Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 14 Feb 1901, p. 6

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m l The Home A FE\V DESSERTS. The following recipes will be found useful in prep‘lrilng simple desserts for everyday use, that can be made withdut much labor or expense. Baked Custardâ€""Do make baked cusâ€" tard scald 1 qt milk and add by do- groes to the beaten yoks of 4eggs. When well mixed stir in the whites. ‘ _ Sweeten, Humor with nutmeg and van- Cinnamon roses an. nice for the mm and pour mm a deep dish or cus_ children‘s luncheon. [Roll out some can] cupi Bike “Btu firm and bread dough quite thin, spread with a nerve com little butter, and sprinkle thickly Wled Custard_A delicious, boiled with sugar and cinnamon. Now rol o'usbaird 'is made by heatilng 1 qt milk Mt up as is”! re“ Jolly (33km, momma in a double boiler, and adding to it the. edge With water, so it Will adhere. by degrees the beaten yolks of 5 firmly. \Vith a sharp knife, cutoff eggs mixed wilt'h 6 tablespoons sugar. shfzes ffomghfimn abm‘lt one mCh Stir in 5 whites whipped stiff. Flavor t‘h‘Ck' fly t m' m 0" gmaé’ed pan’and with vanilla, and pyur into a glass when lnght’ bzlke' dish. Serve in saucers. A little preserved strawberry or cherry, or a little bright jelly may be plac- ed upon each. Bread Puddingâ€"To make bread pudding beat the yolks of 8 eggs very light, and havilng soaked 2 cups of stale and dry bread crumbs Well in milk, stir all together. ’Dhen seaâ€" son with nutmeg and add 1-4 teaspoon soda, dissolved in hot water, and last- ly the whites of the 8 eggs. Bake rbown and serve with pudding or hard sauce, which is made by stirring to a cream 1-2 cup butter and adding 2 cups powdered sugar, Beat long and hard. Custard Pieâ€"A very nice custard pie is made by beating the yolks of 4 eggs and 4 tablespoons sugar light. Then mix 1 qt millk with beaten yolks. flavor with vanilla, whip in the whites, which should be a stiff froth, mix well tund pour into pans “as: with pile crust. Grate nutmeg up- on the top and bake. Serve cold. Blanemn'ngeâ€"A firm, delicious blalncmange is made by heating 1 qt milk to boiling point and stirring in 4 tablespoons cornstarch. \Vet in a Little cold water and a saltspoon of salt and boil together five minutes, in a double boiler. Then add the wellâ€"beaten yolks of 3 eggs with cup sugar. Bolil two minutes long- er, stirring all the whil’e, remove from the fire and beat in the whipped whites while it is boiling hot. Pour into a mold wet with cold water and set in a cold place. Serve cold with Sugar and cream Apple Snowâ€"To make apple snow, pare core, stem and strain 1â€"2 doz Large, tart apples until tender. Press Uhlrough a sieve and set aside to cool. \Vhen cold add 1 cup sugar and the juice of a lemon.’ Beat the whibes of 6 eggs and add carefully to the apples. Serve immediately. Lemon Puddingâ€"Heat to the boil- ing paint 1 pt milk’ and Stir in 2 Visiting is u fine art, and she who tablespoons cornstarch wet with a has wastaer it 30 her presence is. little water. Boil five minutes, stirâ€" desired by every mmber of the fam_ Ting constantly. Whli‘le hot put in fly when she is to sojourn, £01, a time, 1 tablespoonful butter and set away is fortunate indeed. t? 13:01' Beat the you“ or 4.0935 In the first place she should arrive mg and add 1 cup sugar' mums at the time set for her coming, thus thoroughly before puttimg in the juice giving her friends as little trouble of 2 lemons and the grated rind of as possibl" As we have adop‘ted.the 1' Beat the mum” to ‘1 Stiff cream excellent plan Olf inviting our friends and add gradually to the cornstarch when the latter its cold. Stir all smooth, put in a buttered disn and bake. Serve cold. and address will bring you free sample of H ,_. ,34‘ '.‘ OEYLON GREEN TEA. "Salada," Toronto. m- canned fruits may be substituted in place of apples. \thn seasonablc', fresh currents are very nice. WHAT THE TWENTIETH CENTURY. GIRL SHOULD DO. She should be gentle and kind ._to others; She should go out of her way to do a kindness to those who are old- er and younger than herself. She should never listen to scandal or gossip and should consider personal cleanliness and oomeliness as next to Godllnlesfi. She should be neat and quiet in her dress, never wearnindr,r what is, flashy or what will attract attention. She should b9 intelligent, refined, gracious and hospitabe. She should move with grace and dignity as becomes the true. girl. She should cultivate a sweet voice, on the playground, in the home, evi- cry‘where; for in the days to come it will be to her a pearl of great price. She should not only be good, but good for something. She should acquire a thorough knowledge of housekeeping, so she can be of use to her mother and know how to manage a home of her own-â€" when she has one. She should fit herself for some ocâ€" cupation by which she can earn her own livingâ€"if it becomes necessary. She should not be a doll to bc_pet- tcd but a young woman who can help her father pay for the farm or educate the younger e‘hidren. She should treasure her good name as her most precious jewel. She should make a confident of her mother, and consider her advice and experience of more value than that of any other person. Best ctf all, she should be a Chris- tian girl, mild, gentle and lowly, not letting her left hand kndw what her right hand is doing. THE VISITOR 'WHO IS ENJOYED. a week's or a month's stay, as it may be convenient, L'he will know just the extent of her visit and will remain â€"“-' no longer. QAKES FROM BREAD DOUGH- “'hile a guest in her friends'homc A dainty produced from the bread she is for the time a member of the pan is a [fight cake that is delicious family and will enter heartily into for tea. Take 1 cqp of the ight all their pleasures and duties. Slhe dough, add 1-3 pt warm milk, 3 eggs, soon discovers what she can best do sugar or syrup to swatch, Icup to be of help to her friends and does raisins, a flaw spices. and that‘ur to Ihis in agracious, unobtrusive man- form a thick butter, as for cake. nor. Unless there are servants to Pour into a greased. tin], and allow to do that work she will keep her room rise until very light, when bake in the best of order and wilnever be slowly. In place of raisins, dry tardy at meal time. cherries stewed 31nd sweetened She will pay special attention to with maple syrup are nice. Citron the old people in the family and to may ha used. and dried apples are the children, winning their hearts by equally 8005- The apples EhOUId be many court‘tzies. Soaked for an hour in warm Water, She makes the servants no extra and turned in “he Cake Without preViOus trouble and so they are not glad Whinl when she and her baggage are gone. Another favorite relished by the In .fact, she is so pleased with all that little folks, as well as "children of has been done for hermnd made 'her- an older growth," is to knead up a self so generally usefuland delightful quantity of dough with a little but- that her friends regret her departure ter. Roll out very thin. Butter a and long for her return. flat tin, and lay in the dough, so it __._._____ will cover the bottom and sides. Out A MARTYR To PRUCIPLE. a long, narrow strip of dough, wet the edges, und press the strip along them firmy. Fill the centre with 'uppes, peeled, sliced and sweetened Indemil with sugar, dotted with bits of but- You kmnw she always revolted at her, and flavored with cinnamon. The the idea that there could be anything .flavloring my be varied with lemon in common hetwaen her and the lower juice, vanilla or nutmeg. Allow it lclasses. ‘ _ t» ' to become very light, when bake in «So I have always heard. a slow oven. This forms a favorite \Vell, she caught cold from her cools dessert, when Served warm with and was so ashamed that she refus I , . . cream, or a sweet sauce. Dried cried all medical aid and diedl Ah, poor thing! Her and was sad in the extreme. A post card with your name ' oâ€"oâ€"oâ€"oâ€"oâ€"o u o â€" oâ€"câ€"o~o-=o»o i Young Folks. lâ€"o-oâ€"oâ€"o-o â€" o â€" o~ o-oâ€"oâ€" o-c 5L EIGH SONG. Jingle, jingle, clear the way. 'Tis the merry, merry sleigh. As it swiftly sends along , Hear the burst of happy song’. See the gleam of "glances bright- Flaslhiug o’er the pathway white. See them with capricious pranks. Ploughing now the drifted banks. Jingle, jingle, on they go, Capes and bonnets white with snow. Not a single robe they fold To protect them from the cold. Jingle, jingle 'mid the storm. Fun and frolic keep them warm. Jingle, jingle, down the blilx], O‘er tlle meadows, past the mills. Nonv ’tis slow, now ‘tis fast, \Vin'ter will not always last. Jingle, jingle, clear the way, ‘Tis the merry, merry sleigh. __ , NELSON’S ILIMORJI‘AL SIGNAL. " England has had many heroes,” says Southey, “but never another who so entirely possessed the love of his fellowâ€"countrymen as Nelson." He was already the "Hero of the Nile," of “Copenhagen,” and of a hundred other naval conflicts. It was in 1805, during- the great wars with Napoleon, when Nelson, forty-seven years old, received orders to resume the command of the Mediterranean fleet, and on the night of Friday, Sep- tember 13, he left Merton forever. He sailed away in the “Victory,” and on the 28th joined the fleet off Cadiz, under Vice-Admiral Culling- wood. Already, be it remembered, he had lost an eye in Corsica, had reâ€" ceived a wound in the abdomen, off Cape St. Vilnoent. had lost an arm at Teneriffe, and had been wounded in the head in Egyptâ€""tolerable, for one war," as [he remarked. Monday, October 21, 1805, he was eight or ten miles from Trafalgar. Tlh-e Franco-Spanish fleet and Eng- lalnd's squadron, were soon to close in conflict. Nelson had little doubt as to the result. " I’ll give them,” he de- clared, "such a dressing as they nevâ€" elr had before." About eleven o’clock, after his inâ€"I terview. with his officers, he went beâ€" low to the cabin, to ’be alone for a few minutes. An officer, going down lat- elr, found him on his knees, writing words which were afterward found to be: . " At daylight saw the enemy’s wanâ€" bdned fleet from east to east southâ€" east; bore away; made the signal for r order of sailing, and to prepare for battle, the enemy wearng in succes- sion. May the great God whom I wor- ship, grant to my country, and for the benefit of Europe, in general, agrcat and glorious victory; and may no mis- conduct In any one tarnish it; and, may humanity, after victory, be the predominant feature'in the British fleet. For myself, individually, Icom- . mLt my life to Him who made me,and may His blessing light upon my onâ€" QUALITY ALWAYS WINSâ€"the reason why LU ELLA CEYLON TEA, has proved a. winner. It. makes new friends every day. Load Paokofio 25, so. so, so and can. SMA LLEST \VILD CATTLE. Celebes has the distinction of being the home of the smallest living repreâ€" sentative of the wild cattle, or, inâ€" deed, of the wild cattle of any period of the earth’s history, for no equally diminutive fossil member of the group appears to be known to science. An idea of the extremely diminutive pro- portions of the anon, or sapiâ€"utnn as the animal in question is respectively called by the inhabitants of the Cele- bes and the Malays, may be gained when it is stated that its height at the shoulder is only three feet four inches, whereas that of the great In- dian wild ox, or gaur, is at least six, feet four inches, and may, according to some writers, reach as much as seven feet. In fact, the anon is realâ€" ly nolt much, if at all larger, than at wellâ€"grown Soulthdown sheep, and scarcely exceeds in this reapect the lit-- tle domesticated B‘ramini cattle shown a. few. years ago at the Indian exhibi- tion held at Earl‘s court, London. The once has many of the characâ€" ll ll'lllll llll’lllS Sllslllll. A VERY SICK MAN MADE VERY WELL IN A VERY SHORT TIME}. The (‘asc or D. Halal“ Is on lnterenlnu Story of How :- nospntrlng Invallld l-‘Imllly Galncd lleallh and Strenglh Through lllc Use of Budd’s Kidney Pllls. Little Rapids, Aflgbm‘a, Ont., Feb. 11. â€"(Speciall.â€"Most of the inhabitants of this district are constantly exposed to inclement weather and extremes of heat and cold, with a result that very many bad cases of chronic kidney dis- ease, lame back and rheumatism aré to be found among our people. Mr. D. Haight l's onia of our most respected residents who has been] a terrible martyr to the dread torture of chronic kidney disease. For four years he) has suffered. He has tried every prescription, patent medicine and home remedy that has been suggested to him or advertised, but all to no purpose. Mr .Hal'ght enumerates at least a dozen disagree- able doses which he has forced down his throat in the hope of securing some relief, but all in vain. Some of these would help him foo a time, but very soon the pain would return with re- newed vigor to torture him. (At last some one suggested that king of kidney remedies, Dodd’s Kid- nuey Pills. He had tried so many mediâ€" deumyrs for serving my wumtry faith- 'lcinlcs that he had very little faith, but fully. l’I‘o‘ Him I resign myself, and the just cause which is entrusted to me to defend. Amen] Amen! Amen 1” At thirty-five minutes after eleven, as! given by the “Naiad’s” log, he was on deck, ordering the famous signal to the float. The story is variously told, but Pasco’s version may be ac~ wpted as the truest. He was on the poop when Nelson approached him, and, after ordering certain signals t3 be displayed, the admiral exclaimed: " Mr. Pasco, I wish to say to the fleet, l 'England confides that every man Shall do his duty,“’ adding: " You: must be quick, for I have one morel to make, which is for close action.” Lieutenant Pssco replied: "If your lordship will permit me to substitute ‘expects‘ for ‘confides,’ the signal will soon be completed. The word ' cxpects' is in the vocabulary. ‘Confides,’ must be spelled.” " That will] do, Pasco," was the reâ€" p‘ly. The signal was given by Sir Horne Popham's Telegraphic Code, and read as follows; 255. 2:19. 363. 1361. 471, 953 England expects that every man will do his duty, 2.50, 57;. 4.21.195“. The colors conveying this senti- ment, were hoisted, and Captain Blackwood relates that the shout with , which the signal was received through- out the fleet, when its significance became fully known]. was sublimew "New," exclaimed Nelson, turning to Blackwood, “I can do no more. We must trust to the great Disposer of all events, and the justice of ouri cause, I thank God for this great op~' portunity of. doing my duty.“ ‘ | His signal was not for that fleet’ alone, but for his countrymen in alll the great conflicts of war or peacei which are yet to come: "England ex-i pects that every man will do his duty. 1 ormous and somewhat gloomy resid- ', medicines at the suggestion of his friends he bought and used a box. “He cem- menced to improve from the first dose and gain-ed Steadin as the treatment continued, till finally every vestige and symptom of his old enemy had disappeared, and he was a well man. This is over a year ago and Mr. Height has had no return .or sign of the old trouble. lHis hhs been regarded by the peoâ€" ple here as one of the most remarkable Fures that has ever been effected in Algomu. Mr. Haight says, "Four years ago my kidneys [were in a bad state 1 I tried old medicines and new of all kinds, doctors‘ prescriptions and homemade cures, Sum: of them relieved me for a little while, but I was soon‘ as bad as ever again and a second trial’of the same thing proved its worthlessness. 'At last I was recommended to get Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and they cured me andf have stayed cured.” teristics of the large Indian buffalo, but its horns are relatively shorter. less curl/ed and more upright. In this, as well as in certain other respects. it is more like the young, than the adult of the lastâ€"named species, and. as young animals frequently show anâ€" cestral features which are gradually lost as maturity is approached, it would be a natural supposition that the anoo. is a primitive type of bufâ€" falo. PALACE OF KI 'G ALFONSO. The boy King of Spain, Alfonso 31111., who is the smallest King in the world lives in one of the biggest palaces ever built. It takes visitors two days to go through it. In its vast courtyard there is room for a considerable army to maneuver. The youthful monarch is said to have no affection for his en- l com: and to have expressed decided intentions of making radical alters;- tions when he grows up. However, there is plenty of time for him to change his mind before he will have attained the authority to reconstruct anything more extensive than the quarters for his toy soldiers. _+__ I'M. signature In on every box of on. couch! Laxative Bromo-Quinine mm: 00 and: that m I call a..an Do not use promiscuous lotions, no] acids, nor electricity, except tinder expert direction. Electricity often leaves black spots, impossible tot re- move, alnd the others sometimes cause permanent disfiguremen‘ts â€"â€" FOR OVER FIFTY YEARB 3 IRS WINSLOW'B SOOTHING SYRUP has used I) mothcnfor their children teething. It .0033 the uh: d. softens the gums. alloys pain. cures wind on ml 1 u tho best remldy for (ii-"boos. 250 o ban-Ia. 80‘] by all arugula cmuughoul the world. B- m and u for “Ml-a. lulow'l Soothln: Bymp.‘ ._.__ Bacon says "The debauchee of youth are so many conspiracies against old age." MBN‘I’HIAL HOTEL DIRIO ORV. “ “l ‘ “5‘”? “33"”.‘1 â€" c l weak-l, mlfid'il per 1. We do not burn' dissenters now-a.- days. No, thank heaven, me have more patienceâ€"we can wait! $100 Reward. $100. The readers of this upor will be planned learn that there is at cost. one dreaded dlual than science has been able to our in all i stages and that is Catarrh. Ho 3 Gator-r (Ire la the only positive cure n w known the medical fraternity. Caearrh chub: for; titutionnl disease, requires I. coast ton treatment. Hall's Cotorrh Cure in ukenlnté nally, acthg directly upon the blood on mucous aur aces of the system, thereby d ' troying the foundation of the (lineup, 3% giving the patient: strength I: buildln up t cont tntlca and assirting us are in oln i work. The proprietola have no much felt In[ In curative pools". that they off 1' one KW drod Dollar: fer any case that it 5.115 to enrol Band for list of toatlmonlsls. q m b d ri J. eggksmrscoou Toledool o mag am no. hall‘s kamlly Pllfa no the best Don’t lac-e tight, becauselt impede: circulation, which affects the comb plexion, and a pretty complexion in far ahead of a small waisrt any day. W P C 1063 CALVERT’S OARBOLIG OINTMENT. For all skin ailments. J. G. Galvan & 00.. Manchester, England illetallic ceilings m m Al‘Blnl(}§_& TQEQQLQ. ” unease Oaalngsâ€"New importation: anon En “ch hue and American Hos.v Casio P78“ 0 I ghtpprioou. PARK. BLACKWEBLLIO "Homology i-‘EATHER DYEING Cleaning and Curling and Kid Glam cleaned. Thad can be sent. by post, lo per 02. the been place in BITISH AMERIGAN DYEING 00. Akin] psalms. of 03:1 Paddy. Cure for Piles will). not (mu my address on receipt of two cant mum No knife. no neuy Ialva. Address. THE EUTOBINO MEDICINE 00.. Toronto, Ont. m it Will Pay You to consign all yourProducc to the Dawson Commission Co. Limited Cor. Colbome and West Market 5 ., Toronto. m will get you Nelsen wall 1. pm; 1901, conan waits” .. also the laity ln gsinlnl thahcncflta of the J 1100. Prim 0mm .50 h dud. l '37 paroxmswllorauuMontreal. A nlu Menus] f the mud Jublloo To send for our complete Cam Ioaue of In“! Kualo and Boo , with Spool-I um leachedrs llante “5 gusts ylcraam. . Her Life and Glorious Reign makes the greatest _ Biography ever written. We want a few more agent; Massive memorial volume lavishly Illustrated. Remark 3ny lowprice for aucha magnificent book. Noexperlenoi or capital necessary ' expensive outfit free; frei 'ht paid) book: on time. Anyhody can make from 5 be 316 cr do . \Vrite quick. J. L Nicholas 00., Publishem. "on Canada. THE MOST NUTRITIOUB- EFPS’S ORATEFULâ€"OOMFORTINO. CGCOA- BREAKFAST ’SUPPEBâ€"

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