McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, June 06, 1940, Image 3
McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, S. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1940
‘‘Y ES Mam, Lilybud, Ah done
A caught it all by mah ownself.
Ah did.” Thus Fo’ Bits impresses
his mastery of fishing upon his
lady fair. And Lilybud seems
properly impressed—or fright
ened. ’Tis all in fun though, for
both' little pickaninnies are de
signed as cutouts to be placed be
side your pool or on the lawn. Jig,
coping or keyhole saw will cut
them from plywood, and enamel
will finish them. They may be
used as a pair or singly.
Z9181, 15 cents, brings the pat
tern for clever little 21-inch Fo’
Bits and his turtle. The fishing
pole is a stick nailed on. Z9182,
15 cents, is his cute companion,
Lilybud, almost as tall. General
cutout directions come with each
pattern and painting suggestions
are given. Send order to:
AUNT MARTHA
Box 166-W Kansas City, Mo.
Enclose 15 cents for each pattern
desired. Pattern No
Name
Address
- Constipation Relief
That Also
Pepsin-izes Stomach
When constipation brings on add indi
gestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated
tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your
stomach is probably loaded up with cer
tain undigested food and your bowels don’t
move. So you need both Pepsin to help
break up fast that rich undigested food in
your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull
the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be
sure your laxative also contains Pepsin.
Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its
Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that won
derful stomach comfort, while the Laxative
Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the
power of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of
undigested protein food which may linger
in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric
acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin-
izing your stomach helps relieve it of such
distress. At the same time this medicine
wakes up lajy nerves and muscles in your
bowels to relieve your constipation. So see
how much better you feel by taking the
laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on
that stomach discomfort, too. Even fin
icky children love to taste this pleasant
family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Lax
ative—Senna with Syrup Pepsin at your
druggist todayl
Neighborly Courage
People glory in all sorts of
bravery except the bravery they
might show on behalf of their near
est neighbor.—George Eliot.
N^\Wf////^ F , RST ^0^;^ AT ^ F,RST
WARNING OF INORGANIC WUN
1
OR COLDS DISCOMFORTS.
^,*^1 JOSEPH ASPIRIN
Conceit in Weak
Conceit in weakest bodies
strongest works.—Hamlet.
KILL ALL FLIES
Hama anywhere. _ Daisy Fly
Killer attract* and kills flies.
Guaranteed, effective. Neat,
convenient—Cannot spill—
Willnot BtJUor injure anythli
Lasts all season. 20c at
dealers. Harold Somers, Inc.,
150 De Kalb A 1
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OflISY FLY KILLER
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A fool’s voice is known by mul
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AT
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MERCHANTS
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY 8
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D. ,
Dean of The Moody Bible Institute j
of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)'
Lesson for June 9
IF YOU’RE ENTERTAINING THE BRIDE
(See Recipes Below)
No sooner is the June bride back
from her honeymoon, than the busi
ness of cooking for two begins!
Feeding her new husband will be an
important part of the bride’s respon
sibility, and any of the successful
homemakers she knows can tell her
that perfectly cooked meals for a
hungry husband help to keep the
matrimonial ship sailing merrily
along.
So, why not a kitchen shower for
a bride—using for gifts the inexpen
sive little “gadg
ets” that will
make her hours
in the kitchen
pleasant? Those
are the things the
bride isn’t likely
to buy herself and
the very fact that
and inexpensive
isn’t apt to get
they are small
means that she
them, either, among her wedding
gifts.
Small, matching pottery pots for
chives and parsley to grow on a sun
ny kitchen window sill, make a
thoughtful gift for a kitchen show
er; a set of pastel tinted bowl cov
ers is practical and very moderate
ly priced; butter paddles, a french
potato ball cutter and small earth
enware pots for baking beans are
out-of-the-ordinary kitchen gifts.
Any bride will bless you for starting
her kitchen library for her—with her
own copies of my homemaking book
lets ; Better Baking, Easy Entertain
ing, Feeding Father and Household
Hints.
And speaking of a kitchen library
—why not start a collection of fa
vorite recipes for the bride? Have
each guest at the shower bring her
very choicest recipe, neatly writ
ten on a card for the bride’s new
recipe box, with the donor’s name
and the date of the party just for
fun. Give her the recipes, too, that
make up the menu for the day.
Food, for a kitchen shower, should
be “homey,” and informally served
—and planned to give the bride sug
gestions for her own cooking and
baking problems.
Menu for a Kitchen Shower.
Noodle and Tuna Casserole
Spring Vegetable Salad
with French Dressing
Orange Rolls Cheese Scones
Angel Food Cake
Strawberry Sherbet
Coffee
Fresh Strawberry Sherbet.
(Serves 6.)
Combine 1 cup of crushed straw
berries and 2 tablespoons of lemon
juice. Scald 1 pint
of milk, add %
cup of sugar and
stir until dis
solved. Soak 1 ta
blespoon of unfla
vored gelatin in 1
tablespoon of cold
water for 5 min
utes and dissolve in hot milk. Add
2 beaten egg yolks, blend, and re
move from flame and cool. Add
fruit mixture to milk mixture and
fold in 2 beaten egg whites. Assem
ble ice cream freezer. Pour sher
bet mixture into the freezing con
tainer. Adjust dasher and cover
tightly. Then fill the ice chamber
with a mixture of 3 parts chipped
ice and 1 part salt and turn crank
slowly for about 5 minutes to freeze.
Repack and allow to harden.
Orange Rolls.
(Makes 18-20 rolls)
% cup sugar
1 teaspoon orange peel (grated)
2V4 cups flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
Vz teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
4 tablespoons shortening
1 egg
Vz cup milk
3 tablespoons butter (melted)
Mix Vs cup sugar and orange peel
thoroughly and allow to stand while
making rolls. Sift and measure the
flour, then sift together the flour,
baking powder, salt and 1 tablespoon
sugar. Cut in the shortening. Beat
the egg slightly and add the milk.
Stir into the flour mixture. Turn
onto a lightly floured board and
knead 30 seconds. Shape into a
long narrow roll and roll out into a
rectangle to about Vi-inch thickness.
Spread the dough with the melted
butter and the sugar and orange
peel mixture. Roll up like jelly roll
and cut off in %-inch pieces. Place
rolls, cut side down, on a well-
Fruits and vegetables are the
mainstays of summer meals.
Watch Eleanor Howe’s column
next week for suggestions on New
Ways of preparing and serving
them.
greased pan and bake about 20 min
utes in a hot oven (425 degrees)..
Barbecued Steak.
(Serves 6.)
2 pounds round steak
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons vinegar
% teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
1 teaspoon onion, grated
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon chili sauce
Vz teaspoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon brown sugar
Cut steak into pieces for serving
and sear in frying pan. Melt but
ter, add vinegar and all other ingre
dients. Heat thoroughly and pour
over the seared steaks. Bake in a
moderate oven (350 degrees) for ap
proximately l l /z hours. Baste fre
quently with barbecue sauce while
baking.
Prize Angel Food Cake.
1% cups sugar
1 cup cake flour
1% cups egg whites
' % teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cream of tartar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Sift sugar once. Add % cup of «
to the flour and sift together 3 times.
Beat egg whites
with rotary beat
er until frothy,
add salt and
cream of tartar
and continue
beating until eggs
hold their shape. Add sugar gradu
ally, beating thoroughly after each
addition. Add vanilla extract. Then
fold in the flour, Va at a time. When
all flour is in, fold a few additional
times. Then place in large un
greased angel-food pan. Bake in a
moderate oven (325 degrees) for 1
hour and 15 minutes. Invert and let
cool in pan.
French Dressing.
Vz cup salad oil
Vi cup lemon juice or vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
Paprika to color
Few grains cayenne
Place ingredients in covered jar.
Chill thoroughly. Just before serv
ing shake vigorously. There are
many ways to vary french dress
ing. The acid may be lemon juice,
vinegar, or half and half. A few
drops of onion juice may be added,
or shake a cut garlic clove with the
dressing (removing it before serv
ing). Dry mustard may be added.
Worcestershire sauce may also be
added, as may creamed roquefort
cheese.
Cheese Scones.
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Vz teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon paprika
Vi cup shortening
Vz cup American cheese (grated)
% cup milk
2 teaspoons prepared mustard
Sift together the flour, baking pow
der, salt and paprika. Cut in
shortening. Add cheese. Then add
milk and prepared mustard which
have been mixed together. Roll out
to %-inch thickness op lightly floured
board. Cut in triangles and bake in
a hot oven (425 degrees) for about
20 minutes.
Percolated Coffee.
Allow 1 tablespoon ground coffee
to each cup of water. Place coffee
in strainer part of percolator. Add
cold water. Adjust top. Heat until
coffee just begins to percolate.
Then turn heat very low and allow
coffee to percolate slowly 8 to 10
minutes. Do not boil.
Homemaking Booklets to the
June Bride.
These four practical booklets on
homemaking are an ideal present
for a new bride:
Better Baking tlO cents
Easy Entertaining 10 cents
Feeding Father 10 cents
Household Hints 10 cents
Send 10 cents in coin for each
book you order, to Eleanor Howe,
919 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
Illinois, and be sure to indicate ex
actly which books you want.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
EZEKIEL TEACHES PERSONAL
RESPONSIBILITY
LESSON TEXT—Ezekiel 33:7-16.
GOLDEN TEXT—So then every one of us
shall give account of himself to God.—
Romans 14:12.
Personal responsibility Is a sub
ject well worthy of careful and re
peated consideration. We talk so
much about social, national or
racial responsibility that we are
prone to forget that the social or
der, nations and races, are made
up of individuals. The Bible, while
recognizing the relationship and re
sponsibilities of nations and social
groups to God, rightly stresses in
dividual responsibility. It is man
who is made in the likeness and
image of God. He is the one who
has fallen into sin, and he needs
the regenerating grace of God in
the Lord Jesus Christ. It is man
who stands responsible to God, both
as an individual and as God’s repre
sentative in carrying His message
to others.
I. Man’s Responsibility for the
Lives of Others (vv. 7-11).
Ezekiel had the official respon
sibility of a watchman sent by God
to his own people in their captivity
in Babylon. His was a special call
ing, and yet is it not true that, ac
cording to the teaching of the New
Testament, every Christian is called
to be a witness, a winner of souls,
and a watchman?
1. The Watchman’s Commission
(v. 7). His appointment is by God,
and the waining words he is to
speak are given to him by God.
Every true preacher and teacher of
the gospel should be a God-called
man, presenting the Word of God.
Otherwise, his ministry will have
little meaning and no real power.
The same is true of every Chris
tian; a personal touch with God
must precede his efforts to win
others to God.
2. The Watchman’s Responsibility
(vv. 8, 9). Being a watchman is
not a duty that one bears lightly,
for it has grave responsibilities.
Lives are dependent on the vigilance
and faithfulness of the watchman.
Even those who watch over worldly
goods or who guard the safety and
comfort of others are held by us to
a high measure of responsibility and
are liable for misfeasance or care
lessness in office. What about those
'of us to whom the destiny of eternal
souls has been committed? Read
the solemn words of verses 8 and 9.
3. The Watchman’s Message (w.
10, 11). The Jews who were in cap
tivity because of their sin and failure
were despondent. They saw no ray
of hope; they were under the over
whelming burden of their sin. The
message of God’s watchman was
one of hope to the repentant people.
God is gracious toward the sinner
and has no pleasure in punishing
him. “Why will ye die?” places the
responsibility squarely where it be
longs—on the sinner himself.
II. Man’s Responsibility for His
Own Life (vv. 12-16).
Whatever may be our responsi
bility for the lives of others, certain
it is that we must each one answer
to God for our own lives. Ours is
the glorious opportunity of living our
life—and ours is the responsibility
for it.
. 1. Consistent Living Required (v.
12). This verse evidently does not
mean that a righteous man over
taken in a moment of defeat is lost.
It rather refers to the one who has
mc.de an outward show of being
righteous. Confident of himself, he
has then fallen into careless living,
and all at once his true character
is revealed in outright wickedness.
That man cannot then draw on his
past record as though it were a bank
account to be used to justify him
in his hour of failure. Righteous
ness is a matter of the heart. It is
a spiritual rebirth, expressing itself
in changed conduct and consistent
living, not only yesterday and to
day, but also tomorrow.
2. Real Repentance Accepted (w.
13-16). God was ready in Ezekiel’s
day to accpet the genuinely repent
ant man and woman. Infinitely
more precious and warm is the wel
come that Christ now gives to sin
ners who turn to Him, for He, our
blessed Lord, has now worked out
the way of salvation on Calvary’s
tree.
Tn’ Not ‘For’
Am I to thank God for every
thing? Am I to thank Him for be
reavement, for p*in, for poverty,
for toil? ... Be still my soul; thou
hast misread the message. It is not
to give thanks for everything, but
to give thanks in everything.—Dr.
G. Matheson.
They Shall Return to the Lord
And the Lord shall smite Egypt;
he shall smite and heal it; and they
shall return even to the Lord, and
he shall be entreated of them, and
shall heal them.—Isaiah 19:22.
Selfishness
What makes selfishness such a
deadly sin is that it is such a self-
deceiving one.
ATTERN
kki
DeI
*****
V
PARTHENT
T HIS three-in-one sports pattern
nnt nnlv npw in the sense
that it is fresh from the hands of
our expert designers. It is also
decidedly new in idea. You’ll no
tice that the frock of 8719 fastens
in the back, at neck and waistline
only (with plenty of lap-over), leav
ing the front perfectly smooth.
Thus you can lay it flat on the
board for ironing. Made in the
popular waistband style, it has a
charming silhouette—small-waist-
ed, round-bosomed.
The pattern also includes well-
tailored shorts and a brief bolero
that transforms your frock into a
street style, in just a twinkling.
Juniors will love it, in sharkskin,
gingham, linen or pique.
Pattern No. 8719 is designed for
sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Size 13
dress requires 3Vs yards of 35-inch
fabric without hap. Bolero, 1%
yards. IVs yards for shorts. 3%
yards bias fold required ttrim.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1324
211 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No Size
Name
Address
s
HOUSEHOLD
QUESTIONS
>
When lighting a birthday cake
always light the candles in the
middle first and those on outside
last. ,
* * * I
A teaspoon of mixed pickle
spices tied in a small bag and
added to the water in which fish,
ham or tongue is boiled, will add
a very pleasing flavor.
* * *
Art gum may be used to clean
gloves, shoes, and wall paper.
* * *
When refilling a feather pillow
crush a small block of camphor
and mix in with the feathers. This
will keep the feathers “fresh” and
will help to preserve them.
* * *
After a blanket has been washed
and dried pin it on the line and
beat with a carpet-beater. This
makes the blanket beautifully soft
and fluffy.
With Friends
They are never alone who ara
accompanied by noble thoughts.
Look 20mm beyond the
Refrigerator you buy today
Every NORGE ROLLATOR REFRIGERATOR is
backed by the reputation and the resources of the...
great BORG-WARNER CORPORATION, world-
famous manufacturer with 20 factories in 5 states
When you buy an electric refrigerator, look wisely to the future. Lookj
10years ahead.. .or 20. Look beyond the refrigerator as it stands today, >
new and bright and gleaming. Visualize the greater needs which it may
be called to meet in the years to come. Consider the satisfactions of
service well rendered that can come only from a product ably engi
neered and ably built by an organization experienced in precision
manufacturing.
Such,an organization is NorgC, backed by the resources and engineering
skill, the seasoned reputation and world fame of the great Borg-Warner
.Corporation whose score of factories employ thousands in five states.
You will look today, of course, at the advanced features that distin
guish the Norge refrigerator in its field ... at the highlights of detail
and design that are winning such high acclaim throughout the world.
In the big SR-8 model, as shown above, you will admire extra size
and ample capacity, a freezer of stainless steel, the convenience of
the exclusive Handefroster and Coldpack, the sliding shelves, glass-
covered drawers and Cellaret. You will appreciate the simple effi
ciency of the refrigerant-cooled RoIIator Cold-Maker which Norge has
built to almost unbelievable limits of precision for lifetime service. 1
But before you decide, look again at the record of integrity and
achievement which Norge has made in the past. That, we submit, is^
the reason you also may look far to the future with faith in Norge.
See NORGE Before You Buy!
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