Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 13 Oct 1915, p. 2

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eggs, one-half cup anyy Sugar. Nuts, cocoanut, cherries, strawberries | and peanut butter may be combined with this filling to place between the layers of cake and on top. Molded Spinach Salad.--Cook spin- ach early in the day, chop fine; sea- son with salt and pepper, and add one tablespoon melted butter or olive oil 'to each cup of spinach. Press firmly into small molds and place on ice. Serve on lettuce leaves with French dressing and garnish with slices of hard boiled eggs. To Cream Butter.--Put the requir- ed amount of butter in a bowl and with a wooden spoon work until soft and creamy. Pour off any water or buttermilk which may come from the butter during the process of cream- ing. Butter should be creamed for spreading on thin slices of sandwich bread, for making fairy butter or hard sauce, or for making a butter cake. Pea Puree.--Boil a quart of shelled peas in salt 'water, with a young onion, a few sprigs of parsley and six mint leaves. Rub through a colan- der and return to the fire, adding half a cupful of good sugar. . When it has boiled two minutes stir in a table-. spoonful of butter rolled "in flour, cook one minute longer and pour upon croutons of fried bread dice in = the tureen. Housewives can economize on but- Suet is cut in small pieces, covered with water, allowed to. soak for a day, the water bemg changed once. When drained, it is put in a kettle with one-half cup skim milk to. each pound of suet, and cooked slowly un- til sound of boiling has ceased. When partly cooked: the clear fat is drain- ed from the scraps. Graham Bread.--Four cups graham flour, 8% cups white flour, 1 table- spoonful 'molasses, 3 cups tepid wa- ter, 1 yeast cake, 1 heaping teaspoon- ful salt, 2 tablespoonfuls brown su- gar, 1% teaspoonful soda, 2 . table- spoonfuls butter, % cup milk. Sift flour, sugar, salt together; then rub in the butter, Dissolve soda in the molasses and add it. Then add luke- warm water and. yeast dissolved in milk: Knead lightly, cover and rise. Form into two loaves; place in butter- ed pans and bake for 1% hours in moderate oven, Duchess Pudding. -- Three-fourths cup bread crumbs, one-half cup desic- cated cocoanut, two eggs, one-half cup sultana raisins, one-half cup su- gar, one cup scalded milk, one-fourth teaspoon salt, one teaspoon lemon juice, two cups whipped and sweeten- ed cream. Soak bread crumbs in milk ten minutes. Add cocoanut, sugar, walt, lemon juice and raisins. Beat well, add yolks of eggs slightly beat- en and: whites of eggs stiffly beaten. Turn. into well buttered molds, cover with buttered paper and steam stead- ily one. hour, Serve cold, with. whip- ped. cream. Rice and Cheese Souffle. Three cups boiled rice, three egg whites, one cup' light cream or rich milk, y Ll teaspoons butter; one and id cups, grated American cheese, crack-| er ¢rumbs. Butter pudding dish and le with cracker crumbs, Put rice, which should be warm, in bowl and-beat till very light, Add 'ogg whités, whipped stiff, and beat fto-| gether. Spread one-third rice mix- ture in pudding dish, cover with one- third cheese, dot with one teaspoon' butter and sprinkle with cracker himself Hints for the. Home. Ry men ! ed often. Tainted ' Reserve the coarse crunibs remaining ter by the use of beef fat. One way |; : r) of. utilizing the fat is the following: in the strainer for meat stuffings or fee, before adding the water, mix well with the dry coffee as much mus- tard powder as will cover a five-cent piece and same quantity of salt for every pint of coffee required. Sprinkle your roast beef with flour before roasting; it keeps in the juice. To brown meat nicely a very little brown sugar rubbed on before cook- ing is a help; the meat should be bast- medt should be washed in a little vinegar before cook- : ing. When windows are difficult to open or close rub the cords with "a. little soft soap. Try rubbing a little yellow soap on anything that is rather hard to work on a machine, and it will be found to go much easier. Always keep a piece of soap in the machine drawer; it is very handy for = that purpose. Starched collars often get. the' studhole broken before they are half worn out. To make them wear longer sew a piece of fine white tape neatly | across the hole: and work new hole in the tape. If this is done before go- ing to the laundry they will look quite | neat and tidy when they come back, and will wear quite a long time. Every scrap of clean bread not usable in other ways should be dried and then ground in a meat chopper. After this sift it through a strainer somewhat coarser than a flour sifter; scalloped fish or vegetables. The fine | crumbs that pass through may be used for breading chops or oysters or croquettes. This fine crumb meal also may take the place of an equal meas- ure of flour in muffins, griddle cakes, etc. Usually it is not best to use more than one-fourth to one-half of the crumb meal. HIS EAR AND HIS ART. The Portrait Painter and Lady Bridgewater. Anne, Henrietta, Elizabeth, and Mary, the four daughters of the great Duke of Marlborough; were all bheau- tiful women, but Lady Elizabeth, who married the Earl of Bridgewater, was the most beautiful. Courtiers, artists, and poets united in celebrating her loveliness--her "angel's sweetness," as Pope, one of her most ardent ad- mirers, termed it in a letter to his friend, Charles Jervas. Jervas, an Irishman of pleasing address, moder-~ ate talent, and exceptional good looks, good luck, and unashamed vanity, had become one of the most popular por- trait painters of the time. He had just completed a portrait of Lady Bridgewater, when she died. 8922-8036 STYLE AND BECOMINGNESS COMBINED. The new Fall dresses are, to say the, least," refreshingly 'delightful: There is so wide a range of choice and "the garments are so easy and simple' make that there is little excuse fi one's, not being - well "supplied clothes, Overblouse dresses are fash ionable, and one of the smartest' AS Ladies' Home Journel Pattern No, 8086, which has a four-piece skirt, plaited on the hips. The shirtwaist! worn with it has one of the smart convertible collars. 'Blouse No. 8922 "cuts in sizes 82 to 46 inches, bust mea- sure, requiring in size 36 8% yards 27-inch 'material. No, 8085 cuts in MASTER OR SERVANT? Po You Manage Your Mind or Does ? it Manage You? Despite the difficult look of the word, psychology is a most interesting and. intensely fascinating subject, Briefly, it is the science which deals sizes 82 to 44 inches, bust measure, requiring 8 yards 86-inch material, Pattern No. 8987.--Smart and. sim- plé lines are combined in Ladies Home Journal dress pattern No. 89 1 waist opens-in front and has a deep yoke and two styles of collars, a small Quaker col- 1 8 two-p yoke, Te rer ri Shien TAT 44 inches, bust measure, requiring in size 36 8% yards 27-inch material with 3% yard 27-inch contrasting ma- terial for collar and cuffs : Patterns, 15 cents each, ¢ tained at your local Ladies Journal dealer, or from the Home Pat- | 8% tern Company, Toronto, Ontario, 188-A George Street, your mind, and don't Tet it manage youl everyday life psychological effects is to have many interests in life--one main one, and the rest side-lines, were. - A busy mind keeps its ec brium, and where stern common-sense reigns, psychological effects have no Beauty, frail flower that every season! With the extraordinary effect of the place. fears, Blooms in, thy colors for a thousand years wrote Pope; who proved himself | thereby both a poor critic and a mis- Tale & prophet, --and, he added mourn- Alas! Row little from the grave 'we claim! Thou but preserv'st a face, and 'T a name! : Jervas's portrait of the lovely Lady; ' to- | Bridgewater is unknown to day, but; oddly enough, an - reli ot one e of the sittings gave lor the picture. himself in love with her, bout hi Santry loves Satiursivn Wee | ; mind on the body. = To make matters clearer, here siniple instance of ordinary huoita gical effect, You are Eyeling, dnd come to 5 long, steep hill. If you let your 'eyes dwell on the a 'and ts | ingen $ a feeling of depression -and is communicated. to the body, | various which' instantly tires and loges energy. The hill} sight, mind, suscles--there's the porcisioged. sequence. But if fixed = the road on, that strange doen't; « come. It's The Nicknames. Hive ' + mous 'Generals, All good soldiers love i General ranch, for. Vg YDumples 3 i Th French," 'and Hamilton has been "Silent Tan." | rien is f rly The best antidote to. 'ordinary; hoo mony comm

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