Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 13 Jul 1910, p. 6

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to | C0€ quart in a) of rhubarb, w boiling water and boil gent. | the s 'about twenty minutes, then réak into small sprigs. Mix the beans and cauliflower gently to- ther so as not to mash them, turn pm into a buttered earthenware ing dish, pour over the pint of hite sance, add a generous layer of grated cheere, and put into the it five minutes. Add equal f of sugar and boil until it thick You will find this delicious. jelly. PIE Fv Strawberry Pie.--] a ven to brown. Just before taking om 'the oven add a teaspoonful of Yragon vinegar. Comet Balad.--Boak one-half box tin with 'a rich biscuit dq halt inch = thick and bal t spread while hot with butter and fill heaping full 'with ripe whole gelatin in one-half cupful of cold | Strawberries, 'well sugared, - Whip ater for five minutes; add one-half|to a'froth the whites of three eggs pful of mild vinegar, the juice of | 80d spread on top. Put in oven ono lemon, one pint of boiling <DE enough to brown. This can ¥ one-balf eupful 'of sugar, |be served on the fable and is at- and 6 ¢ teaspoonful of salt. Strain | tractive and delicious, and when beginning to set add one}. Crumb Pie.--Make a crust as for eupful of finely shredded cabbage, | lemon pie. Then one cup molasses, two cupfuls of celery cut in small|¢ne-quarter teaspoon soda, one pieces, and one-fourth can of sweet | Fint boiling water, = Filling--Threée wed peppers finely cut. Turn into a | Cups flour, two tablespoonfuls su mold and chill. = Berve on' lettuce |84r; one cup butter, = Mix all leaves with mayonnaise dressing or | Smooth, fill tins with molases, 'then ut in dice and serve in cases made | put the filling into molasses, of red or green peppers, or the mix- % in ture may be shaped in molds lined HOT WEATHER DRINKS, "with pimentos. This is a delicious] Orangéade--Use two = glasses sccompaniment to cold sliced chick-| which can 'be fitted together, or if €n or veal. accessible use - a regular shaker. Peanut Chops.--One glass peanut | Bqueeze into one glass the juice of butter, pinch of salt and a}|lalt a lemon, the juice of half an wash of paprika; soften to a creamy | orange, one. teaspoonful of sugar, gonsistency by adding a little milk;|tte white of an egg, Then shake, cur twelve slices of bread; spread |by fitting the two glasses dir tight #ix of them with a thick layer of | together, until the egg foams, and the creamed peanut butter, cover] lastly add some cracked ice and 'with the remaining bread: as if for |ensugh water to fill the glass, This 'sandwiches; beat one egg, add two| drink is very strengthening. "gablespoonfuls milk: and a little| Fruit Frappe--Take equal parts salt; dip the bread in the egg; roll {of the juices of pineapple, orange, 3n bread crumbs and brown in deep | lemon and cherries. Add enough Mat, using a frying basket, or, if you | sugar to taste and serve with erack- huven't the basket, a pancake grid-|{ cd ice. This is delicious on a warm ale can be used, though deep fat is| afternoon served with sweet wafers aiways 'more satisfactory. These! of some sort. ghops make an excellent substitute Currant Jelly Punch.~Whip half Scr meat at a quarter the cost, as a tumblerful of currant jelly to al ghe peanut butter can be bought] froth, gradually adding half a pint freshly ground at the tea and coffee | of boiling water. Add the juice of Biures for 10 cents a glass. Bervela lemon and a half cup of sugar, on a hot platter, garnished with] pour a cup of cold water slowly in- "%hopped parsley and you will find|to the whole, The drink is more Shem delicious. wholesome withont ice: than ith it, DESSERTS: a ian in | ig physician in Paris. "eon rooms were crowded daily loveliest. women in -the Ere; pital, pushing and je word with or perhaps win a from him. That he turned & ear' and cold shoulder to their Iurements = only stimulated andor; until their attentions so embarrassing that at one #i he seriously meditated flight. =~ Even when he contracted a loath- gome skin disease while hid ; the sewers of Paris, he was devoted: ly nursed by one of the loveliest of iis many admirers, whom he "mar- ried one fine day in the presence of the sun." 8 . It possible a still more repulsive man was Potemkin, the former pri- vate soldier who enslaved the fancy of Catherine the Great and by her, favor was made virtually Czar' 'Russia, : Era DREADFUL AND REPULSIVE, | was the description of him by one who knew him. "He has an un- wieldy figure and knookknees, is swarthy of skin, coarse in feature ard has lost: one eye. He ofte passes whole days in his room hal dressed; uncombed, unwashed ing his nails and scratching tidy head."' And yet, says Dur and, "'the Empress is quite crazy over him, as is proved by her pas- sionabe letters, in which she #d- dresses him as 'my lord," 'my king,' 'my inestimable treasure.' " § But perhaps the most remarkab of 'all these cases of woman's infat- uation for ugly men was that of W.| Hamilton; a Scotchman, of a cen- tury and a half ago. Hamilton was | ner only preternaturally He was terribly 'deformed. y legs,'"' we are told, "were drawn up to His ears, his arms were twist: A acepted - the Messia (John 1. 41), and mo practical utterance § but half a pint of finely shaved ice, : Pineapple Fritters. --Make a bat-| °F le. ed : backward, and almost every added as served, is liked by most fcr with one egg, beaten separate: ly. To the yolk add one-half cup of milk, pinch 'of salt and enough flour to make a stiff batter, the bea- fen white and one-half teaspoon of baking powder. Open a can of the best sliced pineapple. | Cut each SOME FAMOUS UGLY MEN FLAINNESS NO. BAR TO SUC. CESS AS WOOERS, 'drawhacks; . Haniilton: 'easi slice of pineapple intwo, dip in the batter, and fry in hot lard. Drain sprinkle with powdered sugar; and|qhe Ugliest' Men Have Been Fame serve. Fresh fruip is much nicer ji ; aif obtainable than' the canned. ous "Lady Killers' in Days Gone By. Pineapple Bouffle.-~Melt = two ounces of butter in a stew pan, put "Sn three ounces of fine flour, mix| 'No woman worthy of the name," with half pint of milk, boil until it| wrote one of the loveliest ladies in pickens ; have ready three ounces! London society recently, "really of pineapple cut small, the samejcares a brass farthing whether the quantity of sugar; put with the| wan she honors with her hand is ed mixture, add one by oneé| handsome or ugly so long .as he volks of three eggs, then the possesses the manly qualities of 8 beaten to a stiff froth ; make |'brains, o with one cup of pineapple |ard so on which make half cupful of cut pineapple. | peal to our sex." : Sa he pudding three-quarters of | And certainly history support this i : : rather unconventional wview; says pple Cream.--Select one] Tit-Bits, for many of the plainest W@W pineapple, pare, remove the|men of whom we have any record 'ever'. grate, add sugar (pound |haye not only: won pretty and well id, or a little less, but it{developed brides but have been abl it be sweet, as freezing destroys) to pick and choose among the of the effects of the sugar). est, to the con n of | : to each well Jarored 2 ugar, and freeze. | . Was ve all the ingredi-| wo wor "before combining | famous che powerful ap- physical strength, honor member was out of joint." In spite of these terrible Physical agily -out- stripped all 'the gallants in his dis- trict in the favor of the ladies. 'He might have martied any of them for she asking--indeed, it 1s said sever: al of them actually asked him,' says a chronicler. . 'Buf he remain- #d proof against all their wiles un- til after his eightieth birthday, and then hé married & girl of 20, him: |¥ sell being carried 'to the altar sn men's shoulders."' ; " inn irs A RURAL ENGLAND. . ¢An 'Ancient Land and a Land of Lovely Homes," r "The characteristic beauty. of Eagland, the beauty in whiéh she Luv no rival is of a land of 'which mention is fittingly made after A description of her rural society a fe. It is beauty of a land which combines the highest culti-{™ n the One in whom were fu d all 'the expectations of the p phiets, all the for. 1 all the e. nofl ph the prevailing conceptio lessiaship. Ou the other ha opposed 'them, ;

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