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Exeter Advocate, 1912-9-5, Page 7Norms AN D'COMMENTS The has been considerals is- ssussion in England over the seggee- tion that the Natioeal Trust for Plates a Rieterie Interest or Na- tural Beauty ehoold aequire some beautiful old village for the pur- pose a Preserving it as it stands nd maintaining it forever against innevation and ehange. Under the ownershiP thee propoeed no- new building wouldbe allewed within certain, distance ef 60 main street and an additions_ would be made to conform to the original sign, Ib is pointed out that the typical vil- lages ofstlio past NVith their 1m-ce1i- ar charm are becoming rarer with the progreee a thee, and it is urged that if they are to be sassed at alt its is important that the work o saving them should net ha long de- fereads The puechas ertan be underaioodwonld netbe ke$ an a$ MitSetint or ellow plaePnTbo life of the villege d Of 91d f publie agpid by ants wh vrable private owner, fld thcy rdd time to bants of the whoa the15R was in et tion, The ahene is based system $ gf whic know little noantry. .wpAlsramv,v4seiviikweAsA%-avvaiofil EBITIT Spiced Peaches,---Vour pounds of peaches, one capful of vinegar. one, tablespoonful of cinnamon, one tablesPoonfill of cloves,, three pounds of browp sugar, one tea- zpoonful orgiager, one teasPaoniul ,a salt, and cue -eighth, of a tea- sPoonfal of red pepper. I3oil the eager and the viuegar. Scald the peaches, remove the skips and cook ia the syrup. The sPices in a bag and eook with the peaches. When the peachee 4re tender pour ipto stoae jars, reheat the syrup every slay foe a week, pouring when boil, iseg over the peaches. All kind e of small freits may be spiced in this annex.. Huckleberry Pies -Olean, Pick rid wash one pint of huckleberries •' drain them, Beat the yolks we eggs and four heaping tables ninis of sugar until light; add tablespoonfld a milk, then the ed berries. Line one pie plate pastry, peur en it the Were, pat la the even and light brown ; re#40-4'0, /WM epread with a meringue the whites of two eggs heat - and four tablespoonfula of added, Brown ukty The bites eaa be beaten "with the yelks d sugar if preferred. na1444ezOasserole.-Peel lupe banana, ACT4P0 44.0 t110 004 hreads and eut the hatiana.s ii lexigtliwise, and the lime halves, gresewise. Put the pi inty) 4 easeerole, Melt a sma 5$ of apple jelly in tme eupfuLof °Wag water and pour ever the bae 1141344, then lintie0Z0 0V0r them the dee of half an ortinge; eover the h 4141 let it eook 113/4 a moderate for half au helm. Servo from -04N0Z010.1. 4 sweet entree with beef or mutton or with beef- 4herbet.i upfals ter, twe tables edgelatin and •g8.rut tile gel an., add the wat 1311en of the grape. to belling pond. artially, add the beaten up and luff.-Two capfuls ef grat miles, Are tablespoonfule red sugar, A quarter of s o Taal of grated nutmeg an whitee of eggs. Add the sugar io apples while grating thou b add the nutmeg and thew. 4 ten. Beat thoroughl O s. Servo in dainty P• ineapplo 1)ainties.--Cook one eupful ef •grated pineapple, one- fourth a a eupful of sugar, the grated rind and strained juice f rie lemma, a pinch ef stilt and two yolks of egvt until thick, but do not llow it to boil. Chill and fold in If a cupful a stiffly beaten earn,•Spread between •slices of h eanned pineapple, decor - with a star of 'whipped and weetened creain flavored with half The Race Has Only Had Its First Breath, as Com teaspoonful of *range extraet. pared With Its Long Career in Eternity tha.'t remain on them after "erdin- ary" washing as compared wit method that requires a applica- ioa a hot water -with the help of soap or, better still, carbonate of soda, •a thorough rinsipg in hot water'gand wiping with a eterilized cloth Mat is, one. which has been iu boilista water since it was used, before). By this latter method the dishes were practically sterile, while many organisms were lett 00 the diales that were washed by the "ordinary" method, One might ask what harm will they de.' Oftentimes none, but i the bacteria are those which convey disease, dirty dishes may las the means of giving it to well persons. But asest of all, personswho are at all thoughtful of slid' things do not Want any, dirt whichmay. be pre - :vented gOod Metheda, air0Pbr be- cause dirt in itself is suffleiently nr- pleasant. In washing milk utensils st is aro; necessary to stemove with warm water all traces of the milk before ea/fling water ie used. Because of am adhering to he Sides asap. • wed also, but the greateet care must be taken to remove by aelseate ea ruing every trace of soap. A itellta10 gayer of soap in the iiiorne ng ereana lege tneav then once re- eareless habits in the kit" nd made it evident that all ap was not relnOvetl in rine- )) The uteneila must thei dipped into abaolutely boiling wet- mement, E tINDAY SCHOOL, LESSOi INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPT. fa Less X flt Miion o the twelan, Matt 9. 35 to 10. 15;10. 40 to IL Golden Text, 111a,tt. 10. 40. 9, 35-38. 03,51,W0atuei:to, aboTaidtssede s Xlvaastue thTird preaching tour. Gospel a tho laingdons--Or, good news ooneerning the fact that the Ringdera had come, and relating to its eenstitution and the nature of ibs b 36. The- nnatitudeS---Whien, erOwd- ed about him for sympathy and in- s4'uise ettieQns' Dseel and aeatterea The Agure of a flock of sleep among, which wild 'beasts have gone, indieg and devouring some and ttering the rest- The refereace $ et sansenten people, whe had begome the victims of he evribes Ld Pharieees. e'en net having a ehepherel- clueo this statement just the feeding of the ANT 34). A sharp donna, Tillous leaders 01 indelned. They lea ta 9f the blind . 14). Instead a giving *bleb would help into mai s t* And their way into the Xi in, they raleed obstrue- tions Wlddihindered them (att, 2.3„ 13), aild imposed burden 'grievous to ho harae" Matt. 2• 3, 4). The The souls to bo ease anImportant mattcr Was The unlit bottle which m now oremonly delivered toeiMt91410ro. By this_ we refer to the washi,ng of e full bottle before it is 4111014A, t is safe to say Mat this ia seldom ne. But notice tho bottle as it brought into the kitchen, the kln44 grasping, it with his band r the top. The50 lianth perhaps more often arne WW1 hssed his horse, alavspleogpotulie4e reainAhutallte along stair railinge, have wiped Inouth or nose, and ti oughtleas houeekeeper or r arding the white gap 4 (amity from the outer worl at the milk over tla brim. ebould be put unde;' pigot for a moin with a elean Ueeti rili n, 0 wrk aE 'MOW halnia; dedicate to mankind t e or reates work ditig$," bat bere isInc unity for a uew 0. porizu n. Philanthropists i r,y rnight well follow oat this reasoning far its bearing on the acquisition of public parks. Thee is not a municipality in Canada • at hoe parks enough. There is not one that wotdd not be bene - filed greatly by gifts of park lands. -There is hardly one in which a be nefaction of the kind would no eount for more than most of th treasures of collectors, t." SEA.CE JoaatitilLS. Barrels Made in Canada 'Worth Itlillion and. Half Dollars. That Canada is fast losing her possibilities as a, producer of tight cooperage is brought out by statis- tics compiled by -the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior. These show that, where- as 2,768,060 oak staves were cut in the Dominion in 1911, '7,293,000 • were .imported. • In the manufacture of slack coop- erage, used for the dry rongia,com- • taodities such as lime, pota,toes, apples, dry fish, flea; cereals, etc., which' predominate in. Canada's products, elm is the principal wood employed, forming over 50 per cent. of the total. consumption. Spruce is rapidly coming into more general use as a source of „stave -supply, eleven million more spruce staves and nine million fewer elm • staves having been used in 1911 than in 1910. When elrode exhaust- ed birch will probably take its place, being comparatively flexible and available in great quantity. The total value of the materials used in the slack cooperage indus- try in Canada for the past year was $1,465,702. In 1910 it was 119 or some $130,000 more. Imports and exports of materialand fin- ished product were, 'respectively, 8329,992 and $135,463, an excess of imports over exports of $194,529. The total arsennt of, material •used, according to an estimate of the Forestry,Branch, was over., 62,- 1000,000 feet', board ' measure. Through cheekillg, loose methods. of manufacture, etc,, there is also a great deal ef waste not accounted for, The unlimited supplies of spruce in New Ontario may yet be utilized for the manufaeture of barrels. If headaches occur after bathing e trouble is prolaably due to water in the bead, and fetur,e headaehes n be prevented by placing a pieeo cotton -wool in each eae, its:43,:i)illk 1;eirte: (10. o that fullj, Tin d. perha 1 anline 0 slossessala CATARRH. It is net necessary to describe at ength the symptoms of nasal age tarrheeevery one is quite familiar vith them. Catarrh may vary great - in eeverity from the eccasional cold be the heasi" whichonuses nd passes, and is regarded by aey people ae an inevitable ex- perience of the vviuter, to a eeeious chronic and Pusuleat catarrh, which Is often called incurable, but which can be either eured or ameliorated by proper treatment. When the ordinary catarrhal esold does not yield to treatment nd disaPPaas, bat threatens ta run indefinitely, a specialist should e asked to Makea therongh exam- atien, not only of the noels and throats lastt ...01 ears and teeth, as 0/1, Septie reinfeetion vay oceur in any of theee sus; a ing middle ear or decaying may preleng a nasal catarrh ely. at catarrh is also -saw t habits of living, espeei- sufficient ventilation, pa the sleeping -room, Mast think their catarrh in due sure," by which they mean fresh air; but if they wodd eatbe all Me fresh air they 'd 'crowded 4,09111s, 4146t, Ad learn to eleep winelowe, they the powers of iey woukl develop, it st be remembered that a air -passages are nor - tare and centlition wifl ▪ even breathing n one with Obetrueted„ 11 have in spite of all the title Fresh air an whoanziQt OP or ONJWU ecclesiastical poei eneugh, entitles him to e British Board of Trede. Andrew 0 Mks 0-Qha n1154044ry. of johu-The o, with Andrew, had been a ciple of John the Baptizer, Philip ---Like Sinien and A drew, he was a native of Be haaida (John 1, 44). Bartholeinew Probably the Na- -Maned of Can el GaUiaa John 45; 21, 2). Themae-Called Didymus, t twin (John 11. 10), who disbelieve nt the resurrection (John 20. 2 the publican -A aile- in be "grafters" of that ailed "Levi" by Mark 27). Like be became A he new na "'The e iter n his see. rk 8.23-10; enume m here lare Ant time - horn authority -An int the eontiuuai. expanding linden), ve a es -Tho write title 0 because ef miss/ n. Previous iis tune they had been eailed ainl seiples, ' on, who is called Peter--- , or Cephas, was his surname. as an Aramaio name, meaning "the rock," which Jesus gave to Sinion the first time they met (John 1. 42). . - - wash violations of this p y <tame under abseratiou are ted, when •the driver et a dairy washed out some nilk bet- a public drinking fountain d for horses, mailed them ispo there to other cue- oi rs, bl&aiut should be made to the dairynd, if this is not suf- Aciezb to he board of health. DISCOVERIES YET TO COME ut half of a walnut meat on the p of each star of cream. KITCHEN KINKS. • Elasticity is restored to rubber by soaking it in one part ammonia and two parts clear -water until the desired results 'are obtained. This is specially true in the ease of rings ✓ other articles that have become stiff and brittle. Keep a piece of sandpaper handy to the sink where the dishes' are Washed. It will prove invaluable. When a stubborn spot on a burned kettle refuses to move through the aid of a wire dishcloth, use a piece of sandpaper. It is an aid in clean- ing a gas -Stove. Fold a pee ov'er a knife and you eau quickly remove all grease or dried food that sticks, to the corners. ' 'Cut, sheets of tinfoil and place under the flower vase doilies and you will have no trouble with any dampness affecting the best pol- ished furniture. Every woman knows the irritation of finding a favorite waist, petti- coat or corset ready for the laun- dry just as she wants it most. A clever .housewife, however, has thought out a veay to launder such an article of clothing quickly. Wash the garment and starch as usual, but instead of hanging it out in the open air, lay flat on a very heavy Turkish to , Then, beginning at one end, roll the towel and garment as tightly as possible. If laid in a warns place the towel will have absorbed enough moisture in a very short tirae to permit the garment to be ironed. - Before •washing any piece of wil- low furniture brush it thoroughly, so as to remove every particle of dust. Otherwise no amoupt of washing will get the furniture clean. WASHING DISHES. The bacteriologist finds no kit- chen ciea,n enough and the ordip- 'ary methods of washing dishes he is likely te call a "smear." • iSishes, have been tested to de- termine the number of organisms Every wonder that man has yet performed has been done just as Chriet healed the sick. Maxi has come by sIow and hard work into unity nith the power that ruled everything, and he is conquering everything. Into the original idea which the ruler of things had comes a Morse, and distance is so con- "quered and used by man that we tonverse over continents. Field so stepped into oneness with the pow- er which creates that seas do not divide its children. Bell soufound a unity of idea in his own mind with the habits of the omnipotence of the world -which we call laws - that the cadences of the human voice tell the soul's tides unto an- other through miles. All these would be called miracles if men had not found out and told each other of the ways which the, power of the • universe travels. • "We see Him, 'evert Jesaa. - Nineteen centuries ago did He tell the sons of men, His brothers, how He found the territoty unknown and how they might find it, while He urged them to go out and take the lands which lie between man and the power which he feels, which Jesus had made known unto them as their -sown, to be settled and tilled by them forever. Since that day there has been a great fact in the world, to urge on the sovereignty of man over all things. Paul and all of us are heartened. "WE SEE HIM -EVEN JESUS." "When we -think of whatIle did by being at one with God and that we dare ndte say that anywhere in the rising/exultation of Jesus Ilia ina- mortal "Fllo-w Me" ceases to sound, we are overwhelmed with the prospect in the future for our ignorant and sin -cursed race. BY being at -one with this eternal pewer, He smiled as an infant, as Castelar says, "holding in His lit- tle fingers the world of the future, and reflecting in His heavenly eyes the horizon of new and redeeming ideas." By being at -one with this majeety of the universe, He made •traditionalism tremble into dust in its citadel, and captured from the ashes af its dissolution the unharm• ed spirit of man. By being at -one with the genius of the universe, Be loosened in His youth the fetters will& had weighed down the eoul of man and refused to accept the gift of all things from the hand of evil, that he might subdue all things by His courageous goodness. By His oneness of will with the everlasting Omnipotence which travereesteverywhere, He treated death as His -slave, and life as His helpmeet. By His unity i:sf mind with that whieh we call force, He made nature His maid -servant, and she led joy into the house Of mourn- ing and life into the gates of death..ByHis identity of soul with" that which He called Father, He flung from His cross the phantom of death, emote the wrong of earth with fatal blow, dealt to evil its de- struction, snatched from the jaws of bell the destiny of this race, and after showing a passage -way THROUGH THE GRAVE, aecended from the scene of his tri- umphs to a greater triumph unto his Father. "We behold Him, even Jesus" - and can any outline suggest the stature of coming humanity We have only begun the discoveries. These shall be called children's toys in comparison switb those to come. Their grandeur will consist in the fact that they helped our, ad- vancing 14 something better, arid how much better those shall be that are to come must be computed by the immortality and nobility of the human 60111. As yet, all things are not subject- ed, though they are subdued, to the plan of that Son of Humanity. ¶'But we behold Him -even Jesus," and find out what He did by being at -one with the unseen power. If by any Means He shall bring us in- to that unity -and He promised it and is doing it -we ca,n judge of what lies before us. -Frank W. Gunsaulus. addaeus heaz'ty baeus, whieh n us." Both are roue was Judas, 6on af 16). see off 0 biro 24. 22. 4. Simon the Cananaean alot " Pike 6. 14; Aet o called because of his raem ship in a sect whieh had a revolu- ienerzzaetutt. itude toward the Roman e Judas Iscariot -Literally, a man Eerioth, a village of South Ju - near Hebron (Josh. 15. 25). 5. Way of the Gentiles-Anyroad leading to a ,Gentile district or city. O. Sarnaritans--Descendants otl Babylonians who were brought in- to Palestine by Sargon to replace the jorT who were carried into cap- tivity (2'Icings 17. 24ff.). 7. Preach -Make a proclamation as heralds. 8. Freely givi'l-They were to gen- . erously exereise their gift of mir- acle working. prec:vPiduedPurses-Or, poir, geikrdeltes.s, wThheich awpeorse_ ties were to provide nothing but the simplest equipment, relying up- on the reward of their labors to supply tlieir simple needs. 10. Two eoats-Shirts, or under tunics. Shoes -They were to wear only the eoarsersandals) which were less pretentious andbetter adap- ted to travel. (Luke 22. 35; Mark 6. • 9). s 11. Search out who in it is 'wor- thy -Those who would receive the message kindly and consider the apostles' visit as a favor. 12. Salute it -With the common salutation, "Peace be unto you" (John 20. 21). 14. Shake off the dust of your feet -The dust of heathen territory Was considered "unclean" by the Jew, who wiped it from his feet when passilig into the holy land (Acts 13. -51). The implication is that those Jews who would not re-' eeive the apostles were no better than heathen. 15. Sodom and Gomorrah ---Cities in the region of the Dead Sea de- stroyed in the time of Abraham (Gen. 19. 14). 10, 40 to 11. 1. In the verses that intervene be- tween this passage and the preced- ing (10. 16-39) Jesus instructs and exhorts his disciples with reference to their personal standing and be- havior as his representatives in the great task of evangelizing the, world. Then in verse 40 he takes up again the thought of verses 11- 15 which refer to those to whom their message of ',salvation is to be proelaimed. Him that sent me -The heavenly Father: 41. that receideth a prophet in a Prophet's name He that wen comesaand entertains an apostle because he is an apostle;, that is, foe his Work's sake. • 42. These little ones -Even the east „asuong the righteoue. less" bo Went) passe good Al at no Utia to draw it in.. Victims of catarrhwould dowell to use only paper handkerchiefs. " They are eheap and ii,ght. and eau be destroyed after eavh use, a pre- aution which is not only a matter justiee to others in the family, but a real safeguard to the pati- ent, who otherwise is in constant danger of feetion.-Youth s anion. RF. OF T2IB PEET. Warnen who speud hours ear ng for their hands pay little attention heir feet. They, are such hard- kmembers of the body that deserve better treatment. eet re best kept in condition by oes that At, Never economize in leather and do not yield to vanity and get footgear that is too mall. Frequent bathing keeps the feet ow being tired and swollen, and prevents roughness of the skin at leads to callous spots. Water, in which a bit of waehing da has been eliieolved, is restful. Rot salt water is equally refresh - ng, while a vigorous rubbing with alcohol will quickly relieve a burn- ing sensation. Pumice stone, used frequently, keeps the skin smooth. It is especi- ally necessary cif the heel and on the ball ef the foot, where the weight of the body rests in walking. Never cut the nails too short, as they are 'more likely to become in- grown. And file them smooth with saradpaper, so they will not catch and pull the threads of your stock- ings. •Occasionally visit a ehiropodist. He will detect any irregularity in the. growth of nails, and money and pain are saved. And remember that one's disposi- tion is quickly affected by painful feet. '1' A. WORD TOTHE WISE. The preverbial advice, "Cobbler, stick to your last," had an apposite exemplification in the following an- ecdote.: A colored man. was brought be- fore a pollee judge, charged with stealing chickens. He pleaded guilty, and eeceived sentence, when the judge asked how it was he 313A11 - aged to lift those ehielsons right un- der the window of their owner's house when there was a dog in the yard. "Hit wouldn't be of no use, judge," said the culprit, "to try to 'splain dis thing to you all. Ef you was to try it, like as not you would git yer hide full e' shot, and git no chickens, neither. Ef you want to engage in any rascality, judge, yo' bettah stick to de beach, whar yo' am familiar." GERMANY EATS MORE MEAT. The -consumption of meat in the German Empire for the first quar- ter of 1912 shows a coesloldtable ad- vance over the same petid in 1911, and the highesl per capna con eumption for a nitinber of years. Econiniiists do net, however, re- gard this as an indication of in- creased property, but quite the re- verse. They find the cause in the severn drought of last summer and the -consequent failure of all !odder crops As winter came on the iarm- ers ere compelled to sell ,off their stock because of lack of feddst, and this brought about a decided drop in prices. in which is seen th P C P for the increased meat consum tion.