Page
HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30. 1936.
STAPLES SURPRISES
TASTY DISHES FROM
LEFTOVERS
Leftovers are always welcome in the hame as they can be assem- bled so quickly into tasty dishes
A MAIN DISH
The ham bone from a Sunday's dinner can become the basis of a `main dish, for luncheon
2 cups dried lima beans in water overnight. Strain and boli in fresh water with the ham bone for 11 hours Add. "
2 tablespoons dark molasses
i cup cream or milk. Sim-
mat à hour or until a creamy,
uce has been former!
CHILL BEANS
The meat from the shank soup bone can be saved and used the next day for Chill Beans..
Fry
1 large onion, ada
1 small can tomato 'puree
Mest cut in small pieceA
1 large can Chili bean.
"2 tablespoonfuls Chili powder
Enit. Cook, slowly one hour.
POTATO CAKES
Jasl
Mashed potatoes. .from night's dinner can be made into " potato.cakes by adding an egg. Shape and fry a light brown. Foach eggs, and warm over any other vegetables that you And in the refrigerator and you have a nice luncheon plate.
SOUP AND CHEESE SANDWICHES
may
Save the stock after you have served a boiled dinner. The next
day kim the fat and add u
1 quart wate
cup peart barev
Any leftover vegetableş, diced
Boll 1 hours.
With this soup serve
cheese sandwiches.
toasted
Place on slices of stale whole-
wheat bread
Thin slices of cheese
Place in the broller pan, next to the fame and serve hu when chesse is melted and lightly browned.
INDIAN CURRY
The last scraps of meat from.. the leg of lamb can be made into
ART & ARTISTS
What's In A Name?
ון
(BY
JAN GORDON)
"
A
dish of Indian Curry
tor
the next day's dinner,
Fry
1 large onion, adu
Meat cut in small p'ects. Salt
1 tablespoon curry powder
2 cups boiling water. Slice a large apple on top. COVEL. Simmer 1 hour. Pour over 'a mound, of cookɛd rice. Place hard baled eggs cut in half around the rice. GELATIN DESSERT ・・ Bave two slices and the juice from a can of plae apple, add
Juice of 1 lemon - "
1 cup water
1 cup sugar, bring to
and add
:.
abou
1" envelope of gelatin which: has been soaked in a tile cold, water,
Cool and when slightly set add
1 cup whipped cream
Pineapple, diced
2 s'iced bananas.
for
Place in refrigerator" to set
This makes a- dessert four people,
WITH STALE WHITE CAKE Stale white cake makes the nicest dessert: Put the crumbled cake in a serving dish and mols......“ ten with fruit juices.
Make a custard by melting 2 tablespoons butter or sub-
"stitute.
Add
2 tablespoons flour, mix und
add
A cup sugar, add
Stir and cook 10 1 cup milk.
minutes. Add
1 egg well beaten and ccok one minute: Cool and pont over the cake. crumbs. Dot with spoonful of CUTTAN! jelly and top with whipped
cream.
LUNCHEON DISH
A delicious dish for luncheon is made from the co'd bolled bref and mashed otatoes......
Cut the meat in small pieces. add 1. large minced onion and "
Cold boiled potatoes, mashed.
. Mix well and fry in a gene- rous amount of baçon grease. Tun and brown well. Serve with tomato catsup.
CULINARY TIPS SALAD MIXTURES
Stuff Telery with chopped" ham mixed with relish salad dressing.
Tightly box candles and con- Lectiona Sprinkle nuta, candied fruit peel and stuffed dates in corners of box.
Da zot forget to add at least nalf a teaspoon of salt to steamed suet puddings.
Alternate layers of white and chocolate fudge in a shallow pan. Sprinkle with broken nuts mixed with chopped dates."
Add a little salt and celery salt whipped cream for topping cream "soups.
Celery stuffed with chopped roasted Peanuts and cream cheese, is good with cocktails
Even boarding house guests won't scorn prunes if; before sai- ing you soak them in a jar full of fruit juices saved when cans àre opened. The jar may have two. Lhree or even four fruit juices mixed.
Brush your loaf of bread with melted shortening before baking to get a fine brown crust.
To keep purees
and cream soups from separating,when they stand, melt the butter and four called for in recipe. When well blended, add to the soup and bring to boiling point, stirring constantly
Bananas are good in the min- ced ham sandwich for the chill- dren's school lunch. Spread the aandwich bread with butter, then minced ham and finally add a layer of sliced bananas
CREAM CHEESE TIP
·An • attractive way to gerve cream cheese is in two layers with marmalade of jam spread over. Spread one cake of cheese with marinalade, then top with another cake of cheese and pour marinalade over all Serve with buttered toast or toasted kers.
BUILDING BOOM
crae-
~London, Jan. 11,
1
CELERY
always
Celery, ct course. makes a delicious salad, and here are one or two mixtures for you to try: Plain celery in dice dress». ed with mayonnaise, in which you have mixed s very little strips of lean cooked ham (may- annalse); celery in stripe with tomato flesh; celery in strips with apples; for this use a mydonnaise tiressing favoured with "a tile tomato ketchup or puree; celery
dice mixed
chicken with cold dice.
BEETROOT
Beekoot makes 'n good salad when mixed with something else; much better than the usual alices swimming in vinegar. Beetroot with silces of hard-boiled egg dressed with mayonnaise ALY- qured with horse-radish is rather good, and so is a mixture of bett- root and, chicory (the long white kind) dressed: with French dress- ing. I once had this with a few halved peanuts mixed with al
n friend's house, and it was sur- prisingly pleasant,
Beetroot and onion are an ex- the cellent mixture, too; mix slices of cocked beetroot, with rings of uncooked onton and dress with lightly whipped cream de- Ulcately flavoured with lemon and .mustard.
come
an
11
HORS-D'OEUVRE
WHY SUFFER FROM
HEADACHES SLEEPLESSNESS IRRITABILITY
when ASPRO
WILL PROTECT YOU
THESE are nervous complaints that quickly yield to the soothing influence of "ASPRO
people have proved it you not proved for yourself.
you will generally find that your friends can tell you that 'ASPRO definitely dos banish headaches in a few minutes brings sweet sleep to the sleepless and soothes away your irrita. bility quickly and effectively. So why suffer? ASPRO does its work without harming the heart or the stomach. The ume has passed when it was necessary to take dangerous drugs and narcotics for these irritating complaints. 'ASPRO is safe, sure and effective in
· action-you can take it anywhere at any time. The fact that after ingestion in the system "ASPRO' is an anti-pyretic or fever-reducer an anti-periodic a germicide ari internal antiseptic and a solvent of Uric Acid, makes it one of the most useful medicines ever given to mankind. its purity and efficiency is vouched for by doctors and nurses all over the world
Try ASPRO today
and BANISH PAIN and NERVINESS
ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS..
Diplomas Awarded
Varley, in hors-d'oeuvre has ai- ways been a problem. Delicates--| zen, although" piquant, may be
rather monotonous, A change, therefore, is to be recoin- mended A Swiss trend recently gave me the following recipe for hors-d'oeuvre which I have tried with great success. One large, firm tomato is allowed for
London, Jan, 10 – each portion. Carefully scoop out
A meeting of the Council of the the centre. leaving a case about Royal College of Surgeons was held one quarter of an inch thick. Mix
yesterday with Sir Cuthbert Wal- cream cheese, sour cream, pista-
lace, the preafdent, in the chair. chio nuts, and anchovies to a
A report was received from the paste, then fill each tomato case
Board of Examiners in Anatomy with the mixture. Capers
and Physiology for the Fellowship inserted to look like eyes, anal-stating, that, at the examination mond to represent a nose, and a
held in December, 128 candidates' Diece of paprika for the mouth,
were examined, of whom 70 were The approved and 158 rejected. The result is ornamental as well
at as appetising.
Hallett Prize, granted this examination, was awarded ta Robert Butherland Lawson; of the University of Melbourne. At the recent Primary Fellowship Exami- nation, held in Calcutta, 54 can didates were examined, of whom 12 were approved.
BAR EXAMINATION
Woman's Two Firsts
Bre
notes. "Beach Scene"
and "A Study," which are merely en- hanced with colour, Keith Hender- son's "Clouds on Sque a”, Mînain,” and L D. Luard's "Flood," each
In the matter of building ac- conceived in two colours. Miss
It was reported that Mr. F. H. tivity Edinburgh has becn one Stuart-Weir's atmospheric "Roof-
Bentley, FRCS and Mr. David London, Jan. 12. Slome, M.B., had been elected tops, 8.W.7. Mrs. Borough Jan of the bustest centres in the coun-
Among the score or more of Mackenzi Mackinnon son's "Betty" in corte and san- try during the past year. A re-
Research women students at the Inns of Fellows, for one year, zuine. Miss Ada C. Godson's Dieppe cord was constituted last year. In Court who passed in the Hilary sketches, and William Kebbell's the total value of the work for Bar, examination in December was rather harsh but not unsuccessful which Dean of Guild Court war-
Miss Ellice Ayliner Hearn, astu portraits Umited to deliberately
rants were granted, the amount
dent of Gray's Inn, daughter of selected contrasts.
Dr. Thomas Hearn, Chancellor of being over £3,800,000. That re- Cork Cathedral. She took two With the pastellists is incor porated the Pencil Society; Anton Presented an increase on the pre-firsts, a second. and Lock with his horse study, “Wood-| Vious year of over £580,000. "There Prize of £50. Land Retreat," Mrs. Anning Bell has been exceptional activity in with her elusive
"Mrs. Laurence house-building, warrants being Binyon." Miss Estella Canzini with granted during the year for 4555 "Frilled Lizards, Australia, and Miss Roberta Hughes with an alive houses of a total value of over "Portrait Drawing," all show dif- £2,100,000. ferent aspects of a not too responsive medium...
2
And
Mr. Hugh Lett, was appointed Bradshaw, Lecturer for 1938, and Dr. George W. Corner, Professor of Anatomy in the University of Rochester, USA, was appointed the next Thomas Vicary Lecturer $ special Mr. R. Braithwaite was elected the representative of, the college Other successfuls students in on the Medical Advisory Committee cluded. Prince Chumbhot of Siam, of the British Health Resorts Asso- Lord Hugh Algernon Percy, bro: clation for one year. Mr. Victor ther and heir presumptive of the Bonney was re-elected as the re- Duke of
Northumberland, Mr. presentative of the college on the David Powell Croom-Johnson, son Central Midwives Board. of Mr. Reginald Powell Croom! A Dipicia of Fellowship was Johnson. KC., the Han, Charles granted to Kenneth Christie Eden, Melville McLaren, eldest son of of University College Hospital. Lord Aberconway. and Sir John Prichard-Jones:
London, Jan. 12 -
Mr. Walter Shandy, ex-Turkey merchant of illustrious memory. hold that names carried a sort of magu with, which they might exert. good or bad influence on Though few perions a named. would agree with Mr. Shandy's selection of Trismegistus as one of miracle-working potency, most will have a sneaking sense of casual agreement with the notion. At the moment I have been wonder- ing, indeed, whether the word "Pastel" may not in some such way hamper has practitioners by a
FRANCES HODGKINS singular aura of insidious pretti-
save an artist from a hint of pret nesa. Had it been given a simpler That what are called "pasal tiness. Two early works exhibited, name such as mere "coloured | shades";do not always lead to with his more recent paintings of The Hon. Mrs. Rosaline Joan dhalk," might not a robuster school prettiness may be proved by the Chins, by Ian Fairweather at the Youard, a daughter of Lord Atkin, have developed from the use? paintings of Miss Frances Hodg- Redfem Gallery show an evident
a former chairman of the Coun at the A note added to the catalogue of kins, now on exhibition
affection for Carriere. Mr. Fair-cil of Legal Education, passed the the exhibition of the Fastel Wertheim Gallery. This clever weather has progressed modemis-
final examination. Society at the Royal Institute artist often deliberately uses paint, tically since then, but the surget- Galleries claims that pastel is the colour and texture of which tion clings. Many of his colour amentblo to the widest range of recalls pastel; but owing to an treatment. Judging by the results, acuto selection and a seeking out what a diment medium pastel of unusual combinations of int must be. For here, at the Pastel and tone Miss. Hodgkins seems not Society, are many excellent artists, so much to avoid the pretty but well-known in other, branches of hardly to... acknowledge the Arts, who, as soon as they
The colour arrange-
existence.
4
Ita
schemes, and especially his colour dispositions, are however original, as for instance the placing of the red notes in "Market
Beene.
Pekin "Café Scent, Perin, "Fair. Ground; Pekin," and "Native
|
ANOTHER VIVIAN WOODWARD
London, Jari 10. W Fulham last night secured one of
TOAST FOR ISHBEL
U.S. Ambassador A Guest At Her Inn
touch pastel, appear to lose ten or ments of such pletes De The Group" are 'dill satisfying examples the most-sought young forwards American Ambassador, Mr. R. G.
DODWELL & CO., LTD..
Three Packings: 5′a, 10′a. 17.
POLICE COURT METHODS
Defendant's Right To Be Tried By Jury...
LHI
-HITLER'S WISH FOR PEACE
New Year Message To Diplomats
Several instances have recently been brought to our notice in which a defendant charged with
London, Jan, 11. dangerous driving has not been
Germany's desire for peace was Informed before the case was
emphasised to-day by Herr Hitler, opened that he could," if he pre-
in his address to the diplomatic representatives ferred, elect to be tried by a
of the foreign jury. The law on this point is
Pawers, as the traditional New Yaar's reception in the presidential quite clear. Under the Road
palace in the Wilhelmstraasė, -- Traffic Act, 1930, the penalty for This had been postponed until a first offence of dangerous driv-to-day so as not to interfere with ing may be four months' im the Christmas and New Year holi- prisonment, and in the Summary riays.. Jurisdiction Act it is provided
Herr Hitler said, "To our satis that where on summary convic- faction we can claim that 1935 ha tion a
defendant may be imbrought our people considerable prisoned for a term exceeding progre We have succended in three months he may claim to
giving work to a great number of our unemployed, and have thus enabled --ever-growing “circles to chiava the benefits of befter food. Bousing and family conditions,
be tried by a jury. It is the duty of the officer of the court" to address the defendant, to the following effect: You are charged with an offence in res-
The German people is inspired with in ardent desire to live in !! pect of the commission of, which
pesos with the other peoples of the you are entitled, if you desire it,
world and co-operate with them in Instead of being dealt with small phares with mutual under -marily, to be tried by a jury.standing for the good of humanity. jury? This must be said before ther peoples the same driving for Do you desire to be tried by, a | Itqainternly wishes to see amon
the case begins, an dit is not trustful co-operation and mutual within the competence of the respect..
The Taich proceedings to claim to so before are one with you in the hope that defendant at a later stage to the whole German people and myself
Government, the "
the New Year may bring the greatly desired relaxation of international Lension" and appessement and trys reace amona the nations."
2- Jury.
In many instances, doubtless, the defendant, even though he has been told of his right of election, will prefer to be dealt with summarily, but there may be other cases in which a bench of magistrates may have achieved än unenviable reputation for anti-motor bias, and in these despite the possibly higher pen alty that may be inflicted after trial by jury-there may be a very good reason for preferring
tender mercies. Not long ago a not to commit oneself to their
case in which the defendant was not told of his right to trial by Jury was quashed by the High Court, but this must have in volved the defendant in expense. Those charged with offences of this kind should make sure that the proceedings against them are properly conducted.--
London, Jan. 8. So great was the rum of motorists yesterday to Misa Kahbel Mac- Donald's inn, The Flow, at Speen near High Wycombe, Bucks, that the villare constable had to direct the tramce
Among the visitors to the indi during the week-end were the of his very personal idiom; but in in the south-Vivian Woodward, Bingham, and his wife. fifteen per cent of their normal Urn, with its Greek most of others there is sometimes a feeling the Folkestone F.C. forward. Wearing a woollen frock with a cunning. The reason is possibly! Tobacco ar and "The town that the masses Duly seem to com twofold: first, the tempting range Vase, and also the delightfully pose because they are so slighty Woodward no relation to his large silk bow Miss MacDonald of crisp but, alas, fondant-like calculated composition of the 1st suggested, and, an attempt to great amateur namesake, but one deftly handed dishes of roast beef were signs of delay "I am sorry colours which the pastel box so ter, with his inverted balances, generously offers and secondly, might well stand as object lessons Penetrate behind the pleasure of of three brothers in professional and two reg. swept away empty there is not more room
the colour is often frustrated..
footballs twenty-one and s riasses, hastened between tables, After the midday closing Miss the very great difficulty of pro to many a pastellist At the same
tive of Troedyrhiw, South Wales the kitchen and the cellar steps, MacDonald entertained ducing that exact relationship of gallery the Twenties Group, the
At the same gallery is an exhib He has scored over 100 goals in served drinks, counted change and or friends who toasted her as the tone, int. and values upon which youth of which is ruficiently tion of 24 selected early Bickerts, his two and a quarter seasons at was generally as busy as any of her new licensee.
described by the title, contains or as one might say, before, the Folkestone. ADILE
helpersUS interesting work by Doria Vaughan, witty Walter had become the re
Many clube were anzious to get
A muile was never far away from, Scots, Deakin, K. Wall and Gom nowned Richard Among other him and the fee was comparatively her lipe, With so many things to excellent paintings in his sombre large. There is a clause in the do at once, she served the tables style is a small "Conversation contract that Fulham have to pay punctually, enshriping a presentment that can : Folkestone an additional sum for my NEARLY SOLD OUT Hardly be called a portrait of Miss | every cap Woodward gains for "There has been rather a rush Nina Hamnett.
Wale
to-day,” she explained, when there
Bo much good representative Art depends.
RETICENCE
Bo, despite the daims for péstel, It nevertheless appears beat when
IAN FAIRWEATHER
even a caretul search for Steven Spurrier's keenly observed unusual colouring does not, always
́used with most restraint, as in
SCOTS SAYINGS OF THE WEEK
The natives of Caithness have brought to Glasgow "virtue and virility-lir. E. Rosslyn Mitchell
the crofters are some of the happiest individuals in Scotland. ----MP-P.-E., Macnaughton,
Problems peculiarly affecting Scotland receive very little atted- on at Westminister, Mr. R. M. Davies:
The Church of Scotland, has its own part to play in the achieve- ment of world peace. The Right Rev. Dr. Marshall B. Lang.
The Celtic language has come. once again in a position of bạn- our among the more enlightened sections of the population-1, 7. Carmichael Watson
are the agents working most Many present-day enthusiasta
of the beauties of the true Scots number strongly against the conservation
tongue Miss Anne H. M'Alister. * Everything depends on the ma in the street, and there is all the moze need for him to have some- thing of the old courage, grit, and patience we had in Scotland in the past. --The "Rev. J. M'Calder
Miss-MacDonald has been given sach a house warraing that her stock of beer is already running low after only two days
Is no bâr at this inn and yesterday all the downstairs room was publle,
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