Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 28 Oct 1904, p. 3

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'7" ._.___ $ €666€€€€€€€€€§€<€€€€€€@x A About the ....H0use " @§§3)>99§D>’9>)9)99>§9) DOMESTIC RECIPES. I Venetian Cakeâ€"One half cup bull- ter creamed with half a cup of pow- dered sugar; add the yolks of three eggs beaten light, one and a hqu cups of flour and a, teaspoonful of vanilla. Blanch and out half a 01113 of almond meats and add to the dough, which should be rather soft. Take a, small piece at a time, drop into powdered sugar, make into a ball an inch in diameter. Place the balls at little distance apart on a floured pan and bake ten or fifteen minutes in a moderate oven. They will look like inacaroons. Almond Filling for Layer Cake.â€" One cup of sour cream, heated to the boiling point, into which stir three teaspoonfuls of cornstarch, the yolks of three eggs, beaten with one cup of sugar, the whites beaten to a stiff froth, and add last a cup of almonds, after they are shelled. Blanch the nuts, roll fine, and then A M a A A “6“”??39 . return the mixture to the fire and cook till thick. This is a rich and delicious filling for a layer Cake. Chicken Saladâ€"One well boiled chicken; remove the skin and fat and cut in dice; two teaspoonfuls of cel- ery cut in dice. Put two teacupfuls of cream. into a saucepan, let it come to a boil, stir in a-tablespoonâ€" in] of mixed mustard, two heaped teaspoonfuls of- butter, vinegar, salt and cayenne to taste, and last, the well beat-en yolks of four eggs. Stir until it becomes like thick boiled cus- tard; then take from the fire, set the saucepan in cold'water and stir till it cools to keep it from curdling. Toss the chicken and celery together and mix carefully with the dressing. 'A Good Pot Roast.â€"â€"Iâ€"Iave the butâ€" cher extract the bone from the rump roast and take a few stitches to keep the piece in shape. Place in an iron pot with a tight cover. Put in with it two small onions with two cloves stuck in each, a pod of red pepper, two Carrots, salt, and a little allspice. Pour enough boiling Water over the beef to nearly cover it. Let it come to a hard boil, then set the pot where it will just simmer for six hours. Place the beef out on a hot dish, strain the gravy, and take off ‘ every particle of grease. Have ready one~half teaspoonful of sugar browned in a saucepan, pour the gravy over it, and thicken with a little flour. When cooked pour over the beef. Cut up the carrots and arrange around the meat. ‘A better pot roast could hardly be cooked. 'An Easy Omeletâ€"This is made in an uncovered casserole, the sort one buys for twenty cents at Italian groceries in any large city. Beat the yolks of the eggs until they are light in color and quite stiff. Beat the whites stiffly. Add to the yolks grated cheese, chopped mushrooms, or whatever variation of the omelet is required. Add salt and pepper, a cupful more or less, of milk, very gradually, and fold in the whites of the eggs. Turn into the buttered casserole, and bake in a moderate oven. These little shallow casser- 0105, which are to be found in sever- al sizes, are rather fragile affairs, glazed, on the inside only, and soft- baked clay on the outside. They have a. short handle, like the old- time poi-ringer, and are altogether .__...._._ .___,____..._...___-â€".â€"- . ..__ MES THE BABY lllllll/li? : If not, something must be wrong with its food. If the mother’s milk doesn’t nourish it, she needs Scorr’s , EMULSION. It supplies the elements of fat required for the baby. If baby is not nourished by its artificial food, then it requires Scott’s : Emulsion ' Half a teaspoonful three or four times a day in its bottle will bring the desired ~ result. It seems to have a magical effect upon babies and children. SCOTT 8: BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. Ont. hail from “Ole Virginny,” favor. . the kernels from the cob and pound them in a mortar till a sort 0f corn “milk” results. up with egg, cornstarch till a regular cake batter is evolved. ful of butter is put into an enamel- ed frying pan poured When the edges begin to turn golden brown the with a turner which the genuine mammy possesses in Perfection. laid on a warmed plate, sprinkled with powdered over and over likea‘jelly roll. milk, dOUgh to taste. ' _ of citron is a neat central ornament and improves the taste. the back of the ies from I beans, etc., that very pretty dishes. For a dish of baked macaroni, baked beans, soft corn bread or any vegetable au gran tin, they are recommended. A Fine Flavoringâ€"Orange rinds in their fresh state make a 'fine flavâ€" oring. 'A good extract made with- out alcohol is prepared by the yellow rind of a, Mediterranean or a scedlgss California orange with enOUgh' water to cover it, and enough sugar to make a. thin syrup. Every particle of bitter inner white skin of the rind should be peeled off and only the juicy yellow part used. This extract, though it does not keep indefinitely, will last as long as any mild syrup. Put this ‘ ‘temperance orange extract” into wideâ€"mouthed bottles, leaving in the peelings. You may add fresh syrup from time to time, as you wish. . oranges for the supper table, the rinds may be laid aside and used for this purpose. When cutting up Corncakcs.â€"-These corncakes, which may find To make them one must cut This is thickened sugar and triplyâ€"sifted A generous tablespoon- and enough batter in to just cover the pan. cake is “flopped” over in the deft fashion _ ‘A minute later it is cinnamon and rolled A Nice Bun.‘â€"â€"-'Any good bread dough makes a. nice “bun” for‘ five o’clock tea. Simply add an egg or two, brush the outer surface with not omitting to sugar the 'A raisin or a bit HOUSEHOLD HINTS . Have you tried the new way of boiling eggs by immersing them in boiling water and setting them on stove? The time they are to be left in the water var- seven to ten minutes, acâ€" cording to the number of eggs and the time of the year, as many eggs, in cold weather, require more time allowance. Cooked in this way the white of the egg, instead of being hard and indigestible, is soft and jelly-like. will relieve the peculiar dryness of the throat that attends bronchitis, and any illness where much fever is present. Five drops held in the mouth, with the lips closed, as long as possible, will re- lieve the dryness. Custard pie is pretty good of it- self, but..to heap, whipped cream upon it as it is sent to the table, is to "paint the lily.” To remove a cake that sticks to the pan after it is baked, wring a cloth out Of cold water, fold it, set the cake pan on it and after a few minutes the cake will come out smooth and whole. They say that to mix the sour milk and flour for the morning pan- cakes over night, adding the salt, shortening and soda in the morningâ€"â€" but no more flourâ€"makes deliciously tender and melting cakes. 'A lamp that annoysâ€"and is really dangerousâ€"by its tendency to flare up when lighted, can sometimes be helped by using a, taller chimney. A mustard plaster made with the white of an egg will not blister. To get the full flavor of the peas, go to make up a genuine vegetable soup, do not dis- sipate their strength by boiling in Water and then draining off, but use simply what will barely cover them, adding from ’time to time to replace the waste by evaporation soup from the soup pot, which should be kept simmering conveniently near. A half hour before scrving, strain out all bones and bits of meat from the latâ€" ter, put vegetables in and stir in an “eggâ€"drip” of beaten egg and flour, just before turning it out into the tureen. Tuttiâ€"frut‘ti salad can be as com- prehensive as one pleases; in fact, the more variety that :goes to make it up the better, and canned .fruit can be substituted when the fresh are out of season. Slice pineapple, bananas, oranges, peaches, etc., and arrange in layers with cherries, haivâ€" ed plums, strawberries and raspâ€" berries. Sugar well and let them stand till the juice given out is a rich syrup. Drain this off and make a. “syllabub” by beating meringue into it, then pour over fruit and freeze. Equal parts of tallow and tur- pentine mixed makes an excellent po- lish to use on oiled floors, oilcloth, etc. In making ketchup of any kind never use anything but a porcelainâ€" lined kettle, or one of some make that does not impart a taste to the ketchup. It is wise to use new hotâ€" tles, and also to sterilize them by immersing them in boiling water and letting them stand for five min- utes before using them. It is not necessary to purchase bottles with patent stoppers. The cost of the simple bottles necessary is only a trifle- if‘i’liey are purchased in quanâ€" tity. Grate breadcrumbs and brown them slightly. 'Allow one-half tea- spoonful to an egg, and strew them in when making a plain omelet. Baker’s stale bread makes the best crumb. A sandwich dear to childhood is simply bread, butter and sugar, with a liberal sprinkling of powdered cinâ€" nanion. Try this for the school lunch baSkc-t. G lycerine ______________,_______________.__â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" JOY SUGGEEDS nrsnm' IN THE HOME or MR. JOSEPH HILTON, TEOROLD, ONT. boning His Daughter, Florence, Was A11 But Dead From Dropsyâ€"Her Doctor Had Given Her Upâ€"Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Were Then Used and. ’I‘oâ€"day She is Well and Strong. From the Post, Thorold, Ont. Everybody believes in a dreamy sort of way of the efficacy nf a well and wisely advertised medicine, when the recorded cases-0f restored health are at a distance; but when a case comes up in the home town, when the patient is knowzi to everyone, and when the cure is not only posi- tive but marvellous, the efficacy of the medicine becomes a factâ€"a de- cided thing. For many years the Post has advertised Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for quantities of them have been sold by the local drug stores, and many reâ€" markable cures have been effected. One of these attracted the attention of our reporter and lie investigated. Miss Florence Hilton, the eighteen year old daughter of Joseph and Mrs. Hilton, living in the west part of the town, was taken ill early last Summer with dropsy, coupled with heart trouble. She was compelled to give up one duty after another, and finally became unable to walk or to lie down. ~Her suffering was iii- tense andymedical skill did all that could be done. Florence, however, grew worse, sitting in her chair" day and night for :five 'long ' months to get her breath, and the parents desâ€" paired. At last the doctor gave her up. and said further visits were futile. The poor girl’s limbs were pitifully swollen and finally burst below the knees. She sat helpless and weak, gasping for breath and at times could breathe at all only with the greatest difficulty. One night the neighbors came in and said she could not live till morning. But to-day she is alive and well, moving about among her young companions a re markable and miraculous contrast to what she then was. The reporter called one evening at the Hilton home, but Miss Florence was out vis- iting. The father and mother were in. however, and freely told him of the cure, which they attribute entire- ly to Dr. Williams" Pink Pills. The first box was brought to her by her grandmother, who urged their use. Then Mrs. Hilton herself remembered that she had the previous winter been cured by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills of a slight attack of dropsy, and also remembered the many cures advertis- ed in the Post. She bought two boxes. and Florence took them, three pills at a, dose. In txvo weeks she felt a slight decrease in the pain in her limbs, and more pills were pro- cured. For five monthsâ€"five long painâ€"laden monthsâ€"the weary girl had sat day and night in .her chair, but now she began to feel the pain leaving her and to see her limbs re. sume their natural size. Fourteen boxes of the pills were taken and at last her perseverance was rewarded. She rose from her chair; her former strength gradually came back; one by one her household duties were taken up again, and when The Post rep-re- sentative called he was met by beaming faces and thankful hearts and a grateful readiness to give to the World the facts that had saved a bright young life and had brought joy instead of grief to a Tiiorold home.” In thousands of other homes, scattered over'the length and breadth of Canada, Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have brought health and jOy and gladness and in every home in the land where sickness and suffering en- ters new health and strength can be had through a, fair use of this mediâ€" cine. Remember that substitutes can’t cureâ€"they make the patient worse, and when you ask for this medicine see that the full name “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People” is printed on the wrapper around the box-then you are sure you have the genuine pills. Sold by medicine dealers or’ by mail- post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $250 by writing The Dr. wu- liams Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. ___._.+__._._.._ MARKING THE SALMON. .--â€"â€" Plan Adopted to Get Information About Fish. With a view to obtaining further information on the growth and miâ€" grations of salmOn (including sea trout, salmon trout, pcal, sew-iii, etc.), the British Board of Agricul- ture and Fisheries with a small silver label (oxydized or iarge back fin. In a let on Board A it is announced a label returned without particulars, to three shillings and the intact. These experiments are be continued for a number of years, terested in the improvement of salmon fisheries, in ordcr'that fullest results may be obtained. ______+___.... To remove ink stains from goods, put salt on the stain, wet with vinegar, and rub. until the rinse in clear water. white Pale People; large} have caused a, number of such fish to be “marked” or blackened, and bearing distinctive letters and numbers) to the dorsallstant source of trouble. pamph- the subject issued by the blood, is a poison that ‘causing biliorisness, rewards, varying from Sixpence for stain is removed, then tion and other accompanying NATURAL GREEN Japanf’ delicious and pure. tea of Ceylon. l Free from all chemical coloring and adulal ,teration in any form whatever, of great strength! Sealed packets only, same forml ‘ A" “ The rival of as the celebrated Black teas of “ SALADA " Brand.‘ 250 and 40c per lb. By all grocers. __________________________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"- PERSONAL POIN'I‘ERS . remaining perfectly witherit moving a. his capacity for still for hours Gossip About the Leading 1’80â€" muscle or saying a Word. It is said ple on the World’s Stage. Tobacco smokers will be interested has stuck to hear that M. Loubet, the President, is on.» of the greatest smokers in the Republic l of the! Sir Jenkin Coles, Speaker South Australian Parliament, has that his habit of musing, with noâ€" thing but his pipe as a. companion, to him all through his Frmrh career, and that it is during these moments that he makes his plans for the destruction of an enemy or the improvement of his owu fleet. Mme Carlier, ‘ who was recently just established what is probably a married to Captain Andre earlier, in World’s record. eightyâ€"first. ' birthday. l‘vi'cau fastâ€"table.- was placed' a iare‘e- b‘ouquet, with r the inscription" '.atâ€" tached: j “Congratulations on ' ‘your eight-first birthday. ' 'England ex- pects vvery ‘manfto' do‘his duty,’ It is your. duty t‘o'filive tdb'eia centernâ€" arian.” Admiral 'Sir Edward Seymour. who is a cousin of that other fine sailor, Admiral Sir Michael 01.111110. Seymour, is a bachelor and a strong supporter of the old contention that sailors should never marry. “If they do,” he once said, "they must necesâ€" sarily neglect either their profession The oldest clergyman actively perâ€" forming duties in England, Prebenâ€" dary W. Hutchinson, vicar of Blur- ton, near Longton, Stall'ordshire, reâ€" cently attained the age of ninetyâ€"four. Ordained deacon in 1883 and priest the following year, Prebendary Hutâ€" chinson is strong and hearty, and regularly conducts the Sunday serâ€" vices at his church, assisted by his son, the Rev. S. W. Hutchinson. An extraordinary proof of the modâ€" ern collecting craze is the“ fact that General Kuroki has been receiving numberless applications from autoâ€" graphâ€"hunters and cclebrityâ€"mongers for, specimens of his writing. More. extraordinary still, while engaged in the command of one of the great armies of history, and in the plan~ ning of one of the greatest battles on record, he has replied to some to some of their requests. Before her marriage with Baron Cederstroni,, Mme. Patti had seen but little of the world, save from accross the footliglits of the opera houses of Europe and America. “Towns mean nothing to me,” the prima donna said once, “but arrival and departure; spending my days strictly, resting at an hotel, putting on my smart frocks, and being driven to a concert-hall to sing. Then flowâ€" ersd, applause, emotion, and home to be .” People who see Mr. Austen Cham- berlain in the open marvel at the likeness to his father. They have the- same cut of features, the same attire, the same eye-glass, and often a similar orchid. The only difference which can be discovered is that the lines of the face are a little softer in the son than in the father; there is some trace, it is said, of the gentle- ness of the mother whom henever knew in Mr. Austen’s looks. Admiral Togo, the Japanese naval commander, is a man of few words, ,but of iron determination. One o EnHven .Dr. It is the liver that is largely re- sponsible for indigestion and constiâ€" pationâ€"dcrangements that are a conâ€" The bile, which, when left in' the to the system, headache and .muddy complexion, becomes of price- less value when passed into the inâ€" The healthy liver separates bile IF YOU FIND YOUR LIVER and the Board of Agriculture solicits SLUGGISI-I AND T033911) IN Ac- the co-operation of all who are inâ€" TION :03, the LIVER PILLS WILL BRING REâ€" the LIEF CHASE’S KIDNEY- AND CURE MORE PROMPTLY THAN ANY TREAT- MENT YOU COULD FIND. By enl-ivening the action of the then liver they remove the cause of bilious- Repeat ness, headache, indigestion, constipa- symp- toms. Upon his liending some hundreds of Armenians or their wives.’ ’ of German -his most remarkable characteristics is unique POSIUOD {01' a Lord Mayo“ } the (Liver . He has completed Paris, enjoys the unique distinction of fourteen years of uninterrupted serâ€"' Vice in the Chair without ever once being .absent during working hours, iservices.” from illness or any other causes. - li'ail- Nelson recently attained his. being the only woman in France Wearing the decoration for “War In 1895 she won for her- self the cross of the Legion of Honâ€" or, awarded for her bravery in deâ€" Who had taken refugc‘at the French Consolate at Siras, fin lAsia Minor, when pursued-by the Turks. Her late husband, M. Maurice Carlier, ,was French'Consul at that period. A THOUGHTFUL PRIEST. .â€".â€" Points Out to Mothers the Way to Keep Their Children Well and Happy. Rev. K. L. Francoeur, Casselman, Ont., is a kind-hearted priest who has done much to alleviate suffering among the little of his parishioners. Writing under a. recent date he says: .“I must say that Dr. Williams’ Baby’s Own Tab- lets are deserving of the high praise *they have had as a. cure for the ailâ€" ments of children. For the past. eight months I have been introduc- ing them in many families, and alâ€" ways, the mothers tell me, with per- fect results. Their action is always effective, without any sickly reaction, and they are especially valuable in allaying pains in the head, fever in [teething nervousness, sleeplessness, ispasmsgcramps in the stomach and ;b0WelS, colic and other troubles. Their regulating action gives almost instant relief, and givesispeedy cure. This is the comforting experience that has come to my knowledge out of their judicious use. I am glad to give you my sincere testimony, and I will recommend the Tablets to all“ mothers and. nurses of sick children as I have done heretofore.” , The Tablets are sold by all inediâ€" cine dealers, or mothers can obtain them by mail at 25 cents a box by writing to The Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont; .___..._+.__._. Alderman Sir Otto Jaffe, Lord Mayor of Belfast, is the most dis- tinguished Jew in the Emerald Isle. and with Sir Israel Hart, of Leicesâ€" ter, shares the distinction of being the shining light of provincial Jewry. He Was first Lord Mayor of Belfast in 1899â€"1900, the en merchants, one of the biggest business houses in the city, a J. 29., member of the Harbor Board, and Governor of the Royal Hospital. Be- sides all this, he is Consul for the Govoriimentâ€"a somewhat Aid Digestion and Regula e the Action of the Bowels” You Must Use Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills The Great Specific for Liver and Kidney Diseases. This specific action of Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills on the liver is what makes them of so great worth as a family medicine and ensures them a lasting placa in the home. Mr. Rogers Clancy, farmer, Clhep- stOWC, Bruce County, Ont., writes:â€" “I have used Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills, and would say that there > market testines to. aid digestion and ensure ,~ 1, h value of the fish for each fish deliV- regular, action of the bowels. is no medu’me that aqua s t em as a ered immediately after capture in marketable condition, with the label from the blood and sends it into the ‘50 intestines. ‘cure for stomach troubles, biliousness, torpid liver and headache. I was troubled a great deal with these ail- ments before using Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills, and they have proven wonderfully successful in my case.” Obe pill a dose at bedtime and Dr. Chase’s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills will enA sure healthful, regular action of kid; neys, lchr and bowels; 25 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates &. Co., Toronto. The portrait and signature of Dr. A. W. Chase, the famous receipt book author, an on every box. ones in the homes v following year becomingI-Iigli Sheriff of the city. He » is head of the firm of Jaffe Bros, lin-.' -

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