Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 19 Jul 1916, p. 6

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'must_be run one or the other to win out. orange, lemon juice, mayonnaise, hole Wheat bread. Rub yolks to a ' from ai Te ; add afew drops of lemon juice An mayonnaise, work -in the yolks, drawn 3 the whites, sardines and last the orange, Spread carefully over whole 'wheat bread very lightly buttered. * Cream of Chicken Sandwich.--One- half cup diced white chicken meat, 1 teaspoon powdered gelatine, 1 cup . milk. % pint cream, salt, white pep- per, celery salt, © White bread. Dis- 'solve the gelatine in the cold milk; pound chicken fine and season; place milk with gelatine and chicken over dow fire unuil dissolved and thick; re- move and add the cream previously 'whippai stiff; allow to cool; when cold 'spread this chicken paste on the bread, using lettuce leaf, and touch of may- ~ 'onnaise if desired. ~ Cheese and Pimento Sandwich.-- Two cream cheeses, 1 can sweet pimento, 1 quart Spanish onion, % cup pecan or walnut meast, sweet] mayonnaise, brown bread. Pound | the cheese with the 'pimento and on-! negara i things. te Jule a We S 0% Tugats ough, Seventh--Patronize reliable dealers, i i They will appreciate you if you. pay cash, and if they feel you appreciate their reliability they will never fail The Rig! y. experi | up her rules for declares that it is by sticking to these faithfully that she knows how to save a penny here and there from the fam- ily income. Here they are, and all who run may read and profit thereby. fruits and meats only after personal inspection--not over the telephone. Be and quality of all that you buy. Thire erior brands of food do not pay--the best is none too good for one's daily meals. : Fourth--Buy keepable things "in large quantities. ; : Fifth--Keep systematic accaunt of all purchases, Let it be detailed, but concise. Sixth--Never buy = unnecessary previous mixture with enough mayon- naise to make a smooth, velvety con | sistency; spread on lightly buttered! white or brown bread, with 'a few ; sprigs of water cress, if desired. / Chicken-Tomato * Sandwich.--Thin _ Useful Hints, rings of ripe bomatd, breast of chick-1 It is harmful to. silk stockings to en, cucumber, white pepper, mustard; | iron them. mayonnaise, lettuce and brown bread, Slice the chicken in wafer-like slices; also the peeled, crisp cucumber; but- ter the brown bread lightly, lay on let- 'Puce, - then cucumber. Spread the | Plu Or yellow paper. : : 'cucumber with thin mayonnaise fol. Alcohol will remove ink stains from which a little mustard has been ad-| light wool materials. ded; on top of the cucumber place the| Always thoroughly scrub a chicken, then lay the bomato rings on bacon before it is sliced. top of the chicken; add a little more of) Cream soups are more nourishing the mayonnaise on the tomato and last! than stock soups. the slice of brown bread. = This has| Before belting is sewed in awash the effect of -a club sanfliwich. It! shirt it should be shrunk. should be placed on a' very large square of bread, later cut diagonally.! ghould have It must be served thoroughly cold and|in them. the cucumber and tomatoes both must} be fully ripe and juicy. Garnish with | olives and cress. This, with are- freshing beverage, makes a most ac- ceptable, substantial, hot weather ser- ice. washed alone. + Toothsome Sweet Sandwich.--One-; A delicious and %conomical des half pound figs, % pound chopped | sert is stewed figs and boiled rice dates, 1 cup grated fresh cocoanut, 1|gerved together. tablespoon grated sweet chocolate, 1| 'There is more nourishment in. the scant cup sugar, 1 cup finely broken | natural, unpolished rice than in the pecan meats, large soda'crackers, or! ghiny-white kind. white bread: Melt the chocolate inal double boiler; add remaining ingredi- ents and allow to simmer about 10 minutes, or until the mixture is a well-smoothed creamy mass. Remove! from fire, cool slightly, then beat un- til creamy. Spread on crackers or . on lightly buttered small squares of bread. A top piece may be added if i Xe ound Jeatul desired. This makes an excellent | iothes. ' 4 sandwich for the top-off of the chil- dren's meal, for the luncheon basket] instead of candy, or served on the finer { This is less likely to crack the glaze, quality of crackers it is suitable for! mv. short end of candles melted and afternoon tea. mixed with equal parts of tupentime with roast chicken, bd All bacon is improved by having boiling water poured over it before frying, itself. Handkerchiefs should be | will make them last longer. a check on your tradespeople. will ete., Alarm Clock System The alarm clock's possibilities for helpfulness aren't fully appreciated. Most, women look upon it as a neces- gary. evil, a disturber of the gray dawn, and leb it go at that; whereas, it is only waiting to exploit its ver- satile qualifications as cook, nurse, guardian, disciplinarian, memorandum and assistant housekeeper in general. © The alarm clock is a most conscien~ tious cook. 'The housewife has but to lace her pies, roast, turkey, .etc., in the oven, or her potatoes, beets and beans on the stove, set the alarm so that it will ring at or near the end of the time prescribed for cooking the different articles of food, and she may about another task with a free and vided mind, knowing that watch- alarm will summon her in time to » A teaspoonful ' of vinegar placed in a paraffin lamp that smells or smokes will cause a clear light any The "appearance of a low-ceilinged room can be much counteracted by hanging the curtains from 'the top of the window straight down to the floor. To remove tar stains rub the spot first with lard and then with soap. traces still remain rub with turpen- tine. To keep moths from rugs or carpets sprinkle well with salt, then wipe with a cloth dampened with .warm water having spirits of turpentine added in proportion of a spoonful to every quard of water. 3 When you cook fish, meat or vege- tables remember this: The flavor is reminders upon small, best preserved by steaming or roast- ps of paper, to be stuck, "stick-file" (ing. = Simmer bedg n shion, over the little ring at the top ing. Simple boiling is more economi-- clock. The slip calling for thecal, as it ddes not attention is placed on top, or, heat. When fuel is expensive this is e is penciled on each slip, the | a good thing to know, but steaming is be filed upon the ring re-- the coolest and cheapest method of order. The alarni is then summer foods, because several articl the earliest time marked upon, may be steamed over ab yi one of the slipes and reset when . or is conceled make a fine polish for hardwood floors, | 1 housekeeper has | pro- First--Pay cash for all purchases. Second--Buy all loose vegetables, thoroughly familiar with the nature Orange salad is delicious served i keeping watch upon the seas. . The White lace should be laid gway in' 889 to fill the want often expressed piece of ag were within his means, a' plage All wooden puckets when not in use| Club) has done' invaluable work two inches of water left|its uniform is It is better to wash table linen by have now A small piece of camphor in the quite inadequate for a large member- water in which cut flowers are put ship, moreover it is also thought that Always have your scales handy in only in the principal centres Gf _ the! e kitchen. It is a good idea to keep | mother country, but also in the Dom= A knife kept in the sewing basket | ber of men from those Dominions who for ripping have fought for the Empire, which from would also constitute centres to which When dishes are to be heated place | when they tansferred their labor to {them in hot water for a few minutes. our Empire: jdon conceived on generous lines with 'its annexes wherever required would {constitute a noble, visible and lasting { | prevent an unpleasant odor and smoke, | | Leave for an hour, and then wash in { the Association and subscribe to it ac= hot water softened with ammonia. If, cording to their means. so much| t for | ket ; this is the 1 MEMORIAL BERVI 1D The photographishows their Majesties the King leaving Buckingham Palace for firal, where the memorial services. to Lord Ki oi 1 in the methods of their armies and floets filtered down to modern times. as the Greek historian, ly : Sustlys observed, * Opparwunity is of great 'advantage es but especially in war ;* . and among the several things wl have been in- vented to enable man to seize it, noth- ing can be more. conductive to that énd than signals.' : ; The eafliest recorded means of con- veying 'intelligence rapidly over great distances * was by the human voice. [ Thus, when the King of Persia invad- Peace is not yet yet in sight, A rr ce BE ¢ "MEN RE-MADE FOR WAR. a i 5 on its conclusion and' directly affect of the first. thoughts of a grateful peo- One of the results of the war has and 'to those who survive, limbs, both in England and in France Veterans' 'Club, per of the Swiss army, it is a fact that of many now fighting in the trenches ut disabled and oriapled men. Let: ginal Club' was opened five years notice in Germany, Surgeon-Major ; ckn ed sistance, © gy it is not too soon to prepare te deal) with certain problems which will arise ok . Two Instances of Mechanical Surgery the welfare of those who have fought/ - 4a Are Told. i for us. When peace does come one : : : : .- {bean the enormously improved method ple will-be as to somé Memorial , to : : its heroes, to those who have fallen |in the manufacture of mechanical emorial and Germany. g -- susleds tr such a M al- According to Surgeon-Major Gam- Hand Court, High Holborn, London, a TE Germans have semarkabl : : - I devi ised Temar ly Club which is very dear ta the hearts ingenious arrangements for patching turing at Bulach on cases that had actually come under his personal Gamper 'declares that he saw such wonderful artificial legs of German in- by the ex-service man, of a place where he could meet old comrades in better and brighter surroundings than a public house, or such other resorts where he could geb a bed, write his letters, and obtain help or advice, es-. pecially with regard to employme As to this latter matter the Veta Corps (founded in connecibon with: 'active service. . hen: 11 could be transmitted - at the rate of on their horses as well and 450 miles in forty-eight hours... as| According to Caesar, the ii | quickly, smartly and thoroughly any method was in use among aig ny of a perfectly able-| Who, he tells tis, when desirous of bodied man. * {transmitting important intelligence, everywhere, A well-known sake In England 5 8 : A « i that of Lord Lucas, who was woun There were 7,000 members on the arly in the war in Flanders, with register of the Veterans Club before |, 'result that he lost & leg. An the war, the great majority of whot |g ificial limb was fitted so success- E re-joined the colors, but inte 11, that: Lord Lucas was able to view of the enormous increase of our 'transfer his services to the Royal naval and military forces and the ying Corps andis'now serving wi Dumbare of Yeverass i rid that branch of the gervice as a fully e services at the ex n of the. in Baypt, war, it is necessary that the whole pa Alified pijot somewhere in hEyp 'HUNS scope of the "Veteran's Club": should be enlarged if it is bo be of adequate BEMOAN BUTCHERY. German Soldiers Describe Verdun as wT a Hell*Hole. use. The present Club building is H. Warner. Allen, special represen- tative of 'the British press with the French army, €ends some -extralts from letters written by German sol- diers before Verdun and taken from 'their pockets when the writers were captured. - From a letter written by Lieut. Ellizen; of the 6th Reserve Infantry Regiment :-- o / "¢ April 8.--You can form, some idea of our position from the fact that all our officers have been renewed. Loss- es of the regiment are high, for its position on the platean of Vaux is simply ' disgusting. © Our battalions relieve one another; but our positions when' in réserve or resting receive as. many. shells as the first line" From: a letter dated April 11, 'whit- ten by a private soldier named Shro- | der, of the 80th Infantry Regiment :-- " We_ dre -absolutely: in a hell-hole here. The artillery fires night and | 'day... If only this wretched war would come to an end. No reasonable man To purchase and transfer the Club! can justify such a butchery of men. to an adequate building in London, Though' we have not heen long in the now ht the market, and Permantely firing line, we have.all had enough of | to endow it as' a great Imperial it and are lookirlz for peace. We yaa = po Memorial, to endow a splendid coun- | should like to kirtg to font all , fells us it is "a small flying or chawl- try house {wich has been sitered (3 these gentlemen who caused the war jiNg animal'... is the committee) as a convalencent and who profit from it." IRL ; home for the use of members who suf- 4 P Fak i ; animal, then, is the mashopper fer from their wounds = from, i a es 18 sredited. with Wb power to iy ness, to carry on the other a i COCOANUTS or s before wind ¢ of the Club and the existing Club HOW coc AN IS CROW. hundred times its own le Known and respe 'massacre of the Romans in Orleans, at sunrise, was known at Auvergne, the same evening. = Obviously, such & method would liable to interruption by weather. But 'as hi ol life Pion little, her ad planted when need arose. lishing an "infallible communication between > branches should be established not |: the space of five days. inions, for the use of the large num- however, re] the fate of many a valuable sugges- tion in our. own times. = men could "turn for help - or adyice vhic! p in the mists of antiquity, yond the seas. means: of pigeons. _ It is related by A Cen Veterans' Club in Lon- prevent all communication with outside world by drawing lines around proof that the services of the sailor and' soldier 'were appreciated and] that a generous British public lad! taken. its gallant protectors under its: own care. The work to be done is greab, but it should be done at once. | The Veterans' Club Association" has been formed to carry it out, and pat- riotic individuals in the mother coun- try and Overseas are invited to join laugh at these pigeons, to whose feet new courier. took his route through the air 7" e ' FOOD FOR THOUGHT. What is an insect 7 The dictionary neanwhile, it is estimated that the! SE a Bo meanw! Eo ated And' How the Palm Grows Where | overcrowd the e W ; ed Greece (480 B.C.) he is stated to} imposter, declined even to consider it, | and zeal. tions by -using | ously near the synagogue, letfers were home to the Jews the signif fastened, which duly reached their: his action. ~The next verse [mar I=, acters ymong son should have | oop oranis Tieligved he ® Pua had 8 tone, though. to-do man's son, for the rabbis down the healthy maxim that one did not teach his son to work tat him to be d thief. He came it when his father cut him on " becoming a Christian, according to the conjecture noted earli probable L, oe Iaaivy wan a staglo ous a; Tart Tk 0 his workma through long hours of manual labor, and re-' warded by the 'winning of his m Studies, 120 | word of 2 Cor. 6. miles away, between 8 and 9 o'cldck the bn tense, but it se 14. The verb is Their report of work done in Macedonia may well have kindled anmong the ancients, the normal line [him afresh, after the deep discourage- of shouters would, doubtless, be sup-|ment under which he began his min- istry in Corinth (1 Cor. 2.8). No A proposal is said to have been |wonder he felt it acutely, as a genius made fo Alexander tho Great (356.323 and & scholar, when he was cut short 'B,C.) by a native of Sidon for estab-| with jeers in the intellectual metropo- method" of |lis.. He could only devote himself ta. Greece and | necessary toil for daily bread, and .a his remote conquests in India within seemingly unsuccessful weekly argu- The King, | ment in the synagogue: The coming garding the proposer as an [of his friends gave him new courage Compare 2 Cor, 7. 6. It is always well to remember that Paul was very human, and liable beyond - Another method, which originated most men to suffer unjler emotional was by | strain. 6. Reviled. (margin)--So read. Your Pliny that when the city of Modena | blood: [is] upon your own heads---Sa = was besieged by Anthony he sought to | read. - the | claration, not a curse. # words, are a solemn de- 7. Apparently Paul left Aquila's it and stretching nets across the river. (house, nob because - of disagreement Decimus 'Brutus (d 43 B.C.) who was |with him and Priscilla, but because 1 in charge of the defence, was able to! move to a Gentile lodging, con signifi destinations. "Of what use were An- | that there was one prominent Jew tony's entrenchments and sentinels, least who took the warning. . Tif and of what service were all the nets : Read Titius,, a surname (nomen), he spread," asked Pliny, "when the a praznomen, or "Christian name," ds we should call it. ' ; J 8. Crispus--He and Gaius and the family of Stephetias were the only Cotinthians om Paul personally baptized (1 Cor. 1. 14; 16); compare note on verse 48, Lesson Text Studies _ 16. Believed the d spring one | ment length." = ju

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