Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 20 Oct 1905, p. 7

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2.,pint grated sugar, crumbs. eggs, which “should not be added till using up beef, about half an inch thick and on it put a small portion just cover them. on the pan and stew the contents for range the rolls on a hot dish, combines with the valuable hypo- phosphites so that it is easy to digest and does fair more good than the 01 makes Scott’s Emulsion the most strengthening, nourishing cine in the world. ¢+++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++ +++++++++ ital ifs lids s++++++++++++++++++++ SOME DAINTY DISHES. Baked bananas make a very deliciâ€" + ous pudding prepared as follows: Butter 8. piece of paper, and with it line a baking tin; set on this as many ripe peeled bananas as you wish to serve. Scatter sifted sugar over and bake. Serve with whipped or sealdcd cream. Savoury Jelly.â€"Take any quantity l of remnants of poultry, game, and meat. and cut into small dice. Chop up two hardâ€"boiled eggs into pieces of about the same size. Season all with pepper, salt, chopped parsley, and a little allspice, and place in a mould. Dissolve some gelatine in a little wellâ€"flavored stock, and pour it over the meat and eggs. When cold and set, turn out and serve. . Lichfield Cakesâ€"Beat two eggs to a still froth and stir into them one of milk. Mix together six ounces each of wholemeal and fine flour, a pinch of salt, a. tcaspoonful each of baking powder and caster sugar. Work one ounce of butter in- to the flour, and thenashake the dry ingredients into the milk, beating all the time. Bake in small round tins, and when cold split open and butter. Breakfast Sconesâ€"Take one pound of flour, tw0 ounces 'of butter, a pinch of salt, an egg, and a teaâ€" spoonful of bakingâ€"powder, with as much milk as will make the whole into a good dough. Rub the butter into the flour, add bakingâ€"powder and salt, and lastly the milk. Roll the mixture out, cut into eight threeâ€"cornered pieces, and bake in a quick oven for twenty minutes. Rice Bars and Vanilla Sauce.â€" Cut the remains ofâ€"a cold rice pud- ding into small slices, brush each over with beaten egg, and roll in breadcrumbs; place in a frying basâ€" hot, and fry till golden brown in deep fat. Drain on paper by the fire while you prepare the sauce. Heat some golden syrup in a small stewpan, flavor it will vanilla es- sence, and pour round the pile of golden bars. - Vegetable balls are an excellent addition to stews, and should be prepared as follows: Mash a quar- ter of a pound each of carrots, turâ€" nips, vegetable marrow, lentils, harâ€" icot beans, and potatoes, adding at the lust them. green peas if you have Season all with pepper, salt, nutmeg, and mixed herbs. Bind together with beaten egg, dip into frying batter, and fry in deep fat till a golden color. A Delicious Apple Puddingâ€"Stew the fruit gently till it will pulp, and then beat it up. To every pint of pulp add a quarter of a pound of three wellâ€"beaten eggs, an ounce and a half of fresh butter, and a quarter of a pound of breadâ€" Mix all together except the the mixture is quite cool, and then stirred in thoroughly. Put the mix- ture into a buttered dish, and bake for half an hour. Strew a little sifted sugar over the pudding before servmg. Beef olives make a good dish for the remains of un-derdone Take some slices of the and two inches wide, lay each piece flat of veal forccmeat, roll up the beef and tie it round with cotton. Stand the roast beef. rolls of meat upright in a stewpan, and pour good brow-'n gravy so as to Place the cover one hour and a half. To serve, arâ€" cut ii a day: We hatter mankind would have to invent milk. Milk is Naâ€" ture’s emulsionâ€"butter put in shape for diges~ tion. Cod liver oil is ex- tremely nourishing, but it has to be emulsified before we can digest it. decals Emulsion the best oil alone could. "feat food - rnedi~ Send for free sample. :- . scor'r & gowns. Chemists Toronto, Ont. ‘~. (500. and $1.00. All drugglsts away the threads, thicken and flav- or the gravy and pour round. For caramels take one and one-half cups of sugar, half a cup of chocoâ€" late, one cup of rich, sweet, cream, butter the. size of an egg. Cook slow- ly one hour, stirring often. ' When done, pour it into buttered pans. When cool, cut into inch squares. A “can’t be beat” recipe for oyster croqluettes is the following: One half- pint of raw oysters, one cupful of finely chopped cooked veal, one large tablespoonful of butter, three spoonfuls of powdered cracker, the yolks of two eggs, and one teaâ€" spoonful of onion juice. Chop the oyster very fine. Soak the cracker in the oyster liquor. Soften the butter. Then mix all these ingrediâ€" ents together. Take about a tableâ€" spoonful of the mixture at a time and shape the croquettes in any form. Have a board sprinkled light- ly with bread or cracker crumbs, and roll the croq‘uottes very gently on this. Then cover the board Very thickly with crumbs. Beat txvo eggs, salt them slightly, and put them in a deep plate. Dip each croquette in the egg, and then roll in the crumbs. Place a few at a time in a frying basketâ€"they should not touch each otherâ€"and plunge into boiling hot fat Cook until a nice brOWn â€"- about one or two minutesâ€"then lay them on paper iii' a warm pan. HINTS FOR THE HOME. When boiling tough meat or an old fowl, add a pinch of soda to the water to make it tender and cook gently. 1t is-not generally known that tin cleaned with newspapers will shine better than when cleaned with flan- nel. When washing greasy dishes add a few drops of ammonia to the water, which makes the work quicker and more thorough. When boiling fish add a bunC'h of sweet herbs and a piece of lemon rind, tied in muslin, to the water. To glaze scones brush over with one teaspoonful of sugar dissolved in two of milk. This is cheaper than using a beaten yolk of egg, and quite as effective. The remains of cold mutton can be minced, and with the trimmings of any pastry you may happen to have had for dinner, may be made into mutton pics for luncheon next day. After washing a, scent bottle rinse it till quite clear, and then turn it upside down on a cloth near the fire to dry thoroughly before. put ting in the stopper. The air will be as effective as the fire. Dried currants should never be put. into cakes or puddings for small children, for they are diflicult to di- gest and are apt to cause diarrhoea. Sultanas on the contrary are per- fectly wholesome and raisins act as a mild apcrient, which is useful for the little ones. If feather beds or pillows have an unpleasant odor, set them in the air for a. day or two, then give them a thorough drying before a clear fire. Should the smell still remain, have the feathers taken from their covers and properly dressed. Typhoid germs have been known to start from im- properly-dressed feathers in beds. When your Chamois leathers are dirty, do not throw them away in future, for it is a Very extravagant practice, as they may be made as nearly as good as new treated as follows: Take some warm water, add a very little Soda to it, and wash the leather, using a little, soft soap; let the leather lie in water for two or three hours until it is quite soak- ed and soft. Then rinse it, wring it, and whilst it is still wet pull it about with the hands so that it may be soft when dry. Take care of your cocoanut. mat- ting, and it will be found one of the best floor coverings which can pos- sibly be provided, but if it is once allowed to become dirty, its good appearance is for ever lost. When grease is spilt, clean it off as soon as possible with hot Water and yel- low soap. using a scrub‘bing brush. It is useless to scrub the stained part only, but attack the whole surâ€" face. _After the matting is scrubbed evenly 'all over, fold it loscly, put it into a large tub and pour over it plenty of cold water, then hang up to dry in the air and sunshine. You can clean r white kid gloves beautifully at home by this process: Place the glove in a small basin, and pour over just enough benzoline to cover, set a plate over the basin, so as to prevent the spirit evaporat- ing. and let the glove soak for five minutes. Have a thick cloth ready on the table and a piece of clean flannel, take the glove out of the basin, let it drip a little, set it on the cloth, and wipe it with the flan- nel, changing the surface constantly as it is soiled. The glove must not be rubbed me hard or the surface will be spoiled. 'l'he benzoline loosâ€" ens all the dirt, so that it is easily removed, and care must be taken that there are no streaks of dirt left. When the glove is quite cleaned blow into it to inflate it and hang in the shade in a draught. The same quantity of bcnaoline will do for several other glo'ves, adding a little more as the quantity shrinks. Benzoline can be bought of any iromnonger, but care must be exer- cised in using it, for it is highly inâ€" flammable. ’ HALL AND STAIRWAY. Arc of prime importance. First imâ€" pressions are lasting and a home desirable hall is the one that may be treated as a. room. In such a. one, flOWers and vines may be used to beautify. " If it be. of the usual long, narrow shape, little furniture is desirable, and that little should be useful as Well as ornamental. With a generous entrance and the staircase set well back' the hall is amenable to artistic effects. Study to give to the entrance of your home picturesque and unlocked for fea- tures that may be turned into riches of real comfort when necessity de- mands. . / CARE OF TOILET BRUSHES. Should be systematic and thor- ough. The following method is said to prove most satisfactory: Dissolve two tablespoonfuls of borax in a little boiling water; add this to two quarts of lukewarm water in a shalâ€" low vessel, the water being just deep enough to cover the bristles. A pic dish is convenient. Beat the water with the brush by dabbling it up and down, taking care that the back of the brush is not wottcd. To keep the bristles a good color and prevent them from becoming soft, rinse thoroughly with cold water. Tie a bit of string to the handle and dry after well shaking. The open air is preferable, but if it is dried in the house do not put too near the fire or the tips of the bristles .. may singe and the wood warp. Always hang the brush or let it stand with the handle up~ wards to prevent the water trickling down and destroying the polish. Polish the back. The bristles"will be softened if the water is too warm. The brush should be dried as quickly as pos- sible for fear of this result. In case the brush is quite greasy, add a dessertspoonful of ammonia to the borax water. It makes the bristles soft and misplaced to dry them with a towel. THE RIGHT METHOD To employ when hanging pictures is to pierce the wall with a darn‘ing needle. to find the crevice between the bricks before driving the nail. Nails driven haphazard are liker to ruin the walls, for of course they bend when hammered against bricks. SUFFERING WOMEIT. Find Health and Strcrgth in Dr. Williams Pink Pills. "I consider Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a most mnrve‘-ous medicine,” says Mrs. Louis 'l‘urcott, (365 Pap- incau street, Montreal. “They re- stored me to health and strength, when I was in a most hopeless conâ€" dition, and almost dcspaired of re- covery. I My trouble began a few years ago, when I passed through a severe illness, from which I did not regain my accustomed health and strength, though I had the very best of care and treatment. I seemed to grow weaker every day. I was pale and emaciated, had no appetite, could hardly go about, and found my life almost a burden. It seemed as hough my blood had turned to waâ€" ter, and my nerves seemed completely shattered. All the time I was under medical treatment, but with no apâ€" mrent benefit. One day friend who called to see me, br llgllt me some Dr. Williams' l’ink Pills, and asked me to take them. I did so, and after a couple of Weeks 1 found my appetite improving. and took this as a sign that the pills were helping me, and I got another supâ€" ply. ln a Fcw weeks more the change in my appearance and condition was marvellous, and friends who dropped in to see me, hardly thought I was the same person. It Was not much longer until I was completely cured, in fact felt better than I have done for years before. I am, therefore, very happy to make known to all ailing women the fact that they can find new health. through the use of Dr. Williaois’ Pink Pills.” Mrs. Turcott’s experience with this medicine is the same as thousands of others. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the greatest cure for the ailments due to poor blood. All the weakâ€" ness of anaemia; all the distress of indigestion; all the pains and aches oi neuralgia, sciatica and rheuma- tism; all the misery and illâ€"health that women suffer from time to time. come from bad blood. 'And Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure these troubles, because they actually make new. rich, healthâ€"giving blood. They don’t act upon-the bowels, they don’t bother with mere symptoms; they go right to the root of the trouble and cure it through the blood. But you must get the genuineâ€"substitutes and imitations never cured anyone. See that the full name "Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People” is, print~ ed on the wrapper around the box. Sold by medicine dealers everywhere, or sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, by writing The Dr. Williams l‘d‘edicine Co., Brock. ville, Ont. - â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"4 Gibbsâ€"“It’s no use arguing, my dear; I am going to give up our pew a in church. I can’t standvthat new preacher any longer.” “’ifeâ€"“liut, Johnâ€"â€"-” Cl ibl)S-â€"â€"' ‘But nothing Maria. I haven’t slept a wink for the last three Sunday mornings.” Molly (between waltzes)â€"â€"' le the world has been like a desert to him till he met me.” Pollyâ€"“That exllains why he dances so like a is judged by its entrance. The most camel, I suppose." a...- oeuoious n Tnefiocfls is squads tea on sale "for quality and fiance Black, Mixed or Green. At all Grocers. Lead packets only. 40c, sec, and 60¢. per lb. Highest award, St. Louis, 1904. ROIfIANCE OF .A. RECLUSE. .â€" Death of a. Wealthy Englishman tatcs of father and son is the Reveals a Mystery. One of the most pathetically ro- mantic careers known is recalled by the news that letters of administraâ€" tion. have been granted to the Crown of the estate of Captain George Lindsay Anthony Wilson, who died at Folkstone worth something over £150,000. The son of Sir John Wilson, who at one time commanded the forces in Ceylon. he seemed to have the But his brilliant London Leader"), of world at his feet. career (says The was cut short by the disclosure a dark secret. Rich, handsome, he was educated at Cambridge, be- came a‘ captain in the Guards, and traveled across the world. He was in the best Society, and in his young (lays often visited Buckingham I’aâ€" lace. In fact, an oil painting of a dog which Queen Victoria gave to him long hung in the diningâ€"room at and a favorite, his Alexanfh'aâ€"gardens house 111 l.“olkestone. With the death of his father came the disclosure which altered his whole life. He learnt for the first time that he was illegitimate, and that the beautiful woman who lived with his father, and whom he had always known as his aunt, was his mother. The news was a terrible blow, and the favorite of royalty and society cut himself adrift from everybody and sought solace in seclusion. He threw up his commission in the Guards and, attended only by a few servants, went to live on a small estate in Brentwood, which, with a huge fortune in consols and proper- ty, had been left to him by his faâ€" ther. ' int he made no attempt to keep the place in order; horses and other animals roamed about at will, and the property was rapidly going to rack and ruin. Then, people think- ing that. his queer conduct amounted almost to madness, communicated with the Lord Chancellor, and pre- sently the rich recluse found himself in Brontwood Asylum. His friends, howover, exerted themselves to such an extent, that his immediate re- lease was ordered. Naturally, Mr. Wilson was angered at his treatment, and, but for the fact that an action would have givâ€" on to the world the story of his birth, he would have taken proceedâ€" ings against the people who had brought about his incarceration. As it was, the experience made Drentwood so objectionable that Wilson, leaving his horses, the carri- ages, and other property to take care of themselves, moved to lf‘olke- stone. Taking the name of George Boreham, he first settled in Bowerie square, his only attendants being his faithful housekeeper, Miss Mary Campbell, and a manservant. I-lere his life was more. rigidly blank than ever. He sought no company, rare- 1y went out, and only when night had fallen. The house and its owner Were shrouded in mystery. Then came his death and the giving to the, world of the rccluse's secret. Though his huge fortune of over £150,000 goes to the Crown, Wilson having died intestate, he made ample provision for the companion of his darkest days; in fact, he is known to have. purchased a number of 7”!" houses in miss Campbell’s name. sacs J ,p m“ l ,' J: g3}: 23 . 1 ZS SINCSILITY The granting of letters of admin- istration to the Crown of the esâ€" last act in this real life drama. _____+___._ BRITAIN’ S INCOMPETENCY. Japanese in Their Struggle Have Aroused. the Nation. Secure as the majority of people in Great Britain imagine themselves for the present in Great Britain's alli- ance with Japan, a deaf car being turned to any suggestions of a ycl- low peril, nevertheless Sir James Crichtonâ€"Browne, vice president of the Royal Institution of Great Dri- tain, chiefly Well known as a specialâ€" ist in mental diseases, brought the question forward in a new and strikv ing form the other day. He was presiding at the reâ€"opening of the Charing Cross Hospital Mediâ€" cal School and was speaking on the subject of inefficiency. . “It was indubitable,” he said, ‘-’that there was a deplora’ble amount of deterioration among us, and that inefficiency aboundcd in our educa- tional machinery, our economic sysâ€" tem, our municipal administration and our army, all were inefficient. An encouraging fact was that the dangers attending inefficiency were now being perceived and that mea- sures were being taken to insure efâ€" ficiency. This must be attributed to the great object lesson of the e”- ficiency of the Japanese in their great struggle with Russia. “I feel confident that the Japan- ese brain will be found to be not in- ferior to that of Englishmen in weight, in proportion to body weight, in fineness of folding and in depth of gray matter, though doubtâ€" less with. structural characteristics of its own. “Should this prove to be so, and should the Chinese brain be found to participate in the characteristics of that of Japan, then the yellow peril is not a mere bogey, but in some form or other a possible con- tingcncy." .é.â€"â€"â€"....â€".u BARS" S SLEEP; _ One of the first signs that somo< thing is wrong with an infant is 'dis- turbcd sleep. Usually the trouble is with the stomach or bowels. If your little one is cross and restless do not give it an opiate or “soothing” medâ€" icinc of any kind. All these things are deadly poisOn,‘and the sleep they give is unhealtl'iy, unnatural and in- jurious. Your baby will sleep and let you sleep if you treat it proper- ly. In Baby's Own Tablets there is. not an atom of poisonous “sleepy stuff” and yet by their beneficent, healthy aCtion they give refreshing sleep. They remove the cause. and the result is healthy, refreshing, life« giving sleep from which the little one awakens bright and well. Mrs.- S. '1‘. Douglas, Petitcodiac, N13,, says: “My baby was troubled with consti- pation, was restless and uneasy and did not sleep well at nights. I gave him Baby’s Own Tablets and the change they made was wonderful. They regulated the bmvels and he now sleeps well at night.” If your dealer does not keep the Tablets send.- 25 cents to the Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont... and a box will be sent you by mail postpaid. “mlâ€"II. rm.-.â€" â€"c__~..-‘.â€"-.- w. uâ€"v'w...- "nu... - "Emma-«lotik “"3 ZS CPL-IE.

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