HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1910-01-06, Page 6;
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* 1 the above cakes at sante time and pleased the owner better than one
save work. ; that shone, but if the polish is pre•
IN Eggless Tice Cake. -One cupful ferred it could be given with var-
ui sugar, one tablespoonful of lard,' nish. All the ,narks of service will
I cupful sour milk, ono teaspoon- I disappear from a table or other
fat of soda (in milk). one teaspoon- piece of wood treated in this man-
ful of c•tnnatn'll, one teaspoonful of her, and the labor necessary to pro -
PIES. allspice. Bake in loaf tin and frost. ► duce the result is not great.
Devil's hood. --Cream two cupfuls) Cleauing Light ('oats.-- You can
of sugar with one-half cup of but-, make a light coat look like new for
te: (good measure), add two beaten! exactly 0'e' cents. Hero is bow to
eggs, one cup of cold water, one - 'do it : Buy 25 cent.' worth of ini-
tial( teaspoonful each of ground ler's earth at any drug store.
clover and nutmeg, one teaspoon -I Spread the coat on • sheet. sprinkle
NI of lemon or vanilla, one small' 1; plentifully with fuller's earth,
square of unsweetened chocolate' rubbing the powder well into the
(grated), three cupfuls of flour, and c.,at with a soft cloth or brush, al -
three level teaspoonfuls of baking low the coat to lie for forty-eight
powder. Bake in layer tins. Cho -i hours. Thee shake the fuller's
colate Fronting. --Put into a shat- earth off on to the sheet, brush the
low pan four tablespoonfuls of l coat with a stiff brush, and shake
scraped chocolate and place iti well. The coat will look like new
Pumpkin Pie. -Add a tablespoon -
fu! of molasses to each pie. The
flavor is dilicioua, hut not percep-
tible as molasses.
Jelly Pie. ----One cup sugar, onc-
third cup butter,' one large cup
jelly, lemon extract to taste, one
whole egg and yolks of four. sav-
ing whites for meringue for top of
Lie. Beat thoroughly. Make two
pies.
Mock Cherry Pie. -- One cupful of
cranberries cut in halves, one half
cupful of raisins, one tablespoon- where it will melt gradually, bt,t,+t,td there will be. no odor as with
not scorch ; when melted stir in; gasoline. Put the fuller's earth
fol of flour, one cupful of sugar,
two teaspoons of vanilla, one cup- three tablespoonfuls of milk or! back in the box and use it three
fol of boiling water. This makes cream and one of water. Mix all' times more. Cleaners charge $1.50
one pie together and add one scant teacup- for exactly this sane process.
Meek Mince Pie. - One egg, fol of sugar; boil five minutes and
three or four crackers, or six or while hot spread on the cakes.
eight sural, Duey, one-half cupful
Pecan Cake. -Two cupfuls mil-
eight
molassem:, one-half cupful of su- verized sugar. three-fourths cupful
gar, one-half cupful of vinegar, one butter, a half cupful corn starch,
half cupful of strong tea, one cup- two and one-half cupfuls flour, one
fel of chopped raisins, a small piece
of butter, spice and salt.
Squash Pie. -Two teaeups ,:f
boiled squash, three-fourths tea-
cup of brown sugar, three eggs, two
tablespoons of molasses, one table-
spoon of melted butter, one table-
spoon of ginger, one teaspoon of
cinnamon, two teacups of milk, a
little salt. Make two plate pies.
Orange Oreatn Pie. -Bake a crust
in a large pie tin. For filling take
one pint of rich milk, boil three-
fourths of it, and with the remain-
ing quarter stir two tabiespo'nfuls
of corn starch : add to the boiling
milk, stirring all tae tithe, and then
add half a teacup bf sugar, then
the yolks of two eggs well beaten
and thinned with a little milk. Add Almond Dumplings. -Beat one or Of all the existing man apes, the
a small pinch of salt. Remove from two eggs thoroughly; add as many gorilla is beyond question the most
• the fire and flavor with extract of chopped blenched almonds as the formidable, a large male standing
orange and pour into the crust. eggs absorb and one-half teaspoon-• nut infrequently over 5 feet 0
Whip the whites, add three even fu' sugar. Pat into a flat ball and Incites in height, and bones being
tablespoonfuls of sugar, flavor with fry in butter, browning on both known of one which apparently
orange extract, frost the pie, and' side;. Drop in meat soup and boil measured in life no les than 6 feet
place in the oven to brown slight- up lust once and serve. The dump -:2 inch( ft is not, we Hour' •now
lv. Serve cold. lings may be matte and fried the from experience in the gardens and
Mincemeat.- -Take five or six (lay. previous to using. A IRAsgtiitehete, always when young
pounds of scraggy beef -a neck cracker steal may be added if rine
quite so "utterly untamable a
con -
piece will do ---and 1 beast and so entirely and put to boil in wishes not to be quite so extrava- stands an enemy of man'!' as Du
water enough to ewer it ; take off gent and use leas almonds. Sitnple Chaillu represented; but it is see-
the ream that rises when it reaches to make. age and morose enough, says the
the Toil:ng point, ,add hot water I each Dumplings. --Take ono London Times.
Freon time to time nti) it is tender, cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of It is still uncertain whether in a
then remove the I d from the pot, baking powder, ono teaspoonful of wild state, except in the immediate
salt, let boil till almost dry, turn- butter; mix with a little milk and ntonient of attack, it ever actually
,inn the meat over occasionally in drop from teaspoon into hot syrup: walks erect without either resting
the liiquor, take from the fire, and cover and boil ten minutes and. its knuckles on the ground or sup-
I s stuns over night to get thor- serve with whipped cream. Delici-
•�...;.-•.,� -�,' porting itself by a branch overhead.
ought cold;` -ick bones, gristle or sus. I but, that it docs beat its fists open
stringy bits front the meat, chop Rice Dumplings.- Boil one -cupful its breast ellen enraged (Du
fine, mincing at the same time three of rice until under. 11'ring from (Madill says that he heard the
poands of raisings, wash and dry cold water squares of cheesecloth.' noise "like a great bass drum" at
fair pounds of currants, slice thin Spread rice in the centro of each a distance of a mile) is established;
n pound of citron,• chop fine four about one-half inch thiek and as and when the male gorilla turns, as
quarts good cooking tart apples; large as a saucer. Lav on it slices seemingly it does, to confront man ..Sir .ltthur Wilson an Ideal first
put into a large pan together, add of apples that cook quickly. Gather fearlessly when attacked, with its temptation of .the first Adam took is practiced to some extent nearly Sea Lord.
two -ounces of cinnamon, one of i up the corners of the cloth and tie huge size, is great hairy limbs, place in a garden, that is, in a tun- everywhere, rind is a prolific cause
cloves, one of ginger, four nutmegs, in a ball. Drop them in boiling and hideous head set almost down verse as yet unspoiled by sin. The ef moral murder. A lawyer not By the choice of Admiral of the
Oat juice and grated rinds of two water for ten minutes. Itemoveliilto its shoulders, we can believe temptation of the second Adana long since visited a certain work- Flee Sir Arthur Fnyvet 11'ilson, V.
lemons ,one tablespoonful of salt, cheesecloth carefully and serve, that "no description can exceed took place in a wilderness. that is,' hou-e to see a than on whose life a (%•, to succeed Lord Fisher of Kil.
one teaspoonful of pepper, and two with cream and sugar. the borer of the appearance." Add in a world rendered dcrolate by his number of speculators have policies, verstune as First Sea Lord n rlues-
pounds of sugar. Put in a porce- that the gotill;t usually lives in the fall, and the, ultimate effect~ of his and the pauper told him seriously tion of some difficulty has (.ren
lain kettle one quart of boiled cider CLEANING. depth of forests where the light is tietor. will'be to make it a garden that he had come in there for settled in the most sattsaacterr
or, better still, or.e quart of cur- sr, dim that. it is difficult to see any again.' i safety ! manner. says a London eoreV( nd-
rant or grape jui►Ee (canned when Scrubbing Carpets. -Three pints object clearly at a distance of more Tempted of the devil ---Th. ex:st-i Amazing instances of garnl'l,rg ent of the New York Herald It. is
grapes are turning from green to (i water, six oun(t,sl,oapbark , boil titan a few yards, and it is not to once of a personal power of evil is en paui)crt' lives are frequentlydis- even said that Sir Arthur', self -
purple). one ,mart of nice molasses twenty minutes and strain ; a(bl self -
be wondered At that the natio •a plainly taught by Jesus. It is ex covered, despite the secrecy prac- sacrifice in relinquishing hi, Iee,ur-
syrup, aim, a good lump of butter, three gallons warn) water and One- have invested it with attributes troniely (iiflicu,lt to conceive of 811 rices by the parties. About, three; ed retirement for the ard,;1 u•
let it come to boiling point and half pint anunonin. Tv our gallon `'`''It more horrible than those years ago a pauper lunatic was'strain of duty et the Admiralty is
which it, possesses. unperson:rl evil force existing in found to he insured by seven def ,slue in nn :mall n.rasure to the ini-
pour over (he ingredi,•nis in the of water Add five bars of Inundtyopposition to the purpnso of (;ud,
pan after leaving first mixed them soap shaved thin, and boil until I Maii. believe the gorilla to he freest. persons—not one of wilt m tiative of the King. :Moet ccrta�nly
well, then mix again thoroughly. soap is dissolved. Add one pound
human ; others hold that, though Sump
will frontifind t CSsier to thinkfacof had any insurable (that is, pceut,. it would have been almost impoa-
j'ack in jars and pelt in a cool place, of pulverized borax and boil ten
itself a Itenat, it is often informed g key) interest in his life, - for slh1e to. have found another that,
with the transmi ea face on the threshold of his minis who cr.o e so entirely the eoneid-
ar,d when cold pour molasses over minutes, stirring all the time. Stir e(' tc'd spirits of amounts ranging we un to £1 Of* Tho 1 �'
the human dead. It is said to lie try, for the decisive atruftglc, tthilesheneficiaries were, as is usual in once of the nave and the nation.
the top nn eighth ..f an inch in together, adding eight gallons morc�in wait, crouched on the lower others will think of his tempting the circumstances, asked to defray' Sir Arthur Wilson is inspired by
thickness and rover tightly. This water' i branches of trees overhanging a Jesus merely through evil sugges-
will keep two month;. For baking White Feathers. --Make a. thin' g g the mat of {,ptrinl, but they a whole settled dcy..t!ion to his prow
path, and when a human being lion. Allowance Must be made for unanimously decline.,. ,fersion. Like Lord Fisher, trio, he
take some out ..t A jar; if not moist batter ef Hour and gasoline. ho passes M drop one of its long hind Oriental metaphor.
I has had a s, ientifie training, and
enough add a little hot outer And duress feather in this, brio it a STARTLING DISCOVERY.
g p limbs and, clutching the victim by 2. He had fasted forty dare and; is reticent, determined and pro
alders n few elude raisins mer a:uli and down until clean, and if soiled the throat so suddenly and in so fcrly piglets Luke and Matthew] Still more startling vas a dusr,t- gresaive. In fact, ho retries tali -
boreal Instead of boiled beef a {sect lav on baud And duh gently with terrible a grip that hardly a sob differ as to the order of the temp-,eire made in a Lancashire,town. An renes to an extreme. arid • wherett
heart or roast meat mar 1 • used, ether hand. When perfectly clean is heard, 1., desk it mon or woman
and a good proportion fc. ., few (and it. will get white as snow) rinse __tip to its lurking place. It. is
. pies is one-third chopped meat and i t clear gasoline and shake till dr. I credited with capturing and %teal
two-thirds apples. with a little au •t, and all flour has left. It may be ink( women and carrying thein off
raisins, spices, butter and salt. necessary to take n coarse comb,' Si kc, p them in the forests, and,
to clean out flour more cffeet.ively. al mod with clubs, is raid to at -
CAKES. This is excellent and nue need have; tack and beat off elephants. The
no fear truing it with expensive fortnidablenr'.s of the great epos :t:
Nut Laver Cake. - Two cupfuls of plumes. 1 compared with other beasts, how -
Sugar, one scant cupful of butter To Clean 'C•,mha.--A simple way, ever, is not ea easy matter to pass
creamed tegether, three eggs heat- t , clean combs is to let thein lie upon. In Africa it is noteworthy
e, well, one cupful of sweet milk, for ten minutes in a basin of tepid, that the lion and the gorilla do not
three cupfuls of flour sifted to. water, to which ycu have added two occur together, and it Inas ester-
gother with two teaspoonfuls of tablespoonfuls of household am- ( minatcd the gorilla within its terri•
baking powder, one teaspoonful of intone, titers take :t stiff 5 -cent brush tory and that the gorilla has driven
ermine. Mix all well together, then and brush down heteeen the teeth. I ottt the lion.
add one cupful of chopped walnuts. You will he mut prised to see with, In Borneo the rrosl serious r. •.h
This ern, be Naked al.,' int.. loaves. what little lab,•r all oil and dust bora (f the olar.g are the python
Ernst with caramel (rooting as fol- are rcmov• land the crocodile, and the natives
Iowa: Two cupfuls ) Isay that the ape (welcomes there
one -11 ) •thou by seizing and bit-
odile by leaping
' h • the tip
ength
SOUPS.
Cream Soup. --For an invalid, one
that feels exhausted, or is troubled
with a loss of appetite, a nourishing
cupful sweet milk, whites of six soup can bo made in this way : In
eggs, three teaspoonfuls baking a warm howl beat up an egg with
powder, cream, butter, and sugar; two tablespoonfuls of thick, sweet
add milk with corn starch dissoly- cream, season with salt, popper and
ed in it, and flour and whites of a little nutmeg, add some cracker
eggs gradually. Filling -One and crtunha, then slowly pour in boiling
one-half cupfuls maple sugar, one water, beating constantly to avoid
cupful granulated sugar, one-half curdling.
cupful sweet milk, one-half cupful Chicken and Celery Soup. -13 til
butter, one cupful pecans, two tea -
.1,100
spoonful% vanilla. Chop pecans
very fine, put all ingredients to-
gether in a porcelain kettle and
boil slowly until thick enough to
spread on eake while very hot. De-
corate top with a few kernels.
DUMPLINCIS.
a few stalks of celery in with chick-
en broth. Remove them when done.
A little thickening may be added if
desired.
4s -
STRENGTH OF THE GORILLA.
How it )Kills Human Beings -Its
Attacks on Other Animals;.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL1crowd but the homage of believingexatninatton in borrowed plumes--
hearts. Front ono of his favorite frock Duet, silk hat, heavy gull
books, Deuteronomy, he refute% the watch chain, etc. ---which heti been
suggesNup of Satan, showing that lent him for the occasion by ty •lee•
he cannot expect the shelter of (.od uliter who then held a folk/ for
in such a selfish and spectacular 12ot► en the pauper's life. The in.
course. !mate admitted his share in the at -
e•10. l•'inally, the devil taketh hire tempted fraud. but denied that ea
to an exceeding high mountain, was ever told or led to believe that
from whose, height he beholds Jeri- he was to be insured for as much
oho, the City of the Palms; west- as £.250. adding that Ile thought he
Ward the shining minaretes of the was going to be 'put in" for ooh
holy city ; on all sides the land of £20 or £30. L► the end the poli.y
Israel: the roads leading to 1)a- was cancelled.
inascus, Persia, Egypt, Arabia, and Anot her case ra►ne to light
the Mediterranean coast. Here was through the anxiety of some specu•
the vision at ,chat of all the king- lators to realize. Nearly ten years
dorms of the world, whose glory was ago a man of about. 50 catered a
unquestioned. 'The people were workhouse in the environs of Mae.
looking for a victorious king who ('pester in such a condition t!,.:'
should liberate Israel from the days seemed to be numbered. Fo
he beeanmo an object of interest to
surae speculators, each of whom
took out policies on his life a
power to give .Jesus these things, course to which he assented : ru-
in this way : His acceptance of the dewed, he would sign a proposal form
earthly kingship would be equiva- for anybody in return for sixpence.
lent. to his consenting to fall clown knee being in the workhouse forabout twelve months his health
and worship Satan ; for his ordain vastly improved, whereupon he
e(! course was not one of comprom- took his discharge. went out, and
iso with evil but of the worship and has
single service of God. His answer NEVER IIEEN SEEN SINCE.
t.. the question as to the kind of Sante of the oversharp speculators,
kingdom he should establish was failing to obtain any tidings of him,
symbolical act of baptism would not that it should be an alliance with allowed their policies to lapse, but
necessarily mean the same to all (sod •fors 'ritual end t with • I
who submitted to it. 11'hile, to
most, it meant a break with the
past, and an entrance upon a bet-
ter life, to Jesus it meant an en-
trance upon "a new phase of the
accomplishment of his mission."
Thus it took the place of the anoint-
ing which marked the assumption
of their duties by the kings of old.
Ilttt, l,y submitting to this ordin-
ance, he was numbered among
transgresaors.
17. The Spirit of Clod descending
a; a dove -We learn from John 1.
3: that the vision. was given to John
as well as to Jesus; whether the
multitude saw it or did not see it
we are not told. The (love is a fit-
ting symbol of the Spirit, because
of its gentleness and innocence.
A voile . . . saying, This is my
beloved Son ---The voice and the
vision were a complete disclosure gree less iniquitous than that of pro-
of the Messiaship of Jesus. Ilya curing new policies. Here is an ao•
Jett' no fuller attestation that he British Parliament Expected to tual case which shows how the game
was the Messiah could be asked than is generally played. An old woman
this voice calling him Son of God. lass Insurance CompaniesI made up her mind to enter the
In whom I ant well pleased --This Bill. workhorse, • but before taking that
would make it impossible to etas- 1 step she wished to realize on seven
sift' Jesus with the multitude who, If the insurance-er "'panics bill 'policies nn her own life. 'These s'an
while being baptized, were con- note befa,e Parliament becomes event;tally sold to two notorious
fessing their sins. The words also law, and the government grants the gambles in death, who hold he-
intply that those who are found in inquiry into illegal insurance call- tween them hundreds of policies,
him are also well pleasing to (sod. od for by tho tradesunion congress. free and otherwise. Now, time total
This and the preceding verse con -la check will doubtless be put on a vali.e on maturity of the policies dis-
stituto a strong scriptural support' remarkable and little-known prac- posed ef by the old dame was near -
of the doctrine of the Trinity. , tire- -that whereby gamblers in Is. £2, t, and yet all she received for
Chapter 4, verse 1. Led up of the death one paupers as pawns, says them was £2 or £3 apiece!
Spirit-- Indicating that this momen- London Tit -Bits. Such 's one of the phases of il-
tous event in the life of our Lord i This disgraceful form of specula. legal insurance which. happily, is
was specifically ordained of God (inn is mostly confined to certain now threatened with extinction.
(compare Heb. 2. 10). !parts of the country, and them e it
• Into the wilderness ••-Tire wild is so common that workhouse etas -
desert• waste west of Jordan was tees believe every pauper in their
infested with wild beasts. "The charge is illegally insured! Ilut it
1\'17SIt\ t'f1O\.t1. Lt:?sON,
J1N.9,
Lesson 1I. BAptism and 'femptetion
of Jeers. Hatt. 3. 13 to I. 11.
1.oldeu 'text. Heb. 2. 14.
Vere 13. 'Then cometh Jesus ---To
get the poiuteof this statement one
mast keep the background of the
crowds coming to John's baptism.
To be baptized of hum --Not con-
fessing hid sins, a:; all the others
had done, but for the purpose men-
tioned in verse 15.
11. I have need to be baptized of
thee --Though John and Jesus were
closely related, it is not necessary
t ► assume that John knew hint.
His very bearing was enough to
convince the Baptist that here aas
ne ordinary candidate, but One
beside. whom he was most unworthy.
15. It becometh us to fulfil all
righteousness --He must leave un-
done nothing which had been re-
vealed as the will of God. The
hated yoke and restore, is greater
sl;lc•ndor, the throne ef David.
Doubtless, also, it was in Satan's
1 s, no t` evil a few are stili paying premiums in
for a worldly kingship. the hope --the very faint hope -
11. Then the devil leaved► --In the that the missing man will turn ap
threefolii temptation lie had ex- some day.
hausted the avenues of approach to How- is such gambling possible)
the ,gout of Jesus whom he found That is a long story. In some no
unassailable. seances the difficulty as to refer -
Angels ministered unto hire --The onces has been easily overcome ; the
ministry of angelic spirits seems to agent has been one of the referees
have been precious to Jesus (Luke attd the speculator the other! In -
est . 13). It ought to he a comfort curing paupers for comparatively
to all Christipns to know that the small amounts without their con -
family of (;od in heaven have an sent., or even knowledge, is also
abiding interred in all that per d• rte very simply. Numbers have,
tains to our human lot. in response to an invitation, drop-
ped into a friend's house for a cup
t of tea. when they have been out on
SPECULATION IN LIVES ES merely aas aan fellow egueatreann in,_
surance agent, who has thus been
Able to state that he has seen them.
PAUPERS USED AS PAWNS i\ Besides insuring paupers, some
spcculaors take up old policies on
11.1111: WITH DEA'I'II• !their lives -a 'practice only a de -
A HAPPY CHOICE.
tations, but there seems to he no insurance cornpanv found that it during his five years of rule, Lorcl
attempt to give ,hem a strict ehmn_
:had £20,000 at stake on the ,►vcs I Fisher. has made but tw•n pt;hli-
ologieA) order. I of some people who could not have !perches, it is quite on the wards
3. If thou are the Son of Clod- raised 5s. -perhaps not even 5d.--• that Sir Arthur will not make env
Ar. expression of doubt AS to his I among them if thereby they woull et all, however long he remains in
Messiahship.- i have saved themselves from instant office. Unlike Lord Fisher, wh ►
Command that these. atone. he- :execution. One man alone was in- ' Rpecialized A.s A glummer}• officer. Sir
come bread --The problem of Jesus !•i'red for £3,x100. Described as a I Arthur 11'ilsen graduated in the
was how to gain ascendency over ..pipe manufacturer," he, in feet. ;torpedo school. and exhibited curly
men, and what ti1,rt of Ascendency earned a precarious livelihood, ; his bent in the invention of a eli-
it was to he. Pira, he is templed, when not in the workhouse, by antes connected w•th tha tee, of the
to build hie kingdom on bread. Why hawking day p,pea Thr eutnpar►�, torpedo. Tt is, howocer, a std;It-
should he, posaease(i of superhuman1.WImsv whih, of e, ur,e, had tern deeeivcd exits, n tactician and a snndl,•r M
powers, perish in this wilderness for, i,' its agents, had riaks,on no fetter fleets that he it regarded as the
want of fend? than :u- of such lives, and it prompt- highest mtthority- of the nary,
4 Man shall not. lite by breedIv got rid of them by cancelling the, hich usts hi►n u ese matters
DO me 1e'a aws onlytrSir (7eoffrcvithHornby war
alone liis omission routs be fulfills j ;1 rurimts difl)enlfy areee in con 1ruat'ed by his brother seamy.; in
ed only bt• his obedience to the will i auction wit's the 'premiums.
of (mod. To use his miraculous )ow•- I p In recent times.
some ea;ee the copany wished Sir Arthur 1%ileon'a prcgclaseeltt
ec for his own advantage would return tm
hem, dnl accordingly of- the: Admiralty is it guararrf a 1!.,t
by to art. Isp his will as against. the ferdtl fhern to the actual inaurerr nn adequate standard, of natal ;1,_
Father's. By accepting this don- who were, without exception, periority will be n1 intainc'•l.
clition he proved bis utter willing-; speculators. Fen. ng prosecui n.
nevi to share the full human con- I these men declined the nmoner, and,
indeed. denied all knewl••dg(• of the 1elive it.1PPT:NKI►.
transactions. it was thereupon When .tack and ,Jill went up t1.-•
givers to the subjects. seine of stht to hill
thus became o•psessrd of mor • s
zling their sen- cash -in one instance file actual When they came (born CAch were a
ods would amount was about. £40 'Alla!, they
r feast, had ever ha before in a lump.
• long BOIL )11'El) PLUMES.
1)rarnati . • as a discovery made
Ira A doctor, while
Mende-Wilt,-Wilt,astourel•
in one of the in•
dict. Duty became more than
(1.
The second temptation was
seendency over the p e hard Roth were filled with Iau1 gl t ,r •
frown --
And the pail cane tumbling
after.
Sometimes an eAav-going person
i• hard to getrid of.
Hatpins were Bever So e•xtraea-
instilntien a men t;ant in •iZP a11.1 decoration. Some
aminerl A .hurt Cne o' the latest and richest are adorn•
.ontieetion with d e 1 with hind paircled rotn,ateees•
t instil ane. ef L'un. Peki-mg neessaline is the inure kir-
ereter hent lv made r t, to a partir.ular'y alluring .. •k
t the( it was fore(' striped chiffon cloth that is
-J _