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HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY

STAPLES URPRISES

Something Different

Menu

Chicken Bouillon Hot Rolls

Mustard Pickles

Oilves

Egg Timbales

Lemen Shortcakes

Tea-Hot or Iced

Egg Timbales

gelatin

(lemon

1 package

favour)

1 cup boiling water

1 teaspoon salt

teaspoon celery salt

teaspoon paprika

3 teaspoons prepared mustard

4 cup vinegar

8 hard cooked eggs, chopped

fine

3 cup mayonnaise

Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add seasonings and vinegar. Chill' until it begins to thicker, then add eggs and mayonnaise. Pour in small moulds:

Arm. chill until Garnish with pimiento. Makes 10 small moulds.

Rich Tea Biscuits

2 cups flour

4 teaspoons baking powder

teaspoon salt

4 tablespoons shortening 1 egg

cup milk

Sift together flour, baking pow- der and salt. Add' shortening. mixing in well with fork. Beat egg slightly in measuring cup; add milk to make cup; add te Arst mixture Roll out about A inch thick; cut with floured bls- cult cutter. Place on greased pan. Bake in hot oven at 475" F. about

12 minutes. Makes 16.

1.3

Lemon Shortcakes

I recipe Rich Tea Biscuits

3 lemons

3 cups water

2 cups sugar

3 tablespoons cornstarch

2 egg yolks

Make rich biscuits dough; bake

as for biscuits. Make lemon sauce

lemons follows: Slice

very thinly; add water. Cook until ten- der, about 15 minutes. Mix toge- ther sugar, cornstarch and egg yolks. Add to lemon mixture. Cook, stirring, constantly

LUSCIOUS SHIRRED

8.0883

EGGS

1 No. 1 can Libby's Asparagus

Tips

11

1 cup medium white sauce..

ib. American Cheese, grated Parsley

Break two eggs into each butter- Place ed individual baking dish.

a few drained Asparagus Tips In center. Add 2 tablespoons white

Season sauce.

and with salt pepper. Sprinkle with grated cheese and bake until eggs are set. Time for baking About 15 minutes.

Temperature for baking-350 F Amount-Serves 4.

Use

clear looking; cool slightly. between spilt and buttered short- cakes and on top. Serves 12.

FRENCH CHOCOLATE

3 squares chocolate

1 cup sugar

teapoon salt

i teapoon cinnamon

1 cup water

6 cups milk

cup whipped creain

teaspoon vanilla

Mix chocolate with sugar, salt, cinnamon and water Boll gently and stir constantly until thick and creamy. Add milk and cook until the mixture becomes very hot. Do not boil. Beat well. Add vanilla and nearly all cups in which the whipped cream has been placed.

OLD-FASHIONED HASH

4 tablespoons chopped onions 3 tablespoons chopped green

peppers

2 cups chopped raw potatoes

1 cups bolling water

teaspoon salt

teaspoon pepper

I cups chopped cooked meat

onions,

3 tablespoons gravy or butten Combine

and peppers

salt Add water potatoes.

and Cook 20 minutes in frying pan, stirring frequently. Add rest of ingredients and cook 5 minutes. stirring often with a spatula.

If a drier hash is preferred, cook until until the moisture has bolled out.

Aviation As "A Divine Impulse"

LORD SEMPILL'S TRIBUTE TO JAPANESE FLYERS

The Japanese alrmen, Maasaki Tsukagoshil, Ilnuma And Kenji who flew from Tokyo to London m a little more than 94 hours, were entertained to luncheon recently at the Savoy Hoel by the Japan So- clety. Sir Francis Lindley, a form-

We do not hear suficient of the aeroplane as a vehicle

of trans-

port, both for commerce and con-

Roast With Grape "Fruit

A loin of pork is one thing. But a roast loin with grapefruit juice and a garnish of grapefruit egments dusted with brown sugar is a far, far better thing. Allow one pound for each person.

LOIN OF PORK WITH

GRAPEFRUIT

Six pounds loin of pork, alt and pepper, cup grapefruit juice, cup brown sugar, 3 halves of färge grapefruit.

Wipe the loin clean. dust with salt and pepper. Place on rack in

with fat side up. roasting pan. Place in very hot oven and sear for 15 minutes. Then reduce heat to slow oven and continue to cook until tender, allowing 30 minutes cooking for each pound of meat, About 10 minutes before the roast is done, dissolve the brown sugar in grapefruit juice and pour over coast. About minutes

S roast is done, place the carefully removed segments of the grape- fruit in the pan, dust lightly with brown sugar. and heat. When the roast is removed to the hot serving platter, Arrange the grapefruit segments around it. A sprig or two of watercress, a bouncing ap- petite and there you are.

before

Grilled grapefruit is 3 gicat novelty dish. Here's the way it is done. Select medium-large smooth skinned grapefruit. Cut each p half. Core. remove the seeds. Sprinkle 1 tablespoon brown sugar over each half. Some like a dash of salt on the fruit before the mu gar. Get oven broiler very hot. Place the prepared grapefruit un- der the flame and broil for about 7 minutes. The sugar will melt delicious and spread, forming a brown

the top to

grapefruit, Some enthusiasts place 3 cherries in the center of each half and spread a little cherry Juice over the top before serving. Bucu fillips are a personal matter.

For your breakfast or for a cocktail course at dinner, serve large "grapefruit on the half shell, cored and seeded, with 1 ball orange, in juicy segments, piled in the center. Try this without

sugar,

MODERN

SURGERY OF

THE CHEST

venience, and we would like to see Discussion At Coming

much greater attention given to that aspect."

Mr. Yoshida, the Japanese Am-

manifestation of the cordial good- will of the British nation to the Japanese people was clear proof of

er British Ambassador to Japan,bassador, said the spontaneous presided, and presented the air men with silver trophies in com- memoration of their achievement.

Lord Sempill, proposing the toast of the airmen, concluded his speech in Japanese, and the Japanese air- men spore briefly in English. Lord Sempill referred to the part acro- nautice had played m the mytho--

the fact that the traditional friendship between the two nations continued to exist undiminished.

B.M.A. Meeting

These Recipes Are Different

COCOA PUDDING

1 cup sugar.

4 teaspoon salt

6 tablespoons cocoa

5 tablespoons Corristarch.

slowly.

Add

I cup hot milk. Stir over low heat or double boiler until thickened and pour mixture

over.

1 beaten egg yolk.

add

1 beaten egg white teaspoon vanila,

Cool' and

BUTTERSCOTCH PUDDING

Mix together

8 tablespoons flour

1 cup brown sugar

"teaspoon salt. Add slowly.

2 cups hot milk, Cook in double

boller, stirring frequently, for 20 minutes; pour over

1 beaten egg yolk. Cook fre minutes more in double boller,

Add stirring all the time.

2 tablespoons butter, Cool, and

add

1 beaten egg white

SPANISH GRIDDLE CAKES

(4 servings) One cup mashed and drained spinach, 1 cup cooked farina, salt and pepper. 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon baking powder, milk.

Mix spinach with farina, sea- son. Then beat in the eggs, edd baking Bowder and enough muk to form soft batter. Cook on well greased griddle. They are tender, must be handled carefully-and best of all, they are to be served with roast chicken. "

#

LAMB WITH MACARONI One serving well boiled maca- roni, 1 cup minced raw or very rare cooked, lamb, salt, pepper, 1 teaspoon arrowroot, 1-2 cup cream, 1 teaspoon butter.

Butter, small individual dish or glass cup. Line with macaroni, In a bowl mix together all the other ingredients. Then place the result in center of the macaroni, making sure the sauce flows well through the macaroni. Set in pati of cold water, bake in moderate oven, (350 degrees F.) for 1 hour. Cooked primarily for the young- ster, this delicacy might do well for Mother's bridge club luncheon, too.

ROYAL GOWNS AT AUCTION:

Belonged To Queen Alexandra

Court gowns, slippers and other The current number of the "Bri- objects from the personal ward- of Queen Alexandra" were tish Medical Journal" contains the robe provisional programme for the sold at one of New York's best- 105th annual meeting of the Bri-known auction rooms for a total

of £520. The prices

were low, and the buyers were chiefly wo- men, some representing museums, writes the New York correspon~

tish Medical Association, at Bel- fast, in July, 1837...

The subjects chosen for dis- cussion in the various meetings re-

logy" and history of Japan. and LORD MCGOWAN KEEPS fect modern tendencies. Thus, the dent of the "Daily Telegraph."

sald that all those who had been privileged to watch the Japanese during the time they were deve- toping their aviation industry real-

tsed that it would in the future be capable of notable achieve- menta

A DATE

main sections of medicine and mir- Having declared a record profit sery are to hold a joint meeting to

of £9,000 000 for Imperial Chemi-discuss the treatment of abstesses modern of the lung, for which cal Industries, of which he is chairman. Lord McGowan left chest surgery can do so much London for Glasgow in order to which was hitherto impossible, keep an appointment which is

At another section the new nearer to his heart than any

chemicals for the treatment of child-bed fever and other forms of blood poisoning will be discussed.

That day they were welcoming two modern people who had trans-business transaction. lated the old ideas into modera phraseology. If the Japanese Em- pire had started to develop avia- tion rather later than some of the Western countries, it had certainly made up for lost time.

"This

The appointment was duly-kept at Hampden Park, where, in the presence of a record crowd, Scot- land met England at football.

In

FOOTBALL IN HIS BLOOD Lord McGowan is one of those fight," he continued. tscote who have the Association "must rank as one of the finest football bag in their blood. efforts that has ever been made in his case it dates from the days of the history of aviation. The aero- his Glasgow youth, when watching plane had been given the charm- football was the only recreation ingly poetic name of "The Divine for poor boys in that grim elty, Wind. If we could only believe And since then he has rarely that aviation was a divine impulse, missed an England-Scotland in we could guard with all our might ternational in Glasgow. against possibilities of its wrong' Nowadays he watches the match usage. We all acclaim the ex- from the main stand with, a cigar cellence of this performance be-in his mouth, but he always picks cause it is one that relates solely out the corner on the vast slopes to civil and commercial aviation, where as a boy in a cloth cap he and has nothing whatever to do paid his sixpence for his first with any other aspect of dying.

match.

20, 1937.

What is the ADVERTISING

USE of

IF

the claims made are proved a fallacy? Would you buy that article a second, time? While advertising is a powerful force in educating as to the uses. merits or money saving advantages of a product, the people are the judges when they make their first purchase. "Delivering the goods" is what they demand, and the scrap heap of failures is piled with goods that could not stand the test of public judg- ment. 'ASPRO' messages are carefully planned to prove what 'ASPRO' can do to alleviate pain and suffering, and the reason of its success through- out the civilised world is simple, because it fulfils

all claims made for it. Its purity is its safety, and its quick action the healing service humanity appreciates. 'ASPRO' conforms to the standard of purity laid down by the British Pharmacopoeia (the guiding authority of the Medical Profession), and the 15 uses enumerated below make it an invaluable quick first-aid emergency, in every home.

'ASPRO

GIVES QUICK AND SAFE RESULTS

| | | | | | | | | | | | | ? | ? | ⠀ ⠀ DEHNISTRY999

Great Relief - After 14 Years' Suffering

2 Thomas St., Lewisham,

N.S.W.

28/2/33. Dear Sirs,

I have been suffering from Rheumatoid Rheumatism and Arthritis have

for 12 to 14 years. I taken a course of your ASPRO' Tablets-three after each meal and often, when in pain, have taken an extra dost before going to bed.

I obtained very great relief from this treatment; in fact, I do not

know how I could have continued to move about withou! 'ASPRO." The pain has gradually improved. need to take and now I find ASPRO only occasionally. I can confidentially recommend 'ASPRO to all sufferers from rheumatism,

(Sgd.) A. H. BURNS.

10F/34.

15 PROVED USES

1-It relieves Headaches in 5 to 10 minutes. 2-It brings Sweat Sleep

to the Sleepless.

3-It relievis Rheums- tism in one night, 4-It will ass the Nag- ging pains of Neur- itis and Neuralgin. 5-Take ‘ASPRO' to re-

lieve Toothacha. 6-ASPRO taken

ac

cording to directions wili ummah" wp a Cold or 'Flu attack in Zi hours.

7-It brings relief with. out harming the heart. 8-It soothes away Irvin

tability.

Agenta:-DOSWELL & 00., LTD. Obtaiɛable at all Chemists and Drar Stores. Three Packings: 5′s,19′c, 17's.

To New Zealand In 10 Days

New Zealand will be brought combined with the existing Austra- within 10 days of Great Britain by | La-Penang-Hong Kong hervice. The

air mall from the inauguration-probably before

Australia goes via autumn-of regular direct air Penang, Hong Kong, Manila, Guam transport between San Francisco and Hawall to San Francisco.

half On this route the rate for a and Auckland. The Journey by

ourice letter from Melbourne to steamer takes five weeks."

The Pan-American Air Line's Canada is is 7d; to the United Sta- China Clipper, commanded by tes, 4s 8d; to the Philippines, 13

land on March 30, thus establish- A British traps-Tasman Sea zer- Capt. E. Musick, arrived at Auck-4d; and to Argentina, 10s. ing the possibility of the route. vice is to be started by agreement. Although the weekly schedule between the British, Australian and mail rates of the Ban Fran- and New Zealand Governments. cisco-Auckland line have not been Details will be settled at the Im- Such a route fixed, it is expected that the jour-perial Conference. ney will take about four days, an would link New Zealand with Im- against 19 by boat.

perial Airways' route to Melbourne

A black velvet riding coat and

a State gown The following would be the route and with the whole of Imperial bat, brought £9,

10, a Kashmir shawl, a present from Great. Britain:

from the, Maharaja of Kashmir, £7, a Danish wool driving coat 12, a purple velvet Coronation robe worn by Princess Victoria at the Coronation of Edward VIL,

£27,

Days

Mail by boat to New York ... 41 Across U.B. by air........... San Francisco to Auckland.. 4

Total

91 Possibly before the end of next year Great Britain will have a re- gujar air mall service across the

The State gown was that worn by Queen Alexandra at many Nutrition is to be the subject of ceremonies at Buckingham Palace. North Atlantic, which will aborten

a full debate at a section entirely

ล white Another item was devoted to this subject, and the leather and gold jewel box des- pathologists are to have four ex-cribed in the catalogue as pre- the perts on the subject of influenza, sented to her Majesty by one of the speakers being the ladies of Leeds. It was sold for

27. young doctor, now farons in

a

British fur

the journey by at least two daya.

TRANS-CANADA PROJECT

ton

Airways' system. ··*

BRITISH ADVANTAGE The British organisation will have the immense advantage of a flat rate of id per half ounce let- ter all the way to New Zealand, al- though the Commonwealth Gov- enment intends for the present to adhere to the 5d rate on letters from Austraila to England.

9-1 speedily reduces

Temperature."

10-The stabbing pains of Sciatica and Lumbago can be hunted out with ASPRO

I1-It can be taken at any time, in Tram, Train, at Home, at Business

- anywheṛn *** #THY-

where.

12- gives great relief to when de-

- Women

pressed.

13-It relieves 11 after effects of Alcohol

| 4-It relieves Drague and Malaria by reducing the Fever.

"15-As a Gargle 'ASPRO

is wonderful for Sore Throats and Tonsilitia,

YOU SHOULD EAT

NESTLES QUICK CAÍS

FOR EXTRA DRIVE

NESTLÉS QUICK OATS

NOW ON SALE

Temperature Expert Leaves £129,000

The flying boat route to Mel- bourne will take, 10 days at first. and it is not likely to be in full By that time the great trans-operation before the beginning of

next year. Canada air route will probably ne

Ultimately it will be reduced to in full operation, bringing 'Vancou-'); ver within 3 days of Bouthamp-[7] days. Then, adding a day, for the extension to Wellington, the medical history, for acquiring the The gowns were sold by Mr.

Pending, the establishment of a schedule will be 84 days to New disease when

Mr. Matt Payne, Hillington, Wal- an infected ferret Samuel Boden,

British air route across the Pacific. Zealand as against the possible L dealer, who brought them here it will be possible to go by alf from days by the United States service ton-on-Thames, Chairman of the sneezed at him.

Vancouver to San Francisco, there Imperial Airways is negotiating British Thermostat Company and The section dealing with uber-few weeks ago

purposes.

connecting with the United States for an extension from Hong Kong culosis is to discuss the important subject of this disease in hospital On his arrival, however, instead Pacific route to China or to New to Manila, and the Royal Dutch of Packless Gland Company, a

of being able to import the gowns Zealand.

Cine, which runs from Amsterdam member of the Mechanisation workers; and at the section of under bond as he had expected, Australia now has an air connect the Far East, is also seeking an Board of the War Office, left medical sociology "the wider issues was compelled to pay duty, and thon with North and South America extension to Manila, Air France.

route between £129,755 (net personalty £123,- of health legislation in industry" the efore decided to sell them to by the extension of the San Fran-operates an air

870). Estate duty, £27,939. is the subject 'chosen.

cisco-Manila service to Hong Kong. Paris and Saigon recoup himself.

for exhibition

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