre-
served the principle of a true know-
ledge. "For salvation is from the
Jews," This wonderful people,
whose fit symbol is the burning
bush, was chosen by sovereign grace
to stand amidst the surrounding
idolatry as the bearer of the know-
ledge of the only true God.
"But the hour cometh, and now
is." The hour had arrived because
Christ had arrived. "When the true
worshippers." That is, the ideal
worshippers. "Shall worship the
Father." Worship is that attitude
which recognizes the throng, which
recognizes superiority. "In spirit
and truth." The spirit is that part
of man's nature which holds, or is
capable of holding, intercourse with
the eternal order. "For such doth
the Father seek to be his worship-
pers."
"God has a spirit: and they that
worship him must worship in spirit
and truth." The spirituality of God
and his fatherhood are here brought
together side by side by our Lord.
"And let the peace of Christ." It
is that peace which Christ bestows
(John 14:27), which he has himself
secured by his blood, as our Re-
deemer, and he dispenses it as the
result of that atoning work (Eph.
2:14-17). "Rule in your .aearts."'
Wherever there is a conflict of mo-
tives or impulses or reasons, the
peace of Christ must step in and de-
cide which is to prevail. "To the
which . also ye were called in one
body." Being so called, all who
share in it of course find themselves
knit to each other by possession of
a common gift. "And be ye-thank-
ful."
e•thank-ful." Thankful for Christ, for •his
work that provided peace.
"Let the word offChrist." The
•
but the word or message about hini,
or, in other words, the gospel of
Christ. "Dwell in you richly"
Christian truth is not to be received
mechanically, but to become actual-
ly a part of us. "In all wisdom."
Where the gospel in its power, it
will effloresce into principles of
thought and action. "Teaching and
admonishing one another with psalms
and hymns and spiritual songs."
Singing with grace in your' hearts
unto God." Whatever we can or can-
not do with the lips, it is still pos-
sible to sing in the heart, for if only
the inner life is in tune with God,
our whole being will in one way or
another manifest itself to God's
praise and glory.
'And whatsoever ye do, in word
or in deed." Our being in Christ
interpenetrates every part of our
daily life; he is Lord of all we are
and do. "Do all in the name of the
Lord Jesus." In obedience to his
authority, in dependence on his help,
in the light of his will, and to the
praise of his glory.
Today is the only day we have,
Of tomorrow we cannot be sure;
To seize the chance as it comes along
fs the way to hake it secure.
For every year is a shorter year,
And this is the truth sublime:
A moment misspent is a jewel lost
From the treasury of time.
"Young people today have found
everything out before they have had
time to look at it "---.7. B. Priestley.
VW TO GIVE
We are told that .one day a wealthy
man, facing an enemy, was shot at
and escaped only because an ear,
ployee jumped in front of hint an,
took the bullet which was intendel
far his employer." The injured and
lay for weeks in the hospital, ant
the rich man did not even pay thf
bills. The wife said in defence of . hit
well-nigh incredible action, "Yei(
don't know my husband. He is genera
'pus enough, but he does not know
how to give, Ile never learned, He
was too busy making money to
learn." It is possible that the start.,
ling miserliness of some men ani
the almost unbelievable parismony
of others may be due to this fact*
they never learned to give. They did
not know that it had to be learned.
They intended to be generous sonar
day when they had amassed a for.
-tiiune, but while making one they
could not afford to be generous.
If this be true, then the poor mai
who tells himself that he cannot
aff=ord to give is deceiving himself,
and if fortune ever comes his way he
will discover that wealth does not
bring with it the ability to give,
then he will of necessity fail to
acquire wealth, but if this be true,
and there seem to be proofs that it
is not necessarily true, then it i>1
better to get the habit of giving and'
stay poor than to forget that habil
and become a rich man who sloes not
know how to give.
"Poverty is a soft pedal upon al
branches of human activity, not we
cepting the spiritual, and even tha
Puritans, for all their fire, bolt its
throttling caress."—IL L. Mencken.
Spe+citator Sports! .:
Here's a dashing little sun -back
dress with a bolero jacket, It is
just as much at home in town as
in the country or at the beach.
Shirting cotton, pastel linen, Y'"j
silks, etc., are nice mediums. ad
Style No. 3108 is designed =fort
sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, Mi and
40 -inches bust. Size 16 requires
2% yards of 39 -inch material
for dress with is yard of 35 -inch
material for bolero.
HOW- TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address
plainly, giving number and size
of such patterns as you want.
Enclose 15c in stamps or coin
(coin preferred; wrap. it careful-
ly) for each number, and address
your order to Wilson Pattern Ser-
vice, 73 West Adelaide St., To-
ronto.
Sia
THE ZYAT KISS—Night of Peril
Holding gingerly The perfumed envelope—that mes-
sage of death—which the mysterious girl had given to me,
Neyland Smith led me toward a cab. 'We're hardly sefe
from Pe Manchu here, Petrie," he said. "Get in quickly!"
Something whiz.
zed past my ear, missed both Smith and me by a miracle,
and whirled over the roof of the taxi with a hum like a
hurled knife, "Attempt number enol" cried Smith, as we
scrambled info the is3. "if I escape alive from this busi-
ness ithat! know lL srar.; e,..:!i:'a..
"Tonight they will try to
WI Me," Smith said as we sank down on the cushions. He
tapped the perfumed envelope, "Pe Manchu knows that
i alone redognize him as the most evil and formidable
personality in the world today, and understand how the
yellow hordes of the East plot to destroy Western civilize -
flan , .. Look out of the back window, Petrie ..
"Someone has of into another eels," I whispered. "It
is following oursl'" (, r9•`,o ne ihp nnhmnr hod T•hc ru•u sins+:+++, Thr.