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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-2-16, Page 2Hints for Busy Housekeepers, Ree lees and Other Valuable smote* of Particular ibirtvrest to Women vents. $NV BREADS., while boiling, stirring lightly, the n Snows Bread ---One pint wintes of the three ef''''ga beaten to rank, tale_hau euptut ct.a stiff froth. Flavor with variable one-helf teaspoonful of Crumb the -5tae cake by rubbing o tablesPOonful of butter, between the Palms f the hands, kne e, beaten bght, one level aria Plaee a generous laYer on hot- tableepeonfej of baking powder, tom of the baked erust; on top efl calel the milk- in a. doub/e. boiler, this Place a laYer of sliced bananas, ftir in the meal and let eook three with a sPrlukling of sugar oYer .Iwnrs, then heat in the ether ingre_ them; then ever these layers pour dients. Note that it is one table- -a' Be''-i4n 0 the nTePnred ereaind .9tanfel of baking powder, Turn again Place 4 14Yer Inant ftlizs ecaankde Into a -na,iciug dish suitable for the crumbs, layer Of b table apd 13„: forty Leander, ',cream; continue in this mannee an - Serve hot from the dish. Morning Breede-Peur one cup boilli-eg water into one eup of milk \seen eeol .stircake of eorre Itil the crust is fillet]. Two layers wake an excellent cane. Serve 'bile fresh or the crust gets soft id the taananas lose much 5.4 their Prensed yeast dissolved into two flavor. This cake is del -teems and tablespoonfuls of eold urer), rtiaT be served with or without tesspeonfel t5f salt. Add tlotir to \Thinned rearn. ;z soft dough; turn on knead- alsel knead 20 minutes, or , HOUSEHOLD HINTS, will am cling le board. Set ee for three hours, knead their I T° make P°41.tees white whe/1 ''-n-'43Ys Put in Leans, and let rise '.,1;eds they slunIld lie pared in cola water tor tww, or three houls. ene hour, Ileke forevelive minutes. Tvii4iNee ssv.i 1 1 Tille5o1 Isle) ret4hdre insonsipetileirle(rbicIsiaznet.1 witt°;"?a,lislPgins g7ostir eaolliltic;t1.0-1T1 is.'4'er311‘!)11.0g_ far lees treohle tiled to huskier with geI;othkee/Iptilo7fte bread at night, Bren Ilreatl—Foer cups of brownrms'eci e°14 in fted ilour two cups of slreet water bolero poormg hi the one em of etolasses, one teaspoon- 114Q 4iting °41 thread ful of eoda, tuie teaspoonful of salt. 11 - $"ti. t' ‘13,k / teeth and is prolific of *ore throats Ih n. or. Dissolve, soda in I ableSPoon and tr Lot water, then add to the molasses " itj .tep /nd ope of milk1a 44P113 cloth dinne1. in fine ashee eau of two cops of„ -;.or adamn eloth dipped in ocAra ill have the a3.4 -1O eireet. V bOOt5 WOnst, pOr with a eut lem until theroughly ziedv once er uring cold wea- ther Own' their make the bre per. Take toes, slice quarts wate add one-half eupftd of hair enPful of /aril, 3 cent ' 'worth Qf eempressed yeast el on half upful tit dry yeast ilk Water; fleur eugh to make a stiff batter. Set on back of stove and stir from bot- tom every hour. In two hours will be ready to knead clown. When ready to make into- loaves knead 'elI for twenty 'minutee. Make jbe large loaves. ladison Rolls.---Thesc rolls are teU worth the little extra time re- quired in making them. They can- not he excelled in their elelicious feathery lightness and flavor. One qnart of flour, two egg -yolks, one teaspoon of salt, tmerhalf.xint af huid yeast, three heaping, tea- sis one of sngar, pieee of butter size of an egg, two large white pota- tees, milk enough to make dough as ;eft as can be handled. Boil and mash potatoes; cream them into the butter, sugar, and eggs. Work - this smooth, add gradually the flour, then the yeast, and the milk- iest. Be careful and do not get the dough too soft. Knead until ntie at done in t O or sup vista- ed] in two water and IIE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, FEBRUARY n. Lesson VUL Elijah's Flight and Return, 1 Rings 18.41 to 19,21 Golileo Text, Isa. 40.31. Verse 41, The sound of aimed - ane -e ---The Greek Old Testament has he the suggestive words, 'the stird of the feet of the ragn- storm. All the evidence the prs- Phet had was the word of the Lord. "'Show thyself to Ahab, and I will send rain."' Faith was not difficult after the miraculous exhibition of jehovah's power in the sending of fire and the blotting out of the heatheoish priesthood. So Elijaa urges the king to renew his ex- haustedj vitality with food and drink, at his tent up en the slope of the mountain, before the expected downfall should make a, journey to Jezreel iinpractiealale 42. Elijah went up to the top a vLi e refre.5111-Tlent in his eagerness to see the hand of Jehovah dieplayed still further. The attitude be aesurnet \vas one of earnest prayer. 4.3. servant—Tradition say this was the widely of Zgireplieth•, on NVII0O3, he snatched from the - r aws of death. _ts•he sea was 05 couree the Mediterrenean from which rain would naturally sweep iu Six times the lad went up to the point from which, the sreat ex- pense' of water WaS clearly but each time saw nothing but what had appeared io the brassy sky, for three weary years, 46, The hand of Jehovah Elijah—That is, he w vial a divine impulse of rapyo-rtni xultation, which carried Wu» be. re the rapidly moving ehar,ict b even to the gates d the eit.y areel, where theking inaiutained palace, Ilere he halted, for he had no liking for cities and Maki a ily fled shelter in the neighbor - g ren thel a, nay ha,e a eed u • g to bed. This paI althy tiredness thes the pa uddu inflammatou 4,d the ey. Water will help te dull the pain, a weak solution of boric acid rays good for the cye. If you are, distressed Lo find that borne careless person has scratched t e new white paint with a match, ry rubbing the darkened surfac with part of a cut leinon. Glycerin as an application for scalds is most useful and should be applied immediately alter an acci- dent. Strips of linen or rag soak- ed in glycerin should be gently laid oter the affected pd.rt„ Fat skimmed from the water in which bacon or meat has been boiled sliculd be kept for frying or pas- try: Superfluous fat from joints ay be melted --while sweet -- and kept for frying purposes. To keep a skirt placket from tear- ing out at the bottom sew en a hook and eye at the extreme end of the placket, fasten and then -crush flat. This is a simple but very useful thing to know, as it saves many a stitch. Flannels may be washed by hay- lignt, put in a -well greased c.roc.k, ing boiled soap suds poured over .and place in a, warm oven to rise tor eight hours. *When well risen tirm on a floured bond and roll out an inch thick.. Cut with a medium sized biecut tin. Put rolls in a greased pan far enough apart to not touch; let rise netil light, which will require one hour ; bake P1 a cruiek oven. CAKES. Delicious Icing—juice each of four oranges, one can of sliced pineapple, one-half cup of red rasp- berry juice, two and one-half cups aug;tr, enough water to make two qltai•ts. Strain all and freeze. When nearly, frozen add beaten whites of three eggs. Stir in well. The sliced pineapple can be used for salad. There is no waste. 1Vhie Lincoln Cake.—One and one-half cups sugar, one-half eup butter; tweethieds eup• milk. two and one-half cups flour (sifted five times), four eggs (whit -es only, beaten stiff), two teaspoonfuls bak- ing powder, one -teaspoonful vanil- la; cream sugar and butter thor- oughly; add milk, then tlour re- Eerve one-half eup 'to mix...with bak- ing ,powderY, whites of eggs; baking powder with rerna,inder of flour .and lastly, flavoring. Fudge Filling — One and one-third cups of sugar' one-third cup mi r, one squ r „ sweetened ,chocolate, piece ,o t ter siz,e of an egg, ohe teaspoonful vanilla. Roil stigai‘, milk, choco- ate, and butter- Lintil it bubbles: Remove, srom the stoye, arid add va- spiretory muscles of the chest and e Dina, Beat to a cream, spread on throat ilat'6,action,and is', there - cake. Do ,,'t make filline until fe're. the 'best and •Lirznost,..„ natural, d them in a tub; in 20 minutes pour off the suds and pear in clean boil- ing water; pour off and on again more boiling water; squeeze the garments and stretch on line, press- ing water out as it settles down. Women who are addicted to nerv- ousness should avoid peppers, spic- es, eggs, too much meat, and high- ly seasoned sauces and dressings. Their diet shoulcl consist of fish, soup, eelery and lettuce. Both cel- ery and lettuce form an excellent food and tonic for the nerves. The tissue paper that you get parcels rolled up in should never be crumpled and thrown away, but carefully smoothed out rolled up and laid away in some drawer or handy place 'where you know where to find it when you need a nice, soft, clean piece of paper. JiNCOtRAGE THAT Y.,-1.1171si. Doctor Recommends "Gaping" for , Respiratory Organ'S. Dr. Emil laurizi, of Vien na, Aus- tria, in speaking of -diseases of the throat arid their :.remedies, said that ya,wriing had its great value. Yawning has recently been recom- mended, independently as a valu- able exercise for the resioiratory organs. "Accordinr g to D. Naegli, of the r UniveSitY of Teleuttioh,", smd Dr Bunzi, 'yawning brings all the re- politttions by the long famine. It would still be necessary in the div - hie plan for the swords of Jelin anti Flazael to fall upon the Baal - worshipping Itiests of Israelaand for Elisha to airry the reformatory wore s Lit iartner, There, is no re - corer of Elijah's fulfilling all of this mission, bet it came to be fulfilled, 11 oee way 5110 another, through his euccessor, 19. lie the tweifth—Illisha wee guidiee but 04e yoke, the oth- ers being in c..arge of ervant's. Cast his mantic upon hint—"It meant tot- ad,pt:cto ef Elieha, by Elijah te be hie spinetual on ", and `t, meant 15. diatinet can to the pro- phetic office." 20 Let me kiss my father and my mother—An exproaeion of the tenderness charaeteristie of the younger prophet, and pot an act a hesitation Elijah, in the wovds, Go back again, gives him full per- , mission, dieclaiming any other por- po,ee throwing upon him the mantle than simply to eummon him to a high duty, J. Took the :oxen, and slew there—A kind of burning of the beidges behind hiins- BI D coAnuNit DECORATED. Government Bess .1f041301, 10 Falliniar Figure. M. Reurr Poi, the famous bird- heriner of the. Toilleries, whom all paris knows and eitraires, has heen deem ated by the French Mintster of Agriculture. His daily "receptions" of his birds in the Tuilleriee form one of the most fascinating entertain- mente in Paris, and are always watched by hundreds of interested sightseers, M. Poi feeds his chirp- . floelt regularly' ever,v morning ti the delight of children an wa-up strangers. He has ver ppropriately been ealled the Sain Francis of the Tuilleries, and right ly so; for like the Saint of Assist he has only to eall the birds freers the trees wed they ily desvn -to Perel on his hand or his shoulder. 11 gives them the Dames which the A PORTUGUESE BULL FIGHT TIIEV DO NOT USI SR-ANIS/I METHODS l'eN' TlIE IUM Other AilltiSelltellfS Of eifiZellS Of the World's "l'Oungest ltepublics The Portuguese is essentially a pleasure -lover, 1 -Ie is not especial- ly devoted to the theatre but takes hispleaettree /Orteii in the same NV4i.,„y as the Spaniard, although his taete in regard to buil-fights is by no meens so sanguinary. In the Span- ish light gore is tee- predominant feature, and in the Portuguese it ie a display of elegant horseman- ship—the bull is never killed, The Bull Ring at Lisbon is eitn ated at the eietreme, end of the fam- ous Aveneda sli Liberdale, which was the scene of tbe most severe fighting between the Republican anayd, LIW15erbe °nTslili.: t troop.1g1-1t fete dtake place (and this is gerierally op a Sunday), the coneom se of teeple ellernigus -arid etranger aught- vell imaine that an intantlle re- volution bad W-. IM1 ttif, fOr from early morning 55 1.5e time of the hull -fight, at tL.- ‘4. , ,Li ee in the af- ternoon, theie le 4 SOCCOSSi0O Of LX:V1.01)ING 1.30M)S, and roekets fired in open spew' s and espeeially in the vicin- ity of the railway station and the famous Roly-Poly Square, the stones of Which are laid in such an erratic fashion that they rezeroble the waves of the sea, end which ev- er way the tourist -wellies acrose them he involuntarily raises his fooLass.2=1.-5 to etep over a riee iv t AR over Lisbon„ aIId especially long the Aveneda, there is a us fashion in pavements, and all kinds of weird eerolls and twistieg„ ,ancl dragon -like figures aro made in tesselated tiles—either y white 'upon black, or black upon I white. e On the days of the bull -fights the victors are escorted through the streets. In gaily decorated carts The,, with their lady admirers in start- ling costume.?'and the consta.nt °reeking of ftreworks rain'gle,$ with the cheers of the crowd, A Portu- guese bell -fight is worth seeing, and even the Humanitarian League could find little to cavil at it. It, is certainly no more 'cruel than fox- hunthig or stag -stalking. The bull- fighters earn large ,salaries, and many of them are popular heroes. Some of them ar-e quite Irealthy men, THE LIVING PICTURE CRAZE has long ago seized upon the Port- uguese in a manner which_ would astonish the owners of picture pal- aces. .• from noon until the small hours of tho morning the streets of Lisbon and other largo towns are a perfect pa,nclemonium. with the clanging of th bells and e shrieking of steam - blown organs at the doors of these scores of picture palaces ahnost side by 'aide in the main thorough- fares. The price of admission is enceedingly law, for although the Portuguese is a great pleasure -lov- er, he likes to get enjoyment as cheaply as Possible and. to have as, mach for his money as he can. The' shodis are continuous, and one tan stay as long as one likes or rather. as long as one can -stand the din of forty -horse power engine .blaring out every noisy tune that was ever composed. s The heat in these badly ventilat- ed, long, and narrow morns is in- sufferable; the air is thick with to- bacco" fumes for everyone smokes, and the refreshment -bars and food -stalls therein do AN ENOO RMUS TRADE. The Portuguese looks well alto: .11111 Mary.'' When some pot: lar or political scene is thrown on the screen --:and the films, by the way, are very flickery and bad from contt sant use—here' is sometimes a demonstration, for a very little lures on the lower orders, who the great patrons of these resorts, to a scrimmage. I ike the S • • '< g r the Portuguese is a, born gambler, and be it in the bets over the success of boll-fighte or - at cards, or at the everlasting lottery, there is alway m ney -to go in these directThe ions re can' be ' ' rio lot that if , the GoVernMent 'tit, roulette and ot er gam , ;are now saprl:,d to lvIonte efteould flourish in Lisbon, and o er Portuguese cities;c1 jiefore the re-L‘ohitiOn broke out ther .1 I 64 said th be a project on foot ernember, speaks. to thern, an hey listen. His dhartri over th . Jezebel ---To her the events en birds is really remarkable. Eael Carmel meant more than they Pe's' sparrow has its name, and pietur • ly could to 15er husband, for her esque names, too they are. The devotion to the milt, of her father, range from the Christian names of who had been a high priest of the Jean and Jeanette to these of re - Baan -worship Jr) Tyre. ;unwanted to volitionary celebrities. "There is fanaticism. She could not sit idtY Phillippe, now," he will any. "I by and, see her work of years °Wit- have net seen him for several days. ted. It was to he exPeeted that corne here, Phillippe. - You little ras- she send just .suel5 messa0 ea.; where have you been all this to the prime mover of the threattime?" And ithiflippe, A very ned revolution, pronouncing upon piarop, dark brown ,sparrow with a him a viytual sentence of death. ely look, would fly out of it crowd 3. Beersheba—Though this 'was A of twenty or thirty watching for town of Judah, about thirty miles crumbs on the gravel and perch on south of Hebron, yet Elijah did not M. Pol's fihger, His success is the feel himself Secure there, hies -1 result of years' of effort, as he -need much as the king of Israel was in1 to pass through the garden on his alliance with the king of Judah at way to work., this thee. So he took himself, in characteristic, fashion, to the wil- derness (4). 4. juniper-tree—Mere properly a species of the broom plant, which grows everywhere in the 'deserts of the Holy Land, It afforded it poor shelter, but sometimes the best 1 One scarcely thinks of Scotland that could be had. as an Eldorado or a Klondike, yet 8. Went in the strength of that it is a matter of pride, witn the food forty days—The journey to Horeb, being not over 180 miles, wcuild require a much less time than that. The number forty, how- ever, is often taken to symbolize a period of testing (compare the cases of Moses and Jesus), and here doubtless refers to the tinse ef Eli- jah's seclusion. 9. What doest thou here. Elijah? —Dr. Farrar gives a vivid inter- pretation to this question by em- phasizing, the successive words ered 'until recently. In the la,st GOLD. IN SCOTLAND. Believed That it Cita Be. Mined in 'Paying •Quantities. poorer Scots 'especially, that in its river beds Scotland has real geld, -which in the days of Macbeth and the' early kings -west Worked to in crowns and coins, jea-elry and the like. For centuries the ancient deposits have been nothing more than a tradition. From -time to time gold seekers have, dug pits and channels_ in. the river banks'. to the amnoya,nee of huntsmen, but no- thieg worth while had been discos-- "What doest -thou, here '‚• "He was days of the Scot,t,ish kings, gold doing nothing.- Was there no mining in the Leadhill district of work to be done in Israel Was lie Lanarkshire was said to have been tamely to allow Jezebel to be the quite an industry, and .certain final mistress of the situation 1." coins of that period were struck n "What doest thou here ' "Is it from native gold, The immediate not "very significant of thy name, supply probably Worked , out ' and `Jehoyah he is my God?' Is he to the worl,ings were abandoned:" to be the God of but one fugitivel" A few y•ears ago gold was discov- "What doest thou here ?" "This is the wilderness, There are no idol- ators or murderers, or breakers of God's commandments here." 10. I only am left; and they seek my life—A confession of conscious failure, on the part of a man thoroughly diseouraged. L1-12. Jehovah ,Passed • lev—He was present in the strong wind, and in the earthquake and the fire as well as in the still sma,11 Voice. But the more tumultuous elements thd not speak to the soul of the pro phet as did the calm following the storm, God manifests himself the quiet, 'providences of life well as,in its,upheavals. l,n„ ina3t.HThdl ie -4; solemn is'sjieftro s invoellandread, aix] he felt tt etake has baked. This -cake is de- means of rrengtheipg bern., t kious aild the 1e9i1e i'41iuss9le aS,I,v,i2:Severi.Yhh'6- t'says turning out fineapess , le- Bh nfiaantay .„Oake stretched 117'0 egs,1;10aedu 111111114 tgto '''''th. —aecoril* with a fork'',b "' rust' " a 0 1'44.9 I1e1 :What ered in workable deposits in Argyll. But, when a few grains were recov- ered it was noted that the expense made further mining impossible, so it was abandoned. At Kildonan, where gold is said to be deposited in considerable quantity opera- tions have alsvays beee'iorbidden. Now it is reported that the DUke of Sutherland is about to permit milling en ids -estates Kildonan '0;nd he,.lieve, that with im- P „roved 'aloaus rattlie gold can be akeir out profitably. MAKE A OBIMINAld 9, in 04 ic;a, g .,thaks an lin, eq npactin:: 0 11 TIE MODERN MAN-OF-WAR ENDER -GARMENTS Of' T111.4'; NEAVEST The nterier Coating Is Produecil Chiefly From Cocoa- nuts. Battleships wear coats of stout armor plate, as everybody knows but everybody does not know tha they wear undergarments which it Psary°sPi41c'eeadrsoeniilitee1y0itrtno YVfkr°m. our powerful man-of-war is really very delicate object, and require,' s p e ac li al Paris underclothing stra yulY ana so sTot it, become too cold, and so that other equally vital portions may not be. COOcAO too hot. From stem to stern, which is an. other way of saving from head to toe, your euormous super -Dread. nought is enveloped in an undero garment placed immediately behintc. its topcoat of armor plate. Thi*. is its especial mackintoeln or rather. waterpro5-4, whielt aets as a pre., tection front fire as well as water.: In the ordinary way, if ,a stiel, pierced the side of a battleship,' water would pour in at the hale, 1111(1 possibly the ship might sinkel but this is obviated by providing hacking to the armor. Great eces racy is kept in the various varies' regarding the material used, And!. its arrangement. "JACKETS" von THE BOILERS.. In many of the latest battleships, however, the coating is made of eellulese, which again is obtained from the fibrous eoPearnit • nth Ceir lulose possesses the peculiar pro- perty of swelling immediately its1 comes into contact with salt water., Therefore the moment In \eater pours in at, a 11010 the slop's' side, the eenulese almost instantly expands, and so (doses the aper- tOf 000rse tha ee1Iu10itt especially treated in order to ren. der it fireproof. A rnan-of-war I5as its vitality en- ormously diminished if eertein par., tions of it become too cold, and ia much the same way as its human tenants. Accordingly, the boilert and steam pipes are clothed with "saektite," Iti some cases the jaeles ets are made of ordinary blanket. ing, in others of a. fibreus ompositiore or even of close -grains cd Wood. In general, the -material used for a. ship's underclothing „of this descriptiori tonsists of mineral wool, however. The great ship is more likely to suffer from the effects of heat thattf those of cold. There is always the danger, owing to the newer type of machinery employed, that the pow- der magazines may get too bot, In 'the latest men-of-war the, stores are surrounded by a thicki, coating of mineral wool. Mineral, wool, by the way, has nothing what -1 ever to do with wool, as it consists of a mass of snowy threads of al, kind of glass. It is made by blow.' ing jets of high-pressured steam. through the streams of liquid slag which flow from the furnaces in tho manufacture of iron anti steel. AMMUNITION ROOMS COOL. Enorraous quantities of 'this' strange variety of wool are used board for the purposesof under- clothing the bulkheads and the more delicate portions of the'ship's. body. This invaluable ,substaece, acts eqqally well as a protector from heat and from cold. It is such a remarkable non-conductor of heat that it is used for covering the re- frigerators and the cold -storage chambers and therefore the explo- sive stores. in the. dockyards all the men who are employed in packing the ?fl al vool n t e SptiGeS On tie s are obliged to wear mask. s'Thia, is to prevent the sharp. needle-like particles from being 101111 id and so causing chest trenbles of a fatal cbaracter. It is a' very different substance from the, fleecy material , obtained from sheep. The ammunition -rooms them- selves are kept cool by a refriger- ating plant in addition to being clothed in mineral woel. the same applying to the aMMUIlltIOTI sages. The wool is also -packed be- ttveen the double „bulkheads which separate t,he boater spaces from ths 'i'i°tigheehrlaelFdrttl til air7 "met ti with on boar Parcular sort' stance, an cav V9, o.line " Fu4jJ?many an. coIonia1 pi 11 opt* 0", 11 0 6 g, ,e e 111 11 T4t 9 o'. 111 e 01 111 Ises " • ins', .`", 6,1?, .1,4g' A