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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1912-5-2, Page 3NEW DISHES FROM I,TALY, Although French oeking is tra- ditionally regaided as the best of any country in Europe, there are those who eherish a weakness for Italian dishes. T1xe. following re- cipes were oileti by the writer when the was on a visit to Italy, and made the discovery that maoy new touches were given to our own familiar foods. Some are well worth duplicating at our table way of achieving the especial „sauce of appetite -variety. Spieach, for instance, is served in a ring mold, the vegetable being tender in the Reuel way„ drained, chaPPed fine and when hot passed through, a wire sieve. At the point a little. white, thin sauce, with the white a 411 egg, is added, and the mixtare finessed into a mold, which is set in hot water nntil needed for table. Thin, hot elieee el Weenie are laid in groups of twos and threes on the top of the ring - Of celery, the green stalks are „cut in pieces two inehes or so length and stewed until tender, l served like aSparnus on toast, with buttered sance-ta delicious Inore espeeially if grated Par- mesan cheese, is sprinkled on top before the celery is .sent to table. Plain boiled rice, cooked tender and well salted, beomes a dish of Vensequence if *greed with a cream ebeeseNsatice. A rich white eauee is made and grated VarrOWAn cheese stirred in thickly while the he very hot. Serve with this eewe bletrs of dry thin toast, to:Dewlap; dishes are een anore typieally Italian than the fore- gaing, ar.el if the recipes are faith- fully earried out Milt be found quite excellent Pizzella---Add to rather less than three-fourths pound of flour three p etatoes rubbed through a tieVe and a pineh ef salt. Dissolve piece, a fresh yeast the size of sninli marble, in a little tepid water. Make a hole in the center f the flour xiefd add the dissolved yeast, working the paste lightly un- til it eemes away Qasily from the baking board or slab Ka marble slab is the best), Put the paste in a basin and plaee it aside ;n a warm place until it has risco (about three hours). Heat some ail in a frying pan, dip your hands in tepid water, tear off lumps of the paste and fry, rinsing your hands each time to prevent the paste sticking to them. Place a little thiek tomato sauce in the cen- ter of each "pizzella" and serve very het. Rolle of Riee,--Boil a cabbage. Boli some rice (do not overboil it), and when ready add two well -beat- en eggs, a little butter. pepper, salt and grated Parmesan -cheese. Spread a small quantity on a leaf of a boiled cabbage, and roll it round 'and tie it. When as many as required are prepared, fry them in boiling oil. Serveevery hot, with tomato Sallee to -which some butter and grated Parmesan have been added. use her dishcloth after it gets to be over a yard long." Now, when we top te consider the serioveness of athogenic bacteria and , the die - eases which they ause, Vie, realize that a elimen greasy dishcloth would be very likely to breed disease, A noted physician relates an e_e- perienee whieh he had in a family where a daughtee was taken ill with diphtheria,. -After her death tevo other members of the family were taken with the same disease. As there were no other cases in that town and apparently no cause for it, he began to investigate. He searched the whole house and sur- roundings and found everything perfectly sanitahy. EJe was- about to give up his investigation when he caught sight of the diSheloth. Upon examining it he gound it to eontain millions of microbes. So the cense of the diphtheria was at- tributed to the dirty dishcloth which the mother had thoughtlessly - We ehould always wash the dish- cloth thoroughly with hot water and soep after using it, rinse it and shake it out 4Ar,c1 then hang it in the sun to dry; never using it for Anything exceptiog dishwaehing, And do not fiee it until "it is a arel neg. " We must realize that "it is the little things which co net," even in sanitation, CARE OF THE DISHCLOTH. During the last -'few years scien- tists have endeavored to awaken_the people to the vast importance of bacteria. Today every -one is be- ginning tosrealizo and to recognize the important part which bacteria play in home sanitation, writes an experienced housekeeper. Bacteria comprise a; small class tof law plants which are possessed of wonderful powers. There are hundreds of different species and forms, all of which are extremely minute -and which are never visible to the naked eye. The fact that they are so unversalIy lound in nature, -together with their great. powers, _ of Multiplication, renders them of the greatest importance in nature. We -.:bould not.0.et the idea that all bacteria are to be condemned, be- cause some of them ar,„&t0111' friends rather than our enemies. How- ever, there is class of bacteria, called pathogenic, •or disefase-pro. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. When bread makine, do not us toa xnueli ealt an the reeves will riot be light. Sponges will not eet elimv )insed in clean water and put in the air after neing, Save every );•plociful of gravy or ode for a email quantity of ther is a greal, improvement wide thc oven is too hot, Place basin el old welter in it: this u speedily lower the temperature. Suet Puddings must be boiled for lenst two Italie, and if cooked three to four hours they will 1 eve varnish,,..,,,F3rst well nith$audpaper and then ap- ply spirit ofhammenia on a soft rag. To Clean Paintee-Dip‘ a flannel into powdered ‘vititieg, and rub the rface of the paine, and you will he pleased with the result. Steel table knives should never be 'used in the kitchen. for it any- thing greasy is stirred with them they immediately become blunt, When take tins are \Nairn thin, eoatter a little sand over the, oven ehelf before putting denvet the eake tin, and it will not burp in the hale, ing. Where maths are troublesome scatter powdered bitter apple under the papers of drawers and cup- boards, Turpentine, too, is useful for the purpose. If you wish to keep books in good eandition, have ,apen shelvet. Glass doors certainly exclude dust. but they arc apt to keep in damp and harbor moths. Tar stains may be vemoved from eotten fabrics by covering the spot with butter, and allowing it to re- main for a few hours before wash- ing. Fat and suet will keep for a long time if finely shredded, mixed with flour, and put in a cool place. Great care should always be taken that! fat is chopped very finely for pud- dings. To Stain Chairs--Serub the chairs well and let them dry. Then paint with a solntion of permangante of 1 potash and water. If not dark enough apply a second coat. Next apply a coat of thin size, and, last- ly, a coat of common varnish. Leghorn hats may be cleaned with STORY LIKE A PROPHECY OF A GRE.'eT SDIPWRECK AY ,yx IcEAERG., Autitor'e Realistic Details Nigh Niirrative of Actual. Event. The current number of the Penn - lar Magazine, issued a few days, ago., 'contains a etory of a, great ship wrecked, at sea by eollieion with an Iceberg- In its i.,-ssentuils fits with ench uneanny exaetne.es the sparse details yet reeeived of the Titanic disaster that one evonld led almost te believe that the an- ther, Mr, Mayn Clew Garnett, was endowed, like Cassandra, with a gift of epeeprbeay. ome of the nioet etriking parographe of Me. Gainett"t'etery are given. beleeve- The Admiral was a giant liner, a ship of -eight hundred feet in length, and the snoring of the bow wave told of a tearing $Peccle was doing 224 knots an hour, ar lore than 25 miles, the sewed ef a roe of cars. There was a, puff of colder air than uenal, A ohBI asef death it- ,eit eame fleeting over the silent oeean. A 'man on lookout stood stai'ing straight into the nzbt wad, and then sang out: "Something yifehe elwad, yelled in a voli:e that -carried LIKE TUE ROAR OF A. GITN, ,Cept. Brownson just eeized the ever .shutting the compartmeats, wang it, jammed it hard over, and creamed ; sulphur and the joice of a leino:i. Stir a'teaspoonful of sulphur into. the juice, ofa lemon. Brush the mixture well into the bat with a toothbrush. Hold 'under the tap; for a minute to get, rid of the sul- phur, „then dry 5.8. an airy piece. - WISE SAYINGS. A rolling stone gathers sonic knocks.. ' ,Senall men feel big when standing on aleir • It's his - run -hint)" expenses that keeps many a inanbehind. A 'Professional politician is a man who 'has no candid opinions. ducing bacteria, which are harmiul, If you want other people to look • a.net it is against t:he$0that we down on you lock up to -them. ' There are times when a need bluff is a, 01'e -five as .rrreatiiches- In the gike of 'hearts • When a :tan is in ticptibt Ite should lead, dia. monct Dancint, would'ibe awfully 11 ,t,rd work if it wasnot tor the ion 'ot the- oney leeks like, position to some hard should wage our war. To 'mist people the eare of dip dishcloth seems a Very eimple:and unimportant: •Phase. .in • mu. house - 11 61 d 'du arotl -,c," et ' th'e she] oth- is a vdry important factor • in the kitchen, and may bfc, the eause: ol" serious ttouble', We all know of a houSeltieepe, course c never do such a _thing), who is really very tilclere 51 a numbei. 'one housckettpe,r, 'W1'10 , a I:Ler W a Sla Leg her clisbest , vashes off thescgas Platre, the aaki probably a. little of the wood- tvork with 'tile.' San:10 .310t11. illita-F3, li-13'c (-11.11\vater, out the pan and cloth and •hto it over the pan er OVOr in dark cornel)' to ' 11 C-1.1' , _ each 'meal. Itai$ 1)rocessafiie,t9Y't • • ) until the c100.?, is simp1 55 knofV WO.in rie ela name the reeponee; "Needy up to the grates now—' That was all. The man left the tube to rush en deck, and the cap- tain knew the. forward bulltheade had goner; hade either jammed or burst under that terrific impact. 'The ship leas going. down, The Admiral had struck straight into the wall of an iceberg that reached as far as the eye could see' in the haze. It towered at least three hundred feet in the aireshow- ing that its depth was colos,eal, Probably at least half &mile, Brownsco stood calm1S watching the press gain and lose places in the heat% The ship was sinking, That was certain. She must have struck so hard tha,t, ,e'een the 'mid - ship bulkheads gave way, or were o twisted *tit ofplace that the doors felled, The -chief engineer name belowhim and glanced LIP - As he did (3., a tremendous roar- ing blast of steam blew the super- ettheture pwand. The boilers had one. The deek.s grew more and more steep, The liner was settling by the head and to starboard. She even now twisting, railing and the motion brought done, tbousads ef bleeke of ice from th berg. The enginee had stopped long since,. She still held her head Against the ice wall; but it would give her no support. She slipping away - AWAY TO HER GRAVE BELOW, Brewneoe gazed baek decks. Ife watched the er pereenally, and it seemed strange to him. that eee much valeable fabric should go to the bottom so quwkly. The paint, was to elearr and bright, the bars was so shiey. The whole structuro wus s thoroughly elean, Illi SUNDAY SCH11111. STillll ....INTERNATIONAL'.IneS.SONe.. Lesson V. -Poverty and rielies, Luke 6. 20-26; 16. 19-21. Golden. Tet, Luke 12. it. 6, 20-26. Verse 20, His disciples-Jesue is speaking to a larger group of his fellowers, ineinding bnt not. eon - fined to tho apOstliZst It is quite possible that we have before as in this part of Luke's narrative a ehozter, variant aceonnt of the same incident described in Matt hew 5, 1-12, though in all proba- bility Jesus may have repeated the substance of his beautitudes on different occasions, This would ecconnt largely for the difterenee infmandbeauotritudeaswolortiluinni h.lental-etaentthf,elz7 inferred by the hea rers p). the light and in leeke,of the entire nareble, poor --One ef the chief differ, 26, -Besides 3t1 this --or, eueein 'e 14:17Z 3: I:Rh:4' till:: hLuke tle'Qt:e-eet:1:11:hse' evil and the good af' the l'emttitude3 A great gulf fixed -The berrs Luke nrIke$ a each bles-sing tr-Q the discernible from one side enly. The diselples hmitwdiatelY atlare‘5'ed bY wicked man eeldom appreeiatee esue, (Compare, Introduetion te why jwis thut out from the felloy,,_ Legeon for April 26.) This eliffen- ship of good pooplo, enee in the t"'":' eratigeB$t5 "u"Y" he None may cross over -The gulf eounted for by the eharacter and 41/not bo bei4e4 e,ithoe, asexc'te4!ouPAYibni-galiatr, Tpilafcial h1° taager7orf he parable is Jewish throughout, 23, Hades --- Compare liaroduc- ry paragraph above. Seeth Abraham afar o - The language is still figurative. We lieCe, however, that even in the gure used E,a.zarits is not in Rages, which in the parable, is no longer realne for departed sPirits gent - era], but a place of punishment for the wicked only, We must dis- tinguish clearly also between the thical use which, Jesus makes of dugs referred to in his parables andihdiskoteotarcinhaagr:tatements or eirecitiin 21. Send hls'auzprifap:i:t.The despised uteast of further years is recog- lized by the rich man, who Boy; beeeen 25. Receivedste-The verb in the Greek to the full, So far as thle-eel-hasEierl3 aie an itr.tatet:ine is oneerned it shows increll,i aree at of fortune, leaving the mor- al reesone for this reversal to. be -tints of thenght el the two men, Matthew, the tax gatherer, exe presemg himself mere natarelly personal terms. while Luke, the ysieian, reveals the more ietie peeeenai toneh, The princi- pal thought of the first beautitude. 41: itlietaN Q NQ I!C:irdted.3:0114thfia, iitN1:111crite ptor 4 h , sliit out from .many oE ,the, ratvAegea. .1.4roj sumemIt or whielt wealth': ial stantEag offer, rimy, '':ateepta-Ace the govel, 0. 2. Send. him to tey father's heusee-In the heart of theman there AV4; revived the spark o lieitude for others, whieh lied a west been quenched, Fie. Mows and the prophet$ law and the writings of the pro- photi, Thew were *he well,nown les to right living. 31 pprsuad. . one from dead -A. re- uke '11to theJewish. raving Tor tha e a I mraIons algae. FIGURES. IN ROME RULE IIISTORY. Premier Asquith and. his illustrious predecessor, the late William, Ewart Gladstone. pasresnm t the best of all t 2111.4)17.feCirbia't hunger naw --'Th be a reversal el aonditin in the ingdorn ot heaven, where the f accidental social posit allnt interfere with ind 29. When men shall hate Eol,eeetrtain er prejndiefie agenn y Separate youe-Execann ostraeize you from their eompal Reproach -Speak evil of. .23. Rejoice in that day -An ex- ample of sneh rejoieing in the faee of dive perseention it found in the thusiasm of the early martyrae Their fathers unto the prophets -- The persecution which Jeremiah suffered at the bands of his coun- trymen are an outstanding example, 24. Woo -Thi e is not merely a denunciation or pronouncement of doom an the rich, as such, any more than the promise of the see- aed beautitude is an assurance of rewaed for poverty, in itself. The four expressions of woe must be taken together as constituting a la, mentation over the existing un- fortunate and unjust soeial distinc- tions and conditions. 1r,.e have received your consola- tion -Such as wealth, taken by it- self apart from fhe other blessings of life, can give, 26. Ye that laugh now -Laughter 1:11 Every girl viol, Il .• 0 get-l)tc,,11.-quick )-oit-ng man. No man can profit altog-,etlact must1110 Sn1r,eri0ncc <4 others. Ile " 411; , buy 011..10 'Pi, his - in ak,e0. eerti Stop -her----stop her -hard over your wheel -hard over=---''' His voice ended in a vibrating screech that sounded wild, weird, uncanny in that a,wful ;silence. A :hundred men stopped in their stricle, or work, paralyzed at the tones eoming from the bridge. With a grinding, ,simashinF, as of thousands oftons- coming to- -gether the huge liner plunoed headlong into the iceberg that rose grim and silent rigne, ahead, tower- ing over her in spite of her great height. The shock was terrific, and the grinding' thundering crash of ,falig tons of ice, eouple,d with. the rending of steel plates and solid planks, Made' chaos of •sound. The Admiral ,bit,'in, dug, plowed, kept on going, going, and the whole forWard pariof her almost disappeared in, the •of white. ,k thousand tons of huge flakes slamined and slid clown her decks, burying her to the. fore hatch in al 3 ther.. A thouseed ton8 mo re crashed', slid_ and p g cd doiWn the slopes of the joy Troyoutiosn, and:'hurled. theinselves -iota the sca tgia.it splashos. tending to)- " :of . water as high as, the . Th e men who had b een yore swell], awayi by the le. And then; with re - engines,' she finally came to eed 'stop, with her boWS ja/11311C1-1 ifiltired feet 'deep ill tile iCO ,., herr. at.O;Wttson..i tied -tC,"t-r..11 the siren --iand the roar shook the atmos- , ELEMhND�1S TONES neat, and in proper order. It was absurd. The liner suddenly shifted, lean- ed -to starboard, heeled far over, and her bows slipped from the berg, sinking down clear to her decks, clear clown until the seas washed to the foot of her superstructure just below Brownson. Masses of ice fell from her into the sea. The grind- ing, splashing noise awoke the panic. again among the remaining passoengers ,and crew. They strove with maniac fury to get the rafts and other stuff that might float over the, side. Two boats drew away, rAdr to the gunwales with peopae. The air below began to make that peculiar whistling sound that tells of pressure -pressure upon tile vi- tals of tile ship. A whistliro, roar arose above all other' sounds. The siren had ceased, and Erownson knew the air was rushirog from below. The ship would drop in a moment. Etc dreaded that last plunge., th a b [Ivan leto (Ale, void heitow. Eno thought hold hira it little. The, ocean Was s so bliie out therc,, so -lear - Pt 'en iv bottomless, a r)reat . • . youl of water, He wot?clered at the depth, 'wit of- a 'it; e,c1 would receive flifft giant Fabric, the work of so maily liuman hands. The silence was corning again, and_ tlte •sounds 1,1,10 Sii*ill2; shit? '''''"Cre dyiDg iota. i,. Then, suddenly, came a eracking and hanging of iO3 blocks ansi ths 'ship lapsed ter stein higher. Then she pi n °ant strai ownwa.rd, efreight as, a, pluirene, foe the -'beftem e Ocean, 10 11 Sta,i 50010 ; fls Soiet,7 Load. hsve Nation. The Leka pnbliehes an gent, appeal G man society ders to return to "simple eat - n ." It states that the luxury ere mammy has eaueed extrava, time dininke, which threatens financial impovertshment and diges- tiwe Carlsbad, Marienbad, Iiiielnigen. and other spas, which ter to the needs of °penitent ttone," are, says the 3ournal, vltited by 'numbers, annually in- creasing, who go there la spring and aernmer to make aniend$ for over -eating and over -drinking in winter. "It would he et genuine public service on the part of lead- ing ?society personages if they wank] begin by practical example to wage war en the sensual luxuriousness el modern entertaining, as far as the culinary end of it. is eorwerned. Only by a return to simple ad sensible dinners ean we avert genu- ine economic and physical perils." MILLINER'S DEVICE. Artist Draws Customer, and Sketch Sent Rome With ltd. Some of the leading milliners of Paris, France, have, introduced a and mirth in Jesus's day w,ere sel- new device for paying a pretty cam- el= met with apart from the ease pliment to their best customers, and luxury of wealth and social position. Jesus well knew how much al the prosperity, et this day „came through the acquisition of gotten gains, and was followed by sinful self-indulgence, "meriting condemnation. 20, 'When all men shall speak well of you -Universal popularity is too often gained by surrender of deep convictions and of principles, in an efFort to placate prejudice aed. wini approval. Against such popular- ity Jesus warns his followers. 16. 19-31. • 19. Now there was a certain rich man--Tlic parable whieh fellows is taken from its Context Pc Luke's narrative and inserted at, this point in our study, as illustrating one of the beautitucles both ors its positive and its negative side. Faring sunaptelOusly-Or, living Pc mirth a,ncl splendor. The name. of the rich man is not given, the popnlay title, Dives, being only bire Latin for 20. Lazarus -The Hebrew Elea- zar, mea ,liog '`he 15110151 end helpe." Orient al eustom- among lseggars liontes th, vipaltito, 'Was, laid,.11at his e;sition., on was to solicit alms at the gates to the Full of sores -The victim •ist toise, 10511010 , 1111150 doubly 011101113 plight Fro-na Ibo nieh. Ina /a ' sLalllo--iho uticI oriembs, is supplied in the English tran5111,- .11051 Tii Ichie ' 0(15 11 et.is imply to that 1,11 0Vwas 1011 3, ,.C,1,,s1-1-1511-1.1cos oam •in 4c0 her Sy t eeee and one that is well calculated to please them. When a client of dis- tinction entees the shop and pro- ceeds eo try on the various new "creations" which the fashionable milliner produces, all unknown te herself -the eustemer is sitting, oe, rather, standing, .for herportrait to an artist in concealment behind a screen. Absorbed in the fasei- natieg occupation of -trying on a new hat with her -whole attention fix.ed on the reflection of herself in the glass, she la quite oblivious of the artist's p rezone e. IVIeanwhil a he swiftly transfers to paper the feature of his unconscious subject. What is her surprise, therefore., on receiving the next day the hatbox c•ontaining her' purchase, to find clpirai aastpweeicrial tloiptoinier.:cly.i, \by oc axi:ian g ,tohreigliac alc GRAINS OF GOLD. The wealthiest kingdom can show nothing so, beautiful- as a virtuous 110Rm4 .icule is not the Lest .01 truth, heOause truth must always be ,the' test of l'idiCUIC. n 'o pi 'stt • amip dl No ni al I down ' .t.1-,..ing riela : tia titre t is a ago an , e,zs hi 111 s j, Upon the other an•d,eVapeatee,.s iff0p'pinoons a -01.11-Y 5115l1G5 '" rbIlImS'ine;1Tis 1, rend -Ica' be a •e• 111 NO,