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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-9-16, Page 7isewife. eoniler Good Things Made of Peaches.. Peach ,Croutons..—Cat slices of bread about a third of an inch thick and cut into circles about three inches in diameter. Brown them slowly Cut til they are .dried' and golden. t ripe peaches into halves, remove stones and skins and stew them with a little water and sugar until the peaches are tender. Remove them and boil down the syrup until it is cthiek. When the peaches are cold, ,Sot each .half with the cup side tip on a round of bread and fill the stone hole with lemon jelly. four the thick syrup over the peach and add a little bit of whipped cream. Peach • Trifle.—Cut stale sponge cake into oblong pieces and with them line a dessert dish. Moisten with a little sherry. Stale lady fin- gers would answer quite as well as the oblongs of sponge cake. Pare ripe peaches and slice them. and cover with sugar. Let them stand before serv- ing. Then pile them on the sponge cake and serve with whipped cream. P.each Shortcake. ---Sift together a pint of flour, two teaspoonfuls of bak- ing powder and a" saitspoonful of salt. Work a piece of butter the size of an egg into the flour, with iced cold milk enough to make a soft dough. Cut into two pieces and roll each one thin. Put one piece in a round layer -cake tin, spread thickly with soft butter and put the other round of dough on it. Bake brown and separate the two rounds. In the meantime, 'slice peaches and cover them with sugar. Spread a layer of peaches on one lay- er of biscuit, coverwith the other lay- er and put the rest of the peaches on the top layer. Peach Dumplings.—Cut • •five -inch squares of pie crust and in the cen- tre of each put sliced peaches, sweet- ened. Fold over one corner to the opposite corner, to make a triangle. Press the edges together, make a few pricks in the top with a fork, for escaping steam, and bake brown. by children, areese if delicious and hey areallowed liked to eat pastry. Peach and Oranges.—For a tempt- ing dessert, slice together peaches and oranges. Sweeten slightly and serve very cold. Peaches and Rice.—Arrange a. mound of boiled rice in the middle of a dish. Have ready on the ice some sliced, sweetened peaches. Put the pour around the rice and juice, formed with sugar, over the mound and rice. Candied Peaches. — Weigh the peaches, and to each pound, allow three quarters of a pound of sugar. Cgreach peach into about six pieces. Add just enough water to moisten the sugar and melt it over the fire. Boil each piece of peach in it until it is tender, but not until it breaks .easily. Remove from the thick syrup, drain and roll in granulated sugar. Dry, dip in syrup again and then in sugar and repeat until the peach is thoroughly dried. Pack in covered glass jars. Peach Fritters:—Make a fritter bat- ter and add to it sliced peaches, sweet and ripe and firm. Cook in deep fat and sprinkle with powdered sugar before serving. dish Peach Cobbler.—Fill a baking with sliced peaches. Add two or three kernels from the pits to the peaches and sweeten and flavor with a little cinnamon. 'th a lay - WESTERN AND G.A.LLxPQLI BA'T"r LE �'RON T .• hold just half a pound of sugar .or water, or butter packed solidly. A most effective way to clean lino- leum is to wash first with a little wa- ter and then polislehY Applyingsm The outside rend of pineapple should be cut off and squeezed with a .lemon squeezer and added to the sliced pine- apple. • Knives can be cleaned in half the usual time if the knife board be thor- oughly warmed in front of the fire before being used. If there is a quantity of pie dough left over, put it into a bowl and stand it in. the ice chest. It will be good to use again. A good rule for the size of thread in making buttonholes is to have it 20 coarser than that used for making the garments. Don't put clown carpets without an underlay of some kind. They will wear out quickly if left in direct con- tact with the flooring. A quick way to, cool a sickroom is to wet a crib. sheet with cologne, hang in a draught of air or shake the sheet slightly while wet. When you wash a delicate article; in gasoline, add a little salt, and there will be no"stain left at the edges of the washed portion. add the If cream will not whip white of an egg. Let both become thoroughly chilled before whipping. Keep cold until ready to serve. To clear a house of roaches equal quantities of sugar and pulverized borax is recommended. Spread where the insects congregate the most. Spinach needs to be washed very thoroughly, if all the grit is to be re- moved. Put it through three waters at least and strip of all old leaves. If you spill tea on a tablecloth, cover it with common salt and'leave it on for a while. When the clothears washed all stains will have disappear- ed. Turpentine mixed with a little lin- seed oil is an excellent thing to use in taking finger marks off white paint. Put it on a soft cloth and wipe the paint. Remnants of meat of all kinds may ibe utilized by being chopped together and stirred into an omelette of pan- cake batter, with a seasoning of nut- meg or chopped chives. When making an omelet,' first heat the pan very hot, put in some when writesds are Lord like abhsin "Since have and then the omelet mixt , forced to draw. the" -sword, I 't been been ever willingly sheathe it till HO WAR tiring. a 'ITrerie% '>'t rt�.r :' \ V < , � �,•'yS • Frealelt Artillery ' rotected a alnst .. Folsortou6 Via$ Suffered From Salt Rheum FOR MANY YEARS. used with good effect against the Turks in the Dardanelles eamt the left shows a trench mortar now.being present war. "' n It is mounted on boxes and consiaer; The picture at It is an old vlieapon, revived and modified, since the epi picture is being_ fired by an Australian infantryman• i nth mortar in the p' pa erating it. The tre able risk is involved in op ABOUT THE SETTLEMENT? "PEACE MUST BE OUTCOME OF VICTORY OR EXHAUSTION" It Is Possible to Get Co-operation in Europe to Avoid More War. The war will end one day, and those most hasten the end who have a full vision of what "the Great Settle- ment" will mean. therefore, echo Lord Many Esher's warm . welcome to Mr. C. Ernest Fayle's most useful 'book, "The Great Settlement." venge, and would prevent the mili- tarists of Germany from working on their people by stimulating a fear of Russia. This idea has anallied been federated Europepast, but has brought forward in the p xac- generally been dismissed as imprac- ticable. It was impracticable so loong as the political system of Europwas based upon an artificial arrangement of boundaries. It as the could old bele ief lin le value so long a policy of conquest and domination re- mained unimpaired. "The German cult and German it is brown vn the -under side, over and set in the oven, to finish. By this method the omelet"will' not fall. • NOTABLE TITLES EXTINCT. would n both are in the dust. If the free na .tions of Europe consent to a peace t will be ' ns i under any other conditions no peace. Our children will then have to suffer again what we iaares Tsuffering g to -day. Our struggle against military caste. It is a fight to the death with a nation steeped in odious fallacies, bred on hateful dog- mas, and 'imbued with a . false p osophy of life and its aims. Co -Operation Possible. "'But if we can achieve a peace based upon the principle of nation- ality and the equitable settlement of vexed questions, if we can keep before ourselves the idea of public right to vindicate which we are fighting, it ought to be possible to take some step in this direction. The nations of Europe- have a common interest in peace and in adcompe tlonhe Both bur- dens of armament tell us that so reason and experience long as Europe is divided into rival groups, the armament competition will go on and peace will be liable to be broken. Common interests can d ife secured only by co-operation, these comxnperation on interests should be pos- sible. co-operation -• "We may be accused of looking to- ward a Utopia. But the Utopia f to -day is the practical politics of to- morrow. The abolition of the slave dream., yet DIG DRIVE OF ° MEN�IL, HE British Nobility Paying Toll in Crisis' of Empire. Not a few great British titles are doomed to extinction as the result of the death in battle of the. sole legal heir, and the list is increasing almost daily with the publication of fresh casualty lists. The changes • in the peerage brought abbut in this way by the war are almost certain to require leighten them Adslation to amend the Scoamplicated laws out succession. • Among the sole heirs to famotis titles who have been killed are:— Lord Wendover, sole heir of the Marquis of Lincolnshire (Lord Car- rington) ; Capt. J. N. Bigge, only son of. Lord Stamfordham, Private Secre- tary to the King; Capt. Claud Mey- sey-Thompson, only son .of . Lord Mey- er of rich pie crust, rather thick but Knaresborough. rich, and slash in two or three places Lord oronghHa-waren was killed early in 30x the steam to escape. Bake about the war and his title went to a cousin, 30 minutes. Capt. Eustace Maude, now serving in Useful Hints. the Egyptian army. Vis t or - Burdock Blood Bitters. Cured Her. Salt Rheum or a is one of the most painful of all skin diseases, and ef. ot. attended to immediately may oine Very deep seated.. Give the blood a,good olds sig a the use of that grand Burdock Blood Bitters. This sterling e pastfy tys ears, aeeatthe nd is the best blt 'for ood Bast forty y cleanser on the market to -day. Island, Mrs. William XI. Fowlie, erer from'saltwrites: rheumn for have vgood been many years, and was so bad I could not do my own work. I triad a good many medicines.. but they ell failed to do me any good until I tried Burdock Blood Bitters. I had not taken one bottle until I found a great change, and I am most'thankfui o�er for tryit'xg it. 1 hope that every oth • r sufferer from salt rheum will try B. Burdock Blood Bitters is manufactur- ed only by The' T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont. _ SUNDAY SCHOOL THE shape of a continuous Austro -Ger- man offensive. The continuous drain of men has led to the calling out�s the very oldest classes of his reserves Germany. The Russian exhaustion in articularly ma- in minor weapons, particularly can be but chine. guns, is severe, � slowly recovered from. MEANING TRE ADVANCE OF We may confidently assert that on THE AUSTRO-GERMANS• the one hand the drain upon the Teu- continued ton man -power makes a -- '• campaign into the winter here very Hillaire Belloc Shows How Teutons I Stonain ul for them, toand get athey decision acco Must Further Invade ( The king who has won a victory, and before the winter comes. hence has taken off his armor, has the -•-fidently that, � INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPTEMBER 19. Lesson XII.—Defeat Through Drunk- enness (Temperance Lesson), 1 Kings 20. 1-21. G. T., Hos. 4. it 1. The Young Men of the Princes (Verses 10-15). Verse 10. The dust' of Samaria-- Ben-hadad boastfully declared that he would bring so great an army into Samaria that if each man thereof took up but a handful of dust, the whole of Samaria would be carried away. 11. Let not him that girdeth on his armor ---Ahab answers with a proverb rding to the Oriental propensity. conn N th. son,less than two years old.'right of. free races and free nations A cloth moistened with alcohol is ' infant ttle, on his death, went 'to his i cause of free om,1 lives in their own effective goods tomo keys.eldest son of the Earl to live.their own Never keep goods it paper parcels; i Lord WorsleY, has been killed, and manner. "This is the supreme objective of store everything in jars and tins. - , bothof Yarborough, »concludes Lord Esher. i "No To remove ink; wash "at once id his of brothers who succeeded o to the war," compromises, no shuffling cold water, ti n the title in the y dead. of the European ends, , •tnkle with salt. missing and probably f Europe in the followed by milk, an The'Earl, early of the diplomatic Victory or Exhaustion. "Peace car.. only be the outcome of victory or exhaustion.. During the war I have lived much with' then French armieshere is no the French people. sol- dier of Franee antd o Whymfew e o asher es men and women, pellucidly clear. • at Thei are not , and sacrifice of • "Their agony, end 'of life, are not wealth, of blood, , laid upon the altar of ambition. Theye are not offered fortedor ry or pante or to for commercial p impose French ideas upon mankind. They are a. contribution, by of rance; of the tears her youth and manhood,to re of her women and 'children,e inherent We may assert as c Russia. the Russian In an article in the New York failing such a decision, American Hillaire Belloc explains 1 opposition can be continued indefin- hely. that Germany cannot stop her pro- t•n campaign, 'Russia's Great Work. enc right to boast; not he who has a vic- tory to win, and hence is just putting on his armor. m Ben hadad 12• He was drinking — was so full of confidence that he was a banquet to his allies, the gress now in the eas ex g ee verse ..1), In and must further invade Russia. He This last point leads me to the giving ai in j jve felt sure in says the thirteen weeks ca 11ion men,( peetede consideration remarkable success n the I honor b of thel victory e 2of whom area dead, and Ger- . evacuation of the points up the Vis- • would win. —Similar to 200,000 ttula (Ivangorod and Neo Georgievsk)., In the pavilions many has lost three-fourths as many. Lev. 23. 42; In his opinion the Germanic allies j All the great guns were successfully , "booths" (Gen. e j or 'tabernacles" lin upon th of away. I Jonah 4. These "booths" were have• staked everything ghappened' (Lev. 28: 34). crushing of Russia" ,. , . Exactly the same thing was temporary hole of their available energy I at Warsaw, where the armament yvhere branches of trees, aseat the Feast of thew ; on a much smaller scale, t to the attainment of victory s in er_ land. But victory only means a p the stores were enormous. Not only T sect aI ethe Hebrew the sentence manent success when an enemy is dig -;has Warsaw been cleared of every cartridge and eve•ry piece, but, a stops with this word. The words The larger portion than you 11 'tun)." yourselves in array are added. T "Place the engines." armed �n a , most important point, a yourself are disarmed in the process. Victories Analyzed. ' ties for using the industrial resources t of the town have been destroyed. Thus the writer goes on to analyze It is a really marvellous feat, and the meaning of the advance of the it speaks volumes for the deliberate Austro -Germans, and ,the worth of : shows that character of the Russian retirement. the present victor _,p in losses so far are in men, an topian r , `the trade was long U, of . rifles and machine guns; no ammuni- Castlereagh, the feast visionary statesmen, brought it back from the tion captures are recorded. The more Congress of Vienna. Religious toler- serious loss is the machine guns, and ation, government, in- for the rest German returns are mis- ternaorder representative i all-at"Prisoners" to the general ternal order and .justice would leading• one time or another have sounded staff includes railway men, non -cone - equally to our ancestors. No batants of all ages, -whole villages be - oneof ing depleted of males to make an ef- one of these reforms came all at once, nor will the peace of the world. To feet in numbers at Berlin. He there - expect it t o be born full-grown from fore concluded the loss of Russian the chaos of to -day might justly wounded in the retreat to be 200,000. the total at 500; stamp us as visionaries. But like them, it can be obtained if practical men will give practical effect to the erg on the casualties, steps which lead up to it. It will be for us, when we come to the end of our present struggle, to take the first „ step. 4. Good Advice. is An tool Scotsman deenied it tender some sound adviceto duty a youth placed under his charge. "Keep your temper, Andrew. Never el wit an angry person, especial - margin reads, As this same word set, used in Ezek. 4. 2, is followed by the noun "batter- ing-rams," it is supposed that the command given by Sen-hadad to the soldiers was to set or place the bat- tering rams over against the gates of the city. The Septuagint version reads: "Build a stockade, and they set a stockade against the city." 13. A prophet came—When Elijah complained that he alone of all the prophets was left, he did not mean that all the prophets except himselfhat quarr had been killed. He mean ly wit a woman. Mind ye, a soft an- fear of death they had swer's aye best! It's commanded— I throughMany an unknown stop - and forbye it makes them far madder ped prophesying• than onything else ye could say." prophet there was who, like Eldad or —3 — ,; Medad, came to prominence at the op - "What are you doing now, poxtune mo In rifles he sums up e. vv Bill?' moment. 000. Be suggests from all his de- „ °OCollecting what? men of the princes' that the total casualties, ,,I'm collecting• 14. The young ductions „ „ ! were provinces—The picked young apart from prison an "My thoughts. Gosh of the side, during the great retreat, is some -e always lucky in striking easy ;men of the princes, who would be thing in the neighborhood of one job „ marked as valorous and discreet. million. It may be appreciably more; Who shall begin the battle?—That it can hardy beless. Who shall strike a •ds no 'redrawing spa l is ea . narrower Overripe fruit is more dangerous •war, is . t of this or that. Great Power to the health fruit Major Clement Freeman -Milford, of the map o eldest son of Lord h that fails to is or it, of .'children than rut Reddesdale, also interests t .will prove to which n too wishn. u 'perished, and of his four brothers t a n' 'slices, you wish to cut citron d , has re in the army and two in the be more than an armed and minatory thin sheat, place it in the.oven an twoRobert Bruce, eldest son of truce. haat through. (navy. object e let itshouldiLoxd 'Balfour Gf Burleigh, is succeed- Mr. and �he achieves his business -like s -like in A standard measuring cup a brother, also in the book, I ed as heir by seven direct chapters. army. To Save Civilization. These form only a few among the many instances of the destruction the It is not likely that there will be war has wrought among the British any' sentimental weakness towards' nobility. Germany on.the part of the allies. On the other hand, vve must see to it that we do not throw away, for the grati- fication of any sentiment of revenge or triumph, the wider and deeperinn- terests whichewe have at heart," Mr. Fayle. These interests embroace onothing t pubn less than 'the vindicate right' in Europe, to use the words of lig Asquith, 'the saving of European Mr. Asq '. phrase of M. Came cvilization,' pile bon. If that civilization is to be se- cured against a recurrence of this e catastrophe, if public right is to b fully vindicated, it mast receive ex- pression in some form of European organization,p whether it take organization, the shape of a European Confederation, the establishment of the 'an itcd States of Europe, or simp y ex- tension of existing alliances and en - tents to include all the greater Euro- pean Powers, with a natural guaran- tee against aggression. "Such a guarantee Would secure the allies against the fear of a war of re-, Gier Nerves dere So Bad Thought She Wind Go Old of Her Mild, Pat's Reason. A country gentleman engaged an Irishman to look after his' preserves, and when on his rounds he invariablylf. heard Pat talking him ---"For what one occasionsye u asked on talking to your- self, yom n? keep said Pat, "be- causeOy s like to talk to a sen - cause Oi always sible person." Things usually look blue to a man after he has painted the town red. you an 1 first? Ahab is, I What Germany Suffers• might have remained in the fortified city and for a long time warded off the Teutonic allies put the besiegers. To rush out into the Assuming open, however, and engage the unsus- Poand, troops into intotho effort in pectins attackers, was more promise Poland, evenly divided Austrians ing of success. and Germans, II. The Drunken Ben-hadad he says: Of the" Galician drive as a whole (Verses 16-21) the Russian estimate of the Austro - German losses, permanent and tem- 16, And they went out at noon— day. thata lessdthan 1llyOOfor Men engaged in drunken revelry are the Scale down liberally jy in no condition to meet the foe. (Com- thethe necessary difficulties in judging pare Dan. 5. 1-4) • losses of an advancing enemy, ex------ 17. Sen-hadad sent out --Even in and for the eh lossesble tendency It it to only The hof symptoms :v his drunken stupor he is aware that aggerate such losses; and purging df something unusual has happened. inga wholeh, and you sped have der- or alternate y, 13. Talce them alive—Whether they ing the greatdoperation from viole beginning to end, more than 700,000 tl dden and very had come for peace or for war they h iter ejected by the s were to be:captured. The more he men nut of the field. the whole t' arance tnd a nasty was dispossessed of his mind the less Consider that during the first symptom appe g he was in control of his words. period, fighting (less intense, but Extract of Wild Strawl 19 The army which followed them continuous) has been going on should be taken, and the trouble cu —That is, the two hundred and thirty - n throughout of the whole front from the E. Slade 376 l,ogau Ave., two young men who went out tohi be - Nieman a of Cournand right down the ,r to Ont writes, + line and again in - front aisaw� � ,nada nearly lour yea g 1 gin pen thousand�soldiers�wwlo came by the ly was striciccn andyou sector that coversiupon the scene to increase the confu- and you will not find in the whole y f it dries friend. �ecmm siert of the unexpected attack• three months' campaign a Teuton loss Soon tract of Wild Strawberry, than 1,000,000 between the Fowler's Dadvice 2was comparatively easy one his ma t- C lesst with the It nit thein- ese Carpathians and the sea. 11 h were suffering, young men to acquit But the German losses in material gratifying results Stnec that bj t sober Vese well in the fight. in comparison. True, much children have t the first es Syrians fled—A vast army flee. are slight P h t oublcs but of T aheel has been exhausted, tut. onan I to Dr F lug before a comparatively few pur, - field feces were. lost in Russian nits relief. uers. countr pd s titer=attacks. As to the shells ft`"atih in this medicine, coo output as compared with keep a bottle on P Germany's1 Russia'Gvas at least sixfold. Ant Glow the entrance of Italy and the xtn- "sion of battlefronts means a heavier n ammunition, while in Poland drain o Germany has used four shells to Rus- sia's one, a drain which will yet" tell. Drain Will Tell for Allies. Hillaire Belloc sums up the situa- tion that the campaign tion by asserting in Poland will necessarily take.. the FIGHT GAS WITH FIRE. Scheme Recommended by British Committee of Inventors. The British army plans to fight the German gas attacks with fire. This is the scheme recommended headed bythe e committee of inventor Hiram Maxim, who has designed a simple apparatus which the British Government is now testing. is to The object of the apparatus cause targe and rapidly spreading firs by means of specially designeded incendiary bombs thrown innthe istanpace h of the advancing gas at f several hundred yards. By this means, since the - heating of the air must cause an upward current, it is ex- pected to idrive the gas up out o P harm's way. ' Every time you avoid doing wrong you increase your inclination to do right. Mrs. Holies Knox, 45 Harding St., St, John, N.B•, writes: "I suffered sleep tat with my nerves, I could night, nor work, and the least little thing worked on my mind and bothered go me. I 6r winter I thought I gut ad iii' mind, 1 would screech out, out o ywas g my incitlter,,really thought I g crazy with my nerves. It was so terrible 1 would hold my head and cry. I tried two doctors but they did not do Inc any cod, I thought I would telt you tts nt t to -day I am perfectly cured by' three boxes of Milburn's Head them Nerve 'Pills, rstcfronican nervous troubles so to all sufferers i you can tell everyone that they are the orily,,thrng that did me any g I.�Iilhurn's Heart attd Nerve Pills are 50e per box or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all Heelers or mailed direct on teecipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Poronto, ()ate • F- r 7 Years Was Troubled With L Liver. Milburn's Lara -Liver Pills CURED HER Entire Family . Shift - en With Choles. 'boost Child Blue Mrs. E.L.•Hurst, 61 Symington Ave., Toronto, Ont., writes: "I have been troubled with my stomach and liver for. the past seven years; also have had constipation, causing headache, back- ache and dizzy spells, and 1 would almost fall down. I tried ail: kinds of remedies without obtaining any relief. I com- ' ills xtienced using 1Vlilbun neLal $ave recom- mended they have cured e mended then to many of my friends, they are all very much pleased te res>ilts they ,have obtained from their tise." Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pilir original so be sure and get "Milburn's" when you ask for then. Price, 25c. a vial or 5 for $1.00, at all dealers or inside direct on Milburn Co.ielimit,ed, ceipt of rice' by The T. Toronto, Out, e c i ' cholera are vomiting, ecurs either l and are usually ssimultaneously nt and ties y e totnach has the ma bitter a loos Onathe aria taste. perry Dr. Fowler's .xred. Mrs." W Logau I first o a years o, n arrivedin , whit m t i e ami youngest child cholera, from wended died. on a e men Dr, , x x administered and acting onthismost it to a who first at subject tackmy rs to stomach r , „ Fowler's," symptoms resort I have and ita,Iand faith Also immense hand. always 'e I never fail to recommend it to anyone, who is similarly troubled. ;,, When you ask for "Dr. Powder' see that you get it. for the past It has been on the market 70 years There is nothing "just as good." lefaeufectttred'by 'the T. Milburn Ct.% Limited, Toronto, Ont. Price, 35 cents. rp --- Russia Has 700,000 Prisoners. According to the latest official statements, there are now 700,000 war prisoners itt Russia. They consist of 200,000 Germans, 400,000 Austrians,. and 100,000 Turks. The Austrians and Turks are all occupied in agricul- tural work, but the Germans are coati - {fitted in internment cattipa •t