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Zurich Herald, 1935-10-10, Page 3►� tr.• .ti row, s • rear4-easy ++ . y - TRY THIS spinach, asparagus, carrots, peas, Idere's a tempting new 'meat dish 'string beans) by a famous food authority. ',Chis 11/4 cups carrots and 11/2 carrots, liss peas eas savory l:imb chop grill is very nearly 1 cup peas, 1 cup a meal in itselk-amid what an invit-11/2Cup toes and 11/2 cups potatoes 6 fresh shoulder lamb chops 3 cups cooked macaroni, spagbettug,Onel 6 stuffed onions, medium sized ti or rice 6 or 12 half-inch slices of potato 11/2 cups cooked macaroni or spa. 6 peach halves, fresh or canned ghetti nd da11 ecups d shcocorn 6 whole cloves • 6 slices of bacon All of the foods suggested for seal- Parboil the onion. Meanwhile trim loped dishes xnay be served creamed, proportion of sauce ea •kat from the lamb chaps"using ld foode . In making a eamed sear under the broiler flame for abou and solid save aish or what - 6 heat, or if frying wish nt to ever isebeingpusedmeat, cagefu,lly added ,.heat; sear in a frying p' the centres from the onions, dust with •salt, ;fill .with bits of Canadian cheese and cracker crumbs, place a bit of butter in the top, and sprinkle with sugar to glaze. Place the seared chops in a large shallow pan; arrange the potatoes, the stuffed onions, and the peach halves, in eac"u of which a clove has been stuck, around the chops. Salt the chops and potatoes. Place the bacon slices over the potatoes and bake 30 to 45 minutes at 350 degrees F. Serve from the pan onto hot plates, giving each portion of all the foods and one or two slices of po- tato. Garnish with parsleY or water- cress with a dash of paprika on the onions. In the menu below you will find suggested just the right dishes to accompay the lamb chop grill. You'll notice it is really an oven meal, for the only other cooked dish is baked right In the oven with the grill; Fruit cup or tomato juice cocktail Lanib chops, bacon curls, potato slices, Peach halves with cloves, stuffed onion, Salad greens, French dressing, Rice pudding with raisins, Coffee This recipe and menu have been expertly tested and are • thoroughly reliable. "AUTUMN" SUPPER DISHES Cool weather brings with it a na- tural appetite for warm food: Almost overnight restaurant proprietors change "luncheon and supper menus to meet this seasonal desire of heir patrons, and similarly the homemak- er plans to serve nourishing, hot supper dishes which. are 'sure to please and satisfy thex.ii'1-r G) atheassema -B uapea exeeptionaliy tasty, and no matter what ,..foods are combined to make them, the fact that the foundation is a cream sauce assures high food value, axil is enough to place them at the top of the "supper dish" list. Scalloped Dishes 4 tabtcssoons butter 4 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk 3 cup;{ cooked foot, cut in pieces Salt and pepper Melt bu ter, Blend in flour and sea- sonings. Md milk gradually and !stir until mixture thickens. Cook for '3 minute:. Place alternate layers of cooked food and sauce in buttered baking dish_ Cover with buttered crumbs and bake in a hot oven 400 degrees la until crumbs are nicely browned, Note: — 't to s/.� cup grated cheese and a,pinch inch of mustard may be add- ed to sauce just before removing from the stove. Suggestions for Scalloped Dishes 3 cups cooked chicken, veal, ham or any cooked fish 1/ cups cooked meat or fish and 11/2 cups cooked spaghetti or maca- roni 11/4 cups meat or fish and 11/4 cups green peas 11t culls meat and 11,22 cups corn 6 hard -cooked eggs, sliced or cut in pieces 2 cups 4 hard -cooked eggs and 1 s Milted potatoes (diced) celery, corn or peas 3 cups cooked vegetables (couli- flower, cabbage, potatoes, Oman o Warld By Main M. Morgan to the cream sauce and thoronghlY garnish,. CANADIAN APPLE RECIPES The apple without question is the king .of fruits. Whether fresh, dried or evaporated or canned; . it is a wholesome food, easily prepared, at- tractive t tractive and palatable at all times. As pointed.rout by the Dominion De- partment of Agriculture in the book- let, Canadian Grown Apples, in which 120 different recipes for the cooking of apples are fully explained, apples vary in flavour and texture. The sound, tart apples are the most suit- able for preserving but care should be taken to use them in their proper season. When taus is done, spices need riot be added as their flavour cannot be improved. Due to the large amount of pectin contained in apple juice, it may be used in other fruits to give a jelly consistency to jams and marmalades. There is no waste to a good apple; even the core and paring may be utilized -for jelly. To store apples in the home, the atmosphere should be dry and the temperature low and cool. The following recipes are tak- en from the booklet Canadian Grown Apples which may be had free on. heated. Creamed mixture ,may be served on toast points, in croustades, in split tea biscuits, in pattie shells or in rings of mashed potato. Chop- ped parsley, -grated cheese or papri- ka makes a simple, but effective, application from the *Publicity and Extension Branch, Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture, Ottawa. Apple Marmalade • Wash, quarter and cut into small pieces coarse-grained Canadian grown apples. Add cold. water and aeseQk•_slowly until very• -soft. RuU .through a stra%iuer, ..sna'£ox each cup, of apple pulp acid §'a cup sugar. Acrd grated lc;inon rind and lemon juice, allowing .one-half lemon 'to every six cups of apple pulp. Cook slowly, strring• very frequently until thick. Put up in .jars or glasses and cover with paraffin wax. When cold, the marmalade should cut like cheese or jelly. Preserved ginger cut fine may be added, using one tablespoon for every six cups of pulp. Capt. Hubert Braod, ex -Schneider eup pilot, is seen in cockpit of tinyxnystery plane he piloted in King's air races in England. Its capable of three miles a minute. HOME-MADE BEA,. 'AIDS HELP BALANCE YOUR. HUDG.E UNDAYT CHOOLES S 0 LESSON II -- October 13. THE STORY OF JEREMIAH Jeremiah 1: 6-10; 26: 8.15 GOLDEN TEXT — To whomsoever ! shall send thee thou shalt go, and whatsoever I shall command thee thou ehalt speak. Jeremiah 1:7. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME — Jeremiah received his call in the thirteenth year of the reign of and Josiah, approximately 626 B.C., he continued in his prophetic minis- try for more than forty years, down to the last king of Practically all of the PLACE events of our lesson take place in the, city of Jerusalem. "Bue 'Jehovah said unto me, Say not, I am a child; for to whomsoever; I shall send thee thou shalt go, and whatsoever I shall command thee thou: shalt speak." His lack of experience,. will not unfit him for the prophetic. office, for God will direct him, both as to the object and the contents of his message. "Be not afraid because et them; for I am with thee to deliver thee, saith Jehovah." When God sends forth . his servants, he goes with;. them. -" t"' lien*J;enova'xr' • j tit "*Yv't J4 dx and touched my mouth; as nd*.: van said unto me, Behold, 1. have putt; my words in thy mouth." The ran` guage of this verse, of course, is not to be taken literally. It was not an actual hand of God which touched Oatmeal *or Egg Masks Are Easily Prepared—Care of Hair Costs But Little, hovah." The people. of Judah were ,plading their entire confidence in the permanence and stability of the temple. "And when the princes of Judah heard these things, they came up from the king's house unto the house of Jehovah; and they sat in the entry of the new gate of Jehovah's ,house!' The new gate was, in all pro.. bability, the one built by Jotham (2 Kings 15:35). "Then spake the priests and the prophets unto the princes and to all the people, saying, This man is worthy of death; for he hath pro- phesised against this city, as ye have heard with your ears." The particu- lar oharge which was brought against the; prophet should be carefully no- ted. The only thing that he had done was to pronounce the doom of their beloved city unless they repented of their. sins. "Then spake Jeremiah unto all *the princes and to all the people saying,' Jehovah sent me to prophesy against this house and against this city all the words that ye have heard." It is a great scene which here passes be - ore us, in which the prophet's bear- �,g a. n,bntly ,aret.thy ofHimself, and 3?1i0 do yell io o't►sai5re 1?tis 1ji:shaken "conviction that his mes- sage had been__entrusted to him by God himself. "Now therefore amend your ways and your doings." Jeremiah was the one true statesman in all the politi- "If p i riothint ,af nationaliliatt , leads to hatred of other 4.ountrieg!II it bas become an evil thine—Vale .count Cecil. "1 can afford to buy only the neces- sary cosmetics, one cream and a lo- tion," writes a frank reader who ap- paiently Wants to be well turned out at a minimum of expense. "I can. go to a beauty shop •occasionally, but not regularly. What do you think I should buy and what homemade pre- parations do you think I ought to substitute for the ones I can't afford to get?" This calls for reiteration of all the homemade concotions and their va- lue to a girl's beauty. The"one cream had better be an all-purpose variety that can be used for cleansing either before or after soap and water and which will serve as a tissue cream as well. The benefit your skin gets from this depends on the amount you leave on while you sleep. Allow a thin film to remain at least one night a week. To eliminate lines around eyes and across forehead, leave a generous layer on these spots. The lotion ought to be a skin tonic or a good hand ,softener. If you de- cide on the former, use olive oil or the all-purpose cream on hands three nights a week. If the latter, substi- tute ice water or cold, slightly dilut- ed witch hazel for the skin tonic. Other items must include foundation, rouge powder, lipstick, and manicure accessories, of course. Don't feel sorry for yourself when you hear others talk about the mar- vellous commercially prepared masks they have discovered. You can mix uncooked oatmeal with milk or plain water, smooth the !mixture on withce and neck, let it dry, remove warm water and get goad results. An egg mask is beneficial, too. Plain lem- on juice is an excellent bleach for hands and arms. Don't forget about hot oil treat- ments, daily brushing and lemon rinses that keep hair healthy, soft and sbining. Learn to set waves and to make ringlet curls yourself. Save your allowance for visits to the hair- dresser for special occasions when you want to look especially sleek. the ' mouth of the prophet, though cal chaos, .speaking not merely tylia ever touched , the prophet was,interest of the present moment. from God, d, figuratively speaking, „And. obey the vo ceszof Jehovah from God's Band. your God; and Jehovah oval repent "See, I have this day set thee over, him of the evil that he hath pro - the nations and over thy kingdoms." nounced against you.' The suggestion is that of a people listening for God, "Bad husbands are about the only defective things women will try' twice." Bruce Barton. The use of travelling is to regulate, imagination by reality, and instead of thinking how things may be, see them as thery are, --Dr Johnson, Temptations, like misfortunes, areii sent to test our moral strength. Marguerite de 'Valois. It is easier to enrich ourselves Wirth k thousand vtirtues than ti eorrect ourselves of a single fault. Bruyere, Every life has actual blanks, which the ideal must fill ap, 01 whie)ii else remain bare and profitless for ever.—•Sulia Ward Howe. All men naturally hate one an- other, I hold it a fact, that if mein knew exactly what one says of the: other, there would not be four' friends in 'the world.—Pascal. If the day looks kinder gloomy And your chances kinder slim If the situation's puzzlin' And your prospects awful grim If perplexities keep pressin' Tis hope eland grit your teeth one Just bristle up And keep on keepin' on. Frettin' never wins . a fight And fumin' never pays There ain't no use in broodin° In these pessimitstic days Smile, just kind of cheerfully Though hope is nearly gone ont teeth And bristle up and grity And keep on keepin' on. the Coddled Apples 2 cups boiling water 1 to 2 cups sugar 8 apples Make a syrup of boiling sugar and boiling water five minutes. Corse and pare Canadian -grown apples; cook slowly in syrup; cover closely and watch carefully. . When the apples are tender Etc them out add a little lemon juice to syrup and pour over applies. The cavities may be filled with jelly or raisins. Apple porcupine Stick Coddled applies with pieces of almonds blanched and cut length- wise in splice-. Apple and Cheese Salad Mix chopped pecans with twice their bulk of cream cheese adding a little thick cream to blend Vie mix- ture. Season with pepper and salt and make in_o tiny balls. Pare mel- low Canadian -grown apples, core and slice across in centre into rings about half an inch thick. Arrange rings on lettuce leaves and place several cheese balms in the centre. Serve with cream or salad dressing. FU MANCHU The prophet is made a perfect or su-. perintendent of the nations of the world. "To pluck up and to break down and to destroy and to over- throw, to build and to plant." All theawords deers used imply, from their sound, a' ,.certain amount Ofti violence,'i.n the process; in 31:28, is God himself' who is to perform.; the 'various acts which are elsewhere, ascribed to the prophet. "And it came to pass, when Jere; miah had made an end of speaking' all that Jehovah had commanded; him to speak unto alL the people that all the priests and the prophets and all the people laid hold on him,. saying, Thou shalt stirely die." The charge against Jeremiah was that he spoke without God's command, and, having done so, that he should be put to death according to the Mosaic' law (Dent. 18:20). - "Why diast thou prophesied in the name of Jehovah saying, This house shall be like Shiloh, and this city shall be desolate, without inhabi- taut? And all the people gathered unto Jeremiah in the house of • Je- and so amending ways and doings, turning back to God; and God—that is the only way in which we can ex. .press.truth concerning ham — God sighing with reliei'and releasing his sorrow, in -order to console and deal with a people that turned back to pint. . "But as for me, behold, I am in Your hand: do - with me as is good and right in your eyes" Jeremiah • derrves •courage from the greatness of his course; he is only a single life, the contest is not really between him and - his accusers, but . between 'good and evil, right and wrong, God and•the .powers of darkness. "Only know ye for certain that, if ye put me to death, ye will bring innocent blood upon yourselves, and upon this city, and upon the inhabi- stants thereof; for of a true Jeho- vah hath sent me unto you to speak all these words in your ears." Judas Iscariot himself confessed (Matt. 27;4) that he had betrayed innocent So They Say "Love scenes are much more beautiful without a kiss.' Paul Muni. "Let us not forget that, far from progress 'being at an'enl, it is ,go- _ a,..n.la •.ate than I3rlxley. "The educated. man is a greater nuisance than the uneducated one."— George Bernard Shaw. "The theatre is e and kicking. It will not die until someone thinks up a superior form of entertain- ment."—Brock ntertain- ment "—Brook Pemberton. "It is doubtless more dn�ccult tgs." o make souls goose-step i E '1 Ludwig. By Sax Rohrer i Her beauty was wholly intoxicating, Luh 1 it sr : :r 1 1 era, end i^ rank nitre!'•• to the floor. 1 "I..; : i! e.i can, ami p? • I `aro, 1:r. Feirie,",;he cried i ".. `l eagerly, fearfully. "If you r i only urdersiood —ay o u would not be so cruel..: .'. 1 J. "1 cnn not {'et, 'i t'll .: 1 1 rnurt•, int i rat I u Manchu's sac. o. ill, you are not a man if you can give me to the police --if you can forgot I tried to save you on.,o .. : 3 mx _ "Of all indoor sports, one of the most popular and widespread iiis sbun- doubtedly that of doing ody else's job better than he ,does it l;> ;mself."—Deems Taylor. "There is no career in the world to compare with the exaltation of a woman who is the mother of men and women."—Mary Pickford. "Life is like water; there is al- ways a place for it to flow, if not over, then around."—Burris Jenkins. blood. It is a phrase common with Jeremiah (2:34; 7:6; 19:4; 22:3, 17). Of all the places in the world where innocent blood should never be shed, it would be the holy city of Jerusa- lent, yet it has been by religious In- stitutions in holy places that the blood of some of the great saints of every age has been sbed in times of bigoted persecution, One Pattern --Blouse, Skirt Today's pattern of blouse and skirt is a perfect choice for first fall wardrobe. The blouse of royal -blue and silver formal looking metal crepe makes a stunning effect against the navy blue wool-like silk ls kirt. very And incidentally ` fashionable this fall. Lustrous satin crape blouse with the skirt of lightweight wool- en is also smart for this simple to sew outfit. Style No. 8135 is designed and sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 40 -inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 yards of 39 -inch material for the blouse with 21/2 yards of 35 - inch material for the skirt. 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 FINGER—Beauty and Dr. Pel ie, Suddenly.she raised herself to her knees, weep. ing. "It is not your work to hound a woman to death!" she cried- "Ah, I have no friend in all the world. Have mercy en me! Be my friend and save me --from Fu Manchu!" -'\. I turned my back tower! her. How could ou dtoitt �had. —Perhaps to stand trial tor murder? y tried to save me from the - - - awful danger of file Zayat KisO: N4. \\,\\N ,,,,„\.,1 53 1901 i;1,,,..Rte.113hm IgilLr ne tat Eyndkeata, Sdt