HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1912-11-28, Page 3Iand Ilanges.--Take a woolen cloth,
wipe the soot inerntbe bottom of
the teakettle -and with thii rub the
nickel. If there'ie grease or other
dirt, first remove this with a damp
cloth rabbed well with. soap.
When food burns, clakklY seiz
the kettle or pan from the range
and set into a larger pan contain-
ing cold water. This will cause the
steam to escape from the outside,
instead of passing upward through
the feed. Remove to another ves-
sel and continue cooking; if careful
not to disturb the burnt part there
'will be no taint 9r odor to beede-
tected by the most critiend person.
Salt nprinklodi on any substance
lanriaing en the stove will step tho
smell.
ng eletit.--Whee boiling meat
of nny kind, add a tablospoonfvd uf
;duty
Nat
).bead.—One egg, one eup- 1
fill of White ugar a pineh of salt, I
a cupful of sweet milk, three cup -1
fins of flour siftecl with four tea-
zpocrefult of baking powder, one.
ernyilni of nut at worked in at
the last. Put into loaf tins, let
etarel for twenty minutes, and bake
,
!or three-quarters of an eauat
Prawn Bettye—Put into a greased
Pudding dish 4 IA:Mr 'of peeled 444
chopped apples., epriekle laghtly
with granulated sugar, bits of bet-
tfEk1",, 4 few drops of no juice, and
a. Little ground cinnamon and grated
tnneg. Thep died the whole iiht-
br a powdering of cracker
r nubs. Put ies more apples, ald
ed ae before. When the d:sh
fl have the tp 1y of f
be elot thiddy wit
bake .for f
of an hour
dis which it was
ted E41400,
Tedeste and Tanieea
dee of tomatoes, ron
siene; a tell Cent Can a be
hen VA Cup a per tapieca, e
two hours in e little eels]. eaten.; tw
teaspoonfuls ef opioe tuiee; 4 4
QUM ef white sugars a s
M lealt; teeepoonful
eet hebAwl ..kaprilt
* rediente over the
fire1vin xt the tdoca) to heat
and hzu kw1y tQ the boil. Jeep
tivia Up for .fivemUutos and stir ie
the eoaked tpicea, hnner five
stock you Imp . uy g
miautes mew rveAood
have may be
eubstituted fortbe inned seep to
flavor the
abve.
Fruit Cakes 0
pful of sugar a
Add two e
,U1d •hall
stroll cl
vinegne to the water wlien first put
over dee fire. This mekes the meat
tender, without leaving any flavor
of the vinegar.
To Soften Tough )Ieat. --- Brush
over with oil (or 'putter) and vine-
gar, 14Sing one part of vinegar to
two parts of oil or butter, and let
stand to
ten done in tropinn
cal cotries, A
i
ittierneliantr, a.a few h
egrse -n
tvoedin tr This.ih
ep:asoftter-
with ate steak adds to the flavor of
tliee Improve Griddle CACS•
00141ef brown auger or
se titled to the grttlelle cake
bait makes it brown better aid.
inore easily.
Substitete for erearn (good on ,
Beet together the whites ef
two eggs, a, level teblespdoeful ef
r, one tebleepeeniul of corn-
ed better the eie of a nut.
0T10 half eup of eald meat
eat very hard. Put 4. eup of
oW. milk over the fire; when it
s draw he &Al to a cooler part
and pour in the egg
Tomer till the Milk
e s and when cold strain.
Peoa,
Scrupulou
aye be obsored epin,band
g tied
nlines
a
baking
flour,
upful ef raWus, gs, and41t
me d ; e upful
'Tants, a quer
id of oitro minced fine,
quarter poued o blanched and
almonds, and a teaspooz*-
ef nixdpulverized einnemon,
cloves, niavo nutmeg, ilnd ginger.
Favor with tbn strained juice of a
lemon. Bak in a moderate oven
one hour in a mold or pan lined
with buttered paper. This cake will
keep -wed and sat for several
<mils if put into a tin box with s.
vor, Line the box with waxed
paper.
Stuffed Port Tent1erleins.-13p1it
pork tenderloins almost through;
make a stuffing as for fowla, using
bread crumbs, a seasoning of salt,
pepper, a little thyme and grated
onion a,nd two tablespoonfuls of
meltrX1 butter. Spread a thick layer
of this over one of the loins and
plaes the second on top of this; tie
firmly together in eoveral places.
Put a little butter or dripping in-
to a frying pan and When it is hot,
brown the meat nicely in it on all
sides. Then add two cupfuls of
boiling water and cook over a slow
fire for thirty minutes. The meat
should he covered after adding the
water. A little browned flour may
be stirred in after the meat is taken
tut, and this will make a delicious
gravy. Cooking it in the frying pan
eaves the trouble of heating the
oven when the meat is the only
thing to be roasted for dinner. One
hes in this a good and economical
dish. It is equally good sliced e,old
for luncheon.
White Bread:—Chop into quart of
wheat flour a tablespoonful of but-
ter or oth,er shortening, add a quart
of lukewarm water, a tablespoonful
of sugar, and a half yeast cake dis-
solved in a gill of lukewarm water.
Beat hard for fifteen minutes, cover
the sponge and set aside to rise for
si'x hours (or until light) in a warm
room where it 'will not get chilled.
Sift into another receptacle two
quarts of flour sifted with a table-
spoonful of salt. Make a hollow in
the center of this flour and work in-
to it gradually the risen sponge or
batter. When the dough is just stiff
enough to handle easily, transfer it
to a floured board and knead for at
least ten minutes. Cover and set
to rise as before until,twice its pre-
sent size. When light, knead again
for ten minutes, make into_loaves,
put these in pans, and set to rise
for an hour, or until they are a
third larger thin at first. Be sure
that tbe oven is at a goodsteady
heat, put tin loaves: in, cover with
brown pape -for the first -three-
quarters of aa hour of baking. Then
t11100V5r and 'brown for fifteen min -
ties mtore:
Mints to the Cook.
Care of the Stove. ---Before poi-
§shing the stove, wash it with vine-
ar. This removes all grease, lea,v-
g the surface smooth, and keeps
the blacking from burning off so
quickly, saving much time and la-
'bor. A Tittle sugar added to the
blacking is a good thing to try,
Tiy Clean the Nickel On Stoves
1111 STJI
INTERNATIONAL' LESSON,
DECEMBER 1.
LessnX.—The lunatio by, na
9. 14-29, Golden text,
'Nark 9. 23.
Verse 14. They cam — Jeaus,
Peter, J'autes, and dean, returnieg
feenie lount of Transfigunstson.
proiess.onai teach-
, ,
ers ot the common pe.opte aed
tiesrefere influential with the multi.
Ude.
Questioping,with them—The sen -
et dise4sslon was the failure of
tho disciples to cure the epileptic
bey. The seribes seem tO 114Ve
4444e Otis an opportunity for under-
mining the authority and in11ect/0e
of ;laces and his disciples wine the
multitnden
En. Straightway . saluted him
--ins with a eommon impulse the
multitude turned front the seriben
and the diseiples alike to Jens.
Amaze-d.---Perimos at the sudden-
ness and opportunenees of bis ap-
earanee.
Wiaat questiou ye with thenil
The words are addressed to the
multitude, alie eeeond pronene re-
ferring. to the distcipleee Jesus en-
tirely tgeores the preeenee a the
eeribea.
17. Dumlaa-Speechiess,
A . spirile-Compare introdeet
tory peragrepe above.
18. Wheresoever it tilted) him—
The epileptio Ms •to which the hey
WAS allbiect were often of great vio-
Ivaco and came upon him at epee-
peeted tulles tkniti without warning.
They were not able—The inability
of the diseipIes to effeet ouro was
evidently a 4Ore -disappointment to
the distresscd father. This disap.
neat is reflected in hie worda
led to Jesus.
Answereth them—The i
Meted boy had resp
tion o -Jesus add
;ttd "What que
the ,,dsciples). T1
int against the di
tbo exelankati
esus, 0 Itilesgeneration, be
shall 1 bo with you 41—Words
iug apparently to be dis-
ciple:5, whese leek et faith seems to
have been the obstacle in the way
of their performing a cure,
20. Tare—Or convulsed.
21. He asked his father --- Only
Mark gives the details recorded m
this and the next suceeedieg three
venses (21-24),
22. To destroy aim.....Tha violent
seizures sometimes took the form of
suicidal frenzy.
But if thou. rend do anything—
The man's faith in the ultimate
recovery of his son had been se-
verely tested. It, however, rises
anew to meet the ehallenee of
jeans.
23. If thou tansti—The emphasis
is on the pronoun. Jeeuts takes up
the father's own werds and places
the burden of responsibility upon
him. The possibility of a cure
eingea upon his ability to believe.
All things are possible—The ques-
tion of ability turns on the question
of faith. In other words, /cases
would have the father realize the
univer.sal truth that faith recogniz-
es no insurmountable obstacles, no
surrender to disappointing experi-
enees.
24. Cried out, and said --Some
ancient manuscripts add 'fvrith
tears.' The father realizes that
the words of Jesus throw him back
in the first instance upon himself
and upon his own spiritual and
mental attitude toward the power
of Jesus, the exercise of which he
implores.
Help thou my unbelief—True
faith is not inconsistent with a con-
sciousness of its own infirmity.
25. A multitude came running to-
gether—Out of idle curiosity, such
sts-was always distasteful to Jesus.
He therefore hastens to heal the
unfortunate lad, the last obstacle
to whose cure had been removed
with the strengthening of the fa-
ther's faith.
Come out of him, and enter no
more into him—The second word of
command may well have been added
for the father's sake, who, in view
of the periodical nature of the ail-
ment, might ea,sily have been
tempted to doubt the permanency
of the cure.
26. As one dead—In utter exhaus-
tion from the severity of the final
attack of convulsions.
27. And he arose --Matthew adds,
"The boy was cured from that
hour." Luke further explains that
Jesus "gave him back to his fa-
ther."
28. His disciples asked him pri-
vately—Luke records the impres-
sion made by the Iniracle upon the
multitude in the words, "They were
all astonished at the majesty of
God"
is
parasite
kept in t
d ati
raw or cooked,
y paces, peddled from
rty carts, prepared in dirty rooms
d in dirty dishes, or expoeed to
foul air, disease germs and other
ffensive and dangerous substances
can cesily get in.
Food and drink may, in fact, be
very dangerous purveyors a dis-
ease. The bacteria of typhoid fev-
er sometimes And their way into
drinking water, and those of ty-
phoid and scarlet fevers and diph-
theria into milk, and bring sickness
and death to large nurabers of peo-
ple.
Oysters which are taken from the
snit water where they grow and
"floated" for a short time in brack-
ish water near the mouth of a
stream have been known to be in-
fected by typhoid fever germs
brought into the stream by the sew-
age from houses.
Celery or lettuce grown in soil
oontaining typhoid germs has been
thought to couvey this disease.
TURKEY BEITtAYP,D, IS STORY.
King Ferdinand Bought Military
Secrets of Enemy,
Has Turkey been soldl The fol-
lowing story frora Bucharest, if
true, would go far to prove that tlm
mighty dollar has played a leading
part in the disaster that has over-
taken the Ottoman arms:
"Turkey was sold to Xing Ferdi-
nand before he took the field. He
bad used part of his enormous pri-
vate fortune through his agents in
Contsantinople to such effect that
not only was he in possession of the
most treasured secrets of the Turk-
ish War Office, but he was assured
of the masterly inactivity of some
of the leaders of theTurkish forces.
"If you will look at the direction
and daring of Gen. Setoff's policy
it becomes at once apparent that he
had other forces to help him thal
those which were under his direct
command. He could not have
dared to face half the risks before
him if money had not spoken.
"Dissensions between Generals,
unwise night attacks, unsupported
movements, a policy of _waiting and
of fighting at the wrong moment,
the evacuation of strategic posi-
tions and the checkmate always
ttwaiting the movements of Generals
who thought that they were about
to surprise the enemy—these facts
tell +heir own story -
"There is reason to believe the
authoritios in Constantinople know
bv now that King, Ferdinand's purse
has been at least as long as his
arm."
lEvetv-thina C01110.5 t-0 him who
walts--ineluding the woman who
said she'd he ready in a minute.
IvTany intempe;'te people say that
misfortune drove them to drink It
is more likely that drink drove I
them to misfortune.
S Ule DBS IN GEItMANY.
Boys and Girls Ending Tbeir Liesee
Opens a Problem.
ER
The recent suicide of 4 schoolboy NEWS BY LULnovir JO -TIN
of 15 years at Frankfort -on -the- n131014 AND 1115 PEOPLE.
Main, cowing after a eeries of suell
ragedies, has one more rained the
question pi school examinations
and the too strenuous upbringing of 1egns Supreme n the COM*
youthful Germany.
erelai World.
In the ease under notice the boy,
a sea of ,1 well-to-do and very hone At a ploughing match neas Thet.
orable fan4ilY ef'Mebur, tole ford, N4r$01k, a yoke of oxen toolt
$175 and then tliaaPPaarad- Kile part in the competition,
police were asked t� wrest him, as, Bear Admiral R„ 0, Teener, 0„nn
already he had shown himself an 0., has b(„el,) ai„point„-,4 rear a4nlir,,
exeeedingly beadstrenns chatneter. the Howe, yief„tis a,D ports.
For a week no trace of him could he: jawath.
found, 2inofly he was enseevered yiscomie
dead in a hotel in FrankfOrt having t hin te ant
t &hot himself in the head, thin Larinnirne
More recently still, in Berlin, the The
enrrenees
be Land
son of a lenetler, only 13> bange4 the new
bimse; f in the yeller, having been /Ilene ne
sharpy sodded by his etetenother nate
4anct". rodn'ahfel
ta
t ' , with a eel
.ewmarket,
Vielet Dawes, a by girL
tlat.0 Severn at Shrevesb
es pluckily resenneni by
ugh, a boy of 11
is 5arThor0tatatgehll tt
ibmavolbWeen
Rife, s, and the 0E4(1
for not being able to e
penny piocethnta
fly fell from his overooa
•,;At all events, that was. t
nation Filen to the authoriti
h
was necepted for wa
better. Last week, again,
14 years shot himself tn bed sIter
owing extraordinary deiberatJou
and nventien in Villig up the a
As by meanof which he 415,-
4 taepitoL
were three a the moreri
.able eases. One may alte r
eate of double teitiele in
eehool •Childre0, a boy
ended their lives, oud
many &meet irleXPliCable eaS013 01
th ,suiciele of young servant girl
adetel. aViUttal glenee at the ewe
eide lists might lead *no to believe
that in Gerinaev suicide is more t
aui
common ueder 20 than " adult) s
,on ha.
into,
intimated
t/.4- sell
$500 to
b, ioi
1
Two (eel
ho Gains ilk SWe
eat lies a
and other
darker col
st and whit
blue trinnuiegs
ied with white ma
ilk esveater, which is War
"St in addition to it e chartei
fewer the
ore inepected b
ectere late year.
showed physicel
question 01 fa
g 'immolate I
the se
e lee
ages,
The general reasons e Mrs, not very theSse,ere°nt.arl. for Wo
Sehool exarnxantions and the pastor a Zion Meth
'ennous programme of the Ger- pecten,
0013 have endoubteelly been ' etetein
ilAtilZrOedeletsicalIt !;.$(;;f5rT
Ptcr Ti
rtainle Ilene so eraeh'
ereetness of modern at
ne that U1ttmM7 der
weak en's to .finest in
greater r is the p
up bbs
pdity, Parents
tv find e omoeodyiett fedi:: Spa auvig'snieint:l.rf'ntj
tbefr ' n in. the lapco3oibflvi
selves able to brim
the
o is
too mueh
tho
en rate is ough 1;1u:feller.
produeed o. vein of degeneration.
Still another ause may be seen in
the preeocious reading of plats*,
phy, which S00111344 have as strong
a hold on young Germans in tome
quarters as the "penny dreadfuls"
in other countries.
09
29. By nothing, save by prayer --
Some ancient manuscripts add
"and fasting." The cause of the
disciples' inability to cure the child,
Jesus explains as due to their "lit-
tle faith" (Matt, 17. 20) and their
lack of spiritual readiness, Trust-
ing in their commission, they seem
O1UGJ OF CUSTOMS.
d and Giving Arm to
Lady,
Oertnin customs in vogue at the
pretsent day, sueh as shaking hands
or offering the left arm to a lady
are of considerable antiquity. It is
said that Phoenicians, introduced
the former habit into Britain, and
that upon the shores ef Mounts Bay
many a bargain in tin between eas-
tern merchant and Cornishman was
ratified by this method of elasping
hands.
Certain other tustoms no less
widely observed have come down to
us from a later period, says the
London Globe, and yet one suffi-
ciently remote. In Mediaeval times
he who shook hands, whether in sal-
utation or as a defensive measure—
retaining the sword hand, while
seme treaty was being arranged—
must needs strip ,off his steel
gauntlet.
So at the, present time men pull
off their right glove before shaking
hands with a lady. The wearing of
glove or gauntlet, indeed, at one
period was something of a challenge
le itself; thus no men wore gloves
in the presence of royalty, an ab-
sence which indicated also absence
of hostile intent.
Still a man offers a lady his left
arm, a practice which recalls times
When escort was by no means solely
a matter ofpoliteness, but when,
in order to guard against sudden
attack, it was necessary to have the
sword arm free.
Still when a stranger calls for the
first time, he sends in his card,
partly, no doubt, in order that his
name and possible business may be
made clear, but partly, •also, be-
cause in -olden days he who desired
entrance to palace or castle must
send some token as warrant of
peaceful intent.
This token was, perhaps y a ring
or some jewel known to the lord of
the eastle, which would serve as a
guarantee for the sineerity of its
bearer. In a less artistic age the
stranger who desires admission con-
tents himself with a slip of paste-
board whereon his name is printed
in black letters.
A fifteen storey office building is
announced for Winnipeg.
The man who borrows anything
usually borrows tr'Ouble along with
it.
When a man nays he can do
something without half trying he
usually fails because he doesn't
half try.
--
P,rown—I wonder if Smith would
endorse my note? Jones—Bow long
has he known you? Brown — A
king
THE REAL TEST.
Brave and Happy in Spite of Great
Misfortune.
"Of course they are bappy," said
a. neighbor 01 the Lacys, "They
have never known any real trouble;
they are always well,' and they have
plenty of means. It is easy to be
happy under such eonditions."
think that they are happy,"
said a second neighbor, "because of
their sincere and deep religious
faith."
"They have never had to depend
on that," returned the first. "Any
one could be happy with their good
luck. Let them lose that, and we
should soon see what their religion
would 410 for them."
Two hours later Mrs. Lacy was
called to the telephone. The mes-
sage made her heart stand
"My husband] A serious acci-
dent! They are taking him to the
hospital? 0 God, be merciful! Oh,
I need Thy help!"
The next clay the strieken wife
learned that her husband would ne-
ver walk again.
Blow after blow fell upon this
hitherto formulate family. A seri-
ous illness impaired the eight of the
youngest child. Then Mr. Lacy's
income was suddenly cut in two by
the dishonesty of a business part-
ner. The family faced actual pov-
erty. .
One day the two neighbors met
and talked again. "It is astonish-
ing 1" cried the skeptical one. "I
cannot believe itl's
"'What 7"
"The Lacy's. 1 have just been to
see Mrs. Lacy. She is the same
brave, happy woman, and he, too,
seems as cheerful as ever. How do
you account for that I"
"It is their religion," said the
other. "It is real; it supports and
comforts them."
"I cannot understand it. She said
to me, `We are happy. I cannot tell
you how near the tfea,venly Father
has seemed to us through all these
days. God is very good to us.'
There must be something in a
reli-
gion like that." `s,
"Yes; did not Job 'say, 'Though
he slay me, yet will I trust in him?'
Isn't that what we all need—a reli-
gion that is sufficient for any exper-
ience in life? Unless we have it,
ea n wo eall ourselves happy? I was
sure the Lacys had it, and the test
hasprovedit. In spite of their min-
is:Lentil, Jones-eI'm afraid that's I fortunes, they are the happiest of
tee long. an alL''----Youth's Companion.
ee
30 per
Ph -
01
is
he
1-1° rnu
k"
teed
rs
,r the
with he
fi
- •
spitel teb
1 ,Cetiss
Bihord Tnw, a. naval v
we nursed by
lust been
Breton,
shire Countyueearel'IPLI;
proposestablish a farm insti-
tute for spetialieing in fruit grow -
ate, market gardening, and associ-
ted industries,
Tbreepence per unit (0 colts) is
he speeed low rate tor electricity
barged by the Bermondsey Council
for public leauses and places of wor-
ship.
Eight thildren were seriously in.
tined in Sterant, St. Cubitt-town,
by the explosion of a ship rookeb
that they had obtained from one of
the boats at Millwall.
"Yen should keep wider awake,"
said the magistrate at Acton to a
man who eomplained that his -wife
went through his pockets while he
was aselretepB
Rebretherton, la,ndlord 01
the Weavers' Arras, Longridge,
near Preston, met with a t-errible
death, when he fell into a vat of
boiling beer.
Mr. Walter J. Wenhatn, a solid -
ter, practicing in Bedford Row, has
been suspended for six months by a.
Xing's Bench Divisional Court for
professional raiseenduct.
All the crew, numbering 21, of the
tteamer Walkure, which arrived ati
Barry Docks from the West Coast
of Africa, were attacked by malaria
during the voyage.
At the Star and Garter Hotel,
Putney, Lard Desborough preeente
ed the "Spertsman" Sculling Chal-
lenge Cup for -the English cham-
pionship to Ernest Barry, the
world's champion.
nd w
d
Art In Opening Letters.
In Russia, one letter in every ten
passing through the post is opened
by the authorities as a matter of
course. Indeed, the postal authori-
ties of every country have experts
who have raised letter -opening to a
fine art. Some kinds of paper can
be steamed open without leaving
any traces, and this simple opera-
tion is finished by reburnishing the
flap with a bone instrument,. In the
case of a seal a matrix is taken by
means of new bread before breaking
the wax. When other methods fail
the envelope is placed between
pieces of wood with edge projecting
one -twentieth of an inch, The edge
of the envelope is first flattened,
then roughened, and finally slit
open, Later a hair line of strong
white gum is applied and the edges
united under pressure
A nyt hin g romantic, abont their
wedding?" "Not a thing She can
cook and he has a job."
When all, the habits of. ife are
suddenly rent asunder th'ey are like,.
a rope, cut in tIve--,Lthe.bi • will nevnt
bo the Same ,again.