Durham Region Newspapers banner

Port Perry Star, 29 Jun 1910, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

; ther for two oun Rt for 'the othe: 8 and boil for another hour.| 8 2 Food relish for cold' meats m of Témato Soup.--Oream. tomato soup is made y and ily if made by the fol ranch ig Put two sanocepans on the 'In one put two and one-half] of milk and scald it. In the| ub two tablespoons. of but en it is. melted add three i Jospoons of flour and stir till th and bubbles. Then add the and stir till thickens, Then into this one 10 cent can of to- ito soup which has been heated. , not dilute the can of soup but use full strength. Heat and serve, 3 makes a «delicious, cheap and repared soup scalloped Tomatoss. --~Put in' a brown jar oue quart can of toma- toes, four tablespoontuls of well rice, four teaspoonfuls of Sugar, one green pepper sliced Pune, salt, Stir and add small piec-: 8 of butter. Bake rather slowly for one hour. Btir occasionally. so the rice will not settle at the bot- tom, Fried Tomatoes on Toast.--Dip ; of ripe tomato pancake bat- ar fry until tender and brown; e each fritter on a slice of warm uttered toast and' sprinkle with salt and pepper. Minced Beef in Tomato Bauce.-- edge Make any favorite tomato sauce and when hot add one cup of beef or any left over cooked meat which h has been put through food chop- oper. Oook up' once and send to ble garnished with parsley sprigs. CANNING. {Gooseberries.--To can gooseber-| 5 10 be nice and whole canned "tan Carved sponge. ay a8 "poretie'a Bhi of / over carving, 1 take . all the dus derghted with the it, arpets an ugs.--~Eight 'of salsoda; four ounces: borax, one-half pint of aloohol, o! pcund of white 89ap, five salon oi = water. po acire a he on water by ut in rs then add sods and - then add remaining four gallons water, 'stir, and then put in also-|& Lol. Tet stand an hour of two he- fcre using. Use with hair brush, scrub place about a yard square at a time. Take sponge; dipping in clear water, squeezing out as dry as possible, and wipe surface of car- pet or rug. Don't walk on the car- pet or rug while wet. THE SEWING ROOM. When sewing with silk thread al- ways use a new machine needle, as a blunt one causes the silk to draw cr pucker, Curtain Hint.--In making sash curtains of swiss, hem both sides! 'the width 'of the selvage; oné turn! ; 1s enough, They will wear longer, iron easier, and look a hundred per cent. better than with the selvage Kitchen Aprons.--Take as many widths and lengths as desired of ca: lico or gingham, sew together and om "both 'ends. 'Draw a tape through one end to tie around 'the waist; either end can be used to draw tape through. - When wai take out the tape and vou hate flax work to iron, 'Aprons made this way are made quicker than the! apron with band and strings, and ; laundered in half the time. en put as many quarts as desir- into a vessel," Have ready a ket- of boiling 'water, pour it over e berries, leave until they turn ite, which is only a few moments, im the berries out and put into jars. Have more boiling water an 1 pour over them in the jars un- til berries are covered. Seal im- mediately. = They are thoroughly *gonked when opened and will keep. To Can Rhubarb. --Wash careful yi cut in small pieces, fill jars that have been warmed (to avoid érack- ing); Then pour boiling: water cover it until the rhubarb is. well covered. Seal immediately, + Red Beets.~---Cook beets, small ones (if large, quarter them, after |: being cooked); have vinegar. sea- 'soned with salt; pepper; a little sugar, boiling hot, ready, and when "beets are put into the jars, pour the hot. (Vinegar over them. Hee that they '@ire well covered before sealing, but seal immediately. De- us when opened, i LUN USUAL RECIPES. Substitute for Meat --Put a 'can of peas with a cupful of milk into a pan, it scald, not boil; then 'add a tablespoontul of butter, salt and pepper to taste, and then add ean of shrimps, The entire cost abont 80 cents, and it' mikes a meal for several persons. Serve hot with toasted bread, érackers, or futons. Add, more milk if more Beco --A new way of liver and eon is to Padding Enbroidery. Work.--For | 1his lint cotton is much better than |: thread; moisten the finger tips and roll the cotton, size and len wanted, and put in place and work over it. No shrinking required, as most thread does. HOUSEHOLD "HINTS. A sprig of parsley eaten after on- ions or leeks, prevents the offensive] kErcath which other people, Milk may be kept from scorching. if the pan in which it is to be ook. od is rinsed i in cold water before the milk is poured in. To 'clean glass' globes soak them in: warm water and soda, 'add a 'few drops of ammonia to the water, and wash them with a well-soaked flan. nel. Rinse in clean cold water, dry with a soft piece of linen, and pol-| : ish with a newspaper. Finger-mark stains on doors and cupboards vanish as though by en- chantment when hehly with 'a piece of flannel dipped in kerosene oil. In: order to take away the disagreeable odor of. he. oil; xub- the door down with a clean flannel wrung out: water. is. so. annoying: to To improve the color of the Bands : if red, try the following mixture: Take equal parts of rosewater, le: fon. juice. and gen, : these thoroughly and a. Ri the hands liberally every ith this' preparation. It' ne shaken before use. id 'Few. people know outside | sheets properly upon 1 8hake them 11 while borax, mix, | P 1 An Old Testament expression washed | 4s. the Tetters, rubbed; Lt men to conceal their wealth { this way, because of the uncerta its hiding The an afford to wait until the Be row. 'ers above the pulse, parsley, 'mint ("ten feet amongst brushes, and not. than whi horse and his rider'), so that; to all intents, it has the appearance of § tree. The birds , . . come and Joins r the spread of a great kingdom, giv- ing shelter to many (Ezek. 81. 6; Dan. 4. 9-18). The application of the parable is self-evident. = From a period of precarious life amidst persecutions and toils, the kingdom of heaven has gradually enlarged ite Sway till it has become a world- wide protector of the poor and op- pres essed, and a power that can no onger be neglected in any of the councils of men. During the nine- teenth century the number of the aaherents of Christianity increased more than in all the preceding gen-| tories of the Christian ers. 83.. yLeaven -- The fermented dough! lightons it. Bcientists have disco that this effect is pro: duced by tiny living organisms spread through 'the leaven in large Rumbas. Inasmuch as leaven gives reeable taste and odor fo the be , yeast is now much more 'comménly. ui Three medsures--No significance attaches to the number, The seah wae the recognized unit of mea- surement. especially in the case of dry. substances. It was equal te about one peck and a half. Till it 'was all 'leavened--This took 'place by 'the influence of the Heaven, first upon the articles near whe At wag hid, 'then, through se. upon'; 'sll 'She rest. Such persuasive true Christianity upon the life of 'mankind. | Beginning with: Christ, 'it bas spread through the apostles, : then through the early. chureh, Ee 'the: introduction of 'the powerfull ca dually working to transform entire mass. The meal is the whole complex life of men, arty commerce, religion. : The Christian disciple must - bring - to bear upon all these the 'force of his leaven- ing faith and love, and penetrate them with his ideals, § 44, A treasure hidden in the field ~In the East it was not unusual]? in jenwre of property. Often, because of their Master presenting 'influence of Gardiner, is "Greater than the herbs--Tt tow ; 'high; drawn. i» : wd'7y Cas tall an the ar old and new in a new way, Ti a thiough the vehigle of somitonplaca facts and expetiences of life nature. ; ¥ : ¥ a i, TREASURE IN FIAN TO 'REGAIN $20,000,000 FROM THE OCEAN. Captain Gardiner Gives Account of Fortunes to he Won from : Neptune. Previous to the 'opening of the Buez Canal in © 1870 all British transports and 'East Indiamen nade the voyage to and from the East by way of the Cape of Good Hope. ' Many were wrecked. Most of these wrecks lie close to the shore; and all a salve their contents were, un ite' re: cently, attended by great and in riost cases insuperable difficulties, owing to the inefficiency of diving ana salving "apparatus and the practical impossibility of removing *he sand with which 'most vessels submerged 'for some years are co ered, hr il BETTER DIVING APPARATUI During: the last few years, how- Svs, great strides have been ma ting divin, apparatus, & i much greater depth than was heve-| tofore possible. = At the same time centrifugal pumps now available renders it possib 'to remove large guantities of sand in a ery short | The time, An experienced mariner, Captain saperistend the 9 erations on Evident aly they are Dlontifal ook south, fo s stated 'that after the' vicissitudes of * life, the |? claimed in | wealth 'would remain uni lace. A man skcer accident upon the treasure, lite.- Many a man s himself, confronted a nob} without: seeking at all, is true to Sods ound--His coming by 820, WRECKS ik i "The 'above tour. wieiks 1: lcoated and surveyed, as 'I ha and! twelve others. es these six teen wrecks, the contents of hia A I have ascertained, sixteen further) wrecks remain, all 'of which T have med lceated, but not yet surveyed.' ¥ interosta, - Thus, only a matter of $399,000, posed were sin which the company desires to com- of. increasin mence business 'with, is: needed 'to hy collect untold treasure from the: depths of Father Neptune's realm: |; Steir a | They. thea Began 4 to. newed ener; Tey MILK-BOTTLING MACHINE. | the fruits td labor; Se Has o Capacity of" 7,650 Bottles an y 5 Hour. © i The filling of milk bottles by or- dinary methods is such a tedious task for large metropolitdn milk a companies that a machine to Hee the| Improvemen work has become an absolute ne-| = cessity. The latest: form of wilk-| bottling machine is operated by two | ren, .one to operate the machine To itself, the other 'to see that it is properly fed with bottles; it has a capadity of 7,680 bottles an hour. Each operation, which takes about |" fifteen seconds, fills "with milk twelve quart 'bottles in and twenty pint Jott almost pot merely - improvin Phd Th of line, m Japee Paid fo it By bate 2 idle' of spouts from which the 3 he milk g- | hidden now practicable to work at ala a been improved and: 'made more abi: gomplissted, So that varions 1 have to be Sued inthe pel

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy