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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-06-24, Page 6 (2)177777- II • '• 4 0 ••;!' _ o(ut meie*t ',lie * 's the .., joint znd o • e, *nd . . pace i ol ' ikuiseos'arissifSsf znuund tlie .01414„6. ot 'th 01,13, 0,14,totu . rpuu wit* pulley and erve.. • (Jhoci1at,e Ici ounc- s f ,thoecilate iven till soft, then iet i pan with a quztrter o icing sugar, moiseen wi ' ul of water at feeuiteissmoltths bus do not let it boit 23peies.d. it, over flui SLOY other icings . Vietoritt Sendwith. Talse an exg, 1U:weight in flour, ground nee, easter *lifter end butter. 'ma to these ingredients a tablespoonful of lieklug powder And flavoring to es At.. -ix elites" Ss`s'Sst" 7 • ttlettlf. WV. out on n icve,spread one Iigtitiy with jinn and 'set the other in it. Sift /Sugar over and serve., ie Savory. Liver t a pound of liver, out it in thin a1iee, and wipe it with a damp cloth. retietealitesdielts_h,ysitertetieeltlieee. • of- liver, *willies salt, some chopped*mon' few lireaderumbs, end a elicit or two of fats hoeion. Continue thus, till the dieli is full, then cover with some sliced potato, pour in a little gravy or *ate; and bake- for an hour. Serve hot. ' Baked Apple gudding.--Butter pie dish and cover --with- - crumb ; pare, core, And goober ome apples, And three parts fill the pie dish. Sprinkle with ougar and grate of 1lUtMeg and eoyer with hreadisrumbs. Bake till quite cook- ed. In tile meantime, make 0114t. sad with loaf a pint of milk, one, egg" n teaspoonful ot cornflour, and su argo taste. Stir over the lire tifl the custard is thick, but it znut no hoitss, Take ateredurapple, pour over the eustard, return to the oven for a few minutes to set, and then 4. . serve. Mother's isiidding.sslitalte suet' tisst with three-quarters of *pound of flour, six ounces of chopped suet, one tablespoonful of baking powder, and enough water to'ntoke pute. Boll it out, and *opted with, this neteture: One teacupful of chopped apple,. half it teacupful of cuerante„ one tablespoonful of sugar,: and bell * teaspoonful of mixed spice. Boll up, wet the ends to prevent the mix- , titre boiling out, tie in a cloth, and s for -three hours. ----1-----egetable -Marrow Pi marrow, cut it in half lengthwise, - and lay it in trolling etoele letting it cook gently for fifteen minutes. Mix an ounce of dripping smoothly with half an ounce of flour. Put it into oroall sa.ucepare and as it' melts, stir in a dersertepoonful of grated Cheese and teacupful of steels. •Stir for a few minutes , the sem* aid is thiek. Grease a Pie.dish„ and ecatter a few bread - crumbs. over it, then cover the 'sot. tom with a layer of sauces next with axis of marrow, well eetteoned with pepper And salt, then. ixioee grimy and marrow the dish • full. Cover with- crust, _Sind bike till the peaty 'I is. Serve hot. TWOr smaysiqost AEcEttits. Deem: and Cheese ;Siin4Wichei. Tierosround sandwich breeds_ cueciff ) cruet hefore siteiegs *Um beetell in Pieekee \oneshaif ineh thiek. Mix one slightle beetee ems With One jar of club cares" 'pinch of salt, and red pepper. Butter bread with pleriee of elieese, put on top three slices of crisply fried %sloe end put under ,broiler until those is melted. This Miikest a delicionetindwich of toot - ad breed, melted cheese, end, broil. se baton. _ A izing RandWitites."-LsTake aaade mizeteed sop *eie into ea inuch grated Parmeoart theese as the tarsi will 'iota togobtr. Sltee ead thin. remove eruet. *flees adds the cheese mixi u unbuttered slice on top, press together, and yoii'llies plea*- . ed with, result. SS's, WORTH ittlOWIlitt• Stainmay be removed teci tliebee with titmice stones If spices are 'tied in it tiOtho they 61111, be trolibleseute when serY- ing. Alwity* !bests' thine milk pitaieti, ttasJ soait to the water to make Omit Perfeetlyzeweet The., mast smelly dieested incite it shoulti be lea *n4 paced ou the �,iiar nor le linh *boo a tio to Pure boiliug voter before he stain to ilisontitter. ittle garment* whi "skzsbuu eir o Sint eieep is fund to *.1 VS* ngers The teol*Piluf 'double boiIe1 inatead. of ng thiiOteanier p* with hotwat _told' or tbe tame_ kettle in which syrup boiledng ;rubbed with butter he depthof an item or so [ram 1 theop syrup will not boil- GIs (10Ptso nzay be cleaned by moo le it with * cut lemon dippecl •it. When clean erroie in pee r and ,poiish with s *oft clo 0410 lit hydrogen will whiten iik isetiot that has belomii isat bang with the peroxide and haSig waist MS Mart 40a Sanas Wlienmilk, ooups or other tenx* boil over on the stove, and thre en to fill the place with unpleasant odor* (toyer the spot quickly with salt. An old-fashioned but sure rernedy • 14 a 'tteYkjwb .1 spots will go A saucepan in which *tame*" has been cooked may be ossei1Y 010'0'4°41 byttputtiug * cupful ashe* into it t ther:eturs ' *. re • ut by w 4, i-bett�r to u y, foe. tores and writi aiid other bed kept, *he of I'eter. o root me hew it was t- 4 (tiond adasuls Ion co unto* o sures and multiplesein 'vide, and tastlieete exist the right * *Per": when he himself worked just hods and even havderi-ittet often got * wrong *newer. One do the teachers lookioe over ietio ;shoulder' at hi* pester, points out * mistake hee hail made, an ea elle -turned, away, "lee- rs Roy, Sore* do not lie.* It med funny thing les ai Hoy' thought about a 0 eat, Figure* muot be very goodif theyelwayii told the truth.Jfe 1i/oedema if it was easy for them Ito tried always to tell the Out himself, but. tiometsimea it was not — tf". . 0 14 n t t .."?''.. t '' to 4. n it o s he would . not tinished te he could only have told alio *bout it. But still be knew how Ida .father and , mother felt Omit it, and. 00 he eta his best to tell things just as they an filling with weber a few =Junto • before weaning. seittliensstoseshingschildrelese pina- s-&dd-a he boiled ,Starch; This :will make themiron More easily and leave * beautiful glote-on them. The following is said to be a sure cuee. .for COM: One teaspoon es40 of coarse brown sugar, as t Peere and. tar, warmed together; put on kid and binetniistholootsfor 24 bootie To dry parsley waiih, the pareitee and shake it dry. Then set it in * ool oven and when it beeomeg rib') let it cool. Put into tin* or ()Weil and iexclude the air from it. Gilt -On china twill not lett long if sode be used* in the 'oohing ot therefore use soapy water for. washing teacups, etc., petterned -with Riles and keep loas, !wee from them. Paint on clothing; even When it hare beconte4tard and .ary, may be • to removed with Ais InixtUr0 of 4001 Parts of ammonia, and turpentines gaturate the paint spot as often SO nitueede:sary • and wash WA ig *oar - To purify racid biitter, melt and sisirn the butter. and, then put into it it piece well touted bread. In * miniite or two the bread will. have aboorbed all' offensive taste and smell. s Utilize old eigar.boxei by takings them apart and lining it large box r"ehest with them to Meth; rootheti__ ' sis cedar, 41 •• th hisee idor of tobacco, making it doubly most motet. secure .Glaisses which belie held mills should never be washed in warm wateee white the dregs of the milk still cling around the edges. If the glass is first rinsed out in cold water it can then be washed safely in warm water in the usual ways Soup it *11 economical and whole. some Addition to the dinner. fieve ell the boasts, boil them Op for iteek,-tlien, amid the odds and ends if vegetables left over from dinner. If nothing else, fiat ilft aalift $101U.1 you have nide toms, do soup. A broom suPporter made of spools simple and convenient device. Screw into ltirge empty voids high g up on the die alone of a' door; uot far enough apart ellow the btoom Part rets tlfe lip le. sisdlii of the soots Us/4hp 'The When patching paper ' don' forget to , preface operations by putting the new' piece, of piper in the sunshine to fades till it matehes that on the well. Don't cut the path o neat equate, but tear l'he irregularity of its edges nabs it, less 40101466*e. t lint figures imisthe tttringeetlrm if they never told -its -Ike Perhaps they were real and olive' like him- • self; and had to do things some- times that were hard and that they isl_not like to do. At lioY rake, he 'thought about it a good deal. The opting examinations game in March. . ifsessissew it week e ahead and heekeeies too, that he ought to be reviewing the work be had gone over; but it was lust inatble-time then, and it was hard to AO in- doors and and study when everybody eliie was out playing marbles. The examination in number work moiled to Roeeaeler than ho had .thought it would be. He did all of the first SIX examples,nd was ti pretty sure he fiadstOt4a ---rii But. the seventh was * b id one. He worked and worked on it, an till he could not do it, so he akip- ped the others, -And - then went hack., He tried and tiled again, but aS would not conic out sight. Then, When he was very tired, he looked szis lust sit Teter Greenwood asked to leave his seat for it drink of ,water. Peter left his paper on hi o desk, and although Roe aid not letend, to look, he •could*. not help ' seeing souse of the - examples. Number sessu was eight before hit eye*, and where Roy had the figure eight, Teter beet a nine.- , Roy week over his 'own work again and law that - itsought to be ' * nities so 'without thinking much rnoisk-e about it, lie ohmage(' his own, wotle and put down the nine where be had had the eight., s 'Being in a hurry, he did not make a very good nine. It was hunch- baelied and otooped oiler, with a big head, that seemed to be hang mg down. But he turned in his paper, and hurried out, and played taitridet till dm*. 'After slieliPee that evening_he he.' gao to think about the ciampIes again; and Fe remembered ..the ure nine tnat he had put down in *re ot the eight. He retnembeted how it looked --bow is was bee over, and how it hung its bead, as it it was eslierned of something. He iseffe thinking about it, and even after he haw gene to Wd the figure stood , thereliefoles bis sextet looking me an o es S. •• Tlic re he thOuight to it aeemcd to bun that le had Made the figure lie, when it diden weheel not meant. Tlia want was looked so mean , and rt fittrthsittg the next morning Roy erect straw* to his feather. "Pieme may I eletiiiie one f the er v s ibul it net 0' e .„ , . s, , iS47,4 . 1S) 44* ?Suess , .. IS ben qi rau - i lit Driven . feo ilipp i isionarie Inmost outhweet alon tlxt eat Mill eoad *whieli I waielii Rome t the end Of, '.Zi vile*. they. passed though Aro polio, ueer.the sheyelie then travel nig 30 Miles 'more, theyeame ste Apollonie. A* these -Isere eitiee e little importances and did not eon tain es synagogueies a lisaie of pro- tiog the goiliet. 'Naga did no o 4 anytiroo in ....them but haot end on V milee iiirtlar to These *nice on the gulf of leatoniess in Macedonia ' about one hundve *le* feom*Philippi. aul's Four Method* of Teerching the _Bih 1. inteustion. ft „ * hem out - o th = rip OS 4 0 b * 4:- fit Z t rd.0 '.'. a t .4ise sea * bodes, were not fu fi as the Messiah, s The Greek word almost. letter for ,letter our word "diidoguesse- Themethod was more like that of our Bible than of our preaching. Discussion for Ihessiakelsfs-steitsgsthe' ttiettisfteliii slisside is sone *Mash ettsraeiroe'o earuing thestratit. eti:St#431000iinsreuusittv.beslii our own intiide 2. Opening the Scriptures (v. e). Unfolding tlie .Scripture truths pointing out to them the thingethe d not noticed, or applitatious Web they had not understood. Peel was to them like en expert wile points out, to the poor owner of a rocky tenet the rich mines of gold and silver beiies.th the sue. fates or opens to the •poeseseor of a commoti pasture ethe 'wells which are of more value than mines of oilver. 'Selene* it • continually opening the conaitem „. Vikings • of life and., finding. in them segreatee re urii.4rsthiorzit.,01,hxeisuhteitf.ci.s, eleeave in the 31 Coniparino. • Berhititte with _SeSSpture and leging. Tee Greek 'word dote not rnply "assertion,' aft in our mod- ern use of 4'allege' (tbouglit net in .116, older "English utiege),.' but mews* aetting ..beeide" `"setting out .arguineritii Paul set - beside the promises. in the Old Testament the facts of Jesus' life and. teach. legs, as we piece porton beside his photograph, or . description, and showed that Jesus fulflhled every promise on which they ,boocd their idems and their. hope*. Of :* Messiah deliverer. Especially did he show that the -Ohriets.i.eee.sthe Messiah, must needs have oieferoil, forsee the Messiah described au their Seriptureie, This .‘de*cription. wits one of the .great difficulties, in the 'lowish mind. It seenied imeios. sible that the 'victorieu5.. king, who Wes, to reign forever. the Wonder- ful, the Counsellor, dee Everlasting rather, the PrinceofPete°, whose. kingdom was an everlasting. kin dame iticluding nations, could be on humbiesteaeher who.dieet.on, the erosas 'Leib Tani Showed them -that ISys %offerings could the 110siali sails from sin, *lid that by his. •heving..rieen from the deeds, Stenos is is:living and ielori- otos king. ' Therefore this eteue; whom X pee/mho(' unto 'you is (the) Christ. 4t, 114,11S; is0Spel, so. thit, the" ould interpretattmeaning whet * 11. Studying the ture s it Beim -eve. 10.10. • le. ISOM* was inland about fifty, southwest - of Thessidooices Cieero, in hie *retie* against Piso, says that un- able to fate the eliorme of certitilsileit., at Thesselonleit, .Piaosiled to the out: of the way town el Beret, So Paul may lieve gtstie to Beres, On accoont, of it* "Mame. At taw& thoyittot ,to titas tynietogue, vilterestletY were doubtless introdueed tissiissoss rt -of .Christian slew* 'who' left as tisk Greek issiplios) frinii\,- their ern Mitt this points Thiy *Wiser e*e� et into the syrdigiegue. Thev were More noble- in Moral char*rter, cientel apirittod. q This pobility expresotel het they reeeivoid the * ?teen/item of mind. Their aina were open to ail truth faoisi very- ureic sVISO$ Isere tOt ttOst it *rite new reseeteed, thorougli ns up fressi,lso k'M ti t gf nr s*tovrini"Tes it tine t ,be w • ".• t ou Believe eh* c , . e s u i 1 ' ter veto ,Every : '. the' b ', 0 . , ii., , . '' deseeiPtienteo thervitioe of , age before it ' sleelarsis that g in* YOUsi- ' The. ns a 411'74"Sdeolikatrt&emIIPtt:abeb-S"tlihreyllistt:st. They ate, occounte,' of what , men re *tile to gee Aud.' te,11, see their ughte' of the woes of the infinite oft i'men. - - They .diftered .. ' .,, ti no two.meo emi ,occupy te. *sells thisisstio point of view, ii. tho intellotually slothful quiek et them .11.0 44 f1041; they %%NCO thern tReruiZet:. 47.14, tlescriptiou* and.. 4 the 'mbar of lookime farther into Every (weed hs been at some hoe the rankest kind of heresy. It owed its vitality to that fact sswhen Ali men are aisle -to speak well of it, se 11 bane it without see It . ne ' rophecy. THEN NEW HERETICS &msg. Thee are the men who tell not their- fathetii eaw s what they are trying to see for themselveie They sA ..tollAbs,rloth...ofstorlsx„ in the ternio of tstiley. titheneyer fi you dare to do that tsufbo ssss: stisitisto-lioortliesstscusWP4Oteiti those wheat, shireoero are disturbed by these, new sounds. /to •new truth at -first welcome to many. Old leaders will fight it bitterly- because it lions to them to necessitate e their doing their thinking all over again, andsusuals ly they are too Old or have too -long fallen out of the habit of think- ing to contemplate that process witt, any. pleeeure. Their follow ere simply echo their alarms be- cause their are told either to do 0 or he damned. There sare two types mind everywhere --those that . 'crystalize *sowers in My examination Peper FLAG It /lefts be asked. Not, oblago 460.g. Mee Its '• r. eh' Army. Comosil issues tornsrkabje instruction, sense Oe nit or this white las in esosPosst411 the new field iiegulationa just publieh It as stated that the recognitio white flag la an enemy's pos- n or lines is cot obligatory where inoveorientir treope terial ore carried Out ititelet proteetien. is also stated tbst the f(illows are not comildered ,'pies 'Soldiers or eivilien* tarrying. • their "iesiseien penly, charged ftt the delirert et detpaethes ireet for tbeir .OWn *rent' or felqfl the' toe:nye Ito this slogs ris 41 re ortuttOlititOp%0 e1tisori, eirlein beet,- lamb chop*, rabbit ate, tha 1. • "'Why, 'my dear boys" she (IS I couldn't let you do thee, It wotildn't be fair. If *you. hot look. ed up'the answer out ist, *shoo" y inust loot change it now. That would not be yl'es1811"set);friit il01 larille411441104,* 0*would but 1" iiirr14 In* I -didn't mean • st iy 4, whet da: you mein t Riy told the teaster *11 abont it; ow he had not fhe himself* and low ha ad sen ter's pipers and ore .heluid son The r timeliest ad hugged oe t his mother did some. epee. Then elte,took out e suds istloteltaPers and ere the .poors tin -looking figure etioe had etoesd , `. • r• 1 1• : lijis ee i , .,. o s " 11 ieti '1 ix t or es -lit A t ' * ''s tktl Other as a g to; erer deeitlo,P r tirnoth-laartgaetfenivot to satisfy ettly4Sui,mit: , Iseld as lentattite, alive; it mutt grow in order to explant the eteger feet* that opcn up to -morrow. That mind never lee* si ereed $44 AS 44 MOUS? of TEMPORAIVZ RECORD. 0 "Isotietwoi*o'trere: tbiseeril'simveltunlitiX tee. T1107 ,C3r0 &Arise sure to and the first wilt denounce thc ecood as the treacherous foe of truth. Our theological battles lie between these two type* of thinking, betweeri thoise for whem truth is de- livered in sealed, unbreakable a -those -1 ssrs where i )1lite. e wo type.very', , do even to ouggeet which ineniore valuable in alltheaffairs of the world, which has made possible ileleotific ' dis- (*very and its adaptsition to human comfort ii and - eefulnetee.— The - los eishom s uth.,selisesesiveies— - i hilgtoita4Phi4mPlee taPuthi2Gto rifilei iostexantlakilYeit -- Tiflivett' application of living truth to vital tienge is the ,.t1 important dis- tinction. It is that whic,h we moot need to see clearly in matters of re- ligion. The great thing is to take . ouch an attitude to religious truth that we shall see every vision as meaning something real, liveble, as opening truth to us only as scot - thing to be reelized euil lived. Truth saves ee it is lived. Life diecovere untruth and reveals the power and glory of the true. HENRY F. COPE. • wives of the chief citizens, and of rnen, not a few, en followed another popular isturtrance, stirredup by theirs Themisionian enemies. Paul was recretly and hastily sent to Athens while Situ and Timot to foil. low later, BIRD AND ANIMAL 9 -ROUES., Proper litsoiner la Width to -Des. eribe Them tiolleetivelis People, are Often at * loss bow to deseribe groups of aniraels sind hire*, teheretore, the following witi Soreve Interesting. *You should sari A covey for partridges,. a nide of pheasants,it wisp of snipes, & flight of Atom; or swallows, a muster of peacocks, a siege ofherons, a building of rooks a brisootof grouse,' & plump of. wilielowle it strand of plovers, a watch of melting, *lees * elattoring of chouilee *, Reek of geese, a herd or buneh of cattle,' * bevy of queils, a cast of hawks, e trip of dotterels a swarm of bees, 'assettoof of whales, . a *boa of her Angst a nerd of swine, a skulk of foxes, issek af wolvee, * drove of oxen*.itesounder of tiegs, * troop of monkeys, a pride of lions, a, Sleuth of bears, and a- ping of elk.' s......esessis • „ SENTENCE Mile who fear tho detert find Csinalits. •• • The most uplifting talk is 414rigU hiftewwitilttout streint not ion without wreck. Faith idwiese nicans fozsaking sinne seeming • The good We it known by *onto thing beside its geodes • Appetit e ix a, poor .eitegesio n ths 6P*ITlimli eltimliogre:tty*** Ibitt vertie' es it- scif is tumidly for tales ' Illossod are the boosters for they oll not, good boosting. You osn neverwaco petzutitiot.iothers beet linarded t)at aro thost open to others.t ro. e of sal. *OP ratherger fithurt tho feelinp 'the" • ' . 1� who run anise teuble ovidituee *btu eb it pleosures *Is thoy Sons renting *her them lug that you -believe it. There are too puny trying to prove. their love for the good riewa by Mpg All the had- *ems. - - Many a nom wrecks his ship be- - tanseshe _spendssall, the- times -in 'the - hold with his freight; Many Are wiuting f,ep wear the bristian armor provided there is nothing but a perititteinseightse When you see a saint looking for the, *Pot light You may be sure' ne is made • up for the occasion. The quickest way to make stumb- ling blocks is to set up your faith re the only stepping stone to hea- ven. „ TOpSlt-TURiel 'dna bee often been termed the laixI of topsysturvxdom but Tur- key, the land of young rebelie s's surety an equally strong claim to this title. The Turk nods hi tic heed when he memo "Ne!," and 'shakes it when be neean* "let." lie takes, elt his shoes, but never his fez, when he enters mosque or a home. When he rides on it tram -e'er .his ticket is punched at the gam he getesen, inetesetsorTit the piece he must get off. in Order to eut a piece of woods instes4 of rubbing is saw against it, h� rubs it against the . taw; which' he holds' between his legs.. Until eecently, salt, fire. *rms., and Mei:titian were alt teboo in his tounky. Steam ,Mitehinery tectrictl'Applianees were for. the first for nn givoss reSis ' narno,IsieLoogd:tbioestelijir rese'rnblear(' °rd oritainn atnjlmit*rthienliiroetirt' 'eIder' and Plirothee were *elf- conseoualy censured, because Ah. tIul Harnid usueptel the throne from I teidgeer erearsP,Ithirist attersattesscornisel into his own. 11: 4 . /XAVIER. Sesiereed, dust, is ott'St Irish moss,/ oempotieded by a, secret themitel proems i* Claimed to be, by its invantoie Ur, John Corso - belt; rfect sulistituts for loath's, _vulcanite wood, And marble. As leathers t *takes merry:liable eoles for -shoex. Among the thing* the cotepound s good for are pitturt.. 'fronts, ornamental mouldings, imi tation wood partition*, belting fnr wisiebioery, eph oh -terse cote° %planing bobbies, electrie switch. b 4 f! If b vory" ornbs. tier if. otir ent, go ill*, fosetaitt ns, "marble malt color!ithee* and ftsi s'st