Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 26 Aug 1897, p. 3

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llllllllllll . THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. Interesting Items About Our Own Country. Great Britain, the United States. and All Parts of the Globe. Condensed and Assorted for Buy Reading. CANADA. Dr. Peirson has been appoinsed Medi- cal Health Oifimr in Brantford. Seventeen additional letter boxes will be erected in Hamilton. Work on another new bridge at Nia- gara. Falls will be begun immediately. There was a. white frost in \Vinniâ€" peg W'ednesday night. but no damage was done to the crops. At Port DalhOUSie a. bonus of $6,500 to the Toronto Rubber Shoe Company was carried on a popular vote. Mr. R. F. Hollermann of Branlford. says there will be a. partial failure of the honey crop this year. The date of the autumn military camp at Kingston has been changed filial September 14th to September 7 . Exâ€"Mayor Drennan has been a11-.tppointu ed City Clerk of Kingston. ter a. deadlock in the Council lasting several weeks. Mm. George Hudson and four chil- dren were burned to death in a fire that destroyed the family residence at Rapid City. The Ottawa city bakers have raised the price of bread one cent la. loaf. so that the four-pode loaf now costs ele- ven cents. Mabel Pierce of Brockville will pro- bably lose the sight of one eye as the result of an accident with a. pair of heated curling tongs. Mr. \V. Hale, of Hamilton, whose lkull was fractured. spine injured and shoulder dislocated in a bicycle acciâ€" dent a. couple of months ago. is recov- cring. Vv'innipeg civic estimates for the curâ€" . rent year amount to $522,802, and in order to keep the tax rate down a ‘ number of civic officials have been disâ€" ‘ raised. . The Midland Town Council has passâ€" ed a resolution unging [the Ontario Gov- ernment to make a. law that timber out upon Crown lands shall be manu- factured in the Province. Mr. G. C. Cunningham has resigned the management of the Montreal Street Railway botake charge ofthe Birming- ham Tramway Company. and Mr: F. Ill... Wank‘lryn of Toronto will succeed mi. The coroner's jury in the Orr mur-l d-er case at Galt, Ont, On! Friday Ifound a. verdict of wilflul murder ‘ James Allison, the hired boy. The jury stood twelve for and three againstth Val-dict. Brockville Town Council is seeking by petition the'co-operation of differâ€"l out municipalities throughout Ontario , for IEgislation making it within their power to inflict hardâ€"labor punish- meat on tramps. - Mr. A. W. Rblss, exâ€"M.P.. for Lisgar, referring to the mining boom. so 3 the respects for the future ofBritis Coâ€" Kim bis, areexoellenrt, and he expects it Will at no distant day be the most imâ€" portant provmce of the Federation. Mr. George Johnston. the Dominion Government statistician, has compiled figures which show the rapid rate at which the great lakes are being deplet- ed. of fish. The annual catch by Canada and the United States is seventy thou- sand. tons. It is probable that the new Govern- ment telegraph line to the Klondyko mil constructed entirely throu h Canadian territory. In this case t 5 thanth of the line will be fifteen hun- dred miles. and the cost of construction about two hundred and twentyâ€"five thousand ddllars. Mr. Slifbon, of the Department of the Haterior. has decided to inspect the position of affairs on the Pacific coast Iln .connection with the real; rush which is being mad‘to the ukon. He Will accompany Major Walsh and party as far as Tagish, and see them well started. on their way; to the interior. ‘A large quantity of dynamite and giant powder, stored at Reebs' limel quarry, near Port. Ool‘i‘borne. exploded,l dicing considerable damage. Melly it occurred ah an early hour and no one was hurt. Mr. Foster's glass factory was levelled to the ground. Mr. Rebbs’ limckilns were badly damâ€" aged and his barn burned. Buildings ml surrounding towns shooln' as if they were about to fall. and much glass was broken. GREAT BRITAIN; Sir Louis Davies, addressing the Lon- don. Chamber of Commerce, uttered a warning against the indiscriminate rush to ‘the Klondike gold fields. Scotland Yard, is keeping a. strict watch on the arrival of foreign Anar- chists. as it. is rumoured that there is to aln active continental Anarchist lot, With England as the basis of oper- gowns. Admiral Sir John Arbuthnct Fisher, Controller of. the Admiralty. has been appointed to command the North Am- erica and West Indies station of the British fleet, to sucueed Viceâ€"Admiral Erskine. , l 'Cuptain Bate has presented to the Duke of York a handsome volume of Canadian jubilee stamps. on behalf of the Postâ€"Office: Department of Canada. The Duke is an ardent philatelist, and egressed himself as delighted with the g . UNITED STATES. Pig iron has been raised at Cleveland from 9.35 to $9.50 per ton. Secretary Sherman has sent a mes- sage of condolence to Spain. A Spaniard named Roderigo gather- ed gold dust worth $9,000 in two weeks ' Ln Plunas county, Cal. The Michigan Car Company, of Deâ€" troit. has received an order from the U. P. R. for 500 freight cars. I The King of Siam says the United States'oannot be seen properly inless than Six months, and he hopes to visit that country in 1899. Seats on the New York Stock Ex- change are now quoted at twenty thou- land dollars, and those who think of selling are holding for an advance. against ‘ i and com steadily in price, and indicaâ€" . . . e I Hons point to a still furthmq advance. l er is ready to use the mineral fertiliâ€" i zers to enable it to store up nitrogen. ‘Hail fell and drifted to the depth of three feet near Pueblo, 001., on \\ edu. nesday. Property of the Denver &' Rio Grande Railway was badly dam-l aged. It is reported from Saln Diego. Cal.,l that the British flag may be hoisted over (‘llppertun Island, although it is supposed to belong to Mexico. It is reported in New York that the business of the Steinway l’izinc Comâ€" pany, New York, has been sold to an English syndicate for six million dul- lars. Schlatter. who is known as the di- vine healer, has married Mrs. Margar- et Ferris, widow of the builden of the Chicago wheel. Her relatives were much opposed to the match. The operators of the Pittsburg dis- trict coal mines have decided to obtain Pinkerton detectives to pro- tect their nonâ€"union workmen, and a. serious conflict is regarded as inevit- alble. A coroner‘s jury at Chicago has re- turned a. verdict of wilful murder in the case against Jaime-.8 Frawlcy. the Chicago saloon keeper. formerly of Clmtham. Ont... who shot his barten- der. Justice Stephen J. Field, 30f the United States Supreme Court, has been thirty-four years on the bench, having been appiunlted bry kPresident Lincoln in 1863. He is now eighty-one years of age, and has no intention of retiring. Assistant Secretary Havell, of the United Statms Treasury Department, says that. the discriminating clause I in the Dingley 'Darlff Act is: not) in- tended as a revenue creating clause. but is aiman against. the Canadian railways. Canada's proposition for carrying the linails one round trip a month beâ€" tween Dawson City and Dyea. in the Klondike district, was formally accept- ed by acting Postmaster-General Shel- .lenberger, on behalf of the United States Secretary Sherman has rep-lied to Japan‘s note regarding the annexa- ltion of Hawaii. Mr. Sherman main- tains the right of the United States to annex the island. but he guarantees that. the rights of Japan will be safe- l guarded. The tone of the reply isvery friendly. . James Elbert, an Austrian, arrested on Tuwdoy, fought his way with a5 razor through 15 policemen. seriously, injuring flve; jumped 30 feel from al window of the police station, was shot. then clubbed into insensibility. He. will recover. The reports of business in the UnitedI Slates, indicate in some directions at least: a. fair increase in the volumef of, trade. Stocks and produce are advano I ing, in spite of occasional gets! back THE FARM. PROFIT IN FERTILIZERS. W'ithout question. fertilizers increase crops, but it is easily possible to so use the fertilizers that the increased pro- duction will not pay the cost of the for- tilizers used. With a proper use. of fertilizers thir- ty bushels of wheat per were may be regularly gotten. where. with the usu- al hit-or-mis-i. way of using farmyard manure only about fifteen bushels can be depended upon. Ten dollars’ worlh of chemical fertilizer. properly propor- tioned and properly used, will undoubt- edly produce a crop worth far more than ten dollars. Twenty dollars' or even $100 worth of phosphate alone. ap- plied por acre, would not double acrop as compared with an unmanured acre. not would an excessive qua ntity of pot- asli alone prove beneficial. Onthe conâ€" trar,r such applications would injure the crop and prove worse than no manure at all. The same is true of an excessive use of nitrogen without potash and phosâ€" phates. All of the reputable official fertilizer experiments show that com- plete fertilizers are necessary. and that potash and phosphates must be used regularlyâ€"nitrogen may be largely obtained through the cultivation of clove-rs cowâ€"peas, field pens. etc. For all grain crops the fertilizer must contain fully as much potash and phosphoric acid; a. small amount of ni- trogen is always advisable, but the far- mer cannot afford to pay much mon- own so cheaply. For fruit and vege- table crops, the potash must nearly dou- ble the phosphate. It is needless to go into the actual fertilizer needs of dif- ferent crops here. The prinmpal exâ€" poriiiient stations have. frequently pub- lished tables of analyses of the prin- cipal crops, and farmers will do well to consult these tables. After having determined the proper Proportions of fertilizers for a particu- lar crop. we come to a. matter of ful- ,ws a supposed Anarchist in Pittsburg‘; ly equal importanceâ€"the proper time t miss them. All forms of nitrogen should be applied closely after seed- ing time. Good growing weather means good weather for making re- fuse ainmoniates available. In the case of nitrate of wila. applications are fre- quently made after seed planting. Pot- ash and phosphates should be used be- fore seeding, probably some months be- fore. For example. if it is intended to follow your corn this year with crim- son clover, the potash and phosphate There is an increasing demand for‘ money, and the outlook is emourag-; ing. Wheat, has advanced considerably} Prices all round Show an upward ten- dency. In dry goods. clothing, boots and shoes, etc, the demand isl large. GENERAL. Signor Costa, Italy's Minister ofJus- tice. is dead at Rome. It is asserted in Vienna that the Czar ‘ declines to receive Prince Ferdinand because of the quarrel with Austria. There is great excitement in Con- sbantinople. and a general feeling pre- vails that the bomb outrages of \Ved- , nesday will be repeated. ' Thirty-five thousand British troops have been mod on the Afghan ironâ€"l tier of India, and the supression (of the rising is assured. . ' The French Govennmcnt is making overtures to the United States for a reciprocity treaty under the terms of the Dingley Tariff Act. Porte is alarmed at the (state of anarchy existing in Turkish Kurdistan. and has ordered a. genleral mobilization Ln the Viiayet of Bagdad. The Ameer of Afghanistan has issued a. firman forbidding his subjects tojoin Uhe'rebels who are now up ’nn arms against the Indian Government. A'n alliance has been formed between Turkey and Bulgaria. and in the event | of war the Sultan will place [a hundred ' tlhomsmnd men at the service of Prince ‘ F.‘lifllum. The. whole diplomatic body in Const an» tinople has protested to the Sultan" against his bestowal aft‘hle Order of Glory upon M. Stoiloff, the Bulgarian Premier, declaring that henceforth they Will refuse to accept the imferior Order‘ of Medjidieh. Michael Angiolillo, the assassin oft Senor Canovas-de Castillo, was exeâ€"Z outed in prison at San Sebastian on, Friday morning. He showed no sign ' of fear, and refused the ministrations' of the priest. l The Mexican aulthorities have dis-i covered an Italian Anarchist. who has just. arrived with the intention of as- sassmating President Ditiz. His is be-l inig closely watched by the police, and will to ar ested on the first demonstra- . tion he makes. THE LADIES ARE LEARNING. Among the hitherto unnoted beney fits conferred upon humanity by the‘ bicycle is the development in women of l a. tendency to observe "the rules of: the road," not only when riding on their ‘ whee's. but while passing along crowd- ed sidewalks tind in many similar places, where. until recently, the felm- inine habit has been to inconvenience other people as much as possible. This habit. usually ascribed to stupidity, but really due to lack of that. instinctive courtesy, as distinguished from acquir- ed courtesy. which is the one trait set- ting Ill-9“ apart from women, has been .. .i. “when w! by the absolute neces- sity imposed upon all bicyclists of giv- ing to others a fair share and the right bull‘s. of the road. Nonâ€"riding women sl.i.i cling to the old. had way, but a, marked improvement is visible in Chef younger representatives of the incon-' siderate Sex. ___._. TAKING NO CHANCES. If I should fall out of the hammock, what would you do? she asked. I would catch you in my armslhke‘lan- swered promptly. Get ready. she said with feminine im- ‘ pulsivencss. ' should be boradcasted as early as posâ€" sible after the corn is seeded. There. is very little. danger of loss from dram- age. and by the time the young clov- it will find them at hand in forms suit- able for immediate assimilation. By all means apply the mineral ferti- zers for next year's early potatoes. late the coming fall; it is perfectly safe to apply in the fall. and perfectly safe to broadcast. For wheat, use a. fertilizer containing say 2 per cent. of ammonia. 6 per cent. of potash and 6 per cent. of phosphoric actd applied with the seed. Next spring, apply 150 pounds of nit- rate of soda per acre as soon as the last snow is well out of the way. This is the way the French farmers get the 80 bushels of wheat per acre. which seems almost: impossible to our farm- ers. Mix right and use right solves the problem of fertilizing With chemicals. but do not feed niggardly; don’t try to get something for nothing. OVERH EATED HORSES. The symptoms of overheating are easily noticed, as the horse will sudden- ly stop and refuse to work. or in more severe cases stagger and fall. The horse should be unharnessed at once and reâ€" moved to a shady place and freely sprinkled with water, head and body. Sponging the mouth and nostrils with water or with vinegar and water will revive the animal. In ordinary cases it will take several hours before the horse can safely be removed. as in the proof can of recovery it is liable to stagger and fall. ’Iihr sacrifying and bleeding of the mouth and ears. not infrequently practiced by drivers who are frightened and do not know what to do are useless and senseless and only excite the horse. then in acondition where rest and quiet are most essential to recovery. The prevention of suns'iroke lies in the judiâ€" cious care of the horse at this particuâ€" lar time. The patient and careful drivâ€" er will have little to fear from the heat, whereas the man who hurries or other- wise abuses his horses invites sunâ€" stroke. It is well to call the attention of drivers and foreinen of burns to the liability of horses to sore shoulder at the pres:an time, when perspiration and dust easily irritate the skin. The re- ’sults are Sores, simple abrasions, swell- ably “38(1- ings, grills and abscesses, which if not properly attend-ed to from the start may make the horse unserviceable for weeks at a time. Pains should be taken to wash the shoulders of horses with wa- ter and soap when they return from the day's work. and if there are any visi- ble swellings or sores. they should be bother with sallt and water. and in cases of open or running sores acar~ bolic salve or other disinfecting oint- ment should be applied. Horses in this condition should be kept from work un- til the wounds are healed. although in the of small Sores pads of straw or felt may be attached to the collars or other harness parts in such a way as to prevent. further irritation and pressure. If this can be accomplished, the sores will heal. while at the same time the horse may be moderately work~ ed. \Ve would also call attention to the too free use of drinking fountains. In great: heat the horse should be allow- ed to drink frequently. but. a little at a. time. UPVVARD TREND 0F DAIRYING. The old proverb that he who makes two blades of gray grow where only one sprang up before is a public bene- factor, ought to be widened in its Scope so as to take in the dairyman who, by careful management increases the valâ€" ue of his herd. , It is no slight achievement to have been able to take a lot of poor cows which scarcely paid for their keeping and bring them up to the point where the quantity of milk produced is from one-fourth to one-half greater than at first. and the value of the product in- creased in still greater proportion. This is what many herdsmen have done and are now doing. The man who is satisfied to drift along in the old way is unwilling to believe the reports of those who have built. up their dairies. from small be ginnings to a. piston of profit. "Stuff and nonsensel" he says; "I know that no cow can be made to produce four hundred pounds of butter in a. year. W'hy. that is more than any four of my cows will do. and they are good ones. tool" We may well .believe this lat- ter statement if we Visit his farm and note his methods. Cows selected with no idea of their true value as milk or butter makers; poor pastures; scanty supply of water; unventilatcd stables; out-of-dabe appliances in the house; slipshod ways of caring for milk, and butter; no dairy aper on the tableâ€" can't afford to ta 0 itâ€"these indicate truthfully the state of this man‘s busi- ness. A nd still, we do not know that many men have brought their dairies up to the point of perfection spoken abovo; and they are not yet satisfied. It is possible to start with just such a herd as has been described. and, by making it a study. so elevate the capacity of the individual members of the flock. that in a. few years it will be a source ey for nitrogen when he can grow his of profit instead of an expense to the owner. LICE Though not a. disease, are generally classed as such for a. louse-afflicted fowl is as bad off as one that is diseased. It seems hard that. fowls should be made to suffer so much inconvenience, and their owner so much loss, because of un- tbrift. through neglect to provide means whereby they may keep themselves free from lice. Cleanliness will do it. When lice have got a foothold in a. flock. or in their quarters. the real work begins. for they must be dislodg- ed or health and profit are gone. The symptoms of lice are various. Bowel disease in summer is one; when chicks are sleepy or drowsy. look out for lice ;. when fowls refuse to eat; when they look puny or grow slowly: when they die suddenly; when there is a. gradual failing or wasting away; when there is constant crying or loss' of feathers, look out for lice. Even when houses are kept clean. large body lice may be found on chicks; ' A . these come from the adult fowls. chick will never get these lice unless old i fowls are near; that is why brooder chicks grow faster than those under hens. The large lice will kill duckssuddenâ€" ly. They kill nearly all the young tur- keys that die that are not killed by wet and damp. -\‘.'henever you notice a sick fowl dusting itself look for lice. If the house is kept clean. and adust bath provided the hens will drive the little mites away, but it is not easy to get rid of the large lice. Finely sift- ed coal ashes or dry dirt. especially road dust, is excellent. A little sul- phur added to the (lust bath, is a. hel as well be a little air-slaked lime. The poultry must have a. dust, bath. both in summer and winter. .__.__.*â€"._ SUICIDAL DOCTORS. What Is the Explanation ofa Remarkuhl Fact Shown lfly Stalisllcs.‘ Statistics show that the medical pro- fession is more prone to suicide than any other. Duting the last three years the plumber of suicides occurring among physicians has been. respectively, forty- nine. and footy-seven per annunn. an average of nearly one to 2,000; or, as the death rate among the physicians about twentyâ€"five to 1.000, nearly one- fiftieth. of all the death‘s in the pro- fesion have been by suicide. It has been suggested that an explanation of this tendency may be found in the deâ€" velopme-nt of morbid fancies in the mind of a doctor, on account of his con- stant association with the sick and dy- ing, or because he has the requisite knowledge of how to die painlessly and l conveniently. A medical journal dissents from all these views and holds that the leading factor is this accessibility of the poisâ€" onous drugs. which are almost invariâ€" Suicide is largely a. matter of insane impulse. Imagine a. man faâ€" tigued in body and depressed in spirits --a.~3 the doctor very often isâ€"swayed by an oV'erwhlellming conviction of the utter weariness of Life to the impulse of suicide. If he had to put on his ‘hat walk to the drug store and tax his in- genuity for a lie with which to explain his desire for poison. he might pOSL‘ pone the fatal act from more inertia, or he may meet a. friend or have his interest in life aroused by one of a multitude of everyâ€"(lay occurrences. or physicial exercise may bring him to his senses. If. however. as is the case with almost every doctor, he has simply to feel in. his pockets. or walk across his office to get a. deadly poison. the mnpu‘lsa may he carried. into execution before anything can happen to sup plant it in the brain. N0 DISCOUNT 0N THEM. Sheâ€"How can I ever repay youfor your kindness! Herâ€"With kisses. thheâ€"Eow much do you value them a Heâ€"I‘ll take them at their face val- ue. . THE HOME. AN ORDERLY HOUSE. It seems very strange that so many hardâ€"working nibblier do not teach their children order. Much needless work would thus be spared. It is lire- quontly noticed in homes where the mother takes particular care to keep Lhimg‘s in order, the other members of the family do not seem to regard it their duty to aid her. or even ltl'y to keep order. Children are allowed to drop their clothes wherever they hap- pen to be. Hats, caps. shoes and var- ious articles of clothing are scattered. over the house. Streaks and stains and smudges are imprinted on floors furniture and walls for the mother to remove and in spilto of hler care disor- der reigns. '_ ‘ ' Perhaps she has just flmshedscrubâ€" hing her kitchen. and flushed and weary though she be. the thoughtless man who comes in and tracks the white floor with unsightly mud. does not ap- preciate the labor spenlt. She is con- stalntly "picking up" sitter some one. Bob and Mary cannot find their hats pr their books. "Mother" miust hunt for! them and tibia articles are discovered under chairs or sofas or behind doors where the careless owners dropped them. A clean white cloth had just} been put on the table, and John put a greasy knife on it. Instantly there was an ugly spot. There is; recepta- cle provided for the comb and brush and a. rack for the boch, but invar- iably one will find. the bowel on tilld floor and the comb and brush- any-0 where except where ’they should be. : The bedrooms are nlever in order. Soiled garments are tlhrown across the immaculate spread. clothing is never hung into the closets till the mother does it. The washstamd is splashed with soapy water. and the soap left ,dissolve in the water. Everything is 'neglected by the careless fairnin uln- ltil put in order by the .mother. This l is hardly the fault of the family. They! should be taught differently. Every- thing should have a. place and be ,pufl there when not in use. Much workl iwould be spared one member at least. DELI CIOlU S VEGiEII‘lAyBiLES. Baked Cucumbersâ€"Peel a number of ,Iarge cucumbers and remove the soil: 1 inside. after splitting them lengthwise. In peeling scout them thateach suds will lay level in the pan. Rub acupful of soft breadcrumbs into a. piece of but- ter the size of a ‘he-nl’s egg and liddn tablespoonful of finely chopped onions: season the mixture with salt,and alib- tls black pepper. making it quite Sharp. Fill the excavated cucumbersset them in apan and bake them in ttlhe oven till the vegetable is soft alnd the stuffing a. delicate brown on top. A cup of crumbs should be enough for four cu- cumbers. ’ Carrots.-â€"GiVe preference to the small French variety. Scrape and slice them lengthwise, having pieces not much more than an inch long. Boil till tenâ€" der and serve with: white cream sauce. lTlhis is made by cooking a. tablespoonâ€" fuI of butter with same quantity of flour and a cup of milk added gradual- ly; season with salt and pepper bnly. l Baked Cauliflower with Chooserâ€"Boil the cauliflower till quite done and ten- ‘der. Drain and separate into small. ‘pieces in a. baking dish; smooth 3. ta.- blespoonful of flour into a cup of milk and pour over the. cauliflower; season: ed with salt and pepper. cover 'With p thread crumbs. partly filling the open- wnd over all sprinkle grated cheese. The cheese should notbe what might be called strong, but if very mild and fresh it may be used :quibe freely. Bake long enough to melt the cheese completely and to bail and thicken the milk and flour. Twenty minutes, if the oven is good and hot. but care must be taken not to burn, Greetn Peasâ€"Shell one-half peck of young peas, put them in a saucepan. i add one. tablespoonful of sugar and suf- ificient cold water to barely cover; add two ounces of butter and boil fifteen minutes: then add one even teaspoon- lful of stilt, and cook till nearly dry; add oneâ€"quarter teaspoonful of white 1pepper. Mix the yolk of two eggs with one-half cupful of cream. add it‘to the peas. let it remain for a few minâ€" utes over the fire without boiling. then V serve. : l Cooked Cucumbers.â€"- Large, full- growtn cucumbers. cooked daintily.ma.y lbs digested with ease by the most deliâ€" .cate stomach. Cut them into halves. then into quarters. then into eighths; lput them in abaking-pan. cover with lboiling water; add a. teaspoonful ofsalt land simmer gently for twantv minutes. Lift them carefully with astraincr,a.râ€" l range neatly on slices of toasted bread. 'and pour over them asaucc made as for asparagus. using for thwsauce the lwater in which. the cucumbers were ‘ boiled. ings. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Peach stains may be removed from Iinecn if you will soak them for u long time in a. weak solution of chloride of lime. Use in the proportion of one taâ€" blespoomful of lime to four quarts of water. Grass stains may be removed by soaking them in cream of ‘tarlar water. In both cases the linen should be. thoroughly rinsed afterward. Iron runst may be removed by sprinkâ€" ling salt 0m ihcspol’. then s'uicezelem- on juice. on it until it is lhmoufrhlly \Vt‘i’. and lay it in the sun. lf‘ihlt‘ first application does not remove the rust, try it again. for. if persisted in. It will certainly remove rust from linen. A weak Solution of oaxlic acid is also good. Brown flour is almost as necessary [0 keep on hand in ihl9 lztore closet as white flour. To brown flour put a thick layer of flour in. a baking-pan and place. it in a hot. oven. \Vatch it. and stir with a. spoon until flip. flour is well browned all through. ‘Vhen it becomes cold put it into empty pm- serVe jan and cayer them oloselv. It will than be ready to use in making uruvies and sauces. or whatever it is needed for.

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