Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Feb 1935, p. 3

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i1 â€" Hog LDuring r on for the was forecast , the Post. rech on posâ€" y. The comâ€" n appointed matter has report will nt shortly. s of radio avelled â€"â€" ch by the come that e â€" family ister were n, so that as a "real cavalcade y disputes rd‘s habit m an in the party . any able #ging. â€" ital. "ball« v unintelâ€" o go ahead hat regular take place, in progress wavelengths and there 1c Hug" 10n ‘3, so that ose in use broadcastâ€" a 1M ) V ance ay3 [ Says Hopes ega ercome ith the pporâ€" to be were ttendâ€" v to w to those Froâ€" rate, ‘xtent themâ€" There )none nost ften shed 1N e 00 m m Vanilla Tapioca Junket 1 tablet for making junket 1 pint milk 8 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon cold water 1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring 14 cup tapioca pudding (or left over pudding) Put 2 tablespoons tapioca pudding in the bottom of five dessert dishes. Dissolve tablet for making junket in Baked Caramel Custard 4 cups scalded milk 1 cup sugar 5 eggs 44 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla Melt sugar (to prevent burning, use 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 ; _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 difâ€" ferent bottles of flavoring extract to prepare dessertsâ€"when company is present or when the family dines alone. powder *4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg, well beaten % cup milk . 2 tablespoons mellied butter or other shortening Sift flour once. measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, salt, and sugar, and sift again. _ Combine egg and milk; add gradually to flour, beating only until smooth,. Add shortening. Bake on hot, greased griddle. _ Serve hot with mapleâ€"flavored syrup, or blueâ€" berry sauce. _ Makes 12 to 15 gridâ€" dle cakes. 5 tablespoons melted butter or other shortening 1 cup grated American cheese 0 eggs whites, stiffly beaten Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" 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 walflle â€" iron. Serve with butter. Makes four 4â€"section waffies. Griddle Cakes (Sweet milk) 1 cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon doubleâ€"acting baking milk 1 egg, well beaten ® 1 tablespoon melted butter or other shortening. M Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, soda,. salt, and sugar, and sift again. _ Pour boiling water over corn meal and stir until smooth. Let stand 15 minutes. Add milk and egg. Combine with flour. Stir only until smooth. Add shortâ€" ening. Bake on hot, wellâ€"greased griddle. _ Serve hot with mapleâ€" flavored syrup. Makes 18 cakes. Cheese Waffles 2 cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons doubleâ€"acting baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 3 eggs yolks, well beaten \ 14 cups milk \ These are the days when griddleâ€" cakes and #uch like are in demand at the breakfast table. Here are thrce new recipes: 1 cup sifted flour 4Â¥ tesspoon doubleâ€"acting baking tablespeon celd water. Add sugar powder teaspoon soda teaspoon salt tablespoon sugar cup boiling water cup vellow cornâ€"meal eup thick sour milk or butter HOT CAKES MUTT AND JEFF CARE KEEPS PERMANENT Within the past few weeks a good many women have wanted to know how to care for the permanents they got during the holidays. The majority complain of dryness and a 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. NOTE: One cup peaches is sufâ€" ficient for this recipe; however, 2 ecups may be used, making a large pi¢, serving eight. The 1 lb. 14 oz. can furnishes 2 ecups fruit. Steamed Fruit Pudding 1 (9 oz. package dry mince meat and % cup water boiled alâ€" most dry 1 egg, slightly beaten 4 ecup nut meats, finely chopped 4 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 eool. Add slightly beaten egg, nut meats, arange juice and grated rind to cake crumbs. Blend thoroughly. Fold in cooled mince meat. Pour inâ€" to greased pudding mold, eight inâ€" dividual molds, or baking powder can. filling twoâ€"thirds full. Cover‘ SPICY PUDDING IN MODERN , MANNER Nowadays there‘s no need for spicy desserts to be a chore. Housewives used ty chop and shave pounds of fruit peel and beef, apples, raisins and citron for mince pies and pudâ€" 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 4 ecup lemon juice Pie crust Break minc* meat into pieces. Add peach juice. Place over heat and stir until all lumps are _ thoroughly: broken up. Bring to brisk boil; conâ€" linue boiling for one minute. Allow to cool. Line a 9â€"inch pie plate with pastry and fill with mince meat mixâ€" ture. Place drained sliced peaches over top. Place upper crust on fillâ€" ed lower one and press edges firmly together. Trim off surplus pastry. Bake 35 minutes in a hot oven (400 degrees F.). 1% cups sugar 1 cup evaporated milk V teaspoon cream of tartar & cup oleomargarine % pound pecans, chopped Combine sugar, evaporated milk and cream of tartar. Cook, stirring constantly, until the softâ€"ball stage is reached (238 degrees F.), Add oleomargarine and cook until _ the mixture again comes to the softâ€"ball stage (238 degrees F.). Add nut: and beat until the mixture becomes dullâ€"pour into a shallow pan which has been spread with oleomargarine. Allow to set and cut into inch squarâ€" es. Makes 30 lâ€"inch pieces, 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 lunâ€" cheon you will find these tiny tastâ€" ies particularly pleasing. Here is one I feel sure will appeal. Emglish Yums to milk, flavored with vanilla flavorâ€" ing. Warm to lukewarmâ€"not hot. Add dissolved tablet for junket. Stir a few seconds and pour immediateâ€" ly over the tapioca. Let set,. and then chill in refrigerator. Tooth troubles â€"afflict _ monkeys and apes as well as human beings, it is revealed by Dr.: Adoliph H. Schultz, of Johns Hopkins Uniâ€" versity. Dr. Schultz found that teeth lost through disease are more common among some jape . species than in some human races. is kheld annually to revive memoâ€"ies of Caiifornia‘s gold rush days, whon frogâ€"jumping was a popular pastim> among the miners and prospectors. The record jump of 13ft. lin. was made by a frog named "Budweiser" some years ago. About 250 frogs took part in a jumping contest at Angels Camp, California, and 20,000 spectators watched them jump. The contest, inâ€" spired by Mark Twain‘s story, "The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County," One garment from everyone who can afford to give â€" this is the League‘s objective. The appeal is being directed particularly toward Newfoundland‘s _ women, who are urgedâ€"if need beâ€"to knit or sew at least one warm piece of clothâ€" 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 all women to use their facilities in making up their contributions. As winter closes down on Newâ€" foundland‘s scattered outports, the Service League of Newfoundland is making a final drive to provide clothing for impoverished residents who might _ otherwis»e go scantily dressed through the cold months. If your hair is frizzy and never seems to look sleek and wellâ€"groomâ€" ed ask the operator who gives you a finger wave to apply a little brilâ€" 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 vour coiffure. Newfoundlanders Help Clothe Island‘s Needy Sit beside a fairly low table, putâ€" ting your elbows on it and resting your head in your hands. _ Place fingertips flat against the scealp and try to move it backward and forâ€" ward as well as in tiny circles. Reâ€" member that your sealp â€" not finâ€" gers â€" 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. A dry condition is fairly easy to remedy. You need hot oil shampoons, of course, and, since you don‘t want to brush out your fiinger waves, you should massage your scalp with your fingertips every night before you go to bed. few say that their hair is unmanâ€" ageable now. All want to have healthy scalps and smooth coiffures. Joan Crawford here uisplays three of the season‘s latest gowns, chief feature of which is the new neck treatment. 12 ‘Or unto governors, as sent by him‘ "St. Paul calls the magistrate a ‘minâ€" 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 obeyed because Caeser sends him; and that Caeser, throug1 a human inâ€" stituticn, is to be obeyed, because order is God‘s will."â€"For. vengeance on evilâ€"doers," Punishment of those who break the law and violate rights of thers was never in‘»nded to be "Be subject to every ordinance of man," The word ,translated "ordinâ€" ance" is d ordinarily in many senses, e.g., of peopling a country, of founding a city, of setting up games, feasts, altas, etc. Here it apparently selected as the most comprehensive word available. It refe.s to aH huâ€" 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 ofains Caeser, but because the Lord‘s life was o~a of obedience, beâ€" cause he himself showed respect to Pilate, and because he commanded his people to obey (Matt, 22 : 21)."â€" 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. ‘ The words indicate the growin of a idespread feeling of dislike showâ€" ing itself in calumny. So in Acts 28: 22 the disc.ples of Christ are desâ€" cribed as ‘a sect everywhere spoken against.‘ "Having _ your behavior seemly among the Gentiles." They were pilâ€" grims among the Gentiles, citizens of another country, and one of the reasons y they were to abstain from these things was that their lives might bear true testimony to God w h d made en a holy priestâ€" hood. "Beloved, I beseech you," He is not addressing all men, or even all soâ€" called religious men, but those whom he describes in the preceding pasâ€" sage as "an elect race, a royal priestâ€" hood, a holy nation, a people for God‘s own possession." "As sqjournâ€" ers and pilgrims," The A. V, transâ€" lates the first word as "stranger." It means, more literally, "one who lives in a place without the right of citizenship, a foreigner,." _ Place. â€" Some believe that the reference to Babylon on the Euphâ€" rates River, but it is more generally believed that it refers too the City of Rome. The Lesson in its Setting Time. â€" The date of the Epistles of Peter cannot be absolutely deterâ€" mined, It is commonly understood that his first Epistle was written, probably, in 60 A.D, LESSON _ VII.â€"February 17.â€"Peter Teaches Good Citizenship (Temperâ€" ance Lesson).â€"I. Peter 2: 11â€"17; 4: 15. Golden Textâ€"Love worketh no ill to his neighbor: love therefore is the fulfililment of the law.â€"Roâ€" mans 13: 10. UNDA YÂ¥â€"~ ~â€"â€"â€"â€" CHOOl Ess50N "For the time past may suffice to have wrought the desire of the Genâ€" 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? "Forasmuch then as Christ sufferâ€" 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 acâ€" cording to the flesh." "For he that hath suffered in the flesh." When ease opposes duty, the putting down of the fascinating enemy necessiâ€" 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 men," "Don‘t let the flesh constituts the entire circle of your movements! "Honor the king." These last two admonitions are found in close relaâ€" tion, though with a slightly varying emphasis, in Prov. 24 : 21. "Fear God." (cf. 1 : 17), "Love persuades a man purely for the goodâ€" 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," "HMonor all men," "The fact that there were in every man traces of the image of God after which he had been created, and infinite undevelopâ€" ed capacities might issue in the restâ€" 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 resâ€" pect. "Love the brotherhood." _ "There is, as far as it appears, no case where a fellowâ€"man, as man, is called ‘a brother‘ in the New Testament, "As free, and not using your freeâ€" dom." Believers are free (by redempâ€" tion in Christ) from: (1) the power of sin (John 8 : 36); Rom. 6 : 18â€"22) (2) the law of sin and death (Rom. 8 : 2); (3) the law (Gal, 5 : 12). "For a cloak of wickedness." Simiâ€" larly, the Apostle Paul: "use not your freedom for living in iniquity. "But as bondservants of God." On the one hand, they were freedmen, in Christ; but that very relationship made them the slaves of God. "For so is the will of God," "They might demand why they should go on in patient wellâ€"doing amid the deâ€" traction and ignorant opposition of foolish men; but he forecloges every objection, by saying, "So is the will of God." "That by wellâ€"doing |ye shc ‘1d put to silence the ignorance of foolish men." When men act as though they knew the truth concernâ€" ing that of which, in yeality, they are ignorant, they are then fools. measured and inficted by mere inâ€" dividuals, each acting incependently, but by the state as a unit, and through prope®‘> appointed officers, . "And praise to them that do well." Helene Yrande displayed glamorâ€" ous night dresses. of blue, green, grey and flesh satin fashioned with high empire waistlines and cape shoulder lines. Some have wrapâ€" around satin skirts and jackets to convert them into cocktail frocks. Other new lingerie colors are dove grey, baby blue and white as alterâ€" natives for the. traditional pink. Newest night dresses, slips and chemises are fashioned of filmy black georgette bordered with black lace. Paris. â€" Black lingerie spells "it" in undergarments for spring, 1985 fashion showings indicate, 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. Now it is almost imposgible to make a complete study because as the translator goes further into the past he comes upon changed words of which he knows nothing. Thousands of years asmount to very little among the Hindus. Their history goes back hundreds _ of thousands of years, back and back until it becomes so dim ‘that historiâ€" ans can not trace it. make other earth them. ANCIENT INDIA counts as new anything that is not ten or twenty thousand years of age. A great Japanese historian said only recently that he had spert twentyâ€"five years studying Chinese history and had found it to be the most wonderful of all histories. Now we know that Egypt is, comâ€" paratively speaking, a new conntry in spite of the fact that evidence proves that it was a civilized place ten thousand years apo. CHINA‘S HISTORY is so old ‘and so important that the Japanese, alâ€" ways enemies of the Chinese, even the Japanese have many books deâ€" voted to Chinese history. For many centuries people believed that Egypt was the oldest country in the world. 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 eternâ€" ity, ALL OVER THE WORLD strange finds are being made almost daily. "And to have walked in lasciviousâ€" ness." To what permitted wickedness this word directly refers appears as it is defined by the Greek scholar, the late J. H.~Thayer â€" "wanton (acts or) manners, as filthy words, indecent. bodily movements," etc "Lustus." Same word as above (2 : 11), "Winebiddings." Only here in the New Testament, but in Greek translation of Deut. 21 : 20, and Isa, 56 : 12. "Commonly it is used for a debauch, an extravagant indulgence in potations long drawn out, such as may induce permanent mischiefs on the body," "Revelling." Here and Rom. 13 : 12; Gal, 5 : 21, "In the Greek writers properly a nocturnal and riotous procession of halfâ€"drunkâ€" en and frolicsome fellows." "Carousâ€" 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" means forbidden by law, "the natural Jaw of reason and conscience,". "Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the living and the dead." The Judge is the Lord Jesus Christ, The judgment of men By BUD FISHER "Into the same 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." litâ€" erally «blaspheming you. "Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them." The verb here translated "run‘" expresses the blind haste of the wicked man who rushes headlong on his pleasure." SOME DAY SOME Worth Knowing [E DAY SOME MAN a long study of those books and the people of will learn something new Black Lingerie learn something new ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO will and this to "The trick never fails _ It works on small children just as well as on a celebrityâ€"because, of course, we‘re all just children underneath. I‘m never afraid to meet people any more. No matter how assured they seem. I know what is inside their polished armor. They want to be liked, admired, listened to. _ They want to tell what they know, report their little triumphs, feel big and important. The world is full of competition in being interesting, but there are very few trying to be inâ€" terested. "Those who have discovered that secret have the field almost to themâ€" selves. I laugh when I see advertiseâ€" ments telling what makes one popuâ€" larâ€"‘learn to play the saxophone‘; ‘do card tricks‘; be a clever talker‘ None of those things makes for popularity; they make for envy. People don‘t want to admire nearly as much as they want to be admired. "I can put it all in a single phrase. Any one who wants to be a social success can do it by learning just four wordsâ€"and using them conâ€" stantly. Those words are: ‘Wha;: do you think"â€"with just a faint emphasis on the ‘you.‘ "I have never krown them fail." "Sqp I began treating everybody just as if T were looking in a mirâ€" ror. I tried to find out what the person I was talking to was interâ€" ested in most, and then I urged him to tell me about it. It worked! The first trial of this system came when I sat next to a great European seiâ€" entist. I was petrified by his fame and I didn‘t know enough about his work to ask the simplest question. But casting desperately about I found that the passion of this man‘s life was tying trout flies, and he explained it all to me. Afterward I heard that ‘he had asked the hostess who I wasâ€"said I was one of the most interesting people h* had ever met! "Well, I don‘t know whether 1 convinced him, but I convinced my self. In a flash of understanding I saw the whole world as made up of frightened little rabbils just like myself. â€"Some dressed themselves up like wolves and some roared like lions, but inside they were just like meâ€"lonely, uncertain souls, wanting sympathy above all things. | â€":*"What was worse, I knew that everybody else knew it. I was always conscious of boring people. and I | was terrified by the superior intelâ€" ‘ligences I encountered everywhere. 1 was always uncomfortable at parties "Then,. one day, a friend told me about himself. It was startling how closely his mind resembled mine. 1t was the more remarkable because he was a noisy, brash sort of per son, whom I‘d always thought o( as the essence of selfâ€"confidence. H« was always the life of the party, but this, he said, was just covering up. And in his effort to hide his real shyness he often went too far Then, as he lay trying to sleep, he would shudder at what a fool he had made of himself. "The night before had been suck an occasion. He was in a s*ate about it. He had apparently taken a bit too much to drink and had said and done what he seemed to think were outrageous things. Trying to calm himâ€"and it was â€" oddly like talking to myselfâ€"I asked him who had been at the party, and what each one had said and done. He couldn‘t remember. From his acâ€" cout, it seemed that he had been performing to a collection of wax figures. Finally I said: ‘Be logicai. If you can‘t remember what was said or done by any one _ at the party, why should you think that any one should remember what you saig or did?" I was aware of my â€"awkwardness, my clothes, my uncertainty about manners and â€" etiquette, 1 always went trembling; I was always unâ€" comfortable while I was there, and dreaded leaving because of what 1 feared would be said about me when the doors had closed on my back. When I got to bed I tossed wakeâ€" the doors had closed on my back, When I got to bed I tossed wakeâ€" fully, thinking of all the clumsy things I had said and done and been. It seems worth passing on. "Years ago," said this person, "I learned a great truth. I learned that everybody is like everybody else. 1 had thought myself queer because I had a deep sense of inferiority, I was not good looking; I could not talk well; I had been nowhere in particular; I had read very little, and I had no parlor tricks. I was an extremely â€"dull and _ uninteresting person, and I knew it. (By Howard Vincent O‘Brien, in the Chicago Daily News.) The party was over, and the talk had grown confidential, The person to whom 1 listened was one whose popularity is notableâ€"a person adâ€" mired by both sexes, by the young no less than by the old. The new year had just dawned, the toasts had been drunk, the echo of the songs had died away, and in a quiet interlude I learned the seeret of success. s Here is the Secret of t oaiy d isz P se o â€" Smd w Social Success!

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