Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 11 Feb 1914, p. 3

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butter, salt and pspper to taste. Over the above pour a oup purify --a : jo ; mot by theMaw, but by tra- ioineq ny a 2 . od few drops of camphor in a glass of water will break up a cold. freshen a ekirt that has be-|in contact, and as such the custom 'saw it, he just come multitude, 'he had even cast out a demon, 0 the Phariseea would expect him to en- to make binding upon the people '866 was not expressed in words, but was betrayed by his manner. Bathed -- Washing the hands is probably what is meant. This was often done at the table, the ser- vants bringing the water to each person. It was not, however, re- garded as a hygienic measure, but imes aa ceremonial purification from the half- influence of the evil or the unclean with which one might have come of boiling milk, then beat in' she! Ck [SASL 8 SEN What hos bo |in contact, a rebuke of Jesus. Fells of threes' eggw: | When. evel! 205, FU" SE SC Bmssod from Dintier--The meal was breakfast beet the whites of the three eggs' otiff and stir them in | . Bake about thirty minutes shallow pan in a slow oven. This bacon. It will serve four or five at luncheon. ' ; ' Ham Fn Casserole.--Secure a dust may be remo | over a tub of hot water. 8 rather! mo oliove a cough, roast a lemon is nice served with a slice or two of png it. When » and hang|rather than dinner. Compare verse 37 above. 89. The outside of the cup and of it is|the platter -- The less important part is kept clean. The important into a cup ountaining three ounces | part of the man is not cleansed. of finely po A delicious winter salad is made (tion and wickedn Your inward part is full of extor- ess--The idea hice of ham about two inches thick. | with apples and oranges. Out into | seems bo be that the fod which as 5 ned to dredge with flour and saute in ite| gman fat. Brown two halved onions oranges, dn this fat; also a carrot scraped erve with lettuce leaves and salad 1 king of a wabch in a sick les, add one turnip pared and out room is often most trying to a ner- into small cubes. Add half a tea- vous person. To obviate this turn 00 : then pour on a cub| a tumbler over a watch on a chair |inside as well? Why, therefore, boiling 3M # Cover and 000k for| or table beside the bed, and the se pud sliced. Place the mea ro.e, cover with the vegeta-| Spoon pe; meat in 8 dressing. apple two | Pharisees take into their bodies is nuts. the product of plunder and wick- edness. Evidently many of them did not earn their living honestly. 40. Paraphrased, this verse might read : "Stupid men! Did not God, who made the outside, make the give such exclusive attention to the in a moderate oven.|g ini of the ticking can no longer | outside 1" heard Half ah hour before the cooking is|p, White flannel trousers, when soil- | to the contents of the cups and ] , Fire " ed. not too badly, can be dry-clean- . Buckwheat Cakes. -- Two cups ed at home by using flour and salt, finished add cup, of strained can- buckwheat mixed with one ou ik ~and one cup waber. Pi F cals. of Add one 'cake yeast dissolved in|ib oud with a fresh-washed clothes one-half cup water. Beat well and brush. , #3 ni : X-| To restore rancid butter, pack it | flattered by the invitations or at. ; fre, add pinch of soda dissolved in lin a firldn and then 'fake & barrel, } the * one-half cup of boiling water. At! : night take 'remaining sponge; 1add, it, eet the firkin . of butter inside one cup Malf water and half milk 50 and one sp Sidpuneal, a el brine, letting it stand thrés or fou emd raise: ut once in five days § adie ve raise over . 'Take half mix- again. Excellent. t about one bushel of charcoal in the barrel and cover with 'PhARBRAPHS. : i Bad i dw" Us the root of suc- Money may be saved'B +| --Spesinl seats were provided for oo 41. Doubtless a further reference platters. if this is shared with the poor, it is a better way of keep. g three or four applications |ing the foods undefiled than by 'the mixture and then brushing | much cleansing of vessels. His Denunciation of Formalism and Hypocrisy, Jesus was never tentions of those with , whom ft might have seémed good policy to ally himself, His reproof of evil 800d | wag given to the rich and influential as severely and as unhesitatingly as to the poor. il 42-44. These verses contain three «of the seven "woes" that were pro- nounced against, "the Pharisees. They are (1) against their gxtreme ees in tithing as com- i A iiy in weightier gainst their love of * i symo- (they sat. on a Perhaps the surprise of the Pharic 69) : Marie Cole Got 112 Bushels of Corn From an Acre, ~ Marie Cole, aged '14, of Urichsville, Ohio, who raised 112 bushels Of corn on one acre of ground, which is more than double the amount |! raised by the farmers in her neighborhood. She led all the boy con- testants in her county, and was the only girl in the State to win in |® the corn-raising contest, She was corn special trip to Washington. sar of Ohrist (Matt. 23. 30-83; Acts 7. 40. Baid the wisdom of God-- Matthew (23. 34) ascribes the words that follow to Jesus.. He probably meant here, "Divine wisdom speaking through Providence and prophecy."' 61. From the blood of Abel unto the blood of Zachariah--8ee 8 Chron. 24. 20-21. In the Hebrew canon the book of Chronicles came last, eo the murders of Abel and Zachariah were the first and the last murders mentioned in the Old Testament, The verses covering this third division of the longer passage are not printed, but should be etudied a8 part of the lesson. They pre. sent the natural sequence and un- avoidable result of the stern denun- olation whith Jesus had levied against the hypocrisy of the privi- leged olasses, the Pharisees, scribes, and lawyers. The reward of disinterested love for all the people and fearless opposition to oorisy such as Jesus manifest ed could not fail to arouse the un- relenting hatred of those whose insincerity he expesed. ma ' BRITISH COLUMBIA MINES, Mpny Now Being Opened Up With Now Life and Energy. With conditions of unrest in Mex- ico becoming worse daily, and with the future clouding instead of oleari miners from the revolu- Sion tilon republic are seeking new fields of operation. Many of the old camps of the United States afd Canada, deserted yoars ago, are being rehabilitated, and many of the districts which in the sixties were flourishing but ' since have fallen 'to decay, are now being opéned up with new life and energy. British Columbia, 'Which, during the time of the Civil War, and later in 1896-07, © was the Mecca for miners, is.again reviving and tak- ing.an new life that will undoubted- ly*hear, much fruit in the eourse of the vexy near future, This is par- rly true of the Windermere f Jum; I ¢ man he he advent of the Cariadian** Paeifia" Railway' from 'Golden; "B.0.; to Fort Stale. - i When 'the 'old Keotenay: Oentral '| projegt to build from: Golden to Fort Bteels was abandoned: becauss of lack ef funds, after grading for alittle more 'than a dozen ;miles, many good mining propasitions fell' throug ] use of lack of trans: one of the number who made the ee ------------------ Kootenay Rivers, a continuation of runs up the western slope of the Roly Mountains from Guatemala, Ho! such streams as Horse Thief Creek, |e! and Kootenay Rivers, are vast min- [a been worked and have had much E far greater number of the rich min- eral claims are those which are waiting for the necessary capital|qa a done and splendid showings were |® al eaten up before the silver-lead got |! to the emelters. proved too expensive, so the pro- ject was abandoned until time should bring railroad facilities. The Paradise Mine, according to recent h valley of the Columbia, however, |& 0 minerals and as to its agriculture. He has developed both -and has! wide holdings both in mining claims p and in lands. Married recently to|a and his lands. When connected, this rich valley of the Columbia and Kootenay a of smelters available # ki MONSTERS IN AFRICA, A Agia, Elves Sugssétion of all mare animals not, yet known. One of ian, i 0. W. Hey, is somewhat latger than a - ena, ° with' large ears, and' thick, reddish-brown hair, with a slight eak of white down the hindquay: "It'is unlike the hairy -antt boar, which it seems to resemble, onthe Gori River, Lake Vic 'ped, and m leopard, two long white fangs from the, ,. upper jaw, armadillo-like seales, Jeopard-like spots, @ back as broad as a hi; Another monster of the natives is of man:like size, going sometimes | ask the h . . . urin where he will devote his attention ast ten years has been reduced ol i i less than $600,000,000. This ig to the development; of his nunes more Roma kan when {it is remember- ed how. the other countries of ithe world will be a Snot te nor ; Rs mi be Britt OR hE ; + * re" mtd For Which "thier She. taribla fatia ous lg valuable mediairiatly, Being pro- Ay +| to olergym The Dark Continent. Still Has Un- (breach grow teousisifiul® roe . his ¢ ey ji mown Animals: {heb anus, a broad | Sht : (lasgo foot with reptiles) 260,18, h0en"% done mesa bi of "a Yes; his customers a | wou ob -- "went ap,' ¥ Nobody A great it "He h Won the dis i aed' service order His versatil however, my ounced co 4 ; ead eo By of gl al Xe Hat 1otures Just piblisned Ww Di niember i tl SE A as an a \ BY set of with easy bounds. Still another shows atop of monument many feet above the groun had been e t tring became en ont 2 ul! ea St and the athletic ster quickly climbed up the monument al invited to unveil the monu- nd did his unveiling from the top. The Reform of the House of Lerds. 1 nt meets Premier As< uh an] emer a scheme for the re« 3 Lf house of lords in the sha mn Tosolutions which he wi ouse of commons to ® fterward he will found a bl upon em. tmaster General Samuel has stat« Pos ed definitely that they proposs to abols ish the hereditary principle altogether, throwing the upper house open to pop- lar election, the same as the commons, but the voting qualifications are being rranged upon a different The house of lords will, of course, re= which, with Chancellor of t existing interest themselves in the work use of lords, they will wh trenuously against being deprived o! the groat lead-silver zome which |PiuiuuoysiY, 8 King May Visit the United States. Rumors continue to crop up that King! : desi state visit tol uras, and the United Btates George Ia io nay a Slate of America, confirmed. nited States, but this cannot be The King intends to continue touring In the district from Golden to the Industrial (Sentres. | This year . he wi vis 8 0 TKS e Fort Steele, through the valley, shipbuilding centres 'of the Tyne. He 180 tends to pay a visit to Ports- : mouth, especially {f the French fleet re. Wild Horse River, and other well- turns an relay off Spithead, as hel known tributaries to the Columbia Wants to Inspect a foreign fleet. hen he returns to town he will gain give the occasional bachelor din- i ners which he inatftuted last year. They eral deposits. Some of these have were marked with a considerabia de~ ree of informality and were served in is private dining room in Buckingham capital invested in them. 'But the Palace, usually on Friday evenings. $8 to Stay Sober One Year, Twelve months ago Alderman Vernon Wragge, thrice Lord Mayor of York, nd new Recorder of Pontefract, offer- and transportation facilities. ed to twenty of the Inhabitants of York sovereign each if during the last year About fifteen years ago John |they were not once convieted for arume. nness, Out of this number seven were e Hays Hammond and Robert Ran- successful, and the other day they, with dolphe Bruce started operations on [their wives or husbands and riends, . + : were invited to tea, after which Mr. a series of rich claims known as the | Wrarre presented to toon of them a Paradise Mine. Some work was [savings bank pron Staining a deposit f one sovereign To encourage the winners in a thrifty : course the Alderman promised that to made. The ore was rich, but the | h transportation facilities were go [ed at the end of the vear, together with vhatever of the original amount remain= ny sum they might legitimately save, poor that all of the profits were [he would add 26 per cent. on January 1 916. The unsuccessful thirteen had v twenty-seven convictions in all between Pack trains | them during the year, while the twenty ad totalled nearly 200 convictions in the three previous years. Wealth of Britain Growing. Much has been written concerning the relief which will be afforded to th: . . money markets" when the savings o advices, will be re-opened in the [the French middle classes and peasantry : : are attracted by the French loan near future. It was in the rich which 1s shortly to be floated. Britons re apt, however, to overlook the growth f thrift in their own country and in that Robert Randolph Bruce did | their colonies. Whether tested by the q i { income tax returns, the deposits of the make his fortune. Along with many oint stock banks, the post office sav- others he recognized the possibili- ngs pank, the fostmulation of LL i t ah pi : n the hands of trade unions and friend ties of the district, both as to its ly societies or the contributions to the overnment insurance' scheme, the, niddle classes and working opulation f Great tain are becoming rudent in their expenditures. This is wealth "coffer" of undeniable import= nce, ensive methods of s reform an 2a v Although Britain has indulged in ex- Lady Elizabeth Northcote, he plans p f da to make his home at Invermore, | earmarked further large sums for this urpose {ts national bt ad £ the "nol 1. the re adding to their indebtedness, and powerful neighbors like Germany and Tr. ance are reduced to raising funds by . rt i means of assessed Rivers will have two outlets, one the wealthier classes. -oHoRs | from to the main line of the O.P.R. at|Bugland Gets North American Skunks. One natural result of the recent boom Golden, and 'the other 'to the {n furs is an attempt to breed fur bear Crow's Nest branch, through Fort. ng [imal fn England, Tn this con 8 large consignment of "North Bteele at Fernie. Then the range Amarin skunks has lately 'arrived, Sa: "| some of which will short) : r this ore led by Mervyn Chuts in Bre hi ato iy No tablish nclosure on nd.j exp & cribed for asthma; though an hma- an ran took a Bott of. it 8S Congr 1 me London, Fon: 46, "11 ws 5 ad relieved: his malady: but" dispers- Hob: | ie She wai' a wealthy old lady and 8 : it béing seen abroad in, light. [her loving nephew 'was most nx. 1] The es tell of Blas) mon-| ious to:make a good impression, d [8ter, Europeans have reported one| A | swimming, and am American'sports- | ment, aunt," he said. "Electricity Jas bas described a, creature. geen | 8 life, you know, and it'is especial- on i torian| 17 80 d in overcoming. yout com. ad | #8 "about fiftéén" feet long, with-a | Plant. ; : head: 'big as that of a lioness, but new-fangled il jack rked. like that. of a Font have He me, "You, should try electric iifirent- Riv: andr AOR "Now, George, don't try your, C ees Electricity, in. . Stuff and pansense! You % "well that'T was struck by 8 only a few months god ir ok $300 Tp he Spun ® riggs--I hear that Snip: the, Ey hey, Naim, 'dome . down" "80% --tailai stir ait

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