1937-06-03 — Page 3

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STAPLES

Little Invalids' Food

HONG KONG DAILY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1937.

SURPRISES

out tomato and be eaten 'more willingly than if served on 80 ordinary plate.

Being sick is no fun for any normal

little boy or girl. and getting over an illness can seem an eternity to tiny tots. It is at such times when young convales-

For the almost well child there cent is longing to be about or doing is nothing very interesting about things. that its up to Mother to a sliced banana sprinkled do her utmost to help the time to sugar, but take that same banana, pass," and serve gay gala meals „which would brighten the long daylift it out of its skin by peeling and make the next meal some-off just one section and mash the thing that is eagerly anticipated.

If there is just one surprise dish for either brakfast or lunch it is sufficient to arcuse. an appetite, even if the rest of the meal is quite commonplace, Milk, for instance, is Just plain old milk when it is served in a mug or cup.

But try putting it into an unusually at- tractive sneaker and it would be taken without any more per

suasion.

with

fruit into a smooth pulp, mix in

a little powdered sugar, a squeeze of lemon, and some cream, beat well and plle back into the boat shape skin and there's something really thrilling from just banana Make it the last minute to prevent it discolouring.

а

Small sick folk need an abun- dance of energy foods and the! following recipes will be found to All that role besides being attrac- tive as well.

FISH, FOR INVALIDS

Take any white Alleted fish wash and dry, lay between two buttered ¦ plates, "sprinkle with lemon juice

RICE DISGUISED And the most surprising things can, nappen to rice if it is disliked In a plain pudding. One day cook "It in milk in a double boiler, press the cooked rice into a buttered fancy mould and place it in bell- ing water until ready to serve and put the plates over a pan of Unmould and pour over a little bolling water-cook for Ave Jam or golden syrup, or treamed minutes, therf turn the plates up- vegetable and räince should it beside down, and; cook another five required as a savoury dish.

minutes or a little longer. If the fish is rather thick-Serve with some butter sauce.

Mashed potato curled through a pastry tube into a nest, then browned lightly in the oven is en- joyed as a container for a poached egg or steamed 'fish.

The idea of forcing children with eggs

can become an awful

convalescence. bore during

for though its true that little people, especially those in bed, need the nourishment eggs alone can give, there is no excuse for giving themi poached, scrambled, or soft cooked eggs every day without some Im- agination to tickle small palates.

For a change add some seasoned chicken stock to a beaten *3%, pour in to a buttered eup and set in a pan of boiling water and bake til lightly set. Or add a little Bovill to half a cup of milk, stir in a beaten egg and bake til firm, the result will be tempting meat custard. Attractive cups for fruit salad or jellies can be made from a rosy hollowed out apple and the fruit removed can be chopped and mixed with a little sugar and filled into the apple shell.

!

CHICKEN WITH EGG

Cover the bottom of a small dish with hot brown stock, then a chicken. layer of finely minced

Make a well in the centre drop in an egg sprinkle with pepper and salt and a little chopped parsley

with liked-cover

browned crumbs and cook in the oven for five minutes.

17

APPLE SNOW

Peel & few apples, take out the cores and stew till soft, sweeten to

and add a little lemon: taste

Beat up the white of an juice. egg until stiff and mix lightly into the apple pulp. Put into a glass dish and pour round some custard sauce.

· CHOCOLATE JUNKET

Melt two punces grated chocolate and a dessert spoon of sugar in quarter pint of milk, add, to quar tër pint of lukewarm milk, stir In half a teaspoon of rennet mix well and leave to set in a fancy dish. Serve cold with

A VEGETABLE SALAD In like manner a vegetable salad can be served in a large hollowed ¦ whipped cream.

10 YEARS FOR

"RED MAX"

MURDER

#

Wife Clings To Slayer

HE CRIES FOR “SUZANNE”

| AMERICAN

FAMILY FAVOURITES

Sour Milk Drop Cookies

Mix together well

1 cup brown sugar

1 cup white sugar

1 cup shortening. Add

2 eggs, well beaten. Shift to-

gether

cups flour

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoons

RHUBARB VARIETY

Rhubarb and Strawberry Sauce (4 to 6 servings)

One cup tender rhubarb cut in 3-4 tach pieces, 1-2 cup rugız, 1 cup slightly mashed and sugared strawberries.

In top of double boller, cook rhubarb and sugar until tender. Cool slightly, then add mashed strawberries. Mix gently, chill. Spring mornings, can be beautiful,

baking powder. you see.

Then add to flour

cup nut meats. (broken)

cup raisins. Add alternately with

1 cup sour milk. to which has

been added

1 teaspoon soda. Add

1 teaspoon vanjila flouring. Drop from tip of spoon on greased tin sheet, and bake nt 350 to 370 F. for 12 15 minutes.

We think these arë anë... Country Club CroquettesTM

To

1 cup ground ham, add

ני

2 cup cottage cheese, Shape Into croquettes. Roll in nut meats (ground). Serve on Lettuce leaf. Garnish with Stuffed olives and Mayonnaise. This makes it to 2 dozen croquettes if a round- ing tablespoon. is used each!!!

Mexican Rarebit

for

Bring to the boiling point 1 small can tomato soup. Add 2 sups grated cheese (mild). Cook in double, boller until smooth, Add

2 egg yolks, beaten. Fold in 2 egg whites, beaten, and

1 teaspoon chili powder. Serve

on bacon-garnished toast. Makes four servings.

VEAL OLIVES

Thin slices of allet of veal- Stuffing

Some thickened gravy Seasoned flour

Thin rashers of streaky bacon Cut the meat in slices, roughly about four inches long and two and a half inches wide.

"Chop all the rough trimmings very finely. Prepare the stuning (you can use the stuffing sold in packets), and add the chopped

HELIUM, FOUND IN 1868, WAS "TOO LATE" FOR THE WAR

|

Rhubarb' and Fresh Pineaple

One cup rhubard cut in 3-4 Inch pleces, 1 cup fresh pineapple cut. in cubes, 1 cup sugar, pinch salt.

Wash and prepare fruit. Use glass or enamel saucepan. Mix rhubarb and pineapple and sprin- kle with the sugar. Stand for 1 hour.. Then without stirring, place over low heat. Cook very slowly until sugar is syrupy, then increase heat slightly and cook until rhubarb is tender but still retains Its shape. Do not stir. Chill. An- ather tender spring morning for you!

Rhubarb Bread Pudding (6 servings)

*Two cups rhubarb cut in 1-2 inch pieces, 3-4 cup sugar, 1 cup white bread crumbs, 1.cup whole- wheat, bread crumbs, 1 teaspoon grated orange, rind, 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind, 1 tablespoon mashed strawberry pulp, 1-2 table- spoon lemon juice, 1 cup milk, 2 egs."

To the prepared rhubard, add sugar, bread crumbs, grated rind, strawberry and lemon juice. "Mix well, Beat egg, then add milk and beat again. Combine with rhubarb

mixture.

Butter baking dish well. Pour in the pudding mixture. Bot top with sweet butter,. Bake in mod- erate oven (375 degrees F.) for 1 hour, until firm. Serve either cold or hot with cream.

trimmings. Spread some sturing on each plece of veal, then roll up the pieces, tying them with string. Roll each in a little sea- soned flour, then fry in dripping till brown. Put them in a casse-, role, half cover with thicken gravy. (not made with beef essence), and simmer gently for twenty minutes. Serve with the gravy, and garnish with sliced lime and rolls of bacon. (To cook these, roll the rashers, thread them on a skewer and grili or cook in the oven). ·

10

9

8

12

The TIME TEST and

ASPRO

THE old idea that a dozen

medicines were needed for a

dozen complaints—that laying up for indefinite periods was necessary--that it was also necessary to take dangerous drugs and narcotics--was an illusion. "ASPRO' bas dis- pelled it. For it is the medicine that takes the place of a dozen medicines, because. after ingestion in the system. if is an internal antiseptic-an anti-pyretic or fever reducer ---an anti-periodic-a powerful germicide, and a solvent of Uric Acid, and, therefore, banishes the causes of numerous complaints. That's why: "ASPRO® banishes beadaches in five minutes. „It's the time test for quick action. and it stands the test of time.. » 'ASPRO' soothes the irritable--brings sweet sleep to the sirepless-relieves rheumatism in one night-smashes colds and influenza at inception. Furthermore. *ASPRO1· does not harm the heart or the stomach. It can be taken by all. "from child to parens. anywhere, any time. The price is within the reach of all.

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02/24

PENINSULA · HOTEL

Mr. and Mrs. F. Austin, Mr. D.

New Haven-Changsha Allen, Mr. J. C. Avis, Lt-Col. W.

Sports Meeting

Changsha, May 17. For the third consecutive time

D. Arthur, Mrs. C. T. Abbott, Mr. Ainsile, Mr. Alford, Mr. Allen.

Mrs. Broad, Miss Bright, Mr. Burnett, Mr. Bright, Mr. and Mrs. Beattle, Mrs. B. B. Bassett, Mr. A. Blackie, Mr, T. M. Burton, Mr. J. Barnes, Mr. P. Bossut, Mr. and

Hellum, the non-inflammable gas; a few bubbles of gas which proved. which at present is produced com- to be the solar hellum mercially only in the United States, Since then helium has been ob- has been sought by every country tained in microscopic amounts New Haven High School in New -enger-to-develop airships------ from many minerais,-and-its-pre--| Haven, Connecticut, USA, defekt-Mrs. Burke, Mr. C. A. Blum, Mrs.

the last ten "During

years sence in the air to the extent of ed Yall Middle School in a track sporadic yields have been discover-one part in 250,000 has been de meet

monstrated.". ed in Germany, France, Beandina- via and Canada. Cornwall is be- lieved to have traces,

Deathly pale, Roger Vernon, 36- Research into atrata bearing the years-old self-confessed white-sla-natural gases from which hellum ver and Devil's Isle fugitive, seem-is liquefied has generally stopped ed turned to atons às sentence of ten years' penal servitude and 20 years" banishment, was passed on him at the Seine Assizes for the murder of "Red Max" Kassel at a little Newport-street, Boho, nat, writes the Faris correspondent of the "Daily Mail.”

Hellum is inert,, and is not only non-inflammable but non-explo sive. It can also be more readily traversed by electrical discharges than can most other gases.

Thus helium in an airship could be heated or cooled, enabling the airship to climb or descend.

It was when the Allies drew the

N. N. Blum, Mr. B. G. Butler, L.

Comdr. and Mrs. L. G. Bowerman. Mr. G. Borst, Mrs. Boyd, Miss Boyd, Mr. C. I. BIT.

16 PROVED USES:

1. It relieves Headaches In 5 to 10 minutes.

2 It brings Sweet Sleep

to the Sleepless.

3. It reliever Rhenan- tiam 'id one night,

4 It will ease the Nag ging pains of Neuritis and Nauralgin.

5. Taks (ASPRO to re

Have Toothache,

6 A3PRO on" necovillag te directions with o a Cold The ditach in

34

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harming the heart.

It

the amy Irsitability

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Captain Lombard, Mr. L. Lessner, Mr. and Mrs. A. de Lavasse, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lasby. Mrs. Lem- mon. Mr. and Mrs Leoch.

Mrs. McLean, Ms McCarthy, Miss Monahan, Mr. Moore, Mra. Miler. Miss Miller, Misses Mac

9 it speedily reduces

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10 The stabbing pains of Sciatica and Lumbago can be hunted out with 'ASPRO, THE "It can be taken at any time, in Tram, Trala, at Home, at Business. ➡anywhare➡ 479Ju wberk

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EXHIBITION OF

CORONATOIN ROBES

The King and Queen and many | other members of the Royal Family have enabled Lady Smith-Dorrion. principal of the Royal School of Needlework, to carry out with triumphant miccess her: Ides of holding an exhibition of Corom- tion robes at the school so success- fully that one may expect to see

queues of people waiting every day at the doors.

The athletes of the two schouls compete against time, and the results are immediately cabled to the opponents. The competition

Mr. E. M. de Cortibitarte, Miss which was originally arranged by 8. de Corlibitarte, Mrs. H. B. Mr. Weigle is conducted under the Chambers, Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Cog auspices of the New Haven "Re- tellos, Mr. M. D. Cooper. Miss gister. The Americans were vic- Cullinane. Miss Carter, Mr. and torious by 94 to 10, but the Chang- Mrs. Cullinane. Mr. and Mrs. shu middle school boys are still Clarke-Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Camp not discouraged and hope for vic-bell-Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Cathie, tory in years to come. The New Mr. and Mrs. Colson. Haven Eigh School has 2,000 stu Miss Dawson, Mias Dixon, Miss Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien. dents and their opportunities for Dyer, Mr. G. E. Davies, Mr. J. H Dr. Violet Flummer, Miss Plum- practice are far less limited, never- Derkins, Mr. R. Dommer, Miss P mer. Mr. and Mrs. Propsting, Mr. theless the Chinese boys are eager | Dimond."

Kenzie, Mrs. McKee, Miss Morris, Master Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. Morgan and son,

Recently, before the two exhib Mlas McKay, Mr. and Mrs. McKay, tion rooms were completed, Prin Mas MoNeill, Miss May. Mr. and cess Helena Victoria, vice-president Mrs. McPherson, Mra M.-J. Mc- of the school, came to see it, bring- Donald, Mr. and Mr. C. W. N. Mcing with her Queen Ena of Spain. Gowan, Mr. J. F. McKiernan, Miss They made a careful examination M. Manuk, Mr. W. L. McKenzie, of all the exhibits, the chief of Mrs. P. Mason, Mr. E. Mostaert, Dr. which were the robes worn by the and Mrs. C. P. Mallary,

Mra L. R. Neville. Mr. J. E. New el, Mr., Noonan.

in each country because of cost, because of the low content avall- able compared with the Texas yield, and because after each major attention of the UB.A. to the value airship disaster there has been a of helium for military purposes slowing-down or reversal of policy during the Great War that the Hellum was discovered in 1888 by United States laid down a plant the French astronomer Jansen and i ir Texas. Sir Norman Lockyerne

It was too late for the hellum for another chance to defeat them. Mr. F. Edens, Major and Mrs Then: "Where is Suzanne?...... Has she been exit to prison?...... They observed spectroscopic to be used in the war, although In both New Haven and Chang- Eccles, Mr. A. C. Ellis, Mr. and Tell me where she is!" he cried

200,000 cubic feet were ready for to France at the to M. Lapeyre, grey-haired and

shipment handsome presiding judge. He

Armistice.

America decided to continue was calling for Buzanne Bertron.

with it in 1915, however, and a his slim, raven-haired mistress,

This new element remained a plant was laid down capable of who, while he in

was waiting in the solar mystery for nearly 30 years, dealing with 5,000,000 cubic feet cells, had complicity in the murder until, in 1895, Bir Willam Ramsey of gas per day. Fielding 40,000

isolated from, a mineral clevelta } cubic feet of helium,

Suzanne Bertron at that moment was on her way to the Petite Roc quette, the Paris women's prison, to collect her belongings, and emerge a free woman.

Suzanne Bertron had fainted as she learned of her acquittal Ro

evidence of the presence in the sun of an element not known ter- restrially. They gave it this name.

Dini

PRESENT IN THE AIR

queer, exotic atmosphere I have

lived in for so long."

Locked in Embrace":

ger and I will probably meet As Vernon waited to leave the again," she said. "But how can I court I asked him; "Will you see say if I shall still love him or not? your wife before you begin your I am going to see my little daug sentence?

ter, Lucette, aged 0.

Vernon whispered; "I would like to-morrow.

must also sea and possibly her father, my for- to see her. mer husband. I want to leave this Suzanzie....

Then came the most dramatic scene of the trial. Mme. Vernon, despair on her face, climbed over barriers, and over the wooden partition separating her from her husband.

She seized his hands, “My darling, my darling!". They are sending you away, she cried, as she dragged him from the guards. For more than a minute

sha the weather was ideal for the Mr. Edgar, Mr. and Mrs. Eva Miss maet. Firecrackers and the rals- Edmanson,

W. G. Pirie, Mr. R. Pax, Mr. M. C. Potts, Dr. J. & Pyne, Mr. H W. Page, Col H. A. Parkins

Mrs. A. G. Quynn and family, Miss Quick. Apple

"Miss Rimmington, Mr. and Mrs Regan, Mr. and Mrs. Reinhold, Mr. JC. E Rye, Mr. G. O, Rockhalte, Mr. T. Ramsay, Mrs. G. KG. Reilly, Ken

|

| King and Queen at the Coronation. The robes worn by the little Prin censes were shown, and their de- lightful little dresses of Ivory Venetian lace over satin, each with short paned sleeves, gold tassels over the shoulders holding tiny capes of white ermine, and tiny, gold.bows down the front to match the narrow girdles, kui

At the end of another room were displayed the dresses and robes worn in the Abbey by Queen Mary, the Princess Royal, and the Duchesses of Gloucester and Kent. The Princess Royal's lovely dress is Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Skinn. Mas of gold and ivory brocade, but the skinn, Mrs. Stainfield, Miss Stain- there are elaborately embroider- field, Mr. M. de L. Smith. Brised Queen Mary's dress of cloth Beth-Smith, Miss Stevenson, Mia of gold is worked with crystal and Simpson, Adles Streatfeld. Mrs. one diamanté in a design of roses Sutherland, Mr Streatneld, Mr. Shank -- Mr. Bhan," Mik Bixing Miss Stephen Mr. and Mrs. - T.

Soderberg

ing of the American and Chinese Mrs. Frith, Mr. Flowers, Miss flags featured the opening cere- Flowers, Mr. and Mrs W. N. mony in America Lin Ben. Olym-Fleming, Mira: W. W. Fitte, Mrs. A pre short distance girl runner, act- Fay, Mr. W. J. Fraser, Mr. C. on as an official timer in the meet Fornarice at Changsha. Besides the regular Mr. T. M. Gregor Mr. G. I events the champion provincial Gregory, Col. Gowan, Mrs. B. girls relay team gave an exhibition. Griffiths, Comdr. W. H. Graves, Two national Chinese records in Mr. 1. ♬ Geare Mr. G. E. Geddes, the 400-stre dash and the shot Col, and M. G. C. Gowlland, Mrs put were broken by the American A. Guterres, Miss C. L. Guterrez

Mr. Gromadeckiej c high school boys.

Mr. and Mrs, C. M. Hall, Miss D. "Harvey, Mr. H. W. Herts Eng-Lt- || Seccomb

Comdr. H. A Higgs, Mr. G. B G. they were locked In each other's "Hull" Mis Hennings, ~ Mra, and | Tucker, Mr. and arms, the wife begging the hus- Miss Hawkins, Captain and Mrs. J. Mizs, Taylor, band who had deserted Bez lot, T., Hart, Mis L. y. Hobbs, Mr. D A G Trulo, Miss A. ten years to come back to her......" H Hazell, Min Hamilton, Már, and - and Mrs. J. A. Tarrant, Then Vernon turned on bisnesi Mrs. Hayward, Mr. Hayles, Prof. Tyrrell Mrs. J. G, Tált without farewell, without a word and Mrs. Hart, Miss Hawkins.

Rev. G. E. B. Upsdell,

and fuchsias.

and

Mr. and Mr. 03 Mies Wallace MDAWAJĄ WIELRELAKO

Mr. and Mrs Wonderis, Mr. Welsh,

Mr Yule

Walsh,

Whed

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