OCR Text |
Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH THE KITCHEN CABINET 4- -f Lit tv v , Vww tx V ' W- - ( ' 4 And pooplo sro hard to suit, , For tho man who plays on ths violin Is s boro to tbo man with tho fcosW'1 W. try 3 till. Wmi, Ktwapaptr Union.) This world Is a difficult world. CT VU V. " Out. ' V ' 1 A 7 M GOOD THINGS TO EAT lAL I. "' tl; f. v ?c ' A very simple potato salad may be prepared, using boiled potatoes. Make small balls using small French scoop, - && ii ; ., v ' ! ( -- K ... sbi 'J jVjv w ' T. ? .X' VZf fi.j - ft J marinate the potato balls In V. 't45LZ .w jCs yAwjfc riTtvSOTl French v- -- I'ih u dressing until time for serving, then drain and roll In finely minced parsley, arrange on lettuce leaves and garnish with rosea of mayonnaise. For a green and white 'luncheon, mix cream cheese with enough thick cream to mold Into balls. Prepare halt of the cheese by mixing with chopped chives and parsley or with young onions chopped. Arrange the balls la nests on lettuce and serve with a salad dressing passed In a bowL Hungarian Goulash. Cut Into small pieces one-hapound of fresh pork fat, brown In a saucepan, remove the pork scraps, add one onion to the fat (finely chopped) ; when brown add two teatablespoonfuls of flour, one-hal- f spoonful of paprika, of pepper, one tablespoonful of salt, and one-ha- lt cupful of strained tomato; stir until smooth, add two pounds of the bottom of the round of beef cut Into Inch cubes ; add also one cupful of water, one clove, one bay leaf, one teaspoonful of chopped parsley and one stalk of celery chopped fine. Pour Into a casserol ; cover and cook In a alow oven three hours. Baked Sweetbreads With Bacon. Blanch the sweetbreads by soaklog In water, changing until the water remains clear, then cook until firm and white at simmering temperature. Remove the pipes and fibers, roll each tight In a piece of cheesecloth and press under a weight for several hours. Beat one egg with a teaspoonful of onion Juice, add one teaspoonful of salt, brush the sweetbreads with this mixture, and sift over them fine bread crumbs. Arrange slices of bacon In a dripping pan, on these place the sweetbreads, and cover with another slice of bacon. Bake 20 mlnutee In a hot oven. Serve with the sauce from the pan, thickened, and one tablespoonful of lemon juice added. Potato Salad, New potatoes make the beat salad boll them with their Jackets on. Cut Into neat cubes sftei removing the skin. Season with sail and pepper. To two cupfuls add one-hateaspoonful of onion Juice, one tablespoonfuls of finely minced capers, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter and one tablespoonfu1 of lemon juice. Toss all together carefully, chill. When ready to serve cover with a cooked salad dressing highly seasoned. Serve on crisp lettuce, garnish with rings of hard cooked egg white. Put the yolks through a sieve and sift on top. lf tafii (fate Ij7 7mT lc 7ft njH W? flervbssjem gfliVit - WV-Y- h the clang of the church bell breaks over Hie roofs of Jerusalem at this time of year, Cbrlstluns, Mos-- ' leius and Jews have laid aside their tools and thrown thetuselves Into a frenzy of devotion. It is an annual release of the entire community, writes Clair lrlce In the New York Times, telling of Easter In Jerusulem, such as you and I know nothing of. Somewhere In the centuries during which our ancestors were moving westward from the Middle East we have lost the gift of it and we have never recaptured It Yet we are, all of us, Gentile and Jew alike, w hen we alight today at the little railroad station on the Bethlehem road, which bears the twin names of "El Kuds in Arabic script and Jerusalem' In English. As modern cities go, the physical Jerusalem Is small. The population is about 60,000, of whom possibly a third live within the walls. The physical Jerusalem Is a tiny stone relic of a town, the most revered relic of three great faiths. It has more physical riches per capita than any other city on earth. It is surrounded by great modern German, Russian, French, Italian and British properected ad gloriam erties, strong fortress-structure- s majorem Del. Within the walls It Is divided Into Christian, Armenian, Jewish and Moslem quarters. At this time of the year each quarter observes one of the greatest events on Its calendar the Christian and Armenian quarters their Easter week, the Jewish quarter its Passover, and the Moslem quarter Its fasting at the Tomb of Moses, 20 miles east on the stifling shores of the Dead sea. Before the war the old Ottoman government at Constantinople was accustomed to transfer Its Jaffa garrison to Jerusalem to maintain order during the tlfsee festivals, and the British today, after having similarly drawn In their forces toward Jerusalem, find the period of the three festivals one of anxious days and sleepless nights. The Passover of the Jews Is kept in Jerusalem Just as it Is kept in American cities. Among the few Samaritans who are left In the world, however. It Is kept with differences. There are only about 130 of them, and they are concentrated In their own quarter of Nablus, north of Jerusalem. They observe their Passover week encamped In tents on the summit of Mount Gerizlm. Easter week at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is observed with less simplicity, for six Christian communities possess rights In the church and each has Its own program of observances throughout the week. The orthodox community has 8,000 communicants, the Roman Catholic community the Armenians 1,500, the Copts 150. the Syrians 130 and the Abysslnlans 00. Those of us whose toore Immediate ancestry Is Protestant have no specified rights In the labyrinth of churches, chapels and monasteries which together make up the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The rights which each community enjoys In the church are closely defined by centuries of precedent and are embodied In firmans grunted for centuries by successive sultuns at Constantinople. As for the Moslem pilgrimage to the Tomb of Moses, Its participants come Into Jerusalem on the Tuesday before the Christians' Easter week begins and leave on the following day, marching with banners and bands of music down the Jericho road toward the stark wilderness about the Dead A mile from these hot salt shores lies the sert. fabled Tomb of Moses, one of that line of prophets. Including Adam. Noah, Abraham and Jesus, of whom Islam holds Mohammed to be the last. It seems to be generally established that the tomb Is not authentic and It Is not Impossible that to whom It was revealed In a vision, was moved by the desirability of mobilizing a Moslem force near Jerusalem during the Christians Easter in order to prevent the Christians from encroaching on the (The term "hnrara" In Islam corresponds to "cathedral" among Chrisat Jerusatians, and the great lem Is, after the Ilarnm at Mecca, the most shrine In Islam.) The tomb Is owned the powerful Ilusselnl fumlly of Jerusalem, which numbers among Its members the mayor, the grand mufti or head of the Moslem community, and the head of the organization. With 5,000 Moslem pilgrims fasting at the Tomb of Moses, some 20 miles away, Easter week begins at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. I lft the hotel shortly before 8 o'clock on the morn'm of Maundy Thursduy. The church Is annoum I. as one nears It, by a transformation In the ba anrs which line the cobbled streets. Oriental wares give place to rosurles, crosses, pictures. Icon- - und candles. At length, a gateway opens in an ancient wall and a flight of cobbled steps brings one down to the somber overshadowed square which is the forecourt of the church. Every Inch of the small court was crowded. Windows and ledges which looked down upon the scene were Jumntsd w 1th onlookers. Ladders leaning up against the ancient walls were being used to push still more onlookers to points of vantage. Hoofs were perilously crowded, and on the high- - one-four- th HEN home-come- 0, Sal-arii- u, Haram-esh-Shorl- f. Ilnram-esh-Sher- lf d antl-Zlonl- Jerusaemy Principal Business Street O Jrtrnstlo est roof of all a group of Greeks sat with their feet overhanging a drop, their leader standing at the edge whirling a pair of broadswords whose blades whirred past the ears of those who sat about his feet The figure of their leader and the sound of their heavy chant dominated the scene. Down below in the center of the crowded forecourt was a wooden stand with 12 seats, and a small pulpit had been affixed to the wall before It, overhung with an icon and a branch of olive. slowly from under the arch of the gate. He was the sheik of Hebron; 6,000 men, Hussein Effendi whispered were in his family; 6,000 men, what you say, like one. After him came more mounted 72-fo- sword-swingin- g Twelve archimandrites, walking two by .two, in robes of red and gold brocade, were issuing from the doors of the church. As they filed slowly through the human lane which led to the wooden stand, the Patriarch Damlanos followed them from the church, clad in gleaming white brocade and sliver; his long beard was snowy white, the sun glinted on the dlamond-lncrustecross on his breast. With the church bells clanging their wild Jubilee, the archimandrites ascended the stand. At the steps the patriarch paused. His outer robe of white and the jeweled Insignia of his office were removed. A rough towel was tied about his waist, another was thrown over his shoulder and a ewer and basin of embossed silver and gold were given him. The crowded court was now silent Even tho bells had ceased tbelr jubilance. In the role of the Twelve Apostles, each man bared one foot and the patriarch, ascending the stand, the scene In the upper room. They carried out the Bible story literally even to the reluctance of St Peter, whose role was played by the Russian archimandrite. The little play was no sooner over than the wild clangor of the bells possessed the scene again, the sword-swingon the roof s In a frenzy of exabove led his cited devotion, and the patriarch, having resumed his heavy splendor, descended from the stand and walked slowly back Into the church, the crowds breaking through the line of gendarmerie, driven by all the strength of their emotion into frantic efforts to approach him, to touch the hem of his gorgeous raiment. Toward noon I went over to St. Stephens gate, through which the Jericho road enters Jerusalem, to see the Moslem pilgrims return to the front the Tomb of Moses. The wall on both sides of the gate was rimmed at the top with hepds. all of them looking off to where the white undulating Jericho road dipped from sight to the south across the Kldron valley. The rubbish heap which lies to your left as you go out of the gate d was rimmed with seated, figures. A field of yellow-greebnrley dropped sharply at ore's feet and the Jericho road far below was a human lane. Files of orphans In blue and soldiers In British khaki moved like toy figures along the white rond to meet the returning pilgrims. A British airplane zoomed low and, lifting, trailed its shadow swiftly up Gethsemune and the Mount of Olives. The crash of a gun outside the gate was followed by a long clattering echo against the Mount of Olives. Others followed until a salute of 11 guns had reached out to greet the Incoming pilgrims. A Hebron mounted gendarme stopped In front of us, faced his horse about, lit a cigarette and waited The music slowly crescendoed and We stood on approached slowly, very slowly. our chairs as the head of the procession stopped before us, amid the rhythmic thunder of Turkish drums and the deafening dang of cymbals. A double line of small pupils In green, flowing headdresses sang about the Arab fatherland. At the, end of every verse they lifted their wands. More Hebron gendarmes Issued from beneath the gate, faced their horses about and waited More drums and cymbals were approaching. A old man, clad 111 Abraham, Issued leathery-face- d d fellow-pilgrim- d Haram-esh-Sher- many-colore- n lf gendurmes, a cluster of green and yellow banners bearing Arabic names and surmounted with brass crescents. A rough circle of chanting men stopped before us and lifted their voices In a long acclamation of the Arab army, every line of which ended with the thrusting high of naked scimitars and walking sticks. Hussein Effendi, in his European clothes, leaped from his chair Into the center of them, gave them a vlve la for Iarmee Arabs and another and another and another, until the perspiration dripped from his forehead and the veins stood out on his neck and the naked scimitars and walking sticks leaped Into tlw air again and again and again. So religion In Jerusalem slips across the shadowy line which divides it from politics. It took an hour for the rest of the pilgrims to , pass us and we finally followed the fife and drum corps of the Manchester regiment, which marked t, their end, to the gate of the Those who know Jerusalem far better than I know It agree that in point of outward physical beauty the city contains nothing which compares, in the spacious majesty of its setting,4 with the great It consists of one of those great open spaces in which Islam loves to implant Its shrines, of the exquisite Dome of the Rock In the center of the area, of the Mosque along Its further side, and of minor bits, pulpits, fountains, cypresses, which stand at irregular intervals throughout the rest of the area without marring the effect of space. By 10 oclock in the morning, the floor of the rotunda of thq church was crowded with the Christendom of the Orient Above, the little galleries on the walls of the rotunda were crowded with foreigners. The din down on the floor was continual. It was not the hum of many voices, but a roughly rhythmic chanting Into which the voices Involuntarily resolved themselves, an ocean of sound which broke on ones ears In a heavily stressed measure La la la, La la La La La. The tension was now at Its height I remember an anxious vice consul who had witnessed tbs scene many times before whispering at my elbow, Anything can happen In the next five minutes." With a gesture of savage exultance the priest drew from the hole in the side of the sepulcher a (laming torch and, turning, dashed through the opened lane and disappeared out the door, where swift runners were waiting outside to carry the Holy Fire to Bethlehem, Jericho, Nablus and other towns of Palestine. Before the war It was carried also to Jaffa, where ships were waiting to hurry it o Odessa, whence It was used to kindle candles throughout Holy Russia. One of the two men In white now stood before the bole in the sepulcher lifting n second flaming torch. Toward him the frenzied crowd surged, stretching out their candles to light them at the Holy Fire. Candle by candle Jets of flame rushed through the rotunda until the sen of beads was alive wdth dots of, flickering yellow and the air that lay above waa hazy with thin blue tallow Candles were lifted to the balconies by smoke. ropes and the heavy Inmps above were set flickering wlUi yellow light. The great lull rotunda was set The gendarmes gathered fiercely around as the patriarch staggered out of the sepulcher clutch-lu- g flaming tapers, and waa hwlf carried, struggling and swaying, through the nave of the orthodox cathedral up to the safety of the High Altar. The s filled with shouting, with the flicker rotunda 'of flame against a back.Tcund of dark stone. All that day little groups of eastern thrlstlnns stood talking la the streets with burning candles, 1 Haram-esh-Sheri- Haram-esh-Sherl- f.' ul lf Everyday Good Things. than can be served the children : Slice a few apples and place In the bottom of a buttered baking dish, sprinkle with sugar i and cinnamon or with a little nutmeg or grated lemon rind. Butter a few allcea of bread and plunge them into cold water, then place over the apples. Put into s slow oven and bake until ths apples are cooked. Serve with a thin custard. Coffts Jelly. Soak one box of gelatin In one cupful of cold water until soft Add one cupful of sugar and one pint each of boiling water and strong coffee. Stir until the sugar Is dissolved and the gelatin also; add one teaspoonful of vanilla extract, strain through a double cheesecloth into wet molds. Serve with a soft custard sauce. If you have four quarts of qour milk, make your own cottage cheese. Pour Into the milk, stirring lightly, boiling water until tbo curds begin to gather. Pour Into a colander very gently to drain; add salt, butter and cream, mix well and' you have a dish which Is not only appetizing but very nourish- Hers to get perfect walls with ' Alabastine. Alabastine is dry powder in white and I tints. Packed in packages, ready for use by , mixing with cold or warm water. Full directions on every package. Apply with an ordinary wall brush. Suitable for all interior surfaces plaster, wall board, brick, cement or canvas. It wont rub off, properly applied. Ask your dealer for color chart and suggestions or write Miss Ruby Brandon, the Alabastine Company, Grand Rapids, Mich. ! ' save money London Quaker$ Mow The Quakers of London, who have occupied the same building in Blshops-gat- e for more than 250 years, are soon to move Into new quarters. They came to Blshopsgate shortly after the great fire of London, when their meet- ings were still forbidden as riotous assemblies. One of the Quaker leaden who first held services at Blshopsgmta claimed to have suggested Miltons "Paradise Regained" to the author. Dont Forget Cutlcura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisite An exquisite face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous. Ton may rely on it because one of ths Cutlcura Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum), 25c each everywhere. Advertisement, Serious Lumber Situation The lumber cut per canlta in 190t was 523 board feet. This figure had dropped In 1022 to 283 board feet, and at present the cut Is dropping off at the rate of 1.000,000.000 board feet a year, which Indicates the serious forest situation which confronts the Glass made by the early Romans contained so much iron that they could not see through their windows . , clearly. n Is a pie ing. Brook Trout, Baked In Croam, Butter a baking dish and lay In the fish, cover with rich cream, a hot oven for ten minutes, Into pit seuson lightly when the cooking Is done. Cols 8law. Boll one-hacupful of well-d.'csse- d y lf vinegar, add one tablespoonful of butter, tuke from the fire und add a beaten egg and three tablespoonfuls of sweet eream. Seuson with salt, pepper, mustard and sugar. Pour over (inely shredded cabbage. of a Orange Pis. Cream s of cupful of butter, add a cupful of sugar, the Juice of an orange nnd linlf of the grated rind, together with the Juice of half a lemon; beat until light, then add the beaten yolks of three eggs, the white of one beaten stiff. Bake In one crust. When cool, coer with meringue, using two egg whites and three tubleaponnruli of sugar. Say Bayer Aspirin? INSIST. Unless you see the Bayer Cross' on tablets you 'are not getting the genuine, Bayer Aspirin proved safe by. millions and prescribed by phy-sicians for 24 years. Ovjfc- - i Bayer package which contains pro ven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists Aaplria le the treS oiark of Barer Mm-fttlii-n o UwowUseehtaeter ef BeUcyUcaetS i I will reduce Inflamed, sw f,'Joints, Sprains, Bn Soft Beaches; H fistula lull sores quickly l ftotIe.roUEvU.Qa nd positive UDtlMptk CermMde. Plra.a osofSoes sot bllst remove the hsir, you eaa work the) SAW per bottle dslit Book 7 A fret W. F. TOniC, lac, S10 Ltbu Si, SprigUi for Try Joint-Eas- o Rheumatism one-fourt- h three-fourth- When rheumatism settles In any oi yonr Joints and causes agony, distress or misery, please remember that Join Ease Is the one remedy that brings quick and lasting relief. It matters not how chronic or aggravated a case may be rub on Join Euse and relief is sure to follow. Joint-Eas- e la for joint trouble only and Is a dean, penetrating preparatioa that druggists everywhere aro recoup . , mending. Always remember, when Joint-Eas- t gets In Joint agony gets out quick. |