MEAT DISHES

They Are Delicious

FRIED SLICED BEEF WITH

THREAD NOODLES

3 lbs. fillet beef

2 teaspoons salad oli

1 teaspoon sugar

teaspoon salt

2 teaspoons of corn starch

2 teaspoons of wine mixed with

cup of soy sauce,

cup of lard

1 piece garlic ·

Have the beef sliced very thin. Mix the frst seven Ingredients. Put all into frying pan together with one piece garlic and heat it to boiling point, Take out the garlic put in the beef and fry same until the red colour of the Add a little pep- meat is turned.

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1936.

SURPRISES

MORE WAYS THAN

ONE OF DRESSING A SALAD

BRIGHTON CUTLETS

STORM RUINS

£25,000 GOWNS AT THE KING'S RECEPTION

London, July 22. Soaked by the rain and bitterly disappointed, nearly a thousand women picked up Minse four ounces of cold meat their long skirts and, without and mix with it four ounces mashed potato. Season with pep-fied, ran for shelter across the any pretence of being digni.. per. salt, and a Ettle anchovy essence, and bind they whole to Though considering the unifor-gether with the yolk of an * mity of taste in salads you'd hard-shape the mixture into cutlets and solve it with cup water and poly think so. Try these if you want lay them on cutlet-shaped plece into te bolled sauce and let it

of fried or toasted bread in a deep boll 2 minutes. Add pickles and

Brush the cutlets over with tin. cook one minute.

the beaten white of egg and sprinkle them with breadcrumbs Put a small piece of butter on

tablespoon corn starch and dis-

SOY SAUCE" PORK

2 lbs. pork thalt lean-half

fati

Cup Chinese rice wine

I Cup soy Sauce

1 small pc.. ginger

2 Teaspoons of sugar crystals

1 Bowl bamboo shoots (or chest-

Buts)

boll until the

Cut the pork into places two inches long and one inch wide, put Into a saucepan. pour wine and ginger over the meat and let it wine is almost put in the soy sauce and boll about 10 minutes. Add bamboo shoots. Cook over as slow Are, Stir the pork, every 10 minutes until done. Add and boil until soft.

per and serve, Cut the threadsorbed, Then noodles two inches long and fry in deep hot oll until puffed and serve under the beef,

SWEET AND SOUR YELLOW FISH

1 Yellow fish about 2 lbs.

1 Teaspoon salt

Cup sugar

PEPPER CHICKEN

sugar

1 Cup chicken meat in cubes

1 Egg white.

Teaspoon sa't

iCup stock (beef' or chicken)

+ Cup pickles

1 Tablespoon corn starch

2 Small pleces garlic

Clean the Ash cut "M" on two sides in several places so that the fish can become thoroughly crisp. One hour before cooking rub the fish with on teaspoonful of salt Drop the ash and garlic into the pan with deep hot oil and fry it until brown and clap. Take out and put on platser without the garlic and pour sauce ove "Sour Sauce": sugar. vinegar. and stock and boll up. Take one

it.

2 Tablespoons soy Sauce

Teaspoon sugar

Teaspoon corn starch

tc impart a spice or originailty to the salad bowl.

A GOOD MAYONNAISE SAUCE

Rub. the inside of your salad bowl with a clove "of garlic.

sliced onion

or

Put in the yolks of

each

cutlet and pour round » a

little brown gravy. Then bake in a hot oven till the cutlets are heated and nicely.

two eggs. pinch of salt and pepper, an egg spoonful of made thoroughly mustard, half a teaspoonful of browned. powdered sugar, the juice of 3 small, lemon, and a few drops of Tarragon vinegar. Stir gently Add until they have all mingled. olive all drop by drop, stirring until the mayonnaise is like thick cream.

}

a

A tablespoonful of vinegar in large fruit cake will mean that you can do with fewer eggs.

1

few

lawns of Buckingham Palace yesterday when a storm broke during the King's first" recep-

tion.

The royal refreshment tent. being the nearest point of shelter, was beseiged by lovely women in gowns worth thou- sands of pounds, who had caught glimpses of the gold plate and scarlet-liveried. ser. rants inside.

BY A DEBUTANTE

"It was a splendid and dignified affair ruined by the rain. I should think £25,000 worth of frocks were spoiled.

If short of cheese for we'sh "The King sat in state, in almost rarebit, use

the under breadcrumbs Oriental splendour,

shamiana, and a 'ittle milk. and half the scarlet, gold-fringed usual quantity of cheese, but sea- supported by silver poles, which King George brought back from son well,

the Durbar at Delhi.

FRENCH DRESSING Simply made, this, but evar po- puiar, Allow of salt half a tea- spoonful of castor sugar hall teaspoonful of pepper and mus- tard a quarter of a teaspoonful each, of vinegar or lemon juice one tablespoonful, of olive oil two by many to be superior to egg. or three tablespoonfuls.

VINAIGRETTE SAUCE

Save eggs by dipping your fan for frying in the finest oatmeal, or dip in milk before bread-crumbing The flavour is considered them.

If you cook too many potatoes try making a potato crust for sausage

To the crushed yolk of a hard-rolls of minced meat, It is a nice

2 Teaspoon wine mixed with boiled egg add wine vinegar, salt

pounded ginger

1 Tablespoon pepper sauce

cubes

Cup Cooked green peas

and pepper, and twice as much olive oil as vinegar." Now add

Cup Cooked bamboo shoot in chopped fine herbs. This sauce can be made with or without egg yolk, can be used with any green salad. but is especially good with Iced' asparagus,

Cup Cooked Lard ·

Mix the Arst seven ingredients." put them into hot lard for 3 ninutes, then add bamboo shoots peas, pepper paste and a Uttle chicken stock, Cook two minutes and then serve.

MCMAHON: RULES

AGAINST TWO NEWSPAPERS

"Comments May Prejudice

Trial," Says Attorney- General

by the

London, July 22.

the

а

Donald Somervell, K.C.) King's Bench Divisional Court to- day.

A REALLY CHEAP MAYONNAISE

change from pastry.

A quick paste substitute for sandwiches can be made by blent ing hardboiled egg Jolk with anchovy sauce. adding any other flavouring you like.

Mix with 2 uttle melted butter.

This will appeal to those who tard, pepper and salt to taste. like a rather sweet

mayonnaise. Put this in a wide-mouthed bottle, Allow a medium size tin of as it thickens ready and becomes sweetened condensed milk. an difficult to get out. This mayon- equal quantity of vinegar. musi naise keeps indefinitely.

His behaviour at timès brought: him to the notice of the police, who regarded him as a harm- less lunatic nursing a grievance.

MOTIVES

LI

Metropolitan magistrate, when he hears, the charge again next Friday.

LETTER TO WIFE-

It stated later, referring to a +Those are the passages of letter which Barrigan wrote to which I complain," said the At- his wife; torney-general.

"It is not for me, at this stage, to make any comment as to what issues may or may not prove re- levant, or be raised in the course' of the proceedings

"We sat in rows of chairs in a roped-off enclosure, the colours of the women's frocks making it look like an herbaceous border.

4

"One or two drops of rain fell almost immediately, and male relatives rushed to the edge of the enclosure with umbrellas, which mushroomed up here and there over our precious hats. "We fled in tam along the red carpet which led past the King. The dals was banked with tubs of pink hydrangeas, and members of the Household stood in a semi- circle.

HER FEAR

"The rain began to fall steady as I got on to the carpet. I was nervous, but terrified that I was not going to be able to get past the King before the storm broke.

"He sat a little, in advance of the others, dressed in grey morní- in kit looking. I thought, rather lonely on his scarlet and gold chair. But he gave each of us a charming bow and smile as wa.curtaled.

1

"Our curtales were bad, on the whole, I thought, but only because we were approaching the King Bannigan was permitted to from the right side, instead of the write a letter to her on Thurs-left, as is usual at Courts, day night. She received it yes-

"So we had to do our curtsles terday. He told her how sorry on the opposite leg from the one he was to be the cause of dis- we had been taught. tress' to her, again protested be

"Also, there was some confusion had no intention of killing the as to whether we were to do a full King or harming han in any curtsy or merely a bob Many of us compromised and did a sort of Then came a heading. "Palace half-curtsy.

WAS.

Pilgrims," and the following: ings;

"Jerome Bannigan," "The

"But these passages purport to deal with the motives of an off-" ence, if an offence be proved, änd refer to mental instability and to the state of the accused person, apart from the more general ob- servations and what may be thought to be objectionable blogra- phies of this kind purporting to relate to the matters to which I

have referred.

"These matters

entitle

me to

A Rule Nist for attachment for Story of the Man now known as contempt of court against the McMahon." editor and publishers

The article that followed said: of

McMahon, whose real name is "Evening News" was applied for

(Si Attorney-general

Jerome Bannigan, has red in the Notting Hill Gate and Pad- dington districts for ten years.

When he first went to Notting ask the court for a rule nisi on Hill Gate he kept a herbalist's the ground that a prima facie case is made out and, if the rules are shop, and "later similar business in Westbourne- granted, I ask that they should grove. About 12 months ago he be made against Frank Leonard was in business in Lower Re-Fitzhugh and Associated Newspa-

pers, Ltd. gent-street,

Hewart

"

carried

On a

Sir Donald told Lord and Mr. Justice Talbot and Mr. Justice Goddard that he moved in regard to comments made by the newspaper upon proceedings against George Andrew McMahon,

HEADINGS

"I have an atidavit by thè who was arrested on July 16 last

Prosecutions. in Constitution Hill and sub- Sir Donald pointed

Director of Public out sequently, the same day, charged when the article was continued on who says he is informed that Mr. at Bow-street Police Court with another page the headings were: Fitzhugh is the editor of the a Evening News' and that from the imprint thereon it is printed and Associated News- published by papers, Ltd.”.....

an offence against, Section 7 ot; "McMahon felt that he had the Firearms Act, 1920.

"The ground on which I move," said the Attorney-general, "Is that comments made in the news- paper may gravely prejudice the. fair trial of the accused.

that

grudge." "His unsuccessful claim for £4000 against two detectives: City office scene," and "Said to be mentally unstable."

Sir Donald said he had another application of a similar nature to make in regard to an article in the "Dally Express" of July 18.

The article, Sir Donald said, then went on to allude to a claim "I ask your lordships to look at, he had made against two detec- the article. It had

words. tives for £4000 for alleged wrong- the "Revolver affair of no political fut arrest. It said that he was significance."

really an Irishman, that he was married in Glasgow four years ago, and it referred to other in- was this: cidents in his life.

A YARD APPEAL "There la a reference to the Special Branch, It tells about a pistol and refers to an appeal by Scotland Yard for witnesses.

"Then I ask your attention to the opening two paragraphs. They run:

The "Evening News" is now in a position to dispel any lurking fear among loyal subjects of the King that yesterday's incident has had any connection with

any subversive movement in this or any country.

It had no political significance whatever and the man, George Andrew McMahon. now under arrest charged with being in possession of a revolver with in- tent to endanger life, is not con- nected with any extremist vio lent group.

Sir Donald said that at the bot- tom of the page were the head-

"This paragraph followed:

A neighbour in Westbourne- terracé'

to an "Evening sald News" representative, "McMahon always regarded himself as a social reformer, and we always regarded him as rather a crank." Then there was a heading. "BA. of Dublin," and under that came the following:

The article was on the first page, with the heading: "Bannigan, in prison hospital, makes notes for his defence," and in smaller print

11

For the Beach— Fill your thermos flask with 'Ovaltine' Gold which provides all the energy-giving

•qualities 'Ovaltine' in a most delicious and refreshing form.

of

Make certain that your light Summer meals are complete in nutritive value by drinking a glass of delicious OVALTINE' with them

There is only ONE OVALTINE'

TA PRIA

THE LIBRARY WHERE THEY KEEP ON FINDING

PRICELESS MSS

2100-Year-Old Fragment Of

Bible Found On Rubbish Heap

ter.

Manchester, July 20. In some way it came into Egyptian

Dr. Henry Guppy sat at his desk hands, and was used as part of in the Rylands Library. Manches- the wrapping for a mummy, prob- and held in his hand, two ably that of a poor person. And pieces of glass bound with cloth then, somehow, it came to be at the edges, writes a correspond thrown away in a rubbish heap ent, Between the pieces of glass | outside an Egyptian city, There it was something so old and preci- lay for years preserved by the dry- ous as to be priceless. It was a ress of the atmosphere, while tiny piece of tattered yellow European dynasties rose sind fell. on: white" A scholar stumbled upon it-and

now it lay before melting

been

"As soon as I had passed the The story of Bannigan's life, King I just ran for the nearest. and of events leading up to the shelter. Only 100 women got past charge against him, was reveal after me before the Lord Cham-manuscript mounted ed to me from many sources yes-berlain gave the signal to abandon glossy paper.

It was the oldest Bible manu terday. Pieced together, his is the reception, and everybody broke

script in existence, which has just the case of a man who brooded and ran..

discovered a piece of the aver imaginary. wrongs, allowed THE GREAT QUESTION

Book of Deuteronomy, written in instability of character to

"Waiting in the Palace for our

the second century BC. rauge his pative Intellingence. cars afterwards, I heard on all that Bannigan is a sides, Did you get past, Too bad, member of some secret society my dear. I did! or political organisation are without foundation. He shared confidence with few. Be boasted that ble views were non- sectarian, non-political.

his

Fears

de-

A close, aequaintance of Ban- nigan said to me: "He is really 33 years old, married, bis wife, three

"Seme of the dresses were very picturesque. One woman wore a Spanish comb and black man- tile instead of a hat, and a black and white frilly Spanish dress which stood out all around her

like a dancer's.

"Another, who caused a shock years ago. She adores among the crowds of girls him. He is temperamental, un- ground length dresses, had on a stable. He has drinking bouts, green angora suit and tiny brown which send him crazy.

When hat, as though going to an infor-

mal sherry party.

he drinks that is, when he has money-he drinks neat whisky mostly,"

SIR JOHN SIMON. The article also stated:

On Wednesday he wrote a let ter to Sir John Simon, address- ed it to him at, the Home Office. This letter, mentioned at Bow- street, will form an important exhibit at the trial.

Jerome Bannigan, otherwise George Andrew McMahon, club- footed Irish reformer, man with

Bir Donald added, "The paper a grievance against authority is to-day in Brixton Prisonhos- then goes on to give what it states pital writing feverishly, nuling is the contents of the letter.. page upon page with rapidly. Whether that letter will or will scrawled notes,

not be an exhibit in the proceed- Sir Donald said that he had inga, it is not for me at this stage omitted, in dealing with the previ- to say ous application to mention the.

"She was much the most sensi- bly dressed girl there."

EXCOMMUNICATION ORDER

Bishop's Letter In Hands Of Solicitors

Sentence

"There It 18" said Dr. Guppy, in a matter-of-fact voice, and hand- ed it to me.

characters

"I am going to put it in the show cases here to-day for the public to see." said Dr. Guppy.

HUNDREDS OF FRAGMENTS "How will they be kept after that?" I asked,

"I will show you," replied Dr. Guppy.

He led me down the stairs and

Most of the Greek were still clear, after 2100 years. Nearly as clear as when they were through a great room full of an- written by some Jewish scholar indent manuscripts. At the end we

came, to`a Zarrow, winding stone- Egypt before Christ was born.

stairway. Dr. Guppy led the way

"TREASURED FOR YEARS

The payrus roll, of which it up, and then we went along an- forms a part, had no doubt been other passage, and stopped in treasured for years perhaps for front of a cupboard standing 10 generations-by some Jewish feet high, family in a strange land. They Dr. Guppy opened it, and there reading it perhaps when; I saw hundreds of fragments of Julius Caesar was conquering the manuscripts bound between pieces savage Britons.

of glass, and hermetically sealed to preserve them,

were

In time the roll, wore out, and was considered of no further use.

NOT YET EXAMINED

Dr. Guppy picked out some of of the other priceless fragments, beside which the ancient pieces. of Deuteronomy will rest. One- At the inquest the jury censored the only one of its land. In the son for not helping h's existence was from a certificate parents when they were in finan-issued in the reign of the Roman

·cial · nimiculties. At the memoria!

Emperor Decius, when Chrisians service for the parents Dr. Bell were compelled to sacrifice to the referred to the Jurys rider and gods. Another was the earliest declared: "We must feel acutely fragment of the Nicene Creed. London, July 14. of excommunication, the callousness of a son on whom believed to be the Arst, apart from his parents seemingly lavished the

It was only last «November that the Roman Catholic Church, for a bulk of their fortune. Dr. Bell hundred years, was pissed on Mr. acted under one of the Rubrics the earliest known fragment of Bir Donald asked that the rules James Bunting, a young fim- preceding the Holy Communion the New Testament, a part of the Fourth Gospel, was found in the adverse effect which might be in this case should be granted scénario writer of Ferring-on-sea, Service in the Prayer Book

The case has already aroused same collection of rubbish from ple who have had business rela-produced on people's minds by the against Arthur Christiansen, the Sussex, by the Bishop of Chiches

Dr. Barnes, Bishop which the Deuteronomy freg- tions with him as a man with a statement that a man was using editor of the “Dally Express" and ter, Dr. Bell, following the suicide controversy.

London Express Newspaper, Ltd. of his parents, the Rev. W. Hot Birmingham, criticised Dr.ment was recovered, and there boorish temperament and a lack on.alina. of mental balance.

The court granted the rules in Boyne Bunting and Mrs Bunting Bell's action, saying: "It is the may be more discoveries each case and axed next Wednes who were found dead in a gas duty of the Church to make good There is still in the possession day for the hearing of the argu-alled bedroom in a house at citizens, not make bad cues of the Rylands Library a large Comeladata, Sumer - where the worse." In the meanwhile Mr. amount of material to be examin-

Bunting has placed the Bishop's ed said Dr. Guppy letter announcing the excommual-It is impossible to tell what we unexpected ̈äl- cation in solleitor hands with a Maland. "The

ways happens. view to legal action.

He has been known to peo-

Once when he called at an of- fice in the City he created a scene whony he was given ; a cheque for a few pounds instead of the money in cash and had to be ejected by two comma- alonaires.

..

:11

The "Dally Express" article went on to stato, under the heading, "Experts' Report":

He is, under constant observa- ments. tion by prison doctors and ment Bir Donald Somervell and Mr. Rev. Mr Banting was a senior al specialists, who will prepare Valentine Holmes, who appeared curate. He left a letter in which a report for submission to Sir with him, were instructed by the be stated that his son had the Hollo Grahain-Campbell, chief Director of Public Prosecutions. bulk of his fortune,

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