PAGE 10 HONG KONG DAILY PRESS
STAPLES SURPRISES
VARY YOUR MENU WITH PLENTY
OF CELERY
FOOD
SWEETS FOR YOUR PARTY
For the buffet supper, or ang evening party, cold sweets which can be easily served and eaten are These ara pleasant
party sweets, which vary in cost.
Remove all green from a head of pepper, I cupful of melted butter, water. Drain well. Make a fairly celery, wash, cut in pleces and 2 tablespoonfuls grated onion, thick pancake batter, adding u boll till tender. Strain or liquid tablespoonful" of golden syrup, small quantity of grated cheese which may be added to the stock-Combine the ingredients in the or-Dip each plece of celery into the essential. pot. Pass the celery through a der given and moisten with hot batter, and fry in bolling fat till mincing machine, then add water to form a thick paste. breakfastcupful each of cold mash- ed potatoes, and fine white bread- crumbs, salt and pepper to taste. Roll into balls with toured hands, dip into egg and breadcrumbs and fry in deep fat till golden brown.
serve very hot.
CELERY RELISH
FLEMISH SOur
Cut 2 heads of celery and 2 large calons in small pieces. Stice 6. potatues that have been scalded. Put these with 202 butter and
int of water into Q stewpan. Cook slowly for 1 hour, add 1 pint
TOAD-IN-THE-HOLD
བྷ
crisp. Lift and dry in the oven, Serve on a paper with sprigs of fried parsley.
!
A simple but delicicus coffee trife is made as follows. It can be made in a glass dish or in paper CELERY SAVOURY
cases. Cut up some sponge cake Simmer some celery (quantity fresh, not stale) and put into the dependent upon number of people) bowl or cases. Make some coffee and when fairly tender drain well; king with icing sugar and enough. chop up finely. Sprinkle with warm, strong coffee or coffee es- of broth, cook till potatoes are dis-Farmesan cheese. Add a dash of sence to make it soft enough to pour. Cook 2lb of prepared celery Insulved, season and rub through a
into a thick cream with cream and icing sufficient salted water to cover, aeve, put back into stewpan and Nepal pepper but no salt. Mix all Keep it rather softer than when and when tender put through the add J-pint of milk or cream.
pile up mixture on little rounds of mincing machine, using a fine cut-
toast ter. To the pulp add 1 pint of best malt vinegar, I tablespoonful ef finely grated horseradish, tea
This is a popular luncheon dish. spoonful of Cayenne, salt, and Jozi
Three or four medium-sized sticks' each of sliced shallot and garlic. then drain
Boil for 20 to 30 minutes, then rags. doz dour and 1 pint milk of celery, split into two and boiled add the strained juice of two Season well with salt and enyenne. gently until tender in slightly salt- lemons. When the relish is a Pour into a square baking dished water. Lay the conked celery Ar-on a reproof dish, pour over a thick cream, remove from the heat.that has been well buttered. Allow to cool and bottle.
ange the celery hearts in the covering of Welsh rabbit and plaer batter and pour over the top under the gril till nicely browned tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Serve very hot. Bake in a moderate oven for i'- bour until the batter is risen and nicely brown,,
ANOTHER RELISH
This little-known relish is nice with cold meat. Required: 1 stick of celery, 23 breakfastcupful of sliced peeled tomatoes. 1. large onlon, tablespoonful of salt. 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar. 23 cuplus of vinegar, a little Cayenne pepper.
a pinch of mixed spice.
For this luncheon dish take 3 or small heads of celery and boll salted water until tender, and
Make a batter of
CELERY WELSH RABBIT
cakes. Pour OYEE the sponge cake, and when cool de- corate with whipped cream which | has been sweetened and flavoured with vanilla. Sprinkle with chop- ped walnuts it liked.
ORANGE JELLIES.
11
!!
Orange jellies made as follows A pint are an interesting sweet. of tangerine jelly, a tin of man- oranges, two cunces of darin ratafia biscuits, a few crystallised fruits, and a little cream will serve about half a dozen people. Drain the Juice off the oranges and use I in making up the pint · jelly. When this is on the point of set- ting, whip until light and frothy. Grumble the blacuits, "cut half the
For the Welsh rabbit, cut lu Cheddar cheese into thin slices and, having heated gill of milk In a saucepan. with a plece of but- ter the size of a walnut, add the Serve this with fish-It is a cheese, a teaspoonful of vinegar pleasant change from the usual and teaspoonful made mustard. parsley sauce. Put loz. of butter Cook slowly till the cheese is melt-ranges and the crystallised fruits
CELERY SAUCE
Wash celery well, dry and re-
and 202 cf four into a saucepan,; ed. move all green and discoloured and mix to a smooth paste. Add parts: peel enton: minee. celery slowly 1 smail, teacupful of milk; and onion together slee the peel- then small teacupful of finely ed tomatoes firely. Place all in chopped celery, and salt and pep- an enamelled saucepan with the per as desired. Cook, stirring air other ingredients, and cook very the time. until it is the usual
sauce. gently for 1 to 1 hours until ronsistency of white tender. Bottle in usual way. mixing the
ond flour to gether before adding the milk, a delicious creamy flavour is obtain ed. This point is most important.
al
CELERY STUFFING
Celery is good as stuffing for chicken, turkey, goose or duck.
Three
cupfuls of soft bread- crumbs. 1 teaspoonful salt, 1 cup-
butter
CELERY CRISPS
By
Cut celery into fingers and boil rul of chopped celery. A teaspoonful til just tender in salted boiling
NEED OF MORE
DENTAL CARE
Mr. Elliot Warns The Nation
NEW LONDON EXIT
Route To The Great West Road
be
CELERY AND POTATOES
into tiny pieces, and whisk ali in with the jelly. Plle" into the bowl and decorate with the rest of the Allow half a head of celery per pieces of orange and the whipped person. Cook the celery 15min inuream. In the meantime boll two botting salted water. When cooked cupfuls of sugar with two cupfuls pass through a sleve Add to this of water and the grated rind of a half the quantity of cooked pota-lemon until syrupy. then add the toes, also passed through the steve. chestnuts and the juice of the Add plenty of pepper and salt and lemon, and simmer slowly until a little butter or dripping. Spread the chestnuts are soft and trans- this mixture on a shallow dish. parent but still whole. Do not then over the top put grated cheese allow to boil or the chestnuts will and a few small pieces of butter. break. A little ilqueur may Put into the oven and serve when added to the syrup and is, an im- top is golden brown.
provement.
Convict Ship Resumes Sailing To Dreaded Devil's Island
be
THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1939.
WARNING,
TAKE NOTICE
12317-
Have ASPRO
Ready for any EMERGENCY
COLDS-FLU and RHEUMATISM are about Again
HUNDREDS of people everywhere
are suffering from Influenza, Colds, Sore Throats, Sciatica, Neuralgia, and Rheumatism. Quick action by taking 'ASPRO' is the best way to deal with these complaints. Don't wait till you are feeling "flat out." Take 'ASPRO.' at the first signs of being attacked. Take two or three 'ASPRO' tablets at once and follow up with two tables every three hours, and a hot lemon drink with the last dose before going to bed. Colds and 'Flu ars easy to nip in the bud, but difficult to shift if you let them become deep-seated. "ASPRO never fails, if taken according to directions. It is safe, sure and certain. It quickly puts. you on your feet again, and there are no dangerous after-effects. It has Banished Colds and 'Flu for thousands of people. Let 'ASPRO 'help you now, and säve further bother.
'ASPRO'
Quickly Smashes COLD & FLU Attacks
INFLUENZA WARDED
OFF WITH 'ASPRO'
Dear Sirs,
17 Church Place,
Port Adelaide, S.A.
I am writing to you to let you know what ASPRO Tables have done for my children and myself.
We have all been down with the IN- FLUENZA at once, and all we have taken are 'ASPRO Tables and lemon drinks. We all had high tem- peharures and bad headaches. but thanks to your 'ASPRO). Tablets we are all about again, only being three days in bed.
Yours truly, JAZZDA
N. GYLE (Sgd.j
TRY 'ASPRO? FOR:
HEADACHE
TOOTHACHE RHEUMATISM INFLUENZA SLEEPLESSNESS ¦ HAY FEVER FEVERISHNESS IRRITABILITY SORE THROAT NEURALGIA TEMPERATURE EARACHE
COLDS
LUMBAGO DENGUE
MALARIA
SCIATICA
ASTHMA
GOUT
NEURITIS
ALCOHOLIC AFTER
EFFECTS.
"ASPRO' GIVES GREAT RELIEF TO WOMEN WHEN DEPRESSED.
Agente:-DODWELL & Co., LTD. obtainable at all Chemists and Drug Stores. Three Packings: 5's, 11's, 27'4.
WOMEN WHO CANNOT COOK
Lady Baldwin's Regret
"Mr. Walter Elliot, Minister at Work will start shortly on "the Health, opening the Public Health task of cutting a new exit "from
The prison ship, La Martiniere, quell disorder among the convicts Services Congress and Exhibition the West End of London through salled from La Pallice (France) re awaiting transfer to the ship. at the Agricultural Hall, Isling- the tangle "or mean streets
cently for the first time in three Senegalese troops, however, restor- ten emphasised the danger to tween Earl's Court and the Great years with 738 convicts condemned ed order unaided, general health of bad teeth.
West-read at Chiswick.
to penal exile in French Guiana.
An official investigation dis- Tenders have been invited, by "The teeth of this country are
Below decks the prisoners were closed that rioting began between Arst section
confined in stout iron cages as the two groups of prisoners during had, you might almost say rot- the L.C.C. for the
stated. We of the project, known officially vessel started on the 14-day voyage lunch. Guards attempted to sub- ten." the Minister
extension. to South America. A storm had due the Aghting. It said, but the might not get the teeth of adults as the Cromwell-road
This Les between Warwick-
prisoners ran from the delayed, the sulling.
dining "completely repaired, but we
Court and North should do everything possible to read, Earl's
This was the first group of con-room and began a demonstration End-road, West Kensington, and see that the teeth of children
victa to be sent to the Guiana in the courtyard, singing the In- rail- are kept in good condition, and includes a bridge over two
Colony, which includes the notori-ternationale. They were later re- done. that running repairs are
ous "Devil's Island,"
the turned to their cells. Cabinet of Socialist Premier Leon Renewal of the practice of ship- Blum decided In 1938 to end the ping men to Gulana runs contrary Mr. Elliot said that with publicit and Hammersmith Bridge, links
to the published commentaries of practice. health services as we knew them up with the eastern end of the
The Daladier Government" re- many prison officials.
The luncheon was prepared Dy to resume ship- The Guiana colonies are homes 12 and served by four students at to-day many of the early dangers
Chersey-road, continues cently decided to health were well under con-
South American] of abominable corruption and no Queen's College, Harley-street, W.. westward south of Chiswick ments trol, but it was no time to relax.
High-road, and ends at the mouth Colony, to relleve overcrowding of redemptory work is possible in that which was established in 1848, but
domestic prisons.
climate," said ́Armand Andrelu, has only had a domestic science of the Great West-road.
On November 20 it was reported former Director of French Perl-branch for 12 years. Here there will be a great fly- Research was going on, but it over junction, plans for which that mobile guards, were rushed to tentiaries under the Blum regime. was still more important that the are now being prepared for the results of research should be ap- Ministry of Transport by piled. He was sure that the new Middlesex County Council. campaign against cancer would ap-
as an enormous amount of bad! health is due to bad teeth."
41
CANCER CAMPAIGN
coun-
The route approved by Parlia ment by-passes Hammersmith Broadway on the south between
New
DISPUTE OVER ROUTE
the
to the
since
KNIGHT OF 81 TO MARRY
SIR R. H. SEYMOUR peal to the sympathies of
many As regards the extension east-
LEAVES £14,000 cils, their staffs, and the voluntary associations which were ward at Western-avenue, matters
Several years Sir Reginald Henry Seymour, of closely bound up with public are at a deadlock. health activities.
ug it was agreed that the 100ft Roel, Hatfield, Equerry wide Western-avenue, which now Queen Mary and formerly Equerying marriage of Bir Andrew Hislop comes to a dead-end in the 50rt in Ordinary to King George V., Pettigrew and Miss Joan Coctam.
con- left £14,567 (p. £6,009);
St Andrew wide Wood-lanë, "should" be
18 described as a
The Minister, who welcomed more than 700 delegates from local health authorities through out the Kingdom, was introduced by Blz. Frederick 3. Willis. chair man of the Congress Council.
Notice has been given at á Lon- to don reglater office of the forthcom-
Countess Baldwin, attending x luncheon cooked by students at her, old college, said she wished she had been taught cookery when she was a student......
Mra, Temple, wife of the Arch-. bishop of York, who is also a for- mer student, echoed Lady Bald- win's wish, and, said that she her- self had never learned how to cook aven a potato.
The Archbishop commented ou the excellence of the meal, which consisted of celery soup, sole supreme, veal. Marengo, roast pheasant, orange mousse and pineapple ice. The school differs from many.
cause it trains girls to manage their
households. Er 09711
cookers as well as a seldom-used
During their housewifery course, the students, clean the bathrooms
the
trued across North Kensington Mr. Tom Shaw, of Cardinal widower, aged 81, of St. Andrew's and Paddington to the Maryle-Mansions, Carlisle-place. S.W., Club, Whitehall-court, B.W. Miss domestic sclenou institutions be- bone-road and ultimately to Eas- Socialist M.P. for Preston 1918-31, Cottam's age is given as 28, and tern-avenue, another 100ft wide the first Socialist Minister of La-her address as Gloucester-place." kitchens are electric and gas Earl De La Warr, President" of arterial road which ends in abour, 1924, and Secretary for War N.W. th, Board of Education, sald the bottleneck.
1929-31, left £3,029 (ap. £2,886) The wedding in to take place at coal range. challenge which this country was - This project ranks as the first Mr. Henry John Copeman, of the Marylebone Presbyterian facing was one in terma not only in Bir Charles Bressey's Greater Westwood, Newmarket-road, Nor-Church, George-street, W."- of armaments and politics, but London development plans. It has wich, wholesale grocer, head of Str Andrew, who was knighted in and the students' bedrooms, and national itness and been held up by disputes be John Copeman and Son Ltd., a 1913, is a J.P., and is chairman of do washing. They are also taught
tween the local authorities, main former sheriff and Lord Mayor of Campbells and Stewart and Mc- dressmaking and sewing forty as to whether the route should Norwich, and Referring to the scheme
a member of the Donald Ltd., Glasgow, wholesale free meals in schools, he said that or should not coincide with
City Council for 43 years, left £109, and manufacturing drapers, and a the Board proposed to survey line of Westbourne-grove.
870 (np £57,738).
director of the Scottish Temper- the position" in each hoped this would help tes to discover what in their schemes should be done to complete.
4,7 morale.
our
arca
and authori- ig wrong and what
make
CHEMIST'S £605,000.
the
Mr. Revell Anthony Fairclough, South African chemists, who died them juf Kensington Palace-gardens, W., at the age of 91, left' £805,841 has
life director of Lennon Ltd.. been paid.
ance and General Assurance Co.
Ita,
He has served as the Town Council of the city and has been twice married.
£749,659 WILL
Mr. William Rennie, of Frensham Vale, Faraham, Surrey, a director
of A. 1. Jones and. Co., Imperial Tobacco Co., and Salmori and luckstein, who died aged 71, left £749,859. net perconalty £730,031
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