HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-4-27, Page 344.44matoon
'.rHE EXETER ADVOCATE, THURSDAY, APRIL 27
1911.
4.4R4.1.,,,,44p4444414.4.4.4,41wao,4,414,,,
Hints for Busy flotisekeei)ers.
Recipes and .Other' Valuable Intormatlow,,,,,
et Partteular /*wrest to Woollen Police.
Pm • le N0. =meow. le 1.1 4.4 Fon 444.144.4•41.M.,..M41..mw
TESTED RECIPES.
Lemon, Butter.—Grate the in
and squeeze the juice of two km
ons, one-quarter peund ugar, one
quarter pound butter, fite eggs
beaten cook in double boiler til
it thickens. This quantity Makes
tWO glass delicious filling fel'
cakes,
Date Pudding.—One cup white
nigar, two eggs, beaten, one cup
fates, seeds taken out, one cup
English walnuts cut in half, two
tablespoons flour, one teaspoon
Peking powder, one teaspoon van„
ilia; steam one hour; serve eold
with -whipped cream.
Cheese Relish—One half -pound
cheese one small green pepper
one small onion, one-quaretr tea,
spoon salt; put all through food
rhopper; then make smooth with
cream; makes fine sandwich.
Rhubarb Jelly.—This vegetable is
not made into jelly as often a3
Olould be done, Rhubarb make
elate pink fine flavored jelly,
Cut one large buneh into Ane pieeea
withont peeling, add a large ehop-
Ped apple, Peel and seeds included.
Cover with hot water and Cook rn-
til
done, Mash Aim and strain
through jelly bag. To every cup-
ful of jwiee add one eupful of hot
granulated sugar. Boil juice until
it begins to jell or about twenty-
five minutes, Turn into nettled
jelly glasses and seal with paraffin.
Boast Beef,—The rout beef of
old England is presumably the fin-
est in the world and has been cele-
brated in both song and story, but
we seldom hear of the many other
oxvellent ways in which English
cooks prepare this meat. One of
their most pleesing dishes is beef -
teak stewed without the additions
of water or any other fluid, To
prepare tide have three of four
pounds of rump steak out about an
inch thick, Put one tablespoonful
of butter in the freing Pan and It
it melt without browning. Wash
the steak quickly in celd water and
put it in the frying pan, cover
closely and let it slowly become
hot. As- soon as it is thoroughly
heated add one teaspoonful o
of salt and a ealtspoontul of white
pepper, then keep it just simmer-
ing (never allowing it to boil) until
perfectly tender, It should be
closely covered all the time. It will
require about an hour and a bah'
to cook it just right. When done
place the steak on a heated platter
and add bait a thtispoonfal of wal-
nut or tomato catsup to the gravy
4 in the pan let this get hot and pour
over the steak. So1netTme a slice
or two of onion or carrot is added
to impart a delicate flavor to the
,steak, but it is quiet delicious with-
„
er the fire in a saucepan- When
boiling add two level tablespooe-
fuls of gelatin which has been ells-
: I solved in • onealialf tea.eapful of hot
I water. lArtin, elightly thinkened,
il wet a mold and put the gelatin
mixture in alternate, laYers with
one heaping teacuplui of stoned
dates, Set on ice to chill. Turn
out in a flat disk at serving time
and add 'a border of whipped
cream. The combination of the
i flavors of eherrees and &tee is nn
' novel, and exceedingly delicious,
of sliced pineapple, 5 cents' wort
1
,
Pineapple Dreams —Small ca
Intarshmallowe, 5 eents” worth TC:n
I lish walnuts. Chip walnuts, spl
marshmallows, cut pineapple i
small pieces. Alternate layers <
pmeapple and marshmallowe, and
sprinkle walnuts between. Put ia
the ice box one to five hours. Dish
and cover with whipped eream.
Strawberry Slierbet,--epwe bores
strawberries, mashed; add two
pounds of white suger and juiee of
one lemon.; let stand one hour and
strain. Measure julep and add as
miteh water as you have juice. Pour
in freezer and as it bee,ins to freeze
add whites of two beaten eggs.
Strawberry Pies—Make niee, rich
pie erust, pet over the bottom of
pie pan tuned upsi.de down on
table; put three or four fork holes
in the cruet to keep from raising
up from the pee. Bake by itself,
When baked light brown take the
crust, turn on to a -plate, then the
e st is ready to fill. Have rady
, quart fresh puked 'Strawber-
ries, sweetened to taste, 1111 Oa
crust, with the strawberries, cover
the top of the berries with the
whites of two well beaten eggs,
eveetened with sugar. Put in the
even juet long enough to light
brown the whites of the e
—
LAUNDRY HELPS,
Tack a. piece of oilcloth over t
bottom of your elothee basket to
keep snow and dirt from elt,gging
the wicker work and soiling the
clothee,
Never wring linen from a clothes,
wringer. It makes wrinkles that
are hard to iron out. Starelisd
elothes itre easier to iron it sprink-
led with hot water half an hoer be-
fore ironing,
Stareh for a black lawn or or..
gandy dress, that will make it look
like new and will not show on the
surface of the dress goods, ean be
made in this way; Take black- dye,
dissolve as you would for coloring,
and keep it bottled, Make the
starch quite thin, strain the Sive
and mix a little of it with the
starch. Proceed as usual and the
dress will look like a new one when,
lanndered.
Do not pad the ironing board
with wool blankets, which hold
moisture and make your elothes
hard to iron dry. Cover the top'
with a thick layer a cotton bat-
ting—one pound will be sufficient—
then cover with one thickness of
cotton flannel, drawing the cloth
tightly and sewing or tacking on
the under side. Cover this in the
same way with one thickness of
smooth muslin, and you will find
an excellent surface for ironing.
For a handy and convenient
clothes stick to liftneboiling clothes
front the boiler to the tub, have
one made as follows: It is two and
a half feet long, round, and one and
one-quarter inches in diameter
through most of its length, but the
end used to lift the clothes is wid-
ened to three and one -quarter -in-
ches, and made thinner so that it
is like, a paddle. A • "V" 'shaped
cut is made in the end of the blade
leaving two prones which are also
"V" shaped, with blunt points ab-
out one and, one-half inches thick.
A thrust and a slight twist into the
boiler will draw something out
easily and quickly.
S AND WICHE S.
Peanut.—One-half pound shelled
peanuts, mayonnaise, butter, white
bread. Chop fine by running
through meat chopper one-half
pound of shelled peanuts. Add to
this one-half parts each of butter
and mayonnaise dressing. Mix
thoroughly and spread between thin
'slices of buttered bread.
Bacon—Six slices breakfast ba-
-con, three stalks celery, six stalks
lettuce, mayonnaise dressing. Run
bacon through meat chopper, then
place in frying pan and fry brown.
When cool add celery and lettne,e
stalks finely chopped-; mix with ma-
yonnaise and spread between thin
slices of buttered bread on which
has been placed a fresh, crisp let-
tuce leaf.
- Raisin Brown Bread. — Two
leaves Boston brown bread, one-
half pound seeded raisins, one-
quarter pound pecan "meats may-
onnaise dressing. `Chop alternate-
ly in meat chopper a handful of
raisins and one of the nuts until all
have, been run through the meat
cutter; Mix with mayonnaise and
,spread between thin well buttered'
slices of Boston brown bread
Salmon,—One-half pound can
salmon, six sweet pickles, one pi:
inento, three stalks of celery.
8pread salmon and mix with pick-
les, celery, pimento, and mayon-
naise dressing. Spread between
thin slices of white bread well but-
tered. ,
BakedtHarre—One pouni, boiled
ham one pimento one -half cupful
pecansmeats, two hard boiled eggs..
Bun all through -Meat chopper and
mix with mayonnaise. Cut thin
slices of bread, butter and spread
with mixture.
Chcesc.----klix finely grated cream' .
-
;cheese with One pimento. and. one-
half cupful' pecan meats. Add may-
onnaise dressingandspread' be--
'tween well buttered slices of rye
bread.
Lain,' slices o Nvinter
bread,, 1;uttcred, cut in heart shape.
:Between each 'two slices place a
layer of Neufchatel cheese mixed to'
paste -with equa,1- f
cream and salad dressiacc and covr
ith chOpPed''61117CF,;'' -
C h erridaie , Dess cries - P
int 3 of cherrY re
,sh ot' canned), 'oneleaduptul 0
- \valor, ..th`$',,1,1erd 11471\
mon; and ,,onl,tenip
able .7;0 see there, had been a tuck, ;
THE SUNDAY'SCHOOL STUDY
there God earrie to Ilia' as he did
which is' the- case when ti(eks are to Elijah, ,in compassion. 'rho
placed above the bem and let out.
gourd was a fruit cof vine that
grew very rapidly aed spread its
INTERNATIONAL LvssoN, 1)1.0a -el loaves as a protection from
the sun, when planted by suth
APRIL 30.
uttonlioles Lace, ---The owner
of a white waist with a lace yoke
is sometimes at, a loss to -know how
to fasten. the yoke, as it is bard for
a Person. to pin her own yoke in the,
back. Baste small squares of lawh.
underneath each place where you sson, _cap ,` h
; LC
v3Sh to make a buttonhole, tame • --, 'tna"
cut the buttonholes and work them: I. then, ;Jonah 3. 1. to 4. 1. Golden -
Out away the sur )11 s law undL
n .
the buttonholes, leaving theni firm
and strong. Also put tiny squares
of the lawn under the yoke as you
sew the buttons on.
"HIND TOUR, P'S ND Q'S."
One Theory Is 'That the Saying
Orieinated 13 -tinting Office,
Several explanations have been.
• giVen, of the origin of the phrase,
h "Mind your P's. ,and Qts/'. One is
gh that it is derived from an old cus-
it tom et hanging a slate upin an ale -
u house on -which was written- P or
if Q --that is, pint or 'quart—against
the.name a each customer, accord -
ng to the quantity Which he had
drunk; to be paid when the wages
were given on Saturday night,
Another ozeplanation given in the
Dietetic and ITyg“,ine Gazette is
that, the eentenee originally was
'Mind your toupees and queues,'
The teepee was erOlielel lock of
hair and tbe queue was the pigtail
of olden time,
A riddle nsed to be in vogeie as
follows; "Who is the beet person to
keep alphebet in order'? Ane-
wer: A barber, because be -ties up
the emetics and puts tempees m
irons."
Charles 1i:eight give$ the most
plausible explanation, as fO1WWS:
have alwaye thought that the
phrase ',".Jied your P's arid Q's was
derived from the eehoolroom or the
printing office. The forms of the
+mall ifs and WS in the Boileau
type have already been puzzling to
the child and the printerhe appren-
tice, In the one the downward
strokes is on the left of the oVal; in
the ether, on the right.
"Now, IN1101 the types are revers -
as they are in prowss of alias
tribution they are returned by the
compositor to his case, the mind of
the young printer is puzzled to dis-
tinguish the p.from the q. In sort-
ing pi or a euxed beep of letters,
where the p and the q are not in
eonnection with any other letter
forming.a word. thinleit woald be
almost impossible for an inexper-
ienced person dietinenish which
is which upon the instant,"
.THE SEWING ROOM.
When your corset steel breaks
make a slit near the bottom of the
broken steel, on the inside, insert
a steel taken fions the side of an
old corset. This ,st'rengthens the
broken steel and:does the Same sea:
vice asaenew one.
Upholsterer's Linen. — Uphol-
stering linen, makes desirable suits
for children: .It cornea ,mostly in
the tan shades, either tan or strip-
ed, and is'noteexpensive. Thernore
it is laundered' the better it looks':
Plait Help.—After 1;11.3 skirt is
completed -turn it 'wrong side out
and SCi* a tiny seam down toe back
Of each plait within an inch of the
bottom of 'the, skirt. The plaits Will
always hang straight- and require
one-half the pressing. This,. is, a
great help in wash dresses -as. 'it,
makes the ironing of the plaits very,
easy, as they will be perfectly
straight and e,asilV put in.
.Skirt Help—When makin,--, a
child's new dressor„evea, yo?.ir own
wash,dresSes,' make the skirt lodg
cr.:than: required, , allow for
erigth ening ..„Tialce a deep
ake, up; what
,
ning,by 'small tacks,' Or, one„ont.--,,Vo', •
DHAREH EVERYWHERE.
Cost of Living in Berlin, Germany,
Now and Ten Years Ago.
Dr. Friedel publishes in the Ber-
lin Tageblatt, as the result of ex-
haustive enquiries in shops, stores,
ete., au interesting comparison be-
tween the expenses of a. Berlin
household of to -day with its expen-
ses ten years ago. He carefully
lows for the' increased demand for
luxuries and the improvement in
the quality of the articles sold, but,
after making all allowances, arrives
at the conclusion that there is an
average inerease all round of '95
per cent. in the cost of Ening.
If the ladies of Berlin were will-
ing to dress in the simpler manner,
and in the perhaps poorer materials
of ten years ago, say the ladies'
outfitters, they would still have to
pay from thirty to forty per cent.
more than they did then.
Furniture costs 25 per cent. more
than it did ten years ago and in
the last year has risen nearly ten
per cent. The price of the coal bri-
quets, with which the German por-
celain stoves are heated, has risen
from 22 cents per 100 to 31 cents.
Meat, as the housewife buys it is
on an average, 25 ner cent. dearer.
The price, of bread is about the
same, but even burials have become
more essnensive. A funeral which
nos t $125 ten years ago now costs
$175. •
Text, Matt. 28. 19.
Verse 2. Nineveh—A city with
great population and one of won
eters of the -ancient world. It wa
situated on the uppen Tigris, cepa,
tal of Assyria, noted for its tem
pie-% palaces e& marble anti gold
hanging gardens, libraries, brna
walls, and elaborate water system
The 9ty proper was about lain
miles an eircumferenee, Lint heyon
its waijs lny mile Qf.eca°tcitymin9a sond\‘c'.4
great ,
sixty miles around, It was to tins
greatertyeant
ter eiNhlevraeh(ani
lea elxct:ZitingreattSr
"great from (40<i's point- of view"),
a city whose 'diameter 1.--s a' thret
edayer..,(S'j
i aotisreicieoy(».not
time
etiat
(1) .Lesi:oh.was
.
4. Into the city a day's journey—
The distance a mart could go in a
day, of coarse, varied, P ebablt
threugh the crewded sections of a
populous city, preaehing as he went,
Jonah would go no more thao tex
or seven miles.
Nineveh shall be oyerthrowa—
Tide was the message which Jebo-
rah had bidder; him to proclaim the
first, time, and Jonah bad refused,
not so mueh hee.4115Q. of fear as be-
cattee of his preeentiment that Clod
wiehed him to be something more
than the agent of Nineveli's destruc-
tion, to be, in fact, nothing lees
than, the channel of the divine grace
(Jonah 4. 2) to these heathen, whose
wicked:lees (see Nahum) he believ-
ed celled for a speedy doom. The
actual overthrow of Nineveh took
place B. 0, OW,
e, Believed (lode—That is, they
accepted the preaching of the pro-
phet of Ged as direct from heaven
end believed their elle., was downed.
So they organized a public fast
reaching from the king to the lowt
t,, T1 putting on sack-
etoLil was the outward sign of
mourning and penitence. The cus
tem probably grew out of the and -
oat habit of wearing merely a -loin
cloth,*WOVen from goats' and cam-
els' hair, for a daily covering of the
body. From thia,it became the garb
of religious ceremony. The reality
of the repentance is further evidenc-
ed by the people's sitting in ashes
booths as that of Jonah, or near the
trellises ei s.
10-11. -Thou .hat hat' regard for
the gourd—The meaning of this'
, t
part of the story clear -enough
If Jonah's care for the poor gourd
is so great- as to excite bis pity and
even anger when it withers away,
a •
Shall not God show pity to tlic, thou-
, sands of people of Ninace'n, esp,ci-
• 4 y e - heln,ess little children
_ „
(these that cannot diseern, between
- their right baridancl their left) and
the innocent cattle? SQ the closiw,,
d .
ininression of the book is one of a
e „ eax en at
hishas feg,ard fOr all the works of
nis hand..
1(0: „no
The decree of the king—A na-
tiol rather than an individual re-
pentance is the only kind a writer
of this period could conceive in zilch
a case. The inclusion of the beasts
is intended to give a heightened efs,
fect to the picture of a people pros-
trate in sorrowful supplication. This
is in keeping with the temper of
Orientals, to make every possible
outward expression of their sorrow.
They believed God week] not over-
look the sight of their sackcloth and
ashes, and their cries and thecries
of the neglected cattle. Perchance,
when lie saw these works (10), he
would repent,of hie harsh purpose
ed so he did. But the change
was not so much in God as it was
in themselves. Just as he had suited
his warnings to the moral state io
which they were (compare Jer. 18.
8), so now he snits his actions to
the moral state indicated by their
sorrow for their evil -
Chapter 4, verse 1: It displeaseed
Jonah—He was jealous. It did not
set well with the Israelitethat God
should postpone the dOom Or the
heathen. while the world seemed -Le
wait with groanings for justice. And
that -they should repent was parti-
cularly offensive to" them. -
2. Tarshish—So far as Israel was
concerned, this. represented .the
ends ef the earth, for, it was a
country in the extreme southwest
corner of Spain. Taking ship to
Tarshish was a kind of proverb for
a long journey. By fleeing to this
istant port, lonah hoped to put
orever behind his back the odious
ommission of God. The magnitude
f his sin is measured bythe fact
hat he knew God to be gracious,
ereiful, slow tcy anger, and, in
pite of this knowledge, evaded the
SENTENCE SERMONS. 0
We may with adVaritage at times
forget what we know. -
You should hammer your iron
n
when it is glowi e hot.
s
What is left when honor is lost?
A fair exterior is a silent recom-
mendation.
When ortuneflatters she does it
to betray.'
Powerful, indeed, is the empire
.of habit
Aniid a multitude of projects no
plan is devised. '
When tato do the same thing it is
not the same thing after all.
„ —
FACT AND FANCY.
One good thing about the liquor
'dealer is that be is never out of
spirits - . , ,
The banana is 95 per cent. nour-
ishment. "
It is especially m love -making
that .the new, woman finds there is
s'omethivg,o eanalp her.
0n. -6S, he -antler tide. cif hern.
eht skiet is' toe sh(irt lei:. a tuck
two out. our skirt Is 'ionpsi
lab,O,r and you won't- be
”
ej?t13.0.is,.b$1-!,
.ear of d4
dreaded than dea.
duty- of making this known ,totthe
hated heathen. And now that he
saw at length .the, unfolding of this
abundant loving kindness of God,
and his willingness to repent..oPen-
condition of` the heathen's, turning
from their evil, he thcmght it hardly
worth while to live (3).
4. Doest,thou wolf tO ealert, ?—
Here he -elves no, answer, for he
doubtlessis silenced by -the 'sting
of the 'rebuke But la,ter, con-
clude's (0) that -it is: well for him- to
be .exee`ediag, angry, even unto
death. fie. felt , :that it was', right
that bit Prophecy should be abso-
lutely,lidfilled, and -lie could not tolerate any, divine , forbearance: ,',with
the foes af bispeople. [IF this- lie
was -a title typeoffor; even
Chafe at ,,tlie, prosperity Of' the -Gen-
' tiles., In ,their 'pride ,as -the
• e.
of God they nourished -a fear - tliat
others than 'themselVe mighthe
11 the objeCts'. of the infinite grace.
6. ,4,,,$9,gx.d,r4ke-. e;JCila
war ' tiitioS:044
CHINESE' SPORTS3IEN.
siting With Unbelted Rook—
•
Long Guns for lard Shooting.
As we passed through the town
lit of Houlten on the Nada° Cree
a CrOVCd was on the -watehin
the manoeuvres of two lisherme
who were reapieg a harvest
mussele rind 'winkles, These fisher
men were dr> " .1*
tut/le—a eowskin neat and stoekint
all in one piece, with the hair
turned inside, ',says 'the North
ellii,hO:,03tIlia,
lyilapertures in tile gar
meat into \illicit the Wearers work-
ed their way feet foremost were at
the neck and the malls, which were
securely tied before entering the
water, into which the men waded
up to their peeks, As soon as thei
feet came irito contact with any o
the shellfish, which seemed to li
in "beds, th llsliez'meu looeened
them aa as they could from
the laltddY ottom of the creek ant
then brought them au the "take'
in a grasp net,
The men were eminently success
ful durine the short time we stop
ped watch them and piled up a
'11ERE TILE SEA Is Bilit.),LIsT,
One Place in the North Pacific IllaS
31,)1g) Feet of Water
The ocean. has been sounded 211
app.al'ilaYnst dairnedetitOhneSsetislortiQdflinergisl
show that the „floor Of the ocean
consists of vast undulatin" Plains
.ying at, ao aveiag,e depth Of about,
two end a lialf miles beneath the
suifaee Of the waves, In eome
places- huge, ridges and cones rise
froth these' subtherged plains to
within a few hundred fathoms of
the sea 'surface, or they may rise
above the surface as volcanic is-
lands and coral atolls.
The greatest -depth hitherto re-
corded is in the Challenger (or Ne-
ro) Deep in the North Pacific -5,269
fathoms. If Mount Everett- were
placed in thiandeep 2,000 feet of wa-
ter „Dula roll over the peak of this,
the highest "mountain in world.
,The greatest depth in the Atlan-
tic is in the Nares Deep between
the West Indies and Bermuda -
4.60.2 fathome, The greatest depth
in the Indian Ocean is 3,828 fath-
, aaist in the 'Wharton Deep, be-
tweeri Phristmas Island and the
coast Of Sava- We. have now Afty-
7; six ef thesedfeps wbere the 4epth
eNeeea$. three geographical miles
ten areas where the depth exceeds
four miles, and four places where it
'cceeilS Ave miles.
The sea is ,saltest where etrong
winds blow acroep the surface, as
for instance, in the trade wind re-,
&eine and in 'the Alediterraaean
and the Red Sea. It is less salt,
says Harp's Maga-eine, toward
the pole and in the deeper layera
of the eeean. has long been
known that the very salt water of
the Mediterranean flows as an un-
dereurrent oatward through the
e Strait of Gibraltar and thus affeeta
the salinity of the deeper waters of
the Atlantie ever a wide
area,
Mthough the amment ef salt
sea water varies the eompoeition ot
sea salts, remains very woe:tante;
slight differences have, however,
- been noticed along the continental
coasts, in the polar regions end in
, the water in ehreet uutat with
!ieloep sea depoeite,
big eatch ou the foreshore
1 Another sight whie'li interested
us was a novel way of fieln▪ eg,. Two
small boats were moving parallel
With OTIC another about thirty feet
apart. The ends of a line about
my feet long to which small, un-
belted hooks were attached about
four inches apart to two stick* were
held respectively by a man in eaeh
boat. As the boats moved slowly
along, first one man and then the
other would give Ida stick a jerk.
Immediately that the hooks
struck anything the line was gradu-
ally hauled in and invariably, with
success. -We eertainly saw fish
struck four out of five times'inane
of them running apparently from a
half pound to two or mare pounds.
Ib may he that China is the only
place in the world where fish are
caught with unbaited hooks.
The third incident we witnessed
occurred at the well known Shape.,
or, lower barrie,r. A native shoot-
er had his gingal with him—a most
uncanny looking, -weapon. That
there should be no question as to
its length, it was placed npright
alongside myself and towered above
my head two feet two inches (meas -
oIteuntegelt);Lwhich would make the piece
ofordnance over eight feet in
We foreigners sometimes growl at
the 6 1-2 to 7 1-2 pounds our guns
usually weigh. , Fancy having to
carry a twenty-four pounder which
was what this man .did all day long
and ,for every day in the week.
He was acCompanied by a small
weird looking animal, a most un -
presentable little wonk, on whom
he laid great store. Curiosity im-
pelled us to look at man and dog
at work, and What we Saw made
such an impression upon us that
we thought some little record of it
might interest other's.
A hen pheasant happened to drop
into a furrow -eel field at feeding
time. The native took her bearings,
m•ent up as closely as he safely
eonld, deposited his gun on a bit of
higher ground and kept it trained
on the bird. Meantime the dog lay
down across the barrel of the gun
as a screen for his master. The
psychological moment had arrived,
the gun was 'fired, the bird was kil-
led up,on the gronnd and the dog
remained on, the barrel until his
luaster took the gun up to /eland
it.
"Jam truly sorry to - sive you
pain, Mr. licinkirlsoli," said the
young lady.
"but please do not al-
lude to thyjose.;',11),11),i.fe
i-ec..'t'.'.1gain' can
never
"That is your final answer, Miss
'Nothing can indace you to
cha‘j\nrgsemind is final1- 61,1d unait<)3._
ably made up.
11 was toSwith ealultri illYn'sneti
te:11SPlidIe:::ici, °11:11'a:niiat:setbk:gla: ;1?It'ld",c,,,:oh:lilfettit:fiIcW1,11110eiraC'evni d\ne' young
11.11 ,l'saol
as
C
hman, rising , and looking about for
is, hat, `before coming here this
evening
eion
axed aedespa
e,
enipetatuie of ocean water
varies at the surface from 25 de-
grees Fahrenheit at the poles to
over 80 degrees Fahrenheit in the
tropics, The cold water toward the
Poles has an annual variation of
less than ten degrees Fehrenbeit at
y one spot and the warm water
of the tropics also an annual varia-
tion of less than ton degrees Vali-
reuheit in a band thab nearly en-
circles the eart,n; this is the region
01 coral reefs and atolls. Between
these regions of small annual varia-
tion there are two bands surround-
ing the earth where the annual var-
iation is greater and may exceed
in certain regions 40 degrees Fah-
renheit at any one spot.
GOOD THINGS TO EAT.
Novel Combination of Fresh 3111211..
rooms With Sausages.
"Ha,Ye 'eein ever triedi
, broled
sausages -with mushrooMs I" asks a.
correspondent of the Epicure.
, "As*a matter of fact the sausages
are not broiled at all, but the smal-
lest, of- breakfast sausages are ,laid
in ii sizzling hot frying pan and
cooked brown on one sidle then
turned- and teken out te drain on
paper when sufficiently cooked.
"Some, fresh mushroom's that
have been peeled are then set cook-
ing ein the sausage fat, and are
served with the sausages on slices
of toast which have been buttered.
For a change add a few slices of
bacon to the dish of sausages be-
fore' cooking the mushrooms.
A certain egg dish that was in-
vented in a Latin Quarter studio -
in Paris is.delicious. Butter some
little earthen dishes such as areus-
ed for shirred eggs and break one
or two, eggs into each. Sprinkle
with salt and pepper, grate On a
liberal quantity of dry Gruyere
cheese, .add some bits of butter,
pour ovee creain to cover and 'bake
in a hot.oven until the eggs are.set.
'Tor another dish : Put a sweet
Mexican pepper or Pimento mor-
reibes--..the .tinned variety-elu the
bottom of a cultard cep or earthen
egg cup, break ina fresh egg, add
salt, `pepper and butter, and bake
until the egg is sufficiently cooked.
Serve with fingers of crisp buttered
HE KNEW A THING.
Il.eitable Fatliei-- Want to mac-
oils11:11y
11(1Yde-eel°''itr.1:1°11';:lSmia21s:ciesl:ai'kl;'::o',1?1,Igk':c111:111a(illt:--liotlellpefi,1°,:vdX°8:9:1;111)11111'.(:tiicile:5'(:a'''..:(iii,a21.1.iff:‘°101(.1-11.1).1SacT:o'hi''''Iliiieltiltel°1111';‘{-vPL:111:7°11111:Se°'
1,11-lik lt, Nc. 011...C1 1)0 of any use for
suen a yclurig man as you are into
that - '`g
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:1,,Inplideet ,,,,,0 If-, ,sii,, any ,cia
37°11 ca'n'i'' `11(-4?"4 ''i'eqi"
kea„,,,,A, r .,,,,,i,ai ell nhge,,a:eiate etalkinii
ea
sset
1/1
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