Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 11 Oct 1906, p. 2

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Vegetable Cutlets. â€"â€" Delightful vege- tnlile cutlets are made in this way. Mesh six large hot. boiled potatoes. adding butter. seasoning. and enough hot milk to slightly moisten. tiliol) “"9 one onion and fry golden hmnn in R toblmpoonlul oi butter. Boil and chop fine new carrots and white turanS ‘0 make one heaping cuptul oi ouch, add these and tin- onion to the potato. sea- son very highly with salt and pepper. add a tablespounlul of Chopped parsley and mould into small cutlets. Dip ouch in slightly beaten egg, roll in line bread crumbs, and fry golden brown in deep. smoking hot tat. Stuffed Egg l’lant.â€"â€"To stuff wipe large egg plant and boil in salted water for fifteen minutes. then drain and cool. Cut each in half lengthwise and scoop out the centres, leaving the sides almost an inch thick. Chop the centres line. mix with on equal quantity of crumbled bread soaked for three minutes in a little milk. then pressed quite dry. one onion chopped and lightly tried in a little dripping and a high seasoning. The addition of a small amount of chopped cooked hem adds to the tasti- ncss. [leap the shells with the mix- ture. cover virilh buttered crumbs. and brown in a hot oven. $+++++++++++++++++++++ DOMESTIC RECIPES. +++++++++++++ ++++++++~ a quarter of a pound of caster sugar and three ounces of butter till 0! the consis- tency of whipped cream; then add beaten yolks of two eggs and six ounces 0! bread crumbs. Also mix the milk and chocolate and a few drops of vanilla. Beat up whites of eggs with a tiny pinch of salt, place all in greased basins, cover with greased paper, and stand for one hour. Serve with sweet sauce Fish Salad. â€" Ingredients required: Cold cooked fish, salad of lettuce and tomato two yolks of eggs. two table- spoonfiils of salad oil, one tablespoon- tul of vinegar. pepper and salt, and sugar. Take the fish, skin it, and re- move the bones. and cut in nest slices. Arange a nice salad on a dish, with slices of fish on the top. Beat the yolks oi tx‘vo eggs in a basin with a wooden spoon, and gradually add the vinegar; stir one way only, as the oil is slowly added. Season with salt. pepper and sugar. Coat each piece of fish with this sauce just before sending it to table, and garnish the dish with slices of tomato and hard-boiled eggs. Apple Cakeâ€"Place a thin layer of short pastry on a round baking tin. pinch up the edges with the fingers. so as to make a little ledge round the cake. Peel and cut in two some large apples, carefully take out the core. and slice them, then arrange in circles round the pastry, one slice overlapping the other. Sprinkle with ground cinnamon and sugar. and bake for three-quarters of an hour in a steady oven. When cold di- vide into pir-ecs, sitt more sugar over, and serve. Brown Buttered Eggsâ€"Put. two table- spooniuls oi butter in a small saucepan and cook slowly until it is dark brown, then drop in quickly two tablespoonfuls oi tarragon vinegar. cook for a moment and take from the fire. Divide between tour shin-ed egg cups and add to each a quarter of a teaspoontul of chopped parsley; break a raw egg carefully in each, place in a hot oven. and bake un- til the whites are set. A variation on this recipe is to pouch the eggs sepa- rately, trim the whites with a cutter, and slip them into the cups in which the sauce has been kept hot. Chocolate Puddingâ€"Grate a quarter of a pound 0! plain chocolate, and mix it with a quarter of a pint of milk, and cook genlly till smooth. Beat. together Pickled Beetroots.â€"There are some precautions needed in the keeping of pickles that may not be usually con- FIFI'Y CENTS About the Hausa SCOTT & BOWNE N some condiiions the gain from the use of Scott's Emulsion is very rapid. For this reason we put up a fifty-cent size, which is enough for an ordinary cough or cold or useful as a trial for babies and children. In other conditions the gain is slowerâ€"health cannot be built up in a day. In such cases Scott's Emulsion must be taken as nourishment; a food rather than a medicine. It’s a food for tired and weak digestions. g... an! $1.00. All dragging Sen.de fro: samolo Toronto, Ont. Chemisb. sidered. They must not from», or they will be spoiled; they should always be in stone crocks or glass, never in glazed jars or tins of any sort; they must be kept, cool. and especially must- the cup- board be entirely free of dampness where pickles are stored. If grease of any kind has been .in a jar or bottle pickles will spoil it put in the same receptacle. Among the most attractive vegetables used for sour pickles is the beet. Care should be taken in preparing them for boiling to not. prick the outer skin. or the beautiful red is lost in cooking. Select them of uniform size. wash and boil about an hour and a hall; drain and cool; peel and slice half an inch thick. Measure vinegar to cover, and add two mmnos of allsmce and the same of whole ounces of allspice and the same peppers to each gallon and boil mimnes. When ccld pour o sliced heels and cover. They ready for use in a week. Puree of Celery. -â€" Chop fine a little celery, tops and all. and place over the w fire in a kettle conlaining one pint ofile boiling wuler: lel [his stew for a few!d minutes until lhe celery flavors the pl water; then strain, and add the liquid 1“} There are thousands of mothers TEN MINUTE SOUPS. throughout Canada who have no hesita- ‘ ‘ . tion in saying that the good health on- Puree of Celery. -â€" Chop {me a Mile jode by their little ones is entirely due celery. tops and ML 11m} Place 0"?“ the to the judicious use of Baby‘s Own Tab. fire in a kettle comhlmhg one Wm Offlets. And there are many mothers who boning WM“: let “"5 Stew [0" '1 f0W'd.1 not haitate to say that. at critical minutes until the COM? “WOW. the periods the Tablets have saved a baby water; then strain. and add the hqmd life. Mrs. Wm. Forth). St. Genevieve. to one quart of milk that has been boiled Que" says; "I feel sure that Baby's and thickened with two tablespoonfuls own Tabieis Saved my baby's me, of flour and one of butter. Season with when I first, began giving them in him 53". pepper and Celery 58“: and serve he was so badly constipated that the with saltines. Celery extract may be hnu'els could only be moved by injcc made to flavor this SOUP if “0 “€511 091’ inn. and he suffered terribly. After my is at. hand. the first day I saw a marked change. Cream of Spinach Soupâ€"Chop fine some cold~boiled spinach. place two gills of cream in a saucepan and add a pint of milk; thicken Wlul a tablespoonful oi llour added to half as much butter. and then season with white pepper and a dash of grated nutmeg. Stir in enough of the chopped spinach to color the soup 0 light green; let it hell up. strain and ‘then serve, adding salt and butter the last thing. Tomato Cream Soupâ€"Place a cup of tomatoes over the fire to heat. adding a pinch of soda and a little water. When heated through. strain carefully to re- move every seed. and add to one pint of boiling milk that has been thickened slightly with flour and butter rubbed to- gether till smooth. Boil up once,. and season with salt and paprika; serve with croutons; Soup Soubisc. â€" Left over creamed onions can be chopped fine and added to one pint of boilingr milk; the cream gravy should thicken the soup sumâ€" ciently, but more flour may be added if‘ necessary. Boil all together then strain. season and serve with saltines. A little onion juice may he added if the flavor of onions is not quite pronounced. Moisten a little prepared chalk with cold water, to which a few drops of ammonia have been added. Smear over the silver, brush off when dry. and polish with a soft Chamois leather. Cream of Peanut Soup.â€"Add half a pint ol peanut butler to one quart of boiling milk. season with a bay leaf, a little salt, celery salt, or extract, and one tablespoonful of grated onion. Cook for six minutes in a double-boiler, and then thicken with one tablesponful of flour or cornslnrch, moislened in a liltle cold milk. Cook until smooth, slrain through a fine sieve and serve at once with croutons made of enlh‘e wheat bread A few drops of paregoric in waler will exterminate all the ants on the premises. Put it into a shallow dish, and the ants will {all into it. Prunes are greatly improved by being Prunes are greatly improved by being cooked in 21 little cider. To restore discolored brass make a paste of vinegar and salt, and rub it on 'lhe stains. Then polish with a dry piece of ilannel. Yellow stains left on white cloth by sewing machine oil can be removed by rubbing the spots with a cloth wet with ammonia before washing with soap. See that the skin of polaioes rubs off easily when buying these; if not, they havexbeen dug some days. and will not he as good a flavor as if freshly dug. Inventor Discovers Subslimle lor Rub- ber Made From Cereals. Patent omve 300 inventions have been filed laincd success. The new claimant. is Mr. William Thredtall Carr. of Wembley. He pur- poses to make artificial rubber from cer- eals. It. is said that a syndicate of cabi- lalists interested in the manufacturing have offered him 31250000 for his patent rights. Theinvention of artificial rubher was prophesied at the recent meeting of the British Association. and the industrial world has been eager for it ever since the motor car and bicycle trades threatened to exhaust the supply of the natural article. Mr. Carr‘s substitute is obtained by Mr. Carr's substitute is obtained treating any cereal with phyalir well-known chemical snbslance that in solution as a ferment. turning starchy matter in grain into dexlr Another chemical is used in the met to check termmtation at any (195 stage. This makns it possible to 1 The “'lll-‘AT MOTOR TIRES. 11101“ USEFUL HINTS records show that some of substitutes [or rubber not one of which has at- propos OVC!‘ m 1yalin, a that ncis ting the dextrose. : pTOCPS< desired for five 'er me will be Qua, says: “I feel sure that Baby's Own Tablets saved my ba-hy's life. When I first began giving them to him he was so badly constipated that. the hnwels could only be moved by injec- inn, and he suffered terribly. After the first day I saw a marked change, and in less than a wool: the trouble was entirely removed, and he has since en- joyed the best of health." You can get Baby‘s Own Tablets from your drug gist or by mail at ‘25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. A llunter‘s Adventure with a Wounded Pachyderin in a Malayan Forest. I took ~steady aim at the last vertebra at the nape of its neck. expecting the bullet to smash its backbone and per- haps to rake into ils brain, writes G. Maxwell in the Temple Bar, describing an elephant hunt in the Malay penin- sula.‘ I fired and all was still. Peering under the smoke of my ten bore, I saw the animal lying motionless. I waited a few seconds. and then lOL|l\'0d around toward the two Malays. The week before. shooting in the Kunantan valley, I had killed a fine tusker ele- phant with a single bullet in the brain. This made two Consecutive elephants with two consecutive bullets. and the second of them was this famous Blat elephant. Trying to conceal my emo- tion, I reckoned to the men to come up, saying that the animal was dead. But “dead” had scarcely crossed my lips when there was a reading of the rat- tans, and before I could move the ele- phant was charging straight at me. A second before it had been lying on the ground with all four feet stretched out, and with, I believed, a bullet in its brain. An elephant cannot spring to his feet, and a tame animal generally takes some time to rise. The sudden- ness of this charge may. therefore. ap- pear exaggerated. I can only say that l was standing within a few yards of the. animal and was not aware of any interval of time between its lying silent on the ground and its charging me. I CHARGED BY ANGRY ELEPHANT. Take our advice and do not delay an hour! INVEST $500.00 (Not Speculate) IN WHITE BEAR As a. beginning in a remarkably attractive onering, We have associated our name with White Bear Mining Shares. and to our established clientele desier to say that we give it the slrongest possible endorsement. Firm in our belief that White Bear is rapidity reaching a position that will culminate in another Le Roi success. It has all the evidences NOW. Located and forming part 01’ the group containing Le lloi. War Eagle and Centre Star at Rossland. B. C. Ship- mean already made (in process of development only) have netted $10 a ton after paying all cests of freight. smelter charges, etc. Reports reaching us regularly are highly satisfactory, and we confidently expect ,to see another repetition of the Le Roi wonder. To the immense possibilities of White Bear. before it passes under foreign coniml. Act. and act promptly, if you would benefit by this, which we consider the greatest. opportunity that has been placed belore you [or some time. - You have magnificent possibilities in White Bear. Shares in a developed mine, producing under the most. favorable conditions, actually selling at prospect figures. To those who have already taken advantage at this offering we want to extend our congratulations. To those who up to the present have not seen tlt to do so. We want to reiterate what we have already said. and assure them that. our confidence in this property is unbounded. We have buyers and sellers for Calitornia, White Bear. Cariboo. Mrlflnney. Sullivan. North Star. Giant, Novelly. Virginia. Monte Cristo, Rambler, Can. Gold Fields And particularly note the location of White Bear. In a group oi 0! 10 per cent. SAVED BABY'S LIFE. You Can Secure White Bear Now at About |o Cents a Share SIOO Invested in $500 " “ the sumo .. n Bear. Cariboo. Syndicate. Buflalo. McKinley Dar- Colonial Investment and Loan. Canâ€" . . - - neat Trust 1, .\ rm Star. ra in. Co 5 l'dal d 5 site, 0. b 3m“ 0"- 9°" “5"” ’ - o g n on e m r mn y and GM I Sun W3 Virginia, M'onle Smelters. Niphsing.‘ Amalgamated- wme or m is about my mg Can. Gold leds‘rman. Albert. L'mvershy. Foster. 0, Industrial Security. Do Not Fail to Write or “fire us Toâ€"day. Wire Orders at Our Expense- mm a liquid )I'nnfing to a 1115, in which the lightness THINK OF IT! THINK OF IT! CANADIANS WAKE UP! DO YOU REALIZE IT? [rs SUPERIORITY tusks. It and righ! wave that my second of the em being so 1r covered by then with ran down saw the green i'altans tearing asunder t'x right and to left away from an enor- mous brown headâ€"0. trunk tightly cull- ed up and a pair of huge gleaming tusks. It was all high up in the air, and righ! above hieâ€"imminent as a wave that curls before‘it breaks. With my second barrel I fired into the centre of the enormous brown chest, the head being so high and so close that it was covered by the tightly roiled trunk, and then with an empty title I turned and ran down the track up which we had covered by the tightly roiled trunk, and then with an empty rifle I turned and ran down the track up which we had Come. The elephant was only a few yards behind me. and I ran for life. Before I had gone more than fifteen or twenty yards I tripped and fell heav- ily to the ground, my rifle being thing from my hand. Death seemed certain and I could only hope that it would be painless. But to my intense surprise the elephant had not followed me. Look- ing: over my shoulder I saw it standing under the great dead tree from under- neath which I had fired both shots. I picked myself up and, not daring to wait to get my rifle, which had been thrown into a thicket by my fall, raced down the path again and hid behind the first convenient tree. From this point. of comparative safety I saw the elephant still standing under the dead tree. It was fumbling dizzin with Us trunk in the heavy smoke of the black powderâ€"fumbling to find me. The blood was pouring from the wound in its chest in great throbbing jets, and the bright green undergrowth was drenched with heavy red. After a few seconds the great brute began to scream with rage andvpain. How it screamed! As the numbness caused by the shock of the first bullet wore off the pain of the wound and of the second bullet in its chest drove it to frenzied madness. It trampled over the ground, which was already besmear. ed with its blood. and with trunk out- stretched and ears thrust forward turn- ed in every direction for its assailant. After a timeâ€"it may have been only a few minutes. but it seemed like hours â€"weakened by the loss of blood and convinced perhaps of the futility of its search. it moved slowly away. Long afterward it was found dead. You cant judge every woman by her looks. because appearances may be bought at most drugg-ists. “It is a great comfort to have a child about the house.” said the man of do- mmtic tastes. “Yes,” answered the un- fueling wretch, “when company comes that yuu don‘t care for, you can make the child recite.” Le Roi is now worth Lead pal)th only. CEYIDN GREEN TEA. Every loaf ls uncolored. undoctored and of virgin purity. mom‘s only. 490. 500 and 80¢ per lb. At all grc Over Japan Teas is so pronounced that tea critics have nothing but pJaise for it on a teapot infusion. mining pmpenies paying reguiar dividends One-third of Germany's raw food Mutts. he says. comes from abroad. onc- 'l'mu'l.h of the people is led on imported ‘ccreals‘ and 75 per cent. of her foreign trade is sea-borur. It is our recogni-~ tion of the utter dependence of German ’industry and even the vitality of the body politic upon the volume of our imports. which has revolutionized Ger- man policy and forced upon us the con- struction of a great. navy; the second im< pulse being the acquirement of colonies. and the desire to expand across the seas on economic-political lines. lnrrmse in Navy Made Nercssnry by “or Dependence upon. Imports. A Gei‘nmn Government, otficial at high standing, has been giving a correspon- denlofllio l’ull MallGuzelte some explai- nation of the nocessilics driving German policy along the road to international collision. He looks to a future with a Russian Empire barring German goods, self- sumcient American continent. and a selfcontainéd British Empire on Mr. '(jhamberlain's lines. in spite ol Radi- cal and Socialist fanatics. Germany, he Says. means to be able to exercise. Where necessary, the fore? upon which the ultimate success of commercial poli- cy is dependent. He claimed the necesâ€" ‘siiy of the establishnmnt of a central European customs union. with the Rhine under Germany's protection and the 'Adriatic manned by her marines. Favorable and encouraging reports continue to arrive concerning work on the White Bear mine at Rossland. Tho Rossland Miner has the following: “The development of the several new ~" ore shoots found on the 850-ioot leg and elsewhere in' the White Bear, com- tinues with flattering results. Eiglfity tons of firstâ€"class ore and 40 tons iof concentrates were shipped to the smelter during the week. This was taken out in the course of the development." People have time to stop and listen to the story of your success, but: they are in an awful hurry when you attempt to explain why you failed. Hardupâ€"“l’ll never go to that restau- rant again. The last time I was there a man got my overcoat. and left his in its place." Welloffâ€"“But the proprie- tor wa<n't to blame. was he?" “No; but I might meet the other man." (llilfll‘NY'S NAVAL IDEA W'HITE BEAR MINE. $23.0“ 109.000 209.000 At all groom-s.

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