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Exeter Advocate, 1909-06-24, Page 6
r * ******* ! ial, and is excellent fur rernoc ing • yellow marks. * If lettuce is kept for several hours 1i€I%1E. * it should be laid on a wet towel and placed on the cellar finer or ►n the refrnedigeratbolr. Staie liet nt should be put :3/1***********into pure boiling water before put- ; the stain to disappear. SOME DAINTY DISHES. I.ittle garments which come next Ginger Cakes.—Mix together half , to a baby's.skin should never bo nearlyRoMat-dial! three years, andrtmin school i all INTERNATIONAL LESSON, a pound of hour, six ounces of but washed witli soda. This irritates y' J t° l.l' 13. the skin and is very painful. the time he liked it. It was fun to ten, then add a quarter of a pound always warm the baby's bed with read and write, and geography was _- of moist sugar, one egg, a teaspoon- ( easy. But the number work was ful of ginger, and two tablespoon hin�uic� rest fobottle the nights if resg not like the other studies. It was a , Lesson 111. Paul's Second Mis- fuls of golden syrup. Stir these all good deal harder, and ho had to well together and droptablespoon- less this will make him sleep. sionary Journey.—(Continued). If our soup is found too salty work longer at. his lessons. liter feta of the batter on the baking tin add a few slices v[ raw potatoeGreenwood, who sat just in frust Golden Text, Pea. 119: 11. and bake till done.and cook a little lunger. The po- of him, gut cu much better than Cold Pork.-- tut some neat slices, tato will absorb the surplus salt. 1 Roy did in the number work, and I. Teaching the Scriptures at or cutlets, according to the joint, When hen anything has burned in the this made Huy unhappy, for always Thossulouica.—Vs. 1-9. 1. Now sprinkle thein with pepper, salt, and bettor, instead of re lenish before, in the reading and writing when they, Paul, Silas, and Time- doublea suspicion of powdered sage, and ing the steamer ps, c with hot water, and other things, he had kept ahead thy. Driven from Philippi the tim- ing fry a nice light color. Make use cold for the sante effect. of Peter. Roy could not sea how sionaries traveled southwest, along some apple sauce, arrange it in a If the kettle in which syrup is be- it was that Peter could add up long the great military road which led mound on the centre of the dish, ing boiled is rubbed with butter to columns of figures and multiply and towards home; at the end of 33 and place the pork round. Garnish the depth of an inc❑ or so from the divide, and always get the right miles they passed through Amphi- with parsley and serve. lop the syrup will not boil over. answer, when he himself worked , polis, near the shores ; then travel - Chocolate Icing. --Stand two oune- Copper may be cleaned by scour -lust as hard, and even harder, and ing 30 miles more, they carne to es of chocolate on a plat© in the lug it with a cut lemon dipped in often got a wrong answer. { Apollonia. As these were cities of oven till soft, then set it in a stew salt. When clean rmse in pure hot Ono day the teacher, looking over little importance, and did not con - pan with a quarter of a pound of water and polish with a soft cloth. Roy's shoulder at his paper, point- tain a synagogue ae a basis of pro - icing sugar, moisten with a table - Peroxide of hydrogen will whiten ed out a mistake he had made, and pagating the gospel. Pand did not spoonful of water. and stir over the a silk waist that has become yellow. I said, ns she turned away, "He- spend any time in them, but hast - fire till quits smooth, hut do not let Wet thoroughly with the peroxide member, Roy, figures do nut lie." ened on 37 attics .arthcr to Thes- it boil. Spread it over the cake like and hang waist, in sun and wind. It seemed a funny thing to say, salonica on the gulf of Salonica in any other icgnq. When milk, soup, or other liquids an 1 Roy thought about it. a good Macedonia about one hundred Victoria Sandwich.—Take an egg, boil over on the stove, and threat- deal. Figures must be very good if miles from Philippi. its weight in flour, ground rice, en to fill the place with unpleasant they always told the truth. He Paul's Four Methods of Teaching caster sugar and butter. Add to odors cover the spot quickly with wondered if it was easy for them. the Bible. 1. Discussion. He these ingredients a tablespoonful of sair He tried always to tell the truth reasoned with theist out of the baking powder and flavoring to An old-fashioned but sure remedy l himself, but sometimes it was not scriptures (v. 2). Ho based his rea- taste. Spread the batter on two for remove ing ink stains is to dip ' easy- Once or twice he had been Boning on the true facts which they small tins of equal size and bake in the spots in pure melted tallow. punished for things he had done, accepted, and then discussed with a sharp oven. W hen cooked, turn • ..en the latter is washed out the and had told the truth about, when them the question whether the pro - out on a sieve, spread one lightly spots wilt go. it had scented alinost as if he would phecies were not fulfilled in Jesus with jam and set the other in it. A saucepan in which oatmeal has not have been punished ii he could I as the Messiah. Tho Greek word is Sift sugar over and serve. been cooked may be easily cleaned only have told alio about it. But ! almost letter for letter our word A Savory Liver Dish.—Get a by putting a cupful of ashes inti, it still ho knew how his father and "dialogue." The method was more pound of liver, cut it in thin slices, and filling with water a few minutoi 1 mother feltat'o'll it, and so he did 1 like that of our Bible classes than and wipe. it with a damp cloth. before w•asning, his best to tell things just as they of our preaching. Discussion for Grease a pie -dish, lay in some slices When starching children's pins- were. the sake of seei►.g the truth from of liver, sprinkle with pepper and fetes add a small piece of sugar to I But figures must be strange things all sides is one of the best means of salt, some chopped onion, and a the boiled starch. This will make if they neer told a tic. Perhaps i learning the truth. Often rho dis few breaderumbs, and a slice or them iron more easily and leave a ! they were real and alive, like him- I eussion must be in our own minds two of fat bacon. Continue thus 1 beautiful gloss on thorn. self, and had to do things some- 1 as the arena. till the dish is full, then cover with The following is said to be a auto ( times that were hard and that they 2. Opening the Scriptures (v. 3). some sliced potato, pour in a little ' cure for corns: Ono teaspoon, did not like to do. At any rate, Unfolding the Scripture truths, gravy or water, and bake for an eae4, of coarse brown sugar, salt he thought about it a good deal. pointing out to them the things they hour. Serve !iota perre and tar, warmed together; I The spring examinations caste in had not noticed, or applications Baked Apple Pudding.—Butter a put on kid and bind on the foot for March. Roy knew it weeks ahead, which they had nut understood. pie dish and cover with bread- 24 hours. and he knew, too, that he ought to crumbs; pare, core, and quarter g � Paul was to them like an expert some apples, and three parts the To dry parsley wash the parsley be reviewing the work he had bone who points out to the poor owner Ppand shake it dry. Then set it in a over; but it was fust marble time of a rocky farm the rich mines of pie dish. Sprinkle with sugar and I cool oven and when it becomes !then, and it was hard to stay in -gold and silver beneath the sur- a grate of nutmeg and cover with crisp let it cool. Pitt into tins or doors and study when everybody face; or opens to the possessor of brcadcrumbs. Bake till quite cook- bottles and exclude the air from it. else was out playing marbles. a common pasture the oil wells ed. In the meantime, make must- Gilt on china will not last long The examination in number work' which are of more value than urines and with half a pint of milk, one if soda be used in the washing of seemed to Roy easier than he had I of silver. Science is continually egg, a teaspoonful of cornflour, and it; therefore use soapy water for thought it would be. He did all of opening the common things of sugar to taste. Stir over the fire washing teacups, etc., patterned the first six examples, and was life and finding in them greater till the custard is thick, but it must with gilt, and keep soda carefully pretty sure he had jot them right. treasure than the "Open, Sesame'' not boil. Take up the apple, pour away from them.But the seventh was a hard one. ire the Arabian Nights. over the custard, return to the oven faint on clothing, even when it He worked and worked on it, and 3, Comparing Scripture with for a few minutes to set, and then has become hard and dry, may be still he could not uo it, so he skip Scripture and with facts. 3. iAl- ts serve. removed with a mixture of equal parts ofammoniaturpentine. ped that and did the others, and leging. The Greek word dues not Mother's Pudding. --Make a suet and then went back. He tried and tried crust with three-quarters of a pound Saturate the paint spot as often as again, but le would not conte out imply "assertion," as in our mod - of flour, six ounces of chopped suet, necessary and wash out in soap- tight. ern use of "allege" (thought not in one tablespoonful of baking powder, suds. Then, when he was very tired, he the older English usage), but , and enough water to make a paste. To purify racid butter, melt and , looked up just as Peter Greenwood means setting beside' setting Roll it out, and spread with this trim the butter. and then put into asked to leave his seat for a drink out arguments." Paul set beside mixture: One teacupful of chopped it, a piece of well toasted bread. of water. Peter left his paper on the promises in the Old Testament apple, half a teacupful of currants, In a minute or two the bread will his desk, and although Roy did not the facts of Jesus' life and teach - apple, half tablespoonful abteaspoonful f tuixe dgar,c and hal{ have absorbed all offensive taste intend to look, he could not help ��is4p1 utug photograph, places we oh his description, I and smell,seeing sour of the examples. and showed that Jesus fulfilled up, wet the ends to prevent the mix- Utilize old cigar boxes by taking Number seen was right before his ture boiling out, tie in a cloth, and them apart and lining a large box �eyes, and where Roy had the figure every promise on which they based buil for three hours. or cheer with them to make a moth eight, Peter had a nine. their ideas and their hopes of a Vegetable Marrow Pie —Peel a proof bot The wood is cedar, Roy weer over his own work Messiah deliverer. Especially did morrow, cut it in half lengthwise, which is saturated with the odor of again and saw that it ought to be he show that the Christ, i.e., the and lay it in boiling stock, lettingtobacco, making it 'doubly secure a niac, so without thinking Winch Messiah, must needs have Buttered, it cook gently for fifteen minutes. against moth. more about it, lie changed his own for so was the Messiah described in Mix an ounce of dripping eruiootl►ly Glasses which have held milk work and put dowi• the nine where Choir Scriptures. This description with half an ounce of flour. Put it should never be washed in warm he had bad the eight. was one of the great difficulties in into a small saucepan, and as itthe Jewish mind. It seemed impoe- water while the dregs of the milk Being in a hurry, he did not make melts, stir in a dessertspoonful ofstill cling around the edges. If a very gaud nice. It was hunch- sible that the victorious king, who grated cheese and a teacupful of the glass is first rinsed out in cold backed and stooped over, with a was to reign forever, the Wunder- the ostock. Stir ril o few thick. minutes Grease water it can then he washed safely big head, that seemed to be hand ful, F1, er,Ilio Counsellor, 1rice f I'e vethe Everlasting whi whose in warm water in the usual way. ing down. But he turned in Ins a pie -dish, and scatter a few bread -Soup is an economical and whole- paper, and hurried nut and played kingdom was an everlasting king. crumbs over it, thencover the bot- some addition to the dinner. Save marbles till dark. dots, including all nations, could torn with a layer of sauce, next with all the bones, boil them up for After supper that evening he be- be an humble teacher who died on slices of marrow, well seasoned with stock, then add the odds and ends Ban to bink about the examples the cross. But Paul showed them pepper and salt, then moregravy of vegetables left over from dinner. again, and to remembered the that only by suffering could the and marrow till the dish is full. If nothing else, put in a dash of figure nine that he had put down in Messiah save from sin, and that by Cover with good crust, and hake catsup --and you have nice tomato place of the eight. He remembered his having risen again from the till the pastry is done. Serve hot.soup. how it looked—how is was ben over, dead, Jesus is a living and gl•,ri A broom supporter made of spools and how it hung its head. est if it oua king. Therefore this Jesus, TWO SANDWI\•H RE('EIPES. is a simple and convenient device, was ashamed of something. He kept whom I preached unto you is (the) Screw into large empty spools high thinking about it, and even after Christ. Macon and Cheese Sandwiches. .up on the middle .rains of a door, he had gone to bed the figure stood •t. Living the gospel, sit that they Take round sandwich bread, cutoff ust, far enough apart to allow the there before his eyes, looking mean could interpret its meaning by what crust before slicing, site° bread in handle of the broom to slip in. The and sorry. ho was and did. pieces one-half inch thick. Mix one broom part rests on the spools. The more he thought about it the II. Studying the Scriptures at slightly beaten egg with one jar of When patching wall paper don't more it seemed to him that he had Berea. --Vs. 10-15. 10. beroa was club cheese, pinch of salt, and red forget to preface operations by made the figure lie, when it did not inland about fifty miles southwest pepper. Butter bread with plenty putting the new piece of paper in want to, and had not meant to. of Thessalouica. Cicero, in his of cheese, put on top tnrce slices the sunshine to fade, till it matches That was why it. looked so mean oration against Piaci, says that un - of crisply tried bacon and put under that on the wall. Don't cut the and &s lamed. able to face the chorus of complaint broiler until cheese ie melted. This patch a neat square. but tear it. The first thing the next morning at T'hessalonica, Pato fled to the out makes a delicious sandwich of toast- The irregularity of its edges make Roy went straignt to his teacher. of the way town of Berea. So Paul edbread, melted cheese, and broil- it less conspicious. "Please may I change ono of the may have gone to Berea on account cd bacon. •!• answers in my examination paper 1" of its seclusion. As usual they went es - Appetizing Sandwiches. — Take WHITE FLAG 1N Walt T1 Mf E. he asked. made mustard and stir into it as eWhy• niy dear boy," she said, to the synagogue, where they were much grated Parmesan cheese as Commander Not Obliged to Reeog• "I CO111i1" t let you do that. It doubtlst ess s.Ch istianCeJewd s whor left the mustard will hold together. wouldn't he fair. If you have look - Slice bread thin ; remove crust. site It. ed up the answer out of school you them at this point. They Brent away Butter a Alice, add the cheese mix- The British Army Council issues must not change it now. That would (as the Greek implies) from their ture, place unhuttered slice on top, a remarkable instruction core -ern -not be right.' escort into the synagogue. press together, and you'll be pleas- ing the use of the white flag in fu- "Oh, ye` t», it would because one The' a were more noble in moral ed with result. lure campagna in the new field ser- of my figures lied," said ploy, sag- there/ler. ra.•ter, in mental and spiritual ••••••••• .••=1••• vice regulations just published. erly. "Ile didn't mean to, but 1 dun,itiev. This nnhility expressed It is stated that the recognition made him; but i didn't mean to, it`elf (i1 in that they received the WORTH RNOWiYo.word with all readiness of mind. of a white flag in an enemy's post- either. Stains, may be removed from agate tion or lines is not obligator: in "Why child, what do you mean 1" Their minds were open to all truth dishes with pumice stone. cases where movements of troops Then Rey told the teacher all from every centro. They were not If spices are tied in a cloth, they or material Are carried out under about it; how he had not got the afraid . f it because it was new. won't he troublesome when sery its protection. right ensner himself, and how he (2) in that they *Parched. a ing. It is also stated that the follow- had Been Peter's paper, and put thorough examination. up from bat• Always scald china milk pitcher• ing are not considered Spies :--- down the figure he had seen there. tom to top through a seri.ra of and ads) soda to the water to make "Soldiers or civilians carrying The teacher laughed and hugged ubjeet-S nr particulars; to investi- them le rfectly swwei•t smelling. lout their mission openly, charged Roy the way his mother did some- gate, as a i::dee in a court sifts the The i,iost easily digested meats with the delivery of despatches in- tines. Then she tock nut his c'an►i- evidence. the scriptures. where the are muttonchops, venison, sirloin fended for their darn arm • or for netion-papee. and w here the poor. e: idr•nee of the M'siiah.hip of Jeans of beef. lamb chops, rabbit and ; that of the ene:nv. TO t his slaw mean !+'eking figure nine had ,t...•ci pas to be found, by comparing the chicken belong, likewise, indictduAls sent she. put a great big eight that stood Se; ipturce with the taus Paul Coll sausages in Ruler before fry. 1 in balloons. aunt ips, and a!r+'- • up ru straight and looked so strong nreeented. They did not take things ing thein: it will keen them from i;entice to dela er despatches and and heist a that anybody could ace i,v hesrsar. hut sought the truth breaking. and will „ISO improve the generally to maintain C•.In!uunica at a p. Mace that be W as telling the for thrmselies. fla►or. ,!ems between tee various parts of , tr.ith, n., ni•ttter if he had marle al The resnit ws• that roans of Tartatie acid will remote aiau,st the forces in the (Wei tit a terra- m'•teke. ,them (the Jews► believed Of the any iron•rest b:Nmish fru'► luster- $ tory." 1 .Ind lion Res knew.. that if fig- Greeks, many honourable women. YOUNG FOLKS THE FIGURE THAT LIED. uses toes lie it is not because they want to, but because seine cue else make, them. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL DARE TO TEbL THE TRIITH Be What You Believe and Put Your Creed Into Conduct and Character "The truth shall make you free." duhn, viii., 32. (inc of the greatest diuiculties in religious thinking is that its ex- planations tend eoustantly to be- come its laws. It is hard to keep its thought flexible, w ital, and so developing. Every age tends to settle hack on the descriptions of the vision of the ago before it and declare that nothing may be seen beyond. The creeds are but the definitions and aualyees attempted by the past. They are accounts of what sten were able to see and tell of their thoughts of the ways of the infinite among risen. They differed be- cause no two men can occupy pre- cisely the same point of view. Rut the intellectually slothful quickly ,seized such descriptions and set them up as final; they saved them the labor of looking farther into truth. Every creed has been at some rtimc the rankest kind of heresy. It owed its vitality to that fact; when all risen are ebb to speak well of it, when all can chant it without dissent, it ceases t3 have any power. It has montliries nut no vision ; it recites history but it offers no prophecy. THEN NEW HERETICS ARISE. They are the wren who tell not what their fathers saw but what they are trying to see for themselves. They dare to tell the truth of today in the terms of today. Whenever you dare to do that you may be cer- tain to hear the stormy protests of those whose slumoers are disturbed by these new sounds. No new truth is at first welcome to many. Old leaders will fight it bitterly because it seems to them to necessitate their doing their thinking all over again, and usual- ly they are too old or have too long fallen out of the habit of think- ing to contemplate that process with any pleasure. Their follow- ers simply echo their alarms be- cause they are told either to do so or be damned. There are two types of mind everywhere—those that crystalize an idea and those that fertilize it. Some view of truth coulee to the first type and it is immediately ilea). way in precisely the form in which it first appeared. It can not be changed ; it. roust either stay that way or be utterly shattered. That wind makes such a form a fetich. Tho other typo of mind receives truth as a living thing; its ideas, are ever developing ; each vision pro- mises larger views. The exple.na- tion that seems to satisfy today is held as tentative always; it must grow in order to explain the larger facts that opcu up to -morrow. That mind never has a creed save as a matter of TEMPORARY RECORD. 'these two types seldom under- stand one another; they never sym- pathize. They are almost sure to clash, and the first will denounce the second as the treacheroua foe of truth. Our theological battles he between these two types of thinking, between those for whom truth is de- livered in sealed, unbreakable packages and those for whom it breaks out in larger meaning every day. You find these two types every- where in life. No one needs even to suggest which is more valuable in all the affairs of the world, which has made possible scientific dis- covery and its adaptation to human comforts and usefulness. The 'nen to whom truth is a living thing is the man who will steadily seek to apply truth to life to stake it live. That application of living truth to vital things is the ..►1 important dis- tinction. It is that which we most need to see clearly in mattera of re- ligion. The great thing is to take such an attitude to religious truth that we shall see every vision as meaning something real, livable, as opening truth to us only as some- thing to be realized and lived. Truth saves as it is lived. Life discovers untruth and reveals the power and glory of the true. HENRY F. COPE. wives of the chief citizens, and of ing that you believe it. mon, not a tow. !'here are too many trying to Then followed another popular prove their live for the good news disturbance, stirred up by their by telling all the bad news. Thessalouian enemies. Paul was Many a man wrecks his ship bo - secretly and hastily sent to Athens, cause he spends alt the time in the while Silas and Timothy were to fol- hold with his freight. low later. Many are wilting to wear the Christian armor provided there is i. nothing but a parade in sight. BIRD AND ANIMAL. GROUPS. When you see a saint looking for the spot light you may bo sure ne Proper 'fanner in Which to Des• is made up for the occasion. tribe Them Collectively. The quickest way to make stumb- ling blocks is to set up your faith People arc often at a loss how to rs the only stepping stone to Ilea. describe groups of animals and ven. birds. '!'herefore, the following __ t will prove interesting: You should TOPSY-TURVY TURKEY. say : A covey fur partridges, a nide China has often been termed the of pheasants, a wrap of snipes, a land of topsy-turvydoin ; but Tur- flight of doves or swallows, a muster key, the land of young rebels, has of peacocks, a siege of herons, a surely ars equally strong claim to building of rooks, a brood of Grouse, this title. The Turk nuts his head a plump of wild fowl, a strand of v hen he means "No," alai shakes plovers, a watch of nightingales, a it when he means "Yes." lfe takes clattering of choughs. a flock of „ft his shoes, but never his fez, geese, a herd or bunch of cattle, when he enters a mosque or a home, a bevy of quails, a east of banks, When he rides on n tram -car his a trip of dotterel, a svwnrm of bees, ticket is punched at t he place ho a school of whales, a shuai of her- gets on, instead of at the place ho rings, a nerd of swine, a skulk of must get oR. In order to cut a faces, a pack of wolves, a drove of piece of wood, instead of rubbing oxen. a sounder of hogs, a troop of a saw against it, he tubs it against monkeys, n pride of lions, a sleuth the sa:v, which he holds between his legs. Until recently, salt. fire - of bears, and a gang of elk. * arm', and education were all taboo in his country. Steam machinery SENTENCE SERMONS. and electrictl appliances were for - Those who fear the .lc!.,.rt tinct bidden—the first for no given rea- son. the second because the word nc Canaan. The most uplifting talk is an „ up• dynamo' tno closely ietio red right walk. the word "dynamite." Diction - Life without restraint is not long ariP., Loo, containing the words without wreck. elder and 'brother" were self - Faith always means forsaking consciously censured, because .1e. some Seeming good. dill Nereid usurped the throne from The good life is known by some- his elder brother, who, report says, thing beside its goods. ae we go to press, has at last curio Appetite is a poor exegesis on tho int" his own. ,c+ruiirisndrnents. SUBSTITUTE FOR LEATHER. The honesty that advertises it - Irish dust, Knat's hair, and self is usually for sale. i31ee exp are the boosters for tit's Irish moss, cumpot.nded by a secret Camp- -41311 not need boosting. chemical process, is claimed to be, You can never persuade nth. i e by its inventor, Mr. John C'amp- I•ovond our own convictions. bell, a perfect substitute for leather, Those .tirohearts are best guarded vulcanite, void, and marble. As that are most open to others. leather, it n:ekes serviceable rules : for shore among the things the Freedom means the right to a vol,uitarti part in the cod of all. c"ml'nund ►s good far are put•iro Many put a thousand lives iu den- franies. ornausent.al m+,uldinps, imi er rather than hurt the feelings ration weed partition., belting for o g• machinery. upholstery, cetten• of ane. spinning bobhins, electric ewitch- W1'here the life is consumed in boards. Pouring, gelf halls, fountain love's sacrifice the halo takes caro pens, emarbia ' in all colors, chew of sell. ods, bookbinding, and "ivory" Piteople who run after trouble a1• cubmarhs. ways blame Providence when they catch it. Fnllowint a fad i. a short cut to Taking pleasures as they come is folly happiness; running after them is . misery. Just bcclose a Teen is no I,'tter Most men who start lel 1' p:s$ than he ought to he ie oo sign that a flying si•it t•• .in a, quire the i ig;►f Le eest .renswe to vote there •---• If this !Pen,, I. be a i•eari .•-, P1►leinl 'binecr,ed a ^.ifc ft) age the unit that,/ ib do i• tv pat i e 1r,•h.cua . 1 •1' a •illy- goose • y.u your own heart ince it %%h 1 wartiest vets" "Perhaps The -e', a lot • f diflire' e be- ; : u-' rr,,lisd the lases .%t ens twcen believing a thing and bel es - j rate. you v..1 . P., chi' ken "'