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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-1-5, Page 7-1,111R1.1k-,Tkf,, Hints or Busy Housekeepers. Ree-Ipee and Other Valuable Intormatio* et Particular Ineereat to Women Polka, Ainfaimii.A.namormalow rr WITH CORN MEAL. Corn Meal Dodgers. --Two Mips ire whiee corn meal, One tableapoonul sager, tyke eggs, one tea- spooeful butter or lard, hall teaa -spoonful salt, three tablespoonfuls rich milk, boiling wa,tee. Mix an d sift corn meal, salt and sugar; add suffieient boiling water to wet the meal, but not to make it soft; add inettee arid milk; when eold add the yolks beaten very light; then eut and fold in the whites beaten stiff. The hatter should drop readily from the spoon, but not thin, enough pour nor stiR enough to be railk, Aftee boiling riase in two waters, add bluing to the last water. Ironing flinte-While ironing stand on. piece of old carpet or folded -comfort and, the feet will not get so tired. Ironed Clothes.—Stretch a wire line across your clothes closets and across your kitchen; purchase a. lot ef coat hangers On ironing day put the baby's freshly ironed pet- ticeats on a peat hanger and a drees the same length over it, and hang it. en the wire. In irening grown folks' clothes. do the same scraped Irma./ the bowl. Shape m way, and push them along the- wtre oval eakes, and lay in a hiSsing ht, t)lit a Your way. When threugh well greased dripping pani n, and ireng remove and hang in your hake in a very hot oven until brown elesets en the w're' whieh 14 nd puffed s split, butter and serve space saver and Prevents rumpling, with itied milt perk with eream and ye" have Ce4111P1et "41.4t With - Sallee, out hunting out the two garments. Rice Corn Caltes.—Three-fourths 1t °se se'ves se elan.V handlings ef CU) corn meal, one cup white ilonr, the clothee, fear teaSpOontais ualcmg PoWder, fow tableepoonfule sager, oue tea - Obit salt, elle cup thin cream ne.tableapoonfal melted ...el sift the dry hu-. roam slowly, beat- ing continually, add melted butter and eggs beaten very light. Pour mixture into a shallow well but- tered pan and bake 20 minutes in a hot oven, Spieler Corn Coke.---Three-fourtlis Mill corn meal, fourth eon flour, two tablespoonfuls auger, eine tea- spoonful salt, one teaspeonful soda, half eup sweet railk, one egg well beaten, half cup eour milk, two tablespoonfuls melted butter, half eup sweet milk. Sift together, corn =eel, flour. sugar'salt and zotia, Add half cup sweet milk and egg well beaten. Add sour milk aud butter, Mix thoronghly and pour into well buttered hot spider. Pour half eup sweet milk carefully over the top of (earn cake. Coek 10 minutes on top of range and ah) minutes in the oven, Corn Meal Sponge Muffins.—Half CU p coifl meal, one eup scalded unit., one tablespeonful butter, half alum to every pound of flour. toaspoouuI salt, four tablespoon- Matting may be cleaned with salt fills sugar, one-fourth cup flour/ water, applied with a email 'brush. WORTH KNOWING. Toast water is a. soothing eoatl healing drink, during broneliitie. Cheap elateu rteat enn be eery - ed palatably in stews and ero- quottes. After trimmiog, turn the wiele ef A lamp below the burner or the oil will eeze. A eick room should never be made thOrOutchfare or gathering place for the family. Whenever the theoat beemmes ir- ritated at gargle of salt water is most exeellent, Mud stains ean be removed from, black eloth by rubbing them with a raw potato, One teaspoonful of lemon juice in a small etip of Meek coffee will hehp a bilious heath/elle. A. boiled egg whieh is done and driee quickly au the shell when taken from the water is fresh. Dried lemon peel sprinkled over coals will destroy any disagreeable ()dor about the heuse. Paperhanger's paste is made by adding a teaspoonful of powdered THE SUNDAY SCHOOL two tablespoonfuls leaking powder, two eggs. Add corn meal to scald- eal milk, add butter and salt, let cook until thickened; cool; add a and eggs beaten very light, sifted with baking powder; - minutes. Pour into hot but - red iron gem cups and bake 20 minutes in het oVen. "Ret,e's"' Corn Meal Griddle Cakes.—Two cups corn meal, one cup flour, two eggs well beaten, one teaspoonful salt, one and a, half teaspoonfuls soda, two and a half maps buttermilk or loppered milk. Mix arid' sift corn meal, flour and ealt, add eggs Mix well. Dissolve soda in milk; 'add to first mixture. Beat thoroughly and fry at once. If allowed to stand too long mix - lure thickens; may be -thinned by adding More milk, The sour milk n-iust be rich. Buttermilk is best or this purpose. Dainty Spoon Corn Cake.-e0ne- !fourth cup' corn meal, one tea- spoonful butter, two teaspoonfuls .tsugar, one-half. teaspoonful 'salt, three ' eggs, two cups scalded milk. Stir meal into scalded milk, add nalf and let cook until mixture is slightly thickened, add butter and sugar; add yolk e beaten very, light- ly, lastly cut and fold in the whites of eggs beaten stiff. Pour into but- tered pudding dish, bake thirty' laintites in hot oven. Serve from baking ,dish with Appall. Southern Spoon Corn Bread.— POUT two pips boiling Water- over one cup corn meal, cook five min- utes, stirring -continually. Add one tablespoopful butter, two eggs well beaten, orie cup milk, one teaspoon - rill salt; beat thoroughly, pour in- to well well greased baking dish and bake thirty-five minutes in hot even. Serve from the dish in which " is baked. , Rinse ami dry thoroughly. If the handle of the spoon used for basting meats and fowls be bent elose to the bowl of the spoon it will rtdip up" easily. " If you will bend the point of your . . . paring knife you will find it much easier to remove eyes from pota- toes, pines.pples, etc. If a little baking powder is sift- ed with the flour of which pie crust is .maele it will be more healthful and require less‘ shortening. Moat efficient and eerviceable dust cloths may be made from stockings that are no longer mend- able by splitting and sewing to- gether. ' To remove a glass stopper which has become fixed in 'a -bottle plunge the bottle into hot water for a short time. The glass will expand and release the stopper.e To make soap meat balls, cooked' soup -meat, cold boiled peita- toes and onions in the feed chop- per, add veinier' and salt to taste, form into balls, preSs fiat and fry brown. Keep gelatine covered :when you are soaking it for a sweet; a .piece. of glass makes an excellent cover, . and quite 'prevenes any dust or germs settling oe this tempting sur- -face. , a convenient spot,in the kit- ehen keep a box of new wood tooth- picks fell- use in testing bread 'a,nel cake when baking. The old way of using a broom straw is, to say the least, unsanitsary,- - When boiling something which boils over easily, place -a stick of wood across the top of tile vessel, and it sinanly can't boil over try it and see. Exceptionally large vessels use two sticks. , If you object to the thick, hard crust on baked potatoes', put a dish NTERNATIONAroLESSON', 4A,N.8. • """•-• Chapter 13, Verse 1. Jer000ara ,LIKE TO WALK was standing by the altare-Ile was himself officiating as priest. 2. Re cried against the altar— Hi said nothing about the other foeins and signs of religious degen- eracy. 'Who he was is pot reeord- ed, perhaps because his name had been forgott,en after the lapse a so Lefssoni tJerivolTszi ilai"keliSinid3olsimst:nray vy017.a13,riltsapheprwovaasi theeomniin'sgt or elite o p, . g from across the bolder, and, by de Pouncing the altar, showing the di- vine diefavor against the entire new system of worship established by Jerobeam. Josiah—For the fulfillment of this, read 2 'Kings 23. 15-20, It is unlike the 'regular method of He- brew prophecy to mention a. name in this way. The theory is that this name was added !now yeare after, when the prophecy had come to ful- fillment. 12. 25 to 13., 6. Gohlon Text, '11xod. 24). 4. Verse 25. Pennel—The name means "face of God," from Gen. 32. 20. The plaee is connected his- torically with the. three Dames of Man lives to, A eerthe Baas° -Thla FaueY , " ay not be o grave moment," said a n up man,. but I would tatt e know whY smallboYs n mud puddles. "1, don't refer now to the boy in . rubber boots; his motives in 'wad- ing m puddles and in deeper water can understand. He is proud a his waterProof boots and he likes to surfeit himself with the delightful consciousness and proof that they are waterpreof ; be likes to brave and p!,48 uoseithed the perils of the deep watere of the gutters after a Gideon, Jaceb, and Jeroboam. Its heavy ram; though with b ft t ""ls --rs- Few people seem to be aware, says chief feature was a. strong tower boots anyway he is likely to overdo (Judg, 5-17), and it was this that this a little to keep on trying to the Queen' thtnt othnern"nexT;IriotniT remony wasrto Jeroboam rebuilt. Bis purpose. in see how deep he can go till at last of the an !wan church which , ointing o the days the enema Meta s, And in Ear, , land, before the :Kerman -conquest, the term used was ''‘liallowing," or nsecration; rather than that of eoronation. But from old records it seems that the ceremony as then per,form- ed at Winchester was in all eseete- tials the same as that which pow takes place in Westminster Abbey. . „ g e doing so was to strengthen himself e step a into a place ad, little deeper ped the pruning policy of the Re- . against a possible invasion from than the. reet and gets his hoots fill. formers the desert trilees on the east. Hence ate ampressive ri., 26. Row will the kingdOna return , can un erstand the eY The laet corooation at which eve —Be apparently forgot, or placed . ., , „ t , . eryWorldeere and bis rubber boots but I don't old gl (my was dal), little rehartee in, the promises quite see enrougn me ranee, for performed was that of King G eo r go. AN A3,s1.11UPTic REutEss. xtreme Care 'taken of Girl 'Who Will Rave $24,000,000 Betty Tanner, daughter a John S. Tanner, artiet, and grandfather f Abraham Arehilsald Aodersou, in, being, reared in a thorotiFely autiseptie manner in Log Angeles, Cal, It is most eeeeptial 014; nhe wginauhoud, hecause she will inherit fortune et $25,000,000. r‘stal d b tual and gorgeeas pagentriee, (I. Kings 11. 3$). A fear aero5e in ,ertyinwgileernSht:PhPainsgleiialthPeurdsdhleoesf::: bivarii.,i4t, iiti:okeropisian,ciong taueeroarownaataico: ' e ., , , t. , , , WhiCh Jehovah had ntade to hina his heart that his people, attract- Maybe, here leo it 15 ueeteuee be ereceseioa pf peers, tae neve strew- ed by the glories, of the nouse ot likee to take risks, or perhaps it is ' or scattered flowers and the chale , . jehevalt at Jerusalem (27), might beeauee ef his innate defiance of 'l(nge of the ehampion of Erigla at last, from, going three times a rule and convention, was included in the ceremony. But year to the feasts, turn. again un- "A hooch of small boys witl, ne ,_ . - '. ° ' f Will' IV . to . . . Rehoboam, king of Jaclah. after. another try junaptag over aQtuetehne avoireetno;eitaioaasado Ki n g iaETiwar.de Ills fear was also Personal, as well Puddle to see if they eau clear it, tliese Old euetome were for valj°°*. apes 0--pplotritoitiiren,er sato li Qv btohbaota, mif,ttee kAlticpwre4sueyntth,inhgowzoe:;t, csohnets tioeredsnoit. taoudeotinheend:zewritohii4lattehor eo4n:eiscisParce retreons emitted. fiiinseff might be the 'victim of some laves She is. Yerse4 Only IA ant- water, But that deesu3 disturb ef'"d''aelevenvainrtre' rulesttte4giairdemet4117- treacherons assault sueh as was sciaties, EverYthing she eats 0 'he; en the Contrary he rather eo' dor, The dean and el441.tt,ur made upeu Ishhosheth (2 Sam. 4. drink, touches or ainella iasirthoshro- rumaioys tnhgat,o7Pewrai:riinceicoanthdrotuhgehn ,you wes,tieinster. elafea the right to 7)). oughlY sterilized before it is Put may see the bunch wand tip by all struet the seyereign in the duties broke the eeeeed eommandment breathes in her leedroem is filter 'atter. Why do they do this, get- Qnfattihein4 44147 th”eserrevgiaelefa n:rde °Lir ver or: 20. made two ea -Ives of g,014..orwe, near her.. Even the °oder Pretense of lielPing the peo- ed. The toys she Plays with are ting their almee wet and muddy and en into their eus,thdy... pie to keep the fir3t,'" EIS Xact- antiseptic, and -if she Nvants to getting them wet eausing them to According to old recorda B100 ed ,e0 relieve the people of the her- aud is put before lier. Her plate ef eausing their :nether° care alld by the royal apothecarte7 T ore- tive deepite his plea that he wish,- make nInd Pies/ why, aritheeptic wear out the sooner, to say nothiiig ir„ paid ear, the aueinting 0 den of thin lone" journeys to J'erte. books are fumigated and she has Zta°rerkLogesy oralierha;hseite8u4 * ehairs are of interest., That salmi, is evident in aket he Raid in been taught to study 'the thermeme King is the chair of Edward Ids heart (20). nefiti. aseentlaue. eter, to be aesureel that when she, slush through "mud Puddles, and fornfeseor used by every Brit - and persena- ,afety were Ida firA oes out for a. walk or a ride the that matter at!. de -some older tiet, ereler ail his outward aetie ditien, 41:bieirisketorn;eaiki wrbigebtnt ailreavde 0, ovesroixl-vorweligltiii ;len: thetimeeivf.e.170.: needs of his people, the ahrowd da^ BELGIUM'S DBUNK.UIDS. en ich occasion, Beneath 'It la varies in behalf of the religions a-----4.----- gardlees of the pools of water en to step in, thern deliberately if the cone,ern. are eompeile,4 to „ae. tompera,ture ia adapted to b,er con- PI*, t- ward II. It is of oak, and la re - the stone of destiny, an the sidewalk. In fact, am likely vices of worldly policy, ent relic which came original - Behold thy gods—Doutitless he Ono DrInhing PI to V not too deep, so that I may go had no desire to establish an idols- Thirty-four People the, water over my rubbers to wet trona system. He scorns to have " been a believer in a, personae aetie Statistics just published sliow my feet. I like to slaeh ahead un- vity of Jehovah. The calves, in, hat there are in Belgium 211,617 Ishia:1471e<littlaenfdreereaaellerionluIdofiinngd tebnia. young bulls. would servo as syrnbols 'estauduets'," '°r Places where inyment. And 1 gueee it is a sense and rernindere of the strength of drink is sold., averaging one such te<iheifrm?rodm t,heanetal ixvi esreet PcoprhbaypsAeaorpoene ants. Every to veesr,eyryyetahlir2t)0,04:gor :114e6h0:81:ciots.sf ip;,f.patlheoiarssStwtor:ritkitinonlletatirl:trapoliityglmleotrtbdos tyaptimutid: in the wilderness. They would illinesse° are °ceasi*ned by hardly come from jerehoaants Tose. of drink, 2,000 of which result in (use:silt alNive muck twoatt:rkebet1-3,ecanriegketainnd. elence in Egypt, as some suppose death. There are from 000,000 toe state ey intemperance. the thing he likes host about it is were alive. The two images were its defiant unfettefed freedom." alike and represented, of course, Fifty Per cent, of the suicides only one God. They were really in- and seventy-five Per cent. ef the — tended to encourage the worship of cases of imprisonment ean be at- SENTENCE SERMON& Jehovah, the sin of the king being fitrviebuyteedarstoth:leceenlisoili.mptionn towfenatyi-- pacemakers are seldom peace. the substitution qf political expedi- ency for faith in God, eohol has increased fifty-four per makers. - - 29. Beth-el—An ancient sanctu- elit'" is Thheeldrebye°trhde 81;1.70,11 1:1instlaginoi *maits;sereinasgyitm.aking ragrrY-and bard ary of the Israelites, connected with et& the names of Abraham and Jacob, bSeivinryg,1-6vit_ah 211,6dotO)iningheaxbeietannetnst, tbhiel :ie.., Shrinking from suffering May be ileeing,from strength. and with the capture of Ai (Josh. ness—or an average of one to every The, coldblooded are hotheaded 7 and 8). The importance of this when you hit their pride, shrine increased with the advance sixteen inhabitants. inasmiech as the bulls worshipperi 800,000 beggare brought to that to without getting his feet wet, but Repentance, as a habit would of the' northern kingdona reaching the zenith of its greatness under tr,owN UP. keep one turning in a circle. Thera can be no bending in wor- Jeroboam II when it is called "a kiogdonf, (Annna 7. 13). was not going to be dictated to any Men miss happitess because they Dan—As Beth -el was at one end longer by his wife", so when he went eeek goods instead of the good. vi he home at noon he called out' CniPeri- Suffering is no proof of sin but kingdom, only twelve miles t -i acrosalem, so Dan was at the euslY to the servant "Laura I sin is always Prophetic of suffering. it ha,d, been, from earliest Laura!" s It takes' more 'than ability to ere times, Meekley came out of the ate wealth to qualify 'you to dis- times, the seat of a chapelry and enhed served by; the lineal descend- kitchen- pense it. ants of Meses in -unbroken succes- "What do yon want with Laura'?" .This is always an ill ,Nrarld to sione, It does.' not .reaPpea,r in the she asked. btheoasert who nurse infection, in .the dBaibdie(laficteirrigtshei5in.N2'40s)i.,"ItosfIliesiatohray- "IMeweaknItY Ystoauggetreedt'inbdxeltrsbtraancS,dmill:,-% It is a b,acl -thing to feel stirred thereafter is obicare, dam"„e-and he toped , his breast Over wrong and riot' stt,ir- yourself dram tically thee, I ani the en- toright ht it: a - g fa tshi: r—eligit- reT?u.itlehdisinthainigewbeercianrag eo gineer of this establishment,' that It's easier to talk ahoufdying for Meekly made up his mind that he ship without „stooping in sereiee. royal house and sanctuary of the ious ideals and worship of Israel, a I aril—P the right than to . get busy living Comes in for the sterne,st reproba- Joseph. I want you' to understand It is no iiSe sighing to ben sun if gradual eleit.enenAey whieh at length ,,on, you are;are yen? Well, aright. tion on the Part of the Prophets that i'—and she looked dangerons you are not burning the little 'lamp particularly Amos and Hosea: —"I am the boiler that might blow you have. f`The whole subsequent history is up an. pi ch the engin ei orer - It s no use praying to lie the best best intentions a church --and the steam escaping, Joseph?" to be divorced from sine a record of the mode by which, with to the next street. Do you hear ed from teniPtation unless -Yen want nation 'ixtay corrunted." Joseph heard, and quickly got out More reforms have 13eon. prevent , ,31. Houses of high places -ioth of the way, - 'einidinhe3a' ifaitieenadnsa-wollaa° pdieeretea,ndtehcianth,ehh31. the Clanaanites and early Israelites foes who did not want them at all used to worship on hilltops, pro - supposed dwelling Place of Jcila- Pat had been at work for thr e heis WCVrthleSS 6r he- would have ' DREW THE LINE. The humble man never believes bably ,a's bringing them nearer the, F -ah. Though the law nre,seaebeel a days diggueg a well, enc. asthe nothing being humble about. of cold water -in the oven when they restricted form of worship, the use foreinan wanted .it finished within Ireland. ANS FOR 111LANDAllINt, wakening of China 11m, Brought, • Great Changes. The reforming of the pottical as - peat ot China has brought with it some changee in social conditions and it seeme as though many more were to follow. Among those who have felt these changed conditions are tho mandarins, whetse altered official routine is des6ribed by the North China Daily News. The old dreamy days when a. mandarin spent hours in dolce far 3aiente„ "a demigod amid subservient crowds, delighting himself with the philo- sophy and poetry of his land," are all gone since the introduction of telegraph, telephone and railways. The national awakening, bring- ing with it the teorganization,of the army, the introduction of occiden- tal sanitary systems, of modern prisons, and ether reforms, has made mandarin life not what it nee was. Now that official has to raise regiments of modern drill- ed soldiers and 'find the money t� equip and maintain them.; has to build expensive' barracks and hos- pitals, erect model prisons, and must refrain from old time punish- ments and find the money for all these bothersome novelties. He is bombarded ' with telegrams, from Peking and has to withstand at- tacks by the reforro. party and the free press. Poppy growing is forbidden, but he must compel the teluctant agri- culturist to raise eotton and other products. Licensed -gambling has been suliPressed, but he must raise the revenue thus lost by increasing the tax on salt and other necessi- ties. This uses riots, an he must put these down. The enraged and harried taepayers no longer are in fear of the once revered mandarin, and they do not hesitate to attack his person vvhen he ap- pears on the streets. It requires the wisdom of a Confucius for a mandarin to maintain his dignity under the new order of things. h. , you ,:tbr is leeyetntb:c,)i,tphre,,,etai,..;:den.ga '„ro, boudoir01111:i,enljetejn t: 1t',393oil,,I:li'ah: - 'cl°n almos eOla d itiekraw Boit oltY'e lh a4 Lhe eaa's , eke , a n _Jrake a 10 cent canare bdeoinc't"-initebliakt(O'cri,„ ai\clrl'hkeeeliiininoigstuthree fiofneshigairldl,Dolaticieesr oththeervemeaknhteollhaedlpPhrit)nraLlseI'td \Pvaa.9t gaent: I-ILCoi CAL- -A:-Hki Y of syrup one cupful brown sugar skin of the potato .oftcontinued the,tarne, o. Haze ting on tor 11 o clock, and Totyser, Wtll.e h'td tucd by various kiah e a -Leman s bulldog, Avas looking marl o res his fatherm on t Iles oonfuls vinegar, one Bathe chilblains in very - hot P said n CANDY. Iwo Et) tablespoonful butter ; 'boil until it. water, as hot as can be ,berne, and "P'fr snaps in watee. 'Tour on to a Vial' e para., , tercet- platter1;.q./YcY'Vtill. „ ee. sone , the DeuterOlio, :„Iesthotisia:Wes,. rea ,erobhani aeashaCting over the -eelee ,ot t e w len. .v r o said to binaself have siriolee„, . , Ile had. rest , was aboat'to e the ea- u , ' lake'req.-aim ewr-, ' '1644 nggs, as' haad •glaliced ari