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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-5-25, Page 2THE EXETER ADVOCATE ',C_L[ti Burr tl,Y :>r¥AY 25, 1911. its for Busy ns keepers Recipes spa Other Valktable Iaxtesrranskles et Particular mean et to Women Pelle SANDWICHES, Lettuce,, -Select the smaller leaves, of a head of lettuce, wash thoroughly and roll in damp nap- kin and place on ice, Iiia e the ,following dressing. If made ea 4% reefed it will be perfect; ¥olka two eggs, three-quarters of aa, of olive oil,, one tehleep3oorifut lemon juice, saltspeaonfed of salt, saltspoonful of znnetard, dry, dash of cayenne pepper. Have bowl; egg beater and oil as cold as possible. Break the yolks into thebowl, mix with Salt, mustard, and cayenne pepper. Begin to beat with egg beater, adding the oil a a tt1V r;Ma hest, then more rapidly zanial half is used. Then add the lemo.a , aalee, beat worn, 'then the rest of the ail. When finished spread on the Crispy lettrtee leaves and place between thin slices of butt:e>;e i bread. Olive and Nut -Ak4 n beta e _,. cek cal &lives etithed with red >faePiae'xs and . q.Aitartery of ,aa pound of ehelled waa,laliltg. Clue p beth iaaely together raati with a1, ttraikeel sales' dressing Y end spreed 'lictwe en thin shoes buttered bread. Hum, fat half (Ivy eaaastard with a gine teaspoonful cal sea tableaspgon£lils of col quarter of a pound cal bailed lura t1 ty„ chopped. Ad ck this to the well mixed mustard, s k tread w. be t c c an thin n 'c sl es clbuttered: bread, Chicken. ince e cheapped Cla:e*kera, o,toT, a 1 i9neai'e n toiled sola this Add j;anst Spread be"twe, bread. Buy e fid backbone kbone frcaiii the; 1 well and add a tab) espeon( R juice. This spre'aotd betweret eens is dainty. two eggs bard lancet ace in Ewald water four e ep white from (Beet., ra rriaise shells and place e wi with a ' imear ofbutter t waaliaaat Am/ oho. 'Whet n quite fine add dash ,f saltspoaau of stall, and onn- teaspsacinnful of onion juice, spread between thin slicers of but- tered ',read, Peanut. --Bay a pint o fresbl: I iottiAted peanuts.Bemuv wind mins and chop finely. enough melted butter to na.nke nuts stick together. Spread tween thin slices of buttered bread. iCuexamber.-Seieet rather a small t;tacnn iffier. Slice thio and 'rover r with the following dressing: Tkiree tablespoonfuls ref vinegar; Ilse x;iblesp',Gean uls caf salad oil; one saitepoonful of salt cine -half tea- spoonful of onion juice; one -,fourth. teaaepocuful black pepper; da; It of cayenne pepper. Place cucumbers in dish small enough for dressing to cover, then place dish on ice tea chill, Spread between thin !slices of buttered bread, and water in which they have been soaking and cook until mixture thieketns. Bake in two et'anste e DIa. JOHNSON'S HOT:SD. Presented by Cecil Harnaswortln to British Nation. It was announced nearly: four' months ago that Dr, Johnson's house in Gough square, Fleet, street, Londoiz, had been acquired by an auonymous purchaser, andwz s to be plaee•d ie the hands of trustees as a national memorial to the great Loadoner. It is now knewn that the per - chaser is Air Cecil Harnmsworth, FA SHOULD KNOW THIS PROFVv IN BANISHING IN G FLIES AND 31ost'g'roES. Former is talose of 'typhoid Fever, the Latter of Malarial Fever. A mistaken view prevalent in According to: the latest announce- nanny f arnaerei homes- is that flies CAKE. 1 anent, the house will be declieated are a azecessary evil which is con- onge Cake,—Separate the:e$: as national propert • "ee soon as fined to a few summer monthsoz four and yolks of eggs, Beet. saiitable arrangements can lie thet a: ey aa•e an altogetiaer harm,- es tail you can turn, dash up- made,'' less zauisazace, `'lzc. fact is #hat wra and they will remain in, Last year the house was put into tivlaere flies have access "co lin ue- rues of ui * sort the . p '� p � anti • � � � ri.ay carry cat into this one-half eup-eat as good. state of repair at a. cast of sae � �r , . granulated sugar•* Beat the piffles; Me hundrede of pounds, and care , , ,i feral; wInas la tlas y deposal nae era liAz ba'e ^ f add. to. theta Disc -half en?p of snng,ar, l was fatten. to preserve the chase g n oed in kitchen beating; five animates by the eieell ; teristic features of the iuten' r, ' arztxy or dining room. In an ar= i ,tti mete prepared for he k s ; ttlais, is ianportantl, :add to the , \sTn_s.ln is in much the sarzae condition the t oaanway yolks the :juice and grated rind of as when Dr. Johnson lived there e le'a>3on, ,Now beat together the from 1718 to 1758. es and yelks. Now beating is It was in Gough square that II.r. ider, ,but meet be avoided after i Jo1wson toiled at his dictionary ng the flour, of which take:eue ; which was commissioned : by tb p` three tunes sifted. Fold into, chief booksellers in Econdcaaz the eggs, Babe tweetv-five to 'thin- M 1747 for .a fee of 1,800' guineas, Tlae t -five minutes in nnoderaate oven.; dcaetor had an npgeer room fitted up y p and rnaalaraa Gentleman and now reprinted pamphlet farm by the author 'Wil- liam Panel Gerhard writes en flies sad mosquitoes as :carriers of dis- r ase arta en what farmers s eaudo assist in, the campaig=n against ere Both t >< hoid d lib oee"tirriin to -o rix e g s rune et„nt ars ift one. tablespoon granulated like as eaaatnting Tnona*e:i ata \which lie I crimes . ,+are considered to be chiay. country or fame diseases, and flies Way be the indirect caaaase of ty he diel fever and mosc�n�toes of r ,1? l While - ;eatery a fever. While bath flies and loequitees are had enough at eer- ie; times in the city, they ccaneti- ante a agiiculturul distriicts ear ve�rftable hest, a source cat annoy. to horses, Battle and amen, +n. eaf fays2el cliseeannfort and .a ee day which. health may be- seriously@ affected, e<i' ' 16Ae'� s the rapidly Szacre"asa,ra,�, ineator vehicles armed the e o - reasataaetiorn in the la4ent. pits reduces THE b�L ' NUISANCE u top first" before putting .fan ' gave to the copyists their several t ;tasks, in .Aeeerftg tea 4Mtheeto It � dia auad' t ugh Square that Reyend 1 Ruaubill;as to cell upon JQlanse \a lio "meowed thea with m eta e and; took Heenan up into az gar et which he used as his library, e, besides hie books, all cover- with o er-with dust, there wits an old crazy table, and a still worse and elbow eheii', heaving k e<pee f hoeteeke -- iL cup eel sa cnooia tan Ialaee fte 4 eup break,oi}ea es Ali d ben ire s bet\a coni top sal aaeh liatle th pcowedered salgaxte with a eetooniu1: o These are ,delle C'fl\S:t':41Tl\olaI',l4 W Soon Be 4S Minty as eve Tor key's C4041. thirty thousand tantmoplo were crab by the unaniaipaalit at to the Island of .hfarmaraa,, the anfAcl their ,skins ekWS, there we o reg,t rcled to emoved •canna ilrknsh capital her dog ;pop- ring nap some.: ee; of the n,gere the: taantinople3 eranetworked erlindi2 feces hall they eittz be to evon the domestic refuse of which tl Turks disport by throwing it int the cutter. Meeting \title no .opa ositian, they finally transplanted themselves and their families to the deserted land of plenty. It is now again quite usual in C'onstardinople to have to step ov- er a dog lying +asleep -aeroas the pavement. The packs of dogs that are returning to inhabit the golf a d. Where there is no kitchen !links too make,a frequent praactaee plumbing don't throw kit la e of hurrying away with a driven p g kitehen slop hall, with a view to examining in- winter, day by day, over ,the same to its edible qualities atdistance.s1\ot by the kitchen .door, The way q c a . The • city* „ authorities, satisfied to getrid of flies is by absolute e Ad PIE. Cream Custard Pie: �-•One cupful rf sugar, one tablespoonful tof float', two eggs, a pinch o:f. salt; put in 0, dish and beat until light; beat two eupfuls of milk and 'pour on the sugar and eggs; have your eruct ready and fila. while the stuff is hot;. have your oven about the heat than you have for bread; keep watch that it does not bake too long, if' it does it will spoil.your pie; take your pie out of the oven when it will shake yet; the goodness of a custard is in the baking. Si:_ Varieties of Cream Pie.—For each pie one cazp of milk, one eup of saxgar, one tablespoonful of butter,' we!! beaten yolks of two eggs, one tablespoonful of corn starch. Cook' until thick, flavor to taste, and put in a crust preciously baked. Beat the ay�hite s of the two eggs until stiff. Put two tablespoonfuls ef sugar in, put on pie and set. iri pve:n to brown. The variations are ol1oae se which are : When the filling is cooked stir through it one seant teaspoonful each of ground cinnamon and carves. This is a fa- vorite and is called ``spice pie." Cocoanut Pic --Cook filling as di- rected and beat two _tablespoonfuls of cocoanut in the ;white of the eggs. Chocolate "Pic -Grate two heap- ing tablespoonfuls of chocolate in each pie and cook in the filling. Banana Pie --Slice two bananas into baked gust, then pour filling over Genie and bake as directed. Orange Pie=_�?repajre r.ane'as ba- nana pie, -using oranges instead, of banana Nut Pie i n filling as ,Erected, Hien stir in rite cep of finely chop- ped Alts through tee pie, veser a Ce' to dot en top. TW ,;sin_ Pie.--:Orr,-half cupful ,soft i .:�s: ,' cover sign �•.1. one cupful el old iiiater and- soak. two liours. egg ire ind 'one' isibie- 11R ndelilyde ink: » Take 1 cal cyaliauret t i p:eot;asil., ink stain, fnicst dipping then rinse the cloth in b,eots when mud -stained rned with a. out raw Fe- . 'l'Citae off any moisture, and r -se in the* fresh air for half a before polisbng, tatoes for stews aahaukl always boiled for,lave minutes before be - added to the meat, AS the 'first p r in which they are cooled is r quite wholesoine. ver eake keep ` ai. o Basan is .tan 1 d ca ae in Klee tin. as the cake loses its t°or, and the biscuits become soft. d taste faintly of the .,rake, gave the string when parcels packed. Pick out the knot; deli the twine is tied, twis ttnd the fingers' and fasten it. eta the 'eiririgs" of tied string in drawer or bre:, spe'ciall'y saved for e purpose, and you will always ave as supply of different strengths string ready for parcels or pend- trg cloths. I nirniture needs cleaning just as tmach as other wovctwork, especial- ly in our large, dirty towns. This may be washed with warm soap- suds quickly, using a soft brush if cessary. Wipe dry at once and after a few hours polish with bees- wax and turpentine, and you will procure a beautiful polish! $ilk Hose.—To prolong the wear f silk hose reinforce the heel by taekieg a piece of soft silk, which will not irritate the foot, on the in- side before starting to wear the hose. This will serve as a body to darn over when the heel begins to wear thin before holes' appear, or even afterward. Linoleum for Bedroom --If you have to make any changes In the cov- ed/1g for your bedroom floors this spring, bo sure and get linoleum, as it is not only the most sanitary floor covering but is also the most- casily kept clean. There are very pretty matting designs for bedrooms. and it is hard to edet-ect from the real matting. It comes two yards wide and is usually $1 a running yard, which makes it much cheaper than •carpet, and it'wears several times as long. When laying • it, loosen the quarter round molding, on the baseboard so the linoleum will slip under. Do not- tack or nail and let lay at least a geek be- fore nailing down the quarter round, so it can .flatten out and get shaped to floor. About once in a year and a half or two years go over it with a floor varnish. This beeps the pattern from wearing off and preserves the life of the lino- leum, Pc is ;easily kept clean incl sanitary and does not have to be yo taken' ep ng til worn out. If 3,00 to have an old :ingrain° carpet, hare r it ai woven into•-, small rugs to lay" in to (runt of bed, dresser etc. Med and most of waste dispos many farms offer _. ions for the breed"ala iplieaation et Me ori of flies Baan b Aat, einie9fyy. bya. liliga a proper disposal r and by the naaainter loos cleanliness, w bairns, al ikI heave eornstaza and they shout hat they can b the best ,results uld. look portio. tion of the aril landings wardian .0 o'clock dila- beeinrue cry popular onsidered a fan• hour R. tear dianiiag. but with the advent o rrf ;nag frenrge we; are to have a ,t; anea'*v oustom. Seven -daftly ala going of to be the reasonable tune for daze ra- flet. The King dines at that hour and while it has not beer ener^art-, 1 ly advertised, the fact bas leaked t out end the nv r1d foaao°we suit. '. 4 Strange to sa,y, the fashions them e net are begun not in what is yell- . ell"- .:l cad 'the upper cirelees," but by the portion Much of the work to he clone is of an engineering nature, such as the ditching of marshes, the proper grading of gutters and so on, and the assistance of an engineer fam- iliar with drainage work' is much to he desired. Each farming mem- ber of the society should: make in- dividual efzort about his own pre- raises, and these individual labors should be supplemented by the combined community effort in what- ever direction that may be requir- ed, To get rid of flies and' mosquit- oes would protect the farmer's health and well being and enhance his comfort and increase his pro- fits. LONDON TO DINE EARLIER. `~line � . - , < Nine Was Hour Leder-Edwaard VII., George V. Favors 7.30. ``When I first came to London in the heyday of Victorian institu- tions seven ,o'clock was the fixed, lznalterable hour kr dining, writes the London correspondent of Town and Country. Slowly by degrees, the time for dinning was extended. �bFiast 7,30 then: 8, then 8.15 and eventually, by the tinge King Ed - 'award came to the throne the ultra fold took to the din:ag room as late as 9 o'elaek, 'Feast nags bad for theatres arid hotel suppers, and in - Mentally beoi for the health and had niece to do, no doubt, with The "44SC cf gelat and indigestion in in eircles. It w:as the opposite e;�treta e tato of a, century ego, tables would sit down o'clock in the afternoon eosasidered them - eel if their renew ser - not carried them off intoxieaated by 7, The eneration still suffers y,• from hereditary gout these festive lune. ear. iter nebbish :head 1 the dogs of , who in th torn to to enter al< in at nig looked Dairy f laxly to. house and all its. d dairywindows uld'be screened. Barnyards should he leapt sero ousts neat, gutters asrnd stalls o lea elxould leo cleaned daily art efuse heaps kept eovcred pend lug removal. No decaying inatesi honld" be permitted to aaee umula on they household premises, an the garbage pan should be eleaned and aieoured daily and when ,in, use should be always kept well cover ed. All; wooden garbage boxes of leaky slop pails should be abolish - g xva g v rsa, "The suburbs read in the ziaws papers that Kiang George ennd his 1 family- dine tat 7,30. Tlae> suburbs ane leave boon eoutornning to tae urn- written sooiaal law of the last de- al wade by courting ;indigestion at an comm./110o solid phalanx of suburbanites k whose loyalty is ane of those thins s, that peaets ehonld eouunenxerate s to n e boats which saw<them in bed half "Now, with unquestioning ferv- they have altered their time as with last year's great ra,zzia, have evens all his windows and out- side doors. WHERE MOSQUITOES BREED. aken measures to stem the teady influx ef strarge dogs, much o the disgust of the cat population of Constantinople, -which after a few inonthe of unaccustomed facil- ities for nocturnal reunion have be- gun to find their eacial opportunit- ies in this respect seriously cur- tailed by the sudden attacks of the Very -spoil travellers will be once more compelled to push their way 'to the door of their hotel through a jostling, yelping,' pack of lean, yellow curs and ancient Stamboul will be itself again. Mosquitoes breed in stagnant water, in wet marshes or in any pool or permanent water accumu- lation, as in badly graded irriga,t- ing ditches or in roof gutters hold- ing water; *standing water in large or email volume anywhere may breed them, Mosquitoes are net merely a eon - Meta source of discomfort, or as regards 'some species a sezious dan- ger to health, but mosquitoes may also affect business interests. It has been asserted that by the attacks of ewaerns of mosquitoes upon herds of cattle their milk yield has been teq ' so redueed as to make the keeping of these animals for dairy purposes unprofitable. Horses are injured by the attack!' of mosquitoes. It is a familiar fact that there are tracts of land in various parts of the country that are made practic- ally uninhabitable and impossible ef development owing to the pres- ence of mosquitoes in large num- bers; and many places badly in- fested with them. have shown a de- preciation or have failed of appre- ciation in their property value so that all mosquitoes are harmful in one way or another. For mosquito control or exterm- ination there are now employed many means, which are applied by individual work on one's own pre- mises or by combined or commun- ity efforts. Obviously all windows and outside doors of farmhouses should be. carefully screened to keep out mosquitoes, as should be also rahl water barrels and other water receptacles ; but the breed - r • Small Brother—“Nobody filling in or by treatnaent with ker- o't 'Collie Yet; but pa says the Brst p -r similar preparations' that comes can have her." eieirEeGeneonaNee FARMERS LIOJH WHEN THE CLOCK STRIKES Young Man—"So Miss Ethel is It takes of study to enable is;111`,,(3,erlsiclin'cip°r-oopvec'm'aet'icit. an to paint, 1Dlit women :are 1'1a ad,t,i'sts, he ferineu, one of their objects tie- ing organized war on the mosquito. Every nlan believes ihat he is a The work of such a society should leeder, but the majority ere be laid out anel directed by one re - cable to lind a procession to I sporisible head, arel it is desirable I that he be a practical samta-eian. bo haif-a,clozen children,. . .100 taken from Beekingham Palace and 'fashionable society' follows eta. The hotels will not reseet the Change; on. the contrary they wel- come it, for it relieves there of the greatest possible strain, for up to now no sooner have tne dinner tables been cleared than the peo- ple crowd in for supper." Curions Experiment. The latest experiment in plain living and high thinking is being tarried on in the Whiteway Colony of "simple -lifers" on the Cotewold Hills in Gloucestershire, England. Unlike the famous colony at Brook Farm, where Emerson was a shinine light, the Whiteway enthu- siasts °had far to go before they made much impression on this bust- ling age. Bet Francis Sedlak, •an Austrian by birth, who in the inter - vale of manual labor on neighbor- ing farms, toils at the task ef making couverts to the Hegelian philosophy, has brought extensive advertisement to the settlement. Sedlakis diet consists of lentils, home-grown potatoes, and whole- meal bread made from home-grouen wheat. He lives in a wooden shanty of his own construction, and has just published a remarkable ee-Stle book, "A Holiday with a Ellie- lian," which eempetent judges de- clare is a close and original pre- sentation of the Geeman philoso- pher's aagument. Sedlak's ambi- tion is to publish a translation of Hegel's "Science of Logic," Britishees are far more interested in his highly xemaetie career, than in his academic industry. fe is like a candle in the wind E,egardi an old mail as y fath- An ugly woman shuns the look- ing -glass. Meeting is the beginning or see- arTaitgolinthn the cord of your helmet after le tory, When birds are unknown, the best, is peerlesS. An insecii an inch long has half an inch of soul. The pupil should walk seven feet THE SUNDAY DD! STUDY' INTERNATIONAL LESSON, 11L! ! 28. Lesson I.— 4iieiala's picture af; universal peace,, Mie. 4. lee. Golden Text, Mie. 4. 3., Verses 1-4. The future of Zion as, the religious metropolis of tho world. The passage has an almost, exact parallel in Isa. 2, 2-4, The, best opinion seems to be that both. Isaiah and Micah .nmst have taken the prophecy from some older source, the provision of a time of uuie-ersal peace being a popular idea, of which this passage is they finest cxpres$iou. 1.. The latter d.ays....A va n e e gag pression, deeetingr4 rather remote future. The mountain of ,7ehovahis house —The mount upon which is ,situat- ed the Temple of the Lord, It is - to be the seat of dominion of the essiaaln. Its exaltation above ether mountains and hills naeains its spir-- itual and temporal supremacy , Poli- ' tically and religiously, Zion is to tower above all the governments of the earth, No topographical elevtae bran is meatal, 2, Manny.: `nations stall/ ,go --=The heathen nations are to .flow (i) to- ward Zion in a steady streann, ipa order to be taught by the prophets ti like Micah and Isaiah, the ways and paths eaf the Clod of Jacob; that is, , the revealed laws and .maxims of the kingdom of.Gad, whose \religion, :ha; now coaaae to be recognized as uni- versal. All this is to comae about, net by force of arcus, but as n greats moral eonquest. The nations there- fore retain their political independ- nee, 3. He will judge -Jehovah is to be the final Arbiter, to whom are soh rnitted all disputee for Ws just and impartial judgment, and .Lis deeis- ions are to be aaeeepted nee irremver- Bible. The result will be the ees- eation of war among the naations, an.. blessing of the iessiaanie era wind; is often dwelt upon by the prophets. Tito transfo'raation of swords.and spear's into Agricultural implements sho\vs how real this period of ;untie versaal peace is to be. The people of the eountr,y, whose spokesman Micah is for the time being, are to pnnirsnle their aeeustomed labors no- ted. When the true religion falls their hurts, they will not think it necessary to preserve peace by the. sortstrnetion of eostty battle- ships and menacing fortifneetiona. The arsenals and,.navy-yawls will be silent, and the mechaanies will have, gone hack to the eultivetkon of the soil. 4, Every man under his vial+ --Ari, picture of rural felieiityi Wars and rumors of wars do not break in to disturb this satisfying quiet. a i. All the peoples walk That is, at the present time, in contract to. the future ji st depicted, But, how- ever other men walk, let the people of Jehovah eontinuc in his name for ever and ever. 6-8, The day of peace is far off. Meanwhile there await afflictions :for Zion, and exile. But God will restore them, and out of the righte- ous, :remnant make a mighty king f. Z will gather that which is driv- en away—By the Assyrians the peo- ple of God are to'be taken away in captivity. And yet, lame and af- flicted as they shall be, there will be a remnant (7) of so much worth. because of their fidelity to Jehovah, that he will be able out of them to make a strong nation. The tree will be cut down, but life will still ex- ist in the vital stump.. S. Tower of the flock—,Jerusalene The glory of>these prophets is, that their faith is superior to earthly' afflictions ef the'' most stupendous kind. Purified of her sins by mani- fold trials, Zion is eo ariet greater than ever, with all the former gioxy of. they days" of David and Solomon. This is the single limitation of the: prophecy by which it doilies short. o.f the most modern hope •of univer- sal peace. We cherish ,no thought of Zion as the center of fehovah'!s sovereignty. except as "Ion' is,to- us a metaphorical: way of spsaking of that very sovereignty • if Jehovah; and this spiritual sense the Ofd Tes- tament prophet did ant, of c mr;a, entertain. He thought of, Liu,; as, the literal center- of the reign of Jehovah in the new era. THE RABBIT Iii T,) t:15'n13. . The rabbit industr in inestralia. is stated to he slowly but surely disappearing. The lixst ei,riort of' frozen eabbits was ma,lc in 1804, in which .Nvere was 431,7].G. In 1)00 total Since thab year. the total has grad- ually doclined till lest --ear had. come clown to 2,841,048 rabibitfii -ported. Exporters and agricultur- ists alike are ',pleased at this ror suit. The fernier have ad their- a,;ailable, freezing plants occup;e4 with meat and butter 'arn...1 `while the latter vieAv (he el -hiller extinction of the with, commisu re. away from his teacher 1.est he tread Pelee !tad upon his shadow. fall. er go Le re