Woman's World By Mair M. Morgan â-º ♦«-♦ â- »♦•»» I Oysters For Buffet Supper Oyriteis are plentiful this year, we understaud. so the housewife would be advised to have a few recipes on bond. Raw oysters are, of course, the easiest to serve. Simply pry open the shells, discarding the top side, and ar- range five or six ou each plate with a small dish of cocktail sauce in the centre. Chill oysters and serve on a bed of cracked ice. Cocktail i-auce. ia easy to prepare. Add ground horse-radish, chopped pickle and a dash of tabasco to thick chili sauce, stir the mixture and leave it in the icebo.'c until you are ready to serve the oyster course. Catsup will do it you don't happen to have chili sauce. Pigs in Blankets hiMe pig.s in blankets, otherwise known as oyster bundles, are oysters on a de luxe scale. They are perfect for the one hot dish of an informal buffet supper but may be used tor din- r.er or luncheon. You will need 24 large oystc-rs, 24 very thin slices of bacon, some pars- ley and salt and pepper. Season the oysters with salt and pepper. Wrap an oyster in each slice of bacon and fasten with a toothpick. Heat a frying pan and put in the oys- ters. Cook on one side and then on the other â€" just long enough to crisp the bacou. While the oysters are cooking, toast some bread. Cut the slices of toast Into quarters and place an oyster on each small slice of toast. Garnish with parsley and serve immediately. IE you want to serve some sort of sauce with the oyster bundles, you might try a regular tartar sauce. It's easy to make. Just add chopped pickle relish and a few drops of lemon juice to mayonnaise. Oysters a la Ballard Arrange oysters on the half shell in a dripping pan and bake in a hot oven till edges curl. Allow six to each serv- ing, pouring over the following sauce: Mix % tablespoon melted butter, ?4 teaspoon lemon juice, a few drops ta- basco, Vi teaspoon finely chopped pars- ley, salt and paprika to taste. Panned Oysters Clean one pint large oysters. Place in pan in oven small oblong pieces of toast, put ail oyster on each piece, spriiikle with salt and pepper and hake till oysters are plump. Serve with lemon butter. Lemon Butter: â€" Cream 3 table- spoons butter, add '.•• teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon lemon juice and a few grains of cayenne. In Brown Sauce 1 pint oysters, hi cup hutter, Vi cup flour, 1 cup oyster liquor, ^^ cup milk, ^2 teaspoon salt. 1 teaspoon ancliovy essence, 1-S teaspoon pepper. Pavboil and drain oysters; reserve liquor, heat, strain and set aside for sauce. Brown butter, add flour and stir tlU well browned; then add oys- ter lifiuor. milk, seasonings and oys- ters. Thl.3 is a good mixture to fill patty cases. Savory Oysters 1 pint of oysters, 4 tablespoons but- ter, 4 tablespoons flour, 1 cup oyster liquor, % cup brown soup stock, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, few drops onion juice, salt, pepper. Clean oysters, parboil and drain. Melt butter, add flour and stir until well browned. Pour on gradually, while Btirring constantly, oyster liquor and stock. Add seasonings and oys- ters. Serve on toast, or in pastry shells. Broiled Oysters 1 pint oysters. U cup melitd butter, 2;i cup seasoned cracker crumbs. Clean oysters and dry betwet.i towels. Lift with fork by the tough muscle and dip in butter, then in the cracker crumbs which have been sea- soned with salt and pepper. Place in a buttered wire broiler and broil over or under fire till juices flow, turning while boiling. Serve with len-on bui- ter. Oysters and Macaroni 1 pint oysters. ?i cup nuuaroni broken in 1 Inch pieces, salt and pep- per, Pour, % cup buttered crumbs, U cupbutter. Cook macaroni in boiling salted water till soft; drain and rinse witli cold water. Put a layer in bottom of a buttered pudding-dish, cover with oysters, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour and dot over with one-half of the butter; repeat and cover with buttered crumbs. Bake 20 minutes in hot oven. Fried in Batter Dip cleaned and dried oysters in batter, fry In deep fat, drain and serve garnished with lemon and parsley. Oysters may be parboiled, if p:tforred, before frying. Batter. â€" 2 eggs, ?i cup milk, 1 tea- spoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, 1 cup bread flour. Beat eggs till light, add siilt and pepper. Add milk slowly to flour, stir till smooth and well mixed. Combine mixtures. Creamed oysters or oyster stew is a favorite dish. It may constitute the main course of a luncheon or Sunday night supper or be served as the soup co'irse with a dinner. Take one pint of oysters, 4 table- spoons butter. 6 tablespoons flour, 1 pint rich milk ^and some salt and pop- per. Heat the oysters in their own liquor until the edges curl. Make a white sauce with the butter, flour, and milk and then put the oysters in it. Add the seasoning just before you are ready to serve the stew. Oysters dipped in egg and fried are always popular with men. Beat a couple of raw eggs until they are frothy and dip the raw oysters in tUem. Then roll the oysters in either cracker crumbs or dry, hard bread crumbs, put them in hot water in a frying pan and allow to brown on both sides. Renovating Playing Cards If your playing cards have become "sticky" or seem difficult to shulfle, try sprinkling the whole pack either with corn starch or talcum powder. See that it is dusted over all of them. Then dust them off. This removes the stickiness. An old silk glove from which you have removed the fingers will prevent your hands from getting calloused If worn while doing a large ironing. Start Right The bottoms of pots and pans will never become blackened if they are scoured all over each time they are used. Those blackened bottoms mean only one thing â€" systematic neglect. Proper Seasoning Although it's far better to err on the side of under-seasoning than over- seasoning, a dish that must be sea- soned entirely ai:ter cooking is never so effective as one seasoned during the cooking. Xo matter how choice the food-stuffs used, careless season- ing loaves the cooked dish flat and un- interesting. Naturally, tastes differ widely, but the essential point to keep in mind is the nccfesslty of choosing a seasoning that will bring out and enhance the flavor of materials used. Salt, sugar, pepper, and various spices are always at hand, and the clever use of them is the art of cooking. Salt is necessary in nearly every dish prepared. Desserts, candies and sweet of all k.inds gain in flavor it cleverly salted. Any combination containing milk or cream requires salt. A few grains oc salt added to coffee improves the beverage. Inadequate salting is the cause of many tasteless dishes. Sugar Improves Meats Sugar is another everyday seasoning that works ivouders when judiciously used. Unless vegetables are fresh from the garden a little sugar is need- ed to restore their natural gweetuess. A bit of susr'ar rubbed into the roast con- tributes gieaily to its richness and flavor. Ail dressings or sauces con- taining lemon juice or vinegar require a little sugar to emphasize the acid. Both sugar and salt are helpful in blending several flavors into a smooth, perfect combination. Highly spiced sauces and baked-stuffs are dependent on skillful sensoniug with salt and sugar. The streusth of spicos and salts varies. Those which have been ex- posed to th« air lose much of their savoriness. Also, some food.=i absorb more seasonings than others. Sunday School Lesson Lesson X. â€" December 3. â€" Paul in Ephesus.â€" Acts 19:8-20. GOLDEN TEXT.â€" Blessed are they that have been persecuted for right- eousness' sake. - Matt. 5:U. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Time.â€" Paul's three years at Ephe- sus, A.D. 53-ri6. Paul's three months in Greece ami journey to .Icrusalem, A.D. 07. Place. â€" Ephesus. Corinth. Mace- donia. Troas. Miletus. Fruitful Preaching in Ephesus, Acts 19:8. "And he enlereu into the synagogue." It is both pathetic and heroic to see how Paul clung to his people, giving them the first chance at the gospel everywhere he went, though he was uniformly x-epulsed, as he had just been in Corinth. "And spake boldly for the space of three months." By this time it required great bcldness to proclaim Jesus the crucified as the Messiah of the Jews. "Reasoning and persuading as to the things concerning the kingdom of God." Paul was a logician, one of the most convincing the world has seen. "But when some were hardened and disobedient." They had been opposed to the gositel, but their opposition grew hard and permanent. "Speak- ing evil of the Way before the multi- tude." T.he early Christians called themselves "men of the Way," hav- ing reference to Christ's frequent ref- erence to Christianity as "the way of life" and to himself as "the Way, the Truth, and the Lite." These Ephesian Jews did not content them- selves •.vith failure to believe, they began to defame the Son of G^ be- fore the crowd. "He departed from them, and separated the disciples. The precious jewels of gospel truth were no longer to be wasted upon these Jewish brutes. "Reasoning daily in the school of Tyrannus. "This Tyrannus, otherwise unknown, was probably a teacher of philosophy or rhetoric, who occupied the apartment at other hours. "And this continued for the space of two years." Paul's stay in Ephe- sus was longer than that in any other city that he evangelized. Persever- ance in a good cause is sure to be re- warded in the end. "So that all they that dwelt in Asia." Not the contin- ent, but the Roman province of Asia, the three little countries on the west- ern seaboard of Asia Minor, Caria, Lydia, and Mysia, whose metropolis was Ephesus. "Heard the word of the Lord." Probably Paul did not confine his work to Ephesus, but went forth into the other cities of the province. Paul did not give up his own people' but continued to preach to them as he had opportunity, mak- ing converts among them as well as among the Greeks. THE SONS OF SCEVA, .\cts 19: il-16. "And God wrought special miracles by the hands of Paul." Al- though Sf. Paul believed that God, for the furtherance of the Gospel, did allow him to work 'powers' beyond the I range of human experience, and in ' which he humbly recog.uzed the work I of the Spirit granted to faith :id I I rayer, yet he by no means frequently 1 exercised these gifts, and never for his own relief or during the sick^iess of his dearest friends. "Inasmuch that unto the sick were carried away from his body handker- chiefs or aprons." "Paul did choose most simple things, lest any supersti- tion might arise by reason of the price or ix)inp; for he resolved en- tirely and fully to give all the glory to Christ." "AvA the diseases de- parted from them, and the evil spirits went out." We have just had another example of the exorcising of a demon by Paul in the case o*" the demoniac slave girl, and we are soon to have the most wonderful of all miracles worked by Paul, the raising to life of the dead "Eutyehus. "But ci-rtain also of the stroJing Jews." Then as now the Jews were f.,-..nd in uU parts of the world. "Ex- orcists." They were quack physi- cians, adopting any cure that struck the fiopular fancy. "Took upon them to name over them that had the evil spirits the name of the lx>rd Jesiis." "Took upon them" implies audacity, iniimdence, unholy daring. "Saying, 1 adjui-e you by Jesus whom Paul pieachoth." "Thoy heard what Paul -aid and treated "his words as a magic charm or spell to drive the evil spirits out. . "And there were seven sons of one Sceva, a Jew." Only two of the seven are mentioned as attacked by the evil spirit, and probably the other five were not present, but all seven j'^'ned in the evil practice. "A chief priest, who did this." Probably at some time this Sceva had been head of one of the twenty-four courses of priests who ministered by turns in. the temple, and were called chief priests. "And the evil spirit answered." Be- piied to thtir incantation. "And <aid unto them Jesas I know, and Paul I know; but who are ye?" The evil spirit knew that Je.ius had the power t cast out devils, and that to Paul the same power had been ganted by Jesus; but asked sharply, "Who are ye that ye dare adjure devil.s, by Jesus the Son of the living God, as if ye were endowed with an apostolical right to expel devils'.'" "And the man in whom the jvil spirit was leaped on them, and mas- tered both of them, and prev;iilcd against them." The extraordinary strength of the demoniacs, iikcj our insane, wheii the fit was on them, is iilustrateii in t!ie <:a'ye of the Garar- ene demoniacs. Matt. 8:28; Luke 8: 20-30. "So that tliey fled out of that house naked and wounded." "Gener- ally, in the New Testament, the word naked refers to :-. partial, rather than an entire, destitution of clothing. THE GREAT BONFIRE, Acts 19: 20:38. "And this became known to all, both Jews and Greeks, that dwelt at Ephesus." Any supernatural oc- currence is quickly spread abroad. "And fear fell upon them all. and the name of the Lord was magnified." It was made verj- plain 'ooth that the power of Jesua was great and that it was perilous in the extreme to do disrespect to that power. "Many of them that had believed came, confessing, and declaring their deeds." "The natural effect of such an occurrence was to induce a horror of magicial arts and the like. "And not a few of them that prac- tised magical arts brought their books together." ''And buried them in the sight of all." It was like the great Bonfire of Vanities in *:he Square of St. Mark in Florence, when, under the powerful preaching of Savonarola, rich women brought their costly dresses and finery, artist3 their most valued pictures, musicians their instruments, wealthy men their most precious jewels, and tossed them into the flames as a sacrifice to the Deity and a token of their repentance for their sins. ''And they counted the price of them, and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver." The total amounted to from ?50,000 to 1100.- 000 â€" a considerable sum, as such books were very expensive. "So mightilygrew the word of the Lord and prevailed." "It was not a mere skulking creeping progress; it was not a mere gradual acceptance, by one and another, of a religion commending itself to the hearts and minds of men: it was, for once, a mighty growth of the Word. rMj0'jrM.£rjtrM'jrsr40^M:^ \ COMMENTS EVENTS AROUND THE DIAL By AUSTIN MORAN Heiress Has to Wait For Grand Piano Toronto. â€" Violet Rita Mei, youth tu! Toronto music student and teach- er, can't have a grand piano bought withi money inherited from her father's estate until she is 21. So Chief Justice H. E. Rose decilei in Osgoode Hall recently. Although Miss Mel will inherit $50,000 from the estate of her father. and the "boudoir grand" which she wants tor her studio wou'd cost only $1,400. she must wait another three years. Executors of the estate were in- clined to favor the purchase of the "boudoir grand," but the attorney for ofTicial guardiaiwjpposed It. .} Car Fare Reduced In Fort William Fort William.â€" Five cent fares are now in effect on the Fort Wll'iam street railway system, replacing the former tare ot seven cents cash or four tor 25 cents. City Council decid- ed the reduced rate would be in ef- fect tentatively until tlie end of the year Weather Suits Curlers Waterloo. Ont.â€" The cold »nap may not be welcome in :no3t places, but the Waterloo curlers are all tor it. They have the earliest curling on re- cord, as a re.su!f of Jack Frost's activities." British Indorse Short Week Cambridge, Eng. â€" Tlie 4()-hour week found another supporter when Cambridge Council recently by un- animous vote declared that proposals tor a 40-hour week should receive con.'iideratlon by the Association of M'i:iicipal Corporations. Nottingham Counoil haa already urged disouss'on ot thp proposals. A Smile A father asked his son what made him lie In bed so long. "I am kept busy," said the son, "in hearing counsel every morning. Indus- try advises me to gel up; sloth to lie still. And they e've 20 reasons tor and against. It Is m.v part to hear what is said on both sides, and by the time the case is over, dinner is ready." 1 \ They Were Doing Their Part M Yeare .4go The Lonibardos â€" Guy and Carmen â€" had organized a boys' band a. id wore playing for soldiers camped at London, Ontario. Big Freddy Miller was a private In the army on this side. Evan Evans was in the British Royal Marine Artillery, attached to thi French Army in the anti-aircraft section. Niue-year-old iJate Smith was singing for disabled soldierg In Wash' ington, D.C. "Yours Truly" Little Jack Little, though a volunteer, had been drafted to play t'ao piano for the entertainment of gobs la a Great Lakes training station. Bing Crosby was enlisted in the Spokane (Wash.) High School's Stud- ent Army Training Corps. Jacques Fray, ot the Fray and Braggiott; piano team, was on the stalt ot General Jourand at the French War Offlce. Colonel Stoopnagle was in the C.S. Naval Reserve. Gracie Allen's broiher was the kid with the drum . ' â- 'â- } :ne. • •«•»« Those BoswelLs Keep Rollln' Along The Boswel! Sistersâ€"Commie, Martha and Vetâ€" have returned to -Vew Vork after a triumphant visit to the scene ot their struggling start in Hol'.y. >vood. A twist of Fate and the twist of milllocg ot radio dials throughout th« country probably were responsible for the fact that the Boswells. while tak- ing a five weeks' rest on the West Coast, were asked to Interrupt their vacation to appear In the important Constance Bennett motion picture, â- â- -Moulin Rouge", several years after they had made a futile attempt to crash the gates of Hollywood's studios. This time the order was reversed . . they were summoned. -^ Vallee's Singing Is Praised. Deems Taylor, writer of two operas for the Metropolitan Opera Com- pany and regarded as one of America's outstanding music critics, thlnki that many stars of the opera and the concert stage could take iessons m enunciation from Rudy Vallee. Taylor spoke in praise of the radio singer during his fourth anniversary or continuous broadcasting, and declared people who are scornful of '^JJ'^^^^f shouldn't direct their resentment against Vallee, but against hl« oi.OOO imitators. • ••••• Studio Pick-l'ps. John McCormack takes no chances on forgettiag a line when he broaa- casts . . . he has the words before him in a little black book â- ..1.-^^^',°^ "i'^® Penner" . . . that's what a local progrim sponsor is •ooking tor. They Just can't seem to make up their minds what they want on the program, but to start searching tor a Penner In this town. . . well, us rather ridicuSous . . . no . . .? ^•o„i.?^^^'l "^i'^° '* *'°® <*' radio's most liberal benefactors contributing weekly to former vaudeville associates fallen on evil ways. snn-r'M« Li^^?'?u''5-^*" ^^^ '''''"«" '•'^« "^"'^^ a°<l music to over 26» ^ongs, his biggest hit being "It Ain't Gonna Rain Xo More " "IN THE AIR'' Kadio's Alf-Star Presentations »i»»tt«>» j f *-t WAVE lOJNeTHS Stauoo C&NQ, Toronto ., 'JFCF, Montreal .... CFCH. North Hay U CKCO. Chatham ..!!! Toronto Uontreal ..... Waterloo ^ .^ Turonto UamUtOD .... Ottawa _..., HamlltCD .... Preston Metres . 201 , 231 >. 322 . . 237 . 436 .. 411 » 466 . . 311 K. 340 v. 4T5 341 Wlndsor-LondOD 565 3E7 ?08 2Tj 281 S49 Si* Zi3 45: 345 543 379 261 303 384 400 423 447 280 JFRB. CKAC JKCR. CKCT. â- -•UilU •JRCO, CKOa CKPC. CKLVV CPRY, Toronto .. KDKA. Pittsburg „.,., K.\10X, St Louli ...:. KYW, Chicago .,' vv.iBC New â- '!£ „„. 'VBijil. Chicago , WDEN. Buttalo .,^^V. WEAF, New rorli ..»., VV3NR, Chicago WGR, BuCfalo „, WUY, Scheneetadv ^^. WHAil, Rochestar VVKBVV, Buffalo , ^.„. VVJZ, ^few York ,. WJR, Detroit ^ WLW, ClnclnnaU ...,.., WMAQ. Chicago «„. WTAM. Cleveland ... These progr.Tnis ire aub.loct ,, Akhout nonce. THUSSOAT. BsctaTu Standu-tl Time. P.il. 8.00 â€" Rudy VaUee , Captain Diamond ....^.. 3.30 â€" Harlem Sereuad* .... 9.00 â€" Grenadiers ^, WJA3 Dedication .... Show Boat 3.30â€" Dramatic Guild ...... 10.00â€" WlUard Robins--- „.. Paul Whireman ...... rBXDAT. 8.00â€" Rosarlo Hoiirdon ...m 8.30 â€" Jimmle Johnson ...... March of Time ...... S.OOâ€" Fred Allen ..,«.. Xrvln S. Cobb 9.30 â€" Gems from Lyric* ... Football Show Victor Young's Orcheal lO.uO â€" (Msen ana Johnson .... First NIghter 10.39 â€" Lum and Abner 8ATUSDAT. Kljo- Cyclea 1U3U 600 930 I21U 650 Via &'45 96U 890 1010 iOlO 930 o40 340 930 1090 1020 860 770 300 380 870 Sou 790 1150 14811 ;6o 750 700 670 1070 . . . . cncr W JZ .W.CFR3 ....CKCi: -..CFKB ...WBEN ....CFRB ....CFRB ....CRCT ....CRCl . ...CKNC WOK ..,WBEN . .WKBW CRCT WGR ra.WBEN , _WKtiW ...WfctEN .. .WBEN 6.00â€" ileei tho .Artist ... 8.00â€" "K-7" 8.30 â€" Bridge* of furl* ... 9.00 â€" Triple Bur-X Day* Baron Muni.'bausen . 9.30 â€" Leo Relsman ....... Singing String* .... 10.00 â€" Datj.jlnij Party ..... 10.30 â€" George Jessel 11.00â€" Vancouver Frollo • SVirSAT. tooâ€" r.roadwny Melody . Gens Arnold ..CPRM ..WBEN ...CRiJT ...CFRB , .WBE.N ..WBEN ,>.CKNC . . .CRCT ...CFRB . .-CP.CT .CFRU , WBEN C.30 â€" Hollywood Show CFRB 3.00 â€" Philharmonic Orchestra ..CFRB Opera Concert CRCT 4.30 â€" Hoover Sentinels CRCT 6.00 â€" Roses and Drums WKBW U.30 â€" Crumlt and Sanderson ....WGH 7.30 â€" Joe Penner WJZ 8.00 â€" Jimmle Durante .. . ~. .. . . .CRCT Freddie Rich WGR J. 00â€" Seven St.ir Revue ... WGR 9.30â€" Album of Music CRCT 10.00â€" Jack Bennv . . .. ^ . . WKE.N Sunday Hour CrCN'O 11.00â€" Fireside H-"ir CRCT HOKSAT , S.OO â€" Syiup Symohorilos Cl''RB Blackfoot Trails ...... ..^ ... CKNO 3.30â€" Bing Crosby ...WiJR I Canadlanettes .......CRCT 1 9.00â€" ^\. & P. Gypsies ...W.HEM Gaiety and Romance »<..... CKCT 9.30â€" Big Show CFRH Ship of Joy .....WBEN 10.00 â€" Contented Hour CRCT Wayne Kins WKBW TtTESDATT. i.Ou â€" Cr-jnili and Sanderson ...WBlSN 8.30 â€" Wriglev Hour CFRB Wayne liing ......... ... . . WBBM 9.00 â€" Een Bernie WBEN California lleli les CFRB SI.3Uâ€" Nino Martin) CFRH Don Yorhees Orchestra . . Wi^En 10.00 â€" Legend of America CFRB Lives at Stalce WBEN 1100 â€" Moonlight on i\iciflo . . . . CRCl WEDKZiSDAY. S.auâ€"Ben Lahr CKCI 8.30â€" .\lbert Spalding CFRJI Waltz Time CHC1 - 9.00â€" One Hour With You CRC» 9.30â€" Burns and Allen WKBVI Leo Reisman WBEM 10.00 â€" Ortiz Tirarto ^...CRCI Corn Cob Club . . .« w.... WBEN Harry RIchraan WKOW BULOV.\ correct t;_.e d.iily over St*^ Uons CKCTâ€" CKAC. .J Scott-Paine Sets New World's Mark New York. â€" A special cable from London credits Hubert Scott-Pain* with establishing a new unofficial world's record for a slngle-euginaJ motorboat. He recently drove Mis* Britain III over a mile course oa Southa.-npton water at 102.105 mile* an hour against wind and tide. th« cable says. j Scott-Paine hininelf made the pr». vious record of 35. OS miles an hour at Poole in September after his return from -the United States, where h^ challenged un3lKâ- ce3S^tu!ly tor tW Harmsworth Trophy. With a mechanic aboard, ScOtk Paine made Ave runj over a mca*< ured statute mile, .netting the r*l cord on the last run "Arc you married?" ".No. Just iui» lurti'.'v dlscoi'iei'ted I MUTT AND JEFF By BUD FISHER It Had a Nick in the Mud Guard All Rightl