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Exeter Advocate, 1911-6-1, Page 24•FP° Hints ior Busy Housekeepers. leeeelpes and Other valneb alai Particular latereat to RECIPES. chickee Coquetteee:-Roll fonr cups or innieed eldelten, Quo map bread crumbs., three well beaten eggs, one tablespoenful of sherry wine, two grates of nutmeg, oue- hall teaspoonful of salt, dash each oE eayenne auel paprika, one table- speonful each of cream aad melted butter, into pearashaped belle; dip these into beaten egg and bread. crumbs Wad fry to a golden brown. These aro delicious, Pineapple Dessert—One pint of redded pineapple. Boil with one- half ounce of eeelatin 'whieli has been dissolved in just enough eold water to dieeolve it 11' en eooled, but net fully formed, stir in the stiffly beaten whites of three egge and told in lightly one-half pint of whipped eretun; pone into a mold and set on ice to harden. If can- ted pineapple is Used no sugar will he reivered, Serve wth plain *ream. Cubee, line Iler uda. o l and sliet four id e Leave them there hdfn take theta out and dry by upon one cloth, eove other. Eave eady saucepan a dozen floe toreateee 1 ed and slieed thin. Heet elowlar, you fry the Qnions in butter li lit brown. When the tome-, hot and soft season with salt, sugar, and an even teaspoon - fill of paprika. Add our eitea, pods sileed thin. Bring to o. boil, add the fried ,mons, and cook is for fifteen minutes. Line a platter with sliees a toast, well buttered, an4 •por eae Qua over thern. Set in the oVen for three minutes to eik the teeest uc1 eerve. 1)h.—Stew one dozen to- eiatees entil soft, add a little sugar, sell., and eayenne. Put through tJianth'I', return to tire. In a e fug 'an heat three large table- spoenfuls of butter, break into it pidly eix eggs, stirring all the 11 1 eoon as eggs are broken ad mixed add the tomatoes, then add quiekly three tablespoonfuls a a grated Parmesan cheese. Eaf with e brown bread. ! Winter squaela remove the seeds i" and skin and eut into pieces; boil from fifteen to twenty ininutee in I very little water, 1. ()Alone, peel under water; boil three-quarters of an boar to an hour. THLNGS WORTH KNOWING, Lemon juice rubbed on the hands will easily and effectually remove stains. To cure eareche, wrap a, litle blank pepper in cotton, moisten it with sweet oil, and insert it in the ear. Stains may be removed frora tin- ware be scouringwith eommon soda then washing thorottehly and drying. Lemons hardened frone lo standing may be made usable covering: a few moments with boil- ing water, i4 said that a piece of eal r=OVe rat damp, (toed and rubbed on the wart sev- eral nights in succession, When prepariene a leg of lamb for roasting, pin an thin 'slim of 'ba- con with whole cloves and the fla- vor of the meat will be fine. Always werm the baby's bed with is bot wat,.Or bottle Were putting him to rest fur the night. If he is restless this will -make slee Having several pairs of shoos and never ',veering the same pair more than one or twe day at a time will met thee leather and make it last better, 1 Boiled potatoes should be served AS soon AS they ore cooked. To MAN/ -them drier drain off the waterl (Illicitly, shake them in a, strongi, draught of air, and do not put back/ the lid ef pot, Any desb that has held dellgh cream or eggs ehonid be lees: d in eold water before being planed het water, ae hot water tends to k such things and make them lore, difficult to remove. To keep the feet dry and warn i d nierease the durability of boots nd those, it is best to have the elee perfectly dry, and then apply seed ell on the outside of them 1 they will absorb no more. Th t • • • to eemuing damp if left for a wee) r two, ie to leave a blanket on th op of the bed after it is made eke the blanket off before using nd the i you will find it quite safe It is seldom necessary to eat hal rig by THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JLTNE4, Le 0X. Jj's penitenee and God's pardon, gosea 14. Golden Text Nob 9 17 Vers 1. Return auto ,Tehov thy God—Hosea has followed An in deelaring that inevitable die ter awaits his people becalt$0 their iniquity, But Row, with fai and patriotism, he turns -Co the with au appeal to repent and pronliee of God' e forgiving Moro Bis doctrine of repentance, ther !Ore, is as graeious as it is tru Ile realizes how low his nation h fallen in the guilt and shame ef degeneracy. But he knows the is hope in a God who is waiting hear the cry and eatisfy the hung a the returnin prodigal, 2, Take with yea worde True repentance is artieulate • will not keep silent and so give token of it sincerity, but will $pea !forth in praise and pure worslai Rosea saw that the entire mane in which Israel turned to God w altogether artifieiai and laeleinee earneeteess. 'Her burnt-offerm were cheaply rendered. They cou tto wise satisfy an offended Go Be wanted none of them. What I esieee was a clean worship thet expressed itself in heart -wrung welds—bullocks of the Ups, Pepi- tent confeesions, NOWS, abhorrence 01 sln—theee Jehovah win gladly ac - CRETE ON TIIE FARM by a medical health officer, with the Its 'Uses Itave Reen Largely Exten dedsby a Series of Experiments It is only a few years since con- orete was generally accepted as a reliable building material, yet tile .difference which. this convenient and eeenoinical form of conetruetlon he • made in the outlook of th f ' • en these few years, has done nitwit to revolutionize things on the farm, The growine, scarcity: of Jumbo, an and its consequent rise in price, has oa gradually caused, that commodity an, to assume the general aspect of is of luxury. So much lumber is us -ed nri th the farm for buildings aed fences m that its extremely high price has a made le almost prohibitive to the averaee farraer unless he has an e, extra large sum of money to spend on outlay, Wire fencing partially as solved the problem, but real relief ts did not come until concrete was re proven by actual t-ests to. be not to only praeticable, but to possess or many advantages over wood as a ,laiiilding material. ! The uses to which concrete ean It be put are practically without limit no more particularly on the farm. Al - result that it is traced beak to i,ts cause aid this cause removed - The farmer mast be his own me- dical health officer. He must look to the causes to be found on his own farm. A great deal is now being done along thee lines, and in many' places,. particularly in the West it has boon found that a number of the causes of sickness can be avoid- ed ley the use of concrete A coinnton sense view of the situ- atien 4.1LOWS that this eimply-hende led material is peculiarly well adap- ted to measures of sanitation and in preventing germs froiu spreading, Possibly the place visited more of- ten than any other by the farmer is his well. If it is so situated that unhealthful ground streams can leak into the drinking water, there is every possibility of this unhealth- fulne$$ being communicated to the farmer and his family by the most direct route, Concrete has done much to remedy this. If a well is built of concrete—a solid cylinder , „ „ set into the ground—et is impossible for such leakage to °emir. In the same way a cenerete dairy provides but Aim aeVommodation for disease KING'S DURBAR TENT. Enormous Raronnial Fireplace ta be Built in Ceuxas Streeture.a, Although King George is to live.'f in a tent during his stay in Delhi for the Durbar, it may not be sup- posed that the lent will bear any likeness to -the white canvas mush- rooms which are associated with the training of troops. The London Mirror has obtained some details of how the Royal tents in India will be fitted up. In India, Durbar tents aro structures of wonderful splendor, and the King's tent—or, rather, range of tents— will, as is oniv Aftin " he 011 a scale ealculated to impress even those accustomed to the magnific- ence of the tabernacles 9f the, In- dian rajahs and chiefs. A kind of temporary place or pavilion will be built, Consisting of is large number of the meet`sump- thous Durbar tents specially made for the occasion. The principal of these will be ab- out forty feet in length, is being lined with native woven draperies, and will have an enormous "bar- onial" type ef fireplace built into one side of it. The c'enetal seheme of decora- er• ee----- time is genera follow Indian traditions, asf ----- ea - -- ere te,e---::.— e ee all , d will he carried met in is full, ell see—ene-e-,7------4->ee ichetoneel orange and black as the gs dominant color% Externally, the Id WIMILVIonaseamiumemmiiiimmiamm_ , whole group of tents will be mall" d. 1,003.1%.„010 wob. .. --,..-,.........„-- 4 as strikingly gorgeoue as possible -teee—etpao„ a --eeee ie -----'"--;---„a ea..e.ea----_--- in order to Impress the mind$ of a eeae--- ..... >,=---—-- peo-ple who, in a - egos, have been ve eetet\ ewe, associated with the most la,yieli dist play in pegeantry, In al -4 there will be a larg,e nun. her of different eamps outside the lis of Delhi-ettie King's camp, sorrounded by the eamps of the higher officiate •of the Indian Gov- ernment, those of the greater In- dian ehiefee overflow camps for the euites of untive princes, and, all,. ally, camps $or visitors, cept as good, S. Assyria shall not save as There were two political parties Israel in these latter days of th Itiegdom. One courted the bel of Assyria, the other favored re eistanee of Assyria through e with Egypt. The Prophets re g Wed both these schemes As (US loyalty to the God of Israel, an aceordingly frowned upon foreig entanglements of every sort, whe they they meant proteetion fro. the powerful Assyrian, Or the re enforcement of Egypt's swift hers es (cavalry). The foreign idols, ale() wrought by their Own hands Wel' equally to be eseliewed as an of tense to God and - • 11 superfluity. They had Jehovah ilea he was more than all theii allies and made unnecessary thei ticleous idolatries. The fatherless—This is is touch of that peisonal history winch colors s. so much of Hosea's prophecy. Like' e ,his own children—one of whom he . called Unloved (one who knew not , the pity which a father has for his fbildrenY—so were the son./) and 'daughters of this wicked genera- tion. They had grown up in norance of the true God, and were not his. I3ut he intends, neverthe- ' less, to seek them out, to win them back, and prove to them—father- less as they are—that in him is mercy. 4. I will love them freely—The love of Jehovah is nothing that can be purchased. It is as spontaneous as it is undeserved. It asks no sac- rifices except those of a contrite heart, and where that is found there in a potency in the love of God which makes all things new. It is ready to forgive gratuitously, and powerful to heal absolutely, all our backsliding. So it removes the stain, 0,s well as the guilt, of our sin. Compare Rom. 3. 24; 8. 32; Rev. 21. 6; 22. 17. 6. The dew—Scarcity of rain often made the land depend upon the dew. So the Psalmist speaks of e dews of Hermon. In the long ‘oughts of summer there would be o living in Palestine without this •acious provision. Hermon itself snow-capped in summer, and the oist warm wind from the Mediter- nean, coining in contact with the chilled air about the snowy top, results in a drenching dew. What a picture of the gentle -pity of God. Lebanon—Here, as often in the Old Testament, not the entire range now knows as Lebanon is meant, but Hermon, the loftiest and south- ernmost summit. From almost ery quarter of Galilee it is vis - le. "You cannot lilt your eyes om any spot of northern Israel thout resting them upon the vast ountain. From the nnhealthy ngles of the upper Jordan, -the kgrina lifts his hearb to the cool 11 air above, to ehe ever -green dars and firs, to the streams and a.terfalls that drop like silver ains off the great breastplate of ow,'' Compare Isaiah 60. 13. 6. beauty. . as the olive- tree—A promise of national pros- perity and plenty. 7. They shall revive—Under the nurturing influences of the divine mercy, as expressed by the dew, and the protection of his shadow, Israel is to blossom forth in unwonted beauty, fragrance, and fertility. S. Ephraim—Representing the ople of Israel. The verse has OGS EATING FRO.11 A CONCR d ready the list, includes forms of eon- struetion ranging from the 'large - hip -roofed barn down to a nest -egg u that deceives the wisest old lawyer - the brood. These uses have been eatended largely, by a series of ex- , tee eive expo ri men ts. ee Already much has been accom- plished the farm by the use of Drain e slices of pineapple from b the syrup in the ean„ Dip the slices, ° one at a time, in fritter batter and fry in deep fat to Ar• delicate amber ' tint. Drain on soft paper. Serve a at once with a hot sauce inade of the syrup from the can or with a 'powdered sugar. b Sauce for .eritters—Put the syrup b from the. ean of pineapples and, g three-fourths of is Oup of sugar w 1 over the fire to boil; mix a level t teaspoonful of arrowroot to a , smooth, thin consistency, with three! or four . tablespoonfuls of cold ' la es7ater; stir the arrowroot in boil- ing syrup and lee eimmer five or six minutes. When ready to serve add one-fourth of a teaspoonful of 1 a :salt, . a tablespoonful of lemon juiee, and Kirsch, claret, or rums el to taste. Serve as an entree with roast meat. . Pineapple :Fritters.—Batter for Pineapple Fritters—Beat one egg, concrete. Perhaps the greatest ar- ,, gument in its favor, and one which ' has developed only since concrete r has actually been put into general use is its health-proznoting pro- , perties. If sickness occurs in a city to any great extent, a searching investi- gation usually follows, conducted chicken in the middle of the night et there are times when a pleb iscuit and a glass of water ive the relief to an exhausted bode Jiieh will bring soothing rest to he disturbed mind. Wash and starch your curtains in ie usual way, Pin down on the wn with toothpicks, stretching in- to position as •yoa proceed, You will find they will look as good as new and the process much easier nd quicker than with frames. White ostrich feathers can be eaned by using gasoline and flour. Stir in enough flour to make a thin white paste,. Thoroughly shake the feather in this. Dry by waving in the sunshine and air. The flour add erte-lelf cup of milk, and gra- wil 1 d., ally stil :ate one cup of sifted th flo , siltet tgain with one level tea. onful . ti is half each of bak- de ing 1 ewder i .1, sugar and one- in fourth teaspounfol. of salt. Golden Custeird.—To each pint of milk allow two eggs, one-fourth cupful of sugar, or more if desired very sweet. Whip the sugar with the eggs until sugar is dissolved. Pour this into the milk and pour over a half cupful of -stale cake orumbs that have been dried. oand rolled fine. Pour into fancy molds or cups and set in a pan of warm water which -comes to one-third of the top of the cups. Bake in a mod- erate oe-en until the custards are firm. Remove from the cups by slipping a thin bladed knife about the edges of custards. Pour some sweetened pineapple juice over each one and top with a, spoonful of :whipped cream. Pineapple Trifle.—Boil two-thirds cupful of sugar and one pint can of grated pineapple until a good syrup, Dissolve one-half package of gelatin in one-half pint of boil- ing water. Add pineapple syrup, :juice of an orange, and let set. When well set •adcl one-half cupful whipped eream and beat until well mixed. . This amount will serve eight persons, and in carrying out a color scheire of red or green a decoration of niaraschina cherries mild be used. 11 shake out, leaving -your fea- er white, soft, aad beautiful. If there is a strong wind and the ctor has left orders that a window the sick Poem must, be kept open all night, nail a pieee of muslin th over the aperture. This will pre- ch vent draughts, and at the same time n not obstruet the ventilation. Thelgi material should be eoazse. is Instead of is hot-water bag, use in a bag of hot salt. Put the salt in ra a pie plate and heat it in the oven, then put it into a small bag or, in case of emergency tie it loosely in a thin cloth and lay it over the af- flicted part. 'Many prefer a hot salt bag to a hot water bag. The salt may be reheated, Save old kid gloves for ironing day. Sew a pad made frem the left ev glove on to the palm of the right de one, and you will find your hand is Ir saved from becoming blistered while wi the fingers and the back of the hand m will be protected froin the scorch- ju ing heat, which is so damaging to Pi the skin. hi ce ch. sn TIME FOR COOKING.' Beets, from one. hour to four '15ours. Wash and mit off tops. 011 Cabbage, wash' and. soak a few a, mutes ill salt/ water to remove, til ae-y insects; boil for twenty „min- ute. ' bu Carrots .serape. froth thirty .'• irty-five. minutes.. trniPs p,are m water to wh. bee OV ERL GORED . A schoolmaster had been severely correcting a boy, and finished by saying: "Now, sit down and write a letter to your parents, telling them how' mueh you are taught here, and how little you profit there- from. I should be ashamed to tell them." The boy cried at first, and then WrOte : Father,—I am very stupid, though there is more to be learnt here than anywhere. Twice two's four, four boys go to e, bed, six beds make 011.0 attic, d lour attics made one well-ven- ated and well-appointed sleeping dormitory. , One round of bread and tter makes one breakfast, and cry tea nia'-es its own supper," "This time,'' said the mater, en he had examined the letter, will overlook your conduct, 1 you neen't send that note. ..tal.Aepoopitil of si ,ev added;if large, slice.- nr_ Pe man.I difficulties: owing to the con- fusion resulting from the use of so many undefined pronouns. This confusion is cliara,cterist'c, of Hosea's style. Here it cannot cer- tainly be determined which is speak- ing, Jehovah On Ephraim, OT both. A good explanation makes the verse a dialogue betwe,een EP11- nailn ,annomieeg his. intention to nave done with. idols. Jehovah re- •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1 FEEDING FI001 gti:rnnies.f gloloidesehetawltoll:iamsP::•atPeli7 an ezs Lions are a long stride in the di milk, the latter even more then the former, are the eommonest ef the' germ -distributing ageneice and both • d frequently by the farmer and his family. Not only ilaS the modern fazmer studied out a method of gardmg against sickness from sources which might, in the case of water and milk, be termed, internal. HQ baS gone step further and has decid- ed that" the barnyard must also be subjected to some ehanges if doc- tors' pills and doctors' bills are to be dodged. plies that he has taken note of the penitent's prayer aid will answer. That being the case Ephraim feels fi himself robust as is green r -tree. But Jehovah warns Mra not to for- get again that all the fruit of pros- perity conies solely from lint. 9. Who is wise, that he may un- derstandi—To understand, in the thought of the prophet, was to lay to heart, with a good conscience, such truth as God had made known. None but the wise and prudent ean so appreciate the message of this prophecy as to profit thereby. To do that requires not merely an in- tellectual apprehension of the ways of SehoVah, but a. practical effec- tiveness manifest in walking in them. CAPTAIN KIDD'S TREASITRES. Papers in Record Office Tell What ne Did With the Booty. Doomed to an infamy unde- served, his name reddened with crimes he never committed and raacle wildly romantic by tales of treasure which he did not bury, Captain Willian Kidd is fairly en- titled to the sympathy of posterity and the apologies of all the ballad - makers and alleged historians who have obscured the facts in a cloud of fable. Fate has played the strangest tricks with the memory of this seventeenth century sea- farer, who never cut a throat nor made a victim walk the plank;.who was no more than an anrateur pir- ate in.an era whenthis interesting w profession as in its heyday; and who was hanged at_Ex_ecation Dock for the excessively unroma,ntic crime of cracking the skull of his gunner with a wooden bucket; be - eauee, forsooth, his majesty's -of- fieers were unable to prove their charges of piracy. As for the riches of Captain Kidd, the original documents in its -case, ',preserved among the State papers of the Public Record I Mop in London, relate with much detail what booty behad and what he did with it. Alas! they reveal! the futility of the ,searches after the stout sea -chest buried above high water mark. The only authentic Kidd treasure was dug up and in- ventoried more than two hundred years ago, nor has the slightest clue to any other been found since then. WEAK HEARTS NOT FATAL. Irregularity in Beats Need, Not Alarm, Says Physician. D. james Mackenzie; a distin- guished physician and an authority on diseases 'of the heart, recently has., rIpset all of the old-fashioned notit tis.:;concerning what is known as heart failure, The results of his investigations. Were Made k-newn in the fieet of the. Lectures lately de- liveredeat the Royal College of: Phyetieians'London, England. .. Dr. Maxkenzie said elat heart trouble due -to dainaged ,valves 'may persist for -15Q years and hot inter- fere with good health and long life. Again,:heanade ap assertion that 'should ..ease the minds of millions of appre'liensive persons who 'fear that they are in danger of death beaaaise their :hearts, s.oinetimes beat irregularly—namely; that of a skip and a jump once .in a while.IS good eVidence of a healthy heart,. , -ete, C TEIE 'BROWNS HAITE SIX 'KITTENS, ,I/IEVE I COULD GET THEM TO, lliADi ONE FO It A TWIN."—Life. ZINGERS AND PORES. Ti SayForks Were Used in Italy. Tbe eustome of to -day are laTahing stock of to.inerrow ; 4 1,11.011rtneedatiby01,rtivean,dy-going speetable folks, becomes, in the eouree of time, an every -day IleCi.! ity. It is ,eeareely three centuri fur example, since forks Came in 11F.P, "1 oheerved, e a traveller 1611, "a eustoni in Italian tow that is not used in any ether eau try. The Italians do always their meals rise is little- fork Wil they cut their meat, Vor whi with the knife, which they hold one hand, they eut the meat out; the dish they fasten the for which they hold in the other hand, upon the same dish. So that olio should unadvisedly touch the (halt of meat with his fingers, from which all the table do -cut, will give oc- casion, of oftenee unto the company. The reaeon of this their curiosity is because the Italian cannot by any meal's endured to have hie dish touched with fingers, seeing that all men's lingoes are not alike clean. Hereupon, I myself thought good to imitate the Italian fashion of cutting meat since 1 cant home," To Queen Elizabeth were present. ed gold and jeweled forks at var. ious times. But the dainty queer preferred the old habit of fingering her meat, and forks were for a long time regarded as a worthless, oppish invention. One divine, ill he reign of James I., preached a ermon against forks, declaring it o be an "insult on Providence not o touch one's meat with one's fin- ers." And another, in 1617, ad- ised all travellers "returnirl eome to lay aside the spoon and Dile of Italy, the affected gesturei f France, and all -strange ap arel." THE FINGER NAIL. 5.• es, 115 11 - al Bo Nellie Indicate Approachia The signifiDcaisisseelutoif°,1cl. estain mark" ings on the finger nails frequently has been the subject of discussion in medical•Publicatiens. The lab - est contribution is a paper by Nor- man Plower, which appears in the I 13ritish Medical Journal, It deals with the condition of the nails dui iug, and after severe Melees. ,` lower brines forward several ecoaisneise:entis'ialgY•sOtnhehisMie'pdaipeealle R"eNcsiclr'ieda, . , , liave COMO under his observation in support of the contention that. finger nails undergo a change dur- ing and after serious illness. The most interesting pact of his paper is, however, tire testimony of Sir, Samuel Wilke to the 'same °fleet, I Wilke was tile first to notice the white markings on the nails as ing inclicatiya of death or approach - 1113 death. Wilke mentioned sev- eral eases in inoof of this argil- , merit. "Whether these finger 'nail rna,r1c- ings are of any ya,lue in proenoeie i - a s doubtfulin the, first place, it may be presumed that they do notj always occur,. and then those whol have them do not alwaYS ThcYf are alenarentlY eimPle.euriesifies."° When poisoned with poison .bathe the affected parts with 90 pelt cent alcohol. Government experi neOIa have proved this to be an ale.' &elute .4,1,11ACIOte for poi8On ivy,