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Exeter Advocate, 1914-2-5, Page 6
WRY KEEP ON, GGUCH•ING' . Nero is'A Namely That Will Step it Do yolt realize the (imager izi "a regleete(i. eouggli Then. why don't you get rid' of it? Yes, you can 51uike it off, event though it bee stuck to yen for along time, if. stun go about it right. .iaeep oiit in the fresh air as xnucli as you elfin, build up your Strength with plenty of vvhole:otue food, and take Na-Dru-Co Syrup of Linseed,Licorice and Chlorodyrte. This reliable hone:eltold remedy has brokczt. up 'thousaitdsof lfaekin ;, per. sisteut coughs, which were just as trottblesoure ns yours, and what it has done forso many others itwi:l do for you, Na=Dru-Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyue contains absolutely no itantnful drugs, anti so east be given safely to children, as well as adults - Your physician or druggist can confirm. this statement, for we are ready to sendd, them. on. request a complete list of all the iugredients. .1'nt up in ase. and Soc. bottles by the National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, at S' HATCHING EGGS IN RICE. Method Employed. With Consider- able' Success by Chinese. Certain of the Chinese in the in- terior districts• a4ljacent - tfi Amoy employ a somewhat. unique method for hatching- bout hens' and ducks' eggs. In this connection it may be of interest to note, writes Nice Gan- su' Brissel from Amoy, China, that some years ago a missionary livaiig near Amoy suggested that a patelit Amerieen incubator might be of great service to the local Chinese --- only to learn of their owri process, which is very economical. Usually a large percentage of the eggs pro- duce live chicks. The breeder first takes a qu,antit of unhusked rice and roasts it, cool- ing it down by fanning oe by allow- ing the wind to blow through until It is lukewarm. He then spreads a three-inch layer of the rice in a wooden tub and places about 100 eggs thereon another layer of rice, this second and subsequent layers being but two inehee in thiekness, Is spread over the eggs. Each Wb will have six layers of rice and five layers of eggs, so that there will be 600 egga in each tub. The rice •should be heated once every 24 hours, the eggs being tak- en out at such times. When the eggs are again put in the rice the bottom layer is placed on. 'top and each of the other layers one raw lower down, while the eggs pre- viiausly in the centre of the tub are placed at the edge. • The entire tub is covered with a cotton matltress. The chicks and ducklings are pilo- duped in twenty to 30 days. One of the great difficulties with eam+'yfu -..4tsr`'sseis ereess-. •_i essess.w,.''ne..,°.'.-r..y�'`.,;--y�', this mento m the inabiivty to �te31 just when the eggs will hatch, which, or course, renders the smothering of the young very pos- sible. The measure of success of. the breeder depends largely upon his ability to care for the chicks at this time. ANOTHER WRECK. % :hat's the tee . When There's an Easy Way Out. Along with the tea and coffee habit has grown the prevalent dis- ease -nervous prostration. Vete 'MAN WITO 11JCIi1.l)S S1101,1S or V. S. ritriSI1X`xT eoesseeesseeseeeeseeekses Soap Ire Geed Standby for 'Winter. Seup is a winter ottznd1y, Of eouiree, in our modern, complicit- c'd civilization soup is a daily neces- sity, euzilu er and winter, that as suntes .a rather tinimportaait place in the list of the days' menus. Nevertheless, scup does , become more important on the cold days of winter, It can well be the amain dints at,lunchean; and although the. soup at dinner must necessarily be somewhat simple ---that is to . say, not too heavy it can be varied ac- cording to the imagination and ability- of the housewife and the euok. Here are ;some teeipes for some appetizing and seasonable soups, some of them suitable for luncheon and some for dinner. Alniond soup can be served at dinner. To make it cut four pounds of knuckle .of veal into small pieces and • simmer it for about four hours in three quarbs.of water, Then add a little chopped parsley, two stalks of celery chopped coarsely and some salt and pepper. Cook gently for another hour. Strain,cool and take off .the fat. Heat, add a tablespoon- ful of butter rubbed smooth with two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch and then with some of the hot soup and cook rapidly for ten minutes. Then add a cupful of blanched al- monds, pounded to a smooth pasee. Serve at once. Salmon ,soup is especially suit- able for luuchaan. To ni,ake ib boil slowly a can of salmon with a quart of wafer' for thirty minutes. Then add two cupfuls of milk, a cupful of fine breadcrumbs, a tablespoon. ful of butter, pepper and salt to testa, and cook about five minutes longer. Rice soup is another anteaantial soup. To make it, boil e. shoed onion and a bunch of celery tops in two quarits of water for an hour.. Strain this and add a cupful of well wiashed rice and boil until the rice is very soft—which will probably take forty or fifty, minutes. Then season with salt, pepper and a dash of grated nutmeg. B:reak two eggs into the tureen and add a cupful of cream and beat•thoioughly with an. egg beater.' Pour the ,oiling soup over this, . berating all, the, time.. Serve at once .with' croutons. Herb soup has long beena stand- by in oonveiats and menaisberie•s. He -re is a modernized recipe. for it : Wash and :shred enough bender spinach to measure half a cupful, a quarter ef-a pant of sorrel and the -,vvhate_ ,,.,. ai -0;:s,. lies�•�] ofj _.a.�^� 'i,_ . _. err»".a��•_,,��{¢. tuce Wash a leek and blanch it and cut a quarter :spoonfuls of but- ter in a saucepan and spoonful of butter in a saucepan and add the greens. Cook for fifteen minutes without browning. Then add two quarts of boiling water and four medium-sized potatoes, and some salt --about three level teaspoon- fuls. Boil gently for an hour. Then crush the potatoes with a silver fork, add a tablespoonful of chervil,. simmer for five minutes, and seeye with croutons. C'.ocka Leekie is another old soup. In fact the recipe here given; is copied fiorn the oldest known re- The followingletter shows the cipe for soup, which "was written some time in the fourteenth .ten- way out of the trouble : to Cocks Leekie has been a "Five years ago I was a great. farite everywhere, especially ,,in coffee drinker, and from its use d k if I y became so nervii•us scarce y To make it; cut twelve leeks, b I could l winter'nter, 'ItereId the White ]rouse Shoemaker.• Who would believe that the " President of `bile United States has his shoes mended when mending they need'? ` `Very few- of the "common fry" who help elect the Chief Executive" have •ever thought thab even 'tire President -of the United States does net'",think it too much below his dignity and position to wear shoes which : have been mended: Here is F. Sumner, who is known as the "White Houss Shoemaker," in his little repair studio where the shoes of Presidents M•eKinley, Roosevelt and Taft have often been mended, and here it was that. President Wilson, the day following his inauguration, sent his shoes, which were in need of heels, to be repaired. Mr. Sumner, who is an .. Englishman by birth, therefore had the distinction of'r•eceiving the first job from. President Wilson:• more to the boiling point and then served. Hints for the Holme. The woman who means to econo inize on labor in her home will have as little bright metal as possible. If -a rug curls, moisten it and wrap it around a broom stick, in the "opposite way from its desires, then tie and let it dry: Meat 'patties for luncheon dishes. Fare economical because they can be made of almostevery:sort of cold meet. Anybody who has a hinter in the family -an male a 'very nice little. rug at rabbit skins sewn together on a piece of carpet: e Keep in the cellae• 'a few onions which you allow to send up shoots. They are .delicious inwinter salads, or to rub the salad bowl with. If lime in the water forms a coat- ing inside the teakettle it may be removed with vinegar or sulphuric acid: Be careful to wash the kettle afterward. • If mirrors are very dull and speckled the following method is ex- Liqu dd Cough Mill ures Can t Cute Eroneliitis But the Healing- Fumes of Catarrh- ozone, Which are Breathed to the Furthest Recesses of the Bronchial Tubes, Bring Quick Relief and Sure Cure. , Eyery sufferer from coughs, colds, bronchitis and all throat and chest ailments needs a soothing, healing. medicine which 'goes direct to the breathing organs in the client - and lungs, attacks the trouble at the- source, disperses the genas of • die- -glens- „ ,g.�ife- "'t:-theeeti g� - �`biL.7e,"�ltll l: ttl'Xl' y �'!7 W+41f1•a'CG�il LL V.� 1^. ly. And this medicine `is "Catarrh - ozone'' The germ -killing balsamic -vapor mixes with the breath, descends: through the throat, down the bron- chial tubes,. and finally reaches the deepest air cells in the lungs. 'All parts are sbothed with rich, pure, medicinal essences, whereas with a syrup the affected parts could not be reached, and harm would result through benumbing the stomach with drugs. "I have been a chronic sufferer cellent: Take a small 'portion of fromCatarrhin the nose and throat whitening and add sufficient cold for over eight years. I think I have tea to it to make a -paste; rub the spent four hundred dollars trying to glass with warm, dry' tea, with a soft get relief. 1 have spent but six dol - (]mall, then Tuuba little of the paste fare. • on Catarrhozone, and have well on the mirror and polish dry been cmpietely cured; and, in fact, have .been well for some time. Ca= with tissue paper. tarrhozone Is the only medicine '1 Csquares t,f white oalcloth and have been "able to find that would not put ttndsuter the ohildren's plates and. only ;give temporary relief, but will sa'v'e the:,.tablecloth. always cure permanently. Yours sin. sleep at all nights. My condntnonTo make ja which have been washed, in pieces. m or marmalade look 1 (Signed), ). grew worse and worse until finally half an inch long and. cut two stalks I clear without skimming at. add a the physician I consulted declared of celery and a scraped carrot into 'piece of 'butter the size of an egg (Tem is just as injurious becanse itmy troubles were due to' coffer. pieces of the sane size_ Put two before removing the fruit from the tablespoonfuls . of butter into a fire. contains caffeine,the same drug eaiicepan and put. in the vegetables. When they are brown, add six eup- fule of chicken broth ,and a cupful of cooked. chicken, cut ` in dioe. Cover the saucepan and simmer the mixture for two hours. Then add salt and pepper.. Beat the yolk of an egg and add a little of the het broth to it graduaIly, beating :it an the time. Add- this to the soup and serve at once. • C.anliflower soup is made from a head of fresh cauliflower, which has been soaked for an bour in s:a l ter. water. Then ib should be boiled until tender and then the email top flowerets should. be crit off. ` The rest should be ntaslaed and rubbed' througha sieve and added to a quart of hot milk thickened with two tablespoonfuls of flour rubbed' smooth in two of butter.. It should be at Boned with celery, salt and paprika," and the tiny flowerets ehould be added just before it is served. Okra generally suggests chicken gumbo. with its many and some- what expensive ingredients. There is a simple sort of okra soup, how- ever, made from canned okra, that ought to be a usual winter soup op. our tables. This .soup is nude in the folkweng way: Heat two tablerlpoonftile of butter in a saucepan and fry brown: two nneclium ei7ed onions, chopped fine. Add three quarts of water, a can of tomatoes, three tablspoone per pod, 'scraped fr.,a of seeds. If necessarv, acid a little mole water in the eatil°w of the 'simmerin:ir. whirl') shoals' go on or threr liou,r.'+: Stir the mi\tuxe often to prevent slicking \houb ten uiieutes'before' serving thus soup add n can of New, flt1f'rn' Ara. Let the soup come bo A boil Ft i fter'ye . ,A dorm ov:eterit can lw addedsifter the folrr`a• hails itp and the soup can be brought once found in ,toffee.} "But being so wedded to the bev- erage I did .not see how I ®could do without it, especially at breakfast, as that weal seemed incomplete without coffee. "Ona visit, my friends deprived me of eoff-es to prove that it was harmful: At the end of about eight days I was less nervous but the -raving for coffee was intense, so I went beck to 'the old habit as soon as I got home and the old sleepless nights came near making a wreck of me. "I heard of Postum and decided to try it. I did not like it at first, because, as I afterwards discover- ed, it was not made properly. I found, however, that when made after directions on the package, it was delicious. "It had a soothing effect` on my nerves and none of the had effects that coffee had, so I bade farewell to coffee and have used only Poe - turn since, The most wonderful account of the benefit to be de- rived from Postunx could' not e -s cesed my own experience." Name given by Canadian Peetum. Cale Windsor., Ont, Write for a eo y of "The Road to Wellville," ostuna now conies in two forms: Regular Potato-- rntrs,t be well boiled Slista a i os"tnm --- is a soluble` powder. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, InaPq a- dA - Ileious beverage Instantly. Oro - eel's sell both kinds. "Tlu'ro's a R,e,iscnr' fir Pc,stimi Only •e sieteef-'hurnelrsdilr tart of t•hesurface of the globe .ie occr,tpiscl by the British .:ales. fins of washed ries and a red • pep - Tarnished silver can be bright- ened if placed ^ for a fihort tune in boiling water in which a fair-sized lump of washing. soda has been dis- solved. After cleaning brass or copper with salt and vinegar, rub with olive oil and the metal will not tar- nish for a long time. To keep the .table salt dry and They see other girls not half so sa ry int, cr er: pretty nor .attractive as their owe, rolliri in Mill erfectl .free froiii cerel ' St ned WILLIAM ItAGAN Brockville, Ont;" For absolute,permanent care use Gatarrhozone, Two months' outfit costs $1.00; smaller size, 50c., at all dealers, or The Catarrhozono Com- pany, Buffalo, N.Y.,: ancl. ' Kingston, Canada. PARENTS OFTEN ;I`0. BLAME. ,Should Give Their Girls. a. Chance to' Get al.arrled. - A great. many parents twon+der why their daughters do not marry. f t d t tlxen ush at and a , g P p 3 settling themsehes. comfortably in lumps and sif�t'in-bo it a t•ablespooii- life with Husbands and homes, while ful of corn starchttheir own daughters are headed for It is a convenience to make vege-1 , table bags of che•e.se(lath., iaito the spanchers Retreat, and. they which yon put celery. oe)obh. ,let- ppu ,zle their, brains why bhis s thus, ttce and other' £resp vegetables be- and why one maiden ill called to the fore placing in - the refrigerator. If you would whip cream easily and have no beater with which to whip it, put it into a fruit jar—the sort that has a screw top on. If .you have a cupful of cream pubs it -into a pint jar. If you have apint of cream use a c uert ja-r. Screw the bop down firmly and then begin to shake the jar, holding it fit-mly in bibh hands, first to the right, then eo the left, as the .soda -fountain man •shakes a milk 'shake. The ream will vvhi'pi before veru long' altar and another left. And it never occurs to t'beni that. they themseltres ere their dough - era' matrimonial hoodoo. They don't intend to be. Good gracious, no ! Fax from it I They are eonvine. ed that matrimony is the predestin- ed career for •a woman, and that the wedding ball is about- the eueesb dinner bell that ever rings. for a• girl. If you Would accuse them of trying. to immure their Marries and Sashes being,old maids, they would indignantly deny the charge. Yet much more easily and much more such is the case. They block the quicklythan of fi°ou line a fork: love game, at every tarn insbcad of pushing it altrng. ;,..,.w..i,...,,..�i, Take the •case, for instance, in t. present arr old appear- once be are yo0r trine 1 e -y uelnT HAIR RESTORER Your Gray Hair can n be re- stored stored to its Natural Cold'', THOUSANDS WYE lSENEFiTTED or •ITS USt - At ell orugglats aoc. w Mute f i n Utes itself a which the f im ly, co, stlt eommibt•ee of criticism that sits' in judgment upon every young man that comes to the, house and tears him limb from limb, Is any youth going 110 Subject himself to that or- deal: if he knouts it.,'1 Is any girl going to grand for having her rna,n friends vivisected if she can help itt Not . i ,t n' Z\�,t rritcH. 1'�e are ill .ruin and we've all got faults and foibles, and we don't etre to .rave them di s- cense l and ridiculed, nor do we en- joy having our friends made the { target for the near -wit, even of our owsrut Elf G A „yctFt ,rT /sty T.0 ere cu arr 4,, iere fis. AiNS NOALt/r� READ THE LABEL. g'OR THE PROTECTION OF THE. CON,. SUMER THE INGREDIENTS ARE PLAINLY PRINTED ON THE LABEL. IT IS THE ONLY WELL-KNOWN MEDIUM- PR1C.ED ISA -KING POWDER MADE IN CANADA THAT DOES NO, T CONTAIN ALUM AND WHICH HAS ALL THE INGREDIENTS PLAINLY STATED ON THE LABEL. M» ui MAGIC RAKING POWDER' CONTAINS NO ALUM ALUM IS SOMETIMES REFERRED TO AS SUL- PHATE OF ALUMINA OR SODIC ALUMiNIC SV' PHATE, THE PUBLIC SHOULD NOT BE MISLED BY THESE TECHNICAL NAMES. E. W. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED WINNIPEG TORONTO, ONT. IM©MTREAL” own family. 1 know a beautiful and charming young girl who is much admired by men, who are much puzzled as to why she never invites et'hem to cell upon ,her ab her home, .even though she evidently enjoys thier society elsewhere, and who wonder why, when they suggest coning to see her, that she always ruakes some ex- cuse to prevent their doing so. The real re+ason is because her family consider every bean that she has. as their game. Only let a man come. to see her and they make merry over his peculiarity. They mutate his walk and his mannerism and turn him into such a figure of fun that it has made the gill have a per. feet horror of having a man come to see her and thus offering him up` as a fresh victim. The family, think all of this a merry jest, but about ten years from now, when Sadie's beauty be- gins to fade, and they realize that she is still hanging on the parent bough, the fact that they kept her from marrying, - by making her afraid tb .have a young man come to see her, won't seem so funny. But that's just what they're doing. Family criticism explains why there's many an old maid. Then there's the family that kills love's young dream by ridicule. A. maiden's budding fancy is the most delicate and sensitive thing in the world, and it can be blighted almost; by a breath. Heaven knows why, but a certain poetry and romance must surround a Tuan before a girl can fall in love with him, and if you tear this away from her, there is nothing- doing in the' sentiment line for her. I once asked a par'tacular charm- ing old maid why she had never remarried, and.ahe said that the reas- on wee that when she was a girl every time any man came courttng her her family wohlet make fun of him..They wotild point out; that he had .a nose like a - beak, or a jaw like a bull -dog, or that he waddled when he -walked, or that he splut- tered When -he talked, and, having been made to see him in this ebsu d light, she would never again behold him as the hero of her dream. The result was that she. kept waitiaig for the one perfect man, beyond family criticism to come along, and, as he never did she drifted :helplessly in- to spinsterhood. Another reason why so many girls marry is because they have the misfortune to have parents who are hindrances instead of Helps. Before you pull off a success at any- thing. you've got to have a good chance to do it, and this is as true of mntrimony'as of business. A girl can't marry 'unless. she has the op- portunity and it is up to her pa- rents to provide that opportunity. This can be done• in many ways— " by letting a girl go to plans' where she will meet eligible men, by giv- ing her the best clothes that can be afforded, because her youth is the sunshine in which a gie•1 must make her matrimonial hay •and chiefly Ey making the home such a pleasant place that men will like to - come to it. • Yet there are mothers and fa- thers who make every young man who comes to the house feel as if he was an interloper, or - a burglar, with the very natural consequences that no youth, has the courage to encounter such an inhospitable re- ception a second time, and all the men in the oonumunity flock around some girl whose parents give theist the glad hand, Believe me, mother and father have_ just as much to do with making Marie' and Sadie a belle as the giri',s own attractions have. - Another reason why so many girls are old maids is because their parents haven't enough sense to get out of the way and give' a man a chance to make love. How can the fellow have the nerve to make lovetoa girl when father is sitting by the drop light, not six feet away, reading the evening paper, and mo- ther and Aunt Jane are gossiping within, earshot, and little brother is 'listening behind the portiere 1 And how can a girl play up her lit-' tle arts and artifices - with the family looking op, ready to guy her about it as soon as the front dour closes behind the men?' Every man and woman must re- member how they acted in - their own courting days, and yet in spite of this sou will hear a father say that he is not going to kb Sally and herfool beaux drive -him out of his own favorite chair ,in his own sitting room. Very well. Let hila stick to, it if he wants Sally to be en old maid and to have to sup- s...,. part her instead of having a hus- band do it. The morel of all which is that if you want your girls to marry you must give 'them a chance. You must help along the love game, not strew tacks, in its way. 'Punted. Wanted — Twelve well-educated, conscientious young women as pupil nurses in City -Hospital, Cleveland, to fill vacancies caused by graduation. Unusual variety of experience. New Nurses' Home soon fp' be •completed. Finest con- tagious disease - building in the State. Children's Ward and Ma- ternity Department. Two months' Visiting Nurses' work. Monthly allowance from time of acceptanee. Address Miss Frederika''K. Geiser, Principal. INV . T High Claes Profit -Sharing Ronda.. &erles-S100, $500, $1000 INTSST?II•,iNT may be withdrawn. any time after one year on 60 days' notice. Business at backof these Bons estab- lished 28 years, - gond for special folder and full - particulars. NATIONALSECURITiES CORPORATION, LIMITED CONFEDERATION. LIFE BUILDINO TORONTO, CANADA mpho Protects 3 and Sunb urn fNE t:amp hor. Ice eitever chapped hands and lips, similar irritation of the skin. . I, has soothing, emollient.,prop- CuiQ')l elf. Y e tdoo women linen nd in palrticul�.�' find e <.Camphor ° e a comfort. It saves the m the unolea a t Affects of wind and cold. Put up in metal ell • end tin tubes; druggists end depar ent stores every. where. Remember the only genu ine "aselinei Cam h1} it made by a EBROUGH MF yo feve T 'erties Vaseli skin fr CSI ' 1880+1 Mo Rao+ • VVs Itentelidetedl t Ave., ,Offices' rat New York --London ar<:. 11- 4 about "Vaseline " on request.' "'N^ -- n.