The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1942 Page: 7 of 8
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THE WEST NEWS
PLORAL beauty comes to pillow
•lips in the tour exciting motifs
on transfer No. Z9185. Velvety
pansies, conventional flowers for
cutwork or applique, a band of
Transfer No. Z9185
cross stitch broken to form a gay
design, and baskets of posies give
hand-embroidered loveliness to
that household necessity—the pil-
low slip.
• • •
Tour own linen closet or that of a friend
will benefit Immeasurably if slips cm-
brgidered In these motifs are added
Transfer No. Z8185 la 18 centa. Send your
order to:
AUNT MARTHA
B«11SS-W Kansas City, Mo.
Enclose 18 centa for each pattern
desired. Pattern No.............
Name................................
Address....................
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'IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAYI
Ochool Lesson
By HAROLD L LUNEXJU13T, O. D.
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.I
Lesson for January 4
Leteon subjects and Scripture texts se-
lected and copyrighted by internatton il
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
pfNPig
THE SYNOPTIC GOSPELS:
MATTHEW, MARK, LUKE
LESSON TEXT-Matthew 1:1. 17; Mark
11. 14. 13; Luke 1:1-4: Acta 1 I S.
GOLDEN TEXT -Christ Jesus came Into
the world to save turners.—I Timothy 1.13.
‘3M
. .tier:. ■ : - ..
J
Invite the Club — Serve Apple-Banana Rings
(See Recipes Below)
Dessert Parties
ASK Ml o
ANOT
A General Quiz
?
T
?--------------- j
The Question*
1. What are agenda?
2. What is the Dick test?
3. Who cut the Gordian knot?
4. What does frappe mean in
cooking?
5. Was "Old Ironsides" sheeted
with iron?
6. Who wrote the lines, "The
world is so full of a number of
things. I’m sure we should all be
as happy as kings"?
7. Mohammed fled what city on
what is known as the hegira?
8. What are the two most north-
erly countries in South America?
The Answers
1. Memoranda of things to be
done.
2. A test made by physicians to
determine the susceptibility to
scarlet fever.
3. Alexander the Great.
4. Chilled with ice.
5. No. TTie historic ship was
wooden.
8. Robert Louis Stevenson.
7. Medina. .
8. Venezuela and Colombia.
COLDS'MISERY NEWS
DISCOVERY
my iww umts of Ponotro,
vanishing typo salvo
ToC e»a enjoy a new aperient* when you
try Peoetro for th« fir»t time. Diecover thii
new enjoyment in rubbing sold*’ mieeriM
from nym Hub on Fenetro m directed.
It's con* Mat vaulting cream. But pa two
way*—inaide, by vaporizing; outaida, by
ceuntor-imutiun. Pur toniibt any Good
Night to eoids- mizeriez withtea
Result of Zeal
Through zeal knowledge is got- ■
ten, through lack of zeal knowl- ■
edge is lost; let a man who knows
this double path of gain and loss
thus place himself that knowledge
may grow.—Buddha.
That Na^in<3
Backache
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Megwa Hto with tta harry and worry,
—wm riii os ex posy rf %nu unco-
‘ aayy atraln on tha work
They aro apt to botoma
■■____fad to 81 tar axaaa ted
aad athar laapurUiaa boa tha Ufa-gtriag
a» aithu.
__ __
ttaa burning. aaaaty a tao traqaat
Try Oaaa'a Pith. Daaa’i hdp tha
Doans Pills
"Come over for dessert” has be-
come one of the most popular ways
of entertaining at
luncheon or after-
noon meetings of
bridge or sew-
ing clubs. Your
guests will take
a light snack at
home and come
over to your home
for dessert only.
Easy? Yes, and a
very successful way of starting out
your afternoon. So, take out your
best recipes for dessert and let's go:
Whatever you have must be at-
tractive, so bring out your nicest
dessert plates and doilies. First idea
on our list today are these broiled
Banana-Apple Rings which will
polka-dot your table in dessert per-
fection :
•Broiled Bxnant-Apple Rings.
(Serves 6)
1 cup sugar
to cup water
2 apples, unpeeled
3 Arm bananas
Melted butter
Salt
Cinnamon
Bring sugar and water to a boil
and cook until sugar is dissolved.
Core apples and cut crosswise into
three thick slices. Add to syrup and
cook until tender, but firm. Remove
from syrup and place on a broiler
rack or pan. Cover apple slices
with overlapping slices of bananas
which have been peeled and sliced
thin. Brush with butter and sprinkle
with salt and cinnamon. Broil about
10 minutes or until bananas are
brown and tender, easily pierced
with a fork. Serve hot with sweet-
ened, whipped cream.
To make your dessert party a dou-
ble success, serve:
Baiuns Oatmeal Cookies.
(Makes 3Vi dozen)
I Mr cups sifted flour
to teaspoon soda
to teaspoon nutmeg
% teaspoon cinnamon
to cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup mashed bananas (2 or 3
bananas)
1% cup rolled oats
Vi cup chopped nutmeats
Sift together flour, soda, salt and
•pices. Add sugar gradually to short-
ening and cream
teaspoonfuls
well. Add egg
and beat well.
Add bananas,
rolled oats and
nutmeats and mix
thoroughly. Add
flour mixture and
blend. Drop by
onto an ungreased
THIS WEEK’S MENU
Tomato-Pea Soup
Breaded Veal Cutlets
Riced Potatoes
Broccoli
Molded Gingerale Salad
•Broiled Banana-Apple Rings
Cookies Beverage
•Recipe Given
«*44V Oil WU.gl CaOL'U
cookie skeet about 1(4 inches apart.
Bake in a moderately I it oven about
19 minutes. Remove from pans at
once.
Simply elegant will be your guests'
or family’s verdict when you serve
WNU-L
53-41
“NEW HUH
* TO ORDER
• Advertiting cmtei mw
wealth by afeowtug people new
end better wsyt of living, ted
wit ritataa new wtaltk it art-
tribute* to the pnupenty of
WWW touched by the tow of eaoeey
whtfh it wo tto la tk» woy, tot jw
weriuafhife ietonet of every two of m
ovary fey of the year, briugmg as now
LYNN SAYS:
When planning your luncheon
dessert parties, be sure to use
this season’s rich color schemes
on your tables and favors and
placecards. White with silver,
gold, blue, red are tops right now.
If you like three color combi-
nations, there's green, white and
gold, blue, white and gold, or
white, red and green.
For an elaborate color scheme
use the rich tones of violet, em-
erald, gold, blue and red. This
is especially good in a center-
piece.
Bridge placecards may be
made out of paper chrysanthe-
mums in your favorite color with
the card tilting mat of the flower.
The white cards may also be dec-
orated with painted flowers, or
candy-shaped flowers pasted in
the corner. Evergreen, holly,
mistletoe, bright berries, pine
cones, used alone or with a sil-
ver ornament such as a bell on
the place card are sure to bring
delighted murmurs from your
bridge guests.
an ambrosial concoction so easy to
make, it's no trick at all. Here’s a
dessert that proves you don't have
to spend hours of cooking and bak-
ing to get a first-rate dessert:
Krispie Cream Roll.
(Serves 10)
1(4 cups whipping cream
8 marshmallows
to cup honey
to cup chopped dates
V* cup chopped nutmeats
3*4 cups oven-popped rice cereal
Whip cream until stiff, reserving
% cup, Cut marshmallows into
small pieces, adding them to cream.
Add honey, dates and nutmeats.
Roll rice cereal into fine crumbs
8nd add 1 cup of crumbs to cream
mixture. Blend well. Spread re-
maining crumbs evenly on a piece
of waxed paper and place cream
mixture on top. Mold into a roll
and chill for several hours. Slice
and serve garnished with remain-
ing whipped cream, chopped nut-
meats or fruit slices or berries.
No list of dessert tempters for
parties is complete without super-
smooth, delecta-
ble ice-box cake.
Made with or-
ange flavoring
the ice-box cake
can be truly pro-
vocative in both
flavor and ap-
pearance and still
be easy on the waistlines of your
diet-conscious friends:
Orange Ice-Box Cake.
(Serves 8.)
1 tablespoon gelatine
3 tablespoons cold water
2 cups ir.iik or 1 cup evaporated
milk diluted with 1 cup water
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
to cup orange Juice
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
2 dozen lady fingers
Soak gelatine in cold water. Scald
the milk in a double, boiler, mix
cornstarch and sugar, and add to
hot milk. Add the eggs slightly beat-
en, combined with cold milk. Cook
several minutes, stirring constantly.
Remove from fire and add gelatine.
Add orange rind and juice. Line a
mold with lady fingers, then fill with
alternate layers of the cooked mix-
ture and lady fingers. Have a layer
of lady fingers on top. Chill in re-
frigerator overnight. Serve with
whipped cream, garnished with or-
ange sections.
Piquent peppermint adds a nev-
er-to-be-forgotten flavor to choco-
late, and served In quaint tarts,
here’s a dessert that will mark you
as a leader in youf crowd:
Cbocolate Mint Tarts.
(Serve* 6)
2 squares unsweetened chocolate
1 cup evaporated milk diluted
with 1 cup water
44 cup sugar
5 tablespoons flour
to teaspoon salt
2 egg yolks
2 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
to cup chopped nuts
6 baked tart shells
Sweetened whipped cream
44 cup crushed peppermint candy
Add chocolate to diluted milk in
double boiler and heat until choco-
late melts. Beat with rotary beater
until chocolate is blended with milk.
Combine sugar, flour and salt and
add gradually to chocolate mixture.
Cook until thick and smooth, about
15 minutes. Beat yolks and add to
cooked mixture gradually. Cook two
minutes longer. Remove from Ore,
add butter, vanilla and nuts. When
cool, pour into tart shells. Top with
whipped cream, mixed lightly with
the crushed candy.
(Rri»«»«4 to W«4torn HnM.il BatoaJ
A new year uf God-given oppor-
tunity with the assurance of His
grace and strength for our daily
need. Such is (he precious gift we
hold in our hands as we enter on
A. D. 1942.
With the new year, we enter upon
a new course of study—carefully
planned ahead through 1947, if the
Lord tarries. We begin very ap-
propriately witti a study of the life
of Christ as presented in the first
three Gospels, known as the Synop-
tic Gospels.
"Synoptic” is a combination of
two words, meaning "a view to-
gether,” and refers to the fact that
Matthew, Mark.^ind Luke give us
the same general view of Christ,
although differing somewhat in their
emphasis.
Matthew, writing his Gospel
especially to the Jews, presents
Christ as King. Mark, for the Ho-
mans, presents the Servant. Luke
presents to the Greeks the Son of
Man—the perfect Man, and John, for
the Christian church, reveals the
Son of God. But note that all the
Gospels are for us, and in them we
find the fourfold picture which pre-
sents the many-sided glory and
beauty of our Lord. Turning to our
scriptures we see—
I. The King (Matt. 1:1, 17).
These verses come at the begin-
ning and end of the kingly geneal-
ogy of Jesus. It is important that
the descent of a king be carefully
recorded and studied, for it atone
can prove his right to the throne.
We know that Israel rejected Jesus
as King, but we also know what
prophecy reveals that He will one
day take the throne of David and
reign. Does He have that right?
. In Matthew 1:1-17, we have His
national and royal descent. Being
son of both David and Abraham, He
is heir to both the promise and the
throne. As King of Israel, there
was no need to trace His lineage
back further than Abraham through
David, but we find that in Luke (2;
23-28) the Son of Man is traced
back to Adam. Mark has no gene-
alogy for reasons noted below, and
John also has none, for the Son of
God is eternal, infinite, without need
of genealogy.
Turning now to Mark, we find
Him presented as
n. The Servant (Mark 1:1,14, 15).
A servant needs no genealogy, he
needs only to be able and ready to
work, and that is just what we find
in Mark. The account plunges at
once into the story of "the gospel
of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,"
who is ready to serve—by life or
by death—yes, even by the death
of the cross.
The forerunner, John the Baptist,
bears his witness. Jesus is bap-
tized. John is imprisoned, and im-
mediately Jesus begins to preach,
“Repent ye, and believe the gos-
pel." The key verse of Mark is
10:45: "For even the Son of man
came not to be ministered unto,
but to minister." The characteristic
words are "straightway," "forth-
with," and "immediately." The
Greek word thus translated appears
about 40 times in the book. The
Servant of God went quickly about
the Father's business. Christians,
can we say the same for ourselves?
III. The Son of Man (Luke 1:1-4).
Luke undertakes to write, under
the control of the Holy Spirit, a
careful account of the saving work
of Christ, but he makes it doubly
clear that he writes from firsthand
knowledge. “Eyewitnesses" means
those who made a personal investi-
gation, hence, those who knew
Christ as the Son of Man, the One
who became flesh and dwelt among
us. "Ministers" means literally
those who served under Jesus, His
personal assistants; again empha-
sizing His personal ministry as "the
Son of man who is come to seek
and to save that which was lost”
(as Luke 19:10, the key verse of this
Gospel, expresses it).
IV. The Risen and Ascended Lord
(Acts 1:1-5).
Christ who was crucified aroee a
Victor over death and the grave,
and ascended to the Father, where
He now appears aa our Advocate.
That does not mean that His work
on earth terminated, tor we have in
Acts what Dr. Morgan fittingly calls
"the book of the continued doing
and teaching of the living Christ by
the Holy Spirit through His body,
which is the church.”
The Gospels (Acts 1:1) told only
that "Jesus began to do and to
teach." Acts continues, but does not
complete the story. Christ is work-
ing today in and through surren-
dered believers. Will He have lib-
erty to work through you and
through me this year of 1M27 If ae,
it is sure to be a happy—yes, a
blessed—New Year,
PATTERNS'*.
SEWING CIRCLE
1482-B
VES, a dress to admire tor its
* very fresh approach to the
problem of looking slim and state-
ly when your figure is too heavy!
Pattern No. 1482-B happily over-
comes your figure difficulties with
a vestee effect through the top, ex-
tending as a slim waist treatment.
The softly gathered side pieces
permit easy roominess through
the bodice, the low pointed neck-
line is youthful and flattering to
the face.
The skirt attached at a low
waistline takes pounds away from
your hipline because of its adroit
Grapefruit and oranges will peel
more easily if you soak them three
minutes in boiling water to cover.
That will make the membrane
come off along with the skin. Then
chill the fruit for use in salads,
cocktails, or desserts.
• • •
If doors and drawers swell so
much that they won't close, sand-
paper or plane the edges, and then
varnish the surface to prevent fur-
ther swelling or shrinking.
• • •
If year vacuum cleaner has sev-
eral attachments, make the best
use of them. They come in handy
for cleaning behind radiators,
book cases and the refrigerator.
• • •
Here’s a line wsy to use leftover
biscuits, muffins or rolls: Scoop
out the insides, butter the case
well and fill in with a thick cream
vegetable, meat or chicken. For
a creole version, spread the in-
sides with chili sauce blended with
butter. Quickly fill with piquant
creamed shrimps or salmon. Bake
10 minutes in a moderately hot
oven.
• • •
Try dipping the knife in boiling
water before cutting cake or pie.
• • •
The white part of orange and
lemon rinds is usually bitter. So
when grating use only the outside
yellow part.
piecing — and weight-minimizingj
smoothness at the sides and. in
back. The dress may be finished
with short sleeves or sleeves of
the new "betow-the-eibow" grape.
The style is suitable for silk,
rayon or wool crepes, for satin,
faille or romaine.
• • •
Barbara Ben Pattern No MH-B ta fe-
nsned tor aim 84. M. 38, 40. 42, 44. 4«
and 48. Size M, *, sleeve* requires «%
yarde 30-incti Material. Sea* your ar-
der to:
sewing circle pattbkn wen.
Room 1324
311 W. Worker Dr.
Encloie 13 cento In coins tar
Pattern No..............’. Size..
Name .....................
Address ........................
Young Man’s Need
It is not book learning young
men need, nor instruction about
this or that, but a stiffening of ths
vertebrae wiich will cause them
to be loyal to a trust, to net
promptly, concentrate their ener-
gies, do a thing—“carry a mes-
sage to Garcia."—Elbert Hubbard.
Relief At Last
ForYour Cough
Creomulaion relieves promptly be-
cause It goes right to the seattf the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ lauen piiwgm, and tod nature
to soothe and heal taw, tender, to-
flamed broncnial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell yen
a bottle of Creomulafim with tha un-
derstanding you must like the way M
quickly allays the cough or you am
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Brooch its*
As Man Wants
It is not the greatness of a man's
means that makes him independent,
so much as the smallness of his
wants.—Cobbett.
You psy leas for Clabber Girl
but you use so more .. . Add to
this Clabber Girl's half century
record of perfect baking: results
and you will zee why millions of
proud homemakera use Clabber
Girl, exclusively.
Order a can of Clabber Girl
from your grocer today. Yon
will be amazed when be toils yoa
the price. You will be delights*
with your baking results.
You Pay
LESS...
but us*
NO MORE
CLABBER GIRL
BAKING POWDER
A CYCLE Of HUMAN BITTEm/tT
A
dvehtising gives you new idfcas,
\ and also makes them available
to you at economical cost As these
new ideas become mote accepted,
paces go down. As pices go down,
mote persona enjoy new idea*. It
is a cycle of huntim betterment, and
it starts with the printed words
of a newspaper advertisement.
JOIN TH£ CI*CLf Q READ THE AOS
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Webb, Leonard. The West News (West, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1942, newspaper, January 2, 1942; West, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth589231/m1/7/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting West Public Library.