Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 26 Apr 1934, p. 7

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$0 galt and baking powder, "A ~ ¢ 1-4 teaspoon salt "sift ¢mall amount of flour over-mix- and: £61d in carefully; continue until pro / ¢ vidual Yorkshire puddings of delicate | ~ crispness and appetizing "owuness,| "you have something else again to the roasting with this same sauce. "~pan, bring to the boiling point and ~ four more times. ed angel food pan and bake in-slow cold. Roast beef may seem humdrum and. rosiae but if you serve it with indi- "please the palate of beth family and guest oc YORKSHIDE PUDDING Drippirzs [111 roast beef, 1 egg, 1-2 cup milk, 1-2 cup flour, 1-4 tea: Spagn baking powder, 1-4 teaspoon salt, ; Use the fat from the roast beef to grease custard cups, ~ By the time the puddings need to go into the oven the roast will be almost done and there will be plenty of fat in the roaster, Heat the cups in a Hot oven while mixing the batter. Mix and sift flour, Put egg, milk, and dry ingredients in mixing bowl and heat with a rotary cgg- beater for five minutes. Pour into' "prepared hot cups, making the batter about 1-2 inch deep in each cup and bake in a very hot oven (450 degrees F.) for 16 minutes. Reduce heat to 400 degrees F, and bake ten minutes. Turn off the heat and finish baking. It will take five or ten minutes. When puddings are well puffed baste once or twice with drippings from the roast: Serve in a border ol the plats, ter around the roast of beef, An easy way to handle the custard cups 'in the oven and for basting is to put the cups in a large shallow pan, BARBECULD BEEF 3 A delicious way to cook the top of the round of beef is to marinate it thoroughly in a hot barbecue sauce and then baste it frequently during The finished roast is tender and fla- vorsome with a distinctive savoriness that whets the appetite. . Here is the . recipe for the sauce, The quantities given are enough for five to seven pounds of meat. - ; One-half cup butter, 2 tablespocns vinegar, 1-2 teaspoon dry mustard, 1 taespoon sugar, 1-2 teaspoon salf, few grains cayenne: pepper, 1:4 teaspoon chili powder, 1-2 teaspoon Worcester- shire sauce, 1-4 teaspoon tabasco sauce, 1-2 teaspoon black pepper, 1 teaspoon paprika, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 1-4 clove garlic (bruised), 2 cups water, : i tag Put all the ingredients into a sauce simmer 20 minutes. Dip the roast in' this mixture, turning it to be sure every bit of the surface is coated. Put the roast into 'a hot oven for 20 minutes, then reduce heat and baste with sauce. Baste every 15 minutes, for the first hour and finish the roast- in a moderately hot oven, basting : 'once or twice, : SPRINGTIME DESSERT' A refreshing light fruit dessert and a piece of delicious cake make a per- fect finish to dinner now that milder days are here, These two. cake re- .cipes will win you new baking tri- umphs, | : ES Angel Food Cake 1-4 teaspoon almond extract i (8 to 10. egg whites) : { 1 cup sifted cake flour t 1 cup egg whites HR 1 teaspoon cream of tartar 11-4 cups sifted granulated sugar 3-4 teaspoon ranilla Sift flout once, measure, and sift Beat egg whites ~and salt with flat wire whisk. When foamy, add cream of tartar and con- . tinue beating until cggs are stiff enough to hold up in peaks, but not dry. = Fold m sugar. carefully, 2 tablespoons at a time, until all is used. Fon in flavoring: Then all is used, - Pour batter into greas- oven 'at least 1 hour. Begin at 276 deg. F. and after 80 minutes increass heat slightly (825 deg. F.) and bake - 80 minutes longer. Remove from oven and: invert pan.1 hour, or until] Note: Remove eggs from rvefriger- ator deveral hours before using. They beat up lighter and fore eas- ly when at room temperature and give 'increased fineness of grain and _ lelicacy of texture to angel food i By Mak M, Morgan 4 © Hot Milk Sponge Cake (8 eggs) . "1 cup sifted cake flour ; 1 teaspoon combination baking powder' pei ? 8 eggs 1 cup sugar 2 teaspoons lemon juice - '6 tablespoons hot milk Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt, and sift. together three times, Beat eggs until very thick and light and nearly white (10 minutes). Add sugar gradually, beating constantly." Add lemon juice. Fold in flour, a small amount at a time, Add milk, mix- ing quickly until batter is smooth. Turn at once into ungreased tube pan and bake in moderate oven (350 flog. F.) 86 minutes? or until done, emove from oven and invert pan 1 hour, o runtil cold. This mixture may be "baked in two lightly greased 8x8x2-inch pans in moderate oven (8560 deg, F.) minutes; or in 12x8x3-inch loap pan in moderate oven (350 deg. F.) 80 minutes. Or turn mixtufe in 36 small cup cake pans, which have been greased very lightly on bottoms, and bake in moderate oven (860 deg. I.) 20 minutes, or until done. Orange Banana Salad (Serves. 6) "6 oranges 2 to 3 bananas Lettuce - i a, Peel oranges, removing skin down to juicy pulp. Cut'in slices and cut slices in half. Peel bananas and glice them.-. On individual salad plates covered with beds of shredded lettuce, arrange alternately half slices of orange una banana slices. Center with a pat of boiled dress- and J banana ball or cherry, if de- sired, ~~ Orange Nut Bread 2 cups sifted flour , 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt, 14. cup sugar 14 cup shortening 14 cup finely chopped nuts 1 egg > Orange juice 1 tablespoon orange. marmalade Sift dry ingredients together. Cut in shortening, Add 'nuts, Beat egg; pour into measuring cup; add enough orange juice to make 2-8 cup. bine with 'dry ingredients and add marmalade. Knead a few seconds on slightly floured board, Let stand in refrigerator, or cool nlace 1-2 hour. Then" bake in loaf pan in moderate over '(860 degrees F.) till done-- about 46 mintites. Note: A little more orange juice will be 'needéd with some flour to make the dough soft. 7 _ ~~ Screens for Decoration If you are. a lover of screens, the' new. glass ones will delight your heart, With the variety of designs painted on them, "they lend them-] selves well to any room done ir tlie modern manner. One modern bedroom . with white walls, white furniture and a dark blue rug has two glass sereens which are decorated with vivid green, deep sea figures. : ) Another Victorian: living room has a large. glass screen in"one corner of the room, It is painted with quaint little 'Victorian figures in pale yeiiow and old rose. ao ; Slip Covers Slip covers cost:much less than up- holstering and when they are tailor- ed right, and made of new materials then can be most effective and use- ful. - Especially. for homes with child- ren or dogs, slip covers are a tremen- dous asset. : Buttons : Introduce buttons where you can-- they are the essence of smartness, Whether running up your sleeve or down your bodice; they will make a trim finish and lend individuality to your new spring, frock. : x Care of Velvet : To press. the seams: of a velvet dress place a hot iron up-ended on a table with a damp cloth over it. Open the seam of the velvet with the fingers, and carry it back and for- Com- | yi During a lull in the semi-final round of the Hall, London, some of the entrants in bizarre costumes strolled in Red Lion Square, side inwards. Do not hold the fabric so tightly as.to stretch out of shape, : Household Hints To have the best success with slic- ing bacon, place the rind down and do not cut through it, Slice the num- ber of pieces you desire and then cut them free from the rind, keeping close to it and avoid waste. When you are having a number of guests to a meal and require space in the kitchen to spread out dishes for the various courses, don't forget the card table. It will hold a great deal and come in handy for extra space, ' : It is nice to remove the pulp of the grapefruit the evening before using and place in the refrigerator over night. Sugar it lightly before putting away, - Serve in sherbet glasses the next morning for breakfast, This is very attractive for the house guest and is also economical, as one large grapefruit will serve three or four persons, Sunday School on : J Lesson 1V.--Aprin 22, Our All for the "Kinglom. -- Matt. 19:1.30, Golden Text.-- It is more blessed to give than to receive. ---- Acts 20:35. TIME--March, A.D, 80, in the closing three montks of Christ's min- istry. PLACE-~Perma, the part of Pales- tine, east of the Jordan. PARALLEL PASSAGES ~-- Mark coming. Fok : "And behold," Matthew thus indi- ¢ates his feéling that an important scene is coming "One came to him." He came (Mark iv : 17) as Christ was leaving the house where he had blessed the little children. ni "What good thing. shall 1 do, that 1 may have eternal life?" By "eternal life" the younz man meant- end.ess joy, endless purity and power and sa- tisfaction and peage "And he said unto him, Why askest thou me concerning that which. is good?" When we ask a question of ves why we ask it -- "One there is who is good. "Noae is good save one, even God" is the way Mark anl Luke repont Christs utterance. ; ? "But if thous woulilest enter into Iife, keep the commandments." Are there not unmistakable signs. round about us that we need these laws with all their roughness---<that stern, hard 'riot' as it was thundered out from the rocks of Sinai? "He saith uuto him, Which?" lhe young ruler, like most if not all-of his class, was preparéd for a discussion of 'debated points in theology. "And Jesus said, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not Lear false witness." Our Lord quotes from the second table of the law, re- lating to our dutiés toward men, be- cause those commandments are more obvious, and the young ruler could be perfectly sure that he had kept them. "Honor: thy father and thy mother another, it is well to first ask oursel~ thyself." This commandment, which is elsewhere given as Christ's sum- mary of the second table of the law, is from Lev, 19 : 18. "The young man saith unto him, All these things have I observed." From my youth up, he adds in Mark and Luke. But Christ would probe far deeper. ; "What lack I yet?" Out of the vague feeling of his own personal us- satisfactoriness, in spite of his moral achievement, he biurts out this ques- tion. ? "Jesus said unto © him, If thou wouldest be perfect." Christ pointed out the only way in which the young man could fill out the lack which he felt, making himself whole and com- plete 'in his character. . "Go sell that which thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasur«. in héaven; and come, follow me." , We are to note carefully (1) that this command was for the young ruler, who was rich (verse 22) and whose riches were a snare to him; it is noi for any one whose worldly goods are not a snare to his soul; (2) that this command is accompanied by a great promise, that of eternal trea- sure, it was only a bidding to trans- fer his "great possessions" to a land where he should néver lose them, and (8) that this command is accompan- ied be a great privilege, that of fol- lowing Jesas. . "But when the young man heard the saying, he Went away sorrowful; for he was one that had great possessions Alas! the great possessions had hini! "And Jesus said unto his disciples, Verily I say unto you" Another of Christ's emphases, rendered most suitable this time. "It is hard for a rich man to enter inte the kindom of "heaven." Wealth brings with it numberless tempta- tations--to undue ease and luxury, to many vices, to earthly ambition, to empty vanity, to idleness or to ex- cessive toil--which a man of modest means is spared. "And again I say unto you." Like all true teachers, our Lord knew the value and necessity of repetition, It is easier for a camel to go through a needle's eye, than for a rich- man to enter into the kindom of God." The "needle's eye" is often supposed to be the small gate for foot passengers of a large city gate. "And when the .disciples heard it, they were astonished exceedingly." Imperfect description of their blank amazement. - "Saying, who then can be saved?" I'he reign of the Messiah had been pictured by the prophets and rightly, as a time of great and universal pros- perity; but how could that be if all 'but the poor were to be excluded? "And sesus looking upon them' His intent gaze saw their amazement -"#Said to them, With men 'his is im- possible." - All ;things, even this most difficult of all things, to take out of human hearts the love of this world, and its perishable contents and idle pursuits. $ & "Then answered Peter and «aid un- t¢ him." He "answered'" Christ's stat- ment that it is very hard for the rich to be saved. 3 "Lo, we hive left all, and followed thee." They had abandoned their work possible: but with God all things are] ally left all to follow Christ. "What then shall we have?" We must not be too hard on Peter, The disciples at this time were very ma- terial in their ideals. And Jesus said unto them." To all the disciples and not to Peter a- lone. "Verily I say unto you." Our Lord does not chide them ror their worldly spirit, but gives them with great emphasis the comforting hope which he knows the will 'sorely need in the coming years of trial. "That ye who have followed me" Not in- ¢luding Judas, who was following hin only outwardly. "In tha regeneration when the Son of man shall sit on the throne of his glory." The regenera- tion is the new: birth of the world, when the kingdom of heaven is fuily ushered in, : "Ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of m in the way of com in terms which were fam- liar to them, "And every.one that bath left Pou. ses, or brethren, or sisters, ir father or mother, or lands, for my name's sake." That is, for Christ, name standing in Hebrew though for the eitire personality. "Shall receive a hunfredfcld" In this time, Mark and Luke add, ard Mark inserts the warning qualifica- tion, "with persecutions." Of course this is not to be taken literally -- a hundred fathers and mothers and wiv. és and children--but it means what the psalmist said when he testified that he had never seen the righteous forsaken or his children ging ead. "And shall inherit eternal life." That is the crown of it all. "But many shall be last that ure first; and first that are last." In these deep words there is message of hope to all who feel themselves last, the despondent, all who think them- gelves overmatched in the warfare of life, Farm Products Pay Preachers in Georgia Atlanta, Ga.--There is more than one way to pay a preacher's salary in the southern rural districts, according to Dr.-Louie D. Newton, Baptist min- ister of Atlanta, Dr. Newton points out the plan which has been in prac- tice off and on for three generations in Georgia--that of each rural church member setting aside the proceeds from one acre of his land as gift to his church. The plan is working splendidly to pay preachers' salaries and church debts and enables each person to give with what he has abundantly, Crops may be donated, or money derived from A) or even chickens, hogs or butter and milk. The donation in spirit and kind is, of course, purely Israel." If the promise was to be of voluntary. THE PAPER ON pr THE WALL _ IS REALLY VERY IMPORTANT You Make Small Rooms Look Bigger and Dark Ones - Lighter by Your Choice April's the month when the house gets a chance to. blossom out in new finery. And such finery this year! The new wallpapers are creations to make even a professional paper hanger gasp with joy and house- cleaning is indeed a pleasure because it gives you a chance to usc some of them, writes Margardt Currie in the Montreal Star. Whatever your individual decorat- ing problems may be; there are the right wallpapers with which to meet them. If you have large, sunny rooms, look at papers with dark back- grounds. If not, then consider th lighter themes that put brightness and light into rooms that are a bit gloomy. ' Get generous samples and paste them, one at a time, on the wall, Stand back and try to vis- ualize how the room would look if its walls were entirely covered by that paper. Call in the rest of the' family and let them help to make decisions. After all, they have to live there too. : New Patterns Plaid wallpapers ave favorites right now -- large plaids -- the big- ger, the better. Large dots and broad stripes are next in favor. And then there are handsome patterns of classic dignity that harmonize with period furnishings. If you desire-a distinctly modernistic touch, the striped. patterns horizontally -- vertically, if you dont. Patterned papers are being used on ceilings as well as walls, Though they must harmonize with each other the ceiling paper's pattern should be smaller. (Personally we shouldn't like this, but it is new, i If you have a small foyer with a narrow stairway leading from it, use identical paper for the hall and' stairway. It gives an illusion of greater size. 3 : Don't try .to match up the wall coverings of . other rooms in your home unless, of course, the archway bétween two rooms is so large that they appear to be one huge room. Plain wall papers are best for tiny rooms and dark, bright colors, such 4s emerald green, are most popular hang | tiny buttercups, forget-me-nots, gay little rosebuds, ferns and larger flowers, maybe chrysanthemums -- will please the nature-loving house- hold. If you have a penchant for things nautical, look for anchor and diminutive ship patterns: Pastel Back Grounds For a young daughter or the whim- sical member of the family, there are pretty papers with pastel background, printed in bowknot designs. By the magic of new wallpaper, the bathroom may be transformed into a thing of sheer beauty. Mural wallpapers are good here, (Inciden- tally, they're suitable for any room in the house but they are, unfortun- ately, too expensive for the average budget.) But it doesn't take very much paper for a bathroom and per- haps you can indulge yourself in this one room. There's nothing rettier than a huge picture of a lily pond on the wall over the tub. On the opposite wall, another picce of mural wallpaper might show a larger pond with graceful swans swimming across it. > ~ For Father's Den The walls of father's den, another small room, would be lovely covered with mural wallpaper too. There could be a hunting scene on one wall and fishing or camping themes on the others. The homemaker owes it to himself to see that her "work place" is bright attractive and cheerful and nothing can brighten up the kitchen like new wallpaper. There are such pretty designs to be had on washable paper. Cream with green, white with blue, pale yellow -- these are. only a few of the color schemes you may use to dress up your kitchen, Paint your chairs to match the design in your wallcovering, and use a little of the paint to give your food containers a new dress, Remember you usually live with your wall papers for sev- cral years so "take time out" to con- ider your choice carefully with re- gard to your pictures, draperies, light or lack of it, furniture and rugs before you finally decide. Be sure you're right -- then go ~ wakes, : wards ovr the steaming cloth, seam | and, Thou shait love thy neighbor as and some of them had probably liter-|in this category. - Floral designs-- ahead, ae , I hitanitiiimmiiis . Ra ---- cont En . pasa tT vi d------ ---- ; EE IIE------------ is bd va 3 3 £3 ; * pt ¥ . . . : ij MUTY AND JEFE-- © : : Size Nor Color Make No Difference he Sie by a iw wr Ci Ps Vi = vIn ; aay = sn Sibir = ds Y = =. 3 mutT, T GOTTA BE scans | A DeuTIST, © COUNTED CAVITIES, Look! NINE WAIT = TLL ¥ RIGHT BACK! I jl THE LOVE oF Mie, WHAT ARE = You DOING WAS MINMATURE GOLF WITH -A PEA AND THIS LITTLE STICK! Youve GOT NINE CAWNTIES.So & PLAYING A GAME, OF | Ty | ing the frightened animals. Women No. So Than Bn, hore New York--Women aren't any more 23 fickle than men, This is the com. forting announcement of Dr. R. T. Rock, of Fordham University, in & paper presented at a meeting of the New York brauch of the American Psychological Association, Dr. Rock oftérs cold figures to re- fute the mass of evidence gathered these many years by love-sick swains and husbands who acgompany their wives on shopping tours -- evidence * which has bolstered the theory that women change their minds abruptly and often. He reports the results ol applying to large groups of high &chool and college students, both male and female tests designed to reveal their interests and how they change, Re-applylng the examinations after short and long Interyals indicated strongly, Dr, Rock said, that: The women weren't more change- able than men. There is no relationship suggested between one's intelligence and the ten- dency to change one's Interests, One is more constant in his likes than his dislikes; one gets more tol erant with the years. Several other reports rendered at the meeting furnished statistical sup- port or refutation of ancient .platit- udes and axioms, Catching up with the New Testa: ment, I. W Crafts and R. M. Allen, of New York University, broadened somewhat the application of a Biblical prescription, Their advice was: Let not.the left hand know what the right 1s doing --in certain acts of learning as well - as in giving alms. They reported that an activity requiring simultaneous use of both hands could better be learned by practicing it first with each hand, separately. The authors said that tests made of two groups of college students re- quired to use both the "successive and "simultaneous" methods in an act showed the superiority of the former technique. Another popular bellef--that per sons having genius or high ability in a certain fleld are rather stupid fo others--received a jolt from Dr. G. M. Smith, of the College of the City of New York, In experiments to determine the cor- relation between abilities, he found that if you are capable in one mental pursuit you are likely to excel in others. Says Screams 'Hard on Heart Sarasota, Fla,--Charging that his wife's screams made his pulse rise as "high as 100, John Ringling has filed a bill of complaint in his divorce suit against Emily Haag Buck Ringling: Ringling first filed suit for divorce on July 26 of last year, but this was withdrawn. Asserting that Ringling is suffering from a disease or ailment known to medical science as "thrombosis," with accompanying complications, the com- plaint says that she had been repeat- edly instructed and warned by doc- tors and attendant nurses thal he must be allowed to remain quiet with: -out worry. But, the document continu- es, she constantly vefused to heed these admonitions. Ringling charges that on March 12, when asked to go out to dinner Mrs. Ringling flew into a rage, "villifying the plaintiff" and screaming in a loud vbicé, Ringling's pulse is alleged to have risen from 68 to 82. A few days later, the bill recites, over Rjngling's protest, the defendant began to insist that he sell certain property and when he refused she is alleged to have 'denounced him in a loud voice in the presence of servants and his nurse, This time, the com- plaint relates, -his pulse rose from 6 to 100. d i; To Get Degrees ; Five Prominent Men to Be . Honored by Toronto University Toronto. -- Governors of the Uni- versity of Toronto. announced re- cently that award had been made of five honorary degrees of doctors of laws and one of doctor of music. Those on whom. the doctor of laws degrees will be conferred here June 6, are: Cardinal Villeneuve of Que- bee City, Hon, L. P, D, Tilley, pre- mier of New Brunswick; Hon, Charles 'McCrea, Ontario minister of mines; Dean A. T. Delury; Prof. W. 'S. Ferguson, of Harvard University; and Percy J. Robinson of ' St. An- drew's .College, Toronto. Edward Johnson, native of Canada, tenor of the Metropolitan, Opera of New York, has been awarded honor- ary dégree of doctor of music. Roaming Bunnies Timmins, == Another traffic pro- blem has arisen in Timmins. Rab- bits have become so plentiful that they roam the main city intersec- tions. They have proven a menace to motorists, who try to avoid strik- Several have been killed, however, by doge and aavg qty ph Vig " ef re PL " PA Sr a NO Fin a Ld wi hs Soc, Br a i man aE i LAA Sd a * oid Lp ema pe a Lr) In A AN

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