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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1912-2-22, Page 3tigt1,5.4.Q.Lp SELECTED RECIPES. • Cream Pie, -Stir together three tablespoonfuls of, sugar end one sant tablespoonful of flour. Add the white of one ege well beaten, and one pint of cream, with a few raisins. Bake like a custard pie. Stirabout.-Mix one egg, one eupfel of maple sugar„ -not maple syrup-ene cupful a sour eream, arm even teaspoonfulof seda, oue- fourth teaspoonful each oeinna- mon, euteteg and salt, and twO scant cupfuls of flour. Bake in a shallow pan and serve warm, Almond Cake. --Mix one and one- balf eupfule of sugar and one-half eupful ed butter- Add pee -half cup- ful of roilk, two cupfuls of flour eifted with one teaspoonful of bak- powder, the whites of six erg and arte-half cupful of almontre, ehopped fine. Frost, and put split almonds on toe. Herring I3alls (Danisle recipe. Soak twe salt herrings in water four hours, then aoali, in milk i� one hour, after removingaU and bones, Chop rine, and mixwith an equal quantity of =ek- ed Potatoand to this add the, SaMe aMolMt of linelY Chopped veal or beef (cooked). Shape this com- pound into small belle or cones, dip egg and finely rolled dry bread- orumbs, and fry in deep fat, Baked Brown Bread, -Use two oupfuls of sour milk, one-half eup- ful of molasses, two teaspoonfuls of Soda, one teaspoonful of salt, two oupfuls a Graham or rye /lour, one- half eupful of eornoneal and one •half cupful of flour. Stir the milk And rinalasee$:' tott'ether, add the do, dissolved in a little ha water, then the different kinds of menl, $tir rrtil the lnixture is free lumps. Bake in a moderate oven one hour, Cheese Cuetard,---Heat one pint 4xf sweet 'milk in a double boiler. Beet one egg tlhorrsughly, and add to it one-half teaspoonful of salt and one-fourth teaspoonful of black pepper. Beat into this the mint. Have ready ene-fourth pound of doinestic cheese chopped or one ten - cent jar of Imperial eheese. Stir the chdese into the custard and pour into either a well -buttered baking -dish or into individual eups or ramekins well -buttered, and bake slowly about twenty minutes; or, if desired, it may be steamed. Serve with hot buttered toast. Care •shoulei be taken to cook the cus- tard only enough to set it so that ib svill not whey, arid milk and eggs in combination ehould always be 000ked slowly, at a comparatively low temperature. Picanti, or Spanish Potatoes with Rica -Fry one small onion chop- ped fine, and one fresh tomato cat fine, or two tablespoonfuls of canned tomatoes in a pan with a piece of lard the size of an egg; add one coffeespoonful of salt and one-fourth coffeespoonful of Cay. enne pepper and let the mixture fry for five minutes. Add one a.nd one-holf pints of milk, two sliees of soaked bread, one-half of a ten - cent cake of crearn cheese cut up, - and twelve potatoes which have previously been boiled in the skin, but from which the skin has been ernel/id. Boil the mixture for eight or ten minutes; serve it on a platter and sprinkle over it two aarcaboiled eggs finely chopped, and parsley, also -chopped. Serve with this hot rice -which has had salt and butter ,in the, water in rwhich it was boiled, and which has 'been pressed into a mold before be- ing turned into a dish. Ham Pie.: -A Southern receipt for this economical and delicious dish has been handed downin one fam- ily for several generations. Toone quart of boiling water acid about one-half pound of boiled ham --or the meat from a ham bone -cut in- to small 'pieces. Let this boil while preparing biscuit dough. Roll out thin a piece of dough about the size of a pie crust, cut it into. small pieces, and drop them into the, boil- ing broth -one at a time, so that they will not stick together. Line a well -greased two -quart saucepan with strips of dough, put in a layer of ham, a seasoning of butter -pep- per and salt, add dumplings,. more seasoning, and then another layer of ham. _ Over this break one egg for each person in the family; cover loosely with a top crust having an ii openng n the center to allow the steam to escape, Bake in a moder- ate oven until a light brown, and dredge' with butter. ECONOMY IN THE KITCHEN. One of the. most ;serious prob- lems with which the ordinary,houee- wife is confronted during the win- ter is the questioreof the best means • for the ecotionrical disposal of the left -over. vegetables. • In the sum- mer months, when green vegetables are. plentiful; there are sbores of sisee which the small. scraps left, from :dinner may,bd.put, but' When the 'foods to be disposed:of include such things as squaeh, 'turnip, on- .. tons, cabbage, celery, radtshes„ etc., the cook .often "feels like.* ing the task as a hopeless one. In spite of this feeling, however, there are ways and means by which these apparently worthless left -overs inay be utilized to advantage. Thus, on excellent method of dis- posing of the left -over squash is to &lel two well -beaten eggs and ahont a talalespoonfel of near to each pint of the eold vegetable. Blend the ingredients thoroughly, shape the mixture into •seiliare cakes; cCrVer with egg and Orumhs, and fry brown in deep fat. Fried cabbage is another delicacy that cannot be enjoyed until the cabbage has first been boiled, If aonie of the cooked eebbage is left from dinner, therefore, it lends it, self graeefally to this: method of treatmerit, To prepare it, cut some elices of fat bacon into strips, and put them in the frying pan. When they hive cemreeeced to cook, and the bottom of the pan is well greas- ed, add the :cabbage and fry until thoroughly heated. Season with salt and pepper to taste. To prepare left -over onions de- lectably, bell some „rice in a littie salted water, and when done, drain, but reserve the liquor. Butter , baking dieh and arrange the riee and cold onions in alternate lay- , cutting the onions into snsall pieces, if desired, Make a saline by adding milk, batter and sat to the rice water, and, if necessary, thicken with a little dour. our this into the baking dish, saturat- ing the riee and onions thoroughly; 'cover the top with buttered bread erunabs, and bake until brown, HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Never leave the flatirons standing on the stove after yea have finished irening. After they have been left to heat and cool time and again they lese their "temper" and will not hold heat. Ammonia, rubbed beds and mattresses will keep teem cleme and free from hugs, A aeak Paha- tion Qf turpentine poured down the water pipes once a week rill delve the water bugs away. Spots in light dresses may geeers ally be removed lby laying on them a paste made of fiancee earth and eau tie eolegne. Let it dry, and then brush, it off. A second appli- tation may he wessary. To make sweetbread salad mix and boil until tender one pair sweetbreads. Add three stalks of eelery chopped fine, one-half eup of English tvainuts chopped line. Pour elver mayonnaise dressing. To clean a comb, grasp a whisk broom firmly in right band near broom end, comb in left hand; brush between teeth of comb vigor- ously. You will )lave a. perfectly clean comb in a, few Seconds. • To revive withered flowers, put the stems into boiling water, and by the time the water is cold, the flowers will have revived. Then eut afresh the ends of the stems and keep them in fresh cold water, Old brooms make fine brushes for sinks and aro nice for cleaning bed springs and mattresses. Cut off hie haudle, cut even at both ends; tie in two places with •stroeg cord. One broom makes three brushes. Keep a little paekage of absorb- ent cotton in ene of the sideboard drawers. If oil, roilk or cream is spilled on a, woollen deess or cleth a bit e,f the cotton instantaneously appliea will remove all traces oi the stains. If overworked homemakers whose nerves are "worn to frazzle edge" would acquire the habit of sitting or lying absolutely still, relaxed and motionless, for five or ten mie- utes teice a day, they would soon see improvement. To make flaky pie-asust, use one. and one-half cups flour, two-thirds cup lard, mix with as little cold water as possible, roll out, then spread lard on, and roll again; re- peat the process several times. You can use it for tartarusts or patties, baked. in pans. When making the round perfor- atiDns. for eyelet embroidery hold a piece of white soap underneath the cloth, allowing the stiletto to pass into it. When it is withdrawn .it gives a slight stiffness to the ma- terial which ensures even and per- fect embroidery. To ventilate a room having dou- ble windows that do not open bore a number of holes in the lower edge of the outer window frame and fit the holes with cork sthppers.. The inner windows may then be raised and the corks taken cut to admit fresh air. Clothespins will keep the window from rattling if they be split in two and one pioce'used as a wedge.frit each frame. If they are Painted white and fitted with a sectew eye in each head they may be hung on a hook by the window and be always ready for service. " • THE SUNDAY sc11001, slimy ,an, is etrecognize the improba- ' hilitY and iecongruity of the situa- tion implied. To imagine the. trans- • portation to have been instantane- ous and miraculous loecomes equally incougruous as soon az we inquire whose miraeuloes power it was that vas exerniacd. For either we Must think a Jeans as exercising his di- vine power to accompany and ae- eommodate Satan, or we meet im- agine Setae performing the mir- acle involved and taking Jeeue with hire by force; G. It is written -The referenee is to Psalm 91. 11, 12. 7, Again it is written- Deut, 8. Showeth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them -The vision jeeus had of the glory of earthly kingdems must, of lirse, have been purely mental, and this is the areuntent usually brought forward in eupport. of the NrieW that the whole series of temp - tions transpired in the realm of mind or spirit only. The cogency of the argument is evident, The ealism of the narrative, however, adds, vividuees to the whote arid bring e into vital touch with the aerial mental strugee which trans - 144d in. that 1441ely judaeen wild- o.rness, 0, If thou wilt worship Acknowledge my 'Iortlabip over the kingdoms of this world, 10. Clet thee hence, Satan -The elimax of the temptation has eome. A point has been reaehed where eSus IMISt either Surrender oririse mn the power of his 1441111°0 and drive the tempter tram him, Laaveth Mn -Luke adds 911," indicating that we agine the subsequent ear life of Jesus as entire/a, exera t from further temptation, Iudeed, the writer to the Hebrews :CATS SCRATCH" TABLE LEG, table has been in the posses- sion of a Dulwich family for °Yet' eighty years, and during this time the various cats they have possessed have scratched ,one leg, and one • g only, 'ill at last fhey. so wore it away that it lbebartie nselea and had to be replaced with a new leg. The old leg is still in existence, and kept as a curiosity. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, l'BRUARX lesson TIIL-The baptism, and temptation of Jeaus, illnek 1. )lat t, 4. 1-11. Olden Tet, Ifeb. 2, IS. ARK 1, 9-13. Verse 9, In those days -While Joh a waS Still baptizing in the wilderness, preaching repentance and announcenee the early advent. of the Messiah, In Luke'e ace -punt we are told that jeees was at this time "about thirty years of age" (.3, '23), Which WAS the age appoint- ed by law for the inauguratimof Levites into their offiee (Num. 4, 43, 47), Nazareth Conc.tparo note on verse 23, Tet Studies for Febru- ary 4„ The importanoe of Nazar- eth in the early life of Jesus was threefoki: (1) It Was a. secluded lege, seise:rated by a range of hills from the Main high road of traffic, and thus afforded opportunity far more 'quiet and refleetive life than watdd have been poesible either in Jerusalem or Caperneum. (2) At the same timethe OntlOok from this range of hills above Nazareth efferded most wonderfel and highly educative pauoramic view, ineludinn the main road of inter' atiostar trade with its eoritinual receasiono jerusalem pilgrims F,gyptiart and Midianite ore:vans, Roman legions, and princes.' retin- ues. Well might the diversified ele- ments mingling in sueh a Wenn in- spire within Mantled of a thought> ful and espeeially gifted youth, whoee heart VAS open to the hest and highest influences that «sfrom simple outdoor life and erent religious training in the IMMO a vision of the transitoriness earthly splendor and an appreeia- Von 9f the higher values of life. Nor could a lite philosophy f opportunity thus obtained be cramped within the narrow bound- aries imposed by national prejudic- es and teaditions, (3) Situated in Galilee, the village life of Nazar- th was under the influence of the imple synagogue form of worship rather thee that of the temple, with its greater emphasis on Lor- na' ritual. In the Jordan -The place of baps tism is not positively known. The fourth Gogiel speaks of John as baptizing in "Bethabara (or Beth' any) beyond Jordan" and again 9n Amon, near to Salint" On 28; 3. 23). The location of these places is, however, uncertain. 10. Straightway -The word a. charaeteristic of the author's vivid style. Be saw -That is, Jesus, although the Baptist also was a, witness of the heavenly manifestation (John 1. ee). The Spirit as a dove descending upon him -Compare Luke's word- ing, "the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily form, as a dove, epon him" (3. 22). 11. A Yoke came out of the heav- ens -For two similar instances of a voice speaking from heaven, com- pare Mark 9. 7 and John 12. 28. 12. The wilderness -An unin- habited region, net a barren de - 1 13. Forty days -Perhaps a. "round number" (compare Exod. 34. 28; 1. Kings 19. 8; Acts 1. '3). The temptation is here represented as continuing through the entire period. Satan -A Hebrew word meaning advereary. Compare Chron, 21. Psa. 109. 6; Matt. 16. 23. In the sense here used as the adver- sary of mankind its Greek equiva- lent is diabolos, meaning devil, the -word used by both Matthew and Luke. ey slowly') and in company with SIR ,FRANCIS IIOPW000 .ETTNG: N Heed of the Biggest Busineas hi he Seenes Familiar to Englisb Life British Empire. lany Years Ago.' Whee Whasten Churchill went to Finland grows modern with the the British Admiralty to take rest of the world, but the people charge of "the Kmee, navee' atill cling to some et tne Old CUS-- there we misgivings among the toms -the old market -days, for in, 'Tite Barnacles" of that depart- stance, and the market -planes, euoh meet, for Wieston has established as were femiliar to English life one a reputation for elearhig out ineaffi- or two hundred years ago. There is , cleats, 'With the establishment of nonehauee, there for the middleman a "busineee war board" the nus- to make a profit oti, either side of the givings have been fully jestified, transfer from the producer to the and already the modem spirt of consumer. Moreover, the market- aertnss is invading the ;sleepy niece, furnishes many little scenes abode where for years dignity and which illuminate national charaeter "good form" have bean more) ad- and national life. One of these is mired than -vigorous capacity. given by Paul Wainexnan in hie In ReaaeAdmiral David Beatty, book, "A Summer Tour in Fin- Wiesten Churchill has a peinate land." secretary whose record has been The market is a veritable delight bhenoreenally eaeid. The Admiral to the eye of. the visitor, it, is eo has ability. away beyond the aver- ridiculously primitive and? old-fashe age, hlAt he would be the last to toned. There are lines upon lines: deny that the ,social eminence a hi5 of quaint booths and rows of beautiful wife, wife, a, daughter of the les, two -wheeled market -carte, With late Marshal Field„ has aided hispatient little Finnish horses stand- meteorie advancement. ing as motionleas as if they had After Admiral Beatty, c ' aeon_ made of the same gingerbread terest centers in the choice ancis Uopwood as add i that te smiling market -woman offers el to me as 1 wended my way ivil lord -the "buyerthrough their midst. nes 5 Manager" of the Mull a The descriptio4 given oaly a fa. The market waa too tempting -I idea of the reepensibili6e$ that w fargot all about state archivea and fall upon him. Ilia zeleetien as , -galleries, Some liliee-of„, plucked' that morning man to ran the business side of iii a lcres glade, hung their tai' e first line of defence, onee heads wearUy, even when in contact more proves Winston Churehill'a v,'itb big, mei cabbages. Dainty keenness to: put the right man in ladies picked up their skirts as they the right place. AS tbe Admiralty threaded their way here, there and alien& upwards of $100,000,000 a overywberc, inspecting reinatein the year, Sir Feaneis Hopweod thus goods on the various stalls, always beeoraca •the working head pi tbe lel:owed by n red-eheeked hand - biggest Inteinees in the, British Ent- maiden, bearing a huge Old -World pire, His vast experience •of al- wicker basket, from which a very fairs bas been gained at the Board ' varied assortment of edible$ peened of Trade. He first became their fola, autherity on railreada and traffic At that market you ean buy every., -tole pa deAaiteis anaa j-eees was matters,E.faviere isisheeeefully eon-',' thing.-inerat, peultry, fruit, vege- 411. paints aarapaeol like as Nee ducted varmaa =smile to Amer - without, si,n" 4, 15), iva, where he added to his know - the art al effeetive hustle, Francis was transferred te the nial office and INVITOQ advisor ibe short-lived eonstitutiona for Transvaal and Orange River oloiliee. He attended King e ge an his visit to, Canada, and hard be Duke a Connaught when. ho 0 went to South Africa to inaugura the 'Union Pfirliament. MATTHEW 4. 1-11. Verse 3. Command that these stones become 'bread -The first temptation is prompted by physical appetite, the suggestion being to make use of powers granted for a higher purpose in allying the crav- ings of hunger. 4. It is written -In Deut. 8. 3. Isiael had been forty years in the wilderness, but God had provided for all the needs of the people, "that he might make thee know that than doth not live.by bread o nlyeleut by everything that pro- ceedeth out of the mouth of Jeho- ✓ ila (lath man live." 5. The devil eaketh lihne=-A liter- al .interPretalionsof this account of the temptations of Jesus:would re- quire as to think of bobloJesus and the devil actually leaving the soli- tude of the wilderness, and to- gether going to 'Jerusalem, many miles distant, and then, back to the high mountain -top, pr -vice versa, if we follow Duke. who placeS the sec- . oral and third temptations in re- verse artier f r om 111 attlio W. The journey would occupy some time, possibly a full day, unless we sari - pose Jesus to have been transport- ed instantaneously ic some miracu- lous manner into the hole, r2, tY and ' to the pinnacle of., the. temple.. :l ia megine Jesus_ fatigued .ind all but exhausted, making that long jour - Many Gr ore at marriages take place and is proved rt of the renis- ntly issued, Ifere c .most notable ca$- . furled a man twice r age; six married at the age of ility-fourat tho age of 16, in e eases the bridegroom being widower; 320 at the age of 17 ; ten "rls of 18 married widowers. Of boys who entered matrimony, were; One aged 10 married a ' 1 of 15. ono of 16 married a girl af 16; ane aged 16 inavried a we - man o 21,twnty boys married at the age of . In contrat to these youthful partners, there were recorded the weddings of a widower of 86 years of age, and twO others of 78 re marrying, and right others of over 70. Most of the latter married widows. Since the introduction of regis- tration, over half a century ago, irregular marriages in Scotland have greatly increased. Of the 30,- 108 marriages recorded in the ,year under review, 2,01e (or GM per advance. cent.) were irregular, the majority "As far as I know, this, is the of them taking place in Glasgow first abeclutely silent aeroplane; it and Edinburgh. is silent to this extent, that when the wind is blowing strongly from it towards you you cannot hear 14. "A military aviattor who was present at our trials remarked that there was other machines with which he was acqeainted which it would not have been safe to have gone up in, in the wind that was blowing. 1 .see, no reason why every aeroplane which does not employ a rotary engine should not he :silent. It is a very simple matter. The reason why it has been put in the background aitherto is because other rnatters have required more attention, ..but everyone knew that the moment for ,silence would soon arrive -at all events on a, large class of engines. "There is a certain loss of power in silencing, but there is no diffi- culty about it beyond just a careful study of the engine proposition. Silence will become very important when the, confidence that will come as soon as the `chudders' hake left aeronautics has arrived. 'You can imagine, for example, that it might be worth a man's while, instead of taking a special train, to be, carried along what might be called the postal route between Dover and Liverpool. He ,F the combatants fell woancleci, COMCS from the OonHnent andwhite the victor wapileolitstywaiked off without even troubling to send p help to his fallen o le.nu, milk, butter, flowers, even to the humble -wild Illie$, The hum is semething aatonishing. apparently no fixed tragedy of, renuncia- 'et/ in the eurrein egetalilea to a rho has bargained to bench of carrot: gbt iny attention, They appear. tO Tan to be very ordinary ear. The British public 'ban the utmost1 ncts, but their owner, an old man, onfidence in the new business bead bent nearly donbie, with his years, f the navy, a refreshing departurii4 lifted them tenderly from the eor. nent official, whose strength was chaser was an elderly woman with m the old-time type of permal aer of his cart. The would-be pur- often. found 5n social qualifications sharp, greedy eyes. I could see, either than in efficiency, in hia de-' from the &at that 14 would go badly partment. Al`LANTIC FIXER S. British Aviation Expert Says Th Will he Silent Aeroplanes. ., te facee-poliinquiry, a.stontsinnent, "People are afraid of aeronau- cciemp'.,1 IneredulitY, wounded , . ties, but when the aeroplane is Ily- pride, determination, hesitation, ingavarice; finishing, up at la.st with, frequently from -town to town triumph on the one side and resig- silenee will become imperative." nation on the other, as the bunch of So saye Mervyn O'Gorman, saner - carrots was earried off by the wo- iniendent of the army aeroplane -man. factory at Farnborough, England, who has turned out the new all - British "silent," aeroplane that the experts have been demanding, "Ars a matter of fact," he says, "silence is very easy to obtain. This machine shows a little step in with that Old man. The, seen a that took plaee between them was tragic. Every emotion of •hich a,hurnan countenance is capa- ble was portrayed in turn upon both HEREDITY AS IIE SEES IT. Biologist Says Sons do not Inberit Characteristics of Fathers. Sons do not inherit personal traits and characteristics of their fathers, according to statements made by Dr. Johannsen, of the Uni- versity of Copenhagen in an address on "Inheritance," in Huntington Hall, of the Institute of Techno- logy, Boston. That Tom has inherited his fa- ther's bad habit of smoking, or that Harry has inherited his mother't sweet disposition are entire mis- conceptions, according to the Den- mark biologist. "That is only tra- dition," he said. "It has absolute- ly nothing to do with inheritance. Inheritance is not the transtnission of personal characteristics, but merely the existence of the same Constitutional characters in par- ents and offspring." 1-14 SPUN COTTON LONG AGO_ Lancashire's proud record of three hundred years in the cotton trade is far behind India's. Cotton was manufactured to perfection in India More than three thousand years 'ago.' Thus Mr. Thomas El- lison in his "Cotton Trade of Great Britain," says : "Fabrics as fine as ente that can be turned out at the pre -sent day by the most perfect machinery in Lancashire were pro- duced by the nimble flueers oE Hin- doo spinners and , the primitive, looms "of Hindeo weavers, a thou - Mind years bCTOre the invasion of Britain by the Reteans.'' When 'Britons, by fact, were suffering 'from their skills, Indiami n-cae. "luxnriati2ag in garments of o tex- tore r.,o fine as to have earned the poetic ..NV,heet nial(es' . , „ to d ay ru a ' the .Jav. 1Defore , - yeiterda1-Londn C1aoni1 SCHOOLBOYS FIGHT DUEL. German Youths l'se Firearnis ft Set tie Dispute. Once again the morbid readina indulged in. by German schoolboys and youths, and the peeuliar ideas of honor and the deel held in Ger- many, have resulted in a "school- boy duel," in which one of the com- batants received injuries which will probably cost him his life. A boy of seventeen years was found a few days since in a small wood near Dettnold, in an uncon- scious condition, with a bullet wound in the right brea,st. He was taken eo the local hospital, where his chances of recovery are regard- ed as small. 14 seems that the la.d, a scholar in the Detmold higher grade school, quarrelled with a schoolmate of his own age over a girl, even younger than themselves, and for whose fa- vors both -were aspirants. Driven to extremes of jealousy by the knowledge, that each was sharing the girl's affections with the other, the two youthful ROMCOS mutually de- cided on an "affair," in which one should seek the only possible es- cape froin his passion in death, while the victor remained in undis- puted possession of the field. This programme was duly car- ried out. The, boys, by SOME means, obtained possession' of fii,e• arms, and repaired to the wood, without seconds or other witnesses. At the first exchange of shots one wants to go' to Ainerioa, and on such a route, as that silence would before long, beeonaa compulsory. 'T h e extent to which the. a.- - - --a --- S , ther delays or controls the doings HIWAY of an aviator depends largely on 'Fair CI 11C St- '73us if yen ignore two thinge-one, the speed al his social rank and precedence, lioNV machine; thm greater the spend the do yen manage, Jor instance, isa ar- isss is he affected by the relative ranging guests ;or dinner ?'' lbactuations in the Eneed of the Pron.inent Loader of Socialist wiud. Tim other thine is that his Ceme,enne----``Let tic hulas -Hest go MOLITIS Of COntrO] Of bia ba,IMICC in first,'' shall lie v.cry powerful in response to a small effort on his part, and hy making that small effort, he shall cbtan a large result." An old bachelor..will stay out till 2 ,;1.11tif he wants to, but he misses the ..fina oi trying to sneak upstairs with his shoos off. 'How ebean tho nenz.on is re- inarini.d. a ,s oung lady.. .'agrced bier humorous COi5par0.011',' iuse siveet it with '.me 'You mar Pied ire sniaply bo caliSe -11 had rneitey 1 , mar I' (1, '-u becanso I .didaiit have, money