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Exeter Advocate, 1913-4-10, Page 6The sarin "plant" mase be used for years if kept iIi the juice. Szeuurrnes ComPOUATX0AT LIMITED EsrAIMI9Hzo teat HEAP OmcE: 26 [GONG S1', EAST.. TORONTO MONTREAL t-QNOON, E.C„ ENG. O '1rAt, mu UP; $t.000.Ooo REsERVg FUN), memo Our Quarterly List Just published contains' ocean-, piete parblcuistre of these investments GOVERNMENT BONDS AND MUNICIPAL DEBENTURES Amount Security Income Yield 50,000 PROVINCE OF ONTARIO about. 4 % 30.000 CITY OF OTTAWA, ONT. 4,4%a 10.000 CITY OF VANCOUVER, B C 434% 100,000 CITY CF VICTORIA. 13.0 . .. , . , 4g4% to 5 200,000 CITY OF : ST. BONIFACE, MAN, ....: , , , , 5 % 50.000 CITY OF BRANDON, MAN... , . 5 % 15,000 CITY OF FORT WILLIAM, ONT 5 % 9,844 TOWNSHIP OF YORK, ONT, 5 % 7,000 TOWN OF WELLAND, ONT. 5 17,000 DISTRICT OF OAK BAY, B,C 5 % 50,000 MUNICIPALITY OF COLDSTREAM. B.C......, 5 15,000 CITY OF NANAIMO, B.C. 5M% 13,000 CITY OF REVELSTOKE, B,C 5ez9'o 15,000 CITY OF NELSON, B.C. 5X%n 15,000 TOWN OF CASTOR, ALTA..............,6 % 27,822 TOWN OF YORKTON, SASK. 6 % CORPORATION AND INDUSTRIAL ISSUES Amount Security Income Yield CANADIAN NORTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY (Equipment Bonds) At Market $30,000 TORONTO &. YORK RADIAL RAILWAY COY (First Mortgage 5's Guaranteed by Toronto Railway Co.) 5 % 25,000 ELECTRICAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY OF ONTARIO, LIMITED (Firs Mortgage 5's) ...... 55( 10,000 DOMINION STEEL CORPORATION, LIMITED (5% Debentures) 25,000 P. BURNS &- COMPANY, LIMITED (Packers, Ranchers and Provisioners, Calgary,. Alta,) (First Mortgage 6's due 1st April, 1924). 25,000 (First and Refunding Mortgage 6's due -1st January, 1931). 5.91% £2,000 WESTERN CANADA FLOUR MILLS COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 6's due 1st March, 1928)5.60% $25,000 (First and Refunding Mortgage 6's due' 1st September, 1931) 5.91% 25,000 WILLIAM DAVIES COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 6's) 5,78% 25,000 SAWYER-MASSEY COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 6's) 5.90% 25,000 DUNLOP TIRE iT RUBBER GOODS COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 6's) 6 % 25,000 GORDON, IRONSIDE f- FARES COMPANY, LIMITED (Wholesale Packers, Ranchers and Pro' visioners, Winnipeg (First Mortgage 6's) 6 % 25,000 J. I -t ASHDOWN HARDWARE COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 5's).., ........... • 6 % 25;000 THE HARRIS ABATTOIR COMPANY, LIMITED (First Mortgage 6's) 6 % 5%% CZTADIANGOVERNMENTMUNICIPAL AND C PORATIoN]ioND Selected Recipes. Cottage Cheese.—Mix one pint of cottage cheese with one-half cupful of chopped English walnuts, one teaspoonful of chopped chives, one teaspoonful of salt and one-half saltspoonful of paprika. Form, into balls and arrange in nests of let- tuce. Serve with a mayonnaise dressing, to which has been added some chopped olives and capers. ('Reese Cream Toast.—Melt one and one-half tablespoonfuls of but- ter, add one and one-half table- spoonfuls of flour and when bub- bling pour on one and one-half cup- fuls of scalded milk, stirring brisk- ly until the sauce is smooth ; season with sa1t, pepper ,and paprika. Add two-thirds of a cupful of mild, grat- ed cheese and cook until the cheese is melted. Dip six slices of toast in the sauce, place in a hot dish and pour the cream sauce over them. . Boiled Ieing—Often one finds that a boiled frosting is either too much done or not cooked enough, A wo- man whose boiled frosting always calls for praise tells the secret of her success. She uses throe table- spoonfuls of water to a cupful of sugar; when the mixture begins to ball she slowly beats six tablespoon-' fails of itinto the white of an egg, beaten very stiff. Then she lets the remainder of the syrup heir till it hairs; this point in the cooking reached, she beats it gradually into the egg mixture. Famous London "Disk --Take. a quarter pound of grated cheese, Dissolve in one cupful of milk, a small quarter of, a teaspoonful of soda, then add it to the grated cheese ; .aced a quarter of a teaspoon. ful of mustard, half a saltspoonful of white pepper, a; pinch of cayenne pepper and two, tablespoonfuls of browned flour. Heat in double boi- 6lCOUGHS CURES &COLDS 'ler until cheese is dissolved, then stir in three well -beaten eggs, stir a few moments and pour into indi- vidual patty -pans or cases, and bake a nice brown. Serve hot. Cottage Cheese and Chives—Rub the salad bowl with a small clove of garlic or mince the garlic very fine, add two cupfuls of cottage cheese and two teaspoonfuls of chives cut fine with scissors, one teaspoonful of -salt and one-half saltspoonful of paprika. Mix well, add .alittle rich cream if necessary to help it retain its shape, then stir in lightly three tablespoonfuls of chopped pimento ; pile upon a bed of cress and orna- ment with • pimento cut in fancy shapes and place upon ice until needed. Serve with mayonnaise dressing. Good Celery Pickle—For this cel- ery pickle put. in the good leaves as well as the stalks. Three parts cel- ery, three parts cabbage, one part onions. Put these through the meat grinder and mix with three-fourths cup of salt to a gallon. Let stand overnight, then drain off what liquid comes away readily. Heat and add the following to every gallon: One quart good vinegar, one-half cup sugar, eight bay • leaves, twenty drops oil of cloves, twenty drops oil of cinnamon. Just before stirring this into the vegetables 'add one- fourth teaspoonful of red peper. Good Vinegar—To start, use any kind of sweet juice. If you have any jelly that has gorse to sugar or that didn't fornzj or alittle sore- hum, syrup, or " anything of the kind, put it in a stone 'jar with enough warm water to make just a sweetened water. Take a piece of brown wrapping paper, cut round the size of the jar lid, and put with it a thin layer of bread dough the size of the paper. Roll both up to- gether and drop it in the jar ; this will ,form the plant, Any kind of fruit juice of rinsings from jelly glasses may be added at any time. Keep the jar, in a warm place, The contents will be vinegar in about three weeks after the jar is filled and will taste just like eider vine- [ gar. It is a great saving, for one uses so much vinegar ' in the emu): mer for sliced encumbers, salads, beets, 'beans, covering pickles, eta, • Hoole Riots,. Wrap cheese in a cloth soaked in vinegar if you wishib to be Dept moist and free from mold. If the alarm clock rings too loud- ly slip an elastin baud around the bell to diminish the noise, Shelves are a necessity in every bathroom. So is a little medicine closet tohang on the wall.. Heat the clothespins if you would have warm hands while hanging out the clothes in ao1d weather. A great aid to baby's bath when he is afraid of water is soma water toys which he an play with. Before dyeing a garment mark the right side with thread so that there will be no doubt about it. Every housekeeper should keep a pair of butcher's'ouffs on hand to protect the sleeves in emergencies. Brushes and combs are best washed in strong ammonia water, For the bristles, it should be cold. To clean ribbon, sponge -with al- cohol and rub over the spot •with eleen white soap, holdingthe rib- bon straight. To remove grease from woollen materials, rub in powdered French chalk. After some hours shake it o nt. Use wash pillows whenever pos- sibis :for living -rooms and dens, They are more hygienic and more sanitary. • When tinware is new, rub it with lard and heat thoroughly in the oven. Tinware treated in this way will never rust. Porch chairs of wicker or reed can be cleaned with soapsuds and a scrubbing brush and then can be shellacked. To stone raisins without sticki- ness, stem .them, cover with boiling water for two minutes and then open the raisins, A. cake l could be iced before it is quite cold. Charcoal powder is .excellent for cleaning fide knives. A sheet of heavy cardboard is de- sirable to cool hot cakes upon. A special knife should always be kept for onions, bread and hot fat. Try a lone glass stilling rod for stirring food cooking over a hot stove. Hot soapsuds with ammonia is admirable for "cleaning gold jewelry. In whipping cream, add the white of an egg to every cupful of cream:. Cornmeal will remove lamp smoke from a wall blackened. by kerosene, Chloroform is good for removing grease spots, but should . be used with care. Turnips and potatoes mashed to- gether make a pleasant change on the table. • Never blacken a kitchen stove; wash it every day ' with clean soap and water. Housewives will find the butcher's apron- a great convenience, as it covers even the sleeves. Before' beginning to make a cake all utensils and ingredients should be placed ready to hand. Never plunge the ivory handle of a knife into hot water. Wash the knives inaknife jug. Scraps of cream cheese may be made useful by mixing them with butter and milk or a little cream. This should be spread on thin, waf- erlik crackers, made into sand- wiches andwiches and served with salad. Pour boiling water on oranges and let them stand five minutes. This will cause the white lining to come away with the skin so that a, large quantity of oranges can be quickly sliced for sauce or pudding. When sealing fruit butters or preserves, place a circle of thin cloth on top and sprinkle this with ground cinnamon. The spice pre- vents mold from accumulating on the fruit. . Political conditions can generally be bettered by less polities. Solves the Breakfast Problem A bowl of crisp. sweet ost Tostjcs makes a most delicious meal. These crinkly- bits of toasted white corn, ready to serve direct from pack- age, are .a tempitlg break- fast when served 'with Cream or milk, or fruit. The Toasties flavour is a pleasant surprise at first; then a happy,- healthful habit. "The Memory Lingers' Canadian Poatttm Cereal Co., :Ltd, Windsor, Ontario. HORSES EXTRACT CURE U0.QT, Obtain Correct Answers When Trainer is Absent. A'diseuesi'on of a peculiarly inters estine ehaa.rnetler ,took place at a re, cent ineetiu,• of the French Phdleso- phical Society, This Society has greatly interested itself. in • the homes of Elborfeld," The animas are the property of M. Krell, and he has taught them read. ing, writing and arithmetic, or ellaimts. to have done eo. The horses eaxx lext•ract.the square and cube roots of numbers, per. forming the op -oration of multiple. eaRbion, addition .and subtraction which these involve, The Fre•nch's•o'eiety has endeavor. ed to ,solve the problem presented by these remarkable quadrupeds, and invited M, Claparde, the die, tinguished pi ofessor, sof .psyehologe at the University of Geneva, to ad, dress them on the subject: ItiL, Claparde -said that since he had isee.n, the horses two Italian sa:. rants had obtained a •correct an.. swer from them at atime when their trainer was absent. No hypo• thesis, lie went on, can ,satisfaotor, ily explain' the extraordinary fact of which .he had been a witness. Even if there were a trick, it in. volved great intelligence on the part of the horses. Other contribu. tors to the discussion suggested the possibility of the horses beim; trained to act in accordance with signs made b.3.. their trainer, M. Derin, Inspector -General o2 Public Instruction, marvelled that the animal"s could learn in a fete weeks that which it takes children three and four years of age seversl months to learn. He was especial. ly astonished at the power of realcl. ing which the animals possess. It was eventually decided that some further experiment should be made, but all the .savants agreed that, whether there is trickery or not, the wan -tate performances aro remarkably interesting' from the point of view of equine intelligence, SP IT 40 COBS AT AGE OF 85 Thankful to the Medicine That Gave Ifim Ability For the Task. A VERY INTERESTING BASE. Few men of eightp•five years of age earl; boast of much else but poor health and failing strength.. And such was the con- dition of Mr. Benj. Marsh, who is. known to every soul in the neighborhood of his, home at Lime Lake, Ont. "Quite unsolicited," writes air. Marsh, "I wish to .say how I have been bothered for years with stomach trouble. I tried everything I could think of without bene- fit. I was terribly afflicted with swelling and gas, and had much distress between meals. I tried everything I could think of, but without benefit, Then I was re- commended Nerviline. 'M t, but Nerviline did me a power of good --mads a new man of me, so that within the last three weeks I have been able to split about forty cords of stove wood. I will always etiok to Ner riline and will always recommend it, and would like to meet anyone and convince them if in doubt as to what Nerviline has done for me." For sour stomach, nausea, belching of gas, cramps and sudden eickness at night. nothing is more helpful in the home, no- thing saves so much pain and distress as Nerviline. Large family size bottles, 50e.; small size, 25c.. at all storekeepers and druggists or The Catarrhozone Co., Buf- falo, N. Y. TITLES IN GER3IANT`. They° Are Quite a Common Occur- rence in the Fatherland. They take titles eerious1y in. Ger- many. Almost any one may have one, but it must be the one that ex- actly describes him, no matter how long and cumbrous. Indeed, the longer the better, the Geronans seem to think., The New York Sun quotes an address that it declares is probably :written, thousands of times •a week in Germany, for it is a courtesy due to a sort of official whose rank is far below that of a minister of state: "Highly reverenced Mr. Re al Privy Councilor, highly to be rever- eneed Mr. President." The title • councilor has four de- grees, thus: Positive, councilor; comparative, higher councilor; su- perlative, privy councilor, and ex- tra superlative, real privy council- or. Then to complicate matters, there are a hundred or more ooun- cilors, such as councilor's of lega- tion, councilors of state, sanitary councilors, forest councilors, and town police councilors, Titles of another class have to do with the wearer's occupation. Thus a Munich newspaper records the death of Frau So-and-so, wile of the "Royal Court Theatre Oolor-grind- ers' Assistant!' Bavarian news' papers used to print notices, insert- ed by the persons themselves, of the betrothal o£ So-and-so, "Royal Su- pernumerary Flay -Binder's, daugh- ter," or.of So-and-so, "Head Bill- Foster's daughter!" Much can be said in Savor of the rigid German system . of titles. . For instance, in Germany, when a, mean takers the prefix "doctor" he has a right to do so. The title cannot be. bought, begged or &seamed, You may be sure that a. "diootor" haw, f S?",�.rY Y-'i 5,! {iiR� ri't - �M ' 11 Q` x=c , _ x i trdr> r , ; ti % f f9 , ,1st A r %� ....' � '', , w fII : ' •: —,.�,.......- 1�,i ::Y,I��'i�1 tai r , il. .. a:M•e ut 4 0 ' ; K � 1%t b _. FOR MAKING SOAR SOFTENING WATER, REMOVING PAI N T, DISINFECTING SINKS CLQSW S,DRAIN5, C SSOn LO EVERYWHERE,$.TEVERYWHERE,�. REFUSE SUBITUTES g= .�,.. .max r— �-- . _ ._. ,.r won his title in a • university of standing and renown. So, too, professors are such by right; they aro quasi:-ofxeials of the state or the city. • The title cannot be assumed offhand by bootblacks or chiropodists. PROFIT SHARING BONDS. Attractive Forst of Investment. An attractive folder.which will be of great interest to capitalists who are .looking for a safe investment yielding 7 per cent., and which of- fers at the same time possibilities of bringing in still further profits, may be obtained by writing to The National .Securities Corporation, Limited, Confederation Life Build- ing, Toronto: This latter Company . has been particularly successful in developing and financing. various industrial en- terprises. The investment' describ- ed in this' folder is in the form of profit sharing bonds with interest at 7 per cent,, pay -able semi-annu- ally. EA.UTII:QU AKE FOR WEEKS. The Natives of Hayti Can It iThe Gouffre." Earthquake sounds have been variously described and might be expected to differ widely according to eircuans•tances and locality. The island of Hayti, which is situated in a neighborhood where the earth is in acontinual state of tremor, is visited by 'a .peculiar earthquake sound which is locally called .the "go'uffre," and an amount of it appears in the, Bulletin Semes'triel of the Port au Prince meteorologi- cal observatory. The region of the `rgouffre" is in the 'mountain range of La: Sel1e, which is about seven thousand feet high, and which, unstable still, gives much evidence of past vol- canic activity. The sounds are ap- parently the same as those aeco:n. panying noticeable earthquakes; and the name t tgouffre" is applied to both. Its noise extends sometimes over periods of weeks and the vicar of Croix des Bouquets, fifteen ,elutes north of the mountain range, gives elle following description of it: "During the day the sound was heard from the ''south-east and seemed to'oome from a great depth, It was like a deep roaring and then. ani times like the howling of a dog. From time to time it stepped with a hollow boom which might be taken for e distant cannon shot. "During the' night it Was differ. rent, although the sound -came from a different .direction ;, there was a perfect tumult, rumbling of Ulm. (lea, howling and a sound like the rushing of a strong wind. There was no wind, however, Sometimes one heard all the noises at once. Generally and above a11, from 7 to l0 .o'•elock at night, the sound ended. with a loud • detonation • much stronger than in the day, followed • by a long echo. •Then again would be heard an outburst that cannot be imagined. It was as if a moun- tain of glass were shattered and the noise echoed in all directions. At times it seemed as -if one could hear the roar of surf, or even the dead thud of objects falling, such as blocks of stone rolling down preci- pices," Maypole Soap. FOR HOME DYEING Washes and dyes at one operation, giv- ing remarkably clean, bright, fast colors.Dyes cotton, wool, silk or mix- tures. 24 colors, will give any shade, Colors 10c, black 13c atyourcicaler's or postpd with b'k- let "How to Dye' zos horn F. L. BENEDICT & CO, Montreal . a C rn On the Cob or Shelled.. Imp. Learning, ; or White Cap Y. Dent $1,35 per bushel. Longfellow- $1.50; Oornpton'a $1.60. ' Freight paid in Ontario on 10 bushels or more. Bags free.•Write for catalogue. ' GEO. KEITH & SONS, Toronto. Seed ,merehnnts since J866 We have prepared a folder dealing; with one of the most attractive 7% investments in the present market. Copy mailed on Request N 'Nona! Sesuriti s Ci rp rack ii L 1TE D CONFEDERATION LIFE BLDG., - TORONTO, ONT. A Sp:end'd 10.eent Household Specialty 's being Introduced ail over Canada. It is ap- preciated by the Thrifty Ifouaewife who wants things "Just alittle.etter," Send. Post Card tS.day. Simpiysay; "Send Package of .Household Specialty Advertised in my Newspaper." That's all—You will bo delighted! :Pay if Satisfied --ewe tare the Risk. Address P.O. Box 1240,,Montroal, Can, 'Phis Offer expires June est, 'ib 8 Send to-dayl Do not be misled— ASK FOR. and LOO. for the Trade -Mark.' Perrin's Gloves are farted for` their' Style, Fit and Finish. Cloves that are ,Aterr stamped with either• the trade>rieark or thm'name "Perri: .'sil 'rake" are not the genuine,