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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1916-02-18, Page 2€ii'% rt . i i. ' COi' "ENT, None will accuse Admiral Beatty, whose squadron of battle 'cruisers enet :and defeated the Germans in the North Sea, or being a religious senti, mentalist or a 'mealy-mouthed Phar see when he says that he expects a re- Xigiious revival in Great Britain to as- , 'sig in waking England from a "stn - per of self-satisfaction and complac- ency." She must look to the future "with humble eyes and a prayer on her lips" With the simple faith of a "happy warrior," such as he whose Leese eemes.°',mseeeeeneesep character Wordsworth depicted, he discerns through the present becloud- .„„e.„ ed day and firelit night the purpose C""*r f 3 of an overruling Power to make this �4�i ABOUT fl l T ry 1 world, after the surcease of carnage, a r 11 U U l seagaixeseeseessessenteet Female Help Wanted.. in large hosiery, underwear and sweater factories. Vacancies la inns all departments, with openings for experienced or inexperienced help. Highest wages and mod- erate priced board. Apply, im- mediately, Penr�+Mfs Limed ed, Paris, OW. better place in which to dwell. Some men have had their confidence E sl til the tapioca in layers alternately with l•. 3 _ __ ..-..�.�. .-f.1Yi in Heaven considerablyshaken by this �;'.CisS yC.�':t: � sliced apples. Cover with a little "'"' J `milk in which some nutmeg has been' war. They have been unable to re- 1 centile the cruelty and the unreason Some Tried Recipes. shaken and bake in a slow oven. •The''1 with any thought of tender mercy and Bread Sauce.—Rub through cola"- 1 white of an egg beaten up with su-1 loving -kindness in their Creator. They der one teacup bread crumbs. To one- gar and used in place of the milk have assumed that God has abdicated half pint cold milk add small onion is slightly more expensive, but is, of in favor of a devildom, whose purpose and four allspice. Boil eight minutes, course, more nourishing and makes an fiends incarnate are accomplishing Take out onion and spice, add bread attractive .finish to the dish. The with machine gun and grenade. But crumbs and one tablespoon butter. cores and skins of the apples can be if we could see the world afar off i Beat well and serve hot with chicken. I used to make a little jelly. and gain the large perspective of Frizzled Beef.—Melt one table - ii HOUSEHOLD Grease a pudding dish and spread ead cooked rice, and season well with! salt, pepper and mushroom. catehup,l Add a few chopped mushroon e.1 Shape in oval croquettes, roll in bread crumbs, then in egg and crumbs, then,. in egg and crumbs, and fry brown, • I Improved Corned Beef.—When boiling corned beef mix together one tablespoonful of malt vinegar, one teaspoonful of tarragon vinegar; one teaspoonful of relish, a little made mustard, a dessertspoonful. of brown sugar, and a few allspice. When the sugar is melted stir all into. the water in which the beef is to be boiled, add- ing at the same time an onion stuck'. with one clove. The meat should be served cold. Apple Tapioca.—Cook a cupful of tapioca—sprinkle it in boiling water —until it is clear and thick. Sweeten to taste and flavor with lemon juice. slow processes of time through aeons spoon butter, add one-half pound Tips for Housewives. to come, we should not reach the dried beef. Cook five minutes, add 1them the first time in their jackets, hasty conclusion that God has de- : one-half cup stock, a few drops onion The time taken to produce good afterwards fried or creamed. serted the earth He made. We would juice, one-half teaspoon Worcester-' flavor in food is well spent. andWhen daft find with this valiant fighter that ; shire sauce, two eggs well beaten.1 A letter sealed with the white of using spoons for measuring dry ingredients, take as much above there is something left to live for, af- ` Cook two minutes and serve. Ian egg cannot be steamed open. the bowl of the spoon as you have ter all the race is not doomed to jai Cheese Dreams.—Cut twelve thin'. When boiled frosting has been in it. This constitutes a spoonful. ire, nor is the future shrouded in Are- slices of bread and remove crusts.' cooked too long, add a piece of .but- When weighing molasses for cook - tic night. Cut in halves, cover with a thin slice ter to soften. ing purposes, well flour the scale and of cheese. Sprinkle with salt, pap -1 A little powdered pumice stone hill The seekers after noiselessness willthe molasses will run off quite 'ens- rika and cayenne. Cover with another clean enameled ware better than any- i1y without leaving any stickiness be - owe much to Hiram P. Maxim if he; slice of bread and saute on both sides thing else. ` ' hind. is able to carry into effect his plan; in butter. These are more easily pre -1 Mattresses should be sunned as To clean pudding pans put the for a "drugless" locomotive. Future : pared small than large. `often as possible. This makes them little ones in the big ones, turn up - ages are likely to find our era uncivil- Cheese Custard.—Melt two table- sweet and free from germs. side down in the dishpan and set ized largely in this, that "man's fit j spoons butter; add one teaspoonful; To iron embroidery the iron should the stove to steam. They will clean uproar mingling with his toil" was the each of salt, mustard and paprika. be applied on the wrong side, and a in 10 minutes.. rule rather than the exception, and Add two cupfuls cheese, one-half cup- i thick ironing blanket used. To sweeten a sour cask that has that eve, were as noisy as we were 1 ful soft bread crumbs, and one cup- 1 System is a great time and money held pickles, vinegar or wine, wash busy. At present a hideous racket i ful milk. Cook five minutes. Add i saver in the home; haphazard meth- it with lime water, or throw in hot seems to be inspearable from our no -'two eggs well beaten; when thor-; ods are wasteful in every direction. charcoal and ashes. Add water and tion of progress. In our insistence oughly blended pour on to bread To retain the color and flavor ;:of let the cask soak. upon high-speed living and the con- toasted on one side. 1 peas when boiling them, add a lettuce Never use a coarse or rough cleans - servation of time we demand night $,con and Chicken Livers —Cut six leaf and a tablespoonful of sugar. ing agent on paint of any sort. Whit - AFTER A DAYOUT DOORS You can prevent chapped hands and lips by using e made Mnr1r Camp],rated Cream It allays all irritations of the• skin. Sold in clean, handy tin tubes at chemists, department .and general stores everywhere. Refuse substitutes. Illustrated booklet free on request, CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (Conrotidated) 1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal • rank, murry taste, no matter how fine the quality of the coffee. When you boil potatoes, boil enough for two or three meals. Serve real really became the national port of Canada. No More lee Shoves. The crankiness of the river was conquered, a now revetment wall was built, and floods became a thing of the past. Sir John served on a Royal. Commission in this connection, and, following his valuable report, the great guard pier was built and still water was secured for the harbor, and the picturesque but perilous ice shoves right up on the water front passed into history. After building the guard pier to protect the wharves, which he after wards raised to high level from Me - Gill Street to the Victoria Pier, Sir John built the King Edward, Jacques Cartier, and Alexandra Piers, all to •a length of a thousand feet,—a length which everybody considered quixotic at that time, but which is scarcely adequate to -day. The old wooden sheds gave way to a splendid array of gigantic permanent struc- tures ofsolid steel. Sir John was the first engineer to design and lay a double -track rail- way in Canada. That' was early in his career. He was at that time chief engineer of the Great Western Railway, and the road was laid be- tween Windsor and Glencoe in On- tario. Later he designed great dredges now working on the Nile, and he has evidences of his ability and industry in many parts of the world. Since he became blind in 1907, he has designed two great ..- r TONIC C TREATME T labor, yet we conspire to give those who "have to go to bed by day" no chance to sleep. The list of needless noises is long and varied, and as the strident clamor increases each new voice must raise itself above the already prevailing pandemonium in order to be heard. Since the wayfaring man no longer startles at an ordinary "honkra the motorist must be able to fill the air with the shriek of a demon in agony. Nobody wants to see the hand of progress stayed, especially in this day when a bloody carnival of demoli- tion is in full swing, and millions of tered paper, and steam for 3 hours, sert one or two short lengths of ma - "nen are under orders to tear down alt or a little longer. The water in the carom in the top crust of a berry or that the ages have upreared. But outer vessel must be kept boiling all I other juicy pie. surely the future years will see to it the time. Lemon juice and salt is an excel that this amazing turmoil we make Grated Noodles for Soup.—Beat lent medium for cleaning bone knife i:: muted to a comparative whisper in one egg with teaspoon of water. Add ; handles. Apply the lemon juice first order that the still small voice of the I a little salt, then work in enough flour j and then the salt. to make stiff dough. Set aside for a' Tarnished articles of brass when while, then begin to grate on coarse washed in the water in which pots - grater. When inner part of dough is! toes have been boiled will be as reached let stand again to dry. When !bright as new. all the noodles are grated let them Mother of pearl buttons and orna- dry on sheet of paper, and when ments will be considerably brighten - ready to cook drop well separated, ed if rubbed over with a cloth moist - chicken livers in slices. Sprinkle with; Ink stains on handkerchiefs, ete., I ing roughens the surface, but the salt and pepper. Add an equal may often be soaked out in mil}:, ?aur I rougher cleansing agents destroy the amount of sliced bacon. Cook to- the sooner they are dealt with thel varnished or painted surface. gether until livers are tender. Pour better. — e on two tablespoonsful flour, one-half , A little molasses or sugar added teaspoonful salt, one cupful stock or 1 to the griddle cake batter . tomato. Season with Worcestershire tided help in browning and serve hot on toast • well. the scales Bun Oatmeal Pudding. -1 breakfast-; When there is a tendency, , f•,:.�uralJ.at� � "I ` sma3'I-'Spanish onion for a large little . butter under the :edge of the • mild ordinary one), a seasoning of lip. salt and pepper. Mix the "teal and, There is nothing more satisfactory minced suet in a bowl and add the! for use in brightening a mirror than onion finely chopped. Mix and stir , a piece of soft flannel dipped in well; add the seasoning, and put into !camphor. p place of a funnel of piper' in- ased mould. Covered with but -1 of medium oatmeal, , Ib. beef ,gaze pittekcel•M.t..ds,t life of the spirit may gain a hear- ing. ALCOHOL FROM POTATOES May be Used by the Germans to Drive Zeppelins into boiling soup. Cook ten to fif- l ened with olive oil. Whether or not more bombs from teen minutes. 1 Sometimes four families in a neigh- tli(• heavens rat" upon sleeping London D -`f and Rice Croquettes.—Minceborhood can purchase a barrel of depends upon the potato crop of Ger- L« many. If there is a bountiful harvest, the remainder of roast beef fine, put- apples and divide it among them he has accomplished much splendid the Zeppelin bombardment can go on. ting it through a machine three with advantage to all four purses. work as a consulting engineer since It the potato diggers "grapple" in vain times if you have one. Mix the meat; Coffee made in a pot that is not blindness overtook him. For about the giant gas bags will not fly. At least Philip Scheidemann, social - i t member of the German Reichstag, says: "We will need 15,000,000 tans of potal.cc;i for food. The rest of the crop will be used in making spirits for auto- mobiles and Zeppelins. The success of the Zeppelins depends upon tha potato crop." So }c :g as gasoline is plentifut or scientific achievement go back to the soil for its foundations. So long as gasoline is plentiful anti the potato will not be needed for fuel, but when this motor food is gone al- cohol is the resort of the birdmen. If the gasoline tanks of the Teuton 1iin- pire were full the Reichstag member would not have announced the Zeppe- lin's eppelit s dependence upot. potatoes. Pre• suivably, then, (lermany Is short of the favorite muter fuel and must reply upon the distillation of alcohol from. the. potato. The copal' lrhic'.t farms a part of the pr^a't:.-, structure bails out into alc(i ul when properly fermented and nut ,t. d. g'ri'n and fruits contain more sugar ; ` pound, hut in the event of their scarcity the dean of the "goober" family is thrust into the position of i( •vp stitil itt. 1,;.n,1, r`. ,.t say that alcohol is prat:. Y•,'' ., trca.t,E r ",title in il•(t motors of nit l':ath urest as is gasoline, kerosene and otb i more carmio by used liquids, and 'ha, waving the item of expense, wcu'd ,..s jut as much satisfaction. KNIGHT STILL WORKING SIR JOHN KENNEDY, BUILDER OF MONTREAL HARBOR. St. Lawrence River Made Navigable for Ocean Liners to Mont- real by Him. When Sir John Kennedy, of Mont- real, became .Sir John Kennedy, Knight Bachelor, on New Year's Day, all who knew this famous civil engin- eer, or knew his work, agreed that the royal honor has been most worth- ily bestowed. A pathetic interest, too, attaches to this knighthood, for Sir John is totally blind. He lost his eye- sight about nine years ago; but the affliction failed to rob him of his skill or of his spirit, and by wonder- fully patient and courageous effort, with an equal measure of freshly thoroughly clean will always have .a rcitalni,f.: as I am," said a loud vuici rl sl otl.ter at a meeting, "I still remember that I ern a fraction of this ni tg nifi" nt empire." "Are you, indeed," :artier it xiystander, "and' a vul, gar enc at that." t • iOX)11O N a� VIM 1 F F NECK� i�����8�i� III��onoilii6 �tttli Why bear those pale A single battle wilt convince you ,110 Lani,...rat Arrests Inflammation. I3revents severe compli- cations. ,rust put a few drops Om the painful spot and the pain dis appars. 6:'. I"q'i Pioc'nGl Jit J tif'�'„ /�yR A�"a.�kOY, vol4 Rnot • thirty-three years he was chief engin- eer of the Montreal Harbor Commis- sion, and from an engineering point of view he is the creator of the mod- ern Port of Montreal. Born at Spencerville, Ont., 1838, son of William Kennedy, a Scotsman from Dumfriesshire, he graduated at McGill University, Montreal,and filled a number of important profes- sional positions before 1875, when he was appointed chief engineer of the Montreal HarborC omm"ston. When Sir John Kennedy. FOR THE STOMACH The Modern Method is Most Sue. cessful in ,Treating Indi- gestion The old-fashioned method of treat - in indigestion and stomach troubles are being discarded. The trouble with the old-fashioned method was that when the treatment was stopped the trouble returned in an aggravate ed form. The modern method of cur- ing indigestion and other stomach troubles is to tone up the stomach to do nature's work. Every step toward recovery is a step gained, not to bo lost again. The recovery of the ap- petite, the disappearance of pain, the absence of gas,—are all steps on the road to health that those who have tried the tonic. treatment remember distinctly. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a blood -builder, tonic medicine, every constituent of which is helpful in building up the digestive organs, and is therefore the very best remedy for chronic cases of stomach trouble. Thousands of cases like the following prove how successful this treatment is:—Miss Amy Browning, Cornith, Ont., says:—"I have found such great benefit from Dr, Williams' Pink Pills that I would be ungrateful if I did not publicaly say a good word in their favor. I was badly run down and my stomach was in a very bad condition. All food distressed me, and left me disinclined to eat. I suffered from nausea and dizziness and frequent sick headache, and this was further aggravated by pains in the back and sides.. I was in this condition for several years, and although I had got medicine from several doctors it did not help me. Then I heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and began taking them. I am glad to say that they soon helped me, and now I am as well as ever; can eat all kinds of food with , relish, and have not an ache or pain." You can get these Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medi cine Co., Brockville, Ont. A POWERFUL LAMP. dredges, the largest in the world, now being used in dredging the St. Lawrence Ship Channel for the De- partment of Marine and Fisheries, and has also designed and practically completed one of the finest piers in the world, for the Department of Railways and Canals, at Halifax, N.S. —•'p - WAR MACHINE IS GROWING. Britain's Strength Most Alarming Feature to Germany. England's war -machine is mount- ing up; every day that passes adds to its size. There you have the thing that frightens Germany most, writes M. Andre Chevrillon in the "Revue de Paris." She is now at the height of her effort.; she is still capable of hurting, but the wear and tear on her resources is now visible in everything. Her human fuel is running out at a terrifying rate, and its quality is going down; it is pos- sible to calculate the date when the actual shortage will begin. Mean. while, England's strength is only in process of being got together—silent- ly, without vain words; and this si- lence, as anyone who knows England can say, is far more disturbing than all the German tumult of hate. Will Likely Be Used on the Battle- field of Europe. Edison's latest lamp is perhaps a bit ton bulky . for use in the ordinary home, but it is calculated to be very popular on the battlefield of Europe, for it confesses bo harboring 3,000,000 candle power. erne' Every known mans has been ployed by the warring nations to •turn night into day. Skyrockets, floating white lights, flares and immense searchlights have been used to guard against surprise. In many cases the searchlights used were so bulky that they had to be transported on heavy wagons, together with large gener- ators of electricity. The roads were not built to stand much heavy traffic and often the lights were lost when they became mired. Edison has employed a small and • simple carriage for 'the transporting of his lamp. It is supplied with elec- tricity from his famous improved storage batteries. These batteries will give the lamp a greater power than that now boasted by any of the searchlights in use in the English and French armies. It is claimed that the new lamp is light enough to be car- ried aloft in an airship. 5 Bradford's New Distinction. Bradford, the famous centre of Bri- tain's woolen industry, is quite elated over the discovery that in Bolling Hall, the famous mansion on the out- skirts of the city that wits recently turned into a municipal museum of The fourth million of men is being antiquities, it possesses the ancestral prepared. Strange, ridiculous, "ama- honk of Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife teurish"—in such terms may the . of the President of the United States. professionals of Germans have dis- For Bradford is pretty certain that missed the Derby scheme. What do this will meant a rush of American took charge, the Port of Montreal they think to -day of its success? At visitors after the war is over, and was a small and poor affair, in come the moment, when four-fifths of their trans -atlantic sightseers, as ectry- parison with what it is to -day. It had own wounded have had to be sent body knows, are a highly profitable an uncertain, shallow channel, poor back to the front, when the German commodity. people is talking of nothing else but wharves, and was ramshacklet piers and Peace,and believes that the war is elevators.nsheItsstry, overrunolu wood- earithe what must their Wrinkles en sheds of one story, with g end; rats, were erected every spring and feelings be at the spectacle of these taken down every autumn to prevent leers raised in three days; of these five hundred thousand new volun re a Confession their being smashed to pieces by the d b the recruiting of Ade an, int; years arc Eifel. realised by corn. wounded ofice the . is attention in the annual spring debacle. Disas- wail --0£ masses of melt r5tiil press- li, tltt• lir t; nlrttr,tYirtpt,rco^tilde, linea. trous floods occurred from time toing forward at two and three o'clock l,r.t, r=as••. It iJ to Fernier the unsightly' f cvri.nrettt that surely follow. Wrinkles time. By the time John Kennedy teas- : in the morning, to raise their hands, Lr� :t. t tett c ssi at t., rather 7'.lme. 'cite ed to be chief engineer in 1907, sand and in batches of ten to a }rund'red, :Skin' in n;nr+t t,«` t r:ltt tit to turd sit»oth lYy became consulting engineer for the to take the oath that makes them sol- i' ;' ,"'r;';� , i •y'tin.ttsliinil l'not a 1t"sinkle Commission he had worn{eu a mat:- 1 el, s,.-1'. 11 huilel :t ttl+ tlrni, elasUe tiq- d"ens ? ttr 4 t nut I: %It tvrirdtics flirt; nut cic- r Litt velotxs transformation. For eighteen j Tt,:. 1 x,000 or ],,,000 factories that, l t �.:l�u,�r, prt:t e}ttst dryness tt til out of thirty-three years during which i `ticcorc 11'.: to .115,0,00x -factories Kitchener.', are ettu�+ed 1 cy PSniv 1 winds, t o tecl ro t ante Sir John was in charge of the engin-lturning out munitnutt,; for six mil- 1 ` res t of J'rt.»hnres in c?�t rr'nrl IS 011 Bering department for the '•iarborrhall sotcliors in tiles spring, i,,: five eueizi.,, is put ut, in handsome opal Commission, he was also chief en- � tttillions of pounds sterling that :Cng= , t arnaer. t,.rrl c,mluntil letthe el> Drug rtorlt.etlr'wr rale gineei: of the St. Lawrence ship rha ll- land sp,inds daily without visible of- i iiitinfr trait •� lcrtt. i.t.cept fro anl,- `nel between Montreal and Quebec• fort; tine is En} land's force; hither- i MI i i In rt»t tt,-ttti; cur total hotttt, I Under his dirnetion the charmer was 'to wo have felt it as httent and dif- 1,,11'.ittYt i'c,r slit tvt•t•t,s t<:r. eve i,lts ; dredged from sixteen and a half feet :fused; now it h being transformocl, ' l,o• ,,, to any atldresi in (.altti.dr. t1VCrity-seven atnrl ,l half Feet deep,' 1.> •,dav into anergy that is actual . trait Manufacturing Co., T,imitea, to result of that work,Mont-' lay ti 'and risen tl ire:l for colnl;at. uc t. et 178 stonceev0lles .iikvo,, tearoit Ho ' end as a rc and real <.l c 1 n