Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Jan 1915, p. 3

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ISS5S Symbol of Music /; < Columbia Grafonolas and records 10# MADE IN CANADA. TRUSTEES' SALE ■Of a Desirable R sidenee and Beal Estate inBowmanville, and a Valuable Farm in the Township of Darlington. ESTATE OF WILLIAM PULEY, DECEASED. Under instructions from the undersigned Corporation, the administrator with the will annexed of William Puley. deceased, I will offer for sale hv Public Auction at the BOWMAJS HuL'SK in" Bowmanville at two o'clock m the afternoon on 1VUSBAY, FEBRl'AEY 2ND, 1915, the following properties :-- FIRST the residence in Bowmanville which •M bounded on the north by the Base Line, on the ,- â ct bv Liberty street, on the west by Duke St!cel," and on" the south by lots 94 and 123 as .shewn on the plan of Bowmanville in the Registry Registry Office. There is about.8 acres connected tv î th th's residence. A particular description will h- given at the sale. On this property is a most desirable brick residence. residence. SECOND':--39 acres more or less, vcir.p >sed of tl.e southerlv part of lot IS in the broken front e oncessi-n of the township of Darlington, in the County of Durham. It is the property how occupied occupied by one Soper as a tenant. A more particular particular description will be given at the s&ie. On tliis property there is said to be a good right ani^g much improved and desirable lands rinii is a good clay loam. Distant about four "Xii.t'.s from good market town of 33owmnnvi.le. Coxnri ions or Sale of Each Property : The •properties will he sold, subject to a rese.ve 1 bid, ** - • - -11 1 £1 5 1 ho oniM PornnV'if inn 1'j)^ which will be fixed by the said Corporation purchasers shall search the titles at their own ,jvp,apse and the Corporation shalhnot lie bound tofu i.ish any abstract of title to said properties, mu to produce any title deeds, or copies of same, other than those in its possession, either for trie purpose of verifying the abstract or otherwise; the purchaser shall in each case pay down a deposit of 20% of the purchase to the vendor's solicitor, and sign an agreement to complete the purchase and pay the balance of said purchase money in thirty days thereaf:6r. Winter Desserts. ■ Custard Charlotte Kussc.--Make ôr buy an. oblong sponge cake and cut off the top. Remove the inside --it can be used later for a cabinet pudding--and fill the cavity with thick custard. Put back the top and spread with currant or quince jelly and then cover with whipped cream. The same charlotte can be made in individual dishes in this way. Put a small sponge cake in each desert dish and pour custard around it. On each littlle cake put some jelly and pile a tablespoonful of whipped cream on that. Caramel Bavarian Cream* -- Brown two tablespoonfuls of sugar in a saucepan and add a pint .of cream and the grated rind of two lemons. Simmer until the browned sugar is dissolved. Beat the yolks of eight eggs'with as many tablespoonfuls tablespoonfuls of sugar in a saucepan and add a pint of cream and tbs grated rind of two lemons. _ Simmer Simmer until the browned 5 sugar is dissolved. dissolved. Beat the yolks of eignt eggs with as many table spoon fuis of sugar and add to the saucepan. When thick, add a package of gelatine, gelatine, dissolved in a little water. Remove Remove from the fire, and when cool fold in a pint of whipped cream whipped, solid. Mold and chill. Cream Tapioca. -- Cook three tablespoonfuls of tapioca, which have been soaked over night in cold water in a quart of milk for an hour in a double boiler. Beat the yolks of four eggs w T ith a scant cupful of sugar, add to the tapioca, cook for ten minutes, and take from the fire. Add a teaspoonful of vanilla, turn into a buttered baking dish, cover with meringue and bake until brown. Chill and serve cold. To make the meringue beat the whites of the four eggs stiff, add four tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar, beat again, add a pinch of cream tartar and beat again, and then spread over the pudding. Brown slowly and do not put immediately into a cold or draughty place. The careful baking, cream tartar and the gradual cooling do much to keep the meringue puffed and high. Cocoa nut Custard.--Grate half a cupful of fresh cocoanut or use the same amount of shredded cocoanut, and to it add three-quarters of a cup of sugar, a pint of rich milk and the stiffly beaten whites of four eggs. Put in individual custard dishes, place in a pan of hot water and bake until firm. Then change the cold water for hot water, cover the custards with meringue and brown. The cold water prevents further cooking and "possible curdling curdling of the custard. Cream Fritters.--Beat a cupful of cream and add as you beat the whites of four eggs. When stiff add a pinch of salt -and two cupfuls of sifted flour. Drop the mixture by tablespoonfuls into, hot fat and brown. Serve with cinnamon, wine " Fruit-a-tlm " Healed His Kidneys and Cured Him Hagersville, Ont , Aug. 26th. 1913. "About two years ago, I found my health in a very bad state. My Kidneys Kidneys were not doing their work and I was all run down in condition. I felt tlie need of some good remedy, and havin g seen " Friiit-a-tives' ' advertised, I decided to try them. Their effect, I found" more than satisfactory. Their action was mild and the result all that could be expected. My Kidneys rësUriied their normal action after I had taken upwards of a dozen boxes, and I regained my old- time vitality. Today, I am enjoying the best health I have ever had". B. A. KELLY to/ remove .any burned particles or " Eruit-a-tives **. is the greatèst Kidney Remedy in the world. It acts on the bowels and skin as well as on the kidneys, and thereby soothes and cures; any Kidney soreness. "Fruit-a-tives" is sold by nil dealers at 50c. a box, 6 for §2 50, trial size 25c. or. will be sent on receipt of price by Fruit- a lives Limited, Ottawa. Whèn silver has become, discolored" discolored" with"- egg*- 'dtp damp cloth iu salt water hud 1 rid tKhsilver ; the sfcfcin will disappear I Équà! parts of tUEpentme and am-. moiiia will remove; paint from clothing, clothing, no matter how ; hard the paint may bave become/ -■ If the teapot" bejtomes-musty, put a lump of sugar in it before- putting it away It will_ smell,Sweet when you want to;-use ifc % - Keep, bolded newspapers handy upon which to pl%pe" soiled pots and pans, and save 'cleaning smutty marks from the tables. : A tub : of water-placed near, the house plants, in a room where you are afraid of frost] will "draw" the frost and save the:-, plants.. . A few' drops of 'ammonia in the water in which stiver: is washed" will keep it bright for a long time without without cleaning. v v- When frving doughnuts avoid possibility of their burning by putting putting a piè'ce of bread in the 1 fat. The bread may burn, but the doughnuts will be a lovely golden brown. gome of the most delicious cakes are ruined while turning them from the pan. If the pan containing the cake is set on a clpth wrung out of warm water and left for a few minutes minutes the cakes will turn out, witn- out any trouble. prohibited. (The French word' for checkers is dames, which means j ladies). ~ 6,--Every member of the club indulging indulging in-the game o eefiecs (chess) • will be shot at once, addi tion, expelled. (The Erepch word echec also means cheek :in the military military sense). • - 7.i--Taking a colic is< for bidden, but trenches may be taken. ' 8;---Members may sleep'on the divans, divans, but thev are forbidden to take their boots off. 9. --The telephone, box is strictly reserved for the service. In no case may members use it- to; give news to their families or carry_ on clandestine clandestine correspondence with the gentler gentler "sex. - 10. ---The pictures and works of art decorating the room are placed under the safeguard of those using .Weak fey Many people suffer from weakhearts*,; They I tiiay experiénee shortness of breath on exertion, pain over the heart, or dizzy feelings, oppressed breathing after meals or their eyes become blurred, the heart is not ^ blood to the extremities, and blood supply to tho stomach. A heart tonic and alterative should no bad after-effect. Such is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery which contains no dangerous narcotics or alcohol. It helps the human system in the constant manufacture of rich, red bloody Jfc it. whites of eggs, one for each person, stiff, and add half a table spoonful of sugar and two teaspoonfuls of grape juice to each white. Beat all until stiff. Into each sherbet glass put two or 'three .tablespoonfuls of grape juice, and on this pile the egg white. Top each glass with a teaspoonful of whipped cream. Household Hints. are are not 11. ---Tli è tables are at the disposal of all members, but each must bring his own writing paper and materials. materials. 12. --A "company of chasseurs is at the disposal of members of the club. '(A chasseur, besides meaning a certain.kind of soldier, also means a messenger boy). remarkable phqtogbaphs. TROGLODYTES CLUB. The to the the Iron molds for drop cakes among the very best. • If the edges of the saucepan well buttered the contents will boil over. •Stains on knives depart if blade is rubbed with a raw potato dipped in knife powder. Suet may be kept fresh by chopping chopping roughly and sprinkling it with a little granulated sugar. To make pork crackling crisp, rub well with salad oil, then sprinkle .with fine salt and cook in iron spider. A small piece of camphor in the water in which cut flowers are placed will make them last much Membershi p Is Limited French Soldiers. Many are the tales told of pains taken to make the trenches fit to live in, their permanent character character making it worth while to spend some time and trouble in making them habitable. In one trench reserved for staff officers a bench was- dug out all around and tables were left when the Late King Edward and the Kaiser in Attitudes of Anger. , , ~Iy.c c+nm-ich tn assimilate or take up the proper elements from the food, thereby Lart-buL and ^ ^rnlo^sy^- excessive tissue waste m convalescence from fevers, lor xne run down, ansmic, thin-blooded people, the "Discovery" is refreshing and vitalizing. ïn liquid or tablet form at most drug •tores or .end SO on.-cenf stamp a for trial box to Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel, Buffalo. N. Y. -- -, . \r»i n Circulatory Or&ans in tho ee Mo<licol Advi*or M --- \ Fironch cloth* boüail book of 1003 page* » cnt receipt of 31 one-cent stomp., addr... at abo... u THE DAI OF VENGEANCE Vj If 1914 Was the Year of Judgment Shall Not 19.5 Be the Year of Redemption? two longer. If salt is sprinkled on the stove as soon as milk boils over, the unpleasant unpleasant o-dor will be counteracted at once. A slice of potato is an excellent thing to clean white oilcloth which has become disfigured by hot cooking cooking utensils. Pots and kettles should not be scraped. Use a piece of sandpaper Further conditions will be made known at time of sale. In ail other respects the terms and , anv preferred sauce Gingerbread with Cream. comliiions of sale will tie the standing conditions of The Supreme Court of Ontario. Further particulars can be obtained from the mulê 1 signed Corporation, Solicitor or Auctioneer. Auctioneer. L. A. W. TOLE, Auctioneer. The Toronto General Trusts Corporation. Vendor. D. B. Simpson o£ Bowmanville. Solicitor for the Vendor. Dated January 4,1916. 2 4w R OF CH60L GIRL Tails How Lydia ELPinkham's Vegetable Compound Re stored Her Daughter's Daughter's Health. Plover, Iowa. -- "From a small child my 13 year old daughter had female weakness. I spoke to three doctors about it and they did not help -her any. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetab1e Compound Compound had been of great benefit to me, so I decided to have her give it a trial. She has taken five bottles of the Vege- table Compound according according to directions on the bottle and she is cured of this trouble. She was all run down when she started taking the Compound and her periods did not come right. She was s"o poorly and weak that I often had to help her dress herself, but now she is regular and is growing strong and healthy.- --- Mrs. Martin Helvig, Plover, Iowa. ■«rerHundreds of such letters expressing gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink- Cream half a cupful of butter and add a cupful of sugar. Mix two cupfuls of molasses and one of milk, and add alternately with four cupfuls of flour sifted with a teaspoonful of baking powder, a teaspoonful of ginger and a quarter of a teaspoonful teaspoonful of ground cloves. Then add a teaspoonful of orange extract and four well-beaten eggs. When thoroughly thoroughly mixed pour into buttered muffin tins and bake. Serve one to each person, warm, covered^ with whipped cream. Or else cut off the tops, scoop out a tablespoonful of the soft crumb, fill with whipped cream, and put on the top. Coffee Jelly.--Sweeten a pint of strong coffee to taste and to it add three-quarters of a package of dissolved dissolved gelatine. Put half of it into a panful of ice water and when it begins to harden stir in a cupful of cream whipped stiff. Pour the rest of the jelly into a mold, and pour the hardened, cream-and-jelly mix ture into the centre. It will be hard enough to remain where it is put in the centre of the bowl or mold ; the jelly is hardened in. Chil and serve with cream or custard. Cream Cheese Tarts.--Make tart shells of pastry and fill them with a mixture made of two cakes of cream cheese, half a cupful of cream, a cupful of currants, three eggs beaten beaten well and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Bake for about half &n hour. French Puffs.--Cream a third of a cupful of butter with a cupful of sugar and add two eggs, beaten separately, separately, a cupful of milk and two Q-^jpfuIs of flour sifted with a tea- spoonful of cream tartar, half a teaspoonful of soda and a pinch of ggft. Bake in patty pans until brown and serve hot with ample trench was dug. This place is the location of the Troglodytes Club. The club has a set of rules which [probably afforded more amusement when they were drawn up to the music of bursting shells than when read in cold blood in a quiet home. Here are the regulations : 1. --Members of the club are officers officers who wish shelter from the rain or storms (including shells). 2. --Entry to the club is forbidden (a) to all who do not belong to the French army ; (b) to German projectiles. projectiles. 3. --Games of chance - (bullets, shells, shrapnel) are rigorously forbidden forbidden in the club's premises. They are only allowed outside, and preferably preferably outside, the artillery park altogether. , • 4. _^Owing to * fpecMI' circumstances circumstances exception is made for the game of battle (the French name for the card game beggar-my-neighbor) Bridge is also authorized, provided the dead are not counted. 5--The game- of dames (checkers-, although quite inoffensive, is also "I call the picture 'The Beginning Beginning of the War,' " is how Sir Her bert Tree describes a remarkable photograph which he possesses illustrating' illustrating' a quarrel between the late King Edward and the Kaiser Wilhelm Wilhelm several years ago. The origin of the quarrel is not divulged, but Mr. Basset, the London correspondent correspondent of the Petit Parisien, relates how he first saw this snapshot, "taken five'or six years ago, when King Edward VII., irritated by certain certain underhand tricks on the- part of his nephew, found it necessary to tell William II. what he thought of him.fairly sharply. The indiscreet photograph shows the end of the scene. The two sovereigns had been talking in a corner of the garden, garden, and after a discussion, which seems to 'have been very heated, King Edward has turned brusquely away, called his dogs to heel, and, obviously displeased, has refused to hear another word. The Kaiser, looking thoroughly ashamed of himself, himself, is trying to detain him, his hands outstretched in supplication. ... I have .never seen such a striking striking and prophetic picture." Sir Herbert Tree got the photograph photograph in Homburg in 1909 from, a certain prominent person who witnessed witnessed the royal quarrel. It may well be that that quarrel sowed the seeds of the Kaiser's, anger that have " attained such monstrous growth since the war began. know that nice "ght was a "Why, he was telling "How do yon young man we met last night bachelor ?" us all the evening how' to bring up children." C hands Vegetable Compound-baa -accomplished -accomplished are constantly being received, nrovine the reliability of this grand old proving the reliability remedy. If you are ill do not drag along and continue to suffer day in and day out but at once take Lydia E. Pinkharè s VegO~ table-'Compound, a woman's remedy for woman's ills.,. ,... If you 'atfrifcet wfite ts Lydià- E. Pinkham Medicine Co^(confl- syrup. Chocolate Souffle.- a be opened, read and answered by a Woman and held in strict conhdenoa# Soak half cupful of breadcrumbs in milk and wring them dry ill a clean, cloth. Put them into a bowl and add half a cupful of melted bfitter and half a cupful of sugar. Be-at until light and then add the WelUbeaten yolks of four e^gs, vanilla to-- taste -and three squares of chocolate grated Beat-light again and then add the stiff whites of four eggs and pour rhifco a- butiered dish. Bake .m- -a moderate oven and serve imme- . Grape. Juice -Whip.--Whip the "I trod down the peoples in mine anger, and I poured out their life blood on the earth . . . For the day of vengeance was in my heart, and the year of my redeemed is come." --Isaiah, Ixiii., 4, 6. Taken literally, this high-wrought language of the prophet can find little acceptance in our age. In spite of the easy presumption with which the kings and priests of Europe Europe are expecting God to give them victory in battle--by which they frankly mean bring death and destruction to their enemies--we no longer think of God as a conqueror who treads down the people in his anger and pours out their life blood on the earth. Love and not hate, pity and not wrath, forgiveness and not vengeance--these we regard today today as the true attributes of God. If we think otherwise it is because we ourselves are base and thus guilty of the. unpardonable sin of degrading the Deity to the level of our own passions. In the deeper spiritual sense, however, however, these words of our text are as true to-day as ever, and "never before before so impressive perhaps as they are at this very moment. God Is Not Vindictive. but He is most certainly inexorable. Sin is not visited by divine wrath, but it is most certainly punished by divine justice. Days of vengeance have passed forever, but days of judgment still appear. What, indeed, indeed, has the year 1914 been but such a dâÿ '1 Deeply have the nations nations sinned .in their dealings with one another. For forty years they have envied, hated, deceived, plotted, plotted, armed, threatened, challenged. Not one trace of generosity, brotherhood, brotherhood, self-abnegation, even the ordinary decencies of everyday mor ality, has appeared in their commercial, commercial, political and social relations. relations. And, behold, the day of judgment has come upon them ! Their sins have found them out ! . Selfishness has brought misery and hatred death as they have never done before ! And therefore comes the crowning horror of peoples trodden down in anger and their life blood poured out on the earth. But this is not all of the prophecy. For "the day of vengeance," says the ancient prophet, marks the coming coming of "the year of (God s) redeemed." redeemed." Out of all this -misery and bloodshed shall there not come such an abhorrence of force, Such a Hatred of Violence, such a quickening of compassion and brotherhood as the world has never felt before 1 And shall there . not come, as the due expression of this a waken ip g of the spirit of goodwill goodwill and as a fitting compensation for the losses suffered and the agonies agonies endured in this greatest of all wars, the establishment of peace forever more 1 I'f nation shall no longer lift up sword against nation, neither learn war any more ; if vio- dcr.ce shall no more be heard in -any land, wasting nor destruction within within the borders of any continent ; if people .shall clasp hands with people people in one great world-wide bond of brotherhood, then shall "this present conflict, for all its horror, have not been in vain 1 Such at least should be our prayer, and: God helping us, our resolve. as the old year of uisaste i passes into the new year of promise promise ! "The day of vengeance" is still with us, but if we be patient, steadfast and "not unfaithful to the heavenly vision." 1915 may be made to be 1 'the year of the redeemed." --Rev. John Haynes Holmes. A Frank Prophecy. Addressing the recent annual meeting of his shareholders, the chairman of an important London industrial company had this to say : "There is only one thing of which 'we can be quite sure, that we are going towards a world entirely different different from -the world to which we have been accustomed. There is going on throughout what we have been accustomed to call the civilized world a destruction of property which is puite unpayalelled. _ r lha-t means the world wdll be bitterly poor, and there will be a serions amount of work to be done in biing- ing us back iiito the position which we occupied before Julv.' ' the eiK :1 of a large family "You have port, Mr. Finnegan ?" to sup- Mr. Finne- g an --"0i have that, mum, an if they didn't all earn their own livin' ©i couldn't do it at all, at all." Havre ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS To Liverpool - Glasgow - London To take the Allan Line means that the Ocean voyage will bè one of the pleasantest memories of your trip abroad. Large, comfortable steamers, steamers, replete with every convenience and luxury-- the beautiful sail down the sheltered waters of the St. Lawrence--the courtesy and attention ot the ship's attendants--are not easily forgotten. / •> For rates, sailing Hates and lieauUful descriptive THE auJBuSSH-* - - • - »* Ki "= Sl " \uE3 m v* M. A. JAMES, Steamship Agent, Bowmanville. w i* Î Order Coal Now LEHIGH VALLEY COAL I am receiving almost daily-several cars of the best Lehigh Valley Coal, shipped direct from the mines--Chestnut, Stove and pea sizes, Send your order in now and have prompt delivery Thé Cavc-D welters of the British Army in_Nor(hern France. Lance-Corporal Jarvis, V.C., Royal Engine»,*, desento.» i " W v e ^ M Tt VMdü in the r^r of the Une of Irenôhea.hélâ by the Roÿal Shots Fusiliers. s^nt'^l/e.^^s ^r^ although - were^exp^dday a^^ght to showers of shell we had only on-e man wounded. On the right of the-pic E. W. Loscombe Yards and Office at Holgate's Evaporator, Corner Division and Queop-sta., opposite High School. Phone 177. • V, ■ t 1 -i; m

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