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Exeter Advocate, 1912-8-15, Page 3NOTES AND COMMENTS In Englsaud the whole medical profession, with few exceptions, is striking against Lloyd -George and his national insurance act. Nego- tiations long and patiently conduct- ed failed to bring about a settle- ment. Lloyd -George offers the phy- sicians Sane, a aunua+lia per, person in- ured for medical attendanee on the sick; the profession asks. $2.12 per person, :as a minimum. The dif- ference is by uo means trifiinf;, Lloyd -George says it would double the income of the profession and involve an additional„ rex of X20,- -000,000 a year. ni,lasenesavessian l #ought by extern -analog the breed:, Mg places of the mosquito and by the screening of dwellings„ The canal zone, with the cities of Pana- ma and Colon, are the best ex- amples of this method. The ease agaiuSt flies is well prove! and yet they are allowed to infect the joint of meat exposed by the huteher, the bread and sweetmeats of the confectioner's counter, ber-'I, ries and other fruits, thesedgeof milk, pails, the kitchen table and tatensils and the food of our table, So the who fe i h whole p as4n is boy- totting o ytotting the insurance act and "de- t°yieg" theg overnmeut• The in - cured get the other benefits, but not medical attendance. Row long this will 'net no. one knows, but Lloyd -George r!dlcail@:n the neatio that the, physica ar?s'strike, if con- tinued, will cause the collapse ok the whole Scheme. He is ccanfidexat he "can deliver the goods" int, any.. case, and diaapense with tine Phy- sicians entirely. That will mean leaving medical ,aattendnuee out :o the eclgexue, and permitting tK&iu aurid to make their owrn medical arxaiigaruents, e s a'.ntime, arra¢ eaf th cff � ct 0 thiac singular strike, it seems, des?decl boost among for the idea of a "mottos dizod nc dieal sexy toe," Only Sexcisnlast hav heretofore advocated tale, b t u doctors who regard themivos r 1 moderates and Oanisearvagtr.es pulpit ly propose, or cheer, the motional-. iatienii of tlao zraedicral service. They eaf cQurs0A front atorzdixng Lcay, unraarsonaz' aoaita,saatailaat DA1 TY.`DISH1 S.. Iiut and Vegetable Ile. --One cup fresh lima beans (the dry ones will do), one cup almonds and ,peanuts mixed, one eup titin white sauce, tiro hard-boiled egga, two or three small onions sliced, six mediums sized potatoes, seasoning of salt and pepper. Wash one-half of the po- tatoes, cook the 'beans and pota- tees and blanch the nuts. Place a layer of beans in the bottom of the baking dish, then a lay ee of nuts and eggs bellowed by a layer of diced potatoea. Repeat until the ranate{riala have been used, Pour ovor AU the white sauce.Cover the top with the mashed potato brnrsh'ove=r with egg i d xrailk and bake for ;thirty vniautes in a. hot oven, Appie 3leringua Pie - (lhoase ipe, juicy apples; pare and cock ctrl tender; seasons with nutmeg USEFUL TINTS. Tisk stains are sometimes remov ed by soaking in eourmilk and then rinsing in a weak solution of chlor- ide of limo. Iron rust stains yield ttrtheei' Iowing , treattuent ; Soak the stein in lemon juice, sprinkle with salt and bleach several hours in the sun. Pine igin hanns and percales will emerge freen the ku.li with the l ess and dressing of new material if ,dipped in. sweet milk instead of tarch, Bread boarde and other wooden utenerls may be kept white au lad /eemelt ; sweeten to taste prese stainless by scrralkirng with soap reugh a sieve -and fill a eieefly ; and lukewarm water, to which, rngary,, shell with the mixture, Cover =be added a little 0o4 soda or Meringue made by beatiPg ?-loarsebold aruanacnuia, tib froth two or three og When, oeaoleidg .apinaelr conk gaud adding a tablespoon o cheese'cloth bag, easily lifted ata red $agar to each white. Pia- 'drained. dry. `" ate. hake in a mederato q teaasaeonful of glycuriu V xa� until ; tare Souffle, Tw a', three tax aspen cup a3 1k, oxnekbaFl A dash of paprika, three= cup- grated choose an t !Slake a white eaauee , tl flour as d milk in ar doub Add a@a5001083 and grated awl stir until the cheese enae?re front the hot water the well -beaten yolks .of low the mixture to owl, Id fold in the stiffly -beat. Tura ' ibuttered ,{�� and bake in a moderatep arty, It is to stand? souffle mixture in a ter to avoid cooking his mixture may bo served in iedayiduall ingaxe as , aranr , tar the rinse water makes wo �........ Whets cora out like .Sew, ar,ease' -Ail ordinary dish wrap, moista kerosene .is better than re ;o rerUQve dust, cogs, mixture of two starters a pia. o water good egga be found to sick, while bait. t e nes will always float. .en grit a search from a shirt- arny article, lay it where airae will fall on it, It will nd white. should be opened before it is -lased. It. Iger after the o~ gozn of een restored to tt, auMake mustard, mix k instead •of waster, and bat it will not becow keerp .fresh until $ 'lal TSF JURY ROOH E rperienee of an Ancient Institution,. gvasn't guilty almost as soon as she entered the dock, The clerk of the :assize addressed her by name, and continued: "The jurors who are now aboaa<t to 'be- sworn are the jury who are ter pass. betweenyou and our Sovereign Gorc1 the King upon your trial, If, herefore, you object to them, 4r any .of them you must do„so as they -come to the book to be sworn, and you shall be heard." That wasoabhled over as if it .. were a mere formality, and I doubt ed if the poor girl in the dock, wu- deretood it atall. I hardly graspedit u'yself. Then we were sworn, one by one, to "well and truly try the issue joined between one Sovereign Lord the King. and the prisoner at the bar 'whom I shall have in ohaaeas, and a true verdict give, according to the evidence." If we had acted" up to that oath sre would certainly have found vordict of Guilty" without leavi ;, for the stuff was found cat d we heard incidentally slur Lit every.. other well-reguls in ant of these 'islands, I have been #aught to believe that trial by jury is the "palladium of British liberty . ' I bare $never known just What spit of a thing a palladium is, but iteceands good, and I have been always rather sorry for those be- nighted foreignera who haven't got one, says writer in Loudon An- a-were, n- sw.err, I have heard of people who make rtsa of unheoomrng language when - e i a�°ar the postman l�rau�,g g them asvi- ttations from "George Res" to help hien is deciding disagre meat'a with $0B1ea of his lent desarabla ux bj 4 buts I had no inclination that way where 1 got niy first jury someone. Sr, far frons::being annoyed, I bob - that, over with grids.. at the' itbought at last I was enela$idered worthy to take a hand at the creak that worked the justice naaclainne, and I could not refrain .from in r- para&g the ,glad feet. to the last pe-llieemava tame aerosa .ASI was gorug hoxuto that taighta Ifo looked at logo na tf l tlaougb1 trying to take a d then said. that there WAS r<i t pay axed that I would r my own refresh with dignity, to dare .e a i quite aware of the riglata onsibilitios that were to is rapper which be remaaa'ked, Dad reaunao bra beat,. that ba bad 11evor before o # across juryanan:was f xn the telt. lie won't t meet ono when he Fees me $tensa 1 ; 1 looked forward to the day w" 1 was to "be and to appear" n a na s fa in the emu way as 000 io g the ceumz+e? torment of 411 overdo holiday, and tate week that eittps@r betweeia the receipt of the sum- mons and its fulfilment wag as vera lzng •oiee t but the great day came at axed I found myself in the jury- ith eleven other "good razeu traao"---bye prescription. The test pl soner was u interest nig-looking young Wonxtarn, 'ver, eaatly and becomingly dressed, u' a vas charged with: shoplifting. caaaglit myself bopiug that r; proceedings, though that e ought to have been kept that she had been tome mune offence soveral tines 0 But it took us two hours to arrive verdict, and then it wane "Not r." didn't lake the nasty iu which the judge told us, brought silo.that verdict, responsibility was ours, y wa reaeired the. ave the first cr eela_. faatlx in trial by sitting Barn any left who, Ifiten we put ear in the box, an s "willing to ga ted for "Gail- my right said o ought to acquit of the teu ptaa- t inn W0Wen's This a truly, and Ws tenors its oonee, Salad. • Chao: remove the rhino 1 with either diced cu - on or with cabbage salad. Serve en eave;l, using blast TI It may be of heavy aad of any color desir should> lined with a con color, ' Tan is pretty lined with wee pini or pale blue, and lavonder is sty- lish with a lining of the tan. Whichever color is used for the lining of these useful top coats should cover the but Bans which foss, ten the goat front and trim the col- lar , and cuffs. Pongee is also ta. strong favorite For the dressy separate $roamer wrap, Any of the seaeon's color's are good made up in this fabric and the lining may be of satin or silk 3n contrast, the material used for lining serving erefacing for the col- lar and cuffs. Threw tie of black „satin with lin- ing of light blue, rose; pale yellow or lavender are designed for the ,dressy evening :frocks. The evening wrap of brroadcloth. is still shown 'and will be worn by many who cling to the graceful lines and the friendly warmth of this fa- bric. SMARTNESS OF WHITE. The woman of limited intima should not be tempted by colored linen frocks. They are not a wise investment when gowns must nec- essarily be few in number. They are almost sure to, fade, and. even while they possese all their original. glory they cannot be, touched up and variated by colored cravat and belt, as the white outfit can. Such is the imperishable beauty of white that even the inexpensive material known as sailcloth, which can ,be bought for about 30 cents a:yard, can be-made'to look smarter than the average colored linen. Those venturing upon costumes of say:- cloth aihcloth should, however, to make ars surmise doubly sure, 'see that the material has been well shrunk be- fore it is, made up. A NEW BRACELET. If you have an old-fashioned black onyx armband set with pearls wear it. It is again fashionable. A large band looks smaller below a black -bracelet, and one woman with rather reel 'hands,- wears an inch -wide band of velvet around each wrist, for which she has jewel- led clasps, changed to" match " her gowns. Sometimes these. velvet _bracelets are set with large diamond or pearl buttons or pinnewith a cameo or a seed pearl brooch. A fashionable series of bracelets that can be had in French jewelry is made of thinhoops studded with colored stones. An emerald ; -hoop, a diamond, a ruby and a pearl one are worn;together. Mrs. Gotham -Don't you think those doughnuts are an improve- ment on the last ones I':mnade? Mr: dothum-Oh, yes, dear ; the holes ra larger, sea ten Buddiiig,na quart; milk, four eggs, three-qua.rtora Cap! rione-quart ear pound tacit of s and ; nuta, vanilla. Make aaoft custard of the milk, eggs and ugar. Wlga cool freeze, adding; lea 1ratita when half frozen. Sour Grearn Cookies.—One cup inortening, one eup your eream, two cups light brown sugar, two eggs, one teaspoon soda, 'lour to make dough soft enough to handle. Flavor as desired, This makes u soft cooky, Glorified Mico, Two tablespoons rice, washed and cooked in salted water and well drained; one-fourth box gelatin soaked°in' gate -quarter eup eold water, ono cup of cream whipped, one-quarter cup sugar. Any kind of fruit, dates, prunes, cherries, peaches, ate, Dissolve the hydrated gelatin over hot water.. Whip the cream and add to it the sugar, rice and gelatin. Turn into a mold rinsed with eold water. Part of the fruit may be added ` to the mixture, or it may be: arranged at- tractively on the serving dish. Serve with soft custard ar whipped cream. Fresh fruits, such as berries, peach- es or plums, are more apropriate at this time of the year, Hard -Cooked Egg and Noodle Scallop. --Boil 2eggs until hard. Cook 'noodles in boiling water un- til ,tender. Arrange alternating layers of noodles and ;shoed eggs in buttered baking dish, covering eadh layer with thin white sauce. Have. a layer of mushrooms in the mid- dle. Cover the top with buttered crumbs aad grated cheese,. Bake until ,very hot. a all; of eggs fresh, if on" uceded, cover the yelk a little cold water to break it, and at will kce; rocaal days. aiv silver to stand aver -- 14 verut, washing. 1E impos- dishes,'" take enough. the silver in ware t dry, and put it a FLIES AND FOOD. The intelligent housekeeper of this generation has at her cOmmand a wealth of scientific knowledge that may be applied to the solution of prObleras in home sanitation. Of great value are the means ,which have been devised to prevent the spread of disease by insects and other forms of animal .life. In the nature of things the iMportance of this matter was not recognized until it had been shown with certainty that such animal life played an im- portant part in the transmission' of disease. °Two vassieties of mosquitoes are conceded to be ,absoltitely neces- sary to the transmission, respec- tively, of malaria and of yellow fe- ver, since the organism that causes teese diseases must first undergo a complicated series of changes in the body of the insect jsefore it is cap- able of producing a new case. Thus, the mosquito bites a yel- low -fever patient and takes the micro-orga,nism into its body, and there for some 12 days it is develop, ed to the stage of maturity, after which time and 30t before the mos- quito can convey the disease by bit- ing. In such cases' tlse insect is called an "'intermediary host." Both diseases are now successfully ca,vefullyr A good way to two asp edd plats of soap trio put thein all into a pan with a littler water and lot'simmer until -dissolved. Add enough sit- ver sand to :form a stiff paste, roll into ballot, and set in a cool place to harden. This wilt be' found ex- cellent•for scrubbing kitchen tables, wooden doors, dte. .Loops for banging garments ar exlways^ wearing out and breaking, particularly on cloaks and coats. To make a durable loop out a strip acid from an old kid glove, roll into it a piece of eoarso string, and sew the edges of tete kid neatly together. This loop, fastened securely to a garment, will stand any amount of pulling without wearing or break- ing. Thi foxei ed� sed th T AY I. INTER ATIO A.L LESSON, AUGUST Lenon VII—The ruler's daughter, ].lark ra .2 43, Golden Text,, Nark ;i. 41. Verso 21. Crossed over again mediately after healing the de- rnoniac oil the eastern shore of the Lake of Galilee, Jesus and his dis- ciples returned to the western, sliore. Mark, in cbaraeteristia fashion, interweaves the incident of healing into his narrative. He does not follow the chronology given in t}I' ettr.uw 9. 1 -IS, but seems to se- lect incidents waich he considers of great importance. 22. Falleth athis feet—Though a' . distiuguisbed citizen and of taigas-, he4 aYociag position, his parent grief ronght bigot in self -humiliation to rite feet of J'esu:s, 23, AY Mao • deviator—Accord- ing t€a Luke S. 42, an onry daugh- tor. At the point of death—Luke re- cordo that she "was dyirt ," 24. Thronged big. -.Crowe ed close about him. The narrative is interrupted at his point by the incident of thea al of of the wonsan with an iso dd, verses 2; to 34. Al- ' casewas urgent, asiis teiok time ,to Iaouor the faith ef' race worxnaaan wlao touched iris , the interrup y value of sus,, atng the anter ee t orate metra. at irarmrsve, okeTo t., is gar mzat,lae by t a ub]e$t thoar 3 This ;nay. xepxaaseaist a ai btte effort ern tare r part of sairus's aaristocraatiea fraenda tea bavo noth ug fairtlaer tea 10 ndtb. to clues esus useless tt aub1ea. r at lne�g ,garb a "Well judge arm sy lard, The judge snows, asked nd, being answercad it ive, directed us to rets Whoa we got to rhes and took a "vote, it waas we were eight for conviction a lour for accluittaal, Amoeg The eight was the fore r who had etnnouneed his willin ess to "go mit dor crowd" Ono of the four started arguing. that the woman could not possibly ae guilty of latterly, as she had not got away with the goods, and called Inose who differed un:complimen awry "names. Aa the lodge had di- ted us to the effort that the heft v'as eoinplote When the woman melded the goods about her per- son, this was pointed out to hien; but ho said that ho was there to arse his common-sense, and wasn't go- ing to take any notice, oaf what the judge had. said. The foreigner was the first to go over to the minority, and then, ane', by one, those four pig-headed dun- derheads "convinced" : four more,. thus leaving only the foreman, aa - other man, and my*self who .stood. out for a verdict of `'Guilty." At last, when the judge had sent for the third time toask if there was any prosiieet of our agreeing, the foretaste pointed out to we two who were sticking out with him tor a conviction that we agree to dis- agree it would be pretty rough on the girl, who would be kept in sus- pense until she 'could he tried oyer a ain ; and he .suggested that we should cave in. "After sal," he said, "it isn't as if we wero giving way to a convic- tion, when we believed the prisoner ought to be eonvicted." There was a difference, of course, and as I was utterly sick of the whole business, I agreed to this un- doubtedly guilty prisoner being let off, arid the other man followed my lead. I fancy the person who was most surprised at the verdict was the prisoner herself. In the next case we had the pri- soner pleaded `Guilty" ; but the judge persuaded him to withdraw the plea, and then directed us to find the man "Not guilty," as the magistrate ought not to have com- mitted him for trial; but to have dealt with• the case himself, as .a conviction on indictment could not be sustained for a first offence of that description. That :was .a simple enough prob- lem, in all : conscience; but, amaz- ing to relate, there were ten of, that dunderheaded jury who couldn't see why they should bring inti man "Not guilty" when he himself had admitted the opposite. - We two in the minority did man- age to get the others to follow the judge's direction after an hour's argument; butelven then one of them wanted to add a rider to the effect that although we found the man "Not guilty," we thought he ought to be punished, all the same. Of the 'other .cases we tried there was one in which there was,a large element of doubt, but there were the 'ort verlaenarriia census overheard v him arra You won't travel very far if you tread on other people's toes. Canadian actress. who bought e. cot - tin worth $500 tor he.r cat. TURNING SOR OW INTO JOY it is the Discovery and Realization of the Truth Which Brings This to Pass your sorrow shall be turned into 'sand ye shall be sorrowful, heti We seldem think 4f sorrows as blessings, although . many of our joys are but transmuted' sorrows. Moral and spiritual values are learned only through the discipline of sorrow, just as discriminating vision ia attained only by rneans darkness and shadows. Some sor- rows are the product of a morbid, temperament and a brooding imagi- nation and are as purely artifiieial as the fog in. a kitchen from a boil- ing tea kettle. A cbol breeze dis- pels the one and common sense will cure the other. Sorrows are the motions which arise when we contemplate the fail- ure of cherished hopes and expecta- tions, as miasma rises from the deadness and decay of summer's beautiful foliage, brought low by the win:as and rains of autumn. And yet, out of -this store of vital nutri- ment many a seed and plant builds up new life, transfornaing death and decay into LIFE AND BEAUTY. In like manner, truth finds lode,- ment in the heart absorbing the vital forces from ruined hopes and expectations, and turns the emo- tions of sorrow into those of joy. The enchantment of nature's laws, which. turns the bitterness of the root and its environment into the sweetness of the fruit,iis outrivalled by the higher laws of truth and grace which turn :the bitterness of sorrow into joy. Ignotance and indifference to truth are continually e producing great harvests of sorrow in the lives of mankind, as ignorance and ne- glect on the farmer's part produce harvests of noxious weeds. And theee must be ploughed back into the soil that the yield of grain may be the richest; even. as our mis- takes and sorrows may also make fuller and better the true and last- ing joy. Truth and loyalty to it are the two forces which govern the destiny of than. TJao more of truth we grasp and the more thoroughly we obey it tlie larger our realization of life and joy. STI A LLOW GUESSES at greatnruths mean the turning of brief joys into soreows, as surely as surface springs dry up in early sum- mer. Deep and earnest pursuit of truth will lead to fountains of light and joy which fail not, even as the deep cleft rock sends forth Perpet- ual refreshment. Most of all will the religious life turn sorrow into joyt because sells gione after all, is simply ,a great paseion for truth and an equal pas- sion for its realization. Anything less than this is not worthy the name of- religion. Obedienee to the truth will, step by step, turn our sorrows, born of ignorance and im- perfections, into enduring joys. Truth will dissolve the very last shadow, and we shall behold the Author of Truth l-litseself, and "the inystety of God shall be finished," and our final sorrow shall be filmed into our greatest joy, for "death shall be ssvalloweel up in victory." 0 s0" ©r, Flnagt bet eifoetzad. Izn other iustane uch tar ranee healing of the wo- svitb aan tssuo of blood (verses ), the condition of the healing onliathre,e of us who svautesl to give the prisoner t,he heneat of it. I didn't feel that it was a ease where I ought to stink out to the bitter end, and so, when was the last dissentient left in, agreed to a conviction; hut I have never lseeu able to convince myself that I did the right hine I have discussed juries since, with several friends who have served on many jeries, and I have been, as- sured that use experience is by no means an unusual (me If t,hat is so. it is very evident tbat trial by, jury is net the good thing that we have been led to believe.