Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 23 Nov 1916, p. 6

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b. WANTED FOR THE ROYAL NAVY Two thousand CariadUnt are wanted for the Royal Naval Canadian Canadian Volunteer Reserve towards manning the new ships of the Imperial Royal Navy. Immediate oversea* service.. Only men of good character and good physique accepted. Pay $1.10 Minimum per day---Tree Kit $20.00 per Month Separation Allowance 'v n o - -, » i Apply , to the nearest Naval Recruit. Jng Station," or to the Dept, or the Neral Service OTTAWA The flavor added by , the celery and green pepper is. delicious. • Beef Rolls.---Cut a thin slice of round stride into sud stipe, lay each piece on the meat board and cover it with a strip of thinly sliced bacon. Add a seasoning of, salt, pepper., and sweet herbs or onion juice. Roll up each strip and tie it securely; then dredge it in flour. Put a teaspoonful teaspoonful of butter in the frying pan and when it is very hot lay the rolls in it. Fry them until they are brown, then add three quarters of a glass of hot water. Cover the pan and cook thé meat slowly until the beef,is very tender. tender. Serve the strips hot with the gravy, poured over-them. Capon of Pork.--Have a prime leg of young pork boned. Fill the cavity with equal parts of finely chopped apple apple and celery, then sew it up and tie it carefully. Plunge it into well-salted well-salted boiling water. " Add the outer "stalks and Reaves of a head of celery, two bay leaves, and one cupful of cider vinegar. Let the meat boil gradually until the skin begins to crack, then remove it from the water, peel off the skin and press into the fat two dozen whole peppercorns. Cover all the. fat and lean, part of the meat with a paste made by mixing together together one cupful of flour, two thirds of a cupful of Brown sugar, four tablespoonfuls of evaporated horseradish, horseradish, and sufficient cider, vinegar to make the mixture stiff. Then,place the meat in a rather slow oven, fat side up, and bake it until paste and fat are x browned through. Serve it either hot or cold. wnrn nfcm stomach--aodht, HE ADACH ES -- CONSTÎPÀTI 0II - ARE SIGNS OF INDIGESTION. IncHgestion-y thé -'complété or partial failure of the digestive processes--frequently processes--frequently throws out of gear the whole machinery of the body. You can't enjoy the vigour and vitality of good health unless your stomach, liypr and bowels do their work regularly and'efficiently. MOTHER KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT F. F. DALLEY CO. OF CANADA. LTD., HAMILTON. CANADA Unusual Potato Recipes. You may feel altogether like having having potatoes at two meals out of three during these days of sharpened appetite, appetite, but,, of course, you don't want them served in the same way. No, not even the homely changes of boiled, boiled, baked, mashed or fried are sufficient sufficient if you eat potatoes .often enough raise the ration little by little, and to leave the horses practically idle.; W If horses, "due-to - a - Hard season's work^tfre in low condition, they should be fed : up to their" normal weight before before being left aside for thë wintér/ and enough exercise should be,allowed during that period to prevent, stock? ing. - Another , good thing is to .give a purgative so as to clean out the system system before the long rest. One should also remember that some animale are more restless than others and dissipate dissipate more energy, which means that more food will be required, so that the above mentioned quantities should be be increased or decreased slightly, according, according, to circumstances. Mixed hay, for this purpose, can be of any grass or . weed which horses will eat, must not 1 be mtfsty, and should not be worth more than half of timothy. Roots may be carrots, mangels mangels or swedes, though the first are always always liked, and the two latter . are ! sometimes refused at first, which re- quires skill on the part of the feeder | to have enough eaten ; if roots are not given, bran should form part of the ration, as animals at rest will soon get costive and will not thrive very well on dry roughages alone. Oat straw should be used, as it is more palatable than other sorts. It would probably . be well to chaff at least half thé hay and straws but as the idea is to lower expenses, there seems no doubt that the cost of cutting these roughages would be greater than that of the extra feed necessary to supply the energy used in masticating them. The roots were , sliced, most of the time, for the ex- ! periments, and it seems better to give | them thus^ though it is not absolutely -- --= a - j necessary- as long as they are not of roni is to be cooked in. This will I S " ch si , Ze ? as to . be swallowed whole, prevent its sticking and burning. Do not use the best cuts of meat for stews and hashes. Shin of beef ; „ . .* -- ~:r and fed as previously described, did SYRUP As a .digestive tonic and stomachic remedy* Mother SeigeVs Syrup is esteemed in tens of thousands of homes, wherever thé English language Is spoken. If you suffer mudfi dr lime from disorders of the stomach, fiver ? T b ,° we ,' 8 ' tr Y the effect" of taking 15 to 30 drops of this famous remfedy *P water, after, meals, for a few days, apd note its beneficial effects. ASSISTS " ' DIGESTION The newl.OOsize contains three times as much as the trial size sold at EOc per bottle. JC U CONTAIN» no alum. - _ wTW n * : ■ The only well known medium prloed baking- powder made In Canada that does not contain alum ancf which : has all; Ita -Ingredient* ; plainly stated on the label. E.VV.GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED £ w.nm.peq TORONTO. ONT.- =1HI Thi« «/ill 1-- , 7 u uc swauowea wnote rninp- when the ^ e may be dan ff er of choking. It was noticed at Cap Rouge that th e !egs of horses kept .in box stalls, ' m-i -. - , ■ , -,. ! an d neck of mutton are the best for , r , ., . . There, is no reason why you should j these. - not stock up. If there is no box stall, not have the wholesome, substantial | it helps greatlv on ironing dav to H * S ad , vis ' able to turn the animals out tuber regularly and frequently. When j have two or three sizes of irons 7 in 1 eVSI 7 day ' when the weather permits, ordinary serving of potatoes begins eluding a tiny one to " sret into' the i t° they may take some, exercise. ° J In this case, it is probable that some- ! what more feed will be needed, to We c/'e Headquarters for Toboggans and Snowshoes Our specialties are TOBOGGANS, Cushions , Snow- shoes, Snowshoe Mocassins and harness, harness, Skis, Ski harness, harness, etc. W e s , hair he pleased to mail our catalogue on request. Canadian Toboggan Manufacturing Company, 413 ONTARIO ST. EAST, MONTREAL,, .QUE. to pall, try some of these recipes: Cheese Potatoes.--Scrub the potatoes potatoes and cut them in half. Spread each half with a little butter, sprinkle with pepper and salt and place a slice of cheese on top. Put on a slightly greased p'an and bake in a hot oven until soft and nicely browned. Stuffed Cream Potatoes.--Make a potato c .ie by peeling and slightly hollowing out some potatoes of even size. Boil them in salted water until tender, when they can be drained and stuffed. Fill either with hot buttered buttered peas, beans, chopped anchovies or forcemeat, as desired. Then pour over a dressing consisting of hot cream seasoned with salt, pepper and a dash of paprika. Potato Dressing.--One cupful of gathers. When making tea the quality of the tea. will be improved if the tea pot is rinsed with hot water just before before using. When using stale bre^d for stuffings stuffings or puddings, always soak it in cold water, nob hot, and squeeze it dry as possible make-up for the lost energy and heat. & As to the number of times" to feed, it seems that twice a day is sufficient, and that about the same quantity can be given both morning and evening. WINTERING HORSES CHEAPLY. Brief Article By One of the Officers of the Department of Agriculture. Below are given some results obtained obtained at the Experimental Station, Cap Rouge, Que., in the cheap winter- * 4. ., , v .ling of idle horses. The methods foi- tomatoes,- one-h^lf cupful of shredded l owed and the feeds used were such as pimentos, one-half cupful of mush- e bULn as rooms, two tablespoonfuls of chopped onions, two tablespoonfuls of flour, FATHER OF 10 OUT OF NAMES. About the House Useful Hints and General Information Information for the Busy Housewife - .X Meat Dishes. Little "Turkeys."--Spilt pork tenderloins tenderloins lengthwise, but._do not.jquite ... „ ^ e P a ** a ^ e them. Fill then; with a good ! the rabbit into the dish, add two read dressing, seasoned to taste; fas- ! tablespoonfuls of cider vinegar, and one large, onion, and add half a teaspoonful teaspoonful of salt, a sprinkling cf black pepper and a little Cayenne. Put- two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt, pepper, paprika. Boil tomatoes, .mushrooms, pimento and onion together, together, then add seasoning and thicken with the flour and butter rubb#d to a cream, Stir until smooth. Sweet Potato Soup.--Two cupfuls of milk, two cupfuls of stock, one- mashed sweet potato, one tablespoonful tablespoonful of flour, one-half tablespoonful"of butter, one-half beasponful of onion juice, one-half teaspoonful of salt, I one-half teaspoonful of pepper, one | small stick of cinnamon. ' Mix butter butter and flour in double boiler, add milk, stock and seasoning and stir over fire until it thickens. Then add sweet potato. Strain into soup dishes and serve wibh a sprinkling of parsley and a dash of nutmeg Mayor Refuses to Let Him Christen Baby "Verdun Salonica." Children's names in France can only be chosen from the calendar (which contains all the saints) and from ancient ancient history, except by special permission permission to be obtained from the State Attorney. At Nice the Guardian of the cemetery cemetery wished to registrar his latest child, a son, as "Verdun Salonica, ^ en ^ be sides together with sharp toothpicks, then, bake ^the "turkeys" v- t* renty " fi . ve Hautes in a pan in which there is enough water to cover the bottom. Serve them with a gravy made from the liquor left in the pan. cover the meat with small pieces of bacon. Now pour, over it enough hot water to cover it well, cover the dish, and let it remain in a slow oven. When you are ready to serve the rabbit, pile it in the centre of a deep plat- - - ; ter, thicken the gravy and pour it Smothered Sausages.--You may use round the meat. either fresh or cured, sausages. If you use. the cured ones, remember to prick them before you place them in the pan. If you see fresh sausage meat, mould it into small, flat cakes and place these in the bottom of a greased baking pan.' Add a layer of seasoned, mashed potatoes Then cover all,ÿvith two well-beaten eggs, dusb £ with fine bread or cracker crumbs, and bake the dish in a moderate moderate oven for half ;an hour. - bugged Rabbit.--Wash and dismember dismember the rabbit, then wipe each piece ary. Into a- stone baking dish slice Baked Calves' Hearts.--Wash the hearts thoroughly inside and out, then fill the cavities with a dressing made of stale bread crumbs, méfted butter and hot water, seasoned with salt and pepper. When you have (filled thé" cavities fasten the openings with thread. Dust the hearts with salt and' pepper, and arrange them in a baking baking dish, in which there is a cupful of hot water. Sprinkle over the surface surface of the water one cupful of minced minced celery and green pepper. Cover the hearts and bake them slowly, basting basting them frequently -with the water. require a The Flavor Lasts-- In the making of Grape-Nuts there is added to the sweet, rich nutriment of whole wheat, the rare flavor of malted barley, a combination creating a most unusually unusually delicious taste. The palate never tires of it. People everywhere have found that Grape-Nuts is tbe înost nutritions and delicious cereal food known. Every-table should have Its daily ration of Grape-Nuts. s a Reason" M*de In C*e*4*--ByXfcnndian. Pdtium Ôé^aJ.<Jo.;T.td:. Windsor, Ont Household Hints Cakes without butter quick oven. Medicine stains can be removed from linen with strong ammonia. Never moye a cake in the oven until the centre is thoroughly set. Ginger cookies are improved if mixed with coffee instead of water. French-fried potatoes dipped in cornmeal before frying are excellent. To make perfect tea, remember-- good tea., boiling water and a. hot teapot. When mixing a cake, never beat the butter, sugar or eggs in a tin- basin. y A bit of vaseline will remove hiil- dew or stains from any kinds of leather. leather. - Toothbrushes should, be dried in the open air and the sun should shine on them. A pinch of salt in the whites of eggs will make them beat much more quickly.- The important point about making good coffee is to use the water at the first boil. Milk .will not boil over if the sauce pan is battered on the upper part and edge. Cane chairs can be cleaned by • sponging them until soaked with soap 1 and hot water. White paint is best cleaned with a cloth squeezed out in hot water , and dipped in a little bran. > . . Iron garments which have buttons by laying them face down on a thickly thickly folded sheet : or Turkish towel. _ To make a faded dress white, boil it in two gallons of water in which a •half-cupful of tartar is .dissolved, j .Apples, cored and filled with chopped chopped dates or figs, then baked, make an excellent breakfast dish. When wishing real lace.. . let the Anal rinsing be in skim milk, if you wôuld grive it a soft, creamy tone. Always butter the. saucepan tnaca- to make the plan applicable to, and , , x* U aiumra, worth a trial in, practically all parts but the Mayor refused to accept such of the Dominion. a name, as being contrary to the law. Help is scarce, high-priced, and Tbe father urged patriotic grounds oftentimes unreliable, so that large an( i "was able to plead he had fifteen implements and more working stock children to name, ten being still alive, have to be employed. It is not always and . 50 names were somewhat exhaust- possible to buy a good team at a ed in the family, reasonable price in the spring, while Tbe Mayor was obdurate and the it is often hard to get a decent figure father determined. He took the case for the same animals in the autumn. to vhe .Procureur of the Republic (the It would thus seem advisable, whpn P . ublic Prosecutor) and obtained a de- the ground freezes, to lay aside, as ï£ cision in his favor. were, for the winter, all horses which i "* absolutely required and to ! The Best of the Bargain. outrim^afrhMr^h^ 1 ^ pt)ssib ^ e with ~ | You get a bargain when you get k H th t future usefulness. ' The Youth's Companion for 1917 for To gather data upon this subject, " $2.25--52 issues crowded from cover 1 an experiment was started at the Cap .to cover with the reading yo™ ZZ ' Rouge Station in 1911 and has been enjoy. But you get the lfest of the I writers'* with^ mares ^ , cons ^ ative • bar * a m if you subscribe the minute j winters, with mares and ; geldings, yotr read this, for then you will s-et ! some nervous, others quiet, aged , five free every number of The Companion 1 fhflt 1 yea I S ' n* haS been f0Und issued 'tween the time you subscribe ' that they fared well on a daily ra- ^nd New Year's. If you send your Dound f naft P0Und ^ one "J 2 - 25 ' a * once thatmeans a . lot of i pound oat straw, and one pound car- reading for which you won't have to nnnJ r ^ ? h one hundred " pay a cent. And then the long! glori- pounds of their weight., Not only did ous 62 w .s of Companion reading I they gam an average of twenty-nine to come after! Let us send you thf ' pounds during the five months of the Forecast for 1917, which tells all test, but they showed, the following about what is in store for-Companion season, that they had lost no vitality readers in 1917. Our offer includes nor energy. . j 1.: The Youth's Companion--52 is- J-he rule generally followed was to ; sues of 1917. 2. All the remaining gradually cut down the work, also the' issues of 1916. 8. The Companion feed, from November 1 until Novem- ' Home Calendar for 1917. The Youth's ber 15 when the animals under test ' Companion, 40 St. Paul St Boston were placed in box stalls. They never ? Mass. ' ' went out, during the winter, with the ' exception of an occasional drive of a mile or. so. . On April 15, easy jobs were given to them and a " f Not Guilty. Little Charlie had been spanked by email r.• „ ' ai'H-mtea oy .quantity of concentrates wassail owed 13 ™ oth ® r for stealing cookies. His until by May 1 • 1 harness ten hours a dav and werp nn v Î. ' a a * , ± ^ oor Charlie! not tt^be St"* ^ ^ not to; be. forgotten,: . : i0 lower and have not! I didnt touch it!" , -CAKES li-'i O Î - o <2 ïS'i; Dog Is Globe Trotter. V ' Mitch, a Scotch terrier, was rescued from the sea three years ago by Capt. Haines of the steamship Somerset. Since then the dog has been around the world twice, through the war zone and the shadow of the revolutions of Mexico and Haiyti. Whenever he sights a vessel, if his master is not on deck, he /runs to his cabin and . barks or paws at the door. * Naturally. Ethel Poor Jack! When he proposed proposed to me he acted like a fish out of water. r rx ' Marie--Why shouldn't he? He? knew he was caught. A loss of dollars sometimes brings the spendthrift to his senses. A man who trusts no one doesn't know what real disappointment is. Hi m Are you taking advantage of ALL the modern methods of saving time and trouble ? Are you up-to-date in you? shaving as well as in your work? Are you using a eg In its own way the Gillette is as quick, efficient and convenient as your milker, your binder or your telephone. It compares with other razors as these modem inventions compare 'with the things they have replaced. Without honing, stropping or fussing, the Gillette will give you the easiest ànd most comfortable shave you evër enjoyed, in five minutes or less ! It makes shaving an eVery-day pleasure instead of an irksome irksome twice-^-week job. Bulldog", "Aristocrat" and Standard Gillette Sets cost $5.--"Pocket J Editions. $5 and $6--Combination Sets $6.50 up. You can buy them at Hardware, Drug, Jewelry, Men's Wear and General Stores. Gillette Safety Razor Co. of Canada, Limited | Office and Factory : Gillette Building, MONTREAL. British Plantation ..JBnbher Is Saving Canada Mil Low Prices of Rubbers and Overshoes Due to Britain's Control of Situation Canada many of us have fallen into the c rx Anglo-Saxon habit of considering the " Mother of Parliaments " slow and a bit behind the times. The present pnee of rubber, when its cause is revealed, affords one of the many proofs that such an opinion' is away off the mark. - / ■ 1 th ^ han lc s to ^great.rubber plantations established, in în W C + of . Cr l tl S sm . a . nd ' ridlc ule, many years before m her tropical Dominions, Great Britain at the out- break of war held a firm and tightening grip on the world s supply of raw rubber---a grip reinforced by her dominating navy, From 60% in U914, the production ot these plantations has grown this year to 75% of the whole world's output, leaving only about half the requirements of the United States alone to come from all other sources. ennTmnii?^ th& ? thë needs of th « Allies, ' ■nîipü ? b-i th n Ugh they 1 are ' have been plentifully supplied, supplied, while ^Germany has been reduced to reu&tcred D tK t5Gh J an ^ V ini desperate attempts Î? Ji er ^ er famme -- Neutrals have been fowl. % aU fUt) V 1 * W waht, at -prices actually lower than before the war, so long as : they nrevent any of at from reaching the enemy, while Canfda and other parts of the Empire have an abundant suoply at equally favorable Government regulated pricesV- rn « n an< ^ areneroelty of the British Govern- ' ■hoes-through this winter to-protect thés? «rifnTt r ? ver " or rubber farm shoes to replace toem bmÆÏ shoes, thrift-it is grateful patriotism, fo?*In we make it easier for the Government to secure thl Both Thrift and Patriotism Point io Rubbers 1 î ^ fias as |

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