Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1920-11-18, Page 2Into a Crockery Teapot Put a teaspoonful of the genuine Icor every TWO cups. Pour on freshly BOILING water and let it staled for five minutes. THE RESULT win be the most perfect flavoured ed tea you ever tasted..� 8726 The Double Gross.1 By CARL 4itaSON. I3y CARL MsA.SON. -.j rates.With their cargoes, the ships Short -Day Activities. shortening, 1 cup sugar, 1.. egg, a-3 below the sea are worth more than practically ended now, so you should baking powder, 3i3 teaspoon salt,l tea- 6,021;613,400 roughly. pens put the figures at Salving Sunken Ships. Between 3,000 to 10,000 ships, of which nearly ' 6,000 are Biiti€sh, it is ,. estimated, are lying on the ocean bed. These sunken ships are xeckoned to account for about 15,063,756 gross tons, and their estimated value is $1,330,033,7&0 ---at pre-war shipbuilding "Visit your school. Outside work is cup milk, 114 cups flour, 3 teaspoons five billion es is due for ening; add sugar; add well beaten egg have time to visit the milled twice a, spoon vaxdI1a extract, Oream short tfhere is need for the ships as well month. Our school system, an overhauling. Visit your own school, and milk very slowly; add flout bak- study its defects and its good points, ins powder and salt villa have been and interest your ee-wcrkers..in plaits sifted together; add flavoring; mix. to improve conditions. Visit your well. Put a catcall amount of mixture neighbors. That good old-fashioned into greased individual cake tine- and custom is rapidlydying out with thel bake in hot oven 16 to 20 minutes, advent of #livvers and movies, K e Sprinkle with powdered sugar, or haven't time to be friendly. We are cover with the folita;virrg icing: Polttooning is employed whenerair .devastated regions el Belgium and. lo:ang oar power to entertain our- White Icing -1% cups confection- possible "for salving sunken ships; the France, selves and each other because so much er s sugar, 2 tablespoons hot milk, aft second method is for chips to be Beet)" a. "SPECIALIST SPECIALI OF CHIROPRACTIC" Enroll with the Canadian Chiropraotba Cotiege 757 Dovercourt Road, at Moor Write for Free information New Fertilizer. It has been found that the ashes from glass, iron and fateel works, an$ allied industries, stimulate -vegetable as their precious cargoes to be raised, growth enormously through carbotzie and there is small douat that the sal- and fertilization. Tice technieai body vage engineer will be kept busy for wonting for the restoration of •France years hence, Ships of no lase than 2,000 tons eau usually be rat,sed bodily by means of pontoons; ships above such- a mark require often mare ingenious handling. and Belgium has found that plant Are Can be spurred by this means a iu'p,• usual growth. It is proposed that the ashes from the industries, as above mentioned, be used for fertilising the cheap entertainment is tieing furnish- --as--------- teaspoon butter, Sa teaspoon r vanilla pumped and floated, which means that Cloves Once Ueed as Money. extract. Add butter to hot milk; add divers must go down, locate holes, and In the ltiolueea Isltands cloves were highd thea st you living, topping of the sugar slowly to make right consistency mond them with plates, before the cost of slog and think once used as mouey and at a much how limey people you are helping to of spresd; add vanilig; spread on tog ship raised ssagainped to rc method cone later date bitter almonds were so used, make rich. through these same fence of amusement, which cost only a fay. Oatmeal Macaroons --2 eggs, 1 cup . ._. cents ata time, but when multiplied sugar, 1 tablespoon shortening, 1 tee - grow into dollars. So plan some :way spoon salt, 2, cups r°aalled oats, 2 tea - PART I, rated. Something seemed to clutch of entertaining your friends in your` spoons baking powder, 1 tetaspoon s Mrs, Alfred Morrison hung upf her by the throat and throttle the aim home, vanilla extract. Beat egg yolks and v „ g words she wanted, yet feared to speak. These indoor daysare just the: whites separately;. cream sugar cvitli thexe ei t he tronmwherd the es- "Yes, I know," he consoled her. Iu•t time m ,lte.i shortening; add egg yolks, Balt ►va#er into the I tension in the he,.•noitt where her hits- , last to snake quilts and rug,. And here ie land was now preparing for an woe*, 4It's that dream you had ,,,st night. an idea far to little -rot art 1 sand rolled oats; add baking powder, wage company, too, Have a patent un - t party. H, ve l •t and �tll mix thor<nag't- der -water tt@x chip pressed air is used to force the water out of the ship at the bottona of the ocean. An a.iiteriean l�s !tweeted a sal iu some parts of India, Cavalry is said be rendered Ob solete by the recent development of the tank. vage submarine, which ran have its r----- door open below ranter without letting BUY "DIAMOND DYES" hip. i Faro acne sal - peered bush• ,e trip t C e o woe*, It has completely unnerved you." which carries several .�.s p n jell :ogle n a uiltin pec with a tinct. dinner, egg w` tt es vanilla; n ix .,a c F•ncli ?attl:ugr ok "llIanioatd Awa 5' con - midnight traina alis sat gunnel, wan_ But I dreamed you left me left q g potluck 1y*, Drop on greased tins about half curers, and ie ati co.ztpieto re;,+ttr shop d r tiutas so simple t)aat any dorm whether be pact hatr.I the am- lie never to come back ascan, that If you do not need comforts, plan the n toeach macaroon aitlown tilted with telephones and tae, toles glis teaspoon t g DON'T RISK MATERIAL arch• w+,nice c•an dye any material without versa«ion anti the l to a,1 menet ' g to eon hated me and wouldn't t even -party for that woman an dawn the tool aPa e for sural ing. Btike aitotit ten lights etrealsinea fading or ruiming. Druggist her head Rushed her c!ieelts, thea sod ten to MY pleas, who has for small children and no y deity receded and.lett her coil in fear. c'I'oolish hear! Don't you know that help, If you would like to get rid of minutes in moderate o\en. has collar e�a:.d. Tate no otiaat' (Vet She rculd heir him reliving about in , How Plate Glass is Ivltatle. dreams alv.ay s go by contraries? It the accumulation of old black stock- IVI��qq NLEy DANCE the other room where the baby lay ate rias that 111 airw•ays be ill you irgs, make a hooked ru . Decide oai The cast plate -glass of which utir• aria tf y always .. h '' Wi through thick g Discoveries. asleep in its crib She 3teai °;2 hitt en ii u ccay� twit my innte tong ,z the size of the rug you want to throw I hese disa:overea tnni macaroni TORONTO his tras� ung bag, Hien open at ttttd , dab These tt has], tors, shop windows, and such things ° p o��i e , down just inside the door. Commas- will cook perfectly and i easy tv dra;n are made, i p pa red from th +ta acknowledged • �: w rds lesseneai a 1 Y• i reassuring an t zn, no twitter er what ucan ring o 1 , , a sgotten re at erose to the c_ •teaser, as if he had for- bit the weight on her heart, and she cher a grsan bag or potato, ick tvh chi ?f planed tit a wire fry ing .,asl.et and whitest sand, broken plate -glass, soda, to be the best !u t.auad:i. Any number She hear«1 him go lee her hztndc rest in has as with a is in good canditian. Wash, and cut immersed in boiling water, a autall pro, a rt!en of lime, cad a rtuclt of nzua.ciane desireai. Write, wire or back to the bag and close it again. Z£ :mile he Idea .l her. two inches larger all around than the IS'aen poaching eggs ;whirl the smaller t:nacuut of m::garese and ea phone Al. Manley, 65 Ozark Cress lig would only say something his tone.: "'Why. ;,hat's the matter, dear? Size yGn. want you tour Cut old eater rapidly and while at is still in bolt na:de" Toronto, for open dates. a# voice mi„hr sic, he. n cat,.. ; bar rz l:ed. '.Your hands are like ice. E notion drop in the egg. If a little salt The glass, when l:c:eectly melted. She laolte°1 about the acorn, with its' Don't you feel well?" Then he noticed stockings into stripe a half-inch wide, h •.•.,.. as been added to the water the edge is poured upuu ae iron table of the mall, eteefertable furnishings, mellows something else, something she want- started at the top aai i cutting round o the c ;wilt keep round an:i . ed b • the warns 2.�.• :real ;, and rowel to the beet, Fasten the f gg p sire ] f .n the sank ed to h -,ie from hint most of all. required, and the thierneas is re, shade Of the floor heap i i�ar the Piano,':' -Where are your rings? Now that grain bag to the malting fraises, anal sm;r)tl1 gttlatea a strip of ionic pltaced clown i t there I was so thankful when 1 found out each of by four sides of the table+ and she was start that t.i.re w,.a not I think of it, I haven't seat you wear. a wooden hoot:, gulf the rag up , • „ more light. Si ,> ;tl,l hatter bide her; thea for several days," through the eclat; about a half-iticlt that tilt cans would really burn, Ile; Immediately nfte, it is poured out. the rare in her Saco rice 1:rc,k of fact ! _` lo.�l: S fill them with soft cent" ant place thorn molten substance is flattened drawn , -I---I put them away. They're and front an eiehth of an mail to a a tluarter of an inch alsart, Fill in the ' `" - which for the last two wee a' had peen ed un in the dresser," she stammered. i in the fire boli in the kitchen stove, or by an iron roller, which lowers tate stcasing into her eye,. - Another falsehood. One always leads; entire burlap ;with the black stockings, inTdis e s er,hadmeame+i of the impend- gpe d;to more. e2 - Or,: if 'you prefer, use alternating g gas in -Vaguely she felt his lips touch hers anivating letter, z {a ireseed ant ;s-r:t- again, heard him call back to her as strips of black and a color. Or you ten in a cr meed, plainly c',zs£;uieed he passed through the doory y. t may leave a black square in the centre in the Aimee*. It takes a can about. glass to the thleknesa of the strips at two hours to burn up, and sinee it is` the sides. It is then annealed, or teut- red hot meet of this time it mates pored, for several d,az.% after which it zan :inutile heat. Even if they were of is ground perfectly level, and polished ue-- harwrztin ding iseed, perhaps • to "Take good care of yourself and and. the rest filled in with a contrast- no value for throwing off hbrilliance.. eat, it is a� to transparent brillian, , others, but not to 111r,. Mornsan,�baby. Bood-bye! Don't worry! I'll ing color. When the "hooking" is relief to know we can thus get rid of The first plate -glass was mado in There were too teeny outcrajapingfbe gone only a few days this trip-" 1 done,remove from the frames turn them. • 1688, at St. 1 is aaady, in I a.en�.e, where characteristics to hale the writer's' Then the door closed after him and; the dges under and hent Last night when my small son re-; the Process was found out by an acct. identity from her. she was alone, alone with their child Insist •that tiro vvaod euppty is look- turned from school with a sprained; dent, as so many other important She had received ninny other letters! ---arid what was yet to cane. _ ed after. One of the sure signs of amide I wondered what to do, as my methods in mannfaeture stave been from him, and she had written many; • For a moment she stood as if uncle , hot-water bottle, like the Ixislzman's- discovered, where there were c'yea to —but under different circumstances•-- tided what to do next. Finally she thrift is the wood pile. �i blah looks cistern, had a "lake" in it. 1 dried area the accidents and minds to apply when a mere slip of a girl she had went back to the little mahogany desk best you, a substantial pile of care, the bottle thorn , melte,' a p!cce them, or the lessons they taught, to made the error of mistaking infatua on which the telephone stood, and in fully split wood, neatly corded up, or , tion for love, and had permitted indis- a mechanical way opened a drawer a heap of uncut, perhaps rotting logs of eotranatt fruit jar rubber and mend- the advance of art or industry, better judgment. only to assure cretion to get the advantage of her and looked into it abstractedly, as if and slabs, thrown down tie snow in ny old way the hole. It held water all night, :� herself that and is apparently as good re ever, 1 cannot vouch for the permanency of this mond, but it certainly served in The •'flivverette,"' or, as it. is otilor- an emergency. wise celled, the "road bug," is the ,�.itst winter we had a hard time try- newest thing in; automobiles. —Already ing to keep brown sugar from began- tt has achieved popularity In Europe. the future—and the feat of losing- all; her to her senses and her feet at the butter, two cups of sugar, one cup of ing hard. Sometimes when we would It to hardly bigger than a boy's toy held her hack, So she decided to fig-; same time. She had expected the raisins ehopped, one cop of home_ leave it in a paper sack over night wagon, yet aaconmmodates one person, note it. Perhaps a 'cola refusal to t sutnmoiis, yet she hesitated to open candied peel and ono-li 'f cup of cit- it would be so solid that it was nee- and in a pubile garage the little ma- he serape it with a knife or chine can be put into pigeonhole com- partments along the walls, one row of them above another, the higher pigeon -holes being reached by an. in- clined board. A "road bug" can be run by a child. It is driven by a storage battery, and has a speed of eighteen miles an hour. For many purposes it may replace the xuotorcycle with sidecar. . p eves really there. Then she sank down "" •'"" " `.` A'"' . "" Her firs impulse had been to turn the winter? the letter over to her husband; to tell on the chair and the pent-up tears Makewn our Gliriatmas cake now. him all and place herself at his mercy. began to flow,y' Then she thought of the baby, of their She did not know how long she Here is a good recipe, and with the three years of married life—three 1 wait, but it was the sharp, staccato high price of raisins it is r-eltztively ears of undisturbed he iness•—of ring of the doorbell which brought cheap; Christmas Cake.—One cup of Road Bugs, a Pest. communicate with her former lover'the door for beyond it stood some one ron chopped, four egg., one cup of essaty to would show him that she had no in_she must see, yet feared. tentions of opening negotiations. She gietneed nervously at the little She had almost convinced herself. clock Its hands indicated 11. She that her plan'' as a success, and that ohver had made the appointment her fears were groundless when the! aver the phone. rang, this time in - second letter came. Not by mail, but i'sistentln the The crisis had come. There delivered by a little ragamuffin from y' by street. was no turning back for her now. some near It was bn the same tramped hand -I In that instant her mind reverted to writing, but now there were no vague 1 this smame n. She others—with insinuations or double -meaning same m sat tSfo had welcomed phrases. It mentioned certain letters ' them then, looked forward to them ht it which were for sale. It stipulated f was diwith fferent, happiness,diffedifferent. The but gyears their rice and ended with a threat to had disillusioned her—had brought yeve d avers/thing to her hu;r1 nd-' much remorse and regret, and now she should the 'terms not be aceepted- must pay the price of her fell". There could be no evading or fig With a sigh, yet with a straighten - aiming this time. Instead a feverish ing up, a resolve to meet her fate haste took possession of her and drove; squarely, she crossed the room and her on to get the thing over. During opened the door, the last week site had gone to places pHer first glimpse of him told her she but hardly knew ezelsted; had done that the years had robbed him of things which only the fear of exposure everything she had formerly admired. could force her to do. The erect, manly carriage was cane,. It had all descended upon her like and ran its place a stoop was en his an avalanche, impelled by an invis- shoulders, a slouch in his gait. ibis hand, threatening to destroy her Dissipation had dug deep lines in. his happiness unless she chose the only face robbed his eyes of their bright - means of escape. Each lay had Hess, and- his complexion of its color. brought the climax nearer with ever- The flood -tides of excesses had left increasing speed, until to -night it him a derelict -a derelict abandoned would either crush her completely and deserted, sweeping onward, not or - only to his own destruction but "Who was it, Winnie?" her hus- threatening to carry her dow.n� with band called from the bedroom, him.- It was the tone in his voice she e spared her the pain. of even a oaught first and felt a grateau.I relief. formal greeting as he quietly entered The words were spoken in his own pleasant manner, and she was certain the room, closing the door after him. that he had not heard what had been He made no reference to the past— their mast. said over the phone. "Only Mrs. Hawley," she answered. She felt her face go crimson again. She controlled herself, and in "a voice which .seemed: unfamiliar added, "She wanted me to go to the matinee to- morrow." "Yoa'xe going with - her, aren't you?" he asked. '"Take a day off. You won't be so lonely while I'm gone." She made no answer. She did not pare to risk her voice again, to carry the deception further than necessary. She rose and moved across the room, nearer the hall, door, farther away from the light. Iarom where she stood she could look into the bedmoom, where her hus- band was leaning over their sleeping baby, kissing it good-bye. She watch - eel hem as he hurriedly slipped intahis beaver -lined overcoat, and then as last jA.we—trtioxi went to the fire-et:cape WintloW and adjusted the latchtee maize her safe.Then he snapped off the light and, cari:ying his bag, enter- ed 1•he living room, tante over and em traced her.. hate to zee you go, AI," she niut"- itau,.cel aortae. "i just ;feel as if same- thu g terrible is going to 'happen." She wearily n titled her head in the eat fur on the lapel of his coat. "Don't worry, little mother," he I'ayftllly answered. "I'll be all right. 'll wise as soon as I get off the train," "It's not that --it's=--" She heli - (Continued in next issue,) The Silver Plane. The night comes down on the tired old earth And covers its many scars With the misty folds of -a purple veil, Dotted and hemmed with stars, And over the row of tall, black pines, A, luminous crescent new, The moon through the foam of the fly- ing clouds Sails" gracefully into view. It is a silver aeroplane That voyages far and high The cold blue ocean of boundless space " We used to call the sky; And the roan in the moon is an airman bold Who fell with his plane one day, And pilots • the shimmering Iunar orb Since then on its scheduled way. milk, three cups of flour, four round- marc Av wataa �raraaa water. lac aatsti ed teaspoons of baking powder, one made up my mind to keep it where no cup of chopped nut meats—any you air would get at it, so I just used ord- .have --half a teaspoon of salt, and inary fruit jars and s•ea1etI then tight, flavoring, either spiees or 'vanilla.We had no more trouble to keep our Cream butter and sugar, add fruit and brown sugar rapist. nuts, then the eggs and nolle, and Iastly the flour and baking powder sifted together. Bake in a slow oven and store in the cellar in a stone jar. The day before the feast, frost with a boiled icing. For the Children's Lunch. Graham Bread Sandwsehes-13 scups flour, 1% cups Graham flour, 4 Sent by the Lord. Sir Arthur Yapp told a good story at the National Liberal Club in Lon- don when he was handed a cheque for $1,000, subscribed by members to wipe off the Y.M.C.A. deficiency on its war work. A soldier returned from Mesopo- tamia with the delusion that he was He Is AU Things. Is God the same thing as cosmos? someone asks. He is the great Intelligence of the universe, He is the Source, of alt things, the Cause of all things. Ile is teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon completely without money—"not an Justice, Truth, I3eauty, Love, He is salt, 1 egg, 1 tablespoon shortening, unreasonable delusion in these times," the reality back of the atom, back of 1 cup liquid (iri water and i/ milk); as Sir Arthur remarked—and wrote a the electron, the essence of being. He 2 tablespoons sugar or syrup. Sift together graham and white flour, bak- ing powder,_salt and sugar; add beat- en`eg'g, melted shortening, and syrup, if used, to the liquid; add to the dry mixture and beat well. Add more milk if needed to make a drop batter. Put into a greased bread pan, smooth with knife dipped in •cold water, and allow to stand in warm place about 45 minutes. Bake about one hour in mod- erate oven. When cold slice very thin and spread -with cream cheese, jam, or peanut butter. Luncheon Cakes -4 tablespoons letter asking the Lord tosend him £10 to help him out. The letter was delivered to the War Grace, and the clerks there were so touched by the appeal that they subscribed ie7 and sent it to the man in hospital. He then ;wrote a second letter: "Dear Lord,.—Thank you very much for the money you sent me, but if you send any more Mit send it through the War Office, as they have stopped £3 of what I asked for. Send it,please, through the Y.M.C.A. tiMMinard's L.tniment Relieves Colds, Eta Remedies Discovered by Accident It was simply through the inistake' of an assistant in filling a bottle with anise' instead of anise oil, that Pro- fessor Fraenkel discovered a prepara- tion -which absolutely destroys the in- sect which carries the germ of spotted fever or typbus. This is by no means the'only case of a remedy discovered purely by ac- cadent. - Visiting an elderly .:parishioner whom he had not seen for some time, the rector of a Norfolk, England, parish, was astonished to find that the old gentleman, who previously had' possessed a pate as shiny- as a billiard ball, now displayed a fine' crop of hair, The rector very naturally inquired how this seeming miracle had come about, ' and was informed that it was the result of a certain ointment for rheumatism, t "You see, sir," said the old fellow,. Meer four years of experimenting "I . have rheumatism in my leg, and a Florida man has succeeded in mak- after I tabbed the ointment on my leg ing newsprint paper from native saw- 1 wiped my hands on my bald head. grass. Soonthe hair begazt to•'grow, anal now, e—..•e after being bald for thirty years, I Vie -lard's Linemen For Burns, Eta_ have a tine thatch. again." The remedy, it is said, has already been put upon the market under an- other name. . The use of snake Poison in certain skin diseases was first proclaimed to the ` medical world by a Brazilian scientist, Dr, de Moura. Happening to visit an, Indian village, he saw there a than who, by marks on his body, had evidently suffered from a peculiarly terrible form of skin disease, and one regarded as ,incur- able. Yet the pian was apparently in good health. He .made inquiries, and the sufferer told him that, a year previously, he hadbeen dying frons this disease when he was accidentally bitten' by a pit viper. This started 'De Moura on experi- ments with snake venom, whleb have share proved, to be of great value in many skin diseases, and which, it is said, will even arrest the progress of leprosy. Professor Rcsntgen's X -Rays, one ;of the greatest benefits ever conferred on suffering man, afford still another ina'tance of accidental discovery. is the changeless reality. ---------•o'er-.•- One of the treasures of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum at Honolulu is a marvelous feather cloak, the pro- perty of kamahamaha the Great, -up- on which a valuation •of $1,000,000 has been placed. It is kept in a steel vault and is only exhibited at rare intervals. tie• w SCENTED R i'a CEDAR CHEST$ Abaotu sly moil: taroaf and wonder -- fully ]a:.ndeattla yiecca of furniture. DLreot from manufacturer to you, Write for tree tlluxitratod litaraaeuro. Eureka Refrigerator Co, Limited Ott an Sousa, Ont. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Balk Carlota TORONTO SALT WORKS C. d. CLIFF • TOROr1 T There's a Bob Long Glove for Every Job 'r g1neers Riggers Brakemen Lumbermen Firemen Rtectrictaus Pre4ght -Stonehtasons Fri gemea Plumbers Riveters Bricklayers I,inenaen Carpenters Smelters Farmers Moulders Ranchers Miners Truck Drivers Chauffeurs If your Glove is not listed bete, ask your dealer BOB LONG UNION MADE GLOVES Made by skilled workmen frost strongest leather obtainable — soft and pliable. R. G. LONG & Co., Limited Winnipeg TORONTO Montreal Bob Lour Brands Snows frees Coast to Coast 152 Have Your Cleaning Donn Ey Experts. Clc thing, household draperies, lixien end delicate fabric* can be craned and made to look as fresh and bright ars wlien first bought. Cleaning and Dyeing Is Properly Done at Parker's. It snakes no difference where you live; parcels can be sent in by nail or"express. The same carte and attention is given the work as though you lived in town. We will be pleased to advise yon on any question re- garding Cleaning or Dyeing. WRITE ITS. Parkers DyeWorks Limited Cleaners& ers 7SIYonge:St,. oi'onto