Exeter Advocate, 1912-3-14, Page 7CHOICE RECIPES,
Chocolate Nougat' Oke.----Ono-
fourth cup butter, two eups granu-
lated sugar, one-third cup sour
milk, one-third cup sweet milk, two
cups bread flour, two eggs, one-
quarter teaspoordul sa.lt, one-half
teaspoonful soda, three teaspoon-
fuls baking powder, one-half tea-
spoonful vanilla, three squares
chocolate, one cup almend$ (blanch-
ed and ehredded). Cream the bat-
ter and add one and one-half cups
of sugar and unbeaten eggs. Mix
well and add sour Milk, flour sifted
with soda, baking powder and salt
and mixed with two-thirds of the
almonds; mix well and add vanil-
la. Cook together until emeoth
melted chocolate, sweet milk and
one-half cup sugar; cool slightly and
add to the cake naixttire. Bake in
two layers and mit white mountain
cream sprig/0 with the remein-
der of the elMende between the
layers and on top. Keep in a stone
jar. It improves with age,
Peened Oe'etersa—One pint oys-
ter, One-half eup butter, ene-half
a pepper, ono spoonful salt. Drain
the oysters. Ilea the butt ex in
a chafing- dish, add the oysters, and
when they begin 'W "curl" sprinkle
with salt and pepper and serve o
quarts of hot buttered toast ar-
ranged on a hot platter.
Fruit Oelatin.--One glass 'currant
one-half package grauulated
gelatin, ono -half pint cold water,
one-half pint pineapple juice% onow
half top sugar. Stoop the gelac
in told water ono hour,'add suga
pineapple juice and jelly, thou Nov
hot Water mix, strain and allow to
tool slowly. Prepare the ,day
be -
for it is needed. 'This quantity
will serve the family twice. Reep
a tool place. Serve with whip-
ream. r qu
Put a spoonful a maYean se on
eaeh,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Eat plenty of onions, especially
in the spriog,
' To make smooth mush, \viten
thickened, take crank egg beater
and beat it well.
Placing a towel or cloth over the
ragged edges of a can ie opening
will save eut fingere,
In sewing on sleeves, instead of
lainding the .seams, ult
se the Feene
seam, It is much neater and is
quiekly done.,
Large pads of colored bloffing
paper make practical underlinings
'for a thin bureau scarf; they aleo
save peliehed eurfaces.
To keep fruit ealre fresh, wrap in
towel and put into flour bin; cover
with flour, and it will keep moist
and afresh for weeks. "
Te make a good eye wash, add a
teaspoonful of powdored belle acid
te one cup of boiling water; strain
and appy to the eyes night and
morning,
When making a. garment which
quires two rows of machine
itehing, make the second row from
the edge Ara, and it will insure a
straight edge,
shelis when baking.
Tako 01W $hail2 gtush and put in
cruet, add a little water and shake
well ; also good for cleaning baby's
milk bottle and hewls,
If you And the sardine can hal'
to open plaeo serew.driver o
mething eqnally strong in the
loop of the key ATA4 tif171., th
seiew driver AS a lever,
In sowing tape OA hosiery, put it
thrQugh the length of the stocking
o .1r. instead of aoross. IewilE
sot the hose nor rip as when
the other way.
4 bird 1)401 often -
hart times 4 week; the1
rater to take the
keep your bird
sily.
buttonhol
eltinoff T
irclut taking eol
To end
aelt side of tear with heavy
her eew buttoss-hole etitchee
et
hIr. Coveu t li blav
vroo,„ sa104._Ttro bananas,aid tt never ivill be noticed.
.halt blotch of cress, ono.quar. ir" tidn "sh
uthm aa
X GREAT SPEAR THRUST.
tauter Drove Blade Into Rhino..
coros's Breast.
Arab Tumo, the ehinoteros-slayer,
as a mighty spearsmare. Commoa
report said that no lees thee sixty
thiaeceros had fallen to his thrusts,
each one of which he had killed in
single combat, Such an achieve-
ment ,seems impossible; but an an-,
e' -dote of Timm, told by Mr. E. B.
Broneon in his book., "In Closed
Territory,'' makes it comparatively
easy ta bei:'eve, Arab Tame {VMS
leading A, party down a precipitous
eovered with the ghastly
gray /eaves and stalks of the tall
elephant -gra.
Amid the grass everything is. slitt
out from your view except the
patches of sky that now and then
4Ppenr through 4.he ru-stEng russet
roof above your head, 414.t your very
'feeta poiseeg„ue cabra or mamba
may be, coiling to give you a death -
stroke; within reach of the mur4o
f your rifle a grea python may bo
preparing to toss his mighty fold.$
'about your neck; Ain°, buffalo,
Km or love and alway
haunt this cenvenient arnhush, and
One a them may any inalant''ratela
your wind anal be literaTly upon you
before yon have t°.;ne te. threw you
rfle to your eheuider.
When I -wee about half -way down
from the summit to the swamP, with
rah Tullio marching ahead, if Mel
4o4 although no AlQr, than :ix feet
in advance, (Ptite out of my aight,
uddenly I heard, from just beyond
im the ihin and crashing of
ome mighty hi'd,Y•
I jumped forward just in time to
sce a giant rbinO, whichhad been
ssing our line of march (limey
en front OZ US, tartc {.C1aNving for a.
harge stp our lime We had not
tteeked him, but his great head
s shaking, with rage; his little
Ike eyes were glaring, with
u ed tits Be If d koep them straight, don
nnaise dressing; Select firm
ripe ruts, peel and slice lortgth.
wise. range the eress tacit-
vidual salad plates, plate a half ba-
nana, out side down, on each plate,
sprinkle with nuts arid put a spoon-
ful of 'mayonnaise on each.
Veal Cutlets with Tomato Sotco.
—To pounds 1. -cal cutlets, ono tea- To dm stovepipes wecessfully,
ePP P , - ea sp
eecoed. 'When
umo the man and the
1 184A length of
er Ueesuelsed low, -with
e and in the
eeor.d of therhino's swing to
b ge, with heeled and mighty
a Ike drove tho blade ef bis
three-foot spear deep into the
tures breast behind its left
boulder.
The weanon ranged diaeonally
through the slenCee v;tals toward
his right hip, and was buried to the
-very heft in his hody.
The rhirmeeros instantly gave a
shrill scream of pain, A gush of
foam -flecked blocel told ef udeedliy
tri arid irOrt, Which shapes them,
they then can be opened out
r t trouble and ironed all over.
ante all wool stockings can
b kept from shrinking by washing
eni in a light ends of pAre soap
retching them over jolly glas.
dry. When dry press with
nedium hot iron,
spoonful salt, one-quartor spoonful saturate a cloth with gasoline and
one-quarter floor, one teaspoon come off like. mo8i.o. Bo =viol or
onion juice, two tiipS tomato sauco.
popper, one-quartee oup butter, ipe. The dirt and grease will
Cut the veal into pieces suitable
for serving. Dip in crumbs, beat-
en egg Isle& crumbs and fry in ]sot
fat just enough to sear and brown
the outside. Put into a baking dish
and cover with tomato sauce, heat
to point and place in the
fireless cooker for the day.
Potato Soup.—One cup Aced po-
tatoes, four cups thin -white sauce,
two onione (grated). Mix all to-
gether, pass through a colander
and serve very hot. (Bleed pota-
toes left over from dinner the day
before may be used.)
Fresh Pineapple.—Select a ripe,
juicy pineapple with a strong fork
pull the circular sections, from the
core. Arrange ten or twelve of
hese on a dessert plate with a cone
ef-powdered sugar in the center.
This is to be eaten like strawberries
on the stem.
Cress and Cheese' Salad. --One
bunch -erisp watercress, one pack-
age pimento cream cheese. Remove
cheese from the package and cut
in half-inch rounds; arrange the
cress on individual salad plates;
place the round of cheese in the
center with a spoonful.of mayon-
naise on top. 'Decorate with
blanched and split almonds.
Cream of Celery Soup.—Use the
leaves and tough part of the celery
tor soup. Wash carefully and boil
half hour in the fireless cooker
kettle, then place it in the cooker
overnight. In the mornine- serain
and put away‘in sterilized jars to
be ready for use. Mix equal parts
of celery stock and -white sauce- ancl
serve very hot.
Toasted Cheese Sandwiches. -.-
'Cut white bleed in one -inch slices,
trim the crusts, toast the bread on
both sides, bUtter one side and (Ov-
er with sliced cheese; place under
'the broiler until the cheese inelts,
then cover with another slice of
toast with the buttered side in.
This should be serVed,.hot.
Fillet of Beef. ----Soar and beown
in a skillet, place on a rack over
boiling ,water in the fireless eooker
and ie b it rennain all day. 'At din- nant color in the flees_ of the world.
`tier time it will be tender; juicy and There is only one flag' in Europe
still warm. While the remainder that does not contain red, and that
f . the dinner is prepared in the is the standard of -Greece.- 'After
oven make brown eravv in the skit- red, blare takes pride of place.; but
fire. The best place to clean it is
on the back poreh or yard.
Au easily mado ga,to to keep baby
in a room or from attempting to
climb the stairs is an ordinary slid -
big window screen put in at the
baton. of the door or stnirway the
same A$ is put in a window.
• If the icing should harden before
putting it on the take add a tea-
spoonful of cream and stir quickly
for a few semi& this drill soften
the ieine long enough to enable it
to be put on the eake smoothly.
Take a safety pin, stick securely
through end of tape, fasten pin,
then as the pin is smooth it will
go through goods easily, drewing
tape with it. Is especially good for
tape that is too wide for ordinary
needle.
If milk burns in bottom of pan,
pour water in pan, set on stove, let
boil a few moments, and sewn will
loosen of itself, where otherwise
you might serape half an hour. To
remove burnt taste from milk, pone
in fresh pan, set in cool water, and
milk will be all right in a minute.
URVIVAL 'QF CUSTOMS.
Quill pens still survi've at the Law
Courts. The barrister may itse a
gold or steel pen iin chambers; but
in court the quill pen is an indis-
pensable accessory to oratory, whe-
ther to flourish at a jury or to point
a warning finger at a witness who is
reluctantly ',disgorging tbe truth.
And 'the law is .eonsereative in
many other matters. Nbwhere else
but, at a, Chancery Lane law sta.-
tionerls can you buy letter wafers,
which weri abandoned by ordinary
people -nearly a century ago. And
this writer remembers an aged
I 1 11 h to 1
cop, er ce-et enough have
been a contemporary ef the unfor-
tunate Mr. Nemo of "Bleak
Irons& --whe used `a sprinkle of
satid instead of blotting paper—
,.
London Chronicle.
COL011S IN FEAGS.
Fled is by far the, most peedomi-
e
let in which the metal 'Was seared. many flags are entirely red, except
Tomato Sauce.—Melt the, buiter for minor devices., Egypt - Moroc-
,
nil add gradually the flour, salt, co, Ans-tria-nuegary, , and- Japan
pepper and tomato juice to make possess all -red Lags, No tewer than
a smooth sauce. - fort -two .other countries display I
Almond, and Fruit Salad. ---One red freely- in their banners, and th'e
neapple, one cup almonds one- color iS, in a natural sense, typical
hali.,'eelerV .,one-auarter' CUT) may- -et va.ot anc
.onnaise forir -6risp lettuce leaves., represents j,tistice; white s.,ands for
Out '-the, pineapple and Celery in nitrifY•
Ships ca,n be weighed
inintitc.s.1}y-ine'a in 'a -few
' ' • 1,1)raverv Blite in llae8
.pieces, the size of alrnends. 131aneli
,nd-SPlit the' alniOndse ` 11/.1,ix all to -
'ether 'and arranc,e - "individual
garni.shed. with le,t-tu,ce,
11
aeP,.!ragfean t'
- IlOtneter,
lung wound, and then. with trUTACi
spear still transfixing bun, the moss-
ster wheeled and lurched out of our
sight? down the Inn at seght angles
to our course.
Asset there Arab Tomo, with pulse
appareatly unquickened by a single
beat., stood quietly smiling and
signing for permission to follow and
recover Isis spear!
DUKE OF SUFI (BMA .1c
DiSPOSPS fti ,,,Inothev Big Slice of
llis )lolding in Eitgl a n d
„Ilse Duke of Sutherland, the aris-
tocratic prophet of national decay,
seems bent on preparing for the day
wheel he believes England will not
be a lit and proper place for noble-
men to rive in. Another proof that
his hopes are eentred in Canada,
where picked Scotemen a,ro being
settled on his Alberta farms, is now
forthcoming. vAnother slice of his
. .
enorms holdings in real estate on
this sidg is to come into the market,
'title being his Lillesliall estate in
Shropshire, Englend, comprising
eight thousand five hundred acres
of the best agricultural land in the
county. But tlic Duke has Still ever
a million acres to dispose of, and
no doubt his heir, Lord Stafford,
who is soon to marry Lady Eileen
Butler, will put his foot clown„good
and hard af his exalted parent goes
too far in his policy of shedding the
ancestral estates.
E'vid?ntly the Duke of Suther-
land's example is contagious, for
about the time his. next. lot of land
is put up to auction, the Rev, R. E,
Walker, rector of- Frant, with Inc
wife, Lady Emily Walker, their five
children, a footman and a maid
will be making tracks for Vancou-
ver, all bent on seeking their for:
tune in the West. "We are being
faxed Out ef existence," as the- rea-
son Lady Walker gives for this
drastic departure
``YOU 'RE ALL RIGHT.'
Many a heart is kept front aching;
Saved, perhaps, at point of brealc-
ing
By these werds—ato trou
ing,
"YOu're, rigl '
•
IVIlen you feel' like ,growine colder
,
Jtast a -hand upon the shoUlder.
Nothing, greater, notlaing-,bolcler;
Alaltes things lorighter.
Say the avoids' to',those eet-
ing
And iigus,e a cordial r ee ti
iphreeeese °ling, °
Teut they star
t-60,seeillgegae,,'Sanib
11
Ind:a-straying
Obeying,
.1131-,`
SPEOTS SITILLAL: 11 GUT GIVE Til 31 SECI1Fe
49Y?
The above excellent photograph,
uced from the London-
Tetlee, eisews Lord Londonderry, on the left, and Sir Edward Carson,
the two leaders, or ringleaders, as your fancy may call them, if the
Trish Unionists, who are organizing all the opposition in Is:bland to
the forthcomieg bi114.p.."43ing 114:1Dae, Rule to Ireland. They are breath-
-ng blood and thunder, and eveey stop the Goverument makes toward
pnttiug the bill into the forns of len., is to be marked by a grave-
stone. The Tetley says of this feature of the agitation: 'Underneath
the eloak of POlitieal ferecity which both sides adopt, we believe there
Secret joy in the vontemplatiou of a period when they ears unre-
"see head and hitt, "
EMMA= „1„G1EEMENT.
Natives gpt Loyal in Ot
1Vritten in 1793.
To the dwellers in far oorners
lie,earth, black or brown or yellow,
Europeans are Europeans only.
They are all white men and all
Christians; the trilling differences
bete'ten Englishman and Prenth-
mart and German are net uudet-
steed any marc' eleas.l,v by them
than the Aistinetion between Bee
0
soneo and Matebele and Banana,
0
is understood by VS. An amusing
instance in illustration is given by
Mrs. Buteher in "Egypt as 'We
Knew It"
When the British troops were
making their way up the Nile, in a
sin attempt to relieve Khartum
and save Gordon, they came to a
certain town. and camped for the
night. Some of the soldiers went
off to obtain provisions, and appear
to have behaved badly. At any
rate there WAS AZ brawl of some
kind, and some natives were in-
jured. Order was restored, but a
deputation of village elders shortly
appeared ansi insisted on seeing the
officer in command.
To his surprise'they formally re-
monstrated withbim for breach of
contract. "On our side," they said,
"we had loyally kept and were
keeping, it. You were allowed to
eamp without interference, and we
were preparing to 'send you sup-
plies. Why, then, aia you break
your agreement and send your men
into our village'?"
"But," said the otfeer, "I have
no, agreement with you. 3 never
saw or heard of your village be-
icli(e.t1i:e you iet a white man and a
Frangi-?" aels'-ed the village elders,
indignantly; "It, is true Nvo did not
make the contract with you; our
fathers made, it with' the whiteoffi-
el7 it carnc bef e - y°11' But
we
have the contract and can
sho'w t
The 'officer naturally expressed a
desiee to see the contract; and the
deputation .went awa, and brought
a letter written in 1799 by General
Desaix. of Napoleon's army, in
which he undertook that none of the
soldiers of the advancing army
should at any time ,enter that par -
tier -tier village so long as the, camp
was kept supplied with provisions.
I am ISOrry to Say that the story as
told to, inc stepped at this point.
But I have no doubt that the Eng-
lish officer, whose name I cannot re-
member., loyally accepted les an_
heritcd obligations.
LIKE FATHER.
'\\ot yoa (loin! chile0L
'`Nothin' maraniv
'Aly, but you is gittin' like o
father.''
New 'South V\ alt poss es Sixt
friendly soeieties, with a mem-
Ipership of 161;000. -
Quiet-spokenCrtstonier 'Teri
keep ,everything for,tlie piano, ',don't
Salesman e
uiet-Spoketv ,Gustolne
ail axe '
0
BIWFII Qj TI1E WO 'MOS.
Prof, Bickerton Explains Hew New
Stars are Borst.
Er*W new ster$ were barn was ex-
Plained at the Royal Institution
last week by Professor A. W. Biek-
orlon ia the first of two lectures on
"The New Aetrononey."
Profeseor Bickerton who has
been sent by the NOW iealand GOV-
rnment to expOund his theory of
thc birth of the worlds to scientific
men in England, said that new
,etars were, bore by solar eollision,
"The impact of two colliding
suns," he said, "results in the for-
mation of a third body; a brilliant
star flashes out and becomes per -
"A complete collision of two gas-
eous suns waled reaule in the form-
ation of a new sun. Such collisioes
are not accidental, and do not Od-
tUr at randern. Gravitation is in-
cluded among, a number of agencies
tending to develop collisions ; bo -
ins come into collision. they
fall toward each other, and get up
speed for hundreds of years.
"The tremendous speed thus de-
veloped is stopped suddenly in the
colliding parts, and converted into
heat. Thus, in about an hour a new
star is born, explosive forceex-
pands it, and it swells ont its dia-
meter at a, speed of millions of
miles an hour." '
Professor Bickerton, speaking of
Nova Pereei, the new etar of the
new century, said it was zo brilliant
that nothing equal to it bas been
seen for 300 37ears. It was 10,000
times as brilliant as the sun.
IMPORTANT INTENTION.
From Straw It Is Possible to Obtain
Fibre for Spinniug.
An inventon perfected and tested
in Austria has caused no little ex-
citement in the textile world. It
consists of a process of treatment
of common straw whereby itis now
INTEEYATioisiTAL LESSON,
ltrARen 17,
Lesson XL The paralytic for vele
and healed, Mark 2- 1-12.
Goldee Textepsa, 103. 2, 3.
Verse1. He entered again into
Capernatue--After an absence of
some days, daring which he made
the preaching tour of Galilee re-
ferred to above.
It was noised—The rumer that
be had returned and was again in
the house- (probably the house vof
Simon and Andrew, where lie had
last beea seen) spread quickly
through the. city,
2. Speke the word -unto them—The
brnehd
essaa gecom°i etruth
4ancl g' *le etidings„
3, And they citme---Certain
an-
nalueci persons, a larger company
than lust, the four men with their
'afflicted friend, The incident which
follou,s is introduced into the nor -
Mire to illustrate how the words
(3aidjelisautsreadr°'omfed‘'etelrletaiarint'slegrcibneiT`
(verse 6),
A mar sick of the palsy ---Literal.
Y, 4 paralytic.
4. Uneevered the roof—The rooft
f Palestine houses were fiat and
covered with tiles er, in the ease et
the
tlomodestre dwellings, with
t
5. Their faith --More especially
the faith of the four men who would
not, be deterred by any difficulties,
bow -ever great, from bringing their
friend to the notice of Jesus. The
iek man doubtless also exercised
aitb, but the anteeedent of the pro -
an they is clearly the word four
3.
Sen—Greek, child,
6. Certain of the scribes—Phari-
sees and lawyers, present for the
\Tress purfiose of watching, and,
f possible, finding eause for legal
accusation against him,. Doubtless
some of those referred to 'were
ries from the hostile party at
Jerusalem, by whom the death ol
Jesus had already been determined
upon (compare 1..ukc 5, 17; John 5.
18).
7. lie blasphemetb—For strict
orthodox olOWS 1V130 reiectecl the
Messianie claims of Jesus there was
no alternative verdict; the claim to
forgive sins implied, according to
their strictly orthodox views. A
laim to distinct equality with God.
Tide implied elaim‘ of Jesus these
men were cplick to recognize. Hence
their question, Who eau forgive
sins but one, even God'? Having
rejected his claim to divinity. they
could not do otherwise than bit-
terly antagonize Jesus.
S. Perceiving in his spirit—Know-
ing who these men were, Jesus knew
they would understand his mes-
sage. He knew, too, that for them
there would be but two possible
courses of action with regard to
himself. Either they must receive
his message and become his disciples
or they must rejece it and treat him
as an impostor and blasphemer.
The ,expression on their faces doubt-
less indicated which of these alter-
natives they were choosing.
9, 10. Which is easier, to say --
As if Jesus had said, "You have
heard me say, Thy sins are forgiv-
en, but have no way of knowing
whether my word carries the nee-
es*Sary power with it. But there is
another simple sentence, as easily
spoken, though as difficult of ftd-
fillnaent with which we may make
the test of the power and author-
ity to which I lay claim. That word
is, Arise, and take up thy bed, and
walk. And that ye inay know that
thi$ power is really mine I will
speak that second word also.”
Jesus doubtless". would. have
healed the sick man any way, since
none of his miracles were performed
merely to gratify euriosity or pro'e
his power. Now, however, at the
very beginning of the long conflict
with the recognized' religious au-
thorities, his enemies were not to
be left in reasonable doubt of the
f his
expectations. ftioalrilesk,lcialtYheo claims,earnmditttehderi-er;
possible to 'secure, therefrom fibre
v
suitable for spinning. The
se to serve a double Purpose.
&ere themselves assert that their
success far exceeds their original. ,‘I,teall'eslitc,;Cctisl the
ac tonuabltisnugfiesle'linibge sa laielstfre
While the entire method is not `m- and ad -et -II -late gronnd tor faith in
vealed it appeal's that the straw is Jesl-ls:.The word translated 'bed sig.,
reduced to a jelly-like substance, bY nifielir.s any pallet or mat used
b °Han g, cansine the separation ' of
tt
the fibre is then treated in hot ai"' y
the fibre from the outer shell and tor aitaay sleep, or the service
• mid
da
To this product added Belore them le were
another filar. 0u.s in ate le a I , but neia
v:er aII saf, es '.c'c.)l
1`t,.1 a
twenty :
more than per centtal ., so eor-nPlete healing' of the, sick- min
fully eighty per cent is straw The Tccitfi
resulting `4stuff" has many of the
cl aractcristic-=. of th'e "foie)" varn
used in tate aptnning.
The principal advantages claimed, ,
ley the inventors are that, ahe neW .111`11, ,1,11Tea
fibre fias all the inerits 0 don n , a n
new produced; that the cest is only it 1t ienger, clear fel-
one-half that of similar OTOC11.1C{S*
that the, weight is forty per eclat. Witlici`by`—`Te
0
less; and that the geede are in banking aeeeee every
elxvaand.(111.(2.-cilratblilies. n1-17:axtPecrl'ausl wairl-ohave c
agrco a lin th truth of these eat of; Join
Jack—'1?erey, if a anan. were
'sit, "on. ),-olir hat, what ,wetild \,e`u.
ineefast a
1 thjiik he
qi# o e
anprnino
71
4.
111
eel