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Exeter Advocate, 1911-2-9, Page 381 1 for Busy Housekeepers, Redpea and Other Valuable information of Particular latterest- to Women Polka ORIGINAL RECIPES. Baked Cranberries,—Ono quart eranberiea, two cupfuls of water, :three capfuls of white sugar, Bake one hour. They are very nice, and loolz like cherries when dene. Nieer than stewed ones, as the peelings are very tender. Attractive Salacf,—To two brieks crcain eheese mix in one bottle of cream to forni paste. Then - add a grated medium-sized onion awl a half eup of chopped peCan nut meats and salt to •taste. Fill pimentos with this mixture and serve.ort lettuce leaves with a sprig of parsley placed on top a the pi - Mentos. This will serve aix per- sons. English Beef Puddingt—Three ounds of beef—ebeaP oat of round ifehalf pound of beef soot, one one teaspoonful lemon juice. Pou over- cake, to and sides both. A little pink coloriog added to frost Mg improves it, Weary Willie White Cake.—Put whites of two eggs in measuring cup unbeaten, theft add soft but- ter to fill the top to the half mea- sure, the, butter must be soft but not melted, then fill the cop up with sweet milk. Sift oue eup oigranu- lated. sugar, one and one-half cops of flour, and two level teaspoon- fuls of loakiag Powder together three torma. Put this in mixing bowl arid then put in the eggs, but- ter, and milk—which are all to- gether—and beat seven minutes Bake in tuederate oveo in loaf. Ie.- if/go-Foot' tablespoonfuls of sweet milk and (me cup . -of sugar. 13oi1 slowly five minutes, remove, arid quart of flour, two teaspoonfuls of1 beat to a cream. baking powder, Oxte,balf teaspoon- Devil Food Cake. ---Two cops fol of salt on d th • f ib darkest brown suoar, one ilnif e P an fee, ow. a • tp oups,of milk and water. Cut the of butter, two eggs, one-half eup ef ,at in pieces alont, one inch EQnr Milk, three cops at ilour sifted square. Pot the meat through the three times, a pioeh of salt; •mix food chopper and rem A with the thavoughly. Take one-half cup of flour, with which the baking pow- beiling water, stir into this One der and salt has beep sifted; add teaspoonful a so c4 and one-half the liquids, roll the 40110 to about cop Qf gratdd chocolate. Filling— inch in thickness, having it Two cops dark brown sugar, one - round in rhape. Lay it on the pud- half eup of butter, one-half cup eth, which hus ivrau,„ „Tet motor oreara, cook nail it, Add a teaspoonful to every bucket 16, Thou has faljowed tae. ileonre Tall the diTI when s'slept, without!. Wing th-e r0Ora with dust. The cheapest way of cleaning a white felt hat is to rub prepared French chalk well into it, and then brush off with a hard, clean, white - bristled brush. Block magnesia well rub in also eleaos felt- successfully. When frying potatoes have the at very hot, if not actually boil- ing, before the potatoes are put in Haye each slice wiped quite dry, and when each is browned take it out god place on a paper before the fire to dry. New lamp wicks if boiled in vine- gar and thoroughly dried befpre using will not smell bad when burn- . n. A wetk solution of turpentine poured down the water pipes once a week will drive the water bugs away. To rid your cellar walls of mil - try burning little flour of sulphur in a tin plate.. Paste up the door with atrips• of brown paper after-vou have set light t the sul- phur and leave for atleast twenty- idoQuorr„houts before ,re -opening the To remove grease from silk or ool place the grease spots between p pi aott press with ' soon as he set e:,,,rea on this trouble blottinga e = - hot iron, The blotting paper will of Israel (17), But, when be point- ' of tit cqDjnAy schiolli sillily! tgiaiellobausnoc3i Hwe water) pieces and laid upon the altar with the wood, and filled the tretteh'aIso ,Aith water, so that there could be ()NAL LESSON, A Y 12, t no361?-3°'s/LITheeapeeteaPyteir"ejf Elijah. It' was a simple, fervent prayer, free from unavailing repetitions and ac- es00, .v „victors ever re.ompaniments of frerizy. Thrice he the Prophets of Bu, Kiugs 1, 1740. Galden. Text, Josh. 24. 15. Verse 1. In the third year—That is, of the famine in Samaria (2.). It lasted three years and six months (Luke 4. 25 and James 5. 17). Eli- jah, at this time, was for all we 4.now to the eentT.,ary, at the house of the widow of arephath. • 2. And Elijah went—The drought had done its work, and it ,was time fpr the prophet to folloW up this terrible •calannit,v by a public de- monstration pf the supremacY of e ,twt. 1, go before Ahab at such a time required both faith and courage for the king no doubt at- tributed the faro/tr. to the meddl someness of Elijah, , fact, the royal wrath burst irate flame a absorb the grease and the Most de licate Andes en n be `1,04.11 lik in this way, egg 'beater never should be to soak in water, as the oil will be washed out of tlio gears, mak- it hard to turn, Turpentine a. powerful disinfec- toot and will dispel all bad edoro, ed to Elijah toe ramble, bo evaded hich he knew was his own and bis people's, His bad eousciene evideneed in this weak acquiescence in the plan proposed by his ;Intl - ser. A strong king, sure of hs cence, WQ1.141 have taken the pro- phet ieto custody at onee, front bomn4t wator and dredged looaos, of hot water used i.n scrubbing or —Elijah doesn't minee matters. The with flour to prevent the pudding Fig Qake.—Tota-oupfula of sugar, wa.bing Ittein'il$ in a s'?ekreolo- sole cause of the fatuitte was the front sticking, •'Spread over the toree_t000too of a outoatt of butter, Don't pour water in w.hich cab- idolatry of the king and his people. meat and, a little salt (the meat has one cupful of milk, three eopfttls of hage " cthe' green vegetables 19, Gather to me all Israel—It is little fat in it); dust with salt and flour, two teaspoonfols of baking "Ye hc" helletd (Inwn the sink' inere than a challenge- It' i* a littia pepper. Roll the dough as powder, whites seven egt,,,..s, The unpleasant smell that arises is fearless command, the aodaeity af for a ray poly,-phinge into boiling rearn, butter and sugar. Add milk Jacob" to be de6-leatF unbealthY, which 5tataPo EliJah 4$ (MO tiW water and boil three hours, keep- invoked the name of Jehovah, an‘,1 with a sing,:e purpose., -that the God of Israel might be vindicated and his name exalted arno,ag the eCi ten ical ark SOb' people. Sews e 3$-40—The results: 1, The utter consumption pi all that was op the altar, together with the shattering ,of the stones and the up of the water in the trench. 2. Theti- ect en the people. With one ac- cord they fell on their faces and • in the . expressive Hebrew . tongue, "Yaliweli-boo-ha-Elohira, Yaliwch-boo-ha-Elobina,." convinc- ed that Jehovah, and not Baal, was the true God. The slaughter of the priests. Unnecessarily cruel as of it 'tills seams, vie,wed in the Zight our higher Christian doubtiess accorded with the ethics of those faroff days. I ME BULL sk renca iho promo In mereial World. 1$32, bintnn1 to he number of 37,003 oodon. 'e have advance 1,20 per all useful quail e hops Ior not to separate, then N„ever 4and on the edge of al most masterflumen of the Old Tes- . ing the pudding floating cloying the twa c pIuis el floor, then part of °I'll); when reaehing up for any- temente as well as the most pie- s:cnronna, i'ng 4 -native time of cooking. If nece t enpftd /lour with thing, You may qoite easily over- turesqoe, Carmwo el as a Atting '''sa"nant' to114a extra water, be I it is boiling, On removing v r open the bag homediat nrn the pudding on to a b platter,Cut a slit in the pa. uddin and ,d0e9 not Seen1 to have su wa Acion isture, pour into it li tie s drawn butter. Ifalt of the material ca.11ed for in. the b powder sifted in and the the eggs. Flavor -to, suit Idling—One pound of figs Ind 4.rie, One. and one-holf cop - of sugar, one-half eupful of r Cook to paste. Cake. --.-lake or boy a go cake; eat it open and spiv 11.W.i been iOikd whLb ass the Thantes a balance and have a nasty fall. 1 plaee for the proposed eontest, Itioh Med,ieal erne o be supphe 'toxin serum. ir John Aird, head aetng Arm, die k, Beacons altrations Arepee fitatutory regulatkn education aud ex?. )3iStil And druggists Prizes for goad teeth were oon peted for by the Wickham Scho Child Don't; however fond yon may be in arboreal growth oonunandin t have very anueh brass or cop- splendid view of the 3urrouncling per about if you have to dean ft Ion!, ploms, became in 01d yooraelf. To I,Teop it clean takes up Testament literature, and else - a lot of time and strength, and you where, the type of lofty grandeur ore( want to wear yourself out and fertility. The mountain still itoking• atter your household bears the 'prophet's name (gar • or any sweet preserv ds. Elias) and the sprit! of water whi I 41)0Y0 peiPe makes yi.)1,1 may 11111114.1. resisted the drought and -1,1ijah's persons. It forms itn excellent sub •stitote for a roast and is much les expensive. Nippy Cheese.o—To one cup of grated dry American cheese add one tablespoon butter, generous dash of cayenne, and salt to taste, Work to a smooth paste and add one toa. slunan cream. Put into tiny glasses and keep in cold place until used. This is a good way to use up bits of dry cheese of ony kind, sueh as Roquefort, Swiss, etc. Egg Lilies,—Place one egg for each lily in cold water, boil ter minutes, drop into cold water, shel and while still warm cut with silve knife in strips from small end near ly to base, very carefully lay bac the petals an a heatt of bleached lettuce; remove the yolks and rub them with spoonful of butthr, one 'vinegar, a little mustard, salt, auc Tepper 'from cone thaped ball, and Tlacc on petals, sprinkle tiny bits ltf parsley over balls, two or thres qtuffed olives carry out the idea, sof 'buds; serve on glass dishes to giVe water effect: With care this is not lard to maize, and its beauty re- pays all trouble it has east. Chicken Shortcake—Make a soft dough, using two cups of flonr, two leaping tablespoons butter, one- half teaspoon of salt, two rounding teaspoons of baking powder, milk .enough to make a soft dough. Roil out into a sheet one-half inchthick, and 'cut twice as, many rounds as Ton need shortcakes. Butter these rounds and fold together in pans. Bake in a quick oven. Mix one pint of cold chopped chicken, one- fourth cup, chopped, nnishrooms, and "one. pint of rich sauce made of one cup, of-chickeu stock one cup of cream, one tablespoonful of but- ter, ono tablespoon of flour, tom - half of a teasboon of salt, and -one egg. When ready to serve, split the short cakes apart, COVeT the lower halt' with chicken mixture, replace upper half, and cover with Now get a small macaroon Cot the, cake and put into. the dis s you are going to serve it in. Place the tnucaroons around betwee the eake and stitep the whole thin in port or sherry for two'hours Now make a boiled custard o sweet cornstarch podding, not to stiff and flavored with vanilla, wil do. Pour this over the cake anc then ou top of that pour whippe eream and stick on top eithe° blanched almonds or candied cher ries. This is rich and delicious anc serve in custard tops or smal 1,1 dishes twelve people. Spice Cake. --,One-half eup chop- ped figs, one cup seciled raisins. - Pour over these one cup boiling water in which ono level teaspoon soda has been dissolved. Stir and let tool. One cup granulated .1 sugar, one-half cup butte', one and ouc-half cups flour one level teaspoon baking powCicr, yolks four eggs, whites two eggs, one tea- spoon cinnamon, one-quarter tea- spoon allspice, one quarter tea- spoonful cloves, one and ane -half teaspoons nutmeg, one-half cup chopped nut meat. Mix together except flour and fruit, which should be witted last. Bake as solid or la -ye cake. Is excellent. grotto" are still teal " potu aut. The • mountain murmurs with his Tiello i 'ern Ifas an JaUou n 15,66; Peel. of bets of Asherolt --- They ear in tile story again. g Tim distinetion of being the high- no ✓ by the Atorocoelia, branch of the . est railway in the world is claimed Their teialatitngthe5a,t wejreezeIhnettlinstatianbelde O Clootral Railway of Peru, a wholly at the "cnn's own exPens°' 1 broad ,4;aus,o line operated by 41.,. 21, And 'Elijah—On one side 1 Peruvian Corporation. The j alir- everybody else—priests, king, peo- d tilde of the rails is here exactly 15,-1 ple. 'ilia prophet of God stands alone. His first appeal is to the r 605 feet above sea level. ....1 GaTieiellaio,titInhneelwaesnt(otrntliteortpuolitelft •tloief ill).1e,iedPeleo-f Elijah to see his own 'mo- lt stirred the pattiati 1 junction of the Morococha branch rile tee* jilllPill4 alely.' ill ;.AH chicken. Dedorata with a sprig of joarsley and serve at once- • Creanf , Fig (Jake.—One table- •spovriful et ea, OTiO u 1,tigar (scant), two eggs and one-half cup milk, one , and on`e-lia,lf cupfuls ilour. one teaspoonful bakin, pow -1 der sifted witn flour one, teaseoon- NI vanilla. Cream, s-,30-ar and butter together, then add eggs one tit a time, beating orle in well be- foi c adding the other, then add -milk and vamlla, then otii with baking powder bake in two large jelly tits in hot oycii about fifteen - dilutes. for above ---Take ate -half pint; Fresh cream ,whip with an egg heater until stiff' 71'11....6i1 `gidd two tab/esPuenfOls1.„POv,'Aere,c1 ,,ingar, and onellialf.teasPconful , va- ilia, spread • on first la.yer'„§4:111tP4, taik6,,6ne-folirth.' into, . r)ikE,ce,f4:. kle over e then po laye;,•,,aitd i041:17:7' ols1 oolioto, Mock Angel Food.—This„ recipe requires only the whites of tWO eggs, but it will make cake that will melt in your mouth. Yon can- not fail if you fellow directions carefully. Set one cupful of milk into a pan of boiling water and heat to boiling point. Into a stfter -pa' One cupfo71 of flour (no more), one cupful' Of sugar, three tea- spoonfuls of baking powder, j)i.neh ef salt; sift all together four .bat into this pour the ,cupful of lat ini]k and stir smooth. Then put in the well beaten whites of two eggs. Do'not stir or beat eggs into mixture. a Fold them in care- fully, drawing the spoon. through mixture toward you, then shoving it back with the back of the spoon. Then draw tire spoon from' right to lett and shove 1111X:L:ITO back with back of. spoon. , Repeat this until the whites of, eggs are. evenly fold. - cd„ into,kb,atter. ,Do not grease tin _ „ oven. 'Ice with nater icing icing by ,-sifting one cupful ;of, poWdered sugar, and adding water and until it spread. age man •would like, to write a. lit- tle tim,vritte,n law foi- himself. _ ".1`11..ENGS , . Solt fliarine'L is 1)P' ' with thn main line, is the highest Th°lr an8weliegGlihn not a railway .station in the world, at word was an open acknowledgment 15,05 feet, of guilt. Their course had been , To reach this point from sea level One <if vacillation, now a service of , Jehovah, now a service taf Baal. 22-24, The conditions of the con- test: Elijah was the only prophet of Jehovah left, the rest having 'been either slain or silenced. Re therefore must stand as the repre- sentative of the old form of worship, while, he is opposed by the four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal and as a, matter ,of fact such a ca.r equipped with safe brakes, runs For each a bullock is to be provid- before each passenger train, car- ed, and this is to be prepare,c1 for 000ng an Inspector on the look -out for fallen rocks or other clangers the line passes. through fifty-seven tunnels, over a dozen principal bridges and otilizes thirteen mita- hacks, hut has no gradient up to 4 1,-2 per cent, nor does it resort to raek propulsion. A handcar started at Ticlio will run unaided, to Callort, the seaport sacrifice. Dean ' Farrar suggests that the condition relating to fire The grandeur of the scenery along was a precaution against "priestly this route cannot be imagined. trickeries." As Baal. was the god of the sun it Was fair that Elijah The second highest railway in the should ehallenge them to call opon world is that from Antofagasta in • Chile to Oruro and La, Paz in Bol- ivia,„and it is perhaps -the narrow- est gauge line for such a distance, being two and one-half feet in width of., -track. The highest point is at Collohuasi, where the altitude is 15,809 feet, fifty-six feet lower than the Peruvian line. . THE PROOF. "You're very contradictory, nay ton." "No, Pna'inot, pa." - It's difficult to secure- a welcome that is guaranteed not to wear out. How one woman must hate. an- other when she speaks of her as "that thing." It sometimes happens that in niar- iyi•ng a good come a man gets a • poor wife: It, is 'alW4378 safe ,et.; your •, money on another .man's gathe—for. the other '1 , ,wa,nt ,l/onest criticism' OF anYtilin'g.:You-do tell your friendS it is ` the w'd rk '(:)f another'. There ci re. times' when the aver,- tti a a brtie foi ,reiniovjng ,f_l from silk. To IDl'even ,va,s1 0/18 Tom rusting, (try aild then, rubhe, ,(if the 13oilei Ifuindry soap, IMPOSSIBLE. dy-7,---, _ 'an't you find work ?,',.,' . rain2PF.tYessuiri• lint 'everyone ants a:''erenee: from any la -t ctn. iloyer,,,, ..LadY'' ',,,te o; - ,vou get one' P'4494i111. Yer see, he's Tram Sp,-.)ts on plush eene , .• riA:bbe.d. 'Clean ,,SO .01,* 11 ace. ear a•• 5 his name in the hope of securing fire from heaven. Elijah had ap- pealed to the people, and there was nothing left for the priests but to comply with these conditions,, for the people declared the speech well spoken. Then, as now, and always, the people wanted a God who could do things. 26 -29 --The predicament - of the priests of Baal. 1. They cried with incessant monotony from morning till noon, 0 Baal hear as. But there was nit voice. "There lay the dead bulloc111 putiescing under the burning orb which was at once their deity and the visible sign of his presence. No consuming lightning fell, even when the sun flamed in the zenith of that eloudless sky." 2. The,v performed a heathenish dance, with wild gesticulations and shrill cries. 3. The, taunts of Elijah. Until the sun had reached -its high- est poinehe'kept silent. But now, with stinging references to the pos- ,, a ortant mi t to many people and the chaue.es that ai sickness will be ‘sioriq'''. per-, sons, again, have expo tha unpleasant, feeling in a lilt wbeu it commences its de;'.cent or in x swing when, like pend011all it Yeittg:, Lack, Nat a few fkOlide re- fuse to stand close to the edge of a cliff or to trust themselves t look down into a, vast chasm. ot space immediately beneath their feet, owing .to the vague feeliragsl of giddiness, fears of falling arista Q1A 01 2 sense of a icopardiz THE LANCET SPEAKS, ,• xid yet these sumo people, say; Lhe London Lancet, converte giibiy about. the nearness of the day when aero traffic will be an accomplished fact and point in support (4 their tho enormously rapid acl- motor traffic in t tret has made, When the clues, is carefully considered in de - will be coneeded that there anything that is .VORIP4r4 able between the air rooter and ilia, land motor from the pOirit of view.; attaining practical success. A gARD PROBLEU. The problem in the case of is complioated by the ieqniremnt, the conquest of great far eo whieh, do what we nulls us back again to earth tbi momoot we dare to rise front it urine. apecial rnotor ()U. 4"/ to keep afloat on o steblo potioii only gain ti f movie the air anal he wings r by ing buoy or, vhia mac lighter ika upon which Moreton', t upon it, The maeltinc former CA50 =St Ob. '64141'4 b /1 -nigh perfect <I "nearrable eakiog down, the difficulty in the case is the ou oinious bulk of floo.ting ges that must- be used, UNCERTAINTY AS YET, Iri .thort, the advanees yet to e hi order to bring • "ati wt rt the practical affairs - Then assuming tbc great eons Ilife must still be very far reach's, f mation has been reached, will th human organization be able 1stond aviation? This is by means certann having regard the coesta.nt rha.nges of atmospher..1/4 ici pt•essure, with their marked ek fects upon the respiratory and airs cuiatory processes which a journe3o the air must eutail, ren. Sone 42 youngsters to part, and of these the girls were winners. The voluntary oid detachment to bo formed by the Britsn Red •oss Soeiety in Sussex .now num oer 15, with a total membership * 1,159. , Southampton is stirred up over the "dangerous aliens'? question, which has serionoly affected that part for some time. Many undesir- ables have landed here. Recent stormy weather having caused a scarcity of fish, acd fish were sold at Scareormigh for S2.16 each, skate for 96 cents, and soles at 44 cents per pound. Robert Coles of Croydon, a Cri mean veteran, who was 103 on Christmas Eve, drew his first old - age pension a few days ago, with one for his wife, who is nearly ninety. A total of 1,772 cattle, 144,005 sheep and lamb carcases, 3,003 box- es of meat, and 44,865 quarters of beef landed. at Liverpool from 10 steamers .during the first week in January. Between $10,000 and $15,000 worth of jewels that were stolen from a ErM of Hatton Garden dia- mond merchants were returned un- expectedly through the post to the rightful owners. The prihcipal bra,mway scheme on foot at present in London Is the four -mile line from the ,• Marble Arch to Cricklewood, which has al- ready been the subject of so much controversy. The new battleship to be laid down at Davenport will be named the Centurion. The navy estimates provide for $483,615 to be spent on the ship during the current fin- ancial year. Twelve hundred of London's poor- est children selected from the Rai,- ged School missions, dined at the Guildhall recently as guests of the Children's Sunbeam Society. of South Australia. A nursemaid named Emma Ros- ser, aged nineteen, of Neath, Gla- morganshire, was killed by a run- sible ,preoccupations ofethe 'sun -mod raWay 11010 tile other da,y while saying the life of a child of whom she was in charge. , Birmingham 'city council ("applied he holds them in derision. 4. Cut by the sarcasms of the man of God, the four hundred and 'fifty priests resorted to the extreme measures of their worship, and began slash- ing and mutilating their bodies in terrible frenzy. Meanwhile until time for the evening offering of baston, and Northfield, meal, they kept up their -weird jar= Appeal is made for help to raise the other day for authority to pro- ceed with a town -planning scheme embracing 2,320 acres in the par- ishres of Quinton, Harborne, Ed- gon of cries (prophesied) But all $10,000 for the ten witiows and in vain. thirty _children of the fishermen, be- 30-35.—The preparations of Eli- longing to IirixlIam.„ South, Devon, jail. With an orderly calm that wlzo their lives in the gale of stoOd out in imPressive *contrast to 1)c -et" 16, in the Bristol Chan - the noisy confusion of the pliests, the .prophet made ready., ,With one stone for each of the twelve tribe's), 'Israel, he repaired the old altar;', " 'The Home -Offic,e authorities have ..orderco. the destructi.en in his Ma - J ; ce" built /lett a broad clireeia, had dotibtless ' 'oad �l holsiing ve est 3's p.r Is 0 us of certain descrip- tions of irons used in the re531.rn. straint. of- prisoners, retag' °I.ininf ' purposes a," '.i'. , 3).11,- 1 n„ acha,racter ' • A1131Y BALLOONS. Long List of Fatalities Will Nolo Deter Trials in England. Progressive, development in con- nection with the army balloon school and the a rta,!.- balloon factoryt go to prove that the long list of aerial fatalities in 1910 will not de- ter the military authorities from; pushing on with the formation ando extension of the Army Air Corps.?' Both the Beta and Gamma airshipa. are ready for commission, and the,. Lebandy, which ripped while en tering the balloon shed a fen". months ago, has been restored. .A14 though Salisbury Plain will furnisk the chief flying grounds for heavier- than-air machines, the scope offer-' ed for short practice flights on 1 Long Valley and Rattan's Plaint. is evidently not to be ignored. Farman biplane has just been de.' livered to the balloon school °a Falsborough Common. This is tho, third type of aeroplane which hat, been added to the stock at Earns. borough, for the original WriglA machine presented by Mr. R0114 was supplemented a few weeks aga• by an original biplane, the inverot, ton of a young civilian now en- rolled on the balloon factory ..staff, Several officers have returned frona Continental schools possessed of flying certificates. BONTJS FOR TENIPERANCE. Speaking of present,conditions ia Scotland recently, the Laird of Ski.f, bo told of distilleries lying idle.1 "Not a man on our estate," 11/1r.1 Carnegie declarect, "pot a, butler,' a gamekeeper or a chauffeur, event to the captain of our yacht, but he; is a total abstainer, On the first' of January each year, a bonus ob., 10 per centis paid to every em.., ploy of the estate who can truth-' full -y say that he has not tastc4 liquor in the past twelve niontlic except by order of his doctor. That, is the most eloquent sermon for temperance that has ever been preached in Scotland." Soil. —en at:e\lf:1;ays get a finger in the pie in nocle spoil the itpptf v.tbaris.' P3 ft2fW' Iii