Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Sep 1935, p. 3

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bin Remind look. i my husband! "Y dear In. If your shin. mum what tNIE caucd " ot g m... t not _ r and out pl wt, he " 1 old he... friend one. abject crop. a girl - d who“ In a way use-sod " con-on. m or M. nice that I thought Ttr recogniz- pea-935. med - Ihtt. My lived In an; m" This In " and I Ina Bar. t It! on , in on ' to In. " thou; very " hesitant e new”. a mic, 3 master “I me gt. R up "to Draw.“ than”. gait. Na. read mo :tions on " the " ow B-P. ICC. on: kelp. I"). no in I L',V. an. Mild. atom, at. " ”I. s toM and " as no if lee water and chilled utensils make pastry more tender and fhtky. Cold makes bread that is too fresh, "firm" for sandwich cutting. Place bread in electric refrigerator an hour and it will resemble day-old bread when cut. Angel-food cake also cuts Cold makes cream whip better and easier. Place - cream, bowl, and whipper in the refrigerator a while before whipping cream. butter pastry Iced water is used to thaw out frozen tish before it is cooked. Several minutes' standing in cold or ice water makes hard-eooked e33! easy to shell. ICE AND WE WATER To a great many people, ice has become simply I means of making summer drinks refreshingly cold. We're apt to overlook the many valuable uses of ice and ice water, as well as cold. in the household, laundry and sickroom. Here are a few suggestions: A chilled knife will cut meringues, cakes and pies in nest, even slices. without sticking. Simply dip the knife in cold water each time before cutting a slice in a merinttue-eovered pie, and you will have evenly cut lliccs. TA LU A BLE USES OF a full-balanced trreirtiit- ine child. _ _V.‘“._.-l It‘lll3- The child’s breakfast should nish every necessary element proper nourishment. His stol has been without food for the I est period during the twenty. hours, and is ready for a meal Sh will supply food for energy sine active child uses up a vast am of nervous and muscular energy ing the day. Fruit or fruit juice, or cold cereal with cream or milk. milk or cocoa made with n toast and 3 soft cooked egg ma fuse u on the The in Keeping these mind, it is simple fast menu which of all members ul, ter how diversitie The heavy hot dish to menu. Perse strenuous Mt whore total the day no meal. “u... cereal, eggs or their a bread and beverage. It i: for school children, adults active physicully and those very little luncheon at loo The heavy breakfast adds L... ALL _ - The medi fruit, cereal bread and for schcol I -.-....aau are particularly dithu cult, it we are to judge by the let- tem that coma. to this desk voicing plaintive calls for help. kinds o! Breath-t The very light breakfast includes fruit, some sort of bread--sueh Il‘ toast or rolls, and a sbeveraire---mtnr, cocoa or coat-er 'Pha .-, " water washes the salt from that is to be used in making F U MANCHU f adults wht; Physically. medium brent 13 mese elastf.tteatioru, in is simple to plan one break- m which will meet the needs embers ut a family no mat- diversified their interests. tive person may merely re- extra dishes and concentrate itrht or medium items. For [Inactive Persons -""". unculllsl was an extn. h to the medium breakfast Persons who are engaged in \s muscular work and those Mal food reouiromoM- "- “We: 1u3clull' work and those I food requirements for a high need this kind cf I: out food for the long.. ring the twenty-four 'eady for a meal which ad for energy since an Des up a vast amount I muscular energy dur. ruit or fruit juice, hot breakfast those who it noon. 3 wan milk, egg makes for a grow. " consists of eir equivalent, It is suitable who are -WHL tls. mm mm of a. Mould; for mach lur. hot top Beat eggs until light. Add mining ingredients and mix oughly. Turn into individual, buttered timbale molds and plat many thickneue: of paper in a of hot water. Bake in a mod, take Egg and ham timbales are econ- ,omical but are so "dressy" in ap- ‘penrance that you could serve them at a guest luncheon. Egg and Mam Ti-bales Four eggs, % teaspoon salt, few gains pepper, % teaspoon onion juice, 1 cup finely chopped ham, 1 cup milk, six rounds of toast. Press tomatoes throdirh a c [sieve to remove seeds. Add cl (dried beef, finely chopped. c pepper and paprika. Cook on slow tire until cheese is melted. butter and eggs slightly be Stir and cook until eggs are just Serve on hot buttered toast and round with water cross. The tan the cress is perfect with the egg cheese combination. Eggs Chilean Style Two cups chopped fresh tomatoes, ',i cup grated cheese, $5 cup chipped dried beef, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 2 tablespoons shredded green pepper, 1 teaspoon paprika, 1 tablespoon but- ter, 4 eggs, 4 squares hot buttered toast, fresh crass. Eggs, 1ntiiearGiFi,' ttl and appetizing. Try them some evening. eggs, and scrambled eggs and a crisp salm luncheon. Unless many vegan eluded to furnish bulk. on a toasted foundation, Etit inside a refrigex relief to hay-teve temperatures well Cold water poured over plants may save them. Cove plants with newspapers and t a dark place several days. Chilled air sometimes offers acute condition, tempcrary may be had by putting the plants may plants with a dark place Chilled air Cold water removes egg stains on dishes or cloths. Dishes which have contained eggs should always be rinsed in cold water before putting in hot soap suds. Cold water loosens the' dirt in clothes. Make a suds of cold water to soak clothes before laundering. (laid “an-.. -- . bristles from loosening until brush is ready to be discarded. Cold or ice water helps re grass stains. Moisten stain with water and cover it with soda, stand for two hours, and then out in warm water. lee water baths and ice paek used to reduce the patient's tem ture in case of sunstroke. Soaking a new toothbrush in water overnight will prevent bristles from loosening until brush is readv to ho Mun-Ami Ice water compresses bandage for an eye w injured or cut by a fo: until the doctor comes Cold storage in the refrigerator makes facial cold cream go farther. lee water applied to face and hands is first aid in fainHM' t until cheese is melted. Add nd eggs slightly beaten. cook until eggs are Just get. hot buttered toast and sur- refrigerator -wr, hay-tever tsuffere mar removes egg stains on cloths. Dishes which have eggs should always be cold water before putting t aid in fainting. compresses are the best an eye which has been It by a foreign partie'.e, ths and ice packs are the Patient's tempera- below 50 de, it with soda, let ables are in.. ' eggs are good brush in cold prevent the er frozen ‘over the a set in then rinse set. It is .the suddenness with which a sur- mat on a polished floor will slip from, r of under a person that is disconcerting. and Particularly dangerous is a mat placed just at the foot of a stair- :on- case if the floor of the hall is highly ap- polished. A person is so liable to tem run down stairs and step on to the mat which flies from under him, so that he falls heavily on his back few and strikes his head on the stairs. 5 quick relief r head holds In an gree8, Whenever you commend, add 'ePetns for doing so; it is this , distinguish: the approbation I man of sense from the flattet sycophants and the admiratiot fools-Steele. love cold the FLOOR IS DANGEROUS Polished floors are certainly a guarantee of cleanliness in the house. And polished floors, provided we know them to be polished, are not exactly a direct source of dan- ger, for like Aging, we can go deli, cately over them. But the polished floor when its polish is concealed may be very dangerous. A loose mat on a polished floor is a thing to be avoided, fcr it is extremely liable to slip away from the feet of the unwary person, causing him to fall heqvily. i The French door with casement windows on either side, in subur- ban or country houses, is quite an- other story. This needs unsophis- ticated curtains of Chintz, eretonnne, folkweave, slub repp, or linen, and should be floor length at the French door and sill length at the side win- dows. A box-pleated matching val- ance running across the top gives continuity and makes the curtains a! set. LOOSE MAT: ON POLISHED . v._...° gun-cuullg else in the room; or a painted ply- wood one-enehanting if well done: or mirror glass. This finish can be a flat pelmet of the curtain material, or a con- trasting one, repeating something else in the rooms nv " s...,.'..; -r, l MAKING CURTAINS FOR A FRENCH WINDOW The French window which is real: ly a long narrow glass door, with no small casement windosts on either side of it, needs only a simple pair of floor length curtains, and a finish arr: " the top. - --_- - Ili‘cla Three or four peaches, 1 cup flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 3 table- spoons sugnr, lk teaspoon salt, 1-3 cup milk, 1 egg. .. Pare peaches and cut in thin slices. (Mix and sift flour, salt, sugar and baking powder. Beat egg until light with milk. Stir in dry ingredients and when well blended and smooth add sliced peaches. Drop from spoon in deep hot fat heated to 370 de.. grees F. on a fat thermometer or hot enough to brown an inch cube bread in sixty seconds. Drain oni crumpled paper and serve with rasp-l berries crushed and sweetened. to the touch. Turn each to a round of buttered to round with creamed pe with tiny sprigs of parsh at once. oven for 46 v V _.......... ;anlVll OI a bit of Bardie good hurm Megan Lloyd George and The Right Hon. lh Megan Lloyd George, who ytfl annu§l festival of g so; it is this whi:h a approbation of II from the flattery of the admiration of nshed floors, provided 1 to be polished, are direct source of dan- .gag, we can go deli, Peach Fritters of buttered art and creamgd peas. Gas minutes or until firm m _ Right Hon. David Lloyd A -.-.- -_r, - med peas. Garnish of parsley and serve 'aehes, 1 Cup flour, r powder, 3 table- teaspoon salt, 1-3 . timbale on- your " "But let him as]: doubting t for he like the tsurge' of t "And let patience have its perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, lacking in nothing." The form of the counsel implies that the work might be hindered unless the will of those who were called to suffer co- operate with the divine purpose. "But if any of you lacketh wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all liberally and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." Wisdom is more than knowledge and is better. Man may have extensive and ac- curate knowledge, and, at the same time, be anything but wise. sur- word temptations in the margin is translated trials. It is a word used, in a general sense, of proving and, testing, and thus also of adversity, of affliction sent to prove or test a man's character. “Knowing that the proving of your faith worketh patience." Patience here implies not only mere passive submission, but the perseverance which does not falter under suffer- ing, in the midst of the trials and temptations of which James is here speaking. mother would address to other mem- bers whom he recognizes as equals. "When ye fall into manifold tempt- ations." It should be noticed that the word temptations in the margin in "Count it all joy, my brethren." Brother is a form of approach to a member of a strictly defined society such as the Jewish or the Christian brother would address to other mem- bers whom he meaning a: much l "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ." It is sign- ifieant that the author does not speak of himself as the brother of the Lord. It was more to be bond-servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ than to be brother of the Lord after the flesh. "To the twelve tribes which are " the Dispersion." "Greeting." The literal meaning of the word is to rejoice, and here it would mean, I wish you joy." , l Place-The council took place in the Holy doubt James wrote his this city also. t GOLDEN TEXT-messed is that endureth temptati when he hath been appn shall receive the eroivn which the Lord promised that love him. James I t LESSON XII - September 22 JAMES (A GREAT CHRISTIAN LEADEiO.-Aett, l5 : 1-21; James 1 t 1-17. LESSON XII Lesson I in faith, nothing , that doubteth is the sea driven by council of Jerusalem the Holy City. No wrote his Epistle from '--Blessed is the man t temptation; for been approved, he of life, to them 12. "But each man is tempted, when he is drawn away by his own lust, and enticed." Lust, " rather, desire, in its widest sense, includes desire for safety, riches. ease, " well " "Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God." Thus did Adam insinuate that he fell be- cause of God's gift to him of Eve (Gen. 3 t 12); ef. Prov. 19 t 3; 30 : 8, 9. "For God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself temptetli‘ no man." He who was absolutely righteous could not be the originator of sin. He tries men, but does not tempt them. "Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he hath been approved." Approved here means tested and found genuine, " metals are tested to prove their worth. "He shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord promised to them that love him." A crown is given to the victor. and, in many cases, is worn by those who are truly kings. Thus I crown speaks of both triumph and saw! ereignty. - "For the sun ariseth with the, ('j(i'jj':j':,il'jjj':.j."iiij)': scorching wind, and withereth the jj':ijj'iiri:,tijjijii'i.i'jii, grass; and the flower thereof falleth, 'j.'jiljijj,ii:,r1ift',ji'jlj) and the grace of the fashion of it gaggiigéségegz’igzgfag-g perisheth I so also shail the rich man i:1.'jjj'iiij.iiji.'iijjijiijl'ijui, fade away in his goings." It is *.,x" amazing how many truths the writer 3553",. of this Epistle illustrates from the ii8 'jjijjjjjjii?a'i"i:j'j' scenes of nature. The love of nature 'iiii.jl.iii::.i'ij,i,"y.l'iii, which runs through them war, no ”’fl doubt, remembered and cherished in 5:? ii:':.':).":,:':..':":::':":"":":.':..":.'::":":., the village home at Nazareth, and it .:i:i; '..iijjijjji:?y.1.! .. _ij.'l. forms another link between St. 'di2,?.?.iryii":'.i' 9 James and his divine Brother. "Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when he hath been approved." Approved here means tested and found genuine, " metals are tested to prove their worth. "He L?c.T: shall receive the crown of life, which he Lord nmmicml 6n oL--- ALA . whom St. James has in mind is th man whose moral nature is enfeeble by the vacillation and double-hearte condition of his own soul. "But let the brother of low degre glory in his high estate." Tho brother of low estate is, of course the one who is either exceedingl: poor, or without prominent place ii a community or in the life of th, Church. He is a child of God throng} Christ, heir of eternal blessedness instead of resenting his poverty and being discontented with his ob. scurity, let him remember that he is a prince and glory in it. "And the rich, in that he is made low I because as the flower of the grass he shall pass away." How many rich men have, in the last four years, since the terrible depression which has come upon our land, known what it is to be made low! In this one is also to rejoice, because it compels him to see that he may lose every- thing. and that he is just as de- pendent upon God as the poorest of his children. mum. expressive word, as if the man had two souls; one trusting, the other doubting; one for and the other against. The double-minded man whom St. James has in mind is the man whose moral nature is enfeebled I,., "., -___.r, .. - lr the , let the brother of low degree in his high estate.” The r of low estate is, of course, e who is either exceedingly Ir without prominent place in nunity or in the life of the . He is a child of God through heir of eternal blessedness; of resenting his poverty and discontented with his ob-l - ,, "eer» ......., have, in the last four years, terrible depression which of the fashion of it also tshall the rich man his goings." It is n, m that he is made as the flower of the -"V "a, I determine. Possibly, word was used without f a distinction between a low! In this one is because it compels he may lose every- he is just as de- ui as the poorest of ' How many hearted and buttons, would be most at- tractive. Style No. 3256 is designed for sizes ll, 18, 15, 17 end 19 years. Size 15 requires " yards of M.. inch material. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name 1nd nddreu plainly, giving number Ind size of pattern wanted. Enclou ttie in stamp. or coin (com prefer- red; wrap it curetull ), and " dress your order to amen Pat. tern Service, " West Adelaide Street, Toronto. is u, nuwever, it is not school wear which is required. other materials will render the model suitable for various occasions. For instance, black wool-like silk with gay accent in velveteen bow and buttons, would be moat nt- "active. If, hofteyer, wear which 1 materials will tyitalrle for For wear darling dress ty woolen. If. hotpev. For "Nothing of the sort; f arra curious to see if there was any in- come my wife couldn't live beyond." "Ah, her tactful help and udvice in times of 13th need, I suppose?" "My wife," Guswei.ed the mu of sharp pncticea. "What made you a multi-million- aire?” a reporter naked of I big raquj blade magnate. is cant by turning." The best and most perfect of all gift: bu come from above-the unspeakable gift of God's dear Son, and. with the gift of his own Son, he gives you the gift of the Holy Spirit. "be not deceived. my beloved brethren." Cf. Gal. 6 t 7. Seton is liable to deceive men into believing that those truths end laws which have Just stated are non-existent. "Every good gift and every per- feet gift is from above." The two nouns are diCerent in the Greek; the first expressing the sbstract not of giving; the second, the gift " actually bestowed. The perfection of the one thrws from the goodness of the other. "Coming down from the Father of lights.” James would hsve us to know that God is the father of all forms of light, moral, intellect- ual and spiritual. "With whom can be no variation, neither shadow that'; "Be not deceived. brethren." Cf. Gal. 6 liable to deceive men that thou truths and have just stated are n "Then the hut, when it hath conceived, beneth sin .. and the sin. when it in full-grown, bringeth forth death.". Desires never remain dor-. moat. They are alive And powerful; they grow; they lead on to other things. ', sexual pleasure. Adversity and pot- lecution expo» Inn to the evil tali- citation of " lower nature. lit both, desire tempt: the will to depart from what it know, to be the will of God. ONTARIO i Darling School Wear it school, here is . wnrm rust novel- United Kingdom . United States ...... All-tall: at ln 1927, per capital nvwsprint con- sumption in the United Siam amounted to " pounds; at the pooh in 1929 " was 62 pounds. In 1927 per capita consumption in tho United Kingdom was 37.6 pounds and that in Australia and New Zealand was 43.5 pounds. There was no other over. Irena market in which consumption had reached one-third of the per capita "ure in the United Kingdom. At that time there was a general aaat'mption that the per capita con. aumption in the United States waa ‘Io high " to be unattainable in any other country. In 1934. however, Brit. I iah conanmption reached 57.5 pounds . per capita: that in the United Statea waa " pounds, and that in Auatralia and New Zealand was 43.9. In thia aeven year interval, per capita con. 4sumption in Argentina more than doubled. increuln; by 13.9 pounda and that in France and Holland in- creased by more than 7 pounds, while consumption in Japan and Scandina- via increased by more than 4 Pounds per capita. In the conntriea mention- ed in the laat aentence. the gain in total volume conahmed haa amounted to more than " per cent. The ulna in Argentina. hence. Japan. Holland, and Scandinavia have amounted to 400.000 tone; the nina in the United Kinda: to “7,000 and the gaina " other ovaraeaa ”the!" to 881.000 tone. The United States consumption ia "" wan 814,000 tuna leaa than in "w. In the following table will he (and the am or per capita con. annula- in 1004. together with nine and loaaea " compared with mt. [a who of the who mentioned, the per outta coma-nio- in moat ov- en.“ Inna Ia Ital at a low level, leaving a We narci- for “panama an the mutation of thee. con-trio begin to take a wider interact Ia nova and elven-tie": basin to atillae thla am to ther ”We on a lore Idea-ate owe. For m He-ret Conan-nia- world's newuprint upncily, producing two-thirds of the new print which enters into International trade and with an excess capacity as compared with 1934 production greater than that of the whole of the rest ot tho world. has been the chief sufferer from undetueomumtption and low pricel. With the trend townrd recov- err well established. and with indi- cations that newsprint consumption is likely to show a large per cap". inerease in any over on markets, Could. stood: to receive the chief bettetita from such improvement in world demond. Between 1027 And 1984 newsprint consumption In Great Britain In. creased from 841,000 to 1.291.000 tons: tint In France from 235.000 to 400.000 tons; that In Russia from 85,000 to "13.000 tons. and total ov- eraen consumption showed an In. crease of more than 1,300,000 tons. Gun-d1, with torty per cent ot tho - -V v w nv-u‘I-Il-4 While it is laid that the United Mates could greatly incree-e produc. tion by developing mills in Oregon or Ale-kn or by A new proceaI, making use of the nine- in the some, such development, would Involve large in.. ventuentl, which seem improbable unles- neweprint pricea rule much higher than in recent yelrs. " " poulble that there may be on in- crease in the amount available from Bunnie. but in that country there has been I steady increase in home do. mend and it muy even prove dilllcuit tor Ru 111 to keep abreast of her own requirements. In ttteae cirrtuttstattee. I study ot the trend of consumption in foreign markets must be of pa. cuiinr interest to Canada. . PfStr"PmntormooverrinGi I value at noun-mt productloo. t When Comma Induction hsd an. ' on to 1,914,000 to. In 1982. by "" tt had reached 2.5”.”0 tom. Ot thls locusts, out-third wss sold ta , oversea- Junkets. tt this expsnsion i In new markets wore merely“ out. let for some ot Gum's surplus cs- pscity during the deprenlon. it would be married as s welcome mliei. but u or temporu'y importance. In point ot met, however, the careful study ot the situation found in “Newsprint in the World Market", a pamphlet puhllahed by Mr. R. K. Martin. See. Mary of the Newsprint Export As. ’IOcistion, muons the probability of ' stesdily incl-suing overseas do. and for Canodlsn newsprint. Bcandlnavinn output at newsprint looms to be approaching the maxi. mum which out be economically pro- duced in that area. A like report Is mule concerning Newfoundland. II'Llli Pt . _ ' ymwsrmm maii ua-uu new-print Industry. Where. " such expon- took one at six per cent at Canal-n production . 19:7. they mounted to eighteen per cent ot the Increased production at 1984. In the Intern] between 1932 Ind 1934 there nu I major recovery. In the volume of new-nun! "rrtr4o.ot, Export- to commie. other United can. are beeomlm ter ot Incl-cum; ttrtttortanc Cum" newsprint industry mm “mummies. Gain In lbs. tbe. u can. "" with I”? don .. $7.5 MSO. v3 ........ M.t ~10. we wt" u general the per capita con. United State. VII ttttattainable In my 1934. however. Brit. 24., Ig.tt 18.0 11,7 Ita " " um um the United {really increase produc- ping mm: in Oregon or a new process, making "on other than the Mum; g matt- Invariance to a. X13, X " y, " V. " X 4.1 X " X 1.1 ---to. m

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