Flesherton Advance, 9 May 1912, p. 3

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' HOUSEHOLP CARE OF REFHIGERATOR. To keep a refrigerator in a good condition, it is necessary to clean it thoroughly once a week, and to give it a little cleaning each day. The first essential to daily care is in re- gard to keeping of food in the re- frigerator. This should not be kept until it is spoiled. Care must also be taken in keeping the food cham- bers dry and clean. When any- thing is spilled on the shelves, take care that it is wiped up thorough- ly and immediately, towns, where there In country is no sewage three egg, half a cupful of flour, two and three-quarter cupful of flonr, two and one-half teaspoonful of bukiug powder, the -whites of two eggs beaten stiff, three-quarters' cupful of walnut meat broken in pieces. Mix the ingredients in the order given. Bake forty-five min- utes in a moderate oven. Cover | with caramel frosting, which is made as follows : Boil together one and one-fourth cupful of brown | sugar, one-third cupful of water I and one-fourth cupful of white su- gar until it strings. Pour this gra- ! dually, while beating constantly, on the beaten whites of two eggs, and j continue beating until mixture is nearly cool. Set the pan contain- ing the mixture in a pan of boiling' water and cook over the range, j stirring continually until it becomes j granular around the edge of the j pan. Remove from the pan of hot, water and heat until the mixture j will hold its shape. Add one-fourth : cupful of English walnut meats, | broken in pieces. THE RESCUED WAIFS OF THE TITANIC A FLOAIINB PALACE system, the refrigerator empties in- to a pan. This should be emptied every day, or oftener if need be. The weekly care should be done much more thoroughly. First, the ice and all of the food should be removed. Then all the shelves should be taken out and washed with hot water and soip, then scald- ed. The inside of the refrigerator should be thoroughly cleaned in the grooves and corners with a brush or skewer and a scouring powder. It should then be dried very care- fully. Finally, the waste pipe should be cleaned with a cloth on a, rod or a wire and a solution of pot- ash or soda poured down the pipe. If possible, the refrigerator should "be left open for an hour or two. If the water pipe of the refriger- ator does not empty into a pan, it should empty into the open end of a perfectly properly trapped drain pipe. The pipe should never be connected to the drain pipes of the house unless there is a good trap to prevent odors and foul air from entering the ice box. Food may be preserved for quite a, long period in the ice closet, al- though it is sure in the end to un- dergo certain forms of putrefaction. Meat kept in the refrigerator will, in the course of tyne. undergo a typo of decay due to the micro-or- ganisms favored by a low tempera- ture. Always keep all food covered in the ice'box. particularly milk, as it] opened without tearing, even i absorbs other odors quickly. But- j is steamed. ter is also very susceptible to odors, To keep flatirons clean and j and eggs have been known to ab- smooth rub them first with a piece HINTS FOR CARVERS. Cut ham and beef in thin slices. Pork, ve-il and mutton are cut a little thicker. A sirloin of beef, extra thick, should be cut in thin slices. Loosen the slices from the~~bone with the point of the knife. Carve first the i upper portion, then the undercut, j A roast of beef should be sliced toward the ribs. Score a loin of pork before cook- ' ing, as the skin is too crisp or tough to carve at the table. If the scor- ings are too far apart, lift the crackling or skin aside to cut into; thinner slices. Always cut at right angles to the bone, across the grain } of the meat. In carving a chicken first cut off' the legs and wings, then the breast. Cut each 'side of the breast across i in two pieces. The leg is cut into j two pieces at the joint. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Stains on the hands can be re- j moved with salts of lemon. Pumice j stone is most effectual wheu the hands have become marked with ink. If you would securely sea! an en- velope use a little white of egg. An envelope fastened thus cannot be SOML DETAILS OF THI1 ILL- FATED MO.NSTKU MEANER. Nex\ Names Had t be (oined for tue Twelve Decks of iLe Ve**el. All that wealth workmanship could and produce was mbodied in the ill-fated Titanic, the largest vessel ever built, a veri- table floating palace, over four city blocks in length. This 40, 000-ton monster narrowly escaped serious mishap at the very start of her maiden voyage. As she swept from her berth at Southamp- ton there was a roar as from a ' broadside of big guns, caused by j the suction created by her huge ! propellers. So great was the suc- ' tiou of water that the seven huge hawsers which moored the Ameri- I can liner New York snapped hke i pipe stems and the New York drift - ! ed helplessly, stern first, toward the Titanic. The Titanic reversed her .ngines in time, and tugs rushed to the aid of the New Y'ork. Thus a bud smash- up was averted. It has been estimated that the Titantic cost 810.000.000 before she was finally put in commissio:i. .Though SM'.j feet long. 92.'... r'-'et wide and 94 feet deep, with accom- modations for a crew of ^60 and cap- able of carrying 3.50U passenger.;, she was built with as much care as is put into the finest chronometers. weighed four and one-quarter tons each and were 36 feet long. Her rudder weighed 100 tons, and l.he i>.'Sd arm 45 to as forward and 73% tons aft. Her fifteen watertight compartments could be closed sim- ultaneously by the throwing of a lever on the bridge, and her build- ers had declared these rendered the .ship unsinkable. The launching of the Titanic on May 31, 1911, was considered an event of international import i ice. Among the prominent people who were present on that day were J. Pierpont Morgan. Lord Pirrie, Chairman of the Harland & \VoIff Company, and J. Bruce Ismay, Chairman of the International Mercantile Marine. The construction of the vessel was supervised by Alexander M. Car- lisle, general manager of the Bel- fast shipbuilding concern. Mr. Carlisle accompanied the Olympic to this country on her maiden voy- age and was most enthusiastic over the behavior of the big ship. He expressed himself as satisfied that the size of the ocean liners was lim- ited only by the harbor accommo- dation they could find aid the price the public was willing tj pay. Big vessels, he declared, answered tho helm even more easily thanVsmaller, ones. A list of her specifications' follow, '. Registered tonnage. 45.000. Displacement. (36.000. Length over all. S8i feet inches. Breadth over all. 92 feet G inches. Breadth over boat deck.*4 feet.. Height from keel to top deck. 1% feet 7 inches. Height of funnels above ca^-.i-;, 72 feet. The Titanic's tonnage, when she ! ah ' ve boat inallv took the water, was ne-irlx (1 ";" Distance trom top of funnel to keel, 175 feet. Number of steel decks. 11. Number of water-tight bulkhi*d, 30. Engines - - Combination turbine finally took the water, was nearly me thousand tons greater than that of the*. Olympic, -designed :i< her sister ship. Though the 1-. of the two monsters were laid at about the same time, work .y,i the ; Titanic was delaved for a year, that any imperfection in the 1: , appointments of the Olypmic. h-.>w- j t"llS eh 175 Photograph of the two little Titanic waifs, known as Louis and Lolo, who are being taken care of by Miss Margaret Hayes, another Titanic survivor. Tha little children are dressed in their littlo pajamas, just preparatory to going ti bed. The little fellow standing up, who can only say that his name is Louis, ays his little prayers in French before going to bed. An effort is now being made by Miss Hayes to discover the relatives of these two iittl* waifr. sorb odors from onions and other strong vegetables placed near them. of wax tied in a cloth, and after- wards scour them on a paper For this reason, it is a wise plan cloth strewn with coarse salt. never to put strong vegetables. When the hand is injured by b irn- such as onions, turnips, cabbage or ing, or in any other manner, the parsnips in the ice box. Fish should finger lings should at once be re- liever be kept in the refrigerator moved, as serious results may en- under any circumstances, as it is sue if the hand should swell impossible to rid the chest of the If one fears a draught from the 'fishv" odor for weeks. open window in the bedro >;n. In.ve The efficiency of the refrigerator the opening at the top .-overed with depends upon 'its temperature. The | a strip cf muslin and keep the win- larger the amount of ice the lower 'doxv open the ye.ir round, the temperature, and therefore tne To keep windows clean and Hear greater the efficiency. If the amount for weeks, smear glycerine .ill ->ver of ice is very small, there will be j aud polish lightly, but thoroughly, euch a high "temperature that the|with a perfectly dry cloth, afler- food will spoil readily, so it is ad- , cleaning well in the ordinary iran vis-ible to buy as large a piece as^ier. possible, and' to always keep thej If new cake-tins ire r.ut n top supply sufficient to insure a low i of the s; >v unti' they have a bluish temperature. If paper is wrapped color, but uot until t'i.-v become about the ice when it is put in the ; burned, cake will not su--k '_ Mc-n refrigerator it will not melt so re^d- 'during the baking, as it us-ia'I/ d- es ily. If the ice melts low In-fore the; to new tins. iceman calls, open the doors of thei A so nice able addition to t'v in- chest aud keep them open until the valid' s work basket is a horse-.ii>.- THE SHAY SCHOOL SUIT IMIiKVVTIOYU. I.KSSON. MAY 12. I.i-ssou VI. -The law of love, l.uke G. j~- .- : I!.. in. 13. s-10. (...'! Text. KOMI. 11. 9. LUKK li. 27 3-*. Verse 27. But I say unto, you Luke makes it appear that the words of our first lesson passage belong chronologically with the pronouncement of blcssinjis and woes which immediately precede. i and which was part of our lest les- j son. It would be quite natural for ant actions inv living the welfare of Anchors, e-ieh ever slight, might be corrected in j A e j h<jr cablc this nexvest and greatest of ocean ; ' palaces. Her length and breadth also exceeded tho* of the older ^ V "<- ht of r!V < ts "< fd (3-000.000). -el '-'?: a " ls - Wing propellers. 3* tons. Centre propeller. -2-2 t -_>'i-. Sidelights in each ship, v!.:i<i:>. t'rew carried. 380 Passenger capacity, 3.500. A LAI{(.;EH ONE STILL. The Hamburg-American Line is NK\\; NAMES FOR DKl KS New names had to be coined to apply to the twelve' decks of the vessel, nine of which were connect- others to be guided "as much bv the ' <* wlth ^ ctrlc elevators, in addi- effect of your action upon them as ' ^ n to mal '. v wide stairways. More _ _ ^ _ _ __ _ by its effect upon yourself. In the '. t j lan ^ thousand - j now building a ship, the Imperat..r. golden rule enunciated bv Jesus w.- " J i that will be J.OOO tons larger than have the seed kernel which, under j lf) e interior _ ot th monster, j the Ti ,. inio am( the y urth Germ .11 the inHueuce of hi- example, has developed Mito the Christian prin- ciple of altruism. 32-3-1. In these verses Jesus lays down the broad general prine.p e that among his followers the stand- sa: P- ard of dailv life and action nr.ist "; | the Titanic, and the North German Through any of the funnels TWO of jj , y d is planning for a still lirje- thc largest ot modern passenger v<?s ; d measurius r 54.000 tons. The tr-mn might have raced abreast. Cunard Line is also in the race for trii.n might have raced abreast Back link of the anchor j Lunar jne ialso.-,- for chain added bigger slli ,, s _ whu . h gr ,, ws k ..... ,,. r ight of vne < rise above the level of popular ha- ern hou>1 bit. custom, and law which prevail in the wjrld. If no one exer lived n ' s an " She has been compared to a niod- xvas really a city m a gymnasium, ten- courts, a theatre. in advance o* popular standards ballroom, sport, deck. Turkish and popular standards themselves would electric baths, swimming pool. never advance. i P* gardens, card, music and 35. Love In of this entire passage it is import ant to remember that there are two somewhat reduced in sue. vear the A<|iiitani.-i on the stocks, wh.i-e dimensions have not been mad>* public': AN OLD CUSTOM Shaking hands is a relic .if bar- barim. It became the custom in our interpretation smoking rooms, while atop, on the i the days when overxone carried a twelfth deck, was a- golf course. ! dagger in his belt and \vlieu on* friend meeting another thought it . magnet fastened to a ribbdn * r of sufficient length thai it can bo dropped to the tK><.>r to pick up scis- sors or needles. When thv skin begins to shuw of tho Old Testament at its best. Examples from the Old Testament murkinc-s ;\n<| eni|>iU>ns try :v <liet are KXCK!. --J3. I. "If tholi meet j shall love all people alike or that' sister ship, \vas the private proiuea \, nv t |,' o t . t( t.ni is too tirmlv and fresh supply of ice is put in. * CHOICE RECIPES. Potato Rolls. Tasty rolls arc made with mashed potato for a basis. Press two cupfuls of the i of fruit and vegetables for txvo mashed potato through a sieve, and | weeks and the improvement will be add two eggs, half a cupful of lard. \ so market that you will continue it a compressed yeast cake, dissolved j for a month, if not permanently. jo], -if thine enemy be hunitry, in a cupful of tepid water and a tablespoonful of sugar. Make a thin sponge of this, and. when light, make into a soft dough. Lot it rise again, roll out thin and cut into cakes. Put the ro!U into pans, but do not let them t ni'.-h. Let them Jesus to have spoken which follow in connecli > beautitudes, as the thought between the timate. 1 .' > ' " \ (Jll f ' * It < ' It 1 ll*S v '! i IA i 3 i ' i .*! * * j' . J. t v V_>L i iv i n\jiv 01 *^ 1 1 111^. o . to greater prominence the note of simply to have regard for, to wish B" health. mercifulness and good will toward! well; and it is the latter word ^ PRIV VTK PROMENXDE all men already evident in the law which Jesus uses throughout in our proe-~ I shake urexi t^ bo the o-".\en: i ) form of greeting, and the retii--' "1 a proffered hallo! wa.- r.-iiarded ;n lesson passage. Even tho teachings One of the many unusual feat .ires 41|1) , O f tnil! .,, j,, M ,: t ., |,, . . of Jesus do not require that we j of the Titanic, lacking even in her t . ail ,, I1 ' ;v ^,. w jp^ c i ,, ut w ; t |, (,], V( j thine enemy's ox or his ass going astray, thou shall surely bring it i back to him again"; and Prov. 23. -*- HUNS THAI KKASON. Kx peri mo n(s Show That '1 hex Have j give him bread to eat; And if he 'be thirsty, drink." Th we shall bestow upon strangers ade which adjoined the ni-iin n-suu widely established for its abarul-'ii- the- intimate affection that we give rant on the starboard side. On to nieut t,j be conceivable, and vet to those who are near and dear to this deck opened a reception room.] there are various things about* it us. But his teaching does require where diners might congregate be-i^hich render it uu-a:isfacti>ry. that to nil men. whatever their fore going to their meals aud hosts give him water to 1 condition, we shall give that regard might meet the guests whom they necessity for this em- which is evidenced bv an active in- had invited to sit with them at din Memories. phasis arose from tho fact- that the strict Phariseeism since the days of the exile had laid almost fanatical raise again for half an hour, j hens had any memory, ho xvou'd Bake for twentv or txveim -live mill- probably say ' N'o." but lie would ute-. A cupful* of liquid yeast may , be wrong, according to the cxperi- be substituted for the yeast cake, ments of txvo German scientists. but no 'i()iiid is used a-ide from tho '< The plan they adopted xvas to gum yeast or yeast cake dissolved in the 1 twenty grains of rice on a piece of If the average man were aked if 'stress upon precisely the opposite and between theld wt t'.o'.' i ctruut'ai'u. unu ueixeen i iiem to Aunt Jenny's Johnny Cake. -- A 1 P !at<e te " Stains of loose corn. At cupful of swe*et milk, a cupful anil a first V lieas - of i'<-''^. pecked at a teasixi. inful sentiments also taken from .-crtain Old Testament passages, such as. "Thou shall hate thine enemy" (Dent. 7. 2). According to Mat thexv's account. Matt. .">. 21- is. tercst in their well-being. Even an tier. Banks of real flowers con- enemy it is possible to love in this ' cealeil the arbors in the palm gar- sonse of the word. Sons of tho Most High The kin- ship will be that of the spirit. Two of the suites co>t e;ich for a single trip. Those apartments 37. Judge not Bo not ..-en- ..r:i.-.is consisted of sitting or readv haslilv to condemn. i chambers, baths and sleeping wardrobes. 38. Good measure The metaphor I with a garden in front, a'ld a pri- the memory <.f a DRAINS OK LiOLD. It is better to be parsimonious than dishonest. No woman is educated x\li,> is n >t equal to the successful management 't a family. Hu heart was great as the .rKl. but there was no room 'n it to hold of this verse is taken from the corn vale half of buttermilk; each of suit and of soda -the latter sifted throe times in a cupful of rnea! ; "lie tablespoonful of melted butter. Enough meal to enable ymi ice ami corn, but soon they learned to leave tho rice alone, thus xery clearly showing that they re menibercd tho rice xvas stiick down. Jesus brought out clearly the eon j dealing in the market place, xvhore trast between those principles j it is not unusu.tl to see tho entire which the Pharisees xvere emphasix- process of pressing down shaking ing and those which he ..lesirod together, and pouring full to over should be considered Mimiarnenta' in the felloxvsliip of the promenade oxtonuing the length of the suite --some which he wa-* Bless them that curse YOU experiment xva's that the longer the. time between the trials the better xvas the hens' memory. NVheu the h exporiini nts xvere made t-onseeu- tho dough briskly before mllm s \ ff^ k u , (lk , hem six tin , os tll that the rice xvas not worth but xvhen the cxporinieuts to roll the dough into a sheet half au inch thick. Begin with txvo cup- fuls uml add at discretion. Knead out. Have ready clear, S wec t, A very remarkable point about the , Maledictions as well as benedic- tions xvere among the Jews a part of the daily conversation, oxen of good people. Popular JexvUh sym- pathv tlid ni't extend beyond racial bc>ard of c-.ik, hickory, or hemlock (nojor of resinous wood), buttered, n> mado at jntervals of an hour and heated. bet before the '' | thev leaviuxl the lesson at the third coals under me grate at an angle; t ,. v ; R ma> . K> g . lthol . w i that thev that will not let the cake shp doxvii. sh ;, wc<1 not ' on i y that tllpv had ,,. orios. but that they thought the and prop it in place. Spread the dough upon it. patting it gently to make tho surface even, and bake. As soon as it is hard enough to keen its place, set tho board upright. Begin then to bast.- it with butter. lightly going all over tho sheet. Do matter oxer in the intervals. A GOOD ONE. Some tilings arc better as private property. Others ought to be this t!ir-- times. The cake should j shared. In daily life Robert Louis be nicely browned and crisped. Cut | Stevenson's rule of distribution is with a sharp knife, held perpondi- a good one "Keep your fears to yourself, but share with others." Those cuhrly. into squares. Caramel Cake. -Tu make a cara- mel cake which xvil! be found delic- ious, like ha'/ a cupful of butter. ne cupful of nugav, the yolks of this courage who follow rule alxvavs become leaders in the. oud by sheer force of -character growth. flowing th transaction. ROMANS 13. measure used in the s-io. Verse S. Owe no man anvthinn If thou knovxest anytiung g..-xl ol a man tell it unto other- ; if any- fiftv feet- with its own private sea thing ill. tell it privately to him- rail. self. The occupants of either these There are many por^i'i- who ar< suites could have the same privacy ' readv to cut ..IT other people's of- that an owner of a private vacht , fending hand- and feet, furnettiug The apostle has been could command, with his and the added comfort* t'ru (lie a; of . leviathan afforded. There were less prete uious suites, xvith sitting rooms in so/in- of them as large as fifteen foot 29. Offer also the other ..... Jesus announcing a general principle non-resistanoo to ex;il. and is em- phasi/.ing his principle by the use of a striking paradox. That this is obligations to the state. He now passes from a special to a uni- versal moral relation. Christians are to pay all they owe : but the debt of universal good will toward; Each <tateroom on the vesse h,nl men it is impossible ex or t'ul'v to its i.wn private bathriMUii. stipp'y- discli.irge. Such good will, there- ' Jug; fresh and sea water, i .th ii..L That tho command i* to out off the-ir own. The \iewsofe\erx man diiei-ted towards sh.'ii'd lie how.-\ -i iii<der:ite indepeiuli-nce without which iM man can be happy, nor even hone-t. PETROLEUM LONO KNOWN The petroleum industry, whi-.-K . , , ilK . fl<rllul ,. ulll ,,,,,. ;,-, fore, remains the permantMH obli- and c.lil. A servants' hal' xva-ji-o- n jis made such ure.-u advaii.cs -.tin 4 - gation of t-vorx disciple. 10. The fulfilment of the law - vi.led for tho v.-xlels and other .er- i n g ,-. ;.,,.., \ear-. !i-al- \\ith which has been known in situation. To the court officer who , level higher than the law itself, be- [ measured 175 feet She IU.-K!>> .111 : tiine*. Antiquarians say that Pliily at the time of his trial smote him j ing proitii'ted by the motive froia! average speed of twenty-olio ku<.( < .ami Herodotus c-a,-ii kn>xv or ' u he speaks the xvord of challenge, ! which the law springs It is an ad "Why sniitcst thou me.' 30. Give to every ono that asketh Be generous and willing to share your substance with the needy. 31. Po ye also to them likewise Make it a rule of life in all import- vantage in studvinu; th - teachings of Jesus from the gospel records to turn, as we have 'lone in tltis V> son. to tlv.' i'lterpretation of th:U mi l-i-r trill trip. THI5EE Mil. i. ION IMVE'JS In building her inure th in tlnv- million riveto were us-.-d to ; u u 1 heard o* peti. .l ~ * A ur. rr.ir ..>f\,-i pre\.vits a >VM>I-.:U: froni u- : :n>, l teaching as found i-i the writings together the missive phite-*. T'u> ' A .1.1:1 seldom xvorrie* about hu of tho great apostlo to the tientiles. plate- in the Tilanic's bottom character i- ills remitatlon i* food.

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