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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1912-12-5, Page 3NOTES AND COMME;s1T5 v.,--Av4,4t/zActitt, Synthetic: milk follows eynthetie rubber as a novelty in Ezighh ecientifte eireles. The glory a sytt- thetic rubber, it is true, has been emnewhat dimmed by the fact that rubber making zeems not likely to lmnome Possible on a eernmereial la for several years, however eeeessini the experiments aid de- monstretions up to the present time. Wilt syuthetie talk fare any better I Only time will answer this ques- tion satisfaotorily, For the present it is worthy of raote that a milk, made aceording to a process devised by three indefatigable Germans af- ter the years of labor, may be prepared from vegetable sub- stances, ebiefly Soja beans, which •seenas to be superior to ocee's The product, it is said, coetains all the elemente of esew'e mi1k is free rom disease germs and an be kept longer than, eow's milk. It is good for 000ldng pe-poseand makes beese, but 0431Anot baueed for seeking. More digestible milk and .containing U11Cflt1 it can be sold a ceets agoal% awd- the nglish demonetrator , keee &QM orei be pr 0 c nte i pom. ps a Ad n te words seine uab !ood produet. Ae a food however, it may be tam - titer any vegetable Stlia- w's milk eau pro-ve sat getable proteide lout of animal pro g qualities,i t xperts, howeve nalyeis. as of ne elm Isfaetor aot the teide in opinfou they Tea qt 11 Seleeted /Napes. eean Cakes.—Use two eggs, one, eupful of brown eugar, ene-half cup- ful of flour, oete-quarter teaspeoa- ful of salt, one-querter tenapoonfo of baking-poweler and two cupfuls a chopped peeane. Make a dezen rid a half eakes in shallow gera- pans, lay half a pecan spa each cake, and bake them for twelve to fifteen minutes in a moderate oven. English Giegerbread.--Itub one- quarter of a pound of heef drip- pings into one pound 9f flour. Add two heaping tableepooefuls of sugar, one tablespoonful of baking- powd' er one-half cupful of hot milk, one cupful of molasses, and one-half ounce of earaway seeds, Mix these iegredieute well; pour the batter into a well-ereased pau and bake it int a moderate oven for hall an hour, Pork Ball. -They °est little and re easily made„ Chop half a pound of lean pork and add to it ppe salt, a elme of bread soaked in mil and an egg with the white And yol heenee separateln. Mix well, Vona balls by milling ebout iteaslwou"' 4u1 of the mixture upou a well -flour- ed board, 4llie1t butter ia a Pah, and when it eizzles put in the belle and 47. Serve them, on a hot disha with pickles out rounds. Tomato IfoaeYg--Take largo Yea tontAtoen, aud having ecaided remove the peel. Weigh the Q ' then press them through dd one pound of sugar d of tonottoee, aid lemons to Gael), five Cook the ingredi- being eareful to keep uutil thear.ar of straieed mall jars aud ON TINTOE—WEARING SHOES WITTE SIX-INCII HEELS, Fashions in feminine gait and modes of progreseion change with the shape of woman's clothee, The hobble skirt, for iostanee• , brought he a peculiar etyle o walking, If the six-inch beet becomes popular, woman will have to walk ou the tips of her teats. eie Tips to Eouseivives. Salt Ash sheuld alwayabe oa ith the skin side ap. Turquoise ornaments shoul Nem be we, brut cleaned with y chamois. Wben cheetouts ar keyeeasen, deliciem addition Ued) to a simple selad, 0 heneeme perfectly dips - them ou a grid la a het minutes, tnaku doughn svQ. w%julge7 rinsed in milk And wtiic gin damp, it will have little body—end tide is quite sirable, when measuring, a tebleepaen co venient, remember that, speonfuls i5 V48 444414.Va1tr5t of Que tableepoonful, To k0+13 eorne kin& a (lower from making a vivo top-heavY, Put entity of 'clear white an in tho ottora Oaerve as weight. Candles in glass candlesticke ar the prettiest illurnivation for a dila- table, anti with roseoelored e the effect is entiet becoraiog. using finnan toddle in au n dila parboil aria eki it will be iafinitely too ach over with melted. buttr and put them in the even 1,1801 brown. To clean feather tickles an kha- Id or duek suite, use a rice -root ' bruela aud a tub of hot Bud$, Dampen the art ' icle rub the worst spots with wesbing soda, dip brush into suds axed rub vigoronsly. Rinse mid bang la the sun, It LS 011011 diicu1t whea erraag nss flvwer to make them stand !needy. If a pie -ere of wire nottin ushed up into a ball and placed e bowl, the flower stems caa k into the wire and they will p satisfactorily, au afl owen-U1Uesargon g L e beet arreaged in a wide - ase with a en= holder in Or wire sten-holders had that it over the tee) of e vaseor ar. Sweet potatoe ae delicioue eervedii the followio ay: After they have been boiled until done, ash them and put in a generoue ipply o ere= end butter, then at titora until very light, put them • baking dish and bake theniv weunate they are brown. INTERNATI NAL IiESS »OEMBE1 8. son X. --The Child la the mid T1att. 18. 144. Golden text, it 18. 10. Verse 1, In that hour-Fellowing he arrival ef Jesus and his dis- 'pies at Capernatine • Who then is greatest? — The 'then' is explained by lark's toternent that on the way to Ce., pernaum the sliseiples, prompted, perheps,• by the hopes aroused by the treesfiguration and the follow- ing miracles, 'had beea debating this question axe:mg themselves. debated by the rabble and scribes among themselves, The kingdom el heaven—Popular- ly eonceived in the time of Jesus as an earthly kingdom, of which Jeru- ealern wae to be the capital and the expected Messiah the king. The disciples had already come to be- lieve in Jesus 83 the Messiah, al- though they still clung to the hope f an ea,rly kingdere, in which they esed, becaoss. of their relation - sus est his chosen apostles, assigned positions of seithor- and honor. The question which hey asked had therefore a person- al bearieg, referring to their awn relative peeitiana tied rank be the kingdom. 2. A little ehild---Vrom the con- text we may imagine a timid, mai- est child that responded with mixed hesitetien and conAdenee to the kindly summer's, In the midst of them—In the coo- ter a the greop. 3. Verily—The same word which at the end of a senten00 is oeuelly translated Amea. It is en expreie sion owl fez emphasis ouly. Except ye tura—Tara from ba vain and eelfieh spirit that proupti ed their questioa to a 'humble achable frame of mind, trustfu and anxious to learn as little chit- dreu. • Enter iota kingdom of he for granted by spiritual nature of meet 4elly t cakes are it gether throe bleepoonfids of corn -meal, onezalE thbleepoonfuls oE' aping tableepoonful of ad three-quarters teespoon- ealt and baking -powder. and add it to the dry enough sweet milk to batter; quiekly air in OW of melted ba- tter by small spoo nd fry it to a Idol °eau avoidenee Are th thinga a ed. Ona needs wbetber '1 •110NVecl, 1 hat it is surprising owquestions are really open In eetion with the subject longevity. A000rding tee rec ut German ate- stios„ Europe has about 7,000 per- OA s who have peesed the one hun- dz'edth year. They are distributed followe Bulgaria, about 4,000 ceetenarlaus ; Roumatia, over 1,000; Servia, 1173; Smart, 410; 'ranee, 213; Italy, 1071 England, 02; Germany, 70, eta. The meaning of these figures clear. The simpler and more nat- ural the life of a nation the mor tenariane it is likely to have. It vrorm exeess, con- gestion and the diseases of such a oondition to which the shortenhng of life is to be attributed. We •can- not all go back to nature; we ean- not all live on land and by land; but we can all profit by the moral • of the figures abc;ve given, to some extent at any rate. Simpler living, hygienist living, and the eultivation ' of patient and a hopeful spirit are possible to most of us. 'The eery poor and submerged present a problem everywhere, but it is true that worry is more fatal than even • extreme poverty, ter orry—thes nd properly much sleep o should o Amon s the IS AN IDEAL PORT, Only World Harbor That Ras Deus ble Tides Daily. The position of the port of South- ampton is that of England's pre- mier passenger port, and no further, evidenee of this is needed than the feet that 304,045 passengers and 47,- 068 troops, giving a total of 352,013 • persons, arrived in the port and. de- parted from the clocks in 1910. The geographical position of the port is not only unique, in that it is situated almost midway on the coast line of the English Channel, and within easy, access by rail to the Metropolis, but it is blessed with the •unusual natural advantage of double tides, which gives it virtual - four hours of high water twice a • day ---an advantage enjoyed by no other port in the world. The har- bor itself is landlocked but for the oast end wet entrances, and the cy mocerate tidal range with a ow flood tide, is a boon thct can- ot be too highly valued, for it not only makes the port very accepta- ble but minimizes the cost of dredg- Caesier's Magazine. elf ten; drop ae fele in hot brown. le salad is mad smoked salmon ixed with endive, ettlerys o blade chopping withii sharp A foi trey4 betol for 1roee, a single axle. "provlded With tho latesb modern nil in up-to-date require " has been oonstruet- ed by the sanitary department of one quart of oranberries two If Ash must be kept in the refig- Oh,04.1.41ttenklurgi GtermellY *• the paid large applea-or three 8°1°1 en"- bing well with salt awl than wren - Pick over the oranberries, quarter 41/11e'lL ping itt pare,ffin.paper so that the and "re the "Plea' but do not 'Pee' flavor -will not be imparted to other For Adler "You are going them. Wash both, applee and eran- to have moimy lef foodstuffs, berries, and put them in a kettle with a little van:no-enough to show, t you." Customer In, plate of the simple dish of —"Glad to hear it. I've fatly got but not enough to cover the fruit. mashed potato, scoop out the po- 82 to rny name." Fortune-teller— while it is boiling aim a. pinch of tato with an ice eream scoop or "Well, after paying me you will dollar left you." Soda, and a Pinch of salt. Cook en - meld gently lute pyramids4 brush til the apples are tender, and then -- - — rub everything through a drainer. Add one and a half cupfuls of su- IVIAN IS • A gar, or a suffieient amount to suit the taste. rotate Fritters. --134, peel and mask two pound e of white potatoes; add one-half cupful of granulated sugar, one teaspoonful of baiting - powder, and salt to suit the taste. Beat the seasoned potatoes, and add slowly otte-half pint of milk, stirring meanwhile until the mix- ture is smooth and white. Then add enough flour to make a thiek' batter, and fry in deep, hot lard. When the eakes are golden brown, take them from the pan and nerve them on a hot 'platter. This retipe makes enough potato fritters fora family of four, Cheap Salad Dressing.—Beat the yolk of an egg light, dissolve a tea- spoonful of dry mustard in a little water and add to the egg yolk, stir in a cupful of water, one -hall cup- ful of vinegar, two heaping table- spoonfuls of sugar, and and one-third teaspoonful of salt. Beat all to- gether its a sauoepan, put over the fire, and, when hot, thicken with a little corn starch dissolved in water. Set Aside until cool, then set on the ice,until needed. , Plain Calre.—Stir three ounces of melted butter into a cupful of gran- ulated sugar and when well blend- ed, work in one-half cupful of pas- try flour, one Cupful of plain flour, a pinch of salt, and a scant tea- spoonful of baking powder. Break two eggs into a cup, ftll the cup with milk, and add to the other in- gredients. Beat all well together and add flavoring, to taste. Bake in a loaf. tin. White Cake.—Cream a lump of butter the size of an egg with a cupful of suger, add one-half cups. fel of milk and one-half cupful of water. Sift -together three, times one and ono -half cupfuls cif flour and a teaspoonful of baking pow- der and add to the other ingredi- ents. Last of ail, fold in the stiffen- ed whites of two egg. Bake in a very moderate oven. If gas is used, do not heat the oven until the cake is in, Make a boiled frosting, cover the cab'e with it, IMit cool, then ix)ur ever this s wee toned choco late that has been melted ove? steam A pinell f cleam ef tarLar jn i,he boiled fmating will i wove knife, UQ Mediae revolving These are to be fo stores. Apple -Cranberry label en the beak ving: The original Ir totally pre- ator take the precaution of rub- building will accommodate n 000 t have VOLUNTARY AGENT No Other Earthly Creature Shows its Possibility of Fellowship With God One of the facts which mike man 'chief among God's creatures is that he has a yearniag after God. riet has each an intellect that he can know God. Into his finiteness ean come knowledge of infinity. Into his impoionce can come knowledge f omnipotence. Be eaaa look into the depths of his own nature and find there in the moral maw proofs of the ehaeleter of God. He can look at nature about him and think hack of it to God; and as his know- ledge of nature increases, his wan- der and adoration can increase. There is more in man tbau intellect —there is heart, affection, love. And il is with this side of his na- ture that he reaches out most eagerly for God. But even if he should not yearn after God, God knows he eau do eo, and desires his love. That yearning of God for hunia.n love and trust came to pathetic voice when the God -man stood on Olivet looking across upon the holy city. I have never heard the cry he then gave quoted without feeling that its deepest meaning cannot be put into this human voice. Standing there with con- sciousness of divinity, he cried: "How often would I haVe gathered thy eleldren • together --but ye would not!'" No man could say that, however great he might be; but a God -man could say it and Only God Could Feel It. Here we reach the very apex of the human character—its possibility of fellowship with God. There are four traits in man's nature that answer the question 4i.t? God's care for him his conscience, whereby he becomes able , to know God's moral law ; his will, whereby he becomes a responsible, volun- tary agent Under that law; his con- aeieusness of immortality, whereby he ceases to be tho creature of a day and becomes a partaker of GNPs unending, life his yearning after 0,d, ,-hefehv, lirough divine rosnonse, he coniv., into fellowship with Ood through all eternity. In view of all that, true. for you and for all of us, how are you, my brother, taking life l How did you live your yesterday? Did you go on the errands ef your business or your profession, walking God's earth as chief in iti Did you live in sight of the law of God1 Did you live as one whose will might hold him to the right or wreck him in the wrong? Did yeu live as though the day were but a part of the endless life, its deeds fitting into the plans of the eternal purposel Did you live as one with a. right to look up into the face of God and see him there your Father and your Friendi And how did you estimate the man whose life you touched yesterday? Did he seorn to you a. being whose fellowship might mean great things to God? Did you touch him for eternity- Or did he pass on from your life unhelped, his soul unnot- iced, his life left the petty thing of this day? For We Are Great In God's World. We are set on high. Shall we then go our way proud and self- satisfied, ready to patronize God and underestimate the marvellous grace that makes us meet for such fellowship'? A few weeks ago I re- ceived a catalogue of the output of a fine pottery works. As 1 looked at the illustrations of fine cases and .ewers and cups, it was difficult to remember that they were of them- selves but clay, ready to thicken and clot at every rainfall, only waste and wreck, until skilled hands laid hold upon it and worked it over and moulded it and decor- ated it and burned it. Then the pottor might take the clay and count it joy to havo it in his home, mighttoll his friends of its beauty and grace. But shall the clay which owes all it is to the Potter lift up proud voice against him and claim honor for itself Or shall it say as did the great Apostle to us Gentiles: "Be his grace I am what ant t' Surely, this befits our man- hood—that we shoulci find greatness completed by iiis nista.; who has made Tic all v are.-- Dr. Cleland B. McAfee. been telt litii'oonine t kingdom makes such partieipation dependent upon the attitude of mind and heart. 0. In my uarac—In the mime 3:300etriite in tonscieue *ululation of his example and in participation of his Reeelveth me—Be who emulates the example of ;Towle, acquires thereby- a fuller measure of ids spirit, becomes more like him, 6. These little ones that belieibe on Ine---,,Icsus has used the little child as typifying the right-minded Chrie- tion, to whom the reference is in this verse. The humblest and weakest disciple is not to he des- pised. A great raillstonee-The marginal reading is a millstone turned by an ass. Smaller millstones were turned by women. (Compare Matt. 1.14. 41.) 7. Woe unto—An exclamation of distress, not a threat. The sense is "0, the wee and sorrow that comes to the world bemuse of the occae sions of stumbling (evil examples) which abound!'" It must needs be—It is unavoid- able that occasions come. This gen- eral condition, however, in no ease constitutes an excuse for the indi- vidual whose condttet causeth an- other to stumble. 8. Thy hand or thy foot—Sembo- Beal of that which Seems Most es- sential and indispensable. Those who are sorely tempted should dis- eipline thentselves with the great est severity, remembering that itis better always to lose part than all, 40 sacrifice the lesser good for the • greater. Eternal fire—Fire of the ages or eternities. Compare Lesson Text Studies for May 5, introductory paragraph on Hades and Hell. 9. Efell of fire—Or, Gehenna of fire. Compare same reference as in preceding cerement, 10. See that ve despise net—An exhortation addressed to all who, like the disciples, are tempted to regard themselves as in any sense or degree superior to or above others. These little ones—Here referring not to children, but to Christians of humblo estate. The reason given whY we are not to despise .,,Ve31 thct dereloped7„ humblest believers is that, Clod him- self honors such bv appointing for them guardian angels Regarding angels, see introd ti) IT para- graph nib -nye 11. The sentenee which in Older versions of the English Bible con- stituted Yerse 11, and which is found in scene ancient mannscrints of this Gospel, reads • "For the Son of wan cn:me 40 save that which is lost ' The: connection hero seisms Fasliioi Boa, Muff and Big Blue shades heeearon:with s°rtthesma iesiurnrtetatchl adre costume of this autumn. One them is the neck -piece of chigoe, lace or satin trimmed with fur ot feathers and brightened by a tinl nosegay of silken flowers, anothei is the muff of matching materialt and ofttirnes of freakieh shape, and still another is the huge rose of ven vet and silk entirely in the ruling thnk, of the boa and the nat. great rose, its foliage and stem all in taupe, may seem like en a.bsuie dity, and so it would be if used alone, but obviously it is the smart- est sort of trintreieg for a hat oi white plush or of blaek velvet that is worn with a boa and muff of taupe chiffon trimmed with taup ostrich feather fringe or with band °f Amn°oltehsidn. erhorticultural furnished by the blue rose that belongswi and muff of deep blue brora 'tinned with bands ot Claspieg the neckpiece under the chin and trhnming the front &de of the rug -shaped muff, is a butter- fly bow of crocheted white ilOsa,, and felling from under it is a ehowe nosegay of white silk rosebuds mingling with bite of swansdown eupposed to repreaeot ?new balls, The deep blue rose with its wealth of deep blue foliage is provided as a trimming fox- whatever hat is to be wont with the boa, aod mufi! set. All a these aceeesories are genuine creations," For an amateur to atteppt to copy them would be to mart the discouraged state of mind ually prodeced by .failure. Sapphires Favored, pphiree are coming • , the reason attrib is4 being that the, azure hoe ia the (may gem lot be imitated suceessfully an o to suffer from undue popL*lar y. While imitation pearls, rubiee rid diamonds can be manufactured to look exactly like the real thing, phires stand alone as the nairnite gem. el' to a well known jewel. - sapphires have not been really fashionablo tor years, although tboy are becoming to women of al- most any colored hair. Sapphires brills out all the shades of color in blue-eyed women, and they can be worn with equally lea ePyessiir7thract3iunidtsefinbiyte swhael°111necof gray which changes to blue in certain lights. A drawback, however' is the fact that sapphires cannotbe worn with eertain colors in dress, urprise a deep a boa silk, Feathered Rats. litany a t.he latest feather hats entirely in white or all bleak., Some have two smell mercury wings as -their only trimming. The etlettlif is severely tailored, And will be be- coming to very young women more. than those of naatune years. Pro- bably the most peculiar hat of thie year is one fashioned of ostrich fea- thers, It is a frame tovered en the; plan of lays of feathers, which go' deme -fashion f.rona the orawn to the edge. Two immeese ostrielt plumes mount up diagonally from the crown, and one good, hard wind would undoubtedly demolish the whole affair. The color is elephant gray, and the two plumes ehade to almost white at their tips. It, costs $37.50, which amount might ba better invested. Revival of Tired. The revival of braid is a great factor in the evolution of this year's frocks. Not only does it add a deeirable note ef solidity and smartness so essential to wintes clothes, but, further, ±4 18 strongly suggestive of bard -wearing proper- ties. Braid, again -in very fine, silky makes—is admirable as a trim- ming for the ninon bodice of the three -pieced costume, Pli o to g Ode ally . Mand --"Re fell in love with her photograph and asked for the orig•i- ./s 1‘.Ta d "Sho gave him the nega- tive." iess rlest and the sentiment less anntonriale than hi Luke 19. 10, where it occurs in connection with ear Lord's conversation with the rencrtnnt 7fichaeus 11'or this res- sn rbe transIstors of more vorsiona of tile New Testament accent the r i ills nininritv and the host msnuscrints and omit 4110 sen- f,uor Imre, but retein it in Luke. , imeert sill A SA A1 7 n r1; ITVIV , hare been oft reneated by Jesus, and is closely connected in tl oblovislig(hvirzeisthhe 12-14), if twihsthwhai precedes. 12, Hew think ye l—The p Ira rile that follows is intended to make plain how contrary to God's desire for lininan salvation it would be to lead astray one (4 "these littlo ones- and cause him to be lost. A hundred sheep—Yew shep- herds in Palestine would have so many. If, pordhanceone should own so Initn, he world not be an more willing to lose onc. Leave the ninety anti nine--4lo exposed to danger, oi COUrRe, hu In sate ,y. 14• Not the Jere, correcli not a thing willed. 'MC Father ha nOtab,;loly eraUtel d t nitied that shall perish,