West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 20 Sep 1928, p. 3

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Maddocks SHER'I‘ON r destruction. Moms of soap ria cells or or- through their n their death. :teria difl'er in ' reactions to never teat. \IT susceptible of ients of scan- :. on Page 7. Service 'st 'oronto ed 8 the use .2 50 2 .20 i8- 00 £33.00 I .00 3.50 .3 0.. Mixed Sweet Pickles “ quarts green tomatoes. 3 green peppers. 3 red peppers. 1 quart tiny onions. 1 quart pickling cucumbers. 2 cups sugar. 3 pints vinegar. 1 teaspoon cloves. '2. inches stick cinnamon. 2 bay leaves. Slice the tomatoes very thin. remove the seeds and white fibre from the peppers and cut them into strips. and peel the onions. Place these in- gredients. with the cucumbers which have been washed. in a large jug and cover with brine. Let stand over- night. In the morning. drain thor- oughly then pour two quarts of cold vsater over the vegetables to remove anv excess salt. Add the sugar. vine- gar and spices tied in cheeseclOth and simmer for ten minutes. Drain and in; ho: over the pickle and seal. To pickle dried fruitsâ€"figs. prunes. apricots or peaches. soak them over- night in water to cover and in the morning simmer until tender in the same water. Drain. then cook for twenty minutes in the syrup given in the Sweet Pickle Formula. Such hard ingredients as Citron. cantaloupe. or watermelon rind should be allowed to stand over-night in brine or alum water (Brineâ€"one halI cup of salt to one quart of water. AI- um waterâ€"two teaspoons of powdered alum to one quart of water). and cook- ed until tender in fresh water. then thoroughly drained before being added to the syrup. To pickle canned fruits such as pineapple. peaches. or cherries. mea- sure the syrup from the can. Add to it half as inuch vinegar with addition- al sugar if required. The spices may be in the same prOportion as given in Sweet Pickle Formula. little nutriment, but they theflow of saliva and gas and. if taken in moderation] to digestion. _. Sweet pickles may be 1 Soak the peaches, rub ofi the skins with a rough cloth and cook in the pickle syrup until tender, but not broken. , Green. or slightly under-ripe fruits 4:13 vegetables make firmer, crisper pickles than those which have fully matured. A spicy syrup is used as the founda- tion f or any variety. us by Lily Haxworth Wallace: Sweet Pickle Formula pounds any desired fruit or vegetable, all spices together into a cheese cloth spices together until the sugar: is .dis- solved. Add the fruit and simmer un- til the fruit is clear and tender. Turn into jars and cover with the boiling syrup. Peel and cut the pears into halves unless the fruit is very small. Pro- ceed as for pickled peaches. Sweet Pickled Apples Core and peel. then cut the apples into quarters. Proceed as for pickled peaches. Add a little lemon rind to the pickle syrup. as well as from a few Come in Chat Awhile â€"Rnth Raqhnrn. Sweet Pickled Peaches Sweet Pickled Pears themselves a, are an aid vegetables. The symptoms of trichinosis begin with fever. diarrohea and other intes- tinal symptoms. followed by pains in the muscles and joints. The onset of these pains is coincidental with the lodgment of the embryos in the mus- cles. The ankles and eyelids become swollen. The fever may be continuous. and it may persist for several weeks. About five in every hundred cases die. Heat readily destroys the parasite. Fresh pork. then. should be eaten only when the whole meat is white and bears no trace of red in any portion of it. The red juices are hat for roas: pork. no matter how desirous they may be with roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. Sausages and all Other pork. products must be thoroughly cooked The eggs of this worm which are present in the infected pork may lodge in the intestines of the person eating the meat: they later develop into full- grovm worms. the embryos of which find their way into the lymphatic sys- tem. finally lodging in the muscles. In severe cases as many as 50,000.000 embryos have been found. 'I‘richinosis is a disease which is produced in man following the eating of pork infected by a small worm trichinella spiralis. This parasite is found in hogs and rats. In fact. rat: constitute natural reservoirs of the infection. and the disease is passed from rat to hog and from hog to rat in continuous cycles. Quick lime should be either slaked or ground to facilitate uniform distribu- tion. One method. is to place the lime in small heaps of about a bushel each at regular distances on the field. Add a little water (about one-third the weight of the lime) and cover the heap with an inch or two of moist soil and allow to remain for two or three weeks. Mix the slaked lime with a little soil and spread with a shovel choosing preferably a damp day for the work. An average rate of applica- Slaked lime is somewhat unpleasant to handle and may be most conveni- ently applied by the use of a lime spreader. If ap; lied from a wagon box. the caustic acnion of the lime on the hands and clothes may be reduced by mixing it with a little fine soil. bearing materials should be such as to ensure as even a distribution as possi- ble. Thebestmethodisbytheuseoi a lime spreader. A very satisfactory type of machine is one designed to fit on the end of a wagon box, the mech- anism being driven from a drive sproc- ket attached to the hub of the wagon wheel. Fairly satisfactory distribution may also be made with a shovel from a wagon box. - Ground limestone and marl are the materials most widely used in supply- ing lime to the soil and may be readi- ly applied by the above methods. The usual rate of application is about 2 tons per acre but as low as V: to 1 ton per acre will very often prove of great benefit even on fairly acid soils. Marl should be well air-dried and broken down before being applied. ing the ' distribution to the ploughed land and incorporating with the .sur- face soil by . harrowing. They should. not be ploughed under since the ten- dency is for all lime compounds to be washed. down through the soil by the applied in either spring or fall; 'pro- Pablyfhe _be§t time is in the fall mak- The more commonly used forms of lime for application to the soil are : l‘ . i -on 0‘ qt“ WHY PORK MUST BE COOKED THOROUGHLY The methods of application of lime THE APPLICATION OF LIME COMPOUNDS (Experimental Farms Note) ick 1:12: is about one ton per r. marl, quick lime and Dutch official reports showed that 137 decoys each catch an average of 5000 migratory ducks per season. while one decoy alone on the island of Sylt. accounted for more than 45,000. Dr. Lonnberg further declared that com- putations based on the number of rings returned to markers by hunters who shot ringed birds show that at least 35 percent are slaughtered. The conference urged the league to convene an. international conference to make a treaty rigorously proteCting all birds while on their way to and in. their breeding haunts and forbidding their shooting after March lst in Europe and North America and Sept. 1 in countries of the southern hemisphere. Dr. Pearson mentioned one sports- man who had accounted for 50.000 ducks during his lifetime. and Dr. Lonnberg. a Swedish National Museum authority. said that netters in Holland take 30.000 golden plovers yearly. According to an American delegate, 10,000,000 wild ducks at an average costâ€"to the sportsmanâ€"of 4 pounds per duck. were slaughtered in the Un- ited States last year. An alarming de- cline is also reported from Great Bri- tain. Scandinavia, and other northern countries where ducks congregate in the summer. Dr. Pearson pointed out that in Mexico City dead migratory ducks have been piled 12 feet high and sold for two pence each, while gold- en plovers. which are rapidly becom- ,ing extinct, are served on many ocean After patient investigation, ornith- ologists discovered that thousands of storks are being killed in the Trans- vaal, South Africa, through eating poisoned grasshoppers. The storks being regarded as a great sanitary as- set in Holland, the South African Government is to be asked to take measures to prevent their destruction. As whales have been recognized by the League of Nations economic com- mittee as economic assets of immense importance. the international commit- tee has now decided to ask the league to take up the protection of birds. The mystery of the rapid decrease of storks in Holland, Where they are rigorously protected. and. the melan- choly spectacle of their now empty homes on the chimney tops, which have been occupied for centuries, was explained at a meeting of the Inter- national Committee for Bird Protec- tion at Geneva. Above are shown Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, prime minister of Canada, and P. B. Kellogg, secretary of state for the United States, photo- LAUGH AND LIVE LONG WILD FOWL VANISHING THE DURHAM CHRONICLE At present I am wondering: will the nine bachelor bishops remain among the ninety and nine who need no re- pentance. or will they see the error of their ways ?" "Neither a man nor a woman in dis- tress is going to seek out a bachelor "to confide in him or turn to him for guidance. Married people, however ignorant they are. know more about love than any bachelor. If some people were tc think twice before speaking they would never say the weight of power. A priest has to be the father of his flock. How can he fill this role unless he knows some- thing of the dignity of fatherhood ? and imfiroves every man. Marriage is one of the “worth whiles’ of living. A married man has a greater influence socially and spiritually. We do not want the lure of the unattached male to enter into diocesan work. A happi- ly married man carries more weight than a dozen bachelors. I am not al- iuding to the weight of character, but "What foolish creatures they are! No man is complete Without a woman and. the church should draw the best of men. “A bachelor has no one to point out his faults: No one but a wife would dare to tell him that his sermons are too long or that he is vain or pomp- ous. Nobody tells him. and so his faults and. weaknesses increase as he grows older. graphed on ship-board, just before reaching Paris, Where they, with rep- resentatives of fourteen other nations, signed the Kellogg anti-war pact. ' "In my opinion. the reason is usu- ally selfishness. I really believe that some of them think no woman’s good enough for them and that the woman would spoil their intellectuallty. “Marriageâ€"I am assuming it is a happy marriage of courseâ€"mellows “Why are they bachelors ? If they think married life handicaps a man in his career of intellectual develop- ment. why is it that the Bishops are always the first to cry “Hands off the home” and talk about the sanctity of home life and advocate large families. BACHELORHOOD IS A The appointment of a bachelor as Archbishop of Canterbury has evoked many protests. and foremost is that of the novelist. Winnifred Graham, who says: “I feel some protest ought to be made about the increasing celibacy in the church," she said. “The appoint- ment of the bachelor Dr. Lang to the Archbishonric of Canterbury has at- traction to the fact that there are nine bachelor Bishops. GROWING DISEASE BRING THE PIANO The Wife ( to husband loaded with luggage at railway station)â€"I 'wish we’d brought the piano, dear. “Don’t try to be funny.” ‘ “But I left the tickets on it.”â€"The Traveller. And when the day of darkemng shadows come, make the ceremony short, and let me deserve the simple epitaph, “Here lies a man. ”-â€"Current Topics. Teach'me that sixty,‘minutes make an hour, sixteen ounces a pound, and one hundred cents a dollar. Help me to live so that. I‘can lie down at night with a clear conscience and undaunted by the faces of those I have brought pain. Grant that I may earn my meal ticket on the square, and in earning it, that I may do unto others as I would have them do unto me. Deafen me to the jingle of tainted money. Blind me to the faults of others and reveal to me my own. Guide me so that each night when I look across the table at my wife, who has been a blessing to me, I will have nothing to conceal. Keep me young enough to laugh with little children and sympathetic and considerate of old age. It will pay you to advertise in The Chronicle. young. ”â€"1138. MORE, 18 W Ave” Tmom GUflD‘ADVIBE FROM MOTHER PONTIAC S X Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound J" PEBDWUU ELM? ‘15 £11 £131: EE§§ {Pewai‘a’ing AYBW [Pa/130911191115 In a '3‘uccess/é/ $1} 'â€"’ LMAN’S PRAYER “nwkficWWPq-ufl-I“ *bf-zq. New,smarta,smallawheels,withhtgettira, furthaenhancethesparkfingwatyofponfiac’n "BodybyFishef. YouandrivePontiacSixasfarandasfma youwishwithpetfectpaceofmindandseaxrity. AllofPoetiac’sfamousstaninaistha-e.. and aflthequalhyfammwhidawonponfiacin amazingmasintbepast. .thefamomG-Mck Cylinder-had; the fWfled hadhgns; theImejoyHydmficShock-Absorbagctc. Spectacularmconldnothdpbmmdthin most moan evidmce of Pouches mu: Comebandlamvhyl’cnn'acisvhnhgh- Sweepingncwrefinmwts in the sturdy Pontiac Six-cylinderenginc . . for example, New Marvel carburetogimprovedmanifolding..addnev andgratasmoothnastopontiacpaformance. M. GR EIG CALDER 0F SEVEN LWAYS a grat w . . always an outstanding L value . . always a ”Successful Six” . . Pontiac Durham, Ontario The head of the Liquor Board in cries in that province which. naturauy, will also be the vieWpoint of the ex- isting breweries.â€"Lethbridge Herald. A little green upon the hill, A little glade, a little rill, A little day with skies above, A little night where shadows move A little work for men to do, A little play for such as you, A passing night. a coming morn, A passing love, a passing scorn; 0f blackest cloud a little bit, with silver on the rim of it, A little trouble, lots of joyâ€" And there you have a world, my boy. A little rain, 3 little sun .wnn IS A when». not nor: PAGE 3.

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