Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 24 Feb 1915, p. 6

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> shape of a soup plate or use | with Tomon dip Salt. Rios in water and rub. with a soft | ger soup plate. Unless the : bute vecd he lute wil be ' watm enough if hot water is run on it for | cream with a knife or a flat egg whigk. Vanilla flavoring, a: tea- spoonful for this amount, is always opular, but sometimes one-third Pon or orange to the vanilla is added. Mold into a mound or any shape you choose. You may then sprinkle some nutmeg over it if you choose, as many like this flavoring in a pudding sauce. Set on ice to harden. a Harlequin Hard Saice.--Divide a hard white sauce into three parts. Leave one-third white, work choco- late or cocoa into another third and jelly into the rest. Sift cocoa be- fore working it in and work in enough to'/get a good shade, For a cup of hard sauce four tablespoon- fuls' would not be too much. Cur- rant jelly may be: used to make the red or pink part of the sauce, and a fine cléar grape jelly gives a fine or raspberry color, though a grape jelly of anTinferior quality would give a lavender shade. Put the three colors together in any shape you choose, a mound or a square or something more fancy, but so that each serving will have spme of each color. 'One of the easiest ways to get this is to make the plain brick like a brick of ice cream of several colors. Tree Cake Ieing. -- When hard sauce is colored with cocoa it is easy to put it-on a cake to resemble the icing which is characteristic of the tree cake. The inside of the tree cake may be almost any plain cake preferred, but the chocolate or co- con icing must be put on to resem- ble the bark of a tree, and only a butter icing can be so manipulated. But a tube and point is not needed. Just draw the point of the spoon, rather heavy with the icing rather than clean, in lines across the icing you 'have smoothed on. . Fish Recipe.--Here is a nice way to use leftover : Chop very fine one pound of cooked halibut, five drops of 'onion juice, two teaspoonfuls of lemon juice, half-teaspoonful of pa- prikd, half-teaspoonful of salt; add one-eighth cup of thick cream which has been beaten until stiff and 'the whites of two eggs beaten stiff; cook in buttered simbale molds: until firm ; chill on ice. remove from pane, arrange on salad dish, garnish with | mayonnaise dressing; cut up fins one cam of shrimp and put that around the base. Now jb omaking salad-dressing some people always " use ae ojl and lemon, ah k L much healthier than vitiegar and so sweet, x Sweetheart Cakes. -- Prepare a white cake batter as follows: To two cups of granulated sugar. creamed with- half a cup of butter add one eup of milk and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add a saltspoon- ful of salt, and last of all, the whites of two eggs beaten stiff. To half of |g this mixture add a half-teaspoonful of vanilla and to the other half add | Seotel a scant tablespoonful of chocolate powder or cocoa. Spread each batch -in a sheet three-quarters of an inch thick. Bake in a moderate oven, and when done put the white layer on the brown layer with meringue filling. To make the meringue, beat the white of an egg stiff, add one tablespoonful of granulated sugar, aad beab pve minutes, They Sate ully eut the'layers into small cakes with heart-shaped cutter. Frost the cakee with thin white frosting and decorate 'the top with daintily sat pieces of candied cherries and citron. gk i : Useful Hints. . Rice with grated cheese over it makes a change as a Tanchoon dish. 2h Et Tl os ror oss the C a8 ivory | on Samctiues merely. boudig sow E ! ne 3 will make look at salad is made with meat and cold boiled n and parsley. "butter, cheese clear, hot Seth. pples a dish with: unt) tender, put not broken. are ed over them. When one buys a child's dress, |; otherwise good, but with poor ma-|° chine scallops on it, one can regard the scallops as padding and work over them with excellént effect. | To take out iron rust, dip the spot into a strong solution of tar- taric acid and 'expose to the sun. When dry wet the article with warm soapsuds, rub the. stain with ripe tomato juice, eéxpose to the sun again, and when the stain is nearly dry, wash in more suds. SB ein, A WORD FOR THE HORSE, The Russian Soldier's Prayer for the Noble Animal, In the present devastating -con- flict of nations animals play no in- considerable, share, The horse, in particular, has been. dragged. in great numbers to aid his master in the work of destruction, and, like his master, to suffer in his turn. It is inexpressible to any lover of ani- mals to think that these dumb, pa- tient creatures; with their many lovable traits, are lying. maimed and tortured, enduring, who shall say what agonies, on the fields of the European struggle. The 'Bri- tish Army is in this, as in other re- spects, admirably equipped, and its veterinary organization is declared to be sufficient to cope with all classes of wounded animals. One cannot be sure, however, that the same . merciful = provision exists among the forces of the other com- batants, and there can be no doubt that thousands of disabled horses suffer cruelly until death comes to relieve them. The Germans are said, and we can believe it, to be very harsh and brutal in the treat- ment of their horses. The Russian soldier offers a striking contrast. The large tenderness and the uni- versality of sympathy that, though they have rarely managed in the past to express themselves in- the government of Russia, breathe forth in every page of the best Russian literature are strikingly exempli- fied in the Russian soldier's prayer for his horse--/'0 Lord, for .the humble beasts who with us bear the urden and heat of the day, and offer their guileless lives for the well-being of their countries, we supplicate Thy great tenderness of hearty for Thou byt romiged to save both man and beast, and great is Thy loving kindness, O Master, Saviour of the world."' = It 'would be difficult to imagine anything fur- ther than these words from the spi- rit .of Bernhardi. Auxiliary ser- vices have been organized to assist the authorities in mitigating the hardships of the horses used for Army purposes and in Glasgow. to- ay an appeal is being made for funds for this humane purpose.-- h Paper. me eee a dh Too Much for a Lawyer. A young foreigner was being tried in court, and the SSO op DY the lawyers on the opposite side began. "Now, Jaszky, what do you dor "Ven? asked Laszky. ' 4 "When you work, of course," said the lawyer. = : hei Ter ead the lawger, "I know,"" eaid the lawy "but what at?" CA a bench." he BE "Oh!" groaned ti lawyer. "Where do you work at a bench 1 BAER ! nd' of a 2 ipa Sirk " 'You make bricks?' bricks 4 : id 'Now, Laszky, listen," a ; 'What do you mak PY x sopper articles sun & | y | delicious served with custard pour-| 4 - ; ey ¢ ont said fe ather | 'why don't you do it?' = 1 The Cabinet man heaved a sigh © "I asbure you," said he, "tha have very little influence 'w: Kitchener.' the British Cabinet. But it is an absolutely truthful one. Ki is the Cabinet. With certain limit- | ations, he is the House 'of Lords and the House of Commons, and the Royal family. He is easily the most powerful man in Eng $o- day--no. exception whatever being notéd to that statement. 8 the explanation, writes "Hi y Corey, an American correspondent. . The leaders of every party in England recognized that this war threatened the very life of the Em- pire. Britannia 'is fighting with her back against the wall. They did the very sensible and very extraor- dinary thing of selecting the biggest man they had in stock to handle the war for England. Then they did the equally sensible and positively revolutionary thing of letting him handle it. . TALE Down to Brass Tacks. Kitchener has 'a distressing way of getting down to brass tacks in doing business, ' There was a Par: liamentary inquiry into certain failures to feed and clothe the new recruits--for while Parliament -is obedient it is not muzzled. The fact was shown that requisitions for necessary supplies were shuffled through half a dozen hands before they were filled. = It is nob. likely that Kitchener had known. \ofithe delay or the cause. He is not emnis- |: cient. He got reports by telephone of the revelations. Before the clam- oring on the floor had ended' Kitch-| ener 'had sent a telegram to every officer in command at a recruiting station. Y | "Buy what supplies you need and send me the bill,"' was the plrport: ohoosSe 8 en 0 n 8 0 hes 8 andmotne an ern press nd'. 1m of this telegram, 'Never mind pre-|cle vious rules. Get the stuff. I'll get you if you don't." : There was one promising. little scandal that went by-by right away. Kitchener isn't extravagant in his use of Government money--in one ft A Po an campaigns he offered 0 do for £500,000 what another sol- dier 'had estimated would cost £3,- 500,000, and then he turned back a good deal of the money--but just now he ig not counting the cost, He is too busy to fly-speck cost-sheets with audit marks. His subordin- ates are told to buy cheap when they can spare time--but that hours are worth any premium. Sent Him Back to Work. A manufacturer of khaki called at the War Office to ask for a commis- sion. In time he was ushered into Kitchener's office. He standing at the door. ; "Any military experience?' ask- ed Kitchener. «The manufacturer said he had been an officer in the territorials, and this and that. remained | joe o difficulty | igh, and travelling at a speed sometimes exceeding a hundred Yes | miles an hour over an ever varying ots | Scene in which each small road and cart track resem ach small sos The Uses of the Aeroplane may be divided roughly under four s: The ' strategical reconnais- mance, the tactical reconnaissance, the directin r 'of artillery and the dropping of bombs on the army. | The strategical reconnaissance ®1 has for its object a complete survey 1 over and beyond the enemy's lines V&S 1 to remark any movement of troops h or guns that is taking place and to note railway trains 'supply ¢ol- umns and many other details of in- . | estimablé value to the general staff. "|. The tactical reconnaissance cov- ers a smaller area, and in greater detail. The exact position = of od | enemy' trenches and guns is noted pe ine DOI pensiy eh h his ves command 0 on ace 13 he. throne be no 0 + 'What's your business 7 asked pur Kitchener: The manufacturer said he: khaki. er A "Have you any Government con- tracts?" asked Kitchener: The manufacture modest pride. ' He eral contracts -- good which' would ke mad ,, 96 factoty is. made uv|ped id the | H D Done day na 8m Have n much to the i ant no In. sntiaireralt guns firing shrapnel sh A = ra "| Flying Co Sede cory | 80d marked on the map for the in< o | formation of both infantry and ar- tillery. : more | The direction of artillery fire is, perhaps, the most interesting of any task allotted to the airmen. The aviators, having made arrange- ments 'with the commander of a lbat- "tery, rise to a considerable height, from which they can observe the o!burst of the shells on the enemy's positions. They then signal, cor- recting the range and direction of the 'British guns by means of firing colored lights. Extremely success- 01 ful resnlts have been obtained. 'by this co-operation of gun and aero- plane. ed | © Bomb dropping is a dub s not | Quite impossible. of a machin iho and at once becomes the ors of it 'ment was on the tenth of Tisri. That Samuel ho Lye concern over the seriousness situation. ahh 7. The lords of th went up against Israel, that the whole strength jstines nas 4 ings and emper to Ee front in order their soldiers, so the Philistines thought i be in the midst of the battle in that the full fighting stren; determination of the soldiers secured. 0 Sit 8. The children of Israel said Samuel, Cease not to unto J hovah our God for he save us out of the istines.--The Israel Philistines was ing tines were takin The very best offering was interceseory prayer. As to of burnt-offerings, see Lev. 1. 10. But Jehovah thundered a great thunder on that da; stances of thunder, rain, thick fog, and other natura nomena are frequently re history. : Because of such.an vietory has rested with one ¢ other side. REE : il. Beth-car,--Thie place was oi hill'close to the Philistine terri which would indicate that the Pi 'istones were driven back into their' own land. He 'between Mizpah and Shen.--M |pah is the modern Neby-San 'got. its 's lines oD t for furious gun and rifle fire. The Ger-~ mans possess a great number of When the my height" it crosses the ene The *'Archibald" Gun. It is these guns that ha named "Archiba 8, "Aro 8 ve nd 'often fires as many @ reconnais : 1 pad 10 ing to the Miss of the euiine, the rhaps luckily for r the: whistle of the sh shells at an aero Jerusalem is only five miles eyond fo the southeast. means "tooth" or sharp rock subdued by Israel (see 24). Su The hand of Jehovah. was all the days of | the Philistines alk.the 3 n- _ {uel.--**All the days' means all det ays of his government, as Sam Wer ad when Saul ng. he! 14. 'The cities which i tines fr i

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