Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 23 Mar 1905, p. 3

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And here's a poor. sickly little Child. Scott’s Emulsion makes children growâ€"makes children happy. .There goes a young man w1th narrow Chest. Con- sumption is his trouble. Scott’s Emulsion soothes rag- ged lungs and increases flesh and strength. See that pale girl P She has thin blood. Scott’s Emulsion will bring new 10505 to her face. to warm him, feed him, and strengthen his stomach. Potato Pieâ€"One cup hot mashed potato, 2 cups rich milk, .1 Leas-noon salt. 2 eggs Well beaten, 1 tableâ€" apoon butter, 2 tablespoons sugar, “3* teaspoon nutmeg 01' cinnamon. Bake with one crust. Scrambled Eggs.-â€"Break. the eggs into a. warm, buttered spider, being careful to avoid brcaln'ng the yolks; add a little salt and butter or cream, as soon as they begin to whiten stir carefully from the bottom until they are cooked as: desired. Now it’s that white-haired old man; weak digestion and cold blood. He needs , , ,7.-.V.. yuuynv, drop the eggs upon the Change withâ€" out breaking the yolks; season to taste. Pour over the eggs '1 little cream and sprinkle “ith about two ounces of grated cheese; set in a moderate oven for about fifteen minutes. Crowded street. People passing by. Old and young. All eager about their own affairs and always somebody in plain sight who needs Scott's Emulsion. Creamed Eggs.â€"â€"'Boil the eggs for .tweuty minutes. Make a cream sauce. Prepare on a hot dish :1 slice of toast for each egg and pour the sauce upon it, placing thereon part 01‘ the “him-s of the eggs cut, in thin nwm'ow strips. and on this rub part of the yolks through a sieve. Repeat this and finish with a third layer of sauce. Garnish with parsley. Swiss Styleâ€"Cover the bottom of a dish with twa ounces of fresh butâ€" ter and on this scatter grated cheese; Shirred eggsâ€"Beat the eggs thor- oughly and season with hulle‘x‘. pupâ€" per and salt; may be baked in one dish. or in separate dishes for each person. The dishes should be butâ€" tered before the eggs are put into .‘Uium. Alwaggs m gifiggg immodiatnly toast‘ Cup of molasses: when this is Well mixed add one pint of coll! milk. Iical Well, turn imo a, greased dish, set, it in another conLaining warm Water and bake three hours in a mod- erate. oven. Serve hot, with hard sauce. This pudding will look as if it had cremn and eggs in it. and it should be stirred gently three times durinfl the first. hnur nnrl 9 ha” Rice Pudding Without eggsâ€"OmL Scott’s Emulsien ovmi . These look well cut into heart or fancy shapes. Indian I'udding.-â€"â€"Au ideal dessert to serve with roast pork is hul-‘ed Indian pudding. This recipe will be loun-d delicious. ‘l‘ukc one pint of milk scald it and pour it over two heaping tablespoonfuls of Indian meal, in which a saltspoonful of sult, (meâ€"half toaspoonful of cinnamon, oneâ€"quarter of a whole nutnwg gratâ€" ed, have been blended. ’itir'brisfldy, and when perfectly smooth add one- .‘thu‘d cup of chopped suct, one-third Q €66€<€€€€€€€fl€€€§€€<€€d3 About -onful of crown or new milk. in a saucepan and stir over for about, five minutes, or, rises up, when it Should be These look well cut into heart y shapes. I I’lldding.â€"-â€"An ideal dessert 3 with roast pork is hul-‘ed dished House smooth add one- ed suet. one-third when this is well the 0 11 bu I. t ered what the hahits‘ small child as clearing: fore Copper saucepans should be cleaned on the. outside with salt and vine- gar and on the inside with‘ soap and water. after they have been filled with water containing a. small lump of soda. which must come to the boil. New tins should be set over the fire with boiling Water in them for several hours before anything is cooked in them. Teach children thrifty and invdustx'i» ous habits While they are still quifo young. and thov will alWavg- rnfniu an Useful gum.â€"Dissolvc two Ounces of gum arahic and two ounces of gum tragacauth in half a pint of Ville- gar. This will keep good for any length of time, and can he further diluted as required. Keep in a. stoppored bottle. ’I‘o cleanse your Chintz, take the curtains down, shake off the loose dust, brush cart-fully with a. soft brush, than Wipe it with a. clean flan- nel and rub it all over with dry breadcrumbs. Treated in this Way. you will find your curtains equal to new when put up again. Useful gum.â€"l)issolvc two ounces of gum arahic and two ounces of gum tragacauth in half a pint of vine- To remove stains from 3. Walnut table. First rub the spots with a flannel rag dipped into alcohol, then, with another cloth, immediately apâ€" ply oil or furniture ponle Higth polished furniture often only needs to be wiped with :1 damp cloth and rubbed with the hand. Before taking nauseous medicine, chew a bit of orange or lemon pool, or a. clove and the disagreeable taste Will not be noticed. Persons s-ué’l’erâ€" ing from nausea can often take beef tea if, before and after taking it, they suck a slice of lemon. To keep a French polished table nice, wipe on‘ all ringer marks. etc., With a slightly moistened cloth, and polish by rubbing well with a. soft duster or chumnis leather. Care of an oil stovc.â€"The only Way to prevent an oil stove from smellâ€" ing is to keep it scrupulously clean, washing it with soap and water when necessary, and to use 21 good quality oil for burning in it. Pigs and fuwls will always thrive better if potatoâ€"parings, refuse vegeâ€" tables, etc., are cooked before being given to them. After cooking, mix the. whole into :1 stifi‘ paste with barleyâ€"meal, etc. ‘ Salts of lemon may be made at home as follows: Mix thoroughly together one ounce of cream of tar- tar and half an ounce of oxalic acid. This must be placed in a bottle corked tightly and marked “poison” in large letters. When Children are allowed to handle bottles, the salts of lemon should always be kept under lock and key. To clean your‘stnim‘d knives, take a. piece of raw potato, dip it into bl'lckdust and scour them with it. In this “my the most obstinate stains may be erased. To keep table glass properly always Wash it in a wooden bowl and have sufficient water to cover. than rinse in Clean Water. Wipe off all the damp with one cloth, and polish with another. Keep tin vessels from rust by plac- ing them near the fire after they have been washed and wiped dry. Scalloped Salmon.~â€"Ahout oneâ€"half pound of cold cooked salmon, oneâ€" half pint White sauce, one teaspoonâ€" [ful of anchon essence, browned :crumbs. Remove all skin and bone from the salmon and break it into (lakes. Butter some china. fish shells or scallop shnlls, and put in a table- spoonful of the sauce which has been flavored with the anchovy essence. Then put in some flaked fish and cover again with the sauce. Shake hrownod bread crumbs over all PM for eight minutes in a moderate oven. Serve liot. For the sauce, take one ounce of buttm‘. thronâ€" half cup of rice, nearly one cup of sugar, one cup of raisins, and two quarts of milk. Stir frequently While baking, but do not 'let it get, too stifl‘. child going t( child Work it th HINTS FOR THE HOME ing up [h mistaL child r brighten grow Doug objE A (Iv Hat thrifty and industri they are still quih will always. rotai: vocate first giving ry light tasks, sue) heir toys, etc.. be . try t 1turally 7 make :t come to the mld be set over 5 Water in them fore anything is [in 29 that it e life of SOI u-d knives, Lake ,0, dip it into them with it. most obstinate 'e them acco mp] i by degrex to discov Vays‘ retain .‘St giving tasks, such . etc.. be little or come tir ssil: red far 1e an ingeni her and is kept how lon‘ fro It is because Pills make new that they have cure disease. ’ rheumatism, sc Vitus dance. pa and liver troubl Growing pains, aching joints, still- ened muscles, tender, swollen limbs-â€" that’s rlieumatisrn~a blood disease that causes ceaseless agony and crip- ples thousands It is acid in the blood that causes rheumatism. Liniâ€" mc-nts‘ may ease the pain temporarâ€" ilyâ€"but they never cure. To cure rheumatism you must remove the acid in the impure blood. L‘r. Wilâ€" liams’ Pink Pills positively cure rheumatism, acute or chronic. They act directly on the blood, driving the acid out. They made new, Warm, pure blood and send it: throbâ€" bing through the. heart, and lungs and limbs. This new blood banishes every ache and painâ€"brings good health and full actiwty. Mr. T. H. Smith, Caledonia, Ont., sayszâ€"“For a. number of years I was badly trou- bled With rheumatism, and was so crippled up I could scarcely do any Work. I tried quite a number of medicines, but they did not help me. Then I saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised for this trouble, and I got a number of boxes. Before the third box was used, I found myself improving. 1 continued to use the pills throughout the Winter and they have completely cured me. I got so . that I could work on the coldest day without a coat and not feel a twinge of the trouble. I have told quite a. few of my neighbors about the pills, and they are a popular nwlicine here." Rich, Pure Blood Will Drive Out the Most Obstinate Case of Rheumatism. If the first experiment proves as great a success as is anticipated, other wag'g'ons, costing £4,000 or £5,000 each, will be sent on similar journeys. The \vaggon was one of the exhi- bits at the St. Louis Exhibition. and is 20 feet long. It will be loaded with grain, fruit, straw, and other samples of Canadian produce, and lettered with information as to tho openings in the Dominion free grants of land. By this means the men in charge will be able to provide an object-lesson to people who would be missed on an ordinary "train and town" tour, and the waggon, openâ€" ing outward at, Will, provides quite a large area for the display of the produce. An Motor Car Exhibit to Tour the English Countries. Mr. Preston, the Labor Commis- sioner in London for Canada, has arranged an interesting motor wag- gou tour through the outâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"Way places in England and Wales says the London Daily Mail. To die on the battlefield is the only key for a Japanese to find his way to his Shinto heaven, and the soldiers who were not killed on the battlefields are considered unfortun- ate. It is maintained in Japan that if a, man gives you a fan‘ or money or pleasure, you should return it with more than what was given to you. The Japanese army and navy will not strike Russia. hard if the preâ€" sent trouble in her territory should develop into a revolution, for that would be against the traditional dodtrines of “The Bushido," writes Hydesaburo Ohashi in Leslie’s Week- ly. “The Bushido" means “the mor- al doctrines of the Samurai" and they are obeyed by all the states- men, soldiers and scholars of the present time with as much holy re- spect as the Christian’s reverence for the Bible and its teachings. In Japan Buddhism is the popular reli- gion, but Buddhist teachings are not respected by educated men or soldiers. In fact most of them are atheists or agnostics, who do not helieve in any religion but the docâ€" trines of “The Bushido.” "The Bushido," for instance, teach- es a man or woman to have the courage to perform any hara-kiri if he or she commits any serious ofâ€" fence. The spirit of this doctrine is that the offender should kill himself instead of Waiting to be executed by the law, which latter is considered in Japan as one of the. most coward- ly things. “The Bushido” also teaches that the life of a Japanese is the gift of the holy Mikado, and if the country needs the lives of her people they should be given gladly, for that is only to return to the Mikado what they have received from him. WILL ADVERTISE CANADA ng the 'Dr Brockville. Curious Doctrine That is Held by the Japanese. ‘ntvs : because Dr. Williams' Pink nako new, pure, Warm blood hey have such great power to file or nti»t r troubles, 1 which Won‘ The purchas ,‘0 that the. primed on the ‘ach box. Sold by BLOOD WILL TELL. JAPAN'S RULE OF LIFE th mnin teapot, which laced on the market They sciatic partial trainer tea stan Ont W1 positively cure a, neuralgia, St. paralysis, kidney anaemia; and the Ien alone sufi'er or must be careâ€" full name, “Dr. I‘U( all the the wrapper 1 by all medi- ' mail at 50c. or $2.50, by iavns Medicine ame ’ale lir cian, an and piar Queen Sir Griffith Boynton’s house has its “luck.” But the “luck of Boynâ€" ton Hall” is a. somewhat grisly mascot. being, according to tradi- tion, nothing less than the skull of an ancestress of the family. So long as this relic is in the hou5e all goes Well; and niuch woe having followed numerous attempts to give it Chris- tian burial, it was finallyâ€"so says the legendâ€"â€"bui1t into one of the walls,- and good fortune has been the sequel. Tne Grand Duke of Hesse is a man of a, decidedly strange temperament. He is a. wonderful shot, yet he takes no active interest in sport of any kind. He is never known to miss, and his lack of interest renders him Very cool, with the gun. But his favorite pastime is embroidery, and often when he has a piece of work on hand he will breakfast in bed and‘ remain there working in Wool nrl _Mrs. Kennerley Rumford, better known perhaps as Mme. Clara Butt, is said to be the tallest prima donna in the World. The great singer’s marriage was quite a romance. as Mr. Kennerley Rumford actually pro- posed on the concert platform when they were singing the well-known duet, “The Keys at My Heart.” General Luis ’I‘eirazas, Governor of the State of Chihuahua, is probably the largest landowner in the world, as well as the richest man in Mexico. Born poor, he has made his way gradually upwards. and now he. owns land equal in area. to several of the American States. It takes an eight hours’ journey on a. fast train to travel from one end of his property to the other. I Sir Griffith Boynton’s house has its "luck." But the "luck of Boyn- ton Hall” is a. somewhat grisly mascot. being, according to tradiâ€"x LU nearly CDDU.U‘UU a, year. The King of Sweden and Norway in spite of his age, is an athlete, and possessed of great sti‘ength. His Majesty once stopped a runaway pair of horses on the Riviera, thereby saving three lives, and he is capable of walking twenty-five miles in six hours without in any way inconâ€" veniencing himself. Interesting Gossip About Some Prominent People. Miss Helen Gould has. at her Place at Lyndhurst, on the Hudson River, one of the most beautiful gardens in the world, and engages a, gardener at a salary which runs into four figures. Together with this, the genâ€" eral expenses of the garden amount to nearly $50,000 a year. vah It's the purest tea in the Sold only in lead packets by all ‘ Mixed or Green. Highest award a Western Assurance For the Sake Of Good Health HON. GEO Losses under Adjustment Dividend payable Januar Reserve Fund Security to P‘ Capital Stock Less Calls in cour Capital ........ Resarve Fund 'Due from other Comp Interest Duo and Accr Office Furniture, Maps Branch Office and A30 Mortgages PERS ONAL POINTERS United States and State Bonds .. Dominion of Canada Stock Bank, Loan Company and other Company’s Buildings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Municipal Bonds and Debentures Railroad Bonds , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cash on Hand and on anosit Bills Receivable . . . . . . . . . A . . . . ossos paid from 01' ist Head Officesâ€"1 loxaudl‘a among h being, according to tradiâ€" hing less than the skull of Fess of the family. So long elic is in the house all goes Iriuch woe having followed attempts to give it Chris- 11, it was finallyâ€"so says ndâ€"built into one of the is an quite 2 H'on. 000. A. Cox, C. R. R. Cockburn, H. N. Baird, inancial Statement for the Y: December 3lst, l904. J. Kenny A. COX, President brill olivy Holders ng in Â¥ omplish 3 sai Hesse is a man 2 temperament. t. yet he takes sport of any :nown to miss, 0 January 5th, *‘7 r .7 Corner Wellington and Scott ix par famil Eompaniesâ€"Rei nsurances Ace! ued ‘ganimation of the company to date $40 e of payment Managi‘ng Director C. C. FOSTER, Secretary. [15, Plans, etc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . goncy Balances and Sundry and other Stocks LEABILITIES. purest tea in the world. packets by all Grocers. Black, Highest award St. Louis, I904. nI DIRECTORATE Hon. S. C. Wood, E. R. Wood, James Kerr Osborne, W. R. Brock, . Mc Murrich. him his ASSETS- litt] The Mayoress at Chatham, Eng- land, for the second year in suces- sion, is Miss Louisa Mary Dawes Driver, a young lady of four years. During her first year of office she treated 2,000 school children, pre- sented the prizes at Uhatham regat- ta, opened a bazaar with the unique speech “The show’s open," and pre- sented prizes at many meetings. She was driven to the TOWn Hall the other day to receive the honors due to her exalted position, and was lifted into a big‘ chair, from which she dangled her chubby legs and smiled sweetly at the bearded coun- cillors. Some of the latter were so daring as to kiss the Mayoress. th( sto changed its offices twenty years ago â€"a. period sufficiently long, one would think, for even a man of science to get accustomed to the new place of btsiness. One morning last summer, however, the distin- guished student of bees and ants went forth to attend a committee meeting at the office of the company. His mind was busy, as it always is, and he calmly walked past the door and went on until he found himself inside the porch of the build- ing abandoned by the company twem ty years before! Lord Avebury has a. story to tell of his absent-mindedness. For forty years he has been a. director of a certain company. That company changed its offices twentv veax‘s am) never travelled without him, and he is as fondly attached to his Royal mistress as the celebrated Irish ter- rier Jack was to the King in his afl‘ectionate moments. Sandy is priv- ileged to disport himself in the (lin- ing apartments, though his loss for- tunate brothers and sisters have to confine their activities to the other rooms in the Royal dwellings. l-natu red ph \Vallac lave used TI inc nts AN AID TO MOTHERS 3L 11 KENNY... VicePresident and (I hav that 1 $1,500,000 ()0 31.254 00 1 11 th 1t sin onsible t affih are and , Sh Streets, Toronto Year Endlng in found th Company ll Ac‘ts an 1]S( i510 for $3,305, $1,468, 189, 38. 1,608, $3,305 inf stou ,785,765 73 ,108,765 1b] 500,000 608,765 110,000 180,576 501/149 215 21 1 9 10, 40, 506, )nt pin years ago long, one Tablets wh bri g 765 304 746 (380 312 393 ,35’) 390 723 449 409 332 288 292 :h (n of the and Q‘ the 304 9 thing that Mrs Wi l lit m 48

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