Woman's World By Mair M. Morgan LEFT-OVERS Some left-over dibhes are so delic- ious that no apology is necessary even when guests are present. Here are two recipes â€" one for a meat dish and the other for a vegetable delicacy. Note how each calls for sugar â€" an ingredient that brings out the flavor and goes far toward making the dish a success. Hi:m Moulds 1 cup cooked ham, chopped fine 2 tablespoons butter ^ cup stale bread crumbs 2-3 cup milk 1 egg 1 teaspoon sugar Salt and pepper Melt butter. Add bread crumbs and milk, Cook live minutes, stirring con- stantly. Add ham, egg slightly beat- en, and seasonings, including sugar. Pour into buttered custard cups. Set cups in pan of hot water. Bake in a moderate oven until firai. Serve with a white sauce. Currot Tips Cut cooked carrots in cubes, reheat in a medium white sauce seasoned wth salt, pepper and a little sugar. Cut brfad into rounds and rings, us- ing a doughnut cutter for the latter. Toast the rings and rounds. Arrange a ring on each round, and fill with the creamed carrots. Garnish with parsley. ECOSOyUCAL AND TASTY Siiiiniona CotLge Peach Ice Cream 4 tablets for junket 2 quarts milk 1 pint cream 1 cupful sugar 2 teaspoonfuls vanilla 3 cups crushed, sweetened peach- es Warm milk'and cream slightly, add sugar and vanilla. Dissolve tablet for junket in one tablespoon cold water, stir into milk mixture quickly, pour into freezer can and let set until firm and cool. Place can in freezer, pack with ice and salt and freeze to thick mush. Add the crushed, sweet- ened peaches. Finish freezing. Save part of peaches to serve on top. Pumpkin Pie IVi cup steamed and strained pumpkin 2-3 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon % teaspoon ginger % teaspoon salt 2 eggs (slightly beaten) 2 tablespoons melted butter IMi cups milk Mix first six ingredients together, add the melted butter and milk last. Line a pie plate with crust â€" build up around the edges. Bake in a moderate oven until it is set. English, Ruicbit 1 cup stale bread crumbs 2 cups milk 2 tablespoons putter Few grains cayenne % cup soft mild cheese cut in small pieces â- 1 i^gg Vi teaspoon salt 1 teaspo..nful sauce Soak bread crumbs in milk. Melt butter, add crumbs and cheese. When cheese is melted, add egg slightly beaten and seasonings. Cook 3 minut- es, and pour over fried tomatoes or toasted crackers. Serves six. DAINTIES FROM CANS Keep a supply of canned g(.H)ds on your emergency shelf and you need jiever worry about what to serve as a pleasing surprise dish when com pany comes. Here are two recipes for dishes that 1 fee] su^e will please the most discriminating taste; Pea Soifffle 1 cup pureed peas 4 tablespoons flour 4 tablespoons butter X cup milk 3 eggs 1 small onion chopped % teaspoon sugar Vi teaspoon .salt * Vi teaspoon paprika Dash white pepper 1 tablespoon tomato catsup Cook onion and seasonings in the fat until golden brown. Add flour and then milk as for a white sauce, stir- ring constantly. Remove from fire and add pea puree, heating until smooth. Beat in egg yolks thoroughly. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into a well greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven, 375 degrees for about 30 minutes â€" until the souflFle has puffed and is a delicate brown. Salmon Siipreme 1 can salmon; 2 raw potatoes, slic- ed; 1 medium sized onion, sliced; 1 cup catsup; salt and pepper to taste. Slice a layer of potato in a glass baking dish, add layer of onion, salt and pepper to tasto, then layer of salmon, then catsup. Continue until dish is filled. Bake for 1 hour. Garn- ish with French fried Bermuda on- ions. How to French fry Bfermuda onions :Cut onion in slices through rings so that each slice will make a large number of whole rings. Break slices into separate rings, drop these into thin batter and fry in a frying basket. Batter: 2 egg yolks, ^ cup sweet milk, ^i cup pastry flour, % teaspoon salt. Beat egg yolks light, add milk, flour and salt sifted to- gether, beating ingredients together with egg beater. COOKIES FOR SCHOOL LUNCH If the youngsters had a vote, cook- ies would head the list of delicacies for that school lunch basket. With sandwiches, fruit and a vacuum bot- tle of milk or a chocolate milk shake, they provide just the nutriment value required for rosy cheeks. Use these short-cut, economical re- cipes and give your Bobby or Betty two or three extra ones in the school lunch box as a treat for friends. Peanut Butter Hermits 1 cup sweetened condensed milk 6 tablespoons peanut butter % teaspoon salt % cup graham cracker crumbs Thoroughly blend together sweeten- ed condensed milk and peanut butter .\dd salt and graham cracker crumbs. Mix well. Drop by spoonfuls on but- tered baking sheet. Bake 15 minutes or until brown in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.) Remove from pan immediately. Makes 1"4 dozen. Fru-itcd Oatmeal Drops 1 1-3 cups (1 can) sweetened condensed milk hi cup molasses 2 cups rolled oats % cup nut meats, chopped Vfe cup seedless raisins Thoroughly blend sweetened con- densed milk molasses and rolled oats in top of double boiler. Cook over boiling water 10 minutes or until mixture thickens, stirring con- stantly. Cool. .\dd nut meats and raisins. Mix well. Drop by st>oonfuls on a buttered pan. Bake 15 minutes in a motierate oven (350 degrees F.). Remove from pan immediately. Mak- es 3 dozen. Hitler Savora Latest Triunj^ph A HINT Baking-boards and rolling pins will dry snow-white if wiped over with a cloth dipped in a saucer of water that has been nii.xed with a tablespoon peroxide of hydrogen. PERFECT CUP OF TEA The Salada Tea Company offer the following suggestions for secur- ing the best results in making tea: The figures that registered a 9 to 1 triumph for Adolf Hitler in Gernsanv's recent plebiscite ar» being scanned here by the leader-chancellor and his a ides in the garden of the Berlin chancellery after the vote had been counted. Left to right are Hitler, Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels, minister of propa-knda- and Minister Kerri. Behind them in uniform is .Adjutant Group-Leader Bruckner. • â- » . First use a tea of good quality. Second use fresh water always. Third use an earthenware teapot. Scald out the pot to make it warm, place in it a level teaspoonful of tea for each cup de- sired and one for the pot, add fresh- ly boiling water, allow to steep for five minutes and stir slightly before serving. Tea made according to these rules will be fragrant and delicious. The Sunday School Lesson GOOSE LIVER SAVOURY Having cooked the liver inside the goose, take it out when it is cold, and butter, seasohing~tt wfth'salt, pepper and a trifle of cayenne. This mixture should now be spread upon pieces of toast or fried bread which have first been very lightly spread with thin mustard, the French vari- ety. FRUITS AS DESSERTS This is the time of year when the homemaker should make a special effort to serve fresh fruit dishes. Peaches, pears, plums as well as raspberries, blueberries and black- berries are comparatively inexpen- sive and certainly high in food value. Serve them plain with cream, stewed or made up into any number of ap- petizing desserts. HAM SAVOURY Chop fine one cup ham. Soak one cup bread crumbs in half-a-cup milk, add half-a-teaspoon each of dry mus- tard and celery seed, and a little pepper. Turn all into a saucepan small dish, garnished with slices of hard-boiled eggs. COLD AIDS COOKIES Cookie-making requires a special technique. Observe a few simple rules and you're sure to have suc- cess with yours. First of all, in- gredients should be quite cold and must be put together quickly. Chill the dough before you roll it, dip the cookie cutter in flour before cutting each cookie and bake them in a hot oven. Elderly People KUierly people, when on a holiday, should take care to live a regular, simple life, without undue exercise. More harm than good results from a strenuous fortnight which completely wears one out. Climbing, going for long walks, bathing too soon after a meal, are all potential sources of trouble to the elderly. .Moderation should be their watchword. Leston XIII. â€" September 23. Uaiah Counsels Rulers. â€" Isaiah, Chap- ters 7, 31, 36 and 37, Golden Text, â€" Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee; because he trusteth in thee. â€" Isa. 26:3. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING TIME â€" L'nsuccessful invasion of Judah by Reziin and P'ekah, B.C. 737. Unsuccessful invasion by Sennacherib, B.C. 701. PLACE.â€" Jeru.^alem. â- 'Woe to them that go down to Egypt for help." Like all the other Hebrew prophets, Isaiah was a states- man as well as a preacher. He knew that the military strength of Egypt was grossly exaggerated, and he had no confidence whatever that Egypt would keep faith with Judah. "And rely on horses." Judah was a hilly country, and never could employ horses in warfare. "And trust in chariots because they are many, and in horsemen because they are very strong." The level plains of Egypt had always prompted that nation to the development of cavalry and the use of chariots. "But they look not unto the Holy One of Israel, neither seek Jehovah I" God to Isaiah is not simply high and lifted up, but he is a God of character. He is the God of Purity and Cleanliness. He is the God of Righteousness. "Yet also he is wise." Isaiah is tre- mendously sarcastic here. "And will bring evil." He will bring evil on those that bring evil upon the world, as Isaiah goes on to say. ".\nd will not call back his words." God will not withdraw his warnings; he can- not, for they spring from essential truth. "But will rise against the house of evil-doers." That is, aganst the company of foolish statesmen that are forcing Judah into this baleful connection with Egypt. ".And against the help of them that w^ork iniquity." "Now the Egyptians are men, and not God." The Pharaoh of Egypt was worshipped as a goil, and the people of Judah were placing their trust in the Egyptian army as if it were God and not a set of weak mortals. ".A.nd their horses flesh, and not spirit." The nobles of Judah seemed to rely on the Egyptian horses as if they were supernatural beings, able to charge against any foe and sweep them down. ".And when Jehovah .-hall exercise his omnipotence, ful- filling the warnings he has uttered by his prophet. "Both he that help- eth (Egypt) shall stumble, and he that is helped (Judah) shall fall, and they shall be consumed together-" Both Egypt and Judah will be involv- ed in a common destruction. "For thus saith Jehovah unto me." God's word follows, in opposition to the foolish and empty words of the Jewish nobles who trust in Egj-pt. "As the lion and the young lion growling over his prey." Lions were common in Palestnie in ancient days. "If a multitude of shepherds he call- ed forth again.-rt him." As the lead- ers of Judah are summoning in their alarm the multitude of Egj'ptian horsemen and chariots. "Will not be dismayed at their voice, nor abase himself for the noise of them." The king of beasts with his roar will put down the weak shouts of men. "So will Jehovah of hosts." Jehovah Sa- baoth, the most majestic of God's titles. "Come down to fight upon mount Zion, and upon the hill there- of" Mount Zion was the original Jebusite stronghold captured by David. "As birds hovering, so will Jehov- ah of hosts protect Jerusalem." Listen to this expansion of the meta- phor of the hovering mother-bird in one of the Psalms: "He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings shalt thou trust." "He will protect and deliver it, he will pass over and preserve it." As the death angel passed over the houses of the Israelites in Egypt, marked by the blood of the lamb sprinkled on door- posts and lintels,, and did not slay the firet-bom there, so God spares his children and saves them from their doom. "Turn ye unto him from whom >"? have di'oply revolted, children of Israel." Then, as ever, this was the sum and substance of the prophet's teaching, conversion; with that, all was hope ; without it, all was fear. "For in that day." The day of the fall of the Assyrians at the hand of Jehovah, foretold in the next verse. "They shall cast away every ma^J his idols of silver, and his idols of gold."' In that day the Jews will see how vain was the Assyrian's trust in their idols. "Which your own hands have made unto you for a sin." "For a sin" means "to be to you an abiding cause of guilt and punishment." ".A.nd the .Assyrian shall fall by the sword, not of man." The point of this verse is that .A..ssyria was not to fall by the sword of man at all, but by the sword of God. ".A.nd the sword, not of men, shall devour him." That is, destroy him. ".And he shall flee from the sword, and his young men shall become subject to taskwork." As the young men of the Jews have been subjected to slavery. ".And his rock shall pass away by reason of terror." "His rock" is understood to mean the king of .As- syria. ".And his princess shall be dis- mayed at the ensign." Inatead of ' rallying around the flag, the Aaiiyriaa l.-aders will run away. "Saitii Je- i.ovah, whose fire is in Zion, and hi3 furnace in Jerusalem. God is a bright light to his people, and a con- suming fire to his foes. "And the angel of Jehovah went forth." The great angel who in no many Bible scenes stands as the re- presentative of tlie .Almighty. "And smote in the camp of the .Assyrians." Thiji may refer to some powerful force which Sennacherib had sent to press the siege of Jerusalem by sur- rounding the city, preventing ingresg and egress. ".A hundred and four- score and five thousand. This means, of course, that the invading force was very much larger than this very large number. "And when men arose cary in the morning, these were all dead bodies." The cause of the lies- truction of the .Assyrian hcst waa probably a pestilence infecting the low-lying frontier of Egj-pt. "So Sennacherib king of .Assyria departed, and went and returned, and dwelt at Nineveh." Curious, though true It IS, that Sennacherib never came to the Westland again, during the next twenty years of his life, pre- ferring to confine his campaigns to more profitable territory and less dangerous areas. Fabric Creators Allow Imagination To Play Fabric creators have seldom allow, ed their imaginations such free play as tliey have tliis year in styling nov. elty blouses, combinations tor Lri.m- mings, blouses combinations with plain materials and accessories. And seldom have such extreme ideas been snapped up so rapidly by cutters. The more "amusing" the material tile bet- ter it seems to be liked, and it cannot be denied that these "amusing" fab- rics add much appeal to fall coat. umes. , Some which have registered most strongly are heavy dull synthetic bas- ket weaves, covered with a raised pat- terning which looks like rows of tiny shirred ribbons, plain heavy crepes witii tufts of shiny synthetic straw- faille with slit film or colored lamin' ette woven in so as to give the effect of pailettes, and fabrics whose surfac- es are covered with rows of synthetic yarn, silk, metal, or velvet pile fringe. Other really •'amusing'' materials ara covered with little shirred "headings" of self material which are sometimes in a different color to the ground shade and someiimes edged with met- al tiiread. Sheer materials woven ia tucked effects are continuing also and are reported to be in good demand for collars, cuffs and sections of afternoon dresses. Vitad Statistics Paul Rayson in the New York Sua' By way of minimizing the j First symptonis of senility ) One only lias to heed the"sag9 -Advice of those who act their age- Slow down a bit, don't be so keen On overworking the machine. At fort.v, even the soundest mat Had better formulate a plan To hoard the years like miser's gold Against tile time of growing old. .â- Vt least, such seems to be the gist. Of what I've read. But I insist That all this talk of powers that fail Cant make me emulate the snail! Statistics may appeal to those Who favor patience and repose. Still. I prefer to think myself Not quite ready for the shelf. Ponce de Leon may have had. Some crazy notions but tihe lad Believed his Magic Fountain would. Renew lost youth and lustihood. Honor to him whose hope ran high â€" Such assurance can't say die! These human cells of mine can beat .A few more years of wear and tear! Let the Grim Reaper mind his mowin<j There's lime enoughâ€" I'll keep on gou: ine. English City Elects Woman Mayor, Halifax. England. â€" Councillor MiH. am Lightowler, a Conservative mem- ber of the Town Council for ten year%' was unanimously elected Mayor â€" • the tirst woman to hold that poslttoa in Halifax. S^??" MUn AND JEFFâ€" By BUD FISHER WINKATj^t-vju TAKe THAT AAOl> A/s»l> THOSC- / OFFICER, ARTicsr HIMi He V^lNkEP I AT OFFlCeR.I DroWTTUlWK;] I've Stit A CiDtOKR IN KV rtt- X NtVtR, N£M£R SAVW ti£R BCFOfeC^CtU VlCU, TAKC A SooD ^ COOK AT H<£R-_r^ y ^FiteR, Pur A im€^ 1/ *^f